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--- -·

.New $1,069,200 budget cut
will have-'seriQus impacf
University committee convened
to help study possible cutbacks

...

.

Dr. Fisk }s n.amed a~ti~g
academ1c v1ce president

Dr• Erte11 resig'ns
for health reasons

Dr. RobertS. Fisk has been:named acting vice ·pfesident-for-aclldemic -affairs,

~~~~~riJS:W:k.'~~

replaces Dr. ~on ·w. Eitel~ who
resigned from the position for health

r~~~~~ Enell's .,;.;gnation, Dr.
Ketter expressed his thanks for "devoted
service to "the University during a very
difficult year/' and regret that Dr. Ertell's
health would not allow him to continue
in the position.
In a letter announcing the shift to
faculty and staff, Exeartive Vice President
· Albert Somit cited Fisk's "distinguished
record as an educator and an administrator." Dr. Somlt said he is "confident
that Fisk will make significant contributions to the University's·o~ations
as we continue to seek a P:"rtiiailent ..ppointee.'' He is certain, loe said, t~hhe
entire. Univers!ty c;ommu.nity . jc)iris in
wishing Dr. Ertella speedy recpvery.
A Faculty professor of Educational
Studies, Dr. Fisk joined the University in
1953 as dean of the then School of Education. He served as dean until1967, when
he resigned his administrative post to
devote more time tb teaching and
research.
..
A graduate of Grinnell, Dr. Fisk received his M.A. from the University of
Minnesota and his Ed.D. from Teachers
College, Columbia. He served as a consultant to the Ministry of Education jn
Pakistan in 1957, and as a visiti"' scholar
at the Institute of Education, l:lnlvenity
of London In 1!167-8. He- director of
the Ulll Office of Equal Opportunity In
1!Jiill.fi9 and In 1972 named first
cNirman of the u/11 Policy 5ludles eon-

New York, a post he had held since 1969.
A member of the U/8 faculty for 23
years. (1946-1969), Or. Ertell seryed as
Melvon . Baker Professor of Amerocan
Enterprise and professor of economics
~nd ·industrial tela-. In addition, he
~~held -seYt~r.! admiaistrative posts at

A further budget cut of $1,069,200,
which President Robert L. Ketter says will
have "a ~serious impact upon this campus/' led this week to the formation of a
University budget committee and the
first of a series of meetings on how the
additional slashes can· be absorbed.
The budget committee met late
Wednesday with Executive Vice President Albert Somit, vice presidents,
provosts, University-wide deans,
Colleges and Libraries' administrators,
and representatives of the finance and
management division to consider. the
situation.
In a letter to faculty-staff and student
government leaders, Dr. Kener said the
latest reductions were allocated to this
ca mpus from an approximate S7 .5
million added reduction imposed upon
State Un iversity. They "bring the required savings in our budget for 1975-76
to 52,835,000, or a total Un iversity expenditure ceiling of $82,895,600," he
reported.
Wbile the increased cuts seriously affect the current year, Dr. Ketter said, they
"will also affect our 1976-77 budget plan·
ning" by reducing that year's budget by
the same amount.
He pledged to do "the utmost to
protect program quality" despite the
reductions. But, he said, "it is clear that
some sacrifices will have to be made" in
order to accomplish this aim.
" To avoid unfounded rumors," the
President gave assurance that "decisions
will be made only aher maximum consultation with the responsible person or
persons affected by those ·decisions."
Additionally, he indicated, "we will
endeavor to keep the full Urliversity
community apprised of developments.

You might find it interesting to answer
a survey questionnaire on your ideas
about rapid transit or community health
are needs. No one has eve.r sought your
views and there's a lot you'd like to say.
In some segments of the community,
however, panicularly in the inner dty, an
individual· might be more indined to

shudder at the ihought of haying to
cover the same -old ground with yet
another interviewer. For the fact is, according to Dr. Raymond Hunt, director
.. -of the U/8 Survey Research Center,
many communities are "ovenurvey~"
and 0 it's easy to wear out one's
welcome."

-

Or..... -IIIIMII8Cdnl*-.prai-,
~

central ..., of . . !Uie·t.IIIMnlly "' ' . '

Governor Hugh Carey last week pared
the budgets of State University, the State
Education Department, and seven other
state agencies as ~rt of moves to dose
what he contends is a $600 million State
budget · .gap. State Univerlity "(aS the
· hardest hit of the agencies.

The survey comritunity, he notes, has
become increasingly concerned with
public attitudes and reaCtions to unbridled surveying. Invasions of _privacy,
ethical lapses, and sloppy and inconsequential instruments discredit the
general practice of survey research.

Cllll-.niiY ~lidos .... _ .
lllleiest may '-onsocllllftd polldaJ
utltudes; on Malth, edticadOnal orodwiOdll needs; on ...... of . . . .
Kd~ltJ. -"'PPlon pnfere..C.S;

5I-. Council of School Oiltrlcl Ad~.

ment and comptroller; McAllister Hull,
dean of the Division of Graduate Education; Albert Somit, executive vice president; Richard G. Brandenburg, dean,
School of Management; Donald A.
larsen, associate vice president for
health sciences; William H. Baumer,
assistant vi~ president, academic affairs;
a.nd Rob!J t Wagner, chairman ,
Professionaf"Staff Senate.
Cornell University's State University
statutory colleges were also apparently
hard-hit by the latest SUNY budget trimming: A radio report last weekend
quoted Cornell's president as saying that
these colleges had been slapped with
an approximate $700,000 reducti.on.

~AruSuney

.......,.._, the Nallorial Society lot the

........
,17._
...........
c:hlnciiDr far ................... the

ty, vice president for finance and

management; Charles Balkin, assistant
vice president for finance and manage-

Reducing the human and fiscal drain
frequently associated with survey
research'is one of the purposes behind a
new, regularly-scheduled omnibus survey of the Niagara Frontier metropolitan
area being launched this fall by the U/8
Center.
The program, to be known as the ErieNiagara Area Survey (ENI\S), is also
designed to provide practical research
training experience for graduate
students in the social sciences and to
broaden the University's public service.
ENAS will attempt to go h&gt;to the field
at least~ a year with a multi-faceted
survey instrument which will yield both a
general Niagara Frontier deta base
(useful to a number of educational,
public policy and plannl111 uplts) and information on ~ of particular in. teres!: 10 Individuals and orpnlzatlons.
According 10 Dr. Hunt, who Is also
project director for ENAS, there are
many ocaslons when individual scholan
and orpniWions of all ldncll - civic,
educallonal, soclll service, 10"111"-...
tal, busiMa deshe lnfotnllllooo about .•

Sludr of f:duc:MiDn, _, the New York
~

Members of the University budget
comminee include: Charles Fogel, assistant executive vice president, chairman;
, George Hochfield, . chairman, Faculty
Senate; Benjamin Sanders, professor of
biochemistry, also representing the
faculty Senate; Michele Smith, president, undergraduate Student Association; Terry Difilippo, president,
Graduate Student Association; E.W. Do-

It's also an unnecessary and expensive
duplication of effort to run five independent surveys covering one topic each
when one survey on five topics could
glean the same information.

~

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

continued improvement."

Erie-·N·iagara survey to ·begin ·this fall

Prior to assumlna the Education
danshlp In 1953, Or. fisk had been an
aociiiiO fi'OI- at Syrxuse UnMnlly
and .WO.. that at New York Saote
COIIese for TeKhers at Albany. l1ie
lilllh« of numerous eduailianal ~
and moooopaphs, he is a member of the
"-ian Allodldon ;of School Ad-

,.

~'The coming year will not be an easy
one for this University," the President
suggested. "However, our joint cooperation will make it more bearable for all
and will help ensure the University's

~.aaoutiOdlllnlllludonl, or on a

----;...&amp;.-.. . . . . ----"'· . rz=:;?~····~~

U.IJ.t..lo.....ol,j.....~..;.j.l.--...........- -......

�I'.AG£ 2/JUNE. 19, .1975/SUMMER REPORTER

U/B faculty compensation ranks 17th
Pay is up by 6.4 per cent nationally, _
but buying power is down, MUP says
, U/ B's average nine-month faculty
salary and benefit package of $24,820 is
among the 20 best in the nation ,
preliminary figures from the AAUP's annual report on salaries indicate.
As reported in the Chronicle ol Higher
Edvalion Oune 9), U/ B ranked 17th on a
list of 70 non-medical institutions where
average faculty salary and fringe benj!fits
total more than $21,500 for nine months.
Last year, before a retroactive 4.75 per
cent across-the-board salary increase for
1973-74 and a six per cent boost for 1974' 75, the University had slipped to 45th
among the nation 's colleges and universities in terms of total average compensation.
UIB's $24,820 was the highest"average
compensation offered by a graduate
center within State University during
1974-75, the AAUP figures indicate. (The
1
Fashion Institute of Technology,- a twoyear school in New York City, had the
. best paid faculty within SUNY with compensation averaging $25,267, 12th ~ighest
nationally.) Stony Brook, ranking 18th in
the nation, was a close second among
the graduate centers with an average of
1

$24,765. SUNY at Binghamton was ranked
26th ($24,269), and SUNY at Albany, 38th
($23,501).
UIB's average compensation by ranks
was Identified by AAUP as follows :
professor, $33,700 (the highest in the
SUNY system); asSociate professor, $23,900; usistant professor, $18,200; instructor, $13,400.
CUNY

Docnlluoies Top Ten

Again this ye.ar, the list of institutions
with highest faculty compensation
averages was dominated 'by City University of New York, frve units of which were
listed In the top ten (see accompanying
box). Caltech, Harvard, the University of
Chicago, Columbia and Stanford were
other familiar names in the top 20. Surprisingly, seven of the Pennsylvania stttte
colleges were among the 70 best-paying
institutions (ringing from California
State, ranked 42nd between Rutgers and
Cornell, to Kutztown, ranked 68th).
The .average compensation for all
faculty members of all ranks in all kinds
of colleges and universities in 1974-75
was $18,5110, AAUP reported. Fringe ·
benefits - pension contributions, in·
surance, etc.- averaged 12.2 per cent of
compensation nationally.
Total compensation rose 6.4 per cent
over the previous year, AAUP said, but
the 11 per cent Inflation rate produced
an actual loss of 4.2 per cent in buying
power, "the largest decrease ... in the
17-year history of the AAUP survey."
Also, AAUP noted, the average compensalion for all workers has grown
faster than that for faculty members since
the late .1960's. This year, the average

worker is earning 54 per cent more than
in 1967; the average faculty member, 50
per cent more.

9.5 Per Cent 'Needed to Keep Up
Robert Dorfman , professor of

economics at Harvard and head of the
AAUP study committee, told the Chroni·
de that to "keep faculty members
abreast of the rest of the country in 197576 would require an average compensa·
tion increase of 9.5 per cent," presuming
a 6.5 per cent inflation rate.
The preliminary report, released at
AAUP 's annual _meeting held in
Washington, was expanded this year to
include separate data on facult y
women's salaries and tenure. The complete report will be published in the
summer issue of the AAUP Bulletin. The
p reli minary information shows that the
23 per cent of the nation's faculty who
are women rece ive an average cOmpensation 17.5 per cent less than men, and
that 60 per cent of all full-t ime faculty
members are tenured.
AAUP said its 1975 report was based on
responses lrom 1,548 colleges and universities - about 74 per cent of the total
and the largest number ever to participate in the survey. About 90 per cent
of all participating institutions provided
information on women faculty members,
and about 80 pe r cent of those
cooperating provided data on tenure.
The report ~id the 4.2 P.,r cent drop in
buying power was based on the Con-.
sumer Pri~ndex as published by the
Bureau~bor Statistics. "But this understates the loss/' the report contended, " because faculty members' ex,:tenses
are described more accurately bY-the
Higher living Standard Index which is
computed only annually. In terms of this
index, faculty members' real income fell
by nearly seven per cent between the
academic years 1973-74 and 1974-75. The
loss in purchasing power affected all
ranks about equally, though lecturers
suffered somewhat more than the ladder
ranks." AAUP said that faculty members
suffered more from inflation than wage
and salary workers in general because
average compensations per employee in
the U.S. increased by $750 or 7.1 per
cent, accounting for a loss in buying
power of 3.6 per cent.
Women •• Lower Ranks

Women faculty members, the AAUP
said, tend to be concentrated in the
lower ranks at colleges and universities.
Of the total number of faculty women,
41 .4 per cent are assistant professors, 23
per cent are instructors (compared with 7
per cent of men), 20.9 per cent are
associate professors, 12.2 per cent are
professdrs (compared with 31 per cent of
men), and 2.4 per cent are lectUrers.

AAUP's top 20 -

ty....., _,...,..lor.

The lop~ --...llal1nodtullont In terms olaweraae facul-

nine -.ths • ~ by.the Amerkan
A.acWiool oii.JIIhenlty . . . . , _ In Its 1974-75 ulary -.ey ..,,
. City u.haiiiJ ol New Yorlt: City ~ •••••••••••••••

......... Cclletle •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••
~

......... ofTechnolosJ ••••••••••••• •• •• ••••••

Hlrnnl Uliltlerllty ••••••••• , •••••••• ' ••••••• ••••••• ••••
New Sdloal for 5od.a a-d! -........................ .

::.r.:,•IIIJ

...................,........, .................... .... .
oiCIIIc.- •••••••••••••••••••••••••··•••••••
·

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

...................
OIIIIIMI.......,,..._CGIII!ie ........ :..........
'i'hdlh ..... ~c.n.,

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

2S,IM

.

:M;171

••••••••••••••••••• . :M,al
••••••••••••••• :M)IS
:M,6G

..........

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

Clty==~~Yelfcly~
.

Faculty, NTPs
get raise July 1
All faculty and non-teaching
professional staff members represented
by the United University Professions
bargaining unit will receive a 6 per cent
across-the-board salary increase effective either July 1 (for those on 12·month
appointment) or September 1 (10month).
The increase, ihe Personnel Depart·
ment indicates, will be computed on
salary as of June 30, 1975.
For those on a 12-month basis, the
raise will be noticeable In the check for
the pay period June 26-July 9 (to be distributed July 11). In that check, however,
only the period, July 1-9, will be covered.
The full increase will be reflected in the
Check to be distributed July 25.
.
Those selected for merit raises will
begin recehting this differential in midAugust, retroactive to july 1.
t:Jpon receipt of all · appropn.te approval from Albany, a listing of the
recipients of discretionary awards
(without the amount of the
received) will be published in the It~.
The Personnel Office Is also preparing a
statistical analysis of the alloatiOn of
these funds (which amount to 1 per cent
of the University's total June 30, 1975,
payroll).
•

-•rd

City u.haiiiJ ol New , ..... Hunter ~ ••••• : • •••••
City UloiNnltr ol New , ..... Qooeeao ~ •••••••••••
All hftle ......._ ol ,.........,. ••••••••••••••••••••.•••
City..........., ol New,............ ~ ....••·.. .
ol New,..... ........,..~ ........ ..

~.:':='.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::

At all ranks, exclud ing lecturers,
average compensation for men was $19,·
210, and fo r women, $15,850, a difference
of $3-,360 or 17.5 per cent. The difference
was least (3.7 per ce nt) at the rank of
assistant professor where average compensation for men was $15,580 and that
for women, $15,000. It was greatest at the
rank of full professor where women
average 8.4 per ce nt less th an men.
Women receive 3.8 per cent less as
associate professors and 4.7 per cent less
as inst rudors.
c~uYtiYe Factors Being Studied
The report said it was not possible to
te ll from the data how much of the compensation diffe re ntial is accounted for by
age, experience and se rvice, and other
fa d ors, but that two other AAUP committees "are now embarking on a study
of these causative fado rs. ''
According to the survey, women were
best represe nted - about 36 per cent on the faculties of two-yea r institutions,
and " wo rst represented " at major
dodorate-gra nting unive rsities which
re ported only 17 pe r ce nt of their
faculties are women. Among four~ye ar
insti t utions , women have a larger
re prese ntation in the institut ions where
compensation tends to be lowest.
Tenure was found to be virtually uni·
versa! for full professors with the exception of those &lt;&gt;n faculties of churchrelated two-year colleges. •:The great
bulk of associate professors in all
categories of institutions also have
tenure," the · report Qid, " but only a
minority of the lower ranks do. There are
no significant differences in this respect
between the positions of men ansi
women, nor does the prevalence pf
tenure vary much among the categories
of four-year institutions.''
Information on student-faculty ratios
was provided by 1,005 institutions. The
ratios continue to be lowest in independent private colleges and universities
and htghest in public institutions, and
ranged from 11 .9at major private universities to 24.1 in a category that included
mostly public two-year colleges. " Except
in the church-related ~ institutions there
has been a general tendency for the
ratios to rise since last year, presum~bly
in response to the heavy pressure to
economize," the report said.

:M,$71

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

Staub named
Dr. Henry P. $Caub, ....,mte professor
ol pediatrics and director of pediatrla at
Meyer Memorial Hospital, his been
named co-cllrector ol the Pediatric
Nune AIIOCiMe f'rotlnm which has
trained-~- .-elates durIng. past three,_._
He . . . . . Dr.. James Mnello...who

•

.......... f!CIIIIIon·.Jn VlrJiniL

.......

Berner to leave

~~~!~i~r~~~e~ni~!!

admin istration for more than 20 years will
be relinquishing his post next year.
Dr. Robert F. Berner has accepted a
senior Fulbright lectureship for 1975-76
and has announced plags to resign in
September, 1976, as dean of the Division
of Continuing Education, a position he
has held since the 1950's.
Although he will be leaving his administrative post, Dean Berner said he
plans to resume teaching on a full-time
basis in the U/B School of Management
upon his return from the University of
Nairobi, Kenya. He will spend the upcoming academic year teaching statistics
and serving as a consultant to the African
university's Institute for Adult Studies
under his Fulbright-Hays lectureship.
U/ B President Robert l. Kener expressed regret at Dean Berner's decision
to step down from his idministrative
duties. In a letter acknowledging the
University's indebtedness to Berner for
his contributions over three decades,
Ketter said the vigor, size, ~I'Ml success
of the Division of Continuing Education
testifies to the quality of leadership you
have provided these past many years."
Ketter also announced !he appointment of Dr. Donald R. Brutvan as acting
dean of Continuing Education. Brutvan
was named assistant dean of the Division
in 1965 and has served as associate dean
since 1970.
Dean Berner, 57, joined the U/B faculty in 1945 illS an instructor of statistics. He
received a B.S. from the University of
Buffalo in 1939 and holds advanced
degrees from both UIB and the University of Chicago.
He was appointed dean of the Division
of Continuing Education, then Millard
Fillmore College, in 1955 after serving for
three years as acting head of the College.
Dr. Brutvan, SO, earned degrees at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and
came to UIB in 1961 as an associate
professor of chemical engineering. He
served as acting dean during the 1968-69
academic year, when Dean Berner was
on sabbatical.
.
Ketter ·sald a search committee would
be appointed to seek • permanent
successor for Dean Berner.
11

PSS planning
two meetings
The Professional St&lt;lff Senate will hold
both a regular Senate meeting and a
general membership sessioil this week.
The Senate will meet tomorrow (Friday, June 20) at 2 p .m. In 148 Diefendorf
to consider this agenda: 1) Approval of
Minutes: March 21, 1975; 21 Proleosional
Staff Senate Committee Reports; 3l AdHoc Committee for .Review ol Penu·
nent Appointment - sussested
guidelines; 4) ChainNn's Report; 5)
Qther Business.
AI professional sufl ue Invited to ~­
tend the Sen•te's •nnu•l General
Membership MeecJns, l'huncUy, . June
26, In 148 DiefendOrf. The seneral

membenhlp . . . . lndudes lntroducreport by £x.

!ion of new ~ oftlc:ers, •

e!:lllfft VIce l'nlllclent Allen Somlt, •
proposed CanslllutlciMI _..tment
intf. NpOit by out-;olna o..lrpenon

ltobertw....,.

·

�JUNE 19, 1975/SUMMER REPORTEithAGE 3

..

~ -~·

judy Emmings _
wins 2nd major
. design prize
Ms. Judy Emmings, a U/8 student
completing a B.A. in theatre design, has
won first prize in the costume design
competition (undergraduate division}

sponsored by the United States affiliate
of the International Organization of

Scenographers and Theatre Technicians.
Ms. Emmings was honored for a portfolio of designs for a productiqn of
tederico Lorca's chamber play, "The
Love of Don Perlimplin and Belisa in the
Garden."
Her designs were singled out from
among some 300 entries by a panel of
judges including desiRner H.K. Poindexter who won a Tony award for his work

on

11

Story Theatre; " Sally Jacobs,

costume designer for Peter Brooks'

production of "Midsummer Night's
Dream," among others; and lighting
designer Donald Harris, who was scenic
designer for the futuristic porno film,
" Flesh Gordon."
The judging took place .at the annual
meeting of the United States Institute of
Theatre Technology (USITT) held
recently in Anaheim.
Last spring Ms. Emmings won first
prize for costume design in th~ 13th Anv
nual ..Scenic and Costume Desig
Competition sponsored by Souther
Illinois University. That and the USITI
contest are the two major undergraduate design competitions in the
country.
Exercise in Quilting
In " Don Perlimplin ...," lorca blended t(aditional and surreal elements, a
strategy reflected in Ms. Emmings'
designs. Her costumes are " an exercise
in quilting," she explains, a traditional
mode that she uses in unexpected wa ys
to produce effects that distort or transcend the traditional. Each costume incorporales some break with the•period,
some#di.sturbirlg -anachrtmism ··of fabric
o~nceet :-

. J

••

. ... • •

•

•

, .. ...

For example, whe·n the cuckolded

UUAB seeks
-student leaders
for next year

The University Union Activities Board
(UUAB), 1he largest di vision of the
students: non-profit corporation. SubBoard I, will soon be accepting
applications for positions of leaqersh ip in
its organization.
UUAB, a student-run cultural and
entertainment programming board for
the entire student body, is funded with
money provided by mandatory student
activities fees.
There are eight UUAB standing committees, for music concert s, film
screenings, coffeehouses, dance and
dramatic arts presentations, readings in
the literary arts, a gallery and presentations in the visual arts, video productions and programming, and a technical
services group providing public address
audio equipment and stage lighting.
Each c;ommittee has a chairperson or coordinator responsible for its activity.
So111e committees also may have assistant
coordin•tors, or special projects leaders.
Admlni&gt;trative leadership of UUAB
and communication with the Board of
Directors of Sub-Board I is provided for
with the appointment of a division director for the office. Assisting the division
director and providing financial advisement i&gt;the bookkeeper. Each commiltee
also employs a small number of people.
' Applications for all positions of
leadership will be available following
several scheduled UUAB orientation
sessions. Students who wish to •pply for
these positions must •llend one of the
following scheduled orlenullon
workshops and r•p sessions: Tuesday,
June 24 - 9:30 a.m.-11 :30 •.m.; Thursday, June 26 - 7:»9:30 p.m.; or
Monday, June 30- 7:30-9:30 p.m. All
orien..tion sessions willt•ke piKe in 330

Norton.

for further inform•tion, cont•ct:
David llendert, division director, UUAB
- m-.s112.

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

Colturne daian for letiu's mothtor.

Don Perlimplin commits suicide, lorca
calls for him to wear a 11 magnificent
cape." Ms. Emmings conceived of an
engulfing "death cape" of quilted fabric
in browns, vivid reds, and purples. The
cape is both resplendent and suggestive
of some great flayed body with its internat organs exposed . AccordinR to Lorca's directions_i Belisa first appears
nude. The designer chose to drape her
in the death cape, a " solution" trf
Belisa's costume needs that foreshadows
her role in Don Perlimplin's inevitable
downfalL
Lorca's cast also includes two sprites.
Ms. Emmings decided to treat these
less as baroque cupids than as aging
decadents, their tiny bodies painted
dead white and their hair unnatural ly
silvered.
Although elaborate renderings jibe
with o ur usual not ions of costume
design, Ms. Emmings is increasingly interes ted in "found costumes" and o ther
alte rna tives to pure ly constructed
costumes.
It would probably .cost $1 2,000 10
turn he r p~i ze - win n ing renderings into
aa ual costumes, she estimates. " This
ki nd of thea tre is gone. I'd be ashamed
IO do this show whi le old people are

eating dog food."
In more recent work, she has found a
non-literal style that embodies a design
idea or "feeling" instead of providing a
line-by-line example to be translated in
the workshop. For example, in a series
of collage-like renderings for " The
lady's Not .for Burning," she used
flowers and other designs cut from
magazines to trim · several costume
sketches. Instead of literally reproducing
these drawings with specially designed
fabri c, the same mood or effect could
be achieved, she eqltains, by trimming
used costumes with pieces of tapestry
bought at junk stores or the Goodwill.
He r design fo r the beggar Mauhew
Skips includes a tunic-like garment she
~h io n e d fro m crumpled brown pape r
dyed wi th a was h of colored ink.
Imagination, Not Budget
" You co ul d give this design to an actor and ask him to fi nd a costume for
himself that conveyed the desired
effect," she says. Anot her of the desig ns
' for " Bu rni ng" is a gown for Margaret,
the sleeves of which are decora ted with
Ch ristmas stamps showing the Mado nna
and Child. A thea tre co mpany usi ng
such sketches· is prodded to re ly o n the

...,.~~­

richness of its visual imagination rather
than on that vanishing commodity, a big
costume budget.
Ms. Emmings, who began her undergraduate career as a theatre major at
the University of Minnesota, participated in various art, media and
theatre activities in Buffalo before entering the theatre design program at U/B.
For a time in 1966, she had the distinction of being Buffalo's. first and only
woman TV annount:er. She also held a
scholarship to the Studio Arena School
and worked in a psychodrama program
at the VA HospitaL
Anticipating graduate work in theatre
design, she credits U/ B theatre faculty
Esther Kling (costume design), Ralph
Fetterly (scenic design) and Vanessa
James (scenic design) with providing a
creative, open-ended environment iri
which to learn and work. Recall ing such
di verse projects as planning a production of " Coriolanus" for marionettes
and designi ng inflatable stage objects
fo r a production that included no
human actors, she lauds.the department
for championing the belief that " fresh
ideas are more important than an exhausti ve study of the histo ry of costume
or design." ·
·
·
· ·

Blau named associate dean at Milwaukee
Dr. Ric ha rd Bla u, U/ B assistan t
professor of Ameri ca n Stud ies, has been
named associate dean of the School of
Fi ne Arts at the Unive rsit y of Wisconsi n,
Milwaukee.
,
Blau , w ho wa s a Harvard un dergraduate and earned a Ph.D. in
American Studies at Yale, will be responsible for developing and administering
an inte·r-arts program at Milwaukee. The
School of Fine Arts enrolls some 2,400
students and is the central fine arts
program in Wisconsin's st~te university
system. Blau will also serve as acting
head of the University's Film Department.
At Buffalo, Blau is perhaps best known
as a photographer. Although he learned
photography only a few years ago (as a
student of Milton Rogovin}, he has exhibited extensively. Within the U/ B
American Studies Program, he taught a
variety of courses relating literature,
theatre, biography, and social history.
He has also been working with
colleagues Charlie and Angie Kei) on a
study of the music and culture of Buffal.o 's Polish-American community.
Overc:omlns Tr~nal Sepnenlillion
As Blau explains, the proposed interarts program will attempt to overcome
the tr.Jditionill segmentation of the fine
arts into unrelilted specialties. The
program, which will enco1J1pass theatre,
music, dance, photograpny, film, sculpture and painting, will also challenge
tradition.JI assumptions about the
neutrality or objeC)iY.ity pf •rt. an~
acknowledge the roll! ·t~t culture plays
in the crea.tion and appreciation of art.
Bl•u, who . believes his own
photosr•phy k probably bener for his
not lwlvins gone to art Khool, b openly
distrustful of "certain kinds of lnstitu116nallosic" ....1 hopeo 10 develop •
prosr..., llwll d'-les 11w1rp1y from most
tr.dllionlll f i - - tnlnlns. il i ~ .il&amp;ll l1l•~ s: r~n : ! .,

Milwaukee (much like Buffalo} attracts
a la;ge number of wo rking-class students,
man y of whom commute to school from
elh ni c neighborhoods. In the past, Blau
ex plains, such stud ents entered higher
edu catio n and " had high-culture laid on
the m in a way that denied their previous
ex perience." As d irector of the new
program, he will be concerned with how
to put students in touch with their 1own
cultural experiences. This does not necessarily mean act ing Shakespeare
with a Polish accent, he assures, but
rather ask ing such questions as " What do
I have to know about my cultur!! to
render my circumstances in a meaningful
way!"
Milwaukee is experiencing growing
enrollments in the fine arts. Asked 'to
speculate why, Blau guessed that
students realize they probably won't be
able to get jobs when they graduate so
they are entering fields in which they can
express themselves. The student pool at
Milwaukee is changing dramatically. In
addition to highly gihed applicants in the
traditional sense, the School is seeing a
" growing pool of people who may or
may not be 'profoundly or specifically
talented" in the fine arts, Blau explains.
As a result, the School is being called
upon to reassess the nature of art:training for both professional and nonprofessional artists.
Questionlns Aooumpdons
Blau believes students can do bener
work as • result of questioning the
cultural assumptions that underlie the
creative experience. "One of the
problems In the •rts," he Yys, "b tlwlt
they .JNke soi'III!Wiwlt the Yme U...mption as the socbiJ ICience5 -that they are
v•lue-free. As • result, the artkt often
concentrates on formal problems ....t
loses coniKI with hk or her audience."
lll.u would .._, fl...,...studenls ....,_
pie with the social, C.:.lbnl and other

" large issues" of creative work early in
their careers. "For example, we assume
that there must be some enormous personal CQ:St to the artist in self-expression.
Whyl I would hope students would
question such an assumplion," explains
Blau.
The newly appointed administrator
hopes to design a program that will build
on the experiences brought to it by each
student. Developing a beuer understanding of history will no doubt be part of
such a program, he says, since whenever
one studies culture "you end up dealing
with history in some way."
One expectation-is-that many of the
students who go through the program
will eventually return to their communities "instead of being unemployed
in a cosmopolitan center." Blau, who was
raised in New York and whose parents
are in the arts, rejects the notion that
New York is the only American city in
which an artist can work. 11 Personally, 1
resent its hegemony," says Blau, who
suspects th•t sm.ller places •re better
suited for doing one's - n work.
Blau leaves U/11 reluctantly, pr•ising
his colleasues in American Studies as he
soes. "Six yurs In American Studies
prepared me superbly for thb opportunity," says llf.t~, who thinks the
program here b the best In the country,
with the "most sophi&gt;ticated •nd comprehensive aspirations." He fears,
h-ever, th•t IKk of institutional support, includins long-time delays In naming a chairperson •nd approvaa Ph.D.
progr•m, i&gt; "drlvins sood oec
-ay. I
couldn't !wive sot thb job I lwldn't done
what I did here," continues lll.u, who
furs that too often the c:ommllmern to
Interdisciplinary studies and community
lefYice k a ~ or narr..ty Interpreted one ....1 that effOrts In"- areas by .prosrarnl lib American Studies IJO
unrewaldecl
•

�Prof argues
dress point
Editor:
I would like to comment briefly on
President Ketter's humorous remarks on

"the sanorial splendor of the faculty"
and its wide variations. "The medium is
the mesSage" and every possible dress
style tries to say something about the
person adop(ing it and his own value
scale. Some people feel that wearing expensive clothes is a form of insult to the

poor around them. Many others just can·
not afford stylish apparel. During the last
twenty years the recruitment of Universi· .

.

,

Open till ten

-of_....-

and ....... to ... ncdent ......... . , . _ , - Anlhent
~ ....... &lt;owtl . . b e - . - 11 p.m. nlaftdy durins the ............. Cd 131:mli between 1 and 7 p.m., Monclay-Fridoy, IO&lt; ~- llosenotlons con be mode
only ... houn In ...........

ty and college faculties has changed a
great deal. Although some faculty
members still have outside income, I
believe that the majority of them now
have to live on their salaries. Moreover it
has to be recognized that there are considerable variations of salary level even at
the same rank'between, to take up Presi·
dent Ketter's simile, the bark and the
core. Perhaps some kind of salary
equalization policy mtght help the faculty to project a more unified image in

every respec1.

-ftem! Aubery
Professor of French

• Erie-Niagara survey begins this fall
The lllend Is Unique
· The idea for an omnibus area survey is
not unique. Similar regular sampling
· prl&gt;grams geored toward generating an
area data base are conduC1ed by universities and not-for-profit agencies in such
cities as Washington, D.C., Los Angeles,
and Cleveland. Nor is the contemplated
Then, too, many surve·ys· cover ·much
use of a survey program as a means of
the Yme ground, Dr. Hunt points out.
providing methods training for gradua
"At minimum they are all apt to ask
students
without precedent. The Univerquestions about a respondent's age, sex,
sity of Michigan's "Detroit Area Study"
etc."
has served for years as a social science
research lab for that institution, Or. Hunt
i:ea Wasteful of-Good Wll says. But the Michigan program is
The omnibus survey is " far more efdesigned
for academic research and
fident and fu less wasteful of communitraining purposes and does not yield an y
ty good will than ~nduC1ing repeated
sort
of
data
base ihfbrmation about the
independent surveys," he says.
Detroit community. ENAS will be uniA well-designed EIIIAS instrument, adque, Dr. Hunt says, because it blends
ministered on a regular schedule to
these concepts of omnibus surveying,
representative samples of persons in the
area data base development, and educa·
community, an provide each of several
tion.
contracting agencies with data on their
Students will not be involved in aC1ual
own spedfte interests and at the Sfme
field work for the initial ENAS sampling,
time elicit all necessary general
scheduled for mid-September through
background data for each.
mid-November, but they are expec1ed to
be aC1ive panidpants in the spring. If
Olents panidpating in ENAS will also
plans materialize, those enrolling for SSA
receive data from questions introduced
601 (a survey methods theory class) will
by the Survey Research Center itself.
be able to arrange for a second semester
These, Or. Hunt Indicates, will include
praC1icum involving ENAS field work.
stan&lt;brd "community profile" indicators
The
faculty of Social Sciences, in
especially useful for planning and
· cooperation with the Survey Research
evaluating public policies and programs
Center, offered this one-semester
and for exploring social problems.
methods theory class for the first time
A resularly updated data file on
during 1974-75. Next year's ENAS pracsOciological, demographic and other
ticum
is seen as a possible bridge
ci)aracterlstla of the Niagara frontier,
between this offering and the introducsuch a will be provided by ENAS, is
lion of"atwo semester rnethods course in
presently unavailable. The only source of
academic 1976-77. Dr. Hunt views this
this type of Information now in existence
courseworlt a a major step In developIs U.S. Census da~ pthered· only once
each decade. "This should be of major · ins the Survey Research Center B an inImportance to the community,'' Or. Hunt
strument for advandnf quantitative
contends:
sophlsllcatlon In the soda sciences here.
The primary reason for choosing a
combined
area survey-instructional approach, Dr. Hunt Indicates, is
"economic." A strons case could be
made for establlshlns either of the
.
of he
aspeC1S , I
prosram_on Its own: But
~
1
A_
= I = ; : , : ."';:."!'.!~ocr:
Anples MelrolloiiQn Area Survey, with
no eduallonal _ . . • .., must meet
-~"'"'"--"'~
sr-~ol--•
-..o.JOS-Sr..-olo,N.Y. f4114.
direct field COliS o1 ;;;; $40 ,_.for each
---~oa~,c~ -11J.151J
adminlstrallon. '"We an't ~ ob-·
Wmspew Awnut tJihone 2117).
talnlnt IUIIIMWt In these -ms. at leaS1
.-~or -Hunt _...... out. "But ._
A WlS7Ul" IIOWIANO
not

&lt;"- ... 1, coL.,

Sample survey techniques are an ob:viou~ '"'tinS of generating such information. But the "inaedib(y escalating"
costs of mounting well-&lt;lesigned surveys
may often be prohibitive for prospeclive
investigators.

'

-

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_..,._f1'llll&amp;lte&lt;l

...........

_...._..
fdll~

--

aolf!IT T. .....LETT

Ali-~

JOHN A

aourru

rAJWIOAWAmMDfbMN

_,.c.!Oodorfdllc.~QUIIoiH

~­
SIISANM
.. -

$12,000 over two fiscal years, made possiseveral options concerning client use of
ble development of the heart of the
the program. A prospec1ive user has a
ENAS program, the Niagara Frontier
choice, for example, of obtaining results
Master Sample. " Without this," Dr. Hunt
limited to either the City of Buffalo or
says, "the projecl would not have been
Erie County in addition to the option of
feasible." With it, costs and times for
two-county sampling information. And,
preparing individual survey samples are
a client may elect to receive only the data
reduced and the accuracy of findings,
base file-an invaluable planning tool in
-enhanced.
·
itself-at modest cost.
The master sample consists of apThe Uriiversity community has been
proximately 7,500 dwelling units in
more recep.tive. Four l,)/B-affiliated units
150blocks,selec1edfromalldwellin"gun,- ., thJ!·. ~iy. i&amp;i9.n. " g.( .!;.o. n~in,~,Jir;J.g
its in the two county Erie-NLJgara area.
Education's ProJect ~ lmJHict, .in~ int""Blocks ,of dwelling units were fi"t
disciplinary Center for the Stuoy· of Agcategorized into similar groups and
ing, the Man'power Training Institute of
samples were selec1ed from within each
the School of Management and the
group. These groupings or strata were \ Alcoholism Research Institute- plan to
based on location, race, income, size and ~ collect data through use of the Fall ENAS
likelihood of grow1h before 1980.
/ , instrument. The Survey Research Center
After the sample blocks were selec1ed,
will also be studying questions of uneach dwelling unit in each block was
employment, underemployment and job
enumerated, enabling researchers to
satisfadion in addition to gathering basic
selec1 quickly a subsample of given size.
demographic statistics.
.
Each Erie-Niagara Survey sample will
Inquiries and Sugesllono lnrited
be put together in three stages: the samDr. tiunt says -the apparent apathy of
pie of blocks, taken care of in selection
non-University agencies towards ENAS
of the master sample; a subsample of
could indicate that "we may have been
dwelling units from each of the 150
going about it wrong.H But even in that
blocks of the master sample, proporcase, he thinks some public or corporate
tioned to the total number of dwelling
officiak would have called to complain
units in each block; and the selection of
or make suggestions. He invites ina single respondent within each subsamquiries, comments and suggestions from
pie dwelling unit.
all P-Otent~l users.
The master sample will be periodically
Despite its commitment to broad comupdated, deleting housing units no
munity service, ENAS has set up some
longer in existence and adding new
restriC1ions on the type of Information it
ones. Each ENAS sample will consist of
will attempt to elicit for prospective
one adult from each of more than 1,000
clients. For instance, the surwy is not a
of these dwelling units with no individual
poll and will not enPSe In popularity
unit to be reused un'il five surveys have
testing for a given prospect for elected
been completed.
offi~e. The ~urvey Research Center
,.eoullo Puzzlns'
would be willlns. howew!r, to enteruin
To introduce the ENAS program to the
a prospective candidate's request for
potent~l '-user community, the Survey
in-depth information on the social and
Research Center for the past several
political ·climate of the area, conth ha bee cond ·
·
f
sideratlons with broad, scholarly
mon s s
n
uC1ons a senes o
lnforf!~Atlonal malllnp. Each prospect
relevance. By the .ume token, a
has been sent a pr1 list for
•
marketing research job for a aedit card
ce
va~s
· ·
ld
be
ed bu
types::::·ocatlons
of SUI'\'!!Y q~lons and quality
organozatoon wou not
~ • t
. .An outlone of the types of
a study on how people manase their
ta to be provided each dient (general
money could conceivably be underuken
background lnform~~lon on the
for the sa,., dient. In all cases, clients progta~, a packet of current lnformust asree to certain conditions laid
mation on each ENAS project, 10 be
down by the Survey Research Center.
made avalla~ prlor,~o each admini«raof these requires that _all informadon, and a results pM:ket with both
!ion collected - while reserved to t1ie
pneral and cllem-tpedflc results) has - client's eoodusive use for a specified tfme
been widely dllcrlbuled. 1ut, Dr. Hunt
- must at some early point become
'
·
,....._
...,
says, "the results flaw been pu¢1,..H
public Information.
~,.~-~~
Many area asencles, p_ubllc and
---:-==:-:~a~~=-=u-::VING:=:=-::ClAII::-::=--resardlancl__...__a.llt.ants,b~
prime, have~ needs tor the
no. ........................ . - . . . .
fadlltlel
..=i"~ ~ ·...-.:ollectlon of the type of data ENAS can
......._ dloo Ia....., • ..... .,_ D
etc.~the
cleliwer;
In
hire
....... =&amp;111edlooll.,_ ..
commercial .,,._ -...sudons at
......
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.................

·

make-llnCIIher

. The ~· capital contribution,

.

many,

fact,..........,

' hlgherrallel..,;;dQeqbythe0/8

few"-"*' ................

operlllor!. Yet, ..y

eJIIIRSied

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despite the further atl!..;doetlell of

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�Hal Franklin's M.D. marks the start of a 3rd career
New physidan was cancer researcher,
'Ebony' phot~pher before achieving dream
ly Ma,ry . . . Spin.l
&amp;litloNI AI.JocW~ HNIIIt SciMoes

Dr. Hal Fnonklin, who graduated from
th~ Ulll School of Medidne in May,
believes that the "third time is the
charm."
The 50ftspoken, rangy, young physician had su&lt;nS&gt;fully pro&gt;ted himself as
both a cancer research investigator and a
nationally recognized photographer
before finally attaining his childhood
dream.
from· the time I was in the ninth
grade iri·MilledievHie Ga:; I wanted to
11

• tie"~ cW&amp;o(,"'11f~Ys:' l~C'l.,. "' 1"•&lt; '- •U: ;
Encounogement and interest from a
hometown physician who allowed him a
chance to peer through the microscope
and .do errands further entrenched his
desire.
But after graduation from Allen
University, Columbia, S.C., where he ran
track, played the trumpet and met his
wife-to-be, Fnonklin was rejected for
medical school. He opted instead for
postgraduate work at Michigan State.
"One of my professors there
SUBBested I apply for a National Science

Foundation Fellowship available at
Roswell Park Memorial Institute," he
relates.
At Roswell, where he was associated
with then-director Dr. George Moore,
Hal 50 distinguished himself in his work
that he was ~ed to stay on as a full-time
researcher when the fellowship was terminated.

An._ .. ........,..,

When daughter Tnocy was born; Hal
became interested in phol&lt;&gt;ti"'Phy as a
hobby, moving from a Polaroid to a
.single lens reflex.
Always eager to learn, he spent a great
deal of his spare time with Buffalo news
med;. and Roswell pholographers, picking up pointers. Taking the init;.tive, he
attended sports events, which he felt
would be good breeding srouftds for action shots.
Durins the 1967 summer disturbances
in the Inner dty, Hal, who was headed
into the tense area with a ameia slung
o - his shoulder, was Slopped by an
Associated Pre.. photOI"'pher. The
photographer indicated he was reluctant
to venture in since some of the
demonstraton had outlawed "white
llhotaiPaPhei .." He .sited Hal if he
Woulcfcab some pictures for AP ~ for

. . . . . -=..,_

.,.,.,ol-.ne.
Hal Nid he would. and hlo -*'l's
work neaed him aedlt lines and. check.
Uter Hal spotted • • collese

,....._NIWI_.He
.sited Hlllfhe'd be
In clolni
helara
work In the for
Unillld.,._
bMaNIIonll.
Thlo helara _
...... quid upswl"' wlten c:onvkt~ Moseley ei-

caped from a kK:al hospital, an event
which set off what was perhaps one of
the dty's biBBest and most intensive
manhunts. "On a tip, I lurned Moseley
would surrender on Gnond Island," Hal
recalls.
AI the "-sraphen Were There
Arriving on the scene, he discovered
to his chagrin that every photognopher in
the area seemed to be crowded around
the door of the building where Moseley
was closeted with officers.
Spotting a nearby cir and suspectinlrft
to ..be. the veh.id!! .which officers would
· use rotnonsj&gt;ort Moseley, he waited. The
officers strode from the building with
Moseley in handcuffs and went straight
tothear.
"Since I was there first, I had a chance
lo get a unique shot of Moseley, handcuffed, wearing a big grin and sporting
an incongruous derby," Hal remembers.
Next day, his efforts appeared on the
cover of the New York Dally News, in the
New Yorl limes, and virtually aaoss the
country via UPI wire.
The UPI bnss were surprised that"this
great shot" had been taken by a Buffalo
part-timer. They dubbed his work
"photograph of the month" and offered
him a full-time job.
~·1 didn't take it because 1 liked my
work in leukern;. research at Roswell.
I also didn't want to get a job as a
photognopher on the basis of what might
have been a ·nuke'," he smiles.
By then well ~ in pholognophic
technique, Hal began to learn about his
aaft as an art form from artists and sculptors at the ~ngston Hughes Center.
Friends and associates encou"''ed him
to go to Washington, D.C., the summer
Resurrection Coty mushroomed in the
mud. They_felt the trip would yield some
great pictures for his growing collection.
'a-,' Ofleftol • .... •
So impressive were his shots, the
sugestion was made that he·sencl them
to l6ony magazine !or consideration.
After several weeks of hearing
nothing. he called l6ony to retrieve his
"obviously ~.. pictures. "Instead,
they told me tMy'd like me to come to
Chiaso for an interview as a staff
pholostapl""."
Encourased by his wife and by Or.
Moooe at Roswell Park, he to
He returned to ...,., with •
job offer.
"Dr. Moore, ·who is· a sood
pt-.,ap~oe&lt; himself, thouaht II was a
wonderful opportunity,~ Haf says. "And
it would poe me a c:Nnce to !ravel and
see places and .-le thM I would not .
otherwise ...... had:N
Once with . . . , , he traveled with
Rev. Ralph Abernalhr to such places"..
Soulh "'-iaa and s.eden. Manr ol hlo

in areas he'd worked in as a student in
voter registrition drives. And on safari to
the Ivory Coast, Ghaha and Kenya, he
photographed the unnecessary killing of
wild an imals for fur and game.
But his 11 most exdting'' trip was to
Cuba with a Philadelphia mother seeking
the return of her child taken there by her
airplane-hijacker husband. Mrs. JoAnn
Washington had received State Department approval to go talk with Cuban
authorities to try to get the child back.
Pictorial coverage of the drama of the
woman's plight and her elation at success
in · recovering the child appeared in
Ebony.
UIB Was Looking for Qualified lllacks
Although Hal was happy with his job, it
· meant less time at home with his family
- which he didn't like.
During the 1970Thanksgiving holidays,
he and his family visited their old friends,
Judge and Mrs. Samuel Green. The
Greens, who knew of Hal's dream of going to medial school, said they understood the U/B School of Medicine
was looking for qualified black
applicants. They suBBested he apply.
Even aher the interviews and letters of

recommendation from both Dr. Moore
at Roswell and Dr. Nathaniel Webster,
Hal still was uncertain he would be admined.
But while covering the Afro-American
Track Meet in Durham, N.C., for Ebony,
he got an excited call from the Greens:
"You've been accepted."
When Hal had to tell Ebony he'd be
leaving. he found them most undemanding. _charles Sanders, managing editor,
encouraged him to continue his education. "Although I knew -·d be losing a
good and conscientious employee, I also
knew it was a chance for Hal to achieve
his rul goal. We couldn't stand in his
way," Sanders sayo. Only a medical
problem kept Hal's former boss from
coming to l"'duation May 11.

FACUI.1Y

-

............. ol ,.,...,. and
ulleo)

Pfa!essor, Miaoblology,

F-5049.
Professor (two positions), Anesthesiology, F-5050.
Associate

Instructor-Associate Professor (two positions). DentlJtry, F-5051.
Professor (two positions), C~euia. F-5052.
Assistant-Associate Librarian, Univwslty Libraries, F-5053.
Professor and Chairman; l't!dYtria, School of Medldne. F-5054.
NIP
Technical SpecWist, Music, 8-5021.
M.....,, Norton Union (FSA), 8-51122.

a.-.

-elderlr blab In Millllllppi -

Med school required Hal's undivided
anention (which meant not working as a
photog1apher), 50 his wife, Margaret,
who had taught previously in Buffalo,
took a job as an elementary teacher at
BUILD Academy. A fellOwship from the
National Medial Association, a Health
Professions Scholarship and a New York
Scholar Incentive Award also helped
ease the financial burden.
At gnoduation, Hal received not .only
his degree but also the highly prized Dr.
David K. Miller award for the student
who best exemplifies "humanity, humili·
ty, and competence."
People are People, Apples are Apples
Hal does not dwell on the fact he was
the first black to be honored with the
Miller Prize: " I think true equality
happens wh~n a. JM!~n gets. a job, an
honor or an ·-.watif··becaose· h~ "Of" she
deserves it and is qualified to receive it.
True equality occurs when people
receive such things on their merits as
people - not t.ec- they're black."
July 1, he will begin an internal medidne residency at New Hanover
Memorial Hospital, Wilmington, N.C., ·
one of the· University of North Carolina's
teaching hospitals. He aedits Buffalo internist and cardioloslst Or. Lionel
Sifontes, his ~or during the senior
year, with his interest in this specialization.
.
·
Coinciding. with his new al'eet in
medicine Is the publication of a
children's book on the Insignificance of
color, WfMr Color AN You1 Written by
Chicagoan Ms. Darwin Walton and
photographed by Hal, the book illustrates that apples, for example, an be
many colors. "But it doesn't make llny
difference, because, inside, apples are
pretty much alike."
Asked if he has more careers planned, ·
Hal laup that he does notl
But those who know him aren'\ taking
any bets.

laAIIOI iroueAliON

Tissue Culrure

.

TecllnlcMn. Center for Tt.oreticallliolosY, R-5011.

.,. fOUIGAliON.
AssisiMit Dhctor, Cenler for Study ol A1in1. PR-2. 8-5023.

·

For addlllonal lnforiNiion

c:ontler1llftl these

thtoutlhout the State Uhlvenlty
,....., ~ 1oc.dons.

openlnp

jabs and for details. of

syllem. consult bulletin boards at

.

... ......., ....... it-~ a,.......,/AMnulhe Adlaa _,..,_

�PAGE 6/JUNE 19, 1975/SUMMIII W0WW

Women's sports fac:r'a...- •
Fritz hopes women will dew!lop

______ _,_

fDITOII'S NOR: INs Is 1M _ _ _, _ _

,
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ddes
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.tfectUI&amp;

At UIB, sports for women haw: .....,a
long way in recent years, Dr. Harry frilr.
dean of the School of Hukh Etlo..and director of athletics, says.
And, depending on the . _ _ uf
women on campus, these J1R11D1115
could move ahead even more .....,. ill

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years to come. For the new HEW

guidelines mandate that i~
"must assure that sports offered ~Mec­
tlvely accommodate the inllerel aad
abilities of members of both ---.Money will be a major problem i l l upgrading. of course, just as it is i l l _ ,
"""' corner of the University these clap- possibly a bit more so, since the sports
program here is dependent on ~
datory student fees. This 5()lJICe of funding could all but evaporate h..,.._
dum for voluntary fees were ~ 10 br
approved, and State University has a
current policy of not supponins sports
operations. The State does pay coadoe'
salaries, however.
For academic 1975-76, studern ~
provided · an operations budget of approximately $220, 000 for Ufllts.
intramural-recreational, clubr and intercollegiate sports programs. Of this, Fritz
indicates, some $60,000 goes to in.tramu ral and recreational actiYities
(\.vhere, in his view, equal opportuniry is
a f~it accompli); another $10,000 p&gt;&lt;5 to
10 clubs lmost of wh ich, incluclinp; BY"'""
nastics, karate, judo, skiing.. and ridi:ng..

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have both men and women mernber5);

the remainder goes to intercol~
athletics.
Women's Budgels less Jh.a Mea's
An $8,900 general budget has been
provided for the Wofnen'S interCoOegiate
pro'gram. Seven individual sports tor
women are fundea ·apprOiiniatelj ·as~
follows: basketball, $3:158; bowling. Sl~199; hockey, $1,819; swimming. $2.S27;
iennis, . $1 ,290; volleyball, $3,920; golf.
- $1,700.

G5

WE

.

Men's intercollegiate athletics h.ave ~
general budget of $12,550 and a promo:tion and publicity allocation of $2.4SO(to
be shared with the women's ~)'­
Individual men's sports are fundeJ irt
these amounts: baseball, $1,050 (bl) and
$16,824 (spring); basketball, S211..J4!'1';:
cross-country, $1,929; fencing. S5..M5
(including salaries for coachins . provided by the State); golf, St;tO;
hockey, $26,378 !including funds b
facilities rental); s6ccer, $8,574; - .
ming, $3,124; tennis, $1,959; trod ~
doors and outdoors), S5,773; and~
ing, $13,259.
Obviously, the women's ~
which is fairly new, is nowhere-~
ty with the men's. But HEW
quire monetary parity, just ,_.,.....,
suppon for the kind of pr&lt;&gt;pM~want to have and are able to
a need for.
.
Take baske~ll. for insl3ner.. 1hr
men's pr&lt;lllfOm has decided that if it i51D
survive it must play a 26-pme . _ - .
or big-time, schedule, indudiooB _.
nillur•l rivals as basketbal ,...as
Canisius and Niapra. AI . , . - . women's program has opeed Ia&lt;
game season on a differerit lewel. 0. •
basketball coun, as In ,_. _ . , . ; . . .
tl'rcolleglale activities, the 11*2 i5 . _
leisurely." But what H the to seek the
wmpedlioe lewl men! "There'd be no choic:2,.• FriU ;...
dlcates. A wmplainl to HEW CDIIIol iaoocR
an invesliptlon and if the ...... ;...

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AKIJIIDIJa . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

Pr~~ted by the Intensive English U"nsUil&amp;e
IMiitute ~nd vilrious internatioNiand "udent dubs.
THE RJJUH: PBSPKTIVIS FI.OM f..:
IIIOlOGICAl. PHYSICAl. AND SOCIAl SCIENCBf
TPte Theory of Relativity - SpKe. Time. Mauer

_ _ ._.......... --.&lt;XInf&gt;CIBill

.and the Humiln Society, Mendel Sachs, U/8
profeuor of phys.ia. Rm. n, 4234 Ridse Lea. 3 p.m.
Sponsored by the Blophysia Gradu1te Stl.tdcnt

Ormlll..._ Nafton Conference 'lhNtre, all Bl151V._-..-........_

FAcut.n UOTAL•

MONDAY-23
...CIII:IWP
~Gil tfle ~ Century fortepilno,
. . . . - .......... lterilll Hal. 10:30 un. No ¥1....,_.., . . _
.. Music.

--...

As.soc:Ytion .
" The Nineteenth Century Oboist.'' Ron;ald
RicJW'ds. B.aird Recitiil H01ll, 8 p.m. Admiuion: $..SO
students; Sl fKUity, stiff 1nd alumni; $1.50 ochers.
Preserued by the Depanmeru of Music.
WAll COffiBfOU5f• •
A Songwriting Lesend : AblvirY Reynolds. FounUiin Square (rain : Fillmore Room, Non on), 8:l0 p.m.
No ~mission cNrse.
·
Present~ by UUAB nd Student Auociation.

_.., __
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--------. --. ........ No --lOCAl
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-

WEDNESDAY-25

. . . . . . . . - - J1S f . "WilleanQuebec
Quod.

_ _ . . . , .........
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PP--Y-21

---..

.UT ElHIIITION AND SAU•
Original Cr~ph ic Art from Ferdinand Roten
GaUertes. Fountain Square (rain: Hus lounse, Norton), 10 a.m.-3 p.m. No admiuion charp.
Present~ by dwe Univetsit:y Booblore.
CL\fT DfMONSTaATION"
Ceramics: Handbuildin&amp; Oemon.stration, Chris
D.ayman. Fount.ain Square (r•in: Norton Center
lounge), noon-2 p.m. No admfuion charse.
Present~ by Student Activit~ and the Creative
Craft Center.

-

.......

Halrla.te . . . r•~~ta~:et TmfwTwo..A

Vts«rO

- - - - . . . - - . - . . nw.._-

-~

The Creal Blondino, Animals Running. George
Dumpson's Place. 1970, E.arly AbstractJ. 146 Diefendorf, 7 p .m. No idmiuion cN.rse.

a..ic . . _ Oil On-. ......... jn America:
founWn Square (bin:

, . _ De.

n ,.__

~-----No­
-...
...

•A ucrr.u•
• Oi.ane BaNnovich, pilino. ~ird Recital Hall, e p.m.

N o - c h o ....

IICT'-- AND filM~· Summer lmdtute ol 1975. Norton Conference
Thutrt, • p.m.
- b y Media Scudles.

OM:IIUY - - - ·

.... - S J I I --SI - , . . mlf and

~
---~­

UCHn COfflltiOUSE"•
-Hill .... ~- Fou.,.ln ~. l'lO
p.m. (In cae_
of indement
W'Hihtr,
the event wHI be
heldlnlho
_
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~llrWAII.

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EXHIBITS
GAI.IBYm~

Topolslci/Mann: Recent Works: prints, photos and
mixed media by AtwJYTopokiU and acrylic jMintinp
by David Mann. Gallery 219 Norton. Mon.-Fri. 11
a.m.-4 p .m.; Mon., Wed. ind Thu"'-, 7· 10 p.m.; and
Sun., 1·S p .m. Throush June 71.
LOCI&lt;WOOO .....noN
Polish CoHecrion, exhibfdon culled from the
UniYf:f'Sity's col~ of more than ",c:o:l volumes of
material. F'nt Roor, l.oc:kwood Memorial Library.
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.·S p.m. Contlnuifta.
MANUSQIPT AND RUT Ellf110N The most complete coliecllon ol Robert Grnes
manuscripts In the workf is cu~ on display in
the Lockwood Memorial library. Manuscripts and
first editions from the Crave poetry col~ion are
p.Jrt of the exhibition, whk:h commeniOfates Robert
·~ti&lt;lh IMrthdoy. a.kony. RCond floo&lt;.
L9Ckwood Mernc:»NI library. Monday fhroush Friday, 9 a.m.·5 p.m.

en...·

PHOTOGaAPHY w.rr
Puerto Rico: Photographic lmpressiom by Bill
Greene, director, Offtee fOf Urbln Extension, Divl·
Jion of. Continuing Education. Hayes Hall lobby,
Monday·Frkby, 9 a.m.·S p.m. Throutf'a June lO.
Presented by the Offa of-Cuhurat AHak't.

NOTICES

_....,.CINTB

the- IWO Newman
... - Centen.thtoupoaut
Main SUeel
....c.npu.
-·
lltfvlcesllho oente&lt; llioaled 1t1S .-..oy A•.; tho
recta&lt;y,6 .-..oy A...) . . ~ 1112
noon It Newmln c:en.tr, 5rMufdar It'll a.m. •,......
mon Ceme&lt;. There ll a SMUidoy .... 117 p.m. 11 lhe
Cantalldan Chapel WlJ Main ScJ and 5unday

THURSDAY-26

TUESDAY-24

p:m.

- ton): 10 a.m.=l
No idinft.siOO c:Nije":"
Presented by the UniYt'f'Sity BoobtOfe.
IIUI.lK EDUCATION IIC1\JU'
Sodorulwural So OiffeTenCeS in Choices ol Participation in Sports Activities for Children, 1-*~
Herkowtu. usodate profe:uor, physical eduatton,
Ohio University. Hus lounse, Norton Union, 2 p .m.
No admtu.ion c:Nrse.
Presented by UUAB and the Depa.rtment of Health
Education.
POOaf lEADING·
Bill Syfwster and K.Mhy Mc:Goldrld. Tiffin Room,
Norton, 9 p.m. No admission charJe.
Presented by UUAB.

ffifn,..

_____ __

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........
c -.

il • 5panloh -

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7 p.m. 5unday • -

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Lift. . . . Cinter.

lhe c - 11111 5uotdor •

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>JUNE 12. 1975

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

HEW's athletic guidelines
to affect U /B only slightly
Most programs already in compliance;
women's sports may command more funds
_

Model of jcMnl rneudl libr•ry.

Contract is awarded for
$9 million joint library

Planners say structure will be the
'most exciting' along Amherst spine
The State University Construction
Fund has awarded a $9,374,000 contract
to the Alben Elia Building Company Inc.
of Niagtua Falls for construction of the
joint research library on the Amherst
campus. The building is scheduled for
completion in 19n.
The five level structure, designed by
Harry. Weese and Assodates of Chicago
and Anthony Carlino and Associates of
Buffalo, will contain space for 750,
volumes and more than 2,100 reader
stations within its ·154,000 net squire
feet.
The building is the third to be designed by the Weese-Carlino firms in the
campus's law-Social Sciences-Education
area. Other buildings in the gi'ollp inelude John lord O'Brian Hall, the law
building which opened in 1973, and
Christopher Baldy Hall, the education
and philosophy building which is now
complete and awaiting furniture
delivery.
Connected lo Baldy and Clemens
The new library will be connected to
Baldy Hall and also to the Samuel "L.
Clemens English and modern languages
building, which is part of another sub
campus grouping.
ln subject matter, the tesearch library
will be similar to the lockwood
Memorial library. The top three levels
will contain Arts and letters, 1 Social
Science and Education collections; art

Five students
are suspended

Actions are outgrowth
of April disruption

J,ademic penalties have been imposed on five of ten students arrested
following a disruption in Hayes Hall,
April 25. The penalties were determined
by Presidenl Rol&gt;i!n l . Ketter, following
-his review Of the transcripts and
recommendations of the University
Committee on the Maintenance of
Public Order.
President Ketter did not proceed with
internal charges qainst two of the ten,
•and charges against three more were
dropped as a result of the hearings. The
r"""'inins n... were suspended for the
followlns periods: one, effective June 5,
1975, until the fall semester of 1976;
three, -effective June 5, 1975, until the
sprins sernest"er of 1976; one, effective
July 12. 1975, unti! the sprins semester of
1976.
The studenu Involved have been
notifted by Fe~istered mail of the actions
taken.
University policy prohibiu release of
the na....,. of the studenu by any offocill
Univenlty spokesman or .,..wlatioa

history and art slide collections will be
located on a sub grade level.
level one will house the Libraries'
central technical services, including
purchasing and . cataloging. A Government Documents Collection will also be
on the first level.
The ·main floor, to be the site of card
catalogs, reference collectio-ns and book
. check-out, will be the second level.
Although a library's main floor is typically at ground level, pedestrian bridges
connecting with other campus structures
will be located at the second level, and
the majority of library users will enter at
that level.
Most Exciting in Spine Are.1
Architecturally, rhe new building may
be the " most exciting included in the
campus acadeinic spine area," U/ B
planners say.
The
building will
be hollow
at the center to provide space for an
open air courtyard. Some of the exterior
walls facing the courtyard will be of
reflective glass, allowing those inside to
look out, while maintaining library
privacy within.
A "Friends" room, featuring a woodburning fireplace and overlooking a garden area, will provide seminar and special
meeting space for community members
of the Friends of the Library Society. The
room will also house several special
collections.
Other Weese-Carlino design
elements, such as circular windows and a
variety of scattered informal study and
seminar spaces, will be featured
.
throughout the building.
For security purposes, the building is
designed to permit pedestrian circulation throughout withC?ut entrance into
actual library space. An automatic book
detection system will also be installed.
Dftlsned for Crod Sludenls and Focuhy
- University libraries Director Eldred R.
Smith notes that while the joint research
library will be available for use by undergradu.Jte students, its main focus will .
be on collections and services for
graduate student and faculty use.
"The joint research libriry will serve as
the bibliographic center of the Amherst
campus University libraries system/' he
says. "The union atalog of University
libraries collections will be located there
as will the central technlal services."
He odds that beause the new buildins
will be an excellent structure in terms of
design, operation and usoliillty, it "will
· very substantially i"'P"'""' library teMce
to the Unlvenlty."
The new library's , owenll desiBn
provides for lnternll orpniudon of
collections alons broad subject lines,
with space adjacent to each area for appropriate librariaM' offices and poup
study rooms which an abo be used for
~

.........

EDITOII'S NOTE: This Is the lim ol rwo amdes
on HEW regut.riom ourbtring sex discrimin.tion In athletics and physical education and
how they mo~y aHecr UI B's prornms, ~r­

tlcularly in rhe reo~/m of intercollegiate
o~rhlerics.

The sex equality rules of the Depart ment of Health, Education and Welfare,
drawn up to implement Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 and
released last week with the endorsement
of President Ford, pose some interesting
questions for big-time intercollegiate
athletic programs but won't have any
major, immediate impact on U/B,
Dr. Harry W. Fritz, dean of the School of
Health Education, believes.
U/ B is already in compliance with the
most significant features of the
guideli neS, Fritz, who is also the University's athletic director, points out.
Physical education classes here have
been co-ed ucational for some time;
gymnasi um training and equipment
rooms on this campus ("such as they
are," fritz ~ys, lamenting the ger,~er.al
condition of Clark Hall focilities) have
been modified to provide service for

both men and women and those to be
constructed at Amherst are being
designed to serve both; intramuralrecreation and club sports activities
feature a wide range of sports for men
and women, many of which are already
coea; and the women's intercollegiate
program, while admittedly funded far
below the level of the men's program, is
budgeted "about at the level which has
been requested."
Try-outs by Women Mandated
The guidelines, which will not be fully
effective for three years, make it mandatory to allow women to try out for
sports, other than contact sports, in
which there is not a women's team.
Here, Fritz says, U/B will comply fully,
affording women the chance at such
a:tivities as baseball, cross country, fen·
cing, and track - if and wh.en it comes
up. "We wouldn't discourage a woman
in these sports," Fritz says. The law also
gives a man the right to try out fori sport
in which only a women's intercollegiate
team is fielded . Field hockey and bowlins ~re rwo eumples. "We Wouldn't,
•Pie.e . . ID~J~et:Z.col.1

..........
. . .,_._.......
. __. .==. . . . . . . . ..
T...., ........................... ,...._ __...loJ
_ _ .,..., ..... q..,

..... .....,• ....., . .
.

�PAGE 2/JUNE 12, 1975/SUMMER REPORTER
--....

• HEW athletic guidelines to affect U/8 only slightly
" ' - .... 1, coL 4)

however, encourage a man who wants to
do this," Fritz says.
The guidelines do not require that
women's intercollegiate teams be funded at the Qme level as men's, but do
specify that "failure to provide necessary
funds for teams for one sex" will be jud~­
ed as noncompliance-something which
could result in the withholding of all
federal funds from recalcitrant institutions.
This provision worries many athletic
dir ors across the nation, and Fritz
f
it could cause some changes here if
w men decide to push for higher levels
o intercollegiate competition. Right
no , women's intercollegiate spans are
a roached with less intensity than
n's. But, Fritz says, as more and more
yo
women who have been brought
up in
n w spons-oriented lifestyle

begin to co e of college age, "we may
see" a differ ce. Many of these young
women have been parties to intense

athletic competition from childhood in golf, swimming, tennis, and other
fields, Fritz points out. On the college
level, they may demand more and better
coaches, tougher schedules and a
greater opportunity for selfdevelopment. "No fair man would work

against this," he feels.
Alhletia One of Several Areas
Athletics are only one of the areas addressed in the HEW guidelines, initially
proposed in 1974. '
Title IX prohibits discrimination on the
basis of sex in "any educational program
or activity receiving federal financial
assistance whether or not such program
or activity is offered, or sponsored by, an
educational institution." HEW's
· regulations to · impler(leni the law. ·are
applicable to some 16,000 public school
systems and nearly 2,700 colleges and universities.
Discrfmhiation in ac.triiissiorrs~ -is
speci6cally proscribed for vQ.i:ational,
professional and graduate schools and
publ.ic undergraduate colleges.
Provisions on equal· employt'hent ~nd
tr~atment of students apply to all
schoOls.
In terms of course-offerings, shop and
other·vocational subjects must be ~de
available eq~ally to . girls and boys at
whatever level of education. Guidance
and -counseling efforts may not attempt
to deter women from male-identified
occupations, and any uhdue concent,ration of women in certlin duses as a result of counseling programs is to be
held suspect.
·
In terms of admissions, P.reference may
not be given to individuals on the basis
of sex, and schools cannot use admission
tests that favor one .sex unless it can be
shown the teSt predicts academic
success. Recruitment of students cannot
.be discrimlpatory. .
Nondiscrimination must also be
followed in off-campus activities, such as
provislon.of housing, that are conducted
under the auspices of an educational
unit.
.
The regulations- which have gone to
Congress for approval, revision and/or
rejection.prior to taking effect on July 15
- aho deal with such matters as salaries,
job clas•lfications, fringe benefits,
pregnancy leave, scholarships and financial rf:sulations/ penSions, etc.
HEW Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger
says he expec15 "coun cases" on many of
the Issues rahed. He says Congress
enacted the broad anti-bias prohibition
"with little legislative history, debate, or,
I'm afraid, thoush.t about difficult
~of appi)Qdons." More than 9,700 QDIMieiiCI receiwd on all
aspeas of the dlaft reaulatlon• during a
four-month period last year, HEW
repoo1S.

Alilk*s 'Moll CuniiOWII.....
Welnberpr n o t e s t!lat while
athletla - uaotalnly not the most Jm..
~educational~ c:ov.-ed by
the sukllilines, "this 111ue ~~a raised the
most public COIItrGVeiS) and hwolves
50111e of the mo5i difficult policy and
lepl points."
.
Amons other points dealing with this
Inflammatory area, the Anal suldellnes
make It dear that physical education

cannot be offered separately on
sis of sex. Sex separation within

lasses is allowable, · however,
where students are engaging in contact
spons. Students may also be grouped by
ability within such classes provided that
ability tests do not discriminate against
women.

In sports activities, the guidelines permit "separate teams for each sex where
selection for such teams is based on
competitive skill or the activity involved
is a contact sport. HoweVer twhere [an

institution provides] ... a te.!Q:I iil a particular sport for members of one sex but
operates or sponsors no such team for
members ·of the other sex, and athletic
opportunities for members of that sex
have previously been limited, members

of the excluded -sex must be allowed to
try-out for the team offered unless the
sport involved is a contact sport. For the
purposes of this Part, contact sports include boxing, football, basketball, and
other sports the purpose or major activity of which involves bodily contact."
levels of support for women's teams
must be that which is nnecessary" to
provide equal athletic opportunities to
wOmen. This is to include selection of
sports and levels of competition, equip~
ment and supplies, scheduling and practice time, travel, coaching, locker rooms,
practice and competitive facilities,
medical and training services, housing,
dining, publicity, etc.
Finally, "a reasonable number of
athletic scholarships must be awarded to
men and women in proportion to the
number of men and women par·
ticipating in ... intercollegiate athletics."
Colleges and universities have three
years from the effective date of the
regulations to ·be in full compliance. ·
AIAWn.NCAA
U/B's Fritz says he welcomes th'e-rnove
toward proyi~ion of equal a~hletic opportunities for women. The National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA),
he says, engaged in a "benign neglect"
of ' women's ~por1} .Pr.ograrris until .. the
"'late 1960's: ,t;t that point, the ASs6ciation
for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women
(AIAW) came into being, representing
some 280 schools. Today, -AIAW: has
Some 670 member schools; mounts
national playoffs in nine sports, including
one for b;lsketball which drew 12,000
fans to Madison Squarl! Garden; and
recently commanded a full-column front
page anicle in the Wall Sln!er Journal.

That article-noted that many universities.
which formerly relegated women to intramurals, and even on that level provid~
ed grudging suppon, "are now hurriedly
assembling women's teams in everything
from hockey to basketball."
fritz notes that the NCAA now wants
to get control of women's sports. ul think
the women should keep their own control," he mu~ .
The NCAA, plagued by a financial
squeeze in its big-time revenueproducing sports programs, opposes the
HEW guidelines because of fears that big
sports revenues will have to be shared
with women's programs on the· same
scale, Fritz notes.
As the Wall Street /oumaf tells it:
"Although the final regulations make
clear that women needn't be allowed to
participate in contact sports, and full
compliance in athletics won't be required for three years, the rules don't
really allay the concerns of male
athletics' directors. They would, ·for example, have to let women participate in
other sports, either on the men 's team or
on a separate team for women.
"The National Association of lhtercollegiate Athletics [an organization
similar to the NCAA) immediately
blasted the regulations as signaling 'the
end of intercollegiate athletic programs
as we have known them in recent
decades,' "-rhe lo&lt;imal repons.
Not that AtAW is happy, either. The
women's sports association is reportedly
disappointed that the ruling doesn't require equal per capita funding for
women's and men's teams. And they
would have preferre&lt;j a guideline which
would have forced schools to provide
separate teams for women in contact
spons, if requested. Unlike the National
- Organization· -for Wonien· · (NOW).
AIAW is in strong agreement with the
" separate but equal" · thrust of the
guidelifles.
AfAW's ·depanure from NOW bn this
point gives credence to Dr. Fritz's observation that the women's sports movement is not Women's lib. " It's a matter
of equal opportunity," he repeats. " It
had to come even without Women's lib.''

Findler raps
merit process
Editor:
I realize that this time of the year the
number of readers this letter may reach
is relatively small but I do not wish to
withhold my complaint until September.
I, personally, and many colleagues I
have talked to, consider the so-called
self-nomination for merit raises rather
distasteful and less than ethical. Whether
it satisfies sorrie bureaucratic rule agreed
upon by a union is another matter.
Assuming that it has a functional ro·te in
terms of informing the departmental
chairmen and the next higher echelon of
administrators, one would expect to be
given sufficient time to prepare the
prospectus for self-selling. This is far from
the case. This year, which was not exceptional, I found in my mail box the relevant instructions on Friday afternoon,
May 30. My response had to be in 1he
Chairman's hand by 9 ~ . m., the following
Monday morning, June 2. Also, if one is
not satisfied with the Chairman's decision, one can appeal to the Provost by 1
p.m., same day! (What happens if you
are happy with the Chairman's
recommendations but the Provost cuts it
out like in the case of our whole
depanmentn
The whole process, its concept, timing
and the decision mechanism involved
are ludicrous and absurd. Maybe it is
time we gave some thought to it.
-Nicholas v. Andler
Professor of Computer
Science

Kaiser named
Dr. Anhur l. Kaiser has been apPointed 'Chairm.in Of the Department of
Curriculum Development and Media
Instruction for a three-year term beginning September 1.
Dr. Kaiser has been on the faculty and
staff-since 1946. He served as director of
Admissions and Records from 1961 to
1973, when he returned to full-time
teaching duties with his department.
In announcing the appointment, President Roben l. Ketter praised Dr. Kaiser
for his service and said he believed the
new department chairman would "bring
strength and imagination to the post."

Three employees win SUNY suggestion awards
Three _UIB employees have been
honored by the State Unlvenlty of New
von. Emploree Susgestlon Program.
Winners are Mrs. June ' M. Buchholz, aaxaunt clerk In the Office of
Student Accounu; Benjamin P.
BursNrdt, laborer foreman fo·r the
Amlie!st Campus Physical PlanJ; and
Envnetl E. ledder, carpenter for the
Physical Plant.

The trio receiitly presented certificates of merit, de5k penS and cash

awards by President Roben l. Kener and
Civil Service Employees Assodation
local President Edward G. Dudek.
Mrs. Buchholz. proposed using the
· "express line" system for expediting service at st~Jdent financial aid Information
windows. The new system, similar to that
used in many area banks, reduces the
amount of time and frustration for both
students and staff.
•
Mr. Burghardt, who aho receiwd a
suggestion -ard In 1973, proposed that

flasher signals used to mark unsafe road
conditions be mounted on posts set in
concrete rathe• than on saw horses. The
new mounts lessen the possibility of the _
signals being stolen or blown over In
high winds.
•
Mr. Ledder designed, fabricated and
Installed a plexislas protective guard for
the tenenor maChine, a device used for
making special cuts in woodworking.
• The shield protects the operator from
wOod chips emitted while the machine is
operating.

�JUNE 12, 1975/SUMMBrREPORTER/PAGE J

Greene wins
national award
for adult course

Ice cream parlor

Campus food service this wrnmu me.ans lunch around the Fountain .11nd this ice aeam
parlor on the first floor ol Norton, open Mondl.y-Fricby, 11 a.m. lo 9 p.m. ausinftl is
reported brisk.
.

'Playboy' official says freedom absolute
1st Amendment protects sexually explicit~
• raCISt
• matena
,. . • I Joseph conten ds
sexist,

.

I

Bun Joseph, executive director of the
Playboy Foundation,., believes in an absolute freedom interpretation of the
First Amendment, to the point of rejecting the idea that children need to be
"protected" from sexually explicit
material. " Children should be able to
satisfy their natural curiosity," he says.
No relationship whatsoever has been
detected between such ma~erial and sex
crimes. " Just the opposite. Sex crimes
are committed by thOse whose sexual
curiosity has been suppressed."
The Playboy executive spoke. last Friday at the School of Information and
Library Studies'. "Institute on library
Education for Principles of Intellectual
Freedom." Some 30 library education

Law awards
169 J.D.'s
Juris doctor (JD) degrees were awarded to 169 graduates of the Law School at
commencement ceremonies Sunday in
Kleinhans Music Hall. The degrees were
conferred by Dr. Albert Somit, U/ B executive vice president.
...
The main address was delivered by
Soia Mentschikoff, dean of the Universi ~
ty of Miami School of Law. Ms.
Mentschikoff is considered one of the
fo remost legal scholars in the field of
commercial law.
·
· Other speakers were Richard D.
Schwartz, provost of the Faculty of law
and Jurisprudence; Hon. Rudolph V'.
Johnson, president _of the law Alumni
Association, and Joseph P. Runfola,
president of the Erie County Bar Association.
Several a)I'Vards were presented during the
ceremontes: Carlos C. Alden Award - John
Mendenhall; Lawyers Cooperative Company
Book Aw1rds - Dianne Bennett and David
Picken; Monroe Abstract and Title Corporation Award - Douslas S. Coppola; PrenticeHill, Inc. T•x Aw•rd ..:.-Dianne Bennett; David
Ruslander Memorial Award - Muk
Kerwood; Williams Press, Inc. A'fard- Henry
Killeen; Justice Philip Halpem Award Dianne lena~; United States Uw Week
Aword - Douslos Coppolo; John W. Ben nell
Achievement Award - Laura Zebel; Scribes

Award - Shelly ScOn Friedmon; Order of the
Barrister - Don Bergevin, Carl Go&amp;dfield, Paul

Grockchadl, Benjamin ldziak; Trial Uwyers
AMoc:lalionAward-DouBfasS. ~,

Elliot

Losl&lt;y, Joseph Sakowoki, Robe&lt;l A. Doren, Don
Bersevin, Willi1m F. I.Merlki, Winnie F.
Toylor, Thomos E. Fowler, Henry H. Newlin,
Anthony Parlt1, Harry F. Mooney, D. Michoel

Murray, Rodney L. Klofehn, H-•rd Goldmoo, Jeffrey A. Peril, Corl Goldfield, Thomos
E. Scbolleld, ond Jeffrey E. levine.

faculty from across the nation attended
the week ~long conference.
. . .''Ceoso(sl)ip a.n d .secre¢1'. are tbe .absolute enemies of freedom," Joseph
said, reminding the audience "that it
would be as absurd for a librarian to ad vocate censorship as it would be for an
attorney to advocate injustice.
"History has been full of people who
'know' what's best for others," he recall ~
ed. Recent Supreme Coun ·decisiOns
\ have gone further, allowing local juries,
moral police, to sit in judgment as ar~
biters of which,artistic and literary works
are " acceptable," and which should be
prosecuted. "Imagine yourself as an ar~
tist or filmmaker, creating ·with one eye
on your work and the other on a future
jury which may 'rule' on it. This leads to
the most invidious kind of censorship self-censorship."
Stole Should Sloy Out
The "heavy h~ of the State," Joseph
urged, " should stay out of the private
affairs of dtizehs, most especially in
terms of what we read or have a right to
see. We don't need censors, local
boards, city councils, vigi lantes or the
Supreme Court" to take a hand in these
matters. "The First Amendment has to
be extended to all ideas. For if the ideas
we hate are not protected, those which
we cherish will. soon, be in danger."
Joseph considers it of no importance
whether the material in question is " explicitly sexual, s.exist, racist, right wing,
or left wing." The individual himself has
the righ t to judge its merits in the
marketplace of ideas, he feels . There is a
" risk" involved in disseminating material
which incites! people, but the ris~ of
censorship is "even greater."
Educators, Joseph said, must teach
students "that jf the battle of the mind
is to be won, we must remain vigilant
against well·meaning 'solid citizens'
who would sacrifice some freedom for
security. These are the most dangerous
enemies of intellectual freedom."
Citing the results of • recent poll of
he
c.illed
it
Purdue
students,
"ffightening" how little students seem
to know about the First Amendment
· and freedom of the mind. In that sampl- ·
ing, one in five students Ykl censorship
does not violate freedom; 22 per cent
said librories should not necessarily
moke ·ovoiloble unobridsed texts; onequarter of the sample fell that • committee should "review" books to which
ltudents "have access; 34 per cent said
censorship is not self-defeating; and 45 /
per cent failed to approve the statement, "censorship is bad."

0

th:wv~~~=v~t' fr~~~;, ~h'erse~7a":~;
anorney·administrator pleaded. " And
we have to instill the same commitment
in our students.· If freedom is to flourish,
it must live in the heart of man."
1791 Isn't 1975
Also on Friday's SILS program, Dan
lacy, vice president of McGraw·Hill
P'U blishers, said the First Amendment is
" no longer sufficient" in the battte for
intellectual freedom. The First Amendment applies only to the State's abridgement of free speech and a free press.

Devised to meet the needs of a time
when communication was relatively simple, "it is still crucial but relatively

narrow," he contended. The situation of
179l has changed; the drafters of the
Constitution never dreamed of modern
phenomena which come between
writer and reader - the giant communications industries 'and institutions;
the role of government as a provider of
the legal matrix within which these industries operate; and government as
both ·a source of and market for communications.
Government decides what information can be made available in many
fields, including much of scientific
research. And half of all books published in the U.S. today are purchased by
public bodies (schools, librari"', etc.)
with public funds. If a title fails to appeal
to or disconcerts government, it may
not be published at all - simply for
economic reasons.
·
Today, Lacy sugges)ed, it is the goals
held by our society - and not any
specific statute - which alone can
determine whether or not we will enjoy
freedom of the mind.

Three Dental
profs hooored
Three Dental ' School profeuors have
been named to leadership positions in
the American Association for Dental
Research.
Dr. Robert Genco, professor and
director of periodontology, is the
president-elect of the periodontal
research group chapter of the Association. He will become president of the
orgonization In April of 1976.
Dr. Se!&gt;astian Ciancio has been electedsecretary-treasurer of the pharrriacology
therapeutics toxicology group chapter.
Dr. Ciancio is professor and chainman of
periodontics and endodontlcs.
Dr. Russell Nisengard, assistant
professor of periodontics and endodontics, has been named to the editorial
board of the Associotlon's periOdontal
research group.

i

William Greene, director of the Office
of Urban Extension, has won a national
award for his work in developing •
suci:essful college credit course to meet
special needs of part-time adult students.
Greene and three other educators
were presented .with their awards at the
National University Extension
Association's annual convention in Puerto Rico this May. The NUEA and the
American College Testing Program spon ~
sor the awards each year as a means of
pppularizing innovations in continuing
education.
The U/B program was developed to
provide part-time adult students with the
confidence, knowledge and .skills
necessary to overcome the difficulties of
returning to college after long absences.
Greene's course explains to adult
students what higher education is all about and how it can meet their needs. It
examines the major issues in higher
educatiol) and surveys the educational
opportunities offered by colleges in
Western New York.
The UIB educator developed the ·
program two years ago through Millard
Fillmore College with the assistance of a
federal gront under the Higher Education Act of 1965.
The program grew out of UIB's increased involvement with off-campus
eduGiltion, and from requests from community service organizations· which
wanted study programs for their ·
employees, many of whom are
paraprofessionols ·with no college experience.
Greene, 56, was rfominated for the
natio.nal _award .. after . h.e ~OQ \ii~_il.ar
recOgnition frorri a regional unit of the
NUEA last November.

---- ·

......._.._

Erie CountyJ- W111am G. last
Tuesday handed down a demion upholding .,.U
..-by campus police at lf/8. An - C i t y
Court decis6on had had the en.ct of denytng.,..
authority to campus police end would haw Md
reaching knpltcations, H uphllkl. In
rU\Iing, City Court Judge John J. Horwl held that the
arrestilig officer In a ttespusing cue was not
. . . . . . . , _ .. . underStoho EdUc.oon Low.
Honan said that while the Law reQUWed appolnbnent
of campus puce offlcers by the SONY trultees,
the U/8 omc. (end .,.._.. on the force) hlld been
appointed by President Robert L.: Ken.r. In
revwsing lhal dec:lllon, Judge Heffron nabiiCI that
the ao.rd ol Trust- hlld ~ appoiQ1fng

that_,.., f•·

_ln. .
w--.,.
___
. _,.._
_.._..___...__
powertoheedlof~~lna

resotution deled September 30, 1172. The oftlcer
. . . property eppointecl and hlld the authorttr' lo
make
the ..-rest.
Judge
Heffron
CltyCourt
_
_
... ruled. He~
COM.

..._,._ucarer
__ .,. _ _
CAREY Till- SUllY BUDGET

1ut

Gowomor Hugh

___
-- --

Dep.artment, .,., aev.n 04her ..... ~ . . pert
of rnoYeS to close what he~ Ia. 11100
mlltlonStoho--.-~ . . . . .

..w:.
'"'"""'""
lncllcate. SUNY ....-cuts7.5·m._,, includina S3.5
hardest hH: of 1he agenda. wire

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

reports

. The ~Division­

the
cuts woukf not require many rnor-. a.yorta
..and
..._
.__,
thai ma)or programs would ,..,....,.. irUcL
SUNY

.....
___.....__.....10-_
reduced, .. lhe 8udglll Oftioa said. An
announcament Ia npecad 8QOn . . to
how the cuta
U/8.

.... .

,_,.affect

C O U I I T Y - 10WI!II PUll

_._......

Erie propoul
C o u ntol y
- .. a new
1ap;mataaw
al lhe School of
. Counly- _

....... _ T h e

_ _ _ _ _ _ Oit&gt;ry _ _ ... _
ptllpOIIII.~toSc::hool•ap;mllllltwtor

-10-155,000--ol-.
SUNY------ol
···--.....-..-.--

- -. ca1s10r....--.gosa

s.-~-bo-10-·75.000

.,...~-,....O(~af----.aloJ
es.ooo
_ _ .,_.,.__....._ •

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

... al,...,..., ....

ln_ai . . Oid
--.a..SUNYIIoo-10-~10

$1,013,000. ,..-tar 30 ,...tar .... ODnlldlra
ID .,........,.......,._ TMnew plan II Mid IDblnaw

r

�-fAQ 4/JUN£ 12, -tm-ISUMMBt llB'OitTER

U/B biologist conducting

extensive -fishery study
Project aimed at improving
quality of area's environment
~~""!'!..

-

Western New York fishermen, particularly those who fish the Niagara
River, Lake Erie and some of its
tributaries, have an opportunity to
cooperate in -one of che most intensive
fishery studies ever conducted in the
area.
Graduate students, under direction of
Or. Wayne F. Hadley, assistant professor
of biology, have begun research that
focuses on spawning sites, migration
patterns, population structures and
angler harvest of a variety of commercial

-'

_l

and spon· fish.
The project, now only weeks underway, involves netting, collecting data
on, tagging and releasing brown and
rainbow trout, muskellunge, northern
pike, small-mouth bass and walleyes in
the upper Niagara River.
As the season progresses, more species

of fish will be included and data collection points will include other river areas
as well as the New York and Ontario
shore areas of Lake Erie.

Prolectins Thrutened Resources

Dr. Hadley explains that the ~in purpose of the research is to obtain data "the facts" - that can be used to assist
New York and Ontario agencies'
fisheries management programs and to
support arguments for protecting
threatened aquatic resources.
- "All too often, dredging, housing
developmen~· poWer plant and sfmilar

turer ill the E~n School of Music. &amp;lird Recital
Hall, 8 p .m . No ~mission dlarge.

THURSDAY-12

-edbyUUAB.

MUlll-MIDIA PIIBlNTATJON•
A Salute fo the Wori:ingnun of WNY, Ebine
5oumrpen O.nce and Film ~ny with the! Thei!tre
Orepartment ~nee Prosrilm. Foun~in Squ.Jre, Nor·
~t

decisions are made with insufficient consideration of the region's fish populations. The reason is that the available
information is too limited to support
strong arguments for their value and
preservation," Dr. Hadley notes.
He adds that area fishermen can help
the research in a variety of ways. One is
by returning red plastic dart tags affixed
below the dorsal fin of the fish being
studied. " Each tag is stamped with a WFH
and a five digit number, and we would
appreciate if those who catch one of
these tagged fish would send the tag
along with the place and date of catch to
1he Biology Department. We will, of
course, send the angler all our information about the fish.
"We· are making every effort to avoid
inconvenience to area anglers by our activities or the presence of our nets near
their favorite fishing spots. We purposely
try to avoid selling ne ts where anglers
are prese nt, but we ha ve to work in areas
where we are likely to collect fish. The
nels are marked by black and white
fishing buoys bearing our name. The
process does not involve removing or injuring any of the fish, as they are always
returned to the watei aher tagging.
"We are looking for data and feel that
the results of our work will be in the best
inlerests of the public- particularly the
fishing public," Dr. Had ley says.
Money Needed
Or . Hadl ey a lso notes that the

UUUAlM••
The G~l ~rsby. Norton Conference Theatre,
call 831 · S117 for times. Ad m is~ion ~harge.

ton .~

P.-esented by the UUAB, ~nment of Theiltre
Dilnce Progrilm, Center for Medii! Study, the
NiltioNI Endowment for the Ans ilnd the New York
Slate Council on t~ Arts.

POmiY IIEADIN(;•
Mi• Wldc«t. Trffin Room, Nonon Union, 8 p .m .
~ by UUAB and the ~rtment of

- Eng!M.

SUNDAY~15
INlfNSivt ENGliSH lANGUAGE INSnnrrq
Albri«hi·Kno• Art Gallery brursfon. for more in·
fonnation , go to 211 Townsend.
UUUfllM••

The

Creo~t ~tsby. Norton Conference TheaU@,

call 831·S117 for- times. Admission charge.

ROADCASl'
A Whole New Song and fnnce : new music by Joel
Chacbbe. WBFO-fM (88A, 10 p .m .
UUA.Ifii..M••
Daisy Miller. Norton Confltf"enee Theatre, all"831 ·
5117 for timft. Admbsion charse.

INIINIIWt INCU5H lANGUACf IN51lT\J1tf
Oysu/ lad! Amusemenf Pm brursion. For
more details. 10 to 211 Townsend. '

-.osa~NCEThe &amp;lopsycholo1y of

the Init i at ion and
.,..,...,.,.,. 01 ....enul -....-. car, Gnbe&lt;.
U/a o.p.n_.. ol ~- 1011 sn.nn.n, " '"'

......

Aees•M. a.t ..... 6 :10p.m. Few more lnf~

~aeatz..:e

==!~

_.,__,v,

~

MUIIC IIS'IIVAI.• •

....

.
JheMuslcot&amp;rlillmwn. lloinl

~·:;- ~~

........

UUAIIIIIM"

DolsyM-.- Conletonce 5117b--~·

--...

· allll1-

MONDAY-16
DANCf/MUSIC"
All Around .Buff•lo: An Invitation to Secre-t
Dancers •00 Non--0.1incen i~nd M usicians, Elaine
Summers ~ and Film Company and the Theatre
Dt'partlnf!nl D~ Prosram, Fountain Squiu~. 1
p.m. No Klmission charp.
AM6UCAN MUSIC RlM BlfS•
!&gt;rtf. 8lJes Singer-: James "Sonny For-d" Thomas.
Fount,ain Squ~re, dusk . (In case of Inclement
weather, d~ eYent will be hetd in the fillmore
Room, Norton).

.......

~byUUAB.

V¥1Miorn on a Ce-lloplyne w~ tRimmer)
SurfKinJ on 1M -~ (Rimmer), ~
(l..JWder), bin

o.nce

(Uwd@r), T.O.U,C.H.l,N.G
(Sharfrs), J\pparMus Sum {Frampton), r~ Balm

(Frampton), Yellow Sprinp (Frampton), and Fbming
Ctelf~ (Smich). 146 Diefendorf, 7 p .m . No Klmh--

No--...

~MUSIC

fiSIIY.U•
June irllulf•lo VI: lbe Musk o/lrown, feldman
OIWIH6i. lolni-IW.I·p.m.Admlssion , S1

studonlo,SlolheB.

---Nnnllll
.
,
--·_A....,.,._,- -,.;a--. .,..__

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

For-.. ...

..._., .. mr_..t.
QINCBr

c-tel
..,_..,_,_...._,._Mihe

~-~-.~

-

5ponooood by .... ~ of Music.

..,MO._... fllnVAl•
Tolre- ond MU Open. Clorl Hoi. for_,.

por-

....... --

Bernhard Urbaschek, UniversitY of Heidelberg, Ger·
many. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 12: 30·
1:10 p .m .
·
THE FUTURE: PERSPECTIVS FROM THE
IIOlOGICAl, PHYSICAL AND SOCIAL SCt(NCfSI
On the Analogies between Biolot/tul and Human
Sys1ems, Robert Rosen, Center for Theoretical
Biology. Rm. 21 , 4234 Ridge Lea, 3 p.m. (This i~ the
fourth leoure in a seri~ thilt runs every Tuesday
throughout the summer.)
Sponsored by the Bioph ~cs Graduate Student
Association.
COLLOQUIUMI
Early Defection ind Prevention of School Adjustment Problems, Emory Cowen, Ph .D., profes.sor of
psychology and director of the Center for Community Study, Univerlity of Roch~ter . 232 Norton,
7:30p.m.
Presented by the Division of Community
Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry.
·

IIOADCAST•
A Whol@ N~ Song and Dance: n@W music by
Eberhard Blum . WBFO·FM (88J}, 10 p.m.

CONTfMPORAI:r MUSK fi:STIYAL•
June in Buffalo VII: Piano Soniil~s o1 Chari~ l ves.
Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Adm'slion: S1 Slude:nts, S2
others.
Sponsored by the Dep.artm@nt of Music.

WEDNESDAY-18
CRAm IN THE SQUAI.f•
Metals with Miclue/ 0/mste~d. Fount.Jin Square,
12·2 p .m .
Sponsored by the Creative Crafts Cente r and
Summer Activities.
FILM••
h R~ion Centrale (Snow, 19711. 146 Diefendorf 7
p .m . No .dmiufon chari@.
'
CONllMPORAI,y MUSIC FESTIVAL•
.
/tme ;n Buff~lo VIII : the Music of Christian Wolff.
· Baird Reciral Hall, 8 p.m . Admission : S1 students, S2

others.

·

Sponsored by the Department of Mulic.

l.fC1\Jitf AND fiLM .scaEENiNCS•
~ lmliMe ol t975yNorton Conference
The,atr., 8 p .m.

• ~ed b y - Studios.

Ucoam

NICHI5 WITH lOCAl
cofimtousE••
BHI EdwMds and Bill McCaul, foiUinaen. Founbin
Squ.Jre-, 8:10p.m. Un ~of t~in, the e¥ent .,;n be
held in the fillmore Room, Norton.) No admiuk&gt;n
_chqt.
~byUUAB.

TUESDAY-17

.

• -Squn.1Wp.rn.~brlhe

=·!:f"".....:=:.•-.ond--·
__ Ciolcol,..,.._

possibilities, we are beginning a campaign aimed at donations from private
ind ivi duals as well as from area
sportsman's clubs," he says.

UU.U COffEDtOUSE•
Saul Broudy ~nd Spi!rlcy Rudcer (GospeVCoun·
try/Biu~l . foUntiin Squire, 8 :30p.m . (In case of in·
dement weather, the evf!nt will be held in the
fillmore Room, Norton.)

sionchqt.

_ SATURD~Y-14
_ on.._ _ _ _ _

_,.... ,...JD ......

AOADCAST•

~byUUAB.

-.co~m-2!115.

~Ciubondu/a.

Stober\, 831·1701 .
U/ 8 Arts Forum. Esther Swilf1z interviews com:
poser John Uge-. WADV·FM (1065), 10:05 p .m.

FRIDAY-13

--OfiNO
. :f::::

ALCOIIOUCS ANONYMOUS MEfllNG•
Mt&gt;eting for anyone with probl@ms with alcohol.

264 Nor-ton, S.10 p.m. for information, contact Bill

tharougbness with which the study is
completed will depend on the amount of
money which ca n be raised to support it.
And money is presently scarce.
" While a study of this sort is direct ly
applicable rathe r than theoretical, it is
also helpin8; several students earn
graduate degrees. Funding the pro)ect,
however, has been difficult. Therefore
while we are exploring all agency

u~a-.-

~ ~-. "'.&lt;!!!o_o,_'!'."!~'!""'- Cimolo&lt;lon. Dr.

, THURSDAY-19

"With enough support we are certain
we can supply the type of information
that. will contribute to improving the
quality of the Western New York environment."

UUAI ftlM••
Black Windmill. Norton Conference Theatre, call
831·S117 for times. Admission charge .

EXHIBITS
GAUDY 219 O:HIIIT
Topolslcii Mann:"Recent Works : prints, photos and
mixed ~edia by Andy...Topolski ~nd Ktylic p;~inti ngs
by David Mann. G.JIIe_ry 219, Norton . Mon..Fri. 11
a.m..-4 p .m .; Mon., Wed. and Thurs., 7·10 p.m.; .Jnd
Sun., 1-S p.m . June 10.17.

lOCkWOOD ElHIIITION
Polish Coll«fion, exhibition cullled from the
University's colleclion of more than -4,000 vofumes of .
materia;!. FirS~ noor. Lodwood Memori.JI library.
Mond.Jy·fricby, 9 a.m.-S p .m . Continulns.
MANUSCIIII'r AND fiiiST EDITION The most complete coltection of Robert Graves
manusaipts in the world is currently on d;spby in

the Lockwood

Memori~l

Libruy. Manuscripts ,.·nd

.first editions from lhe Graves poetty collection ar@
p.illrt of the nhibhlon, which commemot.J.tet Robert
Graves' eightte.h blnhcby. B.akony, second floor,
Lockwood Memorial LibQry. Mond.Jy throuah fri·
day, 9 a.m.·S p .m .
PHOTOGRAftfY D . .IIT
Puerto R.ico: Phot.osraphic lmpreuions by Bill
Greene, director-, Office for UrNn &amp;tension, Divi·
sion of Continpins EduC.tion.- Hayes tun Lobby,
Monday·Friday. 9 •.m.·S p .m . 1lvoush June 10.
Presented by the Office of Cuhural Affairs.

NOTICES
NEW COURSf U5DNG
The literilture- of the l~lian Ame-rlan Experience
Uli!lian 392) will be offered dutlnt the leCOnd
Summer Session Uune 2J.Ausust 1), Tuetcby ~nd
Thursday, 6 :)0.9:20 p .m. Instructor: 8 . Arcudi. No
pnerequisile-s.
-

• NIWMAN CENTH
Mauet •re- scheduled throuJhout the wrnrner ~~
the. rwo Newman Centen.. Main Street·Umpus ser·

vices Uhe .~er Gloated .s.1S University Aft.; the
rectory, .116 UniftBity Aft.) .e Mol)cily.fridly .Jt 12
nooo.JtNewmOinCfllt«,~M10a.m.ltNew· .
man Center. There Is .1 S.rurcby vtafllt 7 p.m. 11 the
Cantaliciln ~ (lllJ Main StJ And Sundly
Musa ..Jt 9 and 11 .J.m . .Jt Camalidan Chapel. fhere·
k • Splniih Mat it 7 p.m. SuncbY • Newm.Jn

Center.

T h o - c.._een.......... ..._... Rd.

ilnd the ltectoly, M 495 Sldnnerwllle Rd. MIMI •re
held d.JQr It I Lm. It ct.. Center ..cl Sunday 11 11

•.m. 11

the Cerar.

•

a...aOf--~Tho Olflce of will bo

open from I :JO Lm.-7 p.m.. June U, 16-19 2J..l6
.Jnd • Hours 'for ather da,s '" tune Ire
a.m.4:JD P."'- .

e:.JO

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1385283">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451290">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1385272">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1385273">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                    <text>Summer
registration
up by 1500
Final enrollment
to be near 11,000

Dedication
called key to
U/B's future
Ketter tells grads
'caring' profs vital
"The most important institutional
policy" the University can have is to in-

crease its number of dedicated, caring
faculty members, President Rober·t L.
Ketter said at U/8's 129th General
Commencement, Sunday, May 18, in
Memorial Auditorium.

FacuhY dedication, the President contended, is the key to the University's
future for it "will determine primarily th e
type of education which is obtainable"

here.

,

The General Commencement - a
mass ceremony for thousands of

graduates of Arts · and L'etters ,
Educational Studies, Natural Sciences
and Mathematics, and Social Sciences
and 'Administration, and some from the
Division of Professional and Graduate
Education and the Division of Under-

graduate Education - was the highlight
of a round of 11 such exercises between
May 11 and May 18. A twelfth ceremony,
lor 178 graduates of the School of law, is
scheduled for Sunday, June 8, at 8 p.m. in
the main audilorium of Kleinhans Music
Hall. A total of S,714 degrees are being
conferred this year.
hcuhy Under Fire
The President told the Memorial
Auditorium crowd that, in recent years,

faculty " have been maligned perhaps
. more than the American family," partly
because of the " romantic expedations"
which some of the public hold lor higher
education.
Education, Ketter said, is generally
viewed as a process in which both
knowJedse and YOiues are transmitted, ·
acquired, examined, ahered or expanded. "It is in these two areas that the faculty member can exert influence and it is in
the latter of these that faculty have been
most criticized."
·
Grumblings persist, he noted, that the
faculty .are..failures for nol somehow con-

veying to every student that "cleanliness
is next to godliness."
Public opinion seems to be, the President pointed out, tKat the two perceived
components of higher. education have
not been conjointly tn1nsmitted sioce the
days of President Garfield. It was Garfield
who fired the popular imagination with
his pastoral delini)ion of the ideal
college: "Mark Hopkins on one end of a
log and a student on the other." !his
view of higher educition .JS tran1m1tter
of social .1nd religious values at the ex·~ tum to JNP l. col. 1

JUNE 5. 1975

STATE UNIVERSITY AT B.UFFALO

Escape rom madding_crowd
increases stress in animals
By

P.t~lridOJ

W.ard Biederm.tn

R rpon~

6015 vying
for 1800 spots

Sulf

Bepn1 P~n~Ps Enrironmenl
To find out whether "enrichment"
offset crowding, . or. Hull designed an
eiejlant plexiglas environment for her

.2238.

M(&gt;re transfers
applying here

'Enrichment' of gerbil habitat
found no panacea for crowding
Accounts of the dire effed.s caused in
animals by crowding date back as far as
fo lklore where we learn that the serene
country mouse wouldn 'l change places
with his jin ery urban cousin for all the
cheese in Edam.
In the middle of this centu ry, scientists,
troubled perhaps by Malthusian nightmares of a bulging planet, began to
observe crowded animals under
laboratory conditions. They found that
crowded animals did indeed show many
signs of stress, includin g im paired reproduoion, decreased social behavior,
and increased production of "stress hormones" by the adrenal glands. Scientific
interest in what .crowding does to
animals persists into our own day.
At U/ 8, Dr. Elaine Hull, associate
professor of psychology, recently joined
with graduate studenls to discover
whecher the known effects of crowding
in gerbils could be offset by pr&lt;lviding
them with an enriched envi ronment that
incl ude d free acceSs to a number of
" private" compartments away from their
fellows.
"There have only been a few studies of
environmental variables in animal
~owd i ng," Dr. - Hull explains. One
previous researcher had found that
chi~kens were less affl!cted by crowding
when separated by · barriers than when
allowed to mix freely. But an earlier
study of Dr. Hull's had shown that gerbils
displayed even greater evidence of stress
(fewer young or pups, more aggression)
when isolated for several hours .t~her be-•
ing"&lt;rowded than when constantly
crowded.

Summer enrollment is runrting 22 per
cent ahead of last year, accOrding:.l.o
James Blackhurst, Summer Sessions
director.
At the close of registration for the first
of the three overlapping seven-week
sessions, 8,100 persons had signed up lor
courses. This is 1,500 more than had
registered at thiS point last year.
Of those registered, approximately 75
per cent are juniors, seniors or graduate
stude nts. Many of the summei enrollees
are visiting students who attend other
colleges or universities du ri ng the
regular school yea r.
Registrations are still being accepted
for the second .a nd third summ er
sessions. Blackhurst estimates that the
total summ e r registratio n will be
between 10,000 and 11,000.
The dates and registration cut-offs for
the two rema ining sessions are: Session
II, June 23-A ugust 8 -close of registration, June 18; Session Ill , july 14-August
29 - close of registration, july 9.
All regist rat ions must be completed in
person at the Office of Admissions and
Re cords, Hayes Annex B. Office hours
are 8:30 a.m. 10 7:00 p.m., Monday
through Thursday, and 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. on Frida y.
An y graduate of a high school or high
school equivale ncy program is eligible to
registe r, but registration in the Summer
Sessions does not constitute admission to
any degre e -granting divis ion of the
Un iversity.
Persons 60 yea rs of age o r older are
also welcome to enroll as auditors in
summer co urses on a space available
ba·sis. Any.o ne interested in this progtam
shovld contact the Adult Advisement
Cente r, 3 All e nhurst Road, or· call 831-

Transfer applications for next fall are
up moderately from last yea r, University
officials said this week.
The Office of Admissions and Records
reported that 6015 transfer applications
for Fall 1975 have been received, compared to 5368 last year, an increase of 12
per cent.
_
A significant increase in transfer
applications is occurring among those
who will graduate from community
colleges which are part of the State
UniVersity of New York, Admissions and
Records noted. In this category, an increase of •11 applications, or 23 per cent,
has been recorded to date - lor a total
ol 2250. Applicants from four-year SUNY
colleges number 1248, compared to 1091
last year, an increase of 14 per cent.
· Applications from students in a third
category which includes private schools
and schools outside the State have infurry subjects. " In the previous study we
creased more modestly, from 2766 to
felt our method of isola tin&amp;. the ge&lt;bils
3004, a five per cent jump.
by removing them from the cage was arU/8 plans to enroll about 1850 transfer
tificial. In this study we wanted to be able
students this year, an increase of 200. As
to decrease the density of .the animals
part of its IJ!Sponsibility as one of four
without forcibly isolating thllm. We
SUNY university centers, U/8 accepts
wanted them to choose their own den·
students who have two-year degrees and
sity."
Options were thus built in.to the • wish to continue their studies.
Admissions officers ~re considering all
enriched cage, which consisted of a central octagon of clear plexiglas. Radiating · applicants who have maintained a 2.0 or
C quality point average in their previoiH
'from each face was a tunnel, ending in a
college level work. HQWever, in some
small 4" square cubicle, topped with an
programs of study the number of
air hole. "The cubicles were made of
applicants far exceeds available spaces
dark-red plexiglas because gerbils are
and
higher srade P.,int aven~ges are benocturnal and should be more comforing required.
table In dim light," Dr.- Hull explains.
Transfer applications ar!' still being
Most scientists are not, hQWever, and the
received and processe,d; icceptanceo
dark cubicles sometiiTII!S made subse· will continue to be issued throush the'
quent observations difficult ("we had
summer.·
• ~~~e.. ..... ,.S,colt

-...-

.........

�• 'Dedicated' faculty key to future
Cfrot~~ fNP 1,

col 1)

pense of scholarship and research still
prompts unrealistic expectations, Ketter
suggested.
He recalled the experience of Ashbel
Green, an early president of Princeton,
who abandoned the custom of inviting
students to his home for dinner because
the practice "had but little e ffect in
reclaiming the vicious."
By so despairing of the effort, President Greeri, in Ketter's view, 11 admitted
that the character·molding mission in
those early institutions - and even
among ones of more recent heritage was actually suspect in terms of unive r·
sally intend e d results . His remark
acknowledges that the st udents invited
to his table arrived with certain predilections in their behavior and att itudes, and
that he was not likely to have an influential impact upon those whose behavioral
and att itudinal values already were greatly at variance wit~ his own. In other
words, the bases - or lack of them - of
personal moral and social be haviors are
dete rmine d essentially by the actions
and inter·actions ot the processes of
e ducation before a stude nt arrives at a
university.
" A logical reaction to this view of
President Green 's conclusion about
' mealtime - and I can hear il now in
those grumblings I mentioned earlier would be to maintain that unkempt
students seek out unke mpt faculty, and
that they therefore become more unkempt while passing through the University. Obviously the sartorial splendor of
the faculty is uneven - just as it is
anywhere else. Also, th e tendency of like
to search out like, and to reinforce and
accentuate each other, is well known.
However, the truth of this seems to miss
the truth of the contention, which is
simply that faculty seldom are likely to
bring about magical personal transfor·
mation; that an assumption to the contrary constitutes a false expectation; and
that persons unsettled by changing social
behavior and attitudes should not look
for a scapegoat in the form of th e
, faculty."
V~ Rem~in 1 Howe.er

Thk is not to suggest, Ketter said, " that
higher education as it is today is devoid
of values, or that faculty are not influential in the academic and pe rsonal
development of students. Quite the op. posite."
Faculty . facilitate the learning of
specific academic skills and also are able
to influence attitudes which deal with
the value placed upon truth and the continuing pursuit of it. They contribute to
the refinement of individual sensitivit y
and aWareness and assist in the creat ion
of a humane stance toward life developments which " go far toward
making it incumbent upon an individual
to determine the correct moral acrion in
a particular situation."
Not every student will have the in- · clination or ability to pursue th is blend of
personal and academic development,
. ·~ Ketter said, and not every faculty
member will be able to make such an im. pact. " Nevertheless, we must not Ipse
sight of the results which can flow from
the proper matching of strong inclinations •nd high abilities. Such results,
together with those students and faculty
who can pursue them, are at the esse!'ce
of higher education; and we must keep
that fact before. us among the myriad
ends we serve and the contrary pressures
exerted by other functions."
Research Indicates, Ketter said , that a
faculty member has the greatest impact
on the educational and personal
development of a student when there is
interaction between the two both inside
and ouulde the classroom setting.
"What type of an instructor will most
likely engage in this interaction," he asked, ,.and in whtlt type of institution is it
moot likely to occur!" ·

c--. .

" s-. of
The iMtrUdor with a sense of "caring,"
seems the most likely candi&lt;Ut!', the
President ..ld. Kenneth Eble "writes that
the students he spoke with during a particular study 'seen.&gt;ed as sensitive as ·
faculty to the need for maintaining some
sense of difference between 61udents
and faculty. [They) . . . wanted • . . a

teacher able to convey a sense of caring
about what he was doing and somehow
to make that concern include both the
students and the world outside the campus.' " Such a teacher, Ketter added,
must also " be imbued with dedication
and an awareness that his or her personal
example is a primary influence.
" The notion of oedication implies
qualities of its own. When Mac Hyman,
who wrote No Time for Sergeants, was
serving briefly as a faculty member at a
southern university, he reported to a
fr ie nd that he had ' learned such th ings as
how to spend fifteen minutes calling the
roll, five or ten minutes li fting wi ndows
up and down, another fifteen minu tes or

so talking about the next da y's assign·
ment, so that-1 can now spend almost the
who le . .. hour withou t even mentioning

the subject.' Un doubtedly, many faculty
membe rs - even the dedi cated - will
have days when they would like to spend
th e hour call ing the roll or ra isi ng the
windows. Nevert heless, if an instructor
has mastered a particular subject, it must
be assumed that, if he is dedicated, he
will want to communicate this mastery;
and he wil l therefore take the trouble to
culti va te so me of the elementary
mechanics of comm uni ca ting and performing. This is not to say that everyo ne
should or co uld become a John
Barrymore of the classroom and lab.
However, it does invo lve an awareness
o n the part of the fac ult y member that
commun ication is an active_process."
Characteristics of the Dedicated
Among ot her charc~cter i st i cs "which
the dedicated will display," Ketter listed
a wi ll ingness to prepare, to organize and
to inj ect a . varie ty in to classroom
ma te rial; a determin ation on the part of
the instructor to keep aliVe his own
curiosity and enthusiasm both wit hi n and
outside his field; and an attempt to see
and co nvey in formal as we ll a ~n informal settings the relationship of his disciplin e to that which exists apart from it.
Of all characteri st ics, ho wever, the
Presiden t suggested, " the most important is honesty. Any reacher has a great
nu mber of opportunities to be d isho nest
in int e racrio ns with st udents, in gradi ng ,
and in the presentation of sub ject
maHer. This is especially true since the
teacher functio ns as one who has learned amon g those who are learning. The
dedicated facu lt y member will therefore
never be far from the awareness that his
work, his actions, are intimately involved
with moral judgments of righ t and
wrong, with the derermination of correct
behavior. lr is rhe de monstrat ion of this
awareness that I feel ca n have a great
cumulative effect upon some students."
These fa c ult y-stude nt re lationships
and influences, Ketter said, " are
associated customaril y with under grad uat e libera l e ducation," and with
small liberal arts colleges.
...
But, he con te nd ed, e\le n at a university
ce nter such as U/ B with a mission heavily
weighted toward research and g raduate
and professional •ed ucation, ed ucation
need not occur in a sterile and clinical atmosphere devoid of such val ues.
Good Facuhy •t All Levels
J:'lor, he said, are all truly ded icated
faculty me mbers reserved for the upper
reaches: " The fai:l is that there are faculty mem~rs at this institution, at . all
leve ls, who do indeed perform the dual
resea rCh and teacbing roles: and who
also can be numbered" ainong those
who have a broad lea rning impact
among some students. " The.y are
dedi cated; they do not hesitate to give of
th e mselves and their time; and h is this
dedication that will determ ine primaril y
the type of education which is obta inable at this University."
In a sense, Kener said, " we have come
.round to the lOg with its two occupants.
It is i curious imige todiy, especially at a
university. Yet stripped of romantic
notions and expectations that always
were unreollstic, it is not a totally ob·solete image. The bark mJy have ·
sprouted test tubes md grants and commi«ee assignments and union meetings;
still it is possible for some, for the
dedicated faculty member and the
talented and motivated learner, to reach
through the thicket and •ttain the most
Important ioals of education."
.

Rev. Loew is 1975. Medalist;
Eccles receives Citation
Reveren d Ralph W. Loew of Holy
Citation for Dr. Eccles
Trinity lutheran Church received the
-The University Citation, awarded to Sir
Chancellor's Medal, the University's
Joh n Eccles, was instituted in 1971 to
most prestigious award, during General
recognize -individuals who have made
Commencement exercises, Sunday, May
" outstanding contributions to the
18, in Memor~al Audito rium. Also during
University, to higher education, a par- ·
the ceremony, a UQiversity Citation was
ticular field of endeavor, the local, state,
awarded to Sir Jo hn Eccles, retiring d isnational or international community and
tinguished professor of -physiology. The
to the furtherin·g of ·world understanChancellor's Medal . was presented by
ding."
President Robert l. Ketter, and William
Dr. Eccles, winner of the Nobel Prize in
C. Baird, chai rman of the Council of the
Medicine and Physiology in 1963, is retirUniversity, conferred the Citation.
ing after serving on the U/8 faculty since
A leader in both community and ecu·
1968. Recognized as the world 's leading
me nical activ ities, Rev. loew has served
authority on nerve impulse transmission,
at the State level as a Rockefeller aphe has conducted pioneering research
pointee to the Empire State Housing
on the vertebrate nervous system for
Foundation, while locally his church has
more than four decades in four nat ions.
built a multi-story apartment resid~nce
Named Knight Bachelor by Queen
for the e lderly. He is a past president of
Elizabeth II in 1958, he has received
the Buffalo and Eri e County Community
several international honors and
Action O rganizat ion, chairman o f the
honorary degrees from un iversit ies in
·Red Cross Youth Di vision in Buffalo,
Europe, North America and ·A~st~al ia ..
coordinator of Project Good Neighbor,
Mr. Baird stated that the UntverSity
and a member of the Buffalo Council of
Citation was being presented to ·Dr.
World Affairs.
·
Eccles " to add our plaudits to the many
Re v. loew has al so been president of
he so deservedly holds, to salute him for
the Ministerial Association of Buffalo,
the prestige and distinction he has
the Buffalo Council of Churches, and the
brought to our University, and to express
Luthera n Church 's Board of World
our gratitude for his contributions to the
Missions. He is prese ntly chairman of the
development of University goals." (Dr.
Divis ion of World Mission and
Eccles served _in the early 1970's as chairEcumenism fo r the LUtheran Church and
man of a special Presidential Task Force
vice chairman of the lutheran Council's
on University Goals.)
Division of Mission and Ministry.
Well Known to Thousands
Life magazine selected one of his sermons in 1957 as being among the six
most notable se rmons of that year, and
today he ·is well known to thousands of
Buffa lo resi de nts through a weekly
A veteran member of the School of
column published in a local newspaper.
Nurs ing faculty and a speech comA native o f Columbus, Ohio, Rev..
munication professor with 22 years of
loew is a grad uate of Capit·al University;
service to the Un iversity were among
he re ceived his master's degree in divini·
seven ret iri ng facuhy members honored
ty from th e Hamma School of Theology.
at the annual Commencement
He ca me to Buffalo in 1944 in his th ird
Luncheon, May 18 in Goodyear Hall:
clerical assignment.
·
Both received citations from University
In mak ing the Medal presentation, Dr.
President Robert l. Keiter (for informaKetter cited Rev. loew's concern for the
tion on other retirees, see the Re,iorrer,
cOmmunity and the ind iv idual :
May 1S).
"He has served a particular fa it h and
Hurl HarYey, associate professor of
denomination; yet his service has not
nursing, has been a member of the facul..
bef?n bound to these. Oncejte described
ty since 1949. A graduate of U/ B, she
the Buffa lo community as a system o f
received an M.S. from Western Reserve
'wheels within wheels tha t never touch.'
University. She is a member and past
For more than 30 years he has labored
president of the New York State Board of
among persons of all races and faiths in
Nursing and a board member of the New
this city to mesh these wheel~ into ~n · York State NurSing Committee on Prac~
harmonious mechanism."
tice. ·
Rev. Loew was th &lt;&gt; forty-eighth
Bonnie k . Pomero~ntz, associilte
recipient of the Chancellor'sMedal, first
professor of speech communication,
awarded in 1925. The award · was esjoined the faculty in 1953. A graduate of tablished through a bequest of
Occidental Collese in ·Los Angeles, she
Chancellor Charles p, Norton, who
r:..eceived a Ph.D. from the University of
specified that the Medal was to be
Wiscohsin. She has served as a speech
awarded to a citizen whose acts " have - therapy consultant for a number- of
dignified both the performer and BufOrganizations and institutions, including
falo in the eyes of the world." the federal sovernment.

Harvey, Pomerantz
among 1975 retirees

�:Mayaguez strike
within.law,
2 profs agree
By Bob Enselhordt
Unil"tfsky lnform111&lt;M Seoricft

A law professor and a history professor

at U/B say President Ford acted within
his Constitutional powers in authorizing
military intervention after the Cimbodian seizure of the Mayaguez.
-4

" leaving aside whether he was right or
wrong, there are plenty of historical

precedents for his action," says Dr.
Richard E. Ellis, an historian and author ·
of The Jeffersonian Crisis.
Ellis cites President Andrew Jackson's
1818 decision to send troops to Florida, a
Spanish territory at the time, as only one
of many nineteenth century examples of

a Pres ide nt acting without the formal ap-

proval of Congress.
"Sure he has the Constitut io nal
powe r," adds Dr. Ho\Vard W. Mann, a
law professor who helped draft the 25th.
Amendment on Presidential succession.
" If there's a question," says Professor
Mann, "it's whether it was a legitimate
use of the Constitutional power."
Both faculty members note that the
Constitution is not specific on executive
privilege or the inherent powers cif the
Presidency, and they offer differing advice on hbw borderline issues regarding
Presidential power might best be resolved.
Professor Mann believes the
President's constitutional powers would
be clarified if more Presidential actions
were subject to Congressional and court
review.
New Constitution Needed!
Professor Ellis, who feels "t he
Constitution is starting· to come apart,"
sees the need for a new one. He views
the. Mayaguez af(air. as-one example of
" how difficult it is becoming to live un der a document written in the
eighteenth century."
The historian says American political.
consciousness has been raised substantially in the past decade and suggests a
second Constitutional Convention as a
vehicle to channel debate in a constructive direction.
The Bicentennial Celebration, according to Professor Ellis, could be used as a
springboard "for a national debate on
what kind of government we want to
have."
·
The national debate would culminate
with the calling of a second
Constitutional Convention in_the spring
·of 1967, on the 200th anniversary of the
first one. Dr. Ellis describes the United
States in the years between 1776 and 1789
as a "nation of politic'al scientists."
The American history professor
acknowledges that "real dangers" might
accompany the rewriting of the
Constit ution, but these would be outweighed by the benefits. A new
Constitution could clarify fundamental
issues - sUch as freedom of the press
and women's rights - spell out vague
areas of the original document- such as
executive privilege and the role of
nat ional political parties - and take up
matters overlooked by the · Founding
Fathers - .such as national ho:_alth and
old age Insurance.
Mann Opposes New Constitution
Professor Mann, who is against the
idea of a second Constitutional Convention, suggests that a revision of the present document would probably fail to
resolve the question of Presidential conduct when dealing with such emergency
situations as the Mayaguez incident.
"The main issue is that the' President
has to decide at the time," Qys the law
professor. " The Constitution allows him
to do so, but his actions are subject to

.re~:;e::o~ ~~~~i"::~~es

a distinction
between a President's Constitutional
powers and their legitimate use. In
emersenaes like the Mayosuez incident,
Professor Mann believes a President is
justified in a£tins without the formal
_ consent of Congress if circurmtances
warrant the use of force to save
American lives.
But a review of the President's actions,
he adds, would be useful in clarifyi ng
guidelines for futur&lt;! conduct.
·

7 unit- graduations held May 16 thru 18
Speakers stress opportunities,
urge fitness, virtue, hard work
Graduates of the School of Architecture and Envi ronmental Design were
urged to view their degrees a.s "one opportunity for wisdom" by Harold Cohen,
dean of the School, at comme cement
ceremonies Friday, May 16, in . Beth une
Hall.
.
.
Dean Cohen te rmed a college degree
a "door,-" through which a student can
proceed and grow freely or drop into
stagnation:
"I wish you and your family the
strength of your convictions and th e
ability not to yield to intellect ual or
econom ic Self-imposed slavery, not to
yield to despair and bigotry. May yo u
always choose to be free - for the
choice is truly yo urs."
Forty-seven degrees were awarded in
the following categories: bachelor of
professional st udies in architecture- 13;
bache lor of architecture - 14; bachelor
of arts in envi ronmental design - 17;
master of architecture - 3.
Degrees were conferred by Dr. Albert
Scimit, U/8 executive vice president.
Jonathan Hale, one of the graduates,
delivered the class address, and a slide
~ presentation...on the history of the class
was shown.
Heolth Related Professions
Dr. John Naughton, new dean of the
U/B Medical School , told t hose
graduating in the Schoo1 of Health
Related Professio ns that all health
professional groups must be responsive
to ,consumer as well as pmfessionallydefined needs.
Speaking to HRP graduates at the
Roswell Park Research Study Center,
Saturday, May 17, Dr. Naughton urged
the class to participate in developing
new educational, training, and service
delivery programs for health care. Such
future changes in health care delivery
patterns are being encouraged by the
federal government, he noted.
D.r. F. Carter Pannill; vice president for
health sciences, conferred 189 desrees at
the commencement - 141 in the baccalaurute prosram, 28 masters, and 20 in
the·ceni(jcate program.
~t

·

Graduates of the School of Management heard WiiiU.m H. Wendel, president of the Carborundum Company, discuss the " thrilling. chillins and challenging experiences that happen to
managers " at commencement
ceremonies In Kleinhans Music Hall,
Satur&lt;by, May 17.
In his address, Mr. Wendel cited examples of experiences that involve
manager. in all areas of endeavor - the

private sector, non-profit institutions and
government:
" The thrill involves seeing you ng people graduate from college who a few
years ago wo ul d have had no o pportunity to do so; the chills come from
watching recession wipe out the contributions that would have built a new
wi ng for yo ur hospital; the challenges
have to do with coping with govern men t
regulatic;ms and the stresses of inflation
and recession, and being even more
responsive to the needs of your constituents."
Mr. Wendel emphasized that despite
external differences which vary with institutions, management is basically the
same everywhere. All managers, he said,
must be prepared to meet the mounting
criticism being di rected today at all institutio ns.
Degrees were conferred on the
gradua tes by Dr. Merton Ertell, ading
vice president for academic affairs. A
total of 690 degrees- 550 bachelor5, 129
M.B.A.'s, and 11 Ph.D.'s - were awarded.
Ensineerins ~nd Applied Sciences
The Faculty of Engineering and
Applied Sciences awarded 339 degrees at
an open air ceremony in front of Parker
Hall, Sunday, May 18.
.
Engineering Faculty Provost William N .
Gill and individual department chairmen
presented the candidates- to Dr. Merton
W. Ertell, acting vice president for
academic affairs, who conferred 215
bachelors, 93 masters. and 31 doctorates.
Dr. Gill welcomed candidates and
their guests with the thought that today's
engineers are the best prepared to han: die the· complex problems of the world.
However, he added, "You must be
ready to con t inue ga i ning new
knowledge throughout your lives,
regardless of the degree you receive
here."
.
HNIIh Educollon
Dr. Joseph Manch, superintendent of
Buffalo Schools and a former U/B
student-athlete, told those sradu:otins·
from the School of Health Education
they must "be messengers to society to
pro~te grNter interest in maintaining
goOd health and well-being."
Speaking at ceremonies in Clark Hall;
Satur&lt;by, May 17, Dr. Manch stressed the
imponance of sood health for the
development of the human personotity_
"Many who are called 'successful' succumb to poor heolth ond rob themselves
and their communities of their funher
-potential. Those who have worked so
diligently to be successful often don't

consider good health something
worthwhile that should be worked at as
well," he said.
A former at hlete who continues to
keep fit by a program of va ried and
regular exercise, Dr. Manch pointed out
" no one is too busy to eXercise . ... .If
you plan to have exercise as part of your
routine, you can always find time for it.''
Dr. Harry Fritz, dean of the School of
Health Education, conferred .degrees on
83 students, with 56 receiving the B.S. in
health education; 26, the M·.s.; and one,
the doctorate.
Dentistry
Health Sciences Vice President Dr. F.
Carter Panni!! conferred D.D5. degrees
on 83 candidates at the School of Dentistry's commencement, Sunday, May 18,
at Kle inhans. Ten other individuals
received post-graduate certificates.
Dr. Richard A. Powell, associate dean
of the Dental School, called .on the
graduates to bring to the dental profession and their lives a variety of skills.
He urged the new dentists to: utilize
their talents; understand the value of
time; realize the pleasures of working;
cultivate the dignity of simplicity; practice patience; understand the wisdom of
economy; and live up to the obligations
of duty. These things, he said, will help
foster both personal and professional
development.
"The influence of example, tire power
of kindness, and worth of character are
other vinues which will help you in both
these areas of your life," Dr. Powell added.
"'--cy
"Many of you are destined for more
than the corner dru(!slore," Dr. John
Millis, president and director of the
National Fund for Medical Education,
Cleveland, Ohio, told School of Pharmacy graduates, Sun&lt;by, May 18, in John
lord O'Brian lUll.
Dr. Millis, currently heading a study of .
professional pharmacy for the u_s.
Surseon General, said many of the
gr..Ju:otes will go on to become directors
of pharmacies in· hospitals, or involved in
research for. new druss or evaluation of
new treatments, and similar pun;uitsOr, he said, they will face the
challenge of new, more comprehensive
health delivery or become a member of 1
health care team which deliver&gt; total
care to a patient.
Health Sciences Vice ~nt Dr- F.,
Caner Pannlll conferred dqrees on 107
student&gt;. The B.S. In pharmacy wis
awarded to 64, the B.S. in heallh scienOes
to 17, the M.S. to five, and the Ph_D. to
11.
Four candidates for the Pharm.D.
desree were recognized, but
not
complete degree ·requirements until this
summer.

will

�'·'!'---__,..,.....,______ ___________,___.,... _____

Freedo~

to read lacks protection of law

SllS Institute told Foundation
is working to extend 1st Amendment
Freedom of the press is a fully
recognized and revered First Amendment right, but the freedom to read has
never been granted the same protection
under the law, a library rights attorneytold a campus audience Monday.
To have First Amendment protection
extended to this right and to win legal
recognition of public libraries as the
nation's b.sic First Amendment resource
are the primary objectives· of the
Freedom to Read Foundation, William
North, legal counsel to the Foundation,
said.
No rth spoke at a session of the
"lnstityte on library Education for Principles of Intellectual Freedom" being
held here through Saturday under sponsorship of the Sc~ool of Information and
library Studies.
Intellectual freedom is an -acquired
taste, one which is contrary to every impulse of human nature, North said. A
commitment to a freemarket of ideas is
neither natural nor normal. "Each of us is

a censor, with a strong instinct to
protect our own ideas."
Yet, he pointed out, a free tr3de in
ideas is inherent in the natUre and purpose of libraries. libraries must be the
"fountainhead" of all the ideas of a
society, must be a sou_rce of knowledge

for the electorate if democracy is to survive.

North urged librarians to be commilled to intellectual freedom at all
costs, to never take it for granted, and
never use it seledively.
Jeffenon Wos a 'Backslider'
Everyone feels a need to regulate the
market of ideas from time to time, he admitted. Even Thomas Jefferson, miffed at
what he perceived as outrages on the
part of the Federalist press, once
suagested that the prosecution of
" offenders might help restore the integrity of the press."
luckily, North said, the defense of intellectual freedom does not rely solely
on personal commitment. The First
Amendment 11 helps some backsliders"
and offers a measi.J're of protection
against pressures from those who fear
their cherished beliefs will not hold up in
the marketplace.
North noted, however, that Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes once mused that
persecution of individuals for their
opinions is "understandable." Because it
is 10 losical, he said, Constitutional
yfeguards against such persecution are
all the more difficult to use. Distress and
hysteria among the populace easily lead
to suppression and censorship. The
current obscenity laws are a classic example, he sugg!"'ed. Widespread pressures
beins mounted against traditional social
and moral values have predictably
spawned these statutes as though pornography laws alone could stem the
threatening social dislocation.

tlw.uy . . ol

RJshts .

Libraries have · long attempted to
operate un,:ler a self-proclaimed "Bill of
Rights," North pointed out . This
manifesto simply trans~tes legal rights
and obiiJations into a program~or library

.

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operations. It reflects a commitment by
the library community at large not to
abridge the freedom of ideas. It serves as
a . conceptual-philosophical framework
for the operation . of libraries in a free
society. And those who would challenge ·
the First Amendment "won't .stand still
for it."
The American library Association
(AlAI, North said, has traditionally been
adive in enforcing this Bill of Rights, first
through a special committee and more
recently by means of an Office for
Intellectual Freedom. This Office actively
aids libraries arld librarians who are un1
der attack for espous'ing the Bill's principles.
In the late 1960's, however, the ALA
decided that a declaration of rights was
not enough. Books were still being suppressed and library records were
routinely being sought by government
agencies in order to keep tabs on what
"suspicious" people might be reading.
The ALA resolved to augment its principles with the policy of actively invoking
First Amendment rights. To its colledive
dismay, the Association found lthat many
First Amendment protections had neve r
been extended to libraries. Freedom of
the press existed to be sure, but not the
freedom to read. The rights of library
patrons to have access to all points of
view had never been acknowledged by
the co urts.
Freedom to Read foundation
The Freedom to Read Foundation was
established in 1969 to provide necessary
collective l.egal adion.
In going about its tasks of defending
the Library Bill of Rights and advancing
library freedoms, North said, the Folln
dation is guided by four principles:
First, it seeks to make the defense o f
intelleclual freedom respectable. In
order to proted the minority without inflaming the majority, polarization is
spurned in favor of reasoned argument.
Cases are carefully selected; defendants
must be beyond reproach; and the least
· offensive case which can be used to establish a precedent is the one which the
Foundation takes to court. "Telling it like
it is" often gives Way to " telling it Uke
we'd. like to say it," North said. "We try
to attrad, not repel."
The organization believes, too, that
the best and most effective opposition to
a bad idea is a good idea. The agency
never embroils . itself in controversy
" without first having arrived at an alternate solution which better serves intellectual freedom ."
Third, the Foundation holds that the
best way to influence the development
of law is to define issues in its own terms,
to take the initiative in litigation. "The
plaintiff controls definitions" in a case,
North pointed out. "We design·our cases
to control . the fadual context in which
the issue is being decided."
Finally, the agency stresses the importance of due process in the defense of intellectual freedom. Hate and fear prompt
most attacks On First Amendment rights,
North said; but these peak emotionS
cannot be sustained for a long period of
time. Due process means delays and
delays lead to boredom. Thus, in every
obscenity case, the Foundation requires
that the wQrk in question be ruled illegal
in a civil proceeding before an individual
faces criminal (harges. "The cen-sors
want blood," North contended. "They
want the librarian and the publisher to
go to jail." They are bored by the
prospect of filing suit against a book.
"And this boredom is the friend of
freedom."
In the few years of its existence, North
reported, the Freedom to Read Foundation has become a respectable par'ticipant in fundamental Constitutional
litigation, raising Issues never before rais.ed and posing dilemmas not yet solved.
"The Foundation has planted seeds
from which puter liberty will grow," he
said. •
"There must. be Constitutional
~Ilion that libraries can have on
tllelr she'- all' the ~I which they

can legally acquire." This is a battle
which will never stay won, he predicted.
1M SILS Institute
The six-day SILS Institute, being
anended by 30 faculty members from
library education programs across the
nation, is dealing with such topics as: the
emergence of intellectual freedom as a
pro forma philosophy of librarianship;
the current status of challenges to the
freedom to read; approaches to teaching
the concepts of intellectual freedom,
particularly at the graduate level; and the
future commitment and rationale expected in defense and promulgation of
t~ese concepts.
'Educators, practicing attorneys,
librarians and ALA officials are presenting a series of papers and leading open
discu.ssions on these issues.
Friday's Speakers
Presentation of papers will conclude
tomorrow (friday, June 6) with this line·
up of speakers and topics: 9 a.m. - Burt
Joseph, executive director; Playboy
Foundation, "The Future of the Freedom
of the Mind;" 11 a.m. -: lay E. Daily,
professor, School of Information and
Library Sciences , University of
Pittsburgh, " The Anatomy of Censorship;" 2 p.m. - Dan Lacy, vice president. McGraw · Hill , "I ntellectual
Freedom for the Publisher;" 8 p.m. - R.
Kathleen Mol z,. 0(1 leave from the U.S.
Office of Education, Bureau of Libraries,
" Is There a Rationale , for Intellectual
Freedom!" All sessions will be held in 1~7
Diefendorf and are open to the public.
The Inst it ute, directed by Gerald R.
Shields, SILS assistant professor, ends
Saturday with ope n fo rum and summary
sessions.

13 retiring

in Medicine
Thirteen individuals retiring from the
School of Medicine in August were
honored at the School 's annual faculty
meeting Wednesday, )vlay 28, at the
Faculty Cl ub.
Honored were Drs. Thelma Brock,
clin ical associate in medicine; Vidor l.
Cohen, clinical associate professor in
pediatrics; Richard A. Downey, assistant
clinical professor in pediatrics; John C.
Eccles, professor in physiology; louis M.
· Judelsohn, clinical associate professor in
pediatrics; Michael Laskowski, research
professor in biochemistry ; Heinz
lichtenstein, clinical associate professor
in psychlatry; George H. Marcy, clinical
associate professor in surgery; Clyde l.
Randall, · professor
of
obstetrics/
gynecology; loseph • Rosenberg, assistant clinical professor of surgery;
James B. Vau"ghan, clinict~~l associate
professor in surgery; Henry E. Vogel,
clinical instrudor in surgery; and Walter
S. Walls, associate clinical professor in
surgery.

Over 60 group
voices approval
of audit plan
The University's Division of Continuing Education has received a highly
favorable response from older adults
who audited courses last fall, when U/B's
" Sixty and Over Auditors Program" was
offered for the first time.
The program enables older adults to sit
in on many undergraduate and some
graduate classes free of charge. if
classroom space is available after regular
students have enrolled. It is set up to
keep red tape at a minimum. Senior
auditors receive no college credit and
are not required to take tests or perform ·
classroom assignments.
Of 36 senior citizens who answered a
U/ B questionnaire, all but one said they
were able to audit the course or courses
of their preference last fall . Ninety per
cent said the quality of their courses was
good or excellent and 8-4 per cent
attended their courses to completion.
The survey found that two-thirds cif
the senior auditors resided in suburbs
near U/ 8; two-thirds had at least some
prior college experience, and threequarters relied on private transportation
to arrive at their classes on the three U/ 8
campuses. One-fourth of the senior
auditors were between 70 and 85 years of
age.
A large majority said they were
satisfied with the time and place of their
courses, but parking problems on the
Main Street campus du ri ng peak hours
were singled out as a source of dis·
satisfadion .
Most senior cit izens said cultural
enrichme nt was the main objedive in
auditi ng U/ 8 courses. Other objectives
frequently mentioned were the updating
of prior knowledge and contad with
yo un g adults, specialists and scholars. A
few respondents said they were taking
courses to prepare for volunteer work or
new part·time careers.
Senior citizens may obtain details on
credit courses offered this summer by
contading the Adult Advisement Center
(831-2238) at 3 Allenhurst Avenue, across
from the Main Street campus.
In addition to the " Sixty and Over
Auditor 'Program," some 70 non-credit
courses and workshops are being offered
at half-price to senior citizens this
summer by the Office for Credit-Free
Programs, Room 3, Hayes Annex A, Main
Street campus (831-43011.

'Prof of Year'
Frederic P. Fischer, professor of electrical engineering here for the past 2S
years, has been named "Professor of the
Year" in the School of lngineering.
The U/B chapter of Tau Beta Pi, the
':'lational engineering honor society,
presented the award to Prof. Fischer .
last month.

fACULTY
Assistant or Associate Professor, Pharmacy. f·5043.
Assistant Professor, Medicine. F-5044.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Pharmacy, F-5045.
Assistant Professor - Medicinal Chemistry, Pharmacy, F-5046.
Lecturer (Academic Coordinator), Co/lege H (Health Studies), F-5047 .
Professor, Microbiology, F-5048.
•
.
Associate Professor, Microbiology. F-5049.

NTP
Assistant Dean, Medicine, PR-5, B-5020.
.

F_o r additional information concerning these Jobs and for details of
opemngs throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at
·
these locations:

1. ~II Facility between 0152 and D153; 2. Ridge lea, Building 4236, neict to
. cafe~ena; l. Rt~ge Let~~, Building 4230, in corridor next to C·1 ;' 4. Cary Hall, in
corndor opposote HS 131; 5. Farber Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and
the Lobby; ~- ~wood, ground floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7.
Hayes Hall, In !l:'af!t e_n trance foyer I across from Public Information Office; e~
Aches&lt;lfl lUll, on corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9. Parker Engin"'!!ring,
on corrJ+&gt;i next to Room 15; 10. Richmond QUMI, Amherst Campus; 11. 1807
Elmwoolj, _Penon~ Department; 12. Norton Union, Director's Office, Room
22S; 13. Qiefenclbrl Mall, in corridor next to Room 106. 14. John lord O'Brian
(Am~ C..rnpuo).
Hall, fourth

f1eor

Sllle ~at
I

lo., lqM ()pportwlly/AffloMalift Action eMployer

�,. ,,,..

..

J~Nf 5, 19'75/SUMMEit UPORTEilhAGE 5

Job offers
dip sharply,
Council says

Garden of Amherst
No one • • .around Moncb.y morninJ . . . these photos were U.lcen, but the Cotleses'
prden projo&lt;t, off Sldn.....- Rood on the Amherst C•mpus, is tho hn of tho Sum ...... se.on. All JS n..U..ble plob lane been pabbed up by members of the Uni.-ersity com·
munity out to but inflation (or Just ha.-e fun)- amonsthem: Cl.Jude Welch, Political
Sdon&lt;o; John H•lstood, Hlstoty; Jim JuU.n, l'sychoJosy; ond lrv Spltzbors of the Colfeses.

• Escape from 'madding crowd' increases animal stress
{from .,.e 1, col ])

trouble seeing the gerbils' distinguishing
earmarks," she recalls). The cage was
further enhanced by putting rocks and a
cinderblock (as well as food and water
dispensers) in the central area.
Sixteen gerbils, e ight males and eight
females, were assigned to the
" e nriched" cage, which provided a total
of 64 square inches of area per animal.
Sixteen others were placed in a platn, unadorned square e nvironment {also pleXiglas) of the same area. Another sixteen
were paired and placed, two to a cage, in
plain cages providing the same population density. A final sixteen were placed
in a super-crowded condition, assigned
only eight square inches per animal, in a
standard plexiglas lab cage.
Over a period of months the animals
were observed at various times of day
and nigh! as to the location and quality
of any nests, relative activity, instances of
aggression and other "social interactions," and the presence of pups. later
" social interaction" tests were administered outside the cages. Finally,
when the behavioral tests were completed, the animals were destroyed and
hormone levels and other physiological
measures .were taken using radioimmunoassay techniques.
Suspk!Ons Unfounded
Before their actual observ·ations
began, Dr. Hull and students Jon franz,
Chris Kastaniotis , and Georgia
l 'Hommedieu had strong suspicions as
to how the gerbils would respond to
their unusual new environment with its
numerous built-in options for escape
from the madding crowd.
"Many breeders say that gerbils are
' monogamous,'" explains Dr. Hull .(an
Indiana Ph.D.), " and we expected that
the gerbils in the enriched cage, unlike
those in the other crowded conditions,
would mate. There were exactly enough
cubicles for each expected pair, and we
thought we'd see behavior much like
that of the paired control animals, with
the gerbils pair-bonding and retreating
to a cubicle to build a nest and raise a
family. Each cubicle was just the right
size for such a pair and a few pups."
Observalion quickly punctured . their
expectations. On the second day, the
researchers examining the enriched cage
found all sixteen gerbils jammed into a
single cubicle designed for two. "As the
gerbils got bigger, we would sometimes
find half of them stuffed into one cubicle
and most of the oihers stuffed into
another, all except perhaps one outcast,"
the scientist:Jremembers.
No Pair........... In lnrlc:hed C.,e
At no time during the four-month
period was there evidence of pairbonding In the enriched case lor among
any of the crowded animak). Although
the 1erbfk were Biven paper cbily to
fac111tate nest-buildlns, none of those in

the enriched cage ever built a nest
("although we did sometimes find a
cubicle stuffed with paper," Or. Hull
recalls). Reproductive success was even
poorer in the enriched condition than
among the other crowded animals (the
paired . animals had by far the most
litters!.
"The gerbils in the enriched condition
produced only one litter. That was
delivered out in the open, not in one of
the cubicles, and was found dead a few
hours later.'" The young never survived
long in crowded conditions, she observ·
es, speculating that in the general confusion, including the constant runn ing of
other gerbils through nests, such mate rnal behaviors as retrieving the pups are
inadequate to insure survival of the
young. (Also, gerbils do sometimes eat
the pups, she reminds.!
·
In the "socia·l interaction" rests conducted outside their cages toward the
end of the study, the enriched gerbils
evidenced twice the aggression of the
other crowded animals. In the daily
observations, however, the enriched
population had far fewer gerbil-inflicted
injuries than the other crowded animals.
"Apparently the enriched ·(:ondition
di9 offer some . protection against injury," Dr. Hull acknowledges. Fighting
seemed to be most savage in the onenriched crowded condition, where fOur
animals were killed and m;ony qthers
showed wounds and scars. Surprisingly,
in the super-crowded condition, only

one animal was killed and none evidenced wounds.
The final phase of the study invol ved
weighing the killed gerbils, their testes,
adrenals, and ventral glands and conducting a laborious radioimmunoassay of
hormone levels in their blood. It was
found that the enriched animals had the
heaviest adrenal glands, generally believed to indicate high-levels of hormonal
production associated with stress.
(However, the animals from the super·
crowded condition were found to. have
the highest levels of cortisol, an adrenal
"stress hormone.")
Enrichment Exacerbatins
Instead of decreasing the stressful
effects of crowding, "enrichment" of the
environment (like periodic isolation in
Dr. Hull's-earlier study) appears to exacerbate them. "Being able to get away
may actuaUy make things worse for
crowded animals," she says. " There does
seem to be some slight degreel'f ada pta- ·
tion to constant crowding." Crowding,
she clarifies, appears to be a function of
the number of animals, not inability to
escape from one's fellows. In fact, she
continues, there seems to be a strong
social attraction among the crowded
. animals (despite the fact that the crowded situation is stressful), .JS evidenced by
the way the gerbils will often huddle
together in a group.
Unlike those popu_larizers who anthropomorphize aggression in lab
animals Into apocalyptic fantasies of
slaughter fn the streets, Or. Hull is reluctant to make predictions about hurmn
behavior on the baois of whal she ..,...
among serbils. "I'm not wlllln§ to
generalize to human behavior at all, 'slle
says, "but In studylns ~ p
do
often obserw lnterestlns phenOmena
that would be worth studYins at another
time with people."
· ·

Job prospects for 1975 college
graduates are dim and aren't expected to
improve until next spring, the College
Placemen t Council reported at its
national meetiftg in Washington in late
May.
,
Six months ago, the Council had been
more optimistic on the 1975 employment
market, predicting only a four per cent
decline from last spring's hiring totals.
Now, however, ·the group reported, its
latest survey shows that employers estimate they have hired or will hire
about 18 per cent fewer graduates than
last year.
The earlier forecast was based on the
premise that demand for engineers and
hiring by the petroleum industry would
be strong, but " neither of these expectationS materialized," the Coundl said.
Openings for engineers graduating at
all levels have actually declined by 20 per
cent over last year, the Council's figures
indicate. Engineering employment had
shown increases of 7 per cent, 32 per
cent, and 14 per cent during the previous
three years.
Petroleum industry hiring, While up by
4 per cent this spring, is nonetheless far
below the 33 per cent rise predicted last
fall. This small increase was not enough
to offset declines in other fields .
The only groups of employers showing
hiring increases this spring are local ancf
state governments, whose hiring of
college graduates is up 18 per cent, and
educational and nonprofit institutions,
which indicate a 7 per cent rise in the hiring of nonteaching staff. These two
categories, however, account for only a
small portion of the nation's total job
vo lume.
largest declines are noted in the recessio n-plagued auto and construction industries where hiring of college
grad uat es is down 60 per cent from last
yea·r.
The Council reported that its survey
shows that "employers do not expect appreciable improvement in hiring until
possibly next spring." For the majority of
graduates, the Council report concluded, ''supply is seen as exceeding demand
unleu the economy improves."

0

Tennis rules
Because of the heavjl demand for playing time on the new battery of tennis
courts on the Amherst Campus, playing
regulations have been announced by the
School of Health Education to better accommodale students, faculty and staff.
The \regulations .for court utiliution
follow:
1: Courts may be reserved by phoning
831-2926 between 1 and 7 p.m., Monday
through friday. Courts may not be
reserved more than 48 hours in advance.
2. Gra.d uate and undergraduate
· SUNYAB students may play without
charge upon presentation of a validated
1975 10 card.
3. faculty and staff may play without
additional charge with the presentation
of a 1975 Summer Session Recreation
Program Permit. T-hese may be purchased for $5 at Room 300 in Clark Hall and
are valid through August 31, 1975. Each
member of the faculty-staff member's
immediate _family may purchase a
Recreation Program Permit.
- 4. Non-University personnel desiring
to use University -t__ennis Courts ma.y do
so under the following schedule: $1 per _ \
hour per player for singles and $.75 pen ( -1 '
hour per player lor doubles.
5. Tennis shoes .1re required.
6. Play is limited to one hour.
7. All players play at own risk.
8. Classes and scheduled events have
priority.

�~AC?.E 6(J~N~ 5, ~ ~~5(~.1.!~-~ REPQRJER

NTP .:p~rlnane~t appointment procedures SUNY plans
EDITOII'S NOT£: 1M lolowina "lleriow Pn&gt;ceclufts I&lt;&gt;&lt; N1P p......,.
~- '*-dlo anopuo oupenison on Moy lt.
In - t i n s 1M doc:umenl, Preticlent Jtobort L Koll0&lt; tho'*od
• • who prorided "!he consicloroblo lnpul receWod durina lis

-

~1,"

fNIIIcululy !he Prolession.al SI•H S....to.

1. Philosophy
~
With the advent of the new Agreement between United
University Professions, Inc. and the State of New York as well
as the recently revised Policies of the Board of Trustees, permanent appointnient is now available to eligible non teaching professional employees who satisfy spedfic University i.nd title service requirements·. Such a basic change in
State University's personnel procedures undoubtedly

provides both the employee and the University with an excellent opportunity for self-examination and future plannin~ ,

from which both can qualitatively benefit over the years
ahead.
As both process and opportunity, permanent appoint ~
ment is primarily directed at the future. By granting permanent appointmenl 10 an employee, the University is~publicl y
announcing that it firmly believes the individual in question is
adP.quarely qualified to perform the functions that will be
demanded by a particular position as the University continues
to evolve and pursue its missions.
Clearly then, it must be recognized that the University is
not a static organizational entity, but one which must be flex ible, receptive 10 change and in fact an initiator of change, if it
is to successfully respond to those challenges ahead. Consequently, consideration for permanent appointment - the
identification of those individuals in whom the University entrusts 'ts future - must encompass not only a review of past
Ejmployee performance, but a ·clear examination of how
potential employee contributions relate to the future goals
and need for excellence in the department, division and
University. Consideration for permanent appointment must
not be thought of as a " super performance appraisal," but
rather: a critical examination of both employee past performance and potential for continued growth and contribution.
Like continuing appointment for faculty, perm~nent appoint ment should be offered as positive encouragement to
qualified professional employees so that the University will be
enriched by their continued contributions and service. The
oppOrtunity is there- for the University, to selectively identify those professional employees Who will help to determine
· its future - and for the employee, to obtain appropriate
recognition not only for past contributions and
achievements, but most .importantly, for those yet to come.
What follows, lherefore, are the procedures which have
been established at the Stare University of New York at Buffalo, through which consideration of permanent appointment for professional employees will rake place. As a new
process, it represents a beginning- one which certainly may
change, as we be~ome the benefadors of expe~i~ nce. -

2. Elisibllil}' for Pe"""nent Appointment
Eligibility for permanent appointment consideration is
defined in the Policies of the Board of Trustees. Specifically,
Article· XI, Title C, Section 4a of those Policies states:
"Except as provided in subdivision· (b) of this section and
section (5} (b) 2 of this Title, further employment of a
professiOOil employee who has completed two consecutive'
years of full-time service at a campus of the University in the
professional title to which permanent appointment may be
gfinted ind who his completed seven consecutive years of
full-time · service at a campus of the University as a
professional employee must be on the basis of a permanent
· appointment in such professional title; provided~ however,
that such appointment shall not be effective until made so by
the Ch~ncellor; provided further, however, that an employee
in service at a ampus of the University on September 1, 1974
who otherwise meets the eligibility requirements described
herein shall not be offered permanent appointment until the
date of notice of renewal of his term appointment which
notice dat!' next follows Sr;!ptember 1, 1974; such permanent
appointmept shall become effective only pursuant to the
terms of such proffered appointment."

Since permanent appointment will not be granted until
service requirements have been met, there can be no " early"
consid~ration for permanent appointment.
3. Deftnlllon ol Terms
A. f'ennal!enl Appointment:
Anlcle XI, rode C, Section 1a of the Policies of the Board
.of Trustees states: "A perma~nt appointment shall be an appointment of a professio:ml employee in a professional title,
except those titles listed in Appendix ~ of this pan, which
shall continue until a chanse in such title, resignation, retirement, or termination in accordance with these Policies."

.. llnmecllfe 5upenfJor:

'

.

Anicle XII, Title a, Section 2b of the Policies of the Board
of Trustees indicates that the "Immediate Supervisor shall
man the penon deslsnated by the chief administrative offiCer for the purpose of evaluatins professional employees."
Those l'ollcles further state In Section 4 of the same title that:
"Each prolesoional employee in the Professional Servi~
NesacUtlnt! Unlt.shall have his performance evaluated by his
irnrnedl.te oupervlsor formaUy, in writing. once each year
clurins lhe term ol appointment and as chansins conditions
warrant. Such ~ shall be based on a performance
prosram cleteunlued by lhe immediate oupervlsor alter disbillion with lhe employee." Additionally, Article 33 of the
~ lndlatet diM lhe Immediate supervisor Is to
make a recommendation reprdl,. lhe srantini ol pe"""nent appointment to lhe employee with ouch recommendation holdina slanlfl~nt conseque~ In terms of the

employee's access to a review of ·the fi_nal decision.
In addressing who should be formally designated as
,.immediate supervisors," and in recognition of the complexity of our University and the necessity that certain authority be
delegated to the University's divisions for them to function
ellectiyely and efficiently, the President has determined that
within the guidelines issued by him on February 18, 1975,
authorized University officers shall designate immediate
supervisors in their respective areas. Those guidelines indicate that normally, the designated immediare supervisor is
expected to be that individual logically implied by the function. Exceptions to this definition must be justified to and approved by the President. Such designations are to be communicated in writing to each non-teaching profe ssional
employee, the appropriate immediate supervisor, and th e
Personnel Office. Finally, all such designations are to be approved by the President.
C. Immediate OOpenlisor's SupeO'isor:
The individual next higher in the organizat ional stru cture
of the unit shall be the immediate superviso r's supe rviso r.
This is the same individual who, in addition to the immediate
supervisor, must also sign the employee 's pe rfo rmance
programs and appraisals. Individuals who may be servin g in
acting capacities in these posilions are included by thi s.defi nition, and it should be recognized here as well as through o ut
the rest of this document 1hat due to organizational stru ct ures
and reporting relationships, in certain instances the immediate supervisor's supervisor will be the Vice President.

D. Vice President:
That individual within the organization serving in the
position of a University Vice President , including an y in ~
dividuals who may be so serving in an act ing capacity.
E. President:
That individual serving in the position of President of the
State University of New York at Buffalo .
4. Dossie,, SuperYisor and Employee Statements
A dossier must be provided for each professional
e mployee eligible for permanent appointmentconsideration.
It shall be the responsibility of the immediate supervisor to
assemble the dossier, and to review it with the employee (excluding any letters of recommendation solicited by the
University) for comple teness purposes only, prior to actual
permanent appointment consideration.
The dossier shall include : (unless noted to be ar the
e mployee's option)
A. an up- ..,_dare vita e, prepared by the employee;
· 8. all position descript ions which may e xist, for positions
filled by the employee during his (h~r) employment by the
University;
C all performance programs and appraisa ls written
rega rding the e mployee, including any add itional statements
filed by either the employee or supervisor regard ing these
documents;
D. letters of recommendation solicited by the immediate
supervisor after discussion with the employee, ; rom individuals either within or outside the University (or both) who
would be in a position to effectively comment upon th e
e mployee 's qualifications for permanent appointment. These
le tters of recommendation are in addition (employee's option) to any which may. have been solicited as secondary
sources of information under the performance program;
E. other documentation which the immediate supervisor
and/ or employee believes important to consideration of permanent appointment, including items which may be in the
e mployee's official personnel file;
F. a St!ltement from the immediate supervisor regarding
rh e employee's candidacy for permanent appointment. Signed by the immediate supervisor, s·uch a statement should give
the employee's name, officj al title and University unit , and
comment upon any aspects of the employee's past perfor~
. mance and fulure potential which the immediate supervisor
believes bear upon the permanent appointmenr decision. For
example, in his/her statement the immediate supervisor may
wish to discuss such matters as the employee'S most significant contribution(s) while in title and University service;
1echniCal/ professional r:ompetence; skills and strengths;
weaknesses; motivation: interpersonal skills; adaptability to
change; professional growth; etc.
C. a statement from the employee regarding his/her candidacy for permanent appointment (employee's option).
Signed by the employee, such a statement should give the
employee's name, official title and Universily unil, and commehl upori -aspects of his/her performance and PQtenrial
which the employee believes bear upon the permanent appointment decision. For exa.mple, in this statement the
employee may wish to discuss such matters as his/her most
significant contribution(s) while in title and University ser~
vice; technical/professional competence; plans for future
professionaf·development; skills and strengths; weaknesses;
career objectives; etc.

s. Criteria ancfsunclanls
. .. "the Chancellor, after considering the recommendation of.the chief administrative officer of the college concern-

. ed, may grant permanent appointment in professional title to
suCh persons who, in his judgmenr. are best
qualified."-Arlidoxt, Tlllo C, 5odlooo 2, l'olldft ol!M ....,nl ol
T~

What constitutes "best qualified!" Those individuals who
In the University's judgment, throuah successful past f!eriormance and demonstrated potential forfunher arotvth exhibit
the c:apadty to Initiate and!or respond to chanse in a maimer
which will serve the University most positively. Cenainly,
•

~

......... ,,nl.l .

self-appraisal
of priorities .

A special State University Commission
on Purposes and PrioritieS will be formed
·
within 30 days to :
• Weigh the quality and desirability of
all academic programs;
• Exa-mine the efficiency of administrative and non-instructional efforts;
• Consider changes in the fee struc·
ture, and
• Seek ways to increase decision making flexibility among campuses and
with outside agencies.
Chancellor Ernest l. Boyer announced
the Commission this weekend, saying it
will conduct a " thorough self-appraisal"
of acad e mic and fiscal policies.
The New Yorlc Times offered the interpre tation that the study is "evidently
aimed in part at forestalling both unilateral budget-cutting from Albany and
what University officials might view as
academic interfer-ence by the State Board
of Regents."
Boyer in a statement announcing the
year-long study said the appraisal would
address queslions that any large11nd expensive Uniwersity system would be expected to ask itself. " It is the rat ional way
to plan," he noted.
The nmes drew its conclusions from a
further theme sounded by the
Chancellor: that the self-evaluation is
being undertaken "because a University
must control its own destiny within the
resources made availabl&lt;! by the State."
Boyer said that Stale University "confidently accepts this challenge, convinced that we must set our own
priorities rather than settle for acrOss~
the-board reductions which weaken
every program . The actions con templated will not threaten the
educational services .available to the
citizens of the State. Rather, they will
assure the continued excellence of ·a
University · whose future will be shaped
not by the latest fiscal crisis but by
thoughtful, sell-directed planning."
The Chancellor noted that " the
University has cut its projected enroll ~
ment by over 100,000 students ,
eliminated $1 billion worth of new
buildings, and declared a moratorium on
all new M.A. and Ph.D. programs until
revised guidelines" are forthcoming. ·
The self-study Commission will be
formed within 30 days, Boyer said, and
will submit an initial repon to the SUNY
Trustees by September 30. Membership
will include· administrators, faculty
members and students.
The self-examination, the Chancellor
indicated, will include scrutiny by campus presidents of each degree program,
" identifying those which .should be con tinued at)d strengthened as well as. those
which should be reduced or ph~sed
out." Also to be-analyzed, Boyer said, are
class siz~t. enrollment patterns, and
faculty._sQff recruitment and promotion
procedures.
The Times ankle noted "disputes with
outside agencies in which the State
Uni.versity administration is already
engaged," and to which Boyer seemed
to be alluding in his stressing of the need
for self-appraisal.
"On the budgetary side," the Times
said, " the University is resisting paring of
its budget as well as refusals by Albany
budget makers to lund cenain programs.
"On the academic side, the State
University Trustees are fesisting efforts
by the Board of Regents to dose down
the doctoral program in history at the
Albany campus. The Regents regard this
resistance as a challenge to their power
over all education efforts in the State,"
the Times pointed out.

3 to visit USSR
Three Russian majors at the University
have been selecteil to study in Russia
next semester as pan of the State Univer•
sity of New York-Moscow Undergraduaie Exchange l'rotlram.
· ;
Or. William HamOton, assistant
profesSor of Russian, has announced the
selection of U/11 stUdents Dovid Ackerman; Olano Bahanovlch; and Paula
Teiielbaum for panidpation In the international program .

�Alumni to cite 3 former administrators
leaders also to be honored
at annual awards banquet, Friday

4 Alumni

Three indivicA!als formerly associated
wilh the Unive,.ity's faculty and administration will be among seve n receiv·
ing special awards during the University
at Buffalo Alumni Association's 36th Annual installati.o n and Awards Banquet Friday, June 6, in Goodyear Hall.
Emma E. Deters, registrar from 1928-

1960; Mazie Wagner, associate dean of
students and instructor in psychology
from 1936-1950; and Talman W. Van
Arsdale, Jr., director of alu mni relations,
editor of University publications, and
director pf University development and
planning from 1948 to 1956, will be
honored along wi~h fo ur alumni leaders
at the annual affa ir.
Cooke and Capen Awards
Miss .Deters will accept the Walter P.
Cooke Award, given occasionally since
1961 to a non-alumnus for outstanding
service over a period of time to the

University, its faculty, students and alum·
ni. She was the first registrar of the
College of 'Arts &amp; Sciences and the first
University registrar. During her career,
she served as president of two national
associations of registrars, and as a
member of several New York State
education commissions · and various
honorary societies.
Miss Deters has received citations from
the Buffalo Junior Chamber of
Commerce, the Alumni Association, and
the University for distinguished service.
Since her retirement from U/ B in 1965,
she has been active in several community
organizations in lancaster.
Howard H. Kohler, a 1922 graduate of
the School of Pharmacy, will receive the
Samuel P. Capen Award, highest honor
given to an alumnus. The Capen Award
has been bestowed annually since 1950
for notable and meritorious services
which · have influenced the growth and ·
improvement of the University and
stimulated other alumni to concribute
active interest and material support.
Kohler is a founder am~ past chairman
of the Annual Participating Fund for
Pharmaceutical Education. He has
received the distinguish ed alumnus

FritZ named head
of Faculty' Club
Harry G. Fritz, dean of the School of
Health Education, has been named presi·
dent of the Faculty Club for 1975-76.
Constantine A. Yeracaris, Sociology, is
vice president·president·elect.
·
larry J. Green, Orthodontics, will serve
as treasurer for the coming year and
Arthur l. Kaiser, Curriculum Develop·
ment, will be secretary.
These four officers are also members
of the Club's Board of Directors for 197576. Other Board members are: Jonn A.
Buerk, director of orie nt•tion; Barbara B.
Bunker , Psychology; PJ.tr icia A.
Hollander, law and Jurisprudence; M.
luther Musselman, University Health
Services; Milton Plesur, History Depart-•
ment; and John D. Telfer, Facilities Planning.

award of the Pharmacy Alum ni Associa~
lion and a similar service citation from
the Erie .Count y Pharmaceutical AsSocia·
tion.
He has been active in fund raising
programs of the U/ B foundation for
several years, was president of the
General Alumn i Association,· and still
pursues activities in the practice of pharmacy, real estate, and Civic and conse rva·
tion programs.
The Presidents' Award, first given in
1972, will be presented to James ).
O 'Brien, a 1955 graduate of the law
· school.
O 'Brien, finishing his term as president
of the General Alumni Association, has
been closel y involved in alumni service
for several years. His award tecog nizes
th is service, plus other contribUtions to
the University.
He is also serving as chairman of the
Niaga ra Frontier Football Classic, a new

•

major fund raising effort of the U/ B
Foundation and Alumni Association, the
proceeds of which go to University
research and co mmun ity betterment. A
practici ng atlorney, O 'Brien is vice chairman of th e Town of Amh e rst 's
De mocratic Comminee.
Distinguished Alumni Awuds
Distinguished alumni awards, given
since 1971 , will be presented to four people who httve distinguished th emselves
in their p rQiessions and in community
se rvice.
.
The y are M. Robert Koren, Robe rt E.
lipp, Mazie E. Wagner, all from Western
New York, and Talman W. Van Arsda le,
Jr., of Peoria, Illinois.
Koren, a 1944 graduate of the law
School and a practicing attorn ey, was
pr es ident of the Ge neral Alumni
Association in 1969. He. has also headed
the law Alumni and the Erie County Bar
Associatio n. Currently he is serving on
th e U/ B Foundation Board of Trustees.
Koren was a recipiem of a Disti nguished Alumnus Award from I he law School
Alumni Association ea rlier this yea r. He

is a member of the House of Delegates of
the New York State Bar Association, a
member of the Committee on Character
and Fitness of Applicants for Admission
to the Bar of the Eighth Judicial District, a
member of the Municipal Housing
Authority of the Town of Tonawanda,
and of various other boards in the community.
lipp, also a graduate of the law School
{1954), is a practicing attorney and
former president of the General Alumni
Association who served as treasurer of
the State University Alumni Confederation. He has also been a hearing officer
for the Committee on Campus Oisruprions. He was the first recipient of the
Presjdents' Award in 1972.
Dr. Wagner, professor emeritus at
State University College at Buffalo,
forme rly associate dean of students at
U/ B and d irector of counseling at Buffalo State, has had a long career as a
teacher of psychology. A prolific author
of scientific papers and an experienced
researcher, Dr. Wagner is cu rrentl y
research directpr of a Federally funded
project studying child spacing and personality development.
Van Arsdale, vice president for area
development for the Commercial
National Bank of Peoria, was president
arid .chancellor of Bradley University
from 1961 to 1973. Before that he was a
vice president of Worcester Polytech nic
Institute in Massachusetts. In Buffalo, he
was associated with Park School and the
University where he served in several
public relations and fund·raising
capacities.
He has been active in many civic and
cultural organizalions in Massachusetts
and Ill inois and has earned citations
from: the American College Public
Re la tions Association for outstanding
service to higher education; the U.S. Air
Force for assistance to its Reserve· Offi ce rs Training Program; and U/B for
achievement in higher education.
Dr. Ann l. Egan, vice president for
alum nae of the U/ B Alumni Association,
is chairperson of the Association Awards
Committee.

NTP permanent appointment procedures

(from pqe 6, col. l l

·several of the criteria by which such judgme nts must be made
are specified in the employee's performance program. Appraisials against these programs assess in large measure how
well these particular criteria have been satisfied - and 1hc
importance of this performance program-pe rformance appraisal cycle is not to be underestimated. However, as
suggested in the first section of this docume nt, satisfactory
job performance should not be and cannot be, th e sole basis
and criteria upon which recommendations for permanent ap·
pointment are gfounded. Rather, departm e ntal goals and
objectives must also be examined, and the ca ndidate's role in
the successful pursuit of these goals and objectives accurately
assessed. Consideration must be given to the employee's
future abilily to contribute to the attai nmen t of such objectives; to adaptability to cha nge; to potential for growth and
improvement; and to th e benefits to be derived by the
University if permanent appoi ntme nt is to be granted.
Further, such &lt;;.o nsiderations as well as others, become increasingly importa nt the higher the level of position in question . .
The refore, whi le such criteria as interpersonal skills, ·
diplomacy, creativity, initiative, decision making abili1y and
soundness of judgment are important in varying degree to all
professional service positions, they do become increasingly
critical as one mOves up the position hierarchy and should
consequently be so considered.
6. Employee Notice and Ad•ococy
•
At the first two levels of review (or simply the first when
the immediate supervisor's supervisor and the Vice President
are the. same), the candidate is to be informed i~ writing of
the recommendarion which is being forwarded to the next
higher level of review. Should the recommendation of the
immediate supervisor.and/or hisl11er.supervisor (if other than
the Vice President) be negative, the employee, or an advocate
of the employee's choosing, shall have the right to present
his/her case to the next higher level (either the immediate
su pervisor's supervisor or the Vice President or both). It
should also be clear that reasons for the recommendatio ns
made regarding the granting of permanent appointment are
~~~~~~':,to the candidate and/ or hisl11er advocate.
In consideration of the foregoing, the following
procedure has been established by the State University of
New York at Buffalo for the consideration of granting permanent appointment to professional employees:
A. The immediate supervisor •ssembles the dossier and,
excluding those materi.als not available to the can&lt;lidote (any
letters of recommendation solicited by the University}
reviews the dossier with the emp1oyee for purposes of completeness only;

8. The immediale supervisor makes hisl11er dete rmina·
lion, and transmits this to the employee. Simultaneously, the
immediate supervisor transmits this determ ination, along
with a confiden tial statement of reasons for the recommendation as well as rhe dossier, to his/her supervisor for review.
Should the recommendation of the immediate supervisor be
ne gative, upon notification the employee may_ indicate
his/her intent to the immediate supervisor's supervisor to
personally, o r through an advocate, present his/her case at
that level;
C The immediate supervisor's supervisor makes ·his/her
determination, and transmits this to the employee and theimmediate supervisor. Simuhaneously, the imrT.edia.te supervisor's supervisor transmits this determination to the 'a ppropriate Vice Presiden t, along with his/her confidencial
reasons for the recommendation as well as the full dossier.
Should the recommendation of the immediate supervisor's
supervisor be negative, upon notification, the employee may
indic;:ate hisl11er intent to the appropriate Vice President to
personally or through an advocate, present histher case at
that level;
·
D. The Vice President makes his determination and
transmits it to the President, along with his confidential·
rl!asons for his recommendation and the full dossier;
f. After revi ewi ng the full d~ssier including all
recommendations and their supporting reasons, but prior to
making hi.Ydetermination, the President may, if he feels circumslances warrant:
·
(1} hold a meeting with the employee and/or his/her advocate to discuss the case;
(2) appoint an ad hoc committee consisting of five
professional employees, to review the case and provide him
with their recommendation;
(3} do both one (1} and two (2} above.

f. The President shall notify th~ employee, superviso"
and the Vice President of his determination in writing~ as well
as the Chancellor where appropriate.
C. Timely notification to the candidate regarding his
employment status is most important. However, since such
notification dates may vary, it is impossible to establish a
single schedule for carrying out the above review procedures.
Therefore, in the instructions each immediate supervisor will
' receive regarding each. candidate, an approp.Ute schedule
for the completion of the several levels of review will be outlined. Generally, these will provide approximately six weeks
at the immediate supervisor's lew!!, three weeks at the Intermediate levels, and four weeks at the Presidential level. In
the i"itial year; however, time requirements will shorten
these desired intervals.

�~ PA~~/JUNE ~ 1975/SUMMER REPORTER

01lelltlar
To uoid repetition, events
·scheduled during the week June 512 th~t are listed in the milgner insert
in this issue ~re not included in the
U.lend~r. Ple~se check magnel for
the m~jority of this week's cultural
~ctivities.

·c rahs schedule.
SUDEILECTURE'
Southwest Indian Pottery. Rick Dillinghilm.
231 Norton, 7:30 p .m.
Presented by Gallery 219.

TUESDAY-10
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINARf

THURSDAY-S
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
CONFERENCEI
Th is Refresher Seminar in Pediolltrics \fakes

place June 2-6. Today's session is e ntitled
Pediarric .rAIIergy and Clinical Immunology,

R e~ul~tion of Cholerterogenesis ~nd 3hydroxy-3-methyl.glutaryi-CoA. reductase Ac-

tivity in Iso lated Rat Hepatacytes By
Lipoproteins and Horrriones. Or . Peter
Edward s, University of Califo rn ia at los
Angeles. 102 Sherman; coffee at 4, seminar at
4:15p.m.

with Dr. Elliot F. Ellis presiding. Children's
Hospital, Kinch Auditorium, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m .
and 2-4 p .m. For more informat ion, contact
\ the Office of Continuing Medical Education,

831-SS26.
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SEMINARf
Cynecologicaf Laparoscopy is the topi c of
this seminar being held Ju ne 4-6 at the Statle r
Hihon Hotel a nd a rea hospita ls. For more informatio n, contact the Office of. Continuing

Medical Ed ucation, 831-5526.

WEDNESDAY-11

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
CONFERENCEI
·Today is the final day of this Refresher
Seminar in Pediatrics. This session is e ntitled
Infectious Oise~se, with Dr. Pearay l. Ogra
presid in g. Children 's Hospi tal , Kin c h
Auditorium, 9- a.m.·12:30 p.m. and 2-4 p .m.
for more informat ion, contad' the Office of
Continuing Medical Education, 831 ·5526.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SEMINARf
Gynecological Laparoscopy is the topic of
this three--day seminar (which e nds today) be·
ing held at the Statle r Hilton Hotel and area
hospitals. for more information, contad the
Office o f Continuing Medica l Education, 831·
SS26.
PUBLIC LECTURE'
Th e Future of the Freedom of the Mind,
Burt Joseph , executive director. Pla yboy
Foundation. 147 Diefendorf, 9 a.m.
Presented by the School of Information and
libruy Studies.
LECTURE•
. Intellectual Freedom for the Publisher. Don
lacy, vice presid e nt , McG raw-Hill . 147
Diefendorf, 2 p.m.
Presented by the School of Information and
library Studies.

SATURDAY-?
INTtNSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
INSTITUTEf
Ni~gara Falls Tour. More information is
available at 111 Townsend.

SUNDAY-8
INTERNATIONAL
PICNIC'
Foreign students and scholars are invited to
a picnic at Akron hils Park, Area 1. Bri ng a picnic lunch; watermelon will be provided . 3
p.m.

Studies o n th e Int e r fe r on Defen se
Mechanisms, Dr. Pe ter Lengyel, professor of
molecular biophysics a nd biochemistry, Yale
University. 1).4 Cary (Health Sciences),
coffee at 4, lecture at 4:15 p .m . .
Sponsored by the Division of Cell and
Molecu la r Bi o lo gy and Chemi stry of
Bio logical Systems.

NOTICES
NEWMAN CENTER
Masses a re schedule d throughout th e
summer at the two Newman Centers. Main
S1rcet Campus services (the center is located
at 15 University Ave.; the rectory, at6 Un ivers•·
ty Ave.) are Monday·friday at 12 noon at
Newman Center , Saturday at 10 a.m. at New·
man Center. There is a Saturday vigil at 7 p .m.
at th e Can!alician Chapel (3233 Mai n St.) a nd
Sunday masses at 9 and 11 a.m . at Cantalician
Chapel. There is a Spanish mass at 7 p.m. Sun·
day at Newman Center.
The Amhersl Campus Cente r is at 490 Fron·
tier Rd . and the Rectory, at 495 Skinnersville
Rd . Masses are held daily at 8 a.m. at the
Center a nd Su ndav at 11 a.m. at the Cemer.
NORTON SUMMER
FOOD SERVICE
The cash line in No rtOn (Dining Room 118)
will be open Monday th ro ugh frida y from 7
a.m. to 7 p.m. Tile contract line (Dining Room
1221 will be open Monday through frida y
from 7·9:30 a.m.; 11 a.m .·2 p.m.; and 4·6:30
p .m. The Rathskeller is closed for the summer.
Tht• Tiffin Room is open Monday through Fri ·
day fr o m 11 a.m .·2 p .m . and the Faculty Club
is o(X'n Monday through frida y from 11 :30
o~.m.-1 :30 p.m. All areas are dosed Saturday
and Sunday and on the Fourth of July.
A wtt'llite refrE-Shme nt service in the foun·
to~in Square area will be offered on a regular
wN&gt;kday basis around noontime. Special
l'Vl'n ts s uch as a st rawb e rr y festival ,
w&lt;ttNml'lon feast , barbecue and beer garden
drt.' also bt.•i ng ('Onside red . The Ice Cream
Parlour (first floor Norton) will be open Mon·
day throutth Friday from 11 a. m. to 9 p .m .
OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS AND
RECORDS HOURS
.
Tht• Offin.• of Admissions and Records will
tx- open fro m 8:30 a.m.·7 p .m., june 5, 9·12,
16· 19, 23-26 and 30. Hou rs for other days in
JunE' a re 8:30 a.m.-4: 30p.m.

AED libr.uy
Arch1 vC'~

FACULTY OF LAW AND
JURISPIIUDENa COMMENCEMENT'
Kleinhlns Music Hall, 7 p.m.

Arl

BC'II SC'iC'nC'C'
ChC'mistry
HC'JithSc-iC'ncC'S ••
law
library StudiC'S Llb.
Lockwood
Music
hlathan KC'Iscy Hall
library (Ellicott)

MONDAY-9
SI'OIITS DEMONSTilAliONS'
Fountain Square, 12-2 p.m . Sponsored by

Summer Activities.

Health handbook
A handbook on available heahh care
services in Buffalo ~nd the surrounding

311-312 Norton.

Sign-ups for all workshops Is in 7 Norton at the Creative &lt;Zrafl Center. All

classes will be held in Norton. For more informalion call 831-3546.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO LIBRARIES
SCHEDULE OF SUMMER HOURS MAY 26-AUGUST 29 1975

INTENSIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
INSTITUTEf
Ellicon Creek Parle Picnic. For more infor rNtion, go to 11~ Townse~d.

~rea has been relosed joinlly by The
New York Public Interest Research
Group (NYPIRG). and The Heahh Care
Div~~· Sub ~rd ~, lnc. / I.
... /
L~l ngs Include health and informa- tioll'services on ampu• ~ncl off.
The Mnclbook.is available ·a~ a cost of
S2 at bookstores and ~nds in Buffalo and surrc:iundins a-re~. or in Roo.ms

s

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES LECTURE#

FRJDAY-6

Metals, ceramics, enameling, leather and weaving classes are being offered
th is summer by the Creative Crah Center.
Membership in the Center includes classes in jewelry mak ing and ceramics,
use of open shop time, and use of equipment. lt -31so includes reduced rates for
workshops in enameling, leather and weaving. All materials are extra. The fee
schedule is as follows:
May 21-August 29 (14 weeks)
SUNY students
$14
'SUNY students' family &amp; non-SUNY students
$20
•faculty, staff, alumni &amp; famil y
·
$30
•commun ity
S45
OR
Any One-Seven·Week Session
-(May 27-)uly 11 )
(June 23-A ugu st 8)
(July 14-August 29)
SUNY students
9
'SUNY students' fam ily &amp;
non -SUN Y students
$12
•Faculty, staff, and a lumn i &amp; fami ly
$17
•community
$25
•Age limit-must be 16 years old.
The Center will be open through August 29 for classes and open shop, Mon·
day th rough Thu rsday fro m 1 to 10 p.m. The center is closed Friday, Saturday and
Sunday.
The June class sched ule is as follows:
METALS
(You must attend all sessio ns)
june 10-12
8-10 p.m.
l apidary Demo - semi-precious stone cutting
and polishing
june 16-18
3- 5 p.m.
Bezel making - ston e setti ng, must bring own
stone.
CERAMICS
(you must attend both sessio ns)
june 9, 12
7-10 p.m.
Wheel throwing
june 16, 17
Hand building
1- "3 p.m.
June 23, 25
Hand building
3- 5 p .m.
june 23, 26
7-10 p.m.
Wheel throwing
Begi nn ing June 4, Wed nesday eveni ngs will be for special works hops and
eve nt s, to be posted . Additio nal classes will be scheduled if the re is e nough demand.
ENAMELING
Workshop in Iimoges and cloisonee techniqu es of ena me lin g. Fee is S7 for
Creative Craft Cente r members and S12 for non-members. Materials are extra.
Classes are june 16-20, 7-10 p.m.
LEATHER
Workshops in belt-making and sandal-making techniques. Fee is $15 for
Creative Craft C~nter members and $20 for non-members. The belt- mak ing class
began june 4 and runs for eight weeks, from 2:30-5:30 p.m. The sandal-making
class bega n june 4 and runs for eight weeks, from 7-10 p .m.
WEAVING
•
Workshops in basic frame loom weaving for the beginner. fee is $15 for
Creative Craft Center menibers, S20 for non~members . One class began june 2
and runs for six weeks, from 6 :30 to 8:30p.m. and anoth e r began June 4 and runs
fo r six weeks, from 10 a.m. to noon.
CRAFT DEMONSTRATIONS
De monstrations of various crafts (i.e. jewelry making1 weaving, spinning,
throwing, enameli ng, quilting, leather, etc.) will be held throughout the summer.
De mos began june 4 and continue through August 6 every Wednesday afternoon,
noon to 2 p.m. Look for the Craft Center in the fountain area outside Norton
Hall-Ce nte r lounge if it is raining.

I '

I

MONDAY-THURSDAY
10:00 a·S:OO p•
9:00 a-S:OO p
9 :00 a-S :OO p
9:00 a-S:OO p
9:00a-S:00p
8:00 a-9:00 p
9:00 a ~ S : OO p•••
8:00 · -10:30 p
9:00 a-S:OO p

9:00 a-S:OO p
R id~E" LE"a
·8:30 a-9:00 p
SciE"nCE" &amp; Engint"l'ring
8:00 a-7 :00 p
Unde rgraduatE" library.
8:00 a-11 :00 p
EXCEPTIONS TO AIOVE:
•July 14-August 29: Mon.· Thurs. 10 a·7 p
.. Summer Hours Begin JunE" 13
Hou rs From M.Jy 27-)unf' 12:
8 a·11 p
Mon.·Thurs.
Frid&lt;iiy
8 a-9 p
9 a-Sp
Siturday
2 p-9 p
Sundoy
•••Tuesdays 9 a-9 p

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
10:00 a-4:00 p
10:00 a-4:00 p
9:00 a-S :OO p
CLOSED
9:00 a-S:OO p
CLOSED
9:00 a-S:OO p
CLOSED .
9:00 a-S :OO p
CLOSED
8:00 a-6:00 p
9:00 a-S :OO p
CHECK WITH LAW liBRARY FOR SUMMER HOURS
9:00 a-S :OO p
CLOSED
8:00 a-9:00 p
9:00 a-S:OO p
9:00 a-S:OO p
CLOSED
9:00 a-S:OO p
8:30 a-6:00 p
8:00 a-S:OO p
8:00 a-6:00 p

CLOSED
1:00 p-S:OO p
CLOSED
9:00 a-S:OO p

, INDEPENDENCE DAY: Friday, July 4: AiiLibrar'" CLOSED. AED library Closed : Julv 4-Jul•· 6·
Ridge lea library Clbted: luly 4-July 6.
·
· •
FOil -VICf ~ Of PAIITICUlAil DIPARTMENTS WITHIN ANY UNIT CONSULT
~Al ~y FOil DUAILID SIIIVICf SCHIDUU.
'

•

SUNDAY
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
1:00,a-S :OO p
4:00 p-9:00 p
1:00 p-S:OO p
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
2:00 p-6:00 p
2:00 p-8:00 p

�compiled by
the office of cultural affairs

... :·. ' . . .. ; . .

~:·

. . ...

�summer at the
fountain
This lllllltla the Norton Foun1lin . . wil be
the lite of I wide Vlrioty of cultural end
IICIIIIionll ICiiYities. from Coflllhouses to brat•
lfis!lleys. movies to Clift demonstrations. 1&lt;1 sales to dlnce performancos A daily outdoor rofreshment
service. p!OVidod by Norton Food SeMco, wiH be
IYiilable II "fountain Squere." wiKh. togem. with
• bmed , _ "' miiHley end Mning ectMties.
should !IIIIa! this . . a lively center for Summer
75 on the U/ 8 campus_
Sevnl months ago various departments. studerl! orgarilllions and offices began to plan a coordinated and expanded University activities program
for this summer_Besides working towards making
Fountain Squar. a focal point for summer activities
and a spot where University member&gt; would congr!!llle. the committee developed a calendar of
Mnts impressive in its scope and quality, Some of
its highlights: a 3-ilay rosidency by John Paries.
former 1aad dancer with the Alvin Ailey Dance Company: readings and lectures by facuhy and distinguished gu- of the English Department a concert by the Buffalo Philharmonic; a Women's \'Ideo
Fostiva1 - and much more.
Events wiU be listed in the summer - ' " '
whidt 41 be distributed both as inserts in the
and as separate iJffprinU. This issue of
- ' covers Mflts though July 3. when the second issue wiU be published.
Enjoy!

"-*

.,

"j~be in buffalo":
cc(ntemporary
composers'
festival
John Cage is coming to U/ 8 in June. And so are
fao1e ~ and Christian Wolfl These composen.

- togethj}

with Morton Feldman. who holds the
recently..established Elfgar Verese Chair of Music at
U/ 8. boalma the most famous -~ group in
musical Composition in the fifties. when they began
a "New York Sdlooi." whosa iMovations profoundly ihapid conllmporlry rrMJSie.
. Organizld by Monon Feldman. the festivl1 will
be held June 3-Juno 24. Each of the ~
wil be in rllidonco for a Wllk. end their
workshops and ...,.,.. wil be IIIIJIIIamontad by
performances of their works by. the Creative
Associates. U/B's resident rww music group, and
other guest perfOrmers. All concerts will tab place
11 8 pm. in 8linl Hill: ticbts.n $2 gll)era1 admission. St for. SIUdants. Soe ..,..rs directory
for lhi lull ~ChadoR

�a note and some
postscripts abou~
wbfo
center for media
study: 1·975
summer institute
U/B's Center lor Media Study is having its
fourth Summer Institute, May 27-August 29.
The Institute's li!st session will be conducted by
two distinguished media artists. Gunvtlf Nelson and
Steina Vaullal.
GuRYOf Nelson, a native of Sweden. is an awardwinning filmmobr wbo tiiChes at the San Francisco Art Institute. She has held Guggenheim and
AAUW Felowship grants and has won oomerous
awards for films: the Grand Prizo at the Bellevue
film Festival1973 for "lobln's Pool:" a Prizo at the
Bijou film Festival. ChicoQo 1973: and a Prize at
the American film Festival. New York 1973. Her
most recent .....:woman show was at the San
Francisco Museum of Art in 1974.
Steina Vaulka is a native of Iceland. wfl"" she
played violin in the k:elanclic: Sym'phony Orchestra
for a yeor. She began heJ ...., as an independent
video artist in 1970 and has since had shows at
major galleries and experimental television centm
across the country. irdutling: Tha Whitney
Musaum. the New York Avent-Garde Festival. and
Media Study in Buffalo. She is co-founder of The
Kitchen in New Vorl&lt; City and has been artist~n­
residence at Meilia Study, hie.; the Center for Media
Study at SUNYAB (Summer Institute 1974): the
Banff Art Center in Alberta: and the Ontario College
of Art in Tororrto. Steini with her husband Woody,
organized the video exlibition at the EXPRMT 5
Knokke/ Heist Festival in Belgium. DecemberJanuary 1974-75. sponsored by the Royal Film
Archive ol Belgium.
·Ms. Nelson's course films (her own and those by
other experimental filmmakers) will lie given public
scretnings every MondaY and Wednesday in 146
Diefendorf. 7 p.m. ~ is no admission charge.
See 1111"11 dir!ctory for film listing ~

poetry and prose
in the tiffin room
Norton's Tiffin Room will•be the scene of a
poetry and prose reading series. Thursday nights at
8 p.m. Tha series opens June 12 with a reading by
Max Wickert (with an as yet unnamed friend).
Professor Wickert has been continuously involved
with poetry in the University community. botfl as a
reader and as an impresario of poetry events.
June 19 is a reeding of fiction by Ray Federman
and David Porush. Professor Federman is author ol
eight boo~ irduding ~ tfoe ~and Dao1111 or Nading. He will be reading from Tlb It or
lMw I~ a novel to be published in 1976. Mr.
Porush. a graduate student in English and cofounder of the ongoing Writers Project has receiv·
ed a Bolt Prize lor one ol his short stories.
Robert Cr-eeley. who reads Monday, J..,. 23. at
9 p.m. is a professor of English and a poet ol international reputation. Among his many published
volumes of poetry are For LDVe. Pie= Listen.
Words, His Idea. A Day Book.
Bill Sylvester. a professo1 of English. and
probably the only person to have published in both
Petnrlouor flofinef and Poetry: A Magozine of
v..._ will read with Kathy McGoldric~ an undergraduate in English. Thu""-'y. June 26. Among
Sylvester's works are
OIIIOIIS and Prayers
and the recently completed T......,. B.ls fnJm
tfoelllllions.
The Tiffin Room Series will continue throughout
the Summer Session: more in next magnet
Note: Poetry and Prose will be accompanied by
various barside pleasures and by air..conditioned
breezes. All readings are free and open to the community.

eur-

Throughout the summer morrths WBfO (88.7
FM) will be attanding (by sonding out r11110te
equipment and engineers) all sorts of mnts on and
off campus'that you'll prnbalrly attend or may wont
to but might miss. UUAB poetry roodi~
Coffeehousas end performances. concom and
recitals. lacture-demonstrations - a good portion
of the activities desaibed in this issue of
-'---will be either broadcast live or taped for
later air-play. WBFO is aiming toward prasenting an
even wider range of programs to the Buffalo community during these sunny ~ but their schedule
is still loose at """""' deadline. To find out what
special events will be on Public Radio in Buffalo.
chedc the WBFO monthly program guide or listen
for up-to.date on the air announcements.
"A Whole New Song and Dance." a program
hosted by Waher Gajewski Thursdays at 10 p.m.
will air tape high~ ghts of "Nuts and Vo~• a
video/ electro nit music festival: June 5 - ltjaren
Hiller's demonstratiOn, '"Computers as Tools for

Cr-eating Music:· June 12 - Joel Chadabis
presentation of his synthesized composition.
"Dancers.· realized at the electronit studios;
SUNYI Albany; and June 19 - Cr-eative Associate
Eberhard Blum's performance of "IJBonata" a unique vocol piea by Dadaist Kurt Schwittn
Some odie&lt; broadcasts to listen for: the
Toronto-based Mariposa Folk Festival. and
Highlights of the 1975 Festival Ql American
Folldile.

--

Tha Creative Craft Center will extend its
operations into "Fuuntain Square" (Norton Centor
lDunge. ~ bad woathef) with a ·series of mid-day
craft demonstrations by recognized craftsmen To
increase campus parttcipation in the summer aafts
program. mini-workshops will take place in the
Square avery Wednesday from noon to 2 p.m.
beginning June 4. Everyone is invited to come and
observe. (For the regular instruction schedule. inquire at the Cr-eative Cr-aft Center, Room 7 Norton.)
June 4 featured Richard Bergman in a
demonstration of various leather crah techniques:
cuning. stiiching. dyeing and polishing. On Juno 11
Ann Boomsliter will exhibit a wide range of enamel
pieces - pendants. pi~ plates. and bowls and will discuss enamel techniques withJ tfoe
audience. Michael Olstoad wiH exhibit metal. sihor,
copper and brass belt buddes. pendants. and fiB
on June 18. and will demonstrate such rnolllowod&lt;ing techniques as aflting. filing. soldering. polishing.
twisting and braiding. An exhibit of ceramic hnlbuilt pieces and a demonstration of various hnlbuilding techniques will be given by Chris !layman
on June 25. The s8ries wiH continue with a silk
saeen exhibition by Richard Murray on July

2:

-Pap 3 I REPORTER I Mapet 5/•.JUM 5, lt75 _

craft
demonstrations

�n..~~y,.-.s

Fim. .....,, Conllnnco n.u..
Norton. coll831-5117 for.OOW times ond
admission ctwve. spo!ISOI1d by UUAB
10 pm:'&amp;oodc:ast A WWo llow S...
1011 o-•: ,_music by I.Jjaron H~ler.
WBFO (88.7 FM)

Fridlry..... &amp;
Film. s-ttr. Conferenoe Theatn!, Nonon.
call831 -5117 ID&lt; s00w times and
admission charge. sponsored by UUAB.

Salul*y, J - 1
Film.~~

Conference

Theatn!, call 831-5117 for show times and
admission charge, sponsored by UUAB.

8 p.m. 1 " ' -· Hilda Harri~ Bainl
Re&lt;:ital Hall Admission Free. sponsored by
llepartment of Music. Westminster
Presbyterian Churr:h. and Reader's Digest
Association.
Sunday.~B
Film. ~

Eqnss(,..June 7

6sting).

Wednesdoy, ~ 11
Noon-2 p.m. &amp;.oil Eldilition.' Ann
IIGomsliter. Fountain Square (Rain: Nonon •
Center lounge). Admission Freo. sponsored
by Summer Activities and C..ft Center.
8:30 p.m. Coffeehouse,' NiPts oll.aarl
ligllls. Unda Namias and Beth Katkin
(tentativeC Fountain Square (Rain: Fillmore
Room). Admission Free. sponsored by
UUAB.

Tlusdoy, J - 12
Film, o.isy Miller, Conference Theatre. call
831-5117 lor show times and admission
charge. sponsored by UUAB.
8 p.m. Peotry Reodiog. • Max Wockert and
friend. Trffin Room/ Norton Union.
Admission Freo, spo!ISOI1d by UUAB.

9p.m..Mirilk ' ~·
WNY•, dance, Elaine Summers Ilana! and
Film Company. fountain Square. Admission
Free. sponsored by UUAB o.p.trnent of
Theatn! Ilana! Program. Center for Media
Study. the National Endowment for the Ans
and the-Now York State Council on the Arts.
10 p.m. 8nJodcast A WWo llow Soot
1011 o-•: now music: by Joel Clallbe.
WBFO (88.7 FM). spo!ISOI1d by WBFO.

•See "Higlllglots" ... dollils.

Fridlry..... l3
Film; o.isy Miller, (see June 12lisling).

s...r.y,.-.14
Film. &amp;not .._.,, Conferenoe Theatre, call
831-5117 for .OOW times and admission
charga. sponsored by UUAB.
8 pm. Music. c-t II Pablo A.. . . Pilooo Wwb perfonmed by Adam
Kaczynslri, assistant professor at the
Al:ademy of Music. Kralrow. Poland, and
guest lecturer at the Eastman School of
Music. Bainl Recital Han. Admission Free.
sponsored by UUAB.
Sunday, J - 15
Film. Gnot Glt*y (,..June 141isting).
I 0:05-10:25 p.m. Broadcast U/8 Arts
.,._ mmposer John Cage interviewed by
Esther Swam. WAOV-FM (106.5 FM).
sponsored by U/ 8 lnfO&lt;mation Services
MIIIIUy,

J.. 16

1 p.m. Ilana!/ music. All Anand Bulfllo:
An lrwilltiooo 1D s-.t o - and Nor&gt;
0-.r 1011 ~·fountain Square.
Admission frat. sponsored by UUAB.
Night/dark. Film. Oolla-. Sirp:
.._ :s-y
Nonon
Fountain Square (Rain: Filmore Room).
Admission F.no. spo!ISOI1d by UUAB.

Ftd........,·

,......,, .... 17
'8:30 p.m. S..Vc:--,/llloop. · Saul
Broudy ond Sporty Rud&lt;er; fountain Square
(Rain: fillmore Room). Admission Freo.
sponsored by UUAB CoffeehouSe Committee
and Student Association.

-w....,. .-.11
Noon-2 p.m. ..... &amp;liWt ...
0
....... Midloel Omsilad.

founllin Squn (Rain: Norton Center
lormgo). Admission Frio. spo!ISOI1d by

s.r.- Aaivilios and Croft Conttr. .

8:30p.m. ..... ., l.ooll ...... Boot
Hool Bop (limotiw). founllin Squn
(Rain: Filmort Room). Admission Free.
lpOOIIII!idbyUUAB.

............. 11
........................ Theatre.

al831-5117b ......... lind
...................... byUUAB.

;&amp;~..

J

Froo._..brUUAB.

ar.bstAIIIWIIIowS...
a.twd Blum.

..
.-music..,
WBFO
10

(88.7 FM).

......... 28

............ (loe.Joine 1!ilisting).
s..n.,,.-.21
Fim. ..... Wiiii.'Nortoil Conflnnce
'"-'. al831-5111 for s00w times ond '•
sporiillllll bj WAS.
3 p.m. Moaic. ,_ ..... ,_ ...... Susanne
Vrzsolyi and f'llricio Gutzwillor, lllird Recital
Holl Admission frio. o.p.tment of Music.

)

admission-..,

. .REPO.JITER I

at.Pet a I .Jaae 5, 1175 I Pal• ~

�s-8y,.U.22
film. .,.... Willi. (see June 21 listing).
8 p.m. Music. ~ c.n.y
ll8ylooonl w.b', Malcolm Bilson. Baird
Rocilll 11111. $1 students. $2
flculty/staff/ alumni with 10. $3 genl!llll
admission. sponsored by Department ol
Music.

Sundly, J -

Mllllllly•...._23
10:30 a.m. Music.'--., 111111111

Cootwy reno,;... • Mak:olm Bilson. liaird
Hall. Admission Free. sponsored by
Dlpartment_of Music.
8 p.m. Music. Solttilll.,. Striop. Yvar

Mildlaslroff. Wilma Shakesnider. Ronald
. l1idlards; Baird Recital Hall. $.50 students.

$1.00 faculty/ staff/ alumni with I.D. $1.50
general admission. sponsored by
Oepartmant of Music.
At dart. Films. Moair: Fta.lii! o,_
lllod! Moair: i o - m. n..r Tl
llow. fountain Square (Rain: Conference
Theatre). Admission Free. sponsored by
UUAB.
9 p.m. !Wby Roodirrg. • Robert Cr!eley.
frffin Room/ Norton Union. Admission Free.
sponsored by UUAB.

r..-,..-.24
8 p.m. Music. 11rt . . . . . . Cootwy
Olooiot. Ronald Ridlanls. Baird Recital Hall.
$.50 SIUdonls. $1.00 flarlty/ stafl/ alumni

,_ ,.,

~.Q..,SJ .50

--'admission.

- - ' by Oepartmant of Music.

8:30p.m. Coffeehouse. A~
....... ·· Malvina Reynolds, fountain
Squn (Riin: Filmort Room). Admission
friO. ..,.,....od by UUAB Coffeehouse and
Student Association. 9
·
~.--25

10 a.m.-3 p.m. blriWtioo ... We"'
IJoilioollinlrlir: An.. f1!untain Squm

(Roin: Hus lounge). Adnission Free.
spot1Uid by University BoobtO&lt;e.
NooJn.2 p.m.l:enrlicl: ~
D
llioo. • Oris lllymon. fountain
Squn (Roin: Nortun Cenier lounge).
Admisoion Free. ..,.,....od by Student
Acliwilios ... Clift Cenlw.
3 p.Jn; Music. BFA llldlll. Dione
llllionowicb. piono. lloinl Rocilll Holt
Admisoion
by Dopwtment
"'Music.

mo. _..

29

. Film. Ml*ft r - jChaplin Films).
Conference Theatre. call831-5117 for
show times and admission. sponsored by
UUAB.
8 p.m. Dance. The~ ea._., (see
June 27 listing).
10:05-1 0:25 p.m. Broadcast U/B Arts
Foo-. composer Ea~e Brown intervi~,.
by Esther Swarll. WAOV-FM (106.5 FM).
sponsored by U/ B Information Services.

TllunUy....... 26
10 a.m.-3 p.m. blilritirrn .,. Sol! of
Origirool Gllflrir: Art (see June 25 listing).

2 p.m. Heolllo Edur:olirrn Lecture. Dr.
Jadcie Hertowitz. associate prolessor.
physical education, Ohio Univl!fSity. 'Sociorultural Sex·Differences in Choices ol
Pa!licipation in Sports Activities Ill'
Children." Haas LDunge. Admission Free.
spOnsored by UUAs and the Department of
Health Edilc3ti0n.
9 p.m. Paolry Roorirog. • Bill Sylvester and
Kathy McGoldrick. frffin Room/ Norton
Union. Admission Free. sponsored by UUAB.
Fritltly. ..... 27
Film. 11rt llil. (Chaplin Films). Conference
Theatre. call 831 -5117 for show times and
admission chOrge. sponsored by UUAB.
8 p.m. Dance. 11rt
~.
Baird Recital Hall. S1 student and senior
citizens. $2 general admission. spoJ!SOfed by
Summer Sessions and :tJ!eatre Department
Dance Program. ·.

z-..

•

s.t.nloy..... 28
Film. City litJirls (Chaplin Films). Conference
Theatre. call831 -5117 for s00w times and
admission c:lrarge. sponsored by UUAB.
8 p.m. Dance. 11rt ~ -=-(see
June 271isting).

8:30 pni. ~ ...... "l8CII
...... Bily &amp;h.tls ... Bil McCoul
(IIIIIIIM). l1iunllin Squn (Roin: Fillmore
. Room). Admission Fr1e. - - ' by
UUA8.

Monday, J - 30
2 p.m.. Panel Disarssion. Psy-111,.;. in
Criticisoo. • with Robert Silhol. Norman
Holland. and Murray Schwartz. Norton
CoQlaence Theatre. Admission Free.
sponsored by the Department of English Tweffth Summer Program in Modern
literature and the Program in Psychology
and literature.
6:30-8 p.m. Broadcast. Higlrliglrls Ill the
1975 fttslivllal ~hllrife; WBFO
(88.7 FM). These 'liighfights wiH continue.
nightly through Sunday. July 6. Broadcast
time is 6:30-8 p.m. through Saturday;
9:30-11 :30 p.m. Sunday.
8 p.m. Music. M.F.A. Rocitll: Kathy Pogel.
Baird Recital Hall Admission free.
sponsored by Department of Music.
At dark. Films. Dilly.,..... and
M~ lleiUr Bluos'. Fountain Square.
Admission Free. sponsored by UUAB.

Tuesday. Jaly 1
8:30 p.m. Coffeehouse. Balf• Glls, •
Fountain Square (Rain: FiNmore Room).
Admission Free. sponsored by UUAB
Coffeehouse and Student Assocration.
10 p.m.-midnight Broadcast. Folk fttslivll
U.S.A.. WBFO (88.7 FM).
WednesdaY. Jaly 2
Noon-2 p.mc Silk Sa.. o-.m.tirro, •
Richard Murray. fountain Square (Rain:
Nonon Center lounge). Admission Free.
sponsored by Summer Activities and Craft
Center.
2 p.m. lecture. 11rt llollos Ill tire J - Joyce ......... Richard
Blmann. Conlerenco Theatre. Admission
Free. sponsored by llepartm!nt of English
- Twelfth Summer Program in Modem
literature.
8:30 p.m. Cofteehouse. portormer to be
announced. fountain Square (Rain:
Rathsbller). Admission Free. sponsored by
UUAB.

exhibits
HAYES HALL LOBBY
~byw-.G-·

building hours. through June 30. Presented
by Offrce of Cultural Affairs.
LOCKWOOD MEMORIAL LIBRARY
RDIIert G,_ An lOIII 11ir*-Y
Exlrilritiror of first Elitions ..t
• M~ Monday-Friday. 9·5. 2nd
flooc balcony and Poetry Room. Until
September. Presented by Lockwood Library.
GALlfRY219/ UUAB ART EXHIBITS'
a.rtalo Boob: a s00w of visual ideas in
book form. Tues. June 3-fri. June 20.
Tues.-Sun. noon-S p.m. Halfwalb Gallery, of
Ashford Hollow-Foundation. 30 Essex
Street
~ "-A Ploroolory Elrllo
Prajodioo. June 8-June 10. Ouorry Parirint•
lol 9 p.m.-1 a.m. (Co-sponsored by
Summer Sessions)
/Vttr T..,..../.,_ M-.: " - t
Warb. Gallery 219. Norton. Tues. June
10-Fri. June 27. Mon.-Thurs.. 11 e.m.-4
p .m ~ Mon.. Wed. Thur. eves. 7-10; Sun. 15.
.......... Pnjoclioooo/J. J ......
Wed. June 11. fountain Squn. epprox.
10:30 p.m. (II condusion of Colfeehousa).
AJy..~. . . . . . l'rirlll
... llnwiop. Glllery 219. Nonon. June
30-Jufy 18. Mon.-Tlu. 11-4. Mon. Wod.
T1ron. 7-10; Sun.. 1-5.
.
lllod! ~ io l'rirlll- Glllery
219. July (tllles to t.IIII1CIU1ad). (Co-

.

_.,tbySu-Sessiorrs.)

EXHIBmON AND SALE

...... 6ollflic Alt , _ fMiollll
.... WorioL. founllin Squn. (Hus
Loungo. ~rain.) Juno 25. 28. 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Sponsored by University Booblrn.

llltndly, Jaly 3
2 p.m. Heolllo ~ '--'. Dr.
. Bonnie Becl&lt;. assistant professor. physical
rOrcation: SIJC..8roaport. "Social Pressures
and Problims of Women in Sport Choices."
Haas lounge. Admission Free. sponsored by
UUAB and the Deportment of Health
Education.
.

nCKETS
rrc~o~~~.,.........._

..........

111t Norltlrlllll ra. ona (io ~~~v~rtcel:
lllllliittgtidtllllldlt--hoorr

..... _J.D. ... _

.. ~ in

artllrtD~Iidtlllll .·

fla*y/Sliii/Aitt!lft till.

~- 5/ ~ln'ER I M..- 5/.Juae 5, tt75

"'

�\

lively events
scheduled by
coffeehouse

gallery 219 and
friends
The ,.Y lllllrprising UUAB Arts Committoe io
plonning .. irnriguiniJ .... of viouol w ......
this ......,. Ill dollils lislld in - " • Dillotoly).
lo canjunclion with Hollwlls Glllory of the

Asllfont Holow Foundotion. ... Ails Commin•
will ..-!Juno 3.Juoo 20) "Buffooo Boob" viouol . . . in book form. This juriod " -· which
io 1*1 of .. ongoing .... of aJIIII1IUiity ....
- - lllillill. will include ....ot-a-kind
boob. a Mil a lhoso in lizlllle editions.
Xemgrophs. drowings. photos. colllges. ond film 1ft
...,. of tho matlriols usod. Tho exhibit will be held
at the Halwalls Gallely, 30 Essex Sti!Ol
A light ~ All W_. will feature two unusuai1V1111S:
"A Pla.-y Earth Projec:tioi.• by Joseph F.
Panone will be shown Sunday through Tuesday
nights (June S-101 in the Ou..y Partcing lDt. from
9 p.m.-1 a.in. Attonling to 1u.. ~ there
will be no moon visible during the second weelt of
June. This cosmic scheduling will directty complement this fils! outdoor Mf1l _ . , t by Gallery
219 ond Summer Sessions. Mr. Panone will use
four 5-loot diameter carbon ort lamps to construct
1 monumental piece that will be visible from all
points oo compus. a Milas from the surrounding
motropolitln . . """ Canada.
Tho second outdoor light projection event cosponsored by Gallery 219 ond Summer Sessions
will tab place afttr the UUAB Coffeehouse on
June 11 (approximately 10:30 p.m.). when Joe
Hryvniak and Judy Treible of J &amp;. J Prods will proSill! a series of manually manipulated images projected on tho east wall of lockwood Ubrary.
Images fabricated from actual objects. as woll as
photo-graphics projected to heights of 30 feet will
transform the building surfaco. Translucent
suspended saeens hung from nearby ttees will also
beutilizodtooctivatethespac:e.
Tho next two exhibits are in Gallery 219 (Nortoo Union):
.,..__,
From June HI-June 27 the large acrylic dinvases of Oavid Mann and the mixed media pier:es
of Andy Topolski wil be shown. Mann describes
his paintings IS "on invoMrnent with the reo1iza.
lion and transnissions of non-dichotomous thought
diractlld ond informed by unaloyerf light· Photo
composita, drlwings and plexiglass •e the main
compriiWIIS Topolski uses in lis "studies from
SCXInd converted visual-lime which are
praporations for environmental ...;,.. to envelop
the room or ,...., mirrors usod to awry hagment
forms." Both artists ... represented in the 35th
' WIS!Im Now Yorft " - amntty at the AlbrightKnox All Gallery.
Color ond IIXIUre will be major elements in
Gallery 219's .kino 30-July 18 " - of Alyson
Stoddard~ T111 Mochon. Studdord. a g'""""e
studant io tho SUNYAB An o.p.tmerll. utilizes
bra-' "' ..... color in Slrikingly - ......... tor.- tJIIIing ...... of strength
ond - - Eqooly........,. but .... delicate
n Modlan's atdings ond qoyan drawings.
T1nugll ..... "' ..... divisianol folds
ond ptllhpio - - . . - ......... . , _ have
....... llllt:t s.,. Mochon. ""' ....-ed
............... within. IIIUCitnl format.
.................. ond ...,...;son of blocks
_ofillllllllllliDo"

informance with ·
hilda harris
Hilda Harris. a graduate of North Carolina Stale.
currently _ . with the Now _Yorft City Opera.
Her early car. ranged from Broadway musicals to
the Motropoli!On Opera chorus. She has sung in the

United States with on:heslras in Memphis.
Pittsburgh. and Jacbonville and has toured Europe
as a solo concert artist
As an Affiliate Artist she is ,P.nsored in the
Western New Yorft area by the Western New York
Presbytery in an effon to break down traditional
barriers between ·an· mu ~c and audie~ lnlor·
is a term coined by the Affiliate Artists
program to describe the informal. informing amcerts presented by their artists.
Ms. ~· ...,._ which is also sponsored
by the Department of Music and the Reod.i's
Digest Association. will be presented in Baird
Recital Hall Satunfay, June 7, at 8 p.m. admission
free.

During the next few wftks

tormer. will ..,_ undo&lt; the

variety of per·
auspices of tha

1

UUAB Coffeohouse ond Studont Association.
A Werlnesdly everiing series will give Wastern
New Yorft . . ontortainoB ond U/8 students a
chance to perform boforw .. IUdienco. Called
"Nights of local Ughts.• the aries will bogin on
June 11 with the _ . . , . of Uncia Narnias and
Beth Katkin and wil continue oo June 18, 25 and
July 2.
Tuesday evenings also promise to bring special
delights. beginning June 17. A highlight of-these
Mf1ls will be the appearance on June 24 of
Malvina Reynolds. often rofi!Ted to as a
"songwriting legend." Ms. Reynolds has written
such Wllll-lcnown songs as "What Have They Done
To The Rain." "tittle Boxa.• ond i urn Around."
The audience win have an opportunity to join in
the actioo at a SqUift Dance oo July 1. Tlis win
follow a concert by the "Buffaao .Gals." 1 ftmale
Bluegrass ~Jan!~. This group was a hig hit during a
previous appearance on ...,.._ They 1ft dynamic
peftormers who feature a variety,of instruments. including banjo, fiddle. guitar, bass, ond mondolin.
All of these programs will take place at Norton
Fountain Sq... at 8:30 p.m. frft edrnission.

elaine summers'
dance program
The Elaine Summers Dance and Film Company
wiH present two programs 11 the Norton Fountain
Squ.e in cooperation with tho Dance Program of
the SUNYA8 Department of Thaatra. The events are
being prasented by UUAB and tho Center for Media
Study, with the support of Tho National Endowment for the Arts and the New Yort State Council
on the Arts
"Mini-IRuminated Worfcingman of WNY." a
· muki-media event with dance/ film/ music. will be
presented June 12 al 9 p.m. Dancers dressed as
Buffalo araa worfcingmen will perform against a
baclqjmund of films shown simultaneously on two
screens. 8uffalo filmmakers Tony Bannon and
Walter Behnke have filmed workers on the job at
local mills. industries. and construction projects. The
fire depanment is also f88tu&lt;ed in the film~ The
dam:ers will relate to the film~ imprttvising to the
changing environment and the music which will be
performed by The Buffalo Jau Ensemble This per·
forrnanco is a preview of a major multi-&lt;aodiaAvenl
in dance/ film/ slides/ video/ music/ theatre that will
take place June 19 and 20 at 9 p.m. at Niagara
Square in downtown Buffalo.
"All Around Buffalo 1975." a dance/ music performance. will take place at the Fountain Square at
1 p.m. on Monday, June 16. "Seaet" dancers. nondancers. and musicians are invited to join the Elaine
Sum moB ·Dancers and the Theone Department
Oance Program in an inventive axperience. Dances
to be performed include "Splalt• "Saar Dance.· and
"Pile-Up."
•

photographs ~~
puerto rico
An exhibit of color photographs of Puerto Rico
tabn by Wolliam Greene. director of the Office for

Urban Extension at U/ 8. will be M display in the
Hayes Hall lobby during building hours t!vough
June 30.
Mr. Greene began lis photography ~vocalion by
sheer aa:ident in celebration of its 50th anniverwy, the Eastm.. Kodak Company offered a free
box camera to MVOOO willing to pick one up at
his/ her comer drugstore. Bill Gr.. toolc them up
oo the offer ond hoi since become an entlllsiastic
photographer.
.
'
Hio irnpasions of the Puerto Rican counttyside,
amntly ... display, ... pmonted by the Office of
Cultural Alflirs.

old song,
. new.

mUSIC

Eltll Moodly _.,. throughout tho summer
, _ . lllgioniog Jllnl 18, UUAB will prasont 1
"""' Gtllllaor filon .... &amp;nitlod "Old So!_lg. Now
Music." tho ,... wl s11ow as tho lltljor film of
..Jol'llllinga,.....of-ll!*lorDrll
Pl!lllllllitY"""'falllllulo•jllzlllllic.Buit

lrtltlltl. .................

..;,y.

lllljlds olhrltl .for musical btiiHp ond camic
.... Mlny "'1111 fhs .. _.. ...... 'Tho

JIIOIIIIIII _........ .. lllmis Fox ond Oavid
lllotla.
•
s. ..... diioaory for film ocllltloa

ilEPolt'l'ER I Mapiet 5 I .Juae 5, 1175 I Pap 6

�malcolm bilson
Dlabl llllllic l!ufls IIIII dao iAIImlld in the
lillary"' IIIUiicol . . . _ ~ wil be
- plolood to ' - dial Mllcalm Bilsan. aaociate
Pf"'- 1111 llllllic II Camol lqd I 11111111 per·
fomwllllllll18dlllflluly~~will
pr-.t two P11111!WM. Sandoy IIIII Mondoy, June

22 IIIII 23. in lllird Rocitll Hoi.
~ Mr. Billon ... his visit to 8utlllo
will be .. IIICI ..... of I Louis IJulcbn
furutiono "' lht 1790'' llhl originol is in 1ho
Smilhaoniln lllllibnion col1oclionl.
Sanday _..., """*'- to be ployad ... 1ho
piano r1plica. will indudt . . by ~
lleod-.. MOIIrt IIIII Llopald ICollluh. PriCiding
1ho """*'- Mr. Billon w i l l - ... 1ho lillary
IIIII ...... 1111 1ho 1ar11piano. Tho prapn begins 11
8p.m.
On Mondoy II 10:30 1.111.. Mr. Billon will give 1
lodu.-oollllllliui•lglin .., 1ho Oulcbn r1plica.
illlllllllioog 1hl o*ioonoloip 1111 1ho furutiono to ita
" " " -· 1ho lwpoidoood. IIIII ita ......or. 1ho
noodoooo pilno.
Mr. Billon"a visit is _ . . by 111o Oepert-

zodiaque
June 27, 28. 29 111 8 p.m.) will be the time.
ll1d 8lird Hoi 1ho placo. for 1 doroat conien of

-a by Morton Ftldonon. Jolon Cage. &amp;r1e 8oown

center for media study:
1975 summer institute films*

IIIII IAjnn Hillor. T1is pert.,._ by 1ho lodiaque IIIia Conopiny, composed of U/ 8 student
.._., is ., atllllioro of 1ho 3-weef&lt; ContemliOIIIY ~·· Worbhop lllcing ploce in the
.Musif: llepertment in June. Zodieque's director is

liodtoSooiooiudt.
AI ......... willoe in 146 Oiefenobf 11 7 p.ooo.

J - 9, Maoodiy
Pat O'Neill
Schofill
umy Jordan
Dorothy Wiley

Saugus Series
Xfilm
Our lady of the Sphere
Miss Jesus Fries on Grill
• letters
Folly
Women &amp; Children at unge
Divirte Mirade
c.ls

Freude Bartlett
Oaina Krumins
Suzanne Pin-Kraning

18 min.
14 min.
10 min.
12 min.
11 min.
3 min.
7 min.
51h min.
6 min.

~11,W.......,

Jonas Mobs

.-IIIIMulit.

Reminiscence of a Journey
to Lithuania

t972

82 min.

J1011 16. Mondoy
· Rimmer

Variations on a
Cellophane.Wrapper
Surtacing on the Thamo&lt;
Necrology
Rain Dance
T.O.U.C,H.I.N.G
Appanus Sum
Tiger Balm
Yellow Springs
Raming Creatures

Lander

f'a!1l Sharits
HolliSffamplom

be a collector

summer program
in modern
literature
for the IWIIfdo SUiilfOI«. the IJeponment of
Engfisfo will be host to 1 ....ber of "distinguished
visitors wfoo. in addition to theio la:hing and
......,. .. the Uniwnity. will ...... public leeIIIII oalings. two of which flit within the
"dates......., by-this iaue of .......
RitNod llmann. Goldsmith's Professor of
Engfisfo lilnton II Oxford llnivenity. is one of the
_.,, poominent Joyce scholaos. His
..,.........., fill of ....... Joyce is both sd10iarly
lf1d aooooplllely Olldolile: I very penetolling and
~ stuoly. Professor Elmem wil lecture
... "The Hells of the North: ....... Joyce and
ttom.• .., ~ 2. 11 2 p.m. in the Conference
.n .o._ Norton.
Ano1hor disliooguished visitor in the Summer
l'rupoo in Modem tn.llure is Robert Silhol.
fOQII.- 1111 paydooeoMflio:al IIIII aociologicel ap.
.....,.. ID lilllllura II tho Uniwnity of Paris. He
1('1 join U/8 Engfisfo llepertment fao:ulty members
,..._ llalond iood Moooooy Sd'-ll ... June 30
in I lfioaaliooo of ,...,.._..,,. in Criticism.. to
be held II 2 p.m, in the Confennce Theetot. Norton.

Jack Smith
.hooo1B.W.......,
Michael Snow
.._ 23, Moooolly
George Kuchar
AJ Wong
Cun McDowell
Arnold

Robert Nelson
·James Herbert

8 min.

a min.
1968
1972
1972
1972
1963

2'1.! min.

La Region Centrale

1971

190 min.

Hold Me While rm Nalced
Tea For Two
AVISit to Indiana
Nudes
The [jiJeration of the
Mannique Mechanique
Blue ~)hut

1966

17 min.
5 min.
10 min.

1967

15 min.

1970

33 min.
12 min.
15 min.
22 min..

The Goeat Blondino
Animals Running
George Oumpson"s Place
1970
Early Abstracts

1967
1974
1965
1970

42-llliro.
18 min.
8 min.
30 min.
23 min.

OuickBilly
light
Meditation
Hapax legomeroo IINostalgiol
film Groin Anolysi&gt;

1970

60 min.'.7 min.
6 min.
36 min.
30 min.

Apalachee
January

Three
~25.w..e.day

Robert Nelsoo
Anne Severson ·
Ed Emshwoller
Scott Bartlett
HaiTy Smith
~

30. Moolliy

Bruce Baillie
Jordan Belson

Holis mmplon
Pouf Sloerits
,., 2. w..e.day

Jeoome Hill
Yvonne Rainer

film Purtoait
· Film Aboot a Women Who...

'S. "Ifilloillota" flr . . . .

12min.
16 min.
12 min.

1975

10min.
5 min.

45 min.

SO min.
90 min.

�•

june in buffalo:
contemporary composers' festival*
Fri. June 6
CoiM:e!llll

Wed. June 11
Coricert IV

AI C1M*1S it Baird 11 8 p.a; $1 s11111oo1s. $2 odlen.
Various Cage worb pertormed simuhaneously by C!eative Associates and ,
guests. Cage's E - pertormed by entire C!eative Associates ensemble.

Clvistian Wolffs s.-kup;

Ea~

Brown's Comlbonle; Morton Feldman's

Piia for"- Pioo!a; John Cage's W- Mosie. Played by Creative
Associates.

Fri. June 13
CoiM:e!IV

Mon. June16
CoiM:e!l VI

All Brown program. pertormed by Creative Associates and guest artist~:
"""- ~ r.... FM. -......,1952.- Pier:o. s.,...
111.
Buffalo String Ouartet plays Brown's Stnrg'Oaortlt 1965; Feldman's Tine
-Pieces far Stnrg o-tet; t..jaren Hiller's Sliirrl a...tot No.6. Jan
Williams and Donald Knaack perlorm HiUer'sllno Rita* far Twa
~

Tues.. Jone 17
Conceot VII

Piano Sonitas of Charles lves. perlllfllled by Nils Vigeland ·(Ant) and by
Yvar Milrhaslroff !No. 2. the ~·

Wed. June 18 .
Conceot VIII

Wolffs Cloorotli'l ... Systeoor, pertormed by C!einive Associates.

Fri. June 20
Conr:ort IX

All Wolff program. pertormed by C!eative Associates. including
_. ·~ with Julius Eastman

·s.-........-tar .....

e..-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1385261">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                    <text>, STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL6,N0.31
MAY15, 1975

•

More enroll
for summer
despite cuts

Echoing the story heard everywhere
these days, Summer Sessions is feeling
the financial squeeze and , as a result, has
trimmed its program somewhat this year.
No drastic changes are planned, according to Summer Sessions Director James

Blackhurst, but there will be a cutback
on sections in multiple-section courses,
a reduction in the importatio n of visiting
faculty, and elimination of virtually all
the ambitious special programs of past
years.
These measures were necessitated by
th e fact that the Summer Sessions'
budget did not increase over last year
while faculty salaries did.
As a result, the three overlapping
Summer Sessions will offer fewer than
th e almost. 900 course sections Offered
last year, although, Blackh urst assures,
th e ' summe r program will continue to
represen t all the major facultieS and
schools of th e University.
Mo~il Inquiries
Acco rding to the director, enrollment
this summer wj ll probably increase
significantly over last year. " Our mail inquiries are running way up over last
year," Black hurst said.
While more individual students are
laking summer courses, each student is
tak ing fewer courses than formerly, he

added, a decline he thinks probably

The University's

1~h

Commence·

ment season continues this weekend
with eight gr,aduation ceremonies.

A total of 5,714 degrees are being conferred at 12 commencements this year,

degrees in divisions having separate

at the Scl&gt;ool of Pharmacy graduation at

.commencements); and Division of
Undergraduate Education {including

10 a.m., Sunday, May 18, at John lord

special majors and associate degrees) .
Candidates are asked to assemble in the
Auditorium basement at 2:30 p.m.

bringing to 81,916 the number which
U/8 has awnded since its founding in

Heolth Education
Dr. Joseph Manch, retiring Buffalo
Superintendent of Schools, will address

The 1975 graduating class includes 413
individuals who will be receiving

academic doctorates, 1 266 masters
degree recipients, 3,599 stud~nts who
will be. awarded bacslaureate degrees,
and 45 recipients of associate degrees.
The Univenity's School of Medicine,
· its"oldes:t unit," has conferred ·130 M,D.'s
.!s_ee separate ·story for repo11s on three
commencements which have already
been helcj). "The · Faculty of law and
Jurisprudence, marking its 84th anniver·
sary, will graduate 178 juris doctors; and
the School of Dentistry, in its 83rd year,
will bestow 83 D:D.S. degrees.
,
General c-ocenoent
General Commenceinent exercises are
scheduled lor 3 p.m., Sunday, May 18, in
Buffalo's Memorial Auditorium. Presi·
dent Robert l. Ketter will present the
main addreos and will confer the .
Chancellor Norton Medal, the Univer·
sity's hiJihest honor,. to an "outstanding
citizen of Buffalo" whose acts have
· "dlpllfled the pei'foni.er and the C:ity in
the eyes of the world.'' A special University citation will be~ to Sir John C.
Eccles, retiring facu
Nobel laureate,
who is Internationally nown lor his con·
tributions botl!,as a research physiologist
and as a univenlty professor. James J.
O'Brien, president of the UIB Alumni
Asladation, will-lcome graduates Into
the
·of the Associ;ltion.
Unlftnlly units panidpating In this
ceremony include: Faculty of Arls and
Letters (exclu"din_' the School of
·.\rclittetture ·arici, - Envltoitrilental'
1

FLYERS SAVE COMMENCEMENT
~«•use the Pha.delphio Ftyen •t Ions lost
INde it to the Sbnley Cup fm., the UniY~­
sity's -General Commencement Will so -on as
scheduled on Sunday. The Ayers win.ower the
MaHin&amp; N~ · York lsYnden meaAS lh.at
Comes I •nd 2 ol the llnol series (oloted I&lt;&gt;&lt;
Thundoy •nd Sundoy) will be ployed in
Pha.delphio's Spodrum. Hod the hlonclers
won Tuescby's pme, the Sabres would h.in
been ' - to Comes 1 one! 2 In Momoriol
Audkorium one! Commoncemenl would hOYe
been bounced. A5 Kote Smith misht ..y, "Cod

----·

graduates of the School of Health Educa·
tion, Saturday, May 17, at 3 p.m. in Clark
Hall.
Dr. Manch, 18 years Buffalo's 5chool
head, is scheduled to retire June 30. He
has been involved in education for over
40 years.
The Health Education commencement
exercises will include the awarding of
bachelors, masters and · doctorate
degr,ees. Special honors will indude the
Arthur A. Esslinger Scholar Award, the
Physial Edocation Faculty Award, the
Community Service Award, C.C. Furnas
SchOlar-Athlete Graduate Awards, the ·
"Eastern College ,.thletij: Conference
Medal of Merit, plus other physical
education recosnition awards in
academics and athletics.
.
·
Dr. Barbora Sevier is chairman of the
Honots Awards Committee. William H.
· ~nford,tu, Is the commencement coordinator for the Schciol of Health Edua· iion. ~
.

ranu

: J:Iilll8nl;" fKuflyilf'Edualkihal-studiei;
Faailty" ·of -Nalural "Sclenees · and.
Mathemadcs; Faculty of Soi:ial 5clefices
and Admlntslnllon; Sdlool Cll "1oclll
~ Work; Division of Graduate · and .~
Profenlonal Educ;atlon (lndudrns '
. R...tl Park Memorlll tnsdltJia'boll -

O'Brian Hall.
. Some 98 students will receive degrees
65 the B.5. in Pharmacy, 25 the ·B.S. in
Health Sciences, and 9 the M.S. degree.

• · ..

•· • •• · .
~
·
•
.•
"Or. John Millis, president and directOr
of1he HalloNI Fund fOr M8dical &amp;luca-

_.......,~

.

"' ' ' IMiudlni~~ ... ~ &lt;-: "'jloft.~,~,.~-~...........

courses have been scheduled for late

-

At other commencements :

1846.

relares to the economy.
" What we've seen over the last few
yea rs is a te ndency for undergraduates to
lake fewer cou rses in the summer and to
take more of them al night," he said,
noting that at one time many students
carried a full four-cowrse load in the
summer. In response to this trend, in recent years more and more summer
afternoon and evening.
Summer Sessions has also been steadily expanding its upper-division courses so
that this summer. 75 per cent of all instruction will be at the upper-division

Dr. Millis, who has served as president
of Case Western Reserve University and
the University of Vermont, is also chair-

man of the Study Commission on Phar-

and graduate level.

. macy of the American Association of

This emphasis on advanced
coursework is unique among summer
schools, most of which emphasize
introductory-level and professional

Colleges of Pharmacy.
HRP
The School of Health Related
Professions wiJI graduate 1.56 students in

. courses, Blackhurst says.

its undergraduate program and another
23 from its graduate program in

" At . U/8 one degree in s1x 1s completed in the summer, and better than

cer~monies

at 8 p.m., Saturday, May 17 at
the Roswell Park Memorial Institute

hall of those who graduate attended
Summer Sessions in the twelve months

. Research Study Center, Elm St.
Dr. John Naughton, dean of the School
of Medicine, will speak on " Prospects for
Future Role Challenges in the Health
Related Professions." Dr. F. Carter Pannill, vice president for the Faculty of
Health Sciences, will confer the degrees.
Manasement
Approximately 700 graduates of the
·. School pi . Management will receive
degrees Saturday, May 17, in tf.e main
auditorium of Kleinhans Music Hall at 7
p.m.
.
Principal speaker at the ceremciny will.
be William H. Wendel, presid.e nt of the
Carborundum Company_and a member
of both the Coundl "of the University and
the Board of Trustees of the UIB Foundation. Mr. Wendel's topic will be' "Thrills,
Chills and Challenges."

preeeding graduation," explained the
director, who believes the summer
curriculum reflects the University's

regular Septl!mber·to-May program to
an unusually high degree.
For example, many summer schools
are dominated by their education
curriculum. Here, Faculty of Educational
Studies courses make up eight per cent
of the total, a substantial offering but one
that places Education alter Social
Sciences, Arts and letten, and Natural
Sciences in terms of number of courses
offered.

·-Ilion

Malo&lt;
A major

...........

The Faculty of Engineering and
Applied Sciences will confer degrees on
339 graduates at open -air ceremonies in
front of Parker Hall at noon on Sunday,
May 111. Provolt William Gill ancfYarious
depanlnent chairmen will present can~
didates to Dr. Merton W. Enell, actins
vice president for academic ..,_,., who
wiU confer 215 bac:helcMs degrees, 93
masters and 31 doctorates.
•
· (In case ·of rain, "the commenc:ement
exercises will be held In Clark Gym.)
. ;Peter Edehlefn, I clvfl eftllneering ·
..

"'~ ·:'"''

.-:

~

"'"!'" .:..• .........~.,.c.t»

.

innovation of Summer

Sessions this year i• a coordinated effort
to intesrate the academic prasrom with
sodaVrecreatlohal activities on campus.
Summer Sessions has been working
closely on this project with mu•ic,
theatre and other departments, the Nor·

«wn 10 pqe 1, col. lJ

�. .ILZiili

1

-Phi Beta Kappa
will initiate ·
· 94 .students

129 faculty actions ok'd
by President"in 1973-74

The annual Initiation ceremony of
U/B's. Omicron Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic society,

will be held Saturday, May 17, at4 p.m. in
the Conference Theatre, Norton.
Ninety-four members will be added to
the Chapter's roster this year.
. According to Dr. W. Leslie Barnette,
secretory of the Chapter who will present
the annual Phi Beta Kappa awards and introduce the Initiates, both parents and
friends of the students are invited to the
ceremony and the reception which will
follow in the fillmore Room of Norton.
Addrea by Welch
The feature of the program will·be an
address by local Phi Beta Kappa President
Dr. Claude E. Welch on " The American

Scholar and the American Activist."
The Samuel P. Capen prize will be
awarded to Mr. Hilary Kornblith in the
Department of Philosophy for his transla-

tion of Wittgenstein's Philosoph;sche
Bermerkungen under the auspices of
Professors Richard T. Hull and Newton
Garver of that department.
The Hildegarde Shinners Prize will go
to Irving levine in the Department of
Sociology for his paper on " Welfare
Rights in Virginia," done under the
sponsorship of Professor Roy H. Kaplan.
Each prize consists of a check for SSO.
Initiates
· Students being initiated into Phi Beta

Kappa are :

,

John A. Aquino, English; Deborah AuerMat~e!:"ati ~s; Deborah Baskin,
SOciOlOgy; Victoria Bernal, PsychOlogY; Mark
N. Bla", Biology; Rl'\onda Brofman, English;
~·~h,

James C. Brylinski, Economics; Robert S.
Burrick, Political Science; Marityn Cantor
English; Abby Beth Chack, Classics and
English; Peter D. Chapman, Biology; Robin J.
Cohen, Spiinish; Mark Condione, Psy~gy.
Karen Dainer, Psychology; Sharron A.
Doerr, Engl is h; Elizabeth A. Dorsey,
• Psychology and Sociology; Robert H .
Drummer, Psychology; Warren Ehrlich,
Mathematics and Anthropology; Marjorie
Everett, Chemistry; Arlene A. Ferrick, History;
Anita Finkelstein, Psychology and .English;
David A. Fisher, Psychology; Mitchell Allan
Fleisher, Biology; Richard Fliegel, English;
Arthur 1. Fogelman, Sociology and Spanish;
Rita A. .Forma.n, English; Roger M . Fox, .
Enslish.
leslie Gerson, Biology and English; Ray
Molly Goklberg, History; Marc l. 'GordOn,
English; Caren Gould, Biology; Shelly Jane
Gronberg, English; Mark G. Hall,· Classics;
Marjorie 5. Hammer, English; Ann W. Her~
man, EngHsh and Philosophy; Kathryn A.
Hoffmann, French; James A. Javor, Classici;
Susan Juskowitz, Speech Pathology; Marcia
Kap~n, Engltsh; lawrence Katz, Psychology;
Cynthia M. king, English; Michael Allen Klein,
Anthropofosy ond Psychology; Richord T.
Kopecky, Chemistry; Ellie Kulman,
Psychofosy ~ni:l Speech.
Diana Landes, Economics; Steven J.
laukaitis, Biology; James Richard lawrence;
Politlal Scle-; Mary Ler, Blofosy; Burt
Leman, Psycholosy; Beth lauren linman,
Psychofosy; Joel&lt; Lonsert, Psycholosy ond
Philosophy; Hilary Brei Lowl!tl, Economics;

loan LuxemberL Psychofosy and Spanish;
Sloan MacDonald, Art History; William Martin, Psycholosy; 'Dorotheo Eliubeth Mayer,
Anthropology ond An History; Sandra Mazur,
Sociology ond Psycholosy; Shirley Mazur,
Psychofosy ond Sociolo1f; )e~i Mersky,
Americln Studies.
·
•
Wesley Novok, Psychololf; Mlchoel ).
O'Neill, Hlsto&lt;y; Kathym Palmer, Psycholosy
ond French; Amy 0. Penia&gt;, E"'llsh; Marjorie
L Phillips. £nsllsh; Diane R. Phinney, Erisllsh;
Debra S. Picchi, Anthropology; Borbara A.

Podlucky, Philosophy; Volerle A. Ropp,
E"'llsh; Ann K. Rowley, Psychology; David W.
Reitz,. Economics; Linda Herman Rosen,
Speech; CUfford Ri&gt;tt, GecJsraphy; Michael
)ooeph Ruao, Polltic:oJ Selena!; Renee · E.
llrbod&lt;, Speech C&lt;immunk:otlon.
Joy 5tuon 5chochne, llloloKY; Eliubeth P.
Schneider, Speech Pot~_ofOJY; Douslas
• Sdnck. llloiCJKy; 5llonbefJ. Enafloh•
Willoon F. Shteids, Speech c:o..-nlcatlon;
Bonnie C. sa--, Psychology ond Hlsto&lt;y;
Mary Ann
fnsllsh ond Hlsto&lt;y; /
s.... A. Slnotro, l'iyd&gt;olosy; Ellen Sltlarz.
Speech~; )ooeph ftancloSIIwa;
EnBflsh; LorrM. N. 5cenz. Phllooophy; Mary
MaiMmodcs; Burt - . 1 54ulchln,
Pollllcol Science.
Alpou ' Tolonker, ~ ond l'olltk:al
• Sdenco; Felice M: Taub fltdoh• Lucille

51.........,.

s.w...

trmen:

Doltone T-. French; Uefte
Speech
l'alholoD; Alon M. Unpr, History and
Political· ·Science; Barbara Woodward,
Philolophy; Slon C. Wunderlich, An Hlsto&lt;y.

President Robert L Ketter _approved

a.ctions appointing, promoting or grantmg tenure to 129 higher-ranking faculty
members during the 1973-74 academic

year, according to a recently compiled
U/B study.
The report, prepared by Dr. Lawrence
A. Cappiello, secretary to the President' s
Board on Faculty Appointments, Promo-

tion and Tenure, indicated the number
of faculty-related recommendations ap-

proved by President Keuer last year was
greater than the 94 authorized in the

review dossiers and recommend actions.
According to the report, the
. President's Board disagreed with the vice
president's recommendations on 19 oc·
~casions, with Faculties in 20 instances,
and with departments in 29 cases.
The · vice presidents disagreed with
Faculties on 29 occasions. Faculties dis·
agreed with their departments'
recommendations on only eight occasions. ·
Dr. Cappiello said a rt~pon on actions
taken during the 1974~75 aCademic year
should be available by the fall.
The President's Board is made up of
nine tenured professors who are ap~
pointed by the U/ B Preside nt from slates
of three caodidates for each vacancy
drawn up by the executive board of the
U/B Faculty Senate. The board advises
the President after reviewi ng dossiers of
candidates forwarded from the various
departments and Faculties through the
University's vice presidents for academic
affairs and for he alth sciences.

May 15, 1975

Levine will be
acting head of ·
Arts &amp; Letters .\
Dr. George R. levine, professor of
English, has been appointed acting
provost of the faculty of Arts and letters
by University President Robert l. Ketter.
Dr. levine's term is effective from
September 1, 1975, through August 31 ,
1976.
. A specialist in Restoration and 18th
Century English literature, Dr. levine is
author of Henry Fielding and the Dry
Mode: A Study of the Techniques of
Irony in His Early Woris (1967) and coauthor of Readings in American English
and Rirerside ReMiings.. He is a graduate
of Tufts and holds the M.A. and Ph.D.
from Columbia.
0r. levine lias rece ived several awards
including a Fulbright lecturing Award
(1969-70) and the Chancellor's Award for
Excellence in Teaching (1973-74).
Throughoul his tenure at U/ B, he has
been active in University affairs. He was
associate provost of the Faculty of Arts
and Letters in 1971-72.
An accomplished violinist, he has per~
formed with !.everal non-professional
chamber groups and is curre'ntly serving
as chairman of the board of directors of
the Buffalo Youlh Orehestra Foundalio n.
Dr. John .Sullivan, provost of the Facul~
ty of Arts and l etters, will be a visiting
fe llow at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, for the academic year 1975-76.

preceding year, but less than ohe 148 ap·
proved in 1971-72.
Most of the actions dealt with in the
report concerned the hiring or promotion of faculty at the associate and full
professor levels.
Or. Cappiello's study also noted that
President Ketter and the Board were in
agreement about 90 per cent of the time
over the past three yens.
14 Dis.asreements
President Ketter and the Board agreed ·
on the approval of 115 of 155 recommen~
dations and the rejection of 21 others.
flrunlfli1J.W 1.nl/. 4)
•
They disagreed on 14 recommendations.
ton Union staff, UUAB, Student AssociaIn the five remaining cases, the ca n ~
tion, the Office of Cultural Affairs, and
didate withdrew or no acti o n was taken
the camp us papers. An extensive
by the Pre!,ident's Board.
schedule of activities has emerged.
In ten of th 14 disa~greements last year
· Moreover, to facilitate access to these
- and in 24 of 34 disagreements over a
summer events, they will be concenthree-yea r period - President Ketter ap~
trated in the area of the founta in in front
proved an appointment, promotion or
of Norton Union.
tenure decisio n after ihe faculty board
" We want st udents to know that
~a~ advised him to reject it.
almost anytime they walk toward the
. Or. Cappiello also ndted 19 instances .
•center of the campus something will be
of disagreement between Pres ident
Registration for the first of two sixgoi ng on there," says Blackhurst, who
Ketter and either the vice president for
week summer sessio'hs at the Educational
thinks Summer Sessions is small enough
academic affairs, or the vice pr.esident for
Opportunity
Center (EOC) will end fri(not unlike a College) to allow fo r better
health sciences during the 1973-74
day, May 16, at the EOC Admissions and
integration of the academic and
academic year.
·
Records
Office,
465 Washington St. The
recreatK&gt;nal sides of summer course~
In a letter accompanying his report ,
office will be open from 8:30a.m. 10 8:30
taking.
Or. Cappiello stated that "in almost every
p.m., today and tomor:row.
"Activity on the carnpus is often so
instance" where there Wt\S a disagree~
Classes start Monday;. May' ·19, and
fragmented that the sum is less than the
ment, " the President 's action was based
continue tllrou·g h ·Friday ~ June 27: Both
parts. We've tried to both coordinate the
,on material arfd informat io n not seen by
day
and evenihg classes are aVailable and
summe~ activity progra.m and .to con~en­
or known to either the vice presidents or
the . subjects offered inclu~e typing,
trate it into one acre," he said.
- ihe board ai the time of· their recommen~
EngliSh
as a second language, keypunch ,
dation."
Monthly Mognel
biology, chemistry, reading, civil service
Or. Cappiello also noted that last yea r a
Plans include an outdoor stage and
career preparation, as well as other
greater proportion of actions involved
. movie screen, a food-service stand,
academic and vocational areas. late
full professors than in previous yea rs.
weekly craft demonstrations, a booksale,
registrat ions will be accepted up to
• During the 1973-74 academic year, a
dance progra ms, a play, an appeararyce
Thursday, May 22.
total of 40 persons were either appointed
by the Buffalo Philharmonic, and
The EOC provides courses for the
with tenure to full professor positions or
numerous other events, including an exeducationally and economically disadwere tenured U/ B faculty members who
tensive schedule involving media
vantaged. There are no ·tuition charges
were promoted.
studies, which will move from Am!.erst
and all necessary books are supplied.
• On the associate professor level, Dr.
to Norton for the summer. (A monthly
. After registering for EOC classes,. each
Ketter last year approved 57 persons
M~gner insert listing 'all cultural activities
student is assigned to a counselor, who
from a total of 72 recommendations for
on campus will be published each month
helps the student make educational
appointment, appointment with tenure,
in the Summer Reporter.)
.
plans and choose the appropriate
promorion with tenure, or granting "of
This year is probably the last that the
academic or occupational alternatives.
tenure. Of the 72 candidates, the largest
fountain will function as the sodal heart
The EOC Admissions and Records Of· number, 54, were U/B faculty members
of the program since next summer
fice also maintairis bulletins and catalogs
who had been recommended for
Summer Sessions will begin shifting a
about
many ac~demic and training
promotion with tenure.
major amount of its instruction to
programs in the Western New York area,
• In other actions, Dr. Kener apAmherst. " By 19n I expect Amhe·rst to
and
referral
assistance is available for
pointed 12 visiting professors arld
be the center of Summer Sessions, and
persons interested in services not offered
promoted six faculty members to the
this campus to be the edge," BlackhurSI
at the EOC.
rank of dinical professor last year. Nine
predicted.
Registration for the second summer
professors were recommended to the
Although generally optimistic, the
session, which will be limited io Equal
State University of New York lloard of
director did express concern about the
Opportunity
Program applicants _only,
Trustees for emeritus status and one for
impact of continued financial stringency
~ distinguished professorship. ·
will take place June 30 thrqugh J_0y 3.
on Summer Sessions. "I wonder if the
econpmy continues to decline whether
Good Choices lelng Made
.
we will be able to keep the University
Or. Cappiello said the report indicated
open for fourteen ~eeks every summer.
a downward trend In the number· of
A number of departments are already
associate professors who have not been
close to stretching themselves toO thin."
,granted tenure. The large number of
A Neinlreelc Magazine Award of
The first Summer Session begins May
candidates recommended for promotion
Merit for news and information writing
to associate professor positions, he said,
27: · ~~istration is continuous, and Ad~
has been made to U/B's University Inform1ss1ons &amp; Records will. remain open
reRects "good choices being made·•tthe
mation Services.
M?nday through Thuisday until 7 p.m ..
assistant professor level."
. ~~~~was one of 13 colleges and univer- 1
An analysis of the figures for the threeSIIOflS to be honored in the. competition
. year period, the board secretory added,
which
was open• to schools across the
shows th;at tenure, or continuing apDr. William Eller, professor of educaUnited States. Its winning entry consiste&lt;l
pointment, lias "definite!
tied -to
tion,
has
been
elected
vice
president
of
of
news
and fe•ture stories written durthe associate professor ra a
most
.the International Reading Association
ing a one-year period by each of the
of!en come with pr
oon or
int(IRA).
professional and Sludent staff members
ment to the rank." ~
Because the IRA has an automatiC
of the office.
He also ·no,ed 1 "very d1amatic
~ccession policy, Dr. Eller will become
Judges for the competition, codecline" In the tenure requests for faculpresident of the association when· he
sponsored by the Council for the Adty members already holding the associate
completes his term as vice president in
v•ncement . •nd Suppon bf Eduatloo\
· profeuor rank, which, he said, "Is tied to
1977.
(CASE), were five members of the
a decline In requests to appoint associate
The international organization has
Netnweelo stAff and four college and unprofessors· without continuing apover
·6Q,OOO'
members
In
70
nations
and
Iversity public relailons professionals.
poln-..t."
·
. nearly 900· local councils In North •
Ulti has been Invited to present liS
This year's repoft also tabulated for the
America. More than 400 educators are
winning entry during a case-.tuc1y sestint time the number of dhqreements
~ of.the IRA's Niagara Frontier
olon at the CASE National Assembly the
between the various bodies which
week of July 7 In Chk:qo.
_

Summer-

EOC is holding

summer sign-up

Information office .
wins merifawanl

Eller heads IRA

�May 15, 1975

MeO, Nursing, SILS open
1975 graduation season
A sneak previeW; of Lawrence· D.· Beil
Hall on the Amherst Campus, ·a ·call to
end racism in the medical profession,
and the declaration, · on the eve of
Florence Nightingale's birthday, that
nurses are no loriger the handmaidens of

physic.ians highlighted the first three
commencements of 1975 last weekend.
A total of 170 School of Nursing
students and 143 from the School of
Medicine graduated in separate
ceremonies May 11 at Kleinhans. Ninetynine students in the School of Information and Library Studies also graduated
on Sunday.
Nurslns
·
Dr. Jeannette Spero, ading dean of the
School of Nursing, cited changes in the
field of nursing and demands being
made on those in the profession as the
pfincipal speaker at that school's commencement.

"Today is a day of conflicting emotions
for you -going from the role of student
to professional nurse. But each of you
will contribute to the renewing of the

Steven l. linn.
Jhesis Honors - joseph V. Henderson, Jr. and Richard A. Levine.
Buffalo Surslci1 Society Prize
(academic excellence in surgery during ·
junior/ senior years) - Richard A.
Levine.
Heinrich
Leonhardt
Prize
Dr.
{academic excellence in surgery) Michael P. Rade.
Dn·id K. Miller Prize (demonst.fation
of Dr. Miller's approach to caring fDf the
s i ck
competence / humility/humanity) - Hal A. Franklin, II.
. Cilberl M. Beck Memorial Prize
(academic excellence in psychiatry) Miles S. Quaytman.
~
Philip P. Sang Memorial Award
(academiC excellence and dedication to
human values in practice of medicine) ~
Paul E. Bellamy and Leonard M. Klein.
Morris and Sadie Slein Neural
Anatomy Aw~rd (excellence in neural
anatomy) - Stephen W. Olcott.
Maimonides Medical Society ~ward
(application of basic science principles to
pradice of medicin.e) - Michael E.
Rinow.
Hans J. Lowenstein Awud (academic
excellence in obstetrics) - Michaei .E.
Rinow.
Bernhardt and Sophie B. Gottlieb
Award (combination of learning/living/service) - William H. Hall.
Marie A. Petrino Award (demonstrated
interest/aptjtude for general practice of
medicine) - .Thomas C. Rosenthal.
Lieberman Award {interest/aptitude in
study of anesthesiology) - joseph V.
Henderson, Jr.
Clyde L. Randall Society Award
(academic excellence in gynecologyobstetrics) ...:.- John L. Lovecchio.
Alumni AsSod1tion Awnd (outstanding . achievement in hird year) leonard M. Klein.
· 'children's Hospital Prize (excellence
in understanding disease in childhood)
- Sr. Marguerite Dynski.
B1ccelli · R6e~rch Award (continued
excellence in research) - Joseph V.
Henderson, Jr.
Upjohn Award (zeal / diligence/ application in study of medicine ) - Michael
S. Taxier.
Three of the six awards for the first
three years. of medical school went to
Serafin C. Anderson {she is a junior). Ms.
Anderson's awards included : the Komel
L. Terpl~n Awud (demonstration of best
knowledge of pathology in sophomore
yea r), the hrny R. Wurlitzer Aw~rd
(outstanding work in psychiatry), and the
Roche Laboratories Award (highest ranking student for work in first/second
years).
Other awards for the first three years
included:
James A. Gibson and Wayne J. Atwell
Aw~rd (highest record in anatomy in first
year) - RQben E. Miegel.
Bacteriology Award (highest record in
microbiology) - Geraldine A. Krypel.
Edward L. Cunish, M.D., Award
(highest record in biochemistry in first
year) - John E. Billi.

profession when you ' enter the
professional world," she told the
graduates.
She said one is always in a state of
"becoming. You're going from the
scholastic setting into the 'real world'
where you may often find things are
different from those idealistic values
you've learned."
Dean Spero emphasized that the
professional nurse, rather than simply
being a handmaiden to the doctor, is today a facilitator of health care in his Or
her own right.
Class member Li11c':!i Lazzaro sounded
much the same note in a revie.w of the
changing nature o( nursing. Nurses, she.
said, must haVe " the strength, character
and conviction to assert professional ex.·
.
pertise."
. .or. Donald. A.' L!arSo;,, as's odaie vice'
pJ:esident for the Faculty of Health
Sciences, conferred 1~ B.S. in ~ursing
degrees and 43 Masters in Nursing.
The following awards were given : Student Council/Anne Sengbusch Award,
Karen Kotlik; School of Nursing Alumni
Award, Rita Pridgen; S. Mouchly Small
Award, Karen Felgemacher; Anne
Sengbusch Leadership Awards, Linda
Lazzaro and Beth Moscato.
Dr. Spero cited four additional
students who had been named this year ·
to "Who's Who in American Colleges
and Universities" - Evelyn Neiman,
Eileen Lynett, Sara Ann Zimmerman and
Elizabeth Ann Moody.
Medldne
Dr. JohnNaughton, dean of the School
of Medicine; administered the · oath to
130 students who : received the M.D.
degree at the Med School commencement.
· ..
In addition, Faculty of Health Sciences
Vice President Or. F. Carter Pannill conferred one M.S., nine M.A.'s and three
Ph.D.'s.
Medical Class President William H.
Hall, a black student, challenged the
graduates to help combat what he feels is
sus
racism in the medical profession. It conThe School of Information and Library
tinues to be both costly and difficult for a . Studies (SILS) awarded master of library
black to receive a medical education, he
science degrees to 99 graduate students
said. The result is that while the ratio of
during its annual commencement exerphysicians to the general population
cises, Sunday at John Lord O'Brian Hall.
among nqn-blacks is one to 650, the
The graduates . heard Robert .
black ratio is one to 4300. Reverse disWedgeworth, a prominent black
crimination on the part of medical
librarian, deliver the commencement adschools is justified, he held, because
dress. Mr. Wedgewonh, the executive
without such favoritism any catch-up
director of the 40,000-member American
. program is doomed to failure. The rural
. Library Association, spoke on the present
poOr face a "disgraceful" medical ~itua- ·
and f~ture ( sta~us of_ libraries and
tion, he said, u&lt;tiing members of the
librarianship.
Class· to commit themselves to the
Also· during the activities, the SILS
elimination of Inequities in health can;.
Alumni Association presented its founh
delivery.
_
_: • _r .
annual Librarian of ·the Year awards to
twp Erie County librarians. ·
Medl(al ~tudents receiving aw.ards
,thiS" year's recipients were Miss CarOl
Kearney, supervisor of school librarians,
Buffalo Public Schools, and Miss Ida G.
Honorary Society) - P.ennr, A. Asbeii,Silk, head of the Central • Branch
Paul E. Bellamy, Alan J. Calhoun, .Vi~nt_
A. Campa'lel~ Will~m_l , !:~n, Ronald , · Children's DeJ!artment, Buffalo and Er!e
. County library. .
. .
David, leonard M •. Kl~in,.. Robert . J.
Dr. Al~n Somil; uta execiutive vice
Lapidus., ~a,.,r,ence . G. Mlllhofer, •.
presidelll, conferred degrees on the
Christine D, Nicoll; Michael E. Rll)o;w,_.
·
Hugh A. Sampsc!n~ Jr., Stan !e)&lt; I· Szef~r, . . graduates.

~-: ~ ·~ ~:' iNa~ONI :

the SILS Alumni
After ihe
Association held a reception in the lobby ·
of O'Brian Hall, at which time Mona
Jeanne K. Easter, alumni president,
welcomed_graduates to the Association.

Those attending the SILS ceremony
were also treated to a tour of lawrence
D. Bell Hall, just north of O'Brian, which
will become the new home of the School
this summer.

8 commencements·this weekend(from f»fe

1. col. 3)

•

graduate, will deliver the Invocation and
Benediction.

Atdlltecture
Dr. Harold Cohen, dean of the School
of Architecture iind Environmental
Design, will be the main speaker at that
School's commencement, Friday, May
16, at ,8 p.m. on the second floor of
Bethune .-Hall, 2917 Main Street. At
If~ deadline, no funher details
were available on this ceremony.
Dentlolry

'

Dr. Richard A. Powell, associate dean
of the School of Dentistry, will "be the
principal speaker at that school's graduation exerdses, May 18 at 8 p.ni. at
Klei~ns Music Hall.
. '
Eighty-three individuals -will receive
D.f;&gt;.S. degrees from Dr. F. Carter Pannill,

vice president for health sciences.
Ten post graduate students will receive
special certificates.
Law

The final University commena!ment of ·
the year will be that of the .faculty of Lawand jurisprudence, _scheduled_ for Sunday, June 8, at B p.m. in Kleinhans' main
auditorium. Soia Mentschikoff, dean of
the University of Miami School of Law;
will be the principal speaker.

50th anniversary ·
Delta Sigma Pi, the business fraternity,
celebrated i!S 50th anniversary at UIB at a
banquet on Saturday night, May 10, in
the Holiday Inn on Niagara Falls BlVd.
The Delta Sigma Pi Alpha-Kappa Chapter
at UIB is basically for Millard Fillmore
.
,
College studen~

�Moy 15, 1975

Union organizations ask
more edu~ation ·~upport
On April 26, Buffalo teachers from the
public schools, State University and State
College met in Washington together
with their brothers and sisters in· the
trade union· movement. The purpose of
the rally, called by the ;t,Fl-CIO In·
dustrial Union Department, was to _put
America back to work, to tall fOr a
massive; infusion of funds to education, ~
and to end the shameful management of
the American economy.
·As w~ drih into depression, many are
saying that nothing can be done unle~s
people • voice their alarm, demand a
reordering of natioRal priorities, and
sometinles vote with their feet as well as
with th'ir ballots.
Education has had a declining priority
in New York State over the past six years.
State aid has plummeted from 45.2 per
cent of public school· costs In 1970 to a
projected 38.5 per cent for 1976. To fill in
the B~R property taxes have been in·
creased to an intolerable degree. Such
taxes are unjust because they do not
reHect real ability to pay when small
home owners · can barely meet

mortgages, are unemployed or living on
meager pensions.
In the past, our schools have had to ex·
pand rapidly, with over-crowded
classr~ms .and mass production of
teache~. Today, whhout the pressure of
rapidly increasing enrollments, our
schools can change from a stress on
quantit~ to one on quality. We must
work for quality integrated edUcatiOn
through a common effort of all citizens
concerned for the welfare of their
childrerl and the future of their country.
But such a job will be doubly hard if
teacher~ are fired and school budgets
reduced to sub-standard levels, while the
¥outh -tl&gt;&lt;:mselves .face. a bl~ak· future of
jobless~ess.

ing spent simply to pay off high interest
loans, as in U.D.C. During World War II,
massive housing projects wert: federally
supported by near interest free loans.
New York City alone has had to pay $300
million in the interest of loans this year.
With interest free loans from the federal
government, this money could be going
into the schools instead of 10 the banks.
Education More lmportanl Today
Education is more important, not less
important, today. As more and more
mothers enter. the wgrk force, the need
for expanding the educational system
downward 10 include preschool ages
becomes increasingly pressing. The ages
of 21h to s ·are decisive ones for the formation of children's abilities. and how
these are spent will significantly affect
the rest of their school years. High quality early childhood education should be
available to everyone as an essential part
of the public school system.
This is a time when science and advanced technology become part of every
job and everyday life. To become an active participating member of society, we
must be able to return to school when
we feel the need, without having to
scrape up exorbitant tuitions. Something
like a new G. I. Bill for Education is need·ed to make public higher education truly
public, and to stop the trend toward
squ~ezing workin·g people and their
children out of th e colleges and univer·
sities. Decreasi ng military involvement
can re lease enormous funds at the
federal level for stt~h.programs.
We call on the people of Buffalo to
support these ideas and to press their
elected representatives to make clear
whether they are for jobs and education
or for depression and a new dark ages.
Endorsed by :
Nua~ Drescher, President
UUP at SUCB
Thomas ·J. Pisa, Preside nt
Buffalo Teachers Federation
George Wessell, President
Buffalo AFL-CIO Council
Constantine Y.lllcuis, President
UUP W ter Chapter at
State University ai Buffalo
Newly Bected Executive CommiHee
U/ B Center Chapter, UUP

School System Is a Whole
The sc~ool system is ~whole. Without
the' possibility o.f some form· of higher
education, students become less interested in their seconCiary school
studies. The State University system is not
an inStitution for an economic elite.
Sixty-nine per cent of the students of the
State colleges and universities come
from families with combined incomes of
under $12,000, and nine out of ten come
from families with less than $20,000. But
the children of such families can no
longer afford tuitions, which are ninth
highest out of the nation's 130 public
higher education institutions. And loss of
Edltor: jobs both in teaching and in construction
ln behalf of the WBFO staff, I express
due to the present cutback budget will
to
your oUr disappointment that the conseriously limit the effectiveness of
structive role played by this station and
educational programs and only worsen
members
of its staff in the broadcast last
the downward plunge of Buffalo's
Thursday (May 1Jfrom Dr. Kener's office
economy.
went totally .unrecognized in yo.ur front·
It is argued !hat New York State pays
• page story today. (May 8).
.
more for education than any other state.
Good journalistic practice would not
But New York State also has the highest ·
·
require
yOu
to
praise
us;
but
it
would
incomes. In terms of personal income
require you to acknowledge our exalone, the percentage of aid going to
istence. As a broadcast involving the
higher education ranks a mediocre 23rd
campus
community, this event could not
in the nation.
.haw happened without WBFO. In addi·
Because dtles and states are forced
tion,
our
staff worked hard to make it as
into debt, 1nuch needed monies are be:
successful a communicative ven·ture as
possible.
Or. Ketter and Dr. Somit have expressed their appreciation of the evenhanded
manner In which . WBFO handled 'this
broadcast. I think the flepotter might at
pub/Wood
each J'hund;oy by rho.Division of U"'-&gt;ity
least acknowledge that we were in·
INfJom, Sl.te Urplvenity of New Yorlc M
volved.
·
autf.alo. J.OS M,Jin SJ.• IJulfaJo, N .Y. 1411•.
&amp;liloNI offlce:J Me lc:J,ared in room 213, 250
· Slncenely;
WinspNrAwenue(~1'rl7).
Manln f. Gnnaer
&amp;ecuflwe Editor
General Manager
A WESnEY ROWLAND

WBFO deserves

credit for forum

.. '"""""""""""'hy-

Ed;tor...Jn-Chlef
RO«RrT. MAIIlfTT
An ond l'roductlon
/OHN A Cl.ounER
~eEdlt.or

PA TJUCIA WAIO IIEDlRMAN

. - l y C.l•ncf., ldlt....
DIANE QUINN

Conrrlburln-' Mist
StiSMI M. IURGER

By Mory Beth Spina
ldif,i•l "'~'~· H~•lfh Sd enc;n

Ahhough medical educators should
not be cast as problem-solvers of physi·
clan distribution, theY should consider
possible solutions lest others set up rules
which will allow less individual freedom
of choice, a Ca.lifornia physician educator urged at the U/B Medi cal
Alumni Spring Clinical Days luncheon at
the Statler Hilton Saturday.
Dr. Helen Ranne·y, cha irman of tlie
Department of Medicine at th e Universi·
ty of California-San Diego, cited some of
these possible solutions in the annual
Stockton Kimball Memorial lect ure. She
is 1: former faculty member in the U/ B
School of Medicine and the first woman
ever to give the lecture.
" The re has been an attempt to put
medi cal schools in the role of meeting
public need. ·And I think we have been
forced into some inappropriate types of
roles in trying to change ph y.s ician distribution by altering how the medical
student spends his time in school," she
said.
Although she conceded medi ca l
schools are blamed for providing "too
m,.any specialists and 'no t enough
generalists," she cited the abolitio n of
the draft as one reason : " Instead of
medica r graduates spending those two
years in the service, many are going into
specialty training."
She outli ned some possible methods
for controlling physician distribution
through co ntrolli ng the numb er of
spedarists.
" In the freema rke t system, all t~os e
who wished to train in specialties co uld.
But when a saturation was reached, those
left over wou ld be told they mu~t do
general practice," she said.
Another method would involVe es·
timati ng need by popu\atior\ and •Other
factors . "But the re wo uld be h3rd
feelings between institutions if a plan
.,. were enacted which would clearly
restrict the · types and number of
physicians who cou ld be trained," Dr.
Ran ney explained.
" Personally, I feel a ~tter alternative
wou ld be to have regions developed so
we could have some planning on a
broader geographic scale to esti mate
need and economic realities."

' " Although it 's nice t o ~thi.nk all
ph ysjcia ns would 'voluntarily' take
courses to keep up, it seems 'com·
pulsory' requirements get best results.' '
he said.
Another Approach
Although Dr. William G. Felch, of
Valhalla, Calif., immediate past president
of the American Society of Internal
Medicine, agreed that physicians should
continue learning, he doubted that continuing education alone is the- best
method.
" Ph ys icians ca n attend lectures and
still daydream . Or they can ·a uend
sessions which h"ave no practical bearing
upon their particular specialty or area of
interest."
The· best way to determine whether
physicians are "keeping up" with
changes in medicine, he argued, would
be by judging actual performance.
" Original certification of a physician
does not guarantee lifelong competence," he granted. " And ne.w sls_ills
and knowledge .mu,st -be ke'gt :UP. with.
" But I don 'r believe continuing-education course requirements such as Dr.
Derbyshire ch3rripions will achieve lhe
goals of insuring quality physici ans."
Dr. Felch said a recenification system
sho uld relate to what a physician does
daily, his techni cal and skills knowledge
as well as attitudes and problem-solving
abilities.
Discussi ng his participation in the
Union of American Physicians, Dr. Philip
R. Alper, Milbrae, Calif., stated that
unionized physicians should not threaten patient care when seeking chan ge!!
but sho uld instead cause jam-ups of
paperwork, aimeO at third party payers.
At th~e Safurdcty - lunche on, award s
were given three physi ci an s for
· profession·al and - scier'nific exhibits on
di splay durihg ·tRe ' tvlo'aay Spring qlnic
program. Dr. O .R. Oberkirdle r . received first · place; Dr. W.E. Farnsworth,
second; ,and Dt. Charles Tirone, third.
New officers for th e Medical Alumni
Association were announced during the
meeting. They are Dr. Milford Maloney,
president; Dr. James F. Phillips, vice
president; Dr. Michael A. Sullivan,
treasurer; Dr. W. Yerby Jones, chairman,
·program committee; and Dr. Lawrence
M . Carden, chairman, exhibits cOm·
mittee.
Nine classes holding reunions
prese nted an estimated total of $30,000
for purchase of educational materials to
the School of Medicine through the U/B
Foundation.

Relicensure and Recertification
TwO speakers explored the positive
aspects and pitfalls of relicensure and
recertification at a session earlier Saturday.
•
-Dr. Robert Derbyshire, secretary of the
New Mexico Board of Medical El&lt;·
aminers, told of the effects of relicensure
on the physician population of his state.
" The requirement of continuing
medical education program participation
as a prerequisite for relicensure has caus~
Ballots have been mailed for t!tis year's .
ed a burgeoning of these programs
election of officers and board members
across the state/' he said.
of the SUNYAB CSEA Chapter 1#6(J2.
" Until a few years ago, relicensure and
. The slate of nomiQ!:eS for all positions
recertification were greeted With hOstili·
IS :
ty. But in the past five years, we've more
President: Ed Dudek (incumbent), Bob
freely discussed the subjects because of · Smith; lint oke president: Audrey Ben·
demand for accountability by the
ziger, june Boyle, Kay Massimi; second
public, fear of Federal regulations, and
vice presldenl: Dorothy Han,ey (ina true desire on the part of the medical
cumbent), Barbara Lester; thlid oke
profession to police itself."
president: Ginger Moronski, Arthur
Since passage of legislation requiring
Richey; fourth oke (lnelident: Hank
-New Mexico physicians to take a
Eichler, Bill Stober! (incumb·enl);
specified number of hours in continuing
treasurer: Mike Day, Dorothy lewis, •
education every three years, only .18 of
Tillie Wilken; rec:ordlng oecretMy: Fran
the state's 1700 physicians have failed to
Bosack, Jackie Ort, Mary Quirk, Elaine
do so.
Raines; seraeant-at-auns: Tom
"And these 18 are 'not in good stan·
Slomczewski, Dick Zier.
ding' and not ~!lowed to practice in the
Board of Directors - Admln)ltraliYe:
state," he pointed ouL He added that
Kathy Berchou, Jerry Caputo; Barbara
"not in .good standing" status di&gt;es not
Kauffmat;l, Linda. Phillips-Palo;
mean revocation of license, but does
Institutional; Paul faleski;. Ed Villa,
prohibit practice until requirements for
tvlatthew Wrona; Operatlcinal: John
relicensure are met.
.
,
Colu!J1bo, Te4 Fr~e~, Jim Hubbard, Art
· "Some 84 physi_cians . in the state .. Pa&gt;O:Iic~;. 1roff!lil9'!aJ,:· ~~ and
retired rather than take the continuing
Te&lt;:""rcaj' larry- BitHer '(iilcumiH!nt),
edueation courses," Dr. Derbyshire addNOr~rt 'DrjeWiec~t ·. ',. ;-· "~' · · t
ed.
' Ballo~ 'musi_ l;&gt;e_' r~\turned .by.-5 ·p,m.,
· "Contrastingly, in · California, where
"fhl!rsday, ('lay ·29, to P.O . Box16, Hayes
Hall. ·.
·· ·
·c ·
there iS a voluntary rather thai') , mandated system linking continuing edtica'lndiviCI11~s who do not receive a ballot
tlon courses with nellr'ensure,less than 40
are asked to eoinict Mis. Jerry Frleday,
per ceni take the reqqlred ·t.qurs .every
chairman of the Electfoii ·Coln~ 'at
_ three yurs," ..he. polJ11ed
~
exremlbn'1!Bl5.· ,.
. • ·· ~

CSEA elections
now underway

ouC:.:: -·

�May 15, 1975

' . . .liiiA

.·

Garden set
on.three acres
at Amherst site

A coo perative gard.en will bloom this
summe r o n the Am herst camp4s, project
coordinator Roberf J. Walker (assistant
executive o fficer o f the Colleges) has an nou nced .
·
A gro up of inte re ste d pe rsons, many of
them con neded with Rachel Carson
College, have obfained permissio n to
" farm" a 3-acre plot adjacent to
Skinnersvi ll e Road. Similar gardening
,projects have bee n highly successful' on
. s u c h ca m p u ses as Ber keley and
Swa rthm o re.
According to M r. Walker, the area will
be broken int o 100 to 200 small plots,
which will be made available to any
faculty, staff and st ude nts willing to plant
· and ~a re fo r the mini -garde ns.

The plot has bee n planted before and

...=:
Dr. Gilmour

m;~ll e-s

•djust m• nb o n •n

• • ~ri m f'nl • l

.-.. n:ion of lhc- II'KUUm uc swilch h .- co-inwrnl r d . ·

Gi·l mour has $1.8 million USAF .c ontract
By John Thurston
Uni~l)' lnlor~lion~

Dr. A. Sco tt Gilmour,

Jr., professor

of

electrical engineering, has received a
four- year, $1 .8 million contract from th e
United States Air Force to continue experiments aimed at impro ving high
power switching, electromagnetic com-

patibility, and microwave tube efficiency . .
The contract, a part of the Air Force
Post Doctoral Program of the Rome
(N.Y.) Air Development Center, began in

1971 and had previously received approximately S600,000 in fu nding.
In addition to the contract, mo re than
$2 million worth of 8overnment-owned

electronic lab equipmen! has been place d at the. University with an addit1onal $2
million in equipme nt e xpected durin g
the next four years. It is anticipated that
the equipment will eventually become

o n microwave tubes, has d irect application to the co mmun ications fie ld.
M icrowave tubes are used to transmit
- and rece ive e ne rgy at frequencies fa r
above no rma l ra dio and television frequ e ncies. Common uses of microwave
fre qu e nc ies incl ude sa te ll ite communication, Weath e r an alysis, airport
landi ng rada r syste ms, and cross country
telephone syste ms.
·
"Unfo rtun ate ly, most microwave tubes
waste mo re ene rgy than they properly
util ize. Ou r effo rts are d irected towa rd
impr o ving th e eff ic iency of these
devices," Dr. Gilmour said.
The mi crowave wo rk is an extensio n of
work Dr. Gilmour bega n as a Ph.D. ca ndidate at Co rne ll where "he-Jirst conceived of a vacu um va lve that would permit
ra pid and re liable performance of certa in microwave experime nts.
The soph istica te d va lvi ng technique

th e property of U/ 8.
Hish Power Switching
The high power switching work, initiated and Coinvented by Dr. Gilmo ur,
involves a device called a vacuum arc
switch which can turn on and off extremely high DC power (such as d irect current produced by h igh volta ge
batteries). This can be done repeatedly at
very high rates up to 1,000 times per second. Dr. Gilmour explained that this is
important to the Air Force because of its
potential applications in' converting DC
t.o AC powe r (alternat ing e le ct rica l
currept) and the pulsing of e xtre me ly
high power radar and laser syste ms.
· Some high voltage, high power DC
systems have ne ver be en practi cal
because arcing in switches prevents
them from being turned off. Use of th e
vacuum arc switt:h, which can be turned
off, may make tliese systems-practical.
Another outgrowth of the project may
be of direct and immediote benefit to
electric power utility companies. When
high power transmission lines ar_e
damaged, a short circuit often results.
This can cause a destructive and very
· C05tly current surge which can burn out
'thousands of dollars worth of switches
and transformers.
Dr. Gilmour and colleagueo from U/.8
- and the State University Collese at Buffalo .are investigating a vacuum-.arc fault
'li mrter which, if successful, could
drastically reduce tl)ort circuit damage5&lt;

......, wm lnterfeo'enc:e

' A second area of research involves
radio wave' Interference with electronic

has been furt he r developed at U/ B and is
now bei ng used in conjunction wit h Air
Force and Nationa l Aeronautics and"
Space Ad minist ration resea rch efforts.
The U/ 8 contract is o ne of only fo ur
awarde d as a result of open solicitation

and b idd ing by a large number of the
nation's uni ve rsities. The cont rad is
st ru d ured so that other units of the State
U ni ve rsi~y system ca n pa rticipate.

Both u nde rgraduate a nd g rad ua te
students ·are d irectly invo lved in th e
var ious projects, and beca use of the un ique nature of the con tract , conside rable
interaction among facu lty and the sponsoring government age ncies is carried
OUI.

" This interaction allows th e faculty
member to look int o rea l world
e ngineering situations, an expe rie nce
which, unfortunately, many professo rs
have never had," Dr. Gilmou_r poi n ts out.
He added that much of the e qu ipme nt
which has bee'n placed at the Uni ve rsi ty
is now being used by studen ts in seve ral
enginee ring de part me nts: " In th e midst
of these financia ll y restrain in·g times, this
equ ipment is provi ng to be an inva lu ab le
aid in pr~pari n g ou r futu re e ngineers."
D r . Gi lm o ur receive d h is unde rgrad uate a nd grad uate degrees fro m

Cornell. He joined the U/ B faculty in
1970 after five yea rs at Calspan (t he n
Co rn ell Aeronau tical lab).

the project should call 636-2316.

Ensemble plans
fund eveot ·
The S.E.M. Ense mble, a grou p of
m usicians fro m Buffalo and New York
City whi ch includes so me me m be rs of
the U/ 8 Cente r of the Creative and Perfo rQli ng Art s, will hol d its seco nd annu al
fun d- rai si ng eve nt , Saturda y, May 17, at
8:30 p.m. in the stud e nt lo un ge of the
State University Co ll ege Student Unio n

building.
'·
The progra m wi ll fea ture: aud ie nce
participation o n the Moo g Synthesize r;
erot ic and rock videota pes by Woo d y
and Steina Vasulka , taped at the Elect ric
Ci rcus, Fill more East, e tc., during th e late
sixties; and soul dancing wit h Juliu s Eastman, assista nt professo r o f music, "spinning the d iscs." ·
Wi ne, bee r and cheese wi ll be se rved .
Cont ri but io ns for th e event are $10 pe r
person and $25 fo r patro ns. Gifts are taxdedu ctible.
For informat ion, call 855-0926 or 8836669.

The S.E.M. Ensemble is pa rtially supported by t he Ne w Yo rk State Council o n
th e Arts.

6 more departments moving to Amherst
Six departments will be moved to the Amhe rst Campus
during May, June and Ju ly, Dr. Joh n D. Telfer, vice president
fo r fa cilities planni 9g, has anno unced.
Industrial Enginee ring, th e Nursery School, a nd the
School of Info rmation and Library_Studi es w ere o rigi nall y
planried o r " program me d" for the new bu ild ings. Three
other departmen ts - the learning Ce nte r, Art History and
Electrical Enginee rins - we re selected to mov~ to t he new
campus because the natu re of thei r programs fi t we ll with
other departments and services that are or will soon be
located there, Te)fer said. These si x departmental shifts are
the first of a series of moves that will be scheduled through
December of this year and should be very beneficial to
students, faculty, and the Un iversity as a whole, Telfer indicated. '
The vice president noted that it is in the best interst of the
Univ~rsity that departments programmed for the new_campus

be moved as SOOJl as fe asibly possi ble, i.e ., as soon as the
buildings have b'een acce pted by the Universit)l, e qu ipped
with new furni shings, and accomplished in a manner that will
least interfere with academic schedules.

All of th e de partments associated with the Faculty of
Educational Studies will be moved to Amherst later in the year
as will the Philosophy Department, the An History library,
and service s such as a satellite bookstore and an interim food
service area to serve the new academic buildings. Specific
assignments for these areas will be made prior to the beginning ,of the Fall semester.
The above disciplines w;"ll offer most or all of their classes
at th~new locations commencing in September. Students and
factilty. are advised to consult the
0 . Schedule to deter- .
mine which classes are scheduled to be taught at the Amherst
Campus.
~
·

F•

...

MAJOR !JEPARTMENTAL MOYES .- MAY, JUNE, JUt:r 1975
Presentl.ocalion ..,.
New location
1- Industrial Engineering
2. Nurse,.Y School · •

equipment such as computerS and

calculators.
•
This line of invest\gation extends from
basic studleo of solid state.devices all the
way to experimental analyses 'of the ways
In w!llch radio signals can enter elec" ·
tronic systems. The worlt may prove particularly Important nation-wide In reducIng Interference In home radios and
televisions as -u as in computers_
Miavw.we TuM~ .
_
.The tf!ird research area, which Jocuoes. - .

Be nefits lo Faculty and Students
In ad dition to the va lue of the progra m
to the Air Force and to ot her research
concerns, another, pe rhaps the most
si gnificant, benefit is to U/B stude nts and
faculfy, Dr. Gilmou r says.

should be re lati ve ly easy to pre pare fo r
vegetable gardeni ng, Walke r said. Pl9wing and pre paration are sche dule d fo r
thi s week {if th e so il is d ry e nou gh). Participant s will be ex pected to provi de .
thei r ow n seeds, too ls and labor.
Anyone inte rested in partici pati ng in

3. School of Information and
library Studies
4. learning Center
5. An History division of
the An Department. •
6. Electrical Engine&lt;:~ing

Profeded
MorinsDate
. May 21,1975
· June2,_197S

Rm. 25, 4232 Ridge lea
3334 Main Street- University
Presbyterian Church
Rll). 5, Hayes Annex C

Rm. 342, Lawrence D. Bell Hall •
Rm. 15, Christopher Baldy Hall
Rm. 208, Lawrence D. Bell Hall

June9, 1975

Rm. 86, 4230 Ridge lea
Rm. 325, Foster Hall

Rm. 3661 Christopher Baldy Hall
Rm. ~nd Quadrangle,
)osep!t EIUcott~omplex
•
Rm. 225, Lawrente D. Bell Hall

June 16-20, 1975
Early Ju ly

Rm. 127, Parker Engineering

Early July

• The An History Library will be relocated, late in the sumrm:r, from Harriman library tq Haven libra,Y (North) at the Joseph P.
Ellicott Comp)ex.
' '
.·
.
, ,
_
- ·_ ·
.

�. . .dld"H•

May 15, 1975

.---A ppro;;imately iWo-thirds of ' ihe to~al Uni versity commu;,ity-ofaculty, staff, and
students - wou ld rate the overall quality of the Reporter as eilher excellent or good,
projections from a sampling of the paper's audience, conduded by the Survey
Research Center late last year, indicate.
·
In the -..1 sample, 81.7 ""'cent of those answerlns the question ranked the
llep0ne.-s oweraD qualltf In one of these t.,P two cotqories. .
The projections, based on the assumption that non·respondents would answer the
questions in the same way as respondents, also indicate that more than 90 per cent of
the total University community would rate the paper as very reliable or reliable; 73.9
per cent would judge its readabiliiy to be excellent to good; and 61 .9 per cent wou ld
rank general format as excellent or good (the survey was taken prior to a change in

type face and layout introduced last fall).
A-a those who actually responded to tfH!se questions In the survey, 96.5 ""'
cent ranked the publication as •err reliable or reliable; 84 per cent thousht readaiMiity
is 11ood or excellent; and 76.8 ""' Cl!nt found the format to be excellent or good.
Projections to the ...total University community result in scores somewhat lower

than those derived from the actual responses to the questionnaire because the sample
· was skewed in the direction of faculty and non -teaching professional staff, generally
considered to be the paper's primary ·audience. And these two groups gave the
llepotter higher ran kings on tHe fadors of overall quality, believability, readability and
appearance than did Civil Service staff and students .
. In projeaing results to the University community at large, less weight is given to
responses of faculty and NTPs and more to those of Civil Service staff and st udents
(considerably more to students, in fact, because they constitute by far the largest bloc
of the total University).
. ·
That faculty and NTPs tend to respond more fa vorably to the Reporter is probably
a result of the paper's baSic editorial orientation. But the fact that clear majo rities of
those Civil Service staff (72.9 per cent) and s tud~nts (63.5 pe r cent) who responded to
this questionnaire item found overall quality to be excellent or good ind icates that
some measure of content balance is being achieved.
The 887 survey respondents included 199 full-time faculty; 84 part -time faculty;
173 non-teach ing professionals {NTPs); 86 civil service staff members; 137 st ud ents;
and 198 off-campus individuals- retired fa culty, alumni leaders, frie nds of the University, Community Advisory &lt;::ouncil members, etc.
Survey questionnaires were mailed to 498 of 1,414 full-time fa culty; 296 of 361 parttime faculty; 322 of 644 NTPs; 218 of. 2,097 Civi l Service staff mem bers; 470 of 22,059
students; and the entire off-campus distribution list.
,...)
With the exception of the off-campus group, names were selected at ra nd om at
specified intervals from computer print-outs of the names of th e entire population of
~ group.
'
General Opinion
On the question of their " general opinion" of the Reporter, the vario us respon·
ding groups ranked the paper as follows :
Full-time faculty (181 responding) : excellent, 18.2 per cent; good, 66.9 per cent ;
fair, 14.4 per cent; poor, .6 per cent.
Part-time faculty (51 responding): excellent, 13.7 per cent; good, 66.7 pe r cent ;
fair, 17.6 per cent; poor, 2 per ce nl.
NTPs (169 responding) : excellent, 24.9 per cent; good, 63.3 pe r cent; fair, 11.8 per
cent.
Students (107 responding): excellent, 5.6 per cent; good, 57.9 per cent; fai r, 31.8
per cent; poor, 4.7 per cent.
Owil Service (70 responding) : exce llent, 12.9 per cent; good, 60 per cent; faif,~. 3
per cent; poor, 2.9 per cent.
·
Off·nmpus (178 responding): excellent; 27.5 pe r cent; good, 59.6 per cent; fair,
12.4 per cent; poor, .6 per cent.
.
.
.
The questioO of " general opinion" was cou pled wit h an ope n-ended item on
suggestions. for improve ment. Comments. were retu rned by 142 ·-of the 88·7
respondents. The most frequentl y voiced co mment was that diffe rent types of articles
should be included (ranging from stori es abo ut committee work to ~rsona l ity
profiles); 38 respondents suggested th is. Men tio ned next most frequent ly (by 15
respondents; most of whom were NTPs [9]), was th at the Reporter should have greater
autonomy and freedom from administrat ive co ntrol (be mo re free to criticize ad ministrative policy,·etc.). Only three faculty and just one student raised this as a means
of improving the publication.
The next two most popular suggestions fo r improve ment (offered by 14 ind ivid uals
each) were to expand the distribution of the paper and to increase its size so th at mo re
articles can be included. Implementation of these wOuld, of course, e nta i.l a la rge r
budget, something which is not likely to materialize in the forese~able fut ure.
Sugestlons for lmpro•ement
Among specific suggestions for improvement were these :
"I think the Repotter is viewed by some as the spokesman for the administ ration
and therefore biased .... You should avoid givi ng any such semblance - unless you
start including editorials."
.
"Co-opt former editors of the Spectrom or ethos as staff write rs. They really know
what is going on among students an~ creative facUlty."
" Stop publishing it."
·
"More critical reviews of administrative handouts."
" Better d istribution to departments. frequentl y, copies left at the door are missi ng
or gone by noon."
11
More stories generate&lt;:l by staff. Less emphasis on wha t high admin istrative officials do and say."
·
"In Its present form it is a fairly nondescript organ for the transmission of information which is non-controversial. The Spectrom is a much livelier publication by virtue
of the much greater space given to individual opinions rather than mere recording of
fad. Perhaps the two names are quite appropriate to the respective staffs' perception
of their f"nctions; if so, I prefer the spectrum of viewpoints."
·
'.'Make It a daily newspa...,.. Dri&gt;p Spectrum." "The Jrepotter is a good source of Information on adivities held on the campus.
This should· be its concern ... . No other campus paper has this as its function and it
leaves an important task for the llepotter."
" For a shon pa'"" of this type,llepotter accomplishes much; an expanded version
would be one way of offering sreater selection to t!Je reader."
•
· " Since campus journalism is generally poor, we coulduse more frequentpuplication of the •i!porter fo r which In general I have a great deal of resped.:'
. llellewabay
llepotter "believability," the item on· which the. paper scored its highest marks,
was ranked this way by the various respondent groups:
.
..
~ faallly t182 responding): very reliable, 29.7 per ce nt; reliable, 68.1 per
cent; unreliable, 1.6 per cent; ·very unreliable, ,5 per cepL ·
PaJt-llnoe facultr (50 (esponding): very reliable, 20 per cent; reliable, 70 per cent;
unreliable, 10 ""' cent.
NTf'l (169 responding) : very reliable, ol0.2 per cent; reliable, 56.8 per cent; unreliable, 3 ""' cent.
·
5ludenls (106 responding) : very reliable, 20.8 per cent; ro~liable; 74.5 per cent; unreliable, 3.8 per cent; very ul)reliable, .9 per cent.
ChiSenlce (68 resp:onding): very relia!&gt;le, 17.6 per. cent; reliable, 82.4 per cenL
Off~ (165 responding): very relialole; 32.1 pet· cent; reliable, 63.6 per cent;
unreliable, 3.6 per cent; very unrellilble, .6 ""' cent.
· .
Comments on this question were offered. by 199 respondents. The most fre:quent .

J

(mentio ned by n individua ls) was the re mark tha t fact ual info rmat ion ,prese nted in the
Reporter is " accurate." Twenty-five readers, however, contended that re ports seem

" biased in favo r of th e ad ministrat ion." Twelve held that fact ual info rm ation does not
agtee with other so urces, and ten commented that the paper offers a needed suppl ement or alternat ive to st ud ent newspaper views. Anot her ten suggested that the
Reporter is an accurate source of the administ ration's viewpoi nt bu t three (two fac ul ty
and one Civil Service staff member) felt that th e paper distorts even admi nistrative
views.
Typiul Comments on Bel ieV~b i l ity
Typical of comments o n th is poi nt were:
"Some discou nt believability because of the notion t.hat it is an ad min istration
mouthpiece."
"Only good and reliable newspa per publ ished oil this camp us. "
"Only tell&gt; half the story . . .. "
.
.
''A very trusted publica tio n for a house organ."
" Despite the fact that I see it as the voice of the Universi ty establishment, the level
of journalism tends to make me tr ust the co nte nt."
"Having atte nded sOme eve nts later cove red in the Rep o rter, I find their coverage
to be accu rate."
" Abso lutely reliab le? Who knows? Relative to Spectrum, erhos, Ari, et al, it's a
pearl of trut h."
" Too much eye wash from administration."
" During the 'troubles' of the early 70s, the Reporter seemed to do much more
reporting and less rabble-rousing than other papers."
" fo r obvious reasons, the official line is stated fu ll y and accuratel y, but the ot her
side gets fair treatment."
" Reliability obviously depends o n the adm inistration's willingness to make the
whole story public. I can see little e.vidence of the. Report~r's ~fl~~~es~ iQ fi n ~i ng o_.ut .
.
more than it is give n."
"It is a good deal mote objedive than SpectrUrri,'cert.a'iniY ffidn:! 't ~an' ·efi)Os' . '. : 1• ~By_ ...
co,mparing the three, one ~sua ll y can get ·some idea of w.hat's go.ing On::
" Pure· shit.'" · ·
·
·
· ·
·
" One of the most positive aspects o f the Reporter is its ava ilability to the University
community for communi cations. In service to the co mmu nity, the Reporter is to p
notch."
"It's the only thi ng on c3mp us worth reading, fro m the viewpoi nt of getting accurate, unbiased information." #.·
Readability
The reada bility of 1he Repo rter was assessed rJy the va rious grou ps of survey
·
.
respo ndents in this fashio n:
Full-time faculty (184 responding) : excellent, 22.8 per cent; good, 64.7 per cent;
fa ir, 11.4 per cent; poor, 1.1 per cent.
Put-time f&lt;~cul ty (52 responding}: excelle nt, 9.6 pe r cent; good·, 71.2 pe r cent; fai r,
17.3 per cent; poor, 1.9 per cent.
.
NTPs (169 responding): excellent, 28.4 per cent; good, 60.9 per ce nt; fai r, 10.7 per
cent.
·
StudenJs (108 respond ing): excellent, 14.8 per ce nt; good, 56.5 per cent; fai;, 24.1
per cent; poor, 4.6 per cent.
O wil Service (69 responding): excellent, 21 .7 per cent; good, 56.S per cent; fair,
18.8 per ce.nt; poor, 2.9 per cent.
·
·
Off-c:,~mpus {176 re:Spondilig) : excellent, 27.3 per ce nt; good, 60.2 per cent; fair,
12.5 per cent.
Story R~nklnss
As a fu.rther measure of readabil ity, respondents were asked to recal l.and evaluate
12 stories which appeared in the Reporter in the weeks just prior to distribution of the
qUestionnaire instrument .. Those wh~ had read and could recall the stories {ranging
from 473 respondents who ranked a story on John l ord O 'Brian, the namesake of the
Law School Building, to 336 who evaluated a report about a socialist speaker at a conference on ~~capitalism Today") were overwhelmingly favorable in their assessments.
The n ighest .rating l'!as received by the John Lord O 'Brian fea ture which was judged to
be "excellent or good" by 83.7 per cent of the respondents. The article receiving the
lowest score of the 12 was nonetheless still judged to be e xcellent or .good by more
than 60 ""' cent of those who had read it.
· ·
On another question related to readabil ity, which 703 respondents answered, 76.1
per cent of the sample.considered articles to be the "right length." Twenty-one ·per
cent felt stories are."too. long; " only 2.7 per cent said they are " too· shOrt."
One hundred stxty-stx respondents took the opportunity t6 comment kJrther on
readability. ~h~ most fr"!!uently cited observation (from 2J respondents) was a
Javorable van~t~on on th~ theme that articles are generally well wrinen, particularly
th~ . by Patnoa Ward 81_ederman; seven m~d7 negative comments. Eighteen said
spectfocall~ that the type (smce changed) was d tffocult to read; seven offered praise for ·
the legtbdtty of the type.
Comments on Reatlablllty
~ese com~ents on reada~ility ,ranged from ~lowing to insulting: .
I m really ompr~secl. I thmk II s th!&gt; best wrotten publication on campus."
"On the whole, stories. are very ~ell writt~n. Chpice of subject is usually inte_resung, although an occasional story 1s mcred1bly boring."
~
"To (sic) ibng!"
" It's dull." •
.
"I do not expect literature." ·
" As purveyors of the 'offidal news,' the staff are fine. Given a chi nce to take o..ff on
a subject of their own, they .are superb." .
.
" I don't re.cl it. I use it for the Calendar."
•
·

�M•y 15, 1975

7

81.7 per cent of survey respondents judge
overall quality to be good or excellent
" I iate the Reporter higher than any othet campus publkation in its readability,
but still shy from g;ving it the hig hest rating since, by definitio n, it has to ' repo n ' o n
issues and events which, by their nature, de mand unreadabl e -copy.''
" TOo staid, no humor. Dull, quiet people seem to prod uce it."
"Sometimes too sensational."
" I enjoy the lack of profanity, compared to the Specrrum."
" They take care in proofing their work., .
" I use the Reporter as an information so ucce not as an aesthetic experience .
Therefore, I appreciate conciseness and full detail."
" Pat Biederman, a particularl y live ly and int e llige nt writer; Bob Marle tt, a fin e
editor. Without outside constraints and with 'more .staff, would be a first rate paper ... .
Amazing what they already accomplish."
" I suspect the Reporter relies primarily on the fu ll-time activ ity of a small number
of people fo r its copy. More frequent contributions from non-staff membe rs would
have the salutary effect of increasing diversity of co nt ent and freeing staff to devote
longer periods to fewer pieces of higher quality."
format and Appearance
The general format and appearance of the Reporter dreY" these evaluations from
respondent groups:
Full-time foculty (183 .responding) : excellent, 21.9 per ce nt; good, 59.6 per cent ;
fair, 15.8 per cent; poor, 2.7 per cent .
·
Part-time f•culty (52 responding): excellent, 13.5 per cen t; good , 53.8 pe r ce nt ;
fair, 28.8 per cent; poor, 3.8 per cent.
NTPs (169 responding): excellent, 23.1 per cent ; good, 60.9 pe r ce nt ; fa ir, 16 pe r
·
cent.
Students (105 responding) : excellent, 6.7 per cent; good, 50.5 per ce nt!-(air, 36.2
per cent; poor, 6.7 per cent. Th'is st ud e nt assessment of the Reporter's general
appear3nce'(57:2 per c'ent'faVor3b1e) 'is the lowest mark rece ived on any of th e ove rall
assess"'ents fro m any of t~e responding, groups. The indication seems clear th at the
younge r genEd~'ti_Ori' pret.ers _th"e more open, now loqk of a Rolling Srone to the
traditional "good, grey" Of the 'more co nve nti onal press. As noted, some att e mpt has
beeh made to modernize the Reporter's look, although probably not enough to score
many points with this aud ie nce.
CSEA respondents to this question (65) sided with the other older groups. Format .
and appearance were judged excellent by 15.9 per cent of this group; good , by 62.3 per
cent, and fair by 20.3 per cent.
Among off-campus responde nts (172), the ~va luations on appea rance were: excellent, 19.2 per cent; good, 59.9 per cent; fa ir, 19.2 per ce nt; and poor, 1.7 per ce nt.
As might be e xpected from the evaluations; st udents had the most to say about
format and appearance; 32 students commented on this question, 22 finding fault .
" Too crowded," and " not enough pictures,'' were the most freq ue ntly expressed studenf criticisms. " Too crowded," in fact, appeared most frequ e ntl y among to mments
from all groups, 26 times· in all. (Again, however, more open layout would require
more budget). Fifty-one individuals offered positive comments on appearance.
Pro and Con on Format
Samples of the pro and con on format read like this:
" Hire a graphic -designer."
''layout. cou.fd be improved. Some ar:,ticles seem to run toge ther."
" No qualms . . . It is an effective "medium in present format."
" A littl~ too deadpan:" .....
"Quite a nice layout."
" It's a dark p•per and is possibly thereby forbidding."
" Not as good as Spectrum - has a tendency to be drab."
"Solid, conventional."
"Too much is packed. into a few pages."
11
11 appears to be a very professional paper."
"lacking orgaflization."
" Well organized -articles of sp&amp;:ial interest easy to spot and usually comprehensive."
"Sup4!rior to most campus printings."
"Sim,ply not eye pleasing."
·
.
•rA University newspaper should be more innovative in format and-design.''
11
•• 1 can only say that it is super!or to other campus publications since it, in some way
essentially undefinable, appears more sober and reliable."
"Its appearance alone shows a higher quality of taste than the Spectrum."
11
Centerfold--spedal sections usually exciting, artistic, but news sections uninspir·
·
·
... ·
ing in format~" ---....
"At first glance, format appears stuffy but, once read, quife·informative."
"I a~ume you do this on an economy budget. I don't exped to be awed by its
appearance."

a-

Other Areu
.
'
The remainder of the flepottet" questionnaire instrument, which was eight pages

in all, dealt with a series of questions on how regularly respondents read the paper,
where readers receive it, how often readers consult various regular features, what additional regulllr features might be welcomed, and how frequently readers consult each
of several types of stories contained in a typical issue.
. .
. Fifty-four per cent of all respondents indicated they read the RepOrter regularly;
25 per cent, occasioNIIy; 1J.8 per cent, seldom and 10.9 per cent, never.
Full-time faculty, NJPs.and the off-campus audience are the 1]1051 faithful readers.
Among full-time faculty responding, 62.6 per cent reported regular readership; 24.6
per cent said they are occasional .readers. Slightly more than three-quarters of NTP
respondents said they read the ileportet regularly; 17.4 per cent of this group billed
themselves as oc:caslonal readers. Just over one-third of Civil Service respondents are

regular readers; another one-third read the Reporter occasionally.
·
· Twenty-seven per cent of student respondents claimed to be iegular readers; 32.1
per cent are occasional readers. Ninety per cent of the off-campus group placed
themselves in the regular or occasional reader category.
ProJectinR these fiRures to the toh.l University community, of more th•n 26,000,
estimates are lhal 62-8 per cenl of the total community reads t~e paper regularly (31.6
per cent) or !&gt;&lt;Casionally (31.2 per cent). Nineteen per cent seldom read iL And 17.9
per cent newer reitd it. Something less th.1n 14,000 copies are distributed on c•mpus
each week; about 1.000 are mailed.
Most Reponer readers consult the paper at work (67 pe r cent}; 33 per cent read~~
at home. Almost 30 per cent of respondents indicated that other members of thear
families read it, with one s'laff mem.ber reporting that "My husband reads ~v~ry issue
and can discuss in detail the current policies- feelings of this University community
from this contact." ·
More than half the sample obtain their coptes at the e ntrances to campus
buildings; about 15 per ce nt o bta in copies in the ir departments. Others receive the
paper at thei r desks or through the mail.
Res;ulilr fe•tures
Respondents to the survey reported that the .Calendar is the most frequently read
regular feat ure in 't he paper. Of those answe ring this question, 44.5 per. cent re.a d the
Calendar regularly; 33.9 per cent read it occasionally.
Ran kings fo r other regular features are:
Viewpoints: regularly read, 37.4 per cent ; occasionally, 42.5 per ce nt; seldom, 16.2
per ce nt; never, 3.9. Viewpoints are most popular with NTP respondents (46.4 per cent
of whom read them regularly) and th e ofC-campus audience (49.4 per cent).
Job Openings: regularly read , 20.4 per cent; occasionally, 21.7 per cent; seldom,
27.5 per cent; never, 30.4 per ce nt. Among NTP respo ndents, 41 .5 pe r cent read the job
Opel)ings reg ularl y; amon~ full-time faculty, only 8.3 pe r cent do.
U/8 lnternation.JI (since discontinued) : regularly rea d, 15.5 per ce nt; occasionally, 32.4 per ce n_t; seldom, 34 pe r cent; never, 18.1 per cent. This feature was most popula r with part-time faculty and the off-campus audience; least popular with students.
hculty books: regularly read, 21.3 per cent; occasionally, 34.8 pe r ce nt; seldom,
27.7 per cent; never 16.2 per cent. Full-t ime faculty and the off-campus audience read
these book notices more regularly thari ot hers; Civil Service staff me mbers and
students find them of very l i ~t l e inte rest.
Fe•tures W•nted
Amo ng types of regular features read ers would like to see added to the Reporter,
a " People" section; a report o n nat ional trends in higher education; personality
profi les; .:a nd an " action l in~ " were rated des.irable by more than three-quarters of
those pa rtici pating in th e survey. Only about 40 per cent said they wou ld like to read a
regular Campus Secu rity report. Civil Service staff and stude nts were less eager than
othe rs to read nationa l hig her education news.
Types of Articles Rated
Responde nts were asked to indicate how regula rl y they read each of seve ral types
of sto ry mate rial regularly included in the Reporter. Were the Reporter ed ited by the
same crite ria television netwo rk programmers use to judge the survival of most TV
series (re gular audience sha res of 27-30 per cent or more), ve ry few types&lt;&gt;f materia l
would be "cancelled ." The o nl y category of sto ries read regularly by less than 21 per
ce nt of all respondents are. those about socia l e ve nts, th e Faculty Senate, th e Staff
Se nate, and report s on techn ical co nferences. But in the case of the two senates, the
respond e nt groups most di rectly co ncer ned repo rt levels of regula r reade rship
significantl y high e r than the average. Fift y-th ree per ce nt of NTP respo nd ents reg ularl y
read re ports on the Professional Staff_Senate,. for exa mpl e, but only 1.9 per cent o f
stude nts do. Thirty-six per cent of full-time faculty respondents read about the faculty
Senat e regularly, but o nly 5.6 per cef\1 of students find the Senate of regular interest.
The overall readership ratings for the ·types of• mat erial ·included~ in the-Reporter.
reveal that :
·
·
·
• Students are the grou p least interested in news sto ries.
• Faculty and the off-campus audie nce read resea rch stories more reg ularl y than
ot hers (39 per ce nt of each of these groups b f responde nts said. th ey are regular readers
of these).
• More tha n one-third of fac ult y, NTP and Civil Service staff member
respondents regularly read Stories. about department al activities and programs. least
in te rested in these is the off-ca mpus audie nce.
·
• Almost three-fourths of NTPs read administrative appointme nt announcements
o n a reg ular basis as do 51 .4 per cent of f-aculty. Only 14.8 per cent of stude nts find
them of interest, however.
• Off-campus ind ividuals are most interested in reports on visiting speakers (43.8
per cent of respondents}; Civil Service staff are least interested (25.4 per cent).
• A higher percentage of NTPs (38.7) than faqJity (36.5) read reports of the Faculty
Senate on a regular basis. As reported above, students a'i'e particularly bored with
th e m.
• While NTPs are interested in the-Faculty Senate, only 15.3 per cent of Faculty
respondents regularly read about the Professional Staff Senate. Student interest in the
~:;Jsat:u~~~~oo small to measure; only 1.9 per cent of stuCient respondents regularly
• More NTPs, faculty and off-campus individuals are regular readers of policy
summaries than are the mem_!&gt;ers of other respondent groups- 63.7 per cent of NTP.
respomlents; _57.5 per cent of faculty; and 44.8 per cent of those off-campus.
• Forty-eoght per cent of NTP respondents and 44.8 per cent of Civil Service stall
regularly read about new campus construction; but only 27.5 per cent of faculty and
21.5 per cent of students do. Almost 75 per cent of faculty, however, read about construction at least occasionally, most proba~ly when their i_ndividual a(eas are affected.
• Faculty respondents report that, after news stories, they regularly read academic
planning information more than anything else in the paper. Sixty-one per cent of full time faculty said they are regular readers of stories about academic planning as are 54.2
per cent of NTPs. least int''erested in 'this topic are ~ivil Service staff and students.
• Not surPrisingly, students are the most regular readers of student aCtivities information (50.9 per cent of student respOndents read this type of story regularly). Faculty
are the least _interested (onlY 25.6 per cent read about stud~nts on a regular basis},
although agam some 75 per cent of faculty· read about students at least occasionally.
• Faculty are most inten;sted in faculty activities (37.6 per cent are regular readers
as compared to 29.1 per cent of the overall sample) and students are the least in. terested (only 13 per cent read regularly about faculty) .
• ~tudent respondents read most about social activities (50 per cent are regular
readers of this ~pe of story compared to 25.3 per cent of the general sample) and
faculty are least mterested (only 11 per cent read regularly atiout social events).
• NTPs (58.3 per cent of those responding) and faculty (48 per cent) read collective
bargaining stories much more regularly than other.groups.
• Non-local developments in higher education, though wanted on a regular basis
by 80.4 per cent of the sample (see discuosion of wanted features above) are rod
regularly by only Z/,4 per cent of respondents- most regularly by part-time faculty,
NTPs, and the _off-campus audie~Jover one-third of the respondents in each group).
About two-thtrds of the overall sample read these stories at least occasionally.
Perhaps the best_conclusion to be drawn from these rankings of content items
comes from a respondent comihent:. " With such a diverse audience it would be difficult to improve [the content of) the Reponer, for what would be of intereSt to one
group would prove uninteresting to ·another , .. , It's hard to be all things to all the
University community."
,
.
.

�--•Dr. Jain proves existence of long-theorized particle
. . .u...

Or. Piyare L. Jai~, professor of pfiysics:
has proven through direct measurement
the existence of the charmed particle, a
long theorized, often puzzling product
of the rTl&lt;' • fundamental constituents of
matter.
The discovery represents a significan~
step for physidsts throughout the world
who have for a long time, and with great
intensity during the past six months,
been concentrating on how to prove and
directly measure its existence.
· h
·
f
. h'
Pub 1IS mg '" t e May 12 IS~ue 0
l'ftyskal Reriew Letters, Dr. J~m announced, that the c.h~rmed particle was
produced at 300 bllhon electron volts,
the energy '?fa ~rotan beam accelerat~d
at th~ ~err!1 1 ~auonal Accelerator Lab 10
Batavia, llhr:-oiS.
A specr_ally pr_e pared nuclear
photographic em.ulsl~n was. used as _a
~rget for the part.'cle ~nteractlon_or colltSlon, becau~ of Its high re:5?1utlon, and
after an 1ntense analys1s through
microscopic scanning, Dr. Jain was able
to identify and calculate the mass and
lifetime of the panicle.

'

the interaction of nature's four forces

with the sub structure· of the atom. The
four fources, which are said to control all
physical, biological and chemical
processes, are gravity, eiP ·: omagnetism,
the weak force, and the strong force. The
latter three are associated with close encounters between atomic particles.
The atom is made up of a nucleus wilh
an electron rotat: ·g around it and altracted to it because of electrom~gnetic
force . The nucleus is made up of

nucleon, including a positively charged
proton, and a neutron with no charge.

·

.

~·

Aft~~ partklfo ..colis.ioft., cOftducte.cl •t
rnkrcKC~. OM of thto ru~ out p.artic::k-

The

Four Forces of Nature
As the most fundamental of all
sciences, high energy physics deals with

~

May 15, 1975

lfM- F~mi LAb, Dr:1Mn w-•nM'd IM t-mukion with thk K.&amp;ltffins
intHM1tGnt is ptojt'Ct~ on th• TV Krl'f'n (riAhtl.

force binding these nucleon

together is what physicists call the strong
force.
looking fun her into nuclear strudure,
the nucleon contain quarks which
traditionally were thought to be three in
number. The reason .for three, Dr. Jain
noted, was because the theory of why all
other particles existed could be ex plained through the presence of three quark
particles.
Another characteristic of high e nergy
physics is that in particle interactions,
many new, unstable or radioadive particles are born. These particles have a
very short life span before they begin
their radio.a ctive decay - one/ one
millionth of a second would be co nsidered a very long life. The weak force is

that which is associat ed with the decay
process.
Dr. Jain explained that while for a long
time the possible presence of a fourth
quark existed, its existence was theory
o nl y. Renewed, emphasized interest in
that theory w.s introduced when scientists bega.n so look for a fifth force - a
uni fying force which would relate all the
other forces.

Unified Field Theory
This is called the " unified field
theory." The first significant step toward
its proof was observed last year when
scientists at the Brookhaven National Lab
and Stanford Lab independently and
successfully observed the un ification ~of a
Weak force and eled romagnetic force

This is where the nuclear emulsion
technique proved to be essential, as it is
the only detector which is capable of
showing those interactions which occur
in less than one milimeter of space.
In studying the emulsion, Dr. Jain
found that the particle travels onl y 194
microns, or less than one/ fifth of a
milimeter. This distance represents a life
span for the charmed particle of
between one/ one trillionth and one/ ten
trillionth of a second.
Other characteristics of the particle·
which Dr. Jain noted was that its mass is
in the order of 1.25 billion eledron volts
and that it decays into three particles, an
e ledron , a hadron, which is associated
with the strong force, and a neutria:"O,
which is associated with the weak fo rce.

Two Heads Better than 20
Another key fador in the successful
measurement was the slow tedious
technique of scanning the emulsion.
" Looking over the emulsion and observing each of the multitude of particle interadions, we had to first rule out all
other possibjlities before we were certain that this was the charmed particle,"
he said.
Equally interesting is that the "we" Dr.
Jain refers to is himself and one student
who have solved the same scientific
mystery that has been under study by a
number of teams of scientists from
various labs around the world.
In substituting personal concentration 'for manpowEr, Dr. Jain contends
that in fundamental research, it is not the
millions of dollars in funding or th.e full
staff of 20 that makes the difference.
"The important thing is a realization
that th is is extremely hard work which
requires a great deal of time, patience
and concentr~tion . Success is based
h.eavily on a combination of desire and
the ability to have something to offer and
the self-satisf¥ing rewards are almost incomprehensible."
The Fermi Accelerator
The Fermi AcceleratOr, as the world's
most powerful atom smasher, has also
aided physidsts in tKeir quest for a better
understanding of the atom and its con·
stituents.
Operated for the U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission by the Universities Research
Association, a group of 52 major univerjor who plans to attend graduate school
North Americarr Soccer league - a first
Five UIB varsity athletes have been.
sities including U/B, the S250 million
here next year.
round -pick. 'In wrestling, he compiled a
awarded C . C . Furnas graduate
fadlity was compleied in 1971.
scholanhlps for the 1975-76 academic
Mr. Bemsley, a four year swimmins ·
career recor!l of 45-1-1 and was voted
year.
.
A major component of the accelerator
letterman from Garden City, .N.J., will - . the most outstanding wrestler in the
is a ring of 1000 magnets which guide and
.State Invitational Tournament. _
Wlnnen include Christine S. Barone,
enter law sdlool in the _fal.l: An accounfocus proton beams at. energies of up to.
ting major, he also has sei\Yed two years
All 1he recipients, with the exception
basketball; Mark Bemsley, sWimmlns;
SOQbilllol' electron volts. The ring is four
as a resident hall adYisor and worked as a . ' of Mr. Bernsiey, ale from Buffalo.
Lawtenee J. Mentkowai, track; Stephen
miles in circumference and a proton
·J. Munz, ·fencins. and James R. Youns. , · volunteer for the American Civil liber·
M&gt;CCerlwrestlins- .
.
beam trilvels around the ring about 70,ties Union.
.
000 times in 1.6 seconds. . ..
· Mr. Mentkowai was a four-year track· .
Selected on the basi5 of high aqdemic
and athledc standing, the five recipients
Several additional research and supteam ·m ember and co-captain this
Howi_rd ·Deuell, assistani ·vice presi- .
pon fadlities are also included at the i
season. He holds a share of the Univerdent for student affain; Marion Dickson,
were honored Monday, May 12, at an
awards luncheon in 1116 Hayes Hall,
6,800-aae site which has a full time staff
sity's two-mile relay team record. He
assistilnt to tbe chairman, anthropology;
of 1,500 and uses lO million kilowatt
hosted by President Robert l. Ketter.
plans to study management in graduate
and Raymond Volpe, programmerThe· schollnhlps, which range from
hours of electricity per month ..
analyst, academic. computins. are vying
school here.
for the position of vice chairpersonS500 to $1100, are administered by the
A native of India, Dr. Join received his
Mr. Munz was twice co-captain of the
UIB Foundation Inc. and we~ establishfendng team and finished third In the
president elect of the Professional Staff .
B.A. and M.A. degrees from Punjab
ed In 1965 by the late Or. Olfford C. FurSenate in an eJection riow being conUniveRity in India and his Ph.D. from
North Atlantic Fendng Championship at
nas, then president of UIB.
ducted.
Michigan State Univenity.
.
Seton Hall this season. He plans to attend
Ms. Barone, a member of the women's
· He joined the U/B faculty in 1954 and
Running for 5!!Cretary are Gloria
medial school.
. .
has traveled extensively around the
basketball team for three yean, led ~
Mr. Youns. cited for his panidpalion
Aniebo, assistant to the chairman, psyteam In scorfns this semon and played In
world on various research and lecture
in both soccer and wresdlns. was cochology, and AI Errnanovics, assistant
assisnments. He Is · a Fellow· of the
every pme cklrins all three of her vanity
caphin of the soccer team and is the fi~
·
director, Norton Union.
UIB player to be oelected In 1 draft of.the
_ America!) Physical Society._...,. If..
seaoonS. She is a phyoial eduC:ation maBallots are due Monday, May 19. :

•
Furnas ·awards
Five scholar-athletes w1n

PSS election ;.

''?

through what i~ called a neutra~ current.
These e xpenme.nts, tho~gh ~~de~ndent of quark parucle cons1derat•ons, tntraduced a situation which the threequark theory could not account for the birth of what has been labeled the J
or psi particle. Because of its heavy ma~s
and almost indescribably brief life,. ot
co uld not have been the result of an Interaction involving any of the three
quarks. Its "fathe r" was the charm quark.
A new family of particles was P!Oduced whose members had much heavier
masses and shorter lifetimes than those
particles \9hich are a product of interactions invol vi ng the other three quarks.
Excitement increased as ph ysicists,
altho ugh now certain of its existence,
were still unable to identify it th rough
direct measurement. The reason being
that the techn ique which was used did
not e mploy a detector which could capture the swiftly moving partic;le over the
ve ry short di stance it traveled.

�John C. Ecdft

.7

HriPN T. kelPs

EnJ'Iish

retiring faculty to be cited at commencemenflunch

Seven retiring 'faculty members with a
total of 144 years service to U/ 8 will be
cited by the University at the annual
Comme ncement Day luncheon, Sunday,
May 18, prior to General Commenceme nt exercises at Buffalo's Memorial
Auditorium.
President Robert l. Ketter will present
certifica_tes to membe~s of the group.
The f1ve are ~r. M1lton C. ~lbrec~t,
professor of soCiology, who wdl ret•re
August 3~; Dr. Helena T. Eccl~s, res.e~r~h assiStant profe~sor of physiology,
rellnng August 31 ; Sir John C. ~ccles,
distinguished professor of phySiology,
31
reunng August ; ~r. James~-. English,
professor of o~al biology, rellnng ~ay
31 ; Dr. Bonme Pomerantz, associate
professor, speech communication; Mrs.
Hazel H. Harvey, associate professor •
I d l R d 11
nursing; an d Dr. C Y e ·· an a •
professor of gynecology~bstetrics, retiring August 1 1.
Milton C. Albrecht
D.r. MiltQn .. C. Albrecht has been a
. membe• ,of.\be.hculty of the University
for. 29 ·years,.. as a professor of sociology
and, from 1958-1965, as dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences. During the
seven years he spent in the Dea n's office, the College increased in enrollment
from about 1,600 to nearly 5,000; fulltime faculty, from about 150 to more
than 425. In addition to· his professorship
of sociology anp his d eans hip; Dr.
Albrecht also held a joint appointmen1.in
the Faculty of Educational Studies.
A graduate of Antioch, Albrecht
received his M.A. and Ph.D. from the
University of California, Berkeley. Before
coming to Buffalo in 19-%, he was a
member of the faculty of the University
of Idaho. A Fellow of the American
Sociological Society, h e is a frequent
co ntributor of papers to the Society's
national meetings and to its professional
journals.

Captain in the United States Navy, to
serve as dean of the School of Dentistry,
a position he held for ten years.
A Fellow of the American Association
for the. Advancement of Science, tft~
American College of Dentists, and the
International College of Dentists, Dr.
En~lish . received his D:D.S. fr~m the
Umversuy of Penns~lvama and h1s Ph.D.
from Johns _Hopkms. He has _been
hon?red by h•s colleagues_by eledlon _as
~resident of the International Assoc•ahan for Dental Research .
Clyde L. Randall
Dr. Clyde L. Randall, a distinguished
member of the medical facult y for 38
years, has served the University as a
professor Of obstetrics and g_y necology,
"d
f h Ih
d
as vice pres• ent or ea t SCiences, an
as ading dean and executive officer of
the School of Medicine. Deeply involved

in community medkine, Dr. Randall ~as
head of the Department of Obstetr.rcsGynecology, Buffalo General Hosprtal,
pr-esident of the Medical Board, Buffalo
General, and dire~tor of the
Departments of Obstetncs~Gynecology
at E.J. Meyer Memorial and Children's
Hospitals. He served the Planned
Parenthood Center of Buffalo for 25
yea rs.
Dr. Rand all has been recognized by his
co lleag ues by being elecled president of
seven professional o rganizations, ine ludin g the Buffalo ObstetricalGynecological Society, Buffalo Academy
of Medicine, and the American Association of Obstetricians and Gyneco logists.
He is also a Fellow of the British Royal
College of Ob stetr icians and
Gynecolog,·sts.
.
Dr. Randall is serving as secretary-

treasure:r of the American Boar? &lt;?f
Obstet~rcs-Gynecol~gy and the Natron~l
Co~n~l of Obstetnc and Gynecologrc
Socr~ues and . a~ a member of the e~ecut~ve co"'! mlltee .o ~ the C_ou.ncd
Med•cal SJ&gt;E:c•alty Soc1eUes. In h 1s fteld,
he has publ1shed more than 60 papers.
John C. Ec~
Sir John C. Eccles, distinguished
physiologist and university professor,
and recipient of the Nobel Prize in
Medicine and Physiology in 1961, will
rece ive a special University citation at the
commencement exercises. (See first issue
of the Summer Reporter for details.) The
first Nobel laureate ever to serve on the
faculty here, he joined U/ 8 in 1968.
Data on Profs. Pomerantz and Harvey
was not available at press time but will
appear in the June 5 Summer Reporter.

H~noT.Ecdes

Dr. Helena Taborikova Eccles has been
an assistant research professor in the
Department of Physiology since 1968.
After earning her M .D. from Charles
University in Czechoslovakia in 1958, she ·
worked in hospitals in her native Prague,
Mrs. George Dykes Unger, director of
in the departments of internal medicine,
the University's Educational Opportunity
infectious diseases, surgery and derCenter, has been named by President
matology. She joined" the staff of the
Robert L. Ketter as U/B coordinator for
Institute of Physiology in that country's
the celebration of Interna ti onal
Academy of Science in 1962 and later
Women's Year on campus.
conducted research in elec The focal point for celebration of the
tromyography in Charles Univer&gt;ity's
Year, which has been proclaimed by the
Neurological Clinic. In 1965 she earned a
United Nations, President Gerald Ford,
research post at the Institute of
and New York State, will be October 1B,
Physiology at the University of Milan, Itathe date on which SUNY Chancellor
ly. She came to the U.S. in 1966 to join
·Ernest Boyer has called for a " SUNY
the Institute for Biomedical Research in ·
Salute to Women " on campuses
Chicago and sopn was on the faculty of
throughout the State. .
the OejNrtment of Neurology at
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore, chairman of
Nor~hwestern University's Medical
the SUNY trustees, has asked campus
School.
J
coordinators to plan, stimulate and
Having pursued research in
develop ideas for commemorative ac~
neurophySiology. in three oountries and
tivities both ·•on October 18 and
sharing he( .husband'sc{John C. Eccles)
throughout the year, Mr&gt;. Unger says.
commitment IO• medlcat """"rch, she
UIB's observances, sHe indicates, will
worked directly with him in lhe('esearch .
likely in.clude seminars, lectures,
and publica~ior~· of his works in the field · workshops, exhibits , television
of neurophyliology.
programs, and special awards for out~A. &amp;aM
. '
- standing women.
To aosist in p~nning and ooordinatirg
Dr. James ~: English, professor of oral
events, Mr&gt;. Unger has named a threebiology, came' to lh!' U~iver&gt;ily in
person nuCleus group of Helen fledrick,
September 1960;on his re\lrement as a

George Unger named U/8 coordinator for .I WY
coordinator of the campus Women's
of 32 ce&gt;untries elected by the UN
Council; Margaret Nevin, director of the
Economic and Social Council. It has been
Adult Advisement Center, and Marjorie
instrumental in directing attention to
Girth, associate professor, law and
issues affecting women, and in drafting
Jurisprudence. This group, Mrs. Unger
declarations and international
says, will form .all subcommittees for the
agreements covering many of them. One
campus observances and will be chargejl
. of its ~chievements was the drafting of
with coordinating Universily·wide
the Declaration on the Elimination of
events with those which may be planned
Discrimination against Women in 1967,
by individual campus groups.
which serves as a world guide for the ~d­
The October SUNY Salute may take
vancement of the · rights and responthe form of a several day observance
slbilhies of women.
here, Mr&gt;. Unger indicates. A schedule
The declar~tion notes that
for this and related events will hopefully
"discrimination against women is incom~
be developed by the end of May, she
patible with human dignity and with the
says.
welfare of the family ~nd of society,
The idea for- International Women's
prevents their Participation, · on equal
Year came several years ago as a result of
terms with men, in the political, social,
efforts by voluntary organizations' which
economic and cultural life of their oounsuggested . that if · the United N~tions
lries and is ~n obstaele to the lull
could have an International Human
development of the potentialities of
Rights Ye~r and an International Populawomen In the 5ervice of their c:ountrles
tion Year, It would be ~ppropnate and
and of humanity .. . . The full and comfining "to follow with an lnlerlllltion~l
plete development of a country, the
Women's Year. The formal Initiative
weH~re of the world, and lhe aone of
began with the United Nations Commis- .
pe.ce require the rnaximu·m participasion 'on the Sutus of Women' in 1972.,This
tion of women as well ~s men in all
Commission, eStablished In 1946, oonSists
fields..' : ·
.

�•

May 15, 1975

The West •nd the Rest of Us: White
Predators, Black Slavers and the African
Elite - by Chinweizu, former fellow in
American Studies. Random House, New
York, 1975. 520 pp. $15. Simultaneous
Vintage edition, $4.95.
" A fine piece of work ... It combines
learning, insight and passion to provide a
remarkably enlightening and glten
deeply moving account of the European

assault on Africa." - No~m Chomsky
The fundamental conflict between
Africa and the Western world for over
500 years has never centered around

ideology, Chinweizu writes. The basic
conflict has always centered around control and use of the resources of non-

Western peoples and that concern
predates Marxism and communism. ·
This important and original economic
history provides the historical backdrop
to the current campaign by Third World
nations for better Prices for their energy
and resources. As Chinweizu points out,
since the United States, with only 6 per
cent of the world's population, consumes 40 per cent_of its resources, and
Western Europe, with only 10 per cent of
the world's people, controls 30 per cent
of its trade, why should it be up to the
Third World nations to provide the West
with an ever higher standard of living?
To understand the backlash to
Western expansion that is contributing
to the global economic crisis of today,
Chinweizu investigates the styles and
purposes of Western imperialism in
Africa, revealing the role of African complicity - first by the early black slavers,
and now by the prese nt day African elite
- in the subjugation of Africa by the
West. He deals with the myth of racism in
keeping Africa oppressed, with
"independence" as a fake product of the
grand fraud of decolonization, and with
the exchange arrangements between
Africa and the West theoretically designed for Africa n development, bu
hich
in facl have enabled the West to prosper
. . . at Africa's expense.
Chinweizu, a poet, playwright, and
critic from Nige,ria, attended Government
College, Alikpo, studied mathematics
and philosophy .-at M.l.T., and is associate
edilor of the African literary and intellectual magazine Okike. H~ was a fellow in
the American Studies program here
while working on his book. This summer
he will be teaching a U/ B course entitled
" The U.S. and the World" (American
Studies 207).
5 Re~;ders Reading - by Norman
Holland, pro/essor of English. Yale
University Press, New Haven and london, 1975. 418 pp. S1S.
·
" Blake ha• stated the problem this
book addresses as succindly as anyone,"
DJ. Holland writes in his preface:
Both re;,d the Bible day &amp; night
But thou read'st black where I read white

Dr. Holland wants to know " why is this
so?"
·
fusing literary sensibility ·and
chological research , h~ brings to light
important data showing how personality
- in the fullest sense of character
development and identity - affects the
way in which we read and interpret
literature.
Dr. Holland worked with live student
readers, using a battery of psychological
tests and extensive interviews to study
the ways they reacted to classic shon
stories by faulkner, Hemingway, and
omers.
.
His publishers summarize the results:
ncombining his own interpretation of
the stories with his understanding of the
readers and their reactions, Holrand
derives four principles .that inform
literary response. He th.en goes on to
show how these principles apply, not just
to literary response, but to the ~ay personality shapes any experience.
,
"The book carries Holland's previous
studies of creation · and responsive
~lion !O a major theoretial staternenL He replaces the anlfldal Idea that
one must mink of a text (or other event)
u separate from its percelvets by an undenlancllns of the dynamia by which
~and pe~ mutually create
an experience. For critics and_students of
human behavior alike, this ischallensing
and seminal'readins:•

PsY-

From the Grocery Money - a book of
poetry by linda M. Ph illips (Palo),
departmental secretary, American
Studies. Tarot Press, Buffalo, 1975.
HOW FAST CAN YOU

~YPEI

How (ajf c;,n you type
oh big sir
big sur
I cannot type lor yoo toda y
because the typewriter broke down
and I broke up
laughing.
Because my whole life has been
How fa sr can you type
H ow fast can you sweep
How fast can I get you
ro sleep
with me.

" I am a product of Fifc i e s
womanhood," Ms. Phillips writes, "'if
you .pet heavily in high school you will
never be satisfied with sex when you're
married. • There always was som~t h ing
vaguely wrong ... but as young girls we
could never quite touch it
I have
been branded and molded in my lifetime
... my poems speak of a woman's pain
. . . they start out sad and lost and only in
the end show signs of strength . ..
st rength that lay sleeping through the
early Sixties ... stre ngth misguided during the late Sixties ... strength growing
throughout the early Severities .. . still
s.eeking new directions."
Ms. Phillips, who started writing poetry
in the sixth grade, holds a degree in
sociology from U/8 and is doing
graduate work in American Studies. She
is active in the Feminist Acting Workshop
and the Women Office Workers project
o n campus.
The vo lume is avai lable at Everyman's
Book Store, Main St reet, and at other
oUl lets.
·

society relationship. The market
and the public policy
process determine. the goals to be served, the authors say, and these goals
become the criteria for appraising the
managerial unit's performance. The
authors introduce methods of imple menting this " principle of publi_c
responsibili.ty" - plus a specific techmque based on the concept of social indicators. - to provide a framework for
adaptation in a changing world.
Primaril Ydesigned as a text, the book :
• Includes exte·nsive discussion of the
publ ic policy process itself, and the particular role of the large corporation in
that process.
• Presents detailed examples, drawn
from adual experience, for implementing suggested plans in the thesis.
• lends itself to supplementation by
case analyses, library references, current
periodicals and 11ewspapers, etc.
"mech~;n i sm

The Philosophy ~I ti.e "curriculum: The
Need lor Genera/ Education -edited by
Sidney Hook.• Paul Kurtz, professor of
philosophy, U/ B, and Miro Todorovich .
Prometheus Books, Buffalo, 1975. 280
pages. Cloth $10.95.
The publisher calls this " an outstanding new book that offers construdive
recommendations for higher education
in the growing debate about the
curriculum."
In the struggle. for students' rights of
the last decade many universities and
SEND lOOKS
In lieu of a comprfl.~we annua.l wrap-up of
fuulty works the Repotter hopes to print
notices of boolcs ~ they appear. We uk that
faculty include us on publishers' mailinslists
or forw.trd copies and/or rewtews to 250
Winspear, Rm. 213. All submissions will be
returned.

Printe Management and Public Policy:
The Principle of Public Responsibility -

by l ee E. Preston , chairma n, Department
of En vi ronmental Analysis and Policy,
School of Management, U/8, and James
E. Post, Boston University, presently a
doctoral candidate here. Prentice-Hall,
Inc., EnglewoOd Cliffs, N.j., 197S. 192 pp.
Paper, S5.95; cloth, $8.95.
An integrated analysis o f th e
relationship between the modern corporation and its social environment, this
new book also covers the process of
public policy formation as it affects
business activities. The authors contrast
their essential thesis, based on in·
terpenetrating systems, with other viewpoints - economic fundamentalism,
na ive Concepts Of social responsibility,
and· moralistic guitlelines.
Preston and Post demonstrate that
while organizations have their primary
fundion in relation to some specific
tasks or roles within society, they also
have a "secondary involvement" in the
via bility of society as a whole. The work
analyzes the scope of managerial
responsibility - fn terms of a comprehensive model of the management-

colleges abandoned or weakened all
requirements, the co-editors point out.
Furthermore, they say, \Vith .-lhe recent
economic .recession stuP~qts , ieem)~- .
tere.sted onlY in prof~ssional and
voc~tiqnal goals: " As a result, general
education
and
the
liberal
arts
cur riculum have been emasculated."
Are we not mis-educating students if
we negled entirely a core curriculum,
Kurtz and company ask. Many
professional educators grant that the
traditional liberal arts curriculum does
not seem fully relevant to the present,
but if it is not, what should take its place
- in the humanities, the arts, the
sciences, and the social sciences?
In this volume, the question is ex·
plored by some of the leaders in higner
education today. They agree that there is
an urgent need to revitalize general
education so that students will be able to
cope with the rapidly changing world of
the future.
The reflections contained in the work
are intended to serve "as a powerful
catalytic agent in improving the qUality
of our institutions of hig~er educat!on."

-~i~HJ§
.
FACULTY
Assistant Professor, Biology, F-5041 .
Ledurer, Rachel Carson College, F-5042.,

NTP
Techn_ical Specialist, Survey Research Center, PR-2, B-5016.

U/1 FOUNDATION

•

~ssociate Director,

Instructional Communication C~nter, 8-50.17.
Coordinator lor Health Educa@!! Program, Lakes Area Regional Medical
Program, 8·5018.
.
Assist;tnt to Director, Biochemistry, B-5019.
For additional" information q&gt;n~erning these jobs and for det;tifs ol NTP
openings throughout the St;tte University system, consult bulletin boards at
these locations:
.
·
·
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, next
to afeteria;. 3. Ridge Lea; Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Cary Hall,
in-corridor opposite HS 131; S. Farber Hall, in the corridor betweeh Room 141 '
and the lobby; 6. Lockwood, .ground floor in corridor next to vendins
machines; 7. Hayes H•ll, in. main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Olfoce; 8. Acheson Hall, In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113;
9. Parker Engineering. in -corridor next to Room 15; 10. Richmond Quad,
Amherst Campus; 11: 1807 'Elmwood, Personnel Depanment; 12. Nonon
Union, Director'~ Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor neJI to
R~o:n 106. 14; john LorcNYBri•n' Hali, founh floor (Amherst Campus).

suae u~ . . luffalo !' ..;' ~~ Opportunlty/Affl.,natho; Adlon employ~

�n

May 15, 1975

Critical theory
institute set
for summer

Colleges bring Ellicott .Complex to life .
ly Bob Enselhordl ·
Uni-sky1nfori'N tion ~n

Last hll , about 1300 U/ B undergraduate students mo ved into
residence in the Joseph P. Ellicott
Complex, the 38-building architectural
showcase on the Amherst campus.
Since then they have brought life to
th e new campus. In addition to dormitory and classroom activities, a variety

of academic and cultural events have
been offered, man y sponsored by the
seven residential colleges that occupy
space in Ellicott - Cora P. Maloney
College; Rachel Carson College; Clifford
Furnas College ; Vico Coll e g e;
Mathematical Sciences College; College
H. the Health Scien ces unit; and College
B, w hich focuses on the theme of

creative arts.
·
The Collegiate System was started
seven years ago, to create small, personal
units within a large institution, and to
serve as an ever-changing focal point for

developing interdisci plinary and innovative programs!
The past year has been one of change
for the colleges, and the move to
Amherst by the 809 underRraduates who
are me mbers of the seven residential
units was only one step in the evol ution
of the Collegiate System.
Too Valuable, Too Chaotic
In February, 1974, after a grou p of
promine nt outside educators had concluded that ·the colleges mi ght be too
va luable to lose but too chaotic to survive, the U/ B Faculty Senate adopt ed a
new prospectus to serve as the co nstitution for the units untif1978.
A key feature of the prospedus was a
requirement that mandated each college
to draw up a charter, spelling out in
detail its e ducational theme, goals,
teaching style, faculty participation and
co urse offerings.
Last fall, a proposed charter for each
co llege was submitted to a committee of
represe ntatives from various campus interests. After'ferlgthy pubtic hearings on
the mei' its of the proposed charters, th e
committee sutimitted its recomme ndations to the University President fo r
approval or disapproval.
'Tremendous Opportu~ity'
· The months-long chartering process
turned out to be a "tremendous opportunity," according to Jacquelyn
finley, an administrator in College B.
" It gave us a chance to reevaluate
where we were going as well as an opportunity to gain a clear focus and directiOn," she says.
It also helped strengthen the
Collegiate System. Experime ntal courses
of an off-beat nature or of dubious
academic merit fell by the ways ide.
Several of the weaker ·colleges died ,
merged with . others, or underwent
dramatic changes.
By the time the chartering committee
issued its . recommendatiOns, most
colleges were praised for their innovations or high academic standards.
In approving charters for 11 pf 12
colleges this January, President Robert l.
Ketter said he was "convinced that the
College System has significantly changed
from that of several years ago, and is well
on its way to becoming a valuable, contributing component of the University."
. Executive officer of the System is irving
J, Spitzberg, Jr., 33, a&amp;raduate of Columbia, Yale; and Oxford, who sees his position as 11one of the most interesting
educational jo~s" in the U.S." Dean
Spitzberg now concludes the chartering
process gave the colleges a firm base on
which to srow. This spring, undergraduates signed up for more than
13.000 credit hours of instruction offered.
by the- colleges, up from 9.000 credit
hours last fall. Now there are over 3,000
students enrolled in a selection of more
than 300 course listings'.

FACUlty Partlclpldlon Up
Faculty participation has also risen
dramatically. While. there were less than
two dozen resular UIB faculty members
teachins in the colleges a year ~go, more
than 100 are now Involved:
At the same lime, the colleges have
been oucx:euful in attracting .an· impressive array of faculty talent from the
surrounding community.

l1

EDicoll : homt' o f lht•

Cull'~, .... ..

Instructors from the Weste rn New
qui e t, co nlemplative reside ntial atYork communit y include a prom ine nt
mosphe re, ce nt e rs its program on the
judge who tea ches a CO UQe on senten siUd y of th e history of ideas. In many
cing, the business managerOf the Buffalo
Vico courses, stude nts will hear a lec,ure
Philharmonic Orchestra who taught an s
by a member of the English De partme nt
management, a local but wide ly known
one wee k, fo ll owed by faculty members
museum director whose course on
i'tl philo.sophy, history, or political science
museum studies is always filled to capa cion the same subject in later wee ks.
ty, a naturalist. from Allegan y State Park,
Clifford Furnas College, modeled after
and the director of the Erie Count y Enth e colleges at Oxford and Cambridge,
. vironmen tal Conservation Commission.
offe rs pre-professional students in the
natura l sciences numerous opportuniti es
Community Progr•ms
in humanistic studies; while givi ng
One of the strengths of the college•
st
ud ents in the humanities and social
has be~n th eir success in establishing ties
sciences opportunities to le3m about the
between t he University and the
na
tural sciences.
comm un ity-at-large in Western New
Dean Spitzberg hopes more colleges
York, members of the System point out.
will
be added to the Amherst campus
The Colleg~ of Urban Studies, a nonscene, incl ud ing one next fall with an inresident un it, has developed extensive
ternational
flavor; if members of the
involvement with local urban planners,
lnternaftonal living Center - f9reign
lawyers, judges, and city, county and
who
re side in the Ellicott dar·
students
police officials.
mitories - achieve college status.
The Mathematical Sciences College
has established a successfu l tuto ring
program to help Buffalo area you ngsters
with ma th problems.
Rachel Carson College, which st ud ies
the theme of ecology and the environment, designed a pla n for a new city park
Stephen Manes, a member of the
wh ich Buffalo officials have made a realipiano faculty, is spending l.he spring in
ty.
london on a research project. During h is ·
lnlerdisciplinory Efforts
European visit, Mr. Manes hils given
Also successful has been the residenrecitals in Germany, Holland and
tial program which attempts to provide
England, including the artist's Wigmore
students with kindred interests a chance
Hall debut on April 5. The noted English
to live together and share ideas in a
music critic Joan Chissell, writing in the
small, liberal arts college setting:
Times, calls Manes "far moce assured,
The system enables students to gai(l
both musically and technically, than a
exposure in fields outside their particular
number of newcomers to Wigmor~
academic interest. According to Jacquelyn Finley, the colleges give breadtli
Hall."
Dutch revj ewers were lavish in their
to undergraduate eaucation, while the
praise of the Buffalo pianist when he pertradhional departments give depth to
formed recitals' in the Concertgebouw in
learning.
Amsterdam and at The Hague. The reFor example, students in the creative
viewer of Het l"aaooo said "A not too
arts college share the same livinglarge number of music lovers arne in
learning area with College ti, the health
search of adventure: listenins to a
sciences college.
young, completely . unknown . pianist.
This arrangement has given students in
And, instead of having to put up with the
the health sciences an opportunity to
learn about arts 'and crafts by inter. so usual experience of a beautiful
technique, which the American consermingling with College B, which has a jazz
trio and a string quartet in residence at
vat~ries deliver by the shipload, they
Ellicotl- Arts otudents are also learning
were confronted with an artistic personality already radialins a rare
a~ioutthe sciences, and the two colleges
maturity!"
are preparing interdisciplinary otudies on
Professor Manes and his family will
such topics as the mental health of artists
return to Buffalo II' June at which time
and ·the use of art for therapy.
Tfle interdisciplinary approach i• a key
he will resume his teachins duties- lie i5
expected to be performins several coninllt'edient In the curriculum of most
colleges. ·Vico College, which offers ,a . certs during the 1WS:76 academic year.

Manes abroad
doing reSearch

A special Institute on Critical Theory
and Education will be held on campus
this summer under the joint sponsorship
of Summer Sessions and the Center for
Critical Studies in Education, according
to Center Co·directors Michael Simmons
and Roger R. Woock of the UIB Department of Social Foundations.
The institute Uune 23-Augusl 2)
will have three e lements : two graduate
Cou rses in critical theory and education
offe red by the Departme nt of Social
Foundations; campus ledures by outstanding visiting scholars in the field; and
a two-day working conference to be
he ld during the last week of the institute.
Visit in g scholars . scheduled to participate include Professor ·Maxine
Greene of Teachers College, Columbia
University; Professor Kai Neilsen, visiting
professor at the University of Onawa; Profe'sso r John O'Ne ill, York University
(Toronto); and Professor Tre-nt Schroyer,
Ramapo College, New Jersey.
The o rga nize rs of the program anticipate "that because of the outstanding
re putation of the invitees the COOJ.!eration of th e Departments of Philosoph y
and Sociology will be fonhcoming . Each
invited gu est will meet with students
regi ste re d for th e graduate courses and
will give public le dures which should be
of inte rest to a wide spectrum of the
Unive rsity comm unity."
Dr. Gree ne will give t~ e first of the institute's. public lectures Jul y 10. She will
discuss " Imagination and Critique: Tl1e..
Adv e r sar y Tradition t in Western
literaiUre, 1790-1975." Other lectures
scheduled are: Prof. Schroyer, " The
Pro ble m of. Cuhu ral Evolution," July 17;
ProL O ' Nei ll , " Montaigne on Self
Study," July · 24; and Prof. Nei lse n,
" Habcrmas and the Evolution of Critical
Theory," July 31 . All lectures are planned
for 4:.30 p.m., place to be an nounced.
Th e two graduate courses being
oneied _.hi corlnectiOn witf1..t he ~special:­
program are a seminar in the critical
social iheory of education {SPF 508) and a ·
course on educational knowledge and its.
social conte xt (SPF 563).
The orga ni zers hope th e institute will
"provide an intellect ual stimulu s to work
in this area and es~bli s h SUNY/ Buffalo
as' the leading center for research and
teaching in th e ap plicatiOn of critical
theory to education."
The recently established Center for
Critiat Studies in Education is an ap·
proved project of the Department of
Social Foundations, operating through
the Westem New York School Service
Council.
The Center was established, its codirectors explain, to help develop " a
body of knowledge that will aid the
general public to' become aware of the
social control mechanisms of the
educational . system and to understand,
on the other hand, the ways in which
schools can contribute to the development of human freedom ."
There is presently a manifest need
for a comprehensi~e cri.tical theory of
education, the Center's heads argue, one
that "will comprehend education in the
totality of its relations . .. ·. Such a theory
will identify the content an&lt;l practice of a
genuinely humane education ... and will
comprise concepts that simultaneously
describe, ~ indict, and demand the
transformation of the given state of
educational affairs in the interest of making educat_io n a true moment in the
history of 'human emancipation."
The Center is beginning its work by
· developing a network of C9"CI!I'ned
scholars in a variety of disciplines who .
a'r e interested in critiCill studies in edua·
tion. Initially, 'his is ·being fadlitated
through drculation of occa•ional papers
and the planning of relevant sessions at
national ac.odemlc meetinp.· Eventually,
the Center hopes to sponsor a national
conference on critical studies In educa·
lion and to initiate the publication of a
scholarly Journal devoted to the theme.
The Center will also sponsbr and suppon
research efforts (by - individuals and
sroups), the. aHiirectors ..y.

�' " May 15, 1975

THURSDAY-:-:-15
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
SEMINARI
.
Th ree D~ys in May: Recent Trends in
DiagnOsis and Therapeurics is the title of this

p rog ram . The re ma in ing programs a re
schedu led ai Deaconess Hospital on May 15
and 31, and registration may be made for

eit her or both. For more information, contact
Continuing Medical Edu cation, 831 -5526.
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
SEMINARW
Children Needing Rehabilita tion is the title
of th is three-day confere nce which ends ·

tomo rrow. Statle r Hilton Hotel, 9 a.m .... :30
p.m., followed by a reception and dinner. For
further informatio n or registration , call 831 -

5526.
Sponsored by the Departme nt of Pediatrics,
School of Medicine.
·
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SEMINARW
Laser Dopier Anemometer Applications in
Fluid Mechanics Problems, Professor Ja mes
Whitelaw, l mpe~ i al Colle ge, l o ndon, Engla nd.
112 Pa rker; coHee at 3, lecture at 3:15 p.m.
CEU AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEMI NARt
Exploring Cells With a Centri fuge, Dr.
Christian deDuve, 1974 Nobel l au reate. G-22
Farber (Capen), 4-5 p.m.
Prese nted by the graduate students of the
Di visio n of Cell and Molecu lar Biology.
BFA RECITAL•
Edward Marshall, bass, gives a rec;ital. Baird
Recital Hall , 8 p.m . No admissio n charge.

Ishmael Reed returning
for U/B Modern Lit event
Th~ undergraduate dream of retu~nin g

to campus covered with glory will be
realized in a few weeks by former U/ B
student Ishmael Reed, who left Buffalo

without a degree to become one of
America's most prominent black w riters.
The young novelist and poet is among

.,

the eight distinguished visitors who will
participate in the English Department's
Twelfth Sum"'!!r Program in ¥odern
literature, June p to August 8.
Renowned J9yce critic Richard Ell mann
will also partidpate, presenting a con-

centrated course on James, Joyce Uune
lG-July 11) for both graduate and un-

dergraduate students.
Ellmann, w[lo is Goldsmith's Professor
of English literature at New College, Oxford, won a National BOok Award. for his
1960 book on Joyce.
·
If the memories of some of Reed's
former English professors serve them
correctly, the oovelist's presence should
insure that the pr~&gt;gram does not lapse
into drab academic debate.
As reveated in a recent self-interview
in Iliad World, Reed has · vividly ·artiwlated, highly individualistic vi&lt;;ws on
just about everything. including art,
American society, and the tendency of
both blacks and whites to romanticize
the street-smart black at the expense of
middie-dus blocks.
No .,.,... 'Ripple'
R!!t!d recalls that he grew up ·in the
"notorious" Talbert Mall Projects in a
workins'-dass family where "the men
were strong and oturdy and not laying·
around drinking Ripple all day."

He the neighborhood inte ltecrual,
a h1gh-sdlool friend recalls, and In re-

t!h~; hd f.:d.c~~ :d.~

menund clildpline that places him firmly In the peat Anlerican tradition of the
OU1Sicler wfl9 boolslraps hls way Into the

molnsue.m:
· .
Reed doesn't seem to trust polltia
much, risht or left. and he has the artist's
f

.Ill

complexity r1ther than the
'1 Went for slm~tlon.
for ·• non-violent ~. he

reports he - bea""' up by police. the
NIMh l'reclnct, but hls dhutlsflctlon
with Amerlan jusllce ._.., blinded hi'!!
~ the oallty ol crime. " I k.- . . . the

· Insides ol AmeriQn prisons .-ble
hel, but whll - JOU·IIOinlrto do with
IOIIIIbocly who _.... r- )oour house,
,our Sluff llld hils your~ on
. · - ...........wllh .~l" - ,. t .

,.._off

White libe ra ls ha ve conspired wit h
black radicals (he's especiaUy down on
Ho wa rd g radua tes) to prom ulgate
" professiona l st~.q t - nigge r chic" over
the univ ersa lly und er - ra t ed accomplishments of black ach ievers, Reed
says. Maybe, he suggests, the black
barbers, ph ysicians, archi tects, and
shoemakers have a lesson for blacks that
has been o v~ rloo ked in the glorificatio n
of the black " political prisoner," of
whom, he adds, " before I call someone a
~ political prisoner,' I would have to know
what they're in fo r."
Humbllns ,Judeo-Christian Cuhure
Not that Reed has much good to say
abou't the non-black world. Wh e n a
white publisher called to ask hi m what
he was doing fo r the Soledad Brothers,
Reed replied he was sympathetic with
George Jackson and the others, "but my
job I feel is to humble Judea-Christian
cUlture."
This task has taken the forfll to date of
four novels (J'he free-l.am:e l'allbearers,
Mumbo Jumbo, Yellow Bad: lbdlo
8rofce-bown, and The Last Days of
Lou/slarl;o Red), poetry, and his participation in Yardb[rd Publishing Co. An imponant infl uence in his ~ork is voodoo
and the occult, a strain he traces in part
to his _ mother1 the family clairvoyi.nt,
and, presumably, the famil y name-giver.
Perhaps the only aspect of the talented
drOJH&gt;ut's fanwy left unrealized for
Reed is for some university, cognizant. of
academia's failure to reward his budding ·
genius; to humbly offer him an honorary
degree. 11
•
1 haven't received . an honora_ry
degree," he told himself In Iliad Worfd" But I w;u recently .made an honorary
pope by the Bavarian lllumin~tl."
The other vlsltlilg faculty In · the
Program ore:
1'arkhursi Easson, a
Blake specialist from Illinois StateI,Jniverslty; RojJer R. Easson, also from
Illinois State, whose Interests Include
Blake ond lldtlsh Romanticism; poet
Gene Fnumkin from the University of
N~ Mexico a_t Albuquerque; UIB.

""y

FRIDAY-16
CONn NUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
5EM IN(lftl
Children Needing Rehabilitation is the title
o f thi s three-day confe re nce which e nds today. Statle r Hilton Hotel, 9 a.m .-12:15 p.m. For
furthe r informa tion o r regist ration, ca ll 831 5526.
Sponsored by the Department of Pediat rics,
School of Medici ne .
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARf
High Pressure Bradycardia, Or. .Hans Ch.
Ornhagen. 108 Sherman, 4 p.m.

SATURDAY-17
PHI lETA k APPA•
In iti a ti o n o f new m e mbers . No rton
Confere nce Theatre, 4 p.m. Followed by a
reception fo r in itiates, pare nts and friends,
Fillmore Room, Norton.

SUNDAY-18
SPORTS CAR RAUY'
UIB Sports Car Club S.O.S. car rally. Begins
at East Aurora Plaza. Registration is ~t 10:31
. a.m., F.C.O. is 11 :31 (sic). For more informatio n·, call lain, 681 -2388.

Me'ntil Health Center A"ud itorium; 7:30 p.m.
Pi"esei'lted . by the 'Dl~siorl of Community
Psychiatry, Department'"of Psychiatry, and the
Depart~e nt of Psychology.

WEDNESbAY-21
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUGATION
5EMINARW
.
Immunopathology of the Skin is the topic o f
this conference which ends today. Sheraton
Inn-Buffalo East, 9 a.m.·S p.m. fo r more in·
forma tion , call 831-5526.
·
Pr ese n ted by t h e De par t men ts of
Microbiology and Dermatology in coopera ·
tion with the Continuing Medical Education
Program.

THURSDA Y-29
t:REA liVE ASSOCIATE RECIT AL•
Electro nicist Judith Martin perfor ms. Bai rd
Recital Hall, 8 p. m. No ad mission charge.

FRIDA Y_:_30
CONCERT•
lrhaca Talent Ch ildren, Suzuki concert ,
Bai rd Re dtal Hall, 8 p.m. No ad missio n charge.

SATURDAY-31
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
5EMINARW
Th ree Days in May: Recent Trends in
Diagnosis and Therapeurics is the ti tle of this
p rog ram. The fi nal program is tod ay aJ
Deaco ness Hospita l. For more information,
contact Continuing' Med ical Education, 831 5526.

EXHIBITS
GAUERY 219 EXHIIIT
55 Mercer is an exhibit of works bY New
York City artists working at the 55 Mercer
Cooperative Gallery. Gallery ·• 219, Nor'ton,
throush June 4. Ho urs: M6i"itbly:.f Hdiy, 11
a.m.-4 p.m.; Monday, Wedneday and Thu rsday, 7-10 p.m.; Su nd t~y, 1· 5 p.m.
MFA PAINTING EXHIImON
Tra nsfer in Tr.insparency is an MFA painiing
e xhibition by Elaine H11ncock. Upton Hall
Gallery, Buffalo State, thr_ough May 28.
•
MUSIC UIRARY EXHIIIT
Duke Ellington : Such Sweet Thunder. Music

Library. Biird Hall1 through May 31 .
VISUAL AltTS EXH.IIIT
Ariadne auf N~xos is the title of this group
of prints and photographs presented in conjunction with the University Opera Studio.
Hayes Hall lobby~ building hours, through
Moly 30.

NOTICES

IASEIAU•

UI B vs. llh•c• College

Peelle Field,

ALCOtfOLICS ANONYMOUS MEETI" G'
M~ting l or anyone with problems with
alcohol. 264 Norton, 8-10 p.m. For information, contaa Bill Stoberl, 831-~1 .

CREDIT-FREE COtJRSI5
The Division of Continuing Education is
offering a variety of Credit-free Courses for
the Summer Session in the areas of art1
botany., dance, camping, businesS/management~ computers, counseling, music, personal

MONDAY-19

cholosY, recreation/sports, skill development
and social sciHces. for an Informational
brochure or fee information, visit Hayes A,

CONTINUING MBHCAI. EDUCATION
SEMINAII ' ·
lmmutJ()f»rhology of rhe Skin is the topic of
this conference which _losts through May 21 .
~aton Inn-Buffalo East~ 9 a.m
.-s p.m. For
moie Information, call 831-5526.
Pre sented by the Departments of
Microbiology • nd UermatolosY in eo~&gt;pera­
tion with the Continulns Medical Education
Program.

FAU IIICiiSRATION
The pre-registration period for fill
Semester.1975, the only time 11udenttmay adva!)ce rqister for foil, continues through May
16. Seniors may pick up rq1s1r1t1on materills ·
in 114 Diefendorf through the 16th; ocher un dersra&lt;fuotes who misled their Initial rqlstro,tion materiol pick-up. period may olso do so

(2).

1

p.m. No admission charge.

TUESDAY...:..20
CotmNUING MBHCA1. EDUCATION

·SfMINAIII -

development, professional development, psy-

Room 3 or call

831~301 .

through the 16th. EOP stuclems.wttl resJster ·In
202 Diefendorf. Graduate students may so
directly to Admissiom and - . I s through
the 16th. MFC students wtU adVonc:e register
July 7-25 in Admissions. oncl ._,.._ Ad-·
missions and Reconls .wtU be May 15,
· 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. and May 16, l:~o.m.~: 30

. - f~oltheSklnlsit..top!cof
p.m. Sludents who " " - - register wtll
-this ~ which 1osts through M1Y 21 .
recei&gt;e schedule aniJ by moll In -'J A.......
Professor ~-..... - Lyle~~-~~- Robert ·
~ lnn-Buffolo bot. 9 Lm.-5_p.m. For
and wtll hove the opportunity to make
· g,,..,,...of Dl ._.......;
more lnfOI'tltltion. coli 831-!W5.
·
schedule choJips '"'- In ~.
~~....~to
~~and
Presented by the Departments of
Sludents wl"! do - adnnc:e ..,._will be
..,..,,_,..,..
,.,.....,re II
MlcJobiololly and DermoiOiot!Y. In cooperaoble 10 make no schedule IITifiiO!tte"IS lor
tlie University of P1rls; . •nd Albert
t1on with the" Condnul'll Meilkal Educ:ottpn .
fiH"undl September 2.
Wodltel of_ Pitzer Collese Of the ClarePrapom.
..
-~ .
montColte.lwhowlllleldiClDUIIelon
• 'CXIIU.OQIIIIMf
-'
~
•
lURIONWAIWIIS
•
Moder!' 8rlilsh llterlture ltlld trapdy.
l'laitnlnr Md l'ollcy 1omtot1on Jn Menu/
Tuition . IPI!IIco!lons for foreisn
For funher lnform•tlon · on the
Hulrh. J. Robert· Newbrou1h, Ph.D.,
students for the · fall 1975 'iemeltor ore
propom, ~
E.. SAc!-- ~"' · ~· Goiorle P'elllody , ovadol!le In 210 J.........S. The deadline for
,noiiJ, ~ ~ ~1:'.-:: ...- ';-Celop,_Wf!!o.. ~ . ~~ _.~.11\~ lor.lol ..-s a MIJ ~

Prol.l'!--

4

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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 6, t«J. 30
MAY 8, 1975

•

President
reports· on
state of U/B
0

Ketter airs isslres on broadcast forum

A two-hour radio broodcast·wt Thursday afternoon served os a forum for
Presld,nt Rl)ben L. Ketter to field

questions from the University community on events surrounding the campus dis-

turbance April 25 in which 10 students

however, later dropped against two of
the 10 - David Lennett and James
. Hughes. According to reports, these two
were not involved in the Hayes sit-in but

were arrested later near the Campus
Security Office on Winspe.ar Avenue.

were arrested and seven Campus Securi-

-

To the second demand, that he defend
student rights to have control over student activity fees, the President responded that, by law, 'the University ad dent around the conference table in his
...._ministration must exercise control over
office to osk questions. President Ketter . expenditures of mandatory Student fees.
responded to these inquiries for apHe noted that in response to a suit
brought several years ago by a student at
proximately an hour before opening the
hones for questions from the campus at
State University at Albany, the courts had
arge. Twenty-eight telephone quj!stio·ns
ruled that mandatory fees collected by
were received during the final hour.
the State .are State funds. These funds
The questioning panel in the office inhave to be expended according to
guidelines issued by the State University
dueled Ed Dudek, president of the U/8
Civil Service Employees Association;
Phyllis Schaffner, president of tire '
.Millard Fillmore College StU"ilent
Association; Art Laloncle, executive vice
president; Student Association; George
Hochfield, chairman, Facility Senate;
David
Bronstl!in, . Inter- Residence
The University this week dropped inCouncil; Walter Kunz, Professional Staff
ternal charges asainst two of the students
Senate; lewis Groden, Medical Polity;
arrested during the campus disturbance
and Bert.ram He-rbert, treasurer,
on Aprll25.
Graduate Student Association.
According to a U/11 spokesman, ·"the
Michele Smith, president C!f SA, was on
University prosecutor, Howard Meyer,
· hand briefly to protest the forum os !'not
was of. the opinion that the evidence
a proper" one. She ~ld not partldpate,
· regarding James Hughes and David
she said, but sii'R!e undergraduates seemLennett supported the University's
ed diYlded on pirtldpation, one SA
bringing cases against them. However,
representa,tive would remain.
he alsO felt t~t the 'charges (agalmt these
The .Sfudent Bar Associltlon and the
two) relative to the other cases pending
Denr.i Student AJsocUtion did not send
were of a lesser nature-u.cl h was his
represenWives.
recommendation that they be dropped."
The student Attica Support Group,
Considering this along with the show
which MI. Lalonde said had bftn Invited
cause hearings which-~ by- Or.
to pnMcle two of three SA represenKetter April ZJ,. the spokesn\an said,
Whles for the forum, also dedlned parDr. Ketter feh that the best Interests of
tlcipallon.
justice would be served by accepting the
recom!!'endatlon of the Univeroity
Durlns the questionln&amp; Ketter touchprosecutor.
ed from 111M to time on Issues incor·
The dropping of the University charges
porated In "four demands" which a stu"should have no Cllrect effect on the
dent poup '-1 Insisted he answer by
charges pending In the Buffalo City
noon on Thursday.
Court, bUt the Unlverslty'would have no
He would not, he said, drop all campus
objection to seeing "-charges apiMt
and civil charps agalmt all 10 arrested
" - two IIUdents dropped ..
the
.s_tudentl. Campus cha~ges were,. . spokesman Indica~.
•
ty officers suffered minor injuries.
Invited representatives from several
campus constituendes joined the Presi-

r.

u/8 charges

lifted

on two

.,_.....,..

weu:·

4"rustees. The administration of each
SUNY 'unit is responsible for seeing to it
that fee expenditures fall "substantially"
into one or more of several ategories set
up by these guidelines, for ensuring that
the fees are - used for educational,
cultural, social or recreational j:iurposes.
The President indicated that in order to
give students complete control-of mandatory fee expenditures, the· law would
have to be changed. Noting that he
doesn't relish the University's being in
the position of having to okay these expenditures, he reported that the
presidents of the State-operated units of
SUNY are studying the possibility of making a recommendation for the elimination of compulsorx· fees. If fees were
'-voluntary and not :State-collected, as is
the case with the II«:; fee on th.i• cam piTS,
Ketter said, students could spend the
money without administrative regulation.
No Way to Keep Pollee Off
The third "student demand" wos that
Buffalo Police be excluded from the
campus. There is -no ·way the ·Universi~
caQ do this, the President said. U/ll is not
an endive, he pointed out. The City
Police can legally mme on cami&gt;\15 at any
time,.he said, and he lnte,.ds to
them
at any time . he thinks they should be
here. However, he added, there Is aii understanding that when things are tense,
the City Police "don't enga__se In anything
we think we i::an handle." They were called In April 25, Ketter said, because most
. of the Campus Security force wos in
Hayes Hall and there wos good reason to
believe that ,some of the demonstrators
were planning "to take over 196
Wlnspear" In their absence. City Police
did not participate In clNrlng Hayes Hall
on that date; they were dispatched to
Wlnspear Avenue.
The fourth "demand" was for "a dvil
review board" to evaluate Campus
Security actions. Ketter said he Is 1JDt In
favor of this.
Many Qf the questions about the particulars of the events of April 25 corresponded to those raised and answered In

can

Forgoing the standard prepared text,
President Robert L. Ketter reported in·
formally on "the state of the University."
at the May meeting of the Facttlty Senate
held Tuesday.
The presidential summary of the closing academic year touched on a series of
high points in a time characterized by
economic stringency.
The report was, Senate Chairman
George Hochfield observed, "in the
nature of a 1ove letter as well as a
report."
Declining to name names, Dr.. Kener
reported t~at some outstanding appointments to the faculty have ~n
made in spite of the recent hiring freeze.
Other evidence of the growjng
prestige of the campus was an increase in
professional recognition for U/8 faculty,
as inc;licated by letters received by the
President. Campus editorships of
professional journals have also
proliferated, he said.
Increasing numbers of students are
applying to the University, Ketter said,
adding that, according to reports from
Admissions &amp; Records, mor~ and more
students are coming to see Buffalo ·as an
auractive alternative to Yale, Harvard
and other prestigious universities.
The Amherst campus is being completed onr or even a little ahead, of
schedule, Dr. Ketter said. In the fall,
library .SCience, Educational Studies,
some engineering dep.u tments, and the
. Philosophy Depanment will move to
Amherst. A temporary facil[ty, the
Amherst recreational "bubble," wai alSo
completed during the year, aftet the cutting of considerable red-taJ!".
Major progress was made in meeting
the pressing needs of the Medical
School, which was found wanting last
year by accreditation bodies, Dr. John
Naughton was named dean of the
Medieal School, health-sciences library
space was doubled by the 'move from
Farber to Tower, and some .30 new
positions for the medical school were approved in the Governor's budget.
The University, the Presi~nt noted,
has completed an Affii'IJ'Otive Action
plan (not yet approved by Albany), and
ha~sf 'aher several nfalse starts," besun
developing master and academic plans
that will _In dude Input from a wide range
of faculty, staff and studentS. Such planning will be a high-priority activity next
year.
•
The chartering of the c;olleges also
earned a place on the President's list of
achievements, os did the increase in Incoming research dollars over last year
(despite a decreass in the number of
awards made by national funding agencies). The Ulll Foundation's awarding of
$25,000 in "seed money" wos lauded.
These small Ulll grants to faculty have
already pulled in outside funding of
$162,000, the President noted, deeming
the project worthy of expansion.
Ac~no.wledglng the campus's
econOinlc situation at the outset, Ketter
said he was "most pleased with the
cooperation" he has ~
-the
campus community. Fl ly, he ursecl all
faculty to panfdpate In
t
because of Its lpeCial lmpottance to
.graduates and their famRies.
The principal item on the reiulat
agenda was an Interim report of the .
Senate's Educational Pollcr and l'lfnnlng
Committee, which 1s lfiiPPAnc this year.
and next with the quality of undergraduate education at Ulll, particularly during the fiAt two yean.
Citing the results of a recent faculty
survey (lee . . . , _ , April 17), EP&amp;P
Chairman Ira Cohen reported that faculty appear to have 1hree princQyl concerns aboul undergraduate, education:
• . . • • .••• . • •• •• •• •• • •I!'!"!!&gt;JI!Ce.~·col.41'

.,

�May B,

·Commencement 75 opens this-weekend

197~

SenateIMP
Cfrotn

1, col. 4)

lear that there is a widespread deficiency
in communication and analytic skills;
commencement season
ecutlve vice president, will confer the
Hall, 2917 Main Street (second floor), 8
concern over "the limhed extent to
~this weekend with the lirst.three _
degrees.
•
p.m.
which undersraduates typically acquire a
of a scheduled twelve· 1975 graduation
Robert Wedgeworth, prominent black
Saturday, May 17-School of Health
broad background appropriate for
events. Eight other ceremonies are set . _ librarian who heads the ~,OOO.member
Education, Clark Hall, Gymnasium, 3 p.m.
educated peoole, moving into the con·
lor the weekend of May 16-18 and a final
American library Association, will preSatvrday, _May 17-~ of Ma~
temporary world;" and a feeling that the
one, that of the School of law, for Sunsent the SILS commencement address,
ment, J&lt;leonhans Musoc Hall, Maon
existing Undergraduate program is insufday, June 8.
"The Present and Future Status of
Audotoroum, 7 p.m.
ficiently challenging, particularly lor the
In addition to the diploma-granting
libraries and Librarianship."
Saturday, May 77-School of Health
brightest students.
e\'f!nts, an "Achievement Day" is plannThe progrilm will also include a media
Rel~:ted . Profess!ons, Rosw.e ll _Park
With these concerns in mind, the comed by "the Educational Opportunity
show by. Sil5 stud'l"ts and the presentaMemoroal Institute Audotoroum,
mittee has proposed several curricular
Center (EOC) tomorrow night.
tion of the fourth annual librarian of the
Research Study Center, Carlton Street, 8
innovations. In regard to basic com·
A total of . 170 School of Nursing
Year Award by the SILS Alumni A.ssocia·
p.m.
• r . L • • O I Ph
munication skills, two alternatives were
students and 123 from the School . of
lion.
·
•
Sunday, May 1~xnuvo o
armacy,
presented. One is a required freshman
Medicine are scheduled to receive
Sister Joan F. Malone of the Sisters of
John Lord O'Broan Hall, Moot Court·
core course, organized each year around
degrees in separate ceremonies at
St. Francis, a SILS graduating student, will
room, 10. a.m.
•
a cOmmon 11 1arge question" 'theme
offer the Invocation.
.
Sunpay, Ma~ 78-~aculty o_l EnSJneer·
Kleinhans, -Sunday, May 11 .
(Revolution, Modernization) and taught ·
Dr. Jeannette Spero, acting dean of
A reception will follow the ceremony ·
ing and Applied Scoences, on front of
by a pool of regular faculty drawn from
the School of Nursing, will address the
in the O'Brian Hall lobby area.
Parker Hall, Noon.
.
many disciplines.
nursing graduates on "On Being and
Approxima_tely 3&lt;48 students will be
Sunday, May 78-Ceneral CommenceAlso proposed, and currently favoted
Becoming" at 2 p.m. in Kleinhans' Mary
recognized at EOC "Achievement Day"
ment, (Faculty of Arts ana. Letters (ex·
by the Committee, is a series of "basic
Seaton Room. Dr. Donald A. larson,
ceremonies at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the
cludong the School of Arch otecture an1!
courses." These would shift teaching of
associate vice president of the Faculty of
auditorium at -456 washington Street,
Envtro_nmental _Destgn); Faculty of
composition and related skills out of the
Health Sciences, will confer B.S. in nur·
downtown.
Educatoonal Studoes; Faculty of Natural
solitary domain of the English Departsing degrees on 127 students and the
· The main address will be delivered by
Scoe_nces and Mathematocs; . Facul~ of
ment. Freshmen would be required to
M.S. in nursing on 43. ·
the Hon. Horace c. Johnson, Buffalo city
SoCial Sc1ence~ and Admu:u~t~atlon ;
take a writing-oriented course in
councilman
from
the
Masten
District.
School
of
Soc1al
Wo~k
;
D1v1S10n
.
of
whatever
field is of greatest ·personal inIn ceremonies at 3 p.m. in Kleinhans'
Also on the program will be President
Graduate and Professoonal Educatoon
terest \o him or her (biology, art history,
main ·auditorium, Dr. John Naughton,
Robert
L
Ketter
and
Dr.
Merton
w.
(including
Roswell
_Park
Memorial
_
even English).
dean of the·School of Medicine, will adlnstl!.u.t e but not mcl~dm~ ~h.ose who ~re ,
Enell, acting vice president for academic
According to Prof. Mill Clark of
minister the Hippocratic oath to 120
affairs. The All-College Gospel Choir will
receovong degrees on dovosoons. havong
English, who surveyed more than a thoustudents set to receive M.D. degrees.
separa~e commencernen_ts); D_IVISion. of
provide vocal selections.
sand
undergr~duates on this question, 67
Faculty of Health Sciences Vice President
FOllowing the awarding of certificates,
Undergraduate Educato'?n (oncludong
per cent said they would like to take
Dr. F. Carter Pannill will confer the
EOC
students
will
be
congratulated
by
a
specoal
majors_
an_
d
assocoate
degrees)],
composition
in an academic fi~d of
masters in health science on three
reCeiving line 'of Mrs.· George D. Unger,
~emona l Aud1~onum, 3 p.r_n. &lt;7and1dates
choice.
others.
·
EOC director, and Dr. Henry 1. Richards,
woll assemble on the Audotoroum baseConcurring with other educators that
Dr. George S. Bobinski, dean of the
assistant U/ 8 vice president for academic
ment at 2:30 p.m.
•
"contemporary problems in unff ·rs
Sunday, May 78-School of Dentoslry,
School of Information and Library
dergraduate education cannot be resolva
a•
·
Kleinhan
s
Music
Hall,
Main
Auditorium,
Stud ies, will recommend 99 SJLS
ed by curricular reform alone," the
graduates for master of library science
The schedule for the remaining com8 p.m.
Committee discerns a need for coherent
mencement exercises follows :
Sunday, June 8-h:culty of Uw and
degrees at ceremonies in the Moot
se&lt;iuences of studies (programs) that
Courtroom of John Lord O'Brian Hall at 3
Friday, ·May 76-School of ArchitecJurisprullence, Kleinhans Music Hall,
would invo~ve faculty and lower:.division
p.m., Sunday. Dr. Albert Somit, U/B exlure and Enwironmenbl Design, Bethune
Main Auditorium, 8 p.m.
students working together toward
shared academic goals. This might be
ai~ i~ues~~~----------------------~---------------- achieved through expansion of existing
mechanisms (such as the Colleges) or
(from ~ge 1, col. JJ
faculty committee both to investigate the
the President reminded, and there are
could in·volve institution of new, manthe "Presidential Commentary" in the
facts and evaluate the judgments of all
some 25,000 students enrolled. How do
datory
or optional Lower Division
May 1 issue of the Reporter.
parties nivolved" in the mc1dent of April
-you decide who gets in I ·
.
Programs, probably interdisciplinary in
While the President was cond.udmg
25. The committee os to reportb_y Mn 301 Other Responses
nature. ~: ~"-"''-c _-~. &lt;·- ..
the broadcast forum in his office, a stu0ne me mbe r of the exee..utive comAmplifying the commentary and
- All these ~proposals, Elr. Cohen
mittee, Richard A. Siggelkow,- abstained
responding to additional areas of indent demonstration which had begun in
emphasized, are being pr~nted. iQ onfrom the vote.
Norton moved to Hayes and marched
quiry, Ketter noted that:
finalized forni so as to' encourage the inaround the building for a while.
• A coalition of 19 camPus groups
• A resident student suspended from
volvement of non-Committee members.
Shouts of "We Want Ketter,'' " Attica
meeting on Friday called for a
tHe University and thus forced from his
If the afternoon as a whole was pre'tty
living quaners has legal recourse in the
Means Fight -Back," "Our Money, Our
demonstration at Community-University
tame, it ended with a bang when Sen. Liz
lives,".. and . some gratuitous banging
Day on the Amherst Campus on Sunday
form of seeking an injunction against the
Kennedy suggested that meaningful _in- a demonstration which failed to
on the walls of the building made it difPresident;
volvement of the Colleges in any unmaterialize.
ficult for a few minutes · to hear the
• Tne extra shifts Campus Security had
dergraduate curricular reform might be
questions and answers in the room, but
been working would be " step~ cjown
impeded by the fact that George
• The same coalition called for a
the forum continued without incident.
when the level of exdrement on campus
Hochfield, an outspoken critic of many
"strike" for Monday, involving " inforCampus Security estimated that these
is stepped down." Security officers were
of the Colleges, is chairman of the
mational picketing" of classroom
demOnstrators numbered 300-400.
understood to have gone from 12-hour
Senate.
buildings, a series .of workshops, films
to eight-hour shifts with no days off on
Toward the end of the broadcast, a
Asked · to comment, Hocl!field
and a rally at noon in the Norton FounFriday. On Tuesday of this week, normal
man identifying himself as a Canadian
revealed that he regards the chartering
tain area. ~ did not support the strike,
working patterns were Tesum~ .
called in to say that as a disinterested
experience as "largely a failure." In
adding that, although it did not appear to
• The Courts have ruled that it is not
observer of the University he found
general, he said, the quality of Collegiate
be the intent of the coalition to do so, SA
double jeopardy for students to face
himself "persuaded" by the President's
programs has not significantly improved,
" does not condone, under any cirboth campus and civil proceedings for
views on the situation . "When this
as
hoped, and both · course- and
cumstances, the disruption of classes."
alleged unlawful activities.
·
broadcast began," the caller said, "I was
instrudor-quatity remain low.
No in.Cidents were reported as a result
• Campus charges placed against the
on the side of the students, but after ·
Most faculty, he opined, do not trust
of Monday's adivities. Reports are thJt at
arrested students are for disruption only
listening to the debate I find that the
the Colleges. Faculty had expected
least some of the ~vents were poorly
and not for assault.
students are not making rational
serious reform in which faculty would
attended.
• He is not indined to "overlook" all
argumen~ . ''
have emersed as the ~·serious manasers"
Incidents in order to "k~ the peace."
• The-. coalition urged students to
of the Colleges. Such powerful reform
Related Events
"It depends on the Incident," Ketter
gather ·in the Norton Fountain area at
has not taken place and, as a result, ~he
In related events over ·the past week :
said. II demonsfrators absolutely prevent
6:1S p.m. each evening lor the_rest ofthe
Colleges remain marsinal. What went
• The Faculty. Senate Executive· Comothers from exercising their rights (such
week to demonstrate support for the
wrong,· he continued, was not just
mittee ,voted unanintc?usly on Wednesas occurred In the blocking of the -door
"U/B Eight."
.
chartering. Collegiate Director lrv
day, April30, "to estab~sh a thtee person
to the President's Office on April 25), he
Spitzberg, he said, has not taken full ad·
will take appropriate action.
vantages of the opportunities lor refor~
, • He does not,belleve the right to free
ming the system available to him.
usembly was violated In clearing Hayes
Dr. Spitzberg countered by questionHaD becauSe he"'doesn't buy" the arsu·
Ing some of the facts on which Dr.
· In addition to ~is faculty appointment,
Dr.
Elliot
F.
Ellis,
professor
of
ment tNt the right to assembly takes
Hochfoeld's dim vieW is based. He also
he is diredor of the Clinical Re5earch
pediatrics,
has
been
named
acting
chair·
precedence over the rights of others.
pointed out that there ~ always been
Center and the -Division of Allergy and
man of the Department of Pediatrics for
much disagreement as to what the
Immunology at Children's.
..
one year, pending appointment of a ptr·
• He doesn't favor using court on) uncColleges
should be. Hochfleld's view
; He is board certifil!d by bOth the
ffi.l.pent chairman, Presideni Robert L
tions to dear buildings. These proved in·
represents one extreme, the stu~nt·
American BOard of Pediatrics and the
Kelter and Health Sciences· Vice Presi· and-community-oriented Colleges
effective In the la.t e '9605 and early 1970s,
American Board of Allergy and Imdent Dr. F. Carter-Pannill announced this
he said. And such Injunctions bar all
another. His own credo, Spltzberg sald,Js
week.
munology and Is l. director of the latter.
related demonstrations on campus,
that the·Colleges will never uotlsfy elll:&gt;er
He also is a member of tbe Society-lor
Dr. Ellis, whose appointment begins
something he feels should not be done.
extreme, nor should they. Rather theyPediatric
Research,
as
well
as
Fellow
in
June 1, received t~ M.D. from Western
•
He
Is
lnsisilng
on
going
ahead
with
should
wovide dlversifoed, quality alter·
the
~merican
Academy
of
Pediatrics
an~
Reserve University, Cleveland. He served
1
llllemal hearings as a meam of assuring
natives to the department-oriented
the American Academy of Allergy.
his Internship at Lenox Hill Hospital and
tNI aU the facts related to the situation
regular
program. "I believe there should
.his residency at The Babies HOSP.Ital,
come out. Many past charges against
be a Vlco Collese and a Women's Studies
Columbia-l'resbyterbln Medical Center.
students have been dropped as a result
College," he said. Although the Colleges
He joined ihe u/8 faculty. last August,
of such "'"rings, he noted ..The hearings
have not yet fully realized their promise,
coming from the University of
panel for each case Is composed of two
they are nearing that goal. And, he add·
Colorado's
Department of Pediatrics,
students, two faculty members and IWO
ed, !hey are already providing an
·where he had been on the faculty since
staff members, he explained, Hearings
educational experience "as good or
1966.
were expected to begin thlt week, •
better than that offered In the
• An open forum "with students" at
Dr. Ellis previously served a year's sabdepartments."
• .Clark o,m, as oome ol the demonstrators
batical here in conjunction with the,
The Senate also learned that Its new
Departments of Olnlal Pharma&lt;;ofogy
chairman~ is Prof. Jonathan Reichert
sugested, would no purpose at
this time. Clark -only 2,1100 students,
and Clinical lmmunofosy".
0~ Physics.
-

·n;;;.;;,.W

Ketter

Ellis acting head _of ·Pediatrics

.....,_._

a

�May 8, 1975

1!n1vins .a heny fog that mMie the c-\r:us
seem louted on the Ensfish moors, .~;n 1estimated 15,000 Western New Yort.:ers arne to
Inspect the new hiCilities in Amherst duftns
Sunday's Community·University D1.y. Buses
were p~~d:ed throushout the .afternoon · u
members of the community toured the .area
.and stopped off .at O'Bri.an H~oll, the Bubble
.and Ellicott for .a series of conc e rts,
demonstrations, exhibits, a.rld .a chilnce to ch.at

with the Preside nt.

w..,..~

..

thoc.oltc~.

Medical alumni to hold 38th Spring Ciinical ·Days
"Education and Economics" will be the
theme of the 38th annual Spring Clinical
Days, May 9 and 10, at the Statler Hilton.
The tw&lt;Hiay meeting is sponsored by the
UIB Medical Alumni Association.
Five physicians from California, New
Mexico, and elsewhere In ' New York
State- will be amons visiting, featured
speaken; for the event, accordins to Dr.
Paul . Weinmann, preldent of the
Asloclatlon.
Four of the visltlns physicians will dis-_
cuss "lte-llcensure and Re-certification':
frorn 10 -a.m. until noon Saturday. They
are: Or. Robert C. Derbyshire, seaetary,
New Mexko Board of Medical Ex...,lnerJ; Or. William P. Nelson, Ill,
profalor of -.eluate medicine, The
Albany MeCtlcal Collqe of Union
Univenlly, Albuly, N.Y.; Or. Wlllillm C.
Felch, .uendlnsln ~lcine, ~~

Hospital, Valhalill, N.Y.; and Dr. Philip R.
Alper, assistant clinical professor of
· medicine, University of California Schoql
of Medicine, San Francisco. Dr. Milford
C. Maloney, dinkal associate profe550r
of medicine .at UIB and director of the
Department of Medicine, Mercy
Hospital, will moderate thi' panel.
At the opening session Friday (10 a.m.
to 12 noon), ulB faculty will focus .upon
"New Curriculum Topics and Their
Application to Cllnkal Medicine." Dr.
Gloria l. Roblin, clinical associate
profeosoi of II5YCholoKv 1n the Depanment of Psydiia'try, wili' cliseuoo"'Human
Sexuality-." Dr. Rol;lert . A. Spangler, .
ISSOciate pro1euor and act1ns cholnnan,
Depai'lment of lllophplcal Sclena!s, will
clisa.lss "lllomediCal Instrumentation."
Dr. ~ L Modell, a.isllnl profeuor
of ph;siolosy, will - - 011 "Computer
~&gt;~--

Aid in Medicine." And Dr. Roben M.
Mcisaac, profesor of pharmacolosY and
therapeutics, will brief physicians on
"Advanced Teacf\ins Methods."
Preidlng at this opening 5e55lon will be
Dr. Alexander C. Brownie, profe550r
of biochemistry and research associate
profe55or of patholosY.
Four UIB · Medical Schoo' faculty
members will also discuss "Infections as
Seen by the Clinician(' Friday aflemoan
(2 to 4 p.m.). They are: Dr. Cornelius ).
O'Connell, dlnkaliS50ciate professor of
medicine and mlcroblolotJy; Dr. Roben
Spier, dlnkal ~prOfeuof of surgery and mlcroblolosY; Dr. Thomas D.
Flanagan, auoclate professor of
· m icrobiology; -and Dr. Erwin Neter,
profeuor
mlcroblolotJy and dlnkal
mlcroblolosY In ~ De~nt of

or

Pediatrics. Or. O'Connell wlll .moderate
the panet
The annual Stocktbn Klmballo
Memorial lecture will be Biven Saturday
noon by Dr. Helen M. Ranney, professor
and cminnan of the Department of
Medicine at the University of CallfomN!
(San Diego). School of ' Medicine. Her
topic: "Trends In Medkal Education.'!
Dr, Ranney. ~ profe55or of medicine at
U/8 from 1970-73 before golns · to
California

. The 1925 Med School dass (50 yearl .
be honol'ed at a special reception
and dinner Friday evenlns at the Plaza
Suite Restaurant. Eight other dalles ·1938, 1935, 1940, 1945, 1950, 1955, 1960,
1965 - will have rellnlon dlnnen; Satur~II

dayevenlns. ·

.

~

.... -· .... ......,

�••
•
Sex 1n

. . .sum
the future: ·a lady or a tigerl

--

1y hldda Wild lledermon

Will sex In the future be a manageable
"lady,'1 subject to social;scripti~g, or a
raging "riser" that constantly t~reatens
the fabric .of societyl .
·
This was the conundrum Or. Gloria l .
Roblin set before a group of some 200
. i.JIB alumni al)d fri\!nds when she
appeared May 2 as the fourth and fir:&gt;al
speaker in the Faculty Showcase Senes
sponsored by the UIB Alumni Association.
Takins Frank Stockton's resolution-less
classic ~ her frame, the urs clinical
·associate professor of psychiAtry arguoid
that any forecasts about human sexuality
in the future depend_upc)n the model of
sexuality we choose.
Or. Roblin, who pioneered a course In
human sexuality for students in the UIB
Medical School, acknowledged that
many still hold to the vfew ·expounded
by Freuil, Albert Ellis and others that sex
i$ an uncontrollable, anti-social force:
"Psychoanalytic, sociolosic and anthr:opologic literatUre . .. has perpetuated the view that sexual behavior is the
most central of motivating drives. . . .
Implicit in tl\is modellls the ~ that the
drive constantly presses for expression
and aSalnst oontrols . '" in the absence of
' COnstraints, ~ sexual behavior is. seen. to
break ou·t and cause change in
sociologica! standards," she explained.
Sex In &amp;eryday Ule
But, she countered, "any one of us
here can reflect on how it feels to ex- ·
perience ~xual activity and see that it is.
quite distinct from the_ importance . of
sexual activity during the rest of wakong
or sleeping life." In everyday life, ~x
does not dictate our every move but ts a
... drive of varying ~inte11sity. ~
,
''There are numerous social situations

•

• ,

'

initial coitus would not be associated
with the husband ..
'~the Medieval Church, ·however, ex·
alted celibacy and virginity, sanctioned
intercourse for procreative purposes
-only and ordained laws asainst abortion.
There were no such laws among Greeks,
Romons or Jews.
lllepl Three Days a Week
" At one time, the Medieval Chu rch
made sexual intercourse between
_married couples illegal on Sunday,
Wednesday and Friday, as well as 40 days
.before. Easter apd o4!J.!lays befor,e,S:hristmas and from the time of conception to
.4() days after panurition.'(lq contrast,
Mohammedan law considered it
grbUOdS tOiliiVOrc'e if int'ercOUtse didn 't
take place at least once a w~k.)
"The ideals of romantic love and
marriage for love· which ;are- taken for
. '8ranted tOday, didn 't appear in Western
history until about the 12th Century."
Dr. Roblin asl&lt;ed listeners to consider
what kinds of sexual behavior might be
expected from each of the two alternative models in light of three major
social developments: the rise of the
Womi!['l's Liberation Movement, the in·
creased availability of erotic stimuli as a
result of the " new permissiveness," and
the emergence of social movements
designed to legitimize the goals of sexual minority groups such as the Gay
liberation Movement.
Under the impact of the Women's
Movement, gender differences are being
de-emphasized in every period of
human life, from childhood through
0

0

0

---

ol,_,.,

- Editor~

ROeEIITT. MoULETT
Mond/OHN A OOUJIBI

sexual behavior will probeb1y be pmemed In a , _ fashion •••• There Is a dlslinct polllblllty that males will have
lcMered a~no ..bnenll ID wNI &amp;elyn
Hooker .... C8lllc'l, the 'male ...lancle'

durJns

e.rly adale~Cence. • • • In like

-..c.liodor-

1adcer
-. · shauld
' t.lilon,
fade fromthe
...
sactal--

~­

more easilY 111 ,.,._, and have 1eueD-

PAlRICJ" WAllO~

OIANf-

SUSAN M.IUIICEII

propOsals .

ed commitments to ·agsressive fantasies
as a part of sexual a~l. There may
well be lowered pressure toward
premarital colton as pa!' of a male achThough _final Implementation of any
ievement syndrome. ·
.
State-CSEA agreement Is now up to the
"Males will be seeking Intercourse on
Legislature (Repottw, May 1), the State.
much the same terms as females will be.
...workers' union has released the followA decline in gender identity accentuaing basis for a settlement which was
tion could produce males with a greater
recommended by the fact-finding panel
capacity for emotional commitment to
appointed under the Taylor law:
females earlier In life, with a lowered . $Wries
press.u re for direct sexua.l gratificatic:»n
· 1. Six (6) per cent increase effective
and with a wider interest on total bodoly
~
April 1, 197S.
commitments. In the new morality regar·
·2. Payment of innual increments for
ding sexual behavior, fidelity and conthose eligible effective July. 1, 197S.
sid&lt;!ration of others will occupy a very
3. Continuation of the present $6,000
high place. Physical sex will occur on!r
minimum annual salary after one year of
after __the establishment of froendshop
service and .$6,500 annual minimum after
· and/or love. Exploitation of the sexual
two years.
partner will be' very much oppose(! .. . ."
Health Insurance
Women, too, will chailge as their
1. Increased major medical coverage
professional · and economic role imto an annual maximum of $15,000.
proves, she predicted. " Their sexual
2. A provision which enables the unbehavior will be less, reactive in character
remarried spouse of a covered employee
ao\d less extr'eme.
with at least 10 years of service to retain
"If there is a single most likely outcoverage on the same basiS after the
come " she concluded, "it is that there
death of the employee.
will
as John - Gagnon, eminent
3. Hemodialysis .covered on out·
sociologist suggests, a movement tQward ~
patient basis under Blue Cross.
a less penis-oriented sexual encounter
-4. Surgical consultation program exbetween men and women.u
·
tended to New York City. .
Orale&lt; In the Slreeb1
S. Transfer among health insurance
Will increased access to erotica lead to
plans options allowable under certain
orgies tn the streets, as some social
conditions.
critics h~e predicted with fear, tr&lt;:'!'bl6. Membership in health maintenance
ing and minimally concealed antocopaorganizations (HMO) allowed with certain qua1ifications. •
tio;:. Roblin doubts ii, although she
7. Yearly physical exam for covered
does foresee the day when "Alex Comemployees 50 years old and up.
fort's Joy of Sex will rest on the bookshelf
8. Blue Shield coverage for removal of
adjacent to Irma Rombauer's Joy of
sutures, plaster casts, etc., resulting from
Cooking." Studies in non-censor.'al
out-patient care.
nations such as Denmark and Sweden In Disciplinary Procedure
.
dicate that greater access to erotica leads
Employee Rights: (1) If an employee
to lessened i~terest in it.
asks for representation, he. is not..to· be
brie .. resulf df this phE!nomehon, ac- · interfci8ated or requested to sign a state·
cording to the U/B psychologist, will be a
ment regarding his alleged incompetendecline in' the JJse of explicit se}C as a '· cy; or nfisc"Onduct unless a. · CSEA
meaiis' of".!dcii1 p'i-o'lli!St ·''&amp;atidsln will :,~iei[o:i\~~.nt~!i&gt;:f: .~, p~~ht;.,.I~ ··.U. an
_ 11 o~ .,be a
,)":hipe, fq~ ; pro~ts
employee asks for a ~S.EA reP.!'.\¥'n!~tove
.to be present during an inte ol;atiBn, no
transcription or recording ay be taken ·
the establishment setting. Sex will not be
until the representative is hysically preused symbolically and polemically as it
sent. (3)
I
st be informed
will not be an attention-getting vehicle."
of his right to represen~ation . . . ., ,1,.
1'h regard ,to the _emergence1 c;»f
A8ency or DePilrtmentoi.Mrieilng: (1)
movements such as 'Gay lib, Or. Robhn
Arsuch llJ.eetings, both parties will disbelieves that whatever the model, laws
close evidence and defenses. (2) The
criminalizing sexual activity in private · employee will have the right to (emain
between consenting adults, wtfatever
silent as long as his answer is presented
their sexual orientation, are rightfully
by his representative'. (3) If the
doomed.
·
,
employer's answer is not received within
However, she takes issue with . Ellis'
-4 days, the emploY.,., '!IllY move directly
prediction that necrophilia and other
to arbitration.
"statistically odd acts" will become
Suspension: (1) ~o expedite t~ hea~­
11enerally accepted in the future.
ing proce_ss, a suspi!nded employee woll
Non-standard sexual behavio(, inb.ave the right to waive the departme_ntal
cluding homosexuality, might actually
hearing and proceed ImmediAtely to arlessen in a more open environmef!L On
bitration. (2) An arbitrator shall have the
the 'other hand, it could increase. "It Is
power to rule affirmatively on an
entirely possible that with the removal of
employee's contention that time limits
lqal penalty- and the introduct!Q.n of
have not been met. (Previously this could
S-OCiAl sanction, these behavloB may
be resolved only by fillns • · contract
become more CO!I)monly expressed,"
grievance.)
•
• --iilie 'ald1 adding !hat without dearer"--'Shop
knowiedse of the etiological factors
Effective Aprlll, 1975, a provision Is to
related to non-standao'd sexual expres"
be added to CSEA's four unit contracts
sion, prosnostlcations are worth little.
requiring that an Agency Shop fee be
VlctooloMia Gone , _ . , .
paid as a condition of employment by all
Victorianism is sone forever; she
non-members of CSEA In the units. CSEA
assured. But that is not to say that future
and the State are jointly Ill prepare and
man will be controlled by sex. "As we
submit enabllns legislation. The Agency
move up the phylogenetic scale, sexShQp fee Is to be fill per cent of CSEA's
ual behaviors become more and more
resular dues, and prorated for part-time
employees.
.
....
complex. In man, tiloJos1es remalrf ~
tant yet behavior varies. Cr.talnly it
seems plausible to attribute a sreater in- .
fluence In sex-behavior patternlns In
man to sociological direction than to In. The
of State Unlv!!nlty Art
nate blolosiCal urge.:'
The fl!ture, she~' wift be markoepartmerit Chal"""" 1s holdlns its'&gt;pl'ed by less~~ to selt
lns meettns on tl!e u/8 campus today
accompanied by more actual sexual acthrough Saturday.
.
tivity. Both non-marital sex and _,..,._
Meetlnp, belns ·attendea by apsual adultery wiD lncrase. while the
proximately 25-30 lndivlduali from
need for therapeutic I.--tori for
throusJiout the SUNY system, 11e solnl.._
on todly 11 the Amherst.campus and are
sexual clisorderJ will cledlne.
scheduled far Friday and Slturday In
11ut, Dr. Roblin admlded, only time
will tell whedler 1 "'MMJ," a "dpr" or
aha tour AniheRt
facllides.lblp by UIB An
ofow 1utu1e. "The - ' a of 1he future
fkn In Bethune .... ~ lluffalo Meter
Planll, aile! 11tenc1 the fciiiiJ - ' n s
- C8ftnDI belllbjec:IID-dlciMes."""'""
_... behaVIor .... nat - . r t l y be
~ o~ tile
New Yarlt An
better or wane. only dlffeteto«:'
~ suests of the AJbrlsht-tCnox.

be,

,. _ _,_pub/lfhed
A WESTlEY IOWtAND

CSEA oudines
of fact-finders

in which the reduction .1nd even
elimination of sexual activity is managed
by .disparate · populations of biologically
normal t'NIIes or fei'NIIes ....
"It IS rn&lt;lre'than· a C!lstinct pCissibilit'y, it
is a fact : Sex is indeed manageable. As
parCGt life lega·cy of Freud, we liive all
become adept at seeking out the sexual
ing~ient in many f~rms of no~~xua1
behavior and.symbohsm. Yet . .. ot os just
as plaus1~ to examine R:xual behavior
for its aapadty to expre'ss and serve non''Seleual motives as the reverse .. . to look
at 1low S-OCiAl change will effect social
condUct, not vice versa."
Sexual attitudes, she explained, including our own, do not repretl'l1t some
bi9logical constant but are deeply imbedded in a cultural context. As a result,
.e.i.oal ....,...,..,.ry dramatk!ally from· one
sodet'y'to ihe ~- ,I
· ' ''In the first mllleniilm of the Christian
era, In'many parts of what_ls now Europe,
public nudity wa5 no cause for
matUrity.
shame ... virginitY, was not · prized,
Will this result, as Albert Ellis has
marriage was usually a temporary '
predicted, in a' future ·tn whicn all
arrari"pment, · extra-marital relations
marriages ~re "open," children are.in·
were taken for granted. ln&lt;:mt was freeluded in the full range of•sexolal adlvitf;
quent, and were often aaresand women adopt the. ster,eotyped
sors In invitlns sexual Intercourse. Basaaresslve sexual behavior of menl
tardy was a mark of distinctiOn because It
· Probably not, Or. Roblin predicted,
' often Implied some "important. penon
basins her forecast on the · less riOical
had slept with one's mother. In early
model
of human behavior. Instead of
feudal times, , _ brides were usually
women actina more like men; she
- deflowered by the feudal lord. In other
predicted
"the brunt of adaptation will
societies, weddlns suests would
mpuiMe with the bride.· These practices ..: fall lmmtdlately on male$," who will
move furmer towar&lt;l the traditional
were considered a way of strensthenlns
female role.
the nwrlloleln that the polllble pain of
. . . . Ct I of .,..... billanl
Under the leiS fierce model, It Is
reasonable to expect that the future will
brlns "total equality of sexual access. that
Is repudiation. of the double standard.'"
However, she_'continued; "this does
lloc.ndoyby-~
not Imply that _ . , sexual behavior
--~o/Heo(Ycri•
_ __,, UJ5 ...... St. -.ro, N.Y. 1~&lt;.
will
be modeled liter the ao-called
_ _ ... _ _loatedln
_ 2121).,_, ;m, ""
Edltoriol-.,.
assreulve, non-discriminating
'sWOrdsmanship' of males. Indeed male
0

May 8, 1975

"YCIU"J.. .males wll be -'lie ID Jelate

00

~;J:e· rr~,

rMn~.J·~~ll&amp;i~~~R·~~

SUNY Art Coundr
meeti here -

~

0

0

:::ew:.:::::=n::~~

~~ ~n

oe.-u-n·

w-

�·Two winners
spl_it prize. in
poetry contest

Fenton_pane' disagrees· on lawyers' roles
11 Montesq~ieu was a lawyer.
"Fidel Castro was a lawyer.
" Karl Marx.
_
"This nation has a revolutionary past
with r&lt;;&gt;ots in the English 17th Century
and French revolutions. The ideologists
of these earlier upheavals were familiar
to· Jeffer10n" and the other architects of
the great American social change, Tigar
pointed out.
Did these lawyers cause change or just
find hell-raisers in.the streets and decide
to represent them?
It's true, of course, .he answered
himself, " that people make change. Bull
submit that every s uccessful
revolutionary movement in Western
Europe had precepts which looked very
much like legal ideology, that legal
ideology has been ari Importan t par't of
every revolutionary credo," rom th~
bourgeois. revolution to 1975. .
i"··· ..These JdeoloJies~ &lt;ta~ submitt'e4, ~ere
' "'"c'le~~ld)ll.cf ' flY legal '"ililhd; \Yh~" paid
-·~· atU!ntion.nQt JU:~t lo .n.d'* a.s t.l&gt;~y_ existed
but also to those "that might be."
These were minds which recognized
that laws and rules are not a static structure, minds which identified the shock
ti'o ops, of .~h~nge _anll fo'l!ed the rul~
that would suit them, ·minds attuned to
what Tigar feels is the highest form of
legal creativity, "the jurisprudence of insurgency." .
Of course, he said later, insurgents can
undermine their own cause by adopting
the tactics-of their oppn!§sors, by not using their own ·vision of the ultimate
society in their dealings with both friends
. and enemies.
C...........,.._b few lhe Left
Walzer, a. professor of government
who teaches the history of political
thought, made a similar point in his two

Michael Tigar and Stuart Scheingold
have this basic disagreement over
whether lawyers can bring about social
change.
' ·
•
Scheingold thinks not. Most lawyers,
he says, are preoccupied with rules,
somet~ing which keeps them at a distance from society and its prol&gt;lems.
Tigar thinks yes, pointing out that Karl .
Marx was a lawyer. ·
· .
Their contrasting views were aired at
the 1975 · Fenton lectures, in O'Brian
Hall's ~t Courtrool'(l Thursday night.
.Also on the panel was Harvard
professor Michael Walzer who chose not
to address the question directly, electing
instead. to propose two commandments
for radical activists.
........... Effect'

-...

' ' .•.

,sQleingold, a professor at the Un iversity. ~of Washington, criticized what he
co'nsid..B., the / 'narrowing effj!ct" , of
51M!rtdlng·three yea_rs,in law scl&gt;~l "doing. le~~al analysis."
·
·
"'l'he"7acu'rij '\fsS\J\1\1!1'tl\\i this teaches
law students to think more dearly than
others, Scheingold said . In truth,
however, he suggested, the result is
simply that lawyers think "differently."
,..lawyeis•learn to "focus" their Lihoughts
like people adept at reading road maps.
They can find their way through a
wilderness area, buf they never see the
countryside.
Students emerge from law school,
Scheingold said, believing that "rules
make the world go round." They confuse
rule change with political change and
think of litigation as !he natural vehicle
of change.
The adversary model in which attorneys are schooled further encourages
them to steer clear of social questions,
Scheingold sa!d. lawyers are taught to
think of themselves as advocates of their
clients' Interests. To question the social
vatueo of those Interests Is beyond the
pale. As they perceive It, their duty is "to
take on cases and not pre•judge." Any
other behavior, they betleve, .would be a
disservice to the adversary system
because "every cause desenles Its day in
coun." Thus, Scheingolcl said, lawyers
feet they further the public interest "just
by doing their job:"
-·

co~~dt~~~d t!'e(e';e3.~mselves to
.
'
New York Senator Jacob K. Javiis has
introduced a bill in the U.S. Senate that
would allow writers, cocroposers and
other artists to claim tax deductions for
gifts of their work to .libraries, museums
and similar institutions.
Until 1969, manuscripts, correspondence and other works by artists
were tax deductible. tn "thac,ur such
lifts lost their special tax status under a
~ aimed_ at preventing pcilhldans from
benefitting from donations of public

n.e I'Uida ol
lttprs• l'uWk l'olky and ,_,rkal
a...,e, satd that he can't conceive of

this soc;lety doing anythlns about this
type of lepl~ucation.
.After all, he saki, It Is lm~ible that
society would provide tra1ning.· support
and utlsfactiod for Individuals In order
to equip them with the talents, expertise
and orientation to be "dYsfun&lt;:!ional."

papeB.

•

W.....,..

.

"Thomas More was a lawyer.

Since then, according to

.

n.e Neor-l'orl:

nmes, the flow of tibr"!T sifts by artists

has "virtually dried up. The Ubrary of
Congrel5 has been panlcularly hard hit,
losing such valwi61e acquisitions as the
recent rnanuscrlpa of Vladimir Nabokov.
Even ArcliiiNIIcl Maclelsh, a former
ubrarian of Congress, has started &amp;Ivins
his papeR to the Ubrary "on deposit''
rather dian maldns outrlsht donations.
Under-the 01rrent law, an ll1ist maklns a-donation may dedua only the-CIIIsl
ol materials, not the marlr.et value tJf the

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

~:

and
.
2. The left should act within certain
legal limits.
law is not a uniform code, Walzer
suggested, but rather an anthology of _
history. The " newest" revqlutionary
cause, he said, is based on the .oldest of precedent• and traditions, and this
should n9t be " hidden." Rather, these
leg;ol pr~nts should be used to
justify the revolutionary position.
Law is, after all, he said, an "idealizing,
universal mi rror"' ~nd should l?e used as
such by radicals. Any political movement
can and should conveniently refer itself
to " un iversal rights," which are written
in to every body of law, if -not actually
..Sil.nctio ned by those in power.
"Noting that the left has anti-legalist
tendencies, Walzer prescribed that
radicals should fight against these at cer:tain points if they are to gain widespread
support.
large,l)f.' m~JS. of J&gt;!!OI!\e• _!l,e. ~i~, are
tied to t~e statu~ quo, not beCause they
benefit from it, but simply b&lt;;cause of
loyalty o r fear. '{hey can be won over to
the .new scheme of things if 'tthe universal ism of the.!aw" i~ recognized.
This universality should never be
.derided. The aim should always be to extend legal rights,_Walzer said.
If there are to be political trials of
leaders of the old order, Walzer said, the
aim should be not to suggest that there
are no limits to ·the political struggle.
Rather, he said, the purpose should be to
exploit those limits and give promise for
the future.
For "if there is ,no promise for the
future, the revolutiOn is doomed."
The endowed Fenton lectures are
arranged annually by the Office of

;~~u;~! ~~~':::,rear in collaboration
.

Tax break.sought for gifts from artists ·

. Schelnsolcl. author of

11pr, who rose to prominence In the
1960's as an .nomey for such "radial"
clienb as H. Jt.p Blown and Anseta Davis
and on ro raise chickens In the
Soulh ol France. chaltensed Schelngolcl's
view as he mlcht inJn M:lual cou11100m
sltuadon. hdng. posturing. pausin&amp; aiiCI
placlins with the audience-jury, 11pr,
- Ntilmed to the u.s. as a_.,., of
a
law firm~ elo-.

thelawandUse il tor. their··~purposes.,

.

sift.
"The Utirary

ol

c:oncr- esdmalec!

that aboul35 well-kt-' -..posen, Including s..-1 Barber, Aaron Copland

and Walter P.lston, had ceased making
gifts to it," the -Jimes reported.
uCiting reports from other Institutions,
the Ubrary said that Erskine Caldwell, the
auth"or, no longer donated his
manuscripts to Danrnouth and that
papers exPected by' Harvard but ~r
deferred or not received Included those
of the novelist lohn Updike, the
playwrisht Neil Simon and the poet
Denise levertov. Harvard had to
purchaSe the papen of the poets E.E.
.Cummings and Robert Lowell.
"The decrease In sifts, the Ubrary
declared, has had a serious effect on the
archival holdings of the major libraries in
·this country and 'the far-ruc:hlns effects
upon "scholarship could be even more

deYastadns.' "

Under the Javlts bill, artists· could
deduct up to 75 per cent ol the market
value of their donaled works. The biU,
which lnclucles safeauards to prewent
· abuses, would result In loss· of tax
• revenues ollea than $10 milliOn a,.....
ADc:ordlng to Mr. Karl Gay, cinator of
the Ulll Poetry Collecdooi, the moit
serious local effea of the 1919 law has
been to dllalu...., proopeclloe donoRof manusa~p~~w JIII*S.
.

. Joel· Lipman and Jim Guthrie, both
graduate students in the Department of
English, have ' been selected co-winners
of the 1975 prize competition for " the
best poem or group of poems by a
student" conducted on campus by the
Academy of American Poets in conjunction with The Friends of lockwood
Memorial library and the Department of
English.
The award carries a cash honorarium
of $100 which the co-winners will split.
Honorable mentions in the competition were .awarded to. Gail Fischer, a
senior undergraduate, and Stratton Rawson , another English Department
graduate stuaent.
·. ·
A pan.el of three judges- poet Irving
Feldman, Professor Max Wickert of
English,, and Dr. Melissa Banta of
lockwood, who administered the campus program - selected the winners
from among 65 entries of between one
and five poems each.
'
" Poems were judged anonymously;"
Dr. Wickert ~d. "It was remarkable," he
indicated, "that, in· view of the overall
high quality of the bulk of the. submissions, we should have reached a
near.;.unanimous decision so .. easily. In
fact,-our only difficulty, after ind!vidually
selecting finalists, was in deciding
between ·these. Our final decision of
splitting the award between Mr. Lipman
and Mr. Guthrie reflects Jhat difficultybut resolves it, I think, in the faireSt
possible manner." Personally, Wickert
said, "I think that at least half bf the
poems subm itted were of· H uly
professional calibre. Thou~h all written
by students, they were in no way amateurish or sepond-rate."
Co-winner lipntan'S prize-winning entry was a self~ontained section from his
epic-lengt h po~, " Sweet Home
Chicagp." lipmarr, a se·c ond-year
grad.u ate student from WiSt;Qnsin, was a
law school graduate before he turned to
poetry; encouraged by noted black poet
Gwendolyne Brooks in Chicago. Next
year, he will be completll)l his Buffalo
doctoral- dissertation ·while starting a
teaching appointment in Toledo, Ohio.
Guthrie's entry. CX&gt;nsisted pf five shon
poems: " Advice from a European
Lady," "Hostel," "Sweet Potato,"
"legerdemain," and "A'gainst
Astrology." He is from Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
Honorable mention winner Fischer,
an undergraduate se.n ior from Western
New York, submine,r.!,.a poem ent!fled,
"The Swamp Angel.~ Ms.· Fischer,ha$just
been awar~ a fellowship for graduate
study at Johns. Hopkins Unlvenity.
.
Rawson won his honorable mention
with two ~. "Mother" and "Mirror
Room." Rawson Is a graduate student
from Quakenown ..~nsylvanla;-belore
coming to Buffalo, he attended the
University of WY&lt;&gt;n\tni and State University at Albany. .
.
Prpf. Wickert charaaerlzed the competition • an "unqualified success," ad·
ding that a special debt of gratitude "Is
owed to Professor John lopn for
negotiating the Buffalo prize with the
Academy, and · to The Friends of
lockwood Memorial Library for.
providing lynds." The establishment ~
the prize at SUNYAB Is "anocher cNpler
in the University's lona-andlng and
hononbie oommhment to the cause of
contemporary goea:y," Wickert sale[

Acts grant

·

.

Dr. Helju A. Bennett, aJslstant
professor of history, has reaoloed •
fellOwship from the-American CcMincll of
lamed Societies for researdl on ''ReM:tion' lincl the
of Alexander
Ill."
.
,...
Dr. Bennett 1s amons M ~ o1
ACLS fellowships seleaed In a recent
~ ccimpeddcML ~ o/ the
grams -.e
for poll-doctoral
reourch In the hu---. end social
IICienceL In ecldltlon, 13 poll-doctoral

eo-nmem

.....w

fellowships were-.leciiD ..tst rauna
scholan to enlarwe their ranse of
knowledp ., study In fieldl outside
their present -~ speciaiiDtlon.

�..•=•

May 8, 1975

.

S«n~ o~t

Alumni lrun5on Juncheon .11 Norton.

'·
130 50-year graduates participate 1n campus reun1on
lly BID Dock
Ediror. U/8 Alumni H~

Saturday was a day to recall yesterday
for 130 graduates of 50 or·more years and

their guests, totaling 170 in all, at the
Alumni Association's third annual 50Year Reunion on campus.
Art Lalonde, executive vice president

of the Undergraduate Student Association, contrasted the 1920-era student
with today's. The former was committed ·
to the World War I pledge to make the
world safe for democracy and was quite
confident that a better world was at
hand. The 1970's student believes in
"social co·nsciousness," and in questioning everything.
We Were raised on the American

dream, with the belief that hard work is

noble, that you get what you pay for, and
that truth will win over lies, Lalonde said.
But , he noted , subsequent . disillusionments have obscured that dream.
" If we are to return to the ideals which
forged ~ country , it is most likely the
efforts of the young which will do it," he
added. He invited the elder graduates to
communicate to the modern student
their dreams and insights during this
period of change and restructuring.
President Robert l. Ketter expressed
his pleasure being able to share in the
continuing affection which the elder
graduates have for the University ,
"which· is most proud of you r ac- ·
complishments."
He introduced 51 members of the
Class of 1925 who were prese nt and in-

at

ducted them as Honorary life Members
of the Alumni Association.
Dr. James J. Ailinger, class chairman,
responded with gallant observations
about the youthful looking women of
the Class of 1925 and before, plus a few
humorous refe._re nces to his days as a
football sta r here.
Calling him &amp;elf a 17-letter man (four in
football, thYee in basket ball, three from
the dean, and seve n from the treasurer's
office), Dr. Ailinger also explained that in
1920 Rotary Field was a few feet higher at
one end than the other. If you won the
coin toss, you picked the high end of the
field . " It was so much easier to run down
hill with our team."
Dr. Ailinger presented a check for $2,000 designated for the Undergraduate

3 stpdents accept awards, .~ r~j~ct :u(llem
• • • - •..

Three.. undergraduate stUdents
accepted awards for outstanding service
to the cbr\1nfuhity from the U/B Community Advisory Council and the U/B
Foundation at a luncheon at the Marine
Midland Center last Thursday.
Two others. spurned the honors and a
sixth was nor present.
I The 'Oward~. consisting of S25 cash
stipends and plaques, were presented by
Erie County Executive Edward Regan;
Deputy Buffalo Mayor John Downing;
Mary Herman, president of the Community Advisory Council, ana Alfred
Anscombe and Morris Poummit, former
presidents of the Council. In addition to
the Individual prese ntations; S100 worth
of books are being contributed to the
University Libraries and dedicated in the
names of the students.
Accepting the awards were:
• Robin Denise Harris, a senior psy, chology major from Rochester, N.Y. She
is a leader of the student-staffed Soci al
Club for 40 mentally ill or previously
mentally il) clients, as well as a volunteer
worker at Child and Family Services ·and
the Buf{alo 'Psychiatric Center. Recently,
she has become active in the Attica
Prison visitation project.
• William Gory Kerr, a senior biology
major from Kenmore. He is ~istant

h

-

-

·

-

·--

••

~

director of the Be-A-Friend Program,
which often guidance, attention and
companionship to children in need. It
serves over 35 County social service
agencies; as well as countless hospitills,
· judges, doctors and parents.
• David). Saleh, a senior biology major
from Buffalo. He has served as a super·
Three University faculty members have
visor for the Mayors Summer Youth
been selected for Full&gt;rlght·Hays awards
Program, volunteer youth director for
for the coming academic year by the
the Catholic Charities Appeal, and the
Board of Foreign Scholarships and the
first . director of the Bennett Beach
Department of State, the Washinron·
Summer Camp for neighborhood
based Council for lnternatlona Ex·
children. Hl! Is the author of a book, enchanJe of Scholars said this week.
titled J1le Joe Vl!fler Sfoly, about the
. UIB winners and the purposes of their
Addicts-In-Distress Program.
awards are:
.
Turning down the awards w~re :
Dr. a...les W. c-w.y, assistant
• David Chavis, a senior psycholoJ!y
professor, SdiOol of Information and
major from Far Rockaway, N.Y. He ls.the
Ubmy Studies, for lecturing in Iceland
director of the Community Action
In llbruy science.
Corps, an organization which involves
Dr. )Ilion V• .....,._, professor,
over 1500 5tudents uch year . In more
EnP-Ins and Applied Sciences, for
than SO community oervlce projects. In
lecturing and consultation In Malaysia in
addition, he Is the founder · of the
llrUCIUral mechanla:
_
·
Creative
leamlng Project. and head of
Dr. Allloert J. Pautler, a•soclate
·
. - . -ol educatloil, for lecturing and • the Tutorial Training Program.
-llatlon In Ponupl In vocational
• ~ Medlne, a sen.lor special major
. frf',"' Buf!~lo. She has ~ as educa·
~-

3 ·win Fulbrights

,

•

. . . . . .::

. . . . t •••

'\

--

library as a Class of 1925 gift.
After lunch, several alumni took bus
tours of the Main Street and Amherst
Campuses. A recept ion at the Frank
Lloyd Wright House ended the reunion
day.
Trave ling the farthest to attend the 50·
Year Reunion were Jose ph A. lazaroni of
Los Angeles and G. Harold DeVoist of
Banning, California.
The oldest alumnus present was Dr.
Henry V. Heiss, Classof 1909, of Js&gt;hnson
City nea r Binghamton . Dr. Heiss, 88, has
practiced dentistry 66 years and is now
treating the great-gra ndch ildre n of his
first patients.
lean and alert, Dr. Heiss likes to travel,
tend to his garden, and exe rcise his 37year-o ld horse.

Life Quality

~~rn.bJ.~[,,,~~;
~~t:,
A special faculty·wide

gr~duate

seminar on " The-Quality of Life• will·be
offered next fall by the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Administration, Dr. lester
Milbrath, associate provost and seminar
coordi nator, has announced .
Built around six core sessions, the ·
semi nar will offer opportunities for
variab le credit. Those attending only the
core gene ral sessio ns will receive one
credit and should sign up for Social
Sciences m . Additional credit may be
earned .through special reading, research
and d iscussion with one of several
assigned contact professors. To gain
these extra credits, a student must
register for independent' study with the
contact professor.
.
.Dr. Milbrath notes that the "Quality
of life" is an important " policy objective,
but -what is it and how can it be
measured? Social scientists have done
cQnsiderable thinking about" the topic,
he says, ''and have tried to measure it in
several ways. These developments
should now be shared with students."
The semina~s core general sessions
tion coordinator for the Community Acwill include:
tion Corps and project head of the CAC
ruesd•y, Sep~ 76-Philosophical Apeducation program in the Black Rock
proaches to the Quality of Life, Paul
area. In addition, she established a
Kurtz, Philosophy, U/8.
Teacher ReSource Center and wrote a
Tuesday, Sept. JO-Economic
proposal for funding for the Alternative
Measures of the Quaflty of life, J,
Education Coalition.
n.omas Romans, Economics, UIB.
Tuesday, Oct_ 74-Societal Attributes
Chavis charged that th,e University has
and the Quality of Life, Raoul Naroll,
abridged student rights of free speech
U/B.
.
Anthropology,
and assembly · and Miss Medine
- Tuesday, Nov. 4--lnternational Comquestione,d the practice ·of singling out
parisons
of
the
Quality
of
life,
William
individuals for such awards, adding that
Eckhardt, Canadian Peace Research
U/B is not community/minded or sup- ·
Institute.
portive of equal rig~ts for women.
Tuesday, Nov. 111-Subjective PercepRoberto Collado, an urban studies
tions of life Quality, Lester Milbrath,
major from Buffalo, was nc&gt;i present at
Political Science, U/8.
the ceremony. He was instrumental in ·,
Tuesdoy, Dec. l-Concluding Panel on
developing a ·community affairs compo·
Studying Quality of life.
.
nent of PODER . which provides
Contact professors for the seminar are:
educational and referral services to
AnthropofoRy, Raoul Naroll; Economics,
members of the local Puerto Rican com· ~ Kevin Sonthetmer; Geography, James
munity. His other commitments Include
McConnell; llnguiotics, M.a deleine
membership on the Board of Directors of,
Mathiot; Philo•ophy, Paul Kurtz;
the West Side Health Center, the Puerto
Political Science, le•ter Milbrath;
Rlcan-Chlcano Committee of Build, and
Psychology, Edwin Hollander; Sociology,
C.mino Latino, an organization which
~ Mills; Social Work, Sherman . ·
provides educitlonal service•· to
Merle; Speech Communication, Mary
Cassata.
. ~·

�7

. . . .£ . . .

May 8, 1975

Management
SUNY Senators hear Ch~ncellor Boyer,
alums to cite
consider resolution.s on ten agenda items Dr. Manch_
ly 'JhomM E. ConnoUy
SUNY

SinMcw

Priority was gl~en, after the meeting
was called to order, to the report of
Chancellor Ernest Boyer.· ·
First, Chancellor Boyer reported to the
Senate on actions taken in response to
resolutions that had been passed at the
Fall meeting at Canton.
1. The Senate had asked him to clarify
the responsibilities of local campus
presid.ents with respect to review and
authorization of local campus by-laws.
:rhe Chancellor reaffirmed tliat local
presidents have authority "to approve
only those sections of campus by-laws
that pertain to consultation with the
faculty. They have no approval authority
over the substantive matters of faculty
self-governance. Chancellor Boyer
assured the Senate that he has sent a
memorandum to campus presidents on
this matter that is clear and explicit.
2. The local U/B Executive Committee
had requested clarification of what legal
counsel is available to faculty members
in case of accidents during class or dvring research activities. The Chancellor
referred the Senate to a definitive statement written by M. Kimberley that
appeared in the faculty Seure Bullelin
in May 1972, which should be available in
our library. Further calls for clarification
should be sent to the Chancellor's office
for follow-up interpretations.
3. Chancellor Boyer commented on
the methods by which faculty and student representatives are chosen to meet
with Jocal Councils and the Board of
Trustees. He found one instance of a
local council hand picking the persons to
sit with it. This practice is not consistent
with the intention of the Board of
Trustees.
4. Emeritus status - automatic or
selective? Chancellor Boyer announced
that, sinre the -C-anton -meeth&gt;g, he--had
been persuaded that ementus status
ShOUld be autom&amp;itit ~and ,t hat it is an indignity after long and useful service to
invoke a selective system of granting
emeritus status. He confessed, however,
two disturbing factors : the situation is
complicated if certain guarantees of
privileges are built in; he further stated
that a wide range of practices exists
throughout the system. He and the
Board of Trustees have discussed this
matter on two occasions. The Board is
now divided. The Chancellor intends to
submit his recommendation to the Board
formally this year and will consult with
the Senate.
5. Increased financial assistance for
graduate students. The Cent&lt;al Administration is fighting vigorously for increases. On the matter of tax exemption,
the IRS has ruled that 'an exemption can
be granted only if)he amount paid is for
activity required of all 5!udents.
6. The Chancellor agrees to try to get a
uniform data~gathering system
throughout the University.

.
Stony llrook Resolutions
Second, Chancellor Boyer responded
to resolutlom adopted at the winter
meeting of the SUNY Faculty Senate at
· Stony Brook.
.
•
- 1. II) response to the resolution calling
for one expert in research procedures
. and support to be appointed on each
carnpi!S, he endorsed the concept and
has discussed it with the Council of
Presidents. He urged the presidents to
comply.
2. He supports the resolution callinJI
for faculty to be fully involved in 'planning retrenchment cuts. He also en• cloned selective rather .t han across-theboard cuts. The presidents have been
urxed to increase faculty and student involvement in planning.
3. The Chancellor endorsed the paper
on retrenchment submitted by the Personnel Policies Committee {a copy has
been submitted to the local Executive
Committee), and will communicate it to
presidents. One item in the_ paper {in
case of severance, one year wtth pay ~nd
two years' leave without payl will be subject to collective negotiatiom. All other
items fall . within the guidelines of the
U.UPam~.

4. He supports the resolution on TIM
supplemental retirement annuity and has
asked for its implementation. No
negotiation is involved. He has not yet
submitted it to the Board of Trustees.
5. CBTE: He does not quite agree that
CBTE violates 1 institutional autonomy.
implementation is the ·basic problem.
There appear to be some instances of a
conflict with UUP, and the results so far
are .60mething of a muddle.
Slilte of the Unlvenlty
~
Chancellor Boyer next addressed the
current state of the University.
..
1. The overriding concern is for the

. fiscal health of SUNX. The Chancellor is
on the whole gratified b~ the response to
his appeals to stay the · inroads on the
budget. In the final 7 million dollar
redudion from the Governors budget
about 2/3 of the campuses have bee~
relatively untouched, and 1/3 of them
have been mildly to dramatically harr'(led
by the legislative action. There was no
evidence of political or legislative bias.
2. The supplemental budget request,
approved by the Board of Trustees, calls
for $15 million to include legislative cuts
and oversights.
The Chancellor then responded to
questions from the floor.
Minutes of these meetings are regularly filed with the library and faculty
members may read tht!m to get the exact
wording of resolutions, etc.
Resolutions
Following the Chancellor's repon, the
Senate pursued the regular business by
receiving reports from all its standing
commiltees (to be filed in the library!
and by acting on resolutions submitted
.by those committees or by individual
campuses. I shall report on the disposition of the various resolutions.
1. The Senate passed a resolution of
the Committee on Graduate Programs
. calling on the Chancellor to seek a delay
in implementation of competency based
g'raduate programs.
2. The Senate passed a resolution
presented by the Committee on library
Resources that Central Administration
take steps to develop a disciplineoriented library collection formula for
the University, but called upon the Administration to submit the study to the
Senate before implementation.
3. The Senate reaffirmed a resolution
passed at the Canton meeting that calls
upon each campus to establish a committee to review matters of Q_rofessional
rights and responsibilities of The faculty.
4. The Senate passed a resolution of
the Committee on Student Affairs
recommending that each campus .establish a Self-Study Task Force, and it also
adopted a resolution that the President
of the Senate appoint a task force on
auxiliary services to meet with Mr.
Spindler and to report back to the
Senate.
5. The Senate adopted two resolutions
submitted by the University Budget
Committee, The first called upon the
Chancellor to appoint a task force to: a)
develop standards for defining credit
hour calculation that recognizes the
diverse missiom of SUNY campuses and
accommodates current trends in
educational innovation, b) develop a
more complex meihod of formula
budgeting that recognizes the complexity of the University, and c) ~veiop a
resource allOcation process that treats
similar programs on a more equitable
basis. The second asked the Senate to endorse and recommend to the Chancellor
increased tuition supj&gt;ort levek for faculty and professional staff striving for
professional improvement.
6. The Undergraduate Program Committee introduced resolutiom that attacked the Centers at Binghamton an&lt;!
Buffalo on the four-&lt;ourse load and accused them of having absorbed
nunearnedu dollan. The resoiOtion, which called for semeoter credit hour •
contact hour equation, was postponed
indefinitely after representatives from
both centers invo!Yed exposed deficiencies in statistical data upon which 'the

~

resolution was based and pointed out
that the resolution not only showed no
concern for academic requirements but
infringed upon and overlapped the more
considered resolution of the Budget
Committee already adopted.
.
7. The Committee on Research Introduced and the Senate adopted two
resolutions. The 'first callt!(l for the establishment of refresher workshops to
assist faculty members in improving
research skills. The second requested the
Chancellor to recommen!l to appropriate bodies the support ~f un~e!~raduate research and creative actlvltles.
.
.
the
8. The resolution, prese'!ted by

Committee o.n Healt~ Sctences and
Heal!~ Affa~rs, callmg upon the
Chane lor and Central Admtmstratron
to faci tate ~etrieval of data, w~ passed.
9. Resolutions from the Oelh1 campus
and SUC at Buffalo pertammg to awards
to. N!P's for excellence and ':!"'form ad m1ss1on proc.e sses . respect1v~ly were
referred to a~propnate comm1ttees for
recom"'!endat1on.
,
_
10. Fmally, the Senate passed un
ammo~sly a res.oll!tlon o~ t_he _Execu~1ve
Comm1ttee callmg for a JOint mve_stlgation by the three govern~nce bod1es :~
SUNY at Buffa I~ of the disturbances
campus o n Aprr l 25, 1975.

Financial aid meeting
A discussion of the O 'Hara Bill (HR
3741), a piece of legislation designed to
radically revise federal student financial
aid programs, will highlight today 's
luncheon session of the State University
Financial Aid Conference which opened
attheStatlerHiltonWednesdayandcontinues through tomorrow.
Jim Harrison, staff director of the
House Subcommittee on Postsecondary
Education, will be lhe speaker for th e
sessio n.
The Conference, an annual spring
event, is attended by approximate.ly 120
financial aid offiCers from throughout
SUNY. This marks the first time the group
has convened in Buffalo, according to
toseph Stillwell, director of financial aid
to st udents at U/B, who is conference
co-chairman. William Troy, director of
financial aid, Buffalo State, is the other
co-chairman.
Other sessions on today's program inelude a look at the use of cort1puters in
financial aid, and a discussion on need
analysis.
Sessions tomorrow will deal with the
Federal Basic Educational Opportunity

Or. Joseph Manch, retiring superintendent of schools for the City of Buffalo,
will receive the Niagara Frontier Executive of the Year Award from the
School of Management Alumni Association. The award, given each year to a~
ident of the Niagara Frontier who is "a
leader in business or civic affairs," will be
presented at the Mana11.ement Alumni's
Annual Awards Banquet Monday night,
May 12, at the Statler Hiltmr.Dr. Manch has served as superintendent of schools since 1957. Prior-to that
he held a number of administrative
positions in the Buffal~ school ~em
including director of guu:b.nce, d1r~or
of pupil personnel services, and assoo~te
superintendent for school-communtty
coordination.
He holds B.A., M.A., and Ed.D. degrees
from U/B and received an honorary doctorate from D'Youville in 1967. Among
his many awards are the American
Educators Medal Award of the Freedom
Foundation at Valley Forge (1975), the
Man of the Year Award from the Buffalo
Schoolmasters Association (1973), the
U/ B 125th Annivetsary Award {1972), the'
B'nai B'rith Man of the Year Award
(1967), and the Liberty Bell Award from
the Erie County Bar Association {1965).
His community commitments have included membership on the Board of
Directors of the Community Welfare
Council, the Mayor's Committee c:&gt;n Erie
County Community College, and the
Manpower AdVisory Committee of the
New York State Employment Service. He
is a past national chairman of Save the
Children Federation, and former director of the Buffalo Area Convention and
Visitors Bureau .
Dr. Manch is well known for his
photography and has given 20
photographic exhibits for charitable and
cultural institutions. He is the author of A
City 1s People, a collection of his poetry
and photography, and an honorary
member of the Professional
Photographers ·Society of Buffalo.
A number of awards will also be
presented to School of Management·
students at the banquet. The awards and
their recipients are: w~ll Street Joumal
Student Achievement Award - Keith B.
Gendal of Valley Stream, N.Y.; Narional
Obsetrer Student "Achievement Award
_Thomas). Duvall of Niagara Falls, N.Y.,
and Jeffrey L Kremberg of Brooklyn,
N.Y.; Undergraduate Student Achievement Award - Carey B. Bierman of East
Meadow, N.Y .; Graduate Student .
Achievemenr Award - Jonathan N.
Goodrich of Kingston , Jamaica; Pearl and
Lewis Jacobs Award- Manoj"\_Agarwal

-····oo,,

fACUlTY
Assistant Professor, Sp8ch Communication, F-5033.
Visiting Assistant Professor, History, F-5034.
. .
Assistant or Associate Professor, Speech Co~mumcauon, F-5035.
Associ~te Professor, M~thematics, F-5036:
·
Assistant Professor, Civil ~ngineering, F-5037.
Assistant Professor, Physical Therapy, F-5038.
librarian or Associate -librarian, University Libraries, F-5039.
Assistant librarian, University Libraries, F-5040.
Assistant Professor, Biology, F.-5041. •

NTP
Technical Specialisr, Survey Research Center, PR-2, B-5016.
Ull FOUNDA110N
Associ~te Director, Instructional CommUnication Center, B-5017.
Coordinator for Health Education Program, lakes Area Regional Medical
·
"t'rogram, B-5018.
For additional information concerning these jobs .and for details of NTP
openings throughout the Slilte University system, consult bulletin ·boards at
these locations:
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, next to
cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1 ; 4. Cary Hall,
in coiTidor opposite HS 131; 5. Farber . Ha[l, il) the corridor between
Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground floOr in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Office; 8. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
Parker Engineering, !n corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
Housing Office area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Norton
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
Room 106. 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor {Amherst Campu5).

SUielw-..i,llll!fWolo ... Equai~/Aiflnnallft Adlon......,..

/

�.
May a, 1975

a~-·.

Cypr~s

eovoy
to speak on
island's wo~s
Joseph Stephanides, consul general of
Cyprus at the UN, will speak on
"Cyprus-A Dilemma and a Challenge,"
Thursday, May 8, at2 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room, Norton.

_

Mr. Stephanides' appearance is cosponsored· by the U/ 8 Hellenic Association, the Student Association and the
Graduate Student Association.
In inviting the campus community to
attend the lecture, loannis Koutrouvelis,
president of the Hellenic Association, expressed the concern of the · campus
Greek community over events on the

Mediterranean island.
Mr. KOutrouvelis said he is distressed
by the plight of Greek Cypriot refugees
who have fled the northern «J per cent
of the island which is now under Turkish
control. These refugees have been forced to leave their homes and are living in
bad conditions in tents in the southern
portion of the isfan-d, he said .
Meanwhile, Mr.' Koutrouvelis '" charged,

the -Turks have looted and occupied
refugees' homes and are inviting people
from Turkey to migrate to E!yprus.

The refugees, who comprise 30-40 per
cent of the island's population, want only
to go home, Mr. Koutrouvelis said. But,

he charged, the Turks will not discuss the
refugee problem until the political
problem is solved. He indicates further
that the Turks are stalling on
negotiations, despite UN _prodding,
because they want' their control of the

northern half of Cyprus to become a
~· fait

·

accompli."
The Gr:eek · .community on Cyprus as
well as in Greece, Mr. Koutrouvelis contended, want a united, independent

.Cyprus. under the "J,egal government of

THURSDAY--8 .

Jurkey •used the now-deposed Greek

to the island's problems.
The Greek Cypriot majority lived in
peace for hundreds of years with the
.._,. Juiks who constitute 18 per cent of the
island's population,MrJ&lt;outrouvelis said.
There was no per~ecution then , he

claimed, so why do the Turks pretend to
fear this now1 He said the present Greek
government haS no . intentions of interveniq,g in Cyprus' internal affairs and
want,s only1 a. free, Pemqp-.a.t ic lstate for
all. :':) ,
co ,• 1 .1 I
·:
·I r
•
Mr. Koutrouvelis said he fears current
moves in the U.S. Congress to restore
American -arms aid to Turkey. Such aid

would embolden "the Turks to " grab"

problems of edua:tlon and economics. Guest

NURSING CONTINUING EDUCATION
SfMINAitf
Advanced Cardiac Care Symposium (3
days) . Chatter House Motel. For more information, contact Joan Collins, 831-5548.

PEDIATRIC RESEARCH SfMINA,Rf .
Studies of Varicella-Zoster Infection, Dr.
Philip A. Brunell , New York University. Eighth
floor board room, Children's Hospital, 10:30
. a.m.

COLLOQUIU/1.41
Gauge Field Theory, Dr. C. N. Yomg, SUNY
at Stony Brook. 111 Hochstetter, 3:30p.m.

ENGINEERING SfMINARf
Analysis of the Watergate Channel or How
to Keep the Spy in the Cold, Or. A.D. Wynec.

Bell Telephone laboratories. 148 Parker;
coffee at 3:30, lecture at 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Electrical
Engineering and the IEEE Buffalo Section lnforrmtion Theory Group.

MAlHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM#

cuss " Trends in Medical Education." Statler
Hilton Hotel. For more information, call 8315526.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Internal CombusHon by Terry Doran.
American Contemporary Theatre, 1695

Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11, p.m. Admission
cha rge. Seating is limited to 25 persons per
performance; reservations are suggested (8755825).
.

CA.C FILM••
Paper Moon. 140. Farber. (Capen), 8 and 10
p.m. Admi.ssion: $1.
IFA RECITAL•
Cheryl Cobetti gives a flute recital. Baird
Recital Hall, 8-p.m. No admission charge.
UUAI FILM ..
Performance. Norton Conference Theatre,
call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.

Some Metric Properties of Continui!, Andrew Lelek, Wayne State University. Rm . .38,
4246 Ridge Lea; coffee at 3:30, lecture at 4
p.m.

ORCHESTRA CONCERT•
Th e UIB Orchestra, directed by· Pamela
Gearhart, gives its fina l concert of the year.
Ba ird Recital Hall, &amp;-p.m. No admission
cha rge.
UUAB FILM••
The Seduction of Mimi. Norton Conference

Th eat re, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

FRIDAY-9
, •.

i. ...:.!

' ~'·

I

,,

,. _

.1

'"

A Friends meeting for worshiP and discussion will be held. Silent medit011tion will be
followed~ a d iscussion of " Quaker Activities
on the \)18 Campus." Rm. 167, MFACC,
Ellicott (Student Affairs Office), 11 a.m.
IASEIAU•
UIB vs. Eisenhower College (2). Peelle Field,
1 p.m. No admission charge.
IFA RECITAL•
Soprano Elaine Marie Sheehan performs.
Baird Recital Hall , 3 p.m. No admission
charge.
FILM•

Episode thirteen in Sit Kenneth Clark's
" Civilisation" film series is entitled H~ic
Materialism. A Cliscuss io n led by Da vid
Hollinger folloWSthe film. Sy lecture Hall, 8
.
p.m. No 'admissio!J. chiir$.e: ,

5pbnsolell by Voco Colle.. and ·&lt;':olie~e B.
ALCOlt'OuO '
Meeting for anyone with problems with
alcohol. 264 Norton, 8-10 p.m. For information, contact Bill Stober\, 831-2701. ·

ANONfMOriS Mf£riN;G;r r·

NURSING CONTINUING EDUCATION
SfMINARI
Advanced Cardiac Care Symposium (3
days). Charter House Motel. For: more information, contact Joan Collins, 831·5548.

UUAB FILM••

THIRTY..£1GHTH ANNUAL
SPRING CliNICAL DAYSf
This two-day program is for Medical School
alumni and other interested professionals.
Today'S topics are newer "'aspects of the
medical curriculum and their clinical application and recent progress in infedious disease.
Statler Hilton Hotel, 9:15 a.m.-4 p.m ., foll owed by a reception and dinner. For more information, call 831-5526.

THEATRE PERFORMANCP
Internal' Combustion by Terry Doran.
American Contemporary Theatre, 1695
Elmwood Ave., •7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admission
charge. Seating is limited to 25 persons per
performance; reservations are suggested (875-

. 5825).

more of Cyprus and to annex other

CACFILM••

Greek islands · as well, he said. "This
could bring about war between ·Greece
and Turkey."
"&gt;

aFA RfCITAL •

Salaries up sirice 72

Pianist' Irene D eutsch performs. _Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admis~ion cha~ge.

. Paper Moon. ·140· Farber (Capen), 8 arid 10
p.m. Admission: $1. ,-

,

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SfMINAitf
.
Children N~fng Rehabilitition is the title
of this three:ct•y conference which ends
tomorrow. Statler Hilton Hotel, 9 a.m ..... :30
p.m . ~ followed by a reception and di.nner. For
further information or registration, call 831·
5526.
Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics,
School t&gt;f Medicine.
BFA RECIT At•
.
~dward Marshall, bass, gives a recital. Baird
Recital Hall, .a p.m. No admission charge.

GALLERY 219 EXHIBIT
55 Mercer is an exhibit of works by New
York City artists working at the 55 Mercer
Cooperative Gallery. Gallery 219, Norton,
through June 4. Hours:' Momby·Friday, 11
a.m ........ p.m.; Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, 7-10 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
LOCKWOOD fXHIIIT
-Polish Collection, exhibition culk!d from
the University's collection of .more than 4))00

volumes , of material. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday"-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. "Continuing.

QUAKER MffTING•

The topic of tonight's clinic is Auscultation
Diastolic Semilunar Valve Murmurs. Farber
(Capen) Hall Basement, Room G-22, 7:)0..9:30
p.m. For information or registration, call the
School of Medicine, 831-5526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.
-

I ,

SUNDAY-=-11
AMHERST t.\Mrus

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
CARDIAC CUNIC,

Archbishop Makarios" who is willing to
concede inter-nal self-government to the
Turks.
junta's:grab for· control of Cyprus' as·an
excuse to take· part of the island for
"themselves, Koutrouvelis suggested. In
his opinion, they are not on Cyprus in
order to assure. a "democratic solution"

Todoy's topic (todoy Is the final day) is
speaker Helen M. Ranney; M.D., professor
and chairman, Department of Medicine,
University of California, San Diego, will .dis-

Performance. Norton Conference Theatre,
call 831-5117 for times. AdmiSsion chuge.

MONDAY-12

MANUSCRII'T AND FIRST EDmON EXHIBIT
The most cqmplete collection of Robert
Graves manuscripts in the world is currently
on d isplay in the Lockwood Memorial Library.
Manuscripts and first edilions from th~ Graves

~~h ~~~~oenm~~a~~ ~~o~:r~x~i~~~~~:
eightieth birthday. Balcort¥. second floor,
lockwood Memorial Library.

VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Ariadne auf Naxos is the Iitle of this group
of prints and photographs presented in conjunction with the University Opera Studio.
Hayes Hall Lobby, building hours, through
May 30.

NOTICES

cgu:su.
The Division of Continuing Education is

c:mrr~~

-offering a variety of Credit-Free Courses for
the Summer Sessions in the areas of art,
botany, dance, camping, business/management, computers, counseling, music, personal
developmenl, professional development, psychology, recreation/sports, skill development
and social sdences. For an information011l
brochure or fee information, visit Hayes -A,
Room 3 or cal: 831 ....301.

SUMMER SfSSION REGISTRATION HOURS

RECITAL•
-Nan Harris Cobb gives a Frerich horn performance. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p:m. No admission charge.

WEDNESDA Y-14
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SfMINARf
Children N_~ing Rehabilitation is the title
of this three-day conference which besins t2day. Sta.tler Hilton Hotel, 8:15 a.m.-5 p.m. For
further information or registration, call 8315526.
•
Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics,
School_ of Medidne.

The Office of Admissions and ReCords is
.now conducting Summer Se~si on 1975
Registration. Students currently registered at
the University for the Spring 1975 semester
need onty complete a Course Request Fprm.

~:r~.st~~~cnhts;,rs:,:~~~ieaa~~~~i'ss?:~~
and Records. Resistration hours at the Office
of Admissions and Records are 8:30 Oll.m.-7
p.m., May 8, 12-15, 19-22 and 27-29. All other
days in May, the office will be open from 8:30
a.m ..... :30 p.m.
rumON WAIVERS
Tuition waiver applications for foreign
students for rhe fall 1975 semester are
available in 210 Townsend. The deadline for
handing i':l application~ for fa11.1.97S is May 15.

UUAa FILM••
The mean salaries "of ·instructional
FALL REGISTRATION
PHYSIOLOGY VAIQ ClUB ~INAJII
· The Sedudion of Mimi. NortOn Conference
"faculty employed for the academic year
The pre·r.egistration p~riod for hll
•' AcouStic Monitoring of UrdiacContraetiliTheatre, call 831-5117 for times.· Admission
rose approximately 10.5 per cent from
Semester 1975, the only time S!udents ""y ad·
charge.
·
ty, Paul M. Griffin, General Electric Research
1972 to 1974, according. to preliminary
vance resister for fall, continues throush May
and Development C~nter . 108 Sherman, 4:30
data collecied from colleges and univer16. Seniors may pick up registration materials
p.m.
in"114 Diefendorf through the 16th; other un·
sities in the 50 states and the District of
SATURDAY-"-10
,IIFA RECITAL•
dergraduates who missed their
lnltql
Columbia by the National Center for
Violinist Ural McNeely performs. &amp;ird
registration material pick-up period m1y abo
Education Statistics.
lHIItTY:actmt ANNUAL
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
do
so
throush
the
161h.
EOP
students
will
The preliminary report, sent to college
SI'IUNG CliNICAL DAYSI
resister in 202 Diefendorf. Graduate-studentS
and university presidents by NCES, also
This two-day J»rosr~m is f~ Medical School
so
directly
to
Admissions
and
Records
may
shows: .
,.
1lumni and other interested . professionals.
throush the 16th. MFC students will advance
• Salaries at public institutions rose 1
-THURSDAY-15
i-esister Juty 7-25 in Admissions and Recorck.
fastei than at private instiMions during
~dmissioris and Reco&lt;ds will be. open tluoush
the two-year period (12.1 per cent at
May 16 for fall rqlstration durins the followCONTINUING .MfDICAt EDUCATION
P'!bllc..,..! 6j per cent at private).
ins hour&gt;: Monday throush Thur&gt;day, 8:30
The New York State Employment
SEMINAitf
.
a.m. to 7 p.m.; friday, 8:l0 a.m.--4:10 p.m!
• There appearo to be a trend toward
Th&lt;fe O.ys In May: Recent Trends in
vice indicates it has at least 32 jol&gt; listings.
Students who advance. rqister will receiW!
the employment of more women in
for college graduates or individuals with
Diagnosis and Therapeutics Is the thle of this
schedule cards by mail in early ~usust and will
faculty positions in the- past two years as
some college.
·
Program. The remalnins prost•ms are
hive the opportunity· to make necessary
evidenced by the lncre..es In the
listings include positions for
scheduled at Deoconeu Hospital on_May. 15
penenlapl of women in all ranks. . '
ensineers, nurses, · dental hygienists,
a~d 31, and resistration may be made for
~.::.~e.:.-r..!t~~:"!f~~e~:
• The salaries of women relative" to
technical writer, jUnior accountant, store
• etthe~ 0.: both. For more information, contact_
make no schedule arransements for fall Until
men have not sisnlficantly. improved In . m.anaser; real estate _a-sent, urbin
Cont•nu•n~ Medlal Eduation, 131-~26.
September 2.
two years. Women's salaries were 82.9 - .planner, planning aide, accounting de!k, · • _ _ _....,.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
per cent of men's salaries in 1972; they.
and pharmaceuflcal sales.·
. •
To record lnl.......,.. for doe Otlend.r, contact DIMe Qulnn,.ext.
Man-113.2 per cent In 197.4. .
Individuals Interested In any of these
U,.al_for ........... lndoelolowlotil..........,llooue.
·• Olioidvan~ap~ of women also were
openings should see Mr. RicHard
. Ke)-:IC)peaoalylolll.e ...,.poof h IIIMeNotlndoeaulojeet;•opeato
reflected In tenure. NCES said 26j per
Morrison at the New Yor!&lt; State Efnploy- ·
doe~
l o - - - . of doe Unhatlly. Ualela
tickets
· cent of ihe women bad tenure, com- _ ment Service, 7lO Flllm6re Ave., between
~- daooP'I ~an
doe Norton Hal Ticket~
par:ecl to ST.O of the men.
· 8_;30 a.m. and.S P·t!'·• Mondays-Fridays.

Jobs· for grads

Ser-

••open

be.,_.._.. ..

2221,..,
odoenolse--,

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'

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[

!

I

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i

'·

I

·::

•
~-

I

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I

-~ STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL. 6, t«&lt;. 29

i!re$ident
comments ons. s..m;.·
disturbance
·
; EofrOR'S'
de.........r...... ..._
NGir:· ,~ iliil'foliowillB comr.ien~ri. ~~i- :

Fmhy's

~mpus

drsturl»nce:

.

=·=--... " :-' . . . . ---allan

.

President ·Kf!lter: I do noNmow of any stud~nt who h.ls
claimed an injury which resulted from the removal. I do know
that seven officers were injured. I think those facts speak for
themselves. My own conclusion is that C..mpus Security used
the minimum physical effort needed to do the job; they were
professionil.
_

. 1• .Why . . yoU 4edde .... Frldoy (Aprll25) to hue Compus .....,. .· de-Sibaton. from' the -~Hall

the

..e.w.,.

~ n..; demonstrators on April 24 did not
block Ingress or egress to the offices in the Presidential wing
of Hoyes. They seemed to ..ke care not to cau;e this type of
disrUption. The sltuatian on April25 was completely differ!'nt:
A number ol penons-faculty; students, staff, and clerical
penonnel-.re denied entrance to the wing by the ·
demonstrators. Nor could the door bt opened from the insidt!. Whel) it became obvious that the·group inten~ to use
this tactic, then I rNde the decision tllat the demonstrators
would have to move.' They were given this opportunity alter
being warned of the ·consequences of their actions; they
chose no1 to accept it.
. 2. Coulda't' you ..... t.ol&lt;ed with themf

SuspenSions of seven students arrested
in last Fri~y's campus disturbance were
lilted by President Robert L Ketter on
Su~y night, pending harings of their
cases- by the UIB H~ring Committee for
the Maintenance of Publk Order. •
The action came · alter exh of · 10
students arrested was given an individual
h_earing by the President. At these
hearings, the students were asked to
show cause why they should not be
suspended.

6. Were dogs uoedl
~ li:ettei-: No dogs were used in moving the
demonstrators. -Two Campus Security dogs were stationed
ou~ide the building.
'

•

J

7. ~ City ol Buffalo Pollee putldpatel
~j Kener: sever.il Patrol ear units from Precinct 16
were held in reserve but were not needed and were not used
in dearing the building. Precinct 16 did dispatch menlo the
Campus Security ·offices at 196 Winspear Avenue, whgh is
where some-of the demonstrators went after Hayes Hall was
clea_red. The Win5pear area, of course, is primarily one of
private residences. It is my understanding that Three arrests

,.,..;.. Ketteri Dr. Siuel~ow . informeil me by
tele~!""' fie was ·unable to. emenhe "wing-that a
groyp;gf .f!ye o• si( st"denti Wliited .to dka,iss tl:&gt;e:decision •
mac!e::bY. Di.; ~~ia~et!l 10: ~ the·S~ .aU&lt;?COti&lt;;&gt;n_ for-bqsse's ·
for the Albany rally: ·I indica'teil th.lt I would· be happj to
meet with a. small group alter the demonstrators had left the
building. This was not occeptable to those who we'r e talking
with Dr. Siuelkow. The demonstrators made no other request for a meeting. Of course, I did meet twice that alter·
noon with a number of students who subsequently requested
a mef!ling about the ollocation. My decision following those
. meetings was to uphOld the deci~ previously. made by Dr.
Lorenzetti. No persuasive ~rgumentS were made to justify a
reversal.
·
· l. Do you feel 11m the .__.ton bloddng the en·
trance p.en .odetpaate notice to dlspeneJ Were they
....,. Mlf&amp;re of the COIIIeqlletacel -ol nol mo,.l~t~1
, .':..-.,.Ketter: Numerous atte,..P~!!fem'ade by Student Affahs·p:I'SOil"l'i lor. more than an h'!Ur to persu_ade the
· ~~~ JO •.~a¥R-or : QI~Utr'!'it i!'Br~s or
..-...~ ~- ~ - '!!! I. ·T he _statement

"Three other students were suspended
by President Ketter, effective at noon on
Monday.

·
The three, whose names were not disclosed by the admlnistratio&lt;), are ~nned
from campus, until their cases.. come
before the same Hearins Committee.
This group, ch.lited by Professor Howard
Strauss of the Faculty of Engineering ~d
Applied Sciences, is a campus body
made up of students, lacul!f and staff.
Hearings for all 10 students involved
are expected to be ·held within the nexl

were made at this location.
8.. Were weapons found among the ..,_atonf •
Presklent ·ketter: An abandoned canvas bag was found
immediately outside the entrance to the Presidential wing.
This contained a-numbef of chains, one of which was studded
with stove· bolts. The bag also contained spray paint, locks,
and dog food.
·

two weeks.

9. Who h!ol&lt;e the sbu in the door to the winsl Were a
number of persons cut -at this timet
President Ketter: I was approximately six to eight feet _
away from the door when the glass was broken. Tt,e glass exploded inward.- Since the demonstrators earlier had taped
newspa~r over the glass, it was impossible to see What
transpired· on the other side of the glass at 'that 'precise moment. I do know that the hands of the security officers were
on th~ frame aiC?und the glas~ and _!lOt on die glass when it
\!'~s· broken. Some persons were (:lit a~~ .it)!lia!Jrnpact as

~~~.,a-~~ds...lf
~!l#'.
l,•~u.BJl:
~'wafCetf.iiiiW-au 1iile; an
was
oear'a5
to exact1y
Whot woold follow alter thi 10r-ma1 warning had elapsed. The

. l'oelldent K'"""': We were in telephone contact with the
Sta!e "!niversily Counsel's Office prior to and immediately
Nd been cleaned. In fact, the Counsel's Office
MIYised us regarding the procedures to be followed. I also
tallted . with the Executive Vice Chancellor immediately
afterward, since the Chancellor was not available. Additionally, l-talked with the University's local counsel prior to the
decision. The deciSion and circumstance&lt; sut'rounding it also
~ I:,&lt;¥!VIiyecj \&gt;Y ~rie.to' th!'' _h~ads of_ the_ FacuJty. . ·
lil!iiale, ~-~lf- $i!N.te; ani:l Ctvol ~ Empl~ees · ·
~-~l~:aiftn; thatb.t. Siiaiellt!&gt;wwi! in almost
a.nsiarlt bllnmilniatlbd with Michele smith bl the Student
l\aoclatiori; I did nbt place a sep.,rate call to her..

protesting the University administration's veto of the use of student
fee money to finance bus transportation
to Albany for a demonstration in support
of amnesty lor all defendants in the 1971
Attica prison uprising.
The Student Assembly, ' the •un·

=

.dent Affairs, however, disapproved the
appropriation on grounds that the activity was nor edu.caJiQn~l as required by
=~ty of New York guidelines.

wu

,_,p

·

· proved the . expenditure qn Mo~ay,
April 21 . The UniveiSI!jl Division of Sti.o·

10. The ~ministration loB been critidzed for what some
students view • in$:0J&gt;Iisl~. 1~'1 it '""' that an_earlier
apP.-owed 10. bUsses
alloc:ation by the 'Student AHodatiooi
for.,. April2 ~ation1n lulfalof
President Ketiir: The earlier decision was a wrong deci-

4. W• c-ol Ailnolnlstratlon In Albany aware of whiat
• • .....,.., Did tiler"- the demonstraton were to be

..

The show cause hearings before the
President, held in Hayes Hall from 7 p.m .
to midnight Sunday, resulted from the
student blockade of the President's Office last Friday. Students had been

·-d'er.s~~,,;,-l'iiii/f!-fjad c.;p.

we)l as a!t!!rwords w!len reoching throusli the bniken.pone.
OtHefs were in1ured ,outside the wing. .

time specified was five minutes. Prob~bly six to seven minutes
elapsed before C..mpus.5ecurity personnel beg~n to dear the
building.

•

:Suspensions.
-lifted -o n
7 students

. . •.
oldie
cWmed 11m C..mpus
Security uoec1 ~ fe&gt;Kel Do you feel !hat's the aoel

.

&lt;k:nt Raben L · ~f!lter ~nswers questions concerniniJ last

MAY1,1975-

sion. It's that simple. Also, I think it was based 011 misleading
information: At least what adually transpired on April 2, as

A demonstration on Thursday hai:l
ended peacefully alter a march to Hayes
Hall. But when approxi~tely 80 student

opposed to what we had been led to believe would occur,

demonstr•tors returned to Hayes on Fri-

caused us to feel that we had been misinformed.

day morning. they prevented access to
the President's Office l;y blocking the
doodeading
to the Hayes ~mlnisiratiVe
11. Was the concern of the demonotraton prf~Nniy ooet
wihg.
~'7!:.:::~ation ,or lor-seneratins supPort for the At· • .
Alter more than an -hour's pladir)g on
the part of Vice President for Student AI·
P'residen! Ketter: .There's a cynical attempt by
per·
lairs Richard S.isgelkow that
sons. tQ· ~rribi~e th~ two; to capitalize upon an opportunity
demonstrators refrain from blocking the
for prop.;lgan~a pur'~; to manipulate. · Of course, the
doorway, the students were issued 1 war·
questions surrOunding authority over expenditures of
ning to move or IKe disciplinory action
mandatory student fees appear to me to be quite basic. These
and ~rrest. As reqwined by established
!jU_estions may hove to be decided in t.he courts. Or it may be
State University procedures, the IVOUP
· that the Board of Trustees will dispense with su&lt;h fees. Either
was given five minutes to deofthe ara.
of these courses is acceptable to me.
Alter the worning period had elapsed,
However, you: s_houlil understand that the events on Fri·
Campus Security officers begin to
~y involved much larger considerations. What was at issue
iernove d)e demonstrMon. In the sadfle
. w'!S wf1e!her or nOi this linlversiiy is io be a free and open in·
Whk:f1 resulted, seven offbrs recelwed
stituti9n-not just when it su!tS the convfllien~ of a. p41r·
minor Injuries and seven students ticular group an'd nol just 99 percent bl the time, but all of ihe ·
arrested. · Three othen _,. ...-!
time. fteedom for ..err J10nOh will not be denied in this - · ·later as the detroOiiltl......, n-.1 to
under the ·g uise of exer·
U!liversity. bY some -~
Campil• Security ...,dquiners on
~ns a right of their own or in-the naine of ~n ~or. a
Wlnspar AVenUe.
•
political cause oi a penonil morality, would"attempt to
AINIIeltl
abridge the riKhts of othen or to impose -their
and
The len 11udent1 arrelled were
deolres throucfi physical 'diVuption. There is no ~ in this arrligned In luffolo City Coutt. where
.-unity for th.lt type Of beNYfor. Unfortunately, a very
they 51111 face charges ......... from
iN siudent5 last week chooe to ensage in this denial of
criminal trespass to felonious -..11.
freedom to otheis..
•
.
Ac:cordlng to U"'-ssty , _ . , the
· In sUch ~ the Onlverslty hu·-11 known hearing ·
ten_are:
·
pri!Cedures which -.re due proc:eH lor ony cNrged inCharles Edward Reitz. 29, 48 Tuxedo
diYiduai.The_stuilefttldwpdfollowlnt-theremcmlolthose
Place, luffalo - arrested for 'Criminal
· ~ ~'1he.entrance 10 these offlcaolthe Unlver·
mischief, res~~t~ng anest. - " -

~Iter tl\e foyer

some

wtoo;

n-e

v-.

~ .._..~~een

ana._ belnsdatlt with lhnKIIh these 1n1ema1 ·

~:;·~.Well is ~ ..... processes est.a.lished ~ .the

.

.

n..~·haft been estMIIiohed to.ensure 11m
; the .......4c:llliens-tDbe ~,_ lntlmldallon, .

' ~~-.tbjlhalewhO!aMt~...,..ort
. for .... ...._
~-............................ be
_
__fKltiJIIII=~-Iudl-

1!-ouih.--.....

. . ...
~=

1hit ~- April ~

.

........ "

lis.:::::...~
.

~1v:-k~~~
ol .,. _ _ _ .~

bespass, obstrualon

adn)lnlstratlon, crimlnll

ape.

c:oa.., ·,.

-

Gleba;

-n.

mllchlef, ...

·.

252

c,__t

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

'?.7A. ~.~Lillie
Nec.t, N.Y.·...-dfor
qwp...
• DIIWitl ). l..enneU, Z\ 40

~

,..., .. _Z.eaf./1

�:! •_..

Campus melee
gets attention
of/SUNY Senate

~·y 1, 1975
. .IBid ,
Suspensions lifted on 7 students----'"---:--~~~~~:-+:-~
(from ,.,. I, col. 4)

Buffalo- arrested for criminal trespass.
Elliott Daniel Sharp, 24, 162 Minnesota
Avenue, Buffalo - arn!Sled for assault,
resisting arrest, criminal trespass.
Keith Parsky, 20, 145 Georgian Court,
Rodlester, Ne)!V Yorl&lt; - arrested for
criminal trespass.
· James E. Hughes, 20~ Chittenango
Road, Manlius, New York- arrested lor
criminal trespass.
Alex Van Oss,-3421 B3rd St., Jackson
Heights, New York - arrested lor
criminal trespass.
lsmael Gonzales, 31 Shields Ave., Buffa lo - arrested for ·assault, criminal
treipass, resisting arrest, criminal mischief.
'.·
. All ten entered innocent pleas before
City Court )udge Samuel Green who ad -

Word of the disruption on the UIB
campus Friday was arried in dramatic
fashion to SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer
and · members of the SUNY Senate,
meeting late last week at
SUNY/Binghamton.
AccordinJI to UIB representatives to
the SUNY · Senate _who were at that
meeting, a group of · perhaps 200
Binghamton students peacefully d isrupted a Senate banquet held Friday
night (April 25) in the Student Union at
wllich the Chancellor wasxheduled to
speak.
The students, carrying signs with
slogans including "Nq Attica Reprisals.
~~~needr~fe~:::'d u~t~ ~~~i~6. ~:e~
for Buffalo Students," charged that
" unwarranted force" had been used
recognizance or on bail, City Police inagainst U/B demonstrators and demand- .. dicated.
. ed that Boyer go immediately to Buffalo
Injured Security Offkers
to see firsthand what had occurred. ·
The injured security officers who·were
As a -result of the intrusion, which OC·
treated and released at a local hospital
curred just as Baked Alaska was to tie
included:
served to the dining Senators, Boyer an"charles Scripp, cut on nose and above
nounced that he would dispense with his
eye.
scheduled speechmaking. Nothing, he
Roy Guarino, stitches lor a cut over
said, was more important than dialogue
eyes.
with the agitated students. He refused,
hbwever, to go at once to Buffalo or to
dll the campus, saying he would not act
oh hearsay but would look into the
maner and would defer a position until
he had the facts.
· . Tbe . Chan~ellor, .accord_ing to Senator
ShOnnie Finnegan, Was ~~quite disarmCharles Fall, professor of soc ial,
philosophical and historical foundations,
ing" in his handling of the matter. The
Faculty of Educa tional Studies, has been
demonstration itself was a rather
elected president of the Buffalo Ce nter
peaceful affair, which observers took to
referr i ng to as a "spontaneous
Chapter of United University Professions
the collective barsaining age nt
(UUP),
gathering" rather than a " disruption,"
for faculty and non-teaching
she said .. The protest, Senator Thomas
projessionals.
Connolly corroborated, was conducted
" in a much nicer fashion than many of
Dr. Fall, who HJ serve ~ two-ye_a r
term, succeeds Constantin·e A. Yeracaris,
the rallies here."
professo r of sociology. As preside nt, ·he
When dialogue berween students and
will a lso be rh e Chapter's first academic
the Chancellor reac_hed an impas~e. the
delegate to the UU P State Assembly.
parties agreed to a meeting later that
The Ce,er Chapte r UUP conducted
night between m!'mbers of the SUNY
its recent elections under a new constitu·
senate ~xecutive Col1)mittee (led · by
tlon . which provides for an expa.nded
sl!Nv· :sena\e· ·Pre"Siderlt • Narii:y' Auster)
board. In the implementation of th is
and the leaders of the Binghamton Studocument, some of the new officers will
Qent Association.
.
serve for two-year periods and others for
. .')t th~t .111eeting, ~eld at 11 p.m., the
only one year. In th e future, however, all
Senators from U/8 expressed opposition
terms of office in the Chapter will be for
to any Statewide investigation of the U/B
·
two years.
matter, arguing that such a probe im· Named to two-yea r positions in th e
pugned the integrity and ability of the
cu rrenl elections, in addilion to Dr. Fall,
· Buffalo ampus. The SUNY Senate and
are: Josephine Wise, assist~nt to the
pr~est leaders then drafted. a mut)JaAy
chairman, Computer Science; NTP vice
acp!ptt~bJe Tesolution .for prf!S!!nta!ion at
pre•ident (and first NTP delegate to the
tPie: Senate. "SeS$i0 oi ihe following ":'Or·' . .
. . _. .
nlng. -·Slate Asse mbty); Anastas_i a Johr-son,
assistan.t 10 the chairman, Sociology,
Ori Saturday; the ·suNY Senate unantreasurer; Ronald Goodenow, assistant
imously accepted the following resprofessor, soc~al , philosophical and
olution:
·historical ·foundations, ac~demic
"WHEREAS the University faculty
membersh i p development leoSenate condemns the use of unchairperson; Clarence Dye, associate
warranted "force by any member of the
director , .Student Affairs , NTP
University Communiiy, and
member-ship_ development co"WHEREAS the University faculty
chairperson; James lawler, assistant.
Senate has become aware of reports that
a serious disturbance occurred on the
SUNY Center at B\'ffalo campus on April
24-,25,1975,
"THEREFORE, be it resolved that the
Unlverllty f&lt;~C~Jity Senate calls upon the .
SUNY Center at Buffalo's faculty Senate,
The legislature will apparently be the
Student Assodatlon and Professional
final arbiter in the contract impasse
Staff Senate to mnduct a joint investigabetween the Civil Service Employees
tion Into the reponed disturbance.
Association and the State, according to
"1. To dttermlne: I) whether unreports AJvallable at Repd&lt;rer deadline
wuranted force used by any of the
Wednesday. _
plltles Involved; b) ~ reasonable
ThOse reports Indicated that ~nor
effons ~ made to avoid conflict; cl
Hugh Carey has "flatly rejected" because
whecher there - Inappropriate use of
of "austere times" the recommendation
K8demlc: ~ ell whether basic
of a fact-finding panel that CSEA workers
Cllftlllludaill rlllhts ol ..., concemed
be granted ~ six per cent pay raise.
.
piltle5-- violated; e) wliether 1here
The Cioverncir InsteAd proposed a 3.5.
. . ..., . . ol cWepted poweR-'
per cent hike, Waf!llng thauny larger In-

Ch~~· Menklena, head bruises caus'
ed by. flying objects.
James Eisenmann, head bruises caused
by flying objects.
Garry ·Kalisz, who said he was stabbed
by a student who picked up a jagged
piece of glass as a weapun.
.
Gerald Denny, puncture wound on
the arm.
According to the Buff~lo Evening
News, Mr. Denny said Millard Fillmore
Hospital physicians where all were
treated told him the puncture wound
was caused by either a screwdriver or .an
ice pick.
He said he was stabbed while placing
one arrested person in a vehicle.
Th
h · ·
d If
e ~eve(~ ) '~lure 0 d.•cer wa~
~e nnet P. at hennon, ~rector o
\w~t~~~=s~curity, w ose arms were cut

Glass Broken
•About 300 students also marched
Accord ing to Campus Security reports,
around Hayes later on Friday. This noonthe melee began when security officers
time demonstration, however, was
attempted to provide entry and exit to
peacefu l.
·
the President's Office. While officers inside the office tried to push the door
Meetlnss with Students
open, these reports tndicate, the plate
After two meetings. Friday. afternoon
glass w1ndow in the doorway-,w~s
wit~- -~": ,5t!J.'l!~~ - '~!9ers; .il.n~ · four
shattered. Glass flew back into the office,·:·; re~~~n~auv~s : ~- ~~~~.:~!lint,: ~rt
injuring officers in that.area~ As i"rtdicitted · . · ~~OUP!:b~~~ ~ ~~-;;f,k -~ !~ thfe

·

Fall succeeds Yeracaris as
president of Center UUP chapter
professor, philosophy, academic communicalion co-chairperson; William
Greene, director of urban extension,
Contin uing Education, NTP communication 'Co-chairperson ; Mary Mann ,
associate professor, speech communication, second academic delegate;
Ethel Schmidt, Continuins Education,
third NTP del~gate.
_
Elected (O f one-.:yt'!at -J erms are :
Howard Deuel!, assistant vice president,·
Student Affairs, secretary; BrUno Arcudi,
associa te -professor, Spanish;1i~ian and
Porrugues~, --~ademic grieYance cochairper5o~~t; : Rita· l:;~itz; -administrative
assistant to the chairman, Eriglish, NTP
grieVance co-cha irperson; Herbert
Reismann, professor, engineering
scie nce, academic negotiations cochairperson; Be.rtha Cutcher, associate
director, Placement, NTP negotiations
co-ch'airperson; M. Mark Schwartz, leclurer,. Educational Opportunity Center,
third academic delegate; Phyllis Sigel,
assistant to the dean, Continliing Education, second NTP delegate; and Howard
Strauss, professor, mechanical engineering, fourth academic delegate.
UUP is in process of conducting a runoff election for a one-year term as
academic vice president of the Chapter.
Contenders are Marvin Bernstein.~
professor of history; and Oli ~eT. Gii;ls9n,
professor, educational a~ministration .
The newly-elected delegates· to · t~e
UUP State Assembly will attend their first
meeting in Syracuse, May 9-10.
·

Carey rejects CSEA salary hike
recommended by fact-finding panel

=fB,!~vJ:lons~
octunedJ f"'ring the .

herem_

crease would mean "layOffs."

=-·

·~~~+r
recdft--. _. ~ -~ · 1:c:'
ol~ ~sent
Ill

the._ tJI"

IIII'II:UIIr Senate,

.

CSEA responded that the Gowmor's
position was "deplorable," but, at
deadbne, had made no call for a Strike or

ma~

1

by the
Taylor LM, die~,_ _JOesiO the
~ whldi I'IIUit l!ppOlnla blpar-.
tlsan Clllilmlnee 10 ........ die-- of

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

dlsa1reement end lnalte funher

dolllililiit1
a)ollltlnu
br"-_
IIQIIII' f*llWg
.... tlptldn
...,___

flndinl rapi,rt; Ill whldl.the..Jca lut!tl·

At.~deldllne,nocleflnlliftac­

,~..

'

Dlh*. 1-IIIIIMidldoo• In die fac:l.

above, officers also reported attacks by
students.
·
.
.
A group of students Jat\'r Issued a
statement .denying breaking !he glass,
carrying )Yeapons, Qr attacking officers.
Scuffles and arrests~!~ the glass:
breaking-incident. And"S4me of the student· prote5tors attempt~ :to interfere
with arrests, surrounding and· rocking a
car in which arrested individuals had
been placed.
The demonstrators • then mov.ed .
through the campusto the Security Office at 196 Winspear. Campus Security
arrested two students at this point and
Buffalo City Police, one. City Police had
been stationed on Winspear on a standby basis. They were not Involved in clearing the demonstrators from Hayes Hall, a
University spokesman said. Two dogs in
~~~~~! ~~~~-s K-9 Corps were out-

not officially responded ai press time,
w~re that CSEA be· gra~!J:d : an agency
shOp; ImProved hea·lth inSo"ra nce
benefits; · continuatiof\ ~ of . minimum
salaries; and resumption of seniOrity·
based salary. inp-!!fYM!11ts J~ly 1.
,,
Before the Governl'i- anflounced_ his
stand, CSEA n~otiators sil\d th\!Y p\a!Jn·,
ed a pol) of ~I! mem~~!J&gt;on. tl)e factfi~' ·~~liOns. . . . . .

-__

:-fi=

t~~ ~~~iSi~!ncit t~· r~le!!~-- ~:u:

dent funds lor the trip to Albany.
Friday night, an estimated 300 students
attended a rally in Norton at which point
a collection was taken up to pay for
buses to Albany. later, the Student
Association at State University at
Binghamton was reporteCI to have sent
"about S1,000" to the U/ B students to
help pay lor the trip.
Over the weekend, the U/B Student
Association issued several statements
about the use of lee monies and 1he
events of Friday.
•
Michele Smjth, president of SA, said
on f .riday that the·-administration's.det:i'.J
sion .to overr.ule ·SA·o ·n the bus money
Was- f'\ ··\lrOiatmn i:.t&gt;fl :our.l bltslcJicok.,
stitutiorial righn:H..,-:,.
• q"'" ... ,.... .,v~
, .5l1e- saidr6A-iwa•lli&gt;(lSideolog,...liW1lbit
over·contr-ol-ol student Q&lt;tirilyfees-." Ske
noted that the administration had earlier
approved paying lor buses to a downtown Buffalo Attia rally - something
which a Univers ~ ty spokesman said campus officials now resret " after watchins
what transpired there."
At a Saturday morning press conference, SA. demanded dropping of all
academic disciplinary proceedinss
against the ten charged students, calling
· . further lor a State University investigation of U/B officials' handling of the
situation.
Ioyer Confronted
Students at Binghamton confronted
SUNY Chancellor-Ernest Boyer.at a SUNY,
Senate meeting •lilere Fri~ .njghl (5!!'!se_par;ate · storf!,.following · ~da· &amp;Oyer
indicated that · he woUld have-.•merobl!r
of hi• Slaff determine the facts of the' in-·
cident. _
Then, on Sunday, an Assodated Press
, story said that Boyer had ·c oncluded that
Ketter was acting "under the authority
that was dearly his," when · he ordered
Campus Security fo clear students from
Hayes on Friday. "·
SUNY' has "to depend heavily on the
responsibiUtyof each president as he administers the bylaws," &amp;»yer reportedly
said.
· · ·
0n Monday, President" Ketter,- w~o
was In Albany for meetings-concerning .
the supplemointil budge(, dilcu!lsed the ·
incidenl w!Jh•BOyer·and ..lith-Dr: Olfton
C. Thorne, SUNY vice · chancellor for
university• •"fai.f5, :whP, ~ ~ deS'
lgnated - by ' Ioyer · to· 1ep11n or( what
happened. . _._
··- ·. - . .
As· illdicated--ln preso .reports •T..esday
and.Wedtlelday, Thorne is to loe~ campus .IOday to ta&amp; te.SI\-I'resldent ·Sinitti
and..other .stu~.·ltepens aid Thome
wiU also-reyiew Cam~ &amp;eGurlty
COtw&gt;ernlng ,lfle, lnclcletiL , f1uome •W.o

., . . \

Job market ·do~ ::. _
Reversing an earlier forecast, the
College Placement Council rep0i1ed last
week that- the squeeze : 1n ·hili!IIJ new
coiJese grlllaates ~ttY- · hai now
hit engineering as .well- as other ..-eas'.
The Collndl said · that cu~rently;

midway throush the season, the vOlume
ol dfen to engineering candidates is
-do!¥n at both the bachelor's and master'i

.....

.

. t,he Council Nil reported In Jailuary- ...... ~ JD lhe audook In nWnr.

otber fields. ..._.... emploJineni
~~~

--

-··

.-rci.-

~

as·Siylns he..hopeo to · have· a
fi!IICWI· for •Bo)ler within :tO dayi- .r,wq
we,U, aJthoush he hasniltbeen'lfven a .

deadline. .

~

- .. . - .

.; • . . • . . . • .-.;

..!:':;'tt.e~;~:-

dal
Coinnientaiy," . ~
1ri th~
lsllle. .
. ' . . .. . . . . " .

�City is
classroom
for new course

...........

,._- ...... .,_.~ .... ~ow-a ...... "Open

A night at the opera

The_,._.,,
Sir_.,

.. - - ....... .....,. - . . . ,dftctod
, crllk
n.o.. ........ ruled Inthe~
by Muriel Hebert Wolf,.-.-- ~ from
"Ariodne out N.uos"
which It _. present •tlhe Show Fostinl """' fd •nd pmonned
from
opons, ~om.,.nlod by tho U/I "O..mbor Ordtostr•, diroc:tod by c.rfo
Pinto.

••cerpts

Dr. Howard Tieckelmann, U/B
professor of chemistry, has been named
a Distinguished Tea~hing Profess6r by
the. State_.University Board of Tl'ustees.
Twelve . U/B faculty h;ove also been
seleGtecl.~o &lt;rec:eive . Chan&lt;:ellot's t..wao:d&lt;
for f.xcellence in Teaching: :. ' ~ · • ·

organized and stimulating classroom instructor, while also continuing an extensive research program.
·
The Excellence in Teaching Awards

prov.ide a one-time grant of SSOO to each
desigriee.

,;, Dr.vTieck~lmarin) •59t a·.~ihbi!roflthe

faeolty for :29 ·ye.ars; is one of seve·n State
University faculty members to be
recognized as Distinguished Teaching
Professors this year. The 12 local Excellence in Teaching Award winners
were among 101 cited from 31 of the
72 SUNY campuses.
Supetb
Pm.,.....nce
In recommending the distinguished
awardees, Chancellor ~rnest L Boyer
told the Board that "faculty nominated
for this distinction ... have evidenced
superb classroom performance as well as
willing service as an academic advisor.
The nominees are active scholar's abreast
of developments in their fields and standards of student .Jil'rformance· are both
high in''ijuallty.aad quantity:'! · . .. - · ·
, '!he: Oisting~ed.:Feaching .Prdfesso•
deslgnatlon.constitutes a pr'ornatiOn -.nd.
arries·with it a salary increase of· up: to
$2,500.
·· .•
Distinguished Teaching · P.rofessors
must be full-time professors or associate
professors with at least three years'
tenure and must regularly teach some
undergraduate students.
.
A native of Chicago, Dr. Tieckelmann
received his B.A. from Canhage College
and his Ph.D. from U/.B. He joined the
fK\!Ity here in 1946 and was named •full
professor in 1961.
.
During " his · rears at U/.B, Dr.
Ti eckelmann.has .served:as both as~istanl
chairman anllcchairman of1he Chel"istry•
Dep..J1nie!)t . •He- .has , also . se"'ed •. i&gt;n

·. c~~mpuses were .invited to nominal~
candidates for these awards on the basrs
of one nominee for every block of 2,000
full-time equivalent undergraduate
students.
Excellence Award Winnen
U/ 8 winners of Excellence in Teaching

a--

-n...ect.teJio.w.-. :,

a~cit
-......_

D;, N'athan Back, profenor ·of '
bioc:hemital.-phai'I'IIKOiogy; School· 'of
Pha!1'11Ky; ..,as been elecled a-Fellow t&gt;fthe~ll CQIIege of..Ciinial Phar--·
II'IIClOIOIY: .The . Jtesi!nts ·of ~he C:Cl!~e­
eleaed Pt: Bad.. ·~m. recognitiOn of
. pmlessioaaJ and sclientlfic -att•nments!'"
.The Objecllves ·of the Coflege are 10
pfOinCIIe and · -.!vance the 'sci~. of
cllnlqob ' :pJYum~elegy .. . -and.
m-her'lf'Y In all ill phase&gt;, a~ td~·
tal!lb!L~IP. fiJIIIdaqls . ·~· ;ciiii'QII. ~:

- ~il)~~.!!-~~
and, .~1!115~~~........ .
ROswell Park since 1955:

-:~"'-"

several University committees and is
author of more than 65 scientific

publicatibns.
.

ft~p;,~si~le .f9r ~ iong. time for under-

grad~:~a,te

courses in .organic. chemistry~
Dr. Tieckelmann has ~lso adv1sed a large
number of graduate students through
cOntinued studies in chemistry, several
to the level of Ph . D. University
colleagues report that Dr. Ti!'Ckelm"an!'
has enjoyed a reputation a~ . a highly

Awards are: Dr. Thomas C. Barry, assistant professor of classics; Dr. Orville T.
Beach ley, associate professor of
chemistry; Dr . .Charles C. Bernheimer,
assistant professor of English; Dr. Beverly
P. Bishop , associate professor of
physi9logy; Dr. Winston W. Chang,
associate professor of economics; Dr.
Colin G. Drury, assistant professor of in·
dustrial engineering.
Dr. William S. Hamilton, assistant
professor of Russian; Dr. David G.
Hays, professor of linguistiCs; -Dr. Elaine
M. Hull, associate prof.e ssor of psychology; Dr. John J. Peradono, chairman
of the Department of Classics; Dr. Milton
Plesur, professor of liistory, and Dr.
Sherwood P. Prawel, Jr., associate
· prOfessor of Civil engineering.

Facu1ty.o~ child coun~il panels
· Several UniversitY faculty are participating in the annual conference of
th~ New York State Council for Children
which is being held at the Parkway
R'amalla' lnn; Niagara Falls, May 1-3.
The Council; which ha• ~cit met in this
area in 20 years, ;s 'respon5ible for .. the
combined ,ac;ti~es· o,f ~he New . York
.-\ssociatioil for ChildhOod Education and
the. ~ York Association for the Educalion of YQUng Children.
.•Or. Ruth McQath, (jirector of the UIB
~r!y Child'-d CF"Ier._aild. ~te professor &gt;qf educauon here, IS regtstration chairpenon for .the evenL
··
facuhy aild llaff on the ~m
and their .discuuion topia are:
~~etlofo. · - - - professor ot -psycholosY, "Children aild Their Spatial EnYifCII)IJieflts;:• Ms. Kathleen~. hHd
~. Child vCare Center,. "Quality
Child Carel Myth.or. Rulilyl;" Nonnan

. QtheJ:

l?ctinda

R~berg. ~· ..,_,.ofl.,_ri .

"Advocacy_ for Children in Public
School: Focus on Exceptional Children;"
Dr. Richard Salzer, professor of elementary and remedial -- education,
"Studying the Open Classroom;" . Dr.
No~man Solkoff, professor of psychology, "Infant Slimu)atlon and
Psychological Development;" and
Sebastian Zlrabi, doctoral student,
"Undl!rstanding and Appreciating
Cultural -Differences," and "Cuniculum
Enrichment In Outdoor Education."
"Keynote speakeR for the event W.ill be
or Robert Furman Cleweland Center for
R~lfh in Chnd Development, who
wiD diScuss "Puttins Feeling Into Words
Its Promises and Problems," aild Ms.
Jean ReynoJds. Office of Child Devetoprneni, Washinsfon D.C. "7\clvocacy for
Ch'ld
.. - .
• - ,
" ren.
•
loi' retPstratlon aild·program lnforma-

-

tk.n~ mll:aD.22e. .,._ .. .... . ~ , . ' •..

The City will be the classroom this summer for a course taught by Dr. Barry
lentnek , associate professor of
geography.
The course, entitled "Recreational Use
of Open Spaces in the City of Buffalo,"
will be aimed at finding ways to put vacant properties and open spaces to use
for the community.
" Buffalo seems to be burning down in
pieces, at the rate of 2-3 houses per
night, and there is virtually no new construction," Dr. Lentnek said. ''Through
this course we hope to determine what
the community would like to see done
with these open spaces."
To find answers, students will carry out
a systematic survey of residents in the
areas to be studied. The course will be
conducted on what Dr. Lentnek described as a " learn and do" basis.
" Students will be given instruction
during the morn ing in recreational planning, the formulation and design of
questionnaires, interviewina procedures.
data analysis and report preparation. In
the afternoons they will go out into the
community to put these skills to work,"
he saidr
There is room in the course for as
many -as 30 students, and Dr. lentnek
would welcome adults who would like to
participate.
·
· · ··
··
The survey will focus on the ElmwoOd
community, the area from Allentown to
Delaware Park between Main Street and
Elmwood Avenue. .
Results of the survey will be shared
with the City of Buffalo's Community
Development Depart~ent; and, if the
project proves successful, support will be
sought to expand the survey to the entire
city.
.
"If we could create a large number of
small recreational spaces throughout the
cily, urilized according · to community
wishes, it could have a worthwhile impact. It wouldn't revive the dry by ItSelf,
but it could h)ike life more pleasant,' ~
Dr. lentnek said.
Persons interested in registering for
the course should· contact the Summer
Sessions Office. The course begins May
27 an!l runs through July_11 .

Concern voiced on
child center funding
Continuing uncertainty.aoout lh!! -~r)y .
Childhood Center's fin·ancial ' baS&lt;! has
prompted the Student Associ.ation to en' '
dorse unanimously a- resolution Of support for the Center, which calls upon the
University administration to provide
future funding for the day-care fac;ility.
According to Center Director Dorothy
Farner, negotiations about future fl!nding are currently underway with various
groups, including the administratiOn.
The Student Associ~tion r~lution,
passed last week, nates that the Center is
functioning as mandated "as an
academically justifiable unit" of the
University. Moreover, the document
says, the Center "is essential to student
parents, especially those who are poor,
single women and minority parenb."
The resolution calls upon tile University to retoin the Center anct: •to prOvide
funding . . . that ensures the existence of
low-cost quality child-are as a service to
students and staff of SUNYAB."
The issue of child care was expected 10
be' raised at yesterday'~ meeting ol the
Faculty Senate ~xeculive Committee.
Supponers of the Center haw indicated hope that the Senate. will endone continued administrative .funding
of the Cenler just as the Student Association has.
·

�May 1, 1975

History can and shou_
fd·be fuo, prof ·says· . _

The last time Milton Plesur taught the
tends. "To use a current phr~/· ...;~ys,
that only a junk frellk could _love but
su'rvey course in u.s. history some eight
"this -is ·iitstory from the bottom up: ..
which are also pri~ source material:·
years agq, 325 students we~e enrolled.
Fads, Plesur says, are by definition unThis semester, there are 55.
'ConfldentW,' ToO
im~rtant because they are .~l(lg,
•
The predpitous drop, Plesur feels, is
Cultural history is part of iniellectual
"Howev~r, the scholar of _popular .
"no accident " but rather the reflection
history, Plesur argues. Culture Is the total
culture analyzes fads in terms ,of _wf.at
of the sorry' fact that, in recent years,
body of imaginative work which each
caused them and what_additional .(nsii!'Js ; . Editor; .•• ••
• -. _
"history has often been relegated to the
generation receives as its tradition; popthey provide into the trmes_in whiCh_tliey - :-: we-of ihe (1/8 lnremalloiW'highly apular is what grabs the people. "Putting
occurred, and what. _posSib~e com!!'~" . • predate- 'the . anxiety of the Univers~ty
educational scrap heap." Henry Ford,
who always knew that's where it belongthese two words together, popular
threads run from one f~d to a'!o\her !n
community -_!!xpressed orally and on
ed; would be delighted.
culture includes all those elements of life '
drffer~nt eras, F~r e~arnple, lhe. study of_ · wrili!'g for !he non-reappearance of our
Part ol the problem - which is a
which are not narrowly intellectual or
goldfrs~-swallowong, ·panty rar~s•. and
publication .since the beginning of the
national one - lies within the halls of
creatively elitist and which are generally
streaking' tell ~uch abo.ut certa~n a1~s . . Sprlng; ~_ester: - We hereby wish to
academe itself, Ple~ur submits .
disseminated by the mass media,"
of yo~th be~avror andperhaps e;ven!h~ ·. clarify' )h~ circumstances surrounding \.
11
Professors tend to be conservative as far
anything we live with every day. Certain·
drsqUiet~ng trm~ m wh1ch such tletia~u:~_r, .
our apparent inert_ness.
· .•
as curriculum reform goes and too many
ly, he says, " anything that engages
predomon~ted .
.
.
We had hitherto enjoyed what could
historians stran8ely resist change."
thousandsofpeople'sanentionformany-'
. Sports f1gures and mov1e an~ telev1be regarded as a ~~corilmensal" ·
hours cannot be ignored. Not TV (which
s1on perf~rmers also loom large man unrelationship under the sole patronage of
Members of the guild, rightly or wrongly, are~ pictured as "dull, factual, unby the time a student completes seconderstandmg of the culture o.f any age,
UniversitY. Public1tions - by which we
imaginative,. and elitist, wedded to the
dary education. has commanded 18,000
Plesur reasons. "The veneration of }he
were allowed an insen of four pages in
names-dates-facts approach."
hours of his or her life as compared to
hero has long been part of the Amen~a_n
th~ Reporter once a moa;'th or six issues
Students, Plesur says by . way of
1S,OOO hours spent in classrooms). Not
dream. When the hrstory of the 1970 s rs
per academic ye;tr. Unf&lt;?rtunately ,
"Peanuts. " Not even Confident/of
stud red from the perspectrve of years,
University Publications is not itself 1mevenhandedly parcelling out the blame,
resist a field to which they feel they have
magazine, the enormously popular
attention w1ll focus not only on ~he
mune to the financial epidemic that has
already been " overexposed" in their
gossip pulp of the SO's and 60'$. While
Watergate scandals or the Commumsthit most segme~ts of. our iristitution. In
preparatory educations. They flock in" scurrilous" and "worthless" as a
Free World detente, but also on the fact
spite of mountirig operating costs, its
stead to such 11 With-it" courses as
historical sOurce, -Piesur says, Confrden..
that Hank Aaron bro~e ~abe . R~th's · budget t}a~ . been cut. The Reporret,
business administration, the sciences, - ri.llwas read by m'illions and could not be , home run ~ec?rd ~~on the 1mP!1c_at1ohs ... ;therefoie;·•fjiids:-iJ~If unable, albeit
ocea 11ography, the sociology of crime,
ignored, for example, in his recent
for womens hbera!Jonolth.e Bi ~Y);,"" . · -; reiiU'IanJIY.; -l!&gt;~~.us· of its continued
research on presidential sexuality. " ConK1ng-Bobby R1ggs tenn1s hae~n~og. : ~ _:: ~oi!f.Y?: -: . .;-;-:.
human sexuality, "and even some with
less rigorous purpose and standards."
fKienrial contained material on President
·
· - :: .. · r~Jid $f=t.tM:. Primary commitment
History lies -trampled in the dust on the
Kennedy and while the revelations were
Movie lessons
ol;ihi j)(8Jir_rernallonol as a vehicle to
titillating scraps of gossip, I felt they
And while old movies are "great fun ,"
increase international awareness and enroad to 11 relevance.11
History Can le Fun
should be consulted because they were
they also o ffer "great lessons." A film . courage international · dialogue in the
Hope for restoration of the discipline
read by the masses and because it was
dealing with the evils of prison life or
University and Buffalo community, we
lies in " new approacht:s," Plesur
the only way to debunk the source."
gangsterism such as " I Was a Fugitive
did not fold arms. We had an audience
prescribes . Efhnic, wo~rnen's , .and
from a Chain Gang" or "The Public
with the Vice President for Student AtCuhurol Snobs
Enemy" tell " us much about society,
fairs and appealed --to the University
children's history, psychohistory' and
quantification are already providing
Plesur contends that defenders of elite
human va lues, and Depression America.
President to intervene. For all these, it
newer insights into the past. To this list,
culture "fear" that "eternal beauties will
But, Marx Brothers', or W.C. Field's, comappeared the University Publicatio ns
he decrees, "popular cultural history
be buried by commercial garbage" if
e dies and the chorus g irIs or
budget had already been overstretched.
must also be added. It is this subject that
mass culture is dignified by serious study.
MacDonald/Eddy type musical exWe sympathize with the Reporter in its
can proVide students with enthusiasm
" For example, they feel that the League
travaganzas are also important if only
financial predicament. We realize that at
and a feeling that history can pe fun."
of Nations, Hoover's policies in combatbecause they prOvide an understanding
a time of such crisis, well-meaning
Plesur himself offers several courses .in
ting the Depression, or the contributions
of anti-establishmentarian life, because
dependencies are c 0 n side red
this domain_ a survey of 20th century
of Winston Churchill are more important
they are sheer escapist entertainment,
" parasitic." we are grateful for the past
American popular cultural Ftistorf and a
than studying Rudolph Valen tno and
and also because they were what people
services re ndered us.
Babe Ruth as cult-heroes of the 1920's or
watched, enjoyed, or laugh~d at even
We have not gone extinct. Efforts are
study of motion pictures and modern
- American society, among them.
Mae \yest as a pioneer in sexual Iiberawith an empty stomach." ·
being made through the new Student
And he is badgering his fellow
tion. Cultural snobs on bot~ sides 5f the
Plesu r makes a careful distinction
Associalion to reinstate the u/B lntethist.orlans to get fn line. For five y~ars,)le .. issue cannot understand ]io~ on can
between popular culture and the
national next semester under some other
tried to have the topic of poPular
appreciate Beethoven ,and the Seales, a
nostalgia craze: "History has been
patronage. Hopefully, we shall come
cultural history considered at "the annual ~ ·SNiiesj:&gt;earean classic ond a' :Ciptain
described as things we would like to
back in a grander style 10 the joy of the
meeting of the prestigious Organization
' Marvel comic book, a Metropolitan
forget and nostalgia the things we would
internationally minded. We welcome
· of American Historians, achieving
Opera Production ~ond a TV soap opera,
like to remember. Sensible recall of the
whatever input you can afford to ex~ _
success only this year. Meeting in Boston
Isaac ~tern ,and Ji.oagey Carmichael,
past is more complex than a desire to
pedite ad ion.
in mid-April, the Organization finally
Ployboy and the works of Leslie Fiedler.
relive childhoods or a reflection of the
Justin Okoro Ukpabi
For the Editorial Board,
had the opportunity to 'hear serious
" All that I'm arguing," Plesur says, is
desfre to esc~pe co~emp,OJfry
U/8 lnrematlonol,
scholars suggest that the study of the
that "both high and popular culture· can
ha_laisd .. . ~osta g:a ca~
u or
c/o Office of Foreign Student Affairs
more fascinating pages of the human
co-exist," that, as Russel Nye has stated,
' t e .st.u ent o popu ahr cu fture ut if it isl
210
Townsend Hall
record is neither "frill nor fad." For .the
a·-non-selective wars ip o all aspects o
occasion, Plesur lined up the eminent
the study of popular culture and that of
the past, and in the most uncritical.way, it
C.mpus
author-critic Leslie Fiedler who has often
conventioAal history is not an ''eithertends to distort and is self-defeating."
,/
orl' proposition.
suggested that Tarzan anil Sh4:rlock
Examples' of- the 'l'lationship. of the
Goinlng Ground
Holmes are as fit for classroom disCussion
popular and the profound follow in
The study of popular cultural history,
as Shakespeare and Milton; William
rapid SU.fcession: The comics are good
Plesur points out, was not his discovery,
Cohn, a historian fron1 Carnegiefor more than wrapping garbage, Plesur
is really not all that new, and is gaining
The Council for International ExMellon; and Mar.shall Fishwick·,
suggests. "Little Orphan Annie was a
ground, despite the fact that many still
i:ha'nge of Scholars has announced that
professor of journalism at Temple. Plesur
marvelous reflection of the author's
c,ansider it a .,frill." For example, he says,
applications ~re now being accept~ for
reod the Fishwick paper and also chaired
business-capitalist values and Dick Tracy
"Vachel lindsay's stody of the early mov·
senior Fulbright-Hays -awards for univerthe panel, undoubtedly with a relish akin
was a favorite of the FBI:s 1. Edgar Hoover
ing picture, Gilbert Sjl.fles' ~rsis of the
sity lecturing and advanced research in
to fervent' enthusiasm, the same unbecause he, too, symbolized the organiz' lively arts' and the in forma! 'Social~islo?"
over 75 countries during 1976-n.
inhibited gusto he displays when outlined resistance" to the prevalent crime of
of Frederick Lewis Allen are. the~"pi¥'¥tr -. • The booklet on the program lor this
ing his own rationale for introd~cing
the 1930's.
works that provided the b.ase- .'!pon
~riod, is available from th&lt;; Councrl
Mae West, l'lank Aaron, the . Dionne
which Russel Nye and others haYe l)uilt.
(2101 Con_sti.tution Avenue, N. W.,
quintuplets, and Cecil B. De Mille into
Songs; Burlesque and _Groffiti
Nye's work, The Unemba~rassed Muse, is ' Washlnl!ton; D.C. 20418), and may also
the UIB classroom. .
·d
.
.
h
d
d
.
a
history
of
popular
culture.
The
number
be consolted at the office of the Faculty
While military exploits, the causes of
Late1y, aca emrcrans ave " iscovere
of volumes putllished in the many areas
Fulbright Adviser; '107 Townsend Hall.
war and Presidential accomplishments
that th~ ly_rics of rock songs can help
of popular culture in the last lew years
Application requirements include :
draw frequent. flagrant yawns from the
them understand contemporary youth,"
has been noteworthy, especially in the
U.S. citizenship; for lectureships, college
student gallery, ustudents have had their ... Plesur notes, but "this is true of every
field of the motion pjdure .... learned
or university teaching experience; for
interest stimulated by studying the
era. One aspect of the gay and glorious
soCieties have also devoted more allenresearch awards, a doctorate or, in some
1920's can be 1earned from the lyrics of
history of what'e\&lt;eryday' people do and
tion to popular cultural subjects. For exfields, recognized professional standing
eat, how they amuse themselves, what
.'Running Wild;' t~e sober Depression
ample, in . addition to a session nrLthe
as demonstrated by . faculty rank,
.a...u -..a h
h d
, PI
mentality is apparent in '-BrotHer, Can
""
publications, compositions, ·exhibition
u~.,. re~, ow t ey ress,
esur conYou Spare a Dimel;' and the. sad inter. teaching of the subject at the 1975
record, etc. SOme awards are open to
· personal tensions of the Second World
meeting of the Organization of
application
by advanced doctoral canWar are the basis of the Sorig,-' l'll Never
American Historians the following· topics
didates.
·.
Smile Again.',
. ,
·
were consiOered: 19th century male
_ July 1, 1975, is the deadline for applyEven Buffalo's Pala_ce_aod lesser strip
roles, sports history, teaching through
ing
for
most
of the announced research
joints have a place in Plesur's syl!abus: "It
film, and popular music. And~ of course,
A ampus commt.inky newf~Mper published
awards and is alsO the suggested date for
is agreed that burlesque whe!her of the
there are many college courses now -befiling for lectureships.
.
:
1920's variety (mostly a combination of
ing offered in the field."
=~~~e~~~sid t~O:~Z
h
f h
History should - be concerned with
Senior Fulbright·Hays awards general- luff1lo, JOS M1ln St., Buff•lo, N.Y. Jm.f.
people, Plesur says, "with how they livvariety acts), t at &lt;i t e 1930's (chiefly
ly consist of a maintenance a!lowance in
EdlfotUI offices •re bated in room 113, 250
strippers and. vulgar comiC.), and the
Wtnsp$rAW"ftlle(l"hone1727J.
local currency to cover -normal living
contemporary form (an emphasis on
ed, loved, ployed, believed, and dir:d.
En!dltlw! Edit«
costs of the grantee and family while in
licentiousness) ore all rother lewd and
Popular cultural historv is just _another
A Wf5TlfY ROWLAND
residence
abroad, and round-trip travel
certainly unintellectual, bu t great
method !O trace the roots of a person's
EdhCK-in.chief
for the grantee (tra~sportaiiorl is not
numbers enjoy it and therefore it ought
own being. Popular culture is one way
ROBERTT. MARLETT
I'provided for dependents). F,or lecturers
be
1y ed
h
fl
f
that. the generational chasm can be
M•rwiProdudlon
:he
z a anot er re ~ion
bridged. Study of popular cultural
going to most norf·European countries,
JOHN.A aounER
history may just teoch young, people to
the award includes a dollar supplement,
Auodolefdltor •
Another such example of on. im~.
be more compassionate and to unders· · subject to the av~ilobility .of junds, or
,ATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
tand better the -values of an earlier.
probable, lnterestln&amp; "maybe even ac·
carries a stipend -In dollar;s 1nd fOreign
~Colendorfdltor
. curate gauge of societal values" Is graf~
generation and In so doing to appreciate
DIANE QUINN
cu~, the omount depending on the ·
Contrlbutlna Arthf flti. · SIIU another treasure trove Is the
their own role."
.
asslgriment; the lecturer's quali.fications,
SUSAN M.IIUIICEJI
ullry, and other IICIOts.
"local anrlque shop" which ''yields lsems
And, _l;lenry ~· lhars_nat '\~nk."

'.Not exti·nct,'
· says
.
uI 81 ed•1tor

bse

Applications due
for Fulbrights

........

li="

°

�SUNY's Press is small
but .gaining in stature

It's a long hike to the near!"t book
shop, miles to the nearest printer, and
years back in time to the traditional ivycovered, granite-arched image of the
university press. But headqUartered in
their glass and steel environment, high in
a downtown Albany office tower, the
people of the State University of New
York Press welcome the challenge to
bridge these gaps in space and time.
Their offices thirteen floors above the
city streets may not suggest the scholarly
atmosphere of a campus , but
nevertheless the SUNY Press staff annually considers 200-250 inqui ri es or
manuscri pts. And if a staff of six, with the
human limitations that implies, seems
small lor such a workload, then that "extra effort" is all that remains to explain
the 20 or more volumes published each
year by the Press.
The cumulative fruits of all this effort
are many - more than 150 vo.lumes
published in th&lt;&gt; past eight years. They
stand,rowupOnfow,int he Pressoffices,
solid testimony to their contribut ions to
the dissemination of scholarl y research.

-PIease don 't read the
-

.

·

..... ~--lntllolnoolori.

.

IS:

Fall ·. reg••stratl•on has ._begun

Richard J. Canale, assistant director for
ed: It will also reduce the number of
registration and systems development,
times a student submits a Course ReAdmissions and Records, submitted the
quest Form trying to register for a course
following notice with the suggested
as the student will know immediately
heading, " PleaseOo not read :"
whether t_he cpurse is open or closed
" What's going on in Admissions ind
- . "How will this--neW procedure bel'te,Qt
the University! It will enable the Un~verRecords! Fcoll Reptratlon.
. " Regi~t ~~() \.
~he upcoming Fall
jit_y to ascertai~he .status of a course ·m1 75f.'i
' :;..-: ... _ or continuinr;Jllfderf.s ~~:"' ~diatel wiR~ · ,. ~ · ail' 'f rs; . · . . It will run thro_ugh~ay 1);,
-;- r~ports 1 ~ be @:Deialf~it.~!·
1 7 . All students are urged' tp par"So why noi spread the goOd wo'fo l
ticipate. The next opportunity to register
Tell everyOne to register now. Know
Will be September 2.
what courses you have before th
"Those students who register early will
semeSter begfns. Only those student~
be mailed a schedule card in early
who advance register can change their
August. They will then have the opporprogram in August. 5o why not do it
tunity to drop and add courses before
now.
.
11
the semester begins. This new proce1t is import~nt that all students have
dure of in-person on-line drop and add ~ cleared up any financial obligations to
will start approximately ~uglri1;,1B, 1975.
' the University. All outstanding accounts
" What's on-line registratiof1,'f
should be cleared by July 18, 1975, in
"It is something new which will benefit
order not to have your registration
students. A student will now be able to
checkstopped.
walk up to a computer terminal andre" Also, any studen ts receiving
quest that a course be .dropped or addRegen tslrAP should file their forms as
ed. Ahe! a ~erminal ope:ra~or indexes th_e
soon as they are received in early June. If
transadron%W ~~r;t~lh .'•f.. a c:~rse rs ,
students do not receive the forms, they
'lpen and lt~deQMie.tr81he &lt;DUI}", a , cal)~btain them at the financial aid .ofhed~le l fa(~~ll..be._ pr6d
. ~ced;f!riJ;! "'; fice'.Df:~y ins'iltu.tiQn of higher learning
nded ' f&lt;r.thl•'
.,
':Will::-. ln.'i'lew Y'ork.State.ot at the Financial Aid
_y'I.Vali-·~ OftiCe at u/8 located in Room ·312
minate 1he,ap .
to s&amp;eJf the cou.W: we' " ~ ~ oc. idd·
Tower."
·
~- ' " ... ---- ~
.,.

~

:&amp;_ : - •

~

Schedule (or-registration
Undergraduate st~dents should pick up Fall 1975 registration materials according to the schedule below, in Room 114 Diefe ndorf Hall.
Because.students currently enrolled at SUNY at Buffalo wjll be able to register
for fall classes only· during the period, April 24, 197S·May 16, 1975, or on
September 2, 1975, it is 'important that students pick up registration forms during •
these times. Student~ registering April 24-May 16 will receive their schedu le cards
in the mail sometime in early August and will be able to change courses during
August.
·
EOP students will register in Room 202 Diefendorf Hall.
Bre~kdown Designates your Present Cl1sS .
, Ser}i.9r.s _, .:[.; .......... . ....... . ......... Anytime : through May 16

-"

~~':.;"_;r~~ ::: ::: ::: ::::::::::: :: :::::: ::::: ...... A~~/~:~:~~

~ Junfbrs wef.e·l o have pre· registered, April 24-28, but any undergraduate stucJtnt w(8&gt;jn)s51!&lt;1 h islh~r designated pre-registration time will be able to pre~ister~een:_:-Wednesday, May 7, and Friday, May 16, in Di~lendorl Hall,
""""'· 1'f•;: ~ J • _
•
-; Gr~\! ~u1!J.nts will BO to Admissions and R(!Cords throug~ May 16-to up- ·
QJte th~ ,St~dtnt Qata Forms and receive registration materials. _
? MFC iiullents will regi$1er July 7-July 25, 1975, in the Office of Admissions and
• ~ords~t-~ ~te iheir~tude~t Data ~o!ms and receive registrat'ion materials.
.•
Adl{if9!6n~ a,n&lt;f..Recprds w1lf. be opeJl through. May 16 during the following
::'~urs tq ~ct' ~II Registrat~n : MO!lday t~rough Thursday, _8:30 a.m.-7:00
:cP;m., ff!dirica?lO i;m.~lO p.m,
· .
·
.
.
i ~-; '-'t\11 :be(. Gra!~te r i ~FC students .. re ,prged to partidpate in or.der to
,~ ~~e ~i~f!le ~by i'ilall iji early AiJgu$1 and avail themselves of the
'\.ofiPDitLilli~ fD3JI'Of)-an.J:~ore th&lt;fsemester begins.
·
1

Andremarkable
while he takes
obvious for
pride
in
such
production,
Norman Mangouni, director of the SUNY
Press since its inception, these maOy
shelves of books represent much more :
"The Press gives State University visibili ty
in man y unique ways. Press books are
sold by the thousands and find their way
into bookstores and libraries. all over the
world. Moreover, they are Cited as lootnote references m later scholarshrp.'!
-·· !fe adcj~: " Press books are a perma~nent recorO .,f this ~niversity's c?mmit'~-ment·. ta:texceiJ.WJce '11 _uob~larshl~.- che
Pr~s als~ helps the Un_rversrty ~ch_reve a
umtary rdentlly. Its exrste!'ce md rrect ly
advances the_ a~ad~mrc sta.! us of
everyone assocrateO wr th SUNY. ·
One of 80
The State University of New York Press
i ~ one of more t~an 80 ~merican univer·
sny presses and 1s, at e1~ht years of age,
one of the youf!gesr. With a professional
stall of only four, it is also among the
smallest. The Press, however, has already
established a reputation lor its
pu?lications, particularly .in the areas ·o_f:
ph1losophy, language, literature, Laun
American. and Middle Eastern ~tudies
and . med1eval and early Renarssa n ~e
studies.
Certain types of work are excluded
from SUNY Press publication by policy :
fiction and other forms of creative
writing, unrevised dissertations and
theses, bibliographies, and textbooks or
other materials intended primarily for
classroom use. Favored are works Of
original scholarship, preferably b'y a
single author (as contrasted to colloquium papers}. The books must contain
contributions to their field of ·knowledge
and are norma~ly used by persons in
graduate or post-graduate study.
In addition to Mr. Mangouni, the Press
has three other professional staff
members: Eleanor Sypher, who holds a
Ph.D. jn classics from Columbia University; Bruce Johnson, the holder of a Ph.D.
in E.nglish literature from the University
,of london and Elnora Catrino, who earn·
ed a Ph .D. in speech from the University
of Michigan. Dr. Sypher and Dr. Johnson
work with a~nhors in the editir1g of
manuscripts, ·while Dr. Carrino is the
Press's promotion manager.
Mr. Mangouni believes that his staff
has one of the highest 'production ratios
of any such group in the nation. Most
university presses use a staff at least twice
as large as SUNY's to produce a com·
parable number of bpoks. last year, this
staff of six publifhed twenty.- one
volumes (chosen ~rom about 250
manuscripts or inquiries).
The PreS's Is support&lt;lillndirectly by the
c. Reoearch Foundation-of State University,
through the Chancellof!s ln!'Ovatlns and

Special Pur~ Fund and by income
from sales. It has received no Stateappropriated funds sihce 197G-n. While
the.budget of SUNY Press is at essentially
the same dollar level as in 1968, production has continued to average 20 books
and one journal (Dante Studies) yearly.
Costs for producing a book may range
from $4,000 upwards for an edition of 1,000 copies; most average out to around
$8,000. The overhead (manuscript select_ion, editing, design, advertising,
warehousing, selling and distribution)
also costs several thousand dollars. ,
If the Press feels that a work cannot be
comfortably marketed as a printed boo!&lt;,
it may offer it in microform. Substantial
savings result when books are produced
in microform as production costs are
minor and w-arehousing and distriliution ·
costs are minimal.
Microforms Galnlns
Microforms are gaining acceptance

among scholars and publishers as an
alternative medium largely as a res"ult of
eco nomic factors. University presses and
academic libraries have both been
caught in a cycle of higher prices and
reduced buying powe r that has
progressively diminished their capacities
to function effectively.

In April, 1972, the SUNY Press published The Gothic Word by Brian T. Regan,
the first book-length monograph
produced exclusively in miCrofiche to be.
cataloged in publication by the library of
Congress. Since then_ the Press has
published three other original works in
microform only and has several others in
preparation. In addition, most SUNY
Press books are also available in
microform.
The sole criterion for publication by
the Press is ·approval by the nine-man
Editorial Board, after initial readings and
recommendations by academic
specialists or professionals in the field.
Design of boOks is handled on a -lreelance· .\&gt;.a.!_is_ !u' .,.verip us well-.known
professional designers.
·
Mrs. Carrino coordinates the promotion of books by determ ining potential
markets for various titles and arranging
direct-mail, advertising and book exhibit
programs.
Cooperation among the· members of
the Assodation of American University
Presses helps in promotion, as mailing
lists are exchanged regularly and each
member press takes turns in making
arrangements for -book exhibits l n a
geographic area or in specific subject
areas. Mrs. Carrino uses the State URiversity computer syst~m to keep track of
potential buyers.
Effectift l'romollon
As a restJit of effective promotion, the
Press constantly receives reviews of its
books from periodicals all · over the
world. Most of the major historical,
literary and philosophical journals have
reviewed at least one SUNY Press book.
For three consecutive years, SUNY Press
has sold more books ot the notional
meeting of the Middle Eost Studies
Association than any other university
press. At last year's annual meeting of the
Modern language Association, SUNY
sold a sixth -of .all books purchased. And
at the annual conference of the
American Philosophical Association, the
State University Press tied with Harvard
and Yale in sales. Also, the U.S. Information SerVice consistently uses SUNY Press
books in overseas traveling exhibits.
The actual history of State University's
involvement in scholarly publishing goes
back to 1957, when SUNY's Graduate
Council created a Publications Committee to work with' the Research Foundat ion in screening applications for
publishing-support money, and began
making grants to authors. Doctrine and
~oetry (1959)•by Bernard F.,Huppe, dis- ' ·.&gt;
tonguiShed professor of the University
Center at Binghamton, w~s the first l&gt;ook
to be published under t e aeill'l bf thiS'
committee, chaired from ts inceptiOn 10
1967 by 0~. Chandler Mi:C. Brooks,\
professor of physiology at Down~te •
Medical Center. This effort produi:ed
some 15 titles before the Press actually
came into belns in 19!i6.

�,. . U/BF reports ~
ris~ in. gifts-· ~
during. 1_974

_ _ ...,...,_..c.....,.. _..._,.,,_
.

-

.

.-..... Doll .... ,....

·Panel a1rs range of ethic.al health is~ues
•

associate professor in U/ B's Department
of Philosophy, commented that it's been
said "patients would have to complete
A wlde range of ethical proble,;:;s
medical school before they could reall y
confronting health professionals today
give totally informed consent" to various
-from distribution of health care to the
medical options open to them.
complexities of informed consent " How m"uch understanding is re were major topics at a seminar on
quired for consent to be adequatel y in" Ethical Dilemmas and Health Care
formed? Is there a minim Um amount of
Delivery" this week at Norton Union.
education or I.Q. that should be sup·
Initiated by the School of Nu,.ing, the
posed in individuals who are asked to
seminar and workshops Friday and Saturconsent?," Dr. Hull asked .
day were a "Conversation in the
"Or should we read 'informed '
Disciplines" program of State Universily,
passively, not in terms of information be·
co-sponsored by U/B's Faculty of Health
ing understood by the consentor, but
Sciences and the Department of
only in terms of its being presented to
Philosophy.
the consentor?"
Dr. Barbara Ehrenreich, a consultant
He reminded that informed consent
from Syosset, pointed out that the ethical
"cannot always be validJy.ootained due
problems broughJ on by advancing
10 urgency or the patient's stress, un·
technology are no more profound than
consciousness, physical, me ntal or
more common problems associated wirh
emotional anguish, or youthfulness.
the distribution of ordinary health care. "'
Another. difficulty with "informed
"The conserv_atjve ethicist would conconsent" is the alleged necessity of
fine himself or herself to exotic cases
sometimes withholding information
sueti· as who"ge(s"the heart transplant-or·
about a patient's condition when full dis·
use of the kidriey dialysis machine. But at
closure would produce a dangerous psy·
the same time, staring us in the face is the
chogenic reaction. .
truly aw.esome problem of the ethics of
In the case of children, Dr. Hull ex·
·c · distribution of ordinary, primary care an
plained that parents, by vinue of their
this country," she said.
natural and legal status as guardians,
have unequalled power.
.I
The Poor Reuive less Core
"The poor, especially black poor, con"But that power is not absolute: A
sistently receive far less preventive care
parent may not validl)' consent to an ~peri mental procedure on the child
than the affluent. And the poor also exwhich either bears no promise of reliev·
perie'nce-hlgher rates of infant mortality,
tu~r'Cu105is' and disability in general.
ing the child's sickness, or offers no
- "So why should our 'ethical antennae' , chances of the child's eventually
developing autonomy greater than that
' quiver over a choice between two
which would olherwise be en potential organ transplant. recipients, b.ut
remain unmoved by the larger soc1al
couritere~," he~aid. decision to bar an entire class of people
from necessary basic caref," she querie:d.
Perhaps, it's utterly utopian to imagine • . Two drugs now used fOr other purclass barriers to health are an be
poses may have the ·potential to help
removed in the context of a private,
asthma and hay fever sufferers, accorprofit-oriented medico! system, 'she addding tO two University investigators.
ed. "If so, we must begin to osk whether
Dr. Tadao OkazaKi, research assistant
there is any justification lor selling ·
professor and clinial fellow at Buffalo
medical are portlculorly ot prices which
General Hospital's Department of
are now beyond the reach of many ·
Medicine, told the Federation· of
•
· millions of Atherians."
American Societies of Experimental
Testlool af Drup
Biology at its conference in Atlantic City
Dr. Ehrenreich also touche&lt;! on the
recently that there J s evidence
ethicol illue of randomization in testing
tetracaine, a local anesthetic, and ouaof , _ therapeUtic approoches.
bain, a drug used in cenoln heart
"Teitins of,_ drup and techniques
problems, reduce the omount of
h a s - been random In this country.
histamine releosed by cells of known
The owerwhelmlng-proponion of hurNn
osthrN and hay fever poti~nts.
'research material' Is drawn from the
"When an extrad from ragweed
lower socio-economic strata and fr6m
pollen ·was added to wliite l!lood cells
-,. poups who are too helpless to protestUlken from _these patients, !he cells
prisoneR, mentJII patients . and the
predictably began releash)g histamine.
ietanled," she said.
But When either tetracaine or ouabain
She .-1 Dr. David Ozonoff, o readded to the _cells, the hlstomine
M.rchef
• ~- Institute of release was sreatly reduced," Dr.
Technolosr, who Aid "the sodalpoups
oqzakl reported.
.which ue used 11 ,_,.ch material are
He and Dr•. Carl Arbesmon, dlnicol
precisely the poups Which are left out
professor of medicine and director of
-:&gt; when h"QIIIIel to .the distribution of the
Buffalo Generars Allergy Olnlc, feel the
benefils.H •
histamine release reduction Is due to an
Dr. Ehrenreich u!P&lt;f that - make
Inhibition of. the breikdown of lhe ATP
our c11saa11on of ethics "a breothlns
or "enersY souroe" for cells a~eaed by
..,- ...t not a burial f.OUnd for our the aJiersy. .
utlnlp C:imet1dY used for u.aunenl of
deepest moral - ' .
•
.
asthma . 111C1 hay fever. do not ~
= ............. Cellillll" . •
aplnst me hl$tunlne ~In the same
In reprd to the term "Informed
By Mory Beth Spino

ldir&lt;N;.I Al~~~~. He•lrh SciHw"~

Drugs for allergies

patient

~••~: .~f!l..;.!-ef~l'l,~.

way~:.P.r·A~! ~ .... ,.~ . . ,._ ·,~1 ...~

~tics o~ncl PoD~~
.
Cltmg th.~t med!cme can be and tias
~en entwme_d with the .governmental

hi&amp; of our natoon, Ms. Tab1tha PowJedge
of Hastmgs .center pomted out that the
PKU ,;creenmg programs were launc~ed
not --through more normal ~ed1~al
channels, but_ thro.ugh ~he leg1sl.au~e
process, thus f1rmly tnvc:»l.vmg ~enet1cs 1~
the contemporary poht1cal life of thos
country.
.
.
Carr!er scree~mg - d1ff~rent from
screenmg for d1seases or d1sorders represents still another ~lemma , she
said. " What we. have here .1s a search not
for the disease 1tself, but lor people who
may be at risk of having a child with a dis·
ease."
She explained that the pro~ram$ for
Tay-~ch~ drsease and f?r s1ckl~ cell
anem.ra d1ffer on. some pomts relat1ve. to
11
~ he d1seases .. W_tth ~ay-~c.hs, s~n! ng,
IS very selective m lliaf ~_lii~e.ale!~hnds
to affect .a w.ell-delined. ,ea5yofo,reach
population, the Ashkenaz1 Jews. ~1th
the sickle cell disease, the popu.latton
that might usefull_y be sc~eened IS n~~
nearly. so well·defmed as m lay-Sachs,
she sa1d.·
And. although the cou..e of lay-Sachs
disease is ·:~xceptionally ~thetic an~
irrevo_cabte, t~e course of s1ckle. c~ll rs
notonously v~nable ~.nd progn~1s IS ~y
no me_ans ~n1form. Prenatal d!agnos1s
regardmg s1ckle cell co~ld result m a~rtion of many babtes who m1ght
otherwi~ h~ve l!ved rela~ively no~mal
and product1ve hves, partrcularly st':'ce
there do seem to ,be prospects for l.mproved treatment, Ms. Powledge sa1d.

Significant jncreoses in support for the
Univ~rsity' were pr?duced by the U/~
Foundation (U/Bf) 1n 1974, the agency s
annual .report, released this week, indialed.
·
Total gilts and grants for 1974 were $2,535,903.42, John M. Carter, UIBF president, reported.
The Foundation tripled the amount of
·unrestricted dollars available to the
Un iversrty for "research, student
assistance and other meaningful activities,'' the annual report siid. Tot~lgiv­
ing in this category was $172,101 .98 $20,809.7,4 from alumni loyolty gilts, $66,·
663.09 from the $1!lO,:c&gt;r-more Century
Club giving program, and $84,629.15
from 40 area businesses and industries ·
through the Corporate Alliance
Program, chaired by Paul l. Snyder,
president of Freezer Queen Foods.
Noting that these unrestricted fun~s
have an impact far greater than the1r
dollar amount, the report indicates tt hat
one seed moner, grant of $1,000 ftom.tf&gt;is
source ·eventually l~u lt~d in. ~ federal
gra)it ·sgo..bqo lqr~a r~a ~ch ~rqi~i=C.
Rest ric\e/J .,gilts and grar]l! '- fho~e
designated for specific purposes wnhm
the lJniversity by donors - again accounted for the largest portion of U/ BF
income, $2,237,615.86. Making up the
total were: Alumni Association dues,
$35,039.38; gilts to Faculties, $493,166.14;
grants to faculties , $917·, 32S; par·
ticipating fund gilts, $14 ,870.79;
payments for professional services, $600,115.04; scholarship and fellowship gilts,
$108,599.51 ; and interest and divided in·
come, $68,500.
Additions to U/ B endowment funds
received during the year totaled $126,185 58, from "Alumni life Membe,.hip
du~s. bequests a'nd gifts.'
· I_,
The restricted gifts and grants were

ot

distribut~p) WJU!jtr IAhn.~.Ji.

:irJ.s}

agencies as . f000~s : Arts
~ ~~~rs,
s20s~n1.15:' ·rdilt"atiohal ' Siuliies, ""$1.2,516.42; Engineering and Applied
Sciences, $118,979.43; Health Sciences,
san,288.09; law and Jurisprudence,
$121 ,B45 .09; Management, $15,794 ;
Natural Sciences and Mathematics,
$188,093.19; Social Sciences and Administration, $32,729.02; and UIB foun·
dation, $664,719.47.
.
U/B Ptesident Robert l. Ketter noted
in the fePbrt that the University is " deep·
ly appreciative of t!le continued growth
in private financial supegrt." Today's
economy, the President said, "poses a
hardship for. both individuals and institutions; therefore the increasetf support of alumni, friends, and corporations
is all.•t.he ~gr~tJ!Y)!'g:'; :,~,."''~ ', 1,

f..:h

Abo1ities of TechnolosY ·
. . '·
L.;...L! 111.1;&amp;C.Df•3• •~~
The abilities of medical tecKi\olqgy "to
~'"'~.•,...~ . ~ ~ .· n.u! ·c. ~ a
-limit . but not cure ..mariy ills,' anc{dela'y"
. Dr. Harry G. Fritz, dean of the School•
but not prevent tlisability"and mortalliy
of Heafth,. Education and director· of
were emphasized by Dr. Raymond S.
athletics, has been elected· president of
Duff, associate professor of clinical practlte Nationol Associotion for Sport and
tice at Yale's School of Medicine. .
Physical Eduation. HK term of· office
"To what extent should the lucky
(1ws-"76) as head of the 33,000 member
strong insure the rights of the unlucky
organization began at the Association's
weak to survival and reproduction is cerrecent convention at Atlantic City.
tainly a disquieting question," he said.
The Notional Association for Sport and
Under one philosophy, he said, . Physial Eduation (NASPEI Is an associapatients, families and physicians will have
tion of "the recently reorgonized
Co give up the myth that the ppplia~n
Amerian Alliance for" Health, Physial
of technology provides the most promose
Eduation alld Recreation. Dr. tritz
in dealing with diseases In all situations. ·• serves on this organization's board of
"If this is done, the professton wiiiiOSI'
gcwernors.
·· .. ~
power over some decisions in patient
NASPE k the only· natiorial o'iganiza-·
are and have less "liberty io sesyins ~ lion clevolfld "eidllslvt!ly to in\proving
technology, but they.will have a' ~r · ·the overoil sport and physical eduation
role in aring for patients," he.uid.l
experience in the United· States. The
In - addition to the four- speakers,
membership Is comprised of elementary,
workshops for ponldpants were led by
5,econlla~y. college and university
Jacob D. Hyrnon, professor In the FicUity · teaeher5 of pl!ysical ~..g,tion, as w:elll}
of Uw and Jurisp&lt;ucle!Ke; Dr. C. Charles .. , athletic directors, etC. , r ;&gt;• . .
:·
Bochmonn, assistant clinicol professor,
OejNnment ol Plyclliauy; Dr. Henry P. :•~· · · ·' IU-NifuA
1
Staub, associllte professor of pediatrics; t -t ...._
•
. ,.. J '
and Cathleelt Getty, associate professor _. J!!!oSdiDel ............. _...._, .....
of graduate community psychlatrlc ·nur............. ~poc~o~.-.....,
Calsins · ·
•
'
· - · '"'.,... .....,...,... ,. . . _ . _ . .

_..,

.....

~-Joseph

-f!IJ!i~•
·~fl

F.letcher, vlslllns·,.._,. • .
of bloinedical ethics at 1he Unhenlty o(;;; S.
.
Virginia's ·scJiool -of-• Me4leine,,,,
•·
Charlottesville, • ipOke at · the ,.friday • •
dinneron''HulthCareand~~ i~"

""

·

~-~..

ii'l"'.H' ! r

0

Just?~., ••:.o~ ~vJII •n ~., .....,...;~•...-.. ....,~~"'"'",tlio....,
, ..,,,.~,......-J....,oiiOOii&gt;O...,...,_,;..;....,...w'--

�Calendar~--:-------------:-:-''""",.,. •. col. 41
=~~~~N~CAL EQUCATlON .
The topic of tonight's dinic is Auscult~rion
TUESPAY-fi .
- Di~st olic Semilun~r V.alve Murmurs. F~rber
GOLF'
UI B vs. Colgate U. Amherst-Audubon
CoUrse, 1 p.m. No admission ~arge.
RLM'
W.R . : Mysteries of the Organism. 147

Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No adm!ssion charge.
UU"I FILMS"

The Kitting (Kubrick), 7:30 p.m., and · Lolita
(Kubrick) , 9 p.m. Sy l ect ure Hall, Ellicott No
admission charge. .
THEilTRE PERFORM"NCE'
Th e Good Woman of Setzuan by Bertolt

Brecht, directed by Don Sanders. Courtyard
Theatre, Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission : st udents, S1 , others .S2.50.
Presented by the Center for Theatre Re·
sea rch.
"RCHITECTURE "NO ENVIRONMENT "L
DESIGN
RA.ND CH"IR LECTURE SERIES#
The City: Urban Problems and Priorities is

Mary Herman named ·c hairman
of Community AdvisQry-Council

the theme of this lecture series. The finallec·
ture is Towards a Sane Urban Architecture,
given by George Anselevici us, chairman,
Departm~ nt of Architect ure, Graduate School
of Design, Harva rd University. 2917 Main St., 8
p.m.

¥rs. Ma,Y L. Herman, public relations
spe9alist' for the New York Tel~phone
Cof!lpa'ny, Was elected chiirman. of the

Amh.erst, the Publi.c Relations. Society of
America and BOCES District I. She is a
member of the board of directors of

University's Community Advisory Coun- -

Junior Achievement and is past president

dl at the annual meeting of the group on ~
the Main St. Campus, April 24.
Other officers, !,_U elected to two-year
terms, include : Rod f. Frank, vice chairman; Margaret J. Barry, secretary; and
Gordon N. Schilling, treasurer. Elected
directors-at-large were. Marie K. Corcoran, Milton G. Kader, and Leta M.
Stath"acor.

of the Zonta Club of Buffalo.
Mr. frank , executive vice president of
leavers an~ Frank, Inc., ofTonawanda, is
a director of the Rotary Club of Buffalo
and a member of the !Juffalo Executive
Association.
Ms. Barry, a graduate of U/ 8, is president of Barry Paper Box &lt;;:ompany and
vice president of Barry Food Products.

NURSING CONTINUING EDUC"TION
SEMINAR#
Advanced Cudiac Care Symposium (3

She is a former president of Zonta Club

.lACROSSE•
UI B vs. Niaga ra U. Rotary fi e ld , 4 p.m. No

Mrs.

H~rman,

a member of the New

York Telephone Co. staff for 19 years,
replaces Alfred E. "Anscombe, president
of Amherst Cablevision. Mrs. Herman's
commu~ity actiyities incloPe the Niagari
Frontier lntlustfy Educat.ion Cou~cil, th~
Business ar;J:d Professional Women of

·.,. &lt;'oli.lci • · -~·: ... • . J. ·
n,A..W
AI re ,
fll 9111ull • ~· ·
ZT!II.To. . .~• " ' " ~~ ,
,
, •• ~
."1

6

{I~ i;.(;i\~·~UJ'011~ ~s~iption

20b

6
exp~~
9 11

guests thts Saturday, May 3, at the
third annual 50-Year Class Reunion. This

of Buffalo.
Mr. Schilling, branch manage r and
assistant vice pre sident of Marine
Midland BanK -Western, is a past presi·

WEDNESDA Y-7

days). Charter--+touse Motet for more infor·
ma1ion , con t ~ ct Joan Collins, 831 ·5548.
NURSING CONTINUING EDUCA liON
SEMINAR#
New Dimensio ns in Maternit y Care. Norton

Union . for more information, contact Joan
Collins, 831-5548.

the

FACULTY RECITAL"
Yv.J1 M ikh aShoff;. pianist, performs. Baird

a

member

of

ii .Mrs .• &lt;;orcoran, an Amherst re~ltor,
was th e f1rst woman to serve as prestdent
of the Amherst Chamber of Comme rce.

,

Recital Hall , 8 p.m. Admission charge
THEATRE PERFORMANCE; . ..

. •.

A Vic w Fro m fh C' Britlgr:o bY Arth ur Mi lle r,
directed by Do n ·sanders. Cou rtyard Theatre,
Hoyt and lafayett e, 8 p.m. Admissi g n: Sl
stude nt s, others S2.50.
Pr esented by the Ce nter for Theatre Resea rch:

event is jointly sponsOred ~y the U/B
Foundation, Inc: ·
The day will begin with r,egistration

She received the 1973 Susan B. Anthony

and cl~ss portraits at 1~ a.m. in Norton

for her contributions to the area's

Hall. A reception at 11 :30 in the Millard
, Fillmore Room will precede the

growth.
Mr. Kader, past president of the

luncheon at noon.
The veteran alunlni and their guests

Amherst Chamber of Commerce, is the
president of his own realty firm.

THURSDAY-S

Mrs. Stathacos, Gallery Shop manager
at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, is co-

NURSING CONTINUING. EDUCA liON
SEMIN4R#
Advan ced Cardiac Care Symposium (3

Award and was awarded a citation from

the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in 1968

. will tour the ~ain Street and ' ii.mherst
campuses from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. There
will also be a reception at the Frank llOyd
Wright house, Alumni headquarters,
beginning at 5:30 p.m.
.
Members of the Class of 1925 will be
inducted as Life Memb&lt;:rs of the Alumni
Association by". Presideni Robert L.
Kener::ZQ-;;1&gt; Arit.~ ~~1iUpget, It ~B~!

founder and partner in Wonderwomen

Empl.oyment Agency, Inc. A member of
Zonta and a past president of the Junior
League of Buffalo, she is a member of the
board of the Erie County Association for
Mental Health.
.
Tl]_e_CorJ")munity Advisory Council, an

graduiffe.~Eil)frrhan OrM-ttaSS Reu1
'nl:on: """'''~ '·· ,._:.._,_h ,·1· 1
~'": · '

o,rgamzatton made up of more than 100
a'rea ' dtizens, advises the Univer~ity on

' Of ·the 200 guests expected, 130 .are
alumni ¢ UIB.
-

~eral

programs and activities and sponsors
events throughout the year.

days) . Charter House Motel. Fo r more infor·
mation, contact Joan Collins, 831·5548.
COLLOQUIUM#
•
G a u~ C Fi~ld Theory, Or. C. N. YanK. SUNY
a1

Slony Brook. 111 Hochstelter, 3:30 p.m.

ENGINEERING SEMINARI
Analysis of rh&lt;' Warergare Channel o r How
ru Keep rhe Spy in rh e Cold, Or. A.D. Wyner,

Be ll · Te lepho ne laboratories. 148 Parke r;
coffee at 3:30, ·lecture at 4 p.m.
SponsOred by the ·o epanment of Elect rical
Engineeri ng and the IEEE Buffalo Sctt ion Info rmatio n Theory ~roup.
•

senate ,meeting
FACULTY
Assistant Professor, Speef:h Communic•tion, F-5033.
Visiting Assistant Professor, History, F-5034.
Assisunt or .Assoqate Professor, Speech Communication, F-5035.
Associate Professor, M•thl!llliltics, F-5036. . ~rant l.'rolessor, Civil Engineering. F5037.
Assistant Professor, Phrsical Th~rapy, F-5038.
, Ubri~rian or -Associate .Librarian, University Libraries, f-5039.
Assistant libr•rian, University Libraries, F-~·. ·

For adilltional information concerning these jobs and for details of·NTP

openin~ throiighoui the Stare "University·_SYJ!em, consult bulletin boards at.

these locations:

•

·

··
Ridge Lea, Buildin~ 4236, next to
.
aleterW''3. Rlcfil! lea; 11uildlns 4230, in corridor next to·C- 1; 4. Cary Hall, ·
•..• In ~or opposite HS 131( ·5. Farber. Hall, . il! the corridor betweeti
• R - 341 ·and&gt;the lobby; 6. Locltwood, ground floor in .corridor-next to ven. •·· dins m.dlines: 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public lnfor. ~;' 8 Acheson Hall, "In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
~~ iii
.
.IIJ.."!,ffcomdor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
~.
. ., aro; ,,._1.807 Elmwood, Penonnel Oepanment; 12. Norton
Orl
.office, Room ~; 13. Diefendorf Hall, In C:orrldor ned to
· Room 10"6. 4. J.ol!:n Looa O~n..Hall, fourth floor &lt;Anllietll c.tnpusl~

_......:;_-· r."aenFadliiy I:Mitween D15iand D153; i

·,

.......

"'efl

M

I

........

o.,u

....,,AIIInulheAdlool..,..,..

· , The UIB OrctieSrra, directed by Pamela
Gearhart, gives its final co,ncert of the year.
Ba ird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission
charge.

UUAB FILM''
The SeduCtion of Mimi. Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
' cha rge. . .
.

EXHIBITS.
GALLERY 219 EXHIBIT
55 Me~ei- is an exhibit of works by New
York City artists working al the 55 Mercer

Cooperative Gallery. Gallery ?J9, Norton,
th rough . June 4. Hours: Monday-Friday, 11
a.m.-4 p.m.; Monday, Wednesday and Thurs- day, 7-10 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
LOCKWOOD EXHIBIT
.
Po lish Collection, exhibition culled from
the Uni versity's collection of more than 4,000

volumes of materiaL fi rst floor, lockwood
Memorial library. Monday-friday, .9 a.m.-5
p .m. Continuirig.
MANUSCRIPT AND FIRST EDITION EXHIBIT

The most complete collection of Robert
Graves manuscripts in the world is currently
on d isplay in the lockwood Memorial library.
Ma nuscripts and first editions fro m the Graves
poetry collect ion are part of the exhibition,
which commemo rat es ' Ro bere Graves'
eightiet h birthday. Balcony, seco nd floor,
lockwood Memorial library.
VISUAL ARTS ExHIBIT
Ariadne o n Naxos is.the title of th is group of

prints and photographs presented in conjunction with the University Opera Studio.
Hayes Hall l obby, bu ilding hours, thro ugh
May 30.

NOTICES

UUAB FILMS"

oWilliamsville,
. . . Rotary Club and a direc
. tor.
·!'M~Iard..f.il!"'~e..SuburbanJ-iospu•l.

Commerce ,

Sponsored by the' School of Medicine.
ORCHESTRA CONCERT'

admission charge.
Th e Kilfing (Kubrick), 7;30 p.m., and Lolira
(Kubrick ), 9 p.m. 140 farbe r &lt;Capen). No ad ·
missio n charge .

dent .of the Amherst Chambl!r-4&gt;f

(Capen) H.JII Bosement, Room G-22, 7:30-!l:.lll
p.m. For information or registration, all the
School of Medicine, 831-5526.

The . Faculty Senate will hold a regular
meetong May 6 at 2:30 p.m. in Room 148
Diefendorf.
On the agenda are: 1. Report of the
Presic!.ent; 2. Report of the Chairman; 3.
Interim Report of the Sub"-comminee on
Credit Ho~rs/Conraci Hours; 4. Interim
Report from the Educational Policy and
Planning Committee; 5.-0ther Business.
At If~ deadUne, it was unceru.in
whether President Ketter would give his
annual ·~State of the University" address
to the voting faculty as pan of the May 6
-meeting. ~s orif:;lly schedu!ed·May 13,
::,'j,!j~
"time nor ye1 deter-

"!

CORA P. MALONE\'
RESOURCE ASSisT4NCE

Conti nuing for the rest of the semester,
Cora P-. ~Ioney Collese will have available
resource persons to aid students in the follow~
ing areas on these days :' Monday ·- writing
and resea rch techniques; Tuesday - writing,
resea rct'! techniques, study Skills, and reading;
W~nesday . ~~thematics; !h,l~rsday - .
writing, research techniques, study skills, and
readi ng . Resource persons will be available
from 7-10 p.m. in FargO Quadrangle, Ellicott,,
Buildin g 1, Room A 108.
CREDIT- FREE COURSES

The Division or Continuing Education is
offering a variety of Credit-Free Courses for
the Summe r Sessions in the. areas of art,·
botany, dance, camping, b,usinesY,management, computers, counseling, music, personil!l
developmenL professional development, psychology, recreation/sports, skill development and social sciences. for .an informational
brochure or ·f~ information, visit Hayes A,
Room 3 or nil 831-001.
I'OETIIY MAGAZINE .
The UUAB Literary Committee is publiShing
a m.agazine of works by U/8 community poets
which will be available soon at locations on

and off campus. Call 831-5117 for funher illformation.

SUMMa IIOCiKsJOIIf H0U11S
Universily Bookstore bours for the summer,
effective Ml!y 19, will be: Monday through
fnday, 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.; Saturday, c1or
ed. Exceptions will be os follows: Monday,
Ml!y 26 - .dosed, Memor:iol Day; May 7:1,28
.and 29- 8:30a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; June 23 •nd
24- B:.lll a.m . to 7 p.m., textbook c1epanment
only; July 14, 15 and 16 - 1:"10 a.m. ID l :.lll
p .m. The Booltr.tO&lt;e In the Elllalit Complex
will be dosed for the entire summer1 effective
Moy 17. Resulor llookst01e houB wiU be
resumed 5eJ&gt;t!mber 2.
SUMMBI SESSION IIECISTRATlON HOUIIS
The Office of &lt;\dmiuions and Records Is
. now conductins Summer Session 1975
Resistration. Studet\ts"currendy ~ at
the un~vers~~y tor the Sprms 1m _ _ ,
need
.complete 1 Coune ~ forin.

:::l.n..

=..which

!fli'be~·at~

an_d Records. ReJ!Islration houn at the Office
of Admissions and Records . . l:.lll a.m.-7
p.m.;~ 1, s-a, 12-15, 19-22 and 7:1-li.' AI
ocher dajs In May, the office wiU be open

from l :.lll a.m.-4:.lll p.m.
·TUIIION WAIVal
.
Tulllon appliQdono far

.

1an!1i1n

students
for ......_ln210T-.1.1he
the summer and fall 1175
__
_

• deadline for .......... In .............. for
sammerls May 1. 1heileodllnelor ........ ln
fd 1WS ippiiQtlons Is May 15.

&gt;

�/1Aay.1, 1975
•t_t

~--;:·, .., ! :-~-:1 1 1 • {" f, , ,I-

1-"'!C}

:' ~I;JI,~ Ii' '.l \.. p'llft\o

RNTON lfCIURf 5a1E51

THURSDAY-1

uwyers ond Sodol Chonse.

CONtiNUING NUIISINC lDUCATION

l'aOGilAMI

O..nging hrrems of Community Menral
HN~h C.re: lmpoct on Role$ is the title of this
two-doy prosrom (this is the fino! d.&gt;yl. Buffofo.
Gen~ral

Hospital, Community Mental
Health Center. For more information, con·
tact 1om Collins, 831-5548.

__,

CONtiNUING MEDICAJ..ioucATION

Three Doys In A,foy: RI!Cent Trends in
Diognosls ond Therapeutics is the title of this

program. The prosrams are scheduJed at

Deoconess Hospitol on Moy 1, 1S ond 31, ond
registration may be rude for all three or any

one. ~or more information, cOntact Continuins Medial Educotion, 131-SS26.
INfECTIOUS DI5EASf 1HB1APY UCTUIIQ
Miscellaneoos Infectious Dise.lses is the

LfCTURE SHIESt
Slabilities of.Cilrbanions, Professor Andrew
Streitwieser, University of ~lifornia at

Berkeley. 362 Acheson, 8 p .m.
Sponsored by the Groduote School.
FilM•

Episode ·12 in Sir Kenneth Clark's Civilisation film Series is entitled " The Fallacies of
Hope." A discussion led by Chorles Altieri
follows the film . • Sy Lecture Hall, ElliCott
Complex, 8 p.m. No oidmission Charge.
Sponsored by Vico "Collese ond Collese 8 .

THEATRE PBIFORMANCE•
Bride of Shakespeare Heaven fe.t~tures

registration information, contKt Kirold Reiss

scenes from modem life with dialogue ~Y
Shakespeare, d irected by Gordon Rogoff.
Hoyt and Liifayene, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
Presented by the Center for J)leatre
Reseiilrch .

ot the School of Pharmocy, 831-2546.
JAMI5 A. ENCU5H

THEATRE PBIFOIIMANCE•
l.ook Behind Your - Heild is an im-

~' ~!~i!~s.a ~~~~ ~!:.:.~~~~ri~fa~d
Ronald Sorkness, both clinical assistant pro-

fessors of phOrmocy ot U/8. For location ond

-

DENTAL SYMPOSIUMJ

· Endodontic Lesions -

Diagnosis, Dr.

Herbert Schilder, Boston University School of

Graduate Dentistry. 9:15 a.m.

Major fadors for Root Una I Failures, Dr.

~rtyard.l'heatre,

provisational theatre production abo'ur-con·
temporary life styles. Educational Opportunity
· Center (EOC; Auditori um, 465 Washington
St., 8 p.m. Admi~sion : $.75 students, $1 .50
general public.

Calvin Tomeck, University of Toronto School
of Dentistry. Afternoon session.

Eight U/8 Dental School faculty members
wiJI. Pi£1ic!pi;te in ~minar sessions after the
lectures. Holiday Inn, Grand Island. Call 831·
'2836lor more i nformation.

~MAcY SPRING CLINIC
AND ALUMNI DAY•
All pharmacists · are invited to attend the
· day's activities which are scheduled from 11
a.m.-7:30 p.m Reservations should be made
by April 25 with the U/8 Alumni
Association. The program will be held at
the Pellamwood House, 3300 Transif Rd.
INDUSTIIIAL ENGINEBIING UCTUREf
Applications of Models in Planning
Emergency Medial Services, Dr. ThorNS

WiUemain, MIT ()epairtment of Urbin Studies
;md Plannina.. Rm. .27..,. 4212 Ridge Lea, 11 a.m.
Presented by t.h e Industrial Engineering
Gr.duate Student Association.
SYUDfNT AWARDS•

Tbe U/8 Community Advisory c:;:oundl' will
present awards to five undergraduate
0

~~ ~= N!: Y~~:::~nit~~i~un~h~~~
Marine Midland

C~ter,

38th floor, 12 noon.

GOlP
.
UIB vs. Roc~ter Tech . Amherst-Audubon

Course, 1 p.m.

·

·

~m~~;,tgire u. Peell~ Field, 3 p.m. No
Ocl~chorse.
·· ·
~ fNC.NeW AND .
SCHOLAa5 SIMI NAill··
Application of Two Graphinl Sys1em

Phllospphies, Dr. Jack H. Jones, programming
science manaser. McDonnell Douglas Aircrah. 112 Pilrker; coffee at 3, lecture at 3:15
P·O'I· -

Sponsored by the Mechiinical Engineering
Groduote Associotion.
GEOGaAPIIY COUOQUIUMJ
DeciskJn Milking Behavior of F.irms: The
C.S.. ol Eo&lt;portlng. Don Hoyte ond Jomes
McConnell. Rm. 40, 4224 Rlcfse Leo, 3;30 p.m.

-·

U/8 vs. Co/pte U. Rotory Courts,
' 3:30p.m.
No oclmhoion c~wse.

.

p.m.
AaT

-.

tBiou I.ICTUIIP

The Puzzle ol Greek A&lt;cholc S&lt;ulpwre, B.S.

-

lticltleMY, prafesoor, IJ&lt;yn Mowr Collqe. 310
Fooier, 4 p.m. .
.
5poMntl 11¥ the Department of· Art ond
the ~......., Cloollao. •
•

I'IIAIIMMJUIICS-- . .

"'-'P' ~!ooelld oll'ftenfOnn.ln (081), Dr.

DaVId ~=
.·=•C!M-GEJ&lt;lY
sclet~tlat, Corp.
Drus
- .Moaildloin

3M ' -

,

..-,

.

Sclencosl, 4 p.m.
C~JJ~~gJUiNG ....cAL IDUCA~CIINiq

...........aln...,.,.. ............ ol_

lheaidlc ...... ..alftlirthoNo....._

:;,~-:::..~-\"=

~-,..v~~==

-~

........,

~Gill.-:

... Sc:hoal of Medicine. .

FRIDAY-2
CONnNUING MWICAL WUCATION
SIMINAq
Ophthalmology, Or. 1 .). Guttuso. Statler·
Hilton Hotel. For more informat ion, call 831 S526.
PEDIATRIC coi'#RENCQ
Man.agemenr of Acute Status Asthmacicus

and Complicouions, Drs. E. Ellis, l. Mosovich
and M. Cohen. Kinch Auditorium, Children's
Hospital, 10 a.m.
SOCIOLOGY COUOQUIUII4L_
A ·Criminogenic M~rket Sifucture: The
Aulomobilc Industry. Professor Harvey

farberman , School of SociaJ Work ,
SUNY/Srony Brook. Rm . 31, 4224 Ridge Lea,
10:30 a.m.
..
I
pre5ented by th_e Sociology Graduate Stu·
dent Association and the Gra'duate Student
Association.
·
liKE FAIR•
l~ill bike shops will have displays all day,
and bike roller races will be held from· 2:..t
p.m. A biking film will be. shown at 1 p.m.
Fillmore Room, Norton Union, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
STATISTICAL SCIENCI
COUOQUIUMJ
Sfatistical Inference in Survey Sampling.

Professors V.P. Godambe and M.E. Thompson.
Rm. A-48, 4230 Ridge Lea, 11 a. m. ;md 3:30
p.P,. (two lectures). Coffee will be served at 3
p.m.
.
.
GtADUATI SYUDINT EMI'I.OYHS

U~~rr:.:;ship

meeting. All PAs, RAs
ilnd GAs are urged to illtend. 244 Norton,
3:1S· S:1S p .m.
. PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAIIf
.
,
1
Firring Straight Hnes Wflen Both Vilriables
· ore S&lt;,Jbject To Error. :Dr. Oouglos 5 . . Risss.

Deputment of Pharmacology and
Therapeutics. 108 Slierman, 4 p.m.
FilM• .

.

.

The Tr•hoh. 112 lohn Lord O 'Brion Hoi!
(Amhe"t C.mpus), 1:30 p.m.; 146 Diefendorf,

. . . . :~~~t~ &amp;ymN~~i:.'i~'::yer's ·Gui~d,

MATHEMA11CS COUOQUIUMI
Appliatlom Of Generolized :FUnctions ro
lloundoty Volue 1'rollletn$. Professor Rom .
Koonwal, Pennsylvanlo Stole Urihoenity. Rm. 38,
4l46 Rlcfse lei;, ooffte ot 3:3!1,,.1ecture at 4

r.;_, -

with .pe.kers

Michoel Tipr, Stuort Schelngofd ond Michoel
Walzer. Moot Courtroom, John Lord O'Brian
Holl, Amherst Compus, 8 p .m. No odmission
cho'll•·
PHYSICAL-oRGANIC CHEMISTRY

7

WAW·WSO, ~nd Committ~

_Democrocy.

.

fOr Chilean

BKJRICAL.ENCiiNEBIINC
DIS11NCUI5ttiD lfCIURf.SBUE5f
DIBk•l Processing ol "SpeeCh, Dr. ·Allen

Oppen'heim,

~1uchusetts

Institute of ;

Tedm!&gt;k&gt;BY. 104 Porker, 2.p .m .

__, .

MIDIONAL

.

~y ·

..

. Chemial Aspects of Schlzophrenio: Robert
. E. IJnJnsteln. (Jfoduate lludenL 24S C.ry
(lteiJth Sclenooll, 2 p.ll!.

ttw:ril CAIII·sma. MANAGaaNT
ft80W IICRJIIf

•

P.HilOSOftiY I.ICTUIIP
The Sodol Roots of Einstein's . Theory of

Re/otillity and the Concept of Sclemlfl&lt; Evolu·
tion, P.rofessor Lewis Feuer, University of

Toronto. R.m. i~, 4244 Ridse LO, l~ l() p.m. ·
~ , Sponsored by the Depntment• of
Philosophy, Groduote Philosophy Assodition,
Buffolo Philosophy of Science Society, ond

Griiduilte Student AsSodiition.
TOMOIIttOW: A SYMI.OSIUM ON
MODERN SCIENC£ ACTION•
Films: Things to C"''"' (Menzies,'l936) ond
Trip to rhe Moon (Melies, 1908). 7 ond 9 p.m.

For registration

information~

Open to students interested iil Cora P.
Maloney College. Farso Cafeteria, Ellicott, 7·
.

Directed by Harriet .Simons, the choir will
present music by classiCill composers as well as
by 20th century composers, Pauline Oliveros
and Harrison Birtwistle. Baird Recital ,Hail, 8
p.m. No admission charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCP
A View From t_he Bridge by Arthur Miller,

direct · by Don Sanders. Courtyard Theatre,
Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission: $1
st ude nts, others $2.50.
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Research.
IRC FILM•
Serpico. Sy lecture Hall, Ellicott, 8 and 10
p.m. Free to IRC fee-payers; $1 others.
CAC FILM•
Bananas. 140 Farber {Capen). 8 and 10 p.m.
Admission: $1.

SATURDAY-3
CONnNUING MED)CAL WUtATION
SEMINARJ
,, . '' ·
Ophrfialmdlog}t; Or: T:). GOtiOSO. itll)tr·

Hihon Hotel. For more information, Cilll 831·
5S26.
NEW YORK STATE FllM/MWIA
SHOW AND WOIIKSHOPSI ·

Elementary and secondary school·age
childre n will display media work sUch as film,
slides, tape and videotape. Ellicott Complex.
Hosted by the U/8 Center for Media Study.
TOMORROW:"A SYMPOSIUM ON
i'o1opERN SCIENC£ ~CTJON·
.

Today's panel discussions include: Politics
and Science fict ion, 10 a.m.; Science fidion
- Where Have We seen and Where Ari!"'We
Going?, ·1:30 ·p.m.; and The Uses_ of Science
Fiction, 3:30 p.m. All in 148 Diefendorf.
The film Alphaville Uean Luc-Godard) will .

...

£ •+ ·'
:

s:u..

I•

I

I&lt;.

'•l

' '

C/U O~Y II~" RAW• ' . . • . .

.

SUNDAY--4 _,

·

a:~~ !ns';~~~~~ ~=~;;~ii:!~ !HI b:i~ta~
1

10 il.m. An amateur level rKe will bea:in ..Jt 12
noon; those interested shOuld pre-reg:ister ·
ne.ar the Bubble before the rilce. Putnam Vfly,
Amherst Campus.
AMHERST CAMPUS
QUAKER MEETiNG•
A Friends meeting for worship and dtscus·
sion will be held. Silent meditation will be
folk&gt;wid' 'tij ' i \1i:scuiSion on " Quaker Ac·
tivities•in Auburn Prison," led by Phyllis Ran·
tanne:n' £offee 1 ,-y.~l ll ,lbe l ~ · IR.m.· r~~;
MF,..cc. ·.~M'-r; &lt;Stvdeni("Aff.Ms • Oflil&gt;!l?m
;l.II~_H I .:: n

..tlbl' tlf V'* ..

COMMUNITYIUNIVE115111' .!»"'Y:

To be held ori the Amherst CamPus. 1· 5 p.m.
See insert this issue for details.

TOMORROW: A SYMPOSIUM ON
MODERN SCIENCE FICTION•
jVrirer's Workshop. Nortoo Union, 11 .a.m.
ALCOHoLICS ANONYMOUS MEfTING•

Meeting for anyone with problems with
alcohol. 264 Norton, ~10 p.m. For informa·
tion, contilct Bill Stoberl, 831·2701 .
THEATRf PERFOIIMANCE•
The Good Woman of Serzu.in by Bertolt

Brecht, directed by Don Sanders, Courty.ard
Theatre, Hoyr and -l.afilyene, 8 p.m. Ad·
mission: students, $1, others $2.50.
Presented by the Center for The.atre Re·
sench. ·
'' 1•
'

-

«;:ONC~T.•

.I

•

I.,,

:·)11:,:: t · ,

"•

'; • !

,•

~··• •

_::- p ... t

'"fl&amp;J1in},Su1~rt.N.t:~si: ::J:c~&amp;.~c

~s'JS:~~,~-~ A r~8ht:Kn'ox Artc G~IWr~
Auditorium, 8 .p.m Admission S1 students
and Gallery members and $2 general pubhc.

L

MONDAY-S
BASieAU•
UIB vs. Brockport Sr.re (2). Peelle Field , 1
p.m. No admissiOIJ ch~rge .
1

MARK£TING UCTUIIQ
Nevi &amp;oduct Development and Concept

fvaluarioO, Dr. Jerry Wind, marketing
professor, Wharton School "o f Manaseme.nt,
University of Pennsylvani.a. 231 Norton, 2-4

p.m. .
be shown in 148 [);efendorf, 9 p.m.
Sponsored by the U/8 chopter of Morketins
Participants in the syf'nposiuni include
in Society of Tod.&gt;y. (MASCOn ·onc! the U/8
Samuel Delil!lY, Judith Merrill, Fr.e derik Pohl,
~r~'-~uj1~,~~~.~~~~·~}f"·
. Joanna Russ and leslie Fiedler.
. ENCiiJ5H DEPT. RIM•
Registratfor fee · ~eq~ir~;. ca!l,~1~ o.~
·. .....Rl: ' A,IJ!Keries ;,&lt;Oithe'()rp!I~YJ!t
831-4)91.
: ~
·, • ..... &gt;ft. ._ ,
je&gt;-):.140 f~(Gafll!l1);,3 ond,g;p.I!I.•NoJI!d·
TRACK•
mission charJe. '" ~""~ ... - .J-... :r 1 ., , .. ;....- ll :f .;T.;..enty·lhird ·UIB lnvitafiO!Jal. Sweet Home
'l..ECTURP fJ .r.tJ.. ~ , ... ' ...
• t_iigh School, ·12 ~- No iidm~idn di~: •
.-\ MelojJ/Iysial llosJS fCK Mm's ~ of
I~A~
.
Alienationf,
ProfessOr
Anatole Amon, \:lnfverUIB vs. C~nisius College (2). Peelle Field, 1
sity ofCOiorodo. R!n. 15, 4244 Rlcfse Leo, 3:30
p.m. No -admission charge.
p~m.
.
.... ,
• .
'

fttlioSoftn

lACRosSE•

.

u/8 vs. K;jnmore bcrOsSe 'Club. Rotary
Field, 2 p.m. No ·admission ch~rge . •

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
.
,
Intern~ I ComOustion by Terry Doran. Amer·

ian ContemPQrary Theatt_e; 1695· Ehnwood

~~-{n:··i:Yi!7~1 ~o~:-~ ~rl':~

f!'inCe; reservations a~ ~81e5ted @75:-...5825) 1 •

..FILM•

.
~47

-

-..; .... . .;

Dief;.,.,rf, 1 p. ;;F,.-,..d.
Presented by the; tnilja:Siudenta: AssOdo·
lion.
lloworchl.

miulon: $.50 Students; $1.75 others;

.THEATRII'ERfOIMANir ·. ·• ·
"
Good Woman ol Selzuon 1&gt;y aenolr
MICf·.~ In the
Relr£ ltan,jo!Ma' ....... member ol
Brecht. directed by Qon Sanden. &lt;!:ounyord
-n-.e. .~;~oy~ -and Uforeue, a, p.m. Adthe u.s. of llepreaentatl~te~ and
member ol the Hooae ~on - misllon:..atudents; $1, Olhen $2.50. .
.
. Public Heallh."141 DliflloJdarf, 3-4:30 p.m.
.,__. bJ the ~ for n-.e lie.
.
.
.
Spoo-.lbJ d.w 5dloal of ............. d.

,::g•lllf6lllq

:-

:. t,:l""' ' ·''

. Pi,i.nist
~r,;, ;· vi;QiYI ~~~ : ~~d
R~1 ~11, 8 p.m. No ~miSslo~~, clia.rse ... .
lltC flt.M•.:
.........
• Serpico. Goodyeor Cafeteria, 9 p .m. Free to
IRC fee-poye"; S1 others.
UUAI coNtatT• •
.
.
,•Toj Mohol. Cl•rk Holl, all 131-S117 for
ti":'es. "Admission charge.

THEATRI PEIIFOilMANCE•
lnterml Combusrio.ri by Terry Doran. Amer-

12 p .m.
'
·
U/1 CHOIR PBIFORMANCE•

' .~J
... ;: ' .· . '

Admtssion: $1.
MFA IIICirAL•

Cilll 831-4827 or

CORA P. MALoNEY COI.UGE
MEfTINC·AND PARTY•

'I~

CAC FilM~ .
I!'&lt;; •
"'' t 1
·•t•
llononos: ~40 Farber' (C.peri), 8 on\f10 ·p :m .

. 831-4301.

ican Contempora'l' ~tre,.... 1695 Elmwood
Ave., '7. 9,. and 11 p.m. Admission charge.
Seating is limited to 25 persons per perfor·
mance; reservations are suggested. (875·5825) . .

SlJ

&lt;oC' I:,l;~

•

n.e

..,.,...

Spo'nsored by the . Deputment of
Philosophy, Groduote PhilOsophy Associotion,
Groduote f'olhial Science Assodotion, ond
the Grodoote Student Associotlon.

.'.

· ru.uc~·

_ n.e,!Wblenu of.Urbon fduc2.ion,

.

Dr. Roy

Rist, dlreadi'bl ..W\iOpoliton studies, Notionol
Institute of fd..ation. -m Norton, 4 p.m:
Spo__..f!l: )&amp;- ;o,.Ji,oltmo:nt of Sodol
FO!!!!lfOI~ font! the_Foiulty of Ech!c~tionol
Slud~.r:~ ..
,
·
filM• ~·.
,:.r.
!
•
·· L.• Chirpte. IGodordl. 70 AchesOn, 7 :30

P.:m· . ·..,. •
HEALTH

~

Clellvetjr.

•,.

sc-=B--

•·un..n and

llurol. Non-Trodftionof He.hh'

Modeh

~

...,k;ipol)u lrorn

~~'~.j.d~lth

E¥alulllon ... .. .
====:Edo=~-5dloal of Heolth Related

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, ·A·IKDAI.• . . .

.

. - Joan Collot&gt;lr performa, laird
ltedtll Hal, ......... No iirlmikion chorp.

-:

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.

c·

~m~

.

,. .

·orne and See

•

Sunday Ma ·
Amherst
y4,1rom1 :oo-S·
I would rrus.
.00 p.m. will be C
.
Day. It will
e to invite ali
ommunity/UniY .
- ... • """"""'' ........ o&lt; .... •
• ........ . .
1
programs
a lewoppon_
to brin culty
stall to
.
1know th thewrthin
University
years, unity
the Amhe.J
yourand
families
in this

~

.•

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'h~odpate

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(except Pl\a"forpus.all
ope that this will ·be'as yet, had the
rrnacyl

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pus. I h

There will be

.

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

enter, and we will e second level
ofmy
I hope you
t.ab·ppy to greet he Millard

.

.

.

_ucted bus tours

• ..... _. .......
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~
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CordiaUy,

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DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PROGRAMS

l:OOp.m.
Beotbonn: Sonata No. 5 in F, Opus 24
{"SpriDf")
. (flnt moftlllent)
Carol Mc:Neel~y, violin
CUries Hullen_, ptano
Franek: Sonota in A Cor VioUn and Piano
Allepetto ben mOderato
. Allecro
C)&gt;nlllia Mituiin, vloUn .
Ken .len Wq, piano
Suk: Qwosi Bollode
Appoaionata
Jo Ann Lueemon, violin
Paula Kopstick, piano
Bartok: Roumanian Dances
Clrol McNeeley, violin
. LameD Supra, ptano
Ko.....tt:zty: Con~ Cor Double Bass
and Piano
•
.J - Von Deawl, bass
awtN Hullen, piano

1:50 p.m.

Arrlafe: StziDa Qlwtet
(onemo......,nt)
Alyee Cocnetta, violin
Clrol lfeNeeley. riolfD
Atan Sllldlln, vlole
Jo.pb Kimura, eeUo
Mozart: Qu.rtet in F Cor Oboe and
Stzinp, K.370
(two monmenta)

,. t"&lt;L'v'1

..

. &gt;.
. .· ""\...r_;

Paul Scblollllllll, oboe

m.a

(two mo....,.;nta)
8uaJme VIZiolyl, ptano
'lboma Halpin; violin
Mey Ooterbeq, ceUo
Rawl: Slrlac Quertet in F
'l'be llul&amp;Jo StziDa Quertet

4:30p.m.
U/B Open Studio piOduction, Muriel
Hebert Wolf, Direc!O' .

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PROGRAMS
Portlr4320
1:11·1:11

~..._

~ ..... .,.._Port:«
Fillmore
_. f

.......

.

~

•

·Faure: 'l'llo Cor Piano and Strings

0/i.,.,._, Iliad

~

.....

Becky Meyer, violin
Alan Smd!in,
Debonb KauCmm, ceUo

......

:_ ·-

-

4.
~

•
l"aalr ~ Qpolll, Dhctor (Ill .... ot_
............. - * w1Dbebeldi11
K'8lllldlle Oamll 'DIIIIa) -

�..·
. :.

:~

IN CASE OF EMERGENCY
OR FOR FIRST AID
CALL (831)4747

... -~

CAMPUS TOURS:.. BEGIN AT
• Law School (.lobn Lord O'BriaJI Hall)

Ellllcott - Newcomb Tel'race

tows of
the campus with culdes explalnl"' the
fadUties.
·

Buies wiU provide continuous

Bus stops a(:
• O'BriaD HaU
• Ellicott- Newcomb Terrace
•The Bubble

•

.. ·... . ·-

.... -

•

1

0
f

' "'

i ~ :,. ·-~~ :

•..

t .' ··~ .

I

' . ,~·~1 '~

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·DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PROGRAMS
Lecture Han • 170
2:00p.a.
U/B.J.a Worbbop Concert
Milton Ymb, Director

3:30p.m.

ar.tera..

FriDa Anclwlab llc!ldt

- ..

CRAFT CENTER.

_,__

• Art heal&amp;, Bldllblt

•CaftDiai: '1 ....

. .......

__........_ad~~~~~ ud cllllltnldlon

'·•utaa.t.c -·

: ..

�AUDUBON

0
a:

~
1

BEGIN

CAMPUS TOURSAT
•1.- . . . . (JoiiBLoiiiO~

_

; •mucou..:..N~comb,..,_ '

~

~ ... wiD

JIIOfldt COIIUDUOIII toun of
alii _,.. ·wstb IUJdtl ·HPIIIDIDI the

; flalllllll.

..........

: O'IIIID Hall:

BUILDINGS COMPLETED OR
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

j.

; •lllleo&amp;t- Newcomb,..,_ .
\o'J'btllllllllt

'.
;BUBBLE

1.

.,.._
.........
_,.lbota
.

~ .,.._. M

4.

WALTER P. COOKE HALL

!Physics)

npllr spriDc Oftnt

(Pharmacy)

How
ciD you make In a minute?
Plw'l'laawOnnt.t(bnt!)fflft)
,'
ltanle Dlmoallntlon

5.

OoMia Ill Wllabt' .

: '

6.

SAMUEL P. CAPEN HALL

7.

JOHN LORD O'BRIAN HALL

(Central Ad~ i nistra.t l on) • ,
(Law&amp;: Economics)

PlillaCIIID · Riab llarpby
IUab AIIIIDI&amp; 7..... Cur
. . . . , lllaotoat
one)
Oolllillldallolm IIOON' "17 lr Don

c-on

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS.HALL
(Engineering)

9.

·'

10.

CHRISTOPHER BALDY HALL
IEduaotlon &amp; Pllliooophfl

11.

SAMUEL LANGHORNE
CLEMENS HALL
ILongu-1
CHILLED WATER PLANT
ELLSWORTH M.oSTAnER FOOD
COMMISSARY
GEORGE 0 . CROFTS SERVICE
BUILDING

~JIIIPotberllll

.

12.

J 4:10·l:IO
.
.Judo Dalal&amp;n&amp;lon
, . IJII!OD~ au,b
Golf .
•
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Tllak

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lfllll ~ Prdce
Jba.JfeDoaoap
Aaldlmlc Dilpl8y • ·

.

........ ot· tbt Pbyaleal Edueatlon
qutl&amp;loDa and
..... p.B. mr-tloa • tbtlr dllplay
~ llallapoll\ tbt aftelaoon. 'Nile Ia

\

IUidtr aupenlllon of Ilk Clyde O'Mallty.

.

, , ., ..

Iliad IPOUP uncltr tbt lttdenblp of Gory
S.Ualltl '78.
-

:::.,
AMHERST 1 :,
RECREA :r ~~ ~ AL
tENTER

..

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•

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13.

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14.

111111(1

MAPLE ROAD

1B.

ELECTRICAL SUB-sTATION
JOii'!!T RESEARCH LIBRARY•
THE BUBBLE/RECREAfiON FACILITY
CHARLES P. NORTON HALL

19.

MARY BURNETT TALBERT HALL

20.

THE JOHN BEANE CENTER•
IPhysial Ptantl9top/Admintstmlonl
PHILIP OORSHEIMER LABORATORY
GREENHOUSE

15.

r---------.....116:
17.

(Student ectlvltin)

RoadS Undo•"

. . . . . Qub wiD -

Millie

LAWRENCE D. BELL HALL
!En gineeri ng a Sc:hool of lnforrnetion
&amp; Library Studies)

1:10·4:00
llodln!D&amp;a.

I~&amp; '1'lllniDI

RALPH HQCHSTETTER HALL
IBiology)

l:oO·I:Oo
'IWIIIIIblllbltloll (~ mateb) ·

........ .,&amp;

3.

JOSEPH ELLICOTT COMPLEX.
GOVERNORS' RESibENCE HALLS .
FRANCIS E. FRONCZAK HALL

2.

'1:10·1:00

•

~~::::::=

(Student gowmrnentl
I

Plrklnt Avail.•bl•
Under Construction

Of

21 ·

• .Authoriz-e for con.tructlon

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO'
VOL. 6, NO. 28

APRIL24, 1975

NTP .terms
being cycl~d
to hire date
Because a new Board of Trustees
policy requires that employment of nonteaching professional (NTP) stall
·members " beyond the seventH)anniversary of professional service, i ncluding
two years in title, must be on the basis of
permanent appointment," term ap pointments for NTPs will no longer end
on June 30, the Personnel Office has an·
nounced.
.
·
Rather, a memo from that office which
accompanied . forms for this year's NTP
performance appraisals indicates, " each
appointment will now be cycled to coincide with the employee's anniversary
date."
The initial group of-employees to have
term appointments cycled to their anniversaries, Kenneth H. Conklin of Personnel said, will be those who presently
have term appointments ending on june
30, 1975, or June 30, 1976, and who will
have met the service and title requirements for consideration fOr permanent appointmerit by December 31 ,
1976. For these employees, Conklin said,
the Personnel Department has already
computed the date eligible for permanent appointment (DEPA) and has indicated the ~rmanent Appointment
decision period on the appraisal form
rece ntly distributed· to the supervisor
concerned.
Additionally, the Personnel Department is computing anniversary dates for
all other professional employees with
term apj&gt;ointinents ending June 30, 1975,
August ,U , 1,975, or lune Jjl, .lJll~ Super_-

.Dellums urges 'peaceful' foreign - policy
Congressman Ron Dellums of California, who calls himself the Jackie Robin-

want to make sure Japan never again

son of th~ House Armed Services Com-

need

becomes ~ major power and that we
men there

ditures" - $69 billion for SoCial Security,
$18 billion for interest on the national

for refueling
at's gotta be the

debt , and other trust funds - are added
minee because he was the first to break
operations.' Man,
into the federal budget totals. " These
the "oiHolhlte, all-r"'", all SoUther'\"
l~rgest g~s station in he world!" • _
are funds that have to.. be apPropriated
- hold on that group, ~-voted against-- _i"='
-~-: -·- no - matter · whitt-."tti}t-Con8;ress does."
militilry aid· for Israel last year.
And what about 1,~ troops m BerSubtract these, Dellums ·suggested, and
His vofe, violently'opj&gt;osed by some of
mudii of all places1
you ' re talking about a budget of $200
billion lor all federal programs - ••of
his constituents" was a matter of princi" There's no real juStification ,"
which the Pentagon's $104.7 billion i s
pie, he said: nr•m not anti-Israel. I'm not
Dellums said. " All these forces can be
more than half.
an antJ..Semite. I' m anti-killing, anti-war:
brought home without undermining our
The U.S. can't continue to be the
security. We're in -these areas because of ~
" If this can' t be cut," he said, "we
number one policeman in the world.
some 'grand design' which the Congress
can't do anything" about such problems
Our foreign policy needs to be changed
has absolutely nothing to do with."
as a nine and one-half per Cent unto a policy of promoting peace and
'A Ue'
employment rate, 30 per cent functional
humanity."
illiteracy, widespread malnutrition, rat~ The government contends that less
Dellums, who feels the war in Ininfested substandard housing, and the
than one-third of the total U.S. budget
dochina is "insane, illegal, and imneed to provide quality edu(:ation and
of $305 billion goes lor defense, Dellums
moral," was keynote speaker ~t a camhealth care for all citizens.
said. " But that's a lie."
pus conference on 11 National Priorities
and Global Problems," Saturday.
Some arg~hat the defense budget _
- LBJ came up with something called a
One of his major goals, he said, is to
provides " spin-off" benefits in some ·of
"unified budget" _to mask the true ex. end American reliance qn brutality and
these areas, Oellums observed. They say
tent · of military spending, he charged.
force to accomplish objectives at home
that a S20.8 billion appropriation lor the
Under this-''smokescreen," more than
and abroad . "If we could make
(l um 10 f)ige ~ col. 1}
$100 billion in "automatic annual ex pendemocracy real here, we wouldn't have
to export it on the end of a bayonet,t
Target numbe[ one in . making
democracy work, "be said, involves cutting the so-called "barebones" · $104.7
lousy for Uno~$.
By Pa~ Ward Biederman
billion defense budget now before the
Most backyard plots in the vicinity of
R~erS.•ff
Congressa nd applying some of the
the campus are a triumph· of man or
In -.the spring a young man's fancy
- monies to social programs. Secretary of
woman
over Buffalo's soil - much of it
lightly turns to thoughts of - black
..R. Schlesinger told the
Defense
pure clay, wonderful for making pottery
· plastic mulch.
·-Armed Services Committee recently that
but louSy for making-carrots.
The young mart is a die-hard backyard
this figure can'! be . cut because of
"The first time I stuck a shovel into my
Iarmer who moonlights during the year
"foreign policy commitments."
backyard the soil just stuck to the
as a UIB faculty member. His mother is
Schlesinger "may be right," Oellums
· shOvel," the artist remembers with a
very
proud
of
his
Harvard
Ph.D.
He
is
contended, "but we better look at those
proudest of a bumper crop of burpless
commitments.''
.
CAMPUS c.u0t:Nt
cucumbers he grew last summer in patio
· Fully 55 per cent of the military budget
M•nf C111Uornf• ualwenfties, not11bly
containers.
goes to pay and deploy an armed force
Hundreds of U/B faculty and staff are · ed . _ land. AldoooP .... __, 1101
of 2.1 million, Oellums said. He's not
contributing' to (be greening of America
.• sure it's all necessary.
with hoe and spade and Jiffy pellets. few
of ............ *loaillr --..lwllh
Why AI These Troopsf
of the people who do it think they save
tloeCGIIopo-~tloe........,of
Why; for example, he asked, must we · much, if any, money. But everyone
tunq ..... of . . Alollent . , . _ •
agrees that growing · your own food in
have 4'n divisions In Europe when
.
•~~ore- d o e - could
your !'Wn backyard is, well, good for the
everyone knows we cap't begin to resist
soul.
a conventional Soviet attack there, tbat
By this time the first .peas and lettuoe
we're relying on nudear deterrents?
and onions are alret~dy in the ground. "I
shudder. After three seasOns of spading
Wby 42,000 troops in South Korea
put
my first row of peas in three weeks
in mulch and ~~moss, his 12' x 20' plot
when that nation has a Vietnamago, aHoon as that law big snow storm
. is ~ adf!lirably friab;le and takes only
hardened, com~t-neady force of 600,an hour to turn. over..
000"tO ward off a Nonh Korean army of . was over," a U/8 staff anist repons. He,
like just .about everyone. else we talked
The first .rdr many beginning gar325.0001 "I've been told we're there only
to, is growing edib~ peas this ye;.r,
deners are content to grow ·a few
to provide •a poUtieal presence;' so why
long a staple of West Coast prdens but
packets of seeds picked without much
42.000f Why not 4,2110, 420 or 4.21"
-available in the Buffalo are~~ until recentthought from the · display rack. at the
Are 52,000 troops really needed in
ly only under the steel domes .of
supermarltet, augmented with a flat or
Japanl "The reasons I've been Jliven for
Chinese-restaurant dishes.
two of Big Boy tomatoes. But. by the sethat," Oellums explained, are that "we

vison'"-WiH ~t,e ~"""* ~iritm~t

oplions available for this group at a loiter
date, Conklin said.
Employees with term appo.intments
ending June 30, 1977, will be cycled to
anniversary dates at the next. appointment renewal in 1976.
Sincf! th~ appraisal form asks suJ?ervisors to make appointment renewal
recommendations in certain cases~ Per·
sonnel has outlined a series of
procedures for supervisors to follow in
. completing appraisals this year.
A number of blocks on the form relate
to appointment terms, the Personnel instructions indicate:
i
The first block, if prechecked by Personnel, indica~es that no appointment
recomme·ndation is needed af this time.
(lum to f)ige 6,

col. 4)

Campus fancies tu.r n· to ·home-.gardens

"'mes

cond year, most home gardeners are
hooked on t~e seed catalogues. (The
first appearance of coupons for seed
catalogues in the back pages of the" Ans
and Leisure" section of the Sunday
. Times is the reading person's
-.. ._ Groundhog's Day, a comfortins sign that
spring will follow a few more months of
snow.)
..
Burpee II the l'loc:e
Many UIB gardeners swear by such
~earby seed companies as ~okes Jl\d
Harris, confident that their seeds are especially well adapted to the idiosyncrasies of our shon growing season. But
·a large number like Burpee seeds:
Burpee is. the place to tum for un...Ual
vegetables, admirers say, and, because
the firm is out of state, there's no tax
when you buy their seeds by mail.
Many of our informants spurn nursery
sets and stan all their plants from seed.
"Last yea~ I bouglit pepper plants from
the nursery and got beautiful bushy
plants t;ut not a single pepper. I've
.heard that the plants won't .set fruit if
- they're chilled In the seedlin11 Sllgt, and
some nurseries leave their plants out all
night, no matter what the weather," said
_ one UIB prde[ler who learned his
(lum 10 pqe t. col. 1J

....... .-...,.-._people
........ -.._.......__._.
_'Pf'loll._. . . . . . .. . ._
..-.......,.
.... _.... ........ __

�.·
April 24, 1975

··l
Dellums urges 1 peaceful' foreign poUcy·------'--:---- - •• a&gt;I.JJ

11-1 bomber will create some one hundred thousorid jobs, but "yoO give thot
$20.8 billion to domestic programs and
we11 creote 2.5 million jobs.
''The Issue Is one of placing a priority
on human values," he said. "We have to
roily the people and challenge the
politicians."
Fonllo 'Cruy'
We've "arrogantly created ecological
problems both at home and around·the
world," Dellums said. Part of the climate
chonges which have affected the African
food situation are the. result of our
technological developments, he contended. At home, we are "a nation of
niggers- black niggers, red niggers, old
niggers, student niggers, women
niggers, all of !'hom ar!! oppressed~ in
our society because their roles and opportunities are defined by others. Black
folks no longer have a corner on this
market," he said. And it's time for
chan"-"'v.en if President Ford doesn 't
realize it yet.
Ford's "State of the World Message"
outlining American policy was "crazy,"
Dellums judged. "The speech assumed
that the role of the U.S. in ·the world
hasn't changed in 25 years." And more
"insane" than that, he felt, was Ford's
contention that an additional $722
million in military aid would "save South
Vietnam" - something $1.50 billion and
SS,QOQ,"'merican lives couldn't do_ " for
that corrupt outfit," Dellums potnted
out.
The California Congressman said. he is
shocked by the " plastic sense of
morolity" displayed by the President in
his "concern" for Vietnamese orphans.
Ford seems to forget, Dellums reminded, " that as a Congressman he sup._ported for 11 years tht: polici~ which
made these children o&lt;phans." I!Y . t~e
same token, he said, the President
·" worries about the refugees" but fails to
add that he was a long-time champion of
the programs which ravaged and
destroyed , ttlei( homes, of the
philosophy which brilinwilshed our
young men into believing "that the only
good Vietnamese - nonh or south - is
o de~d qne/' .
Intelligence lnwestlption
Other other fronts, Dellums said ·that :
• he fully expeCts that the House's
special select comminee to investiga~e
intelligenc.e-gatheri_ng agencies, of
which he is a member, will come up with
incrlmlnoting evidence, eSpecially in
terms of involvement in assassinations at
home and obrood. (One line of inquiry
the committee might follow, he
suggestecl, is whether .o r not the intelligence community's fears of ·a "Biac~
Messioh" hod onything to do with the
deoths of Mortin luther King and/or
Molcolm X.)
• the Congressional Black Caucus has
as its top priorities: combotting the
"bloated military budget" which has
· brought on much- 91 our · current
"economic dislocotlon;" revising the
unequal tax IITUCIUre to bring In an additional $4010 biiUon eoch year from the
wealthr; creating 1 million public
l!mpfoyment jobs; pushing lor full
employment le!!islation; ·ond passing o

::=::

~

diSP.Ute.
wiU be solved by the panieS InvolVed,
without Nsuperpower" Intervention_
• l)e thlnb Nelson lt(M:kefeller (whom
he voted IPinA confirming ·u vice
president) Is a "dongerous politician,"
and he would ouppon an impeachiJ'ent
move oplnst him "If somebody proVides

me with a~"

.

• only If he "were God" could he bring about all the sweepins reforms o
filibustering National Labor Party
- ~pokes person In the audience
• "demanded" that he champion - the
Impeachment of Rockefeller,
moratorium on the debts of tlie "work·
inl c:IMa" to the "Aockefeller banb," ·
the ending of African starvation, 1nd a
$55 billion EfnerSency Asrlcu!tural
Production N:t to end Jtlrvatlon

a

-rwt-

r·•

don'• ...- ,ou to 1e11
me What to do,'' he IDid the Alfllstent
l.lbor spokesperson who then "'lked
out.)

• he supports ~ to make It

possible for taxpayers who conscien-·
tiously object to war to have that portion
of their tax payments which would go to
the defense budget diverted to other
uses through a World Peace Tax Fund.
Dellums' remarks were followed by
comments from a three-member panel:

U/ 8 faculty members Claude Welch,
political science, and Charles H. V. Ebert,

· geography, and Ed Mathias, a fo rmer
corporate executive now doing
volUnteer work on world humanitarian

problems.
$1,000 o Minute
Bringing the military budget down to

size, Welch noted that if an individual
had begun spending $1,000 a minute at
the time of the A"'erican Revol ution

and had continued doing so until the
present, he or she would just now have
completed spending the proposed
military budger for next year. That $104.7
billion represents $500 for every in-

dividual in the U.S., he said. "The situation is not unique to America, however.

World-wide per capita spending for the
military is roughly $60 per year:,. ..an
amount equal to five a~d "One half per

cent of the world-wide GNP and an extraordinary finandal burden." Welch expressed~ fears about uncont r'olleij
" nuclear proliferation." Some 25 nations
are now members of the nuclear club,
he said.
Not All Our f~ult ·
Ebert emphasized that the U.S. is not
alone in ravaging the world's resources
and pollutiQg its environment. " We are
doing mor.e than our share to ruili the
world, but it is too simplistic" to lay all
the blanle at our door, he said. ·''The
whole world has its priorities screwed
up/' Ebert contended . People
everywhere are striving to "catch up to
our plastic dream, to ~ join in our
senseless adulation of the technological
process . .It's the curse of mank ind."
Ebert said !'it's almost too late" to
reverse the process, to realize that 11 this .
~ is the road to disaster." FOr. those who,
like himself and most others, enjoy the
comfort - of two cars, air-conditioning,
and too much to eat while preachirig
against these same abuses, it's "time u:&gt;
put our money where our mouth .is."
The young •houldn't turn their backs on
politia in the JIO'l:Witergate ero, he advioed. "They •hould go Into political life
. to end the dichotomy between lip ~·­
vice and action."
In an5Wer to a~uestion about the SST,
Ebert iuggeo~ed thot "nobody need• to
go to london in 2Yl hours. It serves rio
practical purpose." But, he lamented,
we alreody hove many SST• in the form
of military aircraft, which can affect,
hwe affected the eorth's vitol ozone
layer. The aerosol sproys with which we
endlessly 1noint ourselveS 1lso ollect the
ozone flyer, !II!• pointed out. If we
stoPPed Iff these poflutontJ immediately, Ebert -sussested, the ozone layer
could repair Itself, but ft would toke
from 10-SO yors. "We're fooling around
with something we don't understand,"
he salc1 "Destroying the ozone would
11oft catastrophic results lor mankind."
Not ·o nly Wbuld skin an&lt;er becorile
rampant, but the bKteril necesllry to
produce protein would be de$troyed.
"We'd be finished and we'd ·desene It-''

A-"-·,.,..

Mltthlas Cllllllended that "hunger Is
the --ndlns mor.l pooblem In the
world todly." Americans, -he Slid, are
"the Arabs of the WOiid food supply. We

talk about our generosity in food handouts and then use that food as a
· weapon to bring political pressure to
bear against other nations. When we do
it, it's 'enlightened diplomacy' but when
th e Arabs use oil in the same way, it's
blackmail."
The U.S. House of Representat ives has
littl e concern for the world food
problem , Mathias c harged, and
systematically blocks even those meager
aid measures which the ,Administratio'r'\
proposes.
" We are giving a~ay less than onefob rth of one per cent of our GNP in
food to develoPing nations, today" he
said. "We did better than that in 1949."
He called for organization of a
humanitarian lobby in the Congress
which should "emulate the Israeli lobby" in ' terms of getting its goals
translated into legislation.
The Saturday conference was sponsored by the Community Action Corps,
. ~ he Graduate Philosophical Association,
the Graduate ·Student Association, Student Association, the U/ 8 Vets Club,
Wesley Foundation, and the Western
New York Peace Center as part of the
campus · " Earth Week-Food Week"
observance.

Health. Sciences
still largest
of faculties
The Faculty of Heolth Sciences
remains the University's largest faculty in
terms of total student enrollment, official registration figures for the Spring
Semester indicate.
Health Sciences, with 4,074 individuals
enrolled, is followed by Social Sciences
and Administration with 3,924.
The Health Sciences figures include
1311 students in the lower division, 1115
in the upper division, no graduate
students, 527 professional students in the
School of Medicine, 342 professional
students in the School of Dentistry, and
9 professional students in Pharmacy. last spring's Health Sciences total
enrollment was 3,819.
•
Breakdowns for other faculties
(followed by last spring's comparable
figures in parentheses} are :
.
Arts ond letters: 2103 (2000)-lower
division, 548 (550); upper division, 914
(8611; graduate, 641 (589).
Educotionol
Studies:
1712
(1751)~1ower division, 14 (34); upper
division, 85 (127); graduate, 1613 (1S901.
Ensineerlns ond Applied Sciences:
1691 (1 389)-lower division; 622 (426);
upper division, 513 (4441; graduate, 556
(5191.
low ond Jurisprudence: 731 (6621, all
professional. ·
N01tural Sciences 01nd Miithem01tics:
2213 (2062)-lower division, 934 (924);
upper division, 825 (743); graduate, 454
(395).
Soc~l Sciences 01nd Administr.1tion:
3924 (3858)-lower division, 958 (10051;
upper d ivision, 2037 (19301; graduate,
929 (923).
School of Monosement: 2054
(1478)-lower division, 650 (449); upper
division, 828 (608); graduate, 576 (421).
Also ihduded in the overall University
credit enrollment total are 1714 general
University students (1692 last spring) anc!
4129"'Millard Fil~more Ccillege ·registrants
(4235 last spring).
·.• f .

Art _History Library, faculty
to be shifted to Ellicott
The shift of the Art History library to
Diefendorf Annex for expansion of the
the Ellicott Complex sometime this
Unde!graduate library (UGL). It had
summer was announced recently by the
been ·thought that rescheduling of
University libraries.
classes might free some space in the
Accord.ing to the April 11 issue of
Annex, but this was not the case, the
libr.~~ry News, the art history facility,
libraries report. Despite the shift of
presently locate~ in Harriman, and the
some classes to Amherst, high night time
art slide collection, now housed in
usage of the Annex's instructional space
Foster ·Hall with the art history faculty,
by Millard Fillmore College classes conwill occupy one of the two Ellicott
tinues.
libraries following some minor
One additional room has been mode
reha.bilitation of the space. Offices of the
availoble in Diefendorf Annex, however.
art history faculty will also mov~ to
The librories and the Maintenance
Ellicott in a spoce adjacent to the library.
Department were interested in creating
The move will enable the Art History - a vending lounge to house mochines
library to retrieve materials now stored
now located in the central corridor. Acat the Bell Facnity and integrate them
cording to the librorles report, this will
with its major collection.
give students o place to sh while eating
The Libraries report these other spoce
and drinking (other than in UGL seots)
developments:
and Will provide. a place lor people to
1. The shift of the- University Archives
gother while woitlng lor the interampus
to the space vacoted by the Art Librory in
bus.
'
Harrimon Is now being explored with
Facilities . Planning. Acc9rding to the
Ubraty News artide,."since the move of
Sundoy, Ma~ 4, will be Community·
Archives to the Wright House on Jewett
University Day ~~ U/11, And this yor, lor
Porkwoy, both the. accessibility and enthe first time, the entire t!Yetll will be
vironment for archival materials have
held ot the Amherst Campus.
.
been unsotisfaC\OI)'." In addition to
From 1-S p.m., bus ours of · the
providing quarters more suitable lor a
Amherst development oi&gt;d individual _
librory;, .Jhe H&lt;lrriman space would also
tours of· buildings will be conducted.
allow roon) for •uffident growth of the
President Robert l . Kl!ller and his stoll ,
ArchiVes until their scheduled move to • will be avoilable In the Hoven librory of ·'
the Centrol library (in the Capen comthe. Ellicott Complex lor c:opversatlon
plex) now under construction at
and information. An "information
Amhent. •
arena" ot the some lc&gt;cition wt11 be stall-.
· 2. BeCause of the "relative nearness"
. ed by person~el who con provide
of tile move to the Reseatch lilirory ot ·
answers to questions about ocademlc
Amherst and the amount of work which
programs, admissions and financial aid.
woul!l beJnvolved In tenovlling the old
A symphony band ooncert, creatiVe
Harriman Reserwe Room lor sovernment
· croft t1emonstm1ons, IIR. art faculty exdocuments, a pion to move Documents
hibit and a variety Gl nMriic:ai-JKOII'ams
to Harri~ hal been withdrawn- Extrawill also be leltured In Elllcalt.
space wiiiiiNJnMded II the Bell flciliThe air-supported "bubble,''' which
ty, enobllns the Documents unit to
provides recreotlonal space on the new
ar;ranse Its INWiah lor easier accesscompuo. will be the site of tennis, br.Jte.l- Facilities Pllnnlng hu been unable• . donee •nd golf demanslrations, a bicycle
to allocate any lpaQe In the south haH of
race, and a basketball contest.

C-U Day at Amherst

�I ·

April 14, 1975

30'~ diplomacy said .cause

of current Mid-East woes
By Bob Enselhardt
Un1~Uty lnforrNfion ~

Michael -Tigar
on law panel

Michael Tigar i\.one of th~ three guest
speakers who will a!ldress the topic of
"Lawyers and Social Change," this year's
Fenton lecture Series theme - an
especially timely _one in light of the Attica trials.
Tigar's career has been singular. He
graduated from Berkeley in 1966. Within
the next five years he had helped defend
Bobby Baker, the Chicago .Seven, the
Seattle Eight, and Angela Davi~. Then he
moved to the south of France, where he
wrote, maintained a private practice of
international law, and raised chickens.
last summer, he came back to the
United States, where he is now an attorney with the Washington law firm of
Edward Bennett Williams {whQ just completed the successful .defense of john
Connally). .
.
.... · c . ; ..• ,
Tigar has said that he went to· law
school believing that the"law was a force
lor social change, But he .later concluded
th~t ''only .people who' are. k\ !i moti~n.
who are fighting for imponant things,

Today"s Arab-Israeli conflict might
have been resolved before the starr of.
World War II, /lad it not been for "a
sorry record of Western Diplomacy in
the 1930's," according to U/B historian
Selig Adler.
Dr. Adler, who has spent part ' of the
past seven years digging through period
archives, believes that a pre-war solution
to the Palestine question would have
also saved the lives of millions of Jews
who later died in Nazi concentration
camps.
" Had there been some place to
relocate~ · European Jews, " Hitler may
well have decreed exile for thern instead ·
of annihilation," Dr. Adler, distinguished
professor of history ilere, said in a
speech before the annual meeting of the
Organization of American Historians in
Boston last Friday.
A fair solution to the Middle Eastern
dilemma would have been difficult
before World War II broke out, Adler
conceded, buf two nations-Great Britciin and the United States - might have
been able to find one " through acute
and sustained efforts."
. He suggested that the effort was not
made because neither nation wanted to
alienate the Arabs at a time when the
world was on the brink of a major wa r,
and because both " realized the bulk of
the world's untapped o il reserves la y
buried beneath the sands of the Midd le
East."
Oil DepOsits Important
Dr. Adler also said the importance of
Arab oil deposits prompted the United
States to abandon a policy of neutralit y
tOward the question of Palestine before
the Second World Wa'N.;td e nded and
to move toward a stance of expanded
Arab input into the ultimate decision on
tWe rllaner.-.la-

·

: ·

•

· ... .:

In his paper, Dr. Adler traced the
background of the problem :
All that lawyers can do is defend those
lfi "1922, the league "df Nations gave
people and try to formulate an.d express
Great Britain a mandate to establish a
their demands ... . A law can be either
" Jewish National Home" in Palestine
progressive or reactionary depending
and to prepare the country for selfupon its application. lawyers can and
government- ''a most d ifficult errand ."
should help to demystify the law and lay
Jewish and Arab rivalries, howeVer,
bare its ' limitations."
... 1
· prevented the British from implemenJoining Tigar on the Fenton p3:nel will
ting a solution through the 1930's.
be two eminent students of the inBy 1939, Palestine had absorbed its
fluence of law on social change, Stuart
largest influx of Jewish immigrants A. Scheingold, professor of political
over 300,000 in the first five years after
science at the University of Washington,
the Nazi inquisition began in 1933- and
and Michael Walzer, professor of
the Arab world had begun mobilizing to
government at Harvard.
contest Je~ish occupation.
Foll&lt;&gt;wing the formal approaches to
With war' approaching in 1939, Adler
the issue by the three Fenton lecturers, a
noted, two factorS - the strategic impanel diseussion will be moderated by
portance of Palestine in protecting the
Marc Galanter, professor of law at UtB
Suez Canal, and · displays of Arab unity
and editor of the uw and Society
on the Palestine question - "convinced
Rel'lew. Questions from the audience
the Chamberlain government that the ~
will be invited· also. ; ·
·
Arab world must be quieted at jewish
The endowed james Fenton Lecture
expense."
Series is arranKed annually by the Office
Jewish
Hopes llluled
of Cultural Affairs. This year's program
In May, 1939, alter ·the Nazis had ab·
has been ptanned in collaboration with
sotbed Austria and Czecho~lovakia,
the IA_w.School, whose Mitchell Lecture
seyerely escalating the refugee problem,
Comm~ has made it possible for the
Great. Britain issued a - White_ Paper
Fenton lecturers to prolong their stays in
which, accor!ling _to Dr. Adler, "blasted 1
Buffalo in· order to parricipate in· classes
jewish hopes."
at the Law School.
The White Paper proposed that
"Lawyers and Social Change" will be
Palestine become an independent state
presented Thursday, May 1, at8 p.m. in
with a built·in Arab majority within a
the Moot · Courrroom of john Lord
decade. The plan sharply limited Zionist
O'Brlari Hall on the Amherst Campus.
land acquisitions and J~wish immigraAd.,isslon is free.
tion, and would have permitted no
funher influx alter-1944 except with the
consent of the Arab majority.
Berkeley G. Burtell; president of the ·
American jews, who saw the establish.·
National Business League (NBL), w.ill be
ment of a national home as a joi!'t
Anglo-American
ve·nture, felt
the featured speaker at a conference on
Washington alone could force London
minority businesses Wednesday, April
to keep the doors of Palestine open to
30, ~ by the Minority Managerefugee5.
·
ment Assistance Program and the Buffalo Metropolitan Business Association,
both
Professor
Adler
bblmed
&lt;:onpess
and
the
R~lt
AdministraInc. He will speak at 7:45 p.m. in the
tion for."fadure to tiecome involved:
GeorsJan Room ol. the Statler Hilton.
"Congreso wished to foroe Britain to
-The conference, on the theme
act In the name of humanitarianism, but
"Reachlll( Out Together for Progress
[on the orher hand) the tnen on Capitol
and Profit," will begin at 2 p.m. in the
Hill were absolutely unwilling to lower
Embmy Room' of die Statler. Included
American Immigration barriers," he said.
will be tesslons on marltetin&amp; accounThe U/B historian believes the
ting, sovernment procurement, and
Franklin D. Roosevelt Administration~•
training for minority businessmen.

can provide the real means for change.

Black business panel

pre·war .decisiorl to remain neutral on
Palest in&lt;; stemmed primarily from fear of
weakening . the British position in the
Middle East as general war became a
more likejy possibility.
Roosevelt also feared that a "junior
partnership" with Great Britain would
only bring the u.s. unwelcome responsibilities in the Middle East, while'leaving
his administr.ition open to•.,s;riticism from
.4solationists, most of whom were also
anti-British, according to Dr. Adler.
PubliCly, the Roosevelt Administration
expressed the view that their " hands
were tied " because Palestine was
recognized solely as a British respon'sibility.
This was a reitefation of the State
Department's positi9n that no legal
grounds existed to justify American interference in the British mandate.
St.Jte· Department Determined Policy
Frain his research, Dr. Adler concluded that in the years before World War II,
the President, preoccupied with more
urgent problems, allowed the Stale
Department to determine Middle East
policy.
Rooseve lt's Secretary of State, Cordell
Hull, in turn, left policy decisions to
Srate's Near East Division, a unit which,
ae&lt;:Ofding to Dr. Adler, had a long
history of opposition to Zionism and
which warned Washingto(J of the " long
run necessity of maintaining friendly
re lations with the Arab nations."
Dr. Adler no ted in his speech that the
State De partment 's .. fervent desire for
Arab fri e ndship" was " closely linked to
the discove ry of vast petrol reserves in
th e Middle East ."
He also said he has discoVere d
throu gh his research that the " inner
circle" greeted the 1939 British White
Pape r on Pal e stin ~ " with its usual
aplomb, noting that at least the 'Gordian
t krlat'··had bee n cur .in the. 1\rab-Jewi'sh
gnarl."
·
·
Ch.Jnge iR Policy
.
As th e Second World War prqgre~se_d ,
Arab oil deposits led tlie Uniled States to
abandon its historic neutrality on the
Palestinian question, the U/ B historian
also' charged:
"At the same time the war was draining domestic oil reserves ~ 'the concessions in Saudi Arabia proved
fabulously productive and vitally
necessary."
He maintained that Washington felt
obligated to placate the Arabs to assure
an adequate supply of ,oil_in the future
and to keep open the PerStan Gulf supply route to the beseiged Soviets. Thus,
on two occasions in 1943, President
-Roosevelt promised Saudi Arabia that
the U.S. would make no decision on its
Palestinian policy without full piior consultation with both contestants.

...........

Rep. Holtzman
to speak her·e
U.S. Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman, the youngest woman ever elected
to· the House of ReP.resentatives, will discuss " The Politics of Conscience" Sunday, April 27, at 7 p.m: in the Moot
Courtroom, John'lord O'Brian Hall.
Ms. Holtzman's appearance here is
co-sponsor.ed by the U/B Law Students'
Distinguished Visitors Forum and the
Niagara Frontier Chapter of the New
York Civil Liberties Union.
~
Her talk will be preceded by a lundrai sing reception to benefit the
financially-strapped area chapter of the
NYCLU. The reception will be held 'in
105 O 'Brian Hall tlirst floor lounge) fro.m
6-7 p.m. Tickets for that event can be obtained at the door. Donation (which-may
be ta x deductible) is $15 per person, $25
·Per · Couple. Reservatio·ns can be made
by calling the chapter office at 855-1494.
Congresswoman Holtzman , a
Democrat who represents New York's
16th District (in Brooklyn), served on the
'AouSe Judiciary COmini"ee that ,con-

si'defeC:f (he ·possib1e···l!f1peachment of
former President Nixon.
Born in Brooklyn, she graduated from
Radcliffe College and Harvard Law
School, where she was a founder of the
Law Students' Civil Rights Research
Council.
Ms. Holtzman, 33, entered Congress
on a reform pbtform "in january,_1973,
an·d is currently serving her second term.
She is a member of the House judiciary
Committee (and its Subcommittee on
Immigration ~ and Criminal -Justice), the
newly established House ;Budget Committee, and the House Commission on
Information and Facilities. • ..... "6\!1&lt;1'
· During her . visit, Congresswoman
.Holtzman will p~esent the Niagara Fron'"'
tier Cl]_apter's 14th Annual Civil Liberties
Award to Buffalo Attorney David Gerald
lay, currently chairman or the local
chapter's lawyers Comminee.

2 faculty named ACE fellows
Dr. Mari~ Carlota Ba'ca, assistant_ to
the provost of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters, and Dr. Norman D. Mohl,
professor of oral medicine·, have been
selected as Fe)lows of the American.
Council of Education in the Council's
1975-76 Academic Administration
Internship Program.
Drs. Baca and Mohl are two of 40
selected nationally to participate in the
program designed to strengthen
leadership in ~igher education. The
program identifies and prepares faculty
and staff lor responsible positions in
higher eduation administration.
Typically, each ACE Fellow is assigned
to a college or university president or
chief academic officer to panidpate in
task-oriented activities. The. Fellows attend seminars on the problems of
academic administration, read extensively in the field, produce an analytiC..)
report, and e,1gage in other adivities to
prepare them for admini5trative careers.
Or: Baca earned her B.A. and M.A. at
the University of New Mexico. She
received her Ph.D. from tlte Unjversity of
Southern California where slie was
awarded the Jooephl.ne dt: Karman

_Fellowship. In the summer of 1974, she
was one of 23 persons selected to ~tte.nd
the Institute of Administrative AdVancement at the University of Michigan. ·
Dr. Mohl has received three degrees
from U/B: the D.D.S. and lhe M .A. and
Ph.D. in anato~y. He was in tl:&gt;e P.rivate
practice of dentistry for nine years. Since
joining the UIB faculty in 1959, '"he has
taught in several dental areas -and has
won many honors and awards. He has
served on a number of faculty committees and is currently serving on the
Academic Planning Committee for the
S!:hool of Dentistry. He was chairman of
th&lt;: Academic Planning Committee for
the Health Sciences Center, was assist an~
for educational affairs and is presently
associate dean lor academic affairs in the
School of Dentistry, a post he has held
since 1973.

�-LI

. . l&amp;biA

Local Sigma Xi salutes radar 'pioneer'
The Buffolo Chapter of Sigma Xi
presented its 1~S Distingulshed
Research Award to Dr. Gregory Breit,
U/11 professor emeritus of physics, In a
ceremony Tuesday night in Farber Hall.
Dr. Breit, who continues to be activein research •nd in contributions to the
Uitiversity and scientific community, was
a pioneer in the discovery of radar and
of the existence of the ionosphere.
The award presentation concluded the
Annual Meeting of Sigma Xi which concentrated this year on "International
~ of Science."
Dr. McAllister H. Hull, Jr., dean of
the Graduate School, accepted the
~ward for Dr. Breit who, due to illness,
was not present.
Dean Hull paid tribute to the distinguished physicist and traced some of
the niRhliRhts of Dr. Breit's career:
Fornoldoble Output
"In the 55 years since his first publica·
lion~ G . Breit has authored or
coauthored Over 250 papers, wrote
much of (and "edited all oO one volume
of th.e prestigious series of books on
physics, Handbuch der Physik. 1.1. "Rabi
remarked on the occasion of Gregory's
retirement from Yale in 1968, he hoped
Gregory would slow down a bit : it was
hard enough on his contemporaries to
face this dedication to physics and the

-

sentially out of available gear, the
magnetic e xtrapolator, . .. the means of
confusing the hostile magnetic mine,
and, as it turns ou t, of designing new
and more efficient mines of our own.
The Navy states that many lives were
saved during the war by this wOrk.
" In 1~2, Gregory returned to Hopkins
to work on the proximity fuze, a device
to detect t·h e presence of a target
without actually hitting it and allowing
the explosive charge of the projectile to
be set off when the projectile is close
enough to do some damage. Such a fuze
has obvious application in anti-aircrah
operations, as well as increasing the
effectiveness of o~d inary anillery shells
by causing them "to explode in the air
rathe r than on ground contact. The
modern so·called 'sman-missiles' are
d irect descendants Ot the fuze. Gregory's
early training in electronics (wher:t,iJ.was
a new science rath er than a"Q!n of
technolo"gy) provide'a the backgrou nd,
and the fuzes wer~ in production within
a year. Gregory then concerned himse)f
w~ith the pro~r deployment of-the fl.ies
by th ~ armed fo rces, and transferred to
the _Ballistic · Research labOratory at
A~(d!"'~ .. ~f'?~irg Grouq9s, in 1943,
wtiere he remained until the war was
over. for this service, both the Army and
Navy have cited Gregory (1945).

competition it meant, but for "younger

physicists half or a third his age, this formidable butput was nothing less than
dal.!nting. In the seven years since,
Gregory may have heard Rabi's admoni tion, but there has been no lessening of
dedication to physics and the pace he
keeps .. : is still that of a much younger
man ... ~· ..
"In the middle twenties, working with
Merlo Tuve at the C:arnegie Institution in
e.washington, Gregory wished to investigate the possible existence of the
then postulated ionized layer of the atmosph~re : Since the presence of ions in
ufficient density woulcj cause elec'tromasnetic ACN.tion . to refraa and
even reflect, the test could be made by
sending signals and seeing whether
there was a radiation echo. If one sent
the signals in pulses,· and detected •he
echoes with their time delay between
pulses, the height of th'e layer could be
measured. The Breit and Tuve experiNuclear Cenoonhip
ment accomplished just this. But it did
"It will have occurred to some of you
more, for this experiment, with relatively ·
to ask why Gr~gory was so employed,
simple apparatus, provides the basis for
with mines, fuzes and exterior ballistics,
radar.
·
during a period when his fellow nuclear
-"No Englishman )Vho lived through .
physicists (among whom he had few
the Second World War, no pilot today,
peers).
were at C-hicago, or Hanford,
no sailor, no meteorologist, needs be
Washington, or Oak Ridge, or especially
· told of the imponance of radar. It is not
at
los
Alamos,
designing and producing
surprising that the Institute of Radio;&gt;.
the first nuclear ~mbs . Since Gregory is
Engineers made Gregory a fellow in 1945
not here to contradict me, as he surely
with the dtalion 'For pioneering in the
would do if I give him a jot tcio much
experimental probing of the jpnosphere
credit, I shall answer that he felt that the
and giving the world the first publication
glamour "of the bomb effon would atof the experimental proof of the existence of the ionosphere, and for hav- . tract plenty of..lalent, while equally important work for the immediate
ing Initiated at an early date the pulse
prosecution of the war might go .unmethod of probing by reflection which
. done. As his wife, Margorie, once told
is the basis of modern radar.'
me, he decided to win ~he war singleSawed hWiy Uwes
. handed, and set about to do so with
" ..• At the beginning of World War-11,
characteristic energy and purpose. But
Germon magnetic mines w- a new
equally characteristically, he had not
menace. Their devices could detect the
turr&gt;eC:t away from nuclear bomb work
~of steel-hulled vessels through
until he was sure It was in good hands.
their Influence on a magnetic foeld, and
He knew the German physicists, knew
SC!f off the mines without there being a
also the international nature of science,
physical mntact. Gregory was asked to . and had no Intention of letting the opjoin the Washington Navy Ylrd to study
position get ahead of usJn a foeld which
the problem, and prompdy devised, es·
could become maner of survival of our
way of life. Thus in 1940 he had led the
effon to get authors and editors voluntarily 1o withhold papers in nude.r
physics from publication, long before
this hearne a molter of sovernment
policy. He continued in a major role 1n
Dl- ol u.v-slfy
nuclear censorship until the war was
~- S.M• UniYMiry ol Yorl&lt; .,
- .• .J0S
S.., luffolo,
N.Y.m.2511
l&lt;n•. ·
Edlloriol
_ ......
__
.., ........
over and_ the papers held In custody
could be published. Those of you who
read tile Pflyslcl/ Re¥iew will note a
&amp;ecurlwe EdiiO&lt;
flood ol papers appeartns first Iller 1945
A WfSJUY ltOWIANO
with submission dales IS much os five
fdlfCK~
ROIIERTT. MARLETT
years eorlier. As an OUIIIfOWih ol this efMondl'laductlon
fort, Gregory the lint 10 draw ""'
IOHNAQOIJnfR
attention ol the -National Academy of
• Sciences and the Nailon.l Research · .
'AIIIfCIAWAIIOIIfDPAIAN
Council to the possibilities from nuclur

a

"'-..........,.,._pub/bhed
- -..by,,..
_,_.. .._,_Z1l1}.

..._.._

_,.c:alondW_
DIANEQ(IIHN

. S(
Conlrillullna
""'"'
ISIIN II. JUitGEII

reactors- •••

•

"You think of Gregory IS one of the
leading theorelkal physlcills of the past

50 years, and so far I've spoken mostly of
.._is e Xperimental efforts. But in so doing,
I have illustrated ·one of Gregory's cardinal characteristics as a physicist. He
understands the most abstruse
theoretical ideas in terms of very con·
crete constructs, and has not been shy of
going into the laboratory when he needed to ~emonstrate something....
First Retirement
In 1·968, on. th e occasion of his first
ret_i rement, Gregory was honored by a
symposium held at Yale. Several hundred physicisis from around the worlo
attended, and eight of them gave talks
on subjecrs to which Gregory had made
signal and seminal co ntributions. Two of
the speakers, Bet he and Wigner, were
Nobel laureates. The titles will give you a
taste of t he ra nge of Grego r.y's
' theoret ical and experi me ntal work : The
Nuclear·Nucleon Interaction, Nuclear
Maner, Consequences of the Short
Range Nature of Nuclear forces,
Interactions of Complex Nuclei, The ·
Breit Interaction, The Isotope Shift,
Proton-Proton Scattering Studies., Radio
Ranging and Nuclear Physics . . . .
" In recognition of the importance of
these 55 years · of work, Gregory was
awarded the Franklin Medal in 1964, the
National Medal of Science in 1967 by the
Presiden t of the United States, and the
Bonner Ptize of the American Physical
Society in 1969. Perhaps the most
prestigious of these is the Franklin
Medal, which is awarded once a year to
the single scie ntist deemed worthy...i n all
the world (and hence is more selective
than the Nobel Prize, which is awarded
in several fields} ...."

On exhibition

. ~ ' '~ spKial ex_hibition of the paintings of

Brazilian artist Abdias do Nascimento, a
faculty member in the U/B Puerto Rican
Studies and ResearcH Center, is on dis·
'JIIay through May 16 at the" llE•IFE
Museum of Af~9-Amerie3n Culture in
Philadelphia. Nascimento's painti~gs J n
·the exhibit are ·~i\1 .to be ~·a aocumentary of a personal 'theogony and express
his vision of the kingdom of God, not as
somethin&amp;., yet to come in a distant
future, but as something right here
within reach of our existence. His symbols aim at what is beyond blackness,
whiteness or a..ny contingency, and ..sa'y
that all men can be reunited on the
grounds of -their common divine
heritage.'.,

April 24, 1975

CAC plans .
conference on
communication
The Community Action Corps will
present its sixth arinual Communication
Conference, on "Organizing Alter·
natives," Wednesday, April 30, frQm 1·5
p.m. in the Fillmore Room, Nonon.
Purpose of the meeting , CAC
orgaliizers say, " is to bring concerned
in d ividuals from the Buffalo area
together around specific peninent issues
that are affecting or will in the .immediate future affect the community.
Too often," CAC spokesmen say, "we
are forced to feel that we are alone in
our .hopes · and dreams for working
towards a better society; a feeling of
helplessness has beset many of us. The
Conference is designed to bring the
people of Buffalo together to work
towards meaningful change.
" We hope not only to talk about
change, but to form on-going grOups
that will actively work together around
these iss~es . CAC feels that enough lipservice has been paid to the ideas of
change and it is now time to begin work·
ing in that pirection. tt is the people
themselves who must enact that
change."
Following an introductory general session, the conference will break into
workshops.
A session on 11 legal Problems of the
Aging" will be led by larry Faulkner,
director of legal Counseling for the
Elderly; another workshop will focus on
" Alternative Energy Sources," featuring
Dr. Gordon Harris, who will speak on
"The Energy Alternatives: Which Way
Should We Gol"
A " Political Action towards Human
Needs" discussion will attempt to inform
members of actions now being taken on
·behalf of . ROvernmental spending 'for
human needs.
A '~Heahh Care" workshop will cons.ist
of two-pans: the-lim will be a discussion
Qf planning ~nd implementing health
. care d!!livery ~Xn!mJ~ . agd ~~a~Y~. ,we
legislation in Erie County; the second
will be a discussion of health
rmintenance organizations (HMO's) and
their implementation in Erie County.
The education area of CAC will pre-sent a .V\'orkshop dealing with alternative
education and the Free Schools. Special
attention will be focussed on the buSing
problem.
Still another session will deal. with the .
subject of day care.

�April14, 1975

Bills, Health. Ed
to co-sponsor
graduate course

Opera-Studio
to -preview
fall production

Outstanding physicians and athletic
trainers will be featured at a two-week
graduate coufse for coaches an.d
physical educators at the Buffalo Bills
training facility in Orchard Park, May 1223.
Co-sponsored br the Bills organization and the Schoo of Health Education,
the course is designed to· teach the 50

A " minipreview" of the UIB Opera
Studio's fall production of "Ariadne auf
Naxos," scheduled for November 7-9 at
the Shaw Festival in Niagara-on-theLake, will be part of a Studio presentation entitled, "Opera Primavera fea·
turing Primadonnas and Friends," at
Baird, Friday and Saturday (8 p.m.).
. In · addition to excerpts from the
Strauss opefa, this weekend's program
will include scenes from "Cosi fan tutte"
(the Act I finale), "Don Giovanni" and
''la Clemenza di Tito" by Mozart, Cilea's
"Adriana Lecouvreur" and Verdi's
"Macbeth."
Jane Bane will sing the coloratura rol~
in "Ariadne."
Others singing on the program are
Bruce Bell; Elizabeth Brown, Joan
Collopy, Kenneth Friesema, Carol Grey,
Jeannette Hall-Wood, Gerzinus
Hoekstra, Rachel Lewis , Edward
Marshall, Patricia Oreskovic, Kenneth.
Whelan and Robert wmoughby.
Opera Studio Director Muriel Wolf
will direct the program which will also
feature the U/B Chamber Orchestra
conducted by Carlo Pinto. Desigt'l and
tech_nical qirection are by Mike English.
Admission is free.
In addition to the fall proQJJcJion at
the Shaw Festival, other future plarls of
Director Wolf include: a bi&lt;entennial
year premiere of a specially~
commissioned opera, the American
premiere of Jacques Offenbach's
" Biuebeard," and the P.resentaiion in
the summer of 1976 of OP&lt;:ras suitable
for TV.

participants ·about proper prevention

and care of injuries students are likely to
receive either on the playing field or in

the gymnasium.
·.
Buffalo Bills general manager Bob
Lustig said that in the interest of
promoting and encouragirig study in important aspects of sports medicine, the
Bills are pleased to make their training
and locker room facilities available to
U/B.
Dr. Maflin Mclntyr'e, associate dean of
the School of Health Education, added
that the "use of the Bills' medical and
training staff and the facilities of the
training complex add a dimension to the
course not otherwise possible." ~
He pointed Ollt that teachers and
coaches affiliated with school programs
often do not have extensive training in
the prevention and are of injuries
resulting from sports panidpation.
"Before a new liw was passed in New
York State a year ago, coaches and
physical education . teachers were not
legally allowed to aid an injured player
in any way," Dr. Mc(ntyre said.
The new law, however, requires that
coaches and physical education teachers
be certified in first aid - ao\d be
prepared to use this knowledge when
th~ need arises.
.
.
.' In• addition ·to the full,time&gt;coaches
and teachers affected by the law, hundreds of ~~volunteer" coaches in non~
school leagues could aloo loe"'!lit ,lrom
learning what proper action ' to" take
befofel •tfle hflini&gt;UI~hc~ or · physician
arrives, Dr. Mcintyre said.
0
8y offering this course at the
graduate level, UIB and the Bills wiil be
performing a service to area teachers
and coachi'S which, eventually will be
reflected in the Improvement of athletic
programs under their dlred".supervision," he added.
~ ~. .
. Class sessions will run from 6-9 p.m.,
and any physicians who would like to attend certain lectures wHI be~welcome.

\ '

f.f.

_,._,.'{\!

ell~'¢f. cP·

...

_.........,...-.!JI!I!IIIIJII!I•
Crowins yow

own lood is 'aood kw

ttw s.qut.•

Campus fancies turn to gardens-

arom page 1, col. 4)

l~n. This. year, he improvise!! a cold
frame. out of discarded storm windows,
plastic, and a bargain-priced he-urtg
coil. · He can reach inside the frame
J~rqugh ~-is _ cellar,, window, and his
pepper and tomato plants, begun six
.weeks ago, .are doing just fine. Others
Impatiently awalilrig . the day . when
they can turn off the gro-lights and
move their tiny plants outside, styrofoam
cups or peat pots and all:

are

A Family Affair
Plant\ng iJ ohen a family affair. " My

kids loved planting the garden," reports
a Ulli's taffer, "except they expected ~II
the plants tb be grown the day aher we
put the seeds in." His young daughter
turne!d out to have a green, ·albeit very
small thumb. She spilled a few beans on
the lawn before the family vacation.
When they returned, the beans had
sprouted, and they carefully
transplanted the seedlings into the garden proper.
_
One of the joys of having a garden is
being able to control the exposure of
your vegetables to pesticides and other
chemicals. Almost eyeryone we talked to
is trying to minimize the artiftcial in~
gredients going into theif gardens. One
staff member, who helps work a 30' x 20'
plot shared"" with her roommate, is an·
tlcipating a fully organic garden, but
probably not until next year. (They
recently bought a miniature silo from
Burpee for making com~.) Many U/B
gardel)erS use only manure for fertillzins. and several reported they spade
vegetoble peels into the soil. But few
Ulil gardens are completely organic. As
ooe woman admitted, "I'm not above
using Superphosphate if I think it's

":~

are espectally unpopular,
and although no one' reported investing
in lady bugs to keep down his pest pqpulation, many people have tried planting
5trong-scented flOwers to discourage
foraging insects. One UIB plant person
ed~ his entire plot with marigolds,
anCI; he·assured, "the bugs sat on them
and admired them gready."
Herbs seem to be -popular this year
(especially dill a!'d . OJetano) • . One
weight-conscious llacl&lt;)'lnl farmer is

~~m:.:r.;.;.~~

,!Nkel, and·with '-1D AliCe. "I
. don't really like It much," she says, "but
It has 110 calootes." Her IIOUI'JIIet prden
also lnd~ a three-tiered llraWberry

patch and Italian or plum tomatoes
(''they're less watery than the huge Big
· Boy-type"). Rutabagas, broccoli, and
asparagus were being tackled by an
adventuresome few. E-veryone was plant1n8.1ettuce ("Bunercr.unch" is popular},
bush l&gt;earis, zUtchini and ' tonlatOes.
Corn was a sometimes thing. Several
people reported lamentable failures
with previOus cOrn crops; induCtin8 one
family whose crop was wiped out by rae~
coons. Another gardener described last
.. year's crop as tough and starchy.
"Corn," said another simply, "is a
bummer."
No one felt that their gardens contributed much to the wn on inflation.
Seeds are more costly than in the past
(and special items like asparagus roots
are extremely high). Equipment costs
money, and there are also hidden costs,
like. jars and rings .for canning and the
cost of freezer bags. And then there's
water. One woman who prefers
irrigating to sprinkling, recalls protesting
her astronomical water bill the first year
she gardened. "But you do have a pool,
don't you!" the water company asked.
But gardening would be worth it at
twice the price. Aher. a few months oi
weeding, watering and solidtude, a
mi.rade occurs right in your backyard.
There, hanging on the vine, is a tomato
so ,.nlike that hard, gassed, plastic:
w~apped travesty sold all winter that you
wosh you had another name for it. Not
one torN~to, but dozens. Soon, you
know, you will become a linle sick of
tomatoes, but for ihat moment you experience a sweet sense. of st!lfsufficiency and closeness to the earth
-that is rare indeed in our busy, urbanized lives:
.

GSA raps Boyer
The Executive Committee of the UIB
Graduate Student Association is
"dissatisfied" with Slate University's
supple~l budget request.
·
In a letier to Chancellor Ernest Boyer .
the GSA Cabinet ..ys that the S16 millio~
supplemental request "Is not sufficient
to maintain all existing academic
programs ancl services provided by
SUNY," and thar Boyer ki'IOWI iL
·w~~tlsfied with your apparent
acqu
in the propriety of alts in
SUNY's prop:ams and seivlc:eS," the CiSA
letter sa)'S. "It Is our belief that all ex·
istlng Univenlty Ktlvltles deserve the
funding they have received; and that
some In faa cleienle to be expanded."

Jane . Bane, soprano who will be
receiving her Master of Fine Arts degree
from U/ B this spring, has been engaged
to sing the role of Queen of the Night in
Mozart's ''The Magic Flute'' i'n June with
the.Des Moines Metro Opera ~ompany.
This marks Ms. Bane's first professional
engagement, although she had the distinction of S&lt;!rvin'g "a~· (lndl!rstudy to
Beverly Sills last Summer at the Wolf
Trap Park for the Performing Arts in suburban Washington, D.C., as part of the
Artist Apprentice Progr~m at that institution.
'
Ms. Bane sang the role' bf Musetta in
the University Opera Studio's production of "La Boheme" last November and
is a graduate assistant- in opera studying
voice with Muriel Hebert Wolf.

Two c&amp;nicians

""!"· n

to give dental talks
'fwo internationally prominent dental
cliniti.ans will be the main speakers at the
fofth •~nual James A. English Symposium
May 1 at the Holiday Inn, Grand Island.
Dr. Herbert Schilder, professor and
chairman of endodontics at the Boston
University School of Graduate Dentistry
will speak on "Endodontic lesions ._:
Diagnosis" at 9:15 a.m., and Dr. Calvin
Tomeck will address the afternoon session on "Major· Factors fOr Root Canal
Failures." Dr. TOFneck is an associate in
dentis_t:ry in the Department-of ltatfiology.
and Biological Sciences at the Uhlversity
of Toronto School of Dentistry.
Eight U/B Dental School faculty
members !Yill participate in two seminar
sesoions after the lectures by Drs.
Schilder and Tomeck.
This .fifth annual sylnposium honors
Or. English, who was dean of the UIB
School of Dentistry from 1960-70. He is
currently professor of oral biology at the
Dental School.

�• •

&lt;:

Bike planrdng
session set
for Saturday
The Department of Industrial
Engineering will sponsor a bicycle infor·

mation interchange aimed at 11 Pianning

for Bicycles in Western New York,"
Saturday, April 26.
Groups and individuals with a

professional or recreational interest in
bicycling yfety, rider training, and other
bike-related concerns are invited to the
program which is scheduled for 234 Norton from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Morning sessions will feature discus}ions of general national and local
bicycling cpncerns; the afternoon
program will include small group
workshops on specifi.c cycling con siderations.
Dr. Colin G. Drury, assistant professor

of industrial engineering, says that the
recent popularity of bicycling has
spawned a number of groups interested
in improving bicycling conditions.

·
''This is a problem in that no on~
group iS sure what another group is·concerned with or what efforts are being
' dupliciued. Through this informal
seminar, we hope to initiate a means of
both_.communication and coordination
among these various efforts," he sa ~ d .
"Representatives from transportation,
recreation, public information and law
enforcement agencies, as well a~ bike
clubs and other concerned groups have
been invited and we expect ap proximately 50 persons," Dr. Drury added.
The semin:1r is supported by the
Jnstit4te .fQr Public Policy Alternatives as
part of a project on bike safety. Registration information is available through the
tndustrial Engineering Department at
831-1166.
-

Pr. Tall chosen
for Soviet .exchange
Dr. Emi\y Tall, a U/B assjstant professor
of , RuuQn .~ (Oepartment of Germanic
and Slavic), is one of -35 American
teachers of Russian chosen to participate
in a summer exchange of language
teachers with the Soviet Union.
Under the program, which is part 'Of
the U5-USSR- cultural exchange, the
Americans will spend ten weeks studying at Moscow State University, while 35
Russian teachers of 'English study al
UCLA.
The program, coordinated in the
United States by the International
Research and Exchanges Board, begins
late in June.
·
. Dr. Tall, who has been on. the faculty
since 1973, received her Ph.D. in Russian
from Brown University. She ho.lds a
master's degree from · Middlebury
College and a bachelor's degree (in
French and Russian) from Cornell.
Among Dr. Tall's curreril research interests . is Kafka criticism in the Soviet
Union.
Last year, she was calle&lt;! upon to
translate into Russian the letter inviting
Alexander Solzhenitsyn to aq:ept a U/B ·
faculty posi~or\. ~
·
,

Evening at Chabad

'

Chabad House will present "An Even- ing with O..bad," Monday, April 28, at
8:30 p.m., With guest speaker, Rabbi
Zalman Pooner.
Rabbi Posner, whO Is spiritual leader
of Congregation Shearlt Israel in
Naslwille, Tenn., is a noted author and
lecturer on the hislory and philooophy
of the Chabad movement. He hao ·
· tranolated Into Englloh a number of
wotb,-indudil)g the "Tanya," which was
·written by Rabbi Schneur. Zalman of
Uady, founder of ChabMI.
The festival of lag B'omer (wf;llch
means *33" In the counting of the
Orner) commemorates the. Yarzelt (anniversary) of· Rabbi Simeon Ben Yochai,
author of the Zohar lieabbalah). On this
day, lhol.ncls of Jews visit his srave In
Meron, ...... for prayers.
lag B'omer is ~lly celebrated as a
day of rejoicing.

........ "'....

Dane~

Repertory

"Dance R~ory," a prosram of works choreOs;raphfll by both stude-nts and

fuuhy of the Physic&lt;il Eduntion ~~ proaram, we'll be prewnt~ Friday and
S,turcby •• 1:30 p.m. in the Katharine Cornell 'Drama Workshop at Ellicott.
Both solo and sroup worb are on the biD, indudins a comJYny number with
,an oripn.al score for 7-piece band composed bY Music ~rad student Richoud
Shulm..n. Seftn~Hn tbncers will tHe part in the procu1m which is dirKted by
Jill folhersil. Here, members of the comJNnr rehearse indiwidu.iil dances and
an ~ WCMic nRecl "Time and Tre:uure" (at left).
.
.

Ten law students win
Sea Grant ·fellowships
Ten first and second year law students
have been awarded Sea Grant law
fellowships for the summer of 1975,
ProfesSor Robert Reis of the U/ B· Law
School has announced. ·
The Sea Grant Law Fellows will each
receive $1,400 to do research on urgent
legal questions related to coastal zone
managemeni. They will deal mostly\Yi ttl
questions sent to them b~..Jo.cal government officials and planners, scientists,
State agency persOnnel, and people living in the .coastal regiqn, Prof. Rei~~rl
New York State' has tw6 extensive· coastal
z®es, one. along the Great lakes and
thle Qll)er along- the Atliflt'ic "Ocean.
. The ten Sea Grant law Fellows are:
Howard E. ~chtsam, second year,
Flushing, N.Y.; Sanfgrd N. Berland, first
year, Wi~liamsville; Anthony S. Bottar, ..
second year, North Tonawanda; "Ave

Pharmacy sched.ules
Spring Clinic Day
A discussion on bioavailability and an
address by a top local .government official will highlight the 197S Spring Clinic
Day program, "to be held May 1 by the
Phar!'lacy Alumni Association.
Class reunions, particularly of the
School of Pharmacy's 1925 anq 1950
graduates, will also be a major fea1ure of
the cinnual observance, scheduled for
the Pellamwood House in West Seneca.
The day's theme, "Bioavailability and
Drug Product Equivalency," will be discussed by t)Yo speakers: Dr. Roger·stoll,
marketing-medical monitor in 1he
Clinical Bioavailability· Unit of the Upjohn Company in Kalamazoo, and Don
C. Mcleod, U/B assistant professor of
pharmacy and director Qf Pharmaceutical Services at Buffalo General.
Erie County Executive Edward V.
Regan will discuss various econOmic and
social pressures confrontirig local·
government at the Association's eve·
ning· reunion banquet.
·
In ~ddition to dass-reunlons for SO and
25 year graduates, special reunions are
also being arranged for the classes of
1930~ 1~35, 1940, 1945,_1955, 1960, 1965,
and 1970. ·
·
The agenda for the program is: 11 :30
a.m.! - Conseculive meetings of the
Pharmacy Alumni Association and the
Annual Panidpatlng Fund for Pharmaceutical Education; 12:30 luncheon, featuring Dean Michael A.
Schwanz's Annual Report from the
School of Pharmacy; "2:00 Bioavallablllty dlscuoolon; &amp;:30 - Dutch-treat cocktallo; 7:30- Banquet .
Reservations for the events must be
made before April ;IS and are being
processed by the School of Pharmacy,

NTP terms(from ~ge 1, col. 4)

This applies to all appointments which
end on june 30, 19n.
If the fourth block on the form is prechecked, this indicates that the
employee will have fulfilled all · of the
Buchwald, second year, los Angeles,
service eligibility requirements for perCalifornia; John Deveney, firsl year, Buf·
falo;
manent appointment on or before
William F. Dewart, Jr., second year,
December 31, 1976. Thus, the permanent
Rochester; Catherine G. Novack, first
appointment decision for this employee
year, jackson Heights; Judith K. Sinclair,
must be made by the time indicated on
second year, Buffalo; John M. Stuart, sethe form. This decision, .Personnel says,
cond year, Buffalo; and Robert E.
"will be reached in accordance ·with the
procedures the University is currently
~ei.nberg, second year, Kenmore.
Reis announced the fellowships at a
developing. The supervisor is . ntft" tb
reception and dinner at the law School,
make permanent appointment
where the students were introduced to
recommendations on the appraisal
Dr. Donald F. Squires, director of tt)e
form."
New York- Sea Grant proe;ram, and tCJDf.
If the first or fourth block is nOL J!rechecked, supe~~ ~H&lt;etl""""'ter
~~~~e~· ,}u~~· th:l',..P.\~g~~) ex~~uti~e
recommendations in one of three adAlmost all activities undertaken by Sea
ditional places on the form :
Grant involve some problem of law in·
• Second Block - Appointment to be
terpretation, law enforcement, or a re·
Renewed: This b)ock applies to those
qu irement of new legislation, Reis inemployees whose present term apdicated. The Sea Grant law Center al the
pointmepts end on June 30, "1975, or
U/B Law School, which is the only unit
August 31, 1975;" or june 30, 1976, but
for legal education in the State Universi·
who have not met eligibility re·
ty system, will emphasize coa~tal and enquirements for permanent appointment
vironmental law, in contrast to o1her law
consideration. These individuals are
schools in the nation, where "law of the
eligible for new term appointments. Per·
sea" and general ocean law are studied,
sonnel is computing the individual DEPA
Reis said.
for each individual in this group and will
An important first project for the Sea
notify supervisors by May 1 of the new
Grant Fellows, he said, is to assemble an
final term ~nding date or term appointinformatioO resource .....: a bibliography
ment option. Supervisors are asked to
Of coastal zone management law. These
check this block if they recommend that
legal materials will point the way to
the term appointment be renewed.
more research, and to new lesislation
• Third Block - Appointment Not to
which ne.eds to be draft~d.
be Renewed.
As SUQestions are made for statutory
• Fihh Block - Other: Here any exor admimstrativ~ reform during the 1975
pected change in title or other.informaresearch activities, the students will have
tion relating to appointment should be
the chance to draft legislation fQr the
noted.
•
.
Law School' s student-r~n Buffalo
As indicated on the appraisal fo'.!!', the
Legislative Project. Such suggestions may
Personnel Instruction memo points out,
also be brought to the attention of State
only the President may issue a formal aplegislative committees or' State and local
pointment. Supervisors, however,
official~ engaged in law r;evision relating
should check the appropriate space on
to coastal zone management.
the appraisal form if they Intend to
recommend a new term appolmment.
If a term appointment is not to be
renewed, a one-year rfolice of non·
A Walk-A-Thon For Soviet Jewry will
renewal is required If the employee willtake place, Sunday, April 17, a jo"int
have completed ill INst two years of ·
Hillel-jewish Student Union committee
professional service by June 30, 1975 (or
has announced.
June 30, 1976).
The · marchers will. gathc;r at 1 p.m. in
Funher, If non-renewal I• to occur, a
front of Norton and will proceed to the
one-ye.n term appolmment and i onePeace Bridge.
.
year notice of non-renewal must be
~ A Rally lo planned on the Canadian
provided slmuhaneouoly for a
side of the Bridge where the marchers.
professional employee whOle term ends
will be joined by a group of Canadian
on June 30, 1!175."
'
young people.
If non-renewal Js directly ,attributable
Crossing the Peace Bridge from...the _ to an unsatlsfiCiory perforniiiiCI! .,.
United States Into Canada is Intended
praisal, the appraisal with the l!fllployee
"to symbolize the opportunity - have
had to be completed no later !hail April
to freely 005$ an international boundary
15. This- to Insure thlt ac1eqtme time
and to U'lle the Soviet Union to grant its
(45 days) wao available for the emplo7ee
citizens the ~me opportunity."
to appeal an unsatisfactory appr11isa to
· BOth ma'r~ and sponSOrs are need·
the Campus- Committee on Professional
ed for the event. More Information may
Evalua~.
·
be obtained by calling Robin llbow It
All other performance appraisals are
831·3868 or Jolle R~ at 836;-5536.
due by May 1.
.

a-

Walk.. Thon slated

�April 24, 1975

-.

. . IlLII&amp;

J

7

' ca~ndar-------------------~--------------~----~----------------~
I.
( frotn

IMP

col. 4}

URIAN ANALYSIS AND POLICY STUDIES

OIINBE AIMS·
Tlt~·-lJU#e Eight Route Army Min, Peking

SEMINARf

Acrobatics 1nd Culwr~l Relics. 146 Oiefen·
dorf, 8 and 10 p.m. Admission : $.50 students;
$1 others.
Sponsored liy the CSA.

THEATRE PBIFORMANQ•
Good Wom~n of Setzu.Jn, directed by Don

Sanders. Courty.ud Theatre, Hoyt and
lifiyene, 8 p.m. Admission charge.
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Research.
MFA RECITAL•
Pianist Nils Vigel.t~nd performs. Baird Recital
Hall, 9 p.m. No idmissioff charge.

'

BROADCAST•
Turn Me On, I'm A. R.t~dio, interview with
program directors of WBUF, WGRQ and
music director of WBUF. WBFO-FM (88.n, 11
p.m .

mission charge.
ERIE COUNTY ENVIRONMENT: 1~5
· SYMPOSIUM•
Citizen Po~rticipation. Joan Schmidt and

Doris lyng, EMC members. Buffalo State
College, Communication Bldg.-East, 1300
Elmwood, 7:30 p.m. ·
UUAB FILMS••
.
What's the Mauer with Helen, 7:30 p.m .,
and Mephisro Waltz, 9:20 p.m. Sy lecture ·
Hall, Ellicon. No admission chilrge.

TUESDAY-29

FACULTY COMPOSERS CONCEIT"

MOOEIN SCIENa FICTION
SYMPOSIUM•
TomOrrow is the title of this five-day

Works by U/8 compostrs will be presented.
Baird ReCita l Hall , 8 p.m. Admission : $.50
students; $1 faculty, staff and alumni; $1.50
genera l public.

program. Today's .Jctivity is a pre-symposium
showing of the Frhz lang film Merropolis
(1928).
For symposium information, call 831-4301 .

two-day progr.Jm {this i ~ the final day}. 231 •

Norton, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. for more in forma·

lion, contact the School of Dentistry, 8312836.
NUTRinON AND MAN
LECTURE SERIES•
Summ.ary of Nutrition in Medicine and
Public H~lth, Dr. Frederick J. Stare, M.O ....G22 Farber (Capen), 12 noon. Bring your lunch .

.

ENGUSH .DEPARTMENT FILM'
Two or Three Things I Know _About Her
(Godard). HO Farber (Capen), 7 p .m. No ad·

..

CONTINUING DfNTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARf
Modern Trends in Periodontics: Etiology,
Prevention and Treatment is the topic of this

.

An OtJaniurion Theory Perspective on the
UrNn Legal System, Or. John ThorTW, UIB
School of Milnilgemena. 237 Crosby, l-5 p.m.
FRENO! DEPARTMENT AIMS•
Cleo From S-7 CVudil) ilnd Lil }ettee
(Milrker). 146 Diefendorf, 5 and 7 p.m. No ild~
mission chilrge.
·

LECTURE'
Th e Dismembermenr of Orpheus: Three
Non-Musicologica l Leclures on Opera (Pa rt

3), Dr. Max Wickert, associate professor,
English . Blue Room, Faculty Club, 8 p.m. No
admission charge.
·
READING•
Feminist writer Tillie Olsen will read from
her novel Tell Me A Riddle. 5 Acheson, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Community Action Corps .
and Women's Studies College.
BROADCAST'
American Poetry fro!Jl pre-Columbus to
present. WBFO-FM (68.7), 10 p.m.

Sponsored by the U/ 8 Dep.utment of

WEDNESDA Y-30

Biochemistry and the De~rtment of Nutri-

tion o f 1he Harvard School of Public Health.
IASEBAU•
U/8 vs. Buffalo State (2). Peelle Field, 1 p.m.

No admission chuge.
nNNIS•
.
UI B vs. Buffalo State. Rotary Courts, 3 p.m.
No admission charge.

this two-day program. Bu ffalo General
Hospital, Community Mental t:t_eahh Center.
For more information, contact )tnn Collins,
631 · 5548.

.,

Fn:M•

eer.u, Boli'fia, .on
tour itinerary

T~ farsifal. Pa lmer Rm., Faculty Club, 12 :30
p.m. No admission charge. Presented by the
Faculty Club and the ICC.
.,.

A trip to Peru and Bolivia, the fourth
in a series of World Venture tours spon-

sored by U/ 8 through the Office of
Credit-Free Programs, will be held June

11-21:

CONnNUING NURSING EDUCAnON
PROGRAMf
Changing Parrerns o f Community Mental
Health Care: Impact on Ro les is the title pf

'

The tour group will be led by Dr.
Stuart Scott , associate professor,
anthropology, who has done considerable on-site work in Mexico, Central America and the South Pacific and
has visited archaeological areas in
various parts of the world. In addition to
Dr. Scott, Mrs. Phyllis Sigel of the ~ice
for Credit-Free Prosrams will accom::::~rst:~:;,toup as the University adOn the itinerary are: a fly-over of the
Nazca Plain, site of mysterious markings

sugested by author Erich von Oaniken
as having been landing signals for an"cient astronauts.; the ruins of
Pacflaca111;1c; a visit 10 the Inca's Sacred
Valley of the Gods; a full-day tour of
Machu Picchu, the lost City of the Incas;

a hydrofoil trip across '""'ke rtticaca, the
highest navigable lake in the· world; and
the ruins of Tlahuanaco.
The $1-"95 tour price indudes roundtrip aimre; hotel accommodations in
deluxe or best available hotels, with
hotel taxes and service cflarges induded; meeting and transfer services

be-n airport and hotel induding
. porterage tips to alrpon poners and
hotel doormen; all •urface transporta·
tion and Charter fly-over of the Plain of
Nazca; tours, induding the services of
an English opeaklng guide; Q&gt;ntlnental
breakfasts lhrouflhout, and most meals.
The tour Is limited to 20 participants.
For further Information, contact Conlinulng Eduation, 3 ~yes A.

COMMUNITY ACTION CORPS
WORKSHOP'

Workshops on topics of community interest
will be held in Norton Union from 2-3 p.m.
and 4-5 p.m. (the Silme workshops presented
ilgain), preceded by a 1 p.m. general session
in the Fillmore Room. Topics and room
lociltion s .ue : He alth Maintenance
Organiutions ilnd Delivery of Mental Health
Services in Buffalo, Fillmore Room; Revenue
Sharing ilnd Alternative Energy Sources,
Room 334; Oily Care, Room 266; Proble ms of
the Elderly, Room 337.
MANAGEMENT W,OI!KSHOP•
Reaching Our Together for Progress and
Profits. Berkeley Burrell, president, National

Business League, is the main spea'ker. Statler
·
Hilton H_otel, 2-9:30 p.m.
Presented by the Minority Manilgement
Associiltes Program and the ,Buffalo
Metropolitiln Business Associiltion, Inc.
CltfMICAL ENGINEEIING SEMINAJII
Steady Slilte Muhiplicity ilnd Stability of
AdiaNtic Ws Liquid .Reacrors, Professor Dan

Luss, ~nment of Chemical Engineering.
· UnivefS!ty of HOuston. 104 Pilrker, 3 p.m.
TRACk•
U/8 vs. Niaga~ U. _.Rotary Field, 3 p.m. No
admission charse.
OIEMISTRY fOSTEI COllOQUIUM

SBIBf

Remote O~tidation ilnd Related R~ction,

· ilnd Mephisto Wiltz., 9:20 p.m. 140 Filrber
(Cilpen). No admission chilrge.
ALM•

Rt~me.Ju'i Nephew, by Diederor (lhanks to
Dennis Young) by Wilm1 Schoen. 5 Acheson,
7:45 p.m. No admission charse.
COOKING DfMONSTRATlON•
French cooking if demonstrilted by Nadine

Berlow in the third pan of this three~part
progrilm. Tonight's menu includes: poisson
poche au poivre vert, bouill~isse ilnd g~tin
. salton. Faculty Club, 8 p.m. For regist ration informiltion, Cilll 831-4630.
MUSIC PBIFORMANa•
The UI B PercussiOn Ensemble, directed by

Dennis Kahle, performs. Baird Hall, 8 p.m. No
admission charge.
THEATRE l'fRFORMANCE•
Bride of Shakespeare Heaven features

scenes from modern life with d ialogue by
Shakespeare, directed by Gordon Rogoff.
Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and Lafayette, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Resea rch.
MODfRN SCIENCE FICTION
SYMPOSIUM•
Tomorrow is the title of this five-day

program. Today's act ivi ty is a pre-symposium
-mowing of the Fritz lang film Metropolis
(1928). For symposium information, call 8314301 .

THURSDAY-1
\~FECTIOUS

DISEASE THERAPY LECTUREf
M iscella neous Infectious Diseases is the
fi h in a five~week series for practicing pharmacist$, r~ught by Dr. kenneth Kellick and
Ronald §ofkness, both clinical assistant
professor~ of pharmacy at U/ B. For location
and registration information, Cont act Harold
Reiss at the School of Pharmacy, 831-2546.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
SEMINARf
Three Days in May: Recent Trends in
Diagnosis and Therapeutics is the title of th is

program. The programs are sched uled at
Deaconess Hospital on May 1, 15 and 31, and r~gistration may be made for all three or any
o ne. For more information, contact Continuing Medical Education, 831 -5526.
CONTINUING NURSING EDUCAnON
PROGRAMI
Changing Patterns of Community Mental
Health Care: Impact on Roles is the title of

this two-day program (this is the fiR_al day) .
Buffalo General Hospital, Community Mental
Health Center. For more information, cOntact
. Joan Collins, 831-55-48.
PHARMACY SPRING CUNIC
AND ALUMNI DAY'

All pharmacists are invited to attend the
day's activities which are schedu led from 11
a.m.-7:30 p.m. Reservations should be made
by April 2S with the U/8 Alumni Association .
The progrilm will be held at 1he Pellilmwood
House, 3.300 Transit Rd .
GOLF•
UI B vs. Rochester Tech . Amherst-Audubon
Course, 1 p.m.
BASEBAU•
UI B vs. Colgate U. Peelle Field, 3 p.m. No

admission charge.

GEOGRAPHY COUOQUIUMf
Decision Mo~"'king Behavior of Firms: The Case
of Exporting , Don Hoyte and James

M~onnell. Rm. 40, 4224 Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.
TENNIS•
U/ 8 vs. Colgate U. Rotilry Courts, 3:30p.m.
No admission ~rge.

ART HISTORY LECTURE"
:
The Puzzle of Creek Archaic Sculpture, B.S.

Ridgewily, professor, Bryn M.Jwr Coliege. 310
Foster, 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Dep.artmeni of Art and
the Oep.artment of Clossics. .
PHARMAaun&lt;:s SEMINARf
l'hormocolcinetics of Phenformin IDBII, Dr.

Da.vid

Alkalily,

senior

scientist,

Drug

Or. Brewlow, Co lumbiil University . 70
Acheson, 4 p .m .

Mer.boli"" Subdiviolon, CIBA-GEIGY Corp.
244 ury '(Health Sciences), 4 p .m .

PHYSIOLOGY V AIQ CLUI

IIOI.OGICAI. SCIENCIS LECTURq .

SEMINAIIf

\ Srudies on the lnlerferon Defense
Mech.tnisms, Dr. Peter Lengyel, professor of

ALM•
Two or Three Thinp I l(now About Her
(Godard). 7 Acheson, 7:30p.m . No admission

at 4, 'ecture ill 4:15 p.m.
5ponso&lt;ed by the Division of Cell and

Elevated lntraCTJnqt ~ure and Urdlovoscui.Jr Control, Dr. John Krasney. 108
Shermon, 4:30 p.m.

~·

.

'CAMPUS 5ltOWCASF I.EClUU"
Se&gt;cuol lehottior In the future- The Udy or
the nllf!"/, Glorio L Roblin, Deportment of
Psychiatry. Rm. 106, John Lord O'Brion lUll,
AmheBt umpus, 7:30 p.m. for fee informotion, &lt;DniKt the Alumni Aloodation.
Preoented by the Alumni, Aolociollon and
the OffKZ for Ctedit-flee Pl'aparns, Division

eon11nu1na Eduatllln.
UUAIFKMS••
·
.
wr..t:s the Malle&lt; with Helen; 7::10 p.m.,

of

Molecular lroophysics and Biochemistry, Yale
University. 134 ury (He.llth Sdencesl; oo11ee

~=·~~IY

and

Chemistry of

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDLICAnON

CAaDIAC OJNICI

This series of dlnlcs In phyoial education
of the cardiac p.Jtient and arrhythmia

worbhops are scheduled -=!1 ThurJCiay
even inc thi'OUJh May The topic of tonl&amp;ht's
dinic Is Auscultation - Diastolic A-V Volwe
Murmut5. Farber {Upon) Hall llaRment,
~ C-U, 7:](1.9:](1 p.m. for Information or

a.

~ation,.all the School of Medidne, 831·
5ponso&lt;ed by

the School of Medicine.-

RLM•
.
Episode 12 in Sir kenneth O.trk's Ovilisation Film Series is entitled " The Fallacies of
Hope." A d i!OJssion led by Charles Altieri
follows the film_ Sy Lecture lUll, Ellicott

Complex, 8 p.m. No admission ch•rge..
Sponsored

bY Vico College and College B.

PHYSICAL..()RGANIC OIEMISTRY

UCTURE SERIESf
Stabilities of Cilrl»nions, Professor Andrew
Streitwieser, University of Californiil at
Berkeley. 362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Graduilte School.
FENTON UCTURE SEIIIESf
Lawyers and Social Change, witft speak~rs
Michael Tigar, Stuart Scheingold and Michael
Walzer. Moot Courtroom, John Lord O 'Brian
Hall, Amherst Campus, 8 p.m. No a.dmission
choirgt:_.
·
THEATRE PERFORMANa•
• Bride of Shakespeare Heaven features

sCenes from modern life with dialogue "by_
Shakespeare, directed - by Gordon Rogoff.
Courtyilrd Thea.tre, Hoyt and lafilyette, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
- Presented by the Center for Theiltre
Research.

EXHIBITS
GAUERY 219 EXHIBIT
55 Mercer is an ex hibit o f works by New

York City artists wOrking at the 55 Mercer
Cooperative Gallery. Gallery 219, Norton,
April 28-June 4. Hours: Monday~Friday, 11
a.m.-4 p.m.; Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, 7~-1 0 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
LOCKWOOO EXHIBIT
Polish Collection. exhibition culled from

the l!niversity's collection of mo_r:~, J~af\ ,4,000
volumes of material. First floor, LOckwood
Memoria l Libriiry. Monday*Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Continu ing.

MANUSCRIPT AND ARST EDinON EXHIBIT

The most complete collection of Robert
Graves manuscripts in the wo rld is currently
on display in the lockwood Memorial library.
Manuscripts and first editions from lhe
Graves poetry collection are part of die exhibitio n, which comme morat es Robert
Graves' eightieth birthday. Balcony, second
floor, L9Ckwood Memorial Library.
· MUSIC UBRARY EXHIIIT
Eastern Music: New Books and Scores.
Music IJbr_ary. Bai rd Halt thrcaugh A:pril 30.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Ariadne on Naxos is the title of this group

of prints and photogr-aphs presented in conjunction with the University Opera Studio.
Hayes Hall Lobby, building hours, through
May 30 . .

NOTICES
POETRY COLLECTION

The UUAB Literary Arts Committee is
publishing a collection of works by U/8 and
community poets, which will be iiYailable the
first of Ma.y in the NOrton Bookstore, Food
Co-op, and other outlets.
· ""
SUMMEI SESSION Rf(iiSTaA nON HOURS

The Office of Admissions and Records is
now conductins Summer Session 1975
Regislriltion. Students currently r~istered ill
the University for the Sprins 1975 semester
· ne;ed only complete ~ Cour5e Request Form.
New students must complete il Student Dilti
Form, which will be available at Admissions
and Records. Registralion hours at the Office
of Admissions and Records are· 8:30 • .m.-7
p.m., April 24 and 211-30, and Moy 1; •II other
days in April, the olflce will be open from

8:30 a.m.-4 :)0 p.m.

TUITION WAIVBI$

Tuition waiver ~ications for foreign
students for the summer 1nd fall 1975
semesters •re avalloble In 210 Townsend. The
deadline fr&gt;&lt; handins in applications for
summer Is Moy 1. The deadline for handinc in
fall 1~ applications Is Moy 15.

INTERVIEWS
ON&lt;AMPUS INTBIVRWS
The Slaff of the Unlvenlty Placement •nd

Career Gu idance Office welcomes all

Sludents In ·the Unlvenlty c:oftvnunity ond
a!J.amni to tiJke part in various career
prosnms offered this )til'. The on-campus
interviewtnc prosram offeR the Ofii&gt;0!1Unity
fa&lt; individuol Interviews with education,
businen, industrial and sovernmental
representatives. undidateo from aH c1earee
levels. who completed their coune .wool In
January or expect to In Moy 1975, are 1tw1tec1
to take part In the intervlewlns. Reghtradan

forms .,. available in tuyes Annex C, Rm. 6.
The followlna qencies wftt• be intet'vlewlns

this-'&lt;:

EDUCATION :
MONDAY-31: Greece Central School
(Qeece, N.Y.)-art, busl,... education and
library.

�_,_

•

April 24, 1975
I_

MuStc I'EIIFOIMANCE' \loseph Jerod Cbouinord (boss-baritone),
Ne•l Horch (occomponist) ond Judilh K•uf-

THURSDAY-24
CON11NUINC DENTAl fDUCAllON
~
.
Developing EHective Occlusal T~rment

Skills Is the tide of this two-port conference.
The first hatf, Part 1: Principles of Occlusion, is
scheduled April 23-24 ond will be given by

~ ~te~~~~::~~li~~~:

231 Norton, 9 .J.m .~:lO p.m. For fee information or reglstratk»n, contlct the · School of
Dentistry, 3435 Moin ~ - · 831-2836.

CONTINUINC MEDICAl

. this two-c:by seminar to · be hetd at the
Shen~ton lnn-Buffilo bst (tocby is the final
day). TO&lt;bY's lectures and discussions .Jre
Khedulecl from 9 .J.m.-5:15 p.m. For registration information, contact Continuing Medical
CAJIEBt PlANNING SlMINARI
Financi.JI PI.Jnning .Jnd Control. 339 Norton,

1-3 p.m.
PU8UC SKJOII INTBINSHtr
SfMINARI
.
Implementation of rhe Ni.Jgara River Environmental Plan - A. trolicy Sci_ences
Internship. T~ry Martin, Policy Studies Ph.D.

candidate. 237 Crosby, l-5 p.m.
Sponsored bY the Center for Policy Studies.
SOCIOLOGY GUfST LlCT\JIE'
New Methodological Issues: How Sure
Must We Be f. Or. Howard S. Becker,

professor o.f sociology, Northwestern Universily. Rm. 42, 4224 Ridse Lea, 3 p.m.
Sponsored by the Sociolosy Graduate Studenr Association.
COUOQUIUMf
Possible lnterKtions of the ) Particle, Or.

T.T. Wu, Division of Applied Physics, Harvard
Universlly. 111 HochsteHer, 3:30p.m.
CEOGRAPH\' COLLOQUIUMf
Something'S Rotten in the St~te of Den-

Or. B. Girner. Rm. 40, 4224 Ridse lei,

p.m.

l£CT\JIE•
Creativity, Or. Sidney Parnes, Center ...for
Creativity Research, Buffalo State College. 234
Norton, 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Edua.tional Psychology
Graduate Student Association.

rt!AaMAauncs RMINAJII
]he Absorption and Disposition of Ter'butaline as a functjon of Route of Administration in Dif[erent Species of Anim01ls,
Stephen Shur, Ph.D. candidate. b-170 Bell
Facility, 4 p.m.
HIUR HOUSE•
Drop.in Night 40 Upen Blvd., 7-11 p .m.
CONTINUING MIDICAL IDIJCA nON
CAIDIAC CUNIQ
This series of clinics in phySical education
of the cardiac patient and arrhythmia
workshc:i,Js are scheduled each Thursday
evening throush May 8. The topic of tonight's
clink is Auscuhiltion - Systemic Regurgitation Murmur. Farber {Capen) Hall Basement,
Room C-22, 7:30-9:30 p.m. For informatiOn or
registration, all the School of Medicine, 8315526.
• Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

ITAllAN O.UI MEETING~
.
ltitlfan hn.icif»lion in the Settlement of the
Nqpra Frontier, Lucian Parlato. Business
meetins ~nd elections. Everyone welcome.
233 Nonon, 7:30 p.m.

filM'
Episode 11 'in Sir Kenneth Clark's CiviJig.
rion Film Series Is entitled "The Wonhip of
Noture. • A discuHion led by lewis Perry
follows the film. 5y Lecture Holl, Ellicott

c:::.r··

No admission cfwJe.
CoiJese ond Collese B.

by Vlco

J.ICIUUO

The Dlsmembennenr of Otphetn: Three
Non-MUJico!orlal Lectwes on Opeto (Port
Ill, Or. Mu Wickert, U/8 auodote professor
of Ensflsh: Horrimon Ubrory, 8 p.m.
.

=

MUSIC l'aiOIIMANCP
L - You Madly Is a trlbuh! to Duke
........,, dln!ch!d by Ed Smith. Horrirnoh
=o~_p .m. Admission: S1

- - by the Deponrnent ol Theoue,
~-~ 5tudies'11nd the Office

niMIIIIIIIOIMAHCP

... Gaad .Woman ol Seauon by BenOit
. . . . . _ . . by Don 5lnden. Courtyord
11-.; . . . and .....,.,.., • p.m. -

...... ......
.::=-., ...._:-f!

.....

the Center

~

FRIDAY-25

~

CONTINUING DENTAL EDIJCA nON
SlMINAJII
.
Pitrt. II: Ocdugl Equilibr~tion is the topic of

this two-day seminar. 231 Norton1 9 a.m.-4:30
p.m. For more information, contact the
SchQOI ot'Dentistry, 831· 2836.
PEDIA1111C CONFEIENCEf
Coagul01rion Problems in the Newborn, A.

Education, 831-5526.

mirlc~

Frosch, ~iStant professor of Engltsh, Queens
College, will reid from their own work. 231
Nonon, 8:30 p.m.
UUAI FILM ..
Doc. Norton Conference Theatre, nil 831S117 for times. Admisston charge.

~liON

SfMINAJII
SexwHty ~nd Contr&lt;~cepfion is the title of

~:30

PODliY lEADING•
Gail Fischer, · U/8 student, and Thomils

or Theatre
.-.

W.....ln Cltlna, " " " - Morilyn 'l'ouna,
o.partment of Hfllory, University of

Minkowski , visitins professor. Kinch
Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 10 a.m.
. AFRICAN STUDIES UCTUIP .
The Structure of M~u-M~u : Rebellion
within Keny01n Rural Society, John Spencer.
Middlebury College. Rm . 9, 4238 Ridge Lea, 1

p.m.

•

' HEALTH CARE SEMINARI
Ethic~/ Dilemm~s and Health Care Delivery

is the title of rhis two-day seminar to be held
in the Fillmore Rm., Norton . Today's activities
are scheduled from 1--8:1S p.m. Open to the
public are presentations by four speakers
from 1-3 :30 p .m. For info rmation , see
Reporter, April17, or ull 831-SS19.
BUFFALO ANIMAL IICHTS COMMITTU
MEmNG•
Day Ure for Dogs. 264 Norton, 2:.30 p.m. If

you can't make t_h e meetins, all ~38-~9 .
PUBUC LECtURE•

Three Tritditions in the Descriptions of German Philology, Or. Byron Koekkoek, chairman, U/8 ~rtment of Germanic and

Slavic. Rm. F221; Wilkeson Quad, Ellicott
Complex, 3 p m
'
STUD\' Of AGIIIIG LECTuaE•
Cell Biology of HUman Aging. Or. leon;nd
H•yflick, professor of medical microbiolosy,
Stanford University. 339 Norton, 3 p.m.
(Reception at' 2 p.m. in 3)4 Norton) .
Presented by the Multidisciplinary Center
for the Study of Asins.
ENGINEEIINC SlMINAq
Ritdiarive Transfer in•. Multi-·Surface
fnclosure Systems, Or. John A. Clark,

professor and chairman, Department of
Mechanical Engineering, University of
Michigan. 104 Parker, 4 p.m. {coffee in 107
Parker, 3:30 p.m.)
Sponsored by the Oep'artments of
Ensineering Science, Aerospace Engineering
and Nuclear Ensineering.
OVIL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
WATII IESOUICES
AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SlMINAII

'Air Pollution in Ucbwitnna-South Buffalo,

James McGarry, New York Dept of EnConservation. 23 Parker;
refreshments at 3:.50, lecture at 4 p.m.

viro~mental

"THEA111E PERFORMANCE•
Internal Combustion by T.erry Doran.

American COntempor•.ry Theatre, 169S
Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admission
charge. Seoiting is limited to 25 persons per
performance; reservations are .suggested
(875-5825).

CAC RLM\•

The P•per Ch•se. 140 F•rber (C.pepl, 8 •nd
10:1S p.m. Admission: $1.
HIURHOUSP
Kobbolo&lt; Shobbor ~ice followed by on
Oneg 5hobbot. 40 Copen Blvd., 8 p.m.
CHAIAD lfOUsE•
,
5hobbor ~ice followed by • me•L 3292
Main St., 8 p.m.
.
For Information on Amherst Umpus services, contoict ~. Guraty, 637·5706.
1

MUSIC I'BfOIMANCP
Lo,.. You Modly Is o lribuh! to Duke
"-4:111neton, directed by Ed Smf1h. Horrimon

Jhealre Studio, 8 p.m. Admission: S1
studenb, ~ $2.50.
.
"'-'"'!d by die Department ol Thutre,
Deportment ol Blodt Studies ond the Office
ol Cuhurol Aftolrs.
-

man (flute) present a prosram of classical
music. Unitarian Universalist Church of
Amherst, Williamsville, 8 p.m.
OPERA I'EIIFOIMANCE'
The University Opera Stu~io, directed by
Muriel Hebert Wolf, will present Operil
Primoivera fe-..ruring Prima Donnas and
Friends, conducted by Carlo Pinto. Baird
Recital Halt, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
THEA111E PERFORMANCE'
The Good Woman of Setzuan by Bertoli

Brecht, directed by Don Sanders. Courtyard
Theatre, Hoyt and Lafayette, 8 p.m. Ad·
mission: students, $1, others $2.50.
PreSented by the Center for Theatre
.Research.
DANCE REPERTORY•
Dance Repertory is presented by the Dance

Prosram, Department of Physical Education.
Katharine Cornell Drama Workshop, Ellicott
Complex, 8:30 p.m. Admission: S1 students;
S2 general public.

York Administrators Conference, sponsored
by doctorJI candidates in the U/8 Department of 'Eduational Administfiltion. Benjamin · Franklin Jun ior High School, S40
Parkhurst Blvd., 1:1S p.m.
THEAT11E I'EIIFOIMAI)ICE'
Internal Combust (on by Terry Doran.

American Contemporary
Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11
charge. Seatins Is limited to
perform.1nce; reservations

Theatre, 1695
p.m. Admission
2S persons per
are susgested

(875-5825).

CAC' FILM••
The Paper Chase.. 140 Farber (Upen), 8 and
10:1S p.m. Admission: S1 .
MUSIC PERFORMANCE•
l ove You Madly is a tribute to Duke

Ellington, directeCI by Ed Smith. Harriman
Thea1re · Studio, 8 p.m. Admission : S1
50

stup~::~t~h~; ~~ 0epartment

of Theatre,
Department of Blad Studies and the Office
of Cultural Affairs.
OPERA PERFOIMANCP

The University Opera Studio, directed by

Live bluegrass music featuring the Boot Hill
Boys. WBFO-FM (88.7) , 9 p.m.

Murie l Hebert Wolf, will present Opera
Primavera feituring Pri ma Donnas and
Friends, conduded by Carlo Pinto. Baird

UUAI COFFHHOUSE••
Lew London. First floor cafeteria, Norton, 9

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•

BROADCAST•

p.m. Admission charge.
UUAB FILM••
Doc. Norton Conference Theatre, call 831-

5117 for times. Admission charge.

SATURDAY-26
ELEMENTAl\' AND IIMEDIAL
• EOUCAnON CONFEIINCEf
Psycho-SOcial and Linguistic Fitdors in
Curriculum Development is the theme pf this

conference to be held at 4236 Ridse Lea, 9
a.m.-3 p.m.
Speakers and topics include:
Teiching the Culturally Disadvantaged
LNrner: A Ration•l A.ppi'Oilch, Or. Kenneth

R. Johnwn, University of California at
Berkeley.
Problems ~nd St~tegies for Dealing with
·cultural Differences, Dr. Thomas Kochman,
University of Illinois at Chicaso Circle.
Sponsored by the U/8 Elementary and
Remedial Education Cr~duate Student
• Association .
MANAGEMENT WOIIKSHOP•
You and Your lndividuitl Cueer
Development: How .ro Prepire a Personal
Life/ Career Plan, Or. Thomas G. GuHeridge,
u/8 School of Management. 339 Norton, 9
a.m.-12 noon .
Presented by the Human Resourc:eS
Institute and the School of Management.
HEALTH CARE SlMINARf
Ethical Dilemmas aod H~lth Care Delivery

is the tide of this two-day seminar to be held _
in the Fillmore Rtn., Norton.1oday's activities
(this is the final day) are scheduled from 9
a.m.-12:30 p.m. Open to the -public is., paner·
discussion from 10:4S a.m.-12:30 p.m:-For
·
more information: all 831· 5519.
CONnNUING' DENTAl EOUCAnON
SEMINARI
.
Pitrt II : OccluS&lt;JI Equilibration is the topic of

Reciial Hall , 8 p.!'A . No· admission charge.

1\ View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller,
directed by Don Sanders. Courtyard theatre,
Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission: $1
students, others $2.50.
Presented" by the Center for Theatre
Research.

DANCE PERFORMANCE"
D01nce Repertory is presented by the Dance

Program, Department of Physial Education.
Katharine Cornell Drama Workshop, Ellicott
Complex, 8:30 p.m. Admission: $1 students,
S2 general public.
S.E.M. ENSlMILf CONCEIT'
Albrisht-Knox An Gallery, 8:30 p.m. Admission: $1 students; S2 general admission.
HIURHOUSE•
~stries Aplenty Party. 40 Capen Blvd., 9

p.m. Admission charge. ·
UUAI COffffHOUSf..
Lew L.ondori. First floor cafeteria, Norton, 9
p.m. Admission charse.
UUAI FILM••
C~udine. Norton Conference Theatre, nil
831 -S117 for times. Admission charse.

SUNDAY-27
AMHERST CAMPUS
QUAICBI MEETING'

A Friends meeting for worship and discus·
sion will be held._Rm. 167, MFACC, Ellicott
(Student Affairs Office), 11 a.m.
Followins worship today, Soo Ho Han and
Grace Han will talk of their experteAce with
A-Bomb victims in Hiroshima, Japan, and give
.
a slide presentation:
1JJEAJllE I'EIIFOllMANCE'.
A View from the Biidge by Anhur Miller,
directed by Don Soiinders. 'Courty'a.rd Tlleatre,
Hoyt and l.a.fayene, ' 8 p.m. Admission: $1
students, others $2..50.
.
Presented by the Center , for Theatre
Research.

=~n, contact the School

this two-day seminar (today is the final day).
231 Norton, 9.a.m.-4:3d p.m. For !!tOrt! infotof Dentistry, 831 -.

AlCOHOUCS ANON\'MOUS MEETING•

IIC\'CU PlANNING SfMIN-'\JI"
.
Pl~nning for Bicycles in Western New York _

Meeting for anyone with problems with
alcohol. 264 Norton, 8-10 p.m. lor informa.:.
tion, contact Bill Stoberl, 831-2701.

is-the topic of a seminar feaiUrins speakers on
national itnd local bicycling concerns and
woricshops on~s,pecific cydins considerations.
234 Norton, 9,;30 a.m:-4 p.m.
HIUR HOU5P
Shiibboit Momlng Service followed by a
Kiddush . 40 C.pen Blvd, 10 •.m.
CHABAD HOU5P
•
Shabbo1 Services followed ~Y a meal. 3292
Main St., 10 a.m.
For information on Amherst Umpus ser·
vices. conlilct Rabbi Curary, 637-5706.·

TENNIS•

""-

SUNY Center Tournilment. Rotary Co'b!ns,

10 a.m.

· ·

'

JIACJ(O

SUNY Cenr..- Moe&lt;. Sweet Home High
School, 1 p.m. •
ADMINISIUTOIIS CONFaENCQ .
Conpessmon Peter A. """"' (1-N'I', 23td
district) will addre. the ....,...1 Western New

·

uuAi RlM••
Claudine. Norton Conference ThHltet cali
831-5117 IO&lt; rimes. Admis!ion cNIJO.

MONDAY-28
CONTINUING DENTAl fDUCAllON
SEMINAJII

Modern Trends In Periodonlks: frio/orr, ·
Prevention ilnd T~tmenr is the topic of this
two-day prosram. 231 Nonon, 9 a.m.o.4:'30

p.m. For more Information, contact the
School ol Dentistry, 831-2836.
ENGU5H DEPARTMENT filM' ·
Wolbbout ~Roes!. 140 For~ (C.pen), 3
ond 9 p.m. No adml&gt;sion

m.,...

ENGU5H IDUCAllON COUOQUIUMf

Rhetoric ond liKe: An ltpptolch to Speech
Acts, Professor Molefei Asante, c:hair;ma.n,
Department of Speech Communlalion. 233
Norton, 4 p.m.

FilM'

.

Trons-furop Express. 146 Oielendorl, 7 p.m .
No admission cNIJO.
RLM•
No M&lt;Ke FleeJng CVeseiey). V.dleoon, 7:45
p.m.
(tum to IMJe 7, , col. 7).

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>. STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFfALO

VOL 6, NO. 'lJ

APRIL 17, 1975

•

Extra budget
request is
$1.1 million

_.,_
A crilft show .wJ sale fe•turina the IroqUois Drum D~ mid Ton.~wancb Sinsen, in
Norton Sund.Jy afternoon, wM Just one of the features of NatiYe American Cultural
Aw.,_... Woe!&lt; on &lt;OIIIPI'fo ~·1/!e~ ~~~-Americans opob on such topics ..
the T~ Way of Ufe, lriCIJUI OiruiHOOia of lmds t.llcen f~ them under tre1.ties
they~ illepl, the trNtment of NatiYe Americ.ans in New Yodt Slate prisons, .mel
other critkal issues. The aclirities, seued to. rediscoW"ery of ~·roots," were lpORIOfed by
lhe Natfwe Ariiiikan Cukur.r Awarene. OtpnlU.tion and the Minority Student Associ.Jtion.

WorJdworkfo9d oujlook said bleak, unless •• .•

The outlook for
f~ .production projected here this week by Dr.
Douglas Ensminger, professor of rural
sociology, University of Mis.Ouri, is bleak
and frustrating :
· ''There is the very great potential that
the world's population will grow faster
than agricultural production, resulting in
a world food crisis . ... Millions of peopie . .. in the developing countries . . .
face death froiJ1 starvation in the decade
ahead."
.
Yet, Dr. Ensminger said, an entirely
different sort of picture could be ~sible if political leaders of developing
count~ would end their overemphasis
on Western-style technological development, return development to the peop&amp;e; and support policies geared to
achieving a level of living economically
feasible, culturally ~cceptable, and fulfilling for all.
'
"lime is '~running· out,'' he warned.
"Time is now."
Dr. Ensminger, who was the Ford
Foundation Tepresentative to India,
Pakistan and Nepal for .19 years,
presented the University's annual
Cowper Lecture at O'Brian Hall Monday
night, culminating a two-part program
on "Feeding A Hungry World" in honor
of Dr. Raymond Ewell, U/B professor
emeritus of chemical engineering.
The UN-sponsored world population
and food conferences held in 1974 were,
Or. Ensminger said, "two of the most
siznlflcant meetings ever attended by
political leaders.''
.
By 1985, studies presented at those
confer!)!ces projected, developing
will laCe an annual .food deficit
J&gt;etween 1111 and 90 million ton" AnCOilS to these rwions of importing
needed food will be between $18
o\ncf S20 billion, a mogllltude ol e&gt;pnclllure impoalble for them to - . . . . .I • • . , . . . . . . . .

n...

,

Dr. EnsminJer .-kl. while· the
food aw•lerences widenawed the fact

its food resources In the ~lure ~s it has
done io the past, the primary message
was that " basic responsibility for meeting
the mounting food needs of the people
in the developing countries" rest~ with
those nations themselves. A se!=ond
message was that priority emphasis for
increasing agricultural production
"should be focused on the small
farmers."
.
Agriculture has been given low social
and political status in developing countries, Dr. Ensminger contended. When
these nations were part of colonial empires,. he said, there was little concern
about producing enough food to meet
all the people's needs. This hasn't changed since the areas gained independence:
"To the elitists who are now the core of

the power structures of the developing
countries, poor, hungry, igllOrant, unemployed people continue to be viewed
as &amp;eing as much a part of the landscape
as are the trees, the mountains and the
water that flows in the rivers."
The U.S. bears partial responsibility for
agricultural policies in the third world,
the former co-chairman of the
Bangladesh Emergency Relief Fund
charged. Our generosity in contributing
surplus food has encouraged a "persistent lack of political commitment" to
. agriculture. And as long as "the political
leaders in the developing countries can
assure food enough to meet the needs of
the elitist and some for their poor
people," they are likely to continue plactrum ro 1»~e .z. col. 1J

A supplementary budget of $1 .1
milliOn "plus" .for U/8 h~s been submitted to the Governor's Office by State
University, President Robert l. Ketter
reported to the Faculty Senate at its April
meeting Tuesday (April 15).
Some $300,000 of that total is earmarked for Libraries' acquisitions - an
· appropriation slashed in the earlier
Governor's budget, apparentlY\.lt!tcause
of application of an erroneous formula .
A requested increase in stipends for
graduate assistants and teaching
assistants accounts for an additional
$160,000, while $100,000 has been requested to correct inequities created by
the mandated decreases incorporated
into the U/B bud.g et recently
recommended by the State .· The
remainder of the funds, Dr. Ketter said,
are needed to meet terms of existing
contracts with UUP, CSEA and other
campus bargaining groups.
As to the capital budget, Dr. Ketter
said he had requested that construction
on the Amherst campus be accelerated,
an· effort supported by area legislators
and the local building trades
organilations. Acceleration on the
order of "$30-$35 million to take place
next year" was the goal, the President
said.
Ketter also revealed that bids have
been submitted ror cOnstruction of the ·
central library, and that bids are running
in the $9.4 million range, down
significantly from the library's estimated
construction cost of $11 .2 million.
Freshman, transfer, lOP and graduate
applicatipns a~.e . a~l ~ p th~_Jpri ng over
last year, Dr. Ketter said. last year at this
time 14,122 students had applied to the
University for freshman slots. This year
that figure stands at 14,325, with similar
increases in EOP and transfer
applications. Freshman applications from
the 8th Judicial District have declined
somewhat over last year, he -noted.
In its only formal action of the day the
Senate removed the Publications Committee from its list of standing committees and gave standing-committee
status to the Committee on the lnstructionai .Communications Center.
The rest of the afternoon was devoted
to a critique of the UUP contract currently being undertaken by the Faculty Committee on Academic Freedom and
Responsibility.
As Senate Chairman George Hochfield
e~plained, ignorance of the actual terms
(fumro,.re6, coi._4J

U/B hears Erich ·von Daniken's 'gospel'
ly Ken 5erYice
lJnhoofnityln~lonSetvlce

A strange craft descended to the e~rth,
~ the very earth some say was visited ages
ago by travelers from the far reaches of
space. The strange craft in qUestion w~ s .
an Allegheny Airlines night and the' .
traveler it carried was none other tban ' ·
Erich von Daniken, post facto advante
mari for those ancient aStronauts. • •~
Von Daniken was in Buffalo to preaCh
his personal gospel of stone-age visits by
men from outer space, to the faithful ~nd.
skeptical alike in dark Hall.
.
Striding down the airpon corridor, he
appeared noticeably less sJossy.than his
publicity photo. At his side- Willy,
von Danlken's assislant, gqpher ,ncl bag·
carrier. If Willy. had a last name, it was

never revealed.

The ride to the ~tel Jpw the

emeraence of a~~ which

~~wili'3':i'i.."':
cliscounes in German, to the exclusiOn ol

ihme not c:on.en.n. with the .........
••• lhllttheU.S.'Ihouldloespeaerhothae· ....of ,the faJllerlaad•.fbeJlequent """"-·

references to "Ameri.kaners" had a way
of creating a certain amount of paranoia
among the mono-linguists present.
Ilia Cheesel
. During his occasional lapse1 into
English it was possible to discover
whether von Daniken is a big chMse in
his native Switzerland, or 'if his theOries
had too many holes even for the Swiss.
"At first I was critidzed heavily in
Europe, but now my theOries are
a£cepted seriously there. Most of the
criticism comes from .the Untted States,"
he said.
·
J That's those "Amerikaners" tor you.
As proof that he Is indeed a pfophet
with honoi in his own land, von Dan!ken
mentioned the two-man film crew that
was aa:ompanying him on this tour to
make a documentary tor Swiss television.
But success hasn't chanaed von
Dilnlken and he Is the fint to 1ell you so~
.''Sua:ess has not ~ my wwys,"
he explained moclesdy. All the people
who know me say rm the sune now as
1before. 1 would . be doins ~

�........

April 17, 1975

World food outlook said bleak, unless ••• ----------~----""----,,..----.
(from F»rr 1, col. JJ
ing development prioritieS on in~
Clustrialization at the expense of .
agriculture.
·
Social and cultural values in these
nations ha ve to be changed, Dr.
Ensminger argued. The small farmer has
to be actively encouraged to produce
beyond his family's subsistence needs.
P-..clalhCrut
" Having observed the small farmer in
India over a 19 year period," he
recounted, "I am confident about the
potential for iricreasing his production.
That rice (paddy) yields per acre in India
ane only one-third the yields in Japan and
Taiwan is convindng proof the potential
is great."
Most of the agricultural changes
sought from the small farmer have been
beyond his means and managerial competence, Dr. Ensminger said. The intfi!utions serving agriculture have not
6een small farmer oriented. While a .few
small farmers have made the transition in
one great step from producing to meet
family needs ...to producing for the
market, most have not. A st~p-by·step
transformation from traditional
agriculture toward modernized
agriculture is needed. "Instead of expec·
ting the small farmer to immediatiily
change ... , a more ' meaningfui approach, from the cultural point of view,
would be .for the first change to
emphasize production as a means of improving the family's, leveJ of living." "
The'' U:s:' li.ia to do this during the
Depression era, Dr. · Ensminger pointed
out. Soil conservation and farm credit
plans gained wide acceptance only when
the U.S. small farmer could see their
relevance io family life.
In Dr. Ensminger's view, the availability
of simple consumer goods which the
family feels are important is basic 10
changing the small farmer's value$. And
these goods should be processed in small
industries within rural areas. ,..It is this
procets of · improving agriculture,
providins alternative employment opportunities, and producing value
oriented consumer goods that will bring
.Jbout an .wareness that a better and

Hillel holding
year-end Shabbaton
The final Hillel Shabbaton of the
current year will be held this weekend "in ,
the Elmwood Avenue Hillel House. Both
Hillel at U/11 tnd Buffalo State will join in
this evenL
.
Guest speake&lt; Will be Richard Siegel,
director of ihe B'nal B'rlth Hillel Foundation at SUNY at Stony Brook. Mr. Siegel is
• graduate of Brandeis and holds two
M.A.'s, one from Brandeis In contempoqry )ewhh studies and 1 second from
the Jewish Theological Seminary of
America. He is a co«&lt;llor of the , _ , .
~ which published by the
JewWI Publication 5Ddety and '!fi.Joys
. . - popularity atiiOIJII youns ~5habbat.on will beiln on Friday at .
6:311 p.m. wllh • IC.Ibbalat Shabbat .service- A Shlbbal OINW will follow.
.............. the5hellllon maybe
..... ., Clllnl the Slate Hillel House Ill
.......... uta tfllel House . . . .
ShabbM ~ .In the
W. Hllit House wiD- be -held this

n.e

.... -..u•

_.. -

more secure way of life is achievable for

all the rural people."
Two Cultures
How new technology is introduced
will significantly affect the process of
change, Dr. Ensminger said. Crash
programs to bdng the most modern
technology to b~ckward areas have, he
feels, led to the emergence of two distinct cultures _ elitists with the
d
resourcesandcompetencetousethea ,.
vanced methods and the rural poor who
have been left behind. Small farmers
must be aided by technology they can
apply and manage. A village blacksmith
to make aod repair hand tools would be
" an appropriate start."
This choice of technology, he
emphasized, is crucial. From the time
developing countries began to emerge
a·s new republics, they have been con·
fronted with either/ or developmen t
choices - rapid modernization or no
charge at all. " Except for the People's
Republic of China, there doesn't seem to
have been any in-b ween position in·
support of modest prog ess through a
step-by-step introduction of technology
within the TeaCh of and for the benefit"Of
all the people."
Wndh"' ~
cb
• '" o"'w
' 'e'v-erllll!OO,
.. e 'sa'oa··. ·,·h.e"r'e··· ·, 's.'~"a'n alterto
" I know of no experience more relevant to the world's
present need for a working model of
how to . i'llrodu.ce t~chnology into
ti'aCfitiOil311y ~ural cultures than that of
Mahatma Gandhi's. Gandhi's approach
to rural development started with the
people. He saw agricultural development as being basic to rural develop·
ment, and he looked to the ilandicrafts
and small industries to provide alter.
. lfiure Ior peop Ie t 0 earn
nat•ves
to. agncu
a living. He knew and supported people
having consumer goods needs and looked to the small industries to provide the
basic family consumer goods. Gandhi
·was. for change, but always in maderation and within the capacity of the people ·to give both leadership to change
and to integrate the change into their
culture and economy. Gandhi was
forever searching for innovations, new
technology. But he wanted technology
that was within the capacity of the peopie to apply and he wanted the
f 11
-technology to work fort he bene fit o a ,
inSiead of a few.':
·
Thtilt view, Dr. Ensminger contended, is
the antitl)esis of the Western approach.

na~ve c~.::~~nes:

{house), memmum clothing, education
for the children, medical servi~es for the
family, and to feel a sense of security and
well-being. To achieve this simple level
of living would, for most of the people in
the world, give a sense of fulfillment.
furthermore , it is economically
achievable.."
Those who "will be doing the big
1
thinking and designing the grand pans
for mobilizing the world's reSC?urces to
a:ssist the developing countries increase
production per acre" should accept this
notion "with both understanding and
flumi lity," Dr. Ensminger urged.

Fertilize&lt; is the Answer
While Dr. Ensminger championed
social change as the key to increased
food production, Dr. Ewell, at ali afternoon symposium on world food needs,
held that more fertilizer is the answer.
Projecting world food production up
to the year 2000, Dr. Ewell, who is inter·
nationally known for his work on food
anQ ~ertilizer problems, was not overly
bptihlistic that the rate of incr~ase ·in
food production experienced over the
past 20 years can be continued in the
riext' 10-20.
From 1953-73, he said, world grain
production increased from 77.S million
to!ls to 1,371 million tons, a growth rate

''The present shortage of fertilizer may·

prove to be a permanent s~ortage- for
the rest of human history. Demand for
food and fertilizer will continue to increase at a high rate as the world's population contihues to grow, and it is very
doubtful whether it is possible for the
fertilizer industry to expand fast enough
to keep up wit\&gt; the increasing demand."
E 11
h
·
Joining Dr. we on t e sympos1um
panel were Ralph W. Cummings, Jr. ,
agricultural ecQnomist with the
RoCkefeller Foundation, and Thomas A.
Blue, manager of"agricultural chemicals
in the Economics Division of the Stanford
Research Institute.
'Cautious Optimism'

Cummings pictured himself as
"cautiously optimistic'' about the future :
" First, there are many unexploited
resources. Second, the means to use
these resources effectively to increase
food production are either known or
knowable. Third, farmers will increase
individual production if they n.n and
goV:e rhments c.Jn increase national
agricultural production if they will. 1see·
enough of the interrelated progress in
public and private investments, research
qevelopments, · and ·-governmeht ll commitments to be encouraged."
B t h
"d ·mpl"c"t.
his cautious op
1
1
that the low:
income countries will implement'1llore
effectiVe~ policies to limit their rates of
population increase . . .. Over the last 20
years the rates of food production
growth in the developing countries have
been reasonably good. However, the
rates of population growth, averaging
over twice that of the developed countries, have been so high as to leave little
or no gain in per capita food production.
There ·os no physo"cal way that the world
can feed an unlimited number of people
indefinitely into the future."
While the world food situation is
grave, Cummings said, the future is
neither sure nor hopeless. "Now is the
propitious time to act decisively to improve the situation. Na!ional and world
leaders · must implement long-term
sus~ined programs if we are to produce
enough food to meet workl needs tilnd to
distribute it fairly among people and
among nations. This is the challenge to
whi!ft concerntabout .d)e furure of the
.
W!).rld'&gt;: ,gr.ic;l!lturitl Pfoducti.ve CJI&gt;ilcity
should be ad~ ;-mtlo · pu~ ·)lnd

:~~st~~\it~~i~ri~~~';a~~~~~=tfrf~:t~~i~~ timi~,;, i~ ~~~ assu~ p;~n

use of fertilizer . Sinc'e mid- 1973 ,
however, a shorta'Be . of -fertilizer has
d
d "D
d ceed
b
eve 1ope · eman ex
s supp 1Y Y
5 to 10 per cent, which has caused prices
of fertilizers and fertiliz~r raw ,materials
to increase by 100 to 300 per cent," a
situation which will probably continue
throughout the 1980's. Demand, · Dr.
Ewell said, is growing at a rate of 7 per
cent
per plants
year and
.construction
of new
. fertilizer
is not
keeping pace.
For
the first time in history, fertilizer conod
sumption is 1imited by pr uction inste~~eo~::;:~r~i~i~",!~Ym~~;:n!ns of
fertilizer will be available in -1980, Dr.
Ewell projected, while probable demand
will be 125 million tons. He eStimated
that this .will mean that the developing
countrieS will be able to gain only one
per cent in grain production per capita in

seven years. But eyen this would be "a
tremendous accomplishment" in the
face of a population gain of .ov~r sql. .
million. By the year 2000,Iu&gt;wever,' he es:

timates, per capita production in the
third world will drop slightly because of
fertilizer shorttilges. . _, .
~ ~'1.
Time 10 " - Quesllono
The limiting factor in the expansion of
After two decades of development, he
the fertilizer industry during the rest of
said, some o40 per cent of the people in
"this century will probably "be the sho[third world countries are locked in
tage of investment capital, Dr. Ewells.aid.
"Modem fertilizer plant~ are very ex·
poverty. Mass starv.Jtion is almost .t1 cerpensive, costing from $100 to $200
tainty for the furure. "Surely the time is
now .for the political leaden of the
million each. The tolal capital redeveloping countries to ask and answer
quirement&gt; for expanding the fertilizer
the most fundamental q~ion •they will
industry faSI enough to keep pace with
ever be called upon to answer. Thar
demand are estimated at $40 billion in
question is what kind oh level of living
1975-80 and $60 billion duri"'! 1!1110-115. In
will be culturally acceptable and
view of all the compellns demancb for
4!&lt;lOIIOITIIally achievable for all of their
capital in today's technoloskal world, it
people. It ·~f!lis _,. quesdoubtful if this much wiU be
lion that led the
's Republic of
invested in fertilizer plants and related
China to the cummunes. I think I know
facilities.
·
the kind of a level of living Gandhi would
"Other poulbie llmitlns faaors Ire the
approve as being acceptable and
~'Of qullllfled ensJneers, capacity
~ achlevlble nQt only for the
for bul"'lns thl specialized equipment
people of India but allo for moll of the
neeclecl'lil fertilizer plants. and the high
people In the cleveloplns CXIUnlries. It
price and uncenaln availability ,of raw
would be . . opponunlty to .... eftOUIIh
.-tals such .. natural ps, naPtha and
to~~!Jun8er.ashelter ., · ~IOCI&lt;. ,,_. ,.., ., ..•.,. ••

seems_,.

pJiv:~te,it commitments!-Jr.to:o"l)oMtive
pr~rams.-to wore t"ot&gt;the-world will

fee itself." Contrary to U.S. press
reports; Cummings ··5aid, the recent
'worfd food conferences made some,
although only beginning, .efforts in this
direction.
Chemic• Neuauy
Blue noted that, despite controversies
and fears of some ecologists, there is no
way to combat the world food crisis
witho.u t relying heavily on chemical
agent&gt; - fertilizers, ·crop protection
pesticides, plant growth regulators, crop
preservatives, and products to Increase
production of livestock and poultry.
Potential human hazards and
~I proJ11ems posed- by _,. of
these apnll haft 10 be 5ludlecl carefully
and COINnOft sense , _ , _ taken to
minlmize risks, he said. Useful ecolosical
standards are ~· Blue venwred,
but praclically lmpolllllle 10 ~ ln. the
of demlncls by frapMnted. often
-· ~- polltlaii~.,...P"'·'oo.• .-

me

�. . .u ..

Apri/ 17, 1975

Philosophers. to conve
for ·East-West dialogue
By Bob Ensefhardt
Univenify lnfonn.allon

~

Does one Ronald L. Ziegler equal 40
philosophy scholars on th e college lecture circu it?
The an swer ma y leave room for

debate, bu t the re 's no question that two
• U/ 8 philosoph y professors have put
together a program featu f ing 40

authorit ies on art , religion, and Easte rn
and Western philosoph y - at a cost less
than th e $2,500 fee the former preside ntial press secre ta ry · would have co mmanded .had)le not cance lled his ca mpus appea rance last month .
Unli ke the ballyhooed but aborted
Ziegle r speedr,"the~ philoso phy )lrOgram
will, b~,. off!!red ..\o. t b~ P,~l!l ic free of
charge. And so .l~f· ~o~ e_ of .th e 40 disti nguished .Jeduf-e rs h.ls 'caricelled .
All are exped e d to de li ver scho larl y
papers o r take part in pane l d iscussions
during a seri es Of conferences and lec-

tures to be he ld Friday, April 16, and
Satu rday, April19, at Norton.
The Council on International Studies
and Philosophy De partme nt, spo nsors of
th e e ve nt, have billed th e program as a
se ries of " East-West Dialogu es in
Aesthe tics," a nd it is dou btful wh ether
anyt hing as earth y· as Wate rgate will be
d iiCUSSed.
Spe akers will d iscuss and CQmpare
aest hetics of Weste rn · philosophy wit h
tho se o f India, China , Jap a n, a nd
Buddhism, the re li gio n th e three Oriental cultures sha re.
Scho larl y papers will be prese nted on
such topi cs as th e " Conce pt of Beauty in
Contempo rary Chinese Aesth et ics,"
" Buddhism and Wh ite head on the Art of
Livi ng," and " Since rity, Truth, Va li dity
and Freedom as Art istic Virtues."
1 ,.Tim, .\~t o.( SJ?I'a k,ers_jncl~ ~nQHJ:i.~,
j1me Nakamura, a tokyo University
P.fPW~,sQ ~.~ m~r.itys ~ru~, yis.i.\ing. prof~}.§9.r

t~ 1s year at

u/ s,. and three expeh:s on

B~il!1lon;;\,Q(. 0 ~ql,;jn, ~dacobson gf,
Winthrop Co lege, Dr. Alex Wayman of
Columbia University, and Dr. Amiya
Chakravarty o f th e State Unive rsi ty
Colleg~ , at New. P,al~ ,
{)r. Richard Edwards, an art hi~torian .
from the Unive rsity of Michigan, will

Quebe«;: natives
said 'alienated'
Nine out of 10 natives of Quebec suffer, in their own territory, a double alienation_ - one which is both socioeconomic and cultural, Dr. Pierre
Aubery, a nativ.e of France and professor ·
of French at U/ 8, ~d at a
Canadian Studies Associatibn conference on Twent i eth Century
Nationalism in Canada at ·Michigan State
recently.
·
"The largely proletarized French
speaking population of Quebec is subjected on the job and often ; n·its public .
life ·to• ~ ~ do · not·.lliterally·
an M'Iiietjphotltilll~ • lindeY~1'ana·l it~·

langu.,t!OAilbery 'detla*&lt;ir· .,,- r.;,.o.;,
Sodo-ecoftbmiC I SOtUSCaftd •linguistiC!
isolatiOn •reintorcei,an.. linferibrityJ:.COnf-1
plex,•he-added. 11 ' r '
· • '
Quebec llter'aiure he•said, appears to'
be ahead of the times in documenting
'a nd assessing thls·sltuation.
While the popular culture, controlled
by mass media and International corporations, underwrites the status quo,
Quebec Intellectuals, in grow ing
numbers, are becoming aware of the dispossession of .their country and their
identity and are striving to regain them
through mediation of language and
litl!nlture.
But, Aubery .conduded, " Such a form
of struggle for identity and recognition
has a limited Impact on the actual situation since Quebec nationalism is primarily an · expr~lon of class struggle that
could only find a victorious outcOme in a
rather unHkely proletarian ~utlon."
Prof. Aubery wiD condud a aracluate
seminar on "Lhermore and Society o1
Quebec" durinl the font Summer Seosion here.

de liver the program 's mai n lecture -on
Chinese attitudes toward nature (in 339
Norton at 4:30 p. m., April 18).
The two-day .d ia lo gUe serie s was
o rga nized by Dr. Ken neth K. lnada and
Dr. Dale M. Riepe wit h the fi nan cial suppo rt o f a $2,000 grant provide d bv
SU NY's
:·c o nve rsations
in
th e
Di sci plin ~s" program.
Accordi ng to Dr.t nada, the two starte d .
arrang ing the progra m by inviti ng facul ty
me mbe rs fro m othe r SUNY un its.
" The n we decided to invite fa culty
me mb e rs f rom th e Sta te!s p riva te
colleges, a nd then we thought to ask
faculty mem bers from across the bo rder
in O nta rio, a nd then Pe nnsylvania, and
"then ot her areas," says Dr. lnada, who is
pleased with tlie respo nse to his invitations.
The $2,000 has been earmarked to
cover costs of meals and lodgin g fo r the
o ut-of-tow n visitors, and in so me cases
fo r airl ine fa res and ot her transpo rtation
costs.
Othe r visito rs have ag reed to pay th e ir
own ex pe nses, te ll ing th e L.J/ 8 sponsors
they welco me the opportu nity to exchan ge ideas with the ir colleagues.
The ledures will begin at 1: 30 p.m. o n
Friday, Ap ril ·16, and at 9 a.m., Saturday,
Apr il 19, in lecture roomS on the third
_
floor of Norton.
Among the speakers and panelists :
Fro m t h e Buffalo area : Kisor
Chak raba rti, K. K. Cho, George F. ·
Houra ni , Ken neth K. lnada, Carolyn
Korsmeye r, Hajime Nakam ura, Dale M.
Ri epe, and John Taka r, all of U/ 8; Hansa
Dagla, Canisi us College, and James
O 'l ea ry, Rosa ry Hill College.
Fro m Stat~ Upiversity un it$ : Arn'iy:i
Cha~ ravitty, 'New~iz; · Hen ry· L Ruf
and Anne D. Adams, Old Westbury;
Ashok Ma lho tr a, O neonta; pav.id
Dilwo ~h, Stony Brook; l~wrence R.
~.~ ~.~~ h E=U0 1~Wli ..-.s;.. v... sa ks hi ,
.
lirOCkport.
Fro m New Yo rk State: John Koller and
David T. Wieck, Re nsselaer Polytechnic
Instit ute; Arnold Berleault, C. W. Post
College; EIJe n Marie Chen, SL John's
University; Ric\iard- Pilgrim, Syracuse
University; Mauree n Ro bertson, University of Rocheste r, ~ an d Alex Wayman,
Col umbi a University.
From Canacfa: Ernest Best and K. L.
Richard, Un iversi ty of Toronto ; Constanti ne Georgiadis, McM aste r Unive rsity;
David Goicoechea, Brock University.
From Ne w je rsey and Pe nnsylva nia :
Charles W. H. Fu, Te mpl e University;
Sui Chi Huang, Be ave r College; He rta
Paul y, Upsala College; David ·Richardson, Edinboro State Colle ge; Robert C.
Smith , Trenton State College , and F.
David .Martin, Buckne ll U.niversity.
From elsewhere : Richard Edwards,
tJ niversi.!Y of Mich_igan; Nolan P. Jacob- .
son, Wmthrop College; Phinip Zeite r,
Un iversity of South Carolina; Richard
Card, Institute fo r Advanced Studies of
World Religions; louis Nordstrom, International Oai Bosatsu Zendo, and Roshi
Sli~~~b,- ~1-in ~t~d.i es Society, New York.
··'J

F'iis.~~~ plans
own. commencement
Engineering and Applied Sciences ·
graduates will have a. separate corytmencement again this year and Will not
participate in the General Commencement as originally announced.
Engineering Provost William Gill set
the change th is week after un dergraduate students indicated to him
their strong desire to have an individual
ceremony. "We originally had intended
to do this," Gill said, ':but during the past
year fiscal constraints suggested that we
should particlpale in the University commencement rather than have· our own.
However, the studentf no~ have
developed ..sseritlally ay,; the ;(l,llnding
necessary. Therefore,
ialend to
have an individual engineerins corrimencement which wiH take place the
same d~y as theoonoln commencement at
12 noon."

- ·do

,\:

r:.n;~J

.•I

, '?!irt;r'l:.""fllf

Renaissance conference

tlpens· at -A-mherst' 'Friday
The Amherst Campo~ -wjU· ~ 1\QSt to
the a nnua l meet in g of the North Central
Co nference of the Renaissa nce Society
of America, Friday and Satu rday, April
18-19.
The theme of the meeting, which will
focus on art, music, history, phi losophy
and literature of the period, will be " Innovations and Traditions in Renaissa nce
St udies."
Lectu res, pane ls and seminars, all of
which are ope n to the public, will range
from Shakespeare to Italian madrigals,
fe aturi ng visiting speakers such as W.
McAllister joh nson, Department of Fine
Art , Unive rsit y o f Toronto; Angus
Fl etch er, Gra duate Center, CUNY ;
Dona ld We instei n, Department of
History, Rutgers University; James Haar,
Departme nt o f Music, N.Y.U.; and
Donald Frame, Department of Frem: h,
Columbi~ .
.
An e xhibit of Renaissance drawings
and a re-creation of a Renaissance Mass
(at St. John 's-Crace Episcopal .Church,
Colonial Circle, Friday, at 8:30 p.m.) are
also included on the program. The Mass,
a Votive Mass of the Blessed Virsin, will
be performed as it would have been in
the year 1500. The performance will include plainchant. Propers sung by thechoir, . alternating with R~naissance
organ settings· of the Pro~r, the Ordinary, and the Missa Ave Maris Stella of
Josquin des Pres. The Mass will be sung
by the Cappella Plumbstead Episcopi,
direded by Dr. James McKi~non of the
Department of Music. .
The program lor the Conference includes:
Friday, 1:45-.2:45 p.m.-"lenary s-lon-W. McAllister Jo!;nson, Department of Fine Art, Graduate Department
of the History of Art. University ofToronto, ''Creation and Re-creation in
Renaissance Art," Fillmore '170.
Friday, 2:45-4:15 p.no.-P.nels and
Set.lnan: "Shakespeare and Performance," fillmore 357; "The Image ol the
Rule&lt; in Renaissance An and Uteraw~"
Fillmore 351; "llt.erature and Society in
Elitabethan and Jacobean Ensland,~
fillonore 362; "The. Meanlns of
.Mannerism lot Music Hislory," Fl.,_.,
35Z; "Mikon," flimwe m ; "Marriale

amLthe .. f,&lt;~"\ily .i!U!:&gt;,e }~~!)aissance,"
Fillm Ore 365; " Rena1ssance Poetry :
Didacti c and Erotic," Fillmore 370:
Friday, 4:15-5:15 p.m.-Plenary
Session-Ang us Fle tcher, Graduate
Ce nte r,,l=).,lNY, ·:f':Ailton and the Death of
Action : a Prob le m for Epic Narration,"
Fillmore 170.
Friday, 1:30 p.m.-Missa Salve, St.
John's-Crace Episcopal Church, Colonial
Circle.
·
Saturday, 9:30-10:45 a.m.~
SeSsion-Donald Weinstein, Department
of History, Rutgers University ;
~~ secularism and Sanctity in the
Renaissance : Towards a New Approach;" Harry B. lincoln, Department
of Music, SUNY Binghamton, "The
Thematic Indexing of Renaissance Music
byComputer," Fillmore 170. .
.
Saturday, 11 un.-12:45 p.m.-P.nels
and SeminMt--:-" lmages of Women in
t he Renaissance, " Fillmore 362;
" Shakespeare and Psychoanalysis,"
fillmore 354;
Mannerism,'~ Fillmore
357; " Thomas More," Fillmore 370;
" Spenser," Fillmore 377; "Liturgical Performance Practice in the Renaissance:
New Evidence, Chiefly lcon&lt;&gt;Jr~phic,"
Fillmore 351; and "Methodologies in
·~S~aissance P~ose Stylistics," Fillmore
11

Saturday, 2:31-4 p.m.-Plenary
Seoolon-James Hur, Department .Of
Music, New York Unive~. "The Italian
. Madrigal of the 1530's: ManuK:ript and·
P.rinted Sources Compared;" Donald
Frame, De'!artment of French and
Romance PhoiOiogy, Columbia University, " Montalgne's Dialogue with His Faculties," Fillmore 170.
•
The Conference is sponsored by the
State University of New York
Conferences in the Disciplines; the UIB
Faculty of Arts lond letters, Department
of Mu~c, and Department of English; and the Renaissance Society of America.
Ulll faculty •on the executive -committee lor the event are: Charles· Qlrman, an history; Victor Doyno, Ensfish;
Bodo Richter, French; Charles Sllnpr,
history; Edmond -stralnchampo. music;
and David Willbem, Enlllioh•
For further inl""'*ion, call the

Ensfish

~

m..:un.

�-~f

___

. . .aa~a

Undergrad -st~dents ~ progra
lacking,
_poll
faculty sa.mple says in r~sponse
ly Potrlc:N Ward Biederman

linle guidance and no criteria of choice,

RepotterSt.tf

to leap into a bottomless array of courses

Both Mr. Finkelstein and Dr. Cohen
said they would have preferred a
Faculty Senate effOrts to . evaluate
broader response. {FinkelStein pointed
general education at the University have
out that only 33 out of a total· faculty of
. revealed diss;Uisfact ion with the qu ality
almost 1400 responded: Moreover, a
of both undergraduate students and the
third of the resppndents were from Arts
exiSting undergraduate piogram among
and letters, onlf two from Management
·the m;rjority of a small group of UIB
and two froiTll,the entire Health Sciences
faculty polled by the Senate ' s
faculty. This v~ small, possibly skewed
Educational Policy and Planning Comsample makes it extremely difficult to
mittee.
generalize from the responses, he ex·Half the 33 respondents to the Com' plained.)
mittee's questionnaire expressed con·
" If this is a skewed samPle," Dr. Cohen
siderable dissatisfaction wilh the perforadded, "it is probably skewed in the
mance of undergraduates in their dasses,direction of those who have an interest
reports Many Finkelstein, a graduate stuin undergraduate education."
dent in higher education who compiled
Without ma:king any claims for the
the results for the EP &amp; P Committee.
representativeness of the canvass, Dr.
Less than a quarter said they were
Cohen felt it does point to tWo or three
satisfied with undergraduate perfor:generally agreed upon areas of .concern
mance.
abou t the quality of the undergraduate
"Inability to write literate English" was
experience
h ere, including the
the single most frequently mentioned
widespread "lack of the so-called
studeril deficiency, cited by 22 of the
Gutenberg
sKills
(reading, writing, conrespondents (who. represented each of
ceptualizing). The survey also raises
the faculties and the School of
doubts about the extent to which underMan-a gement).
·
graduates here acquire ·a broad, liberal"Other defidendes, cited in descenarts education . Further, the survey
ding order of frequency, were inability
suggests
that faculty do not believe that
to reason/conceptualize/analyze (cited
the current und ergrad uate program
inost frequently by faculty in Social
·generally meets the needs of very able
Sciences and Administration and the
students.
School of Management); lack of motiva· The matter of breadth of education
tion, cited by eight of the respondeniS;
was raised in the qu estionnaire in several
inarticulateness, cited most frequently by
ways.
Asked if th e typical undergraduate
Arts and Letters and Health Sciences
was perceived to have~ "a reasonable
faculty; and lack of quantitative skills."
breadth
of background," seventeen
Almost two-thirds characterized the
respondents answered " no," while ten
ability of undergraduates in writing term
"yes."
Almost two-th irds of the
said
papers, lab reports and the like as
respondents reported that their students
" poor," "low" or even "terrible." Five
did
not give ·evidence in classroom per., 't~pondents rated student writing ability
forman ce of background beyond re'a'S "highly variable." ' OnlY one respon quired leading.-..~alf the respondents
dent described it as "fine."
(13/27 on th is particular iteml eh new
CompM!sons wllh Others
.majors were not we ll prepared for work
Asked how students here compare ·
in ~he ir_ "Jajor fi~lds {nine thought them
with those at.other institutions of higher
"somewhat prepared"). 1Faculty in Social
learning, eleven respondents described ·
Sciences, · Health Sciences , and
U/8 undergraduates as less able as a
Management were p art icular ~ diswhole than students at such elite unive rsatisfi~d with the preparation"' bfought to
sities as Ha~rvard, Y'ale, Chicago ana the
their disciplines by new majors. Almost
like. Ten compared U/ B students
ha lf th e r ~spondents said unfavorably with those at similar public undergraduates knew "very little" about
iversities. "Five respondents," Mr.
"associated and different disciplines."
Finklestein summarized, "seemed to feel
· i\"" comri'ulit thieaa rurini ng through
that .~aU 'undergra'c!uates are the same
the responses was a belief that students,
everywhere.' And several respondents
particu larl y the most able, are not be! ng
noled the incredible ' r3nge of talent'
sufficiently challenged. Queried as to
among students here, feeling that the
whether faculty reQui red enough of thei r
~~ here are as good as at Harvard and
students, twenty-four answered with "a
Yale, and the worst are as bad as at . thundering NO!," Mr. Finkelstein exPodunk Slate."
,
plains.
The questionnaire was prepared by. Dr.
"The general feeling was that we've
Ira Cohen, professor of psychology and
'watered down' courses, lowered stan' chairman of the Senate Committee,
dards, and fai led to challenge Students to
which1 is currently devoting all its .
grow in inte llectual and anal ytic capacity.
energies to study of 11the first two years,"
Several respondents, however, felt that
the lower-level undergraduate program
any attempt to raise standards would be
at U/B.
problematic on two counf?: first, if we
The three-page inquiry was sent to 80
raise standards, we'll lose majors, student
faculty in all of the University's majorFTEs, and down will go the depanmental
divisions, selected at randoin from the
budget . .. and second, assistant
faculty_list in the qment undergraduate
professors on the tenure track can't afcatalogue. Substitutions were made for
ford to be demanding, beciuse that
faculty who happened to be on leave, or
migf.t make for unpopularity among
who said, as Severa1 did, that they hadn't
students and that could screw them at ·
taught undergraduates for years. Thinytenure decisiOfl·time;" .
three . faculty returned completed
As to the progr.im for _the first two
questionnaires.
years as currently structured.at U/8, the
The survey, Cohen said, was an effort
greatest n~mber of respondents (fourto get a "rough reading" of the faculty's
teen) across facuhies · felt the present
sense of the current status ·of general
arrangement is "too unstructured, too
educalion Ol! this campus.
incoherent ."~
As one Social Science faculty member
explained, "new students are ask~ with
A a_.s community......,.._ published
..........,., by rhe.Cli&gt;Mion of Unlve&lt;shy
R*ions. Srilfe University of New York •t
luff•lo, Jf35 Al•in S,...., Buff•lo, N.Y. 14214.
EditorW offlc:es ~ed in room 213, 250
Wmspear AW!ntle (Phone 1127).

&amp;ecuthoe Editor
A WEmEY ROWLAND

·

Edlfor..in-chlef.
ROIJERTT. MARLETT
Art arwU'rodut:tJon
JOHN A OOUTlf/V
Assochfefditor
PATRICIA WAIOIIEDERMAN
Weelly c.lendo.. Ed~ or
DIANE QUINN
conrributlnr Anht
SUSAN W, BURC!M _

JELl gets grant
The U/B Intensive Ensllsh Language.
Institute (IELI) has received a grant of

$10~'from the U.S. Slate Oepanment

for tuition awards for non-sponsored
foreign studentS who need financial
asjistance to anend lEU's summer 1975

session.
..\ccordlng to Stephen C. Dunnen,
director of I he Institute, the · award
represent&gt; the largest commitment. ever

lo the U/B summer prosram. The
University, Dunnett added, received the
largest grant of the 12 universities In the
nation which were given Slate Department funds.
'

and come up wfth a sensi ble, serious
program that so mehow expresses their
goals, aspirations, and needs. This is nonsense!"
By a ratio of 13 to 1, the polled faculty
said distribution requirements do not
succeed in' producing broadly educated
undergraduates. Survey courses, on the
other hand, were endorsed hy the majority of respondents as use ful for both
majors and non-majors.
Finally, the faculty were asked to con- .

April 17, 197~

Nurses ask
campus· help

Editor:
The letter by Constantine Yeracaris to
the editor in your March 6 edition encapsulates the position of the Nursing
Faculty regard ing the budget cuts being
e n acte d by the New York State
Legislature and Governor Carey. We feel
that ·it is imponant that the following
observations be made:
1. It is entirely inappr9priate that the
Director of the Budget in Albany be persider the once popular notion of a freemitted to detel-niine academic matters in
choice program for stude nts. "$orne
people feel/' the question read, "that a
t~e SU NY system incl.udirig tpe cutting of
faculty.
'cafeteria' approach allows st udents to
2. Tb~ Bureau .of the . Budget, the
select cou rses which interest them, and
Governor, and the Legisla'ture are totally
that the increased motivation results in
increased learning. Do yo u think we
unaware of the consequences of their
action wherein such reductions of faculshould move in that directio n?" Twoty compromise safe clinical supervision
thirds said "no" (the majority in every
of students a~ they provide health care.
group except Health Sciences, where
one respondent cautioned, " People
3. At a time when the people of Erie
County are experiencing a high infant
need to know the basic principles of
mortality rate, when the nursing home
nutrition if the most meaningful, subscandal is continually on the front pages
stantive 'meals' are to be selected from
th e 'cafeteria' ").
of our newspapers, when the medical
malpractice problem is rapidly apAmong the sugg6tions fo r improveproaching a real health crisis, when
men! of the program offered by the
facu lty were return to the five-course
problems in the health care system are
load; more facu lty advisement; smaller
spiralling, and when the hospital infection rate is rising, the State should be
classes; and requ ired courses in English
com position, English, mathematics,
attempting to encourage and promote
science and history..
quality nursi ng education. Un iversitY
The EP&amp;P Committee is currently
prepa red nurses are needed desperately
preparing an interirO report which is exto make an impact on the health care
delivery system.
pected to deal with many of the points
4. More and more young people are
raised by th e survey.
According to Dr. Cohen, one of the
inte rested in entering the nur.s in g
tasks before the Committee is to co me
profession and, at a time when many
University programs are underenrolled,
, -~~ .w!th some mechanism for moreeffec- tively ' dla l.JEmging · good stud~nts .. The . the.Sl}NYAB School of Nursing·has more
Committee does not favor 3n h'ori6rs
a·pplicamt ~ ;.than 1it can ppssibly accomtrack, the chairman reported, but it is
modate.
generally acknowledged that whatever
5. Our. nursing program is the only one
special program is develOped , all
in the entire SUNY system which off~rs a
students .can not be -req uired 1to .&gt;take-. it.
Masters progra'rli:-'1lif! 'tVfs 'Pi08'r'an1' 1Sby
"There might be available mechanisms
no means superfluous, since we are un(such as the freshman se minars or the
dergoing a national trend which requires
Collegiate program) tha t, with more supnu rses to assume more responsibili ty in
port, could serve," Dr. Cohen said.
the del jv~ry of health care: This i'!'PI.ies,
"We are clea rly .not alone in -our conof couise, the provision of graduate
education.
cerns about undergraduate education,"
he said, noting that this issue is currently
6. We cannot help but wonder
being debated not only at public un iverwhether the decision to eliminate eight
sities but at the most prestigious Private
of our lines was based on the fact that
universities as well. "Like these other un- · our faculty is almost entirely comprised
iversities, we should be considering ways
of female members; It is interesting to
_ to improve undergraduate education."
note that the F.T.E. ratio for the SChool of
Nur.;ing projected wilhoul facul ty -cuts
Parenthetically, _Dr. Cohen said he
for 197S is higher than the f .T.E. ratio
believed that the Collegiate system, as
by the Legislature for Health
accepted
originally conceived, addressed itself to ·
Science Centers! Yet the Bureau of the
some of the _issues raised in the survey
Budget persisted in claiming wts were
"but then the Colleges gO!· off on other
made because of _the problematic(?)
things."
F.T.E. ratio!
The EP&amp;P Committee would welcome
Finally, we are asking thin the SUNYAB
input on aspects of the undergraduate
community show support for our posiexperience, Dr. Cohen said, particularly
in opposilion Jo the cutbacks. We
tion
from people in the sciences and
ask the Faculty Senate for a resolution of
·engineering who · were minimall y
encjorsement and ask that every faculty
represented in the survey.
member in the University system write to
One senses, lurking behind the
their State Assemblyman and Senator ·
negativism -of the faculty responses, a
~and
to GOvernor Cai-ey, -lieutenant
fear that this University (with most
Governor Knupsak and the Bureau of the
Othefs} may be failing to provide its unBudget" as~ih~ that ·tbe deleiioni\ vhich
dergraduates with the intellectual skills
.... r.. made oh !he&lt;regular liudget be
!hought to lead to a more carefully exrestore&lt;/ ioi' the Supplemenlal Budget
amined, more fully experienced life,
whic_h will come up for a vote shonly. _
those skills traditionally identified with a
Sincerely,
liberal education.
· -Sipled by D -...ben of the
. In an institution that does eve'rything
Sdoool of Nunlns Faculty
from train t·o.m orrow's first-grade
teache..rs to teach theoretica l
mathematics (to undergraduat~ whose
ability varies from deficient in basic skills
The Office of foreign Student Affairs
to ~pable of graduate- work), it's nQt
solicits participation in the Foreign Stu~
eaSy even to agree upon goars for· un·
dent Orientation Committee, Fall 1975.
dergraduate education.
·- On April 23, at 2 p.m. in Room 204
·As ·or. Cohen asked, 'Whal's the
Townsend H~ll, a me;eti~g will be held to
target behavior? I have in mind a
form a Steering Committee to initiate
reakmable criterion or target bel)avior
planning for the Fall Ori~t ation
(for a liberal _education), although it may
program.
sound a little silly .... llhink we sl\ould
The Office of foreign- Student Affairs
expect !hat an undergraduate science
-expects 220 new foreign students to
major should be ~ble, two years after he
begin classes this fall. Stu'ilents are re&lt;?! she gfadua~, to read, say, The New
quired to arrive not later than August ·25
and to.partidpate in~the nine~y orien·
'""" le&amp;w ol'lloob.and set something
out of li','''while'li humanities major, two
tation program.
•
.. ,
years alter sraduating, should be able to
for funher information, cont.llct Mr.
read Sdenllllc: American.and understand
Joseph Krakowiak In lhe Office of
and appreciate most- of tf'ie anldes."
foreign Student Affairs, 1131-3828.

OFSA orientation

�.'
Apri/17, 1975

---Etfiicaf problems.
in· health care
to be ·aired
- The right to die, paJients' rights and
responsibilities and the rights of the un~ .
born are among issues to be discussed at
a two}day symposium on uEthical Dilemmas and Health Care Delivery" April 2526 at Norton Union.
,
Initiated by the School of Nursing and
sponsored by the Faculty of Health
Sciences and the Departmen.t Of
Philosophy, the symposium will focus on
a variety of ethical issues involv.ed in
today's health care.
Friday 'morning speakers and topiCs are
Dr. Raymond S. Duff, associate professor
of clinical Practice, _ Yale University
School of Medicine, "Some Ethical
Problems of MOdern Medicine;" Tabitha
M. Powledge, research· as~ciate for
genetics, Institute of Society, Ethics and
the life Sciences, Hastings Center,
Hastings-on-Hudson, 11 Genetics, Politics
and Medicine;" Dr. Barbara Ehrenreich,
long Island, "Competing Priorities iO
Health Care Delivery," and Dr. Richard
T. Hull, U/8 associate professor of
philosophy, "Patient Rights and Responsibilities - Questions of Consent."
· The afternoon session will feature a
series of speakers. and workshops in.:.
eluding "The Right to Die/ ' Jacob D.
Hym~n ; professor in the Farulty of law
and Jurisprudence, and Dr. Duff;"Human Genetics: Rights of the Unborn," Dr. C. Charles Bachmann, U/8
assistant clinical professor of psychiatry
and director of clinical pastoral education at E. J. Meyer Memoiial Hospital,
and Ms. Powledge; "Consent: Is It Treatment or Research,'! Dr. Henry P. Sta!Jb,
associate professor of pediatrics, and Dr.
Hull, and "The Right to Health: Accoun tabir.ty of the Health Team," Cathleen
Getty, associate professor of graduate
·•tommunity psychiatric·nu1'sir11!1 aild -or ..
Ehrenreich.
· n. ~ C_Ongtessman Jam~s Hast_ings ~ bf: the
~9th dJ!irjg -\Yi1Upe~,l&lt;,_&lt;;&gt;n " legisiNj,ve
Issues in Relation to Health Problems"
at 3 p.m. Friday.
At 8:15-p':m. Friday at the Faculty Club
in. Harrim'n libra')(, Dr._Joseph Fletcher,
visitong professor' ofl5iomedical ~thics at
the University of Virginia '~hool of
Medicine, Charlottesville, will speak on
" Health Care and Distrioutive Justice."
. Workshops will continue through
noon Saturday.

Dr. Monk receives
Fulbright award
Dr. Abraham Monk. professor of social
wor~. is a recipient of a Fulbright-Hays
Senior Scholar Award which will enable
him to teach at ihe School of Social
Work, University of Haifa, Israel, during
the 1975-76 academic year.
·
Dr. Monk is a nationally recognized
authority in the field of social planning
for the -aged, He has presented many
papers at such conferences as the
American Gerontological Society, the
National Cooference on Social Wetfare,
·the Council on Social Work Education,
. and othl!rs.
.
,
.- •.
While on sabbitical leave'.during the
academic year 1975-7,6, Dr. Monk's major
assigflment as a seOiof- scho.lar at the
: School of Social Work. U,niversity of
Haifa, will be related to: conducting a
faculty development program, with particular emphasis on the training of junior
social work faculty; developing a social
w.ork professiOnal program in social gerontology; anq teaching . advanced
·courses in social planning.

Salary evaluation
The American Association of University Professors has received a grant.of $50,600 from the Exxon Education Founda-

tion to develop· a "Higher Education
· Salary Evaluation Kit." AAUP says the kit
· will be · designed to provide a "viable
method for 'lfle' detection of salary
differentials and possible salary Inequities betwe_en men and women
faculty." When completed, the kits w}ll .
be made available to both college and
university administrators and facul tY
grpups.

A SUNY

ev~ning

More th.an 300 membfts c;;, the Uniwersity community ~ttepded the U/1 Women's
Oub's 21st """""I scholanhip ball •nd dinner •t the £licolt Llbruy S.turd.Jy
niJh~ resultins in •t lout $!JOG for the Oub's scholanhip fund.~ an President
and Mrs. Robert L KoH« sr«&lt;lns the •rriYins p&gt;elb •nd the poup al the President's
t•ble.
-

The gospel according to von Daniken-----------(/rom fURe

i. col. JJ

kind of work with or without success."
Since "this kind of work" inspires such
devotion, it seemed only logical to
wonder how one gets started in it.
Relisious Doubts
For von Daniken, who had a " strict
Catholic -upbringing," the start came
with religious d,oubts in high school.
"My doubts led me to a careful
reading of t he Old Testament, especially
the ~~k ,o.f Moses .and the apocryp"\Jal
book · ol Enoch. These bQpks always
spoke of gods, in the plural, alieN assumed, they mepnt. ~~ literally."
I
., 1 ~,
Armed with this assumption, von
•Daniken uembarked .on ...his present
career, which seems to require almost as
much travel as selling patent med ici ne
does. His present journey includes
speakiilg engagements in five U.S. cities
and then on to South America "to take
some measurements' io Bolivia and look
at some new stones in Peru ."
Not content with giving him his start,
organized religion has developed into
one of his strongest critics. And criticism
from the various denominations is voiced most frequently in their newspapers.
"I'm crashed down in those papers all
the time, but I'm used to it. I have very
b'road shoulders," he explained, with a
trace of incipient martyrdom in his voice.
'M.oma Mia, Irs Hot'
Von Daniken's first words on entering
Clark Hall were "Mama mia, it's hot inheie," demonstrating-his facility with yet
a third language.•The heat seemed to remind him of •religion, and he began to
talk about his new book, whiCh is already
a beSt seller in Germany-.
"It has a chapter in it which has been
construed as anti-Christianity, and that is
creating difficUlties in having it published in this country. My theorieS Pose a big
problem for Christianity, especially if
they are true,'! he proclaimed. -At the start of his lecture, von· Daniken
asked the- audience to use their imaginations, a request that was to be
repeated frequently throu_ghout the .
evening.
" Imagine this gymnasium is the confe.rence room of a spaceship in the year
2100."
lmmediclte visions sprang to mind of
astronauts in sweatsuits vainly attempting
to dribble weightless basketballs.
The imaginary journey continued to a
distant planet where intelligent life was
just emerging. For those whose imaginations were not up to the trip, ~ides
of the journey were thoughtfully provided. Judging from the-pictures, the rocket
was ll)eing piloted by Flasli Gordon.
"Our ~nding on tl!g pia"'!! wQUid be
view'ed as a fantastic·.pit of~ gods. Ordinary searchlights would seem like .blinding suns ·to them, and our laser beams
would be like lightning."
·
Presum.ibly they would also be quite

impressed by our having arrived in a
gymnasillhl.
Von Daniken Hken~ this flight of fancy to events which transpired thousands
of years ago on Earth. And in his opinion,
this early visitation was recorded in the
" myths and holy books" of early civilization to form the beginning of a 11 great
religion."
What Ezekiel Saw
The writings of the prophet Ezekiel
· were discussed at length, and an artist's
rendition of the space vehicle Ezekiel
" must have seen" was displayed. Fortunately fo r von Daniken's career, there
! W3s ·no U.S. Air Force around to explain
to Ezekiel that what he actually saw was
marsh-. gas.
This bibliCal spa·t e· ciaft, whicli c~m­
bined nuclear poWer for deep space and
rotors fo r atmospheric travel, bore a
strong resemblance to the little machine
that mi xes milk shakes down at the,malt .
shop. Ohviously an appropriate vehicle
£

· -

• •

•

,

__

•

fo~~~;~~nt~~~~~~~ ~en~:~ ~~Ydiscussion of va rious archeological sites
around the world, and explanations of
how these artifacts support von
Daniken's th eories. During this portion,
von Daniken took the liberty of summarizing some of the views of those who
oppose him, with all the care that
Chevrolet takes when talking about Ford.

As an example: von naniken mentioned
the archeologists who explain some of
the drawings on cave walls by saying that
"the dwellers ate mushrooms and had
visions."
Beyond lhe limits
He also bera"ted traditional
archeologists who 11 hold to their theories
like a religion," no matter how
preposterous. Unfortunately for ~9n
Danike(', he failed to check for 'fSin"
before CaSting the first Peruvian stone,
a.:d many of his proofs that support his
premise are stretched beyond the limits
of plausibility.
· But "von Daniken's ideas are not tOtally
without redeeming social value. They
h~~~ ~ .~o_f11an!=e and exdtement that is
lacking in many of the more orthodox
ones. And in many instances, his theories
seem as valid in their explanations of
archeological puzzles as the more conventional approaches.
And at the end bf his ·lecturehe calls
on believers and non~believers alike to
be open minded and not reject ideas
merely because they are different from .
the currently accepted body of
knowledge.
In closing, tie asked: " Are we able to
cope with this new and admittedly fantastic possibility,-Or at least take it into
consideration?"
How about it, Amerikaners?

Katz named associate Med dean

Dr. leonard A. Katz has ·been ap. Student-related activities ·will also be
pointed associate dean for student and
reorganized and expanded. These range
academic affairs in the School of
from finandal aid, student advisement,
Medicine.
and registrar functions to curriculum
. The 39-year-old associate professor of
development/evaluation and the collec~
medicine has served on the U/8 faculty
ting of more data on postgraduate trainsince 1968, on the Buffalo General,
ing opportunities. 'We are now followChildren's, Veterans, and Roswell Park
ing up on our graduates and asking that
Memorial Institute staffs. He has also
they send in evalUations of their inheaded E. J. ~\-~eyer Memorial Hospital's . temship and resident programs for use
clinical gastroenterology program.
by students here/' Dr. Katt says. He
Dr. Kati sees the Medical School movlooks fooward to the challenge of an exing frOm a difficult period into an era
panded administrative role."
_which can be very exciting. "We have a
very good faculty, very -good students,
and the time iS right for. us _to move
The Professional Staff Senate is sponahead," he says.
soring an information meeting on stuWhat attracted Dr. I&lt;au io lhe post was
dent tuition waivers to be held Monday,
the arrival in Buffalo of a new dean. "Dr.
· April 21· at 3 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.
John Naughton ·brings an extraordinary
All membe~ of the U/8 staff, whether
background fro(ll George Washington
derical or professional, who are involved
University,'1 he safs. Naughton, he Points
in advising aboUt and/or processing-of
out , had great success there in
student tuition waivers are invited to atcurriculum revision and in improving the
tend.
whole rapge of student serviceS and ad'
Topics to be covered include'
miS$ions procedures.
I. Tuition Waivers, Tuition Assistance
One of Pr. Katt's first concerns will be
Program (formerly Scholar Incentive
to develop a new Office of Medical
Awardl and the Office of Student AcEducation. "We will be fully implemen•
counts~Wolliam Calhoun.
ting a faculty study completed In lhe late
II. Graduate StudentS-Or. Andrew
sixties," he notes. By building on the efHoiL
forts of " an effective faculty/student ·
Ill. i:ducational Oppo r t&lt;~nity
curriculum committee," educational
Program-Mr. Joseph Stillwell.
goals and priorities will beTeassessed, he
IV. Foreign Students-Or. Joseph
. says.
Williams.

Information sesSion

�April17, 1975

UUP seeks
planning data ·

Home at last

BA/~S

With .a combined seuon record to d.tte of 2 wins .and 14 losses (.J 1~11 record on their
Southern swins .Jnd .a 1·31'1'W'k In the Northern c.ampaisn which opened eoufier in April),
the U/1 aueb.IU lulls will undoubtedly be st.d to be home for their campus opener, .a
doublehudft •s.ainst Niqolr., Tuesd.ay, April22, .at 1 p .m. ill Peelle Fiekf. Here Co.ch Bill
Monbrsh {left center) talks the situ.ation ower with Executive Vke President Albert Somit.

being offered in social sciences

The Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration has received provisional approval from SUNY -Central to offer a ne.w

degree-granting program, the B.A./B.S.
in social sciences, Dr. Clark Murdock,
assistant professor, political Science, and.
director of the new program, announced

courses" which each student in a
program must take and a series of " elective concentrations." The core courses,
he said, are "designed to provide a common interdisciplinary background for
eac:::h student in a particular program -a,
backgrou':'d which is essential ~the'

this week. -r;::;~;g:!s~~e ':f~~~~ ~~[:rs~" ;'hi:
11Jfnown forma41y as ..Undergradu3te
backgfourid \\/.ill alsi&gt; "ensure that eath·
Interdisciplinary Programs •in ' the 'SOcial
student has sufficient knowledge of the
Sciences, this faculty-wide major (FWM)
social sciences to enter upper-level
is believed to be the first of its kind to
.departmental ·cour\es' without meeting
becOme operathe in •th~ 1 ~iversjty, Dr.
all of the department:s prerequisites."
Murdock said. The Div ision of
Undergraduate Education, he pointed
B.S. Option
out, has asked each of the faculties to
After completing core requireme nts, a
design such interdisciplinary curricula.
student will choose ·one Of the elective
The FW/\1. w(ll provide an ' opportunity
concentrations for more specialized
for a student to learn the skills and
study. In· each program, the elective
methods of the social sciences by exconcentration ,will represent an expanamining how different disciplines
sion of the general multidisciplinary apanalyze, ,:iescribe and explain a given
proach of the core courses, Dr. Murphenomenon, Murdock indiCated .
dock said. In addition, for urban and enRather t.han. being a "sampler" program
vironmental studies, there is a B.S. option
composed of a number of unrelated
- that is, a program entailing an admethodological or perspectivistic
ditional16 hours (the normal minihlum is
courses iry several fields, he said, the
ten courses) stressing the learning of the
FWM "is based on the assumption t,hat
skills necessary for policy analysis.
exposure to the social sciences can _
The Faculty-Wide Major -as a new
better be achieved through the mulprogram will undoubtedly suffer many
tidisciplinary study of vari9us substantive
growing pains, Dr. Murdock. cautioned.
maners." The "FWM provides a means
"The three programs are still tentative in
through which a student may study; in a
character since many courses still need
structured form, some issue, problem, or • to be created to fill the gaps left by those
phenomenon that annat be treated • courses· already· offered in the Univeradequately by a single discipline,"
sity," he indicated. As the program
representing a degree option falling
grows, however, he said, ~'more courses
between the narrowly defined
will bq offered and it is hoped that
depanmental major and the highly inresources will be made available to perdividU.Iized special major.
mit the creation of joint·taught courses,
Three ......... a.specially tailored for the interdisciplinary
programs."
Ultimately, Dr. Murdock indlc:ated, the
FWM will consist of a nunlber of interd isciplinary prosrams in different subLegal Studies
stantiYe areas. Initially, ho_Wever, t~e .
The legal studies' program is intended
for those students who are interested in
will be three interdisciplinary prosrams
studying the law, legal processes, legal
- lepl studies, urban studies and environmental studies. •These three were
institutions, and the role of law in socie·
chosen for two reasons, he indic:ated:
"ty, As ~uch. there wm be four major
facets of study available: the functions
"(lilt Is possible to construct respectable
that the law should provide in any
prosrams larsely with existing resOurces
political system,. primitive Or inter- that Is, the various depanments and
national; the law as a social system, in
colleges either already offer the
terms of both the Internal logic of tl:te
necesury counes or have faculty that
could teach them; and (21 Student inlaw and the Internal clynamia of lepl interest In these areas has already been
stitutions; law In Its social and polltic:al
demonstrated either by the high insetting -::- ""'t is, the. examination of tl)e
ddena! of opedal majon or by affiliation
manner In which law and lepl proa!55e5
with a college that deals with the suboperate in both domestic and Interject-'' Students and faculty interested in
national societies; and, finally, the,
clevelopllls addftional Interdisciplinary
evaluation of law as a means of social
change.
This prosram Is Intended for the
encourased to oontact ~·
........... lbenl- student who
Nl ...._ ol .the Initial propa1111 will . has *01111 inleleaull and profeollonal
" - . . . . . IINClUteS, Dr. Murdodt
inter.- ln ... but
ts noC • parapraleulonal
...... , _ . . lie four Of floe "ClOre

c:=.-

N,_.....*......... •

Urban Studies
The program in urban studies is intended for both those students who are
genera ll y interested in learning· about
the urban environment and those who
wish to develop specialized competencies in S9ffil!,i'SPI\~ ol'f, PJ~J:' ,~If'lif:51W:
example, ~rban anthropo(ogy or urban
history) or in the analysis of urban public
policy "piograms. Those who wj~h to pur~ .
sue a general multi-disciplinary P.~9g,rall)
in urban studies may take, in adtfMdKIW
the core courses, a " General Urban
Studies" e lective or, depending upon
their interests, "Minorities in the I.Jrban
Context," "Urban Policy .,Problems/',
" Criminal and Urba~ Justice," or "Urban
Planning." These programs will ensure
familiarity with tht::: substantive material
in the area of a student's choice but will
not necessarily provide him or her with
skills that are easily marketable. They
will, however, Dr. Murdock said, serve
quite well as background for a student
who plans to attend a professional school
(law, business, · urban planning, city
management and so on) or graduate
school for funher work. Students who
wish to develop specialize4 competencies in either history or anthropology
should elect those concentrations. Finally, those students interested in developing marketable skills should take either
the B.S. option (with its stress on
economics af'!d data analysis) or an "Ur·
ban Affairs Applied Research Program"
which is offered in conjunction with the
Urban Affairs Office and stresses job;
.related . training in local,.~ .comniun j .ty .~
organizattons.
.
..
"'~"' q

EnvirOn~ Studies
.
" "'"'
The prpgram ip environmerl~al s~~C:If~ ~
is intended for both those students wh·o
are generally interested in learning
about environmental concerns and d"ioSe
wishing .t o develop an analytical c:apabili• ty in the environmental area. Developed
in consultation with Rachel Carson
College (Dr. John Howell and Dr. Beverly
Paigen), this program will have cOncentrations in environmental m-_nagement,
the political" and legal treatment of en. vironmental issttes, international environmental planning, and the B.S. option which stresses training In those skills ·
neces~ry f~r doing environmental impact~analys•s.

Students lnierested in the B.A./B.S. in
the Social Sciences Program should make
an appointrm:nt with Dr. Murdock, Rm.
A~. 4230 ,lfklge . I.Ja, telephone: 8311814. AdmiDian 1ft'- the DfOiiram must
be complelt!d before the -.,nd of a
student's junior. year and continualllll! Is
c:ondltional Oft achlevlnt-a 2-5 ~In
the ~ course:

The Executive Board of United University Professions (UUP), meeting in
Buffalo this past week~nd , adopted the
following resolution concerning the
•.SUNY Master Plan process:
"SUNY is now revising its Master Plan
for 1976 and members of the prQfessional
staff are being asked to become involved
in the planning process. The· UUP
recognizes the importance of. the role of
the professional staff in making
recommendations to ca mpus and ce ntral
SUNY management. UUP also recognizes
that .Jhe 1976 Master Plan may nave
significant impact on the terms and conditions of employment of lhe SUNY
professional staff. Such~ termS .and conditions must •'be subject •to negotiations
with the recognized colleCtiVe bargaining agent \WUP. further urge$ - t~
professional staff to 'Participate respon·sibly in making recommendations on the
Master Plan while at the same time it inte nds to insure that the rights of the
professional staff are fully protected
through the process of negotiations.
"The Executive Board urges that every
chapter become fully informed as to the
status of the Master Plan on their cam pus
and remain alert as to the implications of
possible cha ng es affecting the
professional staff .. .."
Dr. Constantine Yeracaris, president of
the Buffalo Center Chapter of UU P, expressed hope that all professional staff
participants in the formulation of the
local Master Plan will com municate to
him as soon as possible "relevant information."

Senate(from PJ1!f' 1, col. 4)

of the curre nt co ntract is widespread
among the faculty . To help the
professorial staff to better understand
the document, the lix.ecutive.Committee
has as£etf -the · AF&amp;R Commit1ee•· lo
scrutinize the current agreement critical·
ly in order to recommend possible 'irii":
provements to the bs~ng a'g~l\1'.-'l'~e
undertaking jS" not intended as a
criticism of the union , Hochfield said:
the intention is to educate the facu lty.
The discussion that followed involved
detailed explication of the text by "'the
Senators. Debate began at the beginning
(article one) with a close reading of the
current contract's definition of academic
freedom. The body seemed somewhat
surprised to learn that the present contract specifically states that a teacher
"may not . . . claill') as his right the
privilege of discussing in his classroom
controversial Maner which has no rela·
tion to his subject." The committ~ urg·
ed that the classic AAUP statement of
1940, urging a teacher to "be careful" in
this matter, be substituted.
The committee also urged modification
of the current anide 35 dealing with
retrenchment. In the committee's view,
the University should be explicitly required to prove the factual basis of the
condition (such as financial stringency)
t hat resultS in a declaration of re·
trenchment. Further the 4,i~~sity
woujdbe •!I!!IUi!~ ,tO(Iive evide!Kle,that
bona fide alternative solutions have been
anempted llefore a state of
me!)t ;. -de&lt;Jiared."C.Onsultlotionl ~
rehen.,ltlh••t ,!wl1h l u•ni-o'n" a'n'll
depanmental represenratiWsqs alSo urged l!y the eommrttee. ·· " - " ' ·
·
The committee also suggested that the
contract's "no discrimination" clause (ar·
tide tenl, be extended to include sexual
orientation, political beliefs and union
activily . PrOvisions On discipline,
grieyance procedures, and appointment
and promotion issues were also discussed.
7he committee plans to continue
analysis Of the contr~, presumably in
hopes of insuring that .faculty wishes and
prerogatives are dearly in the minds of
thOS!! who sit at the neJ!Otlatlng table.
Mark Shechner emphasized tbat his
comminee's recommendations are only
proposals subject to modification.
Written comments and recommelldations from faculty are welcome
and should be .tdressed to l'rofessor
Shechner ri the Ensllsh Depariinent, \
blfore April 25, when the negotiating
teain Is apected to rneeL

rinre.m... ,

�._•=•

Apri/17, 1975

c~rendar·--~~~~------~--------------------------~----~------Fargo Cafeteria, 9 p.m.

mation, contact CoOtinuing Medical Education! 2211 Main St., 831-5526.
AMHEUT CAMPUs

wf:ci.~~ ~:S~~:~ 1B~.~-Roc~nd

.

DANONG'
· A dance workshop is given by Turkish
dancer Bora Ozkok. Fillmore Rm., Norton, 2
p.m.
.

FOlJ(

AND FILM•
334 Norton, 3 p.m.

Nutrition and Problems of Dentistry, Robert
Glass, D.M.D. G-22 Farber (Capen), 12 noon .

A Dance Party iS presented by the Biilllkan

Ktn-RYING DEMONSTRATION'
Spon_!P'ed by Roche! Carson College. Buf-

GEOlOGICAL SCIENC£5 SEMINAIIJ
Benthic Ecology of the Bay of Fundy, Or.

Michael Risk, McMaster University. Rm. 23,
4240 Ridge lea; refreshments at 3, lecture at
3:30p.m.

BASBAU'
U/8 vs. Nia~ra U. {2). Peelle Field, 1 p.m.

falo Zoo, 2 p.m.

No admission charge.

R.UTE RECITAl'

Economic 0em9('racy, Resource Allocation
and Regional Growth, Robert C. Konwea,

Meeting "for anyone with problems with
alcohol. 264 Norton, 6:10 p.m. For information, contact Bill Stoberl, 831-2701.

visiting associate professor. 237 Crosby, 3-5
p.m.
fiUD ASTAIRE-GINCBI ROCEIIS
ALM fESTIVAl'
• Top Hat and Swing Jime . Norton
Conference Theatre, 3 and 8 p.m. Admission:
$1 .50.
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.
UFE WOitKSifOI"'•
Grantsmanship and the Grant Process is examined by Mrs. Shirley Stout, assistant to the
vice president for research 234 Norton, 3-5
p.m. For registration or information, visit 223
Norton, or all 831~31.

IROAIJCAST'
Bicentennial Forum: _The Rights of Man.
WBFO-FM (88.n, 8:30-11 p.m.

UUAIRLMU
Vision of 8. Norton Conference Theatre, call
831-5117 for times. Admission cha'Je·

MONDAY-21

.

o ~e&lt;Wf"t.j~ ill,fmjl~oft,., •V
~/"" '
FRm ASTAIRE-GINGER ROCEIIS
ALM FE5TlVAl'
Flying Down to Rio and Roberta. Norton
·~QIV~rer~J J;rn;.aJ.r,e, 3 ,~nd

Slp~~~te'd by' the Office of ~~JiUral Affairs. ·'
ENGUSH DlPT. ALM SBIIES'
81-i {fellinil. 140 Farber !Capen). 3 and 9

p.m. No admission charge.

admission charge.

•}f,j..

olili~On!lieslta&lt;tii\de'roplilll!loi:ce.rliatr,:

..,.

•

Jl

•

-t •

FILM•

"THE

••• 1" 1

- ~.Pierrof le Fou (Godard). 70 Acheson, 8 p.m:
No admission charge.

.

JEW

#

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•

II), Or. Max Wickert, U/ B associate professor
of English . Harriman library, 8 p .m. '-·

MUSIC PEIIFORMANCE'
Love You Madly is a tribute to Duke
Ellington, directed by Ed Smith. Harriman
· Theatre Studio, 8 p.m. Admi ~si on : Sf students,
others $2.50.
Presented by the Depart me nt Of Theatre,
Department of Black Studies and the Office of
Cultural Affairs. ·
· ,A, View From the Bridge by Arthur Miller
· and The Cood....Woman of Serzuan by Bertoli
Brecht, directed by Don Sanders. Courtyard
Theat re, Hoy:t and Lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission : $1 students, others $250.
Prese nted by the Center for Theatre
Resea rch .

UUAI RLM••
Doc. Norton Conference Theatre, call 8.315117 for times. Admission charge.

EXHIBITS
MANUSCIIIPT AND AIIST mlnON EXHIBIT

The most complete collection of Robert
Graves manuscripts in the world is currently
-on display in the lockwood Memorial library.
·Manuscripts and first editions from the Graves
poetry collection are pan of the exhibition,
which commemorates Robert c:iraves'
eightieth birthday. Balcony, second floor,
lockwood Memorial library.
MUSIC UBIIARY EXHIBIT
Eastern Music: New Books and Scores.

Music library, Baird Hall, through April 30.
lOCKWOOD EXHIBIT
Po lish Collection, el(hibition culled from

the University's collection of more tha n 4,000
volumes of material. First floor, lockwood
Memorial library. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
.p.m. Continuing.
Jt ~~ ;11
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Ariadne o n N.11eos is the title of this group of

prints and photographs presented in co njunction with the University Opera Studio. Hayes
. Hall lobby, building hours, through May 30:'

.. .. ... " ·"N01'1C~ · ..... ·
AfltiCAN STUDIES ASSOCI ADON
MEETING

A. View From the Bridge by Arthur Miller
and The Coorl Woman o f Setzuan by Benoit
Brecht, directed 'bY Don. SaOOers·. CoUrtyard
Theatre, Hoyt and Lafayene, 8 p.m. Admission : students, $1, others $2.50.
Presented by the Cem e r for Theatre
Research .

A three-day 'meeting consisting of lectur~.
· worhhops ~ nd ~iS&lt;;~&amp;~ip n s is ~heduled April
24-26 in Syracuse, New York . For information,
cont.act Roderick J. Macdona ld, Program of
East African Studies, Syracuse University, 1-19
is~~~~ Place, Syracuse, N.Y. 13210, (315) 423-

THURSDAY-24

PIIOffSSIONAl COUNSEI.ING
Professional counseling is now available at
~~.' Hou~. For an ap~intmen"- call 836-

coNTINUING DENTAl mUCAnON
CONFtRENCEf
Developing Effective Occlusal Treatment
Skills is the title of this two-pan conference.
The first half, Part/: Prindples of Occlusion, is

scheduled April 23-24 and will be given by
Niles F. Guichel, D.D.S., Anaheim, California.
{The seCond pan is schedyled Aprii2S-26). 231
Norton, 9 a.rf\.-4:30 p.m. For fee informatiori
or registration, contact the SChool of Dentistry, 3435 Main St., 831-2836.

IN ACADEMIC Uff"

SYM~UM'

.

·Discuss.ants will be: Dr. Gerhard J. Falk,
professor, Department of Sociology, State
University College ~t Buff~lo; Dr. leslie ~
Fiedler, chai~n, UIB English Department;
Dr. Richard D. Schwanz, dean, UIB law... School. The modefiltor will be Dr. Alan H.
Podet, assistant professor and coordinator of
Jewish Studies .lit the ~te UnhtersiJy College
· at .81.1~ . Amherst Jewish C~nter, 2600 North
Forest Rd. (~udito~ um).. 7:30 p.m.
.
UUAI RI.MS••
i-,-,' Cold Wind in
Augu~ ' 7:30 p.m., and
Ludwig. 8 :50 p.m. Sy Lecture Hall, Ellicou
Complex. No .11dmission charge.
·

CAREER rlANNING SEMINAIIJ
Financial Planning and Control. 339 Norton,

1· 3 p.m.
PUIUC SECTOR INTBINSHIP
SEMINAill
Implementation of the Ni.1pra River Environmental Ptan - A Policy Scierices
lnterns.hip, Terry Martin, Policy Studies Ph.D.

p.m.

ON-CAMPUS INTBIVIEWS

SornethinKs Rotten in the State of Den-

3:30 p .m.

·

7

•

PHARMAcamcs - . u ,
.
The Absorption ~nd Disposition o1 Terbut~line as a Function of RiNne o1 Adminisualion in Different Species of· Animals, Stephen
SNar, Ph.D. andidlte.. 0-170 Bell Facility, 4

p.m.

CONTINUING ~ IDUCA-

~~hlpbyslcoleducailonof

. WEDNESDAY~ -

the cardiac iMtlent and ant.,d.u .......,_
ore scheduled each'lbundoJeoeninl"'-''h
May a. The taplc-ilt...,...... dnlc I&amp;Aula.tlo

CXIN'IINIJWG 181TAL IDUCA-

·

~ ~ Oc:clt.,sat-:-l'tealmenf .,

CEOCIIAPHY COI.lOQUIUMf ,

m•rlc, Dr, B. C.mer. Rm. 40,4224 Ridge Leo,

I.ECTURP
The Dismembenrtent of Orpheus: Three
Non-Muslco/ofrial Lectures on ()pet:o {Pan II,
Dr. Max Wickert. UIB associate professor of
Enslish. Blue Room, faculty Club, Harrimon
Library, 8 p.m.
IROADCAST'
Ed Sanden sfves a· poe&lt;ry reading_ WBFOFM C811.n, 10 p.m.

' ilJI. 1:•

COUOQUIU~

Possible lntet.1dions of the J Particle, Or.
T.T. Wu, DivisiOn of Applied Physics, Harvard
University. 111 Hochstener, 3 : ~ p. m ~ •

.

COI-Itlt

SUMMEII SESSION RECISTIIATION HOUIIS
The Office of Admissions ~fld Records is
now conducting Summer Sess ion 197S
Registration. Students currently register~ at...._
the University for the Spring 1975 semester
need only complete a Course Request Form.
New students must complete a Stuc:Jent Data
Form, which will be av~ilable at Admissions
and Records. April registf3tion hours at the
Office of Admissions ~nd Records ~re 8:30
a.m.-7 p.m., April 17; 21-24; ond 28-30; oil
other days in April, the offoa: will be open
from 8::30 a.m ....f:lO p.m., with the exception
of April23, when houn are8:l0 a.m.-8:30p.m. •
TUITION WAIVBIS
Tuition w~iver .11pplications for foreign
students for the summer and f~ll 1975
semesten are ~vailable in 210 Townsend. The
deadline for handing in ~ppllations for
summer is May 1. The dNdllne for handinsln
fall 1975 applications is May 15.

can~idate . 237 Crosby, 3-5 p.m. :
· Spon~red by the C.e nter for Policy Studies.

ART HI$TOIIY l.fCI\IRP
The New York Skyline in the Twenries.. Or.
William Jordy, Brown Univen.ity. 310 Foster, 8 .

• May 1 -

'""'.:'.. . . . . . . . . . . _. •.• • • .._

CONCERT~ - ... ""' · ,1 ..,11

muniations Bldg. East, Buffalo State College,
1300 Elmwood Ave., 7:30 p.m.

-

for all other PerfOrmance
~
•
. · • May 15 - for new Perforinance

·

part demonstration by Nadine Berlow.
Toni&amp;ht is the second demonstration and included on the menu are : steak au poivre,
chou farci and veloure de tomates. For information and fees, contact John Buerk, 8314630. Faculty Club, 8 p.m.

ERIE COUNlY ENVIRONMENT: 1975
SYMPOSIUMf
· Energy Needs. will he discussed. Com-

N1P appraisals due
. . ·. Performance appnoisal and performance pi'Op'am forms for campus non·
te«hing professionals have been distrlbuh!d to supervisoR by the PeBOnnel
Office.
- -Aa:ordlns 10 a memorandum from
Kenneth H. Conklin of that offoce, the
forms 5holtkl be completed, reWt!wed
with the ern~, and returned to lhe
Penonnel Department by:. . ·
'
• April 15 - for those Performance
~ characterized as ...a.tac-

charge.

COOKING DEMONSTIIATION'
French cooking is the topic of "this three-

RiChard Doherty, Division of Genetics,
University of Rochester. 147 Farber (Capen);
coff~ at 4, lecture at 4:15·p.m.
FRENCH DlPARTMENT ALM SERIES'
.
Hiroshima Mon Amour iResnais) and A.ndalusian Dog (Bunuel). 146 D1e e ndorf, 5 and
7 1-!.m. No admission charge.
·· ·

The .Environmental Crisis, Dean Charles
H.V. Eben. There will be an informal conversation and slide presentation . 162 · MFACC,
Ell icon, 7:30 p.m..
.
Sponsored by Phi Eta Sigma.

UUAII FRENCH ALM SERIES"
Second Breath. 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No

~-t/IB:~s under Harrielr.sm.o.is; ahd •
the , IJ~ . SY"IPJ&gt;ony_ §a,.. , under Frank f.
apollo will perfonn. . ICie~I'S Ml)sic Hall. ,
8:30 p.m._No odmission cho!S".

UUAB FILMS"
~ Cold Wind in August, 7:30 p.in., and
Ludwig, 8 :50 p.m. 140 Farber (Capen) . No admis~ion

LECTURE•
The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Three
t-lon-Musicological Lectures on Opera (Pan

COfFEEICONVBISADON '

For registration or information, come to 223
Norton or all 831-4631.

• rnq·:r. ;, 1 ~r • '
'"ll•.. d ~ &lt;...iq tt' • ~

Aging, Dr. Morton Rothstein. 246 Cary (Health
Sciences), 7:30 p.m.

IROADCAST'
live bro.1dcast of the Creative Associates
Re&lt;:ital. WBFO-FM (88.n, 7-9 p.m.

Uft WORKSHOP"
Workshop on Rape. 266 Norton, 7-10 p.m.

I h•Ji ·u ~

live broadcast of the Cre;,rive Associates
Recital. WBFO-FM (88.n, 7·9 p .m.
CEU AND MOlECUlAR IIOLOCY
Cou.oQUIUMf
Curr-tmt Research on the Molecular Basis of

Members of the Creative A.ssoci.1tes present
the work of Ka rlheinz Stockhausen from the
"Seven Days." The concert is informal, and
the audience may come and go as they please.
100 Baird· Hall, 7 p.m: No admission charge.
Presented tfy the UIB 'Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts.

8 p.m. Admission:

AlMS'
Flaming Cre.1tures, Ray Gun Virus and Piece
Manchi.11/End W.1r. 70 Acheson, 7:30 p.m..No
odmission chorge.
FRENCH DlPT. I.ECT\JIIEI
SUOf PIIESENTATION'
Sur Une PeintUre de Vittore Carp.1ccio (in
French), Or. Michel Serres, professor, University of P.aris I (Pantheon-Sorbonne), and
foriner visiting professor at UIB. 148 Diefendorf, 8 :30 -p:m.
. 5ponsored by the Departmerii of french:

BROADCAST' ·

. IIOCHEMISTliY .SEMINAIIJ
Mercury Poisoning in Mouse and Man, Dr.

SPANISit, ITAUAN AND
POilTUGuBE. I.fCT\JIIE'·
·'' ' "·' ., .
•l..uigi Pirandello's SiJC Charaders in Search of
an Auth?r, Olg.11 ~agusa , Columbia University.

p.m._ ,.

Members of the Creative A.ssociates"present
the work of Karlheinz Stockl:lausen from the
"Seven Days." The conCert is informal, and
the audience may come and go as they please.
100 Baird Hall, 7 p.m .. No admission charge.
Presented by the U/B Center of the
Creative and Performing Arts . .

POUCY SEMINAIIJ

' AlCOHOliCS ANONYMOUS MEETlNG'

llUIBlA SCIIEENING CUNIC
AND TURIICULOSIS TBTlNG'
Sponsored by the Student O ccupational
Therapy Association. Fillmore Room, Norton,
10 .ll.m.-3 p.m. Free of charge.

CONCEitT'

ENVIRONMENTAl ANAlYSIS AND

Flute students of Petr kotik present a recital.

100 Baird Hall, ) p.m. No admission charge.

7:30--9:30 p.m. For information or registration,
call the School of Medidne, 831-5526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

THEATRE PEIIFORMANCE'

TENNIS•
UIB vs. Canisius. Rotary Courts, 3 p.m . No
admission cha rge.

Bring your lunch.
Sponsored by the U/B Department of
Biochemistry and the Department of Nutrition
of the Harvard School of Public Health .

for both events are available auhe
Norton Box Office.

~ ~0

Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.
INTBINADONAl WOMEN'S PANR

LECTURE SERIES•

Tickets

ROCERS

$1.50.

NUTRmON AND MAN

Dancers. Fillmore Rm., Norton, 8 p.m.

ASTAI~E-(;INGER

FILM FESTIVAL •
The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle and
Th e Barldeys of Broad way. Norton
Conference Theatre, 3 and 8 p.m. Admission :

in a five-week series for practidng pharmacists, taught by Or. Kennettt Kellick and
Ronald Sorkness, both clinical assistant
professors of pharmacy at U/8. For location
a.nd registration information, contact Harold
Reiss at the School of Pharmacy, 831-2546.

noon. For more information, contact Jerry,
832-n35. Entry fee.

d •

FRm

INftCTIOUS DISEASE THBIAPY I.KTURfl
Genito-Urinary Tract Infections is the fourth

The U/8 Sports Car Club presents a
Clockwork Rally Ill. East Aurora Shopping
Center, registration at 11 a.m. F.C.O. at 12

~~..,.

Roll Star.

TUESDAY-22

Affairs Offic_e), 11 a.m.
CARIIAUY'

scheduled April 23-24 and wnl be given by
Niles F. Guichet, D.D.S., Anaheim, California.
(The second pan is scheduled Apr'il25-26) . 231
Norton, 9 a.m.-4 :30 p.m. For fee information
or 'registration, contad the School of Dentistry, 34.3S Main St., 831-2836.

BROADCAST'

QUAKBI MEETlNG'
A meeting for Worship and discussion _will
be held. Rm. 167, MFACC, Ellicott (Student

. l3l, Nor1~ •.2

Skills is· the title of this two-pan conference.
The first half, Part 1: Principles of Occlusion, is

RJRNAS COI.UGE-WIDE

(from p.ige 8, col. 4)

scheduled from 9 a.m.·12:1S p.m. Fo--; infor-

r

tatlot! - s,stMic .....,.._, MurmurF~ (Capen)~4tllt ...........

aoo.a c;.JZ,

INTERVIEWS'
The st~ff of the University Placement and
Caree&lt;Guidana:Offla:wel~allstudents
in the University community and ~lumni to

toke port In various coreer p&lt;OBnlms offered
this year. The on-campus intervlewlns
prosram, running throush Apn1 25, offers the
opponunily for individual lnle&lt;Yiewl with
educ~tion, · business, industrl.11l and
governmental representatives_ C.ndldateo
from all clesree lew:ls, who c:ompleted their
coune work In ~nuory 0&lt; expectiO In May
1975, ate invited 'lo ta~e part 1n lhe Inter·
'"-'111- ResJslratic&gt;n fonns are available In
Annex C, Rm. 6- The lollowi"' apnc~eo

:!Uri:

wilru':o~~:!lsl~ eo_
. WEDNESDAY-23: Elearonlc 0...

,.,._ COrp;· .,.,._, ·" ,_ ... -~ , ., .....

,.,."t,

l.'.

s,stM.s
~ ',. •

�•

1\pri/17, 1975

.OI&amp;Gm

THURSDAY-17
50CLU PSYOIOUKiY

5ftAIIRSBIE5f

Psychology ~nd the bw of Eviden~e,
Professor Anthony N. Doob, University of
Toronto. Rm C·34, 4230 Ridge lea, 1:30 p.m.

FOOD DAY WOIUIStiOPS•

Current Issues in NUtrition is the tide of this
worbhop leoturins severo! focuhy memben
who will discuss aspects of nutrition. 233 Nor-

ton, 3 p.m.
Simple Uving: Towards~ less ConsUmptive
lif~yle

is the topic of a symposium in 231

Norton, 7:30 p.m.

·

MIDICINA1 OIEMISTIIY nt151S

DIHN5P
.
The SynthesiS' of · Ring A Aroma ric
Tricholheane Analogs, Edmond j . La Voie.
362 Acheson, 3 p.m.
\
DtSnNCiUISHID ENCiiNEBIS AND

5CIIOI.AIIS--.u .

.

Compoct Helll Exchonger Design Methods,

R. K. Shah, Harrison Radiator Division,
General MotOR Corp. 112 Parker; coffee at 3,
lecture at 3:15 p.m.
Sponsored by the Mechanical Engineering
Grad~te Association.
DD'AIITMENT Of CiEOCilAI'IfY
COI,l.OQUIUMf
Quantifying Planar Shape - Nested
DrainSge Basins, Richard Jarvis. Rm. 40, 4224
Ridge I.e&gt;, 3:30 p.m.

PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
Thennodynomics 'and Transport l'ropelties

in the liquid Srare, Or. Henry Eyring, University of Utoh. 111 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.m.
MA'!'HfMATICS COI.lOQUJUMf
DefinabiUty of Finitely Additive Measures,

Or. David Pincus, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Rm. 38, 4246 Ridge Lea; coffee at
3:30, lecture at 4 p.m.
AIT I.ECTlJH•
·The Origins of Modem SculptUre, Pioneers
and Premises, Professor Albert Elsen, Stanford
University. 310 Foster, 4 p.m.

INNOYATlONS AND RADmoNS
IN RfNAISSANct STUDIES•

dards Review Coundl. 148 Diefendorf, 4-5:30
p.m.
.

The annual meetings of the North Central
Conference of the Renaissance Society of
America. Today and Saturday, April19. Most
events at Ellicott Complex, Amherst Campus.
See separate story, this issue.

l£CTURE•
Chinese Landscape - Changing Attitudes
Towards Nature. 339 Norton, 4:30 p.m.
A highlight of the East-West Dialogue in
Aesthetics.
'
·

ftDIATRICS CONFfRENCfl
EMI Scanne-r , Dr . Paul

THEATRE I'EIIFORMANCE•
Internal Combusriory by Terry Ooral_l.

Berger ,
Hospital for Sick Children,
Toronto~nch Auditorium, Children's
Hospital, 10 a.m.
neuroradiol~gi st,

I'IIMMACR111CS 5EMINAIII
Effect of Plasma Protein Binding on
Distribution and Eliminatkwl of W.arfarin in
Rau, Avraham Yacobi , Ph.D. candidate,
Department. of Pharmaceutics. D-170 Bell
Fadlity, 4 p.m.

l£CTURP

Building ElecloraJ Coalitions : Women,
Blacks· and Other Minority Groups, Merv

American Contemporary ..J'. heat re, 1695
-Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Adm!ssion
charge. Seating is limited to 25 persons per
performance; rese,rvations are suggested (87S5825) .

.

IROADCAW
The Black Listed Ye.iN is the title of ~ n in-

scheduled. Tickets

Dymally, California lieutena nt Governor and
founder of the National Conference of Negro
Elected Officials. 231 Norton, 11:30 a.m.
Sponsored by the Political Science Graduate

are S2 each, by pre-sale only. Second floor
afeteria.. Norton, S:lO p.m.

~~~n~d~=~~~~. ~~~:d~~:f~~:

terview with Ring lardrier, Jr., one of the first
people to be investigated by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee. WBFO-FM
186.7), 8 p.m.

tion and the Philosophy Graduate Student As-

I'UIUC l£CTURE•

FOOD DAY DINNBt•

A vegetarian dinner

is

-

sociation. ·

CON11NUING MEDICAL RMJCA110N
CAUJIAC CUNICI

This series of dinics in physical education o f
the cardiK patient and ~rrflythmla workshops
~re scheduled ~d1 Thun.day evening through
Ma)-8. Thetopicoftonight'sdinicis.Auscuh.ation - SystofiC Regurgit~nl Murmurs. farber
(Capen) Roll Basement, Room G-22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. For infOI'n'Ntion or registr.Jtion, call the
School of Medicine, 83'1-5526.
s.,o.-ed by the School of Medicine.
'AliT 'LECnJIIP
Rodin ., Spolcesmon of the Unspeokoble,
Dr. Albert Elsen, Deportment of Art, Stonlord
University. Auditorium, Albright-Knox
• C.llefy, a p.m.
The lecture is"co-&lt;p&lt;&gt;nsored by the Ulll Art
Department.
THIATRf~ -

iimen•

Sexu.&gt;l Symphony (•nd other
-es) is • new worlr. written •nd directed by
,Ofd

Morton Lichter. Courtyord Theotre, Hoyt •nd
laloyette, a p.m. lhroush April 19.
/
Presented by the Center for ~Theatre
Reseorch with •id from the New Yorlt Stole
. Couno1 on the Ans.
NATUIIAl SCIIJICI5 AND MATHEMATics .
DISTINGUISHED VISITING lECTURE"

BIE5f

The DegeneraHve Di~ses of Aging, Or.
Henry Eyring, University of Utah. 147 Diefen-

dorf, 1:15 p.m.
·
FilM•
l.ody Wllh • Dog (1960). 114 Hochstener,
1:30 p.m.
•

fteenled by the Ruuion dub.
UUAI RIMS"•

I.F. Stone's w~~,:'il: f'onniHof

:.,~lor: Admission~·

call

FRIDAY-18
- 4 B T Dlo\IOGW IN A1S111E11CS0
to~ ........ 40 ......,._on 011.
phlpqihJ, ....,._. br 1he
Cotindl on ....,_,. Sludles and 1he

·

HORIZONS IN NBJRCMIOLOCY

SEMINARI

DeveloPment of Synaptic Circuitry in Norm~f and Mut~nt Cere bell~. Or. Pi.sko Rakic,
Department of Neuroscience, The Children's
Hospital Medical Center, Boston. 106 Sherman, 1 p.m.
·
MEDIONAL CHEMISUY SEMJNAQ
Carbocyclic Puromycin .An•logs, P•ul F.
Corey,_ graduate student. 245 Cary (Health
Scie~nces}, 2 p.m.
· IIUR'Al.O ANIMAL I1CilfT5 ct-tJI
MEETING•
3lO Norton,_2:30 p.m. Everr.one welcome.

PlASMA APPliCATION SBliES

SEMINARf
Laser Fluorescence Spectroscopy of
Plasmas, Or. R.A. Stern, Physical Research

Laboratory, Bell Laboratories. 104 Parker;
coffee at 3:30 (107 Parker), lecture at 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Deportments of Electrical
Engineering, Engineering Science and Physics.
CIVIL INCilNIBIJNG' DIP~ENT,
WATBI RESOUIICB AND

ENVIRONMENTAl ENGrNIBING

5EMINAIII

.A PredictiVe l'f&gt;osphorus_ ·Model for Likes,William Snqdgms, Mc~er University. . 23
Parker; coffee at 3:50, lect~re at 4 p.m.

:S"='~==

Ane&lt;them •nd Pressure is ttie_tit~ of this
seminar Biven in honor of Dr. Henry Eyring,

:':.Tu:tn= ~h.~:;
ond

Ins is the discussant. ond speoken
their
topics
are:
Rob
G.
Parrish
(Chemistry)-"MoleCular Aspects Of
Mtchonlsm of "'-"edc Acdon;w Joo- ,
eph
Y.
llendenon
~­
~ . of'bdtlble eenS- ••
HiSh Preaun!;H one! Miry ~ ROkltb
~ of Mioe ·• 100 .
~· , .. ShenMn. 4 p.m.

NATUIIAl SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS
Dl51lNCiUISIE) VISITING lKTURE
SBliESf
Cener.~l and LoaI Anesthesi~. Dr. Henry

Eyring, University of Utah. 147 Diefel)dorf,
. 8:15p.m.
MVSI€ I'BtfOIIMANCP &lt;~"'. .. 7
A recreation of the Votive Mass of rhe Bless~
ed virg;n•. d'? 1soo; st. /Ohn's Episcopo!
Church, COlon .._! Orcle, 1:30 p.m.
Part of th,.t! frijorfh Centr.~J Conference of the
Renaissance Society of America meeting.
.

Free Molson~s beer. Goodyear Cafeteria, 10
p.m. Ad.rmssion: $.50 for IRC fee-payer5; $3
for non fee-pavers.
IROADCAST" - , .

Recordlnp mode In prisons •iid on wi&gt;ri&lt;
by Al•n 'tomax, Bruce JKkson ond
l&lt;lwrena! Gellen. WBFO-FM (18.7). 10 _p.m:

s•nss

UUAI filMS••
I.F. Stone's Weelcly ond Antonio: f'onraH of
a Woman. Norton Conference ~, call
111-5117
times. Ad~ chortle- .

lor

SATURDAY-19
CCJN--.ci - . u 1DUCA110N
~ ,_~
.

DANONG•

I'UIUC l£CTURE•

.

Congressm~n Ronald Dellums will speak on
" American Militarism in Relation to Domestic
and Foreign Priorities," followed ·by a panel
discussion led by Dr. Claude E. Wekh. 147
Diefendorf, 1 p.m.
RACK•
Big Four Meet Buffalo State, 1 p.m.
CONCBn'" ·

Concenrus Musicus, Music by Two~~ Three

is presented by the Grosvenor Society. Buffalo
&amp; Erie County Public -Library (downtown}, 3

The Washington Dilemma, David Brinkley.
Clark Hall, 8 p.m. University Community admined free. Admission charge for others.
Presented by the SA Speakers Bureau.
CAC FilM••
Going Places. 140 Farber (Capen), 8 and 10
p.m. Admission: $1 ..
THEATRf I'BtfOIIMANct•
Old Timers' Sexu.&gt;l Symphony (•nd oth~r
notes) is a new work written and directed by
. Morton Lichter. Cq_urtyard TheJtre, Hoyt and
ula)'elle, ,8 p.m. lh'rough April 19.
Presented by the .Center for Theatre
Rese~rch with aid from the New York State
~oundl on the Arts.

IRC 1&amp;11 lllASP

fOU(

Bora Ozl&lt;ok, Turkish musidan and folk
dance teacher, will demonstrate dan ces,
Turkish instruments, and show a film. Fillmore
Rm., Norton, 9:30 a.m.; Haas ~ounge, 2 p.m.
A Dance Party will be given by the Balkan
Dancers. Fillmore Rm., 8 p.m.
Tickets for all events are available at Norton
Box Office.

p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music and
the Grosvenor Society.
'
THfATRf I'BIFORMANCP

of~'!1~~~ ;~a,!~~~~~"l=:: c~~!

temporary Theatre, 1695 Elmwood Ave., 7 and9 p. m . ~Admission. charge .
CACFilM•• . Going Places. 140 Farber (Capen), 8 and 10
p.m. Admission: $1.
·THfATRf~

Old Time&lt;s' Sexu•l SymphOny 'r•nd other
notes) is new work written and directed by
Morton Lichter~ Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and
Lafayette, 8 p.m.
~
Presel)ted by the Center for Theatre
Reseorch with old from the New York Stole
Council on the Ans.
WE$1BtN NEW 'IOU
•,
l'fAG CENIII. - . . . . .. .. . · ~
.-·

a

p.bal Su,...,.l i$Jii!l~-cllche''ilinner
Whlclrloji.l1iiJDGAOf .........l Food

~

...eu .lie¥.

Qoy. The- ~
-ld"S ..
'llli&gt;wil. '!llwfllm, "Diellor'o Smoll Planet," Will
6e ·showii ond, olter dlnne&lt;, Rep. Ronold
Dellumo will spook 11 8:30 p.m. on "The 1976
fede.r1f Budset: An AuaciC on Human
Needs!" Trinity Methodist Cburch, 711
Niq'ro f•lls Blvd .. 6 p.m. For lnformotion,
.
contact Kenneth Sherman, 833--02'13.
COfRitKXI5E"'
~
S'p onwred by "-Furnas College. hrso
Caleteril. 9 p .m. No odmission choJ:Be.
·
CIIIAlM ASSOCIAlllliCII'Al•
.
Plonlst Jmeph ICubera peilorms. '100 Bllrd
. Hill, 10:30 p.m. No odmission
· UU.UfiiMO•
Viiion on Nonon Conlerenoe n-tre, all
Ul-5117
times.~ thorp.

rn.,..,.

lor

SUNDAY-20

ls!lheiOplc:otthlotwo-&lt;loy . ~ MDICAl IDUCA110N
........ -..r
--~...
-5fllr-. lnlt-lluflolo East.
IYMfOaiMI
Mill ,......... After Hrdonal Hellrh InTodoy's ac11v1t1es- scheduled fnlllll:15 o.m.
· Aneslheslolasr Is the topic of this two-&lt;loy
Todor one! Salunloy,
......... tJi. 1:1.-~....-w olomlol · . (......,._,to 5 p.m. fell' ................ con-lllldoy Is the 111111 cllyl•lhe 5hen,ton '
- .~
ol Medl_dne..ond·
- Qw111mRn1 Medical~ 2211 Mlln
· lnn-Buffolo bst. Today'o. octivlllel ore
Aprl1t, .....,_ IJ!IIon.
See . . . . . ~ .... a..e: ~ ....
~. ... '-' "' ~-..- ......................... "''.."'"'! Sti,~-ft-·
"l
4
tit .. 1 1' (

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

-IICIWIIN IEII.1H CAll

~

tron:lto""flllllll'·--'' •'

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 6, NO. 26

APRIL 10, 1975

·-

Campus
to o6serve
Food Week

A variety of activities centering on the
themes of nutrition, food production,

and world hunger will take place on
campus during " Food Week," the week
beginning April 14.
The events, all open to the public free
o f charge, include th e following :
• On M o nday afternoon, April 14,
th ere will be a symposium honoring Dr.

Ra ymo nd Ewell, U/ B expert on food
product io n, in Room 106 of john lord
O ' Brian Hall on the Amherst campus.
Dr. Ewell, U/ 8 professor emeritus of
chemical engineering ; Ralph W . Cummin gs of the Rockefeller- Foundation,

and Thomas A. Blue of the Stanford
Researc h Institute will speak on various

aspects of the outlook for food production in future years during the sym-

posium, which begins at 2 p.m.
At 8 p . m. , M o nda y , Douglas
Ensminger, a career Ford Foundation

represe nt ati ve to India and Pakistan, will
deliver the annual Cowper Fund lecture
in O ' Brian Hall's Alden Courtroom.
• On Monday and Tuesday, the U/ 8
Religiou s Council will sponsor a " Carnival for World Hunger," in the Fillmore
Room , Norton. The event will feature
carnival-style games in an attempt to
raise funds for the world's needy in
countri es facing food shortages. The carni val runs from noon to midnight Monday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday.
• On' Tuesday, April 15, Robert
Kozlowski of the Erie County BOCES will
and slide show _on
p..:-~;Hl~~'~i;,i!';t;;'};;.; Gan:fening,u ilt 8:00
.p.m. in 231
• On Wedn esday, April 16, the film,
" DiPI for a Small Plane t," will De shown
in th P Norton Confe rence Theatre a·t
noon, 12:45, and 1:30 p.m., with commPntary .by Jim Redding. A lectJ,Jre,
"ProhiPms of Developing NatiOns," by
Dr. RobPrt C. Konwea, visiting associate
prof~~r . e nvironme ntal analysis and .
policy, School of Management, follows
at 3 p.m. in 233 Norlon. At 7:30 p.m.,
WPdnP~a y , a grOup of foreign students
from India, Pakislan and other countries
~ will discuss " Another Perspective on
World Hunge r" in 231 Norton.
• Various campus organizations are
also sponsoring a vegetarian dinner at
5:30 p.m., April 17, in the second floor
cafeteria of Norton Union, after observing the day, " Food Day," by fasting.
Tickets are S2 by pre-sale only.
Also on Thursday, a .workshop on
"Current Issues in NI,Jtrition," with Dr.
Harold Segal, Dr. Daniel Kosman, and
other faculty members will be held at 3
p.m. in 233 Norton. A symposium on
"Simple living: towards a less consum~
tive lifestyle," begins at 7:30 p.m. in 231
Norton. Throughout the day, displays In
Nbrtbn will call anention to "Junk..Foods,
World Famine, Zero Population Growth,
Hunger in America, and Protein Aher-'
natives.''
• Ori Saturday, Aprll19, Consressman
RoNid Dellums will~ on "American
Militarism in• Rel.tion to ~ and
forelsn Priorities," In an oddreso ten·
tativefy scheduled for 1 p.m., 147 Dlefen-

Speed-up .of Amherst building sought
Moves to speed-up the Amhent Cam-

pus construction timetable sained
....,._,...m this-'&lt; •lealslators. con1CrUC1fon officials ....t the UnMnitv ad111infstAC1on Joined forces In the effOrt.
U!B Is teeltlns an illklltlonal $32
camp1is aJIIStrUCII(xi In the
flsal ,ear which besan April 1,

...._tor

........... lndlaled.
&lt;memor&lt;:are(s&amp;ecudweludaetfot
1he ; - prowldel only S10.S lllflllon in
-..cdaD f)lllds far ""'--

the basic fosal
. 1975-1976 spe~ing plan.
·
Construction on all the additional
projecb could besln by next sprtns If
they- funded ilow, Jolin D. Teller, Vice
~ for facilities plannfns, says.
Olherwlie, he-lndlcalel,. the Nrliest
possible date for bqfnnfns these
bulldinp would be 11176.
The money~ to ftnanc:e the
. projects Is said to be ....uable lhroush
, lhe'SIMe Unhealty ~ Fund. .
tially · covered. in

lndudlnt a ,..... fleldhouoe and locbr A S7 ...._. dvll and mechanical

tlon _.......

the_.._. · ·•

111e U.il ~--· pph._MI · • -lellinllhe- In
. . . . . . . four addiiiDillllllftiJeds ·-.Ill . . . -..aloa CIIIIIS, .
-lftdudedlnthe&amp;eai!M ....... and, ·· felfwsald, Ilea.-~ -.aors.,. ·.
. ~~foriWObulldlntponlypar- . -~ . for waft. . ~ ~-

,.

a

building timetable would aloo be
hedge asalnst contlnulns Inflation,
Telfer added.
.
· The six projects Ulll wants added to
the current buoftlet .no:
.
• A S7 milll9n music ....t chamber hall
• A S6 mlfllon Instructional commun1ca11on ~and ledure hall
• '""' S7-ll mlllon flnl ...,_ ollhe
health, phrllcal educallon and.--

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

bul&amp;lni-

..

~A 15 .............. ........_ mw .

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

dorl.
.
The address will be followed by a panel dbcwllon by Dr. Oaude E. Welch ol
the PolllfcaiSdence ~who Is
co-autbor ol • book CJn !'i¥11 ~
military roles In~. and
other Ulll faculty "*''heiL 'l1le lecan
and dlscusllon ... eo-tpOI-ed by the

Community Actlott Corps and the
Weseem New York . . . . c.nt.r.
• ,.. pen ol .. Ed Week acllwldes,
U/ll's bchel CanOn Collele w11 -

......,..._. . . . . . . . . . . . . Oft Sun--:
day,AprtiU,atthe~and
Oft SUndly, Aprti2D, . . . . . . Zoo.

11lilr JIUIIIDie Is. to ........... -

. wlndaa~DUn~eet...,_

--s.•• .............z.-

ol

• ..._ ....

�;•
~

A.pri/10, 1975

Doctors ask
more -funding
for hospitals

Latin AmeriCan
scholars holdin·g
meeting here

An 86-member faculty Committee for
Equitable Support of the University of
Buffalo Medical School has called upon
Governor Hugh Carey for more financial

suppon of medical teaching facilities at
three local hospitals affiliated with the
School.
The quality of medical education here
and the future". health care of Western

New York are at stake, the doctors said
this week in a letter to the Governor.
The Committee contended that a recent State offer of 52.4 million a year for

amortizing construction costs and paying
for maintenance of University teaching,

research and office space in the Erie
County Comprehensive Health Care

Center, Buffalo General Hospital and
Children's Hospital " is inadequate to
build modern teaching and research
space."
Best estima,Jes are, the doctors said in
their statement which was sent to all
Western New York State legislators and
to the majorily and minority leaders in
the Assembly and Senate, "that th e
State's yearly budgetary allocation Jor
dedicated University space at the three
major affiliated hospitals should be in~
creased to $3.8 million per year, plus approXi mately $1 miiJion per year in
maintenance costs. This would enable
the construction of modern 1 contiguous
U.ni.ve.rsi~y teaching and research space. at
each ,,f the three affiliated /lospitals,
comparable to that present elsewhere in
the State system."
The Committee charged that the quality of the Medical School here is .declining, that .senior faculty resignations are
exceeding new r!!Cruilments, and that
federal and privale research support is
waning.
A primary· reason, the doctors said, is
that S.t ate University is providi(lg the cpst
'of clinical education " .' .. tO the other
State medical schools, but is failing td
ptavididnrl "the- Utii~etirt'y' "of Buffalo.
"It is simply not fair to the citizens of
Western New York that they are forced

~~~a-~:~~ =~~s~~~s t~~~1a:i~~he;!~~f·
State taxes, which are the same as those
paid by the other citizens of New York."
Coordinator of the doctors' Committee is Dr. John H. Siegel, professor of
surgery.

Alumni sponsoring ·
'update' seSsion
The "Quality of Life" will be the theme
of the U/B Alumni Association's second
Up-To-Dater.Workshop for alumnae and
friends, Saturday 1 April 12, at Nortorr.
Registration for the day-long program,
which includes a luncheon, begins at 10
a.m. The morning session, starting at
10:30, will feature as topics:
"Finandal Services for Women," by
Allalee Babbidge, a vice president of
Marine Midland Bank;
"Abolition of Sex Roles," by Daphne
Hare, assistant professor, medicine and
biophysics, Veterins Hospital;
"Adolescence in the Post-Watergate
Era," by Eugene Galer, professor and
chairman, Educational Psychology, U/B.
Fol'-lng lunch in the Fillmore Room,
Margaret Nevin, director of the· Adult
Advisement Center, will discuss "MidLife Decisions;" Monica Brinson, essistanl professor, environmental and consumer studies, State Unlvenlty College at
Buffalo, will deal with "Consumer
Responsibility and the Quality of Life;"
and Patricia Hoebel, associale employ·
menl SetYke representative for the New
York Stale Em~loymenl Servicle, will lead
a discussion~ 'Entering and Re-entering
the Working World."
ResetVallons a_re $4 per penon.

N~der

urges activism

B«ome more inwolwed in the issues of the dj~: ~met"' .dw~~te •R~ph
ursed - b durins • speech spoqsored by SA ond ~ Now Yorl&lt;
Pubic lnt~eseuch Croup ln Norton's R1Jmore Room, ~nd,ay 1.hemoon.
Tho polontlolpowor oiOiudenb II tromoncloUs NOdor wld dtlnj -pllsh.....,b ol w.ulojo5 oludont-fonwod P!'bGc lrit~' irclui&gt;s ~o\d 'IM n.lloft:: ··. :

.,:::-~, ~ '::.t-NZa:".!:.,-:;::=-nuW:.~
clonins lnstud furlhof
...

... . '· ' .

stud'.., olsolu •nd wind

.

'

~

=1!:·· ·.·· ..

polontlol.

Foreign students ne~d. okay
from U.S. for summer work Prior to ihe downturn in the state of
time workitig permission do not have to
th e. U.S. economy, universities were
re-apply for the summer period.
authorized to grant summer work per· The Office of Foreig~ Student Affairs
mission to foreign students, but in 1974,
and the Office of Placement and Career
the U.S. Immigration &amp; Naturalization
Guidance are continuing to assist
Service decided not to grant such
students in the search for summer and
authority to the campuses.
part-ti me work opportunities. Foreign
The U/B Office of Foreign Stude~! Afstudents 5eeking work are encouraged to
fairs (OFSA) has now·been informed that
register with OFSA.
the Immigration &amp; Naturalization ServiCe
~ill again maintain the right to decide
who should be authorized to work during the summer months of 1975.
FNS~
At a recent meeting on campus of both .
Professor Henry Eyring, this year's
representatives of the Immigration Ser~
vice and foreign students, OFSA reports,
recipient of the Priestly medal, the
it was learned that summer work
highest honor of the American Chemical
authorization will be granted only if unSociety, will be the fihh in a series of disforeseen economic changes have ari~en
_tinguished visiting lecturers presented by
since a student's arrival in the U.S.
tbe F.aqJity of Natural Sciences · and
Students seeking a visa to stu&lt;ty in the
Mathematics. He will give a series of four
U.S. are-expected to have adequate suplectures centered around "Models and
port for their" education here. The U.S.
Scientific Creativity," April"15-11t.
Consul in their home countries must be
Topics and dates of Prof. Eyring's lecsatlsfle!l that such adeq.ute finances are
tures are L ..,The ·Drift.. Towards
available. Only if a student ¢an show that
Equilibrium," Tuesday, April 15; "Th1'
an unforeseen change has occurred
States of Mal{er.'' Wednesday;"'&gt;ri~16r
since his or her visa was approved by the
"The DegeneratiVe OiseaM!s Of Asing,"
U.S. Consul will the Immigration ·Service
Thursday,. April 17, and "Clener~l and
grant work permission. In most cases,
Local Anesthesia," Friday, April 18. All
then, work permission Is based upon
lectures will be held at 8:15 p.m. in 147
emergency situations resutting from cur·
Diefendorf.
· !ailment or reduction of funds. ImmigraThe author of over soO papers in
tion offldals have indicated that
national scientific journals, Prof. Eyrins is
documenting evidence demonstrating
currently distinguished professor of
the change must ~cwmpany any applicachemistry arid metallurgy at the Universition for summer work permission.
ty of Utah. He received his Ph.D. from
The Offjce of Foreign Student Affairs
the University of California and his areas
recol!!mendslo students to apply as early . of specialization include molecular
"as possible for summer work. Employ- _ biology, anesthesia and the process of
aging.
ment cannot start until work approval Is
granted. The appropriate form&amp; and In,
A member of the National Academy of
strucllons are available in the Offloe In
Sciences and a former president of the
210 Townsend Hall. Students should ask
American Chemical Sodely, Prof. Eyring
for an appointment with an advisor Mler
Is the holder of several awariis, Including
they have completed the necessary
the National Medal of Selena!. He Is alw
forms. Students who currendy-hokl partprominent In the Mormon Church.

Eyring is
·lecturer

The annual meeting of the State
University latin Americanists will be held
on campus, Thursday-Saturday, April1012, under spo nsorship of U/B's Council
on ~n jer national Studies and latin
American Studies Program and SUNY's
Conv~sations in the Disciplines.
More than 100 faculty and students
from here, from other SUNY un its and
from outside New York State are expected to attend the program which will
focus on Chile, Peru, Cuba and Argentina- four areas in latin AmeriCa where
" things are happe ning," as Dr. Wolfgang
Walck , chairman of the meeting 's
organizing comm ittee, puts it.
Among fecltured speakers for the
eve nt will be His Excellency, Dr. Javi er
Perez Cuella, Peruvian ambassador to
the United Nations~ who will give the
principal address at a " Symposium OQ
Contemporary Peru," Friday night at 8
p.m. i~ 147 Diefendorf.
That symposium begins at 2:30 p .m.
Frida y with a discussio n in 231 Norton,
'featuring Carlos Astiz, military history
special ist from SUNY at Albany; Jose Antonio Garcia Belaunde, another membl!:r
of the Peruvian U.N . Mission; Scott
Palme r, a political scientist .from Bowdoin College; William Stein of the U/ B
anthropology faculty ; GeorRe
Westacott, military history specialist from
SUNY at Binghamton; and Armando
Zubizarretat a scholar of Peruvian
literature from Case-Western Reserve.
A showing of the documentary film ~
"Cuba - the People," scheduled for 111
Hochstetler at 8 p.m. tonight will open
th~meet i ng . The film, recently shown on
puPiic ~e levisio n , w.as pr~uc¢ by tQe.
Downtown Community' Television
Center, N~w Yprk City. One of the co-

r.~'IP,UC~~· \&lt;iP..:~~~~~·..l'/ill.i'l1.[&lt;?,d~~~ ~~~ •
' 1 ~~ .. •• • ., { 'f{"0 "' iirl!~·1' 11 1 1 d~d~ .•
the ~;:g~~ f~r fhewrrie~n;~.u:n~· ' f!QJ
l'1 ..

:·-.:h~ Wnter5 an)ftli~ Argeritiilli Crisis"
will t;e "disciJssed at 9:15 a.m. Friday in
231 Norton. Dr. George Schanzer, U/ B
professor of Spanish, will coordinate the
session which will feature contributions
by Mireya Camurati, assistant professor
of Spanish, U/B; Raul Castagnino, SUNY
at Albany; Myron I. lichtblau, Syracuse
(replacing Angela B. Dellepiane; CUNn;
and H . Ernest lewald, University of
Tennessee.
" Ecology and Urbanization in latin
America," will be considered at a
separate session at 9 a.m., Friday, in
234 Norton. Coordinated by Warren Barbour, assistant professor, anthropology,
U/B, this program will feature Edward
Calnek, University of Rochester; Edward
Lanning of SUNY at Stony Brook; Stuart
Scott, associate professor, anthrOpology,
U/B; and Dean Snow, 5UNY at Albany.
The final workshop, "Piuriculturalism
in latin America and the U.S.," is
scheduled for Sa"turday morning in 231
Norton, coordinated by Dr. Woldt, who
is director of latin American Studies at
U/B, and Jorge .Gullart, assistant
professor of Spanish here. Julio Fer·
nande"i, Stale. University C-ollege at
Cortland, Giorgio .f'erlslnotlo, SUNY af
Stony Brook; and Carmen Rodriguez;
--Buffalo Biling.ul Schools, will c:onSider
"Cultural Problems of BHinguallsin,n at 9"
a.m. "Bilingual-bicultural Educalion"wil~
be the topic at 11 a,m., discussed by
Osvaldo Clinchon, Slate University
College ~~ Fnedonla; Luz Delgado
Okonkwo, P.S. 76, Buffalo, Carmen Perez
and Gilbert Sanchez, both SUNY at
: ,..lbany.
The latin Americanists' business
meeting will be held at 11 :15 a.m:, Friday,
followed by a luncheon session in 233
No'rton. Maurice Zeitlin, Unlvenlty of
Wisconsin, will be the luncheon speaker
and will focus on recent developments in
Chile.
All conference events are open to the
public.
' ••.
'
Assisting Dr. Wolck on the local
orpnizing comrnillee for the meeting
are: Prof. Stein and Dr. 1'.1bert Michaels ·
and Ms. Chris Wilson of 1nlernallonal
~les. Ms. Wilson Is . In charge of
. arrangements.

�-..ea•ma
j
--Martens .to act as head
Med,cal history collection
unit is 'goldmine' for research
of enlarged
Ar&gt;ril 10, 1975

Expansion in scope and responsibilities
of the Office of University Computing
and the appointment of Dr. Hinrich R.
. Martens as the acting director of the Office were announced this week by President Robert l. Ketter.
in addition t.o its present functions of
· central administrative and academic
computing, the Office will have the new
responsibilities of planning the development of the computer center as a
region~! resource for cOlleges in the
Western New York area. 1n addition, it
will be responsible for coordination of
the growth of minicomputer systems on
campus.
In a letter to the staff of the Office and
to the Academic Computing Advisory
Committee, President Ketter noted that
. the change in sco pe and responsibilities
is.being imple mented now to " insure the
continued growth of computing services
and to integrate computing more directly into academic planning."
Ketter said that "a number of interdependent developme nts" will det ermine the growth of computing over the
nex t few years.
The first of these is the updat ing this
yea r of equipment to serve the Universi ty's acadeinic cOmputing needs. " This
new equipment will reflect greater
e mphasis on remote batch service and
time-shared computing via consoles,"
Ketter said." Alread y underway are plans
for greater sophistication in the use ' of
co~puting technology in administrative
computing through interactive approaches in . reporting, accounting,
registration and cataloguing;'' he con·
tinued.
Ketter said that efforts are being made

~:;~~~si~~~!~~il!~re f~a~!li~esre~~o~ai

resource for cooperative computing. He
said that if· this ~ffo{t. is successful. it Will
entail "iir'0'4'iding remOt:e1·batth aOtfti'rll~- '
~R~r~~o!:?~p~ns . tq' .~~~-~ : ,so~. les.~, :iri'
vvesrern New ,ork . .. · ,~ , . . ..
.·
Ketter said tnat the University's inove
to the Ainherst Cam pin ' .Will . lead , to
another important function for the Of-

By Potrldo Ward Bledermon
R~et' snlf
This University came into being as a
medical school, organized in 1846 to
train physicians for Western New York.
And it remai ned such for 40 years, wit h
a n admirable record of genuine
achieve ments (i ncl udin g the decorum- .
shattering practice of allowing medical
stude nts to observe a dual deliveries) and
an occasional dubious distinction such as
its failure to admit the younger sister of
Elizabeth Blackwell, Amerka's first
woman physician (Ms. Blackwell went
elsewhere, and U/ B did not graduat e its
fir.st woman student until Mary Blair
Moody was awarded her medical degree
in 1876).
"ouring its hu ndred-plus years of existence, th e School of Medicine has accu mul ated a varied collection of Some?,000 books and othe r materials (known as
th e History of Medicine Collection} that
shed light on the School's history, the
rise of \!}'estern New York's medical organizat io ns, and even the cha ngin g
M&amp;rtrns
nature of medical pradice itself.
fice of University COmputing - the
As such, the collecti on is a potential
design of a computer network on the
go ldmine for researchers in many fields,
Amherst CC!mpus, tying together man y of
including history, history of medicine,
the University's minicomputer systems.
and sociology. But until recently, the
" Ongoing deve lopments in computer
material was uncataloguE:d and virtually
technology ·and data communications
inaccessible, caged up in the basement
systems strongly point toward a network
of the old claustrophobic Health
approach in meeting the compUting
Sciences library in Farber (Capen} ·Hall.
needs of a large University," he said.
All This is Changing
Further, he said that the construdion of a
-, But now all this is changi ng, reports
new building on ~he Amherst Call)pus.to. · · Asrociate Librarian Mildred F. HaJioy..ijtz.
·house central computing facilities "Will -- As.head of the collection, Ms. Hallowitz
provide a unique opportunity to take full
is bus\t re-discovering materials that have
dropped out of sight over th e years. She
advantage of modern approaches to
University compu ting.''
also continues the task of cataloguing

f"~!'e~~'::r ~ii~le~~~a~ea~~~nne~ri~~:n~

be~~~ ~~:',;~~~f;;~ :s~~';!rt~~e~~;:~;;

mechanical engineering and chairman of
the AdvisorY Com~ee on A,ademic
~omputir18.. r?iJI ~erVe;a$ ~a&lt;t'iJ28' d lre.c i9r.'
of the Office as soon asJus.:curr.entcomtDitments will· allow:·Or·.. ·C::hartes Jeffrey,:
vvho has headed the Office of University
Computing as an assistant vice president,
will assist Dr. Marten~ in the inter im.

of Medicine Collection into a usab)e

Grants 'for year top $11 m1•111•0' n,•
March IotaI •s
l $1 5 ml•II··on

research collection was given impetus by
·the .· ~;~lt.h •. ~~i~nces · ~!br!!~~ rece!'t

¢oC::r.'~~oth~~;i~=~~uc~iJeci~~~·~r:~;; '
books came out of thei r cage and other :

;e~~e;::~t~ere taken out of sto rage at .th e

dying because one among them has
deliberately poisoned the water supply.
Elsewhe re in the sa me journal is an at·
count to warm the heart of any Freudian .

It describes the strange case of a pregnant woman who went into labor and
immediately fell aslee p. Efforts to arouse
her were futile. Three days later, she
woke up , sponta neously, somewhat
asto nish ed to discover that she had
delivered a healthy baby boy.
The colledion continues to grow,
la rgely through donations. A major gih
was recently received from the Craig
Development Center. Other additions
are serendipitous. For example, Ms.
Hallowitz recently retrieved from
ge neral ci rculation th e proceedings of
the 1934 national co nference on 11 birth
co ntrol and nat ional recove r¥-" that bears
the autograph (not yet verified) of
co ntraception-pioneer Margaret Sanger.
" We'd like to e ncourage use of the
collection," says Ms. Hallowitz. "We'd
also like to ask anyo ne who is contemplating disc)rding his or her personal
colledion to consider donating the
volu mes to us."

Transfers·. must have
over 2.3 average
Transfer students who want to enter
the University next fall must present a 2.3
average or better to be accepted in most
departments, Dr. Myron A. Thompson,
coordinator . for transfe r student admissions, told the Buffalo fl'enlng News
th is week.
An average of 3.0 (Bl or bener is
necessary for acceptance into health
scie nces and the School of Management,
Thompson said.
The increased competition for
management and health sciences spaces,
he indicated, is probably because
students see stronger job opportUMirie5
in these areas.
Tr~n~fer ,admissiO!lS applicatio~ . are
up 5.26 per cent over this time last year,
Thompson reponed. There have been 5,·
261 applications to date and a total of at
least 6,000 is expected by fall. AppJi-.
cations at this point last Year · numbered 4,998.
The applicants are vying for 1,850
transfer spaces, Thompson said.
Transfer applications throughout the
State University system are reponed to
be running about 8 per cent ahead of last
year.
Applications from junior college
students are Tunoing much higher than
expected.
Applications are also up from private
college students who are running out of
money and want to transfer to a State university because costs are Jower, · a U/8
spokesman said.
·

Temporarily the collection is housed in
a basement room in Tower that -i ncludes·
some work space for persons using the
collection. But at the end of the summer
•
.
the entire operation will move upstairs to
Two hundred and seven grant· Research Institute for a pro jed concermuch larger quarters now being refurcontract awards totalling St1,882,900
ning "Eiedric Power Usage and Regional
bished.
have been received by University faculty
The colledion itself consists mostly of
Economic Development."
during .t he fiscal year which began last
18th and 19th century "imprints," library
Additional funds, continuation grants
July 1, Raben C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
or renewal awards in amounts exceeding
language f_pr printed materials. Many of
president for research, rep&lt;&gt;ned this
$25,000 were received by: Paul Ehrlich,
th ese ca me originally from the private
week. .
.
libraries of the medical superstars of BufChemical Engineering, $61 ,900 from
During the same time span, Fitzpatrick
falo's
past, including Drs. Roswell Park,
NSF for investigations of "Struf;ture
said, 406 proposals in the amount of $34,·
James . Piatt White, Charles Stockton,
and
Paramagnetism of Conjugat083,229 have been forworded for conGeorge N. Burwell, and Austin Flint.
ed
Macroradicais:
Crystallizable
sideration by prospective sponsors. .
Polyphenylacetylene;" Solon Ellison,
Some miscellaneous )11aterials, including
Oral Biology, $357,538 from NIH for
The month of March, Fitzpatrick inthe scrapbooks Roswell Park meticulousdicated, sow receipt of 23 grants and constudies of "Host Response 1 in Dental
ly compiled on every facet of his life and
tracts totalling $1,490,325. Fifty-seven
Disease; " Om P. Bahl, $36,306 from the
Stockton Kimball's collection of
• proposals-IOialling $6;463,393. were sub-.
Population C-ouncil for " BiQ.Chen\istry of
stethoscopes, ore also included. A .
aker~
mined during this latest repon period.
Gonadotropins and bther Materials
memorabllia collection of books
Among those receiving .new grants in
Related to Animal Reproduction;"
.authored by U/ B faculty is kept i~ the
Can a sequentially based curriculum
March were Ell Ruckenttein, Faculty 'Of. · •Richard C. Zopel, Biophysical Sciences,
nearby Buffalo Acad'emy of Medicine
for the school be constructed usins
Engineering and ·Apptied Sciences, $132,·
$49,816 from NIH for a "Biophysics TrainRoom. As Ms . .t.taHowitz explains, most
Piaget '&lt;S system of, cosnitJve
600 from NSF for a 51\Jdy of "Rejuvena·
ing Program;" Marvin Zelen, Statistical
private papers, correspondence, and
development! C..n children be trained
laboratory, $377,085 from NIH for the
tion of Supponed Me!al C..talysts;"
other unpublished documents related to
to acquire Piagetian conservation tasks!
Roben f. Good; Chemical Engineering,
"cancer Clinical Investigations Coorthe health sciences schools are in the
Can academic achievement be e•plained
S89.SOO from NSF for a project involving
dination Center;" and another $60,292
University Archives.
·
by more than IQ or motivotion! These
"Surfa~ Thermodynamics Of· low Interfrom the Same agency for "Statistical
Sbrtllng Glimpse at Posl
are some of the QU!'5Iions that Dr, Irving
facial (LIFn .Oil-Water Systems for
Models of Biomedical Phenomena."
The most casual and unsystematic
E. Sigel has attempted to on5Wer in his
Secondary and T.erttary Oil Recovery;"
long research career in Piagetian
perusal of materials in the coiJection
Wan Y. Chon, · Engineering Sciences,
pi'Ovides a stanling glimpse into the past.
cognitive development ond preschool$116,000 from the Electric P.ower
Here is the transcript of an investigation
education.
Reseorch Institute loran "lnvestisation
The Student Association has formed an
in 1881 into charges that patients at ihe
He will speak ot 2 p.m., Monday, April ·
Affirmative Action Committee on camBuffalo State Asylum were beinR mis14, in 334 Norton under the combined
of Combined lnjeaion Emergency Core
COoling following · PWil .._down;" , pus;t~ pu""""'ot·~; as-described• •• - treated by. attendants: 1~ clocumentspc&gt;nsorsh:ip of , the- Educat•onol
· by Chairw......,. Miody.Aber:. 'cis· "'To • · gives a more vivid, ~illin11..,Gmait
Psycholoj~_y and De.v.elopmentoL
Timothy Wllhms. lllo'-lial Science~
$12;'361 from · the Office of Naval · Eliminate Se•isrn.on C..mpus.~
. of the powerlessness of the· inPsychology Graduate Student Organiza·
The committee is open to any member
stitutic&gt;nalized than The Titticut Follies. In
lions.
Research for "A Radar Investigation of
of the University community and will-be
the . Effech cit low Frequency Elecan 1845 number'Of·Thel.merican}oumal
J:?r. Sigel IS presently research·
working in. part· with Women's Studies
of Medial Sciences. U/11~ at the Ed11cational Testlng5er·
tromagnetic Radiation• on Free Flying
College and the President's Committee·
father Austin Flint describes on epidemic
vi~ in Prilla!lon, N.J. From 1969-72 he
MJsrant Birds."
·
on t~e Recruitment and f'l:omotion of
of typhoid 1hat SWI!JI! thi'OU!Ih the .-rby
_.. chairman of&lt; the Developmental .
Parker C..lkln, Geological Sciences,
$27,100 from the Department of
Women.
town of Nonh Boston kiiHng·.lO of .Its 43
Psychology Department at SUNYAB.
Commer~ for "Erosion ; Deposition •
"A"":'"g things - WIN -be. doing are 1 residents. The orttcle is. a capsule' New.
Bef..,.. that, he was chairtnlll olieseorch
rewordong the Student Association conYork Death Trip, an antidote to the popat the Merriii.Polmer Institute in Delroit
Balan~" studies on the Great Lakes.
stitution to eliminate sexist generics, and
ular notion that rural life o century 1110
and had taught' ot Indiana, Smith and
Shoreline ; " Jam.es Greenbers ,
pressuring ~rofessors to use non-se~ist • was a pastoral idyll. The f1lSidents of
Michigan Sbte. Dr. Sigel r~ed his
Mathematics, $11,400 from NSF -for
texts," contonued Ms. Aber. "We'd hke
Nonh· Basta,~ ore not brought closer· by
doctorate in human development in 1951
"Nonlinear Partial Differential
the committee to be representative of
their mutual tragedy. Instead, they perfrom the University of Chicago. His
. Equations;" John C. Boot, Management
student viewpoints/'
· sist to the end in believing -that they ore
blbl~_~y includes over 50 items.
Scien~. $23,815 from the.Eiectric Power

Psyc:h spe
·

SA to fight sexism.

\ •

•' :

· ·.

�April 10, 1975

'UI'I1LIM
.

Nutrition ·study said
ly D. MoeN. Sursenor
Prole ~.

8iochemkrty

The Tuesday Nutrition Conferences

being held each week in Farber Hall have
anracted a large audience of faculty and
students from various parts of the
University. They indicate a strong in·

terest in nutrition within the University
community. A number of useful resultS
can come from these conferences. Given
the forum the conferences provide, they

ca n ·result in the beginnings of a discussion at vario us levels as to the future
place of nutrition in the University. By
bringing together those in the University
who are interested in nutrition - and

there are many -

they help the

nutrition-oriented community to find

ea ch oth e r. And b y focUsing so
prominently on nutrition for a number

of weeks, they call the attention of the
administration to the need to address
. this problem within the University community.
.
In the interest of stimulating discus'o;;io n, I put forward here an analysis of
where we stand as a University with
respect to nutrition. I hope this display of
what I have been able to learn about this
area will produce suggestions and
responses from others in the University
who have similar concerns.
Whot is Nutrition!
•
: What is nutrition? This is an important
·-qUestion" to try to answer at the outset.
From conversations with students, with
facuhy, and with specialists in the field , I
have found a surprising variation of ex. pressiOn on this question. Everyone
associates nutrition with food. But many
students, · particularly undergraduates
concentrating outside the biological
area, have little or no awareness that
rhere is ~ body of scientific knowledge
~iCff "tti"ike nutririon ttn important
scientific discipline. At the other end
~ ef ·the ·scale are those who view nutrition aS being practically "s ynonymous
with metabolism. These people see food
as a mixture of chemical substances
- e ntering -the metabolic systems of the
body. My O)Yn definition, boiled down
and clarified from numerous discussions
during the past few weeks, is this: Nutrition is concerned with the relationships
between ingested foods and the various
processes known collectively as
metabolism which result in the
" maintenance of normal functions of the
intad animal. These functions include
growth, activity, development, repai{
·and reproduction.
lrr the United States, the science of
nutrition was fostered primariiy
within the environment of the land
gran( colleges. There, nutrition enjoyed
many natural associations with
agriculture, with animal industry, with
home economicS, and with th~e ""food
sdences. Some of the most remarkable
achievements that led to the enormous
productivity of AmeriQ:n agriculture
resulted from developments in animal
and poultry nuiririoh. Consistent with
this, nutrition never received much
emP.hasis in the priv.1te universities. In
this respect, our own University is unremarkable. We Nve apparently never
had a department of nutrition or a
program of study leading to • degree of

-y-

A ampus
pub/"Ofhed
e«h 'J'hundly by the.Dtvltlon ol UniWII'Sity
•elations. $tMe lJMoetslt)' ol New Yori: M

lufl.lo. lOS ltAMn 5e., luHMo, H. Y. 7m4.
EdlfoNI olfla!!S .,-e loalled In room 113, 2SO

WI..._..,......,.!Pftonenm.

~Editor
.._ WfSTlEY aOWtANo
Edltor.Jn.Chlef
Jt08f«T T. AAMLm

-·-

Mond•IOHN A QOUTIEII ·

_,Qienclor_

I'ATRIClA WA«DIIEDfJtMAH ~
OWolfQUINN

Conlrillullna-

SUSAN AI.IUIICll!

de~erving

any kind in the field.
Public P.--tc:upation
Sta.nding · in sharp. contrast to this
absence of programmatic concern abOut
nutrition within the university is the
remarkabl e public preoccupation over
food and nutrition in recent years. On all
sides, and in all the media, we are continually being bombarded by all kinds o~
information, good and bad, ~bout food,
health and disease. Indeed, there are few
subjects today which are as likely to find
a readership as books and articles about
food . It is not surprisi ng , then, that we
are all quite conscious about food and
are very interested in learning more
about nutrition.
The legiti ma cy of nutrition as a science
and this phenomenal public interest in
food, taken .together constitute a strong
set of pressures upon a university such as
ours. They result in what is now a strong
tide of desire on the part of students and
facuhy alike for opportunities to devote
time and effort to learning about nut rition and in many cases, to involving the
best resources of the University - its
men, women and ideas - in addressing
the problems raised by nutritional needs
of the populations of the world. What
are the elements of these needs within
the University? I see them as consisting
of four distinct parts: interests in personal nutrition, in clinical nutrition, in
scientific nutrition and in population
nutrition.
Peno""l Nutrition
In the area of personal or general
nutrition, thelfleed is for course offerings
to provide our students with a basic Understanding of the princi~ of nutrition, and hopefully to raise the level ot
ability of students to deal intelligently
with tti e welter of information to which
tHey afe eXposed every day of. their lives.
Students want to know the basis of the
relationship between diet and health.
They .are interested in how food choices
and ea ting patterns affect them as individuals - their own health, their at-

.

.

of University support

titudes toward others and the way they
see thems61ves as ihdividuals. They want
to deal intelligently with obesity, with
vitamin supplementation, with the socalle d natural foods, with vegetarian ism,
and with the const3nt sequence of fa"ds in
foods. It is of course impossible at this
time to estimate how many Buffalo
students want such course opportunities,
but I think the number is large. I am told
that a general undergraduate course in
nutrition at a large eastern state university attracts some 3,000 undergraduate
students.
Clinkol Nutrition
Students in the healt h sciences have
dual instructional needs in nutrition. like
other students, they have a high degree
of interest in personal nutrition. After all,
thei r strong educational background in
the biological sciences enables them to
appreciate the importance of-nutrition to
personal health . But the health sciences
students also need-.to be provided with a
basis for dealing professionally with
patients. And these patients, in turn, may
present problems in which nutrition is an
importan t or even a dominant component. IRe problems can range-, for example, fro-m simple confusion over the
plethora of discordant information they
receive about nutrition and health, all
the way to illness in which nutrition is a
key component, or in which patient
compliance with a specific nutritional
regimen can greatl y affect the desired
therapeutic outcome. What this means is that students need
to be offered nutrition instruction which
will permit them to make the transition
back and forth rep&lt;\iltedly throughout
their careers between the body of
science they. have r:naste_red and the food
. habits of their· p~tients1 .from.· sny.~ dis­
. cussions in 1h~ past few weeks, I gather
that nutritional instruction for medical
and other health professionals should
deal in variable emphasis with the fol-.
lowing core of three essential parts. Students need to know something about

nutritional standards; that is, about
minimum daily requirements. This includes an appreciation of their validity
and of how they are arrived at. Then,
even more important, st udents need to
_know how to ass~s the nutritional status
of a patient. By this, I mean that the
student needs to be able to assess Quickly 'w hether or not the patient has a
nutrit io nal compo nent to his or her disease. Finally, they need instruction in the
nutritional val ue of foods. Patie nts eat
food. not chemicals, not proteins, not
carbohydrates, and not minerals. So the
health student needs to be able to identify and -translate specific scientific information about nutritional requirements
into advice about" foods and d iets for the
patient.
Scientific Aspects
The third category of need relates to
the scientific aspects of nutrition. Should
we pr(.'-lide opportunities for students to
· concentrate on nutritional science as undergraduate majors! Should we try 1o·
mount a graduate program in nutrition?
This aspect of nutrition. pursues the
answers to questions relating to digestion and absorption, and to th e
m et;~bolism of foods. It provides the
mechanism by which the University can
contribute to the continued growth of
the basic body of knowledge about
nutrition. Scientific nutrition is the arena
where nutrition achieves its greatest
respectability within the academic commun ity; This is where nutrition made its
great discoveries in the past such as the
discove;.y of the vitamins, of the essential
amino acids, of the· role of minerals in
metabolism, and of the antimetabolite
drugs which are so useful in therapy. This
is t'he ~rea wtierf! the great nutritionists
•WOn thetr~ 'NObei"PriZeS ; ~ .... 1 ,.,
l!opalation:HIIiriiion,·: ::,;·· ! :·~!~i~:&gt;..,•
Finally, there is what I have"called population ,utritibn.• As itS ·na"me implies,
this area deals with the nutritional needs
of whole populations. It therefore quick·
(fUm M ~Rf'

5. rnl. .fl

UUP 'perplexed' by stand on NTP 'tenure'
Editor:
In the lleporter issue of March 27, 1975
(Vol. 6, No. 241, there appeared an account of President Ketter S address to the
PSS at its meeting of March 21 1975,
mainly dealing wit~ the procedures for
permanent appointment for U/8 NTPs.
I wish to express my distiess over what
I interpret to be an accusation against
UUP's introduction into its contract with
the"State of permanent appointment for
NTPs. The alleged quoted statements
from Dr. k"etter's speech seem to be
making UUP responsible lor a possible
NTP "blood bath."
1

1

The intent of this tnajor accomplishment of UUP is quite clear: Adequate job
performance in NTP positiOns of con. tinuous employment for seven years in
the University must lead to permanent
appointment. Furthermore, if Civil Service workers and NTPs have been "heads
and . shoulders above" faculty(!) and
students "in loyalty11 to this institution
and Civil Service workers already receive
permanent appointment ~her six
months, I find it perplexing that our ad~
ministration wishes to develop an
elaborate and complicated set of
procedt,~res fo_r awording permonent ap• pointment to NTPs. UUP's negotiations
position wos thot the agreement should
grondfother oil NTPs who had -seven
years of University service. We were unsucx:essful In this but assul"ances were
Jj-. to us that fOr all practical JIUIJIOSeS

· that would be the end result.

Finally; "luddlns professionalism" ·

.does not Imply a mOdel aimmon to all •
faculty, NTPs or fo4o that matter manap-

ment or confidential staff. To claim that
the procedures which the facuhy have
developed for permanent appointment
have evolved over a period of centuries
does not mean that they cannot be improved, ll!nllone that they are the best
and only ones for other professional

groups . Efforts to · impose such
procedures to NTPs can be easily il)terpreted as attempts to legitimize the forcing out of NTPs and make UUP's contract the scapegoat.
-C-.ndne A. Yerocaris
President, Buffalo Center Chapter, UUP

Avoid retrenchment; UUP urges
the local administration
Editor:
In reference to the budget that wa_s ap·
proved by the State legislature for ' U/B
·for 1975-76: Although reduced from the
original SUNY approved budget and
from the Governor's submitted one, it is
of interest to note that no direct position
cuts are mandated. The University community 5hould be apprised of this. We
hop_e that our local administration will
now feel free to allocate the available
resolKces in way as to avoid retrenchment.

a

The UUP tails upon oil the members of
. our University to help launch a major
lener writing campaign to our iQcal
. -legislators to urse1hem to restore all cuts
for higher ond public education. All the
proposed neductions constitute a major
threat to quolity of education In the State
of t1ew Yorlt which is fundomentol and
bos1c to the Quality of life we as
A~ns ore entitled to.
Sincerely,

.....c:-.a.•• .\. v-ta.l.

...

mtTOR'S NOTE: Anached to . this
lene( was a copy of a line by line occounting of U/B's approved oppropriatlons by
function for 1975-76: "Total: $80;'J31,500;
Instruction and Depanmentol Research,
$47,979,300; Organized Research, $318,000; Extension and Public Service, $441,·
200; Academic 5uppon Services, $6,021,000; Student Affairs and Student Aid Services, $3.676,000; lnstitutlo""l Suppon
Services, $19,9n,OOO; Auxiliary Enterprises, $2,519,000." The sheet contained
no reference whatsoever to any positions
either approved or mandoted to be cut.
. While Dr. Yer~caris i.ndicates thot this
means no position cuts were mandated,
the adminlstrotion lost week pointed out
that three instructionol lines and two
lines in educotlo""l communications, oil
five of which were inCluded as new
positiQm In the Executive Budget, "specifically" mandoted for elimination
by the legisloture and that other line cuts
would be necessory because 110 per cent
Of Che U"'-&gt;lty :budgel- which was
cut~by $742,500- goes for salaries. .

�April 10, 1975

Nutrition-

({rom t»~ 4. cnl. 4J

ly becomes involved with relationships
between nutritional and related factors
such as food SUP.ply, economics and the
environ mental scien~es. Population
nutrition is likely to be interdisciplinary;
it requires a diverse expertise that only a
large university commu nity can b ~ing to
bear.
_
These are the four areas of need which
I see withi n the University community.
Obviously the priorities are different in
each case. However, one or two ad·
ditional comments are needed to prevent misunderstanding. While I mean to
indicate here tha t w~ are deficient as a
university in meeting the needs of our
students a nd of the public in this impor·
tant field, it would be grossly unfair to
give the impression that no effor).S are
presen tly being made in this direction.
On the co nlrary. While there are no formal courses being offered under the
heading "Nurrition 123 ...," (to my
knowledge) considerable nutritional
•••.isn't euctly "April in P,uis," it tums out. lut winter hun't been like F.tirbanks, either. LHt
co nt ent is be mg included within a
weekend's 13-pl~nch snowstorm m•y fuwe been the wont April blow-up of the 20th Cennumber of courses 10 several divis1ons of ~
1..-y, but thinp kept mowins .tnd the Unh'enity rem•in~ opMt. If you judse • winter b y
the Uni versity. Bur because nutrition is
••snow dosinp," this season hu ~ Ions but not snere. The only snOw '1tolid.tY' ume
so wide ly dispersed or submerged rn
Now~ber 15.
other areas, because there is no focus for
nutrition, no department, no section in
the University catalog, no plaCe where·
students ca n find he lp, students general·
ly believe that nurrition is completely
missing at U/ B. Only the most aggressive
and pe rsi sle nt students succeed in
National figures in rece nt years also in·
Throughout New York State people
nlake mid-career changes in prclfessional
penetra ting the workings of the Uniyerobjectives as well as to revi talize their
dicate an increasing age for college
traoitionally considered too old to go to
sity to find o ut what is really being
stude nts, especially at the undergraduate
knowledge in specific fields."
college are filling a significant nUmber of
taught.
level. According to the U.S. Census
chairs in campus classrooms. Professors
No Insurmountable Problemo
Sex Breokdown
Bureau, in 1970 roughly one-third of all
are teaching studertts older than they
None of these needs present insurThe overall breakdown by sex of
undergraduates
were
22
or
older
are. Children are being ra ised while one
mountable problems in being met if
SUNY's statistics reveals that ap- ·
or both parents seek degrees . .Spouses
nationwide. One·sixth we re over 25. By
adequate resources were available. But
proximately the same percentage of men
are working to put their wjves or
1974 nearly half ol the country's college
obviously, this is not the case. This
and women are enrolled : 50.3 per cent
husbands through college . Older
means that solutions involving . such
students were over 22 and aboul onemen, 49.7 per cent women.
citizens are reviving their intellectual
th ird were 25 years of age or older. From
alternatives as establishing a department
Although there are about the sa me
curiosity on campus. Parents and
19~0 to 1970, the number of male
of nu tr ition a re quite unrealistic. But
numbe{ of men and women in both the
children are competing against .. each
studen1s in undergraduate study aged 22
ot her less costly alternatives appear to
· ~nder ' 2J " ' and "over 23" Categories, a
other in the· same degree programs.
to
34
doubled
,
and
the
number
of
female
exist. These include the recruitment of
high~rcentage 'of women are enrollIn fact, about 40 per cent of the
students
in
that
age
grO
up
_
tripled.
new facuhy in small numQers within one
ed in the older age groups, Of nearly 45,·
shfcj_ents. of \!&gt;.~ _ State ,Un!v~rsjt,y1 of,!'lew
or seve ral existing departments, or the
Between 1970 and 1974, the number of
000 P&lt;!&lt;&gt;pl~ 35 years·old or older on SUNY
York are older th~n the~~ tragit)o na!!Y
esrab
li~hmen r of an interdisciplinary
'
WOf11~n
.
e,nrelled
rose
by
about
25
per
·campt~ses) 26,212.ar,e ·women and 17,363
program- or group to provide a focus for
associated with collilli-,swdy,.,MJ?OrcPnt, while the number of men increased
·are" me r\.
nearly 17,'oo0 students over
ding to . statistics . recently .released by.
nutriti_
Of,l in , t~e . ~ni,versity"' This , lat:ter
~Y aho~t ~a!f that pe_
rcentage
.
. 4~, 10,~1 ~ ~re ~omen ~ n~ ,5,97~ are rn~n.
SUNY's Offi&lt;;e of lnstitutionai. Re5l!a&lt;eh .
alternative has certain anractive features.
The figures indicate that 39.7 per cent,
h is realistic with respect to resource
or more, than 150,000 of the University's
needs. It has rhe advantage of drawing
students, are 23 years of age or older.
on the.p('es,e nt assets of the Universityarnm ~J.:r&gt; ' · rol. u
Bond money is used to fu nd the con(U/ll has 10,241 students over 23.) .
men and women with demonstrated _
pa rtially funded at $237,000.
st ru dion , and the bonds are repaid at
Because, however, this is the first year
prowess in nu trition - and it would give
• A $300,000 biology greenhouse, now
prese nt from student tuition money."
visibility ro nutrition both for students,
in which SUNY has compiled age
panially funded at $10,000.
Izard urged out-of-work construction
and also for faculty members in other
statistics on its total State-wide student
The Buffalo &amp;enlng News during the
men in Western New York to send a
body, there is no way of telling w~ether
divisions
who might be attracted to
letter to Gov. Ca rey, Assembly Speaker
previous week had endorsed such a condevore some attention to the problems
more older students are enrolling than in
struction speed-up as a means of helping
Stanley Steingut and Senate Majority
the past.
of nutrition.
l eade r Warren Anderson urging th e m to
the area's drastic unemployme nt situa·
· But th ere is one essential ingredient in
tion. The News' stand was echoed on
implement a significant increase in
Slsnlflanl Portion of FuB-time Studenlo
almoSt any alternative and - that is
April 2 by Western New York State
University constructio n act ivity in
Although it might be natural to expect
dynamic
leadership. And the fewer the
Weslern New York.
Assemblyman Harold H. Izard.
a larger percentage of older students in
real resources that can be deployed to
Izard agreed with the News that "a
As a member of the Assembly Higher
. pan-time study .because of family or oc·
nutrition,
the more important it is _to
shot in the construction arm of our
Education Committee, he pledged to do
£upational obligations, the number
have strong leadership.
economy would have to have almost
"everyth ing I can_ to expedite any
studying full-time is significant ,
Theie are still other alternatives, and
instant beneficial effects.
necessary legislation through t he
representing 21 .4 per cent of all full-t ime
one of these is to do nothing. Given the
''The unique thi ng about University
Assembly.
SUNY stu&lt;lents.
tough facts of fiscal 197S-76 in the State
constnfction," he pointed out, " is that it
"This is one of those solutions to a dif· Part-time stud y is even more popular
of New York, this may be seriously concosts the taxpayer~thing directly. _ fi cult problem that is so obvious and so
with;older students. The "over 23" partsidered. I hope not. The interest in nutriwell founded in common sense that
time group represetits more than twotion is now very strong at U/8 and · it
every politician will eventually want tq .
-thirds (67.9 per cent) of all pan-time
urgently deserves to be mobilized and
claim cred it for the.idea," Izard said. He
students.
supponed by the University.
indicated he had first heard oi it from
About ·two-thirds (101,623) of the
U/B President Roben L. Ketter.
students over 23 years old are studying
In cOnnection with its upcoming elec·
" Maybe if we can get the University
pan-time, with a third (51,409) enrolled
tions, the U/B Chapter of the Civil Serconstruction project rolling in high
To funher improve setvlce to the
on a full-time basis.
Association
calls
attengear,"
Iza rd said, "we will also be able to
vice
Employees
University, the Centr~l Stores Inventory ·
The figures are based upon Fall 1974 ·
tion to Article IX, Section 3 of its
encourage the I)IFTA to get \heir subwayControl Office at 1803 Elmwood Avenue
enrollment repons from 70 of . the
Constitution which provides tha ~ "Any
rapid transit project rolling as well. This
will be relocated to 25o Wlnspear
Univel"5ity's 72 campuses·, with a total of
person who has been duly nominated
latter project is going to involve over
Avenue (Service Center), effective April
about 9,000 individuals not induded
and wishes to withdraw should notify the
$100 million in salaries and payrolls."
21 . As of that date all Central Stores refrom the two remaining units. The data
secretary
of.
the
chapter
in
writing
at
least
State
Assemblyman
G.
James
Freinquisitions
and correspondence should
are based upon 400,244 students in all,
twentjl-five (25) days prior to the date fixbe mailed directly to : Central Stores,
m.ing of Amherst called on Gov. Cafey
2S0,1S5 studying full-time and 150,089,
ed
for
the
election."
The
date
would
be
on Saturday to meet with area building
Service Center, 250 Win~ar Avenue,
part·time.
.
April 21 .
Buffalo, 14214.
'
trades officials, contractors and J,J/8 of·
Although there is an absence of detail7
Section 4. of the ..IT)&lt;' anide, CSEA
ficials in an effort to accelerate construe·
The phone number will be 831-4906 ed, prior records on the subject, the
points out, says t hat "Independent
tion.
for all inventory information.
·university's provost for life-long learning
nominations for any elected ppsition ·
" The depreSsed economic conditions
Kenneth M. MacKenzie .. ys it seems
QOIID....
SUNDAYS
in WesJern New York warrant action
within a chapter may be l)'lade by. peti·
apparent tmt there is a trend toward an
_
• ......,
_ . . .• . . . . . Lea
tion signed by not less tmn five (5%) per
now," Fremming said in i letter to the
older student population in SUNY:
cent of the members of the chapter and
Governor. "The 40 per cent construction
"First, there are numbers of students
Ubrary ...
the names of such cancllaates smll be
unemployment figure here waronts acwho choose to enter college, not immedi-..-_
....... Leallonlylo
printed on the offidal ballot provided for
tion now and the money ..ved in term•
ately upon !l'ldliiiion from hlsh-school,
such nominations and. filed with the
of inflation, transportation and leuing
..,
... UIIINnlr .......
but after mvlns spent one or more
-..~
chairman of the Election Committee at
warrants action now."
ye.rs In worltins situations.
...._~
Enclosecfin his letter wene supporting
"Also, with the lncreaslns llberlliu· ·, least twenty (20) days before the date fix..... _ . , .......... Moooitoj .......
ed for holdins the election." The date .
Jette,. from Donakf ]. Blair, president of
tion of prof~opponunities for
AIItloont_....
for this is April 25. The local CSEA
the Building and Construction Tradeo
women, with emphasis upon equity anll
IIWoolnol_ ............
membership base is approximately 1,800.
Council of Buffalo and Vldnity, and
_ equality, numllen of older women are
All inquiries should be.senf to qEA,
Robert R. logan, executiYe vice presl·
either returnlns to"&lt;llOIege or enterins
Ullloenlr ............. _ , _ . ...
Box 16, Hayeo Hall.
dent. Construction Industry Employers
.
for the lint dme. Finally; ~~&gt;ere are lOme
Aun. Inc.
•
.
.
.
8allocs .... be mailed by May 15, 1975.
adults who luive. found -it necessary'to

40 per cent of-.SUNY students 'over age'

·or

Amh!!St building speed-up·- - - - - -

.CSEA elections
procedures outlined

Central Stores shift

=
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.............

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

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

...

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

....,.....

�./

•Ketter .to speak

. . .aula

Ap~il

. Career .panel
set for women

at graduation
President Robert L. Ketter will be the
principal speaker at the University's
General Commencement, schedUled
for May 18 at 3 p.m. in Memorial

The campus chapter of Alpha Lambda
Delta (pational scholastic honor society
for freshman women) will sponsor a panel discussion on "Alternative Careers for
Women," Thursday, April 10, at 3 p.m. in
231 Norton .
The program will explore some
formerly non-traditional jobs for
women. Appearing on the panel will be :
Nancy Schlosser, president of the
Creative Express, a local advertising
age nCy; Don Benson of the Apprentice
Training Program, a division of the Ne\Y
York State Employment Service, who will
speak on women in the trades; Eileen
Matsulavage, diredor of purchasing for
Airco Alloys; and Lt. Helen Burton of the
Buffalo Police Department's Homicide
Division.
Th ere will be a question and answer
period, and an opportu nity for those
who atte nd to speak with the guests personally. Refreshments will be available.

Auditorium.

The Reverend Arlo ). Nau of the
lutheran Minist ry to the Campus will
give the invocation and pronounce

the benediction.
The presentation "of the 1975
Chancellor Norton Medal will be made
at the exercises.
The Commencement exercises will be

open to the public. No tickets are re·
qui red.
Parti'cipating in the General
Commencement will be graduates of the
Faculties :&gt;f Arts and letters, Educational
Studies, Engineering and Applied
Sciences, Natural Sciences and
Mathemacics, and Social Sciences and
AdministrAtion; the SchoOl of Social
...,.,Work; the Division of Graduate and
Professional Education, and the Divisio-n

Golf team
wins praise

of Undergraduate Education.

·Leap year brings
less bi-weekly pay
The Federal government giveth and
the State taketh away.
The Personnel Office this week an-

nounced that , because of a leap year in
fiscal 1975-76 (february 29, 1976), weekly
lake-home pay for University employees
will be reducejl at a rate of $1.05 per pay
period for eaV10,000 of annual salary.
According to a Personnel memo entitled, " Change in Bi-Weekly Pay Computation for Employees Paid Over a 12Month Period," the bi-weekly pay rate
for most years is 14/365ths of the annual
salary rate. for 'a leap year, however, biweekly pay is figured at 14/366ths of an·
nual salary. This slightly smaller fraction
will be reflected in pay checks during the
entire 197.5-76 fiscal year, starting with
ch~ks which will be received on April
18.

The change d~Jl.lit, affe,ct,)Q:9.10n\h .
employees paid'orl a 2i pay perfoCJDasis, ·
the Personr;.el memo says.
On the positive side, Federal
wi!~holdi~g tax rates will ,be ,re&lt;j uced.
·- ~ligfltly sb-:netirne in May, atcording to
recent IRS announcements. This will
serve to offset t~e leap year loss.

CSEA sponsoring
grievance sessions
The SU~YAB Chapter of CSEA will
present a . two-day grievance seminar on
April 25 and 26 at the Holiday Inn, 1881
Niagara Falls Blvd., Amherst.
Celeste Rosencrantz will Provide instruction on the proper presentation of a
grievance. On Friday evening, discussion
will center on the necessary paperwork
involved in filing a srievance. On Saturdlty, small group sessions will solve
·

~arlous mock-grievances:-- ~·

Attendance is mandatory for all CSEA
stewards..
--Lunch will be provided on Saturday.
The se&gt;sions will run from 7•10 p .m. on
Frid&lt;ly evening and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m . .
on Saturd&lt;Jy.
For information: contad Donna Miller,
Typogra~;&gt;hics, 250 Winspear.

Ubr.ary moves
Wtth the move of almost all of the
Geology Department· fror:n the Bell
FadHty to the Ridge Lea campus, the
_., GeoiOSY Ubrary has been shifted there as
'""''
Uilivenlty
Libraries,report?"
'l1le"I~
Rlifle
Lee· Ubniy.
_._

''.

Social Scienc:es, Mathemotlcal Sciences,
and Geology, as well as housing the
Human Relations. Area files. bnle
· Waodson; geOlogy and !Till&gt; tolirarlan,
will now be permanently localed at
- Rklse Lea.
By consollda_ting the materials already
at RJdse Lea, there became available

"enoush space to add the geology books

ever-srowtns

10, 1975

as well as the
number of
mop cases, the Ubrarles Indicate. There
Is still suffldent growth space left to accommodate all th.- wbject collections
until the move to the Arnhen,t campus.

Buffalo Quartet off to California
The Buffalo-String Qu.artet has headed
for California Iter being selected as
finalists in the prestigious annual competition of the Coleman Chamber Music
1\SSQ&lt;;iiU!Of) . .. ........ __:
The group, whose members are artists-·
in-residence in the University's Creative
Arts College (formerly College B),. will.
perform quartets by Beethoven and
Schoenberg on the weekend of Apri~12,
during the finals of the 29th annual
Coleman International · Competition at
the California Institute of Technology.
Formed just a year ago, the Buffalo
Quartet has been rehearsing at the
Creative Arts College's quarters in the
Jos~ph Ellicott Complex since
September. They' are part of the experimental College's artists-in-residence
program' which has been established
with some financial support from private
benefadors in the area. .
SinCe fall, they have : given "several
public recitals at ·the Katharine Cornell
Drama Workshop and have been
assisting the U/ 8 Center for the Creative
and Performing Arts.
The Quat1et has also been studying
with the Cleveland String Q.uartet, the
.- chamber music group which has- been
winning international acclaim since join·
ing U/8 as faculty artists in i-esidence in
1971 . Two members of the Cleveland
Quartl!t were winners of the Coleman
competition several ~ears ago when performing as part of another group, andthe Tokyo String Quartet, which
appeared in Buffalo March 18, captured
first prize in the competition in 19n.
The Buffalo Quartet is hoping to win
the $2,000 first prize in this year's com·
petition for more reasons than the
prt!stige.which soes witlr if_ "If-we win,
we11 have enough money to fly back to
Buffalo," says violinist Carol Zeavin.
·: While-In· Gtllfomia,: Miss Zeriin• and

tiM! at*- membet:s of the-quanei:BenjarQift Hudson, flrsf violin.ist,
Maureen Gallagher, violist; and Dana
Ruslnak,' Eellist - will stay with her
relatives.
·Miss Zeavln Is a graduate of the
University of California at Los AR!Ieles ·
and has served as c:oncert...naster of theUCLA Symphony · and as featured
_violinist In the Twice Ensemble, a
group which performed contemporary
'chamber music.
Miss Zeavln has won several prizes ~nd
has performed as a ·soloist with the
l;lollywood Philharmonic.

The U/ B golf team, which stayed at the·
Palm Beach National Golf and Country
"Club during its recent F)o rida swing, has
receiveCI high praise from the general
manager of that facility.
In a letter to John M. Carter, president
of the U/ B Foundation, Inc., Jack Ryan of
the Palm Beach staff noted that " It is not
always easy, during the height of the
season to accommodate a group such as
this, and in the past, with several other
college groups, to whom we had ac·
corded the privilt!ge .. ., the end result
was something less than satisfadory.
" It Is only fair, therefore," Ryan continued, "that 1 take the opportunity to let
you know that the boys of the U/~ team
conducted themselves in a delightful
manner while they were here .... Young
men of this calibre from the University of
S.Uffa~ . !Vill.:al"!ays i;&gt;e. welcome . ..."

Mr. Hudson, 24, of San ·Juan Bautista, ·
Calif., studied at the University of
Southern California and the Cleveland
Institute of Music and is currently
violinist in residence at th Cweritef'.for t
the Creative 'and Performing Arts here.
He has been: first violinist of the Atlan·
tic Quartet, a member-of··the"\CioliJ"' sec., ·
tion of the Los Angeles Chamber
Orchestra, and violinist of the Trio
The President's Committee on the
D'amore. Hudson has also been a
RMuitment and Promotion o f Women
featured soloist with orchestras in
will sponsor a program for women faculCalifornia, Utah, Ohio, and Mexico.
ty on Friday, April 11, at 3 p.m. in Room
Miss Gallagher, 23, of Grants Pass,
244 Cary Hall (Health Sciences).
Oregon, studied chamber music at the
The program will open with ·a panel
Meadowmount School of Music. She
discussion (followed by open discussion)
received the Performer's Certificate
on ° Women Faculty in the Budgetary
before graduating from Indiana Univer- . ._ Crisis." The panel, moderated by Prof.
sity in 1973 and w~s principal violist with
Sara Cicarelli (medical technology), will
the University Philharmonic there.
include faculty members Lou Jean Fleron
Mr. Rusinak, 23, of Adelphi, Maryland,
(Millard Fillmore College), Elizabeth
also studied at Meadowmount and InHarvey (social work), Patricia Hollander
diana. He was principal Cellist with the
(law), Marceline Jaques (counselor
Colorado Symphony Orchestra in the
education), and Hilda Korner (director of
c;.ummber of 1973.
the President's Committee).

women'1arultf"' · ·· ,
plan program : ··

FACUlTY
~istant J.ibrarian (science cataloger), University· libraries, PR-1 posting
no. B-5011 (pending reclauification kT associate librarian, PR-2). '
'
Associate Professor, Program for Media Stud~ F-5024.
V!s~t!ng Ass!stant Research Professor, Chemist~, F-5026.
VtStttng AsSistant Research Professor, Chemistry, F-5027.
Assistant Librarian, University Libraries, PR-2, F-5028.

Research l\ssistant-Counselor1 Upward Bound, R-5008.
Senior Typist, Survey Research Center,-R-5009.
Assistant Dean, Law &amp; JurisprudenCe, PR-3, B-5012.
Assistant ~an for Administration, Pharmacy, PR-2 (pending
UJ&gt;sradtng. to PR-3), B-5013.
'

· • • FOr ac!ditionannformation c:onc:emlng these jobs and for details o1 NTP ·•
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin
these locations:

boards· at

· 1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, next to
cafeteria; 3. Rldse.lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to C·1 · 4. Health Sciences
Building, in corridoo: oppoolte HS 131; 5. E:apen Hall, in t...; corridor between
Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground floor in corridor next to ven-. ·
ding machi,.,.; 7. Hayes. Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Office; 8. Acheson Hall, In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
Parker Engineering. In corridor next to Room 15; 10.·Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
Housing Office area; 11. 11101 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Norton ,
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall: In corridor next to
Room 106. 14. Jqhn Lord O'B~Ian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Campus).

St.- Unlftnlly allulfalo II • . ....,. Oppartunlty/Afllrmalln Action -plo)'er
.l't"l'tll

·rt'"

J\\)1'1. \t

#

�April 10, 1975

7
Circle, 5 p.m. No adtnission charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Bride o f Shakespeare ·Hea ven features
scenes from modern life with dialogue by
Shakespea re , directed by Gordon Rogoff.
Courtya rd Theatre, Hoyt and Lafayette, 8 p.m.
Admissio n charge.
Prese nted b y th e Center for Theatre
Resea rch .

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
MarJ!arer M acl\ rthur. Lapha rp dulcimer.
Norton Cafete ria, 9 p.m. Admissio n charge.
UUAB FILM••
•
Macbeth (Po lanski) . . Norton Conference
Theatre, ca ll 831-511 7 for times. Admissiorl
charge.

Fie ld, 1 p .m. No admission charge.

NA nvE AMERICAN WEEK'

MANAGEMENT FILM'

mission charge.

NA nVE AMERICAN WEEK'
Social : Traditional foods wi ll be for sale and
there will be socia l dancing. North American
Cu lture Center, 315 Niagara St., 6 p.m. No ad mission charge.
Presented by NAC.A.O and the Minority Stu -

dent Association.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Internal Combustio n by Terry Doran.
Am erican ' contemporary Theatre, 1695

Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admissiqn
ch arge. Seating is limited to 2S persons per
performance; reservations are suggested {875-

5825).

CAC FILM"
'"KinKof Hearts. 140 Farber (CaPen), 8 and 10
p.m. Admission : S1.
IRC ALM•
'
KinR Kon'). Sy' l ecture HilltEIIi~Oit); a~.Jnd

.

~.~8~r:.·:~,rH~fr ~~~
DANCE PBtFORMA..C5' "" ~ - J 'T. ~ - i · : • ·
The Zodiaque Company, directed by lind a
Swiniuch~ performs. Harriman Theatre Studio,
8 p.m. Admission charge.
·
Presented by the De partment of Theatre.
MFA REOTAL'
Pia nist Neal Hatch performs. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Bride of ShakesPeare Heaven feat ures
scenes from modern life with dialogue by
Shakespeare, d irected by Gordon Rogoff.
Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
Presented by the Center for Th eatre
Research .
UUAI COFHBtOUSE"
Ragtirfle music by Eric Shoenberg, guitar,
and Joseph Kube~. piano. First floor cafeteria.
Norton, 9 p .m. Admission charge.

U~~::~·(~ol•nski).

No.,on Confe•ence
Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

SUNDAY-13
Hilla ttOt.ISE•
lox ilnd bigel brunch. Karen Riuo will
speak' on " la y-Sachs Disease." Ellicott
Complex, 12 noon . Admission charge.

NAllYt AMERICAN WEK'
.
Craft S.Je and Show: The Iroquois Drum
Dancers and Tonawanda Singers will provide
Norton Union , 2:5p.m. No admission charge.
Presented l)y NACAO and the Minority Student Assoc;qtton.
entertal~t.

NAnvE AMERICAN WEK' •
Crafts demonstr.uions: Beadwork,
silverwork, ba s ket making , Godseye,
dteSSm~;king. quilting, ~;nd sandpainting will
be ~nstrated . There will be entertainment
by the drum dancers and Tona~nda Singers.
Norton· Un6on, 2-8 p.m. No ~;dm ssio(l chiirge.
Presented by the NACAO and he Minority
Student Assodiltion.

laOADCAST"
Metropolitan Operil Final Auditions.
WllfO..FM (811.n, 2 p.m .

MUSICDulcimer workshop by Margaret
MacArthur. 232. Norton, 2 p.m ...
FACULTY IIICIT.U•
O&lt;pnist Squire H•slcin •·olfen -. loculty
rKital. First Presbyteri.an Church, Symphony

BROADCAST•
.
Book burning/banning in the Kanawha
Couat y Schoo ls is the topit:. WBFO-FM (88.7),
10 p.m.

FILM •

NATIVE AMERICAN WEEK'
Workshops: Re presentatives from local In·
d ia n organizations will discuss critical issues.
339 Norton . 11 a.m.-3 p.m. No admission
charRe.
Pr ~ nt e d by NACAO and the Minority Stu·
de nt Association .
·

Presented by NACAO and 1he Minority Student Association.
·

NA TU!!AL -5CIENCES AND MATHEMA ncs
DISTINGUISHED VISITING LKrURE
SERI£51
The Drift Towards Equilibrium, Or. Henry
Eyring, University of Utah . 147 Diefendorf,
8:15p.m.
·

WEDNESDA Y-16

MONDAY-14

Crafl Sale and Show: The Iroquois Drum
Dancers and Tonawanda Singers wi ll provide
entertainment. Nor1on Union, 2-5 p.m. No ad-

Spinal Cord Injury is the topic of this seminar
which features the showing of two films :
" Touching" and " Just What Can You Do? " 337
Norton , 8 p.m.
Sponso•ed by CEPR Z.

The Co rp or~Hi on, video tape profile o f
Phillips Petroleu m Co. 70 Acheson , 12 noon-1
p.m.; 4·5 p.m.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE#
Research Pro blems in Modern Control, Dr.
James Medit ch, Universit y of Ca lifornia a1 lr·
vine . 104 Pa rke r, 2 p.m.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Conformist (Bertolucci). 140 Farber (Capen) , 3 and 9 p.m. No admission cha rge .
PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT
COUOQUIUM#
Justice in Islamic Ethics, Ma jid Fakhry,
America n Universit y of Be irut and Princeton
University. Rm . 14, 4244 Ridge _!.ea. ~:~ p~ .
CHEMISTRY
FOSTER COUOQUIUM SERIESI
Models and Scientific Crearivir y, Or. Henry
Eyring, Un iversit y of Utah. S A~on , 4 p .m.
ENGLISH . LECTURE#
Th e Dimensionality of Models: I\ Proposal
for ln terdisciplinary~rudy. James Bunn. Rm . 4,
A nn ~x B ., ~ p.m.
.._. . •
.
,
UUAI FRfJIICH FILM SERIES'
Lefteot to 'Si9eria •(19Sn . 146 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admission charge.

LfCTUREIDISCVSSION., .... · 1 • , •
Attica Trial~ Forum. 339 Norton, 7:.30-10

p.m. No admission cha rge.
Presented by the NACAO and Minority Stu·
d e nt Association.

CURRENT ISSUES IN
AlliED HEALTH SEMINAR#
Communiry Cotleges and Primary Health
Care. Or. J. Warren Perry, dean and professor,
School of Health Related Professions (with
Stephe n'Wilson presiding). 233 Norton , 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Healt h
Sciences Education and Eva luation and 1he
School of He alth Related Professions.

Diet for a Small Planet. Norton Conference
i'hratre, 12, 12:45 and 1:30 p .m. Comme ntary
b)' Jim Redding. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Food Day Committee.
FILM'
From Every Shires Ende : Th e World of

Chaucer's Pilgrims. Palme r Rm ., Faculty Club.
12 :30 p .m. No ad mission charge .
Presented by the Fa cult y Club and the
Instructional Communication Center.
CHEMISTRY
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIESft
Hif.lh Reso lufion Trace Analysis in Bio logical
ancl Ot her Sy~ r erns b y Gas Chro matogra phy -

~~s~~~e~~s~~~~~;~ ~~h:!~~~J~~~~· Univer·
FILM'
Ma~culine.feminine (Godard!. 70 Acheson,
7:30 p .m. No admission cha rge.
UUAB FILMS"
El (o r Th i~ StromJi:e Passio n) , 7:30 p .m., and
Eva, 9 p.m. 140 Farbe r (Capen). No admission
cha rge .
· COOKING DEMONSTRAnON'
Fre nch cooking is the topic of this three·
part demonstra ti o n b y Nadine Berlow.
Tonight's me nu includes capon au cham·
paJ!ne. poulcr farci grand mere and tarte·
rarin. For information on registration and fees,
call John Bu erk, 831-46.30. facu lty Club, 8 p.m.
CREAnVf ASSOCI A11' RECITAL'
The fifth Crea ti ~e Associate recital o f the
seaso n fratures voca list and flutist Eberhard
Blum. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No· admission
char~w .

R'LM •
Caq .1 Cianr Sh;u/nw. Norton Confere nce
Th ratre, 8 p.m .
PrE"Wnted by Hillel Ho use in observa nce of
Yom Ha·Atzmaut. No ·admission charge.

NATURAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMA ncs
D15nNGUISHED VISITING lfCTURE
SERI£51
Th C' St a tC' ~ of Matter.. Or. Henry Eyring,
Uni vC"rsi ty of l!ta h. 147 Die fendorf, 8:15p.m.

THURSDA Y-17
DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAI'HY
COLLOQUIUMJ

TUESDAY-15

Qu antifying Planar Shap e -

INFECnOUS DISEASE THERAPY lfCTUREJ
Respiratory Tr~d Infections - P~rt II is the
third in a five-week series for practicing pharmacists, taught by Or. Kenneth Ke)tick and
Ronald Sorkness, both clinical assistant
professors of pharmacy at U/8. For location
and registration informatiof), contad Harold
Reiss at the School of Pharmacy, 831-2546.
NUTRI110N AND MAN
LECTUIIf 5ERIES•
Nutrition in PreRnancy ~ nd Child Health,
Or. George Kerr. G-22 Farber {Capen) , 12
noon. Bring your lunch.
Sponsored by the U/8 Department of
Biochemistry and the H~rvard School of
Public Heahh Department. of Nutrition.
iJUAN ANAL \'SIS AND I'OUCY
SEMINARI
The Design and Analysis of Le~rning Environments, Dean Harold Cohen, Architecture and Environmental ~gn . 237 Crosby, 3·
S p.m.

GfOGRAI'IfY lfCTUREJ
The Death of a City: Managua, Nicaragua,
Dr. Chorles Ebe". 147 Diefendorl, 3:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Undergraduate
Geography Organiution.
FllfNCH DlPAIITMENT FILM•
Southerner (Renoir). 146 Diefendorf, 5....and
7 p.m. No admission charse.

ENGU5H DEPARTMENT RLM•
S..nsho the IJJiilifl (Mizosuchil. 147 Diefen·
dort, 7 p.m. N&lt;:l odmission ch•'l•·

uiJAI RLMS••

.

.

ff (or This Slr•nge Passion), 7:30 p.m., •nd
£v0, 9 p.m. Sy Lecture Holl, Ellicott. No •dmi,..

sion

ch.o.,..

fllMIDISCUSSION·
Sexuol Adjustment for the Person with

Nested

Drainage' B a~im, Richard Jarvis. Rm . 40, •224
Ridge Lea, 3:30 p .m.

PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Thermodynamin and Tran sport Properties
in thr Uquicl State, Or. Henry Eyring, Universi·
ty of Utah . 111 H ochst ett~r, 3:.30 p .m.
ART lfCTURE'
Th C' Ori~ins of Modern Sculpture, Pio neers
and Prem i~ e.-;, Professor Albert Elsen, Stanford
University. 310 Foster, 4 p .m.

Council on the Arts.

NATURAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMAnCS
Dl5nNGUISHED VISITING LECTURE
SERI£51
Th e Del{enerat ive Diseases of Aging, Dr.
He nry Eyring, Universit y o f Utah. 147 DiefendOrf, 8:15 p.m.
FILM'
.Lady Wirh a Dog (1960). 114 Hochstetler,
8:30p.m.
Presented by the Russia n Club.
UUAB FILM"
I.F. Stone\ Weekly. Norton Conference
Th eatrr, ca ll 831-5117 for times. Ad mission
c h a r~e .

NOTICES
I'HOTOGRAI'HY CONTEST
Vi co College is sponsoring a photography
contest open to st ude nts, faculty and staff. The
phot ographs must have somet hing to do with
the Amhe rst campus and should be no larger
than 8 x 10 inches (5 x 7 is recommended).
Photographs should be submitted to Vico
College. Box 6, Ellicoll Complex, by April 18.

:~~~~sa:,f~ ~~;p;anr&lt;!J t~ea~~~o;,~;;~:
1

thC' judging in the Ellicott Complex.

PROFESSIONAL ' COUNSELING ·
Professional cou nseling is now available at
HillE"! House. For an appointment, all 8364540.

SUMMER sfssrON RECISTRA TION. HOURS
Thots Office of Admissions and Records will
conduct Summer Session 1975 Registration
be,.;inn ing Monday, April 7. Students currently rC"gist('rC'd at the University fo r the Spring
1975 semester need only complete a. Course
Request Form. New students must complete a
Student Data Form, which will be iiVailable at
,o\dmissions and Records on April 7. April
rC"gistration hours at the Office of Admissions
a nd Records are 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m., April 7-10;
14-17; 21 -24; and 28-30; all other days in April,
the office will be open from 8:.30 a.m._.:30
p .m., with the exception of April 23, when
hours are 8:.30 a.m.-8:30 p .m.
TUITION WAIVRS
Tuition waiver applications for foreign
students for the summer and filii 1975
semesters will be available in 210 Townsend as
of April 1. The deadline for handing in
applications for summer is May 1. The
deadline for handing in fall 1975 applications
is May 1'5. ...
-

V1ETNAM CHARm WEK

I'HARMAcfunCS SEMINAJII
Effect of Pl~s ma Protein Binding. on
Distribution and Eliminarion of Warfarin in
Rats, Avraham Yacobi, Ph .D. candidate,
Department of Pharmaceutics. 0 -170 Bell
Faci lity. 4 p.m.

The Vietn.l"'!"" Club ol Buffalo is spon·
soring ill charity week to collect money for
Vietnamese refugees. Collection SUinds will
be set up in Nonon Union April11 · 20. Checks
may be sent or more information obtained at
Newman Center, 15 Univenfty Ave. (834..

CONllNUING MIDICAL EDUCATION
CAR!JIAC CUNIQ
This sef"ies of clinics in physical education of
the cardiac patient and arrhythmia workshops
are scheduled each ThuMay evening through
May 8. The topic of tonight's dink is "'uscu~-.
tion - Systolic ReRurgiranr Murmurs. Farber
(Capen) H•ll Basemenl, Room G-22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. For information or registration, call the
School ol Medicine, 831 -SS216..
.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.
AliT l.fCI\JIIfO
Rodin as Spolcesman of the Unspeabble:,
D•. Albert Elsen, Depan:men1 of An:; Stanford
University. Auditorium, Albright-KnoxC.IIery, 8 p.m.
The lec:tu•• Is C&lt;Hp&lt;&gt;nsored by the U/8 A•t
Depan:ment.

2297).

THEATRE PRF0aMANCP
Old Tlmert' S..U.I S)'mflhony l•nd other
_.., is • , _ -* wriaen and directed b{
Morton r..1ct11er. Courtyord ~' Hoyt an~
Lof•yette, 8 p.m. lho-oush April 1!1. ·
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Rese••ch with •ld from the New York Stale

INTERVIEWS
ON&lt;AMPUSINliiiVIEWS
The st•ff ol the UnlveBity Pl•cement •nd '
Career Guidance Office welcomes all students
,in the University community •nd alumni to
take part in various career ~ms offered
this year. The on-campus Interviewing
progr~;m, running through April 25, offers the
opponunity fo• lndlvidWII lnlervlews with
educat ion , bus i ness, industrial and
governmental represenhltives. candkbtes
from •II des•ee te.els, whet completed their
course work in January or expect to in Maly
1975, are invited to take part In the lntervlewins. Regis"•tion forms are ovallable In
....,,... Annex C, Rm. 6. The following qendes
will be lnle&lt;vlewing this -.!&lt;:
'
TUESDA.Y-15: Erie County Personnel
Depl.; Boy Scouts of America.
WEDNESDAY-16:-Aetno Ufe and C.SU•Ity
l.nsuranc:e Co.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Sherldon T,.vel
Bu•eou (April10 and 11).

�1\pri/10, 1975

,..,.

Hydraulics, Or. Sewell C. Rose, consulting
engineer, Nuclear Reactor Sitfety, Combustion Enginet::ring, Inc. 10:4 Parker, 4 p.m,
(cOffee at 3:30 in 107 Parker) .
Sponsored by the Departments of Engi neering Science, Aerospace Engineering and
Nuclear Engineering.

THURSDAY-10
DEI'ARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS
SIMINARf
Bilirubin Met-abolism, Dr. Michael I. Cohen.

Second rloor board room, Childre n's Hospita l,
12 noon.

INTERNAnONAL PUB"

NATIVE AMERICAN WEEK* .
Programs for Narive American Inmates in
Auburn and Attica Correctional Facilities will

Entertainment from th e West Indies - The
Steel Band. Refreshments prpvided. Everyone
welcome. 233 Norton, 4:30p.m.
.

he disrussed by speakers from the Onondaga
Nation. 339 Norton, 1-3 p.m. No admission
marge.
.
.
Presented by the Native American Cultural
Awareness Organizat ion (NACAO) an d
Minority Student Association.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Purge, ci lled "a trail-blazing theatre event

of the future.'' is presented. American
Contemporary Theatre, 1695 Elmwood Ave., 7
and 9 p.m. Admission charge.
BROADCAST-•
Palestinian Vie\vpoinl on the Arab-Israeli
Conflic1. Edward Said, professor of American

PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUMf
Omega Squared and How Big is a Variable,
Dr . Edwin C. Susski nd , visiting lect ure r,

Literature, Columbia University. WBFO-FM
C88.71. 8 p.m.

Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Rm. C-34, 4230
Ridge lea, 3 p.m.
~

CAC FILM••
Kin~: of Hearrs. 140 Farbe r (Capen). 8 and 10

GEOGRAPHY COLLOQUIUM#
The Copenha~~ n Regional Plan, Dr. B.

p.m. Admission : S1 .

Ga rner, professor and chairman, Geography
Dept., UOiversit y of Aarhus, Denma rk. Rm. 40,
4214 Ridi;e lea , 3:30 p .m .

COMMON CAUSE MEETING"

Open Co vernm en·l, COngressman Jack
Kemp. Erie Co'mmunity College - North
Campus (Youngs Rd.l . Gleasne r Hall
Auditorium, 8.p.m.

STATISTICAL SCIENCE COLLOQUIUMJ
Abstract Wien e r Spaces, Professor . 0.
Kplzow, Erla ngen University . Rm. 36, 4246

CONCERT-

Rid~e lea, 4 p.m. {coffee at 3:30 in the Commons Room).
-

Paul Orte~d , a native American singerguitarist from New Mexico, presents a concert. Haas Loun ge, Norton Union, 8 p.m. No
admission charge.
Presented by NACAO and Mi nority St udent

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Beta-Lactamese Inactivation of Penicillins,

Dr . John Poole, Exploratory Pharmacy Section,
Wyeth l aboratories, Philadelphia. 244 Cary
Hall (Health Sciences), 4 p.m.

~ssocia t ion .

DANCE PERFORMANCE•
.
Th e Zodiaque Company, directed by Linda

CEU AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND
CHEMISTRY OF BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
LECTURE SERIESf
.
Structure and M echanism of J\ction o(
Ste roid Hormone Rece ptor, D r. Bert

Swiniuch, performs. Harriman Theatre Studio,
through April 12, 8 p.m. Admission charge.
Presented ~y the Department of Thea tre.
HIUEL HOUSE•

O 'Malle" . professor ~nd chairma n, Department of Molecu lar Biology, Vanderbilt
University. 134 Cary (Health Sciences}, 4:15
p.m. (re freshments will be served at 4 p.m .).

8.:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of English Intramural Poetr Series.
UUAI FILM ..
M&lt;Jr&lt;Jt ~de (Brook). Norton Conference
Thea tre, call &amp;31-5117 for times. Admissio'1
charge.

PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
Th e Possible New Forms of Marter at High

Density. Dr. T. D. lee, Columbia University.
' 111 Hochstetler, 4:30 p .m.
CONTINUING MWICAL EDUCAnoN
CARDIAC CUNICN

Th is series' of clinics in physical education of
the cardiac patient and arrhythmia workshops
are scheduled each Thursday evening through
May 8. The topic of tonight 's clinic is Auscult~­
tio.n - ftle Aortic Stenosis Murmur. Farber
(Capen) Hall Basement, Room G-22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. For 1nformation or registration, call the
School of Medicine, 63i-5526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine .

FRIDAY-11
CONTINUING DENTAL IDUCAnON
SEMINAII
Oral Surgery and Exodontia in General
Practice, Dr. Robert 8. Shira, Tufts University;

presidf"nt-elect of the American Dental
Association . 148 Farber (Capen), 9 a.m.-4:30
p.m. Fee : $150. For more informatio n, contact
the School _of Dentistry, 631-2836.

LAnN AMOICAN CONFERINCE•
The documentary Cuba - Th e People will

SCHOOl OF NURSING
CONTINUING EDUCAnoN PROGRAMI
Management Of Common Problems for
Practicinfi{ Pediatric and Family Nurse Prac-

be shown with introduction and commentary
by Jon Alpert, producer. 111 Hochstetter, 6
p.m.
uaVIUZATION" FILM SERIES•
Episode ten of Sir Kenneth Clark,'s film
series is entided "The Smile of Reason." The
discussion following wi ll be led by Larry
Schneider"of the History Dept. Sy Lecture Hall,
Ellicott, 6 p.m.
Sponsored by Vico College and College B.
DANCE PEilfOitMANCP
The Zodiaque Company, d irected by linda
Swiniuch, performs. Harriman Theatre Studio,
through April 12, 8 p.m. Admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Theatre.
NATIVE AMERICAN WE£1(•
Eagle Bay Evidions. ·231 Norton, 8 p.m. No
admksion chiirge.
PreSented by NACAO and Minority Student
Assodation.
·
1HfA111f PEitfORMANCP
Bride of Shalcespelre He&lt;Jven features
scenes from modem life with dialog~e by
Shakespeare, directed by Cordon R~goff.
Courtprd Theatre, Hoyt~ lafayette, 8 p.m. .
·: ' . .Admission charge.
. •
· .. Present~ by the Center for Theatre

~ .·

tif,onf'r.&lt; is the title of this two-day program to
lx&gt; held at the Cordon Bleu Restaurant. For
morf"1 information, contact Joan Collins, 631 5548.

LATIN AMERICAN CONFHENCE•

Today's events include:

Workshop : Ecology and Urbanization in
Latin America _ 234 Norto n, 9-11 a.m.
Speaker: Landlords and Capitalists: A Case
Study of the Struaure of the Dominant CI&lt;Jss
in Chile. Maurice Zeitlin, University of
·. Wisconsin. 233 Norton, 1:30 p.m.
Symposium: Symposium on Contemporary
PPru - 231 Norton, 2:3o-S p.m.
SymP-OSium 1\ddress; Hls Excellency Dr.
· Javier· Perez Cuelta, Peruvian }.mbassador to
the U.N.O . - 147 Diefendorf, "a p.m.
;
DEPA.rMENT Of PBJIATIICS ~NA.a;
L&lt;Jbor&lt;Jlory Aids for lhe ClinidJn in
Ev&lt;Jiuatlng L.iver DiSNse, Michael I. Cohen,·
M.D., viilting professor. Kinch Auditorium,
Children's HospitaT,' 10 a.m.

,·.f .. •J=:!.,.~ ·-~~
-

~SOtOOI.

---·-·· ··-,.,.., --...--

~;:~..;.;;;- -~ Uniwnlty Strinp conductecl by Parnell
· -,;.- ·~ · oe.m.rt •nclthe Unlwnlty Chorus di&lt;ected •
: .- -..,-Simons ·~ concert.BoinUtedtol
-;,Hoi, I p.m. No oclmisslon chortle.
tal&amp; HOUIP
.
Elecdon of olflcen will be held. 40 c_.
-...t., I p.111.

;_·
...

· ···
:·

•

~wa-y In~

StM-. ,....., Claude Welch, Poljticol
Scllnc:e o.--. Red.lodtet

Quod.""'s. s,o.-.d
...,•.,,uloorlounp.
Elleaa,a p.m.
by the 1-tional LM111

__ ___..
. CaitW.

..

·

·

•.

"cr:~r~~~::~~0~r~~{~-~~~-~~ Argentine

--

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

.

~"VISITOitS fOilUM•
u.s. Senotor l•mes l. lluddey wiU speok on

seleaed current ~ fxlns the Ntion.
eoun IIDMI, John Lord O'Brion H.JII,
An1hent Compus. 11:15 a.m. •
leo.IIIONS .. le.-ouJGY

__,

.

.

,_,..,..Dr
......
psychOioe,·~l-.........-.

SpedollutJon and lnten.t:tlon o1 Cete1n1
Milner, proiOMcJrol

. McGI ~· W
Te~...

sa.- ~ ~

d

IDUCAnO~t#

PSYCHOLOGY

WORIISHOPt
P&lt;Jth Analysis : Theory, . Appliarion &lt;Jnd
Educational Research, and Critique. Lee T.

Bryant, SUC at Geneseo, and Bruce J. Fr.ncis, U/ 8 Dept. of Higher Education. The
moderator is leon J. Gross, Dept. of
Educational Psychology. 334 Norton, 1-4 p.m.
Sponsored by tlle Department of
Educatio nal Psycho logy Graduate Student
Associat ion.
DEPARTMENT OF OPERAnONS ~NALYSIS
SEMINARJ
Ccsntrol M ethods in Macroeconomic Policy
Analysi.&lt;. Professor Gregory Chow, DepartmE-nt of Economics, Princeton University. 104

Diefendorf, 1:30-3 p.m.

-

MARKfllNG IN SOCIETY OF TODAY
MEETING••
The Markeiing Aspects of Introducing a
NE-w Produa, John R. Hampton, product
~roup coordinator, Fisher-Price Toys. 307
Crosby, 2 p.m.

MIDIC!NAL CHEMISTRY SEMINARI

Des ign, Synthesis and Evaluation of
Dopamine Agonists Related to Apomorphine,
Professor Joh n l. Neumeyer, Department of
Medicina l Chemi stry and Pharmacology,
Northeastern University. 245 Carj (Heahh
ScienceU, 2 p.m.
NAnVE AMERICAN WHK•
Film : As1Long as the River Runs. 339 Norton,
2-S p.m. No admission charge.
'
Prf'Sented by the NACAO and Minority
Student Association.
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES uCluaq
fnRiand and the M&lt;Jtter of Araby, Dorothee
Metlitzki , professor of English, Yale University. 330 Norton, 3 p.m.
"'Sponsored by the Department of English
and the Committee on Middle Eastern Studies
of the Coundl on ln~ernittionitl studies:
lfCTUIE•
Der Zw&lt;Jng zUr f?9lilik7 Georg ICiis« •nd
Stef&lt;Jn tferrnlin im Exil. Zwei exempUrische
Moglk:hlceiten (in Gennan), Professor ManfredDruN udk,!kndion•~_nlversity.337Nonon,3
p.m. o a m s.on c•..-rse.
~resented ~y t~e Germ•n Grodu•te
Associotion Club of the Deportment of Germonk •nd Sloyic. ··

-G-- .

5TA1ISTICAI. SCIINCI COUOQUIUMf
.
A Slrotllf lmmionce l'rindple In l'roboblllty

•nd SIOfistks, Prof._ 1'. Reoel. Hunpriln
Mothemotks 1 -.. Rm. A-41, 4ZJO Ridp
La, 3:30 ....... ~ 113 p.m.). .

I'WR-Itowdown Heor Tronsfer ond

'
.
,_. . ~CIMIIIIcl..._q.IM.ftL 2221, II,,.,....__ .

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

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._...._.,~

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,.,.. __ .,.._,-'tyCiab, ···· --------------------,.---~

Hille l is sponsoring its fir st Oneg Shabbat on
the Amherst Campus. Jack Bu chbinder will
lead a discussion on " Jewish legends," recite
a Kidd.ush and le ad co mmun ity si nging.
Ellicott Complex. Red lacket lounge, 8 p.m.
Kabbalat Shabbat Service. 40 Capen Blvd., 8
p.m.

MF~ Ric;iTAL•

Yio{infst ~boriih t:;r-eitzer peHohTK Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. N_o admissio n charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•

Bride of Shakesp eare Heaven features
sce nes from modern life with dialogue by
Shakespeare, directed by Gordon Rogoff.
Courfyarp Theatre, Hoyt and La fayet te, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
Presen ted by the Cente r for Theatre
Research.
IRC ALM•
King Kong. Goodyear Cafe teria, 9 p.m. free

to . IRC fee-payers; admission charge for
others.
BROADCAST•
A m erican Indians, Great Myth-Story
Material, Protest and Romance. WBFO-FM
(88.7), 10 p.m .
UUAB ALM••

Maral Sade (Brook) . · Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-511 7 for times. Admission
charge .

SATURDAY-1;1 ·
'EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOlOGY
----=:::::__./
WORKSIIOPf
.
Path An&lt;Jiysis: Theory, Application and
fducottional Research,,..Jnd Cr-irique, second
day of a two-day workshOp. Today's topic is
~"Path Analysis Pro and Con : HoW Should It be

Used in Educational Research," taught· by
Charlone Swanson Otterbein, Jeremy .D. Finn,
Paul R. Lohnes and Robert C. Nichols.
Moder.oted by Barbor• SUliSSberJ Rosenberg
1•11 from the Deportment of Eduqtionol
Psychology). 334 Nonon, 9:30 •.m.-12:30 p.rri.
Sponsored by the Department of
Educationol Psychology Groduote Student
Assodittion.
~
SCHOOl Of NUII5ING
CONTINUINCi EDUCA-fiiOGaAMI
MMOsement of Common Problems for
Proccidng l'ed~ric •ncl fom/ly Nurse l'rocticionen k the !Ide of this CWCM!ar- to '
be held ot the Cordon lieu R - (this k
the flnol cloy). For more lnlormotlon( contoct '
loon COllins, 131·5541.
·
lAliN ~ CXJNRaN(P.
Workshop : PfuricUiturallim .In 'Latin .
•nd the u.s.
ol
Culturol l'roblems ol llllnsuallsm ond
. lillnauof-8kUiturol ~ ZJ1 Norton, 9
a.m.-12:30 p.m.
'
tai&amp;IIOUIP
. . Shobbat - · 40 c_. llwd., ,. a.m.

Includes....._

~

Uil ....

.

~ ol .......... tiGary

........ _7.mt.1):·

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO · •
VOL 6, NO. 25
APRIL 3, 1975

Budget cut

meaos loss
of 44 lines·

The U/8 administration took at1ion
this week to outline the provisions of the
Taylor Law applicable to strike activity
50 that employees may protect
themselves aRainst. actions which would
inadvertently place them in violation of
the law."
According to the statement, 11 th e
Taylor Law prohibits strikes, which makes
it unlawful lor any public employee or
employee orgt~niZiltion to engage in or
cause, instis;1te, encourage, or condone
a st.rike. No one acting lor a public
employer may legally condene or excuse
participation In ~ strlk..__
" ditio...,lly, employee\ are caulianed that any M&gt;oenoe from work du~
strike will be Pftii!IM'I "' lie ..........

lion in •strike. The Taylor Law states:' ...
an employee who Is absent from wool
widitut PftMisskm, or who abstains
wholly or in part from the full perfor·
mance of his duties in his normal manner
without permis~ion, pn the date or dates
when a strike occurs, shall be presumed
to have engaged in such strike on such
date or dates."
Among actions which have been rul·
ed participation in a strike, the statement
lists:
• calling in sick because · of alleged
personal or famiiT, illness;
• refusal or fai ure to repon to work
because of a picket line, alleged car trouble or other transportation difficulties or
other difficulties;

11

The Legislature's $742,500 reduction in
U/B's opetatlrlg budget for fiscal 1975-76
(from the. $81 .674 million requested by
Governor. Carey) means a reduction of
some 44 f.t.e. positions from total
employment levelsJ'rojected in the Executive Budget an the elimination of
approximately $200,000 in other than
personal services funds, University officials said this week.
The cuts amount to an average reduction of one per cent University-wide,
Charles M. Fogel, assistant executive vice·
president, told the Repcwt..,- Monday.
However, some are.as are being asked to
absorb somewhat more of a cut while
others will suffer less than a one per cent
redudio n.
In passing the reduced budget, Fogel
said, the l egislature specifically mandaled elimination of three instructional
• effort to use accumulated leave to
lines and two lines in educattonal com·
avoid coming to work during the strike;
muni ca tions, all five of which were in• refusal or failure to report to work in
cluded as new positions in the Executive
response to written or oral instructions
Budget. The lawmakers delineated
to so report.
general areas for the remainder of the
·"In case of violation," the statement
cuts, but left the local administration
ind icated, "the State (as the Employer) is .
some flexibility in making final deterrequired by law to impose the following
minations on where funds might lte
penalties: (1) Probation lor a period of
eli minated with the least possible
one year following the determination of
damage to University operations.
a violation~ during which time the
employee must serve without tenure, (2)
Since more than 80 per cent of the U/8
Deduction from the employee's salary of
budget goes for salaries, however, posian amount equal to twice the daily rate
tion cuts had tO account for the largest
of pay for every day or part thereof dur·
portion of Jhe decrease, FQgel said.
ing which he was in_violation. ln addi·
· More than two dozen i11!1t'ructional
tion, an employee is subject to diSlines will be affected by. the Legislative
dpli nary action."
cuts, with the remaining job tosses com·
ing in temporary services, NTP, and civil
service areas.
To the extent possible~ Fogel said, lines
being eliminated will be new lines
• Begin a uwork·to--rule" job action if
and those In which vacandes presently
the governor and the legislature do not
accept . the fact·finders' recommen· _ or will soon exist (so-called turnover
lines).
dations. Under this procedure ,
Where a presently-filled line is to be
employees would dQ only work explicitly
cut, he said, every effon will be made tQ
required in their job titles.
·
move
the incumbent into a.n available
• Go out on strike if no wage settle·
opening and to do it soon. "We hope to
ment is reached within two weeks of 't he
rriinimize th~ psychiC shock involved,"
beginning of the job action.
Fogel said. Despite this, Fogel emphasizLoaol Majority Would Strite
ed, the possibility remains that a few inThe campus CSEA meeting induded a
dividuals may, unfortunately, have to be
briefing on these developments in
terminated.
Albany and· led t'! passage of two
Governor Carey's original budget reresolutions.
..

Local CSEA takes 3 strike-related stands
The U/11 Chapter of the Ovil SeMce
Employees Association (CSEA) .,.ted
Monday night to support job actions
leading up to a strike, to ~tablish
"vocal" picket lines in the event of a
strike, and to demand complete amnesty
befat:e ending any strike which might occur. It took no official stand on a strike,
however.
These actiOns, approved by an
overflow turnout of between JOO...«&lt;I
campus employees in 114 Hochstetter,
followed rejection of an immediate
strike by CSEA delegates in Albany
earlier on Monday (a rejection which, incidentally; apparently came too late for
the "Red Head" edition of the Albany
~er News which hit the street
late Monday afternoon with a 72-point
banner reading, "CSEA STRIKES STAT£.'1
At one point In the Albany meeting,
~ delegates seemed to approve a
strike to begin at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday. Or
so Slate CSEA President Theodore Wenzl
ruled as he abruptly recessed the
delegate meeting after a \lJmultuous hall
hour.
Aa:ordlng to the «nid:erfloder News,
- . a l members of the union protested
the -'ng procedure. Ann Urvan, an
employee of the Commerce Depart·
ment, took the stage as union officials '
left the meettns by a side door and
shouted: "Our own union leaders have
railroaded us into a strike."
·
A chain then brok10 out among the
union delegates still seated after the
hurried ending of the meeting. "Roll call
vote, roA aall vote," they shouted . .

.._..leca

from $1,350 to $3,100 per worker), in·
creased health benefits, easing of dis·
ciplinary procedures against State
.workers, and creation of an agency shop ·
(which would for~ non~u nion civil ser·
vice workers to make !ntributior\s to
CSEA in lieu of dues).
CSEA wi
ke the fol wing steps in
the next fe
weeks, i&amp;&amp; delegates
decided:
• Initiate coun action asking the State
to show cause why seniority-based saiary
increments, eliminated In the 1975-76
State budget, should not be continued.
• Proceed to fact-finding.

•e•

The ....,_.. meeting, calle!l "one of
the ~ dllnp r..e ewer seen" by one
of the U/8 clelegato:s, was later
four ' - s al

-llel- . . . . .

_....., .......a.e .........

prowecl

I

plan to Slrlle

anJr If "fKK·

IO...,....•....,_,....,_with
....... and I

-

~-to-rule" IIC:IIon fall

•

StMe. At lllue In~....,......_

clenwlds for ....,

~

er.tPtl

I

: ttum ro ,..e S. col. 4)

�April 3, 1975

:!

SChwariZ-\vill resign
law head after

as

Or. Richard D. Schwartz, dean and
pro.v ost of the Faculty of law and.
Jurisprudence since 1971, has announced
that he will leave that post when his

current appointment expires, at the end
of the 197S-76 academic year.
Dr. Schwartz announced his decision
March·26 in leiters to President Roben l.
Ketter and to the faculty of the law
School. Dr. Ketter said that he is accepting the depsion "with reluctance" and
praised Dr. Schwartz as a "most able and
effective advocate on behalf of the faculty and students in your professional
area." Dr. Ketter thanked him for "the
advance notification" of the decision
because it "allows the University ample
time to conduct a deliberate and
thorough search" for a new dean.
The four years in which Dr. Schwartz
has served as dean have seen transition
and growth for the law School. In 1973, it
moved from its downtown Buff.ilo loca·
tion, where it had been for its 86 years of
existence, to the Amherst campuS. It was
the first academic unit of the University
to move to the new site. It became the

second law school in the riation where
actual court proceedings take place in
the law school building itself. The Founh
Appellate Division of the State of New
York agreed to hold its hearings in the
new building's Alden Courtroom when
the cases are of educational value.
Dr. Schwartz g4ided the school
through a dramatic growth in student
enrollment, from 600 students to its an·
tidpated capacity of 800 expected this
fall . The faculty grew by 25 per cent during tfle same period.
In 1973, the American Bar Association
Council of le:gal Education reaccredited
the law School, saying that it has "one of
the most promising futures of any law •
school in the United States."
Dr. Schwartz initiated several new
programs in 'Clinical legal training and iri·
t~isciplinary methods of investigating
legal problems. One teaching approach,
simulated law firms, is attracting national
attention. Dr. Schwartz-describes this as a
means Of relating classroom studies of
law with the world of law practice. Under
his deanship, a law and Education
Center, a Program. for Training lawyers
as Criminal Justice Specialists and par·
ticipation in the U.S. Government's Sea
Grant Program, were all undertaken.
Dr. Schwanz became the first nonattorney law dean in the United States
when he assumed his U/8 post in 1971 .
He had· served on the faculty of the law
School and Depanment of Sociology at
Nonhwestern University from 1961 to
1971 "and had held similar positions at
Yale from 1954 to 1961. He holds undergraduate and doctoral degrees from
Yale.
Schwartz, who will remain at U/B in a
teachlng capacity, expressed appreciation to President Ketter for his "contributions to the success of the law
. School during this period.".
· The dean paid special tribute to "the .
interest and lmqination of the law faculty. I am glad to be able to say that my
faculty has devoted Itself vigorously and
~tratedly to the strengthening and
development of the School. It ·has
willingly spent the hours of preparation
~each demanding law dass.
Its
have pursued their diverse
research.lntensts, producing - In many
Instances - outstandlnJI scholarly. contributions. And the faculty has organized
Itself as ·an entity, to develop sound
educational policies, and to project a
long-range plan which prOIDises i:ontlnulng prosress....
"In all these activities," Schwartz said,
"the law faculty has benefitted greootly
from the talent and cooperation of Its
SIUdents. The qualify of our Sft!Cients, as
Individuals. has readied a ~ which
surprises and sratlfles IHcherS and pnctltlonen . who won. with them. h Is
hearteningiO find, In the bllr and bench,
so pervasive 1111 affirmation of the ability
of our students and recent pacluates. In
~ I ail report with peat Mlisfactlon that our IIUdents have t!ICel1ed a
positive and vtt.l force In the ctewlopment of the prosram of the law School.

They have played an imponant and appropriate part in propostng policies, for
faculty consideration, on inatters of
academic program , budget , · ap·
pointments, admissions, placement, and
faculty·student relations. They have con·
sistently contributed, from their perspec·
tiv-:, to the evaluation of our teachers.
The y have played a major pan in the
creation of the program of simulated law
firms. Their self-directed work on law
review, moot court, and the Buffalo
legislation project have contributed sub·
stantially to the educational program of
the School. In short, their enthusiasm
and creativity have been felt throughout
the School."
Staff were lauded too. " Over the
years," the dean said, "the law School
has benefitted from the support of an
outstanding staff. I know you are •)Yare
of how important a good professional
and secretarial staff can be. Through
good fonune, the Law School is· blessed
with one of the finest groups of such staff
people as I have ever known. In fact, I
have never even heard of a support staff
i!S able and dedicated as ours. TJ&gt;ey are a
hidden resource whose real value to the
School is incalculable:"
Schwartz said he is " an enthusiast
about the· present position and longrange prospects of the · law School.
Please be assured," he told the President,
" that I will do whatever I can do to cQn·
tribute toward its future."
Ei_nding a new dean for the School will
take at least a year, President Ketter said.
A search committee will be assembled
this spring and will include faculty, a student and one or two CommunTty
representatives.
·

Cowper ·talk, foOd pa~el
to honor Dr. Ewell's work
Dr. Douglas Ensminger, Ford Foundation representative to India, Pakistan and
Nepal for 19 ·years, will present the
University's 1975 Cowper lecture on
Monday, April 14.
Dr. Ensminger's 8 p.m. address, "Social
and Cultural Constraints to World Food
Production," will conclude a day·long
tribute to Dr. Raymond Ewell, professor
emeritus of chemical engineering and a
leading world figure on the subject of
food production.
Devoted to the theme of "Feeding a
Hungry World.'' the day will begin with a
12:00 noon testimonial luncheon for Dr.
Ewell in the Richmond Room of the
Joseph P. Ellicott Complex.
From 2-S p.m. a special world food
symposium, also honoring Dr. Ewell, will
be held in Room 106 of John lord
O'Brian Hall.
Speakers and their topics will include:
Dr. Ralph W. Cummings, Jr., agricultural
economist, The Rockefeller Foundation,
who will discuss " Prospects for Meeting
World Food Needs" at 2 p.m.; Thomas A.
Blue, manager of agricultural chemicals
in the Economics Division, Stanford
Research Institute, discussing
!'Chemicals and Agricultural Produc·
tion" atl_p.m.; and Dr. Ewell, who will
project "World Food Production up to
the Year 2000" at 4 p.m.
Dr. Ensminger's Cowper lecture,
made possible through a grant from the
j . W. Cowper Construction . Co"mpany
Inc. of Tonawanda, will be held in the
Alden Courtroom, also in O ' Brian Hall.
Dr. Ensminger -is currently professor of
rural sociology at the University of
Missouri and president of the Mid·
Missouri Associated Colleges and
Universities.
·
A native of Stover, Missouri, he receiv·
ed his B.S. an&lt;l M.'.-. .degrees from the
University of MiS'Sburi and his Ph.D. from
Cornell. He also holds honorary doctorates from the University of Missouri,
Berea College and Govind Ballabh Pant
Universit Y Of Agiicuhure and
Technology (India).
From 1951·70, Dr. Ensminger was the
Ford Foundation Representative for In·
dia, Pakistan and Nepal and .in 1972 he
was co-chairman of the Bangia Desh
Emergency Relief Fund.
Dr. Cummings, a native of Ithaca,
received hi.s A.B. from the University of
Nonh Carolina and his Ph.D. from the
University of Michigan. From 1966 to
1972, he served in a variety of consultantadvisor roles for the United States Agency for International Development working with India, South Asia, and In·
donesia.
Mr. Blue, a specialist in chemical
marketing
rese:irch
and
technoeconomic analysis of fertilizers,

A&amp;R setS fall pre-registration;
Sept. 2 will be next sign-up day
The Office of Admissions and Records · missions and Records to uPdate their
will conduct Fall 197S negistratlon from · ' forms and receive registration materials.
April 24 through May 16 fo~ all un_ All advance registration must be done
dergraduate and graduate students, with
in person; there will be no mail rqistra·
1
the exception of Millard Fillmore
tion.
College enrollees.
_
DUE and graduate students who parMFC students will be able to advance
ticipate in the early neglstratlon will
·negister July 7-July 25.
· receive dass schedule cards by mail in
Under new University registration
early August and will have the opporprocedures (Jrepcllfer, March 6), untunity to Iron out schedule difficulties
dergraduate and graduate day students
and drop anC:I add dasses before the Fall
who do not panldpate In the April-May
Semester begins.
r!!Bistratlon program will be able to make
The same opponunlty will be extendno class schedule arrangements for Fall
ed to MFC students who register
until September 2.
·
between July 7· and July 25. MFC
The advance neglstratlon, Admissions,
registrants will update data forms and
and Records Indicates, will Involve upreceive· registration materials in the A&amp;R
dating of Student Dota Forms and the filloffices during that period.
_
Ing out of class request forms. The Fall
During the advance neglstratlon period
1975 Class Schedule_ will be available as
for day students, A&amp;R will be open from
part of the registration packer. All
1:30 a.m. to 7 p.m., Mondays through
materials must be returned by May 1~:
lhundays, and from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. on Frlday,s.
,
Dlvlsliiil of UnclerJreduate EduCation
students will follow a schedule to be anEarly neglstratlon, A&amp;R emphasizes,
nounced by DUE 10 lipdate their data _ offers a student a belter chance of obforms and iea!lve rePbatlon materials.
taining the fall schedule of his or her
These students will complete the ( choice and also allows the privilege of
ieglstntlon procea In DUL
making necessary changes and adGn~duate students will gQ to Ad' jiiSiments prior to· the September rush.

-

pesticides and animal feed products, has
spent 1S years at the Stanford Research
Institute. He is a graduate of the Univer·
sity of Arizona.
Dr. Ralph R. Rumer, Jr., chairman of
the Cowper lecture Committee and
professor of civil engineering here, says
that the "Feeding a Hungry World" symposium Involves four of the world's
leading experts on food production.

"Both the afternoon symposium and
evening ledure are open to the public at
no charge and will provide a non·
technical look at a most serious world
problem," he indicates.- ·
A spedal invitation is being extended
to all Western New York residents and
students, he says,"fto take 'pan in-paying
.1 tribute to Dr. Ewell while learning first
hand the seriousnf!Ss and Complexity of
problems confronting ·several starving
countries."

Drug information
service wi·ns praise
1
'Thank you for your kind, prompt, and
thorough service.".
•
That is just one of many favorable
comments that have been received over
the past three years by the School of
Pharmacy's Drug Information Service,
(DIS), the c;urrent rtYrrnacy Newslefte&lt;
reports.
This particular comment c~me from a
h&lt;&gt;spital pharmacist in the New York City
area, wl:tO wrote a letter enthusiastically
praising the Service for ~s help to the
hospital staff in treating a patient recent·
ly.,
•
The patient was a seven-year-old boy
who had seriously injured his knee in a
fall . When he was admitted to the
hospital, his wound was excised and
cleaned.
.
A few days later, however, the boy's
knee swelled up and he developed a
fever. The hospital performed an ojien
anhrotomy and discovered a candida
stellatoidea Infection ol the knee that
was.resistant to penicillin and Kellin. So
the boy was placed on tetracycline
therapy, the next Clrug Of choice, aft!) his
wound was Irrigated with a tetracycline
and saline solution.
It was at this point that-1ile hospital
pharmacist phoned the U/8 Drus Information Service to seek advice on the
most desirable antibiotic solution to 11se
for irrigating the wound. The Service
sugg~ted the use of an amphoterlci~-B
so~~
.
.
.
This advice was folloWed aftll, a few
days later, after a. month ln"the ~al,
the child was well ef'OUsf!. 10
Sl!nt
home.
•
: . . In the hospital pha~s lettef, ille
information provided-by the Buffalo-DIS
was characterized as "very IJIOIIIIIl; mm- ·
plete, and 'ppreclated by the pharmacy
staff and physicians."
The UAI Qrus Information Servlce-ls
acnsslble througllout New York State
via a t6U.fnee telephone.WATS Hne.
·

·.,e

�April 3, 1975

j

Bids: fo.r .

Saleh proposes
disbanding of
0/B Assembly

r~~ar~h:· li~_rary.
'under .~udget~
. A substantial number of below budget
b1ds have been received for construction
work on the Research Library 10 be built
on the Amherst Campus, the University
libraries reported "in an "extra" edition
of their Ubr~ry /lleW$ this week.
The final contract award will be made
in 45 days, the publication said, with construction beginning shortly after.
There had heen fears, according to the
Libraries' report, that escalating construction costs might force the project over

budget and cause the elimination of
some amenities and design features.
Now, however, 11 it seems assured that
the Library will be ·built exactly as
designed," the report said.
The Resea rch library, which has ~en
referred to as the " Joint library" in
earlier discus_sions because o f-t he variety
of collections il will house, will be
roughly equ!valent iii subjed areas to the
present lockwood library, the report indicated. It will contain materials ·in the
social sciences, education, and arts and
letters. The art library will occupy a
separale floor and will be integrated with
the art slide library, presently located
with the art history faculty in Foster Hall.
The structure will also house the
libraries' Central Technical Services as
well as the Government Documents and
Microforms Department.
There will be over 2,000 reader stations
in a variety of areas and styles, including
open and dose:.d carrels, tables,.. lounge
seating, seminar rooms, and group study
areas. This is approxint.nely four , times
the present seat capacity of Lockwood.
According to the libraries' report, the
buildinB it~lf/ 1will be quite unique ,and
.perhaps .one of thl' most architecturally
interesting of all those in the academic '
spine area at Amherst. It is a five-story,
brick-faced structure, rectangular · in
shape with a hollow vertical core at it.s
center." The core will contain an outdoor courtyard, with grass and seating
spaces. The walls ~cil18 tiM!. ;nner, core
will be enclosed in reflective"' glass,
"providing pleasing views and ilatural
light to those inside the Library while still
maintaining privacy," the a1ticle by John
Vasi of the Libraries' staff indicates. ·
Among other special features of the
Research Libra.ry will be a large staff
lounge and kitchenette, an exterior garden court, and a " friends of the LibrarY"
room with wood-burning fireplace ..
The Research Libr~ will be built
between Christopher Baldy Hall (education and philosophy! and Samuel
Clemens Hall (English and · modern·
languages).

Young people's
film Show slated
Film and 1-se-makers of elementary
~nd secondary school age will have an
opponunity to show their work In 1 noncompetitive atmosphere at U/11 on Satur- '
day, May 3. On that date, the Center for
Media Study will be hosting the 1975
N- ·vorl&lt; Stat!! Film/Media Show and
. Workshops for the Western Region at
the Ellicott Complex In Amherst.
Film (8 and 16 mm), slides, tapes and
videotape are some of the media that can
be subm.ltted. Work completed or in
progress may be ~; the work may
have been' done Independently or with
teadier or school involvement.
The coordinators of the day-long
event ate· ~l!'g appll_c atlons from
worlr.sh!ll! lsders. Tbbse wilh· expenise
lri sjletlfiC llspKis of film arid videO makins are needed to share,thelr ~'!lp~nt

inll "k'noW-hOw."

.

.

Those' hitenisted niay contact one of
tliree area ·cOclrdiMtors for all!lliations:
Paula
u/11 Center ·(or Media
Sludy, 636-2214; Dr. Thomas Jambro,
supetYisor of an, Buffalo l'l.obllt Schools,
..2.-; Donald Bllnb, supervisor of
an, Niagara Falls Schools, :115-7236. ~

Sit-.

..

Rabbit rap·
b:•

· Robert Baron, .a student in the School of Information and library Studies, dressed up ..sa r.abbit Tuesd.Jy for .a
on ••&amp;plorins the Mind of tM Annt..Carde;
. utist,"' one of the feAtures of SILS' Altem~~tiwe Wed Kthities..l.lron, who once
wore ·the suit to d.ss u a colbse of himself, Hnch in th( ·r.abbit .a multi-faceted
symbol-.ol birth, deoth, •nd the opproued (tM bstori\JMy, •ftor •II, ploys •
pbor R&lt;:Oncf
to Santa Oaus, he points olrt}. The artist often .adorns the
wfoohc.ap'' to lei his rnesase across, S.ron s.1)'S by way of w.que expblno~tion of
wh..t the suit Mel to do with the lecture. The "cruies" .are too wflolehe..artedly
accepted by .society tocl.ay, ~¥on feels, so the .annt-prde doesn' t re., exisl
.an~. He would lilc:e to see more spKtKie in ewf!l}'cby life, the suit costs
him $20 a dlly, .1nd he JNS$eC1 out bster fsp durinc his • •· Since, .as he wys,
the .aw•nt...... .artist "'doesn't hue to define everythins," you fisure it out.

r.acne

,News suggests the ·time ·is right
for doubling building budget
In the face of what it termed a
"shocking" Niagara Frontier unemploy-·
ment rate of 14.5 per cent, the Buffalo
frenlng Ne... this week called upon
Albany to double U/ B's capital construction budget for the Stale fiscal year
which began Tuesday.
Noting that a recent bid for a project
came in some S2 million under estimates,
the News suggested thai now is the lirl)e
to get as many buildings underway as
possible. Not only will money be saved,
the News ·pointed out, but people in
desperate· oeed of jobs can be put to
work.
·
II would take only a little extra effort to
get plans and ·specs ready for an additional $35 million in building during
the next 12 mqnths, the paper said.
The News....:lilorial continued:
"These are all needed projects, fully
approved parts of the campus construction plan, on which the architectural
plans and specifications are cOmpleted
in som'e cases and so nearly so in others
that they, could be let for construction
bids during the fiscal year -.h9d.
"They include an athletic field hollse,
civil and mechanical engineering
buildin!l ~nd four other structures ·that
normally ~ld be budgeted for construction a yeu Jater. But we know of no
valid reHOn whatever why the timetable
should not, In a yea~ of such pressing
need tQ expand area ernplonnent opportunities, be speeded up to get these
projects under constructlpn promptly.
"Not only do the community, the State
and the University Mill! eftrythlng to
gain from such -. Speedup, but we can
see no way they coukjlose. The projects
in themselves are~llessential parts of the
~mpus plan; and there Is no time In the

future that they could be built more
cheaply than now. There has never beefl
a time in the Buffalo area's history,
moreover, when the stimulus of a speeded co nstruction schedule was more
needed to provide work- nor when the
bidding climate gave as bright a promise
of saving lilerally millions of dollars to
the State in conslruction costs ... .
·'what is required for an immediate
doubling of U/B's campus construction program in the new fiscal year is approval by_the Stale budget office and approval by the Legislature. We hope that
not only the entire Western New York
legislative delegation but the entire community leadership structure - labor,
businesS and government leaders in particular - will get to work to bring abqut
thO§!! approvals without delay."
·

MASCOT chartered
Marketing in . Society of Today
CMAscon, · the
u/11
collegiate
marketing association, · has been
chartJ:red as a collegiate chapter of the
American Marketing Association, Dr.
Arun J~in, faculty advisor to the group,
~s announced. . _
An initial g~l of MASCOT is to present a series of speakers from the
professional marketfng community. The
first lecture of this kind will be given by
John R. Hampton, prOduct group coordinator for Fisher-Price Toys in East
Aurora, who is responsible for the company's new product marketing. His
speech Is entitled "The Marketing
Aspect&gt; of Introducing a New Product"
and is sdieduled April 11 at 2 p.m. In 307
CnMby.
.
The University community Is I~ to
~nend.
•

The last pretense that a function ing
University Assembly exists on campus
will soon be dropped if current Assembly
Chairman Davic,f J. Saleh has his way.
· Saleh has proposed that the Assembly
be disbanded "unless there is a request
from the membership for a meeting
which satisfies the constit utional requiremenl for such a request." The
Council of Un iversity "Governance
Chairm e n , whiCh replace d the
Assembly's Executive Committee earlier
this yea r, has gone along with Saleh's
proposal.
The Assembly, formed with much fanfare as a sorely-needed · vehicle for
campus-wide go vern ance some two
yea rs ago, has "anaine d a quorum at only
o ne· of its scheduled four meetings over
the intervening period, Saleh indicates.
This lack of interest, he says, " has been
attributed to its failure to find a place in
the University'S governan ce structure."
The apathy "has not only challenged the
effective ness of the Assembly as a
University-wide governance unit, but
has, in addit ion , challe nged the
Assembly's constitutio na l consistency,"
Sale h argues.
The co nstitution requires at least th ree
regular meetings, September through
May of each year, he points out.
Und e r Saleh' s plan, the Assembly
would be re placed by the Council of
Unive rsity Governance Chairmen (the
heads of the functioning constituent
representalive assemblies on campus Facuhy Senate, Professional Staff Senate,
Student Association, etc.). The Council
would : act as an informational forum to
facilitate cross~o mrnunications among
vario us governance chairmen as
re presentatives for their constituencies;
discuss issues ofUniversity-wide ~oncern
and suggest means of cooperatively approaching such issues; act in an advisory capacity in behalf of ill campus
constituen ts in setting up and charging
Unive rsity-wide ·committees; a·nd tOnlin ue d isc.ussions on the form and direction University-wide governance will
take in the future. 10 tjopefully," Saleh
says, "these· discussions ~ ill lead to esta blishing a more effective procedure for
handl ing issues of University-wide concern."
Saleh says he is " sure there is an important place for cooperative Universitywide governance on this campus.
However, it will only be through the interest and involvement of the members
of t~is Univers!ty community that the
concept will grow into what it should
be."
.

Millis will address
Pharmacy graduates
The School of Pharma.cy's 1975 I'Ommencemenl ·exercises (to be held Sunday, May 18, at 10 a.m. In John Lord
O'Brian Hall, on the Amherst Campus!
will featu~e an ~ddress by Dr. John
Millis, a man whose Mme Is likely to
soon become a "household word"
within the profession of pharmacy.
Dr. Millis, whoJ&gt;as served as president
of two universities, is chairmao of the
Study Commission on Pharmacy set up In
1973 by the American. Assodltlon of
Colleaes of Pharmacy to draw up
. guidelines for the future of pMrmaceutical education. Known Informally
as "the Millis Commission," the group Is
expected to make some "startling
recommendations.''
Di. Millis iS also the current president
and director of The National Fut&gt;d for
Medical Education.
More than 60 B.S. in Pharmacy degrees
are expected to be conferred at this
year's commencement.

s:

�April 3, 1975

. .IBid

Inflation .seen closing .gap
in···home &amp; dorm costs
axrors

'

.. _
:-

.

•

.:·-..

""!- '"

-. .

-A riew of .;:tuk, lrody's EIJicott IOWHS.

Davis, Brody cited for
'new bruialisf style
Davis, Brody and Associates, the New
York -based architeciUral firm which

designed the Joseph P. Ellico« Complex,
is slated next month to ·receive the

mo re than ordi nary," a co mplaint many
Ellicot\ residents might echo.

As to labelling the Davis,

Bro~

style,

American Institute of Architects' -

Goldberger says it " can perh3ps be called a varia nt on the 'new brutalist'

Architectural Firm Award, the nation's
highest honor for architectural practice.

masonry style of the nineteen-sixties" a term that captures only one aspect of

According to a recent story in The New
Yotf: limes, the distinctWe Davis, Brody
style, with its square bricks, chamfered o r
bevelled corners and wide -topped
towers, has altered the face of New York
City in recent years, most notably in a
series of publicly-assisted housing projects designed by the firm.
As J1mes' architecture writer Paul
Goldberger reports, Davis, Brody " has
managed in the last seven years tO have
so significant an impact on the cityscape
that its work is now widely imitated. That
is no mean accomplishment in a town in
which high costs and the caution of local
developers have held down most
buildings to a level of ..fe mediocrity.
"Collectively," Goldberger continues,
Davis, Brody's New York projects " have
given the city a new style for high-rise
housinJ."
Goldberger lauds the firm's sensitivity
to integrating its designs into e~isting
'neighborhoods and notes the dramatic
visual impact the completed buildings
have: when seen from afar, a Davis,
Brody project becomes ''a gleaming
brown version of the city's jagged

skyline."
On the minus side, as Goldberger
observes, the Jiving units Inside at least
one New York CIIY complex are "no

"'"""'"'--perput,lafied
och J'hursdly by the Division ol
Un~

Rel.liom; StMe Unlvetilty ol New York at
luff•lo• .JOS M•ln St.. Bufl•lo. N.Y. Jfl1f.
EditorUI offiCeS~ loafed In room 1JJ, 2SO

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the complex response elicited by the

showplace of the Am herst ca mpu s.

d -•

1

Aca em1c ·P an
d d I
Un er eVe Opmenf
The first rough draft of the opening
part of a University academic plan has
bee n assembled, President Roben l.
Ketter said at a mid-Ma.rch . meeting of
the Faculty Senate Executive (iommittee.
Ketter said he hopes to be able ro present a drah of an e:ntire document to the
Executive Cor'nmittee by mid -May. This
would provide a ba'sis for extensive discussion during the summer, and a second draft might emerge by August. The
second version would be widely circulated among faculty and others before
a final plan is formulated .
Ketter told the · Execut ive Comnlrnee
that such a plan is necessarY to guide the
University's development for the. next
five years or so. He indicated that such
plan.n ing must and can take place
whatever the· budget outlook.
According to the Executive Committee
minutes, the President mentioned the ·
following areas as being among those
requiring planning decisions: the apportionment of funds and energy between
research and \he teaching of pure
science or arts on the one hand and
professional preparation on the other;
duplication of work by depanments in
different facuhies; general education in
the unde!Saduate program; the future
of the col es; the University's role in
intemation education.
The Senate .minutes indicate that the
President ·does not conceive of an
academic plan as a mere 'allocation of
resources, but as an· attempt to "define
U/8'~ proper intellectual and social

role."

.

NOrf: Tile followlnw Olflclel&gt;y a
U"'-tiry mit ......,_ comldets .,.... the
recurrinw question o f - donn life.,. r.vlnr alt-ampus Is dteape&lt;, and ben.,.,
Re member when gas was 26 ce nts a
gallon , and eggs were 39 c.e nts a dozen?
There was a time whe n gasoline was
chea p ~ nd food was inexpensive. It isn't
that way any more. If you compare the
cost of food at home plus the cost of
ma inta inin g a car with room and board at
SUNY / B you may be surprised.
The Current semester cost for a board
contract is $420 which includes 18 mea ls
a week for a 12-week se mester. That
.
averages $4.94 per da y.
Accord ing to the Agricultural Depanment, a fa mily of four pays $17.70 a
week for medi um-p riced food to feed a
male between tlie ages of 15 and 20. That
amounts to $2.51 a day or $213.35 for
a twe lve-week period.
Housing fees at SUNY / 8 have a wide
range. On the Mai n Street Campus, the
semester cost is $367.50 fo r a si ngle room
and $325 for a double . On the Amherst
Campus, the number of stude nts per
room ranges from one to six. A single
room is $330.75 per se mester; a double,
$292.50; th ree in a room, $263.25; four in
a room $234; six in a room, "$204.75 .
What doPs it cost to operate a car? The
AAA published statistics for 1974 based
on national averages computed by
Run zhei mer and Compan y. A 1974
intermediate-size, 8-cylinder Chevelle
equ ipped wit h standard accessories and
kept for fou r yea rs, costs 5.7 ce nt s a mile
for gaso line and oi l, maintenance and
tires. Annual fixed costs are $149 for insurance, $178 for property damage and
liability, $26 for license and reg istration,
and S732 for depreciation . This totals $1 ,·
092 per year or $2.99 per day. Assuming
the car is driven 10,000 miles a yea r which

is the national average, a student would
drive about 200 miles a week at a cost of
$32.37. Multi ply this by twelve weeks and
he spends $388.44 per se mester for
transportation.
The cost of foo d eaten at home and
transportation total s .$590.09 a te rm .
In comparison, the per semester cost
for food service at th e University plus
ho using .ranges from $750.75 in a si ngle
room . to $624.75 in a six-person room .
The d iffere nce is $34.66 if a person lives
in a six-bed room, and $160.66 mo re in a
single room.
But, that's not all ! Nearly $1oo,ooo · a
yea r is spent by the Student Association
on st udent activities o n ca mpus. Th ese
are attended mostl y by the reside nt populat ion. Furthermore, the com muter stu dent must leave home in order ·to establish social contacts. That usuall y
means " going ou t," and that means
spending mone y. In a do rm, you can
have dinner wi th ·a d ifferent " friend "
eve ry day - an d it doesn't cost a cent.
Time hasn't been ment ione d- but it's
a va luab le ele ment in a University
stude nt 's career. The time saved by liv ing
o n campus is difficult to calcul ate, but
stude nts who have been both commuters and reside nts (I experie nced both
myself) indi cated that the adva nti!lges of
going to the lib ra ry when yo u wa nt and
compari ng notes whe n it's necessary are
tre me ndous ly he lpful.
Th e difference in cost between living
at home and livi ng in a dorm can't be
measured entirely in dollars, but eve n if
it is, that difference is co nsiderably less
.than i~ used to . ~: -·
-John Buerk
Oii"KtOfof()rie&gt;nt.ttlon

Local CSEA.--,.----:, --::----'--:-"--rlrnm

'!.

p&lt;IJ!l'

1, rnl. 1J

" The O,ajority feel ing seemed to be
that if no meaningful negotiations with
the State are forthcoming, the local
grou p would support a strike," Bill
Stober!, founh vice president and CSEA
Rrievance cha irman, said Tu esday.
The approved resolutions included the
three part amnesty-vocal picket-job action measu re and one which directs the
local CSEA Chapter to poll its member;
o n their feelings about job actions,
honoring picket lines, e tc.
Amnesty would mean an agreement
from the State ·that no sanctions would
be take.n against workers who strike,
StoPerl explairied. He defined " vocal"
picket lines as meaning that those on the
lines would " verbalize" their case for a
strike to those who cross. "In a responsible, orderly fashion," Stoberl clarified.
After all , he pointed out, CSEA
workers in 3 of.the 4 State bargaining units are paid less than unemployed
automobile workers. " We th..ink we have
a just case to make."

Dlffen,. lnfomiation
·· Stober! .. id also that CSEA officials in
Albany had presented delegates with information on negotiations. somewhat
different frdm that circulated t~ civil
service workers on campuS late Monday.
Dr. Albert Somit, execu~ive vice presi·
dent, .. id in a memo to the U/B civil service work force that the local administration had been requested by the State Office of Employee Relations to make
available the following facts :
lhe Stale hao offered to

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-~ncre.ea~s

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lor . . . . . , - . .... ...,..,. die
...,..... ....... 1. In ..........; lhe
offer P,.wklel for all clwU Rrt'lce
-piltjwes Npl-aH loJ CSEA to

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... .........
..................
..............
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. $251,

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

no-~ .......... -

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no additional cost to employees.
"In spite of ~;ny rumors, the sub;ect of
pensions hu nof been, and Is not now,
involved in i;RY Wi;Y In these
nqotii;tions."
Stober! said the CSEA repon on issues
also made it clear that pef'\.sions were not
now on the bargaining table. But, he
said, CSEA remains concerned that Lt.
Governor ·Mar y Ann Krupsak has
suggested on more than one occasion
that the State could save a great deal of
money if employees had to pay for half
of their pension coverage.
_
Stober! also said that CSEA maintains
that there has been no State offer on improved health insurance. Neither has
there been movement by the State on
any of the other issues under negotiation, CSEA officials said•on Monday.
Stober! indicated that the local CSEA
Chapter is attempting· to get out to
members all the "honest information" it
can gather about the issues so that U/8
employees can mak~ "honest decisions ~'
if and wl)en 1 State-wide strike develops.

Contrastin&amp; VIew

•

In contrast to CSEA's Stiltements about
U/8 suppon-for a strike, some campus
civil servants were openly concerned
about any job · actiom at this time. The
feelings of some of these workers are
summed up in a le«er to the llulfalo
Netn and to CSEA from 45 individuals on the staff of Admissions and
Records.
.
.
" At this tir('le, because of the state of
our economy, we do not feel it wise to_
ask for funher benefits on existing contracts such as improved hospitalization,"
this group saki. "It is far more important
to negotiate to keep the benefits we now
have."
'
While concerned over threats to pensio"n benefits, the group said, "We Me
not interested in job action, not only
because .it is illegal, but because few
demands can be met during 1 recession
. period. Hopefully by nexi spring. when
our· contriCt must be l'eilewed, our
economic picture will have. lmDroved
and with the help of lnfefllsent
neplliadon, I more beneficial contTict
can be declcled upon."
·

f_,.

�. . . 12!11&amp;

Amherst Cl"aft unit opens with weaving; more
The first program in the ne..; crat;ts
center in the Ellicott Complex in
Amherst is now underway, U/8 crafts .

diredor Joe Fischer said this-week.·
The program, a weaving workshop,
will run through early May in modern
facilities at ground level in the Millard
fillmore Academic Collegiate Center,
offering a preview of the expanded
equipment and .programming in crafts
that will soon be available.
fall, Fischer said, is the target date for .
full operations in Amherst.

Those operations will inclu de
prOgrams in weaving, photography,
ceramics, metals, enameling and leather
crafts. Equipped at a cost of some $110,000, the Amherst Center will make possible an entirely new dimension in campus
crafts instruction, Fischer indiCated.
The present weaving course is being
directed by Carol Watson who will be
the instiuctor in this area for both the
Craft Center _'and College B (which wilt
use the Amherst facilities for coursework
next fall). A graduate of Buffalo. State,
Ms. Watson operates the Fiberfolk Shop
on Edward Street in the city.

SplnnJna and WeaY11111

programs offered by the Craft Center in
the past," Fischer indicated.' Thus, the
decision to significantly expand the
program in the new setting.
Other Facilities
•
The Amherst Craft Center will also
provide photographic facilities which
will be the best available anywhere on
campus. These complete studios are to ·
be equipped with two color processing
units in addition to eight black-andwhite enlargers, washers, dryers, mounting presses, etc.
·
For ceramics, ten potter's wheels and
four large kilns will be available.
The Amherst Center's foundry and
hot metals room will lead to an expansion in metals work, Fischer said. The
found,Y will permit students for the first
time to develop raised forms Jrom flat
sheets of copper, silver and brass, making possible the creation of bowls, vases,
etc.
Two large and two small enameling
kilns will facilitate development of a
large-scale program in that craft while
"the addition of a large Germanmanufactured Adler sewing mach ine will
give leathercrahers the opporturyity to
work on boots, large handbags, etc.Lighted exhibition and display cases in
the hew facilities -viii be used by both
College B and the Craft Center for
regularly scheduled shows by area and
Urliversity craftsmen.

Ten students are enrolled in the
course, learning spinning· and weaving.
The students are becoming expert, too,
in the actual mechanics of the looms
because they also had to put them
together.
Simil~l weaving workshops will be
Reduced Norton Oper.atlons
offered at the Main Street Craft Center (7
When Amherst becomes fully
operational, Fischer said, the Nonon
Nonon) this summer.
When the weaving program returns to
craft program will continue as in the past.
Amhent next fall, Fischer said, 14 floor
Some schedule reduction may be
necessary at Norton, however, he said,
looms will be available for student use,
because present Craft tenter personnel
ransl"'l from four-harness to 12-harness
will have to malntllin both are~.
size. The "'rse 12-hamess looms, he said, .
will provide weavlns capabilitll!s not . This year, College B has been using the
Nonon facUlties In ihe mornings. The
often found even In University
clo!panments which offer rnajon In tex~er has been open from 1-10 p.m. for
tiles.
.
• senenol campus use. College BwHI have
"There has been a lot of campus
momlns use of the Amhent Center startins In~ Fall, accordi"'IIO Fisd)er, who
response . to the limited weavins

will coo rdinate both the academic and

recre!ltional crafts programs in the space.
The Craft Center, which mUst charge
users a membership fee in order to sus·
ta in operations, is planning to promote a
program of community involvement in
order to generate additional operating

~oming

in come, Fischer said.
Membersh ip fees are $10 per semester
for students, $25 for faculty, staff and
alumn i, and $45 for the general public.
For further information about the
Craft Center and its present and projected activities, call 831-3546.

Faculty Club, ICC sponsor
free Wednesday film series
The Faculty Club Board of Directors
and the Instructional Communication
Center are jointly sponsoring a program
of film screenings on Wednesdays at
12:30 p.m. in the Palmer Room of the
Faculty Club (Ha&lt;riman library).
Remaining films in the free admission
series are:
April 9 - Saturday Night •t the
Coliseum - Directed by Geoff Winningham, 28 minutes - film p rint
provid"ed by Media Study/Buffalo. A
revealing but sympathetic vosual study of
the wrestl ing "industry" as it manifests
itself in Houston, the first film of a young
Rice University photographer whose
later film work has been supponed by a
Guggenheim Fellowship and a National
Endowment for the Ans Individual Anist
Award.
'
April 16 - from Eowy Shltes Ende:

The World of Qoauc:e&lt;'s l'flgrims Produced by Mary Kirbr, and Naomi Diamond, 38 minutes. A pi grimage through
the churches and chapels, and the
domiciles of all walks of life. The people
of the period are brought to life in
raucous scenes of daily life carved into
wooden misericords and In details from
illuminations used to Illustrate medieval
manuscriptS.
April 23 - A
........ - Produced by ,_, Jotclan. 23
minutes. What are the-meanlnp and lmpllcalions of B.F. Skinner's summary

ean-...., .... u.

work,..,_,,_,__,~,The

noted behaviorist discusses his ideas in a
'st ra ight-forward way in this interview,
exploring the notions of control, punishment and freedom.
April 30 ~ To hnllal- Made by
Bruce Baillie, 19 minutes - film print
provided by Media Study/Buffalo. A
contemporary personal film interpreting
the medieval and Wagnerian mythic
materials in terms of the industrialization
of nature. A work in the experimental .
tradition by a San Francisco anist whose
works have been accorded a major
retrospective screening by the Museum
of Modern An in New York and the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Budget cut'''nm ~W" 1, m i. 41

quest called for a net increase of 23
positions at U/B for the coming year. This
included the addition of 16 new faculty
positions in core campus departments, 33
faculty and seven support positions in
the health. sciences, and two positions in
educational communications. Five ex·
tension and public service positions, 10
student service jobs, six dormitory •!~­
ministration posts, eight nursing faculty
and six other positions were to be
eliminated.
·
The 44 additional cuts resulting from
the Legislative !eduction mean that, Instead of having a nl!t gain of 23 jobs,U/8
"in lkcal 1915-76 will experience 1 nl!t loss
of 21 f.t.e. lines.

�April 3, f 975·

Cap and gown
order deadline
April 11

is

·i

Students who intend to participate in
UniversitY, comme ncement exercises for
which caps and gowns must be worn (the
General Commencement, Dentistry,
Health Education, Health Relat ed
Professions, Medicine, Nursing, and
Pharmacy) ma y order academic garb in
'the University Bookstore through April
11 .
No orders can be accepted after that
date, the Bookstore says.
Cost of rental is as follows : associate
gown, cap with tassel, $5.95; bachelor
gown, cap with· tassel, S5.95; master
gown, caP with tassel, S6.50; doctorate
gown, cap with tassel, S9; master goWn,
hood , cap wit h tassel, $12; dodorat e
gown, hood, cap with tassel, $13.50;
master hood only, $5.65; doctorate hood
only, $6.35. Prices quoted do not include
seve n per ce nt sales tax.
Gowns must be picked up on the
following dates at the Bookstore : School
of Nursing, Thursday and Friday, May 8
~ nd 9; all others, Wedn esday through
Friday, May 14-16.
Stud e- nts will be advised on
procedure:. for return of gowns at the
time of pick-up.
The Bookstore also has available
diploma covers ($3.95 each plus tax) and
will order graduatio n announcement
cards (10 for $2.99 ~!Ius tax).

Zodiaque group to feature original works
An evening of work choreographed by
members of the Theatre Department
Dance Program will make up the Zodiaque Company's 11 Da nce 75" presenta ~
tion, scheduled for the Harriman &gt;tud io
Theatre April 3-5 and again from April
10-12.
•
- Nine pieces, ranging from dramatic

dance to the totally abstrad, will be on
the program which is a cooperative ven-

ture .among dance students and students
in · Theatre Department lighting and
costuming classes. Four of the pie€es will
be backed' by live accompanists, incfvding Ra y leslee, a composer-pianist
whose original work will. set the stage for

one of the dances; two percussion

studen ts from the Department of Music
who will play a piece entitled " Reflections," written especially fo r....the Zodiaque Company"by Don Knaack;'nnember
of 1he Creative Associates; and Ja y
Hersher, a flutist who doubles as a
dancer with the Company.
,,
.
Linda Swiniuch, director of the--fheatre
dance proj:ram, points out that the
Zodiaque Company is M 111'member
troupe of University dance students. The
concert is the second performance by
the Company since its founding. Ms.
Swiniuch indicates that next fall, in all
likelihood, the Theatre Department will

be home to both a senior performing
company and an apprentice group, a
development which at one time was
thought to be at least three years away.
The next Theatre De part ment dance
concerts, Ms. Swiniuch says, will be on
the weekend of June U~28 as an extension of the Music Department's Com·
posers' Workshop·.
Ticket prices for the upcoming " Dance
75" performances, she says, will be"$1.50
general adril ission ·and 75 cents for
students. Posters printed for the event
list an incorrect ticket price of S2.50 for
general adm ission and Sl for s~udents.
Performance time is 8 p.m. -

The Albright-Knox: overlooked by U/81
Few new faculty come to this UniversiThe Albright-Knox, Buck points out, is
ty without being~ taken to the Albrightthe fourth oldest art museum in the
Knox Art Gallery. It is one of the area's
country - it pre-dates the Metropolitan
genuine four-star, must-see attractions.
Museum of Art, among others .
· But do faculty and students, those who _
Moreover, says Buck (who came to Bufwould Seem most likely to utilize and
!alo ·several_ years ago because of the
support the Gallery, continue to do so
Gallery), the Gallery began early to locus
after that first more-or~less required
its resources and energy on building a
tourl
·
collection of the finest In contemjx;rary
art. Its very first acquisition, he recalls.,
Although no hard figures are available,
was a painting by a living Ameri~n artist.
Gallery Director. Robert T. Buck suspects
that the majority of UIB people do not
"The Gallery," Buck continues, "was
not imposed on the community, not
participate in Gallery activities to the exbrought in from some bigtime operation
tent one WQUid expect.
in Manhattan, but grew out of the conThis is reflected in relatively few
Gallery memberships among UIB faculty
cern of a fairly large local cast of
characters over 112 years," an
. and stall, although the . director
acknowledges that many Unlver&gt;ity peo- _ assemblage do~minated In recent years by
ple who are not Gallery members
the museum's leading benefactor,
Seymour H. Knox. (Among its notable
probably u&gt;e the lacilhy in the best way
possible - by visiting and re-vlstlng the
supponers in the past was Buffalo attorney .A. Conger. Ggodyear, who, in the
collection.
The Unlvershy was once more directly
nineteen-twenties, piqued fellow
members of the Board · of Directors by
Involved with the Gall~ry In that what is
now the UIB Art Department emerged
authorizing the purchase of a controverfrom the .ar;t school of the Buffalo Fine . sial Picasso. Goodyear subSequently left
Buffalp, to become founding president
Arts Academy
of the Mu&gt;eum of Modem An.)
Recently, a link with the campus has
. Alth9ugh euratoriil decisions never
been re-eogblished through a formal
please everyone and In spite of .the fad
alliance with Ulll's young Art History
that the arts are rarely considered in
program, an alliance !hat Buck hopes the
the formulation of public policy, Buck
State will stre"'llhen through continued
support. This effort may be expanded In
believes that mu&gt;eurns llke the !&lt;!brightKnox have ll)ade a major contribution
the bll to include Introduction of a
withoUt which "our sodety would be inGallery-lfught .museum-studies course,
finitely udder." .
he up.
As fellow museum director George
Galleries, like uniYersltles, have an lm· Heard Hamilton recently uld (as quoted
ponant educational function, Buck
In ~): "The museums of America
believes. "A museum isn't Just an an exare one of the most · remarkable
hibition hall. In orpnizlns an exhibit II~
achievements of a free society. In less
the recent Max BIO I show,- hope to
than two cenwries, they have been
amplify our audience's ul\dentancllns of
man's visual achievement. In other - orpnlzed and from coas1 to coas1 fflled
worc~J, we're an educational institution."
with ~res from . the ,mole wide

world. With academic institutions they
share the exciting but difficult burden of
curatorially preserving and educationally
interpreting the cultural history of the
human race .. ..
_. " In their increasing concern with contemporary art they are engaged in the
difficult task of resolving and explaining
t~e tensions in modern society which
contemporary art expresses, but ohen in
ways which are not imnied iately apprehensible ... Now that we have reached the point where annual attendance
exceeds that for any form· of organized
sport, the activities of the art museum, in
however many ways they can and should
be undertaken . . . are among the most
significant ingredients in the spirituai
health of our pluralistic sodety."

At least 5 still
. in academic ':-P race
Five candidates for the Position of vice
president for a~mlc affairs llave
been interviewed by the ICreening committee and three other&gt; may yet be_invit&lt;\&lt;1 for interviews, Preoident Robert' l.
Ketter reponed to the Faculty Senate Executive Committee recently.
Ketter told the executive group that he
hopes to be able to decide upon an appointment sometime during April.

Aging lecture
set for Wednesday
Elaine Brody, director of the Department of Social Work, · Philadelphia
Geriatric Center, will speak on aging,
Wednesday, April 9, at the fourth in a
five-part distinguished lect.u re series
sponsored by the Multidisciplinary
Ce nter for the Study of Aging.
Mrs. Brody, a Fellow of the Geron ~
tological Society, has held many offices
on natiO!lal committees on the ag ing in
the field of health services and mental
-health administration. Her publications
and research in the field of social services ·
for the elderly have won her a national
and internat ional reputation, according
to Dr. Constan tine Yeracaris, acting
director of the U/B Center.
Mrs. Brody's lecture, 11 long Term Care
and Values," is scheduled to begin at 3
.m. in the Fillmore Room, Norton. The
ecture is. free and open to the public. .
The Multidisciplinary Center is also inviting those interested in the problem~ of
caring for sen·ior citizens to meet informally with Mrs. Brody at a reception in
334 Norton, beginning at 2 p .m., April 9.
The filth speaker in the spring lecture
series will be Dr. Leonard Hayflick,
professor of medical micrpbiology at the
Stanford University School of Medicine,
who will sP.,ak here on April 25.

r.

Petty named head
of elementuy ed
Dr. Walt~ T. Petty has been appointed
chairman of the Department of Elementary and Remedial Education for a threeand-one-half year term, President
Ro!Jert L. !Cetter announced this week.
J?r. Petty, whom Dr. Ketter praised for
his\ 'strong leadership/' served as acting
dir~r of the Depanment In 1971. He
join the Faculty of Educational Studies
in 1 ~Iter
11 years as a professor of
edutatlo at Sacra
' to State College.
The auth
merous books and
maga~lne artides on the teaching of fundamental reading and writing skills to
.elementary school children, Dr. Petty
was also the former director of a federally funded UIB prosram to tnln
educators In teaching other teactiers. In
1965 and 1966, ~ he served as director of
the National Defense EducatiOn· Ad
Reading Institute.
'
Dr. _ Petty Is a graduate of Central
Missouri State CoRege and a 1.1.5. Army
Infantry veteran of World War- 11. He
received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from
the Unlverslty of 1-a and served as a
teachlnl! principal in seyeraJ Midwestern ·
schools.
·

�. . eam

April 3, 1975 ·

Dr. Billingham
will present Witebsky talk
Dr. Rupert E. Billingham will present
the Filth Annual Ernest Wltebsky
Memorial lecture on Tuesday, AprilS, at
8:30 p.m. in G-22 Farber (Capen).
The professor and chairman of cell
biology at the ljniversity of Texas
Southwestern Medical School at Dallas is
renowned for his pioneering work in the
biology and immunology of tissue
transplantation, skin, wound healing and
regeneration, and for his work towards a
better understanding of how a pregnant
woman protects the fetus via cellular im·
munity.
.
Born in Wiltsh ire , England , Dr.
Billingham holds a doctorate in zoology
from Oxford and an honorary degree
from Trinity College. He has ~eld appointments at the University of Birmingham, the University College in Lo n-

don where he was honorary research
associate , the W istar Ins t itute o f
Anatomy and Biology, and the Un iversity
of Pennsylvania wh~re he chaired the
De partment of Medical Genet ics and
directed the Henry Phipps Institute.
A member of se veral National
Institutes of Health study sections, Dr.
Billingh'l,m worked in this capacity wit h
the late ffi. Ernest Witebsk y who was a
distinguished profe ssor of bacteriology
and immunology here. Dr. Witebsky established the Department of Im munology in Buffalo and was the fi rst
director of th e U/ B Center for Immunology.
Dr. Billingham is a Fellow of the Royal
Society in london, the New York
Academy of Sciences, the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, and an
honorary member of the Society for
lnvescigati :ve Dermatology. He was
honored by the American Association of
Plast ic Surgeons and received che
coveced Alvarenga prize from the
College of Physicians of Philadelphia, as
well as fellowships from the British Empire Cancer C~mpaign . ·
Dr. Billingham's Witebsky Memorial
ledure, on immunological aspeds of
macernal-fetal relationships, is sponsored by the University's Department of
Microbiology and The Center for Immunology and is open to the publ ic.

starts studies
in criminal justice
Law

The law School has recently begun
to
develop
a
Criminal
Justice
Specialist Program under a grant from
the National Institute of Mental Health.
Although it is presently in the formative stages, the Program's design is
beginning to emerge, Ronald ). Allen,
assistant professor of law, indicates. Extensive exposure to the various aspect!
of the criminal justice system will be
·achieved through the use of observational, research, and clinial techniques, Allen says. The anticipated, " and
desired, effect of this exposure to the
criminal justice system w ill be a
lieiRhtened sensitivity on the part of the
student to the system as a whole, and in
particular to areas that are in need of improvemenL Thus, a Collateral benefit
hoped to be achieved is the creation of
responsible proposals for reform df
specific areas of .the system that will
enable the system to bener perform its
role In society."
In preparation lor full implementation
of the Program, scheduled for Spring of
1976, the law School is conducting a
Criminal Justice Forum this semester,
consisting of presentations on areas of
interest by individuals Involved with the
criminal justice oystem, followed by
'group discussions. One of the functions
of the Forum is to generate otudent
proposalo for rese;orch to be undertaken
this sunvner; H a proposal is accepted,
the student will receive a summer sti·
pend from the srant to allow him or her
· to pursue the research.
Interested faculty or students may obtain further Information by calling the
law School Clinic offk&gt;e at 616-2167, or
by ~ Profs. Norman Rosenberg
and Ronald Allen of the Faculty of Law
and Jurisprudence.

7

C~ndar·--------------------------~------------(from

I»~

a, col. • ,

f05TEII COLlOQUIUM SB1E51

•

ARICAN STUDII5 I.ECTUIIEf
On rhe Polities-of the Afrian Sl,ave Tri de is
1he subject of a panel discussion with Dr. Ab.dias do Nasdmenlo, Or. Keith Henry, Fidelis
Ama1okwo and · Ago Ia Auma - Osolo ,
mode raled by Dr. Molefi Asante. 233 Norton,
3 p.m.
ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND
POliCY· SEMINARI
Sti le T~din g and Changing Resource
Accessibility and Ownership, Roberl C.
Konwea , School of Managemen t visiting
professor. 237 Crosby, 3-5 p.m.
FRENCH DEPARTMENT RLM'
Gr,a nd Illusion (Renoir). 146 Diefendorf, 5
and 7 p.m. No admission charge.

/ihn -Tei ler Funnybusiness: The O rse o f the

EmNrrassecl Technid1n, Or. J.P. Fackle r, Case
Western Reserve University. 70 Acheson, 4
p.m.
Sponsored b y 1h e Departmenl o f
Chemistry.

PHYSIOI.OGY VAIQ O.UI SEMINAIII
VIQ Distribut ions, Or. A.). O lszowka . 106

She rman, 4: 30 p.m.

IOOY MOnoN ANALYSIS
LfCTURE SBIIESf

Some Current Rese~ rches in Body M ot ion

Analysis, Paul Bou issac, visiling pro fessor of
French. Red Room, Facu lty Club, 7:30 p .m.
UUAI FILMS• •
Splendor in the Crass (Kazan), 7:30 p.m., and
Th e Arrangem ent, 9:40 p .m. 140 Farber (Ca- .,.
pe n). No admission charge.

ENGliSH DEPARTMENT RLM'

.

Bonjour Tristesse (Preminger}. 147 Diefe nd orf, 7 p.m. No ad missio n charge.

FACULTY RECITAl'

UUAI ALMS ..
Splendor in rhe Grass (Ka zan), 7·:30 p.m. ,
and -The Arrangement (Kaza n), 9:40 p.m. Sy
l ed ure Hall , Ellicou . No admission ch arge.

Violi nist Donald Weilerslein gives a recital.
Baird Recital Hall , 8 p.m. Admission : S.SO
students; Sl faculty, s1aff and alu mni and S1.50
general public.

ElliE COUNTY'S ENVIRONMENT:
197~ SYMPOSIUMI

PUBLIC LfCTURE'
Erich von Oaniken. Clark ..Hall, 8 p.m. Free
to the Universily comm un ily; Sl ge neral
public.
Sponsored by the SA Spea_kers Bureau.

Solid Waste and Recycling. June James,

chairman, Solid Waste Commission, EMC.
Buffalo Stale College Communication Bldg. Easl, 1300 Elmwood, 7:30 p.m.

THEATRE I'ERFORMANCE'
Bride of Shakespea re Heaven featu res

ERNEST WITIISKY MEMORIAL LfCTUREI

sce nes fro m modern life wilh dialog4e by
Shakespeare, directed by Gordon Rogoff.
Courtyard Theatre , Hoyt and l afa yette, 8 p.m.
Ad mission charge .
Presenled by the Center for Theatre
Research .

Immuno logical Aspects of M aterna l-Fetal
Relationsh ip, Or. Ru pe rt E. Billi ng ham,
professor and chairman, Ce ll Biology Dept. ,

University of Texas Sout hwestern Medical
School a1 Dallas. G-22 Farber (Capen}, 8 :30
p.m.

THURSDAY-10

WEDNESDA Y-9

DEPARTMENT Of l'fO!ATR!CS
SEM!NARI

DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS
SfM!NAIIf
Serine Hydroxymethyltransfense and i!S
Significance in Hyperglycinemia Associated
with Disorders of Isoleucine Metabolism, Dr.

Bilirubin Metabolism, Or. Michael I. Co he n.
Second floor boa rd room, Children's Hospital,
12 noon .

Che n-Kung Ho, Division of Medical Genetics,
Washing1on University, St. l ouis. Conference
Room A, Firsl Floor Nu rses Annex, Children's
Hospital, 1~ a.m .

PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUMI
Omega Squared and How Big is a Variab le,
Dr. Edwin C. Susskin d , visiti ng lecturer,
Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Rm. C-34, 4230
Ridge lea , 3 p .m.

DEPARTMENT OF l'fO!ATR!CS
SfMINAifl

GEOGRAPHY COUOQUIUMJ

Info rmal Discussion of M o ntefiore Exp erience wit h Dete ntion Facilities, Dr .
Michael I. Cohe n. Basement Confe rence
Room, Meyer Memorial Hosoital, 12 noon.

Garner, profeSsor and chai rman, Geog ra phy
Oipt.,J.Jniversity of Aarhus, Denm,ark. Rm. 40,
4224 Ridge l ea, 3:30 p .m.

AGING LfCTURE SERIES'

PHARMACRJnCS SfMIN,oUII

~ging,

Mrs . -Elaine Brody , Philadelphia
Geria tric Center. Fillmore Rm., Norton
Union , 3 p.m.

Beta-Lactamase lnactiv,a'rio n of Penicillins,
Dr. John Poole, Explorato ry Pharmacy Sed io n,

Wyeth laboratories, Philade lph ia. 244 Cary
Hall (Healt h Sciences), 4 p .m.

LfCTURE'

STAnmCAL SCIENCE COUOQUIUMJ

Th e Copenhaj:en Regional Pla n, Or. B.

•
The Philosophy of Social SeNices for the

Contemporary ~meric,an Fidion in Poland,
Zbign iew Lewicki , Un iversity of Warsaw
Americ,a n .Co un cil o f l e arned Societies
Sch ~la r. Annex 8, Reom 1, 3:30 p.m.

STAnmCAL SCIENCE COUOQU!UMJ
Th e Effect of Ethic,a l Design Consid erations
in St,a tistical ~nalysis, Professor D.V. lindley,
Universily College l ondo n and University of
Iowa (visiting}. Rm. A--48, 4230 Ridge l ea, 3:30 p.m. (coffee at 3).:.

The U/B psychology dinic will offer a
free program to help children six to te n
years of age who are afraid of the dark .
Essentially, the program will be aimed
at instructing parents in new techniques
they can use to help their children overcome their fears.
Parents will participate in three to five
_ training sessions. All will be held on
weekends, starting in April, at the psychology dinic at Ridge lea.
Parents may sign up for the program
by_ telephoning Mrs. Sue DeGiovanni
(885-7864) between the hours of 6-10
p.m. through April 3. The program is
offered free of charge.

Brody on aging r)anel
Dr. Harold Brody, professor and chair·
man of anatornial sciences, has been
named to the National Advisory Council
on Aging of the National Institutes of
Health.
The Coundl is an advisory body for the
newly-established National Institute on
Aging that will conduct and suppo"
biomedical, social, and behavioral
researdland training related to the aging
process and the dlsoses, other special ·
problems, and needs of. the aged.
Dr. Brody also seM!5 as president of
the American GeroniOfosy Society and is
editor-in&lt;hief of the,_,.., ol ~

fOioly.

1

Monday--Friday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunday 1-5
p.m. Through April 8.
LOCKWOOD EXHIIIT ,
Polish Collection, exhibition culled from
the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of malerial. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday-friday, 9 a .m.-5
·
p .m. Conti nuing.

MANUSCIIII'T AND RIIST EDITION EXHISIT
The mosl complele collection of Robert
Graves manuscripts in the world is currently
on display in the lfx:kwood Memorial library.
Ma nuscrip ts and first editions from the Gfaves
poetry collection are part of the e xhibilion,
w h ic h com me mora tes Robert Graves '
eightielh b irthday. &amp;lcony, second floor,
lockwood Me morial library.

VISUAL ARlS EiHIIIT
flees. photogra ph s by Dr. Herbert Reisman n , pro fessor o f engineering science.
Hayes Hall lobby, Monday·friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. lhrough April 11.
Present-:d by the Office of Cuhural Affa irs.

NOTICES
CREDIT-FIIEE COURSES
A variely oflale-spring credit-free courses
are bei ng offered, begi nn ing between Ap ril 1
and 15. Topics incl uded are : Typing Re view,
Sociai ' Ge ronlology, Behavior Modifical ion
(Advanced), .MariU1I and famil y Therapy,
lntermediale Te nnis, Supervisory Process in
Social Work, Anthro pology, Christian Meditation, Counseling fo r Mid-Career Decisions for
Women, Accelerated Vocabulary Developme nt, The Ge rman Experie nce and Assumptions Behind Casework Postures. Fo r
date, location, fee information or regimation,

call 631-4301.
FORBGN STUDENT EMPLOYMENT
Foreign Sludenls are requesled lo regisle r
.for an e mployme nt program in Rm. 21 0,
Townse nd Hall . Efforts are being made
through a joint p rogra m between 1he O.ffice
of Foreign St udent Affairs and University
Placement and Career Guidance to aid in job
placement.

OFFICE Of ADMISSIONS AND
RECORDS HOURS
The Office o f Admissions and Records
hours fo r this week are: April 3, 7-10: 8:30
a.m.-7 p. m.; April 4 : 8:30 a.m..... :30 p .m.

tSRAa/ROME STUDY TOUR
A 21 -day sludy.:tour of Israel and Rome, fo r
academic d edit if desired, is being scheduled
through Canisius College. The package includes airfare, food , housing, tours, baggage
tra nsfers and amen ities and runs from ~a y 26June 16. For mo re information, contac.1 Fr.
Frederic J. Kell y, 5.)., 2001 Main 51., 88J..700o.

1\bst ract Wiener Spa ces, Professo r D.
KolzoW, Erlangen University. Rm. 38, 4246
Ridge lea, 4 p.m. (coffee at 3:30 in 1he Co mmo ns Room).

PROfESSIONAL

CEU AND MOLECULAR IIOlOGY AND
CHEMISTIIY Of IIOlOGICAL SYmMS
LfCTURE SEIIIESf

SUMMEII SESSION llfGISRAT10N HOURS

Structure and M ech1nism ~f Ac.1ion of
Ste r oid H ormon e Recep tor. Or . Berl

Psycb dinic to aid
kids ·who fear dark

Show of pointin&amp; and photosraphy ideas by
Chules Clough. G•llery 219, Norton,

O 'Malley, professor and chairman , Departme nt of Molecular Biology, Vande rbih
Universily. 134 Cary (Health Sciences), 4:15
p .m. (refreshme nts will be served at 4 p .m.}.
CON11NUINC MmiCAL EDUCATION .•
CAIIOIAC OJNIQ
This series of dinics in physical eduation of
the a rdiac patient and a_rrhythmia work,shops
are schedu~ each Thursdi y evening through
May 8. The topic of tonight's d inic is Ausculriltion - The Aortic Stenosis Murmur. Farber

!C•pen) H•ll S.sement, Room G-22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. for information or registration, all the -

School of Medicine, 831-5S26.
·
o( Medicine.
Sponsored by the
DANCE PafORMANCE'
TIJ.e Zodi•que Compony, directed by Linda

Schoo!

Swiniuch, performs. H1rriman TheJtre Studio,

through April 12, 8 p.m. Admission c:Nrse.
~'resented .by the Deponment of The•tre.
TH£ATU I'BfOIIMANCE'
Bride of Shakespe1re Heaven features
sce nes frpm modern IKe with dialogue by

Sh•kespeore, directed by Gordon R&lt;&gt;&amp;off.
Courty•rd The•tre. Hoyt •nd ufayette, 8 p.m.
Admission cN'IO·
Presented by the Center - for Theitre
Research.

UNIYBISIIY STRINGS ANJ otOttUS•
The Unlvenity Strinp tonduaed by Pamela
Ge&gt;rhart and the Unlvenity Choruo cllrected
by Hardel Simons llive a concert. Baird Redtal
Hall, a p.m, No admission c:Nrse.
·
WAa tNTIIINATIONAL RIM fBIIVAl''
Marot Sade (Brook). Norton Conie&lt;enoe
Theatre, all ll1-S117 for times. Admltolon
cNIJO.

EXHIBITS
CAWIIY219m.IT
Rean.Jnr fanwy - fantasizing Reality, a

COUNSELING

Pro fessional counseling is now availa;ble at
Hille l House. For an appointment, call 8364~.
.
The Office of Admissiom .1nd Records will
conduel Summer Sessioa 1975 Registration
beginning Monday, April7. Students currenlly regislered .ill the University for the Spring
1975 semester need only com~e a Course
Request Form. New students muit complete a
S1uden1 Data Form, which will be n-ailable at

Admis.sions and Reconls on April 7. April ·
registration hours at the Office of Admissions
•nd Records ore a:lO a.m.-7 p.m., April7-10;
14-17; 21-24; and 2&amp;-30; all ocher days In April,
the office )'VIII be .open from 8:30 • .m.-4:30
p.m., with the exception of April 23, when
hours are 8:30 a. m .~ : lO p.m.
·
TUITION WAIYRS
Tuition waiver appliations for foreign
fludents for the summer and fall 1975
semesters will be available in 210 Townsend itS
of April 1_ The deadline for handing in
appliations for summer ~ is May 1. The
deadline for tu.nding in fall 1975 appliations
is Milr 15.
-

INTERVIEWS
0N-CAWUS INTBIVIEWS
The staff of the University Placement and
Career Guidance Offke welcomes all students
in the \..fniveBity community and alumni to
take pan In various areer prosr~~ms offered
this yev. The on-compus lnterviewins pro&amp;r&gt;m, runnin&amp; throush April 25, offen the opportunity for i ndiVIdual interviews with
education# businesS, industrial and sovernmenr.l rep&lt;eSOnhltlves. Candidates from
all clesree levels, who completed their course
wort in Januory or expect to in May 1975, are

invited to take port In the lntervlewlns.
Resfst!&amp;flon forms are available In Hayes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The followins qencies will
be Jncerviewlns this week:
MONDAY- 7: U.S. Navy.
TU£50AY - a: U.s.Navy; GeM&lt;ol Mills;
Upjohn Co.
THUitSOAY- 10: Sheridan T....,l Bureau
(summer employment on~).

�•

#

.......

•

THURSDAY-3
EOPOfiNHOUSP
New candidates and continuins students in.

UU.U IN1BINATIONAl AlM fB11VAL••
!'Ire I&gt;Komeron (PotOiini). Norton Conference l'lreat~, all 831-5117 fo&lt; times. Ad· ·
mission charge.

the £duatlonat OppOrtunity Prot~ram ore invited to an open house ~e counselors and

stoff will be ovoiloble to provide ossistonce. 202
Diefendorl, 9 o.mA:30 p .m.

511.5 All&amp;NATIYf Acnvtnl5•
51LS closses for the week Morch 31-April 4
are cancelled, and a series of alternative ac·
tMties are planned for ilnyone interested.
Today's activities include a day tour to
Rochester including stops at the Kodak Park
Research library, Georse bst1rn1n House and
the Rochester Institute of Technology. Also

Kheduled are several local tours: (each
limited to 2S per50[1s) WGR-TV at 9:30 a.m.;
WNEO-TV at 11 a.m. and the Buff;alo Evening
News at 12:50 p .m . For tour reservations, call
831-4826.

MECHANICAL ENGINEBIING
SfMINAIII
Recent Advances in Boundary Layer Transition Resurch, Dr. Eli Reshotko, Department

of Fluid, Thermal and Aerosp~ce Sciences,
Use Western Reserve University. 112 Parke r;
coffee at 3, lecture at 3:15 p.m.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Einst ein ' s hrly Work in Statistical
Mechanics, Dr. M. Klein, Department of

History of Science, Yale University and
Rockefeller University. 111 Hochstener, 3:30
p .m . (refreshments wiiJ be served following
the lecture).
PHAIIMAcamCS SfMINAIII
Bupivacaine in Obstetric An01lgesia and
Pharmaceutical Education in Sweden, Or.

~~~~as:e~~~.~rai:~e~~:~h~~~~~

CON11NUING DENTAL
muCAnON SfMINAitf
Restor.ttive DeOriHry , Gordo!£
Christensen, D.D.S., Ph .D., University ·t
Colorado. 148 Farber (Capen}, 9 a.m. :
p.m. Fee: S100.' For more information or
registration, contact the School of Dentistry,
831 -2836.
CON11NUING MEDICAL
EDUCAnON SfMINARt
What's New Abou&amp;.. the Adrenal Cortex is
the topic of th is one-day seminar. For information about location, time or for registration . contact the School of Medidne, Continuing Medical Education, 2211 Main St., 831 5526.
DEPARTMEN1 OF PEDIATRICS
CONFEIIENCEf
New ProgramS for the Severely Retarded at
Home. Dr. Donald Kerr Grant , Department of
Pediatrics and staff of the Association for
Retarded Ch ildren . Kinch Auditorium ,
Children's Hospital , ·10 a.m.

4 p .m.

DEPAIITMEN1 OF PEDIATRICS
CONFEIIENCEf

CBJ. AND MOLECUL\11

of OtNdren, Dr. Jack Lippes, Department of

Th e Benefits of Birth Contro l to the Welfare

IIOLOGY SfMINAitf
· Studies on Photosystem I in Spin01ch
Chloroplasu, Dr. James Siedow, Department

of Biochemistry, Rice University. 134 Cary Hall
(Health Sciences), 4:15 p .m .
COMI'UIING SlllVICI5 SfMINAIIf
T'he Repott Writet' in COBOL.. taught by
Chris Siderakis todoy ond April 10. · Rm. 10,
4238 Ridge Lea, 7-9 p.m.

RIM•
"Things to Come (Menzies) . 147 Diefendorf,

7 p.m. No admission charge. Presented by the
Regionoi Film Project.

CONIIIIII...c MIDICAl EDUCATION
CODIAC CUN1C1
This series of dinics in physical education of

the arcfiOC potient ond onhythmio wodtshops
o~ sdM!duled eoch Thursdoy ..ening through
............_ May 8 ..The topic of tonight's dinic is A.uscuh.t"'-&amp;lpn - Systolic Ejection Murmurs. Farber
(Ciperl) Hollllosement, Room G-22, 7:»-9:30
p .m. ~ or reslstration, all the
School of MediCine; 831-5526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

IIURAI.O MtaCIAN5 COI.UCTM
oaGANIZATIONAI. M&amp;'IINC· ~
Cepo Gollery, 1377 Main St., a p .m. For inlormotlon, an 837-711!17 or 8116-6765.

DANCE ftllfOitMANaO
!'Ire z~ Compony, directed by Lindo

ll:!."tre

Swiniuch, performs. Horrlmon
Studio,
th......., April 5 ond April 1G-12, a p .m. Admis-

sion

a.....,.

Presented by the Department of

l'lreot~ .

FILMIPNB DISaJS5ION"
!'Ire films With ln&lt;enr ro Hann ond lnJide
the Walls (bo&lt;h about prhon life) will be
followed by o pone! discuBion with Joe Heoth ·
ond Kay Guinone (researchen) ond ,fllm·
makers Sherwin Greenbers and Randall
c-ad. Auditorium, Buffalo and Erie County
Public Ubrary, 8 p .m . No odmluion ~.....

~·
!'Ire Role ol rhe MIIHory

-&lt;-r

FRIDAY-4
SILS AlTRNAnVE Acnvtnl5•
SILS classes for the week March 31·April 4
are cancelled, and a series of alternative activities are planned for anyone interested. Today is the final day, and a tour to Toronto is
planned which includes the John P. Robarts
Research Library and Library School facilities
at the University of Twonto and the Toronto
Public Library.

in Developing
States. ProfeSior Claude Welch, PoliUcal
Science Department. Red Jocket Quod, Bldg.
5, seoond floor lounge, Ellicott, 8 p .m .
Sponsored by the International Living

~·
MUSIC I'RFOIIMANCP
.
Olano Toky Oeen, o member of the focuity
ol the American Univenlty of Beirut, leb-

.,_, 8'- a

lecture-plono recital leaturlng
the music ol the Middle bot. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. Admission: S.50 students; $1 facul-

ty, IIOff and alumnl; S1,50 _ . ! public.
I'ODIIY IIEADNl"
_.,.. koc:ke. will reid from ber worb.
led
foculty Club, 8 p.m.

No...,_,

a-.

·s:--""

the l)eportniJIIII .;, lnllhh·

..,._&amp;. .

. , . . JIIKIBij!N(P

elearonk: millie and

_............, peofonned

_

by-~-

a

......................... _Mnae
~ - - . e::!ii p.m. AdoiilooiDn ctwse.

~ .....

Seoting Is limhed to 2S penons per
performance; reservations are suggested (875-

5825).
CACRt.M••
2001: A Spice Odyssey. 140 Forber (Copen),
7:30 ond 10 p.m . Admission : S1 .
COMPOSBIS WOUSHOP•
The concert features the work of U/B's
young composers. Baird Redtal Hall, 8 p.m.
No admission charge.
DANa lftfORMANa•
The Zodiaque Company, directed by linda
Swiniuch, performs. Harriman Theatre Studio,
through Apri l 5 and April 10-12, 8 p.m. Admis:
sion charge.
Presented by the Department of Theatre.
FILMSIPANR DISCUSSION·
" The Process of Change" is the title of this
program on prison life. Films to be shown are:
Rele;,se, 3,000 Years and Life, .and Interview
with Bobby Se;,le. Panel members ;,re Bertha
Taylor Smith and Bill Ga iter. Auditorium, Central Buffalo and Erie County Public Library, 8
p.m.
Sponsored by Media Study Inc.
PfTHl PORTRPUS PARTY•
Colleges H and B will give il party with
entertai nment and refreshments; information·
about the colleges will be available. Porter
Cafeteria (Ellicott), 8 p .m.-1:30 a.m.
UUAB COFFEE HOUSE ..
Sin ge r Leon Redbon e perform s. 118
Cafeteria , Norto n Hall, 8 and 10 p .m. Admissio n c harge.
IRC FILM••
Wait Unril Dark. Goodyea r Cafeteria, 9 p.m .
(Main St. Campus) ; Sy Lecture Hall (EIIicou
Complex), 11:30 p.m . Free to IRC fee-payers .
UUAI INTERN AnONAL FILM fi511V At••
Th e Decameron (Pasolini). Norton Conference Theat re, call 831 -5117 for times. Admission cha rge.

Obstetrics/Gynecology. Second Floor, Nurses
Annex, Children's Hospital, 11 a.m .
HORIZONS IN Nibwo.IOLOGY
SfMINAitf
Synthesis, Processing and Transport of
Proreins in Molluscan Neurom, Dr.'J Har4&gt;ld
Gainer, Natio.nal Institute of Child Ht!alth and
Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland.
108 Sherman, 1 p.m.

IUFFALO ANIMAl IUGHTS
COMMITTH MEfTING•
A pet stort! investigation project will be
w_orlced on; new memben welcome. 240 Norton, 3 p .m.
GfOGaAPHY COUOQUIUMI
U~n Activity Patterns of Women vs. Men,
Veronica Yuen and Susan H.lnson, Department
ol Geogrophy. Rm. 40, 4224 Ridge Lea, 3:30
p.m.
PHiLOSOPHY SfMINAIII

Hi~:~~7s~~7o!th~~~f:S';! S:!~":~~!~
Trinity College. Rm. 14, 4244 Ridge!Leo, 3:30
P·';:;esented by the. Department of
Philosophy, Graduate Philosophy Association,
-tluffolo Philosophy of Science Society ond
Graduate Student Assodaition.
PlASMA

AI'PUCATIOI\! SEitll5

~luorescence

Specuoscopy of

April 3, 1975

SATURDAY-S
FILM•
Z;mjfer (English subtitles}. 147 Diefendorf, 7
p .m . Adrhission : $.50 students with 10; S1 ..SO
gene ra.! public.
'
Presented by the India Student Associ11ion.
THEATRE I'EIIFORMANa•
Internal Combusaon by Terry Doran .
American Contemporary Theatre, 1695 Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.• Admission
charge. ~ating is limited to 25 ~per
perfor'!Nnce; reservations.a~re suggested (875-

5825).
CAC RLM••
2001: A Space Odyssey. 140 hrber (Copen),
7:30 and 10 p .m . Admission : $1 .

DANCE PlllfOaMANCP
The Zodi.aqf:H! Company, direct~ by LincH
Swiniuch, performs. Harriman Theatre Studio,
this evening a.nd t\pril 10...12, II p .m. Admission
charge.
Presented by the Department of Theatre.
MFA llfCITAL•
Baritone Andrew Schuhze sives a ~1.
Ba.ird Recital Hall, 8 p.m . No admission
~rge.

rttltJIARMoNic cONCBlr

Dr. Rolph R. Rumer, Deportment of Civil
Engineering. 17 Parker, refreshments at 3:50,
lecture at 4 p .m .

The Buffalo PhilharmoniC presents a
Pfotl'"m of Bach ond Bruckner, conducted by
Robert Cole. Kieinhons Music Hill, a :30 p .m .
Students with ID will be odmitted for $1, ond
tickets will be available in advance at the boxoffice.
UUAI CONCERT.,.
Argentiniiln-born saxophonist Gato Bitrbieri
performs. Fillmore Rm., Norton Union, 8:30
and 11 :30 p.m. Admission : S3 students; S4
general .admission a.nd tickets bought on night
of performance.

CBJ. AND MOlECtlLU IIOLOGY

'uu.u COFF&amp; HOUSP•

Pl.tsm.ts, Dr. R.A. Stern, Physical Research

Labor3tory, Bell l.ilboratories. 104 Parker;
coffee ot 3:30 (107 Porker), lecture ot 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Departments of Electricol
· Engineering. Engineerl~g Science ond Physics.

WATR 11150URCI5 AND ENVIIIONMfNTAl

~~~lceBoomSrudy,

~orlmerry

of Rhodopsin in ltod
Ouret' Segment Membrane, Dr. Alan Cooper,
Depaiiment of Chemistry, Yole Univenity. 244
Cory Holl (Heohh ~); coffee ot 3:45,
lecture at 4 p .m.

PHYSIOLOGY 5fMINAitl
Temperature Compen~ation _c:Nracterisrlcs ol Blood, Dr. Robert Bloke Reeves. 108
Shefrnon, 4 p .m.
TtlfATIE ftllfOitMANaO
lnrernol Combustion by Terry Dorin .
Arnerlan ContempOrary Theotre, 1695 Elmwood A..., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admission

.

Friends of Fiddlers Green and Roz

Magarian. First floor cafeteria, Nonon Union,
9 p,m. Admission charge.
UU.U INTHNAllONAt filM fi5TIVAL••
Wedding in Blood (Chobroll . Norton
Conference Theatre, all 831-5117 for times.
Admission charse.

Prices ore S3.50 ior oduhs; S2.25 for child~n
six and under; and free for Infants. ReservatioM ~ry.

PHilHARMONIC CONcar
The Buffalo Philharmonic presents 1
prot~rom of Bach ond Bruckner, conducted by
Robert Cole . Kleinhans Music Hall, 2:30 p .m.
Students with 10 will be admitted for $1 , and
tickets will be i.Vailable in advance at the boxoffice.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS MIEfTING•
Organizational meeting for anyone with
problem!: with alcohol. 264 Norton, 8-10 p.m.
For information, contact Bill Stober!, 831 -Zl01 .

M~~o~:;a~:!:een

callagher gives a recitill.
Baird Recital Hall , 8 p .m. No admission
charge.

U/1 ARTS FORUM BROADCAST•
Esther Swartz conducts an in-depth interview
in the arts. WADV-FM (106.5 mhz.), 10:05

p.m.
UUAB INTtRNAnONAL F1LM FEST1VAL ..
Wedding in Blood (Chabrol), Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117.for times.
Admission charge.

MONDAY-7
AAUW USID lOOK SALE•

Proceeds from this annual sale are used for
local fe llowships for area women. Books on all
subjects are included , as well as Braille, sheet
music and magazines. l'he sail! runs through
April 11. Today's hours are 10 a.m.-8 p .m .
Closing time the rest of the week is 4:30 p .m .
Downtown YMCA, -45 W. Mohawk at Frankl in
51.
ENGUSH DEPARTMENT FILMS•
L' Eclisse, 3 p .m., and Shoeshine, 9 p .m . 1.0
Farber {Cilpen). No admission charge.
S1Anmc.u SOENCE COUOQUIUMI
Eigen Values of Sparse Matrices, Professor
G. Golub, Stanford University. Rm. A....S, 4230
Rtdge Lea, 3:30 p .m. (coffee at 3).

CBJ. AND MOtKUlAJt
IIOI.OGY

RMINAIII

Somi Unusu~l Effects of Unwinding
Proteins on the Kinetics of RNA Confir-

morioml Chonges, Dr. Richord L Korpel,
Depa.rtment of Biochemical ScienceS,
Princeton Un iversity . 246 Cary (Health
Sciences); coffee at 3:45, lecture .at 4 p.m.

filM•
· Alphoville Oeon-Luc Godordl. 147 Dle!en.dorf, 7 p.m. No odmission ~rge.
Presenred by_the Regionol Film Project.

saJES••

UUAI fUNCH Rl.M
Therese (Fronjul. 146 Dielendorf, 7 p.m. No
odmission chorge.

COUOQUIUMI
MarYgement lnforrmtion Systems in Ment.tl
Heohh, Dr. Anthony Brosl&lt;owski, Horvord
Medial School. Audkorium, Buffolo General
Hospitol Community Mento! Heollh Center,
110 Goodrich, 7:»-9 p .m .
Sponsored by the Division of Community
Psychiotry, Department of Psychlotry.
MfA llfCITAl•
Yoollst Stephen Morvin gives o recitol. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charse.

TUESDAY~
INRCTlOU5 DISEASE THaAPY lfCTWfl
llespi'"'&lt;Jrt Troct Infections - Pan I Is the

~~~ :;.~ ~!'..:.=.~

ond Ronold Sorttn&lt;ss, both dinial ..rsrant
profeuon of phormaCy ot U/11. For loation
Md registration information, contact Harold
Reiss ot the School of Phormocy, 831·2546.

NUTRITION AND MAN
LECTURE Slllll5•
Nurrilion, Blood, ond Blood SUbsrhiOies,
Robert P. Gayer, Ph.D. G-22 Farber (Copen),
12 noon. Brins your lunch .
!'Ire lecture is the result of o cooperative
orrongement..._ the U/11 Department of
Biochemistry ond the Department ol Nutrition
of the Horvord School ol Public Heollh.

D i P - Of I'EDIATIICS

SUNDAY--6
fACUlTY CUll SUNDAY auNot..
A complete brunch will be served and fomi·
- ly movies will be
Faculty dub Olni11J
Room, 11 a.m.-2 p .m.

.r-n.

CPNFBiNCQ

Crmlcol Clues IO Deviont o..eloprnenr in
Adolescence, Dr. Michael I. Cohen, difector
of adolescent medicine and ·Bsocl1te'
P&lt;!&gt;feuor ol pedlatrla. Monteflore Hosplta( .
Medial Center, Abrt a.--. ~ ol
Medicine of Yelhiva Universiry. Kinch
Audhorlum, Childn!n'• Hoopllll, 12:30 p .m .

OVII. INGII-..c; IICnllll

um.. l'lamlnf 11 ~ _ . . 10p1c o1 a

Julian Wolpeoc. School ol
Architectute and Urbon ........... -

speech by Dr.

Unlvenlty. 104 l'lll&lt;er, Z p.m.

ttum ro pqe 7. col. 2J

�/

compiled by the office of cultural affairs
·as a service to the university community

-

�apparition

••en

•

"Appulllon" Ia a poup of
Wootem Now York uUsll 1Diem$ed ID
WilDe the mecllo of oloctrollle doric:os for
UYO porformaDee. Tbla poup II mode up
mootly .of local compooon of oledrollle
millie ODd Yldoo lmoiJ.
On AprilS at 8 p.m. "Apparition" will
~nt a porformuee ID Hus. LoiiiiJO.
Both col« and bloct-ud-wblte tmqes
will bo created U•e ID compolitlon form,
to the millie of Alan S. Peoree on the
Mooc Synthesizer.
SpoDIOred by the UUAB Video
Committee (ACT V), the eYent will cost
5o. for students, staff and faculty and $1
for otbori.

a study
in contrasts
Spooba Bureau will p - two
leduron ID April-one, Da~ BriDldey, a
bard-bttded DeWIIDOD; tbo otbor, Erlcb
von Danlken, a best-oeiiiDc Seeker of
Truth. The Swill writer, YOO Danlken,
draWl on a number of ~
prophet Ezeldol, for exam~ lllpPO&lt;t
his theories. PriDdpol OIDODI ~ is that
the ,..-til was Yillted ID andent limes by
astronauts from outer spoee who clepolited the .ods that pew IDto our
civilization (the fiery cbiriots were their
spaoesblpe}. Von Danlken, wbBe ridiculed
by arcbaeoloatats, Is dollll very -..ell in
the bookstores. He comes to U /B on
Wednesday, AprU 9, to pootulote his
.Ude-illustroted bolieC..
•
Speakers Bureau's cuest for Friday,
AprU 18, Is newsman David Brinkley,
who bas been a major telecaster on NBC
for 28 years. He come to popularity as
co-anchormu, with the late Chet
Huntley, of "NBC Nicbtly News," and
lost faD bopn a series of personal reports,
" David Brinkley's· Jounial " broadcast

bride of
shakespeare
heayen

,;

Bride of Shakupe4re Heaven is· subtitled "A Kind of Hlstory"-wblcb It is: a
meditation and eelebrotlon on contemporary circumstances that literoUy talks
in Shakespeare.
•
U we ore sucb stuff as dreams ·ore
mode on, then wby not dream of a ploee
in heaven where we can say whAt we have
to say ID Sbal&lt;espeare's veroe and prose?
And what we have to soy Is dredged out
of our strange usociotions with politics,
the low, se&gt;&lt;uality and the public forms in
which we receive so much or our
information-particularly filrps and
television.
Shakespeare Heaven was performed at
U/B ID 1970; Son of ShDkesPfJGfe.Heopen
was performed by The Chicago Project in
Chicago in 1971, and Bride, therefore, is
a new ve.rslon of the same kind of
histo~ther high ·spot in our actors'.
dreams.
1
.~.
These scenes from moderil lite wftb
dialocue by SllaJ&lt;espeU., directed by
Gordop Rogoff, will bo presented by the
Center for Theatre Research on Wednesday tbroucb Sun~ , April 9-13; at the
Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt,
at 8 p.m. .
.
•
General ·admilsion: $2.50; Stude~ts,
$1.

· w'eeknllbti on NBC News. '

Brinkley is eenerolly referred to as
"wry." Hla quips have contributed to his
popularity and to the maldnc of Brinkley .
as a porsonoDty. He Is a responsible
i&lt;iuma!lst, u well, and the redplent of a
variety • of .,....- JawU.Is; ' 'I.Dcfudl9&amp;, ·.io
Emmys and 2 Peabody awards. · '
·'
Both events will bo bold In Clark Gym
at 8 p.m. Admlollao Ia fhte to the Uni·
venit)'~· $1 ~otboro.

.

RI!IOJl'l'BR
. . . , ...... ·-4/ ApdJ 1,18711/
.. .... 2

�:

german
writers
in exne
l'lofellor Manfred Durzalt of Indiana
·Unmmty at Bloomincton, a diltln·
I'JIIbed Germanist, is active In· .-reb
and wrltlnc In oeveral ueu In wblch
Utarature, .politics, and IOdal questions
lntanect. He will tum bls attention In a
lecture at U/B to tbe tone nocloctod
problem of tbo blstorieal and Utarary
apprailal of tbe works of German writers
In exDo durlne tbe Nul period, 193345.
This Ia a quootlon wblch bu recently
arouaed C&lt;lllJ!dorable intarost.
l'lof0110r Durzalt's lecture, wblch is in
Geriiwl, will be pven in 387 Norton,
Friday, April 11, at 8 1p.m. under the
auspices of tbe German Graduate Association Club of tbe Department of
Germanic and Slavic J..ancuales.

.. i'm not really
a fighter: .....
The Native American Cultural AwareOrpnlzation and tbe Minority
Student Association will be joint sponsors
of a Cultural A'wareness Week, April9·14 .
Tho tbeme will be "I'm Not Really a
Fichter, But These Are My People."
Separate events are Usted in tbe
Directory aection.
Additional Information can be
obtained by tolephonln&amp;: Mary Brown,
Student :Activities, 8314681, or Bulfalo
North, American Cultural Center,
856-5606.

more
from the
creative
associates

eberhard
blum:
a showcase
of fascinating
works
A Creative Associates Recital, fea.
turing Eberhard Blum, fiutist, will take
place on Wednesday, April 16. Among
tbe works to be performed on the concert
is tbe first Bulralo performance of "Ur
Sonata" by Dads artist Kurt Schwitters.
The work is a long nonsense poem
structured as a four movement sonata.
Critic Tom Johnson of the Village Voice
in a recent review of Mr. Blum's New
York performance of tbls work said:
" • .. it bsd an incredible impact. It was
one of those rare occasions when I bsd to
exercise real self-rontrol to keep from
applaudin&amp; between movements. And
when tbe 25-mlnuto work was lin.Uy
over. the response was instant thunder.
Everyone obviously felt the same excite·
ment I felt." .
Otber worl&lt;i to be per!b~ on this
propun are "Sonatina for Flute and
Plano" by Pierre Boulez with pianist
Joseph Kubera; a coUag&lt;! of works by
John Cage and Marcel Duchamp; works
by Isanc Yun and Johannes Fritsch (both
American premieres); and the first performance of '-when you get to the *,"' a
ritual theatrleal action written by Tom
Constantan and performed by the
composer with Mr. Blum, Joseph Kubera
and Jan Williams.
The prD1r11D will be in three parts,
be&amp;lnnlnc at 8 :00 p.m. and continuing
unW mldnJCbt In Baird Recital HaD.
Admission: lfte.

h._yes lobby
exhibits
"Faces," an ublblt of photocrapbs
taken over a period of approximately 20
years, In nrlous IJOOCrlpbleal locations, is
on view In Hayes Lobby tbroueb April
12, spoiiiDred by tbe omco of Cull!Jral
Afralra. The facol ...... pbotocrapbed by
Dr. Herbert Relamann, profellor of
Ollllnterinl at U/B, and bolonc to policemen. barbora, deqymen, prof0110r1,
bouMwlnl, denllcts.
Flom Aprl114 tbrouCb Cbe end of May
., elddblt In connection wltb tbe Unl· ·
.. ralty Opera Studio's fortbeomlne
pnotnlaliol&gt; of "ArlldDe on Nuoo" will
be lbown Ill Hayes !AbbY (compiled by
tbo Opera Studio and tbo Muale Ubrary,
111c1 pniiDted by tbe omco of Cultural
Aftlln). The dloplay will lndude a
MdloD on U. U/B Opera Studio's prodDctlon 1111111 . - , pietuJII of productions
of IIIia opiD by IJ&amp;bK COIIIpmlioo, IDd I
..-of~ lll1lllratblt·tbo blstory of
~'lf"AlladDe on NIXOI."

.'

.... I

..

·:·:-

I RBI'ORTER /llapot 4/ April I, 19'75

On Saturday, April 19, Creative
Associate pianist Joseph Kubera will
present works of Josef Mattias Hauer
(1883·1959).
Hauer, the neglected pioneer of
twelve-tone music, is not well known in
this country. He developed a unique
twelve-tone system wblch pre-datos that
of Schoenberg. Music for Plano, piano
ol-hands and chamber music will be per·
formed .
"Pitm: I. Listen to Webem until you
can't stand it; 2, Play Schoenberg's music
until you're sick to your stomllch .
Effective antidote: Any Hauer piece you
can loy your ears on . . . ••
-John Cage, A Year (rom Monday
BmdHaU , ~m100.~ncert~

at 10:30 p.m. Admission is free.
Later in April (tbe 22nd and 23rd) tbe
Creati v~ Associates will perform From
the Seven Days (1968), a work for
instruments and electronics by Karlheinz
Stockhausen. Performers from the Center
of the Creative and Performing Arts are
Ralph Jones, Tom ~nslanton, Jan .
Williams, Eberhard Blum, Judith Martin,
Edward Yadzinsl&lt;y.
Baird HaD, ~m 100, 7-8 p.m., on
both nights. Admission is free.
On May 4 at 8 p.m., the Creative
Associates w ill perform the final
" Evenings tor New Musicu for this season
at tbe Albright-Knox. l'logrom details will
be announced later. General admission is
$2; students, University community and
Gallery members, $1.

innovations
and traditions
in renaissance
studies
This conference is a regional meeting
of tbe Renaissance Society of America.
The speakers* and seminars will be pre·
sented for those with special interest in
Renaissance art, music, history,
philosophy, and literature. Tl&gt;e $25
reclstration fee includes a banquet, a
cboial mass of the sixteenth century, and
a reception. A detailed program is avail·
able fiom Annex B-10 (telephone:
8314201). This conference is partially
spon.sOred by Arts ancl Letters, . tbe
~nversations in tbe Disciplines program,
the Music Department, tbe Englisb
Department, tbe Renaissance Society of
America, and tbe registrants.
As part of tbe Renaissance . Society
presentation, tbe Music Department will
sponsor a ri!-creation of tbe Votive Mus
of tbe Blessed VIrgin as it would have
been performed about 1500. Tbe perfor·
monee will include plaiDCbant Propers •
1W1J by tbe choir, altematlnc wltb
RenallaiDce orpn aettlap of tbe Proper,
U. OrdlDary, aod U. MlaG A,. MJJris
Std/4 of Joaquin des Prea. The ~ will
be IWIJ by tbe Cappella Plumbste-.1
Eplscopl, directed by. Dr. Jam.
McKinnon of U. De~t _of Music.
Tbo confmence Ia lchedUled for April
18-19.
*open to U. Uatnnlty commnnlly.

the ·aesthetics
of the
turned-out leg
and
.
other matters
Aesthetics is a leptimato component
of Western philosophy, althoueb it is not
empbuized iis much u it should. be. In
tbe East, however, aesthetics bas always
been a vital component in the under·
slandin&amp; of man and nature.
.
A symposium, which lJ in essence a
dialogue between the East and West on
Aesthetics, will bring togetber nearly 50
scholars representing various disciplines
from throughout the State of New York
as well as from Michigan, Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, and Ontario, Canada. There ·
will be 27 papers presented in the tbree
areas of Eastern, Western and ~m·
paratlve approaches. The papers range
from such oddities as "The Aesthetics of
tbe Tumed.Qut Leg" to ·~e Ontolopeal
Foundations of Aesthetics in Taoism and
Heidegger."
A public lecture will blgbligbt tbe
event. Dr. Richard Edwards, noted art
historian at the University of Michigan,
will speak on " Chinese LandscapeChanging Attitudes Towards Nature," in
339 Norton at 4 :30p.m., Aprll18.
"The public is also invited to an
ctrliberations.
The symposium is funded by tbe
SUNY ~nversations in tbe Disciplines
program and co-directed by Professors
Kennetb lbads and Dale Riepe_ of tbe
Department of Philosophy.

bicentennial
forum
The second in· a series of lectures by
outslandin&amp; jurists, &amp;cholars and poHtical
leaders will be alred on WBFO, Sunday,
April 20, ·at 8:30 p.m. Accordlne to
David Rosenbloom, one of tbe project's
orpnlzers, ''Tbe speakers on Blcontemlial
Forum are DOt - . y uperta on tbo
colonial period of American blstory.
Instead, tboy are people wbo ean draw
upon Ideas of U. American u:perimont
llld relata tbem to contemponry problema." 'fl!e featuMd apeabr for tbo April
Fomm will be United Slates Diltrlct
Court .ludle Charles Wyzaukl of Bootoll
who will speak on "1be JUcbta ol Man."
At U. dOle of U. featured apeoch, a
quootlon 1111111 anawer IOIIIon will be ._ld.
Llstenea will be umted to telephone
tbelr quostlona-a number to caD wiD be
pven durlne tbe broadcast.

�grantsmanship
Ufe Worlr.lbops will bold a semlner·on
Ibis lmj&gt;&lt;&gt;rtut slr.lll, Tuesday, Aprll 22,

the
incomparable&amp;
A tlueeGy spriq festi~ . of Fr.ed
Altaln-GIDc« Roten movies will be
~Dtecl (no cull, no colllllleldall) by
lbe Oftlee of Cultumi Afl'ain on Aprll 21,
22,ud 23.
,
The Mdel of olx lllma will be mown u
double.fi!!la a a p.m. ud 8 p.m. each day
In Norton's Conference Tbealre ($1.50
for each double "fe.tllft).
The festiftl opena with "Fiylnc Down
to Rlo" (1983), wblch IIWb the debut
of Altaln ud Roten to&amp;elber, llllbOIIIh
1be · ronwice In tbll one II between
llumbrolllly IIUitry Dolorea del Rio ud
all·Amedean Gene Raymond. Tbe mm Is
fmloua for lbe Culoca, a fast tugo, ·
wblch II IUIIC ud danced In a variety of
forma, lncludln&amp; spectacles that out-

234 NOrton, 3-5 p.m. Mrs. Sblrley Stout,
assistant to the vice president for teoeardl, will lectllft and lead a dllcUislon
of the &amp;enerlll upects of lfADt appllclllion
and manapment. Thll will Include
plannlnc, propooal preperation, and
ldenllftcatlon ·of IOIII&lt;:Oil.. of support. In
oddillon, erranpments Wilt be mode for
lndiridual- consultation for those with
specific projects in mind.

dance repertory
Dance Repertory will be ptesenllnc a
twoGy concert, Friday and Saturday,
Aprll 25 and 26, In lbe Cornell Theatte at
lbe Ambeat Campus. Tbls will be the
culmlnallnc project for lbe Dance
Repertory dua which is composed of
student cboreopapbers and performers,
!lbder faculty direction. Tbe concert will
featllft lolo and poup worts, including a
company number with ollginal scote
composed by Ric:bard Shulman. Tbe
concert II belnc arran,.&lt;~ by Jill Fothercill, wbo teaches in the Dance Program or
the Depertment of Pbysiclll Education.

Berkeley Bulby Berkeley.

"Roberta" (1935) II an opetetta by
Jerome Kern, wbooe pnteel atmosphere
111'itallzed by lbe prea~nce of Bob Hope,
lrene Dunne and, moat espedally, lbe

excitement of the Altllre-Jloten portions
of tbe rum. Kern '• 11911p are Immortally
beautiful ("I Won't Dance," "Smoke Gets
In Your Eyes," "L&lt;n;ely to Loot At").
"Top Ha" (1935) II a romance about
tbe twenties, and a saUte of Europeu
"dua. n It lives Ul Astaile In one of bis
belt roles, lbe mo~ famous Astaite·
llofen number, "Cbeelr. to Cbeet;" and
splendid ....,. by lnin&amp; Berlin: "No
Strinp," "Im't This a Lovely Day," and
"Top Hat, White Tie. and Tails," an
: Astaire cluslc.

• ' ·'

"Swine Time" (1936), another Jerome
Kem musical, provides a cozy plot, the
!superb "Tbe Way You Loolr.•·Tonigbt" ·
1 ud a ·peerlesa ftullle, tbe "Never Gonna
' Dance" number, aometbJnc that's usually
I chopped on TV.
"Tbe Story of · Vernon and lrene
Cutle" (1939) tells lbe stOry of this
couple wbo IntroduCed lbe new American
liOdal dancea to Europe (lbe Bunny Hue,
lbe Turlr.ey Trot, lbe One-Step) and wbo
made lbeae dancea popular and aecepted
by biCh aoeiety,.a wella"lbe maaes,ln
AmedCa. Allalle ud Roten teeollllruct
lbe du. . and ..-act lbe man1at1e of
lbe C.U. 'J!'blch onded lnPdy witb
Vem011'1 dealb at lbe ond of Wodd Werl.
It · II a dwminciY -llmentlll · and
1

affedlnc morie.

.

Tbt - - ...... with lbe last picture
Altaln. and Roten made totelber: "Tbe
llarldoyl ol s...dway" (11149). Altaln'l
IOio toar de "'"""· "8booo Wllb
0D," loin lbil0118 alootc with lbe WOIIcler•
ful Oealnrin 10111. ~ C..'t Take
'1W Away I'IOJD lie,"~ for
.. AlbdJFRotea dDOt.

wmP

tomorrow:
a symposium
on modern
scie_
n ce fiction
Tbls symposium offers paltleipants tbe
opportunity to beer sevel'll leodinc
science fiction authors (Judith Merrill,
Fr.ederik Pobl, Joanna Russ, and, U IB
Profesaor Sernuel Delany) spealr. on, 1their
craft and its implicati.ons, witb additloulll
. comment by critics Robert Scholes and
UIB Profesaor Leslie Fiedler, who bave
written about · t!H. gente, and young
authors Jean-Mere Gawron and JOseph
Haldeman, who have recently become
recognized in the field. Science fiction
rdms .from several cinematic periods,
silent to modem, will highlight changes in
tbe. mm approach to science fiction and
tefiect cultul'll attitudes over the yeers. A
reception ,and a writerS' worbhop will
offer participants lbe !'bance to meet and
: spealr. with the featured spealr.ers. For
odditioullllnformation, cllll 831-4827.
Generlll admllslon is $15; for students,
$5. Reeiatration fee includes mms, panel
dlscualons, teceptlon and wortsbops.
Mellis are not lnduded.
Scheduled ennts Include:
7'uea&lt;My-Wednuday, April 29-JO:· Preaympollum · lbowlnc or Flltz Lane mm,
Metropolis (1928), 244 eery (Hellltb
Sdon.-), Tueodly, 139 Ferber (Capen),
WedDelolay.
FridtJy, May 2: 7-9 p.m. Sbowtncs of
WIWam Cameron Menzies llljb ThU.,. to
Come (1916) and Geor&amp;ea Melles uort
7Wp to the ·Moon (1908), 1-'8 Diefendorf.

.

&amp;turday, May 8: 10 Lm.-Panel •
"Poollla and Sdence Fiction;" 1:30
p.m.-Panel "Science Plctlon-Wbete
Han We Bee and WhOle Ate We
Ooln(l;" 3:30 p.m.-Panei -"Tbe u- of
Sdence Fiction;" 5:30 p.m.-ilecepllon;
9 p.m.--5bcnriD&amp; of Jean-Luc Godord ftlm
A/phGDIJle (1965), I-'S Diefendorf for all

nents.

,SundtJy; May 4: 12:00 DODD. Writer's
Worbbop, Coafemlce Tbealre, Norton- .
Come tllllr. to ·lbe writers about wrltlnc
technlq-. martets, etc.
.
PARTICIPANTS MUST PREREGISTER with Mrs. E1be1 Schmid£,
Faculty Dub, Herriman Hall.

lawyers and
s_
o cial. c~ang~
the lady or
the. tiger?

Ate layyea effective acenti of 10c1111
cban&amp;e? Do they brine It about? In wbat
ways II It appropriate for lbem to do so?
Or do tbey,ln fact, inblblt"IOcllllcbance?
'!'Iiese quOitions will be- addmsed by
lbtee lively speakers witb varytnc points
of view: Stuert A. Scbelneold, Michael
Tipr, and Michael Walzer at the 1975
Fenton Lectures.
Stuart A. Scbelngold is professor of
polillclll science at tbe University of
Wasblngton and bas publllbed sevel'll
boots, most tecentiy, The Politics of
R illi ts: Public Policy and PoliticGI
Change. Mlcbael Tipr rose to prominence

-n.e UIB Alumni Alsociatlon and the
Offtce for Ctedlt-Free Programs, Division
of Continulnc Education, bas been presenllnc a dlltinculsbed lectllft series,
wblch bepn Januery 29. Called UIB
Campus Showcase, the eveninc lectllft
series ia open to members of the University community and tbe cenel'll public.
· Tbe fourth and last lectllft in UIB
Campus Showcase Is scheduled for
Wednesday, Aprll 30. ''Sexulll Bebarior In
u a '-rac:Ueal lawyer" in the 6o's; aome or
the Futun.-Tbe Lady or the Ticer?" will
bls caes and clients bave lnduded
·be dilcuased by Gloria L. Roblin, Pb.D.
llelliJiger v. United Stites (Chicago 7),
Tbe oddresa of Dr. Roblin, uaoclate
U.S.
v. H. Rap Brown (wlre-tappinC laue)
clinical professor, Department of
and People v. Ancela Daril. Mr. Tipr, an
Psychiatry, and coordinator of Programs
attorney In tbe nrm of Williams,.
• In Human Sexuality for underpaduate
Connolly, and Califano In Waohlncton,
medlclll students and residents, will bighD.C., bas tecenlly written (with M.R.
licbt the cbanein&amp; patterns in sexulll roles
Levy) Bourgeois Revolutionaries tJnd the
and attitudes. Place-Moot Courtroom,
Jobn Lord O'Brian Hall, Amherst · LGw. Michael Walzer is professor of
government at Harvard wbete be teaches
Campus.
Dues-payinC members of the UIB
" History or Polillclll Thoucbt" and "Problems in Contemporary .Politiclll
Alumni Alsociation may attend the UIB
Campus Showcase free. Tbe series fee for
Philosophy." Prof0110r Walzer bas publllbed The Revolution of the &amp;into: A
other lllumnl and members of the University C011lmunlty was $5; for lbe genel'll
Study in the Orlfitu of RGdictJJ Politics;
Obliaalio1U: Euayr on Di&lt;o&amp;edience,
public, $ 10. Tbe program beliDS at 7 :30
WGr, Gild Citiunship; PolitictJI Action;
p.m. Light tefresbmenta will be sel'Yed by
and Regicide tJnd Revolution.
the Alumni Association.
Call U IB Alumni Association
A panel dllcuaslon will foDow the
forrulll ptesentltlons by tbe Fenton
(831-4121) for further information.
lecturers. Moderator · will be M.rc
Glllanter, prof0110r of law at SUNY IB
and editor of the LGw tu1d Society
Review.
Tbe Fenton Lectures ate
by
the Office of Culturlll Affairs, Ibis year in
association with tbe Law School, and ere .
scheduled for 8 p.m., Tliuisday; May 1, in ·
the Moot Courtroom, Jobn Lord O'Brian
Opera Ditector Muriel He&amp;ert Wolf bas
announced that jJniversity Opera Studio's
Hall, Amherst Camp~.:. A~~ Is~- ,
fully-mounted production or "Ariadne on
Naxos" witb the UIB Chamber Orchesta,
originally to be performed on Aprll 25
and 26, bas been teSCheduled for the fall
(November 6, 7 and 8, 1975) to be presented in the winter program or tbe Sbaw
Festivlll Theater at Niagara-on-the-Late.
On Aprll 25-26 at 8 p.m. , University
Opera Studio will ptesent "Opera Primavera • Primadonnas and Friends" with the
U/B Chamber Orchestra, Culo Pinto,
conducting, at Baird Recitlll Hall (no
admission cbuge).
The piogram will Include a minipreview of "Ariadne" and bel canto
portrlllts. University Opera Studio 111ncen
perticipllllnc are John C. Balter, Jane
Bane, Bruce Bell, Elizabeth Brown,
·Joseph DICesate, Tbomu Doyle, Michael
Fiacco, Kenneth ~.... Carol Grey,

arraniect

prima donnas
and friends

Jean~. ~ WOO:d, Gerzlnua Hoelr.stra,
Racbel Lewis, Edward"' Maaball, Fortunato Pemmenti, Paldda Orertoric,
Kennelb Whelan apd Robert Wllouabby.
with l!len- Selb • coachlaccompanllt
for lbe Studio.
.

c-u day
Tbe Amhaa Campus will be the 1100110
of C&lt;immnnity-Unlftalty n.y- 1975 op
Sunday, May 4. AlllOIII -~~ featured
will be conliniiOUI bUI toull,lnfonDatlon
about Prolaia. demonslnlloaa by lbe
Albletie Oopertmont, m and ...n.
dllplays and demonstratio-. Tbt llulk
Ilejiutment w8l offer aplltade t.1a and
concert~ ranctnc trom Jazz to aympbooy
to opera.
AD arelnrited, to lbare lbe p1euun1 of
. tblllpriq aftemoon.
Etenta will run from 1-5 p.m.

REPORTBR I Mapet-' I Aplll8, 19761Pace 4

�Thursdey. April10
DISCUSSION

Speake111 from the Onondqa
Nation: "Procn-ma for Native
American Inmates In Auburn
and Attica Correctional
FacUlties"
339Norton
1-3 p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO and Minority Student
Association
FORUM

.'

Eacle Bay Evictions
231 Norton
8 p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO and Minority Student
Association
MUSIC
BROADCAST
Monday· Friday.
Sepwnber 1975
VISUAL ARTS

March-

\

Robert Graves: ~ 80th Birthday

Emlbltlon of Flnt Bdltlons
and MoniiiCripll
Lodl:wood Memorlol IJbnry,
2nd floor: Bolcony ond
• Poetry Room
9a.m.. 5 p.m.
Lockwood Memoriol IJbrory
Th"""" April12
VISUAL ARTS '
"F...,.," ezlilhit of photOgraphs
by Dr. Herbert Reis11W111*
Hoyes.Lobby .
Bullclln&amp; Hours
Office of Culturol Affairs

COFFEEHOUSE
• Leon Redbone: ragtime, blues,
and crazy music
Fillmore Room, Norton Union
8 p.m., 10 p.m.
General Admluion $1.50,
Faculty/Statf/AIWDIII $1.25,
Studenta$1
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse
Friday-Saturday, April 4-6

FILM
"2001: A Space Odyssey"
Farber 140 (Capen)
. - 7:30 p.m. ond 10 p.m.
Admission $1
Community ~ctlo n Corps
Saturday, April 5

April3,4,5...d10,11 , 12

MUSIC

DANCE

Andrew Schultze,
M.F.A. Recite!
Baird Recltel Hall
Sp.m.
Admission Free
Department of Music

ZoditJque c;,mpany, dUoected by
Uncia Swlnlucb: "Dance ' 75"
Horrlmon Theotre Studio

8-p:m.
Genenl Admission $1.50, Student.$ .75
Deportment of Theatre
Thuncloy, April3
MUSIC
DitmG T&lt;IA!y Deen, pionist: VisitArtist, on fiiOUity of
Amerleon University In
Beirut, Lebenon
Baird Redtel HaD
Bp.m.
G·e neral Admlulon . $1.50,
Faculty/Statf/AIWDIII with
LD. $1, Studenta$ .50
Deportment of Music

IDe

VISUAL AND AURAL ART

"Appalllon"*
IUM Louaeo, Norton Union
Bp.m.
Getloal AdmlooioD $1, FIIOU!tyI
St81r/AIWDIII/Studellll $ ••50
UUAB- VIdeo Committee (ACT
V) •
F~,April4

MUSIC

Compooers Worltsh&lt;tp Concut
Baird Rec:ltal HaD
Bp.m.

.AdmlooioD Flee
Deplrtment of Music

baritone:

MUSIC

Gato Barbieri with special guest
stars, Oregon Jazz
Fillmore Room, Norton Union
8:30 p.m. and 11-:30 p.m.
General Admission $3.50, Student.$2.50
U.U.A.B. Music Committee
COFFEEHOUSE
Friends of Fiddle,. Green: bold
and bawdy
Cafeteria 118, Norton Union
9p.m.
.
General Admlnlon $1.50,
Faculty/Statf/Alumni $1.25,
Studenll .$1
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse
Surldoy,

Ai!ri16

Buffalo rock concert producers:
ponel di.scussion
11:00 p.m .
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY/B

POETRY READING
T-y.April8
Solly FietlJer and Joel ~ipmDn in

BROADCAST
The Persecution and Assassination of Dramatic Logic
10 p.m.
WBFO -FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY JB
Wednesday, April 9
LECTURE- FILMS

Tom Porter: "'Indian Prayer,
Prophecy, Religion, History,
Values, Ecology"•
231 Norton Union
7p:m.
Ac!plission Free
•
Native American Cultura l
Awareness Organization and
Minority Student Association
MUSIC

Redial
Baird Redtel Hall
8:00p.m.
Admllolon Flee
Department of Millie

339 Norton
2-5 p.m.
Admission Free
_ NACAO and Minority Student
Association
LECTURE
Professor Manfred Dunak,.
Indiana University, Blooming-

Georg Kaiser und Stefan

Hermlin im Exil. Zwei
eXemplariscbe Moglicbkeiten." (In Gennan)*
337 Norton Union
3p.m.
Admission Free
Germon Graduate Association
Club of the Department of
Germanic and Slavic
MUSIC

Erich uon Daniken: "Gold of the

Bp.m.
Admlulon Flee
Deplrtment of Music

Goda"*
OarkGym
Bp.m.
Non-Univenity members $1

S.A. Speake111 Bureau

DRAMA

MUSIC

"As Long as tbe River Runs"

Debotah Greitzer, -.iotin: M .F.A.

Moureen Golloghe r, viola :
M.F.A. Redtel
Baird Redtel HaD

Step/len Morain, "fiola: M.F.A.

Friday, April 11
FILM

LECTURE/SLIDE PRESENTATION

Weclnaodrt-Surldoy, April 9-13

Morldoy. April 7

a reaclln&amp; of their own poems
Blue Room, Faculty Club
8:30p.m.
Admission Free
Department of English: Intramural Poetry Series

ton : uDer Zwang zur Politit?
Donald Weilerstein. first violinist
of Cleveland String Quartet:
F:aculty Recital. 3 violin and
p iano sonatas by Robert
Scbumonn, with Stephanie
Brown, pianist
Baird Recite! Hall
Bp.m.
General Admission $1 . 50 ,
Faculty /Staff/Alumni with
I.D. $1, Students$ .50
Deportment of Music

MUSIC

Bp.m.
Admillion Flee
Department of Music

U / B Chonu, Harriet ·simons,
director, ond U!B Strings,
Pamela GeUbart, conductor
Baird Recite! Hall
Bp.m.
Admission Free
Deportment of Music

· "Bride of SbakespNre lieaftll":

A sequel: aceDea from

· modem Ute with dJalotue by
Sliabapeare, dincted by

Gordon llotoff*
Courtyud TbMtre, tarayeUe a.
Hoyt
Bp.m.
Geaeral Admluion $2.50, Stu·
dent. $1
Cente. for Theatre ReMudl

Rec:ltal
Baird Redtel HaD

BROADCAST
Palelllnlan viewpoint on the
Arab-hraell cordllct pnlellted Ill' Bdwud Bald, [110. r.... of Amedcao La-..
at Columbia Uninnity
8:00p.m.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
AMnlceofSUNY/B
CONCERT

Paul . Ortqn - NativJ American·
alnaer-aullarlst !rom New
Mexico

Haa

-

Lounce. Norton

Union

8 :00p.m.

Admllolon Flee
NACAO and Minority Student
Aaoclatlon

�MUSIC
Squire Hatiin, orpn: Faculty

Redtai
BROADCAST

''American Indians. 1reat
lirylh-otory material, prolelt
· and romance"
10:00.p.m.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A aenlee of SUNY /B
Friday-Sn~rday,

Firat Pr..byterlan Cbureb,
Symphony Clrde
6:00p.m.
AclmiJIIon Ffte
Department or Millie
COFFEEHOUSE
Marraret M&lt;reArthur: traditional

April 11-12

FILM

"Kine of Hearts,
Farber 140 (Capen)
8:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
AclmiJIIon $1
Community Action Corps

mualc with lapbarp, dulcimer,
and euJtar
Cafeterta 118, Norton Union
8 :00p.m.
General Admission $1.50,
Faculty/Staff/Alumni $1.25,
Students$1
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse
Monday, April 14 through May
30

Saturday-Sunday, April 12-13
VISUAL ARTS: EXHIBIT
CRAFI' SALE AND SHOW SOClAL DANCING
Iroquois Drum Dancen; Tons.wandaSin&amp;ers
Norton Union
2:00-5:00 p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO ana Minority Student
Association

"Ariadne on Naxos"•
. Hayes Lobby
Building Houn
Office or Cultural Affairs, U/ B
Opera Studio and Music
Library

Traditional foods for sale, social
dancing
North American Culture Center
. 315 Nlapra Street
6:00p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO and Minority Student
Association

RENAISSANCE STUDIES
Renaissance Society or America:
regional meeting*
Faculty of Arts and Letten,

Bicentennial Forum:

Tuesday. April 15
BROADCAST

FILM

"Book burning/banning In the
Kanawha County schools"
10:00 p.m.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A service or SUNY /B

"Going Places''
Farber 140 (Capen)
8:00p.m., 10:00 p.m.
Admission $1
Community Action Corps

and Tonawanda

Nmton Union
2:00 - 8:00p.m.
Admllllon Ffte
NACAO oncl Minority Student
'
.A.odatioll
BROADCAST ./
...-"
Melropolltan Open Final Audi-

212~UDIDD

I :OOp-111-

AdalllolaD "'-

U.U.AJI. CoffeoboaM

John

Hil~

Joe

Pernasalice

Monday, April 21

FILM
Fred Ar!Aiire.{]inger RotfU$ FUm
Fesli~: "Flying Down to

Rio" and " Roberta"•
3:00 p.m. and 8 :00 p.m.
Norton Conference Theatre
Admilslon $1.50
ornce or Cultural Affairs
MUSIC

U/ B Symphony &amp;nd, U!B
On:hestra, and U/B Chorus in
Concert. Works by Bernstein,
Benson, Ginsstera and Gershwin

Kleinhans Millie Hall
8:30p.m.
Admilslon Ffte

Friday, Aprii18
LECTURE

DEMON-

B. .dworlt, Silverworlt, Bu~t
Maltine, .Godseye , Dressmaltlne, Quillin&amp;, Sar!dpalnt-

Dulcimer""'*"""'

Forum : WUJiam

•

''The

R ights or Man"•
8 :30 -11 :00 p.m.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY /B

Wednesday, April16

Su...S.V, April13

WORKSHOP

BROADCAST

SYMPOSIUM

COFFEEHOUSE

Uoal

Sunday, April 20

ment of Music, Department
of English, Renaissance
Society or America

339 Norton .
7:30- 10:00 p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO and Minority Student
Association

2:00p.m.
WBFO-FII (88.7) ·
A oonlee of SUNY/B

MUSIC·

Joseph Kuberu, plano: Creative
Associate Recital*
Baird Hall, Room 100
10:30 p.m.
Admilslon Free
Tbe Center or the Creative and
Performing Arts

Conversations i n the
DiscipUnes Proeram, Depart'

Neal Hatch , piano: M;F.A.
recital
Baird Recital Hall
8:00p.m.
Admission Ffte
Department of Music

ln&amp;
Drum Dancers
Slnlm -

Concentus Mlllicu&amp;, Millie by
Two at Three
Buffalo Public Library Auditorium, Lafayette Square
3:00p.m.
Admission Free
Grosvenor Society and Department or Music

" East·West Dialogue in
LECTURE, DISCUSSION

Kunstler,

NATIVE CRAFI'S
STRATION

Gro1uetior Society Concert:

· Friday-Saturday, Aprii18-19

MUSIC

Faculty/Staff/Alumni $1.25,
Students $1
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse

MUSIC

Professor Albert Elsen, Stanford
University: "Rodin as a
Spokesman or tbe Unspeakable"
Albright-Knox Art Gallery
8:00p.m.
Admission Free
Department or Art History and
Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Aesthetics"*
Norton Hall
Friday: 1 :00 - 4:30p.m.
Saturday: 9 :00a.m. -4:30p.m.
Public Lecture: Friday: 4:30 '5 :30p.m.
Admission Free
Department or Philosophy in
collaboration witb Council on
International Studies, ·funded
by the SUNY Conversations ·
in the Disciplines Proeram

General Admission $1.50,

Saturday, Aprii'19

LECTURE

Attica Tria

RaeUme Nite with Eric &amp;honebert: classical rqtime piano
Cafeteria 118, Norton Union
9:00p.m.

'J

Prot-or Albert E""'n, Stanford
University: "'!be Oriplll of
Modem Sculptun, Ploneen
andPremilel"
310FooterHall
4:00p.m.
Admission Free
Department or Art History and
Albrieht-Knox Art Gallery

WORKSHOPS

Local Day - Representatives
from local Indian Organizations will discuss critical
issues
339 Norton Union
11 :00 a.m.- 3:00p.m.
Admission Free
NACAO and Minority Student
Association

A Re-aeaUon or u., Vothe
Mua or the 111.-cl Virlln
clrea 1600•
St. ~·• Eplacopal Cbureb,
Colonial Clrde
' 8 :30p.m.
Admlllion -Flee
American Ranalaance Society
and Department or Millie

VISUAL ARTS: LECTURE/
DISCUSSION

Monday, April 14

Saturday. April 12
SOClAL

MUSIC
Thuroday. April17

MUSIC

Eberhard Blum: Creative Asso'
elates Recital*
Baird Recital Hall
8:00p.m.
Admiasion Free
Center or tbe Creative and Performing Arts
Thursday,, April 17 1hroull!&gt;
Saturday, Apri119

DRAMA
"'ld T\mers' Sexual Symphony
(111!1 other notes)," a new
worlt written lllld direeted by
Morton Liebter
Courtyard . Theatre (Lafayette
lllldHoyt)
8 :00 p-111- (2 lbowl.., Apdl19:
8:00 p.m.lllld 10:00 p.m.)
GeDOral ~ $2.50, Studonta$1
CeDt• for Tboe&amp;n ~
wltb aid flam tile New Yott
State CouDdl Oil tile Aria

De~ntofM!Jsic

Dauid Brinkley •
Clark Gym
8 :00p.m.
Non-University members $1
S.A. Speakers Bureau
. BROADCAST
"The Black Listed Years": an
Interview with Rine Lardner,
Jr., one or tile flnt people to '
be lnvestipted by the' now
defunct Houoe On-American
Adhlties Committee
8:00p.m.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A aervice or SUNY/B
BROADCAST
Recordlap ..... ln-p- and
on worlt I•D• by A'""
Lomu, Bruce Jacbon and
~Gellert

10:00p.m.
WBFO-FII (88.7)
A oon1ee or SUNYJB

BROADCAST .

.•

"So You Want to be a Rock and
RoD Star''
11:00 p.m.
WBFO-FII (88.7)
A service of SUNY/B
Tuaoday-Wadnaaday, Apri122-23
MUSIC
Cnallve Aa.&gt;clate Recital*
Stoctbau.a.'a "From the Seven
Days"
Baird-HaD, Room 100
7:00p.m. -9:00p.m.

Admllalon

"*

The Caater or the er.tift and
- Perroniling Aria

BROADCAST
Live broadt;aat of enatm
~a-.!

7:00 p-111- ·9:00p.m.
WBFO-FII (88.7)
· A oonlee or SUNY/B

-,
RBPORTBR J~~apat -4 I April 1,1975/ Pip 6

�Thunday.s.tunloy: April 24-26

Tueedey.SUnday, Aprl :NM.y 4

MUS!C

SYMPOSIUM

"Love You Madly": a tribute to

T~,April~
~~~ r+ :·~ ~

-~Smlt~
Harriman 'lbealre

~ AJ~U,.,. ~ Fam

Futloal: '"l'op Hat" and

Modem Science Fiction.,.
GeDeral Admilllon $15, stu·dentl $5. PrerePtzatiOD.
. Enellsh Department (Butler
Chair); Division of Con·
tlnulng Education; omce for
Credlt-FrM Programe; omce
of CUJturol Attain; Provott of
Art&amp; and Letten; Regional •
FBm Project
.

Studio

8:00p.m.

·

~on $2.50, Stu·
dent&amp; $1
·
Department of Theatre, Department of Black Studies, and
omce of CUJturol Affaln

GeDerol

Tlmo ...
3:00p.m. and 8 :00p.m.
Nortoo Coofere~~&lt;e Theatre
AdmlooloD $1.60 •
Oftlce of CUJturol Affaln
"Swill~

Friday.SII1Urday, April 25-26

VISUAL ARTS: LECTURE

FILM

Profutor William Jordy of
Brown UDinnity on modem
udlltedure
Tlmo and place not decided.
can Art History Department
(831-2240) for further infor·
mallon.

Faculty' Compose" Concert
Baird Recital Hall
8:00p.m.
Admlulon FrM
Department of Music

~on$1

MUSIC
"Opera Primavera • Primadon"i&gt;Ds
and Friends ..
Baird Recital Hall
8:00p.m.
Admlasion FrM
: University Opera Studio and
Department or Music

l'loceoo''*
2M Nortoo HaD
3:00. 5:00p.m.
Admllllon FrM
Life Worbbops

"America a Prophecy" :
American poetry from pre·
Columbus to the present
10:00 p.m.
WBFQ.FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY/8
Wednesday, April 30

"D&amp;D&lt;e Repertory"*
Katharine Cornell Theatre,
Ellicott Complex, Ambe"t
Campus
8:30p.m.
General Admission $2, Students
$1
Dance Program, Department of
Physical Education
.

Richard Ottinger, former Con·
gream&amp;~~ from Westchester
County
Fulmore Room, Norton Union
8 :00p.m.
~nFrec

S.A. Speakers Bureau, in con·
junction with Erie County's
Earth Week Program
(Contact Speakt!IJ Bureau for
fwther information)

LECTURE
U/B Campus Showcase: Dr.
G Ioria L. Roblin: "Sexual
Behavior in the Future - the
Lady or the Tigel'?"*
John Lord O'Brian Hall
Moot (:ourtroom , Amherst
Campus
7:30p.m.
Part oi: a series ·see "Higbligbts"
for admission fees
U/B Alumni Association and the
omce for Credit-Flee Programs

COFFEEHOUSE

Lew London and and: great
guitar, mandolin , banjo,
blues, swing, jaiz and bluegrass
,.
Cafeteria 118, Norton Union t
9:00p.m.
General Admission· $1.50,
Faculty/Staff/Alumni $1.25,
Students $1
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse

BROADCAST

•'.
novelist,

Ed Scrnderr-poet,
mllllcian, and pbBologist in a
recorded poetry reading
10:00 p.m.
. .
WBFQ.FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY /B

Wednuday-Sunday, • April
23-May4

MUSfC' , ..

U/8 P~rcussion Ensemble,
DenniS Kahle, director
Baird Recital Hall

8:00p.m.
Admission Flee
Department of Music •

Friday, April 25
DRAMA
BROADCAST

"CLASSICS": A v.;w From the
Bridge by Arthur Miller, and
The Good Woman of Setzuan, by Bertolt Brecht,
directed by Don Sanden
Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette
and Hoyt
8:00p.m.
·
GeDerol Admlaion $2.50, Studenta $1
Center for Theatre Research

"Jubilee": Live Bluegrass con·
cert featuring ·the Boot Hili
Boys. You're all invited to
WBFO's Studio A as they
pick and strum up a storm.
9:00p.m. •
WBFO-.FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY/B

Wednoiday, Aprl 23

MUSIC

FILM

Nils V.,.,.nd, pi&amp;Do: M.F.A.

Monday. April 28

Recital
Baird Recital Hall
8:00p.m.

h~U,.,. RCJIUI FU;,.
Fettlool: "Tbe Story of
VOIIIOD and lnDe Cutle" and
"The Barldeya of Broad·

Fred

A~nF'rM

Department of ·Music

way""

BROADCAST .

8:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.
Nodaa CollfeNDoe 'lbealre
Adallollon $1.60
Oftlce !If CUltural Attain

"Tum Me On, rm a Radio":
l n - . r with propul ell·
rector&amp; of WBUF, WGRQ and
mlllle~ofWBUF
·
ll:OOp.m.
WBFQ.FM (88.7)A .me. of SUNY/B

,_.._., .. :~
~"-£,r;

.. ! .. ~(·:-~A

1\lt

.,

r

1

'1..

•

, .._w, ::., t' •:!~i

U• · -: ~·

h•

1 •

Saturday, May 3

MUSIC

Susan Vizloly~ pialio: MFA
recital
Baird Recital Hall
• 8:00p.m.
Adml.olion f'rM
Department of Muslc

Sunday. May 4

'

MUSIC
-

University-Community Day*
Varlous places, Amherst Campus
(Ellicott Complex)
1:00 • 5:00 p.m. Musical Aptitude Tests
1:00 p.m. FriDa Boldt, Piano

MasterClau
2:00 p.m. Concert · U/B Jazz
Workshop
3 : 00 p .m . Concert . U/B
Symphony Band (Outside
location) Cornell Theatre In
case of rain
4 : 00 p . m . University Opera ·
Studio
· •
5:00 p.m. Concert . U/B Per·
cussion Ensemble
Admission FrM
Department or Music
MUSIC
Evenings for New Music•
Albright-Knox Art GIWery
8:00 PJD.
General Admission $2, Student/
Faculty/Staff, membe" of
the Gailery $1
Center of Cteative ind Performing Arb
Monday, May 5

Thursday, May 1

MUSIC
MUSJC
Joan CoUopy, voice: Student
Recital
Baird Recital Hall

8:00p.m.
Admission Flee
Department or Music

Linda Smith, plano: MFA
Recital
Baird 'Recital Hall
8:00p.m.
Admission Flee
Department or Music
Tuesday,

LECTURE/SYMPOSIUM

M~

6

LECTURE

'-"'

Fenton Lecture Series :

"Lawyers and Social Chanfe"
with guest tpeaken Mich4el
Tifar, Stuart' Schei"'IOd.
Michtlel Walzer•
8:00p.m.
Moot Courtroom, .John Lord .
O'Brian Hall, Anihent
Campus
Admbolon Frae
Oftlce of . CUJblnl Affairs' In
-.dU!on with the Law
Scbool ·
.

George Ansekuicius, chairman,
Departmen~ of An:bltecture,
Graduate School of Design,
Hanud UDinnlty, "Towarclt
a Sane An:bltecture"
Scbool of An:bltecture 2917
Main Street

·

'

8:00p.m.
Admllllon FrM
School of Ardlltec:tule and
lrmlronn.atal Design
Wedneedey,May7

IWSIC
Yllilr lllllhlllho(f. piano: Faculty
Recital

......

.I'

8:00p.m.
Adml.ollon FrM
~Department of Music

BROADCAST

DANCE

LECTURE (tentative)

U/B .Choir, Harriet SimoDI, ell·
rector

Baird Recltallbli

_MUSIC

Community Action Corps

"Grantamamhlp and the Grant

MUSIC

Tuosday,April29

"Tbe Paper Chase"
Farber 140 (Capen)
8:00p.m., 10:16 p.m.

L1FE WORKSHO!'

Friday, May 2

'Tomorrow: A S)'IDI&gt;08um on

directed by

·'
'

llllrda.da!Han
8:00p.m.
Geaeral Admlulon $1.50,
Faculty/Staff/~ wltb
J.D. $1,
.50
o.p.m.ot of iiUiic

8tuclenta.

�Frldly, M.y 18
Thundoy, M.y 8 /

MUSIC

MUSIC
conductor
Bolrd Redlallbll

'

8:00p.m.
Admission Free
Department ol Millie

Frldly, M.y 9

MUSIC
Irene Deutsch, piano: B.F.A.
Redial
Bolrd Redial lbll
8:00p.m.·
Admioolon Flee
Deportment or Millie
s.tunloy. M.y 10

MUSIC

'I

Cheryl Gobetti, !lute: B.F.A. .

Redial .

Bolrd Redlallbll

8:00p.m.
Admllllon Free
De~ment ol Millie

Denn# .WilliaiiUon, cello: M.F.A.

Sundoy. M.y i 1

U!B Oreh.,lnz, PamelaGeuhlrt

Redial

Elaine Sheeh4n, voice: B.F.A.
Recital
Bolrd Redial lbll

8:00p.m.
Admission Free
Department of Music

Monday, Moy 12

MUSIC
Nan Cobb, hom: B.F.A. Recital
Bolrd Recilal lbll

8:00p.m ..
Admllllllon Free
Department of Music

.

Bolrd Recilallbll

MUSIC

8:00p.m.
Caro~~cNeely, violin: . B.F.A.

Bolrd Recitallbll

8:00p.m.
Admission Flee
Departuient or ll'!usic

Thunclay, M.y 15

MUSIC
Edward Marshall, voice·: B.F.A.

Redial
Bolrd Recital lbll
8:00p.m.
Admllllllon Free
Department of Music

Admllllllon Free
Deportment of Music
S.lunloy, Sundoy,

17, 18, 19

M.....,,

M.y

MUSIC
Bulfalo Younc Artists Auditions
Bolrd Recital lbll

8:00p.m.
Admllllllon Flee
Bulfalo Phllbumonlc Orchestra
*See uHlgb.llcbts" tor details.
TICKETS

Tickets, where required, ue
avallabh . at the Norton lbll
Ticket Olllce (In advance); remalnlnc llckets at the door one
hour before event. I.D. cards .
lllUit be preoented' in order to "
purchaE tickets at Faculty/
Staff/Alumni rate.

·

7

:· .

UPOR'I'IIt /illlloft4/ Afllll,

im ,..;.. a

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
MARCH 'l:l, 1975

•

Trustees
okay names,
honor profs ·
Names fOr sfill more University fa·
cilities and honors for several faculty
me mbers were among U/8-related
ag'enda items aPproved by the State
University Board of Trustees at their
monthly meeting yesterday.
The Trustees: approved the name Of
louise Blanchard Bethune Hall for the
Buffalo Meter Building, 2917 Main Street,
which presently houses the School of
Arch itecture and Environmental Design
and the Art Department; endorsed the
name Ellsworth M . Statler Food Commissary for th e.. food service complex
now under constructiop at Amherst;
designated the yet-to-be-constructed
physical plant-shop building at Amherst
the John Bea ne Ce nter; and voted to call
the outside plaza at the Governors
Residence Halls the George F. Ran&lt;l, Jr.,
Plaza.

U/B's $~,-side show-a·rip_offl
lyP~-w.lld~n
'$60,000 of the .$160,000 ledure package
A. major reason the buyer doesn't haVe
•epon~SUH
more control over the situation is that
put together for the former presidential
most ca mpus speakers bureaus, like SA's,
counsel.
Quick, what do Christine Jorgensen,
lack contint.~,!!y: they have a new d ir:_ec;to r
\Villia111 C1Jiey and Gloria Steinem,Pave
'SudtHecl into lrvinB'
every year, aSl\ldent with Other interests
In
mo -, -~mwer: Tl):ey oll_,have _
Ag~ncies · 'sry '1 n "qualit y'"=' and
and resPonsibililies who has to learn the
lucrative part-time careers as big draws
reliabili.ty, Morrow says. " J was suckered
ropes from scrat~ .
O(l ~ 9~pus.~re-circuit. ·
_
.
into sched uling Clifford Irving because I
those il1ree;1ii:frriinedly make strarjge
tru ~ ted an agent," he says ruefully. The
The lecture -bUri au·s, mea nwhile, on
bedfellows, but apparently the only
age nt was Harry Walker, whom Morrow
- which almost all £am pus impresarios decriterion for ind usion in this burgeoning
rega rds as a "scoundrel." .
pend, grow stronger - and riche r cirde of campus speakers is fame - or
every year. Currently, Morrow says, the
" I'm still in the process of trying to get
notoriety.
agencies get about 20 per cent of the fees
restitutio n," Morrow says of the Irving
The Fillmore Room and . auditoriums
earned by their clients. When a tour
fiasco. At this point, he is considering
like it across the country can,be filled to
package is arranged for a really hot
se nd ing a lener of warning to campus
spilling on three hours' notice if the
speaker, the agency's cut is even larger.s~eakers bureaus nationWide detaili.ng
celebrity is big enough-not liero, mind
According to the grapevine, Morrow
hrs unhappy experience with the
you, but celebrity, an American invensays, John Dean's agent was to receive
(I urn In p;tJ,:r 1. rnl. .f)
tion (as Richard Schickel explains) meaning a person who is famous because he is
well-known.
As a friend noted, the moral indignation over the planned appearance on
campus of Ron Ziegler as well as the acA "change in leadership for the Univerem ployed for nine years. He holds uncusation of frivolity levelled at "lois
sity at• Buffalo Foundation, Inc., (U/ BF)
derg raduate and master's degrees from
lane" both rriiss the point. The campus
and
the
be8innings
of
an
effort
to
Michigan State.
lecture program is essentially a freak
develop commercial facilities in the ,.
show where. . ,singular!ty is all, and a
In his new post, Carter will head all acvicinity
of
lake
LaSalle
on
the
Amherst
woman created by. surgery isas good ai a
tivities of the U/ BF which is a private
Campus were announced by the Founmass murderer or a Wutiful, articulat~
non-profit
corporation chartered by the
dation this week.
feminist or a racist; former governor or a
New York State Board of Regents. to ad
John M. Carter, U/BF executive vice
third-rate writer -who almost pulled off
as
the
Univ~rsity's agent .in soliciting,
president since 1973, was named presipublishing's Biggest Con. . .
collecting and administering private
#dent of the Foundation, replacing John
And for fees of up to $3,000 for an hour
monies.
Latona who has served in that post since
behind the -podium, why shoulp the
Latona, in his new position, will draw
1972. \atona, in turn, will become presispeakers say no! ·
dent of a yet unnamed not-for-profit de$21.-Side~
velopment corporation which will work
Last April Student Association handed
to bring about construdion of a Faculty.Aiumni Center and supporting commersome $20,000 over to Stan Morrow with
cial developments for the Amherst
the Implicit mandate to get UIB its share
Campus. The area surrounding the
of the side show. After a year marked by
several last-minute cancellations (two by
Amherst site is p~esently lacking in commercial . shopping, eating, service and
Oifford Irving alone) and sporadic conrecreational facilities, a situation which
tr&lt;M!rsy over the nature of the speakers
has drown a gre1t deal of student
chosen, Morrow is stepping down as
head of the SA Speakers Bureau, while '-- critiJ;ism. Such facilities would ·be
developed,
1long with the previouslythe fote . of the Bure1u Itself is bei_n g
projected Faculty-Alumni Center 1nd
reconsidered by the Student Association.
Morrow belielles that KtUally having
motel complex. on 1 parcel of lind near
the ampus like designated for such pur·
""!"""'kers 1nd other prominent ~
pie on ampus, in the fleoh, ls a great opposes by the SUNY llolrd of Trustees.
Daniel A. lloblin, Jr., chairman of the
ponunily for students, but he ldmits that
Foundation's B.Dard of Trustees, ln·
the ~pUking business has gonen out of
nounced the two new 1ppointments on
hand and th'lt campuses are paylflg In·
behalf of the Trustees' Executive Com-Hated. prices for the educ1tion1l
rnlnee. .
_,.
equivalent of • lwtury Item.
Can.,.. joined the stiff of the UIB
"H.- We're beinl ripped off," he
Foundation in 1969- as vice president for
Sly5. "but the market situation is this:
. llumni .affain, after iirvlna for three
ipealcen lilt •nufl.-ther can ptand
_ ... ~ far " - -.alnst in, . _ .. director of alumni relations •
dustry and ocher unlv8sldeLH
Mlchlpn State.I.JnJvenlty, -'-e he-

First Woman Architect
louise Blanchard Bethune was the first
professional woman architect in the U.S.
Born in Waterloo, New York, in 1856, she
was the daughter of a mathematics
teacher and was educated at home until
· the age of 11 . She graduated from Buffalo High School in 1874. After two years
of study and trav.el, she worked ~ith
architects ' Richaril A. Waite and F:W.
Caulins. She married Robert A. Bethune
in 1881 and together they opened an
architectural firm -of their own. She designed, among other types of structures,
18 school btrildings in Western New
York. She was elected the first woman
" member of the American Institute of
Architects in 1888.
Ellsworth M . Statler, ;a hotel developer
of national prominence, was born in
Somerset County, Pennsylvania. His first
business ven-t ure was Statler's Restautant
which he opened in_ 1896 on the first
floor of the Ellicon Square Building in
downtown Buffalo. He also built and
operated hotels at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo in 1901 and at the St.
(turn to p.age 3, col.

1)

U/BF·names.Carter, plans Am_herstproject
on several years exPerience in public
development. Prior to joining the U/B
Foundation, he served as project
director -for the Urban Development
Corporation in Buffalo. for twa-years. He ·
was executive director of the Erie County
Citizens' Committee on lntermunicipal
Affairs from 1968 to 1970, and was deputy
to the mayor of San Francisco in 1967-68.
Mr. Latona is a graduate of the College,
law School and Graduate School of-Yale
University.

�March 27, 1975

Sideshow-

(from pqe t. col. J)

biographer Howard Hoghes didn't
engage.
The best and most reliable of the agenci~s . is W. 'Colston leigh, Inc., Morrow
believes. The leigh Bureau is more exclusive in choosing clients than many
others and more expensive, but even
leigh could not deliver client Ron
Ziegle r when he bowed to $!udent
protest and cancelled his nationwide
tour.

·

Morrow also likes Bantam lecture·
Burea u, an up· and-coming agency that
capitalizes on its relationship with Bantam Books (they handle Steinem and Von
Dani ken), and the giant in the field,
American Program Bureau, which loses

points o nl y fo r its size and attendant
bureaucratic aloofness.
Not His Own f,avorites
As to his criteria for choosing speakers,
tvtorrow denies that he opted for his own
favorites. " People accuse me . of onl y

Ketter says NTP 'force-out' not intended
The U/8 administration's proposed
procedures for permanent appointment
in title for non·teaching professionals are
not intended to eliminate jobs or to
force large n~mbers of current incumbents to leave the University, Presi·
dent Robert L Kener told a sparse turnout at the Professional Staff Senate (PSS)
meeting Friday.
If the draft of the procedures conveyed any sense of " high-handedness"
as some NTPs have charged, the President said "it was a mistake in th e
writing."
He indicated he was going to begin a
rewrite this past weekend, taking into account reactions to the draft from vice
presidents and various campus grou. ps.

'Very Few' &lt;it Stony Brook
The President e mphasized that perma·
ne nt appointments for NTPs represent
long·te rm commitments and sizable
money chunks. The University naturall y
must require careful assessment of incumbent capability, performance, adaptability to change, and pote ntial for long·
term service, he said . But U/ 8, he
poi~t~d o~t, is not approaching these
deciSions m th_e same manner as so me
other SUNY_un!ts. At Stony Brook, fo r ~xam~le, he rnd•cat~~· th~ exp resse,? mte nllon oft headmrnlstratlonls that very
fe~" NTPs will~~iv~n p~ rmane ~t appomtme nt ; the
JOnty "Will rem am on
the staff there _for only _6 -_7 years. In th e
sense . th~t some admrnlSir~tors have,
thus, mdl~a~ed t~ey are go mg to play
Jhe5;,f! -deosl~ns Jlkt;.:- hose . for.._fa~ulty
t~nure, Ket~er observe~ Umted . Un}vers•ty Professio ns !!.1UP) r~ally dldn 1 de
NTPs_a ny favors_ by _ha vmg permanent
appomtme~t wntten mto the contract.
The Presode nt noted that people he
had asked cou~d recall no mstance of an~
NTP e~er ~avang been iiS~d_ 1? l_eave
the Umverslty for other than diSCiplinary

Following the President's explanation,
the PSS voted with only one objection to
file with him for consideration in his
redraharesponsefromtheSenate'ssubcomminee-on Permanent Appointment.
That response says the original document contains " an unfortunate quality of
condescension" which has "aroused the
passions of many NTPs."
Intent to the Contruy
~~asons bef~re,!hese Cc;&gt;~tract-mandat.ed
JOb securnr prov--r;lons were InKener said that, to the contrary, his inten.! had been 10 encourage a growing
";:c'~ced. !t 15k the!1 U P-;tr"'e ~hnr'ract
professionalism ·among NTPs whom he
w •c no~ rna es man a ory a any
NTP appol!ltment beyond seven rears be
on the basts of " permanent appomtment
again cited , a Jong wit h Civi I Service
workers, as nbeing heads and shoulders
in tit le,'' he said. And the word "perabove" faculty and students•iit loyalty to
manent" leads to more serious conthe institution. This was panicularly
siderations than simple term ippointdemonstrated, he said, in terms of keepment renewal.
ing the University running during the
troubles of the early 1970's.
Questions
The President reminded the group that
In response to questions, the President
he had taken the lead in suggesting creaalso:
lion of a professional staff senate in ord~r
o defended his right to assemble a pee~
to reinforce a feelinl of p;rofessionalism
committee to &lt;idvise him on those peramong NTPs by providing a vehicle for
manent appointment decisions about
their participation In policy-making at
which he is " troubled." (" I don't buy the
the Unlvenity-wlde level.
.
·
often-&lt;!xpressed notion that 'NTP jobs
The permanent appointment
are so dive""' that no one else can
procedure outlined In the draft, he said,
evaluate an · individual's performance
- · In his view, simply the next stage in
other than the immediate supervisor," he
this "buddlns pre&gt;feslonalism." In
said.)
defense of the a1ter1a for permanent ap• agreed to eliminate the necessity for
po1ntment advanced In tl)e draft, "the
a "form" on whiCh the suj)ervisor (and
l'relldent Aid thM the true professional
the NTP being considered) will . - . . lhould .be -.red ap1nst Jll!)re than
employee. performa~. pcjtential, etc. . )leal-eo-,e. ·JXOIIIeiS - . . ! pis outo said that to include In'the procedures
lined In annual job performance · a requirement that reasons be given for
programs and eva uatlons. Each in- · all negative rerommendations would be
·annbent's "future potential" should also
_!'in violation" of the State-UUP contract.
be aosessed to enable the lndlvldual ·to
The contract requires reasons only when
put himself or henelf forward In the
. the . PreSident gives a "no" to a "yes"
"belt-pOsoible ll&amp;ht." the l'relldent said.
recommendation by the Immediate
JCeaer also clarified to some extent
supentlsor. _
.
·
that IKdon of _the cl.-.ft procedures
• Indicated that the- contract also
whldl call for doa.lmenting that the Inmakes h Impossible to apply the "pennadhldualbeinsconslderedforpermanent
nent appol-.t or out" praalce·only
....-llllw Is the ."beet Qlllllfied" for
to thole incllvJdulls who join the Unlver1M .lit
'110 inlendon, be
sltJ after a C*aln dale: AI NTPs ,.mO

• -

11111n1t..., ocher

•~

.. P!iD Jab, nor 1s

...... _,. _._.._ •

the~

fll the

' .......,..,...... "'Il _.... • n.1ana1
~for every Plt·1 Job" to be flied.

.. '-...

11M been • the~ • Je.tseven
the........._ oil"'* pcaen~
.term ...,.,.._• ....._ lip die _,_
!Ad. .,_ permanent ....,..._, .
review If they- to--.,. In their

rem •

jobs, he indicated , even if th ey have
already been here 20 years or more.
Decisio ns on approximately · 60·70 individuals on this campu s will ha ve to be
made by June of this year (with a year's
notice to be given to those not continued), he said. In th e future, he estimated, between 60-80 ind ividuals will
come up for permanent appointment
review each year.
Budget
Touching on ot her matters, Ketter
noted that 1he Legislat ure doesn 't now
seem inclined to make the massive cuts
in Governor Ca rey's $10 billion-plus
budget which SUNY and others had once
anticipated (up to four pe r cent). " Indications are, however," he said, " that
we will take some further cuts in our
base budget." (As the Report~ we~t to
press, ~; $10.4 billion budg;et wa pused
~;t 4 ~;.m. Wed~y. Reports Yte luesd~;y were th~;t in this compromise
budget, U/l's tot&lt;il oper&lt;iting; buclset was
to be reduced from $81.674 million to
$80.931 million.) A cut of one to one and
-one quarter per cen! of"t.r/ B's orfginall)lprojected total appropriat ion could
probably be handled by not filling the
50-80 jo.bs expected to become vacant
for next year, the President said .
Anything beyond thai, though , would
mean some cutbacks.

bringing people 1 wanted to see," he
sa ys, " but actu ally my number one .
crite rion was the drawing power of a
speaker." If he co uld make up a personal
list, he wou ld in-vite Dan Rathe r 'l":Y_hose
The P~lace Cu~rd he admires and whom
he respects for being able ' 'to pUt his
ne ck on the line"), Art Buchwald and
Dick Cavett. Of th e speakers act uall y in-

~~~~~;i~:~~~~~yd;~~~~e,t,:~=~~e
only
Morrow thin ks that high-ton ed mora l

judgment s about non-cri minal speakers
are inapprop_riate, although personally
he would not invite a speaker like Calley
·who was found guilty of a high crime. He
also regrets asking Irving to campus.
"That was a moral mistake,'' he confesses.
Convicted wrong-doers asi de, Morrow
believes anybody th e University com·
munity Would li ke to see, hear or meet is
a legitimate choice, whether frivolous or
controversial. ~~Gloria SteinerT) is just a_s
valuab le as Moe Howard. It's just a
different so rt of entertainme nt." As to
the prote~t that arose over his scheduling
of Politicall y conservati ve speakers,
Morrow blames campus "pseudop
idea lists/' who would never have rall ied
·if he . had limited th e year's roster to
ra"CJiC31 speakers, he conteh ds·. ·
···
Fringe Benefrts
One of the fringe benefits of Morrow's
jobwasseeingthegreatandnot-so-great
in ·candid moments .. Looking back over
the year's speakers, Morrow recalls that
Israeli diplomat Abba Eban "seemed in
another world. To think that a man like
that is running the world really scares
me. He was so dizzy ·we had IQ help him
to the door of his motel." Eban also
demanded al! the perquisites of power
and was not overly polite in return. At a
ieception at President Ketter's, Eban
ood •s ·
h
h
. Ke_ner reported that U(~ h_as ~
spent a 8
~ mmutes on t e p one,
ftghttng s?me _of the. -spec1ftc hne. t~e.m
Morrow recalls.
cuts deta1led m the Governor's m1t 1al
He was more impressed with Gloria
budget message. The study which
Steinem and her fellow speaker Jane
prompted the Governor's call for reducGalvin-lewis, " a forceful, powerful black
tions of S304,000 and 20,000 volumes in
woman." Steinem is "a refined.l intellec~
library acq"uisitions failed to take into actual, graceful, ~ISec:l. tJ:e.[Sb
,)l W~o' lnight
count the needs of professional school
hate y,o~. with ~~!~!!&lt;' BU):$ bt.ii''\lr9111d
and health sciences libraries here, he
keep smoHng. I liaye a lol of r~ for
said. U/8 wasn't given a copy of this
her, ahhO'ugh_f'was. ~,
at;...b
, o~' b[
study but "obtained one," and was thus
her remark about the Jc&gt;CI&lt;,ocracy a~lf,•)
able to point out the oversight. As a_ were a plot to put her In tlark GYJ1!.That
result, Ketter said, an item to increase V smacked of para'!oia."
library acquisitions funds by $500,000 .
One of the dosappolni!J&gt;ents of the
over the original budget will be conyear was Noel Neill, "lois lane." He~
rained in· ihe supplemenl3ry budRet
was the voice of "desperation speaking."
- Also in the supplernenl31 budget wilf~
Morrow says. "She- so busy !eying to
the add~ional SJOO,OOO ne&lt;ess~ry for UIB
be sweet ~ was obnoxious. She came
to meet UUP contract-mandated salaiy
across very badly on stage - · like a
incre;nefor faculty and iliff. The figure
loser." The actress talked about her unoriginally cornputed.for this Jn the Carey
happy penonal life, ClOmlllained . .
budget was also in error, Ketter .said.
how little money sbe had made out of
The Governor's Budget j&gt;rojected a
"Superman:: and even aackr:d a few
savings of $128,000 by the elimination of
dorty jokes.
~
eight nursing faculty lines. But since ·
"She shatter~!&lt;~ ~he l~ge of herself,"
"Nursing doesn't pay at that level,'' a
says Morrow, whoch moght be the one
reductionofeightfacuhywon'tresultin
worthwhile reason ·for Inviting public·
anything ne.r the pr~ savings. the
figures we think we know to speak on
P-resident poin~ OUL "If we· took._the
campus.
·
difference out of the School's Olher than
pei'IOIIII services accounts,'' he 1111d, "we
.
•"·
would have tO" eliminate Its entire
Mole students are Jlvlnsln Unlvenity
operating budiet.'~ Instead, the adresldencle halls for the spr1ns '
ministration has asked that the
than during the faD tenn, the UniYenlty
difference be made up out of enforod
Ho1Jsint1 Oflli::e reports.
savJnp.
The Hou1Jn1 Offlee ..,. h 1s enJCeaer also told the PSS that a flve..year
CDUrllld "INI lhls INIY 1nc1k:a1e. !hat
Afflrmllhe Adlon tll!tn for 1JIIIwoerslty• · ~ llal ...... Is tiecamlng more .
IIOmoo-~a&gt;l..,
attrKihe to studenis."

litfJe

More a:..e a·n· dorms

�. . 12211&amp;

January grant
total near
million mark

Trustees o~ay names, honor p r o f s , - - - - - - - - - - - - - (frompagPl.col. .,)

louis Exposition in 1904. He later became president · and director of Hote ls
Statler Company, lnc. ·Buffalo, where he
owned and operated his first hotel, was
the only' city. ever I? have two Statler
hotels at the sar:ne t1me. When th.e second S~atler (the pre~e~lt Statler ,Htlton)
was bUilt here, the.ongmal hotels name
was changed to Hotel Buffalo. Other
Statler hotels were subsequently built in
Cleveland, Detroit, St. louis, and New
York, an~, through the year~, th.ey
appeared m m'?st of the country~ maJOr
nt1es. The cham was later acqUired by
t~e H.ihon Corpor~tion: Mr: St~tler, who
d1ed '1!" 1928, provtded 10 hts will for ~he
est~bhshment of the Statler FoundatiOn
, wh1ch allocates endowments, grants and
awards !or education and research con~~~:~~c~~e area of hotel management

. useful me mbers. Within the brief period
of .a score of years, he undertook so
many respo nsi bilities as to challenge the
wonder of his fellow Citizens and to win
the co nfiden ce of all tiis associates.
In Trustee actions affecting faculty, Or.
Selig Adler, Samuel Capen Professor of
American histor y, was nam e d distinguished serVice professor and Drs.
Da vid K. Miller and Milton C. Albrecht
were granted professor emerirus status.
Dr. Adler, a member of the U/B faculty
since 1941 , is a special ist in 20th Century
American history and foreign policy. He
was named Capen Professor in 1968 A
1931 summa cu m laude gradua te of ~ h e
University of Buffalo, he received his
A.M. and Ph.D. degrees from the Unive rsit y of Uliriois.
_ Dr. Miller, whose eme ri tus professorship is effective immediately, re.ti(ed

Forriter PIJinnef ·
.
.
· John Beane was former associate
director of planning and development at
!h~. Upiver&gt;i)y. ~bd R?rt i\ip~t~p, J p t~e
original planning to construct a new U/8
complex in Amherst. He also served as
,d.ean ,,\)_1 MU.Iard ..F.illo:nore College. H~
died in 1967 after having served the
University for 26 years.
George F. Rand , Jr., was a banker and
one of Buffalo's leading citizens. He was
also closely associated with th~ University. At the time of his death in 1942, the
University Council adopted, the following resolution: "That the ui;Uimely death
of George F. Rand, Jr.f removes from this
community one of its ablest and· most

.. .

Carpools to
get
.
pr1onty 1n
Michael lot

from the faculoy of the U/B School of
Medicine in 1971. He had served as
director of medicine and head of the
Department of Medicine at Meyer
Memorial Hospital from 1939 to 1%7 and
as director of laboratories at Meyer from
1937 to 1948. He was a professor of
medicine at U/B when he retired in 1971,
after se rving on the faculty for 34 yea rs.
He is a graduate of Illinois Wesleyan
College and Harvard University School
of Medicine.
·
Dr. Albrecht, professor of socioiogy
and ed ucation, has been on the faculty
since 1946 and served as dea n of the
CoOege of Arts and Sciences. from 1958to
1965. A graduate of Antioch College, he ·,
was awarded the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees
by th e University of California, Berkeley.
Dr. Albrecht's emeritus professorship
becomes e ffective September 1.

Ad~

Albr«:hl

Prof planning 'modern red schoolhouse'By Bob Engelhardt ·
Un ivt'Oitylnforrrn~tion~ket

used. Educa tors haV'e viewed television
and computer learning programs merely
as -"add-on&amp;" to traditional teachirig
met hods, without making the new·
programs an integral part of a school's
·
curriculum.

A U/ 8 education professOr sees
The Student Association has an·
e lementary education of tomorrow
resembling
that of the "little red
n~¥nc;ed l):la~~
1 will make car pool priorischoolhouse" of the past- with two imt1~\p' ~
.~Y~il~i?l~-ir.a th~ 1 ~ich~el
portanl diff~rences.
"This is in direct contradictiOn to the
Jpf,,
jl!!ih 1~1 . , '" n •'
The modern ~&lt;schoolhouse" would
rationale for introducing te.c hnology in
, jil\}:
" 0d~t~rm.ini!W· !)'.fiq .\Viii
0
feature a·· wide range of educational
p~rk
wol,l be baii!d on t~e
industry," says Dr. Willett. "There, it is
Dwij
f.s i~ .f. pr; ~nY car with technology, and it would be staffed by used to improve quality, reduce costs, or
highly tr"ainetl professionals -and
both!'
three q~. 'f'9lte p~SSf'!lger~. woll be able to
specialists.
use the area. lhere are approximately 30
spaces set aside for the beginning of the
The iwo professors note that existing
But, as in tl:le one-room, turn-of-thecentury schoolhouse, a child's study
research indicates that school costs could
program which is being made possible
program would be individually fashionby cooperation among SA, Campus
be cut by one-third with no reduction in
Security, and Environmental Health and
ed, enabling him or her to progress at his
student achievement if educational
Safety.
·
or her own rate.
·
technology were used iri the right
manner-.
Dr. Austin D. Swanson , of the
"We have the people needed to man .
the area and have the necessary material's
Educational Administration Department,
In Dr. Swanson's and Dr. Will~tt's
hopes to begin work later this year in
collected,': Steven Schwanz, director of
proposed model, the role of the teacher
student affairs for SA, indicates.
· - developing a demonstration model of
would be significantly altered.
this learning center of the future. He
'"The only thing left to do is to get peoplans to coll~borate Wilh Dr. Edward ).
ple registered so that we ' have a base
In the mod·ern "lit'tle red
Willett, a professor of economics at
figure to work with," Arthur Lalonde, exschoolhouse," the · teacher would no
Houghton College, in designing a m"odel
ecutive vice president of SA, says. There
longer
need to spend val.uable time on
that brings together under one ·root
will be a list to sign up for ·carpooling in
dis&lt;;.iplinary matters. And rarely would a
many of .t he methods of using
· the Student Association office, 205 Norteacher stand in front of a full-size class.
educational technology that have pro.ren
ton. The Ride Board, located near the
successful in numeroUs studies.
Filltnore Room in Norton, is available for
Instead, teachers would concentrate .
Many of the' ideas· for the project
people interested in .for-ming carpools
on "diag.nosis, prescription, and
evolved from br. Willett's doctoral disbut who lack other means of contacting
evaluation." They would become more
sertation, which he completed at UIB in
people. A base figure is essential for SA
specialized in particular Subjects - such
1973, under the guidance of Dr. Swan. to justify "beginning this program and
as reading, "'!athematics, or science. And
son.
.further ex~nding !1- student officials
they would work more closety with
Dr. -Willett found that available
"We feel that we have put together a
pUpils, often on a on~to-one , basis, ·educational technology - computers, __., reviewing their performance and char·
set-up that. speaks to the neec!s of the
television, records, slides, and other
commuter student whne encouraging
ting out personally taiiore&lt;l learning
audio-visual devices - can be used to
eitergy conser:vation," .. Schwartz inprograms;
teach children effeCtively, but that
dicates. "And we believe this is the first
.technology hasn't performed tq its
·Technical experts wouid play a .role in
such program in the Western New York
pote~tial because it hasn't been proper~y
!he· demonstration learning center ~y ·
area."
·
' · ·
,j

·"

•

sax.

Nineteen grants and Contracts totaling
$944,804 were received by University
facult.y in January, Robert C. Fitzpatrick,
acting vice president for research ,
repotted recently.
During the month, 48 proposals in the ,
amount of $3,654,154 were submitted to
• pi'ospective sponso rs Fitz atri ck said.
Re_ceiviog new g t during the
month we re Ernest
elig, Civil
Engineering, $63,280 fro the Sou hwest
Research Inst itu te for " ns me tation
for
Moisture
Meas e
-Basis
Subgrades and Earth Mater:ia
ensor
Evaluations);" Robert J, Genco, Oral
Bio logy, $37,655 from NIH for "Symposi um on the Immunological Aspects of
Denta l
Caries;''
Kyoi~hi
Kano,
Microbiology, $10,550 from NIH for
" Kidney Transplant Histocompatibility
Study;" P.K. Gessner, Pharmacology,
S41 / 80 from NIH for "Pharmacological
Parameters Pertinent to Alcoholism;" H.
Greizerstein, Pharmacology, $50,962
from NIH for " Mechanisms of Tolerance
to Ethanol."
Ju i .H. Wang, Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, $49,000 from NSF for
" Energy Conversio,n Mechanisms in
Photosynthesis and Respiration;" Peter
T. lansbury, Chemistry, $22,800 from
NSF, "Novel Strat'egies in Terpene
Synthesis;" Chester langway, Geological
Sciences , $90,000 from NSF for
" Greenland Ice Core Studies and
Greenland Ice Sheet -Program; " and
Marian E. Whroe, Anthropology, $81 ,125
!rom th e .s!ate Education Departf!!~.ptJ~f
'1974 Htghway Salvage Anthro_po1ogy
Progra m."
.
Major co ntinuation and/or renewal
moni es we nt to J. Warren Perry, $79,900
from 't he W.K. Kellogg Fqundatiofl 'for
th e Healt h Sdences Education and
Evaluation Center; Eric A. Barnard ,
Biochemistry, $57,959 from NIH for
" Autora,:jiographic. S~ud ies of Receptors
and En zy mes;" and Carl E. Arbesman,
$79,321 from NIH for " Clinical and Immunologi c Effects of Spedfic Immunotherapy."
.
Marvin Zelen, Statistical laboratory,
received over S240,000 in additional NIH
funds · for operations support of his
statistical studies of cancer project at
·both Buffalo and Bethesda, Marylarfd.

managing
~&lt;media
roomS ."
Paraprofessional aides would monitor ·
drill work.
Pupils would be grouped according t9
interest and ability, rather than -age.
Much . of their instruction would be
provided with the aid of computers,
television, and other audio·visual instr~ction programs.
Pupils would help their peers learn, by ·
using flashcards for instance, and, on
occasion, older students would instruct
younger ones. •
The two professors believe the
"modern little red schoolhouse" -approach offers a way to stabilize education costs by making schools mere
"capital intensive" and less···1abor inten~
sive." Among the advantages of the plan,
Dr. Swanson and Dr. Will~ believe, are
that teachers' responsibilities would- be
upgraded, discipline problems would
diminish, and pupils would find school
to be moTe stimulating.
.
If all goes as planned, the
developmental phase of the project will
be administered by U/B, with the direct
participation of school districts in sur~
r~unding Erie Cot,mty.

African assistaritsh~p _
The U/B African Studies Committee is
again 9fferirog a te~~hjng .assistantship for
the academic year 1975-76.·,
the selected graduate student will be
requested to teach one coUrse on some
aspects of African culture.
Applications tan be obiained before
April 1 from Mrs. France Pruitt, chairper· .
~n of the selection committee, 831-3828.

�March 27, 1975

Science fiction ·a uthor
organizing May conference
ly Ken Senke U~ry lnfC!t'I'Mtlon~

Tomorrow is coming, but it won't be
c- here until early May.
·
The reason for the delay is that the
"·T omor·row" in question is a conference
of science fiction writers being planned
by Samuel R. Delany, who has been ap·pointed to th.e Edward H. Butl er
Professo rship of English literature·for the
spri ng semester.
·
·
Delan y, one o f toda y's most promi- .
ne nt science fiction writers, is now completing plans for the conference to be
held May 2 and 3. Open to th e pu bl ic,
the eve nt will feat ure lectures and
workshops o n modern and co ntempora ry science fiction, le d by bot h established writ e rS as well as newcomers to
the field .
More and more people are becoming
int e rested in science fi c tion, and
Delany ascribes that int e rest in part to
th e influence which science ha s on the
"texture" of our li ves. " Scie nce ficti on
explores that influence and it has a
predictive quality that intrigues people,"
he says.
But Delany ca ut io ns against placi ng
too much emphasis o n the predict ions:
"Science fict ion is a significant distortion
of the prese nt rather than a trul y predictive tool. The science fiction writer neve r
says more than ' this could happe n' and
not ' this wi ll happen.' He is more co nce rne d with saying 't he beginn ings of
this are happe ning.'"

The impact of science on people is in
the forefront of science fidion, accor·
ding to Delany, and he feels there is
more good science fiction being written
today than ever before. At its best, he
says, science fiction is ''very good
literatu re.
•
"Science fiction was highly influenced

by Jules Ve rne and H. G. Wells, and it
received much of its defining essence in

the American pulp magazines of the
1920's. But it has finally achieved a
respecta bility of its own, so that it no
lon ge r has to keep dragging in its
ve nerable ancestors," he contends.

De lany's works have added to this
respectab il ity. The recipient of four
Nebula Awards from the Science Fiction
Writers of America, he also received th e
Hugo Awa rd of the International Science
Fiction Convention at Heidelberg in 1968
for his novelet, Time Considered as ~
Helix of Semi-Precious Srones.

In addition to ten novels and a collectiOn of short stories, Delany has written
a number of c riti cal articl es on science
fiction . He ha s also tau ght prev iously at
Clarion College, Tulane Uni ve rsity, th e
University o f Washington and M ichiga n
State.
His latest, and fa vo rite book, Dhalgren,
has just bee n published by Bantam
Books.
" The most re ce ntl y w ritt e n is inva riably one's fa vo rite - to prese rve
sanity," De lany says.

Students conducting f~od drive
for young cerebral palsy victim
How ~do - you

say goodbye
to a cheap thing you love~
Editor:
What can you say about a ten-&lt;:ent cup
of coffee that died!
That is .;,as cheap. And tasty. That "it
loved to stand there in its machine,
seductive anO beckoning, knowing it was
... a bargain. That it was faithful long after
five·cent gum and ten-cent candy
desened you. Sure you had to kick h"ell
out of its machine some.times to get i·t .
And sometimes you paid your mane~
and just got teased. But, shit, it was only a
dime.
Well, no more!
The F.S.A. Food. and Vending Service
has killed it. Fifteen-cent coffee is coming.
They said it had to be done. The first
week of April.
"Inflation," they hissed.
"Coffee up 71%.
"Sugar up 492 1/o; cre.~m up 70%;" Labor
up 38% .
"Tea up 11Wo; Hot Cbocolate up 107%.
"Our selling price of coffee and
rela~ products has been ten cents since
the early 1950's."

A....,....""""""""-

published
1llundly ....he.DMdon ol Un-y··~ Sro1te Unhlerslty of New Yorl: M
SuH.-o• .)flS Milln S,.. autf~lo. N.Y. 14214.
Ediforial otru:s •re loafed in room 213, 250

-

WtnspMrA~(I'hotte2117).

&amp;«utiW Edlfor
A WESTLEY ROWLAND

Edlror-ltt-Chlei

ROBERT T. MAIUETT
Mondl'&gt;oclu&lt;tlon
IOHHAOOifflfll
-&amp;lror
PAI"ItlClA WMD-MAN

_,Oiindor_
OIANfQIIINN

~­

SUSANAf. ~

" Okay. Okay."
Just now, downsta irs in one of the
cam pus vending areas, a long·time ad mirer stood having his last ten-ce nt cup.
" Would you pl.,ase hold me very
tight!," the cup asked.
·
He put his hand around it -Christ, so
lukewarm - and gave it a little squeeze.
"No," it said, "really hold me. Next to
the machine so no one will see."
He was very, · very careful as he got
near the machine and put his hand firml y
around t~e cup. .
" Thank you for your" patronage."
Those were its last words.
" Customer," said a Vending Service
man urgently. " I want to help."
~~Ten - cent coffee ' s dead, " the
customer told him.'
·
" I'm sorrf,'' said th·e Vendor.
Not knowing why, the customer
repeat~ what he had long _
ago learned
from the cheap coffee now gone.
"love means not ever having to say
you're 59rry."
--Oiiftr llarrett IV
lpowidl, M-.

GSEUthanks
thOse who helped
fdltor:
The Graduate Student Employees
Union would like to give its thanks to all
the secretaries and everyone else of the
various depanments who helped us in
our organizational worlt this past friday.
Our efforu have been-greatly enhanced
by their HSi~'!CI! then, In the past, and,
we're sure, will be-In the future. We appreciate their cooper•tlon In our drive
for union recognltlcm and know our
succeos has been much facilitated by
their help_
,

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

l1oe GniiRie~;

.

is coo rdinating area-wide efforts to raise
A ' grOup of U/ 8 student volunteers,
backed by the Co mmunity Adion Corps
funds for Johnson 's medi cal ex pe nses.
M r. Wiene r describes Jo hnson as a
(CAC). have init iat ~d a projeCt to raise
$1 ,500 toward the medica l expenses of . " witt y, res ponsive· and affection ate , ..
child" whose li fe ca n possibly be comAllen Johnso n, a 12-year-old cerebral
pletely turned around with the assi sta nce
palsy vidim from the Buffalo area.
of othe rs in Western New York and on
Young Johnson, who has no control of
the ca mpus.
his muscl es from the neck down , is now
undergoing extensive me dical tests
Individuals wishing to contribute to
preliminary to possi ble experimental
the Fund m~y send donations to Karen
licte r, Box 206-B, Macdonald Hall.
brain implant surgery. The operation
- holds the possibility of dramatically improving his condition. The tests and
opera tion are expected 'to involve more
than $10,000 in medical expenses.
Unable to speak at present, the child . This spring's total enro}lment of 24,345
communicates by way of a Bliss Board,
includes 17,188 undergraduates, 5,548
using a heac:t pointer to indicate some
graduate students ahd 1,609 registrants in
100 different symbols for words and
professional schools . .
e motions.
Undergraduate enrollment increased
If the medical tests are positive, he will
by 5.9 per cent, from 16,235 in spring,
be sent to New York for a kind of
1974. Graduate enrollment is up by 7.1
" pacemaker" implant which , by deliver·
per cent, fro!":' 5,179, and professiOnal
ing electrical impulses to the brain, can
school (dentistry,, law, mediciM and
in some cases reduce the sPasticity of
pharmacy) registration Tose five per cent,
patients with cerebral pals}'.
from 1,532. ..
.-.
t.•·;· ....
According lO lrv Wiener, one of the
·Of the total undergraduates,.13,059 are
students involved in the fund·raising
enrolled in the day division and 4;1il9 are
project, if the operation is successful,
registl!red in Millard fillmore .C ollege.
young Johnso.n will then 4ndergo .
ProfeSsional school figures are: dentherapy to attain the maximum develop·
tistry - 342, one less than1ast spring; law
·ment of his new abilities.
- 731, up 10.4 per cent from last spring;
Mr. Wiener says student volunteers are
medicine - 517, up 1-4 per cent, and the
now sellini lottery tickets in U/11
pharmacy doctoral program with nine
residence halls for 50 cents each. Prizes
students, an increase of twO.
in the drawing will be $5 gift cenificates ·
Approximately 6Q per cent (14,676) of
donated by Buffalo Outlet, Everyman's
the total students enrolled are mert;-and
Book Store, and the Nonh Main liquor
40 per Q!nt · (9J669) are women.
Store. 1\11 proceeds from the lottery will
Enrollment in credit-free programs
go to the Johnson Fund.
more )han doubled this year, with 1,741
With the cooperation of CAC, . the
students compared to 739 last spring.
group is also raising money through
· Credit-free students are not Included in
showings on the Buffalo State campus of
the University's total enrollment.
movies ·booked for U/11 by. CAC. Eilms
are being shown Thursday. and Saturday
&lt;!tenlngs at State, with proceeds from adA 43-year-old construction worker
missions again going to the fund.
died of injuries suffered In a fall at
All money collected here and at BufSamuel Clemens·Hall on the Amherst
falo Slate will be turned over to the VerCampus Friday afternoon (March 21)_
sailles Volunteer Fire Dep.irtment which
George L. Kroetsch, employed by one
of· the firms constructing the building,
fell down an elevator shaft from the third
lloor to the basement. A rescue squad
took him to Millard Fillmore Suburban
Hqspital, where he was pronounced
dead on arrival_
.
The · accideill occurred shortly after
3:30p.m . .

Spring·enrollment
figures detailed

Worker dies in fall

�...acta

March 27, 1975 .
... ..._ -

The media affect politics~but. ho~l
There was.. a time when a politician
who lost an election would shake his
head sadly and moan, "The people have
spoken."
Now, however, ftle defeated candidite
is more likely to snort; " That's show biz."
·This story of Milton Berte's is more
than· a glib joke, Dr. Samue l Becker;

~I

I

professor and chairman of the Depart-

ment of Speech and Drama at the
University of Iowa, feels .
Mass communications h·ave, indeed,
turned politics into show business, Dr.
Becker said in the opening lecture of a
three-day campus conference On the use

of mass media in Ellicon's Sy Hall last Friday.
Presidentia l"chats" are . now carefully
c horeog ra ph ed . Demo nstr ators for
whatever causes are careful to await th e
_arriva l of th e TV i:rews before going into
aCtion. Political speeches are .carefully

wri«en to co ntain appealir)g, catchy 20Bed:er
30 second segments cued to the
The political parties know that centrists
wi ll wal~ off wi th most of the votes in an y
demands of the nightly news. Image is a
para mqu nt iss.ue at the White Ho use and
America n election, so for years it has
Preside nts check the nati·onal polls after
bee n important th at both candidates
each of th etr TV ap pea rances.
should appear to be " about the same,"
The trou ble is, Dr. Becker suggested,
in th e middle.
that ah hou gh we think we know what's
The mass media, however, can't live
go ing on, we're really only on the .
with this. It's not good copy. The media ·
look for, thrive upon , conflict and
" doorstep" of discovering what all this
means.
differe nces. For this reason , Dr. Becke r
said, th e media bought heavily into th e
For exa mple, he asked, did Nixon-win
big in 1972 because of his " image," or
1972 Re p4b li ca n att e mp t... to rrlak e
was his " image" good because he gai ned
McGo ve rn look li ke a " wild- eyed
a la ndslide victory?
·
radi cal." This left th e moderate majorit y
More se rio us studies of th e comwith no place to go but to Ni xon . The
same thing happe ned in 1964 when
munications process ·and its effects are
urgently needed, he said.
" Prince of Peace" Lyndon Johnson was
Closing the Knowledge Cap
pitted against "Warmonger " Barry
In this e lectronic age, Dr. Becker
Coldwater who m the media pictured as
poi nted o ut, we assume that everyone in
not only chomping to drop the Bomb on
this cou ntry knows eve ryth ing necessary
childre n but also eager to cut off-Sotial·to make seriows political decisiorls. The
Securit y for the elder ly. Th e se
co nve ntio nal wisdom has it that new
differences, largely manufactured by the
med ia, were e rceived by vot e rs to be
technologies ha ve closed the knowl edge
gap between those who have traditional•
real eno ugh to send them to johnson in '
droVes. LBJ, in tu rn , pe rceived the outly had the skills tb use print media intelligentl)" and t he fo rmer "k now
come as "carte blanche" for his militant
nothihgs." ).:..• ..· Lp,, '
'
policies .in· Southe3st ~sia .
Yet, he saiO, studies that have been
Shrewd politicians today, Dr. Becke r
done suggest that the reverse is true.
said, take on " extre mist" runn ing mates
"Sesame Street," the. widely-lionized
to titillate th e media. By this maneu ver,
Public Television production d esigned to
the top-level .candid ates are able to stake
close th e pre-school knowledge gap
out the ir own territory in the middl e.
Shift of Power
between the underprivileged , and the
more affluent kids whose "pus hy
The mass media, Di . Becke r said, have
middle-class mothers" make, sure they . · also played a part in the shift of power- in
are we ll-prepared for first · grade, has
American politics from the Congress to
done nothing of the sort. Middle class
the Presidency, a trend wh ich reached its
hi gh poin t in pre-W3tergate times.
children watch the show more, Dr. BeckAlthough Congress seems mome ntarily
e r indicated, and end up •even further
ahead of their less well-off counterparts.
to have grabbed ba(:k some of its clout,
Despite its good intentions, studies have
he said, " nothing has really cha nged in
regard to th e primary reaso n : tl'ie
- shown, "Sesame Street" has made a bad
situation worse.
President's access to the electronic
Other stUdies seem io indicate that the
media."
"knowledge gap" on a· given political
Nixon was on prime time te levision
issue has little to.. do with the media one
more during his first yea r and a half in office than Eise nhowe r, Kennedy and
way or .anOther~ tbe. gap' doses, Dr.·
Becker. u.id~ wHen arT·isSue: is perceived
Johnson put together could manage duras imPortant in a given community; · · ing their first 18 months. And the lesson
is not lost on Ge rald Ford.
when: imp.Onami;reference. groups take
The Congress, on the other hand, ca n't
strong, Cdliflicting; st.inds, and when the
community is small enough to pe'rmit
even " buy time.'' Bur even if Congress
face-to-face eldlange of views about the
could get the time, it would still lack the
issue.
.
leverage needed to force the
It may not even be tru'e that the mass
simultaneous three netWork coverage
media are instrumental in building inthat assures a captive audience f'or every
teiest in political campaigns,· Dr. Becker
Presidential appearance. Congress,
reported. Some research findings seem __ further, has no officially designated op~o suggest "that the general decline of
position "Spokesman," Dr. Becker
political interest among- young people
pointed out, So the networks ohen have
their bwn commentators · serve in that
has more to do with changes in the mass
media than with any revulsion toward
role, something_ he finds less than
corruption in high places." The
appealing.
emergence of less partisan newspapers
One way out of the; situation, he
and · the somewhat overdone ·uevensuggested, might be to· have live
handedness" of radio and television
coverage of debates from the Congress ·
news coverage may be "counteras has been suggested. in a resolution
produi:ti~e" in te~nis of buildiog interest,
now pending before the Senate.
he said. Old fashioned heated parBut even that may· not be- good
tisanship was probably more stimulating.
enough, he said, because it has always
None of this wos meant to suggesnhat
been true "that the President becomes
media coverage has no im~d on the
most importaht duri ng a national crisis;'!
outcome or conduct of elections,
l!;,':~~g~~ends to gain ascendaocy

however.

-

And the way the moss media cover
things, "you olways have a national
crisis'' these days:
~ l'olldes
Politicians ond so-nment leoden;
of American political races by manufac- . have a major responsibility to develop
turilrg campalsn "conflicts" which 5eem
Ions-range policies for. a nation, Dr.
to impress ~;~.Ot:fi"- · · · ··-· · · ·- . . . ... . . . .B.e.cls.!!f••~~··· .B:uJ .tlere..asain, the

'ManufKturecl ConiiiCts'
In fact, Dr. Becker.offered, the media
have tended to destroy the traditional
"Tweedledum and T'lftedledee" nature

mass media seem to be more of an impediment than an aid.
The media focus on irumediate e vents
which toudf and overwhelm the individual, co nvinci ng him that the he re
and now is far more important than enduring problems. Still ano.ther gap
emerges - this tinie between where
public opinion is and whe re a political
leade r should be in terms of the long
range interests of the nation.
We have to close that gap, Dr. Becke r
said, by teachi ng mass media co nsumers
to grasp lpng-range trends, not just the
immediate, and by find ing ways for both
gove rnmental leade rs and th e media to
prese nt this sort of information attractive ly.
At th e Same time, howeve r, he said,
the media are also essential to the
"everyda y" pro·cesses of government,
providing a pow e rfu l o utlet for
gove rnm e nt 's att e mpts to pe rsuade. And
th e force of any government, as Harry
Truman pointed out , lies solely in its
power of pe rsuasion.
" We must try to und e~stand this/' Dr.
Becke r ca ution ed . "and not just conde mn it.
" Fo r, in fact, recove ry from the
nati o n's c urre nt economi c crisis is
d e pende nt upon how well the administrat ion is ab le to use th e mass media
to build co nfide nce.''
Sharing the pod ium with Or. Becke r at
the mass co mmuni cations confe rence
we re Or. Harry Ausprich, d e a~ of fi ne
arts, Stat e Unive rsi ty College at Buffalo;
Dr . Geo rge C e rbn e r, d e an o f the
Anne nbe rg School of Com muni cation,
Unive rsity o f Pe nn sylvania; Dr. Harold
Me nd e lso hn , chairman, Department of
Mass Co mmuni cation , Universit y of
De nve r; Professor lb iyi Fo rd , chairman
of th e Rad io-Te levision Depart me nt,
Howa rd Uni ve rsit y; Dr. Diane Hope,
De partme nt of Speech Communication,
Buffalo State; Dr. Michael Prosse r, Mass
Co mmun ication Department, University
of Virginia ; and Wilbe rt Pearson, United
States Information Age ncy.
Spo nsored by th / U/ B De partme nt o f
Speech Communication, th e eve nt was
o pe ne d b y Soc ia l SCie nces Provost
Arth ur D. Butle r, who ci ted it as evide nce
of the " considerable e xpansio n" in mass
commu ni ca tions studies whi c h the
department intends to 'undertake under
Chairman Molefi Asante.

Sunnnnerinternships

Pre-sale of
all~tar tickets
starts April·1·.
Two teams have been selected and
tickets to the Niagara Frontier Football
Classic will be available to alumni, faculty, and staff for three weeks, beginning
April1, before the general sale opens on
April 21 .
The Niagara Frontier Football Classic is
a hi gh school all-star game, sponsored by
the U/ B Alumni Association to raise
funds for reSea-rch and service projects of
benefit to the Western New York area.
Tickets to the Classic, which will be
played at Rota ry Field, Saturday, August 9
at 4 p.m., are SS each and are good for
any seat. Tickets can be ordered by
appl icat io ns whi ch are available at all
Ma rin e Midland branch offices, or by
se nding checks made out to the Niagara
Frontier Football Classic to the U/ B
Alumni Association at 123 Jewett
Parkway, Buffalo 14214.
Announcement of the two 30· man
sqvads of Western New York's best high
school graduati ng senior football pla yers
was made rece ntl y by David Michaet executive di recto r of the Alumn i Association . Michael 'p ointed out that 16 of the
participants we re nam ed to New York
State all-sta r tea ms and two, David Spat h
o f Bishop Neumann and Bill Hurley of.St.
Joseph's C.o llegiate In stit ute , were
hono red as high schoo l All-Americans.
The ga me will pit a team of Metro All~ta r s, coached by Tom Reddington of St.
·Joseph 's, agai nst the Western New York
All-Stars, coached by lou Martini of
Williamsville North. The Metro All-Stars
will be made up of players re prese nting
Buffalo city schools and all parochial insti tuti ons in a four-county region. ~
WNY AII·Stars will represent all othef ·
schools in Erie, Niagara, Orleans and
Chautauqua coun ti es.
·
A Project Committee has been·fo rmep
by the Alumni Associatioo to oversee
dispersal of proceeds from the football
ga me . Headed by Dr. William Ziter, acting cha irman of oral surgery, School of
De ntistry, the co mmittee will soon be
accepti ng proposals for projects in sports
medicine and ot he r research areas from
departments with in the University,
ho sp it a ls and other ..institutions in
Western New York.
Servir)g wi th Dr. liter on the group are
Dr. Gerard Gu gino, a Buffalo orthodontist; Dr. Charles Tirone, clinical assistant
professor of radiology; Ms. Rita Boucher,
associate professor, adult health nursing;
and Ms. Kat hryn Sawner, acting chairman, Departme nt of Physical Therapy.

Health scie nce students interested in
obta,ining liv.ing and working expe rie nce
in a rural commun ity wi ll have the opportu nity to do so this su mmer.
The lakes Area .Regional Medical
Program, Inc., again this yea r is sponso ring an eight-week program which will
place hea lth science students from
The State Department of Civil Service
various disciplines in several rural
has advised the U/B Personnel Office
locatio ns throughout Western New York.
that
it . has established a 11 Piacement
The program run s from June 16 to
Roster" listing names of iildividuals beAugust 18. ing
term
inated from State departments
Students wi ll be selected from the
and agencies in line with 1975-76 State
fi elds of medici ne, dentistry, nursing,
budget cutbacks.
·
medical technology, respiratory therapy,
This is the fin;t step toward drawing up
pharmacy~ podiatry, physical and oc·
" preferred lists" which must be used
cupational t herapy, nutrition and
for filling open positions before the norhospital administration. They will be
mal eligible lists for appointment and
assigned to the counties of Allegany,
promotion, Harry W. ~oppey, director of
quaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee,
Personnel, says.
Niagara and Wyoming iq Western New
" The Civil Service Department has also
York and Erie and McKean Counties in·
adVised
us," Poppey indicates, "that
Pennsylvania.
.
there may be 'extended delays' in cerDr. john R. F. ingall, Regional Medical
tifyi
ng
candidates
for appointment to
Program d lrector, notes that studerit~ Will
civil servi~ positions in order to insure
be placed wi~h preceptors in rural comthat existing State employees 'cut from
munities of the region. They will reCeiVe
the payroll' are given first priority."
stipends of $75 per week during the
eight-week session.
"Students will have a flexible ~nough
schedule so they can work in and
The Intensive English language
observe hospitals, clinics, public health
lnstituie has announced a record enrolldepartments, and private offices," Dr.
ment for the spring semester. ·
lngall indicates.
.
To date, 150 students have arrive!! for
'"rhis provides for a well balanced
English language training, indudinl! sO
educational experience. The intent of
agronomists from Brazil who will study in
tt,e program, of course," he says, "i~ to
the Institute for seven months under the
encourage these students to consider
auspices of the Agency for International
senling down and setting up a practice in
Development (AID).
rural areas where heolth monpower
The Institute has also been named
usually k in short supply."
·
recipient of a research grontto produce
Students interested in more lnformo• series of -instnJctlonal films on the
tion may contact Wlll.am D. Crqe, Lakes
teaching of Ensfish as a foreign lansuage.
Area Regional Medical Progrom, Inc.,
The. gront- awarded by the National .
29~ Moln Slr.ee~,. Buffalo. 14n4. ... . . . . ... ~ (Of. ~ Student Affairs.

Civil Service plans
'_placennent roster'

lEU sets record

�{

. . .aatA
tfmm tutft" 2, col. 3)

March 17, 1,975

file

hiring has been coiT)pleted and is on
in the libraries. The plan, based on
availability pool data, indicates "how
things should develop" in hiring
througho~t the campus, on the assumption that enrollment will be fixed. The
document, he said. is based on "cold use
of data" and "won't make anybody orr
c.amp~s happy." .He urged anyone with
different sets of availability figures "to
demonstrate their data" to him.
.
PSS Response
ln . the reaction to Ketter's draft
procedu res for permanent appointment
endorsed by the P.SS, the Senate warned
that if the document were to be implemented as originally writteii, it would
" ha ve a disastrous effect on the entire
University community."
•
The PSS also Held to its previous stand
that "performance appraisals for the
years precedi ng consideration should be
the yardstick for determining permanent
appointment." It "does not serve the
best interest of the University to renew
(for term appointments] persons failing
to meet criteria for performance; it c:foes
not benefit NTPs to invest significant
years of their careers when term renewal
fails honestly to indicate the University's
intent to · provide permanent appointment."
The response also contends that:
• .permanent appointment is neither a
" rjght" nor a " privilege," but is simply a
contractual matter negotiated between
the State and UUP;
,
• the disagreement as to when. an NTP
may first be considered for a permanent
appointment should be settled among
UUP, the State and the Trustees; ·
·
• the way the "immediate superviso-r"
(who will make the init ia l permanent appo)ntme nt recommendcilion) is to be
designated should be clarified;
• confidential letters of recommendatio~n are in legal doubt in view of current
Federal and State freedom of information laws;
'
• addition of a resume to the permanent appointment dossier accomplishes
nothing;
• the use of forms is compromising
and constricting;
• the provision for employee selfassessment is "totally unprofessional and
demeaning," and "coercive to NTPs who
may prefer not 'to toot their own
horns;'''
· • NTPs or their advocates should be
provided reasons for negativ e
recommendations; and
• there should be a clearer definition
of how the peer comminees to advise
the President in certain cases are to be
. selected. (In his presentation, Ketter said ·
that he would ask the PSS to se~ up
procedures for selection of such panels.)

~I
l ~~~ employftos (from le:h: Rulh Fmton~ Typosr.aphks; Je.an Shr.adcr, Publin tions; Dorothy Bush, Typosr.aphics) join r.atly .at upitol strops.

U/8 contingent joins 'March on Albany'

It began in the dark al 5 a.m. last TueSday (~arch 18) in the Baird Parking lot
and e nded much later that evening than
had been expected. But reports from
m embers of U/B 's Civil ·service
Employees Association who joined the
largest "March o n Albany" in State
history indicate that the da y was worth it.
five busloads Of employees from the
campus were among the 20,000 o r 47,000
(depending on whether you accept" Office of General Services' o r CSEA estimates) who thronged the capitol to
protest State budget cu ts for the coming
fiscal year. U/B's buses were pan of an
estimated 562 from acroSs the State
which were park~d in a six mile lineup
alo ng Albany's Washington-Avenue.
On th e steps of the State capitol, .the
· site of the mass rally, a grey coVin was on
display, signifyi ng "the death of State
workers'." A ro.~~ bil,nd blared. "
CSEA officials spoke of the seriousness
of the fiscal maneuvers of the Carey admini stration.
State CS.EA President Theodore Wenzl
addressed the crowd, asking:
" Are we going to stand for layoffs to
balance. th e budget!"
"No!.'' th e demonstrators roared back.
" Are we going to be the first o ne to
take a paycut?''
"No!"
There were cries of "We want Carey,"
but th e Governor failed to appear.
Demonstrators marched peacefully
around the ·square surrounding the
capi tol for several hours. The speeches
and marching went on from about 10
a.m. until 2 p.m. At 2:30, a delegates
meeting was convened at Chancellor
Hall. The · meeting approved by voice
vote a resolution authorizing the CSEA
Interviews are being conducted
leadership to poll members on what acthrough April 15 for positions as head
tion should be taken next - including a
residents in University Residence Halls,
strike.
William J. Conroy, assistant director of
"It was so dark when we left that mdrhousing, has announced. These are halfning," one of the U/B participants
time positions of ten months duration,
reported,
that "you coull! hardly discoindding with the academic year.
tinguish faces, but five busloads were
Applicants should be U/B graduate .
boarded
as
the CSEA busily added box
students who have worked on a residenlunches, doughnuts and ("Offee. to each
tial hall staff or who have had other relebus. At 5:30 a.m., we departed. It took
vant experience.
about an hour for people to come' alive
Remuneratlon · lncludes salary, plus a
· and realize the day had come, and here
furnished apanment and benefits.
they were. One didn't know .what to exFurther detalk and application forms
pect when we got to Albany.
are available at the University Housing
"As the bus came down Washington
Office, Goodyear Hall Basement, 831AvenUe to the capitol, the scene was
3322.
suddenly transformed into a sea of faces
and signs. There were hundreds of buses
parked on ~very available street where - .
parking was permitted, as far as the eye
could see. To suddenly arrive and be a
part of this March was a thrill. We worked .o ur way over to the. fr.ont of the
!Capitol where speakers were~ steps
in front of a loudspeaker system. ~ intenl.!ls in the speeches, the representative at . the microphone would shoot,
'Who are we.!' And then in living stereo ·
from everywhere the vcllces would shoui

-and listened to the speakers and then
walked around the capitol and near the
mall with their signs.
"The second co ncern was 'W he re did
th ey park our bus?' No one had th e
slightest knowledge where their bus
would be parked. The expected time of
departure was 2:30 p.m., and we didn't
get away until around 4:30 when we

.

,

"Everyone was there to make Governor Carey and thi! legislalors -are that
we were con'~med for our jobs and
pension money, and other grievances.
There was no disorder. Everyone stt&gt;od

Agreeing, another U/ B delegate said,
" I'd go again , tomorrow."

Speech Communication unit
surveys WNY employment needs
· "Th_e t?epartm~~t. of Speech Com~umcauon has Initiated a comp rehenSIVe survey of th~ demand for va riou s
types of co mmunication skills in the
Western New York job market.
As part of the project, U/B graduate
s111dents will su rvey more than 500
businesses, medical units, ed ucatiOnal
organizations and governmen t agencies
in Erie and Niagara Counties.
The department is seeking information
on the kinds of job titles and communication skills needed in various
organizations in order to bring the
g raduate and undergraduate speech
cb mmunicatio n ·programs at U/B in

close~ alignment with the job market iA
Western New York.
·
The information will also be used as
YIB's con tribUtion •to a natiOnal survey
of communication skills that is being
ca rried out by th e members of the lnter_national Communi~atiOn !:"ASsOC:iitiOri ~ ''·
The department is urging Niagara
Frontier employers who have suggestions on training in interpersonal, organizational, or mass communication to
contact its project d irecto rs, Dr. Gerald
M. Goldhaber and Professor Charles R.
Petri~ , it t,he Speech Communication
Department, 4226 Ridge lea Road .

- ·~i·-.
FACULTY
Ass~stant Professor .o r up, Cell and Molecular Biology, Posting no. F-5019.
AsSistant Professor or up, Cell and Molecular Biology, F-5020.
·
V1s1tmg Ass1stant Professor, PoiWcat Science, F-5021 .
lnstrudor, Healr'h Sciences. Education and Evaluation F-5022
Clinical Assistant Professor, Oral Mecli"ci,t:~.,e, F-:-~~3.,r'· r.~-tl".. ~~H~ ~~~ ",4-. 1

Dorm jobs open

'CSEA.'

rounded up the last of the passengers.
Some gave up and sat on the benches
near the capitol and waited for their people to discover them, which they did.
Going home that-evening, you felt proud
that you were a part of this March."

•I

-j·,'"·Jr &gt;l:'o't• ,;) t&lt;.

&gt;

NTP
Technical Assistant, Cell' and' olecular Biolog , PR, :t-cMiii!IJt!lli~ f
Techmcal Wnter, Academic Coinputing PR-1 8-5006.
'1 •
Assistant to Chair.man, Theatre, PR-1, •s:soo7.' '
· .., ' 1 , 1 ..,)\..il·· ~ ·
sooa:rogrammer Analyst (part-time!, University Computing Services, PR·2, 8. .Assistant f?ean CDirect9r of Evening College Office), Division of Contmumg Educatton, PR· 3, B-5009.
Assistant Librarian (two posftions), Science and Engineering Library PR-1
B-5010.
.
·
'
'
:ublic Health Nurse Interviewer and Coordinator, Medical Sociology, R5004

Public Health Nurse Interviewer, Medi~al Sociology, R-5005.
Research Technician (Veterans Hospital), Medicine, R-5006.
Lab Technician, Physiology, R-5007.
A~sistant U~r~r_ian (science cataloger), University Libraries, PR-1, B-5011
(pendong reclasSifocation·to associate librarian, PR-2).
·
Research i\ssistant-Counselor, Upward Bound, R-5008 ..
·. F~r additional information cOncerning these jobs and for details .of NTP
openmgs throughout th State University system, consult bulletin boards at
ttiese l_ocations:
·'
~
1. ~II Fa~ility between J?152 and 0153; Ridge lea, Building 4236, next to
cafeteroa;-3. Rodge Lea, Buildong 4230, in corridor next to C-1 · 4. Health Sciences
Building, in co~ridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in th~ corridor between
R~m 1~1 and .the ~'!bby; 6. lock~ood. ground floor in corrid5&gt;r next to ven.· .
~on~ ~hi?"'; 7. Hayes l;lall, In ~in entrance foyer, across from Public lnfor, .
matoon Offoce; -8, Ac:he5on Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113· 9.
Parker Engineering. in corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st fl.;..r:
Ho~slng Office are.; 11. l&amp;m: Elmwood, Personnel Oepartment;•12. Norton
Unoon, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. 0~1endorf Hall, in corridor next'.to
Room 106. 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Campus).

i.

SlAte UniYenlly at luftalo II .,

liflulll Opportunity/Afflrmatlwe .Adlon employe.

.

�..•=•

March 27, 1975

Ca~ndar·------~--~~--------------------~~------

Geology plans
consolidation,
'pop' course

(from r»Be a. col. .f)

.

.

Admission: ticke ts are aVailable at the Norton
Ticket Office and other locations and are priced at $2, 53 and SS.
·

In addition to his involvement in piCin·
ning and securing equipment for the
polar ice laboratory at U/ B (Reporter,
February .27) , Dr. Chester C. Langway,
new head of the Department of
GeologiGa! Sciences, is grappling with
the challenge of consolidating the
department under one roof at Ridge Lea
from loCatioris ~ Ma in Street and in the
Be ll Plant.
IS&gt;
•
·
Classrooms, fatu ity offices and a limited amount of lab space are now operative in the new location. Rehabilitation
of the building (forme rl y occupied by the
Art Departm e nt) is continuing, with summe r as target date for the fi nal bringirig
together of all faculty and facilities.
Ge ology ha s bee n losi ng stud e nts,
l angway no tes, because o f t he inconvenience o f having to move from
on e campUs ~o an o th er f o r va ri o us
cou rses and labs. Ridge l ea w ill not o nl y

e liminate this d rawback but will also
allow for iin"' eririching mingling and interadio n betwee n gradua te and un-

de rgrad\Jat e stude nts- which has not
been possi ble pre viously.
Geology has 12 faculty members, six
Ph.D. cand idates, 23 master's stude nts,
some 70 declare d underg raduate majors
and about 350 stude nts ,e nrolle d in its
e le menta ry c o urses , Dr. l an g wa y
reports.
Wit h re quired scie n ce courses a th ing
o f the past h e re, e leme ntary le ve l
e nrollme nts have . dropped se riou sly in
recent yea rs, causing accompan yin g

budgeta ry allocation difficulties. To combat th is and to satisfy stude nts' inte re sts,
a noth e r, more popular el e m e ntar y
course, .P.ayi n g particula r attentio n to
"Caf astroP h ic eVen ts"In geoi08Y/' will b e

added in the fall. To be taught by Dr.
Charl es Cazeau, whom Dr. langway
qeS:Cri~s a s a d ynam ic a nd colorful lec turer, " Great M ysteries of the Earth " will
focus on su c h thing s as nature as a
po!I~W&lt;. ; ~IJ!l &gt;destroye r, ~volcan ic e ruptions, hurricanes, landslides, and eart h quakes, for ex ampl e ) and on t h e
m yste ries related to t he Earth 's processes

and how they affect man. ·,
The course is designed to appeal to a
broad base of non-science and science
majors alike and thus imprbVe th e

UUAI INTBINA nONAL AIM FI5T1VAL''
In rhe Name of the f arhe r (Bellocchio). No rton Co nference Theatre, call 831 -5117 for

times. Admission charge.

WEDNESDAY-2
SILS AL TIRNA nVE ACTIVmES•
SILS classes fo r the week M arch 31 -April 4
are ca ncelled, and a series o f alternative activities are plan ned for anyone interested.

"Mixed Compa ny" is today's theme, and ac·
tivities include :
9-10 a.m. - Cranrsmanship. a discussion led
by Barbara Fa rah, library med ia specialist,
West Va lley Central School System. 334 Norton .
~
9-10 a.m. - Prison Libraries - The Way to
Revolution and Radicalism, Carl Giambra . 337
Norton.
10 a.m.-12 noon -traveling bookmobiles
from th e Buffalo and Erie County Public
library will be statione d in the vi cinity of
Diefe ndorf ·Hall .
10:15-11 :1S.a.m. - Workshop on children 's
film clubs in libraries. Media lab, Acheson A.
11 :30-12:45 p.m. - Pizza luncheon ($1.75).
Harrim3'n library lab .
1-2 :15 p .m. - SllS student s Debbie
Wi ll iams and Kathy Gord~ n will condud a
workshop on enhancing l ~brary atmosphere.
Media lab, Acheson A.
2:30-3 :30 p.m. - Workshop on services to ·
the handicapped . 307 Crosby.
3:45-4:45 p.m. - l aw librarianship Forum
with p rivate , academic a ri'd coun Ia
librarians Wendy Edison, la rry Wenger, and
Bob Gutz. 337 Norton .
7-8 p.m . Administrative roles foru·m with
Millicent Abell , associate diredor of University libraries; Mary Bobinski , director of
Amherst Public l ibraries; Robert Gurn , coord inator of Young Adult Services, Buffa lo and
Erie County Public libra ry.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAR#
A Newer Method of Separation of Dispers-

ed Organics from Water. Pcofessor Darsh T.
Wasan, Ill inois Institute of Technology. 104
Parker, 3 p.m .~
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES SEMINAR#
Heima.ey Eruption Iceland, 1973, Dr. Alan

Morga n, Depa rtme n t of Earth Science ,
University of Waterloo, Canada. Rm. 5, 4240
Ridge lea, 3:30p.m.
BODY MOnON ANAL YSIS"LECTURE SERIES '
The Measuremenr of Body Motion, II : A
. Tentative Proposal, Pau l Bouissac, visiting

professor of French. Red Room, Faculty Club,
7:30p.m.

Department's undergraduate FTE e nrollm e nt tallies. It should also serve·.\&lt; •to turn

FILMS•

students on to the world around us" and

Acheson, 7: 30p.m. No admission charge.
UUAI FILMS••
Roaring 20's (Walsh), 7:30 p.m., and Wi ld
One (Benedek), 9:25 p. m ..140 Farber (Capen).
No admission charge.
FILM•
Poetic Justice (Frampto n, 1972). 5 Acheson,
7:45 p.m. No admissio n charge.

to how the study of geological sciences
Gin be both useful arid " e xciting," Dr.
Langway says.
This " disaster" course aimed at a new
breadth of interest and the polar ice core

research lab geared to bring new depth
to the Department's graduate studies
and research efforts both reflect the start
of Dr. langway's plan to achieve the
"proper bal~nce 'Of education and
research" in

a newly-aggresSiv~

Dep'art-

Breathless {Godard), Charlorre ef son Jules
(Godard) and Une Hisroire d'eau {Goda rd ). 70

FACtlLTY RECITAL'

Saxophon ist Edwa rd Yadzinski perfo rms,
Bafrd Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Admissio n:.' S.SO

ment of GeologiGal Sciences.

Baldy:Jellowships

~·o

Placement plans
career days ,

the Baldy Advisory Committee has announced it is able to make available additional Summer Research Fellowships
for the summer of 1975. These
Two career days for U/B studenls will
fellowships Garry stipends of $2;500 each.
be held on Gampus next" week.
The deadline for appliGation is April
. . The Spring 1975 Business and Industrial
18.
Career Program is scheduled for
A delalled description of the project to
Wednesday, April 2. Seminars will run
be funded, whether it has been or is now
contin~ly
from 1:30 p.m.-4:30p.m. in
supported, plans for publication of
results, and a short biographital sketch · Rooms 231, 232, 233 and 234 Nonon. All
students
interested
in non-techniGal
of lhe pmposer should be included as
careers in business indd ndustry are incomponents of lhe appliGation.
vlt.
e
d
to
attend.
The
seminars
are inforBaldy Summer Research Fellowships
mational only and will not in¥olve disare availal&gt;le to full-time faculty and staff
cussion
of
job
opportunities
for
senior'S.
. of lhe Unlveislty at Buffalo In support of
The program Is co-sponsored by Universchola!iy activities in the area of law and
sity PIKemeni and Car,eer Guidance, the
IO&lt;:ial piilk:y· lor a consecutive twoSchool of• Management, and .the
month period of free'time, provided the
Management Alumni Association.
·recipient Is without employment
obliptlons or income In the fonn of .
Placement ·and Career Guidance will
stipends, fellowships, or olher salary supsponsor a Government Career Day on
port In any form durlns the period In --Thunday, April 3. Area represenlatlveo
which the fellowship will be held.
from city, all.lnty mel federal .....,cles
Appllc:att.ns and supportlns Inforwill be on hand to cllsana various oppormation should be sent to: Assistant Vice
tunities· available at ..,lewis ol aowe&lt;JIf'IWIIdenl William H. e,umer, aecut1ve
ment. lnlemted studenls Will be able to
officer, t.ldy AdviSory Collwn~. 201!Mel. the local representatives from 1-5
K Hayes. Hall.
p .m. In Norton Union,__
i...o

• ~··· ' : .. ;. J

,•

• • • f.

\

• ••

'1

•'J

students; $1 faculty, staff and alumni; $1.50
general public.

VISUAl AIITli EXH181T
Faces, photographs by Or. .Herbert Reismann, professor of e ngineering science.
Hayes Hall lobby, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. through April11 .
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

AIMIPANR DISCUSSION'
The film AWca will be shown followed by a
panel discussion with William Kuntsler and
Big Black. Auditorium, Buffalo and Erie County Publ ic libra ry, 8 p.m. No admission cha rge.
uUAI INTBINAnONAL AIM FESTIVAL"
M o ther and the Whore (Eustache). Norton
Co nfere nce Theatre, call 831-511 7 for times.
Admission charge.

NOTICES
CREA nvE

O n April 2, worksho ps in Belt Making (7- 10
p.m.) and Sandal Making (2-5 p.m.) begin and
ru n Tuesdays and Th ursdays for six weeks. For
informat·ion o n cost and registration, go to
Rm. 7, Norto n Uni,o n.
-

THURSDAY-3
"SILS ALTERNAnVE ACTIVITIES'

SllS cl asses for the week Ma rch 31-April 4
are cancelled, and a series of alternat ive activities are pla nned for anyone interested.
Today's a"d ivities include a day tour to
Rochester including stops at the Kodak Park
Research library, George Eastman House and
the Rochester Institute of Technology. Also
scheduled are severa l local tours: (each
limited to 25 persons) WGR- TV at 9:30 a.m.;
WNED-TV at 11 a.m. and the Buffalo Evening
News at 12:50 p.m. For tour reservations, call

CREDIT-fi!EE COURSES

·

A. variety of late-spring credit-free courses
are being offered , begi nning between April 1
and 15. Topics incl uded are: Typing Review,
Social Ge rontology, Be havior Mod ifi cation
(Advanced). Ma rital and Family The rapy,
lntermediare Ten nis, Supervisory Process in
Social Work, Anthropology, Christian Med itation, Counseli ng for Mid-Career Decisions for
Women, Acce le rated Voc a bu lar y De ve lop me nt, The Ge rma n Expe rien ce and
Assu mptions Be hind Casework Postu res. Fo r
date, location, fee in fOr matio n o r registratio n,

831 -4826.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Bur&gt;iwJcaine in Obstetric Analgesia and
Pharmaceutical Educat ion in Sweden. Or.

Anita Berlin, As1ra lake medel Pharmaceutical
Co ., Sweden. 244 Ca ry Hall {Health Sciences),
4 p.m.
·
FILM'

Things ro Co me (Menzies). 147 Diefendorf,
7 p.m. No admission charge. Presented b)" the
R~gional

Fi lm Project.

CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEMINAR#
Studies o n Phorosyst em I in Spin ach
Chloroplasts, Or. James Siedow, Depart ment

of Biochemistry, Rice University. 134 Ca ry Hall
(Health Sciences), 4:15 p . ~ .
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAR*
The Report Writer in COBO L. taught by

Chris Siderakis today and April 10. Rm . 10,
4238 Ridge lea, 7-9 p.m.

CONnNUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
CARDIAC CLINIC#
,

Thi s serie s of cli nics in physica l education of
th&lt;' card iac patient and arrhyth mia workshops
are scheduled each Thursday evening through
May 8. The topic of tonight's Cl inic is Auscultation - Systo lic Ejection Murmurs. Fa rber
(Capen) Hall Basement, Room G·22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. For information o r registratio n, call the
School of Medic:ine, 831-5526.
Sponsored b'y the School of Medici ne . ·
DANCE PERFORMANCE•
Thf' Zorliaque Company, di rected by li nda

Swiniudl, performs. Harriman Theatre Stud io,
th rough April S and April1 0-12, &amp;p.m. Ad mis·
sion charge.
Presented by the Depart ment of Theatre .
FilM/ PANEL DISCUSSION'
The fi lms With lnren r to Harm and Inside
thP Wa ll&lt;; (both about prison life) will be

followed by a panel d iscussion with Joe Heath
a_nd Kay Guinane {resea rc h e~) and filmmake rs She rwi n Gree nbe rg and Ra nd all
Conrad . Aud itoriu m, Buffa lo and Erie Coonty
Public library, 6 p.m. No ad r:nission charge.
MUSIC PERFORMANct'
Diana Taky Deen, a me mber of the facu lty

of t he America n Un iversity o f Be irut ,
l e banon, gives a lecture-piano recital featuring the music o f the Middle East. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. Admission : S.SO students; $1 faculty, staff and alumni; S1 .50 gene ral public.
MUSIC PERFORMANct•
Emir-non- Time is e lectro11ic music and

video-imagery performed by "Ap~rition ," a
new music and image-making group. Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8:30 p.m. Admission charge.
UUAI INTBINAnoNAL AIM FESTIVAL"
· Th e D eca m e ron (Pasolini). Norlon
Conference Theatre , call 831-SH7 .for times.
Admission· charge.
•

EXHIBITS
CAU.B!Y

219 EXHIIfT

R~l~zinR _Fam~sy -

CRAFT ctNTBt -

c.ll831-4301.
. EARLY CHILDHOOD. CENTBI FAll SESSION

App licatiors are now being accepted by the
Early Chi ldhood Cente r (n ur_sery school) for
the fa ll 1975 semeste r. Children are eligible for
admission in the group between the ages of
two years, ten months, and four yea rs, six
month s. For app lications, call the Pre-School
Office, 631-2246. The gro up will meet in
Christopher Baldy Hall on the Amherst ca rvpus.
FORBGN STUDENT EMPLOYMENT

Foreign students are req uested to register
for an employment program in Rm. 210,
Tow nse nd Hall. Effo rts a re bei ng made
th rough a joi nt program between the O ffice
of Foreign Stu.de nt Affa irs and Un iversity
Place me nt and Career Guidance to aid in job
placement.
ISRAEL/ROME STUDY TOUR

.•

A 21-day study-tom of Israel and Ro me, fo r
academic credit if' desi red , is bein g scheduled
th rough Canisius College. The package indudes airfa re , food , housing, tou rs, baggage
transfers and amenit ies and runs fro m May 26Ju ne 16. For more informat io n, contact Fr.
Frederic J. Kell y, S.J., 2001 Main St. , 883-7000.
NURSING SCHOOL API'li~An9~ •..

Applications fo r admission to the School of
N ursing for September 1976 are now available
and ~ho ul d be filed in Rm . 111 Ca ry Hall
(Hea lth Sciences) b y April 4, 1975.
·
Omct OF ADMISSIONS AND
RECORDS HOURS

The O ffice of Admissions and Records
hours fo r.fh is wee~ 'are : March ZJ and A.pril1 3: 8: 30 a.m.-7 p.m.; March 28: 8:30 a. m.-4:30
p.m.
PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING

Professio nal cou nselin g is now available at
Hillel House. For -a n appointment, call 8364540.

suMMER 5E55ION RECJSTWAnON

HOURS

The Office of Admissions and Records will
conduct Summer Session 1975 Registration
beginning Monday, April7. Students current. ly registered at the University for the Spring
1975 semester need only complete a Course
Request Form. NeW students must complete a
Student Data Form, which will be availal::ile at
Admissions and Records on April 7. April
re8istration hours at the Office of Admissions
and Re cords are 8 :30 a.m.-7 p.m., April7-10;
14-17; 21-24; ond 28-30; aiiOiher cloys in April,

the office will be open from 8:30 a.m.~: 30 •
p.m., _with the exception of April 23, when ~
hours are 8:30 a .m .-8:30 p.m.
.
TUITION WAIVBIS
Tuition waiver applications for the summer

ond loll 1975 semesters will be ovofloble -in 210
Townsend as of Aprll1. The deadline for handing in applicarions for summer•is May 1. The
dNdline for handing in fall 1975 ~iations
is May 15.

f a ntasir.ing Reality, a

show of painting ond photosrophy ideos by
Char:·l es .Eiough . C allery 219, Norton ,

Mondoy-Fridoy, 11 o.m.-4 p.m.; Sundoy 1-5
p.m. Through April 8.
' LOCKWOOD EIH181T
Polish CoiJectlon. e•hibition culled from
"the University's colleaion of more than 4,000
volu...,. ol -materiol. First floor, l..ockwood
.Memo&lt;iol library. Mondoy-Friday, 9 o.m.-5
p.m. Continuins.
MANIJSaft AND fiiST BilliON _ , The complete a&gt;llection of Robert
"Grhft monusoipts In the wmd Is cune!ldy
on dlsploy In the l.odtwood Memariol Library.
Manuscrlp!S and lint editions 11om lhe CirMs

.INTERVIEWS
ON&lt;AMPU5 INTBIVJEWS
The Slaff of the Universily Placement and
Career Guidance Office welcomes all students
in the University community and alumni to
take paf1: in various a~ programs oHered
.... l~i s year . The on-&lt;arftpus interviewinB
prosnom, running through April25, offen the

_..,nlty for lrldividuol interviews wilh

=t &lt;!':::'m";a=' :'o::n"""t.::: -

. elihllelh blrthclo,. lllleon,, IICIInd floor,

~ Memariol library. """""' """'

sov-

education, buslni!H, industrial lnd
et"l1rilenul represent.atives. Candidates from
an clepee levels, who completed their aoune
-"&lt; In .......,Y or expect to In May 1975, an!
Invited to •tob port 1n the "inteMewJns.
Resislrodon lonns ..., available In Hayes
R!ft. 6. The fallowing ....... will
be~ this wi!ek:
·, .·
MONDAY-JI: Morine Coops.
TUESDAY-1 : Ar:mour-Deol, Inc.

c.

�•

March 27, 19l5

Ollelldtlr
THURSDAY-27
SPECIAL APPUm MATHEMA ncs SfMINAJII
St~bility An~lysis of P~rabolic Problems with
Multiple Steady States. Professor Don Aronson, Rice University. Rm. 51 , 4244 Ridge Lea,
2:JO p.m.
·
AFRICAN STUDIES COMMITTH SfMINARf
Recenr Political Changes in Ethiopia, Or.
Teshome Wagaw, chairman, Department of
Educational Psychology, National University

of Ethiopia. Rm. 9, 4238 Ridge lea, 3:30 p.m.
MATHEMAnCS ColLOQUIUMf .
Metric Spaces, Generalized l..ogic and Closed Categories, U/8 Professor William

lawvere. Rm. 38, 4246 Ridge l ea; coffee at
3:30, lecture at 4 p.m.
ART HISTORY lKTURE'
tmages of Women in Renaissance anP
Baroque Art and their Sf?Cial Context, Ann
Sutherland Harris, professor of art history. 310

't:, .;-.._

Foster, 4 p.m.
Presented by the Department of Art, the
Department of History, Vico College, an• ·

Women 's Studies College.
CfU AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SfMINARf
C.arbon-13 Nuclear Magnet1c Resonance
Studies o f Proteins in Solution, Or. Eric Old-

field , Departme nt of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 134 Cary Hall
(Hea hh Sciences), 4:15 p.m.
POETRY READIIIIC'
Hirry Mathews, author of The Sinking of
the Odradek Stadium and Other Novels. The
Ring and The Burning Deck. D1 Norton , 8

p.m."
Presented by the Departme nt of English.
CHEMISTRY FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIE$1
Predic tion of Protein Conformatin ,
Professor H. A. Scheraga, Department of
Chemistry, Cornell University. 70 Acheson,
8:30p.m.
THEATRE IN DER J()SffSTADT'
The Concert by Herman 8ahr (in German).
Directed by Ernst H~eusserm.an. Upton Hall
Auditorium, St~te University College at Buffalo, 8:30 p.m. Admission ch~rge .
Presenled Qy the University-wide Commlnee on the Arts.
UUAa INTBNATIONAL FILM FBTIVAt••

fellini's Rom~ (Fellini). Norton Conference
Theatre; call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

FRIDAY-28
PEDIATRIC STAff CONRilENCQ
Childhood Psychqsis, Or. Michael Koch,
~ssist~nt professor, Department of Ch ild
Psychiatry, University of Minnesota. Kinch
Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 10 a.n].
SOCIAL AND DIYB.OPMENTAL
PSYCHOI.OCY COU.OQUIUMf
Child Re~ring Practices and Form~l Learning: The African Context, Dr. Teshome G.
. Wilgaw, chairrniln, Department of EduGiltional
Psychology, .National University of Ethiopia.
Rm. C-34, 4230 Ridge lea, 12:15 p.m.
llliRALO ANIMAL IIJCHTS

COMMITT&amp;.MEETINC'
3lO Norton, 2:10 p.m. Everyone welcome.
COMPUTINC SfRVICES COU.OQUIU!olf
Analoginl Reasoning. learning and
Problem Solving.. David Chen, Depa.rtment of
Computer Scierice. Rm. 41, 4226 Ridge lea.,
3:30p.m.
1NC1N11111NG ·AND APPUm
SOENCE5 5EMINAill
'
Electric Arcs ~nd Plasma Generators in
Chemial Processing. Dr. Charles H. Leigh,
rese•rch manager, Research Institute of
Hydro-Quebec. 104 Parker, 4-5 p.m. (Coffee
at 3:30 in 107 Parker.)
Sponslored by the Engineering Science,
Electric•l Ensineering a.nd Physics

Deplnmenu. _

au. AN) MOUCULAII

IIOlOGY iiiMfiUI

.

fffed of -.1 Nuclear Mutarions on
Dewelapnen~ Or. Niels Nielsen,
[)eportmOnl olliodlemistry and
o1 Clllfomllat Dovl5. 244 c.ry Hoi
(Heollh 5clena!s), 4:15 p.m. IRef&lt;esh""'!'IS
will be sened It 4 p.m.)

Chlotopla&lt;t

Bio-Pityllcsl

u--,.

ntE.\UE~

Internal CombuSIIon by Terry Doran.
AlftefiCin Conte~nporary Theatre, 1695
Elmwaacl Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admholon
cfllowe. 5eMfna II llmlled lo 25 pet'
perlonnonce; reervllions ore sugesled 11175-

5125).

.

CACMM00

·u. T- In l'oris. 1411 Farber (Copen), 8
..... 10-.lO p.m.~: $1.
.
-HOWP.
5habbll

s.mc..

followed ..,. ... Onq

-

, Jil,

Shabbat, will be held at 8 p.m. (A study session
o n " The Teachings of the Rabbis" wi ll be led
by Dr. Justin Hofmann.) 40 Cape(l ~lvd .
THEATRE IN DER JOSEFSTADT'
,
Six Characters in Search of an Auttior. by
Luigi Pira nd e ll o and directed by Ernst
Haeusse rman (in German). Upton Hall
Auditorium, State U~iversity College at Buffalo, 8:30 p.m. Admission charge.
Presented by the University-wide Commin ee on the Arts .
UUAI INTERNAnONAL FILM FESnVAL"
Fellini's Roma (Fellini). Norton Conference
Theatre, ca ll 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

9-10:30 a.m. - How Our Prejudices Affecr
library Service, Sharon Jordon , librarian. Rm.
8, Acheson A.
10:30-12 noon - Perspectives on t4.frican
Libraries. Adolphe Amadi, SllS student. Rm.
18, Acheson A.
10:30-12 noon- Competency Based School
Library Media Educat ion Program. Anna Mary
Lowrey, SILS facult y. 337 Norton.
A bag lunch and "sniff-in " will be held at
lunchtime (noon} in the Harriman library lab
with Professor Charles Bernier of the SILS
staff.
2-4 p.m. - Facing the library Organization
Adjustment, Accommodation and Acculturation of the Library School Graduate,
Paul Wasserman, Unive rsity of Maryland. 234
Norton .
3:30-&lt;C p.m, - Assertive Training conducted
by the U/ B Counseling Center. Registration
closed. 337 Norton .
8-10 p.m. - Alternatives· to Traditional
Library ~ducation, larry Allen, dean of the
University of Kentucky Library School. Red
Room, Faculty Club, Har~iman .
ENCLISH DEPARTMENT ALM SfRIES"
Rise of iou.is XIV (Rossellini). 140 ·farber
(Capen), 3 ar:-d 9 p.m. No admission charge.
STAnsnCAL SCIENCE COUOQUIIJMI
Censored Survival Da.ta: Wcelihoods and
Large Samples, Professor John Cr'owley,
University of Wisconsin. Rm. A-48, 4230 Ridge
lea , 3 : ~ p.m.
CELL AND MOLECULAR IIOLOCY
SfMINARf
.
Dynamics of Regulatory Enzyme-Aspartate
Carbamylase, Or. Michael Blackburn, Universi.!)' of California at....~,rkeley. 246 Cary Hall
(tThah h ~iences) , 4 p.m. {Coffee will be served at 3:45 .)
COMI'UtiNC SfRVICES SfMINARf
KR.ONOS Time-Smring Text Editor, taught
today and April 2 by Roger Campbell. Rm. 10,
"238 Ridge lea, 7-9 p.m.

SATURDAY-29
THE NEW SOCIAL HISTORY: BEYOND BRUTE
EMI'IRICISM CONFERENCE'
This day-long conference includes a panel
.diK'Ussion in the morning (10 a.m.-12 noon)
and workshops in the afternoon from 2-4 p.m.

~fi~~ii:~t ~ag~~i~~;t ~~~~~j J~~~f~:!'it~~
Rutg ers University ; and Mary lynn
¥c0ougall, Smith College. The morning Session is scheduled in 316 Fillmore (EIIicou
Complex) ·and the afternoon workshops in
Rms. 2•. 26 and Z1 Diefendorf. for further information, call the History Dept., 636-2181.
Sponsored by the Graduate History Association, Graduate Student Association and the
American Studies Program.
HILLEL HOUSf'
Shabbat Morning Services, led by Rabbi Ely
Braun, will be held at 10 a.m., followed by a
Kiddush. 40 Capen Blvd.
THEATRE IN DER J()SffSTADT'
Six Characters in See~rch of an Author, by
Lu igi Pirandello and directed by Ernst
Haeusserman (in German) . Upton Hall
Auditorium, State University College at Buffalo, 2:30 and 8:30p.m. Admission charge .
Presented by the University-wide Commitl ee on the Arts.

FILM•

. Metropolis (lang). 147 Diefendorf, ·7 p.m.
No admission charge. Presented by . the ·
Regional Film Project.
::-UUAB FRENCH FILM SERIB••
LOla (Deny). 146 Diefendorf; 7 p.m. No admissien charge ..
MFA RECITAL'
. Soprano Rachel Lewis performs. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admtssion charge.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ALM SfRIES"
Leda (Chabrol). 70 Acheson, 9:30 p.m. No
admission charge.

THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Internal Combustion by Te rry Doran.
American Conte mporary Theatre, 1695
Elmwood Ave., 7, 9,. and 11 p.m: Admission
charge. Seating is limited 10 25 persons per
performance; reservations are suggested (87.55825).
CAC .R LM ..
Last Tango in Paris. 140 Farber (Capen), 8 .

and 10:30 p.m. Admission: S1.
UUAI INTERNAnoNAL flLM FESnVAL"
Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise (Bunuel).
Norton Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for
times. Admission charge.

·

UUAIINTERNAnONAL ALM FESnVAL"'
} e Taime. }e Taime (Renais}. Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831 -5117 for times.
Admission charge.

SUNDAY-30
UUAIINlBINAnoNAL RLM FESTIVAL"
Discreet cmrm 61 rhe Bourgeoise (Bunuel).
Norton Conference Theatre, call 831-5117_(or
times. AdmksionFcharge.

MONDAY-31
"'1115 ALtaNATM ACTM1115•
Classes in lhe 5dlool of Information and
l.lbrory Sludles for die week March l1· April4
ore cancelled, and i Series vi ~ ac·
tlvilles ""' planned lor lnlereSied.
"llroln 'D rain" Is todoy'o theme and octivhies
include:

TUESDAY-1
SUS ALtaNATM ACTIVITIB'
SlLS classes for the week March 31·April 4
are cancelled, ·and' a series of alternative aciivities a:re pbnned for a:nyone Interested ._
"Potpourri" is today's theme, and activities in- dude :
•
10 a.m.· 12 noon - films: The Projeclionist;
Amerian Time Capsule; Why Do You Sniile,
Mono lisa ond Synchromy. Norton Conference Theolre.
·
10 : 10-11 : 10 a.m. - A,.r Museum
UbroriMHhlp, ·Anneue MooUns. on librarian.
232 Nonon.

•

~ TU:y

.....dK.&gt;do: p... """" le&lt;lu .., ........,.

DHI'I : pt'ffonns April l .

12 noon-2 ·p.m. - r~peat of morning films,
Norton Conference Theatre.
12 noon-1 p.m. - Radio. Sex and You, Jim
Santella, former disc jockey. 330 Norton .
1-2 p.m. - Exploring the Mind of the
Avante-Carde Artist. Robert Baron, SILS st udent (dressed as a rabbit) . 344 Norton.
2-3 p.m. - How to Ser Up a Business,
Cynthia fi sher, free lance libraria n. Rm. 18,
Acheson A .
.
2:30-4 p.m. - filmmaker Tim Brennan
shows his -film, Document of Sturbridge
Winter, and discusses filmmaking. Media lab,
Acheson A.
3-4 p.m. - Censorship and Freedom. James
likoudis, president of Morality in Me9ia loca l
chapter. 3-44 Norton .
3-&lt;C p.m. - Puppeteer Jean Stewart gives a
puppet show about librarians. 337 Norton.
4-5 p.m. - Preservation and Restoration of
Library Materials. John Martin, Corning Glass
Museum library consultant. 234 Norton.
7-9 p.m. - Nine best media shows created
~ib~~~~~~~~~ in the fall sem~ter. Media
7-9 p.m. - .Informal conversation with
alumni. Rm. 244 Cary Hall {Health Sciences).
INFECTIOUS DISEASE THBLVY I..ECTUiiit
An Overview of Infectious Disease Thel'ilpy
is the first in a five-week series for pradicing
pharmacists, taught by Dr. kenneth keUick
and Ronald Sorkness, both dinical assistant
professors of pharmacy at U/8. For location
and registr&lt;lltion information, contact Harold
Reiss ~t the School of Pharrnilcy, 831 -2546.
NUTRinON C9NfBIENCEI .
En~rgy Me{~bolism and Obesity as ~
Medical and Public He~lth Problem, . Jean
Mayer, Ph.D. G-22 Farber (Capen), 12 noon.
Bring your lunch.
Presented by a cooperative arrangement
between the UIB Department of Biochemistry
and the Department of Nutrition of the' Harvard School of Public Health.
URIAN ANALYSIS AND POLICY SEMINAJII
Environmental Control vs . .Environmental
Pricing and Their lm,ncrs on Technical

Che~nges. Or. Kevin Sonthelmer, Department
~f Economics. 237 £rosby Hall, 3-5 p.m.

MUSIC I.£CTURf'
A Day in the Musial Life of Louis XIV.

Professor H. Wiley H!t,chcod, director of the
Institute for Studies in "American Music at
Brooklyn College. 101 lloird Holl, 4 p.m.
L .

'

CEU AND MOI.ECULAIIIIOLOGY .
SfMINAJII
Mitosis in Lysed Cell Pre~ra.flons. Dr. W. z.
Conde, Department of Molecular, Cell and
Developmental Biolosy, University of
Colorado. 246 Cary Holl (Health Sciences),
·
·
4:15p.m.

FRENCH DEPARTMENT FILM SERJfP'
Madame Bovary (Renoir). 146 Diefendorf, S·
and 1 p.m. No admission charge. '
ALM'
The Rise of louis XIV (Roosellini, 1966). 147
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No ~mlsoion chorse.
COMPUTINC SfRVICB ~
Plotting. uught by Horvey Axtefod today
and Apcil B. Rm. 12,-4238 Rlllse Leo, 7-9 p.m.
W.UFILMS"•
R011rlng 20's (Wakhl, 7:JO p.m., and Wild
One (Benedelt), 9:25 p.m. S, l.edure Holl,
Ell'-! Compln. No admission cfllowe.

SCHOOl Of AIIOimcrtJU AND ENVIIIONMENTAL DB1GN ~ 0W1t IEC·

TURESBIESJ

A Culttnl Anolysls of Und Use le/lels and
l'racrla$, Consunce Perin, cily plonner and
anrhropolosist. 2917 Main 51., 8 p.m.
MUSIC RKnAL• f.amed soprano /eiSye Norrpon ilve • perf~rQ. Kleinl-.ans Mulic Holl, 1:30 p.m.
nwn ro,.. 7~ col n

~

..

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY At BUFFALO •
VOL 6, NO. 23
MARCH 20, 1975

NlP 1ten1irei

pro.tedures ·
in s)Jodight
A draft of a "Review Procedure for
Permanent Appointment'' of campus
- non-teaching profession.ls, drcut.ted
for "comment and suggestion" by the
Office of the President ·and called "objectionable" after preliminary consideration by the Permanent Appointment
Commiuee of the Professional' Staff
Senate (PSS), will hold the spotlight at a
PSS meeti_ng tomorrow (Frid.y, M.rch
21) at 3 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf.
At the meeting, NTP senators will be
asked to consider a formal response
which has been proposed by the PSS Permanent Appointment Committee. That
response was to have been available for
review by senators and their constituents
by Wednesday morning of this week,
following a "discussion only" meeting
between the Committee and the President.
Also on the PSS agenda will be: a
report of the President; the final report
of rhe Events Committee; the report of
the Chairman, and other business.
The draft procedures, which have
been circulated to the PSS, United
University Professions, ·vice presidents..
University deans ind others, present a
philosophy of NTP permanent appointment somewhat at variance with
suggestions made la~e last year ·by the
PSS, at the request of President Ketter.
PSS saw permanent· appointment as a
" right" of staff members and urged that
consideration for it be based on
"satisfactory job performance (as docu- ·
ment·e d in PerfOrmance Appraisals) ~" PSS
also called for the employee in question
to receive "a written condse set of
receive 50 per cent of the royalties fo.r
reasons" for a recommendation to grant
their help, th e scientist said.
permanent appointment or not to grant
" My purpose," Goldhaber explains,
il at each review level. The " right of ad" was to describe rather rhan measure the
vocacy" for those who receive negative
com'municative behaviors and shared inrecommendations at any level of review
teraction settings of gay males cOurting
was also urged.
one another." He regards the present
'A Prin"Jese'
study as an e)(ploratory one that should
The administrative draft policy defines
suggest avenues for additional research
permanent appointment as "a privilege
on communication among gays.
granted by the University, not a right." It
In courtship, gay men have tradisays that consideration for such appointlionally used a unique argot and a range
ment "must encompass not only a simple
of non-verbal, often covert behaviors to
review of past employee performance,
signal mutual interest (although the old,
but a clear examination of how potential
secretive (;!_atlerns appear to be changing
employee cOntributions relate to future
under the impact of the gay liberation
goals and need for excellence in the
movement).
department, division and University."
Permanent appointment review, the
Three Purposes of Code
d raft document says, "must not be
This covert communication code has
thougl!t of as a 'super performance apserved threj!_ main purpos~.~Goldhaber
praisal,' but rather, [as] a critial exhypothesizes, allowing men interested in
amination of borh employee ~st perforgay sexual experiences to identify each
mance and poten!ial for continued
other, to avoid sociaJ stigmatization (or
growth and contribution."
even arrest}, and to maintain a sense of
The draft procedure scatement •lso
group identity.
rules out "early" consideration for permanent· appointment. Consideration
The specific cor:nmunication behavior
is strongly related to the particular set· . would be given only those who have
ting in which. courting · takes place,
completed "two consecu!M! ysrs of

colifhaber studies mores _of gay world

--

By P•trki.l W.ud liedenn.1n
Until recently, most of what the
straight world knew about gay courtship
came from novels (whether sentimental

fiction like Cionnnl's Room or a brutal
account like Lost Edt to lln&gt;ol:lyn) . The actual mores of the gay world were known

only to the initiated, who usually held to
a policy of enlightened self-protection
and non-disclosure in dealing with the
straight world.
But times have changed. Last summer
1,016 gay men from across the count_ry
agreed to participate in a massive study
of male homosexual courtship behavior,
the· most extensive empirical study of its
kind ever undertaken.

The study, designed and carried out by
U/B's Dr. Gerald M. Goldhaber,
associate professor and associate chairman of speech communication, provides
a wealth of new ethnographic dat~ on
where gay men go tO meet each other

and how they establish initial contact.
, . ~ lntenlews
In a series of almost one hundred taperecorded group interviews, some lasting
as long as five hours, Dr. Goldhaber
learned that the settings for initial en·
counters among gayS are varied,
although the streets, gay bars, public
~rks. steambaths, private settings (such
as parties at the homes of friends), and
''tea rooms" (or bathrooms) are popular

meeting places in every city with a large
homosexual population.
Moreover, the scientist found, gays,
like straights, use both verbal and nonverbal cues to signal availability or interest to a potential sexual partner, with ·
greater eml?hasis on non .:verbal cues
such .JS eye contact.
Non-verbal cues are used 4.6 times as
often as verbal ones, the study shows.
Dr. Goldhaber, who did the field work
on. the project last sunimer in ten
American cities, became interested in

gay communication aher reading a paper ·

~on 'the subject submitted by a student.

later he discovered that the literatW'e in

the field is almoSt entirely anecdotal and
that little or no empirlally derived data

had been collected.
"I was able to contact a broad crosssection of rhe gay population in each of
the cities included in the study, in pan
through the cooperation of various
homosexual organizations, includin g
gay-rights groups, gay church groups,
and counseling centers that serve gays,"
Dr. Goldhaber explains. Goy ' GheUos'
The greatest number of participants
were interviewed in los Angeles, San
Francisco, and New York City - the
three American cities with the largest gay
"ghettos" - but men from Albu querque, New Mexico, Kansas City,
Missouri, and other cities with smaller,
less visible homosexual minorities also.
participated .
"Most of my sample," Goldhaber says,
"was Caucasian, under 40 and either
employed or in school. Approximately 45
per cent said they were still ' in the
closet.' Only about 20 per cent said they
currently belong to a gay organization."
Everyone who partici~ted in the study
was assured confidentiality as well as a
copy of Dr. Goldhaber's forthcoming
book on Gay Ta/lc. Cooperating
homophile organizations will eventually

(turn to Pllfe J. col. 4)

trumropqe6_c.ol. 1)

Pharmacy group pushes poison control
Although only this week is designated
National Poison Prevention Week, thirdyear students at the School of Pharmacy
believe more than a week is needed to
effectively reduce, throu-gh re education, the occurrence of accidental
poisonings in children.
As a result, they are devoting most of
spring semester to a poison prevention
project in area schools. Concerned
about statistics that show more than half
a million children ingest some type of
poison each year in the U.S., with nine
out of ten under five years of age, the
students are visiting area elem.entary
schools to warn youngs)ers aboUt
poisoning hazards .. The students.. who
began their project last month, plan to

talk with children in about two dozen
area schools by April.
Aiming their talks at pupils in kindergarten through third grade, the pharmacy students show an animated film
and provide the youngsters with poison
prevention leaflets to take home. In addition. they lead the young~ters in small
discussion groups stressing poison
prevention.
The youngsters also receive ce rtificates
identifying them as members of the
"poison prevention team."
· Project co&lt;hairpersons Francis Gengo
and Dianne Hartnett point out most
poisonings are caused by substances
commonly found around the home, with
ordinary aspirin tablets the leading
cause: Examples of other slll&gt;stances

youngsters ingest are prescription and
non-prescription medicines, moth balls,
furniture polish, lighter ft.id, and deaning solvents.
The UIB students warn parents to keep
poisons and medicines out of the reach
of children, diseard old med.iqnes by
flushing them down the toilet, ana never
sior~ harmful liquids in seemingly
harmless containers such as pop bottles.
In case of poisoning, the student team
points out, parents should immediately ::;=contact a physician or the Children's t(
Hospital Poison COntrol Center (8787000). They also urge parents to keep
some ipecac syrup on hand, ready for
emergency use if the physidan or Poison
Control Center advises giving it to the
child.

�:t

SII.S $1ude~ts plaoning
I An Orgy for.r our Mind'
A student dressed as a rabbit, an
author and librarian from. the University
of Maryland, and the dean of the University of Kentucky Libr.uy School will be
among principal speakers during "An
Oll!Y for Your Mind," the School of Information and library Studies' Alternative Week, Maret. 3f-April 4.
The week ako includes a "sniff in,"
and tours of libr1.rie5 and com·
munications facilities in Buffalo,
Rochester and Toronto.
The five-day, student-organized
schedule of activities is an annual SILS
event designed as an 11 Alternative'.' to
regular doss attendance. All SILS dasses
for the week are cancelled.
...... Dnln.
"Brain Drain" is the theme for the
opening day, Monday, March 31.
the day's schedule indudes:
9:01 a.m.-11:31 a.m.-Acheson A,
a - I. Sharon Jordon, librarian, N.
Jefferson Branch, Buffalo and Erie County Public library, Workshop on "How
Our Prejudices Affect Library·Service."
11:31-12:11-A~ A, Room 11.
Adolphe Amadi, Nigerian SILS student,
~~Perspectives on African Libraries."
11:31-12:11--Nooton, Room 337. Anna
Mary Lowrey, SILS faculty, Workshop on
"Co.mpetency B·ased· School Library
Media Education Program."
At noon, a bag lunch and "sniff-in"
will be held in the Harriman Library Lab
with Professor Charles Bernier .of the SILS
· staffoProf. Bernier, who is associated with
lniematioruil flavors a11d Fragrances, will
pass out blotters sprinkled with various
scents for. students and other partidpants
to identify. Coffee and cookies will be
served free.
· 2ill p..ii:.-'4:01' ·p:ria.-Nortori, Room
234. Paul Wasserman, author of The New
Librarianship: 1\ Challenge for Change
and a member of the faculty of the
University of' Maryland, · will sj&gt;eak on
"Facing the Library Organization-Adjustment, Accommodation and Ac&amp;ulturation., o{,, the, .Library.. School
Graduate."
·3:31-4:31--Norton, (loom 337. Assertive Training conducted by the U/B
Coumel;ng c;:enter. Registration closed:

L..._1t:II-Hanlman, F.x:u~ty · dub
· lied a-. Larry Allen, dean of the
University of Kentucky Library School,
'!)II speak on "Alternatives to Traditional
Library Education."

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

Tuesday, April 1, will featu"' a "Potpourri" of events as follows:
11:11 a.•.-12 noo.n-Norton
c:ome.- Theatre, The Projectionist,
1971 color film. Chuck Mc€ann stars as a
projectionist whose fll(lVie dreams come
to life--D minutes; Arilerican Time Capsule-3 minutes; Why Do You Smile·
Mona Llsa-11 minutes; and
S~minutes.

11:31-11:!1-Nortoa; Room 232.
Annette Masllng. librarian, AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, "Art Museum
Ubrarlanshlp."
12 ••o•-2:11 p.m.-Norton
C f cw 'l1lulre. Repeat of 10:00
a.m. ..... .._....
12111-1111 ...._, a - 331. Jim
Santella, former disc jockey, now
lllac:hlns a mune entitled "Pop Radio,"
wll . - . on "Radio, Sex and You." ·
~ ....-. a - JM. SILS
labert llan&gt;n, dreued as a rabble "&amp;pporrns the Mind of the AvanteGarde Milt."
2111-J.....~ A, · - · 11.
Cynthia Fisher, free lance librarian,
"How ID Set Up a lluslnesl."
ldl • • • ?' 1 t A, Mella 1.1t1a. nm
. . _ , flmrnaker, will .._ hlo film,
oaa-otStrrirldp Winter, and dis-

a.. ......lllent fllni makJns.

, . . ... Nus .... . _ James
Llrauclls. pNIIdent of the local chapter
of Morlltr In Media, "c-shlp and
Freedatn."
lill... ,.,..., .._- JJ7. Jean

...... .....,.....,-puppet show about

llnifinL

-

. . . . . . tll'tl • . . _ Dt; John
ID. Coml"lf Glass
~ Ubrary, ,.,_vatlon and

Mlldn.. _...,..
~of

Ubrary Maleriak. ..

7:e.9:-Acheson A, Media Lab. .
Nine best media shows created by SILS
students in the ~all. semester.
7:~ Hal (HHith Sciences),
11m. 244. Informal rap session with Alumni.

'Mixed COIIIpafty' •
,
"Mixed Company'' is the theme for
these events, Wednesday; April 2:
, . a.m.-11:1!1 a.m.-Norton, Room
334. "Grantsmanship" discussion led by
Barbara Farah, library m~ia · specialist,
West Valley Ce('ltral Scl&gt;ool System.
9:11'10:01-Norton, Room 337. Carl
Giambra, "Prison Libraries-The Way to
Revolution and Radicalism."
11:01-noon-vldnlly of Diefendorf
tbl. "Ram Van" and "Lookie Bookie,"
traveling bookmobiles from the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library. Staff will
be on hand to demonstrate the vans'
programs.
10:15-11:U-Acheson A, Mec!Q Lab.
Workshop on children's film clubs in
libraries· with sampling of produced
materials by children.
H:J0-12:45 p.m.-Harriman, Library
Ub. Pizza Luncheon-Pizza, beer, and
soda, $1 .75. For registration, contact
Susan Klein , c/o SILS, Hayes C.
1:00 p.m.-2:15 p.m.-Acbesori. A,
Media Lab. Debbie Williams. Kathy
Gorden, SJLS students, will conduct a
workshop on enhancing the library at·
mosphere, jncluding slide presentation
and techniques.
. 2:30-3:31-Crosby, Room 307.
Workshop on services to the han·
dicapped with slide·tape prese ntation
and displays of special media.
3:45-4:45-,-Norton, Room 337. law
Librarianship Forom with · pfivate,
acade(!!j_c and courl law librar·
ians-Wendy Edison, Larry Wenger, Bob
Gutz. • •. • •...... . -... ~ _.: , . ,.., ~ .-,. ~7:00-8:00-Norton, Room 337. Forum
on administrative roles,~ special focus on
trends of women in administration. Millicent Abell, assoc;iate d irector of UniV,ersitYlibraries; Mary BobinSki, director of
Amherst Public Libraries; Robert Gurn,
coordinator of Young_ Aduh Services,
' Buffalo and Erie tounty' Public. i.ibrary.
Toun

Three local tours and' a day tou t to
Rochester make up the program for
Thursday, April 3. Tours of WGR-TV, at
9 :30 a.m., WNED-TV, 11 a.m., and the
Buffalo Evening News, 12:50 p.m., are
limited to 25 individuals each. A day tour
of Rochester will include stops at the
Kodak Park Research Library, George
Eastman House, and the Rochester
Institute of Technology.
.
A tour to Toronto on friday will take in
the John P. Robarts Research Library and
Library School fadlities at the University
of Toronto and the Toronto Public Li·
brary.
For tour reservations ~nd additional information, contact Susan Klein, SILS
Week chairperson, or Becky Caudle,
publicity chairperson, at .831-4826.

Asante heads
SIEfARgroup
Dr. Molefi K.' /\.sante (Arthur L Smith),
professor and chairman of the Depanment of Speech Communication, h~
been elected president of the Society for
lnterc!Uitural Education, Training; and
Research (SIETAR).
SIETA!t 11 a new . international
professional orpnlution with headquarteB in Pittlburgh, established to
foster · Intercultural and International
communication and cooperation by promoting education and researdl.
Dr. /\.sante'• 1973 book, Transraclal
Communlcatlor-. has beeo deiCribed as a
calalyst In aelllng the field of intercultural cummunlcatlon.
Prof. Alante - appointed chairman
of the Speech Communication Depanment here In 1!113, after serving for three
yeaB as director of the Center for Afrollmerlcan Studies at the University of
California at los Angeft:s.

major campus departments
Representatives of the Graduate Stur~nt GSE~. sta~e"".'nt which takes issue
, dent Employees Union (GSEU) will be
woth th?, guodelone~ for graduate
present in the payroll offices of each of
assosta~ts •&lt;;leased earloer thi1 month by
25·30 major U/B depanments this pay
Executive Voce Presodent Alben Somot
day (Friday, March 21) to discuss issues
(Reporter, "::••ch. 6).
affecting State-funded grad students on
The guodelones, GSEU says,
"aemonstrate an insensitivity to the
campus.
needs of graduate emP.Ioyees and to the
This activity, ·according to GSEU
best interests of the entire SUNY at Bufspokesman Barney Oursler, is aimed at
falo graduate program." They also conmaking grad students more aware of and
11
tain
direct attacks on our right to
interested in means of "fighting back
organize, by denying us employee
against" the current budgetary situation
status,"
the organization argues.
and the gen.eral conditions of grad stuThroughout the guidelines, GSEU
dent employment on campus.
charges, "various terfns are misused in an
"If they feel we are properly fighting
attempt to define us a.s non-productive.
the~ problems," Oursler says, the
We are likened to 'apprentices' and
students to be approached on Friday will
'interns.'
If this is indeed what we are,
have the opportunityJo sign authorizathen it should be noted that apprentices
tion cards supporting GSEU's drive to go
are
universally
considered as emPloyees,
before the Public Employment Relations
that they are eligible for trade union
Board (PERB) to seek approval for a barmembership, get better pay and benefits,
gaining unit election for State-funded
and are guaranteed a jQ!r at the end of
grad students at U/B.In such an eleoion,
their term of probation! The document
GSEU would be a contender for the role
attempts io put academic credit in opof legally-recog nized collective bargain·
position to productivity." ..
ing agent for the 1,200 State-funded
GSEU notes that the guidelines disteaching assistants, graduate assistants,
courage "graduate employees from
and research assistants on campus. ·
holding outside jobs." The organization
GSEU, which has already collected 300
agrees that these students should be
authorization cards, must have a
given a "living wage" in order to be able
minimum of 360 (30 per cent of the
to devote full attention to graduate
potential bargaining unit total} before it
programs and provide the best quality
ca n go to PERB. The group seeks, howeducation. But, GSEU says, the oneever, to have at least 600 such authori:quaner full-time faculty pay formula
zations by the end of March. The New
wh ich was established. by the 1967 State
Yo rk State United Teachers, of which the
Legislature as a base salary for grad stufacu lty and non-teaching professionals
dent employees is interpreted by 1he
union (UUP) is em affiliate, is providing
legal and technical assislance in this drive ... new gui~elines as a "maximum." This
S3,905 ceiling, which GSEU contends
for legal recognition, GSEU spokesmen
"few of us get.'' is funher called "totally
say.
inadequate" lo meet the 47 per cent cost
Issues More lmporunt ·
Of
living increase .s'ince 1967. " You must
Howeve r, they emphasize, rallying
be either rich or 8ei into debt 10 comgrad students around the issues is
plete
your program," GSEU says.
probably more important than legal
GSEU also opposes the more frequent
recog nitiol\ at th.is . time. Th'e. current
revie'ws
Of graduale employee "'perfor·
eco nomic and budgetary cutbacks vitally
mance" called for in tlie document and
affect grad students, GSEU says.
laments
the lack of a grievance
"After years of falling real wages and
proc;edure ~ to be followed to deal wit h
increaSing Workloads," a GSEU circular
the problems which are sure 10 arise if its
co ntends, " we now face the prosped of
tenets are followed ."
major cutbacks in graduate funding.
If _grad s_t~de_nts )I"Qr~ed ~ccord!n$ to
With -the .job freeze imposed by the
the letter of the guidelines (i.e. with
Governor which blocks ail job offers to
faculty supervisiOn of the wo'rk of every
old and new staff for summer and fall
teaching assistant), GSEU says, "the
positions, we are told to prepare for the
educational prQcess on this campus
worst. The worst? In accordance with
would grind to a. halt . In many
Carey's budge t prqposals, 50 to 150
departments, TA's represent well over 50
positions now in existence (200 to 600
per cent of the undergraduate/instructor
jobs if taken from graduate staff ranks)
contao hours."
are due to be axed. However, when the
What is missing in these guidelines,
Legislature fails to pass an $800 million
GSEU contends, "is a concern for quality;
1ax increase, we can expect cutbacks to·
abound. This is inevitable, for New York
ail we hear abOut is 'expediency' and
control. -At a· time when the idministra·
State law makes a 'balanced budget'
mandatory.
tion should be directing its effons to"We will not accept the responsibility
wards fighting the budgetary cutbacks
for economic mismanagement. The
jeopardizing the future of the University,
State, our employer, would have us do
they produce a document which underjust that . . . . ln. the past we. have
mines the security of graduate
attempted to solve our problems either
employees, and the quality of graduate
as ·individuals or in our iridividual
as well as undergraouate education on
depanments. Needless to say individual
this campus."
·
action has rarely wqrked, and in these
More information on GSEU can be obtimes, can never possibly effect the imtained from Barney Oursler at 837-7884,
mediate changes needed in our present
George Boger at 836-4071, or' Frank
situation. T-he answer lies; only in our
Emmett at 833-7271.
collective strength. Together in GSEU we
can begin to confront the issues so basic
to our livelihood and so long neglected
by our ~mployer and University administrators."
GSEU says it is committed to fight on
'all issues affecting grad students and is
also developing with UUP and CSEA a
The U/11 Symphony Band has been in·
"working · coalition" of all campus
vited to panidpate In New ~ork State
employees, inclUding construction
Day ' festivities of the bicentenni.al
workers who "also can expect to lose a
cel!'bration in Washington, D.C.. on
number of jobs due to cuts In the capital - NoVember 3, 1975.
·
construction pan of the budget/'
Professor Frank J: OpoiJ4, diret~or of
On its list -of issues, the organization
the Symphony Band, has received an:in- '
dtes: assistantship levels; the number of
vitation for the group 10 perform on the
assistantships; cUtbad&lt;l in 1taff lines;
steps of the nation's Capitol during acsummer support; workload of graduate . tivities focusing on New York State'• con,
assistants; class room autonomy;
tribution to the bicentennial. The only
TA/GA/RA aulgnmenu; Millard
symphonic band in New York to be inFillmore College positions; departmental
vited, the U/11 unit wa1 picked in
governance; afflrmadve action In pracrecognition of ill ·~fine work" and "Its
tice; leaves of absence; day-care; office · excellent American repertoire. H
space and suppl~; and job 'pLacement.
Cipolla ls .cuiTently· thalnnan of the
College Band Dlrectoril\lallonal AssociaGuldeiiMt Crlllclzed
tion and • meriiber 'of its task force
Indicative of this sLate of co""!'ms is ~ ·
researching early American band music.

Band invited
to Bicentennial

�March

20, 1975

Gay world''"""posH &lt;01. 11

Coldhaber found. In other words, men
typically- communicate.dlfferendy whe~
l ooking for a partner in a gay bar than
when visiting " the trucks" (a unique outdoor gathering spot in New York City) or
silting.. in the spectator gallery at
· Congress - · two of the miscellaneous
meeting places cited by men whom
Coldhaber interviewed. ·
SiJnply being in a particiJiar setting
may be a non-verbal cue to others that a
man is seeking a sexu al partner, the
scientist says. A young man walking slowly down Christopher Street in Greenwich
Village, smiling at fellow pedestrians or passing cars - is probably 11cruisiog,"
an almost universal courtship behavior
among gay men.
5tMcWd Non-Verbal c,_ ·
.
"There are some standard non-verbal
cues that are recogni~ everywhere in
the country," the sodal scientist explains. "In gay movie houses the standard gambit is for a man to sit down near
someone he finds attractive and then to
move doser and closer."
Non-verbal cues can be extremely
precise, indicating specific sexual
preferen~es, Goldhaber says. For· example, on the West Coast some men indicate their preference fo r dominant or
submissive roles in sadomasochistic
" scenes" . by wearing a set of keys on
either the right or left side of their belts.
In gay steam baths a person will lie on his
back, stomach or side to indicate the sexual preference he prefers.
When verbal strategies are used, the
scientist found, they ohen consist of the
same
familiar rituals _(~~ What's your
tions, and su ~picio n .of tUmors in patie nts
sign?'') incanted by straights who are
they have exam ined. Chron ic d iseases,
looking for action.
such as bronchitis and emphysema, and
Besides looking at how gays com·
lead poisoning fro m paint chip ingestion
mun icate, Goldhaber also examined
t:tave also been d et~ct ed . Screening tests
.communication.
". br.eak4own~.· : f~l.ures
fpr the latter. are now underwaY in all
to con~muni ca te . These most often inchildre n.
volved confusion over the sexual o rientation of the person being wooed. For
Counseling ~nd Communin.tion
example, in the course of recounting
"We do a lot of co unseling/' sa ys Mor·
cruising experiences, many gay inforto n. " We lea rn to communicate and to
mants reported that they sometimes.
cruised a perspn, only to find.that-hewas
reliJ-tJe .,o pat i~~~- P~~h~ps, thro.ugh wh at
we lea rn, we ma y be able to improve the
not gay at ali but a straight who aphealth care system fo r those in th e inn er
parently enjoyed teasing gay· men. This
city."
kind of behavior is comparable to the
But there is also a desire to "share what
''rapo" · gam~ that some heterosexu31
we have learned with fre'shmen and
women play, Coldhaber theorizes.
sophomo re med ical students as well,"
Communication Breilkdown
Morton says. " Perhaps through lectures,
Some Communication breakdowns
we can review the acade mic aspects of
result from superficial similarity between
what we see in th e clinic."
behaviors
specific to two different subMOrton feels that the experience of
cultures. for example, a gay man in .New
setting up and wo ~kin g in this wellOrleans
might
ask a smiling member of
hea hh clinic has made him a little more
the drug culture, "Do you want to turn
sy mpath eti c and unders t anding .
Onl"
If
the
person
so approached is not
" Hopefull y, I will be a better professional
gay, he may say "yes" thinking the offer
with more humility. I now know what the
involves nothing more than sharing
world means."
drugs. The consequences of such a
Will there be other students to carry
breakdown could be nothing more than
on the work of " helping our neighbors
mutual embarrassment, or the encounter
to stay well" when he, Johnson, and
could
result in the gay's being arrested,
David graduate in June? Morton hopes
beaten up or wane.
50.
Even within the gay subculture, verbal
miscues occur, Coldhaber says. In San
francisco, a man in a·"leather bar" may ·
ask another, "Are you S or Ml" On the
prime cause of corrosion -of automobile
West Coast, " S" Is the aa:epted slang for
fenders."
"slave," as in •'slave and master." But in
However, there may be one bright side
New York · and elsewhere on the East
for some, Dr. Good says: "Engineers and
Coast, "5'' means-"sadist," u opposed to
scientists who specialize in corrosion
"masoc,hist ." A communication
generally find that, throughout their
breakdown of this type can lead
careers, there is one trOuble_which does
nowhere or to violence.
.
not bother them : unemployment."
If the flirtatious "talk" of the gay world
Speakers at the corrosion course in·
sounds almost u drury u the chanl!r of
elude: Dr. 'leah Cal-Or, deputy head of
the singles' bar, thars largely because
the Corrosion and Surface Treatment ..
gays, like straighb, often have difficulty
labor~tory, Israel Institute of Metals, The
-relatlna to other people u more than
Technion, Israel, who is visiting research ~ ·· sexual objects, explains Goldh'iber.
associate in the U/B 9epartment of
Because of this, more and more pys are
Chemistry; Dr. Bernard Husock, vice
turning to non-coercive forms of
president and; chief engineer of Harco
counseling, not beCause they hope to
Corp.,,Me,dina, Ohio, a company actively
.change. their sexual · orientation, but
engaged in protection of millions . of
becaute they seek more satisfaction in
miles of buried pipe in this country; Dr.
their relatlonsliips with others.
Robert E. Shaffer, associate professor of
engineering, UIB, who lias had wide exNOZIEGIB .
periencle in solving problems of metallic
11oe ...._.., ...... Zllllloo• . . . _ fracture and war and the Interaction of
_
,
_
,
...........
M. ............... ...
corrosion and mechaniCal failure and Is
T.....,,Monll~- ...............
Jlotlor'a ...... _ ....... _ ........
the 1975 winner of NACE's Speller
Award; and Dr. Venice K. Gouda,
w . . . . . ..
research professor, National Research
· Council, Cairo, EgyJ!I. who Is a vlsltlns
.research ..odale in the Canosion Center, Ohio State.

Black med stu~enb staff clinic at EOC
· By Marion Muionowsky
Black medical students in Buffalo are
helping their neighbors to stay well
lhrough a new clinic t~at is located in the
inner city. Eve~ Saturday, from 9 a.m. to
4:30' p·.m., sOnle .J0..4o Pcitien.ts cOme io
the fourth floor of the downtown
Educational Opportunity Center (465
Washi~gton St.l) or a free. physiql el(_amination. :

·

.. ·. · •

·

.

Here i'ndi v'i duals ran8ing fr"om infants
to th~ eld~ri,Y.. a!.~ . ~n by .a !&gt;~n\lf4.1 9f
me'di b il, n UrS i ng, "and medica1
technology students under the su;&gt;ervision of a professional staU.
"We are finally able to offer a service
to the community," Gregory Keith Mar-

. ton Ill, a senior medical student, says.
Morton spent endless hours unraveling
r"!! tape so that the clinic could open.
" We now have a place where J)eople
in the community can come for free

physical exams," he said, " and where we,
as minority students, can add to our
training in physical dia:gn?Sis in a clinic
that is academically· desigried." He explained that Polity, the 'Medical School's
student government, picks up the tab fo r
·those who cannot pay for Services at the
clinic.
·
~
llqan In ute 60's

The idea of 'offer1n8 fr~ services
began back in the late sixties. In the inner city•s Westminister House , a
breakfast program was begun by the
University's Black Student Union in addition to a medical program d irected by
Dr. Haynes Robinson. P.atients were examined by medical and dental stu'dents
on tabletops and in kitchen chairs, and
lab tests were carried out in the kitchen:
It was a poorly-equipped setting, Morton
,
admits.
But, he says, during its first five months
of limited operation (it was open only on
Saturdays), the makeshift clinic screened
more than 300· children, and students
gained first-hand knowledge of the
health problems in an in_ner city popula.tion.
In 10 per cent of the patients seen, the
UIB students found visual defects that
required correction. There were also
three cases of blindness In at leut one
·eye .. Other children had hearing
problems, and 12 cases of sickle cell Jraits
were uncovered.
The . present location at the EOC
represents the third home for ti1e dinic
(there was also a short-stay in SUNY's Urban Center). The fadl!tr Is the best
equipped to date, and then! are Pfii!!S
and !0¥5 for chlljlren.as well as a TV and
plano In a nicely-carpeted lounae. While free eMII!S- slven by fnedlcal
senlon Morton, Tone Johnson, Jr., and

R~nald David, the stude~ts ''are not ask-. ·ed to d iagnose," Mo rton explains. "We
only dete rmine whether referral to a
r nea~by hospital is necessary."
Preventive Eums · · · ·...
Nursing students; carefull y instru e1ed
by a regist e red.~purse , take histories•. give
visual and heanhgotests, etc. An examin·
iAglteam- one junior and !Qne ·s:enior
medical stude nt ·- spends a bout 20
minute s per patie nt. " We tell- o ur
p;:~ tients t.hat ·the physic;a.l exa mination is
fo r' lp~eventi.P rt, ·tliat ' we "do 'ncl't'IVant
them to wait until they are sick," Mo rto n
indicates.
. Physical findings are then presented to
the medical director, Dr. Harvey Butler,
who is ult imately responsible for all
pa tie nts. Dr. Isaiah Meggett is also
available if there is a problem. Once
e ither d octor signs th e examinatio n
form , the patient has a legal docu me nt to
use to fulfill school e ntrance or job re·
.q uirements, MortOn points out.
In~ well-equipped laboratory, medi&lt;al
technology stude nts cari perform a
battery of tests, ranging from urinalysis to
blood tests or bacterial/serologic
smears. Sickle cell tests are also available
on patie.ttt request.
While- the din ic is basically a wellhealth center, students have found
significant
murmurs, urinarY tract infec·
.

Corrosion conference set for Saturday
A one-day course on ~~ corros i on
Science and Engineering," will be held
Saturday, March 22, in Norton Union,
Prof. R. ). Good , Department of
Chemical Engineering, and chairman of
, the Education Comminee of the Western
New York Section · of the National
Association of Corrosion Engineers~·
(NACE) has allJIOUnced.
There is no charge for the course
which will be on the technical level of a
senior or first year giad .student in
science or eng i n~ring, Dr. Good says.
The course is spon5ored annually by
NACE as a service co engineers, scientists
• and technidans in Western New York.
The econom~ cost of corrosion in the
U.S. Is . " simply mind-boggling," Dr.
Good indicates. " -'1 conservativ&lt;&gt;estimate
would lie one per cent of the gross
national product. Elimination of corrosion would more than double t!&gt;e profits
of R&gt;meindustries," he poinb out.
There are many, highly visible examples of corrosion In Buffalo, he says.
··:The Skyway is now closed for
rebuHding. because corrosion of the
reillfordng bars In the concrete has caused concrete to crumble. And the salt We
U!4! to ~It Ice on roads In this area Is the

__

............,_......,_
....
......-·-!::•·..................
.....................-.-

�Morch 20, 1975

liMb··
N~w titles range from
1

·
utopia' to how we learn

Utopl.ln ·Sodallsm: Its History Since
1..-by leo loubere, professor of
history, Schenkman Publishing Company, Cambridge, M~s., 1974. 158 pp.
(paperback).
Utopian thought is as old as man's social consciousness. Throughout history,
utopian ideas have been tempered by
events and · technologies, by everdeveloping philosophies and specific
ideo1ogies. ln. Utopian Socialism, Dr.
Loubere examinef those utopians who
provided elaborate descriptions 61 their
ideal societies, and -those who, without
detailing future social conditions, believed that some simple event would reveal
the rottenness of existing social foun-

dations and bring about a new age. Seeing no promise of future good within

their socie!Y, both groups, pragmatists
and idealists, believed that society
would have to be completely rebuilt.
In examining utopian organization,
society politics, and experimental communities, loubere analyzes the various
ideolot!ical differences that existed in
the utopian thinking of such men as
Charles Fourier and Roben Owen, ~ti­
enne Cabet and louis Blanc. The
thoughts and works of these . men are
also studied in the context of the
revolutionarY movement in France in

1879 and in Europe during the middle of
the nineteenth century. Blanc and Cabet,
for example, were intimately involved in
the pro&amp;reSsiVe move·ments of France
during the turbulent years of the Revolution of 1848.
Periods of stress and rapid change .
have been the periOds richest in utopian
thought, and the twentieth century has
been no exception. The quickening
pace ql m&lt;!ustrial, Sl&gt;ciety,.lhe widening
of world communicalions by means of
invention, and the technologies thai
have cr:eat~ a new concept of world
war have prompted the further development of utopian ideaS and communities.
Such thinkers as Edward Bellamy,
William Morris, Th~ore Hertz"-a and
·H.G. Wells, alth~ugh differing as much
in their specific recommendations as did
the utopians before them, and such experiments as Coden's Familistere,
Israel's kibbutzim, and experimental
communities in America, have continued the search for utopia.
Loubere's analysis of utopian thinking,
· with comparisons of theories, actions,
and events, explores the relationship
between utopian ideas and the social
IC&gt;KeS that surround them. Despite the
lad&lt; of tangible achievements produced
b¥ the utopias discussed in this book,
utopl.ln ideals have been an imi&gt;onant
element in western culture, the awthor
contends. Acting both as a reflector of
socill norms and as a catalyst for social
&lt;flanp, utopianism has provided a condnual response to society's need to understand"existing conditions and to experiment with alternatives.

. Press, Albany, 1974. 258 pp., S20.
In the century 1815-1914 the six
Mediterranean provinces of France ·
moved steadily to the left. Dominated at
first by legitimists and Orleanists, they
became Radical strongholds alter 1880.
By 1914 they had turned to the socialists.
!his book is a "situational interpre·
tation" of that political change.
The depanme_nts produced .wine. That
· economic fad was fundamental to the
region's politics. Viniculture went
through several crises in 'this century,
during which each time politics took
another turn to the left. Why1 The departments were highly urbanized,
something wine production permitted.
The vineyard labor force was notably
young, uprooted men from the uplands
or abroad - a solid demographic 'base
for the left. The typical grower was not a
self·sbstaining farmer, the typical
producer not a tradition·bound artisan .
Each depended. on a market, on a cash
economy, and saw the benefits of im-proved techniques. The vintner Was
alert to the influence of government.
When the market was unstable, govern·
ment got the blame.
In the wine crises of 1848-9, the 1870s "
and 1880s, and 1901 -7, wine producers
turned to political programs offeting
a beuer deal, as, for example, improved credi t facilities, cheaper
transportation, stro nge r market ~o ntrol.
This meant turns to the leh ... .
loubere's ~&gt;be&gt;~\ is a highly detailed
and chronologically arranged presenta·
tion of the e lection returns• of these
deparlm~nts . The structure is .not on the
interprera tive lines suggested above.
As such it is for French speciili.sts a(ld
polit ical deriiograplieo's. Aut th e lhe;,;e
are set down clearly enough to get a
more general reader through the trees,
to give some order to the individual examples and breat he some life into quantitative analysis.
-GeorJeS.er
University of California, Santa Cruz
in History Reriews: of New Boob

-eel
...._"_,..,_:nm.
c-r...,..,__

LEOLOUBEIIE

Usins the Chemicol literoture: A Practical Guide-by Henry M. Woodburn,
professor emeritus, Marcel Dekker, Inc.,
New York, 1974. 312 pages, illustrated,
S14.50.
Designed to alleviate the problems
often encount~red by scientific
researchers, this volume presents a comprehensive guide to the effective use of
printed ~ chemical literature. Not -· a
bibliography, it shows the. researcher
how to overcome the obstacles of un usual orCanizaiion of subject matter,
changes in format, scarcity of indexes,
or simply" sheer magnitude.
Undergraduate and graduate students of
chemist ry; ·p ractici ng chemists and
librarians make up t'he prospective
audie nce for this guide.
Accord ing to Dea n Woodburn, the
volume is· based upon his observat ions,
over many yea rs, of the difficulties exR•r;i~.c&lt;;.&lt;! by 'l~d.e~;&amp;"!dy~t&lt;!J, ~.s ..aQd
Ph .D ~ can'!Mates irt searchihlf Ch&lt;!hiical literature. Research and writing ,equired most of the two yea rs following
his retirement from the faculty in ·
Septembe r 1972, Dr. Woodburn says.
Empirical Studies in the Psychology ol
leoming-abstracted by B. R. Bug•Hski,
distinguished professor of psychology,

Hackett Publishing Co ., Inc.; In dianapolis, 1974.
Psychologists define learning as "the
modificatiOn of behavior through , prac·
tice, training, or experience." lt is a
process as mysterious and complex as life
itself, and one ·that mankind has been exploring throughout the ages. .
In this unique Vl_ork, Professo r Bugelski
charts a course of eXploration in the psy·
chologyy f lea rning tha t began less than
a cen t~y ago.
·
Dunng this period, many of the same
provocative questions keep arising,
while the answers to so me still remain
elusive.
How does one venture into th ~ un ':
known? Wh ~u rewa rding or frustrating
paths have others followed? In 100 years
rh ere ha ve b een thousands of
journeys-most leadi ng nowhere.
Unda unted, the curious co ntinue. for
these few, Dr. Bugelski has condensed
123 research._ projeds, reporting the
melhod and result of each research projed in a spa&lt;;e . of one or two pages.
Togethe r, th ese abstracts of seminal
!'tudies are designed to give any reader a ·
provocative and informative view of 100
years of ~eeking, debating, doubting,
and test ing.
This is th e first in a series of "Empirical
Studies" tilles which Dr. Bugelski is
editing.

UUP urges letter blitz of -legislators.

Ecltor:
...
The proposed Executive Budget for
SUNY at Buffalo has alarmed faculty, staff
and students of this campus. Particular
personnel and programs are being
directly cut in '!'hat some are saying is
only the beginning. A climate of fear is
being generated_ as the Administra_tion
prepares 11contingency plans"- not for
various ways of reducin..J. growing
austerity and of retrieving threatened
jobs and programs, but on how to cut
bad&lt; even further should the need arise.
In the present atmosphere of "uncertainty," one thing is definitely cenain. If
we spend our time wcirrylng obout who
will cut whom, about which depanment
or which individual is most expendable,
the present fears will be realized-and
we will be instruments of that realization.
A - COOIIOIUIIIr- pub/ifhed
If, on the contrary, we join together in a
:::....._
"-;:.,~ :,_~
common eHon to regain projected losses
• - • JOS ...., St. -...,, N. r. lf2f&lt;.
and fight for further needed growth for
Edltoriol-lft
m room ill, 25ll
this University and lor the SUNy·oystem
as a whole, we can not only dispel
&amp;ecutlYe Editor
cten-allzation . ond fatalism, but acA w::;!~o
complish posltl;ve ~Its.
ROBERTT. MJIRUrT
U.U.P. In coordination with New York
Alt_,l'rodualon
State United Teachers 15 ei1pged in a /OHNAO~
State-wide eHon to teiiOA! the SUNY
-·budget, to maintain existing levels
PAJI!ICIA WIIRDilfllQ.,WAH .
against inflation, and to project a course
~c.leo!dwfdlt"'
of CIDfttlnued, needed powlh-1ad"'r
DIANE QUINN
• than -eft the decline and fall of public
higher eduatlon In New ~orlt Slate. We
L-....;._ _ _
SUSAN
__
.._• •_tiii_CE_a_ _ _-.J ... -~- .~P. ,')OW to all5ist. II) a masolve

. .

UTOPIAN SOCIALISM
Its History siDce 1800

le«er·w';iting ci~paign to State Senators.
and Assemblymen to prevent the cutbacks due to our not being allowed to
keep abreast of inflation:
The SUNY system was built by the peapie of New York State who deserve quality education lor their children . .A "hold
the line on taxes" budget means that
there may be irreparable damage done
to this heritage. lons range approaches
at both State and Federal levels must be
developed so that the main weight of
taxation does not fall on ·those of us
already heaviiy overburdened. But it is
essential to say to our State legislators by
Mon:h 31 that needed money must be
voted now to stop the dismantling of our
system of higher education.
Sincerely,
_.....,. lawler
legislative Chairperson, U.U.P.

... .

Loal Members
Erie-Niagara: 139. Matthew J. Murphy,
Jr. (D), 139 S. Transit St., lockpon 14094.
Erie: 140. Harold H. Izard 10-ll; 356
McKinley Av., Kenmore 14217; 141. G.
James Fremmlng (0-l), 2349 Kenoington
Av., Amherst 14226; 142. Stephen R.
Greco (0-C), 795 Richmohd Ave., Buffalo
14222; 143. Anhur 0. Eve (0-ll, 1301.
- Fillmore Ave., Buffalo 14211; 144. William
. a. Hoyt &lt;D-U, 16trvtns Pl., Buffalo 14201;
145. Francis J. Griffin (0-LJ, 56 Morgan
Rd., Buffalo 14220; 146. Dennlo T. Goisl&lt;l
(0-l), 123 Atlantic Ave., Slqan 142;1~; 147.

Ronald H. Tills (R-C), 4J Union St., Hamburg 14CI75. · ·
Erie-Wyoming: 148. Vincent 1. Graber
(D-l), 248 Elmsford Dr., W. Seneca 14224.
Loal 5enale Mealben
Er!e: 55. Joseph A. Tauriello (0-l), n3
Busto Ave., Buffalo ..14213; 56. James D.
Griffin (0-0, 420 Dorrance Ave., Buffalo
14218.
Al/egony - Carta~ugus - Choutauqua frie: 57. Jess J. Present JR), 41 Chestnut
St., Jamestown 14701.
Erie-Livingston-Wyoming: 58. Dale M.
Volker, 63 Central Ave., lancaster 14086.
Erie-Genesee-Monroe: 59. James T.
Mcfarland (R), 21 Grosvenor Rd., Kenmore 14223. ·
Erie-Niaga~-Or/eans: 60. lloyd H.
Paterson (R-l), 1234 87th St., Niagara Falls
14034.
Somple Letter
Dear Assemblyman X,
•
I am deeply disturbed at proposed cuts
~t U.B. Cuts that threaten -the quality of
education deprive us and our children of
an essential means of developing highly
qualified members of society. We live In
a time which calls for more, not less,
scientific, technological and cultural
development. Taxes m\lst be Wiled at
both State and .Federal ..,.. which do
not place the main weight on those of uo
who are already heavily overburdened.
Thank you for your kind attention,
Sincerely,

�March 20, 1975

11 exercises
planned for~
graduation
One

general

comm~ncement

ceremony on May 18 ind 10 divisional
exercises from May 11 to June 8 will conclude the 1974-75 U/ B academic year.
• Participating in the ·general com-

mencement, Sunday,

~ay

18, at 3:00

p.m. at Memorial Auditorium will be:

graduates of the faculties of Ans and
letters, Educational Studies, Engineering
and Applied ' Sciences, Natural Sciences
and Mathematics, and Social Sciences
and Administration; the School of Social
Work; the Division of Graduate and
Professiona1 Eduation, and the Division
of Undergraduate Education. Those
student. who completed degree requirements in September, 1974, or
FebrWiry, 1975, or expect to in May, 1975,
will panicipate.
The ten divisional commencements
which have ~n scheduled are:
May 11: School of Medicine, 3:00p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall; School of Nursing_
2:00p.m., Mary Seaton Room, Kleinhans
Music Hall; School of Information and
· Ubrary Studies, 3:00 p.m., John lord
O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus.
May 16: School of Architecture .a nd
Environmental Design, 8:00 p .m., 2917
·
Main St.
May 17: School of Health Education,
3:00 p.m., Clark Hall, Main St. Campus;
School of Health Related Professions,
8 :00 p .m ., Roswell Park Memorial
Institute Auditorium; School of Management, 7:00 p.m., Kleinhans Music Hall.
May 11: School of Pharmacy, 10 a.m.,
John lord O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus; School of Dentistry, 8:00 p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall.
June 8: Facu(ty o f La&gt;v and
jurisprudence (School of law), 8:00p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall.
More than 6,500 degrees will be
awarded .at t~e cere monies.

French

cooki~g

French cooking, from capon au champagne to bouillabaisse, will be the subject of three demonstrations sponsored
by the Faculiy Club. Conducted by
Nadine Berlow, the demonstrations will
take place on Wednesdays at 8 p.'ln.,
beginning April16, in Harriman library.
The series was originally scheduled for
last fall, but was postponed.
Ms. Berlow, a teacher of the .an of
French cooking, has conducted several
demonstrations for Park School and the
International Institute. French born and
trained, she has had experience cooking
in this country and has adjuned her
r:nenus and techniques to American food
sources and cooking interests. ·
The menus for the three
demonstrations are:
• Alllll16: Capon au Cfiampagne (capon
cooked in champagne), Poulet Farci
Grand mere (boned-stuffed chicken indudes instructions on boning a whole
chicken), Tane-Tatin (upsidedown apple
ran).
Apdl 23: Steak au Poivre (steak with
~pper corns), Chou Farci (whole cabbage with meat stuffing), Veloute de
Tomates (cre;omed tomato soup).
·
Apdl 31: Poisson Pocht! au Poivre ven
(poached fish with green pepper corns),
Bouillabaisse (smfood stew), Gratin Saxon (baked vegetables).
The demonstrations are open to the
public, but advance registration by Apr11
1 is necessary.
The cost for all three sessions is-$15 for
individual registrotion and $25 for any
two panlcipants n!gisterlng at the same
time. The cost includes recipes and wine
and a sample of each item prepared at
each demonstration.
.
For further information, contact John
Buerk at 831-432.

Geology -plans field study
of Mexican coastal plain
Th e Depa.rtment of Ge ol og ical
Sciences will offer a unique field
progra m on th e geology of the West
Mexica n Coastal ' Plai n at its research
facility in Teacapan, Sinaloa, Mexico,
ea rl y this summer.
A maximum of 14 graduate arid undergraduate students will be acce pted
into a 6-credit course on Coastal Plain
Stratigraphy. Graduate students ma y
register for ali additional3-credit course;
e ither an Introduction to Palnology or
Problems in Sedimentation. The only
pre requ isite is satisfacto ry completion of
a course in field geology or equivalent
experience.
· Geological Sciences has participated in
a joint study of the archaeology and
geology of this coastal plain for the past
four years. Geological research has
focused o rl the age and origin of the
plain . .S)udies have been initiated on
both archaeological and ~eological
problems and several theses have either
been completed or are in progress. Research on heavy mineral assemblages,
quartz grain surface textures, origin of
beacli ridges, soil stratigraphy, mangrove
,ecology, and palynological reconstructions is presently under way. During the
1975 field season research will involve
additional pollen cores; sedimentary
characteristics of the alluvial plain, estuarine, and beach environments; and
an extensive program of subsurface cor·
ing to identify older stratigraphic units.
The courses will consist of field work and
complementary lciboratory srudies.
Students from disciplines other than
geology are also invited to appl y.
The 1975 staff incl ud es Dr. G. Go rdon
COnnally, U/ 6, diredo r; Dr. lesli e A.
Sirkin, Ad e lp tt,i Unive rsity, and Dr.
Nicholas K. Coc~ity University o f New
York. Several othe r resea rch associates
will be present lor brief periods and wi ll

T-==.

.-v-

.:::..:!.

make schedul; d contributions to the
courses.
· Headquane rs for the project is the
rural fishing village of Teaca pan, facing
the Pacific O cea n, approximately 90 km.
south of the modern city of Mazatlan.
The .research facility was built by' U/ 8 in
1970 and will be the center of activities
during the field 'season. Living quarters,
for both men and women, consist of
modern bungalows located on the b'each
about V2 km. from the laboratory. Both
th e weat her and the surf are spectacular,
U/8 geology spokesmen indicate. Local
residents will maintain the headquarters
and prepare meals that feaiUre fresh
shrimp, fish, and oysters in addition to
traditional Mexican dish es. The class
schedul e wi ll permit two long weekends
fo r travel to several cultural, historical,
and vacalion centers located with in a few
hours travel from Teacapan. Although
instruct ion will be in English, a
knowledge of Spanish is useful for those
who intend to travel.

Total University enrollment for thesecond semester has been reported at 24,
345, a drop of 2.55 per cent from last fall,
but an increase of 6.1 per cent over
Spring 1974.
Admissions and Records Director
Richard Dremuk told the Buffalo Evening
News last week that the usual 5 or 6 per
ce nt attrition rate from fall to spring has,
thus, been cut in hall.
Dremuk also said that applications for
next fall are ahead of last year for both
fresh men and transfers. Some 15,215 individuals have applied lor 2,100 freshman
openings, Dremuk said, and 4,588 per·
· sons have applied for 1,850 transfer
openings. He predicted that total
applications for next fall would exceed
those for fall 1974 which ran to 16,000
freshman applications and 5,000 bids for
transfer places.

The .field program will run from Mon da y, June 9, to Friday, Jul y _24. Transponalion can be arranged through the direc·
tor or individuals may join the party in
Mazatlan. A caravan will leave Buffalo on
Monday, June 2, and will rerurn on
Thursday, Jul y 24 . Tuition for undergraduates is S175 for New York State
residents and S275 for out-of-state
students. Tuition for graduate students is
S250 for in-state and $310 for out-of-state
students.
four grad uate assista nlships, which
ca rry a stipe nd of S300 and a tuitio n
waiver, are expected to be available.
Preference fo r these awards will be given
to those st udents wishi ng to pursue a
thesis proble m . For further information
and ap plication forms, contact Or. Conna ll y, 4240 Ridge l ea .

Dr. Philip G. Altbach, 33, an internationally recognized scholar in comparative education and educational administration, will join the U/8 faculty this
fall as professor of social foundations
(Facullf of Epucational Studies), Chairman Roger R. Woock has announced.
Dr. Altbach, who is currently a
m e mb er of the Departments of
Educatio nal Policy Studies and Ind ian
Studies at the Unive rsity of Wisconsin, is
also director of Bibliography and
Reference Services for the Internati onal
Cou ncil for Educational Development.
The ICE's bibliographic services will
move to the U/ 8 campus with its director.
.
Ahbach , who ea rned his bachelor's,
master's and dodoral degrees at the
University of ChiQgo, is author, coauthor, e diror, or co-editor of numerous
articles and 17 books, inCluding Student

Philosophy Department holding
Steinb~rg Prize competition

The Philosoph r Depanment has announced the opf!ning of its 1975 competition for the Steinberg Prize in
Philosophy. The prize, a $75 check, is
awarded each yea r for the best original
undergraduate work on a philosophical
theme.
According to Dr. Richard T. Hull,
associate professor of philosophy, " th e
contest is Unique in its openness to a wide variety of media and modes of ex·
pr~sion; painting and drawing, sculpture, musical compositions, fiction and
poetry,_as well as critical or speculative
philosophical essays may be appropriate.
ln. o_rd~r to ins.u~e a non-literary entry's
fa~r 1udgment, or os requested that a brief
statement of the philosophical theme accompany all entries for which the theme
is not self-evident."
Entries will be judged on their success
in expressing and explOring their
themes, Dr. Hull says. Judges will be from
the Philosophy Depanment's teaching
faculty and from the Steinberg famil y.
Faculty throughout the University are
requested to encourage students in their
dasses to consider entering. Stud~nts are
frequently reluctant to enter such com·
petitions without facutty encouragement, Dr. Hull points out, and faculty
who read term papers and judge term
projects are in a unique position to
provide such enc;ouragem~nt.
In 1973, Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Steinberg, of Rochester, N.Y., and their
daughter, Carol, presently a graduate
student at Brown University and a ·
graduate ol the UIB Philosophy Depanment, established a fund for an annual
prize. in philosophy. The award is named
I'OUC&amp;
lor Mr. Steinberg's father, also Charles
ea,lol o1 ......... tD . . ,..... o1 . .
Steinberg, a Rochester businessman who
.- . I ol
o l - Uoohelly,loved philosophy and believed in its im... ...._ o1 Allele .. Allele D ~ponance to both individual develop~~
ment ;md social responsibility. The prize
an111o1e .... 011oe o1 . . Vb,.........
Is• given each year in his memory and
1ar Uohenlly....._~ _. . . ,_
honor. ·
·
...,.. 011oe CD1...._........,. ......_ .
Entries may be submitted not later
cop1os _, . . ...., ........
than April 15, 1975, to Richard Hull,
- - . . . , . . - - - - - - - - - - . • . .clt~irpj!M/1, Stelnberf! Prize Committee,

Enrollment
for spring term
is 24,345

Department of Philosophy, 4244 Ridge
l ea Road , Room 3. The award will be
made at th e time of graduat io n. The winning e ntry will be placed on permanent
display in th e Philosophy De pa rtment.
Unsuccessful e ntries may be picked up in
the De partmen l on or after the last day
of classes.

Women's Club Ball
set for Amherst
The 21st annual Scholarship Ball, a
dinner dance sponsored by the Women's
Club of SUNYAB, will be held in the
North library of the Ellicott Complex on
the Amherst Campus, Saturday, April12.
The arrangemenls take advantage of a
uniq ue opportunity to use this setting
before the library opens, Women's Club
o rgan izers say. ,
The dinner will be catered by University Food Services. For this event they have
planned a menu offering a d'loice Qf almond champagne chickeri with wild rice
or london broil a Ia bordelaise with
duchess potatoes. Dutch-treat cocktails
; will be available before dinner, from
7:30-8:30 p.m., and the bar will remain
open during the evening. Music for dancing will be provided by Johnny
loVecchio's Orchestra.
·
The Ball is an annual fund-raising
event supponing a scholarship fund ·established by the Women's Club in 1955.
Mrs. James A. Conway is chairman of
the baiJ committee; Mrs. leonard A. Katz
is co-chairman. Other committee
members are·: Mrs. Austin D. Swanson,
hospitality; Mro. _ Enrico Mihlch, invitations; Mrs. James W. Sarra a !\(I Mrs.
Roger Smith, tickets and reservations;
Mrs. Kenneth H. Kunz, publicity; Mrs .
Timothy C. Willia!"', decorations; Mrs.
DUllne Marble, newcomers; Mrs. Akira
lsihara, international.
. All members of the University Community and their friends are invited. Information may be.obtalned by phoning
Mrs. Roger Smith at 839-1323.

Altbach to join ·
Education unit

Politics in America: A Historical Analy~is,
U n iversity Reform : Comparati ve
Persp ectives, Academic Supermarkets
(with Seymour Martin- Upset), Students
in Revolt, and the University in Transition : An Indian Case Study.

Dr. Ahbach he ld a Fulbright research
professorship in India in 1968, where he
had worked earlier under a U.S.-Indian
Comparative Education Exchange Pro-

gr~': ~~~n!iso served as project director
for both a bibliography on American
students and a research study on the
history of the American student movement, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Brown heads study
Dr. Frank Brown has been named
senior author of a Ford Foundation
research project that will survey minority
college enrollments ln the 1970's.
For Dr. Brown, an associate professor
in the Depanmern of Educational Administration, this will be his ~=:
study In recent years.
In the early 1970's, Dr. Brown
' associate director of the New York Slate
. commission on the quality, Cos! and
financing of elementary and secondary
education. There, ,he played a leadjng
role In the compilation of reseaich
mall!rial for the "Fleischmann ·Report/'
which Is recognized as the most
definitive study ever prepared on a
•
state's educational system.
Most recel)tly, he served as principal
lnvestlsator of a Ford Foundation
national survey of college and graduate
school enrollment of blacks, Latins,
Orientals and American lndlano duri"tt
the 1960's.
.His latest project willupdate Information gathered in the earlier study of
minority enrollmen~. It will also analyze
the lmpllcatlpno of affirmative action
prosrams and evaluate tile outlook for
financial support for minority propams.
Dr. Brown, 39, also serves as director of
Cora P. Malo'ney College, which
specializes In studying the problems of
deliverins services to urban and Innercity resident&gt;.
.

�March 20, 1975

~1enure'p~edu~------~----------------~---------rtrom,.,et, rol. .f}

permanent appointment Is to be
granted. Further, such considerations as
well as others, become increasingly important the higher the level of position in
question."
•
At the first tw&lt;&gt;levels ol permanent appointment review {immediate supervisor
and supervisor's supervisor), the drah
'l&gt;!ocedures call for the candidate to be
intormed "in writing of the recommen·
dation" being forwarded · to the next
higher level. Should the recommendation of the immediate supervisor and/or
supervisor's supervispr (if other than tf1e
vice president) be negative, t he
employee, or an advocate ·of the
employee's choosing, shall have the right
to present the case to the next higher
level (either the immediate supervisor's
supervisor or the vice president or both).
Contrary to PSS suggestion, however, the
"draft procedures make it "dear that
,.,...,... for the rea&gt;mmenclatlons made
• - . are not aoailable to the candidate
and/or his/her adYocate.''
Step-by-Step Procedure
The· draft outlines this step-by-step
procedure for permanent appointment
considerations for NTPs:
A. The immediate superVisor
assembles the dossier and, excluding
those materials not available to the canrecommendation solicited by t~e imd idate (letters of recommendat ion
mediate superVisor after discussion with
-solicited by the University), revieWs the
the employee, from individuals either
dossier with the employee for purposes
within or outside the University (or both)
of completeness only;
who would be in a position to effectively
B. The immediate supervisor makes
comment upon the employee's
hisAier determination, and transmits this
qualifications for permanent agpointto the employee. Simultaneously, the imment;
mediate supervisor transmits this deterE. Other documentation which the immination, along wit.!J: a confidential statemediate supervisor and/or employee
ment of reasons for the recommendation·
believes. important to consideration of·
·as well as the dossier, to his/her ~uper­
permanent appointment, including
visor for review. Should the recommenitems which may be in the employee's
dation of the immediate supervisor be
official personnel file;
negat ive, upon notification the
F. The immediate supervisor's statee mployee may indicate his/her intent to'
ment regarding consideration of permathe immediate~rvisor's supervisor to
nent appointment, to be submitted on
personally, or through an advocate, prean appropriate form (a lwo-page, 14sent his/her case at -that level;
question assessment of the employee's
C. The immedia·te supervisor's supercontributions to the University.
visor makes his/her determinatio n, a nd
teChnical-professional competence,
transmits this to tbe . e'PI!ioy~, agf\ the .
s!J#.lsi~!r&lt;trJBIAS. " ,f uture. contrl butions,
immedia·t e superviSOr:· 'SifnUl'tcineoUSry, ·
personal motivation, inter-personal
the immediate supervisor's supervisor
skills, professional growth, etc.). .The
transmits this determination to the ap·
form also asks for nlikely" inhibitions· of
future growth ·and for '"a "listing 6Y the
propriate vice president, along with
his/her confidential reasons for the
benefits the University will receive if the
recommendation as well as the full
employee receives permanent appointdossier. Should the recomnlendation of
ment.
the immediate supervisor's supervisor be
G. The employee's voluntary statenegative, u'pon notification, the
ment regarding consideration of permanent appointment, to be submitted, if
employee may indicate his/her intent to
the appropriate vice president to perthe employee so. chooses, on an apsonally, or tbrough an advocate, present
propriate form (a two-page form similar
his/her case at that level;
to that in F. above).
'Belt Quilled'
.
D. The vice presideot makes his determination and transmits it to the PresiThe SUNY Trustees' Pol[cies (Article XI,
.dent,
along with his confidential reasons
· Title C, Section 2) say that the
for his recommendation and the full
Chancellor,~ aher 'receiving recommendossier;
dations from the chief administrative ofE. Aher reviewing the full.dossier in·
ficer of the unit concerned, may award
cluding all recommendations and their
permanent appointment to those NTPs
supporting
reasons, but prior to making
"best qualified." The local draft defines
his determination, the President may, if
those "best qualified'~ as "Those select
he
f~ls.
circumstances
warrant: (1) hold
Individuals who in the University's judga meetihg with the employee and/or
ment, through suctessful past perforhis/her advocate to discuss the case; (2)
mance and demonstrated potential for
appoint an ad hoc evaluation committee
further growth and contribution, will
consisting of five professional employees
serve the University iQ a more productive
to review the case and provide him with
manner than others who may also qualify
their recommeg dation; 13) do both one
for the position in question .. Cenainly,
(1)
and two (2) above.
·
several of the afteria by which sueh
F. The President shall notify the
judgments must be made are; and should
employee, supervisors and vice presibe specified In the employee's perfordent of his determination in writing, as
mance program. Apf&gt;raisals .-.lnst these
well as the Chanceii!H where apprograms assess In large· measure, how
propriate.
well these particular aiteria liave been
G..... In the instructions each imsatisfied-and the. Importance of this
mediaie
supervisor will receive regar- ·
· per(ormance program-performance apding each cal)didate, an appropriate
praisal cycle Is not to be unschedule for the completion of the
derestimated.'' However, the draft state· several levels of review will ~ _putlined.
ment ClDII!Inues, ..........., job~
_
..... _be .......... the
lnlllall PSS le.tdlon
tole ......... c:rlleda . . . .
Loltlal PSS · Permanent Appointment
Committee reactions to the draft, as
polllt-t are paa11411etl. Rather,
suml!lllrized by Pat Colvard, chairperson
of the gi-oup; were that: · ·
.
~rtmental soals and objec:tWes mutt
- 1. The overall tone of the document ·
tho be examined, and the candidate's
role In 1he sucx:essful pilrsuh of _these
[is) objectionable.
'
2. The Draft -eil that permanent apiOIIs and oi!JectMs a&lt;:curately ~.
Co111ideratlon IIIUit be liven to the
polntnient a. prlvllep, not a right;
the
Committee dlsapeed, and pointed
~··future abilltr to C1DIItJtbute to
the .a.llurlenl of sudi ob)ecllve; to · out that this - not UUP's Intent (In
. ......., to dlanee; to pocendaJ for
haYtha ellsiblllty for NTP permanent apllniWih llld ln!piOWement; and to the
pointment Included In the present c:onlieneflts to be derived by the Uni)lenlly If
tractl.
full-lime service at a campus of the
University in the professional title to
which permanent appointment may be
granted and . .. seven consecutive years
of full-time service at a campus of the
University as a professional employee."
(l!olicies of the Board of Trustees, Article
XI, rnh! C, Section 4a.) PSS had argued
that this Trustee policy outlined a maximum time required for permanent appointment consideration, but that consideration could come earlier.
1loe Dallier
Under the procedures outlined in the
draft administrative statement, each individual under review for permanent appointment would have a dossier provided for him ·or her, consisting of the
following:
A. An up-to-date vitae, prepared by
the employee;
B. All position descriptions which may
exist for positions filled by the employee
during his (her) tenure with the University;
C. All performance programs and appraisals written regarding'the employee,
including any additional statements filed
by either the employee or supervisor;
D. A minimum of three letters of

...

•• for....- ..

3. The Committee did npt agree that
Permanent Appointment was available
only after seven ·years and pointed out
that 'this must be resolves! among the
Union, the Slate, and the Board of
Trustees.
4. The CQmmittee objected to the confidentiality of recommendations and of
reasons J or nega-tive· recommendations.
5. The Committee did not agree with
the interpretation given in the Drah of
the term "best qualified." The Committee also re-stressed the use of Performance Programs and Appraisals as tl1e
bas is for evalu'ating an NTP's
qualifications for permanent appoint·
ment and pointed out that seven years of
satisfadory performance should be a
more than adequate in~ication .
For its part, the local UUP Center
Chapter has "strongly urged" Preside nt
Ketter to abolish all proposed requirements for permanent appointment
considerations other than " procedures
established for the professional evalualion of" NTPs. These procedures, Dr.
Constantine A. Yeracaris, Center
Chapter president, says, "cover all aspects relative to consideration for perman ent appointment. No additional in·
formation is necessary."

-t

U-C Day plans
Plans are progressing for UniversityCommunity Day, scheduled for Sunday,
May 4, 1975. The event will take place at
the Amherst Campus from 1-5 p.m.
Continuous bus tours of the new campus will run during the afternoon, beginning at john lord O 'Brian Hall, the Bubble, and the Ellicott Complex, and inside
tours of each of thOse locations will be
avai lable.
A va riety of activities are scheduled. at
Ellicott .. Representatives from academic
depar~meiuS· ·Offe r'ing undergradua te
programs a nd from the Admissions and
Records Office will be available there to
give information about programs offered
and adm issions ,procedures at U/ 8. -The
Alhletic Departm e nt will give
dt!"101l5Jr~t i~n.t,;_, sige _til!\. BuJ&gt;~ie, Music
programs are planned at several Amherst
locations, and the U/B Symphony Band
will give its annual spring concert. The
walls in the "hallway of the Millari!
Fillmore Academic Core will be used to
display an by faculty members, and a
number of demonstrations ~nd displays
are scheduled in the Creative Crah
Center, believed to be one of tbe largest
in the nation.

Mumps link
with diabetes
understudy
Hospitals serving large numbers of
children in the u:s. and Canada are participating in a study which may unravel
the apparent link betwjren juvenile
diabetes and the mumps virus, say_ researchers at the U/B School of Medicine
and the University of Rochester.
Although the link has been suspeded
for several decades, it was not until last
year tha~ a research team from Ulll·and
the University of Pittsburgh reported
evidence that diabetes closely paralleled
the Cyclic infectious disease pattern
which usually peaks every seven years.
Using Erie County hospital and private
pediatric records for the period from
1946-71 , the investigators found that
highs and lows in the occurrence of
juvenile diabetes followed those for
mumps by about four years. The fouryear gap has been attributed to the
possibility that the virus could live in the
pancreas up to four years following
mumps infection, causing the organ to
build up an autoimmune response which
wO uld ~estray insulin production.
Dr. Harry Suhz, chief investigator of
both th e previous and cu rrent studies
and U/ B professor of epidemiology, said
blood sa mples from diabetic and non·
diabetic children are being colleded by
participating hospitals and are being sent
to Children's Hospital. At Children's,
they are analyzed by Dr. Pearay Ogra,
chief of virology and U/B professor of
pediatrics, and his tea m to determine
mumps antibody levels, distributio n and
type of immunoglobins present, which
would revea l any differences between
diabeti c and nondiabetic children's responses to a ·pr.evio us mumps virus infection.
" We've asked about 100 hospitals to
participate because juvenile diabetes is
not diagnosed oft~ n enough .t o enable a
few to furnish us the necessary 200 cases
a.n9. . ~onttQis . n ~eded in a reasonable
length of time," Dr. Sultz said . .
Dr . I. Barry Pless, professor of
pediatrics"at the University of Rochester,
is alsO on the investigative' teC.m.' .- ....
"Hopefully the results from this extensive analysis of the blood samples will
help answer many basic questions a~ut
the relatiof!.ship between the mumps
virus and juvenile diabetes mellitus," Dr.
Sultz said.
#

FACULTY
Assistant Professor or up, Cell and Molecular·Biology, Posting no. F-5019.
Assistant Professor or up, Cell and Mplecular Biology, F-5020.
.
.
Visiting Assistant Professor, Political Science, F-5021 .
·
Instructor, ffealth Sciences Education and Evaluation, F-5022
Clinical Assistant Professor, Oral Medicine, F-5023.
NTP
Technical Assistant, Cell and Molecular Biology, PR-1 , Posting no. B-5005.
Technical Writer, Academic Computing, PR-1 , B-5006.
· .

Assistant to Chairman, Theatre, PR-1, 8-5007.

.

Programmer Analyst (pan-time), University Computing Services, PR-2, B5Q08. .·
•

Asststant Dean (Diredor of Evening College Office), Division of Continuing Education, PR-3, 8-5009.
·
· Assistant Librarian (two positions), Science and Engineering Library, PR-1 ;B-5010.
.
Public Health Nurse Interviewer and Coordinator, Medical Sociology, R5004
Public Health Nurse InterViewer, Med ical Sociology, R-soos:
Resear~h Technician (Veterans Hospital}, Medicine, R-5006.
Lab Technician, Physiology, R-5007.
·
For addit ional information concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at
these locations:
·
1. Bell Facility between 0152 a,nd 0153; 2. Ridge lea, Buildin.g 4236, next to
cafeteria; 3. Ridge lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1 · 4. Health
1 Sciences Building. in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the.corridor
between Room 141 and the lobby; 6. Lockwood, grouni! floor in corridor next ""
to v~nding machlnes; ·7. Hayes Hall, In main entrance foyer, across from Public
Information Office; 8. Acheson !:laii,Jn corridor l!etween Rooms 112 and 113;
9. Pa'!'er Engineering; In corrldoi next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floqr,
HOUSing Office area; 11 •. 1807 Elmwood, ~l ~rtment; 12. Norton
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
- Room 106; 14•. John lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor !Amherst Campus).

StAIIe ~itt Wfilo It.., Equl Oppootunlty/Aflln!lafye Action~

'"'

�.... ..

March 20, 1975

7

]

calendar·~
: ·~~~------~-----------------------------------------

tfrom ,.,. I, col. 4l

Performins Arts perform Luk.u Fou'
"Lamdenl" In Its American premiere.
Albright~nox An Gallery, 8 p.m. Admission:
$1 students and Gallery membe,., $2 seneral

public.
UUMRLM••
M.,ial Mystery Tour. Norton Conference
Theatre, all 831·511Z for limes. Admission
charse.

SUNDAY-:-23

features Professor Hirrlson Birtwistle and
Professor Monon Feldtmn. Baird Redtil Hall,
8 p.m. No admission charge.
UUAIRlM..
Magical Mystery Tour. Norton Conference
Theatre. Call 831-5117 for times. AdmissiOQ
charse.

Seder Worlc:shop. Dr. Justin-..Hof~N~nn will
instruct students In how to conduct their own
Seder and will explain Seder rituals. 40 Capen
Blvd., 7 p.m.
.
5I.&amp; I.ICIUU Cot10QUI\JM'
T11e second Slee Lecture of the senon

Copying survey
begins Monday
The University will ' be conducting a
survey of the use of all its copying,

duplicating and printing equipment during the ~o-week period, March 24-April
4.
Individuals in each building have been

designated to supervise maintenance of
a log for such equipment. Each user will
be asked to record in this log informa·
tion regarding the material being
reproduced - the number of originals
being copied, the number of copies be·
ing made of each original, the size of the

document, whether it could have been
copied on both sides, etc.
Purpose of the study, according to A.

Westley Rowland, vice president for
University relations, is to develop data
necessary to project future equipment
needs, particularly as they relate to the
Amherst Campus and the rehabilitated
Main •Street Campus. The 'data will also

be used in a computer ·simulation
program to suggest various machine and
location configurations that "might optimize convenience and cost,'' Rowland
said. ·

" We

·
ar~

not atte~pting ~o ,evaluate

the kind of· work beong reproduced,"

Rowland indicated, "that is a matter for
each department to decide. We are
simply trying to measure the quantity of
work being reproduced by each of our

copying or duplicating machines."
All individuals on campus are asked to
carefully record any work they do on the
logs provided with each copying or

mimeograph machine during the test
period.

Five U/B busloads
join in Albany rally
Five busloads of UIB Civil Service
employees (between 175 and 200 individuals) lravelled to Albany T-uesday to
participate in a· mass rally of State

workers protestins the "very critical
situation developing" under. Governor
Hugh L urey's administration.
Promoted as "the biggest demonstr~·
tion in Albany's history in support of
CSEA and public employees,'' the rally
was designed, CSEA spokesmen said, "to
let the Governor and legislarure know
that we · me.1n business," in opposing
"threats to the security, the health, the
safety and the welfare" of public

workers:r •
The threats, CSEA S.ys, have come
from ,.the Governor, the Lt: Governor,
the Comptroller and other high administrative officials [who) contln~e to
issue lrrespomlble statements through

the preis. ~·
"
Present sal.Jries, pay raises, increments,
promotional opportunities, pension
benefits (lncludins the State's obligation
to contribute and the Integrity of the
pemlori fund Itself), the abandor.-rnent of
nurnerouo State functions and agencies,
and a

reduction in aid to Slate and local

B~ts and

MONDAY-24
lAW IKTURE'
Law School and 1the Legal Profeuion as a

Dr. Richard D. Schwartz, dean and
prOvost of the School of law. Norton
Conference Th~tre, 2:39p.m. All students in·
terested in altending law school are urged to
attend.
MUSIC ENCotJNTEII SERIES'
The Encounter Series condudes its season
with this informal conversation. with pianist
John Browning. Baird Recital Hall, 3 p.m. No
• admission charge.
ENGliSH DEPARTMENT RLM SEIUES•
Zabriskie Point (Antonioni). 140 farber (Ca-

pen), 3 and 9 p.m. No admission charge.
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMtNARI
MAPS, A Multiple Analysis Program System
for Behavioral Science Research, is taught by
Dr. Robert C. Nichols. Rm. 10, 4238 Ridge lea,
7-9 p.m.
Ltff WOIIt(SHOPS•
Workshop on Rape, 232 Norton, 7-10 p.m.
Your Heart and Heart Disease, 231 Norton,
6 :30-8 p.m.

For registration or information, visit 223
Norton , or call 831-4630/ 1.
FILM•
Stagecoach (John Ford). 147 Diefendorf, 1
p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Regio nal Film Projea .
UUAi fRENCH FilM SERIES••
Playtime ITati). 146 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No
admission charge.
RUSSIAN CONTRIBUTIONS
TO WORW CULTURE SYMI'OStUM#
Sranislavsky and the American Burden, Go rdon Rogoff, professor of theatre, and Donald
Sanders, assistant professor of th ea tre .
Students from the Dcp·artment of Theatre will
present scenes from The Cherry Orchard, accordi ng to th~thods of Stanis1avsk y and
Meyerhold. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m.
MUSit VIStTtNG ARTIST SERtES•
The Visiting Artist Series concludes for th e
season with •a- 'Concert by-Ourch"l'e'c6rder 'vTr-'
tuoso Frans BrueR~:en. accompanied by Alan
Cut!iS, harpsichord. Mary Seaton Room .
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8:30p.m. Admi ~s ion : ~1
students; S2 facult y, staff and alumni; S3
general public.

\

TUESDAY-25

NUTlttTtON AND MAN LECTURE SERtES•
Nutrition and N~tional Pl~nning, James
Austin, D.B.A., G-22 Farber (C~pen), 12 noon .
Bring your lunch.
.
Presented by the Department of
Biochemistry and the Schools of Medicine,
Dentistry and Pharmacy.
PEDIATRICS CONFERENCEI
Renal Function in Hyalin e Membrane
Oi.sease, Visiting Professor Or. Emil Gautier,
professor and chairman, Department of
Pediatrics, University of lausanne, Hopital
Cintonal, Uus,anne, Switzerland. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital, 12:30 p.m.
MUSIC IKTURE'
Baroque Performance Prurice, Frans
Brueggen, Dutch reco~der virtuoso. Rm . 101,
Baird Recital Hall, 2 p.m. No admission
charge.
SPKlAli'IDIATaiCS SEMtNARI
Recent Ad~nces in Peri~ral Medicine,

Visiting Professor Dr. frederick Battaglia, ·
director of neonatal nurseries, University of
ColOrado: Kinch Auditorium, Children's
Hospital, 3 p.m.
·
I'UNCH DEPARTMENT RLM SHIS'
"M" (lang) and Accident (Metzner}. 146
Dtefen~orf, 5 ind 1 p:m. No idmission charge.
DOCUMENTARY RLMS'
Ta.nzanla-Zambia Railway Under
Construction (80 min.) ind· Chi~ Today {20
min .). Norton Conference T'hutre, 7:30 and
9:30 p.m. Admission: $.7$ Sludents; $1.25
sene&lt;al ad!Msion.
Sponsored by.Chui Nui.

UUAI filMS••
PeruU. !Lester, 1968), 7:30 p.m., and In
Search of Grqory (Wood, 1!110), 9:20p.m. Sy
Lecture H.rl, Elllcon, no admission charse.
PUIUC I.ICIUU'
- Winiam Kunstler will tJiYe A speech sponsored by 1he SA Speaken; lkJreau. Clark Holl, 8
p.m.

school districts have all
been Hthrulened," CSEA says.
Exlsdn( State Pf'OII'am5 vital to public
hQith and welfwe, such as building safety, IIII!M lnlpeclion, mental hygiene,
fllannlna and local pwemment, are en- ,. THEATRE IN DER J()S&amp;STADT'
The Concert by Hermafl Blhr (in Gennin) .
danserecl, CSEA contellds.
·
Directed by Ernst Haeussermin. Upton Hall
The qlly was stased to "answer. all

these threats."

.

WEDNESDA Y-26

VISUAL ARTS EXH181T

faces, photosraphs by Dr. Herben Reismann, professor of engineerins science.
Hayes H.aH lobby, Mondoy-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. lhrou(lh April 11.
Presenled by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

IKTURE•

C~reer,

HIUS. HOUSE•

falo, 8:30 p.m. Admission charge.
. Presented by the University-wide Comminee on the Arts.

Auditorium, State University

Coll~e

at Buf-

Economic Development in BuffalO, Kurt P.
Alverson, director of market researdl, Buffalo
Area Chamber of Commerce. Rm. 233 Norton, 3:30p.m.
Sponsored by ' the Undergraduate
Economics Association.

~=-ISTRY fOSTBt COUOQUIU"!,

Those Elusive Traces, 0r: v. A. fassel, deputy director, Ames Uboratory, low' Stile University. 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINAIIf
MAPS, A Multiple Analysis Program System
for Behavioral Science Research, is taught by

Dr. Roben C. Nichols. Rm. 10, 4238 Ridge lea,
7-9 p.m.
BODY MOTIOPj ANALYSIS LECTURE
SERtES• .
Th e Measurement of Body Motion 1: Two
Pioneer.s. Paul Bouissac, visiting professor of
French. Red Room; Faculty Club, 7:30 p.m.

CEll AND MOLECUlAR BIOLOGY
COUOQUIUMf
Some Aspects of the Mechanism of Cell
Differentiarion, Dr. Reed Flicki nger. 246 Cary
Hall (Health Sciences), 7:30 p.m.
FILM•
Rocco and His Brothers (Visconti, 1960). 70
Acheson , ·7:30 p.m. No ad mission charge.
UUAB FILMS••
'
Perulia (lester, 1968), 7:30 p.m., and In
Search of Cre~:ory (Wood, 1970), 9:20p.m. 140
Farhe r (Capen), no admission charge.
HtLLR HOUSE•
Seel er. Tiffin Room , 7:45· p.m. Reservation
·
.onlv.
THEATRE tN DER JOSEFSTADT"
Thr Concerr by He rman Bahr (in German) .
Oireded by Ernst Haeusserman . Upton Hall
Auditorium, State University College at Buffalo, 8:30 p. m. ~dmission charge .
Pre-se nt ed by the University-wide Commill&lt;'&lt;' o n the Arts .

NOTICES
CllfATlVE CRAFT CfNTBI

An enamel workshop besins March 19 and
runs for four weeks, eich Wednesday from 710 p.m. On April 2, workshops in Belt Makma
17·10 p.m.) and Sandal Makins (2-5 p.m.)
begin and run Tuesdays· and Thurscbys for siX
weeks. for informU.ion on cost and registration, go1o Rm. 7, Norton Union.
CIIEDIT.ft&amp; COURSI5
A varje'ty of courses are scheduled for tbe
spring semester. Amons: those scheduk!d to
begin at the end of March are courses deali"'
wilh horticulture, painting, computers and
tennis fundimentals. Courses starting in April
include typing review, behavior moditation,
golf fundamentals, anthropology, Christian
meditation, counseling for women and the
German experience. For a brochure detailing
the courses offered or for regtstration information, contact the Division of Continuing
Education, Hayes A, Rm. 3, 831-4301.
EARLY CHIIDifOOD CENTBI FAll SESSION.
Applications are now being accepted by the
Early Childhood Center (nursery school) for
the fall 1975 semester. Children are eligible for
admission in the group between the ages of
two years, ten months, and four years, six
months. For applications, call th'e Pre-School
Office, 831 -2248. The group will meet in
Christopher Baldy Hall on the Amherst campus.
FOREIGN STUDENT EM_I'LOYMENT
Foreign students. are requested 10 register
for ·an employment program in Rm . 210,
Townsend Hall. Efforts are being made
through a joint program between the Office
of Fore ign Student Affairs and University
Placeme nt anp ~areer Guidance to aid in job
placement .
HtLUL HOUSE
Hillel is making plans for an Oneg Shabbat
on the -Amherst Campus. Those interesled in
participating or planning, call Gordon Kadatz,
635-£044 .

THURSDAY-27
ART HISTORY l.E:CTURE•
Image&lt; of Women . in Rena issance and
Baroque Art and their Social Conrexr, Ann
Sutherland Harris, p~ofessor of art history. 310
Foster, 4 p.m. ·
·• · ··
Presented by the Department of Art , the
Department of History, Vico College, and
Wom&lt;'n 's Studies College.
CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEMINARt
Carbon-13 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Srudies of Proreins in Solution, Or. Eric Oldfi.e ld , Depart ment of • Chemistry,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 134
Cary Hall (Health Sciences), -4:15p.m.

ISRAEL/ROME STUDY TOUR ,
A 21-daY study-toUr of Israel and Rome, for
ara&lt;k&gt;mic-credit- if deMed... is being scheduled
through Canisius College. The package indudes airfare, food, housing, tours, baggage
transfe rs and amenities and runs from May 26June 16. For more information, contact Fr.
Frederic ). Kelly, S.J., 2001 Main St., 883·7000.
OFFICE Of ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
HOURS
The Office of Admissions and Records
hours for the remainder of March are: March
20, 24-27, and 31: 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Mardl 21
_and 28: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
I'IIOR5SIONAL COUNSBJNG
Profession,\ counseling is now available .at
Hillel House. For an appointment, calf 8~

HIUEL HOUSE•

4540.

" Drop-In" ni~ht . 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
I'OETRY READING'
Harry Mathews, author of The Sinking of the
Odradek Stadium and Other NoYels, The Ring
and The BurninR.Dedc.. 231 Norton, 8 p.m.
Presented by the Department of English.
CHEMISlltY fOSTBt COllOQUIUM SERIESI

SUMMEII SESSION IIECISTRATlON HOURS
The Office of Admissions and Records will
condua Summer Session 1975 Registtition
beginning Mondiy, April7. Sludents currently ret~istered at the University for the Spring
1975 semester ~ only complete a Course
Request Form. ~ stu~ts must complete a
Student Dait~ Form, which will be av~ilable at
Admissions ,and Records on April 7. April

Prediction of Protein Conformarin,

Professor H. A. Scheraga, Department of
Chemistry, Cornell University. 70 Acheson,
8:30p.m.
. THEATRE IN DER J()S&amp;STADT"
The Concert ·by Herman Bahr (in German).
Directed by Ernst H~usserman. Upton Hall
AuditoriUm, Srate University College at Buffalo, 8:30 p.m. Admission chirge.
Presented by the University-wide Committee On the Arts.
UUAatNTBINATlONAI. fliM FESTIVAL';
Fellini's Roma (fellini). Nonon Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
dlarge.

EXHIBITS
LOCKWOOO m.rT

Polish Collection, exhibition QJIIed from
1he Univenity's collection of more than 4.000
volu"J"S of rnateriol. Ani floor, lodtwood
Memorial Ubrary. Mondoy-friday, 9 a.m.-5
,
p.m. Contlnulftl.
~ ANDflai'IDIJION m.IT
The most~ ol Robert
Gra,... manuscripts lri lhe world Is cumen1ly
on disploy in lhe lodtwopd Memoriol Ubcary.
Manusqipls and fl111 ~from the Graves
poe1ry collection ..., pan ol the exhibition,
which commemorates Robert Graves'
eish•ieth binhday. BalaJ:nr, second, lloc&gt;r,
~~wood Memoriol Library. Throush April

~~ts;~~".~~~~:.:~.~r~~~~

14-17; 21-24; and 211-lO; all other cloys in Ap&lt;il,
1he olin will be _ . from 8:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m., with lhe e&gt;&lt;eeption of April 23, ·when
hours are I:JO ~.m.-8:10 p.m.

INTERVIEWS
ON&lt;AMI'US-

The staff ol lhe Unhenity Placeme~1 and
Career Guidance Offla! welcomes all studeniS
in .the Univenity community and alumni to
take part In various areer progr~ms offered
this year. The on-&lt;ampus interviewing pro·
gram, ruMing throu(lh Aprii2S, offer. the opportunity for lndividuil interviews with

=j·=~t~u~~~= rr::

all_dqree levels, who completed their course
work in ~ry or eKpe'CI to in May 1975, are
invited to ~ke pan in the InterViewing.
Reshfration forms are av,ail•ble: In Hiyes
Annex C. Rm. 6. -ftle following &amp;(IOfldes wiD
be ... this """":
.
TH~Y- 20: Texaco, tnc., Andco, Inc.
FRIDAY- 21: Andco, Inc.
TUESDAY· - 25: Aetna-Lile and Casualty,
Goulds Pumps, Consumer Value S.ores,
Cofllm a.dio Croup - Rockwell lnter-

natlonol.
WEONESOAY"- 26: Metropolitan life In·
surance Co.
THURSDAY- 27: Cont inental C.-n Co.
•

�~

·•01lftltlor

. . aaum

M•rch 20, 1975

THURSDAY-20
CONTINUING NU1151NC EDUCATION

CONaENCfl

8oJic ElearoardiOrlraPhy for Nurses is the

tide of this two-day conference ·10 be held ot · ·
the Charter House. For funhet- Information,
cOntact Jo,Jn Collins, Continuing Eduadon
Dept.. 831-5~
n. USIS Of MASS COMMUNICATION •

coNfaENcrt .

I'Oikiall Issues •nd !he Moss Medio. Dr.
S.muelllecker, University of lowo. Sy Lecture
HoD, Olicott, 1 p .m .
Cuhural Aspects of the Moss Medio, Dr.
Hony AU&gt;prich, Store University Col~e ot
Buffolo. Sy Lectu..., Holl, Ellicott, 3 p.m. .
5pomol'ed · by the Deponment of Speech .
Communication.

IIU55IAN CONTRIIUTIONS
TO -...o CUI.TUU SYMI'OSIUMf

RussQn ~~ ~ World LllngtUge, William S.
tbmilton, U/8 professor of Russi1.n. 231 Nor~
ton, 2 p.m.
The Spirir of Russi~ n Poetry, Albert Cook,
UIB professor of English. 231 Norton, 2:50
p.m.

Diaghilev's Ballet RUS;Se ;,nd Collaborators,
NiN. Tretiak-Shk*ts, U/8 assistant professor
of Germanic and Slavic. 231 Norton, 3:-45 p.m. .
Pete~s

Chin trable of ranks) in Russian

Liter;,ture, Helju Bennett, U/ 8 assistan t
professor of history, 231 Norton, .4:30 p.m.
SPECIAl APPI.Im MATHEMAnCS

SEMINAIII
.
Professor louis Howard, from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will
speak. Rm. 51, 4244 R!dge lea, 2:30p.m . ..
ENGINEBING AND API'UW SCIENCES

SEMIIIIARf
.A.ppliarions of .Automatic Controls to Bio- _

engineers, Karl Reid, Oklahoma State University. 112 Parker. Coffee at 3; lecture at 3:15
p.m.
MATHEMAnCS COLlOQUiUMf
dper'iltors on Mulfiple Cocui ecte d
Oomflins, Professor Ronald Dougla s,
SUN'i/Stony Brook. Rm. 38, 4246 Ridge l ea.
Coffee at 3:30; lecture at 4 p.m.
GEOGRAPHY COU.OQUIUMf
Movement of .Aiaslciln Oil to Pacific Coast
Marlcers, Dr. Duane Marble, professor of
geography. Rm. 40, •Ul4 Ridge lea, 3:30 p.m.
ITAUAN CtUI MHTING•
Rm. 7, CrosbY,, 4 p.m.

PHARMACEUnC5 SEMINARt
The Metabolism of D icumarol in the Rat,

Francis lee, Ph.D. candidate. 244 Cary Hall
(Health Sciences), 4 p.m.
SEMINARf
How .Atrial Flutter O.u~IH ro Behave, Dr.
Gordon K. Moe, Masonic Medical Research
Ce nter, Utica, New York . C-128 Farber (Ca pen), "4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Physiolog-y Graduate Student Association and the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
AND MOL£CULAR BIOLOGY

Sikorski, clinical instructor in fa mily medicine,
and Dr. Daphne K. Hare , assistant professor of
medicine 139 Farber (Capen), 8 p.m . "
Sponsore 'by the Wome n Medical Students
Associat ion.
PHYSICAL.ORGANIC CHEMISTRY LECTURE
SERIESI
Reactions in the Macrocyclic Polyamine

System, Dr. Howa rd Simmons, DuPont Central
Research. 362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Graduate School.

DANCE LECTURE/ DEMONSTRATION•
O&lt;&gt;vC'Iopment of the Dancer, Ze'eva Co he n,
Baird Recital Hall , 9 p.m. No admiss ion
c-harge.
UUAI FILM..
.
M e dium Coo l (Wex l e r) . No rt o n
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for times.
Ad mission charge.

FRIDAY-21

ca.i.

5EMINAIII

On the Unwinding of Uc Operator by
ReprellOT, Or. Mary D. Barkley, Departme,nt
of Chemistry, University of California, San
Diego. 134 Cory Hall (Health Sdences), 4 :15
p.m.
fiLM·
u Milrse;tb;se (Renoir}. 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No ~mission charge.
Presented by the Regionol Film Project.

COMPU1lNG 5BYICB 5EMINAIII

Suj&gt;Complle Copoblllries in Cobol, !aught by
Chris Slder•kis. Rm. 10, 4238 Kidge Lea, 7-9
p.m.

_

..US.HOUSP
uDrop-lnu nisfll. &lt;10 Copen BMI., 7:11 p.m.
C0N11NU1NG MIDICAl EDUCATION

CARDIAC aJNIQ

.

This~ of dinia in physical education of
the cardiac polienl and orrhythmio workshops
are sctaedu&amp;ed each Thursday even ins throush
May I. The topic of tonlsht's clinic is
Ausculla!ion-The 5-1. F•rber (Copen) Hall
Basement, Room G-22. 7·:30-9:30 p .m. Fo• infonnotlon or registration, all the School of
Medicine, 831-5526.
st&gt;o-e&lt;f by the School of Medicine.

--

Anllqufns ond Collectins. hculty Club Red
J(aronJt 7:)1)..9:30 p.m. Register 223 Norton,

131-463011.

. .

IIEAllH CAlf l.fCTUIIP
Toklnlf Our Bodies Bode. Dr. Helen F.

CONnNUING NURSING IDUCAnON
CONFERfNCEf
"
.
Basic Electrocardiography for Nurses is the
title of th is two-day conference to be held at
the Charter House (this is the final day). For
. fu rther information, contact Joan Collins,
Continuing Education Dept., 631-5548.
CONnNUING MIDICAL IDUCATION
CONFERENCE#
.
Recent Advances in Dermatology is the tit le
of this "two-day conference to be held at the
Sheraton Inn-Buffalo East: Today's program
bes;ins with registration at~8:15 a.m. and ends
with a reception and dinner a.t 6 p.m. Panel
discussions and lectures are featured
throughout the day. For furth~r information
or registration, contact Continui!lg Medical
Education~1 Main St., 831-5526. ...
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION

SEMIIIIARf
The Why's and How To's of Management
and Prevention in rhe Accelerated Practice,
Dr. Omer k . Reed, Phoenix, Arizona. 148
Farber. (Capen), 9 a:m...f:30 p.m:-For fee information or resisti-ation," conract the School of
Dentistry, 143' Forl!er l!=al&gt;enl Hoi), 831' 2836.
IOOY MOTION ANALYSIS
••.
lECTUIE SERIESf .
.,_. ·~·~
. To Urch 'a Kine : The"" Chilllenge . of Body
Motion, Paul Bouissac:. Yisitins pr_ofessor of
F....n&lt;:h. Rm. 19, 4~ Ridge teo, 1.i o.ll).~

itti'uils
OF MA55 COMMUNKATION
CONRIIfNCQ.

fnstirutional forces and the Mass Media, Dr.

To -.llnfonutlon for the Calend.u, &lt;011Ud Diule Quinn, ext. 2228, by Monr daral.... for lndaolon lnlhefollooolns Thund.y lllue.
«&lt;r!toPen only lo tha. wllh • profeoolonaHnletest In the Aibjed; •open to
lheptMfq 0 "otlenlo
the Unlwenlty. Unlessolherwheslaled,_lkkets
• .,.........,........,anbe_....,m-dllltheNorton tt.ITkketOfflce. '

_,._of

George Gerbner, University o f Pennsylva nia. 2
Diefe ndo rf, 11 a.m.
Measures o f the Effectiveness of the Mass
Media. Dr. Harold Mendelsohn, University of
De nver. 148 Diefe ndorf, 2 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Speech
Commun icatio n.

MWICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINARf
Recenr Developments in thJ! Field of Narcotic Antago n ists, M ic hael Darby, U/ B

gradu ate st ude nl. 245 Cary Hall (Health
Sciences), 2 p.m.

DANCE PERFORMANCE•
Israeli-born dancer Ze'eva Co hen performs
he r Solo Dance Repertory. Katharine Cornell
Drama Theatre, 8:30 p.m. Admission: . ~
students; S3 gene ral admission.
The performance cu lminates a three-day
campus residence arranged by the Office of
Cultural Affairs and the UUAB Dance Committee.
• UUAI fiLM ..
Med i um C oo l (Wex le r ). Norton
Conference The atre, call 831-5117 for iimes.
Admissio_n charge.

SPEOAL APPUED MATHEMATICS
SATURDAY-22
SEMINAR,
.
Solutions o f Partia l Differe ntial Equations by
Variations M ethods, Professor A. Schatz,
CONnNUING DENTAL mUCAnON
Cornell University. Rm. 48, 4246 Ridge lea,
2:30p.m.
'\
and How To's of Management
and Prevention in the Accelerated Praaice,
I'IIOFE5510NAL STAFF SENATE
Dr.
Omer
K.
Reed, Phoenix, Arizona. 148
MEfTING•
•
· Farber (Capen}, 9 a.m.-4:30p.m. for fee inforThe agenda includes a report from U/8
mation
or
registration,
contact the School of
President Robert L Ketter and consideration
Qenlistry, 143 hrbe&lt; (Copen) Holl, 831-2836.
o f the proposed response to Presideo! Ketter's
draft of Revi ew Procedures for Permanent Ap•. CONTINUING MBJICAL WUCATION
pointment . 146 Diefendorf, 3 p.m.
·
CONHRENCEf
· Recimt Advances in Oetmiltology is the title
PHILOSOPHY DO'ARTMENT
of this two-cby conference to be held at the
COLlOQUIUMt
'
.
-.
Sheraton Inn-Buffalo.. East. Today's program
How .Are Analytic .Apriori Judgements Possi- .
condudes the conference and features lecble for Kant1, Professor Michael Radner;
tures -from 9:)0 a.m. until noon. For registraMcMaster University. Rm. 14, 4244 Ridge lea,
tion and information, contKt Continuing
3:30p.m.
·
Medical Education, 2211 Main Sl., 831-5526.
ENGINEIRING SEMINAIIf
HII.I.B.HOUSP
Lung Models for Hazard Evaluation, Dr.
Shobbat Morning 5elvice led by Robbi Ely
Thomas ·T. Mercer, profess9r, Department of
Braun, followed by o Kiddush. &lt;Ill Copen Blvd.,
Radiation Biology and Biophysics,' University
10 a.m.
of Rochester. 104 Parker, 4 p.m.
•
Sponsored by the DepMtments of EngineerRIM•
ing Science,,Aefospace Engineering and NuAbhimaan. 147 DiefendOrf, 7 p.m. Adclear Engineerins.
mission: $.75 students witJt I.D.; $1.75 se~al
admission.
THEATRE P.BIFOIIMANCE•
Sponsored by the India Students AssociaInternal Combustion by Terry Doran.
tion.
..'
American Con'lemporary Theatre, 1695
Elmwood A·i e., 7, 9 and 11 p.m. Admission
· THEATRE PERFOIIMANCP
charge. Seating is limited to 25 persons per
Internal Combustion by Terry Doran.
· ~rforman~e; reservations are susgested (875American Contemporary Theatre. 1695
Elmwood Ave., 7, 9, and 11 p.m. Admission
5825). ' ~.• : ·- '
. charge. Seating is limited to 25 penoM per
CAC Rl,M•• · ~. ~ ~
perfOtniance; reservations are suggested (875· Romeo .~nd Juliet. 140 Farber (Capen). 7:30
' 5825).
.
an.d 10 p.m. Admis~ion : " $1 .
.CACRlM..
.
SKI CLUI PARTY•
Romeo ind Juliet. 140 Farber (Capen), 7:30·
. The Schussmeisters Ski crub will hold a
and 10 'p.m. Admission: $1.
wine . and cheese party (for both club
. me mbers and non-members). Second'" floor
THEATI{E PERFORMANCE•'
lounge ;· R~ Jacket _9Uad, Ellicott, 8-11 p.m.
Recfuiem fOr .Atlanfis is the t1tl.e of "an evenAdinission : $2; all tickets must be purchased
ing of light and SP.ace and things" featuring
'n advance at the Ski Club'office, 318 Norton .
Anna Marie BFooks, Judy Emminss, Ralph
Admission will be limited to the first . 200
Fenerly, Tom Slattery, and friends. Harriman
ticket-holders.
Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission charse.
Presented by the Department of Theatre.
HILLB. HOUSE•
Kabbala! Shobbat . Services followed by an
EVENINGS fOR .NEW MUSIC
On~ Shabbll. Or. Jqstin H"o frNnn will lead a
CONCERT'
i.-studY session on The _TNchings of rhe Rabbis.
Members of the Center of the Creiltive and
• &lt;Ill C.ptn Blvd.. 8 p .m.
trumtop.~ge7. ool. 1)

~~~y's

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY -AT BUFFALO
MARCH 6, 1975

VOL 6, NO. 22

·4-course
load said
1

R •.!---1

.

•.....

Revised registration procedures are
beins intrO&lt;fuced for Fall1975, the Office
of Admissions.. a,nd Records .announCed
this week.
The changes involve: earlier class
scheduling; a three-week advance
registration period; an initial iepon on
student demand which will enable
departments t~ alter their propOsed
offerings before registrations are finally
processed ; the mailing of cou.r se
schedules to preregistered students' by
August 1; and an "on-line," immediateresponse system f9r making schedule
changes.k
.
To ma e the revtsed system wo~k to
f!JII .t~dvilntage, however,~ &amp; R cauttons,
as many students as possoble, both undergraduate ~nd graduate, sh~uld take
!he opportunoty to advanc;e regiSter ~urmg the thr~-wee~ penod tentattvely
slated to begon ~pnl 24. Thos_e who do
not advance regtster cannot stgn up for
any
courses
September
2. For
the
present,
theuntil
changes
will not
affect
Millard Fillmore College.
The modifications will bring the computerized SARA registration system
much closer to what was initially envisioned when It was introduced and
"perhaps oversold" in 1971, Dr. Robert
D. Bailey, associate director of Ad·
missions and Records, and Richard J.
Canale, assistant director for registration
and systems development,lndic.ilte.
Ant Slop Toward Canopo It ldni
The revisions also reflect the firs! step
toward a fully computerized student
records system. The ultimate purposes of
such a system, as described by A &amp; R
Director Richard Dremuk, are "to greatly
enhance the student's benefits, to
produce more accurate Un iversity
course enrollment projections and to
provide more viable student data and
academic data reports for use by

............................
_
................ .- . . ....=---....

academic departf"!'le0t5 and Unive rsity
administrators." Already, Canale points
out, COniputer~tefffllnals in the 1\ &amp; R office can act:ess student data ancf'fegiStration fi les and the office has the capability
for on-li ne updating of th ese files. Eventuall y, he says, cumbersome paper
records will be a thing of the past.
t he changes in re gistration 1)ro cedures, wh ich have been approved by
the University's ..,_cademic Affairs Council, involve two basic compone nts of the
intricate registration-scheduling process.
0.. Schedule DeYelopment
Fi,.t, the 1975 Fall Class Schedule is being developed a m~mth and a half earlier
than in the past in order to make it PQ:SSible for students 10 advance register
before leaving the campus at the end of
the spring semester. Previously, early
registration was conducted continuously
from late spring through the summer

Rev ised guidelines fo r ' graduate
assistants, replacing and extending those
issued in February 1974, were announced
this week by Executive Vice President
. - AlbertSomit.
The guidelines are operative as of
March 4, SOmit said, but need not
necessarily be applied in 1975-76 to appointments which would carry a student
beyond a second year of support in a
master's program or a fourth year-of support in a doctoral program.
Stipend limitations of $3,905 for · the
academic year and S390.50 pei month for
summer appointments reflect SUNY
policy, Somit said, and "may not be excepted, nor may the multiple appoint·

.....
_ _ _ .....,,MIIdt
MAGNROMniD
71 .. ......,,MIIdt v.•-~-•

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

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

~

The deba te over the four-course load,
described by Executive Vice President
Albert Somit as a " festering sore in our
relat ions wit h the Bureau of the Budget,"
was continued on the flOOr of the Faculty
Senate Tuesday.
An ad in Monday's Spectrum had urged students to demonstration their suppon for th e present plan, and they packed the sloping galleries of 148 Diefendorf, but the discussion, designed to introduce the complexities of the issue to
the Senators, proCeeded without incide nt unde r th e dired ion of CommiNee
Cha irman Thomas Connolly (English).
" I pre pared fo r this meeting by seeing
Godfather II," Connolly said in opening.
But the fireworks never came, as Connoll y calml y a nd humorously placed the
c urr e n t d e ba t e o ver degr ee r equ ire me nts into historical perspedive,
harki ng back to the pre-1958 era when
the first official requirement for a degree
was an annual chest x-·ray (two a year for
reside nt students).
The so-called four-course load was instituted in 1969 as recommended by the
Senate's Co mmittee on Educational Planning and Policy, chaifed by distinguished
Sha kespeare schol ar C.l. Barber {who
has si nce left t~e University). The Barber
Plan, it was hoped, wou ld allow students
greater fl exi bility in d esigning t he ir
acad e m ic programs (e xis t ing reand ~&gt;most stude nts waited," Or. Baile y
qu ire m e nts, institut e d in 1958 to
poi nts ou t. Of coufS1?( this was a difficult
g u a rante e tha r students in the
yea r in wh ich to tntroduce early schedulhumanities had some. ex~rience with
ing. Budget uncertai";lties ·aild the' freeZff , - science e nd 11 •rt;enNIUcw ·......_~- _, .,.~
o n a ppoi ntl'!le nts for 1975-76 posed
we re widely thought too rigid in the atproble ms in pinpointing who's going to
~here of the late '60s- in the days
teach what, bu t Bajley indicates that most
whe n the talk in the Faculty Club was of
de pa rt me nts were able to line up " 99 per
the year 2000 raiher than retrenchment).
cent of their classes" by the January 2•
As Connolly pointed out: the Barber
deadline date. Academic administrators
Plan does not specify that four four-hour
- were also given a further opportunity to
courses per semester should be the
re view a nd rev ise plans, between
norm. Rather it requires completion of
Fe brua ry 10 and February 18. At the pre128 semester hour credits, 32 to be taken
sent time (until March 25), Facilities Plano utside the major field.
ning is completi ng room assignments.
Why are we continually asked to
Once this has been done, final schedule
reconsider the e xisting requirementsl a
information will be sent out for printing
Senator asked. Senate Chairman George
with a projected delivery date of April 17.
Hochfield responded that the adAdvance registration will follow from apministration regularly informs the Exproxi mately April24through May 16.
ecutive Committee that the University
The registration process and several
budget iS threatened because those who
'""'""~""•·N•. z•
control the budget be11 1ie~e tha.,t col
on3e1
·-·..
•
um n i»R"
·

New
- guidelt·n·es

_

sore':·point

lio•n $ySI
. em set for fall

ev~ r~a

"""o-wr

•

~ne~~tlimltollon."

Questions concerning the guidelines,
which have been reviewed by the Executive Committee of the Graduate
Sdlool, the Graduate Student Associ•·
tion, the ~lc Affairs Couridj and
the f.cademlc · Cabinet, should be
refem!cl, Sornil said, to the Graduate
Set-' Office.
.
The text ofthe guidelines follows: .

~The SUNY ~ for V11rious
..,.,..lntments Include the following

.diuse

CJ)IICI!Riing Gracltale..Asslslants:

ISS.

ued for grad

" These activities are emphasized as a
learning process rather than as productive employment .. . ." This statement ac·
cords with the University's general policy
of assigning these appointments on the
basis of academic merit, consistent with
academic and career objectives: The
Graduate School assigns its fellowships in
the same way, basing its selections on
academic accomplishment and potential.
The distinct.i on between these appointments is that the fellowship ~rmits
the student to concentrlte vn course
work or research while the assistantship
is intended to piovide an apprentice
type of learning situation. In point of
fad, it is quite common for teaching
assistants to receive academic credit for
this learning process, typically being
rqistered in Supervised Teaching. under
the direction of a full-time faculty
member, and eligible to receive
graduate cnedlt as well as a grade for
successful completion of the requirements of the program. It atnnot be
emphasized too = y that the
assistantships are
fellowships
designed to provide apprenticeship learning opportunities a well a financial
suppon for the· most meritorious
gradlllte students 1V11ilable. Many times,
lft,..fact, graduate fellows voluntarily

ts
'

a. s s
• istan

assume teaching opportunities without
e xtra stipend in order to develop the
skills they will need later as university
scholars .
The following guidelines should be
observed by both appointing units and
students:
il The appointments should be
available only to students who wiU be
able to devote their full attention to their
graduate programs. This usually Is
reflected in a full-time lelllstration, or a
registration In courses Which together
with the assistantship constitutes a· full. time program. In addltloil, aalolants
holdins lobs outside the U"'-''ty must
inform the chairman of that fact and the
extent of time required. Coune reglstra·
lion plus an assistantship Is accepWJie to
the State Education Depanment a
evidence of full-time status, and Is .,.ed
quite often in meedng the fulk!Jne requirement of the Scholar Incentive
Program mnducted by the Regents of

_....
•

flumJO-$.col.tl

NO.uEIIBJ-

'IIoe ...................... _

..........-..u.
.......... .....
_,........_,........,,
Mood~

a

�:!- . .

Letelier
to keynote

Chile session .
Orlando Letelier, the former Chilean
ambassador to the U.S. who was im·
prisoned for nearly a year following the
overthrow of the Allende governmeot by
a military junta, will be the featured
speaker at a campus "Conference on
Chile," tonight (March 6) at 7:30 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room, Norton.
Other speakers for the event, co- •

sponsored by the Committee for Chilean
Democracy, a U/ B student group, and
the University's Council on International
Studies, will be Edward B.oorstein, who
served in the Ministry of the Economy

under Ernesto Che Guevara in Cuba, and
Steve Volk, a representative from the
North American Conference on Latin

America, a research group based in New
York and Berkeley.
Boorstein, who is author of The
Economic Transformation of Cuba, later
participated in the reorganization of the
Chilean economy under Allende, work-

ing for the Central Bank of Chile. After
the co.up, he managed to flee through
the Mexican Embassy.

Yolk, who has researched the CIA intervention in Chile, will discuss that

aspect of the coup againsl Allende, conference organizers ~y.
lerelier, who appeared on campus in
October, 1972, 10 prolest U.S. economic
srrangulalion of Chile, returns to d iscuss
the last days of the Allende regime in
Santiago, the variant forces which combined for its violent overthrow and the
death and imprison men I of thousands of
Chileans which followed the . military
coup.
letel!er returned to Sanliago in early
1973 from Washington to t~ke up !Ji~ 1'1'5! .
as the new Foreign Minister in the
~llende Cabinet. The appointment was
viewed not only as a compliry1ent to his
ability but also as an indication of the
continuing importance of U.S. TelaJiOns
to tile survival of tile Allende (or any
Chile) regime, Dr. Albert Michaels,
director of the Counctt on~~natiol'la k·
Studies, !.ays. As the pressure mounted,
letelier served in quick succession as the
Interior Minister and finally as the last
Defense Minister in the Allende Cabinet
-a posl which, Michaels says, presumed
the, by that time, hopeless task of keeping the armed forces behind rather than
in confrontation with the constitutional
government.
After the coup ex-Minister letelier was
first imprisoned in Santiago. and then
transferred for the better part of a year
"to lhe isolation - and desolation - of
Dawson Island in the Magellan straits,"
Michaels recounts. Since, prior t9 being
ambassador to the U.S., Letelier had
spent the greater part of a decade as a
monetary expert in this country, and
ultimately as Chilean representative on
the International Monetary Fund, he and
his wife had made many American
friends, Michaels indicates. "These
friends were consistent and patient- in
their efforts to achieve his release h'om
prison. That happy event took place last
fall ."
Currently, letelier is making
Venezuela his temporary headquarters.
He has also just recently attended a Mexico City conference which "tried" the
current military resime in Ch)le.

Sabbath Dance
The .econd annual friday Sabbath
Dance 5eMce at Temple Beth Zion will
be performed by dancers frum U/B's
loclaque CompanJon frfday, March 14,
MI:15P-m.
Canlqr Ray Edpr, who will sing the
service with the Tempie Beth Zion
QuMtet. hu chosen music by Mllhaud,
o.vldoon and Weill. Or. frederick
the orpnlst and co_nduc-

.....,.._,.Is

IOr..
~ ~

members parlidpllllna In the s.bbaih dance are Wen-

dr IIIIer, Wendy llnllman. Ellen Jacob-

son~~~~dhc:tedloy

Ms.

........

,atllstant~of

dlnoe • Ulll and~ of the Dlnce

'Kick ass,' Flo Kennedy advises lawyers
Allorneys don't necessarily have to
choose between cautious esta blishmentoriented respectability and having
nothing more between "their ass and the
ground" than a pajr of blue jeans, black
feminist lawyer Flo Kenhedy to ld a full
house of law students and others in
O'Brian Halllasl Friday.
In fact, · Ms. Kennedy · boasted, "the
ev!!er I get, the better I do. .
. I make S~,~ a yea~ gomg around
~hrs co~n.tr.y .krckrng ~s~, she re~rted·.
'That ~~n t good, but 1t ~not ba~.elthe~,
hon':Y• .when you cons•der that 1 don t
put 10 more than three qr four days a
. wee~, ~.n~ ~~~e. ..o~f. summers: and for
other long vacations.
"You can try to suck your way to
success in the whorehouse society," Ms.
Kennedy said, " but you may be better off
kicking ass. The line to suck is so long
you may never even set to the suckee."
Noting that law students are trained to
be "cautious," and " nigger noble," Ms.
Kennedy urged her audience not to be
so " careful."
" If a car is on your ankle, are you going
to go to the library to look up how much
it weighs or worry about all the legal
ramifications of why you can't scratch
the paint before yo u do something?"
In particular, "don't worry about going
to jail,',' the salty Ms. Kennedy counsel·
ed. " There's nothing that helps. build a
pradice more than a stay in jail. Besides,
. going to jail ain't no worse than going·
on a camping trip and in jail at least you
· can be sure of having a can."
Teoticulu Approach
Ms. Kennedy, called the Mark Twain
of our age by Ms. magazine, championed the. "testicular approach" to
political change. 0 Put the pressure
where it counts," she advised.
Politicians, of course, protect their
testicular ·areas, she said, but soo·ner or
later " they'll show their ass" arid become vulnerable.·
"Oily Rockefeller and Smiling Whitey
Ford showed theirs with their proposals
for dealing with the economic crisis.
Seven million people are out of work
and these mothers are going to tax gas.
That's like a fat person cutting off a leg to
lose weight. Every law school · in the
country ought to have a petition going to
get rid of these unelecte;d" expletive
deleteds.
"I thought I read somewheie in the
Constitution once that the chief ex.eculive was suPPOSed to be elected by
the people. Neither one of these clowns
t.sbeeneleaedbyanybocly."
.
Goln&amp; "for the testicular" means "hltbelOw the belt If . - r y ,H the 59yur-olcl MI. Kennedy uld. There's a lot
of alaohollsm MIOIII Judees,law,en and
other polttidans, fOr aample-. Use !bat•

ti"'

and anything else you can find out about
them, she advised.
But don't use the cop-out about being
helpless to change things. "We're surrounded by a .mountain -of bullshit/' she
agreed, " but everybody gets a teaspoon.
It's not required that anybody make a
tun nel through the mountain, just use
that teaspoon ."
For example, she said, if you car:'l't get
the_attention of the media ,for ypur,q10se
{the ~ 'oppressed'! seldom can), don ~t.
thro~ up your hands and s3.y, " I carl't
give a cocktail party" 1ili:e ·ttle ~tabl ish:
ment interests can, :'go pee ort the .floor
attheii's.'' ·
· ·
· ·
· ·
·
4

'V4lSeline Dispensation'
Ms. Kennedy, a graduate of Columbia
law School, had linle praise for the
"grass rOO!S organizers" who man the
"storefronts" in efforts to "help" the oppressed. " I call that vaseline dispensation," she offered. " It's like waiting Until the rapist is through and then rushing
in with vaseline for the victim. What you
ought to be doing instead is makirig the
rapist hurt. Go after the people who give
you you rC iients." If you want jto help the
Attica Brothers, for example, "get on
Rockefeller and the pigocracy."
Ms. Kennedy suggested that law

- Feminist 101111
In town also for a lecture to raise funds
for the legal defen~ of a lesbian mother
whose children have been taken away
from her because of her sexual orientation, Ms. Kennedy began her O'Brian
Hall presentatio n by inviting all those
"who think this law school's a hole in the
gro~nd" to .come for;ward a.nc:J join her in
selections from her feminisl song sheets:
"My Count" 'tis of thee, sour land of
bigotry. . . .
' '
" I'm dre~min_s.{)l~stri~_Chri$tmas;'
(for Nixon, in particular).. .. "May your
days. bE; merry and bright and the'
prisoners wealthy and white."
"God Damn Ye Merry Gentlemen;"
and
"Our MOther Which Ai't in Heaven
. ... Our washing's done, our kitchen's
dean . . .. And lead us not into home
economics, but deliver us into politics,
f
h
· h k" d
d h
odt ~re Is t ef mg o~ an ~, e power
an t e go~, hrever. b:n.
, h
Noting t at t erh may
some w 0
di?,n'th knoh w~at.
wehe getting i~~ ~ en ey nv•t
hr I ere to s'ffjarl'
:- hennd ~;as hnondt ~ ess unru e .
" I t ~~y ec e t ·~
t wan~_to PI~~
!"e, ':" n~tllword•
a I ut aft
IUhst rhaoselll e adn ge_t a ot o pu ·~•ty
w •c w en up 10 even rnore m·
vitations to speak somewhere. Then, I'll
jack up my price by$250."
"Even if she did," someone in the
audience muttered, "she'd still be a
bargain." ·

.!tt

'Jh
b:

't;i: .

students deal ·seriously with researching
tht! political conspiracies that have been
"whitewashed" by the establishment.
For openers, she highly recommended
lhe "Who Kill.ed JFK?'~ travelling show
that has played this campus several times
(and is handled by the same bOOking ·
agent which makes her arrangen:-ents).
'-""-~~ ~ 15
" learn to examine" media reports
Married couples who are. having
carefully to get at the truth, she said. HiJltroubles talking to each other •can get
ting archly at iome kind of conspi.racy in
help on campus.
the Patty Hearst affair1 she asked, " Who
has time to taste along their wallet and
Dr. Norman B. Epstein, assistant
credit cards when they' re supposedly
professor of psychology, is seeking
married couples with communication ·
kidnapped from their lover's bed! Who
robs a bank an~ then Sives oUt credits'.'
problems to participate In a research
like the cast of the Mickey Mouse Club:project that will use group techniques. ·
"Hi, I'm Veronica; I'm Tonto, o.r · The program Is tentatively scheduled
to begin in the middle of March, with
whatever the hell they called Patty
Hearst." Also, she said, the SLA's Donald
couples meeting twice a week for three
weeks
at the Psychology Clinic at Ridge
Defreeze must have been some kind of
agen~ possibly· a double age_111: .'~Bio.cJ&lt; , lea.
men JUSt ~on't wall( .a waj from p{i~n'.'.
Dr. EpstelnJslooklng for husbands and
like he was supposed to have done.
· wives who have been married for ai least
other · areas ot her wlc!e-ran,:
l&gt;l!o years, possess at least high school
lng, ·random remarks, 11,4s: .Kennedy · diplomas, and are interested in im- ·
proving their ability . to talk to one
advised lawyers who Would help the op-·
anolher:
pressed to "volunteer" for . only .IWQ
Couples Interested In partlciplltlng
things ·":"" to "disrupc SocietY or .to. do
research into tlie carefully suarded
may set up an Interview by caiHns Ms.
secreu of the p!Socracy. She also salct . Elizabeth Jackoorl at the Psychology
young attorneys should think carefully
Olnlc 1831·1189) on Thursday, March 6,
and friday, March 7, between 7 p.m. and
before they "overload" their "nobility"
bY becoming nsodated with law com- 10 p.m., or on Saturday; March 8,
between noon and 3 p.m.
munes. Communes make fonoo ~
The prosram will be oftered free of
hasoles about who's solns to do whllt to
.'1"·
.
.
or for whom and when, ilhe ald.

pies ..,.. .__,....-__

Cou.

. In

�....u...

Marc:h6, 1975

~ucation, enforced rules
~ould ~ncourage bike travel

Pregnant alcoholic runs .
risk ofdamaging her baby
ly Milry Beth SpiN

tunately, he observed, we are a disease·

EdiforiM.Auocf«e, Hulrll SdrMca

crisis society. "We wait until the heart

The
pregnant
alcoholic
runs
considerable risk her baby will have a
pattern of defects and development
problems which are linked to her ex·

patient is almost out of this world before
we start telling him al&gt;out effects on the
heart of obesity, smoking and lack of ex-

cessive drinking.

California pediatrician Dr. Kenneth
Lyons Jones, who with Dr. David Smith at

youth could be enlightened at a crucial
stage about alcoholism, we could avoid •

the University of Washington

~~~l~i;3 t:t~~~ ~r:~7 ail~:~t~1tii:S~s

documented and identified problems of
the "fetal alcohol syndrome," explained
the role of alcohol in these defects at the
Conference on Alcohol Abuse held at
Roswell Park Memorial Institute's
Hilleboe Auditorium last Thursday and
Friday. The Conference was sponsored
by the Research Institute on Alcoholism
and the Erie County Medical Society.
Dr. Jones emphasized that in the in·
fants studied, none of the defects or de·
velopment problems were caused by
heredity. "All the infants had mothers
who were physically and psychologiqolly
dependent on alcohol," he said. He said

Rver.

.

The need lor large-scale education.
programs on alcoholism was cited by Qr.
John Slnacqre, professor of h.eahh·
sciences at the ·suote Univer&gt;lty CoIIese at
Brodtport and former director of the
Dlvtslon of Health and Drug Edueation
Service of the NeW York Slate Department of Education.
•
"An effective education program
could help combat alcoholism as has
been done with uterine cancer and many
conUIRIOUS diseases," he said. Unfor-

Carel J. van Oss, U/B professor of
microbiology and a native of the Neth·
erlands, widely resarded as a model na· .
tion for b ike travel.
Dr. van Oss, who also serves as consu l

close to a half-million bicycles fill the

than learning facts and figures, he sa id.
A Dissent
How~ver, Harvard Holl e nberg, ch ief
counsel of the New York Temporary
State Commission to Evaluate the Drug
laws, d isagreed that e xposure to such
edu cat ion in t he school s cou ld be
beneficial. " Ma ny youngsters ca n't i nter~
pret fa cts on alcoholism beca use they
can't read or write effectively . . l et th e
teachers try runni ng a school and not a

laboratory fo r social change," he chided.
" If a kid is sho rt -changed by the
educational system, he won 't have th e
respect for his mind need ed fo r threats
. of ' what it will do to yo ur m ind' to be

effective, And if kids drop •o ut of school,
they wori't · be · th e re to lear n abo ut
alcoholism anyway," Mr. Hollenberg

·

bikeways but to institute universal cycl~
ing education -and strict enforcement of
cycling rules of the road, advises Dr.

of the Netherlands fo r Western New

alcoholics. This might be more effective

rate. " Although most pregnant women
are aware of possible damage to the fetus

American cities is not to build special

are unaware alcohol is a drug which can
be i ddictive," he said. Rather than just

telling students about alcohol and its

syndrome examples include retardation

Edlallon , _ _

con-

like the divided highway itself, the path
on e ither side allows traffic in one d irec·

"The public generally is appallingly ignorant about alcoholism. Most people

attendant problems, however, he called
for school programs in which stuft nts
can work in projects dea lin g w it h

in mental and eye development, heart
and joint defects, and a poor growth
from drug usage during crucial periods
of fetal development," he said, " they are
not so aware of the effects - of
alcoholism." He and his colleagues at the
University of California at San Diego plan
further studies to determine how alcohol
ingested by the mother does affect the
fetus. " I want to caution that our su~dies
have dealt only with children of severe
alcohol ic mothers . - not 'social
drinkers,' "he added.
He ' said ·Other 'studies currently . un:
derway in Boston and Washington, D.C.,
also deal with the "fetal alcohol .syn·
drome."
Ailo1eil:enls 'ana the E~c~etty
Dr. Sheldon Zimberg, d[rector of the
Alcoholism Treatment Center at the
Hospital for Joint Diseases Medical
Centei in New York City, reported on a
rising incidence of .1lcoholism among the
adolescent and the elderly. " But the
reasons for these divergent groups' increase is not the same," he said.
He feels the elderly often become ad·
dieted to alcohol because of a feeling of
hopelessness, lack of family or friends,
and excessive leisure time. He believes
treilltment is best carried out in programs
where the elderly are already being
'medically treated or through senior
citizen facilities.
"The adolescent alcoholic is another
problem entirely. In working with them,
I would say it is more important to know
how to deal with adolescents than
alcoholics," Dr. Zimberg said. Despite
the publicity given the young alcoholic,
Dr. Zlmberg said it is not that segment of
the j.opulatlon which has the highest incidence of alcoholism.
"Much more researcb is needed to understand dearly the 'whys'.of alcciholism
as a disease," he said.
ltepldlllo and Clnhooh
Prospects dult hepatitis and cirrhosis
caused by excessive alcohol.use may be
prevented -re presented in a study by.
Dr. Yedy Israel and co-workers at the
University of Toronto and the
Alcoholism and Drug Addiction . Research Foundation in Toronto. Or. Israel
said biochemical and metabolic changes
which occur In the liver of those suffering from an over-active thY,oid gland are
similar to• those changes caused by excessive amounts of alcohol .metabolized
in the

ercise. We don't develop immunization
against disease until it is almost
epidemic." Dr. Sinacore' believes if our

·--

ly Patricia Ward lledennan
The way to encourage bi ke travel...i n

~ id .

.

Detection System

An effective syste~ spot potential
alc6 h'olics a nd' get. th em {nto immerJiate
tre~llhen! 'wa's a eiCiibed b)r fari it e Vogt,
COQSI,II t a '} t ... t o • t h e Alcohol- Driv in g
Counte rmeasures Project,. Departme nr
o f HlgliwayS, in De n ver. " By trainirJg .
police to recogn ize the drinking d river,
the arrest rate in De nver on this charge
has. il) q ease.d 300 . ~r .cent i!l the pa.st
four years," sh e said. By e nco uragin g the
district attorney's office to refu se " plea
downs" from an alcohol~re lated traffic
o ffense to a non-alcohol on e, which
happens if drunk driving is redu ced to
reckless endangerment, an 89 per ce nt
conviction rate has bee n ach ieved in
alcohol-related cases. "The judges are
trained to look at e ach case and refe r
those they feel need d iagnostic work-ups
and treatment. Now 60 per cent of these
cases are referred while only 10 per cent
had been referred p ri or to our

program," Ms. Vogt reported.
The payoff has come in a lowered
percentage of alcohol-related traffic
fatalities in the Denve r area. " Certainly

the early identification of the problem
drinker via the . courts a_nd subsequent
d iagnostic and therapeutic sessions have
been responsible for th is improvement,"

streets e ach afternoon at rush hour.
11

an~ ~fkue~h i~h~hs;'i~~~~:rfa~d~ ~!r~~:
appe ars chaotic to tou rists, th e re's
met hod in the appare nt ma d ness, Dr.
va n O ss insists.
Train in g in th e regulatio ns govern ing

bicycle traffic begins in all Dutch schools
in th e second or third g rad e . By the time
a Dutch cycl ist takes to th e city streets, he
o r she knows exact ly what behavior is expected in any traffic sit uation. Moreover,
e very motorist {almost all of who m have
been or sti ll are cyclists) has received th is
same trai ning as part of his or he r school-

Jog_

'' Everyone o n th e road kno ws e xact ly
what to do in e ach sit ua tio n," van O ss
explai ns. Th is is in dramatic contrast to
American roads wh e re motor traffic is
regu lated, bu t cycl ists often fo llow no
rules othe r than keepi ng to the right -

and don 't always do 'that:
· ·
Everyone Knows Rules •nd Rights
.

· ·

York, Was born in Amsterdam, where

·

" In the Nethe rlands all traffic is complete ly re gulated,'-' the ·scientist · says.
" Eve ryone knows hi s rules and h is rights.
Here th e motorist has rules b ut confro nts
tota ll y ·liberated cyclists. So few people
be have p rope rly on -the ir bi kes that
Americcin mOtOrists haVe!' - fe.irned thar ... ·
you neve r know what cyclists will do."

Bicycle safely· and cycling regu lations
have been part of the Dutch school
curriculum for at least 50 years, van O ss
s a~ .
. .
.
In Amsterdam (a city com parabl e in
size to Buffalo), the pol ice and a bikesafety o rgani zatio n admini ste r an annual
city-wid e e xam inatio n fo r yo u ng cycl ists,
which inclu des both a writte n exa m and
a practicu m. Those who pass are given a
certificate and a lapel p in (which nobod y
wears). Dr. va n O~s vividly recalls the
fea r he and h is younger siste r took th eir
b ike exams. " My siste r, to my great em~
barrassme nt , failed."

Children in the Netherlands learn at a

Growing Popularity
According to Dr. van Oss, bikes continue to grow in popularity in urban
ce nters such as Amsterdam where park~
ing spaces are increasingly hard to find
tram~

are often crowded, especially

throughout the city. When the student
arrives at his class, he simply locks his
bike .and throws it wtth the otherJ •gainst
the wall. In residential areas, bike parkahe,ad of the university's usual fall
ing is frequently in basements. A hollow
schedule - is among changes approved
raiJ is ohen provided next to the ba.seby the university's' council of deanS. The
ment stairJ: the cyclist puts his bike onto
n"l" calendar calls for regular authe rail and 11uides it easily underground.
tumn dasses to. end November 26.
Separote bik~hs are often not pracAlter a. r~s, students )'lilltake final extical for in-city travel, van Oss believes.
ams December 1-5, o:ndil)g the quar)er.
Typically the lane closest to the curb Is
lnstru&lt;'tlop will resume for the winter
designated for bikes: even when this
quart~r .January 5, neorly, six weeks alter
lane is not needed for on-street parking, the last autumn dass. '1f&gt;is will permit
it is sure to be blocked from time to time
subStantial l!'nergy economies during
by trucks making deliveries. Many Dutch
part of the winter season when ~ are 1 cities do not have In-city blkepaths, he
vulnerable to .eutbadts li1. fuel supplies,'!/ points out, yet large numben of bikes
said ··ceoige_ ·p. Crepeau, associate
and cars share the roads with a minimum
provost for instruction.
of accidents.
Bikepaths are essential on divided
CIIARCINIIII HOUa
. .
hilf&gt;wa¥s, he adds. Bikeways are providn. CNolhe ()oft c-. 7 - - . . . ed
on all such high...y~ th~ the
cta.·.....,,Maldl7,. Sp.&amp; ..........
Netherlands: the paths are typically
~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maldl17,.1p.&amp;
some two yards wide (suifl9ent lot the
legal limit of two cydists abreastJ, and,

..

..._.

modes of travel as well). Recentl y, for example, cycl ists we re able to trade in their
rearl igh ts for reflectors- because Dutch
motorists are now re quired to use

headl ights at night instead of depending
on their parki ng lights.

like most people who rode a bicycle in
childhood, Dr. va n Oss e xudes a certai n
wa rmth wh e n h e ta lks abou l t h e
motorless vehicles. " I can th ink o f only
o ne insidi o us use for bikes," he says.
During the Second World War, he was
in te rned fo r a time in a Gestapo prison.

The gua rds patrolled the hallways on
bicycles, p refe rri n g si len t wh eels to

telltale·ja·ckbOo(s. " It wasn't dicl&lt;et. Ttiey
stole our bikes and then crept noiselessly
up o n us to spy o n us in ou r cells." It
wo rked, h e recalls wit h a smile, " as lon g
as they could resist ringi ng the bell."

FacultY. .Ciu

announces.ils
brunch menu
Nine tee n food ·choices plus a series of
famil y movies will be featured at the

Faculty Club Sunday Brunch on April 6
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Faculty Club
Dinin g Room, Harriman library.
,
Dr. A. We stle y Rowland, immediate
. past-president of the Club and chairmilln

of the brunch; has announced that the
pri ce fo r adults will be $3.50; for children
six and under, $2.25. There will be no
cha rge for infants.
The menu will feature sausage links,

baked ham, bacon, chicken livers with
mushrooms, poached esgs, scrambled

OSU shortens·tenn

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

The Dutch traffic laws reflect the fact
tha t, in .the Netherlands at least, cars and
bikes are pan of an integrated transportation network {that includes other

e ggs, hash brown pOtatoes, French tCNst,
juices and fresh fruit C'Ompote, molded

in bad weather. In Amsterdam, almost
eve ry university student has a bike:
classes are scheduled 15 minutes apart
and university buildings illre scattered

Ohio State University will begin and

motorized vehicles are strictly enforced
by the police . " From the age of seven o~
e ight on, cyclists. are ticketed for every
traffic indiscretion." Carrying a rider
withou t a proper seat or fa iling to signal a
turn will earn the cyclist a traffic citation.
Fa ilu re 10 keep right or to stop at a traffic
light is a more serious offense.

school to walk is expected to bike in.

and

fall, principally as a means of cutting
energy consumption. A new fall starting
date of September. 16 _- . two weeks

Education is only half the answer to
bette r biking. The other important factor
is strict law enforcement, van Oss ·con·
tends. In the Netherlands, the traffic
regulations for both motorized and non·

te nder age that the bicy.c le is more than a
toy. Anyone who lives too far from

Ms. Vogt said.

end autumn quaner classes earlier next

tiononly.
Only lblf the......_,

jello salad, tossed vegetable salad,
biscuits, muffins, honey buns, cheese
cake wedges, tarts, pudding, coffee, teill,
ormilk.
·

In cooperation with the Instructional
Communications Center, family movies

will be shown continuously In the Red
Room during the brunch. The films will
be shown in this sequence: Norman
Mclaren, Be Gone Dull Care; Qlarles
C~aplin, The Rink; Norman Md..aren,
Pos de Deux; W.C. Fields, The fa~/ Class
of Beer; a')!l George Melies, Trip to the
Moon.
Reservations will be accep~ed on a first
come basis. Checks payable to The faculty Club should be sent to the offk:e of
the Club in Harriman: Reservations and
payment must be made no later than
March 26. Tickets are also available In the
office of the vic1. President for University
Relations, 186 Hayes.
.

-y ....
.............._.......
..............................
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_.............
...........................
SCHOOl APfi.ICATIONS

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::.:::: :::::"..:.:;::,!':...":,.,"::=:

.,._.,_~lfonrlledayvl

Mr.ZJeafei's~ •

RESOlUTION
Whereas: Ron Ziegler as press
secretary for former President Nixon was
an integral part of the Nixon Administration's deception of the people of
the United States of America concerning
· Southeast A~i3n military activity,
Watergate, and other vital domestic and
foreign affairs;
Whereas: Ron Ziegler in the above
mentioned capacity in numerous instances attempted to violate the First
Amendment of "freedom of the press;"
Whereas: We feel that the sum of
$2500 is too high a reward for this man's
part in the tragedies that befell this na-

On December 12, 1974, an invitation
was extended to former presidential
press secretary Ronald Ziegler by the
Speakers Bureau of the Student Association to speak on the campus of the State
University of New York at Buffalo.
T~is invitation was accepted, has been
confirmed, and Mr.. Ziegler has agreed to
ap~ar in Clark- Gymnasium on March
18, 197S.

Mr. Ziegler's appearance on this campus is con_sistent with the policy of the
Speakers Bureau in that we have constantly sought to bring to the students of
this University programs that are
diversified, informative and enjoyable.
Mr. Ziegler will be speaking from the
same podium which served Jane Fonda,
Angela Davis, lester Maddox, Bernadene Devlin, William Kunstler, James
Buckley, William Ruckelshaus, and Jacob
Javits to name but a few.
The decision to extend Mr. Ziegle r an
invitation was based on the fact that he
represents a portion of American history,
albeit however negative, which deserves
ex.Posure and public recognition. CerEditor:
la ~ nly Watergat~ has shown us. t~e .a~- ... &lt; As Presidefll of the UUP Chapter of the
5&lt;?1ute net:essu r o~ openneS"s- an.d
SUNY cit Buffalo Center, I deplore 'th"e 3cdla~ogt,~e. The Umversrty, of all pla~es .m
tion of the Governor and the Bureau of
soc1ety, should tolerate and - ~ven mvlte . the Budget of NVS in intruding on a line
controv~rsy, and the explorattol) .. of -un- ~ . by line 1ias4s ~ the budgStary rtia1tagepopular. ldeas.
.
me nt of this Unt\l'ersity, viz: the arbitrary
cut of 8 FTEs in the Nursing School, the
. The f1rst amendm~nt to the ~~nstltut1?n -gua rantees t~e n~ht of all Cl~tzens to
• .reC:IuctioA of Jibrary acquisitions by 20,·
~ree s~h . Wh1le ~IS ap~ari!J1Ce ~er~ . 000 volumes, the unique elimination of
ts· certa10~ not free, 1rtoo IS ~la ~n·.
~:-t~e student services, the
sfSf~nt WI Otllers on the coUe;ge ecture
reduction of s fTEs of the extension and
t?u~. It should not be forgotten t~at
public service programs and others. The
''G'ltLar""argu~Rts- were---made regard10g
proposed budgetary reductions for our
the appro~nateness of lecture f~s when
.center are. disproportionate when compared to the other university centers in
Jane Fontla and Angela Davis were
ICbeduled to speak ller~. The argument
SUNY
· ·
has not ~hanged, ":"'rely the perspective.
It is .equally disturbing that on our camWe dtsa~ree . w1~h our .co~leagues at
pus steps are being implemented to
Bosto~ Um~ers1ty ~nd Mlchtgan. Sta~e .
prepare for retrenchment in the evenMr. Zoegler 15 speakong at ~he Unoversoty
tuality that such will be necessary if the
a.t Buffalo because we beloeve he has a
proposed budget passes the NYS
rog~t to be heard. Because- for a long
Legislature. The demoralizing consewh!le: he ~as . part . of a. chapter 10
quences of su~h acts are obvious. We
Amencan h1story wh1ch Will. never be
urge our administration to suspend such
activities and defend by all legal means
forgotten. The extent .to .wh!ch we, as
our budget against any cuts. At stake are
students, and th~ Umvers1ty 10 gener:al.
":". ourse!ves·as ontellectuaUy honest onnot only the livelihood of our colleagues
dovoduals 15 the extent t~ whoch ~e allow
but the graduate and undergraduate
~urselves access to all mformatJon and
programs of our university and the much
tdeas.
needed student and community services
We do not expect Mr. Ziegler 10
without which our Center cannot fulfill
change anyone's minds; nor would w_e
its functions for New York State.
.
exJ;M!CI him to c;onvert anybody to hl5
The top priority of the UUP's program
p~dosoJihy. We do demo~d that he ~
is to intervene with our State affiliate in
goven a Ch;jnce to express homself.
.
the eurrent legislature to restore SUNY's
--Sianlef-,chai~m.an
budget. We find the Governor's budget
/
SA Spskers Bureau
ill advised and ~rbltrary: We need the
support of the total community if bur efforts are to.succeed.
~A. Y«KMMI, Pri!Sident
UUP, SUNY/Buffalo Center Chapter

UUP 'deplores'
line item cuts

Smoking ban ,
draW$..support.

,;,--~

•

~

• •

'

i

J

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

lloondor

by"'"·-

Eclltari

aii.Wwnlrr

--. -~ol-r"'*•

-.,.,. JOS ACoin 51.. -.ro, N.Y. 1m4.
EdltotUI offlces ~ looted In room ltl. ZSD
W~mpeMA_,,.,,.,,.e;r,m.

r-url¥e fdiiO, .
A. wrmEY

ROWlAND .

EditO&lt;.u..aNei
ROBERT T. MAitLEIT

-·-

Ntond-lon
/OHN A. GOUTIER

·

PATRICIA WARDa/(DfRMAN
Weeldy c.lendor fdluw
DIANE QUINN

c--lftsN!Ist

SUSAN M. SURGE/I

'

.

i am writing in suppOrt of Mark
BernsleY.s requi!St that PreSident Ketter
considei and act on the problem Qf
cigarette smoking in' classrooms and leeture halls at this University IR~.
feb. 20; 1975).
As a teaching assistant, I have held a
number of "hearings" In my classes
about the problem of smoking In dass.
These have convinced me that a large
portion of the student body feels
routinely discomforted, annoyed, or
sickened by cigarette smoking within the
confined ipace of the classroom. I myseH
have droppec! .~ than one course

March 6, 1975

and condemned
the undersigned, students and student
tion, and the ensuing lack of trust by the
people of the United States in their • organizations, publicly absolve responsibility for the payment of $2500 to Mr.
government;
Ronald Ziegler for his speaking engage·
Wherus: We feel that this man should
ment on March 18 for the previously
not be rewarded at all for his actions, nor
mentioned reasons and openly condemn
should his "pan of history" be rewarded;
· ~as: By taking this position, we
all those responsible for these arare not denying Mr. Ziegler his right to·
rangements. Also we demand either the
free speech, but feel that the sum of
Assembly or an Assembly committee
review all speakers in the future, before
$2500 is not very "free;"
they are contracted.
WherNI: We the undersigned feel
that it should be publicly known that this
May It Therefore lie Further Resolved:
That this article also be a mandate to this
action is not representative of the U/8
Student Government' and all future Stu~
student body;
Whereu: We, as students and student
dent Governments to gear the expenorganizations of this University, are tired
diture of student fees with more respon· of exhorbitant fees for speakers, tired C?f
sibility, more . towards direct student
needs and services (i.e. health care,
so much of our student fees being subject to the whims of an elite, unresponS.C.A.T.E., etc.), and finally to use their
positions not to alienate the students of
sive few, and tired of our money going to
unnecessary petty expenditures instead
this University from each other, the
of directly towards st udent needs and
University and from the rest of the Bufservices;
falo community, but to use their
May It Therefore Be Resolved: That we
positions to bring these units together.

because of this unregulated and appa rently unrecognized form of air pollution.
Minimally, 1 think that all teachers at
the University should be required to discuss this matter with their students and
make every. e[fort to a£COm~da~e both
tt\ose who-srhoke and those who want to
breathe clean air. If it turns out that the
non-smokers can be satisfied without actt.icitlyO"iui nin8'smoking, fine. If not, then
I think it is appropriate and fair that a ban
on s~oki n_s be}mposed.

AP-38
it wasn't!
Editor:

That may be Lawrence D. Bell i~ the
pictUre oil page 1 of your last issue, but it•
definitely is not a P-38 fighter plane.
-WIJigm S. ADen
• .. : .. · ~:~
• • P:of~~rOfHisJOQ'

Absolutely right, the plane should
~ave been. identified as a P-39, a Bell
It might be argued that the smoker has
Airacobr'a. ·
.... ~ . . - .. _..
~RrM
just as much a rlghno smoke anhe non-· smoker has to clean air. Admittedly; this
is so when space and air are not at a
premium, that is, when people are outdoors and the smoke can be dissip~ted
or avoided. But in die confines of a
cla'ssroom, where there are usually many
people sharing a very limited amount of
A Georgia physician and allied health
space, air is at a premium and t~e comeducator who has helped develop
mon or shared nature of the space dicgreater
understanding . between
tates different moral precepts. The air
physicians and allied health professionals
belongs to ~veryone and to no' one. In
has
received
the annual Distinguished
such a situation, everyone has a right to
Lecturer Award from the Department of
use the air (i.e. breathe ~). though no
Health
ScienceS
Education and Evalua·
one has the right to pollute it.
'tion.
Sincerely;
The award was presented to Dr. John
-Walter._.
Rhodes Haverty, Jr., by Department
Graduate Student, Philosophy
Chalrmon Dr. Phyllis Higley at a Tuesday
night seminar on Current Issues in Allied
Health at which Dr. Haverty was speaker.

Georgiaph ••

reCeiVes u~ant

Wear a helmet,

save your~ .
1

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·

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'•"

s .. ~

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'"'1 .

I read with interest tlie article by
Patricia Biederman in the ·~
concerning· •the prol&gt;lems of · bicycle
transportation. One thing has ' been
cimcemlng
in this regard, but I didn't
know who to diKusslt with.
We get the kids ·w ho have been
io\j~red in bicycle accidents - accidents
of all kindS. We can fix their broken less
and -arms, but we can't fix their, broken
heads. I think It would be a tremendous
cOntribution to the safety of.chlldren and
adults, if someone would· pr.olll!&gt;le the
u~ 'of protective l1acl sear: ~ blcy~
riders. There is no less._ . . for bike
riders to wear ·a helmet than there Is for.a
motorcycle. rich!r, Tlitdall hurts ~ as
much. Hopefully, yo\o .ca·n pas$ ihis.lett&lt;~~
on to some group who is ~lve in
promotio~ of the use, of bicycles arod
bicycle safety.
.,
'
Thanks for readil)g this.

me

-HowanfG.Iarth

...

Controller
Ch)lclren's Hospital

•for -

011

lllce- Afety, -

threeofloday's.._

·

...

Dr. Higley said Dr. Haverty wos chosen
because of his "contribution to the
· development of the allied health
philosophy of. professlc&gt;MI education as
well as for his --~lp in medicine
and allied health fields." '
He is. a pe(liatrldan and graduate of
the Medical Collese of Georala and is
dean of the School of Allied Health
Sciences at Atlanta's Georsla State
Univenity. He is also an asooc1ate In
pediatrks at Emory Unlvenlty School of
Medicine and assistant head of lhe
Pediatric ~tat Crawford W.
Lons Memorial HospitaL

State plans hearings
The - York legislature's Select
Committee on Higher Education will
~In hearings this. month on medical
education In the state. Assemblyman
Milton Jonas, chairman of the com·
mlttee, said that more than haH of the
new physicians' licenses In the state go to
fqrelgn born and foreign tralned medical
school graduati!S, and that more than 3,·
000 New York residents curre11tly are
enrolled in medical schools abroad. "We
want to encourage new patterns of
physician tralnlns that will no1 bankrupt
our state and wiD produce the volume of
physicians we need to meet modern
. standards of health care," he said.

�&lt;

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The year of the rabbit

New guide&amp;nes for grad
lfrom i»se tlf(J0/...4)

•_ ____;,___;,...;...;..--...............,...........,___.._ _ _ __ _ ._ __ _

continued good standing academically.
ordinarily not include direCt contact with
time l[!nils. should be in the title of
In !!lOme cases (MFC assignments parstudents, but rould Include assistance "
technical assistant, technical specialist,
lecture demonstrations, slide
research assistant, research associate, etc.
~~!~r:h)~~~~ss:dh;rt ~3!:i~hhi~~:.~~ with
presentations, library and bibliographical
Such appointments will not carry student
such instances, academic standing and
services, etc., as well as assignments constatus. Where it can be shown that the
teaching performance will appropriately
nected wid&gt; research activities of the
nature of-a program requires a minimum
be reviewed by different officers.
·department, faculty me·m ber or student
time for the ab~t doctoral . students
himself. In some cases, it ,may be apgreatef ~han that noted, exceptions can
Categories of Alslstanllhlpo '
propriate for Graduate Assistants, as part
be sought. The distribution of
In general, the three categories of
of
their program, to assume the· duties
assistantship lines by type (teaching,
assistantships approved a, integral parts
normally assigned to Teaching Assistants.
graduate or research) available to a
of graduate degree programs entail the
following :
·
department, school or Faculty need not
Such an assignment $hould not be conexadly match the various responsibilities
sidered unusual. The responsibilities enTadt~ Auistant.. This is ari instructhe unit must meet. It is most important,
tail the same genen~l time commitments
tional title for an instructional pOsition, ·
as teaching assistantships.
however, that persons having no
and both title and University reporting
teaching duties not be assign!"~ to ' procedures require that persons ap· a - d AlllsrMC. This title should be
teaching assistant positions (although the
pointed to such a position have assigned
used lor graduate student appointments
converse assignment is acceptable; i.e.,
teaching duties in cOurses or sectionS
only where the appointment will be
gradc.,~ate _assistants ml'Y.. be given
regularly offered- by the University lor
funded from other than State sources.
teach;n_g ;doties). the t'eicliing analysis
which there is :-a ,reported student
Persons holding such an appointment
procedures used by the Unlveriity conregistration. The assigned teaching
may . be assigned research duties in
nect the
of those appointed to inresponsibilities may be as the second inlibrary,, taboiatory or field studies asapstructional positions with contact hours
structor for a class, laboratory, redtation
propriate to the pu~ and ICiivltles
and enrollme,.t. Failure to monitor these
section, etc., under the supervision of an
of the proJect for wi)lch support has
. assignments properly results in unnecesinstructor. Duties may indude lecturing,
been awarded. For research aslstants on
sary University embarrassment and may
conducting laboratory or recitation
grant S\lpport, the respoiislbilltles are
deny a student the stipend ex~ed. It is
.sessions; grading papers or laboratory
determined
by the project director but
. . . . . . Appc' 1 .....
~
recommended that the department or
notebooks . Senlo.r, experienced
the assitlned cluties should not exc&gt;eed a
4) Masters andldates are eligible to
pr_ogram chalrma!l or director. of
graduate students may !&gt;ave essentially
proratea
(by
stipend) fraction or multiple
griduate studies make dear the dereceive no more than two 121 years apfull responsibility for a course or section,
of the ieamlng assisuntworld~. (Note
partmental policies with ;espect to stu. induding tlie submlssll!n. of final..grades.
J&gt;&lt;&gt;lntment as assistants or fellows.
that this title is a profeoolonal nonOoctonol candidates are' eligible to. redent aSsistant assisnments; and make
While we 'have n6 separate tide for'SUch
teaching stall position title for positions
each individual assignment dear to the
ceive no more than four (4) years apstudents, their appointment to this level- ·
funded throush the ~ llplnllns
student. This offiCer is responsible: 1) for
pointment .. assistants
leliows. The
of responsibility Jiould be.IIOiellln theirbudtjet of. the 1:/nlversity; l!mlyate
seeing ·that the assignment is consistent
four year li~it indu.des any ~sslst­
dossiers as evide~ of fht, c:Onfldence
students whO are to be funded 1rOili this
with appropriate guidelines, ~lly
antships.-ld While the student was a
we have placed In them. Clearly, and in
source
for 15Sisnment to research duties
. that .tlie asslgn!."""t be consistent with
conformity with the .resolution. of the
candidate for the Master's degree.
should be classified-as sroduate
the ~tuilent's acade'!'ic goak and; inSUNY Senate'Of February 1972. such apAgain, this regulation is comlstent with
.assistants.)
.dudlng that teaching assistants hive
the Intent of the support prosram: that
pointments "-ld not be llshdy made,
teac;hlnJ assignments, and 2) for reviewand 1M depart"!"nt may not relieve Itself
it enable academically meritorious
ing i&gt;ertormance with eac;h student at 1M
of 11ltimate responsibility for 'die course
students the opportunity '!&gt; complete .
end of each semester and noting the
graduate studies as expeditiously as
•C!l"tent and tead&gt;ing performance in
~slated
results of the review on the assignment
possible. Moreover, the time limits are
these cases, since the students are still in- .
Dr. Roy Schafer of Vale University will
form. (Supervising faculty comments and
normally consistent with the academic
terns at this stage. Teachlns aslstantshlp
speak · on "Problems of Sex-Role
teaching ev*luatlon reports are afn!)f1g
responsibilities· entail opproxlrr.ately 1S
requirements of ~th degrees.
StereotYpes"
Friday, March 7, 2 p.m.,
to 20 hours per week.
·
the likely bases for this review. Progress
Appointments beyond the time limits
Room C-26, 4230 Ridge lea.
of the student in research and/or
may be made either in teaching positions
Gradule AsdoiMt. This title Is a nonteaching capability are essential ator research positlorts, but not in the stuinstructional one, and penons appointed
Dr. Schafer, a professor of psychology
tributes.) The continuation of the student category. That is, teaching apand psychiatry at the Vale School of
to such a position ..,..y be assfinecl dulles
dentin i1is assistantship position depends
pointments beyond these time limits
In support of the department's or "In inMedidne, is known for his contributions
should be in a qualified title (lecturer); - on his satisfactory prosress and _success
to pSychoanalytic theory and diaRnostic
dividual faculty member's teaching or
in carrying out the assignment, and his
testing.
research aPP,Ointments beyond these
research activities. These dulles would

the State of New .Yo!k, Every graduate .
studerit '3PPQinted to an assistantship
must be in goOd standing in a degree
program and maintain registration concurrent with the appointmen!.
2) A student should receive no more
than one appointment, or a combination
of partial appointments ~ich do not exceed the state limit, currently ser at $3,905 and 0.25 FTE for the academic year.
Summer appointments should be at a
proportional rate; i.e., not more than
$390.50/month lor a total of 0.25 FTE ap- pointment. Should projects with outside
support wish to employ persons as
technidans or researchers at a sreater
rate of compensation during the
. summer, these persons may not be aP'"
pointed as Graduate · Assistants nor
treated as students for .purposes of tuition wajver or fringe benefhs. • ,
3) Un~. penon~~e•on fuH"or. halftime appointments are not eligible to
receive graduate fellowships or assistantships. This is comlstent with item fl,
as :owell as the intent of the srad"llte stu-_
dent support program .•

'

7 -·
·;...;·- ·..;..

~~IS·..;..
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names

or

Sex stereotypes

�- .~~

StUdents
pB . _
nnn budg t
1~
e
$f)')')
.or athletics
'
~

...__ &lt;h ....._ Assembly has ap~roved a
'"" ... ~.1
1975-76 athletic budget equa ling the
budget for the current fiscal year. The
new budRel will mean an Increase in
allocations for some parts of the program
and decreases for others.
The students' approval on February 26
of 5222,59!!. i_n expenditures for all intercollegiate ; club, intromural and
recrealional progroms, followed an
earlier deodlock by the Assembly· over
the late of six minor sports: track and
fiekl,cross--country1 golf, swimming, fen cing and tennis. Under the earlier
proposal these would have bee_n
eliminated with none of last year's $28,792 appropriation being continued.
Under the propos~! approved on the
26th, the students will provide $29,900 in
"operational" moriey to be spent in a
monner to be determined by the Athletic
Defjrtment. Some $9,500 of this total
wil be used to pay a deficit and the
remainder, $20,400, will probably be
used to fund the six minor sports,
representing a reduction of $8,392. The
Athletic Department .must get Student
Assembly approval for planned use of
the$20,400.
The five major sports, baseball, basketball, hockey, soccer, and wrestling, will
receive a total of $94,763, including $9,000 in anticipated income from tickets
and guarantees. last year, S12,600was es·
ti mated as the income from these
sources, with the remainder coming
from student fee money. The new
budget, thus, repn!sents a S3,600 increase in student expenditures for · the ·
major sports.
The administration and promotion and
publicity budgets for the inrercollegiate
programs were slashed from $33,398 to
$16,761 ~ But · women's intercollegiate
sports will receive $23,173, compared to
$17,3.50 last year; and the total to be
4if£LL~~~~~:"U~cr~:~a~$
-.. $67,000.
;.,.new•budget cat~ary for On·carrlpi.Js..
publicity was also funded at S1,761 .
T':le student budget stipulates that
funher~ncome, mostly from athletic fees .
paid by students who are not undergraduates, will be spent according 10 a
formula to be agreed upon jointly by the
Athletic Department and the Student
Association.
The entire student athletic budget of
S222,S99 is drawn from mandatory student fees paid by all day school undergraduates. Two weeks ago, the un·
dergraduate studenJ body voted to retain the mandatory feesrwhich also sup·
port a wide range of other srudent activities.

'i

=

:£::

help

i

Rew&amp;ed ~SY,Stemrn--~.- - - ,,.,._,_cal.
cussed which would reduce from 24:II

'
steps

•. ~

associated follow-up
comtlt!rte the
second redel(eloped element of the
procedure. .
I •
Demand IIIII ... ~ .__.
~-,-...,.-.

Alter studen~ have completed od·
vance _reglstrotoon, course request
forms woll be processed via computer I~
produce ~ Course Demand Analysos
Report. Thos report, to be forwarded to
the academic departments, will indicate
the number of student requestS for seats
in the various departmentol course sections. During a specified time period, the
departments will be afforded the oppor!unity to make adjustments in course
capacities, the assignment of instructors,
and the number of sections of a given
course which will be offered. According
to Dr. Bailey, this provides a chance for
departments to bring their offerings
more .closely in line with student needs.
.
.
Followtng de.partmental actton on tht:
demand an_alysos data, the cl~ss schedule
w•ll be revtsed. and students course-re9uest forms woll be p~ocessed a second
time to produce their ~ctual 1975 fall
class schedules. On thts ~cond runthrough, check stops !o_r faolure 10 pay
fee~, et~., or .any other Impediments to
registration Will show up.
The schedule information wh ich
results from t his run-through. tN hat
classes a student has been registered for,
which ones were closed, etc.,) will be
computer-printed on NCR forrhs and
mailed to each student by the end of )uly. This, Dr. Bailey says, will, hopefully,
alleviate many of the registration
problems caused by students not picking
up their class schedules or by their trying
to do so en masse on· registration· day.
Specific instruct ions will also be incorporated on the NCR form mailer to those
stud e nf.L wh o h ave re gistration
problems: -t o · avoid · as · many• of ttlese
problems as possible , A &amp; R urges
students to take full advantage of the-opport unity to list alternate Course :se1ec·
t iOO!i at the.timep f a_dv~A.c:e registration.
!.r~ n ~~er-.~ n~....~';!~Q n:'l:i!lg f.r~ s h,f!l e.t~
studehts w'lio part1c1pate m formaf onen·
tat ion programs during the summer will
also be given the opportunity to advance
re gister and should . receive ·Course
schedule information by early August
!depending on the time schedule for
summer orientation).
"On-line" Chanses
Both groups of preregistered students
will have the opportunity, beginning
around the 18th of August and continuing until the end of the month, .to
come into A &amp; R and make necessary
schedule adjustments. At this point,
students will walk up to ~omputer ter·
minals with revised request forms and
will receive an instantaneous response
on whether or not they can get the
desired changes.· However, alternatives
to be proposed to the computer must be
listed on the request form. " We won't be
able to let a student stand there with a
The University Placement and Career
class schedule and try u·nlimited
Guidance Office and the Office of
possibilities untU he arrives at an .accepForeign Stlldent Aff~irs (OFSA) have antable schedule," Dr. Bailey says. This
nounced th~ !&gt;eglnning of a program
"on-line," early change feature is being
desJsned to ajd foreign·students in their
added, he indicates, both to lessen the
search for summer and part-time job opvast number of schedule changes during
portunltles.
the first few doys of the semester and to
fi!1anc:es for the foreign student have
odd an incentive lor students to par·
often been a problem, spokesmen for
ticipate in advance registration.
tbe offices lndlaote, and "given there·
~ who have advance registered
cent economtc situation botH in lhe'U.S.
will also be able to change their
and abroad, additional efforts on behalf
schedules by the "on-line" method durof this r.::t;'~ seem warronted." A
lng the regular faR registrotlon doy (at.
'~=IIUdent
~';::~eui: su": . certain specified hours) and throughout
port lf!emselves through aid other than
the fall dJop and add period.
IJnhenlly.urces (parents, employment
Olhen MIBI Wilt Unllf•
and _..lnsdNtlonahponsors).
Students who do -not pre-register,
however, will face a mGre difficult
A JJIInnlna committee composed of
IIUdlints ancf-..H 1Iom both Un'-sity
prospect. In a mojOr chonge from
Placement and Ol9o his been formed,
previous ~rs, those ,.ho do not par•..and
for employer contact
tidpate ln tile Sllrin1l ..tvance reglstra· •
'·•
lion will be· able to make no
lhe
of foreiSn Student .AffairS.
ar&lt;ansements until the regular fall
requesiS tMI forelp 1tuc1ents who wish ~ registdtlon period -{whlc:to beslns on
10 'lam mOre- ibciut .this program
~ 2 with a day-long -a. and
...... Ia ~ 2111 Townsend Hall
contlriues through 11M! flnlf dMe for lid......_ IIIIi, • q 1).
dlnact-....,lnthe....-,. lbese
- A ..W, of· ·~ student pop1ate&lt;:amen will,_ 10 lip1Jp ·lnltlally
ulldlllt&lt;llllllt 11tt ~ In order to
under the traditional SARA batch
_ . llodl the iillnu and the
procelllna proceclure. but"- may be
~needsof~populatfon.
an lmpnwemeut. A chanp Is belnacfh.

.
students

j.

hours to overnight the "turnar"'!nd" lag
between, the time registration requests
are turned In and the time schedules are
ovailable for student pick-up. If this is accomplished, a student who submits
reglstrolion request forms on Monday,
could then pick up his or her schedule
on Tuesday, rother than waiting until
Wednesday as Is now the case.

Speaker probes
&amp;nkbetween
diet and aging

While little Is known about the effect of
diet on aging, there are hin~ corning
from studies with experimental animals
and man, according to Dr. Robert
McGandy of Harvard who pre$!!nled the
filth in a series of Tuesday noon nutrition
S~bseq~e~t drodo anc;l add~, for _ Ia!~
lectures sponsored by the Department of
regostrants !"'II~ _one voa the . o~-hne
Biochemistry.
.
system whoch, onodentally, woll onstanStudies point to some reversible forces
!•neous_l,y reflect drops whoch open seats
in aging, he said. " We know, for inon prevoously. lolled classes. Thus, a stu·
stance, that the life expectancy for those
dent at ~ermona l A who wants .• closed
living in the city drops five years," the
class "Yh•ch. a student at Terminal 8 15
Harvard School of Public Health
~roppong ~oil be able 10 grab the opennutritionist pointed out. For those who
never marry or are divorced or widowed,
ong om~~oately.
. .
.
there is a similar live-year drop. Obesity
Th_e rev1sed system wtll also make It
possoble for faculty . members to . have
can lop off four to 15 years, as a!!ested to
· more accurate class l1sts from the f~rst of
by cardiovascular deaths, he said. And if
the semester, A &amp; R says.
you smoke a pack O{. two of cigarettes
The -revamped registration system was
daily, you may lose another seven to·12
a cooperative effort among A &amp; R Direcyears of your lifespan. The largest drop,
tor Dremuk, AssOciate Director Bailey,
that of 15 years, comes as a result of
Canale, and the Adm inistrative Com·
strokes or heart attacks among those
puling arm of University Computing Serwith the highest blood lipid or
vices with input and suggestions from
cholesterol levels, Dr. McGandy said.
tbe Registration and Student Records
Or! the other hand, if -you are female,
Student Advisory Committee, made up
you will live three years longer than a
of representatives from the Divisions of
male, he indicated. And if you are an
Undergraduate Education, Gfaduate and
offspring of parents who live to 90 or
Professional Education and Continu ing
more. you will gain seven to eight years
Education-MFC.
in life expectancy.
Much of what we know about nutri·
ti on and lifespan has come from small
laboratory an imal 5!udies, Dr. McGandy
(frnm ~Rf" 1. rol . .f}
said. If a laboratory rat is led one half of
credit hour should represent one contact
its usual food intake, it will still achieve
hour and that U/ B's present system un95 per cent of its ske letal dimensions.
justifiabl y inflates credit hours.
And freeof all body fat , " it will increase
As Dr. So mit added, the keepers of the
its lifespan an _average threefold," he
· budget feel that "a magic wari4 was wavsaid. But there is little evidence to suped and three credit hours became four
port the .notion th at an obese person
credit hours." Ri ght or wrong, they are in
a posiJ io~n to .make , t~eir disquiet felt . . who loses weight and st~ys thin has a
more' tavtirable'iioortality iate. ·. ·
'·
Hard evidence that courses were enrich·
Dr. McGandy believes that cancer,
ed whe n the four·hour course became
tumo ~ of t ~ e lung, bowel,
particularly
!~~~?~.~ h;aJ ~;ry d!ffic~ l! t~ obt~i_n, ~e
and .bi'east, ·mify 'll~ · ll n ~ed to' q iet 'os is
Senator Eliza~th' Kenh~}t {Ame rican ·· true fo r- cardiovascular dtsiase"."'"WHile..... ·
cancer
of the -colon is more and rriore
Srud ies) coun te red that the matter
rept..Sents • split lletween" fai::Uiiy'"and - . conim"ori in this... COU ntrY today, it is
almost never seen in developing counadm inistration. "I hear slander against
tries. And when Orientals move to our
fac ult y" wh e n the administra tion
West Coast or to Hawaii and adopt a
suggests that faculty are routinely failing
more Western lifestyle and diet, their risk
to provide an educational experience
of this disease increases."'The same,· he
commensurate with the credit hours
said, holds true for breast cancer. "This
awarded, Dr. Kennedy said.
hormone-related tumor may be suscepSenator Harold Segal (Cell and
tible to d ietary intake."
Molecula r Biology) reminded the
A study of middle class Americans,
Senators that the Faculty of Natural
those with resources and a knowledge of
Sciences and Mathematics had expressed
good
dietary habits, shows ~ nutrition
dissatisfaction with the Barber Plap on
problems associated with aging, Dr.
academic grounds. Senator jonathan
McGandy wid. "All we know about this
Reichert (Physics) suggested that
group is · that calories are obesitydifferential standards may be needed inrelated."
stead of a University-wide plan.
·
. The real problems of diet and aging are
The Senators were urged to do their
S()Cio.economic - money, isolation, and
homework on the ma!!er before debate
the inabiJhy to shop right, Dr. McConcontinues at next month's meeting.
dy contended. Changes of taste or smell,
In other business, the Senate heard a
loose finlna dentures, etc., have nothing
report on the EOP Program from its
to do with it... Because Iron intake in this
director -Dr. Edward Jenkins. Dr. Jenkins
country Is as low as anywhere in the
· asked the Senate's support in finding
world,
and anemia· or some ~ form of it is
some way to change the existing State ·
so prevalent. he feels that "we need to
guidelines tliat exclude from the
can!fully
pick our foock to gel sufficient
program poor but able students (under
vitamin$ and to fortify the American diet
' current" guidelines only educationally as
through Iron intake." ·
well as ecOnomically disadvantaged
students are accepted). Such students .
would be positive models for their peers
and might" improve the Image of the
· On-Campus houslnaiCClOitlltiOdat
program, Jenkins said.
will be available for unmarried-sracfuate
Reporting lor the President, who is
students for the 1975-76 academic year,
vacationing, Dr: Somit revealed that Sprt he University _Houslns Office aning enrollment increased over last Spr·
nounced in a memorondum drculoted
ing. Freshman applications are up 5 per
this week.
cent and applications by students
Mocdonald Hall on the Main Street
wishing to transfer to U/11 are up almost ·
Car:npus and a section of a hall· In the
10 per cent over last year.
Ellico!! Complex at Amherst will be used
The prOposed slash in the librories'
exclusively for graduate, professional
budget was based on erroneous inlofma·
and "serious-minded students" and are
lion and has -been protested. There is at
"intended ~ have·a study atmosphere,"
least a chance that the reduaion will be
the Housing Office memo explained.
' reconsidered, Dr. Sornh Aid.
Groduate students may apply for the
While the State-wide job freeze con- . groduate residence Centers by wrltlna to
tinues, the campus has been authorized
the Housing Office, located In the baseto make Offers to groduate assistants up
ment of Goodyear Hall. The appropriate
to 75 per cent of the open poshlons. 0111
appllaotlon forms will bti sent to them.
has also been authorized to approve es" While we are still unable to IC!t'Otnsential stall appointments, e.g., six or
modate I]IUrled students on campus,"
. seven key faculty appointments, the ICIthe memo said, "the Off-Campus HoUsmin~tor said. He cautioned, ~.
lna Office, located on the first floor of
that these new appointments could
Coocllear Han, will provide Information
mean painful slashes !elsewhere If the
regarding available housing In the
budpt must be reduced funher.
University area.''

~e------------

.

Grad sludent hcuing

�'Exceptional' children

...

need special dental care
Most dentis!s face the challenge of
teaching patients to fearlessly accept
dentistry.
·
But teaching youngsters that same
acceptance when they are blind, deaf,
retarded, or otherwise 11 exceptional"
requires skillful adaptation of communications to fit each child.
·
Dr. Robert L. Rosenthal, clinical assistant professor of pedodontics (children's
dentistry), admits that many dentists
don' t work with exceptional youngsters
because of the time and patience involved.
" More time must be given each case,"
he says, "just to establish effective communications so the child will feel secure

enough to coooerate with the dentists."
Some exceptional
children · are
patients of the U/B Pedodontics
Clinic, but more are • seen at the
Children's Hospital Dental Clinic
through t~e Rehabilitation Center there.
"At the U/8 Clinic, we see a crosssection of children - and only a small
percentage fit into the 'exceptional'
category. At the ~ehabilitation Center,
however, most have more severe

medical and psychological problems,"
Dr. R&lt;&gt;senthal explains.
To a deaf child, the noise of the drill is
unheard. But to his childish eyes, the
equipment he sees may appear frightening and other-worldly. To the blind, the
noise made by unseen machines may be
frightening. And to the retarded, whose
language development may be limited,
the strange sights and sounds are often
unsettling.
Uslns ihe Most Stronify DeYeloped
Sense
At the Children's Ho~pital Dental
Clinic where D_r. RosenthaL teaches
postgraduate U/B students who will be
pedodontists, the stress is on how to use
to advantage eaJ;h·.child's !)lOSt strongly
devel~ 5!!nse.
•
•. ..
''The deaf can put their hands on my
chest and feel vibrations as 1· hum or
sing," he says. With the blind, he may
guide tiny,.hands over equipment so they

" see" what's making the noise.
Although some dentists feel it's easier
to put exceptional children under a
general anesthetic, Dr. Rosenthal
believes most of these youngsters can
have their dental work completed while
awake. " Only in rare cases or in those in
which extensive or potentially traumatic
work must be done do I li~e to have the
children asleep," he says.
Even in most ~ cerebral palsy ca!·es,
where tremors prevent those affected
from sitting still, pre-dental medication
can control the condition so the child
can be awak e· for routine dental work,
Dr. Rosenthal adds.
Oral Hyslene O•erloolced
He believes that all too often parents
o verlook oral h yg iene in these
youngsters because more ob vious
medical problems take immediate priority. " And who can blame them," he asks,
" when the child's major health problem
requires a great deal of care and money.
They have enough to cope with without
getting around to worrying about dental
disease prevention ."
But by making the parents aware of
oral hygiene and taking time to communicate it to the children, the dentist
can help ward off more extensive dental
problems later, Dr. Rosenthal feels.
Dr. Rosenthal and the students also
perform procedures on children who
have other medical conditions, such as
hemophiliacs (" free bleeders" ! and
diabetics. In both conditions, teeth extradion must be don e with extra precaution.
And some children who are e xceptional have dental problems connected
with their. medi&lt;al problems - such as
extra or missing ~h which must be
attended to.
"Certainly it requires more patience to
work with exceptional children, but it's a
great feeling to know you've succeeded
in · building th~ir. confide11ce while
rendering your service," Dr. Rosenthal
says.

Student award nomin~ sought
The U/8 Community Advisory Coundl is sponsoring awards to five
full-time University undergraduate students who have made an outstan·
ding contribution to the Western New York Community in the past year.
Each recipient will receive a certificate of appreciation ·and a check
for $25. In oddition; a contribution of $25 on behalf of eacb recipient will
be given to the sociolagency of his/her choice.
A panel representing students, University staff and community people will judge the nominees. The awards will be made on Thursday,May 1,
at a luncheon reception in the Marine Midland Center dining room
(downtown) where participants will be guests of Marine Midland Bank·
Western. ·
Nomination forms must be returned by April4, 1975.
Sludent/Community A words
Nomination Form-for awards to .!JIB full time undergraduate students
..

r

·

who have made outstanding contributions to the
Wes~ern New York community.

Na~ofNominee .:......•-.. . . ..... . ......•.......... . ... ·. . ... . .... . . .... .
Address .......... . .. . .......... . Phone
1. What is the nature of the contribution?
I

2.

How is this-person involved!

3. Why in your judgment is this involvement and/orrontribution important?

4. Approximately h&lt;&gt;w many h~rs per week·durihg the current academic-year
has this person contributed!
·
·
,
·.
Your Name ........ ••... . .. . ..•.. Phone

.

Address .. . . .... .... ..-.. .. -.- --- -- -.----.-. -. . :- .. ----- . -- --- - ---- -- -- ---.
Return to: Sludentlcommunity Awards
Community Advisory Council

, ....,.
....
ittluffalo,
SUNY

By: Aprtl4, 1975
L

Main Street, Buffalo 14214

7

Dr. Good stud)'ing ways
to increase oil yields
Professor R. J. Good, Department of
Chemical Engineering, has received a
grant of S89,500 for two yea,., starting
June 1, for a fundamental study of how
ultra-low surface tension between oil
and water
be achieved, in the waterflooding method of recoverin'g .oil.
In ordinary pradice, an oil well is
allowed to flow under its own pressure as
long as the pressure in the reservoir lasts,
Dr. Good points out. Then it is pumped,
until pumping ceases to be effective. At
this point, a large fraction of the original
oil -of the order of 70 per cent- is still
in the reservoir. About 30 years ago, a

can

Paris pr:oject
director needed .
Faculty members are invited to apply
for the position of research advisor of
SUNY AB's Graduate Research Program
in Paris for 1975-76. The Program, now in
its fifth year, is being directed in 1974-75
by Professor Thomas Kavanagh of the
Department of French and the Program
in Comparative literature. The assignment abroad will cover the fall term,
1975, or the spriAg semester, 1976.
The research advisor is expected to :
1. Plan and coordinate seminars, sym·
posia and individual tutorial
arrangements with intellectual leaders,
critics, and authors of interest to the participating Ph.D. candidates. Some of the
academic ad ivities may be organized on
the basis of cooperation and reciprocal
exchange with other American universities sponsoring comparable programs
of study (e.g. Johns Hopkins, Stanford,
N.Y.U.).
.
2. -Advise participating doctoral candidates who have completed theirformal
course work and are engaged in preparing their ~ pre lim inary examinations or
d issertations; help ..them- to. register for
courses they may wish to audit and take
(e.g. at the f~ol~ f'r~t(qu_e . d~s ~H~u!e~
Etudes, the Ecole Normale Superieure,
the various Universities of Paris) and to
choose the most appropriate tutor from
among Frericli Colle'agues; administer
preliminary e xaminations and report
back to the campus.
.
3. Manage the rather modest budget
of the Program which, aside from the
seminars, symposia and tutor ials,
provides for a number of other individual academic expenses (e.g. univer-_
sity registration fees, photocopying, office supplies).
.
Candidates must be full-time faculty
members with exper!ence teachi ng and
advising graduate students in Ph.D.-level
research within the general area of the
humanities and social sciences. More
· specifically, candidates will be expected
to possess: (11an extensive knowledge of
the French language and civilization and
of contemporary European thought; (2)
familiarity with Paris and France, in·.
duding acquaintance and good relations
w!th intellectuals, aCademics and authors
in the French capital; (3) ability to odvise.
doctoral candidates engaged in research
in a var·i ety of areas, to organize
seminars, symposia and tutorials, and to
handle basic accounting ond the supervision of a modest budget.
The research odvispilor the Program '
remains on the regular SUNY payroll
with no difference in fringe benefits, etc.
. His or her personal tronsportation is paid
from his or her home to Paris ond back,
(from Buffolo to New York City,
economy class; from New Vorl&lt; to Paris
and back, on the basis of- the lowest·
- possible fore). There is a modest account
for trovej,Riated to Protvain business,
office S\!l&gt;plles, and equipment; It may
olso 1ii&gt; possible to hlte a part-time
· secretory.
Applications for the posliion are to be
submitted to the Dlrec:tor ol Oweneas
-Academic f'roBrlms, 1117 Townsend Hall,

SUNYAB,byAprll1,1975.
.
Anappllc:ldon mnslllsolaleaerollnleni "8CICIIOII*Iied.by • vita. 1he faalllywlde --commlttee f« the Graduate
lteleMdl Prailram Ill hrli will _ ,
~-appolntthe-...and

-lfiii'OPd*applbnt.

technique known as "waterflooding"
was developed, in which wells are drilled
close to the producing well, and water is
pumped down. This has two effects. it
restores the pressure on .the oil, and the
water displaces the oil from the porous
rock. This frees the oil from attachment
to the rock, and a llows it to flow to the
producing well. But even this is onlY
partly effective; the process loses its
usefulness when there is still some 30 or
40 per cent of the original oil left.
Research ·at Mobil Oil Co ., at
Marathon Oil Co., and other petroleum
laboratories has recently shown that
most of this last oil can be removed from
the reservoirs if a special detergent is
added to the water. To have used this
method only two or three years ago
would have been economically
pointless, because the detergent would
have cost more than the oil that was
recovered, at $2 .~0 a barrel. But with oil
at $7 a barrel, Dr. GO&lt;&gt;d says, it should be
possible to find a detergent that is chea p
enough to make the process
economically advantageous. And it
could make several million barrels of oil
a day available from fields that are now
regarded as played out.
·
A key step in this project has been ttie
discovery that certain biproducts of the
purification of lubricating oil with sulfuric acid were effedive for certain oil
rese rvoirs. They reduce the surface tension to less than a hundred thousandth
of the value that is found for pure water
with the oil. This exceedingly low surface
. tension appears to be essential for the
success of the process, Dr. Good points
out.
The oil company engineers now know

that the process works, but they do no_!
know why this detergent lowers the surface Jension so much, nor whether they
can expect the same dereflrent -to wbtic
in other fields - or even if it can be ex·
pected to continue to ~work · in--. the -oil
fields where it has been effective so far.
Answers to such questions can come
only through basic research, Dr. Good . - says. He will address himself to these
basic questions, by measuring the surface tension between various kinds of oil
and water containing t.hese detergents at
various concentrations. With support
from the National Science Foundation,
he has built aQ apparatus for doing this at
high pressures which will approach the
pressure· in an oil field. In addition, he
has developed a the&lt;&gt;ry of surface tensiOn for these systems, which, if confirmed, will make it possible to predict
whiCh detergents will be effective.

Calendar---({mmtuJ:I"It.NII. 4t

OffiN". Thr. \ervice runs through April 11,
Mnnday and Wednesdoy from 2-5 p.m. C.ll
831 -3828 for ~n ~ppointmenl.

INTERVIEWS

ON--CAWUS--

Thc "all of the Univenity l'laqoment ·and
C.r..,.- Guidance Olllce welcomes all SIUdents
in t~ University community and alumni to

r~kc (Nrt in various ~offered
Yf"~r. The on-a
PI'O"
R&lt;am, runnin8 throush AprH , ollen
op-

' this

portunity for individual Interviews with
educ-ation, business. indullrial and sov..
ern~ral representatives. C.ndklates from
oil dep-ee levelS, who completed their coune
work iii J~nuary or expect to In May 1975. are
invited to take put in the lnterviewtna.
Resistrotlon fonns are available in Hayes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The followlns _.aes will
be intemewins this weelt:
. THURSDAY - 6: Union Cart.1c1e Corp.;
N.Y.S. Depart_,! of Taxation and Finan&lt;le.
FRIDAY - 7: llunouaf&gt;o Welcome Co.;
~ 5leel Co. Qunio&lt;s only-......._
employmen!l.
TUBDAY-11; XeroxCorp. _,
WEDNESOAY -19: Dra¥0 Corp.
Tltl.-sDAY- :10: Teuca, Inc.; Aetna Life
and c..ualty.

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

TUBDAY - 11: Greece C-.1 Sdloat;
• Oneida City Sdloat DiltriCI (Check ...,.,_,.
office for clecallsl.

�••
THURSDAY-6
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PBJIAllliCTEACHINC DAYt
Ped~tric Alfe&lt;ry will be discussed by • pone I

of physicians. E. J, Meyer Memorial Hospital,
p

462Grider St., 8:15 a.m .-5 p.m. For registration
or information, caii831-SS26:
Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics,
School of Medidne.
MECHANJtAt. ENGIN&amp;IIINC DfPARTMENT
SIMINARI
Physial Modeling of Atmospheric Boundary layers with Applications to Wind
Engineering. Jack E. Cermak, Colorado State
University. 112 Parker; coffee at 3, lecture at ·
3:15p.m.
GEOGRAPHY COUOQUIUMf
Crime in Buffalo, Dr. Perry Hanson, assistant
professor of geography; Carl Reed, Thomas
Faua, and Robert Ford. Rm·. 40, 4ll4 Ridge
l ea, 3:30p.m.
·
MATHfMAn&lt;:S COUOQUIUMf
What Markov Chains Can Be Co ntinued
BackWards in Time, Professor Frank Spitze r,
Cornell University. Rm. 38, 4246 Ridge l e a;
coffee at 3:30, lecture at 4 p.m.
I'HYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Meanings of Time in Ph ys ics and
Philo~ph y. Dr. M. Sachs, UIB Departme nt of
Ph ysics. 111 Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.

CHEMISTRY FOSTBt COllOQUIUM SERIES#
Some.- Recent Developments in th e Quan·
tum Mechan ical Study of Che mical Read ions,
. Dr. Robert E. Wya«, University o f Tc)(as at
Austin. 70 Acheson, 4 p .m.; coffee at 3:45 in SO
AcOeson.
CR1 AND MOLECUlAR IIOI.OGY
SEMINARI
Liver Ly.«&gt;spmal Glyco5idases and Re lclfed
Enzyme.s, Dr. Oscar Touster, professor and
chairman, Department of Molecular Biology,
Vanderbilt ~niversity . 134 Cary Hall (Health
Scie nces); coffee at 4, 1ecture at 4:15p.m.

missioner, Department of fnvironmental
Quality. COmmunication. Bldg. - Eilst, Buffalo

COUOQUIUMf
Problems of Se•-Ro/e Stereotypes, Dr. Roy
Sch&lt;~fer , Yale University. Rm. C-26, 4230 Ridge
lea, 2p.m.
Sponsored by the Psychology Depanment.

"'
WEDNESDAY-12

-

Ye~rs.

Paul

P~uerello,

Courier-Express photognpher . 111

ltoch?etter,7:30p.m.
CON1lNUING MEDICAl EDUCATION

CAIIDIAC CUNICt
This wries of dinia in l"'ySiai educorion of
rho cordiac potion! ond oirhythmio workshops
are Kheduled ex:h Thunday f!ftnins through
Moy e. The topic of tonillhrs dinic is Auscu/totlon. Forbor (C.pon) Hol1Bosemont, Room G-.
22, 7:l0-9:l0 p.m. For information ones:istrarion,
die School of Medicine, 831:5526. .
s,.on-ed by die School of Mediclno.

aft

_..,_.

Ufl WOIIIISIIOP"
Antlqulnr ond Collecllng, Foculry Club Red
._.., 7:30-9:30 p.m. R01islor 223 Nonon,
831-463011.
.
CiliA1M AISOCIAliS IIKITA1°

Judith Alattfn., an e5ectronlcist and a new
member of die U/11 Center of die Creothe
l'etfonnlns Ms. performs of .....
own WOib. llllnl llodtol HoD, 8 p.m. No odmloslon ctwp.
ond

FRtDAY-7

FILM•
Ivan the Terrible, Part 1 (Eisenste in). 147
Diefe ndo rf, 7 p.m. No admissio n c:harge .
Presented hy the Regional Film. Project .

HILLEL HOUSE"
" Drop ~ ln ;, n igh1. 40 Cape.n Blvd., 7·11 p.m .
CONTINUING MWICAL EDUCATION
CARDIAC CliNIQ
This se ri ~ o f clinics in p hysica l educatio n of
rhf' cardiac patie rlt a nd arrhyt hmia workshops
arr scheduled each Thursday evenin g through
M ay 8. The topic o f to ni ght 's clinic is Precortlial Pul ~a liom. Farber {Cape n) Hall Baseme nt ,
Room G · 22. 7 :30-9:30 p.m. Fo r informat ion or
rrgio;t ration, ca ll the Sch ~ l o f Medicine , 8315526.
Spon&lt;;;ored by the School of Medicine .

I'HYSIOI.OGY DfPARTMENT SEMINARf
1-.ge-Related Alteratio n of . Enz yme5, Dr.
Morton Ro thste in , UI B De partment of
Biology. 108 She rman,"' p.m .
HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT
SEMINARI
Thr HM piral Out Parieni Depart ll)ent ,.,o w C1n II SurvivP in th e Future! Rq bert
Dkkma n, M.D .• Da niel Ka pl an , M .B.A .•
Kathleen Glose, R.N. 307 Crosby, 4-5:30 p.m.
CACFILM••
Ro m f'O and }ulirt. 140 Fa rber (Ca pe n), 7 :30
;met 10 p .m . Arlmi~s io n : Sl.
IRCFILM ..
S.wr thr n~: C"r. Times and locations are
po&lt;itr ci onC" week in advance of the film on
residence hall bulletin boa rds. IRC fee -payers
are admitted free.

"SATURDAY-S

in the t.asr Flhy

THURSDAY-13

WA TfR RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINARt
CnntainmP.nt anrl Colled io n Techniques
for Cil Srill( nn the O cean Surface, James E.
Glau/y, U/ 8 Civil Engi neering Depar1men1.
142 Parke r; m ffee at 3:50 p.m .• foll owed by
thf' lcnure .

OPEN EDUCATION CONFERENCE#
C:onrrm for Childre n M eans Change is the
ririe o f thi,. two-day con~ ren ce. Tcxby is the
fint1l d.1y, and thr program includes a ke ynote
;tddrr..'i hy Dr. tillian We ber, director of 1he
Work&lt;iho p Crntrr for Open Education, City
Co!IC"J.:r of Ne w York. who will speak from 10.
11 :30 ,1 .m . Disrussion and Presentations will
follow in thr aftrrnoon . for registration inform.ltion, rail Dr. Rk.hard Collie r, director of
the Buffalo State College learning Labor.Uory,
662-5022. The registration deadline is March 6.

~E~I Newspoper Photography

I'HYSIOI.OGY VAIQ CLUI SEMINARt
Con sciou s' Dogs, Or. D. 8 . Jenn ings,
Queen's Unive rsity, Kingston, Ontario. 108
She rman, "4:30p.m.

MEDIONAL CHEMISTRY SEMINARt
Crown Ethers and Phase Tran5fer Caraly5is,
Professor H. DuPont Durst, U/ B Departme nt
of Che mistry. 245 Cary Hall (Health Scie nces),
2 p .m.

partment of Pharnuce utics. D 170 Bell fa·
cility,4p.m.

CONRRENaON CHilP
Scheduled ~kes ~re Orlando Letelier,
-former ChiJe~n -l mOOsador to the U.S. and
minister o,_.. ~ense &lt;~nd interior in the last
yen of the Allende government, Edward
Boorstein. who served in the Ministry of the
Economy in Cuba, and Steve Volle, &lt;1 represenhtive from NACLA. Fillmore Rm., No~on
Union, 7:30p.m.

State Collego, 1300 Elmwood, 7:30p.m.

ELK1111CAl ENGINEHINC ~ARTMENT
DIST1NCUISH&amp;) LfCTURE SERII5f
The Once and Future · Programmin g
l.dnguage, Dr. Anthony Rals:lon, professor and
cha irman, U/8 Department of Computer
Scie nce. 104 Parker, 2 p .m .

Degradation Kinetics of Ampicillin in the
Solid State, Albert lo, Ph.D. candidate, De·

~rvice Employees Association,
Inc., will hold its quarterly membersh ip
meeting at the Cavalier Restaurant, . 1139
Niagara Falk Blvd., 5:30·p.m. A smorgasbord
dinner is included in the ticke t price of S3:
RLMS•
Menallerie and Plum Puddin~ (Yellow Ball
Workshop). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admis·
sion charge.
.. Presented by the Regional Film Project.

March 6,1975

i

Dr. Paul O 'Brien,
research chemist, National Eye Institute, NIH,
Bethesdo, Morylond. 108 Shermon, 1 p.m.

Bovine Rhodopsin in vitro,

I'HARMACRJTICS SEMINARI

-t

~ I

·i

FILM•

Ivan the Terrible, Part 2 (Eisenste in). 147
DiefE""ndo rf, 7 p .m . No admission c harge .
Pre&lt;iented by the Regio nal Film Project.

UUAI FRENCH ALM SERifS""
TP(Ia mP.nl o f O rphe us (Cocte au) . 146
Diefendorf, 7 p .m . No admission charge.
IFA RK:ITAL •
Paul Schlo«man offe rs an oboe and Engl ish
horn rf'ri tal. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No ad ·

missio n charge.
COMPUTING SERVICES SEMINARf
SNOBOL 4 for the Novice, lloyd Uhler. Rm.
12, 4238 Ridg~ lea, 7-9 P.m.
·

NUTRITION AND MAN UCTUitf SERIESI
Rf"t"ommended Dietary Allowances, Stanley
Gf' rshoff, Ph .D. G-22 Farber {Capen), 12 noon.
Bring your lunch.
PrPsented by the U/ B Department of
Biochemistry and lhe Department of Nutrition
of the Harvard School of Public Health.
CML ENGlNHIIING LECTURE SERIESI
Df&gt;&lt;;ign of Artificial Lungs, Dr. lyle Mockros,
Northwestern University. 104 hrk~!r, 2 p.m.
URIAN ANALYSIS AND POLICY SIMINARf
Statf' RPRUiation ~of Air Quality: D .E.Q. 8Pthlf'hem Steel Case Sludy/ Dr. Robert Reis,
UIB Facuhy of law and Jurisprudence. 237Crosby, 3-5 p .m.

CACRLM••
Romeo and /uUet~ 140 Fuber (Capen), 7:30
and 10 p .m. Admission : S1 .

COMPIJTlNG SERVICE SIMINARI
Stati'ltical Package for the Social Sdences.
Glrnn MPyPr. The seminar is scheduled for
Tursdays anrl Thursdays, through March 27.
4238 Ridge l ea, Rm: 12, 7-9 p .m. For ihfonna ~
lion. c-all Harvey Axlerod, 831 -1181.

RiM•
An;•bh.av (with English subtitles) . 147
Diefendorf, 8 p . m ~ Admission: S:SO sludents
with ID; S1 .50 general..dmission.
Presenrt"d by the lndi_an Studenu~ Assoda­
tion.

UUAIRtMS••
Fountainhead (Vidor), 7:30 p.m., &lt;~nd Lost
Horizon (~pra}, 9:30p.m. Sy lecture Halt, 170

. SUNDAY-9

MFACC, Ellicon . ~';)..dmission charge.
LfCTURP
•
The President and the Preu, Ron Ziegler.
Clark Gym, 8 p.m. Free to the University comp

AOADCASr
E..&lt;ithrr Swartt intPrviews Buckminster Fuller.
WADV-FM (106.5 mhz.), 10:05 p.m. -

munity; $1 ~enerol public.
Sponsored by the SA Spe&lt;~kers Bureau.

WEDNESDAY-19

RLM•
U Pa.'Osion df' ~an D'Arc (Dreyer). 147
Diofondorl, 7 p.m. No odmloslon chorgo. ·
~by die.Ropon..l Rim Projocr.

CARmi PROGIIAM•
ArP • ThPrP Allv lob&gt;/ Herben Bionsroclc,
u.s. Dtopa rtmf'n"t of Labor, &lt;~nd Douslas
Winokur, district superintendent, NYS

TUESDAY..,-11
~

-axJNIY--:1975·
~

,.,t

COMPUTING SERVICts w.iiNARI
SNOBOL 4lorthe Novice, lloyd Uhler. Rm .
12, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7·9 p .m .
LECTURE•
No tatio nal Syste m s: G. Pol!i. P. Conte and
R. Birdwhisrell, by Paul Bouissac, visiting
professor of French, Blue Room, Faculty Club,
7:30p.m .
·
Presented by the campus Center for Studies
o f Cultu ral Transmission with the Division of
Graduate and Professional Education and the
Department o f Speech Co mmunication .
UUAIFILMS••
Fountainhead (Vidor) . 7:30 p.m., and l ost
Horizo_n (Capra). 9 :30 p.m. 140 Farbe r (Ca·
pen). No admissio n charge.

'CAMPUS SHOWCASE' LECTURE SERifS"
How W e Carry Out Skilled Movements at
Wilt john C. Eccles, distingu ished professor of
physiology, Frank lloyd Wright House, 7:30
p.m.
Dues-paying me mbers o f the U/ 8 Alumni
Association a re admitted free. For furth e r in·
formation. ca ll the Alumni Association, 831·
41 21.

THURSDAY-20
I'HARMACEUTICS SEMINARf
The M etabolism of Dicumarol in the Ral,
Francis l ee, Ph .D. candidate. 244 Cary Hall
(Health Scie nces), 4 p .m .

FILM"
La Marseillaise (Re noir}. 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Regional Film Project.

CONTiNUING MEDICAl mUCATION
.
CARDIAC CUNIQ
- This series of clinics in phYsical education of
the cardiac patient an'd &lt;~rrhythrhia worksliops
are o;cheduled each Thursday evening through.
May 8. The topic of tonight's clinic is Mculfation-The Sl. hber (Copen) Hoil Bosemonl,
Room G-22. 7:]0..9:30 p .m. For information or
registration, call the School of Medidne, 831 -

5526.

TUESDAY-18

mission charge.
HIUR HOUSE•
Morning Sabbath Service at 10 a.m., follow·
rei hy a Kirldush and Torah study session. 40
C:aprn Rlvd.

Nulrifion Mtd . Mentil ~.Dr.
Myton Winnick, lnslllute of Hurnon Nutr~ion.
Columbia Uni~rsity. Kinch Auditorium.
Children's Hospitol, 12:30 p.m.

Dr. l&lt;resimir Krn}evic, McGill University. 128
Farber (Capen),4 p .m .
I'HYSIOI.OGY VAIQ QUI 51M1NAR1
c;ardiogenic Oscillation5 &lt;~nd Gravity, Mr.
David Shindell. 108 Sherman, 4:30p.m.

MONDAY-17
ENGUSH DEPARTMENT RLM SERIES•
I. 'Avr nturra (Aritonio ni). 140 Farber (( apPn l. 3 a nd 9 p.m. No admission c harge.

MEN'S FINONG•
North At~ntic Intercollegiate Fencing
Championships. Clark Hall, 8:45 a.m . No ad-

PBJIA1111CCONIIIIENCfl

wmuladon Around Active NeM Terminals,

Employm~ OHice. Norton Conference
ThNtrt", 2 p.m. ·

' AGING'·IICTUitE SHIES•
AllinR 01nd thr Soc~l Scif'nCeS, Dr. Ethel
Sho~. pr~"""' ol rho Arnerlcon · Go&lt;Ontoio,;k:&lt;~l A~lion. Fillmore Room, Norton
Union, 3 p .m. ·

SOCIETYFOa NEUROSCIINCI51.1CfWft

l.ond the "'-nnlnJ,_ Ted Hullar, com- · · _ f&lt;Jn&lt;tianol Slfl"'llance· of l'oWslum Ac-

..

•

Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

I'HYSICAL-ORGANIC CHEMISTRY LECTUt(
SERIESI
•
Readions in the Macrocyclic Polyamine

Syste m , Dr. Hpward Simmons,_Dupont Central Research . 362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Graduate Sct.ool.
UUAifltM~·
.
Medium Cool (Wexler). Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831· 5117 for . times.
Admission charge.
·

"

EXHIBITS ·

GAUBIY21'ma.T
Rubber Weds by Michool Zwok is mode up
of sculptur..l pieces and h&lt;~ngi_ng works made
from industrial materi&lt;~ls. The exhibit runs
through March 7 in 219 Norton. Hours: Mon.Fri., 11 a.m.-4 p .m.; Mon., Wed., and Thurs., 7·
10 p.m.; Sun., 1· 5 p.m.

I.OCKWOODm.IT
Polish CollOdion, eJ&lt;hibitlon oolied from
the Unhenlry's collection of mote rhon 4.000
• YOiumos of rnotoriol. Fino floor, loclcwood
Me.-;ol Lib&lt;ory. Mondoy-Fridoy, 9 o.m.-5

p.m. Continuins.

· VISUAlAUSOHiim
foces, phcirogrophs by, Dr. Horben Rois- ,
mann, professor of enslneerlns science.
Hoyos Holl lobby, Mondoy-Ffi&lt;!oy, 9 o.m.-5
p.m. throush April n .
Presented by die Office of Culluf!l Affoirs.

NOTICES

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
FEBRUARY 'l7, 1975
.VOL 6, NO. 21,

•

Women on
U/Bfaculty
•
cur
concerns-

Fifty-five of the University's 254 full time women faculty converged in Nor·

ton Saturday morn ing, many'meeting for
the first time, to discuss their shared con·
cerns as members of a predominantly male faculty community ..
The all-mornmg session (coordinated
by the President's Committee on the
Recruitment and Promotion of Women)

opened with a skeletal history of
women's activities on campus, from the
bleak days in 1967 wh.;ri ten people
could not be found to form a local
chapter of NOW.
According to Dr. Daphne Hare, assistant professor of medicine, the changes
since the n have been less than meets the
eye. Vaginas no . longer intimidate the
Student Health Service, she acknowledged, but many cam pus departments have
done littfe or nothing to improve bad
track records in hiring and promoting
women .

(leology entering research 'il~e age'
U/B geoll;&gt;gists are .expecting the
Laboratory (CRREL) in Hanover, New
arrival qf an "ice age" within the ·next
Hampshire, since 1956. He was chief of
few .monthS. But the cl)ange in climat~
the Show and_lee Branc~ of that agency's
will be strictly an academic one as the
Research Division for a number of years.
Department of Geological SCie nces
and was responsible for the scientific
begins to develop a major international
management of 18 professional and
program of glaciologiq~l research .
tech nical researchers concerned with
conducting
basic investigations on the
A refrigerated ice core storage facility,
physical, c hemical and mechanical
a refrigerated research room and a dustproperties
of
all types and fonlls of snow
free chemistry laboratory now being
and ice.
constructed at Ridge lea will, upon completion later this spring, provide the
During this association with CRREl,
Department with a un ique resource for
Dr. Langwa y made more than 20 field
studying the physical and chemical
trips
to ice core drilling operations in
properties of polar ice core samples from
Greenland and Antractica. The presence · Greenland and Antarctica and in 1971
was
honored
by having a geographical
of the samples themselves will establish
feature in Antarctica named Mt.
U/B as a major curator of the frozen
Langway.
record of up to «10,000 years of dimatic,
U.S. Giadologiul Reseorch
atmospheric and geological hiS!ory from
The United States ' program of
the ~h's polar regions.
· glaciological research with which U/B
The facility will be supported by the
National Science foundation's Office of
Polar Programs and will m~ke possible a
prog~arn of 11rodu~te and postdoctoral
studies In (!ladology In · addition- to
promoting expanded research interacfamiliar University names 'and the
tion among Geological Sciences and
names of outstanding literary, human
campus departments such .as physics,
.rigtlts, business and go~ernmental
chemiStry' civil ensineering, geography-::- le~ders associated with the history ol
a!'d the Nuclur Scienc:e and Technology
Buffalo an&lt;l Western New York haunit. Cooperative scientific ven!J!res with
been approved for several moTe ' new
universities and research organizations
b~ildings and e&gt;lterior spaces on th~
in ,this country as well ~ in Europe, - Amherst Campus.
Iapan, Austr~lia, unada ~nd the U.S.S.R.
In ~ctiori yesterday, the SUNY Bo.ard of
~re also being encourqed by. the ·
Trustees endo.rsed these recommenprogram manager of sladology aJ1d add~tiops ofthe UIB Council:
vanced systems of the Office of Polar
1. The buldlna lo ""'- II1Udent acPrograms, Dr. Richard Caln!:ron.
IIYIIIes, lhe rllhilteler and lhealre (aclualy lhe
oflhe ........
The polar Ice
research iaboratory
is being brought to the camptis by Dr . . llpurpme CApen ~· ""'Jr under
Chester C. Langway, Jr., who assumed '
~) . . be .......... Chules '·
the Geological Sciences chairmanship
Ch.arles P. Norton was .the si&gt;lth
for ~ three-)'ftr term on J~nuary 15. A
chancellor of the University of Buffalo;a
speci~lij! in the study of the physiGal.
attor.,ey, and one Of the
distinguished
characteristics and geochemical properfounders of the University's law School.
ties of Ice sheets, Dr. l~ngway had been a
-After serving as UIB vice chancellor for
rese&lt;~rch giaciofogist with the U.S. Army
four years, he was ~ppointed ch~ncellor
· Cold _Region Research and EnglneerinifanCI served in that capapty from 1909 to
1~. He was one of the leaders in the ·
move to acquire tlte County Almshouse
property for the present Main Street
Campus. LJi!on his &lt;~Nth, t!&gt;e Uni-.ity
was the principal beneficiary of his will. The original Norton Hal) (today's

will now become closely associated is
complex, multi -faceted • . and inter::.n·ational in scope, Dr. langwa y reports.
lnvolved in various phases of the project ·
are the Army Cgrps of Engineers, the
Nationa l Science Foundation and
ac;ademic institutions and scientists both
from this country and abroad.
DifficuiLdrilling operatio ns sometimes
conducted in temperatures as low as -4()11
ce nt igrade result in the recovery of long,
cylindrical ice core samples that are ver·
tical profiles of hundreds of centuries'
wonh of glacial deposits. For example, at
a site known as Crete, at the crest of the
Greenland ice sheet, where preliminary
drilling was ca rrie d on last summer, the
ice is 3,000 meters thick and represents
-.bout «10,000 years of build-up. The core
sa mples are logged, wrapped In -plastic
s h~ti ng and packaged in aluminum tub·
(fum f n piiJ.'t' 6, ~nl. 2}

In 1970, Dr. Hare noted, five per cent
of the full professors were female. last
yea r, that statistic was unchanged. By and
large, affirmative action has been at the
lower ranks, particularly at the level of
lect ure r and instructor, non-tenure-track
tit les that nO "red-blooded male"
accepts, sRe said.
Physiology is one of those departmeJltS .
which has hire d women, and rather than
sufferi ng in qUality -as a result, is one of
~th e few U/B' departments to have an inte rnational reputation for excellence,
~he observed. · Cit in&amp; thf! argurlieni. fhalWo'm ell"ha;eto be bener than men to be judged ~s
good (and that this difference typically .
narrows as one a.dvances up the ranks)~
Dr. Hare concl uded, " probably the only ·
way we're goi ng to get anywhere is
through lawsuits."
I
The Femole Professor
" The Female Professor in an All-Male
Environment" was explored by Dr. Barbara Bunker, an assistant professor of
psychology.
.,
Confessing Jhat as a graduate student.~
she, too, generalized about huma
behavior from observation of all-rna~
groups, the applied social psycholog~
discussed recent work on all-male, all-·.
emale, and mixed groups.
All-male groups, she reported, tend to ·
(fum 1o ~tte

z, coi. Jr

·Trustees·name ~or~ ·buildings at j\mherst:·1 ,.-

co..e

_,_._ol ....

...._ ....

tfum 10 (N~ 2, col. 2)

�February 27, 1975

1

Workets to rally
·against inflation
Friday at noon
A rally of "University Workers AgainSt

Inflat ion" is scheduled for noon
tomorrow. (friday, Febn.~ary 28) in the
Fillmore Room of Norton,· under joint

sponsorship of the Graduate Student
Employees Union (GSEU) , United
· University ~rolessions (UUP), and the .
Civil Service Employees Association
ICSEA). _
The program, GSEU spokespu!n say,
will locus on the proposed State budget
and likeiy budget cuts. It represents, they
indicate, ua beginning effort to bring "toiether ·all campus workers on a
common ground." Tlie rally is also an
attempt to make the budget a public
issJJe on campus for the first time, GSEU
sayt.
Attendance is open to all members of

lfrom ()ige ·1. col. iJ

Fillmore Academi•· Collegiate Center)
Harriman) was buih with these fu~ds, in
will be Albert P. Sy Holl.
USf Of NEW NAMES URCID
The
i~
bulldinp
on
the
Moin
Street
accordance with his directions. His law
The conference room ·on the seventh
,tC.mpus ~ prniousfy remmed by .1ction
library was bequeathed · to the Law
floor of John Lord O'Brian. Hall will be
of the Sl.lto Unlwonlly loud of Trustees and
School "and he established a fund lor the
the James McCormick Mitchell
these names ue now effecti¥e: Stodc.ton Kim·
annual awarding of the Chancellor's
ConferenCe Room.
ball Tmwet", formerly the tower Dormhory;
Medal for "dvic patriotism . . and
A.B. lemon (1889-1969) received a
Sidnor Fof\o&lt; HoD, tonfteitr S.muol P•.C.pon .
put;Jiic sert.ice."
degree in pharmacy from U/ B in 19iJ
Hoi; ond Chorlos C.ry ·HaD, lormorly tho
2- The buHclins to house the student
and a doctor of pharmacy degree from
Ho.Jhh Sdoncos lulldlns, An offic:iol papers
goYemment, food service iind other stuand ,..tionory of schools, dopodmonb and
the Boston School of Ph~rmacy in 1916.
dent odiwities (the western laterol wing
units housed in these structures should reflect
He iheQ joined the faculty of the School
of the Capen comple1) will be Mory
these name ch~nses, Uninrsity spokesmen\ • of Pharmacy here and in 1936 became
Ron Uba, higher education organizer for
indic.ate.
BurneH Talbert HaD.
•
dean
of the School, a position which he
the ·New York State Union of Teachers
Mary Burnett Talbert was a black
held unti l 1954. He received the first
(the NEA-AFT State-wide unit with which
woman leader who settled in Buffalo
ma"· of the New York War finance ComSamuel P. Capen Alumni Award in 1950
UUP is affil iated); Dr. Conltantine
after receiving her undergraduate
mittee whkh conducted savings bonds
for his " notable 3nd meritOrious service
Yeracaris, presid~nt . of the Buffalo
degree from Oberlill College in 1894.
_ to the UniVersity at Buffalo," and for becampaig ns during World War 11.
Center Chapter of UUP ; and
Active in church and civic organizations6.
The
bioiOSY
sreenhouse.
attlched
to
ing one of its most devoted alumni.
representatives of CSEA and · GSEU. A
in the community, she ~as: national
the Woher P. Cooke Tower will--be
Albert P. .Sy (1873-1967) was~he first representative of women and/or other .
president of the Fede rated NegrO
the Philip Dorsheimer Labor.Jtory , recipient of a Ph.D. degree at the Univercampus minorities, whom GSEU
' Women's Clubs; associated with the
Creenhouse.
·
sity.
Professor and chairman of the
tharacterizes .as traditionally "being .last
Niagara Movement; a.delegate to an in-.
Philip"Do~sheirner (1797-1668) arrived
Chemistry Department for 23 years and
hired and, thus, first fired," will also be
ternational conference of black women
in
Buffalo
from
Germany
in
1~16.
He
'
o
_Yas
for
25
y.ears a member of theVniversity
on the program to discuss~ffirmative a.cp
· in the ea rly years Of this centu ry;'"'~hCt ·a
ap'pointed u.s: Postmaster for Buffalo by
Co~fl&lt;:il, · ~e .wa~ widely reco~nize9.,f!' r
tioil practices. ·
recipienl'ol,the .NAACP Spingarn Medal.
President
Van
Buren
and
re-appointed
~io
his
cF.einlc31
research. D~. Sy re.tired frOm
An "open-mike" question and
She died in 1923.
that position by President Pol k in 1845. · the faculty in 1952 atthe age of 80_.,~, ·-·•
diSCussiop period will follow. the formal" ,
3_ The· English ond modern lonsu•ges
bater, he was .named :collector of ifuties
);. distinguis/ied law School ·g raduate,
'
Presentations.
bJJildinllt-wlll be named Somuel
for the' Port of Buffalo· by President"linll:-litchell was pr'¥i[d,~'\li'lfr.th~, l'l\llW )'ork
GSEU, which hopes to become· the
unghome'Ciemens Holl.
coin. He also served.. as•New ·York ·State
Sta.te Bar. Association in 1943. Princeton
legally recognized barga_ipioK, unit. lpr _
~~uel ·· Langhorne • C'lerhens (Mark
treasu rer in 1,.659.
University awarded him the LL.D.
State-funded grad student staff members
Twain} was p ne of ·Americ;a's greatest
In an associated action •. the University
honorary degree in 1945. He was:
on campus, contends that all campus
humorists and writers. He is best knoWn
elected to· the IJ/B Council in 1932,
at Buffalo Council ha• approved names
workers and students stand to be ~
for two noVels of boyhood life o n the
for two tnterior. sPaces in Amherst
chosen vice chairman the next year, and
adversely allecied by proposed budget
MisSissippi River in the mid-19t h cenbuildings. The auditorium in the Walter
named t:q3irman in 1937. He served in
cutbacks. " In pface of the fragmented, - tury: Huckle6erry fifjn -ancj Tom Sawyer.
P. Cooke Tower will be the A.B. Lemon
that capacity for eleven . years until his
tra(le uniop approach to Campus issues
He arrived in Buffalo in August of 1869 to
· Auditorium and the large lecture hall in"
death in 1948. Mr. Mitchell made sizable
which is r:eflected in the present
become ed_itor and part owner of the
the Ellicott Comp1ex (170 Millard
fi nancial contributions ~o the University.
bar:gaining unit breakdown," GSEU
BuHalo &amp;press. Clemens spent two years
hopeS to initiate a collective "industrial
in the area before selling his interest in
union" approach to University-wide
. the ne~paper and settling in Connecarom ~ge 1. col. .f) •
·
concerns such as budget.
ticut, where he wrote ~ Connecticut
In the discussion groups that followed,
An on-going liaison committee, · to
.Yankee in· King Arthur's. Court. He died
be enormously competitive, unlike allseveral themes emerged....- Salary ineinclude repr"5entatives of UUP, CSEA,
in Redding, Connecticut, in 1910 a! the
female groups in which accomodative
quities
were discussed (almost 30 per
GSEU and other workers, will, hopefully,
age of 75. An endowed chair in the_
behavior is · typical and. where the
.cent of the male laCI!Ity earn $25,000 or
be one result of Friday's rally, GSEU
Department of Engli ~h already carries his
primary emptfasis is on being fair.
more, on a :tO-month basis, compared to
spokesmen say.
name.
sorr;ae five per cent Qf the women
In mixed groups, men tend to become
Another projected outcome is the
4- The lnduotrlal enslneerlns and
faculty) . Everywhere women were concompetitive
and
mote
selfless
development of a visible public protest
·school of lnfotmatlon and Librory
1
cerned about their vulnerability should
_ disclosing. They also tend to talk more to
against the Governor's budget cut and · Studies bulcllns wll be twned . . _
individuals and less to the group as a - Tetrenchment occur on a "last hired/first
"job freeze" policy.
,
D.Wibl.
·
fired"
basis. The need for an effective
Whole. Women in mixed groups,
These two sitUations have made it -..,
Lawrence D. Bell (1894-1956) was an
women's caucus
campus, indepen- ' .
• how&lt;!ver, speak less, and when they do
practically Impossible for grad student
experimenter a~ aircrah .builder ~ho
dent of any administrative body, was arworkers on State iines. to .l&gt;e given any
founded Bell A·ircraft (now Bell 1
ticulated.
assuranc:es of employment for next year,
Aerospace Company) which continues
1
women.
GSEU spokesmen point out:-Since. these
,. to be one of fhe major industries in
Many participants saw the n~ for a
. Qnce these patterns (probably the
5llldents' terms of employment end witlr
Western New York. At his death, at the
compus-wide "infermal "old-girl
result of pr~adolescent socialization)
the clow of each academic year;
age ol62, he was-the dean of senior avianetwork"
of 5t!asoned women faculty to
are recOgnized, pr. Bunker' said, women
"'technical vacanCies" exist, and
tiOn executiveoln die country. He was
inform and suppon noiHC!nUred wOmen
dep.nments have been hesli.itt 10 offer
the recipient of : the University's · can begin to devise strategies to make
colleagues (such mutual sappan systems
themsefves heard, f!". example, by callfirm reappointments, the GSEU
Chancellor's Medal in 1947, the
women are an ~eel part of
ing attention to the frequently ignored ' among
spokesm@fl ladk:ate: This "situation has
Guggenheim Medal, the french Legion
many
prof~nal
OIJinizatlons).
suggestions
of female colleagues.
ca&amp;&amp;ed ft!ll')' students to sllffeHn1~
of Honor, a Pn;sklentiaf citation, and
Women in Jields such;as nunln.J where
and uncemlntleo conce.rning future
Men Have Much to Cain .
numerous honorary degrees. The Bell
women are in the majority e1pressed
educational plans, they say.
Foundation provided Funds to establish
Men, she atguetl, have. much to· gain•
their will_ingness to support women in
the uwrence -D1 Bell Endowed 'Chair in
from working in groups with women,
fields where they do not predominate.
the Department of Physiology in ~is
anC:I women too would probably · gain
The .desire to see a.woman candidate, inname. A general · purpose fund, in I) is
from acquisition of "the middle-range of.
ternal or external, seriously' cQnsld(!red
Allred McCiong Lee, president-elect
cornpetitive·skilts.P
name, was also !!Stablished in .the School
for the. vacant academiC''iice•presidency
of the American Sociological A~iac·
of Engineer(ng bere.
Women fWOJ king in largely male
was.also expressed.
• '
tk&gt;n, will speak on ' 'Conflict Patterns in
5. The woods neor joseph EDicott
groups, she noted further, frequently
--;-- ~
· ':l!'l!:' ~ v•'l·ll!l} • 1~--. f; •· •.
Northern Ireland" at a.._seminar ~ pon­
Complex will be the Edward H: - have..!h~ experience of·being treated hot
,.~IJl'!!f» .th_e,-wo(Tleo .{aculw•mdteated· a
sored by the Sociology Department ah'd
stro'l ~ desire to n)eet in the futu re on a
Letchworth Woodsas coOeaguey but according to a set,ot
th e Council on International Studies,
regular basis.
sex -role stereotyp es ranging f.rom
- Edward H. Letchworth (1881-1958) was
.- Thursday, February V , at- 10 a.m. in
....._ ...
mother
through
iron
maiden.
'
~eputy attorney general of New York
Room 42, 4224 Ridge Lea.
Or. lee is professor emeritus of the
State and vice pcesidef!.t and general
The problem, she said, is f.or women to
. HARRIMAN STUDY 'HALL RE-OPENW
coun~ of the Marine Trost C!1rilpany bl
City University of New York. He has been
learn to move from traditibnally accepThe former H1.rrimJ1n Reser¥e Ub"r.uy
president of the Society for the Study of
Western New York .. He was chairman of
table ~sit ions- of . informal power intb..Roidlns-Room hos been re-opened • a study
ball_ .&lt;without staff or, boob), Unlwenfty ~
'the governing committee of the Buffalo
posifiOnlbf roliPpower without adopting
' Social Problems and_ of the Eastern·
. Foundation and as such was instrumental
Sociological Society.
the neg\!~ve 1\flaracteristics associated
Libraries hos aniiounced;- - · ~
throush
Friday, I~ So~Urday,'
with these male-dominated positions in
in the building of Kleinhans Music Hall.
- . He Is the
a.m 't V~~JandSUndty,11..............,
the past. The prospect of some new,
SodcllaiY.M,D, Manflp
1ie was: a trustee of the Stotler founda.,._
.......
be .. oflect '!"''.!he eild of
_ , lfle hM!fy, and other books, articles
tion, pres~&lt;~ent of Kleinhans· Mtn~c . Hall • wciman-lorlled combination of the two Is ·' doe_,
.
and commentariesMal\qeiTII!rlt, . I~, and Upstate chair"~5Jy·ex~n~"~_said. ·
.
the campus working community -

faculty and NTP .staff members who are
represented by UUP, clerical workers
who are members of CSEA, gradu~te
student staff members, and other, non·
organized staff workers. Stude('ts, "who
aie tfueatened with losses in the quality
of their education" in the wake of
proposed cUtbacks, are also invited,
GSEU says.
On ·the rostrum at the rally will be:

Faculty women~---------:----:---

on

-do!~~:~~ :~l:s "~::het~ thdad~e:.~~~

Sodology lectUre .

::.,r.t.o:.t.:_awwrJ H........,

�. . .am

february 27, 1975

SUNY,.TelephQne Com,JJhy. Dentists seek control.for
common infectious disease
set cOoperative program
State University of New York and the
New York Telephone Company, the
State's largest corporation, have entered

into an agreement which will relate the
resources of the UniVersity mucli more

closely to the world of work, Albany
repons said this week.
SUNY Chancellor Ernest L Boyer and
Telephone Company President William
_ M. Ellinghaus have jointly announced
details of an agreement in which four

State University campuses - .including
U/B - and one City University college

will offer courses to approximately 300
employees this year.
Chancellor Boyer said that while the
University's campuses have had many

cooperative programs with local in~ustries,

the agreement with the ._

Telephone Company marks the first
University-wide· educational program
with a m3jor corporation. New York

Telephone emplOys nearly 8S,OOO people.
·
Or. Boyer co111,mented:
"The State University of New· York is
eager to make its educational resources

available to workers throughout the
State. This new agreement with tl)e ,New ~

York Telephone Company is unique. For
the first time, many of our cart;~puses will
serve•the employees of a single company

in a coordinated program.
"With our State-wide netWork of campuses, this linkage ~tween industry and
education should be expanded. To
achieve such cooperation, I plan to name
a special University I Industry Task
Force, comprised of representatives of
higher education and industry. The goal
will be to develop a plan which will
·assure that the resources of 1he State
UlliVersiiY will be available o~ Statewide basis to serve businesses and in·
dustries. ··
' · ·

a

.... ,r.rh~ ""omveisity: wa~~r\rery ,~Hiuro" to

promotional tests: It will stress areas such
as word usage, vocabulary development,
reeding comprehension ·and applied
math skills.
The second offers vocat}Qnal training
specifically related to an employee's job
or job aspirations, and courses are
currently availa~le in the overall
curriculum offerings of the ~ampuses · involved.
.
Developmental studies courses will
be offered to employees in groups of 1S
over 30 week periods in six credit·hour
segments at $27 per credit-hour. Overall
cost is $164, including a $2 fee, of which
the Telephone Company wm pay 75 per
cent, oi$121.50.
•
Employees taking vocational courses
will be enrolled on a semester ·basis at
participating campuses at the per credithour schedule of the particular institution. Credit-hour costs are expected to
average out to about S21c.also with 75 per
cent company support.
In both instances, the employee will
~ay the remai~g 25 per cent of the tuitroncost.

Flo K~nnedy
to visit campus
Prominent black feminist and civil
rights lawyer Flq Kennedy will speak on
campus, Friday, February 28.
Ms. Kennedy, an attorney, will discuss
"law an" the Pathology of Oppression"
as the · guest of the _taw School's
Distinguished Visitors Forum. The lecture is scheduled for 1 p.m. in room 108,
O 'Brian Hall.
. She will give a public lecture Friday
. evening o " "The Pathology of Oppression" jn f:D' Diefe0dorf Hall at 7:30
p.m. Her appearance !s being sponsored
by the S.O .S. Mother's Defense Fund. A

/

By Plllrida Wud lledennan
•epotterSUif

. A* most people to ~arne the second
most ~ prevalent infectious disease
afflicting humans (the most widespre_ad
is dental caries), and they'll probably
guess the common cold-or gonorrhea.
But actually that dubious&lt;listinction goes
to periodontal disease, qisorders of the
soh tissues surrounding ·the teeth that
range from mild inflammation (gingivitis)
to severe bone- and ligament-destroying
forms Of periodontitis.
"While periodontal disease doesn't kjJI,
it does plague thousands of vidims
annually with inflamed, bleeding gums.
-- If the condition is ·not controlled, teeth
inay be lost, and, in severe cases, the
bony tissue that underlies the teeth may
be damaged or even destroyed.
Studies strongly implicate the
filamentous baCteria found ~ in plaque
{that sticky, baderia-laden substance
that clings to teeth and plays the villain in
the formation of dental caries) as a
cr4cial fador _in the development of
periodontal diseaSe.
·
But where there are .baderia, there is
always · hope of finding a
chemotherapeutic means of control,
some drug that will knock out the
offending microorganisms. Currently, an
interdisciplinary research tearrr in the
U{B School of Dentistry is engaged in the
laboriOus search for that special drug or
group of chemical agents that could
control periodontal disease.
$172,000 Contract
Under a $172,000 contract froin the
Institute of Dental Research (of the
National Institutes of Health), the team is
s'ysteinatically testing more than SO
chemical agents ranging from
~xp~r,imental ,d rugs not yet marketed
co.cnmercially , to anti-bacterial. ,agents
already widely used by periodontists to
test their effediveness in inhibiting the
growth of periodontal plaque.
The ideal anti-plaque agent, explains
the contract 's principal investigator,
Robert Genco, professor of oraJ biology,
has two properties: it is an effective
antibacterial age_nt and it adheres ..to the
tooth surfaces where plaque forms. This
abBity to adhere is crucial. Most
common mouthwashes, even strongly
· anti-baderial ones that kill millions of
microorganisms on initial contact, have
liMie ef(ect on plaque because they are
not retained on the surfaces of the teeth.
To evaluate the · effectiveness of the
various chemical agentS under study, Dr .
Todd Evans, senior research associate in
oral biology and assistant professor . of
microbiology, has developed an unUsual
assay (or replicable test procedure} that
mimics in the test tube the relevant
conditions of the human mouth.

. have all been strongly linked to
periodontal disease and are being
studied. Other bacteria being scrutinized
are Streptococcus mutans (believed to
play· an important role in cariesformation) and S. sanguis (a plaque
initiator).
·
Outsbndlns, But Foul-Tasting
The abili!Y of a drug to adhere to the
tooth is
critical parameter being
studied in these tests, Dr. Evans
emphasizes. · So far the outstanding
performer in this regard has been
chlorhexidine, a foul-tasting drug widely
used in Scandinavia in the treatment of
periodontal disease.
The researchers chose chlorhexidine
as a positive test to determine whether
their assay reliably mimicked the oral
cavity : they knew that chlorhexidine kills
microorganisms in the mouth (it was
effective in tests conducted at Attica by
Dr. Stuart l. ·Fischman, professor of oral
mediCine and clinical consultant on the
contrad), and they wanted to be sure
that it did so in the mouth-likeenvironment they had devised for their
screening tests. It did.
As Dr. Evans explains, 11 chlorhexidin'e
offers a great deal of hope. It adheres to
the tooth for a long period of time, and
that's a very desirable quality if a drug is
to .have prolonged effectiveness against
the bacferia believed to cause
periodontal plaque."
Although hopeful about chlorhexidine, the researchers are quick to point
out that mouthwashes based on.the drug
or some other routine clinical
application are still a long way off. The
FDA requires that any new drug undergo
extensive toxicity studies (although
chlorhexidine is used abroad and has
been available in this country for years as
a topical antiseptic) .

a

heljl man;ig~n and . h150r lleco"""
$1 - do~ation ·is- re_quested.
r
more producti\e and, at this time of un:
Other l'roblems
_Ms. _Kennedy, a founder of the
precedented unemployment, we have a
There are other problems, too. Chlorspecial obligation to retrain individuals - Femin'ist Party and a member of the
hexidine, Dr. Genco says sucdnctty,
National Black Feminist Organization, is
tastes like the devil, although it is
in new career fields.
the author of two books, Abortion Rap.
"I cong•atulate Mr: EIIinghaus and the
possible to mask the taste. It has also
and (the not yet released) Pathology of
unions which represent the Telephone
been found to stain teeth, a cosmetic
Oppression,
and
an
article
on
"
Women
Company's work force for developing
obstacle that must be overcome if the
and the law"' in the anthology,
this model program which will have
dr:ug-' is to be accepted by the smile- ·Sisterhood is Powerful.
con~ious public.
_ · _
such a'·significant impad on bot~ State
Ms. Magazine has called Ms. Kennedy
As part of an effort to overcome these
~~~~!!Y an~ the State's industria com"the Mark Twain of our age."
drawbacks, Dr. Robert · A. Coburn,
Among so.me of her more quotable
Mr. Ellinghaus said this is one oi
associate profe.s sor of medicinal
quotes are:
.
"those h.appy circum.stances where
chemi!try, is looking_at compounds
"Organize, Don't Agonize."
everyone benefits. The Univei-sity exclosely related to chlorhexidine that
1
' 1f men ·had abortions, abortion would
tends its services more widely. Our
minimize these undesirable
t&gt;e a sacrament."
•
.. , "usiness gai.ns better trained, more ex-·
charaderistics while retaining the ability
"Oppression has at least four · dimen·
pert personnel which, in tur:n, benefits
to adhere to teeth and to kill bacteria. .
sions: the personal or psychological the public. And men and women at New
lhe logical next step ~ s to test
like when you yourself believe that
York Telephone are' offered a real opchlorhexidine and any Other drugs found
you're a big zero becauSe society keeps
portunity to realize theirlull potential."
to be effective in the in vitro tests -in
telling you so. The p.rivate - like when
Under the plan, the company pays 7S
monkeys or other animals, then to doper cent of tuition cost, according to - some employer. tries to make out with
. toxi~ity studies,' and finally to condud
you
when you ask for a job. The publicthe New York Telephone president.
carefully controlled studies in humans.
.
like when theJovernment takes the
Mrs. May E. Kllesch, president of the
Bovine lncison
money you ne
for childcare centers
Telephone Traffk · Union (N.ew York),
Doesn1.ftelp 5erere Perladoallllo
Dr. Evans be.gins by collecting -not
and uses it to i&lt;ill people in Indochina.
which r~ts about 12,000 telephooe
"We know that chlorhexlcilne Will'
human teeth ,but-·huge bovine incisors,
And the cultural - like when the histoi')l
employees, 4aid that ' "with the
preVent and cuie gingMtis," Dr. CeriCo
donateo by the jawfwl by an obliging
books attribute everything we did, and
technological advanq,s during these
says, "but we don't yet ~now what etfect .
Buffalo siOLughterhous£.
. :
invented to some guy we worked for."
times, it is .recognized that an educational
it will have on periodontitis. So far,lfdoes
Each large too.th provideS five or six .
A potluck supper is belng held at
review, and update is needed to keep
not seem to help much In severe a.is.
small rectangul~r slabs of too!h enamel.
Women's Studies, 108 Win5pear. at 5
pace with the chaoge in working reActually·
we are not sure of the rilldon
Each slab is'placed on end in·a_sn'iallassay
p.m. prior to the evening lectur!. in obquirements. It is the·intent of our union
between gingivitis and ~~
tube, where it is treated with human
servance of International Women's Day.
to make known to all members the adThere may ~ some severe fOrJIII of .
saliva. This quses a layer Qf·pellicle.- a
vantages and availability of this new
periodontitis that are caused
protein substanCe that gives teeth their
organisms not yet isolated. There may
program and encourase their parcharacteristic slick feeling and is· a
tifijiation."
Nominations lor officers .Of- the U/B.J
also be a familial aspect to the da-." necessar.y preliminary stage to the
Chapter of the Civil Service Employees
Mrs. Kliesch's efforts during contract
Meanwhile, in the~~~
formation of plaque - to fo!J11 on the
negotiations were partially responsible
AssociaJ.ion are now bei~g accepted by
tooth enamel.
of drug after drug mnttnue. Uslni
for the pr011ram, which Is available to
the Chapter's Nominating Committee.
assay, the te~m Is also looking at ,Jhe•
- The slabs ·are rinsed; treated with a
Nominations .. will . be -finalized at. a
effect . of antibodies on pla!ltie.,._ .
standardized amouot and concentration
members of a11 seven ~niOns represen·
membership meeting on fvlarclf 31.
ting telephone company employees.
of ,the drug to be tested, and rinsed
adheren~ "(see Summer lteporfllr:')u(J .. 1
18, 1974).
. . ' -.
Members who ,_.ould like to seek ~n
Initially courses will be offered.at four
again, washing away any of the drug that
office are asked to c;gntact Dorothy,
does not cling to the enameL 11!e slap.
St.! NY campuses- Hudson Valley Com"ThiS~department," Dr. #Evans t"~
Mayl!r, chairperson; ext. 4731, or to send
munity College, State University of New
are then' put into a_growth medium and
proudly of Oral BiOlogy (which Is~
their names and the name of the office
York at Buffalb, Suffolk County Cominnoculated with one of the mictoby Dr. Solon Ellison), "Is one of Only
desired to Mrs. Mayer, CSEA, Box- 16,
munity College, the Agricultural and
&lt;il'ganisms lmpilcated in plaque
three
or four places In the country wHere
Hayes
HaiL
Technical CoRege at Farmingdale -and
formation: Control slabs are subjected to
basic
dental research is bei!'g done Wtdl
Offices to be filled include: president,
~City University's John. Jay College inthe microorg!lnism without fim being
this
degr~
of sophistication."
··
first vice president, ~nd vi? presiManhattan.
_
treated with the drug. By comparing dent, third vice president, fourth vice
There will be two types of course work
bacterial . growth on treated and
Peering through their mi.croscopes,
president; treasurer, recording secretary,
offered under the program during iis'
the team is not only~ning drugs, it is
untreated slabs, the researchers are able
sergeant-at-arms, administrative board
also learning more and more about the
pilot year. :
•
to quantify the effectiveness of eachmembers (2), clerical boifrd membeo'.
molecular biology of periodontal
On,e, which ii characcerized as
drus in inhibitillg plaque formation.
(2), technical board members (2), and
disease, knowledge that holds the beSt_ As Dr. Evans explains, three types of
developmental studies, has been specialmaintenance board members (2).
long-term promise for an efficient,
ly developed to enhance an employee's
· ' filamentous bacteria, · Actinomyces
The ~lections will be held in May.
inexpensive way to prevent it.
naeslun,di, A. viscosus, and A. israeli,
, potential , to qualify o.n Bell System

CSEA nominations ,

.

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by,....

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february 27, 1975

\

·Budget news remains bad'all over ·ation
More on the u sUNY~is ~ not·alone- i n- _. emphasized 'that neither its affirmative
terms-of-budget-cuts" front :
action nor student financial aid p'rograms
Many other state and land-grant
•will suffer in any way as a result of.. __the
universities, beset by financial .problems
cutbacks. 1
for the past several years, are hearing
Vermont, Connedkul Affected
even graver news from -their statehouses
Requests to cut state appropfiations
in 1975, the National Association of State
for the current year have also been
Universities and land-Grant Colleges
issued to both the Unive~ity of Conreports.
necticut and the University of Vermont.
· - Early reports from many of these large
In Connecdcut, the cut, announced in
public universities indicate that recomlate January, will be two and a half per
mendations from governors to their state
cent of the current budget, representing
legislatures
regarding
fiscal
1976
approximately $1.3 million. The request
budgets are dealing severe blows to
was made after the governor projected a
these institutions along with other state
$65 million deficit on a state general fund
agendes. In several of the most hardbudget of $1.4 billion.
pressed states, the bite will be felt even
T~e university faces major problems in
sooner as colleges and universities are
making the cut since a large portion of
beiitg asked not, to ·spend portions of
the current year's appropriation already
their - already budgeted 19Z5
has been spent. Economies which have
api)ropriations..
_ ..._
been inStituted include not filling
Declining state revenues brought
vacancies, equipment cutbacks, elimina ~
bout by the general economic recession
tion of all overtime and delaying the start
ave made it necessary for gOvernm·ent
of some scheduled programs.
aden to look for areas to cut back. For
The University . . o
- f Vermont had
gher education institutions which have
$300,000 of its 1975 state appropriation
been attempting to live with inadequate
impounded and the gove rnor~ has
state app!opriations for a n~mber of
recommended a lev-e l-funding budget ot
.years, the decisions which must be made
$11 .2 million for 1975-76.
to accommodate the latest Cuts will be
The university had re quested slightl y
hard, NASULGC says.
over $13 million from the state to help it
"A university is what economists call a
head off a defidt budget in fiscal 1976. )n
'labor intensive' enterprise, by ~hich
addilion, it budgeted tuition increase s of
they simply mean that a very high
S95 for in·state stude nts and $215 for out~
proportion of its budget is in people,"
of--state students. Tuition at Ve rmont is
pointed out President Robben fleming
already th e highest of any state un iversity
of the University of Michigan .
in the country for reside nt st ude nts and
"Consequently it is impossibte to make
th e second highe st for non-residents.
large budget reductions withou t
The increases would bring in-state fees
reducing employment."
to $1 ,045 and out-ol.-state fees to $2,965.
If- the governor's recommended level
Mlchlpn F~ces Four Per Cenl Cut
funding budge t is appro ved by the legisPresident FJeming's institution, along
lature, the unive rsity has wa rned that
with other public colleges and
stUdent fees may have to be increased
universities in Michigan, faces_one of the
eve n more than t he already-3nnoun ced
most se rious financial situations in the
country. All Michigan ..- staie · agenCies _ jumps. s a part of an effort to reOuCe _
universit
xpe nditu res, the trustees
were asked to reduce spending in fiscal
1975 by .a total of $100 million to bring already have made Sl .S millio n in cuts in
e;xpenditures into balance with revenues
existing Programs;"including the eliminaas dictated by the state constitution. The
tion of cO llege football and over 100
cut for the Ann Arbor campus , alone
facuhy positions.
amounted ~ to · abouta'million dollars, or
Wisconsin Slashes 1 . 5 per cent of the total state
The 27· f ampus U n ive rs it y o f
appropriation.
Wisconsin Syste m, asked by the governor
.for fY 1976 universities and colleges in
in January to 11 make specific recomthe state were asked to cut an additional
me ndat ions for phasing o ut, phasing
2.5 per cent from . their budget requests
down, or consolidating existing ce nters,
through internal re·alfocation . Th.e
campuses, colleges and programs," now
governor's budget recommendations for
has rece ived a red.u ction in state fund ing
the university reflect these antidpated
for the coming biennium in the
cuts, providing only $4.6 million in' new
• governor's state budget package. If these
state money compared with the current
recommendations are approved by the
year's appropriation . The 6udget
legislature, the_university's base budget
package calls for compensatiQn increases
from state funds would be reduced from
of only-5.6 per cent - an increase that
$601:8 million .to $600.6 million. Among
can only be achieved if the higher
the un iversity ' s funding requests
eaucation institutions are able to effect
rejected by the governor was a proposed
the full ·four per rent base appropriation
tuition reduction plan which would cut
reduction. There is no fur"!ding for
tuition and required fees in half . for
-program growth iO the go'(ernor's
.._
resident undergraduates.
recommendation and the university
; . Under the governor's " no tax
- ndicates that the amount authorized for
increaSe" budget, virtually none of the
&gt;Utility costs will be inadequate to meet~
university's priority requests for funds
lhe rising costs in this area.
were approved. This included all
units of the universitfhave been
requests for riew or changed services .
...Msed 10 make recommendations for · There '!'•s no-funding provided for any
"• .-Where reductions can be mllde, foiinflationary in.crea~ other than utilities;
crllerla recommended by the
There was also· no· g:rovision for state
-central ailmlnistration, Among the
funding for 6,000 aadition~ -.tudehts
.poalble reduellon ~. units were
expected to enter the syst~m by 1976-n.
.skecl 10 consider _selecttve freezing of
One of the cuts involved $7.&lt;4 million :
unfilled positions -and position
· in · productivity savings which the
1eplacements an!l ma~lng facuhy
university was required to specify in
-replacements only· 11 tile asslstan ~
j&gt;reparlng its budget. lnifi~lly the
professo_!" level, The, university h~s
university was inf6rmed that any sa&gt;rings
achievell in one area coula be re- allocated to another. However, th!'
governor's budset completely took ~wfy
• these savings - an ~ction Which could
result in the elimination of an '
undetermined ' number · of presentlyautliorized st~ff positions.

~

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ROmiTT. MAIILffi

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SI:ISMI "'· eUIICE•

of $328.3 million.
Institutions are taking a -variety of
measures to reduce expenditures
includink cutting salary expe_nses by (1)
placing a freeze on new hirings, (2)
starting new employees at the minimum
salary within their job classifications, (3)
freezing promotions, (4) freezing recf'assification~ and (5) phasing out some
positions.
'
The Un iversity of Florida, which must
make the largest spending reduction , has
been · conducting a massive energysaving campaign to help cut costs. All
heat is turned off by midday dail y.
During the Christmas holidays ,
employees were encouraged to take
leave, allowing the un iversity to shut
down whole buildings. A de-bulbing
campaign has cut off many of the lights
on campus for ~ resu ltant saving in
electricity.

Boyer cites
budget defects -

at hearil)gs

SUNY Chancellor Ernest J.. Boyer
presented his views on the 1975-76 Executive Budget before a legislative
Budget Hearing last week.
Appearing before the )oint Senate
Finance Committee and Assembly Ways
and Means Committee, the chancellor
told the lawmakers that the proposed
$37.2 million ne! increas_e in the SUNY·
bud~et covers only fixed costs and allows
no neW funds for programming. Dr.
Boyer observed that $35.1-mlllion of the
proposed increase is for annualization,
&lt;.;:o ntractual salary raises, increases in
utilities, an£1 general price increases. The
remaining $2.1 million of the increased
appropriation is for building repairs,
equipment replacement, accessory in·
struction, and new building openings.
The session lasted almost two hours,
Arizona, Also·
during which _time the chancellor comIn Arizona, Governor Raul H: Castro
mented on a variety o_f subjects:
r
has requened a five per ce nt cut in
• The new budget reduces the average
e xpendi t ur e s for the thr e e state
percenta·ge of state aid to community
universities fro m the pre sent untO . the
e nd of th e fiscal year on June 30. He
co lleges from 36.0 this year to 33.7 per
cent, That perrentage has dropped conasked for a similar cut for the 1975·76
sistently since 197G-71 when it was almost
.
-fiscal year.
Unive rsi ty of Arizona Executive Vi ce
39 per ce nt. The SUNY Board of Trustees
. is committed to a plan which increases
Preside nt Dr. Albert B. Weaver said the
institution will do its best to make cuts in
that percentage to near 40 per cent for
ex pe nditures.
full
opportunity
institu ~ions,
the
" We've bee n doin g it already, though,
chance llor said.
"
and it 's ext re me ly difficult ," he
• Chancellor Boyer expressed comc ommente d . " Eight y per c e n'"t o f
mitment to the concept of innovative
and experimental campus schools. Camo pera tin g ex pe nditures are alread y
committed fOr the year for wages and
pus schools whose experimentation is
salaries." Dr. Weaver added that the
felt in the community must be preservea,
un iversit y would attempt to nlainfain its
he said.
• There is a need for agreement on the
present 22·to-1 st ude nt faculty y tio.
criteria to be used in the evaluation of
On the go od new s fron t , · th e
doctoral programs, Boyer pointed. out.
Un ive rsity of Minn esota will receive an
SUNY has no desire to maintain an y
ap pro priation of S276 million for t~e
program ·not-of high quality. " We .must·
.- "'19'76-77- bie nn ium if ttle g Overnor's
resolve hOw to judRe--quality and need,
• budget recomme ndation is put into
must maintain the integrity of SUNY ineffect, an increDe of 13.5 per cent.
stitutional plarlning, and must define the
involvement 'of. the trustees of SUNY.,"
Boyer contended.
•
• The SUNY budget as a per cent of the
o verall state budgerwas approximate~y 7
per cent in 1966-67, 7.7 per ceat last year,
and is 7.3 per cent in the. proposed
The Governor's budget has " cre.ited a
major thre at to the continued growth .of
budget, Boyer said.
SU NY a nd es pecially the Buffalo
• Practically all of the bu~geted $33.6
Ce nte r," Dr. Constantine Yeracaris, i
million of construction is scheduled for
the emerging or n·ew campuses. There ~s
presid.e.nt of the Ceriter chapter of
United University Proi essioils (UUP), said
little construction plan'!ed at established
in a preside nt's report to members this
campuses .
• Faculty salaries within SUNY are
week. •
" We view this as a setback which will
cOrllpet-itive, but certainly riot extessive.
ha ve major consequences for our
The raises recently negotiated are- less
University," Yeracaris s_aid, noting that
than the rate of inflation ana national
" in this proposed budget, there are a
salary trends.
. number of divisiOns and departments
• In the past year, · State University
facing the likelihood of retrenchment."
reduced its " heating bill" by about 1_4
Yeracaris said that at a meeting of the
per ·rent and its electrical bill by about
State-wide Executive Board of UUP,
12.3 per rent -dl!spite a 10 per rent inThursday, Fel&gt;ruary 3, he introduced a
crease in space.
.
resolution, which was 'Una-nimously
• Almost 70 per 10ent of students at the
adopted, that the UUP with "its State Affully State-operated campuses come
-filiate NYSUT intervene at the Current
from families with incomes under $12,State legislative session to restore all
000. At community colleges, the figure
budg~t- cuts for SUNY. " It is, of course,
is over 80 per ~t.
clear," .Yeracaiis indicated, 11that,. con• SUNY will gent!rale $213 milliori of
trary to rumors, the Gove~nor's budget
income in 1975-76 from tuition, dorprov1 des lull funds for the UUP
mitory ch~rges, and hospitallnci&gt;me.
negotiated salary increases for 1975-76/ '·
• The I!&gt;Ojor operational cona!t"ns in
Yeracaris reported the following infor- - light of this aUsterity budget are deferred
mation glea_ned frol!l discussions at the
maintenance, obsolete eqUipment, in·
• State 8oard meeting:,
tlatfonary · Impact, library cutback,
Appointments Freeze: "The Govef- - diminished faculty support- and decreasnor's freeze· on new apPointments for
ed research effon.
·
1975'76 until April 1, 1975, 1\as serious
Also last week, representatives of the •
cOmequentes for awarding graduate
Unhoeriity's various _constituent ·groups
assistantships In SUNY.-Appropriate steps
were-In Albany to meet with Chlncellor
are being taken to· unfreeze at least that
Boyer ~nd !!!f staff for a l!!ldset Lrietin~.
area."
The groups_ represented OO(ere the
- N.Y. State Legislative Acts: "Some of
University's Faculty Senate, the Associathe billS' our Stale Affiliate, NYSUT, has
tion • of- Council Members.·arid «allege
introduced· or is planning to lntrodure
Trustees, the, Confederation of Alumni
affect SUNY professionals. These include
~Too ·
:
Associations, the Student Assembly, the
The State University System of Florida
a bill to provide TIAA-CREF equallutiO'!Association ot- Boards and Councils of
musi cut spending by $63 million by
with the State Retirement Plan which has
the Two.-Yeor Colleges, ~rid the Faculty
a goo,d ch~nce for suppOrt and is backed
)U'Jl' 30. The cuts have been allocated
CounCil of the Two-Year Colleges.
· by PQWerful legiSlators; a bill to permit
among the nine- universities, accorCIIIDIT UNION ltOUIS
- ding 10 sire of their ~974-75 state apthe holdfrs of the old .UB Health Plan
Secoiod--u_,.~- 1ooun
_propriolio,ns._Pan of lhe problem which :
option refenter Yhe ....,., advantageous
far
doe
Mciil!!ll
L
'
-Uoolnallp
c:n..tlt
.__ __ .....,..,McioooiiJ, ...........1131 .
led ·ro lhe arts was Increased fuel com
State h~J~!ii pllh; legislation enabling
the reintroduction of sal~ry schedules for
which are running opproxlmately $1.5
~,.......,
million above d.e amount OriglnaUy
.SYNY; a.nd an ~ct providing for statutory
day, 11:31 I.IL-4 .......... tile .............
....... ...,. ..... The ................ far
continuous or perlll9i!nl appointments
buclllf!led for themarts represent
~
for NTf's after three ye~rs of
approxlmotely 2.6 per cent of the
loi&amp;MaS.
- probatlon_ary employment."_
sy.~em's ~MBI1974-75 state appropriation

Yeracaris.sees ."''·'
'threat to SUNY~

J;

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�February 17, 1975

Students want
to organize
Rescue Squad ·

Piagetian
psychologist
her~ Saturday·
"What makes you grow up1 What
makes you stop growingi"Do old people
grow down and become babies again1
What are clouds made-of1 Where is the
blimp going1 Why do you put those
things on your face1 Why do you put
those things in your hairl How come
mommies ~ave 'bump( and -daddies
don'tf" The incessant question_s of a
preschooler!
.
Dr. David. Elkind, noted Piagetian psychologist, Will attempt to answer some of
these questions and perhaps some posed
by members of the audience in a lecture
entitled " Child Development and
Education" at 10 a.m., 5!turday, March 1,
in 231 Norton, under sponsorship of the
combined Educational Psychology and.
Developmental Psychology Graduate
Student Associations. The entire University community is welcome.·

Dr. Elkind is currently professor of psychology, psychiatry ~nd education and
director of the J Graduate Training
Program in developmental psychology at
the University of Rochester. He was

formerly director of The Child Study
Center at the University of Denver. After
taking his doctorate at U.C.LA., he spent
a year as a postdoctoral fellow with David
Rapaport at_the Austen Riggs Center. lh
196+65 he spent a year at Piaget's Centre
D'Epistemologie Genelique in Geneva.
His research has been in the areas of
cognitive and perceptuaLdevelopment
where he has attempted to build upon
the research of Piaget. Dr. Elkind's
bibliography now numbers more than
150 items and includes research studies,
review and theoretical articles, book
chapters, books, and more popular
Pietl!S such as children's sto(ies for-jack
and jill ancj articles for the New York
· Times Magaz;ne, Parents' Magazine and
Israeli-born dancer Ze'eva Cohen will
Saturday Review.
1 n ,, • - .. ... ' •
perform her Solo "Dance Re pertory on
,His more recent \\lorkS iriclude :
campuv,fciday, March 21-,.ata p.m . in th e
:·Anatomy of Melancholy," Saturday_
Katharine Cornell Drama Theatre in
Relliew, September, 1972; " Good me,
Ellicott.
Bad me, The Interpersonal Psychiatry of
Ms. Cohen began he r professional
Harry Stack Sullivan," New Yott Times
career in Israel at the age of 16. In 1965,
Mapzlne, September, 1972; II Sym· she came to New York as a scholarship
pathetic Understanding of the Child:
student at the Juilliard School of Music.
Birth to Sixteen, Allyn &amp; Bacon, 1974;
She has danced as a soloist with tiJe
- Children and 1\dolescents (2nd edition),
companies of Anna Sokolow, the
Oxford University Press, 1974, and "The
American Dance Theater at lincoln
Sociology of Erving Goffman," Human - Center, and the Dance Theater
lleharior Magazine, 197S.
Workshop and has been a guest artist
Dr. Elkind is consultin~ editor to many
with Pearl lang and Company. She also
psychological journals, is a member of
appeared as a soloist in Stravinsky's
~me ten r.rofessional orga!:'izations ~nd
'~L 'Histoire du Soldat" at Carnegie Hall.
1s a consu tant to government agenc1es,
Her solo dance program has been seen
state education departments, clinics and
all over the United States, as well as in
mental health centers.
London, Geneva, Bern, Bonn, and
lerusalem.
Ms. Cohen has choreographed widely,
bo,'h solos and group works, in~luding

.Ze'eva Cohen to be in residence
and gi.~e per~ormance on campus

JDLfounderKahane
to speak in Norton

Rabbi Meir Kahane, ihe controversial
founder of the "radical" Jewish Defense
league, is ~~uled io speak on campus, Tuesday, March 4, at 8 p.m. in the
Fillmore Rooln of Norton · under the
sponsorship of the Jewish Student Union
and the Israel Aliyah Center of New York
-City.
. .
lbbbi Kahane· is both founder and
spiritual leader of the Jewish Defense
league tJQL). He was born In New York
City, ordained an Onhodox Rabbi at the
Mirref' Yeshiva, and earned a master's
and a law degn!e from New York University. He has published se¥e1111 books
relating to the su.-.ival of the Jewish people.
,
He lounded rhei~L In 1968 on the.
thesis that '!mllltam:e Is and will be
necessary to assure both the physical and
sp1r1NaJ eltlstem:e ollhe Jews-" Violence
"Is never sood but s11metimes
necessary," he arsues, adding, however,
that "Jewish "¥iotence to protect Jewish
interests Is ne- bad." Two of the basic
principles of JDL are, he says, "Jewish Pride, and · - Apln.' msning that
_Jews ohall not be 'muidered' again."
T1ckets for the opeech are IYfllable at
the Norton Hall Ticket Office_ For
members of the UnlveRity community
with vaRcl tO's, tickets are free; nonUn'-stty community members .will be
tha'Bed $1. For further lnforrnatlon, call
the Jewish Student Union at 831-5213,

the play " Mod Donna," directed by
loseph Popp at th e New .York Public
Theater.
. • He r Solo Dance Re pe rtorY consists of
wo rks b y seve ral contemporar y
choreog raphe rs, including herself. This
co mbin ati on is said to be a new
approach to the solo concert fiE:Id in
mode rn d ance.
He r p e rform a n ce will be the
culminat ion ,of a three--day campus
reside ncy arranged by the Office of
Cultural Affairs- and the UUAB Dance
Committee, during which Ms. Cohen,
~ ho has taught modern danc.e at
Princeton ,Uriiversity since 1969, will
conduct workshops and master ~classes .

~:!~~~:il~~i:f:!~~ncy pr~gram wil!__be
Tickets for her performance·· are
available at the Norton Box Office; $2 for
students and $3, general'admission.

Mother's .Defense Fund sets events·
A series of fund-raising events, in..clud!ng a faculty-sponsored cocktail party and a campus appearance by feminist
Flo Kennedy, will be held this weekend
to raise funds for the defense of a Buffalo
woman recently denied custody Q.f her·
children because she is a lesbian.
The decision, ~hich is being appealed,
is...seen as having serious implications .for
ga~ parents who ,may now be in danger
of losing custody of their children solely
because of their sexyal preference.
According to attorney Barbara
Handschu-of the Buffalo law Collective
which is handling the qse, this is the first
custody case to be appealed in New York
State by a gay parent. In New Jersey, a
father who was denied visitation rights
because he is a homoSexual has also-

appeall!d the lower court's d-ecision. In a
recent case in Seattle, two lesb"ian
mothers retained custody of ·their
chadren follo)Ving legal action by their
ex-husbands.
·
The Buffalo mother, whose children
are 8, 5, arid 3, was denied custody in
spite of e'xt~nsive testimony to her fitness
and the appearance of an expert in the
field of sex and gender wlto testified on
her behalf. The woman now has
...weekend visitation rights with no provi·
sion for birthdays, holid~ys or summers.
1
' 1t's 'ironic,"
commented .one sup-portl!r, "that elsewhere say people can
adopt children and In W~tem New York
gay parents can lose custody of theirs.,_
, In addition to Flo Kennedy's presentation, the S.O ,S. Mother's Defense Fund is
supporting a cocktail party at8:30 p.m. -at
the home of John Sullivan and Judy Godfrey, 470 Linwood Avenue. Sponsors are:
Judy Godfney,• John Sullivan, Leslie and
Sally Fiedler, Jack and Marion, Hyman,
Naomi Weiutein, ~....., l:emlsCh, Peter
and Daphne Hjlre, Ira Cohen, Charles
and Angela Keil, Uz Xennedy, and Her- ,
man and Mary SchwartL Donations are
$5 (payable to the S.O.S. .Mother's
Defl!(lse Fund) a~lt are Invited to attend.
~
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A group of students who have been /
attempting to set up a volunteer U/8
· First Aid and Rescue Squad, which woufd
work closely with the Student Health
Service, will hold an organizational..recruitment meeting tonight (Thursday,
February 17) at 8 p.m. i~ 231 Norton.
According to senior Management
student Martin Schoen, a spokesman for
the group's organizers, volunteers need
not have had Red Cross first aid training,
but those with such training as well as
those who have had the more advanced
Er ie County emergency medical
technician course. are especially invited.
Faculty, staff and students are welcome.
Training for volUnteers with no previous
experience can be arranged, Schoen
says, using qualified first aid instructors,
such as himself, who are already
associatedwit~h the project.
The First Aid and Rescue Squad hopes
to gain approval from ac:ting Student
Health Service Director Dr. M. Luther
Musselman for an organized effort in
which trained volunteers would be on
stand-by in the Health Service to assist
the presently short-handed staff in
medical emergencies. The squad also
seeks to work in close cooperation wit~h
Campus Security, the Environmental
Health and Safety Office, and the Health
Servi ces Division ' of Sub-Board I.
Organizers plan to ·ask for official
recognition and approval from SubBoard in order to get fund ing.
The group would also provide
dormitory resident advisors with the,
names of qualifiecfstudents in each dorm
who could help out in emergency
situations. These individuals would, cis'
Schoen puts it, " at least know what to do
or not to do" until more qualified help
arrives on the scene. lists of whom to call
in emergencies which are now posted in
dorms are both "inaccurate" and out-of·
date, Schoen contends-. Reliance on this
information, he says, could lead to
cri!ical delays in getting help.
About 100 students have already
signed up for the proposed squad,
Schoen indicates, including some
3

~~ca~:!~~f:t~cfn~;~~he::ud~~t-~r ~~ ~
ambulance corps at other universities.
_ The Corps would organize its own
first-aid training sessions and, if officiallyrecogni zed._ would seek to get
volunteers into County-sponsored
higher level instructional programs for
emergency medidl ~echnicians and
paramedics. Because "'the County must
necessarily limit the rTUmber of people it
can train in these programs, Schoen says,
it gives priority to people who will use
the training sei-iously. Members of an
official campus rescue squad would
easil)&lt;quaHfy, he feels,
Eventually, the P,.oposed rescue squad
wg.,.ld like to get -lunding from SubBoard for the purchase of an ambulanoe
or station wagon which would · be
·equipPed with emergency gear ....:trasoxygen, q»lints, bandages, etc. The
vehicle would be used both in
emersencie$ and io the more routine
transporting of students and others from
the Health. Service to Meyer Memorial
Hospital.
. ·suNY at-Albany, SUNY at Stony Brook,
and Buffalo State already have such
student-funded and operated
ambulance corpS, Schoen says. And UIB
has no less a nei.d.lie feels.
"Besides,'' he says, "the Health Service
is already spending thOUS4nds of dollars
a year on taxi fees" to trar\sporf patients
to area hospitals, so some kind of campus
vehicle "would more than pay for itself."

Senate to meet /

Sen~a regular
meetlns Tuesday, March 4, at 2:30 p.m.
in Room 148 Diefendorf.
The following agenda has been announced: 1. Report of the President; 2.Report bf the Chairman; 3. Discus&gt;ion of
the EOP prog111m with Director Edward
Jenkins; 4. 1,. preliminary di&gt;cussion of
credh hours/contact hour. and the 4- ,
cour&gt;e load; 5. Other business.

_ The Faculty

�---:- --__._~--·-

-

-.

February 21, 1975

Sex, oppreBon .
among themes
of1Apple~'

•

Sexual politics, family relationships,
fascism and oppression are themes run·
ning through" Apple Pie," the new-music
theatre piece by feminist poet and
playwright Myrna Lamb being presented
at the Courtyard Theatre through Sunday, March 2, by the U/8 ~enter for
Theatre Research. Curtain time for each
performance is 8 p.m.
The play's narrative emerges in the
context of a coun trial. A Jewish girl escapeS from Nazi Germany to America

with her parents. She has an unhappy
love.__affair with a black .man, becomes

pregnant and has an abortion, depicted
as a dimly remembered nightmare fan-

,

tasy. She then has an affair with a Jewish
man, very much like her father, w)lich
alsoendsdisastrously.
·'-. '\. ,
Director Saul Elkin, associate professor

of theatre, describes the play as " a unique theatre piece, on the one hand, one
of those rarities - a personal and 'very
moving statement by one of our best and
most important playwrights; on the
other hand, a music theatre piece infused with a brillia~t sense of both
theatre and cinema. The play is
cihematic in the sense that we see a
series of episodes - flashes back and
forward;hints of narrative and montage.
Added to this is a score by young composer Nicholas Meyers, which is a
brilliant blend of contemporary musical
forms . .. . It's veiy dramatic and very exciting."
· Off-Broadway veteran john Marino is
I'JIUSical director. Esther Kling is designing the costumes; Ralph Fenerly is set
designer, and Mitchell Bo.gard is
technical director. lighting is bytierb De
More anO Marian Zielinski is stag'e
managei.
·
The cast includes Robin Willoughby,
Sara Wallens, lucia Beck, Geo&lt;ge Garcia,
Michael Pelonero, Jeff Brooks, Bruce
0' Au cia, Jim lytras, Ron Sandberg and
·
...
Scott Simon.
Tickets are available at the Norton
Ticket Office and at the Courtyard
Theatre. General admission is S2.50.;
stude~ts, S1 .

Allied health ·
.

seminais slated

Contemporary issues J affeding allied
health students, educators and practitioners will be investigated in a series of
three seminars to be s~nsored by the
Department of Health Sciences Educa·
tion and Evaluation:The seminars wil( include discussions
of how health care personnel can respond to new professional requirements
and changing communitY needs.
Issues and trends in peer revieW and l
professional accreditation will be discussed by Dr. John Rhodes Haverty, Jr.,
dean and professor of allied health
sciences at Georgia ..State University,
\tlanta, on March 4 at 8 p.m. at the Ex!CIItive Motor Inn, 4243 Genesee St.
"Community G911eses and' Primary
Health - Care': will be the topic- of a
speech at 8 p.m., April 14, Norton Hanby Dr. J. Wanren Perry, dean of the U/8
jchool of Health Related Professions.
. Representatives from neighborhood
hea,lth centei5 and nural heallll clinics
will be paneiK!s ;for a consideration of ·.
"Urban and Rural Non-Traditional
Heahh Delivery Models" at 8 p.m., May
5, in Norton. Others participating will be
Dr. francis Y. Hanavan, assistant ·
professor; Dr. Phyllis F. Higley, chairman
and associate professor; Dr. Elizabeth C.
Kl"f and Stephen L Wilson, asslslant
profeSSOrS, all of the Campus Depart- ment of Health Sciences Education and

in

Evaluation.

~en~g~h~Keas~----------~------~-~--

,..,;,-•.col.»

ing for transport to a central core
processing facility under Dr. Langway's
supervision for detailed study an!!
analysis. To date, Dr. Langway indicates,
more than four miles of these cylindrical
core samples have been collected by the
NSF sponsored core drilling operations.
logistics and operations for airlifting
men and materiall&lt;&gt;the remote research
sites utilized in both the_Ross Ice Shelf
Project in Antarctica and the Greenland
· li:e Shelf Prog...-m are managed and
coordinated by a unit located at the
University of Nebraska and directed by
Dr. Robert Rutford who is himself a
geologist. This agency coo~dinat~ field
work schedules, lines up mdlt~ry a1r~ft
used to haul_the sophisticated drilling
and~ scientific equipment, and sees t~at
both research personn~ and supploes · m_ove ~n and out of the resear~ sites
w1thout s~ags. -: .
.
The maJor dnllong operatiOns for the
U.S. are handled by ·the Corps of
Engineers' Cold Regions Research and
Engineering Laboratory. Drilling tool
~~velopment an~ a portton of the sci~nt1f1c core work 1s , also presen~ly be•.ng
d~.e. at CRREl s New Hamp~h1re
fac1lot1es, supported by the . National
Science foundation . It is the major-portion of 'the ice core analysis program
which is being moved to Buffalo along
with a quantity of the core ~mples. (The
new Ridge lea lab, incidentally,...will be
maintained at temperatures of -~ cen·
tigrade for storage ~nd. -100 cent1~rade
!or reseaJch.) lnvestrgat•~e work w1ll be
Clone here and ice core samples from the:'
campus collection will be supplied to
more than. 30 different, adiVe research.
projects throughout the world.

n.e·

laren can then be backdated
to identify that portion of the core· actually laid down in a given year. The
Danish studies of 'the Greenland core
have, Dr. Langway reports, confirmed'
and supported climate change theories.
previously arrived at through the use of
other methods such as sea sediment
analysis and carbon dating; as an exampie, ice core evidence showed that the
last ice age ended so~ 10,000 years ago.
The Danish work also aliaws for climate
predictions to_be made by using timeseries analysis techniques. From these
studies, Dr. Langway 'says, it is dear that
in 1974 we .are going into "a cold
period," but not an "ice age," that will
begin to minimize iit1990. If the pattern
of the previous eight centuries holds, an
upswing to warr:ner temperatures sho'!ld
then follow until the year 2025, at wh1ch
time the climate will again be aboUt the
same as it is today. Hpwever, he cautions,
these studies reflect climate trends discernible at the Greenland location and
ire subject to cautious extrapolation on a
world-wide basis-.
This ability tO key ice cor~ sampl~ ~o a
given year has its more ceremomal/
public relations aspects as well, Dr.
liingway indicates. The U.S. is supplying
the Japanese government with two one
meter length ice core samples corresponding to impOrtant dates in the
history of Japan for inclusion in an " 0cean lands" exhibition which is opf!ning
on O kinawa l~ter this year. Dr. langway
will be visiting the .exhibition in
September. He also plans a trip to the
Soviet Union to investigate possible joint
research efforts between the new U/B
polar laboratory and the U.S.S.R.'s Arctic-Antarctic Research Institutes in
leningrad and Moscow.

International Cooperation
\
The National Science FoUndation OfOneofaKind
fice of Polar Prog~s was pleased. ta
The laboratory being established here
have its woilt relocated in University
will, Dr. langway says, beth~ only one in
setting in order to enhance cooperation
~~~;~t~t~~p~d~~;ei~:t:~tii~a!~;;i~:
among scientists from many nations who
are engaged in pola.r ice stuF'ies. Closely
samples as small as parts per million·or
involved in the Greenland and Antarceven parts ..per, ·billion., On the average,•
tica "studies, 'Tor eXarTtple/ are a Danish
he says, the total dissolved chemical conresearch group headed by Dr. Willi • stituents in polar ice sampleS rarely exDansgaard, a physicist, of the University
ceed one part per million (cleaner than
of Copenhagen and a Swiss research
triple:distilled laboratory water) and the
group headed by Dr. Hans Oeschger, a
solid components equal only half that
physicist ·from the University of Bern. - quantity. Researchers working in the
Scientists from universities in f renoble,
U/ B laboratory will utilize ~tomic abFrance, Munster, Germany, and Sapsorptio n spectroscopy , spectra ...
poro, Japan, are also involved. And
photometers, mass spectroscopy, gas
Soviet personnel are eng;rged in similar
chromatography and appropriate small
studies and observations at their Vostok
particle analyzers to conduct indrilling-~ite in Antarctica.
vestiga~ions in .modern -cold and warm
room facilities-: .
Climate ClaanAe Sludles
'
The ice core samples, Dr. langway exThe Dalles,- in particular, have· m3de
plains, cOnsist of three ,components·: the
extensive studies of dimate change by
ice itself; entrapped foreign debris; and
using stable isOtope vari3ti0ns.-revealed
occl~ded air-entrapped as air bubbles.
in an ice core from Camp 'Century,
Since it is possible to identify the year of
Greenland. This core, · 1,390 meters in
origin of a particular section of a core
length and 12 centimeters in diameter,
sample, environmental and pollution
was drilled out of the ice cap by.CRREL in
bacl(ground studies can and will be
1966. It provides a record of 120,000years
carried out. For example, he says, sdenof climatic variation and change, Dr.
tists .cill take a reading of the naturallylangway says. Scientists can, through use
occurring background levels of mercury
of various indired methods,.. including
s~lfate, lead, etc., by examimng a sample
of if;e formed before the industrial
stable isotopes, trace a serif!s of annual
ice accumulation layers along the vertical
revolution. lt .can also be determined if
axis of a given long core sample. TheSe
distinct trends in the levels of such
sequential layers demarcate each year's
elements are now occurring. liht@pped
net mow dePosition just as rings
air bubbles can be .used for •analyses of
levels of carbon dioxide and carbon
delimit the annual growth of trees:

a

. mo~oxideasWellasfor"de~erminingan-

·Rosenberg film
Individuals on campus and elseWhere
affiliated with the Natio~ Committee to
Re-Open the Rosenberg Case are
sponsoring area showings ·of .the PBS
film, "The Unquiet Death of Julius and
Ethel Rosenberg," (recently nominated
for an tmmy Award). The .film will be
shown today (February zn In the Wick
Social Room, Rosary Hill l;olleJe, at 8
p.ni: and again tomorrow in Room S-2
Communicltlon Center, State UniversitY

College at 7:30 p.m. According to Committee members, the fllm addr~ itSelf
to the question" Who were the
Rosenberpl Was there really an atomic
seaetl Was the case a frame-upl Was
there evidence that a crime had been
commlttecll, ancl What was the political ,
dlrnate during the easel
The fHm Is being shown without
~charse.

dent atmospheric composition·. Nuclear
testing· il) the- atmosphere can also be
readily observed as fission p{oducts contemporaniously deposited with the snow
layers.
The ice cores can· be . Used, too,.. for
studies of the dynamic properties of ice
sheets, of the nature of ice, Its crystal
shape and form-; and of the stratigraphic
characteristics arid the terrestrial or extrateriestrial origins of entrapped grains
of deb&lt;U-.
.
ulol.juesi.opeafa~
.
Researchers at the U/8 polar ice
research facility will carry out a unique
scope and varfety of investigations, Dr.
Lan~~.:~"- Other universities
and
t .research laboratories
in the u.s:, IUCh as caJ Ted!, Ohio Slate,
the UniYenity ofN~asb, the University of Wlscontln and the Scrii'P\.Instltute
of LaJolla, California, have been or are
lnvestlptlns ce11aln individual aSpects of

Ice core samples but do nOt ·have a
. general, integrated laboratory and field
research program.
The new U/8 program will eventually ,
encompass three to five graduate
students, a faculty member, a postdoctoral student, and one or two full-time
research assistants. Three graduate
students who were previously aosociated
with l;)r. langway at the Hanover, N.H.,
facility have already taken up studies
here . Two have backgrounds in
analytical chemistry and are now working toward degrees in geology and
geochemistry, indications of thj! types of
interdisciplinary educational and
research efforts that Or. langway hopes
to develop around the polar ice co're
research program. At Hanover, he
reports, geologists, physicists, chemists,
civil engineers, and meteorologists were
all involved in- various aspects · of the
program and much the same kind of
thing could and should develop here.
The National Science Foundation, in fad,
is pleased to have Buffalo estabiisJ&gt; its~lf
as a major center for this type of
glaciological research, Or. langway says.
Field Work U/ B students engaged in the core
studies will also participate in field work
in both Greenland and Antarctica. Up to
· three individuals are needed both for
field work in Greenland this summer and
for the fall season in Antarctica, where
the 1975 schedule calls for drilling
through a 500 meter thick portion of the
Ross Ice Shelf for an ice core and to
provide an acces.s hole to the water
beneath. Unle if any data present ly exists
on what lies below the ice~ Dr. langway
says, i9 terms of either age, circulation or
composition of the water, marine life, or
the present sediment deposition rate on
the ocean floor below.
A neV., ~Jpine glacial research progi;a'm
is also being developed with the University&lt;I'' Bern ~~~~p, ~qdpr. L,a~~~y P,ljR~
to mterad w1t'h a consort•u"!l,of 5C.ln·
dinavian scientists led; by NorWay- on--a
core drilling project in Spitzbergen.
These fi!!id trips, Dr. langway notes,
can be fraught with hazards as well as
rich in scientific observation. The · investigators live on the sites, surrounded
by ~ndless stretches of·polar ice su~,
reminiscent of a "gigantic white billiard
table.' ~ Weather conditions are
capricious even in the summer months
and aircraft are the qnly links to the outside world. He survived the crash of a C54 which came in too low for a landing at
a Greenland site in 1958 and once found
himself stranded for three days on a
float\'lg island of breaking-up ice also inhabited by threatening polar bears.

11 {lurses taking

pediatric course
Eleven new students are now enrolled
in the special Pediatric Nurse Assodate
Program.
.
The 16-week program is offered by the
School of Nursif'\8 in cooperation with
/ Children's Hospital and the Pediatrics
Department of the School of Medicine.
:rhe students will complete their .work
May 23.
"0ur objective is to prepare registi!r~
nur.ses to update and expilnd their
knowledge and skills in the area of ambulatory child health so they can assume
primary care roles in appropriate settings," Miss ~orma O'Hara, Project
director, says. She is also an assoPate
professor of nursing and chairman of the
Department of Child Health at the School
of Nursing. Other faculty members are'
Dr. .James Markello, associate professor
of pediatrics; Dr. Harry Beirne, assistant
professor of pediatrics; and -Mrs. Adele
Pillitteri, assistant clinical professor of
nursing. ·
The program is funded through a-contract with the Division of Nursing,
· Bureau of Healtli Manpower Education,
· NationallnstilutesofHeatth.
-' The progr.am's fourth clus of 12
· students completed. their work January
17. Since the program started in February
of 1973, 42 -students have graduated.
Ti!eY have positions in pediatric officeS,
well baby clinics and comprehensive
care clinics.

1

�.......
~

•

. )

,,

1

-,

'1.

~ndar~
· --------~----------~~--------------~-

,,""",."''·""·41 .

!6 '):
-~

THEA.TilE PBtfOitMANCP -

=.,ANAUSISANOPOUCY

NTJ!:

the~e ~ ~y ~~L:~b!:f
Meyers, directed by ~ul Elkin. Courtyard

ThNtre, Hoyt and La.fa.yette, 8 p.m. Admission : $1 stude nts; $2.50 others. Through
March 2. •
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Reseuch.
·

u~z: ~~;

Man with One Bl;tck. Shoe
(Robert) . Norton Conference Theatre, call ·

831 -5117 for times. Admission charge.

Monitoring and Evalwtion of New Communltles: Findings and Applia(ions, Or. Mark
~:::~5 ~~;~bon New Community\ 237
•
ECONOMICSSEMJNAII
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Alternative Sedoral
Strategies: A M~croeconomic View, Or. Ulrich
Koester,, v.i.tting professor o f economia (on
lea.ve from University of Gottingen, West Germa.ny}. Rm. 107 John lord O 'Brian Hall,
Amherst Campus, 3 :.30 p.m.
.

R:O~~~B:~=-~~~iefendorf, 5 and

·

. 7 p.m. No admission charge .

MONDAY-3
ENGUSH DEPARTMENT FilM SERifS'
Shoe Shi~e {OeSica). 1-40 Farber (Capen), 3
and 9 p.m. No admission charge.
URWOIIKSHOP•
(
I
.You r Heart and Heatt Disease, 231 Norton,
6 ; ~ p.m. Register 223 Norton, 831--4630/ 1.
MEN'S IASKERALl'
Junior varsity ga.me: U/ 8 vs. Buffalo State.
Clark Hall, 6:30p.m. No admission charge.
Va rsity ga me : U/ 8 vs. Buffalo Stare. Clark
Hall, 8:30p.m. Students with 10 admitted free;
S2 general admission .
~

FilMS'
This is It (Bro ughton) and Scenes from
Under Childhood, Part 1 (Brakhage) . 147
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Regiona l Film Project .

Macedonian
dancer visiting /

CONCBIT'
UI B Orchescra and Chorus. Baird Recital ._
Hall, 8 p.m. No admi~sion charge.

Folk dancer and !olklorist George
Tomov will conduct a Macedon ian Folk
Dance Weekend on" campus, Saturday,
March 1, and Sunday, March 2.
The Macedonian-born Tomov, an experienced performer and teacher, has

LECTURE•

•

The Program of K's Coutt: Oedipal ~ncl Existential Readings of The Trial, Professor
Waher Sokel, University of Virginia. 233 Norton, 8 p.m. "No admission charge.

toured as featured soloist with the
Yugoslavian national folk ballet companies, Tanec and Lado. He has won international recognition through his
workshops and master classes in which
he uses especially made tapes and recor.
,
,
lt.
.
dings.
hile at tJ/Ii;-he w111 col\'dui:t''inaster
classes and screen films of Yugosla vian

fo!~ f.J!S.tl,il~l~. ~~.~.':P..~?fe.s fl,9;~~} (~~~.&lt;!~~C.,·

.1 1

Sarurday, March 1.: Master Class, 12
noon-3 p.m., Fillmore 'Room, Norton;

Master Class, 7-10:30 p.m., 339 Norton .
Films of folk-festivals of Yugoslavia and of
•performances by professional folk danc.e
companies will be shown at the evening

session.
Sunday, March 2: Master Class, 1-4
p.m., 339 Norton; Dance Party featuring

a Macedonian Folk Band, 7-11 p.m.,
Fillmore Room .
.
.
General admission for each session will
~1; students, S.SO.
The Office of Cultural Affairs is sponsoring the Macedonian Folk Dance
Weekend.

Lecture 5eries

The cam~ Center for Studies of
Cultural Transmission, in collaboration
with the !)lvlsion of Graduate and
Profi!Siional EducaJIC&gt;n and the Department of Speech Communication, will
p&lt;esent lecture series on "Body Motion
Analysis" by Paul Boulssac, visiting
professor of French, beginning Wednesday, March 5,
Prof. Boulssac, who Is teachln.J one
graduote and one underJraduate cou,...
here lhls semester, Is a member of the
faculty of the Unlve&lt;slty of Toronto and
has conducted extenslft studies of sign
syStems. He Is a member of the 'lnternational. Assodatiol) far Semiotic Studies.·

a

The -schedule for the ' lecture series
follows:
Mc:h S. The=::;Na(ural" Description of
Body MCJ!ion: The.Underlying Structures
aqd ~JYP.ology. Re d Room, Fa~u lty Club,
7:30 p.111.; ~~h 1~r,Notatipnal System~:
G. Pplti and P. c;on(e and R. Birdwhistell,
7:30 p.r.n., Blue Room, Faculty Club;

M1rch 21, To Lalch a Kine: The
Challenge of Body Motion Analysis,
Room 19, 4226 Ridge Lea, 11 a.m.; March
26, The Measurement of Body Motion, 1:
Two Pioneer$, Red Room, Faculty Club,
7:30 p.m.; .April 2, The Measurement of
Body Morion, II: A Tentative Proposal,
Red Room, Faculty Club, 7:3op.m.; April
t, Some Current Resnrdles in Body Motion Analysis, Red Room, Faculty Club,
7:30 p .m.

UUAIRLMS ..
Puzzle of a Downfall Child (Schatzberg,
1970), 7 :30 p .m ., and I Am a Cam e ra
(Cornel ius, 1955), 9:20 p .m. 170 MFACC. No
admission charge.
AWED HEAlTH SEMINARI
Peer Review and Profenional Accreditation,
Dr. Ji?hn Rhodes Haverty, Jr., dea.n and
professor, Allied Health Sciences, Georgia:
- State University. Executive Motor lnri, 8 p .m.
Sponsored by the Department o f Heahh
Sciences Edu cation and Eva luation, School of
Health Related Professions.
LECTURE'
Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the
" radical" Jewish Defense league, will speak.
Fillmore Room, Norton Union, 8 p.m. University community members with IDs admined
free; S1 general admission:
RAND CHAIR LECTURE SEillfS' ,
Political Landscape and the City, Sa.ul
Cohen , director, Grad uat e School of
Geography; Clark University. First floor lecture area, School of Architecture and Environmental Design, ?917 Main St., 8 p.m.

TUESDAY-4

WEDNESDAY-5

NA JURAL SOENCES AND
MATHEMATICS COLlOQUIUMf
Theories, Models and Computer Programs,

=~~.~~~-e1:a~a~~~~e:.~~ of comp-U!er

1

_cofh~a~~Tk~~d·~~~u1~{f~llows:

ENCUSH DEPAIITMfNT
FilM SEillfS'
I, Viteldoni (Fellini). 14$7 Diefe ndorf, 7 p .m.
No idmission chuge.

.

NUTllffiON AND MAN
LE(m)a~SBIES' • .
" ·'
·Calorie-Protein Malnurrilion, Or. Slanley
Gershoff: G-22 1Farber I(Capen), '12 noon .
Bring your lunch.
Sponsored by the Department of Bio:
chem1s\ry.
.
CIVIL ENGINEBIING LECT\JRQ •
Civil Engineering Education- Pasr, Present
and Future, Dr. Richard H. Gallagher, Depart-

-~~~~rs~:;. ~~u~~k!~,.J~~~e~ng, ~~rnell

Dr. Ann Scott
dies in Baltimore

UFE WORKSHOPS'
· D'&gt;:nlmio of Human Sexuality, 232 Norton,
1-3p.m.
•
Architecure: Sullivan and Wright at Buffalo.
123 Jewell Parkway, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
~ Registe r at 223-Norton , 831-4630/ 1.
PATHOLOGY SEMINARI
Human Pituitary Pathology~ Drs. Ca lvin
Ezrin , Eva Horvath and _Kalman Kovacs,
Department of Pathology, University of
Toronto School of Medici ne, Toronto Gener-al
Hospital and the Bant irig lnstilute. 14J5 farbe r·

U:.pen).3-s p.m. .
BROADCAST•

ltlan Stone, New York gallery owner, is in - .
lerviewe&lt;f by U/B art ~ia.q_r!an Ha.rry Ra. nd.
WBFO·FM {88.7), 4 p.m.
.
BUFFALO ACADEMY Of .MEDICINE
MEETIN&lt;;t
Fuel Metabolism and Diabetes, Dr. George
F. Cahill, professor of )11edicine, Ha.rva.rd
Medicai ·School and the Peter Berit Brigham
Hospital. Faculty Club ·(Harrima.n library), 5:30 .
p.m. A d inner follows a.t 7 p.m. Med students
a.re welcome at the lecture a.nd a limited
numbe( may a.nend the dinner. For more information, all the Office of Continuing
Medical Educalion, 831-5526.

Funeral services for: Dr. Ann london
Scott, 45, a national feminist leisder and
former assistant professor af English
here, were held on Monday in the AI[
Souls Unitarian Church, Washington,
D.C.
.
Dr. Scott, who left the University in
1973 to devote full time to work as a
Washington lobbyist lor the National
Organiution ,of Women (NOW), died on
Monday, February 17, in her home in
Baltimore. She had been ill with canoer
for some time, an Associated Press repon

at Buffalo and the Speech and Hearins
Associotion ofWeooern New Yorit.

indicatec;l.

AIM•

.

.

·

AUOIOI.OGY-SP&amp;Of PA~OGY

··.:. ...

, . , , ,_ , · ,

. ·fJJ I• . • . , ,

-.ut

'

Liver Lysosom•l Clycosid•ses •rKI llehted

· Enzymes. Or. Oscar Toust~, professor and
cha.irma.n, Department of Molecular Biolotrv,
Vanderbilt Univenlty. 134 C.ry H•ll (He•Tih
Sciences); coffee at·~ lecture at 4:15p.m.
PHARMAcruncs SEMINAJII
DegradatiOn Kinetics of Ampidllin in the
Solid State, Albert lo, Ph.D. ca.ndldate,. .
Department of Pharma.ceutia. 0 170 Bell
Facility, 4J p .m.
"'"CSEA MEfTING•
The Civil Service Employees Association,

~;ti,;itl ath~~~ ~~v~l~=~e~~ta.=be~~
smor~rd

Niagara Falls Blvd., 5:30 p.m. A
dinner is included in the ,tid: ~t price of $3.
Reservations should be ma.de b~ Feb. 28.
FilMS'
Menagerie and P1um Pudding (Yellow Ball
Workshop}. 14$7 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No a.dmis-sion charge.
Presented by the Rpgional F_ilm Proj~ .
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnoN
CARDIAC CUNIQ
.
Th is series of clinia in physical education of
lhe cardiac pa&amp;ienl and arrhythmia. workshops
are scheduled each Thursday evening through
May 8. The topic of tonight's clinic isAuscult~­
tion. Fa rber (Capen) Hall Basement, Room C22, 7:30-9: 30 p.in. For informatiori o r registra- .
lion, call the School of Medicine, 831 ~5526.
SPonsored by the School of Medicine:
UFE WORKSHOP•
Anriqu~ng a?d Collecting,_Faculty Club Red
Room, 7 .30·9.30 p .m. Reg1ster 223 Norto",
631-4630/ 1.
•

EXHIBITS
GALURY 219£XHIBIT
Rubber Works by Midtael Zwak is ,made
up of scu lptural . pieces and hanging works
made from industrial materials. The exhibit
· run\ 1hrough March 7 in 219 Norton . Hours:
Mon.-Fri., 11 a.m.-4 p .m.; Mon ., Wed ., and
Thurs., 7~10 p.m. ; Sun., 1-S p.m.
LOCkWOOD EXHIIIT
'PoJish•'Collection! extlibition culled frbm·
the University's collection of mote than 4$,000
volumes of malerial. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Continuing.
·
. MUSIC UIRARY EXHIBIT
Harrison ·Birtwistle: Worh and R~Views is
currently on di.lay in the Mu~ic library,
Bair:d Hall, through February 28.
. VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Peo ple , photographs b y Mickey
Oslerreicher. Hayes-- Ha.ll Lobby, through
' Fe brua ry 28, Mon9a.y ·thro ugh Frid)ly from 9
. a.m.-5 p .m.
Presented by the Office of Cult~ra.l Affairs.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIIIT
Fa ces, photographs by Dr. Herbe~t
Reismann, professor of engineering science.
Ha.yes Ha.ll ~bby, Monda.y..fric:t.y. 9 a . m. ~S
p .m., starting March 3.
Presented by the Office Of Cultural Affairs.

NOTICES
TAX ADV1S0U SEilYICE .

I'Oreisn

is

The Off"" of
Student Afloln
apin olferinJ a tax advisory service forforelln

per-

scholon a{'d lludents. Llw SIUdents ~
Steiner and Alan Straus will be IYIIIIble 10-12
SEiliBf
The To&lt;•l ChiOOS Behind Aphaslo. McKenzie
houn
11 the foreisn SIUdent Office.
W. Buclt, Ph.D., Univenlty of OretJon Medical .--' The service runs throuP April 11, Monday
School. Rm. 15, 42-44 Ridse Leo, 7 p:m.
and Wednesday from 2-S p.m. call 111· 3821
lor an appointment.
Sponsoted by U/11, Slote.UnMnity Collqe
PRORSSIONS DISTINGUISHfD lECtuRE

She had served as associate executive 1 • Broken Blossoms. 7ll Acheson, 7:30p.m. Ne
director of the American ~atiOn for
odmisslon cmrwe.
Higher Education until her Illness caused
UUAI·FK.MV• ·
her resignation in late4974..
PUule of a Downl•ll Child (Schotzbet&amp;
A founder of the Buffalo chapter of
1970), 7:30 p .m ., and l - Am a Camer~
(Con&gt;elius, l955), 9:20 p.m. 1«! hrber (C.NOW, Dr. Scott joined the "nation~
pen). No admiuion charge.
organization shonly aher its founaing in
1967. l.&lt;lst May she !"•s reelected to a
POEnlY II!ADING'
thifd term as its legislative vice 'president.
Will~tp Staffordt 231 Norton, 8 p .m. No a.d·
A native of San FranCisco, she taught ai
mission charge. Presented by the Deputment
?f English Poetry Cqmmittee.
_ -.
the University of Wash ington in · the
1960's !Jelore joining the U/Biaculty.
CONCBIT•
In addition to her work with NOW.. - The Dorian Woodwind Quintet performs.
MrS. Scott served o n the board of direc- • Mary Seaton ~oomt.. Kle inhans Music Hall,
8 :30 p.m. Admission : S1 students; S2 facu lty,
tors of Commdn Cause and headed a
staff andilumni; S3 general admission.
number of women'-s rights projec;ts for
Presented by the Department of Mu~ic and ·
the Modern Language AsstK:iation.
·
, Unive~si~y·wide'Committee on the Arts.
She was author of what the New York
Times- referred to as one of the first
doc;umented studies ~sex d. ti~ riminaTHURSDAY.!...-f;
tion il)_.higher educa · ,n, ';{he Half· ,.,.·
Eaten Apple," publish as a supplement
to the lrepolfer, May 14, 1970.
Surviving are her husband, Tom Scott,
an artist and teache(, and a teenage son,
Jarrbd . .(
.,

- CB1 ANDMOI.ECULU IIOloGY

INTERVIEWS
CJN.CAMI'Ui-

The ...rf of the Unlvenlty. Plaaon!ent lnd
career Guielance Oflla: -~comes all SIUdents

in the llnMkity community lnd olumnl 10
take part in various career propams offered
this year. The on-campus Interviewing
1

=:~~n~!~ i~d:3~~!~!h
:~:~~~~tal b:;,':!;ntati!:.ust~~id!~

from all degree levels, who completed their
course '!9rk in January or expect to in Ma.y
1975, are inv1teP to take part in the inter·
viewing. Regist ration foims are available in
Hayes Anne-. C, Rm. 6. The following agencies
will be interviewing this week :
THURSOAY-27: Texaco, Inc.; U.S. Social
security; law Engin~ringTesti ng Co.
FRIOAY-28: Aetna Casualty &amp; Surely Divi- ·
sion; Travelers Ins. Co.
MONDAY-3:" CIBA-Geigy C.orp.; Pratt &amp;
Whitney Airq•ft.
'
.
nJESDAY....J.ot: InterN! Revenue Service;
Northwesteln 'J4utual Life Insurance.
wrbNESDAY-5: Republk Steel; Drese&lt;
lnduotiles,lnc.
THURSDAY~ : Union Corblde CAi&lt;p; NYS
~f1TaxatlonandRnonoe.
·

.,

�·-OIIellllllr

::
February 27, 1975

. .12211&amp;

and locatio ns are posted on residence hall
bulletin boards o ne week in advance of film.
IRC fee-payers are adm itted free.
UUA.BFILM••
· l.af.!ghing Policeman (Rosenberg). Norton
Con'fe rence Thea tre, ·call 831-5117 for times.
Admission charge.

THURSDAY-27.
ALCOHOl AIUSl: I'REVINTION &amp;
TREATMENFCONFfRENCfl

This two-day confere nce is,sponsored by
The Research Institute o n Alcoholism Division

of Research, the New York State Depanmen(
of Merttil Hygiene and The Medical Society of
Erie County, assisted by the UIB Continuing
Medical Education program. Hilleboe
Auditorium, Roswell Park Memorial1nstitute,

SATURDAY-1 UFE WORKSHOP•
Weekend work shop for Wq men, Ellico tt

9 a.m .-5 p .m. For furtlie r information, call &amp;422417.
._,

Complex. Register 167 MFACC, Ellicott, 6362348.

AFRICAN STUDIES LECTURE•

Ashanri Communication Fo rms, Dr. Mole fi
Asante , chairman, Department of Speech
Co mmunication . Rm. · 65, 4226 Ridge l ea, 34:30p.m.
Sponsored by the African Studi.es Comminee.

CHINA NIGHT
Rid11e

PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
.
The Arro w of Tim e a nd . Macroscopic
Irrevers ibility. U/ 8 Professor T. Y. Wu . 111
Hochstetter, 3:30 p.rn.

.,

DEPAIITMENTOF PHARMACEuncs
SEMINARI
Plasma l evel-Response Relationships in the
Assessment o f Drug and Drug Metabolite
Potency, Or. Arthur f. Atkinson, Jr., associate

professor of medici!]£ and pharmacology, .
No rt.hw e st e rn Uni ve rsil y. Kenw ell
Auditorium, Millard Fillmore Hospital, 4 p.m.
MATHEMATlCS COUOQUIUMI
Freeness o f and in Topological Gro ups, U/8

Professor Bernard Gelbaum. Rm . 38, 42-46
Ridge l ea, 4 p.m. (coffee at 3:30):
FILM•
Th e Cool World (Clarke). 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admissiOn charge.
Presented by the Regio nal Film Project.

HILLEL HOUSE•

Morning Sabbath service at 10 a.m., followed by a Kiddush and Torah study session. 40
Capen Blvd.

SATURDAY
MA RCH I , 1975
6 pm

LECTUREIDISCUSSIOJII•
Child Development and Education, Or.

uo Cofeleritl

David El kind, Piagetian psychologist- 231 No rton, 10 a.m.
Sponsored by the f:du cational Psychology
and Develo pmental Psychology Gradu ate Studenf Associatio ns.

fe aturinR

A FULL COURSE
CHINESE DINNER ·
fu rvdMI ~ rn

6 · 7 pm )

MACEDONIAN FOLK DANCE
WORKSHOP•
George Jomov, Yugoslavi an da ncer, will

A VARIET Y SHOW
LUCKY DR AW &amp; PRIZES
ANDA PA RTY
tickets
lfckets

mr

conduct the wo rksho p. Fill more Rm., Norton
Unio n, 12 noo n-3 p.m. Ad mission : 5.50
students; ,S1 general adm issio n.
·

Sl ., O srw:knts
S3.50 Non·slutk11ts
stJie at Nnrton Tir~l 0/fia

CHINA NIGHT"

A full course ChineSe d inne r, variety show,
a drawing and party are scheduled. Ridge l ea
cafeteria, 6 p. m. Admissio n: $2.50 students;
$3.50 general admissio n. Tickets are ava ilable
at the Norto n Ticket Office.
Spo n~ red by GSA and SA.

V"tJNSORI:D HI' \A 6 G......

. MACEDONIAN FOLX DANCE
WORKSHOP AND ALMS•
George Tomov~ Yugoslavian dancer, will

HIUEL HOIJSl•

"Prop-In" Qight. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.

conduct this workshop and show fi lms of
Yugoslavian folk festiva ls. Rm. 339 No rton
Union, 7-1 0:30 p.m. Ad mission: S.SO studen ls; 51 general admission.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCA TlON
CARDIAC CLINIQ

This series of cl inics in physical e'ducat ion of
the cardia c patient and arrhythi"Qia workshops
ace schedUled e ach Thursday evening thro ugh
May 8. The to pic of to night 's cl inic is Precordial Pulsatiom . farber (Ca pen) Hall Basement,
Roorn G..22, 7:~9 :·30 p.m. F~r informatio n or
registration, ca ll the School of Medicine, 8315526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.
INTBIV ARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP"

Follow-up ' program on basic Chrislianity.
Buffalo Stale, 8 p.m.
CIVIUZATION ALM SERIES•

Epi so de e ight in Sir Ke nn e lh Cl ark's
" Civilization" series is entitled Th e Light of Erperience A discussion following is led by
Professor Charles' Beyer of Ihe French Departme nt and Barbara Beyer. 170 MFACC, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by Vico E:ollege and College B.
. CONCERT'

The Composers Workshop offers.its second
concert of the season. Baird Recital Hall, 8
•p.m. No admission charge-:·RRST AID AND AESCUE SQI:JAD"•
All those in the Universi~ commuoity inter~ed in formini a firstJ id and rescue
squad should attend this meeting. 231 Norton ,
8p.m.
UHWOUSiior-

M=~c!~~~~:~~~g,.

MEN 't VARSITY BASKETIAU•
U/8 vs . U. of Pittsb urgh . Memor ia l

Auditori um, 6:30p.m. Ad missio n c~a rge .
CACFILM ~

Medica l · Educat io n program, Hi lleboe
Audilo rium , RosweJ I Park Memorial Inst itute,
9 a.m.-5 p.m. For furthe r information , call8422417.
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINARI
Convergent Pat h ways..of Sensory Prpcessing
in thf&gt; Mammalian Cortex, Or. Walle Nauta ,

tftWOIIIISIICP

·

23411.
AI.ClOIIOlMUSE: f'IIEVINTION &amp;

-.-.-rCONFBB«:Q

This ~y conleren"" is' ~ ~
n..Jteoearch lnsdiUie on Alcoholism DMsloti
of lteselrch,"lhe New Yo rk Stole Department ·
of Menial Hypne and The
I~ of

u

Sato, Depa rtment of Dermatology. 108 Sher·
man, .C p.m.
-

Continuing

TERNATlONAL PUB•

A mini· performance of Arabian and ... Thai
da nces. Refreshments will be served . 231 Norto n, 4:30p.m.
Co-spon:oored by Inte rnational Pub-OFSA
and the SA International Coordinator.

riu~IAR~ATlON .

DISTINGUISHED VISITORS SERIES"
t.aw and the Patho logy of-oppression. Flo

THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
App le Pie is .i world-premie re musical

theatre piece by Myrna lamb and Nicholas
Meyers, directed by Saul El kin. Courtyard
Theatre, Hoyt · and - l afayette, 8 p .m. Admission: 51 students; $2.50 others. Through
March2.
Prese nted by the Cen ter for The atre
Research.
U/1 SYMPHONY IAND 0

Noted compgser·Vincen i Persichetli directs
the Symphony iiand. Sweet Home Senior High
School, 8 p.m. No admission charge.

Kenned y, bla ck fe mi_nist and civil rights
leade r_ 106 Jo hn lord O 'Brian Hall, Amherst
'
·
Campus, 1 p.m.

WOMEN'S IASI(ETIAU•
U/ 8 vs. St. Bonaventure. Clark Hall, 7 p.m .

No admission cha11Je.

UUAI CONCEilT..

M~LCHEMISTRYSEMIN,\Rf

PARTY•

Sponsored by Cora P. Maloney College.
- ~~~·:· Fargo A145, 7:30p.m.
'

Framptons Camel featurihg Peter Frampton.
Fillmore Room, Norton Union, 8:30 p.m. Admission ch_a rge. . . ._

oOcumenta..cies o n Va rious 'Aspects of life
and ~dvan ces i n China, 146.-Diefendorf, 7:45.

UUAI COffHitOUSP•
Entertainment by the bluegrass Nnd, Buffalo Gals. First Roor cafeteria,-Norton Union, 9

Nonpolymeric An!imetast.atic Drugs, Alan

C. Schroeder. 245 Cary Haii.(Health Sciences).
2p.m. CEU AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEMIN,\Rf
.
Nucleotide Sequences of 8in$1ing SitesJor
Co nlrol Proteins,
Or. Jay Gralla, Th e

·acnLM••

Women I n Love. 140 Farber (Caperi), 8 and
10:15 p.m. Admission: $1.
sQuAUDANCP
CCHpOnsored by the International Living
Center and the Cultural ExG"hange Committee.
- Refreshments will be - served. Red Jacket
Loungei Ellicon, _8 p.m.
~REOTAL•
Pianist Parrida GUtzwiller performs. Baird

Recital Hall, 8 p.m. ~admi Ssion charge.

.n:~~~~premiere

musical
theatre piece by Myrna Lamb and' Nichoris
Meyen, directed by Saul Elkin. Courtyard
Theatre, Hoyt . and _Laf~e. 8 .p.m. Admiss.ion: $1 stUdents; S2.50 others. Through
March2.
Presented' 'by - the Center for Theatre
Research. uVAI COfFEEHOUSE•• "~&gt;
Entertainment by the bluegrass band, Buffalo Gals. First floor cafeteria, Norton Union, 9
p.m. Admission charge.

~AlfNGIN&amp;RINGSEMINAIII

Patterns of V.-Qrion in a Fluvial System.
Lawrence J. Onesti. 142 Parker; coffee at 3:50,
followed by lec_lure. ·

-

and 9':30 p.m. A..dmission: $.50 studenlS; $1
general admissiOn.
.
'"Sponsored by U/8 Chinese studl!nts.

Ova~DEPAIITMENr,
WATa IIE50UaCESAND

~ Worlcshop for Women, EIIICOII
Complex. Rqisler 167 ~FACC, Elllcon, 636-

Erie County, auisled by the

PHYSIOLOGY DEPARTMENT SEMINARN
Na. K, HCOJ Permeability Across the Proximal Tubufar Cel( Membrane, Or. Kenzo

Massachusetts lnstit'ute of Technology. 108
Sh ~rm an , 1 p.J!l.

Carborundum ·""· ' Biological Laboratories, Harvaa:J University.
244 Cary Hall (Health Sciences), -:3:15p.m.
Resister at 223 Nonon, 831-4630/ 1.
COMPI.IT&amp; SCIENCE COUOQUIUMI .
THEATRE.I'BFOIIMANCP
_
Medical Applicarions of Computerized
Apple Pie is • world·premiele musical
Proc~ures' for-the ReconstrudiQ!l of Objects
theatre piece by Myrna Lamb and Nicholos
from
X-r3ys, Or. Gabor Herman. Rm. 41,4226
Meyer&gt;, directed by Saul Elkin. Coortyard
~ dRe l~ , 3:30. p.m.
· Theme, Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission: $1 students; $2.50 others. Through
PHI~SEMIN,\Rf
Is MateriaUsm Conceivable7 Professor
March2.
Presented by the Center for Theatre .. Jerrokt Aronson, SUNY"inghamton. R~m: 1~.
lteselrch.
, 4~44 Ridge lea, 3:30'P.m.
PlASMA SEMINAl! sBis,
PUIUC LEC1UIIE" ,
I'Ysma Sh9ths Adjacent to Emitting or .Ab-- Nuniog Home Sandal. Andrew Stein,
sorbing Surfaces, ProfessorS. H ~ Lam, ~n ,
chairman of the TemPor•rY St, te Commission
on LMns Costs and the Economy. HU\.. ment of .Aerospace and..Mechanical Sciences,
Princeton University. l04J'.adter, 3:30 PJJI·
Lount1e. Norton Union, 8:30p.m.
'
5TAT1STICALSCIENCE COLLOQUIUM~
UUAI'RLM• •
• The Unhlenlly Group Diabe&lt;"' Projecl: ReUuflhing Policeman (Rosenberg). Nonon
~Theatre, coll831 -5117 lor times.
cMt Dew!lopments, U/8 Professor M~ryin
Zelen. Rm..A-48, 42JO ,R~ge Lea, 3:30p.m.

FRIDAY-::-28

'-

Women "in L o~ 40 Farbe r (Capen), 8 and
10:15 p.m. Ad mission: $1.

...

lR~ ~=·~ the 0~ and Go West. Time

p.m. Admission charge.
UUAIRLM~•

·

Tall Blond Man With One Black Shoe
(Roben). Nonon Conference Theatre, call
831 -5117 for times. Admtssion charge.

SUNDAY-2
MACIDONIAN fOlX DANa _

WoUsttoro

.

Ceorfl'! Tomov, . Yugoslavian dancer, will
conduct the workshop. Rm. 339, Norton
Union, 1-4 p.m. Students 5.50'; general adm~
sion$1.
~
IIACHEL CAitSON COLLEGE SUNDAY
SUPPBI•

OJn.\er will be follpwed by an eco-poetry#
reading by Dennis Maloney. Farso 5 main
lounge, EllicOn, 5:30p.m. Dinner is $.75".
MACE[)ONLAN fOlJ( DAN~.
· PARTY•

• ·

~

....:.._

A Macedonian band will entertain. Fillmore
Rm., Nonon Union, 7-11 p.m. Admission: $.50
students; $1 se.neral public.
JAZZ TRIO I'BifOIIMANCE•
The Thermopylae JaZz Trio, Katharine
C'!,!nell Ora~ Theatre, Ellicott, 8 p.m. Ad- .
m•sslon charge::,
FACULTY

JtKir.u•

. Clarinet ist Alleri Sifel... perfor:ms. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Admission; S.SO students;
51 faculty, staff and alumni; $1.50 ~al
public.
·
(I lim 101M~ 7,

col. 2)

-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1385004">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY-AT BUFFALO

VOL 6, NO. 20

~20,1975

•

Contradlef
for1fktory
Furnas Hall

The State University Construction .
Fund has awa rded an S8.7 milliOn con·
tract · to . the J_ Migliore Construdion
Company Inc. o f Tonawanda to build
Clifford C. Furnas Hall on the Amherst
Campus.
D&lt;'sighed by Marcel Breuer and
Associates of New York and the Canrion

PartnNship o f Grand Island, Furn ~s Hall
will house the Department of Chemical
Engineering . and provide some space
for the Departments of Civil and

Mechanical Engineering.
· Containing approximately 57,000 net
SflliM&lt;' feet on 10 stories, the structure
will h&lt;' the tall est of several engineering
huildings on the_new ca mpus.
""lhC' first engineering building was
rrc&lt;'ntly comple ted. It, too, was con-

tracted by the Migliore firm.
Work is expected to start immediately
on lhC" Furnas structure which will contain instructional and rese-arf:h labs, as
well as offices, classrooms and an in-

Bikes called serious transportation alternative :~~f~~~~~~h~~n~l£i~~~.:i.·a:~::
IJPabidawanl~

.. _ ·

.,.~
_ . . _...,.el'"suif.:.;~..,. ~... .:-~~ ....
In 1973, for ihe first time since America
began. its bittersweet love affa~r wi~h th_e
car, b1cycles outsokf automobiles m th1s
co t
un ry. .
.

.. "1"

~

.

.

from moto~1_zed traff1c. For_ reasons. of
,safety, env•ro':'mental qualuy and m-

~~=r~~~~e, ~~at~~;:rta~?:n •;l:nn~~~~~~~

no longer afford to ignore the bicycle."
To date, most bikeways-planning has
·!kJI whole blcydes ore now so popular
reflected the general attitude that bik
that tliere · are often !o!'g .detlakys an
are.fun. but not a reasonabl" alternati:~
deliwirr,'IJr.taofnw Arn¢ri~ns a e ~e
-.....
61lt~"ietfo~i§.~"1!1a'i~\Jhf~nfittfy • tl&gt; tl)e-:ar pr bU~)or.~l!ing to work or
niiNnbeu
$•,.• ... .qn, 15 ~I 5-1-~!:.l.t
rnftlns-othe&lt;
rouMe.....
• o .,_n .,." ,
. a. ... tlt.iil.~ .. ifrSisf thit, scenic
professor of geogra~ and sociofc:igy,
ii!&gt;j~do\1-ed railroad beds
and Perry Hanson, assastant professor of _ are no longer enough. .
geography.
• p
.H
"
.
"'1'-tt:ordin' to the Hansons, the single .
. ns er~y
anson says , scentc
m&amp;t fOrmitble "obstade to irriegrating
blk.ew~f.S lake the _propose&lt;l rou!e along
i - an improved urban
the Ene Canal are great; but· ~hat we
the ............_
.......,~ ''"'
.
.
need is a route ' down Main Strt!et."
tra~sportataon system 1s. the _pers~stent
Demarcating a bike.lbuslane down Main
behef . that th': bike as pramara!y a
Street would cost the City $500 for paint,
reaeat1onal vehicle .rather than a v1able
theurbangeographerestimates.
meansoftran~lon.
.
The recreational orientation of
No
llkeonJI
American eyclifiB is reflected even ln the
At present there are virtually no combikes we c:hoose. Racing blltes are exmuter bikeways in Erie County (although
tremely popular with American adults.
a bike route connecting the Amherst and
But In-Europe Dr. ferry Hailson notes
Main Street Campuses is in the planning
where blldns ~- transportation is. mor~
~tjge).
A.mberst_Campus w.ill evenwldel1~,ten~. rapng bikes . t'!ally · in~lucle_ fi~e;· to ; !en miles ol
are tes ~~.,. .five« even
b1keways. Ransom Oaks, an .Amherst
~ bllu!s wlilch are pedalled at a
residential community, also includes

-w. •

bir.:."Yfrw;;·

c-n&gt;e

.
.
nas Hall will have many of the same exseveral m1les of b•kepaths, but neither of
tcrior and structural features, including
these are p~rt of an integrated area-wide
pr&lt;'-streued and pre-cast concrete and
transportation sy~tem.
.
charcoal color brick. It will be connected
Locally,_ plannmg f~r b•ke travel has
to Bell via an above ground end~
begun, w~th the creation. of a b•kewa_ys
....~~trian bridge.
·-:.:
s be
tt
f th N
F
...,."'~
Tu omml .ee o
e. lagara rontaer
Dr. Harry T. Culhnan, chairman of the
ransportataon Committee. Both HanD&lt;&gt;partment of Chemical -Engineering
- sons are mem~rs ~f that group, w~ich
noted that many features of Furnas Hati
•' -J&gt;een meetang "!'~ 1JI73 ~'? t:onsade~
· .
.,
.
•with othet
_,s""in:""!J~
61lie "'!!4el~
~
- I
.·- • •
tegrated 1'ntoa- ·
edt
t'
~ · ·
.,. .
~ -- ~
n lmprov
ran
~ IOn
" Such areas as process metalhirjy, - ·
system~or•Western New .York.
electron_ micrOScopy and systems design
The potential impact of the bike on
are directl~ related· to·"'Chemical
travel behavior is enormous. As Susan
engineering, thus the cooperation incorHanson points out, some 80 per cent of
porated into the facility's layout and
all car trips ate under lou. r miles, a
equipment will be extremely beneficial,"
reasonable distance:to travel by bike, If
he said.
..
_ .
bike trips were ·substit1.1ted for a substan"We are excited about the new
tial percentage of those trips now made
facility. Our department has been moyby car, the benefits in red4ced traffic,
ing around from one to another terncleaner air, .and reduced fuel consumpporary facility since its beginnning 14
tion alone would be enormous.
.years ago. But at the same time we have
Moreover, "the Hansons point out, the ·
built up an internationally · reputable
bi~e could become the vehide of choice
program in terms of faculty and students.
for the "transportation .disadvantaged,"
Furnas Hall will physically inatch the
dramatically increasing their mobility
Department's professional ability and
without increasing their dependence on
studenttalent,"Cullinanadded. ·
mass transit.
· The new building is expected to be
'""'""'"••·1... ~. "
a&gt;mplete~n the fall of 1977.
·

;:~;:,::::ei:i:: ·Grad student· ~o.ip concerned over budget.

hasmuchtoreoommendit: it's compact,
A. grouJ&gt; which hopes to become the"
raisesthefollowing·points:
non-polluting, health-enhancing and
legally recognized collective· bargaining·
"1 . We are opposed to any S)ltbacks in
relatively lnexpensivl!. It ' doesn't use
unit for State-funded -graduate student
the total number of staff lines allocated
scarce fuels and doesn't.require expenstaff member$ . has expressed its .apto gradua\1! staff. The researching and ·
slvematntenan&lt;:e.
,
prehension about the impact which the
teaching .work load carried.by grad~Ute
But, under present conditions, bikers
"dismal" 1!175-76 budget outlook may
employees contributes greatly to the
who stray too far from a country road
have on campus grad stud!!nts.
educational purposes of this institution.
take their lives lri their hands. lu the
In an open rilemorandum to President
The commitment to q~Uiity grad~Ute
Hansons told the .Transportatign
Robert l. Ketter, ~n McAllister Hull of
education is a commitment t(!· qualitY
Research Board at Its 54th annual - the Graduate School, . -department
public education.
·
,._.. r.t-mcindi.(at the Boanf.s first
chairmen, and the University communi"2. Not .of lesser importance, we are
~ _ ,""-eee to bikeways), "if
·ty, the · Steering Committee of the _concerned about the i.,come level of
the·~· ll to become 1 viable, safe .,•Graduate Student Employees · Union
each of those State lines. It Is evident
and ~· used ~ns of transporpoints out that "we are told to expect a
through its budget requests that even
: tat1on, ~- facilities must be provid·
number of cutbacks ·~nd resulting shills
this University recognized the lnadeeiL "Til~ ~ primll!rily constructing
in University priorities," an eaq&gt;eetalion
quacy . of the present levels. The re~blltepailis or delimiting bicycle
which, they say, causes the same conaim
quested 20 per cent Increase, althouRh it
'lanesontexlsdngstreetstoseparatebicyamonggraduatestudentsasintherestof
fails to meet the loss of real Wages due
de ftom . , _ traffic. In addition, a -the campus community. .
to inflation (45%) since the present level
number of secondary support facilities,
"Given the Governor's . budget
was set at ~,000 In 1967, has now, apsuch•showerstnplaces.ofemployment
recommendations," the group's stateparently, been lost altogether. Our preand -1 ecure parkl11g places at
ment says,
understan&lt;! thatthere·re· . sent average income, well under that
delllnldolls, are necessary to encourage
main major decisions to be made both at
State legislature mandated figure, is not a
1~ bicycle use.
the departmental level and at higher adliving wage. The bunlen only increases.
• "11Je critical point to be made is that
ministrative levels conqKning the impad
"3. To the extent that cutbacks
the 11UJ11ber of bicycles on the road Is
cif budge( Cuts on our l)nlversity. Onepf
become necessary, and to the extent the
~ 10 rapidly that the number of
the matters to be decided is the funding
University is able tO"C?ntrol the impact of
acddems irmilvlni bicycles and motor . allocation for gl'ad~UI!! teaclling and
those cutbacks" on its various divisions, it
vehicles wilt amtlnue to skyrocket unless
research staff for the next academic
is good academic afl.(i democratic policy
appropriate steps are taken to provide
year."
to have the full participation In that deci·
bikeways that are tn some way separate . ·
In view of this situation, th': group
sion process of those affec;!ed by such

"we

decisions. The grad~Ute"students of.this
·University have a considerable share of
the responsibilities In its academk and
research programs; this must be
reflected in their participation In the
University process which, In setting
priorities, determines the shape and ·
share of-cutbacks.
·
·
"4. Finally, we must add~ the
departments where the final, most immediate, impact of any cutbacks will be
felL· It is clear that top priority for
available funding must be given to ihose
graduate students who . have arre.dy
begun work at this center and who are
making progreso towards completion of
that work. If it ·becomes necessary for
evaluation_of graduate stl!dents beyond
that required -as part of the normal
academic program, in order to asoign
available funds, tben it is of paramount
importance that the criteria to be used
be set down clearly and 'openly. 1u is
already the case in many University
departments, it is a right of grad~Ute
students to participate in establishing
such criteria." ·
•
The group says it is ''concerned that
the graduale student population, who in
their study and work programs con·
11

..,.,.,,..,...r.nJ.11

�:!

•es

.......

• February 20. 197S

caled serious alten~GIIM~----!'
Until sale bikeways are built here, bike
a..
.....
Eftlclenl
"The bicycle," they explain, "offers a
travel will continue to be a blood sport
(fmtn ,..,.,_ rol.

c:t-p and efficient means of transporta-

tion for those who are either too young,
too old, or too poor to own or operate a
ar. Currendy this arless portion of our
populatlori has little choice in matters of
tramponation, and ... has·b.?en referred

to as 'captive' mass tran_slt riders."
The bike is also gain'lhg recognition as
.an important factor in "mixed mode
travel." As Susan Hanson explains, it is
possible to link bikeways with masstransit stations where travellers could
either park their bikes or take their bikes
with them on the bus or train. Once they
arrived at their"'destination, say, downtown Buffalo, they could use their bikes
to travel from place to place within the
city. Such a system" would extend the
usefulness of the bike and should obviate the reliance on cars for longer
trips to popular destinations.
A major problem lacing proponents of
increased bike travel is the existence of a
national highway system that was built
exclusively with automobiles and trucks
in mind.
"The problem in America is that the
scene is set," says Perry Hanson. To build
bikelan1'5 on all major highways and
streets in just one city would cost
millions of dollars - even though such
lanes are cheaper to build and maintairi
than roadways for heavier vehicles.
A rmsonable alternative to a comprehensive system is to build selectively,
constructing bikeways where use is likely
to b.e greatest. But the lack o f reliable
data on intra-urban bike use has made
rational planning very difficult.
5lucfy ol . .e • UriNn Transportation
One of the few studies documenting
bike use as part of a total urban transportation scheme is the Uppsala (Sweden)
Household Travel Survey, undertaken in
1971 by Dr. Duane Marble, now U/B
professor of geography, and the Hansons, who were then graduate students
it Northwestern.
·
ppsa1a, a dty of 120,000 in- a iiitiOn~
much like ours in its affluence, its high
car·to-person ratio, and its commitment
to an interstate higtiway ·system, had, at
the time of the study, a high rate of bike
owners.hip but no special pub"lic
provisions for bike travel. Unlike most
Americans, however, the Swedes do
regard the bike as a vehicle not a toy.
By analyzing "travel diaries" kept by all
adults in 300 randomly selected
households, the researchers found that
more than 11 per cent of all trips were by
bike. All groups except the elderly traveled more often by bike than by bus, a
surprising finding in light of the city's efficient bus service. The bike was esPI!ciallr. popular for travel io work, and at
least ten per cent of all trips to libraries,
banks, post offices, flower shops, and
supermarkets were by bike.
·
No such data currently. exists for an·
American city, the Hansons point out,
and comparable studies are needed for
ratlorial planning for bike trampon_atiOn.
Buffalo's less than Ideal weather would
seem to be a drawback to bike travel
here, but the bikeway-planners don't
resard that as an insurmountable
problem. Safe, tolerable riding conditions depend on a number of
parameters (wind-chill factor, .the
amount ol snow on the around, and
humidity, for example) that Susan Hanson hopes eventually to alculate. Cold
alone
be compensated
for by dressing ~Y·
"You could probably ride here nine
months a ysr.'' Perry Hanson believes.
Durfns January, for example, lioth Hanrode their bikes almost every day.

an rather..=

.....,Wudu Cqulp•e•ll ·
Blkewllys could also be specially

equipped for llrinter wuther. In the

~nels, which has the world's

model biJce..travel system, transportation

-ot

expem are conslderins all-weather

blieways, equipped with foldlns
anoples that could be raised aplriSI
qln: Heating elements could be •
lnllded In blkepaths to melt snow.
Altfloush expensive, such -specially
equipped lll&lt;ewa~ would still cost less
to budd and maintain than traditional

htpw.ys.

that pits bike against speeding car. " I biked to work twice," says Perry Hanson,
who lives some sevec- miles from his of·
flee, "and I'll never do it again. I did it
the second time because I didn't believe how bad it was the first time. Maple Road
is just disastrous."
Worst of all perhaps is the realization
that a bikelane could have been _
included in Maple Road when it was
widened, but the plan was squelched
beause of some jurisdidional squabble.
In the final analysis, Susan Hanson
thinks, the di...stinction berween
recreational and commuter bikeways is
an artificial one. -·
"Bikeways shouldn't be built just for
recreation or just for serious transportation. They should just be built, period.
Once safe, convenient bikeways are
provided, people will begin to use them
for all kinds of reasons."

. =,..
pli!IFibilil)· t~ the JiOI-"d lift' ror ~·.
m.ua
of
nc.,~\l tlh dk• ~-ibllity

"'·"IP.If\1...._

ll ror :tn rnt-n. And J.hi.. lol :a l'una."!.i--.n ~r
llll'tirh • ehilil) to 1~ t~' ''nt.~l'i-.1)(
!ht~ ~\'.'I'H' to hun-.~ bd\:~i.~to '"'., ··~

R

11!&gt;&lt;....,..:&lt;'¥run;.r,
1-

Alcoholism
conference set
for next week

A systems approach to ide~tify early
problf!m drinkers, th.e necessity for
alcoho l educati&lt;&gt; , and the fetal alcohol
syndrome are amo ng the topics to be
discussed at a two-day seminar on
akohol abuse February 27-28.
More than 200 are expected to attend
th e seminar., co-sponsored by - the
Rew.a rch Institute on Alcoholism and the
Erie County Medical Society at Hilleboe
Audirorium, Roswell Park Memorial
Inst itute.

Cha.irf(lan of the February 27 program
will be Dr. Cedric M. Smith, lnstitu~
direct6r anQ professor of pharmacology
and therape utics at U/B. Participants indude: Dr. Gian Carlo Salmoiraghi;
aSsociat ~ ~ commissioner for Research,
De partment of Me ntal Hygiene; lewis R.
Bigler. coordinator of Alcohol ~buse and
Alcoholism Services at Buffalo Gen e ral
Hospital Community Mental Health
Cent e r; Dr. John Sinacore, heahh
sciences profesSQr.aJ.t he Stille University
College at Brockport and former director
of the Divisio n of Health and Drug
Education Services, New York State
Department of Education; Harvard
Hollenberg, chief counsel of the State of
New York Temporary State, Commission
to Evaluat~ the Drug laws; and Dr. Paul
M. Roman , associate professor of
sociology and epidemiology at Tulane
University School of Public Health and
Tropical Diseases. Also speaking are Ms.
Janice l. Vogt, research-evaluation co·n·
sultant for the Alcohol-Driving Counter•
measures Project, Colorado Department
of Highways, and Gerald ). Sullivan, assistant director of the Bureau of Treatment
Services, Divisian of Alcoholism, New
York State Department of Mental
Hygiene.
U/B's Dr. Marvin A. Block, a pioneer in
the treatment of alcoholism. will chair
February 28's session. On the program
will be Dr. Frank ). Bolgan, president of
the Erie County Medial Society; Dr.
Joseph Feldman, assistant professor of
environmental medicine and community
health at the Downstate·Medial Center,
Brooklyn; Dr. Edward M. Sellers, head of
the clinical pharmacology program and
clinical investigation unit of the
Alcoholism and Drug Addiction
Research Foundation, Toronto; Dr. Yedy
Israel, professor of pharmacology at the
University qf Toronto.and scientist at the
Foundatiorl'; Dr. Kenneth L Jones, director of clinial research, Department of
Pediatrics at the University of California
at San Diego, and Dr. Sheldon Zlmberg,
director of the Alcoholism Treatment
Cenier, Hospital for Joint Diseases
Medial Center, New York City.
Also among scheciuled .tojrics are:
"The Myth of Prevention;" "lmpliations
of Establlshi'!J! SeMces for the Public
lntoxiam;" • Chronic Alcohol Use and
Cancer;" and "Experimental Studies on
~lc Liver Disease. H .

'Ducky' boosts BuHalo
R. Buckminster Fullft, the controveni~l octose~m.t.i.'ctesisn scientist whose
st'OdesK: dome chAnsed the Wpe of contempor~ry ~rchiteclure, WiiS in
residence ltit week • the third of the School of Architecture ~nd Enwironment.al Desisn's R1nd Professors. "Budc.y'' predicted th1t Buff.alo would srow in
worid import~nce bec~use of its proximity to Cilnldl, the critiullink betw~n
the Western ~nd l:.astern Hemispheres in a worid where the preferred lrnel
route is ower the pole ro1ther than ~cross the oceans.

Hull.sets proposal deadli~es -·­
for University fund requests

-·

·.

Application forms and supporting maCommittee for Special Funds, 230 Hayes
terials for requests for University funds
Hail, 8:30a.m.
'grants are due between February 16 and
Friday, April 25, Announcement of
awards.
March 11 under a staggered series ·o f
deadline dates set this week by the funds
Application forms have been revised,
committee chairperson, McAllister H.
Dr. Hull noted. The new form, he said, is
Hull, Jr., University deao for graduate
the only form that will be acceptable for
education.
review by the University·wide Com·
Faculty in the various divisions of the
mittee. A copy can be obtained from the
University should submit six copies of
chairman of each Faculty cpmmittee.
the application materials by the. followCopies of the guidelines lor University
ing due dates ~to the individuals in.funds applications are also available from
dicated : Arts and Letters, February 28,
these Faculty chairmen and from the OfJoerg Shaefer, Wilkinson Quad ;
fice of the Graduate School.
Educational Studies, March 11, Eloise
Skeen, 98 Foster Annex; Engineering,
March 5, lawrence Kennedy, 180 Race
St.; Health Sciences, March 3, Richard
Iones. 138 Farber; Law, March 7, Milton
Kaplan, O'Brian Hall; Management,
March· 4, James . Boness, 329 Crosby;
Natural Scie'Jces and Mathematics, ·
Dentistry and the Boy Scouts of
March 10, Harry King, 107 Acheson;
America have joined,~ forces to teach
Social Sciences and Administration,
Scouts about good oral hulth and
February 26, lester Milbrath, 423CfRidge
prevention of dental disease through a
lea.
dentistry merit badge unveiled this
In addition 'to setting application due
month.
.
dates, Hull announced this schedule for
Dr. Gerard Wieczkowski, assistant
the University-wide funds committee:
professor of resiorative dentiSiry at the
Mr&gt;ndq, MMch 11, Submission of
U/B School of Dentistry, was on the
proposals and ratings from divisional
American Dental AS5ociation's five·
committees to Graduate School Office;
member team to develop the badge resubmission of interdisciplinary and mulquirements. "I .believe· it, will "h.elp actidisciplinary proposals to Graduate
quaint more young men with sood· oral
School Office.
healih as well as familiarize them with
· Monday, MMch 31, 12 noon, Submisdentistry as a potential career," he said.
sion. of appeal letters (S copies) from
He said too many young people do not
faculty whose proposals were rated unpartidpate in their own oral hulth. " By
acceptable.
. fulfilling badge requirements, Scouts will
Tuesday, April1, Steering Committee
not onl7 be more aware of dental disease
will meet, to ategorize proposals, 230
but wil have the satisfaction of learning
Hayes Hall, 8:30a.m.
about something which will help their
Jllutrd.y, April 3-JJoundq, April10,
health."
Review of proposals by individual
Dentists will hopefully get · more in"lnembers of University-wide comvolved in preven!Jon through the badse
mittees.
as each Scout attemptil)g requirements
Monday, April 14; Univ!'rsity-wiqe
must work with a dentist field consultant.
Committee for BSSGINSF Funils, 230
The badge- with a white bacltsround
Hayes Hall, 8:30a.m.
- is centered with the dentistry symbol
TIH!Miay, Apdl 15, University-wide
in purple, black.and beige.

Scouts add
dentisb'y badge

�February 20, 1975

Psychomotor

skills are focus
of dent Study
Dental patients stand to gain from
results of an on-going study which may
lead to more effective methods of
teaching dental stude"nts how to better
and more quickly develop necessary psychomotor skills, say two faculty members
in the U/ B School of Dentistry.
Dr. George W. Ferguson, chairman,
Department of Operative Dentist ry, and
Dr. R.J. Wilko, associate professor, ...
restorative dentistry, as well as Dr. Peter
Cunningham · at the University of
Colorado School of Dentistry and Purdue Universit y's Department bf Industrial Engineering, are working on the
pro jed funded by the American Fund for
Dental Health.
" The study is aimed at analyzing psychomotor skiJJs and improvi ng the ways
our dentar5tudents can be taught to
develop such skills," says Dr. Ferguson.
Psychomotor skills are involved in drilling, filling and other techniques performed by dent ists.
He says input from industrial engineer
Dr. Gavriel Salvendy of Purdue and den ti sts will produce a mo'r e scientific
analysis of skills and develop better
teaching methods. Dr. Ferguson cited
the fact that industry, too, is work ing
toward devisi ng better teaching aids to
help employees learn to better use psychomotor skills.
11
By developin g new training techn iques for students, a better and more uniform standard of qualiry can be achieved for rh ei r future patients. Also ,
siudents may learn to cut ifle:aM'tiUOt of
time now taken to perform certain types
of procedures without cutting the qualit y
of workmanship," Dr. Ferguson added.

State University of New York will spon·
sor up to 15 intercampus faculty con·
ferences in academic disciplines from

July 1, 197S, to June 30, 1976.
Known as " Conversations i n the

Disciplines," these conferences, to be
funded in amounts not to exceed $2,000,

will bring together State Uriiversity faculty members and visiting scholars to
review promising research findings and
become better acquainted with
professional developments in their fields

and on other campuses.
· The emphasis of the program is upon
scholarly development rather than adrifi nistrative, curricular, or instructional
rtfatters. By such interchange, the SUNY
Office of University-wide Services in-

dicates , " both th e personal and
professional growth of individuals and

arrested in.
campus raid

chosen program and objectives, and the
·. selection of invited participants, is a ma·
jor criterion for approval of a proposal, a
SUNY brochure outlining the program
indicates. Other major considerations
are feasi~, probable ~efits to
participa~ and studenfs-;---3~
proposed budget.
Each application should state the purpose of the conference, outline the
proposition, and set forth in some detail
how th e money is to be used. The re is no
special application fo rm but applicants
are asked to follow a 13-point o utlin e in
drafting their proposals. Nine copies of
the- proposal are to be forwa rd ed.
Complpte information may be obtained from University deans, provosts,
and department chai rme n or from the
Office of the Vice Pr esi d ent for
AcadPmic Affairs.

the programs of inst ruction and research
at parti c ipating campuses · are
enhanced."
These interca mpus gatherings are to
be planned and administered by a sin'gle
campus whicf:t ~ost s the conference. No
rigid formula is applied in determining
Candidates are still being sought for
the num be r of colleges that should parthe post .of 197S-76 resident diredor for
the undergradu ate program of "st udy
ticipate in the"Conversation."
Any academic de partment o n a SUNY
abroad in Grenoble, France, sponsored
campus may develop a proposal fo r planby U/B as part of a consortium of SUNY
ning and hosting a ' 'Eonversation" conco lleges. Pro fesso r Orville Murphy of the
terence; however, only one proposal
Department of History is the program
. may be submitted by a depa rtment in a
di rector for 1974-75. .
given year. Proposals approved by the
Applications "for the position mu st be
sub mitted to the director of O verseas
local campus president are submitted to
the SUNY vice chancellor for UniversityACademi c Progra ms, 107 Townsend Hall,
by February 28, 1975.
wide services who in turn forward s them
to th e Committee on Unive rsity Faculty
An applica tion consists of an introdUcPrograms of the SUNY Senate for final
tory leue r, accompanied by a re leva nt
approval.
vita. The program's advisory committee,
Applications are due in Albany by
composed of U/B fac ult y from the
March 15 of th is yea r. To permit lo ca l
Department of French, the Faculty of
review prior to submissio n, application s'
duCational ·st udi es, and the Office of
,
from U/ B shou ld be received by the OfOve rseas Academic Prosrams as well as
fice of the Vice President for Academic
representatives from other participating
··Affairs; ·20t f'iaye-s Hall, nb -lalef -tllarf
S\JNY co ll eges, "will screen candidates.
-. ......._
· •~- __ , .... ~" Martih 1Q Pre limioary notice .of SUNY
interview the st ronger ones, ancf appoint
The Peace Corps and VISTA are seekpThgt1m"a~~r&amp;.);n ~iltbe..made,by midt he strongest and most appropriate
ing people who want the chance to use
May wit h final notification in late June.
applicai'lt:" · i'h·e:: dffke ·'of ·· o ve rseas
their talents and imagination to serve
Scholarly rel evance, in terms of topics,
Programs indicates.
.---------------:-------:-:--------------,
practical human need's, according to
three volunteers, Bob Riley, Dorothy
Sullivan and Michelle Smallcombe, who
wi ll be in-Norton Union, February 24-26.
Ms. Smallcombe says it is ·.a " big myt h
that the Peace Corps is looking only for
tech nical expe rts. There's always a need
for ge neralists," she says. "They can
work in TEFL (Teaching English as a
Foreign language), general health, family planning, well-digging, and some
..
agricultural situations." ,
Ge ne ralists are needed at home aS
well. " They ar ~ the· backbone of VISTA,"
according to Mr. Riley, because of that
.o,gency's emphasis on community social
action programs.
The volunteers indicate that both
Peace Corps and VISTA find the
technology of a job is not as important
as the ability to get across a new concept, such as helping a mother accept
new sources o( protein for her liab9.
" While technical skills a·r e helpful, it's.
important to have the skills needed to
deal with people," Ms. Sullivan says.
"Peace Corps and VISTA are involved in
communities and work with many
different . people in varieties of
situations. Personal rapport, sensitivity,
and understanding of othq:rs are essential" •
Practical
e~periehce is j!lso useful.
1
"What may ~m like an insignificant
jqb couid be 1mportant later on," Riley
indidltes ..) ExPe'rience suet\ as volunteer
work, community service, tutoring,
regular jobs, . Iarin and construction
work, and even caring for a handicapped rl!lativ.e, should be included
on the application form, he says. Ability
to speak a foreign language should also
be noted.
The volunteer-recruiters invite the
campus community to "learn first-hand
how Peace Corps and VISTA experience
could change yOilr- future." Those who
have other commitments during the
time the volunteers will be on campus · \
are requested to contad the l!nlversity
Placement Office fo• information and
application forms.

,. .
Peace Corps
• • • ---··
group-visiting;

Two students

Deadline approaching for
'Conve~tions' proposals

Erie County Sheriff's Narcotics ager}ts
conducted an on·campus drug raid in
Clement Hall last Thursday resulting in
the arrest of two students.
The agents charged that the suspects
had tried to sell them about $5,800 in
suspeded drugs.
One p(,und of a suspected substance
popularly knoJNn as THC or PCP was said
to have been seized in the raid, accor·
ding to Sgt. Russell Pecoraro, Oet. )ames
Karam and Det. William Graeber.
Arrested in their dormitory rooms at
the Ma in Street campus were:
Robert ). Winn, 19, of 414 Clement
Hall, charged with criminal possession of
a controlled substance, criminal sale of a
co ntrolled substance, criminal possession of a controlled substance with intent
to sell, all felonies. He also .was charged
with criminal possession of a controlled
substance and criminal possession of
drug parapherna l ia , both misdemeanors.
Mark S. Dumoff, 17, of 822 Clement
Hall, charged wilh criminal sale of con·
trolled substance and criminal possession with inte nt to sell, both felonies, and
the same misde meanor charges as Winn.
The she riff's agents said the arrests
culminated a two.-month investigation.

pirector sought for
Grenoble program

U/8 student,

engineer·
honored
.

A Buffalo co nsultin g engineer and a
U(B student. were honored Monday b~
the Erie-Niaga ra Chapter of the New
York State Society of Professional
Engineers.
James N. OeSerio of Kenmore received
- rile 50clety's-Profe55115nal £ngl~
Year award and Scott J. Feldman, a senior
n.uclear e ngineer.ing student he,re, was
named the Student Ehgineer-ohhe Year.
The awards were· presented during a
specia l .National Engineers Week
meetin g at the Ni aga ra Falls Boulevard
Ho liday Inn.
OeSerio, who has been in private practi ce as a consulting c ivil and ,s tructural
e ngi nee r since 1945, has designed and
prepared plans a nd specifications for
more t han $350 million worth of construction in 23 states, Canada and Brazil.
A native of Italy, he holds the B.S. from
Northwestern and is a specialist in the
field of strudural design.
Among his area projects are the Dante
Place, Baptist Manor, and Seneca ToWer
buildings, facilities for the U/ B Dental
and Medical Schools, several dormitories
at U/B, several Buffalo bridges, the first
Buffalo open type parking ramps, and
War Memorial Stadium.
Feldman; a native of the Bronx ..and a
Dean's List student, has served as chair·
man of the student government of the
Fac:Uity of Engineering and. Applied
Sciences and as yice president of the UIB
student chapter of the !,merican Nudear
Society.
·•
" Scott is well liked by both students
and faculty and is a natural leader. In addition to his outstanding academic
qualifications and active extra-curricular
schedule, he still finds time to counsel
and tutor students needing extra help,"
Assistant Dean of Engineering Howard E.
Strauss said.
Feldman was elected to membership
in the Tau Beta Pi engineering honor
society in 1974 and received a Western
Electric Scholarship in 1972-73.

_.... ........
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�-4

february 20, 1975

. . .EllA

.Co~puting .Services aids U/BF.fund drive
,..-----~~

With the ald of the Unl...mt)''s Computing Services Office, the University at
Buffalo foundation, Inc., (U/IIFJ was able
to triple the amount of funds raised
through its Century Club program in
1974.
According to Fred Tamalonis, director
of development lor the U/IIF, some 654
individuals contributed over $66,000 in
unrestrict!"~ funds for U/B projects
through the $100-a-person giving plan in
the fisCal period ending last December
31. Only 192 individuals had participated
in 1973, a year of "better times" financially..
Why the upswing in giving in a recession year? Tamalonis attributes much of
the increase to the method used - and
that's where Computing Services came
- Tamalonis recounts that the Century
Club, introduced in the 1960's, anracted
a high of 250 members in its first year, but
had met with a steadily dwindling
response over a decade.
The solicitation for the Club is part of
the U/BF's Annual Alumni Giving campaign, so one way to increase the
number of $100 donors was to identify
those graduates with the potential for
larger gilts. A decision was made to
target the Century Club effort to
professional graduates - those in the
fields of dentistry, medicine, law and
pharma£Y - who finished school
between 1901 and 1972.

.._
capability of Computing Services be
harnessed to make it possible for the
Foundation to conduct a type of solicitation that it could not accomplish with its
own personnel resources and
equipmentl
The answer from the Computing staff
was"yes."

The list of names identified in these
categories by Computing Services (which
keeps all alumni records) ran to 10,000.
'The next question was how to reach
these individuals with an appeal for a
's100 gih. A mass m~iling pi~ was considered "too impersonal," something
that might be automatically discarded
with the flotsam and jetsam of daily junk
Jmail. Individual letters to each of the 10,GOO was a \ogktk:at"\mpcmtbUity. And a
telephone 5olicitation1 program · loomed
as too involved and too expensive, an effort- lbat-ollld...equite a' great deal· of
.
ti_me from a large number of alumni
volunteers.
Why not, Tan:talohis reasoned, anemp,t • ,
to line _up one volunteer f((;m 'eaC~ of · 1
the professional groUps in ea_.ch
graduating year, a dass chairman who
could sign a lener to each of his or her
dassmates
'
Could such a letter be personalized to
some extent! This was the problem he
took to Computing Services.

Three Letters

There could be three letters in batches
of 1Q,OOO with up io ten personalize&lt;!
variables in ea'Ch : an' original appeal; a
second version of the original witti
"Copy" overprinted and a pre-printed
"follow·JJP" message; .a nd a third com•
muflicatlbn at yea~s end, reminding
prospedive donors to "include U/B on
Xour , Christma i-list.lf , £ach: ~oofd· "'carry
the signature block of the individual class
chairman.
·
Special letterhead_ forms were ordered
for t~e . ~igh:speed pri~ter !which can
product; l~,OOQ letters m e1ght hours}
and _an mtnc~te c~mputer progr~m _w~s
dev1sed , pnma~1ly by Ms. ~~~~1ma
Askland. Scheduling and supervos1on of
the print-outs (assuring that the printer
was operating properly and providing
clear, legible copies) were handled by
Joe Regna of the Computing staff who
made cerlain that the finished product
was delivered in time to meet the FounWith the blessing of Administrative
datio.n's mailing schedule.
Computing Services Director Jim Carrier,
_ Also assisting in the project was the
staff. members Joe Drew, Ken Herrmann
Uniirersity:s Central DupliCating Departand Richard Kucharski considered the - ment which trimmed the perforated
challenge In some detail. Were there '
edges from the computer print-outs to
ways to personalize each lener through
make the leners look more like the real
lndivldua.lly typed names and addresses,
thing.
·
bY Inserting a nickname or some inforThe problem of addressing and stam·
mal abbreviation of the Individual's first
ping envelopes was avoided through use
name in the sal.u tation, by ·making a
of pre-stamped window envelopes.
reference to the school and the parAnd each lener was signed by hand in
tlcular.class year in the body of the letter,
case the recipient decided to gi•e the
etc.l Could the leners by iYPed by the
signature the smear test.
high speed computer print-out rriethod
The gilts "poured in," by previous·
and be sorted by year, professional . standao;!ls.
sroup and zip codel Could there,
c.l of Duly
perhaps, be a series of such semiTamaloni~ . gives a large measure of
penonallzecllelters on U/11 FOundation
credit for the succes.. oj the venture to
letterflusllln short, could the technical

.,......the

-

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7llundoy, the.-

of~

..

a-.sar.~of-rot~c
N.Y. tm4.
&amp;:~~fori~~ offlces .e loafed 1n rOom nJ, 250

llulfalo,

lOS-

wo,_A_,..II'fwinezt271.

&amp;oculiOe fdlti.
A wmtEY.JlOWlAND
Edlt&lt;W-m-atlof

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ltOIIBITT. MIIRUTT

/OHNA 001/nEit.

- E d i t...

PATRIOA WARD lllfDEIIMAN
Weeily c.Mndar Edit«
DIANE Qlllt/N

~­

SUSAN M. /WitCU

...,t)

Ca.pudns 5ftvkft st.aH ...,.twn (stmdins from
lich.ard kuch.arski,
foe Drew .and toe lqtP. Seated K Virsfn~ Askbnd.

;,,.._

_..........,_pub/llhed

ban on smoking

in classrooms

in.

A

Student-asks

· the.Computing Services staff who "went
beyond the call of duty to do something
which wouldn't have been possible
without their' help."
~s he put it in a letter to Dr. Charles E.
JeHrey, assistant vice president, Universi·
ty Computer Services, "Mr. . James
Carrier · and his people have been
enthusiastic and more than willing to
help us implement new and innovative
ideaS which· are now yielding considerable financial returns to U/ B. I
would especiallY like to commend Mr.
Joseph Drew and Mr. Kenneth Herrrtilriri (Or their preliminary irivOJ\t'e'rneHt,
patience ~od ~ b ility.~o ,untangle.coi')Jll"!&lt;
issues 0 l~ji,.l:beir, . timer.~nd coopera~
tion was essential in solving the fundamental problems of a unique fundraisi!"lg program involving approximately
10,000 aly!n[I~.- Mr~..Richard J&lt;ucha~ki
and Miss Virginia Askland were also extremely helpful ... . M you can imagine,
the programming of these personalized
letters by professional school, class year,
zip code order and donor codes involved considerable programmiQg which
was performed faultlessly. Finally, Mr.
Joseph Regna · and his staff were in·
strumental !n delivering the clearest,
most attractive computer letter I have
seen. To dat..e, we have not had o-ne
response from , a,&gt; al~mnus .alluding to
the fad Y,at his or her lener was mass
produced. The image and clarity of each
lener is truly exceptional.
"In summary, I want you to know that
all these individuals performed an admir.able job. Their ability to wprk
together in conceptualizing, programming and scheduling and in·befng able
to deliver the final product bit time Is a
fifle example of team work that is paying
off finandal rewards to the Univenity."
Administrative Computing Director
Carrier acknowledges the thanks by adding that this is the sort of thing his
operation stands ready to do for any
Unive~sity department with similar
needs.

Film taken by new Geological Sciences
Department Head Chester C. langway at
pr9ject at the center ·of the Greenlan_d
ice cap will be featured on a two-hour
science· special schecluled for B p.m.,
. Monday, February 24, on ·the Public
Broadcasting Service (WNED-TV,
Channe11n:
The UAI glaciologist provided BBC
produeer Alec -'Nisben with the film
when Nisbett's film crew had aircraft
trouble trying to reach the Gr,eenland
site last summer.
~
The b~oadcast, "The Weather
Machine,'' will use the footage In connection with an analysis of sn())N that fell

Bond
rutback .feed
State Comptroller Arthur Levitt

proposed last week a cutback on the
State's "moral commitment" bonds, a
move which. State University Construction Fund spokesmen said would
serl.ously hamper cbmpletlon of the
Am~ Campus. .
" .
levin proposed j&gt;utting a~lon
1,400 ·years ago and, until last summer,
-debl timitation on ·the Housl
nee
had been deeply imbedded beneath the
Ageriozy for thl! State Unjverslty
cGreenland ice. lhe l!.eayy-oxygen contion program. The Agency Issues bonds
tent of- the snow, according to a PBS
tofinancecampusconst~;;, ____ ,
Pl!blic information release on the broadThe- ~~ru~ fuoo ~n
CO$!, reveals what the weather was like
said there are about $'1.6 billion in bonds
.thousands of years ago. The program· exnow out for Sta~e'lJnlverslty cons~n~ctlon
plores the belief of certain scientists that
but short-term bonowings would put
·the earth's warm cycles usually last only
the total debt over S2 billion, the
.10.000 years and that we've now reached
cOurier-Express reported.
the end of such a: cycle.
Whellter a S2 billion debt limlt would
• The two-hour special was corequire the halting of all projects not
produced by w~. the BBC and broadalready under way would dtipend on the
casting Organizations in Holland,
wording of the law, the SPOkesmen said.
Sweden, Germany: and Canada. It ex- •
Levltt would remove the moral comamines the entire spectrum of CQnditions
mltm4:nt of the State to support bonds
which _?use va!.'atlons in climate. _
j ssued by seven authorities. ·

-Prof's film to be aired on PBS the site of an ice core research &lt;lrilling.

An undergraduate student is conducting a one-man crusade to limit smoking
on campus.
.
Lax or non-existent guidehnes concerning snioking have created a serious environmental health problem at U/B, student Mark Bernsley has asserted in a
letter to Ptesident Robert ' L Ketter.
"Students and faculty are subjected to
classrooms and lecture halls blanketed
with the haze of cigarette smoke," he
charged.
" The detrimental physiological effects
of such an environment have been esw
tablis)led," Berns ley contended.
"Aside from the r~al but perhaps not
so readily apparent damage to the cardiopulmonary systems, the problems
caused by garbage (in the form of ash,
butts, and matches) left on floors and
desks, the burning of. eyes, sinuses (!nd
tt-lroat, and their necessary effed on concentration and motivation must have a
dampening effect on the educational
process." Although admining that the numbers
of people actively expressing "perturbation at, or even awareness of," this
problem hav see'!'ed relatively small,
Berns ley said he· believes this to be "the
consequence of stigmas attached to such
vocalization (especially when one 's
professor is a major offender}." A majori·
ty of adults do not smoke, he pointed
·
out.
Bernsley noted it has been suggested
that "I request the Student Association to
corislde'r'· votihg to change this
d egeh"~r"alid'n." However, he said,
numben are irrelevant, " as a solution to
this problem is necessitated by equity,
not majority. Does one's ' right' to smoke
(and in so doing endangering the health
and • w~ll&gt;heing of .other.) tran~~ml
others' right to poison·free breathing!
Reas&lt;AA~. ansl'll''" not :~th.~ -a!lffl,&lt;;TS noJ
L.e!lis\a~~\o:,s, ,acros~ t h&lt;; ~.~r.\~ i'1 L~~nt
ord(nances (fndlldmg Ene County
legislation) have answered not" '
Bernsley said he has been anempting
for close to two years "to eyoke 1\~~ng~'
through the Envlrorirl&gt;e nt~Li!feallh . and
Safety Office and the Office of the Vice
President for Academic Affairs.
"Univenities have traditionally been
centers of informed, educated, and
progressive thought," he submitted.
"SUNY at Buffalo has enjoyed a reputation of leadership in such conduct in
Western New York. Despite, however, a
plethora of scientific evidence of the
. dangers involved, the University at Buffalo remains stagnant iiS~ sutrounding
· "?mmuni.ty a!'d .~u!falo ~tate &lt;;~liege institute (UidehnS?r, &lt;, ; '~' nhr }.J
"If the Admintstration has, as l believe
it does, the responsiljility to provide an
environment healthy aJ)d cond4cive to
efficient higher education, it is shirking
an essential part of it.
"We, as hu~ns, don't like to change;
but man hasn't progressed or improved
as a result of resistance to change."
Bernsley urged President Ketter ." to
consider and to act on t_his problem."

�~ -- Febr:u~.20. U J,S

First Education Dean
was_1dynamic, spirited'
fDfTO«'S NOT£: LO. Cummlnp, deon ol
rm, Scltool o1 Educa1lon •• ullltrom u:n ro
liD dftct,O&lt; ol ~ s...nn- from tJJt.fJSJ, d~ D«embH 10, ft7f, ~r
1M •
ol " ' ...,~ hod rftlrod hom ·~
Uni&gt;enlfy In /une ol "SI. lite following is "•
, _ _ . . , ~H by""" ol his lomter

--.-u~~~
ly Arthur L K~oer
'"'~-nl fduc".J! ktn

Leslie Olin Cummings, teacher to
thousands, and friend, was a yankee
through and through.
"What suggestions would you have
for changing the siluation so as to keep ·
alive in schools the spirit of curiosity, of

asking-why!"
·
This question, raised in the first interview that this writer, as a prospective
graduate student, had with l. 0 . Cummings, provides a vivid summary of his
spirit - and dynamism. Himself embodying the spirit of curiosity and asking
why, he was continually perplexed by
the staidness and passivity of graduate
students and of the failure of schools to
develop and preserve children's curiosity.
Although he was born in Baltimore,
Maryland, his antecedents were strictly
New England and his most formative
years were spent in that environment.
As a student at Harvard (B.A., 1910), he
experienced at first hand the impact and
influence of Charles W. Eliot and of· Abbott Lawrence Lowell and became committed to lhe . ideas and ideals of the
elective system, curriculum enrichment,
respect for students, lnno,vat!c;»n in
professional schools, etcv , whigj, was
part of Eliot's and lowelh legacy and
which Mr. Cpmmings made his own.
Rnt
o1 Eduatlon Here
It was most appropriate that as an
alumnus of the Harvard which emerged
under the tutelage of Elior.Ond•.towell
lrl:lril small college to great university,
1141'. 'O.ommins' '· s~td '' i~&gt;in• . af!9!her

Dem

;;;- -tet''

b:li~tcJ4!~ --b/ ·-·- vn· v;;-rm­

ch':ncellor Samuei''P'a~fhpe~. at· 'tltfffalo in 1930 as professor of education,
chairman of the Department of Education, 'and as first dean of the Upiversity:s
SCI\'obl 't&gt;f'Eddcation at its fou ndation in

1931 .

He immediately set out to develop a
faculty and program designed to meet
the needs of educational praCtitioners at
every level and to upgrade and
professionalize the field. The University,
under his leadership, was among the
first in the state to offer professional
degrees at the baccalaUreate, masters,
and doctoral levels.
Along ,With "Mr: Capen and a small but
highly ' qualiffed and devoted faculty,
Mr. (:)lmmings, held_ . the };!niversity: of
BuffalO tog~lir.. keP! it fonandally solvent, strengthen~ its intellectual level
and tone and committed it to oervice to
its region in a way that was to be a
model for years to come. And all of this
was accomplished through the years of
the Great Depression and of World War
II when faculty, staff, and student body
were decimated.
One could cite
lacts.aboUt and acc-!plll;lm11!1111Sol

..

Cummings.
He was a- teacher, elementary school
principal, director of playgrounds and
supeorintender'!t of schools in small communitif's in Massachusens where he
applied with honesty, commitment, and
skill tht&gt; tht&gt;ories he had learned.
HI.' was an instructor , assislant
professor and associate professor at Harvard from 1920 to 1930 where he took
the practical experiences of the field
into his college classrooms.
He was a professor of education, head
of the Department of Education, and
dean of the School of Education on this
campus where he provided leadership,
displayed integrity and courage, and
stood foursquare for academ ic freedom
and the rights of professor and students.
He served as director of the University
Summer Session for 20 years and
through that office provided financial
and othe r support for doze ns of innovations, experiments and program
modifications that were to become standard in th e Un iversit y's re gular
program.
He was active in professional
organizations at the local, state, and
national levels and served as co nsultant
to many organizations, state education
departments, and school district .
He was a community leader, especially in the Urban league of Buffalo, where
long before it was popular or "in," he
worked to improve int e rc uhural &lt;..
relations and to gain recognition and
rights for all peoples regardless of race,
religion, or nationality.
Re was a devoted fathe r and husba nd,
a teacher and friend, roles in which he
d isplayed the warmth of his personality
and the sincerity of his beliefs and commitments.
Ceftuine lo•e of Children
But perhaps his most vi v id
~~W~~~ri'!ic ~nQ .the true ma rk of hi&lt;
gt'eainesS'Os a-man was his genuine love
df''Cfi06i'elir o n·many 'oCcasions, he was
observed to move from matters which
would seem to some to be of"great mo·
ment or of great importance to the
Unlve r!fty and/or'1he profession to talk
to a child or to a yourlg motfier. He went
to great lengths to protect, to show affec·
tion, to help children and youth. This
concern for children and their welfare
and rights and his unceasing efforts-to insure that schools, teachers, and other
truly professional personnel were endowed with the same concerns for
children were his life goals and the sum
of his life's work. If, as some sage once
remarked, "No man stands so tall as he
who bends to help a child," then leslie
Olin Cummings stood tallest among the
men of his or any other generation.
He epitomized in his everyday life the
best virtues, intesrity, and character of
man as husband, father, professiorial
and community leader, teacher, responsible dtizen, and friend .
Those of1is touched by his genius, his
inspiration, and his love can do no
great~r honor to his memory than to be
aware of children and youth and our
responsibilities to them. This is his true
legacy and his continuing challenge to
all in university, wor\&lt; and particularly to
those of us in Educational Studies.

CSEA courses ·
Ten training courses (one and two 3: ·
hour sessions, once a week for eight
weeks) will start at the end of March in
the Civil-Service training rooms at One
West Genesee Street in downtown Buffalo, F. Marshall Evans of the Personnel
Office said this week.
_
The COI!rses are: Begirining Typing,
Intermediate Typing. Skill Refresher for
Typists, Beginning Shorthand,
Intermediate Shorthi'nd I, Intermediate
Shorthand II, · Skill Refresher for
Stenographers, Basic _.Mathematics for
Stef1981'1phers, Typis~and Clerks, Improving Grammar ll'ld Punctuation
Skills, and Vocabulary Byilding for
Medical Stenographers and Typists.
Check CSEA -bulletin boards for full
details, Evans advised.

Spring Theatre schedule

::·

•·· • A schedule of eight productions has been ~nnounced forthe spring
season by.ihe Departmerii of Tneatre, including the world premiere of a
new •mtJsi&lt;ral c~ heatre p.iece.by Myrna lamb, directed by Saul Elkin; Love
You Madly- A Tribute to Duke 'f//ingiori, directed by·Ed'Smith; •ami-Aging, a new work by U/ B playwright Morton Lichter.
The schedule :

.

February 25-March 2 alB p.m.

APPI.EPIE

.

World premiere of a new m~sical theatre piece by Myrna lamb; music by
Nicholas Meyers; directed by Saul Elkin; presented by the Center for
Theatre Research ; Courtyard Theatre (lafayette and Hoyt).

March 22 all p.m.

REQUIEM FOR ATLANTIS
An evening of light and space and things with Anna Marie Brooks, Judy
Emmings, Ralph Fetterly, Tom Slattery and friends; presented by the
Department of Theatre; Harriman Theatre Studio.

April l-Si.,.Aprii1G-12 all p.m.

uANCE75

The Zodiaque Company; directed by Linda Swiniuch; presented by the
Department of Theatre; Harriman Theatre Studio. '

BRIDEOF~HEAVEN

A sequel : scenes from mOdern life with dialogue by Shak~peare;
directed by Gordon Rogoff; presented by the Center for Theatre
Research; Courtyard Theatre (lafayette and Hoyt).

April24-26 at I p.m.
LOVE YOU MADLY
A tribute to Duke Ellington; directed by Ed Smith; presented by the
Department of Theatre, the Depart.ment of Black Studies, and the Office
of Cultural Affairs; Harriman Theatre Studio.

Apri23-May 4 all p.m.
CLASSICS
A lfiew from the Bridge, by Artfi'ur Miller; The Good Person of Selzuan by
Bertolt Brecht; directed by Don Sanders; presented by the Center for
Theatre Research;·Courtyard Theatre (Lafayette and Hoyt).

Dates to be announced

AGING

A. new work written and directed by Morton Lichte;'; presented by the
Center fdr Theatre Research with aid from the New York State Coundl of
the Arts.

- _

Dates to be UIIIOUIICed

THE BEARD _

~

By Michael McClure; directed by Don Sanders; presented by the Department of Theatre.
.

�February 20, 1~75

. . 14£11&amp;
problem, ~ mputation of one leg, a brain.
tumor and a stroke. "This determined
lady kepi up her therapy - and it paid
off," she recalls.
Mrs. Joss is hauntetl by a wheelchair
re\ident in Warsaw who asked, " What's
the point of. looking for tomorrow when
one day is the same as the nextl" She
wants to help change this all tooprevalent feeling in' the elderly. "At Rosa
Coplon, we have been able. to set up a
program which can help prevent that at·
tirude among the residents," she says.
-Madeleine Waters

Dreyfus grant winner

4

Homemaker fiil(fs second career
·Disenchantment with the bridge club
circuit and enrolln:tent in a credit-free
course on "Mid-Career Decisions for
Women" at .U/B. Ied..af..Jeast-one womatr ·
to a rewarding "second career" working
with the physically disabled.
These factors nudged Mrs. William
(Donna) Joss back to school and headed
her toward her current job as director of
occupational therapy at the Rosa Coplon
jewish Home and Infirmary. The Home
is a non-profit nursing and health related
facility sponsored by the Jewish communities of Western New York to meet
the needs of the area's Jewish aged.
"I had received the BA in sociology-ten
years ago, but married and became a
homemaker," Mrs. Joss says. She became
interest~ in returning to school after
the youngest of her children- now age
9, 13 and 14 -entered school. "The U/B
credit-fr:ee course "brought to my atten_tion the many career directions in which
I could turn," she indicates. Aptitude
and interest tests narrowed the field and
she chose occupational the'"rapy - a
,&gt;rofession which uses selected, pur,&gt;Oseful activities to promote· physical
11id Jisycholosical health.
Because .Mrs. Joss began in 1971 as a
pan-time student in graduate school, it
tOQk three years instead of the usual two
tocompleteherdegreerequinements.

Dr. Robert D. Be'reman, assistant
professor of chemistry, has been awarded the prestigious Camille and Henry
Dreyfus Teacher Scholar Grant.
The award, one of only sixteen
presented this yea r to young faculty in all
areas of the chemical sciences, is
prese nted on the basis of individual
teaching and research capabilities. It
consists of $25,000 over a five-year period
and is to be used to bro3den research
and teaching programs.
Dr. Bereman's research centers in two
general areas, synthetic inorganic and
bioinorganic chemistry. He explained
that a portion of the grant will be used to
develop an expanded background in
biological problems which will serve to
enhance both h is research in the
re lativel y new area of bioinorganic
chemistry and his teaching efforts at the
undergraduate leVe l, where man y
students are interested in a professional
cu rriculum .
" The ability to relate general chemistry
to biological problems ~ill serve as an invaluable instructional aid to t hese
students," he added.
His bioinorganic chemistry interests
focus primarily on the charaderistics of
the structure-fu ndion relationshipS1 of '
copper metalloenzymes. Copper- enzymes are fundamentally important be-

cause of their involvement in the body's
utilization of oxyge n - a basic cellular
process.
Dr. Bereman, 31, joined the U/B faculty in 1970 and is the first faculty member
to receive a Dreyfus Award.

WBFO staff cited
Marcia Alvar, program diiedor of
WBFO-FM (88.7 FM), the U/ B-owned .
public radio station, has won first place
in the radio division of the 1974 media
competition sponsored by the New York
State Bar Association.
Ms. Alvar was cited for an interview
with Buffalo allorney leonard Klail and
New York State Supreme Court Justice
joseph Malliria.
Martin Buchsbaum, a public-affairs
producer at WBFO, won second place in
the competition for an interview with
three Buffalo city court judges (part of
the stat ion's series on "Justice in
America").
· WBFO is operated th rough t he
lnstructiona! CommUnication c enter.

Student enjoyed visit
Observi ng dental wactice in the
clinics at the U/ B School of Dentistry
wa s a stimulating experience for a 23yea r-old British dental exchange student ."
Huw Thomas especiall y enjoyed his
stint in the pedodontics clinic because
he likes work in g with children. " The
faculty and students here have been
most •rordial' and he lpful. II has been .a
very·Worttlwhile' experience. Sometim~
in f.!le future I want to returl) for a year
Or two of postgraduate work.n/
Mr. Thomas is the seventh English student to be at the Dental School since a
student exchange program started in
197'1 .- 0ne ;U/B dental student will spelid '
30 days at Guys Hospital and Dental
Seho%f ~o.i~ ·Etiglan0 ; 1 th'i!" nimrtrer. 1Tw0.
more English •derltalorsltlll~rft~ "ar'e' 'e lfpected to be at U/B this summer.

crf:'ate recreational activities for the
others.
The Bderly~...n t,nprove; T&lt;Wi ....J :
Many residents ha ve suffered strokes,
a few have arthritis and some are amputees. "Too many people have in the
past believed the elde rl y need not
. auempt to improve . th eir handicaps
because they are old," she says. While
it's . true they may have smaller " improvements," a slight increase in use of
an injured limb is a cause for celebration .
"Since 1have been bere, at least one resident has progressed from being
bedridden to being wheelchair mobile
- and for that resident , it's a tremendous improveme nt," Mrs. Joss points
out.·
Some of the residents have learned
from watching others recei ve therapy.
" If two or "m ore come for di rect therapy
together, each sees he or she is not alone
in the struggle," she says.
Among the e lderly, lack of motivation
is sometimes a problem; they ma y have
no reason for wanting -to improve after a
debilitating illness.
" So we try to help our residents
develop a sense 'of interest outside
themselves -:- and give them activities
which will help them regain use of their
affected limbs," Mrs. Joss says. She adds
•
that Eugene c. David, director of
d~
Scan!d ofSdence
physicaltherapy-!t ihe Home, has done a
"I felt insecune about entering the
fine job helping rehabilitate residents,
, A Cheektowaga police officer is the
Nacke devised his sequent:&lt;! of courses- professional 6eld alter .so many years,"
too. "By having both physical and ocfirst to graduate from Millard Fillmore
with the assistance of Professor George
she recalls, "and my_ Insecurity was
cupational therapy, the residents get a . · College through the school's "i nAdolf, an adjunct professor in aman
helsfltened by the facti was preylously a
well-rounded and continuing therapy
dividualized major prograo:n."
studies here and an aSsistant professor at
program to help keep them as lit as
Mark E. Nacke, 29, met requirements
Buffalo State. ·
Jql
'',
liberal arts major. The switch to the
sciences was scary!" She discussed her
possible."
lor a bachelor t&gt;l ans degree by designlogether,they built a progiarriaroond
Insecurities with Diane Thomas, assistant·
Often Jsnoftd
ing his owrl study program - one that
six alminal justice courses that focuse.:t
professor of physical disabilities in· the
Nursing home patients or residents
concentrated on the field of criminal
·on the study of institutional reactions to
Department of Occupational Therapy,
"ane often ignored unintentionally -by
justice.
'
crime. The six eoui'SeS were offered by •
who convinced her she could learn the
students who feel therapy is only forlhe
Nacke, who will receive his degree this
- the former College z., which is now pan
material.
younger people," ~rs.·Joss indicates. But
month, attended evening classes at MFC
of the Urban ~tudies College.
As a graduate student In the Schoof of
UIB occupational therapy students, who
while working as a patrolman with the
They rounded out h~ ~jor with two
Health Related Professions, Mrs; Joss
are often visitors, learn at Jlosa Coplon
Cheektowaga police force for the past
criminal justice courses offered at Bufworlted three months eath at Warsaw's
and other extended cane facilities how
four and a hall years.
·
falo State and an Independent study
Wyomillll County Comlhunity Hospital
much can IN!' done with and for the
Millard Fillmone's "individualized maproject, In which Nacke analyzed how
~ Its extended cane facility, and at"£.1.
elderly.
jor" Is offered to adult pan-time studfnts
tile sentencing decisions of Buffalo area
~Memorial Holpltal.
Mrs. Joss gives pan of the credit for her
- usually jobholdlers with precise career
judges wene Influenced by elements In a
In her job ·a t Rosa Coplon, Mrs. Joss,
Interest In geriatric residents to havil!ll
plans- whose par:tlcufar needs cannot
defendant's badtground.
·
two alstants and a neaeatlon worker
worked wil1l the elderly at Wyoming
be met through regular study programs. ·
fl!ad&lt;e also signed~sociology and
provide a range of activities for residents.
County"Cornmunlty HQspital. She recalls
Students ane required to work closely
psyc:holot!Y courses
by MFC that
She works directly with those needing
one resident there who became almo5t
with a faculty adviser in developilllltheir
. he thouj"ht would be most useful in
L----m~~~MHmu~~DJ~JUmL~~---_uo~t~al~l~i~n~e~e~d~e~_y
d~e~s~l~te~a~h~iR---~HH~~=-----------~--pwME~mL--------------------~

Pol.·ceman earns 1st"MFC

-cr --.

�7

_ Febryary 20, 1975

SUNY to seek
fund!nf~for

hospitals

Chancellor Ernest Boyer of State
University has told the State legislature
that SUNY intends to present for the lawmakers' approval an agreement · to pay
local hospitals for the U/B Medical ·
School's use of . hospital facilities for
teaching purposes.
The ~greement,. a Courlel-&amp;press
report indicated, would cover the ·new
Erie County Comprehensive Health
Center as well as Buffalo General and
Children's hospitals. The State already
has agreements with the latter two but
these are being renegotiated, Boyei- said.
U/B will be using up to 40 per cent of the
space in the new County unit, the report

said.
·
Boyer said the agreement would be
ready to present to the legislature in
"the next ft:w months."
The Chansellor's statement came at
joint hearings on the 75-76 budget.

Grad studentSlfmm pa~:r 1. m i.

4,

lribute vitally to lhe continuing business

of the University Center, has been left
behind and out of consideration in the

presently increasing economic and
educational crisis. We can no longer
accept this," the statement says. "The
seriousness of our need for a minimal
sta~ ~rd of living and right to participate
in the governing of our lives, only
becomes more apparent in our University budget crisis."
According to spokesmen for the

yraduate Studen·t Einpi,9YI'~s ,. Union
(GSEU) Steering Committ~~. .. t~e , group

,. has been active for almost a year in its
campaign to become the legal bargain-

ing •Bent for approximately 1100 Statefunded teaching assistants, research
assistants and graduate assistants on campus. ,It hopes I&lt;&gt; go before the.·Public

El).lployees Relations Board (PERB) in
M~r~h wj,tl:\,the sigf.liltu•esp.l up.~ Slkper.
cen t of.the ·l&lt;lOO individuals concernedil0 1
pet ition for a bargaining unit election. A
m inimum of 30 per cent of those eligible
must sign before the matter will be
considered. •
GSEU's 45-member organizing committee is said to have individuals actively
working in some 29 departments on
campus to get signatures on cards seeking the election and to secure· .paid

members at a fee of S5 per year. There
are approximately SO paid members at
the present time, organizers say. No e·s timate is available of the numbers of

eligible students who have signed election authorization cards.

The group spokesmen point out" that
g raduate staff . members have formed
recognized bargaining units at such un-iversities as Michigan, Wisconsin and
Minnesota, and that organizing activity is
currently underway at such plac~ as Pitt
an~ Harvard . Ar:t organizational effort
similar to that underway here is a lso 8oing on at State University at Binghamton.
While the group's petition poses

several · questions for PERB (such as
whether or nOt graduate staff members
are University employees and what is the
correct definition of the proposed
bargaining unit), the steering committee ·
is hopeful for a favorable ruling in time

for an election next fall. Such an election
would give memb.!rs of the designated
bargaining unit the choice of: GSEU, no
agent. or .a ny other group which might
prPse.nt signatures of .30 per cent of the

'prospective bargaining unit members.
GSEU feels that its recognition would
benefit-all othl!r grou~ of funded grad
students on campus since positions sup-

pon&lt;'d bv the..Research Foundation and
University funds usually follow the "going Slite rates" concerning payment and

. (/"''"
~--------------------------------~-----ru•• 3. col. &lt;I
CHEMICAl ENGINIHIN&lt;i
Meyen, d irected by Saul . Elkin. Counyard
~INAIII

WoMEN'S 1ASKERA11•
UIB vs. Houghton College. Clark Hall, 7

p.m. No admission charge.
RIM'
Hearts of the World (Griffith). 70 Acheson,

7:30p.m. No admission charge.
CHAIAD tiouSP
• Purim Festival, featuring a Megilah Reading.
ChaNd House, 3292 Main Sl., 7:30 p.m. and
Fillmore Room, Norton Union, 9:30p.m.
MFAREOTAL'
Violinist Carol Zeavin performs. Ba ird

Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.

TUESDAY-25
HILUI. HOUSE•

P'urim Service. 40 Capen Bl vd ., 7 a.m.
NUTRITION AND MAN
LECTURE SERtiS'
Nutrition and Aging, Or. Robert McGandy.
~;i_Farber (Capen), 12 noon. Bring your

COMPunNG SERVICE SEMINARf
FORTRAN IV for the Novice, taught by

Harvey Axlerod. Tuesdays and Thursdays
through March 27. 334 Hayes, 3~5 p.m.
IIOCHEMISTIIY SEMINARf
'
Proteolysis in Cellular Synthetic Processes,
Dr. Robert l. Taber. Department or Medical

Viral O ncology, Roswell Pa rk Memorial
Institute, 147 Farber (Capen); coffee at 4, lecture at-4:15p.m.
FRENCH DEPARTMENT Rt.M•
l' l.ove of Jeanne Ney (Pabst). l46 Diefendorf,

5 and 7 p.m. No admission charge.
MEN'SIASKETIALL'
Junior varsity game: UI B vs. University of
Rochester. Clark Hall. 6:30p.m. No admission

charge.
Varsity game : UI B vs . Unive rsity of
RocheSfer. Clark Hall, 8:30p.m. Students with
10 ca rd admitted free; $2 general public.
ENGUSif DEPARTMENT RIM'

Paisan (Rossellini}. 1-47 Diefendqrf, 7 p.m.
No admission charge.
FILMS•
Only the Beginning; Wint er Soldier; Viet-

nam: A Question of Torture ; Amnesty or hUe;. Th ~ Fate o( a Child; Time of the t.ocust .
"lqf1on ,c;:gnference Theatre, 7-10 p.m. No admission charge.
·
Sponsored by the U/ B Veterans Association.
"ERIE COUNTY'S ENVIRONMENT:
197S" SYMPOSIUM'
Air Quality. Or. Bev Paigen , Rachel Carson

College. Communication Bldg. East. Buffalo
State College, 1300 Elmwood. 7:30p.m.
UUAIRIMS"
Desk Set (lang, 1957), 7:30 p.m. and Par &amp;
Mike !Cu kor, 1952), 9 :20 p.m. 170 MFACC,

Ellicott. No admission charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Apple Pie is a world-premiere musical

theatre piece by Mryna lamb and Nicholas
Meyers. directed by Saul Elkin. Courtyard

Thearre. Hoyt and Lafayette, 8 p.m. Ad- /
mission : S1 students; $2.50 others . .Through
March2.
Presen ted by th e Cente r for Theatre
Research.

WEDNESDAY-26
LIFE WORKSHOr'

Dynamics of Human 'Sexuality, 232 Nonon ....
1-3 p.m.. ; Publicit y, 307 No(lon, 7-10 p.m.;
Architecture: Sullivan and Wrinhr at Buffalo.
123 Jewell Pkwy.

Register 223 Norton, 831-4630/1.

Faculty Oub plans

cross-coUntry skiing
A "Cross-Country Skiirlg" outing for

Faculty Club members, friends - and
families is scheduled for 11 a.m., Saturday, March 1, at Spraguebrook Park, just
south of Kissing Bridge.
Instruction will be ~rranged for a
....nominal fee ~l the park if enough individuals are interested.
Pre·instruction is Jvailable from Mr . .

conditions of "mployment.
If GSEU becomes the recognized

Craig Ritz (ext. 2934) of the Physicaf

barRaining agent, its &amp;eiders SJy. it nuy

between 10 a.m. and noon at Clark Hall.
Cross--country skis rNy be rented at
Eastern Mountain Sports, 1270 Niagara
Falls Blvd., Faculty ChAo.. organizers advise. Charges are S6 for.turdays, S8 for
the weekend, and $3.50 for '"""kdays.

....,k "!ider affiliations, possibly through a
SUNY-wide organization (there are appro•imatelv 2800 State-funded graduate
staff members throughout SUNY, the
group's leaders say), or by arrangements
with such orgJnizltions iS the New York
Stilt~ Union of Teachers or rhe American

Federation of State, C::ounty and
Municipal Employees.

Education Department, on Fridays

RE'\ervations for the outing and/or on-

site instruction "should be! made witnthe
Faculty Club, Harriman Hall, by February
25.

Systematic ~gn of Physical Separation
Processes, Professor Edwin N. lightfoot, Jr.,

Department of Chemical Engineering, UniversityofWisconsin.104Parker,3p.m.
ENCOUNTBt SERIES•
The Beaux Arts Trio will be available for in~~~d~~~~~d.~~;~.Baird Recital Hall, 4 p.m.

Thei;tre, Hoyt and Lafayette, a p-:m. AdmMias~n2.: .$1 students; $2.50 others. "Ihrough
" ·'"
Presented by· the Center for Theatre/
Research.
U~g~i:·~liceman (Rosenberg) .. Norton
Conference Theatre, all831-5117 for times.

IIOCHEMISTIIY SfMINAIII
Fluorescent Probe Srudies - Suucrure/Fundion Rel;,tionships in E. coli. RNA
Polymer;,se, Dr. lynwood R. Yarbrough.

GAU.BlY 21' EXHIIIT
Offset Ripoff is the title of this traveling ex-

Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva
University, New York. H6 Farber (Capen);
coffee at 4, lecture at·-4:15 p.m.
BROADCAST'

Robert T. Buck. d irector of Albright-Knox
Art Gallery, is interviewed by U/B arr
historian, Harry Rand. WBFO-FM (88.n, -4 p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY VAIQ CLUI
SEMINARf
Acceleration and Exercise, Dr. Sarah

Nunne ley. 106 Sherman, -4:30 p.m.
FILM•
True Heart Susie {Griffith}. 70 Acheson, 7:30
p.m. No admission charge.
MEN'S SWIMMING•
UI B vs. Niagara University. Clark Pool, 7:30

p.m. No admission cha rge.
UUABFILMS••
Desk Set {lang, 1957), 7:30p.m., and Par &amp; _
Mike (Cukor. 1952), 9:20p.m. 140 Farber (Capen). No admission charge.
POETRY READING•
Maura Stanton gives a poetry reading. 231
Norton. 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Depanment of English
Poetry Committee.
THEATRE I'ERfORMANCE'

•

.A.ppl(' Pif&gt; is a world~premiere musical
thNtrC' piN"e by Myrna lamb and Nic-holas
Mryrrs, dirNtrd by Saul Elkin. Courtyard
Theatre, Hoy1 and Lafayette, 8 p.m. Admission: S1 students; 52.50 others. Through
March 2.
Presented by . the Center for Theat re
Research.
VISITING ARnST SERIES CONCEltl'
The Beau.IC Arts Trio performs music by

Haydn and 011orak. Mary Seaton Room,
Kleinhans Music Hall. 8:30p.m. Admission : S1
stude nt s; S2 faculty, staff and alumni; S3
gene ral admissiOn.

THidRSDA.Y-27· --·- ··
ALCOHOL ABUSE: PREVENTION &amp;
TREATMENT CONFfRENCQ

This two-day conference is sponsored by
The Research lnstitu(e on Alcoholism Division
of Research. the New York State Department
or Mental Hygiene and The Medical Society of
Erie County, assisted by the U/B Continuing
Medical Ed ucatio n prog ram . Hill e boe
Auditori um. Roswell Park Memorial Institute,
9 a.m.-5 p.m. For further information, caiiS-422417.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Thf&gt; Arrow of Time and M&lt;Jcroscopic
lrrC'vcrsibiliry. U/B Professor T. Y. Wu . 111

Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.
DEPARTMENT Of PHARMACEUTics
SEMINAIIf
"'
Pl&lt;~ 'ima t.evri-Response Relationships in the
A&lt;i&lt;C''ismenr nf Drun and Drug Melabolire

Po iC'ncy, Dr. Arthur 1. Atkinson, Jr .• associate
professor of medipne and ph&lt;~rmacology.
Northwestern University . Kenwell
Auditorium. Millard Fillmore Hospital, 4
p.m.
-HILUI. HOuSE"

.

" Drop-In'' night. 40Cii11pen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
CONTINUING MfDICAL IDUCATION
CARDIAC CUNIQ ·

This s.eriM of clinics in physical education of
the c-ard iu patient and arrhythmiiill workshops
arc \C"hcduled Ciillch Thursdiilly evening through
M&lt;~y 8. The topic of tonight's clinic is Precor(/i;,I-Pul~ r iom. Farber (Upen)·t;talllasement,
Room G-22. 7:30-9:30 p .m. For information or
rcgi\triilltion. ciillll the School of Medicine, a31 .:
5S26.

Spomored by the School of Medicine.
CIVIUZATION FILM SERIIS'

Epi\ode e i-c ht in Sir Kenneth Clark' s
"Civilization .. \Cries is eniitled The LiKht of lxpc!ri~nr.e. A discussion following is ted by
Profc.,\Or Chiiirles Beyer of the French Depart. men! and Barbara Beyer. 170 MFACC, 8 p.m.
Sponsored by Vico College and College 8. &lt;
CONCBIT•
.
The Composers Worlcshop olfl!fS its second
concert of ·the seiillson. Baird RecitJl Hall, a

p.m. No iilldmisston chiillrse.

WOusetor

.

UFI
AnriquinR •nd Collecting. Clrborundum
Museum of CerAmia, 8 p.m.
Rqisle&lt;'2D Norlon, 831-46301't.
THEATilE I'Hro.MANCP

Apple Pie Is • world-premiere musical
1hcotre piece by Myrno Lamb ""'! Nicholas

EXHIBITS
hibit from the Visual Studies Workshop in
Rochester. A Viillriety of media Jre induded in
this multiples exhibit, with each work
reproduced 20 .times. Area artists are invited .
to participate.
For information, contact Gallery 219
th rough the UUAB office, 831 -5112. The exhibit runs through Feb. 21 . Hours: Mon.-Fri.,
11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Mon., Wed., and Thurs., 7-10
p.m.; Sun., 1-S p.m. Second floor, Norton.
GAUERY 219 EXHIIIT
Industrial Wasre by Michael Zwak is made

up of sculptural pieces and hinging works
made from industriiilll materials. The exhibit
runs from Feb. 23-March 7 in 219 Norton.
Ho urs : Mon.-fri., 11 a.m.-4 p.m. ; Mon., Wed.,
and Thurs .• 7-10 p.m.; Sun., 1-5 p.m.
LOCKWOOD EXHIIIT
Polish Collection, exhibition culled from
the Universit y's collection of more than 4,000

volumes of material. First floor. Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Continuin .
MUSIC UIRARY EXHIIIT

Harrison Birtwistle: Work s ~nd Reviews is
curre ntly on display in the Music library,
Baird Hall, through February 28.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIIIT

People , photographs by M i ckey
Ostcrreicher. Hayes Hall Lobby, through
February 28. Monday through Friday frofTl 9
a. m.-Sp.m.
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

NOTICES
CREDIT-fREE COURSES

A variety of courses are scheduled for the
spring semester. including such topics as arts
and crafts. journalism, counseling, computers,
rngincering, government, music and theatre,
photography, real estate, psychology. sports,
women's studies, writing, and many others.
For a---brochure detailing theucourses offered
o r for registration information, contact the
Division of Continuing Education, Hayes A,
Rm . 3, Main Street Ciillmpus, 831-4301 .
OffiCE Of ADMISSIONS AND
RECORDS HOURS

The Office of Admissions· and Records will
be open Feb. 20 from 8 :30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Feb. 21
from 8:30 a .m.-4:30p.m.; and Feb. 2-4-27 from
8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.
STUDY AIIROAD ADVIRMfNT

Study Abroad Advjsement is now available
in 107 Townsend Hall. Call for iilln appointment ·
between 10 and 11 a.m .• M~ through Friday, 831-4247 . .
TAX ADVJ5oRy SERVICE

-

The Office of Foreign Sl:udent Affairs is
agiillin offering a tax advisory service for
foreign schobrs and students. liillw students
Bruce s..,;ner ond Alan Straus will be
iillvaila~ 10-12 hours~ week-It the Foreign
Sludent Office. The service runsthroush April
11, Monday and Wednesday from 2-S p.m.
Call831-lS28 for an appointment.

WEEKfNOIN RURALAMIIIICA
A cultural ex:chanse visit to a small rural
communiry as suests of American families is
scheduled for Mordl 13-16 for International
Sl~dents. There Is 110 charge fo&lt; the exchange.
Applications are available in· the foreiBn Studen! Office, 210 Townsend. The cleMIIirw: for
application A Feb. 21.
Sponsored by the SA lntemotional Coordinator.

INTERVIEWs

ON&lt;AMPUS-

The staff ol the Uniwnity Placement and
CarefrGuidonceC&gt;ffnweloomesallstuclents
in the University communhy and alumni to
take part in various career prosrams offer:ed
this year., The on--c:Ampul· interviewins
prosram,

..Unnlns from Jan. 21-April25, offers

1he opportunhy for indlviduallnte&lt;views with
education, businen, indusrrial and
sovemmentol representatives. candidates
from oil desree levels, who completed their
course work In January·or expect to In .Moy
1975, are invited to take p111 In the lnterviewinJ. Reslstr3tlon forms are ovallable In
Hayes Anaex c, Rm. '-The followtna qencies
will be intenriewlna this week:
.
THURSDAY - 20: Vid&lt; Chemical Co.
&lt;summer pooltlons); Westlnshouse· Electric
Corp.; Eastman KodOtt Co.
FRIDAY ·- 21: Eastman Kodak Co.; USA
Moterlal Command; 51naer Co.

�-.

·-

(__
February 20, 1975

. . .&amp; . .

-OlleiMIIIr
S2 ~tu d ents; S4 Reneral admission . Tickets
available at Norton Ticket Office and the
Greenfield St. Re\taurant.

THURSDAY-20
CONTINUING DENTAl -

CHAMIER WIND ENSlMILf
PERFORMANCE•
The Chamber Wind Ensemble, directed by
James Kasprowiczt and the Depa rtment of
Drama of Rosarv Hill College take part in a
l&gt;roductio n o f Stravinsky's L'hinoire du Soldat.
Oaemen l ittle ;:J~heaue ; ' R&lt;»ary 'Hill College,
8:30 p .m. AdmissiOn : $1 students~ . S2.50
gene ral public (avai lable. at Norton Ticket10ffice}.

EDUCA1101i15EMINAIII

Ponllel Techniques- The Modem Method
of lntro-Orol lladiogrophy, Dr. Charles Liponi.
This is a two-day progr&lt;~m for dental auxiliaries. 148 f.arber (Upen), 9 a.m.-oC:lO p.ni.
for fee infoi'TNtion or r:egistration, call the
School of Dentistry, 831C2836.
PBJIATaiCS RESEARCH SEMI NAif
Rabbit Hemoglobin Vo1riance : " Possible
Model for Some Issues Relevant to

/

HILLEL HOUSE'
Purim Party with entertainme nt by ." Road
Ru nner ." Felafel will be ser\led. No adm ission
charge . 40 Cape n Blvd. , 9 p .m.
UUAB COfFEEHOUSE.,
ft:1ichael CoOney and String Band. First floor
cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m. Admission charge.

Tmlassemia, Dr. Michael D. Go.rrick . Second

floor board room, Children's Hospital, 12
noon.
MECHANICAL ENGINEBIINC
DU'ARTMENTSEMINAif
A Traumatic Single Cell Recording from
Human Cerebral Cortex During Surgery, Seth
GoJdstein, National Institute of Heahh, 112
Parker, 3 p.m.

UUABFILM ..
Duddy Kravitz. Norto n Confere nce Theat re,
ca \1831-5117 for times. Admission charge.

COILOQUIUMf
Advances in Communication Satellites,
Professor louis Clark, U/ 8 School of
Architecture and Environmenta l Design and
Institute of Applied 'Technology, Washington.
111 Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.

' SUNDAY-23
BROADCAST•
St. Joseph's Collegia te lnsti!Ule l.ab Band,
live broadcast of concert and conversat ion
With' band diredor Russell oWen'S. WBFO-FM
(S8.7], 6 p.m. '·1 • · t • • 1 h !:·l

Uff WORIKSHOf'S•
Audio, 262 Norton, 3:30-5 p.m.; Assertive
Training for Wo men, 231 Norton, 7-10 p.m.;
Ski Mech~n ics, 337 Norton, 7-10 p.m.; Antiquihtc and Co/lectin
Red Room, Faculty
Club, 7:30 p.m.; and Power to the People,
214 Norton , 8-10 p.m.
·
Register 223 Norton, 831~30/1.

::h,

C.vn.izAnON FILM SERIES: . .
•
, ,..Ep)sode seven in Sir_ Ke nne th Clark 's
-" Civilization" series is e ntitled Grandeur and
Obedience. A discussion foll owing is led by
Elizabet h Pe rry of Vico CQIIege. 170 MFACC,
Ellicon, 8 p.m.·
Sponsored by Vi co College and College 8.

DB'AIITMENT Of

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAif
The Estimation of Carecholamines in Urine
by HiRh Performance Liquid Chromarotcraphy

STUDENT RECITAL•

whh Electrochemical Defection, Or. David
Wenke, H§istjlnt director of clinical chemistry,
Erie County laboratory. 2.t.4 Cary (Health
Sciena!s), 4 p.m.

Flutist Marcia

RtM••

mittee (a project of the CAO . 332 Norton,
2:30-5 p.m. If you're interested, but an't attend the meeting, come to 345 Norton or QU

SundoY' and Cybele (Bourguigon). 147
Dlelendorl; 7 p.m. No admission chorse.
Sponsored by the Regionol Film Project.

838-2259.

HIU.B.IIOUSP
"Drop-In" night. 40 C.pen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
. . ......... powthpoupmeetsat7:l0-p .m .
·

ENVIIIONMENT.UENGINEBIINC

CON1INUINC MEDICAliDUCAllON .

5EMINAIII

~..!ie.~ics in physial edu&lt;:otion of

· Thf" Medial Care Revolution, Or. Hury.A.
Suitt, UIB Social 01nd Preventive Medkine
Dept. 142 P;~rker, 3:50p.m.
ENCINEBIINC AND

the cardiac potient and arrhythmia wo&lt;kshops

ate scheduled eoCh Thundoy evening through

May 8. The topic ·for tonlsht's dinic is
J\usqlltatlon. FO(ber (Upen) Hall a..ement,
Room G-~ 7:30-9:30 p.m. For information or
~ion, call the School of Medicine, 8315526;

'

ova. ENQN&amp;IUNC DU'ARTMENT,
WA'IB~AND : • .•.

APftJmsqiNCI5$1MII!IAU
SinRIP and Muhi-phase MHO Flows of L.iIIUid Metal.~, Or. Paul S. lykoudis, professor
~nd

head, Depa~nt of Nuclear Engineer·
ing, Purdu e University . 104 P.arker ;
refreshments af3:30, lecture at 4 p.m.

filM-·

Sponsored by the~ of Medicine.
.CJYII.JZAllON
Episode sht in Sir kenneth Clark's
"Civilization" series is entitled Prolest and

WOMEN'S IASUDAIL•

li/B vs. ·Eomell University. Clark Hall, 7
p.m. No admission chorse.
CAC.RtM••
.
Lady Sin~ tlw Blu~. 140 Farber (Capen},
7 :l0a_nd 1_0:15 p.m. Admission: $1.

f.~~lca.:r~~.:=..::~~~

Chorles Sd~. 170 MFACC, Ell-., 8 p.m.

Sponscnd by Vlco Collese and College B.

James Kasprowicz, and the Department of
Drama of Rosary Hill College take p.1rt in a
production of Str~vinsky's l.'histoire du Soldat.
Daemen little Theatre, Rosary Hill College,
8:30 p .m. Admission : S1 students, S2.SO
general Public (available at Nonon Ticket Office):

="'t"R;;.r;.!t~~~~:'.r:~J::s:JJ.r

lnemen Little Theatre, Rosary Hill Col~e;
I!;)A.,~Ql&lt;~~'--ft1v,studO'l.t;s~ ~
~ral ~bljo;(ivoi~ OI, Non0!1 •Tid&lt;et1'li-

. UUAI COfflittoUsf..
Michael Cooney and String Band. First floor
cafeteria, Nonon, 9 p .m. Admission charge.

. .OADCASr
Budcminster Fuller is interviewed by Esther

IRCFUM•

SOOnder.' - C~eck '"residence hall bulletin·
boards for location and times (posted one
week in advance of film). Dues-p,ayins IRC
members are admitted free.
UUAIRLM••
Born to Win (Passer): Nonon Conference
1'?\eatre, all -831 · 5117 for times. Admission
charge.

SATURDAY-22
WOMEN FACUUY f'IIOG&amp;AM•

Sponsored by the Pn!slden(s Committee on
the Recruitment and Proi"':''t'on of Women.~
·

YAIISITY HOCXEY•
tJIB "'· OsweRo Sr.te ColleR•· Holiday Twin
Rinks, 3465 Broadway, 7:30p.m. Students may
pict up free ticke(! at the Clorlt Holl ticket offtee before the ntsht of the same; S2 general

WAaRIM"

public.

IIIUR'IIOUSP
~InS Sabbath semce at 10 a.m., followed by a Kiddush and Torah srudy session. 40

..OADCAST"

C.pen Blvd. ·

8om 10 Win (Passer). Nonon Coni-nee
Thewe, ·can 831-5117 lor dmes. Admission

--- .._
. FRIDAY-21'

Capen Blvd.

r.tollel Tedtnlques-The Modem Method

a1-...o..r flltdlosnphy, Dr. Charles Uponi.

This Is a --.loy poopam lor dental aux-

llrorleo. 141 Farbe&lt; 1'-'l, 9 Lm.-4:30 p.m.
Joe lnlonnadon or reptmion, all the

For

.._....,

__,.

.

. . . , Hormone
- McEwen,
wllh the
lraln, ·
Dr. lruce
- - - pofeaor, Rockefeller Unl&gt;enlty.

-~

___,..

111..._.,1p.m.

;...

- .,.Dewlol&gt;ment a/ Audubon N- Town Is

the~
rJ this sllile
- - and dl&gt;......
117 membeB
of the Urban Develop....... c.,.poratlon-362~Acheson, 1:30p.m. -

. . . . . . aa.rn-.w, -

~ural Analysis: A Method to
Compounds, Thomas W.
245 C.ry (lislih

..--student.

~.IMd

fniiiii."1W

.
Busing, bcism,.....,nd Que~lity Education, a
program dealins with school integration.
WBfO-FM (88.n, 8 p.m.
HIUS.IIOUSP
Shabbar Service at 8 p.m., fol~ by a'
Toroh. study session and ones ShabbaL 40

CXINIJNUIIIG DENTAliiiUCAllON

Schoolo/~,831-2836.

~

ucn,tiiP
.
. U..guage Crisis •nd ~into Myth: Hofmannsthal's Der Schwlerige, Professor Horst
Wlltmln, University of Toronto. 231 Not1on, I
p.m. ~ admlsslen m.rse. .
·
Presenled by the Department' of Germanic
and Slavic tansiJIBes.

231 Norton,9a.m.-12:38p.m.

URWOUSHOI"
Introduction to Folk Music, 232 Nonon, 1
p:m .
Registe&lt; 223 Nonon, aii831-163Qt1.

.

Varsity game: U/B liS. Athletes In ActiOn
fasr: Clorlt Hall, J :30 p.m. Students with 10 ad- '

mined lfee; S2 general public. _
CACJIIM••
4&lt;/y Slnss the .IJ/ues. 140 Farber (Capen),
_7:l0and10:15p.m. Aclmlt;slon: $1.

.

..OADCASr
Breakfast Concert with Pianist Joseph
Kubera. WBFO-fM (llll.n, Ba.m.
FR.MS•
- Only the leflnnlnr; .yinter Soldier; V'H!Inam; A Quesrion of Tonure; Amnesty or Ex·
ile; The Fate of a Child; Time of ihe locust.
Nonon Conference Th9tte, 12:30-4 p.m. No
admission chorse.
Sponsored by the U/11 Veterons Assodatlon.

r

Bringing the Concept of Srructured
Pror,.mmlng Up to Dare, Or. loren P.
- - Uwrena! lerlieley I.Aoboratory,
Uni&gt;enlty of C.Uiomlo. Rm. 41, 4221i ltklae
f.el, 3:30p.m.

MUSIC LfC1\IRP
.
Mischa Schneider, fo.:r- ceUisi with the
Budapest smns Quartet, gh.'es a lecture. 1111
Baird HaH, 4 p.m. No admission ~'8"- · .

UR WOIIIISHOPS•
Your Heart and Heart Disease. 231 NQ!ton,
6:30-8 p.m.; Worbhop on II.P.. 232 NOrton,
7-10p.m.
.
'
Register 223 Norton, 831-463011.
RIM•
t •
'Hisf&gt; School (Wisem.on). 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admission chorse.
Presented by the Resfonatfllm Project.
HIU.B.IIOUSP
Purim Servlc:e. 40 C.pen BMI., 7 p.m.

St ' •• , ......

UU.IISRENCH fii.M5BIES..

~
M&amp;JJNG·
WoJ.:IM:Iui•:MnE. Fertig will speak at a

t'arrinss of Mad•me De . .. (Ophuls). 146
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admhslon charge.

~ Gl

the lullalo Animal Right&gt;

Com-

~

COllOQUIUM•
Hesse's Demion •nd Der~ In the
Ught of lunrfon ~-Marl&lt; Hovey, 221
Wilkeson Quod, ElllaJu COinplex. 3 p.m.
Presented by the Department of Germanic
•nd Slavic. :
ENGUSHDIP-RIM•
Open City OtOIMIIlnQ. 140Farber (C.pen), 3
and 9 p.m. No admission cNrse·
COMPUIBI SCIENCECOUOQtJIUMt

MEN'SIIA5ICERAU.
junior VAnity same : U/8 vs. Hilbert
College. Clark Holl, 6:30 p.m. No admission

charJe.

Swartz. WADV-FM (106.5), 1~: 05 p.m.
UUAIFII.M••
Duddy Kravitz. Norton Conference Theatre,
call831-5117 ID&lt; times. Admission chorse.

· MONDAY~24

Technical Solutions to the Energy Crisis, Dr.
John A. Howell, associate professor of
chemical ensfr\eerins- 140 Parlteo-,8 p.m,

cNrse·

performs. Baird Recital

The c:Nmber Wind Ensemble, directed by
James Kasprowicz, and the Oepanment of

NA~----- ­

~

tee

Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
CHAMIER WIND ENSEMILf
IUfORMANCP

lrum ro (JOJilf&gt; 7. col. 2)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
Vll.. 6,11J. 19
FEIRJARY 13, 1975

•

Minorities
employment
total rises

·.r·

,. ,

-'

Two Amherst buildings opening in fall
Two additional Amherst Campus
• structures J&gt;;l•!' been completed· and
turned over to UIB: the first engineer·
ing building and Christopher Baldy Hall,
the education and philosophy structure.
Equipment specification orders are
now underway for the buildings arod
both are expected to be in use with the
stjtrt of -!he fall 197.5. 'l"'!~t.er, ~on:ling
to Dr. ioltn· A. Neal, atshtanl vl'ce1&gt;iesident for bciUti... J&gt;lanning.
"Barring any delivoory or ether equip·
ment delays, move-in oper•tionS should
take pl1ce dyring: the summer months
with the structures opening for dasses
in September," Dr. Neal says.
The 38,500-square·loot engineering
building, designed by Marcel Breuer
(New York} and the Cannon Partnership
(Grand Island), will accommodate about
300 students and foculty members from
the Department of Industrial Engineer·
ing and the School of Information and
· Library Studies.
Reseu.ch offices, a demqns_tratiol'!

library, special project rooms and
classrooms are among the structure's
major featureS. The fourth of four
s.torjes is devoted _to. man-mach in-e
systems and hUman fador.s research.
The huri)an factors lab, which focuses
on studying and designing toolS, objects
and entire wOtking environments, is expected to be "the best equipped in the
· world,'' campus planners say.

-~ .

.

· BaldY Hall; 'I:Onnected to .John-..,t.or!l
O'Briarl Hall which opened in
September 1973, was designed by Harry
Weese 1Chicagol an~ An!hony Carlino
(Buffalo).
Some 2,550 students and professors
from the Faculty of Educational Studies
and Department of Philosopby will use
the seven story unit whiCh contains
nearly 100,000 net square feet ..
Several architectural highi'ights
(which, thoogh attractive, have been in·
corporated primarily for their
educational benefits} include: a circular
conference theater,_a laboratory nursery
school, and a multi-level open air center

courtyard. A number of d.i.ssrooms, lecture halls and informal seminar spaces
are also included in the building.
Both the engineering and education
buildings were started in early 1973 and
contracted by the ). Migliore Construe·
lion Company Inc. of Tonawanda.
OtMr Slruclures
seve ral other structures are riow complete on the outside with work contj!'u.ing in the interior. These include the
Francis E. fr'onczak •Ph~cs Buildi"'&gt;~the
Walter P. &lt;;.ooke and ~a!ph-t16chstetter
Bicilogf and Pharmacy lowers. and the
eleven story English and modern
languages building.
Final exterior enclosure is unde!'Way
on_ two more structures, the glassexterior Chilled Water. l!lant. and the
centr.il fOod . commiss'ary 'a t ttie
southwest corner of the campus.
· The chilled water facility will supply
cooled water for most air conditioned
campus buildings, while food services
for both Main Street and Amherst will
be handled by the commissary.
(lum lo ~tcr 1. col. 11

Carey see.~_ $3!:J. miDion .hike for SUNY
An increase of $37.2 milli6n is recommended for State
- University in GoVernor Hush Carey's proposed budge! for
1975·76, bringing the tot~l SIJNY operations appropriation
from State funds to $646,760,00jl.
Beyond these direct appropriations. the Governor's budget
projects that SUNY will receive $l01,4n,IIOO in grants,.contracts
and 51udent aid funds. Of this total, S77.800.000, or 39 per cent,
.rePr-nts federal support; another $44,700,000, or 22 per cent,
is expected to be ~Ved from New York State agencies, and
the remaining $79,000,1100, or 39 per cent, will come from gifts, .
grants, contracls and food service income. (U/ll's direct Slate
buciae' of $81.674 million [see ltepoller, February 6) will be
augmented by $16,610.000 In federal funds and $13)41,1100 In
gilts, grants, endowments, fees, food service receipts and New
York State awotds, such as Regents Scholarships and Scholar
lncenlive Awarck, Gov. Carey estim11es.).
Attordi"' 10 the Governor's budge! message, the $37.2
million dlrecl approprl.ltlon lncrea5e for SUNY is "the amount .
requln!d for fixed ...... for mandated salaries aoo rrice rises:
lncreated worltto.d and other Unlvetshy needs wil therefore
be met with no Increase In funds because of offsetting neductlons."
~c...

-

.

Slliory lncreates for faculty, non-teaching professionals and
secwll)' pos111ons will take up $11,310,1100~ the lncrea5e and a
lump mlf~on Can inaelle of $4.5 mlllon over
117...751
Ulilllies. "llecause ol the rapid esa1a1ion
· ol
u - narwe of these lnc:reaRS across
....,. d!otrlltuteilto campuses as the

:;======r=::;::

.staff {U1

o(

.-,

-

95;;,.,.;

•

The minority 1~1 included
end ·
36 women. Some 14.6 per cent of all

faculty hired duriQg tl)e tl]~nth.
July-September periOd were minorities,
22 of 151 . This included 12 men and 10
women.
Minorjties also. mad!' up 14.7· per ceQt
of the University's SJO.person NTP work
force in November 74, the figures show.
A total of 78 minority individuals held
jobs in this categOry.
One hundred twenty-four minority
m.en and women held Civil Service
positions in November, 1974, accounting
foi 6.3 per cent of the 1,972 OYil Service
employees on campus as of that date.
Of the NTP·Civil Service. combined
total of 2,502, 2112 were minorities (109
men and-•J3 w6men).
..
Of 1211 hires in NTP and Civil Service
jobs during July-September 1974; 211 (9 ·
~'d!~ 11 women) were minority in-

primarily at the Buffalo and Downstate Medical Schools. The
Buffalo School has had severe problems which have - en·
dangered its accreditation, and its foculty staffing lags behind
other medical school~."
Among librarians on the payroll last
5maler .............. Growth
November 27, minorities accounted for
A full-time equivalent (ffil enrollment increase of 4,300
State-wide, smaller than in ·previous years, is projected for
6.6 per cent ol total ShiH, S...of 76 (2
1~76, with about 85 per cent of the growth corning at four
men and lWO&lt;Mn). ·
developing colleges - Empire State, Old Westbury, Purd!ase
and Utica-Rome- and _lhree University centers, Binghamton,
The flsures illso break out employBuffalo af!(l Stony Brook. The ten developed University
ment cla1a by sex. Indicating that women
colleges, the agricultural and technical colle!!es and the other
constituted 41.8 per cent ol the Ulll
institutions are expected to have relatively litde growth, the
worft force • ol November ZJ, 197;4.
Gove.rnor said.
The total number ol _ , _ emIn line with the modest enrollment Increase projections, the
ployed 1,657; there were 2,310
budget recommends a net increa~ of only 236 positions,
male employees on the same dale- 58.2
SUNY-wide, bringing total staff to 34,839. This Involves 274 ad-·
per cent of tot•l emplolees_ While
ditional positions at Binghamton, Ulll, Stony Brook, Empire
percentages did c:hlnpi from 1973,
State, Old Westbury, Purchase, Utica-Rome, Optometry and
the total number ol women employed
the agricuku~ and technical colleges: ·Another 135 posillons
aclvana!cl by 53; the ,_,., total, by 75.
are asked for Improved staffing at hallh science cerrteB and SO
w - IIC1COUI1ied for 411.5 per cent ol
· .posillonf are earmarted for the opening of new buildings, ,.. all U"'-''ry hlns c1ur1,.. the three '
SUNY-wide. AbOlition of m poslllons Is recommended II a
month period. July 1-~ 30, 2974.
number ol campuses; ~rtlcularly the Univenlry cerrteB lfld
llllde 1111 1L4 per cen1 of the
Un'-'lly coiJeses. Aeaiidlng 10 the &lt;lcwemor, "these result
total ~ sUit In November 74
. lrcim elimination of vacancies, lilhtenl.. ol studeni-Aculty
255
ol
t.cultr ..... during
ratios or other llafflns palleml, and ellmlnllion or redudloil
the Jufyo
period. women K•
ol low-priori(f prc~~r~ms, ouch as SUNY's lnsdlute for Public·
counted tor 25.2 per Cll!l1l - 31 ol 151.
. Polky Akemallwes."
.
.
.
In NTP 8IICI Ovll Sen11ce arepries In
•
~ oudlned chanps projecled II each olthe four

c...,.

..._..,Sea

=:I:

w-

~

tor Ullllty 'pric.'e}n-

The University had 206 minority male
full-time em·ployees and 132 minority
female full-time emplo.yees as of
November 27, 1974, according to official
employment statistics released this week.
The figures reflect an increase of 26 individuals over minority totals for 1973
and indicate that minorities constitute
8.5 per cent of the full-time U/B work·
force total of 3,967. The comparable 1973
percentage figure was 8.1 per cent.
" Minorities" figures include Blacks,
American Indians, Spanish and Orientals.
University spokesmen, in making the
totals available .. cautioned that the
statistics (fully detailed in charts on page
2 of today's issue} are intended merely
as " an overview" and comparison of
University employment information for
1973 and 1974. The figures reflect the ex·
act situation as it existed on the date the
information · was compiled and is not
meant to be a current accounting. With a
work force total of approximately 4,000,
exact totals vary from day to day ,
spokesmen emphasizP.d.
3-Monlh Hiring Information
The statistics also detail hiring information· for the three month period, July 1September 30, 1974. In that period, 42
minority individuals (21 men and 21
women} were hired, representing 15.3
per cent of the total of '174 individuals
hired.
Minorities constituted 9.4 per cent of
the -~vel1)ber., 1974 U,fB instructional

SUNY....--•falows:
··•a.... ....... ,........

.at.-

Nawlllllar .. '74, 1,J51 entplo,.t,-54 per- C!l the lOIII ol :z.502. Of,. ..... lit the Julr-Seplember
_cenl
__
perlocltn._
~ 71 ot!IU per

o.-111111M pric.'e_lnaeases . • ...••..•••.•• • ••• - -

II\IOnlela ..... up 67.1 per Cll!l1l ol the
ClfllpUf . . . . . . . . .In NcMmber 74-

• .......,

•

•.

5

~ ·

.,_ ·. ~!Cif~' lllaryl~ ........
•. · ~~lnauses -•.•. : ......... . .

·· &gt;

Zl6..atpcisldons .......... :..... :_ .......

trumto-t.aat»

........ _l.aatll

�:!

Law to reduce

size of its
_e.-ering ~

The uw School faculty has accept!!&lt;~ a
recommendation of i" Admissions Committee to reduce the size.of the School's
entering dass.
According to Opinion, law's student
nt!WSfNper, the action will reduce the
· size of next year's entering group from
300 to 2165 or llO, in order to insure an
enrollment ~ling of no more than 800
studen". The lower number will also be
admitted in subsequent years.
The uw School had been operating on
the assumption that a -15 per cent attrition rate in each entering dass of 300
would keep the stu&lt;lent body within the
desired limit. Recent · exP.,rience has
"'-n, however, Opinion said, that actual attirition is no more than 5 per cent
ofeachdass.
In 1973, law admitted 322 students and
in 1974, the number was 300. Even with
this reduction, however, Opinion re·
paned, the Admissions Committee feh
a further cut to 2165 or l70 would be in
order It&gt; ll)eel the ceiling.
~n increased number of first year
students were reponed to have left
school in the fall due to financial reasons,
the uw newspaper said, "but this is not
expected to materially alterthe expected
5 per cent attrition in that dass."
Opinion said that "With only 2165 or
l70 studen" in the first year, Provost
(Richard D.) Schwartz thought that
pet'!yps only three first-year sections
might be required in the JaiL The reduction in dass size would, he estimated,
under cunent circumstances, release approximately 1V. faculty lines from firstyear teaching for the teaching of upperclas offerings. Questioned as to what
the School would do if five promised law
faculty lines do -not event&lt;YIIy materialize, the Provost opined that the entering
dass would be eut still further-to prevent
a worsening faculty ..tudent ratio."
-

Fetiru•ry 13, 1975

Jlandall taking Johns Hopkins rasSignment

.St~ .frao:new9'1&lt; is pr!&gt;fl~ng ~p~ly
on ifle '*i!i!SI SinS~&lt;! ·campus ·buoldong,
Samuel P. Capen HaU, which will house
.central administration, three miljor
Hbrarles, · ailcl a variety of aQdemic ind
studern activity spaces. Located at the
center of the ampus, the Capen structure will conlaln 250,11110 square feet.
A delay in the arrival of steel has temporarily hahed progress on the George
D. Crofts Service Building. located near
the commisoary buiiUin1. Officials
report that the structure's foundation is
now complete and they expect the &gt;teel

soon.

Work is c:ontinulng on the air·~
supported recreational "bubble"

reoent1y erected on a parklns lot just
nMh of the dewloping aademic spine
of the- ampus.
Followlns -'lcation of a floor surface sealer, the bubble will be""!~Ulpped
far baokelball, tennis, volleyball and
other IY"' 1P0f1S. An indoor track will
run .round the Interior perimeter. .
Dr. Neal noted that to date approximately S2ZS m1lion of the $650
inlllion llloated for the - campus is

•.-lied

faculty in 1937.
On Februal)'\14, he and Mrs. Randall
will be honored at a reception in the
Faculty Club under joint sponsorship of
the School of Medicine, Department of
Obstetrics-Gynecology and the Buffalo
Gynecological-Obstetrics Society.

Slee Prof Named
The noted English composer, Harrison
Birtwistle, will be in-residence at U(B
during the spring semester as Slee
Professor of Music.
.
Born at lancashire in 1934, Mr.
Birtwistle occupies a position as one of
England's most exciting composers of
the day, Music Deportment spokesmen
indicate. His works have been performed at the :najor festivals in Europe
and the United Kingdom, and recently
his work was performed by _the New
York Philharmonic under the direction
of Pierre Boulez.
For his first Slee lecture/recital here,
Wednesday, February 19, in Baird
Recital Hall at 8 P.-m., a program of Mr.
Birtwistle's works will be offered including "Refrains an~ Choruses" and
" La
Plage : eight ar i as of
remembrance." Joining in the perform~
ances will be members of ~he Center
of Cre~iive and Performing Arts.

Trainees return to their home countries

to practice and set up similar training
programs. After six months, their effectiveness is assessed by practicing
physicians in their country. And, when
necessary, techniques are further improved.
.
· One of the new- centers to be establfshed under the program is opening
this spring in · Korea. There, .a central
organization w~ll operate -eduation~l
and training centers in five Seoul
hospitals. Each program will be headed
by a former trainee in one of the U.S.
training units.
·
The Arab world, latin America and
Africa are other areas into which the
program hopes to · expand, Dr. Randall
indicates.
Dr. Randall, who holds the M.D. from ·
the University o~ Kansas, joined the U/B

into a single entity existing university-

funded programs training foreign facul•
ty in modern approaches to population
control and offers an " exciting
challenge," Dr. Randall says. ·
Dr. Randall's chief responsibility will
be to assess teaching methods used at
various training centers included under
the program. The most effective, he
says, will be adapted for use in new
centers to be set up in developing countries.
The program enable~ experienced
foreign faculty to learn how to assess

~~:
----------------------~-rul.

rfnltll ,.., ..... J.

.fl

'

men:&gt;bers who are geographical full-time
(and therefore, technically not full-time)
have been accidentally induded in the
Univer_sity total full-time figures this year.
Those known to be induded are nine individuals, all white and two female. Their
inclusion, therefore, selVes to slightly
r-:ducj! the reported percentage . of

51 of the total stoff of 76. Of three
librarians hired in the July-September
period of that year, two were women.
Additional comparisons a_nd breakdowns can.. be derived from ~eviewing
the charts on· page 2.
University spokesmen cautioned that a
few (~t- more than a dozenl faculty

minority .1nd women employees,
spokesmen indicated.
·
For purposes of darity in ohis year's
. report, the instrudionill Otegory includes both regular facultY and thOse
with qualified titles. Librarians are also
reponed in a separate category for the
first time this. year. ·

.Comparative employment- data
!

AI••IEISI

tfmmp;t1lf'1. rul. 1J

and aid the health C:.f women In their
countries, Dr. Randall explains. They
receive training in how to Instruct
women "In proper child spacing" and in
"the seriousness ol the burdens of overpopulation."
To date, some 60 foreign faculty
members have received training at
Johns Hopkins, Washington University
of St. louis, Western Penn Hospital of
the University of Pittsburgh, and the
American University of Beirut, lebar:aon.

Dr. Clyde L Randall will end 38 years •
of service to UIB on March 1 when he
leaves for Johns Hopkins University
where he will serve as coordinator of a
new international program of education
in IYni!CQiogy.
·
, The 69-year-old physician, who is
known for his contributions in the field
of uterine cincer, has served as . .
professor of obstetrics/gynecology here
since 1942. He was ch•irman of the.
Department for over a decade and served over the past five years as vice president for health sciences and acting dean
and executive officer of the School of
Medicine.
The Johns Hopkins-affiliated program, _
funded by the U.S. Agency for Inter- .
natioo:oal Development (USAID), merges

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�February 13,. 1975 ·

. i .

{ f

i

·}\
historiand:.
visits
"iJJe ., .· ,..-:.
d~am fado~
ly Polrido Word ·alederrnon
Rf'(Wllfer Sf~ff

~ih P1esur was a kid, growing
up in Buffalb, he wen't every Saturday to
the North Park Theatre, paid his dime
· and got three hours of pre-fab fantasy, a
pleasure package that invariably included a ca rtoon, a serial, and one of the
feature-lenglh pictures that t he

When

Hollywoqd dream factory cra nked oUt
every week.

"When I was good, I got to see the
stage show at Shea's Buffalo, but usually
my buddies and I went to the matinee at
the North Park. I liked all kinds of pictures: Westerns, horror movies. Th~
only thing I didn't like were the music~l s.
When Dick Powell began to kiss Ruby
Keeler, we'd howl cind groan until

sometimes the ushers· would throw us
out.'' recallS the U/B prgfessor pf histQrY, .

. Some deca.des later PleSur is a

the dream ~ factOry,
seeking out and coil) mittiOg' tO 1he leSser
immortality Qf rriagf)etic lap~ JJ'le; v9ice~
of the men and women wbe made the

historian . in

movies. His academic -'c:redentials are
luie view of the studio heads.
passport to a vanishing world that even
of the positions she and others took at
the most ardent -fan rarely penetrates.
.
the tost of ~heir careers.
· h '~
Thus, last summer Plesur found himseli .
But then lang was not one to be intimidated by a Harry Cohn or a Louis · · · !' .- :~
A 'figUre: th'&lt;lt looms"Yery large in ihese
in Holl ywood · sippiog champagne and
B. Mayer. During the '30's, Dr. GO'ebl)els
taped recollections is Irving Thalberg,
eating pistachio ?Uts by the side of Rudy
came to Lang with an offer lesser men
the ~ovie-industry wunderkind whom F.
Vallee's pool, as the historian collected . (and women) were unable to refuse. The
Scott 'fitzgerald immortalized in his un·
data for a projected book on the public's
finished
The Last Tycoon.
Fuehrer, Goebbels told Lang, had seen
perception of the film industry in the
Se_v'eral qf Pl~sur',s informants _give lie
1920ts and '30's.- • _ ... . · • . -·: . ~ : : .
his pi~tures anc;j d_ecided that he w;IS the
to
!he
generally
accepted view (based on·
Vallee ("a vulgar and. iiascible mari") is·
man : tO · ma~ e ! ·the ·Na:tF • film ~· 't~ang
the romantiC belief that Hollywood, not
o nl y one of dozens of stars, character acsuggested t~at th_e fact tha! his n:other
a heart attack, kmed Fitzgerald) that the
tors , directors, sc~n.ario wri~e;rs,
washalf-Jew1sh m1ght bean!~ped1ment ,
stUdio- heads· w'ere 'moristers ··or at teali '
producers, and Hollywood songwriters
but Goebb~~ as"&lt;ured hom that· the
·
philistines without whom cinematic art
diaf Ple~u f has-inleivi'ewe&lt;l for the proj- - .Fuehrer dec1des who IS and who·~ not an
·
would have blossomed.
ect, including comedian Gec:~.rS.~ ~rns, _, • . f4:ry~n. _La ng .,r~ponded by takl~g the
Anita laos, Who began her career as a
fi:harlie McC.. rthy'~ friend Edn~-.n. J\ ·11:~ lf~l~11f'/iff'i; 1- n·-::::: ·-)'let.~~ 1~ H!tA~
scenario writer for D. W. Griffith,,_Jg!Js
l)"lovie cowboys Don Barry and Johnny
,r\ Amer1~\.'a~~ !e s-t"1es'?r, l\~s - tll~o"
P\E3u t1iat he ev r en£ounte d arpean reP:utauon •n•tJa_Uy.cut Inti~ 1ce ~·th
Mack Brown, directors Fritz lang and'
tistic interferenCe from anYof her bOsSes·
William Wellman, and screeo _p~r.: ; ..: ~ th~ s~u~!OS. ~~ wa~ m da!"ger of be~ng .
(i~cluding Douglas Fairbanks), although
~nalities as dissimilar as Buster t'rab&amp;.~ .; ·. .f•!~d ,ilt. ~PM.1:1.o ~.PHe qf)1]S (?f.~t~s,tattq:':! _ ....
sh~a1l mits "fkarW..s just."hazatd; that was
and Gale Sondergaard.
tliat He hail beeh the oilost famous C:lirecjust luck." Wiitin-g for niovie'SWaS nOt 'an,-·
Adulation, many of theSe~ people have . !or in E_urope, when he fi~ally succeeded
she insists, but a job, something she (and
10 IJlakmg Fury, an expenence marred by
known all their lives, but sedous attenfellow }Creenwriters Christog~er .
Joe Mankiewkz' usurping ·the final cut.
tion from academicians is ·something
new to the m, and man y of Plesur's subFury. redeemed lang · by meeting -the
Crab~. recalling his rePutation a:nong lshliiwoOd ind · Afilou;··HtJ&gt;IIeyl :ar&lt;i.-ld'
make money.
jpcts approached their initial interviews
stud1o's o_ne absolute ~tandard of exthe moviemakers, " 'he strips down pret·
"Fitzgerald had the m'ost idiotic amcellence: It made money.
with th e wariness that one associates
ty good . .. but, God almighty, don't give
bition," she says. 11 He wanted to be a
with street-smart natives in their first en"I never worked with stars," lang exhim any dialogue, because h~ can't talk'
scenario
writer, and it was utter non~
. counter with an anthropologist.
plains to Plesu~. "I'll tell you why. A star
... That's what you had to live down."
sense:c And he failed. He never could
1f a common thread runs through their
~s not necessanly a first·dass actor. A star
Popular-$:ulture courses may be the
write
scenarios,
because dramatic writing
~~ somebody ~ho has caug~t the ~ttenrage on campuS, but Crabbe has no
reminiscences it is that, MGM's. pretenis a IriCk. It hlis nothing to do"with talent.
tious motto notwithstanding, Hollywood
lion of an_aud1en~e.. A star IS a ~mshed
illusions about . his contribution to '
It just" happens that you're born with
in its Golden Age was pre~minently a
character 10 the m10d ?f th,e aud1ence. ~f
history : "I -admire people like Salk and
something that makes it work."
business, and the business wasn't art.
I ... cast anyone who IS a star, they don t
people that are working in the Space Age
Miss LOQs, who made it work over and
People made movies to make money . .If
see the character in· my film. They see a
.and the electronics people and the docover again (most memorabl.y in
the pictures were also beautiful or
star playing the character."
tors that are doing so much for heart
Genr/emen Prefer Blondes and San F.nilpatients and arthritis. ... You know, the'y
powerful; sw~ll; but only -a handful of luster Crobbe ·
cisco) deplds Thalberg as beleoguered
are really contributing something of
directors, writers and actors thought of
More typical of the old Hollywood is
by hack diredors. "The Hollywood
themselves for all posterity. They are
film as an emergent art fonrt.
Buster Crabbe, whom Plesur interviewed
directors (particularly the studio dlreoleaving sorpething behind when they go.
'Fritz tons
at a nostalgia convention. Crabbe, who
tors
at MGM) were morons ... except
And then, as you get older, you start to
clearly nev~r expected to_ ~orne a
. An exception is Austrian·born director
Cukor," she declores. "Th~t's why
think, 'Well, what the hell have I done!'
,. Fritz Lang, creator of Metropolis, M , and
cu!tur.al artifact, and certalf!IY not . by
Thalberg
was so gre~t. because he.was ~
You know, 'What the hell haye I done!'
Fury, among dozens of other classic ~gmg through the. tr~ c:-r - r~scumg
man of taste; int~lligence ond discern·
The damn swimmer, lucky enough to
films. At the age of 85, lang still radiates
Oale'"frnm extraterrestoal vollaons on Flash
ment, and he hail to wateh every frame
win a gold rryedal in 1932 and dripping
of the auteur one
Gordon, . regards the current nostalgia
those directors took."
wet out of a swimming pool. Boom! All
.·;:.-;-~·:;:zoe::~~.:.::·_~~-;;;:~ of ~ving
craze as an unexpected windfall, one .
- of a sudden I was a star, and the very first
~w.....,
the
that can't last forever.
film I did I became 'King of the Jungle.'
In spite of his loincloth·for·brains imPlesur talked to William Wellman, one
age, Crabbe is an articulate, thoughtful ' Nothing could have· been further from
of the journeymon directors, the film·
1he truth. I wasn't prepared for this at all.
person who had completed a year of law
makers who cftdn't talk much about on
... You sit ba~k aod say 'What have 1.
school bef,o re being wooed to
but who brouglit ~r movies in on time.
done! What have I contributed!' And
Hollywood by Paramount, which hoped
wellman, whose credits include The Oxyou come up with one word. Nothing.
to capitalize on his gold-medol vidory in
Bow lnciden!, the origlnol A Star b Born,
Not a thing." .
~
the 1932 Olympics.
'
· and Public Enemy, bepn his career as ari
ador, discovered by Doullas .....,_...,
Througtlout Plesur's interview with
Cole Sonderponl
Crabbe there is an undercurrent of
Unexpectedly upbeat " the historian's
who saw him ·l!laYins ~ in
pathos, a sense of "I could have been . conversation with Gale Sondergoard,
Massochusetts anll later followed his exsomebody" that denies Crabbe's cheerwinner of the first Academy Award for an
ploitS in t~ lAfayette Escadrille.
ful talk about backyafd pools and the
adress in a supporting. rr;&gt;le (lor her P.,rWellmon, like most of · PleSI11's. other
good old days.
formance as "Faith" in ~Anthq/].,Y
infdrmai'its, thinks movies have chanaed,
The star system was a ehattel system, in
Adverse), whose promising film career
~nd not for the better. They uniformly
whieh a good hand was rewarded with
was ended when .she was blacklisted.
·choi'Jie that movies hove become soclolly
lalne, fortune ond a choufleured touring
A serious, theatre-trained octress, Miss
irreSponsible, too violent, too nude (fritz
car, but In whidi.J&gt;e did well to save his
.Sondergoard takes the lona view of her
lAng was oppalled by The CeQwoy, Dore
money aod remember his ploce. When it
post and ,regards herself less as a vldim Scha,.Y by Oeorh tr'shl. Aod they also .
became clear to Crabbe that he could · .than as a participant in a cri~l event in
agree that roqV!Jii are drabber now that
make a living in Hollywood; he studied
the star system_It ~
'
'
Amer~n history.
'
the oaors .he adml.r ed (particularly
"I was proud to have been pan of thot
• Where are the Coops and .the Galbosl
Frederick March aod Akim Tamlroffl In
period," she says of the day5 when Nixon
we1m.n laniento, echolrtK Gloria
hopes that some director would seme his
made political hay by hllundlns her and
Swanson's moUrnful "They "had
then; •.•"
.
'
•
. lellow tfollywood leftistl, "bUt .• don't
polential and live him a chanCe to
develop It In a decent pan.
live In it"~ current political dltnote,
HJeSus C-hrist/,' he ~. "llopy's'
In _her view, is at l~ta partla_! vi!&gt;Cf!ca~~
~iiii~fii!oiiJ.... .. "~l _ t~~ JOG!~ B~ I!Jounc!.': sa_f! _
deod; and-he's idll 1 Ills""!'·" .
~

nces

�4~

~· said

~-

ma;o,-factor

NatiOiJal Engl~rs .~~k· --~-._-~.
scheduled for 'feb. .-16-22

iri cardiovascular disease
Not only does cardiov;~scu)ar disease
account for • huKe number of deaths in·
this country, but the .clinical course for
those alive and disabled lemains a
gloomy one.
With coronary· care units and bypaSs
surgery less than triumphant, Dr. Robert
McGindy, the second in -.- series- of
nutrition lecturers sponsored . by the
Department of Biochemistry, sees the
best hope for jmprovement in preven- ·
tion.
'
AtherosClerosis .
said
the
epidemiologist I pathologist /nutritionist
from the Horvard School of Public
Health, is the main cause of heart attacks and strokes and is related to
hypertension. In this disease, both large
and medium-size arteries become
plugged by fat or blood lipids as they
are called. nlhis rtarrowing of the area
avail•ble for blood flow causes reactive
press4re on ~rtery walls.'.' he said.
Some get this commonplace disease
earlier than others, but rare is the individual with no signs of it at all, Dr.
McGandy sold. While it usually begins

. very early in life -

in the teenage years

- it may t•ke another 40 to become advanced enough to produce myocardial
~ ~nf~rdions or final stage thro~mboses, he
ondocated.
_ -· __ _
• While statistics point to a leveling oft
in this disease during recent years, the
data cautions also that of the one out of
every five males~n this country who will

develop coronary artery disease, 30 per
ceni will die aher the first heart anack,
and another 40 per cent will fo11ow
within a week ..
you make it .aher the
first myocardial infarction, risk of a seco~d one will increase four to fivefold
over the following "three years," c Dr.
Mctandy said.
.
Is cardiovascular disease inevitable in
any population? No, was his response.
Nor is it attributable to aging or bad
genes.
Most investigators agree that diet is
directly linked to a change in blood
lipid "levels. "In comparing one population to another, diet alone accounts for
all variability" in these levels, th~ Harvard
researcher said. Diet acts independently
of other risk factors such as obesity,
smoking, diabetes, etc., which seem to
act in "a synergistic manner." And " diet
is the simplest to manipulate through
substitutes."
While the American diet is changing,
Dr. McGandy attributed it more to convenience and expense than to education.' i'We should reCJuce our levels of
lipid intake," he cautioned. "for only in
Western society have cholesterol levels
been found to advance with age. 11
Substilute margarine for butter, skim or
low fat milk for the- whole variety,
eliminate egg yolks, and trim fats off
meat, he advised.
·
The nulrition lectures are being held
throughout the semester, Tuesdays at
noo~ in G-22 Farber (formerly Capen!.

uu

Preventive dentistry di~ic

seen major ·n eed of U/B school.
" The School of Dentistry must develop
a preventive dentistry clinic for its
patients and an effective recall system."
This is one of the iprinci~ · t"ecommen- dations cited by l}r. Norman Mohl in
summarizing last weekend's teaching
cop(erenc:e on the clinical. education·
program of the School:
Dr. Mohl. who chaired the meeting, is
professor· of oral medicine and ~ssistant
dean for educational affairs.· . · ·
. uwe made some progress in attempting to solve problems that exist among
research, teaching and service to the
community," Dr. Mohl said.
He pointed ~ut that the Dental School
operates.its own clinics and is directly involved in patient care. _
De;ih Wlllia~ Feagans opened. the
- meeting at the Grand Island Aoliday Inn
Saturday. morning (Feb. 8) by outlining
objectives and anticipated prQblems
such as "What impoct will . Nitional
Healih lnsuran_ce "have"- on the Denial
Schooll"
there were eight workshops attended
by 75 foculty members-Saturday morning
and ahernoon. The general theme: how
to improve efficiency of potlent care and
still main~ln the quaUty of the dinical
teaching ~m.
.
The workshops were on patient a:re,
patient evaluation and diagnosis,
recall systems,
idleckolin&amp;,c:onlfJflihenSh.e potlent care,
group prac-

~~~~;:-1l};·;;;
and student"'
meeting ended
" summary and

Febniarj 13. 1975

Dr. Mohl in summanzmg the conference drew these additional conclusions:
· •... ·'
• The Ge:ntal ScbooL!must make a
more detailed diagnosis of. latent medical
problems of patients in order to become

v.e~J,~~~~J~~~e~:~:J!~i~~ts~a~d

a
technicians for the dental students. This
will rpa~e...ovr ,cli,nics rn9r~ effidt;nt."
• The- fac'ulty· must monitor their
patients' progress m_ore closely.
• "We must . find a better way of
educating the public and the University
community. that care rendered at the
Dental School is of high qual ity."
• Additional porking is needeo lor
patients.
• " Patients must be treated better by
our staff. and the physical appearance of
the Dental School must be more attractive to patients."
• The entire senior year for dental
students must be operated
a general
dental ·practice for ~tter . effic;iency.
(Students now rotate ampng the various
departments.)

as

::_Art stUdent wim .
nalional ' pize - ;
Donette M. Reil, ~ senior in the
communication design prDg!am in the
Art Deportment, wori .third _prize in the
recent. nation-wide Eberhatd Faber
Design Mirker Competi!ion.
. Miss Reil received hl!f prize, a check
for .S3000, at an art scholarships awards
banquet held by Eberhard Fabel' Inc at
the New York Hilton Hotel, January 17.
The awards were piesiented by Eberhard
fiber, chairman of the baird and chief
executive officer of the writing instrument firm_
&gt;&lt;
The award winning design was done
in a· U-inch circular formarcomprising a
series of, horizontal seripes In an Intense
range. of Gnl'll'el- reds and blua . The
Slripes segrpented and uranged in
_...variola poAtlons to lJI'OIIuce • wlbratlng

elfea . .

h .

UD cdleps filii unlveriltles
ponldpated In the c:ulllpl!llllcM Enlr!ftiS

~~~=~
.....
ill four
.,..~

~.:.:·==-~==-:;

llidlnlcjue iMhl!r'lfiMWIIIIIjld - .

lecture&gt;, lab demonstrations, films- ' and what they an! doing about energy·
and' exhibits will be featured throughout
conserv•tion.
-,
Buffalo and Western · New York during
On S4nday, February 16, WKBW's
Nation;~l Engineers Week; February 16"Sunday Surprise" will feature • panel
22.
~of Buffalo officials discussing energy
Sponsored by the National Society of
conserving _features of buildings and
Professional Engineers (SPE}, the
public facilities on the Niagara Frontier.
program will focus on "Exploring New
Tuesday's "Morning Show" also on
Energy Frontie~."
.
WKBW-TV, will feature an appearance
At U/ B, a sen~ of five pubhc lectures
by J. fredrick Weinhold, senior engineer
woll be held dunng the week . The leein the Resl!a rch and Development 0£tures. are free and woll take place at 8
flee of the federal Energy Administration who will discuss the role of
p.m. on 140 Parker Hall.
On Monday (february 1n, Dr. Colin
rese~rch and development ·in "Project
G. £?rury~ assista~t prc:&gt;fessor ?,f industrial
1ndepe nde nee ," the Ford Adengm~nng, w•ll d1scuss People ~t
ministration's current energy conservation program.
Work. Tuesday, ~r. S~ephe~ Margola_s,
Beginning Monday and continuing
- professor of :;ng!neermg sc•ea_ce, Will
through Wednesday, WBEN-TV's " Conspeak ~.bout Nuclear Energy on Your
. be 10
fu~~- esd..,. , 1
. h
tact" will Present a three-program series
.
n
ay s ecture WI 11
t ree
on the Ford Foundation Energy Report
parts : Dr. Ralph R. Rumer, Jr., professor
.. A T"me
I
Ch.
"
'
1
0
of dvil engineering, will discuss his
. oose.
.
" Research Studies of the Great Lakes;"
_John R. McChve, presodent of the
"Earthquake Engineer ing Research
Ene-N•agara chapte~ o~ th~ State . SP~.
Studies" will be the topic for Dr.
noted that the ?blect,•.~e of Natoon~l
Sherwood Prawel, Jr., associate professor
Engmeers W eek IS to mcrease pub~tc
1
of dvil engineering; and a demonstra- __awaren~~ c. hf?W technology benef1ts
tion of a rotating laboratory and exill of us.
.
peri mental project on earthquake ·
.
studies of masonry . structures will be
f:~ .11.., 1"'1..
conducted by Wayne Giambrone, a civil
· ca-uuy '-IU
engineering graauate student...
.
The Faculty Club Boord of Directors
On Thursday (February 20), Dr. John • has announced a Sunday brunch to be
A. Howell, associate _professor of
held on April 6 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in
chemical engineering, will discuss
the main dining room of the Club.
"Technical Solutions to the EnerRy
Dr. A. Westley Rowland, immediate
Crisis," and on friday, Anil Jain, associate
past president, is chairman of the event.
profes10r. .o f, ~lect.rical, engineerif)g. will
The price wiJI, be $3,SQ wit~ ~ special
talk about "Picture Processing by Comprice for children under six. ·The menu
puters."
.
will be announced later.
The. lectures are all intended for a
A film of interest to families ;.ill be
gen~ral; non-techniea' audienc~ .. . · ., ·..
shown -during lill! -ltours ol the brWJch
Also during the week, a series of filmS
in the Red Room .o n the second' floor ol ,
on energy will be shown in public
the Club.
libraf\es and schools in the Buffalo: , ·.
C)ub spqk~'1)~q U!S~: JI!I, I"&lt;t~il_ers of .
Orchard ·Park and Williamsville areas.
the \llrtivers.Jrt , ,q&gt;f111Jl~pi!Yr. !o •Rl~ · ill!• ,:.,.
date on their calenQ~rs. Tick.et5 wtll be . · .
A ~ea te{evision stati.ons WKBW·TY
avairable.·in the offici;. of the .faculty
(Channel n and WBEN-TV (Channel 4)
Clu b and the, Vice P~esident for Univerwill ,al.s 0 - pres.eot , SJ!veral ~peel~ I..
programS focilsing on WNv' en~neers . sity RelatiOns after March 1.

·b brunch

Visitjng Professor, Architecture
Posting No. F-4216.
Assistant Professor, History, F-4217. •
Assi1tant/Associate Professor;- Medicine, F-4218.
Visiting Assistant-Professor, Mathematics, F-5001".
Assistant Professor, Speech CommuniCAtion, F-5002.
Assistant(AsSociate Professor, Geography, F-5003.
Visiting Instructor, Gerrmn, F-5004.
Assistant Professor, Art, F-5005.
Assistant Professor, Geology, F-5006,
Librarian .or Associate librarian, University Cibraries; F-5007~ Associ•te or Full Professor, Physics, F-5008."
·
·
•
l\ssistantto Full Professor,
Soci;~( Sciences Rese;~rch Institute, F-5009.
Chairinan/l'rofessor, !llack Studies, F-5010.
Assistant Professor, Art History, F-5011 .
- :Assistant Professor, Theatre, F-5012Research Assistant Professor, Animal Facilities
(port-time), F"5013.
../
· CliniCal Assistani Professor, Pharmacy (four-pOsitions),
F-sirJ4. _
.
.
1!111'
Associate for Tl!Chnial Senrices,
University Libririei, PR·2, Posting No.B-4108Assislanr Mahager, Computing Services, PR-3, 11--4109Programmer AMiyst/l'laCemeilr Assisr..m,
. Computing Services, Plt-l,B-4111Assisranf to Chairman, Cell and Molecular Biology; PR-1, (50),11--4112Technical Operarlons ofrector/Chief RMIIo fniJineer, WBfO, Plt-1,11-4113.
Ass!sranr Ubrarlan, Unlvenhy Libraries, Plt·1, B-5001.
Assisranr ro Chalrmali, Physia and Aslrunomy,l!lt-1, B-5002.
TechniCal ASsistant.~ Science, R·SOOl•
-.
- - For adcf!t~l Information ~lng these Jobs "and for details of NTP
opeq!ngs througl)out the Slate University ~. ~lt)lulletiri boards ar these locations:
.
.
.
.

�Febru~ry

1;3, !97.5 .: ."' -

.

Budget_~ ~~_:.~:::

not restricted

.

toU/B and
New
Yolk
State University are not alone
in !acing budget problems.
The Chronicle of Higher fduarioli
reported last week that "from Harvard
to Stanford, Ftorida to Wisconsin," some
of the nation's top uni Versities- and

statewide systems of higher- education
"have given up on holding the line" and
"are cutting back."
Said the Chronicle, 11 plans are being
laid, and in some cases orders have
been issued, to : reduce faculty size, cut
total spending below present levels, and
increase substantially the charges t-o
students for tuition, board and rooms."
In Florida, the Board of Regents last
month ordered a moratorium on ad-

missions for all campuses in the state
university system. While the ban may be
lifted, serious consideration is being
given to eliminating freshmen next fall
at the University of South Florida and
- Florida Technological University, the
Chronicle said.
Wisconsin Governor Patrick

Mowle ordwlloln \'lncenl Prke lured • pocked house Ondudins ,..-.,,
Robert L IKdter) lo Corle ~ym losl Wednesdoy for • clbcusslon of his Hf..orite
subjecb,'' fiends he ha krlown, ployed ond IO¥ecl He felt ol home In O.rk, he
Mid, beuuse of riM llins· ~ure'' raembbnce ro "one of the sets in my
mowies."
'-

J. Lucey

has advise&lt;! his state system that appropriations for the next · two years
should be slightly below this year's level,
despite continuing inflation and ex. pected "enrollment .growth. Gov: Lucey
had earlier directed the system to
reduce spending by $3 million in the
remainder of the curreflt budget year.
The University of Michi&amp;.an is •
reported to be trimming one per ce...nt
from its 1974-75 allocation and preparing recommendations for additional cuts
offroinO.StoM&lt;&gt;pe(cer'ifin1975-76. ·
And ' both the University bf MisSoUrl
and Penn ~ate have joined the ranks of
those with a "freeze" on hiring.
Notfrrg' fhaf "we arl!· at the end of ·a"n
era," Cornell" President ' Dale R. Corson
has called for a 10 per cent tuition hike
and i • $2 '3' milliOn f'educ.rion in ·
Qper3 i
·c6stS•In·fKlrt inStituriQh!s' 197S-

·

SUNY outlines .'exceptions' to freeze
State University has now issued
pr.ocedures and guidelines for exceptions to the vacancy freeze announced
by Governor Carey, Harry w . Poppey,
directpr ·of persi&gt;nriel, notifhi.d :campus·
administrators this week.

I. The folowins; appointments may be
made witlooul prior •ppro••l.lrom the
DiYision of the ludset:
1. Employment com~itments validly
made and acc::ept~ pnor 10 the freeze
announce~ent on January 8, 1975 (the '
~ti
.
· C5f1T:Yml610rl' fS Sfflf .... . nami!'s rrflfiis ·~rOu p· were Obtained from
1
expetied. '
~~ ._ .
..-· : .
'
· ~·.- each viCe president between Janua ry 9
SianforO has PrOjeCted ' 'defrdt
and 11 ~ ahd Have already beeri •reponed
operations through 1980, despite a 12.9
to SUNY).
per cent tuition r-aise and planned
2. Undergraduate Student Assistanls.
savings of $10 million over the IJ.&lt;!Xt ·.-.•~ J.. l"hqse, ap~ntl!d&lt;o .positions)"bich _ ,
three years.
•... · · · · ir~ 100 'pe"'r C~fii rritOtne ReimbUrSab1e'of- ~
In the upper echelons of the Ivy
100 per cent re imbursed by Endowment
Leagl,!e, Harvard was reported conFund.
.
sidering a $600 increase in tuition-room- ·
4. Those permanent appomtees from
board rates and a iwo per ·cent reducappropriate eligibi lit~ lists who replace
. Temporary or Provtstonal Clvtl Serv1ce
tion in faculty and staff; Princ;.eton, having already upped its student fees by - employees now on . payroll.
.
$625 was said to have nonetheless given
5. Permanent Covrl Servrce promotrons
1
0

~!'.:·~nc~:o~'s~~:~n~uc!S.::~~e:.!

;::,t7.~~=n~;"~~~;~~~;itt~:; ~=s~ ';;;

recently said tl:o~t the university has
Temporary Crvr_l _Servoce pro~otrons to
vacant, compettttve class postttons from
reached "the point where we must consider sharply curtailing, or even dropping. entire •ctivities ·. in · both the
academic and supporting areas."
.t.!
Amon_g the committee's recommen_.,
The SUNY Faculty Senate at its
dations: elimination of eight fKUity and
15 ~dministrative-staff positions, six
meeting in Stony Brook, January 31 •
athletic ~rtment positions, •nd seven
February 1; endorsed a position paper_
under the title of "Retrenchment
building suard positions.While priorities are being weighed for
Bene"fits and Accommodations,"
the ellmln•tlon or curtailment of
prepared . by the Committee on Perprosrams for savings in years ahead, the
sonnel Policies, to be submitted to the
Cltronlde reported, ad.ministrators
Chancellor, uif and when retrenchment
nationally~ been ITillking Instant cuts
becomes a reality."
in such ·oreas as tr•vel funds, employThe text of the paper follows :
ment of outside consult•nts, longThe fKUity Senate requests that thedista~ telephone calls, ond printing.
Central Administr.tion of the University
Cited as ITiltjor bcton in the cost
. study intent!("· the implications foi
crunch are: unrelentin&amp; overwhelming
professional · personnel ·of program or
incrases In costs of fuel and-electricity;
financi•l retrenchment, and m•ke
higher llbor costS; and gener•l · ramprovisions now for benefits •nd accompasi"'!lnflation.
·
modations ior • those persons affected,
_ I ..;.;.;..
through no fault of their own, by .
LIIW
~
retrenchment. ·
.
The U/a t..w School Alumni Associ•- . The Sen•te makes the following
suiBeslions for consideration by the
lion will hold its 13th annuol Dinner and
Awords l'resi!ntltlon, Morch 21, In the
Central Administrotion:
•
1. When prosram or flnoncial ,
Buffalo Athletic Oub wlth cockJalls at i
p.m.Aind c1innent 7 p.m. ,
• • retrenchment Is being considered at •
Cf!Y O:lurll. M. Dolpre&gt;"OenrNn · unh of State UMeslty, the C1ilef AdIs ~ 01 die Oisdn.ilhhed Alummlnistratlve ~ 01 that unit shill dis-~
nus ~ Coll)mlttee w1ilch will~
cuss.lully the ~. durMion, ond per- .
th-aluqll~tobehonoredlor
tonnel lmpllcatlens 01 that retrench· .seMa! to 1111! )liillclory, ihe public" aDd_ ·· ')nent with thedepatbriMilorolliceslnthe ~.. " ,. . voivecJ. llllf with the
cam-

appropriate eligibility lists. (Please note
the word "promotion,'' Poppey said. " It
means promotin&amp;.an individual currently
on the payroll from a lower title to a
higher ti tle. The lower-graded . title
would the n become vacant.")
6. Lateral movement from the same titie and grade to another. pqsition with
the same titre'llllilograde.· - · . ·
' "
7. Appointments to the following
titles: Physician, Nurse, Hbspital Atte nd a nt , Campus Security Officer,
SupervisinJt Campus Secu~ty Officer ,~
Watchman, Power Plant Helper, Steam
Fireman.
AppointrTu! n'(s ·to these ' titleS asSume:
of course, that the vacant line is in the
current budget.
Even thoogh Division of the Budget
apprOval is ' nOt reqUired tOr ·the aboVe ·
transactions, all other internal and external _requirements (Affirmative Action,
line clearance, salary administration
clearance, etc.) still apply.

or safety of patients, students, or
employees; or
2. Clearly result in the loss or lapse ·ot
Federal .funds, or a loss of other income
to,th~i\illl!;or . - .- - - _,
3. Cacc:e a breakdown in administration or operations which cannot
_be . remecfi.e d by transferring other. - .
qu alifieii""Stafl to the function.
Appo i ntment~ required for the
summer and fall academic programs will
be considered in the same manner as
request5'for ~eiCepttofis•~.- - - · - · -

li. The DMsion of the ludset wll consider lndiYid...J exceptions to· the

Requests for exceptions, POppey said,
" should be. in merno form, .indicating
item number, name, title, salary rate, FTE,
and proposed effective date. The memo
should dearly delineate the re~sons for
the request based on the criteria in ·1',·2,· ·:
or 3 above. The requests should be sent
to and approved by the appropriate vic~
president and then forwarded to the Personnel Office. If Dr. Ketter de&lt;;ides that
Presidential approval will also be reQl!ired, the Personnel Office Will provide
for his review. The Personnel Office will

f•lure ID,. the position
1. Directly result in reducing the level
of se"rvic~ neCe~sary to protect the health

Presidents of the Division of the Budget
determination."

==wh~

~~~~al'i~d!d~i:i~he0!~~~;~:;

• • ·on Iavoffs
SUNY Sena•e adopts position
'I
.
ble.
.
~
3. Pers'o ns being termir1ated for
reasons of retrenchment shall receive
priority " consideration for lines that"
become availalile by re•son of retire-•
ment.
4. A system should be est.blished for
the referral. to other appropriate units
- within the Unlv_ers!ty" of resumes of

First Bulod'

~awarded

those persons terminated for reasons of
retrenchment.
5. Persons termiMted for ~sons of
r~nt shoUld receive a letter
from the unit Chief Administrative Officer stAting that the reasons for termination 01 employment ilR! n~t rellted
to perfonnonce...
·
· 6. .On each campus an officer should
be deslsnated to provide assistance in
the s...rch for I MW position bJ periO!".
terminated for reasons of retrenchment.
7. Penons tennlnoted few.. leiSOIIS of
retrenchment should be ellalble for
with pay; theJimelrom the notice
of termination of seMcleS to the end of
leave with pay sloould tQial Oflfi yeu In
0~ to provide lime to locale IIIOiher

le•ve

UIB student PhiUip J, Fruth of Bufblo
' h..- been awarded the first W•rd E.
B.ulk!dt Sen.ior Prize •t the University. ·.
_ Given to. recosnize outstanding
· academic Khie.emenl by .1 senior In ' position.
~
rnec!YI!ical englneerl'!ll desip, the
8. Subsequent to the Aericld
' '"" ._.,
•ward honors Ward E. Bullock, a UIB
wlth pay, persons ternllnMecl for
Pr&lt;!lessor of rnec!Ynical enstneering and
of retrenchment should be piiiCed on
deslsn. Specialt,t, who died Morch '·
leave without pay, .,.! "--d have the
1974.
lollowlnc benelks .C*Itlnued for two
. Dr; (:erald P._francis, cholnnan of the yeon
or until a - posldon Is ollaolried,
Medlanical Enslneerins Dep.nment,
whlcheveroa:un h :
. , . _ . , . the Pique to Mr. Fruth,
a. Condnudian el llledlatllnsuranoe,
noctns that. the.flnt redplent, MPhftls
dental Insurance, and disability Inthe OliiJ llUdent who will , _ hod both
surance.
b.~ ol...,._,, use ol amthe prlvl1eae "" havl!ts· been ..,.tM
.:;;;;;~t · ~ttC;miW·'ndCOoi-- 'pus~nce_,nlt-.
cleilP br ~ luiOdt andCIIbeifts
~
.
dlnatar 01" ~\dtb ·~ ·(QI-', · 2. P~R!ns belnil te~mlnotecl lor . the reclplem ""this hlah11onor.'"
- A notlve. Of Bulblo,.Mr. Fruth Is a •
thefilhthludicllf~'lsChllrinin'ot
'reosons of retrenchment sball be
the--. • ;. -, ,· ,, · .,.-, ....... ,.. · ~wlthiRihelr-unltlf..-1. .,..._CII~nd . . HipSdlool.
worlt wllhln the.l,!JIMnltr.

cln.-- set

.

..,.,...le

-sons

pus....,...

i==:.c:........-~--

y

�-.•·

i

New deadlines

J'

Febnmy 13, 1975

i

SUNY ~ lne for $37.2 ...... hi~e-.---~-~:-::::-:,---:-:~-'----,

Reduction ·~ rl nuclear ~·e~~~j~j~·:

f

~RP • 'f'· J)
technology ..... . ... .. . . . . .~. · ·. · · ·- · · · · • · · · · · · · -35,000 ·
SUNY/USSR student exchange program . . . . . 27,000
Other reductions ..... : ... ' ....._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -29.000
lmplementatfon of audit recommendations ·.. - - .. -. 9,000
Slony llroolt _ Recommended Chonge •••• •• • • +$5,353,1100
End of one year appropriation for
Annualizatlon of 1974-75 salary increases .... . ... 407,000
energy research · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · •19 2,000
Negotiated 1975-76 salary increases .. . - ... . . . . - 1,121,000
Reduction of five faculty, five student services and
Annualization of positions .... . . .. . .... . .. .. . . 1,996,QOO
The Faculty Sllnate . Executive Comtwo organized activity positions · . :-: · · - · · - · · · · -114,000
Ann ual ization ·of new buildings supplies •
mittee and the President's Academic
Reduction in library book acquisition
'
and expense . ..... . . ... .. .. ....... ... .... . ... 690,000
Cabinet have approved new deadlines'
for submitting grades which will take
rat e - · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · -16 2,000
De monstrated price increases ....... : . .......... 699,000
Reduction of four maintenance, one librarian
effect this semester, Charles H.V. Ebert,
39 faculty, 17 sup port positions, su pplies and
and one campus planning positions . . . . . : -28,000
expe nse for enrollme nt increase of 952 students 503,000
University dean for ~ undergraduate
Other reductions . ...... - .---- · ·- - ·--- ·------- ·- -10,000
18 faculty, 7 support positions, supplies arid
education, notified faculty this week:
The need for prompt grade submisBinghomton - Recommended Change ••••• ... +$1,714,000
temporary staff for enrollment increase
sion has been demonstratl!d sufficiently,
An nualiza tion of 1974-75 safary increases .. ...... 209,000
of 196 health science st uden ts . .. ..... .... . .. 472,000
Negotiated 1975-76 salary increases ....... .. .. . .. 605,000"
Equipment replacement . . ......... ..... ........ . 63,000
Dean Ebert said. 11 Severe academic and
financial hardships for students have
Anriuali zation of positions . ... .... .. . ........... 198,000
i posi tions and supplies for dental clinic
.. . . . .. 75,000
arisen in several cases in the past. The
De monstrat ed price increases ..... . ... ......... 301 ,000
s student services and 4 j3nitorial positions ... . . .. 39,000
new procedures, carefully reviewed at
28 faculty posi tions for enroll ment increase
Computer services ....... . ........... . . . ....... 10,000
various levels, are designed to avo id
o f 465 stude nts . . . . .. . . . . . . .
. : . . 254,000
tncre&lt;!sed savings ............ ... ..... .. . .. .. . . -301 ,000
. . such hardships, yet, they realistically
Faculty su pport funds for' enrollmen t
Reduction in telephone, postage and
take into account different methods
increase .... ... . . ..... . .. . . ...... . . ... . . ... . .. 75,000
supplies expendi tu res ... . . . .. .... ... . . ...... -1 65,000
used in arriving at final grades/'
·AnnUj]lization of new compu te r \ystem and two
Red uction in book acq uisi tior rate . . . . . . . . . . .
-190,000
The changes reflect a tightening up of
positions for regional co mputer consortium .... 119,000
Reduction of 6 positio ns including 2 general
U/ B..-ules, Ebert indicated, but " this Uni. . 61 ,000
admi nistration, 2 extensjo n and public service,
Equipment re placeme nt . . . .
versity is [still] by far t~e most len ient
Other recommended increases . . . . . .
. .... . .. 19,000
1 organized ·resea rch and 1 library positions .. -66,000
one in the entire SUNY system, most
Increased savi ngs .. . . .. .... · · · · · · · ·
-98,000
In addition, these statistical comparisons between U/ B and
other units of which require grade sub·
Reduction of three maintenance, two
the ot her graduate centers and health science ce nters are inmission within time periods ranging
dormitory and one
eluded in charts appendeii to the budget message.
from 24 10 72 hours. n
-29,000
Instruction and dep.ut{'1ental costs pe~ full-time equivalent
lib ra ry positions . . . .
The new grades deadlines are as
Buffalo- Rec:ommended Chonge .•..•• •• . , .• +$3,933,000
student: Graduate Centers: Albany, $1,735; Bingha mton, $1 ,follows :
·
Annualization of 1974-75 salary increases ........ 664,000
604; Buffalo, $1,625; and Stony Brook, Si,650. Health Science
1. All grades in courses where regular
Negotiated 1975-76 salary increases . . . . . .
1,499,000
Centers: Buffa lo, 15,741; Downstate; "$7,533; Stony Brook, $7,ex~minations are scheduled, either on
Annualization of positions ...... .............. 1,029,000
981 ; Upstate, S~. ~q2 . . ..
the last day of instruction or on a
Arinualizatio n of new buildings, supplies
Student-faculty . Ratios: Graduate Centers: Albany, 15.6;
specific da y during the examination
a nd expe nse . .• • , . .. ...... ... ..
. . 165,000
Binghamton, 16.0; Buffalo, 16.3; Stony Brook, 15.7. Health
period, are to be submined within 96
Demonstrat~ price increases ... ... . ..... . ... . . . 911,000
Science Centers: Buffalo, 5.6; Downstate, 5.0; Stony Brook, 4.7;
hours (four days) of working · time, not
Upstate, 6.0.
.
16 facult y positions·for enrollment increase
rounting the weekend when grading by
-of 217 students ..... . ............... . ........ 148,000
lnstructioml support per full-time , equivalent faculty :
computer is not possible.
33 faculty and seven healt h science support positions,
Graduate Centers, Albany, $6,723; Bingham ton, $6,488; Buffald
2. All grades in courses where final
supp·lies a nd temporary staff for enrollment
(exduding evening session), 57,505; Stony Brook, $6,164.
term papers are required, regardless of
increase of 139_students and to improve
Health Science Centers: Buffalo, S9,494; Downstate, $12,980;
whether or ~not a regular final examinaweak nesses found in accreditation review ..... 631 ,000
Stony Broo~. $11,358; Upstate, $9.730.
·
•
·
tion is scheduled, are to ·be ~ubntiued
-~ · Busirig necesSary to sUpport a~ per cf nt increcise
'
Ubrary lioldinp pe-r full-time equivalent student! Albany,
within four working days after the end
in st udent workload at the North campus
... 193,000
81 ; Binghamton, 72; Buffalo, 90; Stony Brook, 74.
of the official final examination period.
Ubrary expenditures per fuU-ti~ equivalent student:
Upgrade administrative computer and
The instructor may set an individual
an nu alizatio n of computer tecminal . .. ..... ,_ .. 40,000
Albany, $218; Binghamton, $271 ; Buffalo, $189;. Stony .a rook, :
deadline for the submiSsiOn ·Gt r SGch
Two positions in Educational Communications ·
'
S236.
·
'
papers so that the four-day deadline can
Center . ........ . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 15,000
Student serwices cost per adjusted head count student:
be met. If the student does not meet the
Increased savings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-244,000
Albany, $174; Bingha mton, $148; Buffalo, $153; Stony ~rook ,!
deadli~ "' _tl:-e instructor is to assign an
lostpjdional supplies. . .and expe.n~e .
-200,000·
S164.
., .
.
.
•.... ,., ""
nC6l'(l~ ~~d!o o1 hn dl=~ion , ·
Space rental decrease ...... ..... ... . . . .... . ... -100,000
Cost of dormitory ope;ollons pe&lt; bed: Albany, 5580;
as long as either the Incomplete or
Red uction of 35 positions including five exte nsion
Binghamton, S468; Buffalo, S729; Stony Brook, $615.
•
and public service, 10 student services, six dormitory ' ·
· ~gned dormitory bed c~pKity: Albany, 6,262; Bingham - '
administration, e igh1 nursing faculty and six other
. ro n, 3,960; Buffalo, 5,698; Stony Brook, 6,2]0.
specified.
positions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-336,000
The charts acco mpanying this article provide data. on
~ . In seminars and independent
Red v,ction in..library bJ&gt;Ok acql!isition rate
-304,000
operating budgets, personnel and enrollment projected (or
st.u dies, the grades .are._ai!Q, tO be- $JJb:
Reduction of student services supplies
SUNY graduate centers, healtti sciences centers and University
-~ mitted within four working days C!fter
and expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
•114,000
colleges.
the end of the final examination period.
Again, lncompletes should be reported
STATt PURI'OSfS-REGUL\R • SUMMARY OF APPIIOPRIATIONS AND CHANGES • 1WS.76 (-)
at that time if no other grade can be established.
&lt;4. All professional schools whic]l cannot adopt t~ese grade sub~ission
Ufliwt'floityCf'fllf'f\
procedures should report this fact and
CN"'tt" •. •
should propose a realistic deadline for
Sl .107
sun
~UUil
~"f -·
grade ~ubmission which will attempt to
• +22
+1,476
+1,10'
a...,.
meet the University's and their needs.
-1 .110
24.920
7.351
1.724
27.944
14,Q
71
~"'
.. +450
-)
+1.714
+ 1,1)2
+1
+56
+&lt;
5. Grade submission at the graduate
8i=~ .:: ..
level is not that different from that at
20..mr
m2
-1.990
71.151
Buffalo . .... .
+110
+2)4
:u~;
·
:S~
-41
a..... .
the undergraduate level. According to
),671
-2.7"1)
S7.101
30,814
Ebert, Graduate 09n McAllister 'Hull's
lAo&lt;
UJO
"-"'
+51
+5.)51
+3.]80
+22
s.~~.: :: :: : : : : : : : :::
office rnade a telephone survey of other
-Sl.(l(il
$14,7'916
SIS.157
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lou• yan ISr the St.ote Universily
TRISlees. -

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.Tuition waiver limit·to be lOwered
The current SUNY tuition waiver ceiling of $11.000.000 win be lowered to $9,:
000,000 In 1975-76, Governor Hugh Carey
reported In his 1975-76 budget message
to the State l.egislature.
The change, ·Carey said, will "reflect
both the Impact of New York State's Tuition Assistance Program and a tightening
of the permitted ratio of waivers to total
yearly tuition collections."
SUNY provides ·tuition waivers to
foreign students, graduate and teaching
assistant"r,-and .o thers "for whom full tuition Charges are inappropriate," Carey
said.
.
.
Since 1973-74 a Legislative ceiling has
limited the amount of tuition waivers
granted. /
Total SUNY tuition income · during
1975-76 will be $116,900,000, Carey es-.
timated. "This figure," the Governor
said, 11 includes tuition owed ·tram
previous yean~ fees and summer sessions
revenues, less tuition waiver
allowances." It is only $1 million more
than 1974-75 collections, he said,
"because of unusually effident reVenue
collection in 1974-75. ·SUNY at Buffalo,
for example, reduced its accounts
receivable and collected $3,300,000 more
than had been projected."

Income from dormitories and the $25
college fee is expected to provide SUNY
with · another $44,000,000 in .1975-76,
Carey estimated.
These revenues, plus payments from
patients and third parties for services

lfmrn f'Miff!.-1. col. f)

provided at Downstate and Upstate
Medical Center hospitals, the Governor
said, are used for debt service on ·suNY
construction, •!with the remainder used
. to offset State appropriations for University operations."

UUP' says State ~must' meet

~aise

pay

The problem, he said, is not the fault of
either the U/B or SUNY administration,
but was caused by an error in "the
Bureau of the Budget."
Pointing to growing studerlt de~ands
to be induded in on promotion and
tenure decisions at the departmental and
Faculty levels, Yeracaris said that UUP's
position on this " iS very clear." Article 33,
·1.1, para.b of the State-UUP contract, he
said, says in e'ffect that institutional
aCademic review means review and
recommendation by a committee of
academic employees. Anything else,
Yeracaris contended, would be in violation of the contract and would have " no
consequence." Although " students may
be asked for input into such decisions
through evaluations of teaching effectiveness and other ways, they may not, by
the contract, take pan in deliberations or
votes on tenure," Yeracaris argued.

A reported shortfall in that portion of
the Governor's U/B budget request
which covers faculty-NTP salary increases
and pressures being mounted by
students to be included in the making of
academic decisions concerning faculty
drew comment this week from Dr.
Constantine Yeracaris, presid.ent of the
Buffalo Center Chapter of United
University Professions (UUP), the facultystaff bargaining agent.
· Noting that President Robert L. Ketter
has informed the Faculty Senate that
Governor Carey's budget proposal lacks
$238,000 needed to fund fully a new
salary schedule for faculty and NTPs
which is effective July 1, Yer.acaris contended that "the State must and will find
a way to finance the negotiated increase ." The State "will meet its
obligation," Yeracaris said by way of
· assurance to concerned staff members.

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U:li

Polish Collection~ exhibition culled from
the University's collection of rno&lt;e than 4,000
volumes of rNiterial. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial libr~ry . Monday-Friday, 9 a..m.-5
p.m. Continui_rlg.
MUSIC URAIIY EXtftiiT
Harrison Birtwistle: Works and Reviews k
currently on display in the Music library,
Baird Hall, through February 28.
VISUAl. AlllS EXH111T
· People, photosrophs by Micl&lt;ey Osterreicher. Hayes Hall lobby, throush February
28, Monday thrOugh Friday from 9a..m .~ p.m.
Presented by the Office of Cultuf'll Affairs.

NOJ'ICES . •
CIIEDIT.ftff COUIISES
A variety of courses are scheduled for the
spring semester, including such topics as arts
and crafts, journalism, counsellns, computers,
el\gineering. government, music and theatre,
photosraphy, real estate, psychoiPIIY, sports,
women's studies, writing, and many others.
for a brochure detailing the courses offered
or for registration information, contact the
Ojvision of CopJ.!!Iuing Eduatlon, Hayes A,
Rm. 3, ~in Street'Campus,831-4301.

······

A class in ..Women and J~ Identity" is
now being orsaniEed. Those interested
should coil Judith Friedler, 1131-5213 or 11324769 f&lt;&gt;&lt; details.
by Hillel House.

5Ponso:""

~HAU.-JIIS

Norton Hall buildins hours fe&gt;&lt; the oprins
semester are: Monday-Thursday: 7 a.m.-12
midnjgbt;, Frida.y: 7 ~m.-1 a.m.; S.turday: "
a.m. -1 a.m.: ~Sunday: 12 noon -12 midnlsflt.
(Mon., Feb. 17, buildinil houri are 12 noon 12 ,miclnisf1t.l

OFRCfOF-AND .
IIKOIIDS .-~its
&lt;
The Off.ce of Admissions and ReCords will
" be openFeb.13 from 8:30a.m. -7 p.m.; Feb.

}:.,:,e;g=:oma.~ ~~~Wil1t,;~
edMonday,Feb. 17.
l'ft.OCCUPATIONAI..THBAP.Y ~ •..
All pre·Occupational Therapy majors
should see the Division of . Undofsraduate
Education ~sor if1 119 Diefendorf during
the week of February 18. '
·
·,.
' •· ·
· STlJDYAIROADADVIRMENT
Study Abroad Advisement is now availoble
in 107 T.......end Hall. ull for an appointment
between 10 and 11 a.m., Monday thf'OIIIh Fri-

day, 831-4247.
y , u - - . y·-VICI
The Office of Foreign 5ludent Affairs is

......

~.tu~tenllcefor

fcnip1 scholan and students. Law Sludents
Bruce Stelne&lt; and Alan Strauu will be
avalloble 10-12 ._,. per week M the fo&lt;elgn
Student Office. T h e - ...... Feb. 3April 11, Monday and Wednesday 2-5
' p.m.
for"" appolnlmont.

·- .

c.n Ul--

..-~
..-af-.... .......ruralh .

A adlural - - -

~· ~

liD • . . . .

Man:h 1).16 lor - ·
-.Ienis. The&lt;ehnochMwelorthe...._.
scheduled lor

Applialiono- ......... In the Fonian fludent Ofllce. 210 Townsend. The deadline for
application h Feb...
.
~ t., the SA tntemMionol Ci&gt;o&lt;dinator.

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ANNUAl. AYRAQ fUU-TIME EQUIYAiiNT ENROUMENT. STAll otOaATID INSTITUTIONS IY LEVB. •

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LOCKWOOOEXHIIIT

JEWISH- UI'IIVB5lTY

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..

:ri. Hour&gt;: Mon.-:fr!,

11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Mon., Wed., and Thur.., r-10
p.m.; Sun., 1-5 p.m. Second floor, Nonon .

FACUI.lY-&amp;TAFf SWIMMING
Hours for fKUity and staff swimming are 12
noon·2 p.m. each Friday, Clarlt Hall pool.
·

fUNCTIONAl ASSIGNMENT Of PBISONNB. • 1!175-7' AUOCA TlONS AND CHANCES

........

hlblt runs through Feb.

-~
+Ill

INTERVIEWS

�----~

·'

.....&amp;lui

linch, City of Niagara Falls Water Department.
142 P.arker; refreshments .at 3:50p.m., followed by the lecture.

THURSDAY-13
WTBI-VA1151TY CHRISTIAN RUOWSHI,.

Commitment Is the topic of a speech 'by

Bob Tyrell. 330 Norton, 3 p.m.
EDUCATIONAl STUDIESSIMINARJ
Rudolph Steiner'S Theory of Education, l.

Francis Edmunds, prindp.al, fme~son College,
Sussex, England . 337 Norton, 3:30p.m.
l'ltVSICS COUOQUIUMf
lntef3ction of Elementary Particles with
Nuclei, U/B P..r ofessor P, . l. Jain. 111

laboratory of Aviation and Naval Physiology,
University of lund, Sweden. 108 Sherman, 4
p.m.
INTEltNAnONAl PUB'
Entertainment from Iraq and Ethiopia is

llftWOUSit()po

featured at this international pub. 231 Norton, 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the lntematioml Pub
Group and the SA International Coordinator.

Audio Wor*shop, 262 Norton, 3:30- 5 p.m.
Build your owh stereo components. Regisler in 223 Norton, 831..-t610/1.

CACFILM••
Woods-rock. 140 Farber (Cape n). 7 and 10:15
p.m. Admission : S1 .

SI'KLU"AI'PI.HD MATHEMAnCS SfMINARI
Nonlineflr Stability The ory. Frank
Hopp e nsteadt, Courant Institute of

POETRY WORKSHOP'

HoChst~ter,

3:30p.m.

Mathematical Sciences. Rm . 38, 4246 Ridge
lea; coffee at 3:.30, lecture at -4 p.m.
ART.lfCTURE'

Jacob Rothenberg, professor of art .history,
City University of New York, Th e Reception of
the Elgin Marbles in the 19th Cenrury, 310
Foster, 4 p.m.

An independent poetry workshop is being
organized, and the University community is
welcome. Those interested should meet today, Circular Word Bookshop, 226 Lexington
Ave., 7:30 p.m. For further informa tion, call

Zero de Conduite {Vi go). 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admission charge.
· Sponsored"by the Rq:ional Film Project.
WOMEN'S SWIMMING'
UI B vs. Rochester. Clark Pool, 7 p.m. No ad-

mission charse.

·

lfOUsp
" Drop-.ln" njght . 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
PlfliiCAI.,oiiQAIIIIC QIEMimiY
l.fCTUIIE 5aiESI
Reaclions of Small RinR Compounds,
Professor k~neth Wiberg. Yale Unive~ty .

-l62 Acheson, 8 p .m.

Sponso~ by the Graduate SchooL
UUAI
CASSAY£1115 FilM RSTIYAL••
Faces (Cftwvettes). Norton Conference
Theaue, all_831-5117 for times. Admission

char~e.

FRIDAY-14
I'EAOC~

Visions of Achieving Pmce and Their Educational lmpllatiom; a two-diy conference- on
wOOd peace, wiD fsture two intermtiomlly-

known scholors: Professor Johon Goltung.
University of o.lo, Norwad, ond Professor
.5tlnJer Hoffmann, Harwr University. For
further infonnoliQn, coniOCt Professor Rich•rd
fog. !il11e University Coflqe •t Buff•lo.

-·

INDUSIIIW.--"«;
Opllmol AB/fi'I'M'If ol Worlunen, Donold
II. Smith, lJhhenity of c.llfomio •t Berkeley.
Rrn. 11, 42l2 llklae leo, 10 .....

~IN

NEllllC*OI.OGT - . u t

Control ol H_enle fields. Dr. Jock Diomond,
chairman, Deplnment of Neuroscifltce,
101Shennan, 1 p.m.

-Uniftnlly.

MBIICINAI.aa.IIIY~
lle&lt;ent ~ In hnlclllin •nd

.,._Ruclenl.
UCIWI__,

~n Olemlslry,

Chrislopho&lt; Zusl,
:N5 HolhhSclencies. 2 p.m.

.

.

- IIIICIIIICMINGII_............,

Ca~nBivd.

liFE WORKSHOP'
Power to the People, 234 Norton, 8 p.m.

Or. Manin Resnikoff will discuss the environmental haurdsof nudear power.
1t~i~~ in 223 NOrton, 831~3011.
UUAII COFFHHOUSE"
Lou and ~lly Killen and Saul Broudy enter-

tain. First floor cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m. Admissio n charge.
WOMEN'S DANCE'

An all-woMen dance will be held, featuri ng
entertainment by the all-women rock band
" friends." Beer will be served. Gay Community Center, 1350 Main St., 9 p.m.-3 a.m.
· Sponsored by the Buffalo National
Organ ization of Women and Women's
Studies CoUege.
UUMCASSAVETTB FISnVAl FilM••
Faces. Norton Conference Theatre, cal18315117 for times. Admission charRe.
IICfllM"
Legend of Lone Ranl(er. Times and locations
are posted one week in advance on residence
hall bulletin boirds. Free to IRC fee-payers.

Visions of AchievinR Peace ~nd Their
Eduarional Implications. a two-day con-

ference on world peace_, will feature two
internationally-known scholars: Professor
Johan Gahung. University of Oslo, Norway,
;md Professor Stanley Hoffmann, Harvard
Univenity. For further inforrNtion, cOntact
Professor Richud Fogg, State University
Colleseot Bulfolo.
·

HIUB.HOUSP
Momins Sabbath service at 10 a.m., followed by·• Kiddush •nd Toroh study -.ion. 40
C.-Blvd.
DANa•
A donee is ocheduled fe•turins. music by
"frienck;" beer will be ~. "SocjolRoom,
Student Union llkfs., Buffolo Sblte ,Collese,
1 p.m.-1

lese ond the CAC.

lfA'illncM.scaciCXIIIOQI•Nt

.-'SY.uilnYIIASUJI4U•
. U/11 vs. Aitan. Memorial Audhorhrrn, 6:10

...... ,._....,OW.. ,_A.

P.

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,.........

.

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w::-~ ~
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . lel;a8oeat

·~·.....

CMLtilllliiiiEJott~--

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WAia---Me

Hew Mtlltod&lt; ., Wllttr.

-lllol

SUNDAY-16

MFAREOTAt•
Cellist Oan41 Rusinak performs. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. No admission cha rge.
BROADCAST'

Bicentennial Forum, featuring historian Sim
Bass Warner lecturing on "The Roots of Civility, the Revelution 200 Years later." WBFO-FM
(88.7), 8:30-11 p.m.
UUAI CASSAVETTES RSTIVAl RlM"
Minnie &amp; Moslcow;,z. Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 for timeS. Admission
charse-.

a.m. Admission:

$1..50.

5porlso&lt;ed by the Women's !iludies Col-

-·

p.m. Adrnisoion

m..ae. .

MONDAY-17
I=ILM••
Blood q( a Poet (Cocteau). 147 Diefendorf. 7

p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Regional Film Project.
UUA&amp; flttNCH FILM SD.IES••
Le Corbeau (Ciouzot, 1943). 146 Diefendorf,
7 p.m. No admission charge.
WOMEN'S IASKEJIAU•
UI B vs. Genessee Community. dark Hall, 7
p .m. No admission charge.
DANCE'

" Bottom of the Bucket, But. .." Dance
Company, directed and choreogriphed by
Garth Fagan. Studio Arena Theatre, 8:30 p.m.
Admission charge.
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

TUESDAY-18
-NUTRITION CONRIIENCQ
Far Soluble Vitamins and Their Role in
ConrE"mpor.ary Medicine and P.ublic Heahh.
Dr. K. C. Hayes. G-22 farber (Capen), 12 noon :
Bring your lunch.
filM'
Twelve O'Clock HiRh (King)- 310 Foster, 1
and 3 p.m. No admission charge.

SATURDAY-15
PEAa co.aENCE•

............._......... 2 .......

. . 4211Riclllt '-'coffee. 2:511,- ..

COMPunNG SfRVICE SfMINAif
BASIC (Beginners All-Purpose Symbolic

tain. first floor cafeteria, Norton. 9 p.m. Admission charge. ·
UUAa CASSA.VETltS FESTIVAL FILM••
Minnie &amp; Moskowitz. Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

Baritone Gerzinus Epeus Hoehtr~ performs. Baird Recital Hi111, 8 p.m. No admission
charge.

foolullon ol a Su«euuul l'lonr
~ ~ l.osler Fink, Ollice ol

~and~U.S.Doplnment

UUAI COFFEEHOUSE• •
Lou and Sally Killen and Saul Broudy enter-

Hillel House will sponsor a brunch at 12
noon, followed by meetings of three groups
which are a part of the Jewish Free University .
40 C. pen Blvd.

MFA IECit Al'

FilM"

Norton, 831 ~30/1.
·
Italian - EnRiish Conversation Group, 8192
Red Jacket, Ellicott, 3-5 p.m.; French - English
Conversation Group, B192 Red Jacket, Ellicott,
7-9 p.m.; Guitar: Advanced. Self-Help, 167
MFACC. Ellicott, 7:30-9 p.m. Rq:ister 167
MFACC. Ellicott, 636-2148.

HIUEl HOUSEJIRUNCH'

Fries, UIB gr•duate student, 0 -170 Bell Facili-.
ty,4p.m.

.

Bicarbonate 1\Cfivation of Mitochondri~l
A TP~se: Some New Regul~tory Aspects of
C~rbimyl PhOSJ?hate Met~bolism, Or. Sintiago Grisolia, distinguished professor of
biochemistry, University of Kansas. 134 Healrh
Sci~es. • p.m.
..

'

.

lhls Enflllsh subtidos). 147 Diefendotf, 7p.m.lldmlulon: ttudl!ntswilh 10,$.50;
oDOihen$1.511.
..

LIFE WORKSHOPS'
Death and Dying. 232 NOrton, 11 :30 a.m. - 1
p .m.; Dynamics of Human Sexuality, 232 Norton , 1~3 p.m.; Publiciry, 7-10 p.m. Register 223 .

The U/ 8 Creative Assodates present this
concert, which features works never before
performed in Buffalo. Albright-Knox Art
Gallery, 8 p.m. Admission: 51 students, faculty, staff and ga lle ry mem~rs; $2 general
public.

LIVE .ROADCASP •
Hunting: Friends and Foes. a live debate to

DEPARTMENT Of rtiARMAcRmcs
SIMINAIII
Chymotrypsin - Drog Reactions. Steven

lECTURE SEIIIESI

Woodstock. 140 Farber (Capen) , 7 and 10:15
p.m. Admission : S1. ..
EVENINGS FOil NEW MUSIC CONCERT'

13, 1975

WEDNESDAY-'-19

Sponsored by the India Students Association.
CACFtLM••

881-0335.

take place in Haas lounge, Norton, is broadcast over WBFO-FM (88.7), 8-10 p.m.
Participanrs are : anti-hunting spokesmen
Cleveland Amory (president of the Fund for
Animals, critic and author of Man Kind) and
Bill Grosscup (writer and broadu, ter) ~nd
iluntins advoures Ward Ston ~ (chief
pathologist, Environmental Conservation
Department of New York State) and John Ailes
(st~ff member, Natio~l Rifle Association).
HIUB. HOUSE•
Shabbat Service at 8 p.m., followed · by a
Torah study session and Oneg Shabbat. 40

CEll AND MOUCUIARIIiOI.OCY AND
CHEMISTIIY Of ~OGICAl SYSTfMS

·

rti\'SIOI.OGY SfMINARJ
Aerophagia DurinR Diving; Epidemiologic
and Experimental Studies. Dr. Claes Lundgren ,

F~ry

CIVIl ENGINHIIING
ucrtJIIE 5aiESf
The ERR as ~ Shell Structure and ~ Gas Exch~ntfe Unit, Dr. Hermann R~hn , Depa;nment
of Phy~oiOSY . 104 P•rker, 2 p.m.
COMPUTING 5aVICE SlMINAIIfIntroductiOn to rhe BMD Prolr'"m library,
tauaht by Harry Piniarski. 334 Hayes, 3-S p .m.
Forinformati~ , call831_:1181.
UUAN AN.\1.'1115 AND ·

Instruction Code) is the title of th is seminar
·taught by Harvey Axlerod. Rm. A-44, 4230
Ridge lea , 3:30-S:30 p.m. For information, call
83)-1181 .
THIS IS RADIO'
Dr. Harry Rand. U/ B iiiiSsistant professor of

art history, discusses art deco. WBFO-FM (88.7
mhz.l, 4p.m.
'CAMPUS SHOWCASE'
lECTURE SERIES'
Teaching Passion. Gerald O'Grady, diredor

of the Center for Media Study and the Instructional Communication Center. O'Grady will
present a screeni ng of "The Passion of Anna"
followed by a !!.lide lecture interpreting the
film . Norton Conference Theatre, 7:30 p.m.
Admission: du~-paying Alumni Association
members may attend fr~; S5 for the 4-leciure
series fo r alumni and the University commun ity; S10 ge"neral public.
FILM•
Birth of a Nirion (0. W . Griffith, 1915). 70
Acheson, ?:30 p.m. No admission ch"rge.
UUAIFH.MS••
Now Voyager (Rapper, 1942), 7:30p.m. a~d
Dark Victory (Goulding. 1939), 9:35 p.m. 140
Farber (Uperi). No admission charge.

SlH lECTUIE111ECfJAl'
Works by Harrison Birtwisrle, noted English
composer, are performed by members of the
U/8 Center of Creative and Performing A:rts.
Ba ird Recital Hall, 8 p .m. No admission
charge.

THURSDA¥-- .20
CONnNUING DINTAl
EDUCATION SEMINAif
Pa~llel Techniques-The Modern Method
of lnrn~-Oral Ridioi{T.lphy, Or. Charles lipani.
This is a twO-day prGg'riillm for dental aux-

iliaries. 148 Farber (Capen), 9 a.m.-4 :30 p.m.
For fee information or registration, all the
School of Dentistry, 831-2836.
UFE WoaKSHOPS•
Audio, 262 Norton, 3:30-S p.m.; Assertive
Tr~ininR for ~omen. 231 NOrton, 7-10 p.m.;
Ski Mechanio, 317 Norton, 7-10 p.m.; Anliquin~ ~rtc~ CollectinfiC, Red Room, F.acultY
Club, 7:30p.m.; and Power to the People, 234
Norton, 8-10 p.m.
·
DIPAIITMENTOf

PHAIIMACRJTICS RMINAif

The Estimation of C~recholamfnes in Urine
by HiRh """orrn.nce Liquid Chromorogrophy
with EIKtrochemk.al Detection. Dr. Dnid
Wenke, assistant director of dinial chemistry,
Erie County laboratory. 244 Health Sciences,4
p.m.
filM"
Sundoys •n&lt;l Cybele !lou'l!uisonl. 147
Diefendorf, 7 P·'!'· Noodmlssioo
Spomored by the ResK&gt;nol film Project.
Hai.B.HOUSP
"Drop-In" nishL 40 C.pen Blvd., 7-11 p .m.

m....,_

CONI1NUING - . u IDUCAJION
CAIIDIAC CUMQ
This series of dinlcs In physial eduatlon of
!he ardioc P"tlent ond •rrhythmlooworkshops
POLICY - . u t
ore scheduled eKh Thursdoy everU"ff tluouah
lmp.Kt of Gener31 Revenue Smring on
Moy a. The topic of tonloh(s dinlc is AUKVIIICommunity Dedsion Making, Dr. Donakf ·
rion. f•rber (C.penl Holl -~Room CRosenth~l. Political Science Dep.Jn~t . 237
22. 7:.30-9: 30 p .m . For information or
.Crosby,l-5 p.m.
. resistr•tlon, coli the .Schoolof Medicine, 1131- ·
- 5521i.
fiiENCtt DIPAIITMENT filM"
Sponsored by the School of Meclidne.
Ust Uu,rft (Murnau) -.d Menilmontiht
!Ki,..oovl. 146 Diefendorf, 5 •nd 7 p .m. No
UUAaFIIM••

oclrnisoion.chl...... -

-v-

~

~--·
No--duo.....

OqJheus (Cocleou). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m .

Born ro Win Cl'iluer). Norton Conference

The•ue, all 1131-S117 for limes. Admisoion '

m.rse,

EXHIBITS

UUM ......

(llopptr, 19421, 7:}0 p.m., ond

Doric Vldory IGouldin&amp; '"'!, 9:35 p.m. 170
MFACC,

Ellicott. No ...,_, duo...,_

GALLRYZftm.lr
c:JIMr RJpolf Is the tide ol this ..........
. .nbillh hom .... Vlsull Sludle Wiiililhop in
R~er. A voriely olmetll . . Included in
::~•='"'
exhibit, with uch WOI"k
lll drnes. Ani 1r11111 ore invited to porddpoce. .

.

For information, contact Clllery 219
the UUAB olllc:e. IJI-5112. The ex- 7 ; a&gt;/. 41

throush

"""'''o

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL6,N0.18
FEBRUAI_n' 6, 1975

••

- ~tegets

briefing
on budget

limes to run U/B study of unemployment
By PAirkill Ward ~n

are a "leading human i"n dicator" for the

Rr"(&gt;&gt;ttf'f'Sf•ff

A first-hand account of what it is like

to be out-of-work in Buft.llo will greet
the million-and·a·half readers who pick
up next 'Sundiy'5 New Yoit' 7'lriH!s
M;osuine.
Unemployment in Buffalo is the sub·
ject of the magazine's cover story, a dis-

tillation of interviews with Buffalonians
for whom the nation's sagging economy

is no! an abstraction but a personal
crisis.
In the manner, ironically, of Studs
Terkel's best-seller, Working, the
limes' story allows the unemployed to
speak for themselves on the frustrations
of being jobless.
The 7,()()().word article is full of anger,
but ' it also contains a thoughtful,
sOphisticated analysis of our current
economic dilemma.
As one of the editors· of the story
commented, "People in the unemploy-

'd:s~tr!r;:,~h:!h":'~'bt~~u~ht~;~~~

of unemployment. The people inter·
viewed are not simply presenting J heir
pain in order to win sympathy.... They
have impotUnt things to say that can be
seen only fr9m their perspective."

national situation, the article contends.
Recommtinded by Jerl&lt;el
.
The Times originally approached
Studs Terkel himself about doing the
piece. Unable to take "Uie assignment,
Terkel recommended the UIB American

Studies program.
"We were commissioned collec·
tively," Frisch emphasizes, ''and the
project proceeded collectively to a
degree I hadn't experienced-before."
Students and faculty interested in the
project began meeting weekly late in
Odober, devoting the first sessions to
field-work·techniques.
Pressed by an early December
deadline, tbe group quickly fanned out
with their tape recorders, some interviewing friends and family out of work,
others going ' down to the unemploy·
ment office to condllct interviews there.
As each interview was completed, it

·

'

·· ··

times

IUwer

4. C"ol. 1)

Cruro ro p;JI(e 2. col. 1)

I ·

oak!:

Buffalo's unemployment rate, official·
ly setat over 10 per cent' and, In rolity,
llllny
hfsher, is the third hishest in
the Easl. Local joblessness Is symptomatic, the JJmes' piece argues, of a
systemic crisis that pervades our
ec0110mic system. Buft.llo's unemployed

(fUm IO (Jal(f'

197·1:!4r..,6
·t p•ospects-not encouraoing
I' budge
0'"

Governor Hugh Carey's record·
breaking $10.69 billion budget proposal
for the State fiscal year which begios
u.....l i,lne
.
'
April 1 (a proposal based on record·
The article carries an unusual byline.
breaking tax increase plans) offers very
The oral document was made collec·
little cause for optimism at UIB, campus
lively by some 35 inembers of the UIB
officialnaid this week.
'
Pf081am In American StUdies, who in·
True, the $711 million which Carey
terviewed . 80 unemployed or under·
has requested for State University
employed people for the piece.
operations includes a total of·$81,674,000
As Dr. Michael Frisch, acting dir~or
for UIB, an increase of $3.9 million -over
of American Sludles, exP'alm, the pro·
the present year, but much more than·
ject p!0Y1c1e!f the faculty and students
that would, have been necessary just to
involved with a unique opportu~-10
stand still in the wake of inflation, of·
deal as a sroup with many of the liil-'··• .fodals pointed out. A major portion of ·
resolved Issues which duster around
'the increase is said to be reserved for
oral history, at the same time that they : alreadY-negotiated s;olary increases.
createcho ·clocurMnt which translates the
The. Unlversl;!y had· requested an In·
nationwide problem of unemployment •. ~of. S10 miPion, of which, officials
into vividly human ~rms.
·
'. between $6 and~ mlftlon was ear·
. Buffalo It, unforttJnately, an apt
·marltect for the ~ .cost of con·
Cllok1e for a story 11n unemployment, tlllulng programs at present Iewek.
the nalloriill crisis that has toppled infla.
The $3.9 millltJR flsure definitely
lion as our Number 1 economic con·
n!Nm cutbackS, a sjloke~~Nn uld.

cern.

was transcribed, given a preliminary
edit, and then returned to the group for
discussion. At these free-wheeling, nonhierarchical sessions, the group looked .
for ~~~gin« lbem~~ polnted .out.
,g roups 'in th e commurnty which were
being overlooked in the canvass, and
struggled collectively with the
philo·sophicat problems of their ·
methodology.
The task of further sifting and ordering the interviews was turned over to a
six-perSon editing committee {with two
faculty members), who brought their
recommendations back to the larger
group. The final draft was approved by
the entire . American Studies program.
Two Concerns lmpotUnl
"Two concerns w.e re very important
to us," says Frisch. "We wanted to present a broad view of the unemployment
crisis, one that extended the definition

There was no good news at Tuesday's
meeting of the Faculty Senate as Presi·
dent Robert L Ketter revealed the details
of the 1975-76 budget which Governor
Hugh Carey has proposed for ihe
University.
For the coming academic year the
University had requested an increase of
slightly over $10 million over this year's
budget. Two·thirds of this increase, ac·
cording to Dr. Ketter, is necessary simply
for the camp.us "to stay put."
Governor Carey has pared tkis requested increase to a recommendation
to the legislature that U/8 receive $3.9
million over this year's budget (for a total
of $81,674,000).
'The Governor's budget also contains a
new wrinkle. In addition to recommending specific increases, it also specifies
what areas should be cut, including
elimination of eight faculty lines in the
School. of Nursing, ten staff positions in
student services, and more than $300,000
from the libraries' acquisitions budget.
As Dr. Ketter explained, the Governor
approved some $4,461,000 in "fixed
costs," including $1,194,000 for "annualization" of salaries; $911,000 to cover
price-level increases; and $637,000 (plus
$27,000 for campus security officers) to
cover salary adjustments negotiated by
the UUP.
· Additional funds for bussing
necessitated by U/ B's multi-campus
situation were also okayed.
The Governor a\so responded to the
University.'.s urgent ...r:equeu,......to uP8faM::
the Health Sciences operation by okay·
ing 38 new facul ty and seven new support positions in Healt!'l Sciences. With
related increases in OTPS (Other Than
Personal Services) support and -funds for
temporary services, Health Sciences is
slated to receive an additional $631,000 in
fiscal dollars over this year's budget.
Sixteen new full-time equivalent faculty lines (budgeted at $148,000) were approved for the rest of the campus. No
support lines or funds l(fere approve&lt;l for
these new core-campus positions.
With fixed--cost increases and new
positions .totalling over $5,260,000,
Governor Carey proposed to trim the

Caoololle .._.

,
· -And all of that $3;9 mUIIon increase
may not' be forthclonlfo•tL when . the
legislature finally passes -the new
budget. As E.W. Ooty, vke ~n) lor
finance and manase.m ent, en)phasized,
the budget request Is predic;at~ 11n the

Governor's large additional tax
ed for elimination here, the 1u1t.1o
proposals. "There is great qu~tion,"
Ew!nlnr News said, in such· areas as "ex·
Doty said, "as to whether or not what
tension and publiC service, student ser·
we're lookirg at now is what we'll get.
vices, dormitory administration and nur·
The greater likelihood is that the
sing faculty."
· legislature will revise the budget
Net Increase of ;ra
downward.
Mr. Doty said, however, that his infor·
"We do know," Doty said, "that we'll • mation is that 58 new jobs have been
get no more than what the Governor
requested and· 30 recommended for
has submitted and this itself calls for
elimin~tion, for a net increase of 28
!erious belt tightening in areas other
positions. In response to rumors on
than personal services.
campus that &gt;&lt;?me Individuals have
"Beyond that," Ooty coi:nmented,
already been given notice, Mr. Ooty said
"the outlook is fOSBY."
that the effective date to roch these
At It~ press time, copies of the -' levels is September 1, not April 1, and
text &lt;A the Governor's budget message
that he is confident that adjustments can
were not avallalile on campus, but Presi·
be made through normal anritlon.
dent Raben L Kelter was expected to
There Is no truth to rumors that blyoffs
further detail the. ,U/8 fiscal outlook at
have alrody taken place.
Tuesday's Facully Senate meeting (see
l!ress reperts also indicate that the
~ 51pry, this issue).
Governor
called 'f or decreases in ·
Reports In the..._,., ,_,.,. News
UIB budgets for library book acqulsi·
of last Friday lndicated that the Gover·
tion, student seMces, nuclear science
nor rec!Q.II'Imendfl(l 53 , _ jobs on this
and technology, space renlills and other
Qrnpus. including 33 faculty and seven
areas. But a Univenlty official told the
suppon positions in the,Health Sciences.
8uiWo ,_,.,.News that It Is too early
The Health ScM!nce areas are In line for
to specify where cu~ will be made.
Increased faculty, the Governor said,
(ApiCal
because recent accreditation reparts
UIB also got less than it requested for
"cited a number of serious problems"
new capital constf'-uction On rhe
which need to be rectified.
· "J!'Irty·five other jobs are recommend(tUm ro fN1re z. nJ. 4)

c_.,

�February 6, 1975

:!
Budget-:-

Senate(fromp.JifleJ,col. .f)

(lromJM~1 .col. 4}

UnM!rsity budget by mandating $1,327,000 In cutbacks.
Specifically, Carey called for slashes of:
$200,000 from core faculty support;
$120,000 in nu~ing faculty salaries; $26,000 from the University's overseas opera~
tion; $304,000 (representing some 20,000
yolurreesl from libraries' acquisitions;
$3,000 for work-study funds; ten staff
lines from student services ($74,000) plus
$1)4,000 from elsewhere in the student
services budget; $100,000 less in space
rentals; and reduction of some 17 additional lines in research, 'maintenance,
purchasing, planning and the residence
halls.
As Dr. Ketter old dismayed faculty,

Amherst Campus, ·seeking $28,367,000
and receiving $10,477,000. Some capital
construction funds for projects underway but not completed during
the present fiscal year will be reappropriated.
·
" We go( only 37 per cent oj what we
requested for new construdion," an of·
licial advised the fluffalo f..,;,ing News.
" The capital construction budget left
out $8 million lor the southeast and eaSt
portions of the loop road around cam- pus and $7.5 million for the music and
chamber hall."

who wondered that non-Uaiiversity per-

UUPREAcnON

sonnel could prepare an itemized
budget for the campus, New York is unique in its requirement that the State
budget be itemized line by line.
The budget now goes to legislative
- committee and then to the legislative
houses for approval.
The State Constitulion, Ketter noted,
requires that the budget be balanced,
which strongly suggests that how much
the University actually gets for 1975-76
will be dependent on the late of controversial fund-r~ising proposals now
before the legislature.

ft....,.

.Overweight

clinic set
Parents of overweight boys and girls
between the ages of eight and ten can
get help for . their children's weight
problems through a free treatment

program that will be offered at the UIB
Psychology Clinic.
Under the program, children will be
given instructions on eating and exer-

cise, and encouraged to take charge of
their own weight control regimens.
Each . child wm panicipate in twelve
group treatment sessions, which U/ 8
researchers hope to begin this month
on the Ridge lea campus. Sixty boys and
girls will be accepted for participation in
the program.
lQ participate, each child must be ac·
companied by his or her mother o r
father, and each parent must agree to at·
tend all sessions and provide their own
transpOrtation. .
According to . Dr . Anthony M . .
Graziano, UIB professor of psychology,
the experimental program lor children
will be similar to other group treatment
programs that have succeeded in helping
adwlts control their weight.
Treatment is free, but families will be
asked for a $15 deposit to assure regular
attendance. The deposit will be refunded
at the end of the program.
Parents who would like their children
to enter the program may write to: Mrs.
Dixie Grace, Department of Psychology,.
4230 Ridse lea Road, Buffalo 14226.
Applicants are requested to include
their name and telephone number so
they may be contacted for an Interview.
Appointments may also be made by callins Mrs. GrKe at 831-1187 on Thursdays,
Fridays, or Saturdays.
-

118 folD" slates
women's 5pOits

Athletic competition in wo~n's
vaf1ity spom has been scheduled for
1975-7&amp; In the Bill Four A\hletic
Conference, the recently formed league
which includes C...islus, Nlasara, Buf- ·
falo State and UIB.
Carolyn Lehr, women'• athlelic coorat Buffalo State and newlyeiecled BIB four coordinator, an- ·
-need this week that - · · sports
neXt year will be conducted In tennis,

cli....,.

wolleyWI and basketball.
111 .clclldon to resular season liomeRrles - . , the four insdtullanl, there wtR be conference tour_....ln the three spor1S.
1he ..... tournMient will be at
........ Odober11.
Wit . . hole the ...,.,. tourney,
........ l,llld CanWul . . . . . the
.......... ....,.., Fellrulry 27-21.
~

The Covomo&lt;'s budset proposol IO&lt; the comIns flsc•l re... ..., .._. """ lnclftct lmpllullons I&lt;&gt;&lt;' the operoJtlns budaet of uta
•ncl the onlft SUNY SJIIem, Prof. Constontine A. YerK~~ril, president of the lufft~lo
Center ChApter of United Unlwersity
Proloulons (UUP), the coloctiYe bupinlns
.....t ID&lt; SUNY loculty ollld non-tuchins
prolooslonol sbll, sold this week. UUP Is con&gt;
«med ower both the freeze on w~
•l..,..ty Imposed by the Dlwislon of the
ludset •nclthe octuol job culbocb proposed
In the new budset, Ye&lt;•urls sold. The union,
he sold, hos opproKhed the Lqlslalu"'
throush NYSUT (the New York Sfote Union
of Tuchen) to see to h tiNd neither wKJ~nt
no&lt; non-wountlnes _.be cutin the budset
which Is
_.,_j. Such cuts, UUP
contends, .-lei be --....! to hlsher
eduatlon ollld to the ......,.., of quollty
eduatlon to which the union Is committed.
Ye.oculs uld iurlhet- !hot II Is UUP's un--. SUNY hos Ml!horized locol
umpus prakienb to proceed to implemont
wh.otewer cuts moy be - · Thus, the
loul union hos ursed Ptesldont Kolle&lt; to en-decisions he hos to m•ke
- the moot equitoble. In tenns of elflht nurslns foculty lines. speclflcdy urmotlted lor
elimination In the Gowernor'1 budset
. , . _ . , Ye.•uris sold UUP . . seek the
tr•nde. of tbe penonnel ulti""'tely •fleeted
to the School of Nursina M: the ·Sbte Unfwerslty •t Stony lrool&lt;.

New Med Dean sees seH
in role of 'team leader'
By Mary Beth Spina
fdii~/A nt)(i•l~. H~•kh ~

As a third-year medital student at
Oklah o ma University , Dr . John
Naughton was im pressed Wit h how information leained in class actUally
helped students deal more effectively
with patie nts.
.This strong impression led him into
medical education and research rather
than private practice.
·
So as newly-na med dean of the U/8
School of Medicine, Dr. Naughton sees
his role as that of a "team leader"working with faculty membe rs to
provide students as well as private
physicia ns new knowledge and techni·
ques so they can deli ver advancements
and developments in medicine to their
patients.
" We should provide students with the
materials and stimulus to be forwardlooking physicians. But we also have a
responsibility to practicing physicians to
develop continuing education programs
which help them continue as 'learners
and teachers,' "he says.
Although Dr. Naughton's career has
been piimarily in education rather than
private practice, he feels that through
education , physicians can become
more aw~re _.of advancements and
developmtmS which can benefit patients.
Patient Cue Research
And he's quick to point out that all his
research projects have involved some
aspect of patient care. He developed the
widely-used "Naughton Exercise Stress
Test" - which measures and pinpoints
the levels of a hean patient's potential
and limitations. Currently, he's serving
as director of the National Exercise
Heart Disease Project in which postheart attack patients are evaluated to
determThe the 'merits of supervised exercise versus no exercise. At centers
located at the University of Alabama,
Case Western .fteserve, Emory and
George Washington UIIM!rsities, staffs
are studying patients using input from
psychological, sociological and physical
..
•
tests.
Dr. Naughton's varied career has included service In community and
federal projects indudlns the National
Heolrt and luna Institute Task Force on
Cardiac RehablilUtion and the District
of Columbia Mayor's Task Force on
Out-Patient Care.
He has authored 50I'IIe 60 papers and
served In editorial positions on five
profeuional joumlh. And his InteRs~ In
eun:he physlolofi led him Into the
a~ of spO.ti mediCine.
.
'

While in college, he worked for two
yea rs as a sports reporter and put in
time in the restaurant business "doing a
little of everything." While he is not
himself the son of a physicia n, the eldest
of his six children is planning a med ical
career.
Balilnce Between Dreilms ilnd Needs
Dr. Naughton believ~
a dean
should provide balance between the
"dreams and hopes of the faculty and
the needs of society." He sees a
challenge in bringing faculty talents
toget her for the best team effort pos~i ­
ble.
Why did he choose Buffalo!
" I was attracted by the faculty and the
potential of a school that could be
. responsive to the needs of modern day
med icine, but I realize winning people's
confidence will be a big test," he says.
He also believes deans need strength
·
and endurance.

Women PhD's

losing ground
In spite of consdousness·raising and
affirmative action, women holding doctorates are " less likely to receive the
rewards which their male colleagues enjoy," a recent survey by the Educational
Testing Service reveals.
On the basis of questionnaires sent to
. persons who earned their doctorates in
1950, 1960, and 1968, John A. Centra of
ETS found that women fell further and
further behind their male peers in both
salaries and academic rank.
As reported in The Chronicle of
Higher Education Uah. 13), women
reported average salaries of $16,400 alter
some five years of experience, as com·
pared to average salaries of $18.700 for
men. Alter 22 or 23 years of experience,
women reported average salaries of$21 ,800, while men earned:-an ~average of
$27,100.
The survey also revealed that a higher
proponion of men than women were full
professors and department heads. A
higher proportion of women than men
were instructon and assistant professors.
· Some 60 to 6S per cent of the .women
surveyed reported working full-time
"without interruption" since Uming
their terminal de!!rees.
Reasons dted by women for Interruption-of career were most often marriageand famHy-related, induclllig lack of
suitable positions In the loales where
their hulbands work, lack of day-care
facilities, and institutional antl-nepotlsin

resulatlons.

.

.

IU"'-

The · Governor did 'call for $4.6 million
·for the northwest portion of the loop
road, $2:.7 million for the expansion of
the chilled water plant which will
provide air-conditioning for most of the
campus, $1 .7 mill ion for the installation
of util ities and S1 .2 million for expansion
of the electric substation.
Plunlns luctiet
Funds requested by Carey lor construction planning Totaled $1 ,762,000,
slightly more than one-third of the $3,861 ,000 which had been asked by UIB.
This figure includes funds lor planning: an athletic complex (consisting of
a gymnasium and indoor swimming
pool), a natural sciences lecture hall,
and the southeast· and east portions of
the loop road,
The planning budget left out lun!ls lor
security projects for Amherst, which included plans for dosed-circuit television
and special locks.
The University received $800,000 for
planning the conversion of the Main
Street Campus into a health sciences
center. None of the estimated $8.9
million construction funds for this project were included In this year's budget.
.The UnM!rsity also receM!d 100 per
cent of its $7.032,000 request for equipment.
And the Governor asked $15.5 million
for relocating Millersport Highway
around the new campus.

FNSMnames
v&amp;ting lecturer.
Henry Eyrlns; distinguished professor
of chemistry and metallurgy at the
University of Utah, will be the filth participant in the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics' Disllngulshecl Visiting
lecturer series later this s.emester.
Under the general title, nMocleJs and
Scientific Creativity," Piof. Eyd!IIJ will
present four ampuolectures: "The Drift .
Towards Equllibtjum," Monday, April
14; "The States of Matter," Tuesday,
April15; •'fhe Degenerative ' * - o f
Aglns.'' Wednesday, April 16; and
"General and local A.-hesia," Thursday, Aprll17.
All lectures will be held' In 147 Diefendorf beginnina at 8:15 P,.m.

�•'

......................... o-. Glooeffl,. ~ . . . -

'Intellectual Belly Dance'

ol._.._,

~

hot •1nt011ed...l belly donee" In llolrd H.1lllosl Fricby nlshl, nploinlns lholll is iKiuoly •
'birth dance," il cb.nce of liber•tion for rnoclftn ~ which unhes them with their
onCfllrol siJI'en, • socred ritual which recols prohlsloric wonhip of tho forth Goddoss ond
a time when women's control of society went unquestioned.

1

Boyer assesses State, budget at SUNY ~nate meeting
system, he pointed out that " it would be
incorrect - and inflammatory - to
characterize our problems as signaling a
wholesale war.''
SUNY Senators attending the 49th
Regular Meeti ng ofihe University FaculHe reviewed recent attempts by the
State Education Department "to conty Senate held January 31 and february 1
at Stony Brook was, naturally enough,
duct disciplinary reviews of doctoral
the Governor's budget, just released the
studies throug hou t the system, not unprevious day.
like regional accrediting arrangements.
The difference is that they are isolating
As at past . s~sions, ~h~n_c~llor .Er}lest
disciplines rath~r .thftn institutions, and
IIQyer'~ ·~ddress constituted the first maun'precedented procedures have been
jor agenda item. He varied from his
associated with these reviews in
usual specific comments about current
Ch,
emistry and Hi~tory at this point.'-' .
SerW.e aJlipq~ tq pisc4ss the budgel·a.nd
Asserting that tt;lere is "no quarrel
S.ta!e ~parJm.eJ:~t· .of Education matters,
with
the need for quality programs," he
whi &lt;:..h 1be ., lishrlv • rtefll!1"r.ed \ ro·n •s
singled out "for particular concern" the
" problems. .so eXciting t~ t it is fun to
criterip n of " need," as translated into
get out of bed in the.morning."
the "pote ntial employability of·
Explaining that he had just received
graduates to justify continuance of a
the budget, which he had not yet been
given
doctoral program.
able to review carefully and in detail, he
" If we are subject to review
said that the present fiscal crisi.s is.being
procedures,"
he maintained, " we . need
compared to the 1970-71 period. He also
warned the Senators that this is "only the - to k now the criteria on which
judgments are to be made. Employabilifirst stage of the budget," since the final
ty of graduates in programs is a new
answer can come only through
method of measurement that imposes a
legislative action.
manpower model of program building."
With reference to SUNY, the
Noting that concentration is presently
Chancellor said, "While one always
on doctoral programs at the four SUNY
prefers more resources, it is my opinion
graduate .centers, he warned that the
that the Executive Chamber has made
process could encompass similar revjews
every effort to deal .delicately and effecat the master's and baccalaureate levels.
tively with our budget."
He further questioned the "review"
Still intact within the SUNY totals are
of an isolated . program without
previously negotiated faculty increases,
recognizing relationships with overall
although (outside of Health Sciences) no
institutional profiles, programs, and
new facuhy lines were authorized for
departments, describing the effort as
any unit. Faculty losses (mostly Arts and
being "in ~iolation of everi good planSciences} for each unit generally ranged
ning procedure I know."
0
from one to three lines." (lt ~s this
DiscusSions are continuing with the
writer's understanding that the - State Education Department, the
budgetary situation may be more
Chancellor said, " the doctoral review
serious than the Chancellor's 1entative
program has been modified engrmous.appraisal · suggested, and his comments
ly, and action has been deferred without
on the document should be read with
actuall y closing do~n specific
that understanding in mind.)
programs.'' left for future discussion is
the administrative locus, and " Who will
'Nol Retrenchinenr
act?" Nor, he said, can the University
" This is not retrenchment," the
view these dev~lopments as wholly
Chancellor pointe~ -out, " and personnel
irresponsible, without recognizing
have notheen dismissed."
obligations as to our own review
Referring to. additi9n_ar positions
procedures. " II we do nothing, we have
. authorized for . Health· Sciences,. Or.
no defense."
·
Boyer noted that, " Only . the Health
Centers received' ·privileged tre.ftm~nt
CI~PrOIJams
that violated ' ·;il[ of the ' austerity
·Dr. Boyer touched on "the
guldelin~ submin,i.d py the Governor's
remarl(ably · clouded'' . and "confused"
offiCe.._., . · · :. ' · : ·;. 1
__
~
· pict4re surrounding Competency Based
'He 'also ·1denlifled; a $401),000, or ,10 · Teacher · Education (CBlE) programs.
Pl'r cent, '~i1Cfi9.~: ·~in~~{in)u'n~jng
"While the spirit of CBTI is also uncarilpuk 'sChools:, artliough this . was
derstandable, tile fact.is that as our peo..Ort.Cwtiu · ~~ by ·a · S2siJ.;OQU item
ple ·get into round table discussions
designed for expenmeltt~tiol) ·~to study
teachers in the field are saying that it
altemativeft.o tamptls SchoolS:"
means more work for them." Union
leadership also "is geiting.ir'lto the act."
He was not optimistic about resolving
He deyoted most of his remaining
the CBT£ prc)blem, with "the prindpa~
time to major Issues Involving the State
competition existing betWeen the State
Education Department and SUNY,
Department of Education and · State"because these have been so well
wide teacher unions." (A resolution on
publicized." Emphuizing the need to
this matter was later passed by_ the
maintain the Integrity of the SUNY
ly Rkhud A. Siqelkow
~'"'· SIINY/IJuff~lo

The topic of greatest concern among

--~~

.

Senate).
.
"Whereas such a mandate denies to
Dr. Boyer then referred to the creaindividual instructors and programs the
tion of appro priate Affirmative Action
right to use a variety of techniques for
committees and the addition of Affirdeveloping and evaluating teaching
mative Action posts at each SUNY unit,
competence, in that the exercise of that
as well as plans for an assistant vice · right puts the certification and support
chancellor for this area in the central ofof programs in jeopardy, and
fice .
.
. "Whereas the right of choice is
Citing the evi~e nce as " not disthere by denied, and thus academic
couraging," he pointed out that during
freedom violated, by the CBTE mandate,
the 1970-73 period "SUNY experienced
therefore
a 20-24 per cent increase in hiring
.uae it resolved that it is the sense of
women and minorities," accompanied
the SUNY University Senate that the
by mo.re )e nured staff in these
. CBTE mandate is a violation of incategories.
..
.,·
.
stitutional autonomy and,
During the question· period, he prais"le It fu- weoolve&lt;lotluol lM SUN-Y
ed the Student Exchange program with
Faculty Senate call upon the SUNY cen:
the Soviet Union as having been a
tral office to take whatever steps are
"remarkably.sJ.,JCcessful venture." ·.
possible to alter this mandate in such a
He also responded that rhere is so
way a·s to give to i n-stitU firir\5 ,
much difference of opinion that any
departments, and instructors the option
attempt to adopt· a uniform SUNY-wide
to insritute CBTE programs or not, and
instructional -calendar . is unlikel y · to
"le It further resolved that the SUNY'
succeed.
University Faculty sftna~te sUppOrt lhe efforts of the bargaining agent (UUP) to
urly Retirement
protect the contractual righ!s of the
In response to a final question about
professional staff in this matter.''
the status of early retirement, he
reminded the Senate that this is
Also approved was a resolution from
the Committee on Undergraduate
a negotiable item with UUP, since it inPrograms to "endorse the report of the
volves changir:-g conditions of employCredit by Evaluation Co'mmittee apment. He expressed concern about how
pointed by the Vice Chancellor for
"age" in itself is discriminatory within
Academic Programs and recommend to
our society and said the University
the Chancellor that the provisions of
"should not be insensitive to a major
fault in our culture."
this report be implemented in the State
University of New York."
(U nanimously defeated was the
Presented just before 1he coOclusion
following resolution the next morning:
11
of the sessions, another resolution "to
8e it resolved, that the University
Faculty Senaje endorse the policy of
reduce our salaries by one per cent durlowering the mandatory retirement age
ing the 1975-76 year to preserve faculty
and staff positions," died for want of a
to 65 with sufficient caveats to allow
second.
meaningful association with the University if desired, and recommend-that the
The next meeting of the SUNY Senate
Chancellor pursue this with the apis sch~u
d for April25-26, at Binghampropriate agenci~."f
ton.
Other Action
In other action, the Senate passed a
resolution "that the University ' Faculty
• Senate recomm·end to the Chancellor
Five UIB faculty members have been
that he direct the campus presidents to:
awarded grants under State Univen;ity's
"(1) Give the faculty and professional
program of awards for the improvement
staff maximum information on the fiscal
of undergraduate education, the Office
crisis, the mandated budget cuts, and the · of th~ Vice President · for Research anguidelines for such cuts; make' that innounced this week.
formation available as soon as it comes
The aim of the program is to en: 1
in' and ~dlitate .the fullest partidpation
courage sCholarly and creative activities
of the students, faculty, and professional
which will lead directly to the improvestaff in decisions on cuts in programs
ment of undergraduate instruction.
.ind staff," and
Those receiving awards for 1975-76
· "(2) That college pr~dents ~onsult
and their project titles are:- Donald
with faculty and professiolllll staff directBlumberg, an, New Course Offerings in
ly involved if program. cuts are being
Photography; Michael Fuda; physics,
considered In their specific areas."
Physics Experiments for Health Science·
The Senate, after considerable discusStudents; Bruce Jackson, English, Afrosion, passed the iollowlng resolution . American Folklore Tapes and Anrelated to the CBTI Issue: .
·
notations; Ann McElroy, anthropology,
" . .. Whereas the CBTE requirement is
Medical Anthropology Course Developan academic mandate im_poSed by the
ment; and D. Thomas Porter, speech,..
State Education Department requiring
communication, Behavioral ObjectiveS •
~peclflc means of e'valuation and trainDevelopment of "&lt;:ommunicat1onu
Ins for teaching c:ompeteftce, and
Theory.

Sa

.

grants

�February 6, 1975

People seen as
keys to adv~nces
in nutrition ·

u/B study of unemploymentt-------'---------'.;:-tfrnm~~l.roi.J)

• With

publication only a few days

microphone in front of people and gel

of the problem beyond the male factory
worker/breadwinner who is laid off."

away, the group is co nsidering ways Of
distributing the article more widely, pa r-

truth," says Frisch. Oral history is much
more complicated than that, still "very

As the collective voice explains in in-

traducing the piece , "Official
[unemployment] figures ... fail to inelude many who are legitimately pa rt of
the unemployed labor force - those
who have exhausted their extended
benefhs, those who ha~e become too
discouraged to fulfill the bureaucratic
definition of 'actively seeking
employment,' those whose jobs were
never covered in the first place, and
those, especially students, women, and
older workers, who can find no place in
rhe labor market and rhus are never
counted as part of the eligible work
force. To these must be added those
who are grossly under-employed, those
who work full time but need another job
to rise above the poverty level, and those
who need work to supplement inadequate pensions."
"We wanted to show the broad picture," Frisch continues, "including the
impact of unemployment on those who
are em ployed but live in fear of losing
thei r jobs and the impact on the families
of the un employed.
Nol i Sl~m Piece
" We also felt a strong responsi bility to
Buffa lo," he says. " We did not want th is
t.O be a slam piece ... we didn't want
people ·Saying 'hoW terrible .it is in Buffalo' as they sat reading the paper ove r
Sunday brunch. We wanted them to
realize that this was a comment on their
own sit uation, th ei r own cities. We
wanled to avoid anything that allowed
readers ro feel supe rio r to the Buffalo
unemployed or to dismiss their comments and analysis as journalistic
pathos."
Interesti ngl y, those who were interviewed expressed ange r and frustration
but did not blame Buffalo for their
problems.
They cited such larger causes for the • unemployment crisis as corporate indifference, collusion betwe~n unions
and managementf the tax structure, and
lack of effective national leadership.
Some did cite what they described as
conservativef self·protective local
government as a contributory cause.
~..Buffalo could · bloom,n one woman
said, "but the wrong people are in
charge."

.....

,.,_...

On publication of the story, the group
. . receive the JJmes' USWII JNyment of

--

- n J; lJI!

"--nm.AMSIUf"IIOMANO
~

...

----AN
_ , r. MAIItlF1'
.,~

IOHN A ClOIJflflt

M"IItiDA llfMO

_ , . Olondoo-DIANE: Q UINN
. Contriburlnl( Artllf

SUSAN M. IURCER

ticularly in the local communily.

mysterio us" and under-explored in spite

" Many of the people who wrote the
article don't read th e Sunday Times ,"

ofitscurre ntpopularity, hesays.
After the story was accepted, a minor
disagreement ove r the title developed.
The Times wanted to call the piece
something like " Down and Out in Buffa lo." The collective felt a title like "Not
Working." {with a su btitle) was more
d ignified and more accurate . Sunday's
paper wi ll tell.

Frisch says. ~·we need to give the article
back to the co mmu riity."
American Studies is also considering
using the experience as the basis for a
process-oriented st ud y of the methods
of oral history
"So me peop le think yo u put a

T -....Ia../,§ pharmacy edU
- Cati•On
c~:d
J •
. ._
dI etermlnlng
• • f ufu re 0 f pro
fesslon
{Jll

;xu
0

health care, then pharmacy educators
mu st intensify their efforts now to
edu cate srude nts for clin ical roles.
He not ed that th e roles pharmacists
plav today are due chiefl y to their being
trained in the 1950's to be co mpounde rs
and dispensers of prescript ions. In those
days, he said, th ere was pract_ically no
instru ction given in human d•sease or
therapeutics.
A Shift in Emphasis Pharmacy's .ed ucational foc us for the
future must be less on drugs as products
and more on drugs as they are used in
tre~tment , Dr. Schwartz told·the AAAS
meeting.
He pointed out that some pharmacy
colleges are already shift ing their
educa tio nal emphasis toward patie nt
care and have set up new professional
programs such as those leadi ng to the
Doctor of Pharmacy degree.
Research inlo gum and dental disease
In so me states, he noted, th is shih in
has led a faculty member of the U/ B
ed ucational d ireCtion has brought about
School of Dentistry to an international
laws requiring pharmacists to ·take on
award.
new responsibilities such as keeping
Dr. ltobert Genco, professor of oral
patient drug records, advising patie nts
biology and diredor of the graduate
on dru g use, and attending refreshe r
program in periodontology (gum disco urses in order to keep theif' licenses
ease}, has been notified he is to receive
to practice.
the aasic Research in Oral Disease
Awa rd given by th e International
fPriclice Cap'
Association for Dental Research .
Prof. Mcleod, seeing what he termed
a " practice ga pu in the year 2000, said
Resea rch on which the award was based
includes o ·r. Genco's work on the basic
that thousands of pharmacists - mainly
phenome non of antibodies in saliva in
those wit h Doctor of Pharmacy degrees
which may lay foundations for a future
- will be qualified to examine patients,
vaccine against dental decay.
prescribe drugs, and manage patients'
Established in 1962, the Award is supcbronic drug therapy. Other pharported by the Proctor &amp; Gamble Co. It is
macists, he said, will continue to confine
given to a researcher under 36 years of
themselves to traditional drug dispen·
age who has made an outstanding consing.
tribution in basic science research in
He also predicted that by the end of
oral science. The Award will be
the 20th century, pharmaceUtical com·
present"!~ at the International Associapanies will pre-JNckage prescription
tion meeting in london, Aprii1G-12.
drugs in ready-to-di~ containe~,
Dr. Genco, who has been on the denalieady labeled for the JNtoent. "The dos- tal faculty here since 1967, is a graduate
pensing process:! he YI!Rtured, "will be
of Canisius College and was graduated
one mainly of computer input cum laude from the U/8 School of Denrecordkeeplng. _third-party JNvment,
tistry. He also holds ihe Ph.D. in
therapeutic checks arid bllances - ani!
microbiology and Immunology from the·
verbat reinforcement of written instrucUniversity of Pennsylvania Graduate
tions."
.
School.
He further pn!!licted that mosl dlsAuthor or co-author of more than 25
pensinll will be done by trained
technologists and technjcgns under
professional papers, he is currendy - ving as advisory editor of lmsupervision.
-munoc6ellllrrry. His professional
Prof. Mcl.eod said that the "practice
memberships lndude the American
gap" he foresees will continue to exAssodation of Immunologists, American . - JNnd because of other "gaps" within
Association of Microbiologists ,
the profession Of phannacy, especially
American Ac.1demy of Periodontology,
· those th.at exist in education and those
In ternational Association of Dental
that exist in the attitudes C1f state licenResearchers, and Sigm_a Xi.
sing boards and pharmacy assoCiations.

What pharmacy practice will be like in
the year 2000 dePends almost e ntirely
on what directions pharmacy education
moves in today. But even then there will
be a wide gap between those pharma cists directly e nga ged in patient care
and those performing the mo re
traditional rol!$:of prescription. disRen sing.
These views of pharmacy's future
were expressed last week at the annual
meeting of the American Association for
the Advancement of Scie nce (AAASl by
Dr. Michael A. Schwartz, dean, and
Assistant Professor Donald C. Mcleod,
both of the U/ B School of Pharmacy.
Dr. Schwartz predicted that if pharmacists at th e turn of the 21st century
are to play a vital professio nal role in

Genco wins award

MOnkeys may be good e~perimenta l
animals for studyipg nutr!tif?nc.._. ~U! . l:&gt;t:·
George Kerr, who liist Week o~ned a
serie of nutritioh lectlires-s·pdnsoredb~
the De pa it ment o·f Biochemistry ,
believes that better insights will come
from people, from the way different
people with different backgrounds look
at food .
" We need to know what people are
thinking and what th ey alread y know (or
think they know) ·about food," the
pediatrician-nutritionist whO heads the
primate center at the Harvard School of
Public Health said. For example, he said,
a recent Harvard study ind icates that
yo un g p-eople ca n be kept in fine
ph ysical shape on lower caloric intakes
than are ca lled for on present-day
cha rt s. And, he pointed out, different
cultures, customs, and beliefs ma y interfere wi th good health.
In his wide-ranging presentation, Dr.
Kerr:
• Traced what we know abou t nu trition back to ancient times, pointing to
Hippocrates' awa re ness that lack of
some foods may ca use important d iseases - the prevalence of smallpox,
scurvy, and the Black Death associated
wit h the Roma n diet, for exa mple.
• Noted th at the scient ific method
itself evolved from a search fo r a sol ution to a nutritional problem, a means to
prevent scurvy.
• Deplored blindness that is caused by
Vi tam in A deficiency, ·noting that a cost
"Of but a d ime a yea r per person co uld
prevent it.
• Said " nut rition education, can not
only be good but ca n ca use a great deal
of damage." As an example. he pointed
to black chi ldren, in whom rickets seem
to be so prevalent. Knowledge of th eir
lactase deficiency has led to eli minatio n
of mi lk from thei r d iet, he said. But, "we
must point out that even a small amount
of it per day will provide the Vitami n D
that is needed ."
• Said that if we are ever going to get
a handle on obesi ty, "we have to st ress
that a fat baby is not always a sign of
healt h," and
• Called coronary anery disease th e
biggest nutritionall y-ca used problem of
today.
Speakers to fo llow in the weekly noon
lectu re series to be he ld Tuesdays
thro ughou t th e semester in Gll Farber
(formerly Capen) Hall will focus on
nutrition and specific diseas.es. (~e
C.lendar for weekly listings.)

OFSAoffers

rural weekend · Foreign stusients who would like ·to
get a glimpse of the rural side of
American life will have a free oppor·
tunity tO do so during the spring recess,
the Office of Foreign Stud'Y't Affa irs
(OFSA) has announced.
Ms. Kathy Breuer, a former OFSA staff
member who is now working in Hume,
New York, is coordinating a cultural exchange program in that community with
OFSA and the Student Assodation's international affairs coordinator. Hume is
a small rural settlement about 50 miles
southeast of Buffalo.
ParticiJNiing UIB foreign students will
spo:nd three days • 11uests of American families in Hume and nearby areas, from , .
Thur&gt;day, March ~3, 10 Su_nday, March
16. •
-.
Planned hlghllshts Include a visit to
the fillmore 11~ $chaiQI.aii{j.an opportuntJY.to slllli ""~'a potludt
dinner and olher~nL
Students a.ted -ao· ~ along
slides, phoropaphS lind cfalb from their
native &lt;XIUftlries aad their ~ cites.
Transportallon will be proVIded by the
international affliis coordinator.
Applications for the three-day
program are now available In OFSA.
Deadline for applyi111 Is FebrWiry 28.
Space is limited, · however, and par·
ticipants will be chosen on a first-come,
first-served basi•, OFSA says.

�February 6, 1975

Rese~rch activity up

'Jewish Free University'.

in first.half of year

~~~~;~~i~~~~~n~~e:ussed.
d*

The University recorded significant in-

creases in sponsored research activities
during the first six months Of fiscal 1975,
Robert C. FitzPatrick .. acting vice presi-

dent for research, reported this week.
. Proposal activitY increased markedly
in the period ending last December 31 ,
H1zpatrick said, and total dollars awarded increased by four per cent over th'e

first six months of the previous fiscal

year. New awards rose by 90 per cent,
the acting vice president indicated, a
fact which " could reflect a coincidental

termination of grants/contracts replaced
by new ones, bul also has \O represent a
very significant start of newly approved
projects."

The nurilber of individual awards in-

creased by 18 per cent over the first half
of the previous fiscal year, Firzpatrick
noted. The fad that total dollars rose by a
much smaller percentage, he indicated,
"results from a fairly consistent reduc·
tion in awards of approximately 15 to 20
per cent below what is requested." This,
he said, represents sponsor management
efforts "to maximize the effectiveness of
new budgets by reducing the size and
scope of projects, particularly continuing
ones, to enable them to retain sufficient
funds to initiate new ones."
Two hundred forty ·eight research
proposals were submitted to prospective
spo nsors during the period under study,
Fitzpatrick's figures indicated, an in·
crease of 17 per cent over the 212 sent
forward in the same' pe riod during "the
previous year. A total of $19.457 million
was requested to fund these proposals,
up from $15.359 in the ea rlier period.
One hundred forty·six grants were
awarded, in the amount of $7,943,338; in
the first six months of the previous year,
123 grants totaling $7,652,314 were
rf."ce ived.
At the end of the six month period,
Fitzpatrick said , University faculty and
staff had 537 proposals with a value of
$64.527 million still outstanding before
prospective sponsors.
Bv types, the awards in the first half of
this year are broken down ·as follows

(with comparable figures for. the first
half of· last year in parentheses) : new
awards, 71 (37); continuations, 30 (44);
renewals, 30 118); supplements, 15 (24).
Approximately 400 grants/contracts
are active on campus at any one time,
Fitzpatrick reported , involving about 250
project directors. Seventy~five project
directors have more than one grant, he
said. Approximately 20 per Ce nt of faculty are directing projects supported by
non-University agencies, the ading vice
president estimated, with perhaps 45 to
55 per ce nt of all facuhy currently active
in some way with these on~going investigations.
Current research activity is distributed
among University units as follows, Fitzpatrick reported : Faculty of Arts and
letters, 1 per cent; Educational Studies,
1 per cent; Engineeri ng and Applied
Sciences, 9.9 per ce nt ; Faculty of Health
Sciences, 54.4 · per cent (subdivided as
follows : Dentistry. 6.5 per cent of the
University total ; Health Related
Professions , 2.8 per ce nt ; Basic
Med icine, 20.5 per cent; Clinical
Medicine, 13.8 per cent; Nursing, 2.8
per cent ; and Pharmacy, 8 per cenl);
law and Jurisprudence, 1 per cent;
Natural Sciences and Mathematics, 17.7
pe r ce nt ; 5ocial Sciences and Administration, &lt;).6 per cent; others, 5.4 per
cent.

program of non-credit courses
with various aspects of Jewish culture
and religion, is offering a roster of 16
courses for the current semester.
Sponsored by the Hillel Foundation at
U/ 8, th e JFU attempts to supplement
formal course work in Jewish studies by
covering areas of Jewish experience
usually overlooked in existing courses
and _by providing an informal setting for
learning.
.
All meetings (except " Elementary
Hebrew") will be held in Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd .
,
The courses being offered are:
Women and Jewish Identity (Judith
Friedler, coordinator), Thursdays at 7:30
p.m., Feb. 13, 20, 27, and March 6.
Included will be : a historical sketch, the
status of women in Jewish law, women
in th e synagogue, the equality of
women in modern Jewish society, and
the role of jewish fern in i st
organizations.
Israel (Samuel Prince, coordinator),
Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m., Feb. 11, 18, 2S,
and March 4. A survey of Israel internally
and its relations with the Jewish world
and the world community.
The Writings of flie Wiesel (Gordon
Kadatz, coordinator), Mondays at 8:30
p.m., Feb. 10, 17, 24, and March 3.
Several of Elie Wiesel's most important
_books as well as the principal themes of

Commencement

schedule set
A.Ceneral Commencement and-10 individual graduation ceremonies are
scheduled for this spri ng, the University
Commencement Committee reported
this week.
General Commencement is set for
Sunday, May 18, at 3 p.m. in Memorial
· Auditorium with President Robert L.
Ketter as principal speaker. 'All University units will participate in this exercise
with the exception of these divisions
which have scheduled individual
programs as follows :
School of Architecture and En•ironmenW Desip, May 16, 8 p.m.,
2917 Main Street.
Foculty of Heolth Sciences:
School of Denlislry, May 18, 8 p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall.
'
School ol Medicine, May 11, 3 p.m.,
Kleinhans.
School of Nunlns, May 11, 2 p.m.,
Kleinhans.
School of Plsonoucy, May 18, 1 p.m.,
lohn Lord Q'B~ian Hall.
School of Hullh aNted l'lofeoolons,
May 17, 8 p.m., Roswell Pork Memorial

Institute.
Sdoool of Hullh Eduaodon, May 17, 3

· p.m., Cl.trlt Hall.

Sdoool of ............... and Ulafary
Slullel, May 11, 2 p.m., John Lord
O'Brian Hall.

...,.,.liCe,

,_.., ·of 1Mr ancl
June II, 7·p.m., Kleinhans.
Sdoool .. M• 1 onl, May 17, 7
p,m_, Klelnhano.
Divisions holding serarate com...-cements will Invite al stuitents beIng granted degrees from their areas,
undergraduate, graduate and
profes$1onal, the Comrnenc:enent Commineesald.
In line with the current budget
squeeze~ there will be only one com·mencement program this year.

h Love and Marriage Jewish Style (Dr. f.
Hofmann, coordinator), Mondays at
8:.30 p.m., . Feb. 10, 17, 24, and March 3.
Discussion of the Jewish view of
marriage, divorce, intermarriage.. abortion, birth control, family purity, and
conversion.
Judaism and the Arts {Elissa Schwartz
&amp; David Cohen, coordinators), Sundays
at 12 noon, Feb. 9, 16, 23, and March 2.
A brunch will be served. The February 9
meeting will be held on the Amherst
Campus, second floor lounge of Red
lacket. Two meetings will be devoted to
Jewish Art and two to Jewish Music.
Radical Zionism (Stuart Shapiro, coordinator), Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m., Feb. 11 ,
18, 25, and March 4. Readings and
discussion of Zionism as a form of
socialism.
Dramatics Workshop !Cherie Garfield,
coordinator}, Sundays at 12 noon, Feb.
9, 16, 23, and March 2. Basics of ading,
pantomime, and improvisation. " The
Jews of Silence," a play by Elie Wiesel ,
will be utilized .
Jewish Cooking (Renee Cohen, coordinator), Thursdays at 7:30p.m., Feb. 13,
20, 27, and March 6. Preparation of
jewish style foods - Challah, Hamanta5hen, Kugel, elJ:.
Jewish Sewing Crafts Uody Burns,
coordinator), Sundays at 12 noon, Feb.
9, 16, 23, and March 2. Talith making,
emb roidering Challah covers ,
crocheting Yarmulkes, etc.
The Game " Diplomacy" !Shimon
Schieber, coordinator), Mondays at 7:30
p.m., Feb. 10, 17, 24, and March 3. A
fascinating .;and intellectually stimulating
game th at uses the map of Europe as a
playing board.
Courses already underway include :
Talmud {Or. J. Hofmann, coordinator) ,
Mondays at 7:30 p.m., from ian . 20 until
May 5; Conversational Hebrew (Rabbi
Ely Braun, coordinator), Tuesdays at 7:30
p.m. from ian. 21 until May S; Elementary Hebrew (Or. J. Hofmann, coordinator}, Wednesda ys at 12 noon in 262
Norton , from Jan . 22 until May 7;
Teachings of the Rabbis (Dr. j. Hofmann, coo rdinator), Fridays at 8 p.m .,
from ian. 17 until May 9; Selected Torah
Readings (Rabbi Ely Braun, coordinator),
Saturdays at 10 a.m., from Jan . 18 unt il
May 10; and Personal Growth Group
(Steven Rush &amp; Janet Frankel, coor·
dinators), Thursdays at 7:30 p.m., from
Jan. 30 for ten weeks.

Buffalo Quartet
performs Saturday
The Buffalo String Quartet, quartet ~ in­
residence at College B, will present an
Evening of Beethoven and Vivaldi.

. "Great books are those that work on
us greatly n.o1 the. ones that make it into
the lists of 'great books,' " English
Department Chairman Leslie Fiedler
told a larse, enthusiastic audience In the
fiBt of the ·"UnNenlty Showcase" lectures 5por1sored by the Alumni Association in conjunction with the Office of
Credit-Fret! Prosrams, Continuing
Eduation, last Wednesday.

The renowned crltk, writer and
teacher, whose enthusiasm for pop
culture continues to pique many distinguished fellow critics, lauded the
democ:ratk Amerian unlvenlty for Its
"mad and beautiful conviction" that
educational institutions shquld teach

everyone everything and compared this

particularly American educational ideal
to that "ec~nally retreating horizon,''
the American West.
Condemning conventional literary
standards as cluslst, moralistic,
hypocritical and simply false, Fiedler
charsed that lherature In the "hlsh..n"
sense has lost Its true "disruplhe and
Dionyslac" value. As a result, students
are looking for these values elsewhere,
even In sudt unlikely places as the
"soaps." De~cribln every Ensllsh
teacher IS I
"Trojan horse "
Fiedler insist on the subvenlve natu~
of art which thrutens aH status quos, Including eoen the ordinary limits o1 the
mind.

Saturday, February 8, in the Katharine
Cornell Drama Theater; Ellicott, at 8
p.m.
lhis will be the third in a series of
concerts by the . young ensemble
presented by College B.
Members of. the Buffalo String
Quartet are: first violinist Benjamin
Hudson, violinist Carol Zeivin, violist
Maureen Gallagher, and cellist Dana
Rusinak. The group is studyins under
the Cleveland Quartet as pan ol the
U/11 Chamber Music TralniiiJ Program.
The Quartet will perform Beechoven'sQuartec In f MI.- Opus 59, No, 2 and
VIvaldi's The Four SNsons.
The members of the Quanec 1;.., in
Peter Porter Quadrangle and participate
in the life of Collep B's reslcleilt61
~mmunlly there. Their ~ are
open to other members of the ColeaeAiso appelring on s.turdly's prosram
will be • string om-rlt '-~"f

violinists nl c.ol Zeavln, Jonathan
ShaHII and Dous1as Cone; vl'ollnlsts (2)

Michael Rosenbloom and Kellco :~
Yamazaki; violists Maureen Gallasher
and Laurie Kennedy; cellist Dina
Rusinalc, and harpsichordist Joseph
Kubera,
Tlclcecs lor the COIIa!fl are $2 pneral
admlulon, S1 studenll. Tlc:bts are ·available 11 the Norton Tlclcec Office,
the College B office, and at the door.

�•_Albany outlines 'freeze' regula~~ns
•

Guidelines on expenditure cutbacks
for the remainder of fiscal 19J:4-75
have been received from the State Divi·
sian of the Budget and circulated to

campuS vice presidents by President
Robert L. Kener.
In circulating the guidelines, Ketter

said that "additional guidance will be
forthcoming, particularly with regard to
employment vacancies. This hopefully
will take the form of telling us how important the filling of a vacancy must be
before Division of the Budget approval

will be granted ...."
Ketter called particular attention to

overtime restrictions and said he was
"unaware" of any proposed implemen-

tation of new progr;;&gt;ms scheduled here
between now and April1, another ite m
banned by the guidelines.
In a letter from Harry K._ Spindler,
SUNY vice chancellor for finance and

business, also included in the guideline
materials, the University was directed to
provide SUNY Central with a status
report on such new programs and on
proposals 11 fo r any substantial acquisi·
tion of equipment" by February 5.
.. Substantial,'r Ketter said, referred to
purchases of ·equipment costing S25,000
or more.
He said the University Business· Office
was taking care of this requirement as
well as a SUNY requirement for " a state·
me'nt of appropriation and cas~ re·
quirements through the end of the fiscal
· year."
The text of the Division of the Budget
guidelines follows :
Rlllns of VKoncies
1. The overall freeze on hiring, other
than for those positions normall y
associated with a change in Administra·
tion, applies to all State jobs, however
funded, for the remainder of 1974-75.
Exceptions will be approved by the Divi·
sian of the Budget only when failur"e to
fill a position would :
a. directly result in reducing the le\lel
... of servlce necessary to protect the
.,.._ health or safety of patients, students, or
~the~ w~ r~t of , th.\'-. ~!a,!!'; o,f ~,l~t~
employees! or of the ~tate's residents;
OR

b. dearly result in the loss or lapse of
federal funds or a loss of other income
to the State; OR
c. cause a breakdown in administration or operations which · cannot .
be remedied by transferring other
qualified staff to the function .
2 The use of temporary services will
be approved only when requests meet
the same criteria outlined above for
· regular appointments.
3. Transfers of empl9yees to vacancies

in other departments and agencies win
be considered in the same manner and
subjected to the same guidelines as appointments from outside.
4. Promotions to vacant positions will
not requ ire Division of the Budget approval but should be made only if required to provide necessary super\lision
a n d g uid ance in the minimum
mainte nan ce of esse ntial Se rvi Ces . .
Promotions made in accordance with
established criteria in approved career
ladder situations ma y also be made
without Divisio n of the Budget approval.
5. Hiring will continue for those
pos.iti ons no rmall y associated with a
change in Administration.
Prior Personnel Commilments
Prospective ca ndidates for State
employment who, prior to January 8,
have both received an offer in writing
and who accepted will be permitted to
be emplOyed as a moral obliga tion of
the State. When written documentatio n
does not exist in such cases the Division
of the Budget Wi ll accept clearly convi ncing alternative proof.
Overtime
. To effectuate the Governor's instruction to " hold the use of overtime to an
absolute mi-nimum'' all departments and
agencies should review their plans for
scheduled overtime and submit new
schedules to the Division Of the Budget
for approva l. Unscheduled overtime is
to be limite d to the p covision of
minimum· coverage in emergency
. situations.
New ~nd Exponded Progr~ms
In his "policy memorandum, the
Governor instructed age ncy heads to
" postpone implementation of new
programs ~ and the expansion of existing programs - which are authorized
by th~ cu rre nt budget, except wtJefe it
is absolute ly esse ntial to maintain the
minimum level of program ~ pe rformance." When a request for the allqcation of funds'1s si'Jbml\ted to the Division of the BJdget, the request should
be accompanied by a wri_tte n explanati6ffaS to hoWlt corifohns·ta 'the'Covernor's instructions.
Contr~cb

a. ManagemE;nt c;onsu,tant contracts
and data proCessing consulting contracts will be sent by the departmen ts
and agencies to the Administrative
Management and Systems Group of the
Division of the Budget for review prior
to execution. After such review, approval by the budget exail.ination unit
head for the agency concerned will be
restricted to those where hard cash
savings will res~ It and the unavaila~ility

of qualified State e mployees to perform
the services can be th o rou g h ly
documented .
b. Contracts related to capital construction projects will continue to requ ire approva l by the Capital F.acilities
and Budgeting Group; Divi~ion of the
Budget, prior to execut io n. Cost considerations, emergency, and the unavailability of q ualified State em ployees
wi ll be governi ng.
c. It is not the intention of the Division of the Budget to monitor specific
acquisition of equipment items but
departments. and ag~ n cies ar~ expected
to cooperate fu ll y and to sto p all equipment purchases unless abso lutely essential to the conduct of State operations.
The examination unit head may request
a status report and plans fo r the
pu rc h ase of e qu ip ment for the
remainder of this fiscal year.
d. Contracts or purchase o~ders clearly esse ntial to the day·to-day operatio ns
of State agencies and prog rams - such
as those for food, fuel. equipment
mai nte nance, clothing, medical and
laboratory suppl ies, printing and other
materials and supplies - will continue
to be processed through normal State
procedures wi thout Division of the
Budget approval. Departments and
agencies are expected to hold year:.end
inventories to a minimum working level.
Appronl by Division of the Budset
Division of the Budget approvals
given under these guidelines will be
granted by deputy directors and/or the
budget examination unit head. Action
wi ll normally be on a case-by.:case basis
but class exceptions will be granted.
when they are in accordance with" the
Governor's policy memorandum.
No agency or institution will be exduded fro m .app licat.ion of these
guidelines in toto. Requests for class exceptions and/or requests for approval to
fill vacancies are to be m~de by lette r:
The original and three copies of such
letters are to be forwarded- to ·the Division of the Budget. If the request is approved,r ~ hree ~opies will .be returned to
the department or agency. The department or agency will be responsible for
seeing that the proper officials in. the
Departments of Audit and Control and
Civil Service and the Office of General
Services receive copies of the approved
request.
- cooper~tion of Sl~le Comptroller, Civil
Service, ~nd Office of Generol Senlces
The Department of Audit and Control, the Departmeg_t of Civil Service,
and the Office of General Services will
~ be cooperating and actively assisting in
the implementation of these guidelines.
In cases requiring Division of the Budget
approval these age!lcies have agreed to
require documentation of such approval
before processing transactiOns.

Credit-free
enro_llment up
Enrollment in the Univefsi ty's credit~
free programs for adults has increased
sharply over last year.
·
As of January 28, lSI? individuals had
signed up for 130 courses being offered
this semester, according to Richard L.
Fleisher, director of the Office for
Credit-Free Programs. liy the same date
a year ago, 686 had registered. ·
Meanwhile, registrations are still being acceptf!d for 49 courses yet to begin.
Courses lo start in February, Mar'!h and.,
April include inStructiOn in i'eal estate,
transactional analysis, investing, yoga,
compute rs, _f p~a n ts, n ost a l"g ia ,
salesmanship, and literatur~.
1
Most courses meet fOr two hours one
eVening a week over periOds of six to
ten week'S, with registration fees
between $30 and $45,
' ·
Fleisher suspects the enrollment increases in a period of recession may be
partially anributed to cutbacks on more
~r~':J.sive leisure time P!J·rsuits~ ~u~ as
The program directo~ believes more
area adults are perceiving credit-free
offerings as inexpensive alternative
-forms of enteUoinment a!ld selfimproVement.

February 6, 1975

Reitan acting as
fNSM provost;
Nancollas resigns
- Dr. Paul H. Reitan, professor of
geological sciences, is acting as provost
of the Faculty of Nat ural Sciences and
Mathematics (FNSM) this semester and
Dr. Gordon M. Harris has temporarily
resumed duties as chairman of the
Department of Chemistry, President
Robert L. Ketter announced this week.
Dr. Reitan, who is also associate
provost of FNSM, was named acting
provost through June 30, a period during
which Provost Geoflite H. Nancollas will
be - on leave . At Reporter deaaline,
however, President Ketter announced
his reludant accepta nce of Dr. Nancallas' resignatio n as provost, effective
August 31. Dr. Nancollas will return fullti me to teachin g and research duties. In a
letter to Nancollas, the President expressed both " personal and institutional
appreciat ion for the energy and-though t
which yo u have contributed so unselfishl y to the development of the
faculty. . .. Your leadership ... has ea rned you the hi gh respect, not only of
faculty and students in your own area,
but of administrative colleagues
throughout the institution," Ketter said.
Dr. Harris wi ll be acting Chemistry
chairman throu gh June 13 wh ile Chairman ·Stanley Bruckenstein is on sa bbatical leave.

New parish for
Catho&amp;c.students
' The Catholic Campus Mini;try at U/ B
has become part of a personal parish for
college and uni ve rsit y st ud en ts
throughout the Diocese of Buffalo.
Bishop Edward D. Head of Buffalo has
i~s u ed a -res~r ip t declaring the formal ion,
of this new Parish for Campus Ministry
throu gho ut the Diocese effecti ve
February 1. Father E.Qw~rd Fis_h_e r, qne of
the campus ministers at U/ 8, has been
named episcopalwicar of the new unit .
Almost all the colleges in the eightcounty area of the Buffalo Diocese are
associated with Fr. Fisher in the program.
Membership in the campus parish is
voluntary. Eligible are ~ II registered full
or part ~ tir:ne stud ents at the University
or colleges to which a chaplain is assigned,·-their spouses, dependent children,
and those who live as part of their
h o~es. This includes Catholic spouses of
non-Catholic students. Also eligible are
Catholics who are full or part-time
members of the faculty, administration,
staff, or other employees of the University
or colleges, their dependent children,
and their households as well as Catholic
spouses of non-Catholic personnel.
In the case of faculty, administration,
and staff, Father Fisher points out,
registration is required " by which the
parishioner ..S.iillifies his or her desire for
membership and assumes his duties,
obligations, and responsibilities, spiritual
and temporal membership."
father Fisher says the new unit hopes
to provide a fuller program of service to
those who are affiliated with it. It has
been given the authority to perform baptisms and marriages for its members, he
indicates.

Women's meeting

-

Helen HedriCk, regional coordinator,
New York State National Organization
for Women, will be .the speaker at a
noon meeting of the Women's Council
of SUNY/Buffalo toc!ay in.233 f!lorton.~ .
Ms. Hedrick, also assistant director af
the ca_mpus Office of Equal Opportuni~
ty, requesJs thin women come .j&gt;repared
to ask questions and enter lntQ:disc,us-·
siqn of , feminist Issue$.. Of,:;~~~~niculw.
concern, she s_ays, ·wilL be, lqisloti~)la1~
affecting· women thot
be jnt~uced.~
at botH State ,a!'d ,natio~l. lev,els this
year.
•
, . .
.
She will answer questions and discuss
pending legislation in c"ild core,
marriage ind divorce, insUrance discrimination, dan actions, the equal
rights amendment, jury - duty, etc., as
time permits.
.
All campus women are invited to. attend.

will

�Feb~uary 6, 1975

..

I

II&amp;

7

N.ew food director planning innovations
U/8 students on contract board service will soon be able to select as much
as they want from among seven hems
on a salad buffet that promises to be as
appetizing as anything served up by the
Turgeon Brothers.

And a dessert buffet will not be far
behind.
The innovations are the idea of new
FSA food Service director Donald ).

Calendar(from r»~f!l, col. 4)

the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of material. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday~Friday, 9 a.m.-S
p.m. Continuing.
VISUAl ARTS EXHIBIT
.(
People , photographs by Mickey
Osterreicher. Hayes Hall Lobby, th rough Feb.
28, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Presented by the Office of Cultural AffaiB.

NOTICES

Hosie who recently assumed command

of the campus' sprawling (13 building
locations and 19 service areas) foOd
operalions. .

AMERICAN CONTEMPOI\AR_Y THEATRE .

The American Conterrip6rary Theatre is
offering workshops entitled Primary Te&lt;;hniques for Creative Work and rai Chi Ch'uan
Wu St yl e. ·For information on the

Hosie, who came to the University
after 11 years in ins·titutional food service at midwestern colleges and univer-

workshops, call

975~.5825 .

sities and four years as controller at the

Feh. 10.

University of Wisconsin at Steveris Point,

CRIDIT-FREt COURSES

A variety of courses are scheduled for the
Spring semester, incl uding Sl.!Ch topics as arts
and crafts, journalism, counseling, computers, engineering, government, music and
theatre, photography, real estate, psychology,
sports, women's studies, writing, and many
others. For a brochure detailing the courses
offered or for registration information, contact the Division of Continuing Education,
Hayes A, Rm. 3, Main Street Campus, 831-

believes the buffet approach has merit
on several counts. Self-service tends to
eliminate 80 per ce nt of student ~m­

plaints about 1he variety and qualit of
food, he has found. It iu..an easil instituted means of making improvements
in 'the way food is presented (a consideration Hosie feels is of prime importance} . It goes a long way toward
eliminating annoying, slow lines (diners
will have . to queue only for entrees,
vegetables and. beveragei) . And it
eliminates waste - provided that
studen ts aduaiiY ta ke only as much as
they will eat.
'Won'l Work HHel'
Hosie says he has been told that the
buffet 'concept won 't work here - particularly in terms of desserts. Too much
food will "walk out" to friends and
roommates who are not on board contracts, he has been advised. But he Was
also warned before arriVing thai
students here are "more difficult" than
those he has been used to in the
midwest - something which "hasn't
been true" so far. " U/ B students respond favorably to service designed to
meet thei r needs just like any other
group," he says. And he predicts that's
how th ey'll react to the buffeis. If there
is abuse, "we can always go 'back to the
old type of serVice."
·
The buffets, which are being introduced one step at a time starting with
Amherst, will provide-a needed change
in climate in the dining rooms, Hosie
says. It is common, he indicates, for
students to feel that institulional food
gets worse as the year goes along. " But
it's not the food, they just get bored
with the atmosphere." His remedy is
what he calls "refined service." In addi·tion to the buffets, he hopes to institute
"monotony breakers." At Stevens Point,
these included such special touches as
building a Baked Alaska in view of
students and then browning it with blow
torches.
Hosie's emphasis on contract food
service stems from the realization that
this is the largest potential market for
F.SA food service. Right now, he says,
"we aren't serving as many contract
students as we coUld." Students react to
peer pressure, and the current "party
line" is ' 4 beware the contract food ." He
wants to turn things around by creating
a setting in which "students can't afford
not to take contract service."
lmp;ovements can be made, Hosie
believes, because the contract service as opposed to cash operotions - has a
fixed food dollar budget within which to
operite. Because operations are nonprofit, the plusses of savings, efficiencies
and greater volume can all be channel- '
ed toward bener food, a sreater variety
of ll)enus, and more innovative presentation . .

5tHins ....... Themtelwes
On this point, the new food service
director has found that many students
erroneously believe that food
operations are subsidized by the State,
that when they carry away food and/or
si'-ware, they're punlns one over on .
the Albany bureaucracy. The truth is, he
emphulzes, that they're steallns from
themselves. The $19,000 that food service rec:ently spent to replaoe pilfered
sn-re. for example, was $19,000 less
that could be spent ro improve meals
and .moe.
Holle's Ideas for Innovations are not a
crlddsm 01 fOod operations • they now
exhl. Former food .moe director ~- -

Workshops begin

430t.
FACULTY-STAFF SWIMMING

Hours for faculty and staff swimming are 12
p.m. each Friday. Clark Hall pool.
GRADUATI STUDENT COUNSELING
john E. Fobes, deputy diredor general of
UNESCO, will talk with graduate students in~
terest e d in ca·reers in international
organizations on Monday, Feb. 10; 9:30a.m.
in the Porter Quad (Rm. 349), Ellicott
Complex.
GSA GRANT SUI'I'ORT
Graduate student applications for grant
support are available in the GSA office, 205
Norton. Application may be made for up to
$250; the deadline is Feb. 10. For information,
call 831-5505.
tNTIR-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEUOWSHIP
Bible ) ludy groups and workshops covering
a variety_of Bible topics are open to anyone
interested. For more specific information,
check the bulletin board outside 260 Norton.
UFE WORKSHOPS
noon ~ 2

'"'

mond Becker, who moved o n to a larger
unit at the University of Delaware, left
behind a competent and cooperalive
staff which a~well to new directions, Hosie says. The food here is good,
he finds, and is served in heftier portions than at many other colleges and
universities. Space is a major shortcoming, he admits, especiall y for cash
food lines. Cramped quarters and labor
are, in fact, the two biggest obstacles he
foresees on the path toward upgrading
" presentation." Right now, he indicates,
"we just can' r afford the additional labor
necessary for that goal."
The labor situation was the first
problem Hosie had to face on arriving.
The second semester, he indicates, is
one of budget crunch for food services
everywhere: the number of contrad
students typically falls, leaving an excess
of help. Cutbacks aren't pleasant "but
we have to operate within our means,"
he says. The majority of necessary cuts
have already been made, he reports,
and anrition will be used for further
paring.
Surprisingly, Hosie points oul, the
normal spring cutback in help is
currently the only area in which food
service is experiencing a budget
squeeze. Despite continuing inflation,
food costs as a percentage of sales have
not risen over last year. Prices were-raised at the beginning of this year to meet
anticipated cost escalation and these
projections t'O date are "right on target."
The trick, he says, will be to maintain
the desired cost ratio for the rest of this
semester as prices continue upward.
Food service allocates 47 per cent of its
total income for "raw product;" thirtynine per cent is earmarked for labor;
and the balance, for overhead - equipment replacement, resupplying china
and silver, etc.

Earlier C.reer
Hosie . began his career with ARA
Slater School and Co)lege Services at
Ohio Wesleyan in 1959 and later moved

Hosit- in offtc~t in Goody~t.u bawnwnt. •

to Ohio Northern with the same compan y. He wa s a regional director and
unive rsit y food service director for Ace
Hosts of Wisconsin from 1966 to 1970. In
th is positio n, which brought him to the
Uni versity of WisconSin at Stevens Point,
he wa s ·responsible for a commercial
resta ura nt , an e mployee food service at
Employe rs Insurance of Wausau, an industrial food service (American Can),
and the Unive rsity's food service (three
dinin g are as serving 4,200 students, a
fa c u~t,v -staff dining room ~and a catering
se rv•ce). In 1970, lle joined the Universi ty as its controller. He holds the B.A. in
botel a dministration from Michigan
State and an M.B.A. from Bowling
Green Sta te University (Ohio) and has
b eg un a doctoral program at the
Unive rsity of Wisconsin, Madison.
His decision to renounce financia l admini stration for food service wo rk,
Hosi e says, was based on the fact that in
his role as a business offiCer, he missed
the contacts with young, dynamic people which he had ~njoyed in his former
assignments. His choice of U/8 as an
arena in which to renew these CORtacts
was based in pan on the fact that his
youth was spent in East A~a .
Hosie's job here involves Clirection of
board contract feeding, cash cafeterias,
the Faculty Club, the Tiffin Room, snack
bars , catering services, alcoholic
beverage license sales, and over 400
vending machines, as well as responsibility "for 450 employees, 8,000 daily
custqmers, annual sales in excess of $2.5
million and a multi-million dollar commi ssary now under cOnstruction.
"I left food service," he indicates, "in
order to avoid the headaches of
operational problems. Now, however, 1
see . tho"' same problems as opportunities which I thoroughly enjoy."
That there will be plenty of such " op~ portur_tities" in his wide-ranging duties
here rs a proposition with which few
would argue.

Students voting on ~ory fees ·
U/B students are votlns this ,;.eek on
whether or not to retain the annual $67
mandatory student activity lee.
In a referendum scheduled for
February 5 throush 7, students are being
asked to choose between the current
mandatory fee or an activity fee that
would be administered on a voluntary
basis. State University of New York Board
of Trustees suldelines stipulate that a
referendum on this question must be
held every four yors.

The revenue from the mandatory fee Is
used to finance the Student Auoclation,
which "'·tum allocates money to IIUdent

dubs, special interest organizations and
Sub-Board,
Sub-Board Is responsible for linandns
intercollqiate ·athletics and lnt1111mul"ills,
student publications and other sroups
utilizins "Norton Hall. The specific
allocations are deternilned by the Student Assembly durins Its annual budset
hearings.
r •
•
Currently, the $67 fee must be paid
&lt;lirectly to the bursar's office, and Is
reprded as a Uniftnlty expense. In the
caw of a voluntary lee, payment would
be at the student's option, bul only those
paylns the fee would be able to par~ In-~ . .

life Workshops are organiz.ed to p.-ovlde

small groups in which people an shve interests, skills, ideas and learning experiences
outside the classroom. The workshops are
open to all members of the University community, their spouses, and alumni. There is
no admission charge, and the workshops
cover a large variety of subjects. For information and registration, 831-4630.
NORTON HAU HOURS
Norton Hall building hours for the spring
semester are: Monday-Thursday: . 7 a.m.-12
midnight; Friday: 7 a.m.-1 a.m.; ~ turd ay : 8
a.m.-1 a.m.; Sunday: 12 noon-12 midnight.
OffiCE OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS •
HOURS

The Office of Admissions and Records will
be open February 6 and 7 from 8:30 a.m. to
8:30 p.m. The office will be open Feb. 10-13
from 8:30 a,.m. ro 7 p.m.
TAX ADVISORY SBVICE
The Office of Foreign Student Affairs is
again offering a tax advisory 5ervice for
foreign scholairs and students. laiw students
Bruce Steiner and Alan Straun wilt be
ovoiloble 10-12 hours P,er week at the Fo~gn
Student Office. The service rum from Feb. l-

Aprii 11, Mondoy ond Wednescloy from 2-5
p.m. Call831-3828 for an .appointment.

INTERVIEWS
ON-cAMPUS INTIIIVIEWS
The stoff of the University Plocement ond
Career 'Guidance OHice 'Yelcomes .a.ll
· students in the University community and
alumni to take p.art In v.a.rlous c.a.reer
progroms ofmed this year. The on-ampus
interviewins prosram, runnlns from Jan. aApril 25, offers the opportunity for lndiviclual
· interviews with educ.a.tion, business, industriol and _.,....mental repreoentatlves.
C.ndldotes frqm all depee levels 11e Invited
to toke port In the lnterviewi.,.. Reptrotlon
forms ue ...noble In Hayes Annex C. 11m"_ 6.
The foflowlns apnc~es will be lnteMewlns
this wee!&lt;:
THURSDAY-6: Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber
Co.; Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Penn Central
Tro.._ution.
FRIDAY-7: Bendix Corp.; C.pital Aro
- n e l ; Whhernotor Corp.
MONDAY-10: Firestone nre &amp; Rubber
Co.; lnsuronc:e Servke Office.
TUESDAY-11: U.S. Getwo1 Aaoulllinl
Johmon Controls Inc-; Goodyeir Tire

C?f!ic:e;

t..;o. ·

•

· WlONESOAY-12: G-T.L ~ Inc.;
~ Dlv.--..rCorp:; AlstMe ' - - "

-

�February 6, 1975

#&lt;

THURSDAY~

AHIMALRICHili CLUI MEE11NC•
Anyone interHted in the welfare of
animills is welcome. 264 Norton, 2:3()..4 p.m.
If you annot attend the meetins, but are i n~
terested, coli 831-2259.

WB'IHN-YOIIK
COUICiE PBSONNa ASSOCIATION

WWIRCONBlNCEI

Enrollmenll'rojections •nd Their-Effect on

MA5TBI ClASS sau:s•
}ames Buswell, violinist with the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orcheslra , appears. Baird
Recital Hall, 3 p.m. No admission charse.
Pt(ILOSOI'HY SEMINARf
A. Phenomenology of Multistable Perception, PrOfessor Don lhde, SUNY/Stony Brook.
Rm . 1-4, -4244 Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.

Colleges •nd Universities, Dr. William Fuller,
assistant commissioner for higher education
plannins, New Yo rk State Education Depart·
ment. A panel of Joal college and university
~ Onduding UIB President Robert L.
Ketter) will respond to Dr. Fuller's rem.trks.
Rosary Hill College. For further information,

contact Mr. Robert Lukie, 831 -2100.

CONIINUING DENTAl BJUCATION

CIVIL ENCINEERINC WATR USOURCfS
AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENCINEERINC
SEMINARf
•
Geochemistry of Creo1t Lakes Sediments,
Julian D. H. Williams, Canada Center for
Inland Waters. 1-42 Parker, refreshments serv~
ed at 3:50p.m., followed by the seminar.
WOMEN'S IOWUNC'
UIB V$. Penn Stare. Norton Union, -4 p.m .
No admission charge.

5IMINAIII

DenUI Photography as an Aid in Daily
Practice, Dr. Bruno kielich. 148 Farber (Ca·
pen), 9 a.m ..... :lO p.m.
.
For resistration information, call the School
of Dentislry, 1131-2836.

DEPARTMENT Of PmtATIIICS SEMINARf

.J

o!;u:i",c!,?~~s. ~r.af~phM:~~sc:!::

Division of Developmental Pharmacology.
Second floor boird room, Children's
Hospital, 12 noon.
U/1 WOMEN'S COUNCIL MEETINC'
H~n Hedrick,' regional coordinator, New
York State N.Jtioniil Organization for Women,
will discuss feminist issues and legislative bills

CACFilM' '
Cabaret. 1&lt;40 Farber (Capen), 7:-45 and 10:15
p.m. Adm ission: Sl .
FILMS'
Films by the Du tch Filmmakers'
Cooperati ve will be shown . 70 Acheson, 8
p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Center for Media Study.
FILM'
'
Memories of Underdevelopment, a Cubanmade feature film. Allentown Community
Center, Elmwood and Allen, 8 p.m. Adm tssion : Sl .
Presented by rhe Committee for Chilean
Democracy and American Studies.

concerning women. 233 Norton Union, 12

noon.
MECHANICAL ENCINEERINC lECTURfl

Turbulent Combustion and Fire Research,
John DeRis, Factory Mutual fire Insurance
Co. 112 Porker, 3:15p.m.
MAntfMATICS COUOQUIUMf
Euler's Equation, Dr. Maurice Craig, U/ B
visiting assistanl professor. Rm . 38, 4246 Ridge
Lea,_coffee at 3:30, colloquium at -4 p.m.

HluR HOUSE'
Shabbat Service at ·8 p.m., follo.wed by a
Torah study session and Oneg Shabbat. 40
Capen Blvd.

COUOQUIUMf
Critial Phenomena and Fluctuations in 3and 2~·Dimensional Systems, Professor Gilbert
Hawkins, Un iversity of California at Berkeley.
111 Hochsteher, 3:30p.m.

CONTEMPORARY BLACK JAZZ
WEEICfND•
The works of two University composers,
Frank Fosrer and Milton Marsh, wi ll be performed by a big band . Baird Recital Hall, 8:30
p.m. Admission: $1 .
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs,
Office of Minority Students, Department of
Bla ck Studi es, Department of Music ,
Grosvenor Society and the Buffalo and Erie
County Public Library. -

SIJIIVD' IIBEAIICH CENTBl SEMINARf
A Predictive Model for jury Selection, Joe l
Rose and John Welte. B-52, -4230 Ridge Lea,
3:30p.m.

--otaiSilAN

FBJ.owgw&gt; DI5CUSSION'
Communiation and Sharing is the title of
the session. Norton Union (for exact room
loation, check the bulletin board ou tside
260 Nonon), 4 p.m.

PHAIIMACiliTICS SEMINARf
G.amm.l Hydroxybutyrate:

...-·

A

UUABFILM"
Free Woman . Norton Conference Theatre,
calf 831~5116 for times. Admission charge.
IRCALM ..
American Graffiti. Times and locations are
posted one week in advance on residence
hall bulletin boards. Free to IRC fee-payers;
admission charge for others.

Porenrial

Anti·Partinsonian Agent, John Lenieri, U/8

grMI~te

student. D 170 Bell Facility, 4 p.m.

~. ~';~.1~0C~~~iS:!:~e;~~~."

1-47

Presented by the Region•! Film Project.

._..

SATURDAY-S

"Dn&gt;p-Jn" nisht. 40 C.pen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
CONIINUINC MEDICAl. BJUCAnoN

Hll.I.Q. HOUSE•
Morning Sabbath service at 10 a.m., followed by a kiddush and Torah study session. -40
Capen Blvd.

CAIIDIAC CUNICt
This teries of dinics in physical examina ~
tion of the ardlx p.iltient and arrhythmia
wo&lt;bhops are scheduled each Thund•y
evenins throush May 8. The topic of
tonJshl's clinic Is The {ugul.Jr Pulse. F•rber
(Copen) Hollllosement, Robm G-22, 7:30-9:30
p.m. for information or rqistration, all the
School of Medicine, 831-5526.
_ Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

-

A film series entkled Clvilizotion Is . being
shown each Thursday nisht. Ton ight's
episode lo Min the Meosure of All Things.
1711 Milord Fillmore Aademlc Core; Ellicott

Compleo,. p.m.
---.w~ .

flnl - \llncenl ~'rice stves • lecture enddod "The Vllllns Sclll Pursue Me," spon--.1 by che Sludent A55oclotion Speakers
......._ a..t HoD, a p.m.
IKfiiM"O
~n Gnlffltl. Goodyear aleterl•,
10:Je_p.m. free 1D IRC fee-poyen; odmission ·
clwJefarCIIhen.

UUMfiiM"O
Mlbmln. Nonoo! Conlerenao Thealre,
CIIIJ1-5117for -~ charse·

CONTEMJ'OIIAIIY ILACK JAZZ
WEHfNI)O

-

A jazz ensemble wilL present a mini. concert. Apollo Theatre, 1l46.Jefferson Ave.,
11 a.m. No a~mission charge.

MEN'S RNCINC•
UI B "'· HOO.rt College. Clark Hall, 1 p.m.
No admission charge.

VARSITY WRI5TUNC'
·

U/8 "'· U. of Cue/ph. Clarke Holl; 2 p.m. No
admission charge.
·

-

CONTEMJ'OIIAIIY ILACK JAZZ
Franlc fQster and Milton Marsh will per·
form with a nine-piece band. Buffalo and Erie
County Public Library, 3 p.m. No idmission

m.,...

lUNAa- YIAII f1511\1Al

The LuMi New Year Festival will (eillure a
Vietnamese dinner, a variety show of songs, "
skits, •nd-donces, a fashion show and o dis-

play of arts and crahs. Trin!ty United
Methodisl Church, n1 Nlopr•. Folls B(Yd.,
-6:30 p.m. Admission: Sl students, $1.50

:~=~=public. R~tiom "'"Y.
5ponocioed by the lnlernotlonof Studenr
~and

the Vietnamese Club.

MIN'S VAIIIIIY JAIIIBAU•
UIB .,, Younptown Store. Memorial

Audlrorlum. 6::111 p.m. Adrnlsslon charse.

RLM• .
..
Memories of Underdevelopmenr, a Luban~
made feature (ilm. 146 Diefendorf, 7:30 &lt;~nd
9:30p.m. Admission : $1.
Presented by the Committee for Chilean
DemocrKy and American Studies.

VARSITY HOCKEY'
U/8 vs. A.. I. C. Holiday Twin Rinks, 3-465
Broadway, 7:30 p.m. Students may pick up
free tickets in the Clark Hall Ticket QJfice
before the night of the game; S2 general
publ~c. .
CACRlM••
C&lt;~ba rer. 1-40 Farber (Capen), 7:-45 and 10:15
p.m. Admission: S1.
BUFFALO STRINC QUARID CONCERT'
A.n Evening of Beethoven and Vivaldi.
kat harine Cornell Drama Theat re, Ellicott, 8
p.m . Admission charge.
Presented by College B.

IRCPARTY"
A beer blast fea turing e n; eftainment by Big
Whee lie and the Hut:icaps. Goodyear
cafeteria, 10 p.m . AdmisSion charge.
UUAI FILM••
Cries &amp; Whispers (Bergman). Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831~511 7 for times .
Admission charge.

SUNDAY-9

noon . Bring your lunch.

FILM'
Three Penny Opera (Pabst). 146 Diefendorf,
5 and 7 p.m. No admission chuge.

FILM•
The MaRnificent A.mbersons (Welles; 1942).
147 Diefendorf, 7 p .m. No admission ch arge.

UUAI
CASSAVETTES FILM FESTIVAL"
..A Child is Waiting (1963), 7:30 p.m., and
Shadows (1960), 9 :20 p.m. 170 MFAC, Ellicott.
No admission charge.
RAND CHAIR LECTURE SERIES'
Reorienration of World's .A.d vanced
Productive Capability from a Kiltingry to a
Uvingry Priority. R. Buckminster Fuller,
design scientist. First floor lecture area,
School of Architecture and Environme ntal
Design, 2917 Main, 8 p .m.

WEDNESDA Y-12
CURRENT INTIRNATIONALISSUES
PANEl'
The Relationship Between Foreign and
.A.merican SrudeniS o n the UI B Campus. 334
Norton, 3~5 p .m. Future pane ls are schedu led
on alternate Wednesdays; for more i n fo rma~
tion, call 831 ~3828.

v AIQ CLUB l'tfYSIOLOCY SfMINARJ
Lightweight Swimm e r s, Or . David
108 Shen:1an, -4:30p.m.

Pe n deq;~ast.

CONTEMPORARY BLACK JAZZ
WRIC.END•
A jam session condudes the weekend. Port
East, 950 East Ferry Street, 1 a.m.

HillEL HOUSE'
.
There will be a bru nch sponsored by Hille l
House in the second fl oor lounge of the Red
Jacket Q uad in Ellicott and also a brunch at
Hillel HQuse, -40 Capen Blvd. Both are at 12
noon .
HILLEL HOUSE•
The Hillel Grad Club will hold a Casino
Nite. Guests are asked to bring a wrapped
" Grab Bag" gift . 40 Capen Blvd., 4 p.m. Admission: S1 .
VARSITY HOCKEY•
UIB vs. New Have n. Holiday Twin Rinks,
3465 Broadway, 7:30 p.m. Students may pick
up free tickets in the Cla rk Hall Ticket O ffice
before the night of the game; $2 general
public.

UUAIFilM ..
Cries &amp; Whispers (Berg man) . Norton
Conference Theat re , call 831-5117 for times.
Adm ission cha rge.

MONDAY-10
SEMINARI
Th e UN Svstem cmd the lnternariOnal
Economic and Social Order, John E. Fobes,
deputy d irector general of UNESCO. 201
Ha yes, 3 p.m.

ENCUSH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Grapes of Wrarh {ford). 140 Farber (C&lt;iipen), 3 and 9 p.m. No admission charge.
fiLM••
Native L&lt;~nd (Strand and Hurwitz). 147
Diefendorf, 7 p .m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Regional Film Project .
UUAI FRENCH FILM SHIES"
Bizarre, Bizarre (Carne, 193n. 146 Diefen~
dorf, 7 P·":t· No admission charge.
WOMEN'S IASKERAll'
U/8 vs. Qnisius. Clirk Hall, 7 p .m. No ad~
mission charge.
WOMEN'S SWIMMINC'
U/ 8 vs. St. Bonilventure. Clark Pool, 7 p.m.
No admission chuge.
FILM'
Home Sweet HOme (Griffith, 1914) and
Judirh of Bethuli• (Griffith, 1914). 711 Acheson,
7:30p.m. No ~mission Charge. ...
·
FILM'
Ballet Mechanique .(Leger, 1924) ." 5
Acheson, 7::45 p.m. No odmiuion ChorJe.
Mf.( IIECITAl•

~.zzo--sc)prano Patrida OreskoWc ~r·

forms. S.lrd Recital H.JII, 8 p.m. No odmiuion

m.'ll•·

TUESDAY-11
NUnmONucnla_.

Nurritlon oi.d _ , Dewlopment, Dr.
GuUienno Herrero. G-22 fuber (Copen), 12

MEN'S JUNIOR VARSITY IASKETIIALL•
UI B v.~- Bryant &amp; Stratton. Clark Hall, 6:30
p.m. No admission charge.
MEN'S SWIMMINC'
UI B vs. Fredonia State. Cla rk Pool , 7 :30
p .m. No admission charge.

UUAI
CASSA VIT1l5 FILM FESTIVAL"
A. Child is WaitinR (1963), 7:30 p.m., and
Shadows (1960), 9:20p.m. 140 Far ber (Capen) .
No admission charge.
MEN'S VARSITY 8ASKETBAll'
UI B vs. Armstrong State. Clark Hall, 8:30
p.m . St udents with 10 ca rds ad mitted free; $2
general public.
FILM•
The Long Voya,R€' Home (ford, 1940).
Ache§on, 9 p .m . No admission ch&lt;~rg e .

THURSDAY-13
DfPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICS
SEMINARf
Chymorrypsin - Drug .Reactiom, Steven
Fries, U/ 8 graduate student, 0~170 Bell Facility. 4p.m.

CEll AND MOlfCULAR BIOLOCY AND
CHEMISTIIY Of IIOLOCICAL SYSTEMS
LECTURE SBIESf
Bicarbonate Activation .of Mitqchondrial
A TP~ase: Some New Regulatory Aspects of
Carbamyl Phosphate Metabolism, Dr. Santiago Grisolia, distinguished professor of
biochemiStry, University of kilnsas. ·134
Health Sciences, -4 :15p.m.
•

RLM••
Zero de Conduite (Vigo) . 1-47 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Regional Film Project.

WOMEN'S SWIMMING'
UIB vs. Rochesrer. Clark Pool, 7 p.m. No
admission charge.
HIUB..-JSP

" Drop-In" nisf&gt;r. 40C.pen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
I'HYSICAl-cJIIGANIC CltEMISlliY

I.ECTUU.SIIIIISf

Reactions of Small Ring Compounds,

Professor kenneth Wiberg. Yale University.
362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
·
Sponsored by the Groduate School.
·

, UUAI

CASSAVIT115 FilM fBTIV.U••
foce&lt; (c.....ettes). Norton Conferen&lt;:l!
Theatre, call 831·5117 for limes. Admission

. dlo'll•·

.

:nt-

EXHIBITS

CAI.I.BY
Offser Ripoff 1o the tide of this rraveOns e•hibit from the Visual 5ludieo Worishop In

Rochester. A variely of media .., Included In
this multiples exhibit, with each work
reproduced liD times. Area artists are invlied
toparticiP.ate.
For Information, contact Gallery · 219
throush the UUAB office, 831-5112. The exhibit runs lhroush feb. 21. Hoirn: Mon...frl.,
11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Mon., Wed, alii! Thurs., 7-10
p.m.; Sun.; 1-5 p.m. Second floor, Norton.
LOawQOO EXHIIIT
~llsh Collection, e xhiblllon culled from
(rum ro p.Rf! 7, col.

4,

�the dorian
quintet
people
compil~d

by the office of cultural affairs
as a service to the university community

Mickey Osterrelcber, whose pbotoerapbs are Ceatlln!d In this exhibit, came
-to Buffalo Crom the Bronx In 1969 to

earn his B.S. In photojournalism at the
Unl-.enlty. DlllinC his freshman year be
took his r.nt pictures with a 35mm
camera. He worked for The Spectrum
first u a pbotoerapber and eventually as
the paper's photoerapb editor. During
this time, Mickey also found time to do
stringer work· for the Asiociated Press In
Buffalo.
The title "People" is a natural choice
for the exhibit. Mlckey'slubjects may he
as immediately recognizable u Sinatra or
as anonymous as the man on the street.
He bas captlln!d them in many moods,
during varying experiences.
"A photojournalist Is a very Intrusive
person. I like to be able to move In and
out of situations without disturbing the
people involved, yet at the same time
come away with an accurate representation of the event. This is perhaps the
most challenging aspect of the professioti," Osterrelcher says.
"Working for a daily newspaper I
know the space allotted for my photoerapbs will he limited. With this fact in
mind, I view each situation as a single
frame that will convey to the viewer_ a
strong sense of the event taking place.••
The pbotoerapbs in this exhibit were
made with Nikon cameras and lenses
using Tri-X film. A number of them have
appeared in the Buffalo Courier-Express
where Mickey bas been employed as a
staff photoerapher since January, 1973.
The exhibit, presented by the omce
of Cultural Affairs, Is on display in lhyes
lhll Lobby through February.

Ull Offia

of Cult\ltll ""'""......,a

I

-cierYoF.,.., .. , ....._.,_ .,...).,tiiKkGance

..n.ccOIKII:---."

--Acol~GW., o-v,uiw

__

---- ~~dlflcto -c:onleompor...,

'"'"
.... - .... ....s~ ­
-OonMC:~~Yorflf'lrnN

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

......

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

••• QerWIF....... ....

~...,

~ClhenOgr .......

..__.....__....., __
.......__~....., . ­

-"-~- -.rortn....

.

_,

~-

W

The Bottom

Of The
Bucket

BUT

about life
vvorkshops
Life Workshops Are organized to
provide small groups in Which people can
share interests, skills, ideas and learning
experiences outside the classroom. The
workshops are open to all members of tbe
University community (faculty, students,
staff), their spouses, and alumni. They are
voluntary on the part o( the leaders, and
free to participants.
Registration and Information: Registration is necessary because most workshops satisfactorily accommndate only a
limited number of people; it may he done
in person or by phone. You may register
for any of the workshops at the two
following locations:
Life Workshops, 223 Norton lhll,
831-4630/1, 8 :30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. or
Division of Student Affairs, 173 MFACC,
Ellicott, 636-2348, 1:00 p.m. - 5 :00 p.m.

The Dorian Quintet returna-to Buffalo
on March 4 for a two~y reoldeacy Including workshops and a Cull concert
·
performance.
Long-time Cawrites of area audiences,
tbla ensemble Includes Karl Kraber, flute;
Cbarles Kusldn, oboe; Jerry Kirkbride,
clarinet; Jane Taylor, baaoon, and Jl¥ry
Benpmln, French born.
The concert on Wedneaday, Mardi 5,
at 8:30 p.m. In Kleinhans' Mary Seaton
Room will Include Badl's "Goldberg
Variations" arranged by Henry Brant,
"cave of the Wlnda" by Luku F011, and
"Ten Pieces Cor Wind Quintet" by ~For further Information on the worltsbops, contact the Department of Millie.
The Dorian Quintet wW appear tbmueh
the cooperation or tbo Uniftnlty-wide
Colllllllttee OD tile Ada.

the beaux
arts trio
The famed Beaux Arts Trio will perform works of Haydn, Dvorak and lves at
Kleinhans' Mary Seaton Room on
Wednesday evening, February 26, as part
of the Music Department's Visiting Artist
series. Earlier in the day, students and
faculty are invited to meet with the Trio
members in Baird Recital Ha\\ as part ol

the Encounter Series which encourages
audiences and peiforming artists to
interact in an informal atmosphere.
Individually the members of The
Beaux Arts Trio are formidable soloists.
Together in concert, Menahem Pressler,
pianist, Isadore Cohen, violinist, and
Bernard Greenhouse, cellist, form a
sublime ensemble.
See "Directory of Coming Events" for
further details.

Registration began Monday, February

3.

buckminster
fuller
to speak here
Buckminster Fuller bas been called
" the r.nt poet of technology" and "the
greatest living cenius of industrlaltecbnlcal realization in buildlnc." He Is
famous for Inventing the dynaxlon car
and a new world map system. But be is
moat renowned for his mid-century
breakthrouch , the geodesic dome,
eumples of wblcb probably cover more
square feet of the earth than any other
lincle ldnd or Jhelter.
This arcbltect-phllosopber-mathematlclan-poet-enclneer-&lt;:Omprebenalft
desip ldentlst will Jllve the fourth
lecture In the Rand Cbalr Serieo at the
School of Arcb&amp;ecture and Bn'flronmental Deslp on Tuooday, February 11,
at 8:00 p.m. Its l'ullenlque title Is
"Reorlelllatlon of World's Adnnced
Ptoduc:tin c.p.bllty Crom a Kllllnpy to
a Llwinpy Priority."

~~apple pie"
Tbla wiD he the premiere production ·
of a new inllllcal t h - piece by Myma
Lamb and Nlcbolal Meyas. IlL IAmb il l
the author· of Mod Donna whldl .,...
produced at the PubUe T b - or the
New York Sbakeopeue Feothal and Ia
considered one of our lmportut
new playwtlcbts. Tbe produdioD wW be
cllricted by Dr. Saul Blldn, an -.date
prof..,. of theatre here and the ~
elate dlractor of the ca- for Theatre
a-.b.
"Apple Pie" wW . be ..-.ted February 26 t.brouCb Mardi 2 at tbo Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and IA!ayeUe.

,

�MUSIC
Bu(felo Strilll QU4rlot: An
E~~tninl of B«tho~H~n and

Vioaldl

.

8:00P.M.
Katherine Cornell Theatre,
Joseph Ellicott Complex,
Amherll Campus
Student. $1, General Admission
$2
College B
MUSIC
Contemporary BU!ck Jazz Week·
end: • Jam Session
1:00 in the morning
Port Eut, 950 East Ferry
Admission $1
Office of Cultural Affairs, Music
Department, Office of Minority Affairs, Black Studies
Sunday, Fabrulrv 9

rough Friday, Februory 21
Friday, Fabruorv 7
MUSIC '
Multiple.•
GoJiery 219, Norton Union
GoUery Hours
Free lldmiAion
SpoiiiOnd- by U.U.A.B. Arts
Committee
Th......., Ftlbruory .28

JGI11u :Buswell, violin soloist
with Buffalo Pbilbarmonic:
Muter Class
3:00 P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admiaion
Department or Music

VISUAL ARTS

COLLOQUIUM

Mickey O.terreicher: "People"•
Hoyoslbll Lobby
Bulldlnc Hours
omoe or Cultunl Arttirl

Professor Don

Ihde,

SUNY I

stony Brook: "A Pbeno-.
menology of Multistabie Perception''
3:30P.M.
4244 Ridge Lea, Room 14
Free Admission
Department of Philosophy and
SUNY Faculty Exchange
Scholar Program

BROADCAST
Contemporary BU.ck Jazz Week·
end: • Concert
8:00 -ll:OOJ'.M.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY /B
' MUSIC

UFE WORKSHOPS•
Antiqui"' and Collecting
GrantJnuuuhip and the Grant

,__

'Fiwto,-.p~ty

Spanlah-E"'ffioh
Groupa

.
ConiH!fl4tion ·

Thundoy, F*-v 6

LECTURE
Vln«nt Prlct: "Tbe Vlllalna Still

Pursue Me"•
8:00P.M.
Clui&lt;Gym
Stutlnh free, Foculty/Statf/
AJWIIIII free, Gebenl Ad·
adlolon$1

5:A- SpoUal Bureau

"""""' II coOrdlaated by IIIII Univerllty's omce or Cu1tuDl AffUs aDd
publllbod • a DMitbly aupplamaat to the
Rqomr, tbe C8lllpul commlllllty newspapar pmdUCICI by IIIII Dltlllon of Unllll'llty Relatlolia. Art aDd production
clallp by Suaan Bmw•, Unlnnlty
l'abllel&amp;loal llanlcH; ~ by tbe
omce or 'l'ypopapblcL Tba' 111xt laue or
, . , . , wiD appelr '11tunday' lludl 6.
Otber t.ues wBI toUow on tbe lint
Tbanday of...., month.

U/B Art• Forum: Daniela
Giouf{i, femini.t poet/belly
dancer Interviewed by Esther
Swartz
10:05 - 10:30 P.M.
WADV-FM (106.5)
Produced- by U/B Information
Services
Monday, Ftlbruorv 10

UFE WORKSHOP
Italion-Entliah ConiJ&lt;IfiQtic
Groupa: Daniel Piech
pacluate student in ltalil
ancl teacher with lntensl•
Englllit Lllllluale lnstitut&lt;
3:00 - 6:00 P.M.
Amherll Carnpua
Ad.,.,oe Keptration
Di'llllon of. Student Affairs or
Student Asaodation
Wocl.-a'(l, Fabruory 12·26
LrFE WORKSHOP
Publicity · Worklkop: Cooro
notors: Jill Radler, ar
editor, and Ken Service, c
University Information Se
7:00 -10:00 P.M.
Room 232, Norton Union
Advance Registration
Divilion of Student Affairs an
- Student Asaodation
Friday, Fabruary 14
BROADCAST
Hunting: Friends and Fot&lt; :
Uve debate to take place i

Hoa&amp;Lounge•

MUSIC
Patricia Ort:$kouic,
MFA recital
8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hoi1
Free Admission
Department or Music

Flbr•

12

vices*

BROADCAST

VISUAL ARTS

..........,. w~.

soprano :

8:oc! • 10:00 P.M.
WBFO-FM (88.7)
A service of SUNY /B
MUSIC
Gerzinus E. Hoekstra , voiCE
MFA Recital
8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admission
De~'l'e~~. e! Music

Tuasdoy, February 11
LECTURE

R. Buckminster Fuller: "Reorientation or World'• Ad·
vanced Productive CapabWty
From a Killingry to a
Livingry Priority"*
·
8:00P.M.
School of Architecture, 1st floor
Free Admission
School or Architecture, fourth
lecture in the Rand Chair
Sorloo

Contemporary BU!ck Jazz Week·
end: • Concert
8:30P.M ..
Baird Recital Hall
$1 Admlalon
U/B Office of Cultural Affairs,
Music Department; Black
Studios, Otnce or Student
Minority Arttirl.

Satuftloy

.f.e!&gt;n-Y 15

MUSIC
Evenings (or New Music•
8:00P.M.
Albright-Knox Arl Gallery
Students $1, Focuity/Staff
AI um ni $2, . General Ad
miaion $2
Centor of the Creative and Pel
formlnc Arta
Sunday, Fabruory 16
MUSIC
Dana RuaiMir, ceDI~:
·rt.eital
8:00P.M.
Bdrd rt.eltal Hoil .-'

MF•

'Free Admlollon

o.r-nt of Music

Saturday, Ftlbruory 8
MUSIC
Conte,.,;,rary Black Jazz Weekend:• Mini Concert
11:00 A.M. - .
.
.

"Operation Breadbasket" at
Apollo Tbeatre, .1346 Jeffor-

ann
Free Admlallon
omc. of Cultunl Arttirl, Muaic
Department, Otftce of Minority Aff_aln, J!.lack Studies
MU!IIC
Contemporary 8/Dck Jazz·Week·
end: • ConcCr!
3:00P.M.
Buffalo Public Library Auditorium, lAfayette' Square
Free Admlaion
.
omce of Cultunl Affalra, Muaic
Department, Office of Min·
ority Arttirl, Black Studies

_w......,.,......,.,.f*-v
12
UP'E'WOR«SHOP

Guitar:

.-..

Laurie Leulae~ Be1innen; Diclr Mtldlhn- .
lntemlldlate0
8:00 - 9:00 p....
01nton Mala LoUJIIO, GnftmDri
Reaiclenca Hoil, Ambent
Campua
Acl,._ Jteptratlon
Dl'llllon of Stuclent Affaln lllld
_Student Aaodatlon

llo#ti,t o( ~ Buc/rel, But . .,
S:*.~.a ··

..

llu&amp;lo'l"'lla&lt;&lt;lii Arena Theatre
IWDIInet
lituclalitll S2, U(B Faeulty /Staff
Alunl'ld $3, General Ad
million 54
oltlce of C.uJtnral Affairs

�MUSIC
WidMidiy, Februory 11

Bcwc Artr 7Wo: •

BROADCAST

BROADCAST

77u. I• &amp;dio: Dr. Htll'TY &amp;lid,
U/B ut bfltorlan, talb about
the recently · re-dlacovered
1930'• fad , Art Deeo
4:00P.M.
WB.FO-FM (88. 7)
A ~ee or SUNY/B

FILM AI'ID LECTURE

UIB Campw ShoWCtUe: Dr
Gerald O'Grady: ''Teaching

Pasion"•
7 :30P.M.
Conference Theatre, Norton Unio
Put or a aeries - " High·
JJchts" for admission reea
U/B Alumni Alloctatlon and the
omee for Credit-Free Pro·

crams

.

MUSIC

Fridly, Fobruary 21

LECTURE . .
Pro;easor Horst WiltnUJn, Uni -

ver.s ity of Toronto :
"Lanctiage ' Crisis and Escape
, -~~~;;,J!of'!'Annstbal's
8:00P.M.
Room 231, Norton Union
Free Admission .
Department of Germanic and
Slavic Languages
BROADCAST
Busing, RDcism and Quality
Education: a collage-type
procram, dealing with school
lntecration In Boston and the
entire country
8:00 - 10:00 P.M.
WBFO-FM (88. 7)
A aenlce of SUNY /B
Sotunllly, Fobru.y 22

LIFE WORKSHOP
MichiJd CoOney: Introduction
to Folk Mwic"
Room 232, Nadon Hall.
Ad-~n

ot SWdeat Alfalll and
Student Almdatlon

Dhllloll

,.....,., Feo..y 23
BROADCAST
&amp;dnt ./ouph.. CollefiiJie I IIIIi·
Lllb Bentl: Uw bloedc:aot
o( ODDoort, and llOJl.-llon
with band director, Ruaaell

Ow-

Fobruary 23 · March 7
VISUAL ARTS
'Michael

Zwak:

" Industrial

Waste"*
Gallery 219, Norton Union
Gallery Hours
Free Admission
U.U.A.B. Arts Committee

•

MtueiiJ Lee, !lutist:
Redtal
8:00P.M.
Balnl RedtllliAJJ
Free Admlulon

Architecture:• SuiUvan and
Wri8h t at Buffalo, led by
John &amp;ndDU, architecture
aasoctate of · Facilit ies Plan·
ning
7:30 · 9 :30P.M.
Frank Lloyd Wright House, 123
Jewett Parkway, Office or the
Alumni Association
Advance Registration
Division of Student Affairs and
Student Aasociation

BROADCAST
Thunday, February 27
Break(G6t Concert with Pian ist
Joseph Kubera •
8:00 - 11:00 A.M.
WBFO·FM (88 ..7)
A service or SUNY /B
LECTURE

4 :00P.M.
Room 101 , Baird Hall
Free Admisalon
Department or Music
MUSIC
Carol Zeavin, violi nist: MFA
Recital
8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admission
Department or Music
Fobruary 25 · March 2
DRAMA
Apple Pie•
8:00P.M.
Courtyard Theatre - tafayette
&amp; Hoyt Streets
Students $1, Faculty/Staff/
Ali\IDDi $2.50, General Ad·
mission $2.50
'lbe Center for Theatre Research
Wod.-.y, February 26
MU!!IC

&amp;dux Arts Trio : • Encounter
Series Lecture
3:00P.M.
Baird Redtll Hall
Free Admission
Department of Music
BROADCAST

Tllir Is &amp;dio: Robert T. Buck,
director or AlbriCbt-Knox Art
Gallery, lntenlewed by U/B
ut btltorian, Harry Rand
4 :00P.M.
WBFO-FM (68. 7)
A llnice of SUNY /B
POETRY READING

Maiuu SIGnton .
8:00P.M. .
Room 231, Norton Union
Free·Admission
Department or English Poetry
OommiUee

.6:00- 1:00 P.M.
WBFO-FM (88. 7)
A llnice of SUNY /B

Wod.-ays, Fobruary 26. tnd
March 6
LIFE WORKSHOP

Quartet

Thomas Halpin, violinist: MFA
Real tal
8 :00P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admiaslon
Department of Music

MUSIC

world renowned
ardll!ect and thinker, intertiewed by Bither Swutz
10:05 P.M. - 10:30 P.M.
WADV-FM (106.5)
Plociuoed by U/B Information
Senlces

MilchiJ Schneider, former cellist
with the Buc!Jpest String

MUSIC

1·

Fuller,

Monday, February 24

Harrison Birtwiltle, composer:
Slee Lecture, with concert or
Mr. Blrtwlstle's works by
Millie Department members
and Creative AJ&amp;odates •
8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admisalon
Department or Music

,,u

U!B Aru Forum: Buckmi111ter

Vililia&amp; Art!st

Serlel CoDCOrt
8:80P.M.
Mary Seaton Room, Klelnballl
Muale Hall
Students $1, Faculty/Starr/
Alumni $2, Geoeral Ad·
misalon $3
Department or Music

Student

~ntofMUIIc

Pip 8/ REPORTEil / Mapet 3/ Febnwy6,1975

~.Mtn:h2
· DANCE Macedonian Folk Dance Week·
end•

Master Claas
1:00 - 4:00 P.M."
Room 339, Norton Union
Students $ .50, General Adrni&amp;·
alon $1
Dance Puty and Master Class
7:00 • 11:00 P.M.
Fillmore Room, Norton Union
Students $ .50, General Admission $1
omce or Cultural Affairs
MUSIC
Allen Sigel, clarinetist: Faculty
Recital
8:00P.M.
Baird Hall
Students $ .50, Faculty/Staff/
Alumni $1 , General Admission $1.50
Department of Music
Monday, March 3

LECTURE
Ronald Ziegler: "The President
and the Press"*
8:00P.M.
Clark Gym
•
Students free, Faculty/Staff/
Alumni, free, General Ad·
mission $ 1
·
S.A. Speaken Bureau
MUSIC
Composers Workshop Concert
8 :00P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admission
Deportment of Music

LECTURE
Pro(easor Walter Sokel, Univorslty of VlrJinla: ' 'The Prop:am or K'a Court: Oedipal
and Existential Readings o f
The Trial"
8:00P.M.
Norton 233
Free Aclmiaion
Department or Germanic and
Slavic bu11Uages
Tuotday, March 4
MUSIC

Dorian
Friday, February 28
COLLOQUIUM

Pro{euor ·J errold t Aronson,
S UNY / Bi nghamton : " Is
Materialism Conceivable?"
3:30P.M.
4244 Ridge Lea, Room 14
Free Admisaion
Departmen t or Philosophy/
SUNY Faculty E x change
·Scholar Program
MUSIC

Pa t ricia

Gu tzwiller,

Woodwind Quintet:

Workshops*
, For time and place contact
Department of Music

pianist:

Student Recital
·s:OO P.M.
Baird Recital Hall
Free Admission
Department of Music
Saturday. March 1
DANCE

Wed.-.y, March 6
BROADCAST •
This Is &amp;dio: Alan Stone, New

York gallery owner, intt&gt;r
viewed by U/B ut historian .
Harry Rand
4 :00P.M.
WBFO-FM (88.7 )
A service or SUNY /B
POETRY READING
William Sill/ford, winner of
many national awards
8:00P.M.
Room 281, Norton Union
Free Admisalon
Deputment of English Poetry
OommiUee

Mm:edoniiJn Folk Dance Work-

MUSIC

shop•
Master ClasS

Dorillla .Woodwind Quintet Oon·

12:00 Noon • 8:00 P.M. .
Fillmore Room, Norton. Union
Students $ .50, General Admis·
llon$1
·
Muter Claas and Filma
6 :30 • 10:30 p.M.
Room 839, Norto;; Union
Students$ .50, General Admis·
llon$1
'
Or!lce of Cultural Afraln
. MUSIC

U!B Symphony Bond, directed
by Vlm:mt hrlic!Ktti, one or
America's most noted com·
poaen/oonducton
8 :00P.M.
Sweet Honae Senior High School
Free Admisalon
Sweet Honie Senior High and
Department of Music

cer•

8:30P.M.
Mary Seatoll Room, Kleinhans
Millie Hall
Studellta f1, heultyiStaff/
AIIIDII f2, GeMral Admia-

lloafS

!)eputmtJit of Millie and UniCommittee on
tile Arta

....,.WJde

*See "lficbllcbts" for detalk.·

nCKETS

'11cketa, where
aRIIablt at tbe
11cbt om.,.. (In
malnlng -Uebts at

required, are
Norton Hall

••huce); ...

the door one
hour before nent. l.D. cards
must be preMnted In order to
......,.,_ tickets at Faculty I
Staff/ AlumDI late.

�macedon ian
folk dance
vveekend
Geoqe Tomov, Internationally ~­
nlzed for his expertlle In YuaosJavlan
. Folklore, danee and sonc, wiU conduct a
series of Maceclonlan folk danee clules In
Norton Union on Saturday ant! Sunday,
Mareh 1-2.
On Saturday, one muter class II
ocboduled from noon to 3 p.m. In tbe
Fillmore Room; a 114!C0nd, from 6:30 p.m.
- 10:30 p.m. In 339 Norton wiU feature
fUma of YuaosJavlan folk festivals and of
. performances by profealonal folk dance
componielln Yucoslavla.
Sunday, a muter class will be held in
339 Norton from 1-4 p.l)l. A danee party
with a Maceclonian folk band beclns at 7
p.m. In the Fillmore Room.
There wUI be an admission cbarge at
the door of $ .•50 for students and $1.00
for others for each aeulon.
·
Mr. Tomov's experience as a profes.
sional dancer, teacher and lecturer
promise to make the folk dance session
rich lri the kind of detail that enthusiastic
students of folklore and folk dance wUI
lonc ••or:. He hu toured as feitured
soloist with the Yueoslavlan national folk
ballet companies, Tan« and Lado, and
has pven worklbops and muter classes at
major unlvenltles and museums. His most
recent presentation on Yueoslavian folk
danee and eostumes at New York City's
American Museum of Natunl History was
weU received by a standing-room-only
audience.
Dances taueht in the master classes
will include Slovenskl Plesi, Slavonsko
Kolo, Povrateno, and Koljino Oro.
Mr. Tomov's visit Is sponsored by the
Office of Cultural Affairs.

vveekend of

contem~rary

black jazz

A weekend propam of contemporary
black jazz wiD take place Friday and
Saturday, February 7 and 8, featuring
performances and works by two
prominent black muoictans and U/B
faculty members, Frank Foster and
MUto,n Manb, who will play tbelr
-:,~::.,,;:~b a ~~~~e jazz-enaemble
Frank Foster, composer, su.ophonist, ·
nutilt, dailnetilt, played leod tenor sax
with Count Basle's hand untlll964, after
which be worked with Woody Herman,
Lionel Hampton, Peter Duchin and his
own croups. During 1971 be was artistIn-residence -at tbe New Encland Conservatory of Muoic. He Is currently on the
faculty of U/B's Department of Black
Studies.
Milton Marsh, a composer, arrancer,
saxophonist, flutist, bas recently
organized a croup of young New York
contemporary black musicians in ' 'The
New World Community Ensemble and
Orchestra." Mr. Manb, who holds his
M.M. decree from tbe New England Conservatory of Muoic, Is director of AfroAmerican music studies at U/B. The
weekend's events include a concert on
Friday, February 7, 8:30 p.m.- in Baird
· Hall, a 114!C0nd concert on Saturday,
February 8, 3:00 p.m. In tbe Buffalo
Public Library Allditorium (Lafayette
Square), a mini-coneert Saturday at
11:00 a.m., and a jam' seision witb area
profoulonal artists at The Port East, on
Saturday night at 1:00. . See magnet 's
directory of events for all details.
Tbe Contemporary Black Jazz Weekend II being presented by U/ B's Office or
Cultural Affairs, Department of Muoic
Office of Minority Student Affairs;
Department of Black Studies and the
Grosvenor Society of the Buffalo · and
Erie County Public Library.

villains -- real
and imagined
Upcoming events sponsored by the
Student Association Speakers Bureau and
UUAB will focus on evil dolncs, Washington and Hollywood style.
On February 6 Vincent Price wiD cap a
three-day Vincent Price Film Festival,
lecturinc on the subject, "The Villains
Still Pursue Me." Althoueh known as an
art collector, critic, gourmet cook and
author, Mr. Price's reputation was first
established as a film, television and stace
star. His lecture wUI focus on the oix films
shown at the Conference Theatre during
the Festival and should provide an Interesting eveniD(, as be has been described as
"the top platform performeroftheday."
Politicians are performers, too, and the
appearance of Ron Zlecler Invites us to
make the short leap from horror rums to
White House horrors. Milch publicity has
been elveJ! to Mr. ZiecJer's recent decision
to co on tbe Jt!cture circuit. On February
27, when tbe S/A Speakers Bureau brings
him to Clark !:lym, we will have the
opportunity to reinforce or alter our
vlowa of former Preaident Nixon.
1bellboft Oftnll ue fne to U!!)..,nity

unusual
exhibits in
gallery 219
"M,inlples," on view in Gallery 219
tbroueh February 21, II a combination of
several elemen~: a travellne .multiples
exhibit from Vilual Studies Workshop,
Rochester, New York, fro'!' whicb caJiery
viewers ·are encouraced to select sometblne to take home wltb tbem; a collection of multiples of 20 by area artists,
lmace makers, mUiicianl, orcbltedl, conceptualilta and c:rafta people to whicb
pJJery vlowen are eneoarapd to add
tbolr own mialtlpleof20;and,flnaiiY, tbe
in1ta11at1oD crt a 6 ud 10C multiple
pboto maddne Into wldcb pllery viewers
are encouapcl to . - to ncord tbelr
art "MMqnlalllon" or "contdbutlon"-ln
multlplel.
A IICOIId exblblt, "bldllllrlal Waste,"
Ia lcbod1llod for ......... from SuDday,
,....., 21, lllroaP Pllday, Ilardi 7.

........................
.rl••

,.. - o f IIII.....W. tW loal.u.&amp;
llldiMI Znl
llo -a. Ida
~

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

vvbfo makes
live radio
very live
Two WBFO broadcasla for February
wUI be aln!d "on location" from around
the campus.
.
The first, Friday, February 14, will
take place In Haas Lounce, Norton
Union, from 8-10 p.m., when antlbuntlne spokesmen Cleftland Amory
(president of tbe Fund for Animals, cntic
and autbor of Man Kind) and Bill
GrpiiCUp (writer and broadcaster) debate
huntlnc advocates Ward Stone (chief
pathologist, Environmental Conservation
Department of New York State) and
John Alles (starr member, National RIDe
Association). The debate, "Hunting:
Friends and Foes," will deal wltb hunllnc
and trapping in the areas of conservation,
sport, the fur industry, enclancered
species and the overall impact on environ·
ment and ecosystems. This explosive
dilcuulon will be moderated by WBFO
staff member Steve Gottesman.
The second 100 per cent live broadcast
will be a breakfast concert performed by
pianist Joseph -Kubera , accompanied by
coffee and munchies. Mr. Kubera will
play classic piaoo rap and twelve tone
muoic by Viennese composer Josef
Matthias Hauer. The last, part of tbe
PfOif&amp;M will feature a tape of Kubera
playing John Cace's muoic for prepared
piano. Host for this concert on Monday,
February 24, 8-11 a.m., . is Walter
Gajewski. He invites you to join him In
WBFO's Studio A, 327 Norton Union.

campus
showc~se
A distinguished lecture

series,
featuring ~romlnent faculty members,
began In Januuy and will continue on a ·
once a month basis through the spring,
Wednesday eveningsat 7 :30 p.m. Leslie Riedler opened the series on
January 29, with "English 2001." Gerald
O'Grady, director of the Instructional
Communication Center and the Center
· for Media Studies, wUI present a acreeninc
of the Swedish mm, "The Paaion of
Anna," foUowed by a slide lectuie and
interpretation. This will take place at the
Conference Theatre, Norton Union, on
February 19.
"How We Cury Out SkiUed Movements of Will" is the subject of a lecture
by Sir John Eccles on March 19 at tho
Frank Lloyd Wright bouse, 123 Jewett
Parkway. The Nobel Prize winner will
emphaoize the role of the brain In human
behavior.
Appropriately, the sprinc lectur. wiU
focus on chanCing patterns In oexual roles
and .attitudes, when Dr. Gloria L. RobUn
wUI raise tho qu-o "Sexual Behatior
In Ill• Future - The Lady or tbe Ticer?"
This lecture will be presented on April
·30, In Room 106, John Lord O'Brian
Hall, Amherst Campus.
Dues-paylnc members of _the U/B
Alumni Association may attend the U/B
Car!lpus Showcase free . The series fee for
otber alumni and me-n of tbe Unl"'roity community II $6; for the 1eneral
public, $10. LICht re-.nenta wm be
served.
~

evenings
for nevv music
A- hlebJiibt of tho February 16
Everilnp for New Muoic coneert by tbe
Creatlft Associates wiU be "Bereeuao "
performed here M&gt;On after Ita p....;,.
tatlon at Cooper Union In New York.
Altboueh all of tbe compooltlons on
the procram wiU be recelvlnc tbelr first
heuilll in Buffalo, "Berceua" Ia of
special interest: It wu composed by
Spanish composer, Luis Deol'ablo, 1974
Slee Professor at U/B. This piece for
llincer, actor and musicians wiU be staced
by Julius Eastman, with lightlnc by Jim
Fauvell.

bottom
of the bucket,
but ...
1be title is a misnomer. Bottom of the
Bucket, But . .. Dance Theatre, a
Rochester-based company, bas over the
past few years developed from talented
Inner dty amateurs _into a nationally
known dance troupe which was invited to
perform Jut summer at the 42nd Jacob's
Pillow Dance Festival in Leo, Massachusetts: tbe fm;t croup from upstate
New York ever to perform at this
preslleious Festival. ~nna Kisselgoff of
tbe New York Times reviewed that performance as follows : "The impressively·
disciplined young people who make up
Bottom of the Bucket, But .. . Dance
Theatre concern themselves with con·
temporary issues. Garth Fagan, their
brilliant choreocrapher and director, bas
literally worked wonders on several levels.
His use of black thematic material bas
several features in common with that of
other black choreographers. liut he
started mainly with performers with
minimal dance training. As a result, mu~h
of his choreography is really an incorporation of a street-vernacular style
Into patterns that succest dance. The
method work&amp; superbly and is responllible
for tbe rouoinc raw ene'IY tbat suffuses
tbe cboreogirapby."
The omce of Cultural Affairs brings
Ibis One dance company to Buffalo's
Studio Arena Theatre on Monday,
February 11, 8 :30 p.m. Tickets, to be
sold at Norton and at Studio Arena box
omces, are $4 pneral admission, $3
faculty/staff/alumni, $2 students_

films

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

I

'

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
JANUARY 30, 1975
VOL. 6, NO. 17

•

Speakers
- stir up
controversy

C~porary Black J~ f~tiy~l ~1'1!~

Contem-~ra~ . Black Jazz will be the
theme of a three-day weekend of music'
eve nts, February 7-9.
·
A consortium of University
departments is cooperating in bt:"_inging
to Buffalo a number of prominent black
mus1c1ans from New York as well as many
resident artists who will be performing
. the music of two University composers,
Frank Foster and Milton Marsh.
On Friday evening, February 7, the
weekend activities get underway with an
8:30 concert in Baird Recital Hall, which
will feature -a big band performing the
works of Foster and Marsh. Tickets are
available at $1 through the Non on Hall

Ticket Office , and r~maining tickets will
be available at the door one hour before
. ,the concert.
OnSaturday,February8, th ee nsemble
will make an 11 ~ -'!\· appearance a.t
".Opera~ion B~adbasket" at the Apollo
Theatre, 1346. Jefferson Avenue. The
mini-concert at the Apollo will be open
without charge.
On Saturday afternoon, February Yl, at
3 p.m .. the band will appear in concen
with composers Foster and Marsh under
ihe auspices of the Grosvenor Society i[l
. th e Central library. This concert is
presented by the Grosvenor Society in
cooperation with the Buffalo and Erie

County Public library and the U/ B
Departme nt of Mus1 c and IS open
w~thout charge. A feature of this event
~111 be com me~ta.ry abo~t the evolutlon .of bla~k mus1c 10 A~enca.
Th e con temporary Black Jazz
Weekend will conc:;lude with a jam session at 1 a.m. at Post East, 950 East Ferry
'Street in Buffalo, on Sunday, February 9.
The weekend is being pres_ented by
the U/8 Offtce of Cultural Affa1rs,~ Off1ce
of Minority Students, Department of
Black Studies, Depanment of Music, the
Grosvenor Society, and the Buffalo and
Erie County Public library.

P~f trains those who attend-the dying
ly Mary leth Spino
MtturW ~-;"*"·
snrr-.
ltmo\1 lind It dtHlcultto give adequate
emotional sup~n to a ~in' loved one, ·
they're not alone In their dilemma.
~do a great ma~y-docrors, nurses ~nd
mtntsters who rouHnely artend the dyong,
·oet;ordinf! to Dr. C. Charles Bach~nn,
assiStant clinical professor. In psychoatry
~·
.
..
Few of us really-accept the mev1tabihty of ~r own deaths. And to be around
th_e dyt"§ reminds us one day, we, l_o o,
will die1 says Or. Bachmonn, who !s a
lutheran min~ and director of dtn~l
pastoral educatoon at Meyer Memonal
Hospital.
,
.
For the past 19 yean,~ srraoned more
than 250 past~, proesrs, nuns and
seminarians of all faiths~ and more
recently non-sernlnana~•· to. '"?"'
effectively with the dylns. the gnevong
and the t$ritiecl. ·
.
_
Or. llachtnann. a rec:ognozed authonty
and author qjl IJ!e so_blt!ct ~ .dvlivl and
~ (~JI to the Grief Sulferers.
"-"'ce Hdl, NYSmost hospital pe&lt;!ple
...S allaislen ~ have . no special .
~rain~~~~
:tfit!M to deal with the"

'"""h

to...-

emtllltllhiiMed&amp; el ~ dyloos.

patient who is terminal could have been
saved by no one does linle to dispel the
physician's feeling of failure. .
Nurses, who have more daily contact
with patients than do physicians, are
most often the hospital personn~l "''ho
minister to the dying. "But if they
become too artached to a dying patient,
the death ~mes a_personal loss. ~some unconsoously choOse to remam
detached so the death becomes impersonal," Or .. Bachmar_&gt;n exp!•in~.
.
.Thus, whole the dyong patten! s phySK:al
needs are met, the emotional ones moy
be neglected. "Not because the hospital
people are he•nless- but t.e:cause t~ey
may not be able to de•l with tmpe!!dtng
de•th any berter than most Of us," he
emphasizes.
Tlfe dyinll patient who is conscious
poses a. more perple•ing problem to'!'&lt;'
famny as we~ as ~ artending !'•m
than does the· one who ,Is un&lt;lOIISCIOUs
and. unaware.
·
''fherl!'s always a problem for the
physldin as to how much the patient
wanrs to know. Some patients want to
k-.thetruth abouc their «llOICCitions so
tiler can !!!!!lllelr a-·1n onler before

theJ· -~- don't to l&amp;now
: ,._fi 6+teJtoo~pettdilllthii'Mar,~

!~ ·
Mftle~1oalllladeMh 11 a · _, ~

til

1

1

·

patienr. The patient suspects impending
death but purposely never asks the question.
So these patients are never certain;
hope is preserved without the uncom-·
fonable subject of death intotrfering.
Differmt Kind of Problem
"These patients never have to do their
own 'grief w~rk' and accept death.
Patients who know the truth, however,
pose a different kind of problem. They
must face and accept death, •nd cannot
do it entirely aloroe," Dr. Bachmonn says.
To reach acceptance, -..ral·st•ges of
emotion must be worked through. The
first is disbelief ...""'it can't be happening to me." The second is •nger _ , . "I
didn't do anything 10 deserw this.''
BaQ!olining is the third ... "God, if you11
save my life, 111 do somethlns for-you."
I'IOstility, grief and an~ are oometimes.
1 u pre5en1 in the fourth stace, depression . . . "Oqn't come to cheer me up."
• The final stage is atteptanc:e. :rhe
patient recognizes death is hnmlnent, Is
dealing with It, but neeCis support From
othen to successfully reaiiJie his soa1
"Too m-, the clrlnl_., die .b,e .
_ nwoonl!d 010111 lsiMd surroundectb{· ':"

people. hnlll;, friendln laolp!lal staff

·are..-,butoftenunstdlecllil&amp;lvlnl

•
vital~ Soinetlne theJ a¥Oiil die
:afalllliliir.Wuie:...._lnsplleof- -~ ~'*-ft"tlii;.~ ,_1*ienf ·· dylftlt•llenllnanefforttoproeicllhelr '
... .w.llcll :~ w equipn family Into a "~ of _.
own 'Insecurity about death.'' Dr.

,..,,. .,...,•

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

This week, while "lois lane" offered
the o piate of nostalgia to a record crowd
in the Fillmore R9om, other speakers
scheduled to app.eir on campus in coming weeks triggered controversies both
at U/ 8 and at Boston University . .
The local flap involved Attica Brothers
attorney William Kunstler. ,In a letter in
Monday's Spectrum, Speakers Bureau
chief Stan Morrow was chided for failing
to honor a Student Asse mbl y resolution
m aking a c ampu s appearance b y
Kunstler " a priority."
Faulted for offering Kunstler only $500
for an appea rance tentative ly sched ul e d
for some tim e in February, Morrow was ·
subsequentl y placed unde r a tempo rary
rest raining o rd er issued by the
Student-wide Judicia ry forbiddi ng him
from signing any further contracts with
guest-'speakers until the matter is resolve d.
The issue was to come be fore the Stude nt Assembly at a meeti ng Wednesday,
afte r Reporter deadline.
" ln ji~ ht of th e fact that ' Lois lane' . . .
is receiving..$1,100, and Ronald Reagan
is being offered $3,000 to speak, offeri ng
Mr. Kunstier SSOO,.which is inexplicably
unequal,· makes a mo cke r y of the
Ass e mbly 's decision to make Mr.
Kunstler's appearance a priority,"
Kunsrler su pporters wrote.
M or row explained that when
Kunsller's name was first broached last
year as a possible speaker, he uhif!lately
rejected it because he perceived little
general student interest in an
appearance by the attorney and because
he regarded such a lecture as a contribution to the Attica Brothers legal Defense
(ABlD).
.
.
After the Student Assembly indicated
its desi re to have Kunstler appear,
Morrow says, he began negotiating with
people who claimed to ~epresent
Kunstler in ABLD, arriving at the sum of $500 on the basis of what was available in
the Speakers Bureau budget.
, A time for Kunstler's talk was tentatjvely agreed upon but no fee was set,
Morrow said, who had not heard more
on the matter from his ABlD contacts.
Meanwhile, in Boston, the BU student
government withdrew an invitation to
former Nixon press secretary Ron Ziegler
to speak on campus for a fee of $2,700.
The decision fOllowed campuswide
protest triggered by John Wickleln, dean
of BU's School ·of Public Communication, who argued that Zfe&amp;ler had done
"his best to subven the First Amendment
guarantees of a free press ... I think it
would be •travesty to 'reward him in •ny
trum to 1»f1e J. col. 1)

Dremuk named
to Cabinet
Rich•rd Dremuk, cllrector of admissions and-.Mords (A&amp;It), has been
•ppolnted a regular member of the
Academic Cabinet, President Robert L
Kener announced this week.
Dreml!k's addition to the group,
Keuer said, is "In c:lear recognition of the ·
intesral relationship Of the admissions
process to the Unlvenlty's acaclemk: endeavon, and .•• an ad&lt;-redaernent
of the UniveBity-wlde perspectiVe"
which the A&amp;R director can offer in difcussionsanddedsionsofthecablnet.

Othet--. of the cablneure the

e•ecutive vice president, the vice
presidents for health sciences and
_academic affaiR, the~ deans,
and the director of UnlvenltyUbraries.
~who reports directly to the
President U . ~ llbrll'lel Director

·,·.~-.......- ....'!Or.•-.,~~~~ ... ~·-•:•,ladlrhWo·~ ...: ·-•.•. •.. ~.·.' '·· · • . Eicll!ld.R.Smllll;--'theAitll,poll .
., m.._!-W-~
.,...~
1.'.. lltlri .....
~...._..,_,

31'&lt;litl.JF"""'...,....

.. ,. ·•. ••;·,·

�January 30, 1975

.sse faculty members 'disturbed'

.
by statement in·chartering decisk?n

lidllor:
As faculty members of Social Science
College (SSC) we are deeply~is
rbed by
implied accusations contain
i President Ketter's evaluation of he C liege,
printe~·n
the January 16,R
r, and
his asse ·on that the operation of the
College
d to be watche
with the
circumspect1~in t~ pect, akin to
that of Caesar's 'wife." The reason for
such wariness and suspicion in our
regard, President Ketter writes, is that the
College does not adequately conform to
standards of academic freedom. Thus
President Ketter writes that " ... I had
been seriously tempted to deny approval
of the proposed charter of Social Science
College until the College has made full
and complete adjustment of its purpose
and methodology to the standards of
academic freedom to which this University is committed . . . ." Despite his charge
-=r-not fully meeting standards of
academic freedom, Dr. Ketter has
authorized a minimal two year charter
with a review at the end of one year
because "the College does provide an
opportunity for education : that is not
available elsewhere in the University."
This is not the first time that Dr. Ketter
has raised the charge of violation of
•~tmic freedom by Social Science
College. As a res~lt of charges taken up
by Dr. IE-etter, this matter - was investigated previously . by the Faculty
Senate Academic Freedom and Responsibility Committee, and as a result of the
established grievance procedure ap·
proved by this Commirtee· the ~harge'
was considered without merit.
Moreover, responding to a "vague image of ideological bias" and a ~·putative
denial of aademic freedom," the .comm!ttee n~spo nsible for chartering ·the
College writes in its final report that "the
C~II~g~ a.ppe~rs to l?e try.ing .\O deal y.ojth
tbe .in~erent conilict between a strongly
held view on an issue and ensuring that
-..... course content provides a balanced
pr~htation and atiQ)I{S diversity of opinion among course.. participants. Free
discussion i e.I):Ourased and the issue of
balance is r :seriovs concern . to the
College. . urthl'rmore, the Co)lege is
making a " ~fldus effort . to develop a.
course dealing directly with the issues of
academic freedom and has volunteered
to insert a commitment to academic
freedom in its Charte{."
Oespiie the opinion ol' both · the
Aademic Freedom Commirtee of thl!
Faculty Senate and the Chartering Committee in rejecting the very serious accusations of violation of academic
freedom, President Ketto:r persists in
remarks thot imply such an accusation. II)
sinsfing out this academic unit as requirins a special "circumsP.«fion" on the
-grounds that its members are violating
xademic freedom, President ketter is
mol&lt;ing an unfounded and twice rejected cturs~ that seriously jeopardires
this unit's ability to function effectively.
(Dr. Kener ~1.., raises the issue of
.ademlc freedom with respect to
Tolstoy Coll~se and the Women's
Studies College, althoush in the larter
caseheavoidsmentionofCaesar'swife.l
Continual subjecllon of this Colfe8e
and Its members to vague Imputations
prevent~ u' from auracli nJ rlew
- * r s who from a dlwtsily of ·
phllosoplilal viewpolniJ are commined
•lhe _ , . outlined In lhe penpec:lile of the CoiJeae. In our cfurter we afflnllllalh -our commitment to ac:acJemic
freidDtn .t11111 to ltJ extension 10 more

...s . .

population who do not

-the privll•es of such

-

==~-#£~
' our

._ .... • o..y
•

~ Ill 1lullclinl this
he ..... W OUI· for special

•

~. .
..
Sdence Ca1lep tD be ...,_
jedicUunolhlr II~ lllled on
. . _ _.... hM ...,.. 1111en re-

reputations of all the members of the .
College, by implyin_g that we are not
working in the best interests of the
University and the public, and so need to
be closely watched? Does not the overall
effect of such remarks tend to restrict
our own academic freedoml '
.

Moreover, we do not thin'k that this·
kind of discrimination helps either the &lt;~
Colleges or the University. Adverse

publicity based on vague imputations
can result in a serious undermining of
public confidence in the University at a

time· when its budget is being closely
studied.
We hope that President Ketter will
clarify and rectify those remarks which
we believe have serious negative con·
sequences, and wh1ch may be inter·
preted as ~ontrary to his own positive
evaluation of the unique contributions

of this College.
Sincerely,
~lgsers,

Professor, History

o•Rie.,e.
Professor, Philosophy
WiftiAmSt~n,

Professor, Anthropology
Roser Woock,
Chairman,
Social Foundations
GMe Gr&lt;~biner, Asst. Prof.,
SoCial Foundation's ·
J~mes uwler,
. .
Asst. Prof., Philosophy

Dying patien...... ·
rfm m(IOIJ!r l . rul. ll

He tells of a· minister friend, suffering
from termi nal cancer: "The first time I
visited him in the hospit'al, he"·wa~actuaily whimpering like a child. My first impulse .)Y'ISJo.. gracefully leave, but. I did
not." When the friend stopped sniffling,
_he told Dr. Bachmann, "Thanks for not
runniQg away. Everyone who's been in
today has been funning."
·
'fuD Pretence Needed'
Dr. Bachmann believes the only thing
many of us can contribute to the dying is
our presence. "But make it your full
presence - put your ' paddle in their
stream' so to speak. Too many have died
in emotional isolation because no one
reached into their existence," he ad monishes.
'
"With the dying, our students leatn to
be present. If the patient wants to talk .
about death, we will. If he wants to avoid
the subjed or does not know the true
diagnosis, then we talk about whatever
the patient wants to discuss."
Dr. Bachmann and his \tudents try to
visit all Meyer patients who need
emotional sUpport - not just the dying.
During the 2000-hour clinical c9u....,, the
stuC:Ients work with patients and families
in the emergency room, th'ose scheduled
for surgery, ond rl'ferred potients. "Doctors, nurses, ministers ond families may
ask us to visit patients. And iJpon odmission, patients receive our card to let
them know -we're available 24 hours-a- '
&lt;Uy if they need us," Dr. Bachmann says.
The i&gt;rosram at Meyer is now one of
350 dinical pastor~! education pr!'tlroms
around the nation - troinini( clergy,
seminariam and others to, wOrk with the
dying and other patients. "More
hospitals, religioUs denominatiom ar;ad
hospital personnel are . besinnins to
tealize that anendins the patient is ~
than fiUing rnedlcally-orienled needs,"
Dr. ~n Nys.
·

Nau&amp;'*Jn lo ~
•

_

......

Dr.lcihn Na.uJhton, who will assume
his- posldon •clean of the School ol...
Medicine here In Maim. .... be..speaker II lhe ~ ledure at 8
p.m. frlllly, ..._, J1, 11-G-22 fMber
"--tYCipen).

.

· .., -wtl llielk on "111e Physlbloslcll

Balli of ~-Myocmllal ~

...!::'&amp;:.:=~~; ! .:=..~·~i~i: :!

• Golo&lt;

Two appointments announced
Dr. Eugene L Gaier has been reappoi nted to a second three-year term as
chairman of the Department of
Educational Psychology.
Dr. Gaier was initially appointed to the
post in September, 1972. His new term
will continue until August 31,1978.
His department, part of the Faculty of
Educational Studies, is heavily engaged
in training doctoral students and conducting behavioral and methodological
resea~ch.

Dr. Gaier has published numerous
book reviews and has coauthored more
th'!n 100 journal articles on aspects of
human development and learning. He
joined U/ B in 1960 a!'d has also held
teaching : positions at the University ·oi
California at Berkeley, louisiana State
Un iver sit y, and the University of
Chicago.
He was named Fulbright Professor to
th e University. of HelsfrrXi; · Ffnland,· fOr
the 19S7-S8 academic year.
William ~: lobtiins has been ,;arned
associate diredor of the Office of Urban
Affairs (OUA1, President Robert L. Keiter
announced this week. .
··
Lob bins v..n1 · supe..Vise 'the development of the QUA's academic.concentration, which includes a special major

degree program in urban affairs ind
credit-bearing courses in public services
for student volunteers of the U/B Community Action Corps. He will also
monitor the Comprehensive Planni!lg
Opportunity Program, which provides
professional training for grad uate and
professional students.
In addition, lobbins will : be responsi -.
ble fo&lt;-major aspects of the OUA's community and University service functions,
conduct and supervise reSearch on
diverse urban themes, and advise
studems interested in developing careers
in public service. He is currently conducting research to identify the knowledge
and professional . competencies that
entry-leVl!l· employment · In the · p·utilic
sector requires.
Lobbins holds both ).D. and M.B.A.
degrees from U/ 8, and is a member of
the Universit y-wide Minority Faculty an,d
Staff Requi!meQ1 Cpmn:ainee. Prior ." to
his present appointment, he was assistant
to the dean for affirmative action in the
SctiQOI 'of ¥anagernent, &gt;Yherl' he will
cori~ihu"e ~o _te~Ch -~ tr~C.ifale fotJ fS~ titled "Legal Aspem 'of Busmess ·Ad ministration."
·
·
"He also ~~erveS as vice president of the
Board of Directors of the St. Augustine
Community Center.

Statement on Buc~y Law
fDITOII'S NOTf: rite~~- was~ l&gt;y lite Aademic c.l&gt;inet •ndllte
Aademic Alfohs Council:

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 has been amended to
allow students to waive their right ·of inspection of letters of recommendat•on
" respecting admission to any educational agency or institution. respecting an
application , for employment, r~pecting receipt of an honor or honorary
1
recognition."
·
'
•
In order for the waiver to be valid, the lerters must be used "M&gt;Iely for the purpose for which they were specifically . inten~." a_nd, on requt!st, !he st'!de!'ts
must be given the names of those makong confodentoal recommendotoons. Signong
a waiver may not tM; required as a con~dition for admission, financial aid or other
services Of the institution.
leners~of recommendation put into a student's file prior to 1 January 1975 are
not subject to ihe act, unless such lerters are u~ for a secondary purpose. This
puts a responsibility on the institution to remove such letters from student files
when a request tQ inspect the file is rmde under the law.
The University proposes to develop recommendation forms which will indude on the face a woiventatement which the student will be osked to sign if he
or she chooses IO waive the right to -inspect. These forms are to be given to
students who apply to our institution for distribution to their recommenders, and
to our students who see~ recommendations from our faculty, staff, or administrative officers. Because of the dive"" classes of students ,..ho need
recommendations and the divelse progroms which require them, the immediate
form will be very 11eneral-larsely a blank on which the reSpondent can write his
opinion. lndividualired forms may be developed subsequently, but the ursency of
the need does not permit us to carry out this task just now.
In fact, the forms may be ovailable too late 10 take care of all immediote cases.
If, thet-efore, any department or program is already collecting recommendations,
or any faculty member Is ask~ to write recommendations, we request that you
have the studer!t sig~ ~statement Qf the foliow.ing content:
·
"I ha~ aSkeCI.•••••• _:.,.:•••::_ to wriie a Jetter or recommendation 'for me in support of my applicalioillconslderation for o ...... (lnlliall ~mission ·· o •n academic
il)stltution; c .•. :.,(lnitlal) empio)oll)erll; 0 ... -.(lnhiall honOr 0&lt; honoraiy 'recos~h '
lion. I hereby waive the risht to lnspea the le\1ef which a~? ~ •'!'I at- .
tachments of contlnuatf9r!.~. ~ I may !lOt l!e requi~ 1~ '!aiw!. t~ riJht
aac:onclhionofadn)lssion,~~«~-" ·:
' ·
·

... ·'· ... .. ......... ..... ............. ... : .... .. :.·... ·.
Student's slpature
•

,1

'·

· ~-

To- remind you of a ~..ftii'OU~I on lhls matter, Ron Sleln,
aHOCiale cllrej:tor ol5cudeoil Allain, 201 Harriman'tlbrary, has been deofanlled 10
rece1oe and respond 10 a1 «udeM reques~~ for'reVIew ot:hls or her licademlc
.·.·. ····~··-··
· .
' '. ·' .
.. ... .• .

,_.,

.

.····
. .

~

�~···.-

January 30, 1975

tlrom ~r;:f' 4, col. 4)

UUABFILMS••

The faculty Senate has issue d the
following Jist Of its committe~s for the
current academi c year: Academic
Freedom &amp; Responsibility (chaired by Dr.
Mark Shechner, Engl ish) ; Admissions
Committee (Dr. Edward Hovorka,
Psychology) ; Athletics Committee (Dr.
Howard Tieckelmann , Chemistry) ;
Co ll eges Committee (Dr. Jonathan
Reichert, Physics &amp; Astronomy} ; ·
Economic Status Committee (Dr. James

Schindler, Management); Educational
Planning &amp; Policy Committee (Dr. Ira
Cohe n, Psychology); Elections Committee (Dr. Wayne Anderson, Medicinal
Chemistry); Facuhy Tenure &amp; Privileges

Comminee (Dr. Robert Paaswell, Civil
Engineering); Information &amp; library
Resources Committee (Dr. John Ellison,
Library &amp; Information Studies); Research
&amp; Creative Activity (Dr. Ralph Rumer,
Civil Engineering); Security Committee
(Dr. Joseph Shjster, Management); and
Grading Committee (Dr. Robert
Grant'ham, DUE).

Jewish Arts
Festival planned
The U( B Je wish SIUdent Union is span·
so ring a Jewish Arts Fe stival, February 19 . f ea turing speakers, films ,
coff~e\&gt;~us~s,. a~d- fqlkda.nc_e lNOrkshops.
·.The principal eVeht of the we ek Will Oe .
an address on " Anti-Semitism and
Assimilation in the j.Jnited States.," bY.
Miho ii · Hi'in'me1rarb. ·:;a· ·ContifbU Ung·
e di,ior · OJ ' ccND~R•a;y. ; iriiga~irie: = Mr.
Himmelfarb is director of the. Informa tion and Research Services of th-e
American Jewjsh Committee, an editor
of the American /ewlsh Yeor BooA:, and
has served as a visiting professor at the
Jewish Theological Seminar y, the
Reconstructionist Rabbinical College.
and at Yale. He will be speaking Wednesday, February 5, at 8 p .m . in the Fillmore
Room, Norton. ·
A series of folkda nce workshops will
be conducted by the renowned Israeli
choreographer, Fred Berk, on Sunday,
February 2, beginning at noon in Norton
1-!all. All levels of folkdancing will be
covered.
Also on the schedule:
February 1-Saturday evening, 8:30
p .m ., Norton Union. A coffeehouse with
musicologist Velvel Pasternack, ~n expert
on Jewish music; also featuring a
Chassidic band. Free food and drink . All
invited.
feltruary ]-Movie-Gentlemen's
Agreement. 5 p.m.; Conference Theatre,
Norton. Free.
·
Februuy 4-Qpen .session of Israeli
Folkdandng, 8 p .m., Fillmore Room,
Norton. Free. ·
For further information and times,
contact the Jewish Student Union, 8:315213 .

aa·

hlllri&amp;httofreespeech.
llollan students. taler made dear that

Zleafer -

A series of films bY. . D. W. Griffith (each ap·
proximately 10 minutes) will. be shown begin·
ning at 7: 30 p.m. 70 Acheson. No admi ssion
charge.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FILM•
Secreu Or a Soul. 5 Acheson, 7:45 p.m. No
admission charge.
'
POflRY READING·
Ted Berrigan, poet of the New York school,
gives a poetry reading, D1 Norton, 8 p.m. No
admission cha rge.
·
CREAnVE ASSOCIATE RECITAL •
Benjamin Hudson, violinist, gives the fourth
Creative Associate Recital of the season. Baird
Re-cit!ll Hall, 8 p.m. No admission cha rge.
VINCENT PRICE FILM FESTIVAL •
Th e Masque of the Red Death, 8 p.m., and
The Pit and the Pendulum, 10 p.m. Norton
Conference ~ ea tr e. No admission charge.

~~~~~~;rc~SSOCIAnON

mittee (Dr. Anthony Rozak, Art); Computer Resources Commiltee (Dr. James
Mciver, Jr., Chemistry); · Nomi .. ations
Committee (Dr. Mili Clark, English); and
Instructional Communications Com·
mirtee (Dr. Joseph Masling, Psychology) .

nroin ~ 1. mi. fJ•
way for his despicable conlempt for the
Constitutionanddemocraticprocess."
Ziegler is u:heduled to make a
february 11 appearance at UIB for a fee
of S2,500. Asked if the invitation w&lt;iuld
, stan11.'' MorrOw answered, ·~As .! ar asJ'm
c:ona=rnec1 It's still on" . . · . .. .
~· BU'5
MoirOw ~id
L- thou
. ~~ . w . , 1 ~unaie'• 1.. at
""l'
'IS . ""'&lt;~'
"-·- ~~people
,not w~nl .tp. near auuu• ... ~.
events that had led tot~ toPPling of. ~
president and also ._,.,;ed thai "": ~tlon prevented ZJes1er from exerastng

FILMS• .

THURSDA Y---6

are: Individualized Admissions Com-

.
Speakers--

Madame· Bovary and Little Women. 140
Farber (Capen}, 7: 30 and 9:20p.m. No admis·
sion charge.

WESTERN NEW YORK

Special committees and their heads

1

Enroflment Projections ;md Their Effed on
Coffpges and Universities, Dr. William Fuller,
assistant commissioner for higher education
planning, New York State Education Depart·
me nt. A panel of local college and university
prE"sidents (includi ng l.l/8 President Robert L
KE"tterl will respond to Or. Fuller's remarks.
Rosary Hill College. Fo r furt he r information,
contact Mr. Robert laskie, 831 ·2100.
CONnNUING DENTAL WUCAnON
SEMINARf
· CX&gt;ntal Photogr;.ph y as an Aid in Daily Prac··
riN', Dr. Bruno Kielich . 148 Fa(.__ber (C~I. 9
a.m.-4:30p.m.
For r~ istr atio n information, call the School
of ~ntistry , 831-2836 .
P~A~A.GEIJTICS SfMIISARf ·
Gamma H ydroxybutyrate: A Potenti~l Anti·
Parki nsonia n .Agent, John Lettieri, U/B

. :

TAX ADVISORY SERVICE
ThP Office of Foreign Stude nt Affairs is
a~ain offering a tax advisory service for
forPign scholars and students. law students
BruCe Steiner and Alan Strauss will be
available 10-12 hours per week at the Foreign
Student Office. The service runs from Feb. 3·
April 11,· Monday and Wednesday from 2-5
p.m. Call831-3828 for ail appointment.
WHKEND IN RURAL AMERICA
A cultural exchange visil to a small rural
community as guests of Amerian families is
sched uled for March 13-16 for international
students. There is no charge for the exchange.
Applications are available in the Foreign Stu·
dent Office, 210 Townsend. The deadline for
application is Feb. 28.
Sponsored by the SA International Coordinator.

UUAIFILM ..
Fr~ Woman. Norton Conference Theatre,
caii831·S117 for times. Admission charge.

EXHIBITS

GAUBIY 219 qttiiiT
Spatial SurVey: an exhibir of various media
exploring the use of space: ·The artists
represented in the exhibit are Roben Longo,
Joe Panone, RQRer Ra.pp and Andy Tiiipolski.~
The exhibit runs through Feb. 2. Hours are
Mon.-Fri. 11 i .m.-4 p.m.; Mon., Wed. and
Thurs., 7-10 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 p.m. Gallery 219,
second floor Norton Union. ,
GAI.I.BY 21t ~
_
Muhip/es is the title of this tr•veling·exhibit
from the Visual Studies Workshop in
Rochester. A v1riety of medio are included,
~h 9dl work repr~.ua;d.20ti~ Area.,.
.. tistl •"': lnOited to P.Onictpate.
··
, . _ _ fO&lt;/ •.!!formation, con~ . ,Gallery 219
. tlii'o11111t ~ UUAB office, 831·5)12. The ex- ·hiblt runs Feb. l-!1, HOurs: Mon.-Fri., 11a,m.4i&gt;-!"·:·lilon.; Wed.,andThurs.,7-10p.m:; •' Sun., 1-Sp.m. Secondfloor,Norion.

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS INTHYIEWS
The staff of the University Placement-end
Career Guidance Office welcomes iiill students
in the University community and alumni io
take part in v1.rious areer programs offered
this year . ·The on-campus intervieWing
prog~m. running from Jan. 28-April25, OffeB
the -rtunity for individuollnten.jews wi!!r
educali.on, business, Industrial and
governmental representotlves. C.ndidotes
from oil desree levels, completlns their
coune work in )onuory.,.. May 1975, are in.Oted to takel"!rt in the IJ&gt;IeMewlns- Resbtratlon" lorms Gav•lla~ In lioyes Annex c,
-.Rm. 6. The lollowins aaencies will be Inter·
viewinstbisweek:
.
·
THURSOAY-30: New York Telephone;
C.rrierCoip.;CamatlonCo.
•
·
FRIDAY-31 : Buffalo Fotwe Co.; Allied
Cl&gt;emlcol Corp. .
Manhattan Bonk; Dla·
TU£50AY-4: H. J. Heinz Co.; F -

lOOMOODm.n

- ·Polish Collection.' eiihibltion a~lled from
the UMenfty'• c:allection of ......., than 4,ooo
volu..,.. of materiA flnt floor, l'od&lt;wood
Memorial Llbrory. Monday-Friday, 9 ··~
p.m. Conllnulnc·
·
.

-~

..:=.;;;:g:;
Mutual

_

Ensfnftrlns

--'

-Corp.; ......... bnd

a..tmllielJRwinslolnl:,_dteMuolc :· eo~~-=s~....:::=Wo.m'

;ZJeeler.... ~ hls.mlleBe .,..k, .. UbraryGat-'""" Jllere-Sopl.'itl7- '
1975,a_of...._.,..ll1!i._..lnl:tor.. P~e~Wen!'s transitional Slaff ,· • · inslhehlsti"J·!'fc_he~llbrooy.lalldHIII~ · " ·

iiiJ awr lifter . . ~ a ,ar jcib on

the

NOTICES
CRWIT-FREE COURSES
A variety of courses are K heduled for the
spring semester, includ ing suc;.h topics as arts
and crafts, journalism, counseling, computers,
engi neering, government, music and theatre,
photography, real estate, psychology, sports,
wome n's studies, writ ing, and many othe rs.
For a brochure detailing the cOUrses offe red
or for registration information, contact the
Division of Continuing Education, Hayes A,
Rm. 3, Main Street Campus, 831-4301 .
FACULTY-STAff SWIMMING
Hours for faculty and stafr swimming are 12
noon·2 p.m. each Friday, Clark Hall pool.
FINANCIAL AID FOR EOP STUDENTS ,
All stude nt s who have not filed the 1974-75
TAP, formerly Scholar Incentive, Application
and BEOG application should immediately
contact their respect ive counselors regarding
their current statu s. Failure to do so can result
in an academi c check stop for September 1975
and fin ancia l liability for tuition for 1974-75.
February 1 is the dead line.
GSA GRANT SUI'I'ORT
Graduate st ud ent appl ications for grant
su pport are available in the GSA office, 205
Norton. Applica ti on ma y be made for up to
$250; the dea.dline is Fe.b. 10. For information,

seeks volunteers

Sunshine House, a crisis intervention
center on campus, is begihning a new
training prog~am for individuals who
w ish · to participate in the work of the
center. Participation is open to all in~
terested Western New York residents.
Andrew D. Presberg, one of the
Sunshine House coordinators, explains
• that the organization is looking for "sensitive, committed volunteers" with some
free time and flexible hours to be trained
in all aspects of ~risis interve~ion . Training will include telephone and walk-in
counseling techniques, use of resource
mate rial and integration into the center's
collectiv~ community. ·
Founded in the . spring of 1971,
Sunshine House offers help to persOns
with emotional problems, drug-related
difficulties, general problems in everyday life, and/or those who just feel the
need to speak with someone on a oneto-one basis. The organization receives
an average of 300 telephone calls and
visits each month. ·
Initial screening for the training
program will begin soon, and interested
individuals should contact Sunshine
House at 831-4046 by February 1.

'Book Bus' visits
campus this week
The Book Bus, an avant-garde
bookstore on wheels, will be on campus,
Thursday and Friday, Janu~ry 30 and 31 . It .
will be . located near Annex A, which .
houses · the English Department and is
adjacent to Bailey Avenue.
Cur.rently touring campuses and com·
munities throughout the Northeast , the
Book Bus is a pilot project· supported ·!&gt;y
grants from the National Endowment for
the Arts and the New York State Council
on the Arts. It contains many difficult-toobtain books, journals, tapes and records
produced · by 75 non-commercial, in-·
dependent presses.
·Jhe works of l)'lany COf)terT'!pqrary_
writeis, poets, 'photographers and artists
are included, as well as accounts of
emerging lifestyles, h ~storical commentary -and a broad ·sainplfng of the creilive .
use of typography and boOk design .
· ·
The campus community is invited to
visit the Book Bus to look, browse, listen
and if they ')'ish, to purchase any qf the
materials on hand.
·
· ·

LIFE WORKSHOPS
life Workshops are o ~ g anized to provide
small groups in which people can share in·
tt&gt;rests, sk ills, ideas-i!!d ~efi~ng .experie ntes:
outside the classroom. The workshops are
open to all me mbers of the University co m·
mWlit y, thei r spouses, and alum11i. Th ~ re is, no
admission charge. and the workshops cover a
large -v.a riet¥ of subjects. for information and
rf&gt;g istrat ion , 831-4630.
OFFIGE 0~ ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
HOURS
.
The Office of Admissions and Records will
be open Monday through Friday from 8:30
a. m. to 8:30p.m. thr9 ugh .F eb r~il ry 7. ..

·~vni,.;;a. cPait ·,; · cLeni RiefenstahiJ. i-11
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by. the Rea:lonal FUm Project,..
HILlEL HOUSf•
" Orop·ln" night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7·11 p.m.
" PNsonal growth" group meets at 7:30p.m.
CONnNUING MWICAL EDUCAnON
CARDIAC CLINICf
This series of clinics in physical exa mination
of th e ca rdia c pat ie nt and arrhythmia
workshops are scheduled each Thursday
evening through May B. The topic of tonight 's
dinic is The J~ular Pulse. Farber (Capen) Hall
Basement, Room G-22, 7:30-9:30 p.m. For information or registration, call the School of
Medicine, 831 -5526.
Sponsored by the School of Medici ne.
SPEAKERS BUREAU LECTURE"
Film star Vincent Price gives a lecture, sponsored by the Student Association Speakers
Bureau. Clark Hall, 8 p.m.

· .· ·. :

VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Portraits of Young Black People.
Photographs by Richard Blau, U/B assistant
professor of American Studies. Hayes Hall
' lobby, through January 31.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Peop l e, photo gra phs by Mickey
Oste rreiche r. Hayes Hall lobby, February 428, M ond ~y th roug h Frida y fro m 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs.

ca ll831 -5505 .

:afl~}'t; st,up~ent ~ D 170 ,~ell F,~ilil,)', .4 P·!"· . ,

we'-t)e 19· appear if· he · . ~......,-

...n.dto'-ao.hisfee. ·.

.

~--------------------- SunShine-House
.
.

Senate lists
committees

J;.

j

· · ,...0411+hm MIL-: ~t.!.!l-f~.-. :_•..~·.!!.11~~~~.;...:.:..:.:L'.!::: :! .... ~ .......... _'

S4eol ~
THUitSOAY-6: lelhlohem · s.el Corp.;

Tire·•

VISiting prof gives
talk before Emperor
It wasn't an ordiAary lecture deliv.ered
by Dr. H~jime Nakamura, a visiting
professor of Eastern philosophy al u/8,
upon return to his native Japan over the
holiday recess.
.
In attendance were the Emperor and
Empress Hirohito, Crown Prince Akahito ,
the speaker of Japan's highest ~islative
body, members of the nation's highest
·court, and a· host of princes, princesses
and other dignitaries.
·The ocalion was Japan's.annual "lectu'l! meeting," a centuries'old tradition.
held eacli New Year'• Day nlornlng at the Imperial Palace.
,
Dr. Nakamura, 62, a professor emeritus
at Tokyo University who spoke with two
other S!'holars of similar-stature, lectured
on the formations of early Buddhism.
He described his Invitation to appear

before the royal assemblap as a "areat
honor that occurs but once in the life of
a scholar."

.

Senate ---&amp;..
..... .-1-.
II~'.. . _
win

1

The Faculty Senate
hold a replar
•
Tuesda "'-'-··~
..
meeting
y, ·~-7 4, M ,.;]0
p .m . in148Diefendorf.

Since ~ are no liems of .business
before the Senate requlrinll act1oo1. the
~tinJ ls expected to be cle\ooted
prlmlrlly to general dllallllon of
University affairs or of ·1'nllters ar11tns
from the reports of~ l'resicleflt or the- · •
chairman.
·
Dr. 'f\lbert Somh. aeaJtlve vkie pielident. and Dr. Mer1ion Ertel!.~ vlcle

~
Rubber e&gt;:o.;....., e-ra~ · ~·fonCIIdeniln,_lr.,.hmibeen .
/TrilllpGI.-Il ~ ·
· ~....dn ~r.u ~·~; ,·,· · - ~·~¥P1Jlu· :r·~·,· '!_',·{;;: · j~; · ~ · ·

�.. .
• • :I • ~

."'-.';

January 30, 1975

-,.

THURSDAY-30
CONTTNUING DENTAL BJUCATION
SEMINAitf
Trrarmenr of Advanced Oenral DiseaS(&gt; By
Pf'riodontal. Orthodonric and Restorative
Proc-edures, Or. Morton Amsterdam, Univer~
si ty of -Pennsy lva nia , and Dr . Robert
Vanarsdall, University of Pennsylva nia . 232
Norton , January 30·february 1, 9 a.m .-4:30
p .m. _
For information or registration, call the
School of Dentistry, 831 -2836.
PmiATRIC RESEARCH SEMINAIIf
Acute
lntermiftenr
Porph yria:
New
Tests, Dr. Martha Kreimer·
Birobaum, Department of Medici ne, Buffalo
General Hospital. Se&lt;ond floor· board room,
Children's Hospital, 12 noon .

· Diagnostic

VISITING SCHOLAR SERIESf
Canyons o f the Colorado, Consequencc:&gt;s of
Catastrophe, Or. Eugene M. Shoemaker,
California Inst itute of Technology. Rm. 4, 4240
Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.
Presented b y Phi Beta Kappa and the
Department of Geological Sciences.
MATHEMATICSCOLLOQUIUMf ,
· Torur. Actiom on · 4-M.anifolds, Dr. Pe ter

Pao . Fordham University. Rm .. 36, 4246 Ridge
I ea; roff('f' hour at 3:30, ledure at 4 p.m.
_
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Effects of ·Chronic Oral Administration On
1he Pharmacokinetics of Levodopa and its
Majo r Metabo lites in the Rat, lawrence
Che ng, U/ B Ph .D. candidate. D 170 Bell Facility, 4p.m.
INTERNATIONAL PUB•
A Venezut&gt;lan J~:roup will ente'1ain , and
thNc:&gt; will be mu sic and refreshme nts at this
International Pub (formerty International
coffee hour). 244 ~248 Norton, 4:30p.m.
Sponsored by the SA International Coordinator and organized b y International Pub
volunteers.
LIFE WORKSHOP••
Psychomat is an open, free -flowing ex·
perience ro further open communica:rion.
Supervisors are Or. Jim James ~nd Ms. Wilda
l~in frci_m rhe University Counseling Ser·
VICes. 232 Norton, 7·10 p.m. (Continues each
Thursday throughout the semester, no
registration necessary).
I Am~ Fugitive frgm a Chain Gang (Mervyn

Leroy). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission
charge.
Presented b y the Regional Film Project.
HILLa HOUSE•
"Drop-In" night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
"Personal growth" group meets at 7:30p.m.
CONTINUING MEDICAl EDUCATION
CUDIAC CUNIQ
This ~of dinics In physical examination
of the cardiac patient and · arrhythm ia
workshops a.re scheduled each Thursday
evenin"through May 8. The topic of tonight's
clinic is Auscuhation. Farber (Capen) Hall
Bawnwnt, Room G~22, 7:30-9:30 p.m. For information or registration, call the School of
Medicine; 831-SS26.
. Sponsored by (he School of Medicine.

ATTICA DI5CUSSION"
An open discussion with Brother Oalou and
orher Anla br!)lhen Is scheduled. 248 Nor·
IOn,lp.m,
A film

·

sertes ~titled OWiiUrion is being

-each Tbunday ni,Bhl. Tonillht's episode
is llonvnce ond fie~. 170 Millord Fillmore
Academic Core, EIJ¥;on Complex, I p.m.

WSIIING«ttCCIAR5RIBI ·

Tire ,Ori/lin el tile &amp;rth oiid Her Sibling

~ Dr:~ M. Shoemoker, C.lllornia '-.
Institute ol Tec:hnolosY. 114 Hochslener, 8 :1S

p.m.

Presented' by

"'· ·..

.

!'hi Beta ~Cappo and the
~eiCealaiJcoiSdenrieL

VISRIIiiG.umsr-.ar.u•
l'lanlsllscholar a.det -

Mary -

.wR"ESTUN6•

HORIZONS IN
NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINARf
Th E" Neurona l ·Basis of Locomotion in the
Cockroach. Dr. Charles Fourtner, Deparlme nt
of BioloJ,ty. 108 Sh; rman, 1 p.m.

VARSITY HOCKEY"

A~~~~~,!;w,

~:

l:lll p.m.
!::"'•,41aff

will pirform.

......... lllelnhans Music ~II,

S1 studenls; S2 U/11
SJ pnerol odmls-

IM. alvmnl;

~b,the DeponmenrofMusic:.
~

.·
Conference ~. aH

..... IW. st17 ........ " " " ' ... fit.. . . . .

anm.r.e.Also,_,_

U/ 8 ~- Syracuse University with ... Cortland
.Stati Collr~:e and Ashland Co lleRe. Clirk Hall,
1 p .m . Stutlents with 10 admitt~ free; -52
~-tem• ral public. _,
~ •· ,, ·
~ l/IB \K". WPstern Michigan. Holiday Twin
Rinks, 3465 Broadwa y, 7:30p.m. Students ma y

pk k up a fr(&gt;(' ti ckel'a t Clark Hall ticket office
before tht&gt; night of the game; S2 general
publ ic

a Ca nadian arti st and film makt&gt;r , will screcm and discuss his film s. Communications Center, Buffa lo State, 2 p.m. No
admission cha rge.

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
Jc&gt;.ln RitCiiiP ent€.'rtains. First fl oor cafeteria,
Norton . 8 and 10 p .m. Ad mission charge.

PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUM#
Th e&gt; Withdra wa l -Activity Distinction in
Schizophre&gt;nin. Dr. Richard A. Depu e,
DPpartm&lt;'nt of Psycho logy, Southern Illinois
UnivNsit v at Carbo nda le. C-34, 4230 Ridge
l &lt;'a.2p.m.
Pr'esf' ntf'd bv th(&gt; Clinical -Communit y
Psvcho loJ:v Ar&lt;'a , Depa rtment of Psychology.

T.1kc&gt; thf' Monrv ancf Run.· 140 Farber (Ca·
p&lt;'nl. 8 ar.d 10 p:m. Admission : Sl .

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
SEMINAR#
U~C&gt; of Mult ivariate Statistica l T('ch niques
fo r fq im.l lin~ the Market Value&gt; of Rc (idential
Proprrtv. Rich.ud A. Borst, vice prcsident for
data process in g d eve lo pm en t, Cl T Dala
SvStems Oi\'ision, Dayton, Oh io . Rm . 17 .. 4132
RidgP l l"a, 3 p.m .
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINAR#
StrvCture. fun ction. and Correlation in the
Pulm ona n • Cas Exch ange Apparatus, Dr .
Ewald R. We ib e l, profe sso r of a na to m y,
Uni\'ersit)' of Bf'r n, Swit zerland. 108 She rman,
4p.m.

CACFILM•

CHINESE STUDENT )NORKSHOP•
Thr Historic-&lt;rl Development .. of Modern
China : Th P Opium War f1839) through the
RC'vo ltllin n o f 1911 . This is the fjrst in a series
of opC' n disCussions about the history of
Chin,l. 339 Norto n, 8 p.m.
SponsorNt b\' SA and CSA!'
RECITAL•
,
fdich.w l Anrlriaccio gives
guitar re cital.
ThC' program includes works by Boccheri ni
dnd Rod~rigo . Baird Redta l Hall , 8 p .m. No
adf!lission charge . .

a

ATTICA BENEFIT PARTY.,;

--..~·

ThC' At1ic.1 Support Grou p spo nsors this parwi1h frf'C' h&lt;'c&gt;r, food and band. 124 Jewell
P.nkwav. 8:30p.m. Donation: S2.

I\•

UUABFILM'"•

Tr&lt;"hh. Norton ConfNence Th ea tre, ca ll831 ·
51 17 for tim~ . Ad.missio n cha r~ e:-

SUNDAY-2

VARSIT'Y HOCKEY•
( !/8 V•. Wr•tNn h·1ichiJlan. Ho li day Twiil
Rinks, 3465 Broadway, 7 :30 p.m. Stude nt s
ma y pkk up a fre(&gt; ticket at Clark H,allt ickct
office&gt; bt&gt;for&lt;' th P night of the game; S1
gc&gt;nNal public.

RACHEL CARSON COLLEGE ··
GENERAL MEETING•
Th&lt;' RCC ~eneral meeting includes dinne r
,,, 5 p.m ., a meeting at6 :30, ~ nd a ~ I ide prese ntation, Pntitled Baclcpackinl{ in Colorado. at
7:30p.m. Fargo Quad, bui ldin gs 5 and 6, 1arge
lo ungf' . The cha rge for dinner is S.SO and for
beN S.25.
If vou plan to atte nd, sign up on the door of
thP RCC o ffi ce (FarRo AJ62l by 4 p.m., Frida y,
Jan . 31.

BELLY DANCE/LECTURE•
D .mirllif Giml'fli will read fr om her poetry,
lfftur&lt;' on bf'llv dancing, and perform a "birt h
da ncP.'' Ba ird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Admission :

Sl .
FILMS•

Atlic,l, and Tf'ach the Children. Norton
ConfE"r&lt;'nC"f' Theatre, 12-2 p.m., and 147
Dit&gt;fE&gt;ndorf, s.~1o p.m. No admission charge.
Prrsc:&gt;nt&lt;'d bv the U/ 8 Attica Support Group .
CACFILM"
Tak E&gt; rhr Mnnf'y anrl Run. 140 Farber (Caf)E"nl, 8 and 10p.m: -Admission: S1 . UUAI COTFEfHOUSE"
Billy Hamilron and the Blue Grass Almanac
&lt;'ntrrtain. First floor cafeteria, Norton. 9 p.m. ·
Admission charge.
IRCFILMS••
Bil( Jakf' and Kf'lly'$ Heroes. location and

tim&lt;'s a'rf' posted one week in advance on
rrsidf' nCf' hall bulletin boards. Open only to
IRC fPE"·payers.

5ATURDAY::-1
CONTINUING.DENTAL EIJU£ATION
SEMINAitf .
Tre~tment of Adv~nced Denr~l DiSGse By
Pforiodontal. Orthodontic ~nd Restorative
Procedure~. Dr. Morton Amsterdam, Univer~
sity of Pennsytvania, and Dr. Robert
Vanarsdall, University of Penmylvania. 232
Norton , January ~February 1, 9 ~.m ..... :JO

p.m..

~

•

. for information or registration, 'Call the
School of Dentisrry. 831-2836.
HIUB. SHAllATON•
Shibboron with Velvel hsternock •t Hillel
House. 40 Copen Blvd., 10..m.
' Coffeehocne with lectun! by Velvel Posternod and en1eminment by • Chossidk bond
from Toronto in 2«1 Norton, 8:30p.m.

ATliCA-•

·

An innoduci.,.Y wOrkshop Will besln ot 10 o.m. In 330 Norton, 1M other workshops will
«!f1tlnue untM 2:30pm:

WOMIN'S-..cl"
U/11 lmlltotlonal. Norton Union, 1 p.m. NO.
~chafge.

.

WOMIN'S-·
.
U/11 ws. CiJme/1 UM!enky with llhoa
Coflete. Clarlc ........ 1 p.m. No ...........

...._

Robert McGandy. G-22 Farber (Capen); 12
noon .

trv ~ ENG~~~RING ucruREt
.. Tech no to~ica llnput to the Development of
Fire Safety "Legislation, Dr. Paul R. DeCicco,

1

Ce nte r fo r Urban Environmental Studies, New
York Polytechnic Institute. 104 Parker, 2 p .m.
Sponsored by the Department of Civil
Enginee ring and the Buffalo Section of the
American Society of Engineers.
URIAN ANALYSIS AND POLICY
SEMINARW
l m1e$ in Urban Transportation Planning, Dr.
Robert Pa aswell, De partment of Cjvil
Engineering. 237 Crosby, 3-5 p.m.

VAIQ CLUI PHYSI9LOGY SEMINARJ
Exchange of HCO.J and Cl ~cross Red Cell
M embranes, Dr. Robert Klocke. 106 Sherman,

4:30p.m.
FILM'

Spite Marriage (Keaton). 146 Diefendorf, 5
and 7 p.m. No admission cha rge.
FILM•

Rulf''i o f the Game {Renoir) . 147 Diefe ndorf.
7 p.m. No admission charge.

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL •
UI B v'i. Ruffalo State College. Clark Hall , 7
p.m. Students with ID ca rds ad mined free; S2
~e n f'ra l pub lic.
MEN'S\ WIMMING•
l t/B V(. l lnivf'r~ity of Roch e5ter. Clark Poo l,
7:30p. m. No admi ssion charge.

UUABFILMS••
M.1rlamf' Rovarv and Litt le '\Vomen. 170
Mill.ud Fillmore Academic Cor(&gt;, Elli cotl
Complex, 7: 30 and 9:20 p .m. No admission
ch a r~f' .

HILLEL SHABBATON"
Shabb,1t nn with Velv('l Pasternack . 40 Capen
Blvd .. &amp;p.m.

Sponsorf'd bv th e Office of Cultural Affai rs.

Fli..M•

-·

Vanarsdall, University of Pennsylvania . 232
Norton , January 30-Febru.try 1, 9 a.m.-4:30
p.m.
For information or .r~gistration, call the
School of DE"nt iStfY , 831-2836.

HILLEL COFFEl HOUR•
A cofft&gt;e hour at Hillel HoUse marks ·the
opening of the Jewish Free University. All in INf's ted students ·are invited to attend to ge t
further information about course offerings. 40
~a pen Blvd., 7 p .m.
UUABFJLM ..
Tr.a ~ h .

Norton Conference Theatre, ca ll8315117 for times. Admiss!on charge.

MONDAY_:3
MORTON R. LANE STAn UNIVEIISITY
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION MEETINGf
The annual meeting of Chapter f1S021 of
the. Morton R. lane State University federal
Credit Union will be held on the State Univer~
siry College campus, 1300 Elmwood Ave.
Moot Hall, 12 noon.
RLM"
How Creen Was My Valley (ford) .' 1&lt;40
Farber (Capen) , 3 and 9 p.m. No admission
charge:

RL\1"

7

Toni (Renoir, 1934). 146 Diefendorf, p.m.
No admission ch~rge.
\.-... ·
FilM•
711• 39 Steps (Allred Hitchcock). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission cha-rge.
... Presented by the Regionil film Project.

ENCUSH DEPARTMENT filM•
Fitvre. 5 Acheson, 7:45 p.m. No
dtarxe.
~.

~mission

VINCENT Pilla FilM FB11VA1• ·
The USI Mon on f•nh, 8 p.f!l., •nd 'The FlY,
10 p.m. Norton Conference Theatre. No admislion charwe. ·
..-::
FACUI.IY IIICITAl"
Pionlst till&gt; . Sritk• _jives • reciul ' entitled
Musk f&lt;K l'lono(JJ four honds.ond pef&lt;Ussion.
Bolrd Rec:IUI Hall. 8 p.m. Admission: $.50
studenh; $1 foculty, mil Jnd olumnl; $1.50
genet~P"I!!Ic.

VINCENT PRICE FILM FESTIVAL •
Tombs of Ugeia, 8 p.m., and The Raven. 10
p .m. Norton Confere nce Theatre. No admission c ~arge .

WEDNESDA Y-5
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARI .

ti~~~~A;:!:~=~( a~,;~~~~; f~~~h~;g~e~:
Dr. Williafn D. Zitler. This group of lectures
and demonstrations reviews basic concepts
conct&gt;rnin~ local anesthesia. 148 Farber (Capen). 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.
For rt&gt;gistration information, call the School
of De ntistry, 831 -2836.
FISiftRPERSONS MEUING•
Fisherpersons are invited to . attend this
organizational meeti]lg, designed to bring ·
together individuals interested in the art of
angling, exchanging ideas and fish talk. 232
Norton, 12 noon. Bring a lunch or plan to pick
one up at the express cafeteria.
'AGING' I.KTURE SERIES•
Bf'havior. Health ~nd ARinJt Or. lames
Emmett Birren, professor of psychology and
director of the Gerontology Center, University of Southern California. 233 Norton, j p.m. _
No admissjon ch~rge.
Secon_d in the series of lectures presented
by the UIB Multidisciplinary Center for the
Study of Aging.

CHEMICAL ENCiiNEBINC SEMINAif
1

Enr;;~~;:.iso~':~s~::::' 1~fsSr'u~~i~:
Te&lt;hnolor!y. will speok. 104 P•rker. 3 p.m.
PHILOSOPHY LEC11J1111
ond 7hinklng, u/11 professor B. R.
Bugekkl, Deportment of Psychology._Rm. 14,
4244 Ridge Leo, 3:30p.m.
Pres.:nted by the U/11 Department of
Philosophy, the Buffalo Philosophy of Science
Society ond the Grocluate Stuclen!Auod.itlon.

'""'ll«Y

MUSIC DIPAITMENT I'NCOUNIIr
Michoel nlson Tltomos, music dloector of
the Bullolo Philhormonlc Orchestra, wiU participate in •n Informal conversation encounter. Fillmore Room, Norton; 4 p.m. No
admission cho'l!e. -.
TIM IS IADIO"
A mnYenotlon wilh sculptOr Seymour Up- ron. hosted by Dr. Harry Rond, UIB .......t
profeosor of ort histoJy, WIIFO-FM 181.7

mhr.l,4p.m.

I!Of#AlOACAI!IM\' O f A&amp;IINCt
· ~-

l'lrlmonaty Edemo ond ledy Vessels, Dr.
Alfred P. Flshmm, professor ol medldne one!
- dltector of the c-llcwascular-Pulmonary
ol Medicine, Unloenlty '
Facuhy · Club, .tlarrl1110n

.. -5:30, social hour at 6:30,

No aclrnlsoian charp for

lec-

--.....aam-

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERsiTY AT BUFFALO
JANUARY 23, 1975

~- 6, NO. 16

•

Buder named
provost.of
Social Science

hur

Amherst Bubble

This w,as tbr view from inside the bubble bst week, as workmen inflated the
huge dome whKh will ~e the Amherst c.ampus ~ • temporuy .tlhletic filcili·
ty. Designed by Bird.air Structures of Cheektow.ap, builders of the m.ammoth
U.S. P.nilion .at hpo 70, the bubble is ·42 feet his;h, 262 feet Jons, .and 165 f~t
wide. The infbb.ble gym is expected to e~ the squeeze on M.1in Street
,athletic fKilities .and to .answer the pressins; need of Amherst dorm residents
for re&lt;:rution;tl opportunities.. le•sed for .a reported $50,000 • yur, the bubble,
described by i loc:•l reporter ~ • #plump, &amp;lowins c.at~r" of • buUcllns,
will ewentudy M repbced by .a more connntioml buildins, one th,at Wl11 be
constructed r.atMr lh.an in&amp;ted. ~

Med teams to start Cancer Care Network
T~o_. ~~ffalo&gt; r~i,rch te~ms are a~ng

five_n•no~1Jv lunded tfirough National·Cancer lnstifute grants that will establish
cooperative networks among pl)ysicians,
dentistS and other health pcoh~ssionals to
provide improved detection and
managertJent of head and neck cancer
patients.
_
The teams :- headed by Dr. John M.
lore, Jr., cha~rrnan of the U/B Department of Otolaryngology (ear, nose and
throat). and Dr. Donald P. Shedd. chief ·
of Roswell Park Memorial InstitUte's
Depanment of Head and !)leek Surgery.
- will cot1aborate orr establishing the
network.
Named the-Eastern Great lakes Head
and Neck Cancer Control Network, the
network will feature a data system and
continuing education program~ for
health professionals working with head
and neck cancer patients.
Or. lore said similar networks are being established across the country under
NCI funding . " Our network will aid head
andnecksurgeons,chemotherapistsand

radi~theraplsts-~; pro_yid~~g ~~~.a.nd.

acq.~i!e~and ad!~s~~

again or who n:-ust
e;a-stl
wc;eesstble : tn1orinata0fr!-"an . · - prmtheses-'Cfestgn.e d to· restore funct•on
diagnostic meaSures and patient
- such as sWallOWing - -·or hide dismanagement," he said.
figurement," Dr. lore pointed out. .
·other head and neck netwo rk s will be
U/8 project coordinator "Or. Sol KaUflo~ated _ at. C_hicago and Madison ,
man said physicians participating in the
Wtsconsm. Stmtlar networks around the.
three-year project will fill out informanat ion _are dealing ~ith breast cancers or
tion forms on each head and neck cancer
lymphomas such as Hodgkins· Disease.
patient they diagnose and treat. Follow·
Only five Per Cent
up reports on each patient's prognosis
and rehabilitation will also be coUected
Although head and neck cancers
from the physicians.
represent only five per cent of all
. "Patients need not .worry that their
cancers , they may be especially
debilitating and disfiguring. "We define
personal data will identify them once it's
collected," Dr. Kaufman said.
these as cancer affecting the upper
respiratory and digestive tracts," Dr. lore
· Dentists- who may be the first health
said. Approximately 11,500 will die from
professionals to spot a suspicious lesion
head and neck cancer this year across the
or growth in the oral cavitY,- will be incountry and 32,400 new cases will be
vited to participate in continuing educareported according to figures from NCI.
tion programs. Dr. Alan Drinnan, chairAbout 25 per cent of these involve the
man of U/B's Department of Orallarynx or "voice box" while the others
Medicine and a dental coordinator of
include portions of the mouth or · face .
the project, hopes a dental diagnostic
"Rehabilitation is especially Jmportant
clinic can be established. "' Dental
for patients who must learn to speak ~
uurnro~Rf'1,cbi.2J '

~agement grads: Where are they
lly lob EnteiiNrdt
"'cis a peripatetic troubleshooter.
tfni¥N&gt;,if " '"'~iM~
Who are the graduates of the School of
Alun1ni Questionno~ire
Management and what are they doing?
· These are some of the find ings con· Chances are the U/8 business
tained in a study pre.pared by Dr. Thomas
. graduate is a male who went to high
G. Gutteridge, professor of human
school in Western New York and who _ resources in the School of Management.
now has a home and a- job in one ot
The con_clusions are based on questionthe state's eight western counties.
naire answers submined by more than
He probably devotes 49 hours a week
1200 alumni who earned bachelor of
to his job. including perhaps an hour's
science (85) or master of business ad·
wonh of business homework a niRht. But
ministration (MBA) degrees between
he is unlikely to be pulling in the 801954 and 1971.
hour work week often associated with
A vast majo'rity of alumni said-they are
business executives.
now working in private business or in· ·
He is _likely ID be employed by a large
dustry, usually in Western New York. By
manufas:turing firm, where he expects to
far, the largest employers of U/B ·
be working, at a higher salary, five years
business grads are manufacturers who
from now. But he may be thinking about
produce industrial and consumer
either switching to a smaller firm as his
goods. Financial institutions and governcareer progresses or going ihto· business
ment agencies ~re also significant
for himself.
employers, the survey found.
If he earned his degree by taking night
. The U/B business grads ·are also more
courses, he is likely to be an "organizalikely to be working for a large company
tion man" who plans to stay in Western
- one with more th.an 10.000 employees
New York with h1s company. If he has a
-than for a medium-slled or small firm.
master's degree, he may be a!!empting
Gutterldge said few graduates
to live up to the stereotype of the MBA
reported workin.g on .a strict 8·5

now'l -

schedule. But. he added. "Neither do
&lt;hey put in the 70 to 80 hours popularly
lhought to be a typical executive work
week."'

The norm appears to be a 49-hour
work week, including an hour each
evening of business homework. These
working hours are .£onsistent for all
graduates, whether they hold BS.or MBA
degrees, or whether they obtained their .degree by going to .school full-time or by ·
taking evening courses on a part-time
basis. -

Geosraphk location Important
Gulteridge also · discove.red that
geographic location is an extremely importal)t factor in the minds of most
business school graduates:
"Most prefer to work around the area
they· call home," Gutleridge noted.
"They are reluctant to relocate except as
- a last resort or unless it involved a major
promotion." lie also s.id the first. move
ayiay frQJn. home is by far the hardest "to
make. .
•
Gu!!eridge said 48 per cent of the
(rumrop~«e7~ col. ''

·rhe Board of Trustees of the State
University of New York has appointed
Or. Arthur Butler as provost of the Facully of Social Science and Administration.
The rrustees took the action at a
meeting yesterday (Jan . 22) in Alb3ny.
Dr. Butler, 51 , a specialist in labor
economics, was appointed associate
provost in June, 1972, and has served as
actin g provost since April, 1973.
In annou nci ng the appointment, President Robe rt l. Ketter reported that after
an extensive national search, a screening
co mmitt ee nad. "e nthusiastically "
recommend ed Dr. Butle r fo r the post.
. Hjs selection was supported by all
department «;~airmen in the Faculty, Dr.
Ketter added.
•
Dr. Butler joined U/ B as a lect urer in
econo mics in 1949. He se rved as chairman of the U/B Economics Department
from 1958 to 1966, and as acting d~an of
the School of Business Administration
from 1960 to 1963. He also served as
University Ombudsman in 1969 and 1970.
·He has published ' numerous journal
art ides on inflation, unemployment and
wage structures, and is the author of a
college textbook on labor problems,
· Labor. Economics and Institutions.
In addition, he has prepared several
eC"onomic studies on labor conditions in
New York State for commi«ees of the
State l egislature.
The new provost, a native of Detroit,
Michii;ln..received,bij.bacbelpr.:S·d . - ~ ..
.from Manchester College, lifdfan;t, In
1944; his master's degree from the
Un~versity of M!nnesota in 1946; and his
doctorate from ttie University of Wisctmsinin1~1.
·
His professional activities include
membership in the American Economics
Association, the Industrial Relatidns
Research Society, the American Association of University Professors, and the
American Civil Uberties Union.

�January 2y1975

Guidelines for ·pe~nnel files set forth
While the new UUP Agreement
relating to Personnel files does not differ
substantially from the initial Ag reement,
it is appropriate lor all of us to be
re'm inded of our contractual respon·
sibilities for maintaining the official· Per·
oonnel file.
The anached " Guidelines for Personnel Files" summarize both the con·
tractual requirements for maintaining es-

sential information in the official Personnel file, as well as our procedures
relating to such files on this campus. In
addition, the Guidelines also outline our
obligation to provide the employee
access to specific documents in their of-

ficial Personnel file .
Careful adherence to the Guidelines
- by all supervisors of faculty and
professional employees -

will insure

that we comply with the intent of this
Agreement:
Should questions develop, please contact the Personnel Department. Thank
you -for yo ur assistance.

-Robert L KeHer

The UUP Asreement--l(ey P&lt;9risions
The Agreement (Article 31) is specific
·in providing that the Official Personnel
file shall contain copies of: . . . personnel
transactions .. . . official correspondence
with th~~·.em pl,oyee . . . formal. written
ev.1!uaripn .rerorrs prepared by an im:mediate .supervisor. department chairman, of 'dean, as appropriate.
ThP material lal&gt;ove) shall be available
ro .rf]a e(Jlnlovee. for review.

Procedures
incase of ··

diSrUption'

The Agreement further states that:
"Statements solicited in connection with
an employee's appointment, reappointm.e nt , or promotion shall not be
available to that employee."
Procedures lor Our Compus
. .. The Official Personnel File lor each
employee is maintained only in the Personnel. Department. Cop ies of all
materials (as defined below in Material
Available lor . Employee Review)
prepared on or after September 1, 1971,
should be in these offidal files.
. . . Upon request of the Personnel
De partme nt, each department or unit
head is responsible for forwarding to
them copies of all materials that were
prepared l&gt;efore September 1, 1971.
Supervisors will be requested to provide
this materia l should the employee.. or his
repreSentative, request to review his/her
Official Pe rsonnel File, o r if the file needs
to be reviewed by the Chancellor's Ad visory Committee, th e President's Office,
or other similar needs.
. . . Upon reasonable notice (two work
days), an e mployee, or
desig nated
member of UUP h av.i ng written
autho rization from the employee, shall
have the ri ght to examine his Official
Personnel File during business hours in ·
· the presence of a staff member of th e
Personnel Department.
· : .. An emptoyee may.: . . . not re move
~ ny -mateiial from the file . . . make
copies of any material in the Perso nnel
File ... fi le a statement in response to any
item Placed in .his file.
suPervisoi-s' WnHen R~Om..;.erid~tions
.... A supervisor's recommendations
shall.be.ayaijable to. the employee if rhey
.1re made a parr of a formal, written
evaluation report prepared by the i~­
mediate supervisor, department chairmanordean .

totroii'S NOn: l'ltildenr· ROben· L. «errer
laB Mtl'tOUIK'eCI the following procedureJ ro
be used by Campus Security in inst.ances of
ciJnlpdon of KMiemlc closses:
1. Should anyone engage in" behavior
whicli is disruptive of University dasses,
the Office of Campus Security will dispatch Security officers to the site, upon
a·ppropriate notice.
2. Upon arrival. Campus Security of...
ficers will :
(a) ask the intruders for identilicatidh
indicating that failure to do so may subject one to arrest.
(b) indicate to the intruders. that tilw
havf to leave and, should they fail to
accede to this request, they will be placed under arrest wiJh appropriate charges
to be filed in the proper City or Town
court;
(c) indicate to the intrudeys thai should •
any· of them. be students, they are also· ·
· subject to charges being placed against
them before the Hearing Committee on
# the Maintenance of Public Order, which
·could result in their expulsion ·from the
llnWet.itv; and
(d) indicate to the intruders iha_t if any
o( them are students, and that if University records indicate that~ they have
.
enp11ed in similar behavlo)' before, they
are subjeCt to immediate suspension by
the PreSident, pending a hearing before
the Hearing Comminee-:.
·
3. If the Intruders flee and can be identified:
(a) th&lt;Ke who are students, upon an
appro'priate complaint by an aggrieved
party, may have· action· brousht against
them before the Hearing Commin~;
(b) thooe. who are not students, upon
an 1ppr0prlate complaint by an aggrieved party, may have warrants of arr~
iisued aplnst them, .so that they may be
brousht before the proper City or Tootn
Courts. further, such Individuals may
also rea!ive a lener from the President
prohibiting their presence In or on any
property -ned or oper;oted by the State
University of New York .r Buifalo, with
said future presenile subJecting them to ~
'
arrest for criminal trespass under the
penal codes of New York State.

The Olllcial Personnel FOes-Contents
of and Employee Access to Materiol
Not Avolloble to the Employee
Or His Representotlve
... Statements solicited in conrtection
wi_th the .employee's appointment, reappointment, or promotion. This includes
sta t e ments (justifications and / or
recommendations) solicited from internal as well as external sources.
Materiol Avoiloble lor Review by the
· Employee or His Representotlve
(Note: To be sent to the Personnel
Department upon request.)
The items listed below include those

re quired by the Agreement
... Personnel transadions (ApPointment Authorizations, ~a lary change notices, notices of reappointment or
non-reappointment, copies of Appoint ment letters and leaves of abse nce}.
. Statements of class assignments,·
departmental and other administrative
assignments, committee appointme n-ts.
. Notice of awards, presentations,
and ci tations .
University fringe benefhs a nd
pa yro ll information (life insurance,
health insurance, disability insurance,
Social Secu rit y forms). workmen's compensation claims, and Unemployment
Insurance claims.
... Curriculum vitae.
All official correspondence with
the individual employee regarding his
co ndi tions of e~mploy m e nt , and replies
thereto.
. . . Formal, wri tte n eval uation reports
prepareQ by an ~ immediate superviso.r,
department c hairma n·, or dean, as appropriate. Such reports have been defin ed as the written evaluation prepared by
a supe rvisor, chairman, ·o r dean in accordance with procedures for person,nel action ·cat the department, school. or faculty level).

Student regulations a.~e a.rri~IJ~ed .
in light of new taw on records
HEW], (() an administ rati ve head of an
e du c ation agency or {·D) State
educational authorities from havtng
access to student or other records which
may be necessary in connection with the
(Adopted by Uni.ersiry Council, /anwory 13,
audit and evaluation of Federally sup1975.)
.
ported ~education programs, or in /connection with the enforcement of the
Student Records
Federal legal requirements which-relate
1. InformatiOn . about a student; into such programs: provided, that except
cluding but not limited to any personally
when coliedion of personally idenidentifiable information, records or files
t ifiable information is specifically
may be released withoUt the student's
authorized by Federal law, any data
written pe.rmission in the following cases
collected l&gt;v such officials shall be
o~ly:
protected in a manner which will not
(A.) · University officials, including
permit the personal identification of
Faculty and Staff who have a.legitimate ·
students and their parents by other than
educational interesti
those olfidals, and such personally iden(8.) in corinettion with- a student's
tifiable data shall be destroyed when no
application fOr, or receipt of, "financial
longer needed for such audit, evaluaaid.
·
tion, and enforcement of Federal legal
(C.) authorized representative of (i) · . requirements.
the Comptroller General of the Uftited
4. With . respect to t.hese sedions all
States, (ii) the Secretary of HEW, (iii) State
persons, agencies, or organizations
University or other · state educational
desiring ;~ccess to the records of a stuauthor·ities,
dent sball be required to sign a wrinen
form which shall be kept permanently
2. In all other cases.. no information
about students may be released in any
with the file of the student, but only lor
.
form unless:
inspection by the student, indicating
(A.) there is wrjnen consent from the
s~ificalir the legitimate educational or
student specifying records to be releasother intefest tnat each person, agency,
ed, the reasons for such release, and to
or organization has in seeking this Inforwhom, and with a copy ol.the retards to
mation. Such form shall be available to
be released to the ~udent if desired, unthe school officials responsible for
less confidential, or
·
record maintenance as ·a means of
(8.) such information is furnished in
auditing the operation of the system.
compliance with judicial order, or pur5. Students shall have an opportunity
suant to any lawfully issued subpoena,
lor a hearing to challenge the content of
up&lt;&gt;n condition that the student is
their records, to insure that the .records
notified of all such orders or subpoenas
are not ina~curate, misleading, or
in advance of the compliance therewith
otherwise In violation of the privacy -o.r.
by the1Jnlverslty.
·
- other rights of students, and to provide
3. Nothing cOntained In this section
an opportunity for the correction or
s.hall · p_reclifde autborizec;l : ...,Pnisendeletion of any such inaccurate mls- ~
tatives o( IM the Comptroller ~.-.1-Qt
leading, or otherwise inappropriate data
the United States, (B) the Seaetary-(of
contained therein.
EDITOR'S. NOTE: In conform.ance with the'
F.amily fdudrion Righrs .and PrlrKf Act of
1974 rhe following is olfered .as .an .amendmenr
by substirurion to rhe 1974-75 Student Rules &amp;
Regubrions, Section 5.30 "ltecon:ls, Use ot. '"

Bderly found
more tolerant
of the young
Elderly Americans appear to be more
to lerant of JodaY.'s youth than are
middle-agers or even adults in their late
twenties, say two UIB social science
professors.
Dr. Abraham Monk and Dr. Arthur G.
Cryns, of ihe School of Social Work,
susped that one bridge in the so-called
"generation gap" between the two
groups farthest apart in age might be that
the elderly are beginning to look upon
yo ung persons, or at least those youths
who share their ideals, as allies in a fight
against a hostile world.
.
The two professors, who ha ve
collabo rated on several research studies
about the attitudes of the aging, note
that you ng and old share certain common interests. Neither group plays very
mu ch .of a role in the " power structure,"
they say, and both groups are perceived
by others as belonging to a "leisure
class."
From their research, the social scientists ha ve discovered that senior citizens
most likely to feel positive about today's
youth are those who have good relations
with their own offspring and who are
satisfied wit h the way their own lives
have turned out.
Dr. Monk theorizes that older persons
who have developed good rapport with
their sons and daughters " ma y
generalize th ese positive feelings and
project th e m toward all, or most young
people."
Elderly More Toleranl
The e lder ly are more to lera nt of
others, ·Dr. Monk believes; " they have
little need to release tO\Yard others
frustrations co nce rning unful filled life
goals."
·
In studies of American aged, Dr. Monk
and Dr. Cryns have found a relationship
between an older perso n 's dissa tisfaction · with life and his negative
feelings toward youth. But tHe-y belieVe
this ma y be more of an American cuhural
phenomena th an a universal trai t. They
l:iase this observation on the findings of a
rece nt field study of Scar;1dinavian elderly, in which they found no correlation
between personal life satisfadion and the
acceptance gf youth. . ·
T:he Scandinavian.+study also revealed
that olde~ p•mons iri Oslo, Norway, a nd
Aarhuus, Oenc'mark, 1)ave less generalized anxieties ~and re more lolerant of
youth than tlle~m'erican elderly.
The Scandinavians, who upon retirement receive government pensions
tied to. the cost of living, said they had
few worries about economic matters.
Their major concerns were personal
issues, such as keeping their health and
being able tq, get around.
Both American and Scandinavian
e lderly were more likely to tolerate
young people if they believed youth in
general conformed to their ideological
values.
" To the. extent that the old petceive
the young as deviating from social
nol'ms," Dr. Monk 'suggests, .,they are.
apt to evaluate them with an lpcreasing
sense of criticism and intolerance."
Palriollsm an Amerian Concern
Dr . Monk observes that older
Americans are more Sensitive about
youth who deviate from "national or ,
patriotic ideals" than the ·Oanes or the
Norwegians.
When retired persons at four senior
citizen centers in Western New York
were· surveyed by UIB social scientists'
two yeat:S ago, they responded more
favorably to questions about "our boys
in Vietnam" than they did to questions
asked about "youth. today."
The Scandinavians, in contrast, "were
most inclined to be intolerant in areas of
personal achievement and general
charader -such as being lazy, stubborn
or undependable," Dr .. Monk said.
The study ol how Scandinavians
accepted youth was carried O\JI last year
and earlier this year with the cooperation
oJ Mrs. Kristen Milbrath who spenr a
year In Oslo and Aarhuus with her husband, Dr. Lester W. Milbrath, director of
the · SoCial· Science Research lns\itute,
who '!as teaching _Qn ·sabbatical leave.

�January 23, 1975

. . . .Eilili

UIB faculty~ 67 grants,
worth $123,451, from SUNY
The SUNY University- Awards Committee aqing through the Research
Foundation of State University of New
York has made 67 grants totaling $123,451

to members of the U/ B faculty lor
research projects during 1974-75. SUNYwide, 410 grants were awarded, totaling
$745,162.
According to Mrs. Shirley Stout of the
U/B Office of Research, some of the
grants are for fellowships covering two
months of uninterrupted research ; some
are for } Upplementary grants-in-aid for

researf-h; and others are combinations of
thetwo.
The summer research fellowships

provide $1800 stipends and the grants-inaid range from $100 to $1600. Combination awards are limited to $3400.
AQ..additional 34 research proposals
wer~ found " supportable but not fund -

able" by the Joint Awards Council/
Universily Awards Committee.

Last year, 112 U/ B faculty members
received grants totaling $169,171 in this
annual program.
This year's U/ 8 award winners, their project

titles and the amount of their stipends are :
Alan P. Balut is, Political Science, The Decline
of Congress: Myth or Realityl, S1 ,800; Thomas

C. Barrv, Classics, The Dynamic of Survival in

Classi cal Poet rv. S1 ,800; Alwin l. Baum,
English, Thr Metanovel : A Seminology of the
Absurd Tradition, S1 ,800; Helju A. Bennett ,
Historv. Rank Ordering and Ideology in
lmp&lt;"rial Governmen! , S2.214 ; Charles C.
BN nh&lt;"imN, En~lish , Th e Grammacentric
Novrl : Flaubrrt , Kafli:a and Beckett , S1,800;
C lifford 0. Blo o m , Mathemat ic s,
lnvrstigations in Diffraction and Geome1ric
_Options, S1 .800; Grace C. Blumberg, law,
Child Support : Enforcement Meausres and
Ahr rnativr Sources, S1 ,800; Frina A. Boldt,
Musk, A Studv of American Two-Piano Music,
S575; lamrs 8 . Brady, Philosophy. Hohfeldian
Analvsis Applil:'d to Moral Problems, S1 ,800;
Kurt E. Braswl. Geography, Efficient VIsuali zation O f~Corn,pl r x Data Sets,_S2,900; Jeremy A.
Brurnn, Cl:'l h !v Molecular Biology, SequenrinJt of Yc&gt;ast Killin - Factor RNAs, $3,000;
tulia Rrun-Ze jmis, Ger mani c ~ ,Slavic,
Mk ki£&gt;Wk7.'s Konrad Wallenrod and Pushkin's
Pohava. S1 ,800; Gerard C. Bucher, French,
Elt"'mrnts for a Narrative Theory, S2,100; SunYung A. Chang, Mathemati cs, Function
Alg&lt;'bra, S1 ,900; Ching Chou, Mathematics,
W.A.P. Functions and Growth Conditions of
Groups. S1.800.
Diam~ R. Christian, English, Bod y Metaphor
in Blakl"''s Work , S1 ,800; Charles W. Conawa y,
librarv Studies, Coeffidents of lnde~~: Usability
of "Off-The-Shelf" Indexes, S72S; C. Gordon
Connallv, Geology, Environment of the El
Caton Pvramid at the Vernal Equinox, S541 ;
Thomas W. Cusi c k , Mathemati c s.
Simuhanf'Ous Appro ~~: im ~tion of Algebraic
Numbf'rs. S1 ,800; Robert 1- Daly, American
Visionarv History, S1 ,800; Fred E. Dansereau,
Organi1ation &amp; Human Resources, Role Making Pr~ses in Complex Or g~niz~tions, S2,600; Jonath~n D. Dimock, Mathematics, Field
Theorv Models as Fund ions of Their Defining
P~ramf'lf'r , S1 ,800; lowell Dittmer, Political
SC"ie-nC"t"', Ch'en Po'ta and the Rise of Agrarian
Populism in Chin~. S2,159; EugenKl Donato,
Comparative liter~ture, The literiry and
Critic-al Works of Georges Bataille, S1,800;
Jerry K. frye, Sociology, Press Report Analysis
Technique: NiKon's Watergate Speeches, S1 ,S66; Francis M. Gispirini, Physics, Finite
Size/ Surface Effeds it.Superfluid Transition of
HE4, S2.300; William K. Geo'rge, Mechanical
EnRineering, · Buoyinl Plume lnvestigition,
$2,500; Tvrone -Georgiou, Art,_ Non-Silver
Photot!rophic Techniques, S2,595; Ronald K.
Goodenow, Social Foundatiqns, The
PrQRressive Educator and Race, 1930-50: An
Oro! Hlstmy, ,$2,~.
fort!&lt;' f.£. Grodo, Philosophy, f~ty Yem of
Philosophical Anthropology in Latin America,
$703; Mitchell Harwi1z, Economics, Manipulation of Pref~ences in Developmental Planning, $1,800; Abraham E. Haspel, Economics,
~erminants of the OccupattoN:I Decision
Process, SUIOO; Peler HeUer, Germanic &amp;
Slavic, freud and Freudians: Vienna 19291911, $1,482; Brian R. Henderson, Center for
Media Study, O.W. Griffith and the Origin• of
Narrative film, $2,420; )Mn B. Hooper,
Linsulstiq., Cross-linsuisclc Study: Syntactic
Cbrrelates of Assertion, $2,056; Bruce )Kitson,
Ensli5h, Block folklore in Buffalo, $558; C.rol
F. Jacobs. Comp.orotlve Literature, lockwood's
Dreams as lhe tmose of Wulherins Heights,
SUIIIO; O.ire R. Kahof!O, Engl;,h, Flonnery
O'Connor: A Roge of Vision, $1,1100; John T.
Keam5, Philosophy, A Truth-Value Sem.~ntlcs
lor Indefinite Descriptions, $1,1100; ....... R.
tafountaln, Cell &amp; Molecular Biology~
lJitnstructunl An1lysh ~f Spindle
Mltrotubule5, $1,00; Stephen Malkin,

MN hanica l Engineering, Drilling of Bone, S1 ,600; Roger W. Mayne, Mechanical Engineerin g, Int era cti ve Computer Methods for
Design Optimi zation , S2 ,&lt;400 ; Nancy E.
McCien, Political Science, P,olitical Efficacy of
Wom e n , S1 , 800 ; Micha e l ). Milano,
Ch emistry, Study of Optimum Buffer Conditions for Measuring Serom LDH , S2,12S.
Jo se ph C. Moll e ndorf , Mechani cal
Engineering , Heat Sources on Surfaces, S3,·
371; John F. Naylor, History, Closed Govern ment and the Officia l Secrets Ad of 1911 , S1 .800 ; Cath erine L Olsen , Mathematics,
O fx' rato r Theory, S1 ,800; lawrence J. Onesti,
Geograph y, Impact of Spatial Variation in
Climate of Channel Morphology, S3,400; F.
Annt"' Payne, English, Chaucer and Boethius,
SSOO; Thomas D. Perry, Philosophy, l egal
Reasoning: A Stud y of its Detailed Strudures,
S1 .800; Marga ret A. Piech, Mathemat ics, Harmonic- Forms o n Riemann-Wiener Manifolds.
\1,800; D. Thomas Porter, Speech Co mmunication, Ra d al &amp; Se~~:ist Prejud ice &amp; Co m·
mun ir"a ti o n Effective ness .. S970; Paras N .
Prasad, Chemistry, Raman Study of Organ ic
Charge· Transfer Complexes, S2,945 .
Charlott e D. Roederer, Music, St. Gall
Notation : Cracking the Code, S2,500; Haakon
M. Sa mu e lsso n, Man age me nt , Eff icie nt
A l ~ori thm s for Set Covering and Set Part i t io n i n ~ . S1.800; l au rence A. Schneider,
Hisrorv, Chi nese Anti- Mo de rni sm and
Am....rican Cu lture, 1914-1933, S1,800; Stuarl D.
5&lt;-ott. AnthropoloJiW. l nvironme nr of the El
Calo n Pvram id at the Vernal Equinox, S576;
Gror,:w W. Smith , Art, Co nstruct Sculptu res
Using WPldi nJ:t Svstems and Fab ricators, S1 ,800 ; C. Alan Soo ns, Spani sh, It alian and Portugursr, Crit ica l Editio ns of Texts of Colonial
l atin Amrrica, S1 ,800; Charles L Stinger.
Hisrorv, Thr Renaissa nce in Rome Under Six tus IV. S2.740; Edmo nd N . Strai ncha mps,
Music. Marco DaCaglia no : His l ife and
Works. S1 ,600; John P. Sull ivan , Ans &amp; l etters,
Nl:'w Bra rings in Neronia n literatu re, S800;
o aVid ' W: T.irt}t_&gt;(, "Enklish: · Pe·rsp&amp;-t)Ve' . and
lntNJUI:'t ar ion in Restoration Drama , S1 ,800;
l t"'rranN" A. Tarje. Anthropology, Buffalo
Ethnographv Projed, S1 ,800; John J. Tyson,
Math&lt;"maric-s, ·TraYeli ng Waves in a Model of
th&lt;' Zhabotinskv Reaction. S1 ,800; Tung Y.
Wang. CPII &amp; Molecular Biology, Effect of Androgl"'n on Gene Adivation, S1 ,600; and
Will ia m R. Za me, Mat hematics, Complex
Ana lvsio;, S1 .800.

Goldhaber will speak
Pro fessor Ge rald Goldhabe r of the
DPpartmpnt o f Speech Communication
will di sC"u ss " Orga ni zati o nal Communi ca ti o n : Pro ble ms and Solu tions" at
a seminar this afternoon , 3-5 p.m. in 237
Crosby.
This will be the second in the Public
Sector Internship Seminar serie!
presented by the C~nter lor Policy
Studies and designed to give academic
support to graduate students who will
take internships.
•

BOok sleuth credits luck,
not deduction, for finds
By Palfici• Word Biederman
Rl'(W&gt;'fer!iulf

lite ra ry " d e tective" W. F. Oake shott
e sche ws comparisOn with such fictional
sle uths as He rcul e Poirot and Sherlock
Holmes, who solve their cases in flashy
public displays or mental gymnastics.
Hi s own impressive di scove ries, th e
Briti sh scholar would have us believe,
have bee n largely the result of luck, not
d edu ction : iri the mann e r o f Saul, he
says. who we nt o ur to find his father's
asses and fo und a kingdom .
' Th e re tired recto r of O xford 's lin coln
Co ll ege d iscussed his caree r as a lit e rary
adve nture r and " detective in the library"
Janu ary 17 as a guest o f the Faculty of
Arts and l ette rs and th e newly re vit alize d
Fri end s o f l ockwood li brary.
O akesho tt , who confe sses to be long·
in g " to
very mu ch past g~neration , "
told lit e ra ry tales calculated to stir the _
juices or an y bibliophile.
His first major discovery was made in
1934, wh e n he served as librarian at one
of Win chester College's two libraries. A
friend , whose acade mi c int e rest was th e
sta mped bindings o f e arly books, aske d
O ak e shott to lry to gai n access to th e
Coll e ~ e·s co ll ection of m e d ie val
ma n usnipts in h opes ... o f un co ve ring
m anuscr ipts gat hered bet we e n in tpre sting bindin gs.
The collecti on, locked up behind a
gri ll in the be droom of the warde n of the
fp ll ows li b rary , appe ars to have bee n
re lati vely unexplored , as much a result of
the formidable protocol of the College
as o f the C'ollectio n's ph ysical iso lation .

a

No Bindings
Fi nall y granted pe rmission to lo o k
th-roug h the msS:-, O akes ho tt found no
bindi n gs but rather several me dieval
poems, a life of Beckett, and a ·long tale,
witho ut beg innin g or end, dealing with
King Arthur.
A sh Ort tim e lat e r Oa kes hott was
prf"paring an exhibit in th e College 's
othe r lib rary a nd tho ught to display one
of thP school's small trea sure s, a wood ~
c-u i made fro m a block fashioned b y
Engla nd's first printe r, Will iam Ca xton .
Kn ow in g littl e abo4t _Cji.xton , h e
th ought to learn more liy looking · th e
printe r up in The Cambridge Hisrory o(
Engli&lt; h. The re he fo und that scholars had
been unable to d e te rmi ne the e xtent to
whi c h Cax to n had e d ite d Thomas
Mallo ry's original te xt in pre paring the
1485 edition of M an e Darthur because
no English manuscript of the work prior
to CaxtoA existed . Oakeshou recalled
th r Arthurian ms. glimpsed briefly in the
ward e n 's be droom, and the rest was
lite rary history.
O ake shott chooses to de-emphasize
the importan ce of such discoveries~ but

sc holar G . L. Kittredge , who had
hypothe sized almost 40 years before that
write r Malory was a particular " knight
prisone r" accused in the course of his
life time of rape, conspiracy to commit .
murde r, and assault on an abbey, hailed
the support for his view found in the
newl y exhumed manuscript as ' ' a voice
from the dee p."
' Gre.it Fun ••• But Pure Lt.Jd:'
Th e finder admits it was uall great fun
. . . but really it was ·pure luck: These
things," he says, "are very often coin·
cidence from beginning to end."
· 11 so, Oakeshott has had something of
a charmed life, because he was subse·
qu e nll y to make another fascinating dis·
co ve ry.
During the thirties, he began to build a
modest personal collection of 16th century travel books and atlases. But what he
tr ul y " coveted" was an Elizabethan
manu script map. Seeing notice of what
was d es crib~ d as " a 17th century. commonpla ce book with ms. maps" •fo~ sale
at Southby's, he had a friend bid lor the
boo k, whi ch brought less than lour
po unds.
" The person who had 'compile d the
boo k," he e xplains, " had used it as an ind ex to h is re adin g," wh ich was primarily
in th e Bible and Scriptural commentari es, with emphasis on the history of
th e Middl e East. The ms. map included
appe are d to be one the compiler had
drawn to fi x Biblical geography ·more
cl earl y in his mind. On tlie flyle'af was a
poem of 14 verses in his crabbed ha'nd.
Short on Funds
A dozen years later, Oakeshott found
himsP if short of funds to finance the
edu cation o f his children. Taking a suit·
case o f books (including the " commonpla ce book " ) to a . london
boo kseller, he left the material to be.appraised and wenr ro l he ne•rby 8rlftsh
Mu seum " to console myself."
The re an e xhibit showed memorabilia
o f Eli zabe thans Thomas .1-faklytH . and
Wa lt e r Rale igh on the 400th anniversary
of the ir births. In the display case
Oakeshott
recognized . a . .familiar•
crabbed hand and rushed back to the
bo o kseller: s in time to retain the
not e book that Sir Walter had kept while
a prisoner in the Tower. The book, now
in th e British Museum, documents a portion of Raleigh 's History of the World
and also contains a previously unknown
~m . dedicated to his wife.

Kt1this "is not frankly anything to. be
proud of," insists Oakeshott of his
literary adventuring.
" But," he adds, "I greatly recomme.nd
it as a sport that does very little harm to
anyone."
· ··

~Therapy gives hope to dental phobics
There's hope for those whose fears
lead them to tolerate severe pain rather
than make a dreaded trip to the dentist,
says Dr. Elliott Gale, associate professor
in the School of Dentistry.
Under a grant from the Dental Public
Health Divjsion of the U.S. Public Health
Service, Dr. Gale has successfully treated
65 per cent of these "dental phobics"
referred to him by area prat1ition~s.
"Many people don't relish a trip to the
dentist,J&gt;ut a few refuse to go no matter
how bad the pain becomes or how badly
their teeth need attention," he saYs. Dr.
Gale, a psychologist, compares dental
phobics to those who have strong fears
of flying, cro'\'ded elevators, or high
places. "Like other . phobics, dental
phobics will go to any lenRth to avoid
what they fear most. But by avoiding the
dentist, they hurt themselves and their
health,'' Dr. Gale points out.
One woman took elaborate detours to
avoid driving by her dentist's office.
Another could not go to the Noirdresser
because the salon's chairs reminded her
of the denti5t's chair. And stiU othi!rsin great pain - swished gasoline,
kerosene and lighter fluid lri their
mouths 10 help diffuse pain.

' Dr. Gale lind the 40 dental
Where did
phobics lor the study? "They were easily
spotted by the 'referring dentists because
they would make 10 or 12 appointments
fo r severe pain - and then never show
up." .
Contrary to expectations, interviews
revealed that none of the 40 had ever experienced terrible trauma at the hands of
a ·dentist. But most could recall family
members complaining about dental
treatments or dentists.
The patients were interviewed-· to
determine oral hygiene methods, date of
last dental visit, and specific fears dealing
with dental treatment. Then they were
given a dental anxiety test developed by
another UIB dentistry professor, Dr.
Norman l. Corah.
The patients' electrodermal responses
- amount of blood flowing through the

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finger tips and amount of sweat secreted
in the palms -wen! then measured and
sessions in desensitization were scheduled. first, the subjects were troined to
relax; then, they were told to dose their
eyes and visualize an apple - a nonthreatening, easily pictured item. At five
subsequent sessions, their e~l
responses were again tested, they continued to relax and grodually worked up
to visualizing the dentist's drill in dieir
mouths.
After the lntial apple visualization,
subjects 1\'ere asked to conjure up the
dentist telling them he "(as finished with
their treatment. Next, they were in·
structed to visualize: calling him for an
appointment, having their teeth cleaned,
and sitting in the dentist'• waltlnfl room.
Following this progresslvl! di!sl!nsitization, 65 per cent were actually able to go.
to the dentist!
"They may not have been as relaxed os
people who never experienced such
lear,'' Dr. Gale says, "but at least they
f)nally had the courage to flO·"
His study was so sucussful he was invited to Sweden's UniW!rslty of Gothenborg to launch a similar study·trut""'nt
plan.
.
_
.

�January 23, 1975

4

Nurses could

. .
\2?
SUNY Chancellor Boyer says a new liberalarts is crucial to our continued survival
fllflOir'S NOn: SUNY ChMtcellor Etnes&lt; L
Borer conlribured lite folowl,.. V"oeorpolnr,

... doe_,_
n...

--~A
-.~

Newl.lbenf

Am Crucill ro Sur·

eduation section ol The

New , ...
(/Mtwry 15, U75). II Is
,..,.,_ , _ - pennission.•
To the dsual observer, today's college
campus may appear quiet, almost tran·
quil. The library is.a busy place. Dormhories are well filled, and, increasingly,
students are concerned about careers.
But the mood is deceptive, for just
below the higher education surface a
new kind of churning has begun .
Seasoned administrators, faculty and
srudents are quietly asking about the
purposes of education and, occasionally, there is even talk of reintroducing a
common core of study for all students.

One bri ght young sophomore recentl y
touched a tender nerve when she said, " I
just wish someone would sit down and
tell me what to tak e.'.' She was
bewildered by the confusing thi cket of
department requirements, free electi ve
options and the glittering arra y o !

vocational and professional choices.
The truth is that with all our success in
higher education, we are left with· a
nagging paradox. On one hand we have
opened wide ly college doors. We have
expanded the c;urriculum. Educational
programs have grown flexible, geared to
student needs. We have come a good
wa y toward th e goal of a learning society,
having built a network of colleges and
universities described by C.P. Snow as
"one of the world's greatest glori es."
'Eduation for Wh~tl'
On the othe r hand, the fundamental
purposes underlying all this effort are
less dearly understood; and increasingly
the question being raised is, " Education
for ~hat? " -And another qu e~ tion that is
askeO is, " Does the ex'pert ' preparation
we provide a new doctor or engineer or
political leader _assur e th e sociall y
responsible acJion required in far greate r
abundance than we have summoned in
recent years?"
This is not post-Watergate quarter·
backing. Rather it reflects one of our
oldest beliefS, for ~since the ancient
Greeks we have affirmed that to be
educated was somehow to . be made
bener..~nd to.achieve this goal there was
a. single course of study for all students.
In Plato's Academy, rhetoric, philo..,phy
and mathematics were the prerequisites
to plying statecraft. In the great universities of the Middle Ages, grammar,
logic, rhetoric, music, ~stronomy and
geometry were the vi~l center. And in
our early American colleges -.11 students
were offered a common core of classics
and Christim doctrine; with a smattering
of mathematics thrown in.
.
More rKendy, this core of learning
found expression in the general education 111011emen1 sparked in 1917 by an interdisciplinary uwar Issues" ·course at
Columbia University. The "Great Books"
currirulum was introduced by Robert
Hutchins at the University of Chicago in
the nineteen-thirties; arid Harvard, in
1945, contributed its eloquent and in~uential report, ''General Edua.tion in a

-51.

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AnondIOHN A OOIJliEI
· Auoc:l.lre &amp;lifor
'"' TWIOA WA«O 81EDE«AAAN

_ , Olondlr - ..
.DIIIHf QUINN -

Free Society." The college student, the
Harvard report suggested, must be seen
not simply as a physics major or a history
major, but as "a responsible human being and citizen."
In the sixries, Daniel Be ll, then at
Columbia, produced a brilliant analysis
for the needs of a general education. But
in those days other urgent priorities were
being pushed. The faculty response to
Bell's re port, was perhaps more instruc·
tive than th e report itself. " I can recall no
meetings on the education topic that
were ro poorly anended and so lacking
in vivacity as those in whi ch the report
was co nsidered," says lionel Trilling,
Be ll'scolleague.
·
The Reporter hopes on this page to
provide a forum for the exchange of
views on a wide variety of iss11es of
concern to the U/B community. We
welcome both position papers and
leHers as space permits.

Then and Now
While the gene ral edu catio n deba te
then fo cu sed sharp ly o n ped ago gic
qu estions - those of cafete ria ~style elec·
li ves vs. structured fo und atio n co urses toda y th e press ure to expose students to
a ri cher ove rl ay of value -laden educati on
relates q uile si mpl y to the qua li ty of life
on ea rth .
" There is a question in the air,"
Robert Heilbro ner wrote recentl y, "a
q uesti on so dist urbin g tha t I would
hesitate to ask it aloud di d I not believe it
ex ists unvoiced in the minds of many: Is
th ere hope for manl Heilbro ner's
visions o f th e future may or may not be
overl y apocalyptic, but it is clear to me
that it is no longe r possi ble to assume
si mpl y that some cosmic United Fund has
guaranteed our future.
Out glo bal destinies o nce havi ng a r riv~
ed at some irretrieva bly unma nageable
point. they cannot then be reVersed to
some earlier moment of sanity. We-must
consider the unthinkable.
In a sense, we have already arrived at
this fork in the road. The world has 27
da ~s worth of reserv~ food supply, and
the earth's population now multiplies by
95 million each -year. We burn up
millions of irreplaceable and unaffordable barrels of oil a day, and the nuclear
threat remains.
These realities suggest that education
must give renewed attention to the question of moral development. We must
reaffirm the very old notion that the
whole human being -is more important
than-each of its parts. What I propose is a
21st-century version of a liberal arts
. education, which draws on the wisdom
of the past, organizes our present
knowledge of the world, and then
focuses sharply on alternatives for the
~~~

.

And let me suggest that we make consideration of the future a strong camponent of every college education. This is a
polite way of saying that I would consider a "thorough value-laden preparalion for the next century an obligation
for all students in th_is country.
How to l'roceedf
How do we prD&lt;:eedl ~u.ch a program
sh_ould be rooted 1n.tradU1onal arts and
soence fi~lds, I suspect. But':'~ cou~
and new hnkage among fan;uh.~r courses
al"'. w~uld be needed. Specialozed laculty. mst1tutes, all-campus lectures. and
mid~year seminars for all students, and
carefully selected field experiences
would be helpful - all geared to introducing this n~ dimension on the
camp~s.
.
.
.
My 1mmed1at~ ~oa~ however;-i•_not to
spell out a spec1f1c cookbook rec1pe_f&lt;_&gt;r
every college. T!'ere would be no ng•d
sequence, f'O sutgle panem. My goal
r3ther is to express a deep conviction
that we simply" must do a bener joG of

better public

dental .health

Nurses - if they had additional train ing in basic dental health practices could help slow the increasing rate of
d!'nlal disease by teaching patients good
oral hygi e n e , say two U/ B faculty
alerting our students to the larger conmembers.
tours of th eir world, of helping them see
The two, who have recently completed
the broader ramifications of their actions
a.
study on the potential of the nurse in
and of conveying th e urgent need to
d
e
ntal disease prevention and oral
marshall all our resources so we confront
health maintenance, point out that
th e critical choices of the future . Such a
ahhough
dentists are more actively practhrust may well be the new common
ticing preventive dentistry with their
core of liberal learning.
p,at
ients,
there. are many people wtio
American higher educat ion Has built
don't regularly visit the de ntist. And the
more buildin g s and served· more
shortage of dentists in sonie areas
students since World War I than during
precludes rhe practice of vigorous comthe preced ing 300 years of th e nation's
munity prevention.
acade mi c h istory. The goal of th is
" Nurses - the most numerous health
massive effort was to realize more full y
professionals - could help cut the disthe .democrat ic ideal in the realm of
ease increase by teaching basic oral
human kn owledge. That commitment
hygie ne to patients with whom they have
will re main central to o ur purpose.
contact," points out Mila Ann Aroskar,
But we must now confront anoth er
professor of community health
associate
task: that of definin g with more clarity nursing.
and perhaps with inore passion - th e
Preve ntin g Oental disease by instrucla rge r social meanin g, the broade r
tin g patients about prope r nutrition and
human purpose of all this massive effort.
tooth and gum care is especially imporFor it is by our breadth of vision, not by
tant among the pregnant and aging ou r b r ic k a nd mo rt a r , tha t our
two gro ups with whom th e nurse ma y
stewardshi p ult imate ly will be judged.
have more co nt act th an the dentist.
Many e lde rl y who have no teeth doubl y
need nutritional guidance which nurses
co ul d provide ei the r in the home or in
ambulatory ca re clinics. " In short, nurses ·
co ul d he lp edu cate many of those wh o
aren't awa re of th e importance of effecThe re now ned Juilliard String Qua net
ti ve oral hyg iene and its relatio n to good
wi ll perfo rm the second eve.nt in this
hea lth," Mrs. Aroskar"said.
SE-ason's Visi ting Artist Series to night at
The U/ B stu~ y. sho~ed nurses will
8 30 . P m_ m the Ma ry Seaton ~oom,
need ".'o re tral_nm g m proble ms of
Klemfia ns MusiCHall ·-.· . • • • • .. · -~ .. preven ti ve de ntistry before they can
. .
wo rk effecti ve ly with pati ents. " Of 36
The progra m w1 ll mcl ude wo rks by
se nior nursi ng stud ents surveyed, mo re
~ozart. Ba rt&lt;;&gt;k and Me nd e lsso hn .
than 90 per cent did not know th e
T~rk€'tS a r~ available at _th_e N~rton H~ll
preferred method fo r brushing teeth,"
T1rket O ff1ce (a ny rema mmg ucke ts w1ll
says Or. Charl es· Ga rve rick, associate
b&lt;" sold at the doo r after 7:30p.m.}.
professo r of behavioral science.
This ahernoo n the Quartet wi ll also
l ess than 10 pe r cent we re aware
ho ld a Maste r Class in 101 Baird Hall,
patients should be to ld to use d ental
brginning at 1:30 p.m. Due to the limited
floss, and 25 per cent thou g-ht floss
capacity of the room, the audience will
should be admin iste red onl y by a denlist
bt:&gt; li mi ted on a first-come, first-served
o r de ntal hygie nist. This is particularl y
basis·. There is no Charge.
signi fica nt in view of th e prevale nce of
periodontal disease - which involves
Two of th e Music De partment's youn g
the gum tissue and bone supporting tl·re·
strin g qu art e ts will pe rform for the
teeth - and the importance of flossing
Juillia rd Quarte t. The Buffalo StrinJ!
in its prevel)tion.
Quartet will perform a portion of
As a group, the n!Jrsing students were
Beethoven's String Quartet, · Opus 59,
aware
dental disease is the most
No. 2 and the Dante String Quartet will
prevalent
disease in this country and
pe rform a portion of Arriaga's Quartet
knew the importance of youngsters and
No. 1.
adults seeing the dentist regularly, but
• Membec;s- of the Juilliard Quartet are
lacked knowledge of procedures in- ·
violinists Robert Mann and Earl Carlyss;
valved in preventive dentistry.
Samue l Rhodes, viola, and Joel Krosnick ,
"The visiting community health nurse
cello.
could be valuable in teaching patients
about oral hygiene, particularly in · rhe
Members of the Buffalo String Quart~!
home sening," Mrs. Aroskar said. She
are Benjamin Hudson and Carol Zeavin,
added there is rea"'n to believe oral
violinists, Maureeri Gallagher, viola, and
hygiene practices when learned at home
Dana Rusinak, cello. The Dante String
have more lasting impact on children
Quartet .is composed of violinsists Alyce
than when learned elsewhere. "Parents
Cognena and Carol McNeely; Allan
and children could be taught by nurses
Sandlin, viola, and Joseph Kimura, cello.
how to brush correctly and floss food
partides away - an effective means to
promote oral health;' she said.

Juilli~ud set

for concert ·

Porerty gran~ awatded

Ms. Barbara Turner, a doctoral candidate in U/~'s Center lor Policy Studies,
has won a research grant ·from the New
York State Poverty Research &amp; Training
Program, located at SUNY/Albany.
The Poverty Research and Training
Program was established to conduct
research aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of l~gislation on poverty
--- problems, to train graduate students in
legislative and social-science research.
techniques, and to assist in developir;tg
and ,..riling legislation to aid low- and
fixed·income consumers.
Ms. Turner's ptoposal is entitled
" Analysis of the High Abandonment
Rate of Real Properties in low-Income
Areas of Buffalo, New York ."
Ms. Turner is currently completing her
master's degree in the School of
Architect~re &amp; Environmental Design.
Prior t9 her stu9ies at the Uniyersity,
she was an infQrmation and research
specialist for the Model Cities Agency of
Buffalo.

'

Partdng fines rise
Parking violation fees have bt!en increased ~y the City of Buffalo Common
Council and will affect tickets issued at
all campus locations within the corporate
limits of the City, Robert E. Hunt, director of Environmental Health and Safety
reported this week.
"
The change became effective during
the recent intersession, Hunt said.
· A fee of $3 is now levied lor violations
involving overtime limit parking in
metered spaces and posted areas and
overnight parking in restricted lots. The
for,..er fee was $2.
·
· A S6 fine is-now assessed for no vehicle
permit, and lor parking" fli .roadways,
restricted areas, on sidewalks, or on the
grass. A $5 fine was f.ormerly assessed
in these situations. &lt;
•
Hunt pointed out that these changes •
are by way of example only and do not
re present a complete list of possible
violations.

�. . .a .. -·...-----U/8 team takes architecture

january 23, 1975

prize_for health care plan
A project team from t!&gt;e U/ B School
men t, sex and age), and identify
of Architecl ure and Environmental .. bo!!lenecks created by hospital administrati ve procedure and building
Design has won a national architectural
design. ·
research award for development of a
Finally, this information is fed into a
syst_e m for ambulatory patient care.
The U/ B team was cited in the 22nd
com puter" which prints out optimum
floor plans to best satisfy the needs of
annoa l awards competition sponsored by
Pro~ rcssive Architecture magazine.
doctors, nurses, patients and staff.
The award-winning research project,
Such a system might indicate that the
hospital invo lved needs new ad·
und ertake n for the lakes Area Regional
ministrative procedures rather than a
Medic-al Program, is headed by Gunter
Sc-hnii tZ and Scott Danford, professors in
new building, Dean Cohen explajned.
th e School of Ar chitect ure and En" We're interested in solving a
vironmental Design .
problem," explained the dean, who
Working with them are campus
believes that an environmental designer
is more than simply a planner of
associates and medical, administrative
buildings.
and planning professio nals at Buffalo
General Hospital.
The awards competition was conceivThe award also cited U/B Architecture
ed by the E:ditors of Ptogressive Architecand En viron mental Design Dean Harold
ture to give recognition to good
l. Cohen and Lawrence Zimmerman,
arc-hitect ural desig n, research, and planp rojec-t coordinator.
ning in the period of its development
rathe r than ahei its completion.
Oui·Patienl Care
"Construction" or implementation of
Utili zing th e Out-Patient Depa rtm en t
thP 21 projects cited is expected to be ·
o f Buffalo General, the group developed
und erwa y during the coming year.
a program und er which study teams with
last year, th e Buffalo Organization for
t ~ p&lt;"' reco rd ers obse rve the routin es of
phvsicians and other members of the
Socia l and Technological Innovation,
hospital staff, seek data about patients
In&lt;., o r BOSTI, headed by U/ B professor
(such as the average length of stay in th e
Michae l Brill, won a si milar award from
hospi tal , tvpe of sickness or injury, trea tProgressive Archirecture.

Campus receives research grants
of $1 million-plus in December
Eighte('n grants/ c-ontracts, totaling $1 ,173,766. were received by Uni versit)'
r&lt;'s&lt;"a rc-hNs duri ng December, 1974,
Rohc&gt;rt C. Fitzpatrick, .acting vice presi-

GioRffi

WhNrlt&gt;Y

Feminist 'shaman' will read Poems,
do 'intellectual belly dance'
Daniella Gioseffi, poet, playwright,
Ms. Gioseffi feels the first step toward
multi-media artist and "intellectual belly ' liberation among any oppressed group is
dancer," will perform, read from her
to "rally around a com mon heritage."
poetry and lecture on the "new belly
The birth dance, she says, unites women
dance," Friday, January 31, at 8 p.m. in
today with their ancestral sisters whose
Baird Redtal Hall.
role in a m~triarchal society went unMs. Gioseffi, who:considers herself a
questioned. This, she notes, was before
shaman, or ritual priestess of feminism,
men understood their part in r~prowill perform her "Birth Dance" that -~ "duction.
evening. The dance, she says, is a new
Her poems have been published in
dance of liberation for modern women,
Choice, The Nation. The Paris Review,
evolving from her exploration into the
Ms. , Modern Poetry Studies, as_well as in
origins of the belly dance.
many anthologies. Her multimedia Prehistoric worship of the Earth
poem/ plays have been presented by offGoddess took the form of a woman's
off Broadway theatres.
dance that was also supposed to aid ferTickets for the event will be available
tility, she explains. As woman's rule was
at the Norian Ticket Office. Admission is
supplanted by man's control, this birth
S1.
dance also experienced a devolution
The Office of Cultural Affa irs is sponfr~ sacred ritual to cafe spectacle, she
soi"ing Ms. Gioseffi's appearance.
c~ntends.

State higher education planner to add~
conference of area colege personnel
Dr. William Fuller, assistarit commissioner for higher education planning,
New York State Education DeJNrtment,
will be keyno.te speaker at the Winter
Conference of the Western New York
College .Personnel Association
(WNYCPA), to be held February 6 at
·
Rosary Hill College.
Dr. Fuller will discuss "Enrollment
Projections and Their Effect on Colleges
and Universities."
As WNYCPA President-Elect Robert W.
laskie explains, "As educators, our
careers are very much influenced by the
number of swdents in the population at

any given time. Staffing requirements,
and .consequently job security, rise and
fall with student enrollments. Dr. Fuller's
presentation wilf address this pertinent
issue, derailing -what we can expect in ·
terms of'student enrollments for the next
five to ten years."
Responding to Dr. Fuller's remarks will
be a panel of local college and university
presidents, including U/B President
Robert L. Ketter, Dr. Robert Stauf(er of .
Erie Community College, and Dr. Robert
Marshall, president of Rosary Hin
College.
Mr.laskie is-an assistant director in the
U/ B Olfice of Admissions and Records.

de-nt for resea rch, repor ts.
Fortv-two proposals, requesting $3,260,372, wNe submitted to prospective
sponsor\ rlurin~ th e month .
Acc-ording to Fitzpatrick, a c umulative
total of 248 proposals, val ued at S19,457,871 , wN&lt;&gt; sub mitted during the pe riod
Julv 1 to December 31, 1974, by !,JIB
r«?'seMc-hN . One hundred forty-eight
grant s/ contracts, totaling S7,943,338, _
WNf" rec-eicved during that time .
NewGri.nls
New grants went in December to: Dale
Mer«?'dith, civil engin eerin g, S40,084 from
OWRR , Cornell U niversity , £or
"M~t hodologi.es for Optimal Salt
Management in the Great Lakes Basin - Phase II ;" S. Ramalingam, mechanical
e ng ineering, $7,500 from NVSST for "A
Mobile Data Acquisition, Processing and
Display Facility for X-Ray Analysis . . .;"
Michael Barnett, periodontics, $10,220
from NIH for "A Role of Mast Cell in
Gingival and Periodontal lesions;" E.J.
Massaro. biochemislry, $2, 500 from

NOAA fo r " Photographs and Repo rt of
EIPctrophoresis for Samples of TwentyFi vt" Blue Fin Tuna;" Ri chard Adams,
che mistrv, $3,000 from ASC/ PRF for
"Chrmistry of Orga nometallic Anions
Containing Iso nitril e ligunds;" and
Robert Bereman, chemist ry, $25,000 from
the Dreyfu s Foundation for a Dreyfus
Teacher-Scholar ,grant .
Renewals
Continuatio n and re newal grants in
excess of $25,000 were received by: P.
Bigazzi, Center for Immunology, $179,318 fro m NIH for " Immunological
Studies on Steroid-PI~nning; " Hermann
Rahn . ph ys iology, $110,839 from ONR for
" Hig h-Pressure Ph ysiology;" Harry Sultz,
soc-ial and preventive medicine, S156,829
from PHS for "A longitudinal Study to
Evaluate the Education, Function and
Utilization of Nurses in Extended Roles;"
W. G. Schenk, surgery, $239,074 from
NIH for " Sequence of Organ Failures
Following Trauma;" Milo Gibaldi, pharmaceutics, $141,414 from NIH for
" Ciinir.al Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics; " and Jui H. Wang, natural
scienc-e and mathematics, S95,072 from
NIH for "Mechanism of Enzyme Action
and Allied Model Reactions." •_ . ,

Syndicated nutrition columnists
to discuss diet-related i&amp;Jes
NutTitlon and man will be the subject
Scheduled are: January 28, George
of a series of co nferences sponsored by
Kerr, M.D., "Nutrition in Medidne and
the Department of Biochemistry.
Public Health;" February 4, Ro.bert
Beginning January 28, experts in the
McGandy, M.D., "Nutrition and Carfield will review the latest research and
diovascular Disease;" February 11,
clinical findings on how diel and various
Guiltermo Herrera, M.D., "Nutrition and
diseases are related, how diet affects nor·
Mental Development;" February 25,
mal man, and the nutritional needs of
Kenneth C. Hayes, Ph.D., "Fat Soluble
various age groups. Speaker-s will also · Vitamins and Their Role in Contem·
touch on public health issues.
porary Medidne/Public Health;" March
4, Stanley Gershoff, Ph.D., "CalorieTwo nationjllly syndicated nutrition
Protein Malnutrition;" March 18, James
columnists are among the 14 faculty
AuStin, D.B.A., "Nutrition and National
members from the Department oT Nutri·
Planning;" Mart:h 25, Stanley Gersho~
tion in Harvard University's School Qf
Ph . D ., " Recommended Oie_tary
Public Health who will partidpate.
Allowances;" April 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, to be
Dr. Jean Mayer, whose syndicated
column appears in the lluftM&gt; fwening · arranRed.
News and who was a representative at
Many of the lecture dates are tentative ·
Ihe international congress on nutrition in
at this time. Confirmed dates will be anRome, will speak on " Energy Metabolism
nounced.
·
and Obesity as a Medical and Public
Health Problem," tentatively "scheduled
for noon, April 1, in G22 Farber (formerly
.Capen) Hall. Dr. Frederick J. Stare, Also a
syndicated columnist, is ex-pected to
speak April 29.
· nie series is part of a health sciences
teaching and general education prog{am
open to the University community and
public.

�iiiJII2Zita

U/8 biochemist probes
fatal enzym~ defects-·

'strong army has little or no
detel'l"ent effect, Naroll finds
Military Deterrence in History:

a pilot
cross· historical survey by Raoul
Naroll, U/8 p rofessor, a n thropology,
Vern L. Bullough, and Frada Naroll, State
University of New York Press, ~bany,
1974. 476 pp .. $25.
"You'd think strong armed forces plus

e lse see med to.
The three now see only one hope of
avoiding a Third World War: " Some kind
of world government."
In the course of the volume, the
authors present several techniq ues for
the cross-historical survey method of ·
testing supposed laws of history by

any.
This, Naroll points out, is the principal
finding of this new volume on w hich he

of year-s and hund reds of countiies, from
eighteenth century England to ancient

China. They statistically tested 93 specific

me ans of stalistical correlations.
Naroll proposes solutions to many of
the problems involved. He consi de rs
problenls of d efining a higher c ivili zation , prob lems of sarnpling, problems of
data e rror and data scarcity, proble ms of
the meaningfulness of a large group of
low co rre lations, problems of lack of
statistica l inde pendence of histo rica l units, and · problems of causal analysis of
rorrelations.

hypotheses .

Naroll sa ys t hat their scientific
statistical studies were expected to show

that deterrence helps keep the peace.
The plan of work was simple, he says, involving seeking answers to thrE;e key
questions about the leading nati9ns, of
each of the 20 period s. Was e~ch leading

nation '&lt;lt th.e· time on an aggressive
stance ·or a defensive one1 Did that nation • have ·stronge r and better armed
forces than its leading rival? How many
months of each ten year period studied
Was the nation at.war with ,its chi~f tival~ .
The three authors. like the U.S. Navy
which sponso red the study, thought they

sive. '- Second, ., bu~d

-;

1

SEND BOOKS

In lieu of a comprehensive annual
wrap-up of faculty wo rks the
Reporter hopes to print notices of
books as they appear. We ask that
faculty include us on publishers'
mailing lists or forward copies
and/ or reviews to 250 Winspeu, Rm.
213. All submissions will be returned.

has collaborated with his wife, Frada , and
Ve(n l. Bullough, an historian.
The three looked at 20 different tenyear ·periods of histpry, r andoml y
selectfed frbm 1a list coveri ng thousands

kn ew -how th e answers would fit
together, NarOII says:!t•lf a'1eadiliS nation
wanted to avoid war and keep the peace,
irs leaders~ had . to do only twos th ings.
First, avoid trouble, keep on the defen-

cies. W it h a $12,402 March of Dimes

have h e lped keep the peace. Nothing

like all the money we in the U.S. spend
o n our mi litary build-up helps .little if ·

" language and Int e r personal
Re lati o n shi ps', " by .Da vi d G . .H~ ys,
professor of linguistics, wi ll appea r as a
rhapter iil' a new book, Language .1s .1
Hum.1n Problem, ed ited by Einar Haugen
and Mol"toil'Bit)oTnfield: '
, ' ·. 1 1,
The book will be published o n January
27 by W . W . Norton.

up · the · army and

navy.' The familiar theory of military
deterrence."
.
But, Naroll indicates, " that is not in fact
the w.iv it se·~ms to wor-k." The authors'
careful methods of comparative study
d id not bea r out the l!)ilitary deterrence
theory. The correlations they expe,ded
just did n'ot turn up.
The autho rs looked not only at military
factors , but also at diplomatic,
geographic, cultural and polilical ones.
They focused on those states which
played a leading part in their

civilizations. Tl)e only approach to peace
they fou nd negatively correlated with
war · frequency wa! "the frequency of

mutations, Dr .. Meisler will try to determine whether more than one gene is in•
valved in regulating this enzyme and
wh ether there are ge netic mutations that

There are a group of fatal birth defeds

which are caused . by enzyme deficien-

cultural exchanges; that adivity may

peaceful intentions would be a good
recipe for peace," Prof. Naroll says.
The sad news is, however, that it looks

January 23, 7975

Th e U.S. Internal ReVenue Service
(IRS)'Will ha ve a Taxmobile ci n coi mpu s
on Frida y, January 24. According to IRS
offi dals, forms and assistance normally
available at the 111 West Huron office
will be avciiiable at the Ta xmobile.
The Taxmobile will be at the following

!orations at the following times: 8:1511 :45 a. m., Main Street Campus (in
Diefendorf lot near the visitors' booth) ;

grant, Or. Miriam Meisler, a U/B
biochemist, hopes to learn how the inherited deficiency of an enzyme known
as beta galac-tosidase is implicated in
several disea ses.
In th ese disea ses , the assistant
professor points out, the absence or inactivity of this enzyme disrupts the
· body's normal metabolic pathways. As a

may affed different parts of the enzyme

mo lecu le.
"We need to know which type of gene

defect is involved before we can treat the
inherited enzyme deficiency in man.''
Dr. Me isler says.
In ot her resea rch on the h uman disease known as GM. &amp;anglio~idosis whe re
th ere is no 8-galactoSidase adivity, she
result , c ompl ex glycolipid or fatty
mate rial accumulates in cells of the - has found an in active galaCtosidase pro, tein. " This points to a strudural · gene
brain •. causing permanent neurological
mutation," she indicates. And because
damage.
the protein itself is defective, Dr. Meisler
By using mice with various genetic
feels that enzyme re placeme nt therapy is
in order.
Dr. Me isler is one of 57 U.S. investigators awarded a Basil• O 'Connor
Starter Research gra nt. The program,
named in honor for the man who led the
A confere nce on "Visions of AchievNatio na l Foundation March of Dimes
ing Peace .;md Their Educational
from its inception in 1938 unt il his death
rmplications," co-sponsored by the
in 1972, e nables young scie ntists to start
Conversations in Disciplines Program of
their own resea rch on birth defects.

Peace theorists

to lecture

SUNY and the Western New York Coun ci l for Peace Edu cation, . will be held

Better living
Workship's aim

February 14 and 15 on th e State University Co llege ca mpus.

The conference will present the latest
thinkin g of two inte rnationally known
scho lars on ach ievin g world peace. They
are Professor Jo han Galtung of _t he
Universit y of O slo. Norway, noted, say
the Conference organizers, "for his
radical , ideal istic viewpoint," and Harva rd Unive rsity Professor Stanley Hoffmann , whose stance is described as more
pragmatic.
Professor Galt~ n_g is a sociologist wt"lO
holds· the 'c hair · in Coilflld a nd

P e~ce

Research at the Uni ve rsi ty of Oslo and is
arl in g currentl y director general Of th e
Inter-Universi ty Centre of Post-Graduate
Studies, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia. Galtung,
who has lectured extensively throughout
the wo rld , founded the International
Peace Research' Institute iri OslO and
started iis Journal of Peace Research.
Professor Hoffmann is a member of
the Departm~ nt of Government and the
West European Studies Program at Ha rva rd University, where he co-taught a
Course with Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger.
Workshops utili zi ng the speakers"-.
theories and other approaches to
teaching peace education in elementary
srhoo ls, high schools and colleges 'will

12:45-2 p .m., Ridge lea Campus (in the
parking lot west of Building 4238 - near
the campus bus stop); arid 2:15-4:45

also be he ld as part of the program.
For furth e r information, contact the
project director, Professor Richard Fogg,
De partme nt of Social StUdies Educatio n,

p.m., ~mherst Campus.

State University College at Buffalo.

" Enri ched livin g" is the title of a
workshop utili zi ng the co nce pts of Transactional Analysis to be o ffered thi s
.semester by Unive rsit y Acti vities, coord inated by Carole Hen nessy of th e Norton stafr.
In the words of its organizers, · th e
workshop "offe rs a uniqu e opportunity
for a growt h experie nce thro ugh ron trarting for change" and an opportunity
for part icipants to "learn to de al more
effertivelv in your dai ly co nfrontations
with yo urself and others."
Mary Cleesattel

wi ll ' lead the

workshop. Ms. Cleesattel, a member of
the ~atio n a l Association of Certified
Soria! Workers emP.Ioyed by Child and

Famil y Service, is. also a member of the
International Transactional Analysis Association.
Th e workshop will meet Thursda ys,
Jan uary lO to March 20, from 9 :30 to 11

a.m. in 232 Norton.
Reg istration is limited to 15. The fee is
$15 for students with a current I. D., $25
for non-stude nts. RegiStration must be
completed by paym e nt of fee (checks
should be made payable to " Sub-Board I,

Inc.-In novative Programming").
Prospective participants may register
in 213 Norton during regular office
hours.

.SPRING SCHEDULE FOR U/8 LIBRARIES
IRl

AICHIVfS
JANUARY 14-MAJICH7
MARCH17oMAYI
11,1onday-Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

D
91-5p
91-5p

dose&lt;!
dosed

ART· .

HEALTH
CHEMISTRY ElliCOTT SOENCES

SCIENCE
9a-5p
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dosed
closed

tJ
9a-9p
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closed

Reg,Hrs.
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Closed
9a-5p
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9a-10p
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RIDGE
LAW

LSl

LOCKWOOD MUSIC

REGULAR HOU
8a-12a
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1p-12a

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LEA

SOENCE&amp;
ENCIN11'C

UCL

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8:30a-10p
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8:30a-10p
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1p-5p

9a-Sp,......

MARCHI-MARCH 1'

(Mid--.Receo!l
Saturdoy, 318
Sunday,l/9
Mon ...fri.,l/11)-14
Saturdoy, 3115
Sunday, 3116

Reg.Hr,
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• Closed
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MAY9-MAY11

(Rnol-)
Friday.~

Saturdoy, 5/10

SunclaJ, 5111
"?

.,

Mon.-Thurs., 5112-15
Friday, 5116
Saturdoy, 5117
Sunday, 5/18

Arrhi~

· - , t s - a.

S.t
Sun.

Reg.Hrs.
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...Sp
9o-5p
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Chemislry
Music

stl

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9a-7p
1")11p

·NOTE:
for Sl:-rVicP Hou,-,. of p;Jrtiru/ar cfP~rtmenr s within ~n1 unit, consuli individual Libr.1ry lor dPtilikod S..rvin.•

ow~··t~~ot~o~ar-

"lAWitOIJII5-.0~

Mon ..ofri.

.

Reg.Hrs.
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Sdwdtllf'.
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Fcw .............onhOunc•m-3519

'

�January 23, 1975

. . .&amp;Ella

M~e~twam----~-----------(frompa~T. rn/. J)
.~
business alumni are now working in the
eight Western Ne:w York counties; 68 per
cent have jobs in some area of New York

State. Most previously attended a high
school in Western New York.

Four Calepriesof Alumni
Western New Yorkers constitute 94 per
cent of the business graduates from

Millard Fillmore College (MFC).
This survey finding is not unexpected ,

si nce MFC students are generally adults
with jobs and families in the Bullalo area_
who earn their degrees at night as parttime students, Gutteridge pointed out.
What is surprising, s.aid Gutteridge, is a

second figure which shows that 93.5 per
cent of the

11

day undergraduates" -

those who earned BS degrees going to
U/ B lull.-time - had also attended high
schools in Western New York.

or the day graduate school alumn i,
82.3 per cent, or more than four of every
five MBA's, came to U/8 from this area.
In a fourth category of alumni, the

GMP's who earned their MBA's through
the Graduate Manageme n t Program
(which offers evening business courses
to part-time graduate students). those
from Western New York constitute only

54.2 per ce nt or the alumni, the smallest
proportion.

Gulle ridge explained that relatively
small percentage of GMP's from Western
New York ma y be because eve ning
g raduate courses attract youn g business
execu ti ves who had been transferred to
this area by large manufacturing firms
with offices in other parts of th e nation .
1

0rpniution Men 1

The alumni survey round that the MFC
and GMP Rraduates - those who we nt
to school at niRht- are most li kely to be
" or~a n i zatio n m en who will stay with
thC' ir compan y. The MBA's are most like-

lv to move lrom job to job."

From ~ the queStiOnnaire re spo nse s,
Gutteridge calcUlated t urnover rates at

4.5 per re nt annually lor GMP grads; 5.3
f)f'r cC' nt for the MFC alumni ; 7.4 per
ct'-nt f.or " dav undergraduates," and a
startling 12.2 per cent a year · fo r the

MBA's.

,

According to Guneridge, the proportion of School of Management MBA 's
who have switched jobs is noneth eless
no higher than the degree of restlessness

ways, Gutteridge noted. Because of the
" bu yer's mark e t" for business grads in
Western New York , career _guidance
coun selors are encouraging U/ 8 seniors

to look farther afield lor attraoive placement opportunities.
· From alumni responses about what
they wo~ld take il they had a chance to
repeat th e ir education, Gutteridge
recommends th e School of Management

Two-thirds ol all MFC's, GMP's a nd
day unde rgraduates in the sample said
thev expect to be working for the same
firm fi ve years from ·now. Half ant icipate
staying with their organization until they
reJire.

But among MBA's, only hall exped to
be with the s.ame employer in five years,
and only one-fourth see themselves as

~~------------~------((rom ~l{r B. rol. 4)

Ad mission : students, $.60, ge nera l publicS1 .
Presented by U/ B Chinese sfudents.
MFA RECITAL •
Violinist /on Shallit, accompanied b y pianist
Bronislava Humek Melandinidis. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge .
FILMS•
A series of films by D. W. Griffith (each approiCimately 10 minutes) will be shown beginning at 9:15 p.m. 70 Acheson . No admission
chargt-.

cont inue offering a "general" business

THURSDA Y-30

program, with options to specialize in

particu lar a reas such as accounting,
finance, personnel, or health management rather than moving toward a more

SPE)Cialized progra m.

CONTINUING D£NTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARI
Treatmenr o f Advanced Dental Disease By
Ppricxfo nral.

Cancer Care Systemrfmm,a~f', .ru/. 1 1

patie nts with suspicious lesions spotted
by the de ntist could ·be referred to this
clinic wit hout alarming the patient," he
said. He pointed out that de ntists are
often hesitant to refer a patient to a
recognized ca n ce r ce nte r for fear o f
scarin g him sho uld the diagnosis be
benign.
Dr. Kaufman said fa mil y physicians,
nu rsi n g and therapy personnel will also
be included in the continuing educatio n
programs.

Registration deadtines
In lin e w ith the new University policy
for registration, th e Un iversity deans and
the Offi ce of Adm issions and Records
have SP t th e-se d e adli n e dates for th e spring se m e ster :

Fridoy, Jonuory 24, 1975 - Last da y of
initi1l registration (first regis trati o n
attempt for the seme ste r).
Fricloy, Februory 7, J975- Last day for
Cht1nge of Rqistration (tJdding 1 course
or credit hours to the initial rqistration).
Wedne§lloy, April 23, 1975 - Last day
to drop t1 course without andemic

penolty.
Admission s and Re cords will not
process re troa c tive re g istration s o r
changes. Stude nts should be ce rtai n tha t
the ir registration for e ach c ourse appears
on th e ir schedule card.

•xhibited by MBA graduates ol other
business schools. He suggests these
gra duat es may b e livin g up to the
stNeotvpe o f the MBA as a wandering
problem so lver.
Thf' MBA's also a ntkipate cha ngi n g
jobs more ofte n than others in the
survev.

7

ATTENnON CAMPUS EDITORS
If you .are involved in the wrilins, editins, or
production of .a clep.rtmentAI MWS&amp;etter or
other public11tion on co~~mpus, you qU.IIIify for
fnflftbership in the N~• Frontier Editors'
Assodliltion. The orpnlution, nwde up of

:,:S~on~~~

v:!.":load:

monthly p&lt;osr•ms.de.Uns with odltoriol •nd
publiohlns limdion .. It •lso prorides • rqulor
forum for excfwtsins ldeu .lind conducts o~~n
•nnu.l iudsina o~~ncl ••arch competition for
mombon' publicotlons- To lind out """"
•bout NFIA, coniKf Honold Reiss, usisbnt lo
the de.~~n, School of Ph.lrm.IIC)', &amp;t. 2546.

Orthodontic and Restorative

Procedures. Dr. Morton Amsterdam, University of Pennsylvania , and Or . Robert
Vanarsdall , University of Pennsylvania. 232
Norton . January 30-February 1, 9 a.m.-4:30
p.m.
For information or registration , call the
School of Dentistry, 831 -2836.

TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS•
Ma ry Cleesartel, a member of Natio nal
Association of Certified Social Workers and
Inte rnational Transadional Analysis Association, leads these transadiona l analysis
workshops each Thursday from Jan . 30-Mar.
20. 232 Norton, 9:30-11 a.m. For registration
information, go to 223 Norton. Registration is ·
limited to 15 persons.
VISinNG SCHOLAR SERIES,¥
Canyons o f the Colo rado, Co nseque nces of
CJt&lt;Htroi}he. Dr. Eugene M. Shoemaker.
California Institute of Technology. Rm . 4, 4240
RidRe Lea, 3:30p.m.
Prese nt ed b y Phi Be ta Kappa and the
Depart me nt of Geolo gical Sciences.
LIFE WORKSHOP••
Psvch nmat is an open, free-flowing exp&lt;&gt;rienc{" to fu'nher open communication.
Supervisors are Ur . Jim James and Ms. Wilda
l{"vin fro m the Uni versit y Counseling Servir{"S . 232 Norto n. 7-10 p.m. (Continues ea ch
Thursdav thr oug ho ut t he se meste r, no
rrJ:,isrration necessary).
' ·
HILLEL HOUSE'
" Drop -In" nig ht . 40 Capen Blvd ., 7-11 p.m.
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCAnON
CARDIAC CLINIC# •
This sNies of cl inics in ph ysic I examinat ion
of t hr c-a rd iac p ati e nt and
rh ythmia
works hops are sc hedul ed ~e ~c h
ursda..Y
Pv&lt;"ni ng thro ugh May 8. The topic oft i ht 's
clinic is Auscultation. Farber (Capen) Hall
Baseme nt , Room G-22. 7: 30-9:30 p.m. For info rmatio n o r registration , call the School of
Medicine, 831 -5526.
Sponsored by the Schoo l of Medicine.
FILM'
A fil m series e ntitled Civilization is being
shown each Thursda y night. Tonight's episode
is Rom.mcr am i Realit y. 170 Millard Fillmore
AcadPmic Core. Ellicolt Complex, 8 p.m.
VISinNG SCHOI.AR SERI£5f
Thl' ·Origin of the Eanh and Her Sibling
Pl,1nl'l'. Or. EuRe neM. Shoemaker, California

lnstilutP of Technology. 114 Hochstetler, 8:15
p.m.
Pr&lt;"S(&gt; nt ed by Phi Bela Kappa and the
Dfopartme nt of Geological Sciences.
VISITING ARnST SERIES RECITAL•
Pianist/ scholar Charles Rosen will perform. ·
Marv Seaton Room, Kleinhans Music Hall,

_· Environmental Health &amp; Safety

tify: more strongly with their occupation

with one employer and .work your way
up throu11h the organizational hierarchy,
attaining promotions by time in rank."
Or!!anizatlons "ane going to have to
offer these graduates challenging,
responsible jobs and opportunities for
caneer progress II they are to retain
them," Guneridge added.
While most alumni e•Pect they will still
be worklr1J ·In private business and industry f'rve years from now, growing
numbers in all degree categories look
forward to working lor themselves,
lor a non-profit llrn'l, or lor a government asency by the end or a decade.
like sraduale$ of other business schools,
a slzNble number or UIB alumni who
are1 now working in -ltuse corporations
anticipate migrating to medlum-sfze and
~small firms as their careers progress.

The survey has been useful to the
School ol Management in a number ol

EXHI~ITS
LOCKWOOO EXHIBIT
Polish Collection, exhibition culled from
the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of material. Firsl floor, Lodwood
Memorial Library. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m . Continuing.
VISUAl ARTS EXHIBIT
Portra i ts

of Young

Black

People .

Photographs by Richard Blau, U/ B assistant
professor of American Studies. Hayes Hall
Lobby, through J.a nuary 31 .

NOTICES
COED INTilAMUilAL •ASKETIAU
Rosters will be a~ilable January 11)-27 in 113
Clark Hall for individuals wishing to form
coed basketball teams for. this semester.
Rosters must be returned to 113 Oark by
January 17. There will be a mandatory meeting
for team Captains January 29, 3 Clark, at S p.m.
l eague play begins Friday, January 31 (7· 11
p.m.) in the main gym and will be held each
Friday at the same time . Each team must have
a minimum roster of six - three men and
th ree women - wit h sufficient team members
to have three men and three women on the
court for all games.
CREDIT-FREI COURSES
A variety of courses are schedu led for the
spri ng semester, including such topics as arts
and crafts, journal!sm, counseling, computers.
engineering, gove rnment , mustc and theatre, /
photography, real estate, psychology, sports,
wome n's studies, writing. and many others.
fo r a brochure detailing the courses offered
or for reJ;istration information, contad the
Division· of Continuing EducatiOn , Hayes A.
Rm . 3, Main Street Campus, 831-4301.
FACULTY-STAFF SWIMMING
Hours for fa culty and staff swi mming are 12
noon-2 p.m. each Friday, Clark Hall pool.
FINANi:.AL AID FOR
STtJOfNT5
_
All stude nts who have not filed the 1974-75
TAP, form~ rl y .SCholar Incentive, Application
and BEOG application should immediately
contact rheir respedive counselors regarding
the ir current status. Fail ure to do so can result
in an academic check stop for September 1975
and finan cial liability for tuition for 1974-75.
February 1 is the deadline.
HILLEL SHABIATON
Re wrvations are now being accepted for
the ne xt Hillel Shabbaton with Velvel Pasterna ck. Call 836-4S40, or register at the Hillel
table in Norton Union.
LIFE WORKSHOI'S••
life Workshops are organized to provide
small groups in which people can share interests, sk ills. ideas arid learning experiences
outside the dassroom. The workshops are
open to all members of the University community, their spouses, and alumni . There is no .
admission charge. and the workshops cover a
large va rie ty of subjects. For inforrmtion and
reRistration, 831-4630.

roP

HOURS

MIA's More Occupation Oriented
These figures imply that MBA's "iden-

only route to career success is to stay

UUAIFILM ..

Hear. Norton Conference Theatre, co~~l18315117 for times. Admission charge.

OffiCI OF ADMISSION AND IIECoatJS

career employees.

than with the organization currently using their slcills," Gutteridge said. He cori,dudes that young executive MBA's no
longer agree with the belief that "the

8:30 p.~ . Admission: S1 students; S2 U/8
fa culty, staff and alumni; S3 general admission.
Presented by the Department of Music.

, oHers first aid courses

PROFESSIONAl. COUNSBJNG

The U,/)1 Department ol Environmental Health and Safety, with sand ion or the
· BuUalo Chapter of the American Red Cross and the Erie County Bureau ol
Emergency Health Services, coordinates and conducts various levels of first a id
and emergency care tra~ning programs for faculty, staff, students, academic and
non-academic departments. •
~
The demands for training are increasing rapidly, the Department indicates. In
order to arrange for equipment, supplies and instructors for 1975, the Department

requests all interested persons to seled the courses they wish to complete and
return lorm below to 307 Michael Hall, by February 1st. ease indicate period
desired.
·
Persons currently enrolled in an ongoing or future clas

eed ot complete

the survey.

c........
1.
2.
3.
4.

Standard First ·Aid . ...... . .... .
Stondard Fi"t Aid lnstrudor .. .
Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation .
Underwoter Rescue . . . . . . ... . .
5. Emersency Medical Technician
(State Certified)
6. Advanced First Aid
and Emergency Care . ..... . .. .
(New American Red Cross Course)
Please complete, dip and return
Michael Hall.

Spring

Summer

For the remai.Mser of the month of January,
the Office of Admissions o~~nd Records will be
open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m.
to 8:30 p.m.

Fol

20 hrs.

15 hrs.
8 hrs.
45 hrs.
81 hrs.
52 hrs.

Hillel House now offe rs · professional
counselinR. For an ~intment, a .ll Mrs. Fertig, 816-4540.

INTERVIEWS

..

ON-CAMPUS INTBIVIfWS
The staff of the UnWersity ~nt .and
Career Cuic:bnce Offtce welcomes all siUdents
in the Unl.mity community ond alumni ro
take part in various career propams offered
this year. The on-campus interviewing
program, running from ).an. 28--April 2S, offers
I he opportunity for individu•l interviews with
education, business, industrio~~l and "
governmental representatives. candidates
from all degree levels, completing th{"ir
course work in January or ~y 1975, are in vited to take part in the lnterviewinR. Reaistr..- tion forms -are ~tlable In Hayes Annex C
Rm. 6. The following qencies will be in IN .
viewins this-'&lt;:
TUESDAY-28: Se•rs &amp; Roebuck; Eri ·
County S.vings S.nk; Airco Speer Carhf u •
G~phhe.

to Environmental Health and. Safety, 307
·

·"

- WEDNESDAY-29: New York Telephon&lt;·
THURSDAY-30: New York · Telephpn·
C.rrier COfJ).;um•tlon Co.

�.......

•01lelldiir
THURSDAY-23
STRING QUARTET AUDinON•
Three voung string quanea who are work-

audi1ion for the Juilliard String Qua n e t during
th.eir Buffa lo visit . Bair'd Recital Hall , 1 :30 p .m .
No ad m ission chars;e.
The Suicide Cenrer Volunt eer: Research in
an Applied 5eHinn. Or. fack Tapp, visiting
professor. UIB De p~rtment of Psychology. C-

34, 4230 Ridge lea. } p.m.
Prest&gt;nted bv th e Clinical-Comm u nit y
Psyc-hologv Area , Department of Psychology.

MKHANICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
SEMINAR#
.
CrindinJ! Rest&gt;arch at Carne~:i e -M e llon
Univer.sih ·. Or. Mihan C. Shaw, CarnegieM ellon U niversitv. 112 Parker, coffee a1 3, and

lecture at 3:15.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM#
Fast lncl;wic fiPctro n Sca u erin~: in Solids,
Pro fc&gt;ssor Patrick Gibbom, Princeton Unive rsi· tv. 111 Hoch'iiteue r. 3:30p.m.
LIFE WORKSHOP••
Pro,Ych omat is an open, iree -flowing expN ie nC'e to further open communication.
Sup·e rvisors are Or. Jim James and Ms. Wilda
l evin from the Universit y Counseling ,Se rvic:e'ii. 232 Norton , 7-10 p.m. {Contmues ~a c h
Thursd av throu g hout th e se me ste r. no
registra tion necessa rv).
'
HILLEL HOUSE•
" Drop-In" nigh~ . 40 CJpen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.

"')

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL•
tJ/8 vs. Fredonia State Co llel{e. Clark Hall, 7
p.m. No admission charge.
SOCIAL WORK ALUMNI MEETING•
Willia;, 0 . Hassell, president of W. D.
Ha'Jisett . Inc. will address the Social Work
Alumni Assoc-iat ion.
Mr. Hassett will discuss- social work services
. from thP perspective of a businessma n and
comm unit v leader. His talk will be preceded
bv a business meet in~ at 7:30p.m. Frank lloyd
Wright house. 123 Jewett Pai'kway.
·
WOMEN'S SWIMMING•
U/8 ~. Fret:JorH. Stilte ColkRe. Clark Pool,
~7: 30p.m: No idrTiission charge.
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATTON
CARDIAc; CUNIQ
.
This series of clinics in physical education of
the cardiac patienl and arrhythmia workshops
are .scheduled e~ch Thursday evening through
Mav 8. The topic of toni~ht 's clinic is Th e
Ju~u lar Pulse. Farber (Capen) Hall Baseme nt,
~ Room G-22. 7:30·9:30 p.m. for information or
reRisthtion, 'calrthe SchOol of M~icine, 831 5526.

Sponsored bv the School of M~icine .
RLM•

.

A film series -enti11ed Civilization is being
shown each Thuisday night. Tonight's episode
is Thf' Frozen World and the Grear Thaw. 170
Millard fillmore- Academic Core, Ellicott
'
Comple:lC, 8 p.m.
Sponsored bv Vico College and Coll eg~ B. ·
THEATRE PERFORMANCE"
B&lt;~al bv Bertolt Brecht, directed by Gordon
Ro Roff. Cour tya rd -Th ea1 re, Ho yt and
Lafaverte. 8 p.m. Aamission: S1 students, S2.50
gen~ral publ ic.
Presen1ed by '1he Cente r for Theatre
Research . Thro ugh January 26.
VISfflNC ARTIST SERIES•
The Juilli~rd SrrinR Quartet performs in the
first Visiting Arlist Series concirt of the
se mesler. Mary Seaton Room , Kleinhans
Music Hal l. 8:30p.m. Admission : 51 students;
~ U/8 faculty, staff and _alumni; S3 general
public:
Spo~sor-;&lt;~ by the Oep~rt!J)enl of Music.
UUAIFILM••
Cinderella ·Ubert y. Norton Confere nce

Theatre, calt 831 -5117 for times. Admission
charge.

FRIDAY-24
HORIZONS IN NRJIIa.IQI.OGY SEMINAR#
The Mechanism o f" Generarion and FuncliONI Si~ficance of Electrical Inhibition in

Goldfish Medull.,, Dr. Do.n&gt;ld s. _Faber•.
. Research Jnstitute on Alcoholism, 4021 Main
5I. 1011 Shermon, 1 p.m.
·
BECTIIICAI.~DEP~TMENT

-lECTUUSERIESt

The St~tus and Potendal o f . Pulse d

TroMferred fiKtron Delrices, Dr. Oonild W:

'"'

january 23, f975

Griffin , U/ 8 adjunct professor of electrical
engineering and_r~ ader in electrical eng in~r ­
ing. Universil v of Adelaide, South Australia.
104 Parke r, 2 p.m. Refreshments will be
se rved .
Sponsored by Ihe Departme nt of Elect rical
Enf{ineering.
DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE,

. ing with the Cleveland Quartet at U/ 8 will

PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUM#

/

.

~~R~~~~~~~~~=:~~~~~~R#

Gas-Panidf' Flow : Applications and So me
RPC'(' nl Res('a rch. Dr. George Rudinger, prin·

cipal scit'ntisl, Bell Aerospace Company. 104
ParkN, 4 p.m. (Social hour is at 3:30 p.m. in
107 ParkN).
PHYSIOLOGY DEPARTMENT SEMINAR#
Timilllf o f Resp irator y f vents. Dr. Beverly
Bishop. 108 ShNman, 4 p.m.
VARSITY HOCKEY"
l/18 ~- N orth To n-. wanda. Holiday Twin
Rink(., 3465 Broadway, 7:)0 p.m. S1udents may
pick up frrp ticke ls before the night of the
ga mr .lt th&lt;&gt; Clar k Hall ti cke t o ff ice; S2 ge ne ral
admission.
CACFILMS••
•
A C"J rtoon fest ival. fea turi ng The Critic (Mel
Brook!&gt;). R('lad Runner. H elpmates (Laure l &amp;
Hard v) . Thr Tf' lllale H earl, Th e Creal Chase
(W .C. f ields). -Thr Rink (Charl ie Chaplin), and
DLmlbo. 140 Fa rber (Ca pen), 7:45 an d 10:15
p.m. Ad missio n: S1.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE•
Baal bv Berto li Brecht, c;fttec1ed by Gordon
R o~o ff . Courtv a rd Theat re . Hoyl a nd
Laf.il\'rttr. 8 p.m. Admissio n: S1 stude nt s, S2.50
~f' n C' ral public.
Spo nso red bv t he Cent e r fo r Thea tre
Respa rch.
HILLEL HOUSE"
Sh.1bOO t 5C'rvice at 8 p. m., fo ll owed by a
To rah studv SE"ssion and O neg Shabbat. 40
Capc&gt;n Blvd.
UUABFILM ••
Cindf. rplla l ihPrty. Norto n Co nfere nce
Thratrr ca ll 831 ·5117 fo r times. Admissio n
c-harge.

SATURDAY-25

Posifts in unchu.Kterislk ~I"",~ -~ Neil, best lcnowtt kM Mr
shrewish daarKte-riza.tion of rnilcl-nM.nrw!l'fll cwtc. kent's feDow jour~U~Iist,. is

ART LECTURES•

A Sf'ries of leclures called . Survey of Art,
history of art from the ancie nt
world to th&lt;&gt; 'p resent'. are offered Saturday
mornings from January 11 through April 19.
The&gt; Survrv sPries provides the basic re qui rt&gt;mrnls for those planning to become
volunteN docent s in the Albright-Knox
GaiiPrv's Education Department . The lectures
arl' given at the gallery from 10 a.m. to noon.
For morP information or to apply. contact the
Education OPpartment, 882-8700, e xt. 26.
HILLEL HOUSE•
.
Morning Sabbath seryice at 10 a.m., followC'd hv a Kiddush and Tora h sll.Jdy session. 40
CaJl('n Blvd.
MEN'S VARSITY BASKnliALL•
ll/ 8 vs. C.11holiC' Universit y. Memorial
Audirorium. 6:30 p.m. Students with 10 card
admiut&gt;d frep; S2 ge neral admissio n.

now

CACFILMS••

A carroon festival. featuring Magoo 's
Privatf' War. The Kid From Bo rneo (Lin le
RaS&lt;'als). Thr D('$perare Sco undrel (Keystone
Kops). HnUvw()()(l o r Bust (Abbou &amp; Costello),
A Plumhin~ Wr Will [;o (The Three Stooges),
Th~ Pbantom of the Opera (origina l 1925
o;;ilrnt verSion with Lo n Chaney) . 140 farber
(Cap&lt;&gt;n). 7:45 and 10:15 p.m. Admission : S1.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE"
Baa l bv Berro h Brecht , directed by Gordon
Ro,;off . Court Ya rd Theatre, Hoyt and
l afavNtP, 8 p.m. Admission : S1 ~ ludents, $2.50
ge nf'ral public.
Presented b y t he Center for Theatre
Research. 'UUABFILM••
Thr t our De ra il.

Norton Con{erence
Theal«", n il 831-5117 fo r times. Admission
diarge.

SUNDAY-26
THEATREftiiFOIIMANCE"
Ba~ l bv Bertoh-BrK ht. directed by Gordon
Rogoff. Cou r'ty ard Tlleatre, Hoyt and
Lafayette, 8 p.m. .(dmission: 51 students. 52.50
gener~l publio._
Prese'n ted by the Center for Theatre
ResearCh.

,a

much souaht-after star ol the campus ledure circuit, leniftJ us to

ponder whe-ther Jimmy Ohon on be f•r Whlnd.

cov~? rin ~ thf'

known as lois l ane of the Daily Pla11e1, wi ll
lifr with " Superman." Fi llmore Rm .,
No rton ·Un ion. 8 p.m.
Spomorrd bv the Stude nt Assod arion
Sprakrro;;' Rurra!J.

U/ 1 ARTS FORUM"
_
Esthrr Swartz 'C'ondu cts in·depth interviews
in thC" arts. WADV·FM (106.5 mhz.). 10:05 p.m.

rli o;;cu ~~

UUABFILM••
Th f' l a d DNolil . No rt on Confe rence

Theatre , call 831-5117 for times. Adm issio n
chargP.

w 'EDNESDA Y-29

MONDAY-27

COUNCIL OF INTERNAnONAL STUDIES
AND DEPARTMENT OF KONOMICS
SEMINAR#
.
Labor-Market Search and Duration o f
Un(&gt;mplo yment, John Barron, Deputment of
Economics, Brown ' Univers ity, and The
Brookings Instit ution. 214 John lord O'Brian
Hall. Amherst CamplJS, 3:30p.m.

ENCOUNTBt SERIES"
'
CompoS('r Mort on Fridman and members
of the Cl€'vf'lancf Quarter will discuss Mr. Feld. man's rffent Work to be perfonned by the
ClevPiand Quar1e1 and the Buffalo Philharmonic on January 28. Baird Recital Hall ,
3 p.m. No admission ch ar~e . ·

BIOCHEMISTRY ~INAR#
Vitamin A Df&gt;ficie-ncy, Microsomal
Cvt~hromf' P-450 .1ml thP Metabolism of the
cardrtOJ:C'Il BC'nlpvrene ill the Rat, Dr. Judith
W. Hauswirth , assistant director. Bioche mistry
R(&gt;warch Division, Sinai Hospital, Baltimore .
148 Farlx-r (Capen), coffee at 4 p.m., lectUre at ·

FILM ••
M y fJ.1rlinJ.! CIC'me nri11c (Ford). 1'40 Farber

(Capen). 3 and 9 p.m. No admission chargE'.
FILM••

· l'AtaiPntP (Vigo. 1934). 146 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. Np admission charge.

TUESDAY-28
DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY

LECTURE#

Nutrition in · Medicine and Public Health,

Dr. George ' Kerr. G-~ Farber (Capen), 12
• noon.
FILM••

' BriOKing tip. Baby &lt;ttawks, J938). 147
Diefendorf, 4 p.m. NC!_ admission charge.
VAIQ CLUI PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARf
ThP ArfPrf.Jl Ghemoreceptor s ~nd the
Rf'distribution of Pulmonary Blood Flow_ih
( Jnil~tNal A.lvPOlar~ Hypoxia, Or. - Michae l G.

levitzkv. 1Q8 Shermaf),-4:30 p.ni.
RLM ..

..,;.. Barrling Butler (keaton). 146 Diefendorf, S
and 7 p.m. No admission charge ... ·
HLMS..

'-

It 's A.lwa)'S" Fa ir Weath;; {Oonenlkelly, '
1955). !: 30 p.m., and Sunsef . Boulev~rd
. (Wilder, 1950), 9:20 p.m. 170 Millard Fillmor~
Academjc Core, EUicoll Complex. No admis·
sion rhar«e.
• ·
·

4 :15.

· MEN'S SWIMMiNG•
ll/ 8 v ~. Cmi&lt;ius Colle~e. Clark Pool, 7 p.m. ....
No ad mission charr.1:e.
'CAMPUS SHOWCASE' LKTURE"
English 2001. 0~. Leslie Fiedler, chainnan of
lht&gt; English Departme nt. The lecture is the first .....
in a series of four leciUres sponsored by the
• Alumni Association and the Office for CreditFr~ Progra ms. Oues.:.paying memben of the
Alumni AsSociation are admi«ed free; other
alumni and members of the University community are charged SS for the four..&amp;ecture
series; fee for the general publk Is' S10. Dr.
Fiedler's lecture is at the Frank Uoyd Wright
House, 123 Jewett Parkway, 7:l0 p.m.
F.ILM ..
..

You11_g Mr. f:.incoln (ford, 1939). 70 Acheson, ·
7:30p.m. No adm ission charge.
~

FILMS••,

It 's Always Fair _Weather (Donen/Kelly,
1955). 7:30 p. m., and Sunset Boulevard
(Wilder, J9S&lt;h , 9:20p.m. 140 F•rber (Capen).
No .idmission charge•
CHINESE RLMS••
.. Chinese Aci-obatics. Piano Concerto: " The ..
Yf!llow River", Flowers Bloom Toward the
Sun. and Ta ChinR Oil Field. Conference

Theat re. Norton U~ion, 7:45 ~ 9:30 p.m.

frumro~~7. mi. JJ

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1384887">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 6, NO. 15
JANUARY 16,1975

Freeze·on

State jobs
in effect

A new Early Childhood Center (ECC}
to replace the former Day Care Center
will be opened on campus Monday,
January 20, U/8 administrators announced earlier this week.
The appointmenr of Dr. Dorothy
Farner as academic coordinator of the
ECC was also announced.
The announcement came less than a
week after dissident staffers of rhe old
U/ B Day Care Center discovered january
9 that locks on the Cooke Hall basement
facility had been changed, barring them
from entering the controversial facility.
At a press conference the following
day, President Robert l. Ketler explained
that the locks were changed on his direction after negotiations with supporters of
the student-established Day Care Center
had broken down.
At th at time the President announced
thai the old center had been closed and
a new Early Childhood Center was to be
opened.
In-making the o ffi cial announ cement
this week, Dr. Merton Ertell, acting vice
president for academic affairs, explained
that the new center had been
recommended by a consortium made up
of represe ntatives of a dozen academic
departm en ts, which proposed a ce nter
designed to meet both the needs of the
children e nro lled and the educational
goa ls of the Universit y.
Threefold Plan
" The program wi ll essentially embrace
the threefold aspects of a well-planned
deve lopme nta l sequence," Dr. Ertell
saiO. " These are: interaction between
children and adu lts, ofte n on a one-to~
one basis; planned opportunity for

In line with Governor Hugh &lt;::arey's
"immediate freeze on State hirin~ for the
balance of the fi~l year," announced in
his "State of the State" message, lanuary
8, the University has -been told to
make no further commitments to bring

people onto its payroll pending additional instrudions frOm Albany.
E. W . Doty, vice president for finance and management, told the

Reporter Monday that these further instructions, expected shortly, may provide
exceptions in terms of positions whkh
"affect the.;:heahh and safety of students
or employees," but that these will likely
be the only exceptions.

Dot y explained-that th e present freeze
includes all State-funded positions, but
does nol extend to job lines su pported
. b y rh e Resea rch Foundation, the Facult y-

Student Association or the University at
BuHalo

Foundation , - Inc.

Income-

reimbursable and endowment-funded
jobs are also affeoed, although here,
Ooty said, "we feel it will be relatively
f"asv to ge t approv;tl" fo r exceptions.
The basic objective of the job freeze,
Dot y explained, is to reduce the State's
on-~oi n R payroll expe nse by att rition.
" Hoperullv," he said, "attrition will be
suffiric nt to e nable us to avoid any actual
lavoffs."
Blealc Picture
In the "State of the State" message,
which the New York Times called "a grim
overture to his administra,io n," the new
Governor painted a bleak firJancial pic·
! ....,_,Of'

ft""' ' "flil&amp;:l'

he-State ~~"-f&gt;'OPOSed...both

raising taxes and reducing the State
_budget and pa Yroll as measures to combat what he termed the " lavish" style of
~overnment he had inhe rit ed. " The da ys
of wine and roses are over," Carey indicated .
- Dot y said · the University expeds· to
receive directives· restricting other than
pa yroll" expenditures. Instructions
limiting equipment purchases, travel,
etc., will be issued by the Division of the
Budget later this week, he said.
President Robert L. Ketter has already
issued restrictions on travel locally, rulIng out all but "essential" tra'Vel approved by vice presidents, Doty noted.
All the restrictions, Doty said, ~re only
for rhe balance of this fiscal year which
ends Morch 3'1 .
•
"Unfortunately,"· he added, the..new
fiscal yea'r promises linle relief. " We anticipate thai the budget for 1975-76 to be
approved by the ·Legislature will be
severely limiting compared to the year
we're in. The only exceptions will
probably be added resources ·for the
medical and dental schools in rhe faculty
of Health Sciences."

-Doty
-c
.
declined further speculation on

rhe shape of the 1975-76 budget but
Carey jn his address 5poke of "an enor. mous budget gap."
·
The exact dimensions, the Governor
said, "are as yet incomplete, Out one
thing is s~re: whate'!er its size, there is a
marked and substantial difference
betwee1 what we can expect, to take in ·
and what we are e~~ to pay out."
The immediate economies for the
balance of this year, Carey said, "are but
an introdudiOn to w!&gt;at is. ~equired for
the COIJII~ yeor ond for the future of
State gCMemment ...."
Mud! ol the gap, c.iey said, must be
dosed not" by odditionol "temporary"
new taxes bur by "cuts In the cost of
1overnment not cosmetic# not
painless excisions Into waste .• : but deep·
&lt;~nd hunful cuts Into cherished programs
.affealns thousands of sovemment
- employees and hundneds of thousands
ol citizens."
.
The Carey bUdget proposak will be
presented to Slate lowmalt"" within rhe
nexr lew weeks.

Preside.nt ROberl l. Keiter in early
J anuar~· approved charters of t,wo and
three yeaTS fo r 11 'residential and nonresidential Colleges.
He denied a charter. for a twelhh1. the
former College of Progressive Education.
Earlier, the Charte ring Committee for
the University's Collegiate System urged
the President to deny Progressive Education a formal charter, but 1~ approve the
.11 others, some provisio nally, for periods
up to five years. (See Reporter,
December 5 and December 12 for the
Committee's report.}
The Chartering Commillee, made up
of representatives of various facuhy and
stud...ent g·roups , submitted i1s
recommendations to Dr. Ketter in
November, after the panel had held
hearings O)J each College and reviewed
proposed charters drawn up by each.
The Colleges were regJJired to submit
charter proposals outlining in detail their
curriculum, faculty and educational style
under a procedure se"t up earlier in the
year by the faculty Senate.
In a letter to Dr. Irving Spitzberg,
director of the Collegiate Sysrem; and
others concerned with the Colleges, Dr.
Ketter said that while he recognized that
adequate time was necessary to develop~
and administer programs, he was convinced that charters should be kept to a
maximum of three years.
"The prospectus is new and untried," the President said. " An overall
academic plan, one including the
Colleg~, musr be developed for the
University."
He added that time devoied to evaluation of the Collegiate System was "too
short for a completely adequate assessment, given the number ond diversity of
the Colleges being examined." He also
suggested that some Colleses should
redraft the lonsuage ol their charters at a
later date to ~rify their 4oak.
.
Dt. Ketter praised many of' the
Colleges for lnnovalions &lt;1nd academic
strengths, but had .--vallons About
othen. Moil charteR were apprilved
with a provision that certain ch&lt;~nges be
made or that they be subject to • review

in the months ahead to determi ne
whe ther their performa nces match their
promises.
Dr. Ketter said he was especiall y concerned that academ ic freedom be maintained and discriminatory practices be
avoided.
Following are the President's decisions
and appraisals of the Colleges:
tollege 8 (CreoliYe Arts}-- Appronl
for • period of three years.
Wrote Dr. Keller: " College B has a
clearly-stated objective, a -strong
academic program, acceptable course
offerings and appropriate person~nel.
The
administrative
and
governance mechanisms are sound and the
residential progr.~m is well established.:'
The ' Chartering Committee had
recommended a five·year charter.
Rachel Carson Colle&amp;e - Appro..Jfor .
• period of three years with the proYislon
tJ!al there be a reYiew of the colese
leaclershlp and residential prosram after
• period of 11 -ths.
''R.achel CanOn College gives
evidence or acceptable academic content. It has a clearly siafed objective, its

J. rnl. 11

community projects have been useful,
and its longer term plans seem informed.
" It lacks st rengt h in its leadership with
rwo program coordinators. It should
seek more partiCi pation by (acuity
me mbers in the sciences, .and should
stress the critical importance of basic
science preparation of its students. Its
residential program is new and not wellesta blished."
The Committee had tecommended a
charter for rour years.
Prosressln Education Collese Denied a charter.
"The Chartering Committee concluded, and I concur, that there seems to be
little intellectual purpose or content in
rhe original charter proposed for this
College. What little there was has now
been incorporated in a broader and
comprehensive proposal for an undergraduate sequence by the faculty of
Educational Studies. The College is thus
rendered redunc;Jant."
The Committee had recommended
the College be denied a charter, but
suggested that the Ma~ter-designote of
{furn fO ~~

6. col. TJ

Colleges chartering summary
c!Yrters Approved
without condllions-1

College. B
· &lt;:!Yrters Approved
witli condltion5-1D
Rachel C..rson College
difford Furnas College
- College H (Health ScienCes)
Cora P. Maloney
Mathematical Sciences
Social Scieni:es
·
Tolsloy
Urban Studies
Vico
Women's Studies

Ch&lt;!rter~1
P-rogressive Education·
Three-year ~en Granted-9
College B
· Rachel Carso...n
Clifford Furnas
College H.
Cora P: Maloney
Mathematical Sciences
Urban Studies
'.'ico
Women's Studies
Two-year Charlen .Granted--2
Social Sciences College
Tolstoy

#

�~

january 16, 1975
L. . . . . . . . . .

Revisions, HEW Guidelines CommrinicatiOn-uriitsets ·
ease Buckley Law dilemma
research ac!visory ._~ou,ncil
Confusion surrounding the so-ailed
Buckley law has been cleared up
tl\rough additional legislation and · by proposed HEW guidelines for ad ministering the acJ, Ronald Stein,
associate director of Student Personnel
services, said this week.
PreSident Gerald ford has signed into
blw revisions and clarifications of the
origiNI act, which, in- general terms,
gave college students and parents of
younger children the right to inspect
their school records.
The revisions were attached as a rider
to a resolution calling for a White House
conference on library and information
science passed by Congress in
December.
The law as initially enacted opened up
to college students all records main- tained by an institution, apparently including such materials as letters of
reference and parents ' finan.cial
statements materials orig inally
solicited with assurances of confidentiality. At the same time, it prohibited institutions from giving out even . such
routine information on students as
height and weigh t statistics for athlet ic
programs. Many college and university
offidals objected, maintaining that the
act, primarily directed toward student
records compiled by elementary and
secondary schools, would raise unfore~
seen and unintended problems for
higher education. (Reporter, November
21 , December 5 and December 12).
·, Revisions in the act, develope&lt;! by
Senator Claiborne Pell (D-Rhode Island);
chairman of the Senate Subcommittee
on Education, and New Yor.k's Senator
James Buckley, the legislation's principal
sponsor, were said by Buckley to &lt;'clarify
its intent and meaning. and remed y
potential problems assodated with it."
Principal Rerisions
As outlined by Buckley in a letter to
U/B President Robert L Ketter on
December n;- these are the principal
re~isi(\(lS:
.
. . . . . . .. _ . . . .
1. letters of recommendation received
by institutions before January 1, 197S, will
be excluded from coverage.
.. 2. Students. will. be allmyed to waive
their right to see certain documents,
such as letters of recommendation for
admissions or job placement, thus making it possible for such letters to still be
solicited wiih the.assurance of confiden·
tiality.
·
3. Students will not be allowed access
to' their parents' confidential financial
statements submitted to colleges.
4. Colleges will· be free to send grades
and other information to parents if the
student is still classified as a dependent
under Internal Revenue Service
definitions.
·s. College students will not be" able
directly to see sensitive psychiatric and
related records, but will be able to have a
doctor of their choice review such
records for them.
6. The definitions of . "records'' and
"helrings" for challenging information
in records are sharpened; and
7. Information at&gt;out students can be
released without consent in emergendes
when required by State law, and in conneaion with the validation of testi ng
programs.

De&amp;.lliDn .-1 OIMr Clwtses

"The revised law describes a record as
material directly related to a student
malllbllned by a school or one of its
agents. T1ie material Is covered by the act
-as long IS the Institution uses it for makIng decisions about the Student or for
truiSmltting '!'formation to others outside of the institution. Records of law enforoement units on campus are exempted H their personnel may not examine students' education records and If
their records are used solely for law enforoement purposes.
Other changes in the law provide that
"directory information," induding such
pe.-.onal factS as name, address, and
telephone number, may be made
available to third panies without requir·
ing permission of-the student. However,
the Ia"! does require that pu_blic notice
1las to be Yen thaflhe information is In-

te~ded to be published, so that people
with, for example, unlisted phone
numbers, can indicate their interit that
they not be published. Students formerly
in attendance at an institution but not
currently enrolled are provided the same
access to records as currently- eniol~d
students ·
'
HEW Guidelines
The proposed HEW guidelines for administering the act (on which the public
willhave60daystocommentbeforethey
are final) were issued in early January
a~ spell out procedures for institutions
to follow in notifying students of their
rights; granting them access to records,

·

ly l_lo!&gt; Ensefhudt
·
munity and· sodety at latge."
Uni_..,, lilforrruHon ~
Other plans cal! for the expansion of
Say a white prob;ulon offic~r J n Erie ·
tfie 'department's "externship program,"
County is having trouble communicating · which enables siud~~ts I'! put theoreti_cal
with black youths he is counseling. Can - concept~ intq pract~ce under work1ng
anything be done to bring about mutual
conditions at Buffalo area organizations
understanding?. ·
.
_
al)d induStries.
Quite possibly, thin~s Df. - Anhur L.
The externship program helps students
Smith, chairman of the Depanment of
develop creative problem solving skills,
Speech Communicatio n.
while giving them a sense of what the
Dr. Smith, who has written several
" real world" is all about. It helps Western
books on· how people of different races
New York employers by developing
talk to 'each other, feels that if such a
graduates who are aware of their needs
problem exists, it might be worth ina nd·problems.
vestigation by researchers in his departCommittee Members
ment.
Th e 15 members of the ' Com -

and allowing them to challenge the information contained therein. The

He pOints out that people of different
races and backgrounds attach differen~

gu idelines indicate that the amendment
applies to all institutions that receive
funds administered by the U.S. Commissioner of Education and that institutions must include in any application
for federal aid from , the U.S. OHice of
Education a statement that they are compl ying with the regulations.
The suggested guidelines require that
as least once a year an educational institution .tell student§ :
• What kind of I ormation is maintai ned about them.
.
• What officials "maintain the records,
what persons ordinarily have access to
them, and why they have access.
• The policies the institution follows if
st ud ents want to challenge records and if
the institution then agrees to change the
records. .
.
.
.
• The cost charged for reproducing
copies of the records for students.
• The kind of "directory" information
- such as a s.t'udent's name, .addr~ss, an9
mcijor..!..... that the institUtion Will routine ly release.

meanings to various words. In addition,
non-verbal methods of communication,
such as the use of eye contad, are often
different.t&gt;
By studying the dynamics of interpersonal communications betweeo ~probation officers and black- y.outtis, - 0/B
speech communication researchers
could find out what is getti ng in the way
of effective give and tak.e. ·They co~d
then advise probation officers whal they·
can do to ma ke a conversation go more
smoothly and establish rapport with
youth.
Reseilrch with Pr•ctic~l Applic~lions
Such st ud y ideas are part _of a new approach the department is undertaking to
assure that the research it performs _has
practi cal applications for Western New
Yorkers.
,
·
As a first step, the department w.ants to
find o ut what problenls exist in the Buffalo working world, and whether they
are worth investigitting, To .d o this, it has
established a Communication. Advisory
Council, consist ing of 15 men and
wome n holding key p_ositions il\ y.'ester~
New York, business, labor, govemment
and industry.
. .. ~
.., .. ·~·.
Dr. Smith notes that panel members
we.re ct,osen because "the:y are On top of
day to day happenings and have t he expertise to point out communications
problems that need sol utions."
When the advisory council formulates
study proposals, research teams - made
up of U/ B faculty members, doctoral
candidates or gradua te students -- will
then go to work in an effort to solve
problems.
Areas for investigation will include
problems in person-to-person, small
group, cross-cultural, organizational and
mass communications.
"For example," Dr. Smith. explained,
"a physician may re mark tt,at doctors in
Buffalo hospitals are having real
problems in co mmunica ti ng · with
patients, or an elected official m.ay men·
tion how political rhetoric offen clouds
the issues when local controversies are.
aired. These would be topics for . investigation."
The influence of television on black
children is another item Dr. Smith is especially interested in tackling.
In addition to collaborating on
research questiOns, me mbers of the '
volunteer advisory panel will take part in
forums and' graduate seminars at the
University. and some may teach on occasion. They will also keep the department
up to date on skills n~eded for employment in the BuffalO area communication
job market.
'

U/B in Compliance

According to Ron Stein, whose area of
U/ B Student Personnel Services is charg·
ed with receiving.requests for examining
records, the UniversitY ·is• in .full ·Compliance with th"e Buckley law as amended and is now making availa ble for student inspection records which are
covered by the act. Stein's office · has
drafted revisions to the University~' Stu­
dent Rules and Regulations" which will
reflect U/ B's co mpl iance and will ·be
published in next week's Reporter.
Proced ures. by which students may
challenge record information which they
believe to be inaccurate are also being
established.
.
A student desiring access to records
must cpmplete a request form in the Office of Student Affairs (201 Harriman),
specifYing the records he or she wants to
see, Stein indicates.
· A memlier of the Sludent Affairs staff
will : meet with each student at the time of
the request, explain the provisions of the
law and answer general questions about
it, .determine where such records are
available in the University, and indicate
when the request will be honored. The
law provides a waiti~g period of 45 days
from receipt of each request before the
records jn quest ion 111ust be made
available.
·
.,_Student Affairs will notify the agency
hC)Iding the records that a request has
been made and the student must also
contact that agency.
To date, Stein said, U/B has received
some 120-130 requests to examine
records under the new law.

Wms Scholarship
Lawrence J. Gomiak, a !reshon_an accounting major in tlfe School of Management, has been presented a four-year;
S20,000 lniernal Revenue· Service
scholarship by Herben B. 'Mosher, IRS
Buffalo district director.
The scholarship was awarded ooi the
basis of academic achievement and
financial need and carries an annual stipend of SS,OOO. It covers the complete
cost of tuition, fees and books, and also
provides Gomiak with a pan-time position with the Internal Revenue Service
which will allow him to eam up to the
balan
the SS.o!l!! each year.

'A Nowei Approach'· · '
Dr. Smith . calls the creation of 1he
council a " novel approacn to research
that has never been a«empted before by
a traditional Speech 'or communications
department."
"'
. .
He points out .that· the field of communications research Has been critkiz4;!d
in the past for · taking an "ivory tower'!
approach to some studies ~ that isr investigating questions which may have
had intellectual· merit but. few
applications in the real world.
The depanment chairman · sees the
new. Communication Advisory Coundt•
as part of a broader plan to restructure
U/B's graduate· speech communication
program, " so it is more attuned to the
needs of the W te N

munications Advisory Council -are:

Jerome P. Bishop, regional manager,
General Motors Corp. Pubi ~ Relations,
Buffalo; Fred). Bruski, financial diredor,
Harrison Radiato r Division, Ge neral
Mot9r~ Corp., . lockport; William j .
Dauria, City of Buffalo Common Council; Sairdra- ·Elkins, "Wom3n" program
director, WNED-TV; Charles F. Hamilton,
personnel communications and communily -relations rrianager, B~ffalo Divi· sian, WestingHouse Elettdc:Corp.
. Ma·ry .l.. ·Herman, - p'ublic relat ions
specialist, New York Telephone, Buffalo;
Betty Hutcheson, executive director,
YWCA of Buffalo and Erie County; Jean
K. Hutchinson, public relations director,
Planned Parenthood of Buffalo, Inc.;
Joseph Lentini, editorial director, WGRTV; Frank Mesia, president in cha rge of
developi ng the National Afro-American
Heritage Museum, Niagara Falls;
Robert J. Mood y, assistant vice president and director of communications,
ManufaciUrers and Traders Trust Co.,
B.uffalo; Mar:ilyri St!lh!ka Watt, RadiolrV
director, Council of Churches of Buffalo
and f:rie County; Terry J, Thompson,
dir~l'for, .9f ,puqlic. ·~!&lt;~.•w n~ Fish'l•rPri,:e

Tqys, . {a1),-~ur,ora; , pquglo~.l - WinP.~~rc
s~inte,nd~n.t. ,/;'lt;w1 ,Yqr~. State Ernplo,y-m~ nt Service, Buffa.lo •. pnd Arthur B.

Ziegler' execuiive vice president, Marine
Mid land Banks, Inc., Buffalo.

,Job letters can
.still be privileged
A leNer of recommendation solicited
by a siUden t from a faculty member or
other individual for inclusion in the
student's University Placement and
Career Guidance file can still be treated
as confidentia( if the student waives his
or her right to examine the letter.
The amended Buckley law which extends the protection of confidentiality to
all such leJters received before January.1,
1975, opens lettel's received after that
date to student inspection but a lso
provides-this option for continued confidentiality -if a Student so elects.
According to EugeO.e Manell, director
of the U/B placerneni service, that office
is providing students wit~ revised forms
for requesting le«ers of recommendation. The neW foim contains a statement
waiving the right of examination which
the student may sign. The form then goes
to the individual being asked to writ~ the
letter. That individual may submit his or
her recommendation on the same form.
In this way, Manell indicates, there will
be 'no question as. to" whether or not the
tecommendation will remain confidential. If the student has signed the waiver,
the letter is protected; if the statement
has not been signed the writer will know
that the recommenda"tion is not to remain confidential.
Individuals wishing to respond on
their·_own letterhead may attach the signed waiver Statement form 10 their letter '
or may have _«he' Studen' ·sign ·a similar
statement dir&lt;:'CIIy · on the letter~ead ,
Martell indicated.
·
Afiy individual who does not receive a
signed waiver form from a student o r
who submits a letter of reference not accompanied by a signed waiver must expect that the student will be able to examine the letter, Manell said.
·
In the past, all such h!ners received by
Placement and Cart!er .Guidance ~were
ea red as Confident iii Mitrt@ll fit·

�janua ry 16, 1975

Colleges now
face problems
of funding

Annual U/B·- ceremony honors Fillmore
" While some historians regard Millard
Fillmore as a 'do nothing' President, the
nation was at peace with all the world
and enjoying a high degree of prosperity
at the end of his administration. How
long has it been since we were able to
siy that!"
Vice President for Student Affai rs

Richard A. Siggelkow posed this ques-·
tion by way of tribule to the 13th Presi ~
dent of the U.S. and first chancellor of
the Universit y at the ceremony commemorating the 175th anniversary of

Fillmore's birth, January 7.
·
like most politicians, Siggelkow said of
Fillmore;· ' 'he· 'apparently appreciated
pop~lat~y ; stlli; ri~Htly ··m · wrongly, he
fonbwed 'courses' bf' attion· as President
that were so ·extremely unpopulir \viti"!
large segments of both the North ·arid
South that his position in any Gallup poll
of th e time, had one existed, would have
been low, indeed. He seemed to comprehend the unimportance of personal

popularity when weighed against
national interests as he perceived and
understood them.
" We may concentrate too much on his
Presidential role, and not enough about
Millard Fillmore as a person," Siggelkow
said, recalling Speeches presented in
other yea rs at ihe annual Forest lawn
gravesite ceremony. "Perhaps we can
better understand this man-1hrough his
other actions and accounts of the day.
"From the age of 10, Millard could not
· be sp;ored from his father's farm, and he
attended an isolated rural school for only
two or three months &lt;luring the winter.
By 15 he had learned to plow, to hoe, to
chop, to log and clear land, to mow, to
reap - all of the skills required to clear
and cultivate a new farm.
II Anyone who admi.ts to, realizes, and
corrects his inadequacies has character.
An early, and not ioo successful, teaching
experience subsequently motivated him
to use every free moment to imp'rove in
studying and learning. By the time he
was 17, a small dictionary- to which he
also referred constantly even while
working as an apprentice wool carder was his constant companion. He had
committed himself to seeking out the
meaning of every word he did not up_derstand.
"Virtually uneducated in his youth, it
must also have taken great determiria~
tion to embark on a career in law at a
time when seven years of preparation
were required before anyone without a
classical education could be admitted as
an attorney in ·New York."
·
• After his first legal case, SiggelkC?w
recalled, Fillmore admitted that "Fortunately for my untried powers the suit
was settled, and I got my first fee without
exposing my ignorance." The -former
President also owned up to the fact that
his first public address as a young man,
"had no merits."
Fillmore's " unusually warm and
.....

sinc;erel y active interest positively and
permanently influe nced many lasting
and important civic and cult ural projects
of th is city," Siggelkow reminded. "And
while any one individual 's ultimate impact is admi«edly impossible to measure,
the d eg ree of Doctor of Medicine alone
was confe rred on nearly a thousand
g raduat in g during his period as
Chancellor.
" It is importa nt, then, rhat those who
knew him best referred consistently to
his· 'cheering smile' and 'encouraging
manner.' He 'always cordiall y and kindly
treated and greeted all who came in con~
t~ cl ·with' him' and was 'ever apruoac hable ' eve n Whi le President ,"
Siggelkow said.
A resolution of the Buffalo Historical
Society (Of whi ch he was fi rst president)

su mmed up the se ntime nts of most ·Buffalonia ns on Fillmore's death in March
1874, Siggelkow noted : " We, who have
seen him evt!rv day, who have associa ted
wi th him most intimate ly, who have
known him best, and who have thus had
hig hest proof of his real worth, are most
afflicted."
Col. john E. Blewett, base detachment
commander of th e 107th Fighter Group,
New York Ai r National Guard, based at
Niagara Falls, placed a wreath from President Gerald R. Ford on the Fillmore
grave during the ceremonY. Siggelkow
placed a Unive rsil y wreath.
Rev. Gregory Kristner, chaplain to
Easte rn Orthodox students on campus,
presented the invocation, and James D.
Fisher, a sopho more music major ,
sounded the traditional " Taps."

Early Childhood Center·-------tfrnm~~f. rnl 41

cog nitive de ve lopme nt , and self~
selected act ivities.''
Ea rl y awareness of pote ntial problems
which might interfere with late r schooling will also be a part of the se rvices for
children at the ECC
Dr. Dorothy Farner, who has had wide
experience in childhood educatio n, has
bee n named academic coordinator of
the ECC She will be in charge of its
operation, and will be assisted by
professionally qu alified staff and
teachers, Dr. Ertell said.
Dr. Farner received her Ph .D. in
reading from Western Reserve University. She has served on the faculties of the .
University of Maryland, Ohio Universiiy
and Kent State University and has-con~
suited extensively abroad in the field of
early childhood and elementary education, most recently as Bangkok representative of the Institute of International
Education.
According to Dr. Ertell, the new ECC
will be open from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. and will
have places for 35 to o40 children each
half day, with a number expected to be
enrolled for a full day. Ages will range
from infants to pre-first graders.
Priority Those eurrendy &amp;uolled
Priority will. be given to children
currently enrolled and to children of
other U/B otudents. The fee schedule of
last semester will be continue&lt;!_ for the
current semester.
Parents whose children are served by
the ECC will have the opportunity. to participate in the.program activities of the
· center on a scheduled basis.
" We plan to establish a parents' advisory group and to invited p;orents to
p;ortidp;ote in comminees of the ECC
which will deal with programs and activities," Dr. Ertell explained.
The academic component of the
program will consist of University
students observing or interacting with
the children at the ECC under the super-

to

vision of bot h a faculty mem be r and the
Center teachers. Dr. Ertell gave several
exa mples of how the Center might be
used in conjunction with academic
programs. The nursing program could
use it to observe the health dimensions
of earl y child hood, and also to help
prospective nurses learn how to establish
rapport with young children.
" Psychology students could observe
how you ng children form groups, how
long these groups last, and how conflicts
are resolved by the children," Dr. Ertell
said.
The ECC will utilize the existing daycare f._cilities in the basement of Cooke
Hall.
·
'Attr~ctive Progr~m'

" We believe the new Center will present a part.icularly attractive program for
both children and parents. The rich
resourc~ of the University will provide
fo r creative combinations of c-hild health,
nutrition, and other specialities with
learning experiences and play," Dr. Ertell
said.
Parents of children currently enrolled
at the Center were informed of the administration's decision by letter prior to
the official announcement this week.
Ellen Goodman, of the former Day
Care Center's publidty comminee, said
that p~rents were very pleased to learn
that the University would be providing
day care. Certain requirements of the
parents' group, induding convenient
hours of operation, hot lunches, and no
change in fees, appear to be met by the
new program, she said.
She indicated, however, that p;orents
whose children used the old Center remain united behind such still unclear
issues as retention of the former Center's
staff and maintenance of what she
characterized as an anti~sexist, antir:acist, child-o"iiented program fiith
special sensitivity to the needs of
working-i=lass and minority families.

Endowed with new academic respectability as a result of the recently completed chart ering procedure, the
Colleges now find themselves fadng
another challenge : Whether they can
win sufficient funds in the campus-wide
ra~e for the University dollar.
.
The colleRes' fiscal situation for the
current semester was characterized by
Dr. Irving Spitzberg, director of the
Collegiate system , as ~~exceedingl y
grim."
The Colleges had originally requested
an increase over th'e present level of support of some $50,000~$60,000 to cover anticipated expenses during this their first
se me ster as · fully chartered entities,
Spitzberg said.
This fig ure was su bsequently trimmed
to $25,000, representing what he termed
the absolute minimum needed to meet
the ex panded commitments of the
chartered Colleges.
At th is time it appears that the ·system
will receive an.increase of $5,000-$10,000,
Spitzberg reported . That is a "generous"
esti mate of the anticipated increase, he
said.
The ColleRes currently have-a total .annual budget of approximately S375,000.
As a result of limited funding, the
system will not be able to offer certain
courses which had been scheduled, the
director said . Under the austerity
budget, no additional money will be
ava ilable for cou rse support or residen tial programs. The additional appropriatio n . will be used la rgelY to retain
telephone lines and buy certain supplies,
Spitz berg said.
Although presently in what Spitzberg
te rm ed desperate fiscal shape, the
Colleges are hoping that their situation
will improve in fiscal year 1975-76. For
the Collegiate system to be viable,
Spitzbe rg said, the Colleges will need a
combined budget of some SS00,000~
$600,000 at that time.
" Otherwise, we cannot maintain faculty interest," explained the director. "We
need to build a strong enough program
base to convince faculty that it'S worth
their time .t o participate in the Colleges."
COntinued" Stui:1enf panicipation also
hinges on an attractive program base, he
sa id,
Without a major reallocation Of campus funds to the Colleges, they will not
succeed, Spitzberg said .. Noting that the
ad-ministration has indicated fts
willingness to support the Cqlleges, the
director observed that any such major
reallocation will have to be a "consensual decision," involving the faculty and
provosts as well.
" Of coutse- a lot depends on what
happens outside," 5pitzberg said,
alluding to the reality that any fiscal
decisions made on campus are only p;ort
of a larger economic canvas very
different from the halcyoh days when
the'Colleges were bo~n.
·
·

Expert on aging
to speak on campus
Dr. Robert Kohn, professor of
pathology at Case Western Reserve
University, will be the first of five lecturers who will speak on campus during
the spring semester as p;ort of a series
- sponsored by the University's
Multidisciplinary Center for the Study of
Aging.
His lecture, "Biomedical Aspects of
Mammalian. Aging." is scheduled for 3 i
p.m., Wednesday, Janwtry 22, in 233 Nor- ton. The public is invited to the lecture,
and also to meet informally with Dr.,
Kohn at a reception in 234 Norton, starting at 2 p.m.
Dr. Kohn is author of the book, Principles of Mammalian Aging. He Is a
Fellow of the Gerontologic Society and a
Fellow of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science.
The second speaker in the spring series
will be Dr. James E. Birren, director of the
Gerontological Center, University of
Southern California, who will cfiSCUSS
" Behavior, Health and Aging," Wednesday, February 5.

�...sua

january ~ 6, 1975

Local UU~
seeks ~einbers,
more -~dour

A general membership meeting of the
Buffalo Center Chapter of United

University Professions (UUP) is set for
Tu~day,

A pre-down fire, s.tunlor, Jonuort 4, destroY.ed lhe Amhont Chobod Houoe, 115 !\40IJ!e
Rood.
21 penom. In lhe ..._,. lor • weel&lt;end - t . 1o flee. Tolol domos•
blue _.,c~y enop~..t 1n lhe ldkhen .....,. tood hod been
left
on lhe sto... o- occupont - . . . c l lhe fire shortly olter 4 o.m. ond
- · lhe olhets. The Chobod Center In Amherst wos opened lost sprins to SO&lt;YO
...... students on lhe- conopus.

foodns
........
m.-. n..
&lt;OOfdns

Lawsuit policy
is outlined
&amp;lllar:

J1H!. Ex.ecuiilr~ Comminee of the f.a~ul-:
ty Senate would appreciate your
publishing the enclosed letter from
. Michael G. Kimberly, associate counsel
of the State University, to Vice-President
Alben Somit. The letter is a respori,.; to
an inquiry sent to Mr. Somit by the Executive Committee concerning the
State's policy with regard to the protec. iion of faculty members who might be
sued because of injuries to students or
others as a result of accidents ir;t ...
classrooms or laboratories.' · · · · ' ·
Yours truly,
--Gecqe Hochlleld
Chairman, Faculty Seno!te

Dear Dr. SOmit:
' You recently inquired ... concerning
the nature and extent of protection
provided -. faculty member engaged in
classroom experiments and laboratory
work.
Jn the usual case suit would be
brought and any judgment taken against
the University as employer. A plaintiff is
not precluded however from opting, for
any number of reasons, to initiate suit
against a faculty member in his individual
capacity. It is an accepted principle of
law that each individual is primar~y
responsible lor the consequences of his
negligent acts. In such situations the
protection provided by Section 17 of the
Public Officers Law becomes relevant.
Section 17 of the Public Officers Law
provides protection for all officers or
employees of the State. Specifically it
·
·
provides that:
.
" The state shall save harmless and indemnify all officers and employees of the
~te from finanCial loss arising out of any
daim. demand, suit or judgment by
reason of alleged negliJience or
other act by such officer or-employee

'

January 21, at 3 p.m. in the Red
Room of the• faculty Club to discuss
further a major drive for paid
memberships called for in a letter circulated on campus thi.s...week by Prof.
C.A. Yeracaris, Chapter president.
According to Yeracaris, "the four
Univer~ity Centers and the Health
Sciences Centers (within SUNY), because
-of th eir weak membership, are at a distinct disadvantage within UUP. As of
December 6, the four-year colleges with
a tota l of over 4500 potential -members
ranged from a low of 31 to a high of 62
per cent membership of those eligible;
th e technical arid specialized- colleges
from a low of 29 to 73 per cent cil about
4,000 potential_ members. The fou.r
centers and th.e Health Science Centers
ranged from•18 to'32 per cent of overS,200 potential members."
The consequence of this " lopsided
representation of all units other than th e
centers," Yeracaris contends, "is the
political control of the direction of UUP
by th ~ unit's. It is ironic," he says, "that
rhe centers, if they were able to achieve
100 per cent membership, could exert a
significant influence on the future of the
are more colorful ttian w,;rd symbols.
organization and, of course, on the terms
When lecruring aboul historic figures
and co nditions of employment as they
from the past he easily slips into the roles
are negotiated in SUNY . ... It is obvious
of the perso ns he is· talking about and
that we have no choice but to join this
makes America's early days come -alive
·organization if we are concerned and infor twentieth century students.
terested in participating in decisions
Although ·deeply in~olved in his enadwhich affect directly each one of us."
ment of history he is eve r aware of the
Yeracaris said he has heard in the past
studen ts' presence. A sneeze, a change . various complaints about things which
of seats, e nd -of-class restlessness UUP has or has not done. " It is sad," he
nothing goes unnoticed. He is always in
said, "that although these criticisms may
contro l and, despite the large size of his
be valid, we do nothing about them."
classes, the students respect it.
Unless more individuals on this camHe not only uses words aptly· but parpu "'ndc at •Other1 """'teJlS· joiTh ·UUP,
simoniously. There is very little repeliYeracaris•arg.. es; _!'it '"."1! J?e_ !!i~u).~, . if :
tion in bis lectures._The ...feinforcement..
not i,mpossib!e. tO. ma~e any inrofldS into
process takes place in the ensuing disthe .collecti,ve bargai,ning posture of the
cussio n. gro ups,.
UUP, noi because of any inability of .th e
True to form, at th e end of the final
Statewide leadership to understand our
class last month, Dr. Pope, his head
problems and issues but because of th e
slightly lowered, said simply, almost
absence of relevant political and inforhumbly, 10 the students : " Thank you."
mation inputs."
The response from the next generation
Yeracaris says UUP's annual dues, one
was immediate - a hearty round of
per cent of base salary, may be high, but
applause.
are worth it in lerms of future improve-Ruth Gm.
ment in job conditions.

provided that such officer or employee
at the time damages were. sustained was
acting in the discharge of his duties and
within the scope of his employment and
that such damages did not result from
the willful and wrongful act or gross
negligence .of such- officer or employee
and provided further that such officer or
employee shall, within five days of th e
time he is served with any summons,
.,. complaint, process, notice, demand or
pleading, deliver· the o•iginal or· a copy
thereof to the attorney general."
.
Most significantly Section 17 provides
that the State shall"save-harmless and indemnify" State officers and emplp:r.ees
from financial loss incurred while acting
uin the discharge of duties and within
the· ..scope
'employment" ' provided
such damage results neither from a
"willful and wrongful act"_nor an act of
"gross negligence."
It should be · understood that Section
1-7 proviOes only that the Attorney
General "may" assume control of the
defense. No obligalion to defend is
assured. As a practical matter, however,
1
the Attorney General routinely prov~des
a defense under Section 17 as a matter of
discrelion.
·
Assuming that the above referenced
jurisOictional prerequisites are satisfied
{note specifically the requirement that
The U7B Alumni Association and the
Samuel L. Clemens Professor. Place the Attorney General be notified within
Office for Credit-Free Programs, Division
the Fr.nk' lloyd Wright 'Alu mni tlouse,
five days of service of process) t~e
of Continuing Education, ·have joined
12J · Je~ett Parkway.
coverage provided is without monetary
February 19 - 11Teachink; Passion,''
forces to present a distinguished lecture
limit. The pledge of Section 17 is to
series, beginning January 29.
'
Gerald O'Grady. Dr. O'Grady, director
" indemnify and hold harmless."
Called 0/B Campus Showcase, the
of the Center lor Media Study and the
1 hope yoU will fin.d this information
evening lecture series will be open to
Instructional '-communication Center,
helpful.
members of the University community
will present a· screening of "The Passion
Very truly Yours,
and the general public. Four faculty
of Anna" (Swedish, 1970), followed by a
-Michael G. Kimberly
me mbers will discuss topics iil their areas
slide lecture interpreting the filn_:a. Place
Associate Counsel
- of specialty during the one-a-month
- Conference Theatre, Norton.
- State University
•
March 19- " How We Carry Q~t Skillsessions.
ofNewYor_k
The four-lecture program will include:
ed Movements at Will," John C. Eccles.
Januory .29- ~'English 2001," teslie •A.
Sir- John Eccles, a distinguished Nobel
Fiedler. Dr. Fiedler's lecture will concern
Prize winner, will empha5ize the rol~ of
the lag between the way courses in
the brain in human behavior. He is disliterature are taught and the demands of
tinguished professor of phys1ology arid
1
a democratic mass soci_ety. Fiedler is
biop~ysics. Place The F_rank lloyd
·chairman of the English Department and
Wright House.
Editor:
YICO COURSE COIIliECTlONS
April JO - "Sexual Behavior in the
[n these -~ days where " getting by"
Vico Colqe t...on...,......t these correcFutureb-l ThThe ladyddocthe T ig er!,"RGibol~ia appears more imponanJ than striving for
lions 1o the doss........_ for Sf&gt;rio'I7S: I)
L. Ro in. ·
e · a res• o
r. o m,
perfection, it iS truly heartening to enThe Reoad . Core Courw ("IAcliftclu.l &amp;
assodate clinical professor, Department
counter a professor of the ca_liber of Dr.
Socidy:R..-&amp;Ouistlonlly1-T&amp;T1ut
of Psychiatry and coordinator of
Robert G. Pope of the History Dep~n­
fa11:2tCMt-~nc..p., Trlller'; lhistourw
programs in human sexuality- for underment.
Is teom ........ by nine IKully _........ ond
gradua!e medical students and re~iDr. Pope not only has a brilliant mind
lndudes rHdinp " - VlfPI to. DMte. 2)
dents, will highlight changing patterns 1n
and a gilt l&lt;&gt;r rhetoric but he obviougiy
Counes o•ltleclf"""* tdlecloole: "Culture
sexual roles and attitude. Place - John
of Sclenn" - Holllnser - Th 1lord- O'llrian Hall, -Amhersr Campus,
prepares his lectures and works dosely
with his teaching ~nts. Nothing i•
;:;w:~~~~~ Room 106.
"hit and miss" '•• his classes, although
c1en1 ~- ..__.,. _ MWf 11·11:51
Bues-~ying members of the U(B
_ _ .._....._,...,.,_.. LParJ-M
Alumni Association may-41nl!nd the U/8
they never lad spontaneity.
·
Dr. Pope does not-play it cool '""'he is
2:31-4:31-WACC :r&amp; An Ill Ia doe S,..C- _ umpus, Showcase free. Thl! fee lor .
cool. He doesn't use four-letter words to
....,...._ .......... lalloedoss.....,.. • alumni ' and other members of the
show he ~Its the 51Udents' language.
- ..._.., -.."ftlk II looalrnd. The University community i5 S5 for t()e fourHe doesn't have to - the students hang
lfepor~er loas .. .,.......... wl.. Ill•
lecture serleo;.,.f.or the gl!nl!fal public,
on ewry word then fled around his .
UIINrtlly~~~-=
S10. All program• are sdlecklled to begin :
~ after class to question and discuss.
ID ..,....
-.-- at 7:30 p.m. Light refreshments' will ~
He has evidendy 10und tha~dramatlcs
· lono.....,lloe--..
servejl_by th~ ~lwnt AUoclatlonc' · ·

of

Alumni plan Campus Showcase'
·lecture series~ featuring -faculty

Student ~lutes
gihed' teac~er

10

·--

Ycri at
N.Y. ffir4.

room1U;250

" " ' - " _ , _ :nm.

'

"'- wrmn IIOMAND
--4rt-Otlof

IIOIIIirT

r. IMJtLflT

Mond-!on

' /OHH 4.QOIJ1Jfll
AllociiMEcllar

_,.cw..._

I'AiliiCIII WMIO -AlAN

-~

#

-

1

�January 16, 1975

. . ld!JI&amp; ·-----

U/B's 'no:sh.o ws' split -50-50 between
_ pdv~te. &amp; public campuses, survey'-finds

Jazz rock
&lt;:oncert will
benefit WBFO

Tom Constanten-(formerly of the rock
group, '"fhe Grateful Dead") andl'riend~
' .will perform jazz ..rock 'at ~ concerr tO
benefit WBFO, the University's public
radio service, Monday, ·January 20; at 8
p .m. in the Fillmore Roo·m, Norton.

-

The benefit, the first · organized by
WBFO, will feature oriRinal compositions
by Constanten as well as several pre ~
miert&gt; performanes. best known for his

years spent playing keyboards for " The
Grateful Dead" and " The Incredible String BanO," Constanten has also written
scores for the off-Broadway mu sical;
T.1ror. and several films. He has studied
with such composers as StockhaUsen,
Be: rio , Boulez and Poussein and is
presently a Crearive Associate with the
Center for the Creative and Performing
Arts. . ~
. . ··
Accompanying Constanten will be
Chuck Hammer on . guitar; .Art

LeV.ir\owiti•: o ro lsa"'-oph'One, . Morray
Koh~•,Bn :bass! Bnd Nor~an : S~i~on .'
drutns. TiCk"els f8f th~· ii' r;r. m. CorlceiPin.f ·
S2.50 and are on sale a't iHe U/B an-d But: ·
falo State tickeibffices.
WB-FO is the only public radio
station on the Niagara Frontier.
Primarily funded by U/B and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, it is tur·
ning to the community for support of
pro~ram ~uide production, additional
e quipment expenses and , special pro-jects, station spok~men indicate.

Whit" happens to high school _seniors _
who ,Pre admhted to U/B but do not
enro ll? About half e nter private colleges
and ;molher SO per cent go to other .
publi~ institutions, University officials
believe.
All colleges ~ccept more applicant's
than. they anticipate will enroll, and last
fall the U/ 8 Office 6f Admissions a nd
Reco rds prepared a· follow-up study to
find out where such no-show applicants
had ~one and why they went there.
In most cases, applicants said they
wenl e lsewhere because the college that
was their top choice admitted th em.
The study was based on replies to a
questionnaire sent to 5,454 applicants
who declined invitations to matriculate
here la51 fall. About half, 2,Bo2, returned
the questionnaire , w ith most
respondents, 2,234, naming the college
they actually entered.
Of the 2,234, th e large51 number, 912,
reported th ey we re attending anothe r
ca mpus of the State University of New
York.
Another 721 seleded a private college
in New York State; 555 reported th ey
were in
going
•o .. school.
a private
one,
another
state or usually
in Canada;
a nd
the r~maining 46 said they were enrolled
in a four-year unit of the City University
of New Yoric
A majority of those seleding another
State University unit elected one of the
three other graduate centers: 244, SUNYAlbany; 200, SUNY-Binghal"l}ton; and
151, SUNY -Stony Brook _
An additional 266 indicated t~ey had
decided on one of the State University's
four-year campuses, with the largest
number, 66, picking Buffalo State
College. fihy·one others said their .final
decision was a two-yea r community
college camp us or an agricultural and
ted:micijl college in th e .SJ,JNY sy51em.
-OE !h ~ 7).1_wh&lt;;&gt; chqse,a private .college
in NeW'"¥orkSNne; 154; or more than one
in five, selected Cornell University.
The second highe51 number; 75,
reeoned en rolling at~ the Universit y of
RoChester, which was followed in popularity by RPI, with 66; Syracuse, 41;
Clarkson, 37; Canijjus, 30; RIT, 23;
Cooper Union, 21; a'!d Columbia, NYU
and Union College, 20 each_
Of the 555 who decided on higher
educa tion outside New YOr~k State, the

Smoking banned-

inSmoking,
Ellicott
hall
beverages and foodstuffs will
be prohibked in the Ellicott Complex,
lecture Hall (170 Millard Fillmore
Academic Center), Or. Merton Ertell, acting vice president for academic affairs,
and Dr_ Jo~n 0 _Telfer, v\ce president for
facilities planning, advised -faculty and
departments in a memo issued this week.
"With the installation of -the new
ca rpeting and completion of seating in
the lecture Hall," the ' two said,
" regulations pertaining to use are being
posted:·
.
. The reasona~leness" of the restrictions should be apparent, the two administrators said. "However, safety of all
concerned and the preservation of the aesthetici and utility of the space is
dependent on the watchfulne55 of the
users, especially the faculty and others
normatly in charge when the SP!!Ce is
scheduled. We hope you will experience the same high level, of _pride in
this facility that we do and want to retain
it in good form.''
-similar regulations are applicable to
the Katherine Cornell Drama Theatre
and to the Hall and Haven libraries in the Ellict&gt;tLComplex, Ertell and Telfer
11

said . ...,

.. r,

. ._

-coMPunNG SUGGEmON nOCBJUIIES

..................... _... ___

..

-.._-_

c_..,. Setwl&lt;eo ·

_...._....._~onlhe

Ullhetolly

--

.............
.,.... ..............
_ ..........
... ..._far_

. wicellwiiii ......... CUI IR1.,Tobiner

~~DID-_.11'-.:...--·
:::::. ••:: ;_:.,.:.:.
lllloeee..i . . . _

....

-

largest number, 65, enrolled as freshmen
at the University of Pennsylvania.
.
Penn was followed in preference by
the University of Michigan, 25; Brown,
22; MIT, 21; Johns Hopkins, 16; Notre
Dame and Brandeis, 15; Princeton, 14;
Norrhwestern, 13; ·HaiVard and Rutgers,
11 ; and McGill, Georgetown and Boston
University, ten each.
~
Of the 2,802 respondents, an _overwhelming number, 2,398, gave as a
reason for going e lsewhere the fact that
they had been accepted for admission by
their number one college choice.
Another 157 applicants indicated they
preferred attending a smaller school; 125
said they lacked sufficient financial aid to
attend U/ B; and 98 others mentioned
th e program they wanted appeared
more attractive at another institution.
Smaller numbers said they didn't care
for U/ B's location or weather, and others
said they were accepted too late, lacked
critical information, or that they intended to transfer to U/B after grad uating
from a two-year college.
A few reported they had given up
·
_~Amherst

college plans, usually because they had
taken jobs, were supporti ng a family, or
had joined the armed forces.
- ..
Richard Dremuk, U/B director of Admissions and Records, said the proportion of applicants who were accepted
but went elsewhere was about standard
for a major public university.
He acknowledged that institutions
such as UIB will not appeal to all high_
school grad uates. Some individuals, he
said, prefer a small liberal arts college
where they feel more at home, and
others prefer the prestige of attending a ·
highly seledive private college.
According to Dremuk, U/8 admissions
officials have been advising high school
guidance counselors that the University
has ..a com petitive atmosphere, requiring
students to be " highly self-motivated:'
As -on most large campuses, Dremuk
added, students at U/ B mu51 take their
own initiative in seeking ounhe fielp they
need to solve academic and social
problems. This, he argued , is ideal
preparation for later life .

land swaps approved

The long delayed plan for a flood control diversion chan nel on Ellicott Creek
to protect North Amherst near the U/ B
Amherst Campus has come a step closer
as a result of State University Board of
Trustees adion in December.
The plan, proposed by the U-S. Corps
of E~ineers , involves turping·over a portion of land, now ownea by the University, to the State Department of Envi ronme ntal Conservation.
The parcel includes 56 acres at the
eastern border of the new campus wtiich·
will accommodate a 20-acre, 150-footwide diversion channel a nd also provide
some 36 acres of land to the east of the
c hann el.
In another land transaction, the
TrUsiees ap·prOved an exChange af land .
be tween U/ 8 and the Town of Amherst's
Audubon Golf cOurse at the southeast
co rner of the new campJ,Js.
land obtained in the exchange by the
University includes that now occupied
by seve ral fairways and greens at the
go lf course. These facilities will be
reconstruded to the northeast of the

golf course on land given up by U/B_
Dr. John D. Te lfer, vice president for
facilities planning, notes that the land exchange will allow the campus to develop
a compad and contiguous area.
" The exchange represents an;ther in a.
series of continui ng cooperative
agree'ments which have been worked
out between the UniversitY and Town of
Amherst on matters relating to the new
campus .and su rrounding area," Telfer
indicates.
The channel, wh ich will remain dry ex~
cept when Ellicott Creek waters rise to
flood level, will begin at a point near
Maple and North Forest Roads, a &gt;Short
distance from the camPus. From there, it
will run north. and ~ then no.r·ttnvest; ·
becoming the eastern and , in part,
northern border of the campus to a point
near where f\1illersport Hwy. crosses the
neek.
The diversion channel is designed to
proted some S2.5 billion in public and
private devel_opment in the area.

�.

-

Ketter okays charters for 11
flmm ~1(1'! T. col. 41

the College be invited to establish a
workshop.
·
Clifford Furnu co~~qt. - Appro•Al
for a period of three yean, prowldecl that
the Colese bKomes a f. . fNrtldpant In
the Colese Council as soon as possible,
but not later than the bepnnins of the
Rnt setlleS!er of the academk y~ar 197576.
"The
C o II e g e
is
strong,
serves the needs of its students well, has
a structure appropriate to its goals, ilnd
enjoys substantial faculty participation.
The residential program of the College is
well o111anized.
" Although the College offer.; primarily
a residential program, the intellectual
substance of its program · is impressive,
and mechanisms of governance are ap-

propriate."
The Committee recommended a

three-year charter for Clifford Furnas

College, contingent upon the College
-

participating in the College Council.
Collq~ H (H~alth
proto~l for • ~riod

Sciences) - Apof three yeilrs,
provided that there be a rewiew of the
resic!Mtlal .,.,....m aft~r 18 months.
" Although relatively new, College H
gives evidence of purpose and strength.
Its objectives are clearly stated, it is well
organi zed, and it provides an interesting
focus on health studies.
"The College's intellectual purpose,
educational style, leadership, facult y involvement and internal governance are
all acceprable. My main concern ce nters
on whether the College is anempting too
much too soon wilh its academic,
residential and community programs."
. The Committee had recommended a
five-year charier.
Cora P. Maloney Collq~ - Approwal
for a period of thrM y~ars, prowldecl that
th~ prosram of th~ Coll~s~ be
monitored carefully, by tM Dsn of ~
Coflesiat~ Syst-, and the prosra~ and
orpniDIIon be rewiewed in roro aft~r a
period of 11 months.
"This College presents numerous
problems. Its goals and objectives are
laudable, as are the commitments of
those who have developed the College
frqm J~e. r~mains, of. t~e .' old Cpllege E.'.
But the process of development has
been hastily done and there are many
loose ends which are worrisome.
"The Community Board sees its role as
advisory, which is esserltial. su·t the involvement of such a Board is a significant
venture for the University and will require careful monitoring.
" I remai_n concerned about the risk of
-de facto segregation of the College's
students in the residence halls. This
aspect of the--program must be
monitored carefully.
"Despite th~se reservations, I am suf.
ficiently per.;uaded of the merits of this
venture to be willing to take the risk.''
The ComminM had recommended a
tlirM year charter, subject to limited
revi- after 18 montht.
· Mlllu•lllal SdeD&lt;es Colese- Approw.. for a ,eriool of · tluee y~ars,
................. be • review of the

reoldeooiW ......... ,. ......
"This Is a strong College, well orpnized and led, with substantial faculty sup-·
P.&lt;&gt;rt and participation. It M5 an intellectual purpose, dear and attainable objectiws, and an acceptable array of courses.

"Th~ resld~ntlal program of the
Collep, however, Is new and essentially
untesied. A review after 18 months is
desl111ble under t'-e circumstances."
· The eorn..u- recommended a fouryear charter.
SocW 5deN:el c.llep - Approval

? ................ , . . . .............

........... alille"ealh ......

............ a-......

•'While I hact been -.tous1y 1empted
to clenr--'altheproposecl charter
of SoCial · iScleiiC* COI!e!le until the
Collese had made fu8 and complet~ adjustment of Its purpose and
"'f methOdology to th~ standards of
aatdenllc: fn!edom to wh~ this Univerlity Is ~. I - pen;uaclecl that
the College does prowide an opportunity
fot ecluc:atfon that Is not awallabl~
elsewhere In ~ University. ·
-~
"In -approving this charter, I feel
obligated to voice a profound personal
comem. That concern srows_ .out.of my

.......
~

.·

Colleges----~-----=---

belief that educational un its committed
to the e xposition of a given philosophy,
and to the analysis of subjeCt matter and
issues from the vantage-point of that
philosophy, must be particularly sensitive to matters of academic freedom . By
thei r ve r;y nature, such units have a
special respons ibil ity to ensure tha t
faculty are chosen on the basis of com-pe ten c e ra t h e r th a n be cause o f
philosophical kinship alone; that classes
are open to students of all viewpoints;
and that the free play of intellectual
criti cism is ensured and e ncouraged in
the Qassroom anO in the governance
process. While these responsi bilities are
of course incumbent upon all academic
un its, the explicit commitment of Sod al
Scie nces College requ ires a ci rcumspection, in this respect, aki n to that of
Caesa r's wife."
The Committee urged a four-year
chart er.
TQIS!oy Cofkose - Approwal -for a
.period of two ynrs, prowided that the
Col~e revise its charter, m~ldng it ~
more Kademk document ~nd that there
be a review of the entire program ~fter a
period of twelw~ months.
" While it was possi ble fo r several
members of this faculty to define, durin g
a discussio n, th e th read of cohe re nce in
th e proposed prog ram and co urse
offe rings, th is is anyt hin g but evident
from a reading of the material contained
in th e charter. This must be corrected
before the end of
Spring Semeste r of
acade mic yea r 1974--15.
" As was tru e for Social Sciences
College, I feel obli2ated to voice a
profound personal co ncern in approvi ng. this charter for TolstOy Co llege.
That concern grows o ut o f my beijef
that ed ucat ional un its comm itted to the
ex position of a given philosophy, an d to
the analysis of su bject matter and issues
fro m t he va n tage point of t hat
philoso phy, must be particularly se nsitive to -matte rs ot academic freedo m. By
their very nature, such units h av~ a
special respo nsibility to e n ~ ure .th.at
facult y are chosen o r1 the basis of compe te n ce, rat her th a n becau se of
philosoph ical. k! n~h ip a lo.n~; ,t h ~t classes
are open to studenls of all viewpo mts,
th at the free play of inte llectual criticism
is e nsured and enco uraged in the
cl assroo m and in t he gover n ance
process. While these respo nsibilities are
Qf course incumbent upon all academic
un its, the explicit commitment o f Tolstoy
College requires a circumspection, in
this respect, ak in to that of Caesar's
wife ."
.
Tt)e Co mmittee had recommended a
chan er for a term of three yea rs.
Urban Studies Colleg~ - Approwal for
a period of three y~ars, prowldecl that the
programs at the Cofles~ be monitored
carefully and that the programs and
orpnlutlons be ~wed in roro aft~r a
period of 11 months.
.. In many
this College meets
the tests of the Prospedus admir~bl y. It
has stated objectives, an attractive (on
paper) program, faculty participation
and many interested students. But it also
has many problems of which thfee seem
particularly important to me .. Many important disciplines related to
urban matters are not represented in the
College; there_ is major uncertt~inty on
the part of the College as to precisely
what it · wants to do In the future; and
great uncertainty and questions are rais~
ed in mY mind by the last-moment incorporation of the bulk of the staff and
courses of now-defunct College Z into
this College. A review aft~r 18 months is.
more than desirable un~r t'-e circumstances."
The comminee recommended a
charter for a term of three year.;, with a
limited review after 1B months.
Ylco CGIIeee - Appolwltlfllr &amp; period
of .... ,....., ................... be.
review of .............. ,........, alter a
period of 11 ........
·"Vico Coflese Is firmly established, has
a dear objective, wund Intellectual purpose, and substantial faculty jiarticipation.
"The residential program of the.
College, however, is new and encountering certain probletm. A -review
aft~r 18 months is desir~ble un~r thdraams.tances."

,;,.pects.

The committee had recOmmended a
three-yea r charter.
·
Women's Studies Colle&amp;~ - Approval
for a period -of three JNr&lt; under th~
conclltlons that: 1.) The Chart~r1s remed
- lo indicate when 11 wom11n"· ._..,.d
"women" ue used a senerk terms and
when they are used as ~nluslwe terms;
and 2.) TM Colleg~ ~xpressly adopt the
principles of ac:ademk frMdom and
equAlity o L acceu to courses to which
this u~~rslty Is committed ..nd will
~monstrat~ Its adherenc~ to thes4! principles in Its practkes; and further that
tM Colleg~ be reMwed formAlly for
compllanc~ with th- prowlslons aft~r 18
months.
" Without a doub t th is College and its
Charter have created for me the greatest
num ber of and most seriou s problems.
The eJcl usive and re pea ted use of the
terms 'woman' and 'women' flies in the
face of all we have bee n ane mpti ng to do
to remove from ou r official documents
sexist and racist refe re nces. The Charter
must be appropriately modified before
the College' can be allowed to continue.
"More fundamenta l, however, is the
desire of Wo men's Studies Co llege to
have the au tho rit y to decide in and of
itse lf wh ic h of its co urses will be
restricted to women, and there by ex*
el uded fro m consideration by men, and
which will be made mo re ge nerally
ava ilab le to the Unive rsity co mmunity.
This strikes a t the very heart of acade mic
freedo m. I am firmly of the opinio n that
it musl be acce pted - as given - that
exclusion frOm a give n co urse for
reasons othe r than the abse nce of th e
requisi te academk p re~rat ion is denial
of a_'right;' one that can be perm itted to
occur only un der' the most rigid and
defensible co nd itions. I concede that it is
possible that such might exist for one or
possibly even a few cou rses wit hin a un it
such as Wo me n's St ud ies Co llege, b ut
these should constit ute C1 very small
percentage of the total offerings of th at
uni t."Moreover, it sho uld be the resp~&gt;n ­
sibility of. such a unit to "demo nstr.a te tt"le
nece"ssity·-fa·r excl usivity' iri these\peC:ial
courses th roug h esta blished academic
channels and prbCedures.
"Therefore, to remove any ambi guity:
" (a) The excl usio n of me n from a
'Wo men's 'Studies College course' will be
justified only when such exclusion is
clea rl y and dire ctly re late d to th e
educatio nal o bjectives of the course
and necessary to the achievement of
those o bjectives;
"(b) Courses in which enrollment is
limited to ~omen should constitute only
a small prOport ion of the total courses
offe red by Women•s Studies College;
and
"(c) Challenges or questions with
rega rd to such exclusion will be heard via
established academic channels and
procedures.
" Again, in approving this charter, I fee l
obligated to vqice a profound per.;onal
concern. That concern grows out of my
belief that educational units committed
to the· exposition of a given philosophy,
and to the analysis of subject matter and
issues frOm the vantage point of that
philosophy, must be particularly sen. sitive to matters of aca$femic freedom.
" By their very nature, units such as
Women's Studies College have a special
responsibility to ensure that faculty are
chosen on the basis of competence
rather than because of philosophical
kinship alone; that dasses are open to
students of all viewpoints; and that the
free play of intellectual criticism is ensured and encouraged in the classroom
and iii the-gove! nance process." ·

Brinkworth gets
Ceuna1 position
Kriin J. .Brinkworth; a Buffalo anomey
and former Republkan county legislator,
has ~n appointed to a full term
on the U/B Council effective until July 1,
-"'
. 1983. - .
The appointment, by former Governor

Malcolm Wilson, was announced in midDecember.
Brinkworth was first appointed to the·
U/B"Council in July 1971 . His first term
expired July 1. 1974,

January 16, 1975

Women's unit
accepts charter_
under protest
Women•s Studies College, which ran
into charterin_g difficulties over certain
all-Women classes, has accepted .,under
protest" the conditions of its chartering
as outli ned by President Ketter. •
· According to College Co-ordinator
Margaret Cramer, the most strongly felt
area of disagreement is the review called
for after a period. of 18 months.
-·
As she and co-coordinator Theresa Epstein ex plained in a letter to Collegiate
Director Irving Spitzberg, " the Reichert
Prospect us ad equatel y provides for
challe nges and questions concerni ng an y
Collegia te unit, throu gh its dissolution
procedu res. Such a review, therefore,
co nstitu tes dupl ication of work. In addition, the admin istration has adequate
chance to evaluate our program throu gh
regul ar universi ty channe.ls. It was our
u ndersta ndin g J hat th e charte rin g
procedure would rem o ve th e ad mi nistrative harassment that these kinds
o f reviews and evaluations clearly con" itute. Finall y, we are profoundl y co ncern ed that the redirection of resources
•
• VICTORY RALLY
Wom~ 's Studies Collqe will hold • wictory
r.tfty tomorrow noon in the Fillmore Room,
Norton Union. NfbepurposeoftMrdy,... •
representative of the Collei'e sMd, "is to infonn those students •nd community people
who supported us in our slrussle for
rKh.trterins of our prHe.nl slilllus, illnd of our
pllns for the future. Pleue come illnd help us
ceJebr.tle. liRoons ilnd e nlerhinment will be
prowld..t.••

and energy into these reviews d iverts the
College fro m fun her developing and
mai nta ining excel lence in o ur progra m."
The College also disagrees th at its
charter's use of the terms " wo man" and
" women" needs clarificalion. Rat he r, th e
co-coo rd inato rs said; " the University
musl demo nstrate, in practice, its success
at clarifying tl}_e te rms, 'ma n' and ' men.'
Women's -StUCi ieS College is' committed
ro ·ttre.f ·re mova' ' Of 5e)(i5t 1 and ,rfacisr
references. We fee l the re needs to be
funhe r proof of the University's commil,
ment to the same ."
Finally, the College affirmed its d isagreement wi th Dr. Kelter as to th e
Coll e ge ' s pro vis ion. for academi c
freedom and equalit y of access to
co urses.
" We continue to implement the princi ples of academic freedom and equality
of acce ss to courses," asserted the
College's representatives.
" We reaffirm: • they added, "that that
definition includes selected use o f all
women courses.''
All th~ Colleges have now accepted
the coriditions of their charters, with
Women'S studies the only unit to do So
under protest;

'Lois Lane' has
campus lecture date
lois lane~ star reporter for the ·
Metropolis Dally rfanet and would-be
sweetheart of Superman, will speak on
campus, Tuesday, January 28. Ms. lane,
who is actually Noel Neill, a film and
television actress, will discuss the
"Superman" television show at 8 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room, Norton.
Before she got her start in films, Ms.
Neill worked as a reporter for Women's
w- Dally. Her newspaper career was
short lived, however. One summer she
was "discovered" by Bing Crosby who
signed her to sing at his_Del Mar Turf
- _
Club in California.
After the season at Del Mar she was
signed to a long term contract by
Paramount Studios and made her
professional screen .debut in the movie
" Henry Aldrich for President.'' Other
Paramount releases included "Sub~
marine Command," "Greatest Show on
Earth," and "The Blue GardMia."
$he appeared in the original "Superman" serial for theatres, and also in such
movies as "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes"
and " American in Paris."
Ms. Neill's 'appearance Is being sponsored by the Student Association
Speakers' Bureau. There is an admission
cha111e of $1 for non-students.

�. ..ldlta

January 16, 1975

&lt;:

Named ~mbrldse Fellow
John P. Sullivan, provost of the Faculty
of Arts and letters, has been appointed a
visiting Fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge
University, England, for the academic
year 1975-1976."
A distinguished classicist, Professor Sullivan has also been invited to lecture in
Bucharest, Rumania, and Restock, East
Germany. During his year abroad, he wiil
be preparing four lectures on Neronian
literature to be delivered at the
prestigious Martin Classical Lectures at
Oberlin College in 1975-76.
Professor Sullivan's book, Propertius:
A Critical lntrpduction, is scheduled for

publil:ation by the Cambridge University
Press in the fall. He most recently served ·
as editor for "Marxism and the Classics"
the latest edition of Arethusa, a

periodical published by the U/ 8 Department of Classics.

Dr. Michael Ram has been appointed
to a three·year term as chairman of the

Department of Ph ysics, President Robert
l. Keller announced recently. . ·
A native of Alexandria, Egypt, Dr. Ram
received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from
Technion (Israel Institute of Technology)
in Haifa, Israel, and his Ph.D. from
Columbia University.
He served as a research associate at
Johns Hopkins University prior to joining
U/ B in 1967 as an assistant professor of

physics. He was named associale
professOr in 1973.
A specialist· in theoretical high energy

physics, Dr. Ram, 38, has wrinen many
publications and received two U/ 8
Jacuhy Fellowships jn addition to a grant
from the Nalional ·Science Foundation for research in elementary particle
theor.y. ·' ,,
1: .
","
1
~
·,
••
. l;le .• r.epJaces. .prJ ,§iiQ!ln.•Q . Brink;·
as50Cia1~1lrofeissor ol, p:hytics, who, wa5 t

acting chairman · frori1· 1972t lo 1973 and
chairm.tn from 1973 to 1974.
-

Humilnities Fellowship Winner
Dr. lewis C. Percy, associate professor
of history, h!Js been chosen to spend a
year of study at the National Humanities
Institute in New Haven, Connedicut, under a new fellowship _program .
Dr. Perry, 36, was one of 10 American
social science professors to be seleded

from a large field of candidates for the
program, to slart at the be:gin f'! ing of the
1975-76 academic year. He will begin his
studies at the Institute, located near Yale
University, in September.
The Institute was established in 1974,

under a grant from the federally-funded
National Endowment for the Human ities,
as a center to provide le'adership and brin~ about innovation in liberal arts
e ducation . It has the goal of improving
the teac~ing of humanities at the college
level , essentiallv bv developing new,
imaginative courses that
combine
kpa;wl(j~ge fr~m several •.sqcial sc;ience ,
di~iP.Iines.
.
.
:·or.' ' lPeiry'' ~ill be • Provided with _a
re1i~~rc;f1 gr~nJ, atlQ askeQ to hammer out,

through reading, thought , and study, the
details of a new humanities courSe that
combines two or more disdplines. The
Institute hopes the proposed course will

be added to the U/ B curriculum when
Dr. Perry re~urns -.lo. the U~iversity.

Wiilbesser Awilrd Winner
lawrence S. Segal of Wantagh has

7

teachers and scholars of Classical (Greek
and Roman} antiquity.

commemoration of the 50th anniversary
of his contributions to the discovery of
r~dar. ·
•
Dr. Breit, who at age 75 continues active research and is presently writing an
Atomic Energy Commission grant
proposal, was responsible for initiating

N~med to Natio.W CotnmittH
Dr. Abraham Monk, of the School of
Social Work, has been appointed a

member of the Finance Committee of

the pulse method ·of probing by reflec-

the National Gerontological Society. He

tion - the basis of modern radar.
He was alSo a pioneer in experimental
probing of the ionosphere, having

is also serving as the Niagara · Frontier
representative on an 11-member State

provided the

n..t

panel to advise the State Office for the

publicaiion of ex-

Aging on new social services for the

elderly which may be financed with
federal funds under the Title Ill Program ·
of the Older Americans Act.

perimental proof of itS existence.

Invited to a celebration by the Royal
Society but unable to attend because of
ill health, Dr. Breit received a cablegram
from the group.
" Those assembled at the Royal Society
send greetings on the 50th anniversary of
your pioneering radio experiment," the
cable said.
.
Prior to joining the U/8 faculty in 1968,
Dr. Breit was professor of physics at Yale
University for 21 years.

.

Other HonOJS
Dr. George S. Bobinski, dean of the
School of Information and Library
Studies, has been appointed chairman
of the library development committee of

the New York library Association ... . Dr.
J. Warren Perry, dean of the School of
Health Related Professions, is an
associate editor of a new periodical,
Re view of - Allied Health Education,

On Nationil Associ~lion llo.lrd

published by the University Press of Ken·
tucky.

Dr. John J. Peraddtto, chairman of the
Department of Classics, has been elected
to the Board of Directors of rhe
American Philological Association. The
10-person board is the effective govern ing body of the association, which is the
professional organization of American

Heads Anthropological Group
Dr. Charles M. Frantz, professor of

anthropology, has been elected president

Given in honor of the late William J.
Walbesser, a professor of --electrical
engineering here for 10 years who died
in 1973, the $100 scholarship is awarded
to an undergraduate student for
11
0Utsta nd ing academic achievemen.t."
Segal plans to receive his B.S. in electrical engineering from U/ 8 in May and
antiCipates attending graduate school
here.

visits Management
Dr. Karl D. Gregory, one of th.e

foremost black economists in the
nation, will be a visiting professor at the
School of Management for the spring
semester. Among courses he will teach
will be "Minority and Business Career
Development."
An associate professor of economics
and. management at Oakland University
in Michigan, Dr. Gregory is vice presi·
dent of the Black Iconomic Research
Center and immediate past chairman of
the Oucus .of Black Economists. He· is a
gra&lt;fuate of Wayne State University •and
rect!lved his Ph.D. from the Unive,.ity
of,Michigan.

f(rurn fl•ll:f'

nAAICUf SBSION
J

presented a series of workshops on
mathem .. tical approaches to drug act_ion
and, brain function.
.
The" workshop drew experts in the

field from Canada, England, Austria, and
West Germany as well as from· the U.S.
and Iran.

Mr. 8nace Smidt, • repraenblhte of

nAA!CREF, will be on nmpus,

._.., 17, 11:31a.&amp;-12:31p.a. m

frid~:y,

-.on,

to """ ..... ...,. questions - ...
.nAAICUf - · 0&lt; ... -deferred
_ , . &lt;OIIIrods.

Honored f&lt;&gt;&lt; Work on «odar
Dr. Gregory Breit, distinguished
professor emeritus of physics, has been

honored by the British Royal Society and
International Union of Radio Science in

Northeastern

3, c-ol. 41

S2 U/ 8 -faculty, staff and alumni; $3 general
public.
Sponsored _by _the Department of Music.
UUAB ftLM••
CincfNella Uberty. Norton Conference
The atre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

Intermediate weaving, Mondays, 1:30 p.m.
to 3:30p.m., ten week course starts January 27.
This workshop is a floor loom non-credit class
fo; - "*mbers- of -the Craft Cenier only. All
students must have previous weaving· experience in frame or floor loom weaving.
SIUde nts will share a floor loom and will expe riment . with more adva.nced )"eaving

EXHIBITS

!!i~r"~ud~t:;~ii~1~;~; ~~~r:~~~ ·~~~

studenT working together.
·
Sign up for these workshops is in Rm. 7 Nor.ton Hall.
MPmbership rees fOr the creative Cl"ilft
&lt;:;enter are: SUNY students, $10 per.14 weeks;
Studl!nrs farhiiV .tnd l ion-SUNY students, $15
per 14 weeks; Faculty, staff, .-.lumni, &amp; family,
S2S per H weeks; Community, $.45 per 14
weeks. Age limit is 16 years old for other than
SUNY sludents.
The Creative Craft Center will be oPen
Tuesday, January 14-17, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. for
registration . The full schedule is effective
Monday, January 20: Monday·Thursday, 1
p.m. to 10 p.m., and Friday and Saturday, 1
p.m. to 5 p.m. Phone 831-1546 for information.
CREDIT-fREE COURSES
A variety of courses are scheduled for the
spring semesler, induding such topics as arts
and crafts, journalism, counseling, computers,
engineering, government, music and theatre,
photography, real estate, psychology, sports,
women's studies, writing, and many oth~rs.
For a brochure detailing the courses off~red
or for regist~tion infomytion, contact the Division of Continuins Eduation, Hiiyes A,
Rm. 3, Main Street Campus, 811-4391. ·
FINANOAL AID fOil EOP STUDENTS
All srudents who have not filed the 1974-75
TAP, formerly Scholar lncentfve, Applkalion
and BEOG iipplication should immediiltely
contact their respective counselors regardins
their current statu~. Fiillure 10 do so an' resuh
in an academic check stop for September 1975
and financi.-.1 liability for tuition for 1974-75.
February 1 is the deildline.
UFE WOIIICSHOI'S..
life Workshops .ire orpnized to provide
small groups in which people an shilre in·
terests, skills, ide~ and leilrriiris experiences
outside the dilssroom. The workshops ilf'e
open to all members of rhe UniYef'lity com-munity, tl)eir spouses, and alumni. There is no
admission charge, and the worlc.ihops cover 1
large variety of subjects. For information and •
registrition, 831-4610.

LOCKWOOD EXHIBIT
Polish Collection, e xhibition culled from
the University's collection of -more than 4,000
volumes of mjllterial. First rloor, lockwood
Memorial lcibr.lry: MOnday .:~rida y ,· 9 ' a.b\.'-5
p.m. Continuing.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT Po rrra it .; of · v o un J:- Bla c k Pe o ple .
Photographs by Richard Blau, U/ 8 assistant
professor of American Stu~i es . Hayes Hall
l obby, through January 31 .

NOTICES
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER
Rm. 7 Norton H•U

ProJ:-ram:
Ceramics- Basic instruction classes in hand
building, wheel th-rowing , glazing, and ·
de&lt;;orating techniques are scheduled each
week ; a complete ceramic class schedule is
available at the Center, Rm. 7 Norton Hall.
Metals- Basic metals classes in lamination,
piercing. casting, ring and bracelet construction , etching. lapidary, and stone setting are
scheduled during the semester. Complete
class schedules are available atlhe Center.
Workshops:
lntemation~l Worbhop P~rtlcip.11nls .
leather ~ Behmaking workshop starts
Tuesday, January 21 , 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., and will
Two U/ B faculty were among intermeet every Tuesday and Thursday. All par- national experts invired to participate in
ticipants .must be members of the Craft
a workshop dealing with dissemination
Center.
of information on brain research held at
Sandal and bag _making workshop starts
Pahlavi University Medical School,
Monday, February 10, 7 p.m." to 10 p.m. for
-...5hiraz, Iran.
eight weeks. A fee of $10 for Craft Center
Dr. Cedric M . Smith, director of the _ mem~rs and $15 for non-members is chargNew York State Research Institute on
- ed. S1g~ up for both workshops is in Rm. 7
Alcoholism, U/B professor of pharNorton.
macol9gy and therapeutics and proRram
Enamel - Session I starts Wednesday,
coordinator, lectured on drug actions.
February 5, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., for four weeks.
on muscles. Hf? also reported on the
This workshop will study the Iimoges techniResearch lnstilute's studies on the
que. Session II Slflrls Wednesday, March 19, 7
p.m. to 10 p.m., for four weeks and will study
biological basis of the d~velopment of
the doisonee technique. The registration fee
tolerance to the effects of alcohol.
is S7 for members and $12 for non-members
Dr. Douglas-S. Riggs, also -a professor
for each session.

of pharmacology and tho:rapeutics,

the

Calendar·--'---------------

been presented U/ B's first annual

William J. Walbesser Memorial Award.

of

Anthropological Association for 1975-76.

Amlt«st Qmpus cntr C0111er

Workshops:
.
Weaving - Basic Frame Loom, Mondays,
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., six week course. Session I starts lanuary ll. Session II starts March
17. The reRistration fee is $15 for a member of
the Craft Center and S20 for a
non-member. Students will buikl a fl"ilme
loom and experiment with basic weaving
t~hniques . An introduction to spini'ting iind .
dyeing fibers and an explanation and investigation of various weaving mat~rials will
be provided.- Projed seJection and"Work load
are open and will be determined by each student. No previous experience is necessary. ·

OfffC! Of ADMISSION AND 11K011D$
HOURS

·

For lhe remainder of the month of January,
the Office of Adtnissions and Records will be
open Monday through Friday from I:JO a.m.
to 8:10p.m.

�•

Januaiy 16. 1975

mlelldilr
THURSDAY-16

Hamlen, UIB School of Management, 237
Crosby, 3-5 p.m.

CON.TINUINC . DENTAl - EDUCATION
SEMINAIIf

PHYSIOlQcY YA/Q $;WI SEMINAIII
... lnPrl Gots NarCOsis. Or. Mary Anne Rokitka.
108 Sherman, 4:30 p.m.

Cankers, Chancres and Cancer -

D ifferential Diagnosis of Oral Ulcers, Dr.!. Stuart L.

•
fllM 0
Seven Charges (Keaton). 146 Diefendorf, 5
and 7 p.m . No admission charge .

FtschrNn, professor, Department of Oral
Medicine, and director, Dental Services, E.J. Meyer Memorii.l Hospit.ll. 148 Capen, 9 a.m.·
4:.)1) p.m. For information or registration, call
831·2836.
. MA1HEMATICS COllOQUIUM#
Asymproric Behavior of Conrracaon

filM•
Here Comes Mr. jordan. Rm. 170, Millard
Fillmore Academic Collegiate Center, Ellicott
Complex, 7 p .m. No admission charge.
RAND CHAIR UcrURE SERIES•
RPCOrcling the Urban Condition, Alan fern ,
chief, Print\ and Photographs, Library of
Congress. Auditorium, Albright-Knox Arl
Gallery, 8 p.m .
.
Sponsored by the U/8 School of Architecture and Environmental Design in coo~ra­
tion with the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

SemiRrouPs and Applicarions; Dr. Eonstantine

Oafermof, Brown !Jniversity. Rm. 38, 4246
. Ridge Lea, .coffee hour at 3:30, lecture at 4
p.m.
CEll AND MOlECUlARIIOI.OCY lECTUREf
Liver Tysosomal Cly.cosidases and Relared
Enz ymes, Dr. Oscar Touster, professor and
_ \ chairman, Department of Molecular Biology,

FILM•
MPf&gt;r John ()oc&gt;. Rm. 170, Millard FiHmore
Academi c Collegiate Center , Elli co tt
Complex , 8:45 p.m. No admission charge.

Vanderbilt University. 134 Health Sciences,
4:15p.m.
HlllR HOUSE•
"DrOR·In" Night . 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
liFE WORKSHOP..
Psychomat is an open, free-flowing, experience to further open com municaiion.
Supervisors are Dr. Jim James and Ms. Wilda
levin from the University Counselin g Services. 232 Norton, 7-10 p.m. (Continues each ·
Thursda y ttvoughout t he se m es te r, no
registr~tion necessary) .

WEDNESDAY-22
AFRICAN STUDIES lECTURES•
. Two lectures wi ll be given by Nigerian
author Cvprian Ekwensi, Trends in African
LitPr,liUrf' at J p.m. in 29 Diefendorf Ann{'x ,
and Tl1f' Afrir.w Novf'li~r all( / His Sociery at 8
p.m. in 233 Norton .
Sponsorf'd bv thf&gt; U/ 8 African Studies Com·
mill&lt;'f'.

CONTINUING MEDICAl EDUCATION
CARDIAC CliNIC#
This series of clinics in physica l exami nation
of the cardiac patient and ar rhy th mia
workshops are sche duled each Thut sday
evening through May a. The topic of tonight's
clinic is Au(cultation. Capen Hall Basemerit,.
Room G-22 , 7:30-9:30 p.m. for information or
.registration, call the School of Medicine, a315526.
Sponsored by the School of Medicine.

STUDY OF ACING lECTURE SERIES•
Biumr-tlir.1l A ( (l('('f ~ of A.t:in.L:. Dr. Robert R.
Kohn , professor of pathology, Case We ~ tern
ResNV&lt;' Universitv. 233 Norton , 3 p.m.
JUNIOR VARSIY:Y WRESTliNG•
(1 18 \"'. llilhNf Collrgr. Cl;uk Hall. 6 p .m.
No admission c har~ e.
UUAB FilMS ..

PHYSICAl-ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

L~~~~~:';!~olecUiar Crystals, Prof~ssor

HPr(' Comr( Mr. Jordan and MC'e t John
DoC'. 140 Citpe n..l p .m. No admission char~c .

UUAB FILM••
Serpico sta rrin g AI P~cino . Norton
Conference Theatre, call B31 -S117 for times.
Admission charge.

CREAliVE ASSOCIATE RECITAl •
DorMitl Kn.1a rk . percussionist, gives a recital
acC"ompitniL-&lt;1_ by perCussiOnist Dennis Kahle
and rhorPographer/ dancer linda Swiniuch.
'Baird Recita l Hall. 8 p .m. No admission
charge.

Dav id ·curtin, Un ive rsity of Illinois. 362
Acheson , a p.m.

FRIDAY-17
TIAAICREF SEMINAR•
Mr. Bruce Smith, a representative of
TIAAICREF, will be available in 232 NOJ1on
from 10:30 a.m.- 1~ : 30 p._m. to answer and dis-

~r~~~:;o~~ f~o~e~~~~~n:n:1as~aff0 ra~~~

deferred annuily.

HORIZONS IN NEURO.IOlOCY SEMINAIII
Pre- and posr·synaplic anion of anesthetics
in the CNS. Dr. Roser Nicoll, Neurobiolos.y
laboratory.--108 Sherman, 1 p.m.
DEPARiMENT

Of

PEDIATRICS

CONRRENCEf

Neonatal/ Surgical Conference. Dr .
Theodore C. Jewett Jr., head, Department of
Pediattic Surgery, Children's Hospital. ICNrscy
C~\room , 4th floor, Milternity Bldg., 3 p.m.

PHYSIOlOGY SEMINAIII
Taurine : An Endogenous Anriepilepric
Agenr. Dr. Michael H. Thursby. _108 Sherm.~n,4p.m.

YAIISITY HOCXEY•
U/8 vs. uke forest College. HOliday Twin
Rinks, 3465 Broodway. 7:30p.m. Students may
pick up free tlclt..S before the night of the
;· game at the O.rk Holl ticket .office. $2 gel)efal
admission.
UUAI COFFHIIotS•
Squore Donee. fillmore Room, Norton
Union, 8 p.m. No admission Chars•· ·

"'7 CA~:;. 140 Capen, 8 and 10 p.m. Admission!
_..,...
$1.

.
SNbbat SeMce at 8 p.m., followed by ·a
Toroh study sesalon and Ones Shabbat. 40
-~
-

.....

Clpenllhd.
MfA JICIJAl·

Cloudll Hoca, I student of. leo Smlt,
o11ero heo' MFk tedtaL She h lllisted by
Mlchoel · t-nbloqm, vlollnht; Marsha
- . ........... Lelo Humek Melon-

dinidis, pianist. Baird Recital Hall, a p.m. No
admission charge.IRC hLM;•
PrimC&gt; Cut. Films are usually shown friday
evening at Goodyear Cafeteria, Main Street
Campus, ~nd Saturday evening at the Ellicott
Complex. Exact location and tiines ar~ posted
on dorm bulletin boards one week in a~­
vance. Open only to IRC fee-payers.

UUABFILM ..
SNpico starring AI Pacino. Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for times.
Admission charge.
·
}imi in Berkeley will be sho~n at midnight.

fellowship. 40 Capen Blvd .•. 9 p.m·. ,
IRC FILM ..
PrimP Cut. films are usually shown Friday
evening at Goodyear Cafeteria, _Ma in Street
Campus, and Saturday evening at the Ellicon
Complex. Exact locations and times are posted
on doim bulletin boards one Week in advance. O~n onl.r to ~RC_ fee-payers.
UUAI FILM ..
SNpirn starri n g AI Pacino . Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-'5117 for times.
Admission charge. '
.
._Jimi in BPrkf'lf'V will be shown .at midn_ight .

ART lECTURES•
·
.
A series of lectures called Survey of Art,
covering the history of art from the ancient
wofld to the pr~nt, are offered Saturday
.mornings from. January 11 through "April 19.
The Sutvf'V series provides the--Wsic requirements for those planning to become
...volunteer docentS in . the Albright-Knox
Gallery's Education Department. ~lectures
ar~ given at the gallery from 10 a.m. t~ noon .
For more information or to apply, contad the
Education Department, 882-8700, ext. 26.

THURSDAY=-ll
STRING QUARTET AUDITION•
Three young string quartets who are working with the Cleveland Quartet at U/ 8 will
audition for the Juilliard String Quartet during ·
their Buffalo visit. Baird Recital Hall, 1:30 p.m.
No admission-charge.

HillEl HOUSE•
·~roJ)::'Jn•• night. 40 Capeh BlVd., 7-11 p.m.

UUAB FILM .. ·
Sf'rpko starring AI Pacino: Norton
Conference Theatre. call 831-511 7 for times.
-:
Admission chaq;~e.

Uf£ WOitXSttOP-•
P(vchomar is an_ open.. ·fr~flowing ex.·
PE"tience to ..further open CO"''!JJUnicalion.
Supervisors are Dr. Jim James and Ms. Wild,l
levin from the lJniv,ersity Coumeling Services. 232 Norton, 7·10 p.m. (Continues each
Thursdav throuRhoul the semester, no
r~istration necess.irYl.

MONDAY-20

WOMEN'S 8ASUTIIAU.•
( 1/ 8 voo. FrPCionia Stare Collefile. Clark Hall, 7
P,.:...m. No admission-t:h01rge.

SUNDAY-19

SATUimAY-18

FILMS•
A series of films by D . W. Griffith (each approximatelv 10 minutes) will be shown beginning at 9 p.m. 70 Acheson. No admission
charge.

FILM••
Boudu Saved From Drowning.-140 Capen, 3
and 9 p.m. No'admission·charge. •
COMPUTER SCIENCE COllOQUIUM#

Pronramming with Verification Conditions.
HlllRIIOUSE"
Dr. Maarten Van Emden, University of EdlnMorning Sabbath service at 10 a.m., followed by o1 K'rddush and Torah. study sesSion. ~ - . burgh, Depa'rtment~of ArtiUcial Intelligence.
Rm . •.,, 4226 Ridge lea, 4:10-S:lO p .m . .
Capen Blvd.
__ sponsored by the GSA and the Dep.airtmeOt
VAltSITY HOCKEY•
of Computer Sdence.
·
U/8 .,. Like Fo"'" C!JIIeRO. HolklOy Twin
RLM•
,...
Rinks, 3465 Broadway, 1 p.m. Student.s may
A
nous·
l~
UbertP.
146
Diefendorf,
7 p.m. No
piclt. up free tidceu before the pme ot the
admission charxe.
OaR H.ntidter office. $2 generol ..tmisslon.
FH.M• .
CAC fiLM•• -.
·
.
Port ol Sh•do;. (Carne, 1938). 711 Ach...,n,
.De/iYerance. 140 Capen, 8 and 10
Ad7:.10 p.m. No .admission charge.
mission: $1.
y AII5ITY MEN'S IASIIOIAU..
UIB vs. Can.lsius Colletce. Memorial
relreihmen;s, music and
Auditorlui'i'i, 8 p .m. Students with 10 admined
free, st general P.Ubtic.
· _

p.m..

~'=-with

TUESDAY-21
!,1UAN ANAlYSIS AND I'OUCY ~
C1Nr Ilk As • PUblic lhm/y. Dr. William

Mmlc.u

CONTINUING
EDUCATION
CARDIAC OJNIQ
.
This series of dinlcs in physical examination .._
of the cardiac patient and arrhythmia workshops are scheduled" .each Thursday
evening throuRh May 8. The topic of lonight's
clinic is ThP /uRular Pufse. -upen tUII &amp;aSement, Room G-22. 7:3()...9:30 p.m. For lnforma·
(ion or reRistration, call the School of
Medicine. aJt-5526.
Spomored by the School ol Medicine.
WOMEN'S SWIMMING•
l 1/8 vs. Fredonia St•te ColleRe: Cl•rk Pool,
7:30 p.m. No admission charse.
THEAm~

. • __

•S..l ~&gt;y· Benott Brech~ directed ~ Gordon •
Courtyard Theatre, ·Hoyt and-. ~tayeore,l p.JR. l'\dmlssion: S111udents, $2.50 _ '
~teneral public.
• Presented by the' Center for Theatre
Ro~tOff.

Resutch. Through Jonuory 2li.

-·v.m..c.
Aan5J- .
The

l'!imarlt SlrlrtR Quarter perform, In the
ttn1 Ylsltins Artist Series c:onqen of the
wmester. Mny Seaton Room, ICieinho~ns
Music Hall, lidO p.m. Adm-..: S1 SIUdents;

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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:

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL 6, NO. 14
OECEMBER 12. 1974

':!

I

lnflatio~ taking its toll

_all across the University
By Palrlda Wud Biederman
R~~Su ff

The University will seek some $390,000
in the State's ·deficit budget in January,
President Robert L Ketter revealed to
Faculty Senators last week.
The funds are being sought primarily
to cover increases in the cost of utilities
and to cover the larger than anticipated
cost of bussing occasioned by the opening of the Amherst campus.

Because of inflation, combined with
bussing and moving costs, the University
is moving into a " deficiency budget"
situation, Dr. Ketter said.
As an example of the campus-wide inflation problem, he cited the Chemistry
Department where costs of laboratory
supplies have increased 60 per cent in a
year.
Two faculties, he said, have alread y exhausted their operating budgets for the
fiscal year.
Dr. · Ketter said that tie plans to convene a campus advisory committee on
budget proble ms to counsel him on the
fiscal situation.
ACco rding to Vice President for
Finance and Management Edward W.
Doty, the Uni versity is spending some
. S407,000 this yea r to provide bus service
amon g th e campuses. Just under $100,000 fo r bussing will be requested in the
defi ci t budget.
. Utilities Costs Up .
An add itio nal $280,000 will be requested to cove r th e increased costs of
·
Mr. Doty said. Coal prices,
increased as dramaticall
1
l:lave now begun to nse
steeply.
Un iversi ty, he noted, is
"very de pe nde nt on coal."
Steady inqeases in the cost of electrici ty have a"lso had a major impact on
the campus budget, he said.
Mr. Doty si ngled ou t utilities as th e
area of campus expendit_u re hardest hit

•

~

by inflation.
·
Neither the President nor the finandal
VP saw a happy solution on the horizon.
The University can expect to have even
less buying power next year; Dr. Ketter

told the Senate.
0
lt's inevitable," Mr: Doty
mented.

com~

Not Nightmarish But Not Pretty
ll.the situation is still a far cry from the
Weimar nightmare of a wheelbarrow lull
of bills to buy a lqal of bread, the inflationary picture is not pretty.
Scattered phone calls to campus
departments reveale.d that inflation has
swollen the prices of everything from
dental materials to Xeroxing, from
sophisticated electrQnic equipment used
for research to the paper towels in the
washrooms and the detergent in the
buckets of the maintenance staff.
The situation in Chemistry, according
to one well-informed facultY member,
was understated by President Ketter. The
cost of some common chemicals, particularly those derived from petroleum,
has quadrupled in the last lew years.
Students enrolled in lab courses use
huge quantities of these chemicals, and
the only way to decrease consumption is
b)r re-designing courses and facilities i tself a time-con-suming and costly
business .
Or, take an imal care. According to
Animal Facilities Director Thurman S.
Grahon, "consumable supPlies," which
include animal food and · bedding
materials. h~y_e 1!lgs_~W.se of
20 per cent over last year. The hikes
range from a low of 4 per cent lor feed
for baby chicks to a whopping 57 per
cent for "litter Kleen ," a bedding
material made of wood. Because of increased prices, animal care costs the
departments ten per ceht mOre than last
(Turn to page 7, col. l)

Faculty group supports
Women's Studies College .
A group of University faculty
"concerned about the present crisis over.
the chartering of Women's Studies
College" exP.ressed strong support for
the college in a letter delivered to Presi· dent Robert L. Ketter on Tuesday.

abilitytoniachlargeriumbersolwomen
students and provide them with quality
education, without jeopardizing the
structure that makes that education uniquely possible.
"We believe that the College's past

Ketter, who received the College
Chartering tommittee's recommendations on the future of all·the colleges'
shortly before Thanksgiving, has said he
will make final decisions regarding these

performance merits the assumption of
good faith i(t the current crisis. Even
those who question the College's position on the · desirability of sexually,
homogeneous classes must realize that

recommendations prior to January 1.

The chartering panel called lor a fiveyear charter for Women's Studies °Con·
ditional upon the acceptance by the
· College of an explici.t nonexclusionary
_ policy in its courses and activities except
as- provided lor by an appropriately_con.stituted University review body, and a
redrafting of their charter to remove ambiguities regar.ding the · generic or
speciflcuseoltheword ' woman."'
"Some of us have worked directly with
the. College;,:: the faa.olty group- told
Keller; "some of us have-h~ a more indirect connection, working with students
involved with College projects; and
some of us have had no personal contact
with it. Yet we all feel that the College
has played an ImpOrtant role In this
University over the past several years and
. want to see it preserved.
·
"The Women's Studies College. has
grown In 1 rela!M!Iy brief time In~ a
substantial fi'OIII'Im which has Khleved
national recosnltlon. II would Indeed be
a pity If h were to end In January, -,975; .
The questions at Issue now, we feel, are
secondary to the ma)or question: How
can ,_. preserve a unh thatilas proved hs

this position is a serious attempt to con-:

front subtle and difficult pedagogical
issues, and is based on years of experience and careful deliberation. We
hope that a solution can be found that .
both meets ·the obligations of the
University and preserves the integrity of
the College, and we urge you to confer
with the College' to this end."
Those signing the letter were: Carolyn
Korsmeyer, Philosophy; Ellen DuBois,
History and American Slljdies; Shdnnie
Finnegan, University Archives; John Corcoran, Philosophy; Daphne t1are,
Medicine; Naomi Weisstein, Psychology;
William Fischer, English; Sara Marie
Cicarelli, Medical Technology; Richard
T. Hull, Philosophy; Jesse Lemlsch, Faculty of Social Sciences; Stefan Flelscher,
English; David Gerber, History; and
Jacob J:lymal), Law and Jurisprudence.

lAST 5EME51B ISSUE
Todar't II tile hll ..... of the
......., tar tile .,. - · .......,.
~ ........ Tllan-

...,,.....,16,

1975.

#

�December 12, 1974

~

Senators plan·
Buckley Law

amendments·

Senator Claiborne Pell, Democrat of
Rhode Island, who chairs the Senate
Subcommittee on Education, and
Senator James l. Buckley, ~onservative­
Republican of N.Y., who sponsored the
Family Rights and Privacy Act (the so- called Buckley law) announced last
week that they would soon "11!ek
legislative remedies to clarify certain ambiguities" in the law which allows college
stUdents to see all their own confidential
records.
"Certain phrases and sections adopted
on the Senate floor without Subcom-

mittee on Education consideration did
raise certain questions and were subject
to various interpretations," the two
Senators said In a joint statement:
They said they "will present to the
Senate a series of agreed-upon

amendments."
The current Chronicle of Higher

EdUcation speculates that the
amendments "will probably:
• Deny students access to confidential
material atready in their files.
• Refuse them the right to see their

families ' confidential financial
statements, often submitted when they
apply for aid.
• • ·Give' them· the option of signing a
waiver of their rights to inspect their
records. .• Give parents of so-called 'dependent
students' - those supported by their
families - the right to see their
children's academic grades."
It was expected, the Chronicle said,
that the law would be clarified by stricter
definitions of "student" and "student
rec;ords." The Senators were still working
out the exact language last week.
"Action will shortly take place," they
said, ·and the changes attached " to an appropriate legislative vehicle."
One source told the Chronicle that the
amendments might be put into a bi11 local! a White House conference on
libraries and libr.ary services, which may
go ·to- a· conference committee soon.·ln
that case, action could be •peedy.
When the privacy law went into effect
last month, the Chronicle reported,
many educators were confused by its
regulations and anxious about their
liabilities. Although' representatives of
educational groups met with Senator
Buckley to work on the amendments,
.their first preference was for a delay in
putting the law into effect so that it could
l:!,e l!ntirely &lt;ewrittj!n. ·
p

Ms..Steinem
· More thiin 2,000 people pxked Cliirlt Gym lui Thursdiiy night to he•r feminist
CJorj• Steinem •nd her co--spe.J.Iter );me C.tlwin-lewii discuss the inlerrebt~
problems o( iexism •nd r.t~ciim. After their present.J.tions, both women li5tened
symp;lllhelinlty lo supporters of Women's Studies CoiJese, who outlined their
current .difficultiei with the Collqi•te Ch.trterins Committee. When the twoo~nd-one-half hour session was ower, more than one man in the ~ udience .J.p~
pr0011ched the podium lo ask Ms. Stei"em for he, .Utosr~: · "· • · ·
· · ·

dUb.offer5

gOurmet dinner

11

n-

be'forehiri'l' Onl~ reasOn~rriPfhe';:na~r ·l ' · ·

• n;e- ~etTrH rup '&lt;I~ a't'Fu~e;reM??V!~W
process was otself bbjected to 6y ~orne
staff mefnbers on grounds that the con·
trad calls for only a recommendation
from the immediate supervisor to the
president. The revised committee report
concedes ,that only these recommendations have a "contractual bearing" on
Or. Boot, who Was born in Indonesia
the decision and notes that " recommen·
and educated in the Netherlands, is
dations of the supervisor's supervisor
author of Common Globe or Global
and vice preident are solely .adVisory to •
Commons, published earlier this year. In
the presid~nt , in his internal review
it, he describes in layman's language the
procedure."
·
outlook for the world's natural resources
The revised procedural suggestions
and offers possible solutions for populaalso incorporate a provision under which
tion and pollution problems.
the employee in question is informed in
The World Venture Series' proposed
Writing of the recommendation at each
11-day Per~vian tour next June will be
level of revieW, including reasons. The
escorted J;y Dr . Stuart D. Scott Jr.,
earlier draft called for reasons to be exprofessor of anthropology and a former
cluded.
The revision also states that "the
Fulbright Scholar who has directed
right to advoeacy' is toilsldenid to be ·.,_·
several archaeological parties.
sential in onlei'· ti:&gt; gtiaraniei!· a' fUll 'aiid.
Tentative plans call for Dr. Scott-td
fair hearing ·tot 'eacli prof~ionaf sia'ff'
lead his group on a variety of field trips,
mem~r" and' calls for'timely nOiifiC:.tidn
including a visit to Peru's Sacred Valley of
to the employee of each recommendathe Gods; Lake Titicaca, the highest
tion in order to provide "the opportunity
navigable body of water in the world,
for appeal at any level of review."
and Machu Picci.J, the fabled "lost City of
In tet'ms of the dossier to be compiled
the Incas." ..
for each employee, the final committee
The cultural tour of Bavaria planned
report makes only a slight change from
for next August will be escorted by Or. H.
the draft. Jnst!'ld of calling for the
lames Birx, a faculty member in ·Millard
'"current position description" to be inFillmore College, an authority on the life
ciOded, the final -J!efSI!m dltecls that
of composer Richard Wagner, and an ex"all position descriptions for which Per·
pert on the Qpera and culture of ~ formance Pr&lt;&gt;gr&amp;mi and Performance
Southern Germany.
Appraisals were written"..be Included.
The 15-day Bavarian venture will visit
Also reworded to a degree Is the
the annu_al Wagner Opera Festival and
recommendation on ctfteria for pe.,..the cultural highlights of the Munich
nent appolntm~nt_ T!le repon now
region, with a side trip to Salzburg, ~
defines these criteria .as ''those specified
Austria.
in the individual's Performance
The U/B Credit-Ftee Program is now . Program" and rec:ommends th'at
working out arrangements for the Easter
" satisfactory job ~rformance shall be
Island tour with William Malloy, of the - the basis for permanentappointment (as
University of Wyoming, an expert on the
documented in Performance Apisolated Pacific Ocean island. Tentative
praisals)."
plans call for a w.eek-long archaeological
Finally, the revisions embody the
expedition. to Easter Island next
proposal that "if there is a change in a
December, with a stop-over in Santiago,
supervisor after . a period of 90 days
Chile.
·
following an updated or new PerforLooking past the Easter lsi'and tour,
mance Program,- the dep;lnins super·
Canfield is beginning to make
visor shallappraise.the.PerforrNm:e."
arrangements for future World Venture
Also on today's PSSigencla are reports
Series excursions to the Nile Delta,
fr9m Executive Vice President Alben
Greece, Russia, and possibly the
Somlt and PSS Chairperson Roben
People's Republic of China.
Wagner.

World Venture series offer§
four travel opportUnities in 75

The U/B World Venture Series will
present four opportunities next yea r for
Western New Yorkers to combine
education and travel.
The first program will be an eight-day
"ecology" tour of Scandinavia in March,
followed by excursions that will focus on
the ancient--civilization of Peru in June,
the culture of Bavaria in August, and the
F~
archaeology of Easter Island in
December, 1975.
The World Venture Series was es·
tablished three years ago under the
A gourrilet "'dinner and show" (the
di.[l'ction of the Office for Credit-Free
show being the Buffalo Philharmonic's
Programs. According to Allan l. Canpresentation of Handel's "Messiah" at
field, program ·director, it offers . adults
Kleinhans Music Hall) will be held by the
on the Niagara Frontier "short term
FacultyOub, Friday, December 20.
The evening begins at the Club at 6 .. living·learning experiences" at costs
slightly higher than commercial rates.
p_m. wid) the serving of wine punch,
Each U/8 sponsored excursion centers
followed by an Italian dinner at '6:30p.m.
on a hand~tailored educational theme"
11le concen starts at 8:30p.m.
The dinner menu (supplied by the '· and each group is led by a qualified
academic expert, usually a member of
Faculty Club) includes: Pene Con Vino
the faculty. ·
RossO' (pear with Burgundy), Bnodo Di
The travel programs combine informal
Manzo O&gt;n-Polpettlni (beef broth with
lectures, organized sightseeing, flexibilitiny meatballs), lnsalata Misra (mixed
ty and free time for participants to r~ax
salad), Cotole«e AII&lt;J Pormigana (veal ·
or go off in their own d1iectlons. ,
cutlets Parmesan), . Pasta Alfredo
The academic experts, or "resource
(noodles), Zucchini, l'eperoni, Funghi
leaders," are selected by the Office for
Frltll (fried squash, peppers,
Credit~Free Progr~ms, based upon
mushrooms), JMne (bread), l:onno/i
knowledge of the panicular educational
(dessertl, and continental coffee. Wine
theme, familiarity with the local culture
wiD be served with dinner_
and language, and "~arisma," or ability
Faculty Oub meinbers will be assessed
to inspire students.
$12-50 for the wine puncfl, dinner and ·
They travel with the group at all times,
concert (each member Is entitled to one
answering
questions
~nd
pointi.ng
out
s.st at the membership note). The fee
items of interest. In addition, the
for non-members Is S15 per penon_
resource leade.S brief panicipants on the
A bus will be available for round-trip
details of an itinerary at a wine-tasting
transpoltatlon to Kleinhans at an adparty before the journey begins, and also
d~J CDSt of S2 per penon. Space is
lfmlted_
show films at- follow-up lectures after
their group las returned to Buffalo. (
a-vallons for the evening. aa:omThe Ma1'Ch 1975 Scandinavian ecology
panled· by a check, must be received In
die faculty Oub office by Monday,
tour wid be led f!y Dr- John C,G- Boo~
professor of management science, and
o.-nber 16- .Checks should be- made
will center on the advances in enp.yable to dliOubo
For further Information, contact John
vironmental proteCtion
being rNde
in Sweden and Denmark.
Buerk,131-4630-

The Professional Staff Senate (PSS) will
hold its second meeting of th'e year, today (Thursday, December 12) at 2 p.m. in
104 Parker to consider the final repon of
its Permanent Appointment Committee.
The r.e port will come before the
Senate with the endorsement of the Executive Committee.
The group was charged earlier in the
semester with preparing a response to
Preside nt Robert l. Keuer:s request for
advisory recommendations on
guidelines and procedures to be followed
in considering staff members for permanen t appointment. The new State-UUP
contract and revised Policies of the
(SUNY) Board of TruSiees make permanent appointment necessary for most
non-teaching professional staff members
if they are to continue with the University beyond seve n years.
The Permanent Appointment Committee ' s in itial recommen dation s
(Reporter. Novenlbet 21) ,were..aired at a
general . profess'ion.al . · }tali .rJ'l~eting
NovembeJ 26. Tt)ey have b~en somE;What
revised in the final draft to be acted on
toda y in line with objections raised at
thattime.
·
. A majo r change from the initial drah
calls for "a written co ncise set of
reasons" for a reco mme ndation to grant
permanent appointment or not to grant
it to be included at each of three review
levels - immediate superviso r, supervisor's superviso r, a'nd vice president. The
first version called for such reasons only
in the event of a "no" reco mmendation.
Many s taff memb e rs voiced fears ,
however, that if only "no's" were
docume nted, an employee with a "yes"
from his or her immediate superviso r
and a "no" from the supervisor's superviso r would be at a d isadva ntage at the
third or 'vice presiftel)tial r~view level
sffice ; th~' viCe 'J)(e"'s'iden·t Wqlild ' ·ha1ve'

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December 12, 1974
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C~g:~m~¢¢t~paiis e~n- charter recominendations

:

.
r

Addotollltat ~gtn: fn!&lt;i bot!\ · the · ""The focus of the eollege on health
dividuals in the community: "The extenserious in their desire to achieve serious
College Charterr_ng Comr:n•ne;e's reasons
studies and homan resources seems to
sive involvement of local urban planners,
scholarship."
f~r recommendong or JIOI Tecommenbe relevant to societal needs and student , city and county officials, lawyers and
In terms of questions ra~ by the
do~g full-term chartering. of individual .
int!!rest and will provide a ba5e for
others, can- ·serve as a ll)odel for
college's "image of ideological bias and
unr~ .an~ the pane~'s ra~1!lnale for t~e
· academic explora tion into areas of
University·Community coope_ration. The
putative denial of academic freedom,'~
quahfocatoons contaoned on some of ots
health which affect human welfare," the · •benefits of this cooperation appear to be - .the committee found that free discussion
endorse_ments. became available this
recommendation said.
mutual with student' being trained
is encouraged and thai the issue of
weel&lt; ~11th the release of the text of the
Some members of the committee. exbetter and tht community .being seo:ved
balance is of serious concern. "FortherCommltlee's reports: ·
pres~d concern about the intent' of the·
better."
..
. ,...
moi,, the~ college is making a serious efCollqe 1
.
college to have equally strong academic,
This relationship with the community
fort to develop a course dealing directly
."College B was recommended for a fullresidential, an&lt;l community programs.
has been further enhanced, the Comwith the issues of academic freedom and
term five-year charter because .of whatHowe~er, . according to the report, ~'the
mittee. report noted, by the recent addihas volunteered" to insert •l' affirmation
coordmators and..ot~er~ involved in the
tion of the program in urban justice to
of commitment to academiclreedom in
the committee described as "an _innovative program for resident ari·d non~
college recognize this potential hazard
the college.
its charter."
·•
..,.
resident students," including suctl
of .spieadiflg one's resources too 'thinly.
The committee recommended a
Tl\e suggestion of a four~year charter
features as having a string_quartet and a
T.hey ~·mainly recogni~e that at the pre- . . review of the college after eighteen
rather than the max!muin of five years
jazz trio in residence and ;ts courses in
sent t1me the academ1c program is the
months because of its cont:erns regar~
requested by the college, the committee
cr~ative crafts, dnema, and musicology.
most "Yell develo~d ."
ding rhe · relationship betwee.n the
said, "lies solely on its acaden')ic program
"College B is the only college which
Cora P. Maloney CoiJese
··
college and other academic resources
at this time. Enough co~crete evidence is
deals with a variety of creative crafts,"
T:he Committee recommended the
within the University and because of the
extant to support four years without
granting of a charter to Cpra P.
absorption of the old College Z urban
serious doubt, but enough uncerta~
the committee' noted, addi_ng that "the
college appears .to fill a cultural need for
Maloney/College E for a period of three
justice program.
about continued expansion of faculty ona number of students from various disyears contingent upon a review by' the
"Although the College does have a
put and· curricular development remains
ciplines."
.•
. ·
dean of the colleges eighteen months
broad muhi-disciplinary .'base for its
to suggest less than a full fiv_e-year
The committee said it believed " ttiat
after irs inception "because of its conprogram, it has become apparent to the
charter."
the opporturiit)!. for students who have
cern over the transformation of the
committee
that • some
additional
Tokt(,y College
.very differing professional goals tq share
.college and the newness of its residenresources of the University in the form of
Tolstoy College (College f) has as its ·
with each Other in the fulfillment of a
Jialprogram."
talented faculty mem"bers and
goal, the chartering panel reponed, "the
~ojnnio n perso n~'. : n~ed should be
_Cora P. .Maloney College, the comdepartmental program·s could make
study of the manipula!ion of hu"man cona~a1l~ble if .the Uni\lersity is truly com~
mittee report said, " is a unique program
significant con~ribu tions to the College's
sciousness by repressive social and
~ilted t'o its motro."
directed toward the education of non curriculum."
~
political institutions, and the presentaPraise was also voiced for the College
lraditional students ~ that is students
The college was criticized before the
tion of alternatives to such repression."
B residential program and for the
who have not had the adequate opporcommi!tee on the grounds that it may
The
goal is met through a series of college's "strong sense of community
tunity to pursue successful academic
duplicate programs available elsewhere
courses in four areas: Polish-America;,
withtheothercollegeS.",.
careers. Thefr objective will be best atin the University, but, the report said,
studies, male roles, capitalism and class
The comminee felt it unimportant that
tained by auemptin tO merge the com"the commiuee haS carefully considered
exploitation, and language and politics.
College B 'turrently )las no maste'r
munity with the Univer.siry. The rationale
this isi ue and has concl uded that
" The~e courses, invo.lvil)g faculty,
because an active search is now unfor heavy community interaction· is to
whatever overlap may exist is not sufgraduate
students and undergraduates,
derwav and beca.u~e the act ing ad~
realistically relate the educational exficient either to deny a charter to the
are aimed," the committee determined,
ministrators have already demonstrated
perience with community needs and excollege or to jeopardize other programs
"a t discovering the relationships
their competence to successfully lead
Periences. Nowhere at this University
wirhin the University."
the college.
can such a program be found where the
With respect to the inclusion of the
between theory and practice, rhetoric
and experience. As expressed by Leslie
CBHord Furn.s College
.
.
community Is helping to identify and
Co liege Z pr"ogram In the college, the
Fiedler,
Pierre Aubery and Robert NewAlthough. the \ Co mmittee could
resolve rhose probJems.. which have
commiuee said that ''although this
man, three faculty members who par'lunders1and" '1he ~asons that led'to the
.hindered the non-traditional students'
arrangement was not initiated by either
.ticipate ,in the Tolstoy program, it is im·
·academic success.!'
· .
of t~e units involved, [it] sees no ~eason
separation .of Clifford Furnas -College.
port ant to note the process which is cenfrom the Collegiate System;- it imposed
The college has recently Implemented
for 11 not to succeed. However, 1f only
tral to study within the col]ege: class
tf'le college's return to the system as a
a residential program which intends to
beca use of the accidental nature of this
members learn to relate personal exC!J~P,i ti.?,~ "'fqr ~ ..t,~i~e~yea~ ch~r,t~~' enfHe r SUPflOIIive Sfit~V~~es for .its tnemb.er.s,
m erg~r. it. is pruden.t for the C?mmittee
1
perience$ to the insights of individuals
dors.ew..e.tlt.het:a1J.S~ •;tQ £equire- ~ tbe- ,the report noted. Smce·tR_
e-c:;.oUege..will.. .. to revu~w Hs succesHn the relatively near
who have coped with repressive in·
CSj)ll;eRes; .-e~a~pJ-.'?"'S ·to f?aE;t!c:ipafe. jy1 a
.m~stly_ a.!_tr~ct r_tle d.!s~~~a~taged st~dent
future.~· _ .
stitutionS in the ·past, or are doing so at
cprt;lmO~ ~ystem seem~ Q,either. fair OOJ
reconoml:aHY. eaucatlonally), remedial
.
the present time. This approa&amp; to learwise." Additionally, the commiue·e
courses WJII be offered to assist the stu- - Ruhel C•rsoo:t College
Accord
ing
~to the ·oom'mi«ee report;.
ning embodies and typifles the anarchist
pointed out lhat in terms of the Faculty~
deflt in his/her transitiOn to College life.
Rach el Carson College was recommendphilosophy which underlies all that is
Senat_e ProspeCtus, Furnas College must
There was ~oncern over the possibility of
ed
for
a
five-year
charter
{not
for
four
done in Tolstoy Coll.ege, and ptovides
join the College Council in order to
the formauon ~fa ~grega~d communiyears as reported last weekt. The "group
coherence to its program ..•..
share i_n resource allocation for_ the
ty, bu! the c?lle~e assured us th!Swas .not
found *'&gt;at the unit's "study of ecology
"We find in Tolstoy," the group -;..id,
colleRes. Even if these guidelines did not
the _ mtent1on and they would. do
provide-; a definite focus for its wide"a se n~of excitement, activity;·· exexist, however, the char(eling panel said,
· everyth~ng possible to prevent this from
ranging interests: formal •courses,
perimentation and camaraderie wh ich
"cooperation among the colleges seems
happenmg." .
communit y-action projects, outdoor
embodies those special qualities of
eminentl y desirable on both practical
Concern was expressed by .some
courses." .
collegiate life, as .distinguished from the
and intellectual gro unds. Resou rce6 can
members of the COI]Imittee whether or
The vitality of the program set up by
not Cora P. Maloney College was in any
more traditional structur6 on campUs. .
go much further in a coqperative con·
the college is apparent in a number of
·text, •nd some other. colle"ges also are
way identified with the old College E. or
Coupled with this ent.husiasm il a strong
ways, the committee found.
sense of academic responsibi~ty and a
attempting to· bridge th~ gap between
whether it was a new entity. With the
Special notice was called to the coclear line of administratiYe.authority that
the sciences and the humanities (Furnas'
prospect of chartering, the committee .
coordinators, Dr. Beve~ly Paigen and Dr.
guards oigiiinst~ e"Xci!U . and alii&amp;!·«iid:
p"rimary thrust), which suggests the imreport says, "the members of College E
John
Howe I~. who, in spite of the Univerpoflance of non~duplicative COOJ&gt;e:rative
decided to direct their efforts towards
allows for strict accountability"to outside
sity's
failure
to
gra
nt
suitable
salary
or
agencies."
·
· ~
· ·
•efforts. Some testim~('IY from this cOllege
the. non-tradi~ional student over the
released time; have c:ledicated large vanous other .nterest groups that had
(also) in~icated a lack of Uf!derstanding
The committee recqmmended a thr""'
·amounts
of
time
and
energy
to
fhe
of . t~e c;t~welopJl)ent of o;&gt;ther colleges.
prevlo~sly existed wi\hin the College.
year charter; althoush the unit requested
program.
.
five years, "because of a concern that the
T.he,;r .~RP•r&lt;:n~'!'n~·of· b;eing_ the 'o;&gt;'IIY:
There. IS a ne"Y thrust, a . new sense of
The committee ·r~comll!erided, in adc.OJJ,ege ,"SY.C~essfully." piHSlling .some of
dorectoon whoc~ has left Cora P. Maloney '
nature of the Tolstoy-program, based
dition · to the charter, the granting of
thi! "uri~verSal -' cOIIegia.te. goals , _sh!?w~d
in, a~tr~nsitiC?nal~riod."
.
upon past experiences, may be sufadequate fun ding for Rachel Carson
ficiently altered during "the next tnree
College of Mathem•tical Sciences
disturbing informational isol,ation." ~
programs.
and
called
for
strong
Universi·
years to warrant comprehensive . review
Furnas College received high marks
)"he College of Mathematical Sciences
ty support fqr the cpllege'~effortsto obagain at t~at time."
for providing pre:professional students
the chartering group noted, "tries io br~
tain ad_d!tional outsid~ funding, noting
"{ith humanisticopportunitiesandforafing together. by a piocess of-cross~ ~
11
Vlco COiese
.
fording access to the natural sciences to
fenilization, pure a~d applied ... that 1ts long range goals are in accord
with important natjonal interests."
It was the finding of the committee
- • students in humanities an~ social
~ mathematicians and scientists in· other
that
Vico
College
"n!presents
a
·unique
.
sciences. Sentor faculty are in.v01ved, the
disciPlines. It is an effort which affects
~Sciences Collese
JX&gt;fential within the University for the in· committee noted, and tl;e steady l!rol!(lh ·
tl}ldergraduate students with a deep 111-59cial 5clences College, the com,tellectual, person.!, and social enrichand accomplisllmetfts Of the unit seem to
terest iri mathematical sciehces and also
mittee report pointed- out, "speaks to
ment' of Its participating students and
augurw~llforihefuture.
,
those students with·onJy a peripheral Or
stuoents who are concerned with seek~
faculty . Its .committn.ent to a
_Tho: only significant internal problem·
passing interest. The College has an in- . ing a non-traditional viewpoint on social
'gredisciplinary'
program in the
of Furnas College which the committee
terdisciplinary approach and is a
issueS: That is not to say non-academic
humanities provides a.structure whefeby
found "involves 'the unstable leadership
cohesive program.:' ·
'
necessarily, but a 'radical perspective'
students "of divene departmental oriensituation. With a_history or StfOf18 central
While housing problems ori the new
that examines the impact of economiC
tation may join Fello~ from the
control, the co~e is haYing inajor dif· ·
campus at Ellicott. have posl!d' problems
forces in a his~&lt;&gt;rical progression." While
departments of English, History, Fn!rich;
- ficuhies fillins th~ position of Master.
for its residential program this fall, the
appearing to overlap with offerings
Italian, Philosophy and others for the
They hav~ had an Acting Master for
committee -noted, "The i~Jempt of this
elsewhere, the critical" approach taken" · )lUrpose -of a greater understaDding of
many months, and evince no ,clear idea - college to bring mattl.ematii::s ' and
and_the_overall pers~ive is nowhen!
Western Intellectual · and.: cultural
Df when the search committee · will
science tOgether if! orltt program ·is not
else offered in such depth, thecharter-.
heritage.
recruit a Master. · As always, · la~ of
extensiv~ly covered anywhere else on
ing.group concluded.
:
"The academic program of the college suitatile compensation hampers rec'ruit·
this campus. II is a credit to this UniverSi·
Although the · college was orgahized
iso~high quality... .
. ment of a high quality fa&lt;;Uhy· member,"
ty and should continue to exist."
and dire&lt;&gt;ted . largely by· graduate
"This college indicated in testimony .
the panel noted:
No reason was given for calling for a
students in early years with .Ome few
that the initiative and guillance for the
Calep H
fo~r-year charter rather than a five-year
faculty taking part, the coml]linee founq .
unit Is and should remain In the hands of ·
"Qn the baois . of an excellently
ol&lt;ay._
ot- has recently "rna~ significant adSU.!'IY/AB faculty becaus~ of their
~~charter docutneht, strong supC"'llllese of Urbu 5_tudles .
ditions tol'rofessorial contributions."
. professional compj!tepce. The students
port in&amp; documentation,- an· articu&amp;ate .
The College of Urban Studies, whichThe college has also "made" slgniflca.;r - appeared to welcbrne ·rhis faculty con_....
presentation 11 the public he•rinJI, end .
offers · a multi-disciplinary program for • sh_ifts In poUcy to place courses 011 a · trol. While many of the propose~
adherence to the guidelines of the col·
undergraduates Interested In contemmare serious academic bam·and to be
. colleses vest more · active ro1es •fn ~
~urban ISSIJI!S, w•s foun&lt;l to ,have a
lege prospectus," the · committee
more ~1ective of courses, to ·bring them . students, it would seem that many
recol)"lmended an unqualifoed andorse.
"panicular strength" In the relationshiP"
closer to the goals of the college. They - students will respond equally well to
ment of a five·year charter for Collego; H. ,- it has developed wit~ vrograms and inhave formalized review and tippear
·
(Tumropqe1,coLJr

�..

('

a

~~

.

~of.

JaA
·

IU.USTRATED
(I)OTJON•.

, l01TlDB't'AllX COMf0Rl.M.K, I'hD.

Sex m~ual tops·in-nation;
·second to Castaneda at U/B
By Dl1ne Quinn .
R~rr Sf•ff

-

I

The "gourmet guide to lovemaking,"
~JOy of Se.r, continues to be the bestsellihg, book ori the nati&lt;?n's campuses,
according to a Cll10111de of Higher
Eduadoh slirvey of $3 colleges and university bocl_kstores.
.
While the instructional sex manual
remained at the top of the national list
for most of 1974, it ha• been replaced as
the best-seller a) U/ B by Carlos
Castaneda's culminativt;.,. account of the
journeys of Don juan, T•les of Power.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn's grim
documentary of Communist labor camps
and prisons is the only other work
currently , appearing on
both the
national and U/Biists.
.. U/8 readers' tastes eire not easil~om­
partmenta1ized. Among the ten .favoihes
are two books dealing with the absurdities in Tife : Kurt Vonnegut's Breakfast
·of Ch•mplons and· the humor of
1 Doonesbury through seleded cartoons.
· Still "popular is the Forsyth thriller
about a German journalist trackLA,;. down
.. Nazi SS criminals. Intrigue with surrealist
p;iinter Salvador Dali also con\iAIJes.
WaterJ!ate-mania is reflected on the
lists: All rhe ~s Men is a national
best-oeller, • and CBS· newsman Dan
Rather's critical view o( the Nixon administration is a U/B favorite.
' · "llo•elling;well·at U/B are Erica long's
newel • about :• ··contt!mporary woman's •
oansferniation · ihri)Ugh· sex/love · aff~irs ·
and a candid view of the marriage of
Brmoh politician Harold Nicolson and
novelist Vita Sackfille-West- writte9 by
their son.
,
·
U/B bookstore best-sellers in
November as compared to the Cllronide.
survey are:

/

8. Breakfast of Champi~nf by Kurt
Vonnegut.
.
9. Portrait of a Marriage by Nigel
Ni colson.
·10. The Gu log Archipelago b y Alexander Solzhe niu:y n. ·
National Survey
1. The/oyofser. ·
2. How loBe Your Own Besr.Friend by
Mildr e S N e wm a n and Be r n a r d
Be rkowitz.
3. The Gulag Archipelago._
4. Plain Speaking by Me rle Mille r.
5. Sybil by Flo ra R. Schre iber.
6. Tales of Power.
'7. I'm OK.~ You're OK: A Practical
Guide tO Transaction-./ Analysis by
Thomas A. Harris.
8. All rhe President's Men by Bo b
Woodward and Carl Bernstei n.- ...
9. Renden&lt;ous wliii'Rarrii. Gy-Art hur·C.
Clarke.
·
•.
•
10. Once Is Nor Enough by Jacqueline
.Susann.

. Met auditions

_slated for Baird

The !npartment of Music will host the
di~id auditions_ of the Metropolitan
Opera National Council in Baird Hall,
Saturday, Janua ry 11, 1975. The. di strid
embraces metropolitan Buffalo, Toronto
and Rochester.
Preliminary auditions will be held during the da y'on January 11, with finals taking place io Baird at 8:30p.m. The public
is invited to attend the final auditions,
and tickets will be available at the door
for S1 from 7:30p.m. on.
The panel of judges for this year's
auditions i'}clu.des the_ internation3lly
famed metzo-.sOprano Blanche
Thebom, formerly a member of the
Metropolitan Opera and currently chairU/1
.
man of &lt;?pera at the Little Rock campus
1. T . ol ,_,.by Carlos Castan&lt;:_da.
of the Univ~rsity , of Arkansas . .Serving
2. JfteJoyoiSe.r by Alex Comfort.
with
Miss Thebom 'will - be ·James
· J . , _ ol,.,.., by Erica long. Whither, director, Orphe'u s ChOir,
1 4. n., Odessa file by FrederiCk For-Toronto,
and a memBer of the Ministry
~ sytlt.
of Education of the Province of Ontario,
5. lJJel"'llla!c.nfby Dan Rather.
and
Robert
Cole, associ~te con~u~r,
6.DII.,DIII. •
. 7. ~Humor Books (a~ries _ .Buffalo Phllharm&lt;?"i.c Orchestra. Tbe
judges will! select two fillalists to parol.fuur)'byG.tl. Trucle.u;
I ticipate In, the Great lakes Regional
. All(lition to. be held "in &lt;:leveland on
March 2 and will award cash scholarShips
to aid In hirther·study and travel expenses to Cleveland for the fi.naljsts. :
Prospective candldares must be
prepared to sing three alia$ and must. be .
in 1114: following qe brackel5: oopra_nos,
.18-30; mezzo.sopl'anc;K, 20-30; tenors,
26-30; baritones, 20-32; and basses, 26Zl. Appllatlono are avallabl!&gt; by contas::
tlng Mrs. l'leter Kn&lt;Mies, 9195 Sandrock
Road, Eden, New York 14057.
CcM:hairmen for the Melropolitaft
Opera are Dr. J. Wlmlfl l'f!rry, dean,
SdiOOI of Health Related Professions·.
ProfeMor Muriel Hebert Wolf, ~
· of the Unil!ienlt(s ·Open Studio; and
Mrs. Knowles. Mrs. Moffat Dunlap of
Toronto Is the Natlonll Coulldl district
-.
·
dlllirman. ·

,. •,. " " , . _

11:$'il"7..--r-r1' • t~ r t1J~ ....

•'-T••

n •.r..a ~be;1t,1914

_;------

&gt;.· ·-

Stage nudity.anti-ei'QtiC;;~. ·!i ~:
'Eqti~ author ~a,_~f~~:~··

r---'--Jhe1 .- .-·· -,

GourmetGuide
to Love Making.

~

"I d 01i•t come to the theatre ·to see Life
With Father, Life With Mother, Life With
Sister, Life With Second Cousin Tony. 1

.
· .come to the theatre to see a proper

play. One that's depraved:''
~eter Shaffer smiled wryly as he
recounted this bit of ~udience feedback
overheard at an ·early performance of his
· current Broadway hit, fquus.
Shaffer, who also wrote The Royal
Hunt of the Sun and Black Comedy
among oth~rs. discussed nudity in relation to his play, which includes a seven· minute nude scene, as part of the
Theatre Departme nt 's week-Ions Symposium on Sexuality, Knowledge and the
Theatre.
looking vaguel y Caesar-like, Shaffer
suggested that nudity is usuall y antierotic on stage.
" It is not netessar y to e xpre ss
metaphorical
nudity
by
literal
nakedness," he said. Straight-on nudity,
particular ly in full light, produces a
"clinical e ffect," Shaffer argued, explaining hOw the eroticism of a first-act scene
in fquus was ach.ieved by a fullyclothed actor miming a climactic" sexual/ religious encounter with a ho~e under " phoney-arty" lights that heightened
the erotic effect.
·
In contrast, Shaffer said, a second-act
scene showing an unresolved sexual
encounter between the boy a red a girl "is
played nude, which tends to emphasize
th e vulne rabil ity of the boy and achieves
a clinical rather than erotic effect. The
playwri ght not ed that not a single British
re viewer men tioned the p1ay's nudity.

"Nudity almost invariably bores me on
· stage," added the playwright, who feels
thatthenudesceneinhisownplayisexlremely powerful )hough not erotic. .
In a scene like the mime sequence of
fquus, Shaffer said, the audience is called upon to employ "that frequently unused muscle~ the imagination." '
Asked about the American success of
fquus, a British import, Shafler admitted
that Broadway gt&gt;es. "shopping in
England."
·
·
" The play," he said in its favor, " does
seem to be a 'Play, which is something of
a rarity." By that, he said, he meant that it,.
was something that could only happen to
an audience in a theatre. It further seems
to succeed in providing viewers with
some kind of catharsis. The audience, he
said, is " purged by something, if...not pity
and te rror." ~
· " The psy~hic e nergy of the audience is
frequently ignored by playwrights," he
said. When successfully manipulated by
the artist, the audienc~ ,i5 unhingeCI,
"Linstuck...frori lts .. efer.hal resetve,''. he
theorized .
- .
: • ... :- :«'·.
This process does not necessarily take
place in confrontational theatre of the
kind rece ntly popular, he suggested.
" Se ve ral years ago, one dreaded going
to the th eatre because one was afraid an
actor would si t' on your lap and ask you
about Viet Nam- or worse.."
Th is assa ult ive theatre had the op·
posite o f tbe desired effed, Shaffe r said.
The audie nce, instead of sharing a communal ex pe ri e nce akin to ritual, became
"snails."

_Poor communications cause of
business failu~, ,prof _sugg~ ·
.

Some Weste rn Ne w York.firnl\ will,go • ; · He. suggested. corporfllf1eaders-reexou"t o f business needlessly-..,..~~; -~oAineo~he;r long-Oiasf.,..udes foward
after e mployees with the ~ !!fs~'iln-;:·-~hgio;Qd-de•~&lt;ograms! alfd
savjng th ei r companies go unheeded, a · Usten more and pantc less when busmess
U/ B professo r forecasts.
- ..~
.nosedives. ·
·
In additio n to his work at U/ B, Dr.
Dr. · Gera ld M. Go ldhaber, ass6ciate
Goldhaber is vice president of the Inter·
chai rman of.,.the De partme nt of Speech
Commun ica tio n, blames ineffeai ve innat ional Communicat ion Association
tern al commu nications for1 hese paten(ICAl and coordinator.. of a major interri al b usi ness fail ures. He also believes a
nat ional field project initiated by that
continuation of th e economic recession
professional organization foUr years ago.
w i ll agg r ava t e· c ommun icat ion
The field project is an attempt to
breakdown s within organizations,
deve lop a standardized method of
lead ing to baokruptcies and job losses on
a ud.Hing. c ommunications within
the Niagara. frontier that.otherwise could
organizations. When completed, the
standard audit will enable researchers to
have been avoided. •
" Organizations are mOst susceptible to
compare interpersonal communication
,collapse and par)ic in times of economic
practices in large institutions,"'such as incrisis,'' asse'tts Dr. Goldhaber, who
-dustries, labor unions, hospitals, schools,
earlier t'his {ear wrote the first college
milital:)' u~its and government agencies.
textbook to deal exclusively with the
Earlier this year, the University es·'
problems of interpersonal com·
tablished a computer data baqk to serve
as. a cteaAnghoOse foi. tbe .irtformation
munications Within large organizations~
In that book, OrganizaVonal Com- :· ,that mor.elhan :~OO·IG.\ . researd185o~oe
munication, he points out thal more than· : • . now gatherinc. in-5ix.HDrlhf~ioan-.and
10per s::ent of a.ll U.S. buSinesses fail each • Euro_pe.annatioos..-"'. •. • ,· . ,; · .';, ... ,.. ,
year, " primarily due to bad fnanage,nent·
·
·
"
,'
an~ [!effective communications."
.-...:...:.&amp;&amp;
In an interview,: the U/B professor"
~
added that businesses "often bring about
Fire caused by an overbeated elevatc;&gt;r
their . own · doom by doing what . they
motor bwke out about 5:45 p.m."Saturshouldn't be .doing" under .fiQancial ·· day (December in a dormitory on lhe
stress.
·
·
_Amherst Campus.
-., 'When a cris·is .strikes, com- , About 200.. sludeli!S WJ!re evacuated
munications usually begin to flow · · frem their rooms irf Buldlng 4 of the
downward so the hierarchy has more
Far&amp;&lt;&gt; Quadrangle in the Joseph Ellicott
control. Normal_ communication
Ct&gt;mplex. The fire was confined J.O an
elevator equipment room on level one
channels are thrown out and orders are
, •
·
- given. Communications.from the bottom
of the building.
1
upar~ mi{limized," Dr. Goldhaber.sald.
- The Getzville 11nd
.North a,il-ey
·~olunteer fire compaf)ies responded tO '
· "Rumors H ncrease,. good listening
decreases, those at the top are left
th!! 'alarm and quickly eXtinguished the
wittj,out feedliack. As a result, in tlmes.!?f _ blaze.
•
' Damage to the facility was minimal and ·
panoc those with.thebest ideas on how to
~he elevator equipment w¥ restored to · sa've a company are no longer being
listened to or are being phased out of
service•lmost immediately.
1heir jobs."
·
,
Qr. Goldhaber identified persons who
hold positions in employee training and ' ·
•
·
.
•
•
cbrporate developmen( as those ~
Dr. nbor '· Greenwd; medical dkeCcan .c ontribute' , _ towort;l irocreasing-: . ·lOr of me. NM!onai ·Biood~ln of~
efflcieocyandredudngcosts.
!,·_:-- • . • Amer:!_c•n- Rtid ' CI'OM ' incl 'lll"'l'dl
"These people - usuallj the lint 10· - ,..efeiM,...t-llledlclne at~
· · so. because tha h'ienrtfly f~ theyan't:. , .• Washift!lleA·o.Utll ·
•wti..-Jf ·Cilf
afferd the lu~ury •iif developrnenr,~t ·g,, ·n· 1 "~1111· .-rencfttl~
~"'·
Goldhaber said. ':But they'll wron!l.•tt"s' • • 1F.:.i"l18rfh'llltoll&lt;' t • '
1 ~,'

Are a1

n

Flai

.. necessi!Y."

.. . :

ia.g.,.ledure· ·'··

...:~ ;•::.:~rte;~

·

·

~·

�December 12, 1974

·'
Citing Dr. Szekely's research on g~s- .
enterinJ! college find , the'!'selves :ilL.
solid react ibn and fluid flow phenomena -· situations different from those they have
1n metal·s processing and his
experienced before. But the difficulties
o( adjusting and making decisions are
mathematical modeling and optimization of n'ivtallurgical processes, the
" greatest among those persons who have
award is the sixth major national prize
not grown up in .arJ environment which
Dr. Szekely has received in two years.
provides familiarity-with higher educa·
In 1973, he was awacded the Milth!'W-tion values and procedures."
son Gold Medal and lhe Extractive
'The problems of cultural adjustment
Metallurgy Science Award of the
are compounded f&lt;lr part-timtf adult
American Institute of Mining and ,. ·students, Greene ktotes, because t_heir
Metallurgical Engineers. In the same
college experience _is often limited to
year, he won the prestigious Sir George
off-campus classes. Th~re they are un·
able to "share the intellectual and
Bielby Gold Medal and Prize of the
(British) Royal Institute of Chemistry, the
emotional benefits derived from full·
Socieiy for Chemical lndust,Y· and the
time involvement with fellow students."
ro meet these problems, the fourInstitute of Metals.
' ,
Earlier this year, the 40-year-old
credit course, title~ " Perspectives. in
developer of a modern, computer based
Higher Education lor Adult Students,"
approach to metals procesSing was namcenters on five objectives: -. ed a Guggenheim Fellow ;a,d also receiv·
• To provide each student with an oped the Curtis McGraw Research Award
portunity to examine his own attitudes
gf the Ameri~n Society for Engin,eering
and perceptions about why he wants to
Educat!on.
·
go to college;
'
• To help each student develop a
On Stale Panel
broad and sophisticated perspective on
President Robert L Ketter has been
the nature and sqcial function of higher
appointed tO a Board of Rege nts Comeducation;
mission studying the financial problems
• To help each .student acquire a workof colleges and universities. Stephen K.
ing knowledge of the educational op·
Bailey, vice president of the_Ameri~n
portunities available at c;olleges in
Council on Education, is chairmOitn of the
Wester(\ New York;
group which has been named by the·
• To provide ~ach student with the
Regenls " because of concern over the
benefits of peer group support and learimpact of declining enrollments
ning; and
predicted fo r the 1980s in coll&lt;!'ges. and
• To establish a twQ-way flow of com-1
universities throughout the state and
muniCation between the school and the
nation." The ~anel is made up of a
students so that University officials can
numb er of co llege and universit y
gauge· stUde nt Views, needs and
presidents and representatives of founpreferences,' and make_quick .and perdation'S.
sonalized responses to students who ask
for assistance.

H_,edbyAOA
•
•
Lawrence C. Vdlland, a U/B fourth year
cfental' student, was among eight student
winners at the 115th ·anntJal session of
the American Dental Associatioil.
At the student table clinic program,
Volland presented a description of a
research project, "A Clinical Comparision of Two New Restorative Materials in

the Treatment of CerVical Erosion,"
funded over two summers by the United
W~ y of Erie County.
Fifty-one denial st udents from universities in rh&amp;: United Sfates and Puerto
Rico panicipated in the clinic program.

The 25-year-old Volland is president of
class and s1udent representative of
8th Distrid Dental Society. 'He is also
dental editor of' the yearbook, The
Medenrian. ~.
•
•
Fo~culty 1 H0ri0rs • .
-- . ·•
.

A~cepts qeveland Assignment
Dr. Edward M. Cordasco; clinical assistant professor of medicine here since
1961 , has acCepted a position at the Cleveland Clinic, effective January J., 1975.
In his new position, Dr: Cordasco will
be .director of the Respi ratbry Therapy
Department and professor of medicine.
Dr. Cordasco received his M.D. from
the G eo r&amp;~ town University Medical
School in 1949. He · did post-gradu~e
work at th e Cleveland Clinic an.d at the
Millard Fillmore Hospital.
.
Dr. Cordasco will continue to be a
director of the Niagara Frontier ..-f.nvironmental Health Resear~ h Foundation. ·

~is
th~

/'i"t&gt;f~l;;Af!Jl~ B~l!lli$."1it~ Jh~ ' :O:rii'

Pohtocal Sc1~noe Department has been
named associate editor of the journal,
Th e Bureaucrat.
Dr. Th o mas Port er. Speech Com-

munication, is chairman of the International CommUnication Associatio n's
needs assessmerlt ·commiNee.
Professor Dale M . Riepe, Philosophy:
has been elected to the Far East Institute
in Japan.
. .
In the School of Dentistry, Dr. James
McMullen has been installed as a Fellow
of .the lnternationar-college of :Pentists,
and Dr. Sebastian Ciancio has been named consultant to the Federal Dentaire
International's COuncil on Therapeutics
and Dental Materials.

D-..Aer
named l"n ·
DCIAI
1

1
School. of Ph.armacy clinical instructOr
Orville-Baxter has ~een appointed to the
additional post o,f assistant to the dean in ·
which capacity he will work with Dean
Dr. Michael A. Schwartz and Assistant
Dean-Or. Robert M. Cooper to supervise
controlled substances . and hypodermic
devices used in U/ B research facilities.
Baxter's new duties will include assuring that rules for storage- and record·
~eepmg are followed lor tightly co..trolled habit-forming drugs such as barbiturates, amphetamines and narcotics
and for stringently control(ed devices
such as syiinges and needles used to in· ·
ject drugs. He will also be involved in:•
monitoring distribution of sud. "drugs
and devices to preve'!t diversion~ con 7
ducting periodic inspegions to check
compliance; and imposing .appropriate
sanctions when compliance is,unsatisfac·
"tory.
,
·
.U/B areas in which researchers use the
drugs and devices. include the Schoolsof
Medicine and· Pharmacy, ·onimal experimentation laboratories, the
Departl!;lents of Psychology and
Micro6iolog):. and research facilities in
affiljjrted hospitak. ' ·
·
_
Boxter Is a 1942 graduate of tJ/B. ·

by a professional educational group for
his work in establi.shing a successful
college course to m~et the special needs
of part-time adult students .
... .,. Th~ course was designed to teach
..,, ,oldet students what higher education is
all about and how they can get what they
want from it.
~
·For his efforts, Greene was presented
with .a "distinguished program award" by
the National Un~Vl!rsity . Extension ·
?

p

Association, Region II, at a conference

5ool&lt;olr
~.....,_AwordWinner.

Or. Julian S'zekely, prof)'ssor of·
chemiQII engineering and director of the
Center for Process Metallurwr, has
rMeived the 1974 Professional Prog~
Award from the American Institute of
O......i-=:~1 f.nRineerlng (AIChE).
The awanf, OOJIIisting of an engraved

~a~d~~!'::u.j"~l~.:::!~:
(December 21 in Washlnpon, D.C. In

held November 21 in Morgantown, West
Virginia. The assoc}ation offers the
awards annUally to encourage a wider
dissemination of innovative programS'in
extension education:
·
·~
\ Gteene initiated the program two
years ago through Millard Fillmqre
College; the evening undergraduate
division, with the assistance o.f a federal
gral).t funded under the Higher Educa·
tlon Act of 1965.
•
The program grew out of the Division
of Continuing Education's involve"l"n!
with off-campus Instruction, and from
requests by commun!_ty aclion_agel)cies
for study programs for their employees,
many of whoin were ....,otewonals
who had never taken a col!eJ!e course.
After analyzing the difficulties involved
iri going back ,to . school, Greene

·

·

' liii!EIB:Ya.ING

·

~==~~~~t.: ~u~~·~~=
confidence, knowJ.cip. aild...lldl!&amp;-tbal-. _ ...... ._.~._..,,,_,.

·
5eptember1975,t&gt;r. Szekelywillpresent
· are n·ecessa~to overcome what
the, formal .,.• ..t larh•re a• a .~Qn ' ~~uca~~rspll
"~Qfreentry.:'
meetlng'oHh'tli:itit;;t.r:·,.&gt;:.r~ , , ; • , I '
·· illccordlng 1 to
reeile, all students

S."-•&amp;&amp;ID6p.a._,._ _ _
.....,. .. ~ . . . . . . . . . ~ .

in Pediatrics
Dr. Sumner ). Yaffe, professor of
pediatrics, has been named acting chairman of the Departmen_t of Pediatrics
effective \ December 1, according to
President Roi;&gt;ert 1:: Ketter a(!il H~lth
Sciences Vice President F. Carter Pannill.
Dr. Yaffe has been with the U/B School
of Medicine sin~e 1963 and is ·director. of
the Poison Control Center at Children's
Hospital. He received thl' M.A. in pharmacology from Harvard UniverSity's
Divisiori of Medical Sciences and the
M.O, from the UniversitY of Vermont
st:hool of Medidne at Burlington.
He is a Diplomate of the. American
Board of Pediatrics and a member of the
American Academy of Pediatrics, the
. American College of Clinical Pha.r·
macology and Chemotherapy a~d
numerous other professional
organizations. He has published extensively and ~as a visiting professor in
pharmacology at the Karolinska Institute
in.Stockhojm, Sweden.

plans
drug pricingstudy ·

.Cpllege H

College H (course 351), in conjunction
with "the Ne~ York Public Interest
Research Group (N.Y.P.I.R.G.), is planning to carry out a three-part "Com- munity Information Study on Drug
Pri &lt;j ng"to:
·
• compare the generic vs. brand name
pri..,. of ten pOpular prescription drugs
in at least ten local drug stores; .
.
survey the con~umers' ~nowo:lell&amp;e .9'1
prescription drug pricing-pr~i&lt;!!"s . af\11 .
on available drug pricing inf.orhtations:.
and
'
• circulate a petitionSupporting repeal
Of the New York State "anti-substitutionn
law, through the New York State
legislature.
·
Drug prices are kept high, College H
spokesmen say, because the average
consumer must buy brand name drugs
prescribed by the doctor. The CONUmer
is not allowed to get the less-costly
generi&lt;:.qrug. A generic drugls the sden·
tific name for any drug with the same active components with equal quality and
strength. By New York State law,
' however, tlie pharmacist Is nOt allowed
• to substitute .. generic drug for the same
quality brand name drug piescribed •.
Surveys In other sections of the coun·
try, College H course members point
out, have consistentlY, shown . that
generic drugs are less expensive. titan ·
brand n.ame &lt;I rugs. State laws protect lhe
'nterests Of the drus , companies at the
expense of the consumer, they say. "The

•

School 0 f Phannacy

William Greene, director of the Office
for Urban Extension, has been honored

Yaffe acting.

•

consumer,onttviotherhand,is~rit-

of the fact that they an ask their doctor ' ·
toprescribeth~rdrugsbygenericname.

Hence, there can be substantial savings
to · the ~mer In these inffatiqn.
ridden days, if there Is more knowledse
on drug pricing, and if ln;New Yorit State
the pharmacist can subolitute br con.Umer .-.quest. a Fneric drug for the
brand name cfrus."
.
A c:ompletecl report of the surwy and a oomparMive prlclna ltUCIJ
wiD be awollable In two· weells. for
further lnfonnatlon, c:ontact lUck Morris,
IJ76.2797·or1'elerTarby,~5707•.

•

�·~

December 72,1974

·- ~girleering prof·~~ng ~

Internships
available in
Poley Studies

-reactor safety technOlogy

~=:~-·

The ·Fin-ndaf Aid Office has advised
that applications for students ~Nho wish
to apply for ·assistance for the 197S-76
coal reserves, mankind .may eventually
ly John lhunton
academic year are now available•.
have to depend on nudear e"nergy in the ·
( ~yl~lonSenticn
The deadline for return of finanCial
Applicalions are-(!OW beii)g accepted ,
long run, unless the world population is
statements to the Cojli!ge Scholarship
Dr. Wan Y. Chon,iprofessor of nudear
for 6pring and summer posi!ions. in the
drastically reduced to the level it was in
Service in connection wHh these
engineering, has neceived' A $184,000
University-wide graduate internship
the 19th q&gt;ntury.
. •
applications will be February 1, 197S.
contract tO investi_gate advanced nuclear
program in public policy and public sec"The · negative attitudes expressed by
The form . UB for 1975-76 must be
reactor safety technologies.
tor management, established by the U/8
environmentalists towara nuclear power
returned to the Financial Aid Office .by
· Center for Policy. St4dles, Center DirecAwlrded by the Electric Power
•
are
healthy
and
good,
but
we
must
keep
March
1. Undergraduate EOP students
tor lee E. Preston has announced.
Research Institute (EPRII of. P.alo Alto,
in mind that in addition to the passive or · should obtair their 1975-76 forms. from
Under the program, a graduate stuCalifcih;Jia, the two-year contract focuses
critical
approach
to
the
problem,
strong
their EOP counselors in Diefendorf Hail.
dent in any University depanment may
on development of improved ~mergen­
positive and-constructive approaches are
Financial Aid also indiCates that it can
· apply for placement wilh an area policycy core cooling systems to cope with
needed," Dr..Chon said.
still accept applications for 1974-75 from
loss-of-.::oolant accidents which ,
making agency. Interns may be placed in
The
EPRI
contract
represents
on-e
o(
students
who have not previously' filed
although extremely unlikely to happen,
City or County government and a. variety
the largest research support awards ever.... · for th(s year. Students who have not
are the worst possible potendal nuclear,
of other agenCies, including the Regional
t'
received
by
the
University's
Faculty
of
previously applied may contact the Ofread or acddents.
Planning Board and other public bodies,
Engineering and Applied Sciences.
fice at 312 Stockton Kimball Tower.
Using a Heat Transfer loop designed
private non·profit organizations, ·and
where the need £riteria are met,
other groups.
.
and constr~cted fc Dr. Chon at the U/8
National Direct Student loans will be-apcampus, in addiflon to a simulated
Some of these pos"1tions carry "modest
proved within the -~l)'ltts of available
nuclear reactor system, computer ana
. stipends," the director advises, and all in·
funds. These new applications will be
high speed camera systems, Dr. Chon
/ ternships may be undertaken for
-.....
•
reviewed in order of receipt.
will Concentrate on developing
academic credit with the approval of an
emergency systems for future reactors.
appropriate !acuity-supervisor.
A memorial service for retired U/8
The investigations will· make use of a
According to Dr. Preston, "the .infaculty member Dr. Joseph G. Hoffman,
full length (12-foot) reactor test section
ternsllip program provides graduate
who died December 8 at the age of 65,
will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday in the.
1- ~ ' I/ ,
which will be visible through use of a_
students with field experience working
Unitarian-Universalist Church of Buffalo
- Former . undergraduates who U~h the
special " VYCOR" window under heated
on policy-related and public sector
Unive rsity because of academic difat Elmwood and West Ferry.
conCiitions. More than 80 experimental
management problems. It is designed to
. 'Or. Hoffma n, who retired last June,
ficuhies must ·r eapplf by Tuesday,
data will be collected and recorded by an
supplement the format educational
had been a research professor in the
December 17, if ihey want to be readIndustrial 1111-M computer, which also
program of the University by providing
contrOls the experiments and analyzes
Medical · School since 1947. In 195!1, he
mitted for Spring 1975 classes.
students with an oppartunity 'to learn
the
results.
became
a
professor
of
biophysics
a~d
in'
The Scholaslic Standai-ds Committee
how to learn' within the environment of
1957, professor of physics.
.
will meet Wednesday, December 18, to
The equipment will enable Dr. Chon
an on-going .. orga_nizati6n engaged in
Dr. Hoffman came tO Buffalo in 1946 as
review petitions for readmission fi led by
and his staff to reproduce actual accident
real world tasks. The internship offers an
co nditions while incorporating new
former students.
di rector of cancer research at t he
opportunity both to -apply knowledge
Roswell Park Memo rial Institute, a post
As a co ndition for read mission, former
emergency core coo~ing systems.
.
already gained through academic study
he held until1954. ·
st udents who were dismissed for
Dr. Chon explained that since the
and to identify areas of knowledge or
From 1944-46, he was a scientist at the
academic reasons, or who withdrew unproject is under co ntract rather than
skills that require further development.
grant, satisfacto ry fulfillment of its objecLos Alamos" New Mexico, Scientific
der fa iling conditions, must have remainFurther, the inte'rnship experience
ti ves is mandatory.
Laboratories where he was asSociated - ed away from the Uni verii ty for one
reveals the necesSary integration of sub" The ~PRI receives its funds from the
with the Manhatian..Projeci.
.academic year.
,.
stantive knowledge with behavioral skills
An authority on tissue cells, he was the
Petitions ma y be obtained at.either th e
and communication techniques that is ·
nation's power industries, . thus genet a I
progress and topical reports Will be subauthor of Size and Growth of Tissue Cells
Admissions and Records Office or the
necessary for ~ffective professiOnal per(1953) and Life and Death ~I Cells (]§57).
Divislon of Undergraduate "Educalion
mitted monthly and . di~tributed
formance."
nationwide," he said .
A Buffalo ncitive, Dr. Hoffman received
Advisement General Office on the Main
The internship program is limited to
"I n light of increasing co ncern over
the B.A. a.nd Ph.D. in ·physics fr.o m
Street Campus.
graduate students and principally to
the ultim ate safety of nuclear reactors,
master's degree. candidates drawn from
Cornell, thelatterih1939.
I.,. ... ..,.~-~--~
t~e investigation is urgent," he added.
academ1C!. untts engaged in cooperation
From 1940 to tg:.f4,.. he JoYOr.k.e.d:; ~.~ct"j~:n~~ ~~ .... ·"~~~J;L~"~
with the Center on ~ continuing basis.
The majority 9f nuclear power plant's
physicist i n Washington for. . the Carnegie
Graduate students throughout. lhe
are centered a(ound reactors in which
~~:~~~':ds~n~_ Jhe National Bureau· of
Dr. iohn C. Lane has been reappointed
Unfversit}t-oire, hoWe~er, . eligible to app-·
heated uranium oxide fuel rods are cool" He was a scientist of.abilitv and into a seco:1d three-year term as c'hairman
ly.
ed with water unOer high p.,essure. If a
tegr.ity, characterized by a sense of
of the Depart ment of Political Science.,
1ft Selecting interns, academic records
seCtion of pipe which returns from. the
In announcing the decision, Presiden t
humHity," Dr. Lyle Borst, U/8 professor
will be considered, alorfg with approsteam generator should rupture, the
of physics, says of Dr..Hoffman. ''We will
Robert l. Ketter exp ressed co nfidence
priate matching of interests and needs
reactor system would lose its coolant at
miss his wise cOunsel."
that Dr. Lane would " continue the ada rapid pace.
among all parties (applicant, sponsoring
·
. Dr. Hoffman is survived by his wife,
mir.able record already-established" duragericy, and ~niversity) . Motiv.ation,
Without the coolant, fuel rod
Ruth ,t._Woson,s , "abrotheran~asister. ·
ing .hi s Hrs t term , which b eg an
temperafure rises substaqtiall y and the
maturity, ·and the appropriateness of an
September
1, 1972.
e me rgency core cooling system takes
int-ernship experience within the
Dr. Lane joined the facult y as an assisstudent's entire program will also play a
over. pumping coolant .from a standby
tarll
professor
in 1960, and later served as
·.
tank into the reactor core.
part in the selection process, Dr. Preston
assistant dean in 1he College .of Arts arid
Neither the State University Board of
However, when ihe cold coolarl;l consaid.
..
Sciences, as well a,...... ice chairman of 't he
Trustees nor local campus councils have
tacts the hot f-uel rods, . steam is
Most inter!fthip assignments will inPolitical Science Depart men I.
the power to fine students for ..violations
generated and back pressu re is buili up.
volve a re~arch dimension. Specific
He is active in Town of Amherst
of rules, State Attorney Gene ral louis J.
Tliis back pressure causes ste'aJll binding
research tasks may deal-with internal a·d :
pOlitics, and earlier this Year developed a
Lefkowitz has advised SUNY Chancellor
which-in turn is n}sp.onsi ble for a slowministration, political-administrative
course on Watergate .whidi was offered
Ernest Boyer.
down in the cooling process. The fuel
relationships, inte rgovernmental
to about 1)0 students . .
Lefkowitz further ad vised the
relationships, decision processes and
·rod 't empe rature continues rising and, if
.- A native .of Hannover,- Ger"lany, Dr.
Chancellor that the -Trusiees and local
allowed to go above ·2,200 degrees F,
criteria as. well as specific substanti\Je
lane serv'ed oti tHe faculties of"Columco uncils also lack authority to impose
could threaten the entire_reactor system.
problems and areas.
bia,
CCNVf arid Brookiyll Cdlli!ge befor&lt;:
arid collecL fi.~es by withholding
. " We believe,". Dr. Chon suggested,
Application forms · and a· brochure
~
jdihing-U/8.
diplomas and tran~cripts .
describing the program in funher detail
"that .by JJSing a combined injection of
Such power, according to Lefkowitz,
coolant through more t.h an ofte port, the
ane available fron:1 Ms. Geraldine A.
can be granted only by the Legislature.
steam generated in the reactor core will
Kogler, Center for Policy Studies, 240
.R..epresentatives from four universities
According to 'a UPI repon, Boyer had
Crosby Hall; telephone: 831~ - - -be re-conde nsed and back pressure
and the HEW Divi~ion of Nursing will at·
asked Lefkowitz fof a ruling on fines in
reduced. This ~auld provide a much
tend an invitational meeting December
the wake of complaints from college ad '
faster _flow of coolant into the core and
19 sponsored.by the U/B Department of
mi[listrators that present penalties are
eliminate ihe possil&gt;llity· of .Juel rods
The $Prch commiuee for chairman of ·
- Social and Preventive Medidne to dise ither too strong or too ineffectUal.
melting down due to increased heat."
the Depanment of Curriculum Developcoss the .latest developmentS in research
~ Expulsion EJnd suspension are often
This approach has also been advanced
ment and lnsuuctional Media (faculty of
on nurse practitioners.
·
"too stringent sanctiohs to be imposed on
by some reactor vendors, but the exact
Educational Studies) is eager to receive
The U/8 depan.,.,nt is currently constudents who violate rules, while dis- .
physical phenomena which take place
1
names of possible candidates, Com- ·
ducting
a
project-to
evaluil)e
some
150
ciplinary probatiOn· seems to lack any imin the ~cheme have·not yet been studied.
mlttee Chairman Wade Newhouse of
~federally funded traiAing pr&lt;&gt;grams iri.expact-at an; th_e UPI repon noted.
- " Contrary · to the practice in some
law and Jurisprudence has announced.
te nded roles for nu~. Funded. by a
European· countries, the United ~ States
Because of budgetary considerations,
major .. federal contract; the project
· Atomic Energy Commission requires a
the search is being- fimited to present •
· evaluation inclt:ides the eyectiveness of
thorough understanding of the basic
U/B faculty, Dr. Newhouse said.
nurse practitioner preparation, the role
physical mec~anism which can yield a
~lnees ma~ Pe frc&gt;M •ny. University
or nurses in v.a rious employment
new 'evaluat·ion model' ~fore 11 design
1
-department, and · Affirmative Action
situations, and how nurses function to
improvement is incorporated into the
guidelines will be observed, he in·
provi'de primary care in communities.
existing nuclear safety system," pr. Chon
dicated.
.
'Pooled exP.,nise from the."instiJutions
noted.
.
:
-'
·
Members of the search committee are :
represented at the December 19 meeting
"AlthoUgh_it is highly unlikely ;harthis
Dr. "ltlchard Salzer (elementary and
will aid in further deve)opmenLof the
remedial educadon), Dr. ·Charles Fall
loss-of-coolant accident would occur,
U/ 8 project, which is reteiving national
nuclear ensineers are nevertheless con-.
(social, philosOphlc;al and historical founattention.
· '·
cerned for reactor safety under all possidations of educalion), Dr. Alben Pautler
· Dr. Arnold C..,!!ellinger, director of
ble circumstances," he added.
(curriculum developrnea! and instrucevaluation for the.Healti&gt;Nurse Clinician
Regarding the use of nuclear power in
tional medlal,...-d departmental student
Program at Wayne Stale University. Is to
the future and wjth respect to ~nt enrepn!leftlaliwe John Koullournpas.
be lhe featur.ed speaker. Other par·
vironmental prplolems, · Dr. Chon ·sees
Names of nominees should be
ticipants ane from McMaster University,
n_uclear pOWer as a. :necessary "evil" to
fCHWarded as soon as possible to Prof.
!Jt'ive~_ity ·of Rochester;- University of
' Newhouse, 412 O'Brian Hall, Amherst
supportfuture energy needs. ·
l)lonh "Carolina and the Division of NurCampus.
"~emembering the limited oil and
sing of HEW.

Services planned
for Dr. Hoffman

Ex-students must
"reapply biV ..,._.., -

.:.;OJ:
in P.olitical Scietite

.state nixes

fines

4'

Research meeting

Nominees~

.,

.

�l

Deeember 12, 1974

.

7

New~ict-·anhounced fpr · . ·; •

aw~mg~umo~d~~

New _y,_ive~s!ty policies and
procec:Kires J)ertammg to undergraduate
degrees and certificates of achievem~nt
awarded posthumously have been endorsed by the Faculty Senate Executove
Committee and by the University Council
and are now in effect, Charles H.V. Ebert,

These can be wa~only at the respective levels.)
b. The student must have met the basic
degree requirements set by New Yprk
State, i.e., 120 credit hours with an
overall GPA of 2.0. (If a student dies
while enrolled in his last term toward a

University dean for undergraduate

degree program the courses in which he

education, advised department
chairmen, deans of schools and diredors
of degree programs this week.
These provisions fill a long-felt need
a.nd establish a University-wide
procedure, Ebert said.
The new policy is as follows:
A. Undersraduate Desrees Awarded
PosthU11101H!y
1. The Dean of the Divi~ion of
Undergraduate Education will recom-

was passing will be counted toward the
120-hour m i nf~ um credit required
for a degree.)
2. In each ease the Dean of the Divisian of Undergraduate Education will
ascertain th e specific fa ct&gt; and will
1recomme nd act ion to the Preside nt , ineluding the possibility of award ing Latin
honors through the appropriate De ans. '

mend a posthumous degree under the
following conditions:

a. The student must have been
accepted, and cle ared for graduation, by
a department or program. (A department

may wa iv_.E)..,part of its requirements as
long as t!li S.. -~)iOn dQeS"'(IoJ'- affect
~~\ver~~ty and~or., F~culty requi~~ments.

B. Certific~te of Achiewement

1. In all cases wh e re a stude nt d oes not
qualify for a degree, a Certifi cate of

Achieve me nt is to be issued by the Divisio n o f U ndergraduate Edu cation wit h

e ndorse me nt by th e appropriate department, school, o r program .

2. The certifi cate sho uld be composed

ad hoc since it is doubtfu l that any standard form will cove r th e rat he r wid e ly
va rying ci rcumstances that ca n be ex pected . Moreover, the design of in-

Help asked for needy
The Community Action Corps is seekin g toys, cann ed goods, and warm winte r
clothin g for distribution in the commun ity. Ite ms to be donated should be
bro ught to the CAC o ffice, 345 Norton,
be twee n 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. The office wi ll
be o pe n until Decembe r 21 and will
reopen next se meste r. Contributions,
parti cularly of warm clothes in good condition , will be wj&gt;lcome both be fore and
· afte r the holidays.

d ividual ce rt ifi ca tes sho uld not pose a
pro ble m since we are deal ing wit h a
re lative ly small num ber of cas.es.
3 . Follow in g th e e xa m ple of
de partm en tal hono rs, it is suggested that,
at th ei r d iscretio n, the departments,
sch o o ls, o r programs reco m mend
honors designated " with distinction,"
" with hig h di stin ction," or " with hi ghest
disti nction ," a nd sUch oth e r recognitio ns
of acad e mi c pe rfo rmance as are relevant
to the specific case under co nside ration.

joiJ . . . .illtj§
h~n , , "l , c.u: o: ~ . ~-tCULTY
•
M!i-PI ~..Ssbl';"&lt;!/i~col'n,gineeo:ing, pos&gt;iAg'no.- F-4194 . .

~~~Ji(lt/,A.~sbd,ate PrOfeS&gt;t;t,,CI)emica/ Engineering, F-419S.
V15il1n'g ;l..ssoaate Professor (Spring 1975), Mathem atics, F-4196".
Associate or Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, F-4197.
Assistant/ Associate/ Full Professor, Industrial EngineerinR. F-4198.
Assistant/ Associate/Full Professor, Industrial Engineerin g, F-4199.
Assistant Professor, Environmental Analysis and Policy, F-4200.
Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering, F-4201 .
Assistant/Associate Professor. Electrical Engineering, F-4202.
Assistant Professor, Organization and Human Resources, F-420) .
Assistant/ Associate Professor, Civil Engineering. F-4204.
Ass~stant Professor, Electrical Engin,eering, F-4205.
Ass1stant Professor, Electrical Engineering, F-4206.
Assistant/ Associate/Full Professor, Engineering Science, F-4207.
Assistant/As~ociate/Full Professor, Engin~ering Science, F-4208.
Assistant/ Associate/Full Professor, Industrial Engineering, F-4209.
Assistant Librarian, University Libraries, F-4210.
Lecturer (12 months), Chemistry, F-4211 .
Research Professor/ Executive Officer, Chemistry, F-4212.
Assistant Professor of Accou,nting and Finance, Operations Analysis, F4213.
'Assist~!'.' Ct-ssociate) Professor, School of Management, F-4214.
lns~ructor/Assistant Professor, Physical Therapy, F-4215.

Nll'
Director of Day Care Center, School" of Social Work, PR-1, posting no. B-

~1

(reposting).

Technial Assistant, Survey Research Center, PR-1 , B-4096.
Assistant Dean, Law and Jurisprudence, PR-3, B-4097. •.
Admissions Counselor, Admissions and Records, PR-2, B-4098.
Associate Dean for Stl/dent and Academic Affairs, School of Med icine,

PR-6, B-4099.
Technical Assistant, University Libraries, PR-1 , B-4100.
Technical Assistant, University Libraries, PR-1, B-4101 .
Technical Assistant, University Libraries, PR-1, B-4102.
Assistant Facilities Program Coordinator, Facilities Planning, PR-2, B-4103.
Technical Assistant, Educational Opportunity Center, PR-1, B-4104.
Assistant Facilities Program Coordinator, ICC, PR-2, 8-4106.
Programmer Analyst, University Computing Services - Administrative

Computing, PR-2, B-4105.
Fot additional information concerni~g these jobs and for details of NTP
openinp tliroughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at
these locations: ·
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, B~ilding 4236, next to
afeterla; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health Sciences
Buildln&amp; in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the corridor betWeen
Room 141 and the.J.obby; .6. Lockwood, sround floor in corridor next to vendins machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public lnformatioft Office; 8. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
Parker Enslneerln&amp; in corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 151 floor,
Housins Office area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Norton
Union, Director'• Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
Room 106; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth ftoor tAmherst Campu5).
5tltle 1.Jn1-*r ltlluffalo Is an Equal Opportunity/~ Action~

Charter recoml11elldationsr------colleges as outlined in the Prospectus for
the College5, there is no question that
the unit should be given a charter," the
chartering panel admitted.
But, the group majority said, it found
several problems in recommending a
charter:
" 1. There .![e two administrative office rs. The Prospectus calls 'lor an 'administra t ive Officer .' However, the
charte r states that one coordinator is~the
representative to the College Council,
and di scussions between the Dean of the
Colleges and Women's Studies College
have d isclosed that one coordinator will
as sum e t he responsibility of 'administ-rati ve officer' in interactions with
the Dea n o f the Colleges. This agreeme nt may possibly meet the intent of the
Prospectu s.
·
" 2. The college pursues a singlemi nded goal, th at goal being perceived
as th e freeing of women from the oppression of a male dominated society.
The idea that women are, indeed, oppressed is accepted by the college as a
no n-de batable fa ct. This ·raises the questio n o f whe the r or not the college is as
committed to the concept of academic
fr ee d o m a s th ey a re to women's
freedo m.
" 3. The e nrollme nt in the college is
o ve rwhel min gl y fe male. Th is is not surprisin g. given the purpose of the college.
However, evide nce exists that males are
de nied access to ce rtain courses . . . . This
({romp&lt;~J:e 1. col. 4)
latter fact is vie we d by the committee as
yea r.
a clear case of sex d iscri mination. The
The an ima ls the mselves are more excommittee is willi ng to accept the idea
pe nsive than in the past, said Dr. Graft o n.
th at some co urses, o r sections o f courses, .
If you need primates for your re search
sho uld be offe re d onl y to women if the
program. you are paying 69 per cent
c&lt;ofl ege ca n give justificatio n for such acmore pe r monke y than last yea r. Rats and
tio n. Indica ti o ns are that the colle ge is
other an im als co mm o nl y u se d in
willing to d iscuss this last point and that
resea rch are up 15 pe r ce nt.
rhap s this proble m can be resolved.
pe
Ubraries Also Hard Hit
" 4. The use of the te rms ' wo man ' and
The libraries is anot he r area hard hit
' wo me n' in th e c harte r. le ads to confuby inf lati o n . Acco rdi ng to Dire c to r
sio n, especia ll y if they are to be used in
Eld red Smith , the o ve ra ll infla tionary ra te
both a ge ne ric and specific sense."
for library mat e ri als is curre ntl y at least 15
{for Women's Studies responses to
pe r cent a year. The librari es' proble m is
these
points, see last week's Reporter.)
co mpo u,nded b~ the fact th!)t !_he amount
The committee majority called for the
of info rmation with which th e libraries
fo
llowing
conditions for chartering: " 1)
mu st deal increases at a ra te o f 4 o·r 5 pe r
Women's Studies Co llege commit's itself
ce nt a yea r.
to
equal
opportunrty
and access to its
As Mr. Smith noted, th e re are pe aks in
courses and acti vities to all persons
the ge ne ra l inflat io nary trend. The cost
regardless of sex, except in narro":"IY
of journals in scie nce and engineering .
construed and justified cases; 2) that
fi e lds has increased an average of 30 per
Women's Studies College redrafts its
ce nt ove r last yea r. Some have doubled
charter to clearly indicate when it uses
in price.
..
the term ' woman' · or .'women' in a
Pa pe r is skyrocketing in price, a situageneric and when in an excluSive sense
tio n exace rbated by shortages. No. camin its charter document·. ''
pus de partment is l,{naffected by the risTwo members of the panel issued a
ing cost of pape r, but anyone who prodreport, calling for unqualified
minority
uces a publication is particularly hard hit.
chartering of Women's Studies.
' ·Take th e University catalogues. The
Prosressiwe Education CoUeSe ·
catalogue budget has"not increased since
The
Charter
Committee
recommend1970, according to Bulletin Editor Nancy
ed that the charter application of the
Cardarelli, but the cost of paper has
Progressive Education College be
doubled. Each Graduate School bulletin,
denied, but that it be granted workshop
for example, currently costs over a dollar
status, effective with th.e Spring 1975
pe r copy to produce.
semester, because: ·
As a result of higher production costs,
" 1. The eollege has defined-..s one of
many colleges now charge for catalogues
its educational missions the esublishinstead of giving them away on request
ment of a eurrieulum introducing the
(U/ B is not allowed to charge under State
field of education as one of the liberal
law). Some schools have replaced the
arts and aimed primar-i ly at untraditional catalogue with a tabloid
dergraduates who do not intend to
public;ation, and others are depe&gt;ding
become teachers. While such a prosram
on greater selectivity in distribution to
is undoubtedly of real value and has not
lessen the strain on their hard-pressed
been available elsewhere in the Universibudgets.
ty,
several faeulty members in the Faeulty
Craft Supplies Up
of Educational Studies recently Mve
If y9 u're thinking of an afternoon of
shown
serious and concrete interest in
pot-tHrowing or jewelry-making in the
developing such a prosram. A major
Craft Center to -get away from It all,
concern revolves around how these
forget it. According to Mr. Joe Fischer,
offerinp would differ from regular
di~ector of the Crea~ve Craft Center, the
Educational Studies courses, and not In
proce of· clay jumped 12 per cent in a
'
fact, duplicate each other.
month .
"2. Substantial changes in the perChemicals used ..iA making glazes for
sonnel of the college, coupled with the
pottery are both more expensive and
decision of its new mas1610 bqin a full
harder to get. Tin oxide rose 31 pet cent
. year's sabbatical leave, indlq(llr that
in a year. Barium carbonate is,in conten~
workshop
status is presently die most
tion for inflationary increase of the year
desirable situation for Prosresslve Educa~
with a jump ol230 per cent.
tion ... . Simultaneously, the Faeulty of
As to precious metals, "they have
Educational Studies will be able to
jumped out of sight," Fischer said, which
properly consider the development ol
puts them in the same leasue as most
appropriate program• at the ungoods and services used on campus.
dergraduate level which may complement activities of the workshop."
3. The possibility exists tNt there may
~--still remain !lOme areas of philosophical
fedeo.i
Ctalllw.- ......... IDdisasfeement
among some members of
their . . . . . . . . .. - - 1D Mrthe college, and lime should help -to
1L"-I..,MIIy,
darify and resplve the present uncertain
dimate.
·
(from 1»1e J, col. 4)

Vico's format. The issue, therefore, is
mentioned only to point out that the
continuity of this college )Viii depend
upon the continuous involveme nt of its
faculty."
Currentl y, the Vico res idential
program ha s over 50 student participants,
most of whom reside in the Ellicott
Complex. The college is developing a
" li ving-learning" e nvironment similar to
that which ha s been achieved in, oth ~
colleges with long-stand ing reside nt ial
programs. However, the committe e said,
Vico " has had access 10 a residential
facility fo r le ss than a semeste r, and to
judge its success at this poin t would be
unfair . .. . It is fo r this reaso n th at we
have re co mme nde d a charter of limited
d uratio n. It iS anticipa ted that at th e end
.o f two full yea rs o f o pe ratio n, Vico
Co ll ege w il l b e bette r a b le to
de mo nstrate that it has esta blishe d a
resident ia l prog ram eq ua l to a nd co mpatible with its aca de mic progra m."
Two me inbers of the committee ,
no ne the less, bro ke with the majo rity
ca ll ing for a full fi ve-yea r charte r for
Vico.
Women's Studies College
"If we vie w Wome n's Stud ies College
fro m the sta ndpo int of ·th e ge ne ral purposes of the acade mic aspe cts of th e

Inflation-----

--. --La-

=::r::----

�December 12, 1974

John lord O'Brian Hall, Amherstl
3:30p.m.
.

THURSDAY-12
DIPAIITMENT Of PfDIATIIICS
NEUROI.OGICINRlltOPATHOlOCIC

CONFaiNCfl

.. Several cases will be discussed with strong

neurological. neuror adiolog ical and
neuropatholog ical input. Patho log y_
Conference Room, ChikJren's Hospital, 8":30
a.m.
CONTINUINGDENTALEDUCATION
SlMINAIIt

.

Concepts o f Occlusion Applied to Everyda y

Dentist ry. Or . Ronald Ju vis, i l ss ista nt

CRL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

Call831 -2836 for registration information.

pro fessor and c ha irm an, Depa rtme nt of
Biology, Uni\lersity of Rochester. 134 Health
Sciences, 4:15 p.m.

Common Antigen (C.A.), Dr. Hi Yun Whang.

Second fl oor board room, Childre n's Hospital,
12noon.
RECTRICAL ENGINEfRING
SEMINARt
Co mpu l c&gt;r Communica tion Ne t work s.

Pro fessor Mischa Schwartz,· De partmen t o f
Electrical Engineering and Compute r Science,
Columbia Uni\le rsity. 150 Parke r, 1 :30 p.m.

AI'PI.IID MATHEMATICS
SlMINARf
No n· Linear Stabilir y Pro blems, Pro fesso r
Frank Ho tpensteadt , Co urant Institute o f
Mathematical Sciences. Rm....._ 44, 4246 Ridge
Lea, 2:30p.m.
MECHANICAL ENGINEfRING
DEPARTMENT SlMINARt
Rensselaer's Unmanned Martian Rover and
Irs Srairclimbing Spirloff, Dr. George N. San dor, Rensselae r Polytechnic Instit ute. 104
Parke r, 3:15p.m.

ECONOMICS SEMINAR#
Obse{Vabilit y. Measurem ent Error. and rhe
O ptimal Use o f Info rmation for Monetary
Policy, Dr. Roger Waud, professor o f
economics, University of Nonh carolina, 107

Sabbarh Service at 8 p.m. A Torah study ses·
sion is followed by an Oneg Shabbit. 40

PHYSICS COUoQuiUMf
Electrons on the Surface of Liqui Helium
- A Two-Dimension~l Wigne_r So rdl, Or. P.
M. Platzi"I)On, Bell Telephone L1boratories,
Murray Hill, N.J. 111 Hochstetter, 3:30p.m.
MAtHEMATICS COUOQUIUMf
Minimal-Program Length Definitions o f Ent rop y. Dr. Roben Solov~ y, W~tson Research
Center, IBM . 4246 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SlMINARt
Development of a New Stabilized Sub-lin~u~ l Nitroglycerin Tablet, Pete r Yap, U/ 8
graduate student. D-170, Bell Facility, 4 p.m.

professor, Oepiinment of Fixed Prosthodonlics. and Diplomate, America n Board of
Prosthodonlics, 232 Norton, 9 a.m.-c:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the School of Dentistry.
DIPARTMENT Of•PmiATRICS
SlMINARt
lmmuno lo~ical Studies on Entero -bacterial

HIURHOUSE'

ampus,

CaJ&gt;:"n Blvd. ,
INTERNAnONAL FOLK
DANCING'
Instruct ion for beginners. 233 Norton, 8-11
p.m .
Presented by Balkan Folk Danci ng.
UUABALM"
Th e l as t of Shei la ( Ro ss). Nort o n
Co nference Theat re, call 831-5117 for times.
Admissio n charRe-

SATURDAY-14

lfCTUREf
In fo rmation in the Egg. Dr. Paul R. Gross,

FRENCH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Muriel (Resnais). 147 Diefendorf, 5 and 8
p.m. No ad missio n charge.

HIUEL HOUSE'
Shabbat Morni ng Ser\li ce led I:Sy Rabbi Ely
Braun, followed by a Kidd ush , 10 a.m. 40
.._ Capen 81\ld.
CHAIAD HOUSE'
Sabbath service at bot h houses, 3292 Main
St. and 165 Maplemere Rd., 10 a.m.

HIWLHOUSE•

" Drop- In " Night. 40 Ca~n 81\ld., 7-11 p.m.
PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS MEETING '
All Psych ology majo rs in te rested · in
Psychology Gra d uate Trai ning Programs
shqU id attend a meeti ng in 339 Norton, 7;30
p.m.
PHYSICAL-QRGANIC CHEMISTRY
LECTURE SMI!l5f
Molecular Catalysis o f Intersystem Cro ssin!{
.ancl Non-Radiative Deca y, Professor George
Hammond, Un i\lersity of Ca lifornia at Santa
Cruz , 362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
U/ B STRINGS CONCERT'
The' UI B Strings. co ncluded by Pame la
Gearhart, p resent a concert. Bai rd Recital
Hall. 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the DeparTme nt of Music.

WRESTUNG'
UI B \IS . Lock Ha ven Stare. Clark Ha ll , 6 p.m.
No ad mission charge.
UUABFILM••
Thf' Lasr of Sheila (Ross, "1972). NorTon

Co nferen ce Theatre, ca ll 831-511 7 for times.
Admission charge.

FRIDAY-13

HOCkEY•

UI B vs. Ithaca College. Holiday Twi n Rinks,
3465 Broadway, students may pick up free
tickers in the Clark Hall ticket office befo re
thE' ni~ht of the game, S2 genera l p ubl ic, 7:30
p.m.
CULTURAL NAVIDENO '
Fo lklo ric songs, music and d ance. Puerto
Rican Com munity Ce nter, 261 Swa n Street, 8
p.m.-2 a. m. No ad missio n cha rge.
Presented by Pue rto Rica n Stud ies .
STUDENT RECITAL'
Suzanne Sonnye Short. lute and guitar.
Baird Recital Hall , 8 p .m. No adm ission
charge.

M USIC PERFORMANCE'
An e\lening of Sephardic, Yeme nite and
Hebrew music featu ring Sofi a Noel, soprano,
and Pedro Elias, guita r. Jewish Center of
Greater Buffa lo , 767 Delaware A\le., 8:30 p.m.
Ad mission cha rge: S2 students and senior
citizens. S2.50 Ce nter me mberS, S3 ge ne ral
p ublic.
Sponsored by the Jewish Center and the
U/ B Departme nt of Spanish, Italia n and Po r-

char~e.

St Proid Resistant Nephrotic Syndrom e in
Children. Or. Tadla Ba liah. Kinch Auditoriu m,
Ch ildre n's. Hospi tal. 10 a.m.

INTERDISCIP.J.INARY GRADUATE
GROUP IN NEUROSCIENCE
SEMINARf
In herited Retina l Defi:enera tion in Mice and
Rats, Dr. Matthew LaVail, Depart ment of

Neuroscience, Children's Hospital Medicci l
Cente r, Boston. Second floor confe rence
room, Bldg. A, 2211 Mai n St reet, 11 a.m.

Noel

· Soprano plans concert
The Oepart:..ent of Spanish, Italian and
Po~uguese, in cooperation with the
Jewish Center of Buffalo, will present
Spanish soprano Sofia Noel in concert
witli guitarist Pedro Eliasf Saturday.
December 14, al 8:30 p.m. at the Center,
7ffl Delaware Avenue.
Madame Noel and Elias are in this
country from their native Spain on a
short concert tour and .will perform a
program of Sephardic, Hebrew,
Yemenite and Jewish music.
Madame Noel has appeared in conceriS throughoul Europe and the United
States and has more tMn «ll recitals lo
her credit in addition 10 ten recordings.
'l:ler wide and varied repertory indudes
sonp of many lands and different
interpn!{ed in their origi~al

=
=

~ Elias was· born in Tunis. He
pew Ill' In the musical envlronmenl of a
Sepharilic ClOIIImunlty. In Madrid and
SeVIlle he earned his unlvenlty dqree in
an:hlh!ctwe and at the same time con-

linlll!lf.IIIQ
~
Jhepltar.
. for
~
concert ant $2
~
~~

~ through the_

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY
SEMINARf
Retrograde Axonal Tra nsport in rhe Visual
System, Dr. Je nnife r La Vail, Depart me nt o f
Neuroscience, Child re n's Hospital Medica l
Cente r, Boston. 108 She rman, 1 p. m.
PHILOSOPHY COUOQUIUMf
The Inve ntion of Substance. Professor W.
K.C. Guthrie, Cambridge University, U/ 8
Visiting Professor, Departme nt · o f Classics.
Rm. 14, 4244 Ridge lea, 3:30p.m.
CHRISTMAS PARTYf
The Faculty Club Chri s t~a s pany, for
men1~s only. is scheduled today at che
Facurty Club, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY DIPARTMENT
SEMINARf
Rebreathing, Lung Perfusion, ·and C01 Exchange, Or. Leon E. Farhi. 108 Sherman, 4 p.m.

CHAIAD HOU5P
Sabb.arh .1ervice. preceded by a .study ses·
sion, and foUowed by ~ free .meal,.. at both ·
hovses, 3292 Main St. and 185 Maplemere Rd .,
5:30p.m.
IIOCKEY'

UI B vs. llhO&lt;a Collefl". Ho1idoy Twin Rjnks,
3465 llroodwoy; student&gt; moy pia ap free
ticlteh before the night of the game at the

Cbrlt l:loll ticket offoce, S2 general public, 7:30 ~
p.m.

COI'ilaRT'
The UI B Chamber Wind Ensemble. con·

!'~~~ ·==ta~~:n::o)::ir!i:;
chorae.

HILLR HOUSE'
" Drop-In" night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.

EXHIBITS
LIBRARY txHIBIT
First editions of works by ~muel Becken
fro m the collect ions of Lockwood Memorial
library. 2nd floor balcony, Lockwood . Viewing hours: Mo nday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Continu ing.
LOCKWOOD EXHIBIT
Po lish Collection, e xhibition culled from
the Universit y's co llectio n of more tha n 4,000
\lolumes o f mate rial. First floo r, l ockwood
Memoria l Libra ry. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Continu ing.
STUDENT CRAn EXHIBmON
Wea\ling, pottery, je welry, ena me l and
lea ther crafts wilJ.- be on display through
December 18. Students, staff, faculty and
alu mni working in the Creati\le Craft Center,
Norton Hall , and stude nts registered in the
College 8 craft courses are eligible to e nt er
ihe exhibition. Gallery 219, Norton Hall.
Ho urs: Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Mon_day, Wed nesday and Thursday, 7-10 p.m.;
Su n9ay; 1-4 p.m.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
A selective ~x h ib i t of designs fo r diffe re nt
plays and operas o riginally submitted to the
1974 Sou thern Ill inois University lnterco ll e~iate Cost ume and Scene Desig n
ComPetit ion will be o n display in the Hayes
Hall Lobby,t hrough December U .
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Portr ai t -. o f Youn n Bl ack Pe o p l e .
Ph ot o~raph s by Richa rd Bla u, U/ B assist ant
professor of American STudies. Hayes Hall
Lobby, ()Kember 16-January 31.

NOTICES

tu~u ese.

UUABFfLM••
Dirr y Harry (Siegel). Norton Conference

Theatre, ca ll 631-5117 for times. Admission·

PEDIATRIC STAFF CONFERENCE#

Robert Buhite, president of the New York
State Acade my of Dental Practice Administration; instrudor of implant dentistry, Eastman
Dental Center, Rochester; iind editor. The
Journal of Oral lmplantology. 148 Capen, 9
a.m.-4:30 p.m. For registration information,
call831 -2836 .

CHANUKKAH CANDlES'" - ;
&lt;::hanukkah candles and Menorahs are
available at th e Hillel table in the Norton
Cemer lou nFte and at 40 Cape n Blvd.
CONTACT

SUNDAY-15
INTERNATIONAL FOLK
DANCING•

Some instruction. Fill more Rm., Norton,
8:30·10:30 p .m.
Presented by Balkan Fo lk Dancing.

UUABFILM"
Dirt y Harry (Siegel) . Norton Confe re nce
Theatre, call 831· 511 7 fo r times. Admission
charge.

MONDAY-16
STA'hSTICAL SCIENCE
COUOQUIUMf
Statistics and M edical Decisions, Ptofe6SOr
).A. Anderson, O xford University. Rm. A-;48,
4230 Ridge lea , 4 p.m.

WEDNESDA Y-18
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM

SERIESf

·N icoti namide- NAD Sequence : Electrochem ical- and A llied Chemical Beh~vior,
Professor PJ. Elving, Oni\lersity of Michigari.
70 Acheson, 4 p.m.

PHlSIOLOGY VAfQ CLUB
SEMINA!If
.
Volr~ge ClamP Exp eriments at High
Pressure. Joseph · H~ derson. 108 Shef11lan,
4:30p.m.
UUAifRMS••
.
Di~ ry · o f- a Chambermiiid (Buneul, 1965),
7:~5 p.m. and Le ~mOur~i (Mel\lille, 196n ,
9:05p.m. 140 Capen, no admission chirge.

THURSDAY-19
· CONTINUING DENTAl EDUCA110N

SEMINAIII

Usins Implants with Predictable Success, Dr.

Conlact. a neW"discussion group for resident st udents, meets e\lery Monday in 157
F ill more~ Ellicott Complex, 6-10 p. m.

FINANCIAL AID FOR EOP STUDENTS
All students who ha\le riot fil ed the 1974-75
TAP. forme rly Scho lar lncenti\le, Applicatio n
and BEOG ~ pp l ica t io n shou ld immediate ly
contad their resPective counselors rega rding
the ir curre nt status. Failure to do so can resultin an academic check stop fo r Septe mber 1975
and fi nancial liability fo r tuitio n of 1974-75.
February i is the deadline:
POETRY MAGAZINE
The U/B Lite rary ArtS Co mmittee is publishing a poet ry magazine early next semester.
Anyone in the UIB communitjmay submit up
to three works befofe 1)ec;f!mbet 115tto t'he'
lite rary Artsle omminee, 261 NOrten·. l!.t: '\f r.L.

SPOils .·- '

,,,- ,.

'-'·'"·· ..

"'I I ....

·Sports e~nls sChedUled Detween Dec. 19
.and Jan. 16 include:
WRESTUNC ~ ,U/ 8 vs. U. o f Kentucky. Jan.
9, 7 p .m., Clarl&lt; H~ll.
U/ 8 vs. R.I. T. (Junior varsity}. Jan. 11 , 12:30
p.m., Clark Hall.
U/ 8 vs. R.I. T. (varsity}, Jan. 11, 2 p.m., &lt;;lark
Hall.
No admission charge for studenrs with I.D.,
S2 general public.
IASkETaAU - UI B vs. St. John Fisher
(junior varsity), Jan. 13, 6:30 p.m ., Clvk Hall.
UI B vs. St. franci~ -Pa. (varsiry), Jan. 13, 8:30
p.m. Ciorlt Hall.
No ~dmission charge for sludents with-I.D.,
S2 general public.
#
SI'IIING REGISiKA110N
The Office of ,.Wmissions and Records will
con~ Spring 1975 Rqlstration beginning
Thuooay, Oecembo;r 5. All student&gt; currently

registered at the University Meet only com-plete· a Coune Request Form. All new
.student&gt; lor Spring 1975 must complete a Stu:
dent Dolo Form in order to register. The Of- lice of AdmiHions arid Recolds (Hoyes Annex
Bl 'will be open on the -following dates until
the hour Indicated for Spring Jtealstration:
Dec. 12·13 - 8:30 p.m.; Dec. 16-211- 8:30
p:m.; Del:.'2S&gt;H"...-1211'27 - 4""'P.m~ e.c.
30'31 -4:30p.m.; Jan. 2-3-4:30p .m.

THEATRfi'RfOIIMANCES
PurRe I• preM!nted l!y the Americon
Contemporary Theatre, 1695· Elmwood
at 8:30p.m. Thurs.-Sot. throUgh Dec.
21 . For~.aoU 1175-.51125.
-

A-.

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW-YORK AT BUFFALO
:

.. :

~,.-"

...

-

..··-

/

•·Oftl«h aM Amftiean stPCieets, partoftM~ attHHIInl( tM lniM"nalional f'ood Tullna: held in NOrton on No\'fmbn- 1:\.

~World Women:

They
Must Summon Courage to be Equal

The Twentieth Century is witnessing the most fan tastic scientific and technological development in the
history of mankind. The immense possibilities of
cybernetics· and ~automation are · far from being exhausted: Compare. the progreos that was achieved by
1900 with wluit has been accompliahed by 1974.
But it must be undentood that in our modem
world the development of a nation depends directly
and neceuarily on the development of ita feminine
population. The United Statea. and Ruaaia, the two ·
leadifll[ powers today, prove that. Accordingly, in the
woNt undenlmloped nations, women have been kept
in total subjection. Their only lot has been . the
drud!!ery cl- bouaaliold choreo: And then there is
motherhood. Ae Tillie Oleen put it eo weD, "More
than in any other human relati'!""hip, overwhelmingly more. motherhood meane being inetantly interruptible, raaponoive, noponaible. , .. Unueed capacitiee
atrophy. ceaee to be." However, we do know that
there are waya to provide good care for children eo

women · can actively participate in the general
P"''lffOIIof a nation . .

For the lint time in the hisiory of bumpkind,
women's voicae are being beanland the agee-old &amp;tiff
separation between maacWine and feminine .occupations is being substituted by naw forma. Women
aU oYer tbe world are becoming active in politics timidly maybe, but ilievenibly.
Tha fuDdammtal p!Oblema of human developmmt - the clemopapbic apllllion, tbe eradication cl illitaracy, childrm'a mortality -are p!Oblema
tbat clepand direct.ly Gll .womm'a llct.iona. More ade-

n..__.........._

_L

............ ...
,.. ............ c...,...... - . All'ab:o
·n.

.........._......._.._..,wa..,.."
la...,...........
........-....J .....

quate and just "ways of communication" between
women and men must evolve. In the most developed
countries some solutions h~ve already been put into
practice. In the underdeveloped countries all the work
is to be done. Consequently, while the former countries will be already in the moat advanced stages of
progress, the latter will be still in the rudimentaJy
ones. In Latin America, for example, women have not
yet participated actively in the deatinies•oftbeir countries. Will they be apt to do it eo they can pick up with
· the women in America, for instance!
·

The historic 8cceteration is demanding active
feminine participation everywhere. There must occur
a double interaction: women of the third world must
participate in the dynamic cl development to asaure
themselves aJ complete human beings unfolded to tile
utmost of their mental capacities and abilities and, on
the other band, the very development of their countries demands their active- p,_,.ce, To attain this
goal, these women must summon courage, get ·an
education, and start a ayatematic reflection on their
condition and poeaibilitiea. This ia a complex and difficult task, not many timee favored~ men. But final.
ly in the automation era, I will not say that women
will be free but that they wiD be equal to men. (This
ert.icle was inspired \&gt;y the Brazilian writer Rose
· Marie Muraro'a '"''be Women in tbe Construction of
the.Future World."

Aealped&amp;te.

Guu are ui-ted to be oilly
HO&amp;lMWWe&amp;are.- t H to bediUfent
MotMn ..... upected to~ rUuotH.
Wloelare~ - t e d to be OUIWiueef

.

- N - .......

AAUWGnalee
I

/

The Politics
Of World
Birth Control

""

Robert Malthua, in hia femoua " Eaaay on the Principle of Population" in 1789; aaid that the poor ineiat
• ~ on indulging in large families end as population grows
geometricaUy while food production grows
algebraically, the number of people would outrun the
amount of food and the final result would be poverty
· and starvation. But William Godwin, an early
spcialist, chaDenged the theory, claiming that the real
cause of poverty and starvation was the injustice and
uofair distribution of wealth in society. He aaid that
the solution would be social change and not population control.
-.
The industrialized nations of the world seem to
uphold the Malthusian theory and in recent years
t hey have shown great concern over world population
growth. One wonders-why the concern has gained such
intensity. From one point, t he reason is " fear.'' As the
death rate in the poor nations of the world began
decli nin g dramatically, the rich , industrialized
nations speculated that the " mobile masses" of the
" population explosion" could become a threat es- .
pecially when they are hungry and jobleaa. The population could "go communist," upset the balance of
power or faise prices to reduce access to cheap raw
materials. and Western influence might begin to
cru mble. Though those in the West deny the reason of
"fear," it gives an insight into the Western world's involvement in world population growth control.
To confuse issues further, the Western world cites
population growth as the major obstacle to the
economic advancement of the developing nations.
The solut ion seemed simple, they thought - birth
control. Birth control, scientists held, " will change
t he world.' ' Some parts of the wOrld believe that this is
a world-wide capitalist conspiracy. Birth control
seems to be aimed mainly at non-white populations.
So fa r, the "world "hasn't changed" in the d irection of
population controL Instead the " fear" seems to be
materializing - radi cal, social, and political changes
becoming continuous events.
A look at the Chinese society may help to prove
William Godwin 's assertions t hat population growth
does not hinder economic advancement. In 'Fhe
People's Republic of Chin a, for example, several
millions of people are still being born, yet they are all
fed. It is in the same conte:~t that African nations
should reconsider t he population growth control being
foisted upbn t hem by the Western world. More attention.should be directed towljfdS equitable distribution
of wealth arid opportunities rather than towards
deciding the number of people who should be living at
a certain t ime. Who has ever heard a"ny of the ad vocates of population control say t hat there are too
many upper-middle class or !.o9 many Anglo-Saxona
in tbe world? It is alwaya "too many Asians (Indiana)"
or "too many Africans, " etc.
Fear bas never built empires, neither will it create
a better world. People are precious and beautiful and
should never be thought of in terms of "negative
dependency ratios" or "frightening growth rates."
Our ethnocentric, aelliab and parochial att.itudee
blind us from the realitiea of the world. Though the
Western world bas more power and wealth, the future
of humanity reata on these realities of life. The aooner
this is recognized, the be~r.
-Aneae L. Nnollm

Islam: 'Perfect
Peace with God'
The recentemphuiaon the Middle Eaat is due undoubtedly to ita impeXtance ae a ouppljer of a ocan:e
and ni!Celllaly commodity. It......, otzanp tbat very
little attention has been given to this paJt clthe ,..md
except when the oo-called c:ivilized world reeoiled ever
eo bypocriticaUy at ''terroriem" and "_..;au"
while they guzzled at a ridieuloua rate, and at evea
more ridiculous priceo, the.........,. cltbe lelioD- , ·
However, a new focua baa emerpd, and with it a
new a.....ene. cl lalam, conaidered tbe ......,tin!!
factor·in tbe Arab Middle Eaai ftoat.
Miauncleratancli begina wi~ tbe _,. name cl
this religion. It ia oftAID rel'ened to In the W..t aa
Mohammedaniam after tbe prophet wbo pve it
definita form. From tht! Mualim panpact1w, tbia Ia,
inaccunte and olfelllive boca,_ Molwnmed clld DOt
shape this religion. God did. Mobammed menl,y
transmitted it from God to hia people. Tba tltli Ia
offenaive becauae it IIMi' tliii ilia~ that Jalam
f.,.._ em Mohammecl, the 11W1, iaotMd cl God. To
name Cbriatianity after Chriat, they aay Ia &amp;tll!c, l'ar
Cbriotiana believe that Chriat Gocl"But to caU
lalam Mobammedaniam ia lib c:a11Inc ~.
St. Pauliam. Tha piOpar 11111D8 l'ar tbia nlipoa Ia
lalam. Thia Ia tranalated aa "the P.ll'fect paace thet
comee when ...... life ia rmzeudoiud to God." Tha

wont "Allab" 11 rormea "'jaiDinc die cWlDita mt1c1e
- al (meaning the) with Dlab (God). UWally, Allab
means·~ God." Nota God l'ar then iaoaly .... De
God.
.
•
Tha dutiee cl tbe Moalem an lncorporated ill the

~

�or

hum~~f;~:-.:~·..: ·:~ -:··:, .~_ .. _;.: ~~=-~

Th¢ ILC: ·Why

Have It at All? .

lDil'ORIAL.
.. =-;_j·

.....a.

Five Pillan ollidam. The lint pillario·w...,••
orient ito
adberenta' li- in oome way.ln oome reH,iooo d&gt;eoe
pmnioe ""' aimply eaumed; in moot reliciODO they
are articulated and condenoed into 10111e oort ol creed. .
Tbe creed ollidam ia brief, aimple and explicit: ''There ·
ill no God but Al1ab and Mohammed:ia bia prophet."
Tbe aec:ond pillar ollslam ia prayer in which the
Koran adjureo1&gt;be faithful to "be conatant." If we ask
why the Muslim is admonished to "be constant" jp.
prayer, the ·basic reaoon ·implied by all the Koran's
direct otatementa is to keep man'slife in perspective.
Tbe moot important and difljC!!!t iesoon man must
· learn ia that he ia not God. Creature rather than
Creator, man bas nevertbelesi an inveterate tendency
to place himself at the center of the. universe;
hOwever, when be tries to play God; everything goes
wrong. Man is creature; bia life slips into place and
ateys in prOper perspective only when be recognizes
tha)-: faCt. When one asks, therefore, why does a
Moilem' pray, in part it ia in resi&gt;onse to the natural
yearning of the human to pour out bia love and
gratitude toward bia Creator. But accompanying tbjs
desire ia a need to see life in the proper perspective.
Tbe third ·pillar of Islam ia Charity. Material
things ""' important in life, but some people have
more than otheq. Islam turns to the practical question of what should be done about tbe situation. .Its
ans,..,r is simple: Those wbo have much should Jift
ihe burden those who lire less fortun.ate.l,{ohammed instituted the welfare state mthe seventh century,
by prescribing a -graduated tax on the hayes to relieve
the have-nots.
...
'J1!e fourth ' pillar of Islam is the observanC!! of
Ramadan. Ramadan ia Islam's holy month in-the Arabian calendar':... holy because during it, Mohammed
received his initial commill8ion as a prophet and ten
years later made.. liis historic Hijra from Mecca to
Media. To -commemorate these two occasions ablebodied Moalems~t involved in crises like wars or unavoidab.le ;;iQUI'D~Y • .fast during .Ramadan. From
dayhi!Oak ·!O the. setting of the. sun, neither food nor
drink paaseo their lips; after sundown they may partake-in moderation. Being a month in thelunar calen"
dar, Ramadan rotates around the year. Why does the
Koran requ;n, such rigid fasting? For one thing fasting
makes one think. For another, it' teaches &amp;elfdiscipline; be who can endure.its demands will ·have
1011 difficulty in controlling his appetites at other
times. Fasting underscores man's dependence upon
- God. Man, says the Koran, is as 'frail as the rose petal;
nevertheless he assumes airs and pretensions, Fasting
reminds him of bia ....ntial frailty and dependence.
Finally, fasting ael)litizeo comp888ion. Only those who
have been hungry know what hunger is .and means. If
a man~:~ for.t.birt.y .days .)Vi thin B.Y'!&amp;' he .will
be apt to listen more ·ca~;efully the next time he is approach'ed:!Jy sqmeone in need.
~·
~laiD's fifth_pi!lar ia pilgriJ!lage. Once during his
lifetime every \ Moslem who is physically and
economically in a position to do ao is expected to
journey to Mecca·.wliere God's ~velation was first dis.. closed . .'l'he basic purpose of the pilgrimage ia to
heighten the pilgri"!.'s devotion-to G:od and his re~eal- .
ed will. But the practil:e: bas SOIJie ancillary effects as
well. it 18, for e~J!lple,' a, reminiler of .the equality
amdr!g men. UJIOII reaching~ecca pilgrims remove _
their usual clothea- which tend -to cany clear indicationli of theii aoc:W ~tatU. and don twQ simple
sheet-like garmentS. AU diitiDctions·are removed, and
men ' oW\d ~oil! tlleir God ill their undivided

· EvelY reJi«jon contains convictiolia which

.

- : .·. '

The World in Ttirrti61f;·,·"

It ia oiiiy the twentieth century, yet from aU indications .our world appears to be approaching a
breaking point. Nations have lilted up arms against
nations. Starvation like an avalanche ia gradually
sweeping acroea certain comers of Mother Earth. In
some other: part&amp;. the "oveirecl'' watch on their televi·
aion sets the drama in which famished- kids battle
with domestic animall for
handfu) of wheat. In
countries where the oil wells overflow with the liquill
gold the barons are bloated in sudden affluenCj!. In the
industrial nations the pipes have' run dry. Economic
stresses threaten to bring democratic and soci.alist
coutltries to their knees. Layoffs and inflation are rife.
' Yet more - in the underdeveloped countries, uniformed men have broken loose from the barracks,
overturned the status quo and are fiddling with the
art of government in what seem: no 1011 than fateful
experiments. Accusing f111gers are daily pointed to the
wealthier nations as the brains behind the endless im·
broglio in the third world. These cataclysms threaten
the perpetuation of the human race. Hopelessly the
world slides into the abyss of Hades. And every now
and then conference halls echo and re-echo with
resolutions that are said to be designed to stem the
tide.of our headlong drift. When shall the ailing world
rediscover itself? • ·
The Miildle East- Very few if any commentators
have dealt with the Middle East situation without
. seeming to lean on one or the other side of the age·long
conflict - even when such commentators are not
motivated by anything Sinister. The fact remains that
both sides in the conflict _consider any major shift in
their extreme stands a sell out of their very existence.
. Compromises do seem the best approach to settle disputes of this nature, but compnimjses that have so far
been made in the .M iddle East crisis by the warring
nations merely darice on the periphery of the matter
and only pOstpone the doomsday, not· only for the
nations directly concerned in the conflict, but also for
the entire world.
.
The Middle East crisis has escalated world
problema in great diversity. Is it t he oil problem?
it to the oil producing countries !lecidjng to
- skyroc~e~ prices in order to scOre a political victory ·
over their opP&lt;&gt;nents. Or the food shortage; the
. technologically advanced nations are raising prices of
agricultural machinery to combat the·price Uiey have
to... Jiiy -roloir.R SeemS mOst liaSoilaOie,thererore;- - :
that efforts to solve current complex world problems '
sho\'ld as a mat~r ~f.l!~cy;-be 'diMC,!-ed.to reaching
1
amicable aettlenient in \he Middle East. If t he United
Nations .could do more than bark, that body would
impose a just and fair solution to the conflict. Hopes
of thia fine objective· are difficult to realize -at least
· noi when one super power with Veto Right can over·
tum the votes of_the ·member nations by walking out
of .a· conference that passes a resolution which is at

a

Traee

-

forei~rs; there is OOly a negligible American popula·

tion.· The environment is silent and cannot be inter·
preted by the new :residenta. But the residents talk
1llld -in tbia way learn about each other's cultures.
They thus p&lt;&gt;S8l!sa a rich cultural _knowledge to which
America; by re88Qn o'f its very small representation,
contiibutea very little. lleally, foreign students
observe many things liut they can't understand
them l&gt;P their own, and eo they fail to value their
cultUralsi!tqjpcance.
.
: .
yes, that ia .,hat new foreign studentsexperience.
The reason for tbia type of experience ia complex;' but
there are a few' pointl that noticeably gear situations
toWards the prelent atetus. Firstly, the proportion of
Arne!jcan atudenta to foreign atudenta in
ia too ·
amall for an American - c e tc? be felt. Secondly,
there are too many foreignen in eachd the rooms; tlWi
inducee the foreign otudanta (since they have 10 much
iJ! ·commoni to build a closed group which requires
- ~ lkill to break tbroucb- Thinlly, the new
foreiin- atudent ia oo aw.re of bia .......... ana
"foreigner!' title that he believe~ be bas to maintain
• the role ol foreigner ao: international ficure. 'l'hia
. ·- makes him cold and formal -...Americana, whom
· _be -only aa counaellon. advioors;iecturera, etc. He
ia icueel)&gt;•ware oltbe American in tbe ~ at bia
home or e;vm the rich culture in which be lives! .
.,
_ J,&gt;or ~. oli Qctobir 24 I asked a friend from
the JVOIY-Cciaat who li- in IT.C if he cOuld tell Jl!e
what the m.b And faca drawn on pumpkina meant ,
or ~-'He 'merelY laid: UU..-moi, je "" .U. · par! &lt;DOD't bother me, I "doa't !mow}. Hia reply por~ a hwt feeling that """"' ·him unin~;
why? bece--be bad DOticod
thinp that
coWd not be~ to him and llnaiJy aut the idea
.ol merely·
and DOt IIII!DnYndinr Americen
culture. I, ....................., him- it in
prepa8tionl« ~ andeqUinedtbe lileaning • ol tile &amp;Mt to hlal. So 0118 - · bow liUie ·tho! .- .
A.-icul culture' is ...... eialwtpd ... •fchlln

n.c

_.other

...me

...,tomn.c.

._. -· ··-_·-

variance With ita political objective. AI&amp; the world calls
upor:r th_e nations at war 1b the Middle ~ for a
change of heart, let it a1oo implore the auper powers to
go on soul searching retreat.
The EthiDpimr. FraC48 - When soldiers in
Ethiopia gradually maneuvered their way into l;he hot
seat of Government, the civilized world had a momentarY relief that somew~re in Mrica a group of young
men were teaching power hungry folks in the third
world bow best to ride into authority without toying
with human lives. It was cla&amp;aic and the government
of the day just abdicated the throne. Theil. one bright
morning, as if nothing good should come out of Mrica,
the uniformed men ran berserk and effected in one
brief moment the sUmmary execution o[ erstwhile
Political leaders. AB we wiite, more lives are being
threatened. Perhaps the Ethiopian militarY leaders,
compelled by the political and socio-economic trends
in their country, bad no option than to wrest power
from a degenerating monarchy and redeem their
countrymen and women from anguish. Nevertheless,
the recent killings in that country do not point to the--militaiy "men as tliose who have come to the rescue.
Killing people's -kith and kin in order to rule-them is
like ushering in a bedlam. Victims of the Ethiopian
executioo might have beert~ guilty of maladministra·
tion and mismapagemepi pfpublic funds, but the present leaders are too'"tash to Pronounce judgment when
their performance in the art of government has not
been put to a teat. Military leaders in Mrica or
elsewhere have not been known to be saints nor have
their governments been model.s anyway.
Nothing · seems to absolve the imperialists from
any misfortune that befalls Africa and other develop .
ing nations simply because they maste~minded the in·
itial disequilibrium that waxes stronger with age.
They might not be left out of the present upheavals in
the third world. but when we go all out tor our people's
blood one is left to ask whether the blame-can still be
laid on the doors of the imperialists. and even if so.
must we succumb to their wiles?
-Justin Okoro Ukpabi

U/B INTERNATIONAL
EDfOO&amp;-IN-CHIEF.: · Oko~bi(NigeJje,).J ,,:.

COi&lt;EDITOB:~It.. l\l&lt;:ll~~~ i rn "'''
. ·•. :... , 'ED:JTOIUAIJBOARD"I -JlJ1il u·-i 1 . u.::'

Anselm Diu (Hong Kon~\. Ne~ Lonc'o (Bi-azu), ·
Agha Ngwana (Cameroon), Anene Nnolim
(Nigeria); Maryann Roby, adviser (U.S.A.).
CONTRIBUTORS
Kathy Breuer (U.S.A.), Joseph Krakowlak,
OFSA (U.S.A.), Anthony Kwok (Hong Kong), and
A.ShabaZ.

Foreign students rarely hjlve the opportunity to
make American friends due to their isolation. Thus
with time, the foreign student ends up building a closed environment and unfortunately _ develops the
tendency of not aaoociat:ing with his American
counterparts. This amounts to the situation in which
a _guy ia American academically but is very unoriented
'socially and culturally. Such an .education·ia obviouslyincomP\ete.
.. •.,.t. .. . . .. · •:.; .• : ., ..., , ·~ ~ ... :a&gt;
w~ can oolve thia .~lDJ!Ie ,pcoblem, ~~·IIIKI:~·:,
in a way J&gt;!neficial to•bo&amp;lj ~·Amen~ qd ~ ~'
students,. Here is,otl&gt;e oolution: Let, there : be- 011ly
residence halls. and· qo "ILC" - that. ia, ..foreign..
studenta living on qunpoa ohould be diatriliUted into
the exiating dormitories 10 that the American
presence can be. felt by the foreipers. In thio way
foreign otudenta will &amp;It a CXJ1111.1iete American education academically and"'CUUturally: .., achievement
that will increUe world undentanding in ita own way.
'l'hia ia merely -a ouggeotiOIL!fhicb I am proaent:inr as
food for thought to OFSA which takea care olforeigl)
students.
' '
·~

OFSAGetiOK

,....

On Orientation

Tbe Office of Foreign Student Afrairs (OFSAI bas
recently compiled date pl:bered from a ourvey
questioomaire clesigned to belp evaluato the foNign
atudent orientation J&gt;I'III'UI. rt.alta ol the queotionnaire, while not otatiatlcally ..,...uable
thaD
50 per cent return), are belpful in the Ollico'a elfMtl . ·
toward .a total eMluation tJitla .ervic:aaad aoctlritieo •
oftbeplopam;· •
~ ' !- .. ~ . ,. •• ' ' ! , t .._
,1

a-

More "lilaD · &amp;e : pir .oent."'Of-tlli,.. ~ &gt;the'.
queotiJimaire r.lt'tbatlhhntini pnic!Ur, botb-.r ·

:' ' •'· _

.. · ••r:.·-:;... ~ ·••.-

' , ~- ~·· ....

REPOR"f.ERIUIB lNTERNATIONALIDecember 12, 19741Page 2-

�Perspec;tiYe8 on
'Adjustment'• Within these two months, many f9l"ign studento
are adjusting weU to, campus life and somehow to this
typical Buffalo atmosphere, Typical in the sense that
the weather 1s changeable. It is not 11 surprise to experience the cycle of four seasonal changes within one
day. It may change fiom a mild warm to a sudden
chilly breeze, or to freezing @in. So you must take
cllre of your physical health. Medical care can be incredibly expensive. In your country it would not cost
up to a "penny" in a comparative_term. Like the
variable weather, Buffalo has an e:rtensive variety of
ethnic groups, including a large Polish community.
You can sometimes feel the tension and "coldness" in
this city. In contrast, the freezing winter is much more
•
tolerable.
Luckily enough, moot-foreign student,B have taken
an intensive English course either at home or here,
which makes adjustment easier. However, it is important to be sensitive to the fact that there are still quite
a few foreign students with deficient English training
wh o encounter many difficulties and em barrassments. These students find themselves in a
dilemma. Even worse, I know of some who, being
messed up, either left or were sent home.
Due to the language problem and the uprooting of
their concept of culture and life, confusion leads some

more·of an onROing. piocess involving intercultural ex-

- periences, tripe, guest speakers, and media presen ~
tations to help orient students.
·
-J""!pb Krakowiak

Hume, New York
Dear Friends at OFSA,
Well. it has been a little over two months since I
left OF$A in the wake of Foreign Student Orientation
to settle down in Hume, N.Y., where my husband is
teaching in t,he adjacent village of Fillmore. It is in
Hume that I now,..find myself undergoing an orientation to a foreign culture; that is, a foreign culture to
me - the life of rUral America.
.
..
Lookin~ at a map of New York State. you'll find
Hume (population 400) and Fillmore (population
2."&gt;001 located in Alle~heny County just south of the
southern t-ip of Letchworth State Park. The area is
primarily a dairy fanning area where the children
come from-any one of eight adjoining towns to attend
·the ~hool where my husband teaches. Prior to mavin~. I had onlv seen ihe area once when we made a tiip
to Filhn&lt;li'l!ofb.l'miollWIIiandla:nltervi.W...;. it tOOk alllof. ·
five mitiMI.irtiJ~~~I t'illodoreil:td'f&gt;leb!l\1'.:-l
Now. thatlittle~leef&gt;Y ::illll.bllnkill~l!ilfll41 town" was
to become mY home. ~h~t did I.l&lt;n~w about lif~jn the .
count.ry? M.v family and friends were shocked that we
were about to leave "civilization" and head for an
area where we knew no one'. Yes, I was hesitant to give
up my position in OFSA as I enjoyed working with the
forei~ students and with the cross-cultural exchange
programs. There were sure to be no foreign students in
Fillmore or Hume or in the whole of Allegheny County
and the job prospects for me looked rather dim.
However. it was an excellent.opportunity for my husband and we decided to give Fillmore a try.
On a trip to Fillmore to find a place to live, I felt
ljkeT1oas ROinR to a foreign country where I did not
have anything or anyone with whom to identify.
Where Would we live? Are there stores? Would I be
able to find a job? Are there doctors or a hoopital in
the area? Is there a college within a reasonable distance wbere I . could continue with my graduate
studies? Where did '· people go for entertainment?
Where do you begin when you don't know anyone?
Wodld&gt;~·th!illt'thlt·~re·unttilulll Iiecause we
came&gt;frdtil iii!&amp; ~a~ "eey!•·to{me•haihlways

beenllew Ymli'OitY' E a' reiident nf Buffalo~ut the ·
"city" to area reoidento hele 'is Buffalb - 'imagine, I
tbou«bt. Buffalo beiDI! the closest hot-spotU Once we
enteeed FiUmore, there ..,.. only two or three logical
plaeoe to look for help -,- tbe real estate agency, the
IIIOCOlY otoie aDd tbe post office. The real estate agency-told liB that although they were IJYIDpathetic to
our lituati011 that · tbe apartmento in tbe area were
usUally advertised by word nf mouth. We might try
tbe other two mentioned plaeoe where the local people
gathered. (We were 8l..o informed that the mayor
would be oc help and to keep our eyes peeled for him
- be - l d be ocurrying thmugh town 011 his bicycle
attendil1jfto local~!) Itdidn'ttakelongtofind
out that newt travels fast in a smaU town. As we
enteeed the J1f0C01Y otore, the owner greeted ui- the
real estata agency hl1d already caUed him. He hl1d a
few leads but" would check them out with the Owner-orthe po etation. (Gu otation, that's funny. ·1 hadn't
_,one, I aaid to mYaetr.) By thio time local shoppers
bad 1JQtteD Into tbe convenation and otopped their
llboppiac to help uo. Can you imagine our aurpriae
\irhea two Nlidento laid tbeywould get in our car with
uo to obow Ullii'OUild to the plaeoe they knew-nf while
the otban plooaed frienda aDd family for mon! leads?
~... ~ -110 aputmeolt .......plaM in the area.
we _.. told. EveJyone baa a home or reotl•e flat. • • •
Wlil9 - .;WiWDc till •UW·· out ·aC-Fijlmi&gt;re?_Out aC
FiB-, f,..W. How fllr oat?..O..·cuides felt that · H~ mey hl1ve aome -Diliti• u it waa omaUer

and less in demand. Well, let's give it a try.
To understand how Fillmore can seem large, you
have to see Hume. In Hume, the post office is in the
General Store and the Billiards Parlor is in the barber
shop!
With an antique store and beauty shop you have
the whole of Ht.ime. As small as it was, it was quaint
and it appeared as though the clock had stopped on
Hum e somewhere in the late 1930's or early\40's. The
store had hand-carved wooden counters with inlaid
~lass tops. There was a pickl~ barrel and a glass
cheese display case where cheese is aged and sliced on
demand. Everything fiom shoes and bats to groceries
and toys were sold in this store. Penny candy? Yes,
they had that too. Well, it appeared that there was a
place for rent an(f we went to look at it. It was in a
neat white house about 100 years old. The landlady (a

:I.___l_lT_
·Tl_R_I·___,I
72-year-old retired mechanical drawing teacher who
worked for the Pentagon during the war and who loves
to go deep sea fishing) showed us the flat. It was really
spacious compared to the s~ family house we bad lived in on Ash.land Avenue in Buffalo. The size
prompted us to ask the cost of the rent - $55.00 a
montb. $55.00 a month?, we chimed. I can still
remember the look on Ada's face . WeU, she laid, if
that were too much she could always try to get us
some furniture too. We took the apartment. All of a
sudden thingS looked a lot better in Hum e.
We bad to begin learning or relearning simple
thinRS in life - mail is picked up at the post office,
not delivered. No more colored toilet paper as we now
had septic taiiks and not city oewero. The townfolk
. were quite amused at bow we "'!"'fuUy closed the windows and locked the. doors of our c8r just to run into
the General Store for our mail. It seems, aa we found
· out, that this type of precaution isn't ·n-.ry in
Hume. In fact. moot people leave their dooro open all
nf tbe time. People know one another bere -visitors
and paaseroby are noticed and the townspeople can
teU you moreofwhatsoes on than you could ever im-'
agine.

Although my husband moved to Hume in early
September, I didn't move until early OCtober. I guess
that, _in spite aC my love for tbe country, I
stiU
quite conc:elned as to what type of work I would be
abletofind.
·
My first day after having moved to Hume permanently, l setout.tofindajob. The Employment Office in Warsaw waa tbe clc.st place to begin. Could I
grade pota-?, the interviewer uked. Grade
pota-? What waa that?, I retorted. What type nf
training did I naed? '"l'o be honaat ma'm," the interviewer laid, "You are breathinc -_l that'• tbe only
' criteria the Carmen have. Howver, I ougeot you tie
hl1ck that lone hair, cut your nails. and ptepaJe to get
filthy ~-" Well, 1011111 job waa better tbu no job

was

'---

LBTniiiSPOUCY
As_ ........................._ _

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......,.
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Page 3/REPORTERIU/8 INTERNATIOI\IALIDecember 1~ 1974

~

-

... ..a..e

'foreiin otudents onto the ...0111 tracE A few
AmeriCIIDII have been ., incoaoiderate u to make
M&gt;me foreign studento feel like foolo by playing jokes
which tbe foreign studento could not undentand.
It is doubtful wbicb aide, tbe Univeroity or the ltu·
dent, should claim tbe reopon11ibility. It woold be
higbly desirable to have more consultatiODB and aervices aimed at helping foreign otu!l.ento to adjust, like
an OOc:uional film~ tbe American way nf life, or
· visits·to' hoth rural aDd urban communities. On tbe
studento' part. I would aay they o_bou)d be poycbologically prepared and flexible in confronting a
new environment, and the older ~tudento should belp
the newer studento to learn aboUt American ackdemic
life.
-Ao.elm Dla

Black,Women

In Brazil

As a black man once said, in eome
of the so-called Latin American countries perhaps ba1f of the population bas Mrican blood.
So. they are not only Latin butMrican as well. Maybe
it would be more correct to caU them Afro-Latin countries of South America. In Brazil, the situation is not
different. The Black slaves that were brought fiom
Mrica to tiU the .(and for the Portuguese land ownera
made possible with their hard work the Cycle of tbe
· Sugar Cane, the first meaningful outburst of the in-

.....

and I took down the farmer's name. However, I was
sent to two oiher interviews in tlte meantime and
never did make it to the potato farm . in11tead, I was
lucky enough to be able to find a job ·at the •BaDk-&lt;&gt;f. '·
Castile "(about 15 miles fiom Hume). I was·e)ated: My'·
firstdayoutand I had a job. Another worry over! • ·
Our landlady took us to her sister's farm (my first
- visit to a farm). Bill and I found out that although we
cari speak English we did not understand a great deal
of the terminology of our neighboring farmers . Combines, tractors; bailers, reapers, silos, feeders, "milk~ ing parlors" were all foreign terms to us. We were surprised at the cost of running a farm and at the plight
of the independent dairy farmer. While the stores sell
a half-gaUon of milk for 85 cents, the farmer geto only
about 40 cents - not even enough to feed the cows.
We were introduced to the pigs and sows and sbosts
(baby pigs I .called them). The little "pork chops"
were' just darlinB but the emeU1wu eDOtber ~ . l·
was qUite bemused by the cows who seemed quite intelligent in spite of their reputation. I told the farmer!
would like tO'
'the baby·cOwii if be blld any. ''The '
calves? ma'm?" Ob, yes, the calves, I said. "Well, we
have the heifers, buUs, calves - these are Guernseys
and these are Holstein cows." (Cows are cows- what
are aU of these unfamiliar terms?) BiU and I both tried
to. make note of these terms and with the patient h!lp
of tbe farmer were soop able to get cow terminology
under our belto. After aU, we had to know the
language of our neigbhoro if we are to understand
them!
·
rm hoping to be able to generate interest in tbe
community to have an exchange weekend (or . the ..•
foreign students at U/B to come down "to'this ~ ,to _·,;
... -the rurallide of America. It was certainly a DeW . ·- .
experience for me but it has been WIY wonderful. I
want to share this aide nf our c:ulture with you, and if
things work out. hopefuUy a weekend can be oet up in
the spring when intereot4CI studento could otay with a
·local family for a r- dayS.
I beai tbe winten are vuy long aDd cold in thio
area. But that won't deter liB now. We've decided to
take up·crou-country okiini aDd have been promioed
some rides 011 olri-doaa. Tbere io liOIIl8tbins about our
whole tranliti011 ~from dty dwellen to coimtty
dwellem which io veJy ~t J1l the culture
shock I underwent wMI an AF8 otudent in~
Thailand. n.- oamefeallnpaC~ad.U..­
atiOII oomebow ~ to ~ cliappeer GDCe
we m11de the effort to accept onr tituatinn ad .....,.
the -..Cit. It raaUy baa,_, acultwesbocktar-.
but in the· midst aC aU our doabto and -.mt1oo,
everything....,. to
oat fiDe. I doubt I f would ever want to return to the "city" epiD. lt'a a ·
nice plaee to Yiolt, bat. .• .And, by the WIIJ, I IIIIIIUIIId
to find oome foreip atudento (just a few) at HQUihtaa,
College, four mileo from my home. ('l"hey lcqot their
1-211'1 - - JDinl to Canada and
made bla ..... in the local paper.)
,
Wtabins aU aCyou the vuy belt aCiuek inacbool.
We •. _ to- you at aU of the Intemational Bwa1a
!hit yeer UICL- look lilrwud to n0amn, the V/B
Intematiilnolo I milo you aU WIY muds.
Love, from yourf8vorita Human or io it Humanite?

see

he........,

border..,.........

_

.......
__

~

58.
......... __....,.....
.......................................
'f_.lllc:
l!ar.......__.
........... ..... ...............
,
P.S. PLEASE WJite P.O. 8os
1474&amp;.
• ••
~

vieoe aDd aetivitieo, waa oucc:eooful; 40 per i:ent felt '
tbe pl08nlm wu veJy au"""!'"fu", and only 3 per cent
retUrned a negative evaluation. Similar percentages
were reported regarding the competency of the orientation lltaff and volunteero. OFSA is actively seeking ·
· input fiom studento regarding how to better deliv'!r
oervieoe aDd deoiin new protrUns '!" .n~w stucfeiit
needs are recognized.
· .. .. · • • ; ·
The Foreign Studeat Office Wishes to thank the
International Alfairo co-ordinatoro (SA and GSA) and
the International Student Committee both· for
monetary assistance and for those people who stepped
forWard to volunteer their auistance as orientation
staff membe10. The nine-day program was rated as
one of the most successfufvehicles designed to deliver
servieoe to newly arrived studento. The Office also
wishes to thank more than 35 volunteero who gave of·
their time and effort. The response to the Office's Te·
quest for people was overwhelming and goes a long
way to demonstrate the talent and concern that
foreip stu!lenti' have for each other. The Division of
Studen~ Affairs, The Division of Undergraduate
Education, aDd the Univeroity administration are also
to be commended for their cooperation and assistance
in helpin« to tie together this extensive program.
For the future, the Office of Foreign Student Mfain is seeking to change the orientation program into

M'

.......

......,............. -:.......
(

~

RUIDII,

N.Y~ .

~

..... -

�oipient Brazilian economy.
· With the Abolition of slavery in 1888, the Black
population of Brazil was abandoned to ita Own tragic
destiny, without any laws to protect them, to ll,!!ide
them in their newly acquired liberty or to provide
them with small pieces of land in the interior of the
country. In a word, the government did not help them
to survive with dignity m a rural society made up of
huge rural properties and reactionary land owners.

A""- aDd aaJ.mps

What was then and what is now the position of t he
Black woman in the Brazilian society? She has suffered all the abuses and endured all the hardships
that other Black women have borne in other countries
where the stain of slavery once subsisted. We all know
the inhuman treatmeqt that as a rule was dispensed to
the Black woman as a slave and tbe same happened in
Brazil: either she worked like a man in t he fields planting and harvesting (one remembers Sojourner Trut h)
or she was admitted as a maid inside t he master's
houae to cook, to scrub t he floors, to help t he "sinha"
get dressed, to take care of the- White children and ,
many timt&amp;, to serve the master in bed.
After the Abolition, she became a reservoir of
cheap - labor, working as a housemaid in White
people's houses, supporting her own family, facing all
sorts of hardships but helping to make possible t he little " liberation" the White Brazilian woman has
achieved up to now: the Blac;:k woman leaves her
children alone most of the time in t he slum where she
lives and for an insignificant pay takes care of the
White woman 's children enablirig t he latt er to work
outside the house.
Since t he Black men are for the most part Anskilled workers, it is harder for t hem to get jobs. The Black
Woman has always worked and taken care of her fami ly .-(he best she could. Many t imes, she has had no
other choice but prostitut ion. In the northeastern
states of Brazil there are prostitutes eleven or twelve
yearS of age. They have no protection from t he law
and generally belong to poor and large families of
eight or ten children, They " choose" that way of living
i.D 'Ont,er not to starve, out of a situation without
any decent human perspectives.
A Melting Pot?
_
Much has been said about Brazil being a melti ng
pot. Truly, there has been miscegenation, a lot of inter·
marriages and a lot more of intersexing. In Brazil
there has never been a lynching or any group physical
violence against the Black people. But undoubtedly,
the lighter the color of the skin, t he more doors are
opened. What happens then? A rejection of t hei r own
Black color, of their African ancestry and its own
values, and an. intense desire to " whiten" in order to
be able to move some steps up the soci.B.l ladder.
The Brazilian mulat to girls are praised for t heir
beauty but most of the time are used by White men
who have a White wife and a mulatto lover.
Of course, there iS one field in which the Black
woman as Well as the Black man has excelled: t hey are
wonderful entertainers; t he typical Brazilian rhythm ,
the "samba," is unmistakably African in origin . If t he
Brazilian Black woman is a singer t hen she is
accepted but if she is an actress she generally plays
the maid. There ·are very few job opportunities for the
Black woman imd in a .case of competition wit h a
White woman the latter wiD certainly get the job. The
Black woman bears the heavy burden of being Black
in a sup_.tly White society.
The Brazilian Abolition was not made for ·t he
Black people (but for political reasons). In the modem
soclol orginization that baa been creating for yromen
of any l!olor skin obligations identical to men's, t he
Black woman feels handicapped. The Brazilian Aboli.
tion, poaiti_vely, did no~ rr::~e Black woman.
A woman in North America
A woman in South America A Black woman, a White woman.
Wbat•a a woman?
A riddle, a Spbynx,
An uaip&gt;ed role.
Lolli of love to offer.
Self-hate, dioguat, oelf-pity
Sulrerini, abuoe.

.'

'

the PfOil'IUD of activities ~ for them. An
American student in I.L.C. oaya that hia dotiilliU
more fun and aetivltieo than others. He alao ment ions
that living with foreigners no general problems
.forhim.
The foreign students learn about American culture
and American students in the Intemati(!nal dorm get
to learn about different cultures'too. That is the main
function of the I.L.C.. tO bring people together, let
them have a chance to understand and to respect each
other more generally. Most of the foreign students
have pretty good English backgrounds before t hey
come to U/B, therefore, they do not have much of a
langnag~ gap. On the other hand, some of t he
American students learn to speak some simple foreign
languages after livi ng with foreign students for a few
mont hs.
~/
David Yung, ·t he activities coordinator for t he
I.L.C., set up activities for · residents. in t he International dorm at the beginning of this semester until
t he students t hemselves set up t heir · own activities
council. Now David has shifted his role to t hat of advisor to t he council. The philosophy of the council is to
let students plan for t heir own activities by collect ing -

Kirk Robey, an advisor in t he Office of Foreign
Student Affairs, says that t here will be more pot-luck
dinners. parties and trips for I.L.C. residents. There
will be a wQrkshop for intercultural commun1cation in
February. Probably, there will be a conferenCf! for all
international living centers in New York in Apnl.
T hey are a lso t rying to run a joint program wit h t he
H istory Department in Red Jacket. Red Jacket is a~
well designed place to run programs for this kind of
purpose. It "unites" people from all " nations." We are
proud to have t his "United Nations."
-Anthony Kwok

NlW/
fROm
Of"lA

All you need to do to re~iste r is to complete a biogralJhi cal
data card available from either University Placement and
Career Guidance or OFSA. We have learned that 65 com·
pa ni es have expressed an interest in this program.
Internat ional Committee of Women' s Club
The International Committee of t he UIB Women's Club
and the church women of the Unive~tY. '"'fresbyteri an
Church are CO·sponsorint a n lnterfutltomtt ~ 1-lol id ay
Luncheon to be held today, at 1 1 :30a . m : .-t1DeBJasQyt~~a·n :
Church on the comer of Main St. and Niagara Falls
Boulevard. This is the t hird year that t he Women's Club has
hosted an international holiday luncheon. Th e~ will be an
internat ional buffet.. entertainment and a demonstration of
the various modes of Christmas in America. All new forei~m
women. i n cludin~~: women stude nts and sc holars a nd
students' wives. are invited to at tend.

Renting
A number offorei~ or American stud ents may be le&amp;\'ing
t heir ofT-campus ac;commodations some time in January. If
you ·hBve knowled~te of a possible vacancy, please keep in
mind that 'A'e will be receiving new foreign students on or
about January 10. 1975. Please call 831-3828 if you have

Speakers• Bureau
The University has a Speakers' Bureau which members of
the Buffa lo community contact in order to invite speakers to
ta lk to their 11:f0Ups on va rious topics of interest . One purpose
of the Bureau is to provide forei~n studJ!nls with the oppor·
tunity to speak about their home count ries to school and
civic O!'j1;anizat ions. If you wish to participate as a speaker.
please contact Mrs. Pruitt at OFSA.

knowledge of off-campus vacancies.

Chris tmas Tours
The Association for World Travel

Exc han~te

is sponsorinR

some hospitality tours during the Christmas holiday. T he
tour of t he Pennsvlvania Dutch Cou·ntry is Dec. 24-26 and
costs S22. The tout of Florida and the South (Dec. 21-Jan. 5)
is $145. The tours are open to young people who are in the
USA temporarily as students. trainees or visitors on non ·
immigrant visas. If you wish to participate, contact OFSA as
soon as possible.

Iranian Stude nts
NIOC invites all Iranians with degrees in Math, Com·
puter Sciences. EE. ChE, Physics. Statistics, Geology,

foi~~:: a~~~h~~C !~~;;e~:;t~e:i~~~e~~~~o~·

J::S':~~ g:;:la~~~N:~~t w~~t~a:~:~ !~~tr:S~::~~~

tion fo r you and your fam ily to Teheran, if you are qualified
and would like to work there. Please send a resume and copy
of your transcript to: Mir bagheri , Computer Affairs and In·
formation Services, NJOC P .O. Box 1863. Teheran.
Iran- 2514 telex.

Spring Orientation 1975
Initial planning is now underv.;ay for the Spring Orienta·
tion. Program . OFSA expects up to 50 new students to be in
attendance. A.program similar to last fall's design but not as
lengthy is planned. Mr. Hanan El-Kenien , Internat ional Af.
fairs Coordinator, has pledged his 'full support and joins with
the OFSA in ufRint student&amp;, both fo!tign and American , to
help in the plannint and execution of the orientation. Thoee
interested s~uld contact J oe Kiakowiak at 831-3828. . ~

North Campu~
Kirk Robey is now seein g students at the North CampU,&amp;.
His office is loCated in Room 191, Building 6, in Redjacket
Quadrantle. He is there evezy Moqday and Tbunday from
9:30 a .m.-noon and from 1-5 p .m. He can be re.acbed at 6362351.

Travel
.
If you are planning to go home during the €hristmu Or
eemester intereesaion, flop by the OFSA for the necessary
travel documentl.
Commaaicatloa ud WomoatioD
A recent survey indic8ted that foreign_student,.l wish to be
better informed of various news concerning them . TIPt in·

J(we.could only reach out
And walk hand in band .• .

opinions from all residence students and developing
programs that fit everybody. Among the actiVities eo
far have been a·square danCj!, pot-luck dinners, trips
"to Toronto and an excumiori to a football gama.
On the second level Of es.ch reside~ ball; pingpong and pool tables are 8et \ip' for students. More activities and recreation facilities will be available after
the "bubble" baa been .set up. However, Nikki, a
Japanese student in the Intensive English Institute,
says t hat some of these activities are too ·~American . "
He suggests a tea party would be more suitable.

eludes opportunities available to them and announcement&amp;
of interest. The Project on Communiciotion ud Information, w!Ucb ia part of the intanational Student Vol1mteer
Prosram. - developed to meet thia opecific oeod. We are
American ·ud fcnicn otudeat volunteero to help
with the project. H.,. ia 1D opportunity to uoe your a!tilla in
art, deliln. writm,, manqement and communication. If you
wuuld Hb to portleipote, coatact Emie at 831-3828 or come

E mployment and Foreign Students
Many forei~m students in t he U.S. are now experienci nR
financial difficulties as financial aid sou rces are rYJOre
limited . There is a harsher and more restrictive U.S . lmmi~~:rati o n and Naturalization Se rvice . () NS) policy- ....._
prohibiti ng universities from authorizing summene.mploy·
.. awnt. FurtheQ;DQr;e. j@. opportWlit i~ f&lt;u.JtU 'SiWf.eht5la,lier"
. )~Taduation ar€ SCarcif ' bnd' tortei;hi' tsi'udt'r\'tf'noW:ffliO iblir
monetary exchange more limited rjven t he h i~fi rate of infla·
tion.
Students who have recently arrived in the States have
been shocked by the hi~~:h cost .of living and a few have
te~Grted to findi n ~~: part -time jobs wit hout permission from
INS. As a consequence. a rlumber have been found out by
Jm mi ~a tio n in vesti~ators and charged with violation of
status. The penalty has been issuance of a deportation order.
A few students will t)lus not be able to complete their educat ion in the United States.
The purpose of t his article is to advise students of the
seriousness of t he situation: Although the Office of Foreign
Student Affairs will do its utmost to assist students with
their Immitration problems, there is little it can do once
c~ are verified. Therefore, if you feel you must work,
come in and aee an advi&amp;or to that we might work together to
nemine the situation. In many instances a etrong enough
cue mil(ht be made to wammt INS approval olllD employ.
ment application. Other W8YI mili)t be explored to reduce
expen.ea or facilitate f~ uc:banp.
While the sltu11ti011 U. bleek, thoro aJe elf- underway to
p,...~m for policy c~. 'l'lle Natloaal A.ociation for
F&lt;&gt;n!ii&lt;D Student Affairs (crt" tfbioh till: u.av..ity U. a
member) ia .....tin« ~i&lt;l ~- Two
biDs""'! CWftlltly befarf ~CO.~ to ooce
· a~ain lOve ~mivenity oiiiCioJo the authority to P\mt employment penniaoioa. The OFSA Ia rwJIOIICIIDI in oupport of
these biU.. The Office of ~'&lt;nip Studont Alrmno ud Place-

aloo""""""""'

. ment and CarMr Guidance....WW. and
~ ... the~-Durin« the opriJII term, etroita will be made to ncruit
.jobe in the oommunity for atudenta liom - . in the
meontime. atudenta ahould carefulJy -..ider their..-.
lt'o rW!y toO Late whoa an lmmipatiaD alllc:ial ~
you whit~! workin&amp; without penn-.

-..c

TheiLC: ·
-'A United Nations'

Dateo: Januory 21-May 6.
,
Time: 6:10-8:00 p.m.
-This inteoaive coune U. deoipod for~ with little or
no proficiency in En,!Uob ud U. taucht by pn!(e.loaal in·
atNc:ton from the intenoivo Enctiah LaJ&gt;cuqe inotitute
employing the inotitute'a proveo illltiuctional--. The
main ompluoaia U. placed in improvlnc prooUDciation. and intoaation. The buic pammatical structur. are
pnoented and driUed botl( in clua and in the laJIIuqe
laborstory.
.

Boi.o c.a.a.,. Jolio

job, becaUii it

WW.. oar world by fomjljoridac 111 with mauy and

The Natloaol A.ociati for Fomp Student Afrairs'
Took Foca on Home Counll)l Employment U. coatinuinc to
icleatify employment opportunitieo for U.S. trained fcnicn
otudento in their home eountrieo. Over UIO coUq. ud uii"-itieo ONportleipotinJin the ..........

~-mcntolennceandmon~.
a.lklac to atudonte in LL.C., tbe oaly comPIIIilti-.1 .,_ - tbaae abeut inadequate library

VOLUNTEER POB THE UIB INTBBNATIONAL

~ ..... KqadNipda.Alaqefi!UPIIN

...
...... . A . . t - ....-.Jib' ...
_..,.- ideu,--._._,_ Do

MIJI'

fMIIIilei em·the Nartb Campuo. 'lbere liN about 300
........... in tbe LL.C., tbe ~of them

._...,..-' v...- a

tbe apecial Baclilb
....... "1"''l.r lib tbe P-o tbalr Miphgrhood, and .

, Tf

Fee: ~m-.ntlfyou,..;.terbefonJanuiJy 10.
-

Location: MainS-Campu~.
Day: Tueoday and Thunday. _

to210n..r-c1Hall.

Jt il better to be a RooidoDce Advilor in tbe InterIUIIicJul Uvial Center (LL.C.) than o!Mwbere, accor-

clial to M8nha, wilD blli juat ouch •

111-BiocUUI'IIra..tlnatructDn; Stall', inteoaivo Enclioh LaJ&gt;cuqe inotitute

(

OUR NBWBPAPBBI

We

...

WUI&amp;: ,_,_,........,

-·t

-

(

eoalribaton. We
by aDd
pabUebeJDIIr

REPoRTERIU/8 INTERNATlONA~ber 12, 1974/Page 4

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 6, NO. 13
DECEMBER 5,_1974

History,
day;.care
at issue
Child care and the doctoral dilemma
facing the History Department shared
the attention of Faculty Senators at their

monthly meeting December 3.
President Robert l. Ketter read a
prepared sta te(l'lent summarizing the
University's respo nse to t he recent
recomme ndatio n of the State Education

Depart ment that the U/B Department of
History should offer dissertation-level

wo rk only in United States and mod ern
European history.

1he SED recommendation, which has
been forwa rded to the Commissioner fo~r­

Education but nol yet acted upon, has,
Dr. Ketter ack nowledged, left the Histo ry
Department "somewhat co nstra ined ."

• h ....
d
nts
11
.. ' C.·. o...II~0.es ·Win c . a. er en o.rseme -

t_

jp
. (J'

Colkoa;e 8 - .to cha rter for a term of
five yea rs.·
'
:
C&amp;lforil Furnos College ";-.tO charter
for a term of -t hree yea rs (co ntin gent
upo n th ~'" ~o_llege's participating in the
College eou ncil}.
·
College H - to charter for a term of
fi ve years.
Con1 P. M.t~lon~y Col~e- to charter
for a "term of th ree yeatS (wil h a. limited
revieWaker 18.months}.
~e._ of - ~them.t~tk:.JI Sciences - '
to charterfoi'-a,erm of fol,tr years.

cO....oi~Studies-tocharter

for a term_--of..:C hree years {with a limi ted
.... review after 18 months). ·
CoJiese ofPros-m.e Educotion- to
deny a charter (bUt to recomme na to the
Dean that the Master-designote be invited to establish a worl&lt;.shop}.
..,
RKhel Urson Collete - to charter
for a fe rm of four years.
_
'Soclol Sciences College - to charter
for ~ termoffouryears.
·

;

li-~~ '

.

~ed-d

~~..~- n~ ~·•

..-:

-

~perate after Ja_nuary 1 witho~t- the grantmg by the P_res1dent o~ an off1c1al c~art~r
- a regu latiOn prescnbed last spnng 1n
the so-ca lled ReiCh e rt Prospectus for
col legiate operations drafted and passed
by the Faculty Se nate and approved by
th e administration.
Pre_side nt Ketter said in a statt~ment
makIng k n?wn I h~ ~o r:n m 1ttee
recommendat ions that 1t IS h1s cu rrent
plan " to make final decisions regarding
these !ecommendati~n s prior to J_anuary
1, whrch wo uld be 1n accord w1t h the
timetable suggested by th~ Fa~uhy
Senate Prospectus that def1ned the
chartering Process. " The President said
that " in addition to reviewing the substant'ive, edu.cational merits of ,each
College as they relate to the d~si res of
o ur students and the mission of the
U n~vers ity .. , I will be reviewing the
recommendations in light of the UniversitY,'s tota l budgetary sit uation. Proposed

tturn rnp;~J?r4.rnl. fl

t ·._pie
I

.... .,.... llia.t.., ~

·

l .

"F be '
,

~n · «;On~ . _. ~ ~~r· "~

The. University's Medi~ai-Dental • building indicated, "was • world _authori._
-bu_Hding, which is losJng its name to th,e
tv on cancer. in chlldr.en. He woLbom in
new central library-odmlnistrativoocom. Buffalo in 1904, graduate&lt;! .froJT&gt; 'U/B in
plett in Amheqt, will be renamed_ • n ; 1923, then studied onedidne in ~rmany
honor of a d_istinguished U/B alumnus • and'at Harvard. He served o'n tlie (acuity
and Hilrvard-offir~J~ted physidon, fol low-.
of Harvard ,Med ka 1 Sch oo1 for 41 years.
ins action token ot the November
His dis!'overies in chemotherapy of
meeting ot t~ SUte Univei'Sity Boat&lt;! _of ..-- cana;r and his definition of the total care
~ruAees:;
qf cho!&lt;Jren woth--cancer are re~ard"\J as
f. 'lJle T.rusiees have designated the pretwo of the greotest mll~to~ on ca~cer
~ :SomueJ .P. qpen Hall -•s Sidney
research and 5!-re . He died on 1973·
Farber tlaU. The Capo;n name will ~ ·
· ~e _!rust~ also renamed another·
used for , the Amherst &lt;;:•mpuflargest
Maon 'S_treet _buol~~~~"ndapproved,nam:,
~ building. now under· construe.es for three facolines within the Joset&gt;h
loon, .: .. • ... :· •.
.
. ·:.' ·
Ellicott Complex •t -""'!erst. 1 ' ·
S!JI'qey : f arber, . the-;018 : c~u~1=Ws
The Health Sciences Building on the
i'e~?!n~el'ld.1ti~~ . ; fo~ : nam!_ng .•he -Main Street Campus will beco111e Dr.

&gt;

I

··

Tolstoy College- to charter for a term
of three yea rs.
Vico Collese- to cha rter for a term of
three yea rs.
Women's Studies College- to charter
fo r a term of five years (conditional upon ·
the accePtance by the College of an explicit nonexd usionary policy in its
courses and act ivities except as provided
for by an app ropriately constituted
Un iversity review body, and a redrafting
of th eir charter to remove ambiguities
regarding the generic or specific use of
the word " woma,n.") .
These are the adv1sory recommendations of the Chartering Gommiuee for
the University's Collegiate System
forwarded to President Robert l. KeHer
shortly before the Thanksgiving Recess.
The recommendations emerged from
extensi~ hearings conducted tt}is fall to
evaluate the pre~nt and planned activities of each of the collegiate units.
None of the colleges can continue to

· ·

'·

. _r

But there is ".no panic" on th.e matter,
he added. "We have joi ned this iss ue out
o{principle."
On the 1973 recommendation of the

so-ca lled Fleming CommissioQ, .the SED
is currentl y evaluating doctoral programs
in pub lic a nd pri vate universities
thro ugho ut the State on the basis of both
" need" and quality. To date, u / B's
History, Chemistry, English and Physics
Depart ments h ave been visited .
Chemistry received a green light fro m
the evaluators, while Histoty was apparent ly advised to drop doctoral-level
concentrations in latin America n, ancient, and no n-Western histo!')'. Reports
on the other tv.,:o departments have not
yet been completed.
As the President ex plained, " ... In
1969, as most Qf you are aware, State
Un iver(rty at Buffalo began, and the
Chancellor mandated for the ~ ent'ire
SUNY system in 1972, a program of
regular r:feriodic eval uation and review
of all grad ua te programs. We at Bu ff~ lo
have comple ted our first full series of
reviews of all doctoral programs at the
Uni ve rsity and have started our second
5-year cycle of re-evaluations. As the
State Education De partment evaluation
program was being planned, we Were
given reason to believe that our own
program reviews - which I should here
em phasize are carried out by highly
qualified outside examiners - would be
accepted by the State Education Departme nt as a m.ljor contribution to its own
efforts. Unfortunately, in the end, our
reviews were not accepted . ...
"I should ... note that nowhere in this .
entire exerdse by the State Education
Departmenl. so far as we know, has th!!re ·
been defined a ~t of criteria for judgment and recommenda.tion, or even an
indication of what actions would
necessarily fo}low particulor re&lt;:omrnet&gt;dations, if ultimately approved, What
guidance we had was the experienee in
the master's degree relliews that hod
beer\ cond~cted earlier.
,
" In the case of Chemistry, the SU.!JI·
mary report appeared reasonable and
appropriately followed from the site visit
report and the exit intervjews for our
program ... - ln. the case of History,
' however; thesuinmar'yreportappearslo

~~:;,a,;~;~;;:~~~~~rchra;;~it'be!rV:·

Charles Cary Hall in honor of a former
loosely related to~the site visit reports.
specific
recommendations
for with
our
Med School dean (1882-1883). A ' The
History
program.
are not consistent
graduate of U/8, Dr. Cary also served on
the Medical faculty for a number of yea'J
our previous assessment-of that program,
and was a member of the u/8 Coundl
and if carried out, would significantly
distort
the 11oals, aspirations,
arid-thrust
in 1911 . He died in 1931, providing beof th~t department,
say nothing
of the
10
quests to the University In his will.
possible infringement
of the ocademii:
The 'South lib'1ry within the Millard
·freed 6 m of,, il.s faculty members and
Fillmbre. Academic Collegiate Center of
stuclents. . . .
the Joseph Ellicott Complex will be nam- Early i~ November, · Graduate Dean
ed Nathan Kelsey Halllibrary.'Hall was a _flac Hull was fio(ally J'l'rmltted to give •
'law partner _of Millard Fillmore. Elecfed
formal reply to ·an SED body attacking ·
to the New Yorlt ~sembly In 1845; he
" both the rationale and substanceH of
played ~ n important part in o;_llortering
the move.
' .
the University.
~
·
As Dr. Ketter continued, " Qn
·;a. member of the Ho~i'e of RepresenNovember 13, I reviewed a note from
trurnto,u~e 9, col._..4)
trumropaffe S,coi. J&gt;

�&amp;ecen:;ber s, 1974.

They choose to .teach • • •
ty teachin g allows one freedom to find
the commu nity as qur more obvious and
one's own way and decide personally
practical needs. To be part of that
w.hat is best for the instructor and the
process is very heady indeed."
.s tudents involved in th~ teaching
" After 15 years of teaching," Levine is
During the past two years 18 U/ B
ing taught ." .
process."
co
nvinced
that
w.hat
he
has·most
to
offer
professors have rec.eived the
ATwo-W~yProcess
Hinrich R. Manens (Electrical and
students "is the opportunity to become
Chancellor's Award for Excellence in
Geo'lle Lerine (English) adds another
Mechanical Engineeriogl re.v~als - t~at
actively
rather
than
passive
ly
inTeaching, which was created to identify
dimension. " If I were asked to point to
vo lved in the study of literature. To me,
teaching provides satisfaction for him
and honor outstanding faculty
anyone"thingthatlfeeltobeattheheart
mainly in two ways that operate both in
the essence of that involvement is the
throughout the SUNY system.
•
of my work as a university teacher of
the
classroom and laboratory.
classroom
experie
nce
and
the
na'ture
Award recipients presently on campus
literature, it would have to be my co n" In the classroom I derive lasting
and quality of the relationships that
were asked recently to respond to the
cern for .the comp lex, often fragile, consatisfaction
from tak~ng the students on a
evolve
between
the
book,
the
st
ud
e
nts,
general question : "Why did you choose
stantly shifting dynamic of the Classroom
guided tour through a subject, helping
and the teacher."
a teaching career?" The following sumrelationship . · I work hard at that
them
with
understanding the work.ings
A Guide in an An Gallery
mation of their written responses enrelationship and expect my stuCfents to
of our man·made world, identifying with
do the sa me."
compasses interrelated themes, including
Ebert compares his teaching role to
them the underlying physical principles
that of " a guide in an art gallery. I point
interaCtions with students, the imporTo him, a nd other effective professo rs,
and formulating for, them ma\he matical
out, explain, answe r questions, sti mu late
tance of teaching and the learning
teaching is clearly a two-way process.
relation s for a comprehensi ve
interest - but how the student
pr-(&gt;cess, feelings about their areas of
Levine bc:Jieves, further, that he has been
characterization.
.
perceives, what he wishes to perceive,
specialization, personal satisfactions, and
most successful when he has been able
"In the laboratory I enjoy directing th e
he
reacts
is
beyond
my
co
ntroL
and
how
how they decided to make this career
to "stimulate an environment where
st udent with lranslating theoretical conIt is this catalytic function and the sharing
~
stude nts feel most at ease with each
choice.
cepts into.,.. useful and meaningful pracor her and with me . .Reading and discuss- _ of ideas, through potentially opposing
CoACern for the lndividu1.l
ti ce; I enjoy showjng st udents how toesones,
which
instills
the
love
of
teaching
Concern for each iildividual was
ing literature. always generates anxiety,
tablish confidence in their analytical and
if! me. If in this process ! c;an help
quickly identified as one common thread
which I am conviQced is .a necessary eledexte 'ro~;~ s abilities. by exposure to
human·
being
to
beconie
more
another
that also appears related to teaching
ment in !ntellectual growth . ... During ·
current technology and synthesis of new
se nsitized to life around us, in all its
_
the past few years I have attempted to
sUccess.
products."
shades of beauty a nd sorrows, and
In ' his statement, Norm1.n Solkoff
deal with those te nsions directly and
motivate
him
or
her
t?
stri
ve
for~
greater
Knowledse
•nd ·S elf-Understanding
(Psychol.ogyl emph.asizes b_is "er&gt;o.rmou•
openly. I 'hope I have succeeded . mo re
ability to perceive and use knowledge,
Most •mponarn •s the opponunity ·a nd
respect" for students. "Although 1 know
_oftenthan I have fa iled. An index of what
my role as a teacher has been fulfilled."
need for the acquisition of knowledge
I cannot be all things to all students, and
I would regard as the success of man y of
There is, understandably, both love
and self-understanding at a time· when
will not even come close to satis(ying the
my classes, in recen t years is the fact that
mankind faces unprecedented problemS
and respect by each professor for his pardemands of some, .every stUdent, even iR
-without exception -all of my crjtical
that ' defy ·e~sy solutions: Solkoff points
ti c ular sub'ject matter. Opening ·to
etas~ ofOvei 500, fias ready ai:cess' to
wpr~ h~s had its genesis, in. classroom .disstudenrs the means of understanding
out that "Education of a student doeS nOl
me -..not to-"}"ri assistant or tQ. another
cussions with students. I have often had
human life through the use of language
mean preparatiOn for an often nettulousthe humbling recOgnit~On that with some
student, but to me. -... 1 will serve as
is most satisfying to Richard Ry (English) .
ly de~i ned future profession, does not
consultant, adyiser, conveyor of informabooks my students may well have taught
....re perceives the awa rd. "as a hopeful
mean . coaching for . mu!tiple~choice extion or source of referral, but only in my
me mo~7- ~h~~ .~ taug~t t~~m~ When they
sign that ··effective reaching in the
aminations, and certainly does nGt impl y
e-xp~&lt;rrrole as 1'rofessor·of Psychology. ·1
go well; my clas~s liave;r suspect', oeen
a ban.d-wagon •. apprOach to learning
Humanities is ~ still ppssible in a time
will not serve as advocate, therapist, coa mutually nOurishing experience.''
when language, understood as a.medium
where under the guise of relevance all
revolutioniSt, or ;n loco· parentis. _ . . It
HoW Subject Mi.tter is Presented
suitable for defining and solving· human
fads are gratuitously and a-historically
i~ epofmqusly rewardjng when a student
How subject manet 'i'S'prt!seflted "SO as
problems, ma·y appea r to be suffering a · accorded equal validity within the
has becOine different - in non--iiivial
to ~Xcite interest a·n d .iiivOive the learner
pe
rvasive
and
seemingly
inexorable
eroUniversity curriculum. Instead, when we
ways - from what might have beerl the
is another clue to instructional effecsion.
educate we first ·create an exciting learcase had a meaningful bond not been
tiv~ness . When Eliubeth Kennedy
ning environment with many options
"The alternative to such cynicism and
formed with a professor."
(American Studies! began teaching, she
and alternatives where it is possible tofailure of nerve, I ~lieve( is for the
Cl.tucle E. Welch (Political ·science)
. "realized that many of my students had
reward creative and - ~hoLirly beteacher not only-to believe in the abiding
points out- that " More than any ·other
the ~ me burning issues on their minds
havio~; w..e ,.erve .as imi?Qrt~nt models
value of the material he o(fers, but also
profession, teaching involves the clash of
as I did on mine. Their curiosity was
for, _01-!r ~t4d!!nts! ¥tflqse value systems,
to believe in his ability to communicate
hum.at~ minds. This profession thus leads
boundless and it seemed important' to
pet'50nalillentities and professional goals
that faith to his students.
encourage this so that they did not have
to continuous challenge, and markedly
are -in'i"'ll:; we - are · available to our
"But if the Jwmanities teacher has to
to· go through years of graduate training
differs from the cballeng~ arising in cur'students- as f1M!I)toro but ai.O "carefully
qccupy an uncomfortable· position
ing the ills of the body, solving points of
before they developed the confidence to
Jist~..to·their critici..,.,S il.~d sugg_estioilS;
between the modern student and an inlaw; or directing military operations. A
.make public and Jegitimate their con-linallji, ~e lrea!J&gt;Ur stii&lt;!ents as neopl]yte
creasingly inaccessible cultural history,
' good teacher must be sensitive to the -- ~ Cerns. At the same time, I also learned
schola~who in the ~r future will be
he is als6 in the best position _to exto11cerns of his colleagues - for
th~t there was one m ajor differenCe
-assuming varipus leadership roles ln their
perience
lite
successful
transcendence
oi
between students and myself, ~assumed
· st~:~dents are junic;&gt;r coll.,..gues - in the
communities and throull!&gt;out. ihe world.
this barbaric disjunction. That such
dassroom.
that thetSocial sciences and humanities
PerhapS the best teacher -15 the one who
recurrent triumphs-exist-is what sustains
"Teaching does nOt Involve o ......way
had a~~ deal to qffer In .oiving these
· is prepared·· !O be repJaced··by I&gt; is
_irnpanlns o! knowJedse, Good teadiing
questions, while students !fid not. They
~-:rs·" . . . . _ . . :students, lnd_recfr IQ : be. -OU1d9ne . by
is dla_~: In the old phra~, Ma_rk
assu~, rather, d!at their .~dies were
. .
. .
Hopluns on the other.sid~ of the log. Insomethtng separate _from .their lives and
: Then·
$1tisfactions y -them."
.Weller, who "belli!ves that his stud!'nts
dlviduals leam from a gOod tqcher by
conJ;erns, "'relat1v,ely · useless for · i)when a teacher successtully·helps others
seeing hls mirid in actlon,Ji:trough the
'iuminating wh~f"Js happe.nlrig rigi!l-now _ ~rn . ''Th_e; feeling .of,_ being useful._is · "will keep Jnl!·young. ,if anythir&gt;g_can,"
also writ~. that "the fl!lllins ~~~ 1 have
mutual- chall!!nges that . anse in the . . and what h.as /tappened in-world fllstory. ... · there, - of course," writes Sol ·Weller .
- hel~ in the shaping· of_ a .mature', inAlthough I could understand where, this
.p assroorji; The good teaclie~ thus must
(Chemical Engineen,.g);:'' ailding - that
dependent,"r~ponsive ad!.tlt provides a
i!Yoke discussion, not total~}&lt; monopolize
position came frpin, I also knew that this
"the act &lt;Sf "teaching ·also-J!intlers to th~
Teward which r can no~ -~d.equately
it on the bails of hi• expertisi. l'k! .must
meant the, !Ieath of good Intellectual
. h.am in' tj'fe.- probably a relic of abonive
IJ!! iri"9'-- not ·only with I!POI&lt;5, but ' 11\'0rk ani! of ~:SOOd urt~ity- iri the· ~rl~ thoughts of musll: "or drama-as- a descrit;:.e in words::"
•with liu~n ~f'IIS· The g~ ~acher is
long-r'ln .. The.refor~, it seemed an imbr~r. I find._that...l am quiie. as 'high'
- To
"it is the !!lOSt ifa!lfyinl i.e elnot.looa recl11~, - b"ut a greg~rious inP9nlnt trend to counter. Teaching then
afteifAI really good l~ure~as I ever was ,._;ng if J can take my swdents. ori an ,ciMd"UIIII.:'
.
." - . .
became a primiry_cof1.cern of miite.-The- · a~r a. good performance 1and just as let ·'. 'fntel!ec!ual .w~lk.~ w)l!&lt;;h .is. ~~ must
-cto.~es "Ebert..- unrversitj Dean
classrOom became .. plate to encourage
dawn by .a poor ~ure, otwhich l am as . hapJ!"n. to. a .la'lle ~ ~!!te Its fize
whO" also ffllall\tillns full-time t~ing .I students' -tOi articulate their quemons,
acutei)Uiware as any i!.f my students)!' p~es·a.re.al:--:alk~~k'.sti!latiOn.
duti~ in the Depa~nt of Geography,
·and io iiJIOfOllsly guide. them in tl)e
' To '!ekh;"th~ reward of ihe good
This mea !Is thai yo~ mUst.~. thOse wlio
- . to, have stu~nts see h'lm "ngt as a , _!levelopment of tools of social analysis
teacher is steady personal growth lcleas
wish to_walk (to I_earn) 1!7 .howi.n g them
remota. preachef on a· ped.e sta1
that were relevant to throwing, light on
develop .and c:hanse. "(he good t , acher
the many intricate thit'P around"them ,
protected by a sterile cunain of rank and
. these issues . .lt became a place where
list~. to hts students; ~-&lt;eads boOksi
·which are all-conn~·mto 011e great
iK:adenilcalfy best~ prestige," but, _ througb .ldlaiOBUe students i:~ularly
he Shares liis- thought with others; all · syste~ life-itself. ~lldents· who are subrather, accepting him "as ~n· of their
letrned to challenie stereoljlped think- - benefiJI I personally chose teaeliing-' jected to !hi&amp;-kind of teachiJil.and living·
total life exJ,erien&lt;:e. In this I an suct..ed
&lt;lng_ and to 'rni!ve bad·and (orth between . · ~use, alone amons-the'f'rofesslons it ~ e&gt;(perience may unde'IIO die greatest-exonly ifthey"seemeasanotherhuman be- •. abstractconceptsandoo"=li!data." ·
encourages continuous -- awareriess of • perience·- na.mely,.that of beii.g able.I?
Saul ~ aliln (Theatre! offers this
- ing having strong and weak points, havIdeas and personal in~et~~~- J enjoy
see; to undersUod, and above aH7 to feel
~ing problems and feelings just like anyperspective: "There is a school of
- ·and continue· to enjoy - the pnocess
ihe desire to
more so 15 to' become.
· other individual. Oiic:e this feeling "of
thought ·th.at OOII(:eives of the 511ge as a
oJ ~lnlng. I cihose - and continue to more deeply inrolved in llfe itself." J
human community Is achieved, teachlns
room with one wall removed where
choose -the profession of teaching."
"Qie correctneSs of -the decision by
becomes ~natural, attalytic functiQn
something happens, I Imagine it more as
Howanl ~ ·(Chemistcy) _exw(Industrial Ensineeringl
promoting the tw~ fk&gt;w of ldeao
a platfclrm set up In die midst of a aowi:l,
perien"cle5 '~real satisfaction from seeing
to enter
tellchlns -in 1963 "has
which i•, In my view,
most important
a plice of perpetual give al'&lt;f take, "as
hiS students succeed In their Chosen
been reinforced" throusho\11 the suboo!element o( teachlns.
_r necessary. to the hQ~ and~! being of fields.." He also points: o~n ttiat "Universi· ' que~! 11 years. A otuden!'s S.tisfaction in
By Richard A. Sigelkow
hokuotol fduc~

"L!nderlying the whole concept of be-

ing a teacher must be a d~ep concern for
life in general and for those who are be-

~~~-;:..,rial

B.eit.

v.

see

col•

n.-a.

me

-

J

•

�December 5, 1974

mastering a difficult concept or task, the
recognition students have atlaiOed while
on campus and their success after
graduation have been very rewarding to

me. To have been part of this success is
very important."
An EYCJ!utlon..ry Process
Most of&gt; these faculty members apparently did not decide on a teaching
career early in their lives, and several
report full appreciation of the role only
after an evolutionary process.

Thomu reached his decision that
" teaching at the University level would,
for me, be ·a rewarding career " aher
some "casual tutoring done while an un -dergraduate followed by non - cred it
teaching wl&gt;ile in the Navy."
Leslie Redler (English) wrote that he
had difficulty responding to the original
question. " The problem is, I think, that I
never decided to become a teacher at
all; it just happened to me.
"M the moment of my life wh ~ n I was
· facing the problem of career choice, the
whole economy of the United States was
unravel ing and it seemed fo[ a little
while at )e;ut ~ il there would be .no
·careers ·of.. the kind I had g&lt;own up ...,xpecting to continue forever. I therefore
got up on, a soaP'_box to scold the world
for having failed those of my generation,
and I .thinkr it. WiiiS on street ,.cprners
.o~nd· in. political meetings that : Jearned
how to· use · language in a way which
moved others._ When my original politics
ran out on me, I was lelt with the skills
and .nO cause in which to. invest them;
and so I fell back on talking about the
books I loved.
"I don't think I suspected at first that
anybod y would actuall y pay me for carrying on this kirld of conversation with
an interested and/or captive audience;·
but When I discovered tliat indeed there
were people' willing to do so, I was committed for the rest of my life."
TeKhlnJ french•in the Senice
· The original ·p)arr of ·lrrins Sh.&gt;rnes
(Engineeo;ing'Science) had ·been to enter
the eligineerin~ bu'siness with his older
brother. A series of events combined to
leadlllm iQio the profession. " During my
sop.homo ie year in ·c ollege I found
myself often e,plalnirig to my colleagues
some of the '(o'Ork th~t had been done at
schOol. They sugge5ted to me that I was
very cle.ar In my explanatlons and that I
should think_.abbut·lieinu teacher•... . I
went ·IiilO the serVIce WHen I was 19, for
three years. Once again, because of f!lY
·training• in· French, I founc;l myself
teaching groups of· soldiers the French
language while overseas. Again, I found
grear satisfaction in doing that. When I
returned to .school I ceased thinking of
beComing a practicing engineer and
decided to stay in a university to teach
arid dq r~a~ch ." .
· T~ecke~Mann's ambition was "to teach
high school cheoiistry and coach football, pre'(erabfy' &gt;fn, ·so!M small. lllino!s
-tawn.' My fa~ was 'a high' schoolmusac
1eachet,' and 1- bedme aware of the
_ saiisfactions -he 'received from seeing a
-nunjbelof his students develop Into outstandin8-m1Hidans." Another fador was
"the · pos~~i.., fnfluence- my professors
had on mt:-personally while attending a
small midwestern college." · •

. · Weier, ~for purl'IY selfish reasons,"

leh "a SOITif!'!"hat .plush industrial j~b, at .
advanced mlddle·ase," to tuch. "I had
done, and-supervised, .._ell for :about 25 ye.trs, so lhe perlonnaPce of r""'"rch
was no Jonser. an ·all COIIIuming drive ~ltbousJ:&gt; I do e.•pect to enjoy the exploration of nlllUn! until I die. The need

for ego-g ratification was also satisfied;
after so me years as director of a large
laboratory I had c,ome to realize that
supervision of many people, eve n in
scientific research, was for me more of a
chore than a challenge. My real need, I
came to understand, was to feel useful.
And personal evaluation of what tal e nts I
had led me to think that I would be most
useful, and wou ld derive the greatest
pleasure as a teacher. 1 have neve r
reg retted that concl usio n."
Kennedy "was not particularly committed\to teach ing" when she accepted
her position he re in 1969. " It was certain·
ly not something that I always dreamed

~o~~~n3~ ':;ll~lmh~t~ib:e~ e,~;:~i~~~ !

soci1f an thropologist and came to rrty job
with ambivalent feel ings about my discipline . .
" I had done a tl&amp;'o-year field-research
study with Native Americans in the rainforest of the Pacific Coast of Colorvbia .
Although I liked the wor~ , somewnefe
toward the end of the study I realized
that in essence I was doing salvage
enth nology; gathering the facts for
posterity .on a people who ~ould be
decimated like most other rainforest
Native Americans in South America. This
raised to me all sorts of questions about
history, imperialism, power relations,
resista nce, and consciousness which my
d iscipli ne had skirted or ignored. At the
sa me time I began to_ qu~tion the
assumptions of the discipline about the
basis of sex rol~ being in biology. As a
worflan I was skeptical of this, and indignant at the lack of research to back up
those assumptions Wflich seemed to be
folk. beliefs, rather than social science."
'Woltin!I'TakeoO.er ·
Eldn explains !hat "the choice to
teach, the real commitment, " came after
he had been teachi ng for a number of
yea rs. "Teaching is a very rich and satisfying way to spe nd a life, but it was a seCODd choice, a holding action until the
real th ing came along. The 'real thing,' in
my case was a career as a professional actor . ... leaahing fOr me at first was a way
o f dealing -with b eing 'between
engagements.' I woJ:ked very h~rd at it,
but I was waiting for something else. And
waiting, unfortunately, has a way of tak·
ingover.
·
''Wtiat happened to me next was not a
blinding flash or the dawn breaking over
Marbleh~ad, !&gt;ut a process that sei!T'ed
quietly and insistently to be changing my
life. It is difficult to dcicument because
the process wasn't orderly, nor was it
dramatic; however, it resulted in a slow
change of personal perspective that I
su ppose culminated in.one of those 'life'
choices responsible people are supposed
tor'nake."
From his earliest involvement in
theatre -'- he began as a child actor Elkin· wa~ afflided "with what can only
be described as tl\e actor's syndrome, a
sort of vision problem which results in
the actor seeing theatre not ~ an art in
which ·manY · ar:tists work knowingly
together, but
a ~ery persOnal approach with the actor at the center.
·
"There is a point, howe'ver, in the
rehearsal of a play when the actoi is
compelled to abandon that very persb11al
approach ro his preparation of the role in
favor of integrating himself with the play
as a whole. In changing roleS from actor .
to te~cher and dire&lt;;tor, I hac;l also to
assume·• new perspective, a pulling back
~nd- widening of. the lens so that I c9uld
see tlif~tre as a commt~nal event that involves actors and directors, musloans
.and designers, the audience, the \eacher

as

• • • because they enjoy it

of theatre.
reSearch and study as well as constant ex" I was teachi ng in a small rural college
pansiorl of one's ~nsitivity to student
in Vermont. My students had no theatre ·
need. In addition it requires the strength
training, and neither they nor the comto fight es.tablished university ideas that
munity for whom 1 was directing plays
discourage emphasis on teaching, or
thwart experimentation in this area.
had seen a great deal of live theatre. It is
one thing to create a theatrical event,
Nevertheless, teaching becomes more
and I needn ' t go into the difficulties that
and more impOrtant for me, as it pays
attention to the intellectual process as
that involves here . . . but I found myself
well as the final product, and assures that
involved in a process that was more
satisfying than anything I had ever done.
all students; not simply those who go on
" There was no longer any question of
to graduate school, leave the university
choice. The work was exhilarating and
with a sound grasp of the nature of innot only was I involved in a n activity that
te ll ect ual work that can be used
seemed to be having a real impact on the
throughout their lives."
community, I was he lping to tra in people
Deeply co nscious of the important into enter that delidous process."
fluence of teaching, these faculty
On the other h\.nd, Solkoff's teaching
members are proud of their chosen
caree r " began at age 7 in a large
profession. Their reactions bring
bedroom facing a lu mber yard in the East
together some of the reasons for the
Flatbush section of Brooklyn. There I
choice - the opportunity to help thinkwould perform the almost daily ritu al of
ing human beings learn new things and
reciting what I had learned in school to
make discoveries, recognition of the iman imaginary group of students . ... I
por.tance of contributing to future
be lieved 1hat my personal strength, and
generations, unique opportunities to
perhaps even physical being, were
profit intellectually, the stimulation -and
e nhanced. Afte r all, I was the teacher,
personal satisfactions inheren t in
wh o could now enjoy mastery in my
teaching, and enjoyment that comes
make-believe classroom."
from an inter'esti ng and challenging role.
He e nvied "the excitement teachers
Bkin provides one' final ingredient in
must experience when th rough thei r
the form of advice. "Excellent theatre is
communication skills, att itl.ldes, and
·
just
no longer a function of geography,
wisdom , they could appreciably change
and the line that d ivides the professional
th e values, even the lives, of their
theatre from the theatre we used to refer
students. Throughout high school,
to as amateur is fast disappearing. I have
college, and grad uate school, I in never thought it fruitful t o teuh
creasingly in volved myself in situations
'amateur theatre.' No more would I exwhere I could in some way teas;t"l
pect my colleagues l o ·teach ··amateUT
someone something_."
French, or to teach their students to play
A Taxlns Role
the a!llateur violi n.
lj:enn~y r.em i~d~ us that •:t.here is li.ttle
that is more · taxi ng than being a good
"There is only one way to do it well,
teacher. It demands constant developand that is ·to do it fully and
passionately."
ment of one 's resources through

New registration regulations
effective With Spring semester
New r:~gistrati on deadlines and
prior to the end of the third week of inprocedures which will go into effect with
struction. the Spring Semester of 1975 were
Proof of such an attempt is the dos
outlined t his week by the University
schedule ant whidt all students must
pick up from the Office o'f. Admissions
Dea ns for Graduate . E.ducat ion,·
Undergraduate Education and q&gt;nand Records. (All studen_lS are instructed,
tinuing Education. ·
·
in writing, to do so.) Furthermore, It is
According to a statement issued by
necessary for tf:oe student to obtain the
Deans McAllister Hull, Charles Ebert and . wrtaea appnonl of tile ....._ on
~obertBerner, the new reguhitionl have
~rtmental stationery procelled via
the "full support of the Faculty Senate
~ channeluccordl"' to the
po icy let .., the . . . . , _.. dlllo.Executive Committee and the President's
Cabinet.
or program director_ ~: Adjunct
" It is critical,'' the deans' statement in·
faculty teaching in Millard Fillmore
dicated, " that all ~cquaint themselves
College should contllct professional adfull y with these new policies to avoid dif-Visors in MFC for information about
ficulties later. It is the responsibility of
Departmental policy and the procedure
ttie department chairmen," the state·
to follow.) With the instructor's letter
ment emphasi~ed , "to brief all whq_..,
of approval: .uod the aforementioned
teach and to make sure that the policies
class schedule _card, the Office ·of Adare e"Oforced."
missicins and Records
register , the
The regulations are:
student. ,
1. StM ents who have not preNo •eahllaalioo• ...... ~ .....
the ...... weelt. •
' .
registered may jnit;ally register within
the first two full~week's f!1 each semester.
4. Students may drop courses until two
2. During the first three weeks of each _ weeks prior to the last day of instruction.
semester, i.e., until the end of the third
. • S. Requests to drop courses after this
~ull week, studentS may · adjust their
deadline must be supported, in writing,
schedules, -by dropping · or adding
by a reasonable upJanatlon and
courses. (Unless, a course was officially
justification by the instructor of the
dosed during this three-'r""k peri9'i it is
course, processed via departmental
a1sumed that the Instructor has no objecchannels according to the policy set by
tion to students being added to the
the chairman or pr'*"'m. illreclor, lind
.course.)
•
must be cleared by the UniWenllr ~
3. Students-!UJ add a C!)Urse(S) to th~ of the DHillon in which tbe coune is
scheduleo aher •the third week, bul
taken.
....._ the _, 01 ~ ........ week of •
All Interests concerned will be In· lnolructlon, if they i:an prove that they
formed of · thl! spedflc deadline dates ·
~ attt;mptl!d to register for t~at course(s)
each semeste~

'"'II

�December 5, 197~

11 Coleges
Uiom~.:r J, r nl..l)

and desired interactions of the Colleges
with other academic units also will be
carefully weighed," he indiaated.
Ketter said that in addition to the
Committee

recommendationS.

.Wom~n ~king ·Charter ·
for college as it iS now.

' :the

Supporters of Women's Studies

Director of the Collegiate System (Dr.1rving Spitzberg) has forwarded to me his
own recommendations which do not
differ essentially in substance from' those
of the Chanering Co!!!_mittee, althougn
there are sOme variances in detail."
. The· President expects also "to receive

College planned to rally in Nonon at
. noon today in favor _of chanering the
College in its present (o"rm , including the
selected use of all-women!s clasSes.
last week the CoHe~e. was informed
that the Collegiate Ctiartering Committee
had recommended to the President that
the College be chvtered for five years

other recommendations from the nonvoting members of the Chartering Com-

minee."
The Charter h'earings, Ketter said,
" demanded a great decil of time and
energy from each member of the Committee. The University is appreciative of
the willingness of the· members to accept ·
these responsibilities. The recommendations resulting from their deliberations
will be of great value to me in my final
decisions," he noted.
Members of the 12-person Chartering
Committee and the Univef sit y con stituency \hey represented are :
focuiJY - Dr. Harry T. Cullinan, Jr.,
chairman of the Chemical Engineering
Department; Dr. larry J. Green ,
professor of orthodontics; Dr. Curtis ).
Mettlil"_l, assistant professor of sociology;
Yoram B. Szekely, associate librarian; Dr.
Barbara J. Howell, associate professor of
physiology; and Or. Anne F. Payne,
associate professor of English.
C~ate Assembly- Jackie Finley of
College 8 and Susan Cook .
Unclefllroduole St.,.nl Auoci.ltionPamela Benson and June Lapidus.
Gr~~w':d.Siudent Alsoclolion - John
Acoclemic Affairs Couno1 Dr.
Rollo Handy, provost of the Faculty of
Educational Studies.
In additiOn, SiXnon: voiing- membeis
also participated in committee
deliberations. They are : Merton W .
Ertel!, acting vice president for academic
affairs; .. F. Carter Pannill, vice president
for health sciences; Richard A.
Siggelkow, vice president for student affairs; Charles H.V. Ebert, dean of DUE;
Irving J. Spitzberg, Jr., dean of .the
Colleges; Jonathan Reichert, chairman
of the Faculty Senate's Colleges Committee.

ary nielhods
planned

"The bibliographic confusion of
college students reaches · depths that
librarians cann""o t easily fathom who have
ra~e~~~n~ht~6r~~~i~~a;h~~ fhem ,"
To aid students in finding their way out
of. bibliographfc and related confusion, .
Ms. Mary Jane Platou, hg_ad reference
lib.-.rian -i n the Undergraduate Library,
will offer a course next semester in
"Sources and Methods of Library
R~rch" (UEB 309).
The credit-bearing Bulletin Board
cou~. Is desisned 10 - Introduce underwiaduates 10 systemalic ....,- of .an
ocademk: libnry and Its lnformotion
JesOUrceS- Similar courses have- been
offered Successlully elsewhere.
·
As the reference llb.-.rian explained,
"A geod ~;~nderstanding of any given
course· or \ subject can't result from
.r...dlns cinly one book or text. Similarly,
effectil(e term papers can't 1/i! Written
wr,hout exposure to numeroUS library
resources. In fact, • student is either. extrernely. bnve, or ex!J'elnely foolish, to
otiempt enrollins In aiurses where independent thousht and resea1ch are of
key importana!; Without first aCquiring an · understandins of lib.-.ry resources
aneresearchrnethods, "
- • .
'This course often • leam::bY-doong ,
opp,ro·ach 10 Llslns lnfo•mation
reoources, indudlns 11brorians, in a
~lie wr,. BlblioJir•J&gt;hy, p,er se, has
very littte meanlns to most stullents. But
when it Is preoented as part of the
.._.m process of any discipline, Its
value quickly becomes opparent. Persons.
wbo take the course will be eiiCOUrased
to c:oncenlntte on Information resources
lnuubjectofthelrrn-."
The course will be limit"' to 20
students_ for further 1nfprmalion, ~ntac:t Ms. Plotou at 831-3416'. ,

(the maximum period) on the condition

tharthe College accept "an explicit nonexclusionary policy in its courses and act_ivities except as provided for by an appropriately constituted University review
body. "
The College was also asked to remove
from its charter ·~ambiguities" regardin g
the use .of fem inine pronouns and th e
word ;'~woman ," which the College (like
many other feminist organizations and
publica.tions) uses gen e ricall y.
Letter Cluifying Policy
In response to the Committee, th e
College sent the following letter clarifyirlg its policy of enrolling only ~omen in
certain courses, notably -a self-help
course which includes breast and pe lvic
examinations, and . th e College's introductory course, " Wome n in Contemporary Society"':
" Women's St udies Colle ge is strongly
committed to non-discriminatory practice in regard to sex, class, and cultural
origins .. As women from div.erse social
and cultural backgrounds, we full y
recognize the seriousness of discrimination because we have experienced it in
our own lives.... We, therefore, concur
with the chanering committee that the
issue of discrimination on the basis of sex
is an important issue to w hich all
members of the University must addre ss
themselves.
"In our research and study, in our
teaching experience, and in our practice
of running a college which is committe d
to finding the root causes of discrimination against women and changing them,
we have le.arned that it is not appropriate
to give men equal access to all courses in
our program. To grant this to JTlen in
every instance is, at this moment in
.history, to· deny women the educational
experien'te that lies a t 'the heart of ou r
college.. . . Women's Studies College
maintains that this policy of limited male
participation is not reverse disctimination , for 'it is addiessed,. to _.eliminating
sexist discrimination. . . .
"
"On the simplest level, in courses
which -focus on -the development _ of
women 's subjective respon~s, such as
213 (Women in Contemporary Society},
or on women's unique experience, such
as self-help, men must take a passive role
because they have little of ~ignificance
. to cOntribute. But, sociiil reality is mof e
complex than this.
'~Different experiences and the diffiaJities inherent in explorinR and '
\-alidatins our experiences as women Is
orily one facet of our ratlonole. ·u must be
·joined with the 1\!allty-of sexist relotions
and die prevalence of stereotyping
which impedes the ·communication of
men and !"'0~. StereOtyP;es about men
and women are eJC!remely pervasive.
They have the power of the accepted
and the inenia of .isnorance. Men tend
to brins to all sasses the prejudice&lt; Olnd
$ter~ tha(, enforce the" existing
situation. Many of us ~omen do-as well.
But since some aspects of our_e_xperience
.

1:.0...,.1 pay.,..:...,
~

--.:.-.

~
considered

. ~-a
~
. The Department of labor Is planning
. tofllesuitapMf"10moreunlversitiesfor
.alleged violations of the Equal Poy Aft,
according to Solicitor William J. Kilbefl.
He made the disclosure in a recent
speeGh before .1 ciYII rlshts symposium
Ko.- City, Mo. "We filed our fi?t case
IIJvolvins unlw!Rity fKulty members
ogalnst Boston Slate College and we expe£t to file anOtho!r 10 u!IIYenity cases In
the next six months," .lie said.
·
~ The "Department will not identify tile
10 unlvenltles It plans 10• sue until the
~ are filed. '
·

in

contradic:t these stereotypes, with
• direCted and concentrated discussion,
we can as a group of women clarify that
experien~e and coljle to understand it.

:candidates
SOllghtfor Grenoble post

Candidates ar,e ~ing sought -fo-,. the
pOst of 1975-76 r~id.ent director Jor the
undergradoate program of study abroad
in Grenoble, France, sponsored by .U/B
as part of a consortium of SUNY colleges.
Professor On&lt;ille Murphy of the Department of History is the program di·
rector fo r 1974-75.
Candidates must be full-time facult y
me mbers at a SUNY institution, who ca'n
apply fo r and accept an assignment
abroad at their curreryt salary. Also, a
position de scription sheet circulated by
th e U/ B Office of Overseas Academic
Affa irs indicates, candidates...._s hould
possess th e fo llowing : " 1. Extensive
kn owledge of the French language; 2.
Expe rie nce in having lived in France; 3.
Th e capabil it y of offering services to th e
host institu tion , the Un iversity of Grenoble, in the are a o f instructio n and/ o r
resea rch on an advan ced level; and 4.
Prove n ability to: advise students and
wo rk with the University of Gren o ble
wise ly and tactfull y; administer an
edu cational program in close coordinat ion with Uni versit y of G renobl e
colleagues and the Office of O verseas
Acad e mic Programs, SUNYAB; handl e
so me basic accounting; maintain perso nal re lations wi th host fam ilies; and
re sol ve orga nizational and logist ica l
problems of housing, transportation ,
recre ation, me dical treatment, etc."
The reside nt directo r will remain on
th ~ reg ular SU NY pa yroll with no
di ffe re nces in fringe be nefit s, etc. Perso nal tran sportation is paid from hi s or
he r ho me to Grenoble and back. For th e
home to New York segment, econom y
class is supported; the New Yo rkGrenoble pan is funded on the basis of
whatever group flights are arranged. The
director will have a modest account for
travel re lated to program business, office
supplies and equipm.e nt . Part-tim e
secretarial assistance may also be provided .
Applications for the position must be
submitted to the director of Overseas
Academic Programs, 107 Townsend Hall ,
by February 28, 1975.
An application consists of an introductory letter, accompanied bv a relevant
vita. The program's advisory·committee,
composed of U/B . faculty from the
Department df French, the Farulty of
Educational Studies and the Office of
Overseas ACademic Programs, aS well as
representatives from other participating
SUNY colleges, "will screen candidates,
"interview the stronger ones, and appoint
the strongest and most appropriate
applicant," the job description sheet indicates.

Men's Presence Destructive
" Thus, for courses which give some
emphasis to exploring women 's lives, it is
not simply that men have little to co ntribute, bu\ rather, that the presence of
men has profound and destructive effects.
The ir pre sence leads, at best, to a lot of
argument about woman 's ex per!ence,
and· at worst, to th e silence of wome n,
as we succumb to traditio nal powe r
relations and stere o(ypes. In e ithe r case,
th e purpose of th e course is not fulfill ed .
No one full y explo res and analyzes these
~x pe rie n ces in orde r to put the m in a
large r social framewor k.
" In esse nce , th e n, for us to mai nta in
the kind o f program th at we have, th e
Unive rsit y must conce de that in principle. for the deve lopme nt of a sound and
vital women 's studies pro gram, Women 's
Studies College must have th e right to
limit the acce ss of me n in certain aspects
of its wo rk.. ..
" At this mo me nt, we are skeptical of
any outside unit 's ability to review our
decisions abo ut th e panicipation of men
in courses. Such a unit would have to be
committed to aHirmative action and take
as its basic assumption that in order to
build a sound wome n's studies program
and in o rder to work toward ending se xisrrr, the re can ~e positive .reasons for
limiting th e access of men to Certain
cou rses. We look fo rward to the ti me
whe n the Unive rsity ha s a single coordi nated affi rma tive action office that
co uld handl e this maner.
Bod PrecedeniJ
''We understand that many people,
d ue to their sincere commitment to the
elim ination of d iscrimination feel that
no argument, no matter how rational,
can justify lim iting the access of men to
courses in a public institution. Some
people say that it sets bad precedent and
slows down the fight to . achieve the
stated goal. Others say that in the end it
is reverse discrimination. We have given
serious thought to these issues over the
past three years and .think ~hese positions
are in error. Our reawns for limiting the
access of men are not arbitrary or based
on not iqns of biology, but on social reali~
ty. More imponantly, they have the ul timate goal of creating a more total picture of human experience and the end of
sex discriminaJion against women. We ·au
know that the present legislation to end
sex discrimination • was; brought about
primarily to ~in to rig_h t the wrongs of
discrimination against wOmen "iri the
past. In this sense our work·can be seen
as part of a broadly conceived affirmative
action program. In this context, and in
the - context of histor-y . and power
relationships the charge of reverse disThe UlB Blade "Studef.t
(B.S.U.)
criminatiO.fl makes no st!nse."
..
and the Blac:k llberatlotf Front Board
Accordi..-g ,to College representatives,
(B.l.F .B.) of State- UnM!rslty'
at
men make· up some 9 per cent- of the
Buffalo are spo~ns -a ·"C::hriotmas
College's enrollment, a figure similar to
Drive" this season. _.J
male enrollment in wonien's studies
. The purpose of the drive; Its organizers
prog.-.ms elsewhere.
·
indicate, "is·to bring the holiday to· the
No man has ever tried to enroll in the
younR,
ORed, and hand!Qpped who
~ollege's self-help course_
'
might otherwise II!' unab~ to fully share
The introductory course (which in ito
in
the.spirit."
Donations are. being
first year enrolled men) is an extremely
solicited from businesses, bonks, governpopul~r one, regularly attracting many
ment
ag'~nciest.. and other orpnizations;
more women· than c;on be enrolled. A
contri.b utlons of money, toys, dothing,
m.1n ·who wishes to take the cOurse is ad:
and food are needed. ~
•
vised of more apprppriate 'but -related
Those ._!Vilihlng to .make contributions
courses offered elsewhere in the Univershould rontact-Collins Davis· at ihe Black
sity, a College spokesman_said ..l.f he perStudent Union, 335'Norton, 831-:zil».
sists, he has die option (to date,. never
taken) of independert study. No male
st.,.nt h .. ever filed • coll)pl,int asainst
the eolrege Charging sex discrimination,
A Jewish scieri.,~ whose ~II fr.;.., "the
it was noted.
.SOVHit Union cost•15. ~' $40,000, and·
~ to modification of its uambiguOus;" · ·a Nobel Prize nominatiOn, will· be
use of female generic terms, the College
speaker at Chabod Houle's Chonukkah·has not Ye! .arrived at a collective policy, ~ "festival, Sunday, December. 8, ot 8.:30
re~ntatiYessaid. ..
,
p.m.
· ... · ·
, · ·
"We ' 1\ad • little trouble .taking 'lhil ~ · Discussing !irs experiences os a
seriously,'' a College representative saiil.
member of Ru..[io's Jewlsh,Uf1!1o:rsround
"We \bought that wti i minor,-point,''
will beDr.M. IIratlover, fonneflyqfRip,
said another; expressins surprisl! lhat the
latlvi, ' _ n'" .WII
proJessor , • .of
matter wos silfficienl to hamper the
rnagrietol'lydrodynamla it Tel A~ an'd
College's ocquisltlon of a charter.
_·
Ben
Gunon
Unl~ies-ln
Israel.
·
.&lt;

Black students~ .
Chlisbnas drive:
!imon

co1r..se

Chabad sPeaker-

suest

�D e_cember 5, 1974

lJ/8 _has 35 requests Ur:"~der Buc~ley _Law;
Officials-still awaiting 'clarification~'

Seminar will
conSKiettrade.
with Mid-East

graduat e programs - have on file
somewhat domineering, o r ove rbearing
The University will host a seminar on
academ ic evaluations which are not
attitude on the part of sc hool ad" Doi ng Business With the Middle East,"
ministrators vis-a-vis the stude nts, where
st udent-initiated. The legislatio n as now
Wednesday morning, December 11 . The
dedsions affed ing that st udent and his
writte n seems to open these to stude nt
co nfe rence will provide Western New
future are made in an aura of secrecy,
i~ ~ pect i on .also, posing eve n more senYork businessmen with an opponunity
Sitive q uestio ns.
an d where that st ud ent has no
. to lea rn the ins ..and outs -of expanding
knowledge as to what elements are inStein notes that the bill was pr.ima ril y
marketing operations in the Persian Gulf volved in a decision made aboUt him. O f
Harriman, is rhe centra l agency receiving
directed toward e leme ntary am~ secona nd Mediterranean areas.
course, the Buckley Amendment does
dary schools which do, i~ fact, compile
all such requests ·under the Family
Sponsors of ~ he- e ve nt include the.U.S.
focus priinarily on elementa ry a nd
one ce ntral; cumulative record concern . ---r.iucational Rights and Pri vacy Act, the
De partme nt o f Comfl,lerce, New Y.ork
seco ndary education where the a~uses
ing .each student. At a la~ge university,
so-called Buckley l aw, which grants to
State De partment of Commerce, Buffalo
that exist have been most pre dominant,
however, so many tiep3rtments and ofstudents, and to parents of students unWo rl d Trade Council, Upstate New York
but th ese abuseS do exist in hi·g her
fices keep so many types of !'ecords that
de r age 18, the right to inspect, to
Dist rict Expo rt CouOcil, the Division.pf
educat ion . I think you are aware of that,
it is often difficult eve n to determ ine
challenge, and to a degree control th e
Co ntinuing Education, and the School of ·
and we felt that a st ud ent in highe r
"who is keep in g what where."
release of information about a stude nt in
Manageme nt .
education sho uld not have fewer ri ghts
Beca use of the nature of co ll ege and
his · or he r sc hool or college file .
The prog ram will begin with a 7:45
tha n hi s parents, or than he wo uld have if
university
records,
man
y
national
hi
ghe
r
!Reporter, November 21.)
a.m. regist ratio n, fo llowed by a breakfa~t
he were in high school."
~ducation associations and orga nizatio ns
'under th e procedure established here
and a series of lect ures and panel disin co mpliance with th e law as it is n ow
are concerned by the bill as it stands.
cussions exploring marketing potential,
Several of these, suc h as the College Enwritte n, a stud ent desiring access to
ma rketing ass istance, investment opportran ce Exa m inat ion Board and the
for"merly Confidential records must co mtunities and marketing compe tition in
lfrumJI.l,Cf'1 .('.,/o/l
National Association of College and
pl ete a request form in the Office of St uthe Middle East. All events will be he ld in
Deputy Com missio ne r Holland er inUnivers ity Attorne ys, have issued
dent Affairs, specifying the records he or
Norton Uni on.
d icating that th e summary report and
vo lum inous lega l opi nions On and in tershe wa nts to see.
Speakers wi ll include William T. lucas,
reco mmendations for ou r Hi sto ry
pretations or the legislation , as has the
A membe r of the Student Affairs staff
vice preside nt, marketing, Harris Corprogra m had bee n supporte d by a large
State Unive rsi ty of New York Counsel's
meets with each student at the ti me of
po
rat ion , Rochester; Peter B. Hale,
majorit y of the Doctoral Council. He ask Office. All of th ese, howeve r, Stein said,
the request , explai ns the provisions of
director of Nea r East Actio n Group, U.S.
ed if I had any additional comnient s that
have simpl y se rved to raise more
th e law and answe rs general questions
De
pt. of Commerce, and a governme nt
I ITlight wish to make befo re the Comqu estions than they answe r. A state of
abo ut it, determines whe re such record s
official from a Middle East nation.
mi ss ioner m akes his deci s ion o n
co nfus ion prese ntl y ex ists. " There's bee n
.. are available in th e Universi ty, and inA pane l discussion will be moderated
Decembe r 9. I have replied, reaffi rming
a lot of activit y, but not much
dicates when the request will be
by Dr . Ri cha rd G. Brandenburg, dean of
our ea rlier sta nd on th e rationa le and
cla rifi cat ion," he says.
honored. The law proVides a wait in g
the
School of Management. Panelists will
substance, and add in g th at th e nature of
period of 45 da ys from receipt of eac h
HEW Guidelines
be Paur Harder, trade specialist, U.S.
the recom me ndations, if car ri ed o ut,
request before the records in questio n
Some of t h ~ co nfusion ma y be clea red ·
of Cofll,JTlerce , and He rb e rt
Dept.
would unduly interfere with the prope r
must be made available:
up by a set of guid e lines which the
Wagner and Stanley Fla x, international
co ndu ct of m y office. I have asked that
leg is lation req uires th e Departm ent of
trade
consultants
for the New York State
Procedures to be Worked Out
the Commissioner reject th e recommenHea lth , Education and Welfare to issue
De pt. of Commerce.
Proced ures fo r act ual student inspecdations o n principle and in substance."
for th e guidance of the institutions intion of recorm · at the eX piration of the
Dr. Ketter added that he wou ld invo lved. " These may be out before the
45-day pe riod have not yet b ~ n worked
troduce a "resolution of protest " at
e nd of th e yea r," Stein said, but he is not
o ut , Stei n ind icate d. Various ty pes of
Mo nday's meet in g of the U/ B Council.
optimistic that they will be ava ilable in
record s are genera ted in 'a numbe r of
The-Co un cil of Preside nt s of SUNY has
time for requests w hi c h mu st be
University offices, he explai ne d. In add ialready proteste'd "the interfere nce imhonore d on January 3. The re are at least
tion to Admissions and Records files, inThe Niaga ra Frontier' Chapter of the
plicit" in the move .
two requests which U/ B mu st co mpl y
formation is also collecte d and filed by
New Yo rk Civil Uberties Union will hold
The legal authorit y for acci de mi c planwi th on that date, if no further act ion is
prof ess ional sch.oo l s , g radu ate
ning does rest "with the Rege nts
a cocktail party Saturday, Dece mber 7, to
forthco mi ng from the Congress.
- d e partm e nts, the D1 iv ision of
through t h e State Education
raise funds for the fiscally troubled
Th e C hronicle of· Higher fduca rio n in
Undergraduate Studies, tlie 'Place ment
Western New Yo rk chapte r.
D e partment ," the President
its November 25 issue reported that most
an.d' t~iee 'r CU idaOce · Office, the
acknow ledged.
_
The party will take place at the
institutions of hi ghe r ed ucation were, as
Ed ucational Opportunity Program, th e
As a December 20th fiscal deadl ine
Unita rian Unive rsa list Church, Elmwood
U/ 8, " si mply waiting to see whether
me9ical and health service, .e tc. In all
Avenue and Ferry Street, from 5:30 to
Joomed befo re the.Da y c;a reCenter, the
'Congress would chan~e the law."
probability, Stein said, Student Affairs
issue of child care once agai n ca.me be7:30p.m.
The law, sponsored by Sen. James l.
will ma ke arrangements between the
fo re the ~e n ate .
Donations ma y be made at the doo r or
Buc kley , Conservative-Repub lica n' of
student and the agency generati ng the
Prof. James lawler (ph ilosophy), head"
by calling Joyce Reichert, 836-3398.
New York, was passed by a voice·vote of
reco rds for inspection in -the office conof the Senate's .ad hoc co mmittee on the
The
loca l chapt~ . cu.rrently . f'!.ce~. '
t h e Cong ress. " Many educators
cerned. Since th e faw provides for the
Da y Care Ce nt er, ad dressed him self to
fisca l crisis as the te.sult of the NYCltJ 's
be lieve," th e Chronicle said, that " the
ra ising of q4.estio ns about materials
q uestions rai sed in earlie r debate .
decisio n to radicatly cut back on serviceslawmake rs did not realize all of its im·
containe d in lhe records, Stein · said,
Previous state me nt s about the hi gh cost
at chapt ers outside the metr.opolita n
pli ca tion s for coll eges a nd universities."
someone who is a professional in the
to parent s of ca mpus day. ca re were inNew York area. Explains l:arry Faulkner,·
area of conce rn should be avai lable to
Amendments! '
'
co rrect, he said; the ave rage wee kly paystaff cou nsel for the local chapter whose
provide necessary inforJl'ation .
A few days before the law look effect,
men t per child is not $27, as previous!y
ow n position ha s been eliminlted,
Requests ' received to d ~ t e.. Stei n said,
th e Chronicle report continued, " Sen.
re ported , but $3.80.
NYCLU has chosen 10 cui $80,000 from its
have principally . been di~ect ed toward
Claiborne P"ell , De mocrat of Rh ode
As the quor um dwindled toward the
budget primarily by eliminating four staff
letters of'recominendation which are o n
Island, announced he was 'attempting to
counse l positions (in . Syracuse,
e nd of the sessio n , t he re maining
file and iowartf records on students
work out some agreement with Senator
Se na to rs supp orted th e following
Rochester, Albany and Buffalo) and .by
forwarded to tli~ University by high
Buck ley.' If that failed , he said he wou ld
package of recom me ndations: that fund s
cutting upstate office budgets in half.
schools. ·
' 1 • •
' in all , probabilit y -spOnso.r an
adeq uat e to support the Center " in a
The local chapter.Jaces a reduction in its
If th e re are no further ame ndm~ nt s or
amendm e nt to defe r the effective date.!"
- r~spo nsible fas hion" be suppl ied by the
budget from $18,000 to $3,000.
clarifica{ions. fortt;ico mif)g about she law
ad ministration, at least through May;
NYCi.U is the state· affiliate of the
(which · ma"ny obserVe rs feel contains ·
that p ri ority in any expanded program be
American Civil liberties Union. When an
AI lt e po ;ter de ~ dline, reports · from
confusing, ~ vague proyistons), Stein said,
given
to
MFC
students;
that
a
Senate
individu31.
joins a local, chapter, apW•shlnston indiated !hot Sen.1lon Buckler
the University; will make available recommittee be formed to work witlithe ·
one! Pol hod on.-.n&lt;ed their Intentions to
pri&gt;ximatelf 40 per cent of his o rber .
guested ~ec&lt;?rd~, starting January 3, 1975,
•monel the Law wl!h • more predoe definition
existing Ceriter to explore ways the .
dues are channeled to the national body
""" l or ,requests received oo _November 19,
olwhat ~es M_ltudent rec:onls."
· faQ!Ity can !&gt;est relate to campus child
with the remainder retu!Jied to the state
. _!j!e ~lfei;iiye,date of. the)egis)ation.
_affiliate. • . ·
care services; and that a Day Care Policy
~ _
'Gnnclfather Prowislon' ..
Committee
be
formed
of
Center
parents,
/'People~in upstate are paying dues and
HEW, the Chronicle reported, has anThe maner of letters of recommendamem~rs.
of
the
proJ?.Osed~nate.com­
have
]lte
right
to
representation,"
says ·
\ nounced the Ford Administration's "firm
minee, and -administrativ,e represention, usual!¥ elicited from faculty with
.Mr. Faulkner, wfio belieVes. th~t the
support" of the bill and has promised
the understanding that they are . to retatives,
"".
·
.
Niasara
Frontier
needs
the
"ongoing
gui del ines for putting it into effect
main confidential, is probably the most
Also e ndorsed was a proposal by Prof.
presei)Ce" of the civil-liberties organizabefore the end of the year. ~t .l_he ~me
tion.
""
..
'sensitive. question JJ95ed ·by the new
Michael ¥etzger !Germanic and Slavic)
time, howeve r, HEW Secr'eta.:)' Caspar W.
access rules, Stein said. Congress may, he
that
i'he
Senate
urg~
the
administration
The reduction means that the chapter
Weinberger directed the agency to wor~ ­
indicated, enact a " grandfather" provi19 make day care available to faculty,
will no longer have" full-time attorney
with Congress to derelop "any needea
staff· and students just as other benefits
sion before the first requests have to be
and . thai only top priority cases wil.l be
clarifying amendments::'- ~
such as parking are provided.
honoreil extending the protection of
handled bv the chapter.
Whatever happens by way of clarific~­
confidentiality .to such ' letters received
tion and amendments, U/B's Stein is of
'
.
.. --.-.
before •.Se.ptember c 9 1974, a·· date
the opinion that " th&lt;: spirit of the !Jill wiU _
seleCted as A general ''o~ing date" for
remain irrterrhs of greater access to their
the 1974-75 5chool yelirr lhhal does not
records on the pan bf students." . He
come about, sOme have raised the quespoints out tliafther-: have indeed--been
tion of whether Or' mit a faculty membe r
As general chairman of tlieUn1ted Way-Campaign at the I.Jniversity
.
.cases
where information in such records
or other referelice can pull a letter from
this year, I want lo 'thank eyeryorie wba~rked · on th~ campaign, anQ.
has lleen misleading and inaccurate. .
i file. This"is being looked into "by the
everyone who contributed. As ·of 'itlis date, we are less than $5,000 short
This
spirit"
of
the"
bill
which
Stein
Univefsity Counsel!s Office, Stein said,
of our goal of._$.125,000. 5o far, 2,855 donors have contribute&lt;f:a t_otal of
.perceives w as further emphasized by
indicating that this is but one of several
$120,132.75, 9!1.1 pe~ cent·of ~University's goal. This is approxirroately
John Kwapisi:, legislative assis!3n~ to
ambiguities which this· institution .anlj..
Sen.
Buckley
and
principal
draftsman
of
more than was contril&gt;uted at tl!e University last year, ,
·$12,000
ottiers ,.re Ja u~mpting to ·receive
· t~e act, at the . 1'9 74 ·College - Board
·
Jf there ar.e those whQ were missed in tl!e s&lt;&gt;licitations, please·send .
guiilance on.
·
• .
. _ ·
National Forum held in Washington, Ocyour contribu~s to 186 Hayes Hall. We stilt have a chanc~ In the next
While ttiese ·len&amp;. o( recommendatober p-29:
few weeks to~meet our g~l of $125,000.
.
·
tion are student-initiated and are Usually
1
"Ihere 11eems to be an attitude; not all
sobliht from someone whom the student :;
Agairo, many thanks to aUo1 yeu who helped.
pervasive· but perhaps ~ ather
thinks has a good"opinion of him or her,
.~:--(
A. weo:a~er Rowland
widespread, a kind of authoritarian;
some ' depa~t"!~nts :.... _parti_cularly
The Universit y has receive d about 35
req uests to date from stude ntst&gt;who wish
access to certain records previously cloSed to 1hem, Ronald Stein, associate
director of Student Person nel Services,
told the Reporter this week.
The Office of Student Affairs, 201

Senat.e-

LocaiNYCLU

has fiscal woes

.
_f!ia'l~ torbelping.
..

·-

�__--/'
Preamble.
These Articles of Governance provide

a medium whereby the faculty in the
hculty of Hea.lth Sciences can cooperate
in deriberation on those matters \Ohich
do not fall within the exclusive jurisdic·
tion of one of the Schools in the Facuky
of Health Sciences and ma~e recommen:
datio'hs upon these to the Vice President
of the Faculty of Health Sciences. T~ese

__

.,..

. . latta
University of New York at Buff'llo.
(e) All members of the academic stall
in the Faculty of Health Sciences having
academic rank or qualified academic
rank and who have voting privileges in ·
their respective Schools. If a member of
the voting faculty holds an appointment
in more than one School, he or she shall
select only one School in which to vote
for Council matters.

Articles of Governance maintain the

Article II. "ealth Sciences Faculty Coun·
original and primary jurisdiction of each
dl.
.
School over .its general academic and
Section 1. Function.
' research policies subject to the regula· •
T-here shall be a Health Sciences
tion and/or By-laws of the individual
Faculty Council which shall represent
Schools, of the Faculty of Health
· and act on behalf of the voting faculty in
Sciences, of the ~University , and of the
all matters within its jurisdiction as defin·
Board ofTruotees.
ed in ·Article. II, Section 4. The Health
Attlde I. Definitions
Sciences Faculty Council shall at its dis·
' ~1.Terms
cretion advise and consult with the PresiA.s used in these Articles unless
dent, the Vice President for Health
otherWise specified, the fOllowing terms
Sciences and the Health Sciences Deans
shall mean :
on all matters of general concern to the
(a) "Board of Trustees." The Board of
Faculty.
Tiustees of State University of New York.
Section 2. Membership.
(b) "Chancellor.". The Chancellor of
The Healt h Sciences Facul!Jo Council
State University of New York.
shall be comprised of the following:
(c) " President./- The chief ad(a) Twent y-five (25) ... representatives
ministrative officer of the State Universi·
e lected by and from the voting faculty in
ty of New York at Buffalo.
each
SchoOl. Overall School representa(d) "Universitv." State University of
tion shall be allocated to the various
New York at Buffalo.
Schools according to the ratio which the
(e) "Vice President for Health
voti ng faculty in each School bears to the
Sciences." The chief administrative oftotal membership of the voting faculty rn
ficer of the Faculty of Health Sciences of
the State University of New York at Buf- ~ th e Faculty of Health Sciences; except
that no School shall have fewer than two
falo.
(2) nor more than ten (10) represen(f) " Academic . Units." The
tatives.
organizational units of the University
such as Faculties, Divisions, Colleges,
(b) The Standing Committee on ElecSchools, Institutes, D~partments and
tions shall determine the number of
others--as shall be designated pursuant to
· representatives to be allocated to each
Article IX, Title D, Section I of the
School and th~ written charge to the
policies of the Board of Trustees.
Committee on Elections shall contain
!g) "Schools." The Schools associated
procedures whereby representation shall
with the Faculty of Health Sciences of the
be determined .
State University of New York at Buffalo.
(c) o ·ne (1) representalive of. the
These are the Schools of Dentistry,
Health Scienc.,s Library. to be e lected by
Health Education, Health Related
the Health Sciences library staff, as is
Professions, Medicine, Nursing and
defined in Ar!icle II , Secti on 1 (j) of the
Pharmacy.
Policies of the Board of Trustees.
(h) "Dean." The-chief administrative
(d) The three (3) representatives of th e
officer of the School.
.
Faculty of Health Sciences , to the Ex(i) ''Academic Staff.'" Members of the
ecutive Committee of the Faculty Senate.
professional staff having academit rank
(e) The Health Seiences representative
or qualified_ rank, in accord with the
to the State .University of New York
Policies of the Board of Trustees. ~
Faculty Senate. ,
, .. ,
,
(j) " Academic Rank." Ra~k held by
, (f) Three (3) student members to be
those members of the pr¢essional staff
chosen by and from the student
having_ the titles of professor, associate
mem6ership on the Student Affa irs
professor, assistant professor, instructor,
Committee.
and assistant instrUctor, including '
Section J. OffKers.
_geographic full-time faculty members
There shall be a Chairperson and a
having such titles, and rank held by
Secretary of the Health Sciences Council.
members of th~ professional staff having
The Chairperson, or, in his Or her
the titles of librarian, aSsociate librarian,
absence, the Secretary, shall be the
anll assistant lib~rian. A geographic lull·
ptesiding officer of the Council.
time faculty member is a person serving
Section 4. Powers and Duties.
on the faculty of a medical center who is
(a) The Health Sciences Faculty Coun·
not empfuyed on a full-time basis for the
cil Shall have the power to consider any
purpose of fixing com-pensation payable
matters which the Council may vote to
by the State but all of whose professional
consider; or which are presented to it for
services and adivities are conducted at
consideration by the Vice President fOr
the medical center or its affiliated
Health Sciences, or by the faoulty. The
hospitals and are available to the State on
Health Sciences Faculty Council shall not
a full-time basis for clinical and instrucconSider any matter that is within the ex·
. tional purposes, In accord witl\ the
elusive jurisdiction of one of its constiPolides of the Board oiTrustl!es.
tuent Schools· except as specified 'in Ar·
) (lc) "Qualified Academk Rank." '[tank . tide 11;4(b).
· held by those 1'11ef111MlB-ol the academic,
(b) An individual School .may request
staff having titles of les:turer, or titles.df
the advice of the Health Sci,l!nces Faculty
academic rank preceded· by the
Coundl on issues whichr pertain ex·
C:Jesignations "dililcal'~ or "visiting"· Or
elusively to that School. 'Such requests
other)ilnilar designations, in accorll with . shall be made ,by:
•
•
Policies of the Board oiTrustees. .
( i) the Dea of tl)e.specific Scfiool;
. (I) "VotiDg faculty." All votjng'faculty
or,
of the Faculty of 'Health Sciences as
( ii) the School's' elected faculty
specified in Article I, Section 2.
representitive body; or;
•.
{m) "faculty. Sen~te." · The State
(iii~ the School's Executive Com··
inittee;
or,
·
-:
.
...
..
Univenity of New York at Buffalo faeulty
Senate. ,
(iv) live percent (5%) of the voting
(n) "Health Sciences Faculty Council."
faculty, or ten (10) voting faculty
'(he Faculty Council representirig the·
members, whichever is'gr~ate,.
Schools in the Faculty of,He;ojlh Sciences,
(c) The Health Sciences.Faculty.Coun·
. the · luQctions, membership and ~e~
cil shall elect all facuJty_'committee
_ "'-""duties of which ·are specified in Arti·
members to those Faculty-wide COl)'!·
,. 1
"((ittees specified according to the
cre11.
,
. Sedloot Z.
ol !he Vorlng
P.r~ures s~fit!d in Artide Ill. The
gener~ duties and responsibilities of
- &lt;fxt&gt;lry.
Membership shall be ·comprised of the
each Commlqe&lt;i shall...be s~fied in a
folloWing:
·
"'-:"
Committee charge prepared by the
(il) The Chancellor of the..Siate Unlver·
He21Ho- ~enC.,S Faculty Counc!!- Such
sityofNewYork. ·,
_
.
•
charges may be ame_nded by, the Healt~
(b) The President of thl! On[verslty.
. ~"""' faculty Council: These charges·
(c) The VIce Presl!lentand the Assistant
shaH be pllblishecl M"an appendix to the
VIce Presidents for Health Sciences.
Articles of Govt!mai'ice for the Health
(d) The Deans, Associate Deans, -and
Science$ F.CUity Cotincil.
.•
•
Assistant Deans who have acaol!!mlc rank
' (dl The Health Sciences Faculty G:ouncil
In .t he faculty C?f Health ScienCe.; State
shall provide f!)t' coordination of'faculty

MM...,

•

f

•

,

...

December 5, 1974

Proposed·· Article
the Health Scie11
policies wilhin.the Committee's jurisdic·
participation in University-wide faculty
tio n and to initiate investigations of
affairs and committees and in regio~
any q1;1estions germane to its area of
and SUNY-wide faculty affairs and com·
interest.
.
mittees.
(c) The Health Sciences Faculty Coun- (e) SRf!cifically, and in addition to the
foregoing powers and duties, the· Health . cil may establish ad hoo .Committees to
prepare reports on.. particular issues for
Sciences Faculty Council shall advise the
the informarion of the Health Sciences
President, the ViCe President for Health
Faculty Council, or to recommend
Sciences and the Health Science Deans
policies on particular issues to the Counwith respect to :
cil. The Health Sciences Faculty Council
( i) any proposal to create, transfer
may
also es!,blish Special Committees.
in, transfer out, or abolish a
Chairpersons and members of ad hoc ·
School;
and Special Committees shall be ap·
( ii) any proposal to reorganize
poi nted by the Health Sciences Faculty
academic units within the FaculCouncil.
ty of Health Sciences; ·
(d) Standing Committees, Specia l
om new curricula and changes in
Committees · and ad hbc Committees
existing curricu1a which affect
shall not consider any matter that is
more than one School ;
within the excl usive jurisdidion of one
{iv) general policies relating to the
of the Schools except as specified in Arti ·
distribution of institutional
de II , 4 (b). All Committees shall report
funds;
( v) ge neral Health Science library
in writing to the Health Sciences Faculty
Council.
~
policies;
(vi) general policies relating to the
Article IV. Elections •nd Terms of Office
utilization of space and service
of !he. Health Sciences hcul·
facilities.
ty Council.
Section s..Meerings.
..
Section f. Elections.
(a) Meetings of the Health Sciences
(a) The rep rese ntati ves from each
Faculty Council shall be called by the
School shall be selected according to
Chairperson of the Council or in his or
whatever mechanism that School 's fa cul her absence, the Secretary. The Presiding .Jy selects.
Officer of the Health Sciences Faculty
(b) The Chairperson and Secretary of
Coyncil s~all also call a meeling .of the
. the Health Sciences Faculty Council shall
council Upon the wr)Uen request of ten
be e lected by and from the membership
(10) members of the coUncil, or upo n
of the Health Sciences nculty Council
written request of fifty (50) members of
by a majority vote of all members of th e
the vot ing facult y, or upon written re Health Sciences Faculty Council. The
quest by th e Vice President for Health
standing Committee on Elections shall
Sciences. Such written requests shall set
exercise overall supervision of election
forth the matters to be prese nted at the
of Officers of the Health Scie nces Facult y
meeting. A majorit y of th e voti ng
Cou ncil.
members of the Council shall constitute
Section 2 'rerms of Office. ,
a quorum .
(a) Representatives to the . Health
!bl The Hea lth Sciences· Faculty Coun·
Sciences Faculty Council shall serve for
cil may adopt such rules for the tra nsactwo {2) years in staggered terms and shall
t ion of business as it may deem
assume office on Sep"tember 1. A
necessary. Unles~ otherwise provided ,
represe ntative shall be ineligible fOr rethe latest editio n of Robert s' Rules of
election after two (2} consecutive two·
Order, Revised, applies.
year terms for a period of one year
following his o r her final term.
Artide Ill. Committees.
(b) Officers of the Health Sciences
(a) The Health Sciences Faculty CounFaculty Council shall serve- for one (1)
. cil shall elect Chairpersons of Standing
yea r terms and shall be ineligible for re·
Committees on (i) Academic Planhing,
election after two (2) consecutive one(ii) - Facilities PlanninSf (iii) Academic
year terms for a period of one . year
Freedom and Responsibility, (iv) Stu·
following his or her final term.
dent Affairs, (v} Information and library
Section J. Vacancies.
Services, (v i) Funding of ResearQ&gt; and
(a) When a member •of the Health
Creative, .Activitie$, (vii} Continuing
Education, and (viii) Elections. Chairpersons will be elected from the
membership of. the Council at the first
meeting following the election bl Council representatives. A Committee"' ~hall
The, proPosed , by~aws fo 1
conSist of the " Chairperson, t\YO (2)
publish'!'d !)ere since this is the fi
members from the School of Medicine
you. They havl! been worked pr
and one (1) member from each of the
ed to follow faculty suggesti~
other Schools. Member(s) · shall be
recommendation.
now of all the
selected by representatives to the Coun·
SCieQces , Senato~, . that these b
cil from each School. Members wili be
.seems desirable to some, lt is.bel
selected from that School's Committee
that wen~ done after apP.roval in
having analogous powers ajfd jurisdiction.
, ·
tions to those of the Couricil's Corti·
mittee on wh ich the mi!mber will sit. If
Each of the schools has its c
no analogous Committee exists, Council
laws.
'
representatlves from that Scbool may
School of Medicine:
select _.. comminee memPer from that
' Vote will be ta.ken at a mee
.~hoot's voting faculty at large. Chairper· .
should be rl!ferred to them as so
· sons and members of Stanaing . ComSchool
of Denlldry: '.
mittees shall ~rve beginning &lt;&gt;n Sep·
A vote will be taken at the n
!ember 1. and October 1, r~pectively,
School of Hulth Eduallon:
for a term of two m yejlrs and may be
reappointed. Chairl'!'rsons and members
Thl! bv~ws will be reviewe
of Standing ·committees-s.hall be ineligi·
Committl!l!. ,C omments should I
ble to serve on the same committee after
Committl!e, so that a final vote rr
. ~,0 (2) con~utive JWo·year terms for a
School of~:
period ol, one year following his or her
Eachdepartment will revi•
final term.
·
should indicate their opinion
Tl&gt;e Student Affairs Committee will in·
chairmen
will.votl! on the matt•
elude;- in addition to those designated
·. based upon thl! consensus withit
above six (6) studen1 members. Jhe stu·
Sc~of Nunlna: dent representatives shall be elected by •
·
Thl! faculty will vote upon it
'!rul from each of the following con·
stituent groups: (i) two (2) un·
School of HHIIh Relatl!d Profess
dergraduate students, (ii) two (2)
These by-laws will be revie
graduate students, (iii), one (1) meaical
mittl!a, wilh recoft~~!~endatiom
, 5tudent, and (iv) one (1) d~ntal student.
Su~ul!ntly, they wj'll be pnise
(b) I~ shall be the &lt;!,uty of each Standing
.ty meeting. :-"
Committee !O. consider questions and

: A ·note to Hea

�JinalltJia-

December 5, 1974

[)f:Governance for

es:Faculty Council
Sciences Faculty Council vacates his or
her position, the School, upon notification by the Secretary of the Council, shall
select a representative to fill the unexpired • term .Jac.cording to whatever
·methanisni that ~ool'&lt;fatulty selects.
' (b)When·the ~hairperson or Secretary
of the Heahh Sciences Facuhy ..Council
vacates his or her position, the Council
shall elect a replacementt9 fill the unexpired term as specified in Article IV,
Section 1 (b).
(c) Replacements selected to fill an unexpired term shall be eligible for election
for two (2) terms· as specified in Article
IV, Section 2.

Article V. Meetings of the Voting Faculty.
X Meetings of the voting facuhy shall be
called by the presiding officer of the
Health Sciences faculty Council.
Meetings may be c;_all~d at any time by a
majority of the Health SCiences Faculty
Council, by the Vice President for Heahh
Sciences, or by petition of five percent
(5% ) of the votiryg f~culty. A petition

shall set forth the matters to be
presented at the meeting and shall be
presented to the presiOiOg officer of the
Health Sciences Faculty Council. Notice
and agenda of voting faculty meetings

to the faculty by the Health Sciences
fAfulty Council. The council may initiate
su&lt;;h proposals or a pr.oposal of
amendments may be presented to the
Health Sciences Faculty Coundl by peti·
tion of fifty (50) or more members of the
voting f~culty.' Proposed amendments
shall be· .presented in writing to the
presiding officer of the Health Sciences ·
Faculty C9uncil.
Section :z. Adoprion of Amendments.
Proposed amendments shall become
effective upon approval by all of-. the ·
'$Chools in the faculty of Health Sciences.
Each School shall conduct a referendum
on proposed amendments and a majority
vote of those voting in each School shall
constitute approval .

Article VII. lmplement.tion.
These Articles of Governance shaH
become effective upon ratification by all
of the Schools in the Faculty of Health
Sciences. The ratification procedure shall
be conducted accord ir\g to whateve r
mechani sm that School 's faculty selects.
The Articles of Governan ce will go into
effect if and only if none of the Schools
report a negative vote by Januny 31,
1975.

shall be distributed at least fourteen (14)
calendar da ys (exclusive of "official
University recesses} prior lo rhe meeting \

date. Twenty percent (20 % ) of the
membership of the voting facuh y shall
constitute a quor um for an y meeting of
the voting fa cult y.
The presiding ·officer of the Health
Sciences Faculty Council shall be the
Chairperson of the voting facult y
meeting. The voting faculty may adopr
such rules for the transaction of busine ss
as it ma y· deem' necessa'ry. Unl e ss
otne rwise pfovided: the latest edition of
Roberts ' Rules of Order, Revised ,
applies.
Any '!ctions approved at a meeting of
the voting faculty shall become effective
upon approval of all of the Schools in the
Faculty of Health Sciences. Each School
shall conduct a referendum on actions
approved at a meeting of the vOt~ng
faculty and a majority vote in each
School shall constitute approval.
A~ VI. Amendments.

Section 1.1'ropoYI of Amendments.
Proposal of amendments to these Ar·
tides "'f Goverriance shall be presented

He•lth Scien&lt;es Faculty Council
Committee on Academic Freedom
•nd ResponsibilitY ·
The Faculty Academic Freedom and
Respon sibility Co mmittee is charged :
(1) To conduct a reg ul ar review of th e
gene ral Health Scie nces Facul ty policies
governing a ppointme nt , promo tio n,
gran't ing of continuing appointme nt , and
separation of faculty a nd to re port on
the~ mak ing appropri ate reco mme n·
dations.
(2) To conduct a reRular review of the
general He alth Scie nces Facult y policies
governing ' a cademic fr eedom a nd
responsibilit y and mak e approPriat e
re comme ndations to th e Health Sciences
Faculty Council .
(3) To act as a liaiso n wit h the Health
Sciences Bargaining Unit.
(4) To carry out such specific studies
and investigations with re gard to matte rs
concerning faculty tenure and privilege
and acade mic freedom and responsibility which are assigned to it by th e Health
Sciences Faculty Council.
(~) To sUbmit regu!ar report s to th e
Health Sciences Faculty Council, in ·
elUding an annual report each May.
He•lth.Sciences Faculty Council

! Faculty of Health Sciences are
efficient means of bring\iig them to
nany faculty committees and r,evis·
'rom all o1 the schools. It is the
ewing groups, including the Health
lproved protnptly. .If revision still
d that it would be more effective if
d of further delaying definitive ac·
procedure for voting on these by·

of the Faculty Council. !;:omments
spossible.
acuity meeting.
... , H. •:~t

·

.

~:•r.· ·t~

r .. ·

Operatirij!Codes and~ By-laws
mt to Dr. Meyers, chairman··of that
•e taken by it. ·

1 the

and discuss the material. Faculty
• their respective chairman. The
an Executive Committee meeting, •
!ir departments.

/

s next meeting:

'

i by a facu;~ ~~~~ittee· and \ ub·
• the HRP Executive Committee.
l to the faculty for action at a facul·
I

·-

,.

'-

Committee on Ac&lt;iidf:mic Pbnning

The Academic Planning Committee is
charged :
•
(1) To study and make appropriate
recommendations to the Health Sciences
Faculty Council on the following
matters:
·
- (a) any proposarto create, transfer in,
transfer out or abolish a School;
(b) any proposal to reorganiz~
academic urnits within the Faculty of
Health Sciences;
(c) any proposal of new curriCula or
changes in existing curricula which affect
more than one School.
(2) T6 initiate proposals for new
programs or integrated curricula_which
are essential for a unif(ed Health Science
education. ·
(3) "[o conduct regular reviews of, and
report on, general academic policies and
plans in the faculty ,of Health Sciences.
These -shall include_both short and long
range academic policies and plans which
affeg the general character of the Facul·
ty of Health Science!. (4) To study, and make appropriate
recommendationS to~ the Health ScienJ:es
Faculty Council, general policies, and
plans fgr participation of the faculty of
Health Sciences in the Colleges.
(5) To study the student health care
facilities, to examine possible models of
"Health Team" aP.Pr~es to health
care..,delivery as an academic experience
and make appropriate recommendations

' to ihe Health Sciences faculty Council.
To carry out a continuous liaison with
the Facilities Planning Committee concerning health care facilities.
(6) To conduct regular reviews of, and
report on, general policies and plans of
SUNY regional activities as they relate to
the Faculty of Health Sciences.
(7) To identify cross-campus progra!lls
with which the faculty , rese-arch
associates and students can interact
within the context of a Health Science
Center.
(8) To carry out such specific studies or
investjgatio'1s with regard to educational
plannmg and policy as may be assigned
to it by the Health Sciences faculty
Council.
_
19) To submit regular reports to the
Health Sciences Faculty c;ouncil, including an annual report each May.
Heolth Sciences Faculty Council
Committee on ContinUing Education
The Continuing Education Cbmminee
is charged:
'
(1) To study, and make appropriate
recomme ndations to the Health Sciences
Faculty Council, general policies and
practic e s of th e Fac ulty .of Health
Sciences re lating to continuing education.
, (2) To study Or initiate proposals which
integrate aspects of continuing educa·
tion wh ic h funher the idea of unified "'
He alth Science education.
(3) To act as a liaison between Schools
to develop inter·School coope~ation in
continuing educat ion.
·
(4) To carry out such (pecific studies
and investigations with regard to con·
tinuing e ducation which are assigned to
it by the He alth S&lt;:iences Faculty Council.
(5) To submit regular reports to the
He alth Sciences Faculty Council, incl uding an annual report each May.
He.1lth Sciences f.Jculty Council
Committee on Elections
The Elections Committee is charged :
(1) To ·supe rvise all Health Science
Faculty no minat ions and elections for
Faculty Se nate officers including the
Faculty Se nate o f State University of New
York and the University Assembly.
(2) To supe rvise the nomination ..and
electio n o f o fficer s of the Health
Sciences Facult y Council.
(3) To de te rmine the number of
e lected re pre se ntatives in the Health
Sc ie nces Facult y Council from each
School acco rdin g to Article II , 2 (a) of the
Art icles· of Go ve rnance of the Health
Sc ie nces f aculty Council. The School
having Jh e largest number of voting
faculty members ~hall have no more than
ten (10) representatives and the smallest
shall have two (2) representatives. The
remaining thirteen (13) ohall be alloc;&gt;ted
according to the ratio of voting faculty in
the School relative to the total of the four
Schools concerned.
(4) To study and make appropriate
recommendations so the Health Sciences
Faculty Council on nomination and election policies in the faculty of ·Heallh
Sciences as these relate to (1), (2), and (3)
abo~e. ·
(S) To carry out such specific studies or'
i~vestigations with regard to e~ons as
,
may be assigned to it by the Health
Sciences faculty Council.

7
eluding an annual report each May.
Heolth SdetKes FKUity Council
Committee on Funding of Reourc:h
and ,Creative ActiYides
The Committee on funding of
Research and Creative Activities is
charged :
(1) To study and make appropriate
recommendations to the Health Sciences
Facuffy Council on general policies
relating to the distribution of in-·
·stitutional funds and to act as a liaison
with University-wide Committees which
deal with similar questions.
(2) To carry out sucfl specific studies or
investigations with regard fo funding of
research and creative activities as ma.y be
assigned to ot by the Health Sciences
Faculty Council.
. (3) To submit regular reports to the
Health Sciences Faculty Council, in·
eluding an annual report each May.
He•lth Sciences Faculty ,Couna1
Committee on Information and
Li!nary Serykes ·
. Tfie Information and library Services
Committee is charged :
(1) To cond.u ct a regular revieW of
policies and practices of the Health
Sciences Library. These shall include
such matters as operational aspects,
facilities, and general policies for future
development.
(2) To conduct a regular review of
Health Science computer resources and
to carry out a continuous liaison with
University·wide Committees which are
concerned with computer resources;
this shall include examination of general
pofk:ies and policies and plans for future
developm e nt.
.
(3) To ca rry out such specific studies or
investigations with regard to informat ional and library services as may be
assigned to it by the Health Sciences
Faculty Council.
(4} To subinit fegular reports to the
Health Sciences Faculty Council, including an annual report each May.
.He.tth Sciences F•c~ Council
Committee on Sludent Affairs
The Stude nt Affairs Committee is
charged:
(1) To conduct regular reviews of
general Health Sciences policies that
affect or are of common interest to
students and make appropriate
recommendations. These recommen·
dations may include recommendations
for changes in present policies or the
development of new policies.
(2) To con.fluct regular and continuous
reviews of general Health Sciences
policies encompassing all aspects of
Student-Faculty relationships.
(3) To study and .ma.ke appropriate
recommendations regarding general
policies and practices of the faculty of
Health Scienc-es relating ·to the distribu·
tion of fi.nandal aid to students and
general faculty policies, practice, and
procedure regarding admission.
(4) To carry out such sJll!cific studies or
investigations with regard to Student Af·
fairs or Student-Faculty relationships as
moy be assigned to it, by the Health
Sciences-Faculty O:&gt;uncil.
(5) To Submit regular reports to the
Health Sciences . ·Faculty Council, including an annual repo~ each May.

HeoJth SdetKes FKU!ty Counc:it
, Coftlmlnee on Fodlltles Planning '
The Facilities Planning CorJ1mittee lis
charged:
.
(1) To. assist in the planning of Health
Sciences facilities in locations both on
and off Campus.
_
(2) To make recommendations regar~ d!,rlg the_ utilization of facilities which
Students in the Division of
·m eet the common needs of the Health
Uridergraduate Educatioo desiring to
Sciences faculty, students, research
enter the School of M•nagement in 1
associates, and staff.
_
January 1975 must cont.&lt;;! their DUE ad·
(3) To conduct regular revieWl of, arid
visor-in Diefendorf Hall as soon ., possi·
make appropriate recommendations on,
ble, no later ·than December 17. Students
service facilities; these service· facilities ' must cont.ct their advisor in persoJI in
shall include shop, audit&gt;·visuat, and
order to complete the application and
animal care facilities.
• request transfer of records to the School
(4) To carry out a continuous liaison
of Management.
with the Acadl!mic Planning 'Committee
Students making applicatlt&gt;n ·must ex·
on matters pertaining to student health ·
pect to complete 58 credit hours, in·
care faciliti_es.
' ·
eluding Accounting lMGA) 203, at the
(5) To carry out such 5peeific studies or
end of tbe 1974 Fall semester.
·
Only those studentS who have been ·
investiga.tions with regard to facilities
planning and policy as moy-be .,signed
ormalry accepted and admitted to the
to it by the Health Sciences Faculty
School of Management may apply
· Cou'ncil.
courses at the junior-senior levels in the
(6) To ·submit regular reports to the
School toward the B.S. (Busin- Ad·
Health. Sciences· fa~lty · Coun~il, in·
· ministration) degree.

Managerilent .
petitions du~

�........_
.

•

4

-

'Uberating' studies seen needed for
· "Possibly the most important needs for
education in the liberating arts il) the
future will be to develop at all levels, in·duding the area of adult education, the
ability to adapt to a changing world; to
expand our understanding of our own
world, partic'!larly by,_ Jlleans 'of the
sciences; to cultivate the skill of intelligence, · especially as ' it applies ~to
moral values . and the making of
qecision~; and, finally, to develop
' autonomous inQividuals capable of
withstanding the shock of rapid cha nge
and social conflict. The challenges to
educatio'1 have never been greater."
U/B Professor·of Philosophy Paul Kurtz
advances this theory in an article,
~I

" Education for the Future : The

liberating Aris," scheduled for inclusion
in a forthcoming book, The Philosophy
of the Curriculum : The Need for General

Education. which he is editing with
Sidney Hook and Mira Todorovich.

" Many of us believe," Kurtz writes,
" rhat the reaction against such stUdies in
the sixties- reactions that often denuded or abandoned the liberal-arts
curriculum entirely- were narrow and
in temperate." He notes that U/ 8 was
among those ca ught up in the reaction,
abandoning " th e distribution requirements r.hat attempted to fulfill the
goals of general education."
Noting the faculty Senate-President's
Office conference on general education
to be convened on ca mpus this weekend
(see separate story, this page), Kurtz calls
for a renewed commitment to the ideals
of general education in modified forms :
"Much of the liberal-arts curriculum was
too historical in · character and Wilr not
meet many of the genuine needs of the
future. ThuS, general education takes on
a new dimension; that is, education must
in some way equip both the student and
the social polity to deal with the new
kinds of problems emerging .... For example, it is apparent that we ca n no
longer teach courses ih Western Civilization alone, for the new fo cus must be on
world civilization, not simply on the
historj of the West, but the future of all
truman kind. Accordingly, the real question we face is how will education enable
students and societY to adapt to the
rapidly changing world of the future."
Many students, bOred with traditional
liberal-arts subjects, have, Kurtz says,
"turned back to vocationalism. ' What
.does one do with a B.A. degree?' we are
asked. 'It bakes no bread!' Therefore,
many students have rejected the liberal
arts and the humanities With a
vengeance. Many also have discovered
that the completely unstructured, selfadualizing curricula did not equip them
to develop a career or fundion in the
outside world. The need to develop, ski'lls
and a vocation, · which the selfactualizing programs overlooked, is important. But one lesson to be _'learned
aho Is that vocationalism or areerism by
itself, without supplemental nourishment by general ed_ucation is woefully
inadequate; the continuing n~ is for
some exposure to-... the liberating ahs."
ketwlo for lhe
If we 'forecast the future; Kurt,..contends, "we see that the .number of
problems that we shall have to-face as in; dlviduals, as _a society, indeed as a world

Future

.

~~;;::::::=
:ions,
SIMe UniYenity ol Nf!w Ycri M
luHalo, 3415 Main St•• lufhlo, N.Y. 14114.
fdkat~l

ollic:e5 •~ locarecll n ioom 213, ZSO

Wff!.Sf'H' AV@IIue (~'hone n2n.
&amp;ecurn.e Editor ·

"

A; WESTLEY ROWlAND
'Edifor-ln-Chief.

ICJ4EIJ: T. MARI.m
,An and huduction
/OifN A QOUTIE«
As~efdlfor

1

PATitK:IA W..UO IIEOERMAN
w..lrlyQIMdorldlto&lt;
' OIANE QUIHH

c........,in«Anlll
SUSAN AI• .INJIIGE«
.. •

~..

December 5, 1?74

.

the future

emplified by Paul Goodman, john Holt,
community, stagger the imagination."
adapt _to and withstand changes but
Edgar Friedenberg and others - has
T~ere is, Kurtz says, " one possible
" indeed enjoy them."
emphasized the immediate experiences
scenario for tlie individual that is alieady
Curriculum of the Future
of
the individual student to the detrihappening and seems likely to continue
Ttie curriculum Of the future, Kurtz
ment of his cognitive skills. There has
in the future , though even more so. Fir~t,
sub mits, "will nee&lt;Lto undergo some ·
been " tendency to get away from the
with increased mobility and travel, the
rather drastic alterations." U shou ld "inhard and vigOrous cultfvatiarl of the arts
hi storic rootedness in one place, the
volve several components, mucfi Of them
of intell igence - the difficuft effort ofcommitment to the local community will .
familiar: .. training in the. basic skills ... ,
mastery·
and achievement. We need to
be eroded. N3rrow parochialism will be
Profession~! and occupational prepa[ause our intelligence to judge claims
overcome. Although this will no doubt •
tion , understanding of the M'ture and
about the world,.to describe and explain
expa nd the hori zons of th e individual
· pradice of democracy, and an app reci awhat we encounte r, and to develop nor~
eve n beyond the nation to the 1 world ·
tion of history and the arts. Yet, the vital
mative judgments that will· guide our
com munity,' it may also lead to s~ere
element is to increase, by me·ans of the
decisions
and conduct. . . . Disciplin~d
trauma, a loss of belonging.
sciences, our understanding of the rapid thinking, self-regulating and demanding,
" Second, people will need to cha nge
ly cRanging world in which we live so
is reqUired."
careers, occupa ti ons, and jobs · more
that we can develop the abilir y ro make
This· "moral ed ucation," Kurtz says,
freque ntly, perhaps several times in a
reflective value j udgments."
"m\J
st begin in elementary school,
life time. New technologies Will make
Kurtz finds it curious " that in the
continue in hi gh school, reach fruition in
some occupations ou tm oded and
United States, perhaps the most in·
colleges, but still be part of the ongoing
novative scientific and technological
life of a man or woman. Moral education
civilization in history, a drastic critique of
cannot be le ft solely to re ligion or the
The Reporter hopes on this page to
science and technology is now under
home, as in th e past; nor is it solel y the
provide .a forum for the exchange of
way. Scie nce is blamed for man y of our
task of philosoph y departments, but it
current problems. There is in some
views on a wide variety of issues of
should
permeate "the curriculum. In -.he
circles a neo-romantic flight into anticoncern to the U/B community. We
best se nse, va lu e -ed ucation involves
intellectualism.
This
points
to
a
failure
in
welcome both position papers and
freedom
and auto nomy, the ca pacit y to
educat ion ~ for we have not adequately
leHers as space permits.
think critically and creatively abour life's
explai ned science as a great adventure in
problems, about options, alternatives,
lea rning; nor have we succeeded in
and choices. Among the frontiers of
develoP.ing an appreciatio n for the
residual. The iceman was replaced by the
moral concern will be the definition and
sc ie ntifi c m et hod: the appeal to
refrigerator re pairman, the seamstress by
eva luation of the ethics of freedom and
evide nce and logical Criteria in judging
the sewing ma c hine operator, the
equal right s; the implications of scientific
hypotheses , the tentative and
bookkeeper by the computer technician.
discove ry, and th e creation of a world
hypothetical character of knowing , the
Thi s process will cont inue . Even
co mmunit y in which ou r commitment to
use of reflecti ve intelligence as a way of
seemingly well-established professions
humankind as a whole, over and beyo nd
solving problems. Given the rapidly
-law, medicine, engineering, teaching
narroW loyalties and parochial
changing character of the postmodern
- wi ll be faced constantly with new
allegiances,
is possible."
world, we cannot retreat from the use of
demands and met hods, often so intechnology in science."
novative. that th ey will swee p away and
It is not ~cienti fic discovery that is to be
make obsolescent the best·trained but
feared in Kurtz's view " but the measures
superannuated professionals of the
of scie ntif ic app lica tion , their abuses by
previous decad e. Thus the ability to
deh umani z in g social and political
cha n ge careers and vocatio n s in
forces."
midstream becomes a prerequisite of
su rviva l, especially the ability to adjust
"Ge~ erai · Educafiori and the.First1"Wo
Undergraduate· Years" ·will be the topic
one's skills. 'rf we wish to lead satisfying
Mor~l Educ•tion
of a two-da y campus Conference, Frida y ~
Th e need for the cultivation of the
lives, we must be willing to adapt to new
demands.
scie nti.fic imagination, "Kurtz says, is
and Satu rday, December 6 and 7. Spon"Third, the old moral values and
coupled with an ".urgent need for moral
so red by the Office of the President and
religious traditions are becoming inthe Faculty Senate, the cpnfe rence will
e du ca tion , a continual process of va lue
try to generate some new ideas about
creasi ngly difficult to apply to the urgent
exa mination ," not indoctrination, inhow to handle lower division (freshman
culcation or behaviora1'corlditioning . .
needs of a new cultural rea lity: th e rules
governing marriage, divorce, family, and
"Morat·values, in the best sense, are
and sophomore) education.
th e role of women in society are being
the product of a process of evaluation
George Hochfield, chai rman of the
Fac'uhy Senate, explai ns that there is "a
transformed . Breakthroughs in biology
that human beings undergo as they res. pond to the c ha lle nges in the engrea t deal of Oissatisfaction in some
lead to new moral dilemmas : cloning,
biogenetic engineering, euthanasia,
vironment: an appeal to traditional stanquarters" with the present lower division
volunta ry sterilization, group cohabitaprogram - a group of unrelated indards is never enOugh, Jhough they be
e nshrinetl in religion, law, or custom .
troductory courses.
tion, "changing sex roles, and behavioral
Rather , we need to' lea rn how to
"We hope to find some new ways of
control are only some of the new advent ur es in experime ntal living . · Th e
deliberate about the things that we hold
thinking about the loWer d ivis io'n
orthodox reli gions, as defenders of abto be good, bad, rig ht, and wrong, worth
program which will give the students a
solute values, have to compete with a
broader cultural background, making 'it
cherishin g and app reciating. Mere emo- .
number of alternative. systems. They aJe
tion or passion is not en·ough; we need
possible for them to see tfleir ·m ajors in a
hard pressed and must either stretch and
larger intellectual context and preparing
to learn how to deal with our v~lues ,
change or become irrelevant. The incogniti vely, by means of critical inthem better than the present introduc~
diVidual discove rs that he must create his
telligence. ACcording to Dewey, values
tory cou~ses," Hochfield says.
'
own values and personal goals; there_are
shoulo be treated as hypotheses upon
The conference will begin with a lecno easy guidelines, and only his own
which we act; they grow out o.J.s:oncrete
ture by Stephen Toulmin at8:30 p .m. Friconscienc~ and convictipn.can help him.'
situations and are most wisely grounded
day in 148 Diefendorf. Toulmin is· a
when they are fashioned in terms of the
. professor on ti)e Committee on Social-Role of General Ed~
.
needs of the situation and their conseThought at the University of Chicago and
"It is in this siJ,Uation that general
quences in the world.
the author of Reason in • Ethits,
' education inevitably will play a vital
· " Given the strains of modern life, we
Philosophy of Science, and Human
role," .Kunz says. 11The 'knowledge "in; .annot always provide young people
Understanding, Vol. I, with lune Gooddustry' will be the growth industry of the
wit~ ready·made answers, and certainly
field .
future .. .. Whether we can meet the
not ready-made professions, careers, or
St~_vefi Marcus will open Saturday's ....
needs and challenges of the future as inoccupations. No one can anticipate fully
sess1on at 10 a.m. He is a professor of
dividuals and society will depend upon
th"e future course of an individual's or
English at Columbia University and
the~ ~inds of eoucative process thaf we
society's existence; the best that we can
author of Dickens: from Pickwick . to
undergo."
provide is some resiliency, some help in
Dombey and The Other Victorians. .
"-lthough schools are essential to t_he
developing cognitive- moral awareness,
Christopher Lasch, professor of hi'!lory
educative process, Kuftz believes they
as a Way of _life, a ·means by which the
at the University of Rochester, will follow
are not the only ins.titutions whicf,
person can respond effectively to life in
Marcus at 11 a.m. Books. he•has writ~~n
should be charged with the m'ission. Nor
light of a deeper understanding of it: We
include The American Liberals and t1u!
should .educ;ation be. confined to the
need a whole new curricurum, .. one. . .that
Russian Revolution and The· ·Agony of
young. There is on-going' need to keep
deals not simplywith what is or•has been
the American left
•· ·
learning and growing and "virtually all of
but with what is likely to be, given our efThe final speaker will be john Searle;
the institutions of society must tiave· an
fort and pe~istence ....
professor of philosophy at the University
ed...::ative functlom the family, churches,
"We ·must dare to dream, to cr-eate
of California at Berkeley, at 1 :30 p.m. He
labor \Jnions, corporations, business and.
new visions of What can be. In a sense,
is the author ot Speech /lets )nd [he
industry ... but most vitally'_. .. the elecwe are what we wish -the wish is {atl\er
Campu.-'Nar.
·t[onic mass media.: .. "
'
to the .fact. And ~s W_!! face problems; we
The conference will conclude with an
Kurtz predicts the colleges and uni¥er• need to,:-Wtroduce new means ~nd new
exchange of ~iews by the ·participants
Silies wlll .continue !9.,.!!!ake the main
altemat•ves. Thus, creative' imagination
and an open discussioq period. All of •
contribution to- seneral e&lt;luation "and
as well as deliberation are essential
Saturday's activities will take pl«-e In Rm.
they an do this best by providing a rich.
prerequisites for coping!'
, .170 of the Millard Fillmore l\ademic
curriculum In the liberating arts - scienKurtz fears that "the recent movement
Core in the Joseph Ellkott Complex on ·
tific and hum.tnlstjc.'' Throush this kind
for affective eduatlon - sometimes
~the Amherst CaiTI{'US'
,e
-• _
of edu13t1on, the lridlvidual "!n not only
ailed ''hum.tn_!stlc' and whil:h Is exThe conference is open !O the pu~lic.

Generaled
conference set

Dr-

• •

• • • .• •

• • -. f

~-- ~

-

• -

--

... _.,.,.

~

:..

�,..
Decembers. 1974

TtUStees(from ~I!E' 1. col. J)

tatives for two years, Hall was appointed
py President Fillmore as postmaster
general and in 1852 as United States

Judge for the No"liern District of New
York. He served in this capacity until his
·

death in 1814.
The No"h library at

~ licott

will be

named for Solomon G. HaveR. Haven
was the third partner in the law firm of

Fillmore, Hall &amp; Haven. He was distrid
attorney of Erie County and was liter

elected mayor of Buffalo. He served in
the House of Representatives for th_ree
terms from 1851 to 1857. He died in 1861.

The D.rama Wo'rkshop at Ellicott will be
known as the Katharine Cornell Drama
Theatre. Miss Cornell was an internationally acclaimed stage actress,
·famous fm. her performances in "The
Barrens of Wimpole Street" and " Can~
dida." Born in Buffalo, she maintained a
co ntinuing loyalty to the city. She was

awarded the Chancellor's Medal, U/B's
highest honor, in 1935. She died June 9,
197,4.
froal conbol

~

lftiNf"Ch ...._. W... Uwrenc:r lltonllon IIIMkill Jlat• of

~

ocCUINftb: Hit spins .tlG.

Researeher m.dying effects--of gravitY

-

By M~ori;,n M&lt;i~rionowsky
Man today does strange things in even
stranger environments. A team of U/ 8

pooling by squeezing legs and abdomen
with air bladders in which pressure

volUnteer and an observer who wears an
anti-C suit- dde in the biomedical tentrifuge.· This capsule is surrounded by a

physiologists w ho have pioneered in
st udies of man as he dives ever deeper in

automatically varies with G level. But
st.~Ch suit s may prove inadequate for

60.4 meter circumference swimming
basin and running track. It whirls on the

fut ure needs, she ex plained, and other
protective measures are now being
sought.
.
Everyone experiences an effective
change in acceleratio n as they switch
from lyin g down to standing up. " While
man is lying down," Dr. Nunneley said ,
"there is almost no stress on either heart
or lungs." Ph ysiologically this position
resembles what is found at "zero gravity"
in outer space. But when man assumes
an upright position the cardiovascular
system must adjust to the pull of gravity
down th e body's long axis.
u the adjustment is not fast e nough, visian may temporarily dim on arising too
suddenly or fainting may res ul t. In this ·
condition krlown as orthostatic hypotension, there is so much .pooling of blood
in the lower body that not enough is
available to maintain perfusion at· the
head level.
· .
Gravity also hand icaps gas exChaf'\ge in
man by preventing· perfusion of the upper lung. Dur(ng accele~~tion this
ventilationcperfusion "mismatch" increases, a significant amount of venous
blood passes through the lungs without
ever seeing fresh air, and arterial
desaturation results. ·
. Patients with cbronic lung dis~a se, she
explained, may have a similar Problem.at
1 G or normal environment. While a mild
exercise may impr9ve the situ~tion, Dr.
Nunneley feels that a heavier kind is
"definitely contraindicated."
The CenlrifUJe
.

end of a 21-foot arm to create
accelerations and ca n reach a maximum ·
speed of 31 re volutions per minute.
Inside the capsu le, subjects ma y experie nc'e forces to 7G - .carnival rides
only reach about 1112 G while astronauts
experie nce ·7 or 8 G during launch as
they lie on their backs . .
After. bei~g st;:ated, both subject and
observer adjust thei r seat harnesses to a
co mfortabl e position. The observer
hooks up the arterial cannula that has
been previously inserted in the subject's
arm and blood sa mples. are collected at
regular intervals during centrifugation.
From the control room one gets an unobst ructed view 01 the capsule at all
ti mes. Here there is continuous monitor ..
ing of capsu le occupants via dosed circuit television, recording pf electrocar·
diogram, as ·~ell as open voice communication.
On com mand from the control room ,
the subject operates valves to collect his
own expired air. To determine the .ef·
ficiency of the subject's gas excharlge
during these experiments, expired gas
volume and its compositi.on are
measured. And arterial blood gases are
determined.
While a great deal is alrea-dy known
about lung function, the human cen:
trifuge is yet another tool by which -to
add to this knowledge.

~•cywatersorfliesateverh•gheraltjtudes

is now able to simulate gravity, aftirude,
temperature, and pre;sure in a uniqu e
environmental physiology laboratory
that took eight years to .complete and is
now operational.
One of the questions raised by their
investigations - will exercise improve
man's ability to withsi!nd ._the stress of
acceleration - is being ariswereO·by Of.
Sarah A. Nunneley, assistant professor of
physiology. The former flyer, who trained as i flight -surgeon at NASA's Flight
Research Center in the Mojave Desert,
carrie· to BUffalO three yea'rs ago.
She is now taking a close look at man's
cardiovascular refle-xes the
meChanis·'!l by which the h.u man body
normall_y defends ilself against the effects
of acceleration and gravity. \)'hile subjects rid~ in a specially·desiined human
centrifuge-at up to 3 G- three times the
normal force o·f gravity - they are
studied at rest and during two levels of
exercise as they peda l--a bicycle
ergometer. - ' ·
· .
During one level, "they turn an un·resisting set of pedals. For the other, a
k~oWn load is added so that "the subject
feels ,as , thougll he's ~daling up an
endlesS hill, ~ Dr. Nunneley said.
.
. There are measurements of pulmonary
gas exchange ds· well as cardiovascular
function of subjects · JJnder all combinations Of acceleration, rest, and exercise.
J

Nonnol Grbfty Problems

protedive anti-G suits. These reduce

Mil)nesola graduate (M.D. 1!!67), who
completed -a residency in aerospace

The centrifuge is a part of · the
laboratory for environmental physiology.
Among its unusual operating and safety
features:
'
• ;t takes .ju~t 10 seconds to go fro~ 30

medicine at Ohio~ State University and is

revolutions per minute t&lt;? a standstill

Board-Ce"i!ied, hopes that findingJ may
also l&gt;elp patients whose problems arise
ftom an inability to l)andle the _pormal
stress of gravity. .
·
.•

position.
.
' • a secondary hatch .allows access to
the caesule.
' • it takes staff. personnel less than 30

·"When a ptitson stands .up," Dr.
Nunneley expliined 1 , "his vttscular
system tt!f'(is tO increase its tone 19 pre·

seconds to reaCh a $Ubject.
·
• from a cr~wl space technicians can
reach two electric motors while the cen·

Althou8il she is intereste&lt;l in .normal
nlan and his environment - it now in-

dudes space travel -:: the UniveBftv of

vent pooling of blood in the lower ex-·
tretnities." But when man exerdses, each

trifuge -

designed, built,

install!'&lt;~

by

· Rocker Corp. Of Oakland. California - .is

muscle contraction fofces blood throilgh
in operation,
'&lt;
the veins where a series of valves directs
It not only allows investigators~o study
the effects. of increased gravity and low
it toward .the he•"- This mechanism is
called the perip~ral pump.
pressure- the centrifuge is designed for
Fail;l!ing can be-·a problem !()i')ho~
immediate access from·a suspended platwith varicose veins. They l~k some of , ; form ~ but it Sl,lppor!S the activities of
the Crucial valves, pointed out Or. . the' U/8 team investigating, underwater
Nunneley. Even normal people faint
physiology and&gt;" swimming. (ltopl&gt;ltet",
after standing still for long periods. This
September'S).is espedally.-true in hot weather. While '
· It is the result of several years of planmcwins the legs can prevent the pooling
ning and 'reflects the c;ontrlbutions of
of bloOd ~t 1 G, it Is not known whether
members }If the Depar.tf!!jOnt of
itwillbeateffectiYeat2or3'G. ·
· . PhysioJosy-and the SchOol of Enllineer-·
"Tests resuhs may even be~applied .to-- . ing, indudi98 Drs. John V. ~udilleston
hish altlludepilots who-will soon be ask- '" and !t11lph £. Rumer who were involved
ed to' withstand accelerations
to 10 G .
in i~gnfrom_theearlieststag!!S-- o
' for··,. minute or ·mpre,-she said. To pre- Duri"B the gravity experiments, tWo
vent pooH"' of blood they 'no_w wea·r . people - · Jhe- su'?iect . Who is a paid

up

In other actions at the November
meeting, the Board of Trustees approved

the appointment of Dr. John Naughton
as dean of the School of Medicine, con-

ferred the title of "distinguished
professor" on leendert G. Westerink,
U/B professor of classics, and waived the
mandatory retirement age regulation for
Dr. Adolf Hamburger, professor of law.

Dr. Naughton, 41, has been dean for
academic affairs at the George
Washingfon University School of
Medicine and Health Sciences in
Washington, D.C., since last year. His appointment here is effective March 1,
1975. At George Washington, he has also
been director of the Division of
Rehabilitatiqn Medicine, the Regional
Rehabilitation and Training Center, and
die Coordinating Center for the National
Study in Exercise and Heart Disease.

A graduate of St. Louis University and
tKe Oklahoma University School of
Medicine, Dr. "!aughton has also served
cin the faculty at Oklahoma and the
University of Illinois College of
Medicine.
.
A. member o.f the U/8 faculty sini:e
1965, Professor Westeri'1k is known by
classical_scholars for his continuing work
on the Platonic TlfeoJqgy of Proclus. A

graduate pf the University of Nijrnegen,
he taught Greek and Latin at Emmen ·
Municipal Lyceum from 1945 to 1966.
The Trustees approveddn extension of
Dr. Hamburger's appointment from

September 1,1975, to August 31,1976.
An expert on dvil p[oced(lre _and on
comparative lawt.-Dr. Hamburger tias for
J'fH)re than a decade been chairman of

the Committee to Advise and Consult
with the Judicial Conference of the State
of New York on Civil Practicze Law and
.Rules.

-volunieels needed
· Members'c:&gt;f the-l(niversk,--c omrnunlty (students, staff, faculty, and your
families) are r.emtnded that th4!! Third Annuil Christmas Tree Recycling
· rroject is seheduled _for SUNDAY;~ S. 1WS, ·10:00 a.m.~:OO
p.m. on· the Main Street Campus. W!j need volunteers to ~hovel chips,
flag chips, handle trees; for two-hour shifts diirlng this day. This Universi!f/Communi!V project 'is sponsored by the Community Advisory
: Cgundl of the State University at Buffalo. Please_fill il) the form below
and return to:
·
Dr'. A. Westley Rowland
.
Vice President for University Relations
State'Unive~ity of-N~w York at Buffalo
186 Hayes Hall
.
.
· NAME ........ : ... .... ... :........ ~.... .... , .. ........ ......... .. .. ....... .'..... ........... ~.._. ... ..
ADDRE,SS ._..... .. ... : ............ :............... .......... . , .. ......... .. .... ... ..... zip code

TE~EPHONE# .......... .. ............ : .... ...... ......... ;....... ."......... .................... . .

.

.

.

I W111 velunieer for tbe otRISTMAS TREE RECYCLINC PROJECT on
.
·. ·.
,.
SVNDAY,Januuy·s, 1975
Preferreq time (2 hour shifts-..:10:00 a.m.~:OO p.m.)

..7

••••~••;•••• •• •••••..-••:•••••·•:•::;~•·•••••••••••:•••~••~•:•••:.: t• ••:•••••• ••••• :•••••• •• •••••• •• •:• •••u•

·:..~: : ....... ,,.,),,,, .....•..•.•.,•...!-.: ........ :······-···········--········ .•.•.
Instructions a$ to"Where to re)iort will be sent t
form. THANU'fOit HBJiiNG. WE N&amp;D YOU.
~

'

..: .

�•Modern medicine ill pre~ to han~ie .
psychosomatic diSoid~rs, ·McMah~n says

December 5, 1974

Poetryprize .·

~i~~u?v~~~

York at
humanity j nto a-machinelike body and
Buffalo has been chosen by the-Academy
Rrpon('t~.llt
an immortal soul or mind. Dr. McMahon · of American Poets as one of -60 in·
refers to the century following Descartes ... · sti tutio ns across the country to offer the
Physicians ·talk of an e mOtio nal com, ponent in asthma and recognize that
as "the dark ·age of psychosomatic
Academy's College Poetry Priie.. .
'fnental · disorders can accompan y the
medicin e," a period when the IJiany in··
Th~ prestigious prize is gi\Jen annually
evititble manifestations of ~ychosomati c
at each participating college for . " the
physiologiptl changes or adolescence,
childbirth, and menopause. But just how
illneSs were simpl y ig'l.ored because
best poem o t group of poems by a
adequate is modern med ici ne 's · unthe science oJ .the· age b'ld no
st udent" anQ carries a cash award o f.
derstanding of psychosomatic illness?
philosophical framework ii\ which to 5100. Winning poems are.also eligible for
Not adequate at all, charges Dr. Carol
place them.
inclusion in an anthology published at
11
. McMahon, a post.doctoral student in
The split continues until the present
intervals by the Ac~demy.
the U/ 8 Psychology Department, who
day," Dr. McMahon maintains. "The
-Since the establishment of the awards
contends that modern physicians and
only reason psychosomatic phenomena
in 1954, many winners (induding Jerald
psych iatrists are less well prepared
are studied now is becau}e they are too
Bullis, ·Stephen Dunn, Greg Kuzma, and
philosophically to deal with psype~ste nt to ignore. We -are all still
Gregory Orr) have gone on tp extensive
chophys iological phenomena than were
dualists. After "311, irl" modern times .the
publication and widespread recognition.
placebo effeCt was re-discovered only by
UB's participation in the prOgram was
their counterparts in andent Greece and
accident.."
·
negotiated by poet John Logan ,
Renaissance Europe.
Classical healers were better equipped
How can modern .science repair the
' professor of English, author of fiv~ books
to deal with psychosomatic illness
rent in its view of human health? "The
of verse, and a long-time n\ember of the
because they generally acknowledged
only solu tion is a philosophical change
Academy. The generosity of the Friends
rh at menta I and ph y s i o I o g i c a I
that recog ni zes the non-dualistic nature
of the lockwood library r:nade possible
phenomena have a common substratum.
of man," the psychologist contends.
the local funding for an initial five:-year
Mod~rn science is hampered by a view
period.
Subm issions fo r the prize will be judgof human experience th~t is essentially
dualistic, Dr. McMahon argues.
ed each year by a panel of judges ap"No one who has been trained in an
jeds•
pointed by the Department of English .
American medical school has been given
Administrators of the ,program durin g
The University-wide Committee to
professor, psychology, "Control of Placenthe cu rren t year are Dr. Melissa Banta,
an adequate, rational explanation of psyAllocate BSSG/ NSF and Special Funds
tophagia: Stimulus Cues," Sl,OSO; Ann P.
assista nt to the director of libraries, and
chosomatic disease," claims the young
scientist, who is currently writing the first
hal awa rded a total of $4 5,645 to support
McEirov. assistant professor, ant~ropoloRv.
Dr. Max Wick en, associate professor of
history of psychosomatic mediCi'ine on a
33 faculty projects, Dr. McAllister H.
"Survey Patterns of Alcohol Usage 1n Alaskan
English.
Hull, Jr. , Uni versity Dean for Graduate
and Canadian !':rctic Com~unities," $1,800;
" The Unive rsity at Buffalo ," Dr .
National Institute of Mental Health grant
she shares with U/ 8 Distinguished
and
Professio na l Education,
said
Sarunas R. M1hsaukas, ass1sta nt pr~f~so:r,
Wickert comm en ted, " has a lon gProfessor of Psychology 8. Richard
this week.
anthro~logy, " R~_arch on the Neohth1c m
St&lt;lflding, aclive commitment to the
Bugelski.
.
Hull indic_ated that 106 propo_sals had
PP~:fosond,ph Sli
y, ~in~;~:r F~ila~~~ry·i:r~!~~~;
ca use of contempo rar y poetry, as
Modern medicine has failed to come
been submitted to the Committee relogicians, Sl OOO · Phillips Ste:~ns Jr.;N assiswitnessed by its libraries' superb Poet ry
tQ grips with ,psycflosomatic disease
questi ng a tota l o f $192,511 .
, •~ , .
tant professo;, ~nthropology, ''The., Stone
Cq ll ection and b y the co nt inu ed
because of its . undue emphasis on the
"The ~igh level of requests illustrates
Images of Esie (II) ," Sl SO; Marian E. White,
presence of renowned poets on its facul commendable scholarly act ivity on the
profe~sor, anthropology, "Analysis of Data on
ty. The establis hment here of th e
body, she says. Psychiatry has similarly
failed by giving exdusiye attention to. the
pan of the fa cu lty," he said, " but the exCayuga troq.uois Archa_eology," S720.
.
Academy prize is a welcome and highly
mind in analyzing and treating what are,
cess of requests over available funds- inHe._lth Sciencfl: M1ch~el t. Barnett, as~1s·
appropriat,e event - espe.;iall y si nce in
dicates th e need for indi viduals to seek
!~nt profes~r. penodon.tiCS ~nd endodontia ,
the pa st a number o f young poets
in fad, pSythOph"Vsiolb"giC.ill diSorders:
Desc~rtes Responsible
suppon outside the Universily."
.
I"PhflaamgocyedtGoslonsgbo·vyal.heAnEpEotlhectehraonofMNo,.crrm
osc
aloapnodc
(including Marty Cohen and Judith
In her view, the problem can be laid
Funds aw_ arded by_ the Com,,mlttee,
s;ud y Ut ilizing an Electron-Opaque Tracer,"
Soucek) who had previously won th e
squarely at the feet of Rene Descartes,
Hull ex plaoned, are _ontended to e nprize as undergraduates elsewhere have
51 ,SOO; loan F. Brown;e, ass;stant prolessm,
the 17th century French philosopher 10
courage the prepa ration of propo_sals to
aduh huhh, nurs;ng, " Home Care and
co me to us for graduate work."
whom she attributes the pervasive mindoutside agencies by providing seed
Rehabili rarion Program for Pat ienls with
Submissions for the 1974-75 pr:ize,:to
body split that persists into the present
monies to allow scholars to develop supChronic Obstructive lung Disease - Phase II
be presented on Ma y 1, are now being
m-.~ a.n~...i ,~~uiJ?S -?1~~r'l,theah~ . pr~cpo.(tiqg e~ide nce of the viability of their
Jmplementation," S1,525; C~ester Deluca,
~ccepted . The deadline is February 15.
tlttont!f'S to deal With ' (hsease as an anideas."
·~ •
associate professor, oral biology, dentistry,
Only registered SUNYAB students are
tegrated psychOphysiological
. By Faculties, _t~ose-_ indiv~d uals receiv'NR
' .egEuglwatu;o,n osfsMa
_stamnmo
t IP;arn Ge
fesnse ,r", S400me'd'~,cboal
eligible. Detailed contest rules art . .
1
0
phenomenon..
.
ts th
~~ t tl
d th
available,from the Department of English
:,T_o-,Gr,e ¢o-Roman healers, notabl y
mg gran ' ,,!!,'J,prp ·s ~re}, ,e; . ~n · ' •- ~
tech nology, "Morphology omd Pathogenicity ....-secretary, Room 6, Annex 8, Qr) the Main
1
those ot the Pneumatist School of
amountofthetrawardsar · ·
·
of l-Phase of Bacteria,'' S2,SQO:- Carolyn E.
Street Campus. Other inquiries ~hould
Medicil)e (associated with the Stoics), all
Arb and ldters: Harry z. Rand, assistant
Thomas, asststa nt professor, School of Health
be directed to Dr. Wickert.
.
t)uman befiavior, including illness,
professor , ar t histo rY. " The Critical
Edutation, and Dia"ne. l. DeBacy, ~sSociate
depended on the pneuma or "vital
Implications Of Arshile Groky's Iconography,"
professor, School of Heahh Education, both
spirits," seated in. the "soul." This soul
S900; Anthony J, -Rozak, assistant professor,
physical edUcation, "Identity Factors, Anxiety,
Achievement, and Dominance Needs as
art, "Compute ri zed Evaluation of Golor
(distinct from the purely spiritual soul of
'Separation Integrated with Form," S2SO; l eo
Selec~dictors of Success Among
the Christian era) was the substratum of
Smit, professor, music, " Beethove_n: The fmWomen in Highly Competitive Endeavors,"
· A contribution of $150 to the Univerall mer1tal and physiological phenomena.
pact of -History, Love and literature on the
· SSOO; Vi jay· C. S.wamy, assistant professor,
sity's Un ited Way carAp.aign has been
The ancients,.she points out, recognizDiabelli Vars. Op. 120," S335.
biochemical ·pharmacology, ".Reaoivity rof
made by the students in College H on
ed the " placebo effect"~ the faCt that a
La,- and Jurhpr:u.denc: e : Thoma s
Vascular Smooth Muscle from Normal and
behalf of tha.t college, th~ Colleges in
patient will ,often improve if he only .
Bu e rge nth a l, pr o fessor , law and
Hypertensive Rats,"S2).7,5; 0onaldH. Waters,
general,
the Division _of Undergraduate
believes he is being treated.with a potent
;urisprudence, "Interna tional/ Human Rights
asSistant professor, biochemical phar- ·
Education
and the University.
cure - more · than 2000 years ago,
Ed~~~~~~n·~!re~~es and ~dmlnl:tration:
b::~~~~~h~~~~j~:,:!de~::~~~~n Bar·
· In a lener accompanying the gift,
although the term itself is a modern one. ·
Kenneth H. Abrams, , assista nt professor,
fnPneerina mel ApplitciSdenies: Fri:nk A.
members of College H explained that the
"Galen and HippOcrates both con:linguistics, " Development of Cognitive
Cozurelli, professor, engineering science,
unit " recently col)ducted a Unite&lt;f Way
. sidered the patient's faith in the physiSlrate!ies in Youns Children," SJOQ; Jt. Arthur
" Design and Construction of Capacity Gauge
Campaign carnival in the Student Club of
dan an important variable fn ti'Ntment," ,
Bowler, associate professor/vice cholirman,
to Measure Irradiation Induced Creep Strain,"
the Joseph-EIIicon Complex 0.. the North
she explolns. The Pneumatlsts also
h;story, ''The Social and Economic Compos!S2.750; WIIUam K. George, Jr., . assistant
CampiJs. The carnival was planned illtd
recognized
charms, spells, and
tion of -the loyalists of the American
professor, "mechanical enslneerins, and
implemented entirely by College H
amulets, the ail3'ent equivalent of su110r .
Revolution," S7.0;Kuh E. Brassel, a&gt;sistont
Josep/1 C. Mollendorf, ossistont profesor,
resider:tlial studenu under the dife!:llon
pillsAndotherplacebos,wereeffK:adous ~ profess6r, seography, "Efficient Visualization
mechanical engineering, "Data Acquisition,
of our residential coordinator." .:
not .because they' , were intrinsically
of Complex Data Sets," $1,100i Gera)d M.
Processing and Control ~ystem," $6,000;
..
Gokthaber:·aSsociati professor, speech cotnStephen Malkin, associate PJofessor,
The dontrtion rl!presented the
~rful bl.,ft beause the patient beJ munication, "ComMunication - Behavior of
mechanical engif)Cering, "Oscillating Stylus
proco:e&lt;!s from that event. _
ieved in them.
'
· Male Homosexuals During Courtship lnteracProfilometer for Gri!lding Wheels," $1,320,;
'The~JeofaGnat' .
• tions," $1 ,060; Mark B. Krista!, assistant
Gursharan S. Sidhu, assistant professor, elecTo research her book, Dr.-MCMabon, a
·''
· '
trical engine~ring , , "Study of fast Signal
' The Office. of Fina·ncial Aid has an·u/B graduate who earned her Ph.D. in
Process;ng Methods for Est;malion and'€onnounced' that it is presently ' able to
psychology at Pennsylvania St_ilte Univer·
"~;.~eo and~: Jer~my accept
finandal a\sistance applications
sity, utilized the extensiveJ""holdins~ of
lie
.
.
_.. . - .
A. Bruenn, assistant professor, cell and
for 1974-75' from studenl5 who have not
the ~ellcome Institute on the Historf of
• •
molecular biology,_ "Sequencins of Yeast
previously
filed an application for this -""
Medicine In . London. The available
Exi'tudents who ll)'lsh to re-apply for
KHier -factorRNAs,"S3,300;EdmundP. Day,
1
year.
#
•
• ..
historical documentation on P.SYChoadm1ssfon to the'Un,dersr-aduate Divi~ion
assistant professor, physia, "Temperature
StudentS
·'
who· have not •. previously
somatic medicine has not been ade, for . the Spring Semester must submit
Oepen9eni D;amagnetism of Organic Uapplied may contad the· Office at 312
quately explored until now, she belieVes,
'petitiQns by'Tuesday, Decemb!&gt;r 17, 197~.
qu;ds," S3,750; Francis M. Gasparini; assistant
Stockton Kimball Tower.
•
:, • "because we modems have atways toOkto either Admissions and Records-or the
prof~sor, physics, " Fioite Size and Surface
Where the need . criteria ari met,
.eel at these writings ihrough dualistic .
Division of lfndergraduate Education
Effects at the Super-fluid Transition of He4,"
. When Hippocrates advises
Advisement Office.
•
5l,500; • Piyaoe L fain, professor, physics,
"National Qjrect Student loons will be ap"Muon-Nucleon lnebstic Scattering at 150
proyed within the limil5 of available
polient to wea~ the eye of a snat, we
Th~ whose petitions·are not reviewGeV al the National Accelerator Laboratory,'~
funds.·
.
.
accuse him of primitivism, because We
ed at the Scholastic Standards Com$1 ,25,0;, James R. Lafoun.tii n, assistant
These new applications will be review·
knowthattheeyeciogmtcan'tlnltSelf
mitfee meeting of Wednesday ,
P.rofessor, &lt; cell ·and molecular biolosY.
ed
in
the
order
of
receipt,
Financial
Aid
cure anything. We fail to ri!COII!'ize ~he
December 18, will not be-eligible for re~·studies of Tetrahymena Micronudei,''•S1,indicates.
noi&gt;-dualistlc psy$osoqlad~ i)asis - of
· 'admission nexttemeSii!r.
000; Michael J. Milono, a&gt;sistont ptofessor,
Hippocrates' medicine.'' .
.,
As a con&lt;llddil'for ri!-admission: ~u- \ · chemistry, "Fiasll Photochemlal Generao;on
During the Middle Ases thli sol!!ld, rn- - dent must hav_e·~n out of school fllf .t
of R....nu for \(lnetk Analyses," 5150; .Paras
testatecfbulsformedlcal~went
ieast one fuU ~rllic Ye;tr. Petitions-· S. ~.assistant professor, chemistry,
........,.
d
d'---..........,.
'1o'
-'-ed
th
Off
~·
·
"Enerwv
Tra,._n In ~n 0rgoric Alloy," $1,Into ,.._,tne, an , _ - uov..,...tto
"!"Y "" piu. lfl! at e
ice-o1 Au• 400; Carmela ci. Privitera, profe.. or,
be cured by Jhe lnte~.,cif ~permissions and ~cis or from the Divi;
1MoiCJ8i&lt;al science, !'Tritioted ThymldiM! and
naturol~rs.
'ti'• ·
sion of U~e ~uCA~tion Ad- 14C Leudne ·lllc:orpQrodpn t., ·Heovy Metal
Du1lng ·t he Renaissance, 'how{ever,
~ vl~~~f~,J_06Diefe~dorf.
AdoptedT!osueCulnnCelk,!'$1,AIOO. .•.
By Potricio Wor&lt;l Biederman

wjth the re-discovery of classicallearning • .
and rapid advances in science, psy- ·
ch.osomatic meQicine once again rallied
bnefly.
. " Re~ a i ssa ~ce physician's saw th.at cures
mvolv1ng taUsmans and spells were often
successful : With th ei r newly non superst1t1ous eyes they also saw that the
real power to heal lay not in the charm
but in the individual who has faith in the
cure," Dr. McMahon says.
'TheDa.. As~·
The· integrated view of human health began to dissolye as a con~uen:e of
one of the most profound dtscovenes of
modern medicine, . the discovery by
Willia m Harvey early in the 17th ce11tury
of tlje circulation of the blood. In show- '
mg the heart to be a pump, Harvey d1scredited the Aristotelian notio11 that the
heart was the seat of the soul (and the
· emotions). Descartes took up Ha tvey's
position ·and sundered integrated

uIIB committee'alloc
. ates $45,()()()

t 0 fun d 33 faculty pro

0 0

CoUege H students

give to United Way

t-

-.

Petilions'tO re-enter ,
d by. December 17

~

a

Financial aid

�.......

-:-

o"e-rember 5; 1974

Rebellion .
is topic of

11-

C~endM----~------------~---------------------t frompifl!r' 12.rn/. 4J

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINARN
Tay Sach 's Disease.: S1udies on rhe C--onverr.ion of He:wsaminidase A ro HeKosaminidase
8, Dr. Patrick Carmody, U/ 8 Research Assi stam Professor of Pediatrics. 147 Capen; coffee
a1 3:45,1edure at't p.m.
HOCKEY•
UI B vs. Col{.?.ate University. Holida y Twin
Rinks, 3465 Broadwa y, 7:30p.m. Students may
pick 'Up free tickea in Clark Hall before th e
ni~hl of I he game; $2 general admission.
BFA RECITAL •
Harpi st Diana Landes offers he r BFA red1al.
Baird Reci tal Hall : 8 p.m. No admission
charge.

symposium
A '.special day·long symposium on
"Rebellion and Revolution in Comparative anc~ Histo rical Perspective" will

be held frid ay, December 6, in the
Ellicott Comple&lt;.
' '
The program, organized by Professors
Roger Des Forges (history) and Claude
Welch (political science), is the first such
effon by a proposed "G raduate Group"
on Continuity and Change in China and

Africa.
Five scholars haVe submitted papers to
be discussed during the program . Th ey
are: Dr. Welch, "Towanf an Etiology of
. Rebellio.n and Revolution;" Dr. Susan
Naquin, Yale University (history), " The
Social Networ~s of Millenarian Sects
During the Ch'ing; " Dr. Ralph Tha&lt;ton,
University of California at Berkeley

SEXUAUTY, KNOWLEDGE AND
THEATRE SYMPOSIUM•
Fear, Fantasy and Automatic Censorship in
the Thealre. · discussed by My rn a lamb ,
playwriRht , author of " Mod Donna" . and
Syck lon Z," and Charlet-btJd lam, actor, direc10r and founder of 1he Ridiculous Thea1re
Company. Harriman Theat re Studio, 8 p.m.

(political science), ...!' Tenants in Revolution - The Tenacity of Traditional

WEDNESDA Y-11

Morality: A Theory of the Communist
Party Claim to legitimacy;" Dr. Jose ph
Smaldone, University of Maryland
{history}, " Revo lution and Military
Organization : The Case of the Jihad of
1804;" and Dr. Herben Weiss, Brooklyn
College (political science), "The Kwilu
Rebellion."
Historian Sylvia Thrupp of the University of Michigan; founder of the journal
Comparative Studies in Societ y and
History, will offer concluding obser&lt;,_vatio[ls.
The proposed graduate gro up brings
toget her facuh y and graduate students in
such fields as political sdente, history,
anthropology, and philosophy to e&lt;amine the civilizations of Africa and
China, and to examine the assumptions
that underlie popular approaches to
African and Chinese studies.
The symposium will be held in th e
facul ty Louoge of the History Department, beginni.Og at9 a.m.

LINGUISTICS COLLOQUIUM#
A Study of Tea chers' fKplanarion of Causes
of Behavior, Allan Sm ith , U/8 Depa rtment of
Anth ropo logy. Department of lin guistics
lounge, Spaulding Quadrangle, Ell icott
CompleK; coffee at 3:45, lecture at4 p.m.
Sponsored by 1he De partment of
lingui!itics.
COMPUTING ANI} AePLICA liONS
LECTURE SERIES#
Applications of Arrificial Intelligence
Techniques to l ega l Problem s. Professor
Thorne McCart y, U/8 law School. 310
Fillmore, Ell icon Complex, 4 p.m.

ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES
SEMINAR#
' Molecular Fluids, Professor S1anley L
Sa ndler. Depar1ment of Chemical Engineering, University of Delaware. 104 Parker. 4 p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY VA/Q CLUB SEMtNARN
Gas Conductance, Egg Shefls and Altitude.
U/6 Professor Dr. Hermann Rahn . 108 Sherman, 4:30 p.m.
FILMS•
The Nun (Rivette}, 7 p.m.; Boudu Saved
From DrowninR (Renoir) and True Heart Susie
(Griffith). 9 p.m. 5 Acheson.

wnisaward

Barbara A. Stevenson , assistant
professor of physical therapy, received
the 1974 award of the state chapter of th e
American Physical Therapy Association.

UUAIFILMS••

J

5d6orage {Hitchcock, 1936), 7:15 p.m. and
To Catch A Thiel (Hitchcock, 1955). 6:45p.m.
140 Capen. No ad mi ssion charge.

FACULTY
lnstrudor/ Assistant ~rofessor, Community Health Nursing.
Assistant Professor, Chemical Engiileering, posting no. F-4194.
Assistant/Associate P.'rofessor, Chemical Engineering, post ing no. F-4195.
Visiting Associate Professor (Spring 1975), Malhematics,.f-4196.
Associate or Assistant Professor, School of Social Work; f-4197.
Assistant/As5ociate/Fulll'rofessor, lnduSiriai EnJ!ineerinJ!. f-4)96.
Assistant/ Associate/ Full Professor, Industrial Engineering, f-4199 .
Assistant ~rofessor, EnVironmental Analysis and Policy, F-4200.
Assist3nt Professor, Electrical Engineering, f-4201 .
Assistant/~ssociate Professor, Electrical Engineering, f-4202.
Assistant PFOfessor, Orkanization and Human Resources, F-4203.
Assistlln~Associate Professor, Civil Engineering. F-4204.
Assistant Professor, Elictrial Engineering. F-4205.
Assistant Professor, Electrial Engineering. F-4206.
Assistant/Associate/Foil Professor, Engineering Science, f-4207.
Asslstant/Asoodite/Full Professor, Englneeling Sci!Jnce, f-4206.
Assistant/Associate/Full Professor, lndu&gt;trial Engineering. f-4209.
Assistant Librarian, Universi(Y Libraries, F-4210.
.
NTP
Housing Assistant, Student Affairs, PR-1, posting no. B-4095.
Dir~or of Day Care Center, School of ·Social Work , PR-1, 11-4041
_(reposting).
·· . •
Technical Assi&gt;tanr, SUrvey Research Center, PR-1, B-4096. .
Assistant Dean, Law and.Jurisprudence, PR,3, B-4097 .
. AdmissionrCounselor, Admissions and Records, PR-2, B-4098.
?'lssociate Dean for Student and Academic Affairs,.SchoOI of M~icine,

PR-4;, B-4099.

l

.

" , :, • Tech[li:ca~~stan(. University L!brar!es, PR-1, B-4100.
, , 1 . Technialllssi&gt;tant, University L1branes, PR-1, B-4101.
'· TechniaiAsJI!iltint, University~ibraries,PR-1,8-4102. :
/'
..
For additioMI thformation concerning these -jobs and ·for dc;tails of NTP
• openlnf!S tliroughout the Sta!e University system, cons~lt bulle~'". ~rds ,:tt
"these locations:
•
· · .
•
1. Bell Facility" betwee~ ~152 and D153; ~- ·Ridge_ Lea, Building· 4236, ~e&lt;t to
GOfeteria; ) ." Ridge lea, B~1ldmg 4230, m corndor next'? C-1; 4, Health·Sciences
._ Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen H~JI, ·~ t!!_e·c:orrldor between
Room 141 and rhe Lobby; -6. Lockwood, ground floor m corndo• next. to vending .m achines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public lnformation· Office; a. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms .112 and 113; 9.
Parker Engineering, in corridor next to Room 15; 10._~year Hall, 1st floor,
- Housing Office area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, ~rsonnel Oepa':'""'nt; 12. Norton
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. D1efendorf Hall, m corrldor_nexno
- Room 106; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, founh floor CAnlhetst Campus).
SCale Uniwenlly at luffalo II an fqUII OpportunllyfAfflnutlwe ~ eonplcpye&lt;

MEN'S SWIMMING'
U/ 8 vs. St. Bonaventure UQ]vers'ity. Clark
Hall, 7:30p.m. No admission charge .·
POETRY READING•
Linda Pasran reads from her own lyrical

poet ry. Norton Conference Theatre, 8 p.m.
No admission cha rge .
SponSored by the English Department
Poetry Committee.
STUDENT RECITAL •
Pianist Richard Schulman offers a recital
toward fulfillment of requirement s for his
MFA degree. Baird Recital Hall , 8 p.m. No admissio n charge.
ARTUCTURE•

William de KOoning, Andrew Forge,. artist,
critic , associate dean , New Yo rk Studio
School. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the U/8 Art Department and
the Albright-Knox An Gallery.

tHURSDA Y-12
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINAR#
Concepts of Occlusion Applied ro Everyday
Dent·istry, Dr. Ronald Jarvis , aSsistant
professor, Depart91ent of Fixed Prosthodontics, and Diplomate, American Board of
Pros1hodontics. 132 Norton, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Call831-2836 for registration information.
Sponsored by the S~hool of Dentistry.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUMN
EJectrons on the Surface of LiQuid Helium
- A Two -Dimensional Wigner Solidi, Dr. P.
M . Platzman, Bell Telephone laboratories,
Murray Hill , N . J. 111 Hochstell~r , 3:30p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Devel opme nt of a New Stabilized
Sublingual Nitroglycerin Tablet Peter Yap,
U/B graduate student. D-170, Be ll Facility, 4
p.m .

CEll AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
LECTUREN
lnform&lt;Hion in the Egg, Dr. Pa ul R. Gross,
professor and chairman, Department of
Biology, Unive rsity of Rochester. 13-4 Health
Sciences, 4:15p.m.
FRENCH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Muriel (Resna is). 147 Diefendorf, 5 and 8
p.m. No admission charge.
HILLEl HOUSE•

" Drop-in" Night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
ORCHESTIIA CONCERT'
!he UI B Or~b,e~t ra, ~npuq~ . by l;'a~ela

Gea·rhar1 , presents a cOncert. 'Baird . ReCital
Hall , 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Mu ~ic.
PHYSICAL-ORGANIC CHEMISTIIY
LECTURE SERIES# ''
'
Molecular Catalysis of Intersystem Crossing
and Non-Radiative Decay, Professor George
Hammond , University of California at Santa
C.ruz. 362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
WRESTliNG•
U/8 vs. Lock Haven Srate. Clark Hall, 8 p.m.

No admission charge.. --UUAIFILM••
The Last of Sheila (Ross, 1972). Nonon
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for times.
Admission c harge.

Career Guidance Office welcqmes all students
in the University co mmunity and alumni to
take part in various career programs offered
this year. The on - campus interviewing
program, running from Od. 7-Dec. 12 and
Jan. 20-April 25, offers the opportunity for individual interviews with education, business,
industrial and · governmental representatives.
Candidates from all degree levels, completi ng
their cou rse work in January or May 1975, are
invited to take part in the interviewing.
Registration fo rms are available in Hayes
Annex C, Rm . fl. The followi ng agencies will
be interviewing this week:
THURSDAY-S : UniOn Carbide Corp.; '
Federal Communications Commission.
FRIDAY-6: O'Br-ien &amp; Gere; Burroughs
Wellcbme CQ:WEDNESDAY-11 : Electronk f:?ata Systems
Corp.

NOTICES
CHANUKKAH CANDLIS
Chanukkah candles and Menorahs are
ava ilable at the Hillel table in the Norton
Center Lounge and at40 C01pen Blvd.
CONTACT
Contact, a new discussion group for resident studen ts, meets every Monday in 157
. Fillm ore, Ellicott Co mpl ex, 8-10 p .m .
FINANCIAL AID FOR EOP STUDENTS
All students wt-o have not filed the 1974-75
TAP, formerly Scholar Incentive, Appliation
and BEOG application should immed iately
conta ct their respective counselors regarding
their current status. Failure to do so ca n result
in an academic check stop for September 1975
and financial liability for tuitio n of 1974-75.
Fe bruary 1 is the &lt;!eadline.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
American and foreign st ude nts are needed
as student volunteers to help with the project
on Com munication and Information. This is
an opportun ity to .use your skills in art, design,
writ ing, management and communication. 1f
you li ke people, you are needed also. One
hour per week. Call831-3828, the Foreign StudentOffice.
OFFICf OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
HOURs AND SPRING REGISTIIATION
.
INFORMATION
The retJised schedule of AOmisslons and
Records office hours is: Monday through
Thu,.day, 8:30 a,m . .·.! : p.m·.; Fr~ day, . ~ :~
a.m.-4:30 p.m.
The Office of Admissions and Records ~;n
conduct Spring· 1975 Registration beginning
Thursday, Decem~r .t. All 'students1correntl'{
registered at the University need only complete a Course Request form. All new
students for Spring 1975 must coinplete a Sludeht Data Form in order to register.
Undergraduates should pick up their
registration material starting December 5, according to the schedule.below:
SENIORS whose last name begins with:
A-L . . . ·.
.December 5
M-Z
.
. . . December 6
JUNIORS whose last name begins with :
A-L .
. . . . . . . December 9

M-r· . . . . . . . . . . . oecember 10
SOPHOMORES whose fast name begins

EXHIBITS

with:

'

A·L

.

·

.~r11

M-Z.

. . . . . . . . . . . December 12
FRESHMEN whose last nome f&gt;esins wtth:

UIRARY EXHIIIT

First editions of works by S.mue/ llecice«
A-L . • . . . • • . •• : • December13
from the collections of lockwood Mernoriol
M·Z
. . . • • . • • . • . December16
Ubrory. 2nd lloor.bolcony, Lockwood. ViewIng hours: Monaiy-Fridoy, 9 a,m. • 5 p.m.
I'OERY·MAGAZINE C'ontinuing:
• - ~.
·
· ·
The- U/8 -·utei-ary Arts Committee Is
LOCICWOOJ) EXHIIIT
· '
· .pu~I"B a poetry mapzlne early next
Po6sh Collection, exhibition culled from . semester. Af!I'On&lt;; In the UIB community moy
~ subn;l;t up to th~ worb&lt;before December 15
rhe University's collection of. more tQan 4,000
,. vofume5 -of materj al. fir~t floor. Loc:kwoo&lt;t.
tot~titeRtyArtsCommittee, ~ NOrton.
MerT!Ofiillibrary. Monday-Friday, 9~ .rn.- s .
rt.! ;..;,...~~ "
p . m . Cont~nuing . ..
_
•
.., ,.._....,..~~
.·. 1 1

~~EXHII!TION .

-~

~- .

leSt : . ._

Weaving, pottery, jewelryJ enimel and - 101' •ln::A~ seRiel'
tea!he"&lt; crafts will be on display _thr"!Jgh
......, nlng skr · i:l
Decetpber 18. Students, · stoff, facUlty •nd ;· :""'&amp; n .
1ng
asses a 1 . ng
·'atumni Working in the.Creativ'e crift center _ •.llndge .wrll be offered for one hour
Norton Hall, and stvclentS registered in t~
credit, starting next se"!_eSter, by the
Colle!!e B craft cour.ses are eligible to enter '
Physical Eduation Depanment. :
the exhibition. Gallery 219,- Norton H&lt;oll.
Jhere ~H be two sections of the dass
Houl\: Monday-Friday;lla.m.- 4 p.m.; Man-·
,(~lifa limit of 45 persons. penectlon),
day, Wednesday and Thursday, 7-10. p.m.;
one held Tuesdays from noon to 5 p.m .
Sunday, 1r4p,m.
,r .
ani! the other Thursdays from noon to 5
Y!SU.ALAIITSEXHIIIT
•;
--:
p.m7.: 1n_terested students must be
A selective emibit of designs for different
available at one of these times.
_plays and operos origin~liy 5Ubmlned to tile
r figtlt lessons will be given, and the fee
1974 Southern lllinoi' University Inter..
of $60 indudes transportation, ski rental
collesiate Costume apd Scene De,isn
and instruction. Pre-registration is
Competition will be on display in the Hayes
necesS.ry, although the fee need not be
Hall Lobby, through December 13. - ·
paid until final r)!gistration.
·
Pre-regmration Is in 209 Clark Hall .at
the lollowing_times:' Tuesday, D"ecember
INT(RVJEWS
10:· 9 a .m.-noon; Thursday, December
12:
9 a.m.-noon; Friday, December 13: 9
ON-CAMrusiNlBIVRWS '
.
a.m.-3 p.m.
'
The sioff of the, Un'-Shy·l'laa!ment ond

Kissi

�.........

r

140 Capen , 9 a. m.-4: 30 p.m. Call 8'31-2836 fo r
registration infor mation .
Sponsored by the School of De ntistry.

THURSDAY-S
CONTINUING MEDICA( EDUCATION
SEMlNARf
L1

GynN:olo,::ical Laparoscopy is the title of

this th ree-d!I..,X. se minar lasting through
December 6 at the Statler Hilton Hotel. Ca ll
831-5526for regist ration information .
Sponsored by t~eSchool of Medicine.
ART HISTORY LfCTURE'
Russian Icons and the Russian Tradition,
Alan Birnholz, assistant , professor of art
history . 317 Fillmore, Ellicou Complex , 6:30
a.m.
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARf
Psycholos:ical Approaches to ·the Fearful
Patient. instructed by U/ 8 facult y members
from the Departme nt of Behaviora l Sciences,
Or . Elliot Gate and Dr . Noiman Cora h. 232
Nonon, 1-4:30 p.m . For regis!ration or information , ca\1831-2836.
Sponsored b\'othe School of Dentistry.

PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUMt
Perspective on Schizophrenia RC'Search, Dr .
Rue Ciomwell, director of research in psychiatry , Uni versity of Roc hester . Rm . C-34.
4230 Ridge lea , 3 p .m .

SEXI.JAUTY, KNOWLIDGE AND
THEATRE SYMPOSIUM'
'-The Beard. by Mic hael McClure, directed
b)' Donald Sanders. Open wo rk shop _in
Harriman Theatre Studio, 3 p .m .
COLLOQUIUMI
Cyclotron Resonance and Related Studies
of Semiconductors in th&lt;' Far Infrared, Dr .
Bruce M cCombt", Nava l Research laboratory,
Wa shington, D.C. 111 Hochstette r, 3:30p.m .

SEXUALITY, KI&gt;IOWLEDGE AND
THEATRE SYMPOSIUM•
Th€' BN rrl. by Michael McClure, direc!ed
by Donald Sa nde rs. Open rehea rsal workshop
in Harriman ThNtre S!udio, 3 p .m.
stood of the&gt; Condo r. 146 Diefendorf, 3 and
7 p.m . No admi ssion c harge .
Prese nted by the Women 's Studies College
and American Studies.

DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS
CONFERENCEI

PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUMf
Th e Analy sis of Counterfa ctual Con ditionals. Professor John Pollock. Universit y of
Rochester . Rm. 14, -4244 Rid ge l ea . 3:30p.m.

PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#

The B io~vailabi lity of " Micronized
Gri seofulvin f r om Corn Oil-in-Wat e r
Emulsions. Aqueous Suspensions. and Two
Commercial Tablet DoQge Forms in Man,,Joel
Sequeiri, U/8 Ph .D. candidate . 244 · Health
Sdences, 4 p.m.

PUBLIC LfCTURE'
ltalo--American Writing, Jerre Mangione,
author of The Dream an'd-l,he Deal and Mount
Allegro. 233 Norton, 4 p .m .
Sponsored by the Department of Spanish,
ltal i~n and Portuguese.
1
FRENCH DEI'ARTMENT FILM'
,
L.ast · Year at Ma rien bad (Resnais) . 147
Diefendorf, 5 and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
FILMS•
•• Th e Film That Rises to the Surface (Landow)
and Heaven and Earth Magic Feature (Smith).
1., DJefendorf, 7 p .m . '
HIURHOUSE• .....
" Drop-in" Night. 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p .m .

·-

LANGUAGE ON TRIAL SEMINAJII
Dialogu e in Po sr -Brechlian Drama ,
ProfPSsor • Andrzej Wirth, CUNY' Graduate
P.rogr~m in Theatre and German Department.
234 Non.on, 8 p.m .
·
5ponsoted by the Deponmenl of Get'm3nic
and Silvie.
PUIUC LfCTUIIE'

•

Sexism, Racism, Black Feminis~ Gloria
Steinem and Jane Galvin lewis. Clark~Gym, 8'
p .m . Admission: Ur;tiver~ity •Community free,
$1 gener.al pu61ic.
~ _;

'

SEXUAUTY, KNOWUDGE AND .
THEATIIESYMI'OSIUM'
Is- H~mler ~xyl. Peter Shaffe·r, Britis..h
dramatisr .... and . author~pla ywrig ht of rh e
c urre gt Broad~ y. hit_ "Equljs." Hai-riman
T~atre Stud~.! p.m .
.-INBIGYLfCTUIIE'
Y
.

C;:rn::;,e~~i/~orE";/rThe~~~~ te?rfo~~~
Biology of Nitural Systems, Washi'!gton
University, St.louis. 5 Acheson, 9 p~m.
Sponsore$1 by the School of Architecture
and Environmental Design in coopera..lion
~
' with Rachel Canon College.

r

W.URI.M"
,
Ce&lt;ro Know Y$u' R•bbir (DePalmac 19?21.
Norton Conference Theatre, call 831 -5117 fo'r
times. Admission charge.
'

.FRIDAY--6
CONJJNUI~ DENTA£ EDUCATION
IEMINAal ·

Cranial PaQal Crowr.h, Dr. Melvin 5. Moss,
professor of anatomy, Colum~a 4~ty .

QUAKER MEETING
PLANNING SESSION'
Per son s interested in exam inin g the
possibility of for ming a Quaker meeting in
Amherst are invited to auend a planning ses\ ion. For furthe-r informati o n about time and
location , call831-1386 or 992-3302.
UUABfiLM"
Littl€' Murdrr, (Arkin , 1972 ). Norton
ConferenC'C' Theatre , call 831-511 7 fof times.
Admission rha rge .

MOND/\j'-9
GR ADU ATE SCHOOL I ~TERV IEW S'
The Gradua te School of American Uni ve-rsi tv. W a s hin~ton . D.C. . wi ll have a repre\ entativ(' interviewing at U/ 8 from 10 a.m. to 4
p .m . Se ni ors int e rested may obtai n mo re in formati o n and make appointments !hrou~h
the Office of Universitv Pl acemen t a nd C.uE"er
Guidance . ttaves C, Rm . 6, or bv calling 831 -

HILlEL HOUSE'
Shabbar Morning St&gt;rvicE' led by Rabbi Ely
Braun , followed by a Kiddush, 10 a.m. 40
Capt&gt;n Blvd.

5291.

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Blow- ( lp (Antonioni ). 140 Capen. 3 and 9
p.m . No admi ssion char~ e .

GENERAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE#
. Gener,1/ Edu cation and th e First Tw o
tlndf.&gt; rwaduate YNrs is 'he topic o f !his twoday conference. (This is !he final day). Today's
meeting includes presentations by Sleven
Marcus . Columbia Universily; Chr istopher
Lasch , University of Rochester; and John
Searle. University of California at Be rkeley .
170 Millard Fillmore Academic Cora, Ellicoll
Complex, 10 a.m.
Sponsored by the U/ 8 Facult y Senate and
the Office of the President .
·

ENGLISH SEMINARI
Ort"~tc&gt;~ . Richard Caldwell , vi siting ACLS
!Kholar . 232 Norton , 4 p .m.
COLLOQUIUMI

CRL AND MOLECULAR BIOLCJGY

SEMINARt
Multiplf" Form ~ of DNA Polymerase in
ReJ!E"nc&gt;"ralinJ.: Rat L.iver Cells, Na~ma Khan,
• U/B~~;raduate student. 24 Die fendorf Annex , 4
p .m .

IRCFILM'
littlE' Bil! Man. 170 Ellicott, 8 p .m. Open only
to IRC fee -payers.
MFARECITAL ~
_
JoannP Castellani, guitarist, presents her
MFA recital. Baird Recita l Hall, 8 p .m. No admission c harge.

PJP·

THEATRE I'EliFORMANCE'
Baal by Bertoli Br~ht, direded by Gordon
Rogoff, is repeated this weekend after selling
out the three previous pe[formances. Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p .m. '*d- ·
mission': S1 students, S2.50general public.
Presented by th e Center for TheatreReseatch.

mhTRE~NCE'

" Bits 'N Pieces, 'directed by Ed S mith .
HarrimariTheatre Studio, 8:30p.m. Admission
c harge:
·
·
,
·
Preiented by. the De partment of Theatre.
- A series -of -seven sce_nes· and_exerdses that
grew oul of work-done Jn an acttng wo!kshop.
HillEL HOUSE•
Operation. .J:;reenlighr Closing - Pa!1¥. 40
Capen B!Jd., 8:30p.m.
.

1

UUAIFILM• •
.
• Utile Murders (6.-rki n , 1972). Norton
Conference Theatre: call 831\.5117 foi- times .
Adniission charge. ~

-:SUNDAY-8
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSII&gt;.SBIIES'
The Cre~Ove Associates of the U/8 Cen~er
of the Crearive a·nd Performing Aru prese:nt
the second concert in this annual multi-event
• series; all selections are ..Suffalo premieres.
, Albright-Knox Art..-Gallery, 8 p.m. Admission :

.

FunclamE'ntal Mechani~nh of Growrh aml
Pattrrn Formation in Biol n~ical Systems.
PrOfessor leon .Glass, Unive rsi ty of Rochester.
Rm. 90. 4226 Ridge lea ; coff t"e at 3:40,1ed ure
at4 :)0p.m .
Sponsor E" d b y the Departments of
Biophysics, Computer Science and Math .

FENCING'
UI B vs. University of Toro ruo with Brock
Universir v and McMaster University. Clark
Hall , 1 p.m . No admission charge.

FILM'
Taking Our Bodies Back. Buffalo Women's
Cen ter, 499 Franklin St., 7:30 p.m . Free to all
women and children.
Sponsored by the Buffalo Women's Self·
Help Clinic.

DISCUSSION GIIOUI"
Informal conversation with Sir John Eccles,
U/8 d istinguished prOfessor of physiology and
- Nobel Prize winner. '""231 Norton, 8-10' p .m.
"Refreshments served. Admission by ticket only; free t~ availabli"in 225 Norton.
- Spon"(red by ':"iEta Sigm3.
INTBNATIONAl fOU( DANONG'
.
Instruction for beginners. 233 Norton, 8-1'1
p .m.
,
1
...
· Presented t;y S.l~nl'olk Dancing. '

Presen ted by the Departme nt of Theatre.
A serf~s of seven scenes and exercises that
... Mr~ out of work done in an adi ng workshop .

CHABAD HOUSE'
·Sabbath, SPrvice at both houses, 3292 Main
Str eet a nd 185 Map Ie mere Rd ., 10 a.m.

PHYSIOLOGY SIMINARf
Preventio n o f Deep Venous Thrombos i~ b y
External Pneum~ric Compression. Dr . Peter
W. Scherer. Deparcme nt of Mechanical
Engineering , Massachu sett s In sti tu te of
T~nol~gy . 108 Sherman, 4 p.m .
CHAIAD HOUSP
•
Sabbath service, preceded by a study session, and followed by a free mea l, a t bolh
houses, 3292 Main St. , and 185 Maplemere
Rd .. 5:30p.m.

JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETIIALL'
UIB vs. Sr. Bona venture U. Clark Hall, 7:30
NQ ad missioO:charge.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'•
Baal by Bertoli Brecht, directed by Gordon
Rogoff, is repeated this weekend aher sellin~
oul the three previous performances. Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt ;md lafayette, 8. p.m . Admission: Sl students, S2~ general ptlblic.
Presented by the Center for Th eatre
Research.
lAND CONCBIT•
The U/8 Symphony S.nd, directed by Frank
Cipolla, p resents a concert7Sweet Home High
Schoof,lfp.nl.'N'o admissiOn cha rge .
CA(:FILM"
I
The W.1y We Were. 140 Capen , 8 arld 10
p.m . Admi~sion char~e..
HILLRHOU$E'
·
.
Sap6arh Service at 8 p.m . Rabbi, Hoimann
will lead a Torah st~dy sessiol'! fol}owec! ~y an
Oneg Sha~bal. 40 Capen Blvd .
IRCFILM•
....
-Lilt~ Big~ Man. Goodye;u' Cafeteria, 8 p .m .
OR:.en-only JO ntc.tee-payeT5.

c h a r~e .

CAREER WORKSHOP#
Minorit y Careers in Managemenr is the
theme of a workshop fo r area high school
students which includes tours of loca l companies and presenta ti o ns by area colreges .
Canisius College, 9 a.m .-3:30p.m .
Sponsored by the U/ 8 Minority Manage·
ment Assisrance Pr o~ ram .

nlf. FILM'

MATHEMATICS/ BIOPHYSICS
COLLOQUIUMjf
Roratin~ · Wives in an Excitable Mt&gt;dium.
Professor Arthur Winfree, Purdue Universlty .
Rin . 44, 4246 Ridge l ea, 4 p.m.

THEATAE PERFORMANCE'
Bits ' N Pieres. direc ted by Ed Smith .
Harriman Thea tre Studio, 8 :30p.m. Admission

MOCK TRIALS•
Sixtee n si mulated mock trials will take place
simultaneo usly in 16 different cour!rooms
with judges of the Supreme, Count y and other
courts presiding . Students from U/8 will act as
witnesses and senior law s!udents who have
taken thE' coune in Trial Technique will .,act as
law)'ers. All stude nts, especially pre- law, are
urged to a !le nd to participate as jurors. Report
to Supreme Cou rl , Part 10, second fl oor, Old
Erie County Hall. Hours: 9 a.m.-5 p .m . Free a llday par kin g is available at the City Ramp on
the South side of West Genesee Street ,
bel ween De laware ;and Elnlwood .
Sponsored by, the U/ B law ?chool.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR#
Inhibi tion o f Prost ogl~ndin Biosynthesis,
tames Hilbert . U/ B graduate student. 245
Health Scie_n ces. 2 p.in.

be he ld to revie w cas~rom the previou s
week . Fellows Room, six'ili floor , Chil d ren's
Hospital , 3:30p.m .

INTERNATIONAL FOLJ( DANCING'
Some instruction. Fillmore Room, Norton .
8 :J0-10 :30p.m .
Presente d by Balkan Folk Dancing.

SATURDAY-7

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY
SEMINAR#
.
Membran€' StruCture in Rapidly Frozen
Neural rrssues (Study by Freeze-Fracture
Techniques). Dr. Thomas S. Reese, head, Section of Functional Neuroanatomy, Institute of
Neurolog ical Diseases and Stroke , National
lnstilutes of Health , Beth esda , Maryla nd . 108
Sherman, 1 p.m .

Chr i st int" Brooke- Rose di sc u sses her
current work on Ezra Pound . 234 No~ton , 4
p.m .

THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Baal by Bertolt Brecht, direded by Gordpn
Rogoff, is repeated this weekend after selling
Out the three previous perfo rmances . Court·
yard Theatre, Hoyt and lafayette, 8 p . ~ Ad mi ssion : S1 stude nt s, $2.50 ge ne ral publ1 c.
Present ed by the Center for Th ea tre
Research .

UUABFILM''
GE't ro Know Your Rabbit (De Pa lma, 1972}.
Norton Conference Theatre , ca ll831-511 7 for
times. Admissio n charge.

PEDIATRIC STAFF CONFERENCEf
Anf!iO(ilraph y in General Pedi;Jirics, Dr.
Ehsa n Afshani. Kinc h Auditorium, Children 's
Hospital , 10 a.m .

- A Carrliar Catheterization Co nfNence will

S1 st udenls , fa c ulty , staff and Gall ery
me mbers; S2 ge neral admission .

GENERAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE#
Genera l Education and the First Two
Undergraduate Years is the topic of this twoday conference. It will begin with an address
by Stephen Tou lmin, professor on the Com ·
miUee on Social Thought , University of
Chicago. 1-48 Diefendorf Ha ll , 8 :30p.m .
Sponsore d by the U/8 Facult y Senate and
the Offi ce of !he Preside nl.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
SEMINARI
I
Gynecolo~ical L.aparoscopy is the tit le of
this th ree-dav seminar (this is the final day) at
the Statler Hilton. Call 831-5526 for registration informatio n.
Sponsored by the School of Medicin e.

ENGLISH SEMINARt

DecemberS, 1974

WOMEN OFFICE WORKERS MEETING'.
.
All classified women 'employees of the
SUNY system ate invited to discuss o rga niza·
tion structu re:"330 Norton. 5 p.m.
'
Sponsored bv the Association of Women
• law Students.
FILM'
Wind from the East (Goda rd, Goril'l). 5
Acheson, 7 p.m .
FILMS•

The l.ife Story of a Snail; The l.ife Story, of a
Snake; Chide Embryo. 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m .
CHOIRCONCRT' '
The University. ChOir and Chorus, directed
by Harriet Simons,'presents a concert . Kenmore Presbyteria n Church , 8 p.m. No admission charge.
LANGUAGE ON TRIAL SfMINARI
Thin)&lt;inl! about the t.ani!Uo}l!e of Poet ry
(HeideR~er and Holderliri). Professor Erich
He lle r, Northwestern University. 234 Norton,
8 p .m .

TUESDAY-10
LAWSCHOOLI~iiws·

.!

. A repr~ ntat ive from Albany law SChool
will conduct o n-cimpus interviews from 9:30
a.m. to S p.m . All Seniors interested may obtain furth er information thd make appointments through University Plicement and
Career Guidance, Hayes C, Room 6, or by call,
••
ing 831·5291.

POUCY STUDIES SEMINARf
Freedom ~ncL_Free Schools. Professor David
Ny!!s:rg, UIB Facu!IY '!f Eduatlonal Studies.
237 Crosby, 1·3 p .m.
•
CIVIL ENGINEIRJNG LfCTURq
Structural Control in Wind Engineeilng, Dr.
" · James R. P. Yao, School of Ctvil Engineering,
Purdue University. 104 Pa rker,1 p.m.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 6, NO. 12
~21,1974

-PSS to air proposals for
NTP 'tenure' evaluations

llwHn1~.,1hkdMp,IMII~I~waftiOUJhlocAUWUIW1flntsnow~ofthf.lWD'.._

'' ''

-I!Jize~offered .foF

Su•ng

how much·Snbw w . :get

U/B undergraduates who like to talk
about the· weather can win money by
entering the "First Annual Buffalo Snpwfall Prediction Contest," sponsored by
the Statistical Science Division of the

Schmidt, Buffalo recorded a high of 50.6
inches of· snow in January, 1945, and a
low of 0.7 inches in January, 1933.
Annual snowfalls range from 124.7 inches in the winter of 1957-58 to a low of

Computer Science Department.

39.9 inches in 1947-48.

. The contest has two parts : estimating
to the nearest tentti of an inch the
amount of snow that will fall in Buffalo
during the month of January, 1975; and
estimating the amount of snowfall
between October 1, 1974, and April 30,
1975.
.
The Statistical Science Division will
offer first, second and third prizes of $25,
$15, and $10 in each category.
A"ccording to Professor .Richard N.

dergraduate and must be submiued to
the division .by December 12.
Entries and st~tistical background data
may be obtained at the Statistical ScienCe
Computing Consulting Center, Room A24, 4230 Ridge lea; and the Information
Services Office, 90 Hayes.
Official ligures compiled by the
National Weather Service will be used in
determining winning entries.

Entry forms are limited to one per un-

Proposals for the system under which
campus non-teaching professionals w.ill
either be granted permanent appointment or given notice of the termination
of their employment will be discussed at
a general membership meeting of the
Professional Staff Senate (PSS), Tuesday,
November 26, at 2 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf. All campus NTPs are invited to attend.
As mandated by the new State·UUP
contract, revised Policies of the SUNY
Board of Trustees specify that " further
employment of a professional emplpyee
... must be on the basis of a permanent
appointment"-if the employee has comple ted two (2} consecutive yea rs of fulltime service at a ca mpus of the University
in (a] professional title to which permanent appointment may be granted, anq if
the individual has co mpleted seven consecutive years of full -time service at a
campus of the
University as a
professional employee.
PSS Chairperson Robert Wagner says
the implication of the policy is clear:
"permanent appointment or out." The
issue of the procedure for making suc h
deEisions is of critical importance to
NTPs, Wagner feels.
The proposals to be discussed at
Tuesday's meeting are those drafted by a
special PSS cOm mittee established in
September after President Robert l.
Ketter asked the Senate group for
suggestions for possible mechanisms to
be followed in permanent appointment
decisions for NTPs.
Ketter has also asked other University
groups, including the vice presidents, for
similar suggestions, WaS,ner indicates.
The eigh~n group ·Considering
the issue for the PSS has issued an eightpage, seven~section document as a
preliminary basis for the Senate's
response to the President. It calls for,
among other things, a provision for early
permanent appointment and clear
delineation of the "immediate superviso r.., who will make the recommendation regarding the employee's being
granted permanent status. The proposal
also rejeds the notion of peer evalua~
tion, a standard component of the faculty
tenure decision-making process.
lmmedl;ate Supervisor
The ca·m mittee proposal notes that under Article 33.3E of the State-UUP contrad, "the immediate supervisor is called
upon fa make a recommendation regar·
ding the employee's being granted per-.

But~Y J~W.- ~"~ ~~eQ~ rec()rd ace~
o.d.iders

--IJ.~. P:bli~ ~w- 93:380: a~· act t~ e~- . . Greater ProteCtion f....;.
tend and amend the Elementary. and The new law also provides for greater
Secondary Education Act of 1965, which
protection of these records from outside
became effective this Wednesday,
individuals and ilgendes without ihe
November 19, significantly affects acce)
written permission of the student, Stein
to stu~ent re&lt;;ords and at t~e same time
said,
P?S~s questions for Untverslty ad·
Schools found to be in violation of the
mmrstrators.
new statute face the possibility of having
Ronald Stein, associate director of stuFederal fun_ding withheld.
dent affairs, Student Personnel Services,
As it stilnds, Stein pointed oUt, the law
told the lfepotter at deadline that the
needs darification, both from ' the U.S.
Buckley law (so-called because it was ' Department of Health. Education and
sponsored by New York Senator Jilmes
Welfare, whidris-- given iluthority for
Buckley) as currently written opens up
"investigating, processing, reviewing,
student records· to student inspection.
and adjudicating ~ violations"· of the
This includes, he indicat!!d, identifying
data, -atademic work completed,
NO ISSUE NEXT WEEK
anythinR Which is part of the University·s
cumulatiVe records on the individual, in
The Reporter . . not i f pulil!shed
question.
nextwH!c beal8eof lhe~­
lns ~ Two- illaes • be
Under previous ~ Ur.iver.;ity poljcy, .a
publlhed lhll setneller: Thunday,
student was entitled to a copy of his
academic record, but was "not entitled · December 5,, •nd· Thursday,
to· access to other records in his file·
Decembei 12. Sec~ -aer
whkh contain confidential informat!on."
~........... beiJin Thundiy.
(Section ill, para. 5.30, Student Rules a_nd
t-my 16; 1975.. ·
Regulatlc:&gt;nl, 1'74-75, lfeporr!''•
September 19, 1974.) - . /

.

~~~;st~tion-~nd ;,~o,;,plaints which may be
filed concerning alleged violations," ~nd
from the office of Senator Buckley, the
latter most likely to be forthcoming in
the form of amendments to the law.
Awaiting Cbrlfkallon
Stein said . that, as required by .the
legislation, State .Uni.versity at Buffalo is
now receiving requests fo~ access to
. records, but 'ljs awaiting furttler clarifica·
tion before acting on" such requests.
The law allows the institution a time
lapse of 45 days before it must provide
such information in answer to any reql;'est.

Meahwhile, he said, ilny questions
abo4.t the law or requests from students
to review .their records should be
forwarded to him at 201 Harriman Hall,
Main Street·Campus, telephone number
831-3721.
Stein indi~ted that a further explanation of the provisions of the law' whiCh
·his caused some confusion and· raised
questions both on th~ campus and· in
:-Albany, will be forthcOming "'ter. An.article.conU~inl!'g as muCh of this lnformatiQn as is cunently avai"'ble will appear
inthe....,_,~5.
-

•

manent appointment. Additionally,
when the recommendation of the immediate supervisor is no, followed by a
no by the President, there is no appeal or
further review. When the recommendation of the immediate supervisor is yes,
and the recommend3tion of the President is no, the provision of a subsequent
review is provided. Thus, the initial •
recommendation made by the immediate supervisor is highly important
and significant."
The committee finds, however, that
the definition of " immediate supervisor"
within Article 33 of the Contrad is open
and recommends that _,The designilted
immediate supervisor be that person
from whom the professional staff
member directly receives assignments
and feedback resardins performance.
This some person should prepare and
review the professional staff member's
Performance Program and· Performance
Appra!YI."
The day-to-day supervisor must retain
basic autonomy in this matter, the Committee feels, because "nothing wpuld be
more counterprodudive and demoraliz· .
ing than the realization by the supervisor
and employee that the best efforts of the
employee, and the highest praise of the
supervisor, would not be the basis for
granting of permanent appointment."
brly Appointment
Interpreting the Trustees' Policies
standard of seven years as a ·~max­
imum" time period for eligibility for
tenure (and not a minimum}, the Committee proposes that 11the Immediate
~"'!)',with the~~ ollhe

employft, rec:O...mena peirnanent ......

polntment ~t any lime ilurlni the
employee's appointment In a title In
whkh permanent appolnbl!eal .may ....
sranted. This permanent appointment to
bqln
July 1 IIIIIMcll.lely folowlns
the appro..ed recommencl.llon."
To attract and retain the professional
employee of exceptionill performance,
the option of immediate or early appointment is "absolutely essential," the
Committee argues.
·
The selection of seven m year&gt; as the
length of term appointment before permanent appoint~ent must be granted is
excessively ·long, the group's report contends: "The nature of professional staff
- posllions, the needed time to learn the
position requirements, and the feedback
to supervisor&gt; on the employee's·performance, indicate a much shorter interval
is entirely adeqj.LJte. The possibility of
employee exploitation is heightened by
a lengthy period of term appointments.
Evidence of employee performance ...
initiative, and potential is available each
year at the time of Performance appraisal. Such appr~isals should indicate
whether the . employee should be terminated, renewed for an additional term
or granted ·permanent ilppointment."
Procedures .
r
Following the same pattern as the
review of the NTP Performance Program
and Performance Appra!YI, the PSS
committee recommends th~t the
procedure for granting permanent appointment be:
1) lnlliatecl ..,. lhe ........ ouper-

the

.......

_.

Zlforwardedwllhte&lt;O ml!l......... lo
hlolher supenhor (Jupervloor's superwlsor).
3) forwarded with

the IM--a.te

~~-=-••dlllonMIIsuper­
' I 1 to

whor's supenlsoo's te&lt; a

..

proprllle wlce
......... .
the~~;·
........
"
..........
d..,.
lhe .............. lor
""' I 1•• and

4),........ ............... ...,._
.........................................
openlloa ... the ......

proprllle wice ............ ,...,.

I

............ the .......... the Uooltrenl-·
IJ.
·
llumto-Z.col. lJ

�. . .an ..

~

Proposals for NfP 'ten~r,e' evalua~ . .

Small &amp; giant
classes Said

:hy

most effective

Small seminars and giant lecture
courses both rate tops in teaching effec·
tiveness as viewed by students, a new
study shows.
Kenneth Wood , doctoral candidate in

sociology at Stanford, bases this finding
on student . evaluation of classes
rangiRg in size from less than 10 to more
than 500 at 16 colleges.
Results are reported in the current

Journal ol Higher Education in an article
coauthored with Profs. Arnold S. lmsky
and Murray A. Straus of the University of
New .Hampshire.
"Class size is significantly related to

teaching effectiveness as measured by
student evaluations," they declare. The
ratings decline as class size increases
from 10 to 250, then improve as classes
1

gr~he ~~?~~~j increases in size lessen the
degree of student contact with faculty

and result in greater rigidity of course
organization, the scholars suggest.
.
" Instructors are typicall y aware of th1 s
problem, but in our expe rience do litt~ e
to deal with it exce pt to try to .avo1d
courses with large enrollments or to
\ restrict the size of the class."
Beyond a certain point, however, continued growth in class size resuhs in extra
effort and new methods of instruction, as
well as th e emergence of hi ghl y skilled
ledurers.
FacuhY teaching classes between 60
and 290 st udents in size received below
average ratings. " h is possible their performance might be improved if the y
were to adopt the teaching methods
used by those teaching . .. 300 or more
students,".the authors suggest.
. .
" However, to do so, they w1ll
probably need the release from other
teaching duties which is usually granted
to faculty who teach such giant-size sections. There are obvious limits in the extent to which this can be done.
" We suspect that only a small fraction
of college faculty have the temperameQt
and skills needed to lecture effectively to
such large audiences. The figure may be
greater than the 2 per cent who taug~t
such giant classes in. this .sa_m ple, but It
:may not be much greater. ...
"Under certain conditions, very large
classes are as righJy ev~luated by
s.tudents as s mall classes. Co.nsequently,
colleges and departments should not
automatically ~s~ume -:- as many do ~that Very large classes are inherently unsatisfactory.
. "There are, apparently, teaching st~les
and faculty members who can· satisfy

st~~~~:si:~ ~~~hich we suspect al iaf
us have known for some time. But since
most of us are not part of this privileged 2
per cent, our own difficulties with larle
classes have probably led us to
overgeneralize their drawbacks."
The findings contrast with ma~y e_ar~ier
studies which have shown no parttcular
"'r ange of class size more cc:&gt;nducive to
teaching effectiveness than othe~s_. M~ny
of these used classroom ~ exammatton
performance to j~dge e~ectiveness or
adopted arbitrary categones of large and
small class size.
The research was supported by the
U.S. Office of Education and the University of New Hampshire's central research
fund.

~55ion ·

.

The Niagara linguistic Society ' will
·sponsor a workshop-discussion program
at Canislus College, Saturday, November
23 under the chairmanship of Thomas
Fiwimons of the Secondary Education faculty. Papen presented at mornong
and &lt;Oitemoon ~ons will address tbe •
lllbject " pplied linguistics in the
Classroom." Paul L. Garvin, chairman of
rhe DePartment of linguistics, U/8, will ·
be the princip;,lspeaker. His topic: "Advanced ..Language Teaching." Maureen
Sullivan. Frontier Sertior High Sehool ar)d
U/8, and Thomas Ca]laghan, fa5t Aurora
Senior High School and U/B, will also .
panidp;,te.
. · • .
Regimation w~l be from l!-9:30 a.m .. an
rhe Old Main building.

w:

pointntent: 1.) Current~~
This review sequence, the proposal
lion; 2.) AH Performance frolrams an
notes 11 provides a maximum number of
Performance AppraisAls, lndudfn&amp;
revie.:., steps before reaching the Office
. additional .Utements ll1ed by either e
of the President. Otherwise, if the
employee or supervisor; 3.) Wl)eb:
organization's 'chain of command' was
letters of r~omrnend~tion ue ~o ._
followed some individuals would be
sollched (inAde or outside the Unovem
revi ewed by five (5) levels of organizaty) by the supervisor as a p;irl of the Pertion before reaching the Office of the
formance AppraiHI, this should be !'oted
President. 1t is recognized that some inon the PerformJ:nce Progr1.m pnor to
dividuals eligible for per manent appointsolicitation. All such sollot~ ~He;j
ment due to their 'location' in the.
should note thttl any reply recetv w1
orga~ization, will not follow three steps
be available lo the employee .to :"'d:,'da~.
of review before reaching the President.
All leHers solicited should be one u le n
the dossier.' When a request !or a tter
However this recommended sequence
will insur~ tha t no more than three levels
is refused or isnored, .a notatio.n to thJ:t
of review are involved ."
effect should appeu; 4.) _LeHers ?rhothher
·
supporting docume!ntatron whrc t e
Other Recom"_'lendOJ.hons
d
employee wishes to hne included; 5)
The Committee also recommen s
Other supporting doc~ment~tion wh~ch
th:t :A written, concise set of reOJ.sons be
the immediOJ.te supervrsor wtShes to rnelude, which is directly 1elated to the
h
included ~t euh level Of review with t e
'Perform~nce Progr~ms. " It will be the
recommend~tion nor to gr~nt perm~h ·
d'
nent ~ppointment. " Supervisors should
responsibility of t e m~m~. late supervisor to gather the doss1er.
carefully document their recommendati on with particular regard to the Perfor• The b~sic criteria for the gr~nting of
permaneni appointment to profession~(
mance Program and Perfo rman ce Appraisal for the staff member. General
staff be Qtisfacrory job performance as
statements of ineffectiveness, poor job
specified in the individu~l's Performance
pe rfor mance, tardiness, e tc. are not
Program, ~nd based solely on the perfor·
mance criteri~.
acce ptable."
• At each Jewel of review, the
• To strengthen the import~nce that
employee be informed in writing, of the
the Performance Progr~m ~nd Perforrecommendatio~, excluding reasons, bemance .Appraisal occupy with respect to
ing forwarded. t'lais notice to be sent to
the rewiew of professional staff for perthe employee at he time the recom.m enmanent appointment, and the su~dation is forwarded to the next Jewel of
quent responsibility of supervisors rn
rewiew. "The employee or [his/her] adcompleting these prosrams and apvocate should be provided the opporpr~is.1k, the Uniwersity should: 1.) Owerttunity to meet with the immediate supe~ly recognize ~~~t the prep.uation and
visor, supervisor's supervisor, vice pr~~~- .
revie,w pf,the Pe.rlorm~nce PrpgriJ11 ~nd
dent o r President regarding th~ : 1':11ttal.
Peridrm~nCe Apprttisi.l is ..a seriotJS -and
recommendation to grant or not grant
important responsibility of supenisors;
permane nt appointment, and any sub·
2.) Clearly direct supervisors that the
sequent recommendation: excl~?ing the
responsibility for the prepnation of
final decision by the Pres1de nt.
·these documents is theirs iind . not the
• The foliowi'iig m~terial constitute the
e mployee's; 3.) Prowide orien~tion
dossier for the employee in the consessions and workshops for supenrsory
sider~lion of gr~nting permanent. appersonnel in Jhis impof!~l area . of
Humm Resciurces.; ,4.) Indicate that
1
employee perfQrmance rewiew is ~n ongoing ~ctiwity, not .just ~ 'o nce a year
superwisorr respoosibi1ity; 5.) New
·supenisOrS 'shOuld 6e ietluired to rewieW
the Performance Program and App&lt;aisal
for each employee upon usuming i
superviSQry position. Changes should be
noted with the employee and included
A U/B economist observes that
in the progrii~.
with worldwide food shortages becoming more acute, the conc~pt o! "tria~e"
r-..:o Peer Evaluation
as it applies to hungry nations ~ ~ st~rung
The Committee backed away from
to be taken more seriously m mter·
peer evaluation; including " the specnationa·l circles.
trum from informal 'peer' groups at the
Dr. lohn C. G. Boot , professor of
immediate superviso r's leve l to an
manage me nt science, explains that unequivalent President's Review Board for
der this concept, food relief efforts
professional staff 11 b~cause:
.. .
would be directed_ toward developing
• Great diHiculty, 1f not 1mposs1b1hty,
nations that are perceived to have the
exists in identifying "peers,-'' due to the
best chances of becoming self-sufficient
uniqueness of NTP positions.
.
in food production, and perhaps at th e
• Article 33 in the case of profess1onal
expe nse of otber nations whose
staff, does n~t include peer evaluatio_n.
prospects are grim.
.
. ·
• " Peer evaluation" would face difIn medical emerge ncies, tnage refers
ficulty in identifying on-the-job effecto the practice of sorting casualties into
. · tiveness.
three groups for tre'atment: -those who.
• Common req uirements, such as
will die whatever happens, those who
publication, teaching and service for
will survive whatever happ·e ns, and those
faculty, do not exist for professional staff.
whose lives depend on profnpt medi c31

tfrnm 1Mcr 1. ml. 41

Apply triage'
to_the hungry,
Boot urges

attentionOr. Boot , Who visits the United
Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization each June in Rome, says the issue of
triage is now being brought out into the
open and is no longer discussed onl y
flippantly.
T·he U/B economist reports that
representatives are starting to argue
against food aid on a "squeaking wheel"
basis. They suggest, if food shortages oncrease, it might be better to wnte off ald
to nations where wholesale deaths are
inevitable in the long run; and instead
concentrate the- right kind of ,J.Ssistance..
in areas which lack food but hav~ a
lighting Chance to become produdive or
self-sufficient in the future.
.

HOUDAYS FOil.VETBlANS

---to

Section til oi tho New Yorl! 5IMe Public 01llcon lAw prowlclos ~of ~ who -

electe&lt;l.-)-. _.ory

recehe bodl ........, pi)' (II they
prnlouoly
cloy olf If they ioorl! - . Me-w o.y or
Vetor- Doy, tho ,.,_..Oflke reminded
........................... lftheydo

-_..,_.""Me-w,.
they - lo , _ . hollilooJ pay.

....

ve~or

Day,

:

• Unlike facultY in which " peer
evaluation" is conducted with all panies
operating in the same organizational
level, professional staff would involve
evaluation on various levels of the administrative reporting structure.
• Most) rofessio nal staff positions do
not provide time for extensive Univer$ity
service which " peer evaluation" would
require.
·
Members of the PSS Permanent Ap. po intment Conimiuee drafting the
proposals are : Patricia Colvard, Howard
Deuell, Hilda Korner, Raymond Volpe,
Rita Lipsitz, Jacqueline Cole, Cathanne
Dohn and Carol Stephenson.
The purpose of next -Tuesday's general
· professional · staff meeting, Wagner
emphasizes, is to explain the Committee's draft report, answer questions
regarding the report, and ·s olicit
suggestiOns from the floor concerning
changes to be made in the draft, before a
final odmmittee report is submiiteC::I . ...
- • Th~ final report will !&gt;«; reviel"ed hy
the EXecUtive Committee a,..d sent:tb the
Senat~e. for Se!late a~;orr ~t ..a- m~ting '
!~rta,t!y~ly lc~.e~yle~ for, ~&lt;;.e'!)~!:f, U·

Bruckenstein

named to head
Chemistry
Or. Stanley Brucke nstein, A. Conger
Goodyear Professor of Chemistry, has
been appoi nted chair man of the Deparl ·
ment of Chemistry'for a three-year term
continuing until August 31 , 19n, President Robert l. Ketter announced this
week.
A native of Brooklyn, Dr. Bruckenste in, 47 , received his B .~ from th:
Pol ytechni c Institute of Brooklyn and h1s
Ph.D. from the Uni vers it y of Minnesota ,
where he also taught for 14 years prior to
joining the U/ B facuhy in 1968. He was
named to the Goodyear Professorship in
1972.

Author o f nume rous publications and
holder of a U.S. patent dn a cOmbined
current-voltage contro l circuit, Or .
BTuckenstein is an experl in the area of
e lectrochemiStry and e leCt roanalytical
cheinistfy: He· ·rece ived "ihe ' 1974 ·
Distinguished &lt;Awa rd ·of rhe Amencan
Chemical Society and Society of Applied
Spectroscopy and is a member of the
American Chemical Society and the
American Assocation for the Advancement of Science.

Theatre plans
symposium on
1
Sexuality'
Is Hamlet sexy?
And what would Billy the Kid and lean
Harlow have to say to one-.a nother about
sex?
The answers will be offered in a public
symposium on ~~sexuality, KnOwledge
and Theatre," on campus, December 310, under sponsorship of the Department
of Theatre. .
.
Tuesday, Decembe&lt; 3 - Prolessor
Richard Gilman, formerly the critic of
The Commonweal, NewsWeek, literary
· editor of The New Republic; author of
three books: The Confusion, Common
and Uncommon Masks, and , most
recently, The Making of Modern Drama,
will present his "Noles towards the
Definition of a_ Truly Open Theatre,"
Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 p.m.
Wedneoday, December 4 - "The
Beard," by Michael McClure, directed
by Don Sanders. Open rehearsal of . a
workshop in progress deahng with sexual
dialogue between Billy the Kid and Jean
Harlow, ttarriman Theatre Studio, 3 p.m.
Thursday, December 5 -'- Peter
Shaffer, the well-known British dramatost
and author-playwright of the cur~ent
Broadway hit, " Equus," will answer the
question, " Is Hamlet SeXyl," Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8 p.m.
Frldoy, December 6- Another session
with Billy and _lea n, in "The Beard,"
Ha tri man Theatre Studio, 3 p.m.
Tueoday, De~ember 10 - Myrna
· lamb, playwright, author of "Mod Donna" and "Sycklon Z," and Charles
ludlam, actor; aiiectdr. playwright and
iounder of the Rldiailous Theatre Cornpan;,,: will' &lt;:tiscUss ''Fear: fanJasy ~rid
Aurooio'alic C:en.Or\hil' ln ' rhe Th!'aJre~"
ff3ri'inia)i Th~cnre StUd!~;--~ p;~~~
~

, .. ..

,

�.

'

.U.1a&amp;m

· Thursda y, November 21; 1974

SUNY enrolls .
405,000for
fall sem.ester.

Ketter defines die role
of the departme~t chairman

More than 40S,OOO men and women
are now enrolled in the State University
of New York, preliminary registration

data from the Ul!iversity's Office of
Institutional Research revealed this
week.
~
Full-time enrollment at State Univer-

sitY's 72 campuses this fall climbed to
256,863, and part-time, to 149,718 for a
combined total of 406,581 . This represenH ·
a gain of more than 21,500 students over
last fall's University-wide student body .of
384,899.
.
For the second consecutive year, the
University's percentage of growth is
greater than for the previous year. The

Fall 1973 growth rate was S.S per cent,
compared to 4.0 p~r cent for 1972. This
fall's percentage of growth is S.6.
· Enrollment at the 34 State campuses of
the University grew by 6.1 per cent , from
178,811 to 189,732. Full-time enrollment
at the State campuses is 139,110 and parttime, 50,022.
--.
The 38 locally-sponsored community
colleges which operate under the
program of State University reported an

overall gain of S.2 per cent, from 206,088
to 216,849. Full - time community college

What is the role of department
chairmen?
According to the PoUcies of the Board
of Trustees, Article IX, Title C, Sed ion' 4:
"The chairmen of deparlments and
divisions of the college shall, in consultation with their respective Faculties, be
responsible to the chief administrat ive
office r of the college for 1he supervision
of th e p e rsonnel and educat ional
progra m of the de partments or division s

for which th ey se rve. They shall have
such o th e r powe rs, duti es and respo nsibilities as may be assi gned by the chief
adm ini st rative o ffice r of th e co llege."
In co mme ntin g on this sectio n of the
Tr ustees' Po licies. at a rece nt meet ing of
admini strative offi cers, Pres id e nt Robe rt
l. Ke tter offe re d some obse rvati o ns base d on what he te rme d " th e co nim o n law
of past practice."
He po inte d ou t th at d epar tme nt
chairme n are des ig nated by the Preside nt, with no tifi ca tio n to the Chance llo r,
aft er he has co nsulted w ith appropr iate
facult y, in cl u d in ~ the depa rtme nt o r the
d ivisio n co nce rned .
Power from the President
" Th erefo re, t he powe r and aut horit v
of th e cha ir man flows fro m the Pre side nt , since th e Pres ide nt has in fact
de lega ted his au thor it y to th e chairman
fo r the o pe ratio n of th e partic ul ar uni t in
question," Dr. Kett er sai d .

e nrollment is 117,153 and part-time ,
99,696.
Counter to National Forec~ts
The State Universily enrollment increases were tecorded at a time when
forecasters were predicting that coHeges
in some parts of the nation would be
forced to close due to shrinking student
bodies, the SUNY report notes. The U.S.
Office of Education has suggested that ,
nation-wide, college and university
enrollments would show a modest gain
" Minorit y Careers in Mana ge ment"
of only 100,000 lull-time students this fall.
will be the th eme o f an all day workshop
With a gain of morelhan 13,500full-time,
to be held Saturday. Dece mbe r 7, from 9
SUNY " continues to be one of the
a.m. to 4 p .m. at Canisius College.
nat ion',s. most important growth univer'sporlsore d by the- MinoritY Mana ge sities, as well as its .largest system of
ment Assistance Program (MMAP) of th e
public higher education;' the Albany
School of Mana geme nt at U/ B and
report contends.
Canisius, th e pro grar:n is desig ned for
Only 13 of the University's 72 colleges
area minority hi gh school students who
and centers showed enrollment
are college bound and have an interest
decreases .
in business or manage me nt , o r who are
The greatest percentage increases
as yet und ecided about th e ir college
· among the University's colleges were
majors.
reported at the developing College at
Approximat e ly 150 e le ve nth and
Utica/Rome and in Empire State College,
twelfth grade students from various area
where students work toward degrees
high schools will participate.
through largely independent programs
The program will begin with tours of
guided by a mentor, instead of attending
local companie s, includin g the Buffalo
traditional classes.
Evening News, Mobil Oil, Greater BufUtica/Rome's enrollment climbed 142
falo Press and Republic Steel. Buses
per cent, from 911 to 2,:103, as the
provided to transport the students will
college's full-time .registration rose from
leave from in i ront of Canisius' Churchill
46 to 496 and part-time enrollment
Academi&lt;: Tower at 9 a.m.
roughly doubled. Empire State showed
Following the" tours, students will be
an increase of 438 students over last fall.
returned to the college for a talk at 11:30
Community colleges with large ina.m. by Roosevelt T•bb of the Marketing
treases included Columbia-Greene,
Department of Fisher-~rice Toys, Inc.
which haS moved to its new campus near
Hudson (S12 to 766 students, almost a SO
per cent gain); Erie Community College,
which recently opened its new South
campus (8,256 to 9,780, a gain of 1,S24
students); Tompkins-cortland, another
community college with a new campus
Women's Studies College has made
(1,S381o 2,308, a 770-student gain), and
public the lad that it m~y not be granted
Rockland Community College in Suffern
a charter because men are excluded from
(6,331 to 7,131, an 800-student increase).
some of its courses.
Appllatlons u;.m.nsec~
The snag in the College's passage
through the required chartering
Applications for admission to Sti te
procedure
was revealed at a Collegiate
University campuses continued' to be
Assembly meeting Novembe.,4.
received at about the same ra·te during
As reported in the Buffalo Evening
the past academic year-- as .in previous
News. "the committee'S n\ain objection
years. The 46 campuses which participate
is the exclusion of men from certain
in the University's uniform admissions
courses without a dear explanation of
program feceived 279,07S applications
why they are excluded," a college
generated by 126,695 ·fndividuals. The
spokesperson said.
.
•
. applicants were seeking admission to apDr. Irving J. Spitzberg, Jr., dean of the
pr.oximately 62,000 freshman and 14,000
colleges; suggested the college give the
tran~fer places.
•
committee some justification for college
··ay· types of campus, current full-time
exclusion.
·
enrollment, compared to 1973, is:
Dr. Elizabeth Kennedy, assistant
Uniwersity centers: 43, 17S, up 2,038 professor of American studies and
part-time, 16,722;
health
science·
. member of the college, noted m~n are
centers: S,330, up 199- part-time, 701;
erduded from only five of the college's
unlwersity colleges: 61,123, up 3,166 courses, including one ·on self-help
part-time, 24-2117; specialized colleges:
which teaches women about their
2782, up 282 - part-time, 544; sututory
bodies.
colleses: 6_514, down 7S - pan-time,
(for a reader's viewpoint on this, see
566; agricultural and technical colleges:
"letters;• pqe 4.)
20,7'!6, up 1,128 - _pan-time, 7,282; and
She added Jha~ members of the
-community colleges: 117,1S3, up 6_1146_ college will meet this week to decide
part-time, 99_696.

He emphasized, however, the need for
consultation in the administrative
· process, explaining that just as the President must operate in a clear and consultative fashion, so, too, must the chairman .
. · " All administrative officers, including
chairmen, are obligated to respond to
le gitimate criti cism and to ope rate in a
fashion 'which is consiste nt with clearly
es tabli sh e d a nd understood r ul e s,
reg ul ~ ti o ns and procedures," he said .
M11jority Vote Doesn't Decide

" This is not to say, however, that th e
co nsult at ive process dete rmi nes or dictates decisions, or that a majority vote
decides. Rath er, it is the o bligation o f the
ad min istr ative o ffi cer, o pe ratin g within a
we ll und e rstoo d fram ework wh ic h
soli cits advice, prov id es co nsultation and
fos te rs reco mme nda tio ns to ma ke the
fin al decisio ns whi ch are based on the
best avai lab le e vide nce," he adde d .
Finall y, Dr. Kett er o utline d the foll o wing it e ms as a summ ary o f th e cha irman 's
res ponsibi lities. The de partme nt chai rman : ope rate s with th e powe r of a
Preside nti al desig nee; is respo nsible fo r
th e .educa tiona l programs and pe rsonnel
wit hin his charge; is obliged to act in a
co nsu lt ative fashi o n whi ch proceeds in
acco rda nce wit h clearl y und e rsto o d
~ u i de l in es; and sho uld be rece pti ve to
all po in ts of vie w.

Minority management session
scheduled for December 7 .
M r. Ta b b wj ll discuss the me aning and

impact of manage me nt and busin ess ad ministrati o n and th e o ppo rtunities fo r
ca ree rs in th ose fi e lds.
At 1:30 p .m.,- th e stude nts will hear
re prese nt atives fro m focal colleges and
un iversit ies b rie fl y d e scribe their
business school curricula an9-objectiv~.
Th e day's activities will conclude with indi vidu al co nsultations with the various
co ll ege re pre se ntatives from 2:15 to 3:30
p.m.
lun c h will be provided for the
student s atte nding.
According to Raul B. Saona, MMAP
project coordinator, the program has
bee n created to present students with a
chance to see what opportunities are
available for minority students in
business and management.
Much of the coordination for the
workshop and contacts with local
businesses have been accomplished

through the efforts of the National
Alliance for BusineSsmen in the Buffalo
area.-

Trouble surfa~~ concerning
chartering-of Women's Studies

·

what adion the college will take on the
issue.
" We see the issue as'one of power and
control of the college;• she said. "Who
has control of the college and its
courses?"
Dr. Spitzberg said he will seek a
written definition of the issue from the
committee and pass it on to the college
to help college members decide what action to take.
.
The committee is expected .to send its
recommendations on which ~lieges
should be continued to Presiden Ketter
about Thanksgiving, .giving W
n's
. Studies College two weeks to resJ!!&gt;nd.
Women's Studies may face legal complications in maintaini~l its position
because ol recent Federal legislation
prohibiting discrimination in higher
education on the basis of sex.
No other colleges have made public;
any difficulties with the committee,
whose decision-making sessions are dos-'
ed to the public.
When .contacted by the ae,iotler for a
ful!her clarlfication.of Its position on the issue, Women's Studies College declined
the opponunlty to make a sutement.

Taskforce
seeks to aid
the handicapped
Though not very vocal , disable.!
studenls form an important University
minority that in recent years has had
I heir problems recognized. ·
Bertha Cutcher, U/ B coordinator for
service s to students who are disabled ,
works with both the administration and
stude nts " to provide whatever is

necessary for the ~andicapped to adjust." •
Ms. Cutcher acts as a sort of '"ombudsman; " that is, she is -a person to
whom the handicapped can go for
assistance , whe ther it be just for informatio n o r to discuss 1he problem of having
to anend a class in a room to which it is
difficult to gain access.

A task force has been developed by
Ms. Cutcher to identify the problems of
di sabl e d students and to set up
procedures an_d guide lin es, to decide
wh at the commitme nt of lhe Universi ty
is.
The tas k force is composed of a large,
we ll- chose n grou p wh ich can pla y important rol es in facilitating t he adjustme nt of th e hand ica ppe d to Uni versity
life. Facilities Planning, re sponsible for
the accessibilit y o f buildings, University
Hou sing , Campus Ser vices , which
provides !h_e intercampus busses, and
M a int e na n ce ar e all represented .
Students also se rve on the task force and
the Co mmunit y Adion Corps (CACl is
involved .
Most proble ms are caused by the
design of older buildings, Ms. Cutcher
po ints out . On th e Amherst Campus, she
says, all academic units have been and
will be .@Onstructed to provide for the
h a ndicapped . Publ ic telephones ,
e levator buttons and drinking fountains
are all low enough to be utilized by individual s confined tb wheel chairs.
Problems arising from lat:k of consideration and human oversights are also
dealt with by Ms. Cutcher and the task
force.
A Handicapped Student ... ssistance
Program was recently initiated which
enables Ms. Cutcher to hire a student to
aid the handicapped in maneuvering.
Another example of this type of
assistance exists within the Speech Communication Department where blind
students may take texts to be read aloud
and taped.
. ·
With the proper support, physically
disabled students can fundion as well as
any others, Ms. Cutcher points out.
HOwever, pre!ient registration
procedures provide the administration
with no way of identifying and contacting those who Qeed this support.
Ms. Cutcher has immediate contact
with blind students when they register
because they are sponsored by the Committee for the Blind, a group with which
she works closely. Students with other
disabilities are usually, discovered
primarily by word-of-mouth.
"As of the 74-75 school-y~ar, new
application blanks which enable the
identification of the handicapped were
&lt;listributed, but because of administrative delays I do not have a printout yet," Ms.-€tttcher says. She hopes
that next .year she will be able to cori~ct
all such students.
"This campus is becoming aware of the
probtems of the handicapped;' says Ms.
Cutcher. "We've come a long way but
we still have a long way to go."
As one means of "genlng th"'""
sooner, she asks that any disabled sJudent.with difficulties contact her. Her office is in Placement in Hayes Annex C.

Offices
moved
Several of the DiVIsions of the Office of
Facilities Planning t.a.le recently niOYed
to Hayes Hall from various locations. Ttle
offices, their n!!&gt;W locations and
telephone numbers are: Ass/Slant Vice
l'tesident John A. Neal, 390 Hayes Hall, .
831-4542; Architectural OMs/on, 390
Hayes H~ll, 831~2; ConSiruction Division, 308 Hayes Hall, 831-214'1; Equipment Division, 390 Hayes Hall, 831-4421;
Scheduling Division, 315 Hayes Hall, 8314723.

�4

Thursday, November 21, 1974

......

Whatever happened to the freshman c;:lass of 19671
_Rapid growth, with its attendarit
protest and disruption, accompanied by
great competition for admission and
financial support, characterized the
University environment in the late 1960's
as 1967 freshmen undertook their un·
dergraduate careers. While they were yet

in college, expansion, made pOssible by
Federal and State funds, came to a halt,
panly because of the violence on this
and other campuses, and the competition for admission to graduate and
professihral schools increased. Competition also characterized the job market in
the early 1970's when the majority of the
sample were enteripg the world of work.
Sodally, this era marked a time of great
exper·imentation with new life styles, as

many sought alternatives to middle class
jobs, marriage and child rearing.
So whatever beca me of the freshman
class of 1967!
·
" I've done an about·face, " one
member of the class replies. " I went from
a semi·hippie (complete with the un·
iform) to a srraight teacher (complete
with the uniform). I' m happy with my
home, husband, and usually with my job,
bLt there are a lot of things I want -and
I'm beginnirlg to feel my age. I want it all
now." "'
Things have moved "much more
rapidl y than I expected," another says. " I
have little free time and I find myself
running at top speed just to remain in
the same place. But despite m y con·
tinu ed complaints to my wife and
friends, I enjoy it to a fantaslic degree. ·I
find myself changing almost daily. Rath er
than wonder ing about what or where I'll
be next year, I find myself wondering
what I'll be like tomorrow.
"
These and other responses to the
question were reported in " The Universi·
ty Experience; Follow-up . : . · '19'67
Freshmen in 1973," by La rene Nicho ls
Hoelcle, published recently by the Student Testing and Research office of th.e
Di'(i.sion of Student ·Affairs.
The report is the second in a projected
series reporting data from a ten -year
longitudinal study of a random sample of
100 students in th e 1967- e nt e ring
freshman class and is based on respon ses
tO a questionnaire administered in 1973,
si~ . ~ears. after th,e pr9jec:t ...ya~ ipitiateQ.
Fifty-foUr of the onginal100 me mbers, of
the group completed and returned their
questionnaires. Questions concerned
life ~xpe;ienceS of the year, 'including
rilai"ita! 'sta~Us, family life, interper~onal
relatiOnships, educational and vocational
experience, and personal satisfactions
and dissatisfactions.
Majority Single
Two-thirds of the respondents were
women. The majority of the respondents
(57 per cent) were single; more men than
women were married.
A founh of the single men and women
expressed mixed emotions about their
single statUs; they wanted the companionship marriage affords, but also
wanted to maintain 'lheir independence
and freedom .
"'Ambivalent-sometimeS I feel it

would be nice to build something with

someone: and there are times when ., feel
I need the freedom that my status gives if
I'm to do anything significant" .

A tenth of the women were distinctly
unhappy wilh their single status, and a
similar proportion of men said they were
lonely.
·
"Miserable-/ have had several bad

Editor·in-Ch~

ROBERT T. MAilLErr
' Art ~nd l'rodUdion
IOHN A CLGUTIER
Assod~re
~A TRICIA

Editor

WARD IIEDERMAN

Weel&lt;ly C.lendor EdltooDIANE QUINN "
Cot&gt;rril••fl"" NJ.Isl
SUSAN ~· ~URGER

rela.tionships with guys and I hope soon I
ca n find someone and get married."

Most of the married respondents were
happy and most wanted children. But-•
small proportion repOrted mixed
feelings about their marriages. More
men than women did.not want chil9ren
or were ambivalent about it.
"K ids are groovy - sometimes. Right
- th e 'sometimes' isn't enough for me.
Kids are the ultimate commitment I(
takes real security to bring a kid into this

a few had completed some postbaccalaureate study. Two~third s were
engaged in some . educational pursuits,
either toward a degree or for their in·
dividual self-developmen t.
Person~l ~tisf~ction

world, and think you can help him to be
a loving, ca ring person."
·

The respondents generally felt good
about themselves and reported personal
satisfactions with their jobs, themselves,
their families and others.
Men, both married and single ,
.reported three times as often as wo men
that their jobs were a source of gr~at personal satisfaction.

Work
Th e spouses of the married
respondents were nearly all working, or
working while attending sc hool or
ho~emaking. Most men (64 per cent)
reported their wives were workirlg.

" Finding a job that I really en'joy and
look forward to. I enjoy the lea rning ex p erience more than th e University experience. Possibly the re sponsibilities
and pa yc h ec k ha ve been -very
motivating."

" I'm happ,y - I want her to do what
she wants - and when she wants to get a

Women were more lik e ly than men to
re port some aspect of self - pe rsonal
deve lopment, achi evement or growth as a source of great personal satisfaction.
Single women, far more than others,
reponed satisfactions deriving from their
inte rperso nal relationships.

job. I'll be happy with her choice."

Slightly more th an half of the women
(56 per cent) reported t ha t their
husbands were working, a third that their
hu sbands were working and attending
school, and the rest, attending school.
A majority of those em ployed enjoyed
th ei r work, and more than half repo rted
that their und e rgraduat e studies were
re levant to their jobs.
The sexes cluste red differentiall y in
terms of so urces of jOb dissa tisfa ction as
well as satisfaction. Onl y women, most of
them full-tim e employees, report ed
frustrations of bureaucrac y, poli tics, and
insufficient support for their efforts;
noted dissa ti sfaction with co·workers or
clients; and ci ted inconve nie nces of
sched ul es or loca tion s. Men, especia ll y
those employed full·time , more often
than women ci ted lack of money and
reactions of· otber people to their efforts.
" The only dissatisf yinR aspect about it
is a below average wage and the look s I
get when I tell old friends, most of whom
are se llin g insuranc e, that I'm a
'banker.'"
P~rents

A large majorit y .of the rfs ponQent s
reported sa ti sfaclory re lationshiPs wi th
their parents. Three·fifths of all si ngl e
respondents and about half of all
marrie d ones repo n ed recent posi(ive
changes in this regard .
"Grown closer. Moving away from
home. It has shown me how good and
kind they were to me in my youth -by
stepping back a little I've been able to
get a better perspective on the pasr 23
years."

Nineteen per cent of the group, more
single "than married people, reported
cha nges in the direction of more distant
relationships.
" Wf." have drifted farther aparl. I know
what I want out of life and can't really
put it · in concrete terms. I am not
renouncing their values, but I want
something more, and they can't gra sp
it ."
"Pretty lousy. In a recent letrer, my
' father casually mf!ntioned that he had
been having some prostate tro uble and

r

in things that were going on around
them . Others wished they could change
perso nal aspects of their lives while ,jn
undergraduate school. Those who- did
usually· wished that they had been more
self-aware and less shy or had gone away
from home to school.
Two series of st udies are being conducted with sa mples of two incoming
classes - 1%6 and 1967. The project includes for each sample : five interviews
-one in each semester of the freshman
year and one in each of the three
succeeding years - plus six question·
naires, qne during each of the six years
thereafter. All members are retained in
the samples for the full ten years whether
they transfer to another school, drop
out, fail to complete an interview or
questionnaire, o r con tinue in school
and / or with the project.
It is anticipated, Student Testing and
Resea rch says, that analyses of these data
will cont ribute to a better understanding
of major influ~nces o n you ng adult
development.

" I cou ldn 't even begin to - yes I
could : My lea rning about myself. and my
personal growth as an individual and as a
fri end of ot hers. This growth and learning seems to be what it's all about."

Satisfaction s deriving from famil y life
we re mentioned by marri ed people, especiall y women .
Very fe w of the group mentioned
academic pursuits as sources of satisfa ction althoug h two-thi rds of respondent s
were in volved in so me academic activity.
Dissatisfactions
Self, job, and academic pursuits were
the so urces of greatest dissatisfa ctio n to
more of the re's pondents than were
other things. Single men and married
women were more likel y than others to
repor t di ssatisfactions with themselves,
and married men were the least apt to do
SO:

r

Job-re lated dissatisfactions w.ere
reported by all groups, sing le and
.marrie,d, men and women. ,
.
Ma.rried women were least lik e ly to
repo rt job disSatisfact ions, just as they
were least like ly to report their jobs as
.sources of personal satisfaction.
Both academic and family problems
were more often reported by married
people, and married women were especially likely to , report "dissatisfaction
with th eir academic pursuits.
D i ssa t i'sf action with 'I i vi ng
arra ngement's, the state of the world in
general, and money problems were cited
by si_ngl e people almost exclusively:
"Recently. my lack of money. Generally. the feeling that· there are too many of
us (humans) and,. the planet is being
raped. I despair over the Neanderthal
consciousness and criminal actibns of
those in power (the leaders-political)
here and elsewhere."

Hindsight
Respondents were asked what they
would do diffe rentl y, academically,
socially and personally, with their unblamed it on my lonl( hair (really).
dergrad uate experience if they had it to
Mother would lik e to be a wanddo over again. ~vehteen per cent of the
mother."
sa mple, includi g nearly a quarter of the
tiiterperso.roal Relations
single people, id not respqnd:
The-majo~i ty of these rilen and women
A majority of those who answered
were happy. with their interpersonal
seemed to have Oeen satisfied with their
re1ationships with other men and
undergraduate-experience, at least to the
women, although a third of the
extent that they cited very little that they
respor;tdents were dissatisfied with or un.·
specificall y wished. they could change.
sure about these relationships.
" Nothing - unless I could have
The reason most fr~quently ~xpressed
changed my personality to be less l(uilty
by single P.e ople who were not satisfiei::t
and afraid - but I think I am what I am
with their relationships with one or both
and have &lt;!eall with my feelings the best I
sexes was the desire for closer
could."
.
\ friendships or . love relationship~. Not
In terms of their academic life, most
surprisingly, men. wanted more male
respondents who wanted to change
frieQds and women wanted more female
something wished they had taken other
friends, several of. them reporting that
cour.ses_~)f a different major, or that th,ey
they had moved away from old frieQds
~pel been more . involved and applied
and had not yet made new ones.
· themselves with - greater self-discipline
"I enjoy .the feeling of having close
while they were in school.
_ friends anp I thlly miss the (eeling."
A.few others wishe.d they had had a
"I'm satisfied ,with the friendships I
better idea of what they wanted to· do
have with some ' really ' fine men.
with their lives and had received' better
However, I'm at rhe poin} now where a
.
vocational coynseling. ·
friendship that wasn't entirely pl_atonic:
A few respondents repbrtell a wish to ·
might be appreciored."
change ~ir Social experien.ces as un·
)\llost of the respondents had earned-a ·- dergraduates, - most frequen~y wishi~g- .
baccalaureate degree from SUNY/8 and
they had been more aware a~ involved ..J

Women-only
classes defended
Editor:
Fo r ce nturies women ha ve been
barred from class rooms in Europe, in
America, in Asia. Wh y on earth make
suc h a fu ss beca use here there are some
cou rses at the Women's College where
preference is given to female students? It
is robe noted that male' students are not
prevented fr·om ·registering in the
courses; tHey ca n fo llow · them as in·
dependent student'l under an 1nst ru c·
tor's orientation ~
· But why should the Classes be all
feminine?
'
Because there are issues raised for
which each wo man has her histoFY to tell.
Each woman po"Urs her heart out and we
discover that we are not alone, that
somehow grief, pain and sorrow ha s
bee-n the lot of the feminine condition
rhrou~hout the ages.
We certainly
wouldn't feel so free to talk about our
awry experiences if there were men in
the room.
Suppose there were a · man 's course,
somewhere in the syllabus, in which
each man would tell the others about his
~ first sexual experiences as a man - how
he felt, what he did. Why should there
be women present? In he~ring those accounts how could a woman profit by
those experiences? She could never
relate to anything that could or would
possibly be said under .. such cir ·
cumstances. For a simple reason: she
does not possess a penis.
So, with 213 (\.Vomen in Contemporary
Society), the opposite is true. We had a
class on "General Information" about
our bodies and one of the girls showed
the class how to do a breast selfexamination and a pelvic exam' with the
use of a speculum. Those demonstrations
were exceptionally valid and interesting
fOr us but since men have not been hit by
.b reast cancer af!.d to my understanding
have not ~ad vaginal troubles, I don't
know what they could gain by attending
' one of those classes.
-'
Men have been studying) experimenting, discussing with other .men for cen-_..
turies: I don'.t see how a group of Wfmen
talking about W&lt;?menJ problems cou{d
do any harm to them.
.
·._.,. -Neusa Longo

p·-1:-..: ~-ulu

UIK..l:: 3URAJ·

:Mohammad Khan, a School of ·
1
Management graduate student
from In- ·
dia , h~s completed a dissenatiori sJudy
detailing when, where~ and how many
patrol cars should be allocated in Buffalo
to minimize response time. The-disserta.tion has been presented to Police Com,.rili~~one~ Thomas Blair for st~dy.

�.......

Thursda y, November 21, 1974

Basketbal{ opens
with lunch
Stader Hilton

at

The 1974-75 U/B basketball season, the
58th season of intercollegiate play here,
gets und e r way with a special luncheon
Friday, Nove mber 22, at 12:30 p.m. in the
Georgian Roo m of the Statler Hilton

Hotel in do w nt own Buffal o. The
program will be the first in what is expected to become an annual affair.

He ad Coach l eo Ri chardson, starting
his second season, wi ll introduce the
Bulls varsit¥-Squad and hi s staff.
Jack Ramsey, head coach of the NBA
Buffalo Braves, wi ll be the special
speaker. Presi dent Robert Ketter and Dr.

Harry Fritz, at hlet ic director, will also
co mment. Dr. Ed Gicewicz, former U/B

pla ye r an d ·the instit uti on's at hl etic physicia n, wil l be th e master of ce remonies.
Th e ho m e seaso n open in g vars it y

ga me is agai nst Syracuse Uni ve rsity,
November 30 at 6:30p.m. It is scheduled
fo r Memorial Auditorium. The junior

varsity team also plays Syracuse in its
home opener Novembe r 30 at 4 p.m. in
Clark Hall.
·
U/B has si x new players on its preseaso n roster: fres hme n---Roland Maples
16-1 guard , Be rke ley, Calif.), Sam Pe llom
16-7 center, Le land , N.C.) and leff Baker
(6-5 forward, Washington, D.C.), Ronald
McGraw (6-4 forward , Wilmington ,
N.C.), Bishop -Fallon's Dick Mozdzie r 16-l
· transfe r from Brya nt &amp; Stratton} and
Bishop Timon's Tom Ashe (6-1 gua rd}.
Six letter me n re turn , including 6-6
sophomore Mike Jones, 6-3 Otis Horne
(Ben ne tt}. 6-1 junior Gary Dom zalski
(Bishop Timon}, 6-7 junior Jim Slayton
(Ke nmore) and co-cap tains Bob Dick inso n , 6 -3 senior, a nd Darn ell
Mo nt gome ry, 6-3 se ni or (Ke nsington}.
up from th e" junior va rsity are ·s-10
guard Gene He nde rson and 6-4 forward
Greg Witherspoo n.
Th e mott o for th e curre nt seaso n,
Coach Ricliardson'says; is " A Progi-am on
the Move:.. · · · ·
'
I
•
The luncheon is open to the public
and rese rvat ions may be rriade by calling
the Basketball O ffice on the Ma in Street
Campus, 831 - 293~ .

'Who Killed JFK~'
Find out at 3 &amp; 8
The man y unanswe re d q u e s t i o n s
which surround the assassination of
President John F. Kenned y will be the
subject of a program to be prese nted o n
ca mpus twice today (Thursda y, Nov.
21). Enti tled " Who Killed. J.f.K .l," the
program, a. combination of films, slides
and lectures, will be presented at 3 p .m.
and aga in at 8 p .m. in th e Fillmore Room
o f Norton.
Narrator David· Williams wiJI present
hurJdreds of rare slides, the suppresSed
Zapruder film, a home movie taken at
the asSassination scene, and an in-de pth
verbal ~xpl~natio n of- the research and
discoveries made in the past 10 years.
This evidenc-e: acco rding to Williams,
" reveals incontroverti bly that the Preside nt was killed by a conspiracy and it
offers many hints as to who was respon- ·
si ble ."
The program is being sponso red by the
Student Association Spe~akers' ~ur ea u .

Women's fell9wship
The National Council of Alpha Lambda
Delta, women 's freshman honorar_y
socie ty,- will award eight $2,000
fellowships fur graduate study for the
1975-76 academi{: year. Attendance at a
gra~uate school"' on a campus where
there is a chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta
is encouraged.
_
. Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta
who was graduated wit h a cumulative
average equal to the Alpha Lambda De lta
initiation ~tandard (3.5 GPA) is eligible.
Application blariks and i nf~rmation
may be obtained from:· Ann S. Hicks,
University Activities Office, 223 Norton.
The application form must t&gt;e"'submitted to the National Headquar1ers of
Alpha Lambda Delta, Box 279, Lewisburg,
Pa. 17837, by Jan!!ary 6, 1975. ·

Critic sheds light on
Blake's ApOcalypse
"'That which. ca n be made e xplicit to
th e id iot is not worth my care," William
Blake o nce said, a nd , true to his word , hi s
work is triumphantly obscurp..i explicit
o nl y to dedicated explicators and t hose
who intuitiVely share the artist 's ext raordinary vision . \
light was shed on a crucial aspect of
· Blake's ·art Nove mber 14 whe n visiting
critic M.H. Abrams guided a large
audience through selected passages
from Blake's " Jerusalem," the last and
pe rhaps the greatest of his prophetic
wo rks.
Ab rams' focus was Blake's notion of
Apoca lypse, that mom ent when time is
stopped a nd th e di vine purpose revea led. Is the Apoca lypse of ~ l ake a spiritual
breakthrough to an imaginative vision
th at can occur in ~is life, o r does it imply
a total reject ion of the physical world?,
Abrams asked. Bl~k e remai ns ambiguous
on this point, argued the c riti c, rejecting
the position of some interp ret ers that
Blake's la te r work is unequ ivoca ll y
spi ritu al and anti-p hysical.
Blak e's lifetime obsess ion wi t h
Apocalypse was triggered by that cent ral
trauma of the Romantic period, the
Fre nc;:h Revolution . For many supporters,
the fa ll of the French monarchy was a
sign that "the millen ium was just around
the rorfl er," Ab ram s contended . For
Blake, the event foreshadowed a pervasive revolution that he hoped would
topple traditio nal ecclesiastical authorit y
and free man's fettered senses, including
hi s capaci ty fo r sexual pleasure.
Not Harbinger of More Perfect World
By th e mid 1790's it was apparent that
the French Revolution was not the har·
binger of a more perfect world that man y
· had anticipated. Blake's worJC from this
time onward is marked by increased re ject io n of the ph ysical world. Earl y in the
decade Blake is a doctrinaire ser.asualist
.w ho equates =failure to act upon one's
desi res with infanticide. By 1810 he di s·
misses , ma terial creation "as the dirt
upo n my feet."
Some critics, notably Abrams' former
stu dent E. D. Hirsch, believe that this later
sta nce represents a radical repudiation of
life.
"There is a drastic cha nge [after 1805]."
admitted Abrams, "but is it absolute? Did
Blake abhor this world!" he asked .
Abrams finds in "Jerusalem" support for
a qua.lified no .
Be tween 1808 and 1818, Blake e tched
100 plates of text and illust rat io n for this
major wo rk according to his own secret
process for "i ll uminated writing," a
platemaking prOC!!SS only fecentJy re·
discovered by Ruthven Todd, said to
ha ve bee n revealed to the arti st in a vision by the spirit of his dead brother
Robert .
Althou gh verba l and visual art are
present-ed si mul taneously in
" Jerusalem," Abrams c~ utio ned against
d e pending too heavily o n the illus·rrations to illuminate Blake's text.
"They don 't alwa ys he lp," he warned,
citing Blake's- unfatho mable decisio_n to
illustrate his powerfu l poem " The Tyger"
with the figure of a "smirking tabby.
tiger."
What is esse11tial in plumbing th e intricacies of ·uJerusal e m" 1 and Blake's
other prophetic works is a knowledge of
both his personal mythology and his unusual " narrative strategy."
·
Blake was deeply religious and utterl y
unorthodox. As an artist who blurred the
distinction between the verbal and
visual, he .predicta.bly formulated • myth
ol creation which could be visualized.
That controlling myth posits the existence before the Fall of .univerSal or
primal man, the human form. divine who
incorporates all men and-both sexes. The .
Fall in this scheme is "a fall into

Pedia~ Lecture
Sufjlner J. Yaffe , pr.ofessor and
associate chairman, DeP.ahment of
Pediatrics, gave the ieOth- annual
louisville Pediatric lecture, sponsored
by the University of Kentucky Mt ical
School, Nov. 6; on the topic o drug
prol)lems•in pregnancy.

. division," prompted by the original sin of
:'selfh ood." For Blake then, Abrams explained, man 's basic discontent is alien tat ion or sepa ration. Apocalypse
promises to reu nite mankind to his
primal unity.
" Jerusalem" is peopled by many of the
ce ntral fig ures of Blake's myth, including
Nbion, equated with mankind, the Four
Zoas (creatures for med early in th e chain
of accele rating fragme ntation}, and their
fe male "emanations." Each of these
fi gu res carries the burden of multiple
significance, because, as Abrams explained, !he poem is not an allegory but
rathe r a work in the Scriptural tradition
of typo logy. Each figure is a type, a
representative insta nce of some larger
truth. Moreover, each figure incorporates seve ral levels of mea ning, in addition to its significance wit hin Blake's
myt h.
Thus, Alb ion is simulta n eo u sly
mankind, England, a relative of the Scriptu ral Israel (A lbion's bride is also named
Jerusalem) , and , in ce rt a iri of his
utterances,
a
ve hi c le
for
autobiograp hi ca l reve lations by the poet.
Agent of Redemption
As an artist and visio nary, Blake ide ntifies himself most closely with l os, -the
fallen form of .o ne of the Zoas . In
" Jerusalem," for example, los speaks of
his words as " the blows of my mi ght y
Hammer," a reference to the poetengraver's creative act as he hammers
the words of the poem on to th e copper
plaJe. Christ-like, los is the agent of
redemption , the keeper of the divine ,
imaginative vision.
In the course of the poem, Alb ion or
mankind is awak e ned to redemp ti on. At
the moment of Apocalypse, wri tes Blake ,
" Time wa s finished!" Were the human
se nses annihilated as well?, Abrams asked .
In th e climactic ~ections of rile poem,
th e senses (identified with the Zoas) are
not destroy~d but trju mphant ~y uni,t ed . .
Explained Abrams, Blake believed that
one of th e catastrophic result s of the Fall
wa s th at primal man's infiffite se nses
we re " contracte d ." Thus, th e " fourfold
eye " of prim al vis ion was replaced with
limited ocular sight in the fallen world.
Apocalypse restores man's abilit y to see
both the unified creation and the individual in tim e and space, Blake
suggests.
The fin al plate of " Jerusale m" shoWs
Alb io n joined with his bride, symbolizing
the reun ification of mankind. Hirsch
argue~ that th is union is an androgynqus
o ne. Abrams points -to the vigor wit h
which Alb ion e mbrances hi s female alter
ego in -Blake 's e ngraving as another clue
to his persistent, tho ugh ambiguous
co mmitme nt to the sensual world .
-P-W.B.

United Way
still needs
more gifts
With the University's United Way campaign at 92.5 pe r cent of its goal - $115,652.65 of t h e S1 25,000 total , drive
organizers indicate that contributions
have bee n received from 2,755 donors,
152 less than last fall's 2,907.
" If those who gave last year but have
not done so this yea r would contribute," ·
campaig n leaders point out, "it would
provide a large portion o f"the final push
needed to reach the top."
The ca mpus drive will continue
through the e nd of the yea r.
In the Faculty of Health Scie nces which
ha s achieved 66 per cent of its goal
overall, several departments have reached 100 per cent - Pedodontics and Endodontics, Removable Prost hetics and
Operative De ntistry, in the School of
Dentistry; Healt h Sciences Education and
Evaluation, Medical Technology, O ccupatio n al Th e rap y and Ph ysical
The rapy, in the School of Health Related
Professions; Anatomical Sciences, Dermatology, Gynecology-Obstetrics and
Pediatrics, in the School of Med icine;
Continuing Education arid Communi ty
Hea lth, in the School of Nursing; and the
School of Health Ed ucation. The Depa rtment of Physiology has achieved 90 pe r
cent of its goa l.
Within the Di vis io n of Finance and
Management, all departments except
Mainte nance ha ve reached 69 per cent
of the ir goa ls. Mainte nance, which has a
goal of $10,930 of the Finance a nd
Manage me nt total of $18,000, has achieved 54.9 per cent , already surpassi ng last
year's final figure of 49 per ce nt .

Health.careers .
COUrSe offered
A course designed to acquaint st ude nts
with oppo rtun ities for health caree r~ is
being offered for the first ti me this
. sem~ster , t~rpug h the . Sclmol qf. He;llth
Related Professio ns and the Department
of Hea lth Sciences Education and Evaluation .
.
Cross-listed as HSE 101 and HRP 101 ,
the cou rse not only fami lia rizes students
with the hea lth care system's social and
economic aspects, but also provides field
trips to observe health professionals at
.
work . Dr. Phyllis Higley, .chairman of the
De part111en t of Ht;alth Sciences Education and Evaluation, emphasizes that the
course is designed to expose students to
healt h education possibilities through
U/ B and elsewhere. " There are programs
in medical records administration and
other health specialties which ar"e not
offered here. But we want the students
to know about as many opportunities as
possible," she says.

FACULTY

Professor and Chairman, Pharmacology &amp; Therapeutics,
posting no. F-4187.
Assistant/Associate Professor, Pharmacology ~ Therapeutics, F-4188.
Professo r, o;a/ Biology, F-4189.
Assistant Professor of Dance &amp; Movement, Theatre, F-4190.
Assista nt Professor of Voice &amp; Speech for Actors, Theatre, F-4191 .
Assistant Pc;:ofessor, Biochemist ry, F-4192.
_
·
Assi'itant P-rofessor, Geologica l S~iences, F-4083 (reposting}.
Instructor/Assistant Professo r, &lt;;onlmun!ty Hea_lth Nursing, B-4095.

NTP
Hous iQg Assista nr, Student Affairs, PR-1, posting no. B-4095.

#

.

For additional information concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
openings throughout the State University ~stem, consult bulletin boards at
...;,
.
these locations:
1. Bell Fadlity ·betwee~ D152 -~nd D153; ~- Ridge Lea, Building 4:Q6, next-to

cafeten~; 3. Rtdge lea, Butldtng 4230, m corndor next to C-1; 4. flealth Sciences

Building, in corridor opposite HS 131 ; 5. Capen Hall, in the corridor between.
Room 141 and the. Lobby; 6. Lockwood, grc&gt;und floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public Information Office; 8. Acheson Hall, in. corridor between Rooms 112 and 113· 9.
Parker Engineering, in corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall 1st fl.;.,r
Housing Office area; 11 . 1807 Elmwqod, ~ersonn'el Department; 12. Nono~
Union, Director's Office, Room ~; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
ltoom 106; 14. _John Lord O ' Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Campus).
_. Sl.tte,Unlvenlty ot Buftolo h on Equal Qpportunhy/Afflrm.tiiYe A~ employer

�Thursda y. November

For Spike Nagel, the Si xty and O ver
Auditor Program offered a chance to
"return to the scene of the crime."
He recalls standing on the steps of
Foster Hall in the days wh.en it was th e
only building on a campus surrounded
by farmland . At th e time, he announced
to fe llow unde rgraduates that he would.
return in 50 years to se e how th ings·had
changed .
Among othe r deve lopme nt s, Nage l
. found th at U/B now se rves bee r in the
"Rathskelle r," and that it puts grea ter
stress o n adult e du cati o n.

called the swilchbo~rd and said she had
taken an overdose of sleeping pills. The
girl would not give her name or tell
where she was, but Doris kept her talki ng
and traced the -call to Goodyear. A coworke r used a pay phone in the hall (this
was before the Centrex sy$tem) to call
Security. The girl was saved.
.. _.O ne understands why Doris has a feeling of use fulness when one listens tp her.
" Abo ut te n years ago, late at night, I
received a call from Toronto. A man had

a case o f the bends, and they were bringing him to th e University to use th e
decompression chamber here. W ell, I

-Bob Engelhardt

ale rt e d the Buffalo Police, who escorted
him from the Peace Bridge , and Campus

! lniw-rcif" lnform,1 1ionSrrvi£r •

_,

B~ck

7

to Sc:hool ~~ 68
general ion.
After ne arly 50 years, Spike Nagel is
For some se nior auditors, th e tuiti o nback on campus at U/ 8.
free prog ram is thei r first college exHe is, in fact, occupying the same seat
pe rie nce. Othe rs possess adva nced
de grees and see I he prog ram as a source
!No. 59) in the same lecture hall (Rm .
110) in the- Same building (foster Hall)
of recrea tio n and inte llectua l stimulawhere he once took courses as a history
lion, plus an oppo rtu nity to tackle a submajor in the then Unive rsity of BuffaW's
ject in which th ey've cu lti vated an inClass of 1927.
te rest, but have ne ver ha d a cha nce to
Hubert P. " Spike" Nagel, 68, of Ke n·
master.
\
more, a retired public relations executive
Dr. Do nald Woernl ey, Williamsvltle ." a
now working with the blind, returned to
reti re d researc h phys icist whose ho bby is
make good on a .Pledge made a half cenmath e matics, call s th e se ni o r aud it
program " th e best thin g I've eve r hea rd
tury ago. He did so by taking advantage
of."
of a new pfogram authorized by the
Dr. Woe rn ley, who ta ught ph ysics at
State legislature ~arlier this year.
U/ 8 in th.e 1940's, signe d up fo r seve ra l
The new legislation permits New York
State's public- colleges to establ ish
g r a duat e co ur ses in ad va n ce d
programs allowing persons 60 years of
ma th e ma t iCs a nd n o w e nj oys th e
cha lle ng es invo lved in pu zz ling o ut
age and older to audit courses free of
charge if classroom space is available
solut ions to difficu lt math proble ms.
M. Joseph Co rco ran, a re ti red school
after regular studen) s have enrolled. The
statute enables senior citizens to-parteacher, is taking a course in the preparation of income tax returns, hoping it will
ticipate in classes as regular students, but
without paying tuition, taking tests, or
help him with his. He also looks forward
to the mile wa lk from his home at 818
receiving 8;rades or college credit from
Egge rt Rd ., Amh e rst, to his classes on th e
. participating institutions.
Over ·the summer, administrators in
Main Stree t ca mpus.
the Division of Continuing Education
Rev. Dean E. Richardson, a se miworked out the details of what they now
re tired Methodist minister, registered for
call the "Sixty and Over Auditor
classes in ske tChing and appreciation ·
Program," trying to reduce red tape
of arc hitedu re, interests he developed
through yea rs of trave l and -raisin g fund s
as inuch as possible in the process.
Men and women over 60 wishing to
for new churches.
audit a course start by contacting the
Mrs. Stephania Tyburski, who has a
U/ 8 Adult Advisement Center at 3
grandd aughte r anending U/ 8, enrolle d
Allenhurst Ave., across from the Main
in a _course in nutrit ion at I he suggestion
Street campus. There, CQunselors match
of cou.nselors. At age 76, she feels " just
up the in"dividual's-abilities and interests
wonderful learning something . "
with courses offered at the University.
Although she must leave her home in
..Older adults with little or no previous
Chee ktowaga by 10 a.in. to make bus
connedions for her noon class, Mrs.
~ollege background may choose from a
. variety pf basic und~rg~aduate courses .
Tyburski hasn't missed one yet. SheThose 'with college degrees, or a prior
audits the nutrition course with an SOknowledge of a subject, are permitted to
year-old friend, and each frida y the IWO
register for upper division, graduate
walk from class to the nearby Veterans
school and professional school courses
Hospital , where they help out as
volunteers.
·
.
- provided they demonstrate their
qualifications and gain approval of the
Thaddeus). Damon: 64, of 80 Tremont
St., a retired auto. machinist and former
instructor'.
.
Then, once dasSt?s start and it is clear - labor union official, Sees the 9-.rogram as.r
where · vacancies exist, the Division of
a springbo~rd to launch a second care,er.
Continuing Education _ issues parking
Insisting-he has y ears of productive life
· permits and registrition ~·rds admitting
ahead of him, Damon is starting off by
applicants.
·
,
auditing two laW course5.. in the Political
With 64 /'senior auditors" registereO
Science Department. He_ spends his for classes this fall, administrators are
evenings plowing through landmark ,/
pleased with reaction to th!' fledgling
Supreme CoUrt decisions and . submits
program and i~pressed with the vi!ality
written compositions to his instructors ·
- for evaluation, even though he won't
of the older students.
·"As ·a group;" says the coordinator of
receive college cre9it for his. effort.
the program, John H. Shellum, "they're
But if he does well this fall, Damon
the most lnteresling people l've·met in
plans to enroll in the evJ!ning cnedltyears."
.. ·
..
.c ourses .offered by· Mill~rd fillmore
Asked how they liked being-i&gt;ack in
. Col!qe. ,
•
scj&gt;ool, all in a samP.fing of oenior
Eventually, he would like to enter law
auditors expressed enthusiaSm for thelr
school. Meanwhile, Damon is sharpencourses and praise for their instructofS.-' ing his legal·skills so he can help fellow
They ~lso acknowledsed they _...enjoye(l
worldngmen interpret such niceties as ·
the fine print in their labor contracts.
mingling with dasslllates in the younpr

Telephone O~rator •Retirin;
R-r-r-rin gg-! The swit chboa rd li ght s
and a b utt o n is pu s~ d .
" State Unive rsit y1 may I he lp you
please?"
"Ah, yea. I need ta kn ow how many
;tamps ta put o n a le tte r to Stea mboat
Sprin gs , Co lo ra d o, so it ' ll a rriv e
to morrow.''
Do ri s Mclea n, a te lepho ne o pe rator at
th e Unive rsit y fo r 21 yea rs, has he ard it all
an d will have ple nty of time and stori es
for he r ~randc hildr e n whe n she re tires at .
th e e nd o f th is mo nth .
Mrs. Mclea n is a petite wo man who
began wo rkin g at th e Uni ve rsit y of Buffalo in 1953 o n a pa rt-time basis afie r her
husba nd died . " II all starte d wh e n a
ne ighbo r of mine was goin g o n jury dut y
and needed so meo ne to fill in for her,"
said Do ris.
Do ri s lea rn e d how to ope rate th e
switchboa rd o n he r own ti me. She fill e d
in fo r he r ne ighbor, worked part-time fo r
75 ce nts an hour, and in 1960 starte d as
a full-time te le phone o perator. Originally she was ashamed to admit that she wa s
a telephone operator because " of th e
st igma at tac h e d to that nam e" ope rators we re supposed to be fast
wo me n. But Doris decided to " tak e
pride" in he r wo rk and now &lt;Says, "there
is a so n of prestige in working ~n the
switc hboard because it is th e 'door' to
the Uni ve rsity. You are the first contact
many pe ople have with the school."
In 1962 the Universit y became a State
school, and e mplof ees · were assumed
in to th e State system. For Doris this
mea nt more benefits, including a retireme nt plan, and an increase in pay.
Unde r the State system, -Doris expe rie nce d changes in the administration,
a tighten ed security and an infll:Jx of a
wide variet y of students. " At first ,".. she;
said , " the students were very demanding
and impolite." But students and their attitudes have changed over the years. In
1962, Campus Housing asked Doris if she
would be willing to pul up ' a student.
With some reluctance, she said yes. Since
th e n Doris has had almost a dozen
students live with her. She feels she
providE-S th e m with " a home away from
home," and they provide her with a learning eX perience. ·
" God closes one door and OPf!:OS
another/' Doris believes,· and she is
thankful
the many times she was able
thetimea ·

i 1. 1974

Secu ri ty, who took him to the chamber.
Fo r me it wa s a very rewarding ex-

pe rie nce to kn ow I he lped 'that man ."
D o ri s d o es v olunteer wo r k at

Deaco ness Hos pital. " People are ple ased
with the least little 'k indnesS," she says.
She is also very active in her church, the
De laware a nd Tup pe r M e th o di st
Church, whi ch rece ntl y cele brated its
100th ann ive rsa ry. Doris share d in thi s
specia l occasion by si ngin g a hymn
writt e n by he r mother.
On Nove mbe r 30 Doris Mcl ean will
re tire. She is p ro ud of th e stude nt s he re
and sa ys they have more control in
Un ive rsity gov e rnm e nt and m o re
de dica tion than she has eve r witnessed
be fo re. As for Do ris, she is cOnfid e nt th at
in re tire me nt as in her ca reer " God will
be good to me."
-Michele Egan
Heads Dental Organiution
Dr. Edward F. Mimmack, a 1921
graduat e of the U/ 8 School of Dentistry,
was named pre sident of the American
Sectio n of the International College of
De nti sts at the annual meeting of the
College, Novembe r 9, at the Shoreham
- Ho tel in Washington, D.C. Dr. Mimmack
se rve d as trustee of the American Dental
Association from 1957-1963" and was viCe
president of tha_t organization in 1964196S. A professor emeritus of the U/ 8
School of Dentistry, Dr. Mimmack says
that the influence of the International
Colle ge of Dentists is directed toward
the good of world-wide dentistry.

Tax deferred
annuity plan
.

The University participates in a taxdeferred annuity program through the
Teachers Insu -rance Annuity
;'\ssociation/Cqllege Retirement Equity
Fund (TIAA-CREF). The :plan is open to
all full-time and part-tim·e State
employees and provides an Opportunity
for employees to supplement retirement
i~come by reducing annual salary and
contributing the amount of. . . the reduction in.salary to an annuity contrad. Such
contributions are exempt from Federal
and State withholding taxes. The maximum exclusion allowance- is calculated
by th&lt;!' TIAA·CREF, and base salary may
be reduced by any amount to this maximum level . Contributions are made .in
the form of salary reduction through
payroll deduction.Of particular interest this year, the .
Unive~sity Payroll office points out, is the.
effect that the Employee Retirtlmf!ilt Income Security Act of 1974 will have Qn
the Tax Deferred Annuity Program. The
act places new limits on the maximum
salary reduction that may be taken.
These new limits, which bi!cdlne effec,
live January 1, 1976, will make ihe
recpgnition of prior yearS of service in
the previous regulations almost useless
except in rare situatioris. 1975, therefore,
will be the last year in which credirfor '
prior years' service may be taken advantage of.
.The Payroll Office is currently submitting information requests for 1975 to the
carrill.r. 'TIAA-CREF . .Th'is is done
automatically for those \employees
- currently participating in thl! p!J&gt;Bram.
Other individuals Interested In ~par- .
ticipatii;g. should ~ontact Mr~. leona
Pruchn.iewsk! or Mr. John Bell in the
Payroll Department at extension 3714.

�Thursday, No vember 21, 1974

7

~ndM--~----------------------~---------------------------­
drnmtMJ.!~II . ru/ 41

MONDAY-2

WEDNESDA Y-27
CHABAD HOUSE'

jewish Practices and the Modern Woman,
taught by Rabbi Gurary. 185 Maplemere Rd.,
10:30 a.m.
Maimonirles Ufe and Work s, taught by Rab·

bi Greenberg, 3292 Main St., 8 p.m.

HILLEL HOUSE'
BeninnPrs H ebr ew class. 262 Nor!on, 12
noon.

COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINAR#
P;us I V. FORTRA N IV and a knowledge of
di!&gt;crete simulation are prerequisite. Rm . 27,

4242 Ridge lea, 3·5 p.m.

ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES
SEMINAR#
Conrrlina tf' TrAnsforma tion for Transp ort

Problcoms, Pro fessor J. larry Duda, Oe parl·
ment of Chemical Ef1gineering, Pennsylvania

State University. 104 Parker, 4 p.m.

UUAB FILMS"
Thr Lorln&lt;-r (Hitchcock. 19261.7:15 p.m. and
Blackmail (Hit chcock, 1929), 8:30 p.m. 140

Capen. No admission charge.

FILMS'
~ Propos riP Nicf' (Vigo) , Taris (Vigo), Th e
Ci t y (Stei n e r and Van Dyke). Be r lin :
Symphon y o f a Great City and Las Hurdas
fLancl Without BreadJ (Bunue l) . S Acheson, 9

p.m. No ad missio n charge.

SATURDAY-30
CHABAD HOUSE' •
Ch;woidk cla~s. tauRht by Rabbi Greenbe rg.
3292 Main St., 9 a.m.
S&lt;tbhouh srrvicC', fo llowed by a meal , at both
houses. 3292 Main St. and 185 Mapl eme re Rd .,
10 a.m.
BASKETBALL'
lJ/ 8 V( . Syrill""ll~(' University. The juni or va rsity RamP is in Clark Hall at 4 p .m.; no admisSion c-ha rRe. The va rsit y game is in Me moria l
Audito rium at 6:30p.m. Student s are admitted
frer with I.D. ca rd , $2 Renera l public.

SUNDAY-1
CHABAD HOUSE'
Ell'mrnt.1rv. Talmud Class. taught by Rabbi
Grre nberR. 3292 Main St., 11 a.m.

ARTS FORUM BROADCAST'
Esther Swartz talks with U/ 8 art historia ns
Do roth y Glass and Harry Rand about the expandin~ art histo ry offerin gs . WADV-FM
(106.5), 10:05 p.m.

Buffalo Quartet

~rms tonight

acli-1..,.._
w.,..

recelftcl thk

-~

htcludes Dr. Irene
of...,....,...,., ond
lindolnpol._,ln lldc!l-

llon lo ~ _ . . prftlouslr•. '
'

.~

Child. Rearing Practices, Personality
Developmenr and Educational Performan ce in
Rural Ethiopia, Dr. Tes home Wagaw, chair-

man of the Departme nt of Psychology, Haile
Selassie I University. A-44, 4230 Ridge Lea,
12:15 p.m.
Spo n sored by the Department of
Psyc ho iORY and the Graduate Stu de nt s
Association of Edu ca tiona l Psychology.

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Personna (Bergman) . 140 Capen, 3 and 9
p.m. No admission charge.
LIFE WORKSHOPS"
Cranr~man s hip. 232 Norlon , 3-5 p.m . For information and rcRistration , contact 223 Norton. 831-4631 .
AFRICAN STUDIES LECTURE#
Current Politiol Change~ in Ethiopia , Or.
Teshom(&gt; Wa~aw , chairman of the Department of PsychoiOR)'. Haile Sela ssie I University. Polit ical Science Conference Rm., 4238
R id~e lea , 3:30 p.m.
CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SEMINAR#
ff(P("t of Cvtokinin on Myo·lno 5itol
Mer,lbo/i(m in Acer Cells. graduate studen1
Devi Verma . 24 Diefendorf Annex, 4 p.m .
WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR#
Phosphorous anrl Ewrophication. Robert
Sweeney, Green lakes laboratory , Buffalo
State Colle~e . Rm . 7, Acheson Annex , 4 p.m.
CHABAD HOUSE'
Thr Bih}P ar1rl ~ommentMie , . 3292 Main St.,
4:30p.m.
STUDENT RECITAL'
Pianist Sh.1ron LPr Sari. Baird Recital Hall, 8
p.m. No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Depart men! of Music.

TUESDAY-3
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARM
MPdiral fmrrgPncips in Dental Practice. inst ructed by U/8 facult y members Dr . Alan J.
'Drlnt1a'r\, pfo fe\'\or ··and chair'man, Depart·
ment of Oral Medicine. and Dr. David Dean.
~ssistant rprofessor of medicine. i!J2 Norton , 9
a.m.-4 :30p.m. For informal ion or registration .
ca ll 831-2836.
·
Sponsored by the School of Dentistry.
URBAN ANALYSIS AND POLICY
SEMINARt
Thr Conc('pl of Urban fn er~:y BudRet , Dr.
Ibr a him Ja mm al. U/8 Departm en t of
Architecture. 237 Crosby, 3-5 p.m.
CHABAD HOUSE'
lnlf&gt;rmNiiaiP T.1lmucl d;us. 3292 Main St .,
5:30p.m.'.
ll/ 8 v~ . Cornf&gt;fl l/nivf'r(ilv. Clark Hall , 7
p.m. No adm ission charRe.

MORE SUNY SCHOlARS
The lniiW list of U/1'• pottklponb In !he 1974
SUNY Foculty hchonp Scholars ProF...,,
supplied lo 1M Repone. from Albony, hos
prowecl lo bo Incomplete. A R&lt;OIId list,
H......
Dr. lui Ho!n

FOSTER COLLOQUIUM SERIES#

PSYCHOLOGY LECTURE#

FENCING•

" An Evening of Ha y dn and
Schoenberg" will be performed tonight
by the Buffalo String Quartet. The concert, presented by College B, where
me mbers of the group are artists in
reside nce, will be held al 8 p.m. in the
large lecture hall in the Ellicott Complex,
on the Amherst campus.
The program will include Hayd n's
"Quar1e1 in D Major, Opus 76 #5" and
Schoenberg:s " Quartet 4, Opus 37"
(1936). As is 1he group's practice, they
will discuss the pieces pftor to performance.
An informal reception will follow the
concert. The r~ption, to introduce the
members of the Quartet and persons
from the University and community
responsible for College B's artists-inresidence program, will be held on the
fourth floor , Porter Quadrangle ,
Building 4.
This is the second concert in a series of
performances by the Quartel sponsored
by College B.
· Members of the Quanet are: Benjamin Hudson, first violin; Carol Zeavin,
violin; M.iureen Gallagher, viola; and
Dana Rusinak, cello.

.

Professor Emanue l Parzen, director, U/ 8
Stati stical Science Division. 320 Fillmore,
Ellicott Compl e~e, 4 p.m.

STUDENT RECITAL'
}urly Vrrn.1lr. Baird Reci tal Hall, 8 p.m . No
admission char~e.
Sponsored bv the Department of Music.
SEXUALITY, KNOWLEDGE AND
THEATRE SYMPOSIUM'
Th e MakinR of Modern Drama, Richa rd
Gilman, professor of theatre, Yale University.
Harriman Thea tre Studio, 8 p.m. No ad mission
charRe.

Confo rmations and Hydrogen Bonding of
Simple Molecules, Dr. E. 8. Wilson, Jr., Har-

va rd University. 70 Acheson , 4 p.m.
Spon\ored b y the Department of
Chemistry.
WRESTLING•
Junior va rsity match: UI B vs. Erie CC North.
Clark Hall , 5:30 p. m. No admission ch arge.
Varsity match : UIB vs. Colgate Un iversiry.
Clark Hall, 7:30 p.m. Students admitted free
with I.D .; S2 general public.

UUAB FILMS"
Guys and Dolls (Mankiewicz, 1955). 7:15
p.m., and ·On ihe Waterfront (Kazan, 1954).
9:S5 p .m. 140 Capen. No admission cha rge .
MEN'S SWIMMING'
UI B vs. Hobart College. Clark Hall , 7:30
p.m. No admission charge.
CONCERT'

A U/ 8 Percussion Ensembfe concert is
dirrc-ted by Jan Williams . Baird Recital Hall , 8
p.m . No admission charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music .
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE"
White blues artist Paul Geremia. First floor
cafNeria . Nonon. 9 p.m. Admission : S.75
st udent s; o th ers S1 .25.

THURSDAY-S
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINAR#
P~ycholonical Approaches to rhe Fearful
PariC"nr. instructed by U/ 8 faculty members
from the Department of Behavioral Sciences,
Dr . Elliot Gale and Dr. Norman Corah. 232
o non , 1-4 :30 p.m. For registration or information . ca ll 831-2836.
Sponsored by the School of Dentistry.
SEXUALITY, KNOWLEDGE AND
THEATRE SYMPOSIUM'
ThC' Bei!rd. by Michael McClure, directed
by Donald Sanders. Harril'(!_an Theatre Studio,
3 p.m. Admi!&gt;sion charge.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARN
Thr&gt; Bi nilvailability of Micronized
Cri\Pnfulvin from Corn Oi l - in -Wa t e r
fnwl ~ inns . Ac,r1eous Suspensions. and Two
CommNd.1/ Ti!hiN Dosage Forms in Man. Joel

Sequeira, U/ 8 Ph .D. candidate. 2« Health
SC'if"_nces, 4 p.m.

PUBLIC LECTURE'
ltalo-American Writing, Jerre Ma ngione,
author of ThC" DrecJm and the Deal and Mount
AlfC"Rro. 233 Norton, 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of Spanish,
It alian and Po rtuguese.

FRENCH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Laq YC"M a t Marienbarl (Resnai s). 147
Diefe ndbff, Sand 8 p.m. No admissio n cha rge.
CHABAD HOUSE'
Advancrrl Talmud class. taught by Rabbi
Creenber~ . 3292 Main St ., 7:30 p.m.
PUBLIC LECTURE'
Sf'xi,m. Rari(m. Black Feminism, Glo ria
Steinem and ·Jane Galvin lewis . Clark Gym, 8
p.m . Admission : Unive rsity community free ,
S1 ~eneral public.
UUAB FILM"
CN ro Know Your Rabbit (DePalma, 1972).
Norton Conference Theatre , call 831-5117 for
tim~ .. Admission cha rge.

EXHIBITS
GALLERY EXHIBIT

WEDNESDA Y-4
CHABAD HOUSE'

.

}&lt;&gt;wish Practices and the Modern Woman,
tauRht by Rabbi Gurary. 185 Maplemere Rd .,
10:30 a.m.
Maimoilides Life and Works, taught by Rilbbi GreenberR, 3292 Main St. , 8 p.m.

ENCOUNTER SfRIES'
Neville Marriner, conductor of the St.
Martin-in· the-Field Chamber Orchestra, Wi ll
be available for informal conversatio n. Bai rd
Recital Hal~ 2 p.m . .N6 admission charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music.

COMPUTER SER.VICES SEMINAIIi
Discrete Simulation Langua~:e Design. Some
e~eperie nce with PASS IV or a similar discrete
si.rnulation language is a prerequisite. Rm . 12,
4~ Ridge lea , 2:30-4 p.m.

ENGINEERING AND APPliED sciENCES
SfMINARf
lecture by Professor Darsh T. Wasan,
Department of Chemical Engineering, Illinois
Institute of Techno logy, tille to be an ' nouncid. 104 P.ar:ker. 4.p.m. , •(..
COMPUTING AND API'UCA~ .-

i~~:E
. .. =~wn
~..

Cloudy

~!1 rli:IJ,

Joyful Semanlics; an exhibit ion of Elements
and Process~s O ccurring in a Gallery Space, by

Karl Bar-atto, graduate student in philosophy.
Exhibit hou rs are Monday&gt; through Friday, 11
a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday and Thursday, 7-1 0
p .m ., and Sunday, 1·4 p .m . , through
December 5. Gallery 219, Norton Union.
LIBRARY EXHieiT
First editions of works by Samuel Beckett
from the collections of lockwood Memorial
library. 2nd floor balcony, lockwood. Viewing hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m~ - 5 p.m.
Conti nuing.
-

LOCKWOOD EXHIBIT
Polish Collection. exhibition cu lled from
the University's cpllection of mo[e than 4,000
volumes of material. First floor, lockwood
Memorial library. Monday·Friday, 9 a.m. - 5
p .m. Continuing.
MUSIC LIBRARY EXHIBIT
PutciJli: La Boheme: Music library, Baird
Hall. The ex hibit runs through November 30.
VISUAL ARTS EXHIBIT
Hand-tinted Xerographs by Elain ~ Hancock.
Hayes Hall lobby. building hours, November
· 1....30. Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs. ;..
·.
' VISUAl ARTS EXHIBIT
A~ ~ lective e~ehibit o~ designs for differ:nt

plays and operas originally submitted to the
1974 Southern Illinois University Intercollegiate Costume and Sce ne Design
Competi!ion will be on display in the Hayes
Hall lobby, December 2-13.

NOTICES

&amp;

CONTACT
Contact, a new discussion g' p for resident stude nts, meets every Monday in 1S7
Fillm o re, Elli cott Complex, 8 -10 p . m .
Discussions wi ll d eal with how to make
friendS, how to settle differences with a
roommate, e tc. Everyone is invited to ;ute'fld.
INTERNATIONAl STUDENT
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
American and foreign stude s are ·needed
as stutfent voluntee rs to h
ith the project
o n Communication an d Information. This is
an opport unity to use you r skills in art, design,
writing, management and communication. If
you like people, you are need ed also . .One
hour per week . Ca ll 831-3828, the Foreign Stu dent Offi ce.

#

NORTON TICKET OFFICE HOURS
The ticket office, first floor Norto n, will
open at 11 a.m. instead of 10 a.m., effective
immediately. New office ho urs are : Monday
throug h Thursday, 11 a.m.-8 p .m.; Friday, 11
a.m.-midnig ht ; Sat. and Sun., hou rs vary.
OFFICE Of ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
HOURS
The revised schedule of Admissions and
Records office hours is : Monday through
Thu rsday, 8:30 a.m.- 7 p.m.; Friday, 8:30
a.m. --4 :30p.m. Th e' office will be closed Nov.
28 and 29.
·PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING
Hillel House sponsors counse ling by Ms.
Judy Kallett of the Jewis h Fam ily Service of
Erie Cou nt y. Call Hill el House for an appointment , 836-4540.
ROOM FOR INTERACTION
A p lace to relax, talk and ha~e coffee is now
open in 67S, Harriman basement, from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Everyone is
invited .
SA TRAVEL
Spend your vacation in Nassau: Jan uary 411 ; Cost, S275, includes round trip air fare, accommodations and transfers . Also, a flight to
los Angeles, leaving December 28 &amp; returning
January 12, is available at a reduced rate. For
in forma tion, come to 316 Norton Un ion, or
ca ll 831·3602.
Sponsored by- th-e StUdeOt 'ASsociation .'
SPRING REGISTRATION
The Office of Admissions and Records will
conduct Spring 1975 Registrat ion beginning
Thursday, December 5. All stude nts curre ntly
registered at the University need only compl e te a Course Req uest Form. All new
stud ents for Spring 1975 mu st complete a Stude nt Data Form in order to register. The Office of Admissions and Records (Hayes Annex
B) wi ll be open on the following dates Until
the hour indicated fo r Spring Registration:
Dec. 5- 7 p.m.; Dec. 6-4:30 p.m.; Dec. 9·13
- 8 :30 p.m.; Dec. 16-20-8:30 p.m.; Dec. 23·
24 and 2&amp;-27 - 4:30 p.m.; Dec. 30-31 - 4:30
p .m.
TEACHING INTERVIEWS
Representatives from New South Wales,
Australia , will be interviewing on campU.i-for
teachers in a variety of areas. A group meeting
will be held in 2.34 Norton on December 2 at 9
a.m., and attendance is mandatory' for anyone
wishing ind ividual interviews. Interviews will
be held December 2 beginning at 10 a.m. and
~D ecembe r 3 beginning at 9 a .m . Ap pointments can be made in the University
Placement anCJ Career Guidance Office,
, Hayes C, Rm. 6.
THEATRE PERFORMANCES
Purge is presented b y the Amertun
Contemporary Theatre, 1695 Elmwood
Avenue, at 8:30 p .m. Thurs.-Sal. and 2 p .m.
Sunday. For reservations, call 875-5825.

INTERVIEWS
ON.CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
The staff o " the UniversitY Placement and
· Ureer Guidance Office welcomes all students
in the University community and alumni to:
take part i.n various career programs offered"
this yea r. The on- cam pus in terviewing
program, running from Oct. 1·Dec. 12 and
Jan. 20-April 25, offers the opportunity for individual interviews with-education, business,
industrial and governmental representatives.
Candidates from all degree levels, colt}pletjng
their course work in January or May 1975, are
invited to lake part In the interviewing.
Registration forms arJtr.avaiJable in Hayes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The (ollowing agencies will
be interviewing this week:
·
THURSDAY-21 : Em'man Kodak Co.·
Technical; Eastman ~ak Co.· Business;
Atomic Energy Comm~on; The Trane Co.
FRIDAY-22: The Trane Co.; Army Reserve;
Connecticut General Ufe Insurance Co .

�.......

•

Ollelldar
THURSDAY.!....21

FJ9DAY-22

CONTINUINC DINTAL EDUCAllON
SIMINARt
Parallel TechnK,ues -The Modern Method
of lnrra-Oral Radio~raphy. a two-day par-

CONTlNUING LEGAL AND
MEDICAL IDUCAT10N SEMINAR#
Mental Disability and the taw is the title of

ticipatiori course for dental auxiliaries. 148
Capen, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Sp~msored by the School of Dentistry.
WOMEN OmCE WORKERS MEETING'
All women office workers are invited to
meet with co-workers to discuss common

problems.

Brin~

your lunch. 332 Nonon , 12

noon-2 p.m .
ENCOUNTER SESSION'

All facult y me mbers and students are invitE'd to atte nd a session to discuss facult ystude nt interaction and how to improve it. 234

CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
' SEMINAR#
Par.ltll'l Trchn iques- Th e Modem M ethod
nf Intra-O ral Radiog,raphy, a two-day pa r-

InteraCtion Committee.

ticipation course for dental auxiliaries. 148
Caprn. 9 a.m .-4:30 p. m.
Sponsorrd by the School of Dentistry.

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM# •
Mf&gt;son Exr:hant.!£' Cur rents in f.lecrron
ScauerinJ::. Professor D. 0 . Riska; Cyclotro~

HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINAR#
lnl l'W,1tinn in Cr&gt;rl'hellar Efferenl Line: Th e
lnlerpositus-Red Nucleus Pathway. Dr . John

Nort on; 3 p.m.

Sponsored by th e Stud e nt - Pe rso nn el

~'

this two-day sem.inar to be held in the ·
Audito rium, , Reh ~bilitation Building, Buffalo
Psychiatric Center. ttegistration begins at 8
a.m. today, and the seminar is from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. For infonnation, call 831-5526.
Sponsored by the Department of Psychiatry,
School o f Medicine, and the Comminee on
the Mentallv Disabled, Bar Association o f Erie .
County.

laboratory, Michigan State University. 111
Hoc;hstetter, 3 p.m.
MARKETING COLLOQUIUM SERIES#
StoC"hasrir Pr!!ff'rence Th eory: Derivations
and Compari.~o n s. Dr. Frank M. Bass, Loeb

Di stingui shed Professor of Management,
Krannen Graduate School of Industrial Administration, Purd ue University. 322 Acheson,
3-4:30 p:m.
COMPUTER SERVICES COLLOQUIUM#

Ecclr&gt;s, U/ 8 disti n J.::uished professor of
physioln~\' and head of th ~ Neurobiology
Laboratory . 108 Sherman, 1 p.m.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR#
Recenr Trends in the Search for Anti- Ulcer
Drut-:'. Paul la n ev. U/ B ~rclduate student. 24S

HC'ahh Sdrnrrs, 2 p.m .
PUBLIC LECTURE'
Thl' Q ul''l fnr Hitlfll'n MPanint.: in MPclicval
_"tp,mi'h I iiNaturl', Professor Alan Deyer·

Th!! BASIC l.an~ua~e is the title of this
seminar examining the Beginners AII-Purpo~
Symbolic Instructio n Corle. 301 Hochste tler,
3·5 p.m.

m.o nd, Uni vrrsi tv of london. 351 Fillmore,
Ellicoll CompiC'x, 3 p .m.
Spomorf"'cl hv thf"' De partment of Spanish,
llalirm ancl Porru~-:ul'SC' .

SA SPEAKERS LECTURE'
Who KiiiPd IFK /, a lect ure-slide prese nta-

FILM'
S.1lt of thf"' £.1r1h. 146 Di efendorf, 3 and 7

tio n by David Williams. Fillmore Room, Norton, 3 p .m. and 8 p.m. free to University
members, S1 ge nera l public.
Sponso re d by the Student Association
Speakers' Bureau.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES LECTUREI
The SnalcP RivPr Plain o f Idaho, Dr. Steven
Oriel , United States ·Geological Survey,

Denver. Rm. D-170, Bell Facility, 180 Race St.,
3:30p.m.
PSYCHOLOGY COLLOQUIUM#
Selective Atrenlion in Schizophren i~. Sid

Schneider, Department of Psychology. C-34,
4230 Ridge lea, 3:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the Clinical Community Area,
U/ B Department of Psychology.
.

p.m. Aclmiv.ion frC'&lt;'.
Spon(,OrC'cl hv Wome n's Studies Collef(e and
AmNif"an Srudir...
STATISTICAL SCIENCE COLLOQUIUMN
Prin ci p,l l Componf"'nh, 8ip loh . •11Hl
C.rm•rali7NI h wN~l'". Professor K. R. Gabric&gt;l,

Hrhrrw Univrrsitv and Univers it y of
Rorllr~tr&gt;r. Rm. A-48, 4230 Rid ~e lea; coffeE" at
2:50 in Rm . A-48, wmi nar at 3:20p.m.
ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES
SEMINAR#
Cnrf11~.11N l Plall'\ in Sht"'ar. Dr. Cha rles

Libovr , OrpMrm e n l of Mechanical and
Arrospar-r Engineering, Syracuse University.
104 . Pa r~4 p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY DEPARTMENT SEMINAR#
Thl' Chlnriclf"' Shift in RPcl Blood Cells, Dr .

PtiARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Computer Optimization of Pharmaceutical
Formulations. Or. Joseph B. Schwartz, Merck,
Shar:p &amp; Oohme Research laboriotories, West

AsN Rorhsrrin , Rrsea rch In st itute , Th e
Hospital for s:ck Ch ildre n , University of
Toronto. 108 Shr&gt;rman, 4 p.m .

Point, Pa. 244 Health Sciences, 4'-p.m.

CHABAD HOU5P

CELL AND MOLECULAR IIOLOGY

A sturlv ~Msio n follow ed by a Sabbath servkr and mNI. 3292 Main Street and 185
MaplrmNr Rd ., S:30 p.m.

LECTURE SEIIIESf
.
Ovalbumin Mess.e nge.r RNA, Complementary DNA. ancl ReRularion of Pro tein
Synthf!'.~is.

Or. Robert T. Schimke, professor of
biology, Department of BiOlogical S.Oences,
Stanford University. 134 Health Sciences;
coffee at ·4, lecture at 4:15 p.m.
fltENCH DEPARTMENT FILM'
Hiroshima Mon Amour (Resnais) . 147

Diefendorf, 5 and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
HILlR "''lllOP.fNH NIGHT*
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
CHAUD HOU5P
Advanced Talmud Class, tau&amp;ttt by Rabbi
GreenbefR. 3292 Main St., 7 p.m.

uu.u COffEEHOUSE*

Guitarist Attie TrautrJ. First F&amp;oor Ca.feterir,
Norton, 8 and 10 p .m. Admission : S.75
stu&amp;nts; S1 faculty and staff; S1.25 general
public.
.
-

I'OfTilY IIIADING'
C W. True&lt;dole, poe_!, translalor and
founder of New Rivers .Press, will read from

his works. 'Graduate Lounge, Rm. 2, ~nglish
Annex B., 8 p .m. No admiSsioii charge.
CONCBT*

The ,uffalo String · Q~t:tet, artists in

residence, present an evening of music by
Haydn and Schoenbers. Lecture Hall, Ellicon
Complex, a p.m.
Presented by College B.
THEAlllf~•

S..l by Bertolt Brechl, directed. by Gordon
Rogoff. Courtyard T·heatre , Hoyt and
ufayette, 8:]0 p.m. Admission: $1 students,
$2.50 general public.
Spon50red · by the Center for Theatre
Research.

WAIAtM••

-ic ;n Needle Parle (Schattbertl. 197l).
· Noflon Conference Theotre, all 831-5117 fO&lt;
limes. ~-

c:Nrse.

DANCE PERFORMANCE'
The Zodiaque Company directed by linda

Swiniurh wit h gurst artists, 1hr Bl~ ck DaiiC'C'
Work .;hnp. H.uriman Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission: $.75 studrnts, $1 .50 ~eneral public.
Sponsorf'rl bv tht"' Thrat re Department and
PhvsiC'al Education Dance ProRra ms aod the
Offkr nf Cultural Aff.1irs.
HILUL HouSE•
Rabbi Justin Ho fman n leads a To rah study
!'C's,ion fo llowr d bv an Oneg Shabbat service.
40 Cap&lt;-n Blvd .• 6 p.m.
CAC FILM" .
Thr Twrlvr Ch.lir.;. 140 Capen, 8 and 10 p.m.

HILLEL HOUSE'

Weeke nd trip to Torontq. FOr information,
call Steve l aub, 831-3n5 or 831-5213.
UUAB FILM"
Panic in Needle Park (Schatzberg, 1972).

Norton Conference Theat re, ca ll 831-S117 for
times. Admission cha rge.

SATURDAY-) 3

this two-dav se minar being held in rhe
Auditorium, Rehabilitation BuildinR. Buffalo
Psychiatric Center. Today is the final day, and
lect ures are schedu led from 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
For information. ca ll 831-5526.
Sponsored bv the Depanment of Psychialry,
Sc-hool of Medi('inf&gt;. and the Commillt"e on
rhe Mrntallv Disabled. Bar Association of Erie
Cou nl v.
·
CHABAD HOUSE'
Ch&lt;H, iclic da~~. tau~ht by Rabbi Greenbe rg.

3292 Main St., 9 a.m.
Sahha rh ~(&gt;rvirf"' . followed by a meal, at bo1h
housrs, 3292 Main St. , and 185 Maplemcre
Rd .. 10 a.m.

Rogoff . Courtnrd Theatre, Hoy t and
lafayettP, 8:30 p.m. Admission: Sl students,
$2.50 general publiC".
PrE&gt;SPnted bv the Center for Theatre
Research.
OPRA I'EIIFORMANcf' Puccini's La BohE&gt;Im-. with guest artist In Soo
Park, is presented by the Uriiversity Opera
Studio. The fully-staffed production is
directed and produced by Muriel ·Hebert
Wolf. Williamsville Nonh High ~hool,
Hopkins Rd ., 8:30 p.m . Admission : S2
students; S4 general public.
_
The-""performance benefits the U/ 8 Music
Scholarship Fund and marks the 50th anniversuy of Puccini's death.

INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING'

Some instruction . Fillmore Room, Norton,
8:30· 10:30 p.m.
Presented by Balkan Folk Dancing.

UUAB FILM••
Scarecrow (Schatzberg, 1973). Norton
Confere nce ·Theatre, call 831 -S11 7 for times.
Admission charge.

Rabbi Elv Braun leads a Sh.1bba1 morning
\Nvkr&gt; followed bv a KiclflcHh . 40 Capen Blvd.,
10 a.m .
SCHOENBERG/IVES FESTIVAL•
Piani\t Yv.1r Mikha~hoff performs in the

MONDAY-25
CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
FILM#
Th e Relation of Diet and fieart Disease.
presented in connection with C &amp; MB 108,

" Hu man Nutrition ." Conference Theat re,
Norton, 10 a. m.
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY PROGRAM#
Racia l/Ethnic Conflict in Cross National
Perspectiv&lt;'. Professor Rosalind Feie ra bend ,

San Diego Stale Universit y. C-34, 4230 Ridge
lea, 1:30 p.m.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ALM'
8 1? (fellinil. 140 Capen, 3 and 9 p .m. No ad-

mission charge.

HILLEL HOUSE'

COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARN
Pass IV. FORTRAN IV and a knowledge of

discrele simulation are prerequisites. Rm. 27,
4242 Ridge lea, 3-5 p.m.

SchoE"nhrr~-: /l vrs

CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
GRADUATE STUDENT SIMINAR#
Control of 5(l0rulation in 8. Subtilis, Patricia

DANCE PERFORMANCE'

WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SIMINAR#
Mercury Transport in Aquatic Systems.

of

la~t

thf"'

Drp art m e nt of M u s i c's
series. He is assisted by
hahf'llf"' r..1n.r. a mezzo-soprano. Buffalo and
Eril' Cnun rv Public library, 3 p.m. No admis' ion charJ;,C'.
Thl' Zndi.11JIIl' Comp.1ny directed bv linda
Swin iu('h with Ruest ar1isrs, the Black · Dance&gt;
Wnrl&lt;,hnp . Harriman Th eat re, 8 p.m. Adm~~sion : S.75 studE"nts, S1 .50 gene ral public.
Spon~orPd bv thP Theatre Depa rtment and
Phv.,iral Educ-ation Dance&gt; Programs and the
OffiC"r of Cuhural Affairs.
CAC I-1LM"
fhf"' Twf"'lvr&gt; C:h.lir,, 140 Capen , 8 and 10 p.m.

Admissio n: S1.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'

8,1,11 bv Brrtoh Brecht , directed by Gordon
Ro~off . Courtvard Theatre , Hoyt and
lafavt"'ttP. 8:30 p.m. Admission: S1 students,
S2.50 ~E"nc&gt;ra l public
Prrsr&gt;ntt"'d bv !he Cen ter for Theatre
RPSrarr-h.
OPERA PERFORMANCE'
Pu('dni's {,1 RnhPmP, with l(uest artist In Soo

Park. is presl'nted by the Un iversity Opera
Studio. Th P fu ll y-sta l(ed production is
dirC'ctf'rl and produced ~y Muriel Hebert
Wolf. Williamsy ille North High School,
Hopkin~ Ret .. 8 :30 p .m . Admission: S2
\fudrn ts; S4 ~r oNa l P.Ublic.
Thr pNfnrmanrr benefits the U/ B Music
S&lt;-ho l ar~h ip Fund and mi'rks the 50th anniver\,;1rv of Pu cc-i ni '~ death .
IEH BLASTFillmore Rm ., Norton, 9 p.m. Admission : $1
scraduate st udents and their guests; S2 all
others.
Sponsored by th e Graduate . Student
Association .

UUAB FILM_••
.Sc.1rrcrmv (SC'h.atzberl(, 1973). Norton
ConfNrnrr TtlPatn:• ,.. ('all 831 -5117 fo r times.
Admis~in n ('hargP.
·

Admission : S1 .

THEATRE I'EIIFORMANCE•
•
Baal bv Benoit Brecht, directed by Gordon

Presented by the Center for Theatre
Research.

CONTINUING LEGAL AND
MEDICAL EDUCATION SEMINAR#
Mrnral DiQbifir y and the l.aw is the title of

SUNDAY- 24

INTIRNAT10NAL FOLK DANCING'

Instruction for beginners. 233 Norton, 8-11
p.m.
Prewntr&gt;d bV Balkan Folk Dancing.

Thursday, N'avember 21, 1~~

CHAIAD HOUSE•
£1f'mentary Talmud Class, taught by Ribbi

Greenberg. 3292 Main St., 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
HIUR HOI.JSf•
Operarion Greenlight sponso~ i. bowling
program at Norton Union, 11:30 a.m.-2:30
p.m.

DANCE

PDtfOiMANa•

·Th&lt;' Zodiaque Com~ny directed by Linda
Swiniuch with gu~ artists the Bl~ck Dance
W~shop. Harriman Theatre, 8 p .m. Ad-·
miSSJOn: $.75 students, $1.50 general public.
Sponsored by lbe Theatre Department and
Physical Education Dance Programs .and the
O.ff~ of Cultural Affairs.

THEAlllf I'EIIFORMANCE•
S.al by llerlolt Brecht, directed by Gordon
Ro~off . Courtyard . Theatre, 'Hoyt and
Lafayette: 8:l0 p.m. Admission : S1 students
$2.50 general public.
,, ·
'

Hu ang. 24 Diefendorf Annex, 4 p .m.

James Bosog ni , Cornell University. Rm . 7,
Acheson Annex; refreshments at 4 p.m.,
followed by the se minar .
CHABAD HOUSE'
Th £&gt; Bible and Commentaries. 3292 Main St.,

4:30p.m.
FILMS'
Wavf'fE'n~rh (Soow), Word Movie {Sharits),
T.O.U.C.H.I.N.G {Sharits) and Zorn's Lemma
{Frampton). 5 Acheson, 7 p.m. No admission
charge.
FILM•
Th&lt;' CenPral Line {Eisenstein). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.

HIU.R HOUSE•
The Talmud class and the Yiddish folksingin~ Group meet at 7:30 p.m. 40 Capen Blvd.
SLEE CYCLE CONCERT'
The final Slee Beethoven String Quartet CyclE&gt; program o f the year features the Cleveland
Quartet. Mary Seaton Rm ., Kleinhans Music

Hall , 8 :30 p .m. Admission: S1 students; S2
faculty , staff and 011lumni; S3 general public.

TUESDAY-26
I'OIJCY STUJIIES
DOCTOIIAL SEMINUI
Methodological Issues in Applied Social
Rf!'~arch, Professor Arthur Cryns, UIB School

of Social Work. 237 Crosby, 1-3 p.m.
HISTORY DEPAIITMENT ALMS'
Three and Sallie of San Pietro. 147 DiefendOrf, 3 and 7:30 p.m. No admission charge.
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR#
.... GlucaRQn:- Conformational Tr~nsitions and
Biological Properties, Dr. Richard Epand,

Department of Biochemistry, McMaster
147 Capen; coffee at 3:45, se'minar

Univ~rsity.

at 4 p .m.
MUSIC lfCTU1lE•
English music historian, composer -and
author_ Wilfred Mellers gives a lecture on the
late Edward "Duke." Ellin1(ton. Biiird Recital~
Hall, .4:]0 p.m. No admiSsion Charge. ,
CHAIAD HOUSE•
Intermediate Talmud diss. 3292 Main St., 6

p.m.
·
HILUL HOUSE'
1
Convers.tional Hebrew cl•ss, instructed by-. Rabbi Ely Braun. 40 Ca~n BIYd., 7 p.m.

·vAII5ITY HOCIIfY'

UIB vs. Broclcport Stare Colle!le. Holiday
Twin Rinks: 3465 Broadway, 7:30p.m. Students
may pick up free tickels al the C..ik Hall tickel
office before the night of the game; S2
general public. : . · ·
'
·

IIAND CHAIII LECTUIIf' · Trn.ory of Desil{n BerOnd lhe ~lrsr Machine
A/(e· Professor fleyner t;lanham, design
h1s1orian, School Of Environmenlil S!udies,.
.University College, London. School of
Architecture, 2917 Main SC., 8 p:m. No ~mfs.. ·
sion charge.
5ponSO&lt;ed by the School of Archhecture.
numlnfMf!f'7.rnl. U

-·

�- STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Foreign Students Meet at Cazenov.ia
The National Association for Foreign Students'
Affairs (NAFSAl ~egio n X conference met in
Cazenovia. New York, November 1 ~3. NAFSAprovid·
ed a travel grant for a student representative from
the State University of New York at Buffalo and I
attended the meeting as such.
I was very pleased to have the opportunity to meet
students from other SUNY ca mpu ses as well as
Cornell and other private institutions. This year's
meeting revolved around the theme of " A Realistic
Look at Support fo r International Education ."
Several government agencies, such as the State
Department. the Agency for International Development (AID), the American Friends of the Middle East
&lt;AFMEl. the African-American Institute (AA)). The
Institute for International EducatiOn (liE), as well as
others such as the Immiwation and Naturalization
Service and Social Security were represented .
As a foreiJm student , I was very pleased to realize
that there are many aJ!;encies and private individuals
int erested in foreiJm students and working to help
them make the best of their stay here in the U.S. All
the Mudents present at th e conference attended the
meet inJ!;s and on Saturday evening they held a caucus.
An overall presentation of the past year's student ac·
tivities was made by the Downstate New York
representative. Furth~r possi bilities were then dis·

Brazil:
An Unknown
Neighbor

cussed for involving more foreign students in campus
activities and guidelines for the coming ye~r's activities were developed. All those present agreed to
work on involving more foreign students in the orien·
tation programs held on the varioUs campuses
throughout R.!gion X.
It was sugges!A!d that there should he some kind of
on-going orientation in which senior foreign students
would help newcomers with their settling-in and ad·
justment to the American environment. These topics
and many more a.re to be further discussed during the
workshops to be held this coming spring.
To co·ordinate these activities two representatives
were elected , one for the Upstate campuses and
another for the Downstate ones. AB the Upstate
representative then elected, it is now my duty to work
on organizing the spring workshop and other activities
in close cooperation with the various foreign student
OrJ!:&amp;nizations on campus and the Foreign Students
Office.
I look forward to a very active and successful year
in collaborati on with all those concerned.
-Mariam Asoefa
Graduate Student, French
NAFSA Students' R.!presentative,
Upatate New York

Venezuelans Studying English Here

When I say to an American that I am Brazilian, I
feel like adding that our capital is not Buenos Aires
apd we .are npt,a Spanish-speaking country. It's really
amazing how li~tle people in the U.S. know about the
South American countries in general. Brazil is the
la~est country in SoUth America, a little smaller than
the Uni!A!d States. with a population of 100 million,
half the population of South America.
The other day when reading an article by Eli
Zaretsky, I found these lines in a footnote: "Claude
Levi-Strauss described meeting among the Bororo of
Central Brazil, a man about thirty years old . . . . " An
unadvised reader might think that the country is inhabi!A!d only by Indian tribes, roaming about the
Amazon .Jungle (the laJ"Kest reservoir of pure oxygen
left. for man on earth) "With no contact with civiliution. Well. it is true that we still have Indians in their
primitive state (lucky them, not yet contaminated by
civilization). I myaelf have not seen one, however, except on television. Some lint contacts witb the White
Man have been made in the last two yean!, with the
building of the Transamazonica, a road that will cross
Brazil fmm the East to the West, roughly parallel to
the Equator.
On the Marajo island in the Delta of the Amazon
River, there are enormous native herds of buffaloes,
living in their natural ~tate. Our mineral reserves are
· considerable and only God knowa what lies under the
Amazon jut1Jtle.
But we are also a land of violent contrasts. If you
do down aouth, to Sao Paulo, you will find an
amazingly modem city with 6 million inhabitants, big
- bote~, restaurants, skyacrapen~, squares, tbeatres,
· nightclub&amp;. Sao Paulo is·the largest industrial city in
South America. Since 1954 a car induStry, pioneered
by Volkswagen, has developed in Sao· Paulo and now
we also have a Ford and a General Moton! plant
operating down tbere. We are atill one of the greatest
pmducen1 of coffee in the world and in 1972 we surpaaaed Cuba'a productio'n of auger. We are ai8o one of
tbe greatest producers of cocoa.
Deep down south, the States of Parana and Santa
Catarina have~iyed nuMerous German and Italian
immigrants wlio have developed a well-known shoe
industry and a wine industry. Of courae, we must
mention: .Rio de Janeiro, our former capital, with its ·
beautiful bay and famous ~eac hes, such as
Copacabana; Bahia, up north,,a ctty half old and half
modern with the bluest ... rve ever seen, beaches of
white oand circled by palm trees; and Braailia, our
new capital, inaugura!A!d in 1960 but already home to
300 thousand people. Its modem architecture has
been admired and praised by visiton1 from every part
of the world.
Maybe I make it sound aa if Brazil were a tropical
paradiae. In a aenae, it ia. But "" are alao an underdeveloped country ridden by many problema and
much poverty. But that'sanotberotory .. ..

:_Neuaai:oaco

· AAUW Gran~

The Intensive English Language Institute is pleased to annou nce the awarding of a Venezuelan govern·
ment EnJ!;Iish language training program to the State
University of New York at Buffalo.
The establishment of the Prog rams Gran
Mariscal de Ayacucho coincides with the 150th an·
niversary of t he great victory in 1824 which consolidated the political independence of South
AmeMca and provided the political base upon which
to build its future. In his decree establishing this

Socialization
Process Called

'Important'
U education is defined as going through courses of
study, developing and learning skills and professional
ta lents, it will he both narrow and skeptical. A man,
fully loaded with knowledge from books, being placed
in a .. Natural laboratory" test will fail. We cannot
depart fmm society. As the Chinese say, "a learned
person should not only have book knowledge but also
a well·defined character and personality." A man
with great pride, prejudice, strong "ego" and so
forth will he isola!A!d by the force of society.
Each fall , thousands of international students
(some are exchange students, others are sponsored by
their governments, and some by private foundations)
come to the Uni!A!d States for an edueation. Tb_ey
leave tbeir home countries with high aspirations and
well defined Iife -goala. Each individual'• background
ia different, ao his coa.Ia will be different. A few of
them will be side-tracked by prevalent social norms,
but it usually turns out that academic education ia
their priority concern. A few others have a wrong conceptual outlook, i.e., they tend to keep separate "self'
and acbool.
ning process with the aocialization process. On this
camp\!5, the International student group provides an
invaluable and divereified cultural dimension - like
a diamond reflecting in miniature the light of various
cultur,a l heritages, societal outlooks, life principles
and philosophies. On the wo"rld level, we often fmd
mistrust and misconceptions among nations. We need
to letul) how to worit together aa people of different interests, nations, races. Thio .appean! to be the only
way to survive and wipe out the prevailing inter·
national tensions.
The m01t important concept of education ia the
aocialization proceas. But how often we fmd miaap.
prehension on the part of American atudenta and
negligence on the part of foreign atudenta.

-AuelmDiu

scholarship program, the President of the R.!public,
Carloa Andres Perez, chose the name Gran Mariacal
de Ayacucho to symbolize Venezuela's determination
to build now a strong educational base for the nation's
economic future .
The program will provide full scholanihip suppOrt
for up to 10,000 students during its initial period of
operation. Scholars may study anywhere in the world
as well as in Venezuela. They will study in fielcis
determined to be essential for the nation's development, including Petroleum, Chemical Engineering,
Electrical Engineering, Business Administration,
Naval and Maritime Engineering, Metallurgical
Engineering, Management Sciences, Economics, and
Agricultural Sciences.
·
Having in mind that one of the central purpooeo of
this program is to broaden tbe base from which will
come the educated leaders of Venezuela's future,
special efforts have been made to asaure that tbe base
is indeed broadenl!(!. Fin~t, 60 per ce!lt of tbe
scholan~hipa are reserved for those now living outside
of Caracas. Special account ia alao taken of the
variations in the quality and opportunity for education now built into Venezuelan life. For the last
decade or so, public primary and elementary education outside of the capital city has been inferior to
that available in Caracas (a condition from which few
countries in the world have eacaped). The Ayacucho
program is shaped to help mitigate the reaulta ol tbia
condition. A carefully planned and rigoroualy adben!d
to syatem . has been designed to aaaure; inoofar aa
possible, that schol&amp;n~hip apP!icanta from rural areaa,
provincial cities, public achoola and private acboobt
can compete on reasonable terma witb the atudeat
whoae entire educational experience has been in the
best Caracaa acbools.
The fiist group of acbolan! arrived in Buffalo last
September and are currently studying EncJiab in the'
Intensive Engliab Language Jnatitute. The 1ELI ia
currentlt working cloaely witb the lnatitute of International Education in New Yorit; which admini.ten.'
the Programs Gran Mariacal de Ayacucbo for the
government of Venezuela, on eaaint the tnmoition
from Venezuela to the U.S. academic euviromDent.
lEU ataff are currently working witb Buffalo World
Hoapitality on family bomeataya for 'Illanbciving
and Christmaa. The reaponae and interest from the
Buffalo community has been overwhelming.
--8tepbeD c.~
Director, Intensive Engliab Language Jnatitute

-

n..___
....om...,.................
_.....................
_..._..._..,u/11,_
r n.
................... .__... ·....._

..

_aftiiUio . . . . . . . . .

�The Caribbean:
Diverse Islands·
When it was SUJ!Kested that I write an article on
the C8ribhean area, I jumped at the chanee. Here at
lut ill the opportunity to sock it to these dumb
Americans, who think that the West Indies is
eomewhere between Java and Timbuktu, or even
worse that it is one island divided into Jamaica,
Bahamas and Cuba.
·
Now that I am beginning, I realize just what I let
myaelf in for. I mean the task is enormous. Caribbean
society is as dive.,. as the societies that spawned. and
exploited and peopled it. Politically, the governmental systeins range from C!&gt;lonialiam to Communism.
Geot!raphically, the islands extend from the Floridian
Peninaula . to 10· d - north of the Equator. The
great leveller, however, is the economy. The islands
all bel""lt to the Third World.
The islands of the Caribbean are Bahamas, Cuba,
Hispaniola (which .is divided into the countries of
Santo Domingo and Haiti), Puerto Rico, Jamaica.
British Virgin Islands, U,S. Virgin Islands, St. Kitts,
Antigua, Montserrat, N;evis, Anguilla, St. Lucia,
Martinique, Guadeloupe, Dominica, St. Vincent,
Grenada, Barbados, Tobago, Trinidad, Aruba,
Curacao. On the mainland of South America is the
country of Guyana.
For general enlightenment, these islands are not
the poverty stricken, disease ridden places that some
conceive them to be. I can safely say that I have not
heard of any one starving to death in any of the
islandsi the poverty that exists in this country is far
more degrading and far more depressing than any one
~n find in the Caribbean. No, I am sorry to say, we do
not wear grass skirts. · We do live in houses. We do
drive cars. And tragedy of tragedies, I was introduced
to Big Bird and Chief Ironsides years ago, via
Trinidad and Tobago Television. The truth is that the
income of the area is derived from the export. of
agricultural products. Thus, they are forced to import
the needed manufactui'ed goods. These imported
commodities have always been expensive. There is
never enough money to buy all the technology and
equipment needed to industrialize, even if that were a
feasibl~ solution. So that all the paraphernalia of
Western pro~ is missing and , hopefully, will be
missing for a long time.
Transplanted Society
Caribbean society is a transplanted society. the
original inhabitants having been decimated by the
Spapish conquistadores. A multi-racial society, being
European, Asian and African, this potpourri reaches
its apex in the island of Trinidad, the most
cosmopolitan of all, its peoples being of African, East
Indian, Spanish and French Creole, Chinese, Syrian,
Lebanese, British and Latin American (principally
Venezuelan) descent. By the time the English conquerors ~rrived in Trinidad, the ·island had a fairly
self....conscious Spanish-French Cultural identity. The
British had little trust in or sympathy for the
Spanish-French old colonists. They hsd their own
ideas and plans for the island. The social history of
English Trinidad up until 1850 was one of.a struggle
between the Roman Catholic Spanish and French sector and the Anglican English establishment. British
colonial policies never managed to stine dissent and
opposition, never managed to surpress the Creole:;'
irreverent wit and humor, could never convert them
into Colonial gentlemen. The existence of a stron~
cocoa economy provided the means of maintainin~
Creole culture on the island, a culture that survived
even though the clasa that gave it birth did not. The
cocoa industry in the West Indies collapsed as a result
of African .competition and. a series of devastatin~
crop diseases in the early twentieth century; and a.n
aristocracy without an economic base soon crumbles.

Barbadoe: Britlah
Barbadoor has the distinction of being British
thJ'OUidtout its history and has the largest proportion
of whites in the area. It, too, has evolved a culture
peculiar to its heritage. The British pursued their own
brand of colonialoavoir-faire which consisted of a condescending dolatiilliiam. It became oomething for the
ambitious to aspire to achieve. But it never attempted ,
to be,Weot Indian, or tried to contribute to the evoJu.
tioa ola West Indian-culture. In gentiral, it can be said
that Barl&gt;adian oocial structure has created a culture
that reflects the aalient features ol the Protestant
ethic. Pooitively, it means that Bajans are bardwork:
·m, and thrifty. However, Barbadoa ia oingularly
bereft ol much ol the folklore enjoyed by other islandS.
Martinique and Guadeloupe are French
departments. The languarce is French and the orientation ol tbooe two iilands ia not tOward the other is:
laDda ~--..!Paris. FOrt de France, the capital ol

Inrentives ·for
Foreign Stude~ts
If the U/B foreign student claims to belong, there
is no apparent reason for him to crave foi8 greater incentive in order to make life smooth sailing for himself
and the institution. Ideally, the feeling of belonging
itself should generate in the student the imP.,tus to
swim or sink with the institution. This is simply axiomatic. Unfortunately, ~O'!Yever, any society or
organization that is manipulated by mortal men is
always striving for the ever-elusive ideal. U/B.is no exception. The axiom, therefore, is an overstatement.
The million dollar poser is whether the U/B foreign
student has been accepted by the University as an in·
tegra) part of this institution or whether he is looked
upon merely as a beneficiary of American
humanitarianism, a bird of passage. an object of international political propagandism, a cold impotent
ash that would only sit· by and watch the Americans
do their thing their own way in their University. How
effective is the voice of the foreign student in the af·
fairs of the institution and, in any case. is his opinion
ever sought'? Must the foreign student convey his
thoughts through his advisors or is he looked upon as
matured enough to contribute unadulterated ideas
that would promote advancement in the community'?
If as a body, the International Student Committee or
the cluhr; speak for the foreign stude nts. have their
resolutions and recommendations been forceful
a~ents nf change or are they merelY the sounds of cym·
hills? These are pertinent questions for the Ad·
ministration and the UIB student body.
Touchy questions on this campus, ranging from
change in course load and gTading system to "Day
Care" rarely. if at all. evoke comments from or the ac·
11ve parttctpatton of the foretgn st uden t body
Apathy'? I have never ~n a group of people play a
dum her role - a mle they can only play by the ci r·
cumstance of their alienation. Since most of the
foreign stucienLc;; are from countries that are low on the
sncio-econnmic ladder. it is tempting for those 'who
have the American hlood flowing in their veins to
feleJ{8te their idear; in the ~cheine of things to the
remotest hackJ{mund. After all. the ethnocentrism of
the American is fired tn such a pitch that anything
un-American is viewed with disgust. If the American
streak!. un the streeLc;;. it is a v~e . If it happens
somewhere south· or· the·- Sahara ·Or across the
Himalayas. the perpetrators woul d be dragging
civilization several centuries backward.
We are aliens in this country; we are transient
students. hut in SUNY/Buffalo with which our fate is
tied. need we he alienated intn a status of the silent
min o~ty who give vent to t heir discontent in murmurs. gru m hies and gossips'? Such unheard voices will
nnly generate greater malcontent that like an ill wind
will hlow neither the foreign students nor the institu·
tinn any good. Who wants to be pampered or spoon
fed? ·lt would be a betrayal of manhood and
wnmanhnod too (women lib count on us). Activism is
nnt the word. Separatism from the overall student
body is an anathema. The call is for a positive evalua·
tinn nf the status of the foreign student and the
assignment if need be of the role he has to play as an
effective "cf'O!\.c;; cultural pollinating agent."
The University Administration can always have a
way out of the issues that bedevil the foreign students,
if it M desires. The response that policy decisions are
Martinique. looks like a pictU~ post card one sees of
Cannes on a hillside looking down on the Mediterranean. Typically F-rench and very chic is Martinique.
Colonialiflm fostered the divisive situat.ibn that
still exists. Inter-island mistrust was encouraged as a
means of control. In the same way that Martinique
looks to Paria, rather than to Kingston, Kingston
looked to London rather than to Port of Spain. Always
the focus ha8 been to the outside. The negative effects
of~uch a policy is the legacy of the prese_nt generation.
The isl!lnds have things in common but in other areas
they are Very diSSimilar. :All West Indians do not
speak with the same accent in the same way that all
Americans do not SPeak ~imilarly. There are
differenoes in life stvles as a result of differences in
background. Aa a coDoequence an attempt to cast the
whole Caribbean in one mold is fundamentally
erroneous. But it is this precisely that I consider to be
the weal~ of the islands. The major problem of i.ndividualism, which may beregarded as a CUI'8e, may
in its own way be a bt. .ing. What saves the West Indian from tlie wolves, oo to· spealt, is his sense of
humor, his ability to laug\1 at himaelf. The high and
mighty
lampooned at-Carnival time, in calypso,
on the drama stage. · Picong flies fast evetyWhere.
Mauvais langue ia a national paatime._' Un- .
_oopbiaticated, DO Cbevy'o, no CSI!Ipera, DO hwuy eaaentiala, there ill a certain joie de-vivre, eip......t in
an ertravangance of speech. of "!ugh~._,of music and
of dance.
_ .·. /

are

handed down aa •fiat from Albany -and Wuhington
.oeems to lift the burden off the aboulders of the local .
administration. Buieaucracy can ~eep one in a very
tight comer. However, the Administration can do
more than just give paosive responaea that go no way
to assuage the minds of the foreign students. A strong
representation to Albany and Washington might not
be a panacea to our ills, but it will aurely usher in a
ray of hope for t6e hapless foreign students. In the
wake of the growing economic stress, unabated
austerity of the U.S. departments of Labor and Immigration and Naturalization over summer and parttime employment for foreign students, tuition waiv~r
cutbai:ks, and restriction of moat campus jobs to
" Federal work study .. participants, the alien etudent
in the U.S. sees his tomorrow as bleak, indeed. Wol'8e
still, it is relatively easier Hfor the caniel to enter
through the eye of a needle" than for a foreign student
to enroll in the U.S. health professional schools.
These syndromes are sufficient to breed apathy in the
minds of the strangers within the American gates. No
wonder the U/B foreign student seems to play a dum·
my role in the affairs of the University.
It will be grossly unfair not to recognize the
University as sandwiched between its conflicting roles
- an institution maintained by the purse of the
American taxpayer with its well outlined obligations,
as well as an institution with a growing concern for international reputation. The attainment of a stable
equilibrium between the two objectives is in no way
easy; neither is it impossible. The International Student Committee will gladly offer its services to make
the task easier. At the local administrative level, if by
the reason of our being aliens. we must speak through
advisors in the Office of Foreign Student Affairs, then
these advisors should not only play the roles of the in·
terpreters of the University policies and the dicta of
the Immigration and Naturalization Service, or coor·
dinators of cultural activities between the Foreign
students . and the Buffalo community. They should
also act as our advocates in matters that affect our
whole functioning in the University and the community. One wonders whether the Office of Foreign Student Affairs will not be unduly strained - a doubt
that makes the recognition of a well constituted International Committee as an advocacy making body for
fnreign students a desideratum.
It is difficult to bypass the fact that in those areas
where the potential oft he alien student has been put
to a test . he has not been found wanting. The exploits
ofRmmanuel Kulu . Alex Torimiro. and Jude Ndenge
on the soccer arena: the impact of the home hospitality proJ;rram. the Speakers' Bureau and the Indian and
Chinese cultural exhibitions are to mention but a few.
A lot of talents-still remain t.o be tapped . We want tn
pla.v a greater role.
-Juotin Oko;.., Ukpabi
U/B ,INTERNATIONAL
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Okoro Ukpabi (Nigeria)
CO-EDITOR: MarceUe McVorran (Trinidad)
EDITORIAL BOARD
Anselm Diu (Hong Kong), NeiWl Longo (Brazil),
Agha Ngwana (Cameroon), Anene Nnolim
(Nigeria), Maryann Roby, adviser (U.S.A.),
Ernest :Vau, adviser (Hong Kong).
CONTRIBUTO~

Mariam A..el'a (FnDce), lria Vllll Gllnatra Bleeker
(HollaJld), Kathy B - (U.S.A.), Stephen
Dunnett (Canada¥, a- ~ (Weet GerIDUIY), Pieter KOIIiac ('l'be Netheriaada), .J-h
Krakowlak (U.S.A.), Peter VIUl der Laaa (The
- Nether~). Jobanle U. Opera (NlPrta), Mare
So1ery (l'nDce),

The Aaian Preoence
After. emancipation, Blacks left the plantations
and llettled in the towns. This left the agricultural sector in desperate need of labor. Aa a oolution, Britain
partly kidnapped. partly threatened, partly tricked,
itinerant East Indian and Chinese to work in the West
Indies. Today, people ol Aaian descent are the aingle
largest ethnic llfOUP in Guyana, are the aecond largest
ethnic . group in Trinidad, are found in varying
numbers in the rest of the Caribbean. Their contribution has been in language (Hindi and Urdu), in religion (Hinduism and Islain), and in tbe folk culture
they brought With them. Aa a people they are the
agricultural hacldione&lt;lfthe islands where they live in
large m,u nbers. Increasingly, they have moved into the
retail and service sectors.
·
The Black Preoence
Blacks were introduced into the Caribbean to
fulfill n!!ed for cheap plantation labor. P,imarily
from the West COast of Africa, tbe majority ol Caribbean 'peoples are descendants of Yoniba, Fon, Aahan;
ti, Hausa Fulani and Ibo P.OOPies. Separated .from the
country of their origin, this transplanted population
has evolveil and still is.in the proceaaiof evolving a new
cultural identity. based on interaction with. &lt;&gt;tiler
ethnic grolipo, and based as well, in i.o small·
measure. on what has been handed down in AfriCan
tradition.
. ~
.

a

...

REPORTER-U/8 I~TERNt&lt;TIONALINovembe~ 21, 197..4/Page 2

�Blacks interpreted European · ci&gt;uot " dances as performed by the Whites: ~pean art forma proved too
sterile for the Blick and, as a result, t he minuet, the
Castillian waltz ·(Castianne);• t he Bel · Aire (BeLe}
Joropo, and the Scottish reel as danced in the islands
are not as they were ever danced in the courts of
Europe.
In Trinidad, the sreel-band evolved from the
drum , which was outlawed in t he colony in"the 1800's.
(It was considered an instrument of subversion.) For
the Camboulay festivals .(a forerunner of Carnival},
the people devised a new inatrument, the tamboo
bamboo. Different lengths of bamboo stems (which
are hollow) give off different tones when hi( together
or hit on the ground. This provided the rhythms for
Carnival until the end of the Second World War. On
V.J. Day, there .were no instruments ready, since t he
bamboo has to be cut at a certain time of the lunar
month. and steel cans were improvised as rhythm instruments. giving birth to the stej!l drum. (Note: a
~t eel band worthy· of the name in Trinidad has more
t han 100 players.)

African heritage remains especially strong and ia
evidenced in the llreas of religion, music, dance and
masks. In the islands of Cuba and Haiti, Grenada, St.
Lucia and Trinidad, the worship of Yoruba Gods
(called in the islands Shango wo111hip} still exists. In
most islands, a corruption of this ~ligion hu evolved,
called obeah or voodoo. It is especially evident in
countries of strong Catholic persuasion. African
religion was better able to survive in these than in
countries with a rigid Protestant environment.
Voodoo or obeah is a powerful belief, which may
not be dismissed as superstition or with fanciful scientific terminology. Neither is it the hysteria-evoking
devil worship on which Hollywood has so ofren
capitalized. Authenticity exists in the rites and rituals
or worship and related areas of deat h (wakes}, birth
and puberty. In other instances, only traces of the
original tradition remain, or the rites have been HWest
lndianized."
Africa has influenced West Indian folk art in
countle!!S w8ys. The calypso evolved from the work
sonjt8 or the West Coast of Africa. It is also considered
a product of the African epic songs which rell of great
deeds and happenin~ and include satirical comments
on people and event&amp;. First sung in African, when the
use of this language declined and was forgotten, it was
- sung in the lanjmage of the day, French patois. Today
the calypso is sung in English. Thi word calypso is a
corruption of the word "kaiso" which is supposedly of
African origin. Africa has influenced t he way in which

Touri1m
As an instrument of economic development it will
be difficult. if not impossible to find an industry that
provides more violently contradicting influences than
the touris m industrv. On the one hand it is easily
labor intensive; but it also gives rise to some m ost dif- ,
ficult soc ial a nd sociological prublems. I do not believe
in t he value of tourism as it e~~:ists in the Caribbean .
T o me. it represents the prostitution of a culture, of a
people. for the Am erican or European dol1ar. Montego
Bay with its excl usive beach rights for American
hotel s. to the excl usion of most Jamaicans, is an insult
not only to the Jamaicans but to every West Indian. I
refuse to be condescended to, to be referred to as t he
"nat ive" and it is this attitude that the industry encou rages . If people want to visit my country, let t.hem
visit on my term s. Let them see it as it is, and apprecia te it or not appreciate it as it is. My way of life is
not a circus performance. I refuse to be put on show.
The trad itions of a people are meaningful , and should
never be rele~ilted to being merely, something from a
"quaint .. bag of tricks.
Frank McDonald writes in the Commonwealth
Caribbean:
''Thmughnut the island and mai nland states of t he
C'a rih hean. a new nationa lism is eme rging
a
nationalism that spurns the implied racism oftouri st -

LlTTlR/
Editor, New Yon\ Timea:
A~ Europeans, we would like to respond to the
N.Y. Timeo' October 7th editorial, in which you
depict the crisis Western civilization is facing in the
light of the oil delivery problem. Rather skillfully you
d escribe what a mess it is in Western Europe, and
that "t he consequences for the Western civilizations
may he dire" unless the U.S . takes the lead in this oil
c ri ~ i R.

We could a~ well reverse youl' a~umentation.
There may be a crisis in government in Italy. It might
he "a ~ymptom of a wider malaise that. is rapidly O\'ertaking the Western democracies in Europe." But what
to think of the U.S. ~overnmental situation'? There
have not been Watergates in Europe. There have not
been ~andal ridden government leaders like Mr. Nixon. 1 ~ there as much corruption'? Whe~ the Mafia
a~ strong a~ in the U.S.'? Is there any political mentality that enables such an extended use of wi.,re-tapping'?
Brandt resigned but Edward Kennedy is st ill arou nd .
Certainly - Greece a ncf Portugal have their own
problems after years of d ictatorship,-but WB'Sn·' Ht t he ·
U.S. that supported these dictatorships? Is it not understandable that after being oppressed fo r many
year.; people would take an opposite stand'? And what
is M had about a movement towards the left. if it is
Socialism'?
There are, of course, Irish terrorists, but bombing.
violence. crime. tllpe rates all seem nowhere to be so
high as they are in t.he U.S. Our streets are quite safe
at ni~ht ; your civilization has made it impossible to go
for a walk at night in your cities. Indeed there may be
a "'mounting ,atmosphere of social conflict almost
everywhere .. in Euro~. but in our opinion. it is certainly true for the U.S. also. We do not only t hink of
the problems with Blacks and Puerto Ricans (in
Newark and Boston for instance}.
As we ourselves have experienced, the rtrst phase
ofthe oilcrisis was much wane in t he U.S. than it was
in Western Europe. Yet U.S. papers at that time were
·givilll! the most somber and gloomy picture of the
situation in Europe. It aeemed as if they were trying to
divert the attention from U.S. problems. Did the New
Yri 7'IMa adopt this policy tll(ain?
In oUr opinion ttiere is no apparent reason why the
U.S .A. should take the lead t&gt;Ver Europe. We feel that
Westem .E urope is able to run its own affairs. We do
not wish a U.S. lead~~Phip juat as we do not waJJt a seconil Chile in Portugal. We do not have that much
confidence in the U.S. handlilll! of the oil crisis ao far.
Pdr. Ford's and Dr. Kissilll!er's speeches on the oil
criais have only polarized the stands and provoked the
oil-prod!JCin« countries. We think that Mr. Giscard
d'Eataing has set a better example by simply reducing
France's oil import ratio. His soft spoken and
moderate policies toward oil ~ producing countrieS may
prove far more effective. Europe had better give shapeto its own ucoherent and comPrehensive oil p~m "
otherwise the consequences fOr Westein civilization
may be dire.

N~W/

fROm

orJA
•

'

Students returning to the University this term have
noticed a numher of staff changes in the Office or Foreign
Student Affairs . Our receptionist , Mrs . Radia Reynolds, is
currently nn leave acco mpanyin~ her husband in Morocco
where Dr. Reynolds i~ serving as a Peace Corps tonsult.ant.
Until Mrs. Reynolds' return in January. Ms. Alice Veigas is
filling in. Mrs. Kathy Breuer. secretary for the Foreign
Schnlan:; PtoJ!ra m. has moved to Hume, New York, where
her hu10hand ha10 a!'Sumed a new teaching position. Mrs.
Breuer has taken a position in a• bank in Castile. She writes
u10 that Rhe mis..'lefi cnnt.act with the University and is arranging for her new cnmm unity to develop a host program
AAmetime next year. Replacing Kathy is Ms. Valerie Orlop ·
fm mAihany.
MR . Providence Tripi has transferred assign ment
elsewhere in the Univen.ity. Filling her po6ition is Ms. Barbara Heller. Ms. Heller was fonnerfy a secretary in the
Spanil'h.llalian and Portuguese Department.
•
During the month of November, Mrs. France Pruitt,
aFo.'W"!Ciate foreign 10tudent advisor, will be on assignment for
t he U.S. State Department.. Mrs. Pruitt will be t.raveling to
variou10 rountrie!fl in Africa assistin,r U.S . Embasay personnel
with orientation p~ms for African students who plan to
st udy in t he U.S . Mrs. Pruitt will alao meet with African
educational officials and consult about iaaues and changes in
American higher education_ and U.S .-African u:change.

Foreip Student Health luiii'UICe
A ReOOnd mailin.r haS" been sent to those students who
have not enrolled for Foreign Student Health Insurance
cove~ thiJt year (alsOineludin« new students wbo enrolled
in ~ptemberl. 1lKMie who received this notice should make

payment direCtly with the insurance company by November
22. Failure to adhere to tliis deadline date will mean that
Rt udentl\ will not be able to obtain this «rrUP cxwerace for the
remainde&lt; oCthe yeor.lndiridual cooerqelo oto hicherrote
and doe!' not cover prenistio« conditions. Application forma
for JmUP and individual c:over&amp;Re may be obtained in the Of.
ficeofFori!i~ Student Affairs, 210Townaend Hall.

Mailhouo
Forei!m atudente are wpd to cbock the mailbouo in
RoOm 210 Townaend for nWI and peckqes. Unclaimed mail
will he returned to sender.

LETl'EII8 POUCY

Aa- -tolllo..U.wllllooprialed .. _.,.,....

-~--'"'"'·~..a--

Home CowltrYJo•·

... - . . . . . . . , . - . . ......,._ to 282Towa·
_ . . , .... _ _ . .to-c-~dayaloofonllle,._lo

-

Page 3/REPORTER-U/8

•

Staff Changes

-Hont Healm&amp;Jul, West Germany
Pieter KoaiJii, The Netherlands
Peter vua d8r Laaa, Tbe Netberlanda
M~Solery, France
Grad Aasistanta, SUNYAB

-··

1

-

Need' o job in your home country? The Notional Aooocia·
tion of Forei«n Student Atraira may be able to help. A.ppliee·
tion cards are available in ~IOTOWnleod (over mailboul):

INTERNAT~ONA-t./November 21, 1974

brochure images of the region as o tropical ploypound
for North Ameri.,.,._, oae that increasincly rejects the
economic· domination of North Atlantic inveotment
patterns. AB. the 1970'c began. for eu.mple, UDe88y
governments were already initiating P.roceedinp
against Black Power leaders. (The idea of Black
Power has been indigenous to tbe region for fifty
years, primarily because
a legacy of men, like
Jamaica's Marcus Garvey and from"Trinidad, C.L.R •.
James and Stokely Carmichael}. In Barbados,
Grenada and St. Lucia, there was a ban on all Black
Power activity. In Jamaica, confrontation became a
way of life. In Guyana, the two races maintained an
uneasy peace as the politics of Black Power began to
radicalize the black population there. And then most
significant of all, in Trinidad and Tobago, a mass
movement of students, workers and trade unions
nearly succeeded in what might have been the
Caribbean's second social and nationalistic revolution, followi111: Cuba.
" For the Caribbean, therefore, not a smile, but
clenched fists, are images of our time. And the reasons
are clear enough. After 300 years of political
dependency, the islands object to their continued
economic dependency and exploitation. They know
that in spite of constitutional independence, they remain an economically colonized people."

or

-Marcelle McVorran

·The Art of
Black Africa·
Even when seen in a museum, art gallery or
private home, Black African art still remains forceful,
compelling, and imaginative. The term .. traditional
African art" is usually applied to sculpture carved
from wood, stone or ivory, or cast in metal. Since
these works are generally made for religious ,
ceremon ial, or utilitarian purposes, one must view
them in terms of t heir function - not only for their
aesthetics. In most instances, this functional art
reflects faith in a supraliatural world or force that controls every man , animal , event dr even gust of wind.
The major sculpture producing areas include
SeneJral. Mali , Upper Volta, Guinea, Sierra Leone,

-+

Speakers' Bureau
The Committee on International Understanding of the
Buffa ln Council on World Affairs in cooperation with the
OFSA is enla~ ng its prowam of curricul um enrichment·in
the Buffaln Public Schools. For the past two years, Chinese
RtudenLc; thm~h this prog:ram have lectured at Bennett
High sthool on various topics of interest. This year the
program will he e xpanded to two or three high schools and
will include programs on Africa, China, and India. Anyone
inlereRted in t.his program should prepare a brief talk and
make an a ppointment with Mrs. Dean Pruitt at OFSA.
Speakers selected will receive a stipend for each day spent at
the high school.

Informal English
lnfonn a l English conversation groups, assistance in
locating hou~hold needs, a monthly newsletter and other
are available thro~h the International Women's
Committee. lf you are interested, contact Mrs. Pruitt at the
Forei~m Student Office at 831.a828. Brochures on the Com·
mittee's events are abo available at ihe office.

servicet~

North Campus
Kirtt Robey ifi now seeing students at the North Campus.
HiR office is located in Room l91 , Building 6, in Recljacket
Quadrangle. He is there every Monday and Tburaday from
9::JO a .m .-noon and from l -5 p.m. and can'be reached at636Zl.'\l .

Career Prosram
During the oC October 21 the Oftico·of Foni«n Stu·
dent AffairA, in cooperation with University Placement and
Career GWd:ance and the International Livinc Center• .urveyed ..,.;jlents oC the E!Ucott Complez reprdiq their inWest and needs in the uea o C - development and plaeement. A compilation d data indicated that five major areas
wero of concern to both Conicn atudent ...ulents and their
fellow. atudente at the North Campuo. The ..,.;ority oC students u:prell:led an interelt in tbe put.time job lituation,
in job eeekin« ltrat;epes, resume preparatioa and iDterview
behavior, «niduate ac~ acbool application

procedures, and pla&lt;:emeut into - - induoay, aocial
· sciences, and health 111taled .,...c..;-. A PftlllOlll wu
desi...,od to meet tbMe .-.and bopn on Octobor 30. Additional mootinp _ , bold N......her 7, 14 ODd 21. Due to
the o( the PftJRlOID, it doeided that oerly in ...
sprln,t: aemeeter it "'9UUd be appropriate to apin deliver
theoe oervic:eo at the Inrernational Uvinr Center. Fa&lt; inr&lt;Jr.
motion, -p!MM contact J'*!&gt;li Kroko.iak at the Ollice oC
Foni«n Student AJI'ain.
Spriac Orienta~
,
The Oflice oC Fonicn Student Afl'aino ia ooOkinc atudente
both American and fonicn wbo woold loo in--..1 in plannin« u orientatioo pqram for fonip ltud.ata· who aiit
arrivin«..at thio Uniwnity in January 1975. We antieiJ*e ·
~ 75 and 100 - t e to orrin Cor the~
111--.d either Ill

-

.Jr,... ...

-t

...tar----

~-lo----­

tatioo
.,wu. ..
-~--....--.._.
Kra1rowiak at. the Ollk:e of,.......
Afl'aino.
-..

�·ctUB/
Pakiatan StudeniAI Asaociation (PSA)
The following officers were elected at the 9th annual
meetin~ of the PSA of America, Buffalo Chapter, for the year
1974-75: President - Munir Motiwala; Vice President Taqiya Mehdi; Secretary- Ali Mustansir; J . SecretaryMehmood Javid: Treasurer - Babar M. Khan.
Some of the activities of the PSA were also drafted in a
subseq uent meeting of the Executive Committee.
International Committee ofWomen's Club
The International Committee of the U/B Women's Club
and the church women of the UniversitY Presbyterian
Chu rch are co-sponsori ng an Internat ional Holiday
Luncheon to be held Thursday. December 12, at 11 :30 a.m.
at the Presbvterian Church on the corner of Main St. and
Niagara Fali" Boulevard. This is the third year that the
Women'!' Club has hosted an interilational holiday
luncheon. There will be an international buffet, entertainment and a demonstration of the various modes of Christmas
in Ameri ca. All new foreign women , including women
student!' and scholars and students' wives, are jnvited to attend.

A~n~~~==~~::~~
Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Dahomey, Togo,
Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Angola, Zaire. However,
one must distinguish traditional from contemporary
_ \ art, which consists primarily of paintings, which,
though d eal in~ with African themes, are executed in
the Western manner. We must also distinguish t his
art from th e popular "airport" art which, t hough in corporating t raditional styles, is often produced in
large quantities. But generally, the form of a work . or
the material used. acts as a clue in determini ng the
region of origin.
African Art Conceptual
When one remembers that there is no separation
between art and society in the traditional Afri ca n
culture, it becomes easier to see the particular functions of African art ·in tribal. life. Compared to
Western Rrt, the traditional Mrican art is conceptual
rather t han representative; the artist is striving to
depict an essential concept or conviction while his
Western counterpart's aim is to faithfully reprodu ce
the world of appearances. The African art represents a
comprehensive statement of tribal belief and gives
concrete form to a highly organized system of thought
which has its own logic and its own consistency . The
major dynamic force behind its power and influence is
sacred and mystical. It i s develOped . from t he
overriding emotional desire to form an image of
everything t hat is worshipped and to attach to t hat
image something of the sanctity of its object. With
this connection between tribal art and tribal religion,
one thus sees the Torceful role art plays in the tribal
religious life.
AfnC!ah sctiiJ)ttire · is eSsentially an abstract' ait
and, when regarded as such, can serve to make
modem Western art more comprehensible to the
layman. The Mrican carver generally abstracts those
......, featUres that lire ' most important to him. One must,
however, distinguish between the African and t he
Western abstraction. In Africa, the abstractions
·assume traditional forms which, although they may
appear in considerable stYlistic traditions, are
recognized and understood by t~~embers of the tribe.
The Western abstraction, on the other hand, usually
evolves from the artist's miitd and may not be readily
recognizable to the observer.
Role In Tribal Life
.. Traditional African art, as has already been men·
tioned , plays specific roles in every aspect of tribal
· life. The forms usually include masks, head-dresses,
human and animal figures. To many Westerners,
masks are among the most exotic and yet typical ex·
amples of Black African art. They have ranged from
small, simple facial representations to complex nine·
and ten-foot high creations which required the help of
others, lest the wearer be unable to move or stand un·
der their weight. In the past, the masks bad specific
roles : to recall deceased leaders, maintain social
order, arbitrate d.iaputes, .u:orciee demons, symbolize
authority, accompany puberty rituals. In fact, they
eerved a multitude of purpooea that a tribe held vital
to ita IIWVival and the survival of its protective gods
and epirita.
But the tranafer of a mask from the bead of a leapinc, rhythmically geoturing dancer to the wall of a
m_,. doeo not convey ita oricin!ll purpose. And no
m,_, label can convey the mood and meaning of
the .miW dance, nor retlici the awirl of duat rising
60m daDcing feet, nor catch the sound of drums and
cbaa$illl. · nOr communicate tbe conviction of
~ that mueb WM at atake in terma of the
trlbe'a oafety, economy, and balth.
Some carvinp are manifeotations of deities caUed
upoa to control ouch phenomena aa rain, lightning
- and D8tural cataatropbes, birth and fertility among
human beinp and animals, and the growth of crops.
F"ippree inveoted with magical powen are believed to
briJw pod to a family or tribe, to protect the uaers
a from harm, ,JIUDilh evil dnen, etc. Their effectiveness
reoldea ja.the veiY atreDgtb of belief In them. Some of
tba m.t,.....U ocul~ oerve the aame purpooes aa
amulata, &amp;8liamana and cbarma; otlJimJ are commiaoioaed • portDita of .-lthy or important perIICJIUIIIIII, MII'IIWI muken, or to oommemorate famous

_.e.

. \

Function and Beauty Related
However, function and beauty are not unrelated
considerations in much of African art. In fact, one is
aware t hat the maker of a Dan, Dogon, or Epa mask,
or an Ife bronze head. or an Ashanti goldweight, often
has a masterful sense of proportion and compassion
that beli es his being little more than a craftsman.
bronze caster, or artisan. African society is relatively
conservat ive. a cond ition that nurtures the per·
sistence of styles and themes. The people have been
subjected to pestilence, drought, crop failures and .
famine, death of infants. In an effort to ward ofT such
ca tastrophes. complex ritual patterns evolved over
long pe riods of time. As ritual trad it ionali zed itself. so
d id its related art. A hesitancy to depart from for·
mulae that ancestors believed successful might also
accou nt for a conformist pattern in many exa mples of
African art.
Interest in Black African art has intensified, due.
no doubt. to growinJ! a nd universal recogn ition that
African triba l art is as commanding as t he a rt of more
widely-accepted Eastern and Western t raditions.
Black Africa today is quite unlike the Africa of only a
generation ago. One wonders about the effect of
nationa lism. and equally im portant, of the so-called
modem world on the artist who, as did his father and
gra ndfather before him, carves wondrous objects
similar to t hose to be found in any museum . ln these
days of "developed" and "developi ng" nations. one
only hopes t he traditional African artists are not fore·
ed to conform to Western styles. S hould this happen,
our traditional art shall cease to exist, except in racial
memory or t he halls of museums.
·
-Johnnie Uchehanra Opara

A Primer
For Holland
What is Holland if not windmills, wooden shoes.
cheese, chocolate, tulips and housewives frantically
ruhhin~ away at t he pavements? What brings
Holl and more readily to mind than a boy standing
with his finger in "the" dyke to prevent t he country
from being flooded? That fictiOOal character was born
a century ago when Mary Mapes Dodge wrote about
him _iliJI;lans Brinker or the Silver Skates and he
has ~~ .standing t here ever since. while more and
higher dykes were beinJ! built around him. The most
recent additions were t hose of the "Delta-plan"
developed after the North Sea inundated Zeeland, a
province on the southw~t coast of Ho11and in 1953,
when the sea reached heil'!h ts of about five metres
above normal. The inhabitants of Zeeland who sat on
the roofs of their crumbling houses were drowned ,
while farm animals floated about them and the trees,
like bushes, were barely visible above the water.
Other dykes have been built to ~ain land from the sea
for agricultural use as our population increases and
ourcitieRgrow.

Amaterdam
You may also think that Holland is Amsterdam,
the swinginl{ city where all the European and
American "hippies'\ go to mee~ colleagues on the
" Dam," _\to find hashish in " Paradise," sleep in the
"Vondelpark," and eat in one of the VeJtet&amp;rian
restaurants. If that is the Amsterdam, or H9lhind, you
have heard about, then there is much I have to add to·
·make the picture co.mplete. ·.
First there are the houses alan~ the canals, the
" grachtenhuizeri/' sixteenth and seyenteenth centwy
patrician- and store-houses with all their different
~abies; then there are the antique shppa all OVllr the
' ci ty; the Indonesian, Hungarian, Yugoslavian,
Chinese, Spanish, Jewish and Duk:b restaurants; the
"proeflokalen," where you can taate such Dut&lt;:li liquors as "jenever" and buy them in large quantities;
the UnivenitY with ita antiquarian boOkmarket; _the
fleamarket where. you can buy bleached jeans, 78speed recorda, porcelain d!'Ha and old fur coats; the

Coffee Hour
There will be an international coffee hour on Friday,
December 6. in Room 2.1.1 of Nort on Hall beginning at 4 p.m.
Greek Cypriot Relief Fund
Person!' interested in contri buting to the Greek Cypriot
relief fund should make checks payable to: H.A.V.O.C. and
mail to the Greek Orthodox Church, 149 W . Utica, Buffalo.
N .Y.

nower-market and the nu merous terraces. where you
can watc h t he crowds for hours sipping at your Dutch
beer or coffee; the Rembrandt House or the '' Rijhmuseum" with its collection of Rembrandts and
the neWly·built van Gogh museum and t he orchestra
condu cted bv Bernhard Haitink at the Amsterdam
Music Hal L -

Rotterdam
However, Am sterdam does not- stand for all of
Holland. Take Rotterdam. for instance, which has,
thanks to its being situated along the Rhine and near
t he North Sea, become Europe's bigJ!est harbor for
s hiphuilding. storing and refining oil, besides being
the transit-harbor for other imports and exports. Seafa ring has been , as you can read in the AmericanDutch writer .Jan de Hartog's Holland 's Glory, a
Dutch passion for ages. Also at Rotterdam are: the
" Doelen." a building which contains a m.usic hall ,
movie·t.heatre, conference rOOins . and au'di t.Oritim.
where. among other events, jazz from Germany,
America and Holland is regularly performed and international poetry·readings by such people as Allen
Ginsberg, Robert Lowell, Gunther Grass, · Brian
Pat ten, Hugh McDiarmid and many other contem·
porary poets are held; the Boymans van Beuningen·
museum (which has in the last two years organized
exhibitions of Munch and Dali) ; and the Euromast
from which all of Rotterdam as well as its harbor can
be seen.
Another big city is The Hague, which has a more
stately atmosphere than swinging Amsterdam or
ultra-modem Rotterdam. The heart of the city is
taken up by government buildings, some cif which
date back to the eleventh century. Like Amsterdam,
it ha!\ terraces. where you can hear barrel-organ
music. lots of theatres, movie·theatres, music halls,
re:otaurarits and, moreover, has the advantage of being
Rituated m~ar t he North Se8, where swimming and
sailing catamarans are popular sports.
Smaller Citieo
Then there are the smaller cities such as Leiden,
the city with one of Holland's oldest universities,
where the historian Huizinga, the J!hyaicists H.A.
Lorenz, P .. Zeeman, J .P. van d·er Waal , H.
Kamerlin~h - Onnes , and the ethologist N. Tinbergen
studied and taught at one time. The 11 Museum van
Oudheden" has one of the most important collections
of Egyptian art and ita houses, like those of Amsterdam and Delft, another university town with the
character of the Duk:h Golden Age, reoemble thooe
depicted on the paintinJIII of Pieter de H001eh.
Haarlem with ita"Frana Hala" muaeum and Gouda, .
with its cheese market and municipal church with ita
famous sta!ned.glass windows, are other interesting
small cities.
Usually, the interest of visitom to Holland goes as
far as the cities I have just mentioned. However, they I
are not seeing the Delta-works with Ita concrete dykes
200 metres tall, nor the "polders," the land won from
the sea. Nor do they see the countryside with ita green
undulatin~ hills and endless strek:hes of graaalanda
and com fields, the titately farms of the gentlemen
farmers in the North and the smaller, more endearing
ones, in the South. Nor do they see the orcbarda in the
Betuwe or aail on the lakeo. An&lt;t all of tbia is only a
few hours away-from the cities just mentioned.
.
Of course, I oould go on and on about my country,
becomin~ quite aa lyrically indined about it aa aonie
of you are about yriuro, but I think i ~ would be a better
ic!ea fo~ you to come to my country.
-lrla van Glillltra Bleeker

REPORT~R-UiB IN~ERNATIONA!(November 21, 1~74/Page 4

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                    <text>'sTATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 6, NO. 11

NOVEMBER 14, 1974

Foreign resources need
coordination, report says

Pharmacy students bring
drug-message to youngsters
ly IWold Reiss
For five students ir,:t .t he School of Pharmacy's Class of 1975, the first day of their
summer recess last Ma y found them
once again inside a classroom.
But it wasn't one of the classrooms
they had been inhabiting regularly during th~ school year just ended.
This time they were in a fifth~grade
classroom at the Egge rt Road Elementary
School, just outside Buffalo's city limits.
And th is ti me, instead of just sitting and
listening to someone· teach, they were

standin g in the front of the room and
they were doing the teaching.
The subject! Drugs.
The audience? Young boys and girls in
the te n to 12 year old age group.
'
The pharmacy . students' visit to the
suburban school was only one of several
such visits they had been making during
the past ten months. As part of tfleir indep e ndent study proj ect in Pharma cology 408, _a course taught by
Professor Gerda Klingman, they had
previously been to elementary schools,
high schools, shopping malls, drive-i n
restaUrants, and various other places in
the Buffalo area to hold " rap sessions"
with young people on the dangers of
drug misuse and abuse.
A few of the " rap sessions" they took
piit in were held in conjundion with the
Erie County Sheriff's Depanment.
·
The students, who spent two hours a
week in Dr. Klingman's course, drew
heavily upon the course's discussions of
the pharmacology of dru·g abuse in giving their talks.
The five ~tudents who visited the
Eggen Road school on the lim day of
their summer vacation were Susan
McHugh, Richard Bublis, Howard Riech,
William Schlag, and Steve Turkovich .
.They spent the morning and the afternoon speaking to small groups of fifth
and sixth grade pupils .

.Diolde Audiences
For most of the sessions, the pharmacy
studeniS divided up their audiences. Mr.
Bublis and Mr. Riech took one group,
Mr. Schlag and Mr. Turkovicli took
another, and Mrs. McHugh took still
another.

The sessio ns were conducted informally, with the pharmacy students introducing themselves by thei r first names
and talking to their listeners in friendly,
bull-session style.
Th e youngsters were told some
gene ral facts abo ut drugs and how they
work. They were told about good and
bad drug effects, and about ways that
pharmacists can advise · the public ~n
proper drug use.
No preaching was done by the phar. macy students , but they gave the
/rurulnp.u:r!. rnf ll

The University's foreig'n student and
int e rn atio nal educa t ion resources
"could be better coordinated ... and
more imaginatively deployed," an eightper~n commi"ee, co-chaired by Dr.
John Si mon , Department of French, and
Raj Ticku, international coordinator,
. Graduate Student Association, contends
in a recently-submi tted report to the
president .
The committee, established in May
1974, says that the SUNYAB foreign stude nt co nstituency - th e largest by far
wit hi n 1he SUNY sYstem (so me 1,400) and
"an impressive group in a wider, national
context" is "a poorly u nderstood and
neglected reso urce." Also neglected, the
report argues, a~e related resources,
such as University facu lty engaged in in ternational studies, overseas projects
which are in tegrated into acade mi c
programs and "extracurricular" agencies
suc h as the Intensive English language
Institute, and the question of tuition
waivers.
Grea ter leadership is necessary, rhe
report says, "in order to demonstrate
how the ca use of international educa tion
is directly advantageous to the local
comm unit y and state. This is possible
now in spite of prese n t economic
st resses. Indeed," the Committee concludes. " with the exciting opening of a
new campus, and the reappointment of
an administration that has exp ressed a
keen interest in international relat ions,
there are opportunities for the expansion of certain faci lities, resources and
programs which might enco urage the
productive ttevelopment of SUNY AS as a
truly international center of higher
education."
Noting that the ca mpus foreign sludent population is primarily composed
of highly-selected, well-trai ned graduate
student s, the Committee offe rs eight
recommendations:

1. A thorough evi;IUi;lion of the services provided by the Office of Foreign
Student Affairs. OFSA, the committee
says, now carries out well certai n practical functions "but it seems that liJ} establishes its own categories of importance, and, with a limited budget and
staff, some of the potentially signifi cant

•

services are neglected, or at least given
insufficient priority." The recommended
evaluatio n, the report says, should have a
maxi mum of objective input from ·
fore ign students, and should lead to " a
complete review of the organization of
the OFSA, its distribution of priorities,
and a redefin ition of job responsibilities
distributed among the staff."
2. A foreisn student orientation as •
continuous ongoing progri;m with intercultural se minars, workshops, etc., enco mpassi ng such topics as job advisement, hi gher education in the U.S.,
socio-cult ural aspects of life in the U.S.,
and the Buffalo communi ty.
l. An emphasis i;mong members of the
OFSA Sli;ff on i;dvisemenl ri;lher than
professional counseling. "The re has
been no indication that the highly co mp lex problems of cu ltural conflict,
cultural marginalit y, notions o f morality,
success and failure, and language have
been or cou ld be adequate ly analyzed
and met by expertise wi th in the OFSA,"
th e report co ntends. Thus, " th e OFSA
staff should concentra t e i n less
problematic areas of advisement and
should wo rk hard to create the appropriate o ngoing com munity programs
which wou ld go far to lessen the crises
and stresses of adapting to life in the
U.S."

4. The Director of the OFSA's •doption
o f •n odvoc•cy position on beholf of
foreign st udents, in s uch areas as
landlord relations , the particular
problems wh ich foreign st ud ents face in
d e aling with ca mpu s offices, and
relations with government agencies.
5. The assignment to the Office of
Financiol Aid to Students ol the ollocotion of an forms of fini;ncial i;id lor
foreign students.
6. A coniprehensive coordination of
the offices providins foreign student services uncle&lt; the .o egls of the Office ol the
Executive Vice President Or • V'oce President or Dean usociatecl in a Uni,ersitywide context In p~rtlculu with graduate
prosrams. OHii:es to be involved would
be: OFSA, the Council on International
(tum t o ~J:(' 1. mi. 11

�-.

2

-

I

I

Ubrarians
not obsolete,
-SitS contends
By Bob Ensettgrdt .
l lniW'fo.if¥ fnfrv~r ion~

The

job

market for professional
librarians has been tight for the past few
years and it !s expected to remain highl y
competitive. On top of this, every so

ohen some prophet of doom suggests
books will become obsolete. Does this
mean. librariai)S will someday go the way
of blacksmiths and whale oil salesmen?
The question doesn 't bother Dr.
George S. Bobinski, dean of _the School
of Information and Library Science

(SILSl. He is quick to point out there's an
"information explosion" going on,
which means plenty of work for informa·

tion specialists.
Besides, the dean and other faculty
members at SILS pay no attention to

data;
• l ocal libraries, expanding their role
as hometown archives, are beginning to
film and record events and happe nings
in their co mmun ities;
• Academic libraries are setting u~
· collectio ns of audio-visua l materials they
believe· will be indispensable to fut ure
historians, such as recordings of Franklin
D. Roosevelt 's " fireside c hat s" or
videotapes of the Kenned y-Nixon
debates and the Senate Watergate
Hearings;
• New jobs are opening up in the
co mmunity at large, with government
agenci ~ s . businesses and professional

firms finding they need information
sharpshooters who can put th eir fingers
on facts in a hurry.
For example, jobs are being created in
local commu nity service centers, whe re
staffers are needed to he lp inner cit y
tenants find ways to solve landlo rd
problems . In organiza tions like
c hambers of commerce, tec hni ca l
specialists are needed to help such
c lients as p rospective i nd ustria l
develope rs track down facts and fig ures
on zoning regu latio ns, tax rates and loca l
labor supply.
Dr. Ellison also notes arlarger number
o f U/ B's "informition transfer

specialists" are finding positions with
engineering and law firms aher graduation.

Other School of Information and
speculation on the demise of the printed
library Science alumni are deciding to
word.
go into business for themselves, contrac' "Books will never become obsolete,"
tin g out th e ir info rmation gathering serasserts Dr. John W. Ellison, who lectures
vices on a freelance basis. They are finon the avant garde theories of "media
ding a market for their sk ills, perfo rmin g
guru" Marshall Mcluhan in his audiosuch tasks as ex ploratory bibliographic
visual workshops on campus.
resea.rch for authors.
" Information comes in many formats,"
says Ellisori, " and print is one medium of
The majority of U/ B SILS graduates,
the media."
however, are still finding placement in
But it is the other information formats
libraries, where a knOwledge of print
- the ·o new media " s pawned by
media is still absolutely esse ntial.
technolog y: film, radio, te levis ion,
cassettes, records, microfilm, tapes and
Fo~~uK~--------------------------~----------computers - that are sha king up the
.n
librar y scie n ce fiel d at U/B and
Studies, and the Intensi ve Eng lis h
moderator for that meeting, at which " it
view of the problems as possible, as well
elsewhere.
language Institute; representation from
was proposed and agreed to establish an
as an overriding commitment to the imComputer Technofosr
ot her offices where there is significan t
portant prese nce of foreign st udents at
ad ' hoc advisory comm ittee to stud y
_ :The computer alone, according to
service for foreign students (such as Ad·
issues of concern and draw up specific
the Unive rsit y and the role of interdean Bobinski , " is causing a great
missions and Records) would also be jnproposals or recommendations . .. . Dr.
national e du cation . The Commiltee·
revolution in the libraries."
cl uded. " Each unic. would continue to
Kawi· a,s.sured that a report prepared by
Urges that th e se recommendations be
Computer technology and the informaintain aut ono my for the services it is
given the e arli est and most se ri ous co n·
the Comminee would be presented to
mation explosion have prompted library
intended to dispe rse but all wou ld have
the President and its recommendations
sid e ration by th e President and members
schools nationwide to overhaul their
representatives meeting together
o f th e Acade mic Counci l, in order to e ncons idered . . . ."
master's degree programs, beefing up inregularl y and reporting to o ne commb.n
co ur a ~ e a co ntinuin~ but stre ngthened
Th e co mmittee was for med by student
sirudion in "new media" techniqu es.
administrative office, " t he repor t
inte rnational program .... "
initiative, particularly on the part of the
Among the pioneers has been U/B's
recommends.
Graduate
Student .A~so,ciation's Comyoung library school, which has been
Me mbe rs of the Committee, in addi7. The immedi.Jie planning .Jnd r.Jpid
mittee on Foreign Students and Intercarving out new ground in the training of
tion to Co-chairmen Simon and Ticku,
implementation of a physicol center for
national
Education.
Faculty members
"information transfer specialists" since
we re: Dr. Howard Berman, Council on
intern.Jtioml educ.Jtion coordinating the
we re chosen by the students.
classes first began in 1966.
Inte rnat ional Studies; Dr. Arthur G.
various offices mentioned and includi ng
Copies
of
the
report
have been
In establishing the school, U/ B broke
Cryns, School of Social Work; Mr. Pete r
meeting space, reading and listening
presented to top administrators, inaway from the liberal arts tradition of
Groumpos, a foreign grad uate student;
rooms, and the international dormitory.
cluding
Drs.
Ketter,
Somit,
Siggelkow
library training and organized SllS to
Mr. Elhanan Keinan, international coor8. The appointment by the President of
and Kawi. Co-chairman Simon was
operate as part of the Faculty of
dinator, Student Associatio n; Dr. Tsua st.lndins adwisory boord to oversee
assured by Dr. Somit that the report will
Engineering and Appli.ed Sciences. Of
Teh Soong, Engineering Science; and
issues of inlernotionol educotion ond
recei ve serious considerati on, Simon
the 10 full-time instruCtors now on the
Mr. David Yung, coordi nator for special
review and P&lt;Ovicle recommendations
reported.
SILS faculty, three are specialists in the
programs, International living Center.
on problems .1nd opportunities, ~mons
One positive result of the formation of
computer science field.
Dr. Homer Hi gbee, assistant dean of
them:
the
committee is that a gr9up of campus
Next year U/ B will boast the nation's
international st udies and programs,
a. the preparation of a well-researcJled
administrators involved with foreign stu• most modern information sciences learMichigan State, served as an outsi de con~
public statement justifying and strongly
dent·
affairs have begun meeting on an
ning center. At that time, the scliool will
advocating the support of foreign
sultant.
informal basis to consider issues raised in
move to the new Industrial Engineering
students and international education;
The Committee grew out of a r:neeting
the
report
.and other matters, said Dr.
Building now under construdion at
b. the assignment to the Council on
held last spring to air matters of concern
Simon.
.
Amherst.
·
to foreign students. According to the
International Studies, the Intensive
OFSA
Director
Joseph F. Williams told
The new facilit~ might surprise Melvil
English Language Institute . and other
report~ Dr . .Khairy A. Kawi, assistant to
the
Rep&lt;wfe&lt;
that
he
had
no comments
Dewey, of decimal system fame, who esacademic representatives of supervisory
the executive vice presiderit, aded as a
on the report at this time.
tablished the world's first library Sc:hools
responsibility for planning the deployat Columbia UniVersity and in ~lbany
ment of tu ition waivers and negotiations
~~~16---------------during the 1880's.
for sponsored fellowships in a fartfrnm "''c•· 1. '"....,_ 21
side and he would Probably melt if he
The 14,000 square-foot area assigned
sighted, long-range and campus-wide
youngsters some thOught-provoking
stayed there."
·
10 SILS will house.med~ viewing rooms,
· perspective;
.
facts on the hazards of using illicit drugs.
The children were cautioned on the
listening rooms, televiSion ind film
c. a review of legal rights for foreign
.
"A
quantity
of
!.SO
the
size
of
a
Chiclet
proper
handling
of
legally
available
drug
laboratories, a photography dark room
•students and ways to insure their applica·
is .'st rong enough to give everyone in
products. They 'were advised by the
and a computer learning center. There
tion;
Memorial Auditorium a toxic dose," the
pharmacy stuclents to read all labels
will also be classroom, office, research
d . the eicaminatio"n of admissions
carefully and nor to take any drugs
youngstt!rs were told.
and study space, as well as a complete
procedures with poSsible recommen·
After discussing the harmful effects
without ~rental or medical supervision.
" library sciences" library.
dations for better and/ or more publicizcaused by "uppers" and "downers," one
During'the drug discussions, the plfarAll this Is needed, faculty members say,
ed coordination among thoSe responsiof the - pharmacy students emphasized
macy students encouraged their young
to alve the 200 full-and part-time
ble;
·
the dangers of taking mixtures of
listeners to ask questionS. They did, and
B~te students enrolled in SILS a
. e. a review of advisement practices for
different drugs by giving the children
their questions ranged from "How much
world"' knowledae of the "new media"
students;
this formula: "Aicohoi+Baralcohol can you take before you get
aJona with skills In traditional library . foreign
f. the. assignment to an appropriate
biturates• R.I.P."
sick?" asked by a ten year old boy to tbis
functions. Becauoe of the chanaing
agency or group of the task of seeking
The youngsters were informed about
one from an 11 year old girl: "o..birth
nature of libraries and the job market,
resources (e.g., fellowships; IOlins, other
the
Buffalo
Children's.
Hospital
Poison
control pills really workl"
famllllllty with both print and non-print
support mechanisms) for foreign
Control Center. "If you ever need it, and
The "rap sessions" conducted by the
media will be essential when graduates
students and lmernational education;
you· are home alone," they were told,
pharmacy students have been praised by ,
_ . job-humin&amp; Or. Ellison and' others
g. a review of the employment situa"call
the
Center's
number
and
tell
them
school
officials, law' enforcement ofInsist.
tion on and off campus leading to the eswhere you are."
fiCers, parents, and the youngsters
T...... ....,T.......
tablishment of effective liaison with the
·
.......,_
~ l50
themselves.
More sessions with area
Elllsan oudlned some of the trends
University Plas;ement and Career
young people are planned for the
whldi ..e Nvl"' an lm~ct on library
Descrl ing the hallucinogeniC
currentsl:hoolyear.
Guidance Office;
-·
problems created by LSD; one of the
and Information service tralni111:
h. consideration -of the project of
pharmacy students told the i:hildren
_..,.._.,~,,.--,
• Schook and medical libraries,
associating the Intensive English ·
about
a man who had crawled oul o ri'the
_ _ ,,,_
~ that people leam different
Long~ Institute withi., a., appropriate
ledge of a tall Buffalo building. " When
thklp In different ways, are stepping up
academk administrative context.
the
police
asked
him
what
he
was
doing,
their use Qf audio-visual m~la lor
" These recommendations, based upon
the man said he ;wasasnowflake and had
Or. Emanuel Parzen, professor and
educational purposes;
the Committee's review of documentajust CofTMl ,dOt".A' from heaven. Luckily,
director, · Division
of
Statistical
• Space limitations are fordng libraries
tion, interviews and' collecti v e
t~e police were •eventually able to conScience, was omitted from the -list of
to turn ro microfilm and other
deliberations, · are unanimously and
vince him t&lt;i come back in the building
SUNY faculty scholars carried in the Oc.,inlaruriutlon techniques to handle
strongly beld," the rJ!port notes. ''They
by telling him that it was too warm outtober 31 issue of the Rep&lt;wfe&lt;.
mushroomlns volumes of records and ·
reflect as Impersonal and objective a

,,..I .,...t:··'·,..·'

SUNY
' scholar

�. . .aam-

November 14, 1974

567 share in 1974 disCretionary funds
One-th ird of eligible University
teaching faculty-422 of a total of
1,244-received !"erit salary awards for
1974, according to information released
this week by th~ Personnel Office. The
average award to faculty was 5446, Personnel indicated; the lowest was S246
and the highest, S2,000.
Twenty-five per cent of librarians

received awards-21 out of an eligi ble
82. The average award in this category
was $380, Personnel reported; the lowest
was SJOO and the highest, $1,058.
Among non-teaching professional staff,
124 of .an eligible 442 individuals were
granted increases, 28 per cent of the
total. For NTP's the average award was
$402; the lowest was S300 and the
highest, $1,771.
The amount of money available for
merit increases was .75 per cent of the

total June 30, 1974, payroll of University
employees represented in the United
University Professions bargaining unit.

Emphasis was to be placed on the allocation of such funds to those having below
level salaries.
Under terms o(the present State-UUP.
contract, one per cent of total payroll
will be available for discretionary increases for 1975-76 - .75 per ,cent for
merit and .25 per cent for offsetting
inequities.

Individuals receiving merit awards in
the current round are:

Foculty
C. John Abeyounis; Sidney Addelman;
Judilh E. Albino; James C. Allen; William S.
Allen; Robert D. Allendoerfer ; Cynthia
Anderson ; Jack E. Armitage; Mila A. Aroskar;
Muriel D. Atkinson; Ruth A. Axford .
Norman Bolker; Warren l. Balinsky; Alan P.
Balutis; Cesareo Bandera; Kenneth F. Barber;
Thomas J. Bardos; William Barrie; Theodore
R. Bates; ·David T. Bazelon!• ' Ohilte T.
Beach ley; Jacques G. Benay; David M. Benen·
son; Robert D. Bereman; Beverly P. Bishop;
Clifford 0 . Bloom; Carol A. Bogal; John R.
Border; Carol J. Bradley; J,am~.Q r .B.rady; Mary
M. Brady; frank Brown; Homer 0 . Brown;
Murray Brown; Stephen I. Brown; Alan K.
BrUce; Stanley Bruckenstein; Gail A. Bruder;
Julia Brun· Zejmis; Ger31'H Bucher; Thomas
Buergenthal; Barbara B. Bunker; Gerard P.
Burns.
David A. Cadenhead; James A. Cadzow;
Parker-E. Calkin; Mireya 8. Camurati; Vincent
J. Capraro; Charles H. Carman; Eric J.
Carpenter; Gale H. Carrit hers; J. Malcolm
Carter; John Case; Charlotte S. Catz; Rita E.
Caughill; Richard K. Chalmers; Susan B.
Chamberlin; Min·Min C. Chang; Anand P.
Chaudhry; Houng·Yai Chen; Yoon M. Choe;
Diane T. Christian; Frank J. Cipolla; Mili N.
Clark; Ann H. Clarke; Charles V. Clemency;
Ira S. Cohen; Edgar C. Conkling; Thomas E.
Connolly; Wayne F. Conrad; Charles R.
Cooper; Robert M. Cooper; Philip Coppens;
Norman l. Corah; John P. Corcoran; Robert
Cowen; Frank A. Cozzarelli; Stanley H.
Cramer; Harry T. Cullinan, Jr.; Diane M. Cur·
tiss; Thomas W. Cusick.
Robert Daly; Paula f. D'Amore; Gary S.
Danford; Fred Dansereau, Jr:; Kenneth M.
Dauber; Mary A. Davis; Jean S. Decker;
Robert l. Defranco; Chester Deluca; Carl E.
Dennis; Roger V. Des Forges; Manavala M.
Desu; Robert M. De Yarman; John G. Dinss:
Sharon S. Dit\mar; lowell Dittmer; Eleanor l.
Dougherty; Victor Doyno; Alan J, Drinnan;
Colin G. Drury; Stephen C. Dunnett; Rene M.
D!Jpuis; JOhn f. Duringer; H. DuPont Durst;
John W. Duskin.
George E. Easterbrook; fhomas ). Edwards;
Anke A. Ehrhardt; Paul Ehrlich; Saul Elkin;
Willard B. Elliott; John W. Ellison; Peter Enis;
Theresa L. EJ)\tein; Salvatore R. Esposito;
Murray J. Etting~~; Al~n G. Fadell; S. David
Farr; Michael P. Farrell; leo R. Fedor; Morton
Feldman; leslie A. Fiedler; Nicholas V.
Findler; Shonnle M. Finnegan; Thomas D.

.Fbnagan; Stefan Fleisch..-; Rolf E. Flygare;
John V. Fopeano; leroy H. Ford, Jr.; Robert E.
Ford; Howard G. Foster, CNrles R. Fourtner;
Joseph I. Fradin; Gerald P. Francis; J, Bruce
Francis; Mary E. Frederick; Morris l. Fried;
Harvey M. Friedman; lerry K. Frye; Shigeji
Fujita; Ho--Leung Fung.
Andrew A.. Gage;; Eugene l. Gaier; Marcos
B. Gallqo; Robert L. Ganyard; Davis A.

Garlapo; Michael D. Garrick; Francis M.
casp.rtni; Robert I. Cayley; Frederick 0 .
Ge1ring; J, Ron~kl Genti$e; Peter k. Gessner;
MilO Clbaldl; Daniel I. Gifford; A. Scott

Gilmour, Jr.; Chester A. Glomski; Barbara R.
Goldbers; Paul L. Goldstein; Joseph K. Gong;
Robert 1. Good; Harry A. Gorenflo; L. S.xon
Graham; carol s. Green; larry J.. c;reen;
Dellvina M. Gross; Jorse M. Guitart; irineo Z.
Gutierrez; Thomas G. GuttericJse. •
·
·Robert L. Hagerman; Bert S. Hall; 1. Gordon
Hall; Stephen C Halpern; John P. Halstead;

William S. H1milton; Desmc&gt;nd M. Hamlet;
James C. Hansen; Perry 0. Hanson Ill; Susan
E. Hanson; Peter H. Hare; Vera Harmon;
RobertS. Harnack; leo A. Htrrington; Willard
R. Harris; James A. Harrison; Elizabeth C.
Harvey; Charles A. Haynie; Robert W. Heller;
Keith S. Henl\t; Shirley 8. Hesslein; Walter R.
Hill; George Hochfield; Dennis S. Hodge;
Edward W. Hohensee; Norma.n N. Holla.nd;
Joan B.. Hooper; Gary W. Hoskin; Edward J.
Hovorka; John A. Howell; Ron1ld J. Huefner.

Jui H. Wang; Ka.i Wa.ng; Tung-Vue Wang;
Richard-Wanner; Wilma G. Watts; Richard H.
Webber; Thomas W. Weber; katherine M.
Weir; Claude E. Welch, Jr.; Sol W. Weller;
Marlene Werner; leendert G. Westerink;
Marian E. White; Gerard Wieczkowski;
Marion H. Wijnberg; Roy A. Wilko; David P.
Willbern; ljllian S. Williams; Timothy C.
Williams; Stephen L. Wilson ; Sheldon
Winkler ; larry D. Wittie; Darold C.
Wobschall ; ~oger R. Woock ; Wolfgang

Peter. I. lttig; Milton A. lyoha; Carol F.
jacobs; Gary R. Jahn; Arun K. Jain; Marceline
E. Jagues; Mabel J. Jepson; Erwin H. Johnson ;
Kenneth F. Joyce; Susanne M. Kahle; Arthur
L. Kaiser; frank C. Kallen; Tai S. Kang; H. Roy
Kaplan ; EdwardS. Katkin; Raj K. Kaul; Thomas
M. Kavanagh; Nicholas D. Kazarinoff;
Kenneth A. Kellick; Elizabeth j. Kennedy;
lawrence A. Kennedy; Bambi A. Kertzman;
Gudrun H. Kilburn; Bren A. Kirkpatrick ;
Kenneth M. Kiser; Joseph H. Kite, Jr.; David
M. Klein ; Marcus Klein; Esther l. Kling; Carol
R. Kneisl; Byron J. Koekkoek ; Carolyn W.
Korsmeyer; Daniel J. Kosman; Mark B. Krista I;
Helen R. Kroll; Marie L. Kunz.
James R. La fountain ; Stephen W. lagakos;
Thomas Z. lajos; George C. lee; Yung C. lee;
K. Nicholas Leibovic; Barry lentnek; Adeline
G. levine; Kenneth J. Levy; John R.lick; Duo·
liang lin ; Charles lipani; Janice B. Lodahl;
leo loubere; Oren R. lyons.'
Marga re t H. MacGillivray; Kenneth D.
Magill , Jr. ; lmre V. Magoss; Mary B. Mann ;
Duane F. Marble; Marsha A. Marecki; Jacob
A. Marinsky; Milton R. Marsh ; Hinrich R.
Martens; Peu A. Mashimo; Ralph
Mastrocola; R o~ rt E. Mates; Roger W.
Mayne; James E. McConnell; James T.
McDonough ; Ann P. McElroy; Ruth E.
McGrath; Robert J. Mcisaac; James W.
Mciver, Jr.; Charlene S. McKaig; Paul J.
McKenna; John Meacham; John Medige;
Michael A. Meenaghan; Erika A. Metzger;
Michael M. Metzger; Carlton R. Meyers;
Albert l. Michaels; laurence A. Michel. Jr. ;
Yvar·Emilian E. Mikhashoff; l ester Milbrath;
Philip G. Miles; Sarunas R. Mi lisauskas; Bruce
£. Miller; Gerald J. Miller; Eugene R. Mindel! ;
Richa rd A. Mitchell; lee K. Mohler; Abraham
Monk; Mario ' Montes; Luis L. Mosovich ;
Trudy L. Munford; E. Neil Murray, Jr.; Edwin
D. Muto; John Myhill.

Constantine A. Yeracaris; Chia·Ping Yu ;
William R. lame; Paul Zarembka; Marvin
Zelen; Ric~ard ,A. Zeller; Maria A. Zielezny;
Z_bigniew H. Zielezny; Maryann E. Zimmer·
man.

Terry W. Nardin; Subhash C. Narula ; Joseph
Natiella; Wilma J. Newberry ; Fred A. New·
dom ; Wade J. Newhouse; Peter A. Nickerso n;
David H. Nielsen;..Russell J ~ Nisengard ; James
P. Nolan ; David A. Nyberg; Robert E. Ogle;
Shimpei Ohki ; Edward T. O 'Neill; Daniel T.
Organisciak; Ri chard S. Orr; Keith F. Otte rbein.
Robert E. Paaswe ll ; Albert Padwa; Roger C.
Palmer; Theodore Papademetrio; Anthony
Papalia; James Pappas; Diane C. Parker;
William T. Parry; F. Anne Payne; C. Carl
Pegels; Da vid R. Pendergast; Philip E. Pepper;
Rene Perez·Bode; Thomas D. Perry; Walter T.
Petty; Carlo D. Pinto; Milton Plesur ; Marjorie
M. Plumb; Carlene Polite; Robert G. Pope;
Charles J. Popovich ; Martin L. Pops ;
Sherwood P. Prawel, Jr.; Lee E. Preston;
Joseph T. Quinli va n.
Subbiah Ramalingam; Brian T. Ratchford ;
Ronald J. Raven ; Joel 0 . Raynor; Taher A.
Razik; Garry A. Rechnitz; Wilfred W. Recker,
Jr.; Jonathan Reichert ; Morris Reichlin;
ltobert I. Reis; Paul H. Reitan ; Barbara Ren· ...
nick; Donald W. Renni e~ Mary J. Richardson;
C. Alan Riedesel; ~Iizabeth A. Riegl,; Douglas
S. 'Riggs: Ge rald R.' Rising; CalvirrD.- Ritchie;
Donald Robertson ; Gloria l. Roblin ;
Charlotte D. Roederer; Donald P. Rogers;
Robert Rogers; Donald B. Rosenthal; Morton ·
Rothstein; Anthony J. Rozak; Eli Ruckenstein ;
Ralph R. Rume r, Jr.
Richard T. Salzer; Norwood Samuel ;
Donald T. Sanders; William H. Sanford;
Frances M. Sansone; kazuo Sato; kathryn A.
Sawner; Stephen H. Schanuel; George 0 .
Schanzer; Reinhold E. Schlagenhauf; Judith A.
Schneider; Robert J, Schuder; Herman
Sc hwartz; Joan G. Schwartz; Mary C.
Schwartz; Peter D. Scott; Fred See; Harold l.
Segal; limes M. Serapiglia; Barbara A·. Sevier;
·lindsey W. Seward, Jr.; Richard P. Shaw; Mark

E. Shechner; John B. Sheffer; Robert K. Sberk;
Gerald R. Shieltls; lewis K. ShuP.,; Michaell.
Simmons, Jr.; John K. Simon: Joyce E. Siri~nni;
Jerome N. Slater; Ruth l. SmUey; Arthur L.
Smith; Kevin C. Sontheirner; Tsu-Teh SoOng;
C. Alan Soons; Lawrence Southwick, Jr.; Bonnie R. Spaner; Robert A. Spansler; Harvey
Sprowl; Phillips Stevens, Jr.; Susan R: Stevens;
Richard R. Stevie; Kenton M. Stewo~n; Ja.mes
A. Stimson; ,. Russell A. Stone; Howard E.
Strauss; Corrine T. Stuart; .Harry A. Suitt;
James M. Swan; Gordon E. Swanz; William
Sylvester; linda Swiniuch; Yoram B. Szekely.
Emily T111! David W. Tarbet; Dale 8.

Taulbee; Doris M. Taylor; Diane P. Thomas;
Jacqueline K : Thompson; - Howard
Tieckelman; Conr1d F. TQepfer, Jr.; Elliot P.

r _ .; Virsinia M. Troy; Joseph 1. Tufariello;
Steven R. Tulkin; Ahmed ?o:. Uthman; Mark
Van De Vall; Hugh D. Van llew; Corell. Van
Oss.

Wolck.

Non-Teo~ching Professiono~ls
Rowena J. Adams; Shirley A. Ahrens; James
A. Anderson ; Virginia Askland ; Mary W.
Avery; Maria C. Baca; Peter J, Bagarozzo ;
Robert D. Bailey; Katharine R. Becker; Patricia
W. Biederman; Mildred H. Blake; June P.
Blatt; Ruth D. Bryant; Susan M. Burger;
Edward W. Bush; Carrie L. Byrd .
Alben 0 . Cappas; Nancy E. Cardarelli ; Paul
P. Ciszkowski; Priscilla L. Cloutier; Patricia 8.
Coe; Arthur Cole; Patricia M. Colvard; F.
Clare Cosgrove; John A. Coulter; Samuel
Crisante; Richard J. Cudeck; Albert W.
Dahlberg; Howard L. Daniels; Mary jane B.
Day; James R. DeSantis; Judith A. Dingeldey;
Jane A. DiSalvo; Ronald K. Dollmann ;
Lawrence D. Drake; Richard f ..Duffy; Charles
F. Dunn; Clarence F. Dye.
Christi na H. Ehret; David P. Elmer; Stephen
P. Englert ; Albert J. Ermanovics; Barbara E.
Evans; Charlotte A. Farley; Florence Fradin;
William M. fritton; Charles f. Glover; Thomas
D. Graham; Mary H. Gresham; Frank A.
Guzzena ; Jo hn P. Hansgate; Doroth y E.
Hartley; Mohammad M. Hassa n; Dennis A.
He nneman ; Phyllis S. Herdendorf; Analine S.
Hicks; Roy T. Hutchings.
Rance M. Jackson ; Keith Johnson ; Judith B.
kerman ; Regina Kociecki; Hilda Korner;
Joan ne B. Kosz uta ; faith F. Lebenbaum; Wilda
levin; l eonard S. Lewandowski; Rita G. Lip·
sitz; Jam~ A. Mackenzie; Eugene J. Martell;
Donna McCarthy; Charles W. Miller; John C.
Mo hawk ; Jo hn J. Molloy; Sharon A. Nelson ;
.Ma.r.y. G. O 'Connor; John S. Olearczyk;
AUg usti n Olive ncia; Dean K. Olse n. Jr .;
lawrence S. Osolkowski.
Rita M. Piccolo; Harry Pin iarski; France J.
Pru itt; Mark A. Rei chle; John Riszko; N. Kirk
Robey; William K. Rock ; James E. Rozansk i;
William J. Ruhland ; Edward. L. Saindoux;' John
F. Sarvey; Ethe l E. Schmidt; Frederick J.
Schoellkopf; David M. Smit h; Dorothy H.
Smith; Ronald J. Sortisio; Mary B. Spina;
Ronald H. Stei n; Joseph R..Stillwell; Kaaren L.
F. Stock man ; Madel ine Strauss; John K.
SulliVa n; Esther Swartz.
Juanita Terre ll ; John T. Thurston; Judith
Thu rston ; Agnes f. Tiburzi; Marjorie L.
Tiedemann ; Da vid E. Trinder; Jorge E.
Ve lasco ; Raymond D. Volpe; Willia m K.
Wachob ; Norman J. Wagner; Robert J.
Wagner ; Virgil S. Walker; Stephen N.
Wallace; Charles H. Wallin ; Rita E. W&lt;~.lter;
John R. Warre n; Harold G. Wik; Ural J.
Williams; Clifford 8. Wilson; John E. Wirth ;
Jean Wischerath ; Helen S. Wyant ; Dorothy E.
Wynne.

U/8 student interns

at 116nois OODege
Job experience and insight into administrative procedures are two dired
benefits which Kay E. Martin feels she
has received from participating in an internship program sponsored by the
Academic Affairs Conference of
Midwestern Universities (AACMU) and
the Rockefeller Foundation.
A graduate student in higher education at U/B, Mrs. Martin is currently
spending a year as an administrative intern. assigned to the Illinois State University Colfege (!f Arts and Sciences. She is
-concentrating on tl)e areas of evaluation,
shar~d governance and curriculum
development, and her main concerns
a re the direction, trends and needs
of education of ,t he future.
Mrs. Martin has been in the education
field · for 17 years as a public school
teacher, college instructor and associate
dean at the State University College at
Buffalo. She received her bachelor's and
master's degrees from BUffalo State.
The mother of five children ranging in
age from 17 to 22, Mrs. Martin hopes to
combine an administrative and teaching
. career. "My first love is te.ching,' ' she
says.
l
Her husband, James, is a counseling
_center director in Buffalo. -

'Assertive
training' set·
for women
Women in our culture have not been
trained to assert themselves. As a result,
they often find themselves patronized,
bullied or worse by colleagues, supervisors, parents, spouses, friends, repair
men, physicians, strangers, even their
own children.
·
In order to equip women to better
protect their own rights, Alpha Lambda
Delta, the freshman women's scholastic
honor society, is cO nduding a workshop
on "Assertive Training for Women,"
Thursday, November 14.
The Counseling Center is cooperating
in the pro jed.
U/ B Counselors Bea Ross and Amy Pitt
will ad as discussion leaders for the
workshop, which will include screening
of a "stimulus film" distributed by the
American Personnel and Guidance
Association.
Assertive behavior, advocates of assertive training for women argue, is that
kind of interpersonal behavior irl which
an individual stands up for her legitimate
rights without violating the rights of
others. It is dired, honest, adequate,
considerate but non-deferential expres·
sion of one's feelings, opinions, and
beliefs.
Traditional, nonassertive behavior by
women is rewarding in that it reduces
the likelihood of unpleasant conflicts
with others, but at the considerable cost
of anger, frustration and lowered selfesteem on the woma n's part.
Trainers distinguish between
legitimate assertiveness and aggression.
Aggressive behavior involves the viol~;­
tion of the rights of others.
Following the film, participants in the
workshop will break up into small groups
for discussion related to the adualization
of assertive responses by women.
The workshop is open to the Universi.:.
ty public, but will 6"e limited to 50 or 60
participants. To register, call 831-4631 or
register in person in ll3 Norton.
The program will begin at 7 p.m. in 233
Norton .

4 profs attend
aging meeting
Drs. Harold Brody, Abraham Monk,
Morton Rothstein, and Constantine A.
Yeracaris- all members of the advisory
faculty of U/ B's Multidisciplinary Center
for the Study of Aging - attended The
Gerontological Society's annual meeting,
October 28-November 1, in Portland,
Oregon.
. Dr. Brody, professor and chairman of
the Department of Anatomical Sciences
of the School of Medicine, was inaugurated as the president of the Society
for 1974-75.
Dr. Monk presented three papers he
co-authored : "Cross National Studies of
Senescent Attitudes Toward the Young:
A Review of Findings and of
Methodological Issues"- with Professor
Arthur Cryn$:; "Social Value Concerns of
Scandinavian Elderly: A Cross Cultural
Study" - with Professor Arthur Cryns
and Kirsten Milbrath; and "Block Elderly _
in Public H.o using: A.Case Study in Com- .
munity Planning" - with Frank B. Endres.
'
•
Dr. Rothstein presented a, paper on
"Age Related Changes in Specific Activity _ of Enzymes in Free-Living
Nematodes.''
Dr. Yeracaris, acting director of the 1
Center, also visited two other centers for
the study of aging (University of
Southern. California and Portland State
University) to assess on-going research
arid educational programs in gerontology.

"Stock suit
The state attorney general's office in
Utah has announced It will file suit In
Federal Court charging eight brokerage
firms with maladministration ol the In·
vestment program at Utah State UniVersity, It was reported that the suit will seek
damages of about S3.3 million, to undo
certain stock purchases and to recover
aboUt S1 .8 million paid by the university.

�.

. . IELIIA

U/B panel considering

Bicentennial projects
Soured by Watergate and overshadowed by a faltering economy at
· hoine and the specter of mass starvation
abroad, the upcoming Bicentenn ial of
the United States threatens to arrive with
a whimper.
While other groups have proposed
Bicentennial events ranging from the

liberation of Puerto Rico to a fullcostume re-enactment of the Battle of
Bunker Hill, a U/ 8 committee is con -

sidering ways that this University might
best mark the 200th anniversary of the
nation.

The comminee, appointed last year by
Executive Vice President Albert Somit, is
chaired by Richard G. Brandenburg,
dean of the School of Management.
Members are: Molefi K. Asante, chair- .
man, speech communication; James H.

Black hurst, director, Summer Sessions;
John A. Buerk, director, student or.ientation; Allen Canfield, assistant to the
dean, continuing education; Rollo l.

Handy, provost, educational studies;
Shonnie M. Finnegan, Universit y
archivist ; Donald A. larson, associate
vice president for health sciences; jesse
lemisch, professor, social sciences;
George ) .. Mease r, publisher, Bee
Publications, Inc., and member· of the
U/B Council; Robert G. Pope, associate
professor, history; A. Westley Rowland,
vice president, Universit y relat io ns;
Esther Swartz, assistant to th e exec utive
vice presid ent; Claude E. Welch ,
professor, political scie nce.
One major challenge before the Committee is to come up with a mode of
commemoration appropriate to a unIversity. As Committee members
Finnegan and lemisch have argued, " a
universit y should do better than flag
wav ing, dressing up in costumes, reenactment of battles. Members of
various academic profession s are
'attempting to salvage something of
lasting value from the Bicentennial, and
there are a number of significant scholarly programs in the works. . . . As an
educational and cultural institution, the
University has a special obligation to act
with dignity, to construct a program of
academic respectability and va lue, which
at the sa me time reaches beyOnd the
University.
"Hopefully, the University's commemoration· will not be a matter of a day
or a week, but rather a matter of constructing a program of P!ograms of enduring significance to University and
community, a program worthy of pride
on both sides."
As another member commented, the
group hopes to develop a program of
academic value that will "be an expression of the American experience, not
another binhday party."
For the University's purposes, the
Bice ntennial will be celebrated
throughout 1976. According to Mrs.
Shirley Stout, who attended .a recen t
national conference devoted largely .to
ways_of financing Bicentennial projects,
some groups wish to have the national
Bicentennial commemoration extended
through 1989, the anniversary of the
ratification of the Constitytion.
A number of proposed projects are
before the Committee, including
cooperati¥e ventures with community
groups, creation of an endowed chair or
special Bicentenn'-1 lecture -"'s, ac-

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q!.iisition of works of art, and commission
of a play on a Bicentennial theme. The .
only event actua ll y scheduled at this time
is a banquet to honor both the Bicentennial and the University's 130th Founders'
Day, to be held May 11,1976.
Rather than fragment the camp us
Bicentennial effort, several Committee
members have expressed interest in
direct ing most of the group.'s e nergies to
developing a Buffalo Social History Project, an idea advanced by Finnegan and
lemisch. This would involve undertaking
a co mprehensive interdisciplinary study
of Buffalo's ethnic and social history, including bibliographic, archival and oral
history projects.
Th e Committee is eager to receive
suggestions from all members of the
University commun ity. These may be
directed to the Chairman at 831-3533,103
Crosby Hall.

Mini-marketplace
The Ridge Le~ nfeteri~ wu lr.ansformed into ~ mini·
muketplKe Wt S.aturd.ay u the U/1 Women's Oub hekl its
third .annWIII cr.afts s.ale. The event r.aised over $900 for the
Gr.ace C.apen Scholuship Fund, reports Ch.airm.an Mrs. LoM
Allendoerfer, who estim.ates th.at more th.an 1,000 people

•isited the mini.......trotploce. .

United Way

needs more gifts
A total of 2,629 Un iversity employees
have co ntributed $109,509.85 to the 1974
campus Uni ted Way d rive, campaign officials repo rt ed this week.
The amount, however, is $15,490.15
short o f the goal of $125,000.
Campus United Way worke rs have
issued this " urgent appeal to all nongivers . . .. As of November 8, 1974, the re
are approximately 2,051 non-gi vers
working at th e State University at Buffalo.
If each One would give io cents a week
or 40 cents a pa yroll period, we could
close the gap of our donations. It would
be wonderful if within the Universi ty
co mmunity all employees could sha re in
helpin g th e community and at tlie same
time help the University ma ke its goal."

Paper recycling
doubles in year

Regents forec~ dip in
students, ask building curb

Student enrollmentS in hi gher ed uCation in New York State, which have
rapidly in the post-World War II
era. will peak at the end of th e 1970's and
dedine in the 1980's, a Board of Regents
progress repo rt on the 1972 State plan for
the development of postseco ndar y
·
education predicts.
As requi red by law, the report, issued
last Friday, has been transmitted to
Governor Wilson and members of the
leg:islature.
The report emphasizes that colleges
, and universities may expect minimal
~rowth and relatively stable full-time undergraduate enrollments until 1980,
when enrollments from the traditional
colle~e-age populatjon are expected to
decline. The Regents suggested that in
this period of time, colleges and universities · may well at'tract increasing
numbers of part-time students ani:J those
who have not traditionally attended
vet."
colle~e if they redirect a larger portion of
their resources toward .this potential
clientele.
The Regents' projections are based
upon current elementary and secondary
school
enrollments and the number of
lhe Civil Service Employees -Associapre-school youngsters in the population.
tion wants earty discussions with
These
statistics
1indicate that die number
Goyernor-elec.t Hugh L Carey regarding
of high school graduates will continue to
pay hikes for the 140,000 State workers it
increase
slightly
until 1979, when there
represents, reports from Albany this
will be a 1:9 per cent increase over t_he
week indicated. CSEA is said to'be seek19V figures. At · th~t . point, a sharp
ing a 9 percent hik.e for fiscai197S-76 un:
downward swing is expected - down 15
der a wage reopener clause in their ,.
pe.r cent in 1985 and 31 per cent in 1990,
current contract '~just to 'keep pace with
as compared io 1973.
increases in the coSt of living."
_ As a result, the Regents predict that
full-time underRraduate enrollments,
. which totalled 484,000 in 1?73, will inThe Division of Undergraduate Educacrease to 516,400 by 1977, remain
tion has announced the addition of a
relatively stable through 1980, and
native Spanish-speaking .. cade~ic •dthen decline sharply.
visor to its staff.
From 1980 onward, the Regents make
• Pedro L. Maymi is avaiJ.able in 120
two sets of projections - a low projecDiefendorf from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday
· !ion- baseil on the current in-State
throush Friday, to offer advice to
colle!le-going rate of 51.7 per cent and a
Spanish-speaking students on academic
high projection 1based on .increasing the
advisenJent, University rules and
colll!ge-JI!IinB;~Ie to 56 Jl41r cent. The
regulations, major Information, electives, ,... low esti~,: ~ the number of fullthe Colleges; and procedures to satisfy
.time undergracJwates at 495,000 in 1~
degree requirements.
'
. · and the high estirmte at 536,000.

. The University last year more than
doubled the amount of paper collected
for recycling on campus.
According to figures from E. W. Doty,
vice president for finince and management, 207,272 pounds of paper were
collected from September 1973 through
August 1974 compared to 100,415 pounds
the preceding 12 month.s.
"The major effort," Doty said, " has
been directed toward !he collection of
items which are readily handled, such as
catalogs, brochures, etc.
"We continue to work with student
groups on both the paper recycling and
the glass and metal recycling programs,"
he noted. "All of these have picked up
and . we are getting a fair amount of
money back Jrom the sale of. recycled
material although ·we are not getting
back as much as the extra effort costs as

CSEA asks for
~with Carey

DUE adds adVisor

~rown

By 1990, this enrollment could decline
to between 380,300 and 421 ,600. This
would place the State's full -time un der~raduate college population at th e
sa me level as 1969, despite sizeable additio ns to physica l plant which have occurred in the interim, the Regents contend.
Graduate Erpansion Adwocated
To panially offset this decline and
provide for the yCiliziiion of .existing
facilities, the Regents expect that institutions will significantly expand their
graduate and part-time programs.
Specifically, they urge reaching out to
new age populations and new types of
clientele - such as senior citizens,
women, veterans, armed forJ:eS per·
sonnel, Prisoners, and other heretofore
underserved population groups.
lut1di"ll C~ed
To insure that existing facilities are
used to their utmost effectiveness, the
Regents recommend guidelines to curtail new building. Any new facilities
should replace either obsolete buildings
o·r rented space or should provide
specialized services not currently
available, such as laboratories, libraries,
or research facilities, they .argue. New
building should be geared to meet the
needs of graduate and pan-time enrollment. This recommendation, as ue
others in the- report, is simply thi! - a
recommendation to polity-makers.
The Regents expressed concern that
some institutions - both public and
p_9vate - are in financial difficulty and
may be forced to close their doors.
"Enrollment declines expected in the
next one-and-a-half decades, whe,!)
coupled with the pressures of inflation
and strong competition for students with
the State-subsidized public university
~ystems, may well result in financial crises
for many private institutions." Wh!le the
difficulties may be sl'rort-term for the
stro"l!"r institutions which can adjust,
other institutions with high debt,
traditional academic prosrams,lnflexlble
.adminlstnti-.e structure a~ hiP, tenured
' faculty ratios "may find themselves In an
Jrum ro· -5. col. 4J

�November u, 1974

CREF 'bullish' on stocks
despite markefs downturn
The College Ret iremeot Equities Fund,
that portion of the nat iona l TIAA-CREF
retirement program which is geared to
stock market investment, is co ntinuing to
pour $1,000,000 a day into common

stocks even though priCes over the past
two years have suffe red " th e biggest
d ip" si nce CREF was orga nized in 1952.
The decl ine has caused CREF to cut its
ret irement benefits by 17 per cent this
year but hasn't affected the
orga nization's philoso phy, its chairman
William C. Greenough says in the
November 4 issue of The Chronicle of

Higher Educarion.
Many U/ B faculty and non-teaching
professional staff members are TIAA-

• ..-- ~ ·v -~
~
FACULTY
(Visiting) Associat~ Professor or Professor, English,
posting no. F-4165.
Assistant Professor, Library and Information Srudies, F-4166.
Assistant Professor, Chemistry, F-4167.
Assistant Professor, Continuing Nursing Education, F-4168.
Associate Professor, Economics, F-4169.
Associate Professor, Economics, F-4170.
Assistant Professor, Economics, F-4171.
Assistant Professor, Economics, F-4172.
- Professor, Pathology, F-4173.
Instructor to Professor (depending on qualifications), Civil Engineering,
F-4174.
~ssistant Professor, Political Science, F-4175.
Assistant Professor, Political Science, F-4176.
Assistant Professor, Political Science, F-41n.
Associate or Full Professor, Geography, F-4178.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Geography, F-4179.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Geography, F-4180.
Professor, Geography, F-4181 .
Professor, Psychology, F-4182.
Professor, Psychology, F-4183.
Assistant Professor, Psychology, F-4184.
Assistant .Professor, Psychology, F-4185.
Assistant Professor or Professor (three positions), law, F-4186.
Professor and Chairman, Pharmacology&amp; Therapeutics, F-4187.
Assistant/Associate Professor, Pharmacology&amp; Therapeutics, F-4188.
Professor, Oral Biology, F-4189.
Assistant Professor of Dance &amp; Movement, Theatre, F-4190.
Assistant Professor of Voice &amp; Speech for Actors, Theatre, F-4191 .
Assistant Professor, Biochemistry, F-4192.
Assistant Professor,_Geological Sciences, F-4083 (reposting).
NTP
Assistant to Director, Office of Campus Security, PR-1, posting no. B-4089.
Dental uboratory Technician, School of Dentistry, PR-1, B-4090.
Counselor, Academic Affairs, (EOC), PR-1, B-4091 .
Counselors (two, ~rt-time; evening), Academic Affairs (EOC), il-4092.
. Admissions Counselor, Academic Affairs, (EOC), B-4093.
·
Program and Sludent Development Consultant, Student Affairs, .
PR-2, B-40!14.
For additional lnfonmttion concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
openings tliroughoul the State University sys~em, consult bulletin boards at
these locations:
1. Bell Fadlity between D152 and D153; 2. Rids~ 'Lea, Building 4236, next to
cafeteria; 3. Ridse Lea, B.u ilding 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health Sciences
Building. in corridor opposite H5 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the -corridor l&gt;etween
Room 141 and the_I.Qbby; 6. La:d&lt;wood, ground floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, In ~in entrance fo)(er, across from Public Information Office; a. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms.112 and 113; 9.
'
Parker EngiMering. In corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1St floor,
· Housing OHice area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Personnel De~rtn)entl · 12. Norton
Union, Dlnector's Office, Room 225; J). Diefendorf _Hall, In coii'idor''ilext to
R110111 106; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Giln!MI!
_
SC. Unio811!J at luffalo lo an (qUill Opportunay/Afllr..the Action elllployer

CREF participants. The system is one of
three retirement options provided for
this group by the State.
CREF , the Chronicle points out,
"doesn't try to guess the best time to bu y
or the best time to sell ; it invests steadi ly,
whether the market is rising or falling."
Good Time to Buy
.
Greenough admits that most CREF investors would be out of the market at thi s
point if the reti re ment funds weren 't
automatically deducted from paychecks
or paid in by institutions. He contends,
however, that " if you assume our society
is viable and that the free enterprise
system is going to continue, then we' re
going to look back on this as a ve ry good
tim e to have bee n bu ying stocks. It's exactlv the sa me as the 1930's" when few
people bought stocks but those who did
fare d very well subsequently.
Whil e CREF's investment portfolio
declined 20 pe r cent in market value in
cale ndar 1973 (greate r than the DowJones Index fall of 16.6 per cent) ,
Greenough said its record was slight ly
bette r than th e average of 12 of the
largest mutual fund s which dipped by
21.7 per ce rn .
Since those pa yin g into CREF buy
shares, o r accumulation units, those still
working and investing are currently getting more shares for their money, the
Chronicle article indicates. This
September, a CREF share cost $25.25
compared to $53.74 in May of 1972. If and
when stock prices rise again, the value of
each sha re will go up accordingly.
The number of shares or accumulation
units, plus other factors such as expected
longevity, determine the amount a CREF
participant receives each month upon
retirement.
CREF is o ne of the largest investors in
the stock market, Greenough points out.
last year it put $341-million in new
premiums into Wall Street. On June 30 of
th is year, its assets were still more than
S2.25 billion, even at current prices.
The organization has no intention of
switchin g to other kinds of investments,
its chairman says. Although it has been
shifting the types "ol stocks it holds,
e mphasizi ng oil companies and Japanese
banks.
CREF's older sister institution; the
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America, allows University ·
employees the option of fixed level pension benefits. When CREF was staned,
those covered by TIAA were given a
choice of switching up to half of their
pension premiums to the stock-based
plan. In 1967, the limit was raised to 75
per cent and in 1971,to 100 per eent.

n.u Dolns ~tetter

· Although TIAA's mongage, real estate
and bond investments have been doing
well (earning a net (elum of 7 per cent on
investments in 1973), the Cllronlcle article points out that there has been no
wholesale shift out of CREF and into
TlAA. ln. fact, there has been a small increase in those el&lt;xting 100 per cent
CREF partidpation (from 3 to 4 per ,cent
of all participants). Most TIAA-CREF
members (46 per cent) have retirement
programs which are split equally
between the two and the no:xt gr.eatest
~rcentase (30 per cent) have a 75-25
split, favorins CREF. ·
While TIM benefits remain constant
durins retirement years, CREF ~yments
vary widely according to the total value
of its stocks which is set each May 1 accordins to the _p....Vious year's PC~rfor-

mance. Those now retired have experienced a decline of Il per' cent "in
CREF benefits over the past two years,
despite soaring inflat ion , and , the
Chronicle says, "further reduoions next
Ma y seem certai n ." However, the
Chronicle points out, a re tired person
with 10 CREF accumulation units, for example, still• rece ives $262 monthly compared to $95 for the same units in 1953.
TIAA-C REF itself promotes a middle
ground between the two options,
cautioning that it would be unwise to
commit all of one's retirement savings to
either type of plan.
Some 50,000 reti red persons now
receive TIAA-CREF benefits each month;
23,000 get TIAA only, the others receive a
mi x. The number of persons now payi ngin totals 350,000 - 42,000 in TIAA only;
12,000 in CREF only and 296,000 in so me
co mbination.
·
By 1985, estimates are, 100,000 individuals will be receiving TIAA-C REF
pensions.

Regents(fr,m p.lcl" 4. rn l 41

untenable position ."
Th e Regents call institutional survival a
top priority and are " committed to
providing support for the stronger and
more flexible institutions." Towards thi s
end, they recom mend that the Bundy
program of aid to private institutions be
continued and that a study be undertake n to determine what the appropriate
State role should be in aiding those institutions in financial difficulty.
Tuition Lewels
The Rege nts' report states that tui tio r}
at the State University a nd pri vate
colleges should be maintained at or near
present leve ls in terms of real inco me ,
but that students sho uld pay their. fair
share of the cost of education. " During a
period of inflation, tuition levels would
be expected to rise in relationship to
price increases in all sectors of higher
education ."
However,
ne w
arrangements shou ld be identified to
prevent tuition increases in excess of the
general price level, they argue.
Concerning City University of New
York, rhe Regents urge that institution to
establish "a more rational tuition policy
which considers the student's ability to
pay in relation to tfle level and cost of instruction he receives."
Tenure
The Regents reiterate their former
belief that "the strength of any higher
education institution is a competent and
dedicated faculty."
In their 1972 statewide plan they had
suggested a tenured to untenured faculty ratio of 60/40 to give each institution
flexibility in its staffing arrangeiilents.
Stale University has reported an increase in its proportion of tenured faculty from 45 per cent in 1970 to 52 per cent
· in 1973, the current report soys. City
University currently has 38 per cent of Its
. faculty on tenure. The private sector
reported an overall increase from 40 per
cent in 1970 to 47 per cent in 1973.
·
Accordingly, the Regents urge all institutions to develop "a rational and flexible tenure policy to deal with possible
institutional enrollment declines."
, Re~ting - to collective barsaining
negotiations, underway at many colleges
and universities, the .Regents recommend that academic tenure be exduded
from the items which are negotiable.
They also cited as "outside the purvlty
of negotiations:" curriculum development and revision; ficulty· ~aluation,
promotion,
and
retention;
• student/faculty '!'lias and clus size.

Brandenbutg eleded_
Dr. Richard G. Brandenburg. dean of
II the School of Management, has been

elected to a one-year term as president
of · the Middle ~lantic Association of
Colleses of "Business Administration
(MAACBA). MAACBA is an organiutlon
dedicated to advandng and Improving
hisher education in business management. There an! 78 colleges and universities which hold meml_!ership.

�November U, 1974

..

Boyer takes up growth, tenure,nudget at SUNY Senate
SUNY Faculty Senate membe", arriving at the Student Union of the Canton
Agricultural and Technical College for
the opening session Friday morning,
November 1, found Chancellor Ernest
Boyer corlversing wilh some 200
demonstrating students. One handprinted sign read, "We are students, not
sardines." Major complaints included
overcrowded residence halls, long lines
in the cafeteria, and lack of sUpport
facilities .

The Chancellor, who left the Senate
meeting early to inspect the residence
hall areas, referred to the confrontation
as an appropriate point of departure for .

his subsequent remarks.
"The unprecedented building
program of some $2 billion over the past

decade was required to develop the
University and meet the demands of that
period," he said. By 1970, bonded indebtedness was greater tha n the tuit ion
dollar income. Dr. Boyer warned that

reside nce halls must be occupied for 30
years to pay off present bond holders, as
the buildings of the past "turn into cold
and austere antiques."
Dr. Boyer explained that the halls had
to be 11 ipled at Canton to accommodate
the heaV)' enrollment, whereas unused
beds remain at Potsdam, only 10 miles
away. He also recognized one of the stude nt arguments that " Ag and Tech
offerings are experiencing a ' bull
market,' thereby justifying requests for
residence and other space rather than a
retrenchment policy based on predictions of de c rea s ing enrollments
e lsew h ere throughout higher
education."
Noting o ur past history of trying to
predict the future as " mildly modest, to
say the least," he emphasized that he
must be concerned about relationships
between future growt h patte rns and the
distribution of available resources. (During the later question and answer period ,
he again highlighted the difficulty of
predicting exact percentages of high
school graduates attending colleges.
" Predictions range broadly from SO to 70
per cent with data suggesting differences
that co uld total up to 100,000 students.")
Tenure .and Its lmplk.ations
The Chancellor then moved to the
consideration of tenure and its implications, noting the need to balance
slow growth with professional security. A
series of background papers, presently
under study, concern "difficult but fea sible programs" to achieve a more flex ible
retirement system and other options,
rather than limiting ten ure . He carefully
qualified his comments by stating that
any alteration of present retirement
provisions and policies would be subject
to contract negotiations, since we "could
not alte r policy unilaterally." He commended the issue to local Senate governing bodies for consideration and
sUggestions.
Dr. Boyer later added that he has not
yet discovered an appropriate and nohthreatening terr'l to use in seeking wayS
to improve and extend faculty options as
an outgrowth of ·last year's tenure Statement. " Faculty renewal' ~ is the current
descrjption under which consideration
may be given to questions of greater
mobility, fr~ time, and a variety of options, including sabbaticals. A Universitywide faculty 1Committee is to· concern
itself with such faculty development, as· it
seeks ''to find new things to do." ·
The Confidentiality of Student Records
item ~ad been intended originally to
result in a written policy for each campuS
so that students might, along with
· protectioll from outside s·c rutiny,
achieve appropriate personal access, including examination and challenging of
certain materials. Consideration of. that
effort has now been influenced by newly
enacted federal legislation, effective
November 19, with in the Educational
Amendment Act of 1974. This Act grants,
to parents of children under 18 and to
those students who have reached that
age, access rights to their'1:j!&lt;Ords compiled by the institution. Dr. Boyer said,
"If there is no change, we will be caught
in the web of this federal development
and expected to live within the law."
(During the final questioning pe•iod, the

Chancellor confirmed that a written
directive was to come from SUNY on the
matter and that a possibility exists that
the bill may be amended by its sponsors
to add a retroadive clause to prated past
arra ngements.)
The Senate's " re asoned plea " to
become involved in a mo re effective participatory role in the development of the
Master Plan " has been taken very
seriously." As a backdrop for the 1976
Plan, me mbers of the Senate, the Counci l of Presidents, and the Student
Assembly have already been involved in
a panel to deal with University purposes.
Data considered included e nrollment
patterns and binh rates, as we ll as social
and economic trends. A series of pointed
questions wi ll be addressed to the
va riou s ca mpuses to asce rtain such
matters as the nature of each institution
for the next decade.
Refe re nce was made to the development on each campus of clea rly defined
st ude nt grievance procedures. Since universal affirmation was received from the
Council of Presidents and the Student
Asse mbly, a Memorandum to the various
Presidents wi ll request the establishment
of an appropriate mec hanism at each
un it fo r this purpose.
1975-76 Budset
While poirt ting o ut that certai n
references to the 1975-76 budget
presently fall within the area of privileged information, Dr. Boyer reminded the
Senate about the impact of inflationary
trends. For the first time in its histo ry,
"U nive rsit y work-load has not been the
driving engine of the budget" as we seek
"to maintain in health y fashion what we
have, rathe r than emphasizing growth."
In his opinion, and "on ba lance," the
Chancellor said, the presidential reyi~'+'
process was a health y ve ntu re, an
"obligation and opportun ity" for each
president in vo lved. It permitted cert ain
constitue ncies to assess institu tional
directions, as we ll as presidential contributions. Anot her real va lue was the
engagement of the Board of Trustees in a
"close, constru cti ve, an9 canQid look at
various campuses." Dr. Boyer hoped that
the process benefitted the system, ad·
d ing that all the presidents were
respected by the Board for havin g been
willing to go "under the microscope."
He added that, in contrast to some
si tuations elsewhere, we have been fortu nate in this state to have a " remarkabl y
enlightened, stable, and cohesive Board
of Trustees, an anchor po int of good
sense and professional sensitivity."
He conclud ed with a brief reference to
"the small, but significant Soviet Exchan ge prog ram'' which presently e ncompasses 10 stu dents from each co un try tak ing co urses at Moscow and
Albany.
In 'response to a question about
curre nt reviews of doctoral programs by
the Board of Regents, the Chancellor
po inted out the need " to view all such
programs objectively," stating that it
would also be irrespo nsible to argue that
all such programs should be automatically funded on the basis of present existence.
Personnel Polides
The Committee on Personnel Policies,
referring obliquely to the " sP.ectre of
retrenchment," identified as main areas
of concern for continued stud y and
possible action, questions of tenure,
retrenchme nt benefits and accommodations, retirement benefits ahd accommodations, revieW procedures fo r;
administrative _personnel, early and partial retirement, information for prospective professional personnel, areas of concern for .NTP's, faculty exchange,
summe r and extra-service employment,
incentives and rewards, confidentiality of
personal recommendations, and faculty
development.
A resolution from this Committee, addressing itself to rewording Article XV,
Title E ("Emeritus Status") of the Po1icies
of the Board of 1rustees, was passed. The
proposed change, retitled " Privi leges
Upon Retirement," reads as follows :
1. Accommodations. Membe" of the .
University faculty who retire in accordance with the provisions of Titles lJ, C,
or D of this Articl~ XV shall be granted

such of. the following privileges as are
relevant and possible: use of library and
study facilities, use of office and
laboratory space, eligibility for research
grants, and representation of the University in professional groups.
2. Emeritus Slotus. Membe" of the
University faculty who retire in good
standing shall be entitled to append the
term " Emeritus" to the title of their
academic rank or administrative post at
the time of retirement.
Student Support
Beca use of inflationary trends and present attempts by the Inte rnal Revenu e
Service to disallow the tax exempt status
of a number of st udents, the Committee
o n Graduate Programs recommended
the following resolutions relating to
gene ral st ud ent support, which were also
passed :
" BE IT RESOLVED, that the University
Faculty Senate urge the Chancellor to
cont inue his effort to increase the
number of graduate students granted
financial assistance and to raise the level
of support give n through assistanceships,
fellowships, and tuit ion wa ivers," and
''that the University Faculty Senate urge
the Chancellor to seek ways to maintain
the traditional tax exempt status of
stipends for graduate assistants and
fellows, in recognition of the necessary
educational experience in teaching and
resea rc h thus a(forded graduate
students."
A third resoluticih.~assed was designed
to make tuition waivers avai lable to
faculty who would seek to maintain their
position and usefulness to the University
. by enrolling for additio nal o r different
graduate study urging t hat the
Chancellor , "seek to increase t he
number of tuition waivers for graduate
study and to make them ava ilable for
faculty redeve lopment and the support
of foreign students."
Also passed was a resolution concerning rev iew procedu res, including
eva lu ations by the State Education
Department , SUNY Central, local ca mpus review panels, and professional accrediting gro ups that make "outsta ndin g
demands on the time and resources of
the faculty. " It was resolved that "the
Faculty Senate urge SUNY Central and
local campus admi nistration to exami ne
current procedures in order to determine the extent to which it would be
feasible to coordinate (1) the types of
reports and data base which may be used
in common by the vario us review groups
and (2) the scheduling of such reviews
during the sa me academic year."
Graduilte Progrilms
The Committee on Graduate Programs
sponsored another resolution, also passed, th at the Faculty Senate "request that
Central SUNY promptly prepare a Summary Report of all SUNY Graduate
Programs designating those which have
been approved within the last five.
years."
Other action favo rabl y considered was
a reso lutio n prepared at the Buffalo
Center that " th e University Faculty
Senate request the Counsel of the State
University of New 'York to issue a Statement defining the conditions under
which the State University of New York
wil l furnish legal · co un se l to its
professional staff members in the everit
they are sued as a result of an accident
during the progress of a class, a research
project, or other activity which is part of
the ir professional responsi bilities," and
that " the University Faculty Senate request that the Chancellor pursue this
matter and report the decision of the
Counsel of State University of New York
to the next meeti ng of the Faculty
Senate."
Some discussion preceded the passing
of a reSolution proposed by the Comm ittee on Professiona l Rights and
Responsibilities that "the Faculty Senate
of the State University of New York
recommends tO each campus that it
designate an existing committee or
create a faculty committee that will have
as its charge the review of those A'latters
iden.tified by tlj;! faculty as being of concern insofa r''~&lt; they relate to the
professional rights and responsibilities of
the faculty."
·

This w.ls designed to cover matters not
falling specifically within the UUP contract, constituting a resource to which to
turn when violations do not clearly fall
under management agreements. The
rationale was that " members of the
professional staff of the ·state Unive,.ity
of New York acknowledge their responsibilities to maintain high standards of
professional cond uct and to protect their
academic freedoms from encroachment.
The profession regulates itself by defining the freedoms and responsibilities of
its members and establishes its own
criteria for professional conduct.
"As members of a profession, the staff
reserves to itself (wit hin limits of appropriate laws and Trustees' Policies) the
responsibility to define and disseminate
these standards and to ,review alleged
conduct in violation of these standards."
Campus By-Lows
With reference to each unit President's
approval of campus By- laws, the following action was taken :
" Whereas the Senate notes that the
Campus President . need only approve
those provisions of campus By-laws
which concern consultation with faculty
in compliance with X-5-b of the Policies
of the Board of Trustees and consistent
with the Cha nce llor's statement on
governance,
" The refore, BE IT RESOLVED that the
Uni versity Faculty Senate request the
Chancellor to consider the above interpretation of Unive rsi ty Po licies and, if he
concurs wit h this statement, to disseminate this opinion to the Chief Ad·
ministrative Officers of the Units."
In other action the University Faculty
Senate amended its Observer Status
Resolution to add as observers "the
president , o r designated alternate, of the
Assotiation of Cou ncil Members and
College Trustees of SUNY" as well as
"the President , or designated alternate,
of the Alumni Confederation." Also
passed was a related resolution that the
"University Faculty Senate request each
Facult y Senator to suggest that the appropriate campus gover nance organization invite a representative selected by
the College Council to attend its reg ular
meetings as an observer."
-Richord A. Sill!lelkow
SUNY Senator

Martens honored
Dr. Hinrich R. Martens, professor of
mechanical engineering and electrical
engineering, has received the American
Society for Engineering Education 's
(ASEf) Weste rn Electric Fund Award for
excellence in engi neering instruction.
The award, the highest teaching honor.
in the e ngi ne.ering profession, was
presented to 13r. Martens last month at
the ASEE St. lawrence Section meeting in
Kingston, Ontario.
In presenting the certificate and $1 ,000
check to Dr.. Martens, Dr. Daniel E. Race ,
chairman of the Section, said the society
recognizes " his contri butions of lasting
educational influence, his impact on the
education of engineering st udents and
his success as a \eacher."
Dr. Martens, who has developed· 11
new courses in 12 years at U/8 and has
published extensively, is described by his
Universily colleagues as a " patient, innovative, effective, stimulating teacher."
Mechanical Engineering Department
Chairman Gerald P. Francis noted that·
"his dedication and influence have been
instrumental in formulating what
students will leaJ n as well as how and"
where they · will learn it. Dr. Martens
recognizes the independent impOrtance
and cumulative role of liberal arts, basic
science and engineering and specialty
t[aining in.engineering education."
Dr. Martens is the second U/B
mechanical engineer to receive the
teaching award in its 11-year history. Dr.
Francis received the award for 1970-n .

on County panel

Dr. Allifr'r'"J. Pautler, Jr., . associate
professor, curriculum development and
instructional .
media,
Educational
Studies, has been appainted to the Manpower Advisory Council of Erie County
by County Executive Edward V. Regan:

�. .-.sam

7

~-----------------=
·-~
r ------------------------~----Symbolic Instruction Code. 301 Hochstener,

(from ~»Rea. col. 41

Hilla TAlMUD ClASS'
Rabbi Justin Hofmann leads the Talmud
Class at 7:30p.m . .1nd P.1ula Teitelbaum leads a
Yiddish Folksinging Croup at 7:30 p.m. Hillel
House,40Capen Blvd.
DANCE LECT\JREIDEMONSTllAnoN•
A History of }au Dance Styles, Daniel

Nagrin. Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m. No admission
charge.
Sponsored by the UUAB Dance Comminee
and the Office of Cultural Affairs.

TUESDAY-19
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINAitf ,
A Refresher Course in Radiology -

.
New

Equipment, New Techniques and X-Ray lnlerprelation is examined in chis seminar sponsored by 1he School of Dentistry. 148 Capen, 9
a.m.--4:30 P.m. For registration information ,
call831-28l6.

ART SYMI'OSIUM'
Impressionism Reco nsidered: A Hundred
Year Perspedive, Or. J. Kirk T. Varnedoe, assis·
tant professor of art history and archaeology,
Columbia University. 326 Foster, 2 p.m.
Sponsored by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
and they/ BArt Department.
POliCY STUDIES SEMINARI
National Transportation Policy and Planning, Or. Paul Shuldiner, Civil Engineering
Department, University of Massachusetts. 104
Parker, 2 p.m. Refreshments will be served.

COMPUTtll SERVtCft!SEMtNAitf
The BASIC Language is the title of this
seminar examining the Beginners All-Purpose

3-Sp.m,
HISTORY DfPARTMENT FilM'
The Shop on Main Street 147 Diefendorf, 3
and 7: 30p.m. No admission charge.
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAitf
Regulation of the Globin Gene in Sheep
and Goat Erythroid Cells, Or. Arthur Nienhuis,

Molecular Hematology SectiOn, National
Heart and lung Institute, NIH. 147 Capen,
coffee at 3:45, seminar at 4 p.m.
CONVERSATIONAl HEBREW CLASS'
Led by Rabbi El y Braun. Hillel House, 40
Capen Blvd., 7 p.m.
·
VARSITY HOCKEY'
UI B Vj: . St. Lawrence. Holiday Twin Rinks,
7:30 p.m. Admission: students free (pick up
tickets at the ticket office in Clark Hall before
the night of the game); $2 general admission .
AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY UCTURE'
A Communications Satellite for Educational
Purposes, James Welch . Rm. 10, Foste r basement, following meeting at 7:30p.m.
DANCE PERFORMANCE'
Changes: A Retrospective of Dances 19481974 is I he title of an eveni ng of solo dances by
Daniel Nagrin . Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission : $1 st udents; $2 faculty, staff and
alumni ; $3 general public.
Sponsored by che UUAB Dance Committee
and the Office of Cultural Affairs.

WEDNESDAY-20
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINARI
Dental Office Desigl) : A Science and an Art,
Marvin Cutler of Marvin Cutler Associates,
New York (interior architects for the dental
professions). 245 Capen , 9 a.m.-c:30 p.m. For
registration information, call831-2836.
Sponsored by the School of Den tistry.

Program for
women offered

DANCE MASTER ClASS'

The Women Administrators Program,
established at The ' Claremont Colleges
by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation , is now receiving applicatiOnS for its
next group of administrative residents.

Open master class by Daniel Nagrin.
Fillmore Rm ., Norton , 10:30 a.m.-12 noon . No
admission charge.
.
Sponsore? ~Y the U!JAB Da~ ce Comm•ttee
and the Off•ce of Cuhural Affa•rs.

The program's first group of four women

BEGINNERS HEBREW CLASS'

is currently in a year's residency at The I
M led ~Y Rabb• Ju stm Hofmann . Rm. 262, NorClaremont Colleges preparing· for \..../:." Umon, 12 noon.
positions of major administrative respon-

sibility in 1 colleges and universities
throughout the United States. Directed

AGING LECTURE SEJ:IESf
A, Social-Psychological Perspective of Aging,

2) To share the perceptions and
perspectives of women with ad-

Or .. Robert J. Havighurst , Universit y of
Chicago. 233 Norton, 3 p.m.
CAREER PlACEMENT SEMINAR'
What To Do With a BS in Economia. 337
Norton, 3:30p.m. Refreshments will be served.
Spon~ored .bY.• the Undergraduate
Econom1cs Assoaat•on.
PUIUCUCTURE' ·
Oil ;and Politics in Ar;abia, Or. Ahmed Abu

ministrative stature on the Claremont
campuses who, as tutors, provide continuity and support throughout the year;
J) To d iscuss problems of public and
private academic administration in

CLASSICS LECT\JRE'
Sophocles and Greek Pier y, Professor
~~~~~~~uld, Yale University. 239 Hayes, 4-

seminars and meetings with distinguished members of the academic communi-

Sponsored by the Raymond Professor of
Classics.

ex~ nee in actual operations is the
primary £ mphasis of the program , It
provides an opponunity:
1) To be responsible for administrative
projects. Principal mentors are the
presidents of the colleges in the Cl remont complex;...
a

ty;

4) To attend conferences penaining to
higher education and prepare a paper
for publication or presentation on a
significant aspect of academic administriltion.
The program is open to JTlature
women applicants from filculty and administrative positions in educational institutions, associations, ~nd foundations,
who have the qualities and qualifications
for upper echelon .1cademic administriltive positions, including substantial a~demic experience beyond the
b.accalaureate,
Each administrative resident will
receive $9,500 annually, with up to $1,000
dependent's allowance . Completed
ipplications must be postmarked no
later than January 6, 1975, and appli~nts
will be notified in April.
"f!&gt;e program Is under the direction of
Elizabeth L Cless, director for Special
Academic Program of The Claremont
Colleges, Application forms are available
from: Mary Ellen Mead, project coor.dinator, Women Administrators
Program, The Claremont Colleges, 160

Harper Hall, Claremont, California 91711 .

lo...., ............

5TUOY AIIIOAD
Al ..............

.....
............
-,._lelloroloaep- 5llloobeq In
117T--.dllll.

llnc:e
.....
- Muot
· dearonce..............
lor llully
.........
be done thnlush
lhe
Ollke of o.en- Ac:odeallc: Prop-.

~~~~:~i~.r~:SnS::~~~ ~;a~~~~~~~;~· P~O:ill

CHEMICAl ENGINEERING SEMINARf

· THURSDAY-21

CONTINUING DENTAl EDUCATION
SEMINAitf

ticipation course for .dental auxiliaries. 148
Capen, 9 a.m.-c:30 p.m.
Sponsored by the School of De ntistry. l
ENCOUNTER SESSION'
All faculty membe rs and students are in·
vited to attend a session to discuss facu ltystudent interaction and how to improve it. 234
Norton , 3 p.m.
Sponsored b y the Stud e nt -Personnel
Interact ion Cominittee.

DENTAl VOLUNTEERS
The Depa rtment of Oral Biology is seeking
paid volunteers to collaborate in a federallysu ppo rted research project. Volunteers
should be between 30 and 50 years of ase and
have no dental diseases (including decay and
bleeding gums). For information, contact 8315139.

COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARI
The BASIC l.~nguage is the title of th is
se minar examining the Beginners All -Purpose
Symbolic Instruction Co de . 301 Hochstetler,
3-5p.m.

GRADUATE RECORD EXAMINATION
Regular registration deadline for the GRE to
be given Dec. 14 is November 19. Information
and application forms are available in the .
Uni versity Placement and Career Guidance
Office, 6 Hayes C.

Paf.i llel Techniques - The Modern Method
of Intra-Oral Radiography, a two-day par-

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUMI
Meson Exchange Cu rrents in Electron
Scauering, Professor D. 0 . Risk a, Cyclot ron
l aboratory, Michigan State University. 111
Hochste tler, 3 p.m.
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES LECTUREf
The Snake River Plain of Idaho, Dr. Steven
Oriel , United States Geo logica l Survey,
Denver. Rm . 0-170, Bell Facility, 180 Race Sl.,
3:30p.m.
CELL AND MOUCULAR BIOLOGY
UCTURE SERIESf
Ovalbumin Messenger RNA, Complementary D NA,

and Regulat ion o f Protein

Synthesis, Dr. Robert T. Schimke, professor of
biology, Department of Biological Sciences,
Stanford University. 13-4 Health Sciences;
coffee at 4, lecture at 4:15p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARI
Computer Optimization of Pharmaceutical
Formulations, Dr. Joseph B. Schwanz, Merck ,
Sharp &amp; Dohme Research laboratories, West
Point, Pa. 244 He alth Sciences, 4 p.m.

fiiENCH DEPARTMENT FilM'
Hiroshima Mon Amour (Resnais) . 147
Diefendorf, 5 and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
POETRY READING'
C. W . Tiu esda l e, po et , translator and
founder of New Rivers Press, will read fro m
his works. Graduate lounge, Rm. 2, English
Annex B., 8 p.m. No admission charge.
SA SI'EAKERS LECT\JRE'
Who Killed }FKI, a lecture·sl ide presentation by David Williams . location to be announced , 8 p.m. Free to University members,
$1 general public.
Sponsored by the Stude nt Association
Speakers' Bureau.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE'
Guitarist Artie Traum . First Floor Cafeteria,
Norton , 8 and 10 p.m. Admission: $.75
students; $1 facu lty and staff; $1 .25 general
public.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
Baal by Bertolt Brecht, directed by Gordon
Rogoff . Courtyard Theatre , Hoyt and
lafayette, 8:30 p.m. Admission: $1 students,
$2.50 general public.
·
Sponsored b y the Center for Theatre
Research.

The Mechanism Behind Osmotic Flow in
Porous Membranes, Professor John"R. Ander-

UUAIFlLM••
Ponic in Needle Pork (Schotzbers, 1972).

son, School of Chemical Engineering, Cornell
University. 104 P.nker, 4 p.m.
COMPUTING AND APPUCA.nONS
LECT\JIIESERIESf
Put Popul;ations ....:.... Present Populations,
PrOfessor John krause, De~rtment of History.
320 Fillmore, Ellicon Complex, 4 p.m.
RIM'
Flying Down to Rio (Freeland). 147 Oiefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
UU.U RIMS"
S.voges (Ivory, 1972), 7:15p.m. and Bomboy
Talkie (Ivory, 19701, 9:1S p,m. 140 Capen, no
admission charse.
MFA RECITAl'
Pianist Sharon Lee »ri, a pupil of Professor
Stephen Manes, offers a MFA desree recitaL
Baird Recital Hall , 8 p ,m, No admi55lon
charse.
ARTLECT\JRE•
Poris Seen Anew: C.illebolte ond the 1mpressionist Cityscape, Dr. J, Kirk T. Vamedoe,
- ass istant professor of art h istory and
archaeology, Columbia University .
Audito.rium, Albright-Knox An Gollery, 8 :30

Norton Conference Theatre, Cilll 831-5117 for
times. Admission charge.

P·~nsored by the Albright-knox Art Callery
ond ·the U~ An Deponment.
.
THEAlU PBifORMANCP
Bool by Benoit Brecht, directed by Gordon
Rogoff . Courtyard Th~tre, Hoyt and
lafayene, 8:30 p.m. Admlssion: $1 students,
$2.50 general public.
'
c
Sponsor~d by the Center for Theatre
Research . ..

NOTICES
CONTACT
·Contact, a new discussion group for resident students, meets every Monday in 157
Fillmore, Ellicott Complex, 8-10 p . m .
Discussions will deal with how to make
friends , how to settle differences with a roommate, etc. Everyone is invited to attend .

EXHIBITS
UIRARY EXHIIIT
First editions of works by Samuel Beckett
from the collections of lockwood Memorial
Library. 2nd floor billcony, Lockwood. Viewing hours: Mondily·Friday, 9 a.m. - S p.m.
Continuing.
lOCKWOOD EXHIIIT
.
Polish Collection, exhibition culled from
the UnWersity's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of material. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library, Mondoy-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5
p._m. Continuins.
MUl~EX..rr

l'numlnl Ralnroast. somple works by a
group of U.S. artists who have communia.ted
with eKh othet- through writings, video
production, Xerox prindng.lilm, photosrophy
ond music, Gollery 219, Norton. Viewing
hours: Mq_nday-Friday, ·11 J.m.-4 p.m:; Sun·
day, 1-4 p.m .; Monday and Thursday
evenings, 7-10 p,m, Exhibit ends Nov, 18.
MUSIC~YDHIIIT

•
l'ucclni: u IJoherne Music Ulnry, llolrd
Holt The exhibit runs thrOolgh NoYember 30.

VISUAl AR'IUXI-T
Hol)d-tinred Kerogrophs by Eloine Honcodt, •
Hayes HaU Lobby, building hours, November
1-30, Presented by the Office of Culturol Affairs.

MINORITY CAREER PROGRAM
On November 14 and 15, job interviews
begin at 10 a.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton Union .
NORTON TICKET OFFICE HOURS
The ticket office, first floor Norton, will
open at 11 a.m. instead of 10 a.m., effective
immediately. New office hours are : Monday
through Thursda y, 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; Friday, 11
a.m.:.mid night ; Sat. and Sun., hours vary .
OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS
HOURS
The revised schedule of Admissions and
Records office hour-5 is: Mondoiy through
Thursday, 6:30 a.m. - 7 p.m.; Friday, 8:30
a.m. -4 :30p.m.
ROOM FOR INTERACTION
A place to relax, talk and have coffee is now
open in 67S, Harriman basement, from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Everyone is
invited.
SATRAVR
Spend your vacatio n in Nassau : January 411 ; Cost, S275, includes round trip airfare, iCcommodations and transfers. Also, a flight to
los Angeles, leaving December 28 &amp; returning
January 12, is available at a reduced rate. For
information, come to 316 Norton Union , or
call831-3602.
Sponsored by the Student Association.
SPRING REGISTllATION
The Office of Admissions and Records will
conduct Spring 1975 Registration beginnins
Thursda y, December 5. All students currently
registered at the University need only complete a Course Request Form. All new
students for Spring 197S must complete a Student Data Form in order to register. The Office of Admissions and Records (Hayes An~ex
B) will be open on the following c:bteS until
the hour indicated for Spring Registriltion:
Dec, 5 - 7 p .m.; Dec, 6-4:30 p ,m,; Dec, 9-13
- 8 :30 p.m,; Dec, 16-20- 8:30p.m.; Dec. 2324 and 26-27 - 4:30 p .m.; Dec, 30-31 - 4:30
p.m.
THEATRE PBFORMANCES
Purge is presented by the American
Contemporary Theatre, 1695 Elmwood
Avenue, at 8:30 p.m. Thurs.-Sat. and 2 p.m.
Sunday. For reservJtions, all875-5825.

INTERVIEWS
ON-cAMPUS INTEilVIEWS
The 51011 ol the Univefslty Plocement onll
Career Cuidonce Ollice welcomes oil students
in the University community: and alumni to ·
take part in nrious career pfograms offered
this year. The on- campus lnterviewinc
proarom, runnina fTom Oct. 7-Dec 12 ond
Jon, :IG-April 25, offers the _..,nhy lor individual interviews with education, business,
_ industrial and governmental representatives.
C.ndldotes lrom all degree levels, completina
their course work in January or May 1975, are·
invited to take -pan in the lnterviewina.
Registration forms are avaiblble in Hayes
Annex C, Rm, 6, The following qendes will
be interviewing thfs week:
,
·

in-

THURSDAY-14: ~opol!tan llle
suronce; Allied Chemial; IBM Corp,; Andco
Inc
·
FRIDAY-15: Republic Steel; Travelers.
MONDAY-18 : Edison Brothers Slores Inc;
Continental Can Co.; Eastman kodilk Co.TechriiCill.
TUESDAY-19: Continental Con Co,; bstmon Kodok Co.-Technical; Eostman Kodok
Co.-Business; Pierce and Ste¥em Chemical
Corp,
,
WEDNESDAY-20: Eastmon Kodok Co.Technical; Eastman kodilk Co.~Business;
Burroughs Corp.; Armour-Dial, Inc.; Marine
Corps,
THURSDAY-21 : human Kodak Co ,Technlcill; EastmiiJl kodilk Co.-Business;
Atomic Energy Commission; The Trane Co.

;.•
#

�.......
THURSDAY-14
CONTINUING MEDICAL IDUCAnON
PIIOGIIAMJ
Gynecologic Endocrinology ~nd Practical
GeMrics for the Clinici~n;- second day of a
two-day program for the clinician to update
knowledge of gynecology. Statler-Hilton
Hotel. for information, ci11831-5526.

CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCAnON
SlMINARf
Head and Neclc Malignancies, topic of The
Fourth Annual Dr. Glenn H. leak Teaching
Day, will include ta lks by Drs. David Da hlin,
Mayo Clinic; Robert Gdrlin, University of
Minnesota ; Charles Waldron, Em&amp;ry University ; and Norman Schaaf, Roswell Par k
Memorial Instit ut e. School of Nursing
Auditorium . Buffalo General Hospital , 9 a.m .•

4 :30p.m. No admission fee.
Sponsored by the School of Dentistry.
UUAB VIDEO WORKSHOPS•
The UUAB Video Committee is sponsoring
workshops in Th e Use and Care of Video
Equipment (today is the final da y). Schedul ed
today are: Programming, 10 a.m.·12 noon ;
SEG/Camera, 12 noon-2 p.m. 121 Norto n.
ENGLISH LECTURE•

Th e Radical AmbiJ.:uity of William Blake,

M.H. Abrams. Cornell Unive rsit y. 203 Diefe ndorf. 2p.m.
Presented by the Depa rtment o f English.
Dr. Abrams, Class of 1916 Professor of
English lite rature at Co rne ll Universit y, was
the first Frederic J. Whinton Professo r of
fn gli sh the re in· 1960. He has bee n a me mbe r
· of the En glish Department at Cornell sin ce
1945.

He is the author of The Mirror and the
l amp : Roma mic Th eory and the Critical
Tra clitio~ h ich
C hris~n Qauss

received the Phi Beta Kappa
Prize in 1954, and Natural
Supematur /ism : Tradition and Revolution in
Romantic 1 "terature. which won the James
Russell lowe
· "n 1972.
Or . Abrams' boo , Th e Mirror and t he
Lamp, was cited in 1957 in a poll of 250 crit ics
and professors of literature as one of the " fi ve
work s published within th e last 30 years w"hich
... have contributed most to an understand ing of literat ure."
MARKEnNG COLLOQUIUM SERifS~
Allitude and Prediction of Behavior, Dr .
Jagdish Nshe th , Albert Fry Visiting Professor o f
Marketing, Graduate School of Bu siness,
University of Pittsburgh. 322 Acheson, 3-4:30
p.m.
Organized by the Department of Market ing
and Operations Analysis of the School of
Manage men1. .
~
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Quasars : Alternative EKplanarion o f Observet.l Spectral Unes. · Professor Y.P. Varshni,

De partment of Physics, University of Onawa.
111 Hochstetler, 3 p.m.
COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARf
Introduction to TS-R UN FORTRAN, taught

b y i nstru c tor Rog er Campbell. 301
Hochstetler, 3-5 p.m.
CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
SlMINARI
Proteo l yt ic".. Modificatio n of fruct ose
Diphosphatase and its Possible Ro le in
Regularion o f the Enzyme Activity, Dr. Bernard l. Hore cker , Roch e In st itute o f

Molecular Biology. 134 Health Science s, 4:15
p.m . .
FRENCH DEPARTMENT FILM•
Rules of the Game (Renoir) . 147 Diefendorf,
5 and 8 p.m. No admission charg~.
WOMEN'S VOLUYBAU •
U/ 8 vs. Geneseo State College. Clark Hall, 6
p.m.

ASSBinVE~INING WORKSH()Ii
_FORWOMEN•
_
A worli.shop for women to help participants
. identify iind accept their feelirigs. Z p.m ., preregister in 233 Nonon, 831--4631.
SCIENCE EDUCAl10N DISCIJ5SIONf
Ausubel's ~ ~nd Eduarion Redesign,
Dr. Joseph Novak, Cornell University. C-220
Foster, 7 p .m.
Spo.nsored by the ~clence Educat ion

Prosram.
·

lmi.B."'J)ROP~NIGHP
Jody Burns invites i nnov~tive

chefs to help

lfoke C""ll•h for the Shabbaton. 40 Capen
Blvd., 7-11 p .m.
ftfYSICAI...QIIGANIC CHEMISTIIY
1ICIUIE SBIESf
Orpnk Chemicai ..Modific•tion of Enzyme
Acfiwe Shes. Professor Thomas kaiser, University of Chlcqo. 114 Hochstetter, B p.m.

. Presented by the Graduate School. ·
POETIIY llfADING•
John Logan,
ariirUIB professor of
English, iind Michael Crites; • grMiuate student, pr~t a poetry readlntl. 310 Fooler,
8:30p.m. No admission charse.
. ..

Poe&lt;

VISITING ART1STS SERIES•
Soprano Phyllis Curtin, a member of the
Vienna State Opera and Metropolitan Opera,
presents a full recital. Mary Seaton Rm.,
Kleinhans Music Hall , 8:30p.m. Admission: $1
students; $2 faculty, staff and alumni; $3
general public.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE•
Open Sing. Anyone with any instru me nt or
a d esire to sing is welcome . First floor
cafeteria, Norton , 9 p .m.
UUABFILM••
If (A nde rson, 1968). Nonon Confere nce
Theat re , call ·631-51 17 for times. Admission
charge.

FRIDAY-15
LANGUAGE COLLOQUIUMjf
Languag~ on Trial is the topic of this two day colloquium . Toda y's discussio ns are from
9:15 a.m.-9 p.m., 231 Norton . '
SponM&gt;ted by the Department of Ge rmanic
and Slavic.
FILM•
Atrica by Cinda Fi restone. 10 a. m. and 12
noon , Non o n Confe re nce Theatre; 6 p.m. 147
Diefendorf. A speaker will be feat ured .
Donations welcome.
CHAMD HOUSE'
Cha llah bakinJ.: class taug ht by Mrs. Groner,
185 Maple mere Rd .. 12:30 p.m.
HORIZONS IN NEUROBIOLOGY SEMINAR#
Control of Nerve Fields, Dr . Jack Diamo nd,
chairman, De partment of Neurosciences.
McMaste r Universit y, Hamilton, Onta rio. 108
Sherman , 1 p.m.

HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
CAREER PLANNING SEMINAR#
The Schoo l of Manageme nt presents a
se minar for und ergraduate and grad uat e 'st ude nt s in te res ted in career opportunities in ·
Human Resou rces Managemenl. 234 Norton ,
1-3p.m.
WRESTLING'
l iiB vs. Alumni. Clark Hall , 1 p.m. Ad·
missio n: student s fr ee, general public S1 .

ltkwemiYer 14, 1974,

Shabbat meal. Velvel Pasternak will present a
program of Hebrew Folk melodies.
_Mr . Pasl e rnak , a noted collector of
Chassidic music, holds degrees from Yeshiva,
Columbia and Juilliard. A long·time Yeshiva
faculty me mber, he has served as choral
arranger-conductor for 12 record albums. Mr.
Pasternak will appear at severa l Hillel
programs this weekend (see below).
CACALM•

.

Woodstock . 1&lt;40 Capen, 7:30 and 10:45 p .m.

Admission charge.
DANCE PERFoRMANCE•
Th e Zodiaque Company directed by li nda
Swiniuch with guest arti st Peter Berti ni.
Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m. Admission: S.75
st udents, S1 .50 ge ne ral public.
Sponrored by the Theatre Depa rtme nt and
Physical Education Dance Programs and the
Office of Cu ltural Affairs.
DEEPAWALI CELEBRATION'
The Ind ia Students Association celebrates
Deepa wali. featuring traditional food , music

and dance fro m India . Second floo r lounge,
Red jacket Quadran gle. Ell icott Complex, 8
p. m. Admission : S.SO students, S1 genera l
public, at the door.
Sponsored by the India St udents Associa tion and the Inte rnational living Cente r.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING'
Instru ctio n_for beginners. 233 Norton, 8·11
p .m.
Presented by Ba lka n Folk Dancin g.
IRCMOVIE••
Bu1 ch Cassidy and rh e Sundance Kid.
Goodyea r Cafeteria , 9 p.m. Ope n only to IR C
f ee~ payers.
UUAB CONCERT•
Chick Corea and Return to Forever and
Keith Jarrett o n solo piano . Fi llmo re Room,
Norton, 8:30 and 11 :30 p .m. Adm ission : S3
studen ts {in advance), S4 general pubhc;
students, S4. night of performance.
Sponsored by the UUAB Music Committee.
UUABFILM••
If {A nderso n, 1968). Nonon Conference

Theatre. call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR#
Synth es i s and Bio l ogica l Activit y of

Nit rosourea Ana l o.~:s. Michael Halat , U/ 8
graduate st udent. 245 Health Sciences, 2 p.m.
STATisnCAL SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM#
Essent ial Concepts of Approxima te Theory
for Optimal Lin ear Regression Designs.

ProfesM&gt;r S. Si lbey, Universit y o f Glasgow and
Princeton University. Rm. A-48, 4230 Ridge
lea ; coffee at2:50, lect ure at 3:20p.m.
UNDERGRADUATE COLLOQUY'
Po l itics in the Nineteen th Cen tury :
Stendhal on Tolsto y. lionel Abel. Annex B,

Rm. 5, 3p.m.
COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINAR#
Telecommunica tions is the topic of this
se minar covering the basi cs o f data communications hardware. Rm . 27, 4242 Ridge
lea, 3-5 p. m.
ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES
SEMINAR#
Computer Communication s Netwo rks,
Mischa Schwartz, De partme nt of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Scie nce, Co lum bia _University. 146 Parke r, coffee at 3:30, 1ecture at 4 p.m. _
SponM&gt;red by the Department of Electrical
Enginee ring and t~e Buffalo Section, IEEE In·
for mation Theory Group .
PLASMAS AND APPLICAnONS SEMINAR#
Lasers .:...... No Longer a Laboratory Curiosity,
Richard l. Hundstad, manage r, High Power
lasers, Westinghouse Research and Development Center. 104 Parker; coffee at 3 ~30.
seminar at 4 p.m.
PHYSIOLOGY SEMINARf
Cardiopurmonary Ph ysio l ogy of High
Altitude Natives, Dr, Julio Cruz, University

Cayetano Heredia, lima, Peru . 108 Sherman, •
p.m.
CRL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
LECTUIIQ
The Structure ~nd Function of Protease
Inhibitors from P~taroes, Dr. C. A. Ryan, Jr.,

Department of Agricultural Chemistry,
Washington S_tate Unive rsity. 244 Health
Sciences, 4:15p.m: Coffee at • p.m.
CHAIAD,HOUSE SBVICES•
Services followed by a meal will be held at ·
5:30 p.m. at 6otli Chabad Houses, 3292 Main
and '\85 Maplemere Rd.

HIUB. HOUSE•
Shabbaron begin&lt; at 6 p.m. followed by a

Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for times.
Admission c harge.

SUNDAY-17
UUAB MUSIC WORKSHOP•
A Mini-Sa.mpler of Folk Music workshop.

Fillmore Rm. , Norton,
sion charge .

12 : ~

p .m. No admis·

·

HIUR BRUNCH•
The Yom Kippur War - One Year After is
· the topic of a speech by Binyamin Amiram at
the Hillel Brunch. 1209 Elmwood Ave., 12:30
p.m.
Mr. Amiram, a leader of Kibbutz Lavee in
Israel, has recently arrived in the U.S. as
representat ive of the Religious Section of"the
Youth and Hechalutz Department of the
Jewish Agency and .lets as religious d irector
within the Ameri ca n Ziohist Youth Fo undation . He will be speak ing at several Hille l
events, Sunday and Monday.
HILLEL GRAD CLUB COFFEfHOUSE•
Th e Kibbur z - A Way o f Ufe or a Social fK.
periment f is the topic of a speech by Binya min

Amiram at the Grad Club- Coffeehou se. 40
Capen Blvd ., 3:30p.m.
CHAMBER WIND ENSEMBLE RECITAL •
Th e UI B Chamber Wind Ensemble, directed
by James Kasprowicz, will give a recital, featur·
ing U/8 assistan t professo r and pianist, Yvar
Mikhasho ff. Baird Reci tal Hall , 8 p.m. No ad mission charge.
Sponsored by the Department of Music.
DANCE PERFORMANCE•
Th e Zodiaque Company directed by Li nda
Swi niu ch with guest artist Pere r Bert i ni.
Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m. Admissio n : S.75
stude nt s. S1 .50 gene ral public.
Sponsored by the Thea tre Depa rtment and
Ph ysica l Education Dance Programs and the
Office of Cu ltural Affai rs.
UUAB COFfEEHOUSE•
A Mini·Sampler of Folk Music. Fillmore
Rm ., Norto n, 6 p .m. Admission charge: $2.
HILLEL FELLOWSHIP MEfliNG•
Binya min Amiram speaks on Israel - State
40 Capen Blvd., 6
p.m.

and R e li~io n . Hillel House,

SATURDAY-16
LANGUAGE COLLOQUIUMI
Lan~-:ua~-:e on Trial)s the topic of th is colloqu ium. Today's discussions are scheduled
from 10 a.m .-3 p.m. 244 Norton.
Sponsored by the Depa rtment of German ic
and Slavic.
ATTICA WORKSHOP'
Workshops on Attica will take place from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. featuring speakers on va rious
topics and a free lun c h ~Those interested
shou ld meet in 337 Norton at10 a.m. for an-in trod uct ion and further information o n lOcation of workshops.
HILLEL HOUSE•

Shabbat Morning Service at 10 a.m. is
fo llowed by a Kiddush lu nch . Rabbi Ely Braun
leads the service. A discossion on Jewish fo lk
music will be led by Velvel Pasternak.
CHABAD HOUSE SERVICES•
Sabbath services followed by a meal will be
held at 10 a.m. at both houses, 3292 Main
Street and"165 Maplemere Rd .
BAND AND FREE BHR••

Student Club, Ellicott Complex, 9 p.m.
Sponsored b y the Int e rnational living·
Center and Student Affairs.
CACFILM'
Woodst ock . 140 Capen, 7:30 and 10:45 p .m.

Admission charge.
DANCE PERFORMANCE•
Th e Zodiaqu! Company directed by linda
Swiniuch ~ i t h guest artist Peter Bertini.
Harriman Theatre, 6 P·ll'· Admission : $.75
stude nts; $1.50 general public.
Sponrored-by the Theatre Department and
Physical Education -Dance Programs and the
Office of Cu ltural Affairs.
HIUR COFFIEHOUSE• Hillel and JSU sponror ~a coffeehouse with a
p reSentatio.n on JeWish music by VelvefPasternak. 240 Norton, 6 p .m.

IRCMOVIE• •
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. 170
Ellico,tt, 8 p .m. Open only to IRC fee-payers ."
UUAB COffHHOUSE•
A Mini·Sampler ' of Folk Music. Fillmore
Rm., Norton, 6 p.m. Admission charge: $2.

uu0RLM.. '
0 lucky Man (Anderson, ~973) . Norton

INTERNAnONAL FOlK DANCING•
Some instruction. Fillmore Room, Norton,
6:30-10,30 p.m.
Presented by Balkan Folk- Dancing.
U/ B ARTS FORUM BROADCAST•
Go rdo n Rogo ff, chiiirman of the U/ B
Departme nt of Theatre, is Esth er Swartz 's
guest. They will discuss U/B's upcom ing
production of Baal and the symposium on
Se:Kualiry, Kn owledge and (he Theatre, planned for December. WADV-FM (106.5), 10:0S
p.m.
UUABFilM ..

0 Lucky Man (Anderron, 1973). Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831·511 7 for times.
Admission cha rge.

MONDAY...:...1a ·
ISRAEL INFORMAnON TABIP
Bin·yamin Ami ram, an Israeli kibbutz leader
will be present at an Israel Information Tabl~
sponrored by Hillel House. Center lounge
Norton Union , 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
'
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT ALM•
~
Diary of a Country Priest 1«» Capen, 3 and 9
p .m. No admission charge.
BIOf'tiYSICS LECTUREI
Fundamental Mechanisms o( Growth i nd
Paffern Formation in Biologiql Syslems,
ProfesM&gt;r leon Glass, UniversitY" of Rochester.
Rm . 90, 4226 Ridge lea; coffee at 3:«) in Rm.
61 ; lecture at 4:10p.m.
Sponsored by tile Departments of
Biophysics,.Computer Science and Math.
CRL AND MOLECULAR IIIOLOGY
SlMINARf
Puriflc•tion and Transcriptional Properties
of DNA·Dependent RN-i. Polymer.se 8 ;;,
Ascites Tumor Cells_. John ~hen, g~llille stu·

dent. 2• Diefendorf Annex, •
0

p.m.

WATEII RI50URaS 1&lt; ENVIRONMENTAL

ENGINEERING SlMINARI
· Winter Research on bke Erie, kenton
Stewart, UIB associate professor of biology.
Rm. 7,'-A.cheson Annex, refreshmentS at 4
p.m., followed by the seminar. ~
R~·
.
Near rhe Big Chakra (SeversOn) and Serene
Veloci!y (Gehr). 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No odmission charse.
filMS•
Adieu ·Philippine· (R~zier) and . Blue Je•ns
{Rozier). 5 Acheson, 7 p.m. No admission
charge.
'= (tumiO.f»fff!_l.col.1)

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

~

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
NOVEMBER 7, 1974

~ta!e eyeing
Ph~- wor~,

Senatet

State-Wide scrutiny of doct ral
programs and the continuing question
,admissions were the principal topics .at
Tuesday's meeti ng of the Faculty Senate.
Senate Chairman George HOchfield
early turned the meeting over to guest
Mac Hull, dean of the Graduate School,
who described a state-wide st udy of doctoral programs in seleded fields currently bei ng undertaken by the State Ed uca tion Departm ent.
The st udy was recomm e nded in a
report o n New York State doctora l
education submitted to Education Commissioner Nyq uist l~st year by the socalled Fle mmin g Commission. Both
- public and private institutions a re incl uded in the survey.
The purpose of the survey, Hull said ,
- was to determine the quality of and need
fo r exist in g doctoral programs in New
York State.
Programs to be evaluated are asked to
prepare a self-study describing program
strudure, facult y, fiscal support , and
other aspeds of doctora l-l evel tra inin g.
Each program is visited by a small team of
persons distinguiShed in the discipline.
This team th en prepa res a report describing the stre ngt hs and weaknesses of the
program. After factual co rredion by the
department being examined, this report
is sent on to a program evaluation committee which recom mends that the
program be fully approved, conditionally ,,
approved (with the conditions specified
and p~ovision made for re:evaluation in
three years), or disapproved . .Programs
un!&gt;a!'PY with their evaluations may
appeal to a doctoral council, which
makes the final recommendations on
programs to1he commissioner.
Disapproval of a program amounts to
recomrilendation to disaccredit, Hull
note'd, since the SED d6es have legal
powers in this area.
To date, four ul8· departments have
been .scrutinized, an-d others are
scheduled. Che'l!istry and history had·
their site visits last spring. English and
physics were visited last fall . None has·
yet received notification from .the
program evaluation committee, Hull
said.
··
· .
Although the dean was reluctant to

N1itro'~ ·reco~ .c~ukl- curb paper use

With an eye to skyrodc.'etin_~ paper
msts, the lldmlnistr~~Mi CCII'npllting
uea of Univenlty Computing Seivices is
studying, the teasi.bilit)' ·of keeping an,, .
p~s recor~ on, ryucrofilm or some ot~er
mtcrolorm.
. ·
1\ccordin'g to . E~ ~ewis, a syst,e ms,
anal~ in lld?'tntStr!'tive Computin,B
who IS con~uctl08 the Study, the area tS
considerins ~ng a · microfilming
system)hat ,...,uld eliml.nJte th~ ~rc;onsuminB: printout step in the generalton of campus reCords.,
. ,
~ . Under consideration IS a system called
COM, Computer Output Microfilm.
With this .Y,tem, info~tion is taken
directly from the computer, tr~r)Siat~
from machine-r~adable ' to humanre~dable form,. an~ recorded Ot:l e!ther
m!crofilm or mtcroft~e _(the card-format
mtcrornedium).
;,
In a COM system, the relatively ··
cumbersome -computer printout is'
replaced by a·miniaturized record:
To IHustrate, LeWis 'dted the University's. registration list. Currently, sorite
30,1100 people are regis!ered at U/11. II
collll)uter P(intout of all their names and
student numben mls some 300 poses.
Tbl5 ~ Is three lncnes thick and
weishs as much as a deslt~e dictio~ry.
This same llstcat~be.c:ontained on thr"!'.
microfiche, eadt sliJh.tly Llrser than a
-.tandanl:txS" lndeicard. Moreover, the
microfiche cat1 be prOduced ten times·
faster than the printout; lewis noted.

printed information can be-put into. an
enveli&gt;pe_and.sentthrough theiNIIs fora dime.
Uoe.t~ lililuslr}:.,
tn industry, lewis said, computer ·out·
put microfiche is growing in popularity
as a &lt;!isposable medium, less expensive
and easier to handle than paper. Ford of
Can~da~ distributes a (laity pam inven·
tOry on miCrofiche, which user&lt; diSl'ard
at the end"Of the day, he said.
To facili~te the search .for a particular
·piece of jillamiation, data stored in
microform lo:indexed. The miniaturized
.records are kept in a format thai-pefmits
: them to .be readily reproduced in nonminiature form. . .
CampUS data which· could ~ · stored
using the system include siudent record·
(registration and transcript data), tman~

Early bir(l ge~ the worm' in job de~by

President &gt;fa~ who has, lectured the
nation on the traditional values' of thrift
. plate-cleaning and bel.t-tig~tening:
would undoubtedly be pleased to learn
that tJ/11 51Udents~ in these Clays of
econ.,omic doldrum's,-"have opted to
follow yet another maxim worthy of

needlep(iint.

Lewl$estlftlllied;

_;

.

'

U..-Giher advantqes fo a COM

.,..._-.tmn~nsto the analyst Stohp
sp~~~~~fsiil-'byaratlool~

17110
to -easy
· Dllttlbution
of microforms
is ako
md Inexpensive:
I
mlaollche NPtesenti"l 2110

pases

of

chances o'n missing" crack at the company of his or her dre~ms. So registrants
t~k to lining up, sorne_what O?ld- and
crotchety, in the middle ofthe night.'One
recent· nighi a group forced en~ into
Ha~ C ·to keep warm, and offidals
dectded SO!fl"thmg had !O be done.

~ Shop' NUIIIben

•

. Facled wilh-a ~e'dly. tigh't and still-

, !ish~ national ~ market,, those

res:

'

~ um ro ()allt- 2.

col . .fl

1

. entering the employment arena tn 1975
ha\oe apparentlY, bouKht the.notion that
"tl\e eaify bird sel! the worm."
.
Recent lnaeases in the cost of paper
(as mud! as 10 per Cll!lll in three months)
The worm is an appolntnient with a
hawe llimu"lalied Interest 'In non-paperrepresentatl!e oi.; one of · ~he many
depen'dent stora1e-and-retrleval
buSiness orsanlzatiorJs , whldt ·hold job
systemS, lewis said, Currently. the 1\dinterviews in the l:lniYerslty's ~t ·
lPd t:areer Guidai)Cle Ofl'iCe (a session
mlnlstrall've Cqmputlns. area ~ tens
of thousands of doiLir&lt; 'a year for print·
generally
an 'important
out paper. In addition to rising prices,
"foot"· In the er
neolt cloor). lind
fNIPel' useR f - chronic shcJrtases, jlar~of Ford's
. early Is 3 a.m., cer1ltl
brand of riiJied ~or ewn of
tlcularly of , _ srMies of paper.JnciYdlel "-IJpically used fqr printout.
Franklin's . . . . plln for the "healthy,
MQH.Nnt prices, records on microfilm
-'thy and wise'! llfw. ~'-rat w!lich.
or mJC11111die COlt about oile-tenth as
SIUIIeats '-.mati'*" sf-a up 'o ut• ·
muck to · ~ as those. on paper,: Side f'l-nent's H.,e. C offrces or. in-

hlpCeot'--

cial transactions, personnel records, and
interna.,...,ti.oiis-type da!••J ~!s,ro_id.
Such a system do."s requrre !_SO~antial capital outlay for equipment,
however, he not*:d·. .
.
~ COM speoahst from. the Manne
M1dland Corporatton, whtch provtdes
mtcroftlm. servtces . to busmesses and
other lnS~ItUUOOS, diSCUSsed ffiiCfOmedla
atasemmar on C~M held b~ the 1\dmtnt5t raltve Computmg area October~·
If the ~niversity does decide to go in
the diret:tion of COM, it would probably
depend initially on the service .bureau of
an outside corporation, lewis indicated.
Representatives of campus units with a
possible interest in such a system, in·
eluding Admissions and Records, the
libraries, and Fadlit1es Planning, were
invited to the seminar.

l1lhleW siln-uP ~this faiL

·

l'llcemint polic:i limits iPb hunten to
three Sign-ups for Interviews on the ftm
~ of reaistntlon for each IWCMWlek
period. left..,_ or added 1nt.rview
~rfods may be claimed jater. Apparently, however, no, one was taking any

•

•

That something, PlaQ!ment and Career
Guidan&lt;Ze'Director Gene Marten report&gt;,
was to haye Campus SeCurity undertake ·
a program of handtns out "butcher
shop" number&lt; to early arrival&gt;. Mid· night job hunten now gain not oitly
priority on sign-ups but also get the
chance to return ~ for -sleep and
warmtl\untilla.m.
·
~
The •: ntnnbers'' system, inSlituted for
the Monday, Oaober - 28, lnter.vlew

~

registratlon,~adeflnltel~nt, ,

Martell indicates.. Overlooldns some Initlal confusion M tile 8 a.m. opening
time, he says; thn..s.- fairly smoothly
and sign-ups-.. completed by~t
10:30 a.m. Instead d the ..usual :»noon. ~'No maner what syste
we
devise,'' he laments, "there Cloesn seem
to be any Way to ellmlture Hiles."
The numbers wiU be used next Monday ll!lovember 111 and asaln on
November 25, the final sign-up day for
this ~er. For next semester, also.
The onlY difflcuhy is that Martell and

Security aren't saying what tirrie "the
number&lt; will be passed out during the
night oLNovember 1D-11. "If you say 11
p.ll\. or 3 a.m., thars when a crush will
develop," Manell reasons. That the
numbers will be passed out overnight on
a "floating-schedule" is as specific as
anyone will geL While understandably
evasive on this point, the.,lacernent official emphasizes that studenli have been
_very coc)perat1ve about the sign-up
syotem, ·a nd have made ouggestions for
impro,vement - several of which have
been adopted. "We're working tosether
to make it as painless as possible," he
says.
PUllout Trerid
The rush for job interviews by a
minimum of about 200 UIB students
every other week refleCts a national
trend, Martell says. In a recent study of
student concerns reported in the NASI'A
/oiiiiul, a publication of the student personnel administrators' organization, job
placeiilent emersed as the number one .
worry. (Followed by academic achievement, social res.ulatkins,. amJIUS Hvlnf!
-styles, curricular decision-making and
sexual freedom; In that order, The lOp
two Issues of past years, dn.tg use anct
national · pOlitics, ranked 7th and ·lltl,l
respectively.)
'
•

{ttlm.ffi -(Nifr.

1, t ' "· 11

�~

November-7, 1914

Studeilts okayed Nomination·deadlne nears
fOr slots on ·
~or
SUNY ·---L--Ing·
aw,.;;....L
11
lt:d\.:JJ
ClJ',.m .
tenure board
f'!'

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/

-' dlscusstheNtteruntilhehadmetwith
administrators, remarks from the. f!Qor
Indicated that the History Depanment
had been admonished asalnst offering
dissertation-level work In cenaln subspecialties because . of lack of faculty
strength. The specific areas mentioned
were latin American hlstory, -Far Eastern
' history, and European history before
1780. .
.
Or. Hull noted that SUNY has been undena king an internal review of Its own
, doctoral proRrams.
'Hearing More'
"I'm sure you'll be hearing more about
this subject," the chairman commented.
"I'm afraid so," Hull said.
·
·
:
,
·
FoUowong Dr. Hull s appearance, the
Senate endo_rsed a package of
recommendatro~s on admissions
present_e d by cha1rma~ ~I the Senate
Comm•ttee on Adm1ss•ons Edward
Hovorka.
The talk was of floors' in presenting the
proposed policy for transfer students.
last year the University hoped to attract
1650 transfers, Hovorka said, presumably
to fill the empty beds created by UIB's
massive building program. To do so it
was necessary to take students with
grade' point averages less than 2.3.
Health-related professions had a higher
floor, h~ noted. "EnglneeriJlg had no
floor," he added. Last year ten transfers
were advised to register In engineering
in spite of G.P.A. 's less than 2, Hovorka
said, a situation that has led A &amp; R to
assign admission _numbers l to students
prior to registration. Or. H-ard Strauss
of engineering said that the ten students
so accepted had been carefully
monitored during the year.
11 Pressure to lowei the floor
is not
coming from the administration,"
Hovorka said, "rather some faculties are
lowering the floor." On the basis of a
"feeling"Ehat admittees with low
G.P... .!s ar poor academic . risks, the
committee .
mmended that tr1nsfers
with C.P.A.'s between 2.0 and 2.5 be admitted conditionally and all~ to con·
tinue at the UniverSity only If they ro_m·
plete 24 hours of ·work here with a C
average
pass-fail). The recommendation passed.
·

Nominations-for the State UnlveBity
relations with students, the candidate
must be generous witK personal time,
Distlnll"iohed Teaching Professorship or
the
Chancellor's
Awards
for
Excellence
easily
accessible, and must demonstrate a
. Facukr Appointments, Promotion and
continual concern with the Intellectual
In Teachlng should be flied Immediately,
Tenure haw! been approved by President
Dr. WIDiam H. Baumer, 1assistant vice
and social groWth of individual students.
Robert L Ketter, The procedures are an
president for academic affairs, an0. The candidate inust set high stan·
_ouqpowth t;llf a Faculty Senate resol.ut!on'
noUnced this week.
.
dard! for 'students and help them to at- /
lll!lllled'-t~ 5, which 1'1!!X)mmendNominations
should
be
sent
to
tain academic excellence. A quantity and
i!d the -..polntment of IWO students, one
Baumer, 201-K Hayes Hall, on the Main
quality of work that is more than average
p'odllllle and · one undeigraduote, to
Street Campus (831-4836i.
for the subject must be iequired. 'The
serw • IIMsers,to the Board.
''We- cannot guarantee to give . concandidate · must actively work with .in·
The resolution funher suaested that
sideration to any received later -than
the students be all-ed to attend
div~dual - studen~ to. h_e lp ther_n improve
November
18/' Baumer indicated. -"Permeetinp, eumlne dossierS to determine
the•rscholarlyor.artrst~ctechmqu~.
sons nominated will' be reviewed by a
E. The !=andrdate s evaluat1on of
whether ll"idel!nes for soliciting student
faculty nominating committee or a stustudents' work must be strongly supInput had been followed, and to provide
dent
nominating
committee.
potted
by evidence. He/she must be
a broader baSe of Input· data to the
Nominations should indicate which
willing to give much greater weight to
Board.
reviewing
co~mittee
is
preferred.
each
student's
final level of competence
. The approved procedures for student
Subsequent to that review, a University
than to. the performance at the beginpanic:lpatlon formulated by tiM! Board
screening
committee
inCluding
students,
, ning of the course. Expert teachers
- ' n the following five points:
faculty, · and administrators will screen
enable students to achieve high levels of
• The ~ student representatives are
and recommend to the President the
scholarship. Consequently, it is pc;&gt;ssible
bound by all of tlfe same rules of ethics
final
nominations
from
this
campus.
and conlidentlolity binding other Board
that the candidate's marking record may
Nominations should be accomP~nied by
..-.bets.
.
be somewhat above the average of
a brief supporting statement."
• Dossiers may be ~ by student - Guldelnes
his/her colleagues. If it is, it should be
.
representatives in the Office of the
supported by evidence. There must also
The guidelines lor the awards iollow:
· 5ecrelary to the BOard, but may not be
be -:vidence th~t the candidate ~oes not
Any faculty member who teaches an
removed from that office. .
hes1tate to g1ve low evaluations to
undergraduate course each semester
• The student representatives will
students who do poorly.
during the time period as prescribed by
receive the same notification of meetings
F. No person· may be recommended
· b regular mefl'lbers.
_
the prOJ!ram type (below) is eli~ilile for
"!ho has not regularly carried a normal
·nomination al\hough his teachmg load
• ·The student repn!Senlltives will be
teaching load for his/her· campus, both
may lndude _graduate courses as well.
present throushout each meeting,
in terms O?f the . number of semester
Nominees must, however, .have been
witnessing the debate and vote on each
hours tauglit and on terms of the number
teaching_ a full-time faculty load, ex~- They will be supplied with the
of students served. Teachers of studio
duslve otl.dminstrative duties, during
dossier of each case·at the meeting and
courses or other speci.aliz~ courses in
this same period.
·
·
may speak during the debate.
which numbers are normally low are to
For the Distinguished Teaching
• The Board ·views the students as
be considered in terms of !he load norProfessorship, the candidate must have
iepresentlng the UnlveBity, rather than a
_ mally expected_ lor this discipline.
atta'ined the rank of associate professor
· slven department .or Faculty, and.
- Depanment cha1rmen are not explicitly
or professor and must have completed at
therefore will not ask them to absent
exduded bu_t m~y
nominat~ on~y ~~
l~ast three years of fuli-tinie teaching on
themSelves or refrain -from comment
they m~t .ttus~nerpnofteaf!lms IC&gt;ild. ·
campus. Only . one nominee may be
when cases from their departments are
presentee!. This Is an exception to the
recommended by each SUNY Institution
Faculty Senate·recommendations, which
for the Distinguished Teaching
Professonhip.
~~students not participate ~n
For. th!' Awards f or f!tcellence_ in .
UIB's.Multidisciplhiary Center for the
Teaching. persons nominated by the
The IWO 11Udents1eleaed to serw with
Study of •Aging Is inau1111rating a disthe Board are Elaine MuseJ, a .Jraduate · .campus may be of any academi.c rank
tinguished ' lecture series which ' will
and need not have completed more than
student from the i)eportm!ent of Ger-·
l~ture natio_nally-known -experts · on
one year of full-time teaching on the
IIIMic and 5lowlc, and David Saleh, a
_various facets of growing old.
Ienior from the IJiolosy DepanmenL The
recommending campus. Campuses may
Six lectures are scheduled for the
student representatives were chosenJ&gt;y
recommend faculty members on a ratio
to rn un:dergraC!uate Students indicated · academic year, beginning· 'with ' a
Dr. " - from lisls submitted by the
· t'lovember 20 address by Dr. Roben J.
for the year.
Sludent Asooclatlon and GradUate StuAlso endOrsed was a requirement that
Havighurst of the UnlveBity of ~o.
The usual criteria for promotion are
•
Asooclatlon, and will serw for a
transfers · must complete 12 semester
,
·. Dr. Havighursi, whose WO&lt;t deals with
skill In teaching, sound scholarship
hours of work prior to application and
. .,_ faallty members 'haVe . , been - (us11ally . demonstrated· through
human development, will discuss ."A
expect to .have completed :H ·hours l&gt;y
publications or artistk pn)duction)--and
Social • Psychological Perspective of
'lppCIInled to ~ - o n the
the time they arrive on campus. Transfers'
Aging,'' at 3 p.m. in 2J3 Norton.
hard. They are ·Robert· Flenilns, • service to the Unl-.lty and to the
will be accepted In order ol merit ac:cor·
law and jurllpruclence, and . broader. community. The Dlstlftll"lohed
The Multidlodplinary (:enter ~ esdlos to G.P.A., the Senate lioted.
·
Teathlns Professorsh-Ips a'nd
tabllshe!l this summer to bring together
br. ao,ert . Mat~s, profenor of
Transfers wUI ~::I::' lnoeoslng
mediMbf ............. They replace
-Chaaa.llor's Awards for Euellenoe in
scholars·and professionals at UIB and In
portion of the u/8.
PCIIIUiotion
the COII)munlty who are wo4Jng ,on
. Dr. Elen McHCbolas, priJfeaor of adult
TeachJns place greatest emphasis on the
because . of the preant
on
-health, and Dr. Robert Rossbers,
:first of these. The Chailcellor's Awards·
several aspects of.theproblems of the as·
freshman-daslllze, HcMirlca
• -.
may be made to those who do not rrieet
pnll-rcrf c-leloreducation, whole
fna..
'
The aclmisi¥Nis chalmwl emphistzed
·Efforts are now underway to ecplore
...U the requlrem,nts for a Dlstlftll"lshed
the need for -.:fl ..-ed to 'ad·
feachJns ProfesSorship, but who. have "novel Interdisciplinary approachesu to missions. A &amp; R hjls ._ bien lll'lliortzed
tbe
suiiJect, according to Dr. C~ne
demonstrated ' outstandlnJ teachlns
to.do the 8ldenllve, ~_.ct.·
ability. It may be that those nominated . .A. Yeraarls, acting director of the
,necessary IIi... - . .. salil. ( A t ·for diese Awards haw! not -lned the
4nter. ~ un'-Sitles units Other thin A &amp; R are so
d&gt;artedJ .
.
Or, . Yeracaris envisionS the lecture
aademlc: rank or fensih ol service required for -..polntnoeut • a Dlstlnsuloh·
series • a vehicle '!to bring to the
. The Senate~ -.mend·
·
UnlveBity
and
the
community
at
large
ed Teachfna Professor or that, aJdioush
ed Hthe -bllshn!llill..--~ of
rdistlngulshed and outstanding contheir teachina skills are excellent, they
an office of ~ted In·
tributors to the study of asfng."
-·
haw! not reaChed the standard requl!ed
stltutlonal .-dl." 11ils Cllllt» -lei.
for such an appolntmenL
Dr. Havlghurst, the lnau1111ral speaker,
WO&lt;t with the Allmllllilns Committee In - ·
has been teaching at the UniveBity of · the study of aclmiSIIqns and transfer
Cllleoltl
Chicago since 1941. Or. Yeracarls
practices and _.... . the ac:aclemlc
The following criteria are1o be used In
•
~
him as "the dean of the·stlldy
the selealon of penon$to be (KII'IIInated
achievement of students admitted by •
of human developmenl.ln the United
forellheroftheawards:
'
regular admissions standards, as
States.'' ~
A. There must ... positive evidence
·transfers, In EOP, and by other criteria. '
The five other lecturers scheduled to
that the c:andlclate performs superbly In
· EOP~
speak
are:
the c:lossroom. The Oomlnees rnust main·
• ·o.. Roben R. Kohn, ~fessor of
The Senate .aso recommended that
taln a flexible Instructional .policy which
MIIIPII rwdlly to student needs, Interests patholoSY, Case Western Reserve EOP be authorlatl to admit 450 new 1
Unfvel:slty,
who
will
.speak
on.!Hornedlcal
'students In the faR of 1975, CMr the oband problems. Mastery of ·several
aspects of aging, January 22;
teachlns technlq·ues must be
lectlon of sevei-al- that little was
' • Dr. Janies Blrren, ,dlredOI" of the
known by the carnpuwt-laraeabout the
clemousuilted.
University
of
Southern
CaiHornla
EOPprogram.
.
11', The Q!ICiidate must be a .broad·
tofosy Center, on behavior, health and
, plllltld scholar •
~ abnelst of
A pion for early adm!Sions also
aging.
February
5;
,
hlslher- field~ whO ... the reJe. · • Dr. abel Slwoas 'president of· the endorsed (See story, Plllll 3).
1
Dr. James l.awl.r ~the report
1\tnerbn Gerontoloslllll Assoclailon,
on~ care preparta-llf~ spitlaf l»mcon'WlldofOI!tai~Much.-19; ~­
: t. 'lhie 6
·
Wri
mlttee of the~ ~;J;aprlll.
" • Mn; llline 8rody of the Philadelphia
AlthOugh 'clfsdiMibri Of -the ~'1m.
and abW aS*'
Geriltrlc Center on. the phliolophy of
deferred,~--~ that any
. IIOdal senlc:lls ~the ..... April 9; and
Center for the~ c'if f.lrly.dllldhood
• Dr. t-*11 Hayflldc, DIOfaor of
~lt~biHiefelaped
rnedlctd ~. '5tanlord IJnl-- tltf~-tlledldrle. on·ceiJ •blofosy Ol'f"Umpus shduld~rtlf be a
of~ t,pltl25.
All ...... - open to'lhl! l*\lllc:: .
QlrJI!DI~JAI!t~; -.

. . Prooeclures student partldpation In .
the adlvltles of the ~rs Board on

l?e

Aging Center plans
series. of lectures '

(oo

_,__

..

.__._..-«

::tf.·

eemn.

=~~~
~::.~

~~~~

�/I' .

November 7, 1974

·I ...

1

I

.Fuii-Jime
students up by
8oo this fall

lliohops ~cheek~ with dewlo. oheib with • ........, os students In the
School of Ar&lt;hltoctu.., ond fnritonmentol DesiJn celebr•tod tt.lloween wUh •
pArty in the cnemous Buffalo Meter Plant this week. Some settled for iust be-

Ins cheek to cheek.

-

The University's fall credh enrollment
total of 24,983 - an increase of 3.27 per
cent over last yea r - includes 17,881 fulltime students (a rise of more than 800
over last fall), according to detailed
enrollment breakdowns prepared by the
Office of Admissions and Records.
The overall total is made up of 15,034
- men and 9,949 women, the A &amp; R figures
indicate.
Total day enrollment is 20,599 (12,1_20
men and 8,479 women) compared to 19,534 last fall. Of these, 13,399· are undergraduate students (7,504 men and 5,895 women}- 6,448 in the lower division
(5,754 last yea r) and 6,951 in the upper
di vision (6,742 last year) . The undergraduate total includes 12;249 fulltime students (6,948 men and 5.301
women) and 1,150 part-time.
Day division graduate enrollment is 5,·
560, up 1.91 per cent from last fall'$ 5,456.
The total includes 2,624 full-time (1,638
men and 986 women) and 2,936 part-time
(1 ,656 men and 1,280 women). Full-time
grad uate women increased by 50 over
last fall while full-time men declined by
approximately the same number.
The professional schools of law, Dentistry · and Medicine have a total fall
~haract_eristic~ of the students admitted
registration
of 1,640 comp~red to 1,582
m!o th1s s~eCJal program," the subcomlast year. All but two of these st~dents
m11tee adviSed .
.
are
classified
as full-time. The· total inThe s u b co m m 1 t tee . ~ u r the r
cludes 318 women (up from 278 last fall)
recommended that an add111onal 25
and 1,322 men. The Medical School has
students be spec1ally admitted fo r the
116 women and 408 men; Dentistry, 17
following academic year.
women and 321 men; the 'Pharmacy doc"Wit~ ~ total of 50 students, ave~ two
toral progi'am, 5 women and 3 men; and
years, ~~ 1s expected that more rel1able
the law School, 180 women and 590
and valid evaluations of the success of
men. last fall, there were 199 w9men in
th~ pr?g~am can be made," the sul?comMedicine, 14 in Dentistry and 152 in law.
m1ttee sa1d.
Evening credit enrollment in Millard
Fillmore College is 4,384 this fall, down
1
fr:om,4,657last year. There are 1,368 "f_ulltime" evening students (1,095 m~n aqd
organizations co nducted 4,500 interviews and Manell feels both totals will be
273 women) and 3,016 pan-time (1,819
men and 1,197 women). •
surpassed this year, barring economic
Not included in the overall enrollment
disaster.
"to!al . of. 24,983.. are l,695 indi~id~ak
Placement and Career Guidahce
registered
for credit-free courses.
records indicate an interest in campus inDay-time enrollment is broken down
terviewing at least equal to last year's on
by Faculties and levels as follows (with
the part of accounting firms, business.comparable 1973 figures in parentheses) :
oriented sales and marketing
1\rts and Letters: 2,097 (2, 130) - lower
organizations, and engineering cOncerns. And these sales organizations,
division, S40 (548); upper divisioR, 958
Manell says, seem "more and more"
(985); graduate, 599 (59n.
to be looking for persons from
Educational · Studie&gt;: ],68() -l1.7.50)· lower· division, 16 (30); , UPP$'rdiy-isiQn,_92
all disciplines, not just those . ·from
(138) ~ gr~duaJe, :t--,572 (1,5112): .
,
business fields. " What has tailed off most
drastically," he indicato:_s, "is the market
Engineering. a_r,&gt;d .1\pplied: Scienc;es:-1..for jobs for those with teacher808 (1,47l) - ~ . lo)li!'r :dlvis~•. 6$7 (~18}; '
preparation backgrounds."
upper division, 546 (476); graduate, li05
(579).
.
Whether firms which are interviewing
are simply looking "for replacements or
Health Sciences: 4,118 (3,908).-lower
are trying to fill new, growth positions
division, 1,362 (1,188); upper division, 1,cannot be accurately assessed at this
127 (1,077) ; graduate, 759 (7fi3);
point. Martell's guess is that many comprofessional - Medicine 524 (522), Den·
panies are ·primarily interested in
tistry, 338 (353), PIIJrmacy doctoral, 8 (5).
Law ~nd Jurisprudence: 770 (702), all
developing "a bank ior potential
professional. .
employment in case there is growth."
Natur.~f Sciences and M~tia : 2,Thus, fewer job offers may be
374 (2,294) - lower division, 1,1101 (985);
fonhcoming in 1975.
upper division, 893 (811);i graduate, 480
a-n.... ~.__
(498).
.
• "-"a ,.,...
. In recent years, Martell no\esJ
Social Sciences and Administration: 3,between 18 and 22 per cent of studen!l

Early admissi~ns plan gets faculty -s upport
College wili begin a year early for
preparedness to cope with the demands
gssociated with a complex University
some precocious- high~school students if
an early admissions plan adopted by the
Center."
Faculty Senate Tuesday is put into effect. _
Eacll of the 25 students accepted for
The plan, rec'?mmended by a subcom1975-76 will be assigned a carefully
mittee of the Senate's Admissions Comselected DUE advisor.
mittee calls .for admission as U/8
freshm'erl of ~n initial group 9f 25

~~Every effort

talented high-school juniOrs.
As the subcommittee, chaired by Norman. Solkoff (psychiatry), wrote ~ in explanation of the plan, "It has long ·been
- an untested beliefthat the significant intellectual and personal benefits to be
derived from a universi~ education can
· · 'd 1 · ch ·
I It
OCCU&lt; on y a er an '" lVI ua rea es
·some optimal :level of academic and
emotional maturity, defined arbitrarily
bn the basis of compl~tion· of a 'COI'h·
pre'hensive high-school program,
through grade twetve. However, more
recent evidence, ~lly data based
upon individual differences.._in intellectual, social and emotional-development,
chall
1his
·
nd ·
f
enge
a~'!•on ..a poont 10 ac- tors 01~ _th.an S&lt;mpl': llme-m-school, ~s
more Slg(\oficant predoctors of success '"
co!.7t'.e .de 1h 1 1
be 0 1 ~ d 15
t IS
ir
a nun:' r
u en10
are both Interested In and prepare:&lt;!
.
':n~ higher educatiOn priOr 10 comple-lion of a highrl
progd:'
an~
th:t
1
ear -e •
they would pro from
posure to an envin&gt;f!"":nt ar more conducive t~ creative ~mong th_an present·
ly exists on most tradotlonal hl~h ~h"?ls.
Concomitantly., our own mstatutton
would certainly benefit from the
)&gt;resence of reladvely young, bright, and
·

"I

~iall .c:rut~Yescholars."

poUnder ~e plan . (which conforms to
State Eduation Depanment guidelines),
b och
descrlblns the new program
r ldub! distributed to ali the hilgh
wou
.
h
schools in the State, wnh sc oo 1
guidance counselors serving . as the
primary disseminators ·of information
about the program.
- Young persons who apply woilld be
scrutinized on ""'basis of four ctiteria :
1) standudlred test score~ (the PSAT,
SAT, or ACO; 2i grade point average; l)
evidence of special skills or ajtlltudes
such as musical ability or aehleoement in
sdence; and 4l ''lndslve" Teeolllmenelations from a gulda!Kle counselor, a
· teacher and the school prfncipal
"a~ to the applicant's acadeinic
and -'anal sulbobillty" for such • ·

,irop.m.

'

This preliminary lifting will be folloW·
ed'by a personal Interview with memben
of lbe Early Admission~ Committee "to
determine, In a pneral sense, (the
applfc:ant'sl el!"'tlonal and- social

will be made to incor-

pora~e procedures for evaluating the
success of this program. However, the
selection of particular research methods,
evaluation instru~en~s and appr.o priate
control group&lt; w1ll depend upon · the

Early bird job ~hunt ~

(from p.atfe 1, ~1. .f)

(

,

•

Th
·
~ ·
tnpl '
is &lt;ensuming mterr.n '" e
oyment, ooupled with,reports of fewer jobs
available, has prompted more and more
stlltlents to rf!gi~ter. for interviews this
year. And because of this interest, many
companies are expanding their interview
plans. Xerox, here this week, originally
intended to· have one i(\terviewer but increa~ the number 10 three.

What's the Oudool&lt;l
Is the employment outlook for 1975
really so dismal as to warrant all this
scramb.ling around for interviews?
Martell isn't sure. ~
long-range employment trends for
the rest of the 1970's, as predicted by the
U.S. Bureau of labor Staiistics, are
moderate to favorable, he indicates. And
the 1974 employment market was a good
one in the aggregate - job offers ·for
bachelor's degree holders were up 25
pe""r cent; those for master's recipients,
UP- 12·per cent · and~hose for individuals
wt"-th -'-~-tes' up ,. per cent
""'-'"'" . •
.,..
·. What all thiS means. for 1975, however,
" yet to · '?" deto;rmoned, Mane[l says.
One thing IS certa1n, though, more compa_nies "!!ll have interviewed on campus
thiS semester INn last fall (76 compared
10 6l) . During all of 1973 _74 247
'

SnoW ~
-1~-!ng
procedure set

·
In the event that snowfall forces dosing of the University this fall and winter,
area broadcasters and the Uni~ty
switchboard will have the word by 6:15
a.m., ac:cordlng to protedures outlined
this - " by E. w. Doty. vice. president
for opemions and systems. J
A decision to Close, Doty said, wiU be
made If ovanlght snciwf.tl and weather
conditions are such thit snow remc&gt;Yal
crews cannot dur campus areas. Such a
determination wauld be made by
. . . . . _ aew superv11on by 5:30 .
a.m. Daly -.1c1 &amp;e Clllfllaaed In such a
case by 5:45 a.m. and would died&lt; with
the l'leliclent for a final cktennlnation
prior to 6 a.m.
If _ . , . dlsses .,_ not to be held,
~:e President: will ......... by
media

.__.
. clurtna lbe day.

'

-

948 (3,975) -

lowet.. dlvlilon,

919 ~;

who interviewed on campus had their
upper divisloll, 2,089 (~3); g~e
employment initiated by this contaCt.
940 (974).
•
. • . ' -:
T1ie natibnal average is ,~n 12 a_nd
School of Afana'ieme!;t:l$1' {1,lll3)
15 per.cent.
-.
- lower division, 97 (400); ·UJIIN!i divi·· For those eagerto exercise all their op- - sion, 794 (600); graduate, 600 (433). • ·
_ lions, he points out that surveys indicate
Reglsteted with "no majors" ue 1,376
school placement Interviews and
lower di~ .students, 4521n the upper
professors a'l' the. second best avenues
divislorl, arid five grad IWdents.
for finding ai.Job. Direct applications to
...L...!-.;. __
employers rank flrstJ . and friends and
~~~.
relatives thlri!, fo11owed by newspaper
• ~rofesilonal organlzadons and
Terry Chaftes Schwan, Ul'l aoncert •

M££6

,.

lcals, private"-employment .....des, and pullltc employmeitt apmcies.

-r
-r

Andlng-a Jpb. Minell r-. Is a
"penon a I ,punult(' defying glib
~ Most people haiie
definite Ideas about- posraphlcal
pteferellces. ~nd what !hey will or w.o't

manager, wlft be chairman-for the 1974
Conference of the llllerNdonll Sodety -

of Performing Arts Admlnistrafon,
J)ecember 11-14 In the New York
Sheraton Hotel.
.
Dr. Gerald O'Grady, . , _ . of the
Instructional' Communlcadort Center
do.
.
and hud of media studies here, will be
1
. "If ~ - - . out of school , on the prosram with a lecture•
would dO iln;th~n&amp; then .everyone
clemonstlltlon entitled "New'DirealcQ
would let 1a job,~ he And,
In Media."
. presumdlly, lno one -.old hiVe to pt
up I l l a.m.j to set. titb( for .... "-·

view slp-u"'

.

the~~~=·
~
.
.

�November 7, 1974

.4

Senate panel offers day care alternative

.
Foculty supporters of the fiscally
troubled Day Core C~nter have pro~ed an altema_tlve solutoon to the Centers
current crisis.
The · plan, ~ by a five-person
special commonee of the Faculty Senate
headed by ·Dr. James L~':"ler
(philosophy), calls upon the admonostration to fund the Cent~~ adequately :'on a
University-wide .basis at least until the
end of the academic year. ·
.
lhe plan al_so calls for the for~atoon of
a . campus-wide faculty committee to
coordinate campus research .that makes
use of the ~enter. This ~.monee wo~ld .
~ lnvestipte the possoiJilny ~f formong
a cAnter for the Study of Early Childhood
~ on campus, with the pay
Core !=enter presumably as its nudeus.
Under the Lawler plan, policy for the
Day Core C,.nter wou~d be formulated
1 by a policy ~mittee made up of four
.. representatives from the proposed
faculty, c~mmlttee, three parent
representativeS, •r:&gt;&lt;! a person desognated
by the administration.
.
. The faculty group.further recommendell that first priority for any ex~nded
:funding for the Cent~ be earmarked for
·extenc:11111 campus ch11d care,!o .students
Jn Millard Allmore ~lege. ( Noght ~re
as ·well as day care _was the slog_an rntroduced atTuesday's Senate meeting.)

Aade.iclesow'CePotentW
Uke the proposal recently developed
by the academic vice pre5ident, the
faculty plan emphasizes the potential of
the ·eenter as an academic resource for

the campus.
However, as Lawler not~, the faculty
group also wishes to emphasize the im- ·
portance of campus day care as a service.
"Emphasis on the eduational function
of the Day Care Center ·for definite
educational program• should not
necessarily be opposed to the 'service'
function," the report states.
The much-contested issue of who will
coritroi"the Day Core Center; porents '"'
___ ... ·
be· d
U?iverslty, n=&gt; ~
a• i'(islve one;
tlie report argues. State .law mandates a
hisll degree of porental involvement in
day. care, arid federal regulations give
pa1ents the final authority In experimen• tatlon involvins their children. This
lesislatfon does not mean, however, that
porents should ''control" academic
~nio, oays the report.
. ··'We are convinced that mlsapprehensions on variou• 51c1es can be overcome
by cooperative formulation of clear
~ policies and guidelines for the
eenter"thefacultywrfte
·
The
committee documents the
- t o whidi the Center "has contrlbuted to the rt.spon.ibllity' of the
University for lncrusing the portidpo-

i.awler

tlondmlnoritygroupsandwomen." ·
More than one-thlnl"of the 64 children
. _ enrolled In the Center are minority
children. Two-dunlo of the enrolfees·are
fN•Ir-•s 111ith a per cap1ra Income of
$2.11f1D a year. Many of the'
n 1n1m single parent families.
areswdimts (others
• •lla.,MIIIIanJ.

.· · Smith says-

1
ed b
rei 1 d
dude the porent-child relationship and
charg
Y ~ comme a ay care
· regard children as simple products of a · e,;a
_cv
centers.
laboratory.''
-.1
Affinnatlft Action
Finally, the group faced the poinful
lhe faculty group notes that federal
question of funding. "Beause of the
Ca~ any student accurately assess the
affirmative action. guidelines urge _inbroad diversity of programs served by
quality .of a college teacher!
stitutions to explore ways of provodong
the D;ry Care Center its funding should
"There is some everyday statistical
daycare.
.
not be through aporticulardepartment
reasoning to support the answer, yes,
"In the post," Jhe Lawler report
or a select number of deportments, but
yes, yes," Dr. Charles E. Smith of Biology
observes, "the initiative ·.f~r deyeloping
on a University-wide basis. A pay-as-youcontended at the induction meeting of
day care In _order to faohtate access _to
go policy would seriously inhibit involyePhi Eta Sigma and Alpha Lambda Delta,
the Unlversoty has rested la~go;ly woth
ment in the program, particularly dunng
scholarship sodeties, in Norton Hall
students themselves. In• shofiong the
the initial period of poli_cy planning and
Monday night.
emphasis more and more to the responorganization . . .. "
It is the perception of the "Nincomsibility of the University ~~~inistration
The administration's Consortium
poop Matrix" which underlies the
and faculty, the present cn_so~ !n day car~ ·
proposal appears 10 call for funding
reliability of student &lt;&gt;valuations, Smith
funding places the responsobohty where ot
through the budgets ,0 f individual
said.
primarily belongs.'' .
.
schools and deportments.
''The reasoning," Smith explained,.:•;,
The !""'~mendatoon that any_ future
"It may be argued that this is only
that all of us know professors were once
exponsoon forst benefot Moll~rd Follmore
depriving some other PQtential benestudents and that in every college class of
students_was l'rompted by a survey taken
ficiary of such funds, robbing Peter to
any size there are a few who will go on to
by MFC on wh_och_over ten percent of !he
pay Paul," the faculty continue. "If money
become professors. Thus, on a distribur~pondents ~~~rcated that a~ evenmg
is tight in the short run, investment
tion curve of ability (not, repeat, not inchold-care . faohty _would ~ of conin providing a good Day Care Center and
telligence, a word I believe means
siderable aod to theor academoc progress.
in promoting early childhood studies will
nothing), or quality of -head, professors
MFC's survey is th_e on_ly poll of day care
increase the chances of more substantial
show a skewed distribution .toward the
needs that the Unoversoty has conducted,
funds in the long run. By responding to
high end. But all of us know after a couple
the report notes.
the evident needs in the field of child
of semesters that there is a tail of the dis"In view of the_ fact th.at the expected
care and by giving the leadership that
tribution extending below the mean for
"enrollment on Mollard Foil more College
reflects the status of a 'research center,
the entire student population. There are
has dro~ped over t~e past two years to a
the University will be makin@: a strong
cases of professors who have less native
substantoal degree, the report argues,
case for its value to the public and will
ability in their own field than the average
"this ackn?Wiedgement of the conearn increased public support."
student in their classes. These are ninsiderable ~mportance that day care
Members of the Commiltee, in addicompoops.
·
would have to over t~n per a:nt of the
tion to its chairman, are: Roy . ford
" Charm is one name for a quality
'!uden~ sho~ld be goven senous con(psychology); Ruth McGrath (education),
different from native ability," Smith said.
s1deratron. Is tt ~ot reasonable ~o suggest
. Richard Salzer (edUcation), and Marcia
" Humanity, charisma, patience might be
that the &lt;U:!&gt;P on enrollm_e~t os due to
Sullivan (nursing).
bener names. Assuming charm means all
genera II~ hogher costs of h~ong, and that
The report is being considered by t~e
those things in a professor, how can
by provtdrng evemng ch1ld care the
Senate Executive Committee and is exfaculty be fitted into a matrix of nincomUnlve~si!Y would malte itself more
peeled to be acted upon at nex! month's
poop and 'compoop' (compos mentis?)
a~soble l~ _the ~pie 0 Buffalo who
meeting of the full Senate. Copoes of the
versus charm and no charm! Simple!
have to prov•de chrld. carel
-.....
report were circulated at Tuesday's
Everybody knows professors who are
~e L:awler com!'lrttee also u~g~ the
Senate meeting for information purposes
nincompoops with charm, others who
Uno~ersoty t? consoder the possobohty of
and to elicit further suggestions from the
are compoops without charm, and
portoal fundong through CS.E.A. should
faculty.
the four positions of the matrix are rich
campus day care be extended to staff
with the meaning of memories for all
c_holdr~n (as ~ecom!""nded by federal atstudents who have been through a couformatove actoon guodehnes).
pie of semesters and met a few
Pubic Support Value
professors.
Th
· •tt
dd"f
II
bse
d
"How, then, can students reliably
1
. e p&gt;mmo ee a . oona_ Y 0
rve
,
evaluate ·taCj.Jityl Answer: I don~ know,
that the Center's contonuong onvolvement with community agencies, ranging but they generally do, when I compore
from the Buffalo Youth Board to the Gorl
all the published. evaluations I've seen
Scouts, is evidence to the publoc of the
J
with what I know about the ability-of the
University's desire to be accessi&amp;le. "By
professors evaluated. Even the nincomproviding services, such as day care,
·
poops with e11ormous room-filling
which make the University more open to
K;a~;ar
charm are recognized for what they are
the public, ihe University increases its
--r"'l"'_.
Qy the weaker students!'
chances ·of receiving support from the
Editor:
Smith illustrated his talk wit~ .30x.Opublic,'' the report emphasizes.
. . ,
Lest the overall University Community
inch ponels he m•de to illustrate the .
Central to the Lawler Commonee s
be convinced that ComP,!Jtlng Services
"quality of head" distributions and the
plan is- a. proposal th;ll ~ould _upgrade
on this campus are about to disappear, I
matrix.
academoc programs onvolvong the
would like to offer the-following_facts in
"!~~
Center. ~ total of 58 _different_resear&lt;;h,
response to the recent article on
llj
observatoon-oreducationalprojectswere
Academic Computing Services.
e~
·
conducted at the Center last year, the
(ltepcllfer, October 24).
·
IUdll
group found . Most of these were short.As all the members of the Academic
termprojectsinvolvingUillstudents.
Advisory Comminee and· the Faculty
November 15 Is the starting date for
l.nstead of an unfocussed, under- ·
Senate .C ommittee on Computing are
winter porklng restrictions, Roben E.
supervised, ad hoc research program,
well aware, a request for proposal for
Hunt, dlrect,or Of Environmental' Health
the· faculty urged that a coordinated apnew academic computing hardware is
ancf Safety, said this week.
.
proach to research in early childhood be
currently in' the hands of the Division 91"
.All Main Street lots have notkes
adopted using the Center. AI'8Jling that
the Budget and we fully expect to have
posted at entrana!S to indicate whether
the interdisciplinary study of 'early
on this campus, by the Fall of 1975, a
or no1 ow:mlght parltlng 1s penllltted~ ~
childhood development is an area of insignificantly enlarge!! machine for
H t 11id
- - • - Interest to academia and nonun
~-··D
a...o.•ng •on ·~mpus ......_ midn....., wi II
9•cademlc Com~ng Services. lrt addi·-demla alike, the ~·p recommendrenu
.,...,
'lim
·ed-"'--t the University~·.::.....~ ... consider
tion, It should
noted that while the · be restrlcled to the 5hennan facultx lot,
'""
,...
..
~,
presenthardwarelssix-•rsold(.._ond
Po_..er
f~·lty lot--""
the
Mal~
1110
of esta•llshing
a center for
,_
~,
·~
the '--'bllity
10
,.,...
the normal lifetime of computing
lot. In these lots, Internal signs wi I
hardware) each month during the last . designate ~I areal to be used.
· its otudy. "At a time whef! early
childhood arid day care are being given
several we haw broken a record.,for the
T1Je purpose of the reslrictlon, Hunt
recognltlortnatlonally, the University has - number ot jobs turned OUt by tlie 6400,
said, Is to faciliWe snow ..-!In each
a vital role to play ln providing ·
while the turnaround time for the maof die parltlng - . ~ !*ked In
leadenhip In assisting these new and lm·
jorlty of ~ur users ~ntlnues to be
violation Qf regulations !Ill)' be ticketed
portant areas," the committee said.
relatively short.
for Illegal porltlns and arellibjecl to tow~kcu! z oal
The report . of our External YkllinB
lng.hesaid.A(owedvehlclemaybefm·
~ lilvolvement In any.expanded
Committee, whidt visited our ampus In
pouncted until the tow1ns fee·Is paid.
campus day care llf'll"m would be bothJune, contained the following statement:
On days when SflOW has to be removnatural and desinlble, the report , said:
"The Evaluation Committee an report
ed, the Maintenance
will
"Chilcken are not pieces of paper, and
that In spite of oome dlfflcuhles to be disp1ooor aras In the three ~t lae or
par.-- naturally deeplr CXIIICII!med
cussed below, ri1os1 ac:ademlc computer
In aclJacent lots. All cars nust 6e temOV·
they are ...ed.H However,
with the 5erVIce
ed to thesedeared areas prior to. 2a.m.
the faculty~ "Parent Inthej~~~!flomtlloe~IOI!!'
Afierthelotswheteovemlghlparklngls
" " ' - - ' ..... lnldllhe. permitted have '-" cleared. cars
~-

nincom~flS'
·
to spot

!,

Ner§

Compuung,sat
•_.:
•d'

.

t aOO.ul
. ·
nodi
fO

WiInter ......
... -·
L:..•

1

DeParunent

about'-

---

max

-----fllll!'l~~·.........

be returned to their

or~F~~ · spaa!S,

- .

lfj~~~~=r .- ::at.~---..; . .
;;;;;

LIS'

.

.

~

�November 7, ·1974

U/8 • ·ns

'Energy
crisis'
\
causes SUNY
dollar crunch

~~cr'

.

Conference

State University is faced with an $8
million shortage in its utility budget, a .
need for S33 million against a budget of
S25 million, E.W. Doty, vice president fo r
finance and management, reported in a
memo to vice presidents and presidential

assistanfi this week.
Thus, he said, "the energy crisis) s ve-ry
much still with us, but unfortunately it is
no longer very apparent to any except

those who pay the bills. It has become
only a dollar problem."
Electrical rates in some parts of the
State have more than doubled, coal
prices ha.ve almostl&lt;ipled, and all utility
prices continue to rise rapidly, Doty
pointed out. "Although we continue to
benefit from the actions that we took last
winter as a result of the fuel crisis, there
has been gradual and incremental move"\ent back toward previous energy usage
practices.
"We will have to get back to doing at ·
least as well as we did last winter, and
probably, ultimately, considerably bener
than that," Doty indicated. The present
dollar problem is real and severe, he
said, but it is very likely that there will be
soon - in months, not years - both a
dollar problem and an absolute absence
of adequate fuel.
"The University seeks to lead in many
areas," Doty said. "Certainly this area,
conservation of the earth's precious
resources, should be one in which an institution dedicated to the future should
be forembst."
Oo~y called attention to a memo from
SUNY Central calling for the following
operating criteria to be observed until
funher notice:
.
1-HeatJns. Venliladn&amp; and Air Con-

dllionlns (Winterl

a. Daytime temperatures should not
exceed 680f in all academic buildings,
b. Nighttime, weekend and vacation
period temperatures' should not exceed
55"1' in all academic buildings.
c. Twenty-four hOur tt!mperatures in
residence halls and infirmaries should
not ex teed 68°F ; during vacation
periods, thermostats should be set back
to 550f in these areas.
d. Domestic hot water temperatures
should not exceed 120'F except in
kitchens and infirmaries. State Health
Departmen"t regulations for thi&gt;se areas
will be "observed.
1
e. Outside "'l'ke-up air should not exceed 10 per cent pf the total building air
requirement unless needed for_ precooling (except strUctures requiring 100
per cent make-up airl.
11--Sedrlal
The following Illumination levels
should not be exceeded: a. laboratories,
70 footcandles; b. offices, dassrooms,
lecture halls, kitchens, 50 f!)Oicandles;. c.
dining halls, 30 fOOicandles; d. corridors,
lobbies, stairWells and public areas, 20
footcandles; e. storage spaces, service
corridon, dodcs, etc._, 15 lootcandles;
and f. parldng lots, wallcways, roadways,
quad site llghdng, 0.8 fOOicandles.
·
"We will, ol .coune, have difficulty
with · some of the temperature requirements," Doty pointed out,
"because our controls are not In all cases
sufficiently sophisticated or automated
to do the job. This, along with all other
aspeas ol energy saving, Is going to take
the cooperation ol everyone, students,
faculty, and staff, to achieve the
necessary reduCtions In "enersy usage."

sr-

New-Wke c:hanc:dor

7he M"fSal)thrope'
.,._..t

The ~of. The.ln! _.
j&gt;orlorm•nces of Moliere's ''The Misonthrope,"
cliftdl!d by Wud Wllllomson, IOnJshl throush Suncl.ty •t 1:30 p.m. in H~rri""'n The•tre.
~

Bahi;-Miles are confirmed·.
as new Biology division heads
biochemistry . and was made full
Drs. Om P. Baht and Philip G. Miles
professor in 1971.
_
have been confirmed as directors of the
Author of several books and articles,
two divisions within the newly establishDr.
Baht
was
first
to
successfully
isolate
ed Department of Biological Sciences.
and analyze a human pregnancy urine
Appointed by President Robert l.
' hormone as a significant step toward ferKetter, Dr. Bah I is director of the Division
tility control, in 1972. A year later he
of Cell and Molecular Biology and Dr.
received the Padam Bhushan award,
Miles is director · of the Division of
India's highest dvilian honor, for his
Biology.
work in this area.
·
- or. Miles, 57, has been a UIB faculty
The departmental reorganization is·the
result of a recommendation made by the
member since 1956, prior to which he .
Task Force on the Utilization of life
taught at the University of Chicago and
Sciences ResOurces ippointed in 1973
conducted reseanch at Harvard.
A native of Olean, he completed his
and chained by Dr. Jui H. Wang, U/B
Einstein professor. (Repcllfet, September ·
undergraduate studies at Yale and holds
19.)
.
a doctorate ftom Indiana University.
A native of India, Dr. Baht, 47, received
In 1970 Dr. Miles was the first United
his bachelor's and master's degrees
Stat~ scientist to be awarded a grant to
·conduct neseanch in China undeT the
,there and his Ph.D. fnom the University
of Minnesota. He joined the U/11 faculty
U.~.-KO!pUIIIIICi of Chin&amp; Cooperative
In 1966 as assistant profe~sor of

U/ B has joined C;inisius, Niagara and
Buffalo State in the formation of an intercollegiate athletic conference to be
known as the " Big Four Conference."
Competition in the new league, which
was announced at a press briefing last
Thursday, will begin in the fall of 197S
and will involve eight sports: baseball,
basketball, cross country, golf, soccer,
swimming, tennis, and track.
. Women's sports will also be included
in league activities and there is no limit
on the number of colleges and universities which may eventually become
members, organizers say.
.'
Commissioner for the "Big Four'' will
be Howard MacAdam, 'athletlc director
al Buffalo State, who says that "from the
economic and local interest standpoints,
and also for students, alumni and - the
community, the conference will give a
renewed interest in the broad-based
program of collegiate athletics." Dick
Baldwin, director of the U/B Sports Information Offiq!, will be public relations
director for the league.
St. Bonaventure, which some
observers thought might also join the
new conference, will not be a member,
- although MacAdam hopes " they will
see the value of joining in a few years."
St. Bonaventure, Canisius and Niagara
will continue to compete in a separate
" Little Three" league alignment.
" Big Four" playing dates announced
for the 1975-76 season are :
·
Baseball: home and home 'playing
dales (9 inning contests); May 1, 1976Base ball Jamboree, Hyde Park, Niagara
Falls.
Basketball: one game against each
member: December 16, 1975, Memorial
Aud itorium, Buffalo : Buffalo State
(Home) vs. Niagara, 7 p.m.; SUNY/ Buffalo (Home)'VS. Canisius, 9 p.m.; January
10, 1976, Niagara Falls Convention
Center: Buffalo State (Home) vs .
Canisius, 7 p.m.; Niagara (Home) vs.
SUNY/ Buffalo, 9 p.m.; March 1, 1976,
Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo :
SUNY/ Buffalo (Home) vs. Buffalo State.
Niagara and Ca0isi us will count theseCQnd of their two basketball games as a
" Big Four" contest. Both will count in the
" Linle Three."
Cross-Country: October 22, 1975,
SUNY/Buffalo, 4 p.m.
'
Golf: September ~S, 197S, site to be an nounced.
Soccer: One game during negulaf
season schedule.
Swimming: March 11-13; 1976, Buffalo
State.
Tennis: October 10-11, 1975,
SUNY/Buffalo (weather could move play
to indoor courts).
Tr~ck : May S, 1976, Buffalo State, 3
p.m.
Championship trophies for league
competition will be provided by the
Courfeo-&amp;pi!ii and the....., &amp;.ln8

News.

-

§()~(off named
in ·~
Nomwl Sollcoff, Ph.D~ profeslor ol
psycholosr ill pqdllatry, ... been ap-

eolnted ••soclate chairman of the
Depaltnalt ol Psychiatry, School ol
Medicine, effeaive Immediately.
Dr. Solkoff joined the faculty In 19lil a
an assistant professor. He promoted
to tun pi-ofessor In 1972.
·
He Is author or co-author of more than · ..:u
30 ~b!lcatlons, primarily t.ing to do
with~ Infant stimulation and chltd
dew!lopmenL His primary dulles In the
Department include aM:hairmanshlp ol
the Uncfersraduate fducatlon Comservice •

~iE2~human

CXIOI'dlnlttor of ihe

.of die bebavloro..tlllee- .q,.
He
and t'ronlilltlooas . . the.
of I'Wd!JMry, • flal!tr
a member o1· die flcukJ
=--:~ ·-~ the School of Meclcln!i.
Is also ~ of the s..ndlfl&amp; Committee on Faculty l.p•
~ ~ Promotions, T_
_ and

�November :Z,

197~

'Rolfing' said to create

'very dramatic' changes.
Do you krlow what "rolfing" is?
Richard Diehl, .lecturer in C.P. Snow
_College , does and is ready t9
demonstrate it to the campus, tonight at
7:30p.m. in 33-t Norton.

.

....._. .,..._... ........
United Way tops 80 per cent ·
The University's 1974 United Way ca;.,paign has collected $104,345.35 "or' 83.4
per cent of its goal, Dr. A. Westley
-Rowland, campaign chairman, announced Tuesday.

(Health Scie11ces-Medicine); Continuing
Nursing Education and Community

Health (Health Sciences-Nursing);
School of Health Related Professions
(Health Sciences}; Environmental
Analysis and Policy, and .Management
Eight .division and 41 departments or. Systems (School of ·Management);
schools within divisions hJve made 100 Geo)ogical Science, Statistical laboratory
per cent or more of th"eir goals, Rowland and Statistical Science, and Computer
5.1id. The divisions are: Engineering and Science (Natural Sciences and Math);
Applied Sciences; law and School of Social Work, Geography,
Jurisprudence; Graduate and Philosop_hy and Phenomenological
Professional Eduation; Continuing Research, and Political Science (Social
Education; Facilities Planning; Research; Sciences and Administration); Physical
University Relations, and U/8 Founda- Science Library (Universi~ libraries);
tion.
President's and Executive V.. P.'s Office,
Individual departments whiCh have Office of £qual Opportunity, Culiural
. made their goals are: Art, Germanic and Affairs, The Coll~es, Minority RecruitSlavic; . and Music (Arts and "letters); ment and Promotoon, and Instructional
Ed_ucational Administration and· lnstruc- Communicatio.ns Center (President's Oflion (Educational Studies); Chemical lice); Internal Audit (Finance and
Engineering, Industrial Engineering, and Management); Student Testing Center,
MeChanical Engineering (Engineering Foreign Student Persohnel, Placement
and Applied Sciences); Medicine, and Career Gui!lance (Student Affairs);
Mlaoblology, Anatomical Sciences, Der- and Information Services, University
· rnatology, GynecologylOB, Ped;,trics, Publications and Typographies (Univerand Continuing Medial Eduation· sity Relations).
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
DIVISIONAL PROGRESS FOR UNIVERSITY UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN
FALL, 1874
r:.cutty .. Artl Mel

....
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Feculty .. MIIIltllldencll .•.•• •
Fealhyol u.tnd~ ..

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chronic tension carries an emotional

Noting that he has just returned from
load. Pain is occasionally intense, then
being trained in the technique' and is
disappears immediately when the
"very impres~," Diehl says "rolfing"
pressure is removed . There is also
creates 11very dramatic changes in a persometimes soreness, of the kind fell
son's psychology, physiology, movement
when muscles are overworked, th~t lasts
behavior and general health and funca few days. Pain frequently marks an
tioning.
emotional release, and may be strongly
" I realize that these are very big
colored by associated emotions. People
claims," he says, " but I believe them to
while being rolled often recall specific
be fads~ and therefore~ "'m very fhtraumatic episodes associated with parterested in exposing people to the
ticular parts of the body; with or without
such recall, the release of chronic conpossibilities which ~rolfing~ offers. It is especially useful to people involved in psytra Ctions has an emotionatry- ·purgative
effect . ' I feel as though I have unloaded
chology, dance and other movement
years of accumulated grief,' was the
- forms, and personal grOwth."
comment of one person who cried as
Diehl supplies this further information
on the system as outlined in a flyer from
tension was released in his ribcage. "
the Ida B. Rolf Institute of Structural
Results V•ried
Integration, Bottlder, Colorado:
The resuhs of rolfing, its proponents
"Stq.t_du ral integration, or rolfin'g, as it
indicate, ·:are as ~aried and complex as
is popUlarly known, is a technique for
the orgamsms bemg altered. Gen~rally
reordering the body in order to bring its
speaking, the body acquires a lift, or
major segments - ' head, shoulders,
ltghtness as the head and chest go up and
the trunk leng th ens; the pelvis, in
thorax, pelvis and legs - towar.d a verticatalignment. Generally speaking, rolfhorizontalizi ng, brings the abdomeri and
ing lengthens the body, approaching an
buttocks in; the knees and feet track
ideal in which the left and right sides . . .
more nearl y forward and the soles of the
feet meet the ground more squarely. As
are more nearly batanced and iri which
the pelvis approaches horizontal, perthe joints gain freedom the major
mittlng the weight of the trunk to fall
segments of the body rotate and hinge
directly over the pelvis; the head rides
more freely on one another. There is less
pitching of the body from side to side in
' above the spine, the spinaJ curves are
shallow, and the legs connect vertically
walking and less raising of the body
weight with each step. Conserved energy
to support the bottom of the pelvis. . . .
Body Weisht Hu Slipped
is ~vailable for other purposes ..
''The average individual has let his
'The leng~henm~ and ~entenng of t~e
body weight slip out from the vertical axbod.y along Its vert1cal ax1s together w1th
is, that is, he hits shortened his body,"
an mcreased .::_ngaRem.::_nt. of the d~p
the information folder indicates. "H is
musculature brmgs a qUietmg, a flex1ble
head has slumped forward and his butsense. of se_lf-possession that tends to
tacks are probably carried up and' back.
r~place ~arher prestructure~ responses.
Most likely his body has twisted as it has
Smce thts new sen'!' ~~ self ts presen_ted
to others on the carroage Ol the b6dy,
slumped; one shoulder or one hip m~y
lead the other as he wal~nees'rnay~ ~even.~~J- ~1.. contoas rna _..,..m
track out or in, and misaligned ankles
alter_ed : ~ncreased self-tr_ust c~;may throw his weight to the outside of
mumcates 1tself as trustwonhmess ....
his feet. One foot probably carries more
. Rese~rch. on ~~rof!iOtf' has begun ~~o
weight than the other. .
,1, ,
g•ve obJect•~e Ql!:ant~tat~ve data about Its .
"How do bodies become unbalanced?
effects, the mformatoon sheet contends:
From ~ purely. mechanical perspective,
" Dr. Valerie _Hunt, director of the Movedistortions are -the result of the
ment ~hav!or Laboratory at .U,CLAand
remarkable plasticity of the body, the
Dr. Juhan .solve_rman, research specoahst .
tendency of fascia, the connective tissue
of t~e Cahforn1a Depanment
Mental
which envelops the muscles and-which
Hygoene, have cond.uct~ e"'?""me'!ts at •
gives the body shape, to be remolded by
Agnews State Hospotal on whoch subJ&lt;:ctS
applied force. The primary force comes
were tested before and after rolfmg
from repeated patterns of self-use, the
for changes in ne~r~log!cal control of
way an individual walks, sits or sleeps.
t~e m~scles, for var!atlon 1~ responses to
These patterns, which are Renerally esstom.uh. a~d f~&gt;r boochemoal c~anges.
tablished in infancy, "dr!_w heavily on
Theo~ fmdongs mdocate that there ts more
parental example and on other enefficoent u~ of-the muscl~, conserved
energy, mcreased refinement of
vironmental fadors like diapers, shoes
and school desks. Inefficient patterns of
response a.nd a tendency for molor control to shoft toward the more flexible
behavior set themselves in the fascial
network as unbalanced patterns of strucspinal centers. Other researc!lis planned
or in progress."
ture
Dr. I~ !'· Rolf, formerly an organic
. "Oistonions also ' enter our piastic
bodies through accidents. . . .
. chemist woth the Rockefeller Institute,
·
perfected the technique of-structural
Self-Reinforcing
Integration over many years before es"Patterns of imbalance tend to reintablishing a systematic training progr•m
force themselves: they feel comfortable
and • professional orpnlntion, the inand natural- balanced, in fact. Over the
formation sheet Indicates: Practitioners
are roow workin&amp; In many areas of the
years they deepen by repetition and the
weight centers move rrogreosively
United States and the Gi.tlld for.Structlifal
further from the vertica axis. Gravity
Integration is presently training oome
becomes •n increasingly destructiye
thirty neW ~rolfen" annually.
force.. ..
~
·
•
"Rolfing reb•lances th~-- fascial
~.....:
network by taking ·advantage of its
Jablonska. prgfesoor and
.ten~ncy to hold the sha~ Induced by
head of the Department ol ~tology
applied force," the literature for the
·~t the Warqw Medical Sct&amp;l, Polarid,
system contends. "ln·a arefully
will speak on "Autoimmunity
out sequence of manipulations,_ the
Pemphigus and Related Dlseaes'' at a
roller reverses the randomizing InHarrington lecture at 4:30 p.m .
fluence of the envftonmenl. movtna
November 12 In 139 c.pert Hall
tJssue. back - r d the . .,nmeuy- and
The Harrington t.ecturei bepn at !he
""wa-the~ofthebody
tum .oftheantu,Ywllh111endowment
so Clollrlr.~ ~
·
by Dr. Devilto W. H.fiTiniiOn .who
'1iAIIIIi!f - Dlice ., alldeid len , aracfua!ed fiom the then Unlwnity of
- - ... haw . . . and
Buffalo Sdlool of Medlclae In 1171. He
1 . . . . or_.. lplri. ~
was a member of the dlnkalfaadtyftom

o!

L...r..-

workea-

.. . :

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

the last three.
"The roller must apply sufficient force
to stretch and move tissue; furthermore,
he is frequently working in tissue whose

che llllfaw d die bodY
.... IIIII
relief
....
8nd

11116 until his death 11111105. AI least one
of !he Lecttn sPU!iers eiiCh ,_ is
selec!ted by !he U/11 lllelllml stuclems

.......:-of the 'f!

.wllh c:oncurrenc:eofa fal:ulty edvllor and

n

between mejor

IS

Jn

~

body

.,

:!:::t~ th!OIIIh lhe School

of

�November 7, 1974 -...

s·in Ch,emistry
win felb~ips
awarded graduate fellowships to live
students for 1974-75.
Winners are: Marie Flanigan and Mani
Shabrang, recipients of Henry M.
Woodburn Fellowships; Mark P. Mack,
winner of the Samuel Silbert Fellowship;
Beverly Marwedel, recipient of the
Allied Chemical Foundation Award, and
Joseph Solsky, winner of the U/B
Graduate School Fellowship.
Miss Flanigan received her B.S. in
1973 from Villanova University. At U/B
. she Is studying physical chemistry and is
the recipient of a three-year Woodburn
award.

Mr.

Shabrt~ng,

~~
- ~~~----------------~------~een..lcs foi the dfnlclan, iemnd dly of a divtdual - w i t h education, bUslne...
(1-pqd,col. ()
two-day prosram for the clinician to update
MAS1Jk
knowledse ol gynecolosY. Statler-Hilton
~u.=
PhYllis Curtin, soprano. Baird Redtol Hall, 2
their course work in Jannry or May 1975, are
Hotel. For Information, call 131-5526.
QA55•

The Department of Chemistry has

winner of a one-year

Woodbunr, is 1 native of Tehran, Iran. A
student of ·analytical chemistry here,
Shabrang_ also received a Woodburn
Fellowship wt year in addition ·to the
Joseph W. Richards Fellowship.
The-Woodburn Fellowships, established in honor of Dr:- Henry M. Woodburn,
former dean of the UIB Graduate School
and now distinguished service professor
emeritus, provide a stipend of $4,000 per
year• .

A native of Buffalo, Mr. Mack received
his B.A. from State University Colle11e
and is studying organic chemistry here.
The Silbert Fellowship, which carries a
. stipend of approximately $2,400 per year,
was establislied in 1967 by Mr. Joseph
Silbert and Miss D.!&gt;ris Silbert of Buffalo
to honor the late Samuel B. Silbert, a
local chemist.
Mrs. Marwedel received her B.A. from
UIB and is studying physical Chemistry.
The Allied Chemical Foundation ·of
'Morristown, N.J., through the · Allied Chemical Corporation of Buffalo, established this award in 1951.
.
Mr. Solsky received his B.A. from UIB
and is presently studying analytical
chemistr~. The one-year Graduate
Fellowship carries a .stipend of

/'""•

=:. .

/

p.m. No admission cha'lleCAUBI COUNSBJNG•

Career opportunities In rmnagement and
public and hospital administration will be
discussed by Peter }. Hopkins, director of

~:d~bl~o~~~~~~~e0~1 ::u~:=,\

Institute of Hospital Administration, Cornell
University. Students interested in learning
about career opportunities are urged to attend. Norton Conference Theatre, 3 p.m.

-~~~r ~~~;~s:;e~ Union, ProfessOr
Stephen lottridge, Cornell University. 332

Norton Union, 3 p.m. Refreshments will be
served:
Sponsored by the Russian Club.
COMI'UlBt SBIVICI!S MAPS SEMINAJlf

s:.. ~:,:;~;e~:~~~~~-sk~b:n '~:

Nichols, UIB Department of Educational
Psycholosv. Rm. 27, 4242 Ridse Lea, 3-5 p.m._
au~ LOGIC COUOQUIUMI

Lesliiewslci's "Ontology," John Keams, U/8
associate professor of philosophy. Rm. 14,
4244 Ridge Lea, 3:45 p.m.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMINAJlf
Simulation of Surface Utalo(zed Readions,
Professor John 8. Butt, Department of
Chemical Engineering, Northwestern Univer-

sity. 104 Parker, 4 p.m.

FOsTa COlLOQUIUM SBIESf
· Higher

Sute

Metal

Phth~locy~nine

R~dic~l

Oxidation

Phth~locy~nine.s ;

Species, Dr. Barry lever, York. University. 70
Acheson, 4 p.m.
RIMS•
Big De~l on . Madonna Street (Monicelli,
1960), 7:15 p.m., and The Clowns {Fellini,
1971), 9 p.m. 140 Capen. No admission charge.

VA1151TY HOCKEY•
UIB vs. Kent St,ate. Holiday Twin Rink, 7:30
p.m. Students may pick up free tickets before
the night of the game; S2 general admission.

5fMINAa,f
.
Head and Nedc Malignancies, topic of ~
Fourth Annual Dr. Glenn H. Leak Taching
Day, will include tolks by On. David Dahlin,
Mayo Clinic; Roben C.Or1in, University of
Minnesotai Charles Waldron, Emory University ; and Norman Schaaf, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute. School of Nursing
Auditorium, Buffak» General Hospital, 9 a.m.4:30p.m. No admlsslon fee.
Sponsored by the School of Dentistry.

Gamb\e Co.; Nonhw.estem Mutual ~lfe In·
surance.
,
WEDNESDAY-13: GTE Sylvania Inc.; Atlan-

UU.U ViDEO WORKSHOf'S•
The UUAB Video Committee Is sponsoring
workshops' in The Use and Care of Vtdeo
Equipment (today is the final day). Scheduled
today are : Programming, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
SEG/ca":lera, 12 noon-2 p.m. 121 Norton.

tic Richfield; Mobil Oil Corp.
THURSDAY-14: Metrooolitan Ute lnwrance; Allied Chemical; I.B.M. Corp.; And-co Inc.; Minority Qreer Day (see notices).

NOTICES

ENGLISH L.ECTUW.E• .
The Radic,al Ambiguity of William Bl~ke,
M.H. Abrams, Cornell University. 203 Diefendorf, 2 p.m.
Presented by the Department of English.

CONTACT

COMPUTER SBtVICES SEMINARI
Introduct ion ro TS-RUN FORTRAN. taught
by instructor Roger Campbell. 301
Hochstetter, 3·5 p.m.
BIOLOGY SEMINARI

..

EndocrinololfY and Practical

.

Proteolyric Modification of fructose
Diphosphatase and irs Possible Role in
Regulation of the Enzyme Activity, Or. Bernard l. Horecker, Roche lnstitut"e of

Molecular Biology. 134 Health Sciences, 4:15
p.m.

FRENcH DEPARTMENT RLM•
Rules of the Came {Renoir). 147 Diefendorf,
5 and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
WOMEN'S VOI.LfYUU•
U/B vs. Geneseo State Collese. Clark Hall, 6

P·'l1·
HILlS. "DROP-IN" NIGHT"
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.

INTilAMUilAL INEORMA110N

si~r:e~~!dt~· t~; t~e.:~ :J;:i.
POnliY READING._
John Logan and Mich,ael Crites. 310 Foster, 8
p.m.
Sponsored by the Department of EnRiish.

There will be two turkey trot races held thi1
year, one at the Main Street campus and the
other at the Amherst Dlrnpus. Entries are due
back in the Recreation Office by November

, , 11· .,r~ ·.

VI5ITINC AllTISTS SBJES•
Soprano Phyllis cu}tin, a member of the
Vienna State Opera .tnd ~tropoUtan Oper~
presents a full redtill. Mary Seaton Rm.,
Kleinhans Music H.Jn,·e:lO p.m. Admission: $1
students; $2 faculty, staff and alumni; Sl
seneral public.

FA&amp;n

Associate Professor, School of Medicine (two positions).
(VISltl"'} associate professor or professor, English,
· posting no. F--4165.
Assistant Professor, lib.-ary and Information Studies, F--4166.
Assistant Professor, Chemistry, F--4167.
Assistant Professor, Contfnulng Nursing Education, F--4168.
Assoclllte Professor, Eqltibmla, f--4169.
Assoclllte Professor, fconomla, F--4170.
Assistant f!rofessot, Economics, F'-4171.
Assistant Professor, fcotiomlcs, f-4172. .
Professor, Pathology, f--4173. ...
.
lftstructor to Professor (depending on qualifications), Civil Engineering.
f--4174.
A'ulstant Professor, l'olltlal Science, F-·n7S.
AsslstantProfessor,l'olitlal Sdef\Ce. f-4176.
Assistant Professor~ Political Science. f-4177.·
Assoclllte or Full 'rialeaor, GeoFaPhy, ·f--4178.
Asllstant or Assoclllte Professor, Ceography, F--4179.
Assistant or Aslocllte Professor, Geography, F--41110.

uu.u CORBitousP
Open Sing. Anyone with .tny i nstrument or

a desire to sins is welcome. First_J)oor '
afeteri.t, Norton, 9 p.m.

..

·.,""~,

r

,

:

Intramural ~- hockey entries are available
in the Re&lt;rNtion' Office from November 4
and are due back by November a. There will
be a mandatO&lt;y meeting for all team captoins
Wednesday, November 13, ot S p.m., Clarlr.
Hall basement.
A $10 deposit Is mandatOry at the captains
meeli"' to reserve a spot.
·
LAW-SCHOOL-"- TI5J .
- Replar ~ deacllne lor the LSAT
to be I'7 Is Nowember 11. Information and -'lat1on farms-ore ovallable in the

Doc.

u..-y .....,.,_ and ca-r Guld,once

UUAI FRM••

If (Anderson, 1968). Norton ·Confenerioe - Office, ~ ...,.. c.
Theatre, all 831-5117 for. times. Admlsslon·
._
y
I'IIOGIIAM
.-:"'
'
.-"
. ,~_.._
____
bythe

charje.

•

1

•

Equal ~ ...........

Contlnul,..

The reolood
~ and
Reoonl&amp; olflce hOun Is: MoRday ...........
Thundof, l::tO ·a.m. - 7 p.m.; friday, a::tO

volumes ol ~- first /-bx, lockwood
Memorial Ubrprr. ~-f.rttlay, 9 a.m. - 5
p.m. Continuh)l. .
•
•
M U L - m.tT ·
.
l'numbraf ~ncaasc. sample worb by a

IP'oup Of U.S. irtlsts who 11M COIJ)ITIUnicated
with _., other through wridnp, video
production, Xerox printlns. 111m, photopOphy
and mutlc !faltery 219, ~- ~~~~
hours: Mon~..friday! 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; "sunday: 1-4 p.'fl.; Monday and :rhu~sday .
....,.lnp, 7-to-p.m.
·

For ldclltlonlll Information cOnc:em;ng· these jobs and for details of NTJf
opalinp ~ the State University system, consult bulletin boards at

these IOcadons.
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Riclge Le_a, BulldJns 4236, ilext to
~ S.ltJdseLea,Bulldl.,.4230, in corridorll'exi10C·114. HMitl! Stlenc:es· • ·

·Bulldlii&amp;JttllDrridorapposlte·HS 1JI; 5. Capen Hall, In the cortidol'~- ·
~'A'IInd thwllltlby; &amp;.I!Ocbood, pouildfloor ifi(Orridornexttb~n; /
dllfiitfllcHnet; 7. Hayes Hall, In main -'fo,er,.cros~ flom1'ubllc:'lnfor-,- '•
111111Di1t01Jb; 8. Acheson Hatl,'in corridor between Rlloms 112 and 113; 9.
In CXKTidor next to Room 15; 10. Ciocltlyeal' Hall, 1st floor,

VISUAl. All1J _ . HmtNfnled Xerosraphs by'Eialne Hancadtc
HOyes Hall LObby, building hours, November
1-30. Presented by the Olllce ol Cultural Afblrs.
.
•

1

0'/tke,
.-..,......, .............. ~,~;W..~..

Of-----

'11'10 Lift. In the Mllonf'~-. Nor-

l'ollsh-~ exhlblt1on c:jdled fiom the
Unlvenlty's aillection ol more than 41Df

-Plt-2. 11-4094.

tie pracdce - I n D 1 - l t 2p.m. • On_.....,.,.
and 1S,Job li-.vlewl .......

firs( editions ol worits •af Samuel lledcett
from the oollect1ons ol Lod&lt;Wood MemOrial
•Ubrary. 2nd floor balcony, lockwood. Viewins hours: Monday-frttlay, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
LOCKWOOD m.rT

Aulstant Professor,l's)'d&gt;ology, F--4184.
Assistant Professor,l's)'d&gt;ology, f-4185.
Assistant Professor or Professor (three positions), L1w, F--4186.
N1P
AssoQ.te Deln, Healtf1 Related Professions, PR--4.
_
.
Assistant to Director, Office of Campus Security, PR-1, posting no. B-4089.
Dental laboratory Technician, School of Dentistry, PR-1, B-4090.
Counselor, Academk: Affalrs,1f()C), PR-1, 11-40!11.
- Couruelors (two, part-time, eveil!ni!I1,Academk Affairs &lt;EOO..,B-4092.
. Admlulons CounSelor, Academic Analrs, (EOCl, B-4093.
~ and Student Development Coruultant, Student t-ffalrs,

Mln!&gt;ritr Man:

~
andMinarl-·
ty Student·Aflllls.'On. ...........
NowemberU.
there will

· ~XH!BITS
•LJ.Aay m.rr

Professor, Geoflraplty, F-4181.
Professor, Psycftolosy. f-.4182.
Professor, Psycftolosy, F-4183.-

• 11. 11107 Elmwood. fWiannel Depa"'-'1; 12. Nonon
1Jn1o1!.
-Room 225; 1S. Oll!fendorf Hill. In Cllll1ldOr next to
Roam 106; 14. jphn LOrd O'Brian Hall, founh lloor (Amherst Campus).

-&gt;

Discussions will deal with how to make
friends, how to settle differences with a roommate, etc Everyone is invited t~ attend.
DENTAL VOLUNT&amp;ItS
. The Department of Oral Biology is seeking
paid volunteers to collabOrate in a federally·
supported research profect. Volunteers
should be between 30 and 5G years of age ilnd
have no dental diseases (including decay and
bleeding gums) . For information, conuct 8315139.
F0U1CN STUDea INfORMATION
The Offoce ol Foreign Student Affoirs has
made the foUowing announcement:
Tuition waiver applications for ·the Spri!'l
1975 semester are avaibble in the Offtce ~­
The application deadline Is November 15.
CltADUATE ltfComJ EXAMINATION
.
Regular registration deadline for the GRE to
be given Dec. 14 is November 19. Information
and application forms are available in the
University Placement and Career · Guidance
Office, 6 Hayes C.

lfCTURE SBIIESf
Orpnic Chemiaf Modifiation of Enzyme
Active Sites, Professor Thomas Kaiser, Univer-

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDuCATION

0

de~~~~~~ts~
~~~ ~=: :n ~
Fillmore, Ellicott Complex, 8-10 p . m.

PHYSICAL-oRGANIC. CHEMJSrRY

THURSDA Y-14
l'llOCiaAMI
G~ic
·, .,

invited to tAke part in the interviewintRegistration forms are av~:ilable in Hliyes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The followlns asendes will
be lntervleWlns this week:
THURSDAY-7: Armstrong Cork Co.;
Travel""; U.S. Social Security; Collins Radio
Group-Rockwell International.
FRIDAY-6: Aetna Ute and casualty; F.M.C.
Corp.; Union C.rbide Corp.
TUESDAY-12: Penn Central Transporta·
tion; Emergency Medial Data; Proctor a~

CONTlNUINC DENTAL mUCA110N

Assistant!Associate Professor, Anilomical Sciences.

'

7

1 i

• !

--------......-:..,.

u........,

ON&lt;AMPU5 IN1IDIEWS
The staff af the

......,_and

-

Unicllt-

_,_
OffiCE

-ocheclule af

a.m.-4::10 p.m.

Spend--

SA RAVB.

In-=

-

Jonuary 41T; Cost. $275, lnducles round trip air fore, aocomonodoliool5 and transfen. Aloo, a fllaht •
. Los ................. Declemb.-li and-•ins Jonuary"l2, Is aWalloble It. oeducieoj ......
For lnlonnotlon, """"' to 316 IJnlon,
or call 831-lliOl.
Sponaed by the Student AssociltiOn._

- 5PmNG IIIGISRA110N
The OfiiCe af Admlsolons and Records.... ~·
c..n.tuct ~~~~ 1975 Realstratlon tJosinnk!j
Thundo)l1 December S. All students CumndY

reststered at the

Unlvenlty need ~ tom-

~::;:;,.~-;:;:;:~.;

dent Dlta Form In order to repter. The Offlee af ~and Records (Hayes-

-~~ ':: followlatt iloles .until

---~~-;Doc.&amp;-=-~1:'4
-I:JDp&amp;; Doc. 16-20-1:30 p.m.: Dec. 21-

21Md ..., -4:30p.m.; -Doc. J0.31 -4::10

car-Gu~c~anc.Ofllca.................

p.m;

In the Unlvenlty ~..tnd alu!nnl to

111Eo\DI ~

take__portln¥11i101lii- ..r...~~

-

·-..- ' _.,.*-presented br the Ameril:aor
·· .thh year. ~11!1-~ lplet'Viewl"' · CCIIIIe191!!!fary ·Theatre, 1695 ElllltiiOod
, P"'ffNNI'• ru
:'fia'ill-oti. ,.,Gk:'u and - -~• l::tO p.m. Thun-Sat. and Z.....,.
' Jan; 20-l\prll ,offetstheopponunky ........ _ Sunclor. ,.,.,__., Cliii81W825; .

�•

No'iem6er 7, 19i4

UU.U VIDEO WOIIKSHOI'S"

-La Sonne Atmee (lelouch, 1974). Norton
Confererice Theatre, call 831-5117 for times.
. Admission charge.
·

-

The UUAB Video Committee is sponsoring
workshops in The Use and C~re of Video
topics ~re : Portopak, Editing, SEG/Camera,
and Special Video Techniques an&lt;t Effects.
Scheduled today are; Programming, 10 a.m.-

Co~rt _Room,

• Sponsored by the Comparative Literature
Program and the Graduate Program in
Lheroture ond PsyChology.
SYMPOSIUM: WllTGENSTBN
AND THE UTBIAIIY TEXT•
- 3Witrgenstein on lmaginaHon, Anthor-y Ken-

ny, tutor in philosophy, Baillol College, Oxford University. Moot Court Room, Q'Brian

Holl, 1 p.m.

·

SOCIAL PSYCHOI.OQ' SPEAJ(fR SERifS"

Couples R~rch as Couples Counseling:
Some Unintended Effects of Studying Close
Relationships, Or. ZiCk - Rut»in , .Harvard
University. Rmk -26, 1.230 Ridge lea, 1 p.m.
SpoOsored by the Graduate Students
AssoCiation.
SYMrOSIUM: WllTGENSTBN
AND THE UTBIAIIY TEXT•
Stylistio and Syhonymity, E.O. Hirsch,

profesSor of English, Unhtersrty of Virginia.
Moot Court Room, C?'Brian Hall, 3 p.m.

PHYSICs COI.LOQUIIJMI
Strongly Damped t:ollision -~New Reacrion Mechanism for Very Heavy Projectile,
Profes~or J.R. Huizenga, Department of
Physics, University of Rochester . 111
Hochstetter, 3 p.m.

WOIIKING COMrUTHS lfCTURE•

CompUter-aided manufacturing will be discussed by Dr. C. Bolinger, professor of
m~chanical -.. en8;1neering, University of
Wisconsin. 104 Ptuker, 3:15p.m.
PATHOLOGY 5EMINAR,t
Morphogenesis of Hyper-Tensive Vascular

Disease: Dr. Philiberto Giacomelli, associate
profOSSQ[ of pathology, New York Medi&lt;;JI
Col(ese, Volholli, New York. 1~5 Copen, 3:30
p.m.

I'HAAMACEUTICS !ilMINAIII
0

~\ ~!',:~~!~ c'he~~~~~r. 'Z~~~sH.a~:n:e~:

--directQ_r, Department of Biochemistry and
Drug Metabolism, HoHman-laRoche, Inc. 244
Heatth Sciences, 4 p.m.
.
_
COMP.UTBI 5ClENCf COI.LOQUIUMI ·
• 1\fphord: lclhs foro longuqe ro SUpport

Sjructured Prorr.Jmrniiig, Professor William A.
WuH, C.rnqie-MelrOn U.n~. Room 41,
4221i Ridge Leo, 4:10p.m. Coffee ot 3:-40 p.m.
In Roq,n61.
fUNCH WAIITMENT ~fiLM•
The loWer Deprhs 1Renoir): 147 ();efendorf;-·
5 and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
•LifE wo.aHOPS~·
Chess: Poise Miller, president ol the Chess
• Club, will instruct beslnnen one! Intermediate
ployeB. Games will be orpnized for od.~
player&gt;. 169 Millard ~lllmore
Aadetnic'C-, Ellicott Complex, 7-9 p :m.
Repuolion and Information ore ovollable•
In the Srudent Allain Offic)e, 173 MIU.rd
FilinloleAQdemlcCenter,6J6-23411.

- Hillel"''laaNN"
NIGifr
House, 40Copen
Blvd., 7-11

p.m.

-

IIOIRNG DfMoNmAllON'
.
A leclurV~ ol r01fi11(1 lslructura11ftlesralionl, which Is sold to mon~
dramatic d&gt;anps ln • person's ~'

pltysiololy. -

behovior """ pinfrll

huldt, Is~ by the~ 334 Nor""" l:30 -p.in. No .odm&amp;ilon charp.

GIM APP1A81G I.ECIWP
Gaiy Gotelk. ~ p'aduMe Of The Gemology
1 - ot America ond dte oppraber and '
&lt;(!&gt;

=.,filron~~~~";!'"

obserYe

I~

sefec111ts ·precioUs aad semi&lt;XJ11oc11on d IIIIURI

~ precious -~A

ond oynlhetic st.,._ ,.Ill be exhlbked. Rm. 7

Cfl'llhe Craft Center, Norton Union, 7:30

HILLR SERVICE"

A Shabbat Morhing Service begins at 10
a.m. led by Rabbi Ely Braun. A Kiddush will
lollow. Hillel House, 40 0\pen Blvd.
MINI-MARKETPlACE•

SYMPOSIUM: WllTGENSTBN
AND THt UTaAIIY TEXT•
The· Grammatical Joice, G.E.M. Anscombe,

12 noon; and SEG1Canlera, 12 noon-2 p.m.
121 Norton.
SYMrOSIUM: WllTGENSTBN . _
AND THE UTBIAIIY TfXr
Stanley Uvell, pi'ofesSOr ·· of philosophy,

Moot

U/8 vs. Elmira Hockey Game.

FRIDAY.-8

EqUipment from Novem~r 7-14. Included

--~~~ij!:-~r.i;~~~Z:

HIUR HOUSE' 1
Hillel's Operation Creenlight will attend the

UUAI fii.MU

THURSDAY-7

Third annual exhibit and sale of arts and
crafts to benefit the Crace Capen Stu~
dent Sdiolarship Fund. Ridge lea Cafeteria,
11 a.m.-:6 p.m. Donation ;,_ SO cents for adults;
25 cents for children.
Sponsored by the ~/B Women 's Club.

professor of philo\ophy, Cambridge bniversity. Moot Court Room, O'Bri~n Hall, 10 a.m.

UUAI VIDEO WOIIKSHOI'S'

-

The UUAB Video Committee is sponsoring
workshops in..._The .Use and Care of""1lideb
fquipmenrt fOm November 7-1&lt;4. Scheduled
today is Portopak Workshop, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
121 Norton.
SYMPOSIUM: WITTGENSTBN
AND THE UTDlARY TEXT•
Wiugenstein's Views About Meaning and
the Indeterminacy of Literary Texts, Max

Black, professor of philosophy, Cornell
University. Moot Court Room, O 'Brian Hall, 1
p.m.
MEDIONAL CHEMISTRY SEMINARI
Chemistry and Mode Of Ad ion of Anorectic
Drugs, Miss Pittaya Tuntiwachwuttikul, U/8
graduate student. 245 Health Sciences, 2 p.m..
STATI5nCAL SCIENCE COI.L9QUIUMI
.-fh~Esrimation of Continuous Tiroe Systems
from DiScrete Time Series, Professor P. _M .
Robinson, Harvard University. Rm. A..fa, 4230

Ridge lea;
p.m.

~offee

at :f:SO, lecture at 3:20 ·

FRENCH DEPARTMENT lfCTURE•
Problemes theoriques er Critiques de Ia
Description Romanesque, Francoise Vari

UUAI VIDEO WORKSHOPS'

\

Nichols, UIB Department of Educational
Psychology. Rm. 17, 042 Ridseleo, 3-5 p.m.

ENGU$H DIPAIITMENT fiLM•
Breathless (Godard). 140 Copen, 3 ond 9

p.m. No,admission charge.
POI.InCAL SCIENCE l.fqliRQ
The Role and1unction of Money in African _

Politics, Henry L Bretton, professor of
political science, SUNY/Brockport, and
aUthor of several books concerning politics in
Africa. Conference Rm., 4238 Ridge lea, 3
p.m.
CEU AND MOUGULAII IIOlOGY
SfMINARf
~ -- TempiOtte Availability in Zebraffsh, Ralph

CHA8AD HOUSE•

WATtR IESOURCfS AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING stMINARf
take Restoration: Man 's Awakening or Final
Insult, Steve Yaksich, Buffalo District Corps of

A study group will examine The 613 Commandments. 185 'Maplemere Rd. and 3292
Main St., 4:4_5 p.m.
VARSITY HOCKEY•
UI B vs. Elmitd. Home Opener. Holiday Twin
Rinks, 3465 Broadway, Cheektowaga, 7:30
p.m. Students may pick up a f(ee ticket at the
ticket oHice in Clark Hall before the night of
the garrie; general admission, $2:.
STUDENT RECITAL•
Mark CudeJc, guitarist. Baird Recital Hall, 8
p ..m.

IRCMOVJE••
Barbarella 170 E01cott, 8 p.m. Free to IRC

Downs, U/B graduate student. 24 Diefendorf
An-nex, 4 p.m.
·

Engineers . Rm. 7 , Acheson Annex ,
'refreshments at 4 p.m. , followed by the
seminar.
HILLR TALMUD CLASS•

Held at 7:30-p.m. The Yiddish Folksinging
Group will also meet at7:30 p.m. Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd.
POETRY llfADING•
Poet Diane Wakoski will give a reading of
her own work. Conference Theatre, Norton, 8
p.m. Admission: S1.
~

fee-payers.

TUESDA Y-:-12

THEATRE PfRJOIIMANCE•
The Mis.anthrope by Moliere. Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Through November
10.
.
Presented by the 0/B Department ~f
Theatre.

l'lASMAS AND API'I.ICATIONS SEMINARt
The Effects of Arcing Upon Vacuum Withstand of Electrodes in Vacuum, Or. George A.

Dave Mason and Robin Trower. Century
Theatre, 1!:,.30 P;f,Q-.Admission charge.

Farrall, Research and Development Center,
General Electric Co. 104 Parke r; coffee at 3:30,
seminar at 4 p.m.

UUAI FILM..
•
Fcllini Satyricon (Fellini , 1969). Norton
Conference Theatr~. call 831~5117 for times.

Hoii, B(&gt;.m.
THEARE 'PHfOitMANC£•
The MiSanthrope by MOliere. -. Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8:30p.m. Through November
10.
Presented by the U/B Oepanment of
- Theatre.
-.. ·
IICMOVIf..
/Nrb.Mella. Goodyear cafeteria, 9 p.m. Free
to l~c,:tee-pov,e_rs. ..UUAI FILM•• .
. ·
...
Lo Bonne N!nee (Lelouch, 1974). Norton
Confeninc:e Theatre, coli B,J1·t117 for .~mes.
Adl1)lsslon c:Nrae..
, .
•. , ·

,

~e~OJ~O~~:p~;~:~!se'::J~~r. 5~~~rt ~~

The UUAB Video Committee is sponsoring
workshops in The Use and Care of Video
Equipment from November 7-14. Scheduled
today are: Portopak Workshop, 12 noon~2
p.m.; Editing, 4 p.m. 121 Norton.

Rossum-Guyon, critic, . University of Amsterdam. Bldg. 4, meeting room, . third floor,
Wilkeson Quadrangle, Amherst Ca7npus, 4
p.m.

CHAIAD HOUSE•
Services will - be held at both Chabad
Houses, followed by a Sabbath meal. 185
Maplemere Rd. and 3292 Main St., 6 p.m.
HILLR SERVICE" •
.
A Sabbath Service will be held i t 8 p.m.
Rabbi Justin Hofmann.will lead a To~ Study
Session. An Oneg Shab~t will follow. Hillel
House. 40 Capen Blvd. . .
INTUNA110NAL fOI.(( DANONG•
Instruction for beginners, 233 Norton, 8-~ 1
p.m.
'··/·
~
Presented by &amp;Ibn Folk Dandng.
COMPOSfRS WORKSHOP•
. Students and faculty members present
contemporary . compositions. Baird Recital

COMPUTBI SERVICES.MAPS RMINAI!I

UUAI CONCERT•

Adm!ssion charge.

\

SUNDAY-10
UUAI ViDEO 'VOIIKSHOI'S"

•

The UUAB Video "Co!!Jitli«ee is sponsorins
workshops in The .l;!se and Care of Video
Equipment from NoVember 7-'J!· Scheduled
to'da y( are: Editing WorkshQp, 1 2 p.m. ~
Programming. S p.m. 121 Norton.
SUE CYCU V CONCRf.
The Cleveland Qu~rtei. Mary Seaton Rm.,
Kleinhom MuSk Holl, 3 p.m. Admission: S1
students; S2 U/11 foculty, staff ond olumni; $3
general pu61lc.
INlBINATIONAL fOI.(( DANCING"

Some instruction. Filltnbre Rm., Norton,
8:3();10:30 p:m.
·
.,..,.,nted by llolkon Folk Oonclng.
MrME THEAliiP .
•
Mummense::hanz, a Swiss mime masque

~~~·::~=.7't~u:~r:;r$2

=·

POLICY STUDIES DOCTOIIAL SEMINARf
lmpli~ations ol Special Revenue Sharing.
Or. Benjamin Chinitz, professor of eco~mi~
and director, ~ic Growth · Jnshtute,
SUNY/Binghamton. ~3 N.~on, 1-3 p.m.
UU.U VIDEO WOUSHOPS•
"(he Ul.Jt'B V~ Co. .mmlnee is sponso_ring
workshops in The Use and_ Care of V1deo
Equipment from November ~-14. Schedu~
today are :~ Editing, 2 p.m.; .Special ~ideo
Techniques· and Effects,.l-7 p.m. 121 Norton.
HISTOIIY DEPARTMENT FILM"
1'he Wirnes.s and"llerlin, cnr.ol-4.051 Souls.
. ~f..';'endorl, lone! 7:30 p.m.""NOodmlssion ,
COMI'UTBI SfRVICf5 5EM1NAR,t
• tnrrodvction' to KRONOS Time-Sharing.
taught ~ Ros~ Campbell. 301 ijochsteuer, )..

s p.m.

'
•
...
.
POIJTICAl SCIENa COLI.OQUIUMf
• Arabs ~nd lsnei:__Ihe hlestine Issue, Zer·
• don A..V.i, heod of Information Services,
Consulate-General of Israel, New York.
Politico! Science Conference Rni., 4238 Ridge Leo, J :30 p.m.
CBL AND M01.KU1.A11 IIOI.OGY

5EM1NAR,t
Tay »eel's Disease: Studies on the Conver·
sion of Hexoseamlnidase A to Hexosurnlnidose 8, Dr. Pitridt Carmody, U/11
research profe150&lt; ol peillatrlcs. 147 Copen;
cofteeat3:45p.m:,semlnarllt4p.rn.

:;..~ . =.=~-

and alumni; $3 gene&lt;ol pubhc.
Presented by the Office ol Cuhurol Affoirs
and the UUAB Drama Committee.

'"""'lonolm-IIH~'slor1ndlvldtaJHisrones
- from~ Urchin fmllrYos; Or. MiChael Cru.,..

tein, fiHarch auodate, Depanment of

5.1.M. ENSEMIU CONCERT*
BioiOilcol Sderices, Slonford Urilvenity. 2+1
The Complete Musial Work · of Marcel ~ Hutth ~; coffee at 4, seminar at 4:15

Duchomp. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30
p.m. Admission charge.
THEATRE PBfORMANCP
~
The Misonrhrope· by Moliere.'" Horrimon Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Tonight is the finil _
. performance.
.
_ . Presented .. by the U/B O~partm'ent of
Theotre.

_ uu.u filM••

.

Fellini Satyricon (Fellini, 1969). Nonon
Conference Theatret.Call 811-5117 for times~
Admission charse.
· \

p.m.

.....a ..-EW QASS•
C-lonol Hebrew Class, 7 p.m. AI 8
p.m., there will be .. class on Modem kwish
lriiellec:tual Mowemenrs. Hlnel House, «» ""
Copen lllwl.
·· "
POEI'RY ~·
Poet VIctor~ Cna Will reod fn&gt;rn
his own wa&lt;lt. Cj&gt;nference theOtre, Norton, 8
p:m. "4irnissioh: $~.
'

W~DNESD_!\ Y--13

��·events

'to attract you

�what is a

· mummenachanz?

hand-tinted
xerographs
IIWDe flueoct IDriteo ua to tab a
. look Ill OD WIUIUAI and mMIIDc Uea of
AmodeiDa - populu aoqmoot mlllll: of
lbe.Jfodd Wu 1 OIL "Molber Ia tho Boot
s-tbout of AU " ".Allledea Novor
Took Wiler ODd
Nner WW,"
and "My Klcbpoo Queen" an juat a few ,
of tho 10111 lltloa from tho aaledlon of
bODcltillled JWOpapbll proparocl 'by Ma.
Hueoct wbo bopoo tbll tho ablblt will
~ mdoe uaawaroofwborooqJ"an. 'lbo Dftiii8Pba,IDdudlq conr ut,
mlllk and lydc:a, and baekpap aclnrtloiJII, wlllba on ~lay Iii tho Hayaa Hall
Lobby. llulkllq liOun, Uuoucb F!lday,
NOftlllbor29.
'lbo ablblt 11 p-ntod by tho omee
of Cui~~

Am.mca

-t)appiness
is e~tndy
Forty pbotopapba from Bruoe

Jlct.

1011'a· fortbcomlna book, IlJJpptnea is
Omdy: I'IID,..,III /rom 1M AIWruuas

hnililltlr,y, will bo on cllaplay from ·9
a.m. to 6 p.m. dally from November 1
15 ID Rooin 316 (tho Pbololflpby lab) of. tho new Art Department
facility ID tho B.m.to Meter Bulldlnl,
2917 11a1n s-t (next to Be0111tt lfilb·
Scbool). Fnio admlaalon • .lacbon Ia profMaor of Enatiab. adjunct profaaaor of law
and ~donoe, and cll!eclor of the
Center for Studlea ID Amiork:an Culture at
SUNY/Bufl'alo.

- tbroulb

wit'tgenstein·
Fire 1-...a and clilcullloDI on topics
llllatod to tho theme of "WittplllteiD ODd
tho Weary Text" an oc;boclulecl for
'lbunday and F!lday, November 7-8
under apqaaoablp or the Comparotlft
Utoratw. ' Propuo and tho Gnduato
Propuo In Utoratwe and l'lyeboloCf.
7Juuadoy - 10:00, Stanley Cavell;
1:00, AJithony Ke~"WittfeDJteiD on
lmallnatlon;" 8:00, B.D. Hinch.
£ridGy - 10:00, G.E.M. Anaoombe"Tbo Grammatical Joke;" 1:00, Mu
Blact-"WIUiolllteiD'a Vlewa About
Meanln1 ODd the IDdete'rmiDacy· of
Utorary Texll."
.
AU lec:tuJea will be beld In the Moot
Court Room, O'Brian Hall.

uuabmusic
committee
to liven up
the scene
,
Get on the ball and eet on the bus. On
Saturday, November 9 at 8 :30 p.m., the
UUAB MUik Committee will present
Deft M-n (former co-mastermind of
• TRAFnC) and oflobln Tlower, explosive
lllitU IOiliUI (formerly • wllb Procol
Huum), at the Century 'lbeatre. Studonlll, $4.60; General Aclmission, $6. Bus
tranaportatlon avallable from the Main
.
Camplll.
F!lclay, November 16, bring); a combiDed troll to jazz lonn-Cblck Corea
with RETURN TO FOREVER and solo
planlat Keith Jarrett-'-in the Fillmore
Room for 2 mowa, 8:30 and 11:30 p.m.
Studonlll, $3; GeneraVAclmlaolon, $4.
_.Two ...nlll to double your pleaaure· - - · - - . ., . . . them!

'lbiie II to..._ IIIIa .........
.._._ So lay tbo . . . ,..... ,.... .
formera wbo comprlao IIUIIIIENSCHANZ, a 8 . . . .-.....:
. troupe ICbaclalocl to poobm llallollr.
N.....,..... 10, Ill Amlllal Jmdar Bill
8ebool Auclllodum. Alilloalb tbo jp:aap
odmlnl Marooau, they - t to ..... tho
cooventlona of wblto ""'· or tbo coo. ceolrallon on fadal explllllloo. lllJII.
MENSCHANZ • - ....U,- propaand
llalble 11oc1y ~ .a or ....,..
. they ..... lllomooha ..... they .......
cluee baa baon COIIIpiiN to
tho palnllnp of ~ IIORia and
l'aal Kloo. 'lbolr p101ra111
on
- buman denlopmont from tho ....... cell
to the 1 prlmatea, and on buman cam-

ea.... ....
r-

mllllieatlon.

MUMMENSCHANZ &amp;a ~
fame oulllcle 8wllzerlancl In 1911 Ill tbo
IDtomatlonal Footlnl of lllmo In flllae;
tho follcnrlnl y - they parfonaecl cl1lllnl
tho famed lllllllller r.lnll' In A'f~Ci&gt;oo&gt;,
France, ~ In 1978 loancl fox tho &amp;a
time In Ncirtb America. Durinl1914 they
ban ba4 ID London, Pula, ODd
· Berlin. 'lblo cunent tour will tab them
cooat to cooat, lncludlq a UncoiD Center
e~ment In Nonmber.
" ••• tho moot oJi&amp;lnal form of humor
witne.ecl In a very loq time." -Le
Moruk, Pula
'
" .•. droll delllblll for thooe of ua
-tiDe new approocbea to the ancient ut
of mime .. . Tbe 1110 of unconventional
props was brllllant:"-DANCEMAGAZINE
'"l'he MUMMENSCHANZ mlmillll are
poelll, aatlrlalll and pblloaopbea wbo
speak In tho ~ eloquent laiJiuale of
comedy. 'lbey can aay thlnp about
buman relaliooa tbat we all mow, but
make them ao vivid tblllt appeua we an
recoplzlq trutba for the &amp;a time •••
'lbe mub are creatlo~ of the . ricloot
.expresalonlat fancy.••• futoatlc, p
teaque, comic, IIOiilc and' ap~tabir1a
, cbanpahle In expnoolon aa tbo motlona
. •of the boneleBy dodmul mlmillll tbtmoelna."-Tfle VIUICOUoer Sui! .
- "One of the moot oJi&amp;lnal and clelilbtful theatrical evenlll - n bere ID a tone
time . .. 'lblo Ia mime u It baa DOYOr boon
aeen bere befon-a bdlllant, witty
approodl to an ancient ut.. . In the &amp;a
bait of the propam tho trio offered a
blluloua atory of evolution. Chlllzallon
and Its dlacontonlll recelvecl even moxe
blluloua and more profound treatment ID
the aecond bait•• • MUIIMENSCHANZ Ia
a biply tolentod lfOUP of peat appeal to
all qaa. " -Alina Klaael&amp;oll, The Ne111
Yort Timet
Preaen~ by tho omee of CultuDl
Atfaln and tho UUAB Drama Cooiunlttee
Sullday, Noftmher 10, 8:80 p.m.,
- Ambaat olwdor lllllSdlool ADclltOilum,
88 Klnp lllllWIIY (beldnd Ambaat
Senior Hill 8dloal, one bloet . - of
Main). Tlcketl at Noxton: 8tuclollto, $1;
FaCility, Slall, Alamnl, $2; a-.1
Alllllllolall, $8.

�S.turdey-Sunday, N_,._
1~17

COFFEEHOUSE

0/ Folio Muoic*
8:00 p.II. laotla aJcbll
12:80 • .II. • 8:00 p.M. Sundey

A JllnJ.&amp;mplu

Woclnoodey, N........... 13

Wanmop

VIDEO

l'1llnloft Room, Norton Hall
eedl or $4.50 for

12

Hf6/1Noon•
12:00 P.M.
lit Floor Norton lJilloll
Free admlooiOD
A1:t V/UUAB VIdeo Committee

MUSIC

_,.,..,.

2:00P.M.
IWnl RecHal Hall
Free ldmllllon
Depulment of Millie

: VISUAL ARTS

U..,..lllll Lobby

lluldbtc lloaa

· omoe of CultuJal AtfaiD ·

John Lofan NllliDC witla IJ;allu·
ale student JlicMel Crita

MUSIC

8:80P.M. _

1'hiindoy, ........ 7

Student R«ilrll: Marlt CudU,

pi,.,

cOFFBBHOUSE

8:00P.M.
IWni~H.n

Jlilzl Collbu- Lew London*

Free admlooiOD
lleputmeD• of·Miuic:

9:00P.M.
'
lit P1oor Cafeteda - Norton
H.n
Sludollll I .75, hcultyfSqf(
11, General ~ 11.25

lJIUie Maon Gild Robin Trower•

UUABCo~

8:80P.M.

,

DRAMA

Studlnll $4.50, GeDenl Ad·

, .t-t&gt; l

-,a

rv ·

;·.!""t '

~~

.... ..,

millloa md NJcht of Perfor-

•

'·,

The Jl,_~ bY Moljoe,
diNeW by Ward Wllltlmoon
from tile trellllallon by

MIUIIIIMnochanz, •

-*troupe*

· llladlell I .75; General Ad....... 11.50 .
~."':·,..
.

: ;j8YIIP(i8IUi( :. '.

,.t.

~ and

-~·

. .·

. .

the Ut.ntry_

a-. O'lldm Ball,
a..-.

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

llool Oooat
Amlllllt

0 6 ~~,.,._

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

,........, . . . . . . 7-Fri-

VIBUAI&gt; All'l'8

Sdlool

iDD11 HIF·
Amlllat Senior

AIICIItadam, llli

~

!Ill

(laelalad

HIP 8c1aoo1, 1 1a1oCk •

.. ..

or

F.W.,.~16 .

DISCUSSION
lmpruaionilm ~: A
Hurtdml Year l'entHctive,
of
or ,IP,!k. V-..Ioe,

DANCE

N.,m

In 1D lftllinc of

liHB-1914.•-

8:80 P.ll.llld 11:80 PX.
,._a-.
NadDD

8tudeDil ... o....a ~
llld'Nilbt of~"

........,.,...
8:00 p.II.

.; ' '

'
8llidiiiD ... 'ht:dJ/SUtf/UfB
Alamal 12. o-.1 Adllllallaa . .
.
omc. of OIMaall1 Afteln and

uu.o .... OaoaaiiUM

UUAB.....,~

. l'rldot ..............._,J-17 .
DANCE

..... ...

Zodlitw CollvMn7. dDdlod by
u.~~.....,

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

11111&amp; ..........

I:OOP.II.

...._.. I.Tii, G....a Ad: ~fl.IO
-

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

Tla . . tra De}lutmaat aad
~ _. 0111oo
llaiAfi'IID .

Frldey-leturday,
,~,.

OOLLOQUIUII

!

solo daaa.; C'llall&amp;a: A
retroapactlve ' of ·dancer

MUSIC

.

anJl

T~.Now.nbar19

DanMl

omoe

IIUIDC

omoe

Deperlment of Art (Art H!Jtory)

lit Floor Cef.._·.Norton H.n
Free IOdadlllon

Chlci: Corel and &amp;tum to For, . . llMtlt .Jolrett Oft
oolopiMo•

of CultuJal Aftlln IDd
UUAB Dama.COmmltt.e .

Styloo''*

8:30 P.ll.

. IWniHall
Free admllllon
of CultuJal Mfaln
UUAB Dence Committee

::.=:.:: '".

IIIIa)
.
8ladeDio 11, hculty/Stetf/U/B
Alumlll $2, o - 1 Ad-

.....,

Lecture-dcmon&amp;tration by
douocer, DanMl N..,U.: " A
History of .Jazz Dance

~ Ulllftillty•
:

UUABCo~

Amlaeat .liiDior Hiab

'

- .

s- mime-

DANCE

2:00P.II.

COFFEEHOUSE

B:IOPJI.

.
. \
·- F.W.,~,. ~.....
~,.

Studenll 11. hl:ultyfSqfffUfB
Alumni 12, General Ad·

UUAB Open s~•

...............
n.....y
7.. ........

.

9:00P.M.

lllc:lalld Wllbar.
8:80P.M. \

\

8:30P.M.

miiiiOD fS .. ·
Deportment of Mluic: - .

..,maDC0$6.00. . . "
UUAB 'Miuic:~

1

Phyllil Curtin, oopnDO-'Witla
R)'lll Bd-.ucla. plmllt*
Muy Seeton Room, lOelnbma
Mlllie'H.n

Ooatuiy 'lbMter
Thundey-Sundlry, N.,....,._
7-10 " '

SlOFCIIIIItHall
Free IOdadlllon
.
lntnmurel J!ll&amp;llola Deportment
Poelly ~ Seriol

VJSITING ARTIST SERIES I

MUSIC

U!B Cllcunbcr Wlndr .Concert
-Frent Cipolla, Director;
Ynr Mlltlaesboff, Plano
oololat

Mondey, N........ 18

POETRY READING

s.tunlay, N_,._ e

. Sundlry,,..,..,.., 17

8:00 P.ll.
IWnla.dtal Hall
Free IOdadlllon
Depertment of Millie

Thu....;, N_,._ 14

Hanittlnted Xero;raplu by •.
' llllllalfacoet '

&lt;1w1e

MUSIC

Marter Clau/l¥1yUis Curtin,

'T1IrauF ........ 29

laolb. No admllllon
for 'wolbbop.
UUABCorr.oboult

'.

or CaJ.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

�•l·

'l'loundl¥•.oe-... 12

TueodiY, ~ 211

.lltlSIC

LBCTURB (Ban~~)

Wad.....,-Sundey, Now...,ber
~

o..lialt, Ooadudor

8:00P.IL •
.... BeoKallbll
..... 8llmlloloD
~oflllllic

YOnlty Coli••· London,

J!Dalan4-

DRAMA

s-1 by Bertolt Brecht; dlrected
by Oollloo_Rocofr*
8:10P.M.
Ooullyud 'lbeetN,' Hoyt llld
Lafayette SWdnll $1, Geaeml Admllllon
$2.60
O..lllr for Tboatn a-.m

Thuredey,o-nberli

Mondey, o-mber 2

Suiim. &amp;cilm, B/4c/o Feminiml

7

MUSIC
. Frank apo0a, Director
8:00P.M.
Sweet Home Senior Bi&amp;h Sebool
Free edmlllion

VISUAL ARTS

Zodlaque ColfiiNIIIY dlrec:ted by

Tueedey, o-nbor 3

Swlnludt, wltb IUOit
utllta lbe .Biact Dence Wort-

·

stut~mt Reci iDI: Jucty

..vemate

F ~.

Friday-Saturday, N..........,
22~

Mondey. o.-nber 16

MUSIC

MUSIC

OPERA

.

........ boliD
Oftlce fl!. Caltaml AtrliD

Frw.,.~~-t · .

~)-

Mondey,

.

U!B 0.0....

~

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

eo..-

Ft. .........
, ~oUIIIIic •.-

(lllla...tJnoett)
Ft. .........._
~oflllllic

DANCBflQ!J'nlJ'RIIADINp

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

.

;

8:00P.11.

.......,. a.....
.........

Ad-

.

om.ota....r Aala

-

llaalit

B:OOP.IL
•
~C..tral P...,ilillai. Cbardl

- - - - Wllllamt, Dilector

8:00P.IL

~

a-, Dilector

,, _

·Donide oa.tff·- t.alallt i-t
.........'II,

/

. 2:00P.JI:

U!B ,.,_,.,

'

.,_,._I

MUSIC

:r·

by · ·IUdlanl

Albd&amp;lit-KDciiArt Gtllloly

fonnln&amp; ' Arb (CnatiYO

~

r.,... B/4c/o People:

~forNewMJUic

$2
'
C...IIK of !be Cn.abit·.... IW,;--.

~ofMaolc

-'--Y31

RaJ- Hal Lobby

l!ell$1, ~~

Ft. .........

MC.nd.y; o.-nber 16 • Frldey,

Pboto~pba_.

SQadollii/Fecnlty/Gtllloly .....

. a..t ..... HIIII ·

"""*.!-

-8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hllll
Free adlidoolon
~nt ofMlllic

. lllao* -

' . 8:00P.il:

.lracourafiOI': Neoilk M4nitw,
c:oncfllctorlo

Studmt RecUIJl: J4ma Vander-

l'brtnJjiJ of

~ndey. ~6

DRAII.t

-

De~tofMIIIic

Bit. a1lli Pli!cea dlrec:ted by Ed
Smltb
8:10 P;M.
Htniman·'lbeetN Studio
Department of n-tre

~ntofMulic

Tueedey, o-mbor 3o-nbor6 -

MUSIC

8:00P.M:
Baird Recital Hllll
Free admlsllon

DRAMA

8:00P.M.
Baird Recital Hllll
Free edailtiion · · ., ·

Pbyoi..J ~n· Dence

· Pro,.m-cultlllnl N.ndetw
8:00 p .II. • 2:00 A.M.
-Puerto Rican Community
C...lllr, 261 s...n Binet
. Free admlllloD
.
Pllerto Rican SWdloo

Student RecillJI: JoantNl . C...telUmi, guitar

s.turd8y, o-nber 7 - Sundey,
o-nberB

MUSIC

.

MusiC

. FOLKLORIC SONGS,
ANDDANCB
.

,Ww

~ntofMDiie

· LIDda

s.tunley, .,._.....14

8:00P.M.
llllrd lledlil Hall
Free admlllloD

MUSIC

DANCE

8:00P.M.
llllrd lledal Hllll
..... 8llmlloloD .
Depaltmerat_ of lllllic

Studmt Recital: &amp;mraye SliDrt,
s.tu~. o-mber 7

I

Cottu.... ~ 1J:xhlbtt •
Htyet Hllll Lobby
llulldln&amp;lfoaD ' .
Oftlce of. Cultuml Aftmt and
~t ofTbottre

~~. ~,;;.., •:~·

De~nt of MDiie

F~.

Mondey, o-nber 2 o-nber13

Frldey-Sundey, ,..,...,.,., 22-24

..

U/B Symphony B4nd Concert-

Sorl, pianilt
8:00P.M.
Baird Redtal Hllll
Free edmlttlon
De~t ofMDiie

8:00 llld 10:00 p.II.
lot Ploar c.t.l8rla, Norton Hllll
SWdeata $ .75, healty/&amp;atr
$1, Goaeal Admllolon $1.26
UUAB Colhboule

.- ~,l~··

- Gloda 8telnem ' llld .lane
o.Mn-Lewlt•
8:00P.M.
aut Hllll
Unherlity Commlllllty . Free,
Generol Public $1
S.A. SpoUea' SW.U

Studmt RecillJI: ShDron Lee

,.,.t

BIJulmt ReciiiJl: N_, Bald&amp;,

LBCTURB

Frldey, o-nber 6

Art~enwum•

Tifeit"te.., HBP~'t~ ent .l and

MUSIC·.

MUSIC

COFFiiBHOUSB

8:00P.M.
Hmrlman 'lbMtN
SWdoata $ .75, Genen1 Ad-

Friday; .,_,._ 13

8:00P.M.
Sebool· of All:bltedwe, 2917
. lbln!llnet
Free Mmiollon
Sebool of All:bltedwe

GnuatiiiiDirlhip
3:00. 6:00 p.M.
· 282Norton
Reptntio6 and Information,
228 Norton, 831-4631.

LBCTURB/SLIDB PRESENTATION
' 'Who KI/W JFKr," De'fld
WJillual*
8:00P.IL
Loeallon to be emneedUnl... nlty Com,mlllllty Free,
a.-1 Public $1 .
SA ilpMba' SW.U

•

LIFE WORKSHOP

Thuredey, Now.....O. 21

map•

U/B OrdletiJw eo-t - .I'IIDela

Tfleoly of Dalp BeyOIId 1M
Jl'lnt Mlli:hJne •
- l'lor..or ReyDer llenblm, De- 111n lllltodan, Sebool of .
Bn'liJoDIDontal . 8tudlot, Uni-

_ ..

~.

IIUIJIC '

,.....

All .......

of ..,..,. ,

,,_

..............,/fiWI/
'

. B:GUA

. ...... .. . .10.

. . . . . . . . . . flAG ,

Da I . lellllllle

�"~ -(~

high

. • r,. :..--

nOOn :

··~nsuaae

............... ,...&amp;M"'AA
...., llld" for a ............ • IIIIo flat
flow ot Holt. Ualoll. ~ IIIIo - ·
ftaalalloa ...... poetry llld -'riiDecl
u..By ril lab P.!-, • - IWIIIIty II
--.,_ lllliead, ta-.t IJIIIde oahad baebnrdl.
t Plaolly a lllob of dou Jlpt ........ IIIIo
aad lOll to IIIIo India of &amp;M

_on trial
1

-r

I.

llartoDoD;-... Adloy
llld IIIIo "SDaadL"'A ..t ot lbouiiDdl-

j

'

u..&amp;wauc·~and

Literary

In~on

..,.
Byron , Ji Koatltoet
(chairman, Germanic ' and Slam,
SUNYAB): Introductory Remarb.
9:30 a.m. - wmtuD S. l:lamllton
(Germanic and. Slam, 'SUNY.Ail);_ The
American Structurallatl.
· ' 10:00 a.m. - G. Lee Fullerton (Gerlilajllc and Slam, SUNYAS): The Tnrufonnallonallat Approach to Langu.ce.
10:30 a.m. - Paul Giipn (Linguilllcs,
SUNYAB): Some Commenta on - Lin·
guiatica an!' Uteratfue.

daD't mill IL See whole ol opace
am. warp, CWft • ......,. wWiin.
~lild by Aet V/UUAB Yldoo -Comm!Uee OD tile flat flow of NOiloll OD
Wodaolday, November 18; l l'ne Ad·

---

gifted

n. Cult and Crills of Language
1:00 p.m. -Peter Heller (Gennan.and
Comparative Literature, SUNYAB): Concerning the Topic: of tbla Colloquium. ·.
1:30 p.m. -Michael Landmann' (Freie •
Univenltat, Berlin): Language: Steptlca
and Belleven.
2:30 p.m. - Mlc:bael Metzcer (Germanic and Slavic, SUNYA8): Stefan
George: Toward a Ne}' Rhetoric.
3:00 p.m. - HoiSt Wittmann (Unl- •
nrnlty of Toronto): Language' Crills and
· &amp;cape Into Myth (Hofmannatbal's Der .
Schwierige).
4:00p.m. -Wilma A. lggen (Canlsiils
College, Buffalo): Karl Kraus's View and
Use of Language. · ·
7:15 p.m. - Erich HeUer (North·
western Univenl!fJ Thinking About the
Language of roetry (Heidegger and
Holderlin).
8:15-9:00- Reception

vai&amp;c

Artist
tile Doputment of
Mualc, will fea&amp;un! l'llyDII Curtin.
Amedc:a'a llftllll aopano wiD perform a
JIIOinl!l entitled "Poetry In MUik:," In·
dudlne tile mUik: of FtaDdl Poulenc,
Claude Dobully. Gabriel ........ Paul Des
Mmil, Ryan Bchrudl and Benjunin
Britten oot to poem1 of VUmorln. Verlolne, .. ClliDIIIInp, Paul LawJenee Dun·
bot, Emily Dlctlnoon, Robert E. Hayden
and W;H. Auden.
'lbla iyJical eftllln&amp; wiD 'be Thwsday.
Noyember 14, at the Mary SNton Room,
Klelnbanl MUik: HoD at 8:30 p.m. Stu·
dentl, $1; Faculty, Staff and Alumni, $2;General Admlsllon, $3.

nevv

Saturday, November 16 (244 Norton).

d.a nce group

-r

attltudeo

9:15 a.m. -

. aad

..,.,_,red by

colloquiUIII OD

•

-a-~~~y~~~oookt

'l1le flat poapam of tile

A

Friday, N~ 15 (231;Norton).

l'oopoloq. .....

Sedeo,

.

fowud
......,... ~lild by IIIIo !Department of
Germank aad Slmc: OD Ncinll!ber 15 aad
16 In 281 and 244 Norton .Hall.

wllle wilDie c:rowdl of ODiilobllue cutdlnm .., tl!e oold ~ of JIOilo-pat

soprano
toapPe&amp;r

c·;;--. f' -·x

· ~

to feature
exciting . ·.··
program$

Ul. Toward a Subordination
.
of·I;anguage? - • r.
10:00 a.m. - Michael MetZger (Ger·
manic and Sla.m, SUNYA8): ·Introductory Remarks.
.
10:15 a.m. - Walter H. Sokol (Univenlty of Virginia) : Franz Kafka: The
Truth and Untruth of Language.
11:15 a.m. - Andrzej Wlrtb (CUNY):
Dialogue In Poat-.Brecbllan Drama.
i:45 p.m. -Concluding Remarks and
Panel Discussion (Tiie speakers; modera·
tor: Peter HeUer).
·.
· .

_.

'~'be. Donee procnm1 of Uie Theatre
and l'llyalcal Educallob Dopartmentl have
combined to fo.!Jil ZODIAQUE, eom·
posed of studentl at the Intermediate
level and .abare- They wiD be performing
a new piece, "Danee 74,"- dl.reded by
Unda•8wlniuch. The oJ:i&amp;lnal seore wiD be
dliected and ptayed by.ltl C9PIIJOIOf, Ray
Leslie. U&amp;bliDI Doslper and Technical
Director of the,poup Ia ~ McKinley. •.
r The porformanoea of Nonmller ~5, 16
and 17 wiD Include the aolo appearance
of gueat ut1at Peter Bertini, a young
dancer wtlh "Bottom ot tile Buetet,
. But. ••" Duce Tbeetre In Boc::J.ter. Mr.
Bertini II preoenlild by IIIIo 'Omce of Cui·
tural Atfaln, ...... dlnelor ..... bla
abinr_.pplng aolo "RXR," choreog·
npbod to lllloa Imla' llllllle, at tbe Uni·
ftlllty-wlde "Ceeeeaaioa" • Fredonia
l o o t - · Bertini, a 1974 puate of
~·· duee ~ bad the
....... Cllllta IIMt, ....,.~ bla
• claldiDI , . . , _ · 'IIIIi om.. of
' · ·Cal&amp;lal AfWa ~ deiJ&amp;bWiil!lldq Jatm
to Bull'lllo to ........ ~~ de

,__
. , . _,

~

...

neville
marriner--an encounter~
session vvith
( good vi_
b es.
The third In a ......of ENCOUNTERS
wiD feature an lnfOIIIIII eon"--lon with
the dlatlnau!!bed CCIIldllet«, NEVU.LE
MARRINER of ltie 8t. JladiD.in.tbe.
Field Cbambar Ordloal:ra, ..... of the
-alit-after DIUik: ~In
the world 1"*1· 'Die·ENCOUNTER wiD
lilb t11e f-..ot a rap IOIIIOD llld -...
denta; txuJty ad community mombeil
wiD be . _ . . . . to IDterao:t with &amp;M

,-~

....... ·iJt ·ilae

lllaek~W~WliWili1iaw•

CXIIIIIuet«.

. r:::-cez~
.All 1111
WID
llmlmiD

....

--··4!111~1Mudoata;· .71i;a..al

.

'

Once apln, IIIIo UUAB Cotr~luM. .
wiD IJIYII nenta whlcb prom11t to be
Noftmber 7 at 9
p.m. brinp ~ -COLLINS aad LEW-,
LONDON, llbe to Combfne blt);n..,nedp
of Amedc:an lradlllonal and niiCk&gt;ua
music on . the guitar, dulclmer and
paaltery, and be to abare 'lritl\ ua bla
ailperb guitar atylea. For th. . wbo enjoy
belDc not just apectaton, but parliclpanta
u weD, Novemblt H Ia the date to
remember. There wiD be a free OPEN
SING to which everyone Ia lnvilild to
bring lnatrumenta u weD u vocal
dlorda-to trade aonp and atylea while
&lt;;arrYinC on an old folk lradlllon, meeiiDt
new people and learning new tblnp. A
MINI-SAMPLER OF FOLK MUSIC
foUowa on Saturday evening, November
16, and -.rlll feature, among others,
MICHAEL COONEY and FENNING'S
ALL STAR STRING BAND. On Sunday,
17, there wiD be worksbopa and concerti
to complete the SMALL FOLK
FESTIVAL. A minor le&amp;end In music,
ARTIE TRAUM, wiD be beard ~t 8 and
10 p.m. 9n November 21.
from
the WoodaloCt Folk MUik: Scene that
Included Bob Dylan and Marla Muldaur,
Arlie, who ~a· now doing a alngle,la one of
the moat reapecled and u:clliDI musicians
around.
-.
It Ia with pride that tha abo-.. ...
brovlht to you by IIIIo UUAB Colfee.
" - · Come,IDiala &amp;Mtl!lll

..,..a to the loot drop.

Comii.a

danialliagrin
in·residence
' Donltt NIIIIID. .w. IOiollt, wiD be In
at U/B tor~ claJI: Nonmbor ,
18, 19, 20. l(..,tn U OM 11.- W other
baa crealild and perfonned IOio clancea at
the Jllljor daDct· r.tlnla In Amorlca.
Dance erlllc· Wolter Tmy wrote of Jatm
after bil flat full rNDIDIIOio JIIOII&amp;IIllil
i957. '"l'be llnlm c.r ..... baad (poaalbly •
two) would be auftldent to _.t the
nWI1ber of daDctll cepablo of canylng off
a aolo recital. A moat be add.ld to
. lhla -..ry apaclallll&amp;, Daniel Napln."
Since that lime N..,tn baa been lourIng lha u.s: each yeer, 1porflllllllng and
no!~

au

teaching, and conllnually creeliDI new
worb for bla Tepertolre.
, ·
Wblle !t U/B, be wiD p~nt a perfor·
mance of "CHANGES: A NtrolpediYe of
daneea 19411-1974," the hiCblllbta of' a
career of creating aolo dancea from 1948
to the preoent:
Spanlab Dance
· 8trangll Hero
Blue Man
Nineteen Upbeata
Indeterminate Figure
Path
A Gratitude
WordplAy from the Peloponneatan War
and new work
The ViJIGto Voice~ dance erltic,
Deborah Jowict, reviewed tbla procram In

August 1974:
... . . bla wile, tough cbarlil, bla
strength, bla tbeatrlcal u:perllae are u
formidable u ever. . . .
,
"All iienlng I'd been admiring bla
aldUI'ulnea••• at the end, I loved Jatm for
bla incorrigible berolam."
CHANGES wiD be performed Tuesday, October 19, 8 p.m., ~
Theatre. 'neteta at Norton: Studenta, $1;
Facully/Starf/Aiwnnl, $2; General Ad·
misalon, $3.
....,.~~
~
In aikullon to the.. pertC&gt;riDID&lt;O., Mr.
Nagrin will present a ·'lec:luft.&lt;iOmonatrallon, "A Hlatory of .Jazz Dance
Stylea," on Monday, November 18, 8:30
p.m., Baird Hall nil idmlulon ~)
and an open iiluter cWi on Wednioilay,
Novembot 20, 10:30 a.m.-12 noon, Fill·
more Room; Norton (no ad.miJSion
charge). Mr. Nagrin wiD ailo conduct a
number of cloaed daalea· for dance atu·
den to.
The Daniel Nagrin residency Ia eo· .
apooaored by the Olllce of 'Cultural
AlfldD aad IIIIo UUAB~.

�,0

~T,-

i!f} 1'1.1 '!_;·'
·!"..

~" ~.. ~;

.......

~.

--

la .b Oheme
. 11AAJ. Ia Bertolt Bncht'l lint play, ~

en-lie poem Oollt a poe_t,.an-astound-

IDC loww, ·a

vvho

Tba Unlnplty Opera Stocllo wOJ JINaent two performaneeo of 'Pucdnl'a La

baa I
Day...yer, and

a mlllde..,r.

'l'aldal blo -

ftom the SemlllcPboallldan del~ of llllatlablllty ....,.
oldoNd by
to ba tba
aoul
of etll, Baal ll-ill Bnebt'a bandl--1he
eaemy of -.11 tbat Ja purltank:al and
acelle ·IR tbe Clulatlan...ludale tnldlllon.
AI Brie Bentley, tnaalat,or of Bool, aaya·
"In tba play of Bool tba poetry of life
...~Ill tbe ....... tba beauty by
~ bonor•• ••(BNc:bt) bad made a tubula
nua of the modem drama • a whole and
on tbat bare IUrfact bad eNCted a primitive and alnady aturcly llllllctun of bla
own. For baUer or for...,.., a new era b.
.n-Ile art data from lbla·play-»
A lap eat dlnded by Gordon
Rotoff featareo MUUn Manlak IR the title
role and Morton Udlter, Berbara Danllb,
Mlcbael r.loDelo and Jim Lytraa 1R oilier
Important pull. Mr. 'Lytraa baa alao
wrtlieD tbe millie. v - . _ baa
cleoilned •lo. clotbel, and Ucbl:l for the
procluc:llon.
I'Naatlted by tbe BuffUo Project of
the Center for 'lbeeln a-.dl-at the
Courtyard. 'DieatN, Hojt and Lefayette
Stnelo, NOftllllbar 20-24 wltb a prmew
perfonnanee on NOftllllbar 19. AD perforIDIIICelat 8:80p.m.
~de.nlo, $1; General Admilllon.

a.......

.,.;y

b

~mpressiona of impressionism
In' tba eecoad of tbe SUNY/B Art
Dep..tmant . aDd Allllll4lt-KDox c:ol!pOJIAOr&amp;ll lecture - - . Profilaoro Klrt
Vamedoe of Columbia Unlftzllty w01
lecture 1111 1WiJ Seen AIWD: CGilleboiU
and 1M lmpraslonlJt -~- Tba
lecture, wldch . wOl ba bald at tbe Al-

bd&amp;ld-KDox

~ 0.U., Oil WadDeaday,
Nonmbar 20, at 8:10 p.an., *OIIId
pmride - ) ' . ~· Oil lidl .
.........._., llllller of falpi.oloaJom

and Oil tba ~ 1R ..-J- 'l'bele
will IIIIo ba an . IDtarmal dllcallloll oa
1 , . . , . . ~ A HIUitbed
Ye•r Pe,.,pectbla; lad by rmr-.r
VUDIIdoe Ill Ala(D lllmbol&amp;'a ~­
lam-1'111&amp; lmpNioloollm» COUJia (Art
Hiltoly 116) at-2 p.m., 'l'ueldQo, Nowember 19, Ill FCIIter ~. wldch wOl ba open
to tbe pllbllc.
•
.
Fne admllliOD.
•

Bolwn£ 1R a fuDy oteaoc1 piOduellon
Friday and Satwdjy, Nonmber 22 and

' killed.j.f .k.?

' 28, 8:80 p.m. at the WUllamniJie
NQR'nl lflcb Sdlool on Hopldna ROad.

... lllllliy not GWRIA STBINEM and
GALVIN,LEWIS, wbo wOlledure

~ANB

Tba performlbc:ea wOl beaellt tbe Millie
Sdiolanblp FuDd of the Music Deport-

ment, ....S mart the 60tb annlvenary of
Pucdnl'a death.
Produced and dllected by Muriel
Hebert Wolf, the production w01 ban
ael:l cleoilned by Robart Wlntler of tbe
Metropolitan Opera, ~ coatumea by
8uza!me Utlielleld, Hurief SimoDI Ia
muolc director Ed conductor and Her·
bart DeMo"' Ia Ucbllna deolper and
tecbnle8l cllreetor. CooperalinJ In the
preaantelloa ..., the U/B orehealza, under
the .cllredlon of Plmela Geuliart,-and the Opera Worbbop Cborua.
, Gueot art1at In Soo Put wOl appear u
Rodolfo. 'lbe KoN&amp;n tenor, an liumnua
of the Unlvenlty Opera Studio and a
lf"duate of Seoul Nalloom Univenlty
CoiJece of Muolc, wu winner of the Marla
Collaa ,Sell~ at &amp;be Juilllanl Sdlool
of Mui1c 1972 and baa ~ce ap~ In a ·
number ' of opeia producllona In New
Yort City. Also performln&amp; w01 ba
Radlel Lewis ioll Mimi, Jane ..,_ a
~ and Geoqe Wanda a'Mam!Jio.
Sduauwd and Colllne will ba played by
Kenneth Frieaema and .looepb Cboulnald
:wltb Benoit performed by RDberi
WUJoucbby, l'llrplpol by Robart De
Yuman and Alclndbro by Edward Maraball.
Patron 'licbl:l ..., $25 per couple;
recuJar tlckel:l, · $4, and student llekel:l,
$2. Tlck.el:l..., anllable at Norton Union
Buffalo State Ticket Ofllce, and Fesllvai
Boat at the Staller IWton Hotel.

on "SBXISM, RACISM AND BLACK
. FBMINISM'' on 'lburaday, December 5, 8
p.m., aut Hall. Tba- crwclenllala of Ma.

-

~

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

Stelnem ..., well kncrtrn, J:an11n1 fllom ber
year In India 'Oil a Cbeoter Bowlos Allan
FelloWiblp and her Cllll'Oilt poo111on •
editor of Mo. mopm.e, to ber wr111np on
pollllca, cumnt aoc:lolol)' aDd polllicli
. DlOftmenl:l &amp;IIIOIIC women and miDodty

poupa. Ma. ~...... a flllllldft and
coordinator of tba 'National 111act
Femlnilt Orpnlzatlon, baa baen tD~
In the llllllale for buman julllce and
equli d&amp;hl:l for many ')'em and .....S •
deputy director of tbe Women'• Action
Alliance. Sbe baa tau&amp;llt Bna!l* and
econo.mlca at· tbe Unlvenlty of Dlbomey,
Weot Africa; wu nallonli propun c:ooldlnator of .the Nallonli Council of
Necro Women and esecutlve c11reetor of
tba Mount Vemoa, N.Y., Community
Action Group. 'lbelr joint lectuie, pmaented by the Student Aaaodallon
· Speabn' Bureau (Community, $1; flee
to Unlvellilty memban) wOl ba pmYoca:
u... and allmulalinJ.
P.S:-If you reilly want to know "WHO
KILLED' ~.F.K.?" don't mla the S.A.
Speabn' Bureau offerlnc of a leCtwe and
- allde p.....,tallon by Mr. David Williams
{tbla Ia tba tblrd lime tbat tbls popular
proeram baa baen abown). It wOl provide ·
...., pbcJtocrapba and 111m evidence of
"the CODipincy thet tilled Jolm Ken·
nedy" and promlaea to conrlnce you that
the IIS&amp;IIIinallon "not the act of a ·
maniac, but the product of a covem·
mont-endorsed domestic eaplonage
apparatua wblcb baa been only partially
expoaed in · the )Vateqate bearinp. »
'lbwsday, November 21, 8 p.m. FNe to
Unive!Sity memben; Community, $1.
Location to ba arranpcL

�birth dane*/
notbelly .
dance

.

Dulela o•m. a fOI!Ibiiot poet and
multlmodla artllt, will ~· a poetry

readlnc/ledure

lyrical poet.
vvill read
Linda-Pastan will read fronl her own
poetry on we.m..uy evening, December
11 at 8 p.m., Conference Theatre,
Norton. Her book of poems; A Perfect
Circle o{ Sun, was published by Swallow
md her latest work will soon
oppear from Liverigbt Press.
Ms. · Pastan writes carefully crafted
lyrical poems-often domestic subjects
with metapby&amp;ical overtones. She was a
Breadloaf Feljow this summer and gave
what ,... regarded by many as the most
impressive poetry reading of the season.
All are welcome to share in an evening
of simple, plain and passionate poetry.
This event is sponsored by the English
Department's Poetry Committee and
there is no admissioD charge.

PrMs;

and perform ber ·"lllitb
Dance" In U/B'a Harrlman 'lbeatle on
Friday, January 31. · Althouch Ms.
Gioaem does · not object ;to the term
"beOy dance" to deacribe the dance segment of ber unique propam, abe emplwlzea that It Is performed In the spirit
of Its historic beginnings as a sacred
ritual, rather than as a harem dance of
bondage, or cafe spectacle.
Ms. Giosefti's poems have been pub-·
lished in Choice, The Nation , The Paris
Review, Ms., Modem Poetry Studies, and
other llllgBZines of poetry, as well as in
many antbologi~ ; and her multimedia
poem/plays have been presented by off.
off Broadway theatres.
Presented by the Office of Cultural
Affairs, January 31, 8 p.m., Harriman
Theatre.

portraits
of young
black people
"Portraits of Young Black People,'' an
exhibition of photographs by Richard
Blau, will be on display from December
16-January 31 in the Hayes Hall Lobby.
These pictures were made ·during the last
two years at Saint Augustine's, a community center on the East Side of Buf- ·
falo.
•Richard Blau Js an assiStant professor
of American studies, SUNY/Buffalo.
Pr.entacl by the omce of Cultural

A&amp;la.

Daniela Glooeffi

leo smit
student artists/
piano duets....
An evening · of music for four bands,
one and two pianos, will be presented by
Leo Smit and students, Claudia Hoca and
Nils Vigeland, on Monday, February 3, at
8 p.m. In Baird Recital Hall: '!be program
wiU Include music by Hlndemitb, Schubert, and Stravinsky, and will feature.t be
Sonata {or Two Pilmos and Percussion by
Bela Bartok with Jan Williams and Don
Knaack, percussionists.
•
Tickets will be available at t he Norton
Ticket Office: Students, $ .50; Faculty/
Staff/Alumni, $1; Others, $ 1.50.

life
vvorkshops
Granlirnanship!
Applying for grants bas become a part
of life to many scbolaiS, administrators,
organiiations. '!bose of you who must
contend with this process can benefit
from a lecture/discussion on "Grantsmanship· and the Grant Process," given by
Robert Fitzpatrick, vice president for
research at SUNY/B. '!be workshop will
deal with the general aspects of grant
oppUcations and management, including
planning, proposal preparation and
Identification of sources of support.
Registration and Information: 223
Norton Hall, 831-4631.
- December 2, 3-6 p.m., 232 Norton .

.

films
sm.

are otrered bY. the UUAB FUm
Comr.uttee, the Center fiir Media Studies,
the departmenll of BDtllab, Hiatoly and
~ncb. A bloebure 11o11nt aD lllms on
- . - , ~December, II aall·
lillie 8&amp; -tile Ullllnalty UDioD Ae1DWes
B-.1 In NadGI UDioD.

\. .
"-..

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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STAT£ UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
OCTOBER 31, 1974
Vpl. 6, NO.~

••

Fears about ·campus crime
unfou_nded, Security-says
· Two male students were robbed at
gunpoint of $110 in cash and nearly $700
worth of personal belongings in their

Porter Qu adrangle dormi~ory room at
the Joseph Elli cott Complex on the

. Amherst Campus on O ctober 22.
Campus Security reports that three
male suspects entered the room at approximately 7:30 p.m. ·one of the three
intruders reportedly struck the two
students with a small silver pistol but did
not seriousl y injure them. The ro bbers
force~ the st ude nts to lie on th~ floor,
tied the m up with bed sheets, ransacked
the room, the n fl ed.
One of the students freed himse lf a
short time later and notified Campus
Security.
The items reported stolen are : two
te levision sets; a wrist watch; tw&lt;t stereo
speakers; a stereo am plifier; two clock
radi os; a tape deck; a calcul ato r; a su itcase, and a wa llet, containing personal
papers. Campus Securi ty Officers are investigating the incident.

More than .hiJ/fway there

• • •.-

•

&lt;ill

••

"

•"'

.&gt;#

Ketter cites enrollment
and funds -as fop concerns.

Enrollment5 and fu11ding are the
primory ci&gt;ncems of UIB and all of higher
education, President Roben L. Kener
told the SUNY Trustees and the University Council in his 1973·74 annual repon
issued this·week.
But while the times call for coordina. tion amo,gg all institutions, public and
private,~ l(etter said, " the provision of
public education · that js economically
available to al! classes of persons cannot
be limited .in order t(! . inflate private
enrollment5; nor can the stronger public
institutions be weakened In order io en. sure the con!inued existence of morginal
private institutions, or even that of
~weaker_ public ones. Obligations to the
taxpoyer and to qualified student5 are
too compelling to permit' institutional
fstherbedding, even if politically this
mlsht seem to be t'he most expedient

although credit enr.ollment in Millard
Fillmore College" the evening division,
declined" slightly.
Crod lncre- Encourosins
An increase in graduate enro ll ment
was especially encouraging, Ketter
noted, after a' declining trend between
1970 and 1972; and the exponsion of
professional school enrollments "continued a_n upward curve evident over the
post half-decade."
In these increases, and at the un-. .
dergraduate level as well, he said,
· perhaps the most notable fact has been
the growih i n the numbers of women
and' minority students:
"In 1972, a suney ollts membenhlp by
the Notional Aaodatlon ol Sl.lte Universities IIIICi land-Crud Colleps ranked

the UnMnlty lit . . . . . sixth .........,
In ol ihe ~ ollts loUd. .
........ ~ 7.6. per cent. 1IYI
In his 43-page review and· projection,
~ mcre-ut the UniYenlty In
1973-7411&gt; Ll per centDIKk en~
the President de~iled the bear .market
In • .,....... •~ewe~~, ... ...._ plagulilg higher education nationally.
that omiirM despite. declne .......... Concefns about overemphasized.
lyln 1!731nlhl..,e. e • .......,_,.
credentlalization and uninterested
studenr., in tandem with-&amp;hrinking job ..bladts ...._ .......... .
"At the- undergraduate level, th!"""
availabilities,. he said, have led to in·

rpute."

creased skepticism about the v(lue of '
bacalaureete ... nd higher studies. The
reduced rate of college attendance
amons a shrinking pool of college-aged
Individuals has wrecked enrJillment projections· and "with foresight at •
minimum, many institutions throughout
the nation [have been) suddenly confronted with declining numben of

!IUdenls.

"fooo1Unately," though, the, annual
repon Indicated, "enrollment in. the
University · a~· 8 u fl a I o i~ at
every academic level in 19Z3·74,

University's 9:1 per cent block enro11rneot for 1973-74 su~sideralily
the 6.9 per cent natiOhalligure for this
grdilp in 1970, Which is tile most recent
cpmprehensive figure, In : this Office's
possession. Especially significant is that at
the professiollal JeViil black enrollment
in the sChools of Medicine and law~..
12.8 per cent and 11.3 per cent tf!SpeCtively, as compored to 1970 mitional
percentages ol 4.2-per cent and 3.9 per
cent... . .
"The number of women students at·
(tum

ro J»lfie J. col. ''

In the wake of an occurre nce like th is,
Assistant Director of U/ 8 Security lee
Griffin says, the rumor mill works overtime. Everyo~e knows of at least six
similar incidents, one of which happened just a few minutes ago down the hall
- o r so this guy you sat next to on the
MC,\i n Street bus said his girl friend's
roommate overheard in the cafeteria.
Griffin repons th at dle~~sip, a son of
paranoia about rampant cr;me, is both
unfounded and unfonunate,)t stirs people up for no reason. This worries Campus security, he says. SOSeouo:i)¥.has.ook·
· ed dormitory head"resicRnt5 to repon all
such rumors in order that they may be
checked out and officially refuted, if unfounded.
umpus 5.tfer
The fact is, Griffin indicates, that the '
campus - including the Amherst .area
around which most rumors and security
complaints center - is safer today than, ·
say, four years ago. At that tiine, the campUs crime rate was three times that of the
City ;os a whole. But things have changed.

Since Janua ry 1, there have been only
six robberies on University premises,
Security records show - three on Main
Street and three at Amherst, one in
Gover.nors, one in Ellicott and one at a

bus stop. (A seventh, pu...., robbery
reported in Baird Hall was never substantiated.) And in each-of the six, Griffin says
by way of a word to the wise, the robbers
seemed to !&gt;e looking for soft dru~~
The only reponed sexual assault in 1974
was the widely-publidzed Ellicott inddent
PUSH COMES TO SHOVE
/
Ms. J•n Crobtree, octive in the Doy Core
Center's compolsn ' for University fun·
ding. told the Reporter .Wt week thot she
w;os "pushed" from Dr. Albert Sofl!it's oflice by Compus ~urlty. Security soys
she moy well h..e been, but olter thot
the two versions of the story diller. Ms.
Crobtree soys she wu woltins In Dr.
Somit's office ond w;os ejected when cloy
core demonstrolors entered the Hoyes .
lobby. Security Co,Wn Henrj Urbonsld
indicotes she wos woltins ot the receptionist's desk In the corridor leodins to
the Presidentiol offices ond thot when .
the demonstrotofs em-d the lobby, Ms.
Crobbee one! • componion moved ID open
the door ID the office corridor ID let them
in. Slnc:e Security's orden ~ ID let In
only the two aep-ntolives, there- Indeed some pushlns ond shovins u
denooustralors tried ID set In ond Security
tried" to keep them out. In the coune ol the
ildion, Ms. Croblree ....,. wei . _ been
pushed, Urbonsld says, but not . wlthoul
po11010C31ioa.
earlier in the semester. In this case, Griffin reports, the victim had lost her purse
to bLUglars a week before and had not
heeded warnings to keep her room lock·
ed. Her assailant entered through an unlocked door.
There have been no serious physical
assau lts on campus- in three years, the
Security administrator says. There have
been no rapes on campus, either. 1he
(lum IO ~~

2. col. 2)

�......

~ober 31, 1974

Admi.niStrati;)n, -parenfs·_ ~
meet on day··care plan

Parents and administrators may: be ~
proachlng occord
a INn which would
insun; C0£1tlnuance of the UIB Day Care
Center, aCcording .to a statement Dr. Merton Enell, acting vice president for.
academic affai{S, issued today.
Dr. Ertell and other administrato~S met
. Sunday, October 27, with parents of
children enrolle&lt;! in the Center.
At that meeting, members of the University administrative staff told parents that the
University is serious in its desire to maintain
the Center in operation for the balance of
the current semester, for the second
semester of this Y.,ar and thereafter. The
capacity to do this, however, depends on
the development of an academic program
focused on the Center and designed to
meet both the educational needs of the
children and the educational goals of
University students, Dr. Enell said.
AccOrding to a plan proposed by the administrator, a consonium . of academic
schools and departments will undertake an .

on

Ms. Brooke-Rose
iS Butler prof .
Christine Brooke-Rose, British crotoc
and writer, has been appointed .to the
Edward H. Butler Professorship of English
literature for the fall semester.
Ms. Brooke-Rose is on leave from the
University of Paris V111 (Vincennes),
where she is chairman of the Oepan-

ment Of Anglo·American literature.
Close relations have ' existed ·between
. VincenneS and UIB since the inception
of the Paris univeisity in the 1960's. Faculty exchanges have· been fairly frequent,
notes ·Ms. Brooke-Rose, because of
shared non-traditional approaches to
critidSm and interest in structuralism.
UIB professors leslie Fiedler, Norman
Holland and -Marcus Klein have taught at
Vincennes and several French professors
have been in Buffalo.
A prolific writer, Ms. Brooke·Rose is
author of A Grammar of Metaphor and A
ZBC of frra Pound. She has published
elgl\t'novels induding Such (1966)', which
won the SOCiety of A-uthors Prize; and "
Between (~962), which'-was awarded the ,
James Tall Black Prize. She describes her
last · (oaF · novels · as ·"experimental · and ··
self~ctive. " While discussing Thru,
her latest book, she says " there is a playing tvith lan$uage ... just a ~mblance of.
a. plot. It really is about making a text
With two characters inventing each
other. A.s the novel goes along, the

immediate effon to design an academic
program centering on the Day Care
Center, and tO·Identify resource needs.
There will be full consultation with
parents in the program design, Ertell said.
However, he added, the nature of the
academic enterprise and the legal requirements under which State University
operates will necessarily mean that ultimate
responsibility for the Center and the
program rnust reside in the Academic Consortium and in the Academic Vice
President's Offoce.
'
·The diSOJssion with the parents was
"positive," reported Dr. Enell, who said
that he was aW.iting a formal response.
Other members of the administrative
staff attending the meeting were Professor
Dorothy lynn of the School of Social Work,
a member of the Center's steering committee; Dr. DOnald larson, associate vice
president for health affairs; and Dr.
Anthony LorenzeJti, associate '{i~ p~dent for student affairs. .
.. . .
.

Crime fears said unfounded!-------:-:,({mm (Mitf&gt;

1, col .

.f)

rapes whjch were reported took place
off campus and involved women who
had been hitchhiking.
In fact, Griffin says, contrary to a
recently published faculty study of crime/
in the Buffalo area (Repotter, October 3)
which indicated that the Main-Bailey•
UIB area leads the dty in auto thefts,

even that phase of criminal activity is .
.down markedly. The data the professors
used in tl)e study were four years old, he
indicates. It is true that 118 autos were
stolen on campus ·in 19n, but. the rate
dropped to 61 in 1972 apd to 44 in 1973.
To date in 1974, 21 cars have been taken.
Security can't .claim all _the credit,
though, Griffin admits. Steering wheel
lock devices have proved to be the
primary deterrent.
Ellicott 0oes r~ i&gt;robletm
While c_oocerneil over exaggerated
an~iety about a crime wave, Griffin does
not d.enyJhat there _is a sec;urity problem
in connection with the Ellicott Complex.
The architects, he points out, provided
42 entrances both at ground and plaza
levels. In other residence areas, access
can be more easily controlled by locking
all but a main entrance which is guarded
by student security aides who require
characters who were very convindn_gly
identification from those wishing to
drawn, suddenly don't exist at ali - · enter. Student aides . receive S~. SO an
theY're destroyed by various .tricks."
hour for working in this joint ·Securifv·
Enthusiastic about her' students at U/8,
Housing Office program which is
she's experimentil)g ·with teaching as
budgeted at approximately $28,000 per
well ~ her undergraduate ~creative
year.
writing diu is writing a "collective text.".
If you multiply 84 exterior entrances by
The dassls divided int9 two groups: one
$2.50 an "hour by the number of evening
worb on a fantastic text, the other on a
hours· which would have to be covered,
realistic one.· The results are exchanged
Griffin says, you will arrive. at some i"n·
· and altldzed by both groups.
dication of why the same system cannot ·
'
The Edward H. Butler P,ofessorship of
be used at Ellicott.
•· .
• Ensfish Uterature was established in 1922
An attempt at some measure of securi· ·
by the late Edward H. and Kate Robinson
ty is provided through the employmenJ
Butler. Mr. Sutler was editor and
of six floating student security aides who.
publliher of the ..,.... fftainlr News.• patrol Ellicott corridors. In addliion, !=.C.
Mao Butler we, until her death U.is year, Furnas 'College, in Porter Quadrangle,
1
the newspaper's president and . has its own volunteer security
progri!m.
publlshei.
Seven students man tables at ·doorways
leading ;nto the Furnas residential area
to check on those entering. ;
For the short-term future, studenfpartidpadon In their own security seems the
best approach to the ElliCott problems,
Griffin says. Campus Security has already
Initiated meetings with dorm advfsors,to
see!&lt; ways to alert students to, and inlenest them In, the need for keeping a
watchful eye out and reporting strangers,
elc. Eventually, Griffin hopes to ha¥e
Security offlcen Interact more personally
with tJ.e students themselves bY partldpatlns In quad meetl~.
'
Nol )tilt 5ludenb

warlll
. !d'for

Ed pOst

No - should set the idea, ~.
that Amhent security, or lhlt of Ellk:oolt in
pal1iaJiar, Is· being Wt dely ID students.
There are two c:ampus ..-..-. 1a die
ElliCiaa Cornplex.ull dines, Ollllln n!pOriS.
pnols ft ·In IIU:.h
Sealrlty
distress

-

Meddean
reeommended
·
..iJ,e ;..;... ro. .. .__;.;,.

~ ·i.t.Jial

School

siKiiM .doo,i. ~ ~· II~'

inh

rr.e Sd&gt;Ool's been
:::.:,.,:0."".:;.-::!.."";:~"'!Ilea ....
undH bile olfite July f.

from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m.
The Amherst Campus as a whole, Griffin
-I. C. P~nnlll, vice presklenr tor -tte~lrh
indicates, has more security· per student
sc:i~. lteporter. M•rch a. l9n.
than Main Street Fony per cent of the 54The School will have to wait several
months longer, but the search ended
man patrol foro! is assigned there although
the Amherst population is yet nowhere
with President Robert l. Ketter 's
recommendation to the SUNY Trustees
near -40 per cent of the University total.
Card&lt;onlroled A&lt;u.
this week thin Dr. John Naughton be ap- .
pointed dean of medicine, effective
Noting that the .student aide screening
program in residence halls throughout
March 1, 1975.
·
the campus lacks an enforcement bite
. The 41-year-old Dr. Naughton ~as
- (Albany has ruled drat· the Student
. been dean f9r aca~emic a~irs at Georg~ Q
· Judiciary can'notlevy fines oga_instthose'
Wash'ington University School of
unwilling to cooperate by showing idenMedicine and Health Sciences in
tification), Griffin indicates that the
Washington, D.C. fqr tlie past year. He
University has pending in' Albany a P.lao . has had vast experience in both public
to convert campus·Wide -t'o · a cotn·
and priVate "medical edUcition: ·
puterized card-controlle~ a.ccess
Whi!e much of ~i~ experil'nce · has •
pr&lt;&gt;l!rilm. Under tl)is· program. studenls · be~n'atOeorgeWas~lr,gton- servong as
w'ell~ W8uld ,. professor df lne~I'CIIil! as~l'as' airect_?.i·' '
(and pr~uinably fao:Uit'y
be issued - identification cards which
of ,the - Divislon ·- of • · Rel&gt;aliH!latro ilo•~
would serve as uinaster Charges"lo·r ·all ·· · Medkine-'arid 'dirett6r0f the ~eglon·al '
their lJniversity 'needs -library, parking, ·
Rehabilitation and Training Center- he
building access, etc. To gain access to an
was also instructor and assistant
area after hours, an authorized in·
professot of medicine at the University
dividual would simply -place, his or her
of Oklahoma School ·of Medicine ,
card into a reader connected io a central
Oklahoma City; and associate professor
computer. Each card would have a
of mediCine and director of the
number and the computer would be
Rehabilitation Center at the University of
programmed with information on who is
Illinois College ol Medicine in Chicago.
authorized to enter which areas.
In addition to his expenise in medical
Such a system would be practically fail- · education, Dr. Naughton has served '2_n
safe, Griffin indicates. If a card were lost
community and Federal projects, inor stolen, its number would simply be
chiding the National Heart and lung
removed from the computer program.
Institute Task Force Qn Car-diac
And it would definitely solve. the
Rehabilitation and the District of Columproblem of Ellicott's 84 doors.
bia's Mayor's Task Force on Out-Patient
A pilot card-access program is being
Eare. He has served In editorial positions
tested now in one of th~ small Main
on five professional. journals.
Street dorms. But this system, whi&lt;;h cost
Dr. Naughton is a Fellow In th~
about $700. (for one door), lacks- tile
American College of Cardl~, the
sophisticated computer tie-in envisagejl
American C-ollege of Pl\~ns and the
for the eventual campus-wide set-up.
AmeriGil1 College ·ot _Spom'•Medidne.
Also being tested, in anqther smafl
He also receM!cf a ~t fellowship •
dorm, is the' idea of jssuing each
undeNhe lnterriatlonal Healthltesearch
authorized student his or her own key toAct-SOcial Rehabilitation SeMce. In ad•
the residence hall door.
dillon, he has served IS consultaht to the
~A~ of Canto
Sodal Security Mmlnlstradon, Sodal ·
Griffin sees definite advantages in the
and Rehabilitation Service, Dallas Carcard concept, If It is coupled'with a comdlac Institute and the National Heart and
lung Institute..
puler. A Iost or sto Ien ·key means that
A native of Pennsylvania, he received
lock cores have to be replaced and new
the B.S. from St. louis Unlvenlty, and the
keys issued to each of ihe students conM.D. degree from the Ol&lt;lahoma
. cerned. This, Griffin says, could get to be
University, Q.ldahoma City. He "C'Omvery expensive; panlctilarly in an area
pleted his Internship 11 George
such IS Ellicott which will l!ventually be
Washington UnivetJity and a residency
home to some 3,200 resld~nts. While the
in internal medldne at the University of
computer-ard system would be more
Oklahoma Medical Center.
.
expensive to Install Initially, no wholesale
Dr. Na·...a...... and his wife, Ma..,.ret,
changes would be necessary in the event
YIJmld~O
...
of theft or loss. The offending num&amp;er
have six chi ren.
The recommended IPPOintment of
would simply be wiped from the comOr, Naughton would fib. the position

as

:n:;:::"J.;.e

~~
computerized system
such as that proposed here has been
successfully used at Michigan Tech, Griffin indicates, and Is "the coming thins"
In unl\wslly security.
until 1he system anfves here,

• however. Griffin says, . residence- hall _
Secllrllf can be only IS effective as the
residents themselveS want.
Secultty Is· willing 10 do Its part. he·
~

.thekey.-'

.·

but lfwlent 'GDopemjon is

""""'*It:' It I

.

.•

vacated Jn 1971 by Dr. leroy Pesch. Dr.
Clyde Randall served as exeaadwe offker

of the School of Medldne.ftoln that dme

~nc!'ls
nHI

when

::::~i;Jiimi~:-

I!

�October 31, 1"974

2 )•
ease of publicins_titutions, .a base
- . paotlculalty at. the uppe&lt; left!; yet
the undergraduate level increaSed fr;:;m
ding. "Therefore, dedlning
the ......... _..... of hc!w to ,_...t
42.5 per cent in 1967 to' 44.3 per cent in ' have aggravated a. financial crisis
and recoplla ............. Mnlee.H
the fall of1973. More dramatically, the
came Into existence for higher education
• obserVed that dedlning enrollments
percentage of women at the graduate
prior to the display of any concern over
in Millard Fillmore College, while "too
level was 39 .7 per cent, which
obtaining students: Once the public
linle understood at present" indicate
represented more than a 10 percenrage
popularity of higher education peaked in
that ''added initiatives or alu!rnative
point increase since 1967. In the
the . laner part of the Sixties, higher
modeS are needed to reach persons who ·
professional schools, the percentage of
education found itself as only one of
presently are not being served or atwomen was 17.6 per cent as..oppo~d to · many priorities in a worsening economy.
tracted."
·
Reduced federal and state funding orstat• identified a consensus among
the 1967 figure of 4 per cent. For women,
as well as. for minorities, the increase in
ic funding rates-which in an inflationary
members of the academic administration
the graduate and professional schools
economy conslitute fewer funds regarding "the need, as emphasized in
was significant in that they traditionally
emphasized the notions of accounta9ili~ _ the past, to marshall resources to pursue
have bee~, least r_e presented !t th~
ty and priorities in higher education, and
selectivtt,_ excellence rather than uniform
levels. . . .
more recenily tjle notions have become
mediocrity."
Detnand Consbnt Here
,
hardened realities as the need for them
• spoke of a noticeable decl ine in
In terms of the total number of all
has been reinforced by enrollment
number and rise in quality of faculty
.
"' ·
.
promotion recommendations being
students that could enroll here, Ketter . trends:"
said, "it seems apparent that the institu.' ·
At the UniYenlty at luff~, the Prellforwarded.
tion could maintain for the foreseeable
clenl reported, fundlns lnc:ftaecl &amp;om
• said that, in terms of efficient utilizafuture a number considerably above thin · f101.S mlllon In 1972-73 (from a l tion of space, "some faculty will have to
bf the pr~nt; applications for admit- lnducl.. research, ~ and
adjust to the notion that classes cannot
tancj! to the University's freshman class
State fundi) to $116.9 mlllon In 1973-74.
be arranged at their metabolic conwere at a record level in the spring of
'J"he..lncrease did nol outstrip the lnflavenience" .- just as higher education in
1974. Nor wa~ ther~ any .sllortage of
tion r~te
·
general must become aware that ~new
applicantS in lhe : graduate ' and
NOt
ln these llpifts ue the
types of students will not necessarily be
capital monies eapended on the new
served by adhering to traditional or
professional areas. It is to b_e recognized, ·
however, that enrollments are goVerned
Amhent . ~ Thele tabled ~
~bureaucratic convenience.
not just b).: the number of;g&gt;pllcinis but
prolhnatelj '$215 mlllon thfOUIIh the
• cited an "overriding" need to establish an officially acceptable academic
by availabt:e resources, by State.Univ!!rsi- ' oumiMf of .]974, learins 0. renoalnclei- of
ty policies, by considerations for private
$375 mlllon lrom the $650 mlllon complan with a high degree of specificity,
and other public institutions, and by the
mltinent previously affirmed by State
and
University's own sense of itself.
·
University Trustees. .
• said priority must be Riven to the
"As institutions compete fOr students,"
The scope of construction underway
seleCtion of a new vice president for
and antici pated at Amherst, Ketter
academic affairs.
the President pointed out, "they can
granted, would seem to belie a shortage
Research and Health Sciences
resort to debilitating tactics." The most
obvious would be to lower admission
of e®cational funding. "However, one
Research expendit ures increased by
must remember that the University at
only 1.5 per cent, fro.m · $16,571,481 in
standards, particufa·rty for · first-year
classes. At U/ B; however, "a significant
Buffalo has endured- and still endures
1972-73 to S16,820,124 in 1973-74. Federal
lowering of standards is not considered
- overcrowdin g - and inadequate
funding has moved toward applied
viable. For the faJI semester of 1973-74,
facilities. To whatever extent faculty and
research, Kener said, and " the University
the Universi~ received 11,010 ,regular
stalf morale has been maintained, it has
and individual facultv must recognize
rested in large measure on the hope of
and act upon the trend, for although
freshman applications. Of 6,413 acceptances, 2,276 stude_!lts registered. Actual·
those modern and adequate facilities to
the availability of support monies has not
ly, a much larger freshman claSs could
which State 'University and the · State
increased in the past two years as greatl y
have matriculated without a noticeable
Governmen.t have .been comrhined Qver
as niight have been hoped - they seem
decline in academic quality_," Ketter in~ , the Past decade. Th~ resolve of this adto have c:tecreased - the fact remains
dicated.
•
·
·
. ministra'i~, and of this University...! is to
that monies do exist and that they will be
The ,e~rpllme.n~~~ c.~~ -has . ~ ~ref:l ... ~. brinS. . IJ:'al F9~J11it?J~n~ to ~ ..c;:omRI.ete .
obtained by those who ·are most
cre~tipf! .~'f ,.n~OJr~~itJonal . ,form~ts .~l ... ful(illment·.· To ttiis end, it i.s•imponant to - aggressive in their pursu1t an tr 'Wfi'O"Se
high.,.. , ed...,atiqn , .in, .~;cl) .,cu5tomary
recognize that enrollment$ which just~
research has the promise of' produclimits .of time and·spac!! are reduced )n · proj!!e!ed s~~ must n01 only be maintivity." &lt;'-t ·the same time, he urged guarorder to add to the pool of possible stu-·
tained but must be allowed to. be maindi ng against a complete erosion In basic
dent dientele. Also, attention is being
talned."
research.
given1o reconciling education and the
Academic De•elopmenb
In his discussion of the Health
needs of the job tharket. "Both courses
Turning to academic-administrative
Sciences, the President :
of action constitute legitimate area1 of
deve lopme nts of the year, the President :
• indicated th.at the move to the
further study and development within
• ca lled upo n post-baccalaureate
Stockton Kimball Tower is only an inhigher education/' the President said,
education to display major initiatives in
terim solutiOn to inadequate library
"yet both can be perceived as curiously
adjust ing to the preference man y
facilities in the Health Sciences and that
in oppo~ition to those warnings referred
students are indicating toward the
"serious attention must be given in Main
to previously about too man y unprofessions, in responding to the declinStreet Campus planning to the type of
interested students and .a n overemphasis
ing need for replacements within the
facility that will meet the long-"!nge
. on credentialization - warnings which,
academy by preparing many students for
needs of this library."
incidentally, have never been satisfacnon-academic employment, and in ser• said that delay in completion of
torily addressed by our institutions.
ving populations not presently served.
Cooke and Hochstener Towers on the
Clearly, the most pressing questions for
Ari expe'rimenta l Graduate' Tutorial
Amherst Campus, scheduled to house
higher education at this time are to
P[ogram 10 meet the needs of students
Biology and Pharmacy, has resulted in a
·determine who wants and needs to be
e mployed full-time, housewives, the
consequent delay in the rehabilitation of
educated, who will be educated, and for
handicapped, and the geographically
e ligible space on the Main Street Cam· what."
·
.
rell}ote may help in the l~tter regard,
pus for accommodatinJ the needs of
The Unlwenlty at JuffaiQ Is a _uniftnlty
Kener predicted.
basic science and other departments.
~ with-~ etllphaslo on upper
• looked forward to the creation
•• reported that the State legislature
clhislon ~ enrolt.11ent,
within the University of multidisciplinary
appears to ~ave approved in principle
paduale Mil profelllnnll lludy, )IIKI
teams to address speci.fic problems
the idea that affiliated hospitals should
'rfleardo, Ketter pointed OUL. Th~
within society -formal centers to study
be reimbursed for space utilized by 'the
elllfiiN* . . continue, .he said, with . teaching and learning, aging, and enHealth Sciences by authorizing an initial
chantllns lnlen!lll 8f lludeolls .... the vironment and resources; and more inpayment to Children's Hospital for such
partlallar . . . . .~~J..~
formal units sue~ as those being formed
space. _
.
111 IIIII
bellls relecled .In
"'
io t!te experimental graduate group
• said that budpt pdarilles for the pat
. " - - - "''IIIi ...,.......,., ._...,
prOgram. ·
'
two yean have been ilrected -ard
llllllec:t to a ••• I of Ill owft. . .
• reJ)orted that attention has been', and . rect11y1ns .......... ldenlllled In ac. _ lllboe. jilldle and allllroled
will continue to be, given to im ·credltatlon ~ -on Hullh Sciences
-doe u.lftnltJ . . adapeed U1 of. :
provemen!Nn measures which ensure
Khoolo- ·poob14Mii of...,...~
leW acadeM ..... wWt:la . . with
University aceountaliility - graduate
~lacullyMdinoirudlonal~
In••• nu•erlcallr ratller tfoan
andundergroduateprogramevaluations,
pOrt. and .....,...,alhe aio.....,eolll.
~.alii doe
for exa!'lple.
....,..,. the..,.,.,._ poooh;,. Keller Inthe President cited a need lor
• reported lhat the Hclironkallydlcated, 1s Hrelecled In po1o1111es Jc1en:..
balances In the administration of higher
lroublo 11 _.- . _ o1 oiCIIIIeallc adwloetilled 1!8 .the 8oaJ 1t75-7' 111111pt reeducation, al\ obliplion tO ~ the ' Tent Js neW Unftr retrJeW- b)' a . q-.Hlhe ~ for ............. he

(!.om,. •• ' · col.

mdudect

,..._H

that
stuclv Is underwaY
.determine
mostaable-from
the many to
able.
Notins
the most efledlve means of encouraglns
wilmen and minorities II) promed InKademk: dlsdpllnes 1Vhlch have nat IlldltionaHy !lftndecl them, he cautioned
-.mat "the resouraes available to attract ·
and realn such students are 1)01 as plen·
llful• they have been In~ Here,
~ -~~la!Kels•. ~•~and the ~

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

.u Jl!ldents.

'-*"'Iof uado-M
a 11u11r of ......_
said,
, . . _ 8ltlal
lor doe
, tcWiiJ1 111 ... - * ' lor .. Nllloalll ,
......,.. of ......_
lloll per' •

uliJ.

.lllihM billh actual 1unc11ns and, 1n the

-

•

wlllcll-........
.£ .
•"=:'\t

=jf. .=
.....a

111 •

H

to enrollment,
beclule enrollments con-

111e...., _..
li!IP

• ~ -.......-, _ 1111 .eA:al ....._ ......._, 611 ....,__
tily'a Metlal ~
_, 111 111e -..,, ....._. lllll . . .
1 ; 1 R Z ol _,

~"'

-~~~~ ~
ICIIaer

.....

_,.. .a
r~ih~•:H~IIlt§j~wl~llle~~~~~~-~M~~
~~

-

~

. .... - 33 .... ~- .... . , _ _
..,. 36 per~ leoo than Upolale.H
1Jbnr1es
The University .librories, despite
progress, still face two critical problems
in the President's view: inadequacy of
collections and acquisitions budgets and
inadequacy of facilities.
"From 1967-M through 1973-z4, the
libraries have Suffered a ·decline in
purchasing power for acquisition of
library materials of 52.7 per· cent. This is
not a comfortable fact when one con. siders that the libraries currently have
only two~thirds the number of volumes
per FTE stUtlent that are held by the major state-supported university libraries in
the country. Clearly, the assurance .of an
adequate acquisition budget is the
priority need for the libraries, and one
the University supports in its commit·
ment 10 educational quality."
In terms of facilities, Kener said, "the
number of reader stations provided in
relation to the number of FTE students is
two-thirds below minimum State University standards. Stacj&lt; sP.ce is extremely
limited; and of the collections, almost 10
per · cent are presently in remote
storage." The long-term solution to .
facilities problems, · he said, lies in
Amherst developments.
UUP, Afflrmati•e Action and Studenb
Collective bargaining and affirmative
action received continuing attention
during 1973·74, the President reported.
United University Professions, Inc., he
said, raises the questions of to what extent the collective bargaining agency can
exist harmoniously with various eampus
legislative bodies and whether or not " a
balance can be maintained between the
University's desire to approach all personnel considerations humanel y while
fulfilling its social responsibilities to
students and to the public. The Universi~
ty cannot cater just to the needs of
employees. Nor should its relationships
with constituencies become strangled in
a l'f'&amp;Ze_ of bureaucratic and legislative
regulation." .
Durlns the year, the University
- e d "the Rnt draft of its developed
AfflrnaatiYe Action. Prop...,, which. incorporated a prniouoly enacted Yc:ulty
afflnnatlveactionrecrultmentprocedure·
and S!_at.e d parallel procedure to be
followed for staff recruitrnenL As~ result
of ronscientlous recruitment ~orb In
units..throUptoul the Uniwersity, 23 per
cent of laculty hire (excludlns the
Ll"braries) clurins the mosl recently sur.•eyed period - Janu;~ry 1, 1974, to
September 11, 1974 - were women•
_fisht per rent of faculty hire were blad&lt;
and another I per cent were categorized
as other minorities. Amon11 non-tNchlns
professional staff durlns the same
period, 47 per cent of new hire were
women, 23 per rent were blad&lt;, and 7
per cent were other minorities."
In the area .of student affairs, Ketter
decried a dip in available financial aid particularly for foreign students who are
,also affected by new federal regulations
eliminating employment opponunities;
warned thai. cutbacks in aid may lead
students to conclude erroneously that
the University commitment to the dt.advantaged is weakening; welcomed
another new and ~rge presence within
the student body, that of 3,304 armed
forces veterans; and emphasized thatlhe '

individu;~lstudentis"theonebaslsforall

that the·institution does. It is the student
"Who sulfero or benefits from the
strengths and weaknesses of.- tlie
University's academic~; It Is the
student who Is pleuurably accommodated or made wrecched by the institution'S fadlities; it ' is the student

by th!! servla!s
theIsUniversity
whose'
education
hindered provides.''
tl helped ·
Of

course, the President ~

about Univi!rsity problems, "there are no
Billy lllltsons to be lound In ~ to
shout a mask 5haum that wiU procfuce
solutions as Instant and as dnma1ic in
the&amp; ~ecthleness as the Jishtnlnl bolt
that always precedes
Marvel.
The forc:eodof munlbsnsful ... ~. ......~
IMJ pt Uc:e SU tanto'"' ..,_,..~, IS
rooted t.n time and encluraMe. This

:.S,

:J.C{::a:~..__ -=::!;u=:;:;au~~':
s....
aMIIIal· · It evol•es toward preeminence In
1
klleel w 111a
...... , . .... ~ ~~~~ the probleins of the Pr-nt."
'-

�· October 31, 1974

4

U/B..doctoral candidate
rec~es~ACE _boOk prize'~
~18 doctoral candidate ·Arthur E.
variOus reform ventures and the alterWhile some specialized fields have a
levtne and Jo,hn R! Weingart, a master's
natives available.
surplus of Ph.D.'s, there is no ~~ge n eraliz­
student at Prin~eton's _Woodro~ Wilso rl
· levine and Weingart believe that the
ed
glut" of doctorates, according to an
~ool of Pubhc anq International Afdevelopment of clearcut institutional
interim status repoi-t on fhe American
faors , aJJthors of . Reform of
philos!'phies and- the ·establishment of
Graduate
Enterprise 1974, prepared by
Undergraduate Educauon, published
cohesive curriculum structures which
the Policy Committee of the Association
late l~st year br Jossey-Bass, Inc., San
mirror these philosophies provide the
of ~raduate Schools.
Franosco, are wmners_of the 1974 _book
best basis for undergrad uate educa tio n
A s ummar y of the report was
~ward . of the Amencan Council on
reform. _They discuss three methods
presented Wednesday, October 23, to
Educat1on.
. .
which have been .used to impl e me nt
the
Association of American Universities
these philosophies: th e creation of interThe annual award - .cons1stmg of S1,meeting in Washington, D.C., b y Stan.... 000 and a g_~ld medal- was .presented at
nal cOlleges; the reform of existing
fo rd Grad uat e Dean lincoln Moses, AGS
th.e Councrl.s 57th annual meeting in San . ,:olleges; and the establ ish ment of new
president.
Do':So, Oct~ber 9-11 . The. Borden Founcolleges. The effects which size, location,
· The commJttee said there are expand.at1on prov1des t~e fundmg._
.
cost, and th e nature of st udent, fac ulty,
needs for Ph.D.'s in some fields and
ding
The ACE s:;lect1on c?mm1ttee called
and ad ministrator charader. have haC o n
" there may still be justification for enthe volume a r_efresh1,ngly reasonable
the potential success of these reforms are
cou
raging
' selected St uden ts to enter
asse!'sment of vanous attempts at reform
also conside red.
[other fields] because of eth nic, race, or
of undergraduate education" and noted
· Reform of Undergraduate Education is
geographic co nsiderations.
that the authors "have a common sense
billed by its publisher as "a valuable
" He nce the situat ion must be assessed
a.pp~oac~ to problems and ~escribe their
guide for all who are consideri ng new
field by field and not globally or in terms
fondongs on a clear style thatos remarkably
programs. By showing clearly - and
gl ib sloga ns.. .. •
'
of
from the poi nt of view of students, faculfree fro.m t~e Jar~on wh1ch pervades our
" If it appears that a high proportion of
prof~
n.
x
ty, and administrators - how new
the Ph.D.'s in a given . field will have
levm wh!l holds the B.A. in biology
programs are functioning in other
caree rs that do not use th~ir full ' skills,
~om Bra .
~a~ ~&gt;e&lt;;n enrolled ~ere
. schools; the book provides a reliable and
the proper.policy course is to publicize
sm~ 1972 m a
t h1gher -:du~t1onhighly informative basis for effective
the prospect and to restrict the public
soc1ology doctoral
ram. H1s d1ssenaeducational decision-ma ki ng"
~
·subsidy {or fellows hl ps in this field."
tion topic is " The lnst utionalization of
·
The report emph'asized that "the inInnovation in Higher Education." ·
1
formed free choice of indh&lt;,iduals should
After graduation from Brandeis, Levine
be the central guide to decisions, and
was director of that university's Center
not a manpower plan based on forefor Undergraduate Curriculum EvaluaSevenry-eisht professors on 16 camcasts.
. . . tion, an agency involved in a national
piJSes
including
11
from
U/
B
have
~study of a crOss-secti.Pn of curriculum efNo QuotJS or N~tion~l Pl;on
been chosen State. University Faculty Exforts in the liberal arts. He was also pro'
" The number of students admitted to
change Scholars for the 1974-75
ject director of a U.S. Office of Education
graduate schools should noi·be fixed by
academic year.
survey of eight undergradua -te
quotas based on a nationa l manpower By
disciplines,
UIB's
schola"
are:
curriculum structures at 26 colleges and a
plan .
. · HUtmnides - leslie Fiedler, Samuel
11
cons1:11ta~t for CBS news on th~ early
Careful attention should be paid to
Clemens professor of American
preparation of a news special, "Higher
forecasts of supply and demand because,
literature;
Paul
l.
Garvin,
professor
of
Education - Who Needs. ltl"
·. when used critically they can lead to
linguistics; Peter Heller, piofessor of
At U/ B, he served for two years as
better decisions .... Particular attention
German and comparative literature;
. . assistant to the dean of the ' Graduate
should be given to tne- ·outlook· of the
Arthur L. Smith, professor 'Of speech
SchoQI, condu.cting research on topics
future number of new academic
.communication.
•
such as the cost of graduate education
positions because, of all a~pects of, the
N~turol ScienC!eS ~nd M.othem~tics and the occuP.at.ional mobility o f.
future job marke t, this is 'the~ rrioSt firmly
Stan·ley• Bruckenstein , A." Conger
~ate~ree recipients. He was prin ~
predictable.
Goodyear
..professor
of
chemistry;
Goropal researcher on " Innovation as a Self" Studepts who decide that they do
don M . Ha rr is, larkin professor ·of
~ulf!llin_g Prophecy Study," supported by
wish
to receive a doctorate to prep·a re for
chemistry.
· ·
-1nst•tut1oni)l, funds, . and. director of a
~nd teaching should be aware
research
Soci;ol Sciences - Selig Ad ler, Samuel
study of 57 innovative undergraduate
c~mpet i tion for these jobs in
that
P. Capen professor of American history;
programs. The latter, based on data
academiC departments will be fierce.
collected by the Center for Innovative . B. R. .Bugelski, distinguished professor of
"Every graduate dean should urge
psychology; Duane F. Marble, professor
• Higher Education, University of Wiscon~
each_academic unit to publici?-e i~s judgof geography.
sin, ~reen Bay,_ was sponsored by the
ment of career prospects as a guide to
Other Disciplines - lee E. Presto n,
~menca~ Assoc1at1on for Higher Edun- . prospective students."
Melvin H. Baker professor of American
t1on._Levme also teaches an experimental
Recent ln&lt;;reue Slight
enterprise;
Hermann Rahn , distingu ishundergraduate humanities unit in
Largely as il. result of free choice by
ed professor of physiology.
·
College B.
students, but also as a result of changing
Faculty E.xchange Scholars are
The award-winning volume discusses
levels
of fi nancial support, increa'ses in
members of the SUNY faculty who are
new and experimental undergraduate
new graduate enrollments have been
recognized as eminent in their disprosrams at 26 institutions on the·basis of
~~!~~~ for several years," the_ report
ciplines by their academic peers.
. both institutional research and personal
The visit of a Scholar is projected as
illterviews.conducted by the co-autho":
" There have been extensive declines
lasting from one to three days, perhaps
HQW have such reforms been underin enrollm~nts where c;a"'r eer prospects
norm~lly bei_
ng spread over two days.
• bkenl What are the results! Can these
seem
relattvely poor, and increases in
Specofoc detaols of the length. time, and
programs be a·dapted to other infields where · s ocial changes are
nature of activities of the visit are
stitutionsf ~at do the students, faculty;
generating
good career prospects."
·negotiated by the Scholar and the inand adminostrators Involved in the
In ce!"ain fields, such as engineering
viti~g unit, and may. be . whatever they
programs believe to be the successes and
and
s~1ence, some irystitu-\ions have
failures of these effortsf .From the many - agree upon: The Scholar may read
shown ~ ·a clear recognition Of the need·
~pers, informally discuss his wo.rk, pre· approaches to curriqJium refonm, how
~ to look outside for aid" in defining apsent lectures, resppnd criiially to work
can a college choose the best and most
propriate training for Ph.D.'s who obtain
of the host faculty, etc. The purpose of
suitable programf
·
·
nonacademic jobs, the report observed.
the frogram is to enhance the dis--The co-autho" analyze experimenta_ "Ties with industry and other nonciplinary sch!)lari.Y gr"!'fh and standing
tion in seven major areas: advising
~ademi_c employers play a major role
of ~e ~t de~rtment through inpneial eduatiori; comprehensive ex~
. on s.h~po~g the graduate· programs in
creas~ng .us contact and communicaton
aAIInlltlons, selection of majors, student~r4oco~tong de~rtinents. They enable
with weii-&lt;!Siablished sdlolars within
CIIftleftlll all'riculu.m, ahemati-. to
the cJ&lt;;partments to tune what they do to
Sute University. !~ ~dltion ·to faculty
..,.._IS, and gfading. A chapter Is
the
problems recognized by the ioicon~, If the lnYJiilllflaculty desire ~nd
· clevoled to each •rea. candidly ~
dusiries in the forefront ol'work in that
the visiting Scholar consents, those he
inl strefl8lhs and -~-* of ~
discipline. The existence of close ties
meets ~y also lnducle gr~uate
with industry may be the single most imstudents, ur:icJerllr~~te students and
...por:t_a.nt "' influence_ .on a graduate
· non~den(s in clecr~ng
program.__
·
· The title of Faculty Exch~nge Sdlolar of
What About Homanitiesl L
•.
the SUte University of New Yorl'ls not ~n
. ''An~logues of these pfogram~ are ~ot
~k rank, but the designation is an
!'asjly found for the humanities·. lndeed, ·
honor which, the SU,NY Office of
ot may be Impossible to findlhem .
• ~niverslty-w!Jie SerVices says, mould be
Nevertheless, lt$eems likely that a search
rnduded along with other academic
fc_&gt;r such ~nalogies will go far toward
honors in the curriculum viue of the
.aodir&gt;g such fields to define better theholder. ·
nature of graduate programs to be
sought or to recognize and make khown
to potential students the lack of ~uch opportunities.
.
"For. example, some of ·our Englishdepartmel)ts have benefitted by increasi~~&amp; t!'e'r lht!!rKtion with departmen\' · chaormen . in nearby community
coiJeses. lind .by Instituting a formal advlsoq mundl on the model of many of
.t~-"."l.:.·~ ....... ·~-~~ ..:~-·· · ··:.. .c. .. ~.''-', - \

-d1 U/8 profs

are SUNY scholars

priom;.

o~r/ departments in e ngineering and
sc1e nce.
" Each discipline- and ultimately each
department - should address the ques)ion of wbeth er there is a nonacademic
market for Ph .D. students trained, in ·
whatever novel ways, in that field. The
answer may well be negative in some
fields. If negative, one may ask whethe r
dec_reases in Ph.D. enrollme nts may nOt
be 1n erder. . . . ·
" It would seem approp riate for every
department to include-rn its materials to
prospective students a clear statement as.
to the. experience it has had in job placemen t m rec:_ent years and its estimates for
the future.
"A major effort is needed to ex plore
less traditional- careers fo r which o ur
graduates are fitted and to take seriousl y
the problem of transfer of lraining.
Much will also depe nd o n how well our
program facilities adapt the content of
their training to the n_eeds of these new
- and more v3 ried ocCUpation" careers."
The AGS Pol icy Committee •s headed
by Dean D. C. Spriesterbach of the
University of Iowa. Members incl ude
Deans Alvin Kernan, Pri nceton; Donald
E. Stokes. Michigan; Cornelius Pings,
Cahech ; May Brod beck, Minnesota; 1.
Merrill Carlsmith, Stanford; and David
·
Deener, Tulane.

26 .students get
GRAD awaros
Twenty-six . graduate students have
received grants amounting to $4,949.50
from GRAD, the Graduate Student
Association's Graduate Resource Access
Deve lopment project, director John
Greenwood announced today.
A -priest · doing field work in
•-anthr.o pology}.-in ·· Nairobi, Kenya, was
among the ~tudents to1Wi.n awards:foii.' the
•current grarit per-iod. '!hJjnneu are: Karen
Blair (History) , Guitta Blau (Social
Histo rical &amp; Philosophical Foundations of
Education). Van Corey (Mechanical
Engineering). Dav.id Carr (Higher
Education), lanice Cramrine (Sociology),
Vorgonoa Donovan (Psychology), Kurt
Feic htmeir (English). Carl Fumagali
(A n t hropolo gy),
Tom
Grac e
· (Psychology), Fran Gross (Educational
Ps yc hology). · Peter Hatzitotis
(Management), John Y. H. Chou (Cell
~nd Molecular Biology), Naseema Khan
(Cell and Molecular Biology), Arthur
levone (Hogher Education), Wayne Lifton
(Boology) , Nan Nun (Microbiology).
G . A. O . Ol ':"ill (Educational AdminiStration), Robert Parrish (Chemistry),
Syl ~oa Przemielewski (Social Work),
lucon~ ~ngree (Sociology), Clarence
S~ott (Arj:-Co"!mercial Design), Earl
Sodler (An.thropology), Marilyn lapp
(~sv.chology),
Alex von Oss
(Mi_crobic_&gt;lOKf), and Mary An -n
Wasoelewsko and Jean Kizilmsh (joint
award, Social W.ork).
·
According to Mr. Greeniv;,oo, $22,094
has been awarded to 112 students since
the program beg.on in 1913. "Roughly
S9,000 will be awarded" the spring and
_summer grant periods," he said.
f?ead!ine for ~ppl~s will be: sometome on January.
.
The progr~m, which is ~rt of a ·broad
effort to find altem~tive funding for
gr~duate students hit Mrd by the constrocted economy, is fu.nded by administrative a"d student Souroes.
Applicatiol)s are avail~ble· in ~
offoce, 205 Norton. For fufther
tiOfO, contact · Mr•. ~, Department of Psychiatry, E.J. Meyer Memorial
Hospital, 831-8317.

Ament eleded
Dr. Ri.clmd Ament, assOciate dinlal
professor of anesthesiology School of
Medi&lt;ine, has been
first vice
president of the American. Society of
Anesthesiologists, a 13.GOO-mem6er organization.
•
A U/ll alwrwls; Or. Amen! Is· .an
~ld ht at.8uffalo ~I anct
~" ren's hOsplaak. .

elected

•. 't ('

~ ....

�Oclober 31, 197-f.

Gauguin· viewed .as 'obsessed'
with lost infantile paradise
ly

r.bida WMI llledennM

.....,.,'llooY-~:

._.....,
Paul Gauguin was, in the analysis of art
historian Wayne Andersen, a man
obsessed with the loss of an infantileparadise who recorded his obsession in
11n obscure but decipherable code on
canvas.
Andersen, professor of the history and
theory of art, M.I.T., discussed the personal iconography of Gauguin befon! an
aud~at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery

breaking physical labor (like that done
girl with eyes ·open, for example, he
poverished, shunned as a leper, and'
by the Bret~women in the fields) and
hoped to avo id the inference that this .
given to· railing against the Chinese. His
ultimately death. In many paintings from
was a post-coital scene. "The literary
final debauchery, Andersen suggests,
his Breton perjod the artist shows his slytheme:" he declares, "The soul of the livwas a parody of eroticism. Unable to pareyed maiden in the presence of
ing woman united with the spirit of the
ticipate in the orgiastic scenes he financominous, older women who carry with
ed, he looked on from the bed, carved
dead. The opposites of night and day."
them theJmowledge of death. Andersen
Gauguin's blissf ul interlude with
with erotica, in which, on May 8, 1903, he
traces Gauguin's highly person.alized
died.
.
Tehura ended in 1893. During the next
conception of. Eve to his feeli ngs about
decade his tropical paradise . devolved
Or. An~erSen's appearance was sponhis mother and finds a model for the uninto "a green hell." In his last years,
sored by the Gallery and by the_JJ/B
· usl'al fetal pose in which Gauguin ohen
Department of Art History. .
Gauguin is a pitlful figure, diseased, i ~~17.
shows the maiden in a mummy of a
The ...scholar, who is -author of a psy- . woman, Peru;o.' ian like his mother,.which
choanalylic·study of the artist's·work enthe artist had the opportunity to see in
titled Gauguln:S Poradlse ·Lost, made .. , Paris. ,
· ..spetiafreferenC&amp;tO&lt;!Woi)'nporiant pain- , ., A.nJ . ~ymbolk .CanYilll ,
,rl ' tings&lt;irrthe GaHerv's«41ectiori, The Yellow
· the Yellow Christ was, according to
•Christ-1'1889)·11/idO'Jhl!"Splr'it ol- !he' Dead
G~uguj n's contemporary, the critic
Watching (1892).
' '·
· •·,
Mirbeau.- the- first-of. his "symbolic canThe Board of Directors of the Faculty
package will include a wine punch
" Legend ascribes the flowering of
vases." The Spirit of the Dead Watching
Club has arranged two Special pfograms
. . . rea!ptidn, a-fiVe-course gpurmet·dinner,
genius in Paul Gauguin neither to inis related in symbology, although it was
this fall related to C!ulinary and esthetic
and concert tjckets. Members will be
interests. They are open to members and
dustry nor.to heredity but to mutationpainted three y~ars later aher the artist
assessed $12.50 per person; non non-members, but the cost is slightly
an internal act of God which transformed
had gone to Tahiti.
members, $15. A bus round:ltip to and
higher for those who do not belong to
a solid Parisian stockbroker overnight
Andersen explodes the _myth. ~ ept
from the Faculty'Ciub is extra - $2 per
the Club.
person.
into an anguished artist-in-exile,"
afloat by the endurirrg popularity of
The firsi prOgram invo lves th ree
Andersen writes. In fact, Gauguin un- . Somerset Maugham's The Moofl and SixReservations With check must be
derwent no such "frog into prince"
pence. that Gauguin summarily turned
French cooking demonstrat io ns _by
received in the Faculty Club by Monday,
Nadine Berlow. Ms. Berlow, Club
transfo~tion, Andersen argues. Rather,
his baCk on Europe and "went native.'' In
December 16. Make checks payat&gt;le to
spokesmen indicate, has a fine local
"The Faculty Club."
his life was "a long process of self-evolution
fact, he ieh Paris with some fanfare, inreputat ion as a teacher of the art of
in the course of which Gauguin came to a
eluding a farewell banquet hosted by
The dinner and concert are limited to
100 persons.
·
recognition of his powers."
Maliarme. and he arrived in Tahiti's tacky
French cooking. She has cond~cted
several d emonstrations for Park School
Questions may be referred to lohn
A lou'l!eolse Eden
capital dty in ~he universal _uniform of
Buerk, 831-4630, 4631, 4632.
and the Inte rn ational Institute. French~ '
Born in Paris, Gauguin was only three
th.e sa~1b; a wh1te trop1cal SUit. He ca~e
born and trained, she was encouraged by
when his fatHer cHed during the family's
wtth lottie_mon~y~ a shotg~n, a commosJames Beard t.o share her knowledge. She
voyage to 'Peru. During the next four
soon to paont offocoal portraots, a mand_olon
has had wide experience cooking.in this
years,tl\echiidexperiencedhismother's
and an _actove case of syphdos.
country and, as a result, has adjusted her
homeland as a kind of bourgeoise Eden,
Mossoonaroes~ he found, had already onmenus and techniques to American food
until ~- sudden: iledlne in.the family fortraduced guoit and the Mother Hubbard
sources and cooking interests.
.
- tune force'd tl\em to refum to Paris,
to what he hoped would be a tropocal _
Demonstration dites and menus are:
where :they lived in ~ diminished cirEden.
.
. .
..
Helen Leonard Hedrick has been nam. T#Jursthy, Norembec 7 (8-10 p.m.) :
cumstanl:es. This early trauma was crucial
The beautJfui gorl on The Spmt of the
ed interim assistant director and coor·
. Poisson ·Poche' au Poivre vert (poached
to GaUguin's · sub·s equent ca·reer,
Dea~ Watch~?g i~ Gaug~ir:a's · Tahitia~
dinator of women's affairs in the UIB Off ish with green pepper corns);
Andersen believes, pOinting to tlie sym-_ _ E~e, 'Tehura, ~ thorteen-year-old Maoro
. lice of Equal Opportunity, Barbara 'M.
Bouillabaisse (seafood stew); and Gratin
bois many highly personal relating to
gorl gov,en to hom by her parents. Says
Sims, director of that office, has ·an·
Saxon' (b'aked vegetables):
~
·
this ' primal loss whkh ~r
Andersen, "the tenure with Tehura was
nounced.
Thursthy, No~ 14 (8-9:30 p.m.):
throughout GausuJn's work.
l?"rhaps _the hapl'iest tim~ 'in. Gauguin's
. . Ms. Hedrick will fill the vacancy in the
Steak ;ou Poivre (steak with pepper corThe Yellow Christ was painted in Brit-.
lofe - or ra~her·, ot I?"~ hom back to. the
position resulting from the leave of •
ns); Chou Farci (whole cabbage with
tany aher Ga\'gtoin' had separated from
first happ,y tome of htS lofe! the early years
. absence of Shirley L Harrington (Arnold)
meat stuffing); and Veloute' de Tomates
in Peru.
.
his Danish Wife Bette and their 'five
which eXtends th~ough August 31, 1975.
(creamed tomato soup).
·
children. The anist's escape to' the
The painting depi~ an actual event
Holding an M.S. In education from
Thursday, N&lt;iwenJbe, :n (8-9:30 p.m.):
prim1tlve landscape of Brittany (a
recor:ded by the artost. He walked one
Buffalo State, Ms. Hedrick has done post. upon au Q)ampagne (capon cook~ in · . master's work there. She received a B.S.
"deciduous · paradise") prefigured· his
night into their darkened room to find
champagne); Pouter Farci Grand' mere
final sojourn in Tahiti, Andersen says;
Tehura nude, lying Ol) her stomach on
from. the Vocational-Technical Division
(boned stuffed chiden .,- indudes in-. , of the same Institution. '
The '"calvary" of the painting (copied
t~ bed, ·;~~r eyes Inordinately larg.e
stnictlons on boning a whole chiCken);
frOm a·yellowed Ivory crucifix still hang· .
woth fear. In order ~o keep theor
For the past several years, she has been
and Tarte-Talin (upside down apple tart).
lng In a church near Pont·Aven) relates
daughters home, Tahitians taught lhem
educational director of a locil 'rnenbll
'the cost for all three sessions for F~l- . - retardation program where her responto the pre-Christian bbjects. of phallic
to fear the dark;saiij to be filled with the
·ty Club members is $10, singll!!; $15, couworship which ·ro-exlst in the Breton
spirits of the dead. Gauguin recalls that
sibilities induded staffing and grants
countrysitle with wood and stone
he never saw Tehura more beautiful than ~ ple. for ".?"-members, the fee will be
procurement.
$15. single, and $25, couple.
reminders of the passion anCI death of
on that night.
She has also.: manal!ed a 64Jane bowlThe
paclfage
indudes
'recipes,
wine,
·ing
complex; served In the Technical
Christ.
Not~
•
and sampling of eaCh Item prepared at
Communications Depanment o1 Bell
In GaUJUin's penona~lcooography-, he
' In Gaupn's painting. the nude girl.
each
demonstration.
Aerospace; worked as a pUblic relations
frequently equates himself Wttfi Christ, as . shares the .canvas with a spirit of the
Checks payalile to "The Faculty Club"
·well as with anothet', better publlclzell
dead,1!111.bodted asa:spectral old woman
account executive In Buffalo and
should be mailed to: Fac\llty Club,
self ·he calh "the Savage.!' Gauguin's
In blade, ,a sister to the crones of his
Washington, D.C.; handled public
Harriman Library, Campus (SUNY, Main
Olrist b also related to his Eve, a favorite
earlier palntii)IS. The "eledric flashes" '
relations for the late radio newscaster
Street. Buff~lo. New York 1421f).
lmase In which the malden Is depiCted In
~re patches &gt;bf phospho.--t moss,
Elmer Davis, The Lone- Ranser · and
The Club' has also annOunced that last
the period before she yields 10 temptabeliewd by the Tabltlans to be the· eyes
Hopalon11 CaSsidy; and bee! a ClOIIdlsdOn and, as a consequence,toinevltaljle'
of the splrlls 01 the. dad. As recorded In
sion owner In supper clUbs In Buffalo,
year's . n s e ·to the sourmet dinner
Saratop, -and Palm Beach.
'
and concert. (the Buffalo Philharmonic's
·dedjlll! and death. For~. Gausuin·
a ~ dedicated 110 his daughter
presentation of Handel's Messiah) Was so
shoWs, the result of sexual submission Is a
Aline (hiS mother's name), Gausuin
Ms. Hedrick is a member ol the board
successful that It will be repeated this ~ of directors of the Buffalo 5Cate Child
kind of "calvary of Eve" (In Andersen's
carefully calculated uch detail to con·
year, on Friday, December 20. 'This
term), marked by childbirth, bodytrol the painting's eHect. By showing the
learning_and Developme"! Center,

f.

French cooking, gourmet dinner

on-·Faculty €1u\&gt;

5Che00·~-

Ms. Hedrick named
OEO

to ·post

in

�October 31, 197·4

,ti

GA celebtition Iffot9
- It is...a celebration of youth - one
reason why those who fear. youth and its
capaciti.!s do not praise it; it is a true dis· .
quisition on loss - lost opportunities,
lost love, lost time, lost ideals, It
' memorializes the few -:moments when
reversing of fortunes can turn on an

English Lord's fondness for music and the
moon's presence th-rough an opened
window.
Puc~ipi

was ever the professional in

the musical theater . He had no
polemical, didactic or mystic urgencies.
His correspondence -

amorous ,

technical, litigious and occasionally
pastoral, along with the Strau.ssHofmannstahl, Mozart-Da Ponte and
Verdi-Boito, tells us most about his
technique as a composer. He completes
the line of Verdi, leaving in Turandor a
mysterious link to a future as yet unfilled.
It is a linle like the difficulty of su~cessors
to Pe/leas;. there are simply none. The in·
1..1 lloheme, not Scenes of Bohemian
life or Episodes from the Left Bank, but
the BOhemian Women. The title tells a
good deal . about Puccini and his .
·
dramaturgy. The frail, helpless, pitiable
young women of Puccini, how they win

us over time and time agajn, and how
unforgettable they are! But why
. BOHEMIAN? Well, first of all because of
H.enri Murger's work, first appearing as "'a
serial in Le Corsaire in 1848 and then
made into a proper stage work in 1849yes but still why BOHEMIANi Bohemia,
the land whose king was captured by the
Black Prince, whose good king(s)
Wenceslaus trod lightly where the Saint
had'. trod, the land devastated by' the
Thirty Years' War, of might)' Hus and of
sombre Prague, finally came to be the
sobriquet for a section of freedom liunse -'- lntemltv of spirit - of Paris.
The Boherm"iir Ill&lt;! meant poverty,
carelessness, the bOuntifulness of sudden
success and the richness of intimate dis·
covery. Well, it seems to h"ave something
to do with migrations of gypsy folk and
smart folk who senled in France and
came to be known collectively as
Bohemians (not _Czechs). Puccini had
had his own poor, young, struggling life
in 1880-83 as a student in Milan. The
force and universal impact of 1..1 llclheln"
has more than literary roots in the Parisian Latin Quarter; its characters with
real iilentities actually lived and in that

wondro.us way of g{eat art ~were

somehow enciphered, enshrined into
this splendid work, which is about a time
all of us wish we had, some of us think
we had, and -a few of .us had the sense to
appi1!cqte:
·

novative things in-.the oeuvre of Puccini
are. not in realms of harmony {a few

parallel ... fihhs and consecutive triads
earlyish and the exotica of Turandot) , not
in the realms of orchestration {though he
particularized it and skewered out

various cl!ches), not in the integrative
means {in the manner of Wozzeck let us
say). No-it is a unique, idiosyncratic and

quite inimitable lyric stagecraft, the putting of the right phrases and tones and
inflections into the right peoplel at the
right moment and lending them the
motivations and normalcy and credibility
of persons with whom one has empathy.
And these are incredible feats of musical
composition.

Carner's admirable bioa:raphv of Puccini, which does so much .to put his
·musicil gifts into perspective, takes that
non-defensive .tone finall Y we have
needed. It says the music is popular and alwaY.S ~Yill be because it is superbly
written, · admirably conceived,
meticulously detailed. Of course, it is

Italian, and there are those who dare not
understand the Italians.
Wan, weak, consumptive, luminous
Mimi, that Bohemian girl whose cold
hands hitve lighted many a singer's
career; ebullient Rodolfo, prince of
hilarity and desperately possessiv&lt;!. how
ineradicable these characters are! And
how ·much in a time of frenetic innovation can we not learn from the lexicOn of
Puccini, who realized that musical
significance lies rather in refinement,
economy, resource and not in deVice.
Yes, ·we are very happy to be hearing
once again 1..1 Boheme- and particularly in a moment of centennial concern for
composers who had very different ideas
of popularity, though they did not scorn
it.
.

The University Opera Studio will"
present two performances of Puccini's La Boheme in a fully staged
production;-. November 22-23 at 6:30
p.m. at the Williamsville North High
School on Hopkins Road. The ~r­
formances will benefit the Music
Scholarship Fund of the Music
Department and mark the 50th anniversary of Puccini's death :
To be sung in Italian with full
orchestra, La Boheme represents the
most ambitious undertaking to date
of ihe Opera Studio which has met
· with critical plaudits for each of its
earlier productions.
·
Produced and qirected by Muriel
Hebert Wolf, the pr~uction will

1..1 Boheme, first played February 1,
immediate success; it took a while for the
first sour reviews to wilt as pqpular
enthusiasm proi)OUnced It the triumph It
-Allen Sapp
surely lund W.s.We know it to have lleen
a kind of sandblasted ·masterpiece,
endlessly poliShed by Puccini and his
collaborators, Giu$C!Ppe Glacosa and
Luigi lllica, with the artful Ricordi inACT II
For those who think opera~ stuffy,
- l n g occuionally to restore fractured communication. What seems so efDirector Muriel Wolf provides _this LipAt a sidewalk cafe, Rodolfo and Mimi
dated synopsis_ of the action of b - join the three guys. He introduces her
fortless was a work turned over and OVl!r
loheine: •.
on the hand lathe of one of Music
and they all order T-bone steaks. Coming
llieater's supreme craftsmen. Verdi, who
to sit at th,e next table is Musetta, who is
. ACT.!
something else. She has jilted Mam!llo
worried about the "symphol)ic"
A couple, of S\¥inging bachelOrs share a
aspects ol Putdnl,' recosnlzed his metier
-for Aldndoro, ·a ri&lt;b old man whom slle •
IS euiy IS 1884; the thoushtfuJ Eric Salz· -"" pad in the Lltin Quarter of Paris;bu~they
· now leads by the nose. Furious because ·
are broke and hungry. Things are so bad • · Marcello is snubbing her.._ she. puts on a
1111n writing aboUt XXth Century style. In
tliat
Rodolfo,
a
poet,
byrns
his
· ~I after - have tried to find die
scene for hisl&gt;enetiL Deciding she wants
manuscript to warm up-the Ice-cold attic
"lf!IYito II - are foreed to observations
him back again, ~usetta sends Alcindoro
studio. Marcello, an artist, and Colline, a
abOut Its deft cm:heStration, Its magnifiaway .t!&gt; buy her.a newpair of shoes, size
pliilosophy major, joke with him about
cent dramatu'B)', Its eminently felicitous
7'(2C. As soon as he is gone, she flies-into
the sacrifice. $uddenly Schaunard lirrives
vocal writing. Its "~ eXClellence"
Marcello's arms. A muching !land comes
with ·firewood, lopd, and wine. The
-'all ol which doesn treelly tell us much
along. and the whole gans: joins th~
lhlt,.. dO not lnillticlhely realize • we.. musiclaft tries til tell. them ~ he fell
leaving Al~iiCJoro SIUck with the check
Into the&gt;btead but they are too bu$Y with
II apln. 1bank jJoodnest
•!U'·a pair of shoes he can't use.
chat thefll!eCito~ die
the goocl$to 1~.'"""' decide to booze
ACTm
h up, ~dine out whefe.the acdon Ia.
till .,...,d1 no NlpeCUible rnusiROclollo. who . . behind tp flnl$h 1111
. In the ~. Marcello ~ Musetta
Wde, lieira sOineDne In the i!aht!Y· It
are INdt- as a t.:n -tnd are • hapi'Y as
Pri-llz aili:I1Jick,.. Rodolfo.ls there,
h Mlml,. qlbl dlfdc~ • btlcf ~·
H e r - fi
blOWn. -'109.~ ~JWII!iMI"II sone sour.

1891:!, was a gradual-rather than

E
•fllidsa......._
....._...,...
te::a~
--~~ ~;af
....

~.

_..,..,
rn IYrlcJnPratlon
11th 1n
.-- ~

--Qnlle ...

~~~~~
=-~t5:t:e~~
to~.
tbei &amp;II Iii toM.
' . ~ iflet hidlns Mlhil..Rodolfo - .

,r

.

.

.

have sets designed by Robert
Winkler of the Metropolitan 'Opera,
and costumes by Suzanne linlefield.
Harriet Simons will be music director
and conductor, and Herbert
DeMore is · lighting designer arid
technical director. Cooperating in
the presentation are the U/8
Orchestra under the direction of
Pamela Gearhart and the Opera
Studio Workshop Chorus.
Guest Artist In Soo Park will ·
appear as Rodqlfo. The Korean
tenor, ;m"llumnus of the University
Opera Studio and a graduate of
Seoul National UniverSity College of
Music, was winner of the Maria
Callas Scholiu~hip at. the . Juilliard

�/

October 31, 1974

~s ~in t9e

proqycnqn:

-'

' The Dlrec:tori

School of Music in 1972 and has
since appeared in a number of opera
productions in New York City. Also
performing will be Rachel Lewis as
Mimi, Jane Bane as Musetta, and
George Wands as Marcello.
Schaunard and Colline will be
played by Kenneth Friesema and
Joseph Chouinard, with Benoit performed by Robert Willoughby, Parpignol by Robert De Yarman, and _
Alcindoro by Edward Marshall.
Patron tickets are $25 per couple;
regular th!kets, $4 and . student
tickets, $2. • Tickets are available at
Norton Ticket Office, Buffalo State'
Ticket Office, and Festival East at the
Statler Hilton Hote( ...
,

Muriel Hebert Wolf is· founde an
' di"tector of U/B's University Opera
StUdio productions. An associate
-professor of music here, she is associate
editor of NOll Opera Journal, published
l;ly" the Nation~( Opera Association, and
has been appointed by tbat organization
to a committee ' which is advising the
National Music Council on opera projects and -programming for the 1976
Bicentennial Celebration. Her production credits as producer and/or stage
director include Weisgall's The Tenor,
Rorem'~ Four Dialqgues, Offenbach's
Not in Front of the Waiter (National
ConventiOn· of the National AssoQation
of Teachers of Singing, Waldorf Astoria,
· 1973), Poulenc's Les Mamelles de
Tiresias (National Conference of the
National Opera Association, Toronto,
1973) - a wide range of productions by
- the University Opera .Studio and
collaborations with the Buffalo Philharmonic, the latter _including Mozart's Cosi
Fan TUtte and Rossini 's Barber of Seville.
Ms. Wolf received the B.M. and M.M.
from the New Eng"land Conservatory; the
Artist's Diploma from the Academy of
Music and Performing Arts, Vienna. She
also attended the University of Vienna
and. the Motarteum, Salzburg.
Pa.mela Ce.uh,ut is -a n associate
professor of music at U/B and conductor
of: the Ufli'lersity Orchestra, the University Chamb~r Orchestra, a 100-member
Youth Orchestra, and a string workshop
in Alabama, YOuth Makes Music. A
graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music
where she majored in violin, Mrs.
Gearhart played in her father's orchestra
ai age"9, sitting in the last staOd of second
violins.
Harriet Simons, associate professor of
music and dir~ctor of University
choruses since 1972, has been musical
~ired:or of two other University Opera
Studio product io ns. She has also
piejlar'l&lt;l inarwchoruses for the Buffalo
1
E!.hilharmonic : ·she received her
bachelor~s from Drake University. and
the Master of Music in choral conducting and the doctorate in opera at Indiana University. This year, she was one
of 35 choral directors who toured the
Soviet Union in a People to People mission.
The CHI Principals
In Soo P;ulc (Rodolfo)_- A graduate of
Seoul National University and a former
member of the An:-erican Opera Center
· iri Seoul, In Soo Park has appeared as
soloist with the Seoul "Philharmonic
Orchestra and for the Korean Broadcasting System. He first came to U/B in
1970 under -the sponsorship of Muriel
Wolf to work with the University Opera
Studio, and in 1970, won .the Maria Callas
Master Class Scholarship at Juilliard. In
New York, he has studied .voice with
Giorgio Toui and is presently studying
with Daniel - F~t the Manhattan
School of MusiC. Mdst recently; he has
performed with the Joh'! Brownlee

7
Muriel Wolf and a candidate for the
master of Fine Arts in voice at u/8. Jane lane (Muoetta) -Jane Bane has
been a member of the University OperaWorkshop for the past five years, singing
leading roles in five productions. As a
member of the Wolf Trap Company 4ur·
ing the summer of 1974, she had the opportunity to understudy Beverly Sills in a
production of Daughter of the Regiment
and to appear i n a role in Sarah
Caldwell's production of War and Peace-:
Miss Bane is -a voice student of Muriel
Wolf and is currently enrolled in the
M.F.A. program in voice.

,...
Opera Theatre in New York and the
Stamford Opera Company. Mr. Park has
also been a solost in concerts in Carnegie
Hall .
'
George Wands (Marcello) - A U/B
alumnus and an account executive with
WKBW, George Wands has studied voice
with Vincent Mattina and Richard Allen.
He is a baritone soloist at Calvary
Episcopal Church in Williamsville and an
actor-singer with an extensive list of performance credits.
Joseph Chouinard (Colline) - Joseph
Chouinard recei~~ M.A.
degrees from the- University of Connec·
ticut and an M.l.S. from State University
College at Geneseo. He was awarded a·
·scholarship to Fontainbleau, France, in
1957 and studied in Eufope"4rom 1957-5!1. _
He was a singer at Oxford University dur- ·
ing the summer of 1961 and has also sung ·
at the Aspen and Tanglewooil festivals. .,
He has sung Colline with the Tri·Cities
Opera in Bing!)amton and with the
Florida International Festi~al. Daytona
Beach.
Kenneth Alan Friesema (Schaunard) Formerly a stydent at Wittenberg
University, Kenneth Alan Friesema is
currently enrolled in the B.F.A. program
in voice at U/8 as a student of Heinz
Rehfuss. He has appeared· in four other
University Opera Studio productions.
Rachel lewis (Mimi) - Rachel lewis
holds ·a B.A. .in yoice · from Douglass
College (Rutgers University). She came
to Buffalo four years ·ago with her . ~us­
band who is associate professor of
English, Buffalo State. She has sung major
roles in University ~pera Studio p roductions and has appeared as soloist for the
Choral Arts Society, Niagara Communi!)'
College, and the U/B
Associates. She is a voice

The Designer
Robert Winkler, scenic artist and projection specialist, has been on the staff of
the Metropolitan Opera Association
since 1965. A graduate of Columbia
University's School of Dramatic Arts with
a major in television and film, he· is
presently lecturer in projection scenery
at the l ester Polakov School of Design in
New York _ City and lectUrer in scene
painting at Brooklyn College. He has
designed numerous productioos for
televis ion, touri ng opera compan ies, and
special educational programming, including set designs and proj~ct ions for
Un iversity Opera Studio productions
since 1967.

;.:-·

�•1A-hour, 9-bar
concert to· last
until a·a.m.

Masochistic concen-soers will be

dellsfrtecl to 1om that· a 14-hoUr plino
....nti!Pn will mark the second Creative
Associate recital of the season.
Scheduled to take piKe Wednesday,
. Nollember 6, 'In 100 Baird Hall, the recital
will leature,the area premiere of ':Vexations," a work by Erik Satle, conSisting
of nine bars of music for plano solo
which must be repeated 840 times. It will
be .performed by Josepli Kubera, pianist,
assisted by 20 suestartlsts, who will join
him throughout the presentation, which
will begin at 6 p.m. and is expected to
end at approximately 8 a.m., Thursday,
November 7.
Pianists. panidpatinll will include
Stephen Manes, Torn Con~tanten,
Robert Moog, Yvar Mlkhashoff, Leo
Smit, and Allen Sapp, as well as graduate
student pianists and compqsers from the
Department of Music. ·
•
Written sometime between 1893 and
1895, the work includes this admonitio!'
from Satle: "In order to play this mottf
840 tl'""' In succession, it would be good
... to p~re in advance, and in great
silence, through serious stillness."
Couches will be brought Into the performance room for the comfort of those
, people planning to attend the entire performance. Individuals are encouraged to
bri"fl sleepi"fl bigs If they wish.

__

October 31, 1974

Rural
life found to be.more 'satisfying'
._
lylalt_....

'

Important as other thinss.
.
There were significant exceptions to
this finding. In Hamilton County,
. respondents gave low. ratlnss to the
availability of medlcatcare, a service they
co1)sidered Important. Erie County
residents rated air and water quality as
highly important but also highly displeasing.
_ Overall, Or. Milbrath concludes t~at
people in the Adirondacks are gettong
more of what they think is ·important to
them than those in Erie County. As~ed
about 46 elements of their environment,
Hamilton County residents answered
with a more positive response in 32 instanceS.
This difference in satisfaction emerged
most strikingly in questions about the
natural environment and outdoor living,
Dr. Milbrath notes. Whereas Hamilton
County residents rated the level of clean
air as the most pleasing element in their
environment, Erie Countians ra~ked the
quality of their air 35th of the -46 items.
"Topography of land" and "quality of
household water" were rated as the se·
cond and third most pleasing elements in
Hamilton County, but 23rd and 28th
. respectively in Erie County.
"Natural outdoor recreation" and
" quality of water for recreation" were
also rated much higher in Hamilton
County.
·
Considerable Asreement
While the U/8 research did bring out
life-style differences between urban and
rural residents, Dr. Milbrath found "considerable agreement on some basically
important things- clean air and water,
medical care, security, privacy, comfort
and freedom."
l:le adds thai the pilot study sample
was "sizeable," but " not large enough to
be an accurate representation of the two
counties."
Its purpose was to develop a method
, ..o! ~rroplil)g, enviroQme1)tal be)iels that
.., I'~U.\o;f. Mil'!'llltt~tt!ll?di k\Y ~~s l,r.o m .
&lt;!liferent cultures. A large portoon of the
SOciat Science Research Institute's efforts
went into laying the groundwork for the
study and in working out ways to ask the .
right questions and phrase them correctly.
.
If U/B receives further research funds,
· the research institute plans to refine its
survey methods and eventually share its
findings with similar research groups in
Norway, Japan, South ATerica and
Africa-:
•

-

People llvl"flln rural areas are fletllns
more of what they want from their envilonment than their city COII$ins are.
This was one of the lindlnss of a pilot
research study of environmental beliefs
carried out .,_ the past year.hy the U/11
Social Science· Research Institute.
The project, funded under a founda,_
tion srant,. sousht to find a way to .
-&lt;Q.easure what people were pleased with,
and what they thought was important in
their natural, man-made and cultuo:al ·
surroundlnils.
·
As part of the study, professional interviewers from the I:J/!1 Survey Research
Center sampled the beliefs of about 300
persons In two counties: densely populated, heavily industri~lized Erie County
and rustic, s/&gt;arsely settled Hamilton
County, situated in the Adirondack
Mountain Park resion of Upstate New
York.
·

Rur~ Dwelen More Satisfied
Results of the study suBSest that people living in rural parts of Erie County, as
well as residents of Hamilton County,
were more satisfied with environment
conditions than those in Buffalo and its
suburbs.
Still, residents In a.ll parts of Erie County were "generally pleased" with their
environment, according to Dr. lesler W.
Milbt; h, the director of the Social
Science Research Institute.

Or. Milbrath's study found that Erie
County residents are "most pleased" with
many of the public services they are
receiving. These include fire protection,
electric and postal · service, garbage
collection and the public water system .
They are "quite pleased" with many
environmental elements over which they
command some degree of control, such
as beauty, comfort, and appliances in
their homes.
In addition, Erie County inhabitants
are 11 fairly well pleased" with their
relations with · neighbors and fellow
workers.
Least Pleaed With Police
On the negative side, Western New

Yorkers e xpressed marked dissatisfaction
with the quality of their air an.d )Water,
two environmental elements they con-

sidered very important. Of the public
services offered, they were least pleased
: ,•' ,, :
with police protection..
Security factors, clean air, .al'\d water
we._re ! lso ra ted as top- priOrities by
Hamilton County residents. They, too,
were least satisfied \\lith police protec:
tion among public services offered.
But in sharp contrast with Erie County
residents, people in Ham!lton County
were highly pleased with the quality of
their ·air and water.
Difference in Ufe Style
One factor to emerge from the U/11
-$tudy was a significant difference in life
style between residents of the two counties, with those in the Adirondacks expressing much stronger feelings toward
Mother Nature and the outdoor way of
life.
The survey data 'also suggested that
people's choices of living in the city or
countryside are often made after
weighing wh'at is importaht to them. Dr.
Milbrath sums this up in his research
A guest speaker for weekend services
•!'port by concluding:
and a fashion show have been an·
STATE liNIVERsiTY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
"Hamilton Cou}1ty·Qffers a clean and
nounced by the Chaliad Jiouse ·of Bufbeautiful natural environment, with
DIVISIONAL PROGREIIJI FOR UNIVERSITY UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN
falo.
'
I
man~ pleasing ou~tdoor life possibilities;
Dr. Leonard R. Mendelsohn; associate
$125,000 Unlwnity Goof
FALL, 1874 .
and most people who move or stay in
professor ·of Enslish at Sir GeorJe
Hamilton
County
prefer
that
way
of
life.
Williams
University of ~ntreal, will ~
;" . 10.aJOJX)
'--tyof Amend Lmen: / .
The big city ptovides more opportunities
suest speaker at friday nlsht services at
...._oi~BI:rodll •• • •
for 'getting ahe,d,' more goods and serthe Chabad Center, 3292 Main Slreet,
'-"'of £nP-inl end
vices, but at 1 some costs to the enThe topic will be "The Torah and the
vironment."
.
.
~ .. . . .
Teachlng of Uterature: A 5tucli of Con,..._oli.wlftd ............. .
The ll/11 survey found that while pe~trastJns Appr.oaches." He wiH also speak
;
. sons ir&gt; Hamilton &lt;;ounty stressed nature
at t.he New Chabad .House, 185
'-'tytJI..-..~
and outdoor living. they played down . Maplemere Road In Williamsville, Satur13,!00.00
~ . ...... . . .
-questions relating to Social advancement
day evenl"fl at 8:30 p.in.
as well as the Importance of consumer
Or, Menclehohn specializes In the
-~ ·-· · .,.···
products and services.
study of Shakespeare, Renaissance
This pattern was reversed in Erie coun:DijiO
drama, and Kaflca. He recelwod his B.A.
~~ ·-····
ty. Western New York"!', less toncemed · from Brandeis, his M.A. from Harvard,
.ooo.oo ·
with the outdoors, put higher esteem on
..... ......... .
and his Ph.D. from the urilveAI!y of
food, public services ·and educational
Wosconsln.
.
1.000.00
. . . . . . . . . . CDI... ... . ~
opportunilles. In both counties,
The · lAdles' Auxiliary • of Friends of
......... ......... ...
e.aoo.oo ~
~ ~esidents rated the lack of job· opporChabad House will host ... first annual
'-"fashion show, MondiJ,~4,atB
\. tunities the most dlspleasi"fl of &lt;46 Items.
.......... .
But Erie CountY i-esldents. thought job
p.m. In the faculty Club. Fashions will be
~MIIIrt .: .... , ..
provided by the Bellevue
opportunities lmportanL
Slaoltca I . . U I ; IW(
• Northtown and furs will be from
Analysis Of qlle$llonNire respol!seS
Palanket and Son. Models will Include
led further to die lnfere'nce th•t people
Krlslen Krull, Miss ~ York State, who
senemly atudl llltle Importance to
wiH dlsplaJ the gown she ln the
short,mminp In thdr ftllon - such as
Miss America Buuty ~
tlie VJrietY 9f Wlldllfi\! In Erie County' or
0onat1o1ts - SJ.:iD, All funds nhed
the ~ of ~ avaa.ble In
wiD be donated to the ctr.bMt House of
li~olt- Coil~ lit 'both · areas,

Canadian prof,
fashion show oil.
Chabad agenda

---··
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...........

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reiPOnilen!s ncMd a lack of mass transit

servlt'et, bUt said th!5-a~ was not as

~ldinot~-~..:

relfsious activities and ~

�- _,.r~ 11

October 31, '7974

....

.

Geologists pro~e Great Lakes shoreline to help save it
The New York St~te Great lakes
shoreline is being probed and poked, •
measured and tested with the inveterate
thoroughness that might be applied to a
hospital patient with ~ some rare and
elusive malady defying ready diagnosis.
Computers are humming, receiving,

classifying and spewing out reams of data..

used for wall-size charts of . wave
panerns and probable sediment move-

ment direction, general and detailed
renderings of shoreline characteristics,
and similar materials designed to provide
a detailed profile of coastal processes as
useful to geologists and engineers as
patient tests are to physicians.
The project - being conducted by
U/ B and other SUNY researchers under

~

auspices of the newly-formed New York

State Sea Grant Institute -

is aimed at

predicting : how much erosion will occur

along Certain portions of the shorelines
of Lakes. Erie and Ontario, where such

damage is most likely to occur, and what
a~as ar~ less susceptible to nature's
batterings.
·
AccordinR to Dr. Parker E. Calkin,
associate professor of geology and one
of the principal resear!'h investigators,
the study will yield inform -tion to be
used by advisory services ir. planning
future use and development of the
shoreline , parti cularly in terfl}s t&gt;f
stabilization efforts.

T011t Oslrye of U/1 ~

-ach.

ning -agencies and munidpalities involved.
The project began last year with a
Federal Sea Grant of S18,767 for purposes
~f developing a system for a comprehen- sove, mtegrated, general study of almost
600 miles of shoreline . Dr. Gordon Connally, U/ B associate professor of geology,
and Dr. Roben Apmann, associate
An Ursent Need
pro f~sor of ci~i l ~ngineering. ~nd f?r.
"The urgent need for studies of the
Cal~m were pnn~pa1 and assoctate m~I processes on the Great lakes
vest&gt;gators respectovely.
shores of New York State has become
. Results of the first phase of the work
very evident ," Dr. Calkin and his
rnduded : developme.nt . of procedures
associate_s note in a background report
and models for establoshmg the:amount
outlining their research.
of env•ronmental stress to whtch por"During the past two years, the water
levels of Lakes Erie and Ontario have · tions of the coast are subject and fo r
ide~ltifying . S?.ur.ces and distributi.o n of.
been -abnormally high (as measured by
sed&amp;~nt; 1n1t1at•o~ o_f the collect1~~m of
historical standards). These levels have
analyncal, ba_thymetnc,. wave dlmate,
resuhed in severe erosion along parts of
stream sed1m e nt d1scharge , a nd
the coast and' general flooding
elsewhere. Rapid cliff r~sloh ; erOsion . historical da.ta on th~ configuration of
"''-"' beach_,. a'nd' di~ruptio~ of.'iririsporta- • •J th~ Lake 1:ne shorel~ne; ·and develoption arid utility services haVe all du'sed . ~en.t of ~omputer programs for reducmg the colled ed data.
·
general concern among · the affected
The geologists also started a deta iled
populations. The situation has led to a
pilot study of lotus Beach, south of
series of widely publicized proposals for
Evangola State Park, which wiU serve as a
shoreline stabilization projects, some
model for collections o f basic da ta o n
quite traditional and some as radical as a .
beach change relative to wave climate
local official's suggestion that World War
over an extended area.
II liberty ships be sunk offshoreJo 'form a
breakwater." ·
Project Expanded
· There are also conflicting claims on
This year, with approximately S30,000
which of several · purposes should be
in Sea .Grant funds plus five Sea Grant
served by coastal stabilization efforts, Dr.
traineeships for graduate students, the
Calkin points out. 11Conflicts are ocproject will be expanded so that all of
curring between interests attempting to
New York State's Ontario coast as well as
maintain ,beaches and those wanting to
lake Erie is covered. To do this, ·facult y
kt;!ep'Sfream mouths open for small boat
· and students from other SUNY campuses
passage, for example."
along the lakes' shores will be involved.
. In short, the Meolo!!ist says, · "coastal
Drs. Calkin and Apmann are coor, stabilization Is the concern of a bewilderdinators of the entire study. Calkin is
ing complex of agencies and individuals,
primarily responsible for lake Erie; Ap"
all with differing ·
·nts. n
mann, for lake Ontario. In addition to
· l!efore addit~":iman-~e structhese general responsibilities, Dr . .Calkin
tines are introduCed, "it is advisable to
is participating in a study of the bluffs
acquire an adequate understanding of
along lake Erie and is overseeing work
the naturally existing erosionaVdeposion eastern Lake Ontario; Dr. Apmarin is
tional balance in the rep.o. • We need to
supervising engineering aspects of wave
know whether slablliz.ation efforts should
climate, bluff stability and drainage basin
and can be unclenaken effectively and
where they will do the most good and least
harm, Calkin says.
To luld cw Nolto luld
When study results .,.. jn, he indicates, It should be possible to advise a
landowner or governmental agency
whether or not a sea wall or a groin (a
pile of rodo to protect against longshore
drift effects) would help protect a certain
property or whether some other structure or no structure at all might be
bener. Certain kinds of "protective':
structures ill given locatlbns might actually increaie erosion effects on • the.
property being "shielded" or on adja=
cent areas, Dr•.C:.Ikln points out.
1he Un'-Jitr ·wiU not be InvolVed in
making any: dec:islons on -that should or
. should not be doqe. he emphasizes. The
Buffalo Office af the U.S. Corps of
Engineers, the State Geologico! Survey,
the New YOI\.S. Clrlllt Advlloly Service

or Olher

m=_.... _

Rudy

lntorm.loft.
;dedikiDs 011 aalon to
modify natiAII. 1111
..,_will
probably be lh'ose of ttie YifiOus plan-

analys is. Dr. Connall y will study bluff
anal ysis, to provide the geological
stability and recession along both lakes.
background for proposed jetties, protecFaculty parti cipants from other SUNY
live structures at the mouths of streams.
units incl ude: Dr. Robert Adams of the
long-term recession of lakeshore
Geology De partme nt of State Universit y
bluffs will be calculated and analyzed by
College at Brockpo rt, who is handling
comparing sets of aerial photographs
local supe rvision of beach and bluff
and maps available from federal agenst ud ies on the sou thern shore of lake
des. Automatic gauges will record the
Ontari o; Dr. Roben Fahnestock, a
effects on the bluffs of wave stress and
geologist at Fredo nia, who is develo ping
changes in water level. How frost and
and supervisi ng stream sediment disground and surface water movement affect
charge studies on both lakes; and Dr.
the bluffs will be investigated at a n.u mber
Robe rt Nu ge nt of Oswego' s Earth
of sites; bluff composition and liability to
Science Department who is examining
erosion will be eXamined both in
bluff stability and recession along the
laboratoriesandinthefield.
eastern shore of Lake Ontario.
Techniques such as pebble counts afld
Fi ve graduate stud ents are associated
sand tracer investigations (in wh ich
wit h the project, particularly Anthony .
quartz grains painted with day61o are usRi chards, a Ph.D. cand idate in geology
ed) will help determine origin and movehe re , who provides necessary expertise
ment of beach materials.
in the field of shore erosion studies. The
Wind and wive measurements will be
f.aculty geolog!s~s involved, Dr. Calkin
taken as wilt measures of the toexplains,- are-specialists in other areas~ .... pograP!-.Y'"Of .tile lake's ~Variab\es
glacial geolog y, water and streams, etc.
such as breaker height ;md period, wave
Richards, who ·has - pub~sh&lt;:,d; coastal.~~ • ,angle and _Sfll!ed of lpng shore current
st udies in Barbados and other areas, haS,
will be measured near shore. Offshore
thus, "contributed most of the ideas" for
data will be gathered with the help of
the present effort.
carefully planned bottom surveys utilizPort ions of the study, Calkin report~.
ing equipment from Buffalo State's Great ._
are being funded by the Corps of
Likes laboratory and selectively-placed
Engineers and by the Eastern Ontario=St.
wave-radar buoys.
lawrence Planning Commission. A grant
BeaChes are 1'\ighly mobile formS, Dr.
from' the Corps of Engineers to Dr.
Calkin points out. They change from day
to day. "We have to determine how
Fahnestock is mak ing possible the investigation of sediment discharge and
given wave conditions affect beaches so(
distribution at th e mouth of Cattaraugus
we can predict what will happen in an
area under c::emin dirnatic and wave
Creek; Or. Nugent's work will be financed in part by the Eastern Ontario-St.
patterns." The beaches provide proteclawrence Commission.
tion to the shoreline bluffs; the narrower
the beaches, the . sreater the wind
damage to the bluffs. And tile . bluffs,
Four ATeu of Research
As indicated by the division of faculty
once eroded, do not come back:
It is impOrtant also, he says, to deterresponsibility, research is being pursued
in four areas: streams, bluffs, beaches
mine whether bluffs are formed of till,
and the lake itself. Complete integration
lake clay, or shale, as well as to assess the
of these individual studi!'S is the longrelative stability of each. Pertinent also Is
range objective.
the determination of the most &lt;table
angles for each type of bluff.
Methodology will include measures of
such phenomena as stream.. water and
The differing impact of wind directions
'sediment discharge, wind, wave and
must also be calculated, Calkin . says,
stream I)'IOVement, and rock and textural
pointing out, for example, that the New
York portion of the Lake Erie shoreline is
very susceptible to hish water levels and
_storm wa- because of Its position
relative to prevailing westerly and
southwesterly winds.
Yun to c The initial announcement of the New
York Sea Grant Institute noted tilat its
research would, among olherobjectlves,
assist dtizens of the State In planning
wise management and 'multiple use of ~
coastal lands and resources aiill provide
...._ . . -. mechanisms to make existing and
, _ Information available to industry,
government and dtizens along the COtil. ·
The local coastal processes otudy· not
only fulfills these criteria but may be o.n e
of the most important of the Slate's Sea
Grant projeas, Or. Calkin believes. The
potential impact of the study .on the
stabilization and optimum management
of the entire New York Great Lakes
shoreline could be 61 Incalculable importance to .development of the Slate's
economy and
recrealionalenvlronmentat res!!Urces for years to

,....,..._liar

c:ome.

�•

.'

·-

U/B's Civil Service Employees Association CCSEA) - which dates from shortly
aher the merger.with State University-

held its 10th Anhiversary Dinner-Dance
last Fridar at the Sheraton Inn- Buffalo
East, Cheektowaga.
Dan Neaverth, WKBW's morning
drive-time disc jockey, acted as master of
ceremonies. Chapter President Ed

Dudek welcomed the &lt;400 guests and
Tom McDonough, State executive vice

president of CSEA, presented awards on
behalf of State President Theollore
Wenzl who was unable to attend .
.f.;

Eugene Murray, noW retired from the
U/8 Security force, received an award in
recognition of his acting as temporary
presiden) When the chapter was first
formed. John Warren, Facilities Planning,

was· hono'red for his service as the
.chapter's first elea;,Qpresident. Warren,
in turn, presented Dudek with an

award

• for I)_~ roJe [n,dgveloping the chapt~r· to .
a m'lm~s!J.iJH&gt;f· 1~,!9, G\!'l!Par.~~o. ~. ,, '"

~ at the1outset. Other, dtees were Hank
. ~. Eichler, an electrician· with~ ihe University's 1Jhysical plant division, a charter
member of 'the chapter, and Henry
~dula, the .first .field representative.
Among guests who attend!'&lt;! wer.e :
Jack Gallagher, State CSEA- tr&lt;;!asurer;
Dorothy MacTavish, State secretary; Bill
McGow;lh, pre5ident of CSEA Region 6,
and his wife, Jean!le; Donald R. Brutvan,
uta as~ate-dean of ~continuing educa tion, and his wife_.Eileen, representing

Dr. and Mrs. Robert ~. Ketter, and
many CSEA chapter presidents.
· Ruth Gemerek; wile of Lou Gemerek
who is employed in the lock~J\op, won
. the door prize, a water-pick donated by
Group Health Insurance (GHI}.
Summing up the CSEA history on campus, Chapter President Dudek said, "We ·
can all look INck with pride and satisfac- ·
tion over the pasr-years of achievement
· and growth ..•. Our wocess In meeting •
JQds us to ' look with

�.i

Some ~ys aren't htl&amp;days,
Personnel memo eXplains why

tian theism and·of Marxism, and provide.
~n occount of the plight ofdisrenters in

When is a holiday not a holiday! When
it's Election Day or Veterans Day and you
work at U/B. •·
• •
But there's no reason foi total despair.
We get a holiday when there's not a holiday - on the Friday aher Thanksgiving.
Or romething like that.

Russia1:oday.
Part If, ''The Humanist Alternative,"
develops a positive viewpoint, a presentation of the elements of "the gOod life,"
in which one may realize "the human
potential and the fullne.s of bl!ing." .And
Part Ill conJ-ains an exposition of current
international problems and proposals for
their "intelligent" solution, and suggests
how the methods of rea.on can be
applied in both personal lives and in
world affairs.

AAUW

Nov&lt;:mber 5; Veterans Day (see Note 1)
- Monday, November 11 ; Thanksgivi ng
Day (see Note 2) - November 28.
"Professional Service employees re-

L'fxpressJn France, The london Times
and Catholic Herald in Englind, Central
Daily News in Korea, Panorama in Italy,
numerous publications in Germany,
Mexico, Norway, India, and many ot!&gt;ers-

work on a holiday should rj!ceive either
holiday pay or compensatory time off
depending on their eleCtion.
" Notes: 1. Classes are scheduled and
offices should be open; 2. Observed
holiday; clasres not scheduled and oflice. should be dared.
"The da)&lt; after Thanbgmng, Friday,

The principal address will be delivered
by Dr. Abraham Monk, u/B,profe.rorof
social work · who will discuss
Re!'ations

to my at~ention so that alternate
solutions can be arranged:-"

" The following are the official holidays
in November: '
· "Election Day (~ Not.e '1 )-Tuesday,

the theme of a workshop to be ~eld on
campus Saturday, November 9, by the
1lle , . . _ of . .. _ by hul ICum, _ ~~;::-!~an Association of University

"lntergeilera'tional

receive compensatory time off.
" Civil Service employees required to

" November Holidays, 1974" to campus
administrators:

nWomen Planning for Tomorrow;, is

in

American Society." Dr. Monk's pre.entation will follow a luncbeon in the
Fillmore Room at 12:30 p.m.
The workshop will open with a film ,
"When Parents Grow' Old . " A

November 29, is not an official holiday,
but it is a day on which no classes are

scheduled and for students becomes part
of the long Thanksgiving weekend. The

"dialogue," between area social workers
Natali~ ti. Evans and Helen M. Kowalski,
will follow.
Participants will be able to choose
among four discussion groups : "The
Family and the Older Per.on - Moral

Responsibility," with Dr. Anna Burrell,
professor of psychology, .. Medaille
College, pr.ofess·or e'meritus, Strate
University College at Buffalo, and Mrs.
lois Dabney, certified social worker,

Wesi.Seneca School; "Careers for the
· The National GlbSene' carried' a full· · · Later"Vear5J ' with Mrs. Laverne Werdel

tontroversy

is

unabated.

Huestis;- chairperson, and resource per-

.ons from the Social Security Administration and banking finns; an~ "Alternate

Life Style&gt; In the--Later Years," with Mrs.
Ursula Falk, CSW, Jewish Community
Center of ·Buffalo.
Registration is at 9 a .m. in the Fillinore
Room.
·
Cost of the workshop and luncheon is
. SS.. The cost of workshop registration
only is S2. (Table. will be available for
brown-baggers.)
To register, contact Mrs. D.C. Samp.on, 1818 Yvette Drive, Cheektowaga
14225, 674-0249. The public is invited to
•ttend.
-

.

NTP

Laws Committee; 5. Part 11 of Admission ..
The meeting will be held in Room 148
Diefendorf Hall, beginning at 2:30p.m.

~ndu·----------------~-----,

flrnm ,.a~~' 11. rnl.

.f)

and "'usic. Gallery 219, NortOn. Viewing
hours: Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Sun·
day, 1 - 4 p.m. ; Monday and Thur sd~y
evenings, 7-10 p.m.

VISUAL ARTS EXHIIIT
Hand-rinred Xerograplrs by Elaine Hancock.

Discussions will deal with how to make
friends, how to settle differences with a roommate, etc. Everyone is invited to attend.
FORBGN SllJDfNT INFORMAnON

The Office·of Foreign Student Affairs has
made the following announcements:
1. Tuition waiver applications for the Spring
1975 semester are available in the Office now.
The application deadline is November 15.
. 2. Undergraduate scholarship applications
for foreign students .are ivallab\e in the'0ffice··
now. The apr)lication deadline is November 1.
CIIADliAJJJI~~ AnON _

_

,

Regular registration deadline for the GRE to
ON-cAMPUS INTERVIEWS

The staff of the University Placement and
Career Guidance Office welcomes all students
in the University community and alumni to
take part in various career programs offered
thi s )'ear. The on-campus interviewing
program, running from Oct. 7-Dec. 12 and
Jan. 20-April 25, offers the opportunity for individual interviews with education, business,
industrial and governmental representatives. ·
Candidates from all degree levels, completing
their course work in January or May 1975, are
invited to take part in the interviewing.
Regi~tration forms are available in . Hayes
Annex C. Rm. 6. The following agencies will be
interviewing this week:
_.
~
THURSDAY-31 : New York Life Insurance '
Co.; Union Carbide (Mining and Metals and
Ferroalloys Divisions}.
FRIDAY-1 : Harrison Radiator; Percival G.
TUESDAY-S: Upjohn Co.; Triton Realtors;
Touche, Ross and Co.

WEDNESDA Y-6 : Buffalo Forge Co.;
General Uectric Co. ·
, .
THURSOAY-7: Armstrong Corle Co.;
Travelers; U.S. Social Security; Collins Radio
Gioup- Rockwell 1ntemat~al.

. NOTICES

ment.

Assistant P.rofessor of Accounting (2 positions),
Operations 1\nalysls. School of Management..
Assistant/Associate Professor, 1\natomical Sciences
Associate Professor, Schoof of Medidne (2 positions).

the Chairman ~ 3. Interim report by the
Chairman of the Special Committee on
the Day Care Center; 4. Report of the By-

Committee report; 6. Other Business.

Bixby and Co.
MONDAY-.: Xerox CorP. •

FACULTY
•
Professor and Chairman, r:iepartm"ent of Oral Surgery, School of Dentistry.
Vrslting Professor of Manpower, Schoof of Management.
Assistant Professor of F.lnana! and Management Systems, •
. Schoof of Management.
.
·
As&gt;oclate or Full Professor of MaJketlng, Operations Analysis,
School of Management.
. ,
,
Assistant Professor of- Marketing, Operations /\nal~is, School of Manage-

The ·Faculty Senate will meet Tuesday,
November s, to consider the following
agenda:
1. Report of the President; 2. Report of

non-holidays (except by the Governor)
and, therefore, will not be officially clos-

been '
The

.Senate lisls agenda
for November 5th

University cannot be officially closed on

page feature story on the Ma_nilesto, that
a multi·c~re~rist, and Mrs . Berth ~
Hayes Hall lobby, building. hours, November
was s,i:ndicated aiJ over the .U nited Sta.tes, . . Cu~,
•S$0date director, U/B Place- -· 1-;10- Presented b! the Offoce of CuJtural Afandt-.h~1 LO!het fiev.i 'ser\liies;&lt;&gt;has"'' •- me
~ Guidanclo,.,O f f ' - ·"faors. _
--'-- --.
fl.'ati:ired '1iJN iiurfdfi!as 'of•'Otlil!t ' '" "Fi ~t Pianril'll£.!n a Technologically
- - - - - ' -·- - - - - - - - newspapers. · .
·' · ,., 1' '" '' 1 ~,,, Ad
ta&gt;nomyf'" With Mrs. Mary~,;-: &lt; ·
INTERVIEWS-.···

Theologians throughout the United
States (in Commonweal, CEhristi~nity To-.
day, The Churchman, etc.) continue to
defend and attack the Manifesto. In
Russia; Andrei 5akharov, one of the
signers of the ManifestO, was given a
warning about his collaboration with
We&gt;tern liberals, ani:! then subjected to a
large-scale attack in the Soviet Press. ..
The generative ideas prerented in the
controversial Manifesto are fully
developed in this book. In Pan I, Kurtz
deal~ with the 'chief religious and moral
philOsophies now available to We.tem
man. He gives detailed critiques of Chris·

satory time off and one of the compen-

quired to work on a holiday should

Harry W. Poppey, director of personnel,
has issued the following memo on

planning

ed on Friday, November 29. However, all
employee&gt; who work on Election Day or
Veterans Dar, are entitled to compensatory days should be Friday, November
29.
"Civil Service employee. contractually •
have an additional option which -they
elect in place of a compensatory day and
that is receiving holiday pay in addition
to the regular pay' for working on a holiday. Where the holiday pay election is
made, the employee should be schedul·
eel to take an earned vacation day on Friday, November ·29.
"Past experience indicates that this
method for handling the Thanksgiving
weekend will be satisfactory to almost all
of our operations/' Poppey said. "Necessaiy exceptions should be brought

. 'To make a eonfusing situation clearer,

campus worksl;lop

professor of philosophy, Horizon Pre.s, "
New. York, 1974. Paperback, 216 page..
S3.95. Al.o hardcover, S10.
The Fullness of life is "an affirmative
declaration of human values at a time of
crisis" in what Prof. Kurtz regards as the
· -great moral revolution of our age.
· 'It t&gt;esan when Paul Kurtz pubUshed
the four-page Humanist Manifesto II in
The Humanist magazine recently. The
New York Times carried an extensive
front-page news story on it as did hundreds of ne,...papers throughout the
United State&gt; and abroad. There was im·
mediate comment. in publications
throughout the world: Le Monde and

n

i

~

AMHBIST CAMP1IS UfE wouSttors
A series of workshops to unite small groups

of pe""ns With siml~r inten!lis is sponsorej!
by tile Workshops. They are ln!e of chai'Jie,
except for materials invol...t. On the Altlhent
Campus, the followlqg wotl&lt;shops will be
'"- held: Boking- MOAdays, Nooember 4-18, 7·
10 p.m.; ~nitting and·Crothetlns- Tuesdoys,
·· from November 5, 7:30 p.m.; Guitar Wednesdays, from November 6, 7-ll:30 p.m.;
Embroidery - Thundays.{JQm November 7,

7·9 p.m.; Spanish-EnJlish Convenation - , TUesdaY,, h-om NcM!mber 5 'On alternate
weeks, time to be annou.....S; Photosropl;y
•• ~ Wednesdays. fJQm Nc&gt;ioembe&lt; 6, 7-!1:30
"' ~:;'J~ ,- Thunclays, """! Nooember 7,
-, To ~er for ony worbhOp, and for lnro;'.
mOtion on' locations, .,.g "f.t:.._
. Oiii'IITACT

Conlla, a

,_!W,.::~:=it=~~

.....1 uUdents, "
FIHII!_Pre ... Elli~~

be given Dec. 14 is November 19. Information

and application forms are available in the
University Pla~ment and Career Guidance
Office, 6 Hayes C.
Hilla CAMP Wf£KEND'

Hillel will sponsor a College Camp
Weekend with activities November 1-3. For
information, all 836-4540.
lAW SCHOOl ;u)MISSION TEST
Regular regislnlion. deadline for the LSAT- ,
to be given Dec. 7 is November 11. lnforma. tion·and application forms are available In the
University Placement and career Guidance
Olfoce, 6 Hayes C.
OffiCE Of AoMISSioNS AND-RECOIIDS
HOUIIS

The revised schedule of Admissions and
Records office hours is: ·Monday through

Thunclay, 8:30 a.m.· 7 p.m.; Friday, 8:30
a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
SA TRAYa .
Group YaatiOns ue planned to Fort'
uuderdale, San Juan and ~... u. Also, a
group fliRht is planned to los Angeles. s,»ce
is limited. For information, caH 831-3602 or
come to 316 Norton.
Sponsored by the Student Assoclotlon .

SASU-

The Student Assoclolion of1he State Unlver·
York Is _...,.;na a Jep1ative '
internship prosram In Albany fot the Spring

slty of New

Semester. Many ~llve..-elated ICIMtles· Included· in the. Internships, and
students wUI be selected on the bosis of
writins. resar&lt;h and speoldns ability as well
as aa:eplamle of ~- Interns will
receive I !lfpend of-$250 and IJII!Y ........
ocadernk Oedlt throush lndepe11dent study
for the WOI'L Appllcatlons and lnfqrmotlon
are ovalloble lhtoush Pofltlcal Sclen&amp;, SA or
br writlna: Ray . Glau, legislative dhector,
SASU lnc.,1095tate,-,Aibany,N.Y.122117.
the' deatiUne Is November 11.

)lVIII be

-

�Oct~r 31, 1974_

THURSDAY_;_31

SATURDAY-2

.CONTINUING DlNTAl EDUCATION

.- -=:f
DisNses of lmport~nce in Dentistry
of
M~mgement

C~rdi~c Emergencies,

sponsored by the VA Hospital and the U/B
School of Dentistry. Conference Room, VA

Hospital, 8 :30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.

UFE

WC)RI(SHOPS••

H~lloween Horsebicl&lt; Ride· co-spon{ored
0/11 Rldlns Oub. Bus ~ves Norton at 2
p.m. For Information, all 831~.
PUIUC IECTUIIP
William 8. Hoyt, Buffalo City Councilman.

-

Haas lounge, Nonon, noon.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAIIf
Cadmium and Zinc Balances in Man and
Animals, Dr. George P. lewis/ director of the
Clinical Ph!lrmacology Division, lemuel Shattuck Hospital, Mass. 244 Health Sciences, 4
p.m .

FEAs STUDENT GOVERNMENT SEMJNAR"
The Faculty of Engineering and Applied

Sciences ;md the Aerospace Club are cosponsoring a discussion of an aerospace
rocket project. Freshmen and sophomore

e ngineering students are urged to anend. 106
Parker, 4 p.m.

. CHAJITBIING HEARINGS• .
Public hearings on the colleg~ condude
with consideration of College E and Clifford

Furnas College. 310 Foster, .._7:30 p.m. and
8:30 p.m.-midnight.
CR1 AND MOUCI.itAR IIOLOCY

~~ori

find

Keplicfltion

of

the

Genome of Chlamydomonas
reinhani, Dr. Stephen J. Keller, assistant
professor, Department of Biological Sc!ences,
University of Cincinnati. 134 Health Sc1ences,
4:15 p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
Chloroplflst

A~·
'
The Crime of M. lange (Renoir). 147

Diefendorf, 5 and 8 P·I'Tl· N_o admission charge.
RlM'
AniCfl. Governors Residence · Lounge,
Amherst Campus, 7 p.m.
Sponsored by the U/8 Attica Support
Group. No admission charge.

woa.sttofl··

. \R:
Antiquing and Collecring: Drinking Vesse/5
ond Steins, James GruPe&lt;. 232 Norton, 7-8:30

p.m. For inform.otlon, ali 831-&lt;4630.
HIUa. "DDIOP~~ NIGHT'
Hillel House, 40 C.pen Blvd., 7:11 p.m.
COMPUTB saVICiS RM1NAR1 --

Glenn Meyer, Survey Research .Center
prosrammer. 4238 Ridge Lea, Rm. 10, 8-10
p.m.
UUAI COfflBtOUSE'
.
Andy Cohen and R&lt;~t L.ushk entenain ~n the ·
banjo ond piano. Fint lloooafeteri.a, Norton, 8
p.m. Admission: $.75 students; $1 faculty, staff
· ond olumni; $1.25 general. public.
·
WAIRLM••
...
Valerie find Her Week of Wonders Uires,
1970). Norton . Conference Theatre, call ~1511i for times. Admission charge.

FRIDAY-1

- . u ~y 5EMINAIII

..

New AppnMches to Neutron Capture
Tltenpy Using ""'I Conipounds, Patrick Gr~y.
u~ graduate sludent. :145 Helkh Sdenc:es, 2

-

.

ENCilfiBDKi SEMINAat

Ground Shod&lt;. Dr. Alvo Mllthews, oonsulllnt to Welcllinser Assodltes, New York. 104
Parter, 4-5 p.m.
- CH.UAD Jiousp
.
SeMa!s wiU be held II 6::io p.m. at the two
Chobod Houl&amp;, 185 Moplemere Rd. ond 3292
. !o4oJn St. 1he speoker wlfl be Or. Leonard R.
J;fendeJsohn, professor of English 11 51(
Ciecqe Wiftllms Univenlty In Mon~al.

IHAIIAT BYICI'

oo

'.

IIMiblnlc Comments
the Sedra. Rabbi
Justin Hofmonn.l.\n Oneg $habbat will I""'*:.
Hillel Housed' Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.

CACRIM,. ·

•

~- 140 Capen,, 8 and 10 p.m. Ad:
mission: $1:
Woody ~den.

INJaNAIIONAl FOUl DAI'IONG' ·
•
lnsuUcdon for ............. 233 Norton, 8-11 p.m. Pretenled by lllkan Folk111andng.

UUAiftM" .
vo~or~e Mid ,.,.
1WII). ~

w.- n-.e.
.

'

o1 Woqden 111res;

Caodeoence

5117 for dn8. Admlulon charp.

The mysteries of woofers and tw~ters,
amplifiers a')d speakers, will be unravelled today and ton)Orrow.
What is Hi-Fi All ~bour, a lecture by Dr.
Thomas W. Weber, U/ 8 associate professor of
chemical engi neering, will be given at 11 a.m.
A second lecture, How to Choose A. Hi-Fi
System, by Joseph Solsky, a graduate student
in chemistry, is sCheduled for 1 p.m. Both lectures will be in the Norton Conference
Theatre and will be repeated a~ the same time
and in the same location Sunday, November 3.
There is a S1.00 'e ntrance fee fQr each lecture .•
Exhibits and demonstrations featuring sound
systems displayed and demonstrated by ten
area hi-fi dealers will be set up on the second
and third floors of Norton Hall, from 10 a.m.
to 9 p.m., Saturday, and 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday. Exhibitors includ.e : Audio Center .of
Radio Equipment Corp., FM Sound Equipment Corp., Heathkit Electronic Center,
Lafayette Radio Eledronics of Buffalo, Inc.,
Purchase Radio and Electronics, Stereo
Chamber In c., Stereo Emporium, Stereo Plus,
Tech Hi-Fi , and Transcendental Audio.
Sponsored by the' O!fice f?r Cred it- F~e~
Programs in cooperation w1th area h1- f1
dealers. ~
SHAIBAT SERVIC£"
Gordon Kadatz will lead the Service. A Kiddush will follow. Hillel House, 40 Cape.n Blvd.,
10 a.m.

-.-

CHAJ!AD HOUSE•
A morning service will be held at t~e two
Chabad houses, 185 Maplemere Rd. and 3292
Main St. at 10 a.m. At .9 p.m., Dr. Leonard R.
Mendelsohn, professor of English at s.ir
George Williams University, Montreal, w1ll
speak at the Maplemere Chabad House.
BRIDGE GAME'
Frontier Unit 116 of the American Contract
Bridge League is spohsoring a- ~nited. Fund
· benefit bridge game. Master pomts with 70
per cent sectional rating will be given. Faculty
Club Dining Rooin, 12:30 p.m. A~mission :
S1.50; tid.ets are available at the door.

Ji.uAn DEMONSTIIAliON'
The U/8 Tae kwon Do korean Karate Club
presents a ·free demonstration by Mr. Du_k
Sung Son, ninth degree black belt and president of th~ World Tae Kwon Do Association
and Korea n karate Association. Haas Lounge,
Norton·, 2 p.m. .
.

The Collapse of Concensus - Can ..-.dministrfltors Survive,, Or. Daniel E. Griffiths;

dean, School of EducatiOn, New York University~ The speech is the annual George E.
Holloway lecture sponsored by the Society of
Educational Administrators and will be given
at an SEA din~ner at the Three Coins
Restaurant, 1620 Niagara Falls Blvd. Tickets
may be obtained -by calling 731-3•121 or 8757-405.
MFA RECITAl'
Pianist,.,. Susanne Vizsolyi performs classical
music. Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
CACRLM••
.
Sleeper. 140 C.pen, 8 and 10 p.m. Admission: S1.

ttiua HOUSE PARTY•

ENCOUNTBI sans•
Informal conversation with violinist Kyung
Wha Chung. Baind Recital f,lall, 2 p.m.
Sponlored by the ~rtment of ~usic.

p.m.

UuAI RLM••

HI-A F.UR'

HOllOWAY IECTURQ

St.fltisticaiPadcage, for the Social Sciences,

all 831- .

Hillel's

Wolf director of UIB's Opera Studio, to discuss {he upcomin8 production of J,.fl Boheme.
WADV-FM, 10:05 p.m. '
• .:.- ,

Oper&lt;~tion

Creenlight sponsors a .

~

' Jon~than (Geissendorfer,- 1970). Norton
Conference Theatre, call 831-5117 for tillle$.
Admi~ion charJ~;e .

MONDAY-4
COMPUTBI SERVICES "SEMI NAill
FORTR..-.N IV for the Novice, Harvey Axelrod. 4242 Ridge lea, Rm. I!, 3~5 p.m.
ENGLISH DfPARTMENT FILM'
· The Third Man (Reed). 140 Capen, 3 and 9
p.m. No admission charge.
The movie that made the zit her famous.
CRL AND MOlfCUlAR BIOLOCY
IECTURfl
.
The Regulation. and Metabolic Significance
of Glycogen Levels in Mammalian Liver, Alan

Parks, U/ 8 graduate st udent. 24 Diefendorf
Annex, 4 p.m.
WATER RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL
ENGINEERING SEMINAR#
Wa stewater Filtrati on, Jerry Huang,
CALSPAN. Rm. 7, Acheson Annex, 4 p.m.
COMPUTER SCIENCE COUOQUIUMI
Inductive Inference, Professor Jerome Feld·
man , Computer Science Qepart!Ttent, University of Rochester. Room 90, 4226 Ridge lea ,
4:10p.m. Coffee at 3:40 p.m. in Room 61.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL•
U/8 vs. Genesee County CC. Clark Hall, 7
_p.m.
COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARI

.. .
· }onarhan (Geissendorfer, 1970). Norton
Conference Theatre, .caH 831-5117 for times.
Admission charge ·

SUNDAY-3
Hl-fl FAIR" '
,
Two Dflys of Sound~ features lectures and
exhibit.-monstrations about"' hi-fi systems.
. See S.lllndiy TIS!ing. above, ~ ~lis.
STtJDeiJ UCIT.U•
Violinist /onlthon Shallit peiforms. Bailli
· Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
UNIYBISITY CHAM1a OIICHfSTaA'
Robetl Cole of the- Buffalo Philharmonic
serves os guest conductor oi the UnNenity
Chamber Orcheslra's first concert ol the
seoson. Baird Redial Hill, 8 p.m.
INTEIINAliONAI. FOUl DANCING'
SOme t.-uc~~on: Flnmooe "Room, Norton
. Unioh, 8:3&amp;-10:30 p.m. Presented br Balkan
· Folk Dancing.

AR:h:-s'!.':z · interVIews Muriel Hebert

and Complex ..-.nalysis of Variance Problems,

Or. Jeremy Finn , U/8 Department of
Educational Psychology. Rm . _10,_ 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7-9 p.m.
·
FILMS•
Chimes at Midnight (Welles, 1966), 7:15
p.m., and Purple Noon (Clement, 1960), 9:25
p.m. 140 Capen. No admission charge.
PUBLIC UCTURE"
To Be Raped or Nor To Be Raped, Frederic
Storaska. Fillmore Rm ., Norton, 8 p.m. Universit&gt;: members free; non-University merpbers

S1 ."
Pre se nted by the Student Associa!ion
Speakers' Bureau.
UUAB COFFEfHOUSE'
Boys of the Lough . F-irst floor cafeteria, Nor·
ton , 9 p.m. Admission: $.75 students; S1 faculty, staff, and alumni; S1.25 general public.

Use of the NYBMUL Progrflm for Simple
and CompleK ..-.nalysis of Variance Problems

THURSDAY-7

Dr . Je remy Finn , U / ~ Department o
Educational Psychology. ~m . 10, 4238 Ridge
lea , 7-9 p.m.
HIUR TALMUD CLASS'
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7:30 p.m.
INDUcnON MEETING'
Views on ..-.cademic Life: The Nincompoop
Matrix is the topic of the speech by Dr.
Charles Smith, UIB Biology Department, at
the induction meeting of Pi1i Et~ Sigma and
Alpha Lambda Delta. 3.39 Norton, 8 'p,m.
CHARLIE CHAPI,IN RLM SRIES'
The Great Dictator. Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 (or times. Admission
charge.

SYMPOSIUM: WITTGENSTEIN
AND THE UTEJtARY TEXT'
Stanley Cavell. professor of philosophy,
Harvard University . Moot C--our( Room,
· O'Brian Hall, 10· a.m .
Spotisor&lt;:&lt;f by the Comparative Literature
Program and the Graduate Program in Uterature
and Psydlology.
SYMPOSIUM: WITTCENSTEIN
AND THf I.I1BIAIIY TEXT'
WiUgenstein on lmfiRination, Anthony Ken·
ny, tutor in philosophy, Baillol Collese, &lt;?•ford University, Moot Court Room, O 'Bnan
Hiil, f p.m.

TUESDAY--"5
URIAN ANALYSIS AND
POLIO' SEMINARI •
Ceogrflphical Crime lnformfltion System the Bufffllo Exflmple, Or. Perry Hanson, UIB

Department ol Geography . .237 Crosby, l-5
p.m.
,
.

HISTORY DEPARTMENT FILMS' . .
file Fall of Berlin; _Desert Victory. 147
Diefendorf, 3 and 7:30 p.m. No admission
charge.
HIUR ClASSES•
::;_
A dass on Convergrionotl Hebrew is offered
at 7 p.m. A class ori Modern Jewish intellectual Movements begins at 8 p.m. Hillel House,
40 C.pen Blvd.
. CHARLIE CHAPLIN RLM SERIES'
.
The Crear Dictator. Norton Conference
Theatre, call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.
"'

Costume Party. 40 C.pen Blvd., 8:30-11 P-'.!'· ·
UUAIFJ~

CHEMICAL fNCIN-ING SEMINAIII
A TWo-Zone Model for Paclced Bed Reocrors, Professor W. D. Smith, Department of
Ch"emica.l Engineering, University of
Rochester. 104 Parker, 4 p.m. ~
CltEATIVf ASSOCIATES UCITAl'
Vexations· by Erik Sat.ie will be performed
• for the first time in this area by pianist Joseph
Kubera, assisted by 20 guest-pianists. 10Q .Baird
Recital Hall beginning at 6 p.m. arid ending at
8 a.m ., No'vember 7. The program will be
broadcast live o n WBFO-FM.
FILM•
bodus. Norton Conference Theatre, 7 p.m.
No admission charge. Sponsored by Hillel.
COMPUTBI SERVICES SEMINARJ
Use · of rhe NYBMUL Program for Simple

WEDNESDAY~
LIFE WORkSHOPS"
Vloh~nce and Human Survival Sel:ies:
Psycholo,zy of Violence, Norm Solkoff, U/B
professor of psychology; Consequences of
Disorienting Violence for l.egfll Orders, AI
kfltz, UIB associate Professor; law and_
juriSP,rUdence. For information and registration, tontKt 223 Norton, 831-4631.
_
. CON11NUING DlNTAL.tDUCATION

SQWIIARI
.
.
R".,floml Endodonrics -=- Phflse 1 is the topic
of this day-long semina'r. 148 Capen, 9 a.m.:

SYMJIOSIUM: ~
AND THE I.I1BIAIIY TEXT'

Stylistics find Synonymity, E.D. Hirsch,.
-piofessor of English, University of Virginia.
Moot Court Room, O'Brian Haft, l p.m.
COMPIJTBt SCIENCE COUOQUIUMI
Alp/lord: ldeos for a-LinKuare to Support
Siructured Programming, Professor William A.
Wutf, Carnegte-Mellon University. Room 41 ,
4i26- Ridge Lea, 4:10 p.m:'Coffee at J:40 p.m.
in Room 61.
~
CR1 AND MOUCUI.AR IIOLOCY

~cture

and Function of Protease
Inhibitors from Porttroes, Dr. C. A. Ryan, Jr..,

Department of Agricultural Chemistry,
Washington State University. ll4 Health
Sciences, 4:15 p.m. "Coffee at 4 p.m.
FtiNCH DEPARTMENT RIM'
The Lower Depfhs (Rer:&gt;olr). 147 ~endorf,
S and 8 p.m. No odmfssion q......,.
;
Hll.lB. "'DDIINN" _ .
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
TllfAlU I'BifORMANCE'
I
The Misanthrope by Molleri! is presented
by the u/11 Department of lheatre. Harriman
Thealre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Throush November
10.
.

~~J~ew London. Fir&gt;~ floor

cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.nt Admission: $.75
· students; $1 faculty, staff, and alumni; $1.25
general public.
-

UUAIRLM••
.
la Bonne Annee (Lelouch, 1974). Norton
Conference ThNtre, all 831-5117 for· times.
~dmission charse.

EXHIBITS

4:30p.m.
- ·
For rexistration information, calf 831-2836.

-CLASS·

.

Hillel Elementary Hebrew 0&lt;1ss. 262 Norton.~
12noon.
.

COMPU1III savtCES $EMINA111 ....

FORT.IIAN IV fotlhe Novice, Harvey ~od. 4242 Rldse Lei, Rm. 11, l-5 j&gt;.m.
•
FOSTBt COIJ.OQUIUM 5all5f
• Trati.sltion Metai·Carbon ~onds. in
• lromofleneous Catalysis, Dr/" John Osborn,
, Harvoid University. 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.

T.~i=.!fthe.works

of S.mu:8eclce.r.·
from tbe collectioniof Loclcwood Memorlll
Library: 2nd floor ba~•.Loclcwood. V~­
ing hou": Monday-Friday, 9 a.m: - 5 p.m.
Continuing.
...
LOCKWOOD EXHIIIIT'·
Polish Collection, an e~hlbition culledirom
the UniverSity's.collectlon of more than 4,000_
volumes of- material•. Fint floor, Loclcwood'
Memorlll Ubrary. Monday, Friday, 9 a.m-:- - 5 p.m. Contlnutna.
MUl~

IIOaiT'

.

l'l'lumlw3/ 11&lt;1111&lt;0151, somp1e worb -by a
group of U.S. ortlstJ wbo hove communlaled
with ekli other lhrcJush wrltlnp. video
productiOn, Xerox prlnttng,·fllm, phO!ograplty
.. flum ro ~ 1~. col. 31

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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
VOL. 6, NO. 8
OCTOBER 24, 1974

'

•

Computing
service said
'minimal'
By Patricia Ward Biederman
,

lteponerSf•H

Computing services on campus,
specifically those in the area of
''academic computing," are " minimal,
indeed barely adequate," a Faculty
Senate Committee on Computer
Resources reponed a'l the October 16 "
meeting of the Senate leadership. President Robert l. Ketter was also present.
The report, presented by Committee
Cha·irman james Mciver of Chemistry,
outlined concern and dissatisfaction with
the current computing situation, par·
ticularly strong among the faculty's more
sop histicated computer·users.
The reasons for the Committee's conce rn wefe summarized in an interim
report written last spring: " Five years
ago, Academic Computing at this
University was competitive with many of
t ~ e better un iversity computing centers . .
We regret to report. th is is no longer
true. . . Unless immediate steps are
taken there is a very real danger that
Academic Computing on this campus
will deteriorate even further and more
rapidly. As evidence we cite: the size of
the academic staff has decreased while
represented, she indicated, nor was Dr.
The U/8 Day €are Center. the furure
departmental involvement with the
usage h&lt;!S more than doubled in the past
funding of which has l&gt;een in a Catch-22
Center would be acceptable, if a parental
Ertell, who had been invited but proposfive years, the recently published
never-never-land since the withdrawal
majority on the Steering Committee
ed an alternate meeting instead.
software
summary (Library Guide) differs
Acco
rdi
ng
to
Ms.
Crabtree,
the
Center
of student suppon earlier this semester
were assured, she said.
little from its predecessor of five years
init ially rejected this alternate session
(Repol'fel',..5eptember 26), received new
Negotiations were continuing at
ago,
many
of the most experienced and
because it had been advised earlier by
information this week on a specific adRepol'fel' deadline.
gifted personnel (especially in the vital
the President that lhe provosts might be
minlstrative proposal for the Ct!nter's
While insisting that the agency remain
Syslems are'.) have resigned - usually
able to provide funds. That proved to be
parent-dominated, the Day Care Center
future. .~-· ';'j .
for reasons of morale - and have been
a " misund erstanding," she said. The
Accordins.IQ)an·Crabtree.of the Day
wants the administration to provide: an
replace,d wi_!p.out proper search
provosts, while sympathetic, indicated a
Care.~ee. a meeting was
1niti.il ' grant 'bf S29,000 for immediate·
procedures. by 'in-house' people, some
lack of authority to channel funds to the
tielai~y afternoon between center
needs; a promise of on-going operating
users are obtaining computing services
Center, placing responsibility once more
representatives and Dt. 'Merton trtell,
funds from the University; and a wrinen
off
campus, thus divening needed funds
on the Haves Hall administrators.
adinl vice ~~ for ~ic afcommitmeni~ to work toward expansion
because of the inadequate services
fairs, Executive Vlb! President Albert
of the Center's facilities and operating
After the session wit h the Provosts, Ms.
available here. Other universities are
Crabtr ee and another Da y Care
5Qmit and oth&lt;:r·adminlolratO&lt;S. Accorbours (in order to provide child care sermoving ahead in interactive computing
representative went to Hayes, seeking a
ding to Ms. Crabtree, the m'eeting
vices for Millard Fillmore ..evening
tmd computer-aided instruction, our
centered on a plan developed by Dr.
students, amon11 others). None of these ' meeting with eit her the President or Dr.
progress
is slow and spotty.
Somit on the sit uation. De monstrators
Ertell to· realign the Center and make it
demands were met.
Rnt-lbde Cente&lt; Crucial
followed from Cooke with the intention
"more acadeinically useful."
The Center's militancy in behalf of its
"A first·r~te s,omputing center with in·
of "sitling in outside the President's OfThe administrative plan would evendemands wa~ demonstrated on Monday
te,. Ktive computing facilities for both
fice until a written commitment was
at a ~·ng between . Day Care
tually give the Center budgetary support
large
data - base users and 'number
forthcoming
about
a
m.eeting
between
from Univ~;tY: departments, whiJ:h
~epresentatwes an~ Umv!!rs•ty provosts
crunchers; as well as the usual batch
the provosts and the administration to
~ turn- use the Center lor
on Cooke Hall dunng whoch a group of
facilities,
is crucial to a University of this
discuss
day
care/'
Ms.
Crabtree
said.
a : ' ~ 1be Center was ~lso
~50 ~!rators pa!'"ded outside the
size," the report argued.
·
Waiting to see Somit, Ms. Crabtree said
advised to meet· its immediate financial
won~~ws on voew and on ears'hot of the
In
its
interim
report, the · Committee
neecJs by uSilfi funils presently allocated panocopants. Accordong to Ms. Crabtree, she was " pushed" from his office by recommended that
a number of initial
Campus Security when the
Jqr tfie' fif¥ 1iloi1ths next year, Ms. the meet inK involyed six Univf1rsity
steps be taken to ameliorate the situademonstrators began entering Hayes.
provosts, Dr. James lawler~ the faculty
Ctal!tie'e. ..ill · · · · · ·· ·
tion. The first o"f their recommendations
•.
- .·
··
Senate, M5. Ant~ie ~-~•Women's
She and another day care supporter then
was that a panel of outside evaluators,
The la«er prop(...l is unaccephble,
Studies ColfeKe, and ~er~lWr'esenwenl to Erlell's office asking for and
directors
of "the best-run university
the Center. ~esman .. ld. GI'Nier
tatives. The Health ~ -"!""re not
receiving a hearing.
computing centers," be invited to. examine the operation here.
That outside evaluatiOn took place in
June, and, accordins t9 Or. Mciver,
generally
supponed the faculty comIf ..., lelh s,lloa
other de!!enerative dlseaoes - may
"Some 50 per cent of 118 cases of
. minee's v!ew that UIB computing ser·
~A'l"'nriilr.lfNIIftSciMn5
' result from development of an ~utoimjuvenile diabetes had been exposed to
vices
have
fallen behind after a promisNew evidence lin~ins juvenile - mune response to SC?-called "slow"
mumps or had the disease about four
ing start.
d~~es ~itus with the mumps virus
viruses.
years before evidence of diabetes; and
Problems
are many, explained Mciver,
, "((S reveale'd in a study presented by a
'"The pancreas, whidl is the organ inan . additional 11 per cent had received
including hardware, staffing. organizltu/11 · wofessor at .d)e 102nd annual
vofve\1 in insulin production, is parthe live virus mumps vaccine," Dr . .Sultz
tion, and a general Insensitivity across
~inR of the American Public Health
ticularly sUsceptible to the mumps virus
~eported. He indicated that in many of
the campus to ·the Importance of comA~ in New ~ this week.
and may harbor it for as f!&gt;ng as loior
the .o ther cases, parent5' recollections
puting services to a modern unlveBity_
were vaRue as to whether their children
Qr. Harry A. Sultz, professor of
years. Durin!! this time; the organ may
Hardware problems center on the
epidemicllocy and ac:11ng chllrman of the
build up an autoiMmune response which
hat! been exposed to or contracted
computer ilselt, a CDC 64011 initalled In
Depanment of Soc:Ntl and "'--ive
destroys insulin production and nesults in
mumps.
·
1968. Most administrative computing.
Medidne.Nportedthattheinc:idenc:eof
juveni)f dlabetes r meflltus," Dr. Sultz
The observed time lag and the time insuch as storage oi student records, is
juvenile dilbeles bas closely paralleled
said. He cautioned that the adult form of
volved in an autoimmune teKtion are
handled by a separate, newer UNIVAC
lbe qdlc 1nfectioUI c1sase pattern ~ diabetes results from a completely
consistent and strengthen the study's fin·
1106,
whih! the 64011 is reseeoed prlm.ily
. Whidl aenera11.J pe~~cs _,seven~
different mechanism.
dings that mumps may be a cause of · lor such~ needs as research anc1
"l1flhs and· lows in the oa:urrenc:e of
fi&amp;ures
shup rise in the injuvenile diabetes . But Dr . Si.oltz
instruction.
diabeles folcMed thole for mumpo by
c:idence of diabetes amana boys during
emplysized these research findingo suP1
.bout four yars in our ....,._.,
may be explained by the then
'No Cirowllo ............
•
port evidence suggested by other inchildhood . , _ SIU!IY based .., Erle
common practice ofexposing preaclolesAt this time, Mciver said, "the
vestigatO&lt;S over the past half century.
"'-. .bosrlilaL -and _.__ __......._
cent boys 10 mumpo 10 prevent possible
hardwa~ [the 64011) is saturated, with n"We
hope
virologists
will
puroue
the
.......... onhtt:zi
,...__ ........ ~
sterility which can result flam allllracgrowth ~entlal" This Aluratlon has '
question and come
with
~ for
&amp;tar period flam 1945-. ring the disease after puberty, Dr. Suitt
come about In oplte of systematic disdefinite answers,~, he sai .
.
courasement of additional users,
•
. ~arid other in.......,_.._
'co-investigaton on the project were.
·
Midi
~
As pan of the-stucjy, Dr. Sultz
. Inter;evldena!d by failure 10 provide "public'"
Dr. Benjamin A. Hart; Dr. Maria Zlelez...,;-. --:..o _ _._
•
vlewttd . . . - r!l aboUt~ of the
remace tennlnek lot &gt;ludent ~faallly
~- .... , . . _
.
diabetic padenls 10 find whether' lheit
ny, U/8 anlstent profeuor of
tJR, .for example_
biosmisck:s. and ~ late Dr. Edward R.
A sip ol,_. UIUflllon of!M _,..
•··11&amp;
~"*"' lllllmal~thlldn!nhadbeen~IOft.IIIIIJSor
Schlesinger of the · University of
..~-.lllhe~ll &amp;.llue....... _.....1M
. priOr 10 the
· puter is tna-.1 .......... o l Pittsburgh's Graduate School of 'Pu61ic
erountf time," Mchw ............ ' ..

ProPQsal on Day Care Center offered

·«

· Juv~~ile dia~tes linke(J-·.to mumps

950-,_

showins •

u:f.

as
~---~

·~~~~·=.::-J

.

=-~~ ·~SO.~lona

.. _Health..

more

.

Chlml0-1eal1J

�October 24, 1974-

1

SEA lecture .--.scheduled for
November i

·communication
data bank
being.set up I
U/B is establishing a computerized
data bank to serve as a clearinghouse for
research gathered in a major international· study of interpersonal ·communications within large organizations.
According to Dr. Gerald M .
Goldhaber, associate chairman of the
Department of Speech Communication,
more than 100 accredited researchers
from six North American and European

countries have been involved in the
project for nearly four year.. They are
seeking to develop a standardized
method with which they can analyze the
way people communicate information in

complex institutions - such as
businesses, industries, labor unions,
.... hospitals, schools, military units and
government agencies.
~
The study is being carried out under
the auspices of the lnternation~l Communication Association {ICA ), a

professional organization . whose
members include specialists in all fields
of communications representing nearly

30 countries. Dr. Goldhaber, who is-vice
president of the ICA and coordinator of
its field project, has hopes the research
will lead to a standard "Communication
Audit," which he sees as an invaluable
tool for social scienti,~.
At present-, according to Goldhaber,
analysts in the young field of interpersonal communications research have
been using diHerent scientific methods
to study information flow in large
organizations. As a result they are unable
to accurately compare Communications
patterns in organizations of similar size
and nature.
~
But when the ICA develops the standard "Communication Audit," and when
U/B's data bank acquires sufficient
research data, social scientists for the first
time will be able to compare 0 apples
with apples and oranges with oranges,"
Goldhaber. says. l;{e expects this to be
possible when the fliter~research
project is completed in about two years.
Stressing the importance of studying
. interpersonal communications,
Goldhaber points out that-more than teoi
per cel)t of all U.S. businesses fail each
year, "primarily due to bad management
and ineffective communications.
"Given the technology to conquer
outer ~ce. we should be able to master
the dally 'people problems' we face in
our complex institutions," Goldhaber
remari&lt;s in his book, Oopltlzadonal
~.published this summer
as the first college textbook in its field.

Telfer to receive
honorary "degree
John D. Telfer, vice president for
facilities planning, will receive an
honorary Doctor of uw degree !TOm
Ustem Michigan University (EMOl at ·
.
Ypsilanti, Michip~.
Tel(er is one of tWo who will accept
honorary desrees during commencement exercises It the university,
December 15. The Olher recipient Is Major General Frederic E. ·Davison,. commander of the military district of
Washington.
From 1962-67, Telfer was a member of
the Ypsiluld City Planning Commission;
he chllrecl the Commlsllon from 196):
65. During this dme he wori&lt;ed closely
with EMU as a liaison between the city
and unlvenity.
·
At U/8, Telfer Is responsible for plan__.ntng and ClOfiSUUCiion of
the A50 ·mlftlon Amherst. ~as
wei as for lialfOn with Ylrious clommuni·

nl..,

ty~and~~ -

~~:'knerkan
8ri'dAe tape

Conti'ICI
Is spnnsorlng a
Unllfd ~ 6eneflt bridtle ...,. to be
.heliJs.urilll)"~~ et12:)0 p.m.

z.
.....,._,_
( .,- ........toem. Miller
pillnll. ,. jltlll" -

iilcilonil,...

Wllbe .... 1betoc3lfKultrCiub'-"

II~~:SO llldddcets

.........,&amp;.:~.

tlolll .... 0..

a.--(.-) ........ -..hoto,VA

Japanese physi~an . treats
both -printes and paupers
A Japanese woman physician whose
duties have included care of her nation's
future Emperor is now visiting 'U/8affiliated Buffalo hospitals for a comparative look at American medicine.
Rakuko Nakamura, who h~s served
patie nts from both ends of lh~ socioeconomic spectrum - giving physical
exams and vaccipations to the royal as
well .as serving in a government clinic
during vacations, came to Buffalo with
her husband, Dr. Hajime Nakamura, a
visiting professor of Eastern philosophy
at U/8. She will return to her duties in
November.
When she began medical studies at
Toho Women's Medical College in prewar Japan, she was an exception to her
society's prevailing tradition that women
belonged at home. "At that time, female
medical stude nts could not go to the
same medical college as th e men. Now
that's changed since the war," she said.
While· pradicirlg internal medicine at
St. luke's Hospital in Tokyo after graduation, she was ordered by her parents to
meet her future husband, a philosophy
professor at Tokyo University. It was a
traditional parentally-arranged union
which the couple says has worked out
well! "I only saw him five times before ·
the marriage," she commented.
During the war, she moved to .the
countryside to serve patients while her
husband remained in Tokyo; and after
the war, she returned to the city to take a
part· time position as a doctor at a
kindergarten. liUie did she realize this
job would lead to giving physicals and '
shots to the then-Emperor'S future
grandchildren.
SpedaiKinderprten
. About a dozen years ag&lt;?/ a special
kindergarten affiliated with'" prestigious
Peer's College was created to give
children of th&lt;f Crgwn Prince and
· Princess an opportunity to mingle with
other youn~t~. Since Dr. Nakamura's
work at her jc?b had been excellent and
Security &lt;;heclis rev!!aled her competent,
she was offered the coveted job as
kindergarten physidaf.!.
• .
Both Naruhito Hirqno Miya, who will
one clay be Emperor, and his brother,
Furilihito Ayano Miya, attende4-Peer's
kinder~t:arteri. T.heir &amp;.e-yeu-old sister,
Sayako Norino Miya, whose plaure has.
appeared in mtiQnal magazines rece"ntly,
is currently enrolled.
In addition to the•e duties, Dr.
Nakamura has begun teachinii-'I ·D?Ur.e
in child are .to ·girls attending Peer's
College high school. A colnblnatio~ of
medical science and ethics, this cour.e is
unlgue since od)er hl&amp;h 5dlools onlf
offer courses m home sc:lences.-wrt's an
Important · cxoune because these girls
· shou1il sr- up well physlcaby and
·1 morally and !Om to " beCome· good
mothers and citizens," Dr, Nakamura-

"~·
"
m Japan. birth contn11 piiiJ ribanned

forhellth .-IIICI~--

58DCIInned br tbe . . . ._tt opceplln
Neeclell ·to ..,., 11-

"--* -

wll .be , ...~.ltoia~e Jttnh1 are wldelpread.
"AIIIicJullt - __... "" of hltlh
~dill_.. tent! to keep herdlild

born out of wedlock, those in lower
socio-ecOnomic classes tend to abandon
the childreo,'' she observed.
At the government health clinic where
Dr. Nakamura works during vacations,
health probfems caused by pollotion are
of prime ·concern. "There are also_ incidences of tuberculosis, dysentery and
cholera from abroad which concern
those dealing with preventive
medici ne," she said.
Vaccin~tions ·
Vaccinations are given against measles,
a type of e nce phalitis (sleeping sickness),
polio, smallpox, diphtheria, and influenza. The BCG vaccine is given to prevent
tuberculosis.
Air pollution has become a prime
culprit in so many health problems that
publ ic sirens scream warnings for people
to stay inside when the pollution index is
extremely high.
Even those in Tokyo suburbs are not
imm une to irritants from the factories.
" The pollutants filter miles away into the
dean air causing a tight&lt;hemical reic·
tion which can cause eye and throat
problems," Dr. Nakamura said.
·successful lawsuits by victims agair\st
offending factories have helped encourage tighter government restrictions
over the type and amount o( irritants
which may be expelled into the air.
Dr.· Nakamura laments that public
health clinics .=. which once dotted
Tokyo_ are dwindling. "Clinic doctors
don't earn as much as those in private
practice. So fewer are interested in working in the preventive area of medidne,"
she observed.
While in · Buffalo, .Dr. Nakamura has
visited Children's Hospital, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute and the Veterans' Administration HoSpital.

GaUup to speak
George Gallup, Jr., president of the
Gallup Poll, will speak Tuesday, October
29, aJ 8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room in Nor-.
ton Union. His topic will be "The Whys
of the Polls."
-· ·
Active with · ttie Gallup Poll since his
graduation from Princeton in 1953, first
as .editor and then as president, ~llup
has travelled extensively around the
""United States" gathering material "on the
voting behaviOr of various JVOUpSin the
populatiQn. This material "has been the
subJect of several published studies of
voting · P"ltemS. among Iannen, young
voter., Intellectuals, blaeb and labor.
Gallup's appearance is being sponsored by .the Student Association
Speakeis' Bureau. AdmiSsion Is free for
students and $1 for all olhen.

EOCopen~
fhe U/8 Eduatlqnal Opponunity
Center (E()C) Will hold • "Mini College
Fair" Thunday, October 24, from l-7
p.m. The eoent.ls open lJ) aU prospective
Gllleie students. P"rents and sdlcJol,

CIOIIDII!Inrs. •
The EOC Is located at465 Washlnitotr
"Siree(, comer of Mohawk.
,

Dr. Daniel E. Griffiths, an authority on
school administration, Will speak before
a U/8 alumni group, Saturday,
November 2, on the ct!allenges of running American schools in the 1970's.
The event is the annual George E.
Holloway. lecture sponsored by the
Society of Educational··Administrator.
(SEA), the professional a ssociation for
graduates of U/B's pr.9gram ~
educational administration.
The lecture series, now in its sixth year,
is named in. honor of Dr. Holloway, who
was chairman of the UIB 0el"'rtment of
Educational Administratign from 1961
until his retirement in 1969. Dr. Griffith·s
will deliver this year's lecture following
an SEA dinner at the Three Coins
Restaurant &amp; lounge, 1620 Niagara Falls
Blvd., Tonawanda.
Dr. Griffiths, a P.rolific author and, .
since 1965, the dean of the School of
Education at New York University, will
speak on rhe topic: "The Collapse of
Consensus - Can Administrator. Survive?"
'
The speaker is regarded in education ·
circles as expert in the application of
theory. to admiriistration, according to
Rev. S. Theodore Berg, SEA's publicity ;
-chairman.
·
:
Father Berx also notes Dr. · Griffiths' ,
· published works are well known to ,
education administrators. They include .·
the books: The School Superintendent
(1967), .Admlnlslra!We l'edorrnance and
Personality· !1962), &lt;&gt;rpnlzlns Schoo&amp;
for fHer:tlwe Education (1962), Research
in Educational Administration (1959), and
Human Re4ations In School ..(dminlslration (1956).
The annual dinner and lecture are
open to educators and others who are
not member. of SEA but would like to
hear Dr. Griffiths' address. "(ickets ·inay
be obtained by contacting one of two
SEA lecture · committ~ membt!r-5: tt&gt;r. ·
Raymond VanDeventel' (731-32~1-l" or o.]
Charles ). Blakeslee (875-7405)". · · · '

·Student arrested .
in vending break-in
Campus Security officer. arrested a 20year-old senior student early Monday
morning and chir'ged hlm with third
degree burglary and criminal mischief.
David A. Sexton, 26 Pari&lt;ridge Ave.,
was arrested shortly after 1 a.m. a.t
Winridge and Hayes Roads on the Mal~
St. campus following a report • by- a
maintenance supervilof . of an · aJii!ged
attempt to brea1t into a vendini mach~
in Capen Hall:
· · ' ' .•
'. '
The maintenance . super:vlsor' wlio ·
reportedly wltnes~ 't.he lnclderit·
provided a description ol the suSpec!·to '
Campus Security olflcen who Spott..d .
Sexton a short time late-r: · The
maintemnce supervisor made ·an fden-'
tiflcation Of Sexton when hll ...~eot.
at Campus · Security olflc;es ,. ~t . l?6
Wi~p&lt;Yr.
.
.
, .. .
Sexton was olater : taken , d!&gt;' ..II\I~­
Pollce Headqu-.s. ·. . ,_ .. ·, .•. ,. ,
1

�""

~.

.

October 24, 1974

SUNY plan$
conter~nees

on
research grants

'lJIB 4, ~isius 0

tnn.c.t oi 1M.,.,..._ it's number one, but heft, a in much of tM U.S., SOttet' is just poor
man's 1-w. l'loylns in the shodow of the lololy field mnds '"'-• tho c;unpus onco
foodNII osploits (O&lt;, in honosty, mO&lt;o olton jeered them), U/l's
booton (in cloot jonoys) ...-hod Conioius 4-4 lost S.turdoy ., &lt;O&lt;nP"rotiYOiy low tool&lt;
notlco. Tho molch condudod the homo ....on. A rood aomo ot Geneseo S.turdoy
p&lt;O«CCos the flnol SUNY &lt;onto. tourney ot Stony lool&lt;, Now. 1 and 2.

&lt;"-" the luis'

Computing service called 'minimal'------------llrurllfi.IIWI. .. ol ..11

praq:iCal t~rms, this means that users
now have to wait longer to have their

C.O(JIP&lt;it.'l{;i'!~ ,CQ.,Il)J?),et~ ,~n4 (~turned.

Tl.ois jlen..-al s~up,·~ c&gt;olo~ly annoying
for users, it also has the potential danger
of discouraging.cerlain kinds of research.
With the · ~20 visiop of hindsight,"
Mciver admitted that the University
might . have been better off leasing a
computer, one which the leasor would ·
have maintained. The 6400 which the
University bought outright, saving tax
dollars at the. time, is now something of a
"white elephant," he acknowledged. Improved hardware is available·from CDC,
aqd CD(: has .offered to give credit on a
new machine in the amount of the 6400's
S.1.8 million purcha~ price, but any such
IJllljO( . t;.ardwa_re purchase is largely a
Sta.~ _dt~cisiC?D•. he indicated.
Meanwhile, the present CDC could be
m;~tl~ vaslly more · uuble, Mciver and
"'~'")be~ of . the C~mitiee Marcello
P~ano . (Statistical Sciem;el and Perry
Hanson . (Geogr~phy) .believe, ' if
pr.Oblems pf,staff •'!d orga'l_iution £9Uid
be. ~~
.
~ - se.I!Prololeaw

..

:ywo majot·staff problemS eocist, Mciver
indi~ated . University salaries . . for
piOftrammen are non:ompetitive. As a
result, the original complement of eight.
full·t~ pr011ra'1"""'S has sl;runk to
two. Moi-ali! Is 'Rfnerally .low. and the
work-load contin"" to grow. In addition
to day-to-cbyfasb, I~ coniputing service has a major job at.e.d in converting
. f~om its pre5ent "-..insupported"
operating ~em to one supported by
the manufacturer.
~ At tlie manqement level, the service
~sa crltial staff member, a director of
~k: c;ol1tputinK. Thio position will
tie: ~lfr!Y dlffl'adt to fill, the com~ w.n.dj beQuse of the peculiar
Olaxnputing services here.
Jn most . unlve'rslt~ the director of
~ computing supervises . such
a,_ a sYstems,'services and operations
and repiO!U dqclly·IO a vice president.
.-.~f/II!RPUiinllson the same
~- ~-~andail1111~ JXIII1Putlt'J' l1le director of
· ·~nlfll!tt'!ll tepom to an

o'ilaniDtlon

. -

. • ~~,-,;.;uanalong
a~
assls• · ~~com-

e'Jq)llitned~he ·clffector

of

~ compullng Is very remote from

ultimate decision-making, a situation
which is liable to discourage good candidates.
A "way out" of the current dilemma
would be the creation by Albany of a
regional computing center with U/8 as
its center. However, at present several
smaller SUNY units, including Brockport,
are said to be vyi.ng for such a facility.
Placement of a regional center any place
but here. where most of the users are
.U/8 processes at least 65,000 computer
jobs a month), would require an enormOus investment in equipment for communicating with the central computer,
Mciver said .•
'~Jhere's been a failure of. campus
users of computer services to present
a united front. There's an enormous communications gap between Users and the
administration," MCiver said. This is
attenuated, the committee believes, by a
lack of a person technically
knowledgeable about computers in the
highest ranks of the campus administration.
..
The committee and some major faculty
users feel that acaC::Jemic- computing has
suffered here relative to administrative
computing. One committee member
pointed out that the computing services
budget has not expanded significantly in
re&lt;:ent . years, but lhat administratiVe
computing is talllns an increasing
l&gt;ri&gt;Portion of the available funds. ·
Because the situation in the computing
center is regarded by knowledgeable
users as "unstable," some faculty
members are taking their work outside
the University. Others are IHing grant
monies to buy "mini-computers," which
could have the effect of draining needed
resources away from the cOmputing
center, Mciver said.
,..._,.._a~

. -.

'for the oodal and statistical sciences
' especially, the computer' js mUch more •
than a Jlgantk calculator. "The com·
..Puter i_s Oil'· labontory," .explains
GeograPhy ProfesiorDuane Marble, one
of the "more sophistlcaled. usen" who
has ~ active in the eflod 10
the

make

HOliDAY No.nCI

.

..................
...............................
...............
.. ....
-.....,,Oclllolr... a ....... ........
-~

· .

A new program to explore grant op- )
ponunities i n specific disciplines is being
initiated by the State University Research
Foundation and SUNY's Washington Office.
The two agencies will sponsor a series
of three seminars for interested facuhy
members, beginning with a day-long session devoted to the humanities and arts,
at the College at Purchase, Friday,
November 15.
"Interest seemed so high aS evidenced
by the large turnout of faculty members
at our five previous semi nars on proposal
writing and grant information in general
that we want to zero in this year on
specific areas of faculty interest," Colin
Ci!_mpbell, training supervisor for the
Foundation , indicates.
A ranking represe ntative from the National Endowmenl for the Humanities will
be invited to speak at the Purchase sessio n and will be available for questions
re lati n g to NEH. Other speakers
representing such agencies as the
Smithsonian Inst itution and the Office of
Educa tion will also be on the program.
All SUNY members are invited to attend. No registration fee is required;
however, advance registration should be
made by Nov. 1. Furaher information on
the seminar will be available in the Office of the Vice President for Research,
Hayes Hall. Reservations may be made
through that office, but those interested
may call Mr. Campbell at 518-462-5331,
ext. 248, for further information.
Plans are underway for two additional
"subject" semina r~. They will follow the
same pattern, being primarily devoted to
faculty members, revolving around a
detail ed look at specific academic fields,
and lasting one day. Late March:-early
April is the projected date for a session
on the soda I sciences. The final seminar,
to be devoted to technical education; including vocational education, cOmprehensive manpower planning, and the
various allied health professions are~s, is
planned for late May-early June.
Speakers and program information
relating to the private sedor ~s well as
the appropriate federal agencies will be
included at all three sessions. Reference
materials and selected handouts will be
available for those interested.

problems of campus com puting known.
Marble is the author of a machine-based
instrudional package used at many other
campuses that he is able to use here only
in its 1968 version as a result of the
limitations of the computing service.
Computers are being used on campuses for everything from composing
mu sic to automated chemistry experiments, Mciver explained. "Computers are important in our lives/' said
the committee chairman, who described
the campus as relatively insensitive to the
uses and thus the potential im portance
of computers. A good computing center
would be out proselytizing, he added.
" When you have no capacity for
growth in this area, the whole university
will eventually stagnate . Unless
something can be done, we won't reInflation is expected to force sharp tuimain competilive," predicted Mciver,
tion rate hikes at both pubjic and private- fearful that without a good computer
colleges in New York in the next Jew
operation the campus will become· a
years, the State Board of Rejents in- .
kind of ' 'Neanderthal U."
•
dicated this week.
Because of the long lead-time reStudents attending private four-year
quired for modifying a computing sercolleges
will
be
hit
hardest,
the
Regents
vice (up to two years from approval to
estimated. They projected a $700 inoperation of a new machine), the comcrease
in
average
tuit1on
at
these
mittee argued that immediate action and
colleges 'by 1960, bringinS costs to $3,.]00
good long-range planning are required.
a year.
Committee il~tions
No estimate was made on the inc:rea51e
The committee made the· following
expected at State University ~
recomtnendations to the Executive ComThe Regents said, however, thar SUNY
minee (as reported in its minutes) :
tuition would rise more slowly than
• The Committee believes that the
charges at private schools beause "scate
University-wide Committee on ttie Comgovernment would pick up much oA the
puting Center should cover both
additional costs of running these inacademic and administrative computing.
stitutions."
The Chairman should be a faculty
' In r'esponse to the Regents' stalel'nenJ.
member or someone .knowledgeable
SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer said tbot
about computing.
while it is true that State Unlvenlty wiR
• Tile. Committee believes that the
require more money next yew; no taJ.. .
Director of the Computing . Center
tion increase Is anticipated. The sc..lll
should have the same status as the Direc·.
be asked to make 1 11f$1er conlribution;
tor of the libraries.
he said. He dedined to dlscutl flpres.
• The Commhtee' ..O..Id like to see the
President reJK!rl antidpated policy
changes before they ~re implemented.
Dr. AlbSt Soinlt, ereartlve
,_....f
The Committee would like 10 be kept
up-tcHlate on new developnents. ...• . - dent of U/11, last ·friday dedined the
presldeitcy of Southern Illinois u.......
• The Commhtee would like 10 see
ty.
.._
5ome 5ort of manalement commhtee set
Somlt issued this statement:
up to examine day-to-day problems encountered in the Center.
.
"I honored to be offerell doe
"!o specific action on the matter .was presidency of SoUthern IIUnoli Unheiitaken by the becutive Committee,
IY It Carilondale. I ...,.C "'-oA a -llllloltuna ...... 6 •
allhoush Senate Chairman George
it proved lmpolllble to . . . . . ........
Hochtieid indlcaled earlier ~ computing services would be a major contory
the eirllll oAihit•
polntrMm.H
cern of his administration.

Regents predict
tuition hikes

SomitrejedsSIU

vb

'*-

a

...--ron

�4

·.·.

October 24, 1974

liolliLIA

•'-'•

Corpprate chang~ requires.external p.ush, Chato¥:~.. ~ysj1
....

Those who wish to c::ha ge the role-of
the corporation in modem -society will
have to rely o!' outside pressure tactics to
do the JOb. Somple appeals to corporate.
social respon'sibility are useless.
So Robert Chatov, assistant professor,
Department of Environmental Analysis
and Policy, School of Management, contended in a discussion of corporate
ideology in the campus Lecture 'Series on
The Corporation in Modern Society last
Wednesday.
Applying the Freudian model of idego-super-ego to the _"corporate person," Chatov identified the corporate id
as "a drive for institutional survival," rejecting the "econoriiic theology of the
Chicago School" which characterizes
"the profit motive as the pre-eminent
drive of the corporation." Both profit
maxtmization and ~nother p~em:m:-e.no~
of corpora~e behaVIor called sat1sf1png
(the . ass~rong of ~n adequate level ~f
profots ~~~~out tak~ng the risks and eff'?rt
!!&gt; max1m1ze proflts) are, Ch~to~ sa1d,
merely sympt?ms of the . od. The
~n-corporatoon wants maonly to survrve.
The corporation's ego, c:;:hatov ~id, is
"tha~ part of il which is gea~ to appraoson~,.the exlemal - ~orld and oneludes fonance, marketong, research.and
dev~lopm.ent, product P_lannlng,
engmeermg, manufacturing and
fa~li!ies, purchasing, . .. pUblic relations
act1v1t_y. and .. . ~um~~ous governmental
l~bby,mg operat1ons. Th:se ~o agencres try to effe_ou~t~ tHe d~rve of the
~rso~·corporano_n s 1d, relative to what
IS passable 10 relauon to the external en. vironm':nt, which includes consu,':"ers,
competitors, the government, etc.
Super.f&amp;o Less weir Defined
The super-ego is less well defined,
Chatov said, "because of difficulties in
identifying the corporate personality and
because the values and norms of the corporation, those things embodying the
corporate ideology, are composed of
conflicting therrles."
The very obscurity of this super-ego
and the tenacity of the survival instin'ct of
the co.rporate id are the core problem in
analyzing and re.Oirecting corporate
behavior by persons outside, he noted.
The symptomatic behavior of the corporate id can be changed, Chatov said,
by channeling the drive for survival
toward objectives other than profit maximization or "satisficing," but the drive
will remain. It seems to be a given of all
institutions: "Once established, institutions will tend to remain in existence
unless destioyl'(l from the outside, or as
in the case of a few organizations, like
the Shakers, lack within themselves the
"' seeds of their owo reproductiOn."
Most efforts to. alter corporate
behavior intuitively appreciate this,
Chatov contended. 7J&gt;us, when laws are
passed that Impose some requirements
on the corpo"'iation not of its own choosing, we eflective!y alter the corporate extarnal world which it must take into account when it adjusts its operations to
what k po$Jible.. .. The efforts of environmentalists, or those who seek to imf
pose more stringent- product . requirements through paswge of appropriate legislation, those !IYho seek to
have minority group members appointed to the boards of corporations, all
in effect are seeking to alter the drcumstances within which the corporate
-.o operates!'

This is a far more effective means of
changing the corporation's social
behavior than is the appeal to corporate
social responsibility, an approach which
Chatov finds "vi·rtually bankrupt."
·
Corporate social responsibility as a
concept appeals to the corporate conscience, the corporate super-ego. Yet
that very supe-r-ego, Chatov .said, is in '!1-...._
conflict, as reflected in the collected'
tenets of the American Business Creed.
The Amerian Corporate l'enoYsion
Citing • 1956 study of this Creed by •· ·
team of Harvard scholars headed by
Francis X. Sutton, Chatov identified two
major strains in the American corporate
persuasion.
The first is the "classical" ~ersion : "The
businessman himself it seen as hardheaded and practical, performtng
legitimate services to society. Frequently
invoked by the Creed are the symb9ls of
the founding fathers, the 'free' economic
system, a conviction thiit the economic
system is sound inherently but threatened from the outside. The myth of the
small businessman is stressed; the firm is
a !team,' the businessman, 'a decisionmaker,' usually of humble origins,
talented, dedicated, and a believer in
meritocracy. The Creed .further accents
CO(I'Sumer sovereignty, is anti-union and
anfj~ government, although the symbols
of government, e .g., the constitution, the
judiciary, are highly valued." Profits are
"righ! and. rational."
.
The second, or managerial strain of the
Business Creed, "deemphasizes profits,
accents service and responsibility, has
greater acceptance of labor and government, relies more upon recent history
than the remote myths of the past."

.
(_. ,. . ~
...Both, however, Chatov argued, "are
"The basis for corporite praCtices,"
char.acterized by selective avoidance Q!_ Chatov contended, is "buried deeply in
dis~ortion of appar~nt fa~s .and . ·. · share
th.e .mental strata .&lt;&gt;1 the indlvi~uals
ma)or lnconsostencoes wothon theor con.wothon the corporatoon, and within the
tent." Increasing corporate .;oncentracorporate id, ego and super-eso." And
lion flies in the face of the myth of the
parts, often vast parts, of these mental
small entr.epreneur. Individualism gets
5trata are unconsciouS.
lip service despite the highly .structure~
"This points out a great impediment to
organization of the corporat•_on. Profu
appealing to the Corpor,te..SIJ~r-eg~ .o n
seeking co-exists with the claom of .serthe basis of ideology. On the surface, the
v:ice. Business influence IS ex~rc1sed
corporation may appear to apee ...with
upon government, through legoslators
critics and adopf the path toward1he
and regulators, while the doctrine of
proposed changes, but hidden
laissez-loire is preached fr_o m every corresistances, buried deep in the unporate pulpit. The advantages of the
conscious. : . may result In implementaeconomic system are propounded
tion, if we can call it that, guaranteed to
despite continuing inequalities of inperpetuate the existing state of affairs."
come distribution, wealth and power.The social responsibility theme I~ "an
No Accidents
"'
even greater disaster than merely wishful
Much of the Business Creed and the
thinking," Chatov said, : 'beause it
resultant behavior is, Chatov argued, bas~iverts needed attention ~'Yay fr~ Teal
ed simply "on unconscious r:nental func1ssues, the rea_l ways ·In which, ·the
tioning." There are ':no accidents" in
person-corporatoo!'· can· ~ ~':'1!..0: 7.
corporate behavior, he said, borrowing If the r~le .'?f the_ q&gt;rpara!oon : on
again from Freud. 11 Everything is determodern soo~ IS ~o be ilkerkl, C::~itov
minate, and those things which happen
cond~ded, It · w_oll be ?nb&lt; tli~gh
cha"l!ong the extem~l reaiJ!t ~-the s:or10 institutions are by and large those
things willed by the actors who are inporatron. The corporate~~ tiHed on the
valved."
instinct for institutional Survival, will, not
Thus, it is no accident thai a corporachange. Corporate ideolqgy .. .._Is_too
tion can't develop a hire-minorities
amorphousto~a~ledto~ly,
program that actually works- no accitoo ~uch bu~ on the CX&gt;rpG?le. undent that the first reaction of a corporaconSCIOus to be reached. Tbls.lea~only
tion to someone who attacks them is to
the corporate ego, the f'l"'l!chanisin for
order his clandestine investigation - no
appraising externalitieS in its- _role of
accident that a corporltion will en- · mediator. between the corporate drive
counter "difficulty" in meeting Silfety
fo~ surv1val and the corporate con~
standards imposed by government- no
sc1ence. How does _one change the ~oraccident that top executive ranks and
porate external ~ahtyl Thr~ugh the tame
boards of directors are devoid of
honored, sometimes effectwe means of
representatives of ethnic, religious or
law, org:'nized pressure group _tactics,
racial minorities aside from a few inreportonal and scholarly analysas,. and
dividuals tolerat~ for "show."
unrelenting attention."

Psychotherapy traced to 'medicine .~en~
Psychotherapy would seem to be a
modern phenomenon, a cultural amen ily peculiar to the West and virtuall y un -

known until this century.
Not so, according to Dr. Herbert Rappaport, a U/ 8 alumnus who is an assistant
professor of psychology al Temple
University.
~
During a two-year stay in Tanzania, Dr:
Rappaport found that East African
"medicine men" practice a traditional,
sometimes effective form of psychotherapy.
These ''medicine men" or mganga are
not witch-doctors, the psychologist
emphasized. Witch-doctors are a despised class of individuals who are hired as
secret agents to put curses on one's
enemies. The mganga are healers, called
in to treat phySical or emotional illness.
African healers occupy places in a
clearly demarcated hierarchy. At the bottom is the herbalist or dispenser of drugs.
Higher up the ladder is the diviner, who
functions as a diagnostician. Highest in
rank is the witch-hunter, who is .frequently called in In times of social
calamity. African medidne men belong
to a loose-lc.nit, unoffiml "Pf'Ol!4sion~l
Organization," "like the American
Psychological .Association,'' Rappaport
said.

This approach is "more comprehensive" ·
than most Western medicine, he said.
The healers use a wide variety of
" medicines," only a few of w_hich are actually ingested. Diagnosis often involves
ohe throwing of dice-sticks by the
patient, and reference by the diviner to a
little book filled with Arabic writing.
Medicine men tend to be extremely
charismatic individuals, with CJif.'·
siderable insight into the sociological
.reality of changing Africa, Rappaport
said. Apprentice medicine men must
pass an initiation that ohen indudes a
test of the individual's resistance to druginduced psychoSis.
'

noted Rappaport, who was impressed
with the br;oad sacUl orientation .of the
African healers.
"I was impressed that the system i~ surviving, a living system, and impressed by
the elegance of the conc;t!Ptual system as
compared to Western psychotherapy,"
the younR psychoJosist said.
The African system recognizes
"transRenerational continuity" and views
illness as the price of deviation- "The
medicine men are keepers of traditional
values,'' he noted. Admitting that he
sounded conservative, Rappaport accused Western psychotherapists of underplayi"ll spirituality and other values
in a vain attempt to be :•value-free." ,
A FeB!, Esordsm .... Amulets
"We still hawn't transcended Freud's
A widespread "treatmel)t" irl cases
aggression and se~~· he said, ..•
,
where the patient has transgressed the
Rappaport noted one ether enlightentraditional order is the tambiko. This is a
ed
aspect
of
tl)e
Afri9Jn
.sy$Jem.
}'lealers
feast (paid for by relatives) during which · ·
receive only 11:token pay.~~~ u!)lil tney
ihe suffering individual rett,n ns to his
effect a cure.. .
•
family withput losing face. Treatment for
The psychoJosist spoke. on . campus
cases involving sorcery includes exorOctober 17 as a guest of
PsychOlogy
cism and the, wearing of an::aulets.
Department.
·
• ,..
"Our psychotherapy has not generally
advanced beyond the nuclear f~mily,"
. -P.W.I.

ftte

Campus Securi~ to start .· ,
re__cordirig calls, November ( ·
~inning Monday, November~. in· ·
dividuals calling Campus Security will
hear at the outset of their .conversatiOn
that ~·to in$_Ure better service, thi5 call is "'
• being recorded."
On that date; Campus Security will
begin r,ecordlng all radio communication
and incoming and outs&lt;&gt;lng telephone
calk for "record-keeping and verification purposes," ICennl!th p,. Glennon,
director of Security, lndlcatesGiennon points out1hat almosl all major law enforcement aaendes.l.n dudlng
municipal polite and campuuecurltyoffkes. mllnlaln such IJIIeiiiS to eliminate
mud! ol !he , _ . , manual recon~:
keeping and as a verifyins backup to
written records. T1te system, whichsimultaneously recoids tones -.nd
w111 resu11 1n K~CUme
records and less "reliance upon

messases.

~,"he

said.

•t

I

•

�October U , 1V4 ·

the---..

the

- ... oriontotion
torisfot, Mun•r Mush, aoi"'llnto
......,_olllcillo
uploinlna....,
...,, loft to
W.C.A. hospibllfiold.
&amp;&lt;1....,._..,, )a~Mstown, New York lhif~ &amp;tern Committee CMirm11n; Dr. John R.f.
lnpll, LA.LM.P. dlredoc; one! Robert keboe, dirKioc of the Rur.J Exl""""lp f'rop•m
foe U74.

Rural extern program
The crisis in he~th care in the nation 's
rural areas has become so acute as to
prompt threals of Federal intervention

into new medical graduates' traditional
right to practice where they wish. New
York Governor Malcolm Wilson is also
on record as trying to find a way to interest health science stud erifs in rural
practice.
What is happening in areas beyo nd urban boundaries in New York and
elsewhere is underscored by a rece nt
U/8 study of the situation in nea rby rural
Chau tauqua County. That study revealed
that while the State as a whole has 197
doctors for every 100,000 p eo ple,
Chautauq ua County has only 85 -about
two-thirds of the m over SO years old.
One app roach to solving the crisis
1t1t1 Pridsen, " owsins student fr0111 u11, aoes Oftl' •
through non-legislative means may be potion!
chorl with He.JII Nune 1L Show AI W.C.A. Hooplbll,
seen in the four-year-old Rural Extern J"mestown.
project of the Buffalo-based Lakes Area
Regional Medical Program - wh ich has
proved popular with U/ 8 students in
several health sciences fields.
.
This experimental venture places
health science students within the rural
health community so they can gain
knowledge of the problems and the
potentialities of rural life and health care
practices. It runs for eight weeks.
Fifty-nine students participated this
summer, representing such fields as
medicine, dentistry, podiatry, nursing,
n4trition, pharmacy, physical therapy,
medical technology, public health,
med ~al records, and hospital -ad ministration.
- Hopefully, says an LARMP organizer,
the experience will interest some of
them in health careers after gr3duation
in rural areas of W~tern New Yoik and
Northwestern Pennsylvania.

�•Good civil rule

October 24, 1974

New agency
now handling
- all tickets

L~gitimat~,

popul
·vii-i-an-institutions are th&lt;!~sc&gt;le~efleaive' -­
deterrent_ to the growing political in~
volvems:nt Of the armed forces in the

governfnehts of developing countries,
UIB Political Science Professor Claude E.
Welch, Jr., said in his introductory lecture at the conference on "Civilian ton-

trot of the Military : Myth and Reality,"
held on campus last weekend.
However) W t:;lch. noted, comparative
·figures since World War II underscore

that this prescription is easier giyen than
followed : "Of the 100 United Nations
iflembers in 1961 , 15· were headed by
governments whose Jeaders rose
through intervention. By 1966 and 1973

respectively, the numbers of members
had climbed to 115 and 135, and those
head_ed by officers rose disproportionately -from 27 to 40. As a percentage

of th e number of independent states (a
high e r figur e than th e total UN
membe rs). th e figures rise from 12 per
cenl (1%1 ) to 19 per ce nl (1966) to 27 per
ceh t" more recentl y.
Control over the arm ed forces, Welc h
said. means that they will continue to
play political roles " but with th e boundaries and responsibilities defined by ~
civilian institutions e njoying popular
support."
Mililory lnHuence the Norm
Distinguishing between military influence and·military participation and/ or
force, nor of a few years. Notably in
control of politics, Welch note&lt;;l that the
countries in which the armed forces have
military influence model constitutes
enjoyed
considerable policy autonomy
what many scholars consider the norm,
and have actively participated in changes
as manifested in several Western,
regi
me,
subordination of the mil itary
of
democratic states, and in some developWill span decades."
ing countries.
The
most
important part of the strategy
"Members of the armed forces are not
involves creatio.n and establishment of
excluded from politics; however, signifieffective,
impersonal,
and legitimate
cant involvement remains limited to
governmental institutions. " The armed
those holding ranking positions. ~Clear
forces must be subordinated t ~
boundaries exist between military and
something- and this something should
political roles, with officers shying away
be the government. To meet this sweep~
from the Iauer. Political influence is ex ~
ing prerequisite, no fac!le set of steps e xercised through regularized and
ists~ "
accepted channers. Contacts between
Re-orientation of the military's miss'ion
the military and civilian political leaders
is
vieweg by Welch as being of secondoccur at the top rungs of the military
order importance . "Whe re self~
hierarchy; lateral .contacts at lower levels
conceived
policy prerogatives extend to
are discouraged, to preserve the integrit y
the political system 1 in its enti rety, a
of the chain of command and the in~
sense
·of
limitation
m'ust be iritroduced.
tegral nature of institutional boundaries.
" Perhaps rhe focus can be shifted from
Be il through budget lobbying . or
guardianship
over
domestic politics to
providing information regarding
protection against external threats. Rol e· ~
strategic decisions, military leaders
expansion into areas hitherto reserved
proffer advice. This advice naturally
for civilians . . . may undermine civilian
cal'ries the weight of expertise, and can·
control; role limiration and clarification
not reildily be disregarded by civilian
-assuming the government institutions
leaders. The influence that exists thus
are strong e nough to make these stick depends upon specialized knowledge
accord better with the strategy."
and technical responsibilities."
Great Caution Nec::essary "'
Civilian control of the military can
Members of ·the armed forces may
never be "absolute," Welch said. "Size,
view role limitation as a loss of both face
organizatio~l complexity, symbolic imand power, Welch. said, so " great caution
portance, coerc-ive potential, sense of
must be exercised. The preell)ptory steps
corporate identity, and a· possible
of Nkrumah (in Ghana) should be recallheritage of political involvement interact
to give all armed Jorces political ined here: lacking a solid .fou'n dation of
support and legitimacy, and saddled with
fluence. The paramount issues accor·
dingly "are those that provide channels to- a hollow political party whose legitimacy
few rerognized, Nkrumah did not give
the military through which to utilize
·tbe armed forces sufficient scope in an
their knowledge in suppon of government policies, persOnnel and in·
area to whi~ tl)ey willingly could have
- stitutions."
Taclics and Individual steps to:achieve
cm1tan control must be tailored to individual staleS and societies, Wekh ,said.
"What 'Mittts' for IndiA may fail in
Vico College, widely thought of as bePakisbn; curblns 'militarism' in Mexico
ing the most serious ~nd scholarly of ~he
miJiht so_depend on ldlosynaaric factors
UniVersity's experi-1 c:olleges, was
as 10 ~ misleading In Morocco."
ossailed as • stuffy, facuJ.!y..&gt;rienled great
Ca r . nl._....
books prosram at the public heoring on
Yet, lhete are component elements in
Its chart_erlng Ia~ Thursday.
suc:h • strategy, he believes.
A careful assessment of ,t he relotive
But while Col.te Chartering Comstrenl!lhs of military and civilian· political
mittee member John Greenwood mm-.
Institutions is central, Welch ialjj.
plained thai the college is desisned only
. Potienceend tons-term plannlf1111'11!1$1 · · for the satisfaction of faculty heeds,
otso be inc:6l&gt;orared. "Ovi&amp;lo control is
faculty Senate Chairman George
nor the produa of f~ sintlle historiCal
· Hodifleld, who is involved with ·v-oco,
stressed dr.r fKulty feel no shame In inillatlnll a prosrom "that doesn'! come
from 1t-yur-9kls." ~
.
-

Ripped up, ripped off and easily
rescinded parking tickets are on the
brink of extinction now that the City of
Buffalo has begun operation of a new
Parking Violations Bureau (PVB).
Located at 42 Delaware Avenue, in the
former City Court Building, the PVB was
officially born September 10, and now
processes all City~issued parking tickets,
including__those issued on the UIB Main _
Street Campus.
According to Charles l. Michaux,
director of t~e PVB, all standing, pirking
and stopping violations have been
removed from the jurisdiction of the
Cily's Police Department and Court
System and placed uni:ter civil administrative procedures. The collection
of all fines ·has also been transferred to
the new agency.
·
''The PVB is emPowered to: ac2ept
pleas, hear and determine charg~s 9f
tra\fic infractions relating to parkin@.
violations within the City of Buff:A1o,
provide for monetary fines, penalties and
fees for such violations and enter and enforce judgme nts for the Bureau in th e
same · manner as the enforcement of
mOn ey judgments in civil actions,''
Michaux said.
A high speed computer will match
registration· numbers of respondents
with names and addresses , as well as
prOcess tickets, communicate with the
State Motor Vehicle Registry System and
check on the st.atus of all cases weekly.
"The transfer will free at least 12 City .
Court judges to hear serious criminal '
matters and, combined with the State .
program, will save an estimated
.. thousand.s_ of Police De·partment per~
sonnel man·hours," Michaux indicated. ,
Tickets will still be issued. by officers of •
~ individual agencies and institutions.
·U/8 Campus Security Director ·
Kenneth P. Glennon noted that the Cam_..-. . Pus ~ty. Office wtll still answer in· 1.
quiries .regarHing campus parking
regulatiOns and violations, but will no ·
longer handle appeals or be able to resc~ '
ind tickets. ·
-r :. ~
!
Last ye""ar : the C::ity issued• more than
250,000 parking tickets, including some •
11 ,000 on tf:le U/8 campus.

. devoted their attention . Speed in
reorienting the armed forces, in the
absence of an internal war that permits
totally new recruitment, introduces
strain$ that the- nascent or weak civilian
instituticms might not bear.. .. Policy
autonomy in some areas of professional
responsibility represents a small price for
acceptance of Overall policy subor·
dination."
Specific details can be worked out
wuhm this overall framework,Welch ind1cated " The -:a.rly ret1 re~~t ,o r pqsting
ab road of politically amb1t1ous officers
will doubtless be utilized 7 )'et the timing will Varv from sYstem to sys.:em--.-.nfe
ca lculus of economic rew.a rds_ boosting the pay and prerequis_ites of
those within the system While con·
currently lo~ering the overall level of
militarv expenditures - demands
traordinary political sensitivity. The
calculus of non-monetary rewards- ex·
alting th e prestige of the armed forces
while simultaneously contracting the
sphere of duties - likewise depends
upon great pqlitical acumen."
)'
tat. DIVISIOn
The special COnference, co~sponsored
The data from your experiment now
by U/ B and the Inter-University Seminar
need to be analyzed. The computer
. on Armed Forces and . Society, also
program must be written: W.hat statistical "
featured a keynote address by Ada in Yar- • technique should you use I ,What ;
molinskv. current Ralph Waldo Emerson
algorithm should you employ so that the i
• Professor at the Universiti oJ.
nuinerical r~ults are trustwonhyl Do !
Massachusetts a.nd a high-ranl&lt;ing
you need to write a prosram ot .1111 1
Defense Department official in the john- · Perhaps_ tl!e appropriate program . has '
SO!' Administration.
. . .
been written before, si~H}g,Y,O,u writing :
His speech, titled "Who's in Charge • and debugging totJ&gt;e. How should you in- !
Here," explored the power of the
lerpret your results so as ROllO be;ac-·r·
American military in determining U.S.,
cused of •'.statiSticulation"t
1
policy. Two dozen other speake,.,
The &amp;otistical Science Division of the'
representing campuses from Harvard to
DeP,~nrm~nl of ~ctmpu~er .. Science
UCLA, ~lso deliveced acjdresses.
,. ~ ·"'''ORniJc;o, rhal many otunlbling ,~s ;
.
· may lie etlCOUnlered along !lie path of 1
· · emplrlca~flcatigiJ · ·Q( r!Jec)r~~ .Jn !

ex.

C

ff ed.
• ••

1

Vico ooth da~ned and praised

Olherfacully, ~as Dr. Michele RlccYrdeli, prdellor of halian, repot1ed
fhlt.Yicll1- .-boob -l'laiO,.the
Old 'r~ St- Aupsilne, Daate,
MK1tfave111; . . .espl!aR!. Hes'el. Mono,
Freud.-10 set "Ill gout~ · Students~ the~ for lhe .

lti

onsu ng 0 er

b S

~=~c:;esllo::: .:~:!"has~!;:.'d~~

•
. .
· ed the Staiisrtcal Compulllllt Consulting1
opponunoty _,.1f offers for dose contact
Center
•
with faculty, inside and outside the' . nie ceiiler is dlrecled by Professors (
classroom.
: · . • ,Marcello P•ll"no ond Richard N. Schmldt1
Voco spokesmen noted " desire lo exond is open to anyone who has statistical•
pand that student-fac.ulty conta_ct
compulltllproblems. COfiSUIIilniSoreon '
through more·munes for freshmen and
duty from-10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday ·
. '?phomores who, In most other lin~throuJ!h fri(lay In Room A~230.Ridge
soty .
.co~ In contact only wolh
Lea Road, telephone 831·1571, , - ~ '
t!!achong assmants.
. ' •
· . ''_'Qiere, is. no charse for ·dils-~; 1
.
··
Which provides on-the-job' tfalnfl)l!, fprj
-.rudenls in srarisllcal scienCe/' .ex~ins1
tR.UI&amp;J
, OnProf.
panel
~

"!-·

F--·11.. ChJb ·p lans -"'Wine prop..-.
-

An lntrodualon 10 new New York
Slate wines, ia.-uparison .10 eotablished

Eui"Opl!lft·ones, will be Biven by Someller
Larry SJar, vice president of Fredonia ·
_Produtts, ot the na.hr €tub, today, '
from 4-6 p.m.
OjJen only 10 meniben of the Club,
the JXOIIrMI will felture the lntroducllon, taldn&amp; and dlscusl1on of three New
•
York ~II! ...cllhree European wl..._

Paganoh
·;d._,_

--- 1

:.. , {
•

Dr. Rkhard £. EHis of U/8 will """"nl al

~lec:ture-on"J;dsonton ~· d~r..i
It~~ che eighth annual Hii!OI:Y, rorunf.·
~- !It: Duquesne U~vin]
l'itls'btqh; October 30- Nooemberi1 . . 1
'Jhe forum Is expeaecl iO lltDitt bllerl
1308 people this year, wilh'rncH'tttan~
profeoslonal- historians from across th
nation il'lldTesstng or· -ant!ritfl
sessions.
.
..'

�Octow 24, 1974

7

ott

ftoo-..w.,_

United Way at 29 per cent

, As of Tue&lt;day, October 22, the University had raised $36,437 or 29.1 per cent of
its 1974.Unlted Way goalof$125,000, Sixteen per Cl'nt of University employees
!7791· had contributed.
_·
LeadinR divisions are: Continuing
Education with 125 per cent; University
Relations with 122 per cent; Office of the
Vice President lor Research, 114 per
cent; and Graduate and Professional
Education, 100 per cent. Undergraduate

,r,

'••

,

Education has reached 77 J per cent of its
goal, Facilities Planning, 66 per cent, and
Management, 66 per cent.
- A -~rt luncheon for United 'way
worl&lt;ers wijl be held on Thursday, October 24, at 12 noon in 233 Norton. The
University .hopes to have 75 per cent of
its ROOI by this date. The next report
meetinR will be held on Thursday, October 31, at 4 p.m. in 201 Hayes.

~h o

1

~

'·'
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
. , • D_'.VISIONAL PROGRESS FOR UNIVERSITY UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN

"FALL, 11174

·-

$125,000 Um-aty Goo1

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A second summer of archaeological
work by faculty and students of the U/B
Department of Anthropology lias been
compl"/ed at a 'site on the Allegany Indian Reservalion near Salamanca, N.Y.,
Dr. Marian E. White reported in the
Salamanca Republican-Press receritly.
The intensive excavation projed was
- conducted on the Zawatski Site, south of
Kill Buck, and. was funded by the State
Education Department and the Department of Transportation.
According to Dr. White, the reason for
the project "is that current plans for the
Southern.Tier Expressway call for placing
a channel relocation area where the site
is located, indicating that it will probably
be destroyed."
The work, she said, has been planned
"to identify those places within the te n
and one-half acre tract where occupation took place. This · has been accomplished by excavating 10-feet square
areas to varying depths. The Zawatski Site
is located on the flood plain which has
been built up by sediments from
thousands of years of flooding. Since the
flooding was intermittent, reople lived
along the river between floods . The
traces of their presence, · hearths, firecracked rock, flint chips, were then
buried bv later floods and sediments.
Our tests have found clues to these
settlements buried as deep as five and
one-hall feet.
"To Search for those clues we remove
the soil very carefully with trowel and
shoveL Objects are noted in the ground
before their removal. Their position is
then recorded using measuring tapes
and plumb bobs to get the e.xactlocation
from marker "Stake!: in the ground. Frequently found objects are projectile
points. grinding stones, and net sinkers.
"Th.e n dirt is put th rough a screen and
we pick out all items which show signs of
human workmanship. Even tiny flint
chips are recovered in the sifter. All the
material recorded belongs to the Seneca
Nation who is willing to loan it to SUNY
at Buffalo lor study.
" So far different occupations have
been identified~ in three parts of the site.
On the highest ground near the center
of the site lived a group of Archaic Indians several thousand years ago. They
were a hunting and fishing people who
returned often to the site. Their living
debris is buried deep under the river

SASU internships
The Student Association of the State
University of New York (SASU) is sponsorir:'l&amp; a legislative internship program in
Albany for the "'SprinR Semester. SASU
· describes itself as "a statewide coalition
of the student governmentS of the Stateoperated campuses of SUNY which lobbies in the State legislature for the interests and welfare of Stale University
students.,.
·
A maximum of six interns will be
selected to work in Albany to monitor
the daily activities of the Legtsfature and
to ~dvocate th!' inter""ts of SUNY
students to legislators. Interns wll receive
a stipend of $250 to help defray expenses
, incurrec! during the semester and will be
expected- to arrange aademic credit
through independent study at, their
home campuses.
.
Student interns will lie selected on the
basis of writing; research and speaking
ability as well as their capacity for selfdirection and acceptance o f responsibility. Among the daily legislative activities
_!hat ·would be performed are legislative
research, drafting of legislation, finding
sponsors for bills, preparing testimony in
support of legislation, and speaking with
legislators and their staff memben in
support of 5ASU positions on legislatlve

issues.

r

. Interested students can obcain. additional information and appllcatlono

throush lhelt campus PolitiCal Sc:leiM:e
~ their itudent pemment,
or by writing: a., a..letllillldwe dhector, SASU Inc., 1"' State sn.t, Albany,

New York ,22117.
The dead~~ rec.,lpl of

appfic:allons Is

11, 1974,

sediments. Higher up in the western portion of the site was an occup1tion by
Woodland-people ..They-are-identified by- - their broken pottery sherds and big
triangular arroW points. They built structures on the site as evidenced by the dark
stains where posts were driven in the
ground.
·
11
A few centuries later Europeans settled on the site-in the latter part of the
19th century. Their square nails, broken
dishes, buttons, and bottles are found in
the plow zone over a large part of the
site. It is not clear whether these early
settlers occupied the present houses or
whether they built earlier buildings
which have decayed and fallen down.
"The importance of the Zawatski Site
was recognized by the Iroquois Seneca
Archaeological Society who had it listed
in 1973 in the National Register of ,
Historic Sites. They have been working
with SUNY at Buffalo as has the Federal
Government to see that no information
about the inhabitants of the V'l!ley who
lived at the Zawatski Site is lost or
destroyed by future Southern Tier Expressway construdion."

Calendarrfrnm fl.l~ ro R, rol . 4J

industrial and governmental representatives.
Candidates from all degree levels, completing
their course work in January OJ May 1975, are
invited to take part in the interviewing.
Registration forms are available in Hayes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The following agendes will
be interviewing this week :
.
THURSDAY- 24: Seidman and Seidman;
Rochester Telephone Corp.; Arthur Young
and Co.
FRIDAY - 25 : Arthur Young and Co.;
N.Y.S. Dept. of hxation and Finance;
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
TUESDAY - 29: Peat, Marwick, Mitchell
and Co.; Travelers Insurance Co:
WEDNESDAY """"' 30: Continental Can Co.;
Equitable .o f Iowa .
THURSDAY - 31 : New York Life Insurance
Co.

NOTICES
CONTACT

Contact, a new diSOJssion group for resi~
dent students, meets every Mon&lt;by in 157
Ellicott Comolex, 8-10 p .m.
Discussions will do:l with how to make
friends, how to settle differences with 1: room- ·
mat.e , etc. Everyone is invited to attend.
COUNSBJNC SBYICf
PTofes.sioN.I counseling is now avalll:ble at
Hillel Jiouse, 40 Capen Blvd. For an appoint"""''· call Mn. Eve Fertig. 836-4540,
CII£\TM CRAFT CINTBI
The Cre01tive Cn~ft Ce-nter is "B'in offerins
workshops ~:nd clines this semester.
Memben con participate ·In free daoes and
enroll in ~'It a reduced cost. Cnft
classes include: Cenmk:s-Hand ..,.,...
. Oct: 29-30, l-5 p.m.; Melah - Bezel Ma/dnfr
and Slone Setting. Oct. 30, 7-10 p.tn. The Cnli
Center Is
Saturday fram 1-5 p.tn. for
.

Fillm~re ,

now-

Ceramics only. For Informacion on
rnembenhli&gt; fees. call 131·3546. ,To lfp ...,

and obtain i schedule of dosses and
,-bhops. the Cnlt Cenh;r Oflloe.' 7
- · Mondoy-~, 1·10 p.m., on friday, 1-5 p.m.

- Octobe.-CIVIl
llllsIBYICI
the application cleadUne for

the U.S. Civil~ Exam to ,be pen on
Nowetnber. 23. for fwther ~ call
842-2134.'
caADUAtE IICOIID DAMIOIA-.
Resular ..,.._......,.for the atE to
beaiven Dee.
ancf application fonno are available In the
Unlvenlty Plaaoment and C... GuldanCie
Office, 6 Hayes c.

141s _.....,,_1.....,_

_

LAW SCHOOl.~ 1BT ,
.
Jtesular rePtnllooLcleoclnne for the lSAT
to be siW!II Dee. 7 Is Nowemllor 11. lnlonnotlon and appllqJion fonno are available In the
Univenky Plaaoment and c.- Guidance

.,.___.

Office, 6 Hayes c.

The~ Ski Oub and the-national 5ludenls are ..........- • • a _,_
sklilc trtp "' _ . _ . c1ur1n1
weebnd, Nov. Z7..0.C. 1. Colt"' the trip, ln-

n• ..,.....

duclnc
-faur
-per
-- and.......
.....,_,..
, . -per
. _. . . for ............. ~
1111A111~NCII"

""-- If. ,.....led llr the A-'&lt;:an
C o n t - Tloeacre, 1115 'EIIIIWMd " - at
and 2 p.m.'
Sunday. for~ aiii'5-!IZS.

•=• . . . . ,.,..,...,

.t:Aru&gt;t Rl Nr 'f'b.

�••

. . lELIA

October 24, 1974

',,

odeiMitlr

....
~

- -fHURSDAY-24
ENGINHIIING SEMINAIIf

ldenrilyinR Simil~r Solulions, Dr. Benjamin
Gebhnt, professor of mechanical and
~ospk'e

ALM'

c~~~~=~eld at 7:30 p.m. foll~wing a

WOMIN'S VOUEYBAU'
U/B vs. Canisius College. Clark Hall, 7 p.m.

engineering. Cornell University. 11

Shabbat will follow the
40 Capen Blvd ., 8 p.m.

rhe Surface of Superlluid Helium, Professor
O.Jvid 0 . Edwiirds, Department of Physics,
Ohio State U,ni~~- 111 Hochstetter, 3 p.m .

INTlRNAnONAL fOU( DANONG' •
InstrUction for beginners. 233 Norton ; 8-11

professor of mechanical and aerospace

GEOlOGICAL SCIENCES LKT\JRfl
Subsidence of Sverdrup Basin, Canadian
1\rcric Islands: Eviden ce of Non- Ela stic
Lirhosph eric Loading Response. Dr. John F.

Sweeney, Department of Energy. Mines, and
Resources. Rm. D-170, Bell Facility, 180 Race
St., 3:.30 p.m.
·

H. Boyer, Johns Hopkins Medical Institute . 134
Health Sciences, 4 p.fTI.

ALMS'
Creed (Von Stroheim). 147 DiefenCJorf, 5
and 8 p .m. No admission charge.

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATIONI
Infections in Cynecology-Obstetrics.

Sheriton Inn-Buffalo East, all day. For more
information, call 831-5526.

ELEMENTARY ttaaEW•
Hillel Hebrew Class. 262 Norton, 12 noon.
ENGINHIIING SEMINAIIf
Aerosol Penerr•nce (AePJ : A Sensitive
lndeK of Periphe~l Aif'Wiiys Obsiiuction, Dr.

HIUR COFfHHOUSE•

UUAB ALM"
Tour Va Bien (Godard, 1972). Conference

Theatre, Norton; ca ll 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.

knox Art Gallery staff."7"p.m. Registration is in
223 Norton.

~ SUNDAY-27

PHYSICAI.-OIIGANIC CHEMISTllf
LKT\JU SHIESt
Effect of Molecular Environmenr on
Cheminl ReifCtions, Professor Robert

AMERICAN USZT SOCIETY FESTIVAL•

The annuill meeting of the AmeriCiln Liszt
Societ)"'will be held October 25-27. Various
concerts, recitals and ledures ilre scheduled,
featuring a number of noted musicians. For
further "information, call 831--4827.

Bergman, California Institute of Technology.
362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
UUU COff&amp;HOUSE•
Bob Doyle &amp; The Buffalo Chipkiclcers; Ken

JEWISH-AMBIICAN EVENING'

An evening of Jewish folk art portrayed
through music, Yiddish theatre and dance is
Scheduled. State University College. Campus
Auditorium, 1300 Elmwood·Avenue, 7 p.m. No
admission charge.

Bloom. 1st floor cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. Adminion : S.75 students; S1 faculty, staff and

UIB olumni; S1.25 1&lt;'"".!1'1 public.

-~~

hcbse for the Social Sciences,
-

M. T. Newhou\1!, St. Joseph's Hospital and
McMciSter University Medical S'c :hool .
Hamilton , Ontario. 150 Pa.rker, 3-"4 p.m.
THE COiti'OIIATION IN MOOBN

~.~=! s:!t~ Bureoucrors Regulilting More and Enjoying It L.ess, Barry
Boy,e r, U/8 aSsociate professor of law and
jurisprudence. Comments following the lecture by David L: Landy, senior pa:rtner of
Moot , Sprague, ~rcy, Landy, Fernbach and
Smythe. 3:.30 p .m., Main Dining Room, Faculty
Club, Harritmn Hall.
COMPlJTBI SBVICES SEMINAIIf
FORTRAN IV for the Novice, Harvey Axlerod. 4242 Ridge Lea, Rm. "0, 3·5 p.m.
BUFfALO LOGIC COUOQUIUMI

The Aims of AKiomatic Method, John Corcoran, U/8 professor of philosophy. 4244
Ridge Lea, Rm. 14, 3:45 p.m.
CLASSICS LECTURE'
CrE'f&gt;k Literacy: Some Second Thou~ehrs,

INTBINAliONAI. fOU( DANCING'

Professot Eric Havelock, former Raymond
Professor of Classics. 239 Hayes, 4-5:.30 p.m.

Some imtruction. Fillmore ftoom, Norton
Union, 8:30-10:30 p.m. Presented by Balkan

COMPU1Bt SCIENCE SIMINAIIf
What i~ Arrificial lnrelliRence About/,

Folk O.ncing.
ti~. Ad ~ ·

WEDNESDA V;-730

Hillel House and the Inter-residence Council co-sponsor a coffee. '¥iillard Fillmore
Academic Core, Ellicott Complex, Amherst
Campus, 8:30 p.m.

UFE WOIIKSHOPS"
Antiquing and Collecting-Early American
Art•• Ms. Charlotte Johnson of the Albright-

Theatre, Norton; call 831 -5117 for
mission ·chqe.

Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.

10 p.m. Admission S1.

CSEA DINNER-DANCE"

filM••

CHARUE CHAl&gt;UN FJLM SERIES'
· A King in New York. Conference Theatre,

CACRLM ..
Ler the Good Times Roll. 140 Capen, 8 and

_ U/B's Civil Service Employees Association
will hold its Tenth Anniversary Dinner-Dance
at the Sheraton Inn-Buffalo East . Open bar,
6:30p.m. ; Dinner, 7:30p.m.; Dancing from 10
p.m. Tickets (S10 per person) may be purchased from any boird member or social committee membe!r.

t'Atrfour Fou (Rivette, 1968). Conference

COMPU1Bt SERVICES SEMINARI

Sraristical Pilckage for the Social Sciences,
Glenn Meyer , Survey Research Center
Programmer. 4238 Ridge Lea, Rm. 10, 8-10
p.m.

Shabbat Morning Service, followed by a
Kid® . Hillel House , ~ Capen Blvd., 10 a.m .
CHABAD HOUSE•
A morning service will be held at 10 a.m.
followed by a Shabbos meal at two Chabad
Houses. 185 Mapleme re Rd . and 3292 Main St.
Both houses will also feature Torah study at 5
p.m.

Public hearin'gs continue on the chartering
of the Colleges. College H and College 8 are
considered today. 310 Foster, 4-7:.30 p.m., 8:30
p .m.-midnight.

UUAI

President of the Gallup Poll. lillmore Rm.,
Norton Union , 8 p .m. Free to members of the
University community; S1 for the general
public.

HILLEL SHABBAT SERVICE•

CHARTERINGliEARINGS• ·

Center
10. 8-10

PUBLIC LKT\JRE'
The Whys of the Polls, Ceorge Gallup, Jr.,

The annual meeting of the American liszt
· Society will be held October 25-27. Various
concerts, recitals and lectures are scheduled,
featuring a number of noted musicians. For
further ~nformation, call 831-4827.

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINARf
Molecular Evolulion in Hemoglobins, Dr. S.

Rese~rch
le~. Rm.

40 Capen Blvd.

AMERICAN USZT SOCIETY FESTIVAL'

candidate, U/B De partment of Pharmaceutics.
244 Hea lth Sciences, 4 p.m .

Glenn Meyer, Survey
· Progr•mmer. 4238 Ridge
p.m.

Rabbi Ely Braun instructs students who have
· a reading knowledge of Hebrew at 7 p.m.,
followed by a class entitled Modern Jewish
intelleduill Movemenrs at 8p.m. Hillel House,

SATURDAY-26

PHARMACEUnCS SEMINARI
Inhibition of Drug Biorransformarion by
HydroKylated Merabolires. David Soda, M.S.

Statistic~l

Association and CAC.
HIUR HEBREW ClASS'

p.m. Presented by Balkan Folk Dancing.
UUAB fH.M••
L'Amour Fou (Rivette, 1968). Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831 -5117 for times. Admis.siOn cha rge . .

3:15p.m.

UUA.I RlM••
Tout Va Bien (Godard, 19n). Conference

Theatre, Norton; call
mtssion charge.

FRIDAY_;_25

831~5117

for times. Ad-

MONDAY-28
ENCOUNTBsas•
Informal conyersations with soprano Jessye
Nonnon. llolrd Recitol Holl. 2 p.m .•
Sponsored by the Deportment of Music.
COMI'UTH 5aVICI5 - . u t
· 101/TRAN IV for rhe Novice, Horvey Ax·
lerod. 4242 ltldse In, Rm. "0, 3·5 p.m.
H1UB. TAlMUD CI.A55•
Hillel House. 40 c_. Blvd., 7:30 p.m.

- Hillel House,~
RJIDINGINC•
(Apen Blvd., 7:30· p.m.

-·
r

TUESDA Y-29

No--

""' ond the l'lty. 147 Diefendotf, 3
and 7:30 p.m.
chirp.

THURSDAY;-31

-

A";~~n~~or cym~h:Y·~=tu~~"p~i:l!:phy

Hillel House,

10 p.m. Admission $1.

engineering, Cornell University. 104 Parker,

COMI'UTH

lectu''t'~.

CACRLM ..
Let the Good Times ·Roll. 140 Capen, 8 and

ENGINHIIING SIMINAIIf
A New Transition Parameter for Natural
Convection Flow, Or. Benjamin Gebhart ,

"

PUBUC LKT\JRE'

Why I Could No Longer Bomb Cilmbodia,
Captain Donald Dawson, former U.S. Air
Force pilot and natioi-.al coordinator of

SHABIAT SBVICE'
Rabbinic Interpretations of the Weekly
Torah Reading. Dr. Justin Hofmann. An Oneg

ar

,.

•o . ,n;.:• P"t !' h,&lt;'i'
•)t•t..,u ,('4J I•). ~!VI oJ
:r ~ ·I&gt;"' J}. '1 tJ~

The Gunfighter (king). 140 Capen , 3 and 9
p.m. ~o admission charge.

Shabbos meal ~t the two Chabad Hpuses, 185
_Maplemere Rd. and 3292 Main St. No reservat ions nec~sary .

a.m. Enrollment and loation information
avail4111:ile at 831-3105 or 831-2215 .
I'HYSIC5 COUOQUIUMf . •
'
ScatterinR of Atoms and ·QlJilsiparticles

James P. Hartnett, professor and head,
Department of Energy Engineering, University
of Illinois at Chicago Circle. 104 Parker, 4 p.m.

•··~~

Professor Nicholas Findler, UIB Oepa:rtment
of Computer Science. 320 Fillmore, Ellicott
Complex, Amherst Campus, 4 p .m.
·
ALMS•
ThinKS to Come (Menzies, 1936), 7:15 p.m.
and Tilrgets (Bogdanovic:h, 1968), 9 p.m. 140
Capen. No admissiOn charge.
Uff WORKSHOPS..
_
Violence and Humiln Survival II: v-fOie.Oce
ilnd S..lviltion, Newton Garver, professor of
philosophy. and Brilin Mechilnisms •nd
VIOlence. , ~rk kristal, a:sststa'nt professor,
Psychology. 231 Norton, 7:30-10 p.m. For infomqtion , all 831-4630.

•

• UUUCOffEIItOUSP
.
Andy Cohen ond Ror lushlc entertain on the
banjo and piano. First floor cafeteria, Nonon,
a P·'P· Admission: $.75 students; $1 foculty,
stofl •nd olumni; 51.25 senerol public.
SCHOINiaGIIYB I'ROGIAM•
A perlormance ot music by Schoenf&gt;ers ond
lves leoturlna O.Yid Cohen, orpniol; ~
and Frlno Arschansb lloldr. duo-pianlsls;
Jutluo bslmon, borhone; lsobele Clonz.
sprechtstimme, ond .........tJies. Boird Recital
HoH, a p.m. AdmhsloA: $.50 IIUdenls; $1 f«
~· ltOII and alumni; $1.50 -'public.

CONTlNUING DENTAL EDUCATION
SEMINAIIf
.
Medical Diseases of lmpbrfand; In Df!Ht1srry ·
- Manilgement of tardl•c thie1-gehCI~;!
sponsored by the VA Hospltof and theU/fl

School of Dentistry. Conference Room, VA
Hospital, 8:30 a.m.- 3:30 p .m.
UFE WORKSHOPS" '
Halloween Horseback Ride co-sponsored
with U/8 Rid ing Club. Deadline for sigriing •
up is October 28. For information, call 8314630.
PHARMACEUnCS SEMINAIIf
Cadmium and Zinc &amp;lances in Man ·ilnd
Animals, Dr. George P. Lewis, director 6f t.he

Clinical Pharmacology Division, lemuet ·shattuck Hospital, Mass. 244 Heifih Sciences, '4
p .m.
. ,.
FILM'
The Crime o( M . ian~ee (Renoir). ' 147
Diefendorf, 5 and~ p.m. No admission .c harge."
FILM'
Attica . -Governors Resid ence lounge,
Amherst Campus, 7 p.m .

Sponsored by the U/ 8 Attica Support
Group. No admission charge.

HI~I'~!.:.~,C~~~;vd .• 7-ll .p.m.
UFE WORkSHOPS..
' . '
Antiquing and Collecting: Drfnking Vessels
ilnd Steim. James Gruber. 232"Norton, 7~ : .30
p.m. For information, call 831-4630.
UUU COff&amp;HOUSE'
Andy Cohen and Rat Lushk enttrtain on the

banjo and pi~ no. First floor ~feteria , Norton,
8 p.m. Admission : S.75 students; Sl faculty.
staff an~ aluf!~ni; S1.25 general public.
COMPliTBI SEIIVIOS SEMINAIIf
Srarisrical hclcage for the ¥&gt;cial Sciences.
Glenn Meyer, Survey Research Center
progranimer. 42.38 Ridge ' tea, Rm . 10. 8-10
p .m.

uuu RtM··

'i-..

.

•t

l!!J

Valerie and Her Week o{ Wonc(en (Jjres,
1970). Conference Theatre, Norton; call 831 5117 for times. Admtsston chilrge.

,' EXHIBITS .
UIIIAitf EXHIIIIT"
First editions of the works of Samuel Beckett
from the collections of lockwood Memorial
librilry. 2nd floor balcony, Lockwood. Viewing hours: Mondily-Friday, 9 a.m. - S p.m.
Continuing.

LOCltWOOO EXHIIIIT"
Polish Collection. an exhibition culled from
the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of material. First floor, Lockwood
Memorial Library. Monday~Friday, 9 a..m. - 5
p .m. Continuing.
MULTI-MEDIA~

Pnumbral Rilin&lt;:OUt, sample works bY a
group of U.S. ankH who have communicated
with eoch other throuah wrilinp, video

production. Xeroz prlntins, film, phorosr.aphy
and music. Gallery 219, Norton. Viewing
hour&gt;: Mondoy-Fridoy, 11 Lm. • 4 p.m.; Sun·

day. t- • p.m.; Monday and Thursdity-"
eveninp,.7·10 p.m.
PHOTOCiUftl EXtalr
Colo&lt; f'ltofO!frOP/ts by Jim DeSonrb. lmqes
made In Sourh Amerlco, Greece and New
, fork Stole. Hoyes Hall Lobby display cases.
Through 'bclober 30. Vlewlnl hours:
Mon!ioY..friday, 9 a.m .• 5 p.m. Presenred by
tlie 6flice of Cuhural Alloirs.

w.u- PIIOGIIAw

lfle Day Mer Tamorrow, a morality soap
opera cleolln8 with ....... life. Mondays,
T.oiesdoys andWednesda;s, Hoe'-• Nor·
ron. 2 p.m. Throush Wednesdly, Oct. 30.
VISUAl AlliS m.rr

Hond-flnfed JCf!r'OilriP/u by Elaine~­
Hoyes Hall Lobby, buHdlna ...._--..
1·30. , _ e d by the Ollice "'Cultural AI·
.fairs.

. INTE~VIEWS

�U/8

. STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

tnTlRAAT

Foreign, Student Orientation: A Help 1n 'Adjusting'
The day Larrivee! at U/B two Indians helped to
tl'aiiiiJM)i't 'all-mv l u - from the Univer1ity Manor
Moiel to Clement Hall and then, afu!r they had
&amp;88ured me that "Indian guys are not very atrong,
'' vou: knnw.:• we ~aniedr-their auitcues to the dor•&lt;lnittmr:• 'l'hall\' 'be.;b&gt;• am~ed fronf'Holland, I had
made. my fin;t friends among the "Internationals."
The ne~t tlay, Auliust 'ZI, the pi'OitJ'Ilm for Foreil(n
Student Orientation ~- About 150 foreil(ners.
cominlt frmh alLover the world, participated in it. The
pi'OitJ'Ilm W8ll MUKhlx made up of events deal in~ with
practical matten and festive occasions. In the former
part. forei~ etudent adviaon uw to it that we· were
intmjluced to student life-at U/B in ~neral, had our
study pf'OI(nlm&amp; readYoo time, were uaiped rooms in
the dormitories and helped with any problem that
amoe. Because of the assistance provided by the
forei!ID ·otudent adviaon, m08t of ua did DOt, I think,
have maiiy dillicultieo oettli1111 down. A few foreillners,
h&lt;Mner. thouPt that even 11101e time than the fim
four()( the ei«bt claY" of inlloduction to U/B obould
hoNe' Men concemeil with theoe affairs, u these'
otudento did not ~e all their academic and livillll
·. prohleiiiA in the time llllotted.

·p..._ . ............

·. ' "11le roiti.. 'eveato -

manifold and au....CUI,
ao ...._, by the fact that a lar!le number of forei«n
otuaenbl tumed up for-b-t. Tbe·m~rity of the
~ participanta ·- mYoelf iucluded·.- thouibf tbt day
epent ~ and cloiJII( eporb at N"_.a Falla
,;State Pan tha moot enjoyable event. Aa we were not
able to owim there hacauae of a- ouddeu 'cbop in
temperature - a fact: 1!laicb iplond by aome
Puerto RlcaDI and Dutduaeu, who, ...._....,tly, oat
teedH:hatieri1111 all the ftY. hack bome - materialo
for !'bl.vin« .,.ueybaal. ooftball and aoccer were provid- ·
ed. It iuniecf out that. on the wllole, the participants
weN reU. IIOOd at oporta: the Chineae and
Americana .t oaftball, the IDdiaua atvolloyball, and
the _... IOIId ~ at - - - One Indian
apPlied crickat tac:tiea,to oaftball and by cloin« ao a JliiOII hitAr, but a .,_,. rwmar. Whatever the .
qual'atyoftbe ............ ~. particlpetloa cbove
..,.Y the,aold fan all U...IIII80CUitGiuec to It aa the
-. ~~ OIIIrit noquinod IQ the oporto ....-! our
, ............ . Tht .,. ended *itb a trip to Fort
Nilii!IN. whale-we watchad iDdividualo d...ed u
-to ealollilto oboot a _ , _ in honor of Labor .
0.,. Our bultlrivw, drawiJII on what be remembenod
of fouz piiO¥iouo vioita, - our auhatitute ·cuide.
'lW'• "--uana for you.
.

orr

Olllor . . . .
"' Odllr - a ·that . . bad peat pa..ua .....
·the wine and.._ aoc:lal, where
... .. . . ~ 'lllbto made to plri flllada; the ........ - Bduanlo'a, ...... plataa~ 18_-

. . . . . llai111a.ll\lll: ....tthe .._.. combbaadon of

with tha main !'~· tha ..... - - at Clark Gym with
the ....., claao:laF............... laoked lib ha bad
.fan a cowboy.-; and the vilit to Nu..n.
. . . . jiUD ·plua -

Falls: Canada, where Malaysia, Nigeria and Holland
crowded tottether under a rain"coat while watching the
dizzy-making falls drop over the precipices and-change
color. How d~iiJus ioning to know that they can be and
have been turned off! The trip to Niagara Falls ended
with~ ice cream in the colors of the nightly falls . The
eight daYs were concluded by a magic show on the
third of September. Many forei~ers, especially the
Chinese and the Africans, enjoyed this part of the
program as it is part of their cultural entertainment at
home. Participating in these "outings" mainly meant
to me that I had opportunities to have friendly talks
with the "Internationals" in a relaxed atmosphere.

. I do not think any of us had expected to be received in such a hospitable way by U/B. Therefore, I wan't
to thank the University and in particular those who

work at the Office of Foreign Student Affairs and the
volunteering students for organizing this program for
the foreil(n students of Fall 1974. By now we have all
gone back to normal. i.e., to our studies, but the &amp;iendly atmosphere of the introduction days is still felt
when you meet other foreigners who participated.
For those who feel about it aa I do, the program baa
contributed to an easy initial adjustment to
U/B, both academically and pe1110nally.
-lrio van Glluotra Bleeder

Latins Need 'Self-Consciousness'
The Americans, irr-general, seem to be very conocioua and aware of all their problema. Different
JIIOUIJO of people try to fmd different solutions.
Nothing baa been left unchecked, unstudied, misundetstOod. And all thia can be done freely, .at least
freer than in any other country in the world.
These are two fundamental things that the peoples
in South Ameriea milo in lei'IIUI ol facing their
problema · and tryilll( to aolve them. -Firat. aelfconaciousneM: people_are not aware ol the cauaea or
their problems, ol their 'miaenoble situation. They can
feel hu11110r. okay, but they are ao uneducated, ao poor,
.ao unconacioua that they can't pen;,eive the cauae of
their ueeda. Second, even if they could organize and
become conocioua I}( their problema, moot of them '
wouldn't have the freedom to proteot.

What baa been happening, moot of the time, iB ~

oOcceaoion ol IIOY"mmento,'with a alight change in
whO ill in power. After a certain time, the oame faui!AI
that .... criticized in the former oppreaaoro emerxe in
the present forces ilf'power. When the change io more
drutic (a turn to the right or the left);we either fall
under the preaoures of the so-called' AmeriCan
l'mperialiom or aubaervlently obey orders that i:ome
fioni Moacow or~ from Peking.
· I don't nm~emher who said that each country baa
the - t it deaervea. I don't - how South
America could, in the ,_, future, 'find a puuine and
daoant. rational·way of handling thiup "aouth of the
bonier" without being the t8lpt for laughter and
derioion em the part of the "ouporpotien" who - the
- riclicuiOUI nature of Our and auti-oou.. hut at
- the time -prufit from immoral clealo c:oaceming
ooa aaturel anc! raw materialo.
. We oliO have a lone way. to 19 if we .to ~
reopected. Tha aioio II not of ideas, but of leaden.
The .... who ........ tend to~ in poww till they
... tluowD cfut by ~ otraapr. w-. thio it
DOt the ..., tJ.a .the political climate II eithat
~ ar aptdlletlc. In both tliohoD.t
...,..... tab place.

Could the South _ American countries free
themselves from an entangled mesa or preaourea from
right and left and try to he themselves? But then,
what are they? Unless the individualo become aelfconscioua and aware, I don't aee any way out in the
near ~ture.
·

-N-LaoicO

Welcome to U/B:
You Can Make It
Welcome to all new foreip otudeuta. I'realize that
you have.made a conoiderable m-eat of time IOIId
effort ao that you may acbieYe your educational pia
and develop a greater
in your field in
preparation for your. return home. Tbio io a - t o
you that I hope wiD be helpful
·
Congratulationo on your arri..J hera! We -!mow
you euc:ountered many problema by the time you 11ft
your counlry. You are- haluc placad in allea:lbility
teat. You find yowaelf in a .....,.. - , , ...._
people you're not familiar with, haiDc 8ltiDid to a
"strange" lifeotyle: the way they oat, ~­
cuatoma, an'il 11W1Y othan. YO!l ua juof lllre a bird
arrived OD a - "iilaud." I !mow- of,.,.. ...
bewildered ar may lie dlom8.Yetl. Lilre the . . _
problem, the "culture oboclt" and the academlc
preaaure really drive you wilcl. ~
Thare io a Chiueie proverb: "Whau you eter a
.new DOUUtry, inquire about i t a - · " Beblc uu- ·
familiar with the culture and the way of life- ha iucoDftaieuce a n d a u _ . . , . _ t o • - ·
Thare io • boot ftuuUy JII"'NNII . . . . . . J., the
Fanip 8tudet Ollloe ao tMi J11U ...,. the CIIJPW-

.com.-.:.

=+

�~

-.

tunity to spend some time witli an Ainerican family.
With patience and confidenCe you can aoon overcome
the cultural pp.
'The Focei&amp;n StudeDt Advisor should be your fint
person to see. He.orahe can give you relevant iDt'ormati"!' tellilll{ you the place where you can pt your
problem otrii«btened out and other specific inform&amp;'
\ion. He/abe 'Ia the penJOn who UDdentanda your
foreil(ll hackltround arid problems. The Foreign Student Adviaon have conta¢ts with the community as
well, throuRb such programs as the Speaken Bureau,
the hoot family prognul', and occasional internatiotl!!_
P,Uties: These parties aie intended to promote
mutual understanding between American stu&lt;l_ents
and foreil(ll studenbl. So get involved and you will
soon get a better insight on your part.
Mostly you are concerned with the type ofleaming
that is~ relevant to your interest and the special needs
of your country. You can talk to your Academic Advisor about these. She/he will try to give you a clear
picture and sense Or direction.
At SUNY at Buffalo, an amazingly l8fKe number
of courses are available for your talenbl ana your life
goal. This type of educational system "may differ from
youn completely. So be in a high spirit.
Here are some poinbl for which you should be psycholOjtically prepared. Campus life is casu~!. so don't
be-- surprised if you sometimes mistake the professor
for a student. Your American friends may tum out to
be your "dictionary" or guide to the Ameri?an way of
life and culture. Give your best effort to adjust and
you will soon get over the "culture shock ...
The United States is composed of many different
ethnic groups. Because of the geogrephic diversity
and t.h e complicated structure of its society, you will
soon gain an enriching and wonderful life experience.
Your life in America. even if you experience
hardships. can give you new insight and perspective.
So ch~r up, don't · ~ distressed.
-Anaelm Diu

Nigerians Celebrate
Independence DayThe Norton HaU Fillmore Room was the scene of a
party on Saturday, October 51 1974, in commemoration of the 14th anniversary of the Independence of
the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The party was sponsored by the Nigerian Union of Buff~lo (N.U.B.).
Nigeria, a former British colony, now with a population nearing eighty million (provisional figure)
achieved independence on October I, 1960, and a
republican status three years later.
In a brief speech during the ·party, the N.U.B.
president, Mr. James Okezie, reminded Nigerians
and their guesbl why they were gathered and regretted
the unavailability of time to recount Nigeria's
progn!08 for the past fourteen yean. He enjoined all
thooe present to pray that peace arid progress con ~
tinue to reign in Nigeiia.

International Dorm:
'We've Just Begun'
Kirk Robey, the director of foreign student affairs,
bas a very cozy fannbquae in Holland, New York. It
was there in the latter half of the summer that several
resident advison met to discuss plw for the lnt,ernational Living Center. It was an exciting prospect.
'The International Dorm had proven to be a dynamic
entity, «J''Wing from a one -iloor arrangement in
SchoeUkopf Hall, two yean ago, tp tbe largest single,
semi-autonomous residence in EllicOtt. It nQw occupies Buildings four, five,. and six in Red Jacket, and
Bui.ldinK four in the Richmond Quadrangle.
,n.e growth of tbe Living Center bas been due in
part; to the Univenity's increasing foreign ,rud'ent
,population. It is also due to tbe awareness on 'the part
ol many students of the esceUent opportunity the
""'ter provides for a fint hand intercultural experience. Former residenbl have apoken of bow tbey
have benefited fiom life in the International IloJ:m_
Said one, ''You pin a eompletely new penpective;
you leam ol other -lea' religions and cultu..,;,."
Another claimed it was the nest best tbing to trevel.
'The Ellicott location baa brought its problems.
'The ID-tioaal Domi, like all ol Ellicott, sullen
&amp;,1111 ilolation. A r...-1 and inadequ8ta bus aervice
bao Dot helped much in tbia npnL Foceian atudenbl
have\.., A«ectad m..t by tbia. Many do ~ own
- - A few atudents reeently drew up a brain storm
lilt ol thinp they did Dot like about Ellicott. Busing
and Food Servic&amp; featured ea the most immedim bani ups. Food s..ice liaa alwayo bad a
aatarjoul zepotation. 1D Blllcat1, it baa become a atale.

................................___
Ull'l'aSI'OUCY

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

~

~lllllo·

.... _ _

. . . . . . . . . fto!J .................... "--

..................o-.,..,..............
-........

I

lDITORIAL

On Upholding
International Ed
The staggering number of 1500 foreign studenbl on
this campus, which places the Univenity at Buffalo in
the top 20 institutions with the largest foreign student
enrollment, augurs well for the University, the
American studenbl and their foreign counterparts.
By internationalizing ita academic ~. the
University internationalizes ita fame; Or even if it
means, as the skeptics would have it, that the increase
in alien student enrollmetit alsO means the disaemination of the little pranks and Qitfalla in our microcoa'!l
to the greater humanity, reasonableness would &amp;saert
that the proa far outweigh the cons. For one thing, the
realization of our shortcomings is one.·step toward
their rectification.
Unlvenities would be shirking a great part of their
responsibilities if they should ooni'Om themselves only
with education and learning within their national
boundaries. Institutions that meet only tliese criteria
a.re better known as colleges or academia. It is the
assemblage of international -students and scholars
that Jrives zest' to a university life and makes anything
universal in any institution that lays claim to that title.
It is hard to state who benefibl more "from International Education, the institution, .the host students
or the alien students. "For sure," there ~no loser. By
the fact of his presence ti!J. foreign studenf contributes, even if minutely, -·a, the shaping of the
University and the shaping of its history. Needless to
say. the foreil(ll student himself is being nurtured by
the institut ion and its historical push and shove. ·

joke. (Pun intended.)
·
On the poSit ive side, Ellicott ha.S given the Center
a definite sense of identity. I.L.C. is large enough this
year to have its own government and constitution.
Already, the floor representatives have been at work
electin~ an executive body. When the student body
becomes full y operational, it will be in charge of
organizing most of the Center's activities. These will
be funded. in part, by a $10 voluntary fee
·
the
residents. The response has been ve
gi
far. Already I.L.C. has created a name for iblelfin the
Ellicott entertainment world.: It has sponsored parties
and other activities every weekend since the beginning of the semester. Special credit should be given to
David Yung, initiator of " SCREW" drivers and
"Latin Lovers," who is t he special activities coordinator of the Center. According to David, future
plans include. t rips to Boston and, Washington, D.C.,
during the semester breaks, sports activities including
soccer games, weather pennitting, an International
dinner. lecture/discussions, cultural shows and performances. and more parties. AH international clubs and
organizations aie encouraged to participate and/or initiate activities with the International Dorm.
The way it lOoks now the Center has a positive
future, and yet, we have only just begun!
-Marcelle McVorran

Mrica And .
Godfather_Nations·
. · In times
the rel~tionshlp betwee~-African
nations and the industrialized world baa been that of
colonialism, a relationshi,p of "economic slavery" for
the African nations. Now the relational!ip is moving in
a nj!W direction. This direction may be termed
' "econom~ in~dependence . " This can be achieved
when the African countries are able to participate in
world politics actively without fear ol_looing their internal economic strolll{bold. Many people think tha,t
this process will take a long time, but this level ol
development.. in som-e African nati\)DII might eome
faster than, our expectations indicate.
Nigeria, for eliample, is one country in Africa that
is moving towards """"'omic indapeadance at a nte
t1ie British would not have imagined in 11100 "'-• NiRW ll8ined political independence. This African
·country (estimatec! to be the tenth larpot populated
country in the .....td) bao t h e - to achieve tbia
pl. All that is ·requinld is the manpower to exploit
these - - - That, too, ia ... tbe way. ~.
Nigeria'• .-oil participation
niao!d the -'
country's ahare in focei&amp;n firma to &amp;6%. It io eatimated
that tbia will yield "'"!'" "' billioD iii $6.6 biJiioa from dinCt participatioD and
tiillioa
from rnya)tiea,JIIIIi other traditiaaal,- . ~
Dal&amp;
.Juue 18, 197'1.o
The .... ol.A&amp;ieu aatH.. --=iatiJic with tile
~ ECaaotDic CoiDmmdty 1110111 t.O lltir up
~. ol;upiniono """"" tbe African GIUIItriea.
H.--, i n - t - . tbe.bao IIMD.....,_
and the~ Ecoaomic ~unity is lftduall7

pas;

..,._t
""""'*
sa -;

'The greater tbe foreign student enroUment, the
more the average Ameri'"CIID student is espoaed to a
variety of cultures - more so when tbe alien student bOdy consiata ol studanbl from over 90 difl'erent cilun-.
tries of the worlclas we have them here at the University at Buffalo. Such questions often.directed to nawly
arrived foreil(ll studenbl, as to wbo lives in caves or
which culture still malies meals of human flesh,
reveal · tlae great need -for the presence of. foreign
studenbl &amp;mon&amp; so many American students who have
had no cause to venture out of their country. Th'o ·
technology could be immense, affluence could
manifest iblelf in all ramifications, but to live Jn a
w6rld of one's own, secluded from the rich and diveme
human culture, could make one li social dwarf. Books
don't tell all tbe story about other people's culture
and journals and news media more often than not disfurl facbl in order to sell their wares. The whole exercise of International Education is a
mutually rewardilll{ learning nperience for the
Americans and the alien students. It therefore behooves all lovel8 of progresaive education to give the
program the fullest backing and eliminate all hazards,
social or psycholOjtical, that would tend to dall)pen
the zeal.
...
-.Jaatla Okoro Ukpab;"

U/8 INTEB.NATIONA;L

I

~::

EDITOR IN CHIEF: Okoro Ukpabi (Niceria)
INTERIM EDITORIAL BOARD
Mary-Aim Robey, at!Vbor (U.S.A.); Ernest Y_,..,
advio« (H- ~~-

..

CONTRIBUTORS
Iris van G.linstra Bleeker (HoUand); Richard Lee
Davia (U.S.A.); Anlelm Diu; Neuaa· :Longo
(Brull); TieD Nguyen (South Viemam); ·Jirgbia
Nguyen (South Vietnam); Aaene L. Nnollm ·
(Niceria); Marcelle McVorran ('l'riDidad).

establishilll{ ties with a number of African states. This
sounds like good news. One forgebl that Africa has
been an arena of world politics, a place where
economic aid is tied to local politics. As a iesult, the
political set up of a particular nation in question is in
jeopardy. In most cases, the politi.cal set up and
decisions incJine more to th~ economic godfather of
the country. And when this is not so, what happens to
that particular· government is anybody~s guess.
With countries like . Nigeria and_. Zaire moving
ahead both in manpower and development, one hopes:·
some day there wiU ·bf!J no biktJM'other countl)\.Con .
Mricah nations to lookiup to, at least not for basic internal economic stability. It is then that Africa will
have achieved her goal.
-ADeoe L. Nilolim

Post-oJientation
Advice Off~red The following infonnation sbould be useful to new
foreil!ll students. State Univenity of New Yorlt at
Buffalo (U/Bl is composed ofl~ administretive sections: coli- or schools. In each scbopl; there ari
departmenbl, like the Department of Civil Engineerilll{ within the Sc~ of Eo«ineerin«,- Swdenbl can beclassifieii into two broad llfOUPII: undeixrad.)liii.;an&lt;l
"graduate. ·' Graduate studies are more advanced.
Undt!IJtl"llduates are divided into lower diVision and
upper division students.' In the lower division, you-·
need to have conatant contact with your advisor so
that he or she can help you oelect a field of ¥1Jdy _
Lower diVision work is mainly baaed on a broad and ,
general educatioaal ~- Normally after.i11ro
yean; :vou will be admiu..j to yoi1r cbo\len .&lt;!epaJ1, ,
ment. when you meet the specific requiremen~&amp;-. , .
Certaill Twabloloo
' •' '. .
Ma}o.-: your field ol concentretion.
PN!-.-.q~: a atudy coune which. mll!ll be com. •
pleted before a men advanced muroe may be taken.
Elective: any coune you would like to take which is
not a requirement. . ·
. 1
Credillwur: one credit hour is uaually ....;,ned to.a
lecture IIIOI!tinR one hour a week.
Q~..O: or a ama11 eumination.
'1'llnia or ~ • lone paper baaed upon
~ -.reb which is uaually ~ for a
M-'• or Ph.D. degree.
• · . ~. :- :,~ ·
lnMpmdmt Study: a DOil-tmditiaDal ed~:
appmach "in which the student Coli""" an ~
courae of atudy UDder the guidance ola ~; •

-·

-~Dia

n...

REI'0R'IU..UIB'tNTfRNATIONA1.10ctober•24pUJ4lllage·2 .;

�-··

.·..

the soil ..;,d the succesaioa Of the eeaeon.
. The moot important oaea are: 1'bl! DONG THO
celebration, the ritual ceremony for tbe firet stliring nf
the ground; TICH OlEN celebration, for fields
belonging to the State to be plowed by the Emperor in
, person; HA OlEN for tbe firet descent to the fields;
THUONG OlEN for ascent from the fields; and
NGHINH XUAN for welcoming the Spririg.

· -~-

Two Fe.tivala

South America:
'M~cho's Land'
SoUth of the border is really the umacbo's
Paradioe."
Could we really say that there is anything remotely like the Women's Movement in. South America? It's
true that you can hear some isolated voices, very
ioolated indeed, but the overwhelming majority of
worn~ not even aware of a thing called ureminine
cond.itiODI:" have never suspected their "assigned
roles," and don't imagine they are liVing in a social
.
context known as "patriarchy."
·When Betty Friedan went to Sao Paulo, Brazil,
"9D!.ItPtvJl or three years ago, she _was met by a smpll
8udience of women, the majority of whom, after she
had delivered her'lecture, thought it better to forgt;t
what they bad heard, so different and remote her
words sounded, so.Homeric a task any change seemed.
The media men. all zealous in defense of their
prerogatiVes: decided that the beat strategy to beat her
was derision. They didn't bother to discUS6 what she
had said but reported instead how she looked, coming
to tlie l&gt;rilliant conclusion that because she was not
goqd,Ioqking. men were not idterested in her, so she
was -'!18'1 at them. They missed the po!ltt entirely or
pi;etended to ffi.iss it. They usually fil)ished their ar·
ticlea' with enthusioatic praioea of the doll 'Woman, cOmm~nts on the beauty of the Brazilian girls and on
the eXcellent relationships between the two sexes in
Brazil (with men at the top and women at the bottom,
as usuall.
_
In Brazil there is no divorce (we are a Roman
Catholic country. afterall), no abortion laws (who
would think -of such a sinful thing?), no women 's
a..~ations (what for, .to exchange recipes and talk
about their men's idiosyncracies?). The life of the
middle-claM Brazilian mother revolves around her
children and her husband 24 hours a day. It's a fulltime unpaid job. When she io 40, beaten aad tired,
and some of her children have already married, she
feels· misused and somellow betrayed by life or
deatjny. She.feels.she bas not accomplished anything
in·life:r.a•-Renee-ofi•etftptiftesa•disturbs her:
If she belongs to the poor cl888, she probably has been a house•maid· (or a prostitute) since she was 13,
ha.co a drunken husband, some six or seven squalid
ch,i.ldrel.. is ., . v.eteQin of two or threel precarious abortiollll. and has a life of misery. At thirty. she has VD
and looks like an old woman.
As to the '"privill!lted"- women from the upper
cl~. their t.hT.e is spent either shopping, 'playing
card~&gt;. or going to beautY' shops, always under the
orders of their masters, ofi:oqrse. So, as it is common1&gt;' said. "We've got to~ a long way, babe."
'
~NeuaaLoago

rRom
OF/A
Foreign Student Health Insurance Coverage
All foreign studePta must be insured by Foreign Student
Health Insurance Coverage.
~e deadline date for payment is November f. 1974. This
means that those who have not taken out insurance should
do so immediately in order to be covered under the program
for this academic year and next summer. Application
packets for enrollment may be obtained by coming into the
Office of Foreign Student Affairs in 210 Townsend .
·
A brief outline of iilsurance coverage foiiO'NS:
1. Basic Medical- $1 ,000 per illness with a $10deducti·
·ble per illness. (Example: [(your bills are $45 total for
an illness, you will pay $10 and the insurance company

will pay $35.1
a. includes doctor's visits pertaining to illness;
b. includes prescriptions, tests, etc.
2. Major Medical - 'ss,ooo per illness (utilized after the
$1.000 per illness from. Basic Medical is used.)
a. S50 mom and board charge irl a hospital;
b. All other expenses incurred in hospital stay (tests.
doctor, etc.)
Note: On any expenses over $1,000 per illness to $6,000
per illness. the student pays ~-i&gt; over $1,000 and the insurance company pays 80".-n. (Exam ple: If your bills for an
illne!'."l total $1200. you will pay $40 of the amount over
$ 1000 and the insurance company will pay $160 over the
$1.000.1

For further clarification of the above, please pick up the
packet as there is a complete statement of coverage enclosed
with it .
Re~ember, the deadline for obtaining this coverage is
Nooember I, 1974. Failure to take out insurance by that date
will make you ineligible for coverage under this poftcy for
this year's term .

bnt

·,

''•sQeh tiit&amp;rtain 'climate and
conditions of
Oily' life have coatributed to shaping tbe ~cter
..,. ........_oftbeVietnameaepeuantawboproveto
be patieat, induatriouo, inurecJ to all ldnda of aufferiDp mel proluuDdly fat.aliatii:. Uucler'tbe inftueace
ofthie -.,b.yolcal coacopt, the Vletaameae peuaniB
haw .....,. to eiiOrdinate the agrarfm cycle .lllld the
~ cyde. In the hope that 1IIOie regularity might .
be obteiJied far their barveat, they bold relicious ·.
CINIIIOIIIee at each ata&amp;e of ri9" cultlvaticm. •
•
Moot of til-. ceremaoiea are annual agrarian
ritaala COIIIidered _ , far au..,.. iD the cultlvaticm.of rice, eopecially with npJd to the fartjlity of

· The residents of the International Living Center are now
settled into their new location in Buildings 4, 5, and 6 of Red
Jacket Quad on the North Campus. The ILC office is located
in J!pom 191 of Building 6, and present office hours are 9-5
Monday and Thursday. This schedule will be expanding in
the neu future, with regularOFSA services to be provided as
well as assistance with programming of internationallyrelated ·activities in the n.c. We hope yw will feel freeJp
come out to the ILC for a visit and to participate in our
pf'Of[l"8m.
.

Emplayment SupPort Programe
Joe Krakowi8k is interested in working with students
and other staff' to dMiop more employment support
prquams for foreiR" students. If you are intt;rft!ted ·in
providiDJ ideas., pleue 'step into the OFSA and speak with
. Mr. Krakowialt.

r:&amp;pplica&amp;lallileaAUboe

.

Application deaaline for·· the foreign student
undera-r•duate acholuahip is November t,~ 1974. _ Applicatiooio can be picked up at 210 Townaend Hall.

Tuitiaol, Waiver
Durin« tile aummer ol 1974, the l'Cfticn Student Tuition

WAiver ~ wu given a ~ review by a Com- mittee oppoiated by the Vice Pnoident for Student Alr.U..
It dec:ided that a Fueip Student Tuition' Scholanhip

~~':~r;cta~~:::~:~~:

.aiaatioftll on tbcioe individualo who 1rill be ..:ipienta ol
l!'oreilla Student. Tuition Waivet Scholanhipo. Applicant&amp;_

- .X
Pap~ INTERNATJPIW/~~ ~~- •..-~o...

Feotivala Welcome
As we have seen so far, rice is the most important
thi!Ji which affects the life of Vietnamese peasants.
Th'refore, they have bad to pay a lot of attention to it.
AB justly remarked by Jean Herbert, author of An
1ntro~ to Asia. the traditonal Vietnamese conside~at ..inan is within the world and that a constant relationship therefore links the behavior of the
macrocosm with that of the microcosm. He considers
that it is nohnal for the occult forces to be spread
throughout Nature.
" This consciousness of a close synchronism
between man and the Universe explains and justifies
what we mostly COf!.Sider as mere superstition, the

......

will be notified .by the Awards Committee as decisions are
reached (probably late in the semester).
·The above changes mean that the Office of Foreign Student Affain will no longer be determining student eligibility
for awards. Students will, however, continue to obtain
applications from 210 Townsend and will receive Ulistance
in completing applications. We will al8o be available to
counsel students in the preparation of their appea.ls.
Tuition Waiver Applications are now available for the
Spring 1975 semester. Students must file an application for
each semester. The deadline date for completed applications
is November 15, 1974.

lnternatioaal LiYiag Center

Ricie ciultivatlon haa always '-n the chief elementof tbe eaoo!ntialiy· !Wicultural civilizations of Vietnam. Practiced Since the remoteat timea by the Vietnaineae, it haa helped them build up ·their Social
structure and spread southward their national
territmi. Rice-baa '-n their staple food as well as one
of the' tritditioruil ritual oll'erinp in varicrus religious
ceierilohies to '"their ancestors and deities.
·
Vielnameee - t a in moot areaa of the country
still cultivate their rice as they have done in the past
by ICIWinl! ric:e-oMds in tbe mud, then transplanting ·
rice ..cllinlil to other fields previously plowed,
banowecL aud inipted. However, tliia bard labor
d- - JIUIIIIIDtee a ROOd baneat. Tbia io due-to tbe
Vietnameoe climate which detenniaea aeaaoaal
~ in tbe natural environment and the correlative oequence of human activities. Thus, despite
the relatively 1'l!llular alternatiOn of the Wmter moa_,. aud tbe Summer moaaoon, . wide variations of
raiafall mel river ftaoding make for unreliability in
.
·
'
rice CanaiJII!. .
1

NlW/

I·

Vietnamese
· Rice Festivals

Bimi·ua··· :.- .... ·· ·

We would like to preeent in greater detail two
typical Vietnamese agrarian ceremonies, HA OlEN
" and THUONG OlEN.
HA OlEN was held in the fourth lunar mouth
wheh rice was transplanted into paddy fields designed
for early rice. On the day-selected by an astrologer, a
group of Notables performed a sacrificial ritual to the
God of Agriculture. A boiled cock, a dish of steamed
ghutinous rice, chaws of beteJ, , and a bottle of rice
wine were displayed on the altar. -The objects in view "
were to inform _the god that the time for rice
transplanting was coming 8nd the ceremony of HA
OlEN would take place on that very day. An invocation written on a paper was read aloud and burned by
the apP'?inted Notab!e. Shortly a~&lt;, this official,

holding a bunch of eeedlinp, went down to the field
where be performed the eymbollc tranaplaating.
Late in the eeventh lunar month, when· rice plaaiB
were in. bloom, the THUONG OlEN celebratloa waa
performed. Oa thio occasion, eecri6cial ofleriage included three pigs and every villager baa to come and
kowtow before the . altar dedicated to the God or
Agriculture. Pork offered in sacrifice was later sliced
up and shared among the villagers.

Philharmonic Tickets
Free season's tickets to the IS-concert symphony series
of the Buffalo Philharptonic Orchestra are available to
foreign students on F-1 and J -1 visas and their spouses.
Please bring your ID card to Room 210 Townsend to obtain
the tickets. This offer does NOT apply to foreign scholars,
fa culty or immigrants.
·

Mailbol&lt;ea
Foreign students are u.rged to check the mailboxes in
Room 210 Townsend as Social Security Numben are beginning to arrive . Graduate students on assistantships should
report their Social Security Number to their department immediately.

Home Country Jobe
bleed a job in your home country'? The National
Association of Foreign Student Affair&amp; may be able to help.
Application cards are available in 210 Townsend (over
mailboxes) .

Speakers' Bureau
The Committee on International Understanding of the
Buffalo Council on World Affairs in cooperation with the
OFSA is enlarging its program of curriculum enrichment in
the Buffalo Public Schools. For the past two years, Chinese
students through this program have lectured at Bennett
High School on various topics of interest. This year the
program will be expanded to two or three high schools and
will include programs on Africa, China, and India. Anyone
interestal in this program should prepare a brief talk and
make an a'ppointment with Mrs. Dean Pruitt at OFSA.
Speaken selected will receive a stipend f« each day spent at
the high school. ,

Former Boy Scout&amp;
The· Buffalo Chapter of the Boy· Soouta of America is
seeking foreign students wbo were Boy Scouts in their home
countries to participate in the Scout-0-Ram&amp; to be held in
November. Pleue contact Mr. Ted Wheeldon for~more information, at TR3-8539.
VeDezuelaa Studenta
The Intensive Eagtish Languap lnstituu is pleued to
announce that it bas been eelected .. ODe of four ~
cenurs in the United Ststeo to pnwido EDI(Iisb laacuqe
training for Venezuelan atuden.ta UDder the Proarramo GI'Oil
Mari&amp;cal de Ayocucho.
The first group ol lltudoato bepa their Elllliob lltudieo oa
September 23 and will remain at U/8 fot tbJee aemooten.
They .... living in the Ellioott Compla"" the "'orth Campus. " - i at.erooted Ia mootiaa tbeaa otudeata abou1d
contact Mi• Kathy De Mart at 831..fi661.

.Informal Eqllab
Informal Enclioh coaverutloo poupa, Ia
locatia« bouoebokl needa. a IIIOIItbly.- end other
aervict. He available tJvou,b the laterDatioDal Womeo'a
Committee. lr you are iale!Oated, Mn. Pruitt at the
Voreip Student Ollice at ilst-3818. lllocilnu. em tho Committee's eveatl are a1eo available at the ollice.

Other Nodcea
It is important that you ca£ry your puaporta 1ritb ,oU if
you are tnovelinc ou~oC-.. ...

:n---applied

foraummerwurkpermiaoioa~ntmatbo...-,_

mailed to you by OFSA if you have- abaady . . _ . , .••
New lltudenta who atteaded tho Fall Orioatatloo l'lopam,
p i - retum the evaluatloo rona that- niC&gt;OIItly mailad to
you.

...

�belief that certain hours, certain dayo oC the week or ol
the moon phase, certain months or certain-. aze
auapicioua or inauapiciouo for the aeeompliabment ol

/

certain opecial actiono or for any undertaking in •
«eneral."
•
Moreover, theSe celebratiODf constitute an impor·
tent part Of the peuant'o life. He welcomeo the
feotivals and' enjoys himoelf because they are an ex·
citing change from his-monot.Qaous li(e. ~
-Tien and Nchla NJUYen

Aii American in Taiwan
After being an American - foreign student in
Taiwan (Republic of China) for aboJJt a year, I can
~tly appreciate the joys and trials of foreign
students in America.
Having studied four years of Chineoe language in
the Stateo (graduating from SUNYAB in May 1973)
and wi~ graduate work delayed for a year, further
language and literature study in Taiwan seemed as if
it would be both rewarding and useful. I was accepted
for study at the National Taiwan Normal Univer·
sity's Mandarin Center (Kuo-li Tai-wan Shih-fanTahsueh) and left for there in mid.July. The school is
located in the southern portion of Taipei City
(northwest Taiwan), the economic. social , and
political center of the i land.
Bot Weather
Coming fror:D. Buffalo,. the extreme heat during the
summer seemed at first unbearable. Of the many adjustments I had to make during my stay, climate was
definitely the most difficult . !Then again, those hot
moftths of J_uly. AufUst and S~pt~ember went by
relative.ly fast.
For the first two weeks I stayed i~ a hostel (Inter·
national Housel . I decided that living with e Ghinese
family mij&lt;ht be more enjoyable. It didn 't tal&lt;elong for
me to find one and I stayed with them for August and
September. Staying with the K'o's brought the opportunity to attend a family wedding, enjoy Autumn
Festival moon~akes, learn a few Chinese recipes, and
compare Chinese ·inter-family relationships with
t.hoae of America. I was surprised tO find how
ejtalitarian 1 the husband-wife relationship was, es·
pecially as compared with that of a number of other
Asian _aocieties. It was also striking that despite the
great self-sacrifices that parents make for their
~hildren (much more than do their American counter ~
parta}, they usuallY. don't attempt to dominate the
liveo of their children. (By the way, once while talking
with an elderly lady, ohe asked me in disbelief: "Do
Americans actually~ their parents away in old folks
homes?" This is very rare there.)
· Food "Problema
The food was one of the first problems I encountered, and one of the first ! .managed to solve.
Chineoe people eat many more types of vegetables,
' meats, seafood and fruits than do Americans. The
style of cooking is also completely different. Very
often I didn't know what I was eating and the navor
often struck me as strange. For example, a popular
breeld'!"t was rice gruel (Mi-fan) along with dried
meat (jou-lran) and/or a type of fried-bread (ooo-b'in
yu t 'iao). Although I didn't cue much for the former
two, I did grow fond oC the fried bread. As a reault,
al01111 with my bread I would often eat the few left·
oven from the night before. (Chinese .bouoewives
l'enerally cook only enouch (or ooe meal. They go to
tbe local inut.et early each morning to buy rreab
meata and Yejjetabln (or that day - unlike
Americana who Ulllally buy pocerieo .--Jt.
'lberoran, there IIIUIIIIy - : t maDY leftovera.} All
iD all, J fouDd tile lood both iD..W., aDd enjoyable.
0.. I liked very mui:h was tbe otyle ol
MIIDI· Maot tamilieo baYe a IOUDd diDing table with
Yariouo diabn plaeecl in the centar. Buically,
_,.... io eqaippod with a bowl aDd apoon for ooup,
a bowl vl pl8ia- ilce (with tbe pot Marby for quick
nftllo), aDd cbopaticb. Tbtousbout tbe mealooe . bio cbopatlcb to pick up a bite-aile piece ol whatever
, _ tile --table dlobeo. The coaotaDt moving oC
baDdl the table ...U. iDtaractioD iae¥itable.
~ . . bul)' their race. iD their dilmer
little duriDc thia abort"but
...... ,..,., lllthoriDc-1 - ' t 1111!1 iD pttinc ac- .
. . . . . . lo daapoticb """ could iDortiY the
cbopatlcb tell: pic:ldDc up t'lOOked ~uta iJI.
cllftduaQy. (11........,, I otill handled pic feet a little

.......... "*-' _,
~~- -

.

r

.

feeling as though I were juat as much Chineoe as t hey
are! Chineoe people are usually much more personally
open than Americano. As a result, I made a number of
friends whom I knew better than I had ever known any
one American. Streeia are very safe in Taiwan at any
hour! Late walks for an evening onack were quite pop·
ular. Soy-bean soup (tou-chian,g), hot peanut soup
(hua ~ shen - t'ang), and watermelon or guava juice were
popular at the evening snack stands.
In addition, evening·discuBSions were of mutual interest. Comparison of Chineoe with -American Jiopular
trends in thought. politics, fads, etc., were often the
subject. (Strangely enough, Chinese people don't
seem to go for fads .) It is surprising to realize just how
synchronic modem Western and Eastern thought
have become!
Leisure was often spent playing soccer or baseball
- the Chinese keep in very good physical shape. And
baseball fans they are: when the Chinese Little
· League baseball team was playing in the U.S. for the .
world championship, most of these college students
were up until 3:00 or 4:00 A.M . to see the live TV
covera~e ! (They won!) In addition, I found mountain
climbing (p 'a shan) very popular and enjoyable. For
the most part, I would say that young Chineoe
students are very outgoing while they can take great
pleasure in common t hings.
Architecture Superb
,
or the many beauties of the island, the traditional
Chinese architecture is superb! It is one of the few
Asian countries _which today still strives to maintain
traditional architect ure in man" of its newly-built
buildings. The National Palace'Museum (Ku-~
J'o.wu Yuon) in northern Taipei, built iD extraor·
dinary Ming dynasty architecture, is a fine exampl,.
(By the way, the collection there of ancient Chineoe
art and· artifacts is heralded as the finest single collec·
tion in the world!}
I wouldn't want to close giving one the impression
that I was as naive as to feel that Chinese people lack&gt; ,. &lt;
ed t he typical human frail ties. -As they are everywhere. so jealousies, prejudices, and such are also
found · there. However, although I could see them, I
was fortunate not to experience them.
Regardless of where I went (northern, central or
southern Taiwan), the hospitality Shown to 111e by the
families of my fellow-students and even strangers will
always be remembered. I learned much about the
lani(Uage, culture, and government (even once
m~ing and chatting -with Premier Chiang Chlngkuo); but I hold most valuable the fine friends wbo
made that short year the most memorable I have ever
known!

residence halls at State University at Albany, with
two Soviet otudents and two Albany Stat&amp; students in
a four-room suite.
The Soviet students aze all males and range in age
from 19 to 2:! yearo. Their knQ:wledge of English io
good and they will ba taking some -counea with
AmericaOStudents - the freshman course in English
comPosition and a junior level courae in American
studi ... A t ypicaf-Soviet otudent's program. '!'OUid
al ~ include a Russian . -to~ Engliah translation COUI'8e
given by Albany's Department of Slavic Langu&amp;j!eS,
and a oecond langullj(e, French or Spaniob, to be
determined by acade~c advisement. The rest of the
student'Ei program wHl be in the "English u a secOnd
language" context, in which dialect usage and currerit
vocabulary , includin~ slang and idioms, are studied .
Part of the course work will be devoted to an analysis
of current in agazines, newspapers and television .
While at Albany. the Soviet students hope to take
as many as three overnight trips to Boston: New York.
and Washington, along with other international
studento at SUNY/A.
Shorter trips .are also planned - to Cooperstown.
Saratoga and other ~ites of historical or local interest.
fnvitatioO~ have' also been received for the Soviet
students to visit the other State University campuses.
The Soviets are all enr&lt;&gt;lled at the . prestigious
Moscow State lnotitute of Foreign La....,IIJies where
10 SU!I:Y students will st,udy for the next five months.
The Am e rica n~ will major in advanced lan~age.
literature. and cultural studies of the "Sovlet Union.
AIt of t he Am erican Students are residents of New
Ynrk St ate and a re enrolled at four different S.tate
lJnivel"!'it y campuses. Five.are Rtudents at: the Albany
r am pus. three a re enrolled at t~e Coli.,.., at Oswego.
and the Univel"l'ity Centers at Binghamtob"~ and Stony
Brook each have one participating stu~.l. ...

CLUB/
International Colree Hour
Winter is comiflK! Let's ~et together. New and old
· students, come share a warm and ~ time. .'J'be...JpteJ~

DOtional Colree Hours are beld.on every other l&lt;ridly, -.s

p.m. in Norton Hall. Tbe data fOtthe.comine Coft'ee Houn
are: Nov. 1, Room 233,1ndian Student "-ociation;'Nov. 15,
Roam 233, ChU.. Student Aoloc:iatioa: Dee. 6, Roam 233,
lntA!roational Colree Hour.
·
'The lntA!mational Coprdinator o( . SA ood the lntA!r·
national Student Comm.itt. extend a welcome to everyone.
·s tudent -~tiOD • •
' • ·· •
n.. lndU. StudODt . .A.ociotioa ..;u be cmbnoting
~b\Navom~'lllll:..-r~•-~

India

-~~ :the,..,.... omd1!1f!.W.:~'bll-u.,JIIW.

· ~~ :f::'t!=-~ la .OPSA. Coli Rovi ot83?·
W.,.;;_'•
Club Ia~ Group
Feeli111&lt; loot? Would ,... like to pt o. .y hom your donn
or apartaient from time to time and KW:t to bow a local fami·
ly who woukl make you feel welcome, cive you aD occaaiooal
meal, and take you with them on family outinp?
'J'bon why not .;,.. up ror tbe Cultwol E&amp;chonp
~! Thio _.,.boa boon orpDi&gt;ed ror ......I yeon
by memben o( tbe lntematiallal Committee o( tbe

w-.•

==-~!::":,":!7~~~~~
their .......... in tbe Ullitad-.

-illoo- ,_a - -

Often in,.........- itio-,.dillicultto- loc:ol-- .in their_,- but IIIIo--"*
_tJ.t
_ ._wajty. Root
..... _ _ ..,_
oltbeloc:ol~butaD

SUNY

USSR
'
Exchange StudentS

EDlTOR'S f¥.0TE: Stat~ UniVf!nity at Buffalo
of
rounw. n_ntthr onl.v unit wit/fin State Univeroity with
fnMRn • tudmt• ondlnr forriRn excluJ~ prof(rDrM. In
odditimo to other ·indiuilluDl campua effort. in thio
fir/d. """rra/ Stotr 1/nium~ity-witk forriRn •tudent
pfORromR iJrt' in opnation. 171~ (ollowiRR U an account
of thr brRinnill/1 nf a SUNY-Souirt Union rxcluJ~

u.

proflram.

\

'"'

Leoo than a week beflli"O leavi ,.-for a semester of
la....,_..tudy in Moocow. a ~Pol State Univl'rli·
ty of New Yllrhtudento met. mingled, aDd exchan«ed .
viewo with Soviet counterpart&amp; who bad juot -.rrived
tn belrin otudieil ai State Univenity at Albany.
Both ~ps were . , - . of state U~t¥
Cballtellnr E.- -..L. Boyer and Mn. Boyer fm a
trllditinnal American picnic: at 1M Cliancellor'i
H...-. They- welcomed by Cbaacellor Boyer and
State Univenity at Albany Plaideat Louis T.
Benezet. who ...... •b!Jut tbe aap;rmc- both
nationo held for the ~ the lint ouch un-~uata ~ between tbe Unitad States and
tbe Soviet Union.
The pioneer~~~~! efFort formalised. 1aot -April
" ' - Chmleallar Boyor aDd tile Soviet Mlnllby ol
Hittber Bdueadaa lli!IDed an ~ 1D M - .
Wbile
io
It i1 hoped that 11101'1:. ouch SUNY-8owlat Ualall
pqrama can be developed iD ather~- •
· The 8oYiet atudenta wUI Uve- in UJlivenity

the--- far.,..,......,_.......,_

_
, to belp vlollbo!r otudoDia ... -~
... ..... to .... their lla1 iD .......... •
. •

___
,.....ilollllloa......,....,.....,.ao
~--.....~-- .

........tbe_,..,,...,afudl7 ...........
•JI.Utldo
. - .. ,
_
._
,_
atlipto~ .....
_
_••
_
_.....
_ ...............
I

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

liDauta..........,.._la ... ,.....llladoo&amp;Oitlotlllld
- oliaaJd
wiiWa. olloot ....
~----~~~ bolllc"-te•'flolllowfanipolu·
obould call Cllatlalla ..._ at -..n .. Alko
Tho 1 . . - t
~·---

~ol•W-'oaabaloo

· - - - ..._........;
tbe ~,......, o(
'nety-'&gt;10 L1L tmlll- lit doe tiJilwailr
~ Clnadl. Mala . _ (at tbe N~ FaDe Baalnanll .

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERsiTY AT BUFFALO •

VOL 6, NO. 7

OCTOBER 17, 1974

Arts panel
named for
.Amherst
A Commemorative Arts and Arts
Management Committee to make
recommendations concerning use of,
and decor and dedicatory ceremonies
for, arts faOiities on the Amherst Campus
,. was named ,this week by President
Robert l. Ketter.
In making the comm!ttee appointments, Ketter indicated there are
..._......_ seven performance areas, ranging in
capacity from 350 to 10,000 seats, arid .one
gallery space projected Jor the new campus.
The Arts Committee, to be headed b)
Esther Swartz, assistant to the presilfent
for cUltural affairs, received a four-part
charge:
1. To propose a series of artistic events
to commemorate the formal opening of
the various buildings which will constitute the Fine Arts Complex on the
Amherst Campus. These ,events might
call fo r artistic creatiQns to be specifically
commissioned for this purpose, Ketter
said.
2. To suggest the .commissioning
and/ or acquisition of specific art objects
to serve as part of the decor of the
Amherst Campus.
3. To identify possible fu nding sources
for these.
4 . To recommend : (a) an administrative structure for managing fine
arts facilities not specifically assigned to
given academic units; and (b) guidelines
for the utilization of th~e facilities.
-- ~ ln3ddition ~o the Ellicott Complex
theatre with a capacity of 200-250 which
will be opened for use next semester, the
Amherst arts facilities will include:
• A 350-seat auditorium for films, lectures, poetry readings and recitals, to be
included in the student activities section
of the Capen administrative-library com___ plex, scheduled for occupancy in
September 19n.
.
• A 700-seat Chamber Hall for musical
performances, to be ready in December
19n.

,---theatre: pretty, but ·not yet pe~ect
lasl week College B proudly introduced the Buffalo String Quartet, its
own quanet·in-resldence, for their
. ... premiere performance in the new
Ellicott Complex.
The sealns was the Drama Workshop,
a sturinlnsJy beautiful facility that sits in
· the very hean of the Complex.
The Workshop IS a lhtle architectural
~. Inlaid with brishtiY polished oak
that Is rumored to have cost a modest
fomsne. Instead Of conventional seating
It boasts enormous oak bl9cks,
playthings for a Titan's child, that are
equally adaptable for seating and performance.
U......Dellp
Unusual design solutions were .used
through'out ti;Je facility. Explained campus facilities planno:.r John Neal, his own
pet gimmick is the co-mingling of the
theatre catwalk and the structural steel or
the roof.
The lig~t( system is particularly

sophisticated: The Planning· Office .,S.
timates that the.system. which indudes a
huge ct.ritrol panel .and Its own power'
pack, represents an investment of several
hundredS of thousands ol dollars. An
elaborate sound 5YStem is also part of the.
facility but has not yet been delivered.
Ushdna Snafu
Prior 1o last' week's &lt;'oncert College B
had arranged to have the ovethead lights
· turned on. Apparently because of a
breakdown in communication with
Maintenance, the required lights
remained off. While · the ·audience, including several top administrators,
waited, a search for ~he key to the control room began. Eventually; recalls 'a
member of the audience, "a man W:ith a
helmet" mana~ to get into the control
room, bU1 coufd noj find the proper key
for the overhead lights. Finally, floor
ljimps were' brought down from student
rooms, and the concert got underway.
"It was a lovely concert anyway," a

• The.10,000-seat fieldhouse which will
be used for large popular concerts as
well as for athletics and is expected to be
ready in September 1978. • A theatre-gallery complex,·to open in
May 1979, which will feature an open
theatre space seating 550, a proscenium
theatre seating 1,050, and an art gallery
with 7,000 square feet of exhibit space;
and
•
• An outdoor theatre, adjacent to lake
LaSalle, an expandable facility possibly
accommodating 300-700, projected for
completion ill May 1979.
Serving on the Arts Committee along
with Ms. Swartz are a panel of
representatives from both UIB and the
community.
"university representatives are:
James Blackhurst, chairman, Music
Department; Harold Cohen, dean of the
School of Architecture and1:nvironmental - Design; leslie Fiedler, chairman,

College B•spokesman .added.
The lighting snafu dramatizes the
"bugs" that have led .Facilities Planning
Vice Presid,ent John T!'Ifer to keep the
trum to ~It@ S. col. 1)
facility officially closed until next
semester. Situations lilte that lasl week
are .to _be expected whenever a.... new
facility is being broken-in, Telfer said, but
other problems faced by the new theatre are not SO minor.
The State University Construction
The major factor putting off full utiliza- . Fund and jhe University's Office of
tion of the theatre, Telfer explained,'is
Faciljties Planning report tliat the conthe lack of a skilled technical directractor now expects delivery .of llghtins
tor/manager to supervise use ' of the , standards for the Amherst Campus by
theatre's valuable equipment. The
the end of October.
University's Investment must be
Installation will be started immediately'
protected for future generations of
with energizing of these llshts
students, the planner said.
·
proceeding incrementally as possible.
•· As a.result, the t..eatre is being reservCompletion is expected by early
ed for simple "assembly" functions for
Vecember. "This is especially Wetcolne
the time being. A committee, headed by
news since the departure of daylight sav· Prof. Thomas Kavanagh, has been naming time will bring earlier darkness to the
ed to write~ job description for a facility
campus," a Facilities Planni.ns
(lurn to p.aRe 2, col. !'
spo~esman says."
·

Amherst lightin&amp; due.by December

�October 17,' 1974

Faculty aid-for lawmakers_
being ·explored by Ketter
briefings which may occur with informal
Exploration of the idea of organozing a
consultations orr little notice. On other
pool of Uni't'!rsity fatuity-staff expenise
occasions, brief position papers in nonwhich could be available to members of
t~nical language are useful. On rare
Western New York's State and Federal
occasions, full-scale studies with formal
~islative delegations has been underrepor~s a~ needed. In all of these
taken by President Roben l. Ketter.
The· President outlined the .program
modes, compilations and Interpretations
of existin&amp; information is more likely to
last week in letters to both area law· ·
make_rs and members of the U/B faculty '
be required than the development of
new knowledge.",
and professional staff.
Ketter indicated to the lawmakers his
commitment to the ~otion, expressed in
Internal Guidelines
his 1974 Commencement address, that
Ketter told faculty and staff tha\ the
" This UniVersity is .. . a public
prngram would be run according.!&amp; these
resourCe . .. :in service of the public." ~ general internal guidelines:
1. Requests for assistance and con·
· Adric:e and Consultation
sultatipn will usually be received by the
One aspo:ct of that public service, he
President-'s Office and, in turn,
said, Can be the provision of advice and
transiiiiited to the dean of graduate and
consultation to our legislators and their
prolessional education. That office will
staffs when it is sought by them, for·cer!&gt;old primary responsibility for coortainly, there is a wide range of societal
dinating
requests with appropriate par:
problems of mutual concern on which
ticipating faculty and staff.
our faculty and staff could provide infor2.
Participating
faculty and staff would
mation and expert opinion .. . ."
be asked to assist in areas for which they
To effect this program, the President
have indicated their willingness to
said, "we would deVelop a roster oL
provide information and advice. {It
faculty and staff who are willing to parshould be emphasized, Ketter said, that
ticipate ... together with a list of topical
these
areas Cannot include legislation
areas in which they hold a particular ex·
which directly affects the State Universiiy
pertise." Requests for assistance received
of !\lew York.)
by the--President's Office would be
3. It would 'be expected that for brief
channeled to appropriate faculty or staff
information exchanges, the faculty or
members and, depending upon the
staff
member would serve without comscope of information sought, early
pensation. If it is anticipated that ex·
r~sponses could be provided. "Cerpenses might be j ncurred, such as in the
tainly," Ketter added, "arrangements
case where a major study is requested,
could be made for more extensive
ap}Jropriate arrangements and unstudies as well." Preliminary guidelines
derstandings would be reached prior to
for the program o~ttlined by Ketter to the
the assumption of a panicular project.
lawmakers include:
1. Participating faculty and staff will
respond with brief efforts as a public service;
2. If it is anticipated that minor ex·
penses will be incurred, appropriate
arrahgements can be made between the
principals prior to the assumption of a
Although credit enrollmeDI in the
project;
University's even·ing division has
3. Arrangements for extensive studies
slumped in the past two years ~.
will be mutually developed through apOct. 10), there has been no conesponpropriate administrative processes, as are
ding let-up in the enthusiasm for nonall other ma}or commitments of ..time and
credit uself-improvement 'courses" ~n
University reso~urces .
to adults. .
The proposed program, Ketter said,
With 1700 adults registered in· ft!i!arly
would be "a less formal, more 'ad hoc'
100 shon-ferm courses- indudlng ficmode of timely consultation"· than that
tion writing, estate planning, p~inting,
series of eonferences between legislative
public· speaking. and. tropical. fish groups and professional associations
enrollment is up by about 13 per cent,
recently initiated by State Assembly
repons Richard l. Fleisher, dir~or of
Speaker Perry B. Duryea, Jr.
the Office for Credit-Free Programs,
Ched&lt; List
.
which, as is Millard AHmore ColleKe, is a
Appended to the lawmakers' letter was
component of the UIB Division ol Cona tentative check list of topical areas in
tinuing Education.
which expenise might be sought. lawFleisher does not believe inflation,
makers .were asked. to check off topics of
blamed for some of the MFC enrollment
concern, add otliers, and g-rally indip,
has been detrimental to his program
dicate if the proposed program seems
and thinks It mf&amp;ht _,have·helped.
useful. ,
.
"Many per$OftS the credit-free
· Faculty were asked to review the same
program as . a leisure-time Ktmty,"
check list for areas in. which they feel
Fleisher says,_uand they are -looking
. ' they 'have particular expenise and would
-at the classes IS an ........._ to other
be prepared to consult and advise. They
leisur~Jfivltles, suCh IS lml'i!lor season
were asked additionally "to add any'subticket programs, where costs have gone
ject' areaSjn which you hold 'expenise
up."
,
and on which you believe legislation is
Most credit-free COUI'Iel carry felllstta- .
currently, or likely to become,
lion
fees
ra"'JJns
from .$25 to $liO for
necessary."
Expressions of interest in establishing · two-hour weekly classes lain&amp; In length
from
four
to
ten
weeb.
At tMR costs,
the program, Ketter said, have come
believes more adulls In Western
' from m~ny quaners in the past. Most Fleisher
N"!Y
York
a~
startlllfl
to
evaluate the
~tly, he indicate&lt;!, "strong suppor't
courses in terms ol c:ostJna "not much
was offered to organoze such a project
more than golns to the roovles once a
during this year's meeting o( the
· .
·graduate faculty."
.
. week."
1
Because of the nature~~­
Indeed, Ketter said, "it is apparent to _
free
program.
he
sees
his
·
as
me that the development of such ~n efthe adult recreation mufcet Ather than
fort by our University would be highly
the
COUrseS
offered
by
MfC_
compatible with and supportive of our
Many people Who sJsn WI for credit·
mission as a public. educational institu·
free instruction are cOIIeP sraduates
lion, and these expressions ol Interest in
who
want to Sharpen thelF l!dJis, learn
utilizins the intellectual resources o1 our
UnivenJty In the service of the State _ something new, or lceep hi touch with
academic
life, Fleisher says.
provide the·context (or organizing-such a ·
,vehicle. Through such a mechanism, we
would hope to bring t~r those who
are willing to _ m'ke their expert
knowieciKe dlrecrly available with those
who holc1 responsibility for the framing
of legislation and ind!Qte the clesire to
obtain such iSSislance and advice.
!'Our experience has shown that many
iexlslators no:ed to supplement formal
11

Blicott theatre-----'------tfmm

(Mflf'

J.•"mJ. Jl

rnamger. The comminee is also establishing guidelines for use of tile space
until that time. Telfer expressed confidence that a manager could be foun'd
and funded by next semester.
Cenain safetr. factors involving the
facility's speciar equipment have also
heightened the planner'I sensitivity .to
the inadvisability of premature use, he
said.
Even after the kinks in the theatre's

operation are smoothed out, not

everyone is going to be completely
satisfied with it. After last week's concert
there were already complaints about the
unconventional seats. "They're beautiful
to look at," admitted one music lover,
"but they don't conform to anyone's
backside."
. Although permanent conventional
seating would violate the. spirit of the
place, folding chairs can be set up on the

raised "shelves" that run
theatre's side walls.

along ~ the

Urban seminar series offered
.....__.
Faculty and advanced students from
any~~ in the University with an
In~ in urban analysis and policy are

invited to partldpate In a biweekly noncredit temlnar currently being offered by
the Center for Polley Studies.
According to . coordinator Joseph
BerechnOn (dvil engineering), the
semi- provides a forum for persom in
various departments who share a common Interest in urban analysis. It is
hoped. Dr. Berechman said, that the
--a- will encou,...e the development
of interdisdpllnary programs, courses,
and -rdlln the field.
•. .
The semi.W bepn September 24 with
• presecllallon by the Erie County Commlllianer for EnviiOIIIIICIIICII Quall!y, Dr.
11llloclcn L Hullu. Durlllfl each sislon
a ficullr spu!cer cllscusMs his current
..-di lnlerests related to the field.
. Future lpelken Include Dr. Thomas
Romans, - - . I a , "Transfer hyments
Md the~ ttl local Area lnc:ome," Ocl8ber D; Dr. Perry Hanson,
-..IIY, "GeotlraPhfcal Crime lnform.dOn'
The lluf&amp;lo Example,"
Nowember--5; Dr. Robert Paaswel~ dvil
ens!~ "Issues in Urban Transportadc¥1 I'IMiiin&amp;" Novenber 19, and Dr.
lbral!im Jammal, architecture and environnW!ntal clesiKn, "The Coooept' ol
Urbln £ilerBy lluilpt." Dea!mber 3.
Next - · Dr. llerec:hll)oln· said,
the limlnar will be extended to aarrent
urban-orlented reseuclt in law,
medicine, end 50dolosr............ the
~ program will familiarize
participants with the broad scope of
current .-rch -ole the field, ~ indicated.

s;....,

The seminar meet1 o'n alternate
Tuesdays, from 3-5 p.m. in W Crosby.
For fur!her i!lformatlori, contaCt Dr.
Bel'i!chman, 831-2035, Or the- Center for
Policy Studies, 831-4044.

Faculty support ~ ·
asked for day care
I

•

In an effort to promore faculty suppon
of University funding for the Day Care
Cente~, a letter, signed by faculty
membi!rs, is being distributed to ali u/8
faciilty.
'
The letter stresses- the imponance of
the Day Care Center to aD ol the -University community .and 15 sisnecfl)y 5honnie
Finnegan, University Archives; James
Lawler, Philosophy Depanment; John
Sullivan, provost, Faculty of Ans . and
Letters; and C.A. Yeracarts: prolessor of
sociology.
. .
"Research and training in early
childhood education has become more
than ever a major sodal responsibility for
higher education," the ·JetTer states. "A
properly funded Day Care Center is a
~ adjunct to this work, which
affects depanments throughout the campu5." _
.
The letter asks faculty members to
demonstrate suppon for University fundins of the Center by wearing .buttons
provided by the- Center. The buttons
have the Dty Can! Center symbol below
.the worch "Unite for ~.. The
letter also reqlleSis .rontrlbutlons eo help
alleviate "the ..,resent emergency
.situation."

Credit-free
enrollmept _u p

�j

October 17, 1974

Bikes"&amp; Jensen·
·steal show at ·
college· hearings
Side debates on Jensenism and bicyde
riding for credit took center stage at last
week's first public hearings on'the Chartering of the colleges.
Each of the 12 presently operating
colleges must go through the hearings
and other deliberations to gain charten
for their continued existence after thiS
semester.
The hearing on the environmentally·

oriented Rachel Carson College brought
the bicycle del:\ate. RCC offers several
one·hour credit courses dealing with
outdoor skills. One of these involves
bicycles.
.J
Responding to particular criticism pf
the bicycle course, Mark Bronstein,
coordinator of outdoor activities for
RCC, noted that skill in biking is not the
major consideration. Rather, he said, the
purpose of the course is to teach an en-

vironmental ethic involving an
ecologically sound alternate method of
transportation. There are nine classroom
sessions and three sessions outdoors.
Dr. Beverly Paigen, a faculty coordinator for the College, noted that the
outdoor skills courses account for only

· lltft't'l'man's 'Study of Lftli.

~.'

2l" al1 ".

Breverman show features U/8 fig_ures
A show of "Selected Graphics, 19761974," by U/B Art Professor· Harvey
Breverman is being featured at the
Gallery Without Walls, 460 Franklin ·
Stfee(, thr?u.gh November 16. • . · .
The exh•bi.t lnclucJes 20 etchlngs, and
photORraphs, many created with grant
suppon from the National Endowment
for the.Arts (1974-75), the New York State
Counal on the Arts (1972), and the SUNY
Research · Foundation. ·
Opening concurrently in Buff~lo and
at the Impressions Workshop and
Gallery, Boston, Mass., the exhibit con- .
sists of a series of large works which, in
Brevennan's Words, nfocus on the expressive qualities of the human figure:• A number of the subjects are noted
wrlten, poets and musidans affiliated
with U/11.
llrevennan, who has worked exten- ·
sively In the realm of graphic art, is
described as "a master In this medium/ '
by Sylvan Cole, Jr., president of the
Associated American ArJi$1s, In an in··
troductlon to the catalogue accompanying the local exhibition.
'··
The llftis_t'.s "~ler i~~Yglnary composltiol\s." Cple .says, ha1le. glveri" way in
this show to "more
lmqes
that Me meticulouoly related to their
linear environment~ and bordering
elemeiits. Rls oubjects..are SPeCific
enough to ew»ke real, Jndlvldtsals, yet
general enough to ler one enJoY form
and surfKe qualities. The austerity of the
bacqround, broken only by straight,
aanec1 or raqed lines, plays off against
COIIIOUrS of the llgu~. creating a delicate
tension between figure and ground. The
sPatial mntext is sensed rather ~n ex-

natu....,

Piidr.

•

--

:·In celebrating people and-a compassiOn for life, this eXhibition demonstrates
the &lt;lOnllnulng vitality of the figurative
tr.dition In American prlntma\lng,"
Cole mncludes.
. :.Breverman. who also has a comprehensive exhibition of 38 drawings and
prints opening October 20 at Middle
Tennessee State· University, has just
returned from IWO weeks as a visiting ar-

~

-appoinbnents,_..... .

Or. John Isbell has been named ading
chalrman _of the Department of
Mathematics, effective tanuary 15
Jbroullh tune 1, 1975, &lt;tnd Or. Alfredo
~MatUla will serve as acting director of the
PuertO Rican Studies Program, through
Augusa · Jl, 1~, President Robert L ·
keller announced this week.

tist at O Xford University's Ruskin Schooi
of Fine Arts, England. An exhibition of
his work was featured at O xford 's
Museum of Modern Art.
He is currently representing the U.S. in
the Seco~d Norwegian International
Graphics Bie'nnial in Fre d rikst ad
Norway, and ~as had rece nt one-ma n ex~
hibitions in New York City, San Francisco
and Washington, D.C.

His works have recently been acquired
for the collectio ns of the Victo ria and
Al bert M u se u m , l ondo n, a nd t he
C leve l a nd Mu se um . He is a lso
re prese nted in the holdings of such instit utions as the Museum of Modern Art,
th e Wh itney Museum, Jhe AlbrightKnox, the N a tiona ~ Collection of Fine
Arts, and the Library of Congress, among
others.
.

Dr. LaForge provides fund for
U/B med studeot ·scholarships
Dr. Harry G. l2Forge, ·a graduate of
both the School of Medicine and the
5chool of Pharmacy, has made $16,000
available to· the U/11 Foundation for use
by medical students as emergency short~
term loans.
The $16,000 represents funds which
have accumulated in the former Medical
School Student Council loan Fund. Dr.
Laforge and a 1934 classmate, Dr. J.
EdWin Alford, have been trustees of this
fund which has not expe;ienced a loan
default ~ce Its inception In 1935.
As chairman of a campaign to increase
the principal !&gt;1 the loan fund, Dr.
Laforge Is asking an former recipients to
contribute amounts equal to their
original loans. Dr. Pasquale Greco, a 1941
graduate of the medical school and chief
of urology at .the Millard Fillmore
Hospital, was granted such a loan. last
month, Dr. Greco made $50,000 available
to the UIB Foundation for medical stu·
dent scholanhlp assistance as opposed to
short-term ~Ides.
Monleo from
Unhlenlty ai Buffalo
Medical School Student loan Fund, its
, _ name, are IM!IIable to upperclass
·medical student~ In good standing
· academically. Applications are In the office of the dein of the ,medical school.
Dr. Laforge Is past president of the
Buffalo Academy of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists and past president of the
B!lffalo General Hospital Medical BOard.
He Is a Diplomate of the National Board
of Medical Examiners, a Fellow of the
American ~ of Sulgeons and a
Founding Fellow of the American
College of Obstetriq and Gynecology.
In 1944 he established another student·

100 of 1,300 credit hours being taken in
RCC this semeste r. But, she added, " If
you can give Cred it fo r bowling at this
University, why not bicycling?"
Dr. Paigen noted that RCC has done
much more than offer outdoors courses
in its four years of operation. Students in
th e College were adively involved in the
air pollution a g reeme n~ under which
Bethlehe m Steel promised to install $40
million in ·pollution abatement equipme nt in its Lackawanna facil ities over the
next two and one-half years. The design
of McCarthy Park near the Buffalo Meter
Plant was another RCC project, one
which the City has funded for development next year. An RCC student also
dev~ loped an open space index of Buffalo and has been hired by th!' County to
complete the study for use by planning
officials, Dr. Paigen reported.
·
Courses on race and intelligence
proposed by Social Sciences College for
next semester touched off a debate over
the hypothetical question of whether or
not such figures as Dr. Arthur R. Jensen
and William Shockley, advocates of a
theory of genetically-determined .intelligence differences between whites
and bbc:ks, ·would. or shOuld be allowed
on campus to outline their positions.
Dr. James lawler, assistant professor of
philosophy, who is one of the faculty
memben developing the projected .
course, noted that while the offering will
be critical of Jensen and his colleagues,
"we must represent their viewpofrlts.''
Reaction was split on the issue .of letting Jensen speak here with one
professor questioning the use of College
funds for this purpose.
Dr. WHllam B. Stein, administrative offleer of Social Sciences College, said he
suspected that If It came clown to It, the
administration would hlten~ene to keep
Jensen from appearjng In order to prevent a riot.

Minority bUsi~

cf...ectory avalable
A Minority Business Directory has just
been published by the Minority
Manage111ent Assistance Program
(MMAP) of the School of Management.
The directory lists 597 minority
loan fund bearing his naine, from which
businesSes in 109 dlfferJ:nt categories
$20.000 has been loaned to medical al!d
rangi"'
from accountlng'\o wigs. All of
pharmacy students. In 19411, he establiSh-,
the businesses listed are located ln Bufed a research fund at Buffalo General
falo, Rochester or the surrounding areas
Hospital.
of Western New York.
Sanford M. Lottor, assistant dean of the
~0rbh0ps ...; . School of Management and project
director for MMAP, explained that the
Ulll's Open Education Center will
purpose of the directory Is "to make the
offer a series of 12 workshops !leginnlng • general · public and majority company
October 21 for elementary dassroom
purchasing agents aware of the number
teache~ and other schOol personnel.
and variety of minority business esThe sessions Will be taught by University
tablishments in this area."
faculty members, two British exchange
Free copies of the directory may be
teachers.'and sever~l teachers from area
obtained by writing or calling the
· sChools.
. Minority Management Assistance
The center director Is Dr. Richard
Program (831-31071, 12SA . Crosby Hall,
Salzer. Call 83.1-2421 for further informaState University of New York at Buffalo, .
tion.
BUffalo, N.Y. 14n4.
•

·Open Ed

�October 17, 1974

. . 12211&amp;

-4

-Staff Senate sets charges ·for six committe~
Charges for -six committees - on
orientation, events, elections, con·
terence attendance and !ravel policy,
membership, znd recognition and '
awards - have been adopted by the
Professional Staff Senate, Senate vice
chairperson Walter N. Kunz reports.
Kunz notes that any member of the
non-teaJ:hing professional staff inter~sted ih serving_ as a member,
cha1rperson or co-chairperson of one or
mort; of t~e a:'mmittees should _contact
Phylhs Vertch ~~ the .Senate Off1ce, ext.
2223, by October 25. _
Addlttonal ~ommtttees may be
created, Kunz sa1d.
.
Text of the charges to the comm1ttees
follows:
J..
1. Orienbllion Committee
New staff employees are members of
the ProfeSsional Staff Senate from their
first day of work at the University. Often
the information they receive, the extent
of their introduction to the University
community, and th~ir involvement in activities outside each person's job, are the
result of various uncoordinated events
and actions.
The committee . will first take action
and make recommendations in the
following areas:
(1) Prepare an introductory letter to be
sent to each new staff person from the
ProfessiQnal Staff Senate. (2) Assemble information that the
committee determines would be important for distribution to new staff (to accompany the letter). Careful consideration should be given to not duplicate
what a new employee receives from the ·
Personnel Department.
(3) Review the current orientation
sessions, welcoming receptions, etc.,
held by the. University for new staff.
Make recommendations regardmg 1mprovements in these University functions
and additional actions that should be
taken by the Professional Staff Senate.
(4) Continue the woft( of :last year's
&lt;ommittee regarding 'Professional-staff
Senate Senator orientation and' make
changes the committee- feels are ap~ - ·
1&gt;fOpriate.
151 Make recommendations to the Ex-ecutive Committee, or, with Executive
Committee approval, take action on
:matters that the committee feels are important in this area.
J. ~ Commlllee
The Professional Staff Senate is a
developing organiution. Functions have
been both planned for and evolved.
Continuous thought to new or changed

functioning is critical to Jhe vitality of1
the organization:
./
Initially, the Events Committee should
exa.mine the notion of P.S.S. involvement
in recreational and/or social activities.
A report from this ·committee wo\JI~
include a recommendation regarding the
extent to which P.S.S. should be involved
· in social and recreational functions.
.It is assumed t~at should ·the comm1ttee members fmd the above mentioned ki~d.s of activ_ities aP.propriate, it
would so!rctt· su~gestiOns ~rom members
and prov1de a lost of po_ss1ble events. .
A report to the Executtve Committee •s
due on December 15, 1974.
3. Bectlons Committee .
As stated in the Constitution of the
Professional Staff Senate, a Standin~
Committee on Elections is required.
Article 11 _ Elections of the
Professional Staff Senate Constitution
describes the constitutional minimum
for the Elections Committee.
In addition to the Charge stated in Anide 11, the Elections Committee for 197475 will conduct other elections as requested by the Executive Committee.
Written notice from the Executive
Committee, transmitted by the secretary, .
will be given to the Elections Committee
for the ·conducting of all elections or
relenndums within the Professional Staff
Senatt . .._
follo"(ing each election the Secretary
shall be informed of the outcome of
each election so that the officers, and
members of the Executive Committee
_can immediately be informed of the
results.
A complete , record of nomination
procedures, ballot procedures and other
policies adopted-by the Elections Committee will be kept. This will be available
to the Executive Committee.

Both valid and invalid nomi nation and
final election ballots for all elections conducted f?y the Elections Committee will
be kept and at convenient times
transmitted to ·the Senate Oifice for
storage.
The officers and members of the Executive Committee can be called upon at
any time for advice and assistance.
4• Conference Attendance and Travel
Policy C
itt
1 . Asse~~~ c:rent policies and
procedures, both State and SUNY/B,
regarding_travel on State funds, both instate and out-of-state.
·
2 . Assemble current policies and
procedures, both State and SUNY/8,
regarding payment of conference
registration or attendance fees. This
should 'inClude such items as national,
regional meetings, short seminars" and
workshops (1-5 days), and programs of
longer duration.
3. Investigate current University
philosophy regarding travel.
4. Review these policies, procedures,
including the in-house method of travel
review, d'e cis ion· making and
philosophy.
5. Make recommendations to the Executive Committee, based on this
review. These recommendations should
include recommended changes in the
current policy , procedures, and
philosophy, and any recommendations
for new policies/procedureS.
6. A preliminary report will be due
December 1, 1974, and a final report on
January 15, 197_!;.
7. Reports should be addressed to· the
Executive Committee of the Professional
Staff Senate.
5. M benhlp Commllt
Th:'duties of the me:'bership com·tt
h 11 be·
ma ee s a
·

1. ' Establish and "'!'intain listings of
current memberships in the senate.
. These listings should include:
alphabetical listings,_ listing by area
(alphabetical), and by office in which the
employee works, including name, title,
campus address, telephone number, and
type of-appointment: management/confidential, 5-year term, permanent ap:.
pointmen~, or ter~ appointment, as w~ll
as other mformauon the membersh1p
_committ~ dete~mines. . .
.
2: Prov1de necessary hst1':'gs to Senate
Off1ce and Senate &lt;;omm1ttees on request. .
-;....
.
3. Prov1de to th~ Execut1ve Ct&gt;mm'!'lee,
through the Cha1rperson, ~a~, t1tles,
addresses for each new pro ess,onal staff
employ~.
.
.
4. Prov•de to the ~xecutJve Committee,
thr?ugh the C~alrperson, a monthly
!~sling of professional staff pr?mollons,
tJtle changes, temporary assagnments,
etc.
.
.
5. ProVIde to the ~nate an explanation
of Staff membership.
.
.
. 6. T~ ~rry out suet:- speofic stud•~ or
•nvest•gah~ns regarding mem~rsh•p as
m~y be assigned by the Executive Commanee.
i. llec:opollion and Awuds c-mlltee
1. Gather information regarding the
recognition of professional service from
other institutions of higher education,
industry, government.
2. Review the current SUNY Teaching
Awards Program.
3. formulate, for Executive Committee
and Senate review, a rationale and set of
criteria and procedures for the recognition of professional' service by
Professional Staff at SUNY/B.
4. Submit the Committee's report to
the Executive Committee by february 28,

1975.

:. R~~c;ling in_ .ed_i.alect said not a
The. child who givl!S a .Black- d ialect
"translation" when reading aloud from a
standard English text is not exhibitin"g a
learning prpblem, a former U/B education faculty member and a Michigan
State professor contend in an artiCle in
the Septeml?er issue of Elementary
English.

-

rect~, they may ihi~k 'that they have noi

recognized the word or they may
become confused over the rule about
"ed" and end up reading help!ed for a
peripd of time. If they read hep fluently
and' are able to explain what someone
was doing in The story, they · comprehended and actually read correctly in
their dialect. When meaning is received,
it must be integrated with the linguistic
and conceptual system that the reader
knows. Oral reading may be used by the .
teacher to diagnose a child's reading. but
it must be recognized that oral reading is
productive and not by Itself an indicator
of the meaning a student has received. 1 •
When students are taught to read In the
reacher's dialect, ~ may have satisfied
the teacher's requiren)eflt, but may have
des\royed for themselves the Idea that
the goal of reading i.s meaning. If ,the
teacher and the reader concentrate on
an oral production rea!'ling Vl(hich·is not
in the reader's mother tongue, meaning
~":,-~~ most part becoiT)es tfle.fJtal Yic-

pr9bl~t:n. .

young pi,o'ple&gt;Vho have begun to reject
the middle class values of the dominant ·
economic classes "and may in tum reject
the dialects of· the dominant classes
because they view them as the language
of life establishment; the language of the
assimilationists, and the language of the
oppressors.
·

Rudine Sims, formerly assistant
"This awareness is ultimately related to
. professor -o.f education here, and Yetta
whether the student has the need to exGoodman, an associate professor at East
pand language and communicate with
lansing, point out that, on the contrary,
speakers of dialects different from his or
reading miscue research has shown that
her own. As students reject aspects of a
when students do thiS, they are· comdominant cuhure, reading In Itself may
prebending !Vhat they are reading. .
become a target for some young people
In .studies conducted at Wayne State .
and it may become 'cool' not to become
University, for exan&gt;ple, Black - dialect .;
too
good at reading.
·
The Depanment of Speech Comspeakers frequently. read standard
mun1ca11on will begin offering Its first · English structures orally as Black dialect.
OWed 5wlldalaos .
This was particularly true with verb
undergraduate course In ,transactional
"Teac;hers whO are .good ~ are
.analysis next January.
·
forms, such as those Involving· the third
aware that many 5tuCients !lave the ability
The course (No. 221, "Introduction to
person ·singular "5" fOrm or the Past ~
to
~ dialects depi!ndlll(l on ilme and
T.......aiOnal AnalYsis" - no ·preretense "ed" marker.
f.oflR5 '1\'Pr~
~- We need to " - mUch more
qulsltes) will be taught' by Dr. Gerald M.
.frequently misread as unmarked; e.g.,
about
the proficiency of dialect
Galdhaber, associate chairman· of the
Leroy pointed io Ollie was read L~y
switchfn&amp;._ whld! may she us insights
department and a clOse friend of Thomas~
point to Ollie. ·
Into wli~'stucfeals)IUIIclpate'fn this K·
Harris, author of the best-selling book on '
But, Ms. Sims and her co-author point
Dialed ~ Dlfflailly
tivlty and whep_~ .._it Is done.
T/A, ft1t 0« _ l'CMI'Ie oc.
- out, the changes wece.only surface ones;
· Or. Goldhaber himself iS co-author of
st.u dents retained-the meanings of the
,Ch.ildren who have. ~ ·dialect different
''Eth._triC:' ~ build Into
C-rc:.rJoot holies; · which has
orfslnalsentences. "ltmustbeOHUmed,"
from the one the teacher speaks are,
their tests and techniques lanpaage det.ecDme lhe fastest selling college text- - they contend,~ for the translation to
thus, more likely to ;have trouble In
vi&lt;es which prove that lhe stUdents are
r~ing than lhe youngster who speaks
1oool&lt; on Interpersonal· communications . ~r, ~ had t9 come
speakers of a low dialec:i rather
• like the teacher, Ms. Sims and Ms. Goodshlce Its publication In March by Science
f11st.·
·
.
than ~ lnfonnatlon about the
man point out.
a-m A~~oc:~ates- ,
. _ . . Nol 'l'laducthe'
profidency af a studenr'H8acllns- StanHeaalsolhealhl-ofOop;alulftwllil · _ Reading is after all; they say, not a
"It is possible/' they say, ''that in trying
dardized especially caribot deal
(Wm. C. Brown ·eo.).
productive process but a. receotive one.
with the ecperiences, "-'edp and
to solve the problem, .., have:loolted at
And, In fact, "some studies suggest that
readers and "their language as the·
languap which' -aomlcajiY poor
inner city youngsters may be able to
students mJsht al~ or r.te to.
probleln rather than -.to examine the
receive a broader range of dialect
The degree of ODIIlfort a student feels In
complex psychcHocjo-cultural aspects in
differences than more affluent
a' situation where readlns assessment
the society which may shed light on the
youngsters," because of a broader range
issues.
takes ~ also lndlc::ates that other facof experiences with dialects, ranging
. ton besides reading profidency may be
"The attitude that people have - r d
from television language through school
involved.
·
dialect. Is of great Importance. The way in
· ·•
language"io ghetto street tal~.
"Uttle has been dofte to stud)' wt..t
which a teacher aa:ep1s or rejects .a
And what has been·recelved In reading
student's language may enhance or · students must read In order to survive In
is more Important than oral "productheir. worlds,H the CIO-authon oontencl.
tion" of standard English, the co-authors
destroy a j&gt;osltlve self-&lt;Oneept. which
"To what extent do students who haft
say.
has strons bearing on ldmJns to read.
low scores In reaclfns p!tiS written 1es1s
Too often, Ms. Sims and Ms. Goodman
-The attitude that Blilc:lt&amp;gtisliVemacular
for driver's nce-r Examlnrng the
write, the teaching of reading Is conIs low status permeates the educational
cultural envlror...- of -.clenls and
fused with c:hanldnK the orallanguap of
establishment, and eYelJ speakers of that
~.. .._people In that environdialect .often suppoct the school In their
the ~. "Ofteil when students are
ment -survive In Nlatlonshlp to literate
attemptS to eradli:ate low status dialects.
corrected when readi"i ora~they are r
not ...,. of why they are
mraalvltles might present • rallstlc
"1-!owever, In this period of Black picture' of the extent of reading ·
rected. If students uy wt..t sou
Hke ~
problems than we haft had before."
awamH!SS then: Is a growing force of
hep when they read helped and are a&gt;r·

TA .tourse planned .

for next ·seniester .

Sum

I

�October 17, 1974

OT assistance
now available
at area school

Occupational therapy has-reached out
from its traditionally hospitar-clinical setting into Depew's .Cayuga Heights
Elementary School to provide evaluation
'and treatment for youngsters who have

learning diSabilities and are in special
education clasSes.

The first public school-based occupational therapy program in...Western

New York developed at the school this
fall is an outgrowth of concern as to how
to provide these youngsters better treatment in conjunction with classwork, ac·
cording to principal Dr. Joseph Lazzaro.
0
Students with learning disabilities in
motor development, . eye-hand coordinatiOn and visual perception are
enrolled' in our Special Educational
Needs dassses. But we felt the clinically
oriented trairling of an occupational·
therapist would allow more individualized evaluation and treatment
for these children than special education
was geared to provide," he said.
- Ms. Sylvia Rumsey, an occupatiolial
therapy instructor at U/B, visits the
school once a week. Taking referrals
from special education teachers, she
observes students in the classroom setting and then begins indlvidual evaluation an·d treatment programs which can
be easily integrated into the student's
classwork.
.
"Some d!ildren with learning disabilities have line motor problems- difficulty _picking up objects, drawing or
writing. Those with gross motor
problems may have difficulty maintain ing balance needed lor walking and
other activities. Still others have visual
perception problems," she said.
An additional problem facing these
youngsters - who are of ~verage or
above-average intelligence - is frustration from pUt leamina: iftuations'!" ''They
have lrequentfy'bite&lt;f'to'beablll)o.do ·
activities they saw others their age doing
witt) . ~P.parent ease, and frustration
toward .le.t~rning has often rest.tlted," she
added.
Evaluation .of each child involves
assessment of his strengths as well as his
weaknesses. "A child could have good
auditory perception but poor visual
perception. When the teacher is aware.
of the child's evaluation and therapy
program, she can help reinforce the
strong points .as well as recognize and
work with him on the weaker ones," Ms.
Rumsey said.
Parents are kept current on their
· child's progress-through orientation, giving opportunity for two-way communication between the therapist and
~
and parents.
s. Rumsey's exper·i ence with
evaluating and treating youngsters with
learning disabilities .at Children's
Hospital Rehabilitation .Center has been
helpful In preparing the Cayuga Heights
prosram, she said.

U/8-Kariazawa affiliation celebrated

better understanding among all noThe affiliation agreement between the
quality of the ultimate end product,
University at Buffalo and Kanazawa
tions," the Executive Vice President said.
rather than with numbers and quantity."
University, Japan, will; hopefully, lead
At the dinner, Thursday, October 10,
the two institutions to: initiate an effec·
in Goodyear-10, President Toyota, who
The Council Citation, "the highest
honor that this University can confer,"
tive faculty-student exchange program,
had earlier received a "key to the
has been presented only on two occkve)op an exchange of scholarly
University" was honored with a gilt,
casions· since the University at Buffalo
mate rials, and engage in common
a piece of Steuben Glass Star Crystal from
became a member of the State University
research projects, Executive Vice Presithe Corning Glass Works, and a Universident Albert Somit said last week at a
ty Council Citation.
of New .York in 1962, Council Chairman
William Baird indicated in making the
The Star Crystal, a product of a small
campus dinner honoring Dr. Bun-ichi
Toyota, president·of the Japanese univerfirm which emphasizes individually
presentation. It was awarded to Dr.
Toyota "lor his outstanding
sity. ·
hand--crafted, quality works, is, Dr. Somit
"Both universities are committed to
said, a symbol of "the kind of
achievements .in the field of higher
education and for his leadership in the
these common goals, and we look
relationship that we' hope will develop
forward to their future implemenbetween your University and ours. It will
development and implementation of the
affiliation agreement between Kanazawa
be, we trust, a relationshi p built around
tation," Somit indicated.
University and the State University of
The quest for knowledge recognizes
the individual scholar, scientist, and stuNew York at Buffalo."
dent; one wflich is concerned with the
neither political nor geographic boundaries, Somit said. "More than 1-400
. .
.
students rrom all . over the world are
studyingattheUmversil)'atBuffaiO. we·. '
are deliRhted that in the Rroup are manv
/,
excellent Japanese scholars working
with our faculty in such diverse fields as
·
,
.
allergy research, bioenergetics, chemical,
Edward V. Regan said, "I have SUSBested
Erie County offidals this week were
en11ineering, chemistry, medicine,
to SUNY officials, Meyer Hospital staff,
reportedly studying a plan under which
microbiology, oral biology , and
the Governor's Office and our own
State University would rent space for
pediatrics. ...nd our own program of
Department of Public Works that we
in
the
new
Erie
County
Hospital
for
U/
B
.studies, offer'ed for American students,
should seek to lind in the structure now
an annual fee of $1.26 million.
indudes Spoken Japanese, the· Peoples
under
construction the space needed, if
According
to
reports,
State
rental
of
and Culiure of Japan, Japanese History,
it can be accomplished without sacrific88,000 square feet in the hospital, which
Eastern Philosophy, and 'a Survey of Asian
ing
patient
care needs." ·
is now under construction, would both
Cultures. All of us recognize how inmeet University needs and help the
terrelated we are; how dosely we are
County pay escalating construction costs
The primary lienefn of the plan, Regan
bound together; how much we have to
said, is "that it will allow the State -to
lor the facility.
share with ea,ch other.- As knowledge
An original design plan had called for
share in: our c:OnbructiOn -cOsu:-''· Costs
grows larger, the world grows smaller.
adding a whole tower to the 754-bed
for. the new fa&lt;;ll~ have . gr~wn from
"Sciepce advances on the basis of many
hospital to provide lor University needs.
$875 million to $130 million since the
small, Individual contributions," Somit
project began in 1971.
Now, however, County Executive
pointed out. "Alon~, ~ these may be
relatively modest; collectively, they have
produced, in the past two&gt;clecades, the
greatest scientific advances in human
history.·SO, we hope, it will be with the
quest lor international understanding
and goodwill. We share with our friends
in Kanazawa the .aspiration that our
cooperative educational efforts will
FACUln
eventually contribute, however modestAssistant Professor, Pharmacology and Therapeutics&gt;
ly, to better understanding between our
Associate
Professor,
Department
oi:Psyr:hiMty.
two nations and, i n the long ru·n., to
Instructor/Assistant Professor, Child Health Nursing..
Thll! Amherst Campus area Is likely to
Instructor/Assistant Profe5sor, School Of Dentistry.
have an abundance of motel rooms in
the .yurs-.hucl, acxonjlns to a recent
• - t-"n;;~
report In the AMftent . . .
·NIP
In adcllllon 10 the plan fot I 153-room &gt; 11""'' ,...,. ' · mi. &lt;&gt;
•
Ramada Inn, which would Include space ~ Ensfish Oepartnient; . Jan~ Garver, StuAffirmative Action Officer; Finance and M~ment, PR-5.
191' 1 U/11 faculty-alumni dub; on six
dent Association; Do11ald larson,
Technical Specialist, School of Pharmacy, PR-1.
·
aaes of land at Sweet Home and Chest·
associate vice president for health
Assistant for Instructional Resources, lnstiuctional Communication
• __ .._ nother
1
sciences; Gerald O'Grady, director of
Cenier, PR-2.
·
.
.
.
nut Rid
a ·
mote is prothe Instructional .Communications
Tech_~ical Specialist, Instructional Commu~on C:~~ ~.,P ~. :t:-':~
jected fot the l"tersepion of Sweet
Center; Donald Roberuon, chairman,
Home and Rensch Roads. directly across
Art Department; Gordon Rogoff, chairfrom the campus entrance.
.
. Local busiMwnen will be developers . man, Theatre Department; A. Westley
For additionallnforrnation' concemlng theR .jobs and for details of N1'P
of the Sweet Home-«ensch facility while
Rowland, vice president lor University
. openings throiJghilut the State University ~· conwlt bulletin boards at
the 18-M:re Sweet Home-Chestnut Ridge
relations; "'lien Sapp, professor of music;
these locations:
·
'
.... _ owned by the
Edward Smith, director, Black Drama
plot Is .,...
·1. Bell Facility between D152 and D153; 2. Rldse Lea, Building 4236, next to
.
University at·
Workshop; John Sullival!. proyost of
Buffalo foundation, Inc.
~leter;.; 3. Ridge lea, Bulklilll! 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health Sc:iencleo
H!lliday Inn has for some time had
Fae~~lty of Arts and letters; John Telfer,
Building, In corridor opposite HS 131; 5. ~ Hall, In the corridor between
plans for 1 unit at Maple and Millersport
vice president lor facllitij!5 planning; and
Room 1.41 and the Lobby; 6. lockwood, pound floor in corridor nat to venbut trOUnd for this project has not yet
J. Benjamin Townsend, professor of
ding mXhines; 7. Hayes Hall, In main entrana! foyer, ,.aoss from Public Inforbeen broken.
.
•·
English.
mation Ollke; 8. Adle5on J1all, In corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
Aa:lorcllnllto the llee, th'l, two latest
Representing the community are AnParker Engineering, In corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear HaD, 1st floor,
projects will probably be delayed 'pensie Baird, Melissa Banta, Robert Buck,
Housing Office anea; 11. 11107 Elmwood, Penonnel Department; 12. Norton
dllll!completionbytheTownofAmherst
Max B.E. Cla~n, Judge John Curtin,
Union, Director's Ollke, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hill, In corridor next to
of a ~ "Un~ service dis. William Doolittle, ~obert- Mlllonzi,
R!&gt;0111 .106; 14. John lore!' O'Brian Hall, fourth t!oor i.\J,Iherst·Campus). ,
trier" ·10 be put together by the Town's
Calvin Rand, Mirlain Reading, anet Sue
scm~ atlaffaiD .... fqloal ~~~ Adloa _,..,..
Plannl1111 Board.
Wa.rdynski.

EFie
• ·'-oun
r
ty -mu
. 11s pan
1 for .
J
f
·
•
u 8 renta 0 hospital space

Motels fo..· Amhenf
being plan~

.

_A....-.._,__.'·.- .

se........,

�were employed full-time. Teaching and
Ten-,e.v 5luclenl Sludy .
business were the most popular current
About ' half of the students who
and long-term employment choices of
entered college as.freshmen in·19f;1 and
both groups.
·
1966 earned bachelor's degrees in four
The 156-page report, fme ~nd Ten
. years. By 19n, however, 80 per cent of
Years After Collete fnrry, is $6.50 from
the 1961 freshmen and 60 per cent of the
1966 group· had earned degrees, and the · the Publications Division, American
Council on Education, One Dupont Cirmajority of both grou~ who had not
cle, Washington, D.C. 2!)036.
earned degrees indicated they had not
yet ended their undergraduate studies.
These findings are included in a major
CIYII Rlshts Hearinp
study conducted by the American CounThe U.S. House of Representatives'
cil on Education with ·support from )he
Special Subcommittee on Education has
National Science foundation and the
concluded - for the time being at least
National institutes of Health. It is the first_ - hearings on the civil rights obligations
national longitudinal study of college
of postsecondary institutions. The
students encompassing a ten-year period.
hearings covered ten days in August and
The survey, utilizing data collected by
September and produced testimony
the Council's former Office of Research,
from a total of 30 witnesses.
also found · that women completed unAlbert Shanker, president of the
dergraduate study m9re quiclily than . American Federation of Teachers, told
men. Two-thirds of the 1961 women and
the subcommittee that "the only way to
over half of the women who were
increase minority employment Oppor·
freshmen in 1966 received bachelor's
tunity in higher education is to ·increase
the number of qualifi\!(l applicantS and at
degrees within four years, compared to
the same time increase the available
less ihan one half of the men in each
~roup . Women in both groups also.
positions." ·
.
He said the Afl rejects .the concept
achieved ~ubstanti~lly higher undergraduate grade·point averages than
that affirmati~e action programs to over·
men.

come discrimination must mean a system

A total of 70S.S12 freshmen enrolled at
four-year colleges and universities in
1961. The 1,309,524 freshmen in 1966 ineluded stu&lt;!ents who enrolled at twoyear as well as four-year institutions. In
November 1971, a total of · 58,839
questionnaires were mailed to the 1966

oanf qudoectasaoredr~.r~!eruerntvia.elwhiraisng pwrahctaitcesan'
1
d
affirmative action program should rontain starts with open admission, free tultion, interest-free loans, and grant
money which will not only opeh the
doors of educational opportunity to

group and 60,.307 to the 1961 freshmen.

minorities , but encourage their pursuit

0

1

10

Completed questionnaires eventually
of professional careers." He said the goal
were. returned by 24,590 members of the . in any hiring program must be equal op1961 group_~ representing 40.8 per cent of
portunity, but that "does not guarantee
all questionnaires nlailed, .or 56.3 per
that university or any other teaching
cent of all questionnaires that reached
staffs will reflect nu.m erially the populathe addressee. for the 1966 group, 26,618
tion as a whole."
questionnaires were returned,TepresenSubcommittee Chairman James G.
ting 45.2 per cent of all questionnaires _ O'Hara (0-Mich.) agreed with Shanker's
mailed, or 54.6 _per cent of all questibnpoint about open admissions, saying "a
naires that reached the addressee. The
great deal more needs to be done to bring in nontraditional students."
data were subjected to a number of
weighting procedures before being
Clarence Mitchell, director of the
analyzed by researchers Elaine H. ElWashington bureau of the National
Association for the Advancement of
Khawas and Ann S. Bisconti.
Other highlights from the study&lt;
Colored People, ·tolcj the subcommittee
• Of those in both groups who had not
there is a widespread belief among
yet earned a degree by 1971, ten per.wnt
blacks "that the use of tests and other
or less said they.had actually termina1ed
devices in the field of higher eduqtion
their studies wjth no degree. Also in both
are designed to screen out a majority of
groups one-founh of the dropouts left
eligible blacks and to admit only a token
few who meet the vague and unspecified
college withir&gt; 16 months. Peak attrition
personality requirements that have no
occurred two years after matricul~tion .
The Division of University Relations tinuing Education, 87 per cent~ Division
• Over half of the 1961 freshmen had
relatioMo their ability or potential ability
has raised 120 per cent of its goal in the of Undergraduate Education, 75 'l)er
as scholars."
enrolled for advanced study at some
University's United Way Campaign to cent; and the faculty of Law . and
time. Of these._a third began .their adHe said tests should be eliminated, or.
raise $125,000, it was announced today by Ju.r isprudence, 48 per cent.
van"!"~ study in 1965, one-fifth in 1966,
some way found to ·make them fairer.
Or.. A. Westley Rowland, general ·chairAs of friday, October 11, the Univerand one-tenth In 1967. Most of the fullMitchell also expressed fears that the
m.;ln of the campaign.
sity had raised $18,479 or 14.7 per cent
time enrollment was concentrated In the
result of the subcommhtee's hearings
&lt;?fits goal.
•.
three years between . 1965 and 1967. '
"will be an effon to .fon.dose opporOther leading divisions, based on ea! IY
The next repon meeting is friday, 0cAmong the .1966 freshmen, 29 per cent
tunltles for black. dtlzens· In the field of
returns, include the Division of Con- tober 18, at 10 a.m: in 201 Hayes.
. had enrol.led in graduate or professional
higher education." He ursec:J the subcommittee to do nothing to dulnge the
school by 19n. Of these, 60 per cent
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
were currently enrolled and seven per
language of antkllscrlmlnatlon taws.
cent had earned an adVanced degree.
. Also testifying. John Bunzel, preSident
DIVISIONAL PROGRESS FOR UNIVERSITY UNITED WAY CAMP...IGN
of. California Slate Unlvenlty; San Jose,
Students, in health fields. in both groups
FALL, 11174
'
$125,0001)ioiftnity Goal
tended 19 enter graduate or professional
said eduaton are trou~ by "uneven
lOS 201 " ..,. 4DS · 50$ ~ 1015 80S .90S IDOS
study earlier than those in other fields.
cornpllaooe ealvlty'' of HEW's Office for
.F~yofArnand~ .
• In financ;ing their first year of adCivil Rights and Its reiJonal offices. He
. F.ufty of EdYaltiofW St..O. • •
vanced .study, most students in both
said affirmative action requirements too
hc:ultv of en.;-;nvanc~
groups
said
they
relied
mainly
on
their
often encourage preerential - n t
Appll'ds.s.-&amp; . .••
t.ooct.OO
fKuttyof..._.UI~ , ..• ..
' oWn personal resources, either savings or
for women and minodtles, which· was
40.....00
fKUtyof~-Jur~ .
family
support
(cited
by
two-fifths
as
not the intent of..the Civil RighiS Ad.
3.000.00
4ic:hoalol~ .
3.000.00
their major s9.urce) or ·their own
Carolyn I. Polowy, auoc1ate counsel
Ftcuttv of Nlu,w.t so.nc.
employment_ (dt~ by one-fourth of
and associate seaerary for the American
anciMn""""-tia: . . . .
both
gf!)lips).
One-fifth
·of
the
graduate
Association
of Unlvenlty Profeaon, sail!
. Facuttv ot SaO.! sc.enc.
the organization ''ha found the goals of
students had fellowships or scholarships
I.~ I
end AdminiaT---.
16.IXIO.IXI
as
their
main
source
of
first-year
finan·
affirmative
action
In IJisher education to
Dmllonof~ancl
cing. Most graduate students in the two
be compielely CXMnpa11b1e with MUP
~f-.on.l Edwc.ltion
~. Cl=:c::c::IL;-:t:J-!C:JC:Jc::c~-=IC:~
300~
OhlilionofUndlor.,.._
grou~ n~ took, out any loans to suppolicies a!ld ~ -.cl mnslstentwith .
~Ed.ation •••.
1 .D50.oo
port 11\eir studies. At most, fiVe per cept
continuing high achleYemeht. in higher
Diwhionof QMiton!MntEduc::8tionl
had incunred debts of $4,000 or more for - education instlt\ltlons."
......d Fillmg,. c:ou.,.
1.050.00
jheir undergraduate or graduate educa-Mary Gray, head of AAUP's ComUn~LilnrO.
6.000.00
lion. More than half, however, lndiCjlfed
mittee W on the Status of WOflll!ll in the
Prnic11Mtanc1EII80oltiw
that, if necessary, they would accept
Academic Profession, said "die 11niver- '
tVke~t
6.250.00
moderate loans to finance their educa• sitles appear to be c:on,mltted to pro fortion: ,.
·
. rm affirmative action 'effOrts." Whal is"
• In physical sciences and biological
needed now, she said, Is "a more -tn:
l.liOII.IXI
sciences, one-third · of the graduate
telligent and informed enforcerilent -by
stude.n ts in the-1961 group held
HEW and a more lntelllpnt and ln71.000.00
fellowship&lt;s or scholarships OS·their main·
fOo:med . rommitmem 10 .equal opporUOII.IXI
first·yeai source of support. In the 1966
tunity and affirmative action on the pan
300.110'
/ group one-fourth of the students In· - of the natio!)'S universities and c:OIIeges."
-4.1i011.00
these fjeJds· · held fellowships or
Also, she said, less attention should be
Un!~I.Y Al.lltlonl . • • . .
1.500.00
scholarships as their' main source of firstpaid to statistical computations and more
n. Unt-.ity •• Builllto
year
Sllpport.
•
attention
, to "pr~ procedures for'
fioundei:IOn.lrc.
BOO .lXI
• As of 19n, fi1 pe~cent of the 1961
arrylngoutthesound_principlesofnonk--_:===::::==::;;::::;::==::;::::==:;:;:::::;:::::;;;:::::;::::::;::::::;:::=:::;::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::;::::;!~_;g~r~
oup and 58 per cent of the 1966 grou" pc..,..-.d,..i_scr
__,im
--in-'au
'i-·"'
o":
n.:"--_,..,...,....,.... ..,-''--,.-'""'"'l

United Way progresS

r-'l 1--1 I I I I I I

j ··~=~

IIIIII

-I

~

�7

October 17, 1974

,,,.,. (NftP ..

mi.

4)

5EMINAitf

Algorithmic Chemiql Not•tioo System for
Storage and Retrieval of Chemical Structures,

E. V. Krishnamurthy, Computer Science
Center, un;verslty of Moryland, 4226 JUdge
Le•, Rm. 90, 4:10 p.m.
YIDDISH FOI.KSINGINC GIIOUI"
.The nrst meerlng of the Yiddbh Folkslng;ng
Group wm be held at Hillel House, 40 Capen
Blvd, 7:30 p.m.
•
IRUB. TA~UD ClASS'
Hillel House, 40 Capen B.lvd.; 7;30 p.m.

MON-91'\Y-21
. GRADUATE SOIOOLINFORMA110N•
Represent.Jtives of over 50 sraduate
divi si ons (both on and off campus
departments) will be .Jvailable to consult with
students reprdlns sraduate and professional
school prosrams, Center lounse. Norton, 10
.J.m.-lp.m.
PUMJC lfCTURE' •
.
Governor M.Jicolm Wilson will speak at 12
noon, Haas lounse.
Prew.nted by the StUdent Assodation
Speakers' BUreau.

TUESDAY-2~
FILMS'
Hiroshima- NagaS.Jici- A.ugust 1945, 147
Diefendorf, 3 and 7 p.m. No admission charse.
SEMINAl IN UUA111 ANALYSIS AND

~

POUCYI

Do&lt;Jble lndem~lfy (Wilder), 140 Capen, 3
and 9 p.m. No odmiulon charge.
COMPURII 5BIVICI5 5EMINAaf
FORTRAN IV for the Novice, ;nstructed by
HaM!)' Axlerod, 4242 Ridge le,, Rm. '0, 3-5
p.m.
•
WATB ltBOURCf5 AND ENVIIONMfNTAl
ENG1NHR1NC SEMINAIII
Phosphorus • Sediments • Eutrophication,
James Edzwald, Clarkson Collese of
Technology, 7 Ac,heson Annex,...c...p.m.

TranScription of Viral 'Sequences in SV40
Transformed Cell Chromatin a'ld Viral Sequence lsoiation by Affinity Chromatograph y,

Dr. Thomas Y. Shih, National Institutes of
Health , Bethesda, Maryland, 244 Hea lt h
Sciences, 4:15 p.m.
CHAIUE CHAPLIN FilM SERIES•
limelight, Conference Theatre, Norton; call
631-5117 for times. Admission charge.
COMI'UlBt 5BIVICE SEMINAIIf
Statistical Package lor the Social Sciences,
Glenn Meyer, Survey Research Center
Programmer, 4238 Ridse lea, ~m . 10, 8-10
p.m.
ltfADING'
Ste~n Katz, avant-sarde novelist. 233 Norton,•8 'p.m.

The University Placement and Career
Guidance Office will sponsor its first
Groduate and Professional School Exploration Day, Monday, October 21,
from 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
A number of national law, business,
speech and audiology, radio and television, library science and engineering
graduate schools will be among 30 un-

iversities in addition to ,the graduate
departments of U/B that will be
repreSented.

The program will consist of information tables set up in the Center lounge of
Nonon Union with representatives from
each of the departments available to
answer questions of potential graduate

WEDNESDA Y-""23
O.:~!:=~~GSi=~~ions, Dr. Benjam;,_
·
·
c 11 u · · 10
:%~1i;:!'~~~~J· 1~":on ~;:::?t·ion

Gebhart, professor of mechanic;~! and

students. In addition, a group session for
those interested in psychology graduate
New York University, U/B and the
University of Akron Psychology
Departments. A law school information
session will be held at 2 p .m . in 339 Norton with representatives ' from Akron,
Cincinnati, Duke, McGeorge, Rutgers,
St. louis, San Francisco and Western New
England 15 well 15 UIB.
'
The specialized · group sessions ·are
open to the entire Univenlty community.
,
,.. ___. 1 1 f
tion will be
11 ble
""'"'ra n orma
IYI a
from all the graduate school departmental representatives from 10 a.m. _ 3 p .m .

--(

Tnnsfer Payments and rhe Measurenienr 'of
l.oal Aru Income, Dr. Thomas Romans, U~
~rt.Ttent of Economics, 237 Crosby, 3-5
p.m.
IIIOCHfMISTY SEMINAIII
Mode of Action of Erythromycin, 8orrromycin and Micrococcin on Bacterial Protein Synthesis, Dr. Akira Kaji, Department of
Microbiolosy, University of Pennsylva nia, 147
Capen, 4 p.m.
'UFE WORKSHOPS••
Wine Wisdom, Dr. Bruno Arcudi, Faculty
Oub Rod Room, 4 p.m.
CBL I. ~OUCULAR •IOL~Y SfMINARI

Placement plans
grad school day

school will be held at 1 p.m. in 337 Norton, condut1ed by the represenUitives o f

.

Testosterone Induced Moleculor. Changes
Wirhin rhe Nu.cleus, graduate -stUdent De..lnis
Conrad, 24 Diefendorf Annex, 4 p .m;
COMPUJH SOENCE COU.OQUIUMI

The Conformist (Bertolucci, 1971},
ConfBence Theatre, Norton; a11831·5117 for
times. Admluion ch~rge .

nu.•

... availabl~ at 831-3105 or 831-2215.
tnUB.IlGINNBIS HB11EW ClASS'
262 Norton, 12 noon.
COMPUJH 5BIVICI5 SEMJNAitf
FORTRAN IV fCN rhe Novice, ;nstructed by
Harvey Axlerod, 4242 R;dge Lea, Rm: 17, 3·5
p.m.

I.EC11JRE 5BIJI5t
The Corponlfion ond rhe New Class, Dav;d
'Bazelon, UIB professor of poUcy sdence.
Comment by, Paul A. WUiu, vice president,
Erie County Snings Bank, Main Din ins Room,
Foculty Club, Harriman, 3:30 p.m.
- I N C SEMINAitf
.
.
.
llteak•nlf
and rhe Wafer ro Aor

r:':"r

Bubblo:&lt;

in Norton Center Lou,.e lor those who ._
~In~"=~~~ ~"':i
cannot attend the poup meetings or
Enslneerin&amp; Unlvenity of Penmylvania, 104
who wish tc&gt; spellr with the departments
Parker, 4 p.m.
that are not holclins ifoup sessions.
FQ.ma COllOQUIUM S11t115f
ll.fetol llndlnK lo ~Ides : Probes
•nd llrulri. Dr. ~ J. Lippard, Columbia
Untvenlty, l'O Acheso!i, 4 p.m.
WoMen VotlfftAU' .
A· workshop on
in· Coal
Ulll ~ Erie County CC North, O.rk Hall, 7
TechnoloRY - the Uniwrsity's Role" is ·
p.m.
.
schedulecr for the Norton Conference

Coal conference
"R-m

Theatre· October 21 and 22, under spon-

sorship of tile Office Of Coal Research,
National Scfence Foundation, and the
University's Office of Credit-Free

Prosrams.
'
..
Open to faculty membel'slroni univer- .

~

In Ulienre (8Kon, 1935), 7:1S p.m., ~nd
Scarecrow In a Gorden of Cucumben (Kaplan,
19731, 8:55 p.m. llglh films will be shown ;n
. 1'10 Capen. No admls$/on thafle. , -

fACUI.lY IIEOTAI.'
Harpist Suunne JhomM Rives a concert at 8
p.m., Baird Recital HaU. Admlsslon: stucjents,

sities and representatives of industry and
government, the ptOgram ,is designed to:
n1 Identify the kind of constrUction
· f1!5ellldJ proJects that can be besnarried

S.SO; loculty;sraH and Ulll alUmni, S1; general
pUblic, $1 .50.

l'Yesented by the Deportment of Music.
OtAaUE CHAftJN fRM-Ume/iJrhr, Conference n-re, Norton; call
831·5117 for dmes. Ad...-rt chofle.
tAJAI CXJfi'BIIOUSP
8Gb Doyle &amp; The luff.Jo Chlpl(iclcen; Ken
Bloom, 1st"-~. Norlon, 8 p.m. Ad..-i: .IIUdenH, $.75; IICIIlty, staff ond Ulll
alumni, S1; ..-•1 public, $1.25.

out.ln~;
·
· (211'1uvide some tiR\0! and finandal

penpiiC:Ibe Clll1hese proJects; and
Ol - Dewelop M&gt;me suidellnes on
IMilhods to biins the IMiivenldeS "on

bolfii"\Jn ,ooal teChnology researd't and

...... _,,.l»&gt;llrrbate bOth to teseard't

t!ICI to dlil1nJI effons.

.
~
Dr. SOl W . Weller, UIB professor of
dlemical ensl.-rlns, is prosram chairman.

from the collect;6ns of Lockwood Memorial
Library, 2nd floor balcony, lockwood. Viewins hours: Monday-Friday. 9 a.m. .- 5 p.m.
Continuing.
UU.U VIDEO ~HI·~
.
The Day Aft«i; Tomo}. ow, a morality soap
opera dealins with st e nt life. Mondays,
Tuesdays and Wednesda , Haas lounge, Norton, 2 p .m. Throush W
•Y, Oct. 30.

CEll AND MOlECUlAR .IOlOGY

U.... AilS IFOIIUM'
Esther Swint will host Harold Cohen, UIB
School of Archttectu ~ .Jnd Environment~!
Desisn, on WA'OV-FM, 10:05 p.m.
UUAifllMU

'.

~~: Scenes from lvnellflln

lheRIUre. Allred Kuln; 148 Diefendorf, 8:30,
p.m.

THURSDAY-24
ENGINEBIING SEMINAIIf
Identifying Similar Solutions, Dr. Benjamin
Ge bhart, professor o f mechanical and
aerospace ensineerins, Cornell University, 11
a.m. Enrollment and location information
available at 831-3105 or 831 -2215.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
Scattering of Atoms and Quasipartides at
the Surface of Superfluid Helium, Professor
David 0 . Edwa rds, Department of Physics,
Ohio State University, 111 Hochstetler, 3 p.m.
ENGINEBIING SEMINAR•
A New Transition Parameter for Natural
Convection Flow, Or. Benjamin Gebhart,
professor of mechanical and aerospace
e ngineering, Corne ll University, 104 P'arker,
3:15p.m.
BIOCHEMISTliY SfMINAIIf
Molecular Evolution in Hemoglobins, Dr. S.
H. Boyer, Johns Hopkins Medical Instit ute, 1J.4
Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS siMINAIII
Inhibition o f Drug Biotransformation by
HydroKylated Metabolites, David Soda, M.S.
candidate, U/ 8 Department of Pharmaceutics,..

244 Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
FilMS•
Greed (Von Stroheim), 147 Diefendorf, 5
and 8 p.m. No admission charge.
LIFE WORKSttOPS••
Antiquing and Collecting- Early AmeO an
...,,.,, Ms. Charlotte Johnson of the Albright- .
Knox Art Gallery staff, 7 p.m.
Registration is in 223 Norton .
HIUB. "DDIOP~N~ NIGHT"
H;llel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
PHYSICAL.()IIGANIC CHEMISTRY
l£CTUIE 5flll151
Effect of Molecular Environrrient on
Ch emical Reactio ns, Professor Robert
Bergman, California Institute of TechnoloBY,
362 Acheson, 8 p.m.
UUA. COfFHHOU5f'
Bob Doyle &amp; Jhe Buffalo Chipkickers; Ken
Bloom, 1st floor cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. Ad·
mission: students, $.75; faculty, staff and U/8
alumni, $1; seneral public. $1..25.
COMI'UTBI 5BIVICI5 SEMINAIII
Staristical Padc.Jge for rhe Soc~l Sciences,
Glenn Meyer, Survey Research Center
Prog:rammer, 4238 Ridse lea, Rm. 10, 8-10
p.m.
.
UUAaRlMu
L.'Amour Fou (Rivette, 1968), Conference _
Theatre, Norton; all 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPH~

Coi&lt;N Pllolowaphs by /i'1' DeS.ntis, ;mages
made in South America, Greece and New
York State, Hayes Hall Lobby display cases.
Through Octobe r 30. Vi ewi ng hours :
Mondayd'riday, 9 a.m.-:-'5 p.m. Presented by
the Offtce of Cultural Affairs.
lOCKWOOD IEXHIUT'
Polish Collection, an exhibition Culled from
the UnMrslty's collection ol more than 4.000
volufn!!S of material, first n-, Lockwood
Memorial Ubrary. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.- 5
p.m. Contlnulns.
MUI.ri-MBJIA m . l r
f'numbrof ,lloincoasl, sample warP by ·;
. group of U.S. artists who hive communicated
with each orher through writ)ngs, video
production, Xerox prlnt;ng. film, pholography
and music, C.llety 219- Norton. V-"-B
hour&gt;: Monday- Friday, 11 a.m. -, 4 p.m.; Sunday, 1 -4 p .m.; "Monday and .Thursday
evenings, 7 - 10 p.m.
UUAIIY~

First editions of t~ work~ of Samuel Beckert

· ON&lt;AMPUS INTEIIVIEWS
The staff of the Univers!ty Placement and
Career Guidance Office welcomes all students
in the University community and alumni to
tak~ part in various-career prog:rams offered
this year. The on-campus interviewi ns
program, ru·nning fro m Oct. 7-0ec. 12 and
Jan. 2G-April 25, offers the opportunity for in·
d ividual interviews with eduation, business,
industriill and sovemmental representltives.
Cand;dates from all degree levels, completini
their course work in January or May 197S, Me
ir'lvited to take part in the interviewing.
Registr.Jtion forms are av.Jib.ble in Hayes
Annex C, Rm. 6. The following agencies will
be inte rviewins this week:
THURSDAY-17: Northwestern Mutual life
Insurance Co.; Pri~ Waterhouse and Co.
FRIDAY-18: Price Waterhouse and Co.;
Nat ional Steel Corp.
MO~DAY -2 1 : Brockw•y Glass Co.;
Ravtheon Co.
.TUESDAY-22 : Raytheon Co.; N.Y.5.
Department of Mental Health; Ernst and Ernst
WEDNESDAY-23: Ernst and Ernst; I.R.S.,
Department of Treasury.
THURSDAY-24: Seidman and Seidman;
Rochester Telephone Corp.; Arthur Young
and Co.

NOTICES
COUNSHJNG 5BIVICE
Professional counseling is now available at
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. For an appointment, all Mrs. Eve Fertig, 836-4540.
FfDEitAl CIVIl 5BIVICE
October 28 Is the application deadline for
the U:S. Civil Service Exam to be siven on
November 23: For further information, call
842· 283o4.
FOitBGN STUDENT IN FORMA110N

The Office of Foreign Student Aff.Jirs has
made the foUowing announcements:
1. All foreign students are ursed to notify
the Office of any chanse. of address immediately. In addition, students should check
the mailboxes in 210 TownSend for mail and
~ckases which have been forwarded to the
Office. Undaimed mail will be returned to

'se~~~~lion w.Jiver appliations for die Sprins
1975 semester are available in the Office now.
The appliation.deadline is Novembel 1S.
3. Any stUdent who has not received a
foreisn student he.Jith insurance application
should pick one up ;n 210 Townsend.
4. Undeflraduate scholarship oppik:lltions
for foreign students ne available in the Office
now. The application deadUne;. November1 .

GIADUAJE~ EXAMINA110N

Regular registration deodUne for the GRE to

~t;.~.! ~::e:'~::i~b\."'T..'t:J:

Univenity Placement ond Career Guidance
Office, 6 Hayes C.
LAW SCHOOl ADMISSION TEST
Regula&lt; reglstr.otion deodline for the l5AT
to ~ given Dec. 7 ;. November 11. Information and oppik:lltion forms are ovalloble In the
. Un~ Placement ond Career Guidance
Office, 6 Hayes c.

--~

- The final deodllne for reglst~ ony
Univenity coune Is Thunday,
17.
TEACHWG Aft'UCATIONS
Buffalo Public Schools will hold examinations on Sat., Nov. 9,10 esrabllsh eliKible
lsts for permanent appol)ltment of teaCheR
to texhl'\g pos/llons In llullaJo. These ex.Jminations are open to all tacher candidates ,
who will haw! completed o l l . _ - l o r
New Yort S..te provisional Cl!fdllcarlon by

=r:m.

.Z.::r"eu.l:k.
~~~
be avalioble It the Untvenlty "--11. and

Career Guidance Office, ltoom 6, ~
These be flied by proopedhe c:andldates
on or belote October 17 ond returned In
onler 10 parliclpate ln. these examinations.
THANUGMNG IN MONTIIIAl
The Schuumelsters Ski Oub and the International Students are &lt;lO-IjiOIKOrins • ,_.. •
skiin1 weekend to Montre.JI durlns
Thonksplng weekend, Nov. '0 - Dec. 1. Cost
of the !rip, indud;"-! transponodon and hotel
occommodatioo\s, is four per I'OOnl, $51.50;
rwo per room, 564.00. For further deroils, all
1131-2145.
IIB'Illl PaFORMANCE5"
Purge is presented by the American ' Contemporary Thf!.4tre, 169S Elmwood
Avenue, 11 8:30 p.m. Thun.-Sot. and '2 p.m.
Sunday. F« resemotlons, aii117S-5825.

�Octobef 17. 1974•

in Coniinuing Medic:al Education, sponsored
· by U/8 Department of Medicine and School
of Medicine, will feature various topics and
speakers from 8-11 :30 a.m. Stiitler Hilton.
CONFERENCE ON CIVIUAN
CONTROL OF THE MILITARY'
Civiliilln Control of the Milit~ry: Myth and
Realit y in Developi"R.,P!~!!ntries is the topic of
a two-day seminar (thiS'tl the final day) featuring a varie\y of ~nel d iscussions and lectures.
General topics, participants ahd times of
today's sessions are:
9:30 a.m.-12 noon-PanellA: Civiliilln Cootrol through the Nation-in-Arms? examined by
U/8 Professor Albert Michaels, Professor
William Stover, Findlay College; and Professor
Amos Perlmutter, Harvard Univ_ersity, 231
Norton . Panel 3B: Civiliilln Contiol through
Legislillrive Oversight? examined by U/8
Professor Alan P. Balutis; Professor Abdo I.
Baaklini, SUNY/Albany; Professor Carlos
Astiz, SUNY/AIDany; and Professor Richard
Nune~ SUNY/Albany, 233 Norton. Pane1.3C:
Civilian Control_ .through Foreign Occupation? examined bv Professor James C.
Buck, University of Georgia, and Major.James
Thompson , United States Army Institute for
Military Assistance, 234 Norton .
HILLR SABBATH SfRVICE'
Service begins at 10 a.m. Following a Kiddush lunch, Dennis Prager will speak on:
Judaism as the Most Powerful Idea in History,
~~~~H~c:.capen Blvd.

THURSDA Y-17
PSl'OIOI.OGY-tKn;RE•
Witch Doctors and Psychorherapy, Or.
Herbert Rappaport , Temple University

Department of Psychology, 4230 Ridge Lea,
Rm. C-34, 1:15 p.m.
·
PHAaMACEUJ1C5 SEMJNAitf
.
~
Some SNUisrical Problems in Phar·
macoldnetics and B~vailabiUry, Dr. Wilfred J.
Westlake, director of biostatistics, ' Smith,
klein, and French laboratories, Philadelphia,
245 Heahh Sciences, 2 p.m. · '
PHYSICS C:OUOQliiUMI
Physical Studi6 of Acupundure, Prof. l. Y.
Wei, ~rtment of Electrical Engineering,
Univenity of Waterloo, 111 Hochstener, 3 p .m.
Uff WORXSHOPS••
WhY We Like People, a discussion about
what ihfluentes people in their choice of
friends, led by Dr. Charles M. Garverick,
associate professor of behavioral and related
sciences, 3-4:30 p.m.
·
.
Antiquing and Collecting-Orienral Rugs, a
visit to the largest oriental rug store in the
area, 7-8:30 p.m.
-.._
Registration for life Workshops is in 223
Norton.

ECONOMICS SfMINAitf
Methods of Interdisciplinary Cooperarion

in Research-Pos!i.ibilities and PiffaHs,
Professor Bruno Knall, ~uth Asia Institute,
Heidelberg University, 109 John Lord O 'Brian
Hall, Amherst Campus, 3:30 p.m.
PHILOSOPHY LECTURE•
Some Confusions abo ut SubjecrivitY.

Richard M. Hare, Whyte's Professo r of Moral
Philosophy, Corpus Christi College, Oxford
University, and visiti ng professor, University
of Delaware , 4244 Ridge lea, Rm. 15, 3:45p.m.
CHARTERING OF COLLf~ES HEARING'
Continued public hearings on the charterif')&amp; of the Colleges, 310 Foster, 4-7:30 p.m.,
8 :3Q p.m.-mid night.
BIOLOGY LECTUREf
Differential Gene Expression and ~nzyme
Structure and Function in Maize, Or. John G.
Scandalios, professor and chairman, Department of Bio logy, University of South Carolina,
134 Health Scie nces, 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Division of Cell and
Molecular Biology and the Chemistry of
Biological Systems lecture Series.
FILM'
.
Foolish Wives·(Von Stroheim), 147 Diefendorf; 5'-&amp; 8 p.m. No admission charge. ·
SAAC5.MEETING'
To discuss trip to steel plant , 50 Acheson,
5:15p.m.
'
HILLR "DROP-IN" NIGHT'
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 ..p.m.
ART HISTORY LEClURE'
Gauguin 's " The Spirit of t.he Dead
Watching, " Wayne Andersen, professor of art
history , Massachusetts Institute of
Tech~olog y, Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Auditorium, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Department' of Art History
and the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
DANCE•

fecture/ demonstration by Linda Swiniuch
and Joan VerDun, Harriman Theatre Studio; 8
p.m: A!!Jnission : students, $.75, general
public;"l1.50. Through Saturday.
_
Presented by the Department of Theatre
and the School of Health Eduation.
uu.u COfHEHOIJSE'
Tr~ ~nd Eloise Sch~rz sing ill.nd play
· American folk iind country music, 1st floor
· cafeteria, Nonon, 8 p.m. AdmisSion: students,
"S-75; faculty, stall and U/8 alumni, $1; ienerol
public, $1.25.

·

~= ~akeci Lunch, pe&lt;-

fonned by f!&gt;e Chicaao Projeci/New Yorit, 111!def lhe direction of Donald Sanden, Courlyltd Thelin!. Llfa~e and Hoyt. B p.m. Admission: students, S-75; senerol publlc._$1.50.
Throush SaiUrday.
Presented by Jhe Center for Theatre

Research.
WAIRLM••
hrtner (Bertolucd, 1968), ConferenCe
Theatre. NOnon; caU 831-5117 for limes. Admission charse.
·

FRIDAY-18
llaiiK:AI. COMBINCE ,.OGUMI
ConfetefO&lt;'eln Chesl Dlseose_.a symposium
lo Conlinulns Medial filuallorl. sponsored

by U/ B Department of Medicine and School
of Medicine, will feature various toPics and
speakers from 8:15 a.m . - 5:.30 p.m., Statler
Hilton.
CONFERENCE ON CIVIUAN
CONTROL OF THE MIUTARY ..
Civilian Control of the Military: Myth and
Realir y in Developing Countries is the topic of
a two-day se minar (October 18, 19) featu'rin g a
variety of panel discussions and lect ures.
General topics, participants and times of
·
·
today's sessions are :
9:15 a.m.-Formal opening with introdu ctory remarks by U/ B President Robert L
Ketter, 129 Norton (Conference Theatre).
9:30-10 a.m.-Introductory paper, Civilian
Control in . Developing Countries : A
Preliminary Assessment, by Claude E. Welch,

Conference Theatre.
.
_
10:15 a.m.-12:30 p.m.-Panei1A: The Rise
and Collapse of Military Regimes examined by
Professor Nelson Kasfir, Dartmouth College;
Professor James Mittelman, Columbia University; and Professor David Morell of the Envi ronmental Protection Agency, 231 Norton.
Panel 18: Institutionalized Military Regimes
examined Dy Professor Ronald ]. Stupak,
Miami University; Professor Mark Rose nberg,
University · of Pittsburgh; Professor Ann
G_regory, Columbia J)niversity; Professor
Arthur K. Smith, SUNY/ Binghamton; and
Professor Henry Bienen, Princeton University,
233 Norton.
2' 15-4:30 p.m.::_Panel 2A: Civilian Control
·~s ill Consequence of Revolution? examined
by Lt. Colonel Franklin Mugiona, Air Univers~ty; Professor Parris Chang, Pennsylvania

~~~~oWy~~v~~~i~~~".dofp~~~f!:~~.. _Ra~~i:
AngeJes, 231 Nonon . Piinet 28: Civilian Conr_rol ~s ~ Consequence of Coloni~l Rule1 exillmined by Professor S1ephen P. Cohen ,
University of Illinois; Professor Cynthiill Enloe,
C,.rk University, and I'Tofessor Richard H.
Dekmejian, 5UNI'I8inshamton, 233 Norton .
6:J0..9p.rp.-Conlefence Banquet, research
repon illnd keynote address illre open to those
who have paid the reglstr.nion fee. The
Keynote Speak..- is Adilm Yarmolinsky, Ralph
Waldo Emerson Professor from the University
ol Massachusetb.
.
GAUGl,IIN SYMPOSIUM•
A symposium. WulfUin'S" .,Creation of rhe
Unlvene.'• will be pen by Dr. Wayne V.
Andersen, prolessor of history and theory of
art at Massachusetts Institute of Teptnology,
310 Foster, 1 p.m.
Sponsored by lhe U/8 An Department and
t!&gt;e Albrigllt-Knox Art Gallery.

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR,
Organic Synthesis-Progress and Problems,

Professor Richard H. Schlessinger, Department of Chemistry, University of Rocheste r.
245 Health Sciences, 2 p.m.
PLASMAS AND APPLICATIONS SEMINAR,
Saturation of Non Linearly Excited Plasma
Waves. Professo r Yung-C han g l ee, U/ B
Departme nt of Physics and Astro nomy, 104
Parker, 4 p.m.

ELEMENTARY REMEDIAL EDIJcATION'
Dr. Samuel Weintraub will speak, 337 Norton, 4:30 p.m.
1

HILLfL SHAIIATON'

Wh y Bother Being Jewish, Dennis Prage r.
Service begins at 6 p.m. followed by a Sabbath
Dinner, Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.
PUBLIC LEClURE'
Conflids in the Holy Land, Rev. Joseph l.
Ryan S.J., St. Joseph's University, Beirut,
teba·non, 240 Norton, 7:30 p.m.
CAC FILM ..
The Boys in the Band, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10
p.m. Admission $1 . •
INTERNATIONAL FOIJ( DANCING'
Instruction for beginners, 233 Norton, 8-11
p.m. Presented by Balkil!l Folk Dancing.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
William S. Burroyghs' Naked Lunch, performed by the Chicago Project/New York, under the direction of DOnald Sanders, Courtyard Theilltre, Lafayette and Hoyt, 8 p.m. Admission: students, $.75; gen~ral public, $1.50.
Through Saturday.
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Rese~rch.
0

~'!~/de~nstration

by linda Swiniuch
and Joan VerDun, Harriman Theatre Studio, 8
p.m. "dmission : students, $.75, general
public, S1.50. Throilgh Saturday.
Presented by the Department of Theatre
.and the School of Health Education.
FACUlTY RECITAL'
Featuring sopranO W'ilm~ Shal&lt;esnider,
Baird Recital H~l. 8 p.m. Admission: S.SO
studehtS; S1 fxulty, staff and U/8 alumni;
S1.50 general public.
Presented by the ~pa(tment of Music.

. CHAUD . HOU5P
Rabbi Z. Heschel will speak at 7:30 p.m.~
followed by services ~nd a meol, Chabad
Ho~, 3292 Millin.
•
UUAI filM••
P-~rtner (Benolucci, 1968), Conference
Theatre, Norton; caW831-5117 for times. Ad·
"
• mission chiifle.

SATURDAY.-19
~- CONFERENCE PROGRAMJ

Conference in Chest"'Ois~se. a symposium

U/ B vs. Canisius College, Rotary Soccer
Fie ld , 1 p.m.
CHABAD HOUSf'
Rabbi Z. Hesche! will speak at 1 p.m. at
Chabad House, 3292 Main .
A Melava Malk'a will be held at 9:.30 p.m. at
the Amherst Chabad House, 185 Maplemere
Rd.
FOLK DANCING'
A Polish Folk Dance Workshop will be he ld
in the Fillmore Rm ., Norton Hall, 2-5 p.m., 8
·
p.m., 11 p.m.
GROSVENOR SOCiffi CONCERT'
The Grosvenor Society presents a cha mber
music concert in the Ce ntral Library
Auditorium, downtown , at 3 p.m.
THEATRE PERFORMANCE'
William S. Burroughs' Naked tunch, perf&amp;rmed by the Chicago Project/New York, under the directon of Donald Sanders, COurtyard Theatre, .Lafa yettE: and Hoyt, 8 p.m. Admission : students, S.75; general public, $1 .50.
Final performance.
Present ed by tJle Center for Theatre
. Research.
DANCE•
l.ecturel demonstration by Linda Swiniuch
and Joan VerDun , Harriman Theatre Studio, 8
p.m. ~dmi ss ion: stu dents, $.75, general
pub.lic, $150. Final Performance.
Presented by the Department of Theatre
and the School of Health Education.
CAC FILM••
Th e BOys in the Band, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10
p.m. Admission $1 .
MUSIC LEClURE'
The Philosophy of Ch~nge Towards a World
Music. Charles Camilleri. The leaure will be
followed by a performance of several recent
Camilleri works, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.

~

UUAI FilM••

The Conformist (Bertolucci, 1971).
Conference Theatre, -Norton; call831-5117 for
times. ..Admission charge.

SUNDAY-20
HluR GRAD CIU. IRUNCH'
The Grad Club will have a brunch at the
Buffalo State Hillel House, 1209 Elmwood
Avenue at 12 noorr, followed by • lheoln!
party at Kleinhans Music Hall. Groduate
students, singJe fKUity ~nd seniors are invited.
. For reser}Villtions, call 836-4540.
HILLR CADuvAI.'
.
.
Operation Greenlllfhl sponson a carnival
from 1-4 p.m., Hillel Hotne, 40
Blvd.

C.!"'"

FOUt DANCING•
A PoliSh Folk Donee Workshop will be held
in 1he Fillmore Rm., ~ HaH. 1-3 1!-'"·
- EVENINGS fOil N8¥ MUSIC~
The eleventh seoson ol E_,p frx New
Musk concerts begihs at 8 p.m_ 11 the
Albrigllt-Knox Art Gallery. Prod\'(ed by. the .
Center lor the Creallve and Perl""!!fng Arts. •
the mncens Include a variety of InnoVative
music. Admission: $1.50 foi lhe University
community, S3 general public.
RUCOJT COMPLEX COFF&amp;iiCMISP
IRC Ellicott Are~ Council presents ill
Coffeehouse, featur!ng Mildred ••Daisy"• Herman, illn old-time piano player, 8 p.m. Poner
Ciifeter.ia. No admission charp for IRC ...,
member.. $.25 for non..........,.,.; - .

INTBINATIONAL FOlK DANCING'
Some instruction, FitlrOOre room, Norton,
8:30-10:30p.m. Presented by Balkan Folk Dandng.
rwm rq ru~ 7. mi. 11

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
OCTOBER 10, 1974
VOL. 6, NO.6

;. '

.

•

Drop in students puzzles
MFC; Studi~ planned

Out on~. Cllfood ......... ...._~ _
_. _ b i d ! Is the one he didn't
- · ... ., opHio •cioo ._..; T-.do; nJiht on "Hciuunj lio Anieric:O." IMtood, the
--~...................... ~ ............. ......... -.Fo&lt;theso. - -........ - - - - .. - . - - .. the ... -...., ......... hlsporolo
booo&amp;~ . . . . . . -dolof--~~yotlwreloo.-j,ooolblllylholSA wll
- 1n1na or ~.lc!Lfillloa ........ the oontroct. lrYinaw...lo ~o.$1510 plus
.......... lor~-...... -~--,...,,

Campus con-f erence to air
problems of . military ru.le
Are some democracies on their way to

becoming "garrisbn-managerial stites,"
ruled by .coalitions of professional
soldiers and colorless technocrats!
Is the "mllitary-induslrial complex"
an American phenomenon or are similar
institutions taking hold in developing
nations!
JNill military dictatorships become a
permanent way of life in African, Asian

and lltin American countrieSl
Can civilians in emerging countrie_s
take the steps necessary to prevent
military coups d'elarl
These and other questions will be disC\!Ssed by prominent scholars representing leading AR)erican . campu~ at a
two-day conference here, October 18
and 19.

Acboon hrmolinsky
The special conference, co-sponsored
by U/8 and the Inter-University Seminar
on Armed For~ and Society, will be
highlighted by a scheduled keynote address by Adam Y~rmolinsky, rurrent
Ralph Waldo Emerson Professor at the
University of Massachusetts and former
high-ranking defense depart_men~ official in the l&lt;&gt;bnson Adrniniilr,tion. ~
His · speech,_titled 'Who's in CharRe
Here," will explore the po"(er of the
American military in "Ctetermining U.S.
policy. T_wo ~ dozen other speake ~s ,
representing campuses from Harvard to
UCLA, will also deliver addresses based
on the theme, ucivilian Control of the
Military: Myth and Realil)l.i n Developing
.C ountries." ' Among topicS for dis-cussion:

'

• Haile 5elassie's los~ of authority over
the Ethiopian military establishment;
• Salvatore Allende's unsuccessful efforts to win support of Cbilean military
leaders;
• The 1973 coup d' erar in Thailand;
The 295 me.mbers of the 1974-75 first
• Changes in l~rael ~s civil-military
year class In the School of Law lnclud!' 72
relationships since the-Six Day War;·
women and 16 minority students, two of
• America's nex.t generation of career
whom are women, Robert G. Fleming,
.
·
associate dean and ch~irman of tiJe 1973- . . 1\.ir F..orce officersi
~ : • • The~ pb)ltical ralti of the -military in
74 Admissions Committee, reports. Russia,
China,
and
India;
and.
Further cbota indicates that of the 295
• How military regimes riie and falljmd
new students, 126 are from Western New
what strat~ governments can
Yon, 152 Jrom other areas in New York
adopt to assert and maintain authority.
State and 17 from out of state.
Armed foKel lnlluendal
.
{)I tlie total Law School enrollment of
774, 181 are women and 75 are members,
The conference is being orpnizea by
of minorities (including 13 minority woDr. Claude E. Welch, Jr. of UIB's Departmen), Flemln11's fiRures indicale.
ment of Political Science, who believes
w_.. New-Yodt students account
that "no polltial...,..p Is more iniiUen"
for 3!111 of the enrollment total. Those
tlal and less ·studied than the armed
fraiiHMher
ol New Yori Slate total
form." ·
llt1 Md54otudentsuefrJimout of state.
The events of the pasr clecade, Weldl·
11le ~ year Lafw Clas has 70
usens, iiA! provlns that power does Row
wo~~&gt;en and 29 minority students
from the barrel of a sun. and that the
Onc:ludlnl 7 mlnorily women! and the
"quickest way'to the Presldentlall'alaoe
tltlrd year ~'~-· 39 Women and 30'
Is~ the ~adcs."
·
Rum ro J»tee fO. col. l)
minorities (II,Ch;d11114 mlnorily women).

Law ·r eports

minority data

.a-

that the University was trying to increase
Enrollment in Millard Fillmore
College, the University's credit-offering · its quota of freshmen through irregular
eveninR division, has dipped by ap- • methods and to charges that MFC was
becoming a second-rate, poor quality in·
proximately 700 students in the past two
stitution ·by day school standards. Any
years and offidars are puzzled over ex~
changes in policy will, as a result, be
actly why.
. made very carefully, the Dean
University Dean Robert F. Berner of
emphasizes.
the Division of Continuing Education in~
dicates that MFC has conducted extenIn addition, MFC wili continue efforts
sive recruitment·information programs
to make itself known to the local comin local industrial plants and in such
munity, even though budget for adverheavy traffic areas as a major shopping
tising is practically non-existent. "When
mall in order to acquaint a wider range
our recruitment teams were at the
of working adults with its offerings. The
mall," Berner notes, " many people
&lt;College actually admitted an increased"
didn 't know who we are. Some thought,
number of students for this fall, he says,
from the name, that we were affiliated
working toward an enrollment target of
with Millard Fillmore Hospital."
approximatel y 5,100. Yet, only 4,358
MFC will also explore new avenues
of service to its· traditional clientele,
stS~~di~s a~~~~~ur~9!s~~~~ immediate- working
individuals with adult respon·
Jy, Berner reports, to find out what
sibilities who find it impossible to ane.nd ·
happ"ened to those who were accepted ·
day classes. The individualized niajor, a
and did not register. The results hopeful recently-initiat'ed offering under which
ly will pinpoint problem areas which
students. design their o!'n special degree
can be addressed.
programs with faculty sponsorship and
Rev;ew of Admissions Policy
administrative approval, is one such apBerner has also asked for a review of
proach. Some 12 students are already
and recommendation on the MFC adenrolled in the program and Berner exmissions policy, through both the Divipects 50 by next fall. MFC is also . insion of Continuing Education policy
terested in bringing instructional. credit
committee and the FacUlty Senate Comto adults through non-traditional media.
mittee on Adm issio ns. Present policy is
A current offering provides credit for a
that MFC will admit anv individual with a ~ course .being ~aught through the Buffalo
high school diploma Pl its equivalent
Courler-&amp;prea. Electronic media m_.y
without regard to grade average, if the
also be used for instructional purposes,
individual has been our of high school
although, as Berner says, this is more diffor rwo or mpre years. More recent high
ficult and may be a long 'time coming
school graduates must have ·the same
about. A. "weekend oollege"-conceptgr-*te average and oth'er credentials rea type of individual study program
quired for day school admissions. At one
augmented by Saturday and Sunday
point,
more liberal standard applied
seminars which provide the student with
to recent high school graduates as well,
. opportunities for interaction with peers
Berner recalls, but this led to critidsm
(rum to l»fe 1. col. 4)

me

HIGHER EDUCAllON IS FOR ADULTS

�~-

Assembly
.will consider
disbanding

.&lt;:¥!obe~ 70, 1974

~-··I;I.A
1r
r-"--gues'
·
,_.~te _,_Uf~t::~r
· j

1I

i

MFC .enrollment ('""""'«''·col. .,

~· 1"=". -

anil faculty - is also under consideratlon. This model has •
sua:eufully
used !n the New York City metropolitan
area, Berner says.

.
· Underway
_ . ..
Program-now

·

A new · University service p.rogram
&lt;4. To identify and develop mutual
~on RUIOIII
known as _'~e Corporate Colleagues"
areas of_i~terest sh~red by the communiPending further, formal studies of
The Univenity ASSI!IT1bly will hold its
has
bf!f!n
ontttated
by
the
UIB
Foundaty
~nd the Universtty.. .
.
MFC'
II
t di ...!.__ Be
first meeting of the year, Thursday, Oclion Inc,
5 To . stimlilate. ·and develop the .
! enr_:o men
p, ~n rner can
tober 17, at 4 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf to
A~ord!ng to John M·. Caner, _execo';,bmjc:andsOc!alwelf~rl;of.Weslefn:.: : l!'nlr,..~~late .aboUJ ~me of the unoonsider clisbanding.
·
New York. · ··
.
.····.:-"ery~I!.T!'aSS''!S·
ecuttve vtce president of the UIBF, the
Under a proposal on the agenda, the
program is a refinement of the. "U/B
In addi!ion (o problem -solving;·::· Per,.~, h~sug~ests, the decline h~s
Assembly in its present for'l' (with
Colleagues" idea introduced earlier by
assistance, members : receive -1h.e. .. : ~ ~rn_eitling to-d9w•th t~e faC!·t~~t MFC •s
representative· aelegates from each of
former Academic Vice PresidenJ Bernard
privilege of usinllthe Corporate Liaison • no longer U~ as a reserve for _day
the several campus constituencies)
Gelbaum and approved by the Faculty
Office to arrange for interviews and co~school admlssto';". There was • ttme
would be done away with. A small ~roup
tacts with staff, (acuity and stude~ts;
when each years MFC . ad~issions inSenate. Under t~at plan, corporations in
consisting of the elected head of each
the Western New York area were to be
rec~ive reprints and bibliographies of
c~uded · some 250-300 qualifted recent
consti!Ut!ncy, a Coundl of Chairmen,·
faculty publications where relevant;
htgh school graduates who.could not be
asked to pay a membership. fee to join
.w ould replace the Assembly l?xecutive
the Colleagues group. In return, cor:
receive the Corporate Alliance Annual
accommodated In day school _because of
Comm1nf!f! and would consider issues of
porate members were to receive faculty
Report on campus and Alliance 'aca la~k of ~race. They would study
University concern.
e~Cpertise,-where necessary, to help them
tivities; attend the Annual Corporate
eye.rungs un~l day SpKe opened up. !h•s
At
solve problems in, -or develop new ideas
Alliance Dinner, " Conversations With
pohcy was d~ by the Adm•sstons
for, their organizations.
The President;" attend seminars held
a(ld Records Off!~e - two ~ears ago,
According to student David Saleh,
Instead of using a dues approach, the
specifically for Corporate Alliance
Ber~er reports. And W!! ve never
chairman of the Assembly., the or-ganizaprogram now underway is being tied to
members;. receive advance notice of all ~ regame? ~hese num~rs f~m amo'!g the
tion "is at a crossroads as a University
relevant activities on campus, such as
populatl~,n group wh1ch IS our pnmary
the U/ BF's "Corporate Alliance" effort
.
governance body." ·
seminars, lectures, theater, music and . concern.
which has been seeking unrestricted
Saleh ff!f!ls that the Assembly to date
.funds from area business and· industry
.speci_al events;. and participate in all
The flagging economy may be another
has bf!f!n engaged in a struggle for accepsince 1972. Members of the Alliance are
functions orgllnized by and for the Corfactor,. De~n Berner ff!f!ls. Some -of the
tance, that issues before it have been
encouraged to seek the assistance of the
porate Alliance.
potenttal MFC adult dien!ele m~y be out
"sparse," and that it has not yet "gotten
University through the Corporate
o! work .at the present ttme.' gtven the
its feet on the ground."
Colleagues.
.
htgh rat~ of ~nem!'loyment tn the area.
When it was con~ived, Saleh says,
A participating corporation with a
And the tnflatton ptnch may have caused
"the Assembly was set up to eventually
.
~the"; ~o give up t~eir spending for
problem may call the U/ BF Corporate
become the only •voting campus con.Alliance Office. In turn, that office will
acad~mtc P':'r~ !n fayo~ _of more
stituent body. However, in recent years,
make arrangements either with Dr. Mer~
.
pr~smg family fmanoal pnont•es. Th~re
other constituent bodies have beeR set
tQn Ertel!, acting vice president for
Millard Fillmore College will offer a
are ~o Fed~~al or State pro~ams whtch
up or strengthened and are now functwo--credit course j (l conjunction with
~ro~.l~e tultton or loan_ assistance for
academic affairs, or Dr. A. Westle y
tioning effectively. This has left the
Rowland, vice president for University
the Buffalo Courier-&amp;press. The course,
ftnanctally pr~sed pan-ttme students_.
Assembly in a situation where it must
entitled "ht Search of the American
Per.haps, too, ~rner says, the openmg
relations, to identify a faculty member
review its present function."
knowledgeable in the problem area who
Dream," will consiSt of&gt;a series of 18 arof Ene Communtty Colle~e So~th and
Saleh ff!f!ls there is still a strong comis willing 10 discuss the situation with
tides published wf!f!kly in the Courier.
the change tn several of Erte Community
mitment to the University-wide goverNorth's evening programs. (from dipl?ma
corporate officials. The faculty member
The series was authored by a group of
nance ag~~cy wit~in the Universi~ but
may spen'd one or two hours providing
distinguished write_rs and schOlars, in~
cour_ses to fully·~ccredned offenngs
that "to fulfill this heed,:' the Assembly
advice, may offer to develop a thorough
eluding Robert Penn Warren, two·time
l~admg to assoc.ra_t~ degrees) have
"must act in conjunction with the other
dtluted the lowerdtvtston undergraduate
study and recommendations for a given
Pulitzer Prize winner and author of "All
campus cot~stituent groups."
·cos(, Or may simply provide a list of possithe King's .Men," and . Dr. Michael
evening market. Erie Community's hourtfe has suggested and won Assembly
Kam.rnen, Pulitzer Prize winning Cornell
ly tuition charges are simital- to those
ble consultants, fro·m among the U/ 8
Executive Comminf!f! backing for the
faculty and elSewhere.
University historian. '
assessed by MFC and in many cases the
proposed changes.
For example, a local business organizaThose wishing to enroll in the course
Erie locations may simply be more conFurtt- Details
,
lion recently called the· Corporate
for credit will be asked to read additional
venient for students:
Saleh provided these funher details of
Alliance for help on a problem the home
material and successfully complete an
Berner notes also that those few even~
his plan in-a-letter 10 President Roben L.
office is experiencing in gening its
examination, in addition to attending
ing graduate courses for part-time
Ketter on September 17:
message
out
to
representatives
in
the
one
lecture/
discussion
'period.
Credit
students
now offered by the University
"1 . The Coundl of Chairmen shall conwill be awarded through MFC.
are not given through MFC. This is quite
field. A faculty member wiih background
- - si.st of the chairmen, or presidents of the
in communication met with officials of
Instructors for the course will be Dr.
likely an area in which demand is growvarious campuS constituent bodies
leslie Fiedler, chairman of the English
ing, he !._ndicates. And MFC, perhaps, ~
the corporation and is ·now drafting a
presently represented on the University
proposal for a study aimed at &lt;emedying
Departmeot, and Dr. Sally Fiedler, author
should be considering that '!'•rket also.
Assembly or their designees. There are
the
situation.
of
two
books
of
poe~,
f1mepleces
Nationally, Berner indicates, the
two special suggestions to be made at
The Corporate Alliance Program of the
(1 971 ) and SA:In and Bones.(1912), who is
numbers of pan-time students (day and
this_pbint. First the professional students
ti.J/ 8 Foundation last year received $118,presently teaching a course in American
evening) are growing. Pan-time students
shall be represented by one of the
947.90 in unrestriCted gifts to the UniverMythology in College B.
now account tor 51 per cent of all college
presidents on a rotating basis. Secondly,
sity, funds which. President Roben L.
Funher information on the course by
and university enrollments.- UIB itself
- the classified employees shall be
Ketter,
who
has
given
full
endorsement
newspaper
can
be
obtained
by
contac·
registered
an increase in pan-time day
represented by a delegate elected by the
to the Colleagues plan, calls the
ting Millard Fillmore College, ext. 2212.
students this fall, another factor which
employees' each year.
·
"2 . The Council of University
necessary "something additional'' U/B
may account lor less interest in evening
must have to realize its "aspiration to be
Chairmen, shall actin an advisory capadcourses.
ty and shall be empowered to consider
preeminent - to be numbered among
tio•
The national trend in evening
the handful of the nation's most disenrollments, Ierner says, is still on the
issues of University concern. In addition
this comminf!f! shall be able to act in
tinguished institutions."
No registrations will be processed alter
ascendant. A telephone survey he con- .
behalf of all campus constituents in setThursday, October 17, Charles H.V.
ducted last week determined that most
These funds are used, among other
ting up and charsing University-wide
-things, for seed money _for educational
Eben, University dean of undergraduate
evening programs in urban situations
&amp;lmmittees. ·
education, remin!led all teaching faculty . comparable to MFC's - at Pittsburgh
programs and research projects - fuf'\ds
"3. Two elected officers (would) be
which enable faculty to demonstrate the
this wf!f!k.
and RIT, for example - are up slightly
rel'!.ined in the same context as myself
potential of a given idea to prospective
"There will be no retroactive registrathis fall. Syracuse Is up also, with the rnaand Carolyn Thomas to coordinate and
major donors. One-faculty niember, for
tiol)..via my office or through Admissions
.jor increase noted at the graduate level.
example,
was
awarded
$1,000
last
year
to
and
Records
alter
this
date/'
Ebert
Akro1,1,
on the other hand, has suffered
=-~'"'? the functions of the ab:ove
emphasized.
.
a decline of 25 per cent.
begin a project which has since attracted
$35.000 in outside suppon.
He asked aiHaculty to "be sure, in the
M a ~ E11n11Menf
~ Colleag!:'es plan acknowledges
interest of all concerned, to ask your
MFC has bf!f!n a-vital educationai force
the '?'!"'"~nee ~f thiS type?' su~pon by
·students to check their cla~hedule
in the Westem
Yorlt area since its
provtdtng • rectpr~ semce. .
cards to make sure that their registration.
inception in 1923, proVIding extended
Caner defmes five pu~ -of. the
for your course has gone through.
educational opponunltles for adults and
Colleagues:
. _.
"If you wish to admit a student to your
serving also as a laborltOtY for "exS.N. Elsensudt, Israeli soclotosht and
,1. To encou~a~e. funher ftnanctal ~up- _ class.'' the dean added, ~·you may fora!perimental" new offerings which even-,
profestorofsodolocr at HebreW Univerpon of the Untverstty from corporations
register the student .before October 17;
tualty found plaCI!S In the day division's
sity, will speak on "Sociological lheQry
in Westef1! New York. .
in time for the. last computer run this
academic sun - nursln&amp; engineering,
and Macrosocloloslcl Research," at
2. To provide. a-direct and meaningtul
~mester."
education and social welfare 10 men3:311 p.m., October 15, In Room 42. 4224 · ltnkbetween~StateUniversity_ofNew
MONDAY HOUDA"
tion just~ few. POJIIts Sllth' year, the
1'
R~lea.
,
~
Y~ at Buffalo and a sel17' group of
College is not ab'f&gt;ut to accept the
tie will also be meeting Informally with
dedtcat~_ ~~ 1concerM&lt;I fnends_.
.
~nday, October 1,.4, .Columbus
ptoposition that the recent· enrollment
Interested students, .faculty,, •!'d.
· 3. To~ asnfOoth means O!.two-.- · D.,, • be1- fulr-ollierie.il ~decline inCiiates that' lts WOrk Is do~.
membeB of the \JrWenlty community
way communlcations~ · UI'It and ·
llfr'holltlay";
not 11e"ln , 'We're.ervtnj4,3511st'Uile!itsthisfalf.''
prior to and after his talk.
~~...;.__
.
.
~U!I·~·bec;loRd.
•
OIIi!mer
points out.· "lnd that's stiR a
Professor Elsemtadt hu bf!f!n visiting
• ww ,...--.. ~mentarv
MOfldty. ~ 28;
-the , sizeable number."
·
prolessor at Harvard Un1veJtlty,
WBfO 1•.1 FMl, the ufll f.jblk ;J; 0
.academic calendar u a hoUday
.
MaUachusettS Institute of Technolot!Y,
oerv!a!, will present • ~ • hour-tong
we~er- n.y) so no c:~.a are
the University oJ Chicago and die
documentary on population In the
scheduled. Howew~, h . . be a-Unlverstty of Oslo. He Is a fellow of the
United States, Wednesday, Pctober 16,
~al wodt 'day for non-teachlns
Joyal Anthropolosical Institute of LonThe Board of Directors of the
don. Among his publications are From
Ill 8 p.m. The dot:umentary IS" being
~ -lhls )'U' V-ails Day
American Journal -of Comparative IJtw
Cenemlon 10 Cenemlon, Modemlupresented In mnjunctlon with World
has been dlanJed to Noftmber 11, a
held Its annual meeting Saturday; Oc·
tion, Protest and dlanp, III'M!Ii Society,
Pppula)ion Day to ~observed Octobet·
day OIJ which dlliles meet and • ol·
Iober 5, at JoH!(i Lord a.rtan Hall, A
and Social Dlffetelllia!lon and Stratifica·group
40 llijileiS and (l(llftributors
24.
tead!lt11
tion.
Entitled "The Mme ·the Meritert . : .
~
were on hand for the meeting. wllich inHis visit· to tJIII Is ~ by th'e
the fncrasinl u.s. Population," the
.... dUdeil- die eledlon of offiCiers. The
'OepartJMnt c:#SodololiY Md the Flic:ufty
. IMeltng ~!Qwed by a reception in
wJde.ranalnl t!wnlnatlon' Of
01' ._..._
of 5odll Sciences and-Administration.
- "-kiin'populldontrends.
- 7 ......
....... ...... ~
he faculty lounp.
._ .....

C..;..,_..

Newspaper .
course 0 ffered

Oct. 17 deadll"ne
for regiS
· • tra n

Israeli scholar
to ledure here

New

aa.es ...

"lsted

Law meeting

~·Is.

..._......,.=Non
::::r:
- . . _. .
-=-~

._

«

,.

,,

�October 10, 1974
offers. someth_lllJI called . "lnteiinedlate
ContempOrary," dlfferlng . entirely in
style •nd •pproach. There is also a
. productjon dass, Theatre 34!), open f";&gt;r
-'-Credit 0&lt; non-credit. Students enrolled rn
this offering make up the Zodiique
Compony,.which presents • concert each
semester. Credit is given only if the student is enrolled in other dance courses.
The Zodiaque group is, incidentally,
AN IDEA FOil DAY CAllE
"lclon'llrnow looio,_an-'&lt; It- the
..., ......
......-. ...... I'd
• t o - . plldllor doe Day Care c-..·

__ ..._......,._,
It-.. .
-'&lt;tolna-..........,.

*""-" theUnda
Swlnluch
.11realre -

._.._
fa&lt; doe ..... _

....

.. . . - . - - - ·

......_to-'&lt;wllhdMealtheCenter
_ _ .......... _ t o _ t o _
- .._
- _
paint
thk doe .,..
- .......
_
__
'11_·
.......

but...,....

......,_.... ol doe ~ - Art and
. _ t o ......
-doe oaly
-_
"" ...,
to . - - their
. . .- . . . . -loohlon,
...... way -ani

the

c-, a~&gt;owe- boyoftclllnonclol aieL"

-Courtyard Theatre is 'alive' with dance
The old Studio Theatre building, Hoyt
and lafayetle Streets, the .center of Buffalo theatrical life before the Studio
Arena's move downtown, is haunted by
ghosts of theatre past. There are lots of
memories there. _ ~
But the facility has not ' been abandoned, is nOt in cobwebs, and is
· nowhere near. becoming a museum.
Under the new name of Eourtyard
.The~tre,

it . vibrates throughout the day
and evening with ·activities of students
enrolled in Linda Swiniuch's Theatre
Department . dance cou,ses. Those
seriously interested in dance could, and
some do, spend almost the entire day
there three times a week, taking ballet
from 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m., followed by
contemporary · dance from 11:30-1 and
by Pointe fro.m 1 to 1:30. Then, after a
break or a return to the Main Campus,

they might well come again to lafayette
and Hoyt for rehearsals of the Zooiaque
Dance Company.
The time in between could be spent in

still another dance course - selected
from among' those offered by the
· Department of Physical Education.

" Because of the split, we have two fulltime faculty lines in each area. Imagine
trying to develop four full-time lines

these days within a single n e w
department."
The split ak:o accounts for a richness o f

· resources: making il possible to blend
studies of kinesiology and anatomy (from

the Physical Education side) with acting,
make-up ·and costume design.

Finally, Physical Education people can
be exposeC to theatre and vice versa, a
healthy, broadening experience in Ms.
Swiniuch's' vieW. ·
The two programs work at nor

duplicating each other's efforts. T.h eatre
· offers beginning and intermediate ballet,
elementary pointe for those qualified,
and a course known as ~~ Body Movement
for Adors" (a misnomer, Ms. Swiniuch
points out, because only about half the
enrollment is from Theatre; many, in
fact , are from Physical Education} .
Contemporary dance is the sphere of
Physical Education, although 'Theatre

Cooperation the Two
This leads to ~ point that both Ms.
Swiniuch and Joan Ver Dun of the
Physical Education program emphasize
- that the two areas are working
cooperatively to foster a full-scale dance

P'QB~!'d ~heC::i~r~:~mples of academic
· cooperation between the two is the fact
thit all future ad hoc dance majf.rs in the
University, as well as those rmjoring iil
special combinations of dance and other
areas, will have to hav£ both Ms.
Swiniuch and Ms. Ver Dun as sponsors of
the dae&gt;ce portion of their programs.
The ffnt public . performance
collaboration of the two units will come
October 17-19 lri a [ectur'eDem&lt;instration on dance to be held at
Harrilllin Theatre Studio (8 p.ni.). "M$.
Swlniuch will be reoponsible for the first
half of the ewenlna ~ a three-port
preoentotlon c:allecl ".Dal)oe, Dana!R aod

Oandtl&amp;" fOturina ~of the stu-

dent ZodiM!ue uoupe..The piece will es!
The Saaae Un~ .consliuctlon
plore whit mikes a dance and what peo'Fund bas awarded .• $10,1S0,1180cOntract
ple do to ·betome dulcers, while 11to the John W. Cowper eomp..., Inc. of
luscnllns different llyles of moftlllent· r-anda
for the inlerlor of two
Cradiadntl outwml from a aMNnOn trunk
science - . s on lhe Amhersl c:arttpus.
to sudl tiranchel as billet, conlemporary
Scheduled to . . . . llnrnedlalely In the
ciMw:e, jiZz, atp, burlesque, ett:.). Ms. Yer . Waller P, Coofte and ~ Hochstener
Dun Will lake the - " ' half, Diking
. BioloaY lind f'hlrmacy Towers, lbe -.It
Uoul and deruuodlr.aiiiJ choreoaraPhYlnduc1es allnterlor ..... floor and ceil·anc~ cornposlllon.
Ing finishes as well as lab benches, doon
.
and
some plumblna 111d electrical
.-.~
flnlshlrta.
:
Al finl stance. the spill in campus
Coqiletlon dale, aa:ordlns to Dr.
dance- prosrams seems .unwieldy,
John A. Neal,......,.. viae pnilldenl for
counlerproductlve. Ms-. SwiJtiuch,
facllldes pllnnlnt. Will be June, 1976. Dr.
' - - · feels the oppoUie Is true.

.

working on a November concert to
feature guest artist Peter Bertini and
Carole -welsh of the local Black Dance
Workshop "(hose performance will be in
fulfillment of her master's project for the
· M.A. in humanities.
While there is no formal dance major
at present, Ms. Swiniuch points out that a
student at U/ B may major in theatre with
a concentration in dance. Or he or she
may eled a special major program. Some
e xamples of these with which Ms.
Swi niuch has been involved as sponsor
include combinations of field s such as
dance and anthropology, dance and
education, dance therapy and dance and
media. In the laner program, a student
pre pared himse lf for further work in the
filmin g of dance and is now an appren~ice with the Modern Dance Company in
Winnipeg_. Another special dance major
has gone on to do graduate work in city
pl ~nning, bringing toher stuqies .a particular interest in basing design concepts
on the way people move. This individual
has also been called upon to provide
moVem e nt cla sses for her fellow
architectural students to raise their consciousness concerning this design consideration.
1111 Enrolled
.
Appro ximate ly 100 students are enroll·
ed in the dance courses in the Theatre
Department this fall . "There is tremendous interest on campus,". Ms. Swiniuch
notes. "We run at capacity from 9:.30-6,
five days a week, and Physical Education
does the same from 8-3:30."
Being located in the Courtyard Theatre

offers severol odvantaaes ID her prosrarn,
Ms. Swlnluch feels. "There's somedling
-.bout the allnmPhere. People are freer;
they work harder •ncl perform more
sharp.ly here than ltrthe Unlvenlty-environmel)t." And there's no problem
commuting. C•mpus Sefvices provides
diytime buses to Hoyt and lifayette on a
schedul~ which meshes with the dance
~lass schedule. ·
The floor at the Courtyard Theatre is
another plus. "There's no good performing floor on campus," Ms. Swiniuch .
notes. The Tartan floor in the Gym h•s
only point of impod'resiliency. And the
Harriman floor is m•keshift it best. At
the Courtyard, floors have generol
resiliency, a must for dance performance. But there are splinters.
The Drama Workshop at Ellicott will
hopefully offer the University • first d•ss
dance performanCe floor, Ms. Swiniuch
says. However, opening of that spoce has
been delayed, pendiQg the working out
of administrative procedures and
responsibilities for iu use. Ms. Swiniuch
is a member of a campus committee
currently setting up guidelines for the
facility.
Ms. Swiniuch, who was on the University's Physical Education faculty for 11
years before her dance program was
shifted to Arts and letters, feels that she
and Ms. Ver Dun of Physical Education,
working together out of their separate
areas, have created an " atmosphere" for
the buildin~ of a comprehensive dance
program on campus. "We haven't really
expanded it yet," she says, " but we'll get
\ there."

P-hone briefings
set for .Amherst
A training and information conference
on understanding and Qperating the
telephone equipment on the Amherst
Campus will be held October 16 for
Amherst administrative Qepartmental
· ·
personnel.·
This will be a series of short instruction
periods followed by questions and
answers. The sessions will be 'repeated
approximately eYery half hour between 1
and 4 p.m. in Room 370 of the Ellicott
Complex's Millard Fillmore Academic
·
Collegiate !=enter.
Represe.ntatives ·from th~ New York
Telephone Com pony and Michael Day of
the U/8 Chief Accountant's Office will
conduct the sessions.
Personnel assigned to Amherst are
asked to stop in any time during the
above hours.

�·• October 10, 1974

4

New weapon system could·_-stlfle ·social programs ·.,
8~1

ly W.tler Shnpson
Cr.du.lfe Studenr. I'Niosophy
To most Western New Yorkers, 11 8-1"

means a vitamin. But to the Air Force and
large corporations like General Electric,
Boeing, and Rockwell International, "81" is the name of a proposed new
bomber to replace the 8-52 lor ·atomic
war and deterrence, as well as lor future
conventional or limited wars like Vietnam. While the Air Force and the corporatlons claim that the 8-1 is essential
for national defense, other experts on
the military have argued that the 8-1 is a
very expensive public works project for
the aerospace industry.
The 8-1 is still in the developmental
stage and a positive decision on lis
production has not yet been made.
Congress is expected to decide whether
td buy a fleet of 241 of these bombers,
their weapons, tankers, fuel and
operating costs in 1976.
The Il-l's Price Tas
A report prepared for the 110
Members of Congress for Peace Through
law describes the history of the 8-1's
.Continually escalating cost estimates:
hen at oripnal c'!"f ostln..t_e s the 8-1
boniloer ....,...- to be the most

e•-

pens!Ye - - system e.e. bulh.
In mkl-1971, when 8-1 enpneerins
dewelopment bepn, the toa.l prosro~.m
• ., ostitnated at $9.4 bllion, bnollen
down at $2 w.on le&gt;&lt; ,_.,rdo and

dewelopm8t and $7.4 bilfio~ ~ for
production. That • • doubtless too low
because lnllation • ., not Included. But
It ... the ollldal estimate
which
C""'''ftS "-dlts cledslon to proceed.

upon

• "Since then. costs h.11we risen
AI ol April 1974, the
..-rdo and clew~t estimate
• • $1.5 w.on, up 75 per cent ower
1971, and the procludion flsure
SU.S W.O., up 55.4 per cenL Since
1971 the total ..-rdo and develop-

-ally.

w.,

-olsen -byand
. . -that
ftsure
has
$5.6 .
......_..,..
with the
.,..._ only about hallway throush the
..-rdo and deoelopnoent otase••• •
11ut 11M: 8-1prop- coot h deceptive
beuuR · - -and
-maintenance
.........ents,
.upport,or-atlon
. - _ - o f fhese wil, of COUIH, be
Incurred whether or not the 8-1 h buNt,
oo lo_aa • the United States reblns a
otratep:--. fleet olany ldnd. lui
they . . be.............., hlsf-lor the
...1• •• ·'

Concerning the total system cost of the
B-1 bomber, the same report gives a
$35.5 billion figure as one based on present estimates of procurement costs,
assU!J1ing no more cost overruns. The
neport also states:
' In .w-1971, there . . . . otlenlpt to
anlwe at_ a total llratqk: ........,,

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

. , _ ..... .., ......... the....W
Alrfalce ..................,and.

.... ..... _____
..- ........ _....

Cost in Tox Dollars
According to the 1971 Inte rn al
Revenue Service publication, " Statistics
of In co me : individual income tax

re turns," taxpayers in Erie and Niagara
. Counties (the 8ulfal o Standa rd
Metropolitan Statistical Area) paid $562.4
million in individual (or joint} tax returns
in 1971 . This figure represented .66 per

cent of all federal taxes gathe red by individual tax returns. Based o n this
· percentage, $330 million in tax dollars
would come out of Western New York
(Erie and Niagara coUnties) to pay for a

B-1 bomber system which cost $50
billion, i.e., a moderate estimate of. the
total cost of this systfm.l Taking the es~
timate to be the cost for a ten year

periOd, Western New York taxpayers
would in effect make ten $33 mill ion ta x

installments to pay for the B-1 . Or, in
other words, $247 for every man, woma n,
and child (a bo ut $1 ,000 for a fami ly of
four) in our area would leave Western

New York for 'the B-1 bomber.
The following table estimates the
amount of federal tax dollars which
would , come out of va rious areas in
Western New York [over the next 10
years] in order to pay for a $50 billion B-1
system.•
City of autf~ ... . . . ... . ...... ~ . ... $111 mllion
Ta.n of Ton.~wand.A ' .......... . .... 26 naon

va.,e of Kenmore .. ..... :.. .. ..

S ..-on .

...-on
........,._...................... :.... n-..
City of

Ton.IW~nd.

•• •• •• •• •• •. • •• ••

=
..........·:: : : : : : : : : : :

Cheeldow... ........ :.. .. .. .. .. .. •
West SenecA • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
o.doanl ,... .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. •
Cllyaf........._ ...... ..., .... .. ..

,

~

S

21 12 . ..-ort

s-

,-..,

.....................'!::::::
....,..

City"' . . . . . . . . . . ..... . .... .... . 2t Clly el Nolth Ton...anct. . • . • .-.. .....
9 ..-on
ledqoort • .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. •
' -

&amp;tee-, .... .. .: ........ ........ .,, -

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

Wellenl New York

raearcli ••• oH.relo.-eat a•d

Cosl In

: ....., 111111ft1 ... daoe "' PI

than .'~ ehfl_lonated.~

The Reporter hopes on this page to
prcwide 11 forum for the exchan"'e of
"
views on a wide nriety of Issues of
concern to the U/8 community. We
welcome both position papers and
letter§ as space permits.

~ 't":c.':..':;t,tr.-::.:
_......
,

Supportlns this higher estimate of $70
bllllon,a~doneatPrlnceton University In 1970eitllnllled the a&gt;st of the total

for non-military production, yet therecent dosing of die Hewitt _Robins plant
has been a reminder of the area's
depressed economi6 condition. In May
1974, unemployment in Erie an~ Niagara
Counti~ was 8.5 per cent, havong been
even higher a couple of months earlier.'
A_ r~nt study showed that every $1
bolloon the leder_a_l govern_~':"'
transferred from mohtary to covo_h an
progr_ams. ~uld create 6,436 more Jobs

bomber. system. (including 10-year

operation and maintenance costs) at $75
billion. 1 This would easily- l"flake the 8==1
the m~t expensive weapon system ever.
Cost to Western New York
The cost of the 8 _1 bomber 10 Western
New York can be measured in at least
two ways: 1) The cost in tax dollars which
would come out or'western,~ York 'to
pay for the 8 _1 bomber system; 2) The
cost in- social programs and domesti~
(non-military) production which would
not be possible in Western New York
because the necessary federal money
would be instead spent on costly weapon
systems like the 8 _1 bomber.
·

.

..... c-, .. ......... ..., ..... .. -... .

_...,.._. ~· ······· $))1-

Sodall'nlir-.

and Chllan l'rodu!:llon
The recent hearlnp on housing in the

City of Buffalo Oune 19-21) have revealed
that, besides new vision and lma~ination,
millions of dollars are desperatelY. needed .JD provide cll!cent housln&amp;for Peo.,le
lro the Buffalo area. fn l'l!bruary 1974, the
Housing Council of the i'llagara Frontier
ani! the Community Planning Assistance
Center recommencled the "City. of 8ul. falo cominh the"'SSIm of $25 million by
July 1, 1974 (and annually thereafter)
toward demolition, reltfbilltatilln, (and)
new housing~ • • . .'_:J'Due in _
lar:ge part to a ladt of federal funds, the
'City will not be able to meet _this
req&gt;mmendation. From the 1974-75 City
budget of $229 miUion, just over. six
million clol!.n has been alkicated to
housing related c:onoemo -with virtually no mtJney for reNbllltaflon or new
construction of one or two Alnily dwell-

Ins units.

Areas like mass tfllnslt, medldne,.
alnlrOI, and enetJIY production demonstrate the nat_ionaUy felt need
~

It os agaonst a. background of events
such as these tliat the cost of the 8-1
bon:ober must be measured. Instead of .
buyong _8:1 bombers, to_ what use could
$330 molhon be put to on Western New
York! What social programscould be 1mplemented or sustained with this money!
What non-military production could be
financed or stimulated!
While there would not necessarily be a
direct connection between a decision to
stop the Iundin&amp;..of the 8-1 bomber and
one to fund thd~e local alternatives we
may imagine, the re is a clear connection
between increasi ngly hi gh levels of
military speniling by the federal government and inadequate levels of funding
for other programs. · ·
For FY75 the Administration has asked
the Congress to authorize the spending
of $212.5 billion .• Of these funds, only
$46.3 billion or 21.8 per cent are earmarked for human needs. In sharp contrast, $102.4 billion o r 48.6 per cent are
fo r military spending. This constitutes a
$19 billion increase in military spending
over the last year.
The Brookings Institute's a nnual
analysis of the federal budget found that
the new 11 defense" budget may portend
"the most' far-reaching changes since
1961 , when the new Kennedy Admini stration sought to reformulate'
defense goals and restructure forces."'
The ir analysis claims that if the Congress
acce pts the new approaches, " def~nse"
outlays will rise by some 5 per cent a year
in "real" do)lar terms during the next
decade, and more than that in dollar
terms. New weapon systems, like the B· 1
bomber with its sophisticated and highly
expe nsive technology, are part of these
"new approaches" which may result in
even highe r levels of military spending in
the future.
For F¥75 the Administration is re·
qu es ting $499 million for further
development of the 8-1 . If this amount is
funded, the Congress is one or two years
. away from the $50 billion decision on
whether or not to fund the production of
the whole 8-1 bomber system. This decision, and others like it, may cost Western
New York those programs/ in housing,
health, education, ancl employment
which are very much needed .
Footnotes
report w~ printed in
c~ ltecord with the

the ~}' 20, 1974,
tide, " 8-1 Bomber
Study". II wu prep• red by ·senillor Ge orge
McGovern •nd Congreu m•n John Seiberling under
the wspices of Members of Co~ for Peiice
Th""'l!h law.
2. The Priflcelon University Study estirNte is from
" RePQ!t on the B-1 Bomber", printed in the
Con.reulonaf ltecord on Mily S, 1971 , by
c_onsres:sman ~n Seiberiins.
S. The KCUrKy of rhis estirNte is limited by two
~surnptions. First, it HSUmes~dut W,e steni New
York's (Erie .and Niapra Countles') Wre of
federal tn dolbn pthened by individull tax ~urns
woukS be the- sarne"durins 1M futu re deade as it was
in 1971, the '!'«* recent year for which In cl.aul tm ,
been J,ublilhed. Secxmd, ii HSUrMS rhat Western
New York's ~ of federiil tax dgllan -ptheted
from all sourcrs Ondudlns corpome: excise, emte;
stfl,dtslom taxes, etc.) is rhe u~ as itl sture of lues~• .,. lnd~ tn retuft\5. r , •
1. The

,u

4.. The flsure on thJs tlble.were .arriwd at on ·the
ol population ~ .~one-.. .._oed
in the 1970 C2flWS. T'hus:. dk!y do not tab into ac·
count chanps in poput.llori since then; noJ .do they
take Into account loc:.al difference in per capita tax-

.,_

L RecommendatloM Ol .ohe Febnuooy 91fi; 1974,
which -

Communloy Redeoeloprneno Semina•,

held at the Cemr.al ~n Church at 1ewett
hrkway and Main .Street, Bufbk».
L The New Yon Deponmeno o1 Labor.
7. The "~ . . conducied .. the ~uwns
tnllilute -of 'rechnolosY by Raymond Hanman,
DouaJas Smith, ..... O,Oyld - ·

FJ-.c~~ren!:!=~~==~':~~ 1'~;
FY7s' bucfRrr

over which the Congress has no conuol,. i.e .•~l s«urity ~nd. othe.r trust funds.
,_ThE&gt; N8t rOtt n.nes. M~y 11, 1974.

.•
Graduaie Student~ dew~
this.. "VVewpooRts" ~ In ~
with hh - " will the w-.. New
York PeKe Center. The c-Ia- of

26 aru relfslcMoo, prolelliona!MCI com-

munity action oopniullonl-lndutllns
Common ea..e, the ~MaW of Women
,Yoten, and the YWCA, ...... olhensponsorina a 1"'- on " ' I - Needs:
A Natfc&gt;MI Priority,w Saturday, Odober
19, In the 5ludent Union ol Canhlus
College on Hughes Ave:. from 9::10 a.m.
t_o 4:30 p.m. Conf~ spul.en wt11
focus on priorities lor the 197511scal year
federal budget and the uc:rlsls" of the
poor, the average taxpayer and local
sovernments. Wes&amp;ern New York candidates for the U.S, House of Representatives (36th, 37th and 38th Districts) will
be on h1nd to 1nswer questiorii o~bout
health and welfare, miHtary llpiOndlns
ond foreisn aid and housing and community welf,ne. The conference, open to
everyone, has a registration fee of $2
which, Simpson says, can be waived for
those unable to afford it, Call 85~350
for further information,

MIT profeSsor

-to give art talk
Wayne Andersen, professor of the
history and theory of ait, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, will lecture on
Gauguin's "The Spirit of the Dead
Watching," Thursday, October 17, at 8
p.m. irr the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Auditorium, under sponsorship of Art
History and the Gallery.
The paintin&amp; to be discussed Is in the
permanent collection Df the AlbrightKnox.
.
During his ten ye~ ~ -Alt~ . I.T.,
Andersen has been visiting professor at
Yale; Harvard and Columbia. He is a
specialist in nineteenth and twentieth
centyry art, has publi5hed. a book on
Cezanne's dr~wlng•, atfil a critical
psy.c;ho-biography of Gauguin
(C.UJIUin'$ , . . . . l.olt, reviewed ~
O.ristof!her Lehnjan.,._upt In the ~)lew
YC!'i; Jll,!&gt;es as "Book of the Ti~,'' an~
by .trt In~ as· ~thtfbeot&gt;book On
any aspect of the visual arts ever
written"). A paperback. of the laner will
appeaJ: in September.
In the sprlns of 1975, the New York
Graphic Soclett wlll publish his
A-an~"',.._, a comprehensive stuc!y .of the subject from
19)0 to the presenL
.
Profes•or Andersen has lectured
throughout the country or( different
aspectS of modem art
His Buffalo lectun!- is open •to the
public without admission charge.

�October 10,

1974

... ...
·I

·,

I

Grants total
$1.3 inillion
in September

HSL strengthening hospital relations

r-

The H~alth Sciences Library (HSL}, now
in expanded quarters in the Stockton
Kimball Tower, has embarked on a
program of strengthening i ts service
relationship with area hospital libraries,
Librarian C.K. Huang' repor:ts.
In recent · weeks, HSL representat ives
and individuals from · the lakes Area ..
Regional Medical Program ILA RMP}
have visited major hospitals and health
institutions in the Buffalo area, including
the eight University affiliated and
associated hospitals, to explain services
·offered by the campus facility. ·
Currently, Huang points out, delivery
service (interlibrary loan) to users in
hospitals is provided by.the Information
Dissemination Service of HSL. Services
available include loan of books, copied
journal art icles, computerized
bibliographical searches through the
various dat a bases of the SUNY
Biomedical Network and the MEDLINE
terminal of the National Library of
Medicine. assistance in answering
reference queries and other information.
The Current Awareness or Selective
Dissemination of Information (SOl) is
another HSL service by which
researchers are kept alerted to n"ew jour~
nal articles in their areas of "interest,
through the SUNY Biomedical Network
or MEDLINE. User profiles may be stored
and automatically processed each month
asainst the most current available data
base. The&lt; cur&lt;ent -areness profile will
provide users with- citations· two to three
weeks before they are available in the
Index Medicu•:
Use ol5enlca l'llcolorapd
Hospital staffs are beinJI encouraged to
take full advantage of the service&lt;
available to them, Huang says, Special
services beyond what the HSL can
provide freely are being established to
accommodate extensive research and
Instructional programs. One example of
this, he indicates,· is the installation of a
paid photocopy machine for faculty use.
Many physicians and health
professionals remain unaware of the existence of these services or do not know
how to obtain the maximum u~ o_f them,
Huans says.
·
· "
· Univenity faculty . members station'ed
in the hospitals may request' delivery
senice fronl HSl throush the hospital
library. They ~y also epm~ to ampus to
use the library directly because they
receive the same privileges as a faculty
member .utloned here. There are about
two thousand full-time, pan-time, and
volunteer health sciences faculty
memben scattered In the 8uffalo area.
Htlans estimate...-Acalrdlns to u~-­
ty U6rvies policy, each reCleivel full
librar)&lt; priYIJeees when uslns the liSl
directly. Hospital Nil without 1 UIB
faculty appointment may olltain a
counesy card from the library H they

wis~ to borrow material directly.
Ttie Information Dissemination Service
. of HSL was established in 1970 with a
three-year grant from LARMP to provid e
needed libra ry services to the health

professionals in the Wl!stern New York

area. The service has been continued
with support from the 'Unive rsity, the

Regional Medical Library and other
cooperative programs. The hospita ls are
also urged to further strengthen their
li b rary personnel and basic, frequently
needed mater ials in order to provide
more time ly and conve nient services to

the users in the hospitals.
HSL should serve as a backup to the&lt;e
area hospital libraries, Huang says. " This
is th e same principle und er which
various University branch libraries have
been established to meet local service
needs. Examples such as the Bell Science
Library, the Ridge Lea Library and the
proposed Rio-Pharmacy library provide
library services for the faculty a nd
st uden ts stationed in those locations.
Other off-campus units, such as the
Depart ments of Ora l Biology and
Physocal Therapy also maintain small
collections for their faculty. The Health
Sciences Library provides back-up support to all these unit librarie&lt; as well as
supporting the hospital librarie&lt;."
Ubrary C.,.,P..alion
An updated union list of current
peri~dic;al hold ings of all hosp ita l
l_ibranes m Western New York will soon
be published by the HSL, Huang reports.
A · similar union HSl--Jor audiOvisual
materials .has been considered. These
. effor!'• h~ indicate&lt;, will encour:age the
hospital hbranes to share their .resources
in order to provide betler service to
their users.
The Lakes Area Regional Medical
Program, assisted by the New York• and
Northern New Jersey Regional Medical
Librory and !h!' HSL, has periodically
conducted workshops and training
sessions' for• area hospital library personnel. The most recent was held on
August 15-16, including the continuing •
education cour...-of the Medical Library
Association, "Human Factors in the
Medial~ library Administration" and
"System Analysis;" and panel sessions
such as "libr~riao Participation in
TNchin~ Teams," "Role of the Librarian
in the Future," etc. An association of
"Western New York Health Sciences
Librarians" h!l.s also been organized,
Huan11 repons.
H5l Coledlons
• The holdings of the HSL cover a brOad
ranse of blomeclical subject areu. As of '
July,1974, the t-1 collection was147,197
bound volumes of boob and journals.
· Many 1111jor journals are in CIOmplete sets
and the library subscribes to 3,166
r current journals indudlns 250 ,..jor indexins and abstraalns titles: •

HSL has also been colleding non·
printed materials in many subject areas,
which include films, filmstrips, tapes,
slides, mi crofilms and microfiches. As of
Jul y, 1974, 15;1}4() were incl uded in its
holdings. A number of -se1f-instruction AV carrels are now available' in the new
HSL facilities.
As one of the oldest med ical librarie&lt;,
HSL hold; a val uable historical collection
of about 6,000 volumes, primarily in
medicine, published fro m the 17th to the
19th cent ury. The processing of this
collection has begun and the library
plans to strengthen these holdings l o
provid e the essential resources io r
researchers and physicians engaged in
historical stud ies.

Joins news office
Robert W. Engelhardt has joined the
staff of Univer~ity Information Services as
edu cation and sciences editor.
Engelha rdt, .30, is a native of Alban y
an d a graduate of St. Bonaventure
University. He holds an M.A. in journalism from Marquette__,.
• Prior to coming to U/ 8, he was m~nag­
ing editor of the New Yort Slare Taxpayer, a monthly publication of the
Citizens' Public Expenditure. Survey fn
Albany.
·

Twenty-two grants/contracts totaling
$1 ,356,670 were received by University
re&lt;earcherS:in September, Roben C. Fittpat ric~. acting vice president for
research, reports.
Fifty-nine proposals amounting to Sl,367,871 were submitted to prospective
sponsors during the month.
New Grants
New grants .went to: Sol W. Weller,
Chemical Engineering, S6,000 from NSF
for a conference on " Coal Technology
and Advanced Systems - The University's Role;/' Phyllis Higley, School · of
Health Related Professions, S95,596 from
PHS for "Short Term Teacher Preparation
for Allied Health Faculty;" Beverly
Bishop, Department of Physiology, S3"1;94S from the Air Force for "Analysis of
Multiple Parameters of the Ventilatory
Response to Chemosti mulati on and
Pressu re Breathing;" ·Michael Apicella,
Department of Medicine,- $36,515 from
NIH for "Subgroups of Neisseria
Gonorrhoeae;" G.H. Nancollas, Chemistry, SS4,700 from NSF for "The Nucleation, Growth as DissolutioftC)f Crystals on
Scale Forming Materials;" and George
Unger, Educational Opportunity Center,
$13,155 from the New York State Education Department fo r a " Civil Service
Career Preparation Program."
Renew&lt;~ls

Continuation and renewal grants of
more than S2S,OOO were received by:
George C. lee, Civil Engin'eering, S46,562
from NIH for " Solid and StrUctural
Mechanics of lungs; " T.T\ Soong,
Engineering Science, S51,300 from NSF
for " Stochastic Modeling and An;olysis
of lung Tissue Elasticity; " Om P. Bahl,
Biochemist ry, $103,445 from NIH for
" Studies . on Chronic Gonadotropin;"
A.C. Brownie, Biochemistry, $154,766 for
" Studies on the Pathogenesis and
Prevention of Hypertension;" Francis
Klocke, Department of Medidne, $364,680 from NIH for " Pathophysiology .of
Card1opulmonary Dysfunction;'' Morris
Reichlin, 'Department of Med ici ne, $46,410 from NIH for " Immunochemistry of
·Hemoglobin Variants; " - Fralik loewus,
Biology, $110,722 from NIH for " lnosital
Metabolism;" S. Bruckenstein, SS3,000
from AFOSR for "fundamental Solid
Electrode Studies of Phenomena Related
to Corrosion Prevention, fuel Cells and
Batteries;" G. Rechnitz, Chemistry, $29,100 from .NSF for " Phenomena at ionSelective Membrane Electrodes;'' .and
· Marvin Zele'n, Smisticall.abomory $92 568 from theVeterans Admlnistratk.n f~r
"Statistical Se!Yices for luns Cancer
Studies."

GSA badcs Oay Care

�October 1o. 1974

liSZT .
IETY
STIVAL
Franz liszt, Hungarian composer and
piano virtuoso, died in 1886 while attending a Wag~r Festival, an altogether fitting climax to a lifetime as a pioneering

composer of piano, orchestral wo• ks,
choral works and songs. An extravagatJ.try
praised and adulated pianist who established the vogue of the solo recital and
elevated the social position of the performing artist, Uszt will himself be
"festivalized" and once more adulated at
the annUal meeting of the Ameriean liszt
Society in. Buffalo, October 25-2Z.
The Buffalo event is being presented
under the joint auspices of the U/B
Depanment of Music, the Buffalo and
Erie County Public. library an&lt;! the
University's Office for Credit-Free
Programs. A· comminee composed of
U/B representatives Yvar Mikhashoff,
Terry Charles Schwarz, Ethel Schmidt,
and Allan Canfield has been working in
conjunction with David
Kushner of
the University o( Elorida.aLGainesville.in arranging the 14 sessions &gt;11hich will be
presented during the three day period.
This meeting of the liszt Society is expected to ariract more than 100 leading
musicians --.nd historians from
througho'!t the United States and
Canada. Emphasis will 'be on the music of
Franz Liszt and on the immense influence of the nineteenth century composer on composers of his time and on
mu~ic in· general. U/B faculty, staff,.
students and alumnj as well as members
of the general 'Public are also invited to·
anend.
·
_
Van Clibu_rn, the noted pianist, has
accepted the position of Honorary President of the American liszt Society,
however, it iS not known whether his
··c oncen commitments Will permit him to
be ln Buffalo for this year's session,

z.

tributing tritic to the Christian Science
Monitor and head of pia no pedagogy

and class piano at Catholic University;
George Parish, associate prOfessor of
music, Radford College, Radford, Va.;
Meade Crane, pianist; American Composer Allen Sapp; U/B pianists Frina and
Kenwyn Bo ld t; the Wo men's Chorus,
Kenmore Presbyterian Church, Kent J.
Va nder Band, cond uctor; Helen Engler,
pianist who is associate professor of
music, Northeastern Illinois, and a faculty member of Chicago Conseryatory
College; Michael Ingham, assistant
professor of music at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, who made hi s
professional baritorie debut oppoSite
Phyllis Curtin in " Tasca; " and Carolyn
Horne, piano.
Saturday night at St. Paul's Cathedral,
the . Men and Boy's Choir of the
Cathedral under the d irection of
Frederick Burgomaster, organist, will
ptesent a cOncert featuring the premiere
of a new work by 'Prof. Smit as well as
selections from Bach and liszt. Also on
the concert program: Patricia Or.eskovic,
soprano; Andrew Schultze, baritone;
Benjamin Hudson, violin; Dana Rusinak ,
cello; Yvar Mil&lt; hashoff, piano; Paul
Schmidt, narrator; Suzanne Thomas,
harp; Mr. Burgomaster, harmonium, and
vocal and instrumental ensembles from
U/ 8 .
.
/
.

Sunday Ennis
Sunday morning at the Statler Hilton,
the program will include U/ B faculty
members, Heinz Rehfuss, ~ss baritone;
Carlo Pinto, pianist; David Fuller, harpsichordist and organist; St~phen Manes,
pianist; Donafd Weilerstein, violinist;
and the Buffalo String 'Q uanet - Ull!
studenls -Benjamin Hudson, violin;
~ureen Gallagher, viola; yrol Zeavin,
' friday OpenlnJ '
~iolin; and Dana Rusinak, violincello.
The meeting will offi~lly get un· The Festival's final activity will be a
. derway au ·p.m., Friday, October 25, iri
concen by the .Buffalo ,.philharmonic
the Buffalo and Erie County Public
Orchestra. under Michael Tilson Thomas
Library Auditorium with -greetings by
with sa:prano Jessye Normari as soloist in a
Kushner, Mlkhashoff and Schwarz, to be
Wagner, bi~zt and Knussen program · tn
folk-' Ill' a presentation of·"Roma," a .. Kleinhans Music Hall at 2:30 p.m., Sunlecture/recital !of Professor leo 5.mit of . day.
.·
the U/11 Music Department. 'PianistFor complete registration information,
Composer Smlt's presentation will incontact Ms. Ethel Schmidt, Faculty Club,
..c;lude color slides, photography and a
· Harriman Hall. A student registration· of
performance of music by liozt, and is ~ $5 covers all activities with the exception
billed as "a pictorial, literary and musical
of the Buffalo Philh11rln0nic concen,.
pdmpsest of twenty centuries of everand meals. '
-chanalnl and continuous creation from . lodging
Prof. Kushner of the University of ·
classical limes to the romantic qe."
Florida isdi~irman'of the Board of'DirecAlso 011 the Friday , program (see ac- " tors ..of the Lisit SOcie.:ty. "Othe&lt; : board ' companying sched':!le for complete
members i'l.clude: Dr. Erno. Daniel,
details): -Aif10 Pignottl, former conc:enUniversity 1&gt;f Califon_~ia, Santa Barbara;
rnaster of the San Antonio SY.mphony;
Dr. Cecil C . Ewln_g, UniversitY. of
Dady Mehta, a faculty niember aiEastern • Saskatchewan; Prof. Fernando laires, ·
Mlchlpn . University; George Mann,
Peabody Comervatory of Music; Dr.
assistant profesoor..of music, Kansas State..;
Roben C. lee, Nonh Seattle .Communi~
·College, Pittsburgh; and actor Paul, . College; ~nd Dr. Halsey Stevens, UniverSchmidt, associate&amp; f Russian
sity of Southern Calilornia. "Dr. Dlfniel of
literature, Unlvers
, .and Yvar
Santa Barbara is also president of the
MllchashOff, assistant
of plano,
society; Dr. Elyse Mach-Pelrich,
u/11, a former Pulitzer Prize nominee in
Northeastern llti:fiois, executive
music, _ln. a prolram of melodramas.
secretary; Prof. Anhllr A. Janrlery, Ra.d SaluiUy Eftllll
ford ·college; treasurer; and Prof.
Saturday eveniS ·at Baird Hall will
Kathryn G. OberJShain, membership
secretary.
feature Robert Durnm. COIIIJ&gt;CKeT•

con-

~RIDAY, OCTOBER 25

SATURDA
9:30-LECTURE-RE
Roben Dumm: liszr
Baird Recital Rail, U
10:30-PAPER
GeOrge D. Parish : P
First Piano Concerto
Baird Recital Hall, U
11:15-RECITAL:"'
Baird Recital Hall, U
2:00-LECTURE-PE
Allen Sapp: The Ore/
Arshanska Boldt and
1 performance of
wornf!n's chorus, Ke1
Baird Recital Hall, U
3:lD-RECITAl: He
Baird Recital Hall, U
5:110-VOCAL REC
Michael Ingham. ba1
Baird Recital Hall, U

11 :00-R
TRAliON-Mezzanine, Statler
Hilton Hotel.
1:00-0PEiiiiNG EMARKS by David Kushner,
Yvar Mikhashoff, an Terry Charles Schwarz-Buffalo and Erie County Public Library.
&gt;
2:00-LECTURE--RECITAL
leo Smit, pianist: Roma
Color slides, photography and narration by leo Smit.
Music by Franz liszt.
Buffalo and Erie County Public Library.
4:30-PIANO RECITAL
George ' ManJl, Operatic and Song Transcriptions
of Uszt-Buffalo and Erie County
Public Library.
3:15-VIOLIN AND PIANO RECITAL
Allio Pignoni _&amp; Dady Mehta
Buffalo and Erie County Public Library.
8:30-EVENING CONCERT
Paul ~hmidt, narrator and Yvar Mikhashoff, pianist,
in The Lost Art of Melodeclamation : a program of
' eighteenth and nineteenth century melodramas by
Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann,
Weber, Wagner and liszt
-- Buffalo and Erie County Public library.

1;31 -

EVENINC

Piemiere Performan1
Three ·Christmas Tr&lt;
mixed chorus and in
Frederick Burgoma
soprano and baritont
choir of St. Paul's t
eluding Psalms 129, 1~
ble
St. Paul's C3theifral.

_REGISTRATION INFORMATION
fEE INFORMATION
' Check lot $34.1l0--Cover
tivities
Check ior $24.oo-covers
. noon,
· ind BU

TO REGISTER
• Use registration bl~nk, at the right -~
• Make check payable to The Division
of Continying Education, SUNYAB
•Mailto"'!" ·.
_, ·
Mrs. Ethel Schmidt
faculty Club, Harriman Hall
. SUNY at Buffalo
Buffalo, New York 14214

1

check for

s1o.~~d~
Food,

Philha~

n

oVAUMPI)r Of MUSIC,

·CO.srONsouo
THE
AND TltE ORta fOil

CIIJDII'.ftll Pa0GaAMS

IN COOPaAliON wmtliiE:u&amp;ICAN UUT
FOR FUR11Q- INFOIIMA~

tAll (715) ~·
;J

�oCtober 10, 1974

7

KJOBER 26
rhopin as .Teachers
; and Str~cture in Uszt'.s
Crane, pianist

tMANCE
Music of Uszt, with Frina
·yn Boldt,. - duo-pianists, in
Dante Symphony, ·with
'der Band, conductor

9:30-VOCAL RECITAL

'

Heinz Rehfuss, bass-baritone and Carlo Pinto, piano,
in songs of liszt
·
· Terrace Room, Statler Hilton .
10:30-LECTURE-PERFORM~NCE

David Fuller : Liszt, Wagner, and the Chamber Music,
assisted by Stephen Manes, pianist, Donald Weilerstein, violinist, the Buffalo String Quartet. A lectureprogram of rarely-heard chamber works of Liszt and
Wagner: Duo Concertante~ Epithalamium, Am
Crabe Richard. Wagners, La lugubre Gondola,
Angelus, Romance Oubliee, and Wagner-L.iszt piano
· transcriprib ns

Terrace, Room, Statler Hilton.

:Z:lO-AFTERNOON CONCERT
Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor, wit h The Buffalo

1gler, pianist

Philharmonic, and Jessye Norman, soprano, in a
Wagner program

: Carolyn Horne, piano

)NCERT (fea.t uring the
a new work by leo Smit :
·ols After franz' Liszt for
ental ensemble.)

Kleinhans Music -Hall.
Other events · will ioclude an opening cocktailparty, an informal performance of rare
Welte-Mignon piano rolls, as well as sight-seeing

din~er

events in the Buffalo and Nia!fara. Falls area.

.,

organist ·and director;

.

ists, with the men &amp; bOys
iral. Works of Liszt, in1music with brass ensem-_·

(Det.odo -

.... -

died)

.. ,\MERIO\N LISZT' SOCIETY FESnV~L '

,...
~ve nts

and ac-

'ents to Sund•y
iing Falls tour
iymphon~

con-

nly admission.
ils portation,
event and
d.

I wish to reshfer for:
0 All events and .. ctillities ·listed ($34.00)
0 Events up to Sundi'y afternoon CS24.00)
0 Admission to . sessi~ns only ($10.00); students
($5.00)

Name ... . .... .• •••.... . ......... . • •••..... . .- ..
~

Address..,-:"....••.•. .. . : ..... .... , ...... -· .. . . .. ..
Phone .. . ..... . .. .... ..... ... .. ... · · ·~ ·.-: ··· ·.· · ·- ·
Business
Home

�•• •

October 10, 1974

Hanod

._, Award wi.nners represent .
cross-sect1on of area women
The eight women selected to receive

Richard Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller

University community service awards

Jacob Javits, Jack Kemp and Edward

from President Rober! l. Ketter at the
U/8 Alumni Association~Community

Advisqry Council's luncheon represent a
cross~section of professional and
volunteer service workers from

throughout Western New York.
The luncheon will be held Wednesday,
October 16, at the Statler-Hilton.
MuleCon:oran
Marie Corcoran of Snyder, who will be
cited in the field of business, has
operated a real estate brokerage firm in
!\mherst and the Greater Buffalo area for
20 years. She is presently a par1 0 er in
Corcoran Malley Associates.
She
organized the Zonta Club of Amherst in
1965, was selected as Amherst Woman of
the Year in 1967, served as president of
the Amherst Chamber of Commerce in
1968, and last year received the Susan B.
Anthony Award from the lnterclub
Council of Western New York, for ex-

emplifyins the ideals of that ardent campaiJner for dvil rishts.
Mrs. Corcoran has parlicipated in activities of the Amherst league of Women
Voters; Women's Division; Amherst

Symphony Orchestra; Governor
Rockefeller's Conference of Women;
and the U/11 Community Advisory Coun. cil. She played key roles in Rosary Hill
Collese's fund raising campaizns to expand Its library and line arts center, and
has held posltiom in local, national and
International real estate associations and·
federations. lately, she has been selling
real In Spain.
-

Alai)..,...

.

. Alfa D. Dodse of Enertsville
Crep&lt;esentlns industry) is the owner and
.,......, of Georp A. Terry Company, a
lltdfalo INinuf«turer and distributor of
aircraft equipment and tools. Mrs.
Dodse has tieen associaled l'rith the
· COIIII*'Y for nKXe dun so years;startins
as a secretary. She promoted to
offlte jhanapr in 1939, and since 1946
has been llllnalfnl the company whose
products lnducle materials widely used
in the HrOSpiCie Industry.
She Is
member of the Women's
Cammlttee of the Buffalo Philharmonic.
• '-"' member of the Zonta Club of
Buffalo. U)d • board member of the
Disdples ol Chrlsr Houses in Chautauqu.. Mrs. DodRe also supports a school
fOr refugee p-Ts from Palestine.

uo •

)...,....,.
.. ....._

. f'l!rlls~ly of Snyder will be cited for
._..........,in the Republican Party as

wll •foredensive cMc and educationPresently community services

dllk-a and a director, National
..., fedeildan of-Republican Women, Mrs.
" KeiY • el'tllltclentlal elector for NeW
. Ycri
1912and Is pn!lidentof the
&amp;le County Fedemlon ol lh!publican

._In

Women's Clubs, hnlns personally
orpalzed
of the C&gt;DUnty's 51 dubs.
She- a memlier of the New York sa.te

a

7)

!:'t:'" l'latform~ in~

form..="of~

Regan.

.

tocally, she ha s been president of the
U/ 8 Alumnae As_sociation, vice presidenl

of the Calasanctius School PTA, general
chairwoman of Buffalo Philharmonic fund
raising campaigns, and coordinator of a
_county-wide women 's program to com-

bat drug abuse which involved 110
organizations. She is also general
chairwoman of Erie County's "Keep New
~ork State Clean " environmental proJect, a delegate to the Nat ional Highway

Safety Conference, and a member of the
U/ B Council.

Mildred Spencer Sanes
.
Mildred Spencer Sanes, Eggertsville, is
acknowledged as among the most
prolific and influential writers in the field
of medical affairs.
Although. retired from the Buffalo
for her ability to _get divergent group~
came to Buffalo and Meyer Memorial.
EveninJ News, Mrs. Sanes still pursues
working together in health, inter·racial
She was a resident in pediatriCs at
her career which has earned national
and
inter·faith
matters,
among
others.
Children's Hospital and has been
awards from , the American Heart
She served as chairwoman of the ad·
awarcjed fellowships at Roswell Park
Association and the American Academy_
visory
board
of
Edward
J.
Meyer
Hospital
~morial lnstitt,Jte in pediatrics, on·
of General Practice. She has received
. from 1965 to 1971, and has held
cology and genetics.
regionil and state recognition from the
leadership positions in - many health
A Phi ~eta Kappa , Dr. Harrod is clinical
American Psychiatric Association,. the
are~s . She is a recipient of the
associate professor of medicine ar U/8.
New York State Medical Society and
Brotherhood Award of the 1-!ational
State Health Department, and the
Florence E. laush
Council of ·Ouistians and Jews, an
~m-:rica~ Can~er Society eight
Florence "r. Baugh has been both
organization she has served as a trustee
crtatrons tn ..all, m addition to 14 local
pointed and elected to the Bullaid Board
in
addition
to
other
assignments.
Mrs.
a_wards for distinguished science repor·
of Education. Following the li"t board
Campbell is also a trustee of the Buffalo
tong.
·
·
election last May, she was named by ·her
Council of Churches.
·
From 1953 to 1970, she coordinated
fellow members as vice president.
.Her reCord of accomplishments in
and produced public service programs
inter·racial activities- includes being vice
An advocate of adequate and equal
for WBEN-TV·and WBEN radio, including
president and secretary of die · Urban
funding for public schools, she has
the long-running University at Buffalo
League for more than 10 years, rec~ivin8
worked to involve parents in school
Round Table, the U/B Medical Round
the League's .1.960 award, contributing to
affairs and to heighten community• in·
Table and a series known as Modem
equal hous1rig opportunities and
terest in funding a!&gt;d expansion of comMedicine. She is a former preSifknt of
delivering speeches about &amp;rotherhood.
prehensive eduation and educational
the National Association oi Science
around
the
wor~d
.
alternatives to meet individual pupil
Writers; is a fellow of the American
A former teacher in the B~ffalo Pulitic
needs. In this regard, she visits many
Associ_ation for the · Advancement . of
Schools, at Buffalo Seminary ~nd U/B,
schools around the city, to meet people ·
Science, 41 member of the. Advisocy
Mrs. Campbell was appointed to the
leam the problems and deliver
Coundf._New York Stiate Kidney Disease
Committee , to Study Community
Institute, and a member of the board of
A mother of live children between 13
Colleges in 1968, and served on the State
directors, Researd.l lor Health · in Erie
and 1'9, Mrs. Baugh is director of
. University College at Buffalo board from
County.
neighborhood services of the Communi1950 to 1969. She is also a member of the
ty _Action Organization . With the
VJoslnia Clllilliilnp .
- Development Board, Buffalo 'state
Y.W.C.A .. she developed a program for
VirJin~ Cummings_of Buffalo is direcCollege Foundation.
the newly established Departmeni of
tor of the lltdfalo Museum of Science, as
EmrM.K. H.urod
Racial Justice/Public Affairs which also
was her bther. Dr. Cummings, an ar1
Dr. Emma K. Harrod, the first female
involves the Buffalo Police Department's
teacher in the Buffalo Public Scll.ools
deputy health rom missioner . in 'Erie
Community Relations Unit.
before joinlns the museum staff in 1945,
County, has helped secure Federal grants ·
The State Education Department has
has written for museum masazines and
totaling $2.2 .million for v;trious health
as~ed her to serve on Its advisory com·
had a -weekly local television series from
programs benefitting local residents.
mt!lee to study institutionl of higher
1957 to 1961, She has been ~t of
·
, ·
· Her m'jpr responsibdity is the health ' · education. •· ·
the Zonta Oub of Buftalo~is prest!~!tly a of mothe" and growing children anilslle
· .Raymond T. Schuler, Commissioner,
vice president of the Y.W.C.A. and"of the
has
developed
a
program
which
will
New
York
State
Department
of
TransporNational league of Am~rlcen Pen
&lt;!ouble family. plannlns services for
tation, will be the speaker at the awards
Women, serves as treasurer of Build A
medically indlsent women. Dr. Harrod
pr&lt;!sentation ceremony. Tickets for the
New City, and IS a member of the-adalso &lt;&gt;&lt;sanized.Jhe County's lead poison
luncheon are $6.25. Reservations can be
visory board, New School for the Perforpreven.tion
and
sickle
cell
anemia
made by callins the U/11 Alumni~­
ming Arts.
screening programs.
tion at (831) 4121. Tickets INiy be picked
Dr. Cummii)JS has~ communiSupervising a sta~ of doctors and
up af the Statler Hilton's Golden
ty -..Ice d1Mions from Buffalo SCale
nurses whq )'YOrk throushout Erie CounBallroom on Qaober 16, or at the Alum- •
CoiJece uaCI the Anie(ian AModatlon
ty, Dr. Harrod is concerned, too, with
ni Association, 123 Jewett ·Parkway.
ol IJnMnlty Women and tile Susan B.
school health programs, medical
Mary Herman, public relations r
Anthony Aw.rd frOm the - lnterclub
rehabilitation and a teenase health clinic
specialist lor the NeW York Telephone
CoundJ Weseern New York.
:
in the Rath Building: ·
Com~~Jny and a member of the UIB
,...~Citolapilll
. .
· Alter recelvlns her medical degree
Community Advisory Council, is
Mlfclrild IC. Campbell of Buffalo is
from Harvard In 1957, she Interned at
chairperson of the luncheon to Honor
beins cited for community activities and
Un!-:&gt;ity of Minnesota hospif!tls. then
Distinsuished Women.

:;p.

opeeches:

or

�October 10, 1974

,_

Is there .a crisis in teaching _ E~gUshl
come the semi-literacy of most incoming
students, who have had little or no prac·
tice in reading or writing."
Writlnl Sample Requeoted
At Bowdoin College, the faculty voted
unanimously .last summer to require a
writing sample from all applican_ts_ to
make sure its students are prof10ent

ly r.bkOim G. Scully

wr~~s~dmissions office has modified the

English at Utah State University, reports
that between 1967 and 1973 the pro~r­
(,ion, of colleges with no composotlon
requirement rose from 6 per cent to 24
per cent, based on a survey of 491 ln-

sti~!i!"however, at least so~ colleges

are c~nsidering reinstating the re~
guireme11t or are looking for new ways •
to assure students can write. As one
department chairman says sadly, uwe've
had to go back to dumbbell English.''
At two-year colleges enrolling
students without traditional verbal skolls
and at four·year institutions with open
admissions, English departments have
generally reoriented their pj ograms to
the needs of students for basic writing

Social Science
Data Library
•
sets opentng.
The Libraries' card catalogue is the
familiar best friend of the student sening
out to write a r~arch paper on anything
from the Alblgensian heresy to
zoogeography.
But where does the Machine-Age student or faculty member turn when h~
needs not a book but a set of data!
Such a student will soon have access to
a new Social Science Data Library, opening Monday in Room 13, ~238 Ridge ~ea .
The Library, explains dorector Marol~n
Brooks has two major purposes. ltlwoll
serve a repository or archive fo_r social
science data, and it will also function as a
service-oriented center for stu~nts and
faculty who want to use this data in their
own work but may need assistance in
.
.
handl ing the data.
At this initial stage, the ltbrary con tams
some 75 workable data sets, says Dr.
Brooks who is also an assistant professor
of polilical science. Building on sets of
data collected in recent years by faculty,
notably in the Political Science Department, the Ubr_;ory now has data of potential interest to students in many other
fields as well, including inform'!'-ion on
st udent and parental attttud~s,
demographic and financial data by aty,
simulation data, the 1970 census tapes,
and the national election surveys from
1952 to the present.
Unlike a conventional library, the
holdings of the new facility are stored
not on shelves but on magnetic tape at
the Computing Center.
.
Besides the Library's own collectton,
which the director describes as "good,"
users have access to a vast range of data
as a result of the Library's participation in
th e Inte r-U niversity Cons0nium for
Political Research . Through the Consor·
tium, members may use data collections
owned by other members, much as
traditional libraries share books and
other materials through Inter-Library
loan. The Consortium collects historical
and economic information as well as
.
political data , Or. Brooks notes.
Data sets avai lable to users are descnbed in a card catalogue in the Library. The
University Libraries is cooperating with
the Data Library so that eventually the
new facility's holdings will ' be crossreferenced in the libraries' master card
catalogue, a project that inv~lves
translating punch cards to conventional
catalogue cards.
.
To help students or faculty get to the
data , four graduate students (in history,
sociology and political ~ience) curr-:ntly
staff the Library, iovddotlon to the dorector. A user will sometimes be able to get
some help from the staff with statisti~l
analysis, Dr. Brooks says. The Library woll
also tell the user where to go for additional help. A keypunch, counter
sorter, and calculator are also a•ailable

requirement somewhat. . It tells ~II
applicants that their chances for admission will be 11Considerably enhanced if
you submit to us a sample of your writing
(not corrected by parents, English
teacher, guidance counselor, e~c.)." · .
The faculty's resolution said the deasion was necessary "in view of what
sk~:-therCitv ColleRe of New York, for
appears to be a general decline in
'linguistic skills' among secondary school
ins..tance, the number of E~glish courses
devoted to literature dechned from 70
graduates."
The lack of writing skills has affected
~r cent before open admissions was
the work of other departments besides
adopted in 1970 to less than 50 per cent
in 1973-74. Every member of the departEnglish.
In a report for the Carnegie Foun~a·
ment is required to teach at least one
tion for the ·Advancement of Teachmg
course in composition.
on undE!rgraduate education in political
Edward Quinn , c hairman of the
science, John D. Millen of the Academy
department, says that about 5 per cent of
for Educational Development reports
the college's entering students are ex·
that departments of political science that
empted from writing courses because
have been enrolling students " on a nonthey don't need them. Of the remaining
Selective or less selective basis have found
95 per cent, 75 per cent need some form
in the past few years that many of their .
of remedial program.
students dia not have an adequate
Tlie college has adopted strict reb ackground in readi ng _an~ in us~ of the
quirements for students - they must
English language to man:'tam the mstru cproduce up to 10,000 words in a
tional pace a ppropn ate for other
semeste r, written in acceptaPie, standard
students."
English.
more practical courses in writing are forHe add s: " Often, departmentS have
The co llege does not accept com·
dng some English departments to rechanged
things
and
in
the
process
have
pete nce in a stud~nt 's own dialect_ as
examine their basic approach t~ the
lowered their expectations of what was
meeting the requ1re me nt , Mr. Qumn
study of English. The l'redomon~nt
expected of students. Th is is known as
emphasis on literary ~tud1es 1s bemg
n~~~f course, the student has ~he right ~
the process of 'altering course content to
challenged .
.·
correspond m o re nearl y to the
to hi s own language, but he has a right to
John Hurt Fisher, poofessor of Enghsh
backgro
und
of
the
students.'"
more than that. He has the right to
at the University of Tennessee and
As is us ual w he n conce rn about
learn standard English-. Wi tho ut it he
former executive secretary of the
student
s'
abilities
eme
rges,
many
lacks the secret of the control he seeks,"
Modern Language Association, says,
professors
and
department
~h
air~en
"We have a new clientele that doesn't
place the blame for the decline m wntmg
heT~~d:~rival of vast numbers of students
w~nt ~nglish the way_it.has~r(. and w~e
skills on the hi gh schools, where, they
without writin g skills, as at City College,
have a profession that won t have 1t
sa y, students are bein_g gwen an .mthe re porte d lack of skills on the part _of
any other way."
·
creasi
ng
number
of
o
pt1ons
of
v.o:h~ch
so me traditional st udents, ~ nd the In ·
Whether English departments can ad co mposition is only one - fo r fulf1llmg
creasi ng pressure from students who
just to the clash between the profession
their .English requireme nt.
wa nt colleges to provi de the~ with
and the "new clientele" is the "central
vocati onal -skills have all combmed to
issue to the survival of English in the next
Little Prep.uation fo rce English departments to re-exam~ne
Roberl F. Hoga n, executive secretary
25 years," Mr. Fisher says. .
thei r basic co mmitme nts to teachmg
of the National Council of Teachers of
His successor at the Modern language
"
literatu re" from a professional, scholarincludes
English,
an
organization
that
Association, William D. Scha~fer , adds,
ly point of view.
both high school and college teachers,
"My impression is that on a n_auonallev~l
At a rece nt co nference on the future
says it is now possible for a future teacher
we have failed -have contmued to fa1l
of und e rgraduate English, financed by
- to meet the challenge of illiteracy
of high school English to go all the way
the
Carnegie Corporation, a group of
among college-level students."
through high school: college, and o~to
professors and department chairmen
the teaching professton ~!thou~ havang
Chairmen Surveyed
concluded
that college English teachers
had a course in composition smce the .
Some of the complaints about bad
have "received inadequate, if any, in·
ninth grade.
writing and "fundional illiteracy" represtruction in the teaching of writing."
sent merely the latest version of the
Mr. Hogan says that decisions by state
Thus, they said in a report of their contraditional harrumphing by older faculty
departments of public instruction have
clusions, the profession " has ~e~the~ a
members brooding about the collapse of
had a significant impact on ho~ much
full understanding of the doffocultoes
training in writing students receave. .
standards.
students have in maStering writing nor
But evidence of more basic problems
In Pennsylvania, he notes, prospective
fully effective methods for helping them
comes from a wide variety of insti~' English" teachers ca~ ~ow_ be certified
become better writers."
by choosing to spectahze m one of a
tutions.
Refocusing I n A recent survey of department
number of options, such as speech,
Another group at the same conference
chairmen conducted by the M.LA.'s
theater, linguistics, or writing.
concluded, "Teachers of English _must be
Assbciation of Departments of English
Elsewhere , he says, states h.ave
willing to refocus their .teach1ng and
found widespread, though not u_noversal.
adopted or are considering standardtzed
scholarly interests'so that they can meet
concern that "stOdents are commg from
tests to measure educational progress.
the writing needs of their students.
The tests are designed to measure com·
high school with a far less firm grasp
"This , may mean that ~olars· and
pe:ten~ and avoid "social promotion,"
of fundamentals than before - middle
teachers need to add to theor private Inclass as well as disadvantaged students.''
Mr. flogan S~~ys, but they rarely me~sure
tellectual study a deep, continuous, and
The chairmen also reported that other
writing ability. Nonetheless, once stan·
scholarly concern with the problem5 and
departmenl5 in their institutions felt that
dardized tests are adopted, they detertechniques of leaching writing and comthe English Departments welt! not doing
mine "what will be taught in the
position.". '
a good job of teaching the students how
Michael Shugrue, dean of faculties at
schools"
Thus" far, such decisions by hig_h
to write once they entered college.
Richmond College of the City University
schools and state departl'(lents of pubhc
AITIO!II the specific comments:
of New York and a former official of the
• FrOm a Catholic women's college :
instruction have been made with linle or
Modern Language ASsociation, suggest•
"Studer\15 are leSs prepared than ever for
· no participation bY. higher educadon in
thot the role of college English teachers
general .or English de~rtments If\ pararticulating thoughts In writing. ~ey are
has shifted from introducing studenl5 to
affected by ~nil-linguistic assul)'lptoon~ of
"great literature'' to intrOdudns"srow·
ticular.
'
our culture."
~
ing numbers of young adults to literacy
•Make
&lt;&gt;unelw&amp;
KnoWn'
• From a major state -university in .the
- to reading, writin&amp; and even to
"State departmt!nts of public instr4c·
Far, Weot: "We ha•e to offer I)'IOre
speaking." .
'·tion have been around for a IOIIg _time.
remedial composition as a result of poor
Mr. Shugrue adds that prestigious
The chief reoponse of Englis~
high school training. In 1970, we had 106
in
prestigious
Institutions
departmenl5
departments has been to Ignore them,
remedial students; now we have 376.
can, and probably should, continue to
says. "The lesson Is clear. The time to
Th...e are not minority kid• but WASPs he
function
as
clepartrnents
of
literature.
make ourselves known to state •
· from oupposedly good high schools.''
For the othen, he says, those that condepartments is before anything more
• From a public urban uniYersity in the
tllfue to "treat their major primary funchappens."
.
South: "We're piling -'aljy gift~
tion as literature departmentS are going
0111! consequence of th&lt;t rising constudento who can't org1,nlze theor
to face further retrenc:hmenL"from rile
cern qver writing may be a move back
thoughl5 In writing."
(ReJirinted with (lermlssion
toward required freshman English after
• Fr6m-a prestlglouo women's college
Chronicle of Hlrlter fcluc:atlon,
several years of ~ng requln!men15.
in New EnBJancl: "We are faced with an
September
23, 1974.1
Ron Smith, an assistant professor of
increasfnlly desperate attempt to overI

TeachinR students how to write-never

a job at· which colleges and universities
have been especially adept - has
become increasingly difficult and timeconsuming, according to reports from
many English departments.
Stories of students who "can't write"
or who are "functionally illiterate" come
not only from two-year· colleges and
four-year institutions wtth open . admissions but also from some pnvate _
colleges' and major public institutions
that have traditionally anracted verbally
skilled students.
The problems r.efl~, at least in part •.
changing trends on hogh school education, where the emphasis on English
oomposition has been reduced.
They reflect as well a growing feeling
on the part of many s!udents t~at they
should take writing course!. •o Improve
their chances for employment after
college.
'A New Clientele'
The pressures from stud~nts ~ho ~~d
remedial Or basic instruction m wrn~ng
and from those who are demandmg

a;

fo~~':'!;e collecting data from

all ov~r
the campus:' says the director, who was
active in the User Archive In the Survey
Research Center at UCLA.
''This is a Unl•erslty-wlde fadllty
a•ailable to everybody:' emphasizes Dr.
Lester Mdbrath, who heads the , _
Library's advisory board, a body made up
of representatives from each of the
Faculties which are likelY to be haY)'\
users and of University departments
knowledgeable about machlnHeadable
data. "Social Science 15 taking a special
role because we have a special·need:' he
explains.
The library will be open from 9-5
MOnday through Friday. Dlo staff hopes
to 1oe able to expand these houn In
response to ~maitd, the director adds.

Dental
leader
Dr." William Hailcodt of Batavia -

nomed President of the Dental Alumni
Assodatlort Wednesday at the 7Znd annual Dental Alumni Association ~
at the Holiday Inn, Grand
A 1958
dental sdlool graduate. he SUOO!eds Dr.
James Guttuso.
•
Other offlcen: vice prelldent Dr. Edward waslllleMkl. a1958.,.Mte
from EgertMIIe; _ , - D r.......
A.
1951....--ol~

Island.

Metzler·•

�Problems of military rule----'-.;.......;.,-.___..,_...,..__
.;

(from,.~1 .ml.n

He points ouuhe growins polltiaHn•
volvement of the..mllitary can ~ seen in
- the sovernments represented In theUnited Nations. In 1961, 12 per cent were
~ by ·mllitar:y olfi~rs. bul today
more 'than one-third of the U.N.'s
membe&lt; stites havl' leade" who seized
.pC&gt;!over "'~Jt'etat. .
J'tr(!lighout mOst ohhe world, f.o r_the '
foreseeable fufure, the rrillilary ap'pea ..
to be in power to stay;· WelchCoi\CIU\:Ies
in a 1974 book he co-authored with
Arthur K. Smith, of Slate Unlve,.ity at
· Binghamto!', who will also speak at the
Buffalo conference.
The book, Military Role and Rule,
thai military Intervention is in-

conforming to a patter~ which-t'-

describe as a "garrison-·
-y.:.....,.,1naRetial··st;tte." - run by career oflice" and civilian technocrats who share
similar interests.

SUbllty, law and o.der
Both groups want stability, or " law and
order," modernizaJ.ion and economic
growth. In developing. countries, tioth
profession~! soldiers and civilian
technicians also believe the state should

n..
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
DIVISIONAL PROGRESS FO!l UNIVERSITY UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN
FALL,1974
F.cuttv of

.-..u

; nd Letters ••

I

tO% 2o. 30$ •""

I

I

I

I

so.

$125,000 University Goal
60$

I

I

1os

I

sos

90$

roos

s

Faculty "of Educationll Studies .
F.eu!t v of Enlil'n-ing and
.•

, •• ) . ~~dSd~J '\ -":, .1 ,,.
FacultyofHealttiSc:~

.

1111

F.culty of l.awal'ldJuri.prudtnce •

Sdlool of Mlif'\qtmtnt .

I

!=R

10.500.00
4.500.00
6.000.00

40.950.00
3.000.00 '
.3.000.00

F.cull y o i Nlturel SOence-5
13.500.00
FtcultV of 5ocql Sciences

t nd Adminiw.-ion

..

15.000.00

• Oi...Won ~ Gfia.a.~e enG
Prolnsion.l Educ.toon
Di...nionoiUrw:terar-ttu..tt

300.00

Ed!~Qti~ .

1.050.00

Oivtsfon of Contin uing EduQI:oon l
Mi11•d Fillmore Collllll
l.hi_,itV Ubrwies
Ptnidlrnt and Executive
VoeePresidtn t ••.
VlcePn.idt'ntfor
~Aff.WS .

Voce Prlllident for
F~~e ili tf~nPlatlning

.

V..ee Prft}dent for
Financ~Jand

,.,..men, .

Fac:ui"tv-&amp;udtnt~tion -:'-. •
Vice Praidtnt for Researdl .
Vil:e Presidlru for Suxlrnt Aff aoirJ . .
v~ PrMidtnl for
,Univef'liry AtS.t iOf15 • •
The &lt;lniwniry at auff•o

1.050.00
6 ,000.00
8.250.00

-

6.000 .00
1,500.00

21.000.00
1.500.00
300.00
4,500.00
1,500.00

Assistant Professor, Pharmacy.

'
)
NTP
.
•
PR-2.AuiJUntto Director, ~enter for Media Study (prftlouoly-pl!lted • ':11·1),

Technical Specialist, Dentistry, PR-1.

~ -'dlllonall~ c:oncemins these Jobs and for details of NTP
the Slate University syslem, consul! bulletin boards at
these laclllonl: 1.lell Facility between 0152
0153; 2.1tlcfP La, Buikllns4236, ne&gt;&lt;t to
Cllfellria; J. Rkfle Ia, Bulkllns 4230, In c:orrldornext toC-1; 4. Health Sciences"
8uil5n&amp; In CDriidor opposite HS 131; 5. Qrpen HaD, In the corridor between
._.. 141 and the l.obbr; 6. Loc:ltwoocl, pound floor lA -.ldor- to ven-'
7. tt.yes Haft, In llllin -.nee forer, w- from Pilbllclnfor·
llllilan
~ Hall, In .awrldor belwlien . _ '112 .nd ,,; 9.
......
In -.ldor - to ._..15; 10. ~Hal, 1st floor,
~
.-.;. 11. 18117 Elmwood, ....,.,.,.,. ._.._... 12. Norton
Unlaft, l:lhdDr'a.Qfllcle. ._.. Zl!i; 13. DWenclorf Hll, 1n alrrklor next to
. _ . - ...... Jiihn l.old 0'8rtt,n HaU, tourtfl floor IAplhen1 ~· -.... ~ ............... O,.e tWiiii~Aclleot.....,_
Clf'll'tnp thrauahout

and

........_i

ll•stoldnetlcs - by Herbert Rei.smann,
UIB professor of engineering .science,
and Peter S. Pawlik, West Publishing Co.,
1974.
Engineers and other applied scientists
must be able to determine how ..a
skyscraper will resppnd to an earthquake, t h e effect of vibration on
machine parts, aild the "gust response".
of an ai rcraft.
These problems fall under the general
rubric of elastokinetics or the dynamics
of el.astic sy15tems, the,subje~ oJ a (efently published book by Professor Herbert
Reismann, together with U/ 8 a lumnus
Peter S. Pawlik of Buffalo Slate's
·e ngineering 'techlfology program.
As the autho!'s explain, 11 the
mathematical models used most often in
· such analYses assume a ' linearly elastic
material behavior and characterize the
mass distribution of the structure in
either a discrete or continuous fashion.
The present book was written to present
the fundamentals of both approach'es . .. .
Equal emphasis is placed upon both a
rational derivation of~ the pertinent
equations and ·the tech]1iques for their
solution ... . We have endeavored to
clearly indicate the roots from which the
various mathematical models grow, viz.:
particle mechanics in the case of discrete
representations and continuum
mechan ics in the case of continuous
representations. Alth,ough our ultimate
aim is to present a number of useful,.
lil')ear models, we have shown their non- linear . oriAins and present rational·
lioeariz'ation procedures which ... shm1ld
leave little doubt about their range of
validity."
Directed primarily at beglnr.ing
graduate students in engineering, the .
book aims "lo present several methods
which a Practicing engirieer or engineering student can easily leam and apply to
the dynamics problemswhich confront
him."
The format of the book is such that the
material can be adapted for a variety' of
courses, including. use by pbysics and ·
applied mathem•lics students. The
authon have stiuctured the book so that
It is also suitable lot self..study by perso,;s
who have left the University_
_
• Growing In 'response to student In- ·
lerest out of • set of lecture notes, the
book bears a dedicatory ..- of local interest. The text honors U/B""on the occaslon of Its 125th anniversary, 11146-71."

~ ~

...,;~

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

Md c-al -:-by~ W. Weber,
· li!Midite ~. ~I ensn-Jng, Jbhn Wiley, New York, 1974. 434

-=-;

PIII!L $19.~
There have · been so man' texts
published In this subject area that· it
we ~ld run 0111 of possible
dtlet. but l'rol'esiorWeber's boolt Is both

play a· leadins role in economic plannins, according to the authors.
-- Welch -sutt ests the best way to· prevent milhary interyent1on IS to esti611sh a
11
legitimate" -government with broad
popular support.
'
All Conference meetings will be held at
Norton Hall. Registration is free for
'membe" of the University community.
~ons vtill begin at9:15 a.~.• Friday,
October 18, with introductory remarks
b_r UIB President Robert l . Ketter. The
complete conference s~hedule will
appear in next week's aeportfef'.

PSS addS four
Four membe" have been added io the

.
,
Prof~stom•l Staff Sef!ate s Permanent

. Appoontment Comn:nttee (Reporter,
September 26) by anoon of lhe .PSS Executive Commi~ee.. .
·
Added to the ongonal .four-member
group, fn ordt!r "to provide for improved

representation," are: Marion Dickson,
Area I, e~ 1144; Catharine Dohrt, Area
"II, ext. 2206; Carol Jine Stephenson, Area
Ill, ext. 1181; and Jacqueline Cole, Area
IV, ext. 3!21.
.
'

originally and appropr.ialely titled. A
serious att~mPt has been made to establish some physical insight in ~ he
reader rather than to illustrate design
techniques for feedback sy5tems. &lt;:on' siderable space is devoted 1 to the
elementary techniques for developing
the correct differential equcnions.
Operational techniques are nOt used in
·the fi"t fourth of the book, and the con-

SEN!&gt; BOOKS
fn. Heu of a comprehensive annllilli

wrap-up of faculty works · the
to print notices of '
boob as they appqr. We as~~ . IIYt
facully fndude us on publishers'
mallins lists or fo..Ward copies ·
ancllor rewiews to 251 WllllpHI', Rm.
211. AI iubmiBiona . . be returned.

llepomy hopes

cept of frequency response Is not even
mentioned until the final chapter. Examples of transient response of many
simple processes are presented; and
these results are uoed to Illustrate the
characteristics of confrol s}'ltenls: •..
The explanations In the text are clear
·al)d detailed, and. rflany problems are Ineluded which should be both 11luminating all!lchallenalng. The detailed
clisalssionS and relatively slow pace of
thls book should ~ to students but ·
may not in1enst many ~ who .
have unbounded aMiflilenae In their

claMs when -=~~ E1cept for
=on
.-.,the

uoecl at ~theor~~
This
book
llliafit
I flnt
coulie'
in I--~-for
cuntculiJftl which flacl
space for 1 t.ler coune on men advanced topJa:

�:.u

Octobe&lt;. 10, 1974

Calendar
(/rom

~

11, col. 4)

_ •

. Unlvenlty, and vlsldns professor, Univenity
of Delowore, 4244 Rldse Lea, Rm. 15,3:45 p.m.
IIOI.OGY lKTUIIfl

.

· D/Hen.nr,.l Gene Expression and Enzyme
1Structure .00 Function In Maize,-Dr. John G.
5andallos, professor and c:holrman, .Depa~
..-t of Blolosr, Univenity of South C.rolina,
134 Health Sciences, 4:15p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
Co-oponsored by the Division of Cell and
Molecular Biology and the Chemistry of
llo4osial Systems Lecture Series.
RIM•
Foolish Wives (Von Stroheim), 147 Diefendorl, 5 &amp; 8 p.m: No admission charge.
UUAI RLM••
~rtn~ (Bertolucci, 1969),
Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
HIUR *'DIOP..fN" NIGHT•
Hillel House, 40 Copen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.
ART HISTORY lKluaE·
'.
Gauiuin's •rfhe Spirit of rhe Dead
Watching." Wayne Andersen , professor of art
hi s tory , Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Auditorium, 8 p.m. 'No admission charge.
Presented by the Depanment of Art History

and the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

C.reerGuldonCle Offlceweiconeolllludents
In the UnJv:enlty community and olumnl 10
take part In\various -career propoms offered
this year. The on~pus intervlewlns
program, runnins from Oct. 7 • Dec. 12 and
Jan. 211 - April 25 offen the - " ' " l t y foe Individual Interviews with education, business,
industrial and governmenQI representatives.
C.ndidates from all degree levels, completinc
their course work in January or May H75, .-e
invited to take pan in· the interviewinaRegistr.ation forms are available In Hayes
. Annex C, Rm. 6. The followlns asendes will
be interviewing this week: ••
.
THURSDAY-10: Bethlehem Steel Co&lt;p.;
Haskins and -Sells.
_
FRIDAY - 11: Haskins and Sellsi U.S. ·
General Accounting Office; Union carbide
Corp.
TUESDAY-1S: C-E Lummus Co.; Union
Carbide, Chemicals &amp; Plastic Division; Exxon
Corp.; Silverstein &amp; Freed.
WEDNESDAY - 16: Exxon Corp.; Buffalo
SavinRS Bank; Tex.Jco,lnc.;Sllverstein &amp; Freed.
THURSDAY - 17: Texaco, Inc.; Coopers
and Lybrand; Northwestern Mutual life In- _
surance Co.; Price Waterhouse and Co.

_

NOTICES

DANCE•

Ledureldemonstntrion by Linda Swiniuch
and Joan VerDun, Harriman Theatre Studio, 8
p.m. Admission: stud.ents, S.75, general
public, $1.50. Through Saturday, Oct. 19.
Presented by the Department of Theatre
and the School of Health Education.
THEATR£ PafORMANCE•
William S. Burroughs' Naked Lunch. performed by the Chicago Project/New York, under the direction of Donald Sanders, Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt, 8 p.m. Ad· mission : students, S.75; general public, S1 .50.
Through Saturday, Oct. 19.
Presented by the Center for Theatre

,
same subjed matter.

HeMis local AIAA

Dr. lawrence A.· Kennedy; associate
professor of mechanicil ene;ineering and
el)lineering science, has been elected
chairman of the Niagara Frontier section
of the American Institute of Aeronautics
and AstronautiC&gt; (AIAA).
Other officers elected for-the·1974-75
yea~ include: Vice Chairman Earl - Vim,
program manager in the rocket.propul· .sion division of Bell Aerospace Com... pany, and Education Vice Chairman Dr.
Paul Culkowski, principal engineer at
Calspan Corporation.
Also, Secretary Anthony Niciszewski,

research engineer, and Treasurer Dr.
John Morgenthaler, staff scientist, both
a~ll.

The AIAA, a professional association
lor engineers concerned with all aspects
of eronautics and astronautics, has a
locaf membership of 260 and a national
roster of 24,000.
A native of Detroit,'" Dr. Kennedy
received his B.S. from the University of
Detroit and his M .S. and Ph.D. from
Nonhwestem. He joined the Ula faculty
in 1964 alter serving as a consultant and
research mechanical engineer at the
Cornell Aeronautical lab.

AI .... tlelllnp
John A. Spanogle, Jr., visiting professor

Spanogle is currently on leave from
the University of Maine law School.

Rese~rch.

UUAI COffHHOUSE•
Tr.acy and Eloise S.chwarz si ng and play
Amerinn folk and colmtry music, 1st floor
cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. Admission: students,
S.7S; faculty, staff..and U/ 8 alumni, $1; general
public, $1.25.

Denbl 'Man of Year'
•r. Sheldon W. Koepf, 1926 U/B Dental School graduate; sportsman and dental educator to hundreds of U/B

students, has been named "Man of the
Year" by the Univ ~rsity's Dental Alumni
Association. He was honored at the
group's dinner dance Tuesday at the
Holiday Inn, Grand island.
Associated with dental education in
Buffalo since 1930, Dr. Koepf taught oral
surgery at both E.). Meyer and the
Veterans' Administration hospitals during his career. A dental intern and oral
· surgery resident at the Meyer from 192629, he went on to become chief of the
hospital's dental service for seven year{,
during which time he . suP.,rvised the
treatment of nearly 200 patients a day.
Additionally, he was. in private practice
for nearly 20 years, part of that time with
the late Dr. Clifford Rose, one of Buffalo's first oral surgeons. From 1950 until
he retired in 1969 he 'served as chief of
oral surgery at )he V.A. Hospital.

White House felloWs

EXHIBITS
MULn-MIDIA EXHtiiT•
Pnumbral Rainco.ast. sample works by a
group of U.S. artists who have communJ..ated
with each other thrOugh writings, video
production, Xerox printing, film, photography
and music, G.allecy 219, Norton. Viewing
hours: Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.- 4 p.m.; Sunday. 1 - 4 ·p.m.; Monday and Thursday
evenings, 7 - 10 p.m.
PHOTOGaAI'H EX.--r•
Color Photographs by Jim De»ntis, images\
made in South America, Greece and New
Yorlt State, Hayes Hall lobby display cases.
Throush October 30. Viewins hours: MondayFriday, 9 a.m. - S p.m. Presented by the Office
of Cultural Affairs. UU!\S VIOEO EXHmlr
The Day A.her Tomorrow, a morality soap
opera dealing with student ~ife. Mondays,
' Tuesdays and Wednesdays, Haas Lounse, Norton, 2 p.m. Througlj Wedneoday, Oct. 30.
UIIIWIY

EX-..

First editions of the works of Samuelledett
from the collections of l.odtwood Memorial
Ubrary, 2nd floor balcony, Lodtwood. V'teWing hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Continufns.

LOCKWOOD EXH*r
The President's Commission on White
PoliSh Collection, an exhibition culled from
House Fellows is accepting applications
the University's collection of"""" than 4.000
State Senate Committee on Banks on . for 20 available White House fellowships
volumes of material, Am floor, Lockwood
Wednesday. The committee Is holding
to be granted lor the 1975-76 year.
Memorial Library. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. · 5
hearinp on the New York State Financial
This non-panisan program seeks to
p.m. Continuing.
draw the nation's "bri&amp;f\test and most
«efoml Act.
Spanogle last year served as the chairpromising youns people" to Washington
. for a doser look at Federal Government.
~' the Governor's Banking Study
INTERVIEWS
Committee in Maine. That
One hundred sixty-nine wo"l'"n and
CUfMIIItee studied the effects of similar
men have been selected to participate in
ON-CAMPUS IN1ERVIEWS
Jesislation In Maine on the financial
the program since Its inception In 1964. The staff of the Univenity Placement and
structure and the availability of credit
They have come from many professions,
resoun:es.
.
backgrounds, and cultures; and return to
The Cpmmlttee on B1nks invited
private life with a "deeper understandins of public service and t!te active role """
Spanogte to lestily about results .of the
each individual must play," a CommisRichard l. ~. :n, Is the , _
Maine study In areas that dosely resemsion announcement says.
director of Credit Free f'rosrarm at the
ble " - under consideration In
General requirements ao:e as follows :
University. The appointment, ~
Filllftdllltefonn Act. These lndude exJ)Incled depasitory powers for thrift in-1. Applicants must be dtizens of the
September 1, was made by President
stltutlons and commercial banks, exUnited States who will be 23 but not 36
Robert L Ketter.
years old by September 1, 1975, the com·
Fleisher joins the U/11 staH alter serpanded lendiDfl powers for thrift institutions and credit unions, ·and inmencement of the prDfll')lm.
vins as asslstai1l 'illrector of aantlnulns
terstate banking.
• .
2. No employees ~ the b~tlve
educationforJheGreecec-.lsmool
In addition to appeari~B before the
Branch of the Federal Goveinment·ore
Dlstrla In Rochester. He hB also loeMid
ellslble except career military personrl&lt;ll
on the faculties of Empire Staie Colleae'
l!lew Yodt State mmmlttee, Spanogle
of the Armed Services.
in Rochester, Callfomla SCMe Collep In
- also lftvlted to testify laM month
3. Applications must be postmarked no
Pennsylvania and the Unhenlty of
~ Z5l before the Suba&gt;m·
later thion Oec:ember :Z. 1974.
IIHnoll at Urbuaa.
_
mla. on Financial Institutions of the
Additional Information and/or
A native f11 ~.he NCII!hled !lis
S.. Coaunlttee on Banldns. HousinB
opplicatlon forms may be obtained from
B.A. from Ulll IIIICI his M.A. fiom the
alllio.t.. Alfabs. That poup ts holdlns
Dr. Khalry Kawl, 143 Ha,es. (Uil SJ:M.
Unlvenlty of Illinois.
~ on the federal aspects of the •

of J.w, lestified before the New York

f.leisher nam
- eel ,

me

IAZAAII

The Office of Foreign Student Affairs will
hold its annual bazaar on Thursday and Friday,
Oct. 10 and11, in the Fillmore ltoom, Nonon.
The bazaar is open only to forefsn students on
Thursday, 1-9 p.m. The community is invited
to anend on Friday, from 9 A.m. to noon.
Prices for the used clothins, household soods
and chil~ren 's clothes Will ranse from fwe
cents to one dollar. Donations of articles are
welcome.
·

CONTACT
Contact, a new discussion 8fOUP for resident students, meets every ~day in 157
' Fillmore, Ellicott Complex, 8-1 0 p . m.
Discussions will deal with how to make
friends, how to settle differences with a roommate, etc... Everyone is invi~ to attend.
COUNSEliNG 5aVICE

.

Professional counseling is now available at
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. For an appointment, aU Mrs. Eve Fertig, 836-4540.
CUAllVE caAFT aN1BI

The Creative Craft Center, 1tm. 7, Nonon. is
open Monday through Thursday, 1·10 _p.m.
and Friday, 1-S p.m. h) addition, beginnins
Oct. 12. the Ceramics Studio will be open
each Saturday, 1-5 p.m.
,
The following dasses offered by the Center ~
will begin this week: Ceramks (Hand --....
building), Oct. 15 &amp; 16, 3-S p.m. Meals

(Lafo.dafuY~~~f~~!t:n~~~-:u~IOf II

831-3546.

.

fORBGN S1l.OENT ~The Offic,. ol fo&lt;eisn Student Affairs Jt.s
made the followlns annou__,
1. An foreliiJI students ...., ..,...e.t to -'fJ
the Office ot · any chanae of lllldteu Immediately.... addition, should check
the mailboxes In 210 r__..s lor moO ond
packages which have been ""-'-ed 10 the
Office. Undolmed mall will be n!lumed 10

sender..
2. Tuition - ' - oppliadons lor the !iprtnB
1 9 7 5 - In! ..iiobie In the Office now.
._....15. .
3.AnJtaudentwhohlo_ .........
fooelp ........ heolth application
shOuld pid&lt; - up In 210 1'-..1 Hall.
.4. Undetpacluate ochollnhlp .....,._
.foc.forellnlludentsareavollablelliltteOfllce
now. The applicadon deoclllne Is November 1.

n.e.....-, ..........

--·Aim'.....al

The HlloiCiodCiulo. . hald~ .......
tr •nd lrimch. Sundat. Odober
uin the lufftllo State Hillel - · 12ot

a.•

:n~=-~~J:::
ins the.-

ol Moian and ...,_,_ For
,_,_,., aiG-4540.
.

MRaiD PAIUCJNC
The Ofllce ol Envlronmento~ ltelhh and
Safety, Traffic Division, has o........_.t that
bealnninl Monday, October 2'1, - . . I
~ parkins will be In Jon:e • the
heed ...... clrde, lam&amp; from the .....
leodlni ID l.odtwood Ubrory. A lime limit ol
30 minutes will opply MOIIdlys throush
Fridays. I un.-ll p.m.
~IN~

The S c h - . Sid Club IIIII the Inter·
~ Sluclents - ..._...... -

sidlnltrip ID Montrai durinl 11lriiiMnl
~Nov. 71- Dec.1. Coltolthelrip,ln-

---forfurdter......

clutln!l
- - IIIII halol __,..
modadans.
Is four .... 100111, tiUI; - ....
aiUI-2'145.
- lhellntflCIIGil!GIMG
GIIOUP ........
,-..olthe\'lcNIIII
~ . . fle hell! MondaJ, Ot::dMr 2'1, •
7:30 ....... In the .............. Capen llvd.

~

�October 10, {974

I

Decisions. Decisions. Whar Shalf f,fy Major
Bel, Main Campus, 3- 4:30 p.m.; Ellicott
Complex, 7 ~ 8:30 p.m .- ~ - - ·
Registration for Life Workshops Is in 223
Norton.
FilMS•
Fighting Se,abees and Strategic Bombing,
147 Diefendorf, 3-&amp; 7:3(f p .m. No admission
ch,arge. FilM"
Maltese Filcon {Huston), 140 Capen,_l &amp; 9
p.m. No admissiOn charge.
. IUFFAlO lOGIC COUOQUIUMf
Foundations of M,athernatlcs and ~regory
Theory, _Willl,am lawveri!, professor of
mathematics, 4244 Ridge lea,-..Rm. 1-4, 4 p.m.
CHARUE CIIAJ'UN RIM SERIES" '
The Gold Rush a'¥f Pay Day, ConferenC&lt;O
Theatre, 'Norton, -4, 6, 8, and 10 p.m. Admis·
sion char~.
·
RACHEl CARSON COllEGE MmiNG••
All members are stronRfY Uf'led to attend
this general meetif!K to -elect steering and
curriculum committees, levell'l. F,argo Quad;
Ellicott Complex, 8 p.m.

THU.RSDAY-10
IIBrSGOIP
U/8, Clnnon College, and Fredonia State
Collese, Amherst Audubon Golf Course, 1
p.m.
SOCIAl PSYotOlOCY l.fCT1JRE"

· The Ecology of Interpersonal Relationships,
Prof. Irwin AhfT!in, University of Utah, 4230
Rk:lse Lea, Rm. C-26, 1 p.m.

l.R WORKSHOPS••
. et!bliciry, 2-4 p.m. and Anriquing and
Collecting. 7...S:l0 p.m. Register in 223 Norton .
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf
Van Der Wials Molecules - Some New
MoiKules for Physicists, Prof. D. kieppner,

Department of Physics, M.usachusetts
lostitute of Technology, 111 Hochstetter, ,3
p.m.
.
PIESIDENTIAL RfarnON••
Dr. Bt1n-i~i Toyota, president of Kanazawa
University, Japan, will meet with Japanese
faculty and students, Red Room, Facuhy Club,
3 p.m.
MECHANICAl ENGINEERING SEMINARJ
Mechanlcs of Crindinfl(, Or. Stephen
Department of Mechanical Engineering, U/ 8, 104 Parker, 3:15 p.m. Coffee at)

WEDNESDA Y-16

~alkin,

HillEl BEGINNERS HEBREW ClASS"
262 Norton, 12 noon.
COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARI
FORTRAN IV for the Novice, instr.ucted by
Harvey Axlerod, 4242 Ridge lea , Rm . 27, 3 • 5
p.m.
PHilOSOI'HY. I.fCT1JREJ
Schemarism of rh e Categories and the
Problem of Partern-Recognition, Prof. Peter
Krausser, Freie University of Berlin, 4244 Ridge
lea, Rm . 14, 3:30 p .m.
THE CORPORAnON IN MOD£RN
SOCIETY l.fCT1JRE SERIESI
The Corporate IdeOlogy: Is ld Changingf.
Robert Chatov, assistant professor of environmental analysis and policy, UIB School
of Management, and comment tJy Max B.E.
Clarkson, Chairman of the Board1 Graphk
ContrOl Corporation, Faculty Club, Harriman,

p.m.
CEll &amp; MOlECUlAR BIOlOGY lEClUREf
Studies of Poky, 1\ Cytoplismicallylnherited, Cytochrome Deficienr Muranr ·of
Neurospora crassa, Or. Alan lambowitz, The
Rockefeller University, 134 Health Sciences,
4:1~ p .m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
•
·
ENGINEERING SEMINARJ
Minimum Critical Mau Reactors, Or. J.
Ernest Wilkins, Jr. , Distinguished Professor of
Applied Mathematical Physics, Howard
University, 32 Parker, 4 p.m.
FOIIBCN lANGUAGE •
INSTIIUC110N COUOQUIUMf
Interaction in the Foreign hnguage
Cl~sroom. Or. Gertrude Moskowitz, Temple
University, 310 Foster, -4 p.m.
, ,
Presented by the Department of lnstr'-'c- _

tion.
PHAD4Aaunc5 SEMINARf

3:30p.m.

Pha~coldnetlcs of A~aminop~ in
Anephric Patients, Svein Oie, doctoral andidate, U/8 Department of Pharm.aceutics,
244 Health Sciences, 4 p.m.

RIM•
Blind Husbands (Von Stroheini), 147 Oiefen·
dorf, 5 &amp; 8 p .m. No admission charse. ·
HIUS. "'DDOP...N~r NIGHT•
._. · Hi~~ House, 40 Capen Blvd., -7-11 p.m.

UUAI

HtM••

-

Don't loolc: Now (Roeg, 1973), starring JUlie
Christie and Donald Sutherland, Conference
Theiltre, Norton; all 831 -5117 for times. Admission charge.
·
PQETIIY llEADINGIDI5cUssiON•
Tendances de Ia Poesie Actuelle en France,
Michel Deguy, professor of French literature
at Vincennes, .Biue Room, Faculty Club, 8 p.in.
No admission charge.
Presented by the DePartment of French and
the PrOK~m In Comparative literature.
POOIIY llfADING"
Poets Robert Creeley and Bobbie Lovise
Hawkins read frOm their works, 5 Acheson, 8
p.m. No admiSsion charge. ·
.
Presented by the OeportmenJ of English.
c;;reeley is a m'"ember of the UIB faCulty who
ht5 ~ntly collabor~ted with the sculptor
Marisol ori a forthcoming volume; Presences.
Ms. Hawkins, ~uthor of Own Your Boily and
Fiheen Poems, is currently writing a kmg se- quence of prose narr1tives concerning her
West Texas background.
·

uu.u COfRBIOUSE'

Featuring Bill Staines and Mary McCaflin,
1st floor cafeteria, Norton, 8-1T P-!'"· Admis·
sion charge.

~RIDAY-1:1
.v.aJCAN l'tfY5ICAl 50CI£TY
5YIW'05IUM"
.
Modem Acoustics is the tOpic of the 31st
.J

semgnnual symposium of the New York State
Section of the American · Phfsicol So&lt;;iety,
~ by the Ulll De~rtment of Physjcs, _
Statler Hilton Hotel, continuing through
tomom&gt;w.
for ·further lnformation, coritad.. Dr. M .L

ausqp, an--J2lJ.
MIIIICINAl

~y

,.. '*-" Methods for

SEMINAII

rhe Symhe.is of Un·
- UllunteiiOifJony/ Compounds, Gei&gt;rge. le&lt;',

:MS"IIelillh Sciences. 2 p.m.
Ufl~·

.-·.

a.,.-

.

f'u!IIICily, :H p.m.
In 223 Norton. ·
IIKIMaa.t!IY ~
~ ,.,.,..IIIWJ ........... In Glasses. Prof. R.
lilllfeld, Hebrew Unherlly, Jeruialem, m
. Acheoon. 4 p.m.
UUAIIIIM"
Oon1, Loolt Now (Roes, 191JI, Conference

INTBINATIONAl FOlk DANCING•
Instruction for begin~ners , 233"lilorton, ·a-11
p.m.
Presented by Balkan Folk Dancing.

CACRLM·.. ,
Midnight Cowboy, starring Dustin Hoffman
and John Voight, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admission : "$1.
CONCERT:
SCHOENIERGIIVES FESTIVAl"
Performed by the Creative Associates and
Department of Music faculty, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. Admission : students, $.50; faculty ,
staff and u/8 alumni, $1; general public,
$1.50.

5ClENCE5 lEClURE•
Some M,athemafic~l Phenomena Associated
ro Chemial Reactions, Or. N. 0 . K.uarinoff,
professor and ch,airman, U/8 Department of
Mathematics, 320 fillmore, Ellicott Complex, 4
p.m.
CHARUE CHAPliN FilM SERIES"
.
The Cold· Rush and Pay Day, Conference
Theatre, Norton, 4, 6.- 8, and 10 p .m. Admis·
sion charge.

RIMS"
Trouble in Paradise (lubitsch, 1932), 7:15
p.m., and Fashions of 1934 (Oieferle, 1934),
8:55 P·tll· Both films wiU be shown in 140
Capen. No admission charge.
FACUlTY RECITAL•
Featuri!l8 David Fuller on harpsichqrd,
Baird Recital Halt, 8 p.m. Admission : students,
$.50; faculty, staff and U/8 ,alUmni, Sl; general
publk, $1.50.
Presented· by the Department of Music.
UUAI COffHHOUSE•
fohn Roberts ,and Tony Ba"and, 1st floor
cafeteria. Norton, a p.m. Admission: students,
$.75; faculty, staff and U/8 alumni, $1; general
public, $1.25.
·

li'ASRA.ll•
.
U/8 vs. Ithaca College (double-header)
Peelle Field, 1 p.m.
'
UUA.I FILM•• .
•
Spirits of the Dea d (french , 1969),
Conference Theatre, Norton ; call831-5117 for
times. Admission charge.

.

INTBINATIONAl fOU( DANCING"

IRCMOVIE••
They Mighr Be Giants, Goodyear cafeteria, 9
p.m. Open only to JRC fee-payers.

• Some insrrud:ion, Fillmore Room, Norton,
. 8:J0.10:30 p.m.
Presented by Balkan Folk Oandng.

SAIURDAY-12

MONDAY-14 .

HillEl SAIIATH sBVJCE•
With i Torah study session and a Kiddush ,
Hillel House, -40 Capen Blvd-&lt;- 10 a.m.
UF£ WORKSHOP"•
Publicity, 10 a.rri. -. 1 p.n): R~gister in 223
Norton.
,.,.·
•
SOCCER•
,
U/8 vs. Ohio University, Rotary Soccer.
Field, 1 p.m.
...
- .-J. ...
UUA.I RLM..
~
_
. _ Spirits of the Dead (Fren·ch, 1969),
Conference Theatre, Norton; calr831-5117 for
tinies. Admission charge:
CAC
M!dniRftr Cowboy, 1«1 C.pen, 8 &amp; 10 p.m.

_

CdU.EGE Of MATHEMAnOO

SUNDAY-13

Presented by the Department of Music and
the Center for the Creative and PerforminR Arts. ..-

FJLM•• _ ,

Present~ by the School of ManAgement,
the Center for Policy Studies, and the Univer·
sity at Buffalo Found,ation, Inc. ·

struments, Kleinhans Music Hall, 8 p.m. Ad·
mission charge.
Sponsored by the Chinese Club of Bullolo
to benefit the Chinese C.lub Scholarship fund.
UUAI CONCERT•
McCoy Tyner and ht Mirtino, Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8· p .m. Admission: students
(advanced sale), $2.50; general admission and
student tickets on night of performance, $4.
IRC MOVIE..
They Might Be Giants, 170 Ellicott Complex,
9 p.m. Open only to IRC fee--payers.

Theatre, NortOn, call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
·
HluR S.UIATH SERVICE"
_
Diary of a Trip ro Polpnd, Ray Warren, Hillel
Hou~, ~ Cape.n Blvd. ~ _ 8 p.m.

.

CONnNUING MEDicAl EDIJCATIONf
Teaching/ and Learning in the Health
. Scienc~es: the Problem, the Process, the
Produd, Capen Hall, all day. For further information, c~ll 831 .:55~.
-

~QMPUmt SERVICES sfMINARI
- fORTRAN IV .for-the Novic'e, instructed by
Harvey Axlerod, _4242 Ridge leci, Rm. 17, 3-5

p_.m. .
WOMEN'S VOllEYBAll"

U/8 vS: Niagara Courity . Commu-nity
College,.-Ciarl&lt; Hall, 7 p.m.
..,
. K
Hlu8..TALMuD ClASS•· Hillel House, «&lt;,C.pen Blvd., ? :30 p.m.

Admission: St.

TUESDAY-15

ClASSicAL CHINESE OI'BIA•
Perlormed by the lnsrllule of Chinese Performing Atts f ! - Yorl&lt;&lt;ily, the opera will
include · sinsins, a-ctlns, dancing and
oaobotlcs In three separate~• .&amp;om' ponied by a fuD ~ of Chinese In-

Uff

,..

WOIUCSHOPS••

.Cre~tive life Matlagement. a chance to disco~r if wh~ you are doing is in conflict with
what you wou~ Ilite to be doing. .noon-2 p.m.

THURSDA Y-17
PHARMAaunc5 SEMINARf
~

Some Sraristic-al Problems in Pharmacokinerics and Bioavailabillry, Or. Witfred J,
Wesr1ake, dirKtor ~ of biostitistics, Smith,
Klein, and French LabOratories, Philadelphia,
245 Health Scieftees, 2 p,m.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUMf"
• ·Physical Studies of A.cupundu~ Prof. l.Y.
Wei, Department of Electrical Ensineering,
University of Warerloo, 11~ Hocmtetter, 3

p.m. ,
UfE

-

WOUsttors..

. ~fl Frolic, Organizational ~tin&amp; for rriptO
Niagara Falk on Oct. 19, 3:30-4:30 p.m.
Why w~ 'like ~e. • discussion about .
what influences people In tt.eir choice of
friends,. led by
Charles M. Gar.erid&lt;,

or.

• associate professor of behavioral and related
sciences, 3-4:30 p .m.
,
Anllquing and Colledlng - OrienUI flugs,
a vlslt to the largest orientaLrus In the
area. 7-11:30 p.m.
'
~~do" lor_ Ufe wcxbhops 1s In m
~~

- Some ConfuJions allo111 5ull}eerlwlry,
Richard M. Hale. Whyte't ' " " - of Monti
Philosophy, Cor!&gt;us Christi CDRewe. Ollfo&lt;il

·

!""Pto-n.cot. JI

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I

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'

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.
•

!

SIATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO .··
.• VOL. 6, NO. 5
OCTOBER 3, 1974

..

~

I

Chartering
of colleges
to begin

Amherst 'bub61e' will open in ·January
The beginning ol tfle second semester
is the tarset date for opening the
physical education-recreation " bubble"
planned lor the Amher;t Campus, Bill
Monkarsh, director of recreation and
intramurals, reports with a sigh of relief
and the ajr of a man who is convinced
that the additional facility can't come
soon enough.
The $250,000 "temporary" structure, to
be placed on a parking lot midway
be-n the Amherst aCademic spine
• and the Ellicott &lt;;omplex, will go a long
way toward maktng student life '?n tt.e
new campus more bearable and w:1ll also
·help ease some of the ~tratn on
overloaded Clark Hall facilities on Main
Street, Monkarsh believes.
Present plans call lor the b.ubble to be
use~ lor phys1cal ed~cat1on classes
~unng weekday aca~oc hours and for
tn!ramura~ and r~atton from 3 p.m. to
modntght week~ys and on weekends.
Some on campu5 would have the struc·
ture used also lor conceo:ts a.nd other
suc"h after-hours fest1vit1es, but
Monkarsh is ~t among them. "We~
all the recreatton time we can get, he
says.
. .
.
.The atr - tnllated structure, . wh!ch
wtll be ~ feet long and . 165 f~t wide
(the matn Clark Gym dimenSIOns are
94x45) will·be able to OICCO!'"nocla\e the
simultaneous set-up or SIX basketball
~rts or 12 volleyball courts or 18 ba~mlmon ~ or four lndoo" tennos
courts or any comblnatioa of~ •boY!',
Monbrsh repol1$. The multipUrpose
structure wiU also ~Nove a track around Its
~and will luture Unlverul gym

=~-out room and so~
.;~bu.~r:!t:..~~~
. ~~~
facility." "Temporary" In this context
tTOMm""""
five or six years. the amount
of time expected 10 Ia&amp; before compte.

projeded.Amhenl ~·
Monbrsh Indicates the
be
October tp
~y. II wl be too warm for use in late
sprl"' and wmmer- byt the-outdoors
lacitities (tennis, basketball and handball
.&lt;XIU!tl) IIOWbelnadeveloped on the newcampus shoul!l help bridge the pp. 1lie
bubble Plalect k-belns realized througlj
joint «fortS~ the Student Assodation,
the Ptesldeii's Olflce, Facilities Planning
""".dleJleO(eltlon-lntramurals Service.

tlon
the
educadon;rct.
bubble
usable from
of

.........
.......... H.

~*» o.- Moore, FactUtles
............. me UnWenlty11111

IUPPIIfi8CI ft!CI'elllionll
. . . .,.. • It .. Ullclllr "-'. from

-~~nc..,flfaiiJIIo.the
..........flllllliet.lhe
bubble
be fniiMed IJr CAialk; IDIIII)&lt;- .
runnl. ~- Moore~andwlltie

heated by gas furnaces. It will be a
"double-skinned" structure, he explains,
with an insulating air pocket between
the two skins.
·
Shower and locker facilities will not
. actually be a part of the bub
f.
These will be contain
n trailers at o
end of the structure.
The provision of a recreational space
lor Amher;t residents is not something
whit!&gt;occurredtocampusplannersalter
people moved onto the new campus.
"We started more than a year ago,"
Moore reports, "just as soon as we knew
we were going to be opening Governor;.
We looked at nearby rental space such
as abandoned supermarkets and' even
thought about more perm~nent 'tem·
porary' structures on campus. The i&gt;ubble idea, though, was the most economical and quickest. There will be a
total time lapse ol only 15 months !rom
initial planning to occupancy, something
of a record for campus construction
projects."
Moore emphasizes that the " record"
would not have been possible without
excellent cooperation from the State
Division ol the Budget (which had to
okay spending !rom the UIB facilities
leasing budget), the local Purchasing
Department, and various other agenci es
in Albany whose approval was necessary
- inoluding the State University
Construction Fund,
Bubbles similar to the one to be put up
here have been used lor such purposes
as the U.S. Pilvilion at Expo 70 in Osaka,
Ja~n, and will provide the roof lor an
~
·

80.000-seat stadium being developed in
Pontiac, Michigan.
Not Owerloobd
Amher;t residents will not be totally
o verlooked on the recreation,intramurals front prior to completion of
the bubble, Monkarsh notes. "We just
can't have 3,000 people out there with
nothing to do," he says. The nearby
Sweet Home High Sdlool gym will be
used lor- recreation for new campus
residents on Monday nights and for
intramura1 basketball 'on Thursifay
evenings. Monkar;h is also wOrking with
Housing and the Inter-Residence Council to li nd unused space somewhere in
Ellicott lor gym equipment, weight
training, etc. On the intramural front, a ·
men's touch loot ball program is being
ollered at Amher;t and attempts are
bei(!g made to organize co-ed football
and soccer. " It's hard to get the word
around out there, though," Monkarsh
laments.
·
Some physical education activity
classes are also belng given at Amherst
" lor live or si x weeks," until weather
forces their transfer back to Clark lor the
remainder ol the semester .
q.t&lt; Oweraowcled
.
Monkarsh reports a familiar story ol
overcrowding in Clark this fall. Conflicts
among intramural, recreational and intercollegiate men's and womoin's time
and' spaCJ! priorities (not to mention
demands lor concerts arid speaker;) are
again wreaking havoc. Right now, the
·
gym is open for recreation from 3 until
lrum 10 f&gt;il8• 2, col. ofJ

Enrollment up by .626;_
3 f 4 areas report rise

o•

0_

an increase or three per. cent.
The&lt;e are 62li more students at the
This fall's 2,537 freshmen in the day
University this semester tiNin there were
division represent a gain or 159 students
at the same time last year, the Offia! .of
or 6.7 per cent over. fast year. ·Transfer
Admissions and Records reports. This
students in the day division number
semeste&lt;'s total enrollment is 24,817,
1,652, 168 or 11 · per cent more· tiNin in
compared to 24,19.1 In 1Wl.
1973.
~
The enrollment gain of 2.6. per cent Is
The 2,537 freshmen were drawn.from a
reflected In Increased nulilben of
pool of more tha"' 16,GQII who appiJea, a
students In three of . four ·major
~record application rate for uta.
cateaories: unile,.,Miuate, sraduate and
professional. Only Millard fillmore ·
~st'fear, enrollment statlstla InCo11qe, the """"!::L~ repMted a · ·dueled
students who_,., "''listered for
decruse, :JD5 11
, or per
COUJ&gt;f!S beotrlns no a.:&lt;ilt. This expWns
cent, 10 4;352.
•
why
VIII's
total enrofl..-t ~as
The ~~,.est inaHRwasln• Division
25,&amp;93 lor tho! t.H of 1973 and
of lJndeipdluote ' &amp;lucation, dJe 'Clay
why
some
-reports hiVe lndlcMed an
division, which reports ll&amp;tl more
enrolment drop this fd. 1hls ,...... no
studenti, .. pin«~ .... - ; lor.
such students - - Included In~ the~
._. vi1S.S. OraduilaeiwoiiiMnt .. up
count.
» studiRb. or
mas.ID-.$AD.
More detailed enrollment
Prof-ioN! idtool enrollment,

A,.

medlail .......... _. ..... i!lw-

mac:r IIUdenls, 1--..1 br 47 .1,52!1.

............ br t.a.lllet, full. and jM!'t·
time, etc., are expeaed law.

The mandated chartering procedure
by which the once controversial colleges
will be legitimized gets underway this
month with a series of public hearings
.
and other mP.etings.
, Meerings related to chartering are
scheduled almost daily lor October and
N_ovember, explained Yoram B. Szekely,
executive secretary of the Colleges
Chartering Commitlee. ·
Any existing college that wishes to
continue to operate after January 1 must
submit a charter by October 1S. At
Reporter deadline only Rachel Carson
College had submitted a proposed
charter to the Committee.
Each, program applying to the committee m'ust describe and document its
purpose, faculty - staff; curriculum, and
governance procedures ..
According to Szekely,, eath coll~ge's
proposal will be assigned to a threeperson subcommittee lor study. It will
also be sCrutinized during an initial
review meeting. Subsequently a public
hearing on· the· proposal will be held ..
Finally, the Committee will hold a decision session.
Both the preliminary and decision
meetings will prob'"ably be "quasi-open,"
Szekely said. Persons interested in attending should register their names with
him prior to the meetings at831-l414.The
committee will decide on" a name by
name basis whether specific individuals
may attend.
Public h~arings some three hour; in
length are being scheduled_50 that all
interested persons have an opportunitY - - to speali Out "or listen/' f'!e said. These
public meetings will conSist or a presentation by the applicant, questions from
the committee, and discussion from the
lloor.
The committee will welcome written
statements, _pro or con, about any
college or person connected with the
colleges, Szekely said. These should be
directed to Ms. Barbara Kaufman,
Colleges Chartering Committee, Office
ol the Colleges, 350 Porter Quadrangle,
Ellicott Complex, Amher;t. "The committee will disregard all anonymous
letter;," Szekely added.
Initial discusSion meetings will begin
tomorrow and be held each Friday at
12 : 30 p . m . up to and inciudirig
November 1. At present these are
scheduled lor 2111 Hayes.
. Public hearings are scheduled for each
Tuesday and Thursday In October be!llnnlng October a. On October a antf 10
hearings will be held from 4 until 7:30
p.m. On ·all other dates both afternoon
and evenlnll sessions, from 1:30 p.m.
until midniSht, are scheduled. Problble
room asslgnmenb are: October I (339
Norton), October 10
Dlefendorl),
9ctober 15 (l)9 Norton), October 17
(310 Foster), October 22 1231 Norton),
October 24 (310 Foster), October 2!1 (339
Norton), .and October 31 (310 Foster).
Decision senions will be held
Tuesdays. November 5, 12, 19 and 2&amp;, In
290 Hayes· ~~ 4 p .m. and Fridays,
November 8. 15, and 22, ~311 Hares at
12:30 p.m.
·
.

_

�.Oct&lt;?ber 3, 1974

Bubble(lrom

Increased security in the Office of
Student Accounts · and a study of the
possibility of establishing flexible work
~chedules on campus are called for in a
19-point Statement of Policy agreement

signed this week by the U/ B administratian and Chapter "602 of Ihe Civil Service
~
Employees Association, Inc.
According to Harry W. Poppey, d irector of personnel, the signed memorandum of understanding represents local
issues discussed and agreed to during the
Spring of 1974. It will be in effect through
March 31 , 1976.
Point 17 of the agreement indicates

.

that " within 30 days ... a joint CSEAman~gement cOmmillee will be established ... to study the effectiveness of
security measu'res in the Student Accounts OHice. The report of the com-

minee, including ... joint recof!lmen-

dations, shall be submitted to the President within 90 days of the establishment
of the committee. The President will

'irliplement those recommeridations . . .

deems to be appropriate within 30
_s of subf!1ission of the_ committee's
port. .
Effective with the signing of the agreement, the Campus Security Department
" will patrol the area of the Student
Accounts Office periodically during the
day in such a manner th in no patrol
pattern is readily discernible."
Bill Stoberl, CSEA fo urth vice president
and a member of the negotiatio111 com3. SUNYAB agrees to recognize that
12. SUNYAB agrees to enforce the rule
mittee which hammered out the agreeCSEA representatives (designated as unrequiring that positions be filled from
ment, explained to the R~ that this
ion stewards) have the responsibility to
among those with the three highest
refl~s· the concerns of employees in
scores on the te st list. . . .
in vest igate claimed grievances and
the Student Accounts Office, an agency
process grieva11ces in accordance with
13. CSEA shall continue to participate
which handles a large volume of funds
1he agreement betWeen the State and
in orientation prog rams as provided and
and which has been ·the scene of several
CSEA. Such representatives shall not be
agreed to in the past.
.
robberies. The Office's ararm system, he
subject to harassment and/ or discrimina14. SUNYAB ag rees to provi de the ...
said, was not considered adequate by
"Application for Posted Position" for the
tion.
employees because when it sounded,
4 . SUNY agre es to co ntinu e the
use of all classifi ed e mployees \O be used
Security would first call to check if there
in bidding fo r job vacancies or iranSfers.
prese ntly esta blished safety co mmi ttee
were actually a problem. ·Employees
15. The selecting supervisor will be
on which CSEA will be represe nt ed.
preferred a system under which a securiresponsible for a timely notification to
Spec ific ca mpu s proble ms regarding
ty guard would be in the area full-time, a
those employees who apply for a posted
safety may be referred lO this comproposition which management was
position and are not selected.
miuee.
reluctant to accept, Stober! indicated.
16. Orienta tion sessio ns will be conS. SUNYAB agrees to comply with the
The {agreement, Stober! said, reflects a
ducted peri&lt;&gt;dicall y on each scheduled
·official overtime policy as provided by
compromise under which Security wi fl
wo rk shift. New e mployees will be rethe State of New York. A co py wi~
patrol the area at irregular intervals as a
q u ired to atte nd such orientation
sent to all Departments and CSEA.
deterrent to robberies. There will be no
~essi ons during th ei r regular work shift.
6. SUNY AB agrees to comply with
regular time pattern for these checks, he
Article 23 of th e Operational Seivices
emphasized.
Unit contract. Such anicle concerns
18. A joint CSEA-manager:nent comThe survey concerning establishment
identificiil tion ca rd s for SUNYAB e mmittee will be esta blished to study the
of flexible work starting times is called
ployees.
feasi bility of erecting a bus shelter at
f~fil) lt~m 7 of the agreement. " Such
O ' Brian Hall. The study shall include a
survey shall be completed and imsurvey of all employees and students
8. Jn the eve nt any e mployee's time
plemented by May 1, 1975."
who reg ularly use the bus service at
sheet is altered in an y way afte r submisThe concept of flexible time, Stoberl
O ' Brian Hall, and may include other
. sion ro ihe supervisor, the e mployee
said, is currently being used for
techniques as the committee maYdeter- __
shall be notified in writing of such
employees of the Department of
mine. The committee will report its joint
change and ,the reason.
Transportation ioi Albany. At DOT,
recomme ndation to the P-resident by
9 . SUNYAB will circulate the
employees put in a 7'1.! hour day, perforNovember 1, 1974. The President will
proced ure s now in existence for
ming a prescri&amp;ett anioUht Ot work, bitt
initiate
acrion on those recommene me rgency treatment to all de partment
the 7Vz hours do oot have to fall between
datio ns tha-t he deems to be app;opriate
heads and employees.
rigid staning a.nd quitting times. What
by November 15, 1974.
10. SUNYAB agrees to provide a
CSEA would like here, he said, is the
19. The personnel director will furnish
sj mplified, comprehensive procedure
opponunity for an employee to be able
the
CSEA Chapter with a list of non wherein an employee-may request leave.
to propose to a supervisor a work-day
competitive erriployees- in the
pattern more convenient · to the
11 . SUNY AB agrees to clarify its posting
Maintenance Department, indicating the
employee's schedule - if that pattern
notiCes so that it will notify emplgyees
original appointment date at SUNY at
4cJes not interfere·with the operations of that they can transfer to other positions
Buffalo for -ead{ employee. This list will
the depanment concerned. The study· • within SUNYAB.
be updated every 6 months thereafter.
will attempt to find out if this is feasible
on campus, he said.
· Other poin"ts in the agreement are:
1. SUNYAB administration recognizes
the CSEA as the sole representative of ~II
employees holding job titles in the Administrative, PS&amp;T, Operational and ·
FACULTY
Institutional Units.
Assistant Professo;, Gynecology-Obstetrits, School of Medicine
2. SUNYAB qrees to provide· tlie
Assistant Professor, Pharmacy.
names, frtles and starting dates of indivicklals who al1! reP-ented by CSEA
NTP
who were appointed prior tp S!!pteml~,,.
Assisranr r~. O;r.f'Clor, Center for Media Study (preriously·~ed as PR-1),
1, 1962. Such lists al1! tb J&gt;e provided
PR-2. within lO days of the siplng of this
Memoqndum of Undemanding.
For. additional information con&lt;;erning these jobs a~d for details of NTP
j,
I
.
openings tilroughout the State University system, consult bulletirl bo;lrds at
these locations: .
• ·
~
,
lfiii ~ Personnel Otfice ·has
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, iluildin!-4236, next to
ISJiNII thls · reminder con~ernln.,
cafeteria; 3. Ridge lea, Building 4230,1n corridor-next to C-1; 4. Health Sciences
f.nliiiDMe Tulllon ~ procedures: .
Building. In corildor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, In the corridor between
~ cliJuni!S must be taken after hours,
Room 141 ~ the lobby; 6. lockwood, ground flbor in corridor next to ven- '
. . . . 01' dlqed YKalion ieaYi ~IUS,
. dlnf!~chines; 7. Hayes Hall, Jn main entrance foyer, aoross from Public lnforor • lhe basis of an edjusted work
mauon Office; a.t Acheson Hall, In mrrklor between Rooms 112 and 113;- !1.
~ ltcounisarebeln&amp;uken dur...&gt;
• Parker Ensi~ll&amp; In corridor next to R0010 15; 10. GoOdyear HaU, 151 floor, .
~~ hours; a atement, siRMd
Hous11111 Offiat..area; U. 1807 flmwood, Personnel Depanmem; 12. Norton
b; "fje; eniplafee and the. bnilleCt~ate
. Union, DlreClor's ()ffkle. Room 225; 13. Diefeqdorl Hall; In corridor next tci
~. showin!r the adJuSted work
RjiOm 106;' 14. Joh'n a,rd O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Campus!. ··
Khedule and the supervisor's approvaL
fiiUII ~/Afftnnalhe ~employe&lt;. ..:·
must be au.checl
. ·
'
.
.
...

Tuition waivers-

Stile.,...,." .......... -

-

.

,,ge 1. col. !1- -·

10 p.m . during the week, but after
basketball starts, "forget it " -or at least
call to c heck on th ~ availability of
facilities, the recreat ion director advises.
The Clark pool is open for recreational
swimming from 7 to 9 p.m., Monday
through Fridav. from 1 to 3 p.m. on
Sat urday and 2 to 4 o n Sundar afternoon. The squash and handbal courts
are available by reservation· only (call
2926 tWo days in advance}.
A neW "stay in shape" program for
facuity and staff is being squeezed in at
the pool fro m noo n to 1 p.m., Mondays
thro ugh Fridays. Some weight training
eq uipment may also be avai lable during
·
th e hour.
To take pa rt in the fitn ess program or to
us e any of t he gym's recreat ional
facili ti es, fa culty and staff must pay a
se mester fee of $5 at the Re creationlntramu rals Office, Room 104 Clark Hall.
lnlramurals
In te rms of intramurals, Monkarsh
re ports that :
• 85 men's te ams are participating in a
first-ever la crosse league (Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 3:30p.m. on Main
Street).
• 65 teams are involved in a Sunday
soccer league (11 a.m.-1 p.m., Main
Street).
• 84 teams have been organized for
me n's touch football (3-6 p.m., MondayThursday, on Main Stre et; 3-6 p.m.,
Wednesday and Thursday, Ellicott
Complex).
• 24 co-ed flag foo tball teams are
taking the field on Friday afternoon on
Main Street, with efforts continuing to
Organ ize a similar leag ue at Amherst.
• Co-ed volleyball began this week
(Tuesday nights, 7-9:30 p.m., Clark Gym) .
• 150 e ntries ha ve been received for a
men's and women's si ngles tennis tourname nt o n Main Stree t.
• Co-ed badminton will begin Octobe r
18 (friday niRh ts, 7-9 p.m.).

Monkarsh's office is· also att e mpting to
recr uit individuals for a water ' polo
program (the day to depend on the
wi shes of those sig ning up) and is accepting entries for a one-shot golf tourname nt to be held at the Audubon Golf
Course (particiPants will pay their own
greens.fecs).
Basketball e ntries - for both men 's
and coed tea ms - are due by the
middle of. O ctober, Monkarsh says.
Leagues .will operate Monday through
Thursday nights in Clark and on
Thursday at Sweet Home High School.

Coffeehouse change
In case you hadn't n-oticed, the UUAII
Coffeehouses have been moved.
This Year these folksinging concerts
are scheduled for Wednesday and
Thursday evenings r~ther than Fridays
and Saturdays as in the past.
According to Judy Castanza,
Coffeehouse director, the shift was made
to avqid competition with SA's Pub, now
held in the Rathskeller on weekends
(featuring local rock . bands, dancing,
etc.) and to meet complaints (primarily
from Millard Fillmore stJJdents) that
there's nothing to do arOund here on
w.eeknights.
·
Tonight, the Coffeehouse will
physically move as well - from the
Norton 1st floor. cafeteria to the "Rat," in
an attempt to provide lour consecutive
nights of activity in the oasement
meeting place. If this -proves successful,
the entirt! series may· be ~hifted
slownstairs. ·
-·
'•
• Coff,eehouse .org;~nizers have ·
scheduled a full calendar of-concerts lor
October (see the Mltpef 1 insert iri this
issue for details) and al1! p~nning a mini•
fi!stival in November.
The Coffeef10use series attracted
croWds of approximately, 200 per concert _
l~st season and - had several sellouts:
Attendance . aJ !he opening event this
~r. was ".a bummer,"
c.tanu says.· 1hel1! ·leftral
reasons, ~· lndlca~ one.of whleh was
tbe faa that veoy lew people- aware
of the change of dars-

September,
ML

�October 3, 1974

College 8
looking for
.a coordinator

.At the Co-o , the price' is-even 'righter' .
lyMich~Epn

The North Buff•lo Communily Food
Co-op, 3225 Main Street, offers a gamut
of select foodstuffs to the University and
the surrounding community at minimal
prices. As a non -profit organization, .the
Co-op has been operating approximately
two ye.a rs with few complai nts, its
organizers say. ·
In the fall of 1971 a group of interested
U/ B students worked to organize the
agency ...::I.he Student Association of the
Uolversity provid~d an initial grant of
Sl,OOO, just to get started, and the Co-op
opened in .February of 1972," recalls Jim
Stumm, one of its coordinators.

-. Prices in the Co-op are much lower
.... than in a commercial market wherethere is lraditionally a SO per cent or

more mark-up . The Food Co-op
on a 30 to 40 per cent mark-up
from cdSt, which allows it enough profiJ.. •
to cover expenses ....:... rent, utilities, four
paid coordinators, and replenishing the
stock.
The non-profit organiution h~s approxlrmtelv 100 members. Members pay
a $5.00 membership f~ and wOrk only
couraged t; donate useful things that
four hours a month; in exchange, they
they might otherwise discard so 1hat
are !ntitled to a 15 per cent discount on
others may. benefit from them.
their· purchaso;s:--The work they do may
There js "good demand" ·for the
range from helping customers and
products the Co-op carries, Stumm said,
"and that is mostly· health foods." The
keeping the store clean to sof!ing
shipments and packaging foods.
reason Stumm gave for not carryin"g
The co-op atmosphere is reminiscent
more traditional "''groceries" is that the. .
of a general store in a. small town of the
Co-op cannot .obtain the food at a low
old West. Wooden bins and racks display
enough price to pass on iny Qvings.
fresh produce and quantities of exotic
Even with soaring food prices,_ the
spices; the floor is bare except for a few
Food Co-op is very busy; serving more
sadts of grain, and the air has that
non -members than members.. Even
delightful smell of pure foods.
though non-members do not receive a
The Co-op carries fresh produ!"', such
as fruits and vegetables; spices and
syrups; dried fruito and a variety of nuts;
certain grains; and some dairy products.
There is ilso I "free-store" in the comer
of the facility where one may "exchange
· u;etul objects." The free-&lt;~&lt;~re consists ·
The Baldy AdvisorY Committee invit!!S
mostly · of clotheS, books, dishes, ind
applications from full-time faculty and .
stall for researr.h projects in law and
other small· objects. Participants are ensociety for Sprins, 1975, and for summer
projects In law_-and sqdal policy,
operates

discount, the 30-40 per cent regular Coop mark-up results in " prices wh.ich are .
. still lower than a gorcery s~ore," Stumm
said. He finds that there is no abuse of
the Co-op by patrons. The only apparent problem, he indicates, is getting
people to work.
The North Buffalo Community Food
Co-op is d pen between 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. daily except Sunday, until8 p.m. on
Thursdays. Though ·the facility cannot
possibly offer a rounded supply of
foodstuffs, it does offer substantia l
savings on particular foods.

~ Baldy advisory group seeking

bids for-Ia~ &amp;-society grants .

College 8, the college of the arts and
one of the campus's oldest residential
colleges, is seeking a master. ·
All colleges are required under the
upcoming chartering procedure to have
masters or "central coordinators."
Allen 5app, former chairman of the
U/ 8 Music Departlt)ent, seved as master
of College 8 until his resignation . last
year. ·
~.
The College is limiting its searCh to this
campus, in part because the College has
no-"line" for the position, explains Bonnie Spaner, residential program direc;tor
for 8 and secretary of the search committee:
The search committee is chaired by
Carlo Pinto of the Music Department.
Members are : Theoiior.e Fitzwater (art),
Walter Kunz (undergraduate education),
Joe Fischer' (Creative Crafts Center),
Esther Swartz (cultural affairs), Judy
Steinsapir (81, John Peradotto (classicsJ,
and John Simon (French).
"The master's job," according to Ms.
Spaner, " would be to both serve as
administrator and provide intellectual
insight to a unique and exciting
program."
.
.
The College hopes to find a creative,
experienced administrator-teacher who
would be available at least half-time. The
posilion requires an individu.al able to
participate in eve ning activities. Fundraising ability, the ability to attract
valuable faculty, a~d the ability to retain
credibility with studen ts, faculty and •d.ministration are among the attributes
being sought.
8 hopes a maSter will be found to
assume responsibilities by January, Ms.
Spaner said. Nominations or suggestions
are welcome and should be directed to
Mr. Pinto, cL.o Department of. Music,
Cooke Hall. Suggestions may also be
made to the College 8 o ffice, 636-2137.
College B was one of six original
collegiate units founded under former
U/ 8 President Martin Meyerson. According to Academic Program Director
Jackie Finley, the Col ege is currently in
its fourth year as a residential unit,
· sharing quarters in Elliron with College
H, the health sciences college. Between
100 and 150 students are enrolled in the
College's residential program, and a
similar number participate as nonresidents, Ms. Finley wid.

R~naissance

group

w111 meet here

The regional conference of the
Renaissance Society of America will be
held at u/8 in April of 1975 - providing
"an exciting opportunity for us to shape
and create a professional multidiocipline •
or interdisciplinary event," Victor Doyno •
ot the Department of English reports.
To begin the planning. a meetins will
be held, Friday, October 4, from 3-4 p.m.
in Annex 8-9. Interested membeR of the
University comlllUnity are asked to brins
suggestions for format, speakero, topics,
events, etc. A local execulioe..c:Dmrnltt
for the conference will also be formed at
that time.
·
Interested individuals unable to attend
the Friday meeting are asked to all
Doyno (office phone, 831-4201; home,

detailed description of the project,
whether it has been or is ndw supported,
63+9221).
plans for bublication of results of
research and a short biographical sietch
should be Included in the application.
Baldy Summer Reseirch Fellowships
~
has been named ·
' The Spring granto are nOI intended as
are available to full-time faeulty and stall
the first recipient of the Harriet F. Monmaximum
in support of ocholar!Y ~Illes in the
The Board of Trustees of State Univer- · salary stlperids anchhe
tasue Award newly established In
is S1 ,000. Applications should specify the
area of law and social policy for a con- ·
Mathematics.
sity have named Or. Edward J. Mehringer
amount and use to wbidl funds are to be
secutlve two-month period of free time
associate profe~sor .emerituo. ' Dr.
. The award, named lo honor of recently
. provided the · recipient Is -without
put, demonstrating tf;M: ~nee ~f-the
Mehrll)ler relit"l!lf.July 1, after serving as
retired mathematics "professor .Or.
research to la!oc_and sOcial policy- The.vita · · employment obllpliOns or Income in
a member of theJaculty of the School of
l-laniet ~. is slven to •11 un:of the applicant sl)oulcl be enclosed..the
the form of sti~nds: felloo¥shlps or Olher
0ent111ry since 1937.
. --'_
detwracluate maJoring In lllllhematlcs on
Corru'!)iuee will.~ applications in • salary support In a~y form during -the
A 19JS graduate · of· the U/B_. I&gt;Nital
the bafis of his or .her Intellectual and
excess of.the ricJrmal maXi IliUm if ade- • periOd In which the fellowship will be
5choal, Dr. Mehrinser ·IS a diplomate of
creative promise lo the field.
quate ~ilifi~,. Is llfOYI!Ied.
. . ,. held.
- ,
•
-the "-t'lcan Boad of Proslhodontics
Mi. Catalano received the honor,
ApplicationS for both· typeS of pants'
Deadline fonppllc::Mlon$ i5 November ·
and pill president of the Bghth Olslfict
which' lnduclei a $JS -.d, • a
1.
· .
·· . " ·
. '·· '-.' · ~ : shoUiil be sent to: Profeslor James -8.
Denial ' Men!o1111 Edocatiorull "Founcla·
~ held Sepc. 24 In the ~ .
lion. He --..anted Dentitl Man- Of the .
A lhnited number al S2.51J0· Summer
Brady, 5ecreWY, Baldy Advisory Com- • ' ment.
.
.
•
Year In U7i &lt;by 1he Erie "€ounty Dental
Research Fellowships, fQi SUmmer 1975,. • m ' -1 Office of the l'ro¥oSI, Facul!y of
Dr. Montasue was director of un·
dersraduate studies In maihematia ·
Sodely, tbe EIBhth Olstrld1&gt;e_mal Society
_.1sc; available. The deadline lor ..-Social Science and Admlnblr.i_flon,'lf2l0
appliclliion fOr these is Dea!mber· 1. A · Rl_dle Lea, Room 8-49.
and the ula Dental Alumni AssociatiOn.
when she retired _last year.

Named 'emerituS'

...o.-n...1

Montague Award
eaw.no

�. . .u

4

Teaching evilua_tion plan
feared to be.1 faltering'
Concern that the faculty's expressed• ~ Senate administration will work only
commitment to evaluating teaching
half-heartedly
to
implement
the
effectiveness has fal~ered somewhere
program since new Senate Chairman
between conception and implementaGeorge Hochfield was an outstanding
tion was voiced this week by Professor
opponent of ~ McConneii-Reichert
Jonathan Reichert and other faculty.
plan.
.
Theissueofteachingeffectivenessand
ctr. ~ochfield assured, however, that
· its evaluation, a continuing one ori camthe issue of implementation is"abdut to
pu•,led to Faculty Senate action l.,t year.
· be put before the Senate Executive ComA Senate committee, chaired by
miuee. "They will have to decide," he
said of the Senate's next step.
Professor Jamt!s (~McConnell, was asked
to evaluate a two-year experimental
" The President," he commented, " has
program jn. which the AU instrument
given a strong lead to a decentralized
was used to evaluate faculty classroom ·
approach."
perfo"rmince. ·
·Personai~~Hochfield said, he thinks
The comminee produced a 91-page
this is a Si'Udent responsibility. He is
document .criticizing that instrument,
oppose(l .to the Senate-approved notion
rai~ing wh&lt;Jt the committee saw as the
of limiting access to information on faclarger issues inVolved, and recommenulty perfoirrtance. "This is student infording, among other things, that the
mation," he said. " It doesn 't belong to
~niversity establish a permanent, adethe faculty."
_quately financed Office of Instructional
As to union opposition, UU P Chapter
Development,
President Constantine. Yeracaris said flatLast spring the Senate endorsed the
ly, " the UUP never took a posi.tion
A'lain thrust qf the Committee's report by
against evaluation. " The UUP agrees with
adopting an amendment by total •ubthe need for evaluatio~. but only with
stitution proposed by Dr. Reichert.·
instrumerits much mdre reliable and
The Reichert version emphasized the
valid than those now available, Yeracaris
individual Faculties' responsibiliry for
explained. Until these are developed, no
developing instruments appropriate to
faculty member •hould be compelled to
panicipate nor~ should evaluation
their individual reas ~nd the need for
student involverm: nt in 1he process.
statements be e ntered in to hi s or her
p ersonnel file without the faculty
Explained Reichert at that time, " I view
Ih
ed 0(( . 0 f IPI
·
member·, con•e nl. The union also obt e propos
ICe
as servrng
the important ro le of coordination, lenjects to anonymous letters of eva 1uation,
ding technical a"isoance, proposing and
he .aid .
disseminating model instruments, and
ro individual
providing
to
improveassistance
their reachin_g.
"
·
" Under the Reichert plan, Facultywide evaluation would be mandatory,
but, "for the immediate future," the
extent to which the evaluations -of perThe U.S. Department of Agriculture
formance are disseminat ed would be ·at
has proposed a ·re~ulatiorl which would
the discretion of the Faculty.
limit the number of college 5-t udent s
obtaining Federal food stamps. A similaf'
The President was subsequently advised of the Senate's actiOn.
curb was adopted as an amendment to a
bill-pa.,ed!ry Congre&lt;.,his pa" summer,
No Funds ..........
but the legislation was vetoed by former
At last week 's--,Senare 111eeting, PresiPresident
~ixon . The proposed USDA
dent Robert L Ketter announced that
regulation would declare thcu studel_lts
nowhere in the campus budget was
who receive more than half of th eir
lhere. the $60,000 to $80,000 needed to
su pport from a household which is infund a permanent Office of Instructional
eligiblc for the pr?gram would also be
- Development. -Good teac;hing renJ.ains a
ineligihle for food stamps.
.
high priority, hbwever, - 4he President
The department will accept commer:lts,
said. He added that faculty seeking
oromotion· and/or tenure will be resuggestions or objecrions- until Oct. 16.
quired to document claims of teaching
When asked for the number of
effec.1iveness. Measurements of teaching
students participating in the food stamp
program, USDA officials cited ligures
effectiveness should reside as close as
complied by Rep. John B. Anderson (RPl&gt;'•ible to the unit affected (at the
Ill.}, author of the amendment to HR
departmental or Faculty I&lt;;Yell. he in15472, the agriculture-enlt'ironmentdicated.
••
.
comumer protec tion bill that was
• faculty remaio divided on the questicln- i!f . how teaching •hould be . v.etoe.d. In dist7ussing his amendment in
June, Anderson said that approximately
evaluated and what should be done with
1,000 college "uden" were en.rolled in
the I'I!SUiting information, the President
the. food stamp program in each of three
sugsested. The UUP, lor example, is .
dozen
counties in the U.S. in which
opposed to evaluating teaching effecmajor universitie&lt; ·are located. In more
liveness at all, he said.
than one-half of the counties, he said, 20
Both McConnell and Reichert subseper cent or more of the total number. of
'luently expre&lt;sed confidence that
fqod stamp participants were belieVed to
sptemalic teaching evaluation i• J&gt;O'Sible
be "uden". He -.aid the large" number
without an enormous financial commitof students, 15,000, were enrolled in the
men! by tloc! University.
program
in -Santa Clara County," &lt;;:alii. It
For example, explains Reichert;_perwas estimated that some 60,000 students
sons in the adl'linl~tration or on the
. participated in the program nationally
faculty wilh releYant expertise""tould be
during the past academic year.
made available to advise the Facultie&lt; on
Under the program, stamp allotments
_ , release-time l&gt;.si•.
range from S46 a month for a single
~•SIMII
person to $150 a month lor a family of
ol.the supporters of last year's
four. Stamp purcha"" are required at
are concerned lhat the new
certain irtcome'-levels.
·.
The USDA-proposed regulati90 wpuld
apply-to any student, age 18 or over, who '
attends an educational institution beyond high school and is claimid ., a tax
de~~etl!lent by an ineligible household
(that is, receiws over half of his ~
from thai household). It would apply
only to lhe individual who Is claimed il$ a
tax dependenl; other members of the
studenl's household could rec:elYe-food
s11rnps if they Me otherwise elislble. ll&gt;e
individual also would have an opponunity to prove that he doeo nol receive half his 5upj,M from an iheliaible
household.
Comments are to be sent to P. Royal
Shipp,
director, food SWnp Divislon; food and Nlllrition Servicle, U.S.
~ of Asrlcukure, Washington, ·•
D.C. :10250. ,
4

facu~ty

us mulls curb on .

student food stamps

over

Kilns

..
HansQn a'!d F~rd ~-~uc:Jy:- ... _

Oclober J, 1974

BuHalo· cr•me· patte~ns
If you want to reduce the chances of
having yoUr car stolen, don 't park it near
the intersection of Main and Bailey. The
M.ain Street Campus area has the hig~est
-Iate of aula theft in the Ciry, accordmg
10 U/B researchers.
For the past two years Dr. Perry 0 .
Hanson, assiStant pfofessor of
geography, and Dr. Robert E. Ford, assistant profe&lt;sor of •ociology, have been
studying the d istribution of crime in Buffalo in an at\empt to determine w~en,
where, and why certain types of crrme
occur in the Cily. Dr. Hanson has been
concerned primarily with the spatial and
temporal variations of crime, while Dr.
Ford has examined socio-economic indicators and panerns of crime.
The two professors have been working closely with the Erie County Central
Police Services and are making use of
that organization's .500,000 reco rds of
crimes committed in Buffalo from 1971 to
19 7J. Several U/ B graduate studenrs have
assisted in their investigation of two
major coime types: auto theft and serious
n imc• agai nst person and property. _
Rates of Auto Theft
In the auto theft study, the researchers
discolt'ered that the highest rates occur in
h
1
ed b h d
1 e U B are_a, 10 11 0 ~ .
Y t e owntown
central bu~ness d•strrct, ~fause ~fdt~e
1
0
gheat num e~
cak~ us~~~ .par e h 1 ~
1
esc a~eas. A ;2 ran mg •g 10 car 1. e 1
the mner nt)•, the
Rock sectrqn ,
dnd ptuts of the West Srde. North Buffalo
{wioh ohc ex&lt;·epoion of ohe UI B area) ha•
th("- lowest rate.
In examining
1 1 1_ ksocio-economic
d
h factors
f 0
most c ose Y 10 e tto auto t e t, . r.
f?rd ha s_found tha~ several ~lements Indrcate hrgh rates rn a part•cular area :
poverty, high _percentage of .,. .Pivorce
among a r~ res rdents, large numbers of
yo un g people between the ages 0 .f 14 ~ ~9.
and large numbers and easy a~ar!ab r l~ty
of . ~ars .
.
. ..
._
_. A~to theft os usually_ a crome CQrt)
m~tred not by . pro~essJ~nals, b~~ b~
m1~ors out for~ JOy-~rde , he s~v.s. ~t ~II
~rls do~n to JU.venrle_males llvrn~ '" a
drsorganrzed sacral en~eronment Without
the necessary famrly ~lructure or
em~;JI_oyment and recreatro'lal opportun.'tres necessary 1 ~ c~~trol and prelt'ent
de lrnquency _behavror.
Friends, Neishbors ant;l ViO~nt Crime-!'nalysis of serious crime reveals that
most . violent crimes are usually
perpe~red by friend• and neighbors of
the vi ms and occur clo•e to the area in
which oth the victim and offender live.
Most violent crimes tend to occur in the
. evening, from alter working hou" until
about 1 a.m.; when aggravated assauh
and homicide reach their peaks. or. Ford
terms Main Street a "major crime. corridor ," and points out that the inner city
is· the site of many violent crimes.
Property crimes shift with the oppor!unity 10 "eal with minimum ri•k; thus,
shoplifting a no;! robbery of residence.
tend to.occur during the day when stores
are open and house• are left unaltended.
Burglary of bu.sines"" increases at night
alter working hours. Property theft is
high in the UIB area and in shopping
centers; burglary predominate&lt; in in-·
-dustrial &lt;l!ctions and; in the cehtral
busine&lt;• district.
Dr. Hanson has bee
_ n setting up~ computerized . geogr~phic information
system that
incorporate crime .
statistics and census info'rmation into a
·single data file to make-information on
crime in Buffalo readily available. He explains that although this has been one of
the most. difficult and time-consuminB
.,peelS of the proj4ect. it is one of he

c~re

B~ack

will

most important in lerms of practical use
in helping .police perform t!&gt;eir dtitie&lt;
more effective!Y-

'f•IMik' Potential
•
Ford 'and Hanson thil&gt;k that the pote~tial of ouch a fast·leeilbad&lt; coroputerized

sptem is ''fa~c," and note se\'eral
wa,s It might 116-Used in the fut~~~e71riformation abo&amp;!~ past aimlnal attlvity
can be. used :to ·.,.-edict a ProbabilitY
pallem of when and whale ~n
crimes oc:a~r, and patrol cars can be dis-'
-patdted by computer on a schedule that.
will put_police In !rouble spots at •he

•

right time,
.
.
The. researchers also t;!nvls1on a. ttme""
each patrol car woll be equopped
wrth a co~puter console so that. by
merely p.ushtn~ ~few butto~s an offr~er
can recerve w1thm ~onds mformatron
?" a I;Jirticular li~~se plate or a pers~n's
rde.ntrty. (Some. cttre_s are already_ u~rng
co~puter termrt1als rn cars on~ hmrted
bam.) Th~ profe•sors also thonk . that
computenzed mfor~atron retrtelt'al
syst~"':ls can . eventually. beco!'le
s~p~rsu.c~ted eno~gh to pro~,r~e pr~flles
ot mdrvrduals or even srtuat10nal
profiles". that wo~ld ~ssess b~ckgr~un?
mformatr_o n an~ nsks m a P.a rtrcular mer dent to grve pohcemen advrce on how to
handle it. .
Although Dr. F~rd concedes th~t some
of thes~ suggestrc~ns sound ~s ·~ they
belong m a Buck Roge~ SCef!arro, he
ad?s ~hat with contin~ed refi!"'ement of
thrs k.rnd of system the 1deas mrght not be
so far-fetched and c~uld erovide ~nvaluable help1 to. pohce. . All polrce
systems dep.e nd on '!lformatton, and the .
better the onformauon the IK&gt;Jler the
results of law enforcement," hAays.
Buff.alo _A Good Testins Ground
The profesSors feel that Buffalo is a

w~en

good city in which to test these practices,
since they consider the Buffalo Police
Department and the Erie Count y Central
Police Services progressive forces open
to new ideas. They have been working
with Ruffalo Police Commissioner
Thoma• R. Bl.iir and la&lt;zlo Me&lt;Laros.
directOr of law Enforcement Information
!'IPr\'iCPS for th e Department of Central
Polin• Services, and think that thei't work
might even produce d model system
he re The rese arch thus far ha s been
cion~ on minimal funding , but the two
hope to get aid from the l e gal Enforcement Assistance Administration to co ntinuc their project.
.
Drs. Forc!_and :liao_R&gt;n...,.ad~~t .t~t thei•
finding) arc far fro'{\ 5fdoo:utw~ .~Th ey
explai n tf1ai&amp;iminologj is still" an infant
science, and there is a great need for
trained criminologists able to work with
the kind of information system they are
~Ptt ing op. ~flut they fec::l that the scienrific, policy-oriented work they are doing
is a sJep in the right direction. Dr. Ford
observes, " In the long run •. the scientific
approach is the only answer for good
police work. We havC to make il hard for
crime to be successful."

I ads meeting
•

Denta gr

five visiting dental educ.tors Will be -·
among leMured speakers at the U/ 8
Dental Alumni Association's 72nd allrtual
meeting, October 7-9 at I he Holiday1nn,
Grand lslond, according to Or. )arne•
Gunuso, Association pr~ident.
~akers inclode: two lndia.rti Univer·
sity Dental Sc;hooJ faculty, Dr. Roland
Dykemot, professor and chairmotn of the
Department of fixed and Removable
Partial Prosthodontics, and Dr. Timothy
). O'leary, professor and chairman of the
Department of Periodontology; Dr.
Franklin Weine, associate professor and
director of J&gt;O'tsuduate endodontia,
Loyola University School of Dentistry,
Maywood, UI.; . Dr. Emanuel Cheraskin,
profe&lt;sor and di.ainnan of the Department'-ol Oral Medicine, University of
Alabama School of Oenlistry, Sirmlnsham; and Dr. Leon Leier, medical
director of mental health services, New
York fduc.atio_naiAIIiance, and Co1umbia
tlnlversily faculty member' .
.
luncheon spe~kers include. WKBW-TV
New. DireCtor lrv Welnsleln; Randall M.
Schrader, claims manager for Connecticut Gener-.1 Denial Insurance. and
Democratic Consres5ional candidate
Barl&gt;.ra Wick._ four UIB -Dental School
faculty~ members and 14 dental praclitioners who are UIB alumni will also
participate in 1he progtam. ·
The classes of 1924, 1929, 1934, 1939,
1944, 1949, 1954, 1959, 1964, and 1969 will
1M! honored at the annual alumni dinner,
October a.
For alumni arriving October 6, Dental .
School Dean Wi1Ua111 ~ 8111 his
faculty will hold a recepdon anll open
_house In the dental dinlc In Caper~ Hall
from 4-7 p.m.

�October 3, 1974
~.

\~

.·' \

~Bookfa•r' iari ~:&gt;-:_
.to visit-here on Monday

SUNY holding_.
playwriting
competition

University faculty are invited to a
" Bookfair in a -Truck," being sponsored

by the . University Bookstore, in the
lockwood lot, between Foster and
Crosby, on Monday, October 7, froin 9·
a.m.-5 p.m.
The truck is a service of the College
Marketing Group, publishers' represen·
tative5 who work with hundreds of major
texl houses, trade houses, mass market

paperback publishers, University press~,
film comp~nies and scholarly tournals.
According · to

the

organizarion's

promotional material, I acuity visiting the
truck may :
• Select complimenaary or eKamination

copies of books ro consider for courses
from among 2,500 new or recent titles on
board.
• Sign-up for th e mos1 pre cise mailing
lis·rs in the country, maintained accor-

ding to cou rses taught, which will result
in information on the most r"elevant
books for courses or profess ion_al
li brari es.
,
• Make repOrts on their current writing
projects which will be delive red to
publishers represented on the truck.
The boo~ truck idea was developed by
Glenn Matthews of Reading, Mass .., a
former salesman for Pre n•~H_all, Inc.
~ His fo ur-)•ear-old College Marketing
Group operates four of th e va ns, each of
which displa y&lt;J books arranged by
college courses from approxi ma!ely 200
publishers. The units visit some 400 campu&lt;Je&lt;J each year.
Mauhews fctf that co llege trave lers the tr&lt;~ditional publisher representatives
- C"ould not sec eno ugh people in one
da y. lnstc.Jd of the 10 o r 15-calls .an
individu.1l can m kc, the booktruck can
and oftpn doc~.iccommoO.ite 60 or 70 or
t•vcn 100 professors a day.
Thr Marketing Group does no t sell the
book s it displays; o rd ers are made
throu~-:h th(' ~P.L.i.m·:. ookstore on
each camp us vrsttelL
Matthews says that th.e van concept is
hascd on &lt;·o st effective ness - a prime
c-o nside ration in a pinched economy in .
whi ch publishers arc t'rying -to make each·
dollar go furthe r in geuintpheir1Jlessage
anoss to mo re of the fight p ofessors.
Harv.Jrd Univ&lt;• rsit )' Press, for example,
finds uo;c o f th&lt;' ~ervicc " very advanta~cnus .'-'
·
'
Cost-eff&lt;'ctivencss, Manhews notes, is
even spilling ove r to pro fessors and, in
hi ~ view, may lead to a revival of 1he
hardcover textbook. Quality paperbacks,
n~ccn tly 1hc; mainsla y of cOllege courses,
arc becoming less cost~cffective, he
ma intains. " Five year.s ago a professor
could assign eight quality paperbacks for
around 515. Today he's lucky if he can
assign three or four at $15, and that
leaves large gaps in the course structure
which have to be filled with extra lectures in already_overloaded schedu-les.
Also. less money on Cimpus has led to
cutbacks in the numb.er of junior-facult y
members hired, and these are the people
who have been the backbone of the
quality paperback market. All of "1hese
factors may bring the-· hardcover text~
book back to primary importance in
college courses ancfserve to increase the
use of mass ?'·~uket paperbacks- as · ..
supplementary,ttnaterial,:' he says. .
Both "hardaiver ~nd paperba&lt;\&lt; titles
mily be seen on the van~ however.

Ceorser wllh k-9 nn.

'·Call K-9 for an emergency'
" C.1II K-9 in c-Jsc of emerge ncy," Cam-

pole, .1s well as with a member of the
Universiry 's fully-lrained (by the Buffa lo
Po lice De partment) canine back-up corTh&lt;' s&lt;'lf-cnni.Jincd jeep e mergency . P ~- This K-9 unit usually patrols th e
tuli~ hown in l h &lt;-• accompany in g Amher:st Campus (.the lake area, in-parphol o w.:~ph h.J
bee n o utfiucd b y
I ic-ular) but is available for emergencies
G&lt;' o rg ~ r wit h co rnple1 e e me rg e non Main Street as well.
'")'/r&lt;'~&lt;-U l' equipment, including fire cxGeo rgcr says that the Universi ty now
l in~ui s h&lt;· r~ . hi.Jnk els, firM aid male rials,
h.t!. six trained patro l dogs used by five
lif&lt;' pr&lt;'sPrvC'r s and 1 c ~escopi c rescue
patro lme n and a lie utenant. Two teams
M C..' available on afternoon and night
shih o;: The dogs, incidenta ll y, are no
lo nge r " pen ned up" on campus; each
offi cer takes his dog home with him
where the dog becomes "a me mber of
Dr ... Bun..fchi Toyota, president of
th P fa":'il )•." The dogs, says Georger, are
Kanazawa Universil y, Japan, will be a
"good dnd won 't bother people except
visitor on the U/ 8 campus next week .
o
n command." Once seen on regular
Dr. Toyota will arrive for a three-day
CJmpu s fo ot pa lro ls, they are now
West~rn New York stay Tuesday, 0~­
rcsC'rved ror "sta nd-by" use in extreme
tober 8, as a part of a group of 40 leaders
im ide nts. " They're primarily a psyfrom 1he Japanese city wh9-: will be
c-hological deterrent," Georger notes.
to uring Buffalo. Kanazawa and Buffalo
are "sister cities."
Scc-uril y waired four yea rs.for the K-9
U/ 8 and-ka n.gawa University are also
vc1n, Geo rger ·says, and its main purpose
" related" thro ugh an agreemen t of afis to help rhose. in distress, not to ride the
filiation signed last June when Executniit
dogs around. So if lhere's an emer~ncy,
Vice President Albert Somil visited _the he repeats, "Call K-9':.0t 5555.
·
Japanese cainpus.
Th""""e universities promised in that paCt
to :
·
1. Cooperate in a spirit of mutual
understanding and to deepen close ties
and friendly re lationshi Ps; and
2. Undertake a fa culty-st udent exchange program, exchange scholarly
mater.ials, pursue common research
pro;eq_s, and Work tO)Yards achiev~ment
of COIT)mon goals in the scholastic and
cultural field.
Dr. To)'ota will be welcomed to Buffalo
by ·a delegation of University represen- •
tatives including Vice President Somit
(and Mrs. Somlt). He and several of
Kaiiazawa's city officials will b&lt;!" honored
Professor ~ne Mathiot of the
at a· luncheon q_n Goodyear~10 ,
Depanment of linguistics has agreed to
•
Wednescjay,
and will tour the-,niversity
serve as director of the ·center for
campuses that afternoon. At 3 p.m.
Cultural Studies of Education for 1974-75
Thursday, Dr. Toyota will meet with ·
while Professor Fred Gearing Is on sabJapanese faculty and students in the Red
batical_; .Arthur ButltiJ, acting provo_st of
·R~m of the F.,:ulty Club. A 'meetios
the FliCUI!y ol Social Sciences and Adwith Provost John P. Sullivan of Arts and
ministration, has announced.
·
Leners, Or. Merton W. Enell, acting vice
Or. WIVM D. Hu11hes. Anthropology,
president for academic affairs, and Dr.
will, serve as adminlslralive assistant io
Somit will follow at the Old Facuhy Club. ·
Professor Mathiol.
At a dinner on Goodyur-10 Thursday
The Cel!ter involws fKuhy from the
evenJns, Or. Toyota will be pn!SI!nted
deputments of Anrilropol-ogy ,
with a citation from the Council of the
Educational Admlnlstratlon, linguistics,
Psychology, S"oclai-Ph11osophlcal- · . University.
Friday, the Kanauwa U. president Will
Historical Foundations (Education),
tour UIB's healih sciences facilitieo.'
SocloJosy,.and Speech Commu~tion.

Malhiot .acting as
Center director ·

IH'"

S&lt;'curit )' o ffi&lt;-·cr William Georger .

'•')''-

Japanese educator
to be guest of U/B

A playwriting competition for both
faculty-staff and students is being sponsored again this year by State Unive·rsity
of New York, with the ultimate purp&lt;iSe
of producing a volume of plays by
members of the SUNY community.
A special edition of Modem lnlf!l"·
mtdonal O...ma will be devoted to -the
winning entries will be selected
by a three-member panel consisting of:
television writer and producer Rod
Serling; director Alan Schneider who just
finished a productron of Elie Wiesel's The
Madness of God at .Washington 's Arena
Stage; and George _ Savage, professor
emeritus of theatre arts, UCLA, an editor
for Theotrre Aim.,..,. (A copy of Modem
lnrernatlonal Drama containing- last
year's winning entries may be obtained ..b y writing to SUNY Programs in the Arts, ·
99 Washington Avenue, Albany, N.Y.
12210.) •
In addition to publication, SUNY
hopes to encourage productions of the
winning entries. Any campus which
elects to stage one of the plays will be
~ igibl e for a 5200 productio n grant.
Another gran t of S250 on a matching
basis wi"ll enable the playwright to be inresidence at that campus during the last
two weeks of rehearsals. ·
Plays will be accepted i n two
c.ategories-facu hy-staff and st ude nts . .
Winners in both will be published. Plays
of any length will be accepted and there
are no restrictions on style, p lot, theme
or characters. Musical plays will be
judged sOlely on their textual merit and
scores will not be considered or
published. Pla ys are to be original works;
collaboratio ns are permitted.
Any facuhy or staff member, graduate
or undergraduate st udent at a SUNY
campus during 1974-75 is eligible to
en te r. Playwrights are limited to one
entry each and no submission fee is
required. En tries may be submitted at
any rime prior to the January 1, 1975
deadline.
Manuscripts should be typewritten,
legible and firmly bound. The name of
the playwri_ght should not appear
anywhere in the manuscript except on "'&gt;
the title page. Each script must be accompanied by a self-addressed stamped
envelope ((or manuscript return) and an
official entry blank.
Entries should be mailed to :
Universiry·wide. P~aywr iting Competi·
tion, Theatre Department, State University at Binghamton, Vestal Parkway East,
Binghamton, N.Y. 13901. '
Questions may be referred to Patricia
Kerr Ross, SUNY, !19 Washington ·
Avenue, · Albany, N.Y. 12210 (518-4744962).
.
Official en_try blanks will be available
in the Office of Cultural Affairs, 143
Hayes Hall.

�October

j,

1·97'4
\

IV. Guidelines -f&lt;jr equal employmenf~pportunity
President Robert l. Ketter recently ci.rculated to top-level administrate~ a set
of guidelines, prepared to help advance
the · Equal Employment Opportunity
Policv of the Universitv. They were
proposed by the President~ Panel for the
Review of search 'Procedures, and are
titled "Guidelines for Affirmative Action ·
Search Procedures in the Hiring of Facul~u~::s~.?-Teaching Professional Stall at .
In an August 9 memorandum Presi-

dent Ketter noted that several vice
presidents, provosts, deans, chairmen

~

and directo~ "have expressed the need
for guidance in carrying ouf affirmative
•ction searches." He offered the
.J gUidelines as a document which would .
indicate the types of materials and
evidence the Panel looks for during its
reviews of search procedure reports .

Kefter praised the Panel for preparing
the guidelines. He hoped they would
prove to be of assistance to Universit y
administrators "as we continue to
vigOrously pursue our programs of affir-

mative action."
Members of the Panel are : Dr.
Marceline Jaques (Counselor lidiJCition)
and Frank Corbett (Urban. Affairs) co-

- · In Its coloctlwe ~. the It/ring
... lolled, In Its ..... seledlon
pnxedures, to ,mote a............,. oiJon to
ldemlly
qualftled
mln!&gt;rlfy
women and
candldareJ
• .In anlrs
will•- a
predoritlnance of mlnorlry artd felftale
._ , . , _ . , _ octlon
lie_..., towatd ,_......iOillles- males

--sltould

rice,_,..,. ..

~-

the

""It

J'loe_s_,dutylstoto ooMdoe&lt; •It/ring

... complied """ IJnWenlty ....,.._ ,_.
tltlnlnJ to afR,madre actiOn Jn searcft
~
In reViewing reports of search procedures,
the Panel examines their contents, deliberates
on them, and reaches i decision to recom·
mend approval or dis,approval. In cases o f
dou~, it defers a reconyoendation and _requesti dariftcation or further informauon
before making a decision. The P.anel of
necessity ads on the basis of the knowledge
and experience available to-it at the time of
the review - ltirgely o n the eVidence ·as
reported in search procedure reports.
Review guide lines have been developed to
assure maximum objectivity and uniformity in
th e eValuation of reports of search
procedures. These guidelines are outlined in
the sections that follow.
II. SpecifiC Search Undertakings

co~:::es:~ ~fu~ar~~~;i=u;ses ~~~~,

qualifk.Jtions sought
Ou!l!&gt;e of Seorch l'nocedures
Specific
affirmative
action
search
procedures should be detailed. The contents
of Section II of this document may be used to
suide the prepantion of the outline.
Documentotiofl
.
· Documentation of the affirmati~ action
aspect of the search shall be submitted as
&lt;~iddenda to .the SPR. Examples of the kinds of
~Jfirinative action search procedures requiring documentation &lt;lire shOwn in Section II of
this d~nt. The documenta.tion should in-

clu,~~rtef' notes of telephone conversations

and personal contaCU:showins names of persons contacted, date, specific request made,
~nd fesponseS to, or results of, the contacts.
2. A copy of ·any wri tten . request tor
assistance. If a single form letter is sent to
several sources, onty one copy with the name
of each source is necessafy. Responses, or lack
of same, to such request should be included.
'3. ~copy of each advertisement, 4lnnouncement, etc., published.
-4 . Report of any result oPt.a.ined fro.m the
two University-wide recruitment committees,
the Health Science Affirmatiye Action Committee and any other campus or off-campus
resource, including: Nime· of person contacted, date, the specific request, response or
result.
5. Report of tangible results yjelded from
a11y other affirmative action procedure, such
ilS contacts with national societies, interviewing at conferences, etc. -to include any
names of prospective candidates, additional
resources o btamed, etc.
-

tion to Recruit Form, 4lnd otJter details, such as
rank, time devoted to Roarch, etc.
·
·
c Where there are serious questions about a
panicular affinmtive action search, the Panel'
may also take into consideration the hi!ing
unit's past performance on previous submissions, as well_p other ac.tivities, such as the
establishment of an internal active affirmative
action committee; prior Investigation of the
size of the talent pool for the pertinent discipline or field; recruitment of minority and
women graduate and professional students;
etc.

3. Aher the discussion, the Panel reaches a
. decision. It m1y:
.
(a} Reoommend approval with or without
any additional comments.
(b) R~mmend that approval be ~i thheld
- always with an explanation .
- (c) Recommend -that action be deferred usually in cases where an important aspect of
the report lads clarity, where required entries
have been omitted withour explanation, or
where affirmative action search proced ures
hil!ve been insufficiently documented.
(d) Refuse to review an SPR, e .g. - when a
position does not fall within the Panel 's
jurisdiction.
' 4. Followins the Panel's decision, the SPR is
signed by the two co-chairpersons, or a single
co-chairperson, if only one is present - only
to lndlnre tlo;or the 51'11/oa been re~ by ·
'
the l'onel.

advertising. and the drculation -of np tices to
o ther institutions, as well as with such
5. Within a 72-hour time limit for the review
traditional activities as iecruitment at conprocess,. the SPR and the Panel 's deCision are
ferences, and contacts with petsonal friend s
traiumined to the office of the appropriate
and professional acquaintances. IJrholllfh tM
vice president for final decision to approve or
Viilid•tloro
f'
Panel considers these actirities in its reriew, ir
disapprove the hiring. A copy is also forward1. The initiating administrator should sign
~lso loob to, ~I eridem;e ol concened to the Office of Equal Opportunity.
the
Search
Procedure
Report
either
above
or
Science}, Analine Hicks (Student Acrr•ted •nd oiJ&lt;&gt;n&gt;US eHorttth•t especially seek
Minutes of eilch review session, which include
beside his or· her printed name at the top of
to ideniify ~nd recruir minority ~nd women
tivities}, Dr. David Hollinger' (History),
the Panel's action on each SPR, are sent to the
page, one.
·andld.tes for the rr..tnH&gt;nally c.ucas;.n
Dr. John Medige (Engineering Science),
President
2. The completed SPR shall be signed by. the
~mle- domi~Yred units, or non-minoriry ~nd
and Edward Saindoox (Student AcProvost, Health Science Dean or any othe(
V. Resubmksliohs
male candi«hres lor units With a predominance
counts).
ranking
administrator
authorized
to
sign
it.
By
of minority and fem~le pt&gt;rsonnel respecrireSPR 's submitted for the Panel 's review
Both Dr. Jaques and Professor Corbett
hts o r her signature the person is indicating
ly.
should be received in the President's office at
urged all administrators and all faculty
that he or sf.!e approves the affirmative action
Examples of such additio nal search activities
or before 5:00 p.m. of the d ay preceding the
and staff involved in biring to study the
aspect of the sea rch as reported.
are :
_
'
Panel 's regular meeting. 'The President's office
guidelines arefully before submitting
1. Formal attenlpt by the unit to secure
will continue to apprise departments and
c:rireru for Selection
_
search procedure reports for review.
rosters of qualified minority and women canother units of the P4lnel's meeting schedule.
didates from professio nal societies wi thin a
The Panel carefully reviews this section of
PresentlYthe Panel meets on Tuesdays of each
The full text of the guidelines, which
discipline or specific professional field.
the Seardl Procedure Report, and all hiring
week .
includes a chronology of the affirmative
2 Contacts with appropriate external ununits are reminded of the following parasraph .
The secretary o f the Panel will inform.tl,e
action program's developmefit, follows:
iversity resources by letter, telephone, or on a
from Chancellor Boyer's memorandum of .
offices of the initiating units of the Pane-l's
I. Introduction
more personal basis to seek assistance with
·
February 14, 1974:
; recommendations when they are ready for
~- The President's Panel for the Review of
identifying qualified minority and women
" While it is unlikely that each successful
transmission tO the vice presidents. This ser'i:Search Prc:x:edures was established at SUNYAS
candidates.
search would yield the same documentation
vice is rendered with the understanding that
to a~t with the implementi!ion of the Equal
in no way does the information suggest wh4lt
3. Formal efforts to identify and connect
of effort, it seems approprjate to ea:pect that
Employment Opportunity Policy. Primarily,
with~ existing minoritY group and women
. active endeavors to find women and minority
action the vice president will take on the
the Panel provides a monitoring mechanism,
persons would lead to the development of
caucuses within national, regional, and loq~l
Panel's recommenc:btion.
with regard to hiring, to enhance the vitality,
professional associations.
-such documeOts as : 1) letters Of Inquiry and
Any Panel member who participated in the
substan~. and impact of SUNYAB's Affir4. Letters and advertisemer1ts which dearly
announcement to graduate schools, placereview of an SPR is available to discuss any
mative Action Plin.
indicate that the unit is interested in, and acment officeS, p.rofessional associ~tions,
part of the recommendation anc! explanatory
The Panel was creoted by President Robert
tively seekins to, attract applications from
minority groups, women's groups, and the
commenrs which tre not clear. lnquirins ofL Ketter on February 5, 1973. Its original
like; 2} .advertisements in professional jourqualified minority and women candidates. .
ficials need not depend only on the cocharse was conflne&lt;J to the area of facu_lty hirS. Contacts by letter, telephone, and in pernals, newspapers and minority JW!pers; 3}
chairpersom for this informatiOn.
. ,·
ins; it mandated -a review of departmental
son with individuals representing statewide or
letters to specific individuals ~ferred by any
search procedure reports to determine
local orpnintions, Individuals of the local
source or received by the University f.rom
· whether all faculty hiring was in full comresion wbo work in professional or semithose individuak; -4) records of interviews (or
presidents are expected to notify the Panel in
- plionce with the Unl&gt;enlty's Equal Employprofessional capacities in the given field, etc.
invitatiom to interviews} with minority per
writlnR of their decision and reason(s) for
ment Opponunity Pion. More r.pecifially, the
6. Advenisements and/or announcements
sons and women; 5} letters offering positions
same.
Panel bepn acting for the President to assure
throush media most likely to reach the
. that hirinltdeportments acted "afflrmotively .''
desired minOrity-and WOrrtefi audiences.
exceedlni traditional seordl proceclwres, to
7. Formal request for aHistance from the
sons and women in responsi 10 inquiries,
Identify and , recrun qualified minority and
Minority Faculty and Sttff Recruitment Comadvertisements, invitatiOns to iinetviews,· inwomen condidoles for considerotiOn Infilling
• mittee, the Presid~t's Committee for lhe
terviews,Jnvitations to accept a position;· ?l ~
.
fiKlllty vaandes. By a presidential directive of
Recruitment and Promotion of Women,
sound evidence that the backsround gr
•
• e
.
March Zl, 1974, the Panel~ jurisdlc:tion was ·
Health Science Affirmative Action f:omqualiUations of minority persons and women
I
eJttended to cover non-teoc!ling penonnel. ~ mittee, members of the h iring..unit's staff, etc.
who were considered was ·inadequate, in- Tlnjs, faculty and non-teaching professional
8. Other ac.tivities which the hirins..unlt feels
duding, but no! limited to, such factors -&gt;slack
'
staff of the Unl&gt;enlty .,., co~ with the·
of desrees demonstrated to be required, ladt
C~arles M . Haar, louis· D. Brandeis
would be useful .in identifyina: and recruiting
following qu.alillations:
'minority and women c.andida"tes.
of experience demonstrated to be required,
Professor of law it H•rvard, will be the
1. The Panel's jurisdiction Is restricted to
The Panel does not conskler It tQ.- be a
• lack of special tninlng as documented to be
first in a series of Rand Visiting P;ofessors
state-funded faculty Jiind non-teaching
serious affirmative action search .wh~ con- •
required; and BJ sound evidence that the apin Urban Studies al 1he School of '

chairpersons; Rowena Adams (Student

Affairs),
Mary
Brady
(Unive~ity
Libraries} , Dr. Rose Ruth Ellison
(Medicine). Dr. HarleY' Flack (Heahh
Related Professi_ons), Dr. William Fischer
(English); John Hansgate (Computer

r~!~,!!:~~~~=s~~ 'f=t'efo:~~n=i~

~: ..:~t::e:.ndfrom~.:;~}

_...,

.,.-nalappolntments of .4 FTE or sreater
-with no exception except by the Pre$ident:s.

2. The Panel will review no search ·
pmcedure reports for summe&lt; ~ ap, .
palntmenis and w111t1ns oppolntments for one

ICallemic ,_or

less.-·

there will be

no "'inonsser from . . . _ or v~o~t~n~ocatus 10

,;&gt;7full-llme ~ wtihout an alflrmotlve
.

octlon oeorch: '
•
• •
1 No_.n'-'tiO replaeiindividuahon
. lkllleave or . _ without poy will be review- ed b, lhe Pinel, provided replocements are

_.nted

t.,_acadenic,_orteso. ·
.
.,. Panel Js
by die President,
....... CRqi!IOed Of faadty 11"1 ~ng

.... from~ tl&gt;e UnM!rslty. W)llle
lhe tho! Issue from Its

-l'lillflsditecdr
- forwlldod
the_
_ _ .10
. .¥lcle
. iOpresidetJio,
lhe President.
n. Paaelli ~- · the 'revlew of
repor118llll;ori~~of

-

.&lt;

riilllesleiool~icirvkle
..... 'lhe

... 'lhe

=:::-~

...._ lhe-:::.....,
...., _..... • ._.rID.,...~

tacts with faculty and non..eachlng profe5sionals are made bo ieciewles anCI by ad- '

- ininiStrltive assistants who are not reaularly
involved fry a untt's hirins procedures and

decislon-maklns.

1

~

~n:.u:~:~

dur::eap.:'c!J
: :
• This especially aooicems positions that do "9t
offer enouflh solary 0&lt; security 10 ottract outof-town penons. In such - . ~. the
P.anel !1oes look for evidence inclic;otting doat
broad oeorches hoVe ~ mnducted In the

r::·

pointecl. held a loadtground, tra\1\ing, and
P'!tentlol whiCh, on all doe available evidence,

, P.f(omlses I performonce superior lo lhe other
-

oppficant&gt; aonsidered for the position."
Consequentfi, hiring units should maintain
sound evidence roprdlng their offirmative
actioil search, and report this to the Panel.

lVI' llftlew " or~SPR~~!:f~~:
forw•rded to the President's Office for
screening, reprding the completion of ekh
item. In the screening, no evaluation of entries Is made. If a requested entry Is missing,
and Is- explained, the 51'11 orooy be returned'

Lecture p1anned
on new cities'

Architecture ind Environmental Design.
During his visil, Professor Haar will give a
free public lecture
"New , Cilies"
.
Tuesday, October .8, at 8:30 p.m. In the
· School at 2917 Miin Street.
.
~
One of the.nalflln'•most distinguislied·
experts on 'Jlroperty, land use and
government problems in urban and suburban areas, Mr. Haar held the position ·
of assistant secretary for metropolitan
development in lhe U.S. Department of
H!iUsing and Urban Dew!lopment from

on

iocll ......
IlL Seiodl Procedure lleportl
_1!166-196!1. ~ ~ ,, •
'
The Panel exjoeas eoodi Item requested In
An advioor 10 Presidents Kennedy _,.d
the 5eard! Procediore ~ 151'1110 be comt~!f&gt;elnltlolinlunitbythePresident'•Offlce.
Johnson on urban and suburban
pleted. 'follute' to ilo Ill can lie a rRIOII for "' - 51'11'• !hal pal! ihe prelimlnlly screening ore -· · problepli, he wn , one o( .the ke)'.
cleferrinlicllon on lhe 51'11. or lor teWrnit!tllt
tr~ ID the Panel for review. The
draftsmen In .developins three of lhe
.withOut ..., action.. bdo .......... dOte
revle!r .....,... ol "'!
' .
.
most signifiCant ·~ af Jeslslation of
SO'tllinJ ..,. . Panel, and hltlni units 1ft es•. pedoll, .tirpd IO . Iulllll the · ~o~~ow~ns teo
, ~.~~J'=%t=~. Johnson's . admlnl~ralton: thl!
....-~
' \.
eo;Jdenot tlatlill a111rmat1ve M:tlaft INrch has
Deatonslratlon and Model Cities Act of
~., Oilt!rfi
.• .
. ,.
'tiieett~. 11\ti l'lniJ also sftb10·un1966, lhe Safe Slreeis and Crime Control
Act of 19&amp;8, and Tide fV of lhe &amp;using
detocancllhe Jelatlons . _ the outliiled
C...... far the potltiMtthould
tpiCIIIool!y--...
dtotlhefllnel...
.
oeorch ......,......,lheotlllilleol crileria, the
and Urban Developnienl l\ct of'191i8 ·
un.rstand lhe profeSJional •nd ottte~
intended .-di tpedfJed In the Alllhoriza,.
(New Communities).
• "

"

be=

�October 3, 1974

Workshop on
publicity for ,
·students &amp; staff
"" A five-part series of life Workshops on
publicity, designed for students and staff
responsible for organizing events on

campus, will be held Tuesda y, Ooober 8,
through Saturday, October 12, in Room ,
232 Norton. The

nrst four sessions are

· scheduled from 2-4 :30 p.m.; the last will
be held from .10 a.m.-1 p.m.
The series has been pesigned to assist
coordinators with on-campus publicity
for one -time eve nt s or on-going

programs. Participants will be inlroduced
to the various resources at their disposal
and the most effective ways of using

those resources.
The first session will deal with identification of markets and audiences and a
discussion of general marketing con-

cepts led by Dr. Michael Elgar of the
School of Management. A portion of the
session will be devoted to a presentation
on campus media. with representatives
from the~' the llepon~, Ethos,
Midnlfhr ~na WBFO on hand to
present requir,eme nts for deadlines, content, etc.
The second session will cover graphics,
journalistic st yle and photography.
Anthony Rozak, associate professor in
the Art Department, and Clarence Scott-,
typographies' supervisor in Publications,
will discuss design, layout and costs of
print ing posters and other visual
material. The presentation
stress
economical yet effec tive means of com·
munication . Kenneth Service, news
editor for University Information Services, will talk about journalistic style,
photographic services, and the fund ion
of Information Services.
A tour of campus resources, including
University Press and the Publications
Office, is scheduled for the third session .
The directors of e ach un it will conduct
th e tour and explain the fundions of
thei r deparlments.
Session four will consist of a wrap-up
and discussion of previously assigned
individual projects.
A poste r and fl ye r workshop under the
direction of Rozak and Scott is planned
for 1he final session. Participants will
work on actual paste ~ ups and learn basic
design princi ples, as well as clear methods
of presentation for prinlers.
Those interested may register for the
life Workshops in person at Room 223
Norton, or call 831-4630 between 8:30
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.

wm

Heidelb~rg

honors U/Bmicrobiologist

Dr . Erw in Neter, internation all y
re·cognized m ic rob io logi st, U/ 8
professor, and .director of the Children's
Hospital Bacteriology Depa rtment, was
awarded th e honorary dodor of
medicine degree by his al ma mater, the
University of Heidelbe rg (Germa ny) in
ceremonies Friday at the Hospit~l.
Dr. Be rnhard Urbasch ek, Heidelberg
medical faculty member who co nfe rred
the deg ree, praised Dr. Neter's contributions to medicine as a "researcher,
physician and teacher during the past
three decodes"' and his ability 10 apply
results of resea rch to clinical. medicine.
Among Dr. Neter's accom plishmen ts
are authorship of a microbiology textbook now in its s·ix th printi ng, editorship
of th e American Society fo r
Microbiology 's publication Infection and
Immunit y, and numero us professional
honors.
Dr. Nerer commented that during his
30 years in Buffalo, he has seen the
impad of resea rch in his field on improved diagnosis and isolation of
disease-causing organisms.
" Whe n I first came here, there were
many diseases for which we could o nl y
offer co mfort to the patient- not cures.
Now, more diseases have been put in the
'curable' category because thei r specific
microorganisms have been identified
and drugs h;we been developed lo figh t
th e m effeoively.'' he said. He ciled

several forms of sPi nal meningitis, which
30 years ago claimed the lives of nearly
all you ngsters who con tracted them, and
said, " then more than 90 per cent died,
now the reverse is true."
But· while man y age-old infections are

A&amp;R names associate directorS
Two associate directors have ~n apoointed in the Office of Admissions and
Records. Or. Myron A. Thompson, Ill , has
been named associate director for a&lt;:tmissions, and Dr. Robert D. Bailey has
been appointed associate director for

U/B to host
physics meeting
The 31st Semiannual Symposiu m of the
New Yo'rk Stcite Section of the American
Physical Society will be held in the Statle r
Hilton Hotel, October 11 an d 12 with the
U/ B Phys ics Department as host.
The main topic of the symposium is
Modern Acoustics and invited tal ks on
physical acoustics, ultrasonic device
applications, physics of music, and bio
and medical acoust ics will be given.
The symposium is open 10 (public)
faculty and students. ~urt her information
may be o btained from Dr. M . L. Rustgi ,
108 Hochstetler, telepho ne (831) 3233.

·Badminton club opens season next week
The U/B Badminton Club opens its
third year of aCtivities next week
with the star! of regular Tuesday night
practices in Clark Gym.
According to Ravi Prakash, graduate
student in mechanical engineering and
manager of the Club, the season will
extend through April with major tournaments slated for January, February and
March.
Four tournaments are scheduled : the
Western · New York Invi tational (which
the local Club may co-sponsor with Buffalo Stale); the Eastern America Invitational Tourney, West Chester, Pa.;
the Kodak Invitational in Rochester; and
a lournament in Niagara Falls, Ont.ario.
There is also a possibility of three or four
team matches wilh such schools as Buffalo Stale, Brockport and Fredonia.
Last year, the Club had a &amp;uccessful
tournament season. U/8 won men's
singles, men's doubles and mixed
doubles in the Western New York, took
runners-up lAurels In men's singles and
doubles in rhe Eurern, and came home
from Rochesler wit'J.Ihe men's consola- ,
lion doubles rltle.
The Badminron C I u b is a group
of about 50 sludents, equally divided
between men and women, which
receives a budget of about S300 from
studenr feel. Its policy is 10 encourage
.!l&gt;Umamenr partidpatlon among !hose
who ore resulltfy acrive in Its practices,
nor jusromonsrhe best players, Prabsh -

says.

The Club also onemprs ro promore lhe
sport among rhe U/8 communlry.
.
Membership In rhe Club reflects the

beComing virtually extinct, others are
taking their places. Dr. Neter pqinted out
that man y technological-advances which
bring benefits to the patient are also
accompanied by new sets of problems to
the researcher as well as the clinician.

registration and student records.
Both received their bachelor's degrees
in sociology from U/11. Dr. Thompson
also received his master's degree in student personnel and his Ph.D. in higher
education here. He has been on the staff
of A&amp;R since 1967.
Dr. Bailey received h is master's degree ·
in student personnel from State University College at Buffalo, and his Ph.D. in
guidance, counseling and student personnel from Ohio University, Athens.
Prio r to his joining U/ 8, he was registrar
fo r the College of Allied Health Sciences
at Thomas Jeffer s on Uni versity ,
Philade lph ia.

Calendar(from pa~e 8, col. 4)

3. Any student who

has, not received a

foreign student health insurance application
shou ld pick one up in 210 Townsend Hall.

4. Undergraduate scholarship appliCations
for foreign students are available in the Office
now. The a~plication deadline is November 1.
· HILLR CROUP

Hillel is organizing oJ Yiddish Folksinsing
Group, to be instrueled by Paula Teitelbaum.
For more information. all 836-4540 or 8322359.

UVINC ARTS STUDIO
The living Arts Studio School of Modem
Drama, 39 Goundry, Nonh Ton.~nd.t, will
begin classes ror adults and youns adults this

Monday evening, oaober 7. Classes will deal

:j~~~l~~~~~rn:~i~~~~~o:~~

information, contact the director, Jim Mosey,
692-9667,

MEQIA STUOIE5 WOU5tiOI'S
Medio Sludy, Inc., 3325 Boiley Ave., w111
oiler . lwO four-week video ·wo~ IS an
intensive introduction to the basic Diincioles

and techniques of creative video. The
· workshops, tousht by Steina Vaullu!, will
rnee1 IWia! • week, OcL 9- Nov. 2. There Is no
. chorse except for supplies; '-ever, porlicipallorl Is limited IO 2fl ..,_,.. for rum-_
informoliql&gt;, all 835-2111111 by OcL 3.

11IANICSGMNG .. ~
'
The SdnmnJ"islen =~ thelnta·
nolionol Students ore
,. 1 ,__
sltiins trip to
clurinB 'lhMJushlnl
weekend, Nov. 27-0ec- 1. Coot ol the lrfp,
lndudlns .,.~ onc1 110111 ......,..
rnoclodono, Is four per
per room. S64.00. For rum- .......,CIIIIIJ1,
2145.

Mon...,..

·/

international appeal of
con·
sidered a major sport in such "piKes u
Indonesia, Thailand, India, Japan and
Pakisron. foreign students comprise a
large portion Of rhe membet\hl!( bur.
Pralwh odds, more and more Americans
are disawerlns thor "lr's more thin a

bocl&lt;yonl tport."

·

·

Whllebadmlnlonlsnolyetlncludedin
the Olympics, Prakash notes that It Is a ·

feature "or

ihe British Commonwealth

wmes. II is also pining momentum In

Scondinavlo, --&amp;181ond and Germany
where, u In Souiheast Asia, ,.,....,..,..
amaleur matches ltlracllarge falliowiNs.
For more lnforMalion on the e.dmlft..
ton Oub, cortUCt ltovl I'Absh a IJ71278 In the . evenlnp or at 111-atSB
during the day (MOnday, Weclnada;
and ITiday).
·

�. . .uaaa
Hilfel.13&lt;11!.se, 40 C1pen Blvd., 10 o.m . .

TH~SDAY-3
UNITED WAY VOlUNTHII
Rm. 41, 4226 Ridse lea, 10 a.m., iind
Conference Room, 1803 Elmwood Ave., 4 p.m.
lAW I.ECI\JUO
Coun Reform: -The Selection and
DisciplininB of Judses. _Charles 0 . Breitel,
chief jud~. New York Stote Coun of Appeals,

A~ Courtroom, O 'Brqn•Hall, 3 p.m.
l'tmiCS COUOQUIUMI

.
Hirh Energy l'lto&lt;on-ll1y Astrophysics. Prof.
kenneth Creisen, Oepirtment of Physics,
C"'t'nell University, 111 Hochstener, 3 p.m.

GEOI.OGICALSCIINCISL.ECTUtil
Chemist.ry ond PetroloJY of the"Moon aher
Apollo, Dr. W. ton Ridley, l.omont-Ooherty
Geoloskal Observatory, Columbia University,
Rm. D-170, Bell hdlity, 3:l0 p.m.
PAntOI.OCY 5lMJN.UI
I _Cyrochemical Loaliution of Intermediates
"""""'rh Crclic AMP Metabolism·in Euaryotic·Cells,
8

~~i~~~y~~;~~~~~c'::~~r~f ~~~~~

Medicine, 145 Cipen, l:lO p.m.
CfU. &amp; Mot:ECUI.Ait IIOI.OCY LfCTUREI
Clonal Nerve and Muscle Cell Lines, Dr.
Brian W. Kimes, Department of Neurobiology,
The Stllk Institute, 13-4 Health Sciences, 4:15
p.m. Coffee at 4 p.m.
FOSTBl COU.OQUIUMI
The HeliK-Helix Transition in Poly-L-Proline,
Prof. E. Gornick, University of Maryland at
Baltimore, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.

PHAIIMACEUTICS SfMINAq
Ah~rions in the Effecu of W~rlarin in
Dogs by H_alofen~re: Influence Upon
Prothrombin Kinetics, Dr. Mich~l Weintraub,
assistani professor, -Department of Phar~

u/8 vs. Connon Colfese, Rot1ry Soccer
Field, 1 p.m.
II!COitDa lfCHNIQUES MA5TEit CLASS• .
This three-hour sessk&gt;n for players at all
levels will be tausht ' by Andrew Stiller, Baird
H1ff, 1-4 p.m.
Registration is at Hayes A, Rm. 3. There is a
$20 tuition fee. Presented by the Office of
Credit·free Programs.
UUAIFUM••
Une Femme Douce {Bresson, 1969),
ConferenCe r~eatre, Nor;ton; caii831·S117 for

times. Admission chirge.
CACRu.t••
Pl~y It /\gain, Sam, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10 p.m.
Admission: $1.

SUNDAY-6
HIIJ.El.SWIMMINC PAIITY""
Hillel's Operation Greenlight will hold a
swimming pirty; counsellors are needed . For
further information, Cill 836-4540.
HIUR ZOO TOUR•
Mrs. Eve Fertig will conduct a tour of the
Buffalo zoo and present a lecture on Wild
Canids. Panicipants are asked to meet at Hillel
Hou se, 40 Capen Blvd., at 1 p.m.
UUABFtLM••
Une Femme Douce (Bresson, 1969).
Conference Theatre, Norton ; caii831-S117 for
times. Admission charge.
FACULTY IIECITAL•
By Sylvia Dimiziani and Harriet Simons,
sopranos, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m . Admission
charge.

MONDAY-7

mKOiosY, University of Rochester, 244 Health

::.~·

4

lfCYUIIE"

MffifisoCca--

~SISSIONS••

p.m.

• • nndANNUAillfNi'ALALUMNI

The Co~romon (Kelton), 147 Diefendorf, 5
&amp; 1 p.m. NO Mlmission charge.
tai.B. DINPt&amp;:•
Dinn« in the Sulcbh, Hillel House, 40

~~ M~E~h o· ·
d E·
resent
y t ~ _18 t . •stnct an
rae
County Dent;ll Sodeues, ~olt~ay Inn, Grand

Copen Blvd., 5 p.m.

STATISnCAL SCIENCE SlMINAR•
Some Srarisrical Problems of Drug
Bioavailability Studies, Dr. Carl M. Metzler,
Upjohn Co., kalamazoo, Michigan, 4230
Ridge lea, Rm. A-49, 11 :20 a.m.· 12:40 p.m.
and 2·3 p.m.
Sponsored by the St~tistical Science Division of the Department of Computer
Sciences.

LH.~·

.
.
~~cycle Marnr~nc~ and Repa~r. 233_No~-

ton, 5 P·~· Res•strat.on and Information
av.u.a. "' 223 Norton, ext. 4630.
..US. "DDIOP-IN'" NKilfr.
Hil~ House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7-11 p.m.

UUAIALM••

IS

·

I love Y0re4 I Kilt You (Brandner, 19n),
Conference Theatre, Norton; caii831~S117 for
~mes. Admission charge.

FRIDAY-4
~ CHIIoiiSTIIY SIMINAq

HiKftly Stereose"lective Reactions, Prof.
L Eliel, Deportment of Chemistry,
Unlvenlty of ~ Corolin1, Ch1pel Hill, 245
Heollh Sclenca, 2 p.m.

Erniit

MUSIC IIIPAIITMENT MA5TEit CLASS•
Wtth Alrewis Weissenberg, pianist, Baird
Recital Hoff, 2 p.m.

-·

IM»e't Jan~; J\rtia; Growing Up Female,
146 Diefendorf, 3 &amp; 7 p.m. No admission

-..

Presented by Women's Studies College •nd
American Studies.

PlASMAS AND AIPUCA110NS 5lMIN.UI
!liSe&lt; Futlon -l'ro,esss Toword flre.tleven
ond App/lc:ltlons, Prol.lvloshe ).Lubin, director, Ubotalory for l.aer Eneraettcs, The

~s~dn~~~~Y~~-C~~·du~.ng on Tuesday

LAW lECTURP
Left Wing Radial lnfilrrarion of Federal
Legal Service Operations, Howard Phillips,

former director, Office g_f Economic Oppor·
tunity during the Nixon administration, Moot
Courtroom, O'Srian Hall, noon.
Presented by the Student Bar Association.
COMPUTB 5BIVICB SIMINAIII
FORTRAN IV for the Novice. instructed by
Hirvey Axlerod, 4242 Ridge lei, Rm. ZJ, 3-S
p.m.

RLM•
Public Enemy !Wellmon), 140 C1pen; 3 &amp; 9

p.m. No ttdmisslon charse.
CfU. &amp; MQUCIJlAit IIOI.OCY SIMINAq
Study of t.oosely·Bond~ Non-Histone ,
Proteins, Richard Montt~sna, sraduate stu·
dent, 24 Diefendorf Annex, 4 p.m.
"
WATEII IIBOUIICBANDINVIIIONMINTAL
ENGINRilJN(i 5IMIHAitl

Presented by the Deponments of Electrial
Enslneerlns, Ensineerins Science, and

,..,.._

UNIIIDWAYWJI.UifiB
TUINIIIG~
.
lllaoltCompla.ltm.1i'0,4p.m.

UUMRIM"" . .

I , _ Y011, I ICfn You, (llrlndner, 1!171),
Confetence Theatre, Norton; al1131-5117 for
""--~~.
CM:. ...... r
""'7""iio, II Apfn, Som, - .. Woody Allen,
, . Clpen. • &amp; 10 p.m. Aclnlhsion: S1.

HU&amp;MIM'fiiBVICP

............... rfle Torah, Rlllbl Jtistln Hoi..... ....,....., .. 0..., SINtbbot. Hillel
. . _ . . ~ lhd.;. p.m.
.

-=~· ~a:JOof
~..J:t.fiMiini«'fllulre
~IIIII the ... "' tL of Cullurol
.. _Alloln
U~N.-.c--..

llalt ........ .,..,..... ollliMn.

-

1972 Water Pollution Control Act
Amendments, Gerttld Cinq-Mars, 7 Acheson
Annex, 4 p.m.

Unlvenlty of Rochester, 104 Parlte&lt;, 4 p.m.
· Coffee In 107 Parbnt 3,30 p.m.

Tu'ESDAY-8
UR WOitiSttOIS. Creative Ule Monogemenr, noon-2 'p.m.;
1

~~~ p~:..; ~ ::::i :/:;:rty11;:::;::

tion, 7-8 p.m. Reglstrotion is in 22l Nonon.
-·
U/8 vo. Nilpro Unlvemty (doubfe..heoder),
'
PeeUe Field, 1 p.m.
- . w I N UUAN ANALYses

AND I'OUCYI

c

ncopt

fizlns 0 d M

·

Oc!ober 3, 1974

E· ·

vl,..,::,.,..rQ.,.Hty, Dr~ Leste&lt;e~l't:'.f;, u/8.

Soclol Science (lesearch lnsthuto,ll1 Crosby,
1-lp.m.

~of

• Soldier ,..;j war In' tho Padf'rc.
141' Diefendorf, 3 &amp; 7:l0 p.m. No odmitslon
dwp.
·
~'aMluNI'IIM-•

rfle dNprn R - Canference Theot~e,
,4,'$.1.11!tl10p.m.~dwp. .

Over1eas Academic Programs, lntermtional ·
Uvins Cen~~ Red Jacket Quad1 Ellicott
Complex, 2nd Ooo( lounge, 7:30 p.m.
HIU.R SIMCHAT TOIIAH ClUIRATlON"
Hillel House, 40 Cope~ Blvd., 8 p.m.
PUIUC LECYUIIE•
Hoaxing in America, Clifford Irving, Clark

Hall, 8 p.m. Admission : $1 for the general
public; free to members of the University
community.
Presented by the Student Association
Speakers' Bureau.
llANO LECYUIIE•
New Cities, Charles M . Haar, louis D.
Bra ndeis Professor of l.iw, Harvard University,
2917 Main St., 8:30 p.m.
· Presented by the School of Architecture
and Environmental Design.
5lH IE£THOVEN CONCBIT IV"

r~~~~::~ U,B,~I~i;~~~~~~~~~~~~M!':;

S.::aton Room , 8:30 p.m. Admission charge.

WEDNESDA Y-9
LIFE WORKSHOPS••
,
Dcarhand0ying. 11 :30a.m.-1 p.m. ; Publici~
t y, 2-4 p.m.; Alter Divorce or Separation Whatf,3-4 p.m.; Quality Living lor All, 6:308 :30 p.m. Register in 223 Norton .
COMPUTER SERVICES SlMINARI
FORTRAN IV lor the Novice, instructed
by Harvey Axlerod, 4242 Ridge lea, Rm. 17, 3~
S p .m.
THE CORPORATION IN MODBN SOCIETY
LECTURE SERIBt
Socializing the Corporilion. lee F. Preston,
Melvin H. Baker Professor of American Enter~
prise, and dir~or, Center for Policy Studies,
U/ 8, Faculty .cfub, Harrimin, 3:30 p.m.
Comment , will be provjded by John Het~
trick, vice chairman of the .board, Mirin~
Midland Bank-Western.
Presented by the School of Manasement and
the Center for Policy Studies.
CHAIIUf CHAPliN FilM SEIIIES•
The Chaplin Revue, Conference Theatre,
Norton, 4, 6, 8, and 10 p.m. Admission charge.

ucruu•

~

Intention , Meaning ~ and literary
Knowledge, Dr. Charles Altieri, professor,
U/ 8 Department of English, Annex 8, Rm. 5, 4

p.m.

ur:~~~~ndb~i~!:o~~~~~~.:~:m ii~

Compar:ative literature.
FILMS"
Deep End !Skolimowski, 1971), 7:15p.m. Pig
Pen (Pasolini, 1973), 8:5S p.m. Both films will
be shown in 140 Capen. No admission charge.
UUAI COffiBtOUSf•
Fea1Uring Bill Staines and Milry Mt:e.flin,
1st floor afet~ria, Nonon, 8·11 p.m. Admis~
sion dlarge.

EXHiBITS
MULTI-MEDIA EXHIIIT"
Pnumbral R.iincoast, sample works by a
group of U.S. artists who have communicated
with each - other through writings, . video
production, Xerox printing, film, photography
and music, Gallery 219, Norton . Viewing
hours : Monda:y~Friday, 11 a.m. ~ 4 p.m.; Sunday, 1 - 4 p.m.; Monday and Thursday
evenings, 7 ~ 10 p.m.
PHOTOGIIAPH EXHIIIT"

m~~or/h~~rilrn:e~~:mG=·~~~m~~
York S.a:te, Hayes Hall lobby displa:y cases.
Througtl Oct. 30. Viewing hours : MondiyFridiy, 9 a:.m. • S p.m. Presented by the Office
of Cultural Affairs.
UUAI VIDEO EXHIIIT"
Th e Day After Tomorrow._a morality soap
opera dealing with student life . Mondays,
T~days and Wednesdays, Haas lounge, Nor·
ton , 2 p.m. Through Wednesday, Oct. 30.
UIRARY EXHIIIT"
First editions of the works of Samuel Becke«
from the collections of l ockwood Memoria.!
Library, 2nd floor balcony, lockwood .
Viewing hours : Monda y~ Friday, 9 a.m . ~ 5
p.m. Continuing.
LOCKWOOD EXHIBIT"
Polish Colleaion, illn exhibition culled from
the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of material, first floor, Lockwood
Memorial Librirv. Mondiv~Fridav. 9 i .m:-s
p.m. Continuing:
·

INTERVIEWS
ON-cAMPUS INTIRVIEWS
The staff of the University Placement and
Career Guidince Offk:e welcomes all students
in the University community and alumni to
take part in various areer programs offered
this year . The on·campus intervi~wing
prosram, running from Oct. 7~Dec. 12 ttnd
Jan . ~April 25 offers dle opportunity for
individual interviews with educalion,
business, industrial and governmental
representitlves. C;mdidates from all desree
levels, Completing their course work in
linuary or May 197S, are invited.lo tak~ part in
the lnt~rviewing. Resistration forms are
available in Hayes Annes; C, ~m. 6. The
following agencies will be interviewing this
weel&lt; :
MONDAY-7: Aetni life Insurance Co.;
Factory · Mutua'1 Engineering' Corp.; Arthur
Anderson and Co.
TUESDAY-8: Arfhu~ Anderson 1nd Co.;
Union Comp Corp.; Berhlehem Steel Corp.
WEDNESDAY-9: Bethlehem Steel Corp.;
Haskins and Sells.
THURSDAY-10: Bethlehem St.e el Corp.;
Haskins and Sells.

THURSDA Y-10
MfN'S cou•
U/8, Connon Colfe«e. and Fredonil 5t•te
College, Amhe"t Au&lt;lubon Golf Course, 1
p.m.

UR WORK5HOPS••
Publicity, 2-4 p .m. and J\nliquing ilnd
Collecting. 7-8:l0 p.m. Reglste&lt; In 22l Nonon.

PHYSICS COU.OQUIUMI

Some New
Molecules for l'llysicists;- Prol. 0. Kleppner,
Von Der Wools Molecules -

Department of Physics, Mauu.husens
fnstitule of Technology, ,111 Hochstetter, 3
p.m.
C&amp;l &amp; MOlfCUI.Ait IIOLOCY l.ECJUtil
.
Studies of Poky, It cytoplasmically-

lnh~ired, Cytochrome-Deficient Mut~nt of

=~~ ~.::;.,~; ~~n ..\:j,~~
4:15p.m. Coffee ot 4 p.m.

PHAIIMACEUTICS 5IMINAitt
l'llormocoldnet/a of Acetomlnophet] In
Anephr/c Pat~s, Sveln Oie, doctoral an-

NOTICES
IIADMINTON a.tJI
The U/8 Bodminton Club will bqin its
regulor proctice Tuesdoy, Oct. a, in the
Women's Gym, Clork Hoff. All U/8 students
ienntedr.estThode.idnuponWii~• JNtl~~e~vry~odT·.'!'.J...t·
rb
pr~·-·
""""'Y
from 7 to 10 p.m. For funhe&lt; inlormotion, all
Rovi ot ll7-12711 lohe&lt; a p.m.).

1

11

...

CAMPINGYIIIPINVBMONT
Schuumeisters Ski Cluti is p&amp;Anni"' a ampins trip to Roch,ster, Vermont, besinnina
Frldoy, Oct. ·4, ond returnlns Sunday, Od. 6.
P•nidponts must provide. their own food,
water and campina equipment. Jor fu'!her
information, call 131-2145. Drivers are
~=·:;':,::.',\:.'he Ski Club H you an

C~SiaVICI

l'rofessionol counselfna Is now ovailoble ••
Hillel House, 40 Copen Blvd. For on oppolntment, aD MR. Eve fertls, 135-4540.
- . u GIIANIJ DEAIIUNE BnNDID

• didoto, UIB Deponment of Phormoceutics,
244 Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
·. Appllcotlons f8r
te
FILM"
_
study or reseordt obrood lilcllor
f
Blind Hwl&gt;onds (Von Strohelm), 147 Diolen- , trolnintJ In the c:ratlve and
..,
dotf, 5 &amp; p.m. No ldmlsolon chofse.
oro now onlloblo flom lhe Fulbrfaht
UUAI FilM*"
'
In 107 Townsend Half. The deodliM lor lilf..

fedotolann51or

a

Ch~~~~~.~~

Theme. Norton; an 131-5117 for times. Admlsolon c:Nr.;e.

..US."'IIINN'"NGHr
Hlllolttoute,40Cipen81vd.,7-11 p.m.·
UIJ.AiiCQIRIIIDC_. ~
fellurfnlllfll sr.lnes and Mory M&lt;QIIin.

..~;;;!~~;.~;-~~~~;;:tj;;;;;t:~;;;ii~Liri;"i;""'
N
, on
• lin,

1st floor cafeteria, Norton, 8·11 p.m. Admission charge.

~~~~. .....

been utended to

FOIIIIGNIRIDINTNOIIMA110N
The Office of fonilp Student AHolrs has
modo the followfnJ onnouncements:
•
' 1. All forelp lllidet!ts ore tnpd to natlfy
the Office cil onr ~of llclcl,.. lmmedlolely.tnllclclltlori,IIUilentsshotlldchOa

""'*-

the ...........
210 1--..llor
111111
whichIn.....
been ~
to and.
"" Offlc:e. Undoimecl 111111 will be -..eel ID
sendors.

2. Tuillon-~lheSprina
1 9 1 5 - ore ......,..In theOIIIce now.
The oppllcadon dutlllne Is NcMmber 15.
, /lumto-7,col.4)

��'.

.

'

~

This is the filst of the monthly calen·
dars of cultural events, compiled as a

service to the uw;rsity community by
the Office of Cultural- Affairs. MAGNET
will appear as a special centerfo.W in the
Reporter on the filst Thursday of each
month. All groups sponsoring performing
arts events, exhibits, public lectures, and
symposia can send material to the Office
of Cultural Affairs, 143 Hayes Hall,
which, if received in the Office by the
middle of each month, will be published
In the following month's MAGNET. Since
this wlli be of value both to the sponsors
and to their potential audience, we look

forward to your continuing cooperation
in sending us material, including photographs when available, each month.
· It is our hope that this beginning will
ultimately lead to additional services by
the Office of Cultural Affairs: a clearingbous.i function, to inform about projected events, making it possible to avoid
conOicts in scheduling programs, and eventually - a calendar encompassing an
entire semester, as groups begin to think
in terms of longer range planning.

-Esther Swartz
l'fesidential Assistant for Cultural Affairs

�-·

recorder
master class
'lbla II a . ; . . - oaly, tllllle hour
11011on Cor playen at an leniL Wort will
conr ~~~~ or IDle- to th- • ·
rolled: IIWDI tile b11b DOles to apeek,
proper iDtoaallon, ODIOmble plafiDI,
Buoque performance pradlce, wbateYer
COII*Up.

music for many moods
... will be fealwed by the UUAB
Coffeebouoe ill tbe cominl weeD.
Appearlnl on Oetober 3 will be
MARGARET MacARTHUR and ber oon.
Sbe bdol' with bor lOIII' tbat lbeleamecl
wble arowilll up ill tbe Ozmb and wbicll
lbe ..,.,.,mpaoleo on tbe IUIW, dulc:lmer
and hro amall barpl. BILL STAINES and
MARY MeCASLIN follow on tbe 9th and
lOth featwiDI; amDDI otbell, IIWly IODp
they ban written. BW'a ,..... from
yodeWDI to tender lareiOJliL Mary, who
recently appeared at tbe Marlp&lt;a Folk
Feotlval, oecompaoles henelf with IUilar
and bODjo.' Oclober 16th wW bfiDI JOHN
ROBERTS and TONY BARRAND,
notorious for their bawdy ooop, a little
bit or concertlll&amp; playiJII, a little bit or
gnltar playlnl and a lot of fun. TRACY
and ELOISE SCHWARZ sint and play
traditional American folk and country
music_ on Octobe\ 17 with a repertoire
and delivery reminiscent or lOme or the
old time family 1f0ups. From State
eou...,, Pa., on October, 23 and 24 will
come BOB DOYLE and Tbe Cbipkickers.
Bluepass II their specialty and they do it
'specially well. KEN BLOOM will also
appear these two eveniDp with songs and
the style he learned from Mississippi
Tbunwald using the clarinet, bottle neck
guitar and electric zitber. The month's
events come to a close on October 30 and
31 with the happy notes of ANDY
COHEN and RAT L'USHK. Andy, the
Twangoleum king (a Twangol~um being a
guitar that looks as if it were designed by
Picasso), also plays barrel house piano,
banjo . and autoharp. He and Rat will
feature bluegrass, ragtime, fancy Oat
picking and good time music.
All the above-mentioned pleasure will
take place at the UUAB Coffeehouse, 1st
Door cafeteria, Norton, 8·11 p.m. Tickets
are available at Norton at$ .75 for students; $1.00 for faculty; $1.25 for the
general public.

eric bentley
.in concert: ·
a program of
theatre songs
From the New Yorl&lt; Times, March 1974:
"Eric Bentley, dramatist, drama critic,
author, teacber, lyric writer, translator of
Bertoli Brecht and Jacques Prevert, is
dipping his toe into a potential new
career... . He has become a supper club
performer...doing Brecht, Prevert and
his own soligs.. .. Accompanying himself
on piano, be talks informativelY and
entertainingly as much as be sings. The
effect is informal and Intimate, a form of
polished, sophisticated parlor entertainment. ... Mr. Bentley bas a singing voice
that goes with the informality or the
occasion-modest and serviceable, but
capable or considerable projection ...
Eric Bentley was Katherine Cornell
Professor of Drama when he was at U/B
last year as a visiting professor. His returo
here, in his one-man show, is sponsored
by the Office of Cultural Affairs and the
UUAB Drama Committee, in association
with the Department of Theatre.
Harriman Theatre, Friday, October 4,
8:30p.m.
Students, $1; faculty, staff and
alumni, $2; genen.l admission, $3. Tickets
at Norton Box Office and at the door.

•

Tau&amp;bt by Andiew SWier, M.A. and ·
Ph.D. candidate at SUNYAB, one or the
few proC..onal recorder players in
WealemNewYorlt.
,
Baird Hall, Saturday, Octobe• 5, 1-4
p.m.
Repter beforehand at Heyes A,
Room 3- Tuition fee: $20.00.
Sponoored by omce for Credit-Free
Programs.

a lecturedemonstration
on rape ....
Tbe Student Association Speakers'
Bureau has a varied bW of fare in the
month ahead. On Tuesday, October 8,
Cliffonllrving, the author of the so-called
autobiography or Howard Hughes, is
tentatively scheduled to speak on
"Hoaxing in America" in Clark Gym.
George Gallup, Jr., speaks on "The Whys
of the Polls," Tuesday, October 29, in
Clark Gym. And Frederic Storaska,
whose talk, ''To Be Raped or Not To Be
Raped," has been described as a "leeturedemonstn..tion," is scheduled for tbe
Fillmore Room on Wednesd8y, November
6. The lectures are free to University
members; $1.00 admission charge for
otben.

philip levine,
poet
. Philp Lmne, wbo &amp;....- at P-..
State, graw up in Detroit and taba IW
milieu u one oftbe tbemelofbil , . - .
He baa ncently bNn llllbiY pmllld in a
critical miew by ~ CIIIOI 0..·
(another poet wbo Crequ•tly tile
Detroit aettinl). • Lerine baa wpa a
number or awuda, lndudine a GWDbelm Fellowoblp, and baa pabldoad
utenliYely: bll more noeilt bOob
include Not Thlr Pi&amp; They Feed the
Lion, and 1938. He 11111 bll pamlllli
experienceo u a bale for bll poe1111 wltbout beln&amp; claasllled u a conft!aslonal poet.
Preaented by Enlllah Deparlment
Poetry Committee; Monday, October 7,
8:00 p.m. Conference Theatre, Norton.

buffalo
string quartet
The members or this newly formed
quartet are artists-in-residence dufiDI the
1974-75 academic year at eon..., B in
the Ellicott Complex on the Amherst
Campus. They were a scholarship quartet
in tbe New eon..., Music Featival ill
Florida during the summer or 1974, and
will make their debut as a quartet in New
Yorlr. this comi01aeason. Membersoftbe
Buffalo String Quartet are Benjamin
Hudson, first violinist (currently violinist
with the Center of the Creative and Performing Arts), Carol Zeavin, second
violinist, Maureen Gallagber, violist, Dana
Ruslnak, cellist. The quartet, which II
working under the gnidance or the Cleveland Quartet, will present works of
Mozart and Bartok in their opening concert this season.
Presented by Coll010 B, Ellicott
Complex Theatre, Amherst Campus,
Wednesday, October 9, 8:00 p.m.
Tickets: Norton Box omce. General
admission, $2.00; students, $1.00.

life workshops
1. Antiquing and CoUecting
These workshops will deal with Buffalo pottery and Deldue china, Oriental
rugs, early American art, drinking vessels
and skins.
Tbundays, 7 :00-8:30 p.m. , beglnniDI
October 10.
2. Violence and Human Suroival
October 30: "Violence and Salvation,"
Newton Garver, profelaor of phDoaopby;
"Brain Mecbanilma and Violence," Mut
KrisW, uslstant pmfe110iof payc:boloo.
. November 6: "l'lychololf of VloIenoe," Norm Sollr.otr, pror-. of
paycholoiY, Psychiatry ~

"Conaequences

or Dloorienlinl VialeDce

for Lepi Orden," AI Katz, uaoc1ate
profeiiOr, t.w and Jurilpnrdenoe.
information and reptaotloa: Life
Worklbopa, 223 Norton, 831-4631.

,

.. ·1

Pap 3/

. Jt
,._,. !

.r..~J,~!:J ~ .

t .. --J;~_;d~ ........~:::~ J\oi:·

REPO~'n:R I ~t ~I~ 3, 1974

�OCTOBER1·'1
'-Vkloo

ict

llellnlk pn-nts "s.ct
, . Feecl", a Yldeo uhlbltlon
Oallery 219 - Notton Union
Gallery Holll!l: c:beck with
UUAB

OCToBER '7, 8, 9
Video

Free
Spcmaorecl by. UUAB
Committee

Vicleo

"1be Day After Tomonow",
Epilodo Tbnte
Notton, Haaa Lou..,.

OCTOBER 1-31

2:00 .. 4:00p.M.

Free

Villul Aria

UUAB.VIdeo Committee

- Color Pbotoenpbs by James

DeSantis
Hayes Lobby

OCTOBE~'l

BuDcllnc Houm
Free

Literary Aria

Otrice or Cultural ACCalrs

Poetry Reacllnr-PbUip Levine
Conference n-tre

OCTOBER3

8 :00P.M.

Free

Corfeehouse

Marpret MacArthur
Rathskeller, NortQn
8:00 - 11 :00 p.M.
Stuclents $ .75, Faculty /Starr/
Alumni $1.00, Gen. Aclm.
$1.25
UUAB Coffeehouse

OCTOBER4
Music
Master Class/ Alexis Weissenberg
pianist
Baird Recital Hall
2 :09P.M.
Free
UB Concert Office

"

OCI'OBER4

Eric Bentley in Concert: a program or theatre songs
Harriman Theatre
8,ao P.M.
$ 1.00 Students, $2.00 Faculty/
Staff/Alumni, $3.00 Gen.
A elm.
UUAB Drama Committee
Office of Cultural Affairs

OCTOBERS
Music .

/

•

Department or EncJilh Poetry
Committee

Andrew Stiller: Recorder Master

c....

Baird HaD
l :00-4:00P.M.
$20.00 tuition ree

!.---

OCTOBER 8
Lecture

.. Hoaxing in · America", Clifford
Irving
Clark Gym
8:00P.M.
University Members Free, NonUniversity Members $1.00
Stuclent Association Speaker.;

Bureau

OCTOBERS
Lecture

-

uNew Cities", Professor Charles .
Haar, Harvard Law School
School of Architecture, 2917
Main Street
8:00P.M.
Free
School of Architecture

OCTOBERS
Music

Slee Cycle IV Cleveland Quartet
Mary SeatOn Room, Kleinhans
Music Hall
·
8 :30P.M.
$1.00 Stucleiits, $2.00 Faculty I
Staff/Alumni, $3.00 Gen.
Adm.
Department of Music ·

OCTOBER9

See description
Offke Cor Creclit.-Free Programs

Lecture

"Inii!"ntloli, Meaninc &amp; Literary

OCTOBER6

Kilo. . . ." Clwles Altieri,

Proreuor or BnaUob
EnaUsb AnDex 8, Room 5

~ -

Music

4:00. 6":00 p .II.

- Leo Kottke, J.J. Cale &amp; Claire
HammiU
ClutGym
9:00P.M.
Stuclents (Aclvance Sale) $3.75,
_ Gen. Aclm. ancl nilbt or perrotmance $4.75
'
UUAB Music Committee

OCTOBER"6

Free

Protram in Utemture
ancl PbB~ anc1 Tbe Pro-

Graduate

pam In Compmatlft Lltem-

ture

QCTOBER9
~

Butralo Strine Qlwtet
Ellicott

c.mpa.

Faculty Recital : Sylvia
- Dimlzianl &amp; Harriet Simons
Balrd.Recital HaD
8 :00P.M.
Stuclents $ .50, FiocUity/Statr/
~ · $1.~, Gen. Aclm.
De~ntor~

-

Theatre,

8:® P.M.#
St1l1Ets $i.OO,

Amherst

Gen.

Aclm.

f2.00
CollepB..

OCTOBER-9-10
· Co~

BIU 8lllaea, Mary llcCIIIIIn
bt
Nortoa Catelak
8:00 ·11:00 p.II.

a-

Studaots ••76,, hculty/Statfl
~ $1.00, Gen. Aclm.
S1.2&amp;
UUAB Golreehouae

�,,

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AMHERST

CAMPOs -

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BUILDINGS~ETEDOR

UNDER CONSTRIJCnDN
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IENGINIEIEIIIINOI
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�OCTOBER17
IActure

c.aawa·•
D...S

Uteruy Alta
..,.......... de Ia Poelie Actuelle
. . . . _ (poetry readlDc "
dlocallloa)
Blue Room, Faeulty Club
8:00 P.IL

Ia

French

OCTOBER10
UteWorbhop
AatlquJac .. Colledlll(
See "HJcblilbts" for details

WeWocbbop

Deputmeat of Art History aad
the · Albrllht-Kaox Art Gallery

OCTOBER 17-19

ocToBER 21, 22, 23

Theatre

Video

"Naked LUnch," pertonned 6y
the .Chicaco Project/New
Yort
Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt and

"The Day After Tomorrow",
Epilode five
Haaa Lou...,, Norton
2:00 It 4:00 P.M.
Free
UUAB Video Committee

Lafayette

8:00P.M.
,
Studenll $ .75; Gen. Adm.
$1.50
.
Center for Theatze lfesearch

OCTOBER"l1
Millie

OCTOBER 17
Lectur;e
"Some Contusions About Subjectivity", Richard M. Hare,
Prot. of Philosophy
4246 Ridge Lea- Room 43
3:30P.M.
Free
Department of Philosophy

OCTOBER12
OCTOBER 17-19
Concert
Dance
McCoy Tyner, Guitar Virtuoso.-Pat Martino
Fillmore Room, Norton Union
8:00 - 11 :00 P.M.
Students (Advance Sale) $2.50,
Gen. Adrn. and night of performance $4.00
UUAB Music Committee

Lecture/ Demonstration : Linda
Swiniuch &amp; Joan Ver Dun
Harriman Theatn! Studio
8:00P.M.
Students $ .75; Gen. Adm.
$1.50
Department of Thea In! &amp; School
of Health Education

OCI'OBER18

Video
Music

" The Day Aft.er Tomorrow.,,
Episode four
Haas Lounge, Norton
2:00 &amp; 4:00P.M.
Free
UUAB Video Committee

OCTOBER16

Faculty Recital: Wilma Shake-

Bai~~i~i'::/'~
8:00P.M.
Students, $ .50, Faculty /Staff/
Alumni $1.00, Gen. Adm.
$1.50
Department of Music

Coffeehouse

OCTOBER19
John Roberts &amp; Tony Barrand
1st Door Norton Cafeteria
8:00 • 11:00 P.M.
Students $ .75, Faculty/Staff/
Alumai $1.00, Gen. Adm.
$1.26
UUAB Coffeehouse

OCTOBER16
Mulic
Faeutty Recital: David Fuller,
lwpolcbard

Baird Recital Hall
8:00P.M.
Studenta $ .50, Faculty/Stoff/
' Alumal $1.00, Gen. Adm.
$1.60 .
.
Department of Millie

OCTOBER17

Dance Workshop
Polish Folk Dance Workshop,
Morley Leyton
Fillmore Room, Norton
.--2:00 ·5 :00P.M.
8:00 • 11:00 P.M.
Free
_ UUAB Dance Committee, Balkan Dancers, Student Polish
- Culture Club, Student
Asoociation

OCTOBER20
Millie

Free .

Coffoobouae

Departaient or Music

Tnc:y It Dolle Schwarz

OCTOBER20

lit llool' ~ Cafeteria
8:00 • 11:00 p.IL
studenta $ .76, h&lt;ulty/Stoff/ ·
Alilmal $1.00, Gen. Adm.

• $1.1&amp;
UUAB Co1retbouae •

Dance Worbbop

OCTOBER23 '

Fne
Department of Millie

NOVEMBER 2-3

NOVEMBER2

Coffeehouse

Student Recital :
Viszolyi, pianist
Baird Recital Hall
8:00P.M.
Free
Department of Music

Bob Doyle &amp; The Buffalo Chipkicker.;; Ken Bloom
1st Door Norton Cafeteria
8:00 · tl:OO P.M.
Students $ .75, Faculty /Staff/
Alumni $1.00, Gen . Adm.
$ 1.25
UUA B Coffeehouse

OCI'OBER 25, 26, 27
Music

American Liszt Society Festival
See "Highlights" for details
Department of Music &amp; Office
for Credit-Free Programs

Lectures, Exhibits, Demon·
strations
HI·Fi Fair- Two Days of Sound
See "Highlights" for details
Office for Credit-Free Programs

Susanne

NOVEMBER3
Music

Student Recital: Jonathan Shallit, violinist
Baird Recital Hall
8:00P.M.
Free
Department of Music

NOVEMBERS

OCI'OBER 28, 2lY,30

Leetun!

Video

" The Day Af
Tomorrow",
Episode six
Haas Lounge, Norton
.2:00 &amp; 4:00P.M.
Free
UUAB Video Committee

QCTOBER29

"To Be Raped or Not To Be
Raped", Frederic Storaska
Fillmore Room, Norton
8:00P.M.
University Membon Free, NonUniversity Membon $1.00
Student Alloc:iation Speaken
• Bweau

Lecture

NOVEMBER&amp;

"The Whys of the .Polls, George
GaUup, Jr.
Clark Gym
8:00P.M.
University Members Fne, Non·
University Members $1.00~
Student "-dation Speakers

WeWortsbop

Bweau

"Paycholop of Violence",
Norm Solkoff, Prot of
l'lycboloiJ
.
~ of Dlaodon*'
• Vlaloace for Lopl
AI Kalz, "-c. Prof., Law It
.ludlpmdence
See "Hiibbllbts" for details

0rc1oan;--...

.Ute Worbhopa

Coffeehouse

NOVEMBERlO
Aady Cohen and Rat Lusbk
lit Door Norton Gafeterta
8:00. 11:00 p.IL
Students $ .75, Faeulty/Statf/
Aluaml $1.00, Gen. Adm.
• $1.26
UUAB Cotfeehouse

OCTOBER30

...,....,

•VioleDCo a.llllttalk...•, N~wtoa
~. Prof. ot Pldlooopby
"BDID Mert lma. VIOimce"
lladt ltdlal, Alit. Plot.

See •HJaldllhts" fQr details

· We Worbhopa

. .. • •• ·· ··-· •• •• .' llllfiii'IIA~u.J

Encounter: Kyull( Wba' Cbllll(,
violinist
Baird Recital Hall •
2:00P.M. '

Mu.sic

UUAB Dance Committ.,.,
Balltao Daaaon, Student
Pollob Cultuft! Chlb, Student
' "-&gt;daaioa

l'lpli I REPORTER I Jobpetl/ October 3, 1974

Millie

OCI'OBER 23, 24

_ WeWorbhop

..

NOVEMBER!

Faculty Recital : Suzanne
Thomu, harp
Baird Recital Hall
8:00P.M.
Students $ .50, Faculty/Star!/
Alumni $1.00, Gen. Adm.
$1.50
UB Concert Office

PoDab Folt Dance Wortlbop,
Morley Leytoo
FlllmoN Room, Norton
2:00 ·6:00 P..M.

Fne

"Haad-tinted XerocraPbs" by
Elaine Hancock
Hayes Hall Lobby
BoDdlng Hours

Free

OCTOBER 30, 31

Slee Lecture: Charles Camilleri
(aad Concert)
Baird Recital Hall
8:00P.M••

NOVEMBERl-30
Viaual Alta

omce of Cultural Affaln

Millie

Creatlte "-dates aad Departmoat of Millie Faeulty;
Schooabora/b• Festival
Baird Recital Hall
8:00 P.IL
Students, $ .50, Faeulty/Stoff/
Alumal, $1.00, Gen. Adm.
$1.50
Department of Music and Center
of The Creative and Performing Arts

OCI'OB_!:R t4, 15, 16

- Music
"Eftatnp for New Millie"
Allllllbt-Kaox Art Gallery
8:00P.M.
Studeall $1.50, Gen. Adm.
$3.00
.
Center or tbe er..uve and Per·
formlll( Alta .

Fne

Fne

Do~at or

OCTOBEB.20

"The Spirit of tbe
Watdala(', Prof.
Wayao ADdenoa
Albrllht·Knox Art Gallery
Auditorium
8:00P.M.
.

OCTOBER _1 0

of

M1me
Mummcnacllanz, , . Swill
lllmo-lluque 'l1loatzli
Amboat Junior Hilh School
Auclltodum
8:30P.M.
,
Studeall $1.00, Faeulty /Staff/
Aluaml $2.00, c... Adm.
$3.00
UUAB Dlllma CommiUoo It
om.. of CultuDI AfraiD

·-

.-

�tiom /

naked-lunctt
to -moHere
~
s. llllr·
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............... of .......

~-

ten dances
de Ia po~ie
actuelle
en .france
(poetry retlding a~d disc,..ion)

DecuY

Michel
is a professor !'r French
Uteratu1e at Vincennes, the experimental
univenlty set up by the F~encb covemment In mponse to the May 1968
student uprisln1. Mr. J&gt;eidy, I naUve of
Paris and ·• poet, is the author or
FrQgment du ' cadastre, Poemes de Ia
pruqu ile, Bie{s, Ouidire, os well 15 a
book on Thomas Mann and essays in the
Nouvelle Revue Francoise,
tique and
other journals.
Presented by the Department or
French, Thursday, October 10, 8:00
p.m.; Blue Room, Faculty Club. No
admission charge.

"the· spirit
of the dead is
watching"
Wayne Andersen, professor or art
history at MIT, is a noted Gauguin and
19th century painting scholar who will
lec:lule on Gauguin's "The Spirit or the
Dead is Watching," which is in the
AlbriJht-Knox Art Gallery's rollec_tion.
Mr. Andersen's lecture is the first in a
aeries which will be presented by Art
History.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery Audi·
torium, Tbunday, October 17, 8:~ p.m.,
free lldmlalon. Prooented by Art History
and Jbe Allulgbt-Knox Art Gallery.

fo!IDM ..U.. &amp;1111 y- atllae New YOlk
Sbabopoue holm! l'llblle 'l1IMtle by an
uperlmentel •dine eaaemble, lbe
Cblcal!&gt; Project/New YOlk, under -lbe
dlndlon of Donald 8adla; both &amp;dine
IDd dlneiiDJ W- pmlled ftly blgbJy In
lbe New YOlk p..._ The U/B Departmeat ol. ThMtre il fortuaate to bafe
Donald Suden 011 · ill r.cwty, and
announceo that NGited Lwtch will be performed bele by the Cbleaco Project/New
York, onc:e apln under Mr. Sanders' atlllful dlredlon.
Prooented by the Center for Tbeatle
Re.uch, Courtyard Tbeatle, Hoyt and
Lafayette Stleeb, October 17-19, 8 p.m.
Tickets at Norton Box Ofllce and at
door. Genenl admlaalon $1.50; students
$ .75:
In con- to thil plec:e or contemporary America seen through the funny/
nightmarish perceptlona or Burroughs,
the next production or the Department
of Tbeatle is MoUe~e 's The Misanthrope,
from the translation by Richard WUber,
which will play In Harriman Tbeatle
Studio, November 7-10. Mo~e about this
In November MA(lNET.

wilma
shakesnider,
soloist
Wilma Shakesnider, I native or WashlnJion, D.C., and a graduate or Harvard
University and The Juiliiard School, has
perfonned as an opera, concert, and
recital soloist, throughout the East and
the Southwest. She bas appeared with the
Symphony of the New World, the Louisville Philharmonic and the Buffalo Philhannonic, and with opera companies in
New York City, Jacksonville, and
Washington, D.C.
"Miss Shakesnider hes a vOice of surpassing beauty. It is original and easily
identifiabl~nique to Mi"' Shakesnider. "-The Washington Star.
" . . .a sopnno with a remarkably
beautiful .voice."-Raymond Ericson.
New York Times.
" . . . burnished vocal presence ...
passionat e invo.lvement and rich
coloring.. ."-New Orleans States-Item..
Miss Sbakesnider will give her forst solo
recital at SUN'(AB in Baird Recital Hall,
Friday, October 18, at 8:00p.m. She is a
member or the voice faculty of the Music
Department. -: _
Tickets: students $ .50; faculty/staff/
alullll!! $1.00; lODen! admlaalon, $1.50. ·

american
liszt society
festival

polish
folk dance
_workshop

The Unlnnlty will boat the 1974
annual meetiDJ or lbe American Llszt
Sodety, u orpnlzatlon deYoted to
furtberin1 the mulic ud lnftuence or the
1rnt' 19th centurY compoaer. The
meetlne will brinl totether more than
one hundred sc:bolars and musicians from
throughout the country, and numerous
concerts and lectum will take place.
A few of the bigbllgbb:

Morley Leyton, director or the Janosik
Dancers or the Univenlty or Pennsylvania, will conduct three workshops in

Pollsb folk dance technique, lndudinJ the
mazur, polonaiae, kujawiak, krakowiak,
ud oberek. Mr. Leyton's mearcb in
authentic costum101 and style helped his
JIOUP win 3rd place in the 1973 Worid
Festival of Polish Artistic Groups held
annually in Rzeszow, Poland.
All workshops will take place in the
Millard Fillmoft! Room:
Saturday, Octo.ber 19 2 :00-5 :00
p.m.-Intermediate; 8 :00-11:00 p.m.Beginning &amp; Intermediate.
Sunday , October 20 2:00-5:00
p.m. -Beginning &amp; Intermediate.
Sponsored by the UUAB Dance
Committee, Balkan Dancers, Student
Polish Culture Club and Student Association.

11th season
for ·"creative
associates"
The formal opening of the Uth season
of the " Evenings for New Music" series
with the Center or the CreaUve and Performing Arts wUI feature Oiseaux
Exotiques (1956) by Olivier Messiaen,
Entr'Acte/Cinema (1924) with music by
Erik Satie,- film by Rene Clair, and the
world p~emiere or Crow (1974) by
Pauline Oliveros, commissioned especially
for this concert.
Sunday, October 20, 8:00 p.m.,
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Tickets at
Norton Box Office and Gallery Door.
Genenl AdmiSsion $3.00; students $1.50.

Friday' October 25
2:00 p.m., Public Library Auditorium;
"Roma," music by Liszt, performed by
pianist Leo Smit; color slides, photography and narration by Leo Smit.
8:30 p.m., Public Library Auditorium;
"The Lost - Art of Melodeclamatlon,"
Yvar Mikhashoff, pianist; Paul Schmidt,
'I
actor.
Saturday, October 26
9:30 Lm., Baird Hall; " Liszt and
Chopin as Teachers," lecture demonstration, Robert Dumm.
2:00 p.m., Baird Hall; Lecture: " The
Orcbe&amp;tnl Music of Franz Liszt," Allen
Sapp; Performance: . by duo-pianists,
Frina Arsbanska Boldt and KenWYn
Boldt, with women's chorus, Kent
Vander Band, conductor.
8 : 30 p.m., St. Paul's Cathednl;'
Evening Concert, featuring the premiere
or a new work by Leo Smit, Three Christ·
mas Ttu · Carols After Franz Liszt,
soloists and ensembles.
Sunday, October 27
9:30 LID., Statler Hilton Hotel, Terrace Room; " Songs of Franz Liszt,"
Heinz Reb fuss, bi5S baritone; Carlo Pinto,
piano.
10:30 a.m., Statler Hilton Hotel, Terrace Room; "Liszt, W&amp;~Der and Their
Chamber Muolc," concert by Stephen
Manes, Donald Weilerstein, Buffalo String
Quartet; commentary by David Fuller.
Co-sponaored bY the Music Department and Office for Credit-Flee Pro-

grams. Information about events may be

obtained bY calllne 831-4827 or
831-3408. Festival dates: Friday, October
25; Saturday, . October 26; and Sunday,
October 27.

Series are otrered by the UUAB Film
Committee, the Center for Media Studies,
the departments of ~. J:flst!&gt;ry and
Frencb. A .....,..., liltlnc all lllmo, on
campou, September-December, is available at the Unlnalty Union Activities
Board In Norton Union.
·

REPORTER

I ~et 1/ October 3,1974/Pap 6

�·tii-fi fair
two days
of sound
Days

led 2:

Lectures In Confeft!nce 'lbealle,
Norton; 11:00 a.m.-~Wbat Is Hl-Fl all
About?;" 1:00 p.m.-"How to Cboooe a
Hl·Fl System."
Lecturers: Dr. Tbomos Weber,
II&amp;Odate p~fessor or cbemlc:ol engl·
neerlnr, Mr. Jooeph Solsky, graduate
student, Department or Chemistry.
Fee of -$1.00 for eacb lecture payable
atdoor.
,
ExblbiiB ed l&gt;oiinonslntlons:
Second ed third ftoom, Norton. Day
1: 10:00 LID.•9:00 p.m.; Day 2: 10:00
Lm.-5:00 p.m. Sound· systems displayed
and demonslnted by Aft!l hi·ft dealen.
Open wltltouttee. ·Sponsoft!d by the Otrice for CreditFft!e Proerams- IdentiCal programs on
Saturday, November 2, anll Sunday,
November 3, except for closing time of
exhibits (see above).

mummenschanz,

.the swiss
mime-masque
theatre

"One of the most original and delight·
ful theatrical events seen here in a long
time. . . . TJtis is mime as it has never
been seen here before-a brilliant, witty
approach to an ancient art that recalls the
sophistication and deceptive childlike
simplicity of the great Swiss painter, Paul
Klee. Like Klee, Mummenscbanz makis
its points through humor, econorriy of

expression and philosophical overtone.
"Mummenschanz, whose name derives
from medieval mummers . . .uses masks,
but these are not face masks in the
traditio~ sense. 'lbey ·are "a bstqlct
fonns .. :Mummenschanz creates fantasy #~
figures whose conducC Comments on the
hum an condition
characters might. n

better

than

~real'

.

In the fiist half or the program the trio
• offers a hilarious sequence or stylized
creatures ~ the story qf ev.olution. The
·second half, which deals almost entirely
with human relationships, is even more
hilarious and profound.
Mummenacbanz is a highly talented
group with great appeal to all acesPresented by the omce or Cultural
Attain and the UUAB Drama Committee.
Sunday, November 10, 8:30 p.m.,
Ambemt Junior High Sebool Auditorium
(55 -Kines High-~hind Amherst
·
.
Senior High Scbool).
'llckets at Norton Box orr..,. and at
the door. General admlsaion, $8; l"ac:ulty,
starr and alumni, $2; students, $1.

:
I

-

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO •
VOL. 6, NO. 4 . SEPTEMBER 26, W74 .

PSS asked for advice on
jo~ terms-

Local frosh,
'improved,' ·
Ketter says

President · Robert l. Ketter has asked
the Professional Stall Senate (PSS) to
develop by October 31 suggestions and
advice -Ofl "advising mechanisrps" whiCh
may be used in formulating recommendations to the Chancellor concerning
permanent appointments for campus
NTPs.

· The most dramatic fad to emerge in
analyzing the vital statistics of the current
freshman class is the academic improvement of local .students, the Faculty
Senate learned at its first meeting Tuesaay.
For the first time in recent years, the
average freshman from the Eighth
Judicial District entered the Univ.~rsity
with slightly higher high school averages
and test scores than his counterpart from
outside the district on all measures except the SAT verbal aptitude test, Presi·
dent Robert L. Ketter reported.

The recently negotiated contract
between the State and United University
Professions provides that under certain
conditions such appointments may now

be granted to non-teaching profes·
..
In a September 4 memo to Robert
Wagner, chairperson of the PSS, Ketter
said that "While [the] newly revised Arti·
de XI of the Policies of the Board of
Trustees indicates in Title C, Article 2,
th':ll 'The Chancellor, alter considerin ~
the recommendation of the chief -ad·
~ionals.

Approximately half the freshman class
is drawn from the Eighth Judicial District.

In addition to revealing the annual
"freshman profile," Dr. Ketter advised
the Senate on topics ranging from day
care to next week's budget hearings in
Albany.

ministrative officer of the college con-

cerned, may grant permanent appointment in professional title to such pei-sons
who, in his judgment, are best
qualified; neither the policies nor Con·
tract Atricle 33 (which defines the

The fiscal picture to emerge ·in his
remarks was one of continuing tight
money. Funds are not available for a
University-wide Office of Teaching
Effectiveness, approved last year by the
Senate, the President said', adding that
teaching effeaiveness remains a high
priority on rhis campus.

procedures for job security review) in-

~

dicates what advisory mechanisll)s . thechief administrative officer may wish to
establish in helping him to formulate his
recommend.ations to the Chancellor."
Consequently, Ketter said, "I would be
most appreciative of any suggestions and
advice the Professional Staff Senate may
wish to give me on this subject; i.e., your
ide~\ OQ .what is.an appr.opri~te, internal. .
pr--otedure- for ae;lew/evaluattonfjodgment."
The -Professional Stall Senote, in
response. to the President's request, has
IIO.gun to take steps"1o provide in put on
"this very important inaner," Chairman
Wagner indicates.
At the September 17- PSS Executive
Committee meetins a plan of action was
diSCU5Sed,. with emphasis on: wide dis·
semination of information concerning
permanent appointment for eligible
stall; input from ~If members; .discussiorl of the intent of grantini permanent
appointment to eligible stall from
different viewpoin ts; use of "consuhants" a• needed; and perhaps most
important, W..,er says, -the in.volvement
of Sl.tf from the beginning of Senate aclion to its completion.
s.bc:an ulllll ~

Mo-e;--cur1y -ana.Larry:
You love 'em
ly Pilrida Word llledennon
•-~ sa~~

or hate 'em·

scent of prom-tired garCienias . . "In
childhood
especially, "
one
Stoogemaniac wrote, "toddlers have a
cartoon character ·or a f amous person
that they can recall all through their lives.
- In my case, that character, actually a
group of three, is The Three Stooses.
Their amalingly humorous antics will remain in my mirld always."
From Toronto a collector of Stooses'
memorabilia wrote asking 'if Moe might
like to use some of the choicer items in
his act.

You either love them or you hate
them::unsympathetic critics have blasted
their violent slapstick as. a barely veiled
exercise in sadism, while other equally
passionate analysts have hailed them as
__.,
geniuses of physical humor.
Lik~ oysters, The Three Stooges are an
acquir!!d tjste. f'eople whose stomachs
are unturned by the animated sufferings
of Coyote at the hands of Roadrunner
have 'been known to blanch as the hammer slams down on Curly's head or Moe
wrenches tarry's nose.
·
·
First Great love
Tocarrythls!Mif,a.smaU~mlttee ·
And other peopletlaugh like hell.
Another devotee used tlie occasion lor
.of the.lxecullweCommittee has been apNow retired to"the campus nostalgia
an autobiographical sketch in which he
poir.ted - Palrtcia CQivard, Howard
drcuit, lone stoose"" Moe Howard, n,
recalled how he lost and re-found his
Deuel!, Hilda Komer, and Rayinond
appeared on campus Tuesday as a guest
first great love. "At my pre-adOlescent
~ vol
· ·
·
of the Student Association. Before ·his
stage,•· he confessed, "I wm forced to
group will provide the Executive
public appearanee, the SA Speakers
wa,tch the Stooges in sect.it hiding spots.
Committee with recommeni!Ations and ' Bureau arranged a private reception lor
My mother thought they were too
mionale .....,clina: procedure(s) -for : the performer ·limited to 30 'guests.
violent iind thit my constilnt exposure to
reviewlevaluation/iudgrnent of eligible
Bureau head Stan Morrow ran an- ad in
them would drive ·me insane and make
profeaiona1 ~If permanent apj)!)inl·
the SfJectn- inviting persons interested
me suck ~mons. (To this day, I cannot
"**t; ClOnlenl of/format for J!l'llerialto
in attending to explain ' whaf Moe
whistle.) By the time I was-thirteen or
- be amlalned In the review process; and
Howard and The Three Stooses meant to
fourteen I was too ·big for her to
manhandle me anymore. 'Out of my way
problemuhatiM)I/will be created the
them.
.
proy1s1ons of the UUP contract, polities
The responses, which Morrow shared
WOminJ' ;r:!hrid~~j.;'~ed from "the reverent~lto · . "~or the nelrt few years my thirst lor"
· ofthellollrdOfTrustees,andSUNYIBin·
·. the Stooses was quenched ... In front of
temal procedure.
•
__
my set I popped ' nyok, nyok, nyahs,' and
In carryii!B out this cha,,.e, the C~m­
'A formative influence'.
got high on _'wooh, wooh, woohs'.. ..
mittee will undertake area Senator
"The Three Stociges tiave been a for·
The
sound of •laps, eye-jabs and
nleetinp and lhort meetings with other
motive influence on my lilf.~which ex·
wrenches pulling noses, were music to
indlviduah In the .University who are in·
plains a srmt deal about me," wrote a
my ears. I was in love.
tenited and knowledseable in the area
·student journalist, mare in the witty
"Then- one ·dismal day it happened. ·
of permanent appointment, such as Un- . mode of Marx tharr the head-craOr.ins
~
frum ro ,.,e l. col. JJ
Captain Jack sianed off and I waited for
manner of Moe Howard.
Officer Joe.. He never showed up. My
Sev"ral respondents 'thapsodized
Stooses sone. I know love means ,_e.
about the Stooses' comic senius. "Moe .
havlnsto say you're sorry, but lam, I am.
is one of die most classic and .greatest
comedU.ns of all lintel.'' declared one fan . NotNns He1pe4 the , .
, who recalled watching the .team - a s
"I tried artoons, comic books,
&lt;.. a child. "The St0C11"5,'' he CIORiinued,nothing 'COUld Jemove the pain. Then
"have the one lhlng that places them
one day While I was thumbing thfOUIIh
abcwe others: ~ haveftdle .,.._,.
the movie section of the l'os!. I sponed it,
This meano they haye the ltillitj tv'd!&gt; it
Three ~ooses Extravap~za. playlni this
to me.' Their brand 1)1 COiadyo-hfa·that
week at the Elgin Clnerria. I buril out the
'sO-hard-to-reach' chord In my head."
Nostalsia clu"'IOII\ilny letters 1iJ1e the .
_, 1 -......__tlumro~"ooi.Ct

rl:"

sr

In regard to day care, Df:'--Ketter said
that the facility's current fiscal O:jsis is
due not to the withdrawal of ad·
ministrative monies but to the Student
t\ssodation's decision not to allocate
some $30,000 to the Center.
The Center, which enrolls the
equivalent of 51 full-time children {all
but one the children of UIB students), is •
not a recognized "entity" within SUNY,
the President said. In !he past, the ad·
ministr.ation has won finan&lt;UI support
for the Center with the argument that it
-serves to enhance the educational ex. perience of UIB students, notably thoSe
in social welfare.
The Senate subsequently supported a
motiOn to refer the matter ·of the Day
Care Center to the Executive.Gommittee
with the . ;ntent of .supporting administrative efforts to retain the Center.
The body tabled. a motion that 11V0Uid
have expressed the SeNte's support lor
the Center.
_
Or. Ketter Indicated thot the re. quirements of the dental and medical
schools would be the first priority at nelrt
week's biJdt!el helrinp. Attention will
also be palil 10 the University'• losing
battle apinsl inflation, he indicated.
The Senile's . new · chairman, Dr.
&lt;;eorge Hochfield, told the body that a
major concem of his administration
would bll' the quality of the educational
eJq&gt;erienc:e ol students during their first
two years II the Univenlty.
"There is reasonlble ....-nent that
unllersradu.le education Is In a not too
healthy condiclon,'' said Hochlle1d. who
has asked the Senllte's Educational Policy .
and Plannlns Committee to moke this
matter ks sole ~ Computer - vices for facuhy will also be a matter of
/lumiD-4.coi.&lt;G

ENROllMENT-UP

zs.------

· The U.......,.s W ea"D.,ent
flpra . .ft!flect _ _..,....__
doa .. eueil ..

:==:.:211::...~

lnfonnllon Jadkdes that under1raduate, 1raduate and
p1Gf11 fMII Khoal-•arr.e.t. are .
~ ~ Glier ... ,_. AI lteporter
....._ afldll. ,._. expeeled ID be ualltlile Iller .. the

.....

�... -.
.!

-\

New position-to ·deal with '
campus human resources
A new position of assis~iJ:nt vice presi~
dent for affirmative action and human
resource development has been created
within the U/8 Division of Finance and
Management, University officials ~id
this week.
A seorch for an individual to fill the
position is being conducted by a
Presidentially-appointed CO\"mittee
chaired by E.W. Ooty, vice pr~ident for
finance and management.
According to the official position
description for the post, the individual to
be named will have both general duties
and specific responsibilities in affirmative
.1ction .1nd career development.
The individual will :
• Counsel .1nd .1dvise managers and
supervisOrs in the exercise of their
resp~sibilities concerning. career
mobility and equal erriployment opportunity.
• Esublish and maintain communications with University/campus offices, · committees, interest groups and
members, to further the efforts of Career
mobility and equal employment oppor•
tunity.
• Be responsible for directing an Office
of Affirmative Action and Human
R"e source Development, including
supervision of professional staff; coordinate the activities .of relevant
University-wide• committees; maintain
liaison with COfCerned community
groups and appropriate enforcement
agencies; clearly enunciate program
purposes of the Office, and integrate
University-wide needs into programmatic planning. ·
• Assume responsibility for, and supervision of, those functions currently being
performed by the Offices of Equal Opportunity and the Minority and Women's
Faculty and Staff Recruitment.
• Lead in the d~velopment, implementation, and monitor.irig of those policies,
procedures, and programs necessary to
insure that the principles ·embodied in
equal employment opportunity and affirmative action are fully practiced in all
· aspeCts .of recruitment, selection,
employment ~nd promotion.
·
' • Lead in the development of expanded efforts to insure that the principles of
equal opportunity apply to all elements
of University life and activity; e.g:, in stu_./ dent enrollment, financial aid, etc.
• Advise the President directly. on
matterrof compliance with all relevant
equal opportunity and affirmative action (AA) ~ulrements and, with the approval of the pJesident, ~blish committeeslboa'rds a• neceosary to 'assist, ·advise and monitor programs and "effo"rts.
• btabliih review, record-keeping,
and audltin11 •ystems to monitor the
efiectM!hess of ihii campus' M prowarns; evalulte campus M programs;
evaluate c:ampu• employment and
rrornotton: practices; determine comflliance with equal opportunity po)icies;
recommend a~te mcKijfication
and action as required.
• Dellelop procedures to provide for
the prompt and equhable internal
resolution of dlscrimloatlon, charses.
• Allist all employees in reelwng their
full career s..-h potential by developing and implementing a l'raleJsloml.

c.eer ' De

' 1111

1

II ,.,...._ which

should deWIIop rec:opltlon by both
emploree and supervisor of their
fesltlmate responsibilities ln.- career
inoblllty and alst employees In euminIns arid developlni their Interests,
abllldes, peiUIIIIIICle Mid motivation to
enhance their 9romotlonal oppor~

• Help esa.blish and sulde programs

for: lhe lnlniltll and orientation of

enriChmerit~ present jobs
arpanded ~ !den·of under-·and" --utilization
orlenlatlon, train-

E
_af.._
--.;
inl and
f*dclplllonilysuper=
aaM

¥lsors In __. . . . . . . development

or u~~~cm ...~lonlbiPs- with . .other.
empao,en
l4entlfy ~ opportunllleis farwrfuldlerfril
·lhe QfftB ot
l.lnllledlly ~ •

Couf~Mjf ~~In

Mluating

=~n~' :::~:

September 26, 1974

maiiZIIW

hori~ontal and/or vertical re_assignments
and relocation, and e-ncourage
employee/supervisor meetings to discuss performance, career goals, personal
development and job enrichment.
• Examine such· questions as job
satisfactioland develop programs
responsive o these questions; develop
• an Employ Skills Information System,
through which the interests and abilities
of employees can be matched for consideration for job vacandes.
In addition to Vice President Ooty,
members of the screening committee
for the- post are: Miss Rowena Adams,
assistant to the vice president-for studerit
affairs; Prof. Frank Brown, Educational
Administration; Prof. Frank Corbett,
director of urban affairs; Dr. Merton W.
Ertell, acting vice p~ident for academic
affairs; Dr. ·Walter H. Kunz, associate
dean, Undergraduate Education; Prof.
lee E. PrestOn, Environmental Analysis
and Policy; Prof. Barbara A. Putnam,
Counselo"r Education; and Mrs.·Grace B.
Staerker, Admissions and Records.
The screening committee has been
charged by President Ketter with :
1. Aiding in the search process itself,
through advisement regarding sources of
possible candidates, places of advertisement, etc.;
2. Reviewing appropriate resumes to
advise who might be brought to campus
for interviews, and
3. Participating in the interview
process itself to provide the vice president with impressions and recommendations regarding candidates..
Nominations of individuals to serve on
the screening group were received from
several University constituencies, ineluding the Fac.ulty Senate , the
Professiohal Staff Senate and the Minor.ity and Women's Recruitment committees.

PSS asked.-fo.- advice re: app()intmeiits--:-

(from ~· J. col. T)

'-

ion officers, faculty members, and librarians.
·
The Committee will then provide a
draft of its report to the PSS chairperson
for distribution to all staff members. This
will provide an opportunity for all to
review the current information of the
Comi'Aittee ..and to comment on it.
Comments are strongly encouraged,
Wagner says.
·
Following distribution of the draft
. recommendations, all staff members will
"be invited to two general membership
meetings at which the provisions and in-.
tent of the ·contract and revised policies
will be discussed. Following receipt of
comments, the two general mem~rsh ~p
meetings, and review by the Committee,
final recommendations will be sent to
the Executive Committee where they will
be - reviewed and, if acceptable, forwarded to the Senate for discussion and
action.
'Input lmporbnt'
Wagner wishes to emphasize to NTPs
that: "Input into the Senate response is
very important. This input should begin
now, as the Committee begins its work.
Contact one of your area senators, a
committee member, or an officer of the
Senate. A number of opJ)O:rtunitieS will
b4i! provided for your comments and
suggestions. Please ta~e advantage of
them and begin by making any
suggestions or comments you have to
one of the responsible individuals. If
you are unsure of your area, or area
senators, please refer to the 'guide'
which appeared in the September 17
Reporter.
·
"Area senator meetings have or will
begin very shortly to begin to discuss this
matter.
" A tight timetable is essential if we are
to provide our input by October 31 ,
1974."

Not all members of the non-teaching
professional staff are eligible for permanent appointment. Those positions
designated m~nagement/confident i al
a·re excluded from the provisions pf the
contract, and a number of other
positions, while cOvered by the contract,
are eligible only for five-year terms
which do not lead to permanent .ap·
pointment status.
To provide background regarding permanent appoiniment for eligible staff,
Wagner asks staff members to revi~w Article JJ ·of the Agreement between the
State of New York and United University
Professions, Inc. (UUP), 1974-.]6, and the
_folloy.ring selected articles and section;
ll-QJ:r( the recent revision of the Policles of
the Board of Trustees of SUNY. (Copies
of the full text of the revised. article will
be distributed to all NTPs at a later date.)

8 entIey to open

th ea(re season

The campus' fall theatre sea~n will
open Friday, October 4 (Harriman
Theatre, 8 p.m.) with Eric Bentley,
dramatist, drama critic, author, teacher,
lyric writer, translator of Brecht, "dipping his toe into a potential new career,"
as the New Yorlr limes put it.
Bentley, Katherine Cornell Pr{lfessor
of Drama here last year, will be leatured
in concert with a program Of theatre
songs.
·
·
:--The nmes in its review of the same
performance·. in New York 1ast spring
noted that Bentley " has become a
supper club' performer ... doing Brecht,
ARTICLE XI
Prevert and his own songs.... AccomAppointment of Professional Staff
panying himself on piano, he talks infor(Selected fxcerp&lt;s)
1r1atively and entertainingly as ·much as
Tille I. Contlnuin11 A~nlmenl
he sings. The effect is informal and in- ·
2.
Mer,.od
ol Appointment. The
timate, a form of polished, sophisticated
CNncellor, after considerins the recomrnenparlor entertainment .. .. Mr. Bentley has
d.uion of the chief administra.tive officer of
a singing voice that goes with the infor_t he colleae concerned, and except ~s .
mality of the occasion- modest and serhereinaher permitted with~ to appoint- ·_
viceable, but capable of considerable
ment of Distinguished, Distins;uished SerYke,
projection."
Oistin1uished Teutiin1 ind Univers-ity
Bentley, a member of both the ·
Professon, may srant continuing appointment
to such peisons who, In his judl!'"f!nt, ~re best
academic and t)1eat&lt;ical communities for
quoiKied.
30 years, was born in England ·in 1916.
11\le c. l'ennaMnl Appointment
Educated both In England and the United
3. -~.A person-who "opStates, he was Charles Eliot Norton
pointe&lt;tJo 1 professionoltlde In which he m.oy
. PrOfessor of poetry at Harvard ancTior 20
be sranted pe,..,anent appcSinlrJ!enl must be
years was the Brander Mlotthews
· granted a tempo,ary appointment for tf)e first
Professor of dramatic literature at
year of wch employment in the University.
Columbia.
Upon completion o( the temporory oi;'I'OintAs an adaptor of plays by Plrandello, . -ment, the professionol employee m.oy be
Brecht and others, Bentley . became a
granted 1 term oppolntment jll ~nee
with thk Aclide. SerVice In Rich lempOrory
._a..........., writer fof&gt;the theatre. Hii
oppolntment puriblntto this seclion shall be
name Is familiar as editor of such play
coUnted tow.rd the satisfaction of"ttie ..
collections as The Modem 7hatre and
ellaiblllty requiremenb for lnillll permanent
The &lt;;lassie 7hearre. A prolific: author, his
appointment.
'
..
published works lndude more than 25
ar.m.tlc and crftlcal works. He has also
recorded elsht albums, Jndudlng
(af Except • provided In subse&lt;1lon lbl Of
Bentley on lltechr, - conslder~chhe best ·
this and seclion..GIIbl2 af this Tlde
fwlher .........,._ · af I PRJieUionoJ
Introduction to the subfect in EnaJish.
employee who hu completed tWo conRCUIM! _ . af fulklme
ClmpUS
~~r
.' "!....~cleitll
ol ,ttte' IJnlvcnity !n the prolesoioOat lille ID
-- af o.; ....................... af"" We.' whlch,,pe~'!'l"
1.• appointment .'l'"Y · be
........., eo.dl4ar ....... _.~AI...~
.... ~-J;Dtl:.,
secu
full-tlll)e- at 1 campus
=-~ '::".:!.,':',.!::~~
of the
as a·Diafesslonal employee
must bee on the
of 1 .,e.inanent appointDIS 5 I' ot &amp;-..w,Seolellar.1Wf.
ment tn tuch profeHionil ~ ~;

-..

.·

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

-

--a

however, that such appointment 5hill not be
effective until made, so by the Chancellor;
provided further, however, that an employee
in service at ~ campus of the University on
September 1, 1974, who otherWise meets t~
eligibility requirements described herein Shall
not be offered permanent appointment until
the date of notice of renewal of his term appointment which notice date nel{t follows
September ·1, 1974; sUch permanent lppoint·
ment shall become effeaive only pursuant to
the terms of such proffered appointment.
· (b) Addirlonol Appolnttn.,.nljs. A
professional employee holdina ill perritlnent
appointment or .a·ierm appointment at a campus of the Universjty who accep_tnln appointment to a professional title at another campus
of the Universiry may be 1iven that i1PP9int·
ment for ill, term not to exceed three years.
(c) Service Credit.
/
(1) In determiningeli1ibilityfor permanent·
appo.intment under this section, Siltisfactory
full-t ime prior service in a professional title at
any campus ol the University shall be credited
u service at the time of initial ilppointment at
another campus of the University, up to a
madmum of three years.
s. c:Joonre ln , . . , - . . , 11t1e.
(a) A professional employee holding a term
appointment or permanent appointment in
professional title who Kcepts an appointment
to a different professional title at the same
campus of the University, •hall be given a
probationary appointment in the different
professional title.
·
(1) A professional employee holding permanent appointment in professional tide who
completes a probationary appointment in a
different professional title shall be granted a
permanent appointment in the different
professional title only and shall not retain the
PSS MEETING
The l'rolesslonol Slofl Senoto will m. .t TU&lt;'Scb:y, OctoM-r 1, at 9 o~ . m. in 290-Hayes Han to
consider the followins aaendil: 1. CommittH-S
NeedM and Memberships; 2. Ma.nasenwnt
Dewelopment and Trainin1 Committe-eo
Reporf; ):. HUm.tn R60Uftft Position; 4. Step
One, UUP Criewance Procedurt"; S. Activitie-s
of Uniw~ Asse-mbly; 6. Discussion of Perm.lnenl Appointments for NTPs; 1. OtRer
BusiMSS.

permaniri t ~pPo fn~men i'' lr1 th'e " for"l'iler
professional title.
(2) A professional employee who is ser·
ving on a term appointment in professional title and completes a probltioNry appointment in ill d ifferent professional tftle"'hall be
granted a new term appointment as appropriate in the new professional title and
shall not retain a term ilppointment in the
former professional title. The new term appointment shill be for a duration not less
than the unel{pired time of the previous term
...appointment. Service in the P,obltionary appointment shall count towards s.atisfilction of
the eli1ibility requirementS for permanent appointment
,
(b} At o~ny tiff!e durins the probati~ry appointment, the professional employee fJ!iY
elect to return or the appointins authoriry
may require the employee to rerum to his
former professional title and sucli aC\iOn shall

be occomplished os soon as practicable.
(1) " professionol-.mployee ilolcllng a
penmnent appointment in prof~l title
and serviii1 ~ probationary a.ppolntment In a ,
different professiOnal title who 10 returns to
. his former. proleH!onal dlie resu~ his perm.a.nent appointment In lhe former
professional tide.
l2J A professional employee hokllns •
term oppointmenl ln. a prolesoional tide and
• serving a probalionary IPPQintment in a
different professional title WhO so returns to
his former prolesslonal tltle shall hove hisservice In the probationary appointment
counted toward• the utlsfaction of the
eligibility ._lrements ' IrK - t oppointment oacept as' pnMclod floreln. stlould
Rich employee 10 mum. he shall be . .nted
It , _ tenn ..,pol_ in his lariner professional title anclllholl- be ellalble IrK permanent oppolntmentin Rich fotmer prafesolonal
tlde undl expiration .,..that term appair1!ment

11 the eorl"!llNadcle'thit;, hln!l .,.......,_,
In thlsodrciJ.......,. .Wintoe ~;,;pi;;;
shoO be .,_. 11 the....,__- prior. to
the expiration af that MW _ ._.IIII!*'L

'COach of yeaf'

'

Vanity Baseball eo.ch Bill Monkarsti
has been named "eo.ch of lhe Year"
Eastern Rejpon In ' QOIIepte baseball, ' Editor-Publisher Dwitlht Keith of OMdt
&amp; AlflleM. ~. has arinouriCed·
Monlwsh, a ~- ·Uflt .,aduare and
for'I'Oet farmland In '-ilrbo\tyn arid
Detroit· challis, Is" In l'dS efBIIIh" ..son as

baseball coach •hete. 'His Cliteer summary·

includes 161 vlctori8,., ' - wltll ftve
ties. His 1971 and 1973 teams were in
~

12 NCM Chimptonshlps. .._.

,

�September 26, 1974

. . .u ..

, ·.

Eve_says minority programs just I SCratch- SUrface'
Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve didn 't
want the Sta,te's ·Educational OPportuni·
ty Center (EOCI in Buffalo to be placed
under the auspices of Erie Community
College not because there was anything
intrinsically wrong with that but because
he wanted State University to live up to
its '' responsibilities."
" I wanted 1hem t o have a public op·
portunity to fail or succeed in really giving people a chance 't6 become all they
are capable of being. I ·wanted all the
credit for success or blame for failure"
on SUNY's doorstep, Eve s~ id at last
Friday's open house/dedication for the
EOC's newly~ renovated facilities at 465
Washington Street in downtown Buffalo.
Eve, who received a plaque from
Center officials for his efforts in

:

providing legislative support for the
project, said that State programs to in·
crease educational opportunity - including SEEK and EPIS - have only
begun to ''scratch the surface/'
, ~e , termed as "absolutely . horrible"
scores which graduates of U years of
public education in Buffalo schools achieve on EOC tests which determine if
they need remedial education or can
move directly into college· programs.
These test results, Eve said, should be
taken back to the Board of Education.
·SChool officials should see the poor performances (in comparison with national
norms) on the part of s~ud Is who come
out of the Buffalo s
m with grade
averages .in the 80's a 90's.
-. Eve praised EOC' efforts to let
students ~now w~re jobs are available.
More students stiould be steered away
from such ·over-supplied fields as
!!'aching and · wcjal wotk, he said, and
into , careers ii-t the health-related
· professions ~here dramatic personnel
shortases exist. _ .

ly rioted early problems, and praised Mrs.
Unger:
':As man y of you may reca ll, the EOC
- at leasi the University at Buffalo's part
of what has evolved into the EOC - was
establiShed with a seilse of urgency in
1970. It was a large endeavor undenaken
;n---a short period. As I recall that earlier
1lme, I am reminded of the co mment

th at a chairman of a Minority Student
Program Committee in one of our

professional schools made . ' We've
probably made mistakes,' he said, 'and
we'll probably make more . But the o nl y
people who don 't make mistakes are
those who don't do anything.' •
" This Open .House and the newly
renovated facility are visible signs of the
fact that educational opportunities ·are
not to be limited .to .a pa rticula r class.
Progress has been made and it wi ll continue - and I might add .. . that its pace
has been quickened under the guidance
of George Unger." .
Mrs. Onger ~lso received a plaque in
tribute to her efforts from the EOC staff.
Part of U/8
• U/ 8 provides adminis.trative and per. sonnet support services to EOC, Ketter
explained . _" The Center's reporting

relationship is through our insti tution,
and it exists as an important presence of
the University within the Western New
York community. In turn, the Center acts
in one of its roles as a valuable source of
students for the University at Buffalo ~nd
for other units in the State Unive rsity
system. This fall, thirty-four students
from EOC were admitted to our
freshman class through the University's
Educational Opportunity Program and
twenty-six of these acCepted. I do not
mean to slight the significa nce of the
other fu nctions which EOC provides for
the commu ni ty. But the fact is that we
view the EOC as an integ ral part of th e
commitment that the University at Buffalo has to providing educational oppor. tunities in higher education to persons
who othe~ise migh t not have them."
Dr. James S. Smoot, State University
vice cha ncellor for University-wide services and special programs, noted that
the State system has been involved in extending educatioilal opportunity since
the 1960's when the first urban centers,
created as a result o1 "heat in the
streets," were opened to serve the urban
poor in Buffalo, Brooklyn, Harlem and
the Capital District. Yet, he said, "we

haven't made more than a dent in the
problem." The educational opportunity
centers which have succeeded the urban
centers and other, similar programs, he
said, must be continued from )'ear to
year unless and until " we can open the
doors of our regular campuses to all."
Smoot added that he had first known
Assemblyman Eve at West Virginia State
College, an institution that served " more
people of color from this area than the
State University or its predecessor instit utions." State University's job to catch
up in t~is regard, he said, " hasn't yet
been done. "
1,421 Enrolled
A total of 1,411 stuclents are enrolled in
the EOC's day and evening programs this
fall, Mrs. Unger rePorted. The Center has
11 "3dministrative staff members, 53
general education and vocationaltechnical facultY; 13 counselors, three
librarians and 19 clerical and secretarial
staff -members.
The Center offers educational services
which include programming in basic
education, high school equivalency,
developmen.tal education for college
preparation, and occupational training.

Lectures to examirie' corporate change ,

HOw the ~ern large corporation
can adapt itself to a changi~g social en·
vironment will be the focus of a four·part
lecture-discussion series on "The Corporation in Modern SocietY" to . be
presented l;ly the · Man a gement
Associates Program (MAP) and the
Center "for Policy Studies, under sponsorship of the University at Buffalo Foun·
dation,. Inc.
ihe "Series, to be held on four
Sllddnl:~ It
'
.• .
successive Wednesdays., beginning OcThe State Assemblyman, who recenfty
tober 9, will feature members of the U/B
"beat the machine" by winning the
faculty and the local management comDemoaatic prj mary race without offitial
munity. Dr. lee E. Preston, director of
endorsement, had accolades for State
the Center for Polrcy Studies, will open
University's willingness to "stick wit~"
the program with a lectyre on Socializ~
the EOC in spite of incidents (a shooting
ing.lhe Corporation," to be followed by
jlnd alleg~iions ,of.fund· discrepancies)
comments froin John Hettrick, vice
which marked the project's early days
chair!Tilln, Marine Midland Bank, Inc.
(When II was known as the Cooperative
Dr. Preston believes that the modern
College Center.). He noted that other
corporation is pi-obably America's most
educational opponunily programs in the
important social inventipn, with the only
area had opposed the Center's creation
serious challenger for top honors being
and urged all such ·programs "to come
the federal sYslem of govern")enl.
''Of the two, corporations clearly ac·
:::k!~:.;. ~~::.s~r.~~~,st~d~ts wh.o .can
count·for the larger volume of ~nomic
. Onli; if· '.~ ~c{ 'C'ij, ' P.i'Odu'~e· Jsuch
and ·social activity, and the corpOrate
stud'er'!f. ~l! ~;foe' slicc'es~ul i':' •:giyJns.
model has been more widely extended
all .me11 ~d · wl)_men ,the .~:h'a,nce to.
and ihiplicited. indeed, the .worldwide
develqp to their full capacity,'; E~e· sa1d,
expansion of the corporate system - led
"can we coat~nue to re:ceive annual fun·
by and cent~red on U.S. corpor.~tions ding from. ftle State." He noted an un·
has been one of the overwhelming social
suCcessful attl!mp\1n the State Senate last
- trends of the post World War II
year to phase out educational opponuni·
decades,'' Dr. Preston says.
ty moneys wblc:h~ he admitted, are "phenomenal" in termo of per student · ~ aJMI Crltldsm
· But the success of ' the corporate
costs. "We lf'oave to work hard to k"l!P
system has also 'eVoked ·• significant
what We have," he told the EOC staff.
IIIIOuntof questionlns and critiCism. Dr.
Preston points out that, during the
1960's, the student revolution It home
&amp;e lauded Mrs. Gecqe D. Unpr,
and lnclisenous p o l i
' movements
tl.
director of the EOC since last fill. for
"dolns one · heU of 1 job" In IOivlns
abrciicl rePeuediY chi!
the
1oah and the melhocls
" · !Ions.
problems at the Washlnaton Street facill·
"This
tumult
and
lhoutin&amp;
which
has
ty.
now larae)y subsided, was ihe birth
: UIB President,Raben L. f(ener sl_?'llar·
11

, . ... Miiu...,

!!ctlh

tra uma of a new set of social forces trois Corporation; October 23 - David
consumerism, the en"vironmental move-·
Bazelon,. professor of policy science,
ment, affirmative action emPio)'ment,
speaking on "The Corporation and the
New Class" followed by,Pau[ A. Willax,
3nd so .forth. The question that remains is
"executive vice presider\c, Erie County
'can the m~ern corporation adapt to
these changes/' "
·
Savings Bank; October 30- Barry Boyer,
Dr. Preston is convinced that it can.
associate professor of law and
" The business· o rganizatiOn is the
jurisprudence, speakir1g on "The Cor·
creature Of society. That is, the commerporation ·and the Bureaucrats Regulating_More and Enjoying It less,"
cial enterprise exists in order to serve the
needs of society, not the other way
with comnients by David l. Landy, senior
around. As such, the corporation shQuld
partner, Moot, Sprague, Marcy, Landy,
and can adapt successfully to changing
Fernbach and Smythe.
social forces, human needs, and perforAll sessions will be-held from'3 :30 to 5
mance goals. In a word, the corporation · · p:m. in the Faculty Club, Harriman
can become 'socialized' to a changing
libra'!.
'
envi ronment."
Change Unde.:Way
There are signs that this process.....is
already underway. As ~n example Dr ..
The kickoff meetll)g for the U/B
Preston pointed out that the number of
United Way campaign will be held Tuesleading corporations presenting detailed
day, October 1, at 3:30 p . m . on
data on at least a few aspects of so·
Goodyear-10 featuring presentations by
cial performance in their annual reports
President Ro~rt l. Ketter; -Richard E.
· has increased from a handful to several
Heath, lieneral chairman, 197-4 United
hurrdred in the past five veal'5.
Way Campaign; and Arne C.,...,.ensen,
·He also cited a recerlt. visit he mad~ to · ' chairman, schools and colleges division .
To assure that · the campaign will be
a major Buffalo company as iodicative of
changing attitudes. He asked an ex·
ready to begin II that time, a preliminary
ecutive of the company why their pOlicy
chairmen's meeting is scheduled for 4
with resP,ect to plant visits had changed
p.m., Wednesday, September 25, in 290
from an absolute prohibition' on outside
Hayes. Chairmen of the 21 campus i:am·
visitors to a large, well-organiz'ed
paisn divisions are expected to anend to
program of public plant tours. _
hear details of the drive In advance of the ·
:r~ executive replied : "We used to
kickoff. eampalgn materi;lls will be dis· ..
think that we oushl?lo keep people out,
tributed at that time.
that this was our ~mpany and1t wasn't
United Way repon meetings are
any of their business. And now we-know,
scheduled. for Tuesday, October 8, -4
that isn't so.''
,
p.m.; friday, October 18, 10 a.m.; Thu~
day, October l4, u noon; lhunday, OrThe P,ogram f9" the ren\ainiiiiJhree
sesSioi)S Is: OctOber 16 - Dr. Robert
tober 31, .. p.m.; ~. Noveniber 7,
Chatov, auistant professor of en·
.. p.m.; lind Th~. Novemb;er 'M, 11
a.m. All , _ . , . are scheduleil fGr 201
vironmental anllysls and policy, speak·
ins on "The Corporate Ideology: Is II
~yes with the exception of the October
2-4 session which will be 1 Jurocheon In
ClwisJnal," with c:omriiems from Max
It E. Clarkson, chaii'IINin. Graphic Con·
233 Norton.

United Way kickoff

�-.
September 26, 1974

4
Senate(from

t»Je f, col. 4)

high priority for this ~dminlstr~tlon, ~id
the chairman. At present these servi.cies,
which he described ~s equal in importance to the libraries, appear to be "in
trouble/ ' Dr. Hochfleld ~id .
In its only major action of the day;-the
Senate endorsed unanimously the '
recommendations of the Admissions

Committee, headed by Dr. Edward
Hovorka (see Reporter, Sept: 19, 1974).
Under the new _guidelines for admissions, national standardized tests (the
SAT and ACn would replace the Regents
Exam as favored measures for admission.
Additionally, 10 per cent of the freshman
class. would be chosen by a review of
special Or non-standardized credentials
undertaken by a faculty committee.
Director of the Colleges Irving
Spitzbetg reported that faculty involvement in the Colleges appears to have in~­
creased substantially. October 15 is the
deadline for charter applications lor all
Colleges that wish to .continue next
semester. The Colleges Chartering Comniiuee hopes to make its recommen-

dations on individual applications to the
President by Thanksgiving; the director
noted.
The Senate is scheduieJ to meet again
November 5.

Power workshop

Day Ca·r e -fund~ng still _uhresolved
ly Mkhele qon
The UIB Day Care Center. is suffering a
severe fundirig crisis. Formerly funded
by Sub-Board I, the Center is now requesting that the University assum~
financial responsi"lity.
late this ~st summer, Sub-Board I cut
the Center from its list of priorities.
Previously die Center received $23,000
from Sub-Board,, the primary source of .
its operating funds. Parent fees and
money from "the UniVersity, used for
supplies and equipment, constituted the
rest of the Day Care Center budget, ~Q
amount n~t enough to operate on·.
The withdrawal of Sub-Board's support, according to Day Care
spokeswoman Mary Yeager, seriously
affected the Center. in an attempt toremain open, the Cente,r h'"as had to cut its
staff, their pay and the number of
operating hours. Because of these cuts
the Center feels tl!e quality of child care
is deteriorating and that it is impossible
to run the facility using" such a
"haphazard solution."
,
In 19n, Dr. Ernest l. Boyer, chancellor
of the SUNY system, approved establishment of the Center provid_e d it operated
according to defined educational purposes. That is, the Center was to senre as
~n educational laboratory to be used by
various departmentS.
Asreeing to these defined .educational
purposes, students pve up sonie of their
living s~ce, the basement of Cooke
Hall, ~nd some of their student activity
fees, throush Sub-Board . I. Parents
donated time and paid minimal fee;
and the University provided both a coordinator, '5-ithleen Cassiot research
' associate, ~nd appropriate funds to be
used for educational purposes.
The Division of the Budget, in Albany,
- feels that the center 1m strayed_from

a

these

orfslnal JIUidellnes ~ftc! -v possi-

bly disallow any tum- funds for its operations- Presently, aa:ordins to .YNger,
"the focus of the Day Care Center
riinalns.on.the lfOWlh and development

of the children, not others." This view,
is contrary to the guidelines
and as Executive Vice President Albert
Somit says, "it is not New York State
policy town a day care center."
Assistint to the Vice President Charles
Fogel and Pat Colvard, ~sistant to the
provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences
and Administration, both feel that the
University and the Day Care Center have
a "working 'relationship" aod are ~·most
anxiou~. _!o. find assistance for the
Center :~vard indicated t~at al l possible alternate avenues are being investigated.
· ·
To exist as a Child day care center, with
~ he empbasis on the child, the Center
could .turn a number Of ways. One possi·
ble alternative would be to service mid. die to higher income families who could
afford to pay a more expensive fee; this,
however, would "defeat the purpose and
"philosophy of the Center which is to
provide low cost child care," said Yeager.
Restructuring is another suggestion. As
the Center operates now, full-time
employees, for example secretaries,
not u~ the facility because they cannot
work the co-op hours themselves or alford to pay someone to work the hours
for them.
·The U/B Day Care·Center attempts to
provide quality child care, working with
children 2 months to ~years i~ age. The
Center tries to develop the child's
ca~bilities. Cassiol, whose in-house title
is directOr of the D~y Care Center, notes
that there is a-5ervice fee of S30 to $35 a
week in most other day care centers and
that tp . hire a baby-sitter costs approximately $1.60 an hour while the child
receives nothing more thaiYll babysitter. 11Child care is exPensive. A study
by B. Greenfield show5 that it costs· as
much to put a child In preschool as it
does for a college education," ~id
Ye.-ger.
·
·
The Day Care Center has always l:&gt;een
overcrowded, but now is operating at
full ca~City to utili~e 'Parent resources.
P~rents work at die Center to defray the
Cost of hiring more staff. In the Center's
present situ~tion, parents must work
more hours ~nd.h.lv.e paid an increase in
service fees. There Is ~ w~itlng list of
~bout 200 f~mllies. ~nd that is just~ sinal!
number of those who are interested. Ms.
Y~ feels tfw!t"thoutlh the Center is a
thorOugh ."eduat!Onaf ' prog111m, the
University h• no conceptiOI\. of It f~ther
~n as ~ place to drop off the children."
The 0~ .Care Center and those af-·
Iiiia~ with it feel ~~ the Unlltersity
should assume fiRjlncial responsiblliiy: A~
.formallener from the Center w~s sent to
President Ketter petitioning the Umversity for appropriate funds, but n9 action
has been raen in responding as yet.
Day Care Ceo\er apokesmen feel very
· howev~r,

canp

The university's role in research in
electric transmission and distribution will
be the theme of a two-day workshop in
the Norton Conference Theatre,
September 30 and October 1.
strongly that "Childcare is a Right Under sponsorship of the Electrical
Not a Privilege" that should be funded
Engineering De~rtment and the Buffalo
by the University. Although the Center
Section
of the IEEE in cooperation with
"demands" that the University fund
the Office of (;redit-Free Programs, the
them, it does -not want to be under the
conference will seek: to identify the type
governing power of or responsible to the
of constructive research best carried out
University, spokesmen indicate.
by universities, to provide financial
in a&gt; related development, the
perspectives on such projects, and tO
Graduate Student Association ~onday
develop guidelines for university parnight passed a resOlution supporting the
ticipation in this research and in training
Day Care Center and calling on the adfor the electrical transmissiOn industry.
ministration to fund its operations .. Stu·
Conf@~nce keynote spealcer •wm •be
dent fees should not have to be used for
T.H. lee, president, IEEE Power Engineer·
the Ceoter; GSA contended.
ing Society, and managt!f, Strategi~ Plan·
ning and Operation, General Electric
Company, New York City. Qther
speakers will include representatives of
poWer companies, educiltional and
research institutions such as MIT,
Older women enrolled on a full or
Brookhaven National laboratory, Purdue
part-time basis at U/B will have a chance
and Drexel, and UIB faculty members
to a~uire financi~lrassistance thrOUgh a
Frederic P. Fischer,. ~nis Malone,
specoal $1000 lovong Care Scholarship -' James H. B.urghart, Honriclt R. Martens,
grant.
A. Scot! Golmou~, D.M. Benenson and
Established by Clairol, Inc., the loving
Deme.lrlos G. uoniotis. O..vid T. Shaw,
Car.e Scholarship is · parJ of a $50,000
U/B, 15 general ch~lr~n of. the event.
natoonal fund designed to !'ncourage
Although !he conference 15 ~esiJ!~ed
women over 35 to -continue un·
f~r _fa.cul~ mem~rs fro!" unrvers1ttes,
dergraduate degree programs previously
parttctpat•.on !rom tnd11stroalan~ gover~mterrupted by marriage, child-rearing or
ment 1~trt~t1ons was also invned. ~h1s
other responsibilities. Clairol believes
confe~ence 15 one of two presently beong
orl!".noz_ed, at UIB on the subject of the
the program is the first nation-wide
scholarship fund of its kind targeted to
unoverslty s role fn !'nelll' re10rch for
women in this age gro\!P· .
.
an :Jdequ~te and enVi~mentally comUIB is one of 50 four-year institutions
~ttble supply of energy for the futiJre.
throughout the country selected by a
The oth.er conference to be h~ld in Ocpanel of educators to r~ive grants unIober "·.Coal Technology and l'.dvanced
der the program. Schools were selected · Systems.
on the basis or undergraduate 11 rosrams
specifically desiRned for mature women
tlrom ,.,. 1. col. 11 "
•
with special counselihg, sched~lin·g and
finandal needs.
·
front door, tears in my eyes, my nose
RecipientS, who will be -chosen by the
dripping, ~l)d my hair a !Mss. . 'One,
University on the basis of need and
please.' I leiped into~ se.;ot -idst a row
merit, must be JS or-older ~nd enrolled
of divorced ~th!n t~Jdna their children
on a full or part-time 6asis in-·un·to the Sunday matil'lee- 'A Screen Gems
. dergr~duate degree programs ..Funds will ...._ Presentation.' The 'T-hAll! Blind . Mice'
be a~arded to one or more eligible · theme ~ns... 11.. was re.olly them- They
students.
· were moners. ~~foe was lifting UJ! ~ pick.
· According to the prosnm's
Higher, higher, up into the ~lr ~nd then ·
.down upol) Curly's head. 'DOJNKI' My
guidelines, recipients need not fit into
pnedetermined inccSme groups.- R~ther,
love was back.''
·
••
thuppliant's seneral.fin~ncial position,
But only one letter-wri~~ to
takins into .account extenu~tlng circapture. the true spirit of The-Stooges in
cumstances, will be considered. Such.cirher request to ..-t the master. "I would
curnstanceH:ould Include the necessity
like to so to the Moe How~ Receptor ~rt-time work, chlkl-&lt;are expenses,
tion,'~ she wrote. "My reason is~~ 1 will
transportation costs and college-ase
tnclte mutjny 01herwise.''
children who . set first priority for the
.
famHy's education dollar. There
no ·
-restrictions eiiher for. or ag~lnst married _
wonien and feeipienu need nOI be users
of Cwr61 ~ucts.
, Tbfe 81111U, will be administered liy a
committ~q of representatives; from
University Placement and Career
Guidance, the Adult .Advisement Center
and the Office of fiMncial Ald.

Scholarship for ·
women over 35

Moe How·ard.

are

�.September .~6. 1974

$100;000 is

available for
U/8 researCh
..The Institutional Funds Committee has
· approximately S100,000~vailable for support of research and Dr. McAllister H.
Hull, Jr., chairman of the Committee, especially invites new faculty to submit
proposals.
All proposals must "be entered by approximately October 15. (Faculty are ask- ·
ed to see their Divisional Committee
representative lor exact date.)
A mailing to all regular lull-time faculty includes a complete..-&lt;lescrfption of
policies and procedures.
Application forms may be obtained
from the following representatives :

Arts and Leners: Joerg Schaefer,
Wilkeson Quad, North Campus.
Educational Studies: Eloise Skeen, 98
Foster Annex.

Engineering and Applied Sciences:
lawrence Kennedy, Rm. 1649, 180 Race
Street :"~'

fhMih Sciences: Richard. Jones, 138
Capen Hall.
.
Law and Jurisprudence: Milton
Kaplan, O'Brian Hall, North Campus.
Management: Howard B&lt;ine&lt;s, 3:19(
Crosby Hall.
.
N.Jtunl Sciences •nd ~tics:
Harry King, 107 Acheson Halt
SocW Sdencel and Administration:
Le&lt;terMIIbrath, Rm. 8-1, 4230 Ridge lea.
Proposals whidl involve human subjects should conform to t!&gt;e University's
policy, see Research Notes f3, distributed September 13, 1973, or call ext.
2056, the Office of the Vice President for
Research, for copie&lt; of that statement.

OfA ·scholars

plctuftcl ot the - - ~y for loal CSEA dtaple&lt; tdoolanhlpo on (from loll)
Howord Strouss, ,PrOieuo&lt; ol medoonlcol enpllftrin&amp; ond cholmoon ollhe Scholo~
Selection Committee; Edwitrd Dudelc, loCill CSEA presiHnt; John Duclek, iln o~Wi.rd
winner worldnstowud a polili:cal scie-nce depee at U/1; C.oi.Mt'Sier, awo~rd winnet" in
chemk11l ~sinMrins here .d the cb:ushtft of John Mnter, m11int~nce st.aff, n11
Millin 5tr.!et; Pretident kder; Mrs. Norbftt OrzewiKid; NorbM: Drz~i, bbor.atory
~uipment desiper, Physics; C.ry M. Drzewiecki, "'.d winner in ~ric.al ~ineet"­
ins twre; mel loser friedlly, c.vnpus SerYkti, in e'lltploYft' ..-..rd rrcipienL Not picluftd ..., Deboroh 5chullz, cloushlor ol Wolter ""Schultz, Cetotrol Storo5, on oword
recipient enrolled In the llbor.t oris propom ot Erie c-unlly Coles•; onc!Kothleen
Kone, slenop.,..., Uni,.nlly l.bories, on employee -ord recipient.

·Finnegan chairs Ar&lt;:hivists'/ program

"Archivists," explains U/B Archivist .
closely identified with the concerns of
specialized and purely technical inShonnie Finnegan, "are cultufe-bound
the '60s.
terests.
like everybody else. But ours is a profesThe purpose of this general session,
Watergate and its implications will also
sion in which it is necessary to look
Ms. Finnegan says, is to encourage conbe on the agenda; the archivist notes, in
ahead. We have to develop a perspective
tinuing self-consciousness in the profesthe course of a session on "Archives and
that trailscends current trends rf we hope
sior_l and "to get us out of the boxes" of
the Public Interest."
to anticipate the needs of future
scholarship."
Programs -on wine, violence; the afterMs. F.innegan is the first woman in re math. of di-ce, .and grantSmanship are
cent years to serye as program chairman
among the life Workshops being offered
for the annual meeting of the Society of
, this fall, according to Cpordinator C!role
American ArchWists. The 38th annual
Willert Hennessey.
•.
For the first time in Buflalo history, a
not only preserved, but expanded by
~eting opens October 1 in Toronto.
Life Workshops, co-sponsored .by the
performance of classical Chinese opera
developing interest on the part of
New GenerAtion
Division of Student Affairs and the Stuwill take place at Kleinhans Music Hall,
overseas Chinese as well as American
"The people who planned this year's
dent Association, are open without
Saturday, October 12, at 8 p .m., Dr. T. T.
audiences. This group of people,
program Clre a new generation of
charse to all members of the University
Soong, professor, . engineering science,
although non-professionals, have
archivists
who suspect that what has
community and bear no credit. Although
has announced.
devoted many, many years of their lives
been preserved in arch~e&lt; of the past
the formilt of the workshops varies, most
to perfecting their performing arts. THey
The program is sponsored by the
may be distorted because o f the
programs meet weekly for four to six
Chinese Club of Buffalo, a member of
are admired and revered by many contraditional emphasis within the profesWeeks.
temporary professionals in Taiwan and
the International Institute of Buffalo, in
sion on political history."
Current offerings include: After
Hong Kong."
celebration of its 20th anniversary, for
Divorce or Separation - What/, AnTaking as its theme ' 'Documenting
the benef it of the Chinese Club
Three separate stori!'S will be included
American Cultures," this year's program
tiquing and C&lt;tllecting, Bicycle
Scholarship fund, and for supporting
in the program, spanning a wide specMaintenance and Repair, Creative life
is an attempt to broaden the concept of
cultural activities at the International
trum of singing, acting, dancin~ and
Management, Death &amp; Dying, What Shall
documentation, Ms. Finnegan says.
Institute.
acrobatics in the authentic Chinese
My Major Bel, Fall Frolic, Grantsmanship
"American," she notes, indudes CanaTime magazine has called · Chinese
opera tradition. A full orchestra of
dian and Mexican cultures as well as
and the Grant Process, Minor Home
opera " one of the oldest, most rarefied
Chinese Instruments will be on hand.
those of the United State&lt;.
Repairs, Personal and Property Protection,
operatic ·traditions in the world." The .
Psychomat, Publicity, Ship-Shape (an exTicket information,can be obtained by
New Areos
...._
Buffalo performance will be presented
ercise workshop), Ski MechaQics
writing to Chloese Opera, 276 Ranch
Traditionally arch1ves have been conby the Institute of Chinese Performing
Workshop, Violence and Hul'!lan Survival
Trail West, Amherst, N.Y. 14221 or by
Arts of Ne"' York City.
cer&lt;1ed with ·public . or institutional
- II, Why We Like People, Wine
calling 688-9160 or 689-9681. Tickets can
records or some t raditional subject
Acoording to Dr. Soong, "the Institute
Wjsdoon, Workshop for Couples and/or
also be purch.ased at Kle!nhans on the
matter such as labor hiStory, she explains.
was founded by a group of people who
Interracial Couples (upon request), and
night of the performance.
Increasingly, however, ~historians and
possess the 'know-how' ind the zeal and
Quality living for All.
others are requiring documents relevant
determination to see to it that this
Special student group rates ar"
- "RI!IIistration has alrady begun, and
to such relatively new areas of study as
authentic and highly stylized -art form' is
available.
some workshops do have limited
edinic and wprking-dass history, urban - ·~·
enrollment," the coordinator nOted.
:
history and family history.
In addition to participants, the
The program will open with an un program is also seeking members for its
usual " autobio8raphical" session in
planning committee, potential workshop
which r-epresentatives of . three
Jeaders, arid ideas for new programs, Ms.
generations of American archivists will
---~-------------------------~
Hennessey said.
· discuss how tliey came into th~e profes·
To register or to obtain furtf!er inforsion, ~nd what.their values, perspectives
lecturer," Equal Opportunity C~nter. ·
mation, cqntact life Workshops, 223
and goals were.
Assistant Professor, Occupational Therapy .
..Norton Hall, 1131.-463011, during business
3Spuken
_
Assistant Professor, Gynecology-Obstetrics, SchQJ&gt;I of M~icine
hours:
•
~,.,· Speakers will be Herman Kahn, one· of
,
NTPthe pioneero of the profession, in the
Assistaryt Dean, Health Related Professions, PR-3.
1930s, · firs! director of the Roosevelt
Assistant
to
Director,
$:enter
for
Media Study, PR-1.
l:lbrary, first of the Presidential libraries;
Frank-8. Evans, representing the "second
- For additional information concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
gel)eration," head of the National
openings throughout the State University system, consult bul~n boards at
Clifford IMng, llOntroversial-authbr ;:,f
Archives' Training lrlstitute~ and Andrea
these locations:
•
_
the fake autobloiraphf of Howard
Hinding,
of
the
University
of
Minnesota,
Hushes, has been rescheduled for a ·
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and D153; 2. Ridge lea, Building 4236, next to
representing the "third generation,"
campus appean~nce at 8 o.m., Tuesday,
caf!'teria; 3. Ridge lea, Building 4230, in corridor next !o C-1; 4. Health Scieoces
Building. In corridor opposite HS 131~. 5. Capen Hall, In the .corridor belween
Odober 8, the Student Association
Q
•
Room 141 and the Lobtiy; 6. Lockwood, ground floor in corridor next to venSpeakers' Bureau has announced.
· Irvin&amp; recently released from federal
ding machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public Infor_ prison, .lllfiiiORdto liave talked on
A~ M. Miler . wiU IJt!PH!$I!lU the
mation Office~ I. Acheson Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
' "Hoaxftaa In America" as the first SA
Graduaie Student -AssoclailOn on · the
~rker Engineering, in corridor next to Room '15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
speaker of the. rut on· SePtember 5 but
Screening Commlnee for·~ President ·
Housing Office area; 11 . 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Deparlt(lent; 12. Norton
ran into difficulties with parole __ for Academic Affairs, Presioent.Robert l. ·
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
authorities.
.
Ketter announced this week! . ·' 1 '·
Room 106; 14. John L&lt;&gt;rd ¢Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amher$t Campus).
SA has not_yet schedule&lt;;~ a location for
Other members of the panel were
State Uniterslty_ AI luHalo Is an Equal Opportunity/AlfimNIIYe Action ~Yo:'
Irving.
_"~am"'! earlier (Reporter, Septl!!il~19) .

Workshop
series·offered

C~in~~ oper~ . perform.a oce

will be 'a first for Buffalo

.Cliffotd Irving·
is rescheduled

n screening panel

�. . lELIA

tt ·

September 26, 1974

1Jooth sleuths' assist in

identifying dead bodies
ly Mory Belh

Spi~

fdftoO.IA~re HH irh ~

While most dental " detective" work is
limited to searching' for decay and di.s-.
ease, a growing number · of dentists are
earning the title "tooth-sleuths" for their
work in helping identify bodies whose
only recognizable remains are their

..

teeth.
Wor.king in cooPeration with law en·
forcement agencies, the " tooth sleuths"
can determine whether a body burned
beyond recognition is a particular person
. by comparing found teeth with the
suspected victim's dental charts.
Prominent cases in which dental charts
compared with found teeth proved identity ·ot remains include Adolph Hitler,
more than .20 of the victims in the
Houston homosexual murders, and
member&lt; of the Syr:nbianese liberation·
Army found burned inside a gutted los
Angelesbungalow.
Not New
,
Dr. Alan J. Drinnan, professor and
chairman of oral medicine in the U/ B

School of Dentistry, who has wOrked on
police. cases locally, says forensic or
" legally aspected" dentistry is not new.
" But although dental identi cation
goes back more than a century, only in

rt-ce'ht years has it been refined," he says.
Since l~th are 99 per cent calcium, inost
orgaryic processes won 't deslroy them.
Some dentures, unlike teeth, are acidresistant and · virtually indestructible.
" Burn victims, the dismembered, and
others otherwise unrecognizable may be
identified only by their teeth or dentures," Or. Drinnan indicates.
There are thousands of possible
variations in one set of teeth, which
makes it improbable two sets would ever
be identical. " Most. people think fillings
generally look alike. But a dentist knows
there are more than 148 possible surfaces
which. could be filled in a mouth with a
full complement oi teeth. If you add
natUTal malfor.mations, bridgework, caps
and crowns, the variations and their particular combinations become endless,"
Drinnan says.
Needle In Hor.stodt
Those who i:teal in the forensic aspects
of dentistry admittedly have an easier
task of jdentification if they have a chart
to comp;ore with found teeth. " When
you have the teeth and no clue as to
who the owner might be, it's like looking
for the needle in the haystack," he says.
· In plane cr~hes, the airlines' manifests
provide a tertative roster of victims.
Then . those per:sons' dental· charts are
rounded up and compared with found
teeth •tthe site to determine whether all
listed passen_gers were aboard.
Nation.lly and Internationally, forensic
dentists •re f..:ed with • giant problem
sin~ there's no uniform numberingsystem. on charts nor a.re charts
categorized and computerized as are
fingerprints. Some dentists number teeth
right to lef\, while olhers start numbering
from the midline whicl] causes confusion
if a dentist is trying to identify by.written
description. There is now • move toward
uniform numbering, however, which
could well pave the way t~a~ a ~ore '

efficient system.
Since charts are not' computerized
nationally, police agencies take a " shot
in the dark" ·when seeking help from
dentisls in identification cases. " I have
written every police agency which over a
period of five years placed .dental
descriptions of victims in the American
Dental Journal- hoping to reach a den- .. ,
tist who wo•uld ' remember' a particular
s ~ t of dental charaC:t·eristics . The
response from dentists was not significant i n helping establish identities for
lhese victims," Dr. Drinnan relates .
Thinking that by inscribing the owner's
name and address intO his dentures
would be a step forwar Dr. Drinnan left
15 sets of dentures - with his name and
address affixed - in several airports
across the co.untry.
Only three were returned. one airporl
· sent him a form feller which stated " This
item was found in our airport. If you do
not claim wilh in ten days, it will be turned over to a charitable organization for
distribution I"
The Bormann C~e
While identificalion of vidims is usual ly only of importance to police or nextof-kin, some cases draw international
anention: At a recent meeting in london
chaired by Dr. Drinnan, one speaker
stirred fOnlroversy anew over t he
whereabouts of the missing Nazi, Ma rt in
Bormann. The speaker at the Federation
Denlaire lnternationale had, through
research, e xamined teet~ found in arecent German e xcavation, compared
them with the Bormann charts kept un~
der lock and key by the German government, and concluded Bormann is dead.
There are many who believe the missing
.
.
Nazi is alive and well in South America.
On~
to be.at th~ rush on the EDicon-M.aln Stre-t&gt;t bUSft is to t.ak" .1 bik" for
Verification of Hitler's remains was
the six·mile ;.aunt, which some 5ludents ;ue doins. fM.se. conrrf'l(' bikr r.1dc\
partly possible by comparing teeth found
•re louted in ·courtyud •reu in the new .comp~x.
in Berlin at his alleged pyre with charts
and interviews provided by his dentist, a
University ot Pennsylvania dental .s chool
graduate who had returned to Germany
after graduation.
While Er ie County cases haven't
received if!ternational attention, the
same painstaking work must be done,
A wastewater phosphor~us removal
asreement entered into between the
says Dr. Stuart l. Fischman, professor of
process called a " Riant step toward the
United States and Canada in June of 1972
oral medicine and newly named head Of
. solution of . one of · the difficuh
highlighted the necessity of coming to
the·E.). Meyer Memorial Hospital dent~ l
ecological
problems
of
urbanization"
grips
with the phosphorous problem in
department.
·
·
the Great lakes.
' ·
has been developed with the assistance
Dr. Charles Skoney, clinical instructor
of Dr. James 1'. Danielli of the U/B
" This same problem exists in many
and Meyer senior dentist who worked in
Center· for Theoretical Biology.
ot~er section~ of the country . and
forensic dentistry for several years with
The process is patented by Biospherics, . throughout the developed world where
now-retired l;)r. Conrad lange, said nine
Incorporated, of Rockville, Maryland,
this .technology will now become
of a dozen identifications were made
· which has granted exclUsive worldwide
available," Ruckelshaus notes.'·
there . in recent years through cbmmarket rights to Union Carbide Corpora. Prior to negotiating the !icense agreeparison of teeth with cHarts.
•
lion. It will be _marketed urider the serment, Union Carbide ev•luated the
vice mark PhoStrip.
PhoStrip process both technically and
Unidentified bodies at the morgue are
AccordinR tG Dr. John R. McWhirter of
economi~lly. The technical merits of the
given CO'f'plete dental exams and mouth
Union Carllide "this biological phosprocess were confirmed by. pilot-plant
X-rays, Dr. Skoney says, These are then
· phorous removal technology is a mastudies at . Union Carbide's .-Tonawanda
compared wit~ dental charts of known
jor addition broadening our product line
laboratories, where soluble · phospl)or- .
missing persons. If this method is not
in the field of wastewater treatmenL"
ous eHiueat· concentrations of 0.2
succe_ssful, dentists practicing in the
the current U.S. Environmental Protec~
milligrams per liter were •chieved with
geographic area where the body was dis(EPA)
"Needs
Survey"
intypical riiunidpal wostewater which had
tion
Agency's
covered are polled for i::lues. "But .if a
. dicates that of the sewaJiie treatment
an aver•ge influent concentration of 7.0
body floats from Detroit to Buffalo or if
plants plann~ in the U.S. more than 1,:
milligrams per liter. Union Carbide's
the victim is someone from outside our
000 ·will employ phosphorous removal.
economic ev•luotion confirmed the
area, then police must make inquiries to
William D. Rudtelshaus, former dir-!'CPhoStrip process's potenti•l to ochieve
the area the person , might have been
tor of EPA and currently a consultant to
significant cost reductions over convenfrom, "'he says. .
.
,
,
Biospherics, says, "This licensing agreetiona! chemial·•dditive tech"9iogy.
ment should greatly assist the needed
Dr. D•nlelli w•s . • consultant on
cleanup of the notion's woters. _ .. The
development of the process.
)
... .

Altemative to

~ng1

••r

'

Danielli is consultant on
new wastewater treatment

.

Freshmen .scores .up

.

Job serv1ce set for ahen students

The· !'"!an value of each of the quality measures u~d for regular
For~ign students will have. improved
employm~nt fo c~inple~;·s· biodata
freshman admissions increased with this year's freshma·n class- with the
opportlihities to locate ·employment in
materialS· on themselves. NAFSA will in
exception of Resents&amp;holarship Examination scores (RSE), the Office of
their home countries_by participating iq
turn, oontact.• proopective ..owneas
Adm~Fons and Records repc)rts.
. .
. · ·
-·
'-- a "Home Country Employment
employen ond en&lt;9urage them to scan
The nine-point drop in mean RSE. score exhibited by the 1974 class'
Registry/' a rooperat.ive project of· the
the Registry fot persons with appropriate
corresPQnds to a nine-point drop in the mean RSE score obtained by the
University aotl the National Association
qualifications.
ef!tlre State-wlde.popu)atlon which took the exam in October 1973, ~ &amp; R
Employers' ui'illzong this 5ervice inctude
for Foreign Student AffaTrs (NAFSA), Dr.
Indicates.
.
Joseph F. Williams, UIB director of
American corporations with o~ •!foreign student affairs, announced tofiiiotes, foreign corporations, foreisn
The score data for both 73 and 74 freshmen follows:
d•y.
,
eduntion•l institutions, •rid mul- )
F. . 1974
According to Dr. Williams, ma(ly
tination•l asendes (UNESCO World .
Jor.eign studenu would like to return,
Bank, etc.), Williams .. icL Con~ with
Mean HiBh School
(0-lOol ........ __ _
· a9.1
. 90.5
home •fter .,adl,lalion but are U(lable to . students will be INde directly by the
3.44
loate positions related to their fields ot.-_ prospective employer. _ ,
Averase (0-4.0) --- - --- - - - 118.7
iludy. NMSA, with fundlna lrorii the
Foreign students m.1y obtain employApncy fiif&lt;:Jnternllional ~ot,
ment registry cards In the Office of
Mal
195
g;
Is setldnl• Improve lhls llluatlon bY
Foreign Studelit Affaln In 210 Townsend·
Mein-s.\TVert.IScore .... , ........ . -- -.· .... .
530
requesttna forelp students who will
o~ •t the University Placement and
599
,..._.SAT Math Score --. -'·- .... --.-------593 ~"
soon mmplete their prosnoms and who
Career Guidance Service In H•yes c, the
.....
will! to make known their ~Utblhty for
odmlnlttrator .. ld.

Ave.
&amp;School
=~~~.~~~-- ~: ::::·::::

I

�. . .atm
Hi-Fi Fair scheduled
SUNY, Cornell establish
for November 2-3 in Norton
State Sea Grant Institute

7

September 26, 1974

lures are sched'uled for the Conference
Hi-fl buffs are advised to reserve
· Theatre; each has an admission fee of $1 .
Saturaay and Sunday,J&gt;Iovember 2 and 3,
Exhibits and demonstrations, On the
for the University's first " Hi-Fi-.fair."
second and third floors of Norton, will
Subtitled "Two Days of So'und," the
be open to the public without fee, frem
event will feature both lectures and
10 a.m.-9 ,p.m., ~turday, and from . 10
exhibit-demonstrations in Norton Hall.
a.m.-5 p.m., Sun y. Sound systems will
The lectures, by Dr. Thomas W.
be d isplayed and emonstrated by Audio
Weber, · a~iate professor', chemical
engineering, and Joseph . Solsk~ ,_ . Centers" of Radio Equipment Corp.; FM
Sound ~qulprnent Corp.; Heathkit Elecgraduate student, Department of
ttonic Center; Lafayette Radio Elec~
Chemistry, will be given twice. "What Is
tronics of Buffalo, Inc.; Stereo Plus; Tech
Hi-Fi All Aboutl" is scheduled for 11 a.m.
Hi-Fi; and Transcendental Audio.
Satul'lby and noon Sunday; "How To
The Hi-Fi Fair is being sponsored by
Choose A HT-FI System" will be
the Office for .Crellit-Fr~ Programs.
presented at 1 p.m. both 'days. The lee-

____.

..,., ·
Amherst - ·Main Street
BUS SCHEDULE

mcoet (21

a.w.mon(tl
7:15A.M .

•'

7:15A.M.
7:20
7:30
· 8 :00
8 :15
8:25

7,20
7:30

uo
8 :15
8:25

8,30

uo

8:15

,,,s

, ,oo
us

10:10

10:20
10:30
10:50
11 :00
11 :10
11 :20
11 :35
11 :50
12:00 P.M.
12:10
12:25
12:40
12:50
1:00
1:15

1:30
1:40
1:50

2:05
2,20
2,30
2:40

2:30
2:40
2:55
3:10

2:55

4:50

s,oo

s,oo

5:10

5:10

5,30

5:30

~ , 40

5,40

uo

s,so

. , ,20

8:25
8:35
7:10
7:25

e,:oo
'f:os
7:20
7:50

e ,40

uo

1:10

us

uo

.,so

10:00
10:15
11:00
11:15
11 :50

10:10

10:50
11:06
11:40
12:00A.M.
11:10
11:1f

8111 . , _ , -

'

-

7:55
8 :15 .

....

9:15
9:45

10:15
10:40

11 :10
11 :30

\

library, 2nd floor balCony, l 6ckwood. View·
ing hours : Monday~friday, 9 a.m . • S p.m.
Continuing.
LOCKWOOD EXHIIIP

Polish Co llection, an exhibition culled from
the University's collection of mo're than 4,000
volumes of material, first floor, lockwood
Memorial library. Monday·Friday, 9 a.m. - S
p.m. Continuing.

3:20
3:35

1:10

'"'

BIKE HIKE Rli,fCHIDULED
Schussmeisters Ski Club has rescheduled
ihe bicyde tour of Buffalo {which W.JS r.ained
out last week) for this Sonurday, Sept. 28. The
tour will le.ave from the Amherst C.ampus in
front of Governors Residence .at 9:•5 a.m., .and
from the Tower side of Norton on the M.ain
Stfeet Campus .at 10:15 a.m. for further infor·
mation, call 831·2145.
CHAIAO HOUSl OBSERVANCES
On Tuesd•y •nd Wednesd•y, Oct. 1 • nd 2,
Ch.abad House will make Lulav ;md Esrog
av.ailable for blessings in Norton, on the ~in
St. Umpus, 1nd in the Ellicon Complex and
Governors Residence on the Amherst Campu&gt;.
'"-

5:00
5:15

6:10

7:00
,7:45
8:30
9:20

COUNSBJNG

11 :00

1he lollowins cr•f)s '
·
te•r~ makins (bqinnins Oct. 8);
belt makins (Oct. 9), •nd sandal maklns (Oct.
10).
Enamel-&lt;~ (bqinnina Oct. 9).
We.vinr-fr.ame loom lbqinnlns Oct. 8).
For oddillonal Information, lndudinl •
schedule ol feel. call131-l546.

Laat bus to AMC on .Fridey

In tront · · Moln 81. Compuo' ~ ..,._ •·
A11w .~P.M.-

=C.,..· 81.-(-):

"""'-Union..

.
Moln81. Campuo (-...,.):
Dlr"'"lram _,.,;,;.

at-.....
lit..._
--.-lari\IIICWII
___ ....,..,.,..,;;_,. .... _,.._ ....

an

Dlroct"""' -

......

OOILY- moncOct AMC-MSC ( _ , ) . . _ ,;;:

(-UOP.M. _W11 _ _ _ _ _ 1011111C)

(3)

"',•n._

~ . . . . . . . . . . cntilonttll,. .. _...-~~~~~wttl

-'itt9'8itoll___.,1~- ........ - -. P~lrambilrton..l'e
-•-lldiootarllltc--.,.Oomplo[.•--.. noclltln..lliltt
~~~--forO'IIrtonn.....,.__..,____
•l &gt;ni~

:_-In-""' 00 Fftdlr + OOILY.

:.

·

•

SBIVICE

·PrOfessional couns.elin« is now ~v.ailable at
Hillel House, ..0 C.pen Blvd. For .an appoint·
ment, all Mrs. Eve Fertig, BJ6....4540.
CREAnVE CRAFT CENTBI '
The Cre.ative Cr.aft Center, Room 7, Norton,
announces .a new schedule of ~ in

10:05

laat bull 10 AMC Mon. to Thur..

"Ill .AIIO.fiiiC
~ - -• Campuo-. Cioopuo
M - - . . MIC Wll lllop

4. Undergraduate schoi.Jrshlp .applicatio~s
for foreign students are available in the O ffice
now. The application deadline is N~vember 1.
HILLR ST\JOY CROUPS
Hillel House is org.anizing a Yiddish
folksinging Group, instructed by Paula
Teitelbaum, a Talmud Class and a Beginners
Hebrew Cl.1ss. For times and locations of the
first meeting of each of these groups, call8)6..
4540.

HYPERTlNSION CUNIC

NOTICES

1:06

Campoo,l_ . . . . . , _
Ellicotr-Core--

_a.Campuo

(from piJ!.C 3, col. 41

2:30
2:45

5:55
6:05
6:15
8 :45
7:00
7:30
7:50
8 :15
8 :40
1 :05
1 :30
8:50
10:30
10:45
11:20
11 :40
12:10A.M.
12:30

Financial resources will be realized
from the National Sea Grant Program
and from State and local funds as defined
by the National Sea Grant Act. Not more
than two-thirds of the total funding may
come from;.the federal government, and
at Ieist one-third must be provided by
State arid local sources and industry.
In its first thr"'! years, New York
Sea Grant has been awarded $2,303,160
in federal funds and $357,763 in State and
local f~nds, an annual total program
budget of more than $1 .5 million. The
Institute's annual budget may ap i' .
proximate $2 million.
Dr. Donold F. Squires, the program
director, said that Institute research
teams will tackle specific coastal
problems identified by Sea Gr;mt's
citizens' advisory cou.ncils as highpriority adivities, especially those with
the greatest potential for .regiona l
economic improvement and resourCe
development.
_
·
" Complex coastal issues are rapidly
becoming more urgent as land an~ water
along the coastal interface bear the brunt
of urban eXpansion," Dr. Squires said.
"Fierce competition for shore spaCe and
water access is accelerating amo_ng
power plants, cargo and oil transfer
facilities, sewage treatment plants and
solid waste disposal sites, fish marketing
and processing locations, and small and
large mar-inas, not to mention new s~im·
ming beach requirements and extensive
residential development."
Announcement of~ the Institute's for·
mation was made during the National
Sea Grant Office's anriual site visit and
review of the New York State program.
Both Cornell and SUNY Boards of
Trustees had given approval to its es·
tablishment.

Calendar·--------------

1: 35
1:55

4: 10
4:25

~'-

.. _

12:50
1:05

1

~:1q~loi.
11:40

;': ::c::"~-

12:00 P.M.
12:15

3:35
3:45
3:55
4:10
4:25
4:35
4:45
5:00
5:15
5:25
' 5:35

3:45
4:00
4:10
4:20
4:35
4:50

.,:20
'4:35

8:45

3,20

3:20
3,30

3:45
4:00
4:10

7:45A.M.
SEE NOTEf3

12:00 P.M.
12:15
12:25
12:35
12:50
1:05
1:15
1:25
1:40
1:55
2:05
2:15
2:30
2:45
2:55
3:05

~20

3:10
3,20
3,30

...

...

8 :30
8:40
8 :55
11 :00
11:30
11:40
9:55
10:00
10:25
10:35
10:45
10:55
11 :15
11 :25
1l :35
11 :45

11:25
11:30
10:00
10:10
10:20
10:30
10:50
11 :00
11 :10
11 :20
11 :35
11 :50
12:00P.M.
12:10
12:25
12:40
12:50
1:00
1:15
1:30
1:40
1:50
2:05

Objectives are :
(1) Assist the State in realizing the full
economic potential of its coastal
resources by strengthening existing industries with new technologies and by
developing new potentials for industry
and for jobs.
(2) Assist the citizens -of the State in
planning wise management and multiple
use of coastal lands and resources.
(3) Provide new mechanisms to make
existing information available to industry
and citizens along the coasts.
like its predecessor, the Sea Grant
program, the Institute will draw in people from many fields and areas of expertise - faculty and students Universitywide and from private colleges, personnel from State agencies, scientists
from the public and private sectors,
business and industrial leaders, and people from all levels of local government regional, county, and municipal.
The Institute will consist of a small administrative unit iri Albany and oi network
of existing research facililies and facylty,
advisory service offices, and citizens' advisory groups.

O' a.Mn

7:30A.M.
7:35
8 :00

11:00

, ,30
10:00

1:10
1:35

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

......

......

State University and Cornell University
have announced formation of the New
York Sea Grant Institute, which will
bring the capabilities of the two universities to bear on the State's ~coastal
• resources and problems.
Announcement of the Institute
culminated three ~ears' development of
the New York State Sea Grant program
under support from the National Sea
Grant Program of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
State University and Cornell's land-grant
college have been partners in the
program's formation.

/

..

The University Health Service will condUct a
regular Hypertension Screehing Clinic during
the year for employees of the University. All
clinics will be held at Mich.ael H.all in the Out·
p.atient Dep.artment (basement) ori Mond.Jy
and Frid.ay morninss st.artin~ .at' 8:30 a.m.
Employees wishing to p.articip.ate in the
progr.am should all eJCt. 3316 for an· appoint·

ment. )

·

RECREAnpN HOUIIS

The lollowins schedule lor use of Clark Hall
recre,ational f.Jdlities is in effect for this

semester: Pool: Mondily..f(lday, 7-9 p.m.;
S.turdoy, 1-3 p.m.; Sunday, 2-4 p.m. Gym·
nasium' Monday-Fridiy, 3-10 p.m. (until Oct.
15l;'S.turday, 10 o.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, HI p.m.
The Squash, Handball and Tennis Courts are
open by re5ef'Vation only durins open recru·
tion hours. ReJef'VItions rmy be rude rwo
· days in advaooe at the lntromur.al Office, eX1.
2926. Faculty, otalf, MfC and 1raduate
studen1S must obtain an athlelic fee ard on
the 3rd floor ol Clork Holl to use the ·
recreotlonol focilltles.
·
~

HEAlTH IN5URANCf
The Office of Student Aaounts has on-

~=~,!!•:::_u;.:..-::=

lnsur.ance must be made to: SUNY 5ludent
Medical lnsur.ance Committee, Jtm. 225G
NortOn Hall.~- ocMsed to not make
checks payable to SUNYAB, 5ludent lie·.
counts..and not to o4d .to amount due, since
all such checks will be
to the IIUdent's
ocxount, one! no lnMrrance- benelhs will be
~fOII8GN 5fUDENT INFOaMATlON
sm;ot ADOAD ~
•
The Office ol Forei(pl' 5ludent Affairs has
5tudr obrootftlounoells - ovailoble by
made the followina onnouncements:
rnakina on appointment In 107 T.......t Hall
1. lYI forelsn students a&lt;e ursed to notify
the Office ol any c:honBe ol -.idreso Imwith ShlmbetJ.•AppolntmoniS should
be made by phonlna Steve ot 831-4247 or In .
mediately. In ac1c111i0n, students should check '
the mailboxeo If' 210 T.......t for moll and ' penon from .10.11 Lm., Monday t h ; }FriP,
~·
.
~ whk:h " - ' been forwarded to the
THEATIE I'BIIOKMANCP .•
Ollk:e. U~lmed mod will be returned to
~rp. .•n. Cl(lll!nal perfor~nce
1
L~
. . . . ,_.
•
•• ..,.
- 2. - Tu.ition waNec: . opplla~ for the
wri(ten, clhcftOd. •
~
DUnn Inti lrja Koljijnen, will · be presented
Sprina 1975 semeste.r - ....lable In the
thtoutih October on 'ThundoY, friday and
Office now. The ·oppliatlon dmdline is
S.turday ewenlnp 11 I:JO .Jncl iundays. at 2 ·
'Ncwembef 15:
3: Any stUdent who has na4 riCeived •
p.m: II the American Contemporary Theatre, ,fc&gt;n!illfl student health lnsur.ance -'lcatlon
1695 Elmwood Avenue. For additlonol lnfor·
should pldt.one up In 210 T.......t .Hall.
motion. call 1175-5825.

-'led

�. . .sum

September 26, 1974

THURSDA Y---26
HIUR YOM KIPPUR SBtVIC(•
Service will begin ~~ 10 .il.m.; il "Break~the­
hsr" supper will follow. Reservations are
·nccess.ry. C.11l 636-4540 for furtber information.
-

CHAIAO SBtVICES•
Ch.1bid House, 3292 Main St., 10 a.~. Also
in Ellicon Complex, Fargo Cafeteria, 10 a.m.
CONTEMPOIIARY YOM KII'I'UR SERVICES•
For Reform Jewish students. Will include
bre&lt;ilk the fast, Conference Theilt.re, Norton,
11 a.m.

MECHANICAL ENGINEIRINC SEMINARI
The Stability of Swirling Flows, Dr. Martin

Lessen, YilteS Memorial Professor of Enxineer~~~- ~~;,e;t!~ ~fp~::.hester, 10&lt;4 Parker, 3:1~

.WOMEN'S TENNIS•
U/8 vs. Cortlt~nd Slate, Rotary Courts, 3:30
p.m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINAR#
Pharmacoldnetics of Berhanidin e, in
Hypertensive Patients, Danny Shen, U/ 8
Department of Pharmaceutics graduate stu dent, ·244 He.1hh Sciences, 4 p.m.
CRL &amp; MOLECULAR BIOLOGY SEMINAR#
Turno ver o f Plasmi Membrt~ne Proteins m
He{ntoma-cells, Or. Darrell). Doyle, associate

cancer research" scientist, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute, 134 Health Sciences, 4:15
p.m. Coffee al 4 p.m.
FILM•
The Cenecal (Kt"aton). 147 Diefendorf, S &amp; 8
p.m. No admtssion charge.
Nlft.A SRV1CfS• .

Followed by a meal, Chabad House, 3292
Main St., 7 p.m. Also on the Amherst Campus,
Millard Fillmore Academic Center, Rm . 355, 7
p.m.
HILLR "DROP-IN" NIGHT
Hillel House, -40 Capen Blvd., 7:30p.m.
UUAI ALM••
The Ruling Class (Medak, 1972), Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
Starr.i ng Peter O'Toole, Coral Browne and
Arthur lowe.
IENEflT HOCKEY GAME•
An exhibition game between rookies and
some veterans of the National Hockey league
Buffillo Sabres and Pillsburgh Penguins, Holiday Twin Rinks, 3465 Broadway .
Cheektowaga, 8 p.m.
Tickets at S4 are available at the Sabres
Ticket Office in Memorial Auditorium, Holi day Twin Rinks, the U/8 Alumni Office at 123
Jewen Parkway, and Norton and Clark Halls.
Proceeds from the ga~ will benefic the_ U/ B
Alumni Scholarship Fund; .

FRIDAY-27
IIASEIAU."
UIB vs. Conisius Collese (double-heoder),
Peelle Field. 1 p.m. _
SOCIAl I'SYCHOI.OGY SEMINAIII
Inference ProcesseJ! Nomatioml, Nonverbll~ Mid Noncomdous. Prof, Richord Nisbeti,
42lll Ridp lei, lm. C-34, 1 p.m.
-=-w. otfMISRY 5IMINARt
Ubcnlory Solely, Michool G. Syrxu.e, UIB
Division ol Envlronmenaal tteolth •nd S.fory,
245 Health Sciences, 2 p.m.
PltaOSOPHY 5EM1NAR1
lnteqntlns Nl: J\ ~ Outlined, Prof:
Peter Jones. University of Edinburgh, and

vlsltlns · pn&gt;leuor, c.leton Colle!!•. 4244
Ridp lei, 11m- 14, 3:30 p.m.
.
-THBVICB•
Followed by a meal, Chabacl House, 3292
Main Sc., 7 p.m. Also at 115 Maplemere,
Amliersl, 7 p.m. .
•

CACfllM"
Joe. 140 ~. lime to be onnounced. Ad-

million: $1.
.
,./ IAJAI ·fii.M··
.
. · lite lluliiiB Class. Conference Theatre; NortOn; call 1131-51~for time. Admluion charje.
. . . . . 5AIIA1118biCP
-,
· 5iol:l:alfl ~ Robbl Justin Hofman~.
fclltMe4 ..,. Ones ShobbiJf. Hillel House, 40
~

fllv4, I

p.m.

.

Joe, 140 Capen, time to ~nnounced . Ad mission : S1 .
UUAI FILM••
Zilbrislde Point (Antonioni, 1969),
Conference Theatre, Norton ; call831-5117 for
times. Admission charge.
p.m. Admission : students, $.75; all others, S1 .
Presented by the Chinese Student Association.

SUNDAY-29
SPORTS CAR RAU y••
A 120-mile "Sunday Drivers Rally - Mark
V" will begin at 10:30
from the Seneca
Mall. Registration is at 9:.30 a.m. For further informat ion, call 833-9616.
~
·
Presented by the Sports Car Club.

a.m.

BASEBALL·
U/ 8 Y'ii . leMoyne College (double-hea der),
Peelle field , 1 p.m.
HILLR GRAD CLUB••

CIIMAD sawas•
tolloMd by .......... Chabacl House, 3292 Main St. lnd 115 Mlplemen!, 10 a.m.
..... JAIM1118biCP
lhe ...tao ... be lollowN by a Torah
taudyf*lodn •IOddush. Hlllel House, 40
Opin llwd.; ........
OlAND SIUDf GaOlr
/
ifJ ' - Chobod House, 3292 Main St. oriel
115 Mlplemen!, 5:30 p.m.

WEDNESDA Y-2

Get Acquainted Coffee Hour. Hillel House,
40 Copen Blvd., 2 p.m.

CHABAO SBtVICES•
S:ervices will be followed by a meal in the
Succoth, Chabad House, 3292 Millin St. and 185
Maplemere, 10 a.m.

HILLR SUKKAH BUILDING PARTY"
Hillel House, -40 Capen Blvd., 2 p.m.
l.iUAI RlM••
Zabriskie Point (Antonioni, 1969).
Conference Theatre, Norton: call 831-5117
for times. Admission charge.

.

M.ONDAY-3~

RLM•
Citizen Kane (Welles}, 140 Capen, 3 &amp; 9 p.m.
No admission charge.
,.
GYMNASTJCS CLUI MHTJNG••
· All undergrAduate students are invited to
attend the first mefling, Clark Hall GymniiStics
Room. 4 p.m.
••
WATER RESOURCES AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINHitiNC SEMINAit
Water ___Qc!ality lnder, ~"At.ll Eralp, ~sistimt
professor, UIB Oepvtment0fCivil Engineering, 7 AchesOn Annex, .4 p:m.
wOMEPn llNMS•
".
UYB vs. Buffalo ~ State College , Rotary
COII.ru, 4 p.m.
,
COMI'UTBI SERYICES_!i~~IINAIIt
· ·
• "New User Q!tent~fon~ inStruct_ed by ~rvef
Ailerod, 4;u8 Rids&lt;! tea, Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m.
SUCCOTH HOUDA)(SERYICES• •
• '
Chabad House, 3292 Main St. and 185
M\pleme&lt;e, 7 p.m: There will be • holidoy
· ' festival in the Succolh at both places.

CONCEIT•SLEE IEETHOVEN CYclE HI•
Periormed by the CleW...ild Qu•rter, in~
, reside.nci at ula, ~ary Seaton Room,
Kleinhans • MusiC tall, 8:30 p.m. t\dmission

~

THURSDAY-3

Maplemere, 10 a.m .
MEN'S GOLF "
U/ 8 vs. Buffalo State College, Amherst
Audubon Golf. Course, 1 p .m.
SEMINAR IN POLICY STUOIESI
Po licy Science in Process and Action: The
Audubon Project, David Parker and Or. Mark
1- Ramsdell, 237 Crosby, 1-J p.m.
FILMS•
Blitz_on Brit~in and Operation Barbarosa,
147 Diefendorf, 3 &amp; 7 p.m. No admission
cha rge.
LIFE WORK
p• • •
Minor Home Re airs, led by l ee Kennedy ,
264 Norton, 3:45-4 :45 p.m . Registration and
additional in formalion is available at 123 Norton, ext. 4630.
CHARLIE CHAPLIN FILM SERIES·
City lights, Conference Theatre, 4, 6: 8, and.
10 p.m. Admiss:,ion charge.
SUCCOTH HOLIDAY SERVICES•
Chabad House, 3292 Main Sl. and 185
Maplemere, 7 p.m:

FILM•
Orchids and M y Love, 146 Diefendorf, 8:30

~-

SATURDAY----28

Succorh, Chabad House, 3292 Main St. and 185

CAC ALM••

. . .

;

SECOND WAHLE MEMORIAL LECTUREI
Paroxystm.l Noct.urml Hemoglobinuria and
its Relationship to Aplastic Aneml.1 and
Leukemia, John V. Qacie, professor of
• hoem~tology, The Royal Postgraduate Medial
School, London, "C" lla5ernent Conference
Rbom, Meyer Memorial Hospital, 12:30-p .m.
Presented os part of lhe UIB School of
Medidne Visiting lecturer Series.

UNITED WAY VOLUNTHR
TRAINING SESSIONS •
Rm. 41, 4226 Ridge Lea, 10 a.m., and
Conference Room ~ 1803 Elmwood Ave., 4 p.m.
PAniou&gt;(;y SEMINARf
CytOchemical Localization of Intermediates

in Cyclic AMP Me~bolism in Eucaryotic Cells,
Dr. Leslie Cutler, Department of Oral Biology,
University of Connecticut School of Dental
Me~icine, 145 Capen, 3:30 p .m.
FOSTER COLLOQUIUM#
The Helix-Helix Tram ition in Poly-L-Proline,
Prof. E. Gornick, UniversitY of Maryland at
Baltimore, 70 Acheson, 4 p .m.
PHARMACEUTICS SEMINARI
Alterations in rh e Elfccrs of Warfarin in
Dog s by Ho~lofen.Jte : Influenc e Upo n
Prothrombin Kinetin, Or. Michael Weintraub,

assistanl professor, Department of Pharmacology, University or Rochester, 2.... Health
Sciences, 4 p .m.
ALM"
The Cameraman (Keaton), 147 Diefendorf, 5
&amp; 8 p.m. No admission charge.
HILLEL DINNER"
.
Dinner in rhe Sukhh. Hillel House, -40
C.tpen Blvd., 5 p.m.
UFE WOtUCSHor••
~
Bicycle· Mainrenance and Repifr, 233 Noi-ton, 5 p.m. Registr.Jlion and informillion is
available in 223 Norton, ext. 4630.
UUAIRLM••'
I Lore ._tQu, 1 KUI You (Brandner, 1971),
Conferen~ Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for
times. Admission ~J.ife·

EXHIBITS
CUlTURAl. llffAIIIS -

MEWS TfNNIS•·
'
In Me;nort of ~ ledumn(l, an exhibiUIB vs. ~rockport Stole Collet~e, Rotory ( I · Jion of phototVaphs by .Richard lllaU; U/8
Courts, 3 p.m.
assistant professor of•American Scudies, Hayes
CHARUE CHAPLIN FilM SERIES•
Hall lobby display caoes, "'""'-" Monday,
Gry Lighrs~ Conference The~tre, 4, 6, 8, ~nd
Sep1ember lO. Viewina houn: Monday~
10 p.m. Admission charge. ·
· Fridiiy, 9 a.m. 5 p.m.
UNIT&amp;) WAY VOLUNTEER
GALLBIY : 1 1 9 TRAINING SISSIONS..
...
Rellecriom on White No&amp;e, 1n -environmont_&lt;!! vlsuol 1""-Y and sound by Ceorxe
404 Hayes, 10 • .m., ond 306 Diefendorf, 4
p.m.
· ·
Kindlei', Gallery 219, Norton. 1'hr!lulh Sept.
WOMEN'S TENNlS~
30. Viewi"' hours: Monday· Friday,11a.m. - 4
a

c'o~-::s•• ~-p.::ockport Stote C~~"'l•· Rotory . ~;:·;7~~ -: p .m.; Monday and Thu,..
RLMS• r·
•.UUAIVIDfODHIIIr
" foreisn Jlff•ir (Wikler, 1948), 7:15 p.m.
· The 0., Mer Tomorrow. a .-.lity soap
Desire lllof:use, 1936), 9:25 p.m. Both films
oper• dealins With ~ lile. Mondays,
•re free and will be Shown In 140 C::.a&gt;en· .
TuesdaysandW~Ha.;.._,NorSCHtiSSMBSTBtS MEMIBISHII' PAatY.•• .
ton, 2 p.m. 111....... W~. OCt. 30• .
Fr100 relreshmenb; .._i movies and .disPHOTOIIillliPH
cussions with ~flllt!Yes of .._i areas and
Color, l'llolur;""" Iii' 11m De!anlis.liilases
ski shops,- Fillmore Room, Nonon, 7:30-11
made Jn, SOul ~ Galet:a' 'll:od New
p.m.
- ,
York) illle, Hayes Hal tabby ~-ases. All faculty, staff onil their fomilles are InV~"' "hOUrs: Mcinilay -Fridov, 9 a.m.· 5
viied to •ttend, as they ore·elsible to join the
p .m. Pre.riled by lhe OffiCe ol CUIIURI Af~i dub.
fairs. •
..
CONClitT•
I
..
.VIDEOTAPE EliHIIIT"
· C,..,.{ive Jbsodotes Recitof t featuiins Tom
Baclcfeiid, a videotape preseidatlon Dr Ed
Constanten, former keyboard man with lhe •
Melinik; Gallery -t!?• Norton. Viewlnt hoUrs: ~-"
Gr31elul Deod; and assi51ing jazz artists from
Monday-Friday,l1a.m.- 4-p.m.; ~.i'. 4
the UIB q&gt;nimurifty, Boird,Recltal Hall, a p.m.
p .m.; Mond;oy •nd Thursday_,.. 7'-10
• No admissiQn charge.
. p.m.
·

m.P .

·

-

-:-;;-::~:;;;;o:"i:;; . Thursday,
lmaRe,maktns
Oct. 3, al
worltshops
e·p.m., andwiH
Ocibe4 •rid
held7
-T.;:;;;;d"i;;i;;;;:;i;;t;;~j;C:~;;;:;:-;=;;::;-;;::;~:;::
To .-.1 lo..,.lllloo for doe~.~ Nanqo Cinlaoell, ut. :znt..bf
atl P·"!Monlllr II._ for loduoloo lo llle .......... .,......,.......

·

tfie:.%ic,~-t':~1'::'.te$~=:=.-....-=:.."C.:
lot ..... clolrit-a ........ a. IIi
..... Nodoa .......... Oltlce.
-

.

.

'

~

u::-'~heWorbofS.muelledcetr

from lhe.alllections ol Lockwood ~I

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1384600">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451261">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1384581">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384582">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>1974-09-26</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384586">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384587">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384588">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384589">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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          <element elementId="109">
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            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
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                <text>v06n04</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384595">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384597">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384598">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1384599">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="105">
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              </elementText>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
6, NO. 3 . SEPTEMBER 19,, 1974

e:

·.offit·ials seek remedies· for
--EUicott ·.'shakedown' woes
.
Facilities. Pkmning Office
· warned ·before the Ellicott Complex
opened that there were bound to be
"shake&lt;lown" problems.
'
. They were rightl
Just how r.ight was brouifit home
to University administrators at an
open discussion at Ellicott last week.
Complaint after horror story about
bussing, food service, accommodations, etc., filled the air at that
event. Some students charged poor
planning; others suggested that
opening Ellicott should have been
•delayed until the Stat~ provides sufficient funding for bussing and other
operations.
University spokesmen -acknowledge d ifficulties and inconveniences caused in the start-up
but point out also that many of the
problems are being acted upon, that
many of the annoying, inconvenient
situations can be cleared -up, given
understanding and cooperation by
all.
· "We could have waited ten years
to open Ellicott," one observer ind icated, "and we would have still
had troubles. The Complex is as
large as the ph~ical plant of an
average small liberal arts college and
no matter how carefully you plan for

~--

_··~The

-U/8 .scientists help solve

Air Force's.bat
.

·lyP~~n

Ral)dolph A:~r I'Orcle111R near San "ntonio, Texas, 1\Mf a problem.
Airborne animals, pre5!!1Nbly birds,
were being suCked _into the engines of
. the base's high-periorm•nce trainfns
jets, the T-37 and T-38.
"BJrdstrikes," as.mld-atr collisions with
birds are calli!d,thruten the safety of Air
Force personnel and- also cost the
government an estiiNited $25 million a

teJr.

-

"

.

Struck by a liigh-ip!ed jet, a bird does
.. much damase to a i&gt;fane as a chunk of
concrete. Blrdstrikes on a plone's
windscreen reduce visibility. Much more
danaerous Is "ingestion" of a bird by the
Jet el)glne of one of these planes. When
5uc:bd Into the engine of a T-38, a birdsized object deforms the compressor
blades al)d .results in Immediate loss of
power. A plarie with two engines out has
· no power at all. But blrdslrikes, .as it turl)ed out, were
not Randolph's INjot problem.
In AIJIUII, 1!1W, the reinalns of an
aniiNI ·oaaped from a '!Vfndscreen
after a nlshtfllght. Tbe creature was subsequendy ldi!tldflecl as a .bal. 'Wfth this

-~·the base', safety igff ~llzed
just how big a problem they hid. tn
season, this put of Teas is in{labited by
miAionsdbats. Se.en miles NNW of the
air baR is a u-tone cave, really an

enormous sinkhole, whk:b alone contains betwftn 10 al)d 50 million Mexican
free-Wied or Qlano bats.
In the .,_.·the Air Force might have
dnlt with Its bat problem~. by
issulnll.shotsuns and holcllns batshoots.
But Instead, the Air Force Office of
Scientific: a-rch, worklns with the
Smithsonian's Ecolosy Depanment,
IIIIPJied a team of scientists to study tl)e
.,_. -problem and to propose an alter'

......

~solution.

._
After a

~

~ study, biolosis!J.
Dr. llmothy C. WllliaiDs, now a UIB assis-~Of ..... and his wile

,._ M:'WIIIIamS.-whO IRUdled
Wtth the nation's ~
bats, Donald lt. Cirlffln,
.-.&lt;x~~nnlei\Cied that the Air Force
the bats undlstutbed.
·
The blolosists arsued that the 40
11)1111on.ptus bits of ~en cave con-

~

on the;r
researchers
Herreid) found .
Any successful attempt to kill the ba~
might result in an explosive rise in the
local insect .population. This would also
attract additional birds to the area, and
bir&lt;b continue to be the principal cause
of daytime dama~e to planes. .
The Air Force was-considering waUing
up Br•cken cove, but the Williams' dissuaded the military from that drastic
course of action. Bracken cave, one of
the . state ' s importaht'a oological
resources, is prtmarily... a nursery Cave.
FeiNIIe Gua119 llats are impregnated in
MexiCo, and begin arriving at the cave in
May. By June aniiJuly f11any ohhe •dull
feiNIIes have begun· migrating again,
leaving thj! cav~ to their offspring. Thus,
the PQPUiation of Bracken is always in
· ilux, alttiough by October almost all the
· bats ha.ve left the C0\'11 for winter foosts.
Should the · cave, Which has been t!le
summer -horne of migratory -flats since
time Immemorial, be wall~ up, !he.
ecofosy of the area misht be altered in
) ncalculoble wayS. If the~ts were w•lled
out of their limiliJr - , the scientis_ts
further warned, they milhl seek sheher
by the millions in houses 1n the area, •n
lnYGion worthy of Alfred Hkchcock.
fiiii.Acddent Eftry f . - y_. . . . Althoush the biolollisls found "" ba_ts
had some capability o1 awldlns the T·~.
pnobably because the anrm.ts hurd Its
ear-piercing sound, they were less
SIKO!Siful ift staylns out of the way of the
faster, less noisy T-31. -Durin&amp; the
SUflllJiel' of
Ol)e nlsht-411aht In 211,
partlcylarly
Ill T-Ws. N!SOited lri

loa of an
liSts

tiM:~ .

.could be,

the opening of a new facility of such
scope, you can never predict how
things will operate until they are
operating. Then, and only then, can
you make sure they're operating
correctly."
To find out what various sectors of
University operations which have
come under student fire are doing
about arranging a cease-fire through
more effective service, to get the
views of the people responsible for
these services on where problems lie
and what has been, can or should be
done, the Reporter this week talked
to Housing, Food Service and Bus officials.
This is what they had to say:
Houslns h
'Smoothly'

oPe••tins

One newcomer at Ellicott tried in vain

to turn the lights· on in his room upon
moving in . He flicked the switch .
Nothing. He made sure all bulbs were
screwed in, then flicked t~e switch again.
Still nothing. Then he worked the switch
rapidly several times on the chance there

might be a loose co'Onection. Again, no
lights. leaving to report the problem, he
was stopped in the hallway by the occupant of an adjoining room. "There's
something wrong with the lights in my
room," the second student said. ''They
keep bli.nking on and off." Student 1's

�September -19, 197~

l

"

Senate to hear·aJtmissio~s pia~ ­
for .1975 frosb ·

Ertell. to head . ~Academic

search group

Recommendations lor regular admissions polities lor 1975 freshmen will
be considered at the Faculty Senate's first
meeli'l8 of the academic year, Tuesday,
September 24, at 2:30 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.
·
~
The recommendations come to tt\~
Senate with endorsement of the Executive' Committee.
·
The agenda for the meeting also in/.r
dudes reports by University President
Robert L. Ketler and Senate Chairman
George Hochfield, and considera~ion of ,
Senate procedures.

Or. Merton W. Ertell, actlns vke president for academic affairs, has been named by President Robert L. Ketter to chair ·
a screening Committee for a permanent
. vice presidential ._appointee: ·
.
Also serving wolf be Rose Ruth Elhson,
associate professor . of medicine; Rene
N. Girard, distinguished professor of arts
and lenei-s; Edwin Gordon, professor of
musiC' Edwin P. Hollander, professor of
psych~logy; Scot! J, Salimando, Student
Association; Wilbur P. Trammell, attorney wit~ the firm of Markel, Trammell
and Santa lucia, Jui H. Wang, Einstein
Professor, and a representative of the
Graduate Stude nt Association, to be an·

The Senate Committee on· Admissions
is recommendi"ng a two·part procedure ·

. for 1975 regular admissions. Ninety per
cent of the class would be admitted
through a "~tandardized" procedure and
the remaining 10 per cent through an
11
individualized" program. Fifty·per cent
of those admined would again come
from the Eighth Judicial District,
Rkommendations· for special and early
....... admissions, the EQual Opportunity
·PrOgram, transfers, etc., will be made
later this· year.
·
· '
The. '.' standardized~~ admi~sions
program would .be based . on three
variables : percentile rank in hogh itlflool;
graae point average (GPA); and standardized lest scores. The lowest rark for
eadi 'applicant ' would' .be dikirded and
the iRdividual~s final .position in the
applicant pool would be determined by
mean rank on the other two criteria. For

noun~d.

O..C...O(lolt)cliscuososslftwldo-IKoft...

$50,000 gift ·will provide ·

loans for medical .students
\.

Dr. Pasquale A. Greco, a 1941 gradua te
of the UIB Medical School and chief of
urology at the Millard Fillmore Hospital,
has established a loan fund , bearing his
name, 'to prov.ide loans up to $2,500 Per
academic year to qualifie d U/ 8 medical
students.
Dr. Greco's gill of SSO,OOO to th e
University, 'througn 1/le U/ 8 F!!iJndation,
Inc., will be direct'ed at junior or senio r
students in the School of Medicine who
are residents of Western New York, and
whose performance, ih the' opinion of
the• Schotanhlj&gt; · &lt;::ommltlee, Indicates
they possess the ' potential of·becoming

the . s.ta.nQardized ·test score, the
Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAn or the
American College Test (ACn would be
accepted as favored measures.
Speciol Committee
Individualized admissions would be
handled·by a comminee to be composed
of one fae\Jity member from each faculty
with an undergraduate program and the
director and associate director of admMtoni,-who woukl ~ 'ex.-officio.·
This group would : review and recommend admissions on a wiaer range of atoutsta11ding clinicians in their com ~
tributes, develop pro_c~d_ures for
munities: ~ . ~ ~
~
evaluating .. academic perfofmanee· bf
Qualified students who apply for loans
students displaying these attributes,to the School of Medidne will undergo _a
review and study this performance, and
detailed need analysis which will _conreport results to the Faculty·Senate Co_m:
side'r-how"the "sludent"haS financed his
minee~on AdriiisSiOiis.
· ·
'"
education thus far, and how he will be
If these recommendations are - financing the remainder of it. The co~·
t ' adopted, "no begiOning freshman stuplete academic record of the students on' dent 41all be acfmitled by any other
volved will also be considered in the
procedures" except for the special
need analysis.
.
8roups llish!d above) which will be con(?r.. Greco, who · receive~ a student
sidered in other Senate resolutions. ··
The policl'es under which regular 1974)
odmiulons were made aonked 95 per
cent or-.ertni ffeS~iht; hig~
two of three criterl•.-. hiB,~ sC.!\_ool rank,
The purpose of UIB's Ed!!cation.a i'OpGPA and Regents SchoYrshlp
(RSE)
portunity 'Program IEOP) is "to facilitate
scores; the remaining five per cent Wl'r
the University's commitment to provide
to be chosen by raw high school rank.
opportunities · for students whose
Aa:c&gt;rcllnc to 1 Senate Admissions
economic and educational backgrounds
Committee report. the Office of Adwould otherwise pol allow them to atmissions .nd Records indicated that "it
tend college."
·
--was able to carry out pon of the policy.
· That's how Dr. EdwardS. Jenkins, newDue to limited time, the Office • . .
ly appointed EOP director, views the
restricted the ranking procedure to
function of his office. Jenkins feels that
those applicants who, before february
this func_tion lnducles counseling11nd·~d15 subm~ a mlnlmu!R of ffl, 85, 185
·vising Individuals from those segments of
f.,; GPA, percentile rank, and JtSE
the population \hal traditionally and
respect1we1y bier the minimum for GPA
historically haw nOt attended college so
- loweNct to 85. Students whose~tt~ can make the best use of thelr
scares fell below cutoff scores were not
own untapped resources: .
·
aMIIidered!"' 5con!l used In selecting
"To this enc!, we try not only to make
the Eighth Judicial
them -an. that this Unlvenlty cares
the rest of me Stlite . about them, but also to do whatever we
w

. -'

... •

•

•

loan while atlend.ing med school, has
always feh that the University and particularl y the Medical School were sympath~tic to his fin.ancial problems,
thereby helping-him terjir.lduate. ''I nur- . .
tu red this thought Jhrough the yea,..,
hoping that someday I could express my
appreciation in a material way.
. - ."L -feel - lhi!~ :51.\Jd:e~t :n~lna- l&gt;~lp
wciuld a ppreci ate a ' loart, as r ·did; and
would be happy to repay it in l~e-·f'!ture

:a

DP:-m.."
accl"m
a !or
' IQ• ,.,..,.
......~'e
- ·~"'
· .
. t ~eser'J..~ - •• h
•vi 'il! ' Srlidel)ts, .' a
_.w o
hopes to encour~ge o.!Jl~~Y!ic!ans to
·ma ke similar dOnation5~· • •. ·~;
~~Dr. Greco, an ..assiSiaot_professor of
-wrgery (urology)" -ai-CI-11!; a lsi) serves as
chief of urology at Emergency and
Columbus Hospitals in a$1dition to his
private practice. ·-: -': • · • •
He has participated iri many· communitY and philanthropic activities and was
most recently cited py the National
Jewish Hospital and Research Center,
Denver, Colorado, as their 1973 Honor
Award recipient for civic and dlaritable
work.

.ar.:...,. .

New director· outlines EOP aims.

~~~===

W

while
recludng thole
can
tohopefully
proYide opportunities
for ~
fll'owth,
for flollure which would ellist were we
not here."
Prior to joining UIB in A.,.ust, Jenkins

ol education .nd
the president at
La.
of

1
•

•

In nafning the group, Ketter mdtcat_ed .
that " ttfe 5election of ari academic VICe
presiden\ is an extraordinarjly important
decision ... and will call lor a significant
invest men[ .oJ tifi'!e, energy and thought
by the members.~·
.
.
Rather tha·n pres~ntong a lengthy
written charge, Ketter said he would
meet with the Committee at an early
date to "indicate the objectives I would
like ~o see the Committee pursue."

Biology splits
·into 2 divisions

�September 19, 1974

....

lbe. CAC wants you
.
to help them ·lend a ·h~and .
The U/B Community Action Corps has a l~t going for it.
Founded in the fall of 1965 as a small, independent, public action group,
controlled and operated by, students, it had more· than 2,000 volunteers en11ag- ·
ed in its servia: programs -last year.
It contributes to-the building pf harmonious relationships between University and community through action, not words, helps change the "aloof, scuzzy, weirdo, undesirable" image of students hell! in some quarters.
It lends manpower. assistance to community institutions with staff shortaKeS - aKencies which often can muster volunteers from no other source.
It helps needy individuals not associated with any institution.
It give$ students first-hand knowledge of the community, its social
problems and the debilitating effects of these problems on people.
·
It contributes to the fight against poverty, social injustice and inequitable
opportunities for knowledge, health, happiness, and security.
But it can't continue to do any of these thif18S without you -freshmen,
newcomers to ~he University, those who were ftsociated with various CAC
projects in past years.
....,
·
· To get you, CAC is conducting a "sign-up" campaign for volunteers today
and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Fillmore Room, Norton. Representatives will b!! on hand to talk about various project opportunities, find out your
interests, and make a match.
·
The types of services offered by CAC
are generally divided into Adion, Day
Care, Drug ·and Youth Counseling,
Education, Health Care, legal and
Welfare Rights, and Social Services and
Recreation categories.

·

And while yoU have to volunteer your

servia!\, you get a lot of satisfaction in
return, not to mention academic credit,
in sorri'e cases. ~ Through two bulletin
board courses, CAC offers credit to project heads and resource assistants and
also maintains a list of faculty members
will ing to sponsor students for independent study.
Action

CAC act ion programs deal with
current, Often complicated community
issues, many of them long-range. Action
vol ~ nteers have been involved in: studying the impad of Buffalo's propoS!'d.
rapid transit- svstem ...{findins~h2t-it may·
not, for example, benefit students and
the poor, and making proposals on how
both can be better served); glass, paper
and Christmas tree recycling projects,
bike path studies and other . envi.r onmental Concerns; studies "'to help
develop priorities .for spending Buffalo.
an~ Erie County revenue-sharing funds;
housing assistance projects; a women's
self-help clinic, and community plan·
ning.
. QaY Care . ~rdgrams_ disp;tch .
volunteers to s~veral core city ;md suburban centers and to the U/B -Day Care
unit.
·
:

:Dr~g and yooth tounseling activities
extend -to such facilities as the Amherst
"CounseHng Center; the Erie County
RehabilitatiOf) Center (a public shelter
for homeless and/or-alcoholic men); the
Night People Drop-in Center, (in tire
heart of Buffalo's sle~zy Chippewa~treet
strip); -and Sunsliirie · House, the UIB. affiliated outreach center · for people
"!ith _"''emotional prOblems, general
problems. in eV..ryday life,-. drug related
p":"li~ms~~ drug emergencies."
-

Legal Ripb
Legal and welfare rights programs
offer opportunities for working with Attica prisoners, on voter registration and
courtroom watching progra1ns Of the
American Civil Liberties Union, and for
helping welfare applicants cope with the
voluminous bureaucratic forms they
must fill out to be certified for assistance.
In the field of social service and
recreation, CAC operates a Sunday
basketball league for fifth and sixth grade
boys, the Be-A-Friend program designed
to provide attention for and give com·
panionsbip to children from broken
homes, and a community companion
projed for elderly persons.
The CAC, funded by Student Associa·
tion as one of its committees, also runs a
campu~ movie program to raise lhoney
for projects and materials for which student feeu:annot 11!:. ~5!;&lt;1 , _ •
CAC:
• has offices in 345 Norton (extensions
3609 and S59S);"
·
• is headed by David Chavis, a U/B undergraduate;
• has a reimbursement program to
compensate volunteers for transporta·
tion to various activity sites and for other
out-of-pocket expenses;
• has a brand-new Dodge maxivan to
help transport children and volunteers;
• and, according to assistan.t .~ir:ector
Gloria Pruzan, is waiting (or you ..

Menioriar ·c-oncert

for Drapiew51d

A -concert to raise m'oney for a
scholarship fund in I!JI!mory of the late
P~ter Drapiewski, who was~ graduate
st·udent in , the Department of
EducatiOI)al Psychology, will be held
; Saturday night at 8 p.m. in Baird Hall. ·
· Prc;&gt;fessor :J. Ronald Gentile of the
Department and Randy Pesano, a local
insurance underwriter, will be featured'
i&gt;erf&lt;M:mers. Geittlle, who plays piano,
Eduallon
and Pesano, on RUitar, come from two
- In the field of education, CAC is indistinct~ musical traditions . . Playing
volved· in: developing an ·after school togeth!!f, they mix Gentile's jazz and
tutoring center. for children in Buffalo's
Pesano's folk, country and western forms
deteriorating · Black. Rock district, in
into ~ uni$jue blend, they report. The
duo- also performs comedy numbers.
enrichment prQIIrams for ,young Seneca
.Indians of the Tonawanda-Reservation in ' They ha~ tpPeared on Channel i7 and
in various lOcal concerts.
r.
Akron, New York, and for children in the
poverty-rilldtin First Wald 'in LackawanFor this performance, Gentile and
na; bringing tosether and studying ways
Pesano have written and wiU play songs
of providing funding for the several
in memory of· Otaplewsld:
'
•
alternative. ~iducation, free school
dnve for ·a scholanhlp In o.-...
programs Jn the area; -and a varietY. of
p~'s name- Initiated by Ed Psych
speda.l education and creative fearnlng
students "who felt it would be a waste
not to do something" In memory_ of
tor chlldre~ !"!th handicaps:
programs _
Draplewsld who, Gentile says, "was ~I
·ttea'lth c;are volunteers work In ·nliked by both faculty and students'ln the
des s\Jdl• the llufflllo State Hospital for'
Department."
.
-· t!Ht ' rnentaUy· an.d emdonally hltl\The Kholanhlp-.ld be aWardee! an'dlcapped; the nearbr·ean..Rdan Center
nually 10 an ~ student In the
Depll1menL
•
for t.e.nlng," the
lUx- Hos1el (a
halfW_ay house Jot-the dewelopmentalty
Tldcecs are -avallaWe at the Eduatlonal
-~ ~ Clfllce, Rni. 7

The

amer

=::!;!:,'~.=Jnaec:!e~;.'d

&amp;le Co!lnty's Servlcerfor the Mentally

Retarded.

.

' - •

..r mftldoor: aenem

~Annex,
ac~­
S3 (or • special doMtlon tlcltet'
.

mlillon,
of $5). .

�Sepfl!mber 19, ·1974

New structure ·set · for

·,

'Uttle old lady' tag irks HDI;
·psychics say they didn't say. it
Editor:

May I congratulate the Collegiate
System upon its projl!cted plan for estabtishins a "full fledged" experimental
colll!se dl!voled to scil!ntific studies in
thO! para-psychological fil!ld. (Reporter, ·
September 5, 1974) The importance of
large ~le investigation and with adequate funding in this. field cannot be
over-estimated.

Douglas Dean and Carol Liaros, whose
team teac--hins was

inaug~ated

and

dev!!loped at the Human Dimensions
. Institute, are an excellent combination of

- scientific knowledge and psychic ability
and will provide a popular introduction
to this projected undertaking.
I do hope, however, that they were
misquoted in sayii'g, as published in the
Reporter article, that the Human Dimensions Institute is basically a " lecture
seril!s attracting little old ladies" and that
their parapsychology belongs in a
"serious an.demic setting."
For t~ past eight years he Human
Dimensions Institute has pior\eered in
this field in Western New York as well as
the nation. Rosary Hill College was will-

ing; for the Institute to investigate,
publicize and become a center for this
kind of research at a time when such
terms ·as ESP, j:,sychokinesis, clairvoyance, etc. were anathema to the

scientific and academic communities..
HOI exposure of qualified researchers
and scholars from all parts of the world
to the Western New York public has
brought to light the most authentic
research in a field overwhelmed with
misguided, fraudulent and exploitative
practitioners. HOI's own scientific
research 'has been neported world-wide,
its maP!bie Human DirMriiiOns has a
,,... glo'bil sU6Sefipfion list, and the Institute
intreasingly is askeiS to sponSor or cospOnsor seminars and "programs
elsewhere in this countrY atfd l ibroad: ·~·
A fundamental reason for the growing
acceptance of thl!se subjects in Western
New York (and, incidentally, for the incr"easing publi~ about · ~nd popularity
of thO! Dean-Liaros team) was due to the
courage of Rosary Hill College to accept
the investigation of parapsychology
within Its halls - surely a "serious
iladeniic setting~' I believe it is a-compH~ to · the· pioneertng- ·acuiiy of
Ropry! HHf'~ other-col~ anil high
schools' now
follbwin""g suit: . . .
' Tlil! HOI proinms at Rosary Hill have
attracted over 34.000 participants' drawn
from' ALL walks of life lndudlns a large
representation from the professional aod
busiiii!SS oonlmunities, students from all
the suiToundins colll!ses and IIW1Y high .
sdlools and many participants coming
·from considerable distance In New York
·Stat!!, Pennsylvania, CanJda and
elsewhere.
. Human Dimensions leaders and
prOgrams (lndudins 0ous1as Dean .and
Carol U.ros) have been Sl!fllto surroundlns collqes and communities as the inoestlpllon of psydllc phenomena has

are

becolne-~

HOI Is conoemed, not only with para·
psycholoslal investlptlon, but with a
· tola! approach to the condition of the
hunw~ bl!ins. u Its name Implies. It will
continuO! to do so, and welcomenimilar
rl!search, and actlvltil!s ' in-other
"addl!mic"seninp."
·
Cordially,

__,_..... Poiotlus Rindgl!

l'resldl!nt and .
Execuflve Director
Human Dimensions lnstit4Je ·

. . ..

Edllor.
•
We both want to thank you· for the
~ well writtl!n article introdudns' our
IICa'edlted Pa~logy course at
SUNYAll. ~. Septl!mber 5.) You
are a ~ soOd writer•.
~. there is one very definite
mistake of .,eatimP~t~Unce In the iirtlcie
thlt we feel M1J!1s c:firrectlng.
For four ye~nwe enJoved an ~letlt
relationship with thO! [Rosary Hill)

-Associates' 11th season

Human Dimensions Institute Ofl a
professional basis. We never in anyway.
stated that HOI "attracted little ·old
ladies-." We could not make this statement because it simply is not true. The
people. in our Parapsychology dasses
came from all walks of life, including
doctors, lawyers, nurses, engineers, dty
court judges, etc. This misquotation in .
the article we feel is unfair to us and the
Human Dimensions Institute.
We do not want to jeopardize our
relationship with our alumni and
sincerely and strongly recommend a
retraction of this statement in your
paper. We are contacting personally the
Board of Huma.n Dimensions Institute as
the first step in correcting this mistake.
We hope you will play your part in
publishing a retraction .
Thank you again for aU your help.
·
Yours sincerely,
-E. IJouslu Dean·
Cuol Ann U..ros

.

Don't mention iii-RTM.

Social anxielf
being studied
Have you ever felt -ill at ease in a large
group of "people1 Do y~u have difficulty
talking to stfangers, Or maintaifling conversations in social situationsl
These are all aspects of social anxiety, a
problem currently under study in the
~sychology Depa.rtrne.nt..
. _ .
Maureen O.;Mafa, who is directing the
research, explains that the whole range
of social anxiety will be studied frorn
peo'ple,'who are m~recy' uncorl,fortable lri
n'ew sOtial SilUiitions · tO indiViduals ·wliO
haVe nO friends and.cannot meet people
at all . .
The research will incl~de a series of
!)'riel ireatinent programs·during the next
few months for individuals (male and
female) 21 or o)der . who .feel. some
degree of social anxietY. The treatment
programs are based o'n research
developments in the field of self-control.
• "Self-control has often been limited to
use in programs aimed at weight control
or overcoming the •moking habit, but it
offers fie_lp in other areas," Ms. O'Mara
says. " It does not mean inhibiting bad
impulses,' bu._t rather giving person~ controt over ther own lives in particular •
areas."
The treatment sessions will cOmbine
instruction in current self-change
strategi~ with concrete suggestionS on
how to overcome specific types of social
a!lxiety. .
..
.
"Often people"who suffer from social
anxiety arl! so· busy being anxious that
t~ey don't even think about what to do
to correct the situation. We tr:y to specifY
what they can do and get them to put the
susSestions into ,practke(.' Ms. O'Mara
says.
. •
.
,
· The tr.ea.tment programs · ~ill be
offered free of charge to individuals who
experil!nce any form of social discom·
fort. ThOSI! wishing.to participate should
·send a lener with their name, address,
phone number, and a·convenient time to
be contacted to: Maureen O'Mara, ...
Department of Psychology, State ·university of New York at Boff~o, 4230 Ri9ge
Lea Road, Amherst, N.Y. 14226.

Study at world
Education, businesS and government
orpnlzatlons in Indianapolis have jointly
announced a fH!W educational program
for people workins d-.&gt;town. The
program, called "Leamlns In thO! City," is
""lng funded for two ysrs by thO! Lilly
Endowment, Inc., and will o,fftr classi!Sin
office ladlltif!$ beslronlns this fall. Participants are ~ to come to work
urly, sJve up theidunc:h hours, or stay
awhile after work Ill~ d•. Thret!
thousand Indianapolis municipal
~ wiU Ill! given rl!leue tlmO! to

putici~IO!. ..

' .

· . ..

The Ce~ter ior the Creative and Performing Arts hos announced the opening of
its eleventh season :with plans for a new
administrative structure and the performance of several new works commissioned by . the Center with th~
assistance of the New York State Council
on . the Arts. Several new creative
associates have also joined i he Center.
Administrative restructuring involves
the appointments of Jan Williams as
music director and Renee · levine, as
managing director, and the formation of
a Music Advisory Board . made up of
Lukas Foss and Allen Sapp (co-founders
of the Center), lejaren Hiller, former codirector, and Morton Feldman. Both
Williams and Levine have been with the
group since its inception in 1964.
The first Evenings For New Music con'cert of 1974-75 is scheduled for Sunday,
October 20, at 8 p.m. at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery. The proRram will in·
elude Oiseaux Exotiques (1956) by
dlivier Messiaen, Relache Entr'acte
Cinema (1924) by Erik Satie with the film
by Renee Clair, and the world premiere
of a new work written for the Center by
Pauline O livero s- which Was commissioned with the assistance of the State
Council on the Arts. Admission is $3 for
the general public and $1 .50 for University students, faculty, staff and gallery
members. Parking is free. Qther Evenings
For New Music concerts will t»e
presented at the AlbriRht-Knox on Sun·
day, December 8; Saturday, February 1S;
Saturday, March 22; and Sunday, May 4,
1975, N&lt;!w works by Mary Anne Amacher
(former creative associate), Alvi~ Lucier
an'd Mauricio Kagel are among those
scheduled for performance.

New members ,of the Cl!nter this
season are Tom Constanten ,
pianist/composer from California w~o
has studied with Luciano a..rto and is a
former membl!r of the Grateful Dead;
Donald Knuck, percussionist, formerly
with the Louisville Orchestra, who is
presently editing- and arranging. for
marimba a book entitled "Music of the
Renaissance and Early Baroque Periods; "
Joseph Kubera, pianist with degrees from
U/B and the Peabody Conservatory of
Music; Judith Martin, composer/performer fiom Indiana University specializing in live electronics, and Margaret
Scoville, archivist/librarian who will edit
and catalogue the Center's collection of
performance. tapes of die past ten years.
Miss Scoville is a·Ph.D. candidate in composition here.
Returning members are Benjamin
Hudson, violinist; Eberhard Blum, flutist;
Ralph Jones, electronic engineer, and
several part-time music faculty members,
Julius Eastman, Dennis Kahle and Petr
Kotik , whose reduced teaching
assignments refl~ performance duties
with the group.

Rutgers offers

'Dial-a-job' ·
Rutgers University has initiated a new
telephone service, operated 24 hours a
day, seven days a week, briefly describing administrative and professional job
openings. The recorded message, changed several times · a week; lists specific
jobs, salaries arid some educational and
skill requirements. Applicants are invited
to mail in the job number and a resume.

·--' · - ·{h~@.'S!:/iJII~ule::.~;n:::! ..
· ... , , ··

•n · ~ ·

.,: •1'/V'

1• • '/ J: :.

•. ~r:J

'; "b., ~ -i : ': i:?&lt;' (',.,o: J£11 ~ ~J n o-i &lt;J\' I,. :r , • ~

. The De~artment orTh!iatre hit:s anfl(iin1c!ld•thisiCRe&lt;iule'ot proi:luc·· ·
,
tioris' fot"the fall 5einester: .. :
·
October' 4 at 8:30p.m.

£RIC BENnEY - .·SONGS BY· BRKHT ·
Pre5erited' by the Department of Theatre and the Office of Cultural Affairs, Harriman The'l_tre Studio, Main Street Campus.

October 17·19 at 8:00 p.m.

DANCE

Directed by Joan Ver Dun and linda Swiniuch, presented by the Department of Theatre and the SChool of Health Education, Drama Theatre
Studio,. Fillmore Academic Center, Ellicott Complex.

October 17·19 at 8:00p.m~

NAKED LUNCH

- By William S. Burroughs; directed by Donald Sanders with the· ChicagoProject/New York; presented by the Center for Theatre Research;' Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt ·and .Lafayette Str~ts.
·
·
Nowember 7·11 at 8:31! p.m. ·

THE MISANTHROPE' r

By Moliere; directed by Ward Wnllamsolirrotir~lie ir~ns.laliori by Richard
Wil~r;- presented by the Departnle!!t .~J . !lit;a~.f!i- ~a~i'!'8ii Theatre

~~~0: .. ; ~ ~ :-

.

\J

.~: ~ ~· &gt;.;
... -

. .;·. ~; ~. . .~= ....;-. -.

.; ,:. ...; .; :• ~: ~ -&gt;Nowetriber' 15-17:.and ~ at:a&amp;"Uil:o.ni.
i'- ~· '
' DANCE '7'4 ··· · . I .

•.:.. -&gt;-·.· .
'r~'z:d'ia«;~u:~-Compaoy;

Lin~

'

....

-=·

... · .

ani~

dir:icted by
Swiniuch, ":ith .guest
Peter Bertano _a nd , the Black Oance ~tkshop; directed by Karimu;
presented by the Department of Theatre, Drama Theatre Studio, Ellicott
.Comple,x.
,.
.
~
.
•
Nowember 20-24 at 8:30 p .m.
B~L

-

By Bertolt Brecht; dir:ected by Gordon Rogoff, with the Buffalo Project;
presented by tile Center for Theatre. Research; Courtyard Theatre, Hoyt
anahfayette Streets.
·

December u

-:- ·

11:1EATRE~
. .
A week-long public symposium including on t&gt;ecernber 3 at 8:00 p.m.
CAMIL~E, directed by Charles• Ludlam, with the RidiculoL!S Theatrical
· Company; presented by tile Departmenrqf Theatre; !:larriman Theatre
5\udio. ·

.

SEXUALITY, KNOWLEDGE, AN_D

December 7 and 8 ,!tjl:30

BITS 'N Pln.:ES

p.m.

Directed bY Ed Smith; presented by t.h e Department of Theatre; Harriman
1'11eall' Studio. .
,
,

�September 19, 1974 •

.i

OlficMI USAFI'ftoto

•

U/8 scientists help solve bat

(~b:e~:i~l)fofb~t ~beha~,0,:· · ·t -

proble~-

both . engines bf a T-38.".,The crippled
p ne managed to re!urn to the base.
. he bat avo1d~nce program at Ranemerge from the cave. "This column,"
d_olph has been m effect ea_ch ~um~er
they explained, 11 twists for about a
smce-1967. Currently the proJect IS bemg
quarter olawhour arabout treetop level
headed by Dr. leonard C. Ireland, a U/8
and then slowly ascends." As the column
psychology gradua~e ~ho teaches ,!II
rises, roups of a thousand to ten thouO~kl_and Umv_erslty m Rochester,
sand tats break away from the main
MIChigan! prevlousl~ a post-doctoral
swarm. Usually, but riot always, the main
fellow With . Dr. Wlllla~s. Th!s s~m~i~
swarm seen on search radar as a swelling
Ireland was-JOrned on t e prOJect y .
c:;resce~t (covering as much as 250 square
social psychologist Or. Victor A. Harn~
miles) flies SE directly toward the air
and Dr. larry Guzy, also a U/ B psy
·base. '
_
chology graduate.
Using weather radar, t~e scientists
Behavior Also Studied
.
found that the bats reached altitudes ·as
·. Preventing collisions between planes
high as-10,000 feet. Returning to the·cave
and bats is only one aspect of the project.
in the morning, the animals apparently
The scientists are also interested in studydrop abruptly from great heights, breaking the little-understood behavior of the
ing their falls by briefly opening their
flying mammals. During eleven weeks
wings._Some oL tbe.. bats .arrive back. - ~his -summe&lt;, lor exampler the psynome as late as 11 a.m., according to . chologists-collected thousands of radar
._
~
... •
, . :.,",;. !o"-.re,a~in~"~his_~r,'('t.l~r] ~'!~1fz~, may ex- .
. observers.
1 Thescie~\1t~'ii.'Oioblltsa\ ~'" ctl -f)t'-~•HI~ llctors that ,
p.-esentins~\fi!!lti.f'.ciilllj,~es, ""l:lntro ' th'&lt;!' timi llil."1&gt;all 'en\'erge from
t~e massive concentrations near the cave
their caves. (When temperatures
and lor&lt;,-,IJ.yiflg•., f-;~slinJI .. ..\&gt;i'!&gt;-,,J.h, ..,c llfOI:!Il"l!i..!h• Jla!S .seen:'e_d ! O come out
r.ecOmmended that ·all aircraft av01d
·earlier, Dr. Harris observed anecdotally.) · ·
Bracken and other bat caves nightly durDr. Harris and his colleagues even vening the seaso.n.
·
·
tured inside Brackerrcave. "The cave has
Fottunately, this arts~ls&lt;unuslllllly""'!!l- •;. . , been .charted,'t. he .noted, " but in the .
equipped with varfous kinds of radar,
winter when the bats are . gone. In
and the scientists urged that this be uSed
summer, on a bright day, the walls of the
to keep track of bat movements m'uch as
cave often look black from the concenweather is carelulfy monitored. From
. tration of bats."
before dusk each nfght until the next
The psychologists wore protective
morning, operators keep tabs on the
clothing from head to lqpt end breathed
flight behavior of the bats. Using ·search
·with the aid of Scott airpacks because of
and weather radar, augmel)ted by visual
the high risk &lt;if contracting airborne
observation, •potters repott bat location
rabies and because of the phenomenally
afld altitude information. at regular interhigh ammonia level in the cave.
vals to the Air Fprce safety officer on the
. Dr. I(Villiams and, his wile have also
base, who ultimately decides whether
·g one 'just inside th~ cave with hets to
planes will fly 4nd which flight patt~rns
_capture bats. "ltd&lt;&gt;S!sindeedstink,"conofler the least ~ng~.
~
lh:med Williams, whp worked extenSively
"Pilots were initially skeptical of the
with larger bats in·ninidad and ~ho did
bat avoidance
" recalled Dr.
not use special gear.
/
Willla1115.
the
In the
Dr. Harris noted, Bracken
mined commercially for
current fertilizer shor.bei~ 10_!&gt;nsiliered.

'.

Starting -about an hpur before sun- - · down, a dense swarm of bats begins to

1

i

-...down.

;.d., Kfftfl showins bot octiYity nNr Randolph AFB before and
In the 'before' shot ~t left, few b.Jb hue yet emersed from their owe. A few hours bter, a shown o~t
rfsht, bolb nn the screen, fo~nnins out in columns more tb.n ten mile-s Ions. Circular r~nse m.aR:s .are
two miles .aJNrt.

.....;..,. IX a Rar&lt;h

Questions Rem~in
Man y fascinating qu estions about bat
behavior remain and may be answered
by studies at the site. Biologists have
noted that, the area supports ,many bat
roosts in addition to the mammoth one
at Bracken. Do all the bats in the large
cave travel long distances for fopd, leav~
ing the local insects to the residents of
the smaller roosts/ they wonder. Con,
siderable exchange between roosts has
been observed. Perhaps, biologists
(including Dr. Herreid) have proposed,
the entire area constitutes a " megaroost" with free movenlenr between
va rious parts ...
Another unanswered question is how
the bats -are able to orient themselves
dl.\ri~g flights at al!itudes as high ·as J0,000 feel. Echolocation, the sonar-like
system used by these animals of limited
visual acuiJX, functions only at ·~ range of
up.' 'ii.· :abo..,l"'a r~busan,d feef _T~e.
Williams' ~nd Dr. Ireland SP.l&gt;culated iliat
al' great 'h'eighis ilii! IJats may' u5e"eiilier
th~ ~!ilfS . O [ '!''!~! , •~.~ !.~~ri~}9 orient
themselves, ahliough th1s tnes1s has. not

yet been tested.
Radar-monitoring has reduced the
number of batstrikes involving planes
from Randolph, and has probably saved
lives. Moreover, in return for a S40-;txxl
investment, the government has already
saved a million dollars in avoided equipment loss and will continue to save up to
5200,.000 a year "fo;rever," pr. \Villia~s:
noted.
On a more cosmic scale, the project'is
one of those ..fare instances when
technology, in one of its fiercer gUises,
and nature, in one of its least winsome
aspects, have found a way to co-exist.
As a fellow biologist commented to Dr.
Williams, " It would seem to me that bats
are just aS much a_part of our natural en·
vironmental situation as a high moun·
tain, and on this basis it would seem just
as reasonable for jet aircraft tQ avoid 'the
bats-as it Would to avoid t}:le mountain. lt
&gt;I(Ould .also seem · Impractical and
economically, as well as ecologically, unsound to attempt to destroy the bats or
the,rnouot"iA;", ~ . :.. , . .. ,
~
j

•

••

•

.J • •• •

II)Y..~~g~~~~. .~~port .o n studi~
of post trauma. metabolic ·chatlge·
Researt:h conducted by a trio of U/B
acids -may cause this stepped-up
·investigators has reinforced evidence
breakdow~ of protein in die animal. The
previously reported that accident and in;
stu&lt;j)', entitled "Effects ol t;;lucOSj! l~ly-_
jury victims wh6-, survive · the initial
siqn O'.!; ~et~!&gt;oli~ .Proli~ .o( ~ ~.!JI'OL
trauma may die weeks later. lroln
Th.r"!'-p.ay-~ast~ 1 anq.,a . ~ptt&lt;; ·Tiw,.,.. ,
metabolic changes whu:h cause tne1r . Day:Fasted ~g,. ~lso..-s"~ · t,h~tl¥t
botlies to abnormally burn protein.
S!'PIIC dog .burned co,n~der.bly mot!' of
In a paper presented at the national • its amino acid~ lor e~erll)l ~han .did the
me eting of the American Chemical
normal dog.
.
.
_
Society in Atlantic City, N.J.; Neelakantan
"In the septic do&amp;;. the liver- w~ich is
Vaidyanath, a gra~uate student !n the
t~e supre,me orga':' m the regulatio~ of
Department of Biochemistry, points out
b1ochem1cal lunctlons and metabolism
that before age 45, more Americ3n
-carried out its functions-very poorly,"
deaths are produced by or related to acthl' researchers stated.
cidental injury than any ,other cause.
While studies have beeo conducted on
~'With modern c~re ~k~lls, a large _num~r
an!mals, a~u~l tra~a patients are also
bemg stud1ed_....JHJ&gt;e Trauma Center. at
of these injured IndiVIduals surv1ve the~r
E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital.
...
immediate injuries, only to succumb to a
R,Ost trau""' altered _met_abol _ism
~,.
4
associated frequen~ly Wll.h InfectiOn·
10..
pro?u~ing organisms," Yaidyanath
says m h1s paper.
--;r•
He indicates that the phenomen(!n has
Head coaches have been selected for
' been very disturbing to physicians who
t~e Niagara Frontier Football Classic, to
watch the patients - otherWise in a
be played on Saturday, August 9, 1!175,
recovery state- waste away alter several
under sponsorship of the U/8 Alumni
weeks. He said the stuay conducted unAssociation.
'
~
der an NIH grant by himself, Dr. R. H.
Tom Reddington of St. Joseph's
McMenamy, professor of biochemistry;
Collegiate Institute and louis Martini of
Dr. John Border, professor qf surgery;
Williamsville North will coach the 28siudents Dr. Ronald Birkhal\n, leisure
man squads of graduated seniors who
Yu and Garret Oswald; and senior
will be selected on the basis oftheir pertechnician Gregory Trietley explored the
lormances during the 1974 ,hlsh school
metabolic pathways of substrates in
season, their last year of high school
patients in the trauma-.septic state to
eligibility:
·
identify the source of defects which
The players will be divided into Metro
eould lead to these metabolic chahges
and WNY teams. The Metro team, to be
and the organ or organs which primarily
coached by Reddington, ~ill include .
contribute to the defect. Sinte m'!Sf of
players from the Bufla_lo C1ty league,
these patients are unable to eat solid
Catholic scllools throughout the eightfood, an' intravenous formula whicb
county v.jestern, New York region,. and
could corrector counteract the proteinpriv~te institutions. The WNY squad,
wastins syndrome should be sought, the
coached by Martini, will be made up of '
....-rdlers ouggest.
·•
· ·
young men who performed In suburban
leagues and com~T~Unltleo outside BufResearch by the UIB team states that
- an imbalance ln.. utilization of amino
lalo. ·

"'
oaches named•
football claccic ' .

C

�·-

B&amp;cott 'shakedown' woes&gt;
- :------:-----"",,.,.._ •• &lt;'o/. 4)

swilch was activ~ting Student 2's lights
and Housing Director Mapison Boyce
isn't sure they ever found the location of
the switch for Student 1's room.
·
·The missing switch is typical of the "wkedown" kinds of problems that
have annoyed Ellicott residents these first
few weeks of occupancy. Locks on some
doors didn't work at first. Some
automatic lights have been coming on at
the wrong time; others not at all. But
these difficulties, in the housing director's view, "aren't at all unusual for.
sometliing new. " Just think about the
troubles )'ou had with your last new car,"
. Boyce suggests.
As far as Housing is concerned, Ellicott
opened without major bottlenecks and is
oper.ating smoothly, " than1cs to
superhufllan efforts by all the members
~ of our s all," -Boyce says.

ex~" both in the residential areas and·
·
·
faculty offices.
Boyce points out that Ellicott - for all
its celebrated design features - has one
major facilities flaw. It· lacks a · large
enough indoor ~ctivity space for concerts and beer parties, those loud; exuberant evel\15 which studt!nts find at- _
tradive. The fragmented dining spaces-i ~
the Complex aren't suited to this· purpose as Goodyear Cafeteri~ .is; and the
Drama _Workshop is not really large
enough and has too .many special pur·
pose, expensive furnishings .. Up to now,
concerts haVe been- scheduled outside,
on the plaza, but the Buffalo winter is
coming. There is a chance that the
" bubble" being installed for Amherst
physical education and recreation purposes can be booked, but that is the only
possibility an~here on the new ~mpus .
Some might suggest that Amh~rst
Expecting to accommodate up to 1,200
residents can always take the buses to
siudents in three of the Complex's six
l't!of0s b)l kn
concerts in Clark, Norton and Goodyear,
quadrangles, Red Jacket, Porter and
but Boyce feels that the 2,300 students
. continued as long as demand holds up.
Fargo, Housing has now checked in apliVing on the new campus (the majority
Dieckman contends that everything
proximately 1,500 by making use of 100
of the University's residential students}
possible is being done to alleviate food
or so additional beds in a fourth unit,
'~won't swallow that." They need a place
service
difficulties at Ellicott - not
Richmond.
of their own.
because long lines and slow service
A survey is undefway to determine if
~
loss
of money and customers,
there are any "no-shows" in the fully
which they do, but because " this is the
Mlssins: One Commissary
operational quadrangles. If there are,
students'
home;
they live here; and they
· The food service story at Ellicott has
students in Richmond will be moved.
have a right to demand and receive the
the ring of Catch-22. The six kitchens in
"We hope RichmOnd will be• t e tngprary
best possible service."
the Complex (one for each residential
situation," Boyce says. "We really don't
Food Service is also attempting to solve
have the staff to operate an additional • • quadrangle) were designed to handle
the
problems of board contract students
food
pre-prepared
·
in
a
central
COil)
·
4adlity." But, "if necesSiry, we will."
whose
schedules take them from their
missary. But construdion of the com:four-P~n
Problems
";
" home" residence areas to other camrrlissary didn ' t begin until this summer
. · Boyce notes some dissatisfaction on
puses at m·ealtime. Students can transfer
and completion isn't expected until1976.
the part of students unexpectedly assignmeals - for the entire semester or for
Ellicott food service manager Bob
ed to• four~person rooms. "It's sort of un·
one day o r one meal at a time - by fillDieckman, who helped whip the Governatural fOr four to live in a single space,"
i'!g out a simple request form. Meals may
' nO!'S Residence Hall food operations into
he admits. "It's not like living four to an
be swapped around among Goodyear,
shape last year in Amherst, was prepared
apartment where there is more than one
Ellicott, Norton (lunch only), Governorsto cope with this much. Produce would
room." But it's a problem both Housing
Dewey, and Ridge Lea (lunch only). All
be readied in Goodyear Hall on Main
and students have to live with.
students on board contracts throughout
Street and shipped out; other food
Resident advisors at Ellicott may have
the University may take advantage of
would be prepared with some difficulty
made ;i mistake in handling the fourthis.
and much ingenuity on sit.e.
person complaints, l}oyce feels, Instead
Co~cerning 1he flip sid!' of the same .
He was not prepared, he says, for the
of talking to students about the problems
numbers of students electing cOo;ltract ·
p~ m;yOitlcikman--! has p !W to· be•
and how to deal with ~. advisors
re5pon.s1W! to !hoie Ellltott:"r'i!siaents wh,;;:;
food service at ElliCott. Using an estiinale:'
•uggested thai the dissotisli{!d,plaee their
mi~ contn~ct..,eal servi"'l ho.,'becausi!l..
of 1,l00 residents at most, Food Sefvice,
names on waiting lists for twq·person
of bus foul-ups. ''The other day, 12 kids
. from its experience in other residence
rooms. About -400 did, but Boyce expects
missed a bus and arrived 100 late for
hall situ~ti9ns, determined that one dinverv few - double accommodations io
dinner," he recalls. "We took them over
ing area for contract meals and another
open up anywhere on campus, least of
to the Student Club for a substitute
for cash customers would be adequate.
all at Ellicott.
short-'Ordt:r meal. It may not have .been
Red Jacket was to · be used for the
The three quadrangles 'being used in
exactly what they had in mind, but we
former; Porter for the Ia~(. Since ..inly
"Ellicott provide 221 beds in 'single rooms;
tried to help.
two of the boilers installed in the six
306 in double rooms; 336 in triples; and
kitchens were acceptable to State inspec·
" Some students even call down from
704 in the quadruple arrangement. There
their rooms to find out 'what's for lunch.'
tors, this seemed a reasonable plan. Th_e
are also 54 beds in Slx·person rooms, a
accepted bOilers could be used in these
We try to accommodate them, too."
fact which had been exi&gt;ected to prompt
two facilities; and the other four could
· the most ,student tomplai(!ts. There have
be replaced over the course of the next
On the luses
been, however; no gripes about these
year - in time for phase two of th!'
"Dear Spectrum: ... Two friends and I
accommodations ..to date, Boyce ~ in·
scheduled three-phase Elli~ott start-up.
were trapped out at Ellicott early in th!'
dkiate\.-Those-living in six-pei'son' rooms
.When 900 students · signed . up _!Qr
signed up for them and knew what to ex- .- ·board contracts, however, long Waiting
morn because no bus showed. It was
there in black and white: arrive at Ellicott "
pect; many of those in the fours had no
lines develope(!, especially at dinner. To
at 2:20. . . . they (the bus operators)
choice. ·
help with thtf crushr the Fargo kitchen
claimed
that they sent out a bus .a!_ 2:17
The housing director feels that. as •
opened without benefit of steam for
with .sixty-odd people .on board .•But we
students becoine accustomed' to living
fOod preparation and warming (except
saw
nothing."
"'
four-to-e-room 'disSatisfaction may ebb.
for the small· amount .that can· be
So one student lamented last week
And there are ways to escape. A student
generated ir\ ov~zed ~ettles) . Contract
about
a
bus
he
couldn't
find.
·
can always flee to a lounge (there is one
dinners are now sE&gt;rved in both Red
Others howled. about buses that too
for ~ 30 students) or a kitchenette
Jacket and Fargo, from 4:30-6:30· p.m.,
(one lor every 60) or to other spots
many people find. IThot five o'cloCk ~!!."'
and the lines- are sliorter. • '
to
Amherst_ look like the IRT at rush
within the Riant interconnected
Contract meatS,. other than dinner, are
hour, for eumple. "And if you think
. C!omplex.
•
served only io Red Jacket: I&gt;J,eakfast from
this
Is " bad.'' one sandwlchell-fn
Ellicoa has experienced a shottage of
7-10 a.m., continental brea~fast. 9:30-10;
~er.on the~:Sihaid Monday affer, .
maintenance otaff, lloya! reportS. But,
lunch frQm .11to 2 p.m.
. .1
noon, "you should check the midnight
this "quite visible" ~should be
For cash customers, Porter os opeo.
alleviated late thiS week with the addi~
from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the Student '" runs on weekends."t,
RotJO!r frieday of Cempus ~! the
tion of 18 I)Wntenance people to· the
Club, or li.athokeller, a short oriler f~cili­
Unlvenlty agenqr'wliich - ~ bUs
present mff of less than 30. The result ·
ty, operates from 4 to at least 10 p .m.
schedul!~~~~o is aware of
and.1)iher
should ~ "the kind of semce people
According to Dieckman, ..t hese
difficulties and haS already mr:Mld to
arrangements. are equal to the weekday
alter
liriletabla
(see
new
schedules
food deman.d. · •
elsewhere In this. Issue). Five' extra buses
wee~&lt;H.I~
have been added io the
Board contracts run only from. Monday
to Rid
lea scheduies.
through Friday (a policy .adopted in acservice is CinR instituted
trips
cordance with student preferencet,.food
behveen Main Street and Ellicott; route
Service report5) so· aU weekend
is
numben haw been leplaced by easier"cash.:' During Ellicott's lint weekend,
to-understand abbreviations, and
the cash food seMc:e was a-"nlghtmare'~
schedules haw been placed Jn loded
for all involved. "We just sooted.''
boards at bus stops so ~ wiU
• Dieckman says. "We used . our exknbw wheiHo expect a pick-up.
.
perience with other residence halls to 1!5The whole ~ of the servlc:e ...
"timate. the ilemancland it didn't~..
tieen ~. fttlldlly Indicates. EffecThey- -amped.
• .
tlnR maxlintllll bus usap throush
To make sure .._ won't get caught
mlnimulft &amp;urn-llraunct ~ Is 0111; the
apln,''
sars.. extta help and
extra houn have . been added on
wt!ekepds. Porter Is , _ qpen ~ ,9
~--.....
a.m:'to 6:30 p.m. and the Stud,ent Club,
Many of the chanaes resulted from
from 11 Lm. 10 11 p.m: The eatras will be
infonnattori on .-cis elidtechli_rectly

.

Room

'l"••

t!!*

tw9

Amhent1f.:;

semce

Dleckma"

::d.~to~~

.. .

•·

'I

from passengers'. Frieday spent hours last
week at the Ellicott stops asking
passengers about the service, its shortcomings and ~ow it,could be i~proved.
Other suggestions came from the Student Bus Committee at Am~erst, a group
which, Frieday says, has provided
" fabulous cooperation" and understanding. Their input together with that of
the lnter·Residence Council, he indicates, have been "extremely helpful"
in ironing out d ifficulties.
The first two weeks of intercampus bus
service were plagued by the unexpected,
Frieday indicates. More people had to be
moved through more traffic than anyone
dreamed of.
For example : ·
More students are living at Ellicott than
originally expected.
University projections were that a hi2h
percentage of students residing at Ellicott
would be ta_king the majority of th.eir'
classes ther~. The. projections were
wrpng. Ellico!p·~i~ntt are all.o_ver the

~
re ~
~~~
5.~llf~~

..

.,.

~t

. en are ta ing asses at Ellfcott
than was thought likely .
Monstrous rush hour traffic jams have
· routinely developed at Millersport and
Maple and on · Bailey between
Millersport (or Grover Cleveland as it is .
called at th~t point) and Main. " Bus
drivers are reporting in average of nine ·
light changes to get from Grover
Cleveland to Main, Street in morning ·
traffic," Frieday says. B.uses hive, been
rerouted during rush fioors to avoid the
stall at Maple and Millersport. But there
is no way to drcumvent the Main-Bailey
tie-up so rush hour schedules have simply been revised to ~fleet the Inevitable .
Class times have added to the' confu~
sion,.frieday reports. 1111 claSses at R!&lt;!Je
Lea and Amherst were ' supposed to
bqin at twenty past I lie hollr .
"However " he says .._ already f.now
of several 'that besi~ at ten to the hOur
and some that start at half past." While
this is the fault of neither studerits nor
the bus schedule-makers, It causes
problems •for bOth. Some academic
. depa!tments apparently cllcln't 11"'1 the
__..;-.. OJ ..-en't -amed.

a-

-sp.Jdntt· of lntrt-Untvenllf communication and/or the lack d it, the bus
ser¥lce coordlillttotl f..W to retllllve an
Important messqe conc:emillll Tuesday,
September ·3 . "We had
that day,"
Frieday l'f!O!IIs. "It com~ destroyed .
student confidence. in- the bus service."
Students had ,_d_ iJito Elllam, t!ut _no
· classes -re"Kheduled until W4Kineiday.
It figured tllat two buses -uld 11e plenty
on what Campus Services Supposed
would be a loilsurely fait day before
classes. "We bad no Idea it was necessary for studen!S·to coiaa 10 Clark
IIObody
· Gym and pick . up dau

en.;

told us," Frfl!day says. "We caJlecHn u
many extra buses as the aMIIrldot could

supply once we

--...of

the sltuatlori, but it made• ~fin! im·
Pression on students/' one Which the

.... ....,.......,.,
bus _.,. Is. still

trrfna Ia shake.

This year's budaet for campus bUs ser·
vice- aeonuactual secvke~by
operiiOr - Is S21t,IJOO,
barely enough of an- Increase over last
year', $2168.000 to take care of athree P";r

a commerdll

·

�September 19, 1974

.,__M_-F_

Amherst

._
o...n..ctl

bu5eS Zi )lYe can. safely u5e," he·s.ays ..I~'We

Gaft'.tl w.m- to' ovre~ae·.-·rt!~ ·o'f

coJ/rie; 1ilnes 'when we· ~uld 'llse"inore,
but rush hour loads can usu~lly be cleaned up in a few minutes"- with ..some ·
temporilry incohvenience, to be sure. ·
Calling in more buses lor these relatively
short peak periods would be impractical
because the bus company has a fourhour minimum for extras.
Budget problems have also played a
part in decisions to reduce bus service
that would·be nice to have In order to in- ·
~that which is ~ necessity. For example, tlie 1~-Amherst shuttle hu
been discontinued. Regular buses from
both Main · Street ~nd Ridge lea now
provide transportation within the new
campu•. And service between Ridge lea
and Amherst hB been curtailed alter 5; 25
p.m., becaUse de-nd during the first
two weeks didn't warrant Its continuance. If a dermnd arises, howevel,
Amhers~

- ._

1:30-,ui:
7:55
8:25

1:55

us

.

t :55
t0:25
11:55 -

1J:~
' 11:15
tz!iiP.'!;
t2:55
t:25
1:11
2:25
2:55
3:25
3:55

4:25

•:55
5:21 -

-~

,-

.

reinstated, Frieday says.
Governmental r~gulations - which
nobody can do anything about- restrict
service and cause inconveniena, too,
Frieday points out. There are legal limits
on the numbers of ·people who can be
loaded on . buses. And the contractor is
subject to serious legal hassles if he
operates with overloads. xhool buses,
used on some runs, cannot move unless
everyone is seated, and the load cannot
exceed the _capacity posted on the vehicle. Drivers have orders not to start a bus
i~ations are flouted . Metro or
transit buses,l:rsed for ,. \ mherst, can carry
78 passengers, including standees. On
th~, pusengers can be packed in, up to
a limit. But try explaining the limit to a
student left standing at the curb.
"It's our job to move students to and
from class on time," Frieday says of his
operation. "We have a further special
obligation to Amherst students who do
not have cars, who need goods and services not available at Ellicott,.who.have to
·get to,oJheJ; pla~w.ithirUhe Univers!tY
and the communi~. . There is no commercial bus service available in the
Amherst-U/B area_and we have to bridge
the gap.
"We also have an obligation to University employees," he continues, to get
them to their jobs at Amherst and Ridge
lea and back again to Main Street where
they can get City tr~nsportation.
"The goal," Frieday says, "is to be as .
accommodating to everybody as we can
afford to be" - literally.
Noting his belief that this week's
schedule changes wi.JI bring problems
"temporarily" JJnder control, Frieday
looks forward to further changes "lor the
better" later this fall, once a computer
study of bus requirements has been
completed by the Department of Industrial Engineering.-RTM.

Ridge Lea

....... . . . . . . M--F_

7:20
1:30
8:00
8:10
8:20
8:30

8:00
8:10
8:20
8:30

8:30
1:40
8 :-45
8:00

8:45

9:00
9:10
9:20
9:30

9:00
9:10
9:20
9:30

9:30
9:35
9:45
9:55

9:45

10:00
10:10
10:20
10:30

10:00
10:10
10:20
10:30

10:20
10:30
10:40
10:50

10:35

10:40
10:50
11 :00
11 :10

10:40

11 :00
11 :10
11 :20
11 :30

11 :15

t1 :20

11:20

11 :55

11 :30
11 :40

11 :50

11:30
11:40
11 :50

11 :40
11 :55

12:00P.M.
12:10

12:00P.M.
12:15
12:20
1J:30

t2:00P.M.
12:15
12:20
12:30

12:20
t2:35
12:40
12:55

12:35

12:40
12:55
1:00
1&lt;1 5

12:40
12:55
1:00

t :ob

1: t5

1:15

1:15
t :20
1:25

1o20

1:30
t :40
1:45

1:20
1:30
1:40
1:45

1:40
1:55
2:00
2:05

2:00
2:15
2:20
2:30

2:00
2:15
2:20
2:30

2:20
2:35
2:40

2:35

2:55

3: 10

2:40
2:55

3:00
3:15
3:20
3:35

3: 15

3,00
3:15

2:40
2:55 /
3:00
3:15

3:20
3:35
3:40
3:55

3:20
3:35
3:40
3:55

3:40
3:55
4:00
4:10

4:00

4 :00
4:15
4:20
4:30

4:00
4:15
4:20
4:30

4:20 *
4:30
4:40 •
4 :55--"

4:35

4:40
4:45
4:55
5:15

4:40

5:15

4:55
5:15

5:00
5:05
5:15
5:25

5:20
5:30
5:40

5:20
5:30
5:40

5:40
5:55
8:00

6:00
6:15
. 6:20

8:00
8:15
8:20

1 :20
1 :35

8:35

1 :~5

1:50

8:40

s :•5

7:05

7:20

7:05

7:10

7:30

7:40

! :25

7:30

7:50

1:00

?""

~ : •5

'

11 :05

11 :45

12:25 P.M.

1:05

1:40

1:55

2:20

3:50

4:25

5:t0

5:40
5:55
8: 10

7:~5

7:50

8:10

1:20

8:05

8:10

1:30

1:40

8:25

8:30

1:50

t :OO

8:45

1:50

1 :10

t:20

8:05

t :io

t :25

t:35

9:25

t :30

1:50

10:00

1: ~5

10:015

10:15

10:10

10:30 '

10:40

10:20

10:25

10:46

10:55

PuMngera wflhing to go 10 O'Btlan from RLC must

10:45

10:50

11:10

11:20

10 go to RlC .,. actvtsecl to ~ the RLC bus wiShing
at Gov·

11:05

11:10

11:30

- ... --thor.,..,•.· - ·

........

t1:2~

H:30

11:50 IAol buo

11 :45

11:10

U :1JfA.M:

U:OSA.M.

11!11A.II.

12:25

. 12:10

12:50

1:00

U:JO

11:141

10 AMC- 10 n.n.

,

1:11 Lat bua to AMC' on Fridey

For thll echeduie uee buMa m.tced:
(1) .......
AMC-MSC(~I·
----MolnSt.c..-Ca..........l: DVec:t ..... aa....-.
St. _ _

-eon--....;, St. eon-(-); Dncl ..... -10 .....
r.&gt;.
.,P 01 aa..or-.. O N L Y - - AMC-MSC ( - ).. . on'10-(AIWUOP.!
......... - ..sc .. _ _ _ _ onlylthoy--10-Gff.
: ! - _ . . _ _ _ _ _ 10MIC!
.
(2) AMC-MSC (Eilcol1) •
St. ~

A l l - IN¥Ing M8C . .

13l
·ALC-AMC

Gch«aiOI........cllf.ectf)l In front
--A-~--Care-

Aldgot.a .~~~

'1---Rl.C•AidgO ... - . AMC·---

11:00
11:10

10 10

8:40

::: ;,

aus MARKED

10:50

9: 15

10:05

-!!~!:

FOI! THIS &amp;CHEDULE USE

._,
.._
7:45 A . ~ .
SEE NOTE f (3)
8:05

7:30A.M.
7:85
7:50

. .o-.-

....

7:45A.M.
7:36A.M.
1 :15
8:015
I :S5
1:45
1 :15
t:OS
t :S5
t :45
10;015
10:15
10:S5
10:45
11:015
11:35
12:'0 5P.M.
12:15P.M.
12:35
1J:45
1:05
1:15
- - = - 1:45
1:35
2:15
2:45
;s,15
3:015
• 3:45
3:S5
4:015
4:15
4 :S5
4:45
5:015
5:15
5:35
5:45

.

some of the former service can be

-._

._
_,,
7:15A.M.
7:20
7:30

7:'16A.M.

cent cost hike th~t went into effect
September 1. Yet, the service is shuttling
approxi-tely -4,000 students a day, compared to apeal( of 2,500 a day last spring.
"We spent half of our minor budget i{'crease during the first week &lt;'»
operations," Frieday says. And projections are that the entire budget will be
exhausted prior to the li.-.t of February,
maybe even "before the eod of the year
if we don't get~ significant change in our
ridership pattern." While · it might be
logical to expect a droJK&gt;ff in passengers
as students • settle into the academic
routine, chan1es in efficiency could also
cause iln increase in riders and break the
budget that much sooner. At any rate,
the Ad~tration is trying to come up
with addit1onal funds.
From aquickglance at ~ssenger count
sheets, frieday estimates th.Jt buses are
running at85 per cent of capacity all day
Icing and at more than 1,00 per_cent during rush hours. In light of budget constraints,, "we have contracted as_many

Main Street

-

-

-•

__....,MSC..,~

-·~___,,.

..... ., _ _ _ AMC-MIIC c - . l _

·-

__ _.,.....,IIIC..._.......,o·arton ....

-10--farMIICot----~---not-

AI·--tar~----....---·
........_....,.-:.Y.
- .

--~~~-

~

.

�...

September 19, 1974 _ .

-~~f!JJY p~~s ope~ ·fio.~s~
The e•JNnded He.alth Sciences libt•,Y wiD hue open house- ,at its new loco~tion in Stodc.ton Kimbo~ll
Tower from 3-6 p.m., Septembft 24, to o~cquo~int users with its new f.Oiilies, urordins to C.K.
Huns., libro~rbn . The libr,ary, which mowN this sumrMJ from C.pen tu.U, ~es.., esJim.ated 6,000

~':,~~~~~~=ffc=~~~n~~r~::~l: ~:o~:~~~h !~~~es~ono~k

!n Western

New

AREA Ill
(132)
Budget
Chief Accountant's Office
Computing Center
Computer Services
Data Processing Center
Environmental Health &amp; Safety
Financial Services
Internal Audit

A. guide. to

the Prpfessional
Staff .senate, 74-75

M~oag~fytmatiorfS)'S\etns

Operations &amp;'Systems
Personnel Services
Ph ysical Facilities

With elections completed, the Professional Staf1 Senate has announced new
4
and continuing Sen~ tors for t~e four areas of its mem~Bhip : ,
·

l:ll~l'[~~~uon :

_,....:. :....... , ··.I I (

Chairperson
~ice Chairperson
_J :•· S~r~~';l' •• .

~., ........ • : • • ...., 1

••'.JJJ':.!f·

Robert Wosner
Wi!her Kunz
.'rl·~m Crisonte

College &amp; College Workshop

Nuclear Science &amp; Technology Facil ity
Sc~ool of Mana gem e m

"c FacJities-p[visions reP9rting to Faculties

·;·~~~~Jbt~if ~A~li' :~, · ;
'(I~

;·=--,.b

• -J

t l

•fl

r

...;
{

~tharlrie 'Ieder' ,. Historr;' EIIicott Complex
· Nancy lroderlc:k

"Patrlda Colvard
lAwrence D. Drake

DolonS'Ceofser

n - n Gr~on
Resina Kodecld

5lnford Loltor
Iemke !'oa

Josephine Wise

205 Fosler Hall
Rm. 8-49, 4230 Ridge Lea
143 A Capen Hall
111 Acheson Hall
409 Capen Hall
312 Diefendorf Hall
125 Crosby Hall
Old Faculty Club
Rm. 1, 4226 Ridl\e lea

Ext.
' 6-2181

Termhpi_res

5447

7-1814
2837
3015
2&amp;40
4406
3401
5306
7-1351

6-30-7~'.

6-30-75
6-J0-76
6-30-76 .
6-30-75
6-30-76
6-30-76
6-30-75
. 6-30-76
6-30-76

AREA II

1\ .

(158)

• Mi~rity F~culty &amp; Staff Recr~itment

Admissions &amp; Records ·

Office of Cultural Affairs
· &lt;;&gt;!lice of Equal Opport~nity
DUE
Educational Opportunity Center Program O ffice of Urban Affairs
President's Office
Executive Vice President
Continuing Education

r

-'Ellf. ,., . ,.,,

1 Hayes Annex " C"
5045
278 Hayes Hall
3517
Rm. B-49, 4230 Ridge Lea ? -.1814

AREA I
(179 professional staff members)

Sen.ators

· Executive Vice President -

Analytical Studies .
Gr~uatt!'School

R~lth Sciences library
Instructional Communication Center
International Studies
•
law Library
MFC

22 F~ter AnneX ·
292 Hayes Hall
Hayes Annex "B"
109 Diefendorf Hall
292HayesHall
2 Hayes Annex " A"
mHayest.UII
192 Hayes Hall
Harriman library
3~nnex"A"

Physical Plant-North Campus
Physical Plant-South Campus
Purchasing
Security
U.B. Foundation
University Information Services
University Publicalions
University Relations
Vice President forfadl ities Planning
Vice Presldeht for Research ~·
Vice President for Wniversity Relations

Recruitment &amp; Promotion Of
Women Faculty &amp; Staff

JamesCaril'e.
Howard Enslish
Neil Goen '

•

Rm. 3,~ltidgeLea
4250 Ridje lea
·
Rin. 176,1807 Elmwood

''6·30' 76' ·, ...
6-30-75
6-30-76

DennisHenne~n
4250~8elea
u:\, v 1 u rJ 'Trl!J2145 0 ii.&gt;~&gt;1 "" 6'-~~ ri ·i.· H
JohnH~n y.;.; 4250fJ.!geLea
, ,b~~" ~~ '141,115" )i!duq;..:idJ7Sf l1w iu '
Richard Kudlal'sld
Rm. s; 4250 Ridge Lea :~.' '"' ' ' ;'1..1 881&lt;1 d)u.• &amp;!10'~6 01 l·
Robert M~
·_:-~rvice Center
•J&gt;no: f,.)\Jf"&lt;t &lt;2'1211" v'"' .. '"·'6-3(P75"' ·,.· ..... ~ .. '
Raymond Volpe
4250 Ridge Lea
7 -1181
6-30-75

AREA IV
...- ~....

(98)

Financial Aids Office
Housing
Off-Campus Housing
Office of Minority Student Affai"
Student Accounts
•
·
Student Personnel Services
StudenLPersonnel Services-coun&gt;&lt;;ling

Beriha CUtcher
Howard Deudl
Albert~vlcs

James Cruber .
Thomas Hurley
france Pruitt

Student Personnel ServicesForeign Students
Student Personnel Services-Placement
Student Testing Center
Student Union
Vice President for Student ~fai"
WBFO .
.
•
..

. 6 HaYes An~~'ex 11 C"
201 Harriman Library
. 115 Norton Hall
225 Nonon Hall
6 Hayes Annex 11 C"
205-Townsend Hall .1

5291
3721 ,
3541
2511 •
5291
3828

6-30-7.6
~JO-Z5

6-30-75
6-30-76 .
6-J0-76
6-30-75

SUNY Senate Rep&lt;esentatives
Dr. Thomas Connolly 7 Annex 8 ::•
Ms. Shonnlefinnepn 121-125Jewett Pkwy.
Dr. Don.alcl Rennie
122 Sherman Hall
Dr. Richard $1gearow 132 Hayes flail
NOTE: The new PSS Constitution has extended mem~rship in the Senate and
on the .Executive COf!1mJn_e e totthese SUNY Senal_e representati-V~s. .
E•ecutlve. Commlttee
The fi"t Ql~ting of the full senate was held "Friday, September 6, to eleci
members of the Executive Committee.
In addition to the officers and SUNY Senate representatives, the following area
represe_.rllatives ~omplete the Executive Commillee for 1974-75: ·
~

Ridge Leali~~rY,
Summer Sessiqns

AREA I

University Health Service

University libraries .
Upward Bound
VPAA Office

?-1'161 ·'
7-1245
· • '3116'·'

Pat Colvard
BemlcePoss

Room 8~9; 4230 Ridge Lea
Old Faculty Club

Hilda Korner
Phyllis Slael

AREA II
192 Hayes Hall
3 Hayes, Annex A

NeiiGoen
by Volpe

How.d Deuel!

AI~

AREA Ill
Room 176, 1807 Elmwood
4250 Ridge lea
AREA IV
201 Harriman Library
115 Norton Hall

.

.

,

hi.
7-1814
5306~

4019
4301
3116
7-1181

)

3721
3541

Senate meetings are e•pected to be held at monthly intervals with the Executive t::om!"ittee meeting every other week. _ '
.

�......

,7

,_

(

~·
DepH Redp~M
· Dr. Geol'fle W. Ferguson, professor and ·
chairman of operative dentistry, received
an Honorary Doctor of scien,ce degree
from the University of Nebraska last May

Hone;..,

"in recognition of his contributions to
research and teaching in the field of dental surgery, in acknowledgement of his
distinguished career as an educator, both
in the se..Vice of the U.S. Navy and at one
of the nation's foremost dental schools,
and with pride in his performance as an

alumnus." Dr. Ferguson practiced dentistry in Lincoln, Nebraska, from 1934 to
1942. He beg~n his teaching career as a
part-time instructor at the Uni~ersity
there in 1939. He joined u/8 in 1966 after ·
more than 20 years with the U.S. Navy.

.

.

,

.

New WlfO M-er WU.ts .to

'M1Ice a I'IM:e' lor lhe Sbllion
" People who work at a university are
almost automatically suspect to people
who believe that anyorfe who really
works, works with his hands and gets his
hands diny." But a university-based
radio statiOn has to overcome that suspicion if it is ever going to make a place for
itself in the community at' large.
With those thoughts, 36-year-old Marvin F. Granger has assumed the position
of general manager of WBFO, the
educational FM station (68.7 mhz.) supponed by u/B.
Granger comes to Buffalo after 11
years of work in public radio and television in Minnesota, including seven years
at the Depanment of Radio and Televi-

.

~on

1 'i

.i

September 19, 1974

I
must dictate public radio programming.
" Radio is not a dramatic medium
anymore, as television is. It's not the
primary medium of information or
entenainment. Radio has become a kind
of companion to p~!!&gt;ple - and I don't
think public radio can become a friend
to pe(&gt;ple in the way that cbmmercial
radio has become a friend . But if we do

things right, we can make a substantial
place for oursel~es."
Recei•es ulbrlshl Award
Dr. Gilbert l. Crouse, assistant
professor of economics, has been named
a Fulbright ·Scholar for 1974-75. Dr.
Crouse will study economics in the
Republic of China.
New Unl•erslty Accident ln•estiplor
Donald W.. Speck has been hired to

serve as accident investigator for the Environmental Health and Safety office
with· the in-house title of " safety

technician." Speck will serve as liaison
among injured persons, University
depa.nments and insurance carriers. He

will also work directly with employees,
department supervisors, the Un iversity.
Personnel, Payroll and Researc;h offices,
and the U/ B foundation, Inc. A life-long
resideot .of the Tonawandas, Speck is a
volunteer fireman, past president of the
Mullen School P.T.A. and a former
member of the Tonawanda Traffic Safety
Board. Most recently, he was service
manager at Dietrich Oldsmobile.

Rosh Hashanah 5735

Robbi luslin Hofmann, diredor ol the ca...P.., Hllel foun&lt;loiio.., -.nd. the ;.
foshloned &amp;om • r•m's '-n he•rd oh llosh •
lfuhonoh, the lwcHby festinl tNt opened the moot ucred hc&gt;II6J! ol the ·
Jewish c..,...r Mondoy •t ............._ The holldoys usher In the Jewish yeM
5735.
.

shof.,, the traditional trumpet

at the University of Minnesota,

where he was public affair;s Pr.odl'cer and 0 .,
program director · for the university's
radio station, KUOM. He has also worked for Minnesota Educational Radio, a
five-siation FM network covering 80 per
cent of that .Ute's population:
' Granger says his interest is public
rather 1/l~n education~! radio - bv,
which he ;IJ!e;o!)S radio ~8{1ed IO ·find
dut whot'&lt;tbe ,public _..,..,nd needs,
~nd to supJ!IXJ such n)aterlal, but not r ~
rlodio which -Is closely tied !tO educational
Programming 01 university attitudes. He
tf&gt;inks radio ought to be enjoyable: "I
believe in the entenainment purpose of
l)roadcasting, whether public or commerciaL But I do object to the fact that
entenainment values are dictated by
what is marketable.'' A station like WBFO
does not have· to program what" is
marketable, says Granger, and, in fact,
the station has a national reputation for
innovation In programming and preseniatlon of material.
Granger, who holds a B. A. 'in
philosophy and theol'ogy from
Valparaiso University in • Indiana, but
· who·· traies his ' intete5t in broadcasting
back to
time he worked as a fill-in announcer in Mic;higan at the age of 14,
w~ to continue and expand WBFO
p
amming aimed at special comm ities or parts ofa commun~, such as
blacks and llueno Ricans. He does not '
plan major programming or personnel
changes a! -this time, but does intend to
look into a possible rn~ in power. .
(Cu~770 watts).
"
Crahger jays the needs' served by
public radio are different from tho'se
setwed by CIOflll'llllldl radio, a!\(1 that fact

me

Securi~

to · start recording
all . radio and tel~phone calls
"evidentiary need to kee'p them longer,"
Campus Security will shoniy begin
Glennon said.
recording all radio com~nication and
He explained that complaint and
incoming and outgoin telephone calls
of the Security Office. enn~tjl.J&gt;, .GI.e .n - .. e.r'nnrgency,, piJ!&gt;nt; ..r.nes for both the .
non, director, said that the recordings
Main St. and Amherst campuses as well '
are being made for " record-keeping and
as Umpus'Security radio are being_converificatian purposes on!Y.
nected to the recorder. Another parallel 1
"This system should be o f great value
track on the tape continually records the
to us in streamlining record-keeping and
1:ime.
providing ben~r Campus Sec!!rity servGlennon said that the recording
ice," he indicated.
system is available for inspection at 196 ; "'
Glennon said that almost all major law
Winspear Ave.
enforcement agencies, including
municipal police and campus security
offices, maintain ·such systems to
The National lnstiMe o'f Education
eliminate much of the necessa,Y manual
record-keeping and as a verifying
reports it has awa~ S261,126..!o ;~p- '
pon
two projects. that wiD atfempt to !
backup to written records. The system,
identify factors in society !hat adversely t
which simultaneously recordstones•nd
. affect eduational and occupational opmessages, will result in more accurate
portunities for women. Thot projects,
records and less "re1iance .upOn
memor.y," he said.
funded It $12i,ol6 and $145,o5o respec~~ allows Security officers to check
tively, will be directed IJI' Virginia Nordjn
and Robert Hefner of lhe University of
precisely the response time for com- ·
plaints and e~l'fl"ncles, because it will
Michigan's l'sychology Department ~nd . ·
be pouible to check · radio and · Constantina Safllios-ROthschlkl, director,
Institute for Fa~~~ily Research, Wayne
telephone messages against written com- .
State.
•
·
plaint forms which the Security · dispatchers must routinely complete . .
"The IWO studies a~ designed to dl!;-The taPes will normally be kept for a
close the major factors that create and
30-day period before they are erased and
encourage sex discrimination in schools
• ·. -used . apin, .unless there is a cSpeCific
and~.

Two studies funded

·Senate conference.

Four prominent educators will be
guest" speakers at a conference on
gener~l education \O ,be held on campu~
. December 6 and 7 under co-sponsorship
of the Faculty Senate and U/B Pr:esident
Roben l. Ketter.
According to Sen1te Chairman George
Hochfield, the aim of the 1=0nference is
to consider , general · educaiion · with a
view toward the ·possible development
of a campus-wide geheraf education
'Prosram for .the first two;~adwne
yeaB.
.
Appearing at the progl}'ml will be
Christopher Lasch, profesSor of history at
the University of Rochester and author
of several ~ mponant books on American
ndicalism; Stev..en Marcu~, profesSbr of
English at Columbia University who .is
currently planning director for the
prOpoSE:d National Humanities Center;
John R. Searle, chairman oL the
Philosophy Depanment at the University o!•. California at Berkeley; and
philosopher Stephen E. Toulmin of the
Comminee· on Social Thought, University at Chicago.
_
Dr. Hochfield has announced that .undergraduate education, panicularly "the
first two years," will be one of his main
interests as chairman of the Facufty
Senate. He has asked the Senate's
Educational Planning and Policy Com- •
minee to( consicji!r work on. this issue its
prim1ry !~' the current a?demic
year.
•
The ~Decembj!r conference will include 1n 1ll-d1y session Saturday,
Decentber 7, to' be held in lhe Ellicott
Complek on .the Amherst Campus.

FAOOLT\'

lecturer, Eqwal Opportunity Cenrer.
AssiSfltnt Professor, Occupatiorial Therapy.

,

NTP
Assisrani Dean, Health Related Professions, PR-3. ·
Assisranr to Director, Center for MediaStucJr, PR-1.
~ For additional inform~ion conceming these jobs and for details of NTf'
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at
these locations: .
'
.
.
1. Bell Facility beiWeel) D1S2 and D1S3; 2. Ridge l.,._ Building 4236, ~xt to
.. cafeteria; 3. Ridge lea, Building 4230, in corridor ne¥11'! C-1; 4. Health Sciences
Building. in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in' lhe corridor between
Room141 and the LQbby; 6. lodtwood, ground floor in corridor next. to ven.ding machines; 7. Haye;Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Publoc Information Offici!; 8. AcheSon flail, in corridor between Rooms. 112 and 113; 9.
•Parker Engineering. in corridor next to Jtoom 15; 10. Goodyear Hal, 1st ~·
Hollsing Office area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Penonnel Depanmenl; 12. lilortdn
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hill, ill corridor next to
Room 106; 14. John ,Lofd O'IJrlan ltaU, fourlh floor (Amhenl Campus).
~.

Sb1e Uniwen~Jy lllulfalo II •

Equal Oppootunliy/AfftNollh:e Adloa

eti!PinYer

�......

SeJ)Iember 19, 1974

Alumni" name·.
8 Winners of ·

women's. awards ~

October is United Way month on campus
October has been officially designated
, by President Robert l. Kener as "United
Way
Month on the U/B campus," a
1

Slavic; and Mr. Theodore Fitzwater, Art.
·
fduadonai-Studles. Chairman: Dr. Leroy
Cillahan, Elementary Education ; sub-.
chairman: Mrs. Florence Fradin, assistant to
·~;:,:~,. ~nd Applied Sdences. Chairman: Professor Howard Strauss, assistant

month dur_ing which the University will
anempt to raise a qaqta of $125,000, a
gOal of SS,OOO more ttlin last year's and
some $18,(K)() more than the University
dean; sub--chairman : Mr. John Molloy, assis.actually ~ntributed in 1973. A kick-off
J;ont to the provost.
·
meeting will be held Tuesday, October 1,
Hu11ft 5den&lt;:es. Chairman: Dr. Richard
at 3:30 p.m. in Goodyear-10.
Jones, assistant to the vice presii:tent; associate
More than 200 faculty, 'Staff and
chairman: Ms. Mary Waring, Vice President's
students are serving in leadet'l'si_p roles in
Office; sUb-chilirm·en: Mrs. Marjorie
this year's campaign, ~ccordins to Dr. A.
Tiedemann, Health Related Professions; Mr.
Westley Rowland, vice presidentfor un'"'I IJ.Ichard Duffy, Nursing; Mr. Jorge Velasco,
f
· Ammal laboratory; Dr. Gerard Wieczkowsk1,
iversi~ re1ations, general chair~an o
. Jr., Dentistry; Ms Cynthia Anderson, Health
the ?,nve . . ,
f h Education, Mr. John Coulter, Pharmacy, Dr.
The men and women o t e
Clyde Randall, Medicine.
uW &amp; Jurisprudence Chairman: Mr:
University ~t Buffalo year-after-year have
demonstrated their support and concern
Charles H. Wallin, assistant to the provost;
for the community in which they live by
sub..chairman: Ms. Audrey Koscielniak,
contributing to the United Way cam-.
stenographer.
_..
~
.
.
paign," Rowland said. "We again ask all
Na,.,..,Sden&lt;es&amp;Modlemaocs.Cha&amp;rma n.
faculty and staff to contribute g-enerously
0~. Eman~~~ - Parzen, d~rector~ Sta~15t1ca l
·
0
Science DIVISIOn, Computer Sc1ence, subto the annu~l campa1gn.
~e cannot
chairmen: or. Paul H. Reitan, Geologia!
overstate the Importance of th1s once~aSciences· Jeannene R. Schaefer Provost's Ofyear, unified drive. Some 70 communrty
fice.
'
.
·
'
and social service agencieufepend upon
-SocW Sciences and Administration. Chairthese funds. Last year, more than SOO,(K)()
man: Or. Robert H. Ganyard , History.
people in Erie County were serviced by
Ma~r. Chairman : Mr. Sanford . M.
the United Way . a~. They'te gtad. ' Lottor, -ntdeanfordevelopmentandexsomeOne was listening 'when thtfy needtemal af!a1rs.
.
' ed help."
·
. Unlwnhy lJIHvies. Chaor~an: Mrs. Mar·
_'' United Fu'ri~d '?ffi'ciaiS repOrt t~at-the
JO~~~e:e~,as~d~~~~~~~~- fducarion.
goal for the ~mted Way Campa!gn fo~
Chairman: Mr. William frinon, assistant to the ·
Buffalo and ':.Ene_&lt;7ounty for 1?74 IS $10,dean; sub--chotirman: Miss 'Dorothy Wynne,
039,970. Fund-ra1smg and year-roun~ apacademic advisor.
.. ~ • ....
c;J minlstrative costs for the local United
Di.-JsJon of Croldu.1te and Professional
Wi.y take only about seven cents of·every
Educarion. Chairman: Mrs. ]iime DiSalvo, assisdollar - one of the lowest rates in the
tant to the dean.
country.
_
· .
. Dlrislon ol ConllnuitrJ fducalk&gt;n: Chair;
University United way officials pomt
man :~ Dr. Donald Bru~n, _assooat~ dean,
·
1973
602
U/B
1
sub-chairmen:
Mrs. Phyllts Sigel, asststant to
ou.t t h at, t~
!. .
. emp o~ees.
the dean· l'{rs...Ph)llis lierdendorf, assistoni to
and/or the1r famll1es recewed servtces
the
from United Way agencies. During the
Preskknt and &amp;e&lt;VIin! y~ Pres/dent.
same year, the Uni!:~ Way allocated to
chairman: Or. Charles 'Jeff~, ·assistant vice
UIB approximately $7!,500 for rj!Search
president for University Computing Services.
purposes.
.
·
·
.
\'Ice ~t fOI Acaclem_lc Alta'!'- Chair' The University .will organize its camman: Dr. William H. ~umer, assi~ant v1ce
paisn arounCI. 21 divisions. Each division
pr.esiden t-) su·b~ c_h..-~rmen: ~1ss Jean
will have Its own quOta. Divisional
Wischerath, ln.ter~u?"al St~d~, Dr. Henry
chairmen ani::l sub-chairmen for. the catnJ. Richards, ass1slant v.ce prestd~ot; Mr. F~nk
r•
•
Corbett, Office of Urb.n Aff~u-s r Mr. James
pus d~1ve are:
IJlac:khum, summer Sessions; ~r. Charles
AltiA ~ Chairman:' Dr. Jeffenon
'Thomas,1r.. NuclearScienceandJechnoi~;
· ""- french; sub-chairmen: Dr. John Dinp,
Dr. Irving SpttzbeTJ, Colleges; . Mr.. fames
~~; Ms. Charline Zent, Ce~anlc &amp;
Anderson, lnstrudlona1 Communacauon
"

dea,.; ,.

Center; Mr. Philip M. 'Orlosky, Nudear
Science and Technology:
\'Ice l'reldent fw .flnaitce &amp; ~nt.
Chairman: Dr. Paul A. Bacon, assistant vice
president for bosiness affairs; sub&lt;hairmen:
Mr. James Stampp, Budget; Mrs. Carmen V.
-Warren, Umpus Mail; Mr. Paul Faleski, Campus Mail; Mr. William Uner, Central Stores;
Miss Shirley Berger, Chief Accountant's Office; Miss Ida Harris, Chief Accountant's Office; Mrs. Rose Nebrich, Chief Accountant's
Office; Mrs. Penelope English, Contracts Ad·ministrcition; Mr. Richard Scibetta, Environmental Health; Mr. Charles Balkin,
Financial Services; Mr. leonard Snyder, Housing; Mr. Robert Edwards, Maintenance;· Ms.
Evelyn Larson, Payroll; Ms. Florence LaMina,
Personnel; Mr. Charles E. Devendorf,
Purchasing; Miss Letizia Visone, Student Accounts; ·Ms. Norine Piduch, Student Accounts.
faculty-Student Association. Chairman : Mr.

John P. Fal liides_~ aSsistant to. director, Hous-

in~~ ~ 'fW ~ Alfllbs.

· The UIB Alumni Association and the
University's Community Advisory Coun. cil have announced the names of eight
women who will be honored ior outstanding -achievements in t_!leir fields at a
noon £itaticin luncheon in · the Statler
Hilton Golden Ballroom, ·October 16.
The eight - selected from a number
of nominees - are:
·auslneu - Marie Corcoran, a partner
in Corcoran-Mall.ey · Associat~, a· local
real estate firm.
·Arts - Or. Virginia Cummings, director of the Buffalo Muse.u m of Science.
Community Senfce
Mildred
Campbell, member and former chairman
of the Erie County Mental Health Advisory Board and chairman of the Governor's Citizens Committee on the

Problems of Alcohol.
Gowemment - Phylli~ Kelly, community services chairman and a director

of the national Federation of Republican
Women and assistant chairman of the
Erie County Republican Committee.
Industry - Alia Dodge, owner and
manager of the George A. Terry Co. of
Buffalo, a local tool manufacturing firm.
~ - Or. Emma K. Harrod,
deputy county health commissioner for
maternal and child health services.·
Education - FlorenCe Baugh, an atlarge member of the Buffalo Board of
Education.
Creative Communkatlons - Mildred
Spencer Sanes, former medical reporter
for The Buffalo benlng Nr:ws.

.·1SO pllysicia~s
at U/8 seminar

Chairman: Mr. 'Howard Oeuell, Jr., assistant vice
preSi dent;- sub-chairmen: MrS. Rowena
Adams, aSsistant to the vice president; Mrs.
Norma Haas, Financial Aid; Mr. Ro~ert
More than 150 phySicians froiMht;..U:s.
Henderson, Student Union;---MrL..Doris_Rabe, ~ • ~nd Caitada: are-.nend ng a se'mlnar &lt;&gt;!!
University Placement; Mr. Gerald Thorner •.
·changing j&gt;anerns of caf!!' fo~· the newSi:udent Counseling .~
.
··
\'Ice l'resldenl fOI IJnWenify Relations. • b~t;n. ~i~g S!f9nSC!red : by· th!l. U/.B

~di£c)M,~~ .
~~~~=~~wlli:r.Jo:;d, .:_,C/tildren'sJ!jiSpitJ)~
R~~n
Alumni..~tion; Mr• .char~..,&amp;.-~land,

Central Oupli~ting; Mr. RObert -r.--Marlen,
University Publications; Mr. Kenneth P. Ser·
vice, Information .services; Mrs. Ruth M .

Sch~~~:-"~C:~i&amp;nmn;.c;;;ir-

man: Mr. Albert Dahlberg, assistant .to the
'vice president; sub-chairma_n: Mrs. lucille
BianChi, stenographer.
\'Ice l'resldenl 1o&lt; ltesevdl. Chairman:
Mr. John Boeh&amp;er, administrative assistant.
Unhoerslly of lluffolo foclndlllk&gt;n; Inc. Chairman :,. Mr. John Latona, presjdent ; subchairman: Mr.. John Carter, executive vice
president.
·
Uillred Way ~ Coonlinotori: 'Mrs.
Juanita MonteiJt-, administrative assistant;-Office of the ·Vice President for University
Relations; ~ Priscilla Cloutier, assistant for
conimunity relations, Office of ihe ViCe Presi·

dent lor University Retatioris; Mn' Emiry
EWilld, director of alumin fund-raising,
Unive~rsity _at Buffalo FOUndation, inc

coffeeho~

5ef·- ..~

at..Blic.Ott
· The ~ : of ' a . pr9.jected series . of.
coff11ehouses fo.r Elljcon , and otlter
Amh~t campus re.Jdents · ~nd fri~nds
wiU be~ held ..SundaY;f September 22,
•
~begin!Jing at 9 p.m.

~~din'g

Coh~~.

"tare Nursery at the Sheraton lnn·B
East, today and tomorrow.
'"'--;..-:
Speakers include Or.. Ronald A. Clie2,
chief of~ Pregnancy Research Br.inch,
National Institute of Child. Health and
Human Oevelopmen~ Nationallnstit~tes
of Health, Bethesda, Md.; Or. l. Stanley
Jat)les, 'director of the Division_ of
Perinatology, Columbia University
College of Physicians· and Surgeo{ls, New·
York City;"Dr. Marshall H: Klaus[ djrector
of nurseries at case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland; Dr! George H.
1\oicCraCken, Jr., professor of pedlatrl£5 at
t!:te University of Texas Southwestern
Medical ,School, Dallas; Or. Frank Oski,
chairman of the Pedijtrics Department at
Upstate Medical Cent~; Syracuse; and
Dr. Robert Schwartz, 'chief of pediatric
metabolism, RhOde· Island . Hospital,_
Providence. UIB faculty aod Chddren's
,staff partic:!jlatinJ In the two-day _event
are Or's. GeorJje P. Gfacola; TheodOre C.
Jewett Jr., J~ Krasneo, Jeratd P. Kuhn,
.and Sumner ),.Yaffe: '

- Seiler t~--:head#

Family· Med -··
5_jtller,.ilrettor

or.' Robert H.
of the Dlvi·
'
,to- student Eloug
.who is assistl~g-lnter-Resldenee CounCil • sion· of FaiiiiiY ~at Hllhnemann
Medlca1 .1:QIIese and · H01pltal · In
Vice Presld!!nt for ktlvltlesJim Slt)ith on
Phil~""'Ils been /IUII8d to head
the · p'!&gt;ject, the c:Oifeebouse Is con:
' sidered a means of fillins the activities · U/8'1 new Oepanment 'bt "fatnlly
vacuum.in ihe newly-oj:,ined COmpleX. . Medldfte; Prelldent Ro6ert L J(aw!lnd
Health Sciences Vice Prilldent-E: Cirter
"It will be a~ for _students to' meet."
fannill !)aYe announaid. a~ socialize.'~ Cohen said. -, ~ · ·
' A native of Phllaltelphla, Or; Seller
The coffeehoUse Is bei1111 spo~ by
gradu.ted from the UhlversltY of Penn.1~ and will be held in Porter cafeteria.
sylvania Sdrool of Medkine, 11'.-m8t!lber
Uve entertainme~ will be provide!~ b~ ._of the Amel'k:an 8oflt'jh Of 'Uttemal
·IIU~ts, Cohen said, and food sel'¥ice Is
Medldne and Falillly ~ ana a

~its Price$ on.wl~ and~ for.
-: ·

the event.

Su•
•

Fut.~ cO~ ale

plann.ct for

Fellow In bodi the ·~~
Ph~ ancflhe Ameltbul.
Of

~:::.=;:,. ~rei

.nd Tuesc!AY evenlnp, ~ Slu·- · of l)ypettalllon;·.
.
'
.'
· tn~ with his~-. .
clerit=~andthe~~~~e...__~r~
.T
............. Jifti8Ja.lll WH
polatJilent, ha will' &amp;le~ ·-of
pro;!!~
lnduclil free.coffei! ~.dOnuts.
~-• Hospltlll't Dl!l*mm of
lbe CloffeehDuies )Mil be free utd
fail.lllr l'nlctlcle - the third oldest
open lO allltUdents. Cohen Jlfd. •
~ of·fts ldnclln the -countr:J:

�/

_,

Sf!pl.f!mber 19, 1974

-

Amherst
Main Street
Regular &amp;...ion - S.turd.,. Md lundaJ

-....

...."
_,...

"

8:05 A.M.
8 :35
9:10

8:00 A .M.

8 :30
9:05
9:35
10:10
10:40

9 : ~0

10:15
10:45
(11 :20)

(11 : 15)
(1 1:45)

(12:20) P.M.
(12:50}
( 1:25)
( 1:55}
( 2:30}
( 3:00)
( 3:35)
( 4:05)

(11 :50)
(12:25) P.M.

( 6 :15)
( 6:50)
( 7:20)
l 7:55}
( 8:25}
( 9:00j
( 9:30)
(10:05)
(10:35}
11 :40
12:1 5 A.M.
12:45
~ l:..fO -~~
1:40
2: 10

( 1:-45)

(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(

2:15}
2:50)
3 :20)'
3:55)
4:25)
5:00)
5:30}
6:05}
6:35)
7:10}
7:40)
8:15)
8:45)
9:20)
&lt; 9; 501
(10:25)
(10:55)
11:30

( . 3:15)
( 3:50)
( 4 :20)
( 4:55)
( 5:25)
( 6:00) .
( 6:30)
( 7:05}
( 7:35)
( 8:10)
( 8:40)
( 9:15}
( 9:45)

4:45}
5:15)
5:50}
6:20)
6:55}
7:25)
8:00)
8:30}
9:05)
9:35)

(10:10 )
(10:40)
(1 1: 15)

(1 1:10)

( 1:1 0)

'&lt; 2:45)

( 4 :10)

(
(
(
(

(11 :35)
f12: 05) P.M.
(12:-'01

t

( 2:00)
.&lt; 2:35}
( 3:05)
( 3:40}

(

8:20 A:M.
8:50
9:25
9 :55"
10:30
11:00

8:15 A .M.
8 :45
8:20
9:50
10:25
10:55
(11 :30)
(12:00) P.M.
(12:35)

:~=~:
2~0}

(12:55)

i 1:30)

(
(
(
(
(

( 4:4Q)
( 5:10)
( 5:45)

-

(10:20)

(10:50)
11 :25.

11 :45

11 :55
12:30 A.M.
1:00
1:30

12:20 A.M.
12:50
1:20

12:00 A.M.

8 :10A.M.
8 :40
9:10
9:45
10:15
10:50
11 :20
(1 1:55) .
(12:25) P.M .

(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(

1:00)
1:30}
2:05}
2:35)
3:10)
3:40}
4:15}
4:45)
5:20)
5:50)
8:25}
6:55}
7:30)
8:00}
8:35)
9:05}
9:40)

( 10:10)
(10:45)
(11 :15)

11:50
12:20 A .M .
12:50
1:20
1:50

......
.._
8:25 A.M.
9:00
9:30
10:05
10:35
11 : 10
11 :40
(12 :15) P.M.

(12:4 5)
( 1:20}
( 1:50)
( 2:25}

: ~~~~}

(
(
(
(
(
(

4:00}
4 :35}
5:05}
5:40)
8:10)
6:45}

( 7:15)

(
(
(
(

-

7:50)
8:20}
8:55}
9:25}

(10:00)
(1 0 :30)
(11 :05)
(11 :35)

12:10 A.M.

1:50
2: 20

FOR TH IS SCHEDULE USE BUS MARKED• • • AMC-MSC
SATURDAY SCHEDULE INDICATED BY BOTH BRACKETED AND UNBRACKETED TIMES
(SUNDAY SCHEDULE INDICATED BY TIMES ENCLOSED IN BRACKETS)
"TIMES u STED ARE APPROXIMATE AND DEPEND UPON TRAVEL TIMES ENROUTE!
• • AMC-MSC = AMHERST CAMPUS-MAIN STREET CAMPUS
BUS STOPS: Amherst Campus: Governors-directly In front

Ellicott-Core Road
O'Brlan-at Loop

Main St. Campos: Across from Norton Union

Calendar--------:----=-~----showing: Thursday, Sept. 19, Hns Lounge,
(from

~ge 11,

cot. 41

CONnMPORARY YOM KIPPUR SBIVICES'
For Reform Jewish students, Conference
Theatre, Norton, 8 p.m.
•.,..,

.

THURSDA Y-26
HILLa YOM KIPPUR SBtvtct•
Service will begin at 10 a.m.; a "Break-the- .
Fast" supper will follow. Reservations are
~~ry. Cilll 836-4540 lor funher. infor'!"a-

Blau photogr~phs .recall style
of·.portraitist Max Beckmann
. "In Memory of Max· Beckmann," ~n
exbibition of photographs _byJRidMrd
Blau, assistant professor of . Ameflcan
Studies, is on vie,. in ' Hayes Lobby
through September 30.
Blau has selected 20 black and white
photographs, origlnally called the "German Series," to exhibit in four
PI'OJiressive groups. "Seeking." as he
says. "to complicate~ reality .rather .than
simplify It,'! Blau's .j)hotographs , reflect
"the deep Inner trouble, the thr~tening
feeli"'l aitd slhjations mat peop~ deal
with every day." Blau I'll'S that tlie show
"concerns questions of repression ~nd~
authority. Authoritarianism if you will.
Dominance and. subordination. It's as
dose as I've come to a pc)rtralt of contemporary social nolations."
·
1he photographs were taken during
the last !hree ,ears. Their compelling.
qualliles ano · reinforced by .the dark
values dlosen by ·!he artist; intensity,
alienation and ambiguity quietly ·

CONTIMPottARY YOM KIPPUII SBIVICES•
For Refon\, Jewish students. Will include
break the fiiSt, Conference Theatre, Norton,
11 a.m.
· ·
WOMEN'S TENNIS•
.&gt;Photographs "ilnd Beckmann's "Hotel
UIB vs. Cortland Stote, R&lt;mry Courts, 3:30
Lobby" (1950), which is on display at tile . :- p.m ..
Albright-Knox Art Gallery. As Blau says:
RLM•
":rtu; trick to portraits of this sort is learThe Generol (Keaton), 147 Diefendorf, S &amp; 8
ning not to flinch in your subj'ect's .gaze.
p.m. No admission ch~rge.
Max Beckmann l~rned it wei . He simpUUAI"RLM••
ly stood there and made his pictures. He
The-Ruling dw (Medok, 1!172), Conference
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 ·tor times. Ad· '
let nothing- not even the most terrible
mission ch•rse.
secret - escape him .. And yet· he saw
Starring Peter O'Toole, Coral Browne and
what he saw with gr~t t:om~ssion . It's
Arthur Lowe.
this that gives his ~intlngs their clarity.
BENEFIT HOOtfY GAME•
From this they gain their inner' strenilth."
An exhibition pme between rookies il"nd
Blau received his B.A. from Harvard
some veterans of the Nationil H~ey League _

and his M.A. from Yale. He' was ·a codirector of the Buffalo Theatre
Workshop~ an improvisational group that
performed everythlng fr~m guerrilla.
th~tre on th' streets to Brecht, Beckett,
Strlndberg anll Pinter. It was during this
time, when he grew Increasingly dissatisfied· with photographs of his pla115
taken by others, that he became a·
photographer.
·
.• ·
· ·.
He currently teaches courses in
phot&amp;sr~phy and culture, vj~ual
eth11011raphy, and f\merican lives and
envlrQnmenl. .
The show, on view Monday through
Friday, h.m.-5 p.m., Is presented by the
Office of ~Uitu(lll Affairs.
•

reverberate.
.·
The show take• Its title from the
si!nllarlty between the feell'!l In Blau'•
worhndlhatinlheworbofBeckmann.
~ 'Beckmann Is best known
for dreMilllte and terrifyjril al!elorlcal
pieces - JIIIJntlnsi whiCh i!aplole the

...... ~of.-wa&lt;Ciem\an
...., ~,.JiiMrWnlndsdllt.the(ierman
4rtl«~--of1he~sjrd

. -~""'as ......
~
.tills ' t.( ·.
•

• redll'hf.dae _

and hutllilll

•• •

to...

,. .

the~ from,.,

C1l , .... ~
_ _. ·- .

• . - ...

·~

.

.

- -..
. ·•· •

~...,_, qu euily .com·
~"' the reWiorlshlp ~ Blau's

•

iri4l .

IIIII

- ·

I=·
m.t :·.

...........Of·

.::~I&amp;

::,3 ~unl~ SIUdenti

Sobres ondi'ittsbwwh hnsuim,

Holi·

3465 .. Broadway, "'

Cheektow0110, 8 p.m.
.
ndtets at $4 are ovollmle at the Sabres
Tidtet .O ffice In Memorial Audhorium, Holiday Twin Rinks, the U/8 Alumni Office at
123 Jewett Parltway, and Norton ond O.rk
Halls. Pr~ frOm the Jlme will benefit the
UIB Alumni Sc!Kilanhip. Fund.

mun- .
.:

,
• ""•'
.
lll.fdui:ltloft'sanqjjj! ..

Publl: lllstltullons wD1

.collge and

Buffalo

.datt Twin Rinks,

Norton, 8 p.m. Showincs there1.fter: Monday,
· Tuesday and Wednesc:by, Ha.as Lounge, Norton, 2 p.m. Through Wednesday, Oct. 30.
LIBRARY EXHIBIT• .
•

fr~~mr;~i:~\!~e ;yore!:~~!~~!~
lill'ory, 2nd Hoor balcony, Lockwood. View·
ing hours: Mond1.y-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Co11tinuing.
.
·

LocXWooO EXttillri"

.

_.. Polish Collection, an exhibition culled &amp;om
the University's collectiOn bf more than &lt;4,000
volumes of materia), first floor, Lockwood
Memori&lt;tl Library, Mondoy-fridoy, !1-o,m.• S
p.m. Continuins.

�n

Sepl~mber 19, f974

THURSDAY;-1~ ,
UUAa RLM•• .
.
1"M Mec:Nnic (Winner, 1972), Conference

'Theiitre, Nonon; all 831-5117 for times. Ad-~
mission chiifle.
Stiirrin&amp; Charles Bronson ilnd Jan-Michael

. Vincent.

~

COllOQUIUM IN MABETINCI
ModelinR 1.nd Musurement of Multiattribute Choice Bemvior, Dr. Paul 'E. Green,
S.S. Kresge Professor of Marketing, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 114
Crosby, 3:30-5 p.m.
Presented by the Dep.artment of Marketing
ilnd Oper1.tions Analysis, U/8 School of
Manq:ement.
PHl'5ICS COUOQUIUi\41
The Physics of Intense Radiation Fields, Or.
Philip Stehle, Department of Physics, Unrversity of Pittsbursh, ·111 Hochstener, 4 p.m.
Refreshments in 112 Hc;:tehstetter, 3:30 p.m.

WOMfN'S nNNIS•
U/ 8 vs. University of Roche5ter, Rotary
Courts, 4 p.m.

CR1. &amp; MOlfCULAR IIOLOGY lfCTURfl

Sequent~/ Biochemical Events in the Mamm•li•n Cell Cycle, Dr. Robert A. Tobey,

·Biomedical Research Group, University of

And now

Ulifornia, 13-4 Health Sciences, 4:15 p.m.
Coffee will be served at 4 p.m.
RLM'

PHYSICAL-oRGANIC CHEMISTRY lfCTURf
SfRI£51
.
Acidities of Carbon Acids, Prof. Fred
Bordwell, Northwestern University, 362
Acheson, 8 p.m.
. This lecture is p.illrt of the'Conversa.tions in
the Disciplines-supported by the UIB Founda·
tion i.nd administered by the office of the Vice
President for Academic Affairs with the aid of
the Giaduate School.
UUAI COffffHOUSE•
Featuring Pilul Combs, a folk and blues

~~~~~:~e;:,r':f!~,a::,.c:.ck

• • • • 'Th~

U/B students have entered the world
oi daytill)e television by producing an
original video soap opera, 11The Day
l'lfter Tomorrow." Episode I of the sixpart
drama
premieres
tonigh t
(September 19) at 8 p.m. in Norton's Haas
lounge. Subsequent showing'S-will be
held in the Haas lounge, on Mondays,
Tuesdays, and Wednesdays at 2 p.m.
through October 30.

The Navigaror {Keaton), 147 Diefendorf, 5 &amp;
8 p.m. No admission charge.

Written and directed by Ed Mellnik, a
U/ B graduate, and Richard Fliegel, a
senior student in English, " The Day After

Donald,

Tpmorrow'' has been in the making s !~ce

Day-after Tomorrow'
d.-eY-ci

last December .. Billed as "a new morality

soap opera," the produdion, featuring a
cast of 17, deals with the usual complicated set of relationships. Unlike the

network offerings, however, drugs, non~
traditional living arrangements, etc., are
not points of conflict. "There are no bad
guys either," says Fliegel. "Rather the"\
are pe11p_le who are less -benevolent to
ea~ other." Ttie epiSoC!i!i cover one day
in the life of tbe characters, and although
the original intention was to play tricks
on and undercut traditional daytime
fare, Mellnik and Fliegel found that the
"look" of the!r work r~flected ·- the ·

Admission: students, $.75; faculty and staff,
$1; generi.l public, $1~25.

COllOQUIUM IN

Recent Developments in Marketing

lles..rch, Dr. Pou) f. Green, S.S. Kresge
Professor. of Marketing. The Whorton School,
University of Pennsylvanio, 233 Norton, 1:30-3
p.m.
...:.:.
Presented l!y the Deportment of Marketing
and Operations Analysis, U/B School of.
Manopment.

!1117.

"*em.. Admlsolan: $1 .

. •

rr. Mec/wllc (Winner, 1972), Conference&gt;

TheliN, Norton; cai1"831-S117 for times. Admloolon chorp.
.

INCIMIIIING.,....•

5Dme Hew /tfMIIIs Md Problems 'ln.Com-

,.._,l'fuld OJ'Iai!Db Md MHo, Dr. C: IC

Chu, ~.., c:~Wrmon......... Pityllcs
Committee, ~ Ill . Enlfneerlris and
~ ~ (llolunoiJta Unr.s~ty, 104
Pirller;.. p.ill. j • .
. • 0

UUAI:

·

_ ~~li!iUii,J.fflf_~IZ.l W Si"' ,~

BloSY,I~'Or~~,., ' o..-. '!~ ·

HILlS. OraATION GIIE!NUGHT.. ,.._
Activities will include a tour of the .Bu~
z~ and a study &gt;esS~on oonducted by Mn.
Eve Fertig. For further lnl0f1lllli9fo, qll 11364540.
•
- "..
~. UUAarALM••

.

...

•

five fjngeJS of Deoth (Cheng Chong Ho,
1973), Conference Theotre, Norton; coli 831- ·
U/1 ARTS FORUM
Esther Swartz wtli inteniiew Ed Mellnlk, a
U/ B grodu.Jte, and llichord Fliegel, a UIB
senior English maJor, the Cf9tors ...of the
doytiine video dromo. "'The 0.y After
t:ornorrow," currently being show.n on ca~
"pus, W~V-FM, 10:05 p.m.
.
MONDAY~23

_

IRN&amp;IT CONCERT"

•

"

. -

F..turina J.. llonord Certile, ~nilt.. ana
Roiwly P,esano. 1\!ltarist, Baird Ho)l, •8 p.m.
tlclcets ore avollioble at the fducoticlnal
l!sf.cholosy ~rt.-.~ offlce, 11J!&gt;. 7 fOster ·
Annex, or 11 the door:·aeneral admission; S3
(or • special donation dclcet of f5).
-- The concert will ·ben~fk a· memoriill
scholorshlp fund In the name of.Jhe late UIB
student Peter Drapiewslil. •
·
·

~oundotlon of BuRalo, 147 Cor&gt;e&lt;~. 4 ·p.m.
Coffee ot 3:30 11.m.
' . ·
MEN'S CIIOSS-COUNTIIY•

U/B,vs. -Geneoeo 5tale", Grover C~nil
Track,'4""p.m.
J
"··
·
rtfT5rcs OOUOQUIUMI
'
A New toOii ot the Lam6 Shift ond the Electron Anomo/ous Momen~ Dr. Joseph H. Eberly, Deportmj!nt of Physics and Astronomy,
Univenify of Rochester, ·111 Hochstetler, 4
p.m. Refreshments in 112 Hochstetter at 3:lo
p.m.
RACHEl CAliSON COI.UClE M&amp;TING..
An l~t general meeting 10 discuss
the Chorter, fllkiDtt Complex, Bids. 6, Farso
QUill, ~-'12 Lounp, 8 p.nr.rtale LECTUUIFILM•
M.oe Howard _and a Three· StOOJfes

~~= :sr:u~= =..,~i :~

RLM•
•
Young Mr. Lincoln (ford), 140 capen, 3 &amp; 9
p.m. No admissiOn charge.
• ..

$1.

Presented by the- Student Assoclati!'n
Speokeri' Buruu.
.
_

lfCTURP

saa

n• '

EJHOVEN CYCU CONallY
Theory versus Criridsm, .c;hnstine BrookePerformed br lhe 'Cieoeland Quane!. inRose, · professor , · uni-ver.sity of
.• residence II u/a, I(Jetnhans Musil: Hall, Mary
Parls~Vincenries, ri'ovelist aitic, and currently visiting professOr of English at UIB, Bids. 4, · SeMon Room, 1:30 p.m. Admlsolan cha~p,
Memben !'f the Quartet are: bopald
Wilkeson Quad._Rm. 303, 4 p.rri.
•
.
Wellentein, viOlin; Pel~, violin; Martlil
Presented by the Deportment of French.·
Stronsln Katz. v191a; and Paul Katz. cello.

WAJH RESOuaCfS &amp; ENVIRONMENTAL

"ENGINHIIING SEMINAR~'"

,

W.utewaterMa~ment in Uke Erie S.Srn,
Angelj&gt; Conj&amp;fio,~ Buffalo District
of
:EnsineerS, 7 Ac_hesOn ....Annex, 4 p.m.
...

W:EDNESDAY-25

C!&gt;rP\

IASBAU.•
·u/B vs. Bull¥ State (double-header),
Peelle Field,"1 p.m.

filM••

five fingfiis ol Deoth (theng Ch&amp;ng-Ho,
1m1. Conference Theatre, Norton; all 8315117 for times. -Admission cho'l!•·
. ·

-

- ~~,~·'

5117 for times. Admission charge.

SATURDAY-21

fOC oriN HOUR•
The UIB fducationol· Opportunity Center
wilt hold an open house in its newly
BUFfAlO likE rOua•
renovated fKilities, 465 Washington St., 1:30-6
The Schussmemers Ski ~lub is sponsOring
p.m.
.
·
f . the firs\ annual bicyde tour qf BuffalO. The
"ctlvlties will include a guided tour of the
tour will 1.., •il·d.J_y, and porticiponts should
Center, !!J'hlbits, and s1if!e presentations by
bring·their lunch Or be pr~red to buy food
EOC ctepanments. The Center will be -open to
' along the route. A map will be provided for
hish school ~tudenu from 10 a.m.-noon. _
those who may wish to,dep,an from the planned itinerary. The tour will . stan from the
SOCIAl SCIENCE MfASURfMENT CENTER
Amherst Campus at 9 :45 a.m,' and-from the
~
Main Street Carrlpus .at 10:15 a.m.
1M ~lopmenr ol Spclil.l".lndiarors in
September 28 is the r•in date. For further inGermany;- Wolfgan1 Zapf, professor of
formation, ·call the Club office, ext.=2145:
·
&lt;oelolOiJy and deon, foculty of Sodal Sciences,
HILlS.· SAIIATH savrd•
· Unlvenlty of Monnheim, Germony, 4238
The O.ys o(A...,, Robbi fly Braun; followed
Rldse Lea, Rm. 9, 2:30 p.m.
b.yma. Kldd~ush, Hillel House, 40 Capen.llivd., 10
0
COMPUTING CENlER OffN HOUSE ..
lheacademlcseNicesiroupofthe UniverHILlS. HAY RIDE AND CAAttPFIRE•
sity Compudns~r invites all new foculty ,
Reservations m.y be made at the Hillel '
19 ·an open house in lhe C!&gt;nference Room,
House, 40 Copen Blv!f., or·at the Hillel table In
Jtm. ~ 950 Rldse Lea. 3-5 p.m.
·
Norton H•ll. There Will be a nominol cha'l!e
free mffee and clouahnuts will be served
for the. evenJ. For further informotion, all
and faculty will-have lhe _.runity to
836-4s4o.
Computlns Genter staff me~ and
crAC fiLM••
.. .
ffilcl out tbout lhe -.lcles the Center. Offen, ~ Tlte Day of the J•c/c•l, 140 Copen; all allbolh hardware and software.
5117 for dmes. Admission: .$1 .•

W.UIIIM- .

·The cast for "The Day After
Tomorrow" includes: Robert Daley,
Kl!!h!een Fe'81150i1, Susan Rosen, Tom
Kreuzer, Jo~ Siemierz, Carolin HiscoX,
Carl Ferraro, Steven Adler, Mik4\ Olczak,
Claire ~Its, RO!I'sandbers. Ruth Mus!&lt;a~
Vince SpiotU, Rura. .Burkunas, Mellnik,
Murray Schwartz, and Kathy JacksOn.

-

CHINf5f DOCUMENTARY RLMS•
Wushu; Our Five Children, Anciem Arts
and Aher School, 1&lt;46 DiefendOrf, 7:36p.m. (in
Chinese) and .9 :30 p.m. (with fnalish
narration).
Admission: students, $.50; all others, $1.
HILlS. SAIIAJH savrp•
.
The M ..ninR of r5huhh, Robbi Justin Hofmlnn;. an Oneg Shabbar will follow, Hillel
House, 40 Capen Blvd. C.ll 1136-4540 for time.

MAUfTINCll

CACFR.M••..
J1oe Oily- of !he }IJ&lt;:bl, 140 Capen; all 831-

"daytime drama
grown up wjth.
The rxocfuction was co-direCted by the
two. Shooting was done in black and
white half-inch video tape on location in
the Buffalo homes of the cast. Ray ~eslee
provided the music.
·

RNAn MEETING~• ·
-~~ of tbe .aade.;uc yeor, 1\18

"FACULTY
f Fir&gt;t

Diefendorf, 2:30 p.m.
.__
...., -i
AliiCAN SRIDIES COUOQUiUMI ~ ·
·Whither M!JZMIII&gt;ique i{!d Whyl, Hendrfl(

!~n Oss, former mem~r. United States
Department · of ~ S·tate, 4238 Rldse · Lea,
Conference Room, 3 p.m. ·
F,ILMS•
.
• •

Prelude to W.r and Munich C!im: 141
Diefendorf, 3 &amp; ·7:30 p.m. No admission

"""""·

-

MEN'S teiNIS•

. .'

·

Lilli vi BrOdcpon St.le, Rcltaty CourtS; 3

p.m.

..

POtiCY STUOIIS - . u . t

-

.

Tlte frle County Departmellt of En~ Qual/1)': f'iasress iiod ,.,._.
Prof. 1heaclono -Hulllrr Con..-oer, 237
~
3-5 p.fl!.
-

. "CIOiliJ

..,

MfN'5 ClOlP ':
' ' .
U/8 vs. Nl11ara University_., Arrihei-st
Audul&gt;op Golf Course, 1 p.m.
!pSTBI C!OIJ!)QUIUMf
,
Mechonlsms of .EIKtrophlll&lt; Allpliotlc

Substkot/on ... the De/lcale Balance Inversion . lnd Retention o1 C-fiV'IIIon,
PJof: F. F. Jensen, Unlvenify Of California,
llerf&lt;eley, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m,
MfN'S socca•
.
u!B_v.. Buffalo~. Rotary Soc:aer Field; ~
p.m.
\
lfiUB. KOL ~ SBVIQS•

.

Fillmor~ Room, Nb!f!'f'• 6:45 _
p.m.
RIMS•

Vo- lo /WY.IRCIOIMOIIinl, 1953); 7:15 p.m.

Four Nillhts of a breamer (Bresson, 19711, t:SS
p.m. 8oth films will be &gt;hown.in 140 c.pen.
No 0\lmisslon ~. ,
(tum ) O - 11, col. Jl

�,.

�put(.

. ol New York at Bulraln. 8-u.I • - or aay
U = t y IJIOUDCia withtion .• alrould be .paid to lha f~
oat WrlltiD
·
r...,; the P-ireplatiorlo:
dent, oaot.odlal or other iD ....,....
tl.no!r or iD vlolatbl of - - ' ra1eo or
1-~=;:::....~:: ·
_..me . !hi! - theJeol,
oball .. pllty of -cliootde
OODCiw:t.
:f"1~ for lha~ of iDrlaciDc
( I n - w i t h - ~.20 of the
~eiDalthe~~~~ ­
Now York Slate PeaaJ t.w.) R.pia~ ~~-~:.:!,.aoJ!t·
. ...........
tioDo - by
- wbich
- -- oballviollaliooa
iDdude the
by
DOD..turMit.t. obaiJ be de9ilopod iD ...,_ . .. puniabed by ..... of not thaD
t5(), or by ~t for not ....,..
conlaDco with the PeaaJ t.w.
than 6 daya, or 'lj both 'aucb IDe rmd .
2. u...se. N- York .PeaaJ Law Sec~Jn~
BC t.w, ArticH 6,
liml "240.85, a ·pentm ia cuilty ofloiteriD&amp;
wboo be loiten or remaiDa iD or about .
2. An~pe.- UDder the ... of 18
a ~ eollllp or .Un!Yeroity buildinc
or IJIOUDCia. not ha..U.. 11Df .......,.. or
unX~~J:.
relatioaabip iDvol~ c:uotoc1y of or reopoaoihility ·for a pupil or atudoclt or any
apoclllc. lesilimate for belnc there
of qe which ia falaa, fmuduleat or DOt
.rmd not b&amp;vbur: wriuen penniaion from
actuilly his own. for .the of
aay penon auihoriMcl to gnmt the aame.
pur:cba.oiq or attemplina to purcbue lillY
S. Under New York PeDAl Law Secalcoholic boverap. may be arreated or
tion 140.06 a penon ia cuilty of crimiDrrl

...wa-

(

:=a:.::

-==

fi=.;_w
~!.~ ~iiC.:.:. ~y--=t::.

:1.':~~ .!':.!0~~~":

;o~rmd~=~ !&gt;'~

"viOlatidn."

~~x~s.::.;.; ~'1rc

fully in or upon premi8ea. Thil ia a

4. ·under New York Penal "Law Sec-.
ti011 l.CO.lO a penon is ~ of criminal
treapeaa iD the TbiJd ~ when he
koowindx entero or remruna unlawfully
in a buildiq or upon real _property which
is fenced or otherwiae encloeed in .a manner desipated to exclude iDtruden. This
is ~ Claoa B Miadomermor.

Ill.

GENERAL POliCIES AND PROCEDURES - STANDARDS OF STUDENT

CONDUCT

5.00 Aalclomlc lllal1oMst.Y
•
The development of iDtellipnce rmd
strengthening of moral reaponaibility are

=0~~
~=.,~:n~~~ll'!l::
ment of theae pur:poeea ia the duty of

the studeut to P.!'rform all of his required
work without illecal help.

fo~eo~o~=:t:(na~~~~~

eaty among atudenta: (a) rrub:rUaaion:
to satiafy academic requirements. of material previoualy submitted in whole or
in substantial part in another coune,

~tho~~~r;C:) e~~:Ut· of
material from a .aurCe . or eourcea~

illecalJy puri:buinr or ·~ to
beyer.

S. No retailer lhaU permit or .wfer

~re:'"'u=..!f c:te:r.;:be~

=::.· F:iiU:r:'re.U: ~-:e:n!:
from oo appeariD&amp; oball be ciMmod to

:.:::~~~2_ ; ; -· &lt;Article 8. Sec- -

4. No penon lioeuaed to aeU alcoholic
howe,.... oball autrer or permit any pm.
bling on the lioeuaed pnrmiaea, or aulrer

or permit llllch premiaea to become diaordorly. (Article 8, Section 106, 6)

5:30 - . . uaa of
Tl1lll8Cripta or educational recorda contain only information about academic

:..t~· a~=tthe~k=~~:o:

re--register ia recorded.
The institution makes every endeavor

to keep the atudent'a record coulideutial

and out of the handl of thoae who would
uae it ror other than legitimate purpoees_

~ti:"~d' cl~~ - ~~ty~i':i:.

coune or their employment at the Uni ti:::t!C:~resaCtCC:=~ infonnaDitcW.ure to the Student
A student ia entitled to a copy of his
academic record. However, a student is
entitled to
to other
in his file which contain . coulidential
information. He baa the ri«bt to iDapect
hia academic record (from which tran-.

submitting this material u one•• own
without acknowledging the particular ·
debta to the aource (quolatioua, perapbraaes, basic ideu), or otherwUe repreaenting the wodc: of another as one's
own; (c) cheating: receiving.iDformation
rrom . ·a nother student or- unauthorized
source or giving information · to' &amp;nother
student with intention to deceive ~while
completing an examination or indiVidual
-in it. When the. oricina! ia ahown, e.am.
...i~t; lei) flilaification of acailemiC
materials: fabtr.ca,tihc !Jiboilltoll:.'~rii
ala, notes or repoda. f6rging an lDfltriac·
or. mutilation.;
•
Docuilienta oubinitiAJcl byc lir'·Yot \he .
:~rt.na:pe~.r =~.o~r -=~: aNcient
iD· aupport of hia aJ&gt;Piii:ation for
admia.i.oo or lot tra.nifer credit _.re
~ly c:,.n;we~;·~
~
returned to the student and are not 8ellt
deut reapo~ for the auipunent; (e)
elMwhere at his requnt. For e.umple.
a tran.cript from another college. or a
hil!h school record, ia not to be aent to
coulidential academic materials without
a third institution. In uceptional cuee,
prior and expreaed coneent .or the inhowever, where another tnm.cript ia un·
~:~tructor. "
.
obtainable, or can be aecured only with
All alleged caaea of academic diabonthe grea...t dilllcuJty (U ia ~
eaty are ruijudicated iD accordance with
true with foreip recorda), copiea may
the Univeraity Procedure on Academic

not

aoceu

records

:=r.:.~ r:r.t 'l:to~~!.~ro::l

:r~~c\h""~~r ie'tS.:~.

not

t:.,'*£,

~r:=~o~~~~

:f::U:

=~-~-~~~~
Affairs iD 201 Harriman, 831-S'/21.

5.05

u-... w. ·or

~

l:...tl:i~
::' .~...::to =~
moat p,_t a lli«ned
initiate
~

lhia action. 11aually tho copy. marked u
a oartilled copy of what 10 iD the atu-

=t~~- =~

n-rmdTerm.._.
. I. No perion oball aeU or oft'er for aaiv
to any peraon 'IDfOlied iD a unioeraity, • copy retaiDed, with a notation to lhia
.,.... pi-.1 iD the $8.
&lt;-oUece, acaclamy, acbool or other aduca'
•
. tiona! iDatitution within the Slate of N,w . Di.c'-'ro top,~
and Ariminiatnllioa
·
- York any uaiatancoJ iD tbi preperation,
F""!'ll7 rmd admluiOtratiwt o&amp;cen wbo
~ .or writing of a diaaertation,
haw Iecltimate iD-t iD the material
~~te~ peperi ~:~
rmd cllooi&gt;oMirate a Med for iDfomuotion
aion to ".:cf'!f.:catiq_ual iDatHuticm iD
are peJ:mitted to look the ......S...U.:
reconla of any olucleat.
~fo~~ce~ta=.:e~
The
of the alldal falder of
study.
:
a - t are not - t oalaldo the Ollice
2. No penon oball aeU or olfer for aala
~ ..... ~· esalli.t iD
any diaaertation, lhrioia, term paper •
the ~r or-=:.~
say, report or otber writteD

::=w:

-Y
coli-.

:.:u~=-=-tlon;~olf=report or~-~......::.&amp;
to aay . penon ........_. iD a uniYenity

--Ia

f.!:':::l::..'!u~,_,. ~

~~

.:=.u:m::

academy, acbool or·other ar~uca:
the rotudooat .. . . . . - - - (NtioDal IDatiluticm within the Slate . of
of lha atoiiloet'a ·- ) . "--ooooic
N-· York for aubmloalen to oudl ec1u:
8chioon may p.,. . -f81 l a f o e&amp;tioDal· IDatitutbl 1a falllllment of the
- ~...:..-.~ • ot.doat'a - requh-ta lor a ~ diploma,...,...
tillcate or ooune
Rudy.
./ A vlolatbl of- the provioioaa · of lhia
..:.=-~~-=-~
aectioa oball CODOtilute a C.. 8 MJay. atitutbl of Je.!uDiDr IDdkatiM lha ~!:_~lion
llectioD 21JI6)
011, ia lalonrl u • allater-iiloti5.10 _ . . . , . . .Law,
.
IDtblal -.rlaay. N~, lha,. lo"DD
A1cobol . , . . . _ .... aold iD .NOrtoo.
.... to ....... prior _..... fNii the
Hall by lha thilwnity FliOd Servico
olucleat. Req..ta fllllli • ~

....u-

·or

~a :J:'ed.t

'::.tF=:t

lha ~..l.,~ are _ . . _ by the New
.. York~ A1ai11i11 a._. t.w, ,the
ruloa of the 8 - ~r Alitbority, rmd
_.._. eotabllohi4 by lha N a - Couadi:_j(l'or IIIJIICill(: ra1eo - -

emblr Hanaoa

11.18

a.u. -

llodlaoa

~--=--

IV.r

Alalbrrrl ....,..

AD ............ ollha New Yod&lt; 8 -

Aioobol. . . . _ Ooeltal Law ... ruloa

~.,:=. ~:.,.~~P:.,.~l7u=:

c::!:r'!i"~~oou~~::

==-~~""':.;
=~=-w:=:~
~ olucleafa lo to loa ~ ·
Diac~Mun ... ~.._.,_
~ldoa~_.,.._.._,_

...._ 8tala,

or--'--

il:'Jr&gt;'loaP.41oa~~­

of:'dalil~~~~

~E~BER 19, 1974/ STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS I Page 2

,._
-

�diviooD .,· em-ciUmoDt and

ci.U.;

claiM ol

11117,

IV ~ HAI.L' RULES AND
D~
IIBIUIA~
Nortoo ~ Um-.ity UniOD of
the State Um-.ity of N- York at
Bdalo, aloo -called the UniOD or the

oihle lor all lndllc: Yialatioao -

.....U.....t; depeo(o) e&amp;med, if
on - - with aey_ear, JDOioloqde, or
date, ~r or field of ......,tration,
~-~-propellecl veblcle nciotered in
111111 b&lt;moro .-we~; ~ 111111 local
·~ ~ IIDd: looiepbaDe nambeza; wr2. A COl')' ol the - . . . . State Unlilceticm - of lllpatwe; aDd name and\'enil)' ot- N- York al Bdalo v~
- ..wol - t or JDUdlan. ·
Replatioao m u • t bo clmina
CAIDoonliDa ..._ of ~ iaforma- • cia. ,..;.tnlicm or " - ' the Olllco Of
t1aa, It oboalil bo noted that - t
StudoDt Account&lt; or .the Camp. Se-- m-tlla- .....,.._ u ouch haw DO
cur.tyPe'=. All otudeni. muot obtain
~~\Vt.,
-::':n~~ and .-!Bs a permit for any vehicle pubd -forma- ;. - t e d , it IIOIIIIaiJy will
oo campuo. P - o o of a· permit en-

='·

.!:!.,""ii.!?..~..!:,ldi~

:=..~.~ar:-u~te.:.':;;:!

=-=~=lure·

_ill:":t

be..-- ooly with writta autllori&amp;aticm f - the otudenL U web authori&amp;a-

=.:,rt~the..:Jot=.,~
or~
u

U a .oubpoeu
oenec1, the otudent " ' - aw»rd u i&gt;oi.,. -~
will bo notiled 111111 that oubpoena will
~ _ to tbo m.tituW...'o 1 err al

wn-

Sludmt clefermoat oorti6c&amp;IM will be
to the ~ Servioo Syothe
petmiollion Oltlie

~
D&amp;.ebun

o,.,..,....,_
14)

·

Other lndiuilbuJla

and
IDformaW... fumiobod to other individuat. 111111 orpnilatiolla will bo limited
to the i - lUted below unclar "Teee-

=pe~·:...u:rma~~~

ocript N1eaoo aiped by the otudenL
D~ in~ to -

Te~~

miuim;...,

rei-;.

merit li
lliDoo
~tieO - of callero are

-

cl.ilicidt to verify. At the preeeat time
the

~
only for otudento who

O!llY informalioD

111111 thlo

u pWD

lr."s:=:W~ry~Y

boinrr

tioted in

Student Dinc!O?'
Eech otuclent 11 given the opportunity
to dinoct that hio aclcl..o and telephone
number bo omitted from the Univerllity

.... one

equi-t,
a) Ground Flool'-induded
on thio
floor are tbe Creative Cr8tt Omter,
=~~tioD area, Rathokeller,
b) Main Floor--included on thio lloor
ue the lloobtore, the Dorothy M. H&amp;u
Lowip, operaticmo compleo (which indudeo the "Information, Communicatioo
aDd Loot aDd Found Center, Lobby Counter, and Aoaiotaot Director'• ollic:e) , Center ~Terrace, Cbockrooo:i, Con~""'J! Main~!f"'ee't.~re Room
c) Second Flool'-ioeluded on thio lloor
are the Student Gow!mmmt 01i-, 'Student Aclivitieo Hoom 220, Gallery 219
Norton Union ..Aclmlniotrali Olfit:a'
Sub-Board I, .Inc. Offic:a, TilliD an ci
Chari• Rooms, the Browoinrr Library/
Mallie Room, meetinp roemo aod student offices.
,
d) -'lbird Floor-included on this lloor are Univerllity Preoo, Creative Croft Center, Admlniotralive Offiooo, WBFO, the
'lbird Floor _Lounp, Student Activities
Room, all puhlicationo offices, worbhopo

!~'!'iro:.t .~ to ~--~~y if~~-~
~

ww

led ~-..

"'f."special Parmito. Student. who . opecial perldnc conoiclaraticm for. boalth
- . muot apply for opecial permio- Ilion from the Sectuity Office, 196 Winopeor .._..,.....,_ Cerli&amp;CaW... ol dioohility

m';,\:;':\d~"'{:'Yoo.;~~~e parldnc

·

the omDJI!I8 io CODIIidared to bo a
privil., rrraniod by the Univerllity. The

OD

=..,..~

ia a 7~tba.L,~
IIUkiDa . _ ~ ;. a-ptinrr 1o 1&lt;aap
Up witli the boavy deaianda of a rrrowins
oludent and 18culty populaW&gt;JI u efllciently at fiDencoo· aDd 1arul Pl'rmiL In

=...:. :!:o~~to"\'!~~

llllr reculationt reuouahle aDd to enforce
them otrictly. Each otudent it ezpected

:...'";:! :'~~~an,: t!vola:!,

a:

lind a lepl parldnc place. Lmorenoe
of regulation~ ia not considered an excuoe lor violaW&gt;D.
6. Parldnc io prohibited at all times

~:.tin~' !:,~.:'r~~

dent oftices.
·
Amplification equipment - all radios
tape .~rders. J"!'COrd players, bull horns:
televwoDB, public addreos oystemo, aDd
their accompanying speakers.
Posters--all paper, cardboard, or oilcloth announcement..

~"i!:~ ·:::~. ~:."~.!

th~UIIh~ays or the "parking areas. The
Uruvenuty may tow away vehicles itlerrally parked and aaaeos a charge.
7. Parldnc Fioes and Peualties. City
or
parkingcampus.
ticketo On
are the
issued
on
theBuff'!io
Mam Street
Ridge

11D~ephone
f!!rectoo·•-rryO.ff;..cloow-o ._,
~
__
of 1M lnotitution
Lea and Amherot Cempuaeo, Town or
The ~
- - rruidelm. are a lie~rot tickela are iooued. Anyone wishable·i:o
· any reque.t for a c ! C
1D&amp; to appeal a ticket mu.t first contact
information
t otudento or fom&gt;er
Campuo'llecurity. U the ticket it not
otudento received by any member of the
.-:inded -by Security, and is not then
[acuity, adminiotrotion, or clerical atalf.
paid by the recipient he muot await a
The guidelineo are intended to protect ' tra"'''!L"'_?DiorfromJ
_udicial!he appyrowphiriachte will·~mhi•eaia r:
the indi~·~ rirrht _to privacy · and
~
bnch
the ocmlldantiolity of· bit acadeDUc rect!&gt;• caae aDd make the proper adjudica- ,
~~~.?"of r:P"_~Y-~ed&amp;811eSSedvehicleor.'or the
ordo thJ'OUibout the Uniwrllity,
All Univenity peroonnel ohould he
---...
illet;...., .-.~
alert to refer promptly to the Oftioe of
8. Liability. Tbe University accepts no
A~ons and Recorda, qr . other ap.
liability for lou or damage to a motor

~r;&amp;r:.~~; ~u:-:r::aa~:~

6.00 Norton Hall Bullclln1 Hours
1. Norton Hall building houro are to
be posted in the foyers. Announcements
are aloo to be maile prior to closing.
Any person found in the Union after

~h:u~~r:fJeiJ ~ ~.:ti~:~~

0

Section and any other relevant Rules
and Ordinances of the University or of
state, federal or local agencies.
Norton
Council

The

may grant

~eAb!~n~.h~

~rlr~ns~~o~a~~~e~

that ol6c:e ,typically provides_ Faculty
memben and the various University offioea lhould reatriet .their reepoues to
acknowledginrr ~hen apro!lriate, the .re-

A motor_vehicle ohall he deemed to he
abandoned if •Jeft for more than seven
· daya in one spot. The vehicle shall be
~- or in a~rclanoe with the law.

in'
Jf~u.~~~~:~:nz..:::~nfrector of Norton Union may grant writ-

;;',.':!t-

~~ty ror_ tJ.e coot of removal , • tor-

3. Any ·grOup wi.ahing to use the Union
outside normal build.ing hours may be
assessed a charge for the services or

~U~~tf~r~:
1$l'ty~ !:J.Ii~;:

e.c.• faculty advioer, major profeooor etc.
· Si..noe the iDaterialln a atudent'a Pboemoot llle (ohould """ exiot) -hat been

:r::~~i;=:r; ~~

lea.ed to ~yone fo.r thia purpoee. When!Wftr there -~~ need for the inatitution to

·=.!t
~~ o~~J, ~:
ploymeot, it tohould be Cc:ally . .,_

c::r.
':.,
W~
~

· &lt;lD -

ouch •

'=.,~ A miooiono and

111/0TiftGtu&gt;n
there may bo coudiliono
uomet liDaocial obliptiono, vio-

latioao ol DOD--academic replatioDS etc.
unclar which the UniveNlty will 'with:
hol!l C..SO ~rto, tranocripto, oortili~= or o
r iblormatiou abciU.t . a

5.40 - · Pcoll I c.rd
·
A otudent idoalillcaW... card (LD
Card) ia ~ for each otudent ai
~":ttearly in the fall - t e r

!:t

~'to.~~ "!'.~Zf"~~

catic.a • • Sta&amp;e Uaiveni~ of New York
at Balralo otudent 111111 .. tii!IO the - r
~ ~l~LD..__UPIIII ~pe~~
· - ..,...
Can! wUI• pe.-"'"
~ to bailie athl8tie eveoto and
-to. J.illrlicipation in
off~ = t ~to.~-~

=Cattural

!':w, ~-=r:S.!ilf· boc~

......,. ...,. IDiMcl- to the Olllco ol

:::.fU~nin~~:.ts or faculty at

~ea~~,t~~uo'&amp;::erli~~tell!!toa~~

5.1i0 Chartae of Addials
Each student is required to keep Admiollions and Recorda informed or his

N~:WWs~Fkf~dfoelPe~~;l· shan ~

allowed a minimum staff for the operation or the station and ita programs 811
a standing exception. This exemption
does not ~nclude guests or l'amily or
personnel.
·

::ti~:N~~~ :'~chao~=;

ia in and of itlell a · violation triable

bef~~ the Student-Wide Judiciary. In

:::.~n~~':'~e"!'~ j~~~~

6.05

broadcast equipment in the WBFO otudio, the Amateur Radio Society &amp;Dd .the

~ot:~r=~!t...,"":

thereof is mailed to a otudeot at the addreoo fUmiahed to Admiaiono and Re-

cordo.
5.70

.

Envlronmentol Hulth ariil s.tety

_

Health related aspecto or the environ-

n:J't and mattera of penonal and gen-

::....t":fel..~":!~:"~K:r~:

ty. Perooru&gt;el or the department provide
c:onoultob"Ye and direct oerviooo to stucleo~.- to iDoure all activities

Tnr:n
.. orp=~~':.f!~':':ft
of
or error or omission.

~:W&lt;:-3.!H~.::t~~ ~

written approval of the Norton Houae
Council and all appropriote apllcieo.
2. Amplification ~y not be ueecl on
·. any of the steps of Norton Hall or directed out -any windowa.

6.10 Care and Uoa of F.ocll1. Intentional misuse, vaodaliam, or

destruction or equipment or fac:ilitieo of

-11:' ~:::::,~tri~ t\':~o"::!..""f.:
Council Any p - - by said Couoei1
~ n:~~~~de action taken by io2. No equipment o any nature Or other

=

~(lf!

Department pencmoel aloo ourvey ongoioc activitieo. When, neoeoaary, directivee llftd recommendation~ are iuued for
~eo _which may include elimination,
- oubotitutiOD or alteration .of portiona or
:'ta!a=ty:or dellnite OOI&amp;IWm of a

.,~:-! :r..,o~~

~=::..:\J-~~s:
Buililinrr

the Builclinc or taken from the

2h~ ~o=H'!tlr the~

:,r .::-::l:r",:_

3. Animals are not permitted in Nonoo

. ~ 8t aey lime, except Seeinrr-eye clop.

=tinr

Statea.:r~ty

:f: .....

&amp;.

._, a-

£' v;_w.~
............
:

~

Eadi

~t ::t= :::i .:::::1:..1"...:.~::.~ -:c
:Z.:..~:::::";"n~

...=::-~

tbMi are - N l loCaU...
..._L 1IP and ..,_,......,..,. ldooitllocl for
.....,t~!::d~)
·~=::~
~ ~
.,.._
. _ Ollee
~dle'OIIIIIde-be
•
at
llle 8tiaoadty Ollce « at
Olleo ol
BtadoM ~EliCh ....... oball be

-t~~~~~-==

Dlltionwide, and

No oball inlaitioaally ref1110 to
- ot.erve boalth and ~ JIIOcadareo and
nculatioao
-lillllied
ol or propartyfor
oo·the
!hiprotection
.....__

AcMooud-.laDooOD-zaolent ·

~tal boalth 111111 aafaty are available to all .......... frwD ....o.s--t

~~~l~r.'~Safety,204

Page_3 I STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS I SEPTEMBER 19, 1974

Am~lfleallon

N:rto~fl!ucaP~~~=t•;::::t !d

uae the address listed in Admissions aod
for the eervioo of proooos. Ser-

J!ecordo

_-..hly, opec;ial activitiea, academic proStadoDt Allain.. Studaito ........t ol
~ extro-curricular activitiea, houo::::=..~ =t~~e~W"-111inrr·
food aemoo, traftie reculalicmo, be
Studait Judidary and~ with
~ '"!'- -ty. m-:t control;' acllle •JIIII&lt;II!r!ate of the
=~~lion and emerrrency prac-·
- - --;;.,.;;:.,t Rulolo and a..ut&amp;tiono. LD . Ruleo 111111 ~ are not .........,.
liliould. bo e&gt;arded at a11· ~ (fD;-' ' in _a llinlle document;- but, ~
ol ..... a otudait "'-lee abtaiD a ' polideo 111111 ...-ureo adop~ by the
aud lfta AV OaaaallllleaU... CanEn~bil Health 111111 !Jafety"Com18, J'eoter Ball, tim. are
mltteo; rules ol the SUNYAB E:ncutioe ...... • llle daor- A 12.00 cbup u
Coomeil; rules promulpted by SUNY·
~ ~
la- .ol feclerol, llate 111111 ..,_.........tai

•

House

~~~~~ri~e::ira~~ ~~:;

such permission.
2. The Night Manager on duty may·

6.16

'

lawo 111111 onlinlmoeo
will bo otrictly eo-

rrambliDrr

Drun .

Il!epl·-cfrup oball Dot bo P&lt;*e.ed or
U't,.
m Nortoo Hall .(See aloo Section
6.20 ~ "a-wed that no authorilatiou. will
bo rriWJo lie! -priirate ' COIIIJMrcial - r prioeo to operate on State u~

~-=ty~u!: ~:!
='.;in":,"C...:-=to~~
RI'P'l. tu ~-Sea­
the UoiwSty." (~ ~~

aDd cu1tunl -to. 'l1bio -mtiOD oball

=.~=:

olulioo ai ......sod~ 28, 1.978)

~- A"::.,.-., 11117 .-t. J!lljdaot, or

......... .._..tbJr

a--~

..a.ted poup or ilodloldaal oloaB . _ on the interior or - - . , - .

'

, r

�...

1.55 ...... - . - . AlcolloRc - ·
1. ~!:.!::"'oftwthe N- York
State Alcobolle - - Control ~
ud ruJeo or the State Uquor Authority
mUIJ!l he -.-~ ud adbenod lo.
.
e.~.: a) Minoro under the ap of 18

t.•:~ ~i'!":!.,~=~
liceDied premiML

orb~~'lfce~~~i';!~;~

hibited.
c) All entertainen performinl! on the
lice...,.;. premises must be 18 yeano of
~-) Alcoholic beverages sball not be
•'eonswned on the licensed premilles later
'than% hour after the start of prohibited
boun (3: 00 a.m.).
. 2. No alcoholic beYeraps may be
broqbt into areas where U is being sold

:h.:ct~~J:ealFS~~F!:fS:::U:i

the s .U.N .Y . at Buffalo are permitted in

Norton Hall.
3. Beer and wine will be sold in the

e~~~!ld~teds!"~ specified

.

lion ·or Nicbt Muapr on !laW .iiom.._,·.
tUiaa immidiate ..tio1r for IIHi p'-rC
fttion of the' ~th eel eafety ·of the

._.. or Norton H8ll.
V

·

OFF1C£ OF STUDENT ACCOUNTS

· ·7 ·~

~ Tuition and F -

l!Y
:i=e~~ul;Lt!~~
~;
Payment is due

the dMe indicMed

VI.

money order pa/.&amp;ble to the State. Uni0

~=
~!.,Na~.,::r ~='~ c!'u~~
Payments forwarded by mail ohould be ·

8.~ro:.,..,!;::' ~ ~ac:~umiture,

·:;p:;=

=

~~ JiUb' .
..,:.,._,_
. ro. the ........ "' tlie lluia ~~

• A otudent called to adiw duty in-any branch of military eervicea may ......i...

r·-~ --~

.orden lo -the Office or Student .Accov.to,
Hay,. A. ' In the-~ the iludent'liaa .

~~ .:~ .=....~~

..._

- ...

~#-rU~:,•:!:'t;~";;,
miaa

.w

be required

or the
or an

,_r.

e.ct:..tt:: "No.- UDion

~-

' . !:!:'...•~
...... -

........... in- Lt~

}l:t= -

.,_ Ollb.

...a- be

1111111 by 11DY

~

6.10 ..... ..,. ,.,.,._.
'L on. .NDdlla
OoilmciJ and/or
U. ~ f1l Nodaa Ualaa - . the
.........,.
-el ~-- tallin&amp;
]aNcNoobaBaDID~ ......&amp;7.
.
1111111 ...-."'the
~-llllllloat'- f1l fibe

a-

.

. .~
::r

~

..

u....,..

"'-=-~

Noroi '!'edt - amr.Jo

._..,.
t..• ~a-.
..,_ tl!e
.'6da
to ...

Ja-

'brtli

""I

diviiloao

'Nnib

·-·· ~tllllt...........
-~~!:li.:
nt.cmthla. ·, •

«We-..

-earity, the

-

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

an

in

and the event is registered with th~
Inter - Residence CoWlcil's Activities

~~v~~ :be Mai;1tr!~ A;!~~~ .

~nclJ ' )laii '.: ': . n.~ · ~

of alcoholic beverages will be permitted
~t.· indiviau8J't- robms "m· tbB televiSion
'Noin~aod~ih'' ttte : JcitdheJ£t. -&lt;!OtuAimPtKfD,

b~~~,:ilo~lbllilltlo-....p

L

· SchO.iuwpt Hall ·- 'The co~
·· .ic&gt;q
of alcoholic' bomiraps will • be
.in individual roome end in
tower
area. C!&gt;_,.,Piion will -not be permi!lted
in the main lounge esoept .on apeci.al oc-

:""~ed

for

!t =~ ~ ~ ~

aoo..,.,.,.

=

H--

::!h~~!::!

~~~do=.,~:

~r

__

available throuch the R.idelit A&lt;hlaor
the .-rinc
Tbe boot

r.ideaoe hall.
.
Iloilo ~.. ud --reoicleDce
......... who wlab lo 'lrioit • noldat l&gt;f
tbe baDo mab .....,_.. for
that to at the ..rn
lo the ball. and they be

u-

=.rlad~~U:- ... ~
~.:=:t....
=-andBaD

~---~

building)

ilnotviJqr the -

of alcobol 111 . anv f1l the Go.emoro
RaoidoDoo Hallo • &lt;aclao!~Da priftte
- a n d iDdividaaJ aaitll .........) - t
.~ l!Y !be IDtar.:.R•~I.deDce

J~/licotl Cor11P1ez- Raoidoatial

Azelia -

'1'tle ~ o1 a1co1ao1ic

=r.~be;,'=tted in IDdmoluill

.ud in .liei.i~.t:'; .l:':;
DDt beliDOoNd iD . . M.ain ftobr~

or i!l'lbe-.-, a n ; . - a

8JI!Id·

t_~~the ~U:

Intar-~ ~the BoaoiDc

08Ice.

be~=~~;"~=
niclit f'- ol NOideala be in
_ . . . , of a aa.t Pa., whleb 1o
or
atao~eat.
oea.
=-..-.::r-tbeir"""'=--:1!"
fb!

~ -~

Any

the'!,.... , !JIJ
both ~ Security ~ the H...U. ·
~"".;....ny~~"%,_~ &lt;
Their lundion is~ _ , . . the hall ·!"'·
ud to ~ ~ ~laOJI'! -~1
:Ot;:o"Fo~od.,ft!id ~ 8.00
and aOI!. ~ ~SeC!Jrity Aide 1o a
U~ty OlficiaL
8.30 . Of. llaoldant - Tbe _ . . , . is

--~per

=-ao!=';-d:!.iso.'!,Z.~
•

CounciL

entry is a W&gt;IatiOn alibis rrectian.'

·'
'nie Be-

eo:,:ue

..

~»='c.:'!:-,~· 0:.!.1-::::r \ir;

!:,k~~cte;,to J:,.~~=-~
8ecwi
_u::,.,:. Any
~
Procnm· -

Tbe

upstairs 1""-. in the ~- (if
~ ~~built) .
will -

Cam
SecuritY Olllco
Aid.:"'m......ing the

Securitr, Aide

by the Main Street

R ..uunu HoU. -

~~ i!- ~~~~ ~

Oludeiito
t';i/'d; :C:r ~~!:

~~

-~!Mi.\~C~'l~...M~In!ot
· ""'-

~lh~O"imdl' ·an;,:~ ··

- . tion with the Houeing Olllco ~
appropriate Area CounciL ~ts
are made .. that reaii!eDce hall

bem:::
. .'

u~ . · . e.
1o
'.!!!!!tP.oraddtofta,_.t_ti!M.
Ollloia1 ~Dton.tiom -...u... bi1tioD

tng from vtolation of such ozdinances
rules, regulations or standards or bees~
of the negligence of the student

.s:.nm-:.n
8~ =:: ::..::::--andHa:...

r»/

a.! .U Uni·

~or a ny ~nse! 1o8s or ~aa.ma,ge rNult-

.. :····-="·

.

'·Clr

~~diU!~~~~U: ~: u~~J:~

(basement anack bar), and in the East
televi&amp;ion lounge. Consumption will not
~ allo~ed in the ~ownstairs lounges,
e.K:~pt 1n the "Preceding case. ·Alcoholic
beverages will be permitted in "the Goodyear s~~~~. Conference Room only if
the pro~ use ~ ao in~ when

or, used..in.tbet.Jmveraity~HaJla.

'

--:r===~

~e consum~n of
alcoholic beverages will be penmtted in

~~·~=J!i~ v
No weapo are
' tted · the
·
dence halls. (See
a90) tesl•
8.20 Ga bli
.a'ell~~~(.;~ ~~mn'' a'h.e
96
" )·.....
. ·.
mce halla. oee IU80 ~~

to Nlioter for the followiJur · - . ,
DOr will lie he' ealitlad lo ....olwi a """" or - ~ or hla aedita IIDiil
hio IDcleNM._ lo MUied: Tbe UDi.wraity dooa ad • a oo11eC1iaa ai!D9
for'IOIIIIIamdal
or 'indi· ·
'ridalo.
,
· oaloide -

':'"

bunges.
Good_year HaU -

a.~ =tl'!.c@ ~ ·u::; i&lt;l~ ¥~rk

...=

loljle

fa;:;!,

State Multiple Dwe!ling(Laws, OQOking
is not ·penmtted in aleePJ.DC ·rooma.
'
8.10 . -!~JtuJd!J tt. ··!t,tJ,;.t r.1 "1 ,_..,_,j.
, . meliiJ " afup• ~ilialF~!li1fl ~

z:~=.=:.:-:u::

7.70 . . . . _
No atadeat Ia elidlll to ......., a
- coftilicala v£

:a~~hed~:r al:~li~i=~

and approved by the University Alcohol
RCi::e~ffaU~ The oonsumption of
1 h r beve
·n be
· ted ·
indivi'a~~ roo~inwtfloor
~
the basement televisiOn room. It will not
be permitted in the main floor public

!i.':u~ofh~f,'tbe~ut':.,~~,..S=

=

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

:.:=d~ Mc.:\,~~ew'i\!::1

the Inter-Residence Council, which supervises same.
Students in the residence area are expected. to abide by and observe the ordinances, rules,· regulations and stand:Srds~y th~ ~~~rsi?'ro:wu!:eef~ectfu::.
They will~ also comply with the terms
and conditions of occupancy and use of
the facilities as stated here, printed in
the University Housing Office Brochure
and as enumerated in the list attached
to all housing contract cards, and as

:fw~"t'::.u-ri:"~rk..:U

tlon or the UD~ftzmy.
7 10
'
Uapeld ~--.

restrictions on the oonsumption of alcoholic beveragee in the dorms." The! reg-

~u;.c!o~re~~ i:~'::f&amp;e -~~

~~~and/s::
~~7~~
~be~.. _-'BaD.
....,
reru:l':h

-- ~~*:n:=-=~be

dents will be referred to the appropriate

reserved

::....tef.:':'p:...,~ u:~-~ndn~
a proportionate

students who do not wish lo participate
are not viola.ted All viaiton and boeta
under the policrare suJ?ject lo all previously mentioned University · Houeing
Rules and Regillationa. (especially- Sec.
tion 8.80)
8.45 Ak:oholk:. ........
•
·All !ederil!, alate, .and local laws gov00
eonungf
a!.cohothelic ~~ .andwill
be"".umptieffioq
111
~----eot
at all times. " In o,rder to beat Mn'O the
interests of the !form students. the Inter-

Ci~~~c;,1~Pace in the residence halls
is
fof the sole use of occupants
of the building. The forms and pro-

u. "'

tluaoJii.

!jf:J:
m!i:':: :!
sure that the rights or thoee individnal

furnishings, furniture, or television sets
may be moved within or taken from
the building, unlese special written per~~~nH=~n granted by the DirecAnimals are not permi!lted in the
buildings at any time,' ezcept twapecified
in the section entitled !'Pets" below.
Registered occupants o( each room
are f"lllS.Dcially responsib1e fof keep ins
their room and its contents in gocxt
order and free from damaa'e both by
themselves and by others. Room damages will be assesse&lt;1 on actual labor plus
material costa.
Any student found damaging Univer-

grri!ro~1'tu":f~n~ A:o~ts~N':!s~~

s~J:~'fias app~~:rScb~~ars~i=

All

~::ru=. ":n.jPS.."'Wceb~
dent or student Alfaino atatea that the
~...:! ~~ ';!""

th~u::r!~.:h~f ~=e~~~= ~

r.'::!ntto

s~r ~~n~at~b~uc

8 .40 Vlaltatlon
.
The · current IRC policy ooncernins

equipment, materials, and the building
are re~uired at all times.

addn!!llleel ·to the State Uniwraity of
New York at Buffalo, Office of Student
Accounts, Hayes A. 3435 Main Street.
Buffalo, New York. 14214. The student
~~:t.sl;to~e be
~1e~~~ti:!J
··
·
red
d
:! 1 ~0 ~r:tillr of ad'd~gp:rt: ~~~
quent to registration must be made on
the date of the change of cou:cse. Addi·
tiona! fees may be assessed for late
late pa:Yment, and· change

7.10 YortCState llepnts and/or
4 Alcoholic beveraps will be serwd /
Tuition Asslstanca .....,..ms and
in· tbe Tiffin Room during hours of se~
S-lh)lverslty Scholarships
ice and for catered event:B in Food ServIf a student has a Poyter of Attorney
ice' designated areas.
.
on fLle at the. Office. of Student Aoco~'b
6. Alcoholic bevelage. will not be ala_nd has receiVed his , Regents Exammalowed in any room other than those
~o.n ,!lnd Scholarship CenUlr Award Cardesignated in Paragrepbs S·and 4 of ·the
tif1cate on or before the date . (us~
building u:cept by special permi.sllion of
about .2 weeks. afte~ c~ be~) mdithe Norton House Council and where
cated p1 the fn:urnc~ i!UOf!D.Btion sheet
catered by Fqod Service under the folthat accompa~ues hts mvotce, he may
lowing _conditions:
d~uct the a?Justed award amount f!Om
a) Method of aervice and what is to
his ouf':standing ~ance. .I f he recetved
be seJWd is specified.
a rnB;XJ-DlUtn Tui~on_ ~tance ~ward
b) Number at event is not too large
and filed an application m the Offtce of
for adequate control.
Student Accounts, he may deduct the
c) Age of all individuals in attendance
State. University S cholarship. Note.: The
shall be eighteen years or over: except at
combmed New York State Schola~~P
special evenb where arrangements have
may not exceed the am~mnt of tuition
been made for additional Food Service
charged, except for Child of Veteran
supervision, .to inspre compliance with
~~rou I . Sc.hol hi
d Loa
1
beverages mWJt also
· If a
be served.
and Loans p&amp;Jd t~rough the Uruvers1ty,
he may defer paymg the amount (usuale) The groups must show well organized plans for the event and that they
1~ one-half of ~he annual a~ard) !rom
can control that only invitees or licensees
hJS ~barges lJ!ltil the chec~ IS received.
will be admitted.
~e LS responsible for applymg the check
m paym,e nt of outstanding _charges. .
6. Alcoholic beverages purchased in the
Rathskeller Tiffin Room and rooms for
7.30 Tolt!on and Fees Covered by Wa•v·
catered eve~ta. may not be taken out of
~ Grants or Govemmentlil Aaent~~bin~but must be consumed only
U a student files an approved notiticaWJ?. Alcoholic-=-rages may not be. sold
tion at the Office of Student Accounts
for the purpose of fund raising
by the announced date, (I) an approved
8. Credit sales of al;;.molic ·beverages
notification, (2) .a n official notice of their
are prohibited by the ABC law of the
State Scholarship and (3) a power of
terms of the FSA Food Service License. _.. f~mUf~ir~:?a:=: d~'!!ew~~~d:
6.60 ~
not cover fees.) Note: Credits for anticipated scbolanohips, loaps, gran!B, etc.,
1. No """"' !." Norion Hall m_ay be
deco~ted or altered permanentlr or ~will _not appear on the mvoice. Deduct
J)Orarily, etructurall.y or otherwue, w1ththe amoW\13 as indicated abQve
out first ~ ,P"!lted penniasion bl( the
7.40 stUdent F ·
· ·
Norton Ho.- CoUncil and/or the DlrecTbe College Fee is a state .........,.
tor of No~n Union or hja designee.
mandatory fee. The Student Activity
Such pe~on must be granted at 1~
Fee is a student assessed mandatory fee.
21 ~ 111 adftnce of any"""-~
7.!50 TuitiOn and Credit RefUnds
When a student registe~ it is sJ!ecific·
mal. On!~ tape may be uoed to
arm decoraliolll lo wall surfaces.
ally undentod that 'he will pay 111 full
a Orpnisations muat fumiab their
for. all c~· . '!""u:coed at l'Oj[istratlon.
own *"'&gt;P!iee, and muat ,_,.., decorsFailure or inability to attend elMo &lt;~?""
tiono within 24 houno of the event, or at
not change the payment due or ~Iitle
taro houn Wore the nezt .-.._.
the student ~ a refund. Studenla ~ho
of the room. wbicbever is ..Oner.
officililly_ change f'!"" full; timo
U the orpniation fai1o in their clean·
to part-time, or on a part-time besia reieoponoihility, -~ will be- cbluaed ;:::
duce their l"'bedule '?r .directl~ notifying
the a.t of ba\&gt;inil the job done t;y Norton .
~ DirectOr of Admillsions ~ ~rds.
abdt
will be cbluaed on the following besis:
4.
provisiona inciDclec! in ~
W&lt;ek
Tuition .
F••
6.10 aDil 6.liO abail be COJIOiclenod part of
lBt week
0%
0%
thlil Section.
2nd week
0%
0%
6.711
the ..........
3rd week
0% 0%
1. -1'be Doi!'Otby M . llua Lounp is
4th week
70%
1~
doolaiiiCad poiljije JoanP ana be-..
6th week
100%
l"'!'Jb
the Doa.. Of 7·'00 LID. and 2•80 p.m.
A student who is entitled 1o a refund
~
Friday. No~ -.i
has one year. from the date of the &lt;M!r~thet.%,"111ora:~ p.m.
~to requeet the refund. or it io

UNIVERSITY HOUSING OFFICE
RULES AND REGULATIONS

" 1

.

.

-

UO FIN Al8rm
FIN alama ud ru.fichliq equip.
ue for prolllctioD ID the ieoldilaCe
ballo. Any ~ wltli or ....._ of

~ ~s!uehihi~

::'_::

·. of~w~o~a~
or the~ "'thi-Btate.
N- York. ud will be c1eait wi111
4bneandor.
.
.... c:an-.w "'*-

•

a-

.

ue· b ......,_ oiliodoort ieoi,•
doala '!1117. No IICDdiDt Ia to . _.--..,~
pannit IWi - t o be

1111111.""'- -

fl!!lldal~wba-.

uo

MltiaDII ...............

'

All~~~·-aDY

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

alild
11a1r •llimiiD
to u..- raJ&amp; ~~~~ CIIIIIDIY r atudoet~m u~ haaOwilh iw»ri oal J ........,.. Ia a ..,._ • inllaollltlao.
tiaD "' . . ....._ .
tiGio . . . _ . . ~ . ......... .
. . .. flllloi
deac!.lla!!t.-aaiioali the Uoilwlo!V a-.
BY ~ f1l the SWa UaiNnlty
U.. ~ ...U.W. foam tlliot ....
o(. N- York .t BallaiD, peta ~ - · 1D the
f1l ~ BaD.
•

..__..t

. SEPTEMBER 19, 1W4· I STUDENT RUL-ES AND REGUlATIONS I Page 4 •

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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1

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'~r~·matieally

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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO •
VOL. 6, NO. 2 SEPTEMBER 12, 1974 •

...

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under-:represented' on juries
By

P~trici~

" Under ·New York State Judiciary Law,

Ward Biederman

(EDITORS' NOTt: This'is the first in t~~ series
of ;utid~ rel~ted to AHic.a ;Jnd its aftermath
that will .•ppear in the Reporter during the

comins monl~s.)

...

_

In the co urse of preparing a legal

color, religion, sex or national origin,' "
ex plained Ms. Schweber-K6"ren .
" However, in this State a person can be
excused from jury duty for several
reasons,

including

practicing

certain

defense fOr the Attica. Brothers, supporters of the 61 indicted inmates
predictably scrutinized the jury system in
Erie County, where the accused are to
stand tcial.
The Constitution provides for trial by a

professions, and also simply because she
is a wQman. At first, We hypothesized

jury "of peers." In the co urse of the years
this has been interpreted to mean a jury

missioner's Office, we found that thft
was not the reason for the significant

chosen fr_o m a pool representing a cross-

under-representation of women. It turned out that there were very few women
on juries because the Jury Com-

section of the community.

Was Erie County's pool representative?
wondered the Attica Brothers legal
Defense (A BLDI .
H not, ABLD reasoned, the legitimacy
of the County jury system could be legallY challenge _d . Evidence of non representativeness would help support
the ABLD 's conte ntion that the Brothers
could not receive fair trials in Erie Coun-

ty.
In an inte nsive study of the local jury
system, the ABLD found that women ,

blacks and young people do not appear
on juries in proportion to their numbers

in the general population.
The under-representation of women

was particularly dramatic. In fact, ABLO's
documentation of a pattern of discrimination against women in jury selection resulted · in a recent judicial ruling

that the County jury pool as constituted
prior to January 1, 1974, was invalid. With
the aid of a computer, the jury pool for
the County is now beii'lg reconstituted.
Women make up 53 per. ceni of the
Population of Erie County. HOW"ever, less

•·D

no individual or class may be excluded
from jury service on account of ' race,

than 17 per cent of the County's jurors
were women. As U/8 graduate student
Claudin~ Schweber-Koren (educational
administration), lilt Larkin and other
feminists who panidpated in the ABLD's
Fair Jury Project discovered, this disparity
did not result solely from reluctance on
the · part of women to serve, as County
officials and others originally claimed.

that women were under-represented in

the jury pool because they were taking
thei r women 's exemption . But aher six
months' research in the Jury Com-

missioner's Office was deliberately .not
choosing them."
New York Women hduded· unlil1937
Historically, a woman's right to sit on a
jury came many tumultuous years after
-..women's suffrage. New York women
were excluded from jury duty untll 1937.
- Until the n male legislators successfully
raised every conceivable argument
against women's participation from the
now familiar cry that additional
bathrooms would have to be installed in
court houses to the popular argument
that women were too delicate and/ or
stupid to deal with the complex,
sometimes sordid testimony presented
to members of a juiy.
The fact that the law excluded women
from juries and the jury pool until 1937
was particularly significant, Ms.
Schweber-Koren found, because Erie
(:ounty had, until this year, what
amounted .to a..peunanent pQ!&gt;I, . • ~ _
ln· Erfe""Countf"ihenames ofpros~­
tive jurors are chosen· by the Jury Commissioner from a large revolving drum
containing names culled, ostensibly at
random, from voter registration lists. In
January this jury pool bulged with _some
111,000 names .selected between 1922
and 1972. At least one name in the "drum
had been added in 1915.
(turn

ro

~ge

1. col. 1J

Conyers says 'tW~-party trap~·_Jrustrates real reform
Michigan Congressman John Conyers
is""tired."
After ten years in Congress, he's "at
the end of the line trying to work for
reform within the Democratic Party.
" But don't writ~ a h~adline saying I'm
leaving to stan a sixth pany," he admonished the members of the press· in
his Fillmore Roome audience 'Monday
night "I don't kn~w where to go. That's
what ~·m asking people to stan th•nktng
about tonigllt.
·
"We&lt;tre"trapped in a two-pany liberal
reform _system which is becoming. increasingly frustrating to those who seek
real change," Conyers said. "Few people
want to admit to its problems and
nobedy has any solutions for dea)ing
with them .... It's the American Dilem--

ma"

Conyers is tired, t~, of being
"traumatized, shocked and · disappointed"..,_ ~"Nixon Scandals," the
aniiO!'nced toptc of the evening which
he touched only peripherally. An un·
relentins antasonist of Richard Nixon's
durlrtB the House Judiciary Committee
impeachment hearings and one whose
''honeymoon'' with th~ Ford Admlnlstlatlon was possibly the shortest in
Washlnston, he __ ~
NixOI}'s
weekerlil "absolutiOn" with a shrug of
reslsned exhausdon• ."Martha Mitchell
saicfJheoi was a deal but I didn't believe
iL I do now."
_......--..
$llltlealt Are ....._,
11retl of the~ WHry of the oc:andals, Conyers ' is .tso "~ antistudenL" Studeflls are "the bial!lt putons In our ICidety, next to pcilftidans,"

o-

;.m

the Detroit Dem&lt;ic:rat charpd ... tired
of the campus i&gt;rosresstves. liberals and

socialists who Chari~!! their tunes when
-they Bet jobs ancf. ha\oe ~ · It's
'popufar' to be progressive while ln.
$Chool," but alter sraclu"!k&gt;n, "todav's
radical" sets a habCut. aoes Into debt,
starts complllniiiJ about ~xes and
Welfare, becomes ~ble from
now sajlfll. "''b, -don't
PiOSeCUte Nixon, the poor man's suf·
lered enough." As If to Illustrate this
· position, Conyers later In the ellenihfl dlsm'-&lt;1 as "bullshlt" tlie rantlngs of a

"- • are

gro~p of N•tlonal Labo(Party spokespersons who anempted to filibuster during
the question and answer period. Fie sai.d
he Intended to 1p1ore their further .
tirades , (somelhi"' frenzied about a
national plebiscite against "The Capitalist
Rockefeller," the Club of Rome, thte
International Depression, and "gettirtB
screwed") and watched with some
satisfaction as SA iJ)eakers' Bureau
representatives escorted them out. .
When he first came to Congress, ·.
Conyers said, he had the Idea that hecould Bfl . all the Demoaatlc liberals

together and begin to . chip ·away,
t'hrough Jejpslatlon, at the problems ailing the American society- He an
"issll~ junkie" with a pcescrlpdon for
everythil)&amp;: a way to enchllsatinktat.
to provide full employment ..xi equal
housing. to comrol bla business, to end
the war ln Vletnam.
'
He's learned, however, that all that is
"immaterial beCause the two-party _!rap
makes ·sure reform can't work-" The
Republicans are dedicated to suaranteeing that nOthing happens; Democrins
.

(tum lo IMP 4, -col. 1)

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Women under-represented on jurie5- -,
• • tlmm t»lf'! 1. col. 41

"The pool," the gradWite SluMnl ex- ·
plaine&lt;!, "wl5 continu~Uy_ added to from
the voter "'Sistr~tion lists, but luld never
been staned anew."
~
Such a syllem serVe. to perpetuate
past practices, including discriminatory
ones. Criteria for eligibility have thanged
over the years, she noted, but until the
pool was ruled invalid, it Mill contained
names chosen under rules no longer
oper,Jtive, when, for example, a person

who did not own at least $250 worth of
real property was not eligible. At various
times in the past, blacks, students, Poles
and Italians have also been the victims of
unbffidal but discriminatory practices in
the selection of jurors. These past injustices continued to be reflected in the
pool.
last fall, with the aid of a court order,
some 50 volunteers in the ABLD's Fair
Jury Project began an on-site study of the
j11ry selectjpn process.
Although the . volunteers'· concerns
were not primarily feminist, in the course

of their study they uncovered systematic
exclusion of women in t~ jury selection

process:
The staff of the Jury Commissioner's
Office chooSes names for possible addition to the jury pool from voter registration books called "blue books." By law,
the names must be chosen at random . . .
·one day i volunteer happen~ to glance
through a "blue book" and noticed that
more men's n1mes than women's were
underlined, indicating that a question·
naire determining eligibility to serve had
been sent to the individual.
WUI's 'blldoon'l
"This freaked us out," recalled the student. "It had never occurred to anyone,
especially the soda I sdentists involved in
the project, to question . the clerks'
definition of random." .
Statistical analysis of a sample of "blue
books" indicated that only 1S.7 per cent
of the names underlined belonged to
women. Nor was this simply a chance
event, however unlikely.
l:: "In May and June, 1974, hearings were
conducted to discover whether the Erie
Cou~ty jury system was illegal," she .
recounted. "One derk testified that· shehad been told not to select women's
names from·Jhe 'blue books' when· she ·
first Slarted working in the office ·fifteen
years ago. She had followed those directions ever since. Two other clerks
testified tlult they too had deliberately
not chosen women. However, they said
that this was their own idea, based on the
belief that women would take their
women's exemption anyway."

The ~rchers also found that the
Commisslori'"r's Office was further
redudng'lhe number of female prospective jurors by illegally granting them their
wor~~en's e•empt;Qn. According to the
loow, the women's · exemption must be
~lmed on the questionnaire sent "'!I
eart, In the selection process. By stud~-

ing the Office's Inactive file (persons
considered but not included In the
pool), the volunteers found t'hat almost
half the women who received summonses to ~r for jury duty had subsequently (and Illegally) been given a
women's exemption.
·
1
'1 su~ _ that a woman calling the
Jury Commissioner's Office 11nd indicating any hesitancy to serve, say,
because her child is sick, was told to
claim her exemption. In fact, she could
be given a postponement in these circumstances instead of the exemption
which permanently excludes her fr'!m
the jury pool," 'the student noted,

01scouro8eo

w• The System
" The whole system discourages ·
women from exercising, their respon-

~--· ·
-D

sibilities as citizens," concluded Ms.
Schweber-Koren, who noted thar-some
employers are reluctant to excuse

women employees for jury duty in light
-. of the availability of the exemption.
However, the constitutionality of the
women's exemption is currently beJng
challenged in the courts both in New
York City and in Buffalo (by the N~tional
Organization for Women).
"When we first asked offidajs why so
few women appeared on Erie County

juries, everyone blamed the women:
'women don't want to come sit in court
for weeks,' 'trials are a hardship for
women with small children,' 'women
don' t like making decisions,' 'women are

taking their exemption,' they said.
Perhaps this is true for some women. But

our study showed that actually very few ·
women were being given the choice
they were all accused "of making. This is
one of those no·win situations. Women
are attacked for taking an option granted
only to them. At the same time, attempts
to eliminate this option have, ~ep
defeated annually since 1937.
*"~::?
"I think this illusion of choice, ·lfut
reality of impotence charfcterizes much
of what happens to women in America.
"The protective, Jntriarchal attitude
that permitted the Jury Comll)isfiAH(
and his staff to decide for a woman,
without consultation or .ootice, Con·
Unues with the State law. The women's
exemption is a logial extension ·of this
attitude," she said.
·
Most of the worst abuses in the jury
selection · system occurred under
previous jury commissioners. The
current commissioner Crucian Messina,
who took office tast year, commented at.
the hearings that led to reconstitution of
the pool: "W&lt;!men .are free to serve on
juries. They don't haye to dai!Jl the exemption . . ... listening to the
[challengers) you'd think women were
. dying-to serve. But women ~aven't exact·
.ly been breaking their n.,P.s,to volunteer
for duty. In fact, I haven't seen one."
· Indeed, jury duty is often a sreat bore,
but it is also one of the few oa:asions on
whid&gt; dtizens participate directly in the
decision-making process. As M~.

Schweber-Koren commented, "participation in this important process
should certainly not be determined -by
genital ia." Women are _ especial~y
qualified to sit on juries heanng cases m
which women are litigants, victims .or
defendants, she added.
•
Currently, the Erie County jury pool is
in transition. All but some 3,000
names have been thrown out, and the
pool is being rebuilt. Names are bei ng
selected randomly by computer, reports
Mr. Messina. Personally, Messina told
the llepotter, he advocates eliminating
the women's exemption from the law.
He would also like to see the names of
persons Who h~ve already served remov·
ed from the pool.
"This would result in a more transient
wo.l," . Messina ~ys. although he does
not regard the earlier body of names as a
" permanent pool." He also favors reducing the size of the pool so that it contains
approximately 10 per cent of the _voter
registration lists (some 60,000 names}
rather i han ~ames .numbering 10' per

cent of.the County population:
" Women are taking their exemption,"
Mr. Messina added in parting, although
when asked to compare doe percentage
of women uking their special exemption
with the percentage of men taking exemptions available tQ them, he replied
that no figures were yet available.

~

(This ai-ticle was based on an interview
with Ms. Schweber-Koren and liz Larkin,
who works fulltime on the Fair Jury Pro·
ject of the ABLD, and on a research
paper on discrirq_ination against women
in the jury selectlon process written by
Ms. Schweber·Koren. The ABLD found
women under-iepresented on local
juries by 68 per cent, blacks by 39 per
cent, and persons between the ~ges of 21
and 29 by 84 per cent. The ABLD (856·
0302) is actively sqlicjting, P.e~'i" . ip
these groups to volunteer for~'duty op
Erie County juries. Anyone interestell in
volunteering for jury duty may also con·
suit the lull' Co"1missionei's
Office, 8541
'5553.] ; • I • ~. ... • , ' : 1 ' ' ., :.:~.·.:-·~~ : : • ,

Application ~~~dl;!j_~: n~~d~gJ . ~·"·
for Fulbright, Danforth grants·
Deadlines·are nearing for applications
for two types of educational grantS, campus sources indicated this week.
September 30 is the final date · for
receipt of applications for grants for
graduate study or research abroad and
for professional training in the cr~tive
and performing arts under auspices of
the Institute of International Educatiofl.
Approximately 570 awards· to 50 countries will .be available Mtionally urMJer
this program for 1975,76. ·
Purpose of these grants Is to increase
mutual understandintl between the people of the United Sbtes and other countries throulh the exclulnge of persons,
knowledge and skills. Tliey are provided
under the Fulbright-Hays Act and by
foreign governnlen!S, uniw!rslties and
pri...te donors.
Applicants mliSI: be U.S. dtiunJat the
time of application, hold a bachelor's
degree or its equivalent · before the
beginning date of the tvant, and, in most
cases, be proficient in. the language of
.- the host country. Except for certain
specific -ards, Candidates may not hold
thePh.O.
- .
.
Cratlve and performl"ff artists are not
required to lulve i bachelor'• but must
lulve four years of professional SIUdy or
eq11ivaleftt experience. Social work
appjlcants mUll have at leaS! two years of
professional experience after the Master
of Soclal Work; candidates In medicine
'!'"" have an M.D. at the time of applica-

tion~ is based on ~mic and/or

profesoioftal '!llll)rd, validity and '-ib!Uty_ of the proposed study plan, language
preparation, and personal qualifications.
Preference is pen those between 20
and 15 who Ita~ not had prior opportunlty for, SIUdy or reslclena! abroad. ·
lnformation and appllcatiofl. forms for
the
Fulbristrt Prosratn Advisor, 107 Townsend. Office hours are Tuesdays and
Thun_dayi, 3-4:30 p.m. Appointments
;

tl!ese ·11rants may be obtained from

JrUSt be made in advance by alling 831~247 .
.
Students wishing to be considered for
nomination for D~nfonh Fellowships for
College Te~ing Careers should file
letters of interest and biographical data
by November 1. ·
Danforth Fellowships have ..b1!en
awarded i!y the Danforth Foundation
since 1952 to si~ personal encourage-.
ment and financial support to selected
·college seniors and recent graduates
who seek to become collese teachers,
and who are
In relatlns their
eduational plans to their 6asic values.
Candidates for these aw.,ds must be
nominated to the Foundation by the
SI}!'IYllluff~ ampus liaison officer, Dr.
Andrew W. Holt. 2lO tta,eo Hall~ (1315026).
Students wlshlnt 10 be considered
should submit the ' - ' materials to
Dr. Holt bY ""' .......
In selectl"' Danforth Fellows, anention is liven to dJree
(1) Evidence
both of intellectuaJ ~which Is flexi·
ble ..nd of wide. ..... and ol Kademic
achievement which Is a thoroulh fou!ldatlon for sradWI!e study; (2) Evidence
of personal dlaracteriltla·llkely to contribute to eflktM teachlns and to mnstructive relationship$ with Students; and
()) Evidence of concern for the
relationships among ethical or religious
values of dlsdplines, the educational
process, and academic' •nd social
responsibility.
The Graduate Record Examination
(CitE) In werbal and quanlltatm! abilities
: is required and should be .taken on
Saturday, October 26, 1974. Applications
for the GRE espetially coded for the
• Danforth Fellowship Prosrarn are
available at 2lO Hayes Hall. This appllcatibn must be received by ETS by October
. 1.
. ~ PersoN! interviews by a faculty selec·lion mmmlttee will be held for each
applicant prior to Novembet' 15, 1974.

1,_.

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�Septem,..;·11; 19i4

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-~~~~

I

Yot!~R~. ehergetfc~: .'fac"iill}frev•talizing J\rt History
.

.

.. ~

.

Harry Rand - ·a 26-year-old faculty
member who will officially receive his
Ph.D. from Harvard this fall - compares.
recent developments in Art Hislory ~t
U/B wjth wbatli1!$.1i;{{&gt;pened in English
- here over the past de&lt;!ade.
- Just as Engli~~iened ·from deep
ata,d.el)1ic sleep,~(
-~ 10 a position as
the lii~-~···uml&lt; _ """·'nf the nation.'s
" ,.
- ~v~ w
English establis~~ihrough infusion
of youngish, cr~~; innovative ' talent,
so, Rand says,-has·"'\rt·History begun to
stir.
~ ;
At the instigation of Art-·Depaip.!er;tt
Chairman Don Robertson and wjth-tl&gt;e
blessina of Arts and letters Provosiioh'n
~
Sullivan, Art History - wh1ch, Rand say~.
"didn't x;ist ~Q v.ear&lt;6 ago," except as"'a
small " rvice" unit ....: has rushed
headlo

· to

the

.

~

!

European nineteenth century, the Dutch.
and Flemish seventeenth century, and •
the Northern Renaissance. He has com·
,Piet&lt;!$1.. wor~· tor~he Ph.D. at 'Harvard
:wne~ · he wts·aiSoca teaching fellow. _A
ldrmer edi)orial~ assistant at Harry N.
·N&gt;i:ams, a~4lo&lt;&gt;k. publishers .in New
~,tie is &lt;iffi!JlQbhis semester botll an
~I'Yey (~and a cob rse on !tf&gt;;e
;~llnlje of W.4~~ in Art."
'
- -•
-""-·''''
f
d
"- .n~JIVard .... - the scene o Ran 's
~ edUcation ~and .he)'tpo, was a teac~ing

~~~~~~t~he~reH~u:.11 ;he~- !~~h~~n~~n:h~~

published volumes of poetry, Rand .is coauthor of American Art at Harvard (Harvard University, 1972) and of The Genius
10 ( American Painting (Morrow.:.:·&amp;~ Co.,
New York. 1973). As areas of special com-

a'cademic

petence, he lists American art. of the last

marketplace, successfu ly attracting high
~ality, en~rge\ic, yo . R faculty.
The comp rison ith English is, of
course, that
ea with · elephant, if

100 years, problems of art historical
methodology, ' and the· history and

you 're talking abOut. sCale :. the · Art
History facul~ numbers only five and,its·
program is primarily undergrad,uate. In
terms of quality, ~ffon and enthusiasm,

howeve r, the flea wali&lt;s tall, Rand
believes.

What we're building here, he says, is

development of:fifln. "Picasso's World,"

and ''The-New York School of Painting"
are his contribution·s- to the ·current
semester's·curriculum.
An History is also in th~ rO~rket for an
orientalist/classicist 'an.d looks forward to
developing a faculty of eight in the im-

mediate future.

·

'Offerin115 'Without Parallel'

"a high·powered, small department that

A sort -.of unofficial spokesman·

could be one of the best urdergraduate

cheerleader_ for the developing unit,

things /around three to five years down
' the road ." A 50,000-slide library {in 315
Foster) and a collection of art research
materials in Harriman will be important

Rand is at pains to point out that this
semester's course offerings, with their
emphasis on modern art, tre probably
without parallel anywhere i'h the cO un·

adjuncts in this developrr]ent, Rand says.
Art History, incidenially, remains on ~
ihe third floor of Foster Hall_even. th 0 4g~ ·the remainde'r 'Of 'tHe Ai1' 't iepartmerif .is
·flow tlfBUffaiO' f.:.teter.f .- .. . . .
(

Aweiase Ase, 30
· ,
The average ·age 'ol the · five~'P,e,r~gn
- faculty Is 30- a statistic which accounfs for a lot of the · enthusiasm, makes for a ~ --:

try. But, he moans, those traditional U/ 8

gremlins, registration information foulup and last minute course changes, have

caused a storm of confusion. The latesi,

acCui-ate regiStration informatiOn :1135
been Xeroxed in large .quantities,
however, and is aVailable on the th ird

floor of F~t~r and elsew~ere on ~mpus.

~t)!il,~pt~ f~oo;nJii~\&gt;~gh9';'t' th~ U)&gt;i ~e'1i_ty
~·;~rt majots; pie-med';s&lt;'lence~tudenls,

anyone -

are invited to ""Search it 9ut

congeni ~!'f4i'li!.AWn~~ ~~ i f::.li$ (97iJ ml~il:')! ~ }i.f!.a'!: ~~ gi , t ~~ tion

enhances rapport

\Yi.i'h

one hour instead of three."
.,
.'
DorothY- Glass, newly ~ ilrrived from
Boston University where she was an assistant professor, is the senior, sole tenured
member of the group. In her eiirly .thirties, she laughs 'at the "senior" tag, talks

students, aiid

C:leas1ons.
._
·
, Rand ech'O'es ~s. Gl~ in emphasizing
-the universal applications of An History.
~'People with university educations," he
saYs, · ~.. re frequently visually illiterate,
and, thu5, oblivious to 90 per cent of
their environment, unaware of the visual
·cues which simultaneously assault them

of "the challenge of buililing a good,

. fro_m eve~ sisJe. ~o '(ead': th"\" cues re-

balanced program," and .suggests that
"we might e'ven get everyone in the

qu1res a kmd of mformat1on processmg
different from that used . in understan-

· means "that faculty meetings can take. ,

University to tJke"

~History.

Why I

ding linear, sequentially-transmitted in-

118ecause from the. age of five, children

formation, and we are the only ones who

11'te taught to read, but nobody is taught
to see.'~ Ms: Glass 'liolds the Ph·.D. from
~ohns Hopkins ~ere her interest in
medieval art prompted-a dissertation ·o n

teach this. We wannhe U/B community
to know we're here so they can have the
opportunity to ·decide if they want this
kind of education."

' ' Studies of . Cosmatesque -.l Pa'Ve'ments." ThiS ~ se~et ·, she's 1eachihg
Romanesque ·, art, next semester;· the
Gothic . .Her· sdisser.tation has been·

accepted as a monograph " by ·the
Ameripn Acad.emy ir\ Rome and she. has
in preparation a work on ·RomanesqUe

sCulpture in Campania ..,- "I have been
compiling,material, but,do not expect to
. be able to write .until' I have a -year-.off."
Alan Birnholz, :18; holdS. the Ph.E&gt;1from
Yale and has taught at Fairfield University, at Smith where he was ·an assistant .

professor, and at~e Hartford Gollege lor Women. A volumeon The-Art·oi.Ef
. Li.ssitzky js..iwaiting pubUatign and·he.is
at wo~k on ~asimir Malevith ! White;olo
White (l;'engljin-Books;·.N:tin Cont'ext):' A•
specialist in Russian art ,oftheR-evolotion'

aoid thereafter McLin.twentietl\,centur.y
an in ·gene'ral, Bir·nhoJz, ·iS te-a~hihg.
twentieth century scuJpture and "lln..pressionism &amp; Post-Impressionism" this
1
. :'seniester.
,
,

Charles H. Carman, 31 , is ~ nother
Johns Hopkins Ph .D., schooled in
· nineteenth century, R~issance and
Baroque .studies. "The 'Paintings_, oL
lodovico Cardi il Cigoli" were the subject ol his dissertation. This semester,
·Carman is offerinx a survey of ArtHistory
· from 1400 to the piesent alont(With
w.aduate study in Reaa1ssarce.Art.
Anthony F. Janson, 31, Is rriost inter;
ested rn American nineteenth ·century
oaintlnx, but equally at ease wjth the

.
"""
Englisli~-~~d·~rn· Languages
.~-

B~ilding

is 'topped

The English and Modern languages
Buitding, now under construction on the
Thursday as the topmost piece ·of steel
for the 10-story superstructure of the S5
million project was put in place. ·
Started in February. qf 1974; the
• building, designed bY. Ulrich and

our.

French, Germinic and S_liiivic, and

FranZen and Asso:.ciates,~ arid being con-

w:

~

date.
The building is the first phase of the
Amherst Arts' and letters subcampus
development. It will provide n ,OOO n.et
square feet of .space to be used as
classrooms, .offices and labs {or 2,800
students and fac;ulty f&lt;Qm Engl.ish,

Amherst Campus, was "topped out" last

structed by~oly&gt;
Cowper Company,
Inc., is reported to be "on schedule"

-

'

Spanish, Italian al)d Portuguese. ~
Location Of the structure is to the east ·
of the law and Jurisprudenre-Education
and Philosophy complex.
·

toward its s~~e~ber, 1976, ~mpletion
....:•· ~
....,------,-:..,-....,,..----,--------...,.---------------.....,------------,

�Si!ple"!ber 12, 1974

-.J

_ ~?,!!!,~)says ~m

Pardon called
just another
'sad' event .. -_

claim to be lor progress and reform, but
support only enough of it to establish a
miniscule difference
__}'tween them and
"the Republicons.
•
_
Interested IS a 'codcroach'
Conyers said he. has twice run against
__ Carl Alben lor SP.,aker of the House
because he is convinced the present
Democratic leadership is no more interested in reform than a "cockroaCh."
Unsuccessful, he has been left with only
"unspeakable" thoughts about the " twoparty trap." .
,. · ..
lllustrotive of where Albert- stands,
Conye" noted tl1at the Speaker, a
Democrat, has spent the last month being "thrilled and excited about Ford and
Rockefeller," hardly Conyers' choices as
leaders of reform action.
About Rockefeller, he asked, "what
more obscene act ~n you think of than
to send the single, most powerful,ti nter-.
national industrialist-business .man into
the number two spot in the nation?"
Alter his speech, he indicated he would
work to block Rockefeller's confirmation.
Bemoaning the lack of real liberal
leadership, Conyers said he had " gone
down" with McCarthy and McGovern,
but " I'll be damned if I'll be with Walter
Mondale on another kamikaze trip" in
1976.

McGovern and McCarthy, he said, are ·.
as bad as students in want•flg "instant
success." They .campaign once, lose and
get out. "What we need is sustained
leadership. This is a lifetime struggle. I
begged McCarthy not to give up his
Senate seat and let Huben Humphrey
come back into national political life, but
he went off somewhere to write poetry.
Now he's back with a liberal reform party, but it Won't work. What we need is
systemic change."
·
The present system serves SOIJ1e/;?ne,
Conyers observed, but it isn' t the poor,
the working, or the blackAnd when you combine this political
system
with the economic system,
1
" you've really got problems."
-~
'
A 'ShriRklns-Bo•'
The -Americ'an economy is based on
unlimited expansion, al) okay pro~i·
The WI'OIIII DiYhlcMH
tion fOr the Frontier, but not for today
In Conyers' v;ew, this assures a basic
when we'ref i.inOfni OutOrt!Wer)-thing,
division within the working class. The
especially markets on which to "dump
working poor (the major ity. cil
our productivity." Europe, in particular,
Americans; in his view, those who make
is no longer interested . in either our
under $50,000 a year) are pined against
productivity or our buck, he said, so-we
the non· working (who ~r.e considered
need new markets. "We' re in a shrinking
poras it e.s) And the device , PI
box. Whit do you think we were. dofng
- " unemployment" keeps• the workers
in Southeast Asia?
running sared, lest they, toO, become
· "We ~re .-'the point," Conyers con" parasites." ·
·
tended, "where we an antici~te limits
As long as the country is d ivided on
on growth. Cars are obsolete, but no one
these lines and alonR lines of race, rather
will admit it. The ~~nd oil cartels won 't
than along class lines, Conyers said, we'll
say we're running out of fuel. There's a
never get anywhere.
Wiler shortage coming. There are going.
The McCovern·Nixon contest in 1972,
to be .terriftc shortages thr.oughout the
he suggested, provided the lirsi real
world and serious reactions to them,
choice for Americans - since Franklin
maybe even revolution, unless we begin
Roosevelt, but the results simply -proved
to put thinp together.
how " reactionary'' -.American - workers
"Do you really.Jhlnf,'' he posed, "th•t
have beconie because of these
our
an't contend with unmanipulations of the system.
_
- employ"""'!, racism •nd urban decoy,
"We have to have new alternatives that It con't Provide low-cost housing
honest, real alt~rnatives," Conyers . con·
and poverty prognms thit -workl"
eluded, " and_ I)Obody's thinking about
The trouble is, he Slid, that the twowhat they might be: ·
party~ builds in both ~ and
"let's start thinking about w~ere to
unemployment to keep thlnppng the
go I"
way they are. "The liberals art _.._
prosramsad the
ply for them.
The~-- . . ofthlsm&gt;d tell

sovemment

-u.s

the

d\at .lt's the ~lng
their high."

"Just another sad chapter in the whole
Watergat&lt;! story."
That's how Dr. John lane, chairman of
the Politico! Science Dep.anmem, views
President Ford's decision - to pardon
Richard Nixon.
,
lane, who taught a course on
Watergate last year, feels that Ford's action contains " an element of reill un·
fairness" to others, who are, J n his opi·
nlon, " at least as deserving of pardon as
our former president."
Nor does lane·feel that the pardon will
bring an end to- Watergate. "I think it
makes iunore difficult to bring things to
a conclusion. Watergate was too impor·
tant, too d ifficult and too wrenching an
e xperience to expect this decision to
make it disappear from people's minds
o r from the political· scene or the
courts, ~· he said.
Lane's view of the unfa irness of t'li'
Nixon pardon is shared by Herman
Schwar.tz, professor of law at U/ B and a
-defe nse attorney in the Attica tri als.
· "F ord's action is simply another
demonstration that there is oner law for
people in power and another lor people
who don 't have power,!-' Schwartz said.
Schwartz termed the timing of the Ni xon pardon "interesting" since it took
place two days before Ford 's planned announcement on what he proposes to do
in regard to amnesty for draft evaders an announcement now delayed because
of the "crush" of the Nixon decisionmaking process.
" If ever the logic that Mr. Ford used
appl ied , namely sulferi~~ by ~he people
· mvolved and the1r fa'trlllies, 1t certaml y
appl ies to the draft evaders who, unt il
prQven otherwise, we must believe acted
out of conscience and not out of a desire
to line their own pockets or 10 stay in
high political office," he said.
Schwanz also warned against "puning
Watergate behind us," at tbis time: " I
think we should be leariJing ,the lessons
about k'e xcessive imperial presidential
. a-:·~~··
P • .,·,
., ·c
-~1
• •
.
power lor a long time to come - that's
Conyer&amp;' ppearance was co·
what W;ilergate is all •bout."
sponsored by ihe SA Speakers' Bureau
'A UniversitY Constitutional law
and Black Studies._
authority, W. Howard Mann of the Faculty _of law and Jurisprudence, told the
Couriel-&amp;press Monday that in his opiEban Opens lecture Series
nion the pardon granted by President
.Former i-sraeli foreign minister Abba
F_ord should be subject to a qualified
Eban opened the SA Speakers' Bureau_ judidal review. "I don't iccept the no-fall lecture series with a discussion of the
tion that the pardoning power Is separate
Middle East situ•tion, " A Year Alter the
from ti)e other poweB" P!ovided hi the
War,'' last Thursdily in Clark Hill.
Constitution, l1e said, ~ many other
Israel will make territorial concessions
sections of the Constitution are subject
to the Arabs to ensure peace, he said to review by ttie courts. Mann, who took
including the west bank of the Jordan
pan 111 drafting the 25th Amendment
and the Gaza strip. The Arabs lor their
which provides. lor the filling of a vacanpart would have to pledge peace.
&gt;Y_ in the office of vice president (through
Jerusalem would ' be _expected to rem•ln
which route ford SUCileeded to the
under Israeli control, Eban lndicoted. He
nation's hiihest office), saki he is un:
I held out the possibility, however, that
awa"re of any legal precedents for Issuing
Jordarl might be alk&gt;W.ed cus.todial coni pardOn before n is known S{!Kif~lly
trol ofMoslem_boly.plaa!\. - _· what the recipient is being~ for.
Eban sailj he senses •.l continuity in
M•nn saki also that as it Stands noW unAmericon Middle East policy ander the
der the pardon, Nixon Is not liable to
Ford Administration and believes this
· prosecution in any of the states or ihe
country will continueto promote both a _District of Colum,bia for anythlns stem.:
.strong·_ lsrael and a negotiated senleming from Watergate, or what..- else
ment.
Ford intended.

Educational Opportunity Center plans open house

Ulll'o Ed_ptional Opportunity Center
(EOQ wiH llold an open housefriday, '·
Seplember 20 in ·1ts -'Y renovated .
facilities at 465 Woshln_IIOft Street. down- )'
. town, The !Jpen houie is belns held to
acquaint the publlc·w.lth the JIUI1IOS' Of
the EOC m&gt;d to explain the pdemic
m&gt;d vocationll JIIOII'III'IS offeted by the

' center.

.

- - -

U/11

Presldeni

Robert l .· Ketter;

Eli-.

Janies F. Kelly, necutjve vice chanCellor
of the State Uriiveriily elf New York, anll
Dr. James S. Smoot; Ylce chanclellor lor
~_!Y~ide R!"ices . and .. ~.1
...

·-D·---

Prog;-.olfered at EOC are: civil service preparation, Clerk IYPist. dlrilal !ab,
collqe ~ ilent8l Mllstlng,
English IS 1 second lanplllje, .....,..,

"!Jucatlen, snphlc -tei:hnol!ltlr&gt;-high
sChool equivalency IEn&amp;flsh and
Spanlsh), keypur.ch, lfticl..tnlnlpnt,

quick copy media, speedwrltillfl
stenography.

Most of the Clay wUI be devoted to
guldecltoun of the niiiiOdeled bulldll)l.

With exhibits and slide presentations by
EOC ~a. The cen!lir wHI be
~ open to' hllh school 5IUdenls from 10
UIL to no1!!11. and to the pnem public
from1:J0-6p.m.
'
AI J p.m., sr. ~ Arthur.
o. he wiD ... the main ...... at -a
opedal program In the alxth floor
auditorium. Other spabn ~ inducle

'

~.

and

�September 12, 1974

'Dance is for ·everyone,' Ver ~uil says;.
·'lfs education for human g.-owth'

Hockey game
will provide ~
scho~arsfdPs
Proceeds from a speciil exhibiiion
game between rookies and sOme
veterans of the National Hockey league
Buffalo' Sabres arid Pittsburgh Penguins
will benefit the UIB Alumni Scholarship
Fund.
~
Scheduled for Thursday, September
26, at 8 p.m., the game will be played at
Holiday Twin Rinks, 346~ Broadway,
Cheektowaga. The donation for each of
the 2,1100 general admission tickets is

$4.00. -

T~ are on sale now at the Sabres
Ticket Office in Memorial Auditorium,
Holiday Twin Rinks, the U/B Alumni Office at 123 Jewetf"Parkway and Norton
Union and Clark Hall on the Main Street
· ·
·
Campus.
Checks and money orders made
payable to the U/B Alumni Association
can be mailed to 123 Jewett Parkway,
Buffalo, N.Y. 14214.
Alumni President James J. O'Brien, a
Buffalo attorney, no~es that the game's
proceeds will be given 10 the University
through the U/B Foundation, Inc., for
use in its general scholarship fund.
" The need fer. scholarships is greater
today than ever before and we are
grateful for the Sabtes Org~n ization ' s
generosity," he adds.
Sabres officials note that the roster of
rookies and veterans to participate in the
game "!ill be released as it is completed.

Danielli said
leaving U/8
Dr. James F: Danielli, a U/B professorand former provost of the Faculty of
Natural Sciences and Mathematics, was
named Monday as chairman of the
~· Department · bf ' ' life '' S'ciences at
WorCesfer - Polytechn1c ·rnslitute,
~Wbrcester, 1Mass , the Courier-Express
1
iei/Oiteci'Tul.Sday. · ·:
" Dr. Oanielli, an internat!onally known
biologist, has bee....., profess.or. of
theoretical biology at 018 and director
of the Center for Theoretical Biology
since 1965.
·
He sained international attention in
1970. with his "~fullabora1Qry reassembling of a living .. nd reproducing
one--cell organism."

Research opening
The University's Bioenergetics
LaborAtory has ~n opening for a research
assistant professor to study the structurefunalon re!Atloilships in mltod.or!!lri~.
Aa:ordins to Dr. Jul. H. Wang. Eirfstein
. P,rofeuor, the salAry for the poSition,
"which has An~ April1, 1!175, startins date,
will be'commensurate with qualifk:ations
and e&gt;operience. ".Only recent Ph.D.'s
with polldoctoral research experience
and demonstrated K&lt;XIIIIplishment in
the chemistry and ~ of mitochQnddA and/or chlof'l5lllasts should apply,"
Dr. Wons says. A resume with -three
refererKes should be sent to the director, llioenerJietics llborotory, Acheson
~I, St~e Unlvenity It Buffalo.
_
A dinner-dance
~
Crl:

.:

Ulll's Civil Servia! EmplOyees Assoda-·
tion will hold Its Tenth Annlyefsary
Dlnner..ou-,Frklly,October2S,otthe
'Sher-nM-tnn-tluft.lo · E-nt,o Mrs.
DoralhJ Honey, soc:t.f chairman, has ..,_
nounced.
· ·'Mr. Ken Mdtenzle; .,._ of lifelana leunlng. Stale Unlvenlly centrill
staff, "Will be the main speaker. Danny
Neavadt,l'llllo~WKBW,

will be ~Of

.
Tkbls ($10 p1tr J*IOII ire. limited
and an lie ~ fraln an, tioard

._..,., tlldll_._ member.
The _ . . . ,........, wllh an operi
blr •

i:JI&lt;IUI"~..,.... . .

be

~

p:.M.,. lolllltHd br ...,_,.• 10 p.m._!P

the~
~

'"'"''=: •. . .

:

"""' ,.. unherilty ' corii.,w

munlly llllwlled

ID.aaud.
'

;,Men are afraid to move in a wft way
. and women can't bring themselves to
move a1111ressively. Both thus have a
whole range of human experience
ripped from their grasp; it's a disaste~."
Joan · Ver Dun, assistant professor of
physical education, wants to smash this
stereotyped thinking and salvage whole
human beings from the rubble through dance.
"Rigidity is death," sl\e says after an
ancient Chinese Proverb; "movement is
life.''
And " dance is for everybo_dy" (even,
I •
though, she admits, the men on campus
who take it have to be free wheeling,
" pretty sure of themselves").
Dance is an area of academic activity at
U/ B which, Ms. Ver Dun says, " has
grown up like los Angeles," scattered
here and there, with no plan , no
organizatio-n.
.
The Theatre Department offers dance
courses as does her own area. In the past
there may have been little or no coordiiution, but now the two units are
working cooperatively. A case in P,Oint is
a lecture/demonstration scheduled for
the Ellicott Complex, October 18, under
joint sponsorship of_-bott) depa~tr:nents,
with the common a1m of e xplammg to
students what dance is all about, to ge t
them interested in " movemen t."
A Global View
Ms. Ver Dun, now in her second year
in Clark Hail, came to U/ B to develop a
professional preparation program in
dance, a O,ajor. Traditionally, she says,
such programs have emphasized an in- flexible three-way division of the art :
dance education , dance therapy
pl!rfolmance-choreography. "It's '
though dance went King Solomon one
better by cutting the baby in thirds." Her
approach is to treat dance globally, as
scimething for those, both men an.!!.~
..wOmen, who simply '~ ike to IJ'K)Ve," for
"" those WhO warii -to create, tor those interested in building scenery or-becoming
dance hlstorians or dance critics, for the
psyc~olo11y student . studying "body
language," as ~well as for those eyeing the
out of their own experimentation.
more traditional dance areer patterns. A
dance company in the WashingtonStudents find this "a scary thing to do,"
course in dancing in her view might also
Baltimore· area for 7-1 years, and had
she says, but. "anytime you decide to
be the plaee for providing an entire arts·
studied in Europe. "I found I was no
grow in life, you're taking a chance, steporientation for the physical education
longer interested, in being a performer,"
ping- into the unknown. ,Actually, the
major - an individual who mi11ht shy
she says, "but rather in becoming indass is ideal preparation for developing a
alllay "from arts courses as such but who
value! in a Viable form of education for
philosophy ofliving."
·
m!ght take dance as part of his/her
human .growth."
l.n the spring, some of M5. Ver Dun's
teacher training. "It should be" total inAssociated with Ms. Ver- Dun in the
students will pr~nt their original works
tellectual, emotional, creative ..and
Physicai .Education dance program is Jill
on a public reCital; others will perform_. Fothergill, a newcomer to the faculty this
physical activity," she believes:
dances cho.._raphed in a "Faculty
To reach the point where a full-scale
year, who studied modern dance in New
Repertory" coil..., (which she describes
program along these lines might flourish,
York City where she receh&gt;ed her B.A.
as a sort of X·ray course on the inMs. Ver Dun has begun by emphasizing
from Hunter ColJese. She earned the
terrelationship between the dar\cer and
"good, scilid basic courses.''
M.A.
at the Univenlty of Kentucky
the director).
. Half of the pr.esent program consists of
where she taught as well before coming
Ms. Ver Dun's &amp;lobal view of dance .
on~it "exposure" courses - uthe
hefe .
ernersed from a career as a performer · hornl'oel~Yfes" of the dance education
The emphasis of the Physical Education
menu as she calls them. The other half
a career she broke off to retum to the
dance program i5 on ODntetilpOIUJ aJJCI
University of WISCOnsin for a master's
consists of three and four-credit courses.
creative aspeas ol movement; billet Is to
degree which she . completed before
.Both kinds are QPen to. everyone- and
daie the province of the Theatle Departcoming to 0'111. Just dondng· wasn'i
eall"riY sought by students, Ms. Ver D!!_n
ment, a division which reflects primarily
enough, although she had Worked arid
notes: "We are loaded·- even have
the backgrounds of the lnstruc:ton in· studied with both Hanya HOlm
waiting lists," not to mention the fact
volved.
Martha Graham, llad had her
that "I signeCI·up six more than We really
have space for in Contemporary Dance."
There·is, however,-one exception. An advariced IntermediAte lAb !coed] was mislabelled in . tJ&gt;e current r~istration ·
tabloid. Scheduled-to meet M~ays,
W~nesdays and fridays from 1G-11:30
FAQJI.n
. a.m. arid offeri'.'B' four aedits, It is sti~l .
instructor-Associate Professor (3 positions], Dentistry.
, open. RegistratiOn number i5 101751, ,.
.
.
. NIP
I
, course numberJ&gt;E _llll-C. Assnt.nl 10 Direclor, ·Admissions and Records, PR-1.
~~. fm ... ' ·" "
AssiStan!IO Dlnictor (.50 line), lnrema~l Studies, PR-1.
The exposure counes, "Beginni"ll
'
For 'Miclillonll lnformltlon c:oncemlnc these jobs and for decails ol Nl'P
Conll!lnpCinry Dance," are a c:omiMnation of"'-' and pqaiOe, emphasizing_
openlnp 1fvoushoul the 5Ute Unlftnlty system, consult bulletin boards It
these '-Ions:
.
.
bale sdentllic "--ecffe o f . - n t
in clancie f'lurnlnl what the j)ody in:
1. Beii'Fadllty between 0152 and 0153;.). Rlcfse Leo, Builillns 4236, next to
.stru!Mnt can do In ldenlllle lllrm5'1:
ca'-11; 3. Rlcfse leo, BuilciJns4230, incorriclor nexttoC-1; 4. Hellth Sciences
11!ere i5 no JnslrUCiion II!~ The
Buildinj, In corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, In the corridor between
intermediate "Cclillleli...,.. y DlncleH
Room 141 and the Lobby; i. Loc:bwood, pOund' floor In corridor next to_,_
counes 110 Into ptllter'deplh and levels
dins machines; 7. Hayes HaD, In main -.nee to,er. across from Public lnfarof ICJIIhhticallon while Instruction in
malioA Offke; .. ~ .HII, • CDiridor .......... . _ . 112 aad 11!; 9.

I

their__.......

"Dance Composition"_ encourases
studenls lo "do
t.en-

dlllr. Ms. ver Dun .....,.,._ Coi!'~ Is a llborillllf'.1n dec:liloil-

miklnB Iii ..tudi studenls are feald with

i • ~ - * of . ~ lltOWinll

ao a-u;

c_,...

Pattter ~ • aan1c1or next
10.
Hall, 111 floor,
' HcMasJns Offke -a;. 11. , . , l1nMDod. Pen6nnel ~ 12. ."4ortton
· Union, Dlreclor's Ollie». . _ 225; 13. Diefendorf Hal, Ill c:onidor next 1o
. _ 106; 14. John Lard O'lrlal:l Hall, bmh floor (Amherst Can1pyl).

a* UnlienltJ ....... II •

...... Op~Ditlillliy!Aiihulhe ~ .......,_

�•
'RegiStration

~ I

· I

s;;;xem'ber 12, 1974 .

i

deadline s~t
Oeodlines for student registration and
addition of courses or course sections by
departments were announced this week
by Charles H. V. Ebert, University dean of
undergraduate education.
·
Students must be registered by the end
of the third week of classes, Ebert said, in
order to be counted for departmental
FTE credit. ExcePtion ~.registration, he
announced, will be accepted after the
third week by Admissions and Records
unill Tluirsday ; October 17. No
registrations wUI be processed after that
date, Ebert indicated, meaning that
"from now on there will not be any
"retroadiv.e registration. "

Oeputments have until Friday,
September 10; to add any additional
courses or course sections to this
serrteSter's schedule. Facilitii!S Planning

will not process any later requests for additions, Eben, emphasized.

U/B freshman
cited by Roswell

·

.• ,RIIJIY.UNIQN' IIOUIIS ,,

- In ........
lor doe Ulolwenlly
U..
..........._-,
HaytiCredit
HoD,
•e a. elfed I his seMesler. Hours ur

....._.J .,....;

crowd~

in thr Norlnn ·

-

/'

Caliguiri worked under Or. David
Harker of the Roswell staff on a study of
the "Synthesis,... of HexitOI Derivati.ves,"
the breakdown of which_is important to
their function as anti-cancer agents.
The award cited the "potential of the
research . participants in the area of
cancer research and studies."
.
The .late Dr. Sidney farber, for wl0m'
the citations are named, was a U/.8 alum::&gt;
nuS who received his M.D. at '"Harvard
and founded and directed the Children's
Cancer Rl!search Foundation in Boston.
He is recognized as a pioneer in
chemotherapy treatment for cancer as a
resilk of his diw:overies tl)at~mjnote~pif!
can produce temporary- remissions in
patients with acute leuk~mia.

T.....,., 11

busy, new stuMnb {aiMI othen} are betns truttf'd to a who~ '"""R&lt;' of orit'nl&lt;dion otc·
tivitift durins rhHe first weft.s of school hsl ~ an afternoon of imprn"i-..1 tion~ by the
Commedia ..._Arte and cnft ~nstrations aHractt&gt;d inlrrnlf'd
fount~n uea.

Michael Caliguiri, Jr., a freshman at
U/8, was one of two recent recipients of
Roswell Park's Dr. Sidney farber Award,
presented for achievement in the cancer
institute's summer Research Participation Program in Science.

.

-

As if just lramins to find their ways aroUnd rhrH nmpust"S wt-ren't €'nou~h to lc:N'p tht'm

w-.,., 11

......J ..--; .... 'l1lonllo!i,1:,....:JI - -

54 August grants total, $2.1 million
Fifty. four grants and contracts totaling
S2,179,616 were awarded to University
researchers in August, Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice p resi dent for
research, reports. During the same
month, 33 proposals in the amount of
$4,346,466 were submitted ' for possible
funding.
Recipients of new grants, sponsors
and project titles included: Charles Keil,
American Studies, S10,975 from the
Rockefeller Foundation for research on
Polish cuhural activities in Buffalc)t;
Marceline Jaques, Counselor Education,
$147,005 from SR5, teaching a nd
traineeships in reha'bilitation counseling;
Dwight Kauppi, Counselor Education,
$170,000 from SRS, "Rehabilitation Continuation Education Consortium;" oivid
T. Shaw, Engineering Scjence, $46,878
from NASA , - "Experi.menta.l· and
Theoretical investigation " or ·the Suppr~ion of Plasma Arc Drops in Thermionic Conveners; " Gerald Shields,
School of Information and Library
Studies, 116,970 from USOE, "library
' Education for the Prindples of Intellectual freedom;" Robert Genco, Oral

Biology, $55,105 from NIH, "In Vitro
Screening of Chemical Agents with
Potential to Prevent Periodontal Plaque
Formation;" Eric A . Barnard ,
Biochemistry, a $24,400 faculty Scholar
Award from the Macy Foundation; W.
Roy Slaunwhite, Biochemistry, $67,000
from NIH, Center for Population
Research project, and S110,762 from the
American Cancer Society, "Evaluation of
Prolactin Control in the Management of

ment of Commerce to Saoford lottor,
School of Management, for the Minority
Management Assistance Program; $53,910 from USOE to F. 0. Gearing,
Anthropology, for " Ethnograph y in
Education;" S59,076 from NIH to James
Julian, Psychology , for " Social
Psychology; " $91 ,416 from NIH to
Murray levine, Psychology, for " Clinical
Psychology;" $125,000 from USOE to
Robert Baum for " Upward Bound; " and
S54,009 from PHS to McAllister Hull,
Gr.aduate ..;Scbo41 , , i{H , bio.mctcj!Fal
sciences support.

~~g;tJ!;ic , !:A."

' &lt;Mkhael ·Garrick, Pediatrics, $34,230
from the March of Dimes, " Gene
Substitution for Rabbit HemoglObin;"
lack Zusman, Psychiat ry, a $15,000 Facul-·
ty Scholar Award from the Macy foun9ation; Mila Aroskar,'$2,000 from SUNY for
a " Conversations i{l the- Disciplines"
v• ·•·
1~ ~~t~P.~~~~,d k t ·~p 'n •l ff''l'l
program; .GeorR!' .Nan&lt;]l!~!· ftft~(l!i.~tr,~;.
Civil Service Employees Association
$19,000 froln .J.j:51PRF, A Kinetic Study
of the Crystal Growth and Dissolution of
dues and insurance payroll deductions
Oilfield Sealants ;" Albert Padwa,
for members of the professional staff will
Chemistry, S9,500 from ACS/PRF,
be cancelled effective with 1-he
"Photochemistry of, Carbonyl ComSeptember 20 pay day, the U/B Payroll
Office has announced.
pounds Through the Enol form;" r;&gt;ennis
Hodge, Geological Sciences, $6,000 from
The change comes about because
Gulf Oil Foundation, "Seismic ReflecUniversity United Professions, Inc., has
tions in IRneous Rocks;" Jame·s
eJected to exercise its exclusive right to ·
McConnel.l, Geography, S21,537 from
payroll deductions under its 1974-76
SUNY, "~ision Making Strategies of
agreement with the State of New York.
New York State Business Organizations
Under that agreemeni, payroll deducas Influenced ,.by National and State
tions -for membership dues and
. Foreign Trade,~ Policies; " Dale Riepe,
employee organization sponsored inPhilosophy, S2,000 from SUNY for a
surance, except those in favor of UUP,
" ConversatioQs _in tbe,.;,..Dis~iplines_:• •. ~a_nnqt~ ,wit!lhel~ (r~ the sal~ of
program; Steven Tullr.in; 1!5Ychofotly, 17',-•.
employi!eS'tn"the Professoonal Unit.
500 from the Grant 'foundation,
· Affected NTP's and faculty were
"Relationship Between EaHy Experience'
notified 'by CSEA late in August of this
and lntell~ual functioning ,i .J.Jje Si~;"
change.They-were'also provided with inSherman Merle, · Social Wl&gt;rk, $106,159
formation ·· on a direct payment
from NIH, "~ombined Social Wor~
procedunnliould they'Wish to ci&gt;htiriue
Programs: Comm\Jl'ity Mehtal Health;"
thelr membership a,nd insurance
N~rman · Rosenberg r law • arid
· cov~a·ge~. ' Any questions should be
Jurisprudence, $36,000 from ClEPR lor a
dinkted to the CSEA_E!f!c"e a{ extension
clinical·legal education• program; Eldred
3040. •
Smith, t)n1versity· libraries, $4,'2.35· from
USOE for library ·resburc5; and Gerald
O'Grady, lnsfructional Coinmunication
Noted Quaker theologian and
Center, $10,000 ·from USOE for equipphilosopher Dr. D. Elton Trueblood will
ment and materia'ls tO,i improve :un.
speak .on ~ainpus in li p.m. tonight in 5
dergraduate· instruction·. ; • .
Acheson Hall. His topic will be "Com~'
~
mu'nit:,a ( i,o"q ,' Abo&lt;Ji .the.&gt; Human
.' Several grants wer#,! ' received frorJ~..t/le
Predicanlen~· o:: ; '
'
••
local Un,if eil ~~Y p'ro.'!ramt ) ncl~dlng· $61"' A 'Wor)d.:Wide lectur~r, Dr. Trueblood
- 078 to Moriam Meisler, BiR,ch~\"isiry, for
i~ a well-knowti_'Orato~' wh'o delivered the
studi~ of ~"Biochemical BasiS o{ Huif1an
8-Galactosidase Oeficierides;" and $4, ..
eutoi&amp; aQ he fu neral OJ former Presiden.l
Herller't Hoover. He lias taught at· Har883 to l;rnest Abel, Research .lnstitute on
Alcoholism, for a project • concerning
vard a.nd Stanfor&lt;! and is the author of
"Alcohol and Maternal Behavio"'' '
more than 30 Q&lt;&gt;oks, including his mos1
recent, Abraham Lincoln: TheoloRian o1
Major renewal and/or continuation
American AnRuish.
grants included: SJ(),OOO from NASA to
l'he lecture, which is free and' open to
P.E. Bigazzi; Immunology, for studies of
the public, is sponsored by the Depart"Electrophoretic Separ•tion of Cells in
Space;" $82,118 from NIH to Floyd
ment of SJ!!!e&lt;h Communication and the
Religious Studies Progr_am.
Green, Medicfrie, for "Erythrocyte Membrane Sulfhydryls and Rh Adivity; "
According to Dr. John J, lou of the
$195,624 · from PHS to Jean Cortner,
Speech, Communication · Department,
Pediatrics, fo(. a "Human Genetics
Dr. Trueblood is "one of the few remainProt~ram;" $164,924 from PHS to Robert ·
ing rhe19&lt;ical giants of our time." The
Guthrie, Pediatrics, for "Muhiple Test
Quaker orator is " a pacesetter ... in style·
Procedure - Inborn Errors of
:;jdl~~hnique as well as '!'ought," addMetabolism;" $75,000 from the Depart-

CSEA -'c:teducti~ns .

f~t-P.'-f&gt;.f~.P.~~~ ,;,
tn ....... 1.-a,._. '''· . . "

Quaker orator

r

1' ...

'

I

. . ;:

•

• .,,

•

0

-

•

�........

Seplem~r 11, 1974
~ .' r

~

l{I!J~ ~~ ·irains teach
~lth care.special ~ es
ly M.y lldt Spina

at Weiland, Ont.; ltosary Hill, or Trocaire
-or a hospi~l, such as Millard Fillmore,
Roswell Park Memorial Institute, St.
Mary'5 •in Lewiston, or NiagillroJ. ..Falls
Memorial Medical Center. If the.student
is a physical or occupational therapist, he ·
or ol)e may teach at U/B's School of
Health Related Professions. 1'he prot~ram
runs for ten ·months and graduates are
certified for teaching.

ffllforWAsoc:ilr ... Hulff'!Sdlnc-es

"The prime asset of our students is expertise, · not degrees," says Or. Phyllis
HlaleY, chairman · of the Department of
HNith Sciences Education and Evaluation.
Students in this unique prot~ram ~
desl11ned to traln people to fill teacher
needs In health i:are specialties at twoand four-year colleJ~e5 - have completed tnany of their prerequisites as
employees in !he real world of hospi~ls
and health care instltution5. ·
"More and more health care
professionals are needed yearly to fill
needs In hospitals and other institutions.
Who.was Koinfl to teach and train these
people! With development of pr0f1rams
to teach health care professionals croppinfl up in two- and four-year collef!es,
where were the teachers fiOinfl to be
found!
·
"Obviou•ly the quickest and best solution was to. take qualified health
professionals and teach them to -be
teilchers," Dr. Higley ~ys.
When in 1966, the State Department of
Education requested UIB and the City
Colle~~e of New York to take on th" task
of startinfl . pilot teacher preparation
prot~rams in this field, its successful
flrowth could not have been fully
predicted. But after seven years, the pilot
program at U/8 stands on its own IJ'Ierits.
s1 Main lor
Since its inception, the Depanrnent
has 11enl!rated about $1,000,000 for
prot~ram devei!Jpment from Federal
sources and private foundations. h\ addition, it hu received more than $500,000
for student stipends from HEW.
· -Graduate. from the&lt; teacher· preparac
tion pro11ram have a reairdbf almost100
per cent job placement in two-.and louryear institutions and there ·a re practically

1(. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Prosr•m DeY..,_..,

no

dro~ .~' ''"'""j

:I'" ' ' .. ,_,I

Althoulifi'\tuaents may vatronfl
amounts ollornW~yqn ::;.~ nJirtjl ·
from hospital-ba~-j)l~r.tion'lo 6lcalilureate degrees~ they eac::h muSt have
two to three yeilrs work experience in

their field. There are two· program options - an underRraduate cenificate
with an optional baccalaureate ond an
M.S. def!ree.
. · '
In addition to cla55work in each op- ·
lion, students must put in a semester of
student teachinfl at one of several
location._ The settinfl is either a collej~e
-Monroe Cotnmunity Colfetle, Niaf!Ora
or Erie Community Collef!es; Niaflara
Colfetle of Applied Arts and Technolof!y

t

Another program- offered by the
Department, on the post doctoral level,
is an administrative internship funded
throuflh the W.K. Kelloflfl Foundation.
Students in this sequence .u e trained to
asso~ p&lt;»itions ii-I dean's offices in
5chools of allied health in colleges and
universities. Aftef a one month session
here where tf!ey study such topics as
allied health curriculum development,_
new concepts of health care delivery,
dinical - education and professional accreditation, the students serve ten
months under a mentor, who is dean of a
school of allied health professions.
Schools which have participated in this
project include Ferris State College in Big
Rapids, 114,jch.; Temple Univers ity,
P~iladelphia; Quinnipiac Colleg~ ,
Hamden, Conn.; the University of Illinois
at Chicago; the Un iversity ·of Kentucky,
lexinfllon; and ·Georgia State College,
Atlanta. Followinfl work. wirh·their men tors, the students go to Washington,
D.C., lor two to four weeks in wh ich they
meet lef!islators, attend hearinf!S and
conferences pertaining to health care.
All students in these programs receive
financial aid. " After all, these are people
who have been workinfl and already
hb'e certo~in financial commitllftents,.'' Dr.

Hlflley points our.
· ,
The . Department activelY recruits
minority students, Dr. Higley says. About
20 per cent of those enrolled represent
minority groups.
IP- addition to the formal progra ms
off~l~~:i1r. _l;lli!leyj~~tafl,i~ dl'_veloping a
teaCher prep program ~ for health OC·
cupations teachers in secondary schools
as a result of a feasibility study funded by
the State Education Department. " Health
occupations education is growing rapidl y
at this level - especially in the areas of
licensed practical nursing, nurses' aides
and mental health aides,'' Or. Hiflley in_dicates. Another project on contract
throuflh the U.S. Public Health Service&lt;is
the development of modules for short
term teacher preparation. This study will
be field-tested in Buffalo next summer.

State ,U's train :most graduates
Slate and land-lrant uniftrsitles continue to produce more co1Jeae sraduates
than any other type of hisher education
instltl.otion in the United" ~tes, accordinBIO the latest da~ on earned desrees
published by the National Center lor
Eduatlonal Statislia (NCES) of 1he U.S.
Office of Education.
There -1,147,985 dqrees awarded
In the U~ ~tes In 1970-71_by the 1,~ Institutions which proviili!G"da~ for
rhe NCES study of &amp;nted Depees
Oifrletretl: Jf11.11. Of this total, the 129
unlversltles holdlni membership 'In the
National Association of ~te Universities
and Land-Grant Colfeaes (NASULGC) ac· .counred for 439,697 of the de1ree•
. awarded, or .JB.l per cent.
An analysis of di!sfees by type showed
that state _and land-srant universities
awarded a disproportionate share in
every catqory. Out of 846,110 bachelor's

ck!a~ awarded, NASULGC institutions
awarded lOSlSI, accounting for 36.14
per cent of the total. These institutions
awarded ;5,070, or 39.37 per cent, of the
l8,276 lirst-prolesoional desrees earned
durinsthe pear. At the ..-er•s desree
level, IU!te- and land-srant universities
awarded 98,204 of the 231,486 earned
desrees, for 42.42 per ~t of the to~l.
AlrMSI two-thirds of the 31,113 docrorate desrees awarded durins the year·
-re e,trned at state or land-sr~nt unl versltles. NASULGC inslitutions ac• counted for 64.35 per cent of the tota.l,
· -arding 20,665 dqrees.
·
The California State University and
GolleBes system, which awarded a to~l
ol48,222 deRt'ees within its 19-campus
system In 1970-71, wa• the nalion's
leader.
Other institutions conferring more
than 9,000 d....-ees -re:

University of California ......... : ................. ............ ......... .......... 27,539

.~rn~&amp;r.:.~:: : : : : : : : : : : ~: : : : ;: x: : : : : : : :~~~5-·
. University of Texas .................................................. ...............11,305

~~~;~~:7-~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : ::::: : : :::;:;:;: :~~is

65 ·taculry -a;:e _promoted;

7

:20-t_o. lull prot~ -rank
Sixty-five University faculty members
have received promotions in rank for the
1974-75 academic year, including20 who
were advanced to the rank of 1ull
.
.
professor.
In academic departments, full
professorships wt!re... awarded to :
Cesareo Bandera, Spanish, Italian and
Por-l ufluese; Ernest T. Selifl, C ivil
Engineering; David T. Shaw1 Engineering
Science; A1 Katz, Faculty of law and
Jurispruden&lt;e; Shuen·Yu an and Stuart P.
Hastings, Mathematics; Gabor T. Herman and Patricia Eberlein, Computer
Science; Albert T. Steegmann, Jr. ,
Anthropology; Madeline Mathiot,
linguistics; John C. lane 1 Political
Sdence; Irving Biederman, Psychology;
Derek A. Sanders, Speech Communication; and Joseph A. Alutto, School of
Manaf!ement.
Promoted to full professorships in the
health sciences are: Robert Genco, Oral
Biolofly, School o f Dentistry; K. Nicholas
leibovic, Biophysical Sciences, School of
Medicine; J. David Schnatz, Department
o f Medicine, School o f Medicine;
Robert Guthrie and Pearay l. Ogra,
Department of Pediat rics, School of
. Med ici ne; and Hugh 0 . Van liew,
Depart ment of PhysioiOfiY, School of
Medicine.
As compiled by rhe University Personnel O ffice , other advancements i n ~
elude :

Acadetnic Allain
F.culty of Am and letters: i\rt : Paul J.
M cKenna, to associa t e · professor;
Englis h: Charles F. Altieri, James Bunn,
Dia ne Ch ristian, Anna K. France* Desmond Haml et, Murray Schwartz, Ma·rk E.
Shechner, Alan H. Spief!el and David
Tarbet, all to assOciate professor; Germ~n k ~nd Slavic: David G. Richards, to
associate professor.
FKUI!y of Edualional Studies: Higher
Education : Walter C. Hobbs, to associate
professor; Instruction: Rodney l. Doran*
to associate professor.
f KUity of Engineering and Applied
Scie nce-S: Mechanic~ # Engf neering :
Adam.C. Bell, to associate profe..&lt;&gt;r.
FKUI!y of u-.r and Jurisprudence:
Robert W . Gordon, to associate
professor.
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
~ria: Chemislry: El i Grushka, to
associate professor.
Fxvlty ol 5odM Sciences MNI Administration: Economics : . Michael J.
Hartley, to associate p rofessor; HistQry:
· R. Arthur Bowler arid David A. Hollinger,
to associate professor; Philosophy:
Richard T. Hull, to associate professor.
Hulth Sciences
Sdw&gt;ol ol Oenf!stry: Periodonlics and
fndodonrlcs: leon ard Gr055, to clinical
assis~nt proleosor; Rot~er T. Czarnecki,
to cl ical a55is~nt professor; Howard
Wo lsohn, to clinical associate professor;
Bruce . !itidber&amp; .to clinical associate
professor; Michael D. Altman, to·dinical ·
noistant professor; 9pera!ive Dentistry:
ShH-Iey Birch,. to clinical associate
professor.
·
Sdw&gt;ol ol Medidr&gt;e: Microbio/Of!y:
, David T: Mount, to clinical a55is~nt
professor; Luigi -E. Bif!UZI, to associate
professor.; Biochemistry: Daniel J.
Kosman, to a550dare professor; Michael
D. Garrick, tp associate Professor;
Murray J. Ettio\fler, to associate professor;
Biophysical Sciences: Shimpei Ohki, to
a550date professor; Medicine: Robert A."
Klocke, to associate .professor;
GynecofoKY and Obslelrics: M~rcos II.

FES appointments .
lilancy Broderick has been named
associ4te provost and Florence Fradin,

·as~istan!- provost. In the Faculty of

Educational Studies, Provost Rollo Handy
has announced.
Ms. Broderick has been With the Faculty since 1966. Prior to cominfl to the
Uni versity., she served on , the
·professional staff of the Carborundum
Company.
Mo. Fradln came to FES with varied ex•
perlence as both an administrator and a

University of North Carolina ...... .............................. .......... , •. 9,810 !Jniftrsity of Missouri .... ,•..........: .......... ~..... ....................... ,-~:. · 9,616
Ohio State University, Columbus ········· ···················' ······· ·· ····· 9,611
1
Uniyerslty of Mlnneso~ :··································:·· ··················• 9,204 ~--- teacher.

1

Gallego, to ass istan t professor; ~
Parholog y: Peter A. Nickerson, to
associate professor; Pl&gt;ysio!Ofly: Daniel
T. OrRanisciak, to assistant professor;
Perry Hogan, to· associate· professor;
Surgery: Thomas Z. lajos, to associate
professor.
Scltool ol Ntlrsing: Aduk Healrh : Rita
Cauflhill, to a•sodate professor; Judith A.
Schneider, to associate professor;· Cfoild
Heallh : Jacqueline K. · Thompson, to
associate professor; Community Health:
Mila Aroskar, to associate professor.
School of Hulllt fdualdon: Jerrold S.
G reenberg, to associate professor;
William Sanford, to associate professor.
Scltool of ~: William J, Juoko,
to associate professor.

calenCiar(from

~ge

8, cpl.

4)

the DisciPlines supported by the U/ 8 Foundotion ;md administered by the office of the Vice
President forAademic Affairs with the &amp;id of
the Graduate . School.

·

EXHIBITS
CUlTURAl AffAIIIS EXHIIIII""
In Memory of Mu Beckm,an, 1n exhibition
of phot-hs by Richard lllou, \.JIB ossist1nt
professor of American Studies, IUyea Hall lob-

by disploy cases, throul!h Monday, September .
·30. ViewinK hour&gt;: Mondoy-friclay, t un.-5
p.m.
GAUBIY 219 ~·
Rellect;ons on White Noise, an e'lvironment of vioual irnowery ond fOUnd by Geo&lt;xe
Kindler, Gollery 219, Nonon. Viewinll houn:
Mondoy-Fri&lt;by, 11 • .m.-4 p.m.; SUnclay, 1-4
p.m.; Monday" ond Thur&gt;day, 7-10 P·"'· .r
utJ.U
The O.y Alter T&lt;&gt;m&lt;&gt;n:OW, 1 onorality ·oper• ~ali"1! · with dudent life. lfttniefe
showinK: Thursday, Sept. 19, Haas Loun«e,
Norton; I p.m. S'-inKs r~eafter. Mondoy,
Tuesday and Wec:lnescby, Haas Lou,.,.e, Nor~
ton, 2 p.m . ThrOUI!h Wednesday, Oct. 30, .. ,
LIAAaY~
.
First editions of the works of Samuelled:ett
from the collection of Lockwood Memorial
Lib,.ry, 2nd !lOot- boicony, Lodtwood:'Vlewing hours: Monday~. h.lft..-:5-p.m. Continuing.

v.ro-

·-'·

LOCKWOOD~·

Polish Collection, an e&lt;hibition culled from
the University's collection of more than 4,000
volumes of m.JterUI, first floor, lockwood

Memorial Library, Moncby-Fricby, 9 a.m.-5
p .~ .

Continuing.

NOTICES
CREATWI CRAfT ClNTIII

The Creative Croft Center will apln offer
worluhpps and classes th1s semester.
~ an portidpote- In free eta.. in

jewelry maldns. laplclory ond pottery rlllli'i!ot
•nd enroll in -t.shops In lealher, ~
and en•melin1 at A re4uce4 cest .
'Membenhlp fees ..,, $10 lor Ula ..-....;
$15 lor SIUdents' families and --u/8
students (ewer 16 yean of . ,, S25 lor Ula
faculty, stall, alumni and
and $4Star
the - - ptobllc. For adcf-.al .......
lion, all m-3546. fo s1p up and tloulri a
schedule of dasoes ond workoMpo. ..... .
Croft Cenrer office, 7 Norton, Montlay'
Thursdoy, 1-11 p.m.. or Friclay, 1-5 p_... '
IIIKlM Sama MGISRA-The 5elecllw! s,.tem ................
even~ the chit has ended, al . . _ .
old males are IIlii required 10 ,.,._. lor

f_..,

milltJry -

- .....,_

- b e ..... .

pleted"..., time ITom 30 daya belate . . 1Ith &gt;
birthdaY to JO daya ,__ . . . . , _ .....
ore ovalloble a! the lciPI Selecd¥e Senlco co(.
foao, Rm. 16olthe Feilen!Bkll.. 11 W.Hwon
St., Buffolo, or In Hayes Annex I on . . UIB
Main Compus. Or, lor additional Warmotion, all the Selectl"" SerYic:e office
betWeen I a.m.-4:30p.m., 142-l2711. Failure to
rerrisler Is a felony violation of the Military
Selective Act.
U/1 SQUASH O.W
.
The UIB Squash Club Invites_,_ whp

~he~:.,~o;..,.~~= ·

dly leaiiUe action at all 1.....1s. of skill
llnducli"' .-Ice). For those who have never
ployed beloie, here's a chonoe to have oorne
fun and learn the - Any .man or woman
with some relationship 10 rhe Unt.....tty lstudent.loculty, stall or alumni) Is Invited to arlenfl an orpniutional meeli"' this Friday,
Sept. U, at 5:15p.m. 1ft Rm. 3, Clark Hall. If
unable 10 attend, call Anna Marla, I:J1-53Zt, or
Peter Scoct, 131-l0l3.

�•

September 12, 1974

f

THURSDA t-12
UUA:I FILM••

Cops ilnd Robbers, Conference Theatre;'
Norton; all cUl-5117 for times. Admission

chuse.

·

MEN'S GOLF'
U/8 vs. St. Bonaventure University, Amherst

Audubon Golf Course, 2 p.m.
IASEIAU•
.
U/ 8 vs. Geneseo State, Peelle Field, 3 p.m.
HEALTH CARE DEMONSTliATIONS'
The School of Health Related Professions

will demonstrate how health specialties work
together to -help patients reKain their well being, rooms "330, 332, 334 and 337 Norton, 4-7
p.m'"
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUMN

The Rising Total Cross Section in Strong
Interactions, Dr. HunR Cheng, Department of

Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology , 111 Ho c h stetler , _ 4 p . m .
Refres hments in ltl Flochstetter, 3:30 p.m.
FILM•
The Gold Rush (Chaplin}, 147 Diefendorf, 5
&amp; 6 p .m. No admission £harge.
·
COMPUTER SERVICES/ SPEECH
.J
COMMUNICATION LECTiiREN
Pr oced ure s for Pr e parati on of
(t\udiologicai/ Ocol6gic.all Clinical Data for
Subsequem Computer t\nalysis. Thomas P.

White, assistant professor, U/ 8 Oepartment"'C&gt;(
Speech Communication, Buffalo Otologi a l
Group, and lloyd M . Uhler, Jr .,
proRrammer/ analyst, academic services, U/ B
ComputinR Center, 4238 RidRe lea, Rm. 10, 7
p.m.
01\ ...CE NilE'

Presented under the auspices of the U/8
C'3mpus. Ministries, in association with the
U/ B Student . Religious Council, Fillmore
Room, Norton, 7 p.m.
UFE WORKSHOP'
PerSGOal and Property Safely, led by l ee
Griffin, Campus Security, Main Floor lounRe,
Red Jacket Bldg., Amherst Campus, 7--8 p.m.
CAC RlM ..
The Po'int, 140 Capen, 7:4S &amp; 9:4S p.m. Admission: $1.
HIUB. ORGANIZATION MEETING'

Refreshments will be served, Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
UCTURE'
Communiarion about the Human Prediatrienr, -Dr. D. Elton Trueblood, Quaker

theologian and philosopher, 5 Acheson, 8
p.m.
CONCERT•

. Performers to be announced, Ellicott
Terrace area, Amherst Campus, 9 . p.m.-·
midnight.

CO~PUTER

SATURDAY-,-14 ·
UUI\1 FILM"
Th e ..Lo n~: Goodbye (Alt man, 1973 ).

Confei'e nce Theatre, Norton; call831·5117 for
ti~s. Admission chartle.
StarrinR EllioH Gould, SterlinR Hayden and
Jim Bouton.
HORSEBACK RIDING'
Li fe Workshops present a day of horseback
riding ·at reduced rates. Buses will leave Norton at 9 a.m. For additional information, call
831-4630.
MUW MEMBERSHIP ·BRUNCH'

The Buff~lo branch""'" of the American.
Association" of University Women invites all
women Rraduates to a membership brunch ,
Rosary Hill ColleRe, Wickes Center, 10 a.m.
- for further information, contact Joyce
Catania, 839-5067.
CHI\81\0 HOUSE SERVICES'
Followed with a Shabbos meal, Chabad ·
House, 3292 Main St., and also at 185

Maplemere Road, 10 a.m.

F~IDAY-13
UUAI filM••
· Cops and Robbers, Conference Theatre,
Norton; call ~831-5117 for times. Admission
charge. •
lWO PENNY ORCUS'
_
Workshop session, 11 a.m.-1 :30 p.m.; performance, 4-6 p.m. Both events will be held in
the Ellicott Comprex parking lot, A.mherst
Campus. (In ase of rain, will be reschedule(f
for ~turday, Sept. 14.)
•

SERVICES SEMINI\Rf
The New C~lcomp 9251936

lnrroducin~: :

Plotter, instructeq by Tom Giancarlo, 4242
Ridge Lea, Rm. 27, 4 p.m.
SEMINAR: WATER RESOURCES AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERINQ
Conr~minal io n of L~ke Valencia.
Venezuela, Or. Robert Apmann, associate

professor, U/ B Department of Civil EnRineering. 7 Acheson Annex, 4 p.m. -Refreshments
will be served. CHiliAD ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES'

wi~~s~~;~:~d~~~ ~~~~~:~i~~~u~~~
House, 3292 Main Street. No reservations or
tickets are necessary.
Chabad House will also hold High Holy Day
servic-es... in the Ellicott Complex on the
Amherst Campus. These services will take
place at the same times as the services in the
Main Street Chabad House. for additional information on the Ellicott services, call Rabbi
Gurary, 8_33-8334.
HILLEl ROSH HASHANAH SERVICE'

fillmore Room, Norton, 7 p.m.
CONTEMrORARY
SERVICES'

HILLEl SAAATH SERVICES' ·
Hille l House, -40 Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.
JUDO DEMONSTliATION'
-

AI Schmidt, a 3rd degree Black Belt, will
present a brief history of Judo and explain the
dynamics of mart ial arts, Haas lounge, Norton, 1 p.m.
MEN'S TENNIS•
U/ 8 vs. Gannon Collefi:e, Rotary Courts, 1
p.m.
CAC FILM••
·~ The Hariid Experimenr, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10
• p.m. AdmissiOn: $1.

ROSH
;.

.

HASHANAH

for Reform jewish students, Conference
Theatre, Norton, 8 p.m.

..

TUESDAY-17
-

CHI\81\0 ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES'
Services will be foll~ed by a meal, Chabad
House, 3292 Main St., 10 -a.m. (See M"onday

list in_R for additiorial details.)
CONTEMPORARY
SERVICES•

ROSH

·
HASHANAH

. ~ For Re!orm Jewish students, cOnferenCe
Theatre, Norton, 11 a.m. .,..- .

The Two Penny Circus, callinR it ~ lf a
theatrical circus; creates all the excitement_of

CQNCERT' ,

lhe Big Top with acrobatics, jugRiers, un-

behmd

HILLR ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES' •
fillmo{e Ropl)l , Norton, 10 a.m. &amp; J: 30 p.m.
MEN'S GOLF•

UUAI FILM"
•
.:. The lonK Goodbye (Altman , 1973).

#U/ B vs. Can isi us College , Amhe rs t
Aui:fubon Golr Cou~, 1 p.m.

Conference&lt;The~tre,

POUq STUDrES SEMINAR!
OYerview of Policy . srUdies, Dr.

icyclists and comedy routines. Refreshments
will include a nNrby outdoor barbecue, can(ly apples, popcorn and conon candy._
Members of the circus are fOrmer students

.,..c:J Goddard College iti vermont, and are under the direction of Donny Osman, who
studied mime and down artistry with Etienne
De Croux, Tudor Bono, and Jocques teCoq in

Paris.

•

•

Presented by the ·student AssOciation, the
UUAB Dance and Drama Committee, and the
lnter-Reoklena! Council.

JRC-...M••
The Cincinnat-I

. ICid~

starriftg Steve

~_;:: ~Rf~~~ and~laC
llASf"•
. f&amp;turi1111
1 bohd, and i'elreshments. Call
131-4715 lor dme and location. Open to IRC

, _ _ _ only.

-

.

.

Performers to be announced, Baird Lawn ,
Schoell~opf, 8-11 p;m. (In case of rain,
the concert will be held in the Fillmore Room,
Norton.)
Norton; cal1831-5117 for

times. AdmiSsion charge.

SUNDAY-15

.. -

NEWMAN~•

Newman proPertY on Skinner~ville Road
(north side of the Amhetst C.mpus), 1-5 p_m_
Bu~ wiU leave the Newman Center on Main -'

Slrfti.M 1 &amp;.1:30 p.m.
.
HK.I.R IAII--.QUP Music and reln!shments, HHiel House garden, 40 ~n Blvd., 2 p.m.
·

UUAI CONCBtr
•
- New IUders of the" Purplj? SOKe. Claik Hall, a
p.m. Admission: Sludenb, $3; gene&lt;al public,
$4. All tldtets will COS! S4 on the nisht of the
performance.
·

tee E.

Preston, chairrnaf1, _U/8 Department of En-vironmental Analy,sis ilnd Policy, 237 Crosby:
. .} -3 p.m. · -:-filMS•
:.
Story of the Unknown Soldier and To Die rn
M¥Md, 147 Diefel)dorf, 3 &amp; 7:30p.m. No admission charge.
MEN'S TIIIIN~· :
,
.
U/8 vs. Niag;il111 Universiry.J Rota:ry Courts, 3
P·~ ~
.
CHAIAD SHOfAR llOWING'
for those who didn11 have ~~ chance to hear
i~

Chabod House, 32!12 Maln:St., 4 p.m.

CftAIAo ROSH --SBYJCE'!

T h e - WIU bealn II oundown, -chobod
Hi:&gt;use,- 32!12 Moln 51. ~ Mondoy listl1111 for
· additldnOI detalls.l

WEDNES9A Y-18
CHiliAD ROSH HASHANAH SERVICES'

Chabad House, 3292 Main Si., 10 a.m. &amp; 4
p.m. (See Monday . listinR for additio_na l
,
•
__

det~ils. ) ~

HIUB. ROSH HASHANAH SERVICE'

fillmore Room, Norton, 10 a.m.
- uUAI RLM••~·.Oumbo (~nimated Disney classic, 1941}, 7:15
p.m. Gulliver's Travels (animated, Fleischer
Brothers, ,1939), 8:30 p.m. Both films Will be
show~:;~ 140
No ~dm~n cnarse.
PO£TRY READING'
CharleS Resnikoff, Conference Theatre,
Norton, 8 p.m.
Presented by the Department of EnKiish.

c.p,en.

LECTURE'
Greece, · Cyprus and U.S. Powe;,' Dr. Curtis
Bennett, Council on lntematioNI Studies,
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: SI.H IHTHOVEN CYCLE'
Performed by the Clevet.nd Quartel, inresidence at U/8, klei!'lhans Music Ha:ll, M~ry

• Seaton Room, 8:)9 p:m. Admission charge.
Members of the develind Quartet are:
Donald Weilerstein, violin; Peter ·salaif,
violin; Martha Strongin Katz, viola, and Paul
K~tz, cello.

THURSDA Y-19
UUAB FILM"
The Mechanic (Winner, 1972), Conference

Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. .Admission charge .
StirrinR Charles Bronson and Jan-Michael
Vincen~.

I'HYSICS COLLOQUIUMI •.
The Physics of Intense RMIJ.lion field~ Dr.

Philip Stehle, Department of.Phys.a, UOiversi- •
ty of PittsburRh, 111 Hochstener, 4 p.m.
~efreshments if!. 112 Hix:hstener, -!_:30 p.m.
WOMEN'S TIIIINIS'.
U/8 vs . University of Rochester, Rotary
Courts, 4 p.m.
CELL &amp; MOLECULI\1 IIOLOCY UCTUIIQ
Sequenri.J Biochemial·ft!ents in rite f.fammafian Cell "eye/e. Dr# Robert A. Tobey,

Biomedical Resea.ct. Gfoup, Uniwonity of
California, 134 ~lth Sciences, 4:15 p.m.
Coffee will be served at 4 p .m. ,
. FILM•

~

Tfie·NniRa(or (keaton), 147"Diefendorf, 5 It
8 p.m. "No admission d1arJ~e.
PHYSICAL.QRGANIC CHEMISTIIY LECTURE
SERIESI Acidities of Carbon Acids, Prof. Fred

Bor~weU, Northw~stern Unlv"e rsity, 162
Acheson, 8 p.m.
- ·
This lecture is Plrt ·of the Conven.ations in

.

llu,.;.

to~ I. col... 4)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1384553">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO . •
VOL 6, NO. 1 SEPTEMBER 5, 1974

.

Enrollment to near 25,000
as Ellicott Complex opens
University enrollment is expected to
near the 25,000 mark this fall as approximately 2500 freshmen (including
hospital nursing and Educational Opportunity program students) and 1500
transfers jo in returning students for a
projected total of 24,700- an increase of
500 over last year's final fall figure of
24,191.

U/B .job·offers· seen aiding
jailed Chilean officials
· The U/8 Council on lnternatio~l
5nldies is involved in "intensive efforts liY
American academics and others to free
jailed members of the late Chilean President Salvadoi Allende's government efforts which the Washington. Post
._,dy reported "are believed to be on
tho! verp ~ success."
Spedflc:ally,· the U/8 agencv h;ls alons with ~ universities - extended Offen of visltins professoMips to
lomier ambiSSador to the U.S. Orlandp
leteller and to one-time foreign minister
Cfodom!ro Almeyda. Ar:mrdlng to the
Post. the Job offen have been "an imporw:tt factor" In deflatlns the present
Chilean military rqlme's drive for
further venseance
lnst. these two and
32 Olher
r officials now ·
In
• The nta; e PoJI said, has
now concluded I any case they could
brl'll aplnst memberS of the group ·
·~would be ]leld liP to ridicule .betore inJernational public opinion."

Heltl 0.. . , _ , hllnll

Both Leteller and Almeyda were

lhe

IN THIS 1SSUE
Toda,'s
of
ltep6ffer con"taint two .special pull-out sec·

-.e

tlo-tbe schedule of Music
~ ewent1 for· 197.4-75 and
- _
lllltodudloa
to ilddlllon
)olephto '·a
.
·c:o.pe.--1n
·w..W, of bllporta11t Unlwerslty

lhe

·

lhe ....

........
·~···
ftqffk
. lor.... and
., llloe• ., funds to

.....,........... prondiifis for

members of Allende's Soc!alis( Party. Until recently, the Post said, they were held
on Dawson Island in the Straits of
Magellan at the sopthem tip of Chile.
While no formal charges have been filed
against them or the other prominent
prisoners taken there after the coup, the
Post indicated that the military has often
suggested it intends to "prove" they
weie part of an Allende plot to seize dictatorial powers.
Letelier, 41, was with the InterAmerican Development Bank in
Washington for a decade before becomIng Allende's a(nbassador here. He has;
the Post article said, received offers from
several other universities, Including
Amerl!=in University In D.C.
Dr. Albert Michaels, director of the
local Council on' International Studies,
ronflrmed that ti!B is interested i"n both
letelier.and Almeyda, a.former sodQiogy
professor, who hu also been offered a
visitlns professorship at J!rj~~,-;: ..:
While the national· Uitln · Anl_erican •
Studies Association has ~de .,. J xl!ncerted effort -on behalf of the ~...
Michaels told d ie Post his '"Offer -10 ,
Letelier grew out of a visit here tiy the
then ambassador .several years qo.
·
In response to Chilean junta c:harses
that efforts to free the jailed leaders are
part of an "International Manclst -conspiracy to damase the cur.rent
gO\'ernment," Michaels denied any
political motivation.
'
A similar denial came from lt-.lon
Roen of the Johns HoPfdl'S School of f\d.: ·
Studies In Wuhlnston who
heads the subcomm~ of the Lalln
AmeriCan Studies AssOdatloii·aWfil&amp;. ilie

meed

:=~:=:,lhe
• ··:
·. ~
. - ... - - -- and - ,Chileans.
While Roett's_ ~Includes
odlel.-lellllllun ~-

.

Helping acci&gt;mmodate-the population
increase is the vast 38-building Ellicott
Complex on the Amherst Cam·pus wh ich
will be home to: an estimated 1200-1500
residential students, the University's
residential colleges, and several major
University-wide departments (see special
pull-out section, this issue, for more
complete information on Ellicott). The
Ellicott Complex ·provides an increase ol
1,000 campus residential spaces while
also opening up much-needed
classroom and office space. The·size and
complexity of Ellicott ·a nd the magnitude
of the task o! simply getting everything
ready in the structure offer potential for
confusion and inconvenience over the

first few months of its operations (some
facilities may be delayed in opening, for
example, and some other things may just
not work out as planned). Camp~s

planners india.te, however, t hat. after a
"shakedown period," the facility will
o.ffer a definite plus for UniversitY"
operations. "l~s just a11o h.er example of

the growing pains we'lh11 be faced with
as more and more facilities pn the new
$650 }nillion campus come on litn!," one
source said.
·
Ten other new facilities are in various
stages of construction with at .feast three
scheduled for occupancy rtext fall Christopher Baldy Hall for Eduqtlon and
Philosophy; the Industrial Engineering
Building and a structure for . Physics. A
30,000 square-foot air-inflated plastic
bubble will prov ide· temporary
fieldhouse fa.cilities at . Amherst by
November, permitting physical education and recreational' activities to be
offered the second semester. The bubble
will house four basketball courts, running track, f!quipment: room, showers
and dressins rooms.
.
The Ellicott Complex gives the University's Collql~te S~t~ "turf of Its own"
at a time when the ,.n11re system is beins
re-examined and ~ u~der a new
prospectus for its operations ~dopttd last
spring. The prospectus requires that each
(fum 10 -z. col. 1)

.A~ba

Eban ·will launch ·
74.;.75 SA speake~ series
Abba Eban, former lsra,u forelsn
' minister, will be the campus's .first ·
visiting speaker of the ,e.; tonilht
(September 5) at 8 p.m. In Clark Hal[·
EQan will discuss the situation In the
Middle East "A Year After the W•."
:rttkeis
are available at the NortOn Hall'
1
Tit:ket
Office.

tree

. Admission· Is
to. the UIB c:om.
munlty and $1 for the pneraJ public.
Eban's appearance is belns ~
. by the Student Asoodatlon speKen'
llureau which presents a year-lont
of lectures by nationally~
flpres "In politics, entertainment and
action.
·
Other speakerS listed by the SA -seney
in a ~ule re'-ed last _... (Mel
subject to c:hansel Include:
. . . . . . . , 9-Rep; John Conyers Jr.
(()., Mich.}, member of the House
Judiciary Committee, "Waterpte," Nor-

.,..,am
sodar

(fumiO-Z.~•

�Septttmber 5, 197~

Library ..a£~ess
at Ellicott
said adequate
' rears that the ,new _Ellicott Complex
will lack adequate acd!ss to campus
library resources were assuaged by the
annQuncement that the Complex will in- ""
elude both a library facility a_nd a sameday book delivery service. ·
As John J, Vasi, assistant to the director
of libraries for facilities planning, exJ1Iained, Ellicott will open with a small
lllirary locate&lt;r in the north wins of the
Millard Fillmore _1\.cademlc Center.
This facility, which will move to a· twin
site in the south ·wing as soon as
carpeting _and other appointments are
installed sometime in December, will initially contain some 3,000 to 4,000
volumt!s, mostly reserve books for
courses taught at Ellicott.
largest Reserve Site
" This will eventually 1le the largest
reserve operation in the system,"
· predicted Vasi, who noted that none of
the four library spaces included in
Ell icott is large enough to house a major
subject collection. ·
~ In addition to reserve books, the new
'l•brary will have a •mall seneral
reference collection and a very small circulating collection. There will also be a
coin-operated copier installed in the
to Ridge lea during the c9urse of the fall
semester.
facility.
• Relocation and consolidation of the
"We are going to try to keep the
Health Sciences library in the Stockton
library open from 8 a,m. until midnight
Kimball Tower on the Main Street Camand 24 hours a day during exam times,"
pus - enlarging that facility .by 9,000
said Vasl, who acknowledsed that the
square feet at the outset and providing
de-centralization -of library space in
space for still more expansion over the
Ellicott, originally designed to enhance
next two years.
the now largely scrapped collegiate plan
of the Meyerson years, does not facilitat ..
the most efficient use of ,library staff.
DeliYery Serwlc:e
.
" We are also going-to have a delivery
service at Ellicott for studerots and
free," observed .a professor in social
scienCes Who cruised almost a thOusand
faculty," . V~i ~' - "P~e .can request books located in other. unils of .the
miles on lakes Michigan and Huron, acsystem
at the library ~~. a'!'lliw books
companied by one or another of his four
will be delivered later that day or the
children. _ .
.
next day, depending upon the time of
Undaunted by horror stories abOut
the request."
for~ign inflation, some people did .go ·
l,Jitimately, the collection in ElliCott
abroad. A presidential assistant, who last
could reacl).6 or 7,000 volumes, Vasi esyear spen t her vacation at Harvard
timated. "Tiie library could continue to
Summer School, went to london, Paris
grow in response to the needs of the
and Spain.
Complex for the next three years," he
" The last time I went to Eyrope," she
said.
··
·
recalled of a 1966 trip, "we were squeezlnnontive Design
/
.ed into the plane like sardines. This year
it was apP[oximatelyone-third filled, and
like the rest of the Complex, the
I could pbt.._ down the arm-rests and
library facilities in EIJjcon are Innovative
stretch out across three seats." She was
in design. -Each of'\ the larser library
shocked at the rise of the cost of. stayi~g
spaces contains two large sunken lounge
areas loca!ed beneath skylights. "The
on lof!don, but found. Spaon st.oll
somethmg of a travel barg~m. In Madnd,
aesthetics are fantastic," the librarian
for e~~mple, she stared·~ an. el~~ant
said.
hotel ~111&gt; Ernst lubotscli onteroors for
Vasi also noted that the library facilities
in Ellicott will be the only ones on the
$24 a nogh!.
Amherst campus (outside the law
library) until September, 1977, when th~
Beaching on Crete
two major li!lfal'\' faQiitJes;ate ~uled
Another administrator who went
to open.
. •
_
~road was OR the Greek island of Crete
"We plan ' ti:&gt; :opeo · as . ea_rly in
when the war broke out in Cyprus.
American newspapers suddenly dis- - September as possible, the first day of
dasses if we can," Vasl said.
appeared from the newsstands, and all
commercial planes and ships were seil!'d
by the government for -troop transport:
S~akersHe spent an unscheduled nine adtlrom pore 1, col. 4l
ditional days on the island and was forcton l)nion Fillmore Room.
ed to cancel 'a planned trip to l)aly. As a
September 24-M'!:!I Howard and a
result, he saw several more Cretan
Three Stooges film fe•tlval, Norton
archaeological sites than he had origini'lUnion Fillmore Room.
ly intended and spent more time on the
October ~rge Gallup Jr., presibeach.
'
dent of the Gallur. Poll, "The Whys of the
"The beaches were pretty well
Polls," Clarlt Hal .
•
·/ ·
deserted," he said, "left to me and the
Ncwember 6 .- - Frederic StQraska,
German touriSts.'' He was able to leave
founder of the National _S odety for the
Before anti-American feeling peaked
Prevention of Rape, "To Be Raped or Not
and 3.000 Cretans. marched on the .U.S.
To Be Raped," Npnon Union Fillmore
air base on the Island. As to the
Room.
·
economic 5ide of the trip, he came home
Nowember 21-Movle, "Who Killed
with money In -his pocket.
JFK!" NortOn Union FIHrriore Room.
Not everybody's vacation offer&lt;!d high
December 5-Giorla Stelnem, editor
adventure. A campu~ ~n took his
of Ms. mapzlne, and Jane Galvin
youns daughten to. VIsit his wife's
coordinator of the National Black
parents lA Kokomo, Indiana. They fed
Femi111st Orpnlzadon, "Sexism, bclsm
the ducks and IIIIRrimapd to the site of
and Black Feminism," Clartt Hall.
"Old Ben," a .tuRed, 6,000-pound steer
All speeches are scheduled for a p.m.
that servet as the emblem of Kokomo•
l.asl year they made the -same Uip.
.
For the sprlni - · the tentatiVe
"But next year," he ..ld, dhlolvlns-ln
llneu,p _ ~~- f1enry J«&lt;cpJ (1).,
laughter, "we hope to .., to ·Hobofien,
Wash:),~,-....,.~ IR,;AriLJ, :
New fer1!w, _,....._ for
.We
actor VIncent Price arid Writer WIHiam. F.

Enrollment up as Ellicott opens:-_- - - - - - - - - - - - - : - (from pqe 1, col. 4)

existing unit and any proposed new ones
must be chartered by ·a special committee, If they are to exist after January 1.
The committee wiH receive charter
applications through October 15 (see
"t::.ollege Chartering Rules and
Procedures" elsewhere in this issue).

Other campus changes effective this
fall include:
·
• Relocation of the Art Department
from the Ridge lea Campus to a larger
space in the former Buffalo Meter Plant,
2917 Main Street (to be celebrated with
an open house in October)- a development which frees space for the shift of
the Department of Geological Sciences

Dollar b9ught less vacation
'

IJ pJdrk:bl Ward lleclemw&gt; .

..,_,..;SuR -.

1-¥

·

haln· Today's il.floted dollar -~ys
burger, less house and less vaclltiop. ·
As the' AAUP reported reeendf, last
year for the first time since the late 1960s,
faculty salaries failed to Increase' as
qt,~i~ly ~~cost oJ lhiing. •
·
Curious as to what effect the economic
pinch, combined with rumors of gas
shortages, dimbing air fares and even
greater i11flation abroad, had on vacation
plans, we asked_a random sample of U/B
faculty and staff how tHey holidayed this
summer.
For many people this seemed like a
good year to stay home and paint the
~se or finish some other non-frivolous
pr~)ecl- . .
.
A va';lttan. as a chan,~ to ~o thmgs
you don t ordonarlly do, e~plaoned ~ne
staff member who had consodered goong
~way but opted f~r twO weeks of .sleepong las,e Instead. It felt so good JUSt to
rest," She real~. She met .~rjends for
lunch, took a senes of day !Tops by car,
and alio sewed up a st;t of fishing-pole
CQVer5 for her brother-on-law.
More to a ~ Houle
,
• A campus varltyplst used her vacation
to move into a new house. The high cost
of buying a home preduded a more
elaborate vacation, but she and her husband enjoyed the twO weeks so much
they're going to take another week off in
October. "We11 probably use the time
to re-decorate a room," she said.
A number of Civil Service staff
reported that they were taking their
. vacations piea!rneal, favoring a series of
long weekends over acme-shot holiday.
"It seems like you get a longer vacation
that way," explained one woman just
back from three days In Toronto where
her mini-vacation was only- slightly
marred by that dty's transit strike.
Many people who did get -ay stayed
within the borders of N- York State. Ex~
plalned one NTP, "We like to so
somewhere that's within reason~ble
drlvl1111 distance." She anCI tier husband
spent four days at a resort it,otelln the

n-ne! lslanck..h- their flnt "real
wcadon" sinCll their bor~ 1M
....... ..,_ "We ...... lal d ....,,"
.... lldrlilaed, but _
_ . . . . . , and
........ c:arwlnaed lhallhe trip ~lt.

- ·

"'lhlnlt chis,_. people had~ Ill

obsession to get away," she spetulated.
"It wasn't sim,PIY a desire to tour and see
things; esPecially with the high cost of
everything. People needed to go
somewhere where they' didn't have to
look at a newspaper or talk-about all the
things that are going wrong."
Another NTP also saw N..W York first.
She spent four days by the pool at a
Catskills resort, the Concord. last year
she vacationed in her own backyard, but
this summer she splurged on the hotel's
$41 a day_vacation package.
.. .
" I felt I had a little money to spend,"
she explained, after the recent salary increases and a merit raise.
Camping in Vermont
A member of the management faculty .
spent almost a month camping on his
own undeveloped land in Northern Ver~
mont. He and his wife ~hared a large
tent, and pitched a smaller one nearby.
for their sons, ages 8 and 6. He put up a .
third "office" tent off in the woods
whe;e he retreated to work on a book.
"We've had this beautiful land for five
years," said ~is wife, who explained that
rislng·building costs have forced them to
defer their original plan to build a cabin
_on the 65-acre tract. So this year they had
a tent platform built and camped out.
Sailing was a popular suml)'ler pastime,
part sport, part vacation. "T~e wind is

2 ·appointments
at Children's.
Dr. Margaret H . MacGillivray,
associate professor of pediatrics, has
been named director of the Division of
Endocrinology at Children's Hospital.
. She replaces Dr. Thomas Aceto, Jr., who
has left to become profesoor ani! deputy
.chairman, Department of Pedlafrlcs, U.
· of Virginia Medical Sdool,
Charlottesville. .
Also at Children's, Dr. Anke A.
Ehrhardt, dinical assodate professor of
psychology In · rhe Oepar ment - of
Psych'-try and resejlrcli assistant ·
professor In the Department of
Pedlatrla, has been named
director of the Department of Oilld Psjchlalry

acti"'

and llehavloral Sdences. Or. n-.f.
farmer d~. has been ..,.
_.... .,.._,. and director
of , Dlvillon of dl1ld Psychiatry, SUn-

a
fol'd

u. Medical Center.

-· -~·· 'rf"'t-

t~is·

summer

,.

Lewis;

"..,..h_,_

dOn't have~:......._::·-·

...

~let-.'·:·.

..•. . : ..:. - ,;:; ,::f'

�September 5;. 1974

Heahh ·Service
expands lab;
·plans. pharmacy
Adaitional space, a more convenient
entrance and expanded services wilf be
available to students t)lrough_thj! Student
Health Service during this school year,
according to its acting director, Dr.
LUther Musselman.
·
" The entrance in Michael Hall will be
on the first floor rather than the basement - which should be greatly appreciated b}4tudents on crutches who
had difficUlty man~uvering the stairs
before," Dr. Mu.sselman salCI. The basement w ill house medical recclrds and a
general medical lab where a majority of
tests can be run by a certified
technologist with supervision from the
Department of Medical Technology. ·
Students will find a more spacious
waiting room and incre~.sed space for
clinical use by patients and staff on the
seconil floor. The Studeni ' Oral Health
S!!rvice' wm · temain on -that floor,. with .
environmental health and psy~hology
moving from seci&gt;rid to third.
Plans are underway for a pharmacy to
be added to the Service. Dr. Robert
· cooper, assistant dean of the School of
Ph_armacy, said hopefully by January a
full-time pharmacist will be employed.
Some students will also be doing clinical
work at the new site. Cooper hopes a
drug profile system can be kept on
students- a system which would greatly
reduce the chance of an individual taking two or more drugs that could, in
combination, cause a drug reaction.
" Such a pharmacy wou'ld certainly be
more .convenient for students who now
must go off campus to ha~e prescriptions
filled," Cooper said.
'
Dr. Musselman' stresSed 'that any student needing medical care or dental care
on campus is eligible to be trea\ed ·at the
SfuCient Health Ser)ric;e. -~ere ..Ore '20
'bedS' for short' t'erln in~tienl ami ·on a
·24-1\our basis - and if a student-needs to
be referred to a hospital, thin's where _
he'll be referred," Dr. Musselman added.
Ahother service offered Is assistance
• for persons on campus who become ill
or injured. "If someone fa(ls o r has a
seizure, the Security Police should be
notified first. Then they'll'bring .the person to tlie Student Health Service. if the
person should not be ·moved, a doctor
and · nurse - will be dispatched to- the
scene," Dr. MUsselman pointed out.
"It's important for new stud~nts to be
aware of the services we're offering and many returning ones don't ·really
knowwhatwecandoforthe,.,''hesaid.
Seed money for the ex.pansion of the
laboratory and phani)Ky was provided
. through ·the student fisCal agency, Sub .
Board 1.
·
'

30

wom~n,

u'les'
HRP ""'
•mulalions
Care Sl

New York."

.

. . .• .

will graduate because you have been so
well screened. Several years ago the attrition rate was 15 or 20 per cent.
" You will have many frustrations and
tensions and even threats from some _
professors that you might not make it.
Don't be scared. This is not true," Dr.
Marine- said. " Keep cool Be sensitive to
problems a.nd _stay II) _command of
you ~lf."

The orientation prolram also included .
rap sessions wit)! sophomores about
pos!five and negative Issues, as well as
~hat courses to !like, how to study, and
other do's and dOn'ts. There was also
registration, picture taking, ·a!' Informal
luncheon with.fapl_!ty In Norton Union, a
tour of the new. Health Sc!e~ Ubrarf,
a picnic, and a briefing on flnandal aid.

Health sciences schools report
fall minoritY enroll~ent --data

inconveniences the class will encounter

in the next four years as this campus is
redesigned into a health 'sciences· center.

These r~rts on minority representation among new students in the schools
of the Faculty of Health Sciences other
than Medicine (see separate story for
Medicine's figures) were issued this
week :
Dr. Richard· P,owell, associate dean of
the School of Dentistry, said there are
seven women among the enterlns dass
of 87 which was selected from 2,039
applicants. Approximately 500 students
1
h

~h: ~~~j ~:~d!iss':.~~..!

mittee. There are three blacks (two fnen,
one woman) in the first year class. Eigh:l
of the students- come from New Yo
State, and 30fromtheWestern New York
area: All members of the entering class
have · bachelors d~rees and six have
masters.
·.assistants- that you must be dependentIn ih.!' School of Health Rela(.ed
upon for hell!.. You can't go ltalone. You
Professions,- there' are 157 new un- ·
::fu~o~:v~.!o..~n a~e ':ft':~~~
dergraduate students aouf 42 new
health care.
graduate students, · according to Dr.
"ltlsunfortunatethatmany_peopleexJOseph Necbasek. associate dean. These
pect health care .on 1 one-to-one basis. . 199 were selected from 580 applicants.
This:-oh:oune is impouible-because
There are 150 women and 49 men, In_th~ never will' be enou&amp;h phj..cians to- --eluding seven racial minority· students ..
accomplish this."
The majority. of the . - undergraduat~
Dr. Rartdall told the new students ."to
students are from New 'York State, while
th
riodi 11
k
the graduate students come from several
1
~
emse ves · pe
ca Y· As
stateS;
~urself whil you are learning, and conDean Michael Sch'!'artz of the School
tlnue this process ev.en after paduation.
of P,haimacy said there are 34 women.
Examinations Jre vety, Important while
(one· black) in the fir&gt;t year class of 12.
you are In school and for future board
c...'--L..
made from ~_,_
cenlfication. There is pendlns natiOnal'
~-nlegislatlorl. that ma_y• require periodic
450 applicants. MpR of
first year
testins or - examinations- for all
st_udents - 90 per mnt - come from
•
New
d.ealsofrom
......
ltUIIernL
of
.._._ Medica
....
sJ:.o."""'A
_.·dri{~ec;,ri: --enterina. daa.1lawe bachelor's· clear-/
....,
while about .
half did their un-

·.

Dr'·.·,.~~Ei'!'~'"
I ' ~~-:.:..._·n·. ~.,-.: ·~o:•·

71~

1978 Med Class

noted that "this is the finest dass

we have ever admitted. You come from

Ketter praised the work of the Medical
School Admissions Committee In selecting the group, told class members that
"the clinical education you will get in.a
real life hospital is one of the pluses of
the School of Medicine," and.noted the

tion..,.'~ls-~ lOf~n~ in-, -~H ~--

t---·
11.1.....,a~.c:areers;..,.•:;•'•
Demonm.tJol.s· wtll be held lit:'llO,

-

74 undergraduate schools and 'have ZJ
different majors. Many are science majors but others majored in English, psychology, nursing, engineering, history,
music, political science, economics,
foreign language, pharmacyand liberal
arts."
.
/
Dr. Edward Marine, chief of medicine
at the Deaconess Hospital, gave the 1978
class ah overview of , the School's
re lationships' With · the affiliated and
associated . hOspitals. He spoke of
curriculum cb~nlles that he helped bring
about while iie was an associate dean.
"This is a larger arid di!ferent _type dass
than we had here five .yetus ago," he
said.
·
"Almost without exception, all of you

.

A "live" answer' as to how various
health specialties work together to help
p atients regain· their healtli will be
.
.
ed n· fr
._
pr!!S4!nted on a somu1at se ong om 7
p.m. Septen\ber 12 in Norton Hall.
To . be sponsored by the. School of
l;:iealth Related Professions as part .of its
Clinical'
Convocation,
the
demonstrations will take the spectator
from admiSsion of "patients" through
various allied health checkpOints and
~emonstrate how these specialties work
tOJether for the patie11ts' recovery.
Specijli5ts frohm tlohe 'bepartments ~!
- Medical Tee no gy~Occ.upatJQII-"'Therapy and Physical Therapy will take
" patients" -wch as a 56-year-old fndian
quadriplegic injured in a traffic accident
thro~ mock-up treatment. And the
Department of Laboratory Animal
Science will present demonstrations OR',
how animal research may make significant contributions to patient care. Uve
..,-_
videotapl"' and presentations will .;,·
provided throu&amp;h the Department -of
!-- -----",_"" Sciences Education and jValua-

332, 334 and '337 Norton.

min~,

Monday.-August 26, was the first day of
classes for the School of Medicine (and
for the School of Dentistry), with orientation for the 135 members of the 1978
Med Class coming even earlier -:- on
August 22.and 23.
·
•
At the orientation, President Robert L.
Ketter presented incoming students with
this-prt&gt;{ile-of themselves: "The 135 of
you here today were ~elected from 5,317
applications. The Admissions Committee
interviewed 633 candidates before
decidinll upbn ydu. Thirty of you are
women and there are 23 blacks and one
Cuban. Only ten are from outside New
York State, and 58 come from Weste rn

Permnllkatlon of PriYate Enterprise
Dr. Clyde Randall of the Medical
School officially welcomed the newcomers for the School and the
profession : "Although the image of the
physiciJn is somewhat tarnished, the
practice of medicine is a personification
of our private enterprise. Under this
system any physlcitn may select any area
of specialization that he wants. But this
may change if any one of. three bills that
· are ln Congressional hearings are
adopted." ·
Dr. Randall told thjo 1978 class to take
"your lesspns seriously. 'As you learn to
live with this system your effectiveness as
a student will ~elp you get into the field
you desire.
,':
" Be _.....,...., 1 ol people _ nurses,
_ therapi;;r,--;:,~hnlclans, . physicians'

~r.hed
'

·

23

•
black~ 1n

=

Y!l&lt;kNt!W~~hilfn.e:

Dr.

DOWN:...IUTUP

...............
............ _u,..-..
.............

1lle

lliiiNniiJ

~_..

....

-·r ..._
=..:...=-~
J':l:
c
_... ....
__.._,.,tlill
;....-.

Two~ J!! '

one

dergraduate work at UIB. Most of the
. other students are transferring from New
York State colleges.
·
The School ol Health Education . will
enroll 70 (40 men, 30 women) In the
Department of PhYsical Education for the
first time this fall, acconllng to
Mar•
tin Mc;lntyre, associate dean. Most of the
new students are junior collqe transfers
from Niagara lc Erie countle$. There are
12 or·1S blacks in the first year class. in
the graduate illvlslon, there are 54 new ~
students enrolled in the physical education prosram and 26 in the health educa-tion prosram. There are two black
among 2li2 students enrolled In tho
physical education ·sraduate ~
and nine amo1111l8 in4he health edUCation sracluate prosrun. .
Of 120 ..,detpaduates Kcepted in tho
first year class in the School of Nursi"'
20 per oent are minorities and 10 per oen•
are niale. There were 350 applicants, accordlns io Miss Mary c. Ham!n, ..atan1
dean. All of the new studenls are from
New york State, with appniiXIu•tely 65
per cent -comi!JB from W - New
York. ~iss Harren said 73 new llUdents
have been accepted· fQr PUfte study
In the School of ·Nurslnc- Mote than
three-fourths a~ from New York sme.

~
·~------- ~_.. .. $Qt .
-..
.
.

£

�.

4

J

\~ -

\ .

\

September s, 1974

Ketter· reappOint~d; Ertell named. acting -Ac~mk
The reappointment of President
'Roben L. M;etter by the SUite University
Board of Trustees; the resignation of Dr..
Bernard Gelbaum from the post of vice
president lor aca~mic affairs, and the
appointment of Or. Menon Enellas ~­
ting acaderilic vice president highlighted
University administrative actions this

summer:
Ketter was arnang seven - SI:JNY administrative_officers reappointed by the
SUite University Boam of Trustees at its
June 26 meeting in formal implementationJ of a frve-year presidential review
~~

ev.luatioh process announced in

" 1973. The protess Is said to be the first of
its kind in any public university in 't he ·
United SUites.

· The reappointment, Ketter said in a
University Information Services radio interview following the announcement, indicates that the SUNY Trustees agree that
UIB haS been moving in the right direction over the pUt several years and that
they feel confident the institution. can
continue in that direction.

. reached stages" where his direci involvement;. required that he intends to direct
hio effons.
·
·'
"Reluctantly" accepting Gelbaum's
resignation and thanking him "for the
many contributions that he has made to
the University at Buffalo," President
Kettef recommended to the SUNY
Trustees the appointment of Or. Enell,

·. until a permanent vice president for
academic affairs is named.
Enell had m&lt;&gt;st recently been asSociate
chancellor for special projects with the
central staff of State Universily. Prior to
his Alban{ appointment, he was a
member o the faculty here for 23 years
(1~). He served as Melvin H. Baker
Professor of American ·Enterpr1se and as
professor of economics and industrial
relatiqns. In addition, he held several ad-

ministrative posts, including dean of
University College (now the Division of
UnC:tergraduate Education), assistant vice
president fqr educational affairs, and

director of ilfstitutional research.
He joined the central staff of State

·university in January 1969, as vice ·
chancellor for University·wide activities,

Ketter noted that his administration
has achieved a considerable degree of
stability with the outside community,
something which-the Trustees were most
coinplimenUiry of.

later serving as deputy vice chancellor.
Dr. Enell holds the B.S. and M.A. from
. U/B and a Ph.D. from the University of
Chicago.
·

"Now is the time," Ketter said, "when

OtM. Appolntmenb
lrl other administrative appointments
•nnounced since the end of the 1973-74

we can really determine what this
University can and should do and get on

with the business of doing it." U/8,

h~

SUBSested, has the capability of playing a

.major, if not the major, roJe in es·
tablishing the credentials of State
University in the forefront of knowledge.
To do this, Ketter said he indicated to
the Trustees, U/B needs two things: first,
commitment on the pan of the Board-to have it 8&lt;? in this directio!!i and, se- ·
cond, the internal flexibility to determin·e at ·the" local level what programs
should be phased down, which shquld
be held sUitic, and ..,.hich shoul,!f. be
allowed to grow rapidly in terms of lioth
quality and .numbers.

.a

Ac.Weonk~Presldeftl'
Gelbaui'n, who jOined UIB in 1971 after
serving as associate dean' of the School of
Physical Sciences a! , the University of
California, Irvine, said he was resigning
_ to devote "dose attention, undistracted
by the other demands of my office" to

various academic projects. "On a
number of occasions and in a variety of

contexts," he said, "I have stressed the
view that a university has a deep obligation and an unparalleled opp6nunity to
serve the community through teaching
and research." He indicated that it is to
proira!"s of this nature which . "have

Natio~al

a~_demic year:

• HaFofd L C~, formerly executive
director o.f the Institute for Behavioral
Research (IBR), Silver Springs, Maryland,
was named dean of the School of
Architectur~:o.and Environmental Design.
Cohen had served as executive director
of IBR since 1!166 anifbad been president
of IBR's ExperimenUII College since 1970.

Prior to that, he was an associate

professor in th~ Depar t me11t a·f
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the
School of Medicine at Johns Hopkins
(1967-61), and educational director and
program designer for the Experiments in
Higher Education at Southl!rn lllinqis
University in East St. louio (1966-6n. He
has won a number· of design awards; his

"Nylon chair," designed jointly with
Davis Pratt, was selected by the Museum
· of Modern An in New York for its per-

manent collection as "one of the most
important seating advances in the past 50
years."
• Dr. Jeinnette Spero, chairman of the
Depanment of Community Health Nursing since 1969, was named acting dean
of the School of Nursing. .
• Dr. Byron J, Koeld&lt;oel&lt; was reap' pointed chairman of the Qepanment of

·

~P

received her Ed.M. in college~student
personnel last May, had been a graduote
assistant in the Oftice of Urban Affairs.
She was also a reside.nt counselor at
'Canisius College, worked In the office of
the vice president for student affairs at
Canisius, and the Office of Admissions
and Records at .' uiB. At the Alumni
Association, she will be responsible for
the membership dues program, alumni
tours and .several special projects.
• wnam Lobblns has been appointed
assistant to the dean of the School of
Management. He will be responsible for
setting up and imple"'!!ntillg affirmative
action _programs in the are,as of student
and faculty recruitment. A Rraduate of
U/B, Mr. Lobbins received the J.D. from
UIB Law in June 1972 and an M.B.A. from
the Schoo! of Management in February,
1974. He is a member of the Board of
Directors of St. Augustine's C-o'mm_unitf
Center and an associate in the U/8
·Center for Policy Studies.
·• Dr. Daniel Hambetw has been reappointed chairman of the Depanment of
Economics for a th'ree-year term effective September 1. Dr. Hamberg, who
received his bachelor's, master's and
doctoral ~ees from tl)e University of
Pennsylvani , served on the fa&lt;;t~lties of
Princeton Uni ersity and the Universities
of Delaware and Maryland before joining U/B as a professor of economics in
1961. He was appointed chairman of the
depanment in 1966.
·

Germanic and Slavic for- a three-year
:'t erm effective September 1. ·
.. Professor Waller C. Hobbs of the
Depanment of Higher Education was
named acting chai"')a~ of that depanment througb August 31, 1.975. Dr.
Roben 0. Berdahl, chairman, is on a
one-year leave · of absence with the
Carnegie Couricil for Policy Studies in
Higher Education.
· • Dr. jaJMS F. Mohn; professor of
microbiology and head of the blood
group research unit, aftumed the post of
director of the University's ' Center for
· Immunology, July 1.
'
·
• Frederld&lt; M. Tamalonls, director of
alumni affairs since 1972, was appointed
director of development of the · U/ B
Foundation, Inc.
• Dr. F. carter Ponnlll, vice president
of the Faculty of Health Sciences, assumed the additional duties of acting dean of
the School of Medicine. The search for a
permanent dean is actively continuing.
• Professot Robert Heier was named
acting chairman of ihe Depanment of .
Educationpi Administration, September
1, 1974, tHrough January 31, 1975.·
• Leonam F. Snyder, who had been
performing the functions of the assistant
vice president for -housing and auxiliary
enterprises, Operations and Systems, in
an acting capacity since November 1972,
was officially appointed to that position.
• m. John F. Peradotto was named to a
three·year term as chairman of the
Department of Classics, effective
• Dr. Phyllis F. ftlsley, acting chairman
September 1. Dr. Peradotto returns to
of the Depanment' of Health Sciences
Buffalo after serving as chairman of
Educ,ation and Evaluation since 1970, has
classics at the University of Texas in
been named chairman of that unit, acAustin for one year. Prior to that time, he
cording to President Roben L. Ketter and
was chairman here.
Vice President of Health Sciences F.
• Dr. Eclwam DoidJey was appointed
Carter Pannill. The department
chairl)lan of the Depanment of Spanish,
specializes ·in teacher preparation for
Italian and Portuguese for a three-year
two and four-year health sciences and
term effective September 1, 1974. Or.
• allied health professions ed'ucati9n. Dr. Dudley, a native of St. Paul, Minnesota,
Higl~y is a graduate of D'Youvilie
comes to Buffalo after having served
College and U/B. S~e is president of the
both as chairman of the Depanment of
Allied Health AssOciation for 'New York
Hispanic.Languages and literature and as
State artd io serving on the' t-dirisory
director of the Comparative Literature
Committee for the Study of Teacher
Program at the University of Pittsburgh.
Preparation for Health Occupations
He was chairman of lower division inEducation for the New York State Health ·
struction in the Department of spaniSh
Oq; upations Educators Association.
and Ponuguese at the University of
California at los Angeles from 1964-1969.
•or. Edwam Cler!l&lt;lns has been namMore Recent Announcemenb
ed director of the Educational OpporIn appointments not previously mentunity Program. formerly specialassisUint
tioned in the Reporter:
·
to the'president and professor of educa• Dr. llruce F. MUier has been named
tion at Southern University, Baton
acting chairman of the Depanment of
Rouge, la., Jenkins also served as coor·
! nstruction , faculty of Educational
dinator of curriculum there and was
Studies, effective September 1 through
associate director of the University of
December 31, 1974, in the absence of
Illinois' Upward Bound Program in 1!166.
Prof. Gerald R. Rising.
Me holds the Ed.D. in icience education
• Uncia J, Nennl joined the staff of the
from the University of lllinok, the M.Ed.
Alumni Association as director of alumni
from the University of Nebraska and the
affairs this summer. Miss Nenni, Who
B.S. in biology from Southern.

study. sf:iows ·mino~ity. enrollm.ents ~till low:

City; ·and Texas/Houston. In collecting
Following are i&gt;ther highlights of the
students were in · that categoiy in 1970
~
study:
.
.
.
information and classifying · minorities,
compared with 653 per cent for whites;
A study preparecf.for ihe Fom Foundathey !'sed three major sources: U.S. Of• In 1970 blacks were 6.9 per cent of
upper divbion represenu.tion was 26.4
tion' and released in late August show&gt;:
fice · for Civil Rights, which surveyed
undergraduate enrollment and 11.1 P.,r
per cent for minorities and 34.7-per cent
that toUII · enrollment of black and
co.lleges and universities in 1910; U:S. Ofcent of the naqonal population; Oriental • for whites). Many of the minority
Spanish surnamed students increased at
fice of Education, and the U.S. Census:
Americans were 1.0 per cent of enrollstudents in community colleges are in
colleges and universities in recent years
Statistics compiled by the American
ment a~d .8 per cent of the national popterminal occupational programs.
.council on Education and national
but remained below their percenUiges of
ulation, and the Spanish surn'a med were
the total population. Enrollment&gt; of · professional associations were also con2.1 per cent of the enrollment and 4.6
• In the Initial open enrollment years,
·
whites and Orientals, on the other hand, . ~ulted.
per· cent of the n~tlonal population. .·
1968-1976, when there was a concerted
were greilter than their population
The strudy repons that blacks, Spanish
·
e
ffon
to"increase minority enrollment,
on A~ican. lndians show wide
· percentages. ·The study depended largely
surnamed, C5'riental Americans and
discrepancies ..ln rmation from the Ofespecially on the undergraduate level,
on Federal statlstla produced in the
American Indians constituted 1~.8 ·per
fice for Civil Rlgh , for example, shows
data bail!&lt;! on unpilblished ~EW flsunes · ·
cent of the U.S. population in 1970 but
period 1960-70. Researchers said daUI on
that in ·some states there are -more
show mat nationwide undergraduate
only 10.6 per cent of undergraduate
American Indians were Insufficient to
.
mio:'(!rity enrollment I'C!5e !&gt;Y some S1#1), ·
American
_Indians
enrolled
.
in
oollege
.enrollment, while whites m~de upJ13.2
make estimateS.
compared with an increase of 101,000 for .
than Indians listed in the college-age
per cent of the population and 89.4 per
· ;rhe study was conducted under the
wliites.
That represented gains of 13.0
groups
!&gt;y
the
U.s:
Census.
According
to'
cent of undergraduate enrollment From
• direcllon ol Prof. Madelon Delany Stent
per cent for minorities and· 2.4 per cent
.the P!fice for Civil Rights, American In1960 19 1970 the proponion of blacks, ~
of the 0ty College of New York. Y.he.
for whites.
dian
enrollment
in
1970
'was
.5
per
cent
principal investigator was Prof. Frank
OrienUII An)ericans, and American Inof toUII college enrollment; the U.S. .
· Brown, of U/l's D·epartment of
dians rose in 'total enrollmentJrom 6.1
Census
rep&lt;&gt;ns·
only
0.23
per
cent.
The
• .New York dry was-considered by
: per cent to 7':1 ·per cent Since the
Educational Administration, assisted by a
discre""ncy' is about JOO per cent.
researchers to ~ a special .,_ since it
team of researdlers.
~ '
Spanish surnames . were classified as
alone has a public munldpal universitY,
The research team compared informawhites I~ the 1960 i:ensus, tl)ey do 'not
• Of bachelor degrees earned in ·1976,
containing senior and community
tiOn on .the paduate and undergraduate
appear as a separate category in ' this
whites lccOUnted " for 92.1 per ~nt,
colleges, administered separately from
enr.ollment of four 'miriOrlty poups in 50
comparison.
.
· blacks 5.2 per cent, Japanese and
the SUite system. In the ,city's popl.llation,
lhltes and the District of Columbia. Five
· .Undergraduate and graduate
Chinese Americans 1.0 per cent, and the
blacks and the Spanish surr~~~med make
states and a · major metropolitan area in
enrollmef\ts of .these three minonty
Spanish surnamed 1.2 per cent.
•
up 21.lJ per cent ' and 10.2 per cent,
eKh were selected for special analysis
groups tripled, rrom 177.000 in 1960 to.
• Minority enrollment' nationwide b
respectively.
In 1970 full- and part-time •
because of large minority populations:
533,000 in 1970, and lwhite enrollment
heavily concentrated in lower divisions
undergraduate enrQJiment in the City
Qllfomiall.os Angeles; Florida/Miami;
more than doubled- from 2.7 million to
of 111 Institutions and in commun!tY
6.3 million.
llllnols/Chicaio; New York/New York
colleges (_7.3.6 -~~cent of aU·.!'i'~o:sJty .
W.......... D.C.
eo-c:t on E*lallon

• Data

�,j

Septembei s.'t9u ·'

........

., All -72·flre·ft1be-rS of·&lt;Campus Security·force
have sa~e training as.:._ muQicipal officers
As -a r~~ a special sch~l held on
campus i~f'Y 22-Septe!Jlber 3, 'all
members of the 72-person Campus
SeCurity force have now had training
identical to that required for any
municipal police officer In New York
State.
.
A~ording to leon E. Griffin, assisJant
director, Campus Security, t~is level of
trainins..exceeds that required for campus officers under latest revisions of the
State Education law. That law calls for
some .zOO hours of training; all U/B officers, however, have had appro~imate­
ly 300 hou.rs of special instruction.
Future-additions to the force will con• tinue to receive this higher level of training, Griffin says~through an arrangement
which will .find u/8 . secUrity recruits
onending tralning sessions held by Et1e
County's Central Police Services.
Previoysly, campus OffiCers received
training in Albany under supervision of
SUNY's coOrdinator of security services.
The n..W policy, however,' sets standards
higher than. SUNY's. Using. County
facilities f_Of future trilning; Griffin says,
assures that U/B officers will cOntinue to
meet the minimum standards of the
State's Municipal Police Training COuncil
(MPTQ.
The summer training program on Campus, a joint venture of SUNY ~ritf
· Services and Campus Security with the

co-sponsorship of Herbert Zimmerman,

chief, A.mherst Police, was designed to
bring 20 U/B officers who _had not
previo~sly received such training up to
MPTC standards. It was also anended
two officers from Alfred Agricultural
Technical lnstifille and bY seven
Buffalo 'state: ' · · ·
-· ·
·· ·
Faculty for the school were
from the
State.
local law

unit on.
of law Enfiirciorner&gt;t:" re&lt;&gt;reoen,tatives of the Erie
County
dis, cussed social service agendes; Leonard
F. Walent}'nowicz, a Buffalo anorney,
t. ught 11 Constjtutjonal . law;" Dr.
Zebulon Tiintor, assistant chairman, U/8
Department of Psychiatry, discussed
"Mental Illness," in connection with a
field trip to the Buffalo State Psychiatric

and

tage, Griffin says.
First, it helps build a feeling of
professionalism and an espirit de corps
among the Campus -Security force. TQ
realize that they have had'the same law
enforcement training as other police of-

Second, Griffin says, it should · be
reassuring to the campus community at
large to realize that those responsible for
their safety and protection operate at a
level of competence equal to that of
police officers in any municipality in
New York State.

Cuban IGWTW' t·o be s'ho
' wn

'Fall smecJules for U78.
'·

. .\UGI.U:n---.-

IWCOTT ·

....,_,2mid.
....,_,_

=.t'-liundly

,.,...,_

='' -

~Ooj,()a.14

V-t:Jor,Oct,:ll .

(from tMP 4, col. 4)

UniveDitY of New York. consisted of 16.9
per cent blacks ond 4.8 per cent Puerto
Ricans. In the same · year blacks constituted 26.4 per cent of total full· and
part-time enrollment in CUNY's com~
munity colleges and 12.2 per· cent in the
sepior ·colleges. For Puert~ Rican
students th~ figures were 7.1 per cent in
community colleges and 3:7 per cent in
senior -colleges.
• Data on graduate school enrollment
indicated simiJar underrepresenUition
for blacks and the Spanish surnamed.
Japan~ an!! Chinese Ameri&lt;;an enrollment appe~rs on a par with their related
numbers in the population. For blacks
and the Spanish surnained, opportunities
to aneiid graduate and professional
schools appear extremely limited when
·compared with other Americans .
• In professional schools (mediCine,
dentistry, law) black and Spanish surnamed enrollment is low, and so is their
representation among employed
professionals in those fields. 1972-73 data
for medical schools shows blacks S.S per
cent of total enrollmeJlt, the Spanish surnamed 1 per cent; for dental schools,
blacks 4.2 per cent, Spanish surnamed .8
per cent; law schools, blacks 3.9 per cent,
Spanish surnamed 1.1 per cent. Data for
~970 show that black doctors, dentists,
and lawyers amounted to 2.0 per cent,
2.3 per cent, and 1.2 per cent of the
respective work forces. Spanish surnamed representation in the three
professions respectively was 3.7 per·cent,
1.3 per cent, and 1.4 ~r cent.
The report, Minority fnn&gt;llrnenr
Representarlon in lnsrlrutlom ol Hlghe
Eduarlon, is available on request from
the Ford Foundation, Office of Reports,
320 East 43rd Street, New York, N.Y.
10017.

Center; Dr. Allen Kuntz, _director,
lnsiructional Services and Testing, U/B,
lectured on "Basi&lt;' Psychology for ·
An epic film that has beer&gt;f;AIIIed_"The · ''narratl.;, which ·alloivs one to feel the
Police;" and Ronald . Dollman, Student
Affairs, UIB, covered the "Relationship
Gone With -the Wind of Fidel Castro's
spirit of each time. It is the tjme as it was
of Campus Peace Officers with the Stufilmjpdustry" will be st)own on ~mpus
lived by 1&gt;\'0ple, and the atmosphere
dent P'opulation.'' - ·
September 6 at 7 ond 10· p.m. rn 147
which grew out of it, and not !IS a moOther topia included: Ia~ l'nfQrceDiefendorf.
_
ment of history that I wanted to capture." -,
•
men! ethia; h,!lma!l relatlOi&gt;~ ,cdrninal_ . _Hailed as both a feminist and a Thirdprocedure; pl!!lllflaw; vehide and·traffic ' · World maSterpiece, Lucia -i~ being spon· The first section is a tale of betrayal in
law; disorderly conaui:t and intoxication
sored-on camp~s by the Committee -lor
almost operatic .style which takes place
'laws; dvil disorder; juvenile law; acci-.
Chilean .Democracy, Women's Studies
during Cuba's War of lnileP\'fldence
dent inv..Stlgation; communications;
College and the Council9n International
against Spain. The second vignene is set
aowd ancl rio!_ control; int~ews and
Stud"".
·
'~
.
in the '30s during ·the regime of Gerardo
interrogations; _collection and.P"!""rv!Lucia is a three-part· epic that spans
Macado, the first of the modern Cuban
tion of evj.lleJlce; narcotics and
almost 70 years of Cuban history, from
dictators. The final section is a eomic
dangero\ii. drugs; auto theh, burglary
the late 191!&gt; century to the early years of
parable on the· .fruits of marital
and· robbery; sex crimes; bombs ~nd
the Cuban ~lution. In ·each section,
possessiveness which has as its 'COntext
bomb threats; first aid; relatioM wltli • ·featuring~ different actress ond shot in a
Castro's drive against illiteracy.
mijl()rlty'sroups; arrest techniques; self- .
disdnctive styje, tile life · of a woman'
Anti-Castro Cuban refugees rel!!ased
defense, and fire arms training. .
nariled lucia is shown in relation to the
White mice in theatres and disrupted
Fire arms training !'VOS in&lt;;luded, Griffin
political events of her time.
ihe American p'!!miere of the film in
says, not because ~mpus Security _ever
flumberto Solas, the film's young
1972. The film was subsequently seized
intends-either to use or-carry arms, but
director, has explained that his intenby the. Treasury Department.
- because it Is Jl¥folthe basic training all
tions ' were to "show the epj&gt;Ch,. not '
A donation of $1 is being asked at the
pollee _officers in the State receive.
throush historical facts but through a
showi!'_l!,: ,

DC8'110NSJO-

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Sciences said
still losiog
grad students
Graduate enrollment i~ science and
engineeri ng decli\u;d again last fall at institutions granting .science Ph.D.'s,, the
National Science foundation reports.
The total decline of 1.9 per cent for both
science and engineerins followed ·a
similar drop the year liefore in a trend
that began in 1969.
The total &lt;tecline in engineering ~as
3.5 per cent. life sciences showed ari inaease of 2.2 per cent, but declines were .
reponed for physjcal sciences (23 per
cent), mathematical sciences (3.0 per
cent!, psycholoi!Y (1.4 per, cent), and
social sciences (3.0 per cent).
The largest percentage declines were
recorded by sociology (8.S per cent), and.
electrical ensineering (8.3 per cent).
The rate of decline in the number ot
· students receivins federal ~was
14 per cent between 1972 ai'R11973, aher
a ten per cent drop from 1971 to 1972.
.NSF said this was partially offset by a six
per cent increase in students rec:elvins
institutional support, and a four per cent
inaease In those rec:elvi"B aH other
f9rms of outside oupport. SIUdents who
were self-supPorting declined nine J!.er
cent,-rsverslng an upward~ nated in
recent Y'l'rs.

'

.

-==

-UGl

�•'Excellent' new faculty appointments
repQrf~d

in survey of deans

The University ,has.)11ade a number of
~•cellentsenior faculty appointments for

aademic 1974':75, EKecutive Vice President J(lbert Somit indicates.
·
A survey, of provosts and oons con·
ducted by the EKecutive Vice President's
Office resulted in this sampling of these
key appointments:

5oc:W Sdences Mid Adlllinlllr.ation
SSA has made 25 faculty appointments
for the n - year, Acting Provost Arthur
Butler reports. "Only a fractlon of this is
attributable to n - lines; the bulk are
replacements ' for r.eslgnations,
. retirements, terminations and deaths."
Butler si~ out:
Rkhanl
History - "A relatively
young scholar with an already~solid
reputation in- the. field of American
history. His book, The Jeffersonian Crisis,
has received the .highest of praise. He is
qualified to teach legal history and will
make valuo~ble contributions to our in·
terdisciplinary relations with the Law
School."
Rudolf Wlldenmann Political
Science - "A 'J)fominent scholar in the
field of foreign and cross-natiol)al
political institutions and behavior."
Roy Magiclls - Politlal Science "An eminent scholtu with international
visibility in a variety of fields induding
French politics, comparative analysis,
political parties, elites, and foreign
policy-making."
Roser Burton - Psychology - "A
prominent scholar in the field of
developmental psychology. Well kn!&gt;Wn
for -his work in social-personality
development and on the moral develop-

ment of children."

...

.

MorriS Rosenbers- Sociology-" An
eminent scholar with outstanding skills
in survey-quantitative methodology. His
book, The lOiit of SUtvey ANiysis, 'is a
dassic in the field ."
·~-.
JKl&lt; Katz,..- ·Spo!ech -"An outstailding scholar in the area of clinical
audiology. A pioneer in a number of
au&lt;!iP,!om: fO!injcaH~shi.!l-_s-" t' . ,.
.
~~.y.t6ini ~ direetor, 'Survey ResearCh
Center and faculty professor - ..:.!A
leading scholar with strong interilisciplinary skills induding oocial psy=chology, management, education and
surveyrquantitative-r:netfiodology.''
Jooeph ~anok- joint appointment,
Faculty of Social ~iences and Ad ministration and Department. of
Statistical Science - "An outstanding
sampling_ statistician who wiiLWQrk with
our• Surv.ey Research ~enter to
strengthen statistical su~ techniq'ues
in the social sciena!s."
•
AI the tenured asoociate professor .
· level, Butler said, H. Ray Hoops is joining
the Department of Speech Communication.
·
Arb ..... Letlen
Among Its Incoming senior 'faculty,
Arts and Letten lists Huald Cahen, n oon of the School of Architecture and
Environmental Design, Jolon rw.doUo,
retuml~ and chairman of the
Departmem, of Claula, and Edward
DDIIer, the recently ~nted chair·
man and professor o(Spanish, Italian and
Ponusue~e (see administrative appolntmems Wfi!HIP• elsewliere in this

illue, for more

infl?nnatlonl. '

~ CIMo will ll'e joining the An
Department as a tenured associate
professor in ·an history. A former faculty
member at Boston University, she wrote ·
her lohns Hopkins Ph.D. dissertation on
"Studies of COsmatesque pavements,'"
and is currently compiling material for a
book on ft-.anesque Sculprure In CM\Jpanla.
W.K.'C. Guthrie, Laurence Professor of
Ancient literature at Cambridge UniY1!r·
sity from 1952-73 and a fellow of the
British Academy, will be the visitiJ1g Raymond Professor of Classics for the fall
semester. Prof. Guthrie is ·author. of: A
History Creel rfoJiosoplry (vol. I, 1962;
vol. II, 196S; vol. Ill, 1969; .other volumes
in progress), The Gre:ek l'ltllosophen
(1950), The Greeh iiiKI r~~W.Cods (1950),
among-other volumes. _
British novelist and critic Christine
.,_.e-llote will be the visiting Butler
Professor of English this . fall. She has
. taught literature! language and
linguistics in Paris, is author of A C~
m.ar of Mebt&gt;#tor (19581, A ZBC of Ezra
Pound (19n), and eight novels, the
latest two of which , Sud&gt; (19661 and
(19681, werS' awarded the Society of Authors and James Tail Black prizes
respectively.
Ensfneerlns and Applied Sdences ·
Stephen Maldn is joining FEAS as

oi

tenured associate professor of
mechanical engineering. A former faculty member at the University of Texas,
Austin, he was visiting senior lecturer in
the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering at
the Technion-Israel Institute of
Technology, Haifa,' in 1972~3. His fields
of interest indude materials engineering,
manufacturing processes, abrasive
processes, and .surface phenomena.
llenjuUn Gal-Or, prof~r at the
Department of Allrona.utic~l Engin~ring
of the Israel Institute of TeChnology, will
be visiting professor of chemical
engineering. A native of Israel, Gal-Or is
involved in aerothermochemistry
research and, during 1973, was respnsi... ble for initiatiOn, planning ,and sUpervi .. .
~sian of the construction of Israel's first
Turbo- and Jet-Engine Laboiato,.Y.

- 1 ·.

September 5, 1974
0.' I :

~ /

~ •

UIB · ~. ~

schedule 90
a~.d pr&lt;;lV2~fs · fall contesrs
undergrJOduate engineering degree, he is
chairman of the Maine Governor'~jlank
Study Commission, and of the li:.B.A.
Commission on Regulation of Consumer
Credit. He is a forml!r .member of the
Public Interest Research G roup,
Washington, D.C ., where he was
associated with Ralph Nader.
Natural Sciences and Mathema6a
Four senior appointments are reported
by the faCility of Natural Sciences and
Mathemalics - S. WIIILun lawvere as
professor of mathematics, John Christian
laiW Ill as visiting professor in the
Statistical Science Division o f the Depart·
ment of Computer Sciences, Chestft
Cluorles Langway1 Jr., as professor and
chairman of the Depar t men t of
Geological Sciences, and Joseph
Sedransk, a joint appointment with
Social Sciences and Administration who
will also be associated with .the Statistical
Science Division of COmputer Science
(see Social Sciences section abovei or in·
formation on .Dr. Sedransk).
Lawvere, who earned the doctorate
from Columbia in the functional semantics of algebraic theories, was a visiting
professor at t he Universita di Perugia
from 1972-74 and has taught at Dalhousie
University, the City University of New
York Graduate Center, the UniVersity of
Chicago, and in Zurich.
Bail~r, with a Ph.D. in mathematical
statistics and an M.D., has been editor·
in-ch ief of the /oumal of the Natlon;lf
~oar Institute (NCI), deputy associate
d irector ror cancer control of that
Institute, director of research service for
the VA, d irector of-the . Third National
Cancer Survey, and head of the
Demography Section, NCI, NIH.

U/B will compete in 90 contests this
fall in men 's baseball, cross-country, golf,
soccer and tennis, and women's field
hockey, tennis and volleyball, according
to schedules released this. week -by Dr.
Harry G. Fritz, dean • of the School of
Health Education and director of
athletics. The schedules alsi&gt; include 14
championship tournaments.
There are 21 baseball contests, including ten doubleheaders. Coach Bill
Monkarsh starts his eighth year with the
liu lls.,He originated fall baseball in 19n
and his teams have compiled a 29-5-1
record. Overall, Monkarsh is 161-93·5
since 1968. The season opens September
· 12 at Peelle Field wilh Geneseo State and
concludes October 13 at home with
Ithaca College.
jim McDonough's third cross-country
season lists 12 running dates, starting
September 14 at the Syracuse University
Carnival : The only home meet is
September 24 vs. Geneseo State at
Grover Cleveland Park. The season ends
at the · IC4A Championships, Van
Cortlandt Park , New York City ,
November 18.
• Varsity men's golf under Bill Dando
has 13 dual matches, plus the Annual
Brook Lea Tournament September 27-28
at Rochester. ECAC Fall Championship
play opens October 4-S at Co rnell
University.
Men 's soccer, newest of the Bulls'" 11 ·
varsity men 's competitions, includes~ ten
games and the Annual SUNY/Center
Championships, hosted this season at
Stony Brook. Coach Sal Esposito in his second season would like to improve on
last fall's S:S-2. Tlie schedule starts at
Syrac11se, University SeP.tem9&lt;ir: 21.-.The
SUN¥ Genter play caps the mmpetition
November 1·2.
There are , 11 men 's tennis dates, in·
' cludiog:. lh!! "-!111ual E(AC F~ll S:ham-

Dr. LanJ!&gt;yaY~ who will .,a~~me ,-~he
chairrriansflip, of GeOlogicill ,Scjert&lt;;o['S in
piOJlShii&gt;~ : Octob!arJ ,4-4;&lt;~., .,Pri!l&lt;;,~ton
January, has a wide range Of scien~ific exUnivef!ity. U/.1! .•opens ,SeQ\~IJlby~u1.4
pe rien ce in both government and
here ag0i11s1 Ga(lnon College. .at :Rotary
academe. He was a research geologist·
Courts. ,
glaciologist with the Snow, Ice and PerDr. Carolyn Thomas, second year
:rnafrost : Research &lt;fstablishment from
coach of field hockey for wo"!."n, opens
1956-1959 and since 1961 has been
that season against Niagara.at home, Oc·
associated with the Cold R,egion ~
tober 7. She is also women's varsity
Research and Engineering LaiX&gt;ratory,
basketball head coach. Cynthia Ander·
Educational studies
NHampshire,
teacljing
ocHanover,
son
is in her third year in charge of
Samuel Weintraub is joining
casionally at Dartmouth. His studies .in·.
volleyball for women; her regular season
Educational Studies as a professor in the
volve
independent
and
cooperative
schedule
begins October 4 with Niagara
Department of Elementary and Remedial
laboratory and field investigations in
Community College (here).
Education. Weintraub has been an
Greenland
and
Antarctica
on
basic
and
. Elizabeth Dimmick, recently a staff
elementary teacher, a member of the
applied problems related to ~now and
member in phySical education at Buffalo
Reading Research Center of the Univerice, particularly geochemical,
SUite CoiJese, is UIB's new women's var·sity of Chicago and, most recently, an
glaciological
and
geochronological
sity
tennis coach. Wo~n's tennis begins
associate professor at Indiana University.
studies of glaciers. A fell~ of the
September 19 with a home match .•~· ; ­
He is associate chairman of the national
Geological
Society
of
America,
among
Rochester. .
Committee on Critical Reading in the
other professional associations, he has
Consult the It~ "~leo. - . ior
Middle Grades.
been 'chief of the Snow and Ice Branch
weekly scheduleS"lleginning neKI week.
frank farner, former president of
Research Division of the U.S. Army Cold
Federal Ciiy College, W~hington, D.C.,
Region Research Engineering Laboratory
and, most recently, a school finance ad·
since June 1966, r~nslble for ....the
visOr to the Royal Thai s:;overr&gt;ment, will
A male assistant professor at John Jay
scientific management of 20 professional
~a visiting profesoor in the Department
College of Criminal Justice has filed a sail
and technical researchen concerned
of Higher Education. Farner has also
charging discrimination in the college's
'with conducting basic, research qn the
been executive secretary of the Oregon
policy. He alleges John Jay promoted
physical, chemical, and mechanical
School Study Coundl and is co-author of
four women ahead of him and ended his
properties of all types and forms of snow
~- on dte future ol Stare
teaching
contract in violation of h~
and ice.
Co1Jeses iiiKI llnWenldes, amojlg other
rights.
~ books and artldes.
·
.
School of tte.ild. Educ:.ation .
JKl&lt; Iaker will join 'die School of
Health Education as chairperson, Depart·
ment of PhY,ic::al Educatio_n with the rank
of tenured associate..professor. He was
,
FACULTY
previously an associate professor at
Instructor-Associate Professor (3 positions!, Dentistry. .._
Murray State University, responsible for
Nn'
instruction, development of new
curriculum ·and pl_a nning .of new
. Assistant to Director, Adl'!)issions and -Records, PR-1.
facilities. He- was coordinator of the
Assistant .to Director (.50 linel, International Studies, PR- 1.
"Faculty Fitness Program" there and was
For additional infortna'don l!!?nceming these jobs. and for details of .lo!TP
involVed in design and mhstructlon of a
openings throusJ&gt;out the State University system, mnsult-bulletin boards at
" Human PerformaDCe laboratofy'' to aid
these locations:
'
students in the· study of e•ercise
1. Bell Facility between D152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, neKI to
physiology and biomechanics (the
cafeteria; 3. Ridse Lea, Building 4230, in mrridor neKI to C-1; 4. H&lt;:Jith ScienCes
mechanism · of human nootion with
Building, in corridor oj!poslte"'HS 131; S. ~pen Hall, in the mrridor between
respect to performance In sport ac·
· Room 141 and the ~; 6..lockwood, ground floor if!·corridor 'neKI to ven-·
~1.
- ·
ding machilles; 7. Hayes Hall, In o;nain entrance foyer, across from Public Information Office; ·B. Acheson Hall, hi corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
A specialist, In' commercilll transac. Parker Engineering; in corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
tions, .... Alllhw st-osle. .... a
Housins Office area; U. 18117~, Personnel Department; 12. Nonon
p&lt;ote.or _. the Unlfttslty ol Maille
· Union, Director's Offoce, ~325: 13. Qiefendorf Hall, in corridor l)eXI 'to
Sch~l of taw, Is joining .Lni and
Room 106; .14. John lord O'lliian Hall, fourth floor V.l!lhetst ~mpus).
JurifPrudence as a v1s1t1ns ~ for
the year. A pradldng ~.With an

M-.le prof sues

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

~,l,lnlftn!lt:·· ~J· ~~' ~{~- ~~ .
&lt;'

�IDI&amp;ta

7

8 women.
U_n ique 'te~m of -psychic an~ _scientist.
to lead Colleges~ par~psyc~ol~ course to be cited
· An "Introduction to ParapsychoiOIIY''
to be tausht by a unique .t eam of psftdiic
and scientist will be offered this fal as a
Dean's Listing Coune ~U&gt;der auspices of
.t~e Col~iate System - possibly as the
first step toward establishlnR a fullfledsed "experimental" c:OIIetle devoted
to scientific studies in this field.
The cou~oss lis1ed as CDC 118
and COE -178 - will meet Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 9 a.m. in HO Cap,en (a 500se~t lecture hall). OrpniUil ar\d approved days ago, the coune was not
listed on resistratlon schedules but is
now ()pen to student sign-up," offeri ng
full elective credit (four hours). RegiStra- ·
lion number is 01~6. Students
previously resistered for the Colletle E
parapsychoJosy coune, COE 177, wiTI be
automatically switched to the new
eluding Mercyhurst (Erie, Pa.), RIT and
speakers, etc., all Reared to taking a
. courie by the computer l'f!llstratlon
Niagara Community College, in add(llon
reading on student interest In para·
I system, Collese spokesmen indicate.
psychoJosy. According to Ms. Dale
to maklns television and lecture
Instructors will be Carol Ann Liaros,
appearances. She has, according to her
Colton, a U/B undergraduate who
who calls herself a "psychic-sensitive," ) vita, "investigated
haunted
taught the subject for two semesters
and Profe•sor E. Dougl10 Dean, a
houses . ·.. 'poltergeist' cases
within the Collegiate framework, . a
research associate in the Industrial and
and ... cases of 'possession,' worked
group of interested students and faculty
~nagement Engineeri ng Oepanmentat
(who at the present time wish not to be
with various medical docto" and psythe Newark College of En,lneerin!l. The
chiatrists by psychic diagnosing ... (and]
identified) feel the semester's activities
· two have previously taught together at
assisted police in investigation of
will uneanh enough interest to suppon
the Rosary Hill Human Dllreuions
criminal cases." She has been conduc·
a formal petition for approval of a fullInstitute with whic;h they are no longer
scale college next spring. Such a unit,
ting local experiments on teaching "the
aS50Ciated. That Institute, they say, i•
blind to ' see' through extrasensory
Ms. Colton says, would be similar to the
basically_ an information-lecture series
perception," also involving Dean and Dr.
scientifically-srounded Duke. Universlty
"attracting little old ladieo." In their opiparapsychology institute, would probe
Sean Zieler, a clinical psycholosist at the
nion, "pa~apsychology belongs in a
VA Hospital. In newspaper repons, Ms.
the full range of "the extended nature
seriouo academic setting."
hundred
Liaros claimed that in these tests, "the
of the mind," and would involve physiAmerican institutions of his!- ieamins
blind people were able to correctly discists, chemists, psJCholo!tisto and enphave acxr:edl!ed pi'OII'amS in the field,
tinsulsh between black and white sheets
neers. Many students al.d faculty are
they indicate.
of pl!per 65 per cent of the time in more
quietly working on experiments of this
2,511 y_:. of Psychic henll
than 2,000 attempts and between red and
nature at the present time, she says,, in
Their 1:.1/B-courie wiH ·investipte: "2,green sheets 70 per cent of the time in
anticipation of such formal acceptance.
500' years·of P'&gt;Ytnk events" (from Greek
over 2,000 tries." Ms. Liaros says also the
If the idea seems far out, Ms. Colton
oracles to the foundinR of . psychial
blind sul:ijects "were able to pick up
reminds potential skeptia, the term ''exresearch), the modem history of paraauras very well."
.
perimental" In Its fullest sense is suppsychoiOJY (from the founding_'Of - the
The Dean'- Liaros course will be
posed to' be" bufc to the whole
Parap5yd\oJosy LabOratory 'by 'Rhine •ar
augrilenied' ihrouJhout the semester by
philosophy of die UIB college .idea.
Uullertln~ In 1930 ft&gt;recogriilion of
.a . seri~ . of ~eekend workshops, films,
!heflilil by-thel(rnerican -ASsociation 'for
the AdvancemeN of Science (AAAS) in
1969); ESP (lncludi"R telepathy, clairvbyance and precosnition); PI( (the influenCe of mind over matter, embracing
the phenomenon of healing); Kirlian
photosraphy [photosraphs of the "aura"
A .new treatment devi ce which
or energy projected by the human
motivates "'patients with injuries or illness
body)J and dreams- the entire scope of
to perform prescribed exercises which,
the interaction of the individual with hiJ
in turn, help them regain use of injured
surroundinp without use of the sensoryjoints has been developed by a U/B
motor system, Prof. Dean summarizes.
professor in collaboration with. a
Class sessions will.consist of lectures, disPittsburgh couple:
cussions, slide presentations, films and
The solid-state device - called a
demonstrations, culminating in "getting
Synaptor - was developed by Kent
the student to actually take pan and
Nelson Tigges, associate professor and
develbp the ESP abiliti~ which everyone
chairll)an pf the School of+lealth,Related
has," -Qean eicplains. The ·approach will
Professions' ·.Occupational Therapy
be both "scientific and e.P.,rientiat," he
Oepanment, along with Mrs. Maude
says.
.•
Malick, occupational therapy director at
The Sdentllk_.,.
Pittsburgh's Harmarville Rehabilitation
The scientific will be the province of
Center, and Francis Malick of the
Pittsburgh Franklin Control Company.
Prof. Dean who has also taught computer
"One major. problem in our field was
programming and statistics at Newark. A
that. there w~ no universally appealing
graduate of Liverpool Univeuity ,
incentive which could motivate all
£nsland, ; he received his masters in
pl!lients and allow for their in.dividual in·
physical chemistry, and has done
aintives," Tigges says. He points out iri
postgraduate work in electrochemistry at
occupational therapy, the total person Is
Cambridge.
.
He was president of the Parapsythe first consideratibn, with treatment
chological AS50Ciatlon (PAl In 1967 and
designed to fit his or her lifestyle and activities.
in December 1969 was successful1n havThe new device provides this flexibiliing- the PA affil!aied with AM.s, thus
ty. The, patient - throush exercise gaining recosnition of paraP,SychoJosy as
provides the eiectriciiy to activate both
a stjence. .
'the Synaptor and any otht:r electricallySince 1910 he has been president of
the incentiv!! for the patient to carry out
powered device he chooses. A' splint,
the·jersey Parapsychological As5oc!ation,
his therapy.
which is COI)ilected to the Synaptor by
worklns extensively In hlsli voltase
Another innovative 10pect of the
wires, is affixed to the joint. By setting
Kirlian photosraphy of "emanattons
device is that patients confined to bed
Synaptor dials for a certain · exercise • can, by doins limited exercise, generate
from .flnsers (Whlchl are helpful in unpattern and number of -ments per
the "power" to operate a television or
dentandlns psychic heallns-" minute, the patient activates the
Deln Is CIHiuthor of &amp;eculloe ESr
whatever for other patients' participamachine and thus turns on the radio,
(Prentioe-Hall, 1974), detalllns ten years
tion. 'In this way, .it can help continue
television set or whatever by dolns the
of woilt at Newall&lt; with presi!lents and
normal group ldlvlty for the bedridden
prescribed exercise property.
•
fiW1aaen of business companies. Based
which is so important ~
If the patient falls to~ the exon hit tests of these subjects for
nsses Predicts the 5ynap1or wiU
.
ercises required,.the~ warns him
Precosnldon (via 1 ~scored exgreat flexibility In the selection of treat·
wiiiY I buzar and I !~.shins led IJsht. A
periment), he concludes that·"ptOphets
actMties jfid more adaptability In
malce profits.H
few - - ..... the s,n.ptorand the
specillc acute "THH will help
television will thut 011. In order to tum
extend ou:upallonal thenpy lenlcles on
on the &amp;,napiDr
the television apln,
'lloe ....h Iii
· .••
an lapatlent • well • outpatient .basis,"
Ms. Llaros, Dean explains, ''ex~ • the Pl(lent ... exercise
perlencB" ... effec:ls of ESr and "Is . pattern. The "motivation" - · tape
the~ Is desJaned to
NC!Dfder, ~ trllp, television -ls'of
brtltlarot at. eJII!Wnl!"'it to peep~e.·: She
. slrnP.Ie "hhnae action"
prime lll!portance bec:ausl! It becomes·
has held clasRs ai ...ral colleiei. ~~ joints such • the wrist, .elbow, knee or

·-

one

A search is on for elsht area women
who have distinsuished themselves in
their vocations, through civic service and
cultural endeavors. They will be
recosnized by the UIB Alumni AS50Ciation and Community Advisory Council
on October 16 attheit annual event to ,
honor outstanding ivomen.

Nominations were submitted in elsht
categories: business, art,. education,
government, industry, community ser·
vice, professions and creative com·
mu nications, and have· been narrowed
down to three in each Category by ,.ward
.selection subcommittees. Eight women
wlllbe selected from among the finalists
·
by a final selection COn:'millee.
The eight distinsuished women will be
honored at a community luncheon on
October 16 in the Statler Hilton Golden
Ballroom. Raymond T: Schuler, commissioner of the New York State Oepanment of · Transponation, will be the
luncheon speaker.
·
Tickets for this event cost $6.25 and will
.so on sale in early September. Reser·
vations can be made now by calling the
U/B Alumni AS50Ciation at 123 Jewett
Parkway, 831-&lt;4121.

Mary Herman, public relations
specialist with the New York Telephone
Company and a member of the Universl·
ty at Buffalo Community Advisory Council, is chairperson of this year's event to
honor outstanding women.
The final seieaion committee Is headed by R. Bruce Pullins. general manager
of New York Telephone Company, and
includes: Allaiee Babbldse, vice presi-

dent, conimunity affairs, Marine
Midland Bank; Leroi Coles, executive
director, Buffalo Urba!1 Leasue; Father
James Dem•ke, president, &lt;;anlslus
College; Charles F. LIJht, 'president, Buffalo ~rea Chamber !&gt;f,Com~rce.

Synaptor called ·b oon ·"tO. patient ·e xertise

ment

..r

.

.

:&amp;.:

.

-

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

ankle, des!Rns • underway to M1NJt the
Synaptor's SPlint to all type of joints.··
Tlsges believes the rilachfne will be.
suc:ceSiful with patients of ...... ud .
certainly will be 1 boon to dae Who ciJs-l
like doin~exerdsel and retard their own
•
failure to do them pooperty•
B Occ11patlonal Therapy
Department Is the first academic
jlrOsram In the ODUntry to 1M the $pap- ·
tor and research will be c:ancluclled In
llufQio on patients to Its cffec;

."Teu

the-.
.
;
HJn ocx:upatlonal therapy, we u.t
patients for their ClDIIdltion, but - alto
prepare them t o - '-'e and tunc- don at their mafmuin ....._ We hope
. the Synaptor wm.be an lmpocbm tool in
matlvatlns them to .'help ~: "
Tlsges says. ~

�•
I.

i

~

i

~ampus.

Providin&amp;. for the ~istration of motor
vehicles; controlling parking and operation of vehicles; adopting New York
State .Vehicle and Traffic laws and Oty of
Buffalo and TOwn of Amherst venicle
taglng and-ticketing; providing for towlni; and providing for revocation of permlu.

W*-tolluiWo

· The State Univenity of New York at
Buffalo is unique an\ong urban universities in possessing, on its campuses,
motor -vehicle parking areas having a
capacity for mOre titan 7.000 vehicles as
well as a system of roadways providing
entrance and egress for these areas to
public thoroughfares. These fadlities are
provided for the convenience . of
students, faculty, staff and visitors otthis
University.
Parldns and Traffic legulotiOns
Persons who drive vehicles on the
various campus locations are subject at
all times to the motor vehicle laws of the
State of New York, to orders of the
Department of Transportation ancfto the
ordinances of the City of lluffalo and th~
Town of Amherst where applicable.
The operation of i motor vehicle on
the campus of the State· Univenity of
New Ymk a(Buffalo is a privilege granted
by this institution. Serious or excessive
•. traffic violations may result in the loss of
this privilege. .
Only those motor vehicles displaying a
valid permit are entitled to use campus
fadlities.
- The University assumes no responsibility Jor a vehicle or its contents. This
includes any damage caused by moving
_ or towing.
·

porary employees may obtain a temporary parking permit from Campus
Security.
l'arfdo&amp; Slider l'lac:ement
The parking sticker is to .b e affixed to
the back of the inside rear view mirror so_
as to be unobstructed and visible
through the vehicle windshield.

The lt.epottB publishes lfHoushout
the ,_. the texts of 01 number of

documents

oudlnlns polldes_ md

~of Interest to the Unlwer-

~ mmmunlty. Tbls yeu, these
Vehicle llegiolrati!&gt;n
~ wll be published under
The term motor vehicle as used in
· the ltMtlud hudlns, UniYenlly
thl!se regulations means all selfpropelled vehicles including, -but nof
D~»a•• ~
be numbered
lmlfed 10, snowmobiles, automo.biles,
consecutiY~ for eae of reference.
motor scooters, motorcycles; and motot ,
bicycle,..
Students (including teaching assistants)
Persons possessing more than one
may ~ister vehicles during registration
motor vehicle must register each such
or at the Secur1ty Qffice, 196 Winspear
motor vehide brought onto the campus.
Avenue: ·
·
·
Verification ·of vehicle ~istration and
Faculty and staff may ~ister their
personal identification !My be requested
vehicles at the· Personnel Office. All
by the Personnel Office or the Campus
Security OlliC'l.
faculty, all full-time and all part-time annual staff are eligible. Hourly· and te!!'Any chang!1- of State motor vehicle

·

..

registration numbeT (license _plate
number) must be reported within ten
days by students to the Security Office,
196 Winspear ,-.venue, and by faculty and
staff to the .fersonnel Off~e.

Parfdng for .Ph)'licaly Handicapped PerIOnS

Physically handicapped persons may
apply for a spedal parki~g permit at the
Security Office, 196 Winspear -Avenu~,
wit/! a con'ifrming statement from a doctor or Student Health Service physidan
wh ich indicates the length of time the
space will be needed. Permit holders
may park in ~paces designated "Handicapped Parking Only."
Vehicle Pernolts .
.
Permits are issued for a full year from
September through August, unles_s
associ~lion with the University · terminates at an ~rlier d.lte. Mutilation,
theh, or other disposition of a permit
must be reported promptly to the office
from which the permit was obtained.
Tile person In oohooe • ~Ide llcMse Is Issued ... lie
responsible for any .......,.,.., ........
_tlon lmoMnr • oeblcle.

heir/,...,

Motor VehldU)peratlon'•
Speed limits are -posted at entrances
and on roadways of each- campus. The
limits va.,.according to ~rtl1)!!nt of .
Transportation orders, from 1S.nljih to 40
mph. Close obServation of signs will be
necessary to insure speeds within the
permissible limits.
·
Full stop at all stop signs is required.
Pedestrian&gt; have the right· of way.
Motor vehicles may not be ·operated
on any sidewalk·or grassed area. 5ervice
vefiicle• r' •and r:authorlzed:~contr~Ct.or

vehicles are not included In this prohibi·
lion.
Campus Security Officers, City of Buffalo police and Town of Amherst lilice
are emjlowered to enforce a I or- 1
dinances and laws pertaining to traffic
regulations.
·
••
-

,.....,.

Parking is prohibited on all roadways
and service drives exoept as od\erwise
posted for time-Umlt parking In selected

ar~ion Of a mOtor vehicle
it
entitles the holder to park only If
is
available space In the alloned parking
areas. Jfle ~does-.-.mee

J::Z'

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{tum IO

,..;-;;:col

f)

II. Guide for distributing 1974 discre,iQnary funds
EDITOR'S NOTE : The following . organizatlo~s." Additionally ·1 he
by Departmental Chai.,.;,..n, Supervisors,
individual's name, rank or PR grade,
guidelines for distribution of 1!174 disDeans,"'irectors, Vice Presidents and the
Professional Staff Senate has spent condepartment ot unit, yun In r111k or ser·
ctelionary funds went folwMOed to camslderable time in examining various
President in the appropriate order of
vice, and a ful~ written justification for
pus admlnistntors on Augusr ZJ. Tile recriteria which might be considered in
progression.
why he or she bellevesotdlsc:ntionuy incent contract bet-. the State a nd
awarding disaetionary monies to noncrease should be ........ Anr~l
United u~ l'rolesslonals. barpinteaching· professionals. A list .of those
Procedures .
who may have rMde such -'icatlori on
lng agent (or SUNY llallly and staff,
items identified by them Is-also appendEach Departmental· Chairma!l or unit
hls .qwn'behalf may,ln rum; torward that
pmvides for a pool for rhls purpose of . ed for your reference. .
•
·
Supervisor may recommend faculty or
request to the hiBher lellel for mnthree-qwrters of one ,_ cent of the
NTP's within their area in aocorda·nce
sideration, should It not receive the supWhHe the above considerations are
June JO, 1!174, fMyroll - eat;!! unit lw
with the&lt;guidelines. They must J&gt;I:Ovide a
port of his inunedlate supervisor. bch
certainly"still applicabie to your present
available ro...lr to per cent of funds
priority _ranking for these !ICO"'menProvost, Dean, or major UAit fUperV1sor _
generated .tMMier this formul.t; 10 ,_ •. deUberations, I wish to highlight the
dations (separately for faculty and NTP's)
(In some Instances, VIce President~) shall
following emphasis placed on the dis- - along with suggest~ dollar amounts, - review the r-ecommendations he
cent Is
by the~·. Oftribution of such monies, which was
and a written, separate letter. ol justffkareceiWes. He may review the._._ and
flee ffl' ~use.
provided in Vlcie Chanc:2llor MacKen· In I!IY Matdl , 1974, memorandu"'
tion in supJ!Ort, of each Individual
send them forward whh approvAl,
........... the dlllrlbutlon of our 72-73 · zie's recennnemorandum to Presidents.
recommendation. ,a~,
modify them In consu~ with the
disaetloiaary funds, I lndlated that · "Discretionary lncreMes are to be awafdun~led by ..oucll lndMrl.,al,
reconirnencllng officer, or dliapprowe
ed for outstanding and meritorious per"dlscretlonilly monies can and should be
oorlnen
"""'~""""·
lie
can.them,
lndlc;itlng his reasons for dlsapformance. AI twt ol file ptOOeSS rtf
awarded on the basis o1-a1 different'
lldeted. Any· recommendations which
proval to tHe ~II*ICIJna Gfflaer..
criteria. Primarily, It Is Intended that . ........... ..,., einplafoees ... lie
·may exceed the dollars available to a unit
·
· reaNIIMended lor ~ Inthese
rew..dsbe cllllrlbuted In
should be prepared siparately. All
lr ... lie lfle , ..... lay ol lfle
...._ I
·'----lei be
,.,__ ,_._..,_...,. . . . , _ , (In
~ c
'1rflllcin - l i e pwen 10
1UCh a t.hJori so lhlr nilultant Mlaries
menda
recom
_.., n turn, ......,
•........_ ...._ .............. ~
beaer relleq the ClOnlrlbution each Inforwa~ to the next level of otd•
. _ ....... ~._ ~ w6o pllld ., MIMes
dividual makes to the Unlvwslty. Ccinminlstrlltion for its consideration and apl f l e - - 1 d wfw6fsMI!I .....
-.eularJ lor
... « ..... A salarY lower than
lkllndon. therefore, shOuld be pen to:
proval Slmu~. the Departmenlfle....., ........ lwhldt. tam afnild,
CJU!IIIiridllw . , . . _ .and ~(~nice; the . . . . . ~. should not be the
tal Chairman :or unit ~ should - a~ Indeed *Y itnaiO. VIa! l'resldents,
lncllwltlu* ..._ . . . . have been
basis for recommendlna a disdlscua with
member or NTP . in tum, shali"revlew these -..ellfrozen .t cenaJn 1ew6 becaUse, under • -aetionaly lnaeue. Outstanding • and
who may so
ornotthatlndatlons Jn:a
llmllar 10 the above
dividual ha been ~ for a
procedure aiad foiwanllhem to this ol·
meritoriOus~ must be a ma.Jor faaor In all recominendation for dlsd~ IOXJUM and !lfbr or why•'" flee wllh the ric:ot1nJt1o11 thlt C*tain
aetlonary lncreues.H
'
teaching excellenc.:\. scholarly
not. Sudl ~should -IOUCb
rnodtflcationf
'2 _ _ ...,
I belieVe It Is lmpoJtant that all conpublicallciM; deplrtitlll ~
upon dolllr--. ~.~
~ -~
~ ......_Suc:h ~
stituents have· 111 . . . , _ of and In:
facl!llr ........
··-OIIIIIIIIIaliOn
volvement in "this ~ tnd - ~. · consultatiCin llioUid oa:u;. I· .applrJor.e
or ·tlae tG
lildr
adfurtiMj bel~ hqwewer, that thell;lual
and
. nomlnltluri .llld lllel:don of JncllvlchgJs
mfniitratori lt an teYets iliOu1d
and
profes-.lo!!~l . • for cllsaedoriirr awards should be made
superWor In .. format whJctt ...--the
llum ~,..;. , .. coL »

,.,.held

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10 FoM ...... DirK1or
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100
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L.-iott

MFACC \
MFACC
MFACC

........

........

0

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-....
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Room No.
:n7

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~GIATE

Lootiott

CI:NTEA

6'~~

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~

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�It looms above dense natural foliqe
on the Amherst Campus's north horizon
looking vquely like Habitat, its 'outline
sparkling and deeply defined in
sunshine, yet somehow faded, almost
gothic, against grey skies, an eyeurchin&amp; blend of lines, forms, corners,
angles.
Unusual. The sprawling Joseph P.
Ellicott Complex which opened for earnpus use this week after almost a decade
of planning and construction is 'definitely
that - something unusual for UIB, in
function as well as in form.
11
Most- academics haven't in their
wildest d reams seen themselves working
~-., in such superb surroundings," is how Dr.
Clifton K. Yearley, chairman of the
Department of History, the Complex's
first oCcupant, described Ellicott earlier
this summer. "It's sure to take all the
major architectural prizes."
.Designed by Davis, Bro~y ·and
Associates of New York, and Millstein,
Wittek, Davis and Associate\ of Buffalo,
the SSO million, 38-building Complex
contains a\ much · space (over threequarters of a million usable square feet,
one million square feet in total) as the
typical small liberal arts college. In fact,
the variety of features within its walls classrooms, libraries, dining facilities, ef·
fices, labs, lecture halls, a drama
workshop, residential and recreational
space- could en•ble it to function as an
independent academic entity.

An lntepilll,.

LangUages, the· general offices of the ·
Collegiate System, and offices and faculty of seven residential colleges: College
B (Arts), College H (l:iealth), Vico College
(Humanities), Rachel Carson College
. (Environment), College of flolathematical
Sciences, New Collese of ¥odern
Education and Clifford Furnas College
!Science and Society). Collese E is also
sponsoring a small residential prog~am at
Ell icon.
With so many campu ~s-wide
departments headquartered in Ellicott
and offering large chunks of their course
work here, campus planners predict that
the Complex - despite its apparently
isolated position at the northern fringe
of Amherst developments - will
definitely be in the mainstream of
University activity for commuters as well
as residential students. Another of their
predictions is that the drama .workshop
in the Millard Fillmore Academic Center
- a ·beautifully designed multipurpose
space with ample seating - will be a .
highly popular site for University-wide
public events ol all. kinds - plays, con-

certs, speakers, etc.
Classes -SCheduled at Ellicott begin at
the same time as those at Ridge Lea, with
frequent bus service linking Ridge Lea,
Main Street and Amherst. An internal
Amher.;t Campus shuttle is also in operation;or student and faculty convenience.
For further convenience, the Ellicott

c.,.. .

The multiple buildings, several of
which are. high rise residential towers,
are 'drawn tog~ther by an academic core,
the Millard ' fil.lmore Academic
Collegiate tenter, a Podium structure of
one to three stories which connicis all, .
integrating )!ving and learning. Occupants .can m~ve f1orn buildi,ng to _
building i~ide, at graek.level, or. outside
via a third-level pedestrian esplanade.
This latter feature, the architects explain,
is meant to mix the pastoral with the hustle of an urban plaza. 'It serves."'s a busy
thoroughfare while at the same time
offerinl egress to, and a view of, what
will eventually be a gre,en, landscaped
meadow leading to the campus lake.
That landscaping, -while not. yet complete, is reported to be ahead of
scheaule.

core area features outposts of such
University service functions as Campus
Security, Maintenance, Campus Mail and
the ~heduling and Housing offices. in· formation booths are · strategicall y
located to aid members of the University
commu'nity and visitors in finding their
ways through the Co~mplex . (See IOEiltion
charts; pages 2 and ·3 of this insert, for
preliminary assistance.)
Six

R~ntlal Qua'd;a~

· ·'Ellicott 's 'six la rge · residential
quadrangles provide a total capacity of
3,200 beds - in arrangements varyi ng
from
single rooms through six-person
7
suites. T-hree of these · - William G.
fargo, Peter B. Porter and Red ·Jacket
quadrangles - are expected to be home
for 1,500 students this semester (fargo
a~d Porter will be primaril y for
Collegiate students and the University's
International living Center lor foreign
and American students will be in Red
For vehicular access, a ' campus
· Jacket along with others): The remaining
roadway snakes beneath the Complex at
three units will be fully occupi~d by 1976.
These residential areas offer direct access
grade level facilitating Joad[ng .an&lt;! un- ,
loading of both provisions and people
to aca'demic spaces and ·study areas; .to
reach any facility within the Complex, in
(the campus bus stops here). And ample
parking areas, hidden by gently sloping
fact, a resident need never venture out- ·
side.
mounds, are IOC.ted at the very door.;,
Of the 1,500 students who will live at
also on grade level. Vehieular access, incidentally, is via Skinnersville Road from~
Ellicott, some 55 per cen! are freshmen,
both SW..et Home Road and Millersport
Housing Director Madisori L Boyce estimates. However, a substantial number
and from an inner campus roadway
leading in from the south -the "downof upperclassmen and even a few
lawn area" of the Amherst Campus
graduate &gt;tudents will also live in the
wfiere most of the University's academic
Complex. Six-person rooms, which one
and administrative· functions· will evenU/8 administrator labelled "an atrocity,"
tually be grouped.
have been made more attraCtive by
offering them at a reduced rate : students
who choose them will pay only half .the
The C..... Area
· cost of a· private room.~ Houslnj rePorts
The Ellicott core contains departmenthat six out .of nine of the larger rooms
tal office space, classrooms w.itl&gt; a total of .
have been voluntarily filled already.
900 seats Uncluding a lecture hall with a .
capacity of between 260 and .2801.- four ··
spaces designed. as libraries (one such·.
The CoiJeseo
.
space with room lor 24.000 volumes Is
With the occupation of Ellicott, the ·
now open and ot~ will be used initialresidential colleges will finally have "turf
ly as study halls and for instructional
~of their own," Collegiate Dean Irving
Spitzberg notes. A beli,\!ver in the. psy- ~
medial. a specially-designed lrneraction
laboratory. for the SocioloKY Depan-·
chological Importance of architecture,
ment, and some 200 t.culty oHices (most
Spitzberg thinks the overall -impact ' of.
at so:ade IRYel within the residential
Ellk:oa will be extremely positive. A maquadrangles arid 1101 prec:lsely jn the
jor..problem for the CoUeges, however,
Spltzberg noted, is the paucity of ad- ·
llere
also in some
ministrative space assigned to•them as a
. sp;u:es within the residential
result of-their late entry into the planning.
quadrqlesl ...., ·"'- Deputments' o(
process:
~·.
Hillory, C'-~Gs; French, GerrDanic a.,d
This s·ummer the Colleges . were
s&amp;.vk, Unp~istia, SpMish, ltlliln Mid
predicttn11 that as many u 1.000 Colli!ge'i1 Portusuese, the Program Jn Critical alfili.a ted students (700.800 of them

I~

,.,

~nd,,.;~.

.

~

.,._

'\

"smaUer than the w'hole." for example,
freshmen) ..:ould live at "Ellicott .
each of tlje six cafeterias is subdivided.
However, a room·assignment sn.ag
into three separate dining areas. Libraries
developed when many students)Vho had
·
are similarly smallish, frqmented. Small
indicated their desire to affiliate with a
specific college were assigned to rooms . study carrels are adjacent to faculty offices. Hallways are broken up, turning
elsewhere. for the time being, however,
here, flowing into office or food service
students will be able to participate in
areas there.
residential programs regardless of their
The eight-inch•square bricks used for
room assignments, Spitzberg said.
the exterior walls (twice the size of nor-•
Twin challenges face the residential
mal
bricks) similarly serve to scale down
colleg115, the Collegiate dean explained:
their enormous size (while also
first, to prevent a ruinous split between
providing construction .economies).
residential and non-residential programs
Peter Blake, international architecture
from developing to the detriment of the
critic and editor ·of Architecture Plus
infant Collegiate System and, second, to
magazine, said while touring the
insure that the Colleges do not becOme
Complex recently that he was singularly
isolated from the rest of the University
and the community at large in their redimpressed with this high degree of attention to space both inside and outside.
brick mini-city.
At first glance, he noted, the sprawling
Dlnin1 and Recreational 5pKes
maze of arChitectural shapes and angles
Six dining areas are 11art of the
in
buildings ranging from three to ten
Complex, each capable of serving 1,000
storieS is completely bewildering; "but
individuals ..Three of these are in use this
after
walking aroun.!!Jor a short time, it
fall with the others temporarily given
becomes quite easy to recognize where
over to service as study halls and recreayou've
been and where you're going.
tion areas. A cabaret or rathskeller is also
The variety of forms and shapes actually
included as are such student-cent!&gt;red
identifies each of the various types of acfacilith:s as lounies, game areas,
tivity and ftmction."
organizatiOn offices, a bookstore, and
craft center.
J
According to Norton Union Director
lndiYiduality Intended
)ames). Gruber, Norton plans to open a
~~The intention," .according to a
recreational com'plex in the Wilkinson
member of the architectural design firm,
Qua'drangle . This will consist of a
"is individuality." The majo~sidera­
counter- information area whe r e
tion in planning the Comple
as uhow
be
newspapers, cigarettes, and candy
to make each of 6,000 stud · ts feel like
spld. A cluster of mini-lounges will be inan individual in an area of more than one
cluded in this area,.&gt;vhich w)ll also h 0.u~.
milliori squilte feetl"
1 ·• ' ., .).1.:!
"coin-operated amusement deviCes," in' The answer, he notes, "rested in ~rt
cluding air-hockey and other skill games.
with the careful study and articulation&lt;&gt;f
A game room is also planned for
space. The student is aw~ of the parts~
billiarC:is,· taB~~ tenni~, ches(,.. ~~~~er:st
as Y"!JIIas the 'whole. Srn'ce all types of
and card games. ]'he r~eation coll'plex ,
students wiH " ~ using' the- ·complex,
will open as close· to Labi&gt;r Day as ))ossi;
space&lt; suitable for ·all types o"f'activitles ·
ble, Gruber said, and should lie fully
are pfovided."
·
· ~.. · .. ··
operational sometime this month. .
, The handicapped were not forgotten,
All public spaces within the Complex
either. An extensive rarrip and..elevafetr ~
are already air-conditioned 'loperating
system will aii&lt;&gt;W disabled studentS io go ·
independently of the Chilled Water Plant
anywhere in the facility.
. .• ~
which will provide this amenity to the
. How well the Ellicott Complex works
rest of Amherst).
out in practice, of course, remains to be
Outdoor recreational facilities
seen. Heavy traffic just starte&lt;! flowing
available to Ellicott residents will eventhrough this week.
tually include 12-14 tennis courts to the
Dr. John A. Neal, a~.istant vice presi.· west, handball and basketball courts to
dent for faci lities -planning, expects "a
the north, and a temporary 30,000
year or two of shakedown" before
square-foot " bubble" field house for all
everything goes smoothly. Nonetheless,
of Amherst to be located in a·parking lot
he says, " Ellicott is going to be an exto the south.
citing·place to be. The kids will like it,"
A Series of Intimate Spaces
.
he predicts, "and so will the people woo
work there, once they g~_used ~to the
Despite its vast scale; Ellicott is essent ially a series of · intimate . ~paces,
differen£es . · It's n·ot' your typical
providing t he illusion··that its part~ are _ educational plant."
·

will

r

.

.

.

Since the ear!y design stages 9f these bu.ildings, we
recognized two pitfalls of a project this large. On the one
. hand · · ~ bigness" can lead to a design that is ove.Whelming,
scaleles~ or generally unwelcome as ii place to live. Ori.'the
other hand, complexity and yariety c;an lead to a maze from
which the most experienced will emerge confused ·and ex·
hausted. - ~
We have then avoided large di~ing ·halls, rigid study halls,
·
, or imposing· courtyards and substituted ~smaller, more varied
spaces. Despite a complex mixture of livilllg, dining, academic
and.s~cial spaces, it is not 'difficult in a short time for one-to ·
J~arn his way~ around. _
·
Fo! example, in wall&lt;ing around the raised plazas ol)e inevitably returns to t'he.main plaza an9 is oriented by the lake ·
and towers which signal the entrances.to-the six Quadrangles.
In a similar W,ay the many shapes of the building help
direct the students around the Complex. One qu1ckly learn~ ­
to recognize cantilevered study cooms, skylighted libraries,
lounges that bridge from one buflding to another and the.disti,nctlve shape$ of the drama workshop and lec:ture hall;
.·
..: ·.- :oAVtS;.BRODY &amp; . ASSOC~TES,.
•
'
• &gt;..Y.•.
·&lt;,
architects
-. •
- •
-,

�Sepiember 5, 1974

Ill. C~llege..Charter «2o'm_mittee r_u~es at:~d guidelines
13. A specification of th"e proposed
througflout the entire · meeting: Any
duration of the charter (this duration will
Committee member may move to adbe at least three years but no more than
journ or recess the meeting if the rules of
five);
procedure are not followed. A two- 14. A detailed statement of committhirds majority of the voting membership
mentto affirmative action, with a general
present is required to carry such a modescription of a plan. for affirmative action.
tion;
B. Each charter applicant shall name a
15. A detailed statement of commitchairperson for the purpose of a ~ic
nfent to protection of the rights of all
hearing. Tltis._individual sh;lll meet witb
those in the College; and procedures for
the Committee Chairpenon, prior to the_
guarant~ing the rights of persons in the
public notice of the hearing, to discuss
•
(f~lfy ~ved by the Commirt~, 517/14
College.
the format of the meeting. The agreed(jrdet.
3. Non-voting members may not exer·
4
4
upon
agenda will be induded in the
and 5/1 17 !
11. Supportlns Documentation and
else voting rights in full Committee
public notice.
Guidelines for
ott- hldence
meetings.
C. No more than one hour and frfteen
f
rt
1. Ao'Ninalysis of the student needs
4. Minutes of all proceedings of the
minutes shall be devoted exdusively to
app )'tng Or C a er
and demand for such a Collel(e, which
full Committee shall be made available
the applicant's presentation. The j&gt;osiIntroduction
'
includes enrollment data and, where
tion of this period or the distribution of
to all interested penons.
The following charter application
relevant, data about residence and
5. Nonmembers may participate in
the 'periods in the agenda shall be decidguidelines have been formulated by the
residential interest among unproceedings at the invitation of the
ed
by the appli&lt;;;~nt within the limitation
Charter Committee for two reasons.
dergraduates in the University, as well as
Committee.
that the applicant's presentation be
First, they are inlended as 3 guide to
any other relevant documentation such
·6. In the case of excessive absences
divided into no more than three time
as survey or other information about ~potential applicants to aid tAem in forthe Committee may, by a two-thirds
blocks, and that the applicant shall offer
mulating their proposals. Second, these
dent needs and demands;
vote, expel a voting member. A replaceits substantive arguments as the firSt
2. A list of the proposed courses which
guidelines represent a format which will
. ment shall be selected in the same
presentation in the public hearing. ,The
·allow the- Committee systematically to
will initially be offered and a description
manner as the original rriember:
applicant's designated cbairpenon will
review the numerous applications that it
of each with clear identification of those
7. All non-voting me,..,bers may
be responsible for regulating discussion
will .receive. Although the Committee
teaching each course, as well as informaduring this period.
· ·
designate one penon to represent their
recommends that these guidelines be
tion showing the degree of overlap with
office in the proceedings: The ComD.. No more than one hour of the
dosely followed, adherence to this foralready existing academic offerings in
hearing
shall
be
exdusively
devoted to
mittee trusts that this will be necessary
mat is not suffident grounds for the
the University;
only infrequently. The Committee
the Committee's inquiry. During tliis
, 3. A description of each non-student
granting ofa Charter. Conversely, deparretains the right to express its displeasure
period the Committee or individual
ture from the format may not, in itself, be
position in the College, including those
members of the Committee may ask
with abuse of the practice.
individuals suggested for appointment,
grounds for lhe rejection of an applicaquestions of any representative of the
8. Members shall receive no less than
tion. In every instance, the overriding
and documentation supporting such apfive days advance notice of all regular
charter applicant or any specific penon
concerns of the Committee shall be: 1)
pointments;
meetings.
in the assembled group. The questioner
the quality of the educational concepts
4. Evidence that regular SUNY/Buffalo
shall have the prerogative to limit the
9. Except as provided otherwise in
embodied in the proposal, 2) the comniversity faculty not appointed to fulllength of responses.
these rules, R"'-t's Rules ol Ord« shall
petency of the instructional and non·
1i
positions in the Colleges will sub·
E. The remaining time shall be devoted
be followed for the condut!t of meetings.
instruCtional staff to fulfill their proposeg
st tially participate in the College; this
to
a public discussion of the charter
.:10.
Meetf"ngs
would
generally
be
held
1
o_bligations, 3) the consistency o ~e~""""""'idence should clearly indicate the role
application. The Chalrpenon may allow
in closed session, with the exception of
of each participating faculty member in
Charter with the requirements-of the
any member of the assembled group to
charter hearings during which interested
Prospectus, and 4) the compatibility of
terms of teaching and involvement in the
speak. A limit of. four minutes will be
individuals would have a chance to,share
governance of the College;
the propOsed college organization with
placed on all speaker.; during this period.
t~if, 1 mlil)iorn 1 and, I!."IJ!:rlise with, ) !W,
the rules and regulations of the State
5. A history of the Collese-r the
Penons who were not permitted to
Committee. Howe-ver, any person
University of .New York.
Workshop which indicates the exspeak under rules C. or D., will be given
wisliing observer status at any College
1. Topics to be CoftrH 1n Draft Chuten
periences of the past which are relevant
to make their presentation.
preference
Charte.; Committee meeting may request
1. Intellectual purpose of the proposto judgment about the prospect of. the
Committee member.; may participate in
s~ status by registering hisllier name
ed College and the appropriateness and
College or the Workshop to succeed unthis discussion but shall limit themselves
with the Executive SeCretary prior to said
uniqueness of this purpose within the
der a new charter.
to brief questions for darification:"
meeting. Consideration of these requests.
Ill. Some Notes on Committee
University setting of SUNY/Buffalo;
F. Generally, the Committee will subwill be the first order of business for the
2. The educational - methods and
l'ro&lt;edure In RepniiO Conslderamit questions, in writing, to the proposCommittee.· At the end of each regular
pedagogical styles of the College, with '·
tlon ol Charter Appladons
--i ng group after inftql reading of the
meeting, the Committee shall decide
an explanation of the relevance of this
· 1. The Committee will hold at least
charter, so that ihe group can prepare
whether the fleX! meeting shall be
method and style to the purposes of the
one full-fledged public hearing, at which
answers in advance of the meeting. They
accessible to obsefvers according to the
College;
,
a quorum of the Comrriiftee is present,
shall, however, not be limited to discuss.
above procedures. A positive two'thirds
3. Residential or non-residential
where public testimony will be received
ing only these questions iluring the hearvote is required, The Executive Secretary ·
from representatives of the "College or
characteristics of the College and, where
ing. The reoponse to any q~n whjch
shall then notify all interesteCI parties of
appropriate, an indication of time when
Workshop seeking a new charter and
has not been submitted in writing may
this decision:
.
the College proppses to become
other interesteCI parties in the U~enity;
be deferred but must be submitted in
11, The Chairperson shill' be elected
residential;
2. Upon receipt ol an application for
writing within a week after the d6Se of
for a one-year term with the following
4. How participating faculty will be
charter from a College or Workshop, the
the
public hearing.
· '
powers and responsibilities: •
chosen-regular .SUNY faculty and other
Chartering Committee "iil issue a public
(FonNI/y twxo-J, June 24, 1!1741
a) power to chair all meetings
faculty membea;
notice to the University community at
1, keep ordet
5. How the leadership of tbe College
large and invite all interested parties to
2. keep to agenda
will be chosen and what criteria will be
submit signed, Y(!"itten comments on the
l. keep meetins flowing smoothly
used to evaluate this penon; . . '
application and any other ·e vidence or
12." The Executive Secretary shall be
6. The conditions of membership and
· data or opinion relevant to the conelected for a one-year term and shall
affiliation of those other than un·sideration of the charter application. The
have the following powers and respondergraduates in the College and an inessence ·of the criticisms raised In the
Hibillties~
·.
•
dication of whether there are different
received comments shall be comThe School of Social wort. has receiv1. chairlns the meeting In the
classes or kinds of affiliations with the
municated to the College in question for
ed a $106,159 grant from the National
absence of ~ Chalrpenon,
its response;
Colleges and of the rights; privileges, and
Institutes of Mental Health to estatillsh
2. Plli!'B qe"nda to aiLCommittee
rewonsibilities of membership in the
3. The Chartering ·committee will not
two student training units in community
membeR .no less than 5 days in adCollege;,
·
be bound to limit its consideration O(lly
mental health work during the current
vJ~nce,
.
.
7. How undergraduate student
to evidence submitted by the College'or
academic year.
.
), be accessible to Colleges, ComThe one-year grant will enable the
members· will be chosen, what con·
Workshop · and outside parties, which
• millft members and all lntetested
stitutes undergraduate membenhip in
volunteer additional· information. The
School to appoint two field lnstruc:IOn
parties In refefence to·the qenda and
the College, and whether there will be
essence of critidsms raised.ln the receiv"who will develop tralninl units of eJaht
special-'ons, charters, etc.
different dasses or kinds of affiliation
ed comments-shall be communicated to
students each to wqr:jt In Buffalo's O.lld
·4. pttlns all necessary information • and of the rishts, ~lieges, and reoponthe College in question for its reoponse;
a'!!! FamiiJ' Ser\:ICleS and the Amherst
to the Committee members ~
slbllitles of undergraduat~mben;
4. The Chartering Committee will
Senior CenteJ-. With the 1fant. Social
each-..-Jng,
.
8. How representatives of the College
assume that all charti!red Colleges wilL
Work Olflclals. say, the Sdiool can In-~
s. pt~~ns out 10 anc1 ,_..vlns all to the College Coundl·will be choseri;
obey the rules of the.OnlftfSity.
crease · Its apadty to educate and ..,.
.___, tilfonrultlon from the peo9. _A descnllfi!Jn of Internal fiover·
'
(fomu/ly - - Mrt Ill. June J
prepare social wodten who will be
ple~
nance and Judk:W procedures;
and Jutte 1-&lt;J
responsive to the mentlll health r.-ls ol
13. The Chairperson and the Executive
.o. How the counes and 1ns(iucton Spec:W rules for
the community, are k~~
Seaetary shaU COnstitute an qenda
about"community rnent.l '-lth
...-will be selected and evaluated, with a
commlttee.detailed Statement about evaluation
pU
tn:oll ngs
,
systems
•ncl can apply die ~ ol
14. No non-votlns memberi shall be
I. Meetlnp shall be open to the public
community mental he.llh to their own
elected as Chairperson or Executive , prOcedures;
fuhire prldlces.
.
.
11.
A
.
description
of lilidget process,
and
public
notice"
shall
be
posted
at
least·
--.y.
flsal C&gt;OIIIrOI, and 1 ar.ft budpt lOr the
one week prior to the ...-lng.
Auordlna to the grant's project direclint 11enn ol operation;
·'
II. Meednp shalt have a maximum
alillllr
tor Dr. Sherman Merle, dan ol the
-,. Durtna the Fall term 1974, the
1Z. Olterla for a fair, pra&amp;ial; and
duration of three and one-half hOurs.
School, " - , _ units wll be major
objecthe evallllltion of the
on
_ II~ These '-lnp shall be mncluctectChi! rilri.JII Committee will actept
compol- In a cleftloplna .......
under the lollowiril Nles:
·
apciiiQdolis only fmm exlldttl Colh!ps; . the GCQSJon· o1 rechartertna anil the
~ ....... In~ ......
._..... whldt'WII·pe ......... . , _
ctwtertna Coianilttee w111 ~ detailed Indication · of evaluation
A. The ~ ol the Charter
_. _..,......... eJtPIIIIft 10 the
beth! to .J.Cli&lt;WI!.~ allllbllons fqr ..jJfiiCl8!lure to be llled 10 provide Jnfor- fore~~~re1p01t
_.... helllh...,.....Celnfra~o~tll• the
chArteis ~ AUIIJII 15, 1974.
matton about tJ:Ie subltanoe o1 f1108Rms
..,.....,. ..... u ...
11
3. The Colleles sb.allsubmlt _their ~- .. .ot the ~~I!» recllarterina;- ·
and ibat dec:oru!ft, Is maintained .. Anwlan - n l t y .

lules

1. ~ quorum for the conduct of the
business of the Committee shall be eighi
of the regular and duly appoiined votingmembers of the Committee.
·
2. Acceptance, amendment, or
suspension of these rules shall require
approval of no less ihan eight of the
voting members. All pther decisions of
the Committee shall require the approval of a majority of the quorum, except as specififed in R"'-t's Rules ol

mal application for chartering to the
Dean no later than· October 15.
· 4. The final dlte for submission by the
Dean of a charter application to the
Committee, for chartering by January 1,
1975, will be October 15, 1974.
'
5. Ali"applications for charters must be
submitted to the · !;oUegiate Assembly
until the Cpllege Council is formed and
the Dean of the Collj&gt;ges for forwarding,
without comment, . to the Chartering
Committee.

I•

h

NIMH pant·aids
Social Work unit

blk L--ri

eou.e

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..='!J

- ~

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�•.

\

J ·.

Campus bus sebed~les­
·reflect expapded service·
...,....

__

Amherst -

-

.,
7:10A.M.
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7:20
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17

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.

ROUTE 14 IS INTRA AMHERST CAMPUS SHUTTU sus.··
•fiMES LISTED AR£ .AP.PAOXIMATE AND DEPEND U~ "TRAVEL TIMES ENR.OUTET
- BUS STOPS: Amhettt c.mpw: ~ In front

-....cor.--

12:30A.M.

12:40
1:40

1:20
1:25

1:10

FOR THIS SCHEDULE USE BUSES MARKED ROUTE 14 &amp; 14A AS INDICATED.

.11 :55

0' _ _ " - _

UIO

BUSES

dlrectlj in front

EMcott - Core Road
O'Brion-01"Maln Sl Campw: OiefwMtorl Annex
An. 1:00 P.M. acrop from Nonon Unk&gt;n

Amherst -

- ._

Main Street

._

1 :00 A.M.

t:05

10:10
(11 :151
(12:201 P.M.
( 1:281
( 2:301

8 :05 A.M.
8:10
10:15
(11:201
(12:251 P.M.

,,:3ol

( 3:351

( 2:351
( 3:41)1

4:401

( 4:45}

( 5:451
( 8:501

( 5:501
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(11 :101
12:.1 6 A.M.
1:10
2:10

1:15 A.M.

t-.20

.

• 111".25
(11 :301
(12:35j P.M .
( 1:401

( 2:451
( 3:501
( 4:551
( 8:001
( 7:0151
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( 8:1151

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( 7:1151

(10:101 '
(11 :151
12'.20 A.M.
1:20

f10:201 '
11:21

8:20 A.M.

9:25
10:30
(11 :351
(12:4lll P.M.
( 1:451
( 2:501
( 3:551
. ( 5:001
( p:051
( 7:101
( 8:151
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(111".25)
11:.30

12:a0 A.M.
1:JO

8:40 A.M.
9:45
10:50
(11 :55)

( 1:001
( 2:051
( 3:10)
( 4:151
( 5:201
( 8:281
( 7:301
( 8:351
( 8:4(1)
(10:451
11 :50
12:50 A.M.
·. 1:50

9:00· A.M .
10:05
11:10
(12:15) P.M.
( 1:201
( 2:25)
· ( 3:30)

( 4:351
( 5:4(1)
( 8:45)
( 7:501
( 8:55).
(10:00)
(11:05)
12:10" A.M.

2&lt;20

FOR ntiS IICifEDULE UIE BUI MAIIKSl ROUTE f20
IIA'I\IRDAY ICHEDULE INDICATED BY 80TH ~RACKETED AND UNIIRACKET£0 TIMES
~y- INDICATED BY TIIIB ENCL08ED IN IIRACKETB)
"TIM&amp; LJSTB) AilE - M A t E ANO 0EPBW- TRAVEl. TIMEB EHADUTEt

'7

7:35A.M.

8:110

10:05
10:10
10:20

aua STOPS: Amherst C8rnpla: CJo\wnon -

7J

14

8:30
1 :45
8:50
10:05

1t
1t

(10:0111

......

. . . . "-!

14A
14
14.
14A

7:55A.M.
8:00
8:05
8:15

FOA THIS SCHEDULE USE
MARKED ROUTE,,. - 17- 18- 19 AS INDICATED "BOVE.
•TIMES LISTED ·ARE APPROXIMATE AHO DEPEND UPON TRAVEL TIMES ENROUTEI
IN 1101.D WtLL RUN ON FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY.

i

- -

......
O'WIII·

f:4()
8:55
10:00
10:15

- J~i~·"

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._
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._

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18
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Ridge Lea

8:30
1 :35 ·
. 1:40
8:50

8:4(1
7:15
1:05 '
8:35

17

1t

7:3oA.M.
7:35
7:40
7:50

7:20A.M.

Amherst

Main Street

._

18

s, 1974

se,.~IN

...._.. _

---

---~-

_.__...,_hm_lHon
~"-

............ ......., ....c.m,u....-~

Room ~tO. 4211 . . . . Lell ,

.

'

Free courses· now available .
for .area· senior.f;:itizens
rhe latest speci~l service for the 60the widest possible variety of credit
and·over set offers such things as · courses available for auditing by in·
Shakespe'are, Chopin , French,
terested senior citizens. Credit-free
. courses are not included in the . free.
fORTRAN, Renaissance sculpture and
twentieth century architecture. And it's
tuition pl..,;, bec:io_use these courses are
all for free.
·
not funded by State monies. Hcnrever,
. U/8 will now admit ariy Interested
certain credit-free courses are offered to
senior citizens at a reduced rate . •
seniOr citizen as an audit'or, on a space-available basis, in any University course
The senior citizen program is being ad·
which has no prerequisites. All that's,
ministered by the Division of Continuing
required is an interest in the subject.
Education. Enrollment information and a
'There wiiLbe nO charge for tuition or
listing of available. courses may,&lt;be ob" •
fees, ati"d C:tay and evening courses are
tained from the Adult Advisement ·
both included.
·
Center (831-2238). .
Senior citizens may also take courses
which do have prerequisites by showing
evidence of formal or informal learning
experiences , which 1\'0uld satisfy· the
prerequisites.· Even . gradua!F-level:
courses may be taken without cliarge by
The University's Office for Oedlt-F~
senior citizens with a B.A. det!ree or its
Programs is offering . more ·than · 100
equjvalent, or wiih special authorizaiion
courses this. fall, ranging from "how-to"
from the UniveBity's administrative of· . sessions on duplicate bridge, ~. and
ficen On the case of courses offered
Japanese flower arranglng.IO disallllom
through professional schools).
of behavior modlflc:atlon, alcoholism,
The JKOIInm, which ta~ effect this
current best sellerS, and nuclear poliier,
month, Is cleliiiJiecl to help- senior·
The cout'ses begin duljng September and
dtizem looking for,_ career opporOctober and usually meet In the even·
ing.
.
- tunlties, or simply wishing 10 enrich their
retirement rurs.
Students may register any lime prior 10
the Starring date ol a course by lllfll "or In
The plan made poulble throuah
an arnendqlent 10 the l&gt;(ew York. State
Jienol! • ·Hayes Anne~t A, .Roocp ~. on •
EckKatlon Uw which lllloWs .C IIIIplee of tile Main $U8tl Campus. front 8:30 a.m.
the~ Um-.lly of New York 10
10 . 6:Gfl. p.p~.. Mondar ~
develop PfOII'antl Which Wliuld pennlt
Offlca.wlll be-opert4ltlllll p.m.
penons fiO y-. p i • or Older 10 liildlt
- - $eplanber 9-12.
cours,s· ....._ .,.,..,. ~taking
.(Sep(ember
For flirtflet·lrlfarnllliolt
and ~
course llsdna contact the Ofllai for
Credft..fn!e ~-tb 1113'1o011.

Credit-Free Office

slates 100 c:Ourses,

=

u;:·~~r=.:.IO ·~

~

�--·--·--

Main Street-Ridie· Lea

....

\

._
'- •
. . . . . . . . . . . . . L.-

.. 1
2

7::10 A.M .
7:45
8:05
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8:00
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(l0:05)
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(10:45)
11 :00
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(11 :30)
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(12:10)
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(12:50)
1:00
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(1)

. 2

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(1)

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1:00
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11'20
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(10:25)
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(11 :05)
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(11 :50)
12:00P.M.

12:10
12:20
. (12:30)
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1:00
( 1:10)
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"'-·

Two physiologists using laborato·ry tank
for study of man's inefficiency in water
ly John Thurston
Uni-slfylnfOI't't'IJifion~

. W.hile man has always been a
reasonably efficient land creature, he is
very inefficient in water. Two U/ B
physiologists are discovering why.
Drs: David R. Pendergast, assistant

professor of physiology, and Donald W.
Rennie, chairman of the Physiology
Department, have been studying human
swimming proficiency in and under the

~;:: ~.

man is only from two to ten per cent efficient as a swimmer. In comparison, he
~t

usE BUSes ~Riio

FOR T-HIS SCHEDULE
ROUT£11-2·3 - 4

~

MONDAY TO FRIDAY SCHEDULE INDICATED BY
BOTH BRACKETED AND UNBR!ICKETED
TIMES
SATURDAY SCHEDULE SHOWN BY BRACKETED
TIMES. •
•waLL NOT RUN ON FRIDAY EVENINGS.

eus STOPS:
MolnStreoiCompus-~Annolr

-Lea Compus-

.

-

Building 4231 -...-

_
.
.
......_ _......._
--·
--Main-Elm-Bell

._
._
._ ~-F-

8:00A.M.
1:00
10:00

8:15A.M . .
1:15
10:15

11:00 ·

1.1:18
12:15P.M.
1:15
2:15
!b15
4:21
5:00

12:0o P.M.
1:00
2:00
1:00 .-

1:31 A..M.
1:31
10:31
11:31
12:31 P.M. .
1:31
2:31
S:S1

----------- ..
--fee
____
. __ _
·-------...
--3:155
4:45

Mii6nS~rwt~tc.n..,..

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THE._

4:21

5:11

OII. . ICIOrfAMex(northlkM)

1801 Elmwood Aw.

~~

F- of

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

- W I L L - UP~- OPI' ONLY AT
UlnD; .
•

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WIU.- _,

IIAYI, - Y I , 011-.JIIAYB.

water surface for the past three years.
Thiough measurements based on
energy expenditure they have found that

ON UTUR·

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

is about 20_to 25 per cent efficient while
or rUfll'\ing.
•

w~l~ing

that the female · is actually a more
proficient swimmer 1han the male," Dr.
Pendergast Qid.
Whyl One reason is the pr~nce in
women of more adipose {fat) tissue
which accounts for bener buoyancy. Dr.
Pendergast explained that it has long
been known that women are more
buoyant because of the additional
adi.P,?~ tissue located in the breast area.
' However, women also have more
adipose "tissue in the legs and this is an
important consideration in the use of the
kick in swimming. Because of her
buoyant legs, the female benefits from
using a kick. Her position in the water is
such that the kick will actually propel
her," Dr. Pendergast said.

Inside the University's Environmental

f

oxygen. HyperventilatiDn decreases the
level of carbon dioxide in the blood
without changing the oxygen level, thus
offsetting the balance. The respiratory
system is sensitive only to carbon dioxide
as a stimulus for breathing and without
rhe proper amount of carbon dioxide,
the stimulus is reduced or elimin.Jted.
Therefore the swimmer could go for
long periods of time under water
without breathing and, thus, deplete the
oxygen in his blood. The result .is an in·
adequate amount of oxygen to the brain
or unconsciousness.
.''It is conceivable," Dr. Pendergast
ted, " that even though the swimmer is
t of oxygen and maybe unconscious,
continues to swim for a few more
skonds by utilizing th.! energy stQ._red in
'his muscles. Consequently, a life guard
would not reillize that the swimmer fs in
tiouble u11dl it is too1~ie." ,
Dr. Pendergast q:&gt;nduded that as a
general rule the safest practice is for ""ch
individual to understand his capabilities
• in the water and stay_within the limits of
those capabilities. "Swim at a speed and
IDr a di.unce that is comfortable:"
As for competitive swimmers, he
noted, continuous practice,!~J!&lt;ainlng
will inq""se levels of both 'illt!J'Dic and
anaerobic . power for the female and
overall proficiency through improved
·technical movement for the male.

~

Man's Kid Less Propellins
He added that th~ ,man's legs, which
contain more musCle, are less Quoyant
and are thus positioned lower in the
water. The energy he uses to kid helps
to keep his legs from . sinking, but does
le55 to propel him.
As a test of this, Dr. Pendergast has attached' small ~l.oats · to the male
swimmer's legs: With the floats the
male's energy costs decrease to that of
the female.
Other considerations which contribute to swirilming perform.Jnce are
aerobic power, the capability of oxygen
intake as delivered to the muscle
through the circulatory system, and
anaerobic power, the "automatic" .
f!!erwy Expenditure
energy stored in the muscles lor which
En.ergy expenditure is measured in
oxygen is not required. terms of the amount of oxygen used-and
·Because the male has more aerobic
the kilocalories of energy produced.
The fall course schedule in music, both •
and anaerobic power, he is able to swim
(Kiloalories or Kcal are the calories in
at the undergraduate and pacluate
generally longer and faster than the
the diet books which are labeled with a
levels, will offer an ~·and more
he
Is
less
proficient.
female
even
though
capital C.) The energy expended per unit
vuied •choice of c:oun.. .~
This accounts for the usually better times
of distance swim is"an indication or inspokes_men have indlcatM: These
tor·meo in comPetitive swimming.
dex of the swimmer's technical ability or
courses are · open to all itudents
PrKikaiA~
,
proficiency.
. .
· providing they meet the ~lsltes
Practical applications of the RennieFor instilnCe, ttt a' leisurely pace 5wimfor a giVen course, although the departPendergast study could reduce a subming freeStyle IDr 1,000 meters or apment does Blve priority to music lllljon
stantially high number of 5Wimming acproximately .6 miles, the unskilled male
for performaiiCII! or other required music
cidents.
swimmer will use 95 hten of okygen ID
concentrAtor courses.
.
Since water is an environment quite
produce 475 Kcal of e"!'f8Y.
hi the fill d • schedule an! a number
unnatural to man's physiological makeThe male swimmer of average skill will
of under!vailbate courses spedflcally Inup, it is importont to adjust gradually tD
use 65 liters of oxygen to produce 325
tended fOr students with little or no ·
the conditiDns.
•
Kcal, While the skilled male will use 42
musical blckgrounil. These Include: _
The greatest . cause of drowning_ Is
liters of oxy11en ID produce J10. !&lt;cal ~I
1t'I-Historlcal Survey for Nonfatigue and fatigue results when the
energy.
.
.
Majors.
.
body runs out of its anaerobic power. A
Average times to complete the dis·
11s-unclentandins Music for Nonrapid swim, even for a short di.Unce,
tance would be 32. 22, and 14 minutes
MaJon.
.
before the body is proj)erly adjusted
respectively. In other words, it takes a
116 (2 sections)-Theory of Music for
could cause a penon to use up his wpply
. skilled swtmmer less than one hali the
Non-Majors.
of
anaerobic
power.
If
tNt
sWim
wa~
to
a
e""'lll' of an unskilled .swimmer to swim
311-Wagner'for Non-Majors.
raft and the swimmer decided to return
the same distance . . Or; the skilled
Departmental performlns lfOUPisuch
to shore without resting. he might riot
swimmer could swim the dimlnce twice
as.
band, ~ ct-ui,..,.,. and
make it.
as last.
chamber ensembles open 10 all
Awulilltypenenlllllon
qualified students and COIIIIltule an opw - More -Pra8denc s..t.Men
Another very llanprous practice, ' portunlty for ltUdents 10 _...... . . InWomen expend ,approxlmotely 3!1 per
which the resear.dlen ay should be
cent: less enet1IY to perforo1 the same
volvement In music while Jnl*llll for ..
career In another field, the . . , . . _ .
wk. IQ the Saine tests, the umkllled
avoided by the bell swtmnws, Is
female swltnmer usecl·65 liters of oxygen . • hyperwntllatlon - the .....,_. of taldns
points out.
For additional Information or
to prOduce 325 Kcal - the same • llle
several deep "'-hh 10 . _ - · ·
a¥erase m'ale 5Wimmer. The skilled
the Office of Sludent
capacity to stay under The human can~~o-pur.-y .,_.
l'lopaml, Millie Dl!partnad, lllrd Hall,
feniille owlm~useclilnly 3311tenof oxc:ontalfls
a
bllance
of
calbon
'!~and
~-4141.
•· ~
.~ to,produce 1~: Kql. "This shows
Physiology lab, tests are conducted in a

60-meter circular swimming ta'nk -

the

only one' of-its kind in the world. The
tank measures 2.5 meters (approximately
eight leetl in depth, 2.5 meters wide and
contains a glass viewing area under water
and a revolving platform abov~ water to
enable uninterrupted measurements
during tests.
How long and fast a person swims
depends on his proficiency and
availability Df energy. The amount of
energy used in running varies only slightly among people with similar body
characteristics, but in swimming, energy
expenditure is highly variable and
dependent upon swimming profidency .

Music courses
open to non-majOrs

ro..er.

..--ca.-

�n
iriail ·,_
$erYices listed

-Area

-Chinese pharmacistS f~nd- . July ~~a'!~-~ .··:·:'cfdferent' bvJ UIB -Dean · ·-· tql:l· $.~ - mllho!l
I

The Business AffoiB Offk:e h~de
avalloble the followlns list of UnltedSutes postal facilities in the vicinity of
the Unlverslty.
Those facilities desisnated "U.S. Posul
-Service classified sutions" are post office
branches manned by resular postal service employees and housed In post .office
facilities. They provide the entire range
of postal services, explained a
spokesman for the U.S. Posul Service.
Those facilities desfsnated !!contract
stations" are not regular branches of the
Postal Service but limited-service
operations run under contract with the
Postal Service for consumer convenience. These contract sutions are not
equipped to handle lnternatlo.nal
- . parcels, rqistered mail of great value,
larJe amounts of mail, tracers, daims,
passport· applications and certain other
postal Services. Persons with any of these
special needs should go to a claDIIIed
station rather than to a ~ station.
The houB of conft.oct stations - ~e
determined Individually and' vary from
station to sution, the spokesman noted.

~
sr!,.-,C., Senlce ~
.,.,_.
-

......, "''f," 2690 Main Street, Buffalo,
New Ycxl 14214;
ICenllnaton · Stotlon, 29S6 Bailey
Avenue, lkiffalo, New Ycxl 1421S.
Unlled Sllfts.
Senlce contract

""*"

Ten grantS and co.ntracts totaling ~051,448 were received by UniveBity
faculty and suff during July - a month
which 'also saw the submission to
prospective sp&lt;insoB of 26 proposals
totaling $2,680,852.
~
According to Robert C. Fl~trlck, acting vice president for researcli, two major renewals from PHS for the Health
Professions Capitation Grant Program accounted for more than 50 per cent of the
total. the School of Medicine received
$944,542 under this program and the
School of Dentistry, $646,1911.
_
Four new grants went to: A. Rekate,
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine,
School of Medicine, $6,480 from SRS for
a project entitled "Reha~llitation
Medicine Teaching In Medical
Education;" M. Schwartz, School of
Pharmacy, $57,783 from PHS for a Health
Profes~ions Special Project Grani- to
decrease time in the doctor of pharmacology program and $20,520 from the
same sponsor_for special prqject grant
to formalize interaction between third
year medi!'ll and doctor of pharmacy
students; and R. Schwartz, Faculty .of law
and Jurisprudence, $83,398 from NIH for
"Train!ag Lawyers as ~rimlnal Justice
Specialists."
Other r(lajor ~enewaland continuation
grants included $139,G71 from PHS tpthe
Scl\ool of Nursing for the long-term
Professional Nurse Traineeship Program
and sn,641 from NIH to the same school
for graduate psychiatric nursing traini!lg.
G. Burns, Department of Surgery, School
of Medicine, received a continuation
grant of $60,007 from NIH for dinlcal
cancer studies while S. Graham, Department qf , Sociolqgy, . w.as ~ward_e&lt;l. a
renewal of $15,808 from PHS,, for .t!&gt;e
Graduate Training Program in Medical
SociolOgy.

EdiroriaiAaocMt..~5c:lenfts

The role of the pharmacist in Mainland China differs considerably from that of his American cou~llerpart, according to
Or. Michael A. Schwartz, deah· of the
School of Pharmacy, ~ho recently
returned from a 26-day tour there:
"In China, the pharmacist usually
works in a pharmaceutical factory or
hospital developing new drugs and
,dosages and~nalyzlng old and De!¥ com6in~ions. The use of herbsJs an integral
part of traditlon'al Chinese
medicine-with 11cupuncture being the
surgical component. In the past, herbs
played a prominent part in medical care ,
in China, and then Western .med!cine
appeared on the _scene tending to
replace the traditional form. With the advent of Chairman Mao~s cultural revolution, however, trad ftto'nal Chinese
medicine and Western practice are com~
bining the best of both in treating
patients," Dr. Schwartz said.
"Pharmacists are not normally- found
in the drugstore as they are in this country. Dispensing duties are filled by
technicians _rather -than college-trained
pharmacists," he pointed ouL Many of
the drugs available here only with a
preScription may be purchased uover the
CQUnter" in China, he added.

a

UniveBity of WiscOI}Sin. Dr. Anderson's
work involves designing drugs based on
molecular structure know11 to have anticancer activity. Currently, two of his
drugs show definite promise, but he is
quick to point out, "Many thousands of
drugs reech the same point in experimenution and are rejected either
because of too little anti-cancer activity
or too great a toxicity to the patient."
Acupuncture-Induced -"-'--a
Or. Schwartz and memliers of the
delegation visiting China also had opportunity to observe acupunc:tur.e-induced
anesthesia with patients - among them
a patient who was having cartilage
removed from his leg. "The patiei11;talked with the physicians and obServeB
while the procedure was being done,
without ap~rent pain," Dr. Sc~wartz
reported. - --- ,.
. He also observed that the €hine5e
educational system appears to·be geared
to the practical. "Medical teams from the
cities travel i nto rural oreas to help _
An-,;ientiltion program fc;&gt;&lt; ~ facul·:
p rovide care, train.. other . medical
ty and professional staf_( mef'llbeB ,iS
workers and be educated by 'associalin.l
scheduled for Saturday, September. 7, hi _
with the masses.' Preventive medicin'i
the ' Faculiy Club and In Norton Union,
and outpatient care are stressed with
beginning a' 8:30 a.m.
.
training and practical experience given
Newcomers to the Universi3l' will be
in varying degrees to the 'barefoot i!ocwelcomed by' Executive Vice President
to( (comparabl~ to our ernersency
Alben Somit and will be briefed on
medical technician); the 'wcxllns physiacademic orpnlzatlon by Merton W . •
cian' (who has more extensive training);
Ertell, acting vice presldentJor ocademic
and, finally, the physlciln (who has
affairs, and F. Caner•Panillll. vice presianended medical school),'' Dr. Schwartz
dent for liealth sciences. The three
said. In order 'to be a 'candidate for
Unlverslty deans - Charles Ebert, un"
medical school, you must be c~H?sen by
der!tmuate education; MQllllster H.
"the people" and have atleost IWO yeaB
Hu~, Jr., lraduate ·and professlonol
worker-exPerience:
education; ~ Robert .F. Berner, conOn-site · medical p&lt;Otessionals · serve
tinuing ecltic:ation-'ft provide illforthe comrnl.lnes --which usually have a
mation oli their .... ol nisponslblllty,
population of -about 20,000; With more
will Eldrec_l R. Smith, dlredOi' of pbrarles;
complex- cases referred to d\e dty
hospiuls. _
-Robert C::. 'Fitzpatrrck. ac:tins viCe presi-

Herbal Treatment lleploces Some
Scqery
.
As a member of a delegation to study
herbal pharmacology sponsored by the
operation: Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Cleweland Hll 1JruB COIIIpUIJ Inc:.,
Commitree on Scholarly Communication
144S Kensington Avenue, Buffalo, New
with the People's Republic of China, Dr.
Schwartz toured drugstores, hospitals,
york 14215. Hou'B of Operation: Mon.c
Fri. 9 a.m.-5:30p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-12 noon.
universities and had the -opportunity to
Llsbon-lalley Drill Company Inc.,
observe patients being treated with her3378 Bailey Avenue, Buffalo, New York
bal preparations and .QJ!!:rated on under
acupuncture-induced anesthesia. 1 1 An
14215. Houri of operation: Mon.-Fri. 10
a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.· - .
herbal prescription maY, , contaiR six to
In addition, the p!OIIIIIdook near No"
ten or.more different hetbs a.J)d must be
ton is open 24'hours a day for those who
prepared carefully ai:cordlng to forwish to buy ~ge or Insure mail. J"·
mljlated .d~gl'l,,'' he salcj. · In China,
inc!LI!Ies a ~lrea'i~orriladoh 1i~'- s6ffie tf'p.,:s"'of i:a'seS whii:h"woi.old normally- be treated surgically here are
to the U.S. Post Office.
treated with herbal medicine. In only
some 30 per cent of the appendicitis
Anoloenl
casi!s is surgery performed. ·Instead,
Unlled sr.res
Senlce dusllled
patients·get an herbal preparation which
~
'
includes a form of 'rhuliarb and
~ lronch P.O., 30 los
magnolia-with apparent success. There
Roblo!i, Williamsville, New Ycxl 14221;
were no _new herbal constituenis being
A•ltent ' aronch -P.O., Ch.a teau
currently used in China as far as he saw,
Terrace, Snyder, New YOtk 14226;
1
with the single exception of one for the
~ Paot Olllce, 234 MH~
Highway, Getzville, New York 14o68; ·- treatment. of.bronchitis, which is a· major
health problem there.
&amp;.1 Anoloenl Paot Ollke. 6343 Trarlslt
"Heros or their extracts are also used
Road; East lunherst, New York 14051;
in Western pharmacology,'' Schwartz
Paot alice, Suley &amp; Tranpointed ouL Ephedrine, an ialltaloid from
sit Roads, Swormlvllle, New Yon 14146.
the . ma huang plant (Ephedra sinica~ is
Unlled
5enb ~
given asthma pati&lt;!hts. Digitpxln, which is,
- /
taken from the foxglove (Digitalis pur~ CleftiMd ........., Inc., 609
purea), is ~ in heart conditlofts; and
Millersport Hlshway, Amherst; New
reserpine from the root of·the Rauwolfia
York 14226. HouB ol operation: Mon.- cient •for lesealch, and John D. Telfer,
serpenrlna plant is used as an antivice president for faclllt!es &amp;ltonning. 'A
$11. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
•
.
-. .
Georptown
o,.., 55'25 -hypertensive druj.
presentltion on "filahl!r Eiliic:atloii in •
Sheridan Drive, WJIIIamlvll1e, "'ew York
New Yorl&lt; SUte and Ulll
u.s. Experlonenb .... Herbal Medldne
14221. HouB of opention: Mon.-Sun. 9
by William H. Baumer, alllstant vice
Despite d~ llufTY. of Interest In herbal ·
president
for ac:ademlc lffaln, Wlllround
1.111:·11 p.m.
0('
medicine generated by recent -¥lsltS tQ
out the morninl portion ol the prosrani.
China, Dr. Schwartz does not believe
NorJitiOWII P=:~ Inc., )091
The reflect1on of · four basic
At 1 luncheori In the Tiffin Room the
that a surge of experlmenutlon will
Sheridln Drive, '
le, -New York
_characteristics of Ia.......-- In several
ne&gt;II'COIIM!n will hear irom Fronk l i
result in this country anions ptoorof human life 11 the theme o1 a
142a. Houts ol apedlion: Mon.-frl. 9
Jackalone, president of the
moceutical .companies. Among private . phases
seminar being offered this 'In
a.m.-11 p.m.; Slt.-5un. 9. o.m.~ p.m. _·
Underpa4uote Student Allodatlon and
reseorcheB, howevei', such IS _ Dr. S.
the Dei&gt;ortment of Linguistics by Dr.
A~~thony Schamel, ~ Of -the
Morris Kupchan of the Unlvi:nlty of
David G. Hays. - .
• Gr.duate Student Allodltlon...,_
I,_., Semce
Vlrslnla at Chorlottesvllle, Who wos a
Instead of Introducing the field to out·
The
afternoon
Jll'llll'llll will feature
member
of
the
oelegatlon,
herbal
siclefS bY a series of' ledures on hlllolv
~
T___. Paot Ollce, ·96, Seymour
'_poUibllities Ire bel... lnvestipted~-Dr. ' . and standard ~ Ha~ wiU take ad- Richard A. Slgelk(lw, vice pielldent for
IIUdent
affaln;
llarbua
M.Siml.._
of
die
students'
badcpJunc!
In
Kupchan and hll staff have , tested
SU....t~ Hew VCIJI\14150;their own'flelch. which we ~ to
~-....o..tuuTerrace,
thauunds ol plants for evidence 01 antiInclude
.
.
!
IOdal
-sdeilc:el
and
Snyder, Ni!w York 14226.
cancer ICiivlt)!. Of these
than 500
-hullllllildc cllsdDIInes. in lilY af·lheie
flnonce ·and m
t. and A.
showectsome slowlna oltumor growth
IJIIIIetl , . _ ,..., ~ ~
areos, ....._ Is a -.dord tDIIIc; the - Westley Rowland,
for unIn model-- .,.aems In onlmils. He
. IIUdents 1il die ~ wll . - both
lvenlty relations.
Leslie
reports_ thll from these 500, ----of
Lhlcllll ,_. ...._,, 540 Nlapra
classic ,nd modern treetmenb of - ' ...,_
will
_provlcle
lnforllllllon
on
compounds
responsible
for
thll
IICIIvlty
~ In ieladon to lft!:lely culture,
W. llhd..f~NewYC¥1&lt; 14150. ~~~ and ~ - - - have been lsolliled and d-*-1 llti'UC·
peiioriilllty, and aesthetics.
Houri fll aplriiiDn: Mon.o#rl. 9 Lm.-9

st;rdons:

ttenos'• Drus 5eore Inc., 3168 Main
Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. HouB of

Otlen~tion"'~t.:.

for newcomers

kic!sk

c...-

"'T

-

........ . ""*"
Swoo-•

........, s - ""*"

as

a.e.-.

"'tr...::~I

New-~ seminar
in Liri~isti~

c.

~

-

""'*"

......, _. '

p.m.; - ·~ p.~~~.·ac-cs ach doy
ofqllriiiiiii'-U--'D1p.m._

..,I

cures dete••lll.led .._ 110. Of ~ IPOUP•

six ' - " - IUflldentpramlse In their

c-........ -

_.lt=111r..UM~flllllllvd.,
1111• -New Yarlf14UD. 1-tocm of.
opiAiien: Mlln.4rf. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.: S.L 9

effeahowl_aplnlt ....... tumontobe
~- •ariilldllel1n clnlcal trills by

Mon.•Tu&amp;·flhun.-flt.'8:JO a.tR-&gt;5 p.~~~.; ·
Wed. 1:.10 Lm.·1 P-IlL: Sit. 1:311 UL•12

·w_..~......_pnlf-.of

-

................
.
.
a.lftedllwldtf'allOibl ......./

11001\,

c-.o--.ce"

the

l'lllionl1

At Ula . - d t . . . . . . wlth her·
bol /lllllll:lna ....... ~by Dr. -

mddall.chemistry, who Warbd with
- --lloth - at the.

Dr ~

von.

'rii,

=-~~'-cc~

.$:.Y.'!7-:b,t~

'.Alltcfd~F--g

-~~it·
~~

~

fram

:.W.":t~~
·~
w.

offered by ·~.lJnMnltY IIIII d,....ciiiij:
munlty.
- A tour ol

,

the Amhent Campus will

conclude the .,.. Jll'llll'llll.

�.i

Septt~n~ber ~~ 1974

1M
........ .~. c-ntj · Five UIB students worked as interns
for the Erie County Environmental
Management Council (EMC) this
summer on important environmen~l
problems concerning the ·county. The
five were awarded grants on a com-petitive basis fo r their work - a device
which County officials say "Is more
economlcar and appropriate than the
hiring of professional consultants." And
because the students are environmentally -trained, County spokesmen indicate,
t~ey "give EMC fresh approaches and
ideas for assessment and implementation." As interns, the students-work
with EM.C coordinators and faculty advisors.
David Hershman, graduating senior in
political science and biology, worked on
Amherst Flood Plain management.
Hershman, having studied previous objections to flood control measures for
Ellicott Creek, worked tow.rd developing a new plan which will protect the
new l!/B campus, the Urban Development Corpc:iratlon's Audubon project,
the Town of Amherst, and other upstream communities. He worked under
the supervision of Or., Donald B.
R~thal, UIB Political Scien •.e Depan-

~

i

Staff Senate
to meet friday
The Professional Staff Senate's first
meeting for 1974-75 wilt be held Friday,
September 6, at 3 p.m. in the Red Room
of the Faculty Oub.
·
Agenda items include: election of an
executive committee of the Senate (for a
one-year term expiring June 30, 1975)
and selection of a time for bi-weekly executi~e committe'e meetings.
According to Senllte Chairperson
Roben J. Wagner, the PSS durins this
academic year will take an active role in a number .of areas:
.• The establishment of -a Human
Resources Director's office.
• Development and implementation
of special purpose workshops and orientation· programs for the professional staff.
• Recommendations concer11lng

u/1 - . , -

.-,
1

guidelines and procedures for continuing appointments for professional
staff.
• Insuring professional staff input in
policy matters at SUNYlB.
• Esu.blishins communi.£ation
between the Professional Staff Senate
and outside orpnibtions such as the
American Association of University Administrators.
• Funher study as a result of the
Career Mobility and Management
Development and Training Reports.
• Travel and Conference attendance
policy as they affect professional staff.
• Estal&gt;lishment of and preparation of
a charge for an Events Committee for the
panicipation of professional staff in
social and recreational activities.
• Establishment of and preparation of
a charge for an Awards and Recognition
Committee for prOfessional staff.

Niagara Ungulstk Society Officers
practice - and Dr. Lester has served as
Thomas W. Fitzsimons, .Canisius
president of the New York State Chapter
ment, and Mr. Menitt W. Van Ller, exCollege, has been elected president of
of the American Academy of Family
ecutive director - the County EMC.
the Niagara Linguistic-Society for 1974· Practice.
Daniel Stanton, a junior in geography,
1975. Geraldine Bard, State University
In addition to their medical practice,
mapped and analyzed remaining open
CollegeatBuffalo,willserve assecretary-both have served their respective comspaces in . the City of Buffalo. Working
treasurer. Other elected officers are:
munities through schools and lire
under the guidance of Or. Beverly
Charlotte Farley, UIB; Roben Nicol,
depanments as well as civic groups:
Paigen, Rachel carson College, Dr. BarNiagara University; and JoSeph Oliva,
Cenilicates were presented to both
bara Mann, Political Science DepanState University College at Buffalo. The
physicians by the Mayville-Chautauqua
ment, and Mr. Harold Dodge, chairman
live new officers constitute the Society's
lions Club, the Town of Chautauqua and
of the EMC land Use Committee, he
steering committee, which Is planning a
Chautauqua Institution, the Village of
divided the City into 12 study areas, payseries of monthly meetings and conMayville and t he Mayville and
ing special attention to those 25 comferences lor the academic year beginChautauqua Fire Depanments.
munities especially in n-A of additional
qpe..
ning this rtlo.n~h. •
•
·•
•
Mrs. Cheyette Dies
Editor:
.
ltvincent Po'llina,graduating senior with
On Wodd.He.llth Fellowship
Mrs. Ruth Chehette, wife of Professor
This is to point our that the Summer
Dr. Joseph Nechasek, associate dean of
E
· 1 . C
d'ed
Rep_orter
erroneously
printed that
a B.A. in physical geography, was engag1
the School of Health Related Professions,
meratus rvmg
eyette, 1 on 1u Y 29
Protestor Kenneth Kiser, one of the
ed in a comprehensive land use J!lan lor
iU
d h
h
.
in New York Citjr. Mrs..Cheyene was m
winners this yeaJ: of the Chancellor's .
the cattaraugus Creek Watershed ~in~
1
1
w , h~~ Y, de~ I se.rv~ces Panning
active member of the Women's Club of
Teaching Award; was an usoclaie
Po1Hne'\fad~~t-2om~ridilind
!""t UU&gt; an utiliz.ation of health manSUNY; of MUW an and music groups;
professor of educational administration.
use plans con~ined i~vailable master
of Women's American ORT of Buffalo of
Dr. Kiser is really an.-mte JW01-w
power in Sweden and Finland on a threeplans for the Townships Of Brant, Nontr
mon,th World Hf!alth Organization
·which she was a founding" member a'l,\1
ol c:IJemlal eo~
Collins, Collins, Concord and Sardinia. - lfi!lowship . . He will be in contact with
officer; and of Omicron Nu, honorary
it'is interesti;t;-nite tl~t of the "18
Atiht ~nd.uslqn of his ~tudy, he was explanning depanments in the National
home economics sorority. She was a
Chancellor's Awards given oul over the
~ed to recommend revisions and adBoard of Health in both countries and
graduate of Syracuse University and for
last two years engirieering professors
ditions' to these plans lJased on newly
will study university health manpower
many years a senior case worker in the
have received live. At the .same time, our
issues and regional health planning
faculty constitutes significantly less than
deVI!Ioped criteria. He worked under the
0 non d ~ga an d Erie County soda 1
10 per cent of the .SONY at BUffalo.
methods. Dr. Nechasek has been chairsupervision of Or. Theodore Hullar,
man of the Long Range Planning Comwelfare depanments. She is survived by
- - N. Cill
/ll!ellicinal Chemistry Depanment, and
her husband, two sons, Herben· and
Prooaof, F~
Mr. Frank Newton of the EMC. Dr. Hullar
min1"' of the Comprehens)ve Health
Fredric, and shr grandchildren.
111111
Sdencel
wa,s recently named the. new comPlanning Council of Western New York,
Inc., a group which guides t~e developmissioner of the Environmental Quality
_ IJeP.anment in Erie County.
ment of a health plan for Western New
York.
·
Daniel Hamblin, curreody completing
a Ph.D. in management under Or.
TAlum!)!
Physidans
Wll!lam A. Hamlen, Jr., , studied the
Honored by· their Comlltll1lltles
economic· Impact of the lak~ffect on
The death of Mrs. Edward H. Butler, president and
"The younger physicians will begin to
alternative air pollution cqntrol
publisher of the Buffalo Evening Ne.Ws aAd· president of
move into small communities to practice
-strategies in Erie County. Dr. James Ford,
medicine in the next years - and infla. WBEN Inc:, on August 3, 1974, prompted many on campos to
former department head at calspari c;or~
tion and the hectic life of the larger cities
pc)ratlon and abo Chairman of the Counrecall her-long C!Ssociation with and many benefactions to the
will . be responsible," predict two
cil'.s Air _Polluiion Control Committee,
· Universlty of Buffalo. A member of thetJB Coundl from 1920
Chautauqua County physicians who've
~ as hts EMC coordinator. Hamblin
delfvered thousands of babies, put in a
to 1960, Mrs. Butler was active in two major University fund
was particularly interested In how Buftotal of 88 yeats. l!fa,ctlce, and still ma~e
falO .oompan!s to other lake · dtles and
drives in the 1920's and "made many gifts of time and exhouse
calls
with
nd
~tlremenf'
ih
sighL
also Inland cities in Its ability to..disperse
perience to the institution in addition to domftions in which
Or.. Harold Saxton, w\lo has practiced
air P.QU.utants and thus loWer costs of
she collaborated with her husbanl:t," as the News repaned in
in Mayville since 1932, and Or. . Garra
necessary air pollution control devices.
Lester, who has served the Towl! of
·
·
Charies Jaoobs, a law student, worked
her obituary.
Chautauqua and the Chautauqua Instituwith the County Attorney's office on
An
individual
closely
associated
with
the
University
dur-·
tion
since
about
1937,
were
honored
by
open space conservation easements. ·.
ing those years remembered especially the remarks of the late
citizens they've served at a'dinner at
Such easements· could be used toMayville
Central
School,
August
29.
Chancellor Samuel P. Capen at the 1926 dedication of the
preseive valuable lands and protect
Both physicians - sraduates of th~
them from future development. Or.
WestminstP.r-dock and chimes i_n t~e Hayes Hall tower, a gift
UIB School of Medicine - say they
Thomas Buerpnthal of the law School,
of Mr:s. Butler's which present ca~pus generatio_ns continue .
chose · rural medicine rather· ~an the
a~, fW. Dodge, EMC, served as his ad"big cjty'' variety because It pve them a
to enJoy:
,
.
·
visors•. The Massachusetts Audubon
chance for more personalized" practice.'
Society provided partial funding for this
. Thargift, Dr. Capen said, "creates a new·envirc;mmentfoT
Over the years, they've seen changes -a
the University and all who dwell near its campus. , ..
drop In contagious diseases, iml!fO'Ied
director
the EMC,
"Bells are and always-have been peculiarly associated
diagnostic tests, less "exploratorY'' surMerritt Van Uer, jiOied that the Engery, and an increase in good,· u""'l
vinmmentallntem Prop1m will be conwith tile life of universities. They establish the most pervasive
drugs.
.
•
·
tinued In the fall~ semesters for ·
and the most characteristic element of the university atBut lri the area of preventlve·medldne,
bY another
. acH,mlc: credit
mosphere.
·
·
they agree, there~s not much change.
su_, fuilding prosram: ."We have
"People still get cOncerned about their
been particularly . happy with the
"They color the lives and thoughts of the stuclents while
health only wnen.tlieY're sick," Or. Saxresponse from departments .at UIB and·
they are students. Afterwards the most cherished memories
•
.
the .quality of wM IICXDIIIPltshed by .-tQn says,
of youth· are linked with their sound. They
to symbolize
lThe two continue to practice medicine
HCb.. itudent." County &amp;ilcullve Regan
the univemty .not only to students but to all who live wllhln
Ald. "1JJe JI!QIIIIIlli Gi'fwfdina real in:. by appointment In their respecdve offices live afternoons ach _.. -JIIYing .
puts Into solUtions IGt ...... enhearing.
mominp to makina house calls on·
vironmental 1Jrob1ems incf at dilf same
"No gift the University could receive would add 1110re to
tlme_tlvlftl .... SlUdents the 41P!Jartuhl- patlc!,nts who are becJ..ridden or unable
t"e quality and stsnlflcance of its spiritual life."
ty to'filt'tllwolted tntd'tO betvine Jtlr't-of • . to· tr•vel . They keep abreast of
d~lllll_n
their
specialty~
family
these solutions." .
. .
- -"- .

'&gt;Pam

.:·--r.

.

Error noted

r----------------------....:...;_..,...___,
An enduring gih

T~

~

come

�·i .

I

-.------:------:---:------::----:----'--.---:-~ ·
.. OPEN P,U.KING
.
..
- Or:ien pa'rking in all University lots, except the Oi«:fenqo_rf
Lot and the President's Parking Lot by Goodyear, Will be_ In
force for the first three weeks of the. sem~ter t~ give
studen~, faculty and sta~ time to g«:t the1r parkmg st1ckers.
Student stickers will be ava1lable m 240 Norton,
September 5-6 and September !J.13 from 9 a.m. to 8 _p.m. ·
Proof of being a student (10 or class card) and auto reg1stra- tion ,will be ·required. .
.
,
.
.
Late .registrations w1ll be handled at the Secunty Off1ces,
·196 Winspear and Rooms 0116-0120 Ellicott Complex.
· As usual, faculty and staff stickers will be issued th~ough
the Personnel Office. Replacement fac~lty a!'d staff·stl_cker.s
(new cars, lost stickers, additional cars) w1ll be available
through-the Security Offices.

(from pqe 1, col. 4!

ck

.,._.

!If'

resularfons.

Bicycles are permitted on all cam~s
roadwilys. Bicydes must be , parked m
one of the bicycle racks provided for
them at various locations on the campus.
Bicycles leh In hallways or stairways are a
safety hazard and will be remov~. by
Campus Secl!rity.
.
. ,_,,,_ -Over nigh! parkins 1s proh1brted except as specified below:
u tMalft .. Calitptts.:-.;I Rf!~ident -student
vehicles are restriCted ·to• designated
areas In the Main/Bailey lot.
Amhenr ~: Resident student
vehicles are restricted to designated lots
~~ons ~~~~~---is.~"'! to residence

heavily Committed to the
Allende government, the Post said, Roett
emphasized that he had taken no such
.position and w1s wo.rking for the
· Chileans "for humanitarian and
profeuional reasons."

""'-'

If-...,_.,

. 40'\

"

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

Viill6ns -

aue

·

·a.ea

urnil

./

GUIDE FOR REVIEWING PROFESSIONAL STAFF
1 · -~ FOR DISCR~NARY INCREASES _ "
1.

shall be in accordance with regulations
of the. Stllte University of New York
trustees. A request for a hearing for
_reVocation m!'st be pro;sented
within ten days of receu&gt;t of notice.

pr9JIOSI!d

.

No person shall cause any vehicle...to
be an abandoned ¥ehicle.
A motor vehlde shall"" dee~ to be
abandoned If leh more .-than seven
days.in one spot without permission~ 'The
vehick. shall be disposed- of in .accordanCe with the Vehicle and Traffic law,
Section 1224.
' .
The last registered owner of an abandOned vehide shall be' liable to tfte
municipal airthority · haVlniJl jurisdiction
IOf the cost Of removal, storage.

-m

vraiif .. '

KK:IIe••-1: cr ·

The N1tional Hear-t. 1nd luns
Institute has announaid re.-al of a "
grant to the University entltl~d
"Pathogenesis and . Pn!ve·n tlon of
Hypertenilon" from Sep,tember, 1974,
tlllough Aujust, 1979. The 101a1-.ro i!'
direct COliS Is $!1917,501. Prllidpal In- ·
__..., 1s Dr. Alexander C. llrownie,
of blochem1stry uld ......-c:h .,

Prof-

assoclar. , _ , _ cif ~ Co- • .
imeslipton are pr. Peter A. ~~·
uiodlle prcifelliir of p.dlolo_gy,- Dr.
Samuel 0a1t.nr, ........_ prufeillor;

.

tor ·IIJ non• .
--~:..:.~;;;.;.::===

ticipatory, co-determinative democracy.
A paper on the sui!Ject, "National Policy
for Sdence and Technology and In·
dustrlal Democracy," is
to be
published -under the Councll on ' International Studies' Spedal Sludies Series
ihis semester.

-..cl by~ Slaff Senate at lhe May 16,197.4 ~118 -

been incurred during an academic year.
A notice of proposed revocati?~,
provisions for a hearing and revocat•on

.·

llioviOI ...... .I.e.. plltclna. no per·
uslnt ._,..... ~.... ..,........ ·:···

· mil,

_..,..._ ......... ..._,
._."'tile
,_
a»

len Gurlon ~"'the ....... . lonol,
..-..-. ... "The
llppur
w.,H Tuooclay, Sept. 11,
liclpl.eo, a....
24,4......
...

demonstrated that operating funds are
«. col. 4)
not ~vail&gt;.l&gt;le for such purposes. Should
consideration to and identify th~ Insuch recommendations be fonhcoming,
dividuals, both faculty and NTP's, who
they will require spedal exp4~tion a_nd
they leershould .b e con~idered for the 10
justification to the appropr~ate Vace
per cent disaetlonary "'9nies held in
President, and I will rely upon his judgthis office on the bash of their conment as to whether or not they should be
tributions to University-wide service.
supponed. ·
..
Such nominations should be ~
Finally, the Office of Pe~¥&gt;nnel IS Inldenrllled;and supponed by full, written
structed to maintain those records
justification. Individuals who, while fully
gel).e_rated by this process for ,at lea~t a
deserving of awards from the 90 per cent
perio.d'of 1&gt;\'0 years;.upon ~II ~pproproate
pool, but who may not have been so
approval in Albany 'a hst1ng of the
recommended. because of fiscal conrecipients of discre1ionary a"!ards
straints, should also be included in this
~wjthoui the a~4n1 o(,a&gt;y~~d, fli.'i"iv~jll
special listing of _people n~~O\~!"f. to
will b&lt;: . llubli~ed'. i'! .the .R~. ang,~
receive funds from the Unovers1ty-w1de
sllltistical analysis of tlie allocat1,o n o'
pool. As, we have- done previously,.I a·m · these funds will be prepared by the Peralso soliciting recommendations from - sonnel .Office as soon as possible for
Chairmen of · Univll!rsiiy . gov.ernance
'J)Ublicatiori. - · ~ ~ ~ . t-&gt;
~ •
'
groups and!.lni.versity~w,ide, ~opi~, ,
c•·&gt;l tFUSt,you ' wU~sive ¥Our earl,.ancc.full
for i~ese 'ftinl},S 'a&gt;
consider.ation to .this matter, and all
Additianally; you sho~Jld be _.ware th.a t
recommendations must . be received in
the.se di~etio'oary mol!les; are .tqc.be
this office no later thaor September 16,
to ·runii promotiOnal iricreaies Only
1974. . .
- IOIERT L
in those cases where it can be clearly

w..n·: · · ·

of ~ categorles:~1.

~:z.~,..
·.AJ•~:• Is .(liUed

YOM - ~WAR-

The Coundl on l11tenaatlonal Studies,
Aaclotnlc _ ancl·.the
.,_
. , Pntlcleat
._ _ ,......_
Soclolo1J
Vice
for

(from p.~

llewocallon of Permits
Faculty; staff and student registration
permits o:n_ay be revoked with a loss of
parkinlf privileges for the balance of the
academic year upon a finding that ten or .
more campus parking. violations have

~~!--L.-:.....~

and later senior research associate with
the Prosram in Science 1nd TechooloiY
Policy of Developina .N1ttons 11 Cornel~ .
At UIB, Streslls offerina a course on
"Ccmparative Policy for Science 1nd
TechnolosY,'' which indud'es In 1nalysh ·
of a national policy for science 1nd
technololly in an industrl1lly semideveloped country. The model 15 bMed
on the princlple of an indumill, par-

-~. Discretionary f u n d s - - - - - - - - -

prescribed In the Vehicle and Traffic
laws.
Appuls
Questions concerning a tag should be
presented to the Security Office 1mmediately.
A· plea against a municipal parking tag
must be presented to traffic bureaus of
municipal authorities having jurisdiction.
(Under current· city regulations in Buifalo, a hearing may be . delayed for
several weeks pending issuance of a
summons, because there is no proVIsion
for immediate appeal to city or traffic
couns.)
A plea against a uniform traffic summom and ~o!"plaint ·must be ma~e on
,- the localp1m1nal CO!-":':of.! nthe;City of
· Buffalo, to the Adm1mstrat1ve AdjUdlcation Bureau, as· lndlcaiW!d on rite sum~ "?~I v .,, I ;! r·~ I ' ',,...
•

Ablndoned 'VehiCles

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

On another front.- the UIB Inter. national Coundl was imtrumentol in
bringing to the University .IS visiting
. professor for 1974-75 Or. Karel Stregl,
former prQfeuor at the University of
Prague School of Economia. S~l served also as the secrellry general of the
State Commission for Science and
Technology in Prague. During Alexander
oUbcek's era, he was i member of a
8fOUP of advisors responsible for sdence
and technology policy within Dubcek's
comprehensive prosram of "Socialism
with a Human Face." Following the .
Soviet occupation of 1968, ).1e leh
Czechoslovakia and took up resilience in
Switzerland wheie he llught and continued his research. ·In 1970, -he was apJIOinted professor in the Summer School

the vehicle or other penalties as

w..r Lol leolrktlons
Allllot c.mpas: From November 15 to
Aprii1S between the hours of 12:00 midnight -and 6:30 a.m., faculty, staff and
non·resident student vehicles ~r!!
restricted to designated areas in the
Main/Bailey lot, the Sherman faculty lot
and the Parker faculty lot, because of
s,_ ~ requirements.
Amhenr c.mpas: Fr()fll November 15
to r\prll 15 between the hours of 12:00
midnight and 6:30a.m., faculty, slllff ana
non-resident students may park only in"
lots rK Portions of lots designated fpr
overnight parking. Designations will, be _,
l1)lde as lots and buikfongs are completed. Traffic regulati'!f'S will be revised '
to show specific changes at appropriate
ri~
,
~
- Snow days (days or !'ights when -l_ots .
must be plowed) require special con: sideration of aiL permit holders ..
Maintenancewilldearareosinrestricted
loiS or In lots adjacent to rl!strk:ted lots
prior to 2:00 J.m. at each campus loca- ·'
lion. AU cars must be moved to f"e
cleared area by 2:00 a.m. and shall not ,
JeiUm to regulatly designated nisht
Pllkina loiS or spaces until loiS llave
been plowed. Vehicles not moved may
- be CXInlidered to be illegally parked and
IOWiiCI at the owner's expense.
· CllmP.:us Sealrlty Qfficers may have
..., Will&amp;! towed,
of the
__.., wblcn 15 parked:'in violation of
IIIUIIIc:IIMI ordinances, the -New York
state .Vdilde and Traffic ' Law or .state
Un1veiJitr cif New York regulations. A
~feewlllbeasseaeclbythetowing

leaders-......;....---~---:':---""--

pro,.,...;,.

A uniform traffic ticket (Summons) ls
issued for all moving violations. ·
Both tags and tickets are returnable to
City of Buffalo, Town of Amherst; or the
State of New York. The coun of jurisdiction will be shown on the lllg or ticket.
Failure to return tags or tickets may
result in a warrant for arrest of the
offender, prohibition of registration .of

•

Visitors to the ~in Campus must display a visitor card obtainable from the
Visitors' Booth or from the department
to be" visited . . This card shall be
prominently displayed inside the vehicle,
on the driver's side, upright, against the
windshield.
•
No person shallJ.&gt;ark_a "':hicl~ on the
premises of the U ~uv~rs1ty 1n such
manner as to interfere wot!&gt; the use of a
fire hydrant, fire lane, or other emergen·
cy zone, create any other hazard or unreasonably interfere with the free and
proper use of a roadway -or pedestrian
way.
Parking prohibitions do not apply to
State-owned or operated serr/ce
vehicles. Pool cars dmen by laculry, staff
rK sludelifs are subject ro ~ moro. .ehi-

Chilean

(from pqe '· col. 2!

Traffic regulation5&gt;___:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
~

i

;:::;;io'o_ _ _....

JOt KNOWLBXiE

. ·
·•
. . .
(Practlal knowledge as related to the ·prest!nl job beong performed.)

2. JUDGMENT- ·.
.
(Ability to obtaiif-and analyze facts, and app~ fact judgme~t-! ,·. ~
3. QUANTITY Of WOillt"
·
,
.
· . - (Organizing ability-personal efficiency-the employee$ effec·
· · tiveness In planning his own work as well·as the work of his subordlnates-coniblnatlon of speed and efficiency in carrying out-d!Jlles.)

4• .AmTUDE '

. .

. '

· , •

,

.

(Employee's enthusiasm for his.job, his ability to accept crlticls!ll and
changes II! university policy and work methods.)
.5. Daoe.oAIIUTY
~·
. ·
·
·
(R~Iab!Jity In carrying out assignments conscientiously and with
effectlveiM!SS. Quality of work-:completeness.).'
6. • CltEAnvnY
·
(Ability to apply lmagl!latlon to the jqb in developing new plans, cut
~

cOStS, etc.)

._

'

.

.

7. DEALING WITH PEOPLE
.
• ·
.. .,
. ·: (;f.bility to get along with othen - tact, diplomacy, and ab1hty to
command and influence people.)
•·
«
.
~. +
L DBIGAliON
.
.
·
(Abllityto.-asslgn work to othen and to coordinate other employees.)

'· LEADaSHIP

.

... .

:. .-.

tAOIIity to Stimulate subOrdinates or colleagues to perform their jobi

- ~ effeCdyelyJ

-.

• .

.

1L~&amp;VIa
·
...
(Partlclpadon In unlyenlty commltiee5; merni!el'lhips~Joal campus .
uniYenJtr

sovernance;

U!IM!nity related student/campus/~

munlty ICllvltles;)
~
• 1f:' CONI1NUING Gllownt
.
. --'--1
• ·· -~~ucatlon,_partidpatlon in _.-c
·_ .' ancYor
.
, enroll~~~e~~t !n training j)rOg!'ai'IIS,'
.--'cb. ~
. .)
'".. . ...,_ ;: -N61t: Somecitheie Criletfa maitlgt 'al!p!t~_all]o!ls, e.s:·u~­

... - :t!tY·~·~wheni~~~-~
......

,.._ ~

......

1..... -..

...

~--;;

1'.,.•;':1'1-~~

..

.

·

�· Sep!e~ber 5, 1974 ·

200 .new. f~reign students attend early orientation
Approximately 200 new foreign
students from 40 countries were among
the first official campu• arrivals for the
fall semester, report ins uesday, August
17, for a week of .orientation activities,
many of. them becoming the fi~t dorm
residents- of the new Ellicott Complex in
Amherst..
The full orientation program lnduded
advisement, American home hospitality,
assistance with housing, an introduction
to University services, an offlcial University welcome, handling of red tape concerning passports and the Immigration
an,d "l~!w,atlz lion Serflce - lnf,?rol)at!on' Sl!SS~oi\s on everydilng the newcomers need to know to adjust to life at
U/B and· in the U.S.·
On the lighter side, there .w ere
.sh_o w• .of, !!£:at ,Ballou,;'. a . wine ' and
cheese social (Ellicott's first social event),
a banquet at Ecloardo'• lestaurant, an
evening of "traditional American folk
dances," a shopping tour, the inevitable
tdur of NfiiJara · Falls, and a picnic at
Niagara $_tate Park.

The foreign students living at Ellicott
together with the Americans in their im·
mediate vicinity within Red Jacket
Quadrangle (approximately 2SO in all)
will constitute the campus' International
Living Center,the purpose of which Is to
offer "more intercultural sharing than
takes place in the dassroom."
Basically, the center is a group of
students, half of thern Americans and
half foreign, who live, study and socialize
together. According to Kirk Robey, assistant director of foreign student affairs,
''The main reason for the existence of
the International Living Center is to
enable students to have an opportunity
for personal growth. By learning about
the world through the eyes of others you
keep your mind open arfd flexible."
International LiVing Center was started
In 1971. Since then It has grown from 40
student$ to the present 250, with nearly
20 countries r~presented. This is the first
year _that graduate studentS, as well 'as

undergraduate .students, have ,been
accepted. ''The only requirement this
year for admission into the International

Living Center iHhat the students should
W'l!'l to get .to know other people
better," according to Robey. .
David Yung, coordinator for special
programs and a past resident adVisor in
the International Living Center, feels that
" the emphasis of the program is not the
dorrn itself,_ but the students." In the
planning stages are seminars, workshops
and social aCtivities designed to increase
personal· interaction among students. A
free film series has already been scheduled, with most of the films provided by
National Geographic. The aim of this
program is to bring the students together
so that they will talk about their countries and give a balanced perspectiye of
their homelands.
The center also encour11ges informal
programs on the needs ·of students. This
is how most students obtain their understanding and appreciation of other
cultures, according to Yung ...-1:11~
students themselves run the athletic,
entertainment and cultural affairs committees.

Robey would like to involve as large a
comi"Qunity as possible in the International Living Center. Area nationality
clubs will be encouraged to run
programs on campus in connection with
the center, and Robey is hopin&amp; that the
center will become a place to go In~
to find people wid. Intercultural Interests.

Calendar-·
(from-16,co/. 4)

dent affairs, Ellicott Ternce area, Amhem
Campus, 8 p.m.
AJili'AIIJ[ CONCBIT"
Chide Core. and w.. ther Report, Artpark
Thei.tre, lewiston, N.Y., 8:30p.m. Admission
cha~

MOVIE OllCY•
' Feoturing W.C. Fields shorts and Slty-Ki!ll
westerns, Governors Courtyard area, Amherst
Umpus, 9 p.m.-2 a.m.
·

,, e_.ted by_tbe .Stu~Asoodatlon and
the Inter-Residence Coundl. · '

THURSDA Y-12
UUAI RI.MI••

UUP mo~nts campaign .to increase its membership
United Unlvenlty Professionals (UUPl
is mountlns a membenhlp drive to increase the participation of · University
faculty and l'ffi"s in collective bargaining. A letter frOm Laurence Delucia,
presidl!nt of the Statewide organization,
has been sent to eKh member Of tlie
barplnlns unit 11rgi"3 them to join the •
rapidly srowllll UUP. Discuulon of UUP
is beins· included In the .orientation
meetln&amp; held far new f1culty, and
Constantine YeniCiris, president of the
Buffalo~· hu sent 1 leqer to 111
new faallti explainlns !1\e role of UUP in
the SUNY system.
In their letten On. Oelucl1 •nd
YeniCiris point out thot UUPlS the sale
bargalnlna agent fOr SUNY fac:ulty 1nd.
. NTP's under the terms of I two yeor eon0 trac1 IIIIII'OVeCI by the membership last
Oel.ucil reported !hot copies
of the CDnlrlct ore belns printed and will
be dllulbuied to all meiilben of the unit
reprdless ol their membership status..
the Bufblo Chapter Is, ICXOI'CII.,..- to
the l l l l l l t - flwres. the,_ growin&amp; drapter
UUP wJth a lOIII
membenhlp ol21!1. Combined with the
141 members of the Buffalo Hulth
Sciences Chapter overall campuo
membenhlp ~ at 430, lupit in
SUNY. StiMwicle, UUP~ts4,722.1hirtyo41ww
CleiiC ol the 14,1116

--sprt,._·o..

or

P1\11e111Dilll

..J:- It..........

.

At lhe 5llllt lewel, UUP performs a
---~~Nijlllllllble for

differences headed by Dr. Yeracaris has
been formed. The purpose of this com·.
millee is to identify the unique concerns
of various constituendes within SUNY
. with an eye toward their accommodation
in future coo tracts. Anyone having views

on this matter Is urged to communicate
them to Dr: Yeracaris.
·
- At the local level, UUP is responsible
for handling all pro~ional employee
grievances at the first step. The Buffalo
Chapter grievance chairpersons are, for
the faculty, Dr. Herbert Relsrnann of
Engineering Science, and for the NTP's,
Juanita Terrell of the Department of
Linguistics. In the Health Scie"ntes
Chapter, grievance matters •are coordinated by Dr. Thurrnan Grafton of the
School of Health Related Professions.
Both Chapters hold 11!8Uiar Executive

·New nursery

A nurs,ery school will be a~ng the
PI'08!'ams offered this fall by.the Jewish
Center at its newly constructed Amherst
Bulldin&amp; .djacent to UIB's Amherst campus.
.
Mrs. Richard (Lynn) Hinch, a UIB
alumno, wiU head the new school. which
i5 called Ga'non, Hebrew for ''nunery:."school will offer 1 momin&amp;
progrunthaee ~ a week and a "fiveday~ J1R&gt;11n111w Mrs. Hindi said.

The:

~~~~~ --

said.

Tile ldiOol

·

~-CDII
_IIIII.......;CIII
~Inldtullonal
==-.=:;.

Is

Anyone desiring further information
regarding the activities of UUP and the
various economic and insurance benefits
of membership should contact Buffalo
Chapter mem~tship coordinators Curt
Menlin in Sociology or Phyllis Si&amp;el in
Continuing Education. In the Health
Sciences, Interested persons·should con- ·
tact Dr. Peter Gessner, membership
coordinator, or Dr. George Reading.
Chapter president.
. .

scho~l

"llo!h aroups wiH haweiWimrnlna and·
u.e !be IYmnasium, ~ with
·:;:;:•ore.~a~M~:r= . "wiU
the CenWs aquatic: and phJIIcal edumdon lnla'uctan. loti;_8!011111 will allo
hM .wo reaular certlflid ..,_.,"she .
~~
IIOW.Itts•

~.~='waft~

Board and general membership
meetings. Representatives of both
Chapters meet with President Robert L.
Keller every month to discuss matters of
mutual concern. The Buffalo campus
chapters jointly publish a newsletter that
is distributed throughout the campus
during the school year.

~.

open 1D ..;, .dllkl_w1MI will be 3 lw

~mber ~f~~.: :H_t_•··~
-~-!..

'

in Amherst

However, In order to· enroll their
children, 110rents must f be members of
the Jewish ·center.
·
. The cost of the th~ay program is
$300 for the .rear. $440 for the .five-day

p~~'f:;rther

lnform.tlor( call Mrs.
Hinch, 136-0115.

Cops and Robben, Confefence 'fileme,
Norton; all 13'1·5117 for dmes. AdmiSsion

clwJe.

.

'

PHYSICS COUOQUIUMI
•
The Rising TooJI Cross Section In SUong
lnreractions, Dr. Huns Chen&amp; Deportment of

Mathematia, · Massachutetts Institute of
Technolosy, 111 Hochstetter, 4 p .m.

q

Ref.reshments in 1!2 Hochstelte&lt;, 3::10 p.m.
RlM•

Three JIBes (Keaton), 147 Diefendorf, 5 &amp; 8 ·

p.m. No odmlsslon

dwae-

DANaNRP
Preented under the aoapk:es of the U/11
C.mpus Min-, in IBOdlllon with .the
\JIB Student ll.elfllouo Coundl, FIHmore
Room, Norton, 7 p.m.

UR-

Fersona/ ond " ' - " Sofety, led by ~
Criflin, Clmpus Security, Mlln Floor l.ounp,
Red Jacket llldtl. Amhent Compus. 7-8 p.m._
CA.C
The l'olnt. 140 ~ 7:45 .. 9:45p.m. ,..
mission: "S1.
CONCBf"
Performero to lie 1nnounced, £11'-t
Terroce 11eo, M&gt;hent Clmpus, 9 p.m. - ml6-

FaM••

~ighL

'

EXHIBITS

�,
SPECIAL NOTICE
Many of the events in this week's Calendar were taken
from the 1974 Fall Orientation Schedule, still incomplete and
subject to last minute changes at Reporter deadli~e . . Individuals planning to attend events would be well advtsed to
. dou"ble check schedules in Norton Hall.
front of Nonon at. 7:45 a.m. Tickets are
available a1 the liQ&lt;lon Hall Ticke t Dffic:z.
SJ)Ke is iimitect.

THURSDAY-S
MA&amp;aYN MONROE RLM f1511YAL••
Monby lullness, starrin1 Marilyn Monroe,
Conference Theatre, Nonon; call ~1-5117 for
times. Admission cha~Je.

""''J

....(

CANADIAN
MIMf
This session
will -be Instructed· !if Robin
. Patlenon of the Canadian Mime "!heater,
~Room, Norton, 3-4 p.m.
Partldpotlon Is limited to 30 persons.
lntenested indlvlduah should check at the
Norton Hall Ticket Offk:e for more Informa-

tion.
filMS"
One Week, Cops. The Frozen North, The
EJecrric and llalloonarics, 147 Diefendorf, 5 .. 8 p.m. .No admission chaiJe·
CACRLM••
.
.
Cloc:horlt exan,e (Kubrla), 140 Capen,
7:30 and 10 p.m. Admholon: $1. . .

· FRIDAY-6
·
IRC RaM••

.

t.t•A.•S•H, call -1111-4715 for details.
~ 10 IIIC ,_.....,... OAly.
,
- . Y N MQf.c)l filM IEAIVAL••

c::.:::;..,:,:!~L::,;•::~.:~;~~

HIURSH.Uit\TON•
.
Servias will be followed with a Kiddush
lunch and a study session, Hillel House, -40
Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.
·
IRCRlMu
M•A•s•H, ult 831-4715 for detai ls.
Restricted to I@C fee-poyen only.

MARilYN MC:j.OE RLM f1511YAL••

Some Like !f Hat mrrins Marilyn Mo~roe,
Conference T'hNtre, Nonon; ca) l831·5117 for
timeS. Admission ctwse. .

~Je~rou,.;

will c:onstrudtwo
video " people" ol monltOB into • mukichannel Worit t~t frasments and necombines
im.... of the audlerici!/partk:lpants, 232 Norton, noon-3 p.m. MoO on Su~y. Sept. 8.

CANADIAN MIMf WOIJ(5ItOI'O
Drama workshop, instructed by. Adrian
Peclcnold of the Canadian Mime Theater,
Ellicott Complex, Amhent £ampus, 3-4 p.m.
·Participation 1s limited 10 30. c.n 831-5507
for further Information. ·
.
CAC

FilM••

Clodnooti: 0ronse (Kubrick!, 140 Capen,
7:30 and 10 p.m. Admlsoion: $1.

a:::::iHubbonJ

~oct

limes.~ &lt;harp.
aAff fAir
.
CQft ........ and derilotBirMionsln.wheef

to· be announcedl, Clark Holt. 9 p.m.
· ·
-Admiuk&gt;n: ~and transfer students,
$2.50; all othen. $150.

::=--=..~-=::::::

~n~~e

__.p.m. CF111mofe ~Norton, In case

~110N"

.-

·

tommedlacWI-M._ NononfouniOin Area,2
p.m.

01.- ........... Norton, In case of ralnl.

.,.uJIOftlf LICIWIP

........., • ,.,. ., me ~:~~~..

-

A De~erA ·o1

Hart Aplnll
Dworldn.
- leo. Rm.
- 14,
·
Homlllon
Collep.
4244Pro/.
IUdp
):JII .......

. . . . WB.COME-10111"
. . . . - . 40 ~ llwd., 6:30 p.m.
Ole 111M""
Clocflwgfr Olwtp IICubrldl. 14D ~
7:30 . . 10 p.m. ...........,, ....
.

IMICP
_

Ltllft.hatillcMIIIIIIk.

be

•
.
...._..._..,Noroold .

_, p.m.-1&amp;.11L . , . . _ ...

.....

. r t:'- ...._~_., '- _..,......,~~
~iH;,;;;.;ill:\t.fi'.;..;.;,U_·
=;;;;
_ __

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

-:_-.

;

,.pan; ............. . . . . . . . . -

Israeli St udeiu
prpntution,.H'llel House, 40
Blvd., 9

&lt;:-.

P·~ oerv1ces ;.. fallow at mldn!Jht.

UUA8 ~ Mov!P!·
·
Sym,.lhy for the Devil, Conf~rence
Theatre, Norton; cal831-5117 foreuct limes.

_ Admholon

c~wp. .

SUNDAY-'S

·

CONCIU'
Performers to be announced, B.tlrd ~wn.
behind Schoellkopf, 8-11 p.m. (fillmore
Room, Nonon, in case of rain.)
COP OUT..,.GIIfAT AMBIICAN PASTIME
Menul llearrntlon and Se.r (Part 51, a discussion with Bambii Abelson Kertzman, U/11
instructor in health eduntion; and f lois
Jacobs. vice president,; Parents Association for
Retarded Childre n, WICBW radio, 10 p.m.
The P'OSTam is moderated by ~ne
Cook Burns.

~

·

UUAS MlDNICHT MOVIP• •
Sympathy for the Devil, Conference
The.atre, Norton; calf 831·5117 for times. ~dmis.sio n charge:
·

.

Securi~, 232 Norton, 3-4 p.m.
RLM•
Triumph of the Will, 147 Diefendorf, 3 &amp;
7:30 p.m. No admission charge.

c=~ole conducts memben o f-the Buf-

f•lo Pllilhormonlc. Harrl""'n Library steps, 7
p.m. (fillll)Ore room, Norton, In ase of rain.)
CONCBIT"

Periormen to be announad, Baird !own,
behind Schoel~ 8-11 . p.m . (fillmore
Room, Norton, in ~ of rain.)
A&amp;TPAU CONCIU'
. N1o Gufhde. Artpartt Th..tre, ·Lewiston,
N.Y., 8 :30p.m. Admission char!Je.
.

WEDNESDA Y-11
HOUtt•- .

MONDAY-9

COfRI
MAIN CAMPUS 5BY1CE5 "FOliUM•

Representatives from all servkle areas that
· -have direct contact with students will be
available for a questlon-an&lt;Hnswer session.
Call 831-5507 for place and time.
MARaYN MONROE FilM f1511YA1""
Misfrts, starrins Marilyn Monroe and Claait
Cable, Conference Theatre, Norton; ali831S117 for tUioes. Admission chaiJe.
CJIAf15 fAIR•
.
Craft exhibits and demonstrations in wf\eel
throwin&amp; jewelry makl~ and
weavlns. Creative Craft Cellier, ~ Core

area, Amhersr Campus, noon-t P.-f!!.·

CANADIAN-Ora""' Workshop, Instructed by Ho"o
Moilcow of the Canadlon Mime Thremr,
· Eliicott Com!&gt;!A Amhenl Clmp(as, 3-4 p.m,
Pan~c~pot~c~n 1s limited •o 30.
831-5507
for furrhoof-'lnformatlon.
·
RIM"
•
.
l'sydao (Hilchcock), 140 Capen, 3 &amp; 9 p.m.
No admission char!Je. -

can

~UCIURP,

John

Conyers, mell)ber of .the House

~~·~.·=
Room, Norton; 8 p.m. General.._, $1;

free to membenollfletJnlvasityaammunlty.
Presented by thi "udent Auoclotlon
Speaken' euae.u.
filM"
Oclober (Eisenstein~, 5 Acheson, ' p.m. No
admilllon chorp.
.

TUESDAY-10

Fo!

studenu interested In chemistry;

refreshments will be served, SO Acheson, 2:30-

4 p.m.

'

LIFE WORKSHOP FOR FRESHMEN

~·will

J,vt.,..

be distributed about
available 10 women at the Unlvaslty and In
the Buffalo community, 334 Norton, 7-9 p.m.

IJUAS_..

• Juliet ol the Spirits (Fellin!, 1!MI, 7!1:i p:m.
Rain (Mileotone, 1932), 9:45 p.m. Bodt films
wiD be shown In 140 Capen. No admission
chqe.

......

The Drunbrd's R~ Willi Drinlc
Alon ,..,....,.,..,._. ol '!!..~:
and- l'iiat Hal 1111 Grlflllh). Cllu.for- IIIIIIDclllon. No oclmlollon chorp.

Old.,......

WNWIIG-.aNG"
-n. w-.. Now v...t Public • a-ell Group will hold liS
)11
Norton, 7:30p.m.

lint-...

·cc;:::;:'"for the Guitar, 1-t.O. Wilh

Mldloel~ IIIII Joonne c-llnl.
stucleMI ol Ooorlld R-...:1 In the ~
~ ~ Musk. llllnl ltedlll Hal, 8

;a-

wll

Include..._ IIIII

toaeb by loch, c;Julianl, SOr, .,_,
i'eoaJbeldl, and Carulll.
'
CONCal"

Pl!rfonnen 10 . . ...nounc.l, .............. .
behind Schoellkopf, 1-11 p.m. O'lllanclre

Room,-. ... ~ ol rllnJ

~
·
Caller-be~--·-.
p.m.
01.- ....... Norton. . . . . ol nlnJ

OI'BCDIKI_.
•·
•
The ,_,.,., ,.. an. 01 ODiii Nhllf.
datnr ._ .,. flaiiiP, an Cil*l ......... .....
U/11 ......,., lloben L "-': .... Or.
Rldllnl~.~ ....,......... ....
. .

.

,.. ....,.,."".

�.

-

,

. the .departmelt of music . ·.

-'

state mUversity or new york -at buffalo

-~-

\

,

. .1974175 .

-.

�·--

Stee·Cycle
1974175
f,OMCERTS

Chamber millie boo llowlobed In tbe UDI- t y far-~ llqoly due to tbe
I'"Derooity of
Fndietfct Uld Allee
In lllablloiiiDI a faDd whldl belli
tbelr ...-, Mr. and llrL .Siee eull'ed
tbe eonUnuallon of aallllb cbamber
millie coocerta lndiullDI t1oe p,_,IJJiion
etJCh .-on of tm complete ltring
quGTtet · Utemtwe of Beethoom For
many yeus tbe
performed
by tbe Budapeot st
QuliteL More
· NeeDily, tbe Cleoeland
t, cunenlly
ID'ftlldence at SUNY at Buffalo, con-

Slee..

Slee5wu

Un.,.llllllllllque ana pand tadlllon. .

The ~ Quartet llloday ODe of
tbe IUkiDI cbamber mUll!: eDJembles.
been balled by public
and crllica and Ita RCA Victor ncordlnp
baft won many careted awards, and have
oenecl to broaden tbe Quartet'• lnternatlonll audience. Memben of the
Quartet are Paul Katz, cello; Mutha
Strolllln Katz, 'fiola; Peter Salatro_!lolln;
and Ooaaid Welle.ateln, 'fiolln. we are
~ to p - the Clm!iand Quartet

,., ODJemlile ....

.Y-··

In tbe complete Beethonn striDC..e~

cycle far 197"175. nu.
folloWL " - note that all concuts will
lab place" In tbe Mary Seatoil Room,
KleinlianiMuak:llaii,ID an effort to make
thoR oulltalidlnC concerta anlllble to
tbe peateot"numbeiL

I • .........,. SepL 18, 197"f8:80 p.m.
-r..~q · SepL u, 1974/8:80 p.m.
SopL
197"18:80 p.m.
IV ~ Oct. 8, 197"18:80 p.m.
. V ......,.
Noo. 10, 1t1"fS:OO p.m.
.VI llaadlly ~ N.,.. 25,~74/8:80 p.m.

n

m 11oo1o1q

ao.

(Aibi«t to cfr4nle}

L PHYLLIS CURTIN, IOpnllO

'lbUIIUy, Nooember 14,1974

America'• IIIUt -10~0, Phyllis Curtin,
will open tlie1974f76 U/B Vlsitln( Artist

Seriea :wiD a tun rediaL

Miss Curtin occupies one of tbe most
. unique places in mUiic in this country u
a member of not only tbe Metropolitan
Opera, hut aiiO of tbe 'Vienna State Opera
and La Scala. She hu been deocrlbed u
. "a IIDCer'a IInCe•-" Phyllis Curtin Wll
trained enlinlly In tbe United Statea
(reftlliDC tbe uaual made-i!t-Europe label
of moot current vocal careem), and when
abe went to Europe, to tbunderoua
occlaim, abe went u a atar! She wu born
In &lt;lartlbUq, West VlqiDia, where her
father wu a church" tenor and her mother
11t111 playa orpn and direCts three church
chotm. AI a atudent at Wellealey CoUece,
abe llDI for tun (bein&amp; a political adence
major) and It .... not until her university
daya that abe bepn formal vocal atudy.
She made her profealonal debut wltb
The New York l::ity Opera In 1954 and
since then boo lnlllt a career u one of tbe
moot lnteJU,ent liDtMs ·before tbe public
today, _ . s ol a "fOice which the

Amsterdam llturdelblad .-crihea u ...

miracle. nu. ... more than lliD&amp;IDI; IIIII ,
.... creatln£" Counll• conductoli han
aiiO prailecfher artlatry ,lndudlnl BaaDe

Ormandy, Leonard BernliWD, Cailo llarla
Glullnl, Sir Geoij Solll Uld .,.... ~
...

--

....,

Min ' Curtin hu devoted peat
attention to the maolc ol' our llmea u well U to tbe ll:lJidard Npenoira. Contemporary COMJIC*II with Whom abe II
aaodated lndude Ned B..-. Alberto
Glnaltera, Cadlole Floyd, Duiul MUJuud
and Benjamin Btttten. Her - aiiO
emhracel ~- IUDfMilrilf
voice at Yale U
Uld acU'fitleo at
tbe Bertahlra Millie
tar. at ,....._
wood. In IIIII nln, Milo Curtin wiJ ofrer
a ~
Jn Baird Reeltal Hall on
Wedniaday, Nonmber 13, at 2 p.m.
wblch •~ open to o'-rvell without
chaqe.

a..

�.EacOaaters

A _ . dftoUd to bdDtlnl lotlf'tber
!lOUd . . . artlala and eoadlletoll of the
lluftoki l'bllbmnDIIIc aod Unlvenlty COD·

celt · - wttb ltudenll, faeulty ...d
otboor lnlenoted lncltriduailin ao inlormal
atmoopbere.

V. TIIB DOIUAH QOINTBT
-~......... 5,1175

'lbe Dorian Qulnt.t ..tum&amp;.to Bulfalo for
~jJnloat.d •In .,...

a .hr1Hiay

=:=
. .'":..
VIIHIDc

':..0:~

AJta.
tile
Arlilt Sodol ~. Mudl
6, ~ full day'• adblty of wcxbbopo.
•~Din~~!, !!le., II oebecluled for Bllrd
Recitll H&amp;IJ the p11!riolll day.
.

We &amp;18·lndebted to the JD&amp;OaiOIIIeDt of
tbe Pbllbarmonlc for belplnl fo arraap
tbll ._ . wldch II deolpd to bnat
down of tile . , . _ wldch ~
betw.o arUot aod andlence. 'lbe
•
COUDtell will lab the form of "rap"
-...,. and tbe &amp;Ddlence will be en·
CCIIIDpd to lnteraet wttb 1ho utlall.
OpeD wttbout cbaqe.
:IV = L E IIAU.DfBR, ..... _ .

:.:~~4, 1974. 2

For ill colicert, the Quintet baa ..,.
leded ao unuoual procram inclucllq con·
temporary compooer Henry Brant'•
oe~ of J.S. Bach'• "Goodbeq Vula·
Uo111, Ten Pieces by Gyorcy u,eu, and
"Cave of tbe Wind&amp;" by Lukas F011
(former conductor of the Buffalo Pbll·
bumonlc ~ aod cummtly codlrector of tbe Unlvenlty's Center of tbe
CrealiYe aod Performlnc Arts).

'lbe Dorian Quintet oem~~ tbe entire
Steta Unlvenlty of New Yom u artllllin-ft!llldenee aod allo se"es in the same
· capacity for Brooklyn CoiiOp. Memben
of the poup &amp;11! .Kad Knber, llute;
Qwleo Kuoldn, oboe; .Jerry Klrtbride,
clarinet; Jane Tavlor, baloon, aod Barry
Benjamin, Fl1!nch born. Tbe Quintet was
&lt;Jl1IIDized in 1961 under a Fromm
Foundation pmt at tbe Berbhlre Music
Center at Tan&amp;~ewood . 'lbey bave concertized tbrouebout tbil country and
El!roPe aod, under State Department
;1~~ toUI1!d Africa, Asia aod tbe

I ROBEJP' COLE, - t e con·
duet or, Buffalo Pbllbarmoale

Orcb-.

Moaday, Soptembe&lt; 28, 1974 ·. 2
p.m. • Baird Roettll Hall.

�Master Classes Evenilgs .for
New Music

Major 1974/75.
Music Departil!ent Events
Wed.
Tues.
Mon.
Wed.
Sun.

fi. PHYLLIS CURTIN,aoplallo
WodDMI&amp;y, Nonmber 18, 1974/2 p.m.

A selieo of ftft coDCelta piOducod by the
Center· for the CrealiYe and Performlne
Alta fealwtJUr the moot lnnovallve musk:
of our timOI!' CcHIIrected by Lukas Foos
·and Lejuen Hiller, Evenlnp ' filr New
Millie U. juJt concluded Ita tenth year
wblcb Included a European tour as well as
biply lllcceosful concena \n ijew York's
Cunecle Hall, and at leading colleres and
unlversllles.
Eveninp for New Music will take place
at The Albrlcbt.Knox Art Galleey, 8 p.m.
I. Sunday, October 20, 1974

n. Sunday, December 8,1974

m. Saturday, February 15~ 1975

IV. Saturday, March 22,1~75
V. Sunday, May 4,1975
(subject to change)

Sinlde tickets: $1.00 students, faculty,
staff, U /B olumni and Gallery members
with ID's, $2.00 pneral public. Series
pass available, phone 831-4507 for
information.

"·

IV. FRANS BRUEGGEN 1ee0nler
~eoday. March 25, 197S/11a.m.
(wb}ect to chcngej

Special Events
The Department of Music will sponsor
several specill events throughout the
ocademlc year.

• October 25-27' 197 4
THE AMERICAN LISZT SOCIETY
FESTIVAL
The University wiD boot the 1974 annuli
meetine of the American Liszt Society,
an orpnlzation devoted to furlberlne the
music and ln!luence 1of the r;reat 19th
centwy coml"*r. 11ie. meetine at Buf·
folo will bring toeotber mille than 100
acbolus and mllliclans from throughout
the country aad nUIDI!IOUI concerts and
lectu..,. will tab place. The public is
Invited to partldpate In the ldlvlties of
the American Llozt Society and complete
lnformallon may be obtlloed lbrou&amp;b the
Concert otllce.

The

Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Fli.
Wed.
Fli.
Sat.
Sun.
Wed.
Fli.·
· Sun.
Sun.
Wed.
Thurs.
Fli.
Sun.
Thurs.
Sat.
Thurs..SUn.
Mon.

Sat.
Wed.
Fli.
Sun.
Mon.

Thurs.
Fli.
Sat.
Thurs.
Wed.
Thun.
Mon.
Wed.
Fli ..S.t.
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
Wed.
Thurs.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Wed.
Sat.
Sat.
Mon.

Wed.
Thurs.
' 'Mon.
Wed.
Thurs.
Sat.
Sun.

_Sept. 18
Sept24
Sept. 30
Oct.2
Oct. &amp;

Cleftland Quartet/Sloe I (MSRJ* J
·
·ae.etand Quartet/Sloe n (MS ~·
Clenland Quartet/Sloe
Creative "-dale Recltlll (B
).
Harriet !limons and Sylfia Dlmlzlanl,ooplalloe

Oct. 7
Oct. 8
0cL9
OcLll
Oct. 16
Oct. 18
Oct. 19
Oct. 20
Oct. 23
Oct. 25·27
Nov. S
Nov. &amp;
Nov. 7
Nov.8
Nov. 10
Nov.14
Nov. 16
Noo. 21·24
Nov. 25
Nov.30
Dec. 4
Dec. &amp;
Dec. 8
Dec. 9
Dec.12
Dec. 13
Jan. 18
Jan. 23
Jan. 29
Jan. 30
Feb. 3
Feb. 5
Feb. 7-8
Feb. 8
Feb. 15
Feb. 22
Feb. 26
Feb. 27
Mar.1
Mar. 2
Mar. 3
Mar. 5
Mar. 22
Mar. 22
Mar. 24

~ony

m (liS:/.*

Apr.2
Apr. 3
Apr. 7
Apr. 9
Apr.10
Apr.12
Apr.13

Wed.
Apr.16
Apr. 20
Sun.
Thurs..sun. Apr.24.27
Mon.
Apr. 28
Wed.
Fli.
May4
Sun.
May4
Sun.
May4
Sun.
Wed.
. May7
MayS
Thurs.

~:0

~~·

MSR
' AKG

L~li.J974

Jl. . . . . . . lllt..!974

r

Wllma Sbakesnlder, ............
~
Grosvenor Society Con&lt;ert ECL
Evenlnp for N- lllllie ~
Suzanne Thoma, harp &lt;:RH)
American Lilzt Society Ollinl*

GJ*

~uslocationl)

/B Colle(lum Musleum (BRH)
CreaiiYe "-date Recltll n (BRH)
U/BOrcbesln~
.
StudentCom~ ~(BRH) ,
Cleftland Quartet/Sloe V
R)* 3 p.m.
Pbkllil Curlin, oopniiO
)*
•
U/ Clwnber Winds (B
'
Unlnn,tty Opera Studio (BRH)*
Cleftlmd Quartet/Sloe VI (MSR)*
Grosvenor Society Conoert.(BECL)
U/B PefCUIIion Ensemble (BRH)
UfB Symphony Rand (to be announcod)
Even1np for New Musk: (AKG)*
U/B Cbolr.Qlo'i&amp;\enmore Presbyterian Church}
UfBOrcbesln=
Bulfolo Strine
~BRH)*
Grosvenor Society (B ~
Jullliard SlriliC Q¥artet SR)•
Creative Aaoda~ R.ecltll ill (BRH)
Charles Roeen, pianist
~R)*
Leo Smit, pianist (B )*
Creative Associate Recito!IV (BRH)
Black'Music: Festtnl (BRH)*
_
Grosvenor Society Concert
~BECL)
Even1np forJiew.Yusle (
G~
Grotlftnor ~noert (B L)
~
Be'anx Alta Trio
R)•
'
· .
Student Compooen Worbbop..(B~)
U/B ~ony Band
(l~r anooun&lt;ed)
Allen
, darlnet
U/B Cborus-Orcbesln
Dorian Quintet (MSR)
Groevenor Society Conce'l*BECL)
. Ev~(
G)*
Frus
, recorder and
. Alan Coutil,
:::.::R)*
Echranl Y
,
ooe (BRH)*
U/BCollollumlluoicwD ~
Donald Welleraleln, 'liollll
~·
· ·FriDa Aracb==~o RH)*
U/B Cborus-Or
)
U/B Chamber Winds (BRH)
Squire HaotiD., ......
Flnt ~ Cbardl, 4:411 p.m.
Crealift "-ddt Recital V (BRH)
U/B 8ympboDy a-t
be announCed)

18:l:t)

··

J:'

Un~Sia
~)*
Famlty
pa.eaCon&lt;ert
U/B,._.._.._..
)
U/8 Choir (IIIUl)
~(ndoaaldlrilles ill Baird Hall)
a-t (Lockwood Llbnry) 8 p.m.
-~ lllllie~)·
Ynr
~ ( be announoed}
U/B Orejaeolla
)

(wbject

BRH

iif:&amp;t

Band (Port Colborne, Ont.)

ScboenberC
-1- Fll&amp;lnl
•
Quartet/Sloe
IV
ScboeniMq -1- Feollnl B ; •
David FuDer, borpoicbord (

·'

to c,_,..j ·

- 8.Jrd Recltll Hall, SUNY at Buffalo, 8:00p.m.

- Mary 8eatoe RoomJ..~ lllllie Hall, 8:80 p.m.. .
- Allllllbt-KDox Art......,., 8.00 pa.
BECL · - Buftllo &amp;: "Erie County Pliblle Llbnry Allllitorlwn (doWDtown},
8:00p.m.
• *Norton Hall Tlc:ket Otrlc:i II now open. nckeb available two ,_,,. prior to
eoenll. RemaiDinl tlcketa anllable ont hour before - t at IWI. All ,other .
concerts OJIOII willloul: cbalt8. No p..._ orden,~Sbllle tlckeb to Sloe Cyde
and VloltiD&amp; Arlllt Sedoo fl audlllta; $2 U/B
/rtaft &amp;Del ilamnl wiiiiiD'a
&amp;Del $8 otbeD. ~ for New Mullc $1
r.ealty, U/B alumni &amp;lid
AlbdCht.KDos Art Gallily lllllllbeD wWl ID'a &amp;Del
olben. hallty Ndlala 60. •
· atudlllla;,$1 U/B r..ulty/llaftud a1;umnJ with ID'a &amp;lid $1.60 olben.

'

m.~18,11nli
IV.~8j1971i

V.lllnll:lll,l971i
(•bl«t to .,.,..)

.·

f"

. RBI'OilTBil/1974.76 Concerts /Soptambor li, 1974/ .... 4

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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When requestinc Pbylics courses, th~ laboratories and recitations must have the same
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leiter • lbe ~- ' Chemistry courses to and including CHEM 214 require
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oectlon letter 11 tbe lecture. Chemistry co111110S to and inclucliDC CHEM 214 ftquire
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IN&amp;TftUCTIONS.FOR SiRA REGISTRATION
fl!AR JIE'Aa THESE I~UC110• CARERILL:f AID COIIPI.pELY IEFORE· AnEIIPrllll

TO

FILL OUT AIY OF THE
REIIIIliAnOI FORMS. TH~ REIIITRAnOI FO-IIUST ~ ~mD WITH A I . . .ER 1110 LEAD PEIICIL OILY.
D.aa F111111, S&amp;udallt. ~Form, Uld plaD to . . . . . 'Olio *""'-t ia a.....,. duJiatliiiiiiP.!II!I197~ -·~­
F111111, a per ljle ll&amp;&amp;ldled polite of alllbe ltUdoel data _ , for to apdate lbelr data ... If tile - .
e,unipleo, to CXIIIIplele IM.JWIII&amp;alloo p10- lbe eomPaeuoo of a ftlloty of UDiHalty ""*-. ..... « . . . ~..,_,

eaa- lleqlllllt
'1111 ............ -.1 fGr llllloiDIIoD •

....... '· of........

....... ~:'11eldlliM4forlllllotm- - .
........,, ~ ...... II a cm..lep

......... -* pGdloa of wldcb lllllll be

1,

I. Sludont ~ fornt-iEsamplea 1 Uld 2)'

........... Ill full If 1be l&amp;adiDt II to be
Allstutloala at tbe U~- com.......... a11 lbe SARA B......... a,. ploie or updatea Data -Form pdor to lbe
18111. 'Die otudeat lbould Ill-~ S&amp;udaDt - ~ of .lbe -In whlcb tbey

ll!pCIIIL'Die......,..uaaoflilllformbytile
otudeat II an lnt.pal pBt of tbe nptralloll . . - . 'l'belefooe, stuclenla wbo faD
to ·lle ·tbJo form wDI be IDeiiCft&gt;le to complete lbelr ~ For Summer S..
...., 1974 aeptzatlonconlinlllnlotuclenta,
Iii._ ltuclenta wbo_were nptenod at U/B

ll!llltratloD .... be ....,-d. . •
L

Continulnl Students -

...;.. -

' rplled In tile ........ ~ ....

for wli1cb they repter!Dc. , _ ltUtloDia ...... llllbmlt tile t.oe.l ~ Uld Vllllde
JtepiDIIon Form (example ' •8) for
Summer s.lon np&amp;ratioD If .......
hate·occured. ..

,_,.DATA,_

....,...... ~ • .....--..... ~--

WAiie ...

plete a,_ form ID tta..u..tr

Cecunc tile -

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
.'

lloll .... eJiiaeod. Nally . , . , . . , t*lrflr,f;
tpeCiol and n-alariiV ..... . - -

r

Allnllttai

....

b. . Newly
~
u... .
who are .........., for Iiiii lint ~ at

'-

tbloU-tyaeiiMr-a' ~

lnlllfer, p.duate or poo(-1111 student. 'lbeae students wDI R!Celve a bloat ·
1
Data Form and are to eompiMe It In lla
entirety. 'Die date ·June 1974 , . , be
iDierted where date of lint JeCisllatloD
at U/B is requested. (oee example • 2)

,,

.

c. Visiting and Special ~ ·lndude
all thooe who are not regular ltudenll
here and are studfinl here oaly for tile
su~ term. (oee example •2)
NOTE: Visiting and Special ~a4er­
graduate ·ltudenla ohouid enter' cfus
- Code 6 (Undaslfled) In Item T (Ciao&amp;)
of tile Studea~ Data Fo.r m.

Non-Matrlculaat

graduate

students

· should enter Code 9 (Noa-Malriculant)

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

In Item T.

J

L

--- --

.

._... ...
1111 : -';t~ ;
~

.:. . 1111

L

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.

-- · -'l!l

._.

___ _____ -·

ri.ia Fo;,;.. me to be ~ to tbe
foUowin&amp; oftlce two ~ prj,ur to tile
start of tile Summer Saolon' tblt stuclenla
inteDd to. ntJIIer tor. .
·

YORK

STATE,UNlVERBrTY OF NEW
AT BUFFALO
.. _ _ .. .
~MTAJ!III
~•
~--------~.-.

2.

· d . R~ng ~ Include all
former Ualvl!lllity stuclenla not enrolled
In tile ..immediately Precedln&amp;
tile ...-er for which tbey are ...pierInc- This form Jllllllt be eompleted In Ita
•';........:...entirety. (oee example •2)

..........

Millard Flll......fs..._- to lila Ol'llct
AdmillloDI and lleeoldlln a.,_ B.
All Gndult8 ..cl U......... htclants - to the Ol'llct of Admilll0111 ..,.
Rec:onls In Hayes B.

.............. ~ : tO tile

to

maiD

p~

om.. In llle nopeclift
ocbools.

All Data Forma wDI tben be fornrded
Admi.IOiis and ileeonls Uld tben to tile

o.aa Plocoaolnc Center .. ..... tlley wDI be .
bypuncl&gt;ed

updaled.

and tile

.sw.-.

II. ·Rogistntion a-k

Malter Fie

~Eumple

3

-~)

Cunelllly emolled studenla or U...
be
prnenled from ftllllledDI for _ . ~ to tbe Ullhmllty, .,._
demli: . clilqlllllftcatloD, or dJ!dpllllllry
...,.... It 'II the mponaliHUty of .Ute
rtudliitt to dMr 1111 record by OOIItaetiDI
tbe appropriate om.. In ...,_,. of ......

.atiJIC ......mdollon. or ldinlooloD .IDlY

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-=-==---~Fz:2b::

Eodl ltUdent lbould .,... • copy of
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.

b.2 A llludoat

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' two (2)
~ foi" plilllaJy lllllli:tioi.s 1 :
tbrou&amp;b 4; ...,_, aaly 1 .Jiem8te ..
,a.ible for P"-7 oel- ~ tluoulh
7.

4.

o-rldt 1 s--w

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b.S Allemate.,.,.,.. caDDOt eoaftletiD
time with my prlmuy except that
prlmuy for which tlley ue the il~. ,.;
b.4 All iltemate oelec:tions sbould be
reconled iD the "altel'l'l4u •• sections of
tbe form provided. ·--

4. It Ia the student's """'&gt;'DSibUity to
!epter Independently for each lecture, recitation, and laboratory In oil counes
wbere combiDalions ore requin!d. Bach of
these selections sbould be -ted ..
primuy selections, ud tllerefore, requested
separately. When requestlq pbyai:s
counes, tbe laboratories ·ud recitations ~
must bne tbesame sectioa.letter; In mathe- matics'IDd eeonomics courses the recitation
must ~e the same section letter as the
lecture. A . student must be J:eCi&amp;tered for
the proper lectwe, redtatioo md laboratory for oc:ience counes, (other tbllll chemistry), -to receive· Oftdlt for the course.
Reciatrallon for Chemistry courses up to ud lnduding CHEM 214 will require a
different proeeclure. Students must ree~ster
for the projler &lt;;bemlatry lecture and the
cortespCIIIIIIn- recltatioo-laboratory unlike
~ ldence counes, Chemistry' nptlallon will .only be a two step (irocea, (i.e.
Loctwe" - ' Bee-Lab). Lab times. will be
incrNRd by one hour to fadlitate automatic redtation registration for students
otfidally nlillered In the laboratories.
It Ia the student's responabUity to propOilY ree~ster In these various combinations
wllere requUetL

s

~ - PRBREQUlSI'l'BS: IT lS _THE
STUDENT'S RESPONSIBILITY TO
8BCURE THE APPROPRIATE PERMlSSION OF THE INSTRUCI'OR OR THE
DBPARTIIENT WHERE INDICATED: IF
fiB ATI'BIIPTS TO REGISTER WlTIIOUT
. RBCBIVING PERMISSION, HIS REGIS- TBA'ftON IN THAT 'COURSB IIAY liB
CANcBLLBD. THE SI'UDBNT - IB ALSO
RBSIONSIBLB TO CLEAR ALL O'l'iiER

PllBBBQUI8l'I'BII

INQ I'OR A

BEFPU RBGIS'I'B&amp;IF HE HAS NOT

~

Financiallnfonnation
YOUR FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY BEGINS
WHEN YOU SUBMIT YOUR COURSE REQUEST
FORM.
Failure to pick up your course schedule can! will not
cancel your tuition and fee clwges.
Last day to drop cowses without financiil penolty is
the Friday ending the * ~nd week of c1 ...... (Fridays ue .
olways considered the end of the week· for financiil
purposes.)
'
*Exception: 13 or 14 week sessions~ if the COUI'IieS
ue officially dropped and you notify
. the Office of Student Accounts, your
charges will be adjusted as follows:
100% Tuition and Fee credit until June 7 Hl74
30% Tuition until June 14, 1974 '

Non-Attendllnce · (unofficiol withdrawol) does not
cancel clwges. .
SUMMER SESSION Regent. Scholarship AND
Scholar JncentiV« cannot be applied to Summer Seaion
Tuition and F'!" ciwges. Pay111ent is d'le, in full. You wm
be _notafied when your check is received from Albllllf.
Payment of tuition ud fees for a coune added &amp;fUr
Invoice date is due on the date of addition. NO BILL
WILL BE SENT.

omce

..

!!Ill II !617101

CoDIUit the
of Student Aeeounta for addltlonil financial information • 831-2041 831-4]31
831-4735
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•aniSTIAnOI PlAIIIIC TAILE

ACADEMIC POLICY REGARDING REGIS.
TRATIDN FOR GRADUATE COURSES
BY UNDERGRADUATES, MILLARD
FILLMORE; UNCLASSIFIED AND NON·
MATRICULATED STUDENTS.
1 . .Ali regularly emi&gt;Ued undergraduate
students ottemptlnJ to register for gnduote
courses (or undergraduate credit must peti·
tion tbe Office o( tbe Dean or tbe Division
or Umk•rgraduate Education, 278 Hayes
Han.

..

2. All regularly enrolled Mlllud· Fillmore
students oUemptinJ to repter for gnduote
courses for undergraduate credit must peti·
tion tbe Office of tbe Dem of tbe Division
or Undergriiduate Education, 278 Hayes
Han.

~-·

3 . Undergraduate md Mlllud Fillmore
students attemptlnJ to register for graduate
COIUSeS for gnduote credit must obtain
approval o( tbe Dean o( tbe Division or
Graduate md Professionol Education, 230
Hayes Hall , •
Stodents taking Suinmer Session courses
who ore undergrad.W... or Mlllud Fillmore
students and ore cl&gt;ded as non-matriculated
·or undamfied (i.e. non-U.B. students during
reau1or -...,.) must oecure tbe approval o(
tbe Dean of Graduate md Profeuionol
Education, 230 Hayei Han, to repter for
graduate COIIIRS reprdl.. of whether tbe
coune II to be token for gnduate or widergnduote credil

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·tL Tillie wll be fldiWia na1ab1e 1D
Admlllloal ..... I t - * to IDitruet ....
doDta ID lacnr to PftiiiiiiJ eoaiplote t1111r
......... ..a.dlll.lf ....... doolre
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they llloald . . . bolp
.u-pt.
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llalloa f - wiD aot be ....opted.
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12. Tbe lludoat lllauld report to Ad·
lllillloao _. Reconll to 111m ID bll reptra.
lloll ......... Other lum-ln looatlo.. will
be ..... at Admlaliona _. Records If

•

_,..

W!Wn lumiDJ ID your ntJslntlon
forma, you may hand them to IDY'
c:becter who will review them to assure _

L

a certain dOC'" of correctness. The
ebeclter wW then give you 'a. """'lpt Cor ·
your Coune Request Fonn and tell)'ou
when your Schedule Can! will be anil·
able. Schedule Card. for aU Millard Fill·
more rtudenl&lt; will be ..,.;ihzble at
AdmiiSiont and RecorrU, Hayer.A nnex
''B." .
•

;c:.

-"·lt eonij,~~: :~ o~.,J~e

will be avaDable Cor plc:k.Up by students

approximately one week after a Coune

Request Foan Is submitted. Sebedule Cards
will IIIUally be anllable at Admloolons end
Records with other locationa pooted If
mqulnd. 'Student&amp; aldeo will be anllable to
diNct lbldenla ID plcklnc up tbelr reptra.
lion formo.

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>1nstnJ9tion Begjns.Wednesday, January 16, 1974

�General Nates far Use of
the Scbmlale of _ClasSes
_Tbla Scbedule prvrides rooin
Semelter 1978-1974 c:ow._offerinp;--

-.n-ola

£xamination Sche_
dule _
-for·Classes
in the Day Divi$ion

tor the Second

Se.enl polnla abould be undentood by the student&amp;:

,

-

MAY 10 TO MAY 1:71·1974·:
1.

'lbe studea1 mould- pay careful attention to the campus.
lndleator c:oluam lbown In-the c:oUree J!stings. 'lbls indica·
tor ldentllles th~ eourees which ~ offeft!d at outlying
camp-.
/
' " ' - Include:
NC • ~~erst campus
RL - JUd&amp;e Lea Campus
BP - Bell Plant or Race Street Campus
MA - Meyer Annex or Grider Street Campus
' ~ - All Other Auxiliary Locations

2;

It Is the responslbWty of the student to See that adequate
time (app~xlmately 30 minutes) is provldi!cl in his schedule
for travel between camp1115. BUSiing aerviee, leaving from
the Diefendorf Annex Bus Stop, is provided to the North. .
Campus,
Lea Campus and Race Street Campus
locations.

.;ui

Final examinations to be given this .emestir
follow the system
used iluring the past year.
'·
This automated system checks tlie ~tlc;m f)(,the students in all
courses to he exaJJ)IJled 'and' orpntzes· the exam 'Schedule In IUch a
fashion as to minimize ilie riwnber "of 11lrect' confl_i~ during the exam
period. This system &amp;1'9 -mi!liml~ the -~bU'J3.: _
i&gt;J a student baYing
more than two finals In any given day.
As In the past, we wish to remind youlh~~~-~~~ccess of this exam
'schedule depends upon the full-cooperation of bQtll.ijle faculty and the
.•!·
students. ·

Rklie

3.

For COUJ"SeS that are listed as "ARR" in the Day, Hours,
BuDding or Room columns consult the department as to
the location of the course.

4.

If a particular-course, department or coUege is not li~ted in
this schedule, contact the Department for further .infor:
mation.

Admissions and , Records, Hayes B. will "\aiQtain

eVening hours {t'o be announced at a later diit~ ) "tor

• ) I

the Spring Seme'ster.

0,•,

BUILDING ABBRE~Tio~ :
CAMPUS INDICA TOR (none)
• . • MMf:i STREET CAMPUS
ACH __ _ . _. _ .. __ _ ... -- ..- . _' _ . .· .: . ; . : ACHESONHALL
ACHA .. _ _-.. . . . . .. .. . . . . - - .. - .. ACHESON ANNEX

~~~

·- .. .. --: : . -.-_,. ·.:-~ : ·... -:--:;_::.-- 8AI~~~

&lt;:-

CAPEN : : : : ::: : : : : : :: : ::: : :: : · ~ :
CAPEN HALL
CLARK _ _ _ .. _ _ . . . . _ • . ..• _ • _ ·- . -. _ . _ -.. CLARK HALL
CRSBY
__ . . . . _ --· .. _ _ ... __ - -- ... __ CROSBY HALL
DFN . ___ __ ___ -_ .' . _ : _ _• _ : _ _ : __ . DIEFENDORF HALL
DFN A _ _ __ • _ ~ __ _ . : . , ___ • .•. -- _. __DIEt'E!;'DORF ANNEX
FSTR
... -· -' ·- .. -.--· . _ _ : .. • .. : _ ;_ -··.· : FOSTER HALL
FsTRA . __ _ . . . • . • _ _ . _. __ _ -. _ .: _. : . _ _. -FOSTER ANNEX
HAR L
. , _ _ . HA(I.R!MAN LIBRARY
__ _ _ _ _ . _ HAYES HALL
HAYES
HEALTH SCIENCES BUILDING
HTH S . _
HOCH _ _ _
. . • . . __ . _ . . . . . _ : _ _ HOCHS'JlETTER HALL NORTN
__ . . .. . . . . _ : ___ _'- : _ _ : . .' .· NORTON HALL
~ ... RKR
. _ _
. ...., 0 u _ , fA~!.~ ENGINEERING
SCHKP
_ _ _ •.• . . . • · _ : . :, •
• _ ·_·'scHOELLKOPF HALL
1
\I'NSN D
_ • _ • _ . _ . _ ____ __ _ _ . . . . •• ;'J:QWNSEND HALL
TRL
____ ___ _ .
TRI\ILER COMPLEX
AMHERST CAMPUS
CAMPUS INDICATOR (NC)
OB R!A
.. __ . __ __ _ _ . _ . _ . _ _ _ . __ .. •O' BRIAN HALL
CAMPUS INDICATOR (RL)

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS &amp; RECORDS
NOTICE TO STUDENTS
IMPORTANT DEADLINES FOR SPRING 1974 REGISTRATION
Tuesday, January 15

Tuesday, January 15
Friday, February 1
Friday, February 1

Cross divisional registration begins at noon.
First day of which DUS students may add
MFC courses and first day for MFC students
to add DUS courses.
First day to-drop courses.
Last day for initial registration without
Dean's approval.
Last day to drop courses without financial
liability.

Friday, February 1

Last day to drop courses without having an
\'R" aasigned. Official resignation:

Friday. March 1

Last day to add courses. -

Wednesday, AprU 24

Last day on which students may drop
without academic penalty.

~ourses

- 4224-4250

· - • . RIDGE L EA CAMPUS

.RIDGE LEA BUILDINGS

CAMPUS IN DICA TOR (BP)
· . - • BELL FACILITY
RACE
. -. . . . . _ . __ " 180- RACE~TREET(BELL FACILITY)
CAMPUS IN DICA TOR (MA)

MEYER ANNEX

462AA ... _ ... _ ___ ____ . _ . _ . 462 GlilDER STREET AA
462BB - . - . . . . ..• _ _ _ • _.· .. . . . . . 46~ :G_ftiDER STREET BB
462KA - - - - - - . ____ _ __ .. -462 GRIDER STREET K ANNEX
CAMPUS INDICATOR (AX) ALL OTHER"AUXiLIARY LOCATIONS· _
1721E
______ _ .. _ ______ 1721~WOODAVENUE
1749M - - . - -- .•.. ______ . 1749MILLERSPORTHIGHWAY
. 22 11A - - - . - - - . __ _ __ __ . . . . . _ . _ 2211 MAIN STREET A"
210 F - - - . . - . . . - - - - - - .. _ .. _. 2i0 FRANKLIN STREET
2917M -- . - - . _ ..• _. __ __ -. ,. _ . _. .. : 29i7MAINSTREET
30CHR
- . - . __ : _ _ _ . ~ . • ... _ _ : _30 CHURCH STREET
3423B -- . •. . .. . _. _ . . . . _ . __ . _ ' 3423BAILEY AVENUE
4510M ... - • - . . - • . • . . -. _- . __ . . . : _ 4~,10 MAIN STRE_E T
560 M - - . _
...• _ •. ___ . ___ . _ 560 MAIN STREET
73 H . . . . _ - - - • - . __ • __ . _ . _ _ __ • , .. -73 HIGH STREET
BSH
. • .. : BUFFA I:.OSTATEHOSPITAL
CHLDR - - - . . . . .•• . - .• - - . - -.: : C!!ILPRENS HOSPITAL
- - • - - . - . . _, __ _ . . . . : _ DEACONESS HOSPITAL
DECNS
EAGLE - - . . . . - - . . . . ____ . . . . 77 WEST EAGLEJTREET
ELTON
4 ELTON·STREET (ROCHESTER; N.Y.)
ESTMN
EASTMAN DENTAL CENTER (ROCHES'I'ER, N.Y.)
GENRL - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ BUFF:ALO ,GENERA\- HOSPITAL
__ _ .. _.. . . . 7~1 -/EFFERSON AVENUE
JFRSN
(JEFFERSON-GENESEE CLINIC)
MEYER .. - . - - . E.J. MEYER MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
MILRD
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PERRY .. - - .• . - .. _ _ 321 PERRY STREET (PERRY CLINIC)
ROSWL
- - - - . ROSWELL PARK MEMORIAL INSTITUTE
SISTR - . - - - - - . . . . . . - .. _ _ . .•. . . . SISTERS HOSPITAL
VETRN - .. - .. - . . . . . •... _ .. _ . . VE'fERANS HOSPITAL
W SEN
WEST SENECA CHILDREN'~ PSYCHIATRIC CENTRE ·

�3~

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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  <item itemId="85496" public="1" featured="0">
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1715866">
                    <text>Instruction Begil1s Wednesday, ,$eptember 5, 1973

�lids ..............
.ll11-1tlt-CiftldliiL
....... poilllltboald ...

_.........,Ia

Eullillltion Sclledule for Classes
.i l tbe Day Divisiu

f«.IW Flnt s-.ter

UDdlalood.,. the ltudeata:

-f" DECEMsER 15 TO ~ECEMBER 22, llrf8 .

~ ,lllouW P1Q1 Cll'eful atlellllan to the, camp111
lDdWtor col.a 1bon Ia tbe
llotiDp. TIIIIIDIIIeawbldl a., offeNd I&amp; oullyblc
'

l.

tor......-·._ .,.,.._
...-.
,_....,.,

cou""

NC: Nodla c..pu
. IlL . . . . a..e.mpa.

Flail exalllladionl to ......... tblli - - - wll falcnr tbe ~
laed dllrial tbe
'l'!lll autotllaled . , - cblcb tbe· ~ ot 11M ........... Ill

put,-.

'

-.

.

mole tbaa two llaala Ia 1111 lhn dir.

BP: Wl'lat «a- sc-t Campuo

·

Ai 1a lbe pat, •• wilb to reilll1ld you ti.at lba .,..,.. or t b l l ocbedufo de.,.ftd. upon the tun eoopaalloa of bi&gt;tb the ~ ud the
ltudellla.

It ia tbe ....,...U.Wty of 1bt IWdeat to - -ldequate
Ill,. (~y 30 mlaulea) II prorided Ia bllldloo!We
~raw~ bet- .......-. &amp;ullia&amp; sen~.... leariDI r10111
tbt Dltreadcirf Aanex lluJ Stop, is pro-ricled to tbt Noltb
· Camp111, Rldp Ia Campus aad Race Stftet Campus

'

'

for

BUU.DING ABBaEVIATIO!fS;.

.

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loealloas.

CAMPUS INDICATOR (Mne) •
.
. -SOUI'II
.ACH ..• . • .... • . • •· . . . . , •• ..• • : • . .ACHESON HALL
ACH A •. ... • .• • . .••. •• • . • .. • • ~ ••• ACHBSON ANNEX

For COIIIIIi tblt an listed • "ARR" In the

ANXB . . . . .. . ... . ..... : .. . • : • . : . •••• • • ANNBXB •

ti.Y, Houn,

BAIRD ••••.. . • . .•.. ••• •
CAFEN . ..•. .. . • •.. .•• • .
CLARK ••.. ... • • • . .•• . • .
CRSBY . .• . . . •. . . • • . . . • . .
DFN ....•. .. •. . . • •.•. ..
DFN A . . . •. . . .. . . •. •.••

. • ." ... . , . • • • • BAIRD HALL
• •.•••• ~- • CAPEN HALL
•. ••• • • • ••• CLAJUt HALL
. . • • • • • • .. CROSBY HALL
. ... •• DIBFBNDOJUP HALL
• •. . • DIBP'BNOOIW ANNBX
F9'l'lt: . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . : . . . : . \ FOSTER HALL
FSTRA . . . ... • .....• • •.• . •. . •. •• • · "FOSTBR ANNEX
HAR L •.. • . .. .•...• • •• .••. •• • HARRIMAN LIBRARY
HAYES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . -, HAYES HALL
HTH S . . . . . • . . • . • . . • • . . HBALTH SCIENCES BUILDING
HOCH .•. •.•. • .. ...•. .. : . : .. .' HOCHSTBTI'ER HALL
NORTN . . . . • . . . .. .. . .. . . . ; . . • • ... . NORTON'HALL
PARKR • ... .. .•.. . ... . · . .. • • .' PARKBRBNGlNBBRING
SCHKP ;• O" • •• • . • • ~~ ~·,. (:- ~. ~ •t··· .. "'-" ~•"'' ~KOPPHALL
TNSND . ... . ... . . . . . .. .. .• .- • . • • • TOWNSEND HALL

Bulldial • Room colu1111111 coD.wt the deportment • to

the locltlocl9t tbt coune.

••

·

......... to ... eumllled llld IIIPJII- tbe ·~ ICIII*It Ia .ell •
faoblan a-to IIIIDiallu tbe IIIUIIber of dlnd -alcla.duJal t b e pedod. Tlllloyllem lllo - ml~ tbe poeo!lllllty 0~. lillllllllt lla*J

IIA ·lli;w "-'&lt; « Gddor S!Not c.mp,.
AX •&lt;"1 Other Aullluy Loea11oD1 _.

3.

.

·

If a-putleular .O.U., department or eollefe II not lilted In
tbll ldledult, onnt.et ·the Department for further iafor·

mallon. -

Admissions ..,d Records, Heves B. will meintllin
evening hours (to be announced at a later date) for
the Foil Semester.

TRL .. : . . . . ~ . . . : : . . ·."" . ·~\.:~o;._. ·~ ~~-~ ~ERC&lt;)MPLEX
I

CAMPUS INDICATOR (NC)
. NORTH CVUUS
OBRIA • •. . .. ... • . ••.• • ; . . •• .' • •• •• O'BRIAN 'HALL
CAMPUS INDICATOR (RL)
4224-4250 . . . . . . • . • . . . . • • . . ,-

RIDGE LEA CAMPUS

IUOOJ!! L!L' BUILDINOS

CAMPUS INDICA TOR (BP)
" " •··.... - f iLL FACILITY
. RACE- .•. ....• • . . .. 180RACES~(BELLFACILITY)

'

.

.

NEYER ANNEX

CAMPUS INDICATOR (MA)

462AA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462 GRIDBR STilEBT AA
462BB . . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 4ll2 GRIDBR sTaEBT RB

)162KA .. .. ... . .' . . . . . . . 462-G.RIDER S'l'llt;BT K ANNEX
CAMPUS INDICATOR (AX) ALL OTHER ArJxJLiARY LOCATIONS
1721E
17 49M
2211A
210. F
2299E
2917M

'

. . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . • 1721 BLIIWOOD A VENUB .
. . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . 1749 MILLERSPORT tnGHWAY
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • 2211IIAIN STRBBT A ·
.. .. .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. . 210 FRANKLIN 8TRBBT
. . . . . . . •... ... . . . . . . 2~BLMWOOD:AVENUB
. . . . . . • . . . . . . . . •.••· •••. 2917IIAINSTRBBT

30CHR ... . . .... . .. .... . . . . . .. : . 30 Clll1RCR 8TRBBT
34238 . . . . . . . . . • . . . . ..• . ; ." ... 14231WLBY A~ _

,

4510M . .. . . .. . .. .• . . . .•. • : .. •. _ 4UOIIAINSTRBBT
560 M . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . .. • • . . • • 560 IIAIN 8TRBBT
73 H .. .. .. . . . . . • .. .. •... . , . .. .... .?BlUGHSTRBBT

BSH .. •. ..••• . . ..•... .. BUFFALO"STATEHOSPrrAL
CHLDR ... .•.• . • . . . . • . . . .. . . CHILDRENS HOSPrrAL
DECNS . . . .•.• .• . . . . •. .. •• . . DEACONESS HOSPrrAL
EAGLE .••. • .• . ... . . •. ••• • ·• 71 WEST EAGLE STREET
ELTON ., . . . . . ,· • .. , -4 BLTON STaEBT {ROCHESTER, N.Y.)
ES1'MN . . . EASTMAN DENTAL CENTER (ROCHESTER, N.Y.)
BUFFALo GENERAL HOSPITAL
GENRL ...
JFRSN . .. . . . . . . . . . ... . ·. •.• ·-:- '19UBFFERSON AVENUE
.
(JEFFEII$0N-GBNESBE CLINIC)
MEYBij. • . . • . • . . • • . .
E.J. MBYBJ\ lilp.(ORIAL HOSPrrAL
MILRD ' . . . . • . . . . . . • . • • )ULI:.ARD FllliMOaE HOSPrrAL
PERRY . . . . • . . . • . . • 321 PERRY STREBT (PBRRY CLINIC)
ROSWL . . . • • • . . . . ROSWELL PARK YDIORIAL INSTITUTE
SISTR • . • .. • . . ." • . •. ••. •.• .• • • • • SISTBRS HOSPiTAL
. VETRN .• • . ..• ••. • ·• • ; •• ••• •• . VBTBR/diiS HOSPrrAL
WSEN
. WEST SENECA CHILDRBN'S PSYCHlATRIC CBNTRE

7

..... .. ..·

.

;_;.,

-......,

�)

Contents
MCi•[(t'INO"'IC~

MG•' fNAitC[
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�CLASS SCHEDULE

.INSTRUCTIONS

~OR

PLEASE READ THESE lfiii'RUCTIOII CAREFULLY MD t:DMPUTElY BEFORE ATTEWFII&amp; TO FILL OUT AIY Of THE
RE&amp;ISTRAnOI FORMS. ~ REIIIniATIOI FORMS MUST IE Cu.t;ETEO WITH A lUMBER TWO LEAD PEICIL OILY.

r.ooi!aJiy, tbe ~)'~tam II a ~
..,.,.,....., e.11 portiOn or whleb IDIIIt be
Tile ~ lllld for· ntlllntlon 11 complotild In run If tbe lludent Is to ·be
clooaiiMd bllcnr ean ..--lltlllzed for ad·
re11~ on lhe SARA Keplnllon
...-~ NP~n~Jon,lft.pe- nplrailon, . By-. '!be lludent obould liD out lila
and for cb8ftll of l'tiiiiDIIon. _The
Student Data Form, Student and Coune,
l)'ltam llllowa lbe lludeat to cb8np lila
.Request Form, 11 per the attadled
ICbedult (wllll pBmllolon) UDIII lhe lut
eumples to !")mplete the rep.tntlon
two - b or lhe - a n d a1en allowa
procna.
for NPinllon In I l l - _....where
depatmental olfldap 1nltDcnrn.
lntnlductlon:

1.

I. Sluclant Dltll Form-£umples 1 and 2,

All ~~~ at lhe Unlftlllty mUJt
complele or updale a data form prior to
tbe bellnnlnl or tbe in whlcll
tbey plan to npler. Tbla document II a
compoolle of all_lhe lludent data neeeuuy
for lhe complelion of 1 tulety or Unlftr·
llty report&amp;. '!be !"''DPiellon or t1111 r!"'ft
by tbe lludent Ia an inlepal part or tbe
.......,.tlon p - . Therefore, lluclenll

STATE UNIVERSITY.OF NEW YORK' AT BUFFALO

r.H

to me thli ·form wW be iilollllbko
to c:omplete lholr nptrallon. For Fall
Senieoter 1978 I'OIIatallon, oubmllaloD or
wbo

the Addi'OD and Vehicle Replratic&gt;o
Chanp Form (example •B) wUI oene.ai an
update for eontlnulq lludenta. Newly
tJdmjfU!i Gild re.:enterinl IIIUfentl . muot
eomplde a new form In Ito entirety befOft
a ~n ean be proc:eoMCl.
•

a. Continuing Sludontl are 111emolled In tbe Precedlnl tbe -

-

.Immediately

for whleb tbey
... ~- ' , _ lludenll wUI
recene a prinlolil or P!_e'lloully ....,.
milled data and ..cl oaJy to updale
lncOnect lnformallon. -Tbla ean be done
by clr8wln&amp; line tiuoup tbe old lnfor·
mallon and inlertlnC tbe new lnfor·
mallon in_ the opace provided.
example d)

a

......

.": (
;..:.(..'.,.
):- ~
-

.

'

.

.P
.·;
,....,1
::~-

.•

.

-

'

&lt;-

.·
~

.

sru.-.uare

b. Newly Admitc.d
lhooe
who are _reptedol for tbe tint time at
lhlo UniYeRity 11 a frelhman, tranorer,
Millard FWmo,.,, paduate or pro-

.
--

~

fOuional lludent. Tb01e lludento will
receive a blank data form and "" to
c:omplete it In its entirety. The date
September 1973 rrwst be inaerted where
date of first ~lion at State U.U.ersity of New York at Buffalo Ia _
requested.
c . Ro-Entaring Sludonto Include all
former Univenity .atudents not emolled
In tbe lmmodiUely 1JN&lt;'OCiinl
lhe for whlc:b tbey are "'111tering. This ronn must be completed in
its entirety. (aeee:umple •2)

iliiiiiiiii~ . r ................

c·-

.·Le-.&amp;.l'ftD1\

f"'"""
-

IUif

bd

=·==

L

I
fM.tli·IJM

Data Forms "" to be "'turoed to tbe
following offices prior to the ~­
tion period.
Millord Fillmore S-nto - to lhe
Office of Admissions and Records in
HayesB

---'!II
1111

2.

1111

'

All Groduata IIIII Undo,..._
Stuclantl - to the Oflice of Admissiono
and Records in Hayeo B

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Professional Stuclonto - to the main
administrallve olfice In their respec:tl..
professional school

.

.

:~. ~&lt;,~~~;. ~

. '. .:

i'i~ .~
-~';··

.~;:
....

All Data Forms wUI be forwudecl to
Admilliona and Rec:onla and then to tbe
Data Procesoinc Cenler where Iiley wUI be
keypunched and tbe Student Master FUe
updated.
II. Rogistntion a-It ~- S
and4

Currently enrolled sludenll or U.O.
Eeldng admission or readmlaolon may be
prevented tro.m fellaterinl for .....U
teiSODI - indehlednell to the Unl...tty,
academic disqualllleatlon, or dlodpUnary
reasons. It is the raponrlbUity of the
student
deu bla rec:ord by contaetlnl
lhe appropriate otrloe in aduance or .....
tratlon.

w

Ill. Registration Procedure (SARA Method)
J

•

Each student should aeeure a copy or
the appropriate Sc:hedule or
Clu&amp;es, aloq with Coune Reqllelt Form
which will be provided. The Coune
Request Form should be completed ~
follows:
Gener8l Information:

1. The student shoUld !lrst -· look
throllih lhe C:Otute offerlnp listed to
determine which courses be wishes to
take this semester.

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

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.... . . .. ao.I . . . . . IAIUafl

. . . . . . .. . . . . . Ill . .

lliiiiiM
th • ,_
r
omc. .. ellAIIIIM
.. It

omc. crt

·•• ....._..
.....·
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~ to

.......... ..........
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. ._
. ( ..,....crt
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, . , _ . . .......... . .

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11&amp;11 ..............

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. . . . . . . . . . . . ....... for ...
- - crt ..... ...... IUbjlcl to
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for ..... .........

a. Typtof . . . . . ......

111011111 IDdlc:lte ... - · of endJt
. . . . . . 011 the 0..0. a.qllllt F01111

.. at. Oraduallt llodala ...... .....'

endJt cal1uDD
(Bumpln 6 aDd 1, F1nt Primary
ID

tbt

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

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

0

nrltblt

u......,.._

dolpldadt . endJt aad

~~-

.. ......
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............ ,..._.crt .....
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t 0
20

,., • o.lJIII

o.. .... o-tlia

·2. , . lltlldollt ..., ellet to II'80Ciid

--

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11111011 ....... '1'111111 (........ ri llde

-

1'.lu;t a,.own

"A" crtllle 0..0. a..- fonD).

a. ........,- A~Mmata-.. ......

11011·
'
.: ......, - StadeDia lbould ~

"'

llllct .... wlllth - DMded
to fultlll cSoJ- ~Ia IDIII/rir
tile free
wbldl - PNfened.
,
. - _ _lbould .. llliii,IHII;d ..
Prinuuy
(tnt prefuettt:e IDd NCCII'dod ID 1be

.

-

l..tfic:~

..

SadiiSINittHo.

(!@!]

.... s... Hour o-n-

w

t...heo.trridl

0

....

•

..

1!1!1 0!I!I!l

-..u..

b. Al~en~ate- '111elbldeat mould olio
illdleae .... oubolllullt- to be
tabiD If prm.ty COIURI ,.,.. r:IORd.
(Tbe lludent II uqed to IDclieUe ol12r·
Date cbolea w b - poooible; doiDC
10 will help to iDiure .., oceeptoble
IICbedule.)

4.
:70/m J' m i th
Sl~!Natroe

b L Alternate cou.- will be
lllliped only If lbe primary telectloll .. UD&amp;..u.bie.

-·

Socilll:s...ritl• No.

ILlml
l!lll
01

T..tfC&amp;S.Icty
"-• Sa...i Hour O.."''k

w

U ttheo..ridlt

0

~

..

b2, Students may cbooe two (2)
altematei for primary telections 1
ttuoucb 4; bowewei, only one alter-.
nate Is pclllible for primary selections 6 tbrouch 7.
b3 . Altenwk cow-.. relectioru
cannot conflict in time with ·any
prirrUJry .election except tha(pri·
trUU')I. (or

which they

lUI!

the alter-

nate.
b4. All al12rD&amp;Ie oelections should
be
In the "altenwte" sectloas or lbe form.
4. It is the student's responsibility to
repter indepeadently for each leclure,
recitation, IDIII laboratory in all courses
where eomblD&amp;tions are required. Each of
th.....sbould be treated .. primary oeledlons, aDd therefore, requested
separately , Wbell req-..,; pbyllics
..,....... the laboratories md recitations
must bne tbe same 81!dion letter; in
mathematics and economics cou.nes tbe
recitation must baR the same section
let12r u the lecture. A studeat must"be
reptered for the proper leclure, reclta·
tioo aDd laboratory for lcienee couroes,
(other thaD cbemillry), to reee!Ye eredit
for the c:oane. Reciatratloo for~
!'!!!!!!!!. up to aDd IDdudiDC CHEll 214
wm require a dlffoteDt procedure. Sludenla must Je1ista for the proper Cbemlotry lecture and the coneopondlnc
recl-=laboratory UDIIte other ocienCe
a.m.try npt:ratioo will only
t. a two ltep ......-. O.e. Leelute and
Jlee.l:.b). lAb will be la-.od by
ODe boar to fadlltate ..tomatlc recitation "'~Wra!loa for students olrtclally
.....,..In thelaboratorieo.
It Is the lbldeat'l noponsibillty to
properly , . _ Ia theoe various com-·
required. -

recorded

bl_...uc--

5. It is the lludent'• responllibility _to
eecure the appropriate permission of the
illllnlc:tor cx the ~t where ID·
dicatal.lf
to ..... without
recoiYIDI permiooiOII, ftCIIID!IoD in that
_.... may be . . . . . . . , . lludollt Is
.................... , ........... other pre-

lie._,.

ACADEMIC POLICY REGARDING
REGISTRATION FOR GRADUATE
COURSES BY UNDERGRADUATES,
MILLARD
FILLMORE, UNCLASSIFIED AND NONMATRICULATED STUDENTS.

1. All regularly enrolled undergraduate
students attempting to r:e&amp;isler Cor
&amp;raduale courses for undeJ:Ifadaute credit
must petition the Office or the Dean of
the Divlllion of UndeJ:Ifaduate Studies;
278 Hayes Hall.
2. -All regularly enrolled Millard Fillmore
CoUece students atlemptfng to register
for craduale courses for undergraduate
credit must petition the urn.. of the
Dean of Continuing Education, 292
Hayes HaiL
3. Unde'lfaduate and Millard Fillmore

eonece

lludeato at12ropting to regiill&lt;!r
for &amp;raduale courses for eraotuale credit
must obtain apj&gt;ronl of the DeaD or the
Graduate Scbool, 230 Hayes HalL

4. Non -matrieulat,Od or unclaolli!ied
eraduale lludeoto must produce docUmentation from the appropt'ine fll'lduate.
department ID order to oecure retisttation
male rials.

TUITION ADJUSTMENTS AND INFORMATION

Invoices wlll be iosued after Friday, September 21,1973, the end of the •
third we~k of classes: If you officially withdraw· before that dale, no
invoice will be Issued.
If you fde a Cbanie-of Registration before that date, the correct
charges should renect on your Invoice,
Non-At1Bndance (unofficial withdraw!) does not cancel cbarJes,
Uyou offic_lally withdraw or c1w1ee your procrau~, adjwtmeot of
tuition only will be made according to the following IICbedule:

'·

-·

4th week ending Friday, September 28
~ter Friday, September 28

.,_

Tuition
7o%cbaqe
.100%c:baqe

, 100%cbaqe
100%cbaqe

Payme~t of additional tuition incurred u a retult of addJni a coune
after the dale of this Invoice Is due on the dale of addition. No adell·
tiooal bW wW be sent.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 211S THE LAST DAY TO DROP COURSES
INCURRI,NG FINANCIAL LIABILITY.

WITH~UT

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tllil Office of Stu ...t ACCOIUIIr

.. ~lbe 8cu. 8ba&amp;t (Side "B" .
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&amp;beet ol llll&amp;nldicp for
JIIIIC'011IIll cbaa1Ja of ...............
'11111 eel lllould ... tabll to Room
• 240 N«llB Hall, wilenlt wllllllft 11
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nlllllher. Sludenta who ae doted out
durlne recillla"on 1Micau&amp;e . . , - DOt •
~ &amp;bould eheet with lbe deputment
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beell dooed out errouec&gt;UII)' be &amp;bould
nport to 106 DlofODdorf Hall to tute a eblllCe ill bla major de&amp;lpallon.
G...Suate &amp;tlldellll &amp;bould coatact tbelr

· 1. I

~taloftlce&amp;.

13. Studenll wbo do not participate Ill
lbe maD NliltntiOil p r . - ...y ncllter
ill the omce of Admll&amp;lona llld Recorda
September ol-7. eou- RequiA FoiDII
wUJ be anlllble lbere llld Illldenll wUJ
complete them llld return them to Clart
Gym lluemenl Studenta wUJ be told by
tbe Aclmlulon&amp; and Reei&gt;nls &amp;tafr wbell
their JChedule cards wUJ be produced ud
where they will be anllahle.

8.
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. ll&amp;lld&amp;at'a Ill&amp; - · A ........ of IMa&amp;
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CH.AHca 001 ADDRDS OR VEHICL! REGISTilA'nON H,\\'E OCCURRED SINCE YOU f'JLEUYOUR DATA FORM

P'Ol1'UECOMJNC SDlliS'l'D.. an:at HERE '.:I AND DOW FIU.OUT11t£ RDI.USD£11 OFTHlS FOR».

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ALL STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED
TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MAIL
REGISTB.AT10N 1F AT ALL . POS-

. . I _.._. . IT!
1'1111

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7/4 , 8741! 0 0 "

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- CHANCE AT COURSBS AND ARE
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completed lbe Nliltntloa ~ Aldeo
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&amp;dledule cards are to be dlltrlbuted to blip
with lilY problema. Doll't ....,_ tO lilt
que&amp;tiOil&amp;. c:banp ·of ReP&amp;tn1lon WID be
held from September 10-21. NO CHANGE
OF REGISTRATION WILL B-E
ACCEPTED BY THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS PRIOR TO
SEPTEMBER 10.
,

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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· CuJtunl
Atfalnl •Doputment ot -'lbeatze/Dmco,
D,putment ot ......,, • 'lbe Oonter tor
Media Stilclloo, and many eommlttees of
lbe Ualftnlty UDioD Aetlrilin Boord u
weD u Ita plofeaiODII starr. Tlm&gt;ucb lhe
cooperatlcm of 011anlsatlons oenrol
ewenta wme allded to exiJtiD&amp; procr- in
order to -olfer bllance and 'IIJ'iety tor lbe

y.:~.ro~t ~ Festinl, entl~ed,

We hope that you will take advantage .
ottbeE procr- and enjoy them.
-'
-For the 1974
Sprlnc Arts Festival Committee,
p.,l Ko.,. end Tony Chwles Schwarz,
CoCbainnen

·

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

MM1f- M - l l y .illtlnc •
--- ..,.r- at U/B wlleN be Ia
~ with

,._~

r.....

lhe

~t ot

Mr. WIIIIW 11M boeD a

oltal
In tbe daaee wild( tor eMily
two deelodos. He ebpnopapbed bil ftDt
worb tor lhe DOIIod .Calltomla daacera,
Ann Halprin and Weiland Lallmlp, tor
their Studio Theatre performancoo. Oilier
early WOib wme
in New Yort
at The J\lllllard Scbool, tbo Cboreopapben Worbhop and The Heruy
Street Playbouoe, and by Dance Alaocl·
ates, wbldi be founded. He one of
llle ftDt cboreopaphen to wort -.,!Ill
eJeclmDic mnslc and bas !lequenlly collaborated with contemporary artiala.
"More teceDIIy bil works b..., been per·
formed by leadinl dance com~les and
. JesUvals, lndudin&amp; tbe Jacob • Pillow
' Festival and 'lbe Manhattan Festival

.,_ted

Ballet.

.

•

Mr. Warlnc and his students will otfer
a iec~Dstratlon in Baild Recital
Hall, Monday enllln&amp;, March 25, at 9:00
p.m.

Prints:
U/BEtchlng
W~rluho.p

An exhibition

Atts

ot recent prints

by students in the"U/B Department pf Art
EtcbiDg Workshop cre~. ltllder_ the
· guidance of Professor Harvey Breoerman
and Robert Aull, .graduate assistant from
llle Uniwni~ of'sOulllem· California.
Collectively, it · is hoped that these
etchings and mixed media images exhllllt
some mysterious .denseness of meaning,
and a grip on experienpe.
· Hayes Hall~bby , lllrougb April 5

Mark Strand,
- poet . . .

Mark Strand was born in Prince
Edward Island, Canada, bnt has lived in

tbe United States most of his life. After
attending Antipcb and Yale, be traveled
to Italy on a Fulbright Scholarship and in
1965 was a Fulbright" Lecturer at tbe
University of Brazil at Rio de Janeiro. Mr.
Strand is tbe recipient of grants from tbe
National Endowment for tbe·Arts and the
Rockefeller Foundation and baS taught at
several American colleges and universities.
His published books of poetry include
Darker (1970), Reasom (or Mouing
(1968), Sleeping wiUt One Eye Open
(1969), and New Poelry o( Mexico
(1970). His work appears frequently in
such magazines as The Atlantic, the New
Yorker, Partilion Review and The . NewYork Reuiew of Books. ·; Conference-o'Ibeatre, Norton, Monday,
Much 25, 3:00p.m • .

Ulldoabtedly al tll8 lblollt &lt;Gilece
o..bestru 'Ill lbe coantry today, tbe
MJ.T. SympboDy, compoaad of lludortts
(10m tbe M"aalal:ll-tta lnltltnte ot Tech·
noiOI)' and Wellesley CoOeto, wiD be
~Its Westem New Yodt debut. The.
Orcbeltra waa.mcently aeen on National
Public Televliton and bas ~ Widely
balled by the public and crltlca tor. its
pedormance. 'lbe Otdleatra, under its
exciting, young conduetor, David Ep.tein, bas toured extellliftiy in Ibis country md abroad Indudlnl vlllts to New
York ' s Carnegie Hall ComJK*rconductor Epstein bas caned out a bril·
liant career. As a compooer, be has re. celved . cOmmissions fiOm tbo BQoton ,
Syui ll(,ay a;.
Yalk..~ Council
on J:e
and 11M 'Eulllilll1 SChOOl of
Music. As conductor, be bas beeo invited
to direct llle Boston Symphony Chamber
Players, the Bavartan Radio Orchestra;
the Bedin Radio Orchestra, and the lsrael
Broadcasting Corj&gt;oratlon Orcl&gt;eslia. ·He
will roon ~ - wij;h ~· Royal
Pbilbarmonic. .Joinlilg tbe" Ordiestra toe
··us Buffalo concert will be· Marcus
Thompson, violist. Mr. ThOmpson is cilr·
rently on tbe faculty of MJ.T. and will
perform ·BJocb's MSuJte Hebnlque" for
viola and old&gt;estra. The balance of tbe
program win include tbe first area performance of .John Harbison's incidental
mu&amp;ic .(or Sbatespeare's "Merchant .of
Venice" and Gustav Mahler's -Sylnpbony
No. 1 in D Major.
!Qeinbani Music Hall, Wedne;ay •.
March 27,8 p.m.

Welcome Back,
Aaron C.o pland
The Department of Music faculty and
members of tbe Center tor tbe Creative
and Pertonning Aris win honor tbe distinguished American composer with· an
aii-Copland con~rt. Mr. Coptand will be
visiting Buffalo as guest "'!nd_uctor of the
Buffalo Philliarrnonic (Marcb "22-24) and
bas consented to attend tbe concert. Consiilered.llle dean of American compooen,
Copland was the nnt· Slee Professor of'
, ~f~tion at tbe Uni-:ersity or-Buffalo
Baild Hall·, Tuesday, March 26, 7:30
p.m.

-New·

�INTI!RNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

....blzaap
8omb lbldolOf, 19'72. ADiaiL
The . m~ pcnrerful t-... film to .
. coine out of Africa - tile llolj of a poor
woman - . . , for bet joiJecl husband •
In Portuaueoe wltb J!ac1i1b a~btllles.
ConfeoeiiCI! Theatre, Nortoo, Monday,
Aprill.

.....

- Uad~d

ColidcAn.

San Fraacbeo
s.

Clay WUaon ond Manuel "Speln" .
Rodrigoez have been major names In tile ·
field
underground comics since Its
inceptioo In tbe eady 1960's. Wilson's
Grand Guicnol style h• - t e d tile
senses and morals of fans of tbe form
since the earlieSt ~Lap" and "Yellow
Dog" comix.. The only complete worts
which he published were Bent Comics ·
(currently out of print) and tbe Wilson
portfoUo, a collection of his famoua
panels. His work has spawned a plethora
of imitators wbooe feeUng for tbe grotesque n!mains ingenuine and sophomoric
. by comparison. Wilson's most widely
pubUshed and best known comic character is " The Checkered Demon. n
.
Spain Rodriguez is a native of Buffalo
~d references. to this city appear
throughout his works. He had extensive
Interactions witb Buffalo's legendary
Road Vultures motorcycle gang whose
activities are Immortalized In his poster, "The Birtb of tbe Beat Generation/'
Rodriguez's 'l'rilshman strip appeaoed In
East Village Other during its golden days.
Trash min appeared in· bis own comic
subvert, and a tableau of EVO reprints
· during 1970-72. Spain bas also worked on
Insect Fear (No. 1-3). •- • • •
Ao exhibition of tbeli original panels
wiU be on display in Norton's Gallery
219, April 1-14.
.
Ao open forum _.,a discussion with
the artists and campus 'and community
personalities as well as worksbops will be
conducted tor anyone interested in their
craft. Botb will take place during tbe
Gallery presentations, according to convenience and demand. ...
Presented in conjunction with the
Small Mutants Underground Comic Club.

·or

·E venlnl•lor"·
Nrivll1181c
FoUowlog tts 'oetum froiJI a four-week '
European tour, Evenings for .New MUsic, ·
produoed by tbe Uniftrslty's Center for
tile Creative and Perforoninl Art&amp;, will
offer a procram .including fi~ Buffalo
premieres! Tbe . Procram includes:
''Cdmtnc Together" by Fn!deric Rzewski,
newly appointed Creative Associate; "182
Norwood:_l&gt;y David Gibson; "Saturday'
A'ftemoon/5 o'clock" for five nutes by
tbe Center's graduate assistant, Ralpb
Jones; UAJgorlthms n.n a computer piece
by .ea._..e. ~tor. I-eiaren ~r, and
"Qilutel fcfr ·F1ute, Violili, VIOla and
CeUo!"' by tbe GermanCOI)lposer, Erbard

-cr-topf. •
Ao explosive sunlril dmma Wiitteo
inside Son Qoentln. by _B.iet Cluebey wbo
researebed It during 12 yem of-imprioonment: A . compelling ooe.act· l!loy per,
formed by ex-eonviets, settini four cbaracters In motion aro110d · a toilet bowl,
acliog .out Utuqlcal and lecal W.llllies
witb often bDarious, but ultimatelY letbal
effect. Altbougb '"'be Cqe" delcrlbes
tbe borror and brutality of prisoo Ufe, ihe
ploy is not primarily a eall tOr pliaon
teform or protest apinst tbe injustices of
tbe American judicial system. lt is ao
intricate and profound itatemeo\t.
Flllmooe Room, Norton, Friday,
Mm:b ~.8: 30-p.m.

-

• '

'AJbricbt-Kiu"' Art Gallerfauditorium,
Sunday ,Ilardi 31, 8 p.m.

O•car Ghlglla
Tbe young, Italian-born guitarist Oscar
GhigUa will offer a recital as tbe final
event of tbe Department of Music Visiting Artist Series. For his program, Mr.
Ghiglia bas selected works by Bacb, ·
Villa-Lobos, Malipiero and Bracali. Mr.Gbiglia, is well known l.o American audi·
ences. Past seasons have included recitals
in New York,- Washington, Boston, Los
Angeles and Toronto, 311d everywhere he
is greeted witb warm praise. He has
studied witb Segovia, Alirio Diaz and
.Julian Bream and is considered one of the
most gifted guitarists performing today:
Concert, Mary Seaton Room, Kleinbans Music Hall, Monday, April 1, 8 p.m.
Lecture-demonstration, Baird Hall,
Tuesday ,-APril 2, noon.

Second Annual
UUABPoetry

Award•

The U.U.A.B. Literary Arts Commit·
tee presents its ·Second Annual Winners
· Poetry Reading. This reading wiD feature
the winners or th~s year's poetry contest
which extended into the community. The
cash prizes will be awarded at tbis time.
Conference Theatre, Norton,·Tuesday,
April 2, 8 p.m.

�eo

'

.....,.,

PriJda: U/8 BkbJDc Warbbop
llutlllnnd

Duce:

-.... WIIIIIICI&lt;Itadeata,

Vloaal Artl:

Aprli

...... 26

~ BaU I..obbf

.

Ooatenace ~. Norton
Baird lledtal HaD

- boull belowl
3:00p.m.
9:00p.m.

flee
flee
flee (with Uc:tela)

E,P,U
CA

leeture/demo~n

...... 26

Vllal Aria:
Muole:

Maldl27

Millie:

llardl28

l'llm:

Jl8n!l26-31

.....,.,

PboloiJaplly
Wel.oome Baet, Aaron Copland

o.Dtry 219, Norton
lloJrd BaU

- bows beJow2
7:SO p.m.

flee
· $ .50 ltudenta
$1.00 u /B Caculty /atatf
"$1.50 othen

GuySnydor

Confennce 'l'he8tn., Norton
KleiDiw&gt;a Millie HaD

9:30p.m.
8:00p.m.

flee
$1.00 ltudenta
$2.00 othen

()qnfe,..nce 'lbeaire, Norton

from 3:00p.m.,
-below•

11.1.T. Syqobony Ordleltn;
Da'fid l!poleiD, CX&gt;nductiJic;
........ TbolllpOIID,- M&gt;loilt
lnte....-1 Film F..U1'11:

Confe,..nce Theatn. Norton

lntemaUoul FOm F..U1'11:

· FUm:

"Stateoi.Siece"
Tbeotre:
Maida SO

FUm:

Maldl31

.,
April!

"Tbe C.,.," performed by San

~"'.R,o&lt;!"'! N~n

lntemalloaall'llm F..u,al:
'"lbe Spider's Stratopm"

()9nfe,..nce Theotre, Norton

lntemalional FOm FeoU1'11:
'"lbe Spider'a·Stratocem"

Confennce Theatre, Norton

from 3 :00 p.m.• \

Albr!P,t.Knoli~,Gallery ,,1

8:00 pJ:D.I'!.~ , • ~'

QaeDtiD ex...,"ficta '

l'llm:

Eftninp fot fiew Millie

;~ Millie: ·

'

.

..-

;•\

.

..

.

~

~

.

$ •75 ·otude.nb
$1.25 U/8 faculty /staff
$2.00 othen
. .,$1.00 itildl!nts_
$2.00olhem

.,:· M
·u

llualc:'

Olear Gbi&amp;Ua. doulcal pltar

Mary Seaton Room,

8:00p.m.

$1.00 ltudenla
$2.00 U/8 Caculty/statf
· $3.00 othen

M

Millie:

)

Film:

Unde..,OIIDd Comic Artl
· from San Frondaco
Olear GbJ&amp;Iia, claasical guitar,
lecture/demonatraUon
. Second Annual UUAB Poetry
Awarda ·
lntemaUollll Film Festlnl:

Goller; 219, Norton
Baird Recital HaD .

aee boura2

flee
flee

"' 12:00 noon

Conference Theatre, Norton

8:00p.m.

Confe!ence Theatre, Norton

..

u

from 3:00 p.m.•

$ .75-nta
$1.25 U/8 Caculty/alatr
$2.00 otheri

u:.cA

free

CA,U .

Fillmore Room, Norton

3. 5 p.ni.

Dance;

The Chuck Davis Dance Company/
Open master d110

Cluii:Gym

7. 8:30p.m.

l'llm:

lntemaUonal FOm Featinl:
"Tbe Ad""""'Y"

Confe,..nce Theatre, Norton

Dance:

The Cbuck Davis Dance Company/
dance-demonatratlon

231Norton .

Dance:

The Chuck Davis Dance Company/

·African Cultural Center
MutenAve.

'Apr114-7

Tbeat...:

Aprll5

l'llm:

"Gl,.n: No Bread, An Enco'11nter
and Dinner fD&lt; Fifteen"
lntemational Film Fostlnl:
"lA Collectlonneu."
Tbe Cbud&lt; Davis Dance Co111p111y

Clailt Gym

lecture-demonatraUon

Dance:

( trom 3:00 p.m.•

Millie:

"Filta of Fury" - dlsaualon wltb
Plofeaoor Letlle Fiedler, etc.
Mixed EmotJona (Strine Quartet)

/ free

CA,U

$ .751tudenta
$1.25 U/8 Caculty/atatf
$2.00 othen

u

3 -5p.m.

free

CA,U

8 - 9p.m.

free

CA,U

Harriman Studio Tbeat...

8:30p.m.

$ .751tudenta ..
$1.25 othen

T

Conference Theat..., Norton

from 3:00 ,p.m.•

$ .751tudenta
$1.25 UJB Caculty/atatf
$2.00otbem
$ .751tudenta
$1.50otbem

8:30p.m.

(flee open .... .
bMmal, 5:SO p.m.)
F'llm/'-l:

u
', M

flee

The Chuck Davis Dance Company/
iecture-demonatraUon

Moot Court Room, Jobn
Lord O'Brian HaD (Amhent)
Buttalo &amp; Ede Co11nty
PubUc Liblary Auditorium

7:SOp.m.
3:00p.m:

flee
(ticket roqulnd)
free

{'

"u

.$ .751tudents
$1.25 U/B Caculty/statf
$2.00othen

Dance:

AprD6

I

from 3:00 p.m.•

Vllal Artl:

.

u

Confe,..nce Theatre, Norton

"Diumination"

Aprll4

u

lntematiollll Film Festinl:
"Samblzanp"

Poetry: .
AprilS

u

Film:

Kli!lnhauMIIIic HaD

Aprl12

u

~~~ ~.:.~lty/statf ...

'

1

Apdl1-14

u
M

$ •75 ltudenta
$1.25 U/B Caculty/statf
$2.00othen
from 3:00p.m.! . . $ .75.1tudenla
•. $1,25 U/.Bihi:ulty/statf
$2.00othen
$1.00 ltudenta
8:30p.m:
$2-\10,~.:
from 3:00p.m.I
$ . 751tudenb

"Sto&amp;eotS~ece"

Marcb.29

u
M

· .1.!
.cA.,u

OFSA,I,SA,
IRC
M·

REPOMBR I !IPlUNG :Ml'll!&gt;FESTlV AL / ·MARC!f &gt;1.411974/ Pace 4

�/
April 'I

Conference Theatre, Norton

from 3:00 p.m.•

u

"I am a Woman," with
Vlveca LIDdfon, noted actrels

Hmlman Studio 'lbeatre

8:30p.m.

$ .7511Udenll
_.1.25 U/8 fac:ulty/lltatf
$2.00 othen
tree (with tickets)

Stelna A Woody Vuulka,
•a ricleo en:rtroament '

232Norton

10:00 a.m.-4 p.m.

. ID.temall;... Pl1m Feoltnl:
"My Nllbt at Maud'a"

- Pilm:

mm: .

Apdl-8-13

Video: ·

Apdl8-27

~Aria:

Apdi8-May 3

~Aria:
:·· ·~ "

• Film: -

Faeulty Exhibition
E'lant Uoyd Wrilbt and Louis
• ; ·Salllmi b1 BUrralo (materlalo
!"'mpl)ed 1ly ~ D. Randlll)'

lnternltfonal Film Festival:

·"Rflfl'laiM"
Tllellle·
Film:

.. Music:

Apdll0-11
Apdlll

·$4.00 ($3.00 to UB &amp; &amp;Soc
otud_enllln adftnce)
$ •76 IIUdenll
$1.25 U/8 fac:ulty/lltatf
$2.00othen

u

Conference 'n!.•lln, Norton

8:30p.m. &amp;
11:30p.m.
from 3:00,p.m.•

Clark Gym

·Theme:

ApdllO

U

Jlulic:•

Apdl8 .

Apdl$1

$ .75 lludenll
$1.25 U/8 fac:ulty /atatf
$2.00 olben

Tllellle:
Video:
Tlleitre:

Pllm:

..

U~,lliziap,:1'aD!eJa

director

Gearbilt, .•C '·

4240 Ridge Lea, Rooms 6 &amp; 7

see bows&lt;

tree

see boursl .

' free ,

Conference Theatre, No~n

from 3:00 p.m.•

t .75 IIUdenll
$1.26 U/8 !acuity/statf
$2.00othem

from 3 : 00p.m.~

$ .75 students

Baini-Recital HaJJ. · · ., c....

Ik. Mupret Cl!&gt;yclen
Stein&amp; A Woocly·V-Ib Worbbop

Detolls to be announced*

Preoentatkm bY ~clenllln
"Women In 'lbeatre" mwse
ID.temational Film Featiftl:'
"Tbe Lion Haa Seftn Heads"

Detolls to be announced*.

232 Norton Union

Conference Theatre, Norton

'lbeatze:

Apdl12

Film:

~dll3 ·

Film:

ID.temational Film Feitl'rai:
"I.. Salamandre"

Conference Theatre, Norton

Tllellle:

"Titanic I.e!"'" (premiere)

ApdiJ.l

Film:

International FUm Featlval:
"Le ~toW' D'Afrique" -

Courtyard Tbeatre
_H!_&gt;yt A. Lofayette St.
Conference Theatre, Norton

AprR 14,20

Tlleabe:

'aoritanic Love"

Medieval Myatery Tllellle of
theAbaud
ID.temational Film Festival:
"Cbarles: Dee-or Alive"

~

Fillmore Room, Norton
Conference Theatre, Norton

Courtyard Theatre
Hoyt "' Lafayette St.

A

CA

•:

$1.25 u/8 !acuity/lltatf
$2.00 othea

T

u

. •· ·tree .....

8:00p.m •

T
. 7 - 9p.m . •

tree

u
T

from 3·00 p.m •

·

Apdlll-13

CA,U,T

u

tree

Hayea Han Lobby

M~,~.,playwrlcht
Detolls tO be announced*
ID.temallo!lll,Pilm Fl!tlival:Conference Theatre, Norton
~'The Man Who Left Hill Will on Film"
·

u

•

. '

$ .76 studenll
$1.25 U/8 fa&lt;:Jty/atatf
$2.00 othen
$ .25

8:00p.m.
(3 p.m. on the 13th)
from 3:00 p.m.•
$ .7511udenll
$1.25 U/8 fac:ulty/atatf
· $2.00 othem
from '3 :00 p.m.•
$ .76 studenll
$1.25 0/8 t.aculty /statf
$2.00 othen
8:30p.m.
$ .75 studenll
$1.25 othea
from 3:00 p.m.•
$ .75 studenla
$1.25 0/8 t.aculty /•taft
$2.00othen
8:30p.m.
$ .75 studenll
$1.25othen

,*A comploteliotlq ofactmtieo 011 a daily buia, inc:ludiDJ timea of !ilma, may be obtained by telepbonina 831·5117.
lllayeo Hall LObby boUD: Monday thru Friday, 7i30 a.m. to 11:80 p.m.
sGaDery 218, Norton,~: Dally, 12:oo DOOI1 to 5:oo.P.m. AIOo, 7:oop.m. to 10:oo p.m., Tueodayed Friday.
•Fnm bowa: See Conference Theatre Sbo.._. For timea, eaii831::SU'T.
'Rid&amp;e Leao.uer;, bouo: Monday thru Friday, ,8 :30 Lm. to 5:00p.m. Saturday, 12:00...;.,.. ~6:00p.m.; Sunday, 2:00p.m. to 5:00p.m.

'

BPONSORlNO AGBNCIBS
.
Cont.otlbooe ....,aea for additional lnfoomation ~ eftilll they.,.. sponao~:
CA Cultunl Affain, 143 Hayea Hall, 881·2785
·
B
Bnatio1&gt; Deportment, 6 AnDel&lt; B, 881~2317 •
T
'lbealnl Deportment, 26N Hmlman, 881·2045
M
Music 'Deputment.108llalnl Hall, 831·8~08
U
.UUAB, 261 Norton. Hall, 881-6112
• ·
A
AR~t, 4240 Rlclle Lea, 831-1251

F
Frieods
Lockwood Llbnry
•
.
S S deo t -·•lion;
•~ • IRC, •-•'de
Council
OFSA,
OUice of
ofF~ Student Att.lra; I, lntemational Student&amp; COmmittee; A, tu
-~- , nee

TI~
I
Ticket&amp;, Wloere ~are ,.vallable'at the Norton Hall 'l'icke} Omoe (ln adnDoe):.l'OIIl&amp;iDIDt tlcke~ at the door one boW' before eft..t.

u
T,B

u
u
T

u
T

�......

..... 1Jiillfi

&amp;nM~t~• ..... vl . . 111M*_..
...... ,._ AMea to AIMIIea! llr.
Dais, .;, ~ diMtr IIIII c:llcnappiiH, 11M
totoCIIH a J111111 wllldl II dnoW to tlllllal Jb11

...,..,.t
D;i.·-.
............._Ill...... 11111
- .........

..

-

..................... a.et
~

The lloo
, _ Dlaet Oc.p.ay befon ~

IWIIDCIIII _ _.._

INftiiiiA~FIUIFUilV~

-n

......_tlon
Kn1lltol Zalllll, 1972. PGIIDcl.
llluWtelltJft II DOt lbout

hut

obout .._....to ... wllboat-n. .
Dbedur-WIItor ZIDulll'l bezo Ia a llo-

delll vlocitllce who Ia baftlod'and llltlmi·
dal8d by tile lllldcados or tilt llalunl
order, lblltd by doubt IIIII lltar of tilt
lll)'ltelill' tiW Dot oaly IIIUIOiiDd billlllat
drl-.e blm. ZanUIII neatly .,. effecliftly

bel.,.._

or

rnu-

•'"
- Md bia beiO'a · 1ot11 US,
lratlan
by eaculfinc
documentmy . . . . will&gt; tilt kllld or dati

lhat ., 'botbtr him: -.IItle tbe«&lt;eo,
~ell&amp;lou onlen, IOdal paUems.
. "A radian~ 'rUm, it olfb tluolllb doubt
..d 'pain to make, ftnally' a atotement or
triumphant humanism." - Time.
E.,.um oubtitles.
Confennce Theatre, Norton, Wednesday,April3.

Tbl (tick . . . . Complny 11M bela
.......... ,_ II adliDI piOIJiil by
eaiJeco ... WlhinllJ' .udieDeH lldoalll· '
out s-m Nn Yurt. 'lbe CalllpiDy
...,.....s ii .... lltiltl wUb llldlm .
· Mabbo at Nn Yclll'ol'lllllwmolllc 11111 Md bad a twll'-' llllideDey at lllo 8L .
llut'o
Ill tilt But .Villlft
wbldl
pnile from pul&gt;'
lie IIIII erllleo lllto. lluriJIIItllbree-&lt;lay
reoldeocy at UIB, lbe compony wiD be
featured in rap .-Ions, lectwedemonatrotionoand one major concert.
Lecture·demonStrations, Fillmore
Room, Norton; April 3, 3-5 p.m.; and
Atriean Cultural Center, Masten Avenue,
April 4, 8-9 p.m.
Open maoter class, Clark Gym, APril 3,

...,boule
drew....,.,..._..

: ri!~demonstn.tion, April 4, 231
Norton, 3-5 p.m.
,
Concert, Dark Gym, Frldly, April 5,
8:30 p.m: Free open nbearsal, 5:30p.m.
, Olber maoter closses and workshops to
be announced.
7 8

INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

The Adversary

Cbloelatbe
.Altertaoon

Saty.t Ray, 1971.lndla.
' "''M Actoe,., mows., quieUy, with
oueb ...miDI politeneso to jaded film
·. •noes, tbat' lt takes a wbile to realize that
for all Ill ~011 It's a particularly
movin&amp; comedy • • • • The director's
•nllbWty is pJOfoundiy compaoalonate ..
. a clear and bematlful movie."- Vincent
CUby,New York Times.
• Screenplay by Ray; based on a story
by Sunil Ganguli. OriCinal . title: Prati-

Eric Rohmer. France.
More or Rohmer's obsessive romanliIn flldl the ptetai(onli( sheds his
spouse and searches for new love with the
help or a fantoslic amulet. Starring ZouZou .
Conference Thtaa,, Norton, . Satur.
dly,April6.

ciim

Fists ol Furs.r.
Internationally. renowned literary
critic Leslie Fiedler joins a distingUished
ponel or Butralonians to view and evaluate the Kung Fu mm classic, Fists of
Fury, starring the late Bruce Lee.
Moot Courtzoom, Jobn .Lori! O'Brian
Hall, Ambent Campus, Friday, April 5,
7:30p.m.
Free admission tickets available April
1-5, Lehman Hall Desk and Norton
Ticket Office.

wandi.

Conference Theatre, Norton, 'lbursdly, April 4.

Given·:
No Bread,
An Encounter
and Dinner
lorFilteen

Written and directed by Morton
Lichter (Center tor Theatre !IA!search
. Playwright in !IA!sidence ), " Bread" bad its
world premiere in Buffalo on October 11,
1973, and then went on to the care La
Mama in New· York City . The productiop
was subsequently invited to represent the
United States at the lntemationBI Theatre
Festival in Parma, and will be leaving for
Italy in mid-April.
Harriman Studio Theatre, 'lbunday,
April 4, through Sunday, April 7, 8:30
p.m.

·Commander
Coclyand
his Lost Planet
Airmen
· Sometime in 1968, Geoqe Frayne saw
a grade :? movie entitled "The Lost Planet
Airmen" which had a leading character
that reminded him somehow o[ Commando Cody, the movie serial space
marshall ' who put a layer of ·ozone gas
around the earth. Being an ex-gleaser in a

1

rock and roll band needing· a name, :
George took on the handle.
Commander Cody and His Lost-Planet
Ainnen went through a series of unique
and profitable cbaftles: from a rock and
roll band doing [rathouse beerblasts, to-a
_loose group or musi~s lbat jammed
country music and played with up to 38
people at one time (including the Galactic
Twist Queens), finally emerging as al!istinctive band that plays JOCk and roll,
boogie, and country. The band bas played
[rom Nashville to New York, from Calgary to Bakersfield, [or straight and hip,
young and old, turning on more and more

people to their low volume, high energy
music. The basic philosophy or the group
is that it would be nice' to see people
dancing again; they do.
r Clark Gym, Saturday, April 6, 8:30
an~ 11:30 p.m.

REPORTER I SPRING ~TS FESTIVAL I MARCH

l4, 19'74 1 ~age 6

�Facal~

ArtEdlbltlon
I

INTERNATIONAL FUJII FESTIVAL

The Allelllat
N.._
Doo
1972.
·!bet """""'
a 16111 eentwy

S.tol,
lbaut
print wbo eammlll bll eotlle lloct to an
Pwn!la

IDilae.,tum.

.

Collferellee Tbealft, NortoD, Mondly,
. Apdl8.

.VIveca
Undlors

vneca Undlon will preient ber solo
performuoe of "I .., a Woman." Mo.
Undfon II a ~lap and 111m octzns of
International re(iutatlon.
.
Saya tbe New Yorlr Times' Howard
TbOIIl(&gt;IOD of tbll production:"
"VI'NCa Undfon II colliDg her impress!"' 10lo proeram of Interpretive exeerpta
'I Am a Woman.' She's teUJnc us?
"Mill Undfors is . abo a beautiful
woman who can act, which she proceeds
to do liencbantly . . •. Mtl&amp; bindfors is
l euellent • she mercurially brings to life
a eavalcade of 36 women, from Shaw,
zoo
- L
Ibaen, Colette, Sbatespeare, Sylvia Plath,
~
Brec:bt, a battery of women's liberation
joumllisll and many olber.soun:es.
~.~
. ,..._
"Tbe projection of such a vast gallery,
culled from a deb lore, takes intricate,
balanced 4ofnc. Miss Undfors, a hom
....
. . . . .., ,
..:tress, does it, llllboueb tile gallery itself
buJ&amp;es a bit. Tbe emerclng words-and tile
interpreter--shape ~e characters, so':"" of
Tbb wtU 'be., exblblt qf aiur..ta by - lbem popping brightly and amusmgly,
SuiUvao aDd WJI&amp;bt, tbe ~or which
~ llasbbulb snippets, longer~":" Un·
Is to ~ patH awarenell to uu;
wmdlng -tremulously, like tile firit"tiss of
University-owned Martin Residence, 123
that ~I child, ~ne Frank."
Jewett · Parlnny, Jor which con"tlnulng
~amman Studio Tbealft, Monday,
viable uses are beinC atuclied.
Apri18, 8:30p.m.
Campus dllplay, Hlyes lbll LObby,
April 8 . May 8. Matertals eomplled by
John D. Ranclal1, hdlltles l'lanaiDI, U/B.

U/B faeulty (IUIIdpMiaJ Ill tbe Faculty Art Show, April 8-27, Ill COilii8CtloD
wllb tbe Spring Art&amp; Fellinl are: Donalci
~pro~rMdmmman.~

1J111:ment of Art, plllnter and lilbograpber; Sheldon Berlyn, aaodate pro. faaor, plllnter; Harvey Bre~rman. profeuor, prlntmaker; Phillip Elliott, profesIOr, plllnter; Tyrooe Georgiou, -tant
professor, pbotopapby; Willard Harris,
aiiOciate profeuor, plllnter; · Duayoe
Hatchett, profe1JC1r, oculptor; John
Mtbor, pro~r. prlntmaker; Donald
Nichols, professor, designerlplllnter;
James Pappas, uslsllnt professor, plllnter;
Anthony Paterson, associate professor,
oculptor; and George Smilb, visiting assistant professor, oculptor.
Tbe exhibition will be .on display in
4240 Ridge Lea, Rooms 6 and 7.

ra....

w---•t
Llo. ...:-.A•
_....
.·. _
--,._ ._ .;...tltJS-aft
Lo --u ·s
. , "'-....a 0

_

.

TheVasulkas

Woody and Stelna Vasulka work as ,a
team In lbe f~eld of experimentlll video.
They are the founders of ''The Kitchen,"
an electronic media theater In New York
City, and. have ri!&amp;l'Ved grants from lbe
Creative Artists Public Service Program
and Tbe New York State Council- on tile
.:
Arts.
• Will! tile support of tile National En:
dowment for tile Arts in tile summer of
1972; lbe Vasulkas were artists In resi·
denoe at tile National Center for Experi·
ments In Television at KQED in San
Francisco.
_
Stelna Vasulka, hom in· "Iceland, '
studied violin at tile Music School in
Reykjavik and at the Conservatory of
Music in Ingue. She played In tile Icelandic Symphony Orchestra and free.
lancecl in New York City.
Woody Vasulka, hom In Czechoslovakia, bas a background in engineering
and studied at tile Film Academy in
Prague.
He made severlll documentary films in
Algeria, leeland and Czechoslovakia, and
worked for a number of years In multi·
screen film techniques In New York City.
The Vasuikas ' came to tile United
'
States In 1965. .
Video environment, 232 Norton, April
. 8-13,.JO a.m. · 4 p.m. ·
Workshop, Wednesday and Thursday,
AprtJ 10 and 11; 7-9 p.m.

\,..

Pace 7 I R.Bl'ORTER I SPRING ARTS ~AL I MARCH 14, 1974

INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Bed Psalm
Miklos Jancso, 1972. Hungary.
"(Jancso) weaves his film ingeniously
will! his by-now-famous long camera
takes and his continuously moving cam·
era. Tbe 'weaving' is tile basis of tile
film's structure, ton, formally and thema·
tlcally. Red Flaim is an eXtraordinary
formlll and stylisti~ work, full or vlsulll
metaphors (some reminiscent of Godard).
It's very stylized, very elliptlclll, and lllso,
I think, very deeply rooted in the Eastern
European Folkloric style. It's a very fine
work."- Jonas Mekas, Village Voice.
Tbe setting is Hungary in tile 1890's, a
time of·emerclng agrarian socialist movements.
Conference Theatre, Norton, Tuesday,
Apri19.
.

-,-_

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...

' ..... "!!!"' ...

.

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~

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--

�-~~~~A~

FILM FUTSVAL

LaSala•andre
AlaiD ,....., 187l.Swl.......

or

II)TII&amp; LamiJ
lly- IAmb Is a ~t wbooe
play Jlod Donn4 pl'llduc&gt;ed Jut ...
..., by ibe Publle Tbeabe, •d wbooe
opem AP Pie will be &amp;iftD Ita world
................ ill Buffalo ill tbe fill
CIMdt whll 'lbeatre Deputment for
lbltber lnfomatloD.

..

..,. .,.

Theatre ol tbe
AIJsard

TlaellaaWbo

•• • Q CnM!I cirru., tJIJd yet we laugh at
it. grotaqueneis tJIJd ai:Jsurdlty. ..

onPIIID

NJilla Osblma, 1970. Japan.
SeJf.referentill film about a student
maldnc ·a movie. Complex, riolent and
Oblesllve.
·
Confere""" Theatre, Norton, Wednesday, A_pril 10.

Dr.llarpret
-cr~den

Dr. Malpn• Cloyden bas just pub-

lished a new book dealinc with the
Avante Garde Tbeabe, Lwlatica, Louers
tJIJd .Poet.. Sbe Is a theatre historian and
critic who bas written reviews [or the

New Yort Time1, The Vil/4g~ Voice, The
Nation, etc".
Cbeelt with Theatre Department for
further ~formation.

Women
I•Theat.-e
Presentations by students in

the

Women in Theatre course.
Cbeelt with Theatre Department for
further information.
·

'I'll-.

Medieval

IIITEIINA-LFILMFUTIVAL

Letta.. wm

The senutlon
tbe 1872......, both
he!e and alnnad, this 111m b abont •
fecklitl llrl (Bulle OWlet') and two Oftr·
oerlou* wrilen.
· Conteanee
Norton, Saturday' Aprlll8•

The medieval rision of a life which was
inexplicably harsh was made possible by
an imaginative interpretation of the
"stoey of'
Each spring, an entire
town would join together (with the same
communal effort that resulted in Gothic
cathedrals, castles, and ·immense tapestries), and produce a dramatic version or
Biblical histoey. Set against the festive
atmosphere of an outdoor marketplace,
the plays were a strange inixture of terror
and comedy, outright obscenity and
philosophical thought, chaos and order.
The p!a}'s were realisti.c - both in their
vision, and iJ) tbtir presentation:
butchers, for example, would put on the
"CrucifiXion n because of their ample .supply of blood.
It is in these mysteey plays that to· ,
day's .theatre finds its roots. Arter six
centuries, the ideas remaln:_our modem
"theatre of ·the absuril'' beals many of
the Same themes. Brecht and Beckett
both use the same medieval tecbilique of
eliminating the barrier between actors
and audience.
. You are inrited to participate in these
Medieval Mysteey Plays, April 11, 12, and
13, in the Fillmore Rooin, Norton. It wiU
be set up as a marketplace, which we
hope you'U enjoy as much as the drama
about the buying and selling or souls.
(Any stpdents interested in setting up
their 01'11- stalls in the marketplace are
welcome. Call Barbara BeUafiore,
837-0081, for more information.)
The Medieval Mysteey Plays are being
funded by the English Department.

man."

Titanic Love
World pre;ruere performance of a !lOW
play by Arthur Williams. Directed and
choreographed by James Waring.
· ''Titanic Love" Is the stoey of a .
poverty..trlcken movie company wblch
hires a boat ·to make a film about the
ill-fated ''Titanic"- with the privoso that
they have to stop wort and entertain the
passengers whenever necesSary. "Ihey
don,t get much work done ,!' Waring says.
Nine singers and a dance chorus or 15 are
among the 30-member cast. The score
includes 10 songs circa 1929. Dancers wm
perform a ballet, "Tbe Spirit of St.
Louis," a tribute to Charies Lindbergh, to
music by Amilcaie Poncbielli (Poncbielli
is composer of "La Gioconda"); as well as
a suite of bu)gos by Emesto Nazareth.
Courtyard Tbeatre, Hoyt and Larayotte, April 13-20, 8:30p.m.

/

INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

:The Lion bas
Seven Beads
Glauber

~ocba,

.L eRetour .
D'Afrique--

1970. Congo}Brazta·

Alain Tanner, 1973. Switzerland. ·
Subtle account of the interior voyages
made by a young couple as the result of
an aborted trip to Algeria. By the diiector
of tbe highly acClaimed La Sa/tJmtJndre.
Conference Theatre, Norton, Sunday,
April14.

ville/Brazil.
Exuberant, personal allegoey attacking '
colonialism, filmed by an expatriate
Brazilian in ~ca. In five languages with
EneJisb subtitles.
Conference Theatre, Norton, Thursday..ApDU.l.

INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Charles:
DeadorAUve
Alain Tanner, 1969. Switzerland. _
Ironic account or a middle-aged drop·out, full of (!Orceptive jokes about Swiss
society; a brilliant first feature by the
director of ._,. StJIGITUJndre:
.
Conference Theatre, Norton, Friday,
April12.

REP~RTER I SP!Ul.ft ARTS FESTIY AL f MAR~H 14, : 974 I Page 8

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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Board l's recent decision notto
pe[jpdical for 1974-75.·.
'
Ethos:· manage~nt ·was unprepared
for Sui!-Board's July 14 decision, it
r:epone_d. According to supervising
"editor 'Bruce Fisher, some ~reduction
from. last fe.ar's. subsidy of $29.000. had
been antiCipated, but the disco\'ery tha
no st~ent monies' would be fo~licom~ •
ing for the publication· cam~ as a com- .
plete surprise. "We're unsure," ·. Said
another Ethos editor plaintively, "why ,
we're having our cpjo~ cut off."

'Ethos' lilol SlnJiecl PUt
.
. A spokesman for Su.b-Board who did
not wish ~o t&gt;e' named said that SubBoard' hao not .singled 'Ethos out inns
general belt-tightening effort. A buaget
ceiling ..was set by Sub-Board's Board of ·
Directors priOr toL preparation of the'
1974-75 reeommended budget. Workil)g-::
through a .list of priorities drawn up !&gt;Y
the Board, the bOdy reached-that ceiling
before teaching Etho~ on the _list. Other
siudent P'lblica!iru». not recommenc;le&lt;j
for funding because they were of low
priority · indude Ari~ Wom~n 's

Collective

and Buffalo

on Thurscf.1ys, emergcampus publication duiing

when irwaS gi~en ,tacit support

,

by foune&lt; U/B presi,dent Martin Meyerf'
SO!) as .1n- alternative to a "monQpbly

an

press~'::on campus: t ppiuint relereoc:e .
to the Spectrum. .lJthou'gh the Spectrum
has remained the c;:.ampus's f113jor stu-...,
den( publication, Eth.os has, · ~nder the
current -editors, adopted a relativeiyl ""

· succes5ful tabloid magazine format thai, ·
is presently attracting some $40,000 an·
nually in adVertisifig revenue.
_
Ethos' reaaers learnedOf the crisis in a

letter from editor Fisher published in th~
issue of July 18. The editor argued that
Ethos and 'Spectrum do not, in spite of

som~ ·overlap, represent a duplication of

- effo~ )which might j~stify Sub-Bo~rd's

. dec• ~ "?.!J· Etho s, F..t she~ sa1d, IS~ a. ;
-magazme, Spectrum a newspaper.
Furthermore, he . states, the magazine
provides a practical learning experience
for: campus w,riters and those interested

in news!iaper production. Unlike Spectrum, Ethos publishes no • news-service
material and !lepend's heavily on ~n­
solicited articles with special emphasis
on the arts, he said. '

- .

~Tonlsht

.

·

"a~~~~f~t~~dd~~~~~v~t'b~~~~': 7t~

~~~~~~~:it~~d!~~~~~~;~l."~~e.iio

--

Art.. • • . .Ar.c'ht.tec-.•·ure' at M. eter P.lant
JOinS

.,

~

arg1J1! for at least partial subsidy at a SubThi!- Art . Department's central aaDepartro&lt;iht with an incre.ase .in space
miriistralive offices and "studio facilitieS'
and "makes possible many opportunities
Board budget meeting scheduled for .8
p.m. laSt Thursday. However, because all
moved from the .Ridge tea campus to the
which we wouldn't otherwise hllve." In ,
members of the Boll'rd were not preseiJt
Buffalo Meter. Bl!,ilding (2917 Main
particular, there "!'in be expanded
at that time, the meeting was,r!'(:Se&lt;l
Street)thisweek,settingthestageforstill
facilities for scu1pture, photography and
until tonight (August 1). At that meetong,
another series of internal-campus moves.
printmakinl!- he said.
·
managiog editbr Joe Do--:ling said, he
At the Meter Building, already. ~he
N;,tino •hat ~'
· 'ro,nversion . of the _
will try !9. convince Sub-B,pard . tp dl'-al . o' home of the saibbl of Archit!'Cfure and
"' •
.
• '1 .
..,
Wlth lts defio;it by· So~ .~tl&gt;pd, ot~(!r.
Envjrorimental
Art wiU occupy
~lj!r P}aot 1'l .'7i""isjty l!5e ~ no yet '
'than~nylng 1my funding MlatgoeveUtl' , \ pa.ce the third and fourth levek and
c»mPie'!Mf fitnoialer said -the paintiilg
.
,.
'
"
Th
ed'
studio
areas, fcir example, are simply
" low prion:r; actoviloes.
e . otol\ " in the penthouse. Central offices are
large factory spaces on which no
hope I h at EI OS supporteo;s 'WI·n q 11 Or
located on the third floor.
.- • \
rehabilitation - work has been done.
The move Wij bet!un arid oompleted
write Sub-Boa,r d prior. to the meeting,
" /lurn ro ,.,. •· col. lJ
late last week ancf earlY,_ thl~s _wee~,- • T!lree phases of rehabilitation were
· Dowling .said.
· orikinally 11lanned for the facility with
PhaSe 'Ill yet 10 come.
j •
fal:ilitated by the fact that no art studio
courses are now in session. Ail history
courses are in no way affected by the
Art's exodus to Buffalo Meter opens
shift, TheodO&lt;e B. Fitzwater, assistant-to - up a larje chunt of space in 4240 Ridge '.
the chairman of Art. indicated.
- •
Lea which, according to A. W. Dahlberg •
. . Fitzwater said· the .move provides the
of the Facilities· -Planning staff, is e.ar-

on

Desigq,

, ._

··-

't~ ·~·

marked for the Department &lt;!.f
Geological Sciences, now loaoieCI I!&gt;
another Off-ampus leased Sf)aCe,' ft,e
former Bell Facility ~~ 180 Race~Following minor renovatio!'5&lt;J~
maintenance work in the freed-up ~idee
Lea facilities, Dahlberg said, Geolpsy will
begin a pieCemeal move _that rnoS'}!'I!J'
t~rough December or janJiary. 'Mc&gt;it Gl_
the move, however. is expectecl"to be
u ... _ ' - ·
completed by the •first.,...__._.,
or .n.......,
·..,. '
.__,.._
No\'ember with some ~· · - · •
and courses scheduled to'be.in~ic;lse~ •
in time for the filii semester. - &lt;
,
·
·
.
·
According to 'Dahlberg, no ~nite
plans have been made for the ·aetl I'Mrit
space which will becOme· aviilabli In
la?uary. However, he said, "~here-are
several possibilities."
'
;'

�eRe:. . ---·,•

Seeki!'j.

.

ral funJIIjj ·

._

The~~· 'p,a EciUc.don

(AQI, tt. Nallonal IIS!ocialiori of 51ate

w.£5U

. ~ and Land Grant ~on.s,
.anttllit4lltlel"'*' ClCIIIep orpnizailons
as1eo1 the sen. lilly 17 to •~

the S6nlie to qlse the~!ilure for-Ibis
.,..,.... 10 S18 l!llllrcm, 1 f6 rnllllon _1[1cruse over the HOUIIi- and an"
million lnch!ase over the budset..

llolllhJ, I f-' of ~ which . .
been stn!lled In dental schools only In
1he past few yun Md --s the public

_.. ......

- "People hated to 10 for dental
checkups bec:a\ISe of the'lneWtable bad
news of more c:awltlel and dl,iliud;~

rellltlionJ....-rthatthisls"lheonlr.u-

~..E""~

old~'drllls cleatllii usell."~

the trip Wk made ont, ~ the pain
"would maintain, at the level
ex
.cetlence !"-:SO_,~ supwas bad enilush.'' he Nowa.tays, however, thlnp " ' port and would ~ a .Riect number
diffe(ent, especially In the U/8 PlniC
of middle,lnd small-sized prosrams,
where
frequent checkup~ ue J11ven O(lly
lqely .u~ to compete for •
those who llllrt lO pradi6e preftrltlon.
tht!in:'.•
•
• .
wpport'' and, ~. would ex·
Students comins to-the 01n1c for lhe
Johti f.' 'Morse, ACE dlrecto~ o!
pand the InfUsion o'f bnmallonal c.vn·
iirsttime set large dose of JnfOnnation
~ te1at1ons; preteflled the
tent into education 'lit .U.~Is, ~on pl~ue - !he primary cUlprit of denrequl!lt.Jri 111dmonr before the Sl!nate
ly in tacher trainlns. , .t .
;
• .
ul disease- and how It can be remOved,
~ Sabcommltiee handllns
lnaQSeS over the nouse-a~ by brushing and ~·dental floss da~y.
l.abcw and ~~tfunds. While
6RUre, and over the bodpt. alsO' Wen.
They team how -n ~re brushins as a
e~ippreciation for HoUse action
soushtfor;..colfese
aiCI, communi·
veg~ble .dye Is applied to their teeth.
in rl!slbWntr-·funds fi&gt;r ~ number of
ty service and continuins education, unAdhering to plAque-al]d not to aea.n
prlJsr~m.'lhe'·Admlnlttration wants 10 , dersraduate teachins equi!'ment,
• areas,thedyepro~a'_'plaqueindex." ,
eliliiln.te:'·~ · urged the Sen.ate to
strensfhenlns sraduate prosnms,r and
Nex\, dental h~ students {rom
ratsetill!~flpnesinsomecaoesand .• ·aid to .•bnd-grant' colleses_. The
Er·ie Community College ....: under
fundlictlfi~ not indllded in the
organizations' ~quests f&lt;?r the~e
&lt;' the supervision of -clinic hygienists
lalllir-HIW'II!II*oprlatioll bill (HR 15580) · pr!&gt;Jirams -rf!; library aid, S30 million;
Mrs. Caryl . Ashkin and Mrs. Connie
PasRd bY tj)e House J411e 17.
community service" $25 million; equtp' l&lt;inner - clean and x-ray the .students'
. ~ ~SlOt rn1lltQn for cost-Ofment, $17.5 million; graduate programs,
teeth. Student dentists from U/11 handle
~~· a!ICJwances to Institutions,
S30 million; and land-grant ·colleges,
which iM!ie iuthome&lt;f by the 1972
$12.5 mlllidn. For programs ur1f.UP&lt;fed in
examinations and diag!)OSis under the
f&gt;iBher· education law but which never
both the budget and the House 1&gt;111, the ·
directlon otOr. Bonshi.
have been (uilded. The Administration·
o~:oizations aSk"!!: academic facilities
· "If a student comes in with a high
~ no funds for them in its FIScal
oonstruction, $43 million; planning for
plaque index and decayed teeth - and
1975' bUc!pJ and the House approvl!d
community college de"!'lopment. ·$15.7 •
returns Six manths ' later with ;no imnolle. Regarding these .tlowanees,
mjllion; developrnent.--of,:occupa!ional
' provement-- know he's not try,ing,"
_Dr. Bonghi says._And trying is "what the
MorW sild n~we tan rielther understand -_ programs,
million; institutes. for
_nor-accep~ the total lack of ba~nce in the
training oollege teachers, $5.8 million; .._ .
·
,
&lt;;Jinic demands.
·
Students whose teeth need attention
Adm_lnistratlpn bu.dget, which seems t_p
and law school clinical experience, $7.5 '
~
suiill5t thii'the l!ualiJy al)d health _and
million.
•
•
· are encouraged to see a dentist of tfleir
sUllllltfoAiie:m.tituilons students are to
The orsanizations urged jncreasing 't he
•
choiCe or ·;n approPriate cases, the(re
referred to· ihe Dental· Clinic;s of the
~d 'isOfno cOncern." An approp(ia·
$1_1.5 milJI,on voteil ·by the House for the,
ti&amp;n of "e ven $50 million for ·the
.Fund for .th_e Improvement of PoSISe&lt;lQIJno • ~ .. .
I Ill
SChool of Dentistry. IHhey' need teeth
allowances, he said, "would be of enordary Education to the Administration
·
'
· extra"bed, they may' go to a lcn:al
request of $15 million.
Dr. Edward Dudley has been ap·
mous bene6No eolleges and universities
specialist or to the Buffalo General
h
· rog'gtl 1g 't IS &lt;I
h
· pointed .chairman"of the Depa_rtment of
Hospital Dental Department where oral·
~nd ~~ ~f ~u'ca~i.,s:P.
c:
Spanish, -Italian a'nd Porlugu~· for a
surgery' residents under the direction of
Tlie next ··~ I~' ~ 1he -"
three-year term effective September 1;
Dt. Alan Drint~an perform tile work. Dr.
House fitures _.., ~'lor ihe •
197--4. The ~r\ouncement was made.J&gt;y
Cloln'na ,
--~rtment
Co.liege Work-Study (CWS) and National .
0,:. Albert'Somit, executrve vrce pfiisf.
at . t~o;.• hospj!al ,and profes.or ,.eMoR\1:
c;,,~ l
(NDC.t,
dent•
_
- ~ \.(:'·
medicine at -u/B, indicates-they've been
- DJrect ~ -- ~ 91n . ~...,.)"'Pgrams.
,
/ ...,-·&lt;·
·
d
··
-'&lt; - •·
The orgariital i\s asked $421tmllllolr1ot .,..
.or· Du li!y/ a ''I'! alive 'of .,f. ·raul,
handling ,students' extractions and imcws; compared· to an Administration '
' Minnesota, comes to Buffalo after having
pactions referred by t~.... Clinic for the
request of-$250 milliOn and a ijouse ap_ . •
5erl(ed both as chairman -of the 6epartp~ three years.
propr~ of.SJ00:2_m1Uion. The colleg~
. ~n upward cfiange in eligibility rement of ·f:lispanic langua}es and
Th!' Clinic can also arrange emergency
groups · sought $400 million for NDSl,
qutrements for , Phi Beta Kappa
literature and as d irector of'tlie 'Com- · tr,eatmeht for students 24 hours a day. All
- comparl!ct&lt;owlth - the . House figure of
membe&lt;Ship was INIOUn«ed -this week
pa.rative li ieratlfi'e' Pr'Og air; a\ _ttie
U/B students are eligible for the. free ser$3~.5 million, and· the' Administrati.on's , by Claude E. WeJc!!, president of lf/B's
UniversiJy o! Pittsburgh He was chairvices the .Clinic dispenses .
...- p&lt;llfiO'II to put no new funds into this
Omicron· chapter of the organization.
man of lower dl.oisiondnstruction in the , •
Dr. Bonshi.started as clinical instructor
program • . -~·'
· •
For the past several years, Welch said,
Department of Spanish and Portuguese
three years ago and finds havinga hand
~e • groups · ~~pported ihe Hl&gt;use"undergraduate grade point av~rages
at Jhe, University of California at los
in dental education as -well as in private
apPiow!d fiBures of $6501;lillion for Basic
have been rising around the· United
- Angel&lt;:s from 1964-1969. 1
·•
practice gives hir;n the ....best of both
Oppol1unily Grants (BOGs) to students
States; SUNY-Buffal!) is no exception to
After serving in the United States Navy . worlds. "It 'keeps me on my roes to be
and $240 .million for Supplemental Opthis trend. The escalation in · median
from 1944-1946, Dr. Dudley-.ttended the
learning all the time, and_l feel dentists
por1unity trants (SOGs) . The Adgracjes has meant that .an increasing
Univei~it)'...f&gt;f Minne_sota where he
·who eith,e r teaCh or keep u p . through
mi~~ion. had requested $1.3 billion
percentage of baccalaureate candidates
· rt:eeive&lt;l botli his f!.A: and M.A. degrees:c.ontinuing educ3iion progra'ms in the ..
fo• BOG• to concentrate -student aid
qualify for Phi ~ta Kappa, and this
He earned his Ph.D. in Spanish ljte~re'
School of Dentistry are better private
, funds on this program, and proposed to
chap(er is iQ the invidioUs POSition of
• from the same institution in 1963.
·· practitioners, too," he Ays. ~ firs~ei.r,
eliminate the• SOGs.. Morse nOted that,
having ,elected more than c;&gt;ur permitted -- He was roieditor"wi.th John Crow of El
he worked at the· Clinic half days · all
th~ older SOC, NDSI. arid CWS prot~r:ams
maiim1,1m for .the p~st two years.
Cuento (1966) ' aQd with Maximillian
week, anchhe past twO years, he's been
have worked well, while the BOG proSpecifically, in May 1973, 350 individuals
Nol(ak of. The Wild Man_ Within :· An
fulltime Tuesdays and Thursdays.
gram has been In operation only~ year
were S(!lected from a total of 1,901 B.A.
- Image In_ Western , Thought . from · the
"There's a noticeable-difference in the
and there isn't enough · solid da.ta yet
candidates - that is to say 18.4 per cent
R_enaissance to Romantidsm (1972).
\
teeth of the generation that's. had
about its future funding requirements.
-when Phi Beta Kappa honors are to be
&lt;
'
flouride -either in drinking water or by
For the new State ~rshlp Incentive
confined to the top 11! P.,r cent!'
•
indivi4ual deptal treatment And they
program, the orpnlzalions requested..
·Foll!)wlng analysis of grade poi~t
Dr:\Theodore l. Hullar, professor of .
don't dread golhg to the !lentist like their
$38 million, ~ to _the House- '
trends and -consultation with W. 'leslie
medicinal chemislry, was confirmed this
parents did, thanks to improved tecllniapproved figune of $19 iniHion and zero
Barnette, secretary-treasurer of the
week .as commissioner of Erie County's
ques and equipment.'' Dr. Bonghi adds.
funding propOied by.Jhe Adminis,tration. . Chapter, Weich S.id that in the future
new Department of Environmental
With more prevention, ttiere should be
Another'prosram for which increased
undergri!duates . will ·be -elected to Phi , Quality. .
· .'
~ontinued · impro~~nt, he feels.
·
funding was aoked was the language and
Beta Kappa only if:
·
All but one of the members of the
The Clinic, which is part .¢ the U/B
area studies program.
J!tDUps asked '
(1) Their overall undergraduate grade
&lt;;ounty legislature, Democratic:.MajorKjo
Student Health Service, is-partially fund· _ point average (112 hours or more) is 3.6
l~ad~r Raymond F. Gallagber, apprcved
ed -through a Federal grant to the !icl1ool
· or better; with SUNY/Buffalo average for
County Executive Regan's nomination·of
of Dentis\IY's Department of Behavioral
transfer studenls-t)o less than·the transfer
Dr. Hullar, f~r the post which .will pay
SCience, ?eaded by Dr. Grant T. Phipps.
· between $17,)32 and $33,8M a year. ·
average.
(2) Th~r overall undergraduate grade
Hullar, who has been active in conserpoint average is 3.4 or better and invation and ecology programs, will
dividual departments submit deiailed
assume the J&gt;OSI August s.
•
" The Surgeon General has determined
recommendations indicating (inter alia)
The new deparf!11ent was brought into · that cisarette smoking i~ dangerous to
that those--.tudents stand in the top
being by the County legislature this spryour health" :- but you still smoke,
dedle of the particular field; ·
jng to establisH leadership and action. in , ~f)'ou would like to kkk the cigarette
(3) Their·' 'overalr .~undergra-duate'
f!!e
.
Co~nty's fight againlt pollution ... · ,
habit, the PsychoiOSY Department may
~verage (96 1\ciun . o r'· more) · is 3.8 or
·
, be' able to help. One of thel'r current
'better.
programs. conce'rns research· ·on . the
Raising ihe floor. for automatic acceP:'
- modification of smOking behavlor., Free
tance from 3.4 to 3.6 will, according to
• t~e~tment is b_eing offered to any instatistics Profe5sor Ba'!'ette has sathered,
: .11duals wf!o wo!'ld li ke to stop smok- reduce the intake by approximately &gt;46
1
tng.
per cent. This Is a necessary step, We'tt::h
.Th( .;rogram can accommodaie ap·
said, _.': lest"We cont1i)ue to exceed the 10
pr.oximately 40 peisons, and those In•..:per..cent limit. However, for* unusual Canterested should write tO&gt; Dr. John ' lidt,.,. •
didates, the provision for department
:;',~'!',t~o.BY Department, 4~ Rltlge lea
riomination offers an OpPOrt~nity·o'' ,.

. _ sz:1 biiiOn

for

.......,. of1he u.s.
11 1ft 'the qln'eflt 1975
~
1111oat $650 1111111on-more
t1w1 •
A.dmintsa.don's budpl for .

a

IIJH:arr

sso

-· '
Dud1ey n·am-':.1
-=u
as head 0-f .

Clp "prograMI!o

'ph·I a-t
e a. Ka a ..,
•ff
sti ens ru1es
f or e-•••g••b•lity
I

:.:,_::, ,:come

-.. r....

Hull'ar COnfi rmed -,. .

lbe

Help for smokers ·

�- -::-...

'

lJ/8
·
-. -~ostumer·
.
. .. .

~-ladlir

_
-..-..
takes -national award
...:

.

,..,....,.;;-...,.....,., .

,

.

._-

.

· ticipatory ' play . for · children; Mrs. Em- _ began- her studies at the UniverSity of .
Minnesota more than a dozen years ago.
min~ decided that. ·constant motion ·
After moving to Buffalo with her husllf~tre . Qepartmeot pas won lint prize
within the drama's structure was to -be
in .·th"t Fiftl\: Annualr· lntercoll~iate
'The determining factor in designing ·- band and two IK¥ She bi.came interested in dance therapy and psy.•Costume Oesi8l' Competition'sponsOred
costumes. Thus, Father Christmas glides
chodrama, and, in the mid 1960's, was
by SOuthern lllino~ Universi»r. "'
on roller skates, the dragon
a 14--'
awarded a full scholarship to. Buffalo's
Mrs. Judy .:.Emmings' inventive
foot tail and. the King of Egypt walks on
Studio Arena School where she studied
creations· for A Christmas Mummi!Jg: ·
stilts.
·
voice, dance, acting and movement.
The .Play ojSt. George, combining.roller
Vuldy of lnfT''""'ce5
skates, ~tilts and mechanized t~ with
Mn. Em ,illJ!S drew upon a variety of' • Su!&gt;sequently, she ap~red on local
levWon~;a w~Sirl, an-d, 'd!;lrihg
!,.cH...I~in ; 'McUr
r~.....
i - 1 otylo
infiu'l"ct&lt;s, 'i-Azte&lt;lf"'
that . periqd, participated in a pSycostumes, will .be exhibited...,tthe-.nnual
Egyptian ahd Medieval, 'for-an engaging
chodrama pr~g;a..'!' at~ Vetera~s Hospital. "':
convention 9.1' the· Ami!rican~ 'Tti-efui!~ . .mix at·once visually exciting and practical
1n execution . Costume fabrics are
Association in Minneapolis ~ugust 12
Formal training in theatre.#and. dance
and 13 and Will become part of a travelpainted or dyed, allowing. for greater
was suspended w~en she began .· a
freedom and individuality 1han could be
ing ·sh&lt;&gt;W of wmning .designs to be e,...
'cooperative crafts shop- with several
hi,bited -here.ttl is. fall. ~··· - - ·' ··~ .
found j~ co'!'mJ!!C)~I!y ~l(ai!able fabrics.
friends. ~hen 'the shop closed, after two .
Competiti&lt;;ln. rules called for submisThe St. ·George· .pl~y's were derived••
years, she decided tq go back to ·school.
from pagan pieces of death and resurrec- - sion of three cOstume sketches for a play
At _~JIB_ she "retrenched" and began;

·:r\..toSluiJ)e design student in' the Y/B

sports

tion mirroring the dying of vegetation in

assigned_as a class project accompanied

winter and its return in.spring. In tfu; version assigned as a project in a U/B
costume design class last ·spring, father
Christmas is the• masterof ceremonies.
St. 9e&lt;Jrge predictably slays the dragon
,who is resurrected by the Doctor·only 1'1
be .ltilled again. Tlje Tur~jsh Knight, introduced into the plays during the
Crusades as St. George's adversary, is killed by St. George anp also brought back
to life by the QOcror. St. George then
claims Sabra, daughter of the Ki~g of
Egypt, as his .wife. The entire company
dances .. ~ the play ends.
Conceiving of the production as a par·

by fabriF swiltches and color layouts of a
scene in· which. the character was to .
appear. Mn. Emmings chose to submit
designs for the King of Egypt, the Dr~gon
and the Turkish Knight.
Towering above the other cl)aracters
on brightly painted stilts, the King of
Egypt ,wears a bronzy gold costume slit
~p the sides lo allow for .f reedom of
movement. Beaded collar, gold crown
and feather-painted staff complete the
outfit. Mrs. Emmings added to the
traditional ' Egyptian style by illustrating
the figure frontally in the maimer used in
ancient Egyptian fr~~zes.

.Ga.rv.in-heads

The ske'tch of the Dragon .reveals fan·
.
ta_sy transformed into p·racticality. '1)Was
the back end of a dragon in a school
.1:
.
.
· play," M~. Emmings remembers. "I fell
down, of course; the audience loved iii'
A SearCh Committee has been formed
to find a-successor; to Dr. William Eller,
Needlesstosay,herdesighisaone-piece
· currel)t chairman of the Department of
dragon. Wings, clawed feet, and a flam-ing mouth are~ topped off with a horn
Elementary and Remedial Education. The
memben of the Committee are: Dr. Paul ' piercing a bleeding hand. I!He looks as if
L. Garvin,' chairman; Dr. Austin D. Swan'·
he's beeh up to - skullduggery
son;- Dr. Walter R. Hill; Dr. Elois M.'
somewhere," she observes. But ruffled
ribbons· of br!'wn and _violet vinyl make
Skeen; and Ms. P)lyJiis Schneider.
.[hechargetotl),eCommitteespecifies
him m·o re comically menacing than
1
-that ~e nom)nees for the ChairmaQship
dangerous or~ frightening.
' ~
l'nust .be meml&gt;en.Of the SUNY/Buffalo
· A ~meJy constrOcted costume con- ·
faculty'
'
trasts woth a myriad of ~olors and
The Committee held one m.,;,ting in
.patterns in the fabric design for the
July and will hold second meeting early , Turkish Knight, the ~ast of .the designs
··-" - ~-in September .• A .IJiail'·ballor hilS' been·
submitted .• Zigzags, tS.'ri~, ~lka-dots •.
·sent•out:ro -memben of the Departihent
and checks blend •on- a collage-1i~e
of Ei!E to ask. for nominations; ~
~ pattern In various .c:Oior patterns of black
Any suggestions from the University
al)d tan, blue and red, brown and t{n. A
,,
communHy aJ )arge, incl11d.i!lg ' lar~ "jewel" punctuates the- Knight's

-=d s'earch gr'oup

a

nominatjons for the chairmanship, "will

l&gt;e greatl)l appr.,Pated," Dr. Garvin ~n1 dicateso Communications should be addressed to the chairman of the S,.arch
Cumm)~, Paul L Garvin, Depirtment ~
·of tingulstics, Spa~,lding Quadrangle,
li\m~l}t Campus.
•

tu

n. ; __

.

/

;

CII'CI!Itous Ro61e lo die Tburre··
•
· -. Winning the competition in the
'midst of 'her recently I'!Sumed college
career is a re-affirmation of a seeminglY
circuitous yet•determinedplan to enter
the · theatrli:al world. Mr!~ Emmings

regastermg m courses geared toward~ the
fine arts~ painting, silkscreening, and

basic design - along with the f basic
theatre ·COurses. '~I no Jonger feel the
need to act, but have a real desire to
learn more about the.technical aspects of
theatre," she says.
.
'

Job. openings
.
'

FACULTY
·
Assistant librarian ·(Law library), University Libraries, PR-1.
Assodate librarian, University Libraries, PR-2.,
Assistant/Associate librarian (Health Sciences},
University Libraries, PR-1 .
Associate and Assistant librarian (2 positions)~
University Libraries. PR-1.
.
Associate Librarian (Reference), University Libraries, PR-3 .
Assistant/Associate librar.ian, University Libraries, PR-1.
Associate irofessor, Patho.logy.

Assistant Professor, Gynecology:-Obstetrics.
Associate Professor, Gynecology-Qbstetrics.
Associate Professor, Physical Therapy.
'

NTP

.Technical Specialist, Chemistry, PR-1 .
Technical Assistant, Univenity Publications, PR-1.

Pro~r.ammer Analyst, Computing Center, PR-2.
to Dean, Urban Aff;tirs, PR-3. ·

A~ststant

·· for additional information .;,ncerning these jobs and lor details of NTP :~
openings throughout the State Unive.Sity system, consult bulletin boards at'
these l.ocations:,
"'
·
... .&gt;
· 1. Bell facjl}ty between 01~2 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, nexfto ,
. cafeteria; 3. Rii!ge tea; Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health Sciences ~.-.
'Boilding, in corridOr opposite_HSl3~; S. Capen Half. in the corridor between '
Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. LOckwood, ground floor in corridor next to ven-~
ding machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public lnfor- '
_ "}ation -Offi~; a,,Acheson Hall, in corridor between Room~ ;12 and 113; 9.
Parker Engineering, in .corridor .next to Room 15; 10. &lt;':oodyear H~ll, 1st floor,. •
Housing Offite area; 11. 11107 Elmwood, Personnel Department; ' '12. Nort'on
_Union, Director'S .Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next'to '

Room 106; 14. .John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amher:St Campus):
: Sbte Ulliftnlly at

~Ia an:Equool Opportunlly/AfflrmioliYe~on .,.;.t&gt;ll&gt;Y~ '..

�"SATU RD~.Y -r3

Slietbners ne~ ' vofume 'on Joy.c~
.foulld to 1};lre~k new·. ground'
lof&lt;e In Nlsf1tto'wn:'

-

.A Psychoanalytic

.

Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, Co.nference
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admissiori charge.

knowledge, has rajsed too many points
too quickly.. , His Writing is concentrated

ing hoUrs: Mol'idly-Fri9q, 9a.rru·5 p.m. Con·
...
.t

\inuing.-

•
Polish Colfecrion, an exhibition culled from

lJU~8 RLM•• ,.._
,_. .
~
'Beyond the Volley of rhe f:!olls, Gonf~'!lq!"
Theatre, Norton; call 831.-5117 for times. Ad-.
mission charge.
·

AR~A:RK ·CON,.SE~t'r

from the colledion ol LockwOod Memoriol
Library, 2nd floOr bakony, lockwood. Yoew· •

L~-EXIflllr

~ 'SUNDA y.;.4

Inquiry into Ulysses-;by Mark Snechner,
aosistan.t· professor ()! &amp;.glish. Uqivenity -.. :-and every wotd co.)Jpts. But in his discussiO(JS, say, ofloyce•s fantaSy1ife; or of
- l!f €ilffornfa' l'.re&lt;s, 197-4. zn pp. $10
J:tis hostilitY. to women as seen in the
. • fre$h l~t )';.,.,~Joyce's Ulysses
Molly
Blo9m sectio~; or of 'creation .as
through; (S.~rtle' book jacket pUts ~t,
re-creat~on'; he seems out of breath tho
1
"spectacles borrowed from Freudian
soon.
._. .
psychoanalysis," .is the-focus of }oyc_e in
"But this only _mak~- us . hope · !or
- Nigbtfow.n bY.' U/B English · professor
~ another volume that wiU search deeper
~rl&lt;&gt;~per. · ·.
·
intO some of iliese notfons aRd
~ll~lf ncfrf3,u·spicioUs first book(' in a
"
· ,
·.
reView by Neir Baldwin in the Courier- ... • otherS. .• . "

~om·en

UIIIIAIIY EX~
-·
·
'
'~'
~ EifStjOditions•ol_ tl(• woiks oi:s.muel led:~t

uuAi FILM..

!he Univ:O~~oi~,4.11111L

volumes of material,

ffrst ~-·flOOr, (Od-wo:ocP

Memori•!,. Ljbro~, I\.!OrldaY-!i-lday,- 9 a.m.-5

- p.m. ~~inuing.

·

..

MmiA STUDY EXHIIIIT"

·

-

, •,

·taan AmE!ricatl Art~ a cOllect ton of works in·

'

R1ch1e Havens, D~ryl Hall and. the John '
t.,erpreting l he Third Workl by anistS indudins
~ares Band, Ar:tJ&gt;:irk ~Theatre, Lew•ston, ~Y.,- _ .-Julio Teich, ~,Aifre&lt;lq - Potillos, luis Benedit,

8.30 p.m. Admass1on charge:._ ·
•
,.

in. SP.Orts

.

wath guests Carolyn Shaffner, pres1dem,
Parents Association for Retard~ Gh!ldren

- Jacques Bedel, tuan Bercet&amp;e and Carlos
Ginzberg:.This is the.firsl of a series of Media
.Study -exhibitions featuri ng still pho~aphy ...
and_thi8raphic art~ 33l5 Bailey A.;e.~ t~rough
August 10.A'iewing hours: Tuesdays ttlrough
Saturdays, noon·S •p. m. , and TuesdaY

2~tr:~.~o~~si(Z'·r~:~t~m~Y Susanne

- - - ' - - ''-""- - - - ' - - - - ' " ' -=-":--c'

-

COP OUT-GREAT AMERICAN PASllME "
_Men~al Retar~ation : Paren tal: .Pro?lems,

1s the· top1c Jor

~~~~!~~· p:~:nt~~~~::ia~~~~;/~:S~~d~

fa~ulty ·seminar

evening~ 7·9 P.:T·

'

.Or. carole Oglesby, conducting a two·
week grjiduate seminar in 11 Women and

•. 1

Sport" .,iit the School of Health Education
A • R OfRCE HOURS
MONDAY-S
Summer session, will lead a special facul"The Office of Admlssi(JftS and Records, 1
Hayes 8, will be open from $:JOa.mAJ:3P p.m.
ty seintnar _today, August 1, in the Red
FILM•
on August 1, 2, 6, 7, 13, 14, 2Q...23. On all other
Room of the Faculty Club from 4 to 5:30
Tire Merry Wrdow (Stroheim}, 1&lt;40 Capen, 3
weekdays the Office will be open from 8:30
p.m. ~r issue will be "Role of Women
&amp; 7 p .m. No admission chcirge.
~. -4 : 30p.m.
·
fxpress, · thc!~lume is billed ..as t reating"· in t!"J~ .Governance .ol Spon."
FOIIBCN STUDENT
•
Ulysses "not as art' created· by Joy~e
Dr: Oglesby is an associate professor o f .
SUMMEII FILM INSTJTUTf'
'ORIENTATION
VOI.UNT&amp;RS
_
th rough some- ine&gt;&lt;plicable' gift, ·but as_. physical education at the· University of
- Design for ·a National ln form~tion, Utility,
~ Both Anlerican .... and foreign •student
Gene Youngblood , author of Expa.rided
gesture, ·as purposeful human action,
Massa~Husens. In 1973yhe was recipient volunteers are needed to hefp with foreign
Cinemi, 142 DiefendOrf, 8 p.m. No admission ,. student' Fall orieiitation,services suCh as hour
with all that implies 11bout human drives,
ol the ·highest merit reaching, award in
charge.
'
human Conflicts and hu~n fee.li,ngs," an
wom~n's physical education at ·UMass:
lng, tf"ansportation, receptiC:::»R, ~istration, ~
approach which, ttie publistiers,contend,
She was the first" woman to sit o ri the
and campus tOurs, and witfi· pros;~ activities
leadsto a "diHerent sense" of understa.nSta1e Oepal'tmenr Panel on International
induding exCurstons, a picnic, dance, pany
TUESDAY-6
and banquet. Orientation activitfes wlllr'take
ding of'tht; iio¥el. Within this framework,
Athleiics. .
place· August 27-September 3: Those whO
Ulysses 1&gt;ecomes a "fine example of at- ' ~ . lr\ 1972, she managed the u.s. Office at
' RLM•
wan,t1o have some ~RI expe~ .. ._.
tistic nardosism; a '&lt;!If-reflecting· show- ' the World University· Winter _Games_ ~
Young Mr. Lincoln (foid):--140 Ca'pen, 1 &amp;3
should call Emi_e at the Foreisn .stuclent Of. · piece· of· poll!$ · and ' conf~ons" by
cl.'ake Placid, and, in 1~3, sewed as coorp.m. No .admission charge.
_.; ~ice, · 831 -3828 (li"l the aheinoon}.
~ Joyce.
.
·
dina)or of women's !,earns for· the World
.........
",
.
•.
University Games in M~.
" Eien:lelits of'1he novel tbat.critics'have
trad
. itio!'!!OC' reaarded as merefy. literary
fl. leader in the develop'!'ent of com'themeS'. fit1W fall into place as ~ oyce's ' J&gt;etitive sports programs for women, she
· ways Qfltvi~With hlrl)5ell and &lt;Nnaging.
slis as a vpiing member of the U.S. .
1-(js. ~.~ the jacket blurb
.Collegiate Sports Co\)ncil, the fran&lt;t.i~
•
prorniSeo: '
, holder-for c()llege and university inter1 ,
~ .a.ldwln finCis' the promise '
national co·m petitionc
•
,;&gt;,:
fuHIJJed. $hlcfmer'udditlon 19 the g.,.t_..
Dr. Ogl!isby was the .first pr~ent 0 f '
~ . ·~ i, _,-~...... \, • .: '.{~.. ";~ - ; ···\ .:/\ ~~~:
, bo!!Y of.jpficeq!!~Psl.t!."lsa 'worthyone •the Association fpr lnter~ol.legiate;' ~;: ~~~~~
···.-:~'· -~~ ~-~·"· ~-~ - ~ 'n ·,~"' ·_·"":
' thai ~ IIJII(ilioU'rid," Baldwin 'Says.
~thletics for Wome.,' (1971·72l,' die ~n~ ..
, u
&lt;u ~
EvaditionaJ J.! terary trollln_gbodyforwomen·s_;ntercolfes.._te
(/;.,;,;
,.,.;,
col.jj
..
.
.-.
"'
crit' n writes, "this bOok en·
at)lletocs in the U.S.
• "Ethos
contirtue· to publish as lo.;'g / has a huge telephonJ hill run up 1.1rgely.
'c om
.
; outside tl)e work _in
Iii.. I - •
:l
. 'question which - 1 0 enrich it further .. ....
.. we ha~ . writers ~d ca!' give a com:
by earlier staf(s .and "handed down '
mission to the person Who sells adverthrough t_he·generations." On lhe brigh(
instead-- of closing · Off the rest -of · the
Mrs. Marsa~et B. Nevin, direCtor, ·.
world it belonp to. The biosnphical
Adult Advisement Center, ·Division of
tising." said fisher. Finding ..campus
side, .adVertising revenues should at least '
substrate r1se to tl\e surface ancf ampli(y _ Continuing EducatioA, -was elected tl\e
writers ha~been'ho problem: unsolicited
•equal last year's, he predi~ed. aided-by
&lt;Nnuscripts-:fill his mailbox ev!ry week,
the postulates: .
"
,
regional representative of R_i!glon I! in
the antiCipated imminent demise of the ·
),;, Yld. As to the paper's fin;mcial situa·
"One's only quarrel is1hat Shechner,
recent Adult Education Association eleccom~ting, non: campus publication
lion; tlie editi:&gt;r acknCW,..Iedged that ~hos o~ Buffalo New Urnes. .
~- .
i n his obvious enthusiasm and thorough
tions.
,.
-. ..;

..

t,: --1 ...- .- .

·"·aliOS' filiaRCial . ciisis .:

evwn ·.elected'
"

.....

..

.

will

_ .

· ..

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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osing' ~irths
...~•.: ... -: as, popUlation_curb:,r
A &lt;ontroversiaL solptlonp o the
'1&gt;&lt;oblems of pollutigh and depletion.of
the earth'~ reseul'a!S t!Jroush J'ellulating
populatio!l ~ "In a way whlcli wil~
' lfiaSilvlily ani! pentlllvely redlilrihute intDine ·hom
rich to -the poor,
llrel!8lhell the'"lirttdl! 'sociaiSII:uclure-of
'tbe BJobe, ..and reclaim lis banarecf.surlace" hu been prppose&lt;f in a new bOok
by John C. Boot, prOfessor of opera!ions
analysis in the 'Scihool· oi Manasemo;nt.·
..In eo.- Globe-or CiioiNol Com" - '- popialallon·' repllallooi ancf in- :
., - ~ ...............)&gt;t.lbl~hy M~rcel
Del\~er, Inc., New Yorky 8 volume one '
of~ series•ol monoJJraphs Jild telCts call- .
ed llush-·( &amp;onwntq· ionCI . ~

.-utll be a..flnearly increasins,lunction
ol me ~ (m) of the couple se/Uns. '

.

~-"· theqencyaJo~~lcf'Seta price
.functlori· p ol st50 + 50m). :Thls _would . ~-

- • thas a poor cOIIple,)IOith a nulltl~ .
of~ . ceuld sell its certificate to the agency foJ J100, and a more well-to-do coupie, with, SlY,, multipje of-9, could seil
lor 9 times~ + $50, or s:;oo. cr
·
. ..,..t ihe ..-time, liowever, the rich~
couple' in order to buy an extra certificate would have .to pay 9 times $500,
or. ti~OO~whi~ -the pooren;ouple could
purchas~n addit!onal entitlement at the
samel'nce at wh•ch. it sells.
. This, says .llo'ot, incorporates the idea
" that riel&gt; children are more demandi!lg
I
-Boo! argues for a eopu~tioA!I--contr()l
of the environn:'ent and more malidous
-rfaedtanism as a r1)9nS tO prevenf
.in tbe.'"r exterralities [or impact on others
trau,matic global experiences. "In cthe . - o~de \)le lamilyhhan poor ones." This
~ns~ run," he contends;. "if b!eediflg
marls_et systesn; ·providing that .multipfes
goes uncheck·f!4, mass_.starvation ._~r · . a_re. ~ o. less than one and 1hat apf OIIective suflqcation : or !'lush'rooll)
.Pr:",J'mately the ~me n~mher of cer- clouds or whatever will lead to wholesale·
·tlflcates ·are ·bough.t and sold, woul&lt;t,
ll9ot . oont~nds; provide_ profits ~ich
deatjls, and thus • : natu'ral: ~"P.n ..n:~
inhibited growt~ ... . - • .
. • : . l rould- be-"Used; among' other things, to
· l!oot, who ·received his. Ph.D. - in
· defray' administrative costs of ru.,ning
Robert l~-Kett~r this week an, Dep~rt ment .Df the Un fversi ;~ of ·
econometrjcs tiom . die •Netherlands
tlie...control agency.
.
nounced the· resignation..o( Dr. Ber11ard
Minnesota ...
-~~00,1 ql EconomiC$, prese~ts. his ideas
l'lan · ~·t Imply Use
R. Gelbaum, vice president Jor academic
Ertel to be 'Adlnl' VI
.
.
·
affairs.
1n-the fra~rk of botlrna~':'nal_:,and .
"Design ' ol the plan, Boot says, "does
· _ Pointing,out tile important role of ihe ..
In · a letter to _PresiCient Ketter, Dr.
_g~l ~ulat~~~:.cont_rol poh~. : :"" · no't. ~~rily_ l'!'ply _ jts !iSJO.~ .~ow or
ViCe
president
for
academic
affairs,.
Dr."'
Gelbatim said: " On a number of ocTtio C~ loi &amp;dr-WOIIWI
· eyl!r; any more than-the acquJSJt•on_of a
Ketter said%- r&lt;!&lt;Ominending to -the
-casions and in a variety of conteXts I have
:__In its simp~! terms; IJ!!.poposal lor ·. fire extinguisher.' implieS &lt;Jse. It is a
ao.rd of Trusaees of tlie State uniWenity
stressed
the view that a -univenill: has a
pre~utio.'!·~'? be ~ as; tj&gt;e sitUation
individual gations· is.'26~ied on ..th.e
the~ ... DI'.:Menon w. &amp;tell
~
'-lsouancre . of two a.nmeates ··In eve{)'
•warrants.'J\110 it is for.'the gowmmenuo . 'd~ obliptlon and anu~
aac:llofts rfce P. esfden• ftW:.acatliasdc If
portun1t
o
serve
.the
co111.muiiily
~~~
·iklti!nnlne WllenoibiS'wlll·b;l!the case and
fairs
. .Dr. Enell has a~ to ~rve until a
through teaching and .researCh. AI' ttiis .
-·· IS loocffor-dleliirtl\of onuhlld. At "'I" • l~:ft Will' be used. .
permanent ...nce.-p'esident for..academic
junctur~,
.a
.
nurtt~r
.of
prograJils
and
3_0. the' wpman pn;set~..ofl!'-9i:!x!th ~r~
..,'Th~s. is no~ sitnplr _ari !dlt; dis?ai[ner.
is 3ppdinted.
- ·
·
-projects consonant /with 'this position
t•fiatp . to . a nafl!1na! control· agency
PopulatiOn growth JS·.qu1te cyclical, eshave readied stages where they require
whlch can, in turn, sell certilicates.in the
pe&lt;;ially · n., deveio~d countries. It
Dr: Enell is
~ate
,chancellor
my close attention, undistracted by the
game of those whq waiJ).to buy. A multi·
c-li~nges with the pi&gt;litical and.ecoriOmic
lor sped~ J"!&gt;jects.!'Yi!h tbe 'central .stall
other demands of my office. In· the circple wg,uld be established lor each C:ouple
dim~te,: or with a change in the in·
of ~tat&lt;! Uni~ty, l)ior.:'to h"' Alba~·Y
cumstances,
I should like to tender my
or .ea&lt;:h sing~11irl wanting to. sell 'or buy
her[tance laws. In the United States,
appointment, he .was a member of 'the
r~igncition, effective. at your early con·
• '~IIQ!es. The ·multi~ wpuld give,.the
binhs have been as low asJ.4,_~nd as high
faculty _here for 23 years 0946-69). He
venience."
.• _ra!io l:ietween. b!Jying and selling .price
as ~ per ti)oUAnd per y~r Since theSe·
served as Melvin H.. Baj&lt;:&lt; Professor of
• for -tbat,oouple.- 11-a co\lp~ .had ;a.multicond World War. At present it is an all'Reluc.Untly Accepted'
.
America(! Enterpr~ and as professor of
pte•Of 5; lt ~uld ~ti~Ji~~,e Ji mes as· 'ti~ low, ll_uct_uating ~round and ocIn response to· this l~ner, Dr. Ketter
economics ~nd j ndustrial relations. 1n
much to bUy .. they woulil get lor sellcas10nally d1ppmg. , bel~ . replacell)&lt;!nt
said : "I understand and res~ Dr.
addition, he held sewrallinPonan(;;d~ing. ·~,·.;,: ... : ---.
"'· :
•
level=" ' .
..• .
;.
Gelbaum's wishes and reluctantly accept
minislrative pqsU. indudl!)8. .aean of
The most c;ommon ar~ment against '
The multipl&lt;! lor each couple would he
his resig nation. for three years, Dr.
Uni\oersity CoiJesoi, assistant vice ,_.;.
an irK!feasing function of- its prosperity,
th_e. pl,~n _(wh•ch, Boot _wntes, was met
. yelbaum has served·the University well,
dent for. educatjanal afl~lrs, and director
computed 0.!!.' current capital (assets.
w1th. smggers and· g•g~es, . c~uckles
and I thank him personally, and on
of institutional researCh. ,
·
minus debts), current inco~.~ . and ~'!nles of g~neral d.'sbehel ~en
behalf of the en!ire University communi·
Dr. Enell joined ·the central '!tatf of
- income sJream and expected in- - ~ese~ted' a~,semmars pnor to pu~hca­
ty, lor tlie many contributions that he has
State University.on January 30, 1~, ~s
. heritances. No coup~ would have a mult•on) ·~ that somehow the poor: will he
made to the advancement of the Univervice -chancellor lor unJ venity-wide actiple of less-than one, nor higher tharl a ' screw~d ...again," that ua carrot_ means
sity at Buffalo."
tivities, later serving as depu'!Y vice
specified maximum. In a population of
~re lor a hungry man t~an cav1ar lor a
or. Gelbaum joined U/B on June 30, chancellor.
~.Q!IO couples for examp~ there might
nch man, so $100 can eas1ly bnhe a poor
1971. He was previously assOciate dean of
be-1001's 2502's 2003's 10o4's-and 350
man, ~ut ~1,000 will leave a rich man un·
ed
..
the School of Physical Sciences at the
With ~ mJitiples' Over ...!4, includi ng,·· ~ved.". Also, .the_author adm_its, 11 the
University of California, Irvine. Prior to
nor's Commission to Study Non-Public
perhaps .one couple with a multiple of
fnghtemns spectre of forced ster- Higher _Education in Illinois..
his deanship there, Dr. Gelbaum was
60.
' ..
·
•
illzation" rears- its head in terms of
professor and first chairman of t~e
Dr. Enell holds his B.S. and M.A. from
· The price at which the national agency
retribution lor those who might have adDepartment of Mathematics. from 1948UIB and a ~h.D. from the Univenity of
would buy certifiates from &lt;;aU~ . ditional ' children with'!ut buying en·
64 he '95 a .member of the Mitht.matics
&lt;::hicago.
·

.a.·

a

--

I

Gelb~um. resigns;

-Eitell

will
;act. - as - Acad~mic VPo:.

..

......

!"faits

;..,"l

~~ ~ ~~~:':!.=; ~-~~e~:

t• ·rm to paje 2, col. 1)

New multidisCiplinary center
will -focus. on study of -aging
' The-5\udy ol, aging will he the locus of
a new multidiscip)inar:y center being established at U/B. ' Dr. Constantine
Yeracaris, professor of tQCiology and acting dir&lt;!Ctor of the·aonter, explains that
it will provide a &lt;etti'!B lor research,
educat:ipn ~nd p"ractia! hearing -dir&lt;!ctly
on tb&lt;i pr~ of aging.
.
"In respoqse to'growing needs of our
society, this' eenter will help develop cohesive and comprehensive prosrams to
increase our Cil~llty for improving the
- well heini of ' o'lder persons· and their
contributions to·our oociety,..and of cpntrolhng the pr~ of aging in futu"'
seneRrions,~' Dr. Yeracaris says.
...,_The center will alsO serve as·an inlor~on source fOr public ·and · private
agencies for thl! a&amp;ed in -New York State.
: In addition, -ernphiiSjs will he placed. on
the development of well trained scientists-,.and · professionals , who will stall

research, training and Service institutions
dealing with the elderly.
·Activities of the center will include
research in the biologic_al ~iences~
' ~adinx to a hener understanding of the
process of aging, . and research .and .
educational programs in the health
sciences for i111proving both .the J&gt;h_yslc;!l
and meo!•l health. of ~mor C!!'Z&lt;!RS.·
Research m·the. ~al soences w•JI·
he emphasiZed •n order to ~.nalyz&lt;!
emerging social, legal, econom•c and
(Jum to poge t col. ·21 "

•!so

�Job Openings_/

FACULTY
Assistant Professor, Pathology.

•

Assislllnt .,!:ibrari~n (law library), University Libraries, PR-1.

As52Ciate Librarian, Uni'("rsity libraries, PR-2.
Assistant/Associate librarian (Health Sciences),
UniV..rsity'libiilries, PR-1.
Associate and Assistant librarian (2 positions),

University i.l~ries, PR-1.

'
-;

· ·

.

Associate librarian (Refereni:e), Unilleliity libraries, PR-3.
AssistaOt/Fate librarian, University l ibntries, PR-1.

NIP
' Programmer Analyst. Computing Services, PR~i·:
• Admissions Counselor, l'dmissions· &amp; Records, PR-2.
Assistant to Executille Vice #!resident (half time), ,
Office"'f ·t he PreSident, NS.
Director of Computin&amp; ~ces, Computing Services, PR..,t.
TeChnical Specialist, Chemistry, PR-1.
·
·
Technical Assistant, Unlveroity Publications, PR-1.,. .

F~ add;ti.;-,;~j

c::~rning

and-~ ~Is

infor:.:.tion;,
; ; _ Job,
of ,NiP openiri(S' throushout the-State l:lniveroity system, consult bulletin•&amp;.rds -at ·
these lbcatiol\s: '.
..
4- ,_

4

0

0

'

•

, •'

'

•

•

0

•

'

'1. aen Facility!;- om-~"oo o1s1;i Rldse LU.~ing'42i&amp;, ~~eXt to
· cafeteria; 3. Rids!! lea, Building~230, in corridor nexttoC-1; 4.Health 5dences
B.uildlng. ~ corrid_or opposite'~-131; s. Qlpen Hall, in the cOrridor ti'elwien

Room_.141 and the loblly; &amp;.Lockwood,,.around floor In Ullrldor next toftllding machines; 7. Hayes_Hall, in main ~trapce'foyer;'KK'U
lnfor- '

'"*"Public

~Office; .8.~ Hall, _ln corridor betweat ~112 and 111;'9. ._
........- fnslne.,rfhs, in corridor next to Room 1S;.1Q. c:ioodyeu-HIII, 11L8oor, .
~ OffiCe ..-; 11. 11117 Elmoioood,, l'eisonnel Depanment; 12. Norton '
f;MNaon......._Ofllcle. a -_225; 13. DiefenciDrf )'lall, ill corridor next to' '
&lt;"T'"" 14. lii!on l:ald ~ Hall, foutth ff'oor IAnJhent -&lt;:ampus).

li'!'::-

0

--~· ....~~-~:o...o.w;,~-,.;,.,;.-~

�E~menfal -.
~med .course

set for fall .

M.expertmenul cour.e oflering a un-

lqve~unhy for undt:rsraduate

· l

studenli-Who Ale ;nter~ in medial
~~pin some ;eXperience iir,1
c:llnbl felting will tie offered .. an incle;ieticlenl study project, ;this fall .' , f"*:Peflartment of Health Sciences
liducetlon and Evah{ation and the Cardio-Pulmonary ' Department of
_V - - Hospital will offer a new cour.e .
~ correlatts theofetk:al understan- ·
dinB of the pll~and funCtion Of
the cardlovastu. . oystem with practical
dinical experiencle. A spo~eSman from ·~
the . Cardlo-Pu"'-!ary - ()epartment · o( -•
Vet-otilerved that this course would
~ an' excellent opportunity lor
pre-lh!!d students eo determlne how well
they Uke ~~~~~fn a clinical setting as a \
means· of"clarlftlng their vocational

·soak-

. .

-

· ~ in the coo.ir.e will receive

l~ .. in -~e basiC ana om)i a~

..

.iiiWslclb!Y ol ~ ardiQ!rascul.k S¥Stem
ian8 WllrSI.tdY the~lq_ues of car-

di~scular
Cjlt1tetefiz·atlon,
dnaftl!l*'•o!ls ind ~f1!of:ams.'
·A ~de variety of.teachintltchiliques"lndudlng videotape -.nd ROi'ICUNI self.instriictiOnal pri&gt;gram5~1 be
Studenb will=~ the unusual
~nhy of
and participating
. as members of a suralcalteam. · '
The times Whiiit die course will meet .
: will be art&lt;mged· around siu~ C­
. sdiedulei _fo}!ow,ing. an orginizatioltal
ml!eting. lll!fjdpallon is Umilea'.and ad, ditioNI !nfOW'I'tion "can be obtiolnact'6)'-calling 831~245.' 1 · _,, • ' • ' ·- •

'

"""'loye&lt;!,
oi-

Gr_eek group ~
·seeks
.. . . . aid. for,_-:-.-.
.

..

··-·....

....

war ~ VJ~ -

~ ~. ~ --:.~ 1 ', ,.,

.· ·'i :J: · -1 .eo_rly s.!Unl.y A.omlng when
the news about the war in Cyprus reach·
ed the American pUblic.- It waS' a ·great
sulprise to the people as well as to the
governments" around the world.· Heavy fighting raged on Cyprus .dunn last- -- L:-::-;-:----:----::-----------------;-----;....;'---,--...,...--.:o..-:--,,_....,,....;;...___....:,___j
wee_l&lt;end as Turkey invaded the_str
·
·· ·· ·
-~.-....

P,ay·iiiil
.for-·medical care-Daffles
p

.~:i::;:~:~~7r.;~~~~~:~~~g:topple
the Greek-oriented regime that deposed

P_reside"! Makafi&lt;M ,about ten' days ago.
Greece and ·Turkey mean!Nhile were

.'

ready to enter a bloody and · expensi~e

war.
~ .
, ,
The U.N.- Security _Council apP.,aled
-unanimously for a cease fire on Cyprus
and for immediate negotiation for peace
. on the Island. Monday afternoon ~he
cease fire took effect.
After almost three days of heavy
fighting, there Is no doubt the casualfiei
must be enormous, according to th.e
news and the tourists whp ' left Cyprus.
Many people have been killed and many
more' have been wounded. The needs of
those .people who have been affected by
the latest war in Cyprus _a re tremendous.
The Hellenic Association of SUNY1AB
with the worm suppon '!f the Greek
faCulty of the University has been very
much conceO'l&gt;ed about the situation an
the Mediterranean Sea, ~nd particularly
about the innoce(lt ~ims of this war.
We have opened~ Hellenlc -Emer.senq fund. Anybody -interested in o::ontributing to it please send your check to:
Hellenic •·Emergency fund, do Peter
Groumpos, lEU, Suite 211, Tawnsend
Hall, Buffalo, New,. York 14214.
·
Anypooy who is willin'g to give some
-bloc&gt;d is encouraged to call fqr an .appointment Aols, B. WHiiams, Ameriqan
Red Cross, at 886-~500, ext. 282. The offlee hours ~re the followinl!': Monday, _
9:30-12 noon; T~y, Nl.p.m.; frkfay,
9:30-3 p.m.; Saljlrday, 9:30-12:30 p.m.
__._ Qouolopoo

Studen~

1

- ·

ly

M8r Beth Spina ·

.. :- ftlrcNIAnoc:~M~ Hoth Sc::irtftces

-~
·

. "It/'s haid to believe pll!lple hej e mu.st
pay o~ medical and hospotal care -: on
our country jt's .free •tor all citizens,"
observed th~ee D~n!sh ~tudents who
toured teachong hospotals on Buffalo thos
mon!h.
.
,
· Two of the students, Jorgen Elmo
Jensen and Marianne Boas, are medical
students ahd the third,, Susanne Soren·
son, , is a biochemistry major. All are
en'ro11ed at t'he. Unive r_s ity of
Copenhagen. They are here under the
auspices of the Danish International
StudentJ _Sodety anendinl! U/B's lntensove Enghsh Language lnstotute.
·
Tou_ring the _Veter~ns' A.sfministration
Hospoial, Choldren s, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute and the UIB dinical
Center Pain Clinic at Meyer Memorial,
the· studenb weres urplised to see no .
female physicians and no ~le nurseS! In
Den~~rk,~about 35 per cen'l of all
physooans are women, .and male nurses
are a o::ommon·sight in Oanim hospitals.
They. were iJTlpressed with !he dOsed ·
circuit televi.lon stll!lios located at the
VA Hbspital; ond ,th~ am~nt of work
th.r~ghout hospjtal! here that is per. formed by a~t~t,ed equipment. "In
labonotory tesb ~re '!'Ore of the work is
d6he by ~terizatlon. In Denmark
much is still
ne by hand," they said.
The two mect!cal studen~ said they
were lnte~ l n medicine as • coreer

~= !:~~~~n':'d:n~~

Graduate
_
MOIII CaADS IB'IC ,._, ·
. much more Income than people in-other
......,_-!'*-'r'Wnoi•
eoopo&lt;t • ·
so thai
.... .._ _ _ _ _ ............
. eo;ofesslons,
- t """-·· tlo
I InCreased
___ .. __ t income-is
L. _ .. tln-I';J,IM~.........,.c:;,;;;; . . no~"""'~~ n or ...........tJ o...,..,me
c1 _..,-....;. 11oe - .._!oownef, · . P!&gt;ysidans_, ~- oiid. AlthQUsh ~....... ~._n.,...-,_.ioolilo&lt;t&lt;il_
a font~ of sodall~ ~!9ne,
In ~.....,....,.._,
-:~:-whoc;h f)!'C!Ykles·ft,a care to Ill Q14:el!!')',
" .,.~~~ , II)IY, change ~· ..SUsanne

.· .-.·:·
.

...

.-,,

.nla!k !'as

,_

'

\ ·
pointed out: 'She i~ interested in dOing '

Daraes-,

- whereu in Denmari&lt;, the ...;.,id-be
'
doctor must . . - , .U ..,.. in ·order to
, research in the pr0blemt10f"how to in· '
crease and impro-'e. food sup~fi&lt;;&gt;. "Jo.
get one~., lolllen.llicl. Two year&gt;
have good health generaHy, it os ompor- '
as a "~ ls' lilqul'*' oher
tant to eat balanced diets. In Denm.uk,
medial Khootttwa,.._ 10 ~ calleif
"doctor." n-·
t.ip811l in
which is a rural country, people stjll have
hospitol ancJ.., similar 1 0 - ~ip
a feeling for the farm where fOod" is raisprogram.
·
,
· ed. Here, people eat more 'snack' food
The three saki they'voe enJured their
which is not as good for them" SuSinne
stay in Buffalo,and hne been Impressed
observed. She and the ottoe'r studenb
with how polite people hne been. "We ·
were amned at . the vivid coloring of
have reaOy felt welcome .nd have enmany of our foods- which is achieved
joyec'l our visit," they noted. ,
by artifidal o::olor additives. " Here ·the
Other students in the Dulbh group ·
orange juice is so .orange and the meab
-visited their areas of lnteiest while in
are so red. In Denmark, this artificial
BuHolo, according to Mike -Lynch,
coloring:is not added 5o oriuch," Jorgen
Amerihn field director with the
said.
Institute.
"'
,.,
In spite of the fact that much of the.
treatment and testing which is provided
here only in hospitols is performed in
Honudng
Denmark's · docton' offiCes ond out-~ •
patient-dinic:s, there'is st,Hia crfitcal rieed
The UniversitY Housing Offoce hu
for more · hospital -beds over there.
assumed responsibility for the Off~About 50 per cent of the hosj&gt;ital
Campus Housl~ Office, Madison L
patienb in our country are .over 65 and
Boyce, director of, housing, reported this
..there is no room in nursing hOmes 'for
week.
_ ,.them," one of the studenb .said_- Under
At the same time, Boyce remlnd!ed in·
Daflish health i...Unonce, t~re is no limit
coming faculty and staff, those facultY"
asto.how mu~ hospitol care thes~and staff with aanmmodatlons for lease ,
ment will provide free to elderly citizens,
and/or rent, and·studenb that the. Off. .:
sowme eldeily ~" Jn loosp!tals pntil
Campus Houslng-Offlce provides listings
they die. "Many of these ll!qulre.hospital
of available:'eq!AI opportunity" housiflll _
care, but odoers nefid Only Custodial careIn the C0f!1munlly. New faruhy, Sla(f and
. which they could get !n i nursing home~ studenb a" esi&gt;edaJiy invited to corilult
iltheycouktgetln,''~studenblldded.
lists in the Offlce to help them ' fincl 1 _
· In the oreJI !)# iriedlcal care, the
place for . the fall. In -.ddiilon, Ioyce~

ra&lt;&gt;lriult

a

help

:=.,~~:; , ~·!ff=::::.J:::.t.=! .~

::_~b

fact mediCal studenb begin spedalized
lion on 'fM'opertles they wislt to rent,
study in their first
lease _or syb-lease
for
their
l yeor of college and
·----·
f the term of _..__
!"USt- ~ntinue or seven years. ~In
..,.ye as· wao as lnormotion on""""'
America, a student get5 a degree alter • rental properties. •
four year&gt; a.nd then 1oe5 to medical. · The Off-Campus- Housing Offoce k
school four I'IIOn! 'years. At the oencl of
located on the first floor of GQodyear ·r.
foor yeors, 'he has a degree of some.sort
Hall, telephone 131·2426.

�~

~-

.,~ -~~ -

to

~~~ - -~.
-~~~:. .
, _ b[lhe $cflool of
acco"'inl to Dr.

~-s;:;_.,_W~Mnted ac~.,_been

.

chairman of

-d Comniunlty Health
- - , . , -named 10
Dr ~ Robert &amp;..· .

lrer
Ketter.

.

.

• UU.UfiiMO' .
.
•
Mante,W.&amp;h. Conference Theatre, Norton;
qoU_1131·5117 for. times. Adm~ ~rge.

A.~NtwYod&lt;City,Dr.Sperois

graau. ...,

the Bellevue Hospital
Sdtool of Nuninl. and NCeiYed the B.S.
in nlftiM. the ~r's •"JI Ph.D.

:a

desretl._ New Yolk UtllveniiY. She
~ aloo ,_.. ~
Ill Jlllbllc .~lth
from f9!!na Ropklns, flrior to coming to
u/8, ~ was directw .ol-die gradl!ate
progmn In C01111111111ity health nursing at

n..?'s

RIM; · _

N.Y.U.; M\d had been su~ of .the •
Vislt~"Nune Servlc!e ,ift N~ .YOrk Cll)l. _
She. 11 vja! cbalrman o[ the National
league of folllnltll:s Bacxa~oirellte a~.!l
Higher 9eafee Maedltatlon · Review·
Board ~ wllkh aiXn!dits all sdlools of ~nursing in hlllf)er educati0t1 - a"hd .is -a
member 9
advjs6ry committee Of
the U.

me
S; Public .Neal~

Service's

_ Com~unity Da~ tteal!h·-~de Ce~ter.' -

If_

Dr•
•

IS

- •-•.!.::.::.1.

..,.~~ _.,

-;

•.

~~ t ~

~~-~~

.

P·ll'· ~ odmissio~

cha

.

Diefendorf;~ -

- •
rge. ;_~ ,__,_.-·

~a,;;, lin~ln (Griffith), l 40Capi-n, 3 &amp; 7
p.m. No.odmission charge.

•

·~

MlPAU'CONCBr
_
·
• •·u
· trum-ter. Mite.. Davis, 7:30 p.m. and .· _
Mon ligWOOl. foTksinge&lt;, 10:~ p.m., Arf-

parr Th~tr,e_,

charge.

Lewbton, N .Y. Admi!sion
, ·
.
_· ·• _ ·

,IHTBINATIONAL FOJI( DANONC' ··' .

,

• Instruction for bqinnen. In good_lY..ther,
~~;.-:rn,n~ain &gt;or~; ~rwi5e1 23j ~~rto~,

· ,_ ;: UyM·fi!.M"
SponSOied I!Y Bolkan Fplk ~nang. _ •
~ •
•·.

~- ~'- MOntiWOllsh,&lt;!QAferencelilei:t~.~Onon;

or. Byron J. Koek~- has ~ ri:

• • ~ ~-5117 (I" .times. AdmissiOn charge. ,
, • '!' 'SATU.RDAY-27 ..-

·aPP.Ointed chairman.« the•Dep;ut"""t
of Germani£ and-SlaVIc .for a three-yi!ar
tern) effectiye Septem.ber 1:
-Q_r. Koekkoek, who received the Ph.D.
froin !he tJnlv.ersily of Vl.e nna in 1953,
came to U/8 in that year as an instructor
in Ge:r·m-an, was named anistant
prafeHOr in 19SS, and full professor ten
. years later. 'He was forst •PJI&lt;!inted chair'man of the department in ·1971.-He serv- ·
e.! as acting associate provo« of the
Faculty of Arts and letters from ·1970-n,
and has been- actove or · fa~ulty-wide
,· tommllt~ throUKhout hislenllre. ln.
1972-73 ~ served as chairman of the
· Faculty senate Committee 6n Academic
Freedom and Responsibiliiy.
;.

.

Birth of a .Nation CG"riffithl, W

UUAI RIM••
When rhe Lesends Die, Conference
Theatre, NOrton; call 831-5117 for times. Ad- .

mission chirge.

SUNDAY-28
SHAW R!SllVAL EXCUtiiON'
lhe Shaw Festival excursion pickage plan
includes a ticket to the_production of Bnndon Thomas' ChMieY.s Aunt, a steak buffet at

the Pilior ana Post, and round-trip coach
transpi&gt;(lation. SWdents,J17; foculty, staff and
U/8 •lumnl, $18.50; seneral public, $20. Additional inforrrt.ition and tickets are avai~ble
\ ~!._ the

NortonJ :Iall Ttdet Office.

: : :; .;

~'t;~u:~~f.ei;'!ds Die~ Co0fere~ce"

-~=·

qoll·arr-5117 lor times. Ad-

COP OUT-c&amp;EAT AMBICAN I'ASTJMf
· Ment'"al Retardatfom Retapped Resources,
with suests Or. Normo~n Cole, 'director of
pupir personnel se.Vices, Williamsville School
Dbtrlct, •nd vice presi&lt;lent, Project Retap;

and

or. Sidney

hrnes, professor of creative
studies, SUC/Buff•lo, and member, lloard of
Directors, Project Retap..,Proi:ram moderator
b Mar~ J. fstnen. \)'K-BW radio, 10 p.m.
U/1 AII1S FOliUM

Composer P~uline Oliveros, visiting
professor in the U/ 8 Depanment of Music,
will discuss with hostess Esther Swartz the con-

~ _of improvisation, orginic rhythm tmd
• ~I compositions~ ¥{ADY-FM, 10:05 p.m.

'FtlM·- ..- .. . . .;. ..
- - . • ~
.
The llig hr.ode (Vidor), J40 Capen, 3 &amp; 7 p.m. No admission charge. I •
COWumt salvtCB SEMINAQ
Data formals f or l'rol&lt;rom Lilnry Vsen, In:
structed by lj..-vey ~xlerod, 4Zli· Riilge Lea;
Rm. 10, 7-9 p .m.

Study·on aging-:assUmed

the ~ ctrom ~ 1, coL 4J •
responsl!lllltle5 of TyPPiraP!'oics Depart· · politlc.ol pra'blefT!S of the aged. The
mentsuPervisor. FonMrly
¥edal
Typing.· ~ department
supervised • center will • be involved, too,- In
cooperating with local hospitals in
by Mrs. Mildred Jones P,!'i&lt;lf 10 her retlreclinical research and-practice in the ~n ­
meot.
.
'
lal and physiOlogical health areas. " ~
. Mr. ~tt, holder of a B:f.A. i!\..cc&gt;mFounding faC)IIty of the center, in ad~ inunltalion cleslsn from,U/8, join~ the
Unive§lty ·Relations pivislon following _ dition to Dr. YeracariS, are: Dr.-Harold
Brody, profesoor and chairman 'of the
seven years at Arcati Gr!tPhics Corporaoeparimei'it of AnatomiCal Sciences -in
lion. His community Involvement inthe School of NlediCine; Dr. Robert Ca·
graphic ;arts director for
aucleS
bral, adjunct assistant profeSsOr of
the ~~on Hughes Ceniel· for the
sociology and ·director of ,program
•- V~l· ariif Nrlormlng Art\, .
development and evaluation for the Erie
Coun_ty Offtce of the Aslni; Dr. Eleanor
Jacobs, clinical professor of menial
PrOfessor Waiter C, HobbS of · the
heoith; Dr. Abraliam Marik; professor in
· . Depa...._,l of- HiJiher Edur:alion has
the Sctiool of Social Worlti Dr. Morton
been named aaing' chairman of thai
Rothstein, --professor of· c&lt;-11 and
· departmen~effective _Septem""' 1·of this
m61ecular bioJosY, and Dr. John Tllomas,
yur through Aup15t 31, 1975, Executive
· assOci4lle professor'of. orsanizalion and
human - iesCiurces hi the School of
V'oce President Albert Somit •Tlnounced
Manqemeni: -'
this week.

ailed
om

service ••

_~··~dlngJn ,higher~ed

S'iturdays, noon?5

eveni"'} 7·9 p.m.

p--:m., and

• ·

Tuesday

·

: UIRAai~

'TUESDAY-30

First editions of the works of ~mjlel
lledcetr from the a&gt;llection of lodcwood
..
- - Mehlorlal library, Ind .f loor balcony,
A SO-mile round-trip to She151on beaches
LO&lt;:Ioooocl.' Viewi"' !'ours: Monday.fj~, 9
will le.ve frorp. Norton tQII, 8:30 ·a.m. For ~- \ a.m.~s p.m. Cont~nu•ns-·
·
!'{fa';)'~~tlon, !:'op by ·223 ·Nofton, or _ LOCKWOOD Bturr•.,.
MU: HIU

RIMS'
Potemkin (Eisenstein) and Cops (KeatOn), •
140 Capen; 1 &amp; 3 p.m. No odmission charge.
COMIUTIII SBIVICI5 SIMINAq
.
Update-MOdify, instructed by - Roser- Campbell, 4238 R!dge l~, Rm: 10, .?·9 p.m.

WEDNESDA Y-31
FilMS'
• The Crowd (Vidor! and Our Daily Bread
(Vidor). 140 Clpeh, 3 "&amp; 7 p.n1. No admiuion
charge. ,
·
~

· : .'.THURSDAY-:-1
filM' .
Kiss Me DeOdly (Aldrich), 140 C.pen; 1 &amp; .3
p .m:-- No admisSion ctwae. ·
·
·
COMPUIBI sBVICB·SIMINAJII

E. Scott has

MIDIA 5lUDY ~
"'
- •
Lalln Amerian Art. i Q&gt;llection of woH&lt;sliiterpretlng the lbird World.!&gt;y artists indudil18
Julio Teidl. ·tdlredo Poiljlios, -Lub llenedjt,
Jocqiies~ lleael, Juon ' Beraotche: and CarloS
Gin'Zbet:J. T)lis I&gt;'tile.lim of a series of Media
study. exhlbltions ~urlfl8 st!U-~I&gt;Otc&gt;lrilphy
and.ohe sr;ii&gt;hk ....... 3325-S.iley Avo., through
August 10. Viewing hourS: Tuesditys tlirough

Update-Mod~fy,

-

,£oibh Collection, an.exhibition wllecUrom
the tlitlversity's collec;{ion .o f more than 4,000
volumes ol matert.l, flrst floor, l.ockwood
Memorial library, Monday.frido'y, 9 a.m.-5
p.m: tontinuins.

--=--.&lt;- -..-N-Q~T-IC-,-E_S_____
A lo R OffiCE HOUIIS
The Offia! of Admiosions and Records, 1
tlayes II; will be open from a:lO ·•.m-~:30 p.m.
on the following-dates: July ts, 26, 30 and 31;
AlJIUSI 1, 2, 6, 7, 13, 14, 20-23. On .all other •
weekdays duril18 JUly ond August the Olfoce
will ~ ~ frorp 8:~a.m.-t:lO p.m. . _

UlPAU lHIATRE OPINING ,
n.,u.day, ~Illy ~ mortis llie pia Jntei-

~':"0:,~~~ ~C"t!'::r!::
Me.m.n,

indUde Ethel
Cicely lfSOI', Edward
Villelo and Michael Tilson ]homos, coridUclil18 the Bufholo Phllharmonk Qrchestra. The ._
event begins at 8:30 p.m. Information on
licit~·~ perfor""'nce schedules Is available
at thl' Artpork Theatre Box Office, 479-Center
St., Lewiston 17161 75ol-4m. Box offia! hours

,instruCted. by Roge.r
Campbell, 4238 Ridge Lea, Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m.'
sUMMER FilM INSTJ1'UTP
~
Screening/discussion with filmmaker H&lt;'len
. v.m Donsetl Durant, 140 Cipef), 8 p.m. No adare 10.e:m.·.7 p.m., seven days a week. Tickets
miuion charse.
.
- •
_
.
.also ~nilable at Nortol) Jlckii
AIITPAH CONCBP
:
H..vy Otpn; VIrgil Fox with Jhe Re...UfOIIBCN STUDENT ~
tion LJshts, 1:30 p.m. AnP.arlr. · Tjaeatre, • ~ATION VolUNT&amp;a
..
Lewiston, N. Y: Admission ~rie.
~. Both .AmeriCan 'ind fCHeiBn student
,
volunteeB are needed to help with loretsn
stl!dent Foil orientation servlctio such .. in~ ' tranSpo'Jiotio!J, ~ip!'o registration,
~rid-campus tour}, alld with prosr.am activities
uT ~
- 1noU4i118 excursions, a. pip&gt;~. pany
Drawings •nd W•t..-cOion.-i!Y Olicio C.
and bonquet. Orientation actiVlties ,.UI pke
PelOsi, Brull~n srodU.te *uclen~ Hayes Hail _Place August 27·September 3. Those who
lobby cfi5J)Iay cases; Monday~. 9 a.m.-5 1 want to have some'UOH-CUituraloxperiences
p._m: Tlvoush July 31.
~shoUJd can •Ernie at the ForeJap Student ofPresent~ by the Offlc;e'bl CulturaiAfhoir&gt;.
ftee, 831·31211 (In the alt~l-

'*:tee.

"

'.EXHIBITs·

;

I

......

.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>.''llj Joh~ ~ -

Hall. i~ connected to O'Brian and· will be
'joined by. several other buildings in the
coming yu:rs. '
..- .
Dominating the view along Millenpon
Highw.ay, between Maple and
Skinnersville "Roads, is a pair of11ktory
. tbwers that will house the School of
Pharmacy and Department of Biofosy.
Exteriors of these buildings are comqmstruction progr~s at the Amherst
Campu.s, as more structures take -their
pleted. Named for Walter P: Cooke·aild
places in an already interesting skyline.
Ralph Hochstetter, the twin toWers wiO
Universi~X._91tidals note that on all
h;we a separate contrat1 for · interior
projects currently underway ·constrUe- • work. That contract, .as well 'as,.-an~ ·
tion progreSs- is either on or afiead of • for a related g~nhouse profed, ls ex-.
pected to be let this ·summer.
·•
sch'e dule. The absence of major work
Practically hidden from sight along the
-stoppages, good weather conditions and,
same route, and situated \O the north of
in general, fast Work by contractors are
the O'Brian anrl Baldy buildings, is the
' reasons cited· for-the progress.
industrial Engineering building, the third
As John lord O'Brian Hall, the law ·
strUcture on which Construction 'has
· facililty, and the GovernOrs · Residence
moved inside. Though considerably
Hall Co(Tlpl~ prepare to begin their
smaller than its neighbors, t!ie Engineer~ sophomor;e year of qperations, attention
ing structure will provide space for the
is centering on moving occupants into
Department of lndusttial Engineering
the Joseph P. Ellicott'College·complexand the School of Information and
Amherst's ne)l'est complet~ addition.
library Studies.
·
.
The 38-building Ellicott Comi!IJox·will
A fourth structure scheduled for comserve vario.us academtC and reSlaential
pletion c .ring 1975 is Francis E. froncuk
Reeds for som~ 6,000 students when fully
Hall, the new home lot I:JIB's Depan._ &lt;&gt;~c~pied. This summer the first 1,200
ment of Physics:· Brick endooure -con•... ~~dents will move-in as Well as a dozen
...tinUes on the structure .1nd will be com~ or more academic departments,
pleted
this- summer. Fronczak HaD is
coll!!giate Qffices and service functions.
situated nonh of tlje Cook~
Thoee ~ UnilsadooHtowers.
.......... . .
D!ree more. academic units are now

... -

j,~~~lniOf'tNidon~

...~ ..

Two ~reopen. -Tiiir:ty-eight more will
~ 9pen .rhis•fall. lhree.,are&lt;:omplett;.on
the outside. Another is, being endosed.
Two~ are skeletOris and three more are
tf\ere, but only slightly noticeable.· ·
That, very simply, describeS current

ff"

..hluY' ~~-ha~to,
th~..-..ins4&lt;iet·-h,e~

interlor .~suf&gt;­

m'nlractots .continUe to ready the structures for their early to late 1975 debuts. ,
During the past year, O 'Brian Hall
grew an add'itional 9~,000 $quare-feet to
the east. ·That addition Is- Christopher
whiCh is to be the home for
of Educational Studies and
-Departrili,nt

:. - Qerttal

_r.t ~se,a·rc:~n _ . . ~1!-Jdy.

~va&lt;;c:;ine
·

to fi

~ ~llrlda .;_, ~

t·~~avtlles ~

prOcess cOsts ArnericariS a; estimated $2

..
· · .· _ . . . ,
billiol}Annually. "" .
IMhe.not too distant past, grOWing-up
. Polilble Prlndpal.Af,ent
The growing -suspicion that caries is a
almOst inl!)'itably meant a oolrt'With on~"'.
, or more ·childhood ·diseases: mea~,
communicable bacterial disease was
mumps, whoopl!!.g cougb, "even polio.
confirmed 'in studies by d'ental
. ' Today, thanks to routine immuni~,tions,
r~archer Paul H. Keyes published in
1960, recalls Dr. Emmings. Subsequently,
these diseases ~ looser raze Whole
..; dassf'&lt;!Oms and neighborh&lt;&gt;ods. In the
Keyes and others focused · attention on
future, routine prevelrtivt! health care
Streptococcus mutans ·as the ~ible
may also l.r\dude.Yaccinatfon against y.e t
principa_l bacterial agent in the
another common, costly, though rarely
cariogenkyrocess. •
life-threatening dise.ase of .childho&lt;id =To do its dirty work; 5. mutans .needs
(!ental-caries.~-,~.
sugar, or r1)9fe precise:ly, waose. Eacf{·
A vaccine- effective against human
bacter.ium·has on its surfaee· ~ number of
cavities is still in.the pni-testing~e, but
enzymes. Several of these enzymes, the
its feasibility has been demonstrated by
Scientist explains, synthesiZe sucrose to
U/B,oral biologist Fred G.~Emmings and
produce polymers, sticli"y substances
his Colleagues in the School of. Dentistry,
whiCh facilitate the implantation of .t he
R~ril T. Evans and RObert J, Genco.
bacteria on the surface· of the tooth.
WoddRB lll1ilh irit.monkeys, ~nim~ls in , ' 9r. EmmingS'and ot!lers bega11 explor.which tart~ develo.p · much . as 'ln
jiJS,the fe~bilitY pl) t carieS vaccine,alter
humans, the· ScientiSts l'iave SUCCI!SSIUlly• :;:tJIB a1umnus 9r. Martin 'Taubman; an
interfered with. the .bacterial implanta- ". immuno·Joglst at the Forsyth Dental •
tiOn or infection stage Of til~ cario~enic · , ~n'Stilute, demonstrated-a correlation, in •
. proc:e:ss 'by means of a vacone. · · . ra,ts between the lntidence of caries and
-. According to th~ Nat~a! ll)sli!_uto: for -~ the animal's le_vel pf salivilr;y antibody.
Dental Rese.arch, . a lypLcal· Amerocan
, Taubman shoo9l!lt"that carieS could be
teeoager hascll~ !"'ries-damaged teeth..
redo~ by increasing the individual's
TheSe ~ are a result of a process In
l~el of, lmmunoglobuli!1 A (lgA) · an.
w.hiP, or-al &amp;acteri~ alwa~ p(I!SI!IIt In the
. til&gt;ody, the principal antibod~jn sud)-"'- _
• &lt;&gt;mouth, ImPlAnt'on·-the enamel surfaces ·• ternal secretions as saliva and tears. &gt;·
5 01 ,lJle tee~cteria quickly mulDirect -qlatloa ~ ~
·: ~
~~~nttjbuting to ~.formation ~of • _ In ordtor .'tc&gt;- stimulat_e JgA antibody
P-liiJiitf..,.a. sticky coating , of bacteroa, 'Pr&lt;&gt;&lt;!uction, Dr. Emtnlng&gt; vaccinated
salita,Y::•J!Ycoi&gt;!Oteio5; salts and food
adult Iris .monkeys
killed Strep-:
de'Jris ~ dlngslcHhe ~- Once im' ' tococCils murans .and a aUde prepa(aplaiM.(I crt&gt; ~~. . . lhacterla let;·
lion ol.enzymes lrom'the culture fluid In
' ment ciiri'M&gt;llyuqtes,~!fy a~gar, " . which the bictt!rii Were! srown. When
to prl)l!_u ce Kids that attack the tooth · this vaccin~· was Injected into tlie
enaili\:!l":5 auslns declar:. 'This dl~se
,
'
Clum ro ;..,."l. ool._u

with

..

~W~Ior}~ =-~

..

urly SJ!!el V.:Orf&lt; lor me ~nme of the
Engtosh and Modern language$ building,
located east· of .the O'Brian and Baldy
structures, may n&lt;&gt;w be seen by passers- ·
by. The lo-story. building is schedul!!&lt;f fpr
completion in e:.rly 1976 and wjll attprn·
modate approximately . 2,800 students
and faculty members.
·
.
Another frame, a ·white steel stnicture
dose to Millersport Hwy., is the campus's
. .......... - .Z..CXJI.

�Mii~

Sawner named

to past iif PT .
Kathryn A. Sawner-has ~n named to
a_ one-year aPP9int"'!'nt as executive ofDepa~t~nen( of .J'hysiql
· - Therapy, School of · Health . Related
Pi:ofesslon$, according' . to"'a• jOint an• ..
nouncemen~ by President Robert .b. ·
Keiter aiid Vice President 'for 'H51th .. .,•.-......,,._..--""'····
Sciences F, Carter 'Pannill. . \
·
•
Miss Sawner h~ been~ an~ aSSiStant ~,.
prpfessor in the Departinens. and• has'
serv~ as dir.ectofo&gt;bf continuilig&lt;eduea- ·

ficer of the

tion....

~.:.._~
-_
She came.'to U/8 'from' the New Ybrk
State ~ Rehabilitation ~ H_ospital, Wesf •

Haverstraw.·

.

J:

""

-

Heller BppoJnted .. ··

~rofessor. Robert.HeJie( h.s.:t&gt;;.~~p:..
poonted acting chairman ·of 'the·Oepart- ·
rnent of Educational Admlnktration. ~·
effective September 1, . 1974, through
January 31,~1975...
· :.
The ap'pointrnent was made by Pres;,
dent .Robert't.. Ketter on the.rec:Omrnendation of Educ;ationa! Studies Provost ·
Rollo Handy ·aQ,d Dr. Bernard Gelbaum, :
· vice P'I!Sident for academic affairs. · ·

..

.

:

.:..~ ~

:..

~

.

�lliliilr .......
.

. ._,.;...

1

.'

..-~ ,

·.

6rant fo train 6 ·students
··for drug_educatio~ .work
more
.,_~
A 52;635 .,_,., from the U.S. DepartDrus eduation and 1nlftJnlr ~
Instilled the vac-·
metit of.Melllh.-,&gt;fducation and Welfare
can be well coordiMied wlih hicully-MCI
the monkeys' &gt;1livary
will make~ a drug-abuse training
su.ff,.Dr. Grexton pol'!!&gt;~ ''but part.of
of tfny tubes or cinulae.
~=• Unlver!lty Sllldi!nts who
the sue~ I• dependent upon lmstimul~led "In this· ,.ay,
lO!I!
iaplannlftJ'.and Initiating
plementalion ~ Sllldents. The ....
oecretory •
production did take
drug ec1uca11on prapams' on cammemlien will~ a .an group actlnil as
place. The ~ 'then squl~ live S.'' pus ariel In the coininuniJy.
•' .
. antennae to the sensitivities and needS of
mutans onto the teeth of both tlie vacACX!Ordlns 10 br. ldna M. Grexton of
students, facilitators . of communication
dnated!fiO!Ik~all!l .acootrol!llriiUP:S. .' •Swdent Alfalrs. who j1 ~dlnator ~f ' amoni student•, faculty and adj mutans, •ihe sCjendScs lOUnd, dRI not
dtus" programs ·on;campus, the 5ix. wjll ministrators, educators, and..teseaidlers
In the dena.~ plaque of , work clo5ely . wfth ber and with a
'both on -campus and !n the community."
\ ~ily
the vaa:lnated ~ Slnc:eimplanu.Unlversl!f-wlde, (aculty-•taff drug
These efforto wiD be coordinated "with
~ 15 one of de ~'Y steps In the.
Pr08ram !'Dfiamittee• which has been '&gt; those of Dr. Grexton's-office.
time.
Dr. Grexton's position as coprdinator
-deVelopment ofGries, tl)l!l' expect tfm:·· fuiK:tlonlilg fOt
tile lleated mon~wlll ~feWer.• , ·"Members of ' !he. studeni ~eam, Dr.
·of campus drug programs was es'u.blishaovltle5 lhml the untreated C!Oflt!'Ois. .
• Grexton ,Indicates, will attend an intened in September 1971. Members of the
"lthasbeeneigllt..aaonthsslna!weinoive session at one of the federallyfa&lt;;Uity.lstalf comminee, with which she
oculated the monkey$,'' ~ys Dr. "EmsupPorted a&lt;ug educafion centerS 'in
has been wo~king (each of whom has
mlngs, "and the anlmab !In! lust now
the nortfiNst. "The)' will be expected to
ha&lt;! drug program training similar to that
ileg_lnnlng to develop i:arles.": 11eca_use
dioseminate the information ihey gain
the students will receive) are: Charles
cuoes develop• . 50 slowly on adult
at ihe lr;til'lng oenter 1;&gt;1' way of panels,
Klepak, counsel!"•. Student Personnel
.mon~ · e.-en . amon&amp; monkeys ll_k e_
seminars, radio spot announcements,
Services; Dr. M. luther Musselman,
these on a ~k tliet of s,u8ar,
television, and classroom presenUitions
assisa.nt director, University Health Ser_coated bana"'!5 and peanut butter~and In their daily encounters· with other
· vice; lee Griffin, assistant director, Camjelly. &gt;~~cbes. the researchers ~re
students,"
points out. "TI)ey will parpus Sec_urity; ~adison Boyce, ~irector,
C(lfl~nng use of younger, mor~ ~ticipate at times as a member of a team
Unoversoty Hpusong; AI Ermanovocs, asslsprqne monkeys In future experoments.
and at times -each member ,will contant director, Nonon Uoion; and ~lph
John D. Telfer, vice . ~ b
Much furthler. SIUdr must be done
tribute on his own. Members will be exHernandez, former advisor, Financl.il
fadlities. !&gt;li'nnlng. 'was elected president
before a caries. vaccine !Or/ humans is
pected to participate in identifying core
Aids Office. ·
.1
...:
of the ~for College and IJni-*f
~alld market~. S. mutans has
conte,!)l on drug abuse f~r existing
Planning (SCUP) at the SCUP Annual
~enlmphca)edin~moforms'ofhe~n . classes, 'o!;ienUI\ion Rrograms for new
lntemationai .Con~~ in Denver this.
dosease, ~rtk:Uiarly suba~ute ~cterlal
students and faculty, training programs
week.
·
_
endocar&lt;!his,-andasafeanuge_nwollhave
such ·as those for Campus Security and
teHer, one of ih'e' founders and first
to be f"!!nd bef~e the vaccme can be
Resident:: Adv~rs, and in drug abuse
·
,. • •
executive director :Of SCUP, an Intertested with ll'umans.
.
Workshops."
'
The possibilitY of. transplanting n'!"mal
national &lt;irg.inlzalion'cona!med with all
Wll People l.loe ftl ~
.L
Members of the team will also be exhemoglobin (red blood cell) genes into
aspects of long-ra~ge planning in higher
. "The question remains whether peopeeled to contribute to policy-making
the bone marrow of patients with
education, 'tiei!ins IllS twO-year term Imand decision-making in an effon to comhereditary disease is under e1ploration
pie willhliethis direct canular method of
mediately. Othe&lt; officers elected Include
immunization," Dr. E'mmings points out.
bat drl:lg abu~on campus, Dr. Grexton
by Dr. Michael o . Gt~rrick assista..nt
a secreu.ry .and four of seven regioilal '
.! ?nulation · 15 not painful! he ¥'ures,
says. "I~ is expected that members .of the
professor of biochemistry.
'
represenUI!IYes. As ~nt, Telfer will
but. the _ideal "":thod of!o_!Timunozat!'&gt;n
team w!ll be more alen to drug abu~ on
Dr. Garrick will. use a $34,23J) grant
direct a profession.ll ' mff housed at
SCUP headquarters at Columbia Univerwo~ld ~ ~me ·ktnd of a:&gt;oii.·We ar~ust
Jhe r~d~'1~- !J'!.US~tiQI'tPn Un~on-~... ~ ~ the Natio.nal Foundation:March of
sity in New York City.
llegmnong to- leart) abO_J!t J!l~ onte~;::;.,;; ·o'! Q.t'!li!Jl.""'!n_,l!eneral, and thirt'ther,"Wftr~ Dimes to contonue research aomed parCommenting pn the election, he
relatedness of the ~"!!."'"""~
be more sensottve to drug abusers.
ticularly at sickle cell disease, a blood
noted that. a paramount goal of the
system. It may be that antigens In,
~- Crexton lists several ~dditional an- . deficiency occurring ~mong people of
society will !Mo. to co~sqllcl-· ~ ·
troducedintothelntestlneby~ans!'fa
ticipated outcomes of the student pro_bta~ k . ancestry, and thalassemia
achievements while rnovlr!K ~ In
.. pill can migrate to
, _-jest a.i~ '"'}-' ,.:.~
I
..
~'alterranean or Cooley'~· anemia)
' Its effolu -to serve the v.iHed ·paannrng
~-., •
!{~~!!&gt;'- .ll,lcj.;_ ~~f.!!~SJ~ _lity
which occurs ' among peopl&lt;i of Greek
secretOf)' immune '
needs of higher education In the next
&gt;1llvary glands, to s
ng:ffie &lt;:amP.US"ttrug program. •
and Italian -descent.
decade,.
ti~f!llC!ducli9!1:-\M'!"~.,.-· ~ · · • ·!1!9:~;-~formation about the
Using two strains of rabbits which have
. An associated organi.Ution of the
reSolved iSsue is 'Mil!il\er~~ "' drug~~~actiOJl patt~rns, effecslightly different forms of hemoglobin,
American" COUn~il on 'EduCation, SCUP
as this carl cause a significant eno~gli
tive progJ:ams, -available facilities and
Dr. Garrick and his ..colleagues have
was founded in 1966 and' has · an Inrepuctiort in disease to ~warrant mns 1mresources.
. .
.
deve1oped a highly sensitized process for
stitutional and individual niembership of
• Improved commumcauon wtth
distinguishing the hemoglobin through
munizatiQn, he says. · .
nearly - 2,0jl0._- 'Membership indudes
"S. mutans iS not ~ good implaot~r,''
me"l.bers of !he ~mp_us community (one
' its chemical properties.
1
college preoidents; professional SUIIf and
Dr .Em!"ings c~nt~nues . . "Early 1m-.
to o_ne .commumcat1on or mass com~her P.(!!piiTing DNA (the substance
faculty as well as ardiitects, government
that genes are made of) which cormumzabon resultmg m relatively low -.nmuntcatlon).
tibody levels may be just enough to tip
• Increased commitment to students
responds to o ne t)lpe of hemoglobin
representatives •nd, in ~1, a 'Cross
section of persons l'!volved l_n planning.
the tenuous b.alan.c e away from implanwith "drug probJe~s."
gene, the genetic material Will be inration and dental disease:''
• -Jn~rea'S ed sensitivity to and
jected into the marrow of rabbits with
SJ!onsoring extenoive P'!bllihli&gt;&amp; training an(! consilltlrig prosrarn5; the 50Ciety
Meanwhile,-advises the scientist, who
aw.areness of stud-;nts [n need of
the other type of heof.oglobin. Dr.
also practices de,.tistry, the .!&gt;est way 10
guodance and reassurance.
Garrick hopes to make the recipient's
~ on academiC, fiscal arid physical
pre~nt caries is plaq~e removal by
• tncreased awareness on the part of
marrow cells incorporate t,he injected
planl)inl' lor all of higher eifuCatlon.
means of a thorough brushing and flossother students .and .faculty of !he need
genes. If they do, the rabbits of the seAt U/8, .:relfer, 'fl, Is ln. c:barse- of
programming; pfiilnlng and ·c:onsuuc,
in_g at least once a day.
for more tramong on combanong drug
cond type should be able to produce the
tion
of the Univenity's $650 million.
abuse.
.
.
new form of hemoglobin in addition t~
Mary ·A. Ptttman woll serve as team
their native form.
·Amherst Campus, as well
l!aison with
lea?er of the student group. A student
Dr. Garrick explains that particular
various community groups and
. Media Study, throug'f. a 'collaboration
· with Jorg~ Glusberg, director of Centrci
ass1stan~ to Dr. Grexton, she has been mattention will be given to how effiCientgovernmental agencies.
'"
He joined the UIB staff-In 1972, after
de Ane . y Communication (CAYC) in
volved '" ~vera I drug prog~ams on c~mly the new genes are inco~rated, the
Buenos Aires, ·Argentina, will present an
pus and m t~e .commumty. She ts a
possibility of harmful sidtt_effects, and
serving four years as assbU!nt vice.'president for physical planning at Columbia
exhibition of Latin American an, July 23
member of the Eroe C'?unty a;&gt;rug ~buse
whether or not the process will be
I,Jnive..Sity and eight years a5 planns fo.- _
- through August 10 at332S·Bailey Avenue.
Task- For~~ and a teachmg a~tstant 10• th~
carried on from or\e generation t&lt;&gt; the
Exhibit hours will. be Tuesdays through
course,,, ~rugs and the Communo~.
next.
the University of Michigan. From 1957to
Satii?daysfromnopntoSp.m.andTuesShe ha~ also been r~P."nsoble forfoeld
If successful, his work may
1959 he was professor. of graphics and
day e~niJlgs frQ"L7 to 9 p.m. .
.
placement ~nd .supe;:vosoon of _students'"
demonstrate the feasibility of gene
head of the. Division of Engineering.at
the Abadan InstitUte of Technology,
The exhibit stems frDm a prOject un·
~er course domg field wor~ 10 counseltransformation to correct hereditary '
Abadan,
Iran. He also served pan time as
dertaken in 1972, when 1_00 artists
mg ~enters.
·
h.
d
anemias ·and, ultimately, other genetic
throughout latin Aml!ricalYere asked to
. .Other member~ of I est~ e'ltleam
disorders as well.
acting president at Atiadan.
w!ll be : Hal Ardon~ who Kas ·also ':"'ork':d
. In · related · experimentation~ Dr.
present an. ·interpretation of the Third
World on a sheet . of architectural
woth th~oordonator of drug P':"B"'ms'"
Garrick, P/'illip P. Dembure, pediatrics
blueprint paper 2\l:z feet wide by 2 feet
the). Offoce. of Stud.ent A.lfaors;• Dana
techni~ an&lt;l Dr. Roben Guthrie, releonard Snyder, who has iieen perhigh. ~·Amc)ng the anists panicipating
Pluile; Rochart;l ~ro!'e~ who has had
search professor of pediatrics..ndmlcroforming the fu!Jf;lions of the assiSffnt,
. we~ JuJio TeiCh, AlfredO Pootillos, L!JiS
held wor.k . experoence '" . a local .dr~g
biology, recently devl!loped a method
vice president fOr bousing and auxiliary
Beni!dit, Jacques Bedel, Juan !lercetthe • apuse t~aono!'g ce!'ter; Jesso.e Suber, and
of detectirog sickle cell disease at
and Carlos Glnzbers. The works 'nclctde
~athleen Gilmanon, a regos~ered !'urse
binh. On. June 14, New 'York Governor • exterprises jn an acting capadty Mila!
November 1972; has been .officially ,lipco'nctete 'poetJy, ,cqn~p_tual .an and im&lt; • who worlfs~ :" a stu~nt ~ssost~nt on-an
Malcolm Wilson signed into 1- a bill
pointed to that position e~ im..,
aginative architectural diagrams.
·
o.u'!'each .offoce of Unoversoty .Health SerwhiCh requires a sickle· cell and 5evera)
mediately,
E. W. Doty, vice preoident·for
In addition to the 100 graphic works, a
vo~ on the Am~erst "''mpus.
other tests of infants similar to the
operations ~nd Systems, announced this
· comple~nta,.Y set .of films gathere&lt;{ by
_.According 10 Dr. Grexton, the student_.
phenylketonuria (PKU) test.
•
,
.
Glusberg will be shown each TueSday
team .memb_e_rs w~re chosen from
Collaborating with Dr. Garrick on the . week.
Snyder has been acting in replacernen(
eyening at 7. p.m. The films include " A ' strategiC. ~.'!tons Jn terms ~f .theor
March of Dimes grant is Dr. David
of Thomas J. Schillo who has been on .
tan,a:uage for~. ,. the· Dance.," by Analivia
physl~llocatlon.oncamp~S~I)dmte~ms
HoUseman of the Ontario Cancer
several other assignments and is llOW' on ~
Cordeiro; ·~Pau Brazil," by 1he Fogo
of theor potenhal. success on effectmg
Institute and Dr. les·.Giick of Associated
extended leave. Schillo will receive
fiiDl" Group; " Death of fa Hen," by
'h~nge. The . p~nocular ~epresen\atov~ lliomedic· S)'stem5 of BuffaJo.another assignment upon his return to ·
.CJ~io Tozzi, and " Ma$'ks," by
were s'l!lected because q.f the1r
the University, Doty said.
,
Al&gt;!lham Berman.
"-.. leadership ability, their successful effons
Snyder holds a bachelor's from
·~ Th~ entire exhibition was showii at the
In . ~he ~t. i!' handJing d"!g problems,
Canisius·
and
an
MBA
from
UIB
. .He
Internal' onal Cultureel Centrum m
the1r sens1t1v1ty to students ~eeds, and
staned wiih the UniversitY in Novecnber
Arltwerp, N~therlarids, frDm Aj,ril r 25because · of their commitment to joint
1965
as
an
assistant
accounu.nt
train~
May 19, l9Z.4.
,. ' • -: ,
plannihg a'!_d programming .of• drug
and has moved through poslt!&lt;&gt;m as
![This exhibliiOn wRl be the-first . of. a . abuse education. "The students were
aSsistant accounu.nt, senior accoW)tapt.
series .at Mi!olia .Study featuriq still_ ~ •lso chosen a~ being representative of •·
an~ college a..ccounUinL
. · :
,•
j)K~apftY and the-IT"f&gt;bk ans.
the student population," she says.

lin"""'

some

Telfer named
p_resident of
planning gr~up .,

sbe

p ro f St U dbing
• ·

• ·
:flearnogI0 1n

·

· M e d"·
Ia st u dv exh"b"t
I I

as

Snyder ptomoted
i

~

.

~

~·

\

�SUNY degrees

,~bould be film's .,earriing~contexf.

IIJIII.....

.-GinN~

•

~'!"'!Clio"!'•"..~~

-.;

for IPibts '74 ·
,fot.al 56;700

- n.""''llber o1 ~ awarded at )'0
• Slate Unlvenhy of New York ~
talized, and to make a Jona.-standlnl
thiS spring toWed 56,700, 'an
of
n.e seminar- emotional arsumen-' ci&gt;mplaint briefly, I shouhlliloe to see It 3,945, or 7.5 per Cleft!. over the same
• Wive. ai\CI even erul!led, 811 ~,In~~· to borrow a word irom Paul
~In 1973. IUill....,ted almost oneto up1ome personal dramatic perforTolhch, 1n the hu~n bOdY, a concern for
.temh of the tOial, "5,1126.•
rnance. 11s peat strength was, in tact, its
phys1C?Iogiul a nil psycholojll~al
Totall in each d !he various clewee
seem1os lack -of concern with .the orl!ehavlor: the ~udent body, the 50Ciallncat~ as c:tJn1i1!1!H1 by SUNY'S'Office
amary rnatteis of design of courses and
teractlon• in which . we are all ~each~
ol IR5lltutional Research, exceeded last
depanments as academics from other
and learners from b1rth to d~a~ '" an IR·
year with one exception.
fields might - perceiVe .• them.- Instead,
formatiOn envlronme':'I'W~ich IS already
The University awarded 1,381 docthere was passionate debate about more
an open global U!'lvers~ty : and ~he. - torates, up 160 from last spring; 5,240
truly fundamental IssUes, whether creawo;td's body i_n wliich ~ W?Uid exz
than last spring; and
master's, 1,260
t1v1ty in film or any other an coilld be
tend the phys1cal "':'d b1olog1Cal ~~29,959 two-ye¥ aSsodate desrees, 2,731
taugbt ai all, whether. schools..wi!re the _·lcepts of ecology to .1ndu.(le the ~~~he
over 1973.
•
proper lnsti}utlons In which ti&gt; .attempt it,
endeavo~ of men an_d women as cnt1cal
.The increase· In doctorates awarded
and whether teaching placed the anist's
factors '" the mamtenanc~ of our
over a year ago was ~).1 per. cent whjle 32
_ , crutive impulse in peril. Stan
ecological balance. ~
.
~r cent more master's &lt;!esrees were
Bralthage and Peter Kubelka raised
Sips of Hope
·
·
conferred.
,
provocative questions about all of these.
There ·are signs of hope. In the. R!lst
A decline was noted In the. number of
One wondered whethirfilmmaking was
year, r'nore of Jonas' 16 Moyi~ Journal" ·
bachelor's de8rees,l0,122. a decrease of
a career which one .could rrepare ·for, or
columns have been on non~fllm events
"208 University-wide. -According to SUNY,
~career un~r the aegis o very different than in any previous time. Anthology
the decrease reflects national trends in
forcel than those U.}ually associated with
Film Archives is now publishing a film
which students are "Stopping out'' _dur·
and video bulletin. Jacques Ledoux, the
sd&gt;ools.
·
•
ing college careers, by reducing coulie
·Another problem surfaced wl.ich has - curator of the Royal Film Archives in
loads or leaving college for entire
great implications about how film will
Belgium and organizer of the world 's
semesters-to travel or earri money for exlocate ifs.elh within the university, and .
best experimental film festival eve~ five
said to be entering
penses. Otners
.soon, within lower ~hools. What should
years, was r,ecently in town and decided
the work force, planning to complete
,be the teaming context of •film? What
that this December's festival will feature
their educations af a later lime. ,
\· ~med a reluctan'ce or inability to deal
a special event which would highlight
A breakd..wn of degrees by dis·
with it left me distur.t?e&lt;t.
video in its iconiC and .environmental
ciplinary' programs shOws an increaSe in
Some of the artists who had begun as
forms. It may be that we can "tet ·move
.students graduating with majors in
fiJrnmakers had moved into video filmic activity"toward that human wholeagriculture and forestlf, in ! he health
~ Vanderbeek and Emshwiller., for e xness which " Movie-- Journal" has stood
sciences, ancf bus· ness. amples; the younger Scott Banlett had
for since iis inception. ·
·
While the number .of baccalaureate
~ in~rpo':"ti':'g video in~o his, films
_.eprinred.;.,. __. o/rl&gt;e
n..
cindidates in arts and sdences, which inVllolo ·voice lulr • tV&lt;.
from the beginnmg; and Bill Etra and
dudes teacher preparation programs,
Woody Vasuil:a, though the .latter had a
'
· '.
,
dipped by about 500 University-wide,
film backg[ou_nd, were •!ready te~ching
there was an increase of 600 master's
the nation's ftrst college courses m "\He
~
~
,
~
degrees in education and .a rise of 500 in
exper i'mental electron ic ima~e.
•
-.~arts , and sciences. There were fewer
Although man_y of .t he filmmakers pre- .
' engineering graduates on University
sent had engaged in and were supporThat too few minoriJY students are atcampuses at both graduate and bac·
t~ve of a Vi!_riety .of activities which could
tracted to the health professions is a
ealaureate levels, SUNY-repons.
broadly be=nsidered as para-cinematic
problem being attacked at "gut level"
or multi-med ia, there see med a
throu·gh an innov.ative summer program
resistance to' interfacing the moving im- - now underway on campus.
ages of celluloid with those electCQnical" " Minority students arerft normally inly generated on video-tape, and an unterested- jn ~ealth · professions because
conCern and sometimes ignorance about
they or their families have had bad exOr. John j. Peradotto win return to the
the structuring ofelectronic imagery and
"periences with the health system and
University as chairman of the Departall of its richly contemplative and
because their background in essential
ment of Classics,. President Robert L.
... performance-oriented offshoots, such as
sciences and math niakes them unable to
Ketter has announced. Peradotto has
in-spin and close~ circuit feedback ,
hold thei r own in classes of better
received a thi-ee-year appointm'ent
already Oeing enlarged upon in the work
prepared stude nts," observes Dr. Harley
effective September 1.
of fo rmer filmmaker Shirley- Clarke and
Flack, assistant dean of the School of
Dr. PeradottOreturns to Buffalo after
others.
.
Health Related Professions.
serving as chairman of Classics at the
' i was disapp_ointed by this tenden cy
The Summer Preparation Program for
University of..-Texas in Austin fo r one
amo ng the ~rtists not to genera lize their
Health Sciences is designed to ma ke a
year. Prior to that time, he was chairman
activity at least on the cOmmonality of
dent in the problem by provid ing !6 inhere.
A
'
the moVi ng jmage, not to mention other
coming freshmen with individualized
A rlative of Ottawa, Illinois, Dr.
elements wh ich the two media sbare.
tUtoiing in these essential courses. The
Peradotto holds the B.A. and M.A. from
'Pure Film' Study
.
Progra m is a direct result of a recommenSt. louis University. He received the
I find the same tendency in their more
Ph.D. in Classics from Nonhwestern.
dation made by the Health Sciences AIacademic associates who ar_e founding
firmat i v~ Action Committee and is coorAuthor wof many artic1es and reviews,
" pure film" study l:lepanments at New
dinated by Delores Clark, administrative
he wrote Classical Mythology; an AnYork University, UCLA, and Richmond
associate in t he School of Health Related
notated Bibliographical Survey (1972).
College~ I . understand the impetus
Professions. The Program's faculty, is - During 1972-73 he was. a fellow at Harbecause serious film study has had -a difcomposed of u/8 graduate students,
Yard University's Center for Hellenic
ficult time in the colleges. It has often
me"mbers of the Faculty of H.eal.lh
Studies in Washington, D.C.
been absorbed by depanment~ of com~
Sciences, and instructors from. the
munication who did not pe~ive film as
Educational OpponunityCenterand fast .
an art form but only as a channel of inHigh School.
.
:..11
formation and interested themselves in
""In the eight-week Program we hope
problems of censorship, sponsorship,
to touch base with those students early
etc. It has been claimed by drama
.enough to help them get interested in
John E. Leach, U/B counsel.• and
departments who had an inter est in achealth sciences and also work with them
recently eleCted chairman of the New
ting, setting, psychology of plot, but little
to bring. _thejr competency levels up in
York-State Bar Msociatlon, died Wednes· if any in the materiality and physicality of
. technical areas," Ms. Clark.said. Students
day, July 10, at Millard Fillmore ·Hospital
the mellium and its basic propenies of
were selected in cooperation ·w ith
following a shon ·illness. He w~ 66. •
rhythm, ~ght, and 11raphic motion. Its
guidance counselors in the City_of ButA· past president of the Erie County Bar .
location iQ , ar.t· departments was
lalo high schools. ·
As59Ciation, Mr. Leach was the senior
hospitable to the visually experimental
Altet:. orientation, the students will be • panner in the Buffalo law firm of lfrown,
"film but an teachers could not do ~he
t~ .for deficiencies 5o the Program
Kelly, Turner, Hassett and Leach.-He was
auial pan of ihe r,nedium justice and
can better serve the individual student'• named "Distinguimec! La,.Yer of the
were historii::ally more adept at handling .
n~s . Lab work_as well as lectures and
Year" in· 1973 by the Erie County Bar
the still inlllge. Literature departments
individual instruction will be featured in ·-AssOciation.
t
with--Strong concerns in narrative struc-the Program, according to ·Ms. Clark.
: L~ch was a 1933 graduate of U/8 Law,
ture and symbolic forms of vari"l'• kinds,
"With this experimental program, the
a member of an 8-man State Bar AssOcia·
but usually no awareness of film technichallenge is more on tfie teachers than
lion panel" working- to restructure the
que, are the most recent an\h.strongest ·
the students," she added. "We want' to
State coun system;-and a fellow of the
"interloptl&lt;S," their activities usually
.get the faculty involved prior to the
American Bar Foundation and tfie
m~ired by a fatal attraction for popular . ' students' fall arrival, nOt aber they're
American COllege of Trial Lawyers. ,on
culture and entertainment, a_..complete
thrown 4 nto the regular dasses," - she Since 1953, he had serYJ!(I on tht!;p:omreluctanCe to deal with the documentary
. said.
• · '/ .
i)&gt;ittee whidi reviews applicanfi", fOI" adheritage, and, strangely, an aversion lor . . While ~- Clark and Dr. f~ don't
mission to the bal' in the Elghthi:Judicial
the independent film ':J&gt;oets" -w ho carl!'!"
ex~ miracles from the ~rarii, they ·
, District. He had been a mejnlier of the
to the cOnference.
,
feef it:s a positive start . .' 'Ideally, we
State Bar ~n's ExecUtive ComSo I am dmurbed that "film," which is
. should l:!e WOrking with these. students
mittee sina&gt;-ila ~
T,. I •
still withoUt a tutorial tradition, Is being
..llefore they gradua.t e from high school," - He is survivt!tfby:tllswife, Elizabeth; a
depanmentalized and compa'!mena dai!Jhter, and ~ grandchud.
Dr. Flack said.

tna-e

C!lfiPOrtlni these ,_ .enwres.

more

OWl"

Jon~.,

Fra

Nelson, lArry

•IJ:Il·_,,_
arou.llton at San
AN Institute, Stan

Y~

atlll Will lfindle ' at the
Univenky 01-Soudl ~~ohn~U
and ~ l.alidow .at Chicago's 1'.11

lnsdtulil', Tony Confacl-.r An!iiKh.Pines

Blue at Rice til Hodllbn, 1Cen Jacobo and
Larry Gotlhelm and noir Ernie G!!hr ai

SUNY,...,..._,~ Uwder at Yale,

Hotr.1 fi"M1Il'IOII and hul.sharits at SI.INY
Buffalo, Willard Van Dyke at l'urdlase,
Ed Ernstildler whO hlcf.vlshed many f~
shon .peric!di, ltftd dozens of others, ind~ing ikib ~ and Jonas at COoper
Un1011.
·,
With a few ~
the Harry
Alan PoWnltin School'ln llleW Yoik and
the classes of Siclney "Peterson at the San
Francisco Art lnsdtule - teachlnif!lm in
American colleges had usually centened
6n the production studio anil roncemed
itself with preparing stude!&gt;ts ·to produce
the tradtional narrative·shon and !_eature
or, later1 the television stitiOndocumentary.
But now anist, teachel} wt:re,engaging
the students Jn progr.ams which encouraged them to be total-:makers conceivers, ~ QJT"tel"amen, edi.J,ors of
their own films; to express themselves
not only in personal forms like
autobiographical iilm 'llld advoca cy
reportage, but in cerebral forms wh ich
might sell-reflexively lead them, to investigate the..very act a ~d materials and
teehniques of- ma~ing itsel f; and to pu rsue modes evolved from sophisticated
psychological ~nd anthropological, and
even cy bernetic a nd b ioenergetic
theories of lifestyles.
No Interchange of Information
"Despite"the diversity of'the endea vor,
perhaps because of it, there seemed to
have been almost· no inte_rchange of information and the riew forms of teaching
were undocumented and unexamined.
The seminar· w~s primarily intended to
be a celebration, a gathering of-the clan,
but alsO to provide an environment in
which the artists could Ope!\ each other
to their ideas about the best way to teach
making. I had invited t!!e fiei&lt;Cs leading
practitioners to Buffalo not in search of
anything remotely approaching a model
curriculum or a pilot program that&lt;ould
be adopted by the increasing num~r of
colleges beginning filmmaking courses,
but simply to give the anists' views and
experiences sonfe resonance and
currency among each other and a small
body of co11cerned· foundati9n and
N•!ional Endowment offlari who had

,.

..

" ......... . . . . . . . _ , . - pulJilshed
- 1llunilor by !he o/IJnlvenl(y
R-s..te~o/-Yorl&lt;o&lt;

lulfalo. Jo0S ~MMn St., luffalo, H.Y. 14214.
fdltorW ol/ice:J we looted In Room l'rl, 250
Wlmi&gt;or - " - (1fooM 21Z1).
f
faealllw -Editor A.. WESTlEY ROWLAND
fdlc.-4n&lt;ltief
aOili!T T. MNIU'TT
" Mwwl-.von

-·-

IOHN A. CLotmER

'"TIIICIA WAaD IIEDfltMAN
_ , . c--lque Edlt.HJWO' f. OYDAUW

~­
SUSIINM.-

•re

..-hom

HRD seek-·•ng
- · .....
mlnOrl,•t•les.

Peradotto will
return. to U/B

'L
h·
Jo h R:
d . eac .

uea at :.a ge 66

scr•

�'

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

............ ,_ ____ _

ls :.~c)ipun.ctur.~ ~ a · fake~ Meyer clin·ic is investigath_
1g ·:·

.
1y ~ lleth $filo)A &lt;
Edl&lt;...,....x..t.. ,_b~ •.
Acupuncture ... ""~ .
.1. fadf-&lt;A fakel A ~year-ola "p_ut
onl"
·
. •
· ..
O c a. very real hope for miltions ·who
live with '&lt;lebilitating chronic.painl ·
More ihan 30 patients being t~eated by
• the andenr methoc:! at th.e Pai~ Pinic
operated by U/8 i~ conjunction with E.).
. !'~eyer Memorial 'flospital ma'y'well belp
pr9vide the allsw~, says Dr ~ ~Benjamin
MO,' Clinic .director. Anotber f200 are
currently, orr the waiting list forthe Clinic
whi~ ~!'ts f[o.'\1 ~~ 1!·!7'· three 9~~ a

#-

weeK. ,..

_

J .... i

.

;

of bis basic medical proble!J1."
·-The majOiity 66 Clinic patients suffer
either low ~ck. pain £?f arthritis. A few
have migraine· headaches or severe
't(hiplash injuries. Each must be referred
by a medical doctor. And only one of the
patients has failed to get reUef from the
traditio'nal application of hair-fine
needles to the pain points.
,, e
Not an -IUsen;ibly Une
Being accepted into the Clinic involves
a lengthy wait - partly because Dr. Mo
doesn't rUrl- an " assembly line." Each
patient gets individual attention, unlike
•
· r
.'

-

er.' Mo, a U/ 8 .assistant. pro(ess(&gt;r of
anesthesiology, began t~e Clinic a
month agq to provj'de relief "to sufferers
as well as gather data on the "whys and.
wher.efores" of this ancient Oriental
treil.tm~nt. No Stranger t6 ·acupunCture,
D~. Mo received hiS M.D. degree from
South China Medical School - specialiZing in sur:gery - and had Opportunity to observe the successfur integration
of this part of ''\raditional Chinese
medicine" into Western medicine;: .
"Traditional Chinese medicine involves a.
philosophy as well as empha·sis upon
herbs and acupuncture Jor treatment.
ACupuncture is the ' surgery! Of
traditional medicine," he said.
Slipping out of Mainland- Cbina, .Dr.
Mo taught in medical school. in Hong
Kong and then studied at the University
of· California 1 under 'the auspices of a
branch of the Rockefeller Foundation.
Aher receiving the master's iri pharmacology, he returned to Hong Kong. In
1961, he emigrated to c:anada, wl)ere he
took a postgraduate esidency in
anesthesiology and became a Canadian
citizen. He came to Buffalo last year.
Some of his patients in tlje Clinic have
visited nearby acupuncture o~rations
which have been springing up outSide
State law. ''The law says acupuncture
can be. performed legally . only In a
universi!Y setting for research investigation," says Dr. Ross Markell~,
chairman of. the Depart'men.t of
Anesthesiology.
·'Recently Gov. Maloolm Wilson charged the Boards of Medidne and Dentistry
..,
with makiRg,...recommendationS fOr establiming·lioensing criteria in the area of
-acupuncture.
-&lt;.
Clmdnline Clinics Could Be Danserous
"ll)pse who·con&lt;tuci these clandestine
sdinics attempt, to tieat only the pain not 'the total patient, whi&lt;:h could be
danaeroUs,'' dlarges· Dr. Mo: .
·-''ffil a patient suffering from gout is
1~ treateilr.with acupunCture, it seems to
9r.' relieve:liiepain. But jf.tha&lt; patient fails to
.;;; tak\; medication wbll!h~uces the level
t of uric.•dd iiJ, his srstM~~fh:e could suffer
ifr kidney failuoe. fheref&lt;li&gt;e1'it'sjmportant
we help stophl~ pai~ without losing sight

Th.eatre ..event

the procedure a~ cJinics operated - because of their pain. We also cQmidef
primarily for profit. The ·average patient·
wh.e ther a penori who &lt;OUkl not war{
visits the Clinic between three and six
f&gt;ecause of his pain_is now able to do sO,"
times.
.
.
Or. Markello said. After more cases a:re
The Clinic is a result of careful plandinically stUdied, the physidans .will join
ning by Drs. Markello and Mo; coupled
forces with specialists in anatomy,
with a bill.introduced into the Erie Counbiochemistry and physiology to help '111-.
ty legislature earlier this year by Mrs.
plain the mysteries of "!llpuncture scien. ~enevieve Starosciak - asking that
tifically. Although the treatment looks
acupuncture be dinically investigated
promising, Dr. Marl&lt;ello said not until
here.
the patients have been under treatment.
"In this first phase of investigation, we
for six months or longer an he and .his
chart whether patients are able to do
group begin to judge the longer range .
Ahings they couldn'.t do before treatment
effects.
·
'
• ·
·

�"'~:')!!"~~~~~~-.... ··

Co{lpess ~ays
3

m..,'l'elaf~dl.

_fundiDJt bills·.::::~~~
Concress "- Oompleted action and
sent to the While Houle three Important
medk:al researdl and lnlnlntl bills, the
~ Cquncll on Education reports.
drie - a.npromlse ven1ons of .
dlfferlns ~ palled earlier by the
House and Seiulte. They deal with
reseuch on c:ancer and diabetes and
weneral biomedlaol and behavioral;
researdl lralnlfla. .
IIDth Houle .nd ~ lat week approved a COR1pi'OINse bill (5 21931 extend ins the ndlonal .cancer researth
prosram for three yean and ._...tins
it. The ,_.,..authorizes S2.7 billion for
the prosram du~lns the three-r.ar
period. Another· ~ of the bll establ~ Blonjedk:a1 Relelrch hnel
of 12 members to advise the President on
policy Issues relating tO biomedical and
behavioral research ci&gt;nducted by the
National Institutes of Health · and .
National Institute of Mental Health. The
panel-is recjulred to report Its flndlnss to
the President and 'Consre- within 15
months after the memliers are appointed. Also, the .bill provides Jor .
review l&gt;v scientific . peer groups of
applications for research pants and con-

"II

· -. ·
· ,f
: b
ld1ling· tis~~- _itn~~s-. _UJ

~f

say~

:u::S~~\=·.~.::.':.~~=~

.

.
. ·
Congress alsq completed action last
provide us-with eneqy."
· ~· •·
walking ten. hollrsfor.tWo days~ch to
wee1&lt; on a biU (S 28301 to expand and
cise, their IMidfeo ~ h811ihier. NcM
• Ah athlete nimsell, Dr. Cureton's.ln.::-- . burn up one pound offal," Cureton say$.
coordinate research on diabetes. The bill
we have lftOI.CIP 10 IUn ~- Interes! _in fitness for the average citizen
'Only a o..;., In
authorifiiS $30 million over thrf!\' years
dudlng-ra~-andit1J.Idllwas stomuL1ted by a pre-World War II
---~
••
for diabetes research and training
Ins us, according to 73-year~
visit tc;&gt; Germany _and__Scandinavia where
Only In fec:epr-years have the~ical
centers; plus Sl million for a new 17physic:;al fitness ~ Dr. ThomaS L
~xercose and lot~ were str'essed. "'nd dental P!oftssion' begun tO; actiVely
member commission to develop a longCuretboi, e l l - of the Phvsical Fitness
"When the war began, I helped the U.S.
take an interest in '.what we can .do
range pL1n to combat the dlseaie. The
lriltltute at· the UniverSity oiiHinois.
government conduct a study to detertowards prevent in!! illhess through
commission would be charsf!d with }UbA realpllzi!d authority In the foeld, Dr.
mine how fit our 'fit young men' a~
fitness, ' he ootes'. ''The physicians - esmltting its repon within nine months
C"'.l'on recently mncluded a special
ly ~,"'he r";&lt;"ils.-The figures were s8
pecially cardiologlst5 and onhopedic
alter•Its fundr'ar.,...pproprNited. n ... ·
• twd-Weel&lt; seminar on DhYslcal frtness for
aL1rmong that ot became known as the
surgeons- are pushing regular exercise.
The biomellical researCI! bt11 (HI{V'12-4};"
40 sraduate students Iii the Ulll Depan"unfitness" evaluation.
The dtntists are taking positive steps to
which cleared Congress just before the
~of P-hysical Education. ' ·
·
,..,...... of A\llolilllon
•.
,
p1;,0mote prevention of tooth ~d .gum
Independence Day recess, 'authorizes
l 1- " ~ ~n of :!!~,itl~
. tl!_.calls the L1!_VI!ru! ncrease of_CO. ·
dbiusecka!"S208 million in• the -current 1975 •fiscal-•
. '-But, t_his .~ only a _jrop lnfthe
4
-.. pa ns.anu·~~ •l'ments?! •k:b-c
non•ry artery
ri'ase -a iTO odler
..::;·:--·.
yen .J to'1..mnt~ b~ical research 1
1 ly could be cuted "'?"'a dally one-hour
degenerative Conditions"'payoffs" of the
Although 'technically retired as
traiheeships..andJellbws1ipsr ll"pr091~
. regimen of rftythmlc. ~such as ' automated society: "If
do hard
tor of the ~ltr,otflli ·
, that at least 25 per cent of.the-ohoney ap-lking. ~!'rimming or running, he con- ~. wortr- such as mi"""
r incidence
Fitness Labi1ilbiy at Cham
~
propriated shall be r115erved for National
tends. •
~
f •
d'
... 32 •ft
100 000
bana, Dr. Cureton
pu~"ing a bus~ Research &lt;-rvo'ce 'fe' llowsho' ps under
"Sudl $p0rll• BOif and tennis~ · ~c:;r:;:;,~ihen
~a ·~'job i~ a,;.
schedule of lectures and ';riling. He i~ • which recipients would have to'serve in
office their· odds go up to 1000 per
the author of 600 anides and 52 books.
areas with health mailpower shonages.
only inlermltlent e,.dse and are not Of
the
which Improves · body cir100;oclo." In 1900 when 90 per cent of the
cuL1tlon, he edded. "When ~ did
country lived on the farm, he notes, the
=-~
~..~n.,i
desenerative diseases were not so
_.,.ng ,
_,
re
prevalent. "But the move of 90 per cent
oil. If we don t reverse. the klllins1Jend • bf the people to the city l;&gt;as brought
brouiht on by our super-.utomati!d
with It enormous health problems.
FACULTY
~cletf! h_alf the c,ountry will be
"There are more than 17 million
Associa;e Pn/essor, Gynecology-Obstetrics.
llospltdHCI and the ,!'ther ha~ will be
diagnosed cases of coronary &gt;'disease and
Instructor-Professor, Dentistry.
.
r.lting care of theml, he Pfed~:
probably another 17 million unVisiting Assistant Professor, Civil Engineering.
.
l_polll ... ,._. Cooof...t
•
diagnosed, and at least 40 million are
Assistant/Associate
ProfeSsor,
ffectricaHngineering.
He says peopl!! get,cornpetltive sports
'obese.' Improper eating contributes to
Assistant llrofessor, Chlfcf: Heallh Nurflng.
· and pliysical flill8s confused. "Body • these problems as well as ilflproper exerAssistant Professor, Heahl) Related Professions.
type and 'motor/nerve developme'lt - , cise.·Too many people think they can go
Assistant or Associate' Prof1'550r (two-year term
determined primarily by heredity- are
on · 'crash' diets and 'crash' exerCise.
appointment},.._Cell &amp; Molecular Biology.
illlpCIIUM fKIOrs In whether a person 1s
programs to keep fit. Well, it juSt isn't so.
Asihciate
Professor or Professor, Pathology.
a sood athlete. Certainly not eve&lt;yone
Even with proper~die&amp; and exercise it's a
Associate .Professor or Professor, Chemistry. ·
Will be. but we can all do the rhythmic_
month before we can detect favorable
Assistant
Professor,
Pathology. .
exercises whiCh help .our muscles
changes in the heart. And it would take
NTP
Assistant Librari2n &lt;2 positions), University~ libraries, PR-1 . ,Assistant Librarian_(pending reclassification to Technical Specialist),
·
University Libraries, PR-1 .
Assistant to Director, Educational Opponunity Center, PR-1.
Counselor·(4
positions},
Educational
Opportunity
Centi!F, PR-1.
fta!'
uses is called
Editorial Assistant, University Relations. PR-1 .
make you c:rlngellf'you have these fears,
systematic desensitization and it begins
Assistant
for
University
Finandal
Analysis,
Budget,
PR-2
l;)r. John Lidt Is looltin8 for )'OU._Dr. Lick,
"!!th the panicipant being taught deep
Programmer Analyst, Co'!1put~Services, PR-2
assistant profesJor of psychology, hJJS set
muscle relaxation. Next, the volunteer
Asslstan1to Direct9r, the ·eolleses, PR-1.
up ,a free treatment program to help
imagines scenes of the ~eo!' =Inspiring
Programmer Analyst, CQ!I{puting Services, PR-2.
people reduce these fears. . •
situation. Only then Is he sllown the ac"'dmlssions Counselor, Admissions &amp; Records, PR-2
"Phobla&gt; lnvolvi'!J spiders al snakes
tual object of his fear. By repeatedly im·
Assistant to Executive Vice 'President Chaff-time),
are fairly prevalent. iffectlng almosti'Wo· . aginins'lhe feared-object, the panicipant
Office of the President, MS
•
•
...;-- ,
per -.:ent of the popuiMion," ~- tick ·
can ieckice the fear reaction.
Director of Computing Services, ComJll!ting Services, PR-4.
says, Thise fears h ~ enougli in
· "Anticipation of lf!e phobic object
certain ,Individuals-to cause lll!rious disusually produces the peak fear reaction,
For addltio""l information concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
ruption In their lives, he Indicates. "But·
and· the pan;ppants lind that actual · .
openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin boards at
the pepple with the most int~ fears
object less disturbing than .they had im·
tliese locations;
'
don't seek treatment &amp;cause their fears
agi{led, so there is UJually a reduction in
1. Bell Facility between Dl52 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building 4236, next to
are so strong that they avoid anything
fear," Dr. Uck says.
cafeteria; 3. Ridge lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health Sciences ·
con~ed with spiders and snakes."
The trealm!'nl works, accori:ling to past
Bu'ilding, in corridor OPJl9Sile HS 131; 5. CApen Hall, in the corridor between
panicipa'nts~o have written to thank
Room 141 ana the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, ground floor in corridor-next to ven... Dr . Lick . Some have even cited
ding machines; 7. Hayes Hall,~n main entran!=f! foyer, across from Public lnfor5~,
'" remarkable changes" In their level of
mation Office; 8. Acheson hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 an0l13; '9.
fear. "Many of the participants were
Pao:lter Engille!!rlng. lil'rorridOr next to Room 15; 10. G9&lt;&gt;&lt;fyear Hall, 1st floor,
amazed il how rapli!ly they improved,''
!:loosing Office area; 11 . .1807 Elmwood, P.,rsonnel D!!Pa~.['t; 12._1!1Mon .
he says. .
·
r
Union, Dlrecto(s Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf HeJ~ 1 Jll ,~rrid"!{~' to
' Anyone interested if. treatment · ro
Room 106; 14. John l.ord O'Brian Hall, foufth' floor (A.(w\fjwiJ,~amp~}:
·
reduce such fear, may write to Dr. lick at
the l'sychokm' Ot!plhment, 4230 Ridge
Jt.le u~~~~ lalfalo 11 • ~
a Doii,/Atllr.atlft ~
Ua.ltlere Is no ~tor the treatiMriL

''Whenpeople,di4-~lexer-

!lie....,..,.. .. ·. •

1

·o s

_,

ll'P!,

-=

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r----------------------------,

PsychoJogy program treating

~~! !J?li~~!~ a~trea~~n~~!c~

-.

o,,

etnployer

�.profs

T6.~~:.:tmons104 ~

~

fac!l

illettecL ..
• Award for

~ al the Olan

lxce~ 1 n Teachlns for ,,74,
Chincllor &amp;ne.t L Boyer annouiK:ed

t111J ..._ The awardo provide a _ .
dille~ al $5011.
~ aho llllnotma!d prOmotion of
nine SUNY ~- to the rail!&lt; of

.

Dlsllftlvlslieil

Teachlns Profesoor · in

~ qt their '-.nted teachin1
~· !JIIP."iQriilardo ol scholarly wotk."

.......,.lze

0

0

U/11 hill-.-~ to this rank. · ~
. R~lelochl'lll ex~llence
. aw
are Dr. Charleo H.V. Ebert,
dean of I
.
ate Ellucatlon and
profesSO, of -~rap'!f; Dr. l,eslle.
Fiedler, JMofesscir of£np.h; Of. RIChard
Fly, ...IAant professor, English; Dr.
Ken. M , Kw, associate professOr,
ed~. admfn.lstratlon; Dr. C'.,eorge.
R.l.evlne, p{Ofessor, Ensflsh; Dr. Henrich
R. Martens, professor, electrical
enslneerlns; · Dr. iohn F. Mo•an,
asoodate professor, bioc:hemlstrt; Dr.
Orville T. Murphy, profesoo;,hlstory; Dr. ·
Gordon 'Swan4 professor, bioloBY; i nd
Dr, Claude~· Weith, profesoor, political
science.,.;..;. ~
r•
•
..: J
'1111(Jsthi! aeCond rounil of awarils In
the SUNY recosnition ~ra111 e.Qbli$11ed ~as~,_ to''- " ' ralentea'leaehlng
as afflrri!atively as we 'have recosniil!(l
ouiSWidil!llt!learch,".Chancellor Boyer
'noted. He added that the distinguished professonhips
the impact of •
senior faculty who have taught effective- '
ly thouUnds Of students throughout.the
-v.ean. -·Ue· the~-~hancellor:S
acknpw~ outstaoding contribution•
o~ the: part· of the •!.Jniversity's yoUnger
teachtm as. well.
. .-,
.~; •.,,
n.e ~ihguished Teaming Pr~ ,
designation Constitutes a prpmofion-and ·
carries with IH. salary. inpease of up {o
$2,500.· The.chancellor's..-'watds foo.Ex- . ·
ce~nc5e ,., ~'lii~·•·Dn!"!c'
time'llfM't' cif SSQO ~o:oeach ·deSi.snee. ~II
full-time •facum- of any ran~ with \:&gt;tie Ql' '
more yeats of University service ah~&lt;~igi·

-·ds

bje,,fl&gt;l? &lt;lhete~ :l"\'arGs;,andmStil~&lt;

Un~y ~~ CM ·fteiFninatel aR• '
d.idate&amp;10(ll t~ot.o-. Aocnill8tl .for

"W!f'f' .~GOO ~1-o;,.e-

0

:eqii~ ,alll~

dergraduate students. Seleaion criteria
' iqclude demonstr;ated mastery• o.t-"''
teachin~J , 1echniqueo and Jlexlble - ·.
respopSe to studetu needs; continuing
scholarship; !!Stablishmen_t of high stan- ·
dards for stUdents and a construdive aJtej11pt to l)elp students attain acadeD)ic.
excellenee; -and'a:willinll!'ess to ~ as ,:
an acadehlic advisor and be easily
accessible to students.
·

peOple_
v-...

Fulbright-Hays award by the Board of
T" .,_.
5oqeons
·
faculty here for -47 years prier to his
lion' Program on Educationa! Adminlstrac
_ Dr.-Wo,rthington G. Sc:henk, Jr., .chaifFoteign Sc:holarships and the Depanre tirement in 1973.
lion being held in England, July 6-ZJ.
• man of the Department of Surgery, is the
ment of State. The award is for lecturing
Department Chairman Dr. R. Oliver CJb:.
new president-elea (1974-7S) of the
and research in Spain in the field of
son .and Dr. Robert W. Heller ,are
Low School Prize Winner
.
Society for. v,.scular Surgery, a 'limited
representing u/8, one of the assodale
ciltalysis. .
Rolland E. Kidder, Jamestown, has'
merflbership association of 250 surgeons
sponsors of the event. Approximately 150
received the Robert J. Connelly Award
who specialize-in the care~of blood vessel
fr9m the Erie County Trial Lawyers ~ practicing administrators and profesoors
Elected 1o ALA Posts
,
disease by wrgical means. The 52-yearA~ation. The award, named for the • of· educational administration from the
Gera ld Shields, assistant professor,
old Schenk joined the Medical S.hool
English-speaking world are at the conlate Buffalo attorney, is presented an: ·
School
of
Information
and
' Library
faculty it;~ 1954 as instructor in surgery,
ference, which is held every foUr years to
nually to students who distinguish
Stildies, and George S. Bobinski, dean ,
became professor of surgery in 1966, and
promote
· development of s~tematlc .
themselves in the Trial Practice Course it
have been electe~ · in a ·nationwide mail - U/8. Mr. Kidder is the ninth reciP.ient of
three years later was ~Cling 'cf.air,man of
study and research in educail&amp;aradballot
as
members
of
the
Council
of
the
the depart~nt, a 'position h~ held 'until -,
ministration. Participants will spend one
the award, formerly called the Erie
30,000-member Ame~ i ciln Library
his pemw1ent appointment as chairman
week . each at the Universities of Bristol,
County Trial Lowyers As!i!)Ciation Award
Association. They will each serve on the
ih 1972. Dr. Sc:henk received his ~ . D ..
Glasgow, and London, hearing papeR;
for Excellence in Trial Practice. He
' Council foJ. a four-year term. The 150-from Harvar&lt;f Medical S.hool in 1945,
recently received the J.D. degree from - attendil.!,8 seminars, an~ visiting various
member Council is the governing body
and interned -lit ihe Massachusetts
educational institutions and '"tendes.
the Fa~lty of law and Jurisprudence. In
of
ALA,-detetrriining
all
policies
of
the
General Hospit;jj~A Fellow of the
Dr. Gibson will deliver a paper on
order to qualify for the -ard, students
American Co!lege of Surgeons- and a · Association: It meets twice a year to carry
"Trends in Educational Administration
must .prepare and take to trial an actual
on its ·deliberations. Both Bobinski and
_Diplomate of the- "'meriq,n Board o,l
Research in the United States," and will
caSe, either dvjl or alminal. Although,
Surgery, he has held offices 1n several' · Shields have been active in ALA. Dean
also chair a team representlns the
this is all -&lt;lone in the dassroom, judges
Bobinski was elected to the board of
- national societies, induding the Society
University Council for Educational Adfrom the Buffalo ....,. sit arid try the
for Clinical , Surgery (secretary) ·and ' dir~ors o( the College and Research
cases. Fellow students play the parts of -- ministration (UCEA, the mtlonal
Library Division of ALA fast y~ar .
Society lf!r VaSGJiar Surge!)' (treasurer
organization of American uniwenity
jurors and witnesses and members of the
Professor Shields previously serv'ed as·
and vice president). H~ is a former
departments of educational admlnlstraTria,I Lawyers -"ssociatlon -take the parts
editor of Ameiican Libraries, the offidal
ll)ember of the t-jational Inst itutes' of
of clerk ;lnd ot)&gt;er courtroom officia~. . tion) tl\at will explore pouible interacjournal
of ALA.
~alth's.sorgeiy study section, was presition between the UCEA and the
William Reynolds,. president ·of the
•.
df!nt of the Buffalo Surgical Society and
Association, said;mat the "awards are not J pr~ram.
~~s "Served oit the Council, . Centr:al
necessarily given to~ students who
History Award Recipient
:SUrgi~l. ,o\ssociation.
win the c*se, liut.io the'students who rio
Or. JoiJ!I T. Horton, professor emeritus
the best job,..
of
hi$tory,
was
honored
with
the
197-4
._
. tlpo
·. ..
•
•
Owen B. Augspurger Local History
Award at a dinner aJ the Buffalo &amp; Erie
At 1n1ema11ona1 c~
Dr. Sol .
le r' I sor and actmg
County Historical Society, July 17. Dr.
Two members Of the Department of
chairman, "
' of Chemical
Horton is · a former- chairman 'Of the
Eduational 'Administration are taking
~gille'lfl ng, haS .been selected ~or a
Department of History and~ on the
part in t~e Third lnternationallntervlslt1- ...,

.

0

Wlns ~-A!

~~ ~e~

'

.

....

-

/

•

�.-

.

. .c.i. ~ol ~·

25.

LlftAIIY E X - ~
·• · nation•I premiere of the "'-"'· ThUtre .in
Firsteditions of the works ~SOmufil~ett
LewiSton. celebrities Khe&lt;!uled to perform
!~om the 5011ect1oq· of Lock~~~
on .~ning night include' Ethel Mermon,
library, ~rill l1oor bolcoQy, LoCkWood. Vli!W- - -c;oeJy -TysOn, Edward - llillella&gt;and Michoel
ing hours: Moncijly-Ff!day,~ a.~ p:m. ConTilsOn"" ·Thom.il, condu-C-ting' the Buffalo
tinu ing.
~ ._!.. ~...
~
Philharrn;pnic OrChestra·. The event begins at
LOCICWboD Ellli);rr
, - ~
8 :30 ~p.m. lhfofmation.on tk:ltet{ and ~rfor~
Polis{~ Collection, an ~ibii;on rulSec:Hrom , rNnce Schedides is available at dle ·Artpark
the U~iveriitys~cOilection pf mori than 4,tfoo
Tl\eatre Box Offk:e,:4!9 C~ter St., le'wiSton
·yqhJmes of material, first flcJor., Lockwood
(716) 754-437,5. Bo.: office hours are' 10 a.m.~7
Melnotial Lilfrary, Montlay!Fri&lt;by, 9 a.m.~S - p.m., seven diys .a ~eek. Tickets also available
p.m.~ Contiiwing. ·
,
- at Nbrton TiCk~ Office.
• ·
·

/

;..-"J .

KiaacN STUDENT

A &amp;~~....oi..$.

1..

... .

The Olfiai ,61· -".dmissions a&amp;i ,RecOr-ds, 1
Hayes Jl, willile open ~f9m ~;lO ~-rj\,~:.JP. R·I"·
on the foii&lt;&gt;W!nf~t~: July 1~, ~26, 30-~
31; August 1, 2, 6, 7,' 13, 1•, ~23.'0n all o tliii!_
wee~days durin_g tuly and Augtist

ihe OifJ&lt;e

- will he open from a;lO a.m.-4:30 P·.'l'·

ARTPA&amp;K THEATRE ,OI!ENING
Th~rsdoy, _July 25, marks ~ g~ inte!-

SUNDAY~21 - ;
RIM•

liuAIRLM ..
Fantmi~ PJ.n~

Conference ~tre. Norron; all Gll-5117 for tirMs. Admission charge.
COl' ot!J-CIILU AMB1EAN PASTIME
•
MenU~I ' Retonhtlon: Con They be Nor-

molizodl, a discussion With leon CompbeD;Jim Koren ond Dr. E~ Lusthous, all of the
Erie Coun!Y CNpter of the Assocntion for
Retitrded thilaren. ·~ by ,.,.,..~1.
Estren. WK8W "!!!lo; 10 p.m. , • ,. _,_

. '. MONDAY-;-7.2

&gt;

.•

Wason~mster (Ford), 140 Capen, 1 &amp; 3 p.m.

No admission charge.

.
SUMMIIl RIM INSTITUTt•
Screening/djscussion with filmmaker Donn
Alan Pennebaker, .140 Capen, 8 p.m. "No admission diarge.
UUA.I RlM .. .

Monte Walsh, Conference Theatre, NortOh;
call 831·5117 for times. Admission Charge.

EXHIBITS
· An EXHIIIIT"
- - Drowings •nd Wotem&gt;lon, by Oficio _C.
Pelosi, Btuilion grodu.ate student, Hayes Hall
lobby
ases, "!.onday-Fridoy, 9a.'m.-5

d=

P·~-~~~oft:ulru-;.1 ~flairs.

-

J~

- ... '

..

-;-

ORifNTA'nON, \'OlUNTIBS·, '
Both" 1\merican. and "fote.Jgn student
volunteen· are. .-ded 10 1lelp with ;fOreign
student Fall ~tation ~such H housing, ..transportation_, ~pdon. ~iQn,
a"mP.us tPtnt_, anO with prosram lctfl.tit'i'~
inCluding' ~.:cursiohs, 'a picnic, dance, ~rty .
and banquet. Orientati_!)n ac:;.tiviti..es WiiJ taka.
place August 27-Septemher 3: Those who
want to hl.ve sOme cross--cuftufal experiences
should cal! Ernie at the Foreign-Student Of. fice, 831-3828 (in the" afternoon). ·
.....

"'"d

To ~· infomullion b~the Weelrly C..............,ue, contact Nancy C~,
ext. 2221, by Monct.y at noon for lnduslon In the folc&gt;wlna lhunclq.Jooue.
Key: #iOpen&lt;~nly lothole with a prof~ ~-In ihe~
to

•ope..

the public; ••open !o meonben ol ~ Unlftnlty. Un!- ~ ~. tlci".ff ·
for eweilts o;lw'slns ~ can be~ at_!hi!. Norton Hill T1dcet Office.

1i c~urses ~l;tt~· fu!·CSEA e.;.plo~~e5, _-:
Twelve Employee_:Benefit· Training.
Program courses, supported by. lr!lining
and- development funds negOtiated
between the.Stateand CSEA for uoe.during the existing C~?Rtract period, will be
available to U/8 classified employees this
tan; with riwst beginning the w~ of
Septembe~ 16. •
__
Participation i~ limited to. State
employees who ar!! members of the administra!iVe serviees; institutiopal ~r-

op_en to ill5titutional and _operational
employees; B-1·283, lehnior-Modllk.a'!On• Wednesdays;1'li 11.m. (30 -flours
total), open to institutional- and
professional, scientific -and technical
elnployees. ~ '
_
·
One ..w. Genesee Street. Suite 75()
(under.· auspic_es of Erie_-communttr
College): A-1-S,fuado•znlliloGfS&amp;oJieriwlslon, Tuesdays, 6-7:50 p.m. (30 hOuri); A-1·160, lntrochoc:tlon -lo Pubic: l!er-~
v!_ces, opf!r·a tibnal Services, -a'nO
IOIIIIel Admildstradon,- Tuesday$, 6--7:50
'-Professi.o nal, scientific, an!! technical ser·
p.m. (30 hours); ;,and C-1·5, Eftedhe'
vices .negOtiating uriits. '·
·,
- Spealdns, -Tuesdays, 6-7·:50 p.m. (lo
Ap;:&gt;licalions _for_the ·courses m~Si be
hours).
made before AtlgusJ 5 to the University's
·
.
training, ~cer, Applications' afe •t!'' be
Erie . Comm.u)lily &lt;~1/ege: A:2·90,
made on Fon:ns PS'2ZQ.S· a!'# forwarded
l'rlndpleo of Attountlns, ~Mt I, Mon·
throug!l ' normal channels. Each form &lt;lays a~d Wednesaay5, -6 • 7:15 p.in.
mu_st · b~ -&lt;:ou ·rlrers1gne~'' \l y the
(4~ours), threecollegecredits,open to
employet;:s~ supervisor to ~assure ~radministrative and professional; sdentidpati6n f.,-asibility, acd)rifing Yo a Sta1 !! . tific and technical employees; A-.3;90,
:.. &lt;!:iviJ Service Department announcement .., &lt;ioyer.nmenlill .lccountlnl)'. Part I,
drqJiated on qmpus this week.
,
Tuesdays -~nd Thursdays; 6-i':1S p.m .. (45
Classes will be offered In foUl-locations
hours), three collej!e.credits; open to-ad·
in Buffalo · as folloW.: · • -·•
ministrative .and professional,~ scientific
·sulfato ~City Sdiools:' 8~1-180, Small
and ) echnical ,employees; A:·1·180,
EnsJne WorbhOp, Wed~esdays, 7-10 _ Concepti of PubHc Ad111lnlstratlon,
p:m. («!.hours total); B-3-165, ·Act.itnc;ed
Mondays, '6-7:50 p.m. {30- hours), open tb
Wl)ldlns. • WednesdaY,; 7·10 p :m. («&lt; · · administrative and -professional; scten·
hours total). The5e cl.uses Start October' · tific and teq, leal emplqyees; B-1-47,
2; ·resistration is the fim night of class.
~ -Madtematla, Wednesdays, 6Enro! hnent is 11~n to employees in the
7:50 p.m. (30 hours); ll-1-2112, l'lycholosy
institutional and ~atlonaloe~ un·' , of lnterpenonai 'Rellllons, Mondays, 6-.
: its. •. , ·
, &gt;: · • • _
7:-50 p.m. (JO Qur~); and C; 1-35,
- BUffalo State H~/1 11-3-150, -fuot..
Uoodeo-..... ..-1 IMelpoetalloO ol
- ~of~P..t , · w~ ~ ~Wednesdays ~:20
HI, Wedltesdays, ~ p.in: (40 hoilri}'otan, .. p.m.· («&lt; hours).
·

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>_,.._,._._,_....,_.
............
-........-- ' __....
• . , Palrldl Want . . . . . , _ _

Schultz, who sought an escape to
freedom, the UIB scientist hoped to
learn how the Ojibwa people, living in
the subitrctic or boreal fo(est, have
ad_a p_ted biolosically and culturally to the
relentless.cold.

· n....-................
- l i l l . ...
.

-

hili ....._,_
......... ..... ....., _,fell,..,
_,.......,..,............... pn&gt;fl!led
.........,,
~....._"'""'
-.:tradci ol .... ...,_, _, ....... -

Nlllflllw -

..........

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

I

ol ....

.. . ~

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

.

pJ.yeil,

Weagamow Lake, south of the western .
end of Hudson Bay, often &lt;!_ropped to_SO'
below zero. With the permission of the
leaders of the settlement, Dr. Steesman.
..... and research assistant Louis Marano flew
into the village by bushplane/ They
remained there throughout- the harsh
months of January and Feb"'a.ry,_studying th~ .critical adaptations that allow the

-

"To•, ftdt . .....,•• Ia .,._o,..; -Y. lor
&amp;Cin'IJ.W.Schultt.Wythas.MIIndi.'l

'

In wiQter the temperatures at

·-Almost a &lt;entu;y ~ ~ yguns New
Enslande&lt; named James Willard Schultz,
.chafins- at the conftnliQns of while .

.

350 villas'f!rs to survive wint-er
temperatures that present a constant
threat to life.
_ ·
Ufe Is l'lec:orious
Life at Weagamow Uke is precariOus,

dependent on the vapries of !he food ·
Sllpply and constant resourcefulness in
.dealins with a harsh environment. Until
1950 or so, these were nomadic PeOPle,
who followed the moose and earibou
herds and lived in ten)S. Today snow- c
mobiles are replacing dog-sleds, and
there are canned peaches.Dn the ub~,
augmenting such traditional staples ·as
moose meat · and ptarmipn, but life
(turif lo l»ie 2.. carl.l. 1)

U/8 President Robert L. Ketter was
W. Brown, College at Brockport; Jol1n D.
among .seven SUNY administrative ofMaguire, College ..ft Old Westbury;
fii:ers reappc)inted,i&gt;y the State University
James E. Perdue, College at.Oswego; and
Board of Trustees at its June 26 meeting
John S. Toll, University &lt;;:enter .at Stony
in formal implementation of a .five·year
Brook.
Predclen~ &amp;Uutions
.
review and evaluation process ·an·
nounced in 1973. The P.rocess is said to
·Ketter and the lift other campus chief
be the first of its kind in any public unexecutives were the iniml group of iversitv in the United S!ates.
SUNY presidents to undergo formal
The reappointment, Ketter said in a
review and evaluation. The evaluation
University Information Services radio ininvolved participation by student, faculterview following the announcement, inty, administrative, and trustee repraen- _
dicates that the SUNY Trustees agree that
tatives who served on committees on
U/B has been moving in the right direceach of the campuses involve!~. .,
--tion o~ the past severaryears and feel
Campus discussjons and ~valuations of
Conftdent that the· institution can conthe individual presidents were·submttted
tiRue in that direction.
to the Chancellor, who, in turn~ reviewKetter .noted that hir-administration
ed the findings, interv~ each presihas, achieved a considerable degree of
dent, and made a recommendation to
stability with, the outside community,
the Board ofTrustees. Each president was
..._ •
·· - '-&lt;
$0mething which the Trustees were most
also interviewed by the llbard before in°
complimentary of. Several members of
dividuil decisions were inade.
·the Board, the President said, indicated
Mrs. Maurice T. Moore, bqard chair•7
· that when he was appointed they did not man, in announdng the reaffirmation of
a President could succeed here •for
all six presidents, praised individ!!Jl cam11
•
.1~-.... feel
one year, much less for a lOnge(period.
pus evaluation cormriitt~ for " outstan. ~
~ "Now is the time," K~tter said, ~~..when
ding and thorough reviews, and for the
A{ter li!IY Zl, .,the Health Sfil"'ces • Jaculty ~nd healtlt prbfessionals, but it - -W'e an really determine· what this
positive ~nd ct&gt;nst111ctive attitude with
library, which coptai.rls over 145,000
certainlY will .b.e .a biJI&gt;improftment,"
Uni¥ersity·can and should.do and-get on
which the initial evi\luallon was con""und books wod journals, nearly 16;000
Lil;?rarian Huang_ say£ T11e expansion will
with the business of doins it.''· UIB, he
ducted.
•
pio~ide a, total of 415 reader stiltions. ·'
suggested, h3s the c;ap.bility of plarins a
"Obviously, each campus has d~nt
audioVIsual tapes and films, equipflK!nl
· and assorted furniture;'will be "at ho""''~
Some 1800 viSits ore. recorded elec· major, if -not . tlie major, role -in eo- '
sets of accomplishments and"t&gt;roblems,"
Ironically on.,.aQ "averase·:· day at- the.
tablishing the credentials of• State
Mrs. ·Moore said. ·~All "of the ·reports
_ in o;iew quarters in. the St&lt;&gt;!;kton Kimbal!
.
Tower.
·
.
-ll~ary- most ~I which~~ made by the
University in the forefront of1tnowledse.
made solid recommendations for actions
C.K. Huans, Health Sciences libr~rian, ~.estimated 6,000. .full-time -f~Ct;llty, ~fl
:.. .To do this,_Ke'ttij: said he indicated to in the future, as well as citing cument
.- and his 1¥11-tl~ -staff of 37· started tl}e .C and '-Student popu1atlon. of me Health
the't'rustees, U/11 needs two things: first,
strengths. After a review of these
,'
July 1. --The shilt, intidentaJij, in- • Sciences. ftuans inilicatt!$,.....,._, th'at
a CX&gt;mf11i1mint on the part of theJioard
ev~luations, and pe~Jdnal interviews with
eludes the satellite library at tbe Bell ~ many:of the U,OOO health ~Is
to haft it JIO ill this direction; and sethe_fJ!:esidents, it is the judgment of the
facility in addition--do collections
in Westem "::&lt;iw Ycid also make use of
cond, the internal fle•ibility to deterBOard of Trustees that each.of these cam_·J!teviou#Y loated in Cape(! •• , ,
reference .- and., bibliosraphy services .
mine at the -local ......I what programs
puses ·is reeeivin8 strong and able
Jhe Kimball Tower locatio!) gives· the provided bv.th.;Japlity, the .mmt'com- _should a.,.· phased down; which should
leadership from the presidents reafibrary9,GIID~feetmorethanilhad
plete and~ libr~rj ofltSlaod lnlhis
be- held - ~ -and which should be
. ~" •
area.
, .
- .. allowed to
fast in. tenno of both
s - l e o F 111M - 1oo
.,
in Capen, with an llldlilonaiS,!!OO square
feet to be a'dded iit.a.out tin montho. A '
~unique fe.ture oft}:M! Library, H~ns
quaUty and nu~ • · · •
·M Moore
•;;:_the Board will
final COIISi(uctlon~ be comsays, Is the 6,000-volume HistOrY of
~
•
.·
.
1 n.
~ed.litiwoyea~~,~IP,!Iceby
MediclneCollltalon.Many-oflhese·date'
~Qfflrmed •tons with ·Ketler were
fo~lls~.with~ summary!"'
-still anotber
~feet."'~ this
to the 17th &lt;en~ury~ are invalUable-to .- · Chance1lor-&amp;Ma'L:Boyer and~
&lt;eeeh~ ·e'ilkalion, which Will
~ Js~UUiy . . . .-for the~
~preparing n~~l studies,_ . ca~p~s : presidents: Thoma( M. , . be included:'" ~:&lt;'f the~ pU~ic
.,_. · ose'.the'library~fiomiludeiils.'
.-"/i;· •
- , ~ n- _.~&lt;0!-.'l•: " :Jami!IIO",Coflese'at-Poisdaii); · Albirt ·
-'
·' - ~~~~- a&gt;f; .41

, • .' t•b
- Sctences
'I . rarv ·H.•ealth
·ng
_
·o
·
.
Kt.
_
mball
~ ro
. ~·,er
mov1

sr-

s.-

..

-:d

�core.

-

wu

equator,
a
relf!lllUe. But
some 500.000 years aso man moved ~ay
from ~he tropics. At that time, we
hypetheslze, a seconda.ry evolution took
place, with frqst-bite actina as the ~­
tive force.") This seconilary evolution
favored those individual. . who ' inain-.
tained efficient blood circ4lation
(reflected in higher hand tempera~res)
ilespite the cold.
.
"This seems to be a genuine gej&gt;e_tic
adaptation," Steegma11 notes, although
an indi~ual's ability to maintain !&gt;and
teml&gt;l'ratu.re -wl)l · i!'!'prove some~hat
y
with acdimatlza~. Most populatoons
~ 011. &lt;D
means • man caR'alwoys make' uhelter,
wrapped seVeral ti~ around. 1 ~ leg. } " that live In cold, lndUding .Northern
15 you
find Something With which !O build a
' -The only problem woth
Europeans; show this adaptation. In con"Acclde!&gt;ts ate a leadlns . ~use of make a new pair of snowshoes il--hos
have toi&lt;eep diem dry. In extreme cold
trast equatorial f'OI&gt;ulations, indudingdudi.'' Dr.Sieepnanreports."lnwinter
should break. Both, however, are cuith1sisnoproblem:at«J'or50'belowthe
most -black's, respo'nd to l.ow
a hunter who becomes hungry and
tuleS In which man is just hanging O'! by
snow ..won't even sticle 10 the~ Bu! you
. ter(lperatuq!S with constricted l,&gt;lood
weakenedonthetrailmaydle. The line
hls.toenaifs. "-·
'..
. .
"
havetobecarefulwhenyoucomeneara
. vessels and chilled !lands. Militao:y surbetween
rvival nd
·val 's
·
fire· or go Inside." Becoming over~eoted
·.,.j· te th black
1
often .ery
-d:!':nali'y
!?th," he , •!Ids, . "are damn
s\veaty cln
as
thos
of 1
1
freru
-A fall1rom
snowshoes in
~
criti&lt;:al adaptations which Dr. - dh omat~e
.
as~':.
~~~llfu•tse
•a
g· vo ageet~r
told have an.elevated incidence 'Of frostf
f to death.
of
I II •- ' 111t of
.
d'
$ 000
ave
"'"' "'"
at arron ong th
.
·
a
:lanC:
Steeg man
un . er
73,
in In f!i!iponse to changes in activibote.
while out lllone on the trail or trap line
from the Natoonal Scoence fou.n da:lon,
ty or changeS in temperature:. throughout
Ad Hoc lord Test
may -- wet and may not survive," he
fell i~o .. two. gro.u ps: behavlora or
1he day so as to '"inimize this danger,
- While •• w.eaga.[TIO~ake. ,Dr '
o~·
culliihol ond blologocal. •
•
Ste:egman wos his ow!' subject in ~n ad
51 • man adds.
"the Eskimos to
North,
l1oe Snowshoe: A Crltlal A.Uptation
wrirking and living in the cold the ·· hoc test of an hlstoncal hypothesis on
hove been mpch more extensively
"PrDbably_ the most critical cultural
··villagers use a number of 'tdcks, some
why Northern- Asi~n people, Including
studied, the o\lgonquin people of
adaptation is the snowsh&lt;&gt;l!:" he soys. . consciously learned and others.,.;,, .. the
Eskimos, hove littl.e facial_hair. lthas been ·
nada refl
the wi
.
;'Withool snowshoes,--;- wh1ch are ""*-!~~teo. ''When .4!'J!!~nt prJ. .,.f!rW-&gt;~ _tl!.•~ fac;lal boor enhances the
their
o\lgonquin invention, perhaps 5,000 . w oufifoo on the
WI!&gt; •
••
-,
tr•-"""•tion, manner. of dreos, . and'· years old - I don't thinlt.moncould have
· tlon, the theory goes, favored those few ,
-·.,..,..e.)lploited this en~onmen~." . .,._
, IndividUals with llitle-hair, thcte· who,
,_____ 1h
Ofi&amp;wa snoWI(iOes
on soze;:
titteR the;ll!llhlled&lt;ill the•.cold-·aii&lt;p had J
od)er-behavior.
·
"The c1ISiiGrand.
-differen&lt;e. _Eskimos
_ , is
,!·110
oj;•:wtifcl\ flt:Oit&lt;&gt;i•ould
environment
th•r of the
is,.- familiar rotinded-n
.
- , .,_
_, .._ form.
_.._, '
;r. the presenCe ·here Of trees," s~ys
byourfn&lt;?untatnmenrtoas-.t ...e
.. l;lL).... Steq"':a8rurW4!81!tJf~\rtlt~e, ~·n
SteegmOn. "In oorne ways' the ,;ctic
sion ' used fo r' traveiUng •cross
'-"' y llolail!:of
.:.,. b..,mj)e~lltllnhlndet' hi~ own··reild.~h
seoooast.is_,a.ri~r environmentrhon Jhe. terra~ have on'll
~·
Clothing a .fOikl"'yS are-on1y part·o(
~rd an_d ~ound !hit, ?JUOter t~ theory,
boreal forest: there is. more animal ljfe,
ai eaCh en t!&gt;at is charactendristi&lt;:a
1' y
'lheanswertoliow .t hevillagerssutyiveJn
.facial haoros. ~ecent lnsu!ator. a warm
loren--'.-. Buttheovailabilityof·wood
Ojibwo. In die village, four- a
1'(1'this inl&gt;Ospitable .. climate, h~wever . . layerofair~onri~underhlslloorybeard
year-olds move competent! ~ 'on
Biologicol adaptation to cold
also -~nd
. kept h1s face~os
warme~ than those of
(jL-.. ..,....'
snowshoes. An extensive lore surrounds
&amp;..-1:- .
h ~ b
snowsl&gt;o{'s;, encximpaosing ..their design,
taken plaee, .D.o;.,.S!eq~ ~~ Io-o;-. 1l.
l.l'li l1W' ;
.
·-· - - ·
"'-_,, col. 2J '
•••• .~ •··
their care (they are ltept on the cabin
he rootes.
-.
:...
.
'
roof awa.v from the clogs, which will eat
In addition to services sucn as regular.
th'e home-tonrieil moosehide bindingo),
ond interlibrary loans, . the Health
the complex and critical tyi~g of the binSdf.nces library provides photocopies of
dingo, and how to handle them in .the
artides on request to· foculty located in
deep s1)o,!" thot accuROulates ln the
hospitals having libraries (who may reforest.
·
Professor and Chaliinan, fomlly l'rac!!ce. · "'
quest that such ortides be _delivered
CommittM"to learning by doing. the ,
Instructor or r\sslstant Professor, H.S. Ed. &amp; Ev•1;.
through the Information Dissemination
scientist admits that he· never really
leaurer, Academic Affoirs: -. ; - .
' Service) and other hospital health
mastered the crucial art of snowshoeing.
A550date
Professor, ~yneco!ogy-Obstetrto;s.
~ionals (who s!Jould make ~ir · :·· "Usualiy the Indians do not teach in the ·
InStructor-Professor, Dentistry.
~
requests directly to the Ubrory):
.
Western sense," he explaiAS. "People
Yisiting Msistant Professor, Civil Engineering.
••
o\nother se~ice to k~p professi?nals
leorn by observing. I became fairly
r
Assistarit/o\ssodate
P-rofessor,
Electrical
Engineering.
current on top1cs of speat~llnterest_ 1.s !he
proficient at nowshoeing for s'ttort
· o\ssistant Professor, Clilld Health Nursing.
. .'
Selective Oisseminatfo!' of lnformatron
periOds in open areas but I never got
o\ssisiai'll Professor, Health Relot~ Professions.
. service. By registering. • request for argood at handling them in the' forest." '
,. r\ssiStant or o\ssodote Professor (two-year term
tides on a specifoc subject wi~h libr~ry
Appropriate dress also help~ the
·appointment), Cell &amp; MolecuiM.'Biology.
pe&lt;10nnel, a U54'1' can be. provided w1th
villagers to cope with the cold .. The ·
~~late Professor or Professor, Polh~gy.
new artides'lls they appear, thf9ugh the
routines of winter - · li~hing, hunting,
Associate. Prof~sor o~ P.rofessor, Cherrnstry.
SUN¥ llioJne!:licol Network ·or· ME~LINE . tropping, wood-gathering- mean spen~uter termlna1 of _the Not1onal
ding time outdoors no matter what the
NTP .
llbillry of Medidne )Oiuch . uses .Uta
temperatun!~ven babies are taken out·
baseo of MEDLARS !Index Medicus) and
side, swaddled in ·layers of woolen duffle
Associate for lnitructionol Resources, Instructional Reso~rces, PR-3.
others.
.
doth bought at the Hudsi&gt;n Bay Com{ Assistanl blrectof, o\cademic .\~airs; PR-3,
Huang points to 5eV!!1'al foctors conpany store (their grandmothers favored
Assi~ntto .Choirmon, Biochemistry, PR-1 .
,
tributing ID the Ubrary's in~ usoge
Tabbit skinland carried on thl'ir mothers'
~si;tont Libroriin (2 positions), Uni~~ty libraries, !'It-1. . .
slrice Its-first move frpm ~~ Hogh·S~r!'" to
backs pn crad.le boords.
•·
Assistont Libr;at:jan (pending· reclassif)catlo,n to Technocal Spet;aUst),
Capen Hall 21 )'e;lrs as&lt;'· 'There IS more
, Winter dress is an exotic blend of
·
University Libraries, PR-1.
·
t,roditionol; hanil-fashionei:l, handAssistontto Director, Educ;llional Opportunity Center; PR-1'.
eniphas!S 'on 'mntinull\f! edu&lt;;ation' for ·
people in aU arus of ~lth profess~ns; · decorated _garments and reody-to-we.a r
touqse/or (4 positiohs), EducatjOI)al Opportu~ity center, PR-1.
the great inftux of Information available
purchased-at the store. "The villagers are
... , Ecfitorial Assistant. University Relations, PR-1.
to the!n!las mushroo~. ,TI:!e r~lt has
very ecle&lt;;!ic,'l explaio• Steegmon. "They
Assistont (9f Universit't .finmdol AnalySis, Budget, PR-2.
lleen to seek Information as quo_d&lt;ly, as ' will '!"'Or anythinfl thot works. ,.!ljey are
. Programrrier .liriaJyst. ,Computing Servl~, PR-2:
Posaible - ancf.automated equopment
not very_emotional about their &lt;:tress." .
&lt; ...'; Msistint· lo Qirect'?", ihe Colleges, PR·1
.. _
has made that posllble.
. .
, I'J
lie Motuolllo ·
•
· ,'
I
· •
· · '
'
'
·
uA request tor~! whoch, without . _ ~f)ragri.atlsm ,~~ ~ in their_
· ·· For additiopal inforiWatlon. cbhierni~g .th-~,and (or cjetails of NTI'
computers, would oke many ~urs to
moccasins, for edlrul!e. "In Buffalo in .
top.,oilhgs illro'liift;'ollt liM! 'Staie Unl~ity system,. g&gt;nsult ·bulletin boirds. at
these loeaiidns: •, · '
'' · ·' .- : · . ~~
·'
_· .
. locate, can now be Rllecl within nunutes. • the winter.'' Oi; !iieegman ot.seo:ves,
People In the he.fih ProfeSsions; w+to
"every one has cold feet. The' reason·is ·
f. Bell -facili9i ri./D153;' 2. 'Ridge lea; Building 4236,-next to
.adorn have tln\e,. to do the
that ¥ie wear shoes that restrict the cir·'·'·
cafeteril! '3. Ridge
Buildlng4230, in corridor neXt t? C-1; 4.
Sciena:o
themselves, rely on us to dolt fo• them.
&lt;:ufiotion, -~hich 15' what keeps ow feet
Building,.io corridor ~te .l;lS 131; S. C,pen Hall, 1n the comdor j&gt;etween
CIIIDIT'uNION HOUIIS
.
warm. Unless !he village~, are doing
. Room 141 ond the J.ebtiy; 6. lockwOod, ground floor in corridor next to vens-er alik-e 1ooun for doe· Maifon something dangerous, 1ike~ chopping_
ding niachlnes; 7. Hayes Hall, 1[1 Qlain entronce foyer, across from Public lnforhdonl .c:n.111
wood, they light-weight, looSemation Of(lce; 8: o\cheson Hall, in corridor between Roornll112 and 113; 9.
...
11oa11o Hayes - fitting
with felt
r'\rker EngineeriQg.Jn cortfdor next to Room 15;
Hall, 'l_stfloor,
....
~ Manila): ;
- or newspai!JifS $tud in the bottom to ,
HOUsl!'lll Office ore.a; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Norton &lt;
..._, . ..
·· union, Dltecloro6 ,clllice, Room 225; u.
to
1p.oio.' " ;
. ,.
ore wonr ..- - . 1 pairs of duJfle · Room 1116; 14. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth flOOr

' renJ:"~ ·

= =who

fir~,

~in. ~

~

~~ke

~sons

·~

a:;:?,d

stu~ied

'k..::. hk

~

tra11\0ii'it1Nd~.

!Hnge~of ~-V~ E~reme

~

=";,i

=~ ;,:reme co~~

:rJie~'s;'!:i::~e, U: .~. ~xtreme

1

g~ant ~cloth

Wh~

me

~ lfda':~rh;s ·lr

~ry

~

~.bNi'ili

ru.s

wary mOVI"ng'- .

'be~'0.152
l~

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riioc&gt;Se,hlde.mOcciasin~.

10~y8ar

~-, ~1 .fo~pf.~~~themoa:asins

:-t':"'t ~
!

.

-~ ·· ~-andclosed'atdoe •topby•""""' ' '
~

-1. '

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,.;

H~lth

~rf H~l~,il'o'ffiCidot next

•

'' "

•.

.,

'

.

'

1.\m'l\erst}r~,
mpus),
·.·.
-

�Ketter-

_ _ ,_;...

I

.

....

·eo.nr. Exeallhe Com- ~~~
minutes ol !he

~ the MW plln dlrecled ID ~
pmidem ~ ID their .,_ In
1965 or 1~. Those _._t In 1915,

•

· Manpo~er,:_:mln~rity pr~gr~ms funded
~ f
• '"' SchoOf o Management has been
awarded both a $400,000 Manpower
Institutional Grant from the U.S. Departmenl oHabor (DOll and a third ye_ar of
funding for its Minority Management
Assistance Pr--'.
..,.•• m.
The DOL grant provides $100,000' per
}"!a'l&gt;ver a four year period and will be
used 10 sup119rt a manpower teaching
and curriailum development program
u)uler the direction of Or. Thomas G.
Gutteridge, assistant professor of human
~urp;s.
-

Presidents Brown, Perdue, IIICI Toll,near the completion ollhelrsecondilveyear cycle, while those -'"ted In
1970, Presidents Barrlnston; "-"· aad
Maguire, were about to bepl dlelr'hfth
year of service. Six more~ wiD
be involved in lhe proce51 nst rut·
Chancellor Boyer tenned lhe flhl ef.
fort "a succeloful procedure which InSproves accountability and _,..._.
leadership within lhe Unlwnlty. ~ 1
presidents have_ supported lhls ieJf
assessment and evaluation ~
have proceeded carefully and responsibly.
•
"I' m convlnced," he said, "this,._wiU ha~ a lasting and beneflclallmpKI
- -on the Univenily, helplns t o - 1Mt
our leadership will continue tq_ be badl
, effident and responsive to the needs ol
people."
.
The Trustees an!""'nced adopdon Of
this new 'review process early in 1973 on
the. recommendation of Boyer. The
proce•s is designed "to clarify and
strengthen the professional SbiUs of the
presidents and Jive them suffiCient time·
to establish and move towards achievement of their educatio!'al goak." Such a
systematic assessment of the· quality of
leadership ako insures accountability for
performance, a SUNY policy statement
indicates.
~
. The new polk.')' establishes no formal
contracts, but sets a maximum Period of
initial serviGe with live-year re~iews.
loyet's&amp;.......,
- The Chancellor's reaffirmation .was
~sed on a similar process.
t t.J l4!
Mis. Moore.said that a Universil)(-wide
evaluation committee (of students, facul·
ty; trustees, campus presidents, and ad· ·
ministr.ators) was unanimous in· its en- "'
d~rsement of Chancellol. Boyer'S _ ·
leadership, "as are the Trustees."
Since his appointment as Chancellor in
1970, Bo~er has successfullv guided and
strehgtheneii"ilie' 'comPI{xl '12!timpus
system, Mrs. Moore said. "More than
- that, he has given to State UnNersity a
sense of unity which will, in my opinion,
be its greatest ~urce of strength as it
faces the new and comples educational

:=~~:~EE:tu:Ih~.:;e~e:.:

and losses of the 'past four years-and has
U/B was one of 13 institutions selected'
office in Ne..r Yo•k City,
.
•
h ghl ghted fu
k
for such an award ouLof ._.aotal of 145
The institute will be designed to ini i
ture goa :
·
·
applicants from across the nation.
•
crease the interaction between
m:~
~~!':!..tm : . : l :
.
·
. ·
·
' academic·ans teach 1' ng and do i
y
~e. pn.~ary objeetove of the gra~IIS lo
'
ng
serve the educationahieeds of people of
traon _l..ndiVIduals. to develop and ompleresearch "about .m anpower planning and
all ages. We must develop UnNersityment manpower programs at both stale
the individuak responsible for actual
wide centers of excellence in such fields
and focal levels. We DOL funds will be
resolution of manpower problems. A
as the aging, general studies, policy
used to establish an Institute for the
series of interdis£iplinary courses
studies, society and the arts, and- must
Development of ManP.OWer SpeCialists
relating to manpower will be offered for
restate the goak of education so that
which will be part of the School of
both graduate and undergraduate
studentsdevelop~kilkforworltaswellas
Management and _will work with the
sudents. For those already involved in · skills for effective living.
New York Stale Manpower Planning.
the field, academic courses, workshops
" State University must ako introduce
Council in Albany and the Regional DOL
and seminars will be availablt!. A summer
new governance and decision makin11 ·
collqquium is.being planned for '!'3ional
ammgements whiCh will demonstrate
centers throughout N~!!!r York State, and
·that the 'world's largest un'-"slty' an
a human resource management option
be both administratively efficient and
will be developed within the School of
resP&lt;&gt;nsive 10 lhe needs of people," the
Management's MBA program.
Chancellor said.
Young patients at Children's Hospital
the medical chart:' he added. It also
Saturday Allergy Clinic are helping lest · eliminates the slower proaidure of senCongressman Jadr. Kemp was "par- '
--.,.,.1
the accuratv of a new version of an old
ding the child lo aJaboratory for testing
ticularly helpful" in encouraging QOL to
rOfl"'_lNI'!S aS
fund the program, School of ManageThe National Institutes of Health,
machine which may aid physicians in
and wailing -for results. Administered
ment sources indicate.
responsible for support of reseudl on
making_quicker ev.iiluation of asthmatic
anti·asthmatic drugs can be ev.Jiuated
more quidr.ly with "before and after"
children.
Elsewhere in ..the School, Sanford M.
many of the medical, biolotlical. and belottor' assistant dean, has been awarded
havioral facet$. of aging, have issued an
The five-pound ponable ver~ion of the
pictures which show the drugs' effeca $75,000 contract from ~U:S. Departinvitati!&gt;n for o'esearCh proposals on the
machine whict, usually fills half , an
tiv~~':'~ or l~dr. of 'it through breathing
ment of Commerce Office of Mfnority
psychological and ~I aspects-of the
average-sized roam was purchased ' by
capaoloes.
.
.
_,
phenomenon.
the University.lt's the only one ofits ~ze
. To . h_e.lp v,o;rofy standa~ds, nonl!usiness Ente'rprise: This one-year conBecause of recent legislation creating a
in Western New York, accordlnlf'1o o~. . . ~~~~''':'1' well as ~atlCS. are betract provides funds fQ' the Minority
National Institute on Aging, NIH wishes
James .Griffin, U/B ·physical therapy
on~ ~esteil on th.e ,mach1n!'· ,Gnffin ~ys
Mana.&amp;eml'rit Assi~tinc.!' · Progra'll
10 expand its current program of healthprofessor, who's testing the device.
chrldren a'ed srx of older provide the
(MMAPI which . involves rrlanasement
related · research In these fields. rt.e
"AithOughth&lt;!ri.' ita.etof,sianda·rd~to'· '' !]1.'3~'-; ','}:~tiab,le~ .~e~~~~~~~.:.~.'Y'1unger
and technical assistance, loan pacltaging,
projjram is funded through the '-grant
· wh the
h"ld k l
, ~,lldren are,n t u,~ •Y .~to com·
and
educational
al)d
business
developmeChanism
and consists of investigatorde termone
e
Nl c '
nils-horma. or
prehend the precise instructlo.ns which
men! · pro,ramJ for minority
initiated proposals.
·
must be followed ;n orlier tO sive valid
only ~ percentage !lf _normal breathong
m
the
Boffalo
area.
This
is
In
order
to
be eligible for funding in
businesses
·
capaoty, :the d~ta bern~ collected-:wrll . · ··n!sults"' 1\l, yld. · •
,&lt;&gt;., third year that federal funds haY&lt;(
fisCal ~ear 1975, research pronnuk must
.ad.d o the~sehne and ,elp _u s eval.uate
1{, alter eva1uadon and diagnilsls, the - lhe
been rea!iYed for MMAP. · ' ·
- ·•
.-lhl5 machines accuracy, Gnffon_said.
phftlaian ded~ the b&lt;eathing difficulty
. lJnder.._ _ __;_ofthegra·n· t, ~•••APis
be su mitted by October 1,1974. Fun'"'"~
n
g
~""
ding of research proposak will be CQRDr. Robert ~&lt;!isman, an assoCiate
is lQlog-lived enougb to be a majot hantlngent on approval by NIH revr...,
director .of the Clinic, said the Spirostat
dicap, Griffin tea~ the young patients_ - responsible lor "increasing the number
of minority business enterprise starts;
bodies and the availability of funds.
gives the physiciih an1:'instant'( Polaroid
to breathe more. efficiently throughstnensthenlng existing minority business
~ ln!luiries regarding ihls program can
picture showing ~~~child's breathi.ng . tl)erapy.
enterprises, and Improving opportunhles
be add......ecl to Or. C.A. Y~. actins
Cooperating j n this promising test are
capacity within lO seconds of the tests. '
for socially. or- eai!IOO'icalll' disacMn'director of;the M!'hidisdplinary Center
"lhis permanef!l ~rd is 11!55 cumberClinic Oirecto.r Or, Carl Arbesman, D&lt;s.
t~ged persoris ~ Cilli]l '&lt;ill'ecehful&gt;l fclrrh&lt;&amp;ludr. -pt·Ac~ns&gt; ~. 4224
same than· 1 q~h'e't~' of i&gt;fintlCiilts ' Joseph Mattimore and William Cla)'\on.;
bUsinesses.!', •
. . -··, . _
.aldge-Lea (ext-105)•• :.-.". .'!\·? ..
and can easily ,1'1!' read' and'atta~ed tO
a_nd Hospital sta~.
.
..._,_

~achine for aSthmatics

·

!n'b!

tesfed

p

"""··&lt;·

ked

.

�~

·1~1
4\11 "lnterllledla n.e.tie Event,"
........ EIIIne s.,n.._.. DMoe Mil'"

....

n.~
cle$atbed..... -pedment Jn ~ ........ belns
~fftim-ID10p.a.f11Chday

throu&amp;.Moftday 1ft the' Harriman

T'-re..,....

.

~the~

aoe free and •
- the publlci5 lnvllediD -.cl
MI. Sumnien explained !hat llhe hopeS
the .udleric:e will and 10-at will,
...a
tpend.- mudtor ill little lime as
rWucm WOIUICIP"
The' wodilhop has been orpQlzed by
..., wish Ill vlewlna the continuous
Un'-'hy lnfonnallon SeMces In _ . . .
....... of dance, music anil film.
In addldlln, she mentioned that the

jtfOiflm .0 desisned 10 that each
~ .cf. the
wiU not be

.aucn.,ce

' '1odr.ed IntO one fllaQ!." INifiad. they
will be•encou,..ed 10 walk in and
-.rout~!! die dancers ollf'd.fllin·pleces and
10 obserw lhe danClers ~for "subde . - n t s . " lnduded ue ~·E-zy
t:hanses," a dance- piecle whidi M&gt;Summen likened to a kinetic sculpture,
anjl "City · People Movln,J," a ' lilm
presentation Ulilizins 10 projectors-

.MS. Rabkin wins

jlon with life WOibhops. ond is OJIItR to all
rneri1ben of thie Unillenlty community, 232
Nonon, !l-11a.m.

AU AJ!9UND IUffAI.()O
-"'
- An lntermedia theatre even~ wkh continuoUs perfOrmance of film, ~nee,. video
and iilusic by the Elaine Summen DanCe and
Film COO.pany, Hlninian Theatre Studio,
noon-10 p.m. Throush Monday, July 15.

lJUM-- ·

-

~.

Such • ~ IGd Uke Me; Conference
~~on; callllll-5117 Ia&lt; i~. Ad-mialon c;ha&lt;ge:

Baldy felowship- . ~'noiw.
I~

fOU(

DANCING· , -

for_besinners. In good weather,__

Margaret M : Rabiln, ~ !:Jill ·gladuate
Norton fOuntain arN; othei')'Yise, 231 Norton,
' student, has received the first Baldy
&amp;-11:lll p.m.,..
' •
~ by Balbn Folio DOncing.
Graduate Student Fellowship In uw and •
Social Policy. The felloWship, na~ for
~ FilM INSti1'U1'P
.. ... - ~
the late BUffalo attorneY Chrisloph~r
The fi/Oiutlon of form 1'n Eorly /!a/ion
Baldy, was established to'recosnile outCirremo. an Hlustroted lecture by Ted Perry,
cNinnan, Griduate Oep.anment of Onema
star\ding-U/11 graduate students wh9 are
Study,~ New V~ Oniyenity, iii~ a screening
~~didates for ·a k!inl JDIPhD degree,
&lt;&gt;I Cre&lt;ine&lt;li Cera Un Duello (1909), 140
1\ave -.ubstantially q~rT~pleted law school,
Ca~; a p.m. No admission chirge.
and are doing a dissertation in the area· of
bw and soCial policy. ~·
.
The $3,000 one-year fell~hip is admlnister.ed through thj, -new, Baldy
,..,
.. .
Program in law and Social Policy, wf;ich • cbNRUNCP.
, Unioniurion ~tlf} ~rjon in our Chiilngis funded by a legacy left to the Universiing Soaety, 8 Diefeildorf. 10 ..
• _
ty by Mr. llaldr.-Ms. Rabkin will use her
- Presented by the Un~ed Gra'duate Studen!lfellowship · next year - to· complete her
For further inforrniition, clll Doug Pfile~ 833doctoral dissertation on "Women 'and ; 1n7)#or Birney Oursler, 837-~the Law: The Silent Feminist Revolution"
under Dr. Clifton K. .Yearley, chairman of . CONI'BINCP
Cr~oare ~sruderir pnions: Hislory, Techthe U/B l:llstory DepartmenL
·•
niques, Sr:rudures, 337 Norton, 2 p.m.
The Baldy Advisory Comminee, which
Presenled by the United Graduate StUdents.
is responsible for allocating the
For further infonnatiofi, all Doug Pastel, 8l3program's funds, chose Ms. -Rabkin for
1n7, or 80\-ney Oursle&lt;, 837'711&amp;1.
.
the fellowship. Members of the committee include Executive· Vice President
UU.U RIM••
Albert. Somit, chairman; Assistant Vice • _Such 01 Gorgeous· Kid Like Me, Conference
President for Academic Affairs William
Theatre, Norton; call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
·
H. Baumer; Dr. James 8:-~rady, aSsociate
~. provost of the faculty of Social Sciences
sUMMot ni.M INSTITUTf;
and Administration; Dr. Richard D. \ Films arid videotapes by students who have
Schwartz, provost of the Faculty of uw
po~_rtiCipo~ted in t_he classes of James Blue, Tony
and .Jurisprudence, and Robert Ko'r~n,
C--onrad. and St~rniil V~lkiili 1 Media Study/ Buffalo, 3325 Bailey Ave., 8 p.m.
president of the Erie County 8ar;Ass0ciation. '
·
~
The presentation of the Baldy
SUNDAY-14
Fellowship will become an annual event,
and, in the futu~ there inay be more
CONFBIENCP '
than one recipient. '
'
..
.
The -PrOcess of · collepive Bargaining. 339
·- Ms. Rabkin, wno expects fo complete
Norton, 1 p.m.
.
doctorates in la:w and histOry in May, P-resented by the Graduate Philosophy Club
and
the
United
Gr.aduate
Students. For further
19'15; also receiyed the B.A., M.A. and
M.Ed. from U/B. She has served as an -il\foi'tNtlon:, all Doug Pastel, 833-17'17, or
Barney
Our&gt;ler,
837-711&amp;1.
•
assistant ii'rstructor of history and as a
graduate teaching assistant on campus
an!!_ h~s also taught in the Buffalo
· schOols. A member of the uw Student
DiviSion of the Amerfcan Bar
AssOciation, she has been on the Buffalo
uMI Rew..W ~!If" September, 1973, and
is- co-chairperson of the Society· for the
l.nterdiscipll~ry Study Of uw.
,
The Bal4y Advisory Committee has
also awarded
first S2SOO iia'tdy
Summer Rese..rch Fellowships. in uw
and Sodal Poliq to five U/11 faculty
. members. Reaplents of tjle 1974 awards
and their projeds are: Dr;. Terry W.lilardin, associate professor of polilieal
science, "The Proteciloi\ of CivilianS in
Armed Conflict;" Dr. AI Kafi,..~te•
PfjJfessor of law,'. "Delemible 5f&gt;ace;"
l911is _Del s;ono, professor 'o' law,
"Morliiie financing Since the
Reform Act;" Dr. Jane15. .Harrlng. allisprc~euor of'-· ".ludldal Creation
MONDAY-15 .
·
of ~ Jtemedles in 1 ~ ·
•
1

her

the

-.,.,

,_,Tax

tan!

f;olllai;"MciDr.AnllianrM.Grulu!Q

;...

,Q.e

- ./ ""

·'-·'·

·

::?:,~;, e;"'~:~~ .: -~=::~~7

RIMS•

, -Life ~n Americar1Fi~n (Porter)~. Greif

Trafh Roj!l&gt;eryiP.onerl,. N_. fork•Hi!l JGriffith) and Civil~tiory (I nee), 140 Capen, l arid 7

P·l'll:

U.

'!'I' ·

.

LOCKW.OOO EXH1aJr '
. ""
POlish COllection, an eJI&amp;ibition culled from

· tlie Un~; col~ qf more.than 4.000•
volumes ~f tnilterial, first floor, Lock~
Memoiial Ubrary, -Mofjday-Friday, 9 a.nr.-5

p.Q\1 ~ontinuing~

-

"·

ART~~
~
.,.
. ~ ;._,
.- '&gt; ;&amp;~&gt;&lt;allft Watl!f'CI)Iors. by • Qliciq· c .
Pelosi, Bridllan graduate student, H~ayes Hall
PUIUCilY WOIIII$HOP.t•. .
•
•
lobby- display cases; Mondoy-Friday, 9 o.rn.-5
The woruhop 'has t&gt;ee'n O'lJ~nized by
p.m. Through July 31.
- '
Universiry "lnfortmtion -=Setvices in- ~­
Presen't ed ·by the office of CulturarAffiirs.
lion -with life_WorKshOps, and :is open _tq all
members of the University community, 232 ...
Norton, 9-11 a.m.
NOTICES~ -"

WEDNESDAY-17.
FILM•
Birth of a Nation (O.W. Griffith), 147 Diefen-

dorf, 1 p.m.
•
This silent dassic runs 175 minutes.
fiLMS•
One AM., The Rink, The Immigrant, Easy
Srreet (ill Qlaplin), 140 Capen, 3,.. a~d 7 p.m.
sUMMER FUM INSTJllJT£•
~- ,..
Cable Communialions, Robert Schwartz,
president, ComaJr Te.lcom Corporatton, Buffalo, 147 piefendorf, 8 p.m. No, ~dmission
charge.
-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>1

w stut~Y

UUP okays
n_e w pacf
by ·4.,.1 vote

Chal~

_

fear theories
·
w.d..,;...,
. , Plllllda

... .

In the final, terrible Pll"' of 19/U, the
hero Is threotened by hiS Cestapo--Uke ·:
tormentors with the thing he fears most:
rats. In hiS agony he begs the State to
tum the rats loose. on his lover inste.ad.
•'Do it to Julia," he screams. Fear.., Orwell
says, in effect, is. a more powerful emotion than love..
.,..
In a recent issue of The New -York
Times Magaz(ne (June 1'6), author
, MJggie Sca'rf discusses "The Anatom~ of
Fear," referriQJ to the extensive·findings
of psychologists who have been studying
fear in the laboratory since the 1920's.
fear, she observes, has become a way of
111.,.. for many dty-dwellers. ·why, she
asks, are we so exquisitely aware of the
threat of violent 'crime when, in fact, we
are ten times more likely to die in an accident than as a result of an attackl
The increasingly accepted answer, articulated .by Martin Seligman a~d others,
ts that humans and other anunals are
genetically "prepared" to become fear·
ful of certain stimuli (snakes, rats,
foreigners, and high places, for example)
and not of others. We ar.,, they
speculate, "neuraJiy 'prewired' for acquiring fears about certain objects or
situatioM, which ·ha¥e perhaps affected
human lil,lrvival ·owr the long cour:se .o f
our ~lutionacx..h~ory."
·~·
• U/a Slucly Uols Doubi
Ho'!fever, a recent study by U/B
graduate student Sheila Deitz casts doubt
on the Seligman "prepiredness" notion.
Ms. D&lt;;itz found that human subjects,
given mild electric shock, were as likely
to become fearful of a ne~tral stimuli (a
rope) as of a snake. Th.e significant
variable to emerg_e in her study was not
the ·nature of the stimulus but the
If you're passing lhrough the zoo or
lion. dante evet)t a few years ago at the
"~bility" or "stability'' of the individual
around Delaware Park lake and the
Seagram Building in New York, and per·
subject, that is, the amount of .sponAlbright·Knox
this
Saturday
or
Sunday
formed
·" Summergarden,. in the
taneous electrodermal activity typical of
and notice a bunch of people doing
Museum of Modern Art Sculplure
the individual subject.
"body
orientations"
on
the
greens,
don
't
Garden
last
fall. "Theatre Piece for
Seligman, who is associate professor of
thin ~ the sun's gotten to them.
ladders" was an intermedia work with
psychology at the University of Penn·
It'll
just
be
one
of
a
series
of
perfordancers and chairs, ladders and filins.
sylvania, explained his position to Ms.
mances in intermedia (defined by 1he
done at Byrdecliffe Theatre in WoodScarf: "If you look at the phobias in
Courier's Thomas Putnam as .. getting it
stock last ~umrner.
·
humans, by which I mean those persis·
all
togelher
in
1he
ans"
and
embracing
Company
Members of
tent and irratio.n.1lfears which sofne peodaoce, film, video and music) led by the
In addilion to Elaine Summers, the
ple attach to certain stimuli (such as
resident Elaine Summers Dance and Film
company includes dancers . Tedrian
snakes), then you:H notice pretty
Company as one Of the features of
Chizik, Roberta Escamilla, Ellen
at the photilas fall into a quite
Summer
Sessions
74.
Sahon51all and Robert Kushner, and
1. That is, fear pf open spaces,
Known as "All Around Bulfalo," the
technical director AI Rossi. Parlicipating
animals, of Insects, o( heights,
series consistS also of workshOps which
local artists will be Buffalo dancers Fran~
·in spaces - there may be a
began
on
campus
Tuesday
and
will
con·
cis
Maraschiello, Ellen Jacobson, Margie
dozen of them, all told. Th&lt;!f iosl!!de
tinue through J~ly 9, in the Harriman
Gershek and Wendy Biller. Linda
xenophobia, the fear · or mistrust of
Theatre·
Studio.
Swiniuch
of the Dance Division Of U/B's
strangers, peopk! who seem foreign . . . .
Some performances will be held in
Theatre Deparlment is the host and
The current ala'rums aboUt crime in die
Harriman,
too,
the
major
one
being
an
choreographer; Julius Eastman of the
~surely partake of phobic efemen'ts
intermed ia theatre evenr to be presented
Music Depanment. the composer; and
of this sort - that is, fear of people with
from noon to 10 p.m., July 1G-15.
videomake" Woody and Steina Vasulka
skins of d ifferent color, 'who may not
Worlcshop Topics
.
.
of the University's Center for Media
look- like oneself.
. Sludy, ~rticipaling guest artists.
The workshops include topics ranging
"We kr~ow," he continued, "that for
from "Kinetic Awaren~" to "Body
&lt;The visit.and program have been made
children, things like pajamas are often
possilile by support from the National
Reorientation ~ ' (see . yteekly Communi·
paired with psychological trauma; . yet
Endowment for the Arts, the New York
que, page ~ for exact·tiines of these for :
you don't see pajama phobias. Also, ob-State Council on ihe Arts, the City of Bufthe coming week) and form a sort of
jects liJ(e liammers and electric outlets
prelude to the larger doings In the Park · falo, the Buffalo Zoological Gardens, an!!
are commonly linked with very painful
Media Study/Buffalo, as well as Ulll's
area this we..kend. On Saturday, events
· experiences: I know of no instance of an
Office of Cuhur.al Affairs, the Creative
are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at the Buffalo
electric-outlet phobia. A child may, after
Zoological
Gardens
and
5:30p.m.
beside
Assodates,
and the Center for Media
an unfortunate experience with an out·
Study. Coordination ind pri.paration
Delaware Park Lake_. For Sunday, It'• 1:30
let, leam to-fear it (~ly); but you won't
p:m. outside the · Albrisht·Knox and .
have been handled by John Hellman- in
see him tremble or become ril!id with'
again at 5:30-p.m. at lakeside.
.
the &lt;City and louisa Green at the Univer·
feat at the ""'re suggestion thot he's
·
· All of the work.bops and perfor· . sity. ·
anywhere near an outlet, as would, for
mances are free, and the partldpation of
· IMtani:e, a cat phol1'c If he espleila cat in
NO
ISSUE NOT WEB(
all members of the Buff~lo community is
the distance...
invited. The Summers C-ompany is here
. the Summer Reporter will - ....,
Teslinlthe_.,
to perform HAll Anound Buffalo,'' .and
To test Seligman's notion, Ms. Deitz,
also to begin preparations for a mUCh
" I I deoice 0.,. .......,, l'ullllcallon
who is completing doctoral studies in
more ambitious city dance event, ':Jhe
.. l'lluntlay, July 11, .......
clinical psychology at Ulll and who is
Illuminated Workins Man," whJCh will
cqilliaioe 011 oucceulwe Tllandayo
assistant professor "Of human developtake place in 1975.
.
.......... .Ai1Pot1.
• (tl!ffl tOIMP6. col..J) ~ ~· The Company did a special d&gt;n~ruc-

~ine ~mmers trouj,e will'
dance 'All Arolind Buffalo'

the

0

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

The tentative two·year agreement
between the State and United University
Professions, representing some 15,000
SUNY faculty and non-teaching
professional staff, ·was ratified by the
UUP membership by a 4 to 1.marsin in a
ballot count conducted in Albany last
Thursday. ~Actual count: 2317 for and 547
against. With approximately 60 per cent·
of dues-paying members voting; the
results, according to Dr. Con~antine
Yeraearis, U/8 Center Chapter UUP
president, show strong support for the
policies of the present Slate UUP _
leadership.)
rtie most immediate impaa of the ac·
tion, of course, will be a siK and on~half
per cent a cross~the-board increase for all
faculty and NTPs. The boost, for 12·
month employees, will be reflected' io
pay checks to be issued from Albany,luly
10, UUP spokesmen say. Ten-month
employees will receive the hike effective
Septeit)ber 1.
·
An additional amourlt Oot to exceed
three-quarters of one- per cent of the
total of basic annual salaries, as of June
30, 1974, is earmarked, in the words ef
the agr.eement, 0 for distribution for
meritorious service by the State University. Trustees, in their discretion, with ap~
proval of the Director of th-: Budget. In
the distribution of the discretionary
funds ... coMideration shall be11iwn to
emp~ Who are belOw the average
salary for their rank or grade at their
campus."
. ~he. local administration is awaiting
guodehoos from Albany soverning distribution of these discreti!'nary funds.
for 1975·76, the contr~ct mandates sir
per cent acrOss~tfl~board raises, three
quarters of one per cent for merit, andanother one quarter of one per .cent
specifii::ally designated for adjustih·g ,
salary differentials.
·
The new pact, as has been heavily
emphasized by UUP officials, also makes
non-teaching professionals elisible for
continuing appointment for the first time
(aher a spedfied period of service): It
requires college presidents to justify
tenure refusals in cases involving faculty
who have been recommend..d for COn·
tinuing appointment by a review com·
mittee or NTPs who have been so
recommended by their immedi.Jte
supervisors. An appeal procedure which
the employee may follow in such a contingency is also outlined. However, the
, agreement notes, this does not "aeate
any manner of legal right, interest or ex· ..pectancy in any appointment to con~
tinuing appointment or permanent appointment." ·
R~t

The new contract provides an expand·
ed definition of retrenchment, permit·
ling '"termination of the employment ·o f
any academic or professional employee
during .1ny appointment ... as a result of
financial exigency, reallocation of
resources, reorganization of degree or
curriculum Offerings or requirements,
reorganization of academic or ad·
ministrative structures, rrograms or
functions, or curta.ilmentp one or more
programs or functions University~wide
or at such level of organization of the
University as .1 campus, department, unit,
program, or such lither level or organiza- ,.
tion of the University ;is the Chancellor
or his designee deems appropriate."
Such retrenchment Is to be made in
inwrse order of appointment within
each affected group of employees, with
part-time employees being terminated
before full•time term appointees and
full·tlme term employees before perma·
(tum.tD~

2. col.

J) .

�2

.._. ,......

7 -comm!ttees $'!Jdyi~ -~~y~~)~ improve ·

student 1nteradions Witfi·_l:ampus offices
.....,_student

.Those recommenc1a11on on " - the
lltlldent needs.
recommended by the Scaff SeNtel alief a
life by
The chalrpenons a!'d members of
. financial commitment to University
uppadins the quality of Interactions
most of the committees, Dr. Grexton .
training programs designed to I!'Ake
~ students and various campus
says, "seem tcrunclentancl that ultimate
University perso"nnel not only cognizant
offlceJ, made last winter by an 11authority does not reside In the hands of
of the functional aspects of their JobJ but
member Committee headed by Eldred R.
a committee but rather with the adalso aware of "the people ingredient In
Smith, director of libraries, haven't simpministration.... However, they believe
carrying out their dutleo."
1y .been filed away"ancl forsonen.
the committees can and . did effect
• On-site visitations to other unlwersignificant changes."
·
slileo of comparable size and nature to
AJxordins to Dr. Edna M. Grexton,
Division of Student Affairs, the
Six spedfic recommendatiohs for adstudy their training programs and
recommendations (Reporter, Februory
mlnislratlve funcllns support are outlinproblem-solving mechanisms.
211 are under study, either by the UJ&gt;ivered In Dr. GrextQJ&gt;'s report.
• A transfer specialist to advise transfer
~ for fullllnl
students - As recommended by the
sity divisions concerned ·(such as
Facilitieo PlanninR. Food Services, StuFirst, a funding commitment is sought
Staffing P.attems group this would be .an
dent Health Service, ~nd the Libraries for establishment of the I)OS!ion of direcindividual "with a broad academic
which were subjects of specific
torofan Internal information Center. An
background whp is familiar with departrecommendations for improvement of
original Smith Committee recommendament requirements and maintains.close
services) or by one of seven Universitylion thal"''co~sideration should .be given
liaison with the departments." Service by
wide committees (which have been
to establishing an information officer1n
such an individual would. be designed-to
studying suggestions cuning across
each substantiil University unit" is also
ameliorate "the problems which transfer
departmental and divisional lines). The
endorsed.
· students encounter at registraDr. F. Carter Panndl, vice president of
commiuees, appointed by the President,
The University-wide ·communications
lion . . . due ... to delays in- having
the Faculty of Health Sciences, has been
are being coordinated by Or. Grexton.
director would be responsible (accorprevious course work in their_ majors
appointed •cting dean of the School of
One hundred twenty-live faculty,
ding to a proposal of the Comevaluated."
,
.
Medicine, according to President Roben
students, professional and classified ·staff
munications Committee) for .gathering,
• The hiring of ten student aides from
L. Ketter. He replaces Dr. Clyde Randall
members have been involved in com·
validatinf and disseminating informati9n
summer orlent1tion for the first three
who
has held t_b e post~f-executive ofmittee deliberations to date, she ina
essentia to a student's successfuJ _ weeks. of each ..semester~· again
fice&lt; of. the -School of Medicine since
dicates in a preliminary report on their • University experience. "Besides com.- . recommended bY: the· Staffing Patterns
June, 197.3.
.• .
•·
activities forwarded to the admi~istration
munication skills and technlcal•exper'tiser _ - report-''T~e- ~ce.· of Admissions and
Or. Paimill, who took the position of
this week. One comrni.ttee has filed a · the !lirector should also possess -a • "Records and Student Accounts already
vi l:!e president a year ago, -emphasized
final repon but others will continue to
thoroufh familiarity with .the University's
employ student aides with good results,"
the "'search for a permanent 9ean is acbe active in the coming academic year,
interna structure and dynamics . and '
this ·c ommittee notes. TheSe additional
· ·
strong liaiso·n -capab'ilities with all
aides, which would be assigned by ihe "tively continuing.'' The School of
Dr. Grexton says.
Medicine
has been without a permanent
The seven committees and their
academic departments, administrative
vice president for student affairs to large
dean since December, 1971 .
chairpersons are : Student-Staff-Faculty
offices and student groups, to ensure the
departments with heavy workloads as
"Dr . Randall h-as held both
Rve!ationships, headed .by Eugene·
free fkJw of critical information as it is
well as administrative offices, " can
positions-that of vice president of the
M~rtell-, ..(;Jn1v~rsity" Placement; .Ada
generated ," the Committee
relea~ regular staff to deal with more
Faculty of Health Sciences and executive
mlriiSi~ : Procedures, . Mrs. Florence
· recommends. This individual would
complicated matters.''
officer of the School of Ml'(ficine-and
oridirr-::Eifu.eational -~tudj es; . ~om- . : · dr~~u~n matedals-supplie!i bv.upi~il!• An increase'" in tlie dissemination of
the University is deeply grateful lor his
munieafioh, Dr. Anhur Smith, '5'"peech - ·formatiOn· officer&gt;; ·-·· · &lt; · &gt;: -;_ : · ·
information to students (employing
continuing leadership under these dif• Communic~tion; Stalling Patterns and .
As funher delineati.d in the· repon ·ot
graphiclorm~tsand utilizinR moreofthe
ficult drcumstances," Dr. Pannill said.
Adjustment, Ms. Bernice Poss, Arts and
the Committee on Jo~nt Participation in
nonaprint media). ·
L.etters; StudentsaPersonnel Encounters,
Policies and Program Development, the
Of.- Nathan Altulher, :Swdeot:Cot.ois;;l:-:· • lnfer.nal lftfbmation -Cellte•)Voidil; ab&lt;!:: .
0
·"'"-~.-,--....,....,....,~"""""~"""""-:--:--..,.-..,...,.-~
ing; Joint Panicipation in the DeVelop~ he "a clearirig house 3net feSoUrCe infof(from IMP 1, col. 4,
.
ment· Of Policies and Programs, Sanford
mation center for units..to utilize ~rior to
f!ent appointees. Four. months .notice is
·provisions •for review of presidential
denial .~ of.. ,ip.ermaraent ~t -.lflPQin,tme~nts
. Lottor, SChool of Management; aJ&gt;~ . · ,- init~8 al)cl ,i'?f&gt;)a~nyog-PP!~:~., :
said !'desiuble'aoroll!r.m•appointees·lso
Assatjjted" -S"tudent:;Activit~es, !Y(rs.v~·- ·.-v(t.(~~~ave ~dpab]~tjL totl&lt;hiif. t .
affected-and·at least one~emestl!r 'is'cllll r
recommended ~through •&lt;:hannels irom
h~ow,• fop ,.both .fjiCUIIy;c&lt;l)&gt;d · NTP.s .
G~rge t)nger, Educatoonal Oppol\llnit)t - J•!Y,21her--&lt;,jnof!~n"P.P&lt;!..O!fl~q!Tl~~lfi.iJ; · ~ Jop in , t he-pase of permanenk ~p:
Centef.t
";. .
• .
r
a •..Jtaye i:.p~ to #offer.. J"ptjl 'b!::19~ ... ~ . pointees.
.,. - I : • ~ . • ~ : •
P.r~viously, ·Shl!"- emphu_ized, campus
The coiiJIIlittees,. Qr. Gr.el(ton _io- - : Q91icjl •i$::PrQRWigi1~ ,£~.ty.!fi1POh~
, No cl)anges -are. made; . however,~n
.presidents had to give no reasons for turdil:eteS;::iia..;..·~zea-?..neans--·or ··--..·nt"wotoldbetiif)utffofhtlioseunifsmat
notice time required lor non-renewal of·
ning down such appointment
better utilization of the time and energy
must eventually enforce those polides
term appointments for other than
recommendations. Not only do reasons
of existing personnel a~d (have} tried to
set up by other areas."
.
retrenchment reasons.
now have 19 be given, but opportunity
avoid advocating ."il:t~~ea- in ~,.. --· - .The llitecto~DI. ~~.ipiJ!(rlajlpfOFI!&gt;a.~ '
A new feature of this phase of the confor a peer-review appeal procedure is
sonnel:" 'Some t&gt;l- their sUggeStions; ShEf .. · tion 'tenter ~or.tfd De a facilifatOr, cooftract indicates that special consideration
provided each employee so affected.
notes, have already been implemented ·
dinator, and communicator; the Center
for placement within the University is ~ 0
The-outcome· of this process, moreover,
a':'d_others have bee~- forwarded to.ap- - would, n!)l set policy and, thus, would
be given employees terminated because
is to be sent directly to the Chancellor,
P'9Pr~e. offices who have provided· . ' not.be a threat to any unit's autonomv. in
of ·retrenchment, " provided that a
giving employees direct access to the
a~~: : Of potential change. Still
· acfdition to its being an information
suitable position : .. is a¥ailable." for two
central administration for the first time in
otlieis; Wifl:neell intervention by top adbank, the Center, as proposed by the
years following, a terminated employee,
such cases.
miOts'icatjO;f, she sa'ys, and a few will recommiJtees, could also be "a conduit for
not otherwise employed in the UniversiAddressing other areas of the contract,
suggestions, about changes in policies
ty, shall be offered re--employment in the
quire.liinding.
•
Ms. Gutenkaul noted that:
•
SugeStions Implemented
and p~og~ams, that would improve stusame or similar position at the campus at
• NTPs will theoretically become eligi·
In the cat~ory '!I "already im- . dent hf~.
..
·
•
which he or she was previously
ble for continuing .a ppointment . alter·
plemented," Dr. Grexto~ f[sts ~ s~ggi:s·. . . ~th.er_ lun~ong . req~esn_ w~~!d~ m~~'l. ·. e'l'Ployed .''should an --opportunity. .fOJ : .. seVen years of University,: service, ina
tion by the Administrative Ptocedui"eS
possible ..
·
· .~
· - · • - s'ucll employment arise:" ·
~·
·
eluding' two years·in title. In practice, she
Committee that ·University Placement
• .creat•on of the post of dtrector. ~f an
The cQn\ract. also includes pro'(isjons.
said, th!nneans that, alter September 1,
ani:! Coreer Guidance ilotiW!I~: seek part"
Offoce· of. Human· Res!)urces (P""'IOUsly .
outlfrllng " disciplinary" proeeounis "for
an - NlP wko · meets .these criteria will
become eligible for-this type-of appointlin:&gt;e empl~yment ·lOT . stude~ts-_ a!'d set•
"just cause," where informal disciplinary
ment at rhe time of the renewal notificaup .a part-tlme JOb -mart. The: Dovosion of
·
. · · _
• ·
action fails, and establishing fOT the lim
tion date provided by his or her present .
Student · Aff,irs, she reports, has . also
·Four Life Workshbps o"n publiCity loi
time· binding arbitration ·in" such
term contract. • ·
accepted a sugges_tion ·of the Staffing
members and staff of studeni activities
The employee must be notified in detail
· • The Tetrenchment provision in the
Adjustment Committee- thj.f · ?'Action
groupS will be held in Noo:tori iQ· July.
of what he is being disciplined lor and of
new contract simply expands the definiline" outposts be increased Tn the fall .
According to the oiganiz.,rs; the
the · penalty proposed. The discipline
Admissions and RecordS· and the Ofsessions " have been conceived in the
notice is grievable throug~ a series of . tion of retrenchment. ''This is an expanliceoiStudentAccountsareconsidering
tiope"thal campus events will &amp;e "better
steps;,including hearings by a panel of
sion of language, not of meaning," she
establishment of temporarf sa_lellite '01organized and publicized and, i~ ihe"
disciplinary arbitrators to be agreed on
said. The change in these provisions, she
noted, involves~he preferential re-hiring
!ices· on- the' Amhe.rst C...mpu•, anotherend, more sui:cesslul."
•
·
by the State and UUP within 60 days of
recommendation of the•Staffing Cbrha
In the course of the fOur sessions,
execution of the contract agreement. In
policy for individuals terminated
mittee.. And that same committee has
representiltives of various campus
cases where an employee's continuance
beouse of retrenchment, a further
employee protection.
recommended that "faculty hours be exres9urces, including the School of
on the job poses a potential dan..ser to
tended during peak periods," a request
Management, OHice of Information Ser·
persons or property or where'" an
• New language in the disciplinary
wh'ich the Student Association "has
vices, the · Art Departm.e nt and ·
employee has been charged with com- . provisions serves only to ·spell o~l whatvolunteered to communicite tb faculty.
was permitted previously under Board of
Publications Services, will meet-with the
mission of a crime, suspension without
Development of a flow chart to im·
panicipants to brief them on the variety
pay is permitted before notice of disTrustees polides. The- only change is a
of publicity assistance available, how to
cipline Or the completion of the disa
prove StU,dents' aWareness of whit is rf!a
plus, Ms. Gutenkauf feels: binding arqui red of them throughout their
go about orgarozing and planning, etc.
ciplinary grievance procedure.
·
bitration · has been introduced where
During the first meeting, Tuesday, July
Ms. Dorothy_ Gutenkauf, State
academic careers is being considered by
previously the Chancellor alone had the
the Adminiotr•live Procedures ~roUp
9, a panel of campus media represen·
secretary of UUP, said that response to
final say.
while· a flow · chan of:-University d ntertatives will be on· hand to discusnheir in·
the proposed agreement by the UUP
relation-ships · - to ·delineate whose
dividual requirements arid deadlines and
membership reflects a "certain kind of
dedsion• . •fleet whom . - has beeh
to answer questions.
negotiations reality on the part .o f'
proPosed and -will be pursued by two
Other sessions'will indude·discussions
members." UUP; she said, w!&gt;ile pleased ·
other committees.
of graphics, journalistic styles of writing,
with the agreement, is " well aware of its
·As · an · e-x~mple ~I the type of
a walking tour of . campus information
shoncomings."
and printing resources, and a P.Ublidty
Nonetheless, she emphnized, certain
recommendations ·needing "intervention
by top .cil'llini'!l"•lion, Dr. Grexton· notes
workshop. ·
.
.
·
"national bteakthroughs" in terins of
a SUSBeS~~on of the Staffing Patterns
Information on this and otheF · life
university and college collective bargain. groilp thitt the President "ask all units to
· Workshops is available from· 223 ·Norton
int~ are- contained in the pact', notably
arrange their schedules so that no~- ,
Hall, ext. 463CJ. For n\orfinformation ·oh
the" • provision fOr NTP ell,ibllitY for
student..-eWed ~ are -deferred
the publicity session•; cohtict iill Radler
perrnjlnenl"appbintmein (the first" of its
wherever pCI5Iible" during times ·of peak
(831-244n:
· ·
•
kjnd -.nywf&gt;ere, sh.,.. belieVes) and the
Uni~ mlaht

a$

UUP;

kays .pact-:·_.,.. ..

Pub1icity
• - w()rkshops
·.. ...

·case.o

. ,

".

.

Med dean

�June Zl, 197&lt;4

Bike trips coming
The Summer bike sea!ion is in· fUll
swing in and around U/8.
Whether for reasons of ecology,
economy, or exercise, an armada of
bicycles (estimated by Campus Security
at between 1,800 and 2,000) can be seen
converging on campus and troveoiing
the route between Main Street and
Ridge lea, pedalled by cyclists of all
sizes. ages, and statiom in U~iversity life.
:r.he ellent&lt;of the phenomenon ·has
been rioit!d bodltly planheR·(th'e biCycle•
"parking lot" behind lodt~, for one
example, and the pr.,._Hor'a bikrivay
linking the Amhent and Main Street
·campllll!&gt; made this spring by local
transporiation authorities, for ariother)
a_~. by those "!ho schedule summer ac-

•

hYitift..

.

.

Fcir-.cy.lillots wljo :hm ·fully

.

.

~

up

campus life Workshops ano;t the
Schussmeisters Ski Club have arranged a
series of intermediate length (rips for this
month and next. The Ski Club is apparently following the lead of area spor·
tin~ goods· stores which have found it
profitable to 5witch emphasiS from skiing'
to cycling in season.
The first of these trips, a 40-mile "bring
your.oyvn t¥nic" bike hike to Chestnut
RidsePark aRd bac!r, will le~ve from- the
Tower Hilll side of Norton at 8 :30 a.m.
this Sunday Oune 30).
· Orr-Thursday,1uly 11, a 50-mile round
trip excursion to Niagara FaHs is scheduled to liave Norton, again at 8:30 a.m.
Instructions for this one are " bring a pic·
'·nic aRd a swil"suiL"
· ·
Food and beach stuff will ;!@in be the •
orderof-tl'lediy,;Tue.ilay,)idi:JO,when·:..

- doe bid dl ~:vound-;llte .• ~~'-.,~~troua
··.lO~ •tnP.cm.
. " ~t,:.._
- ' Eity but are.- quite ~iO.:a ~
"""·~· ~·~· •
'""' "'~
• ~ biketrip 5UCh • thal 'detailed in
headins lor the Shftbton
last month's &amp;quire (because of prevail- . ••. The bike trips are open, to everyone.
ing winds,~ravel west-to-ast, the article
Siin·Lip IS In 223 Norton (or call &amp;Jl·
urges ~emers ~plan the.trek), the
&lt;4630).
•
•. •
.

n;aches.

HEW says

regulati~n·s

--c.!.-:-"'-!:

- :_

•

• •• -

..... . - . •

...,.._ .

on athletics .not 'disruptive'

tradition~lly and continually been single

are offer~, ~ ,.,.:,pient i~titution may
not discrimi]tate a:n '"" basi&gt; of sex in
provision c Of' rieCessaty equipment or
supplies, or in any othe&lt; way, but equal
aggregate expenditures are not required.
The goaf'of the ·ro!j!ulation in the ar~a of
competitiVe a~hletics .iS to 'secure equal
opportunity fOr males-and females while

restricted to members of one sex cOuld
adhere to its restrictive policies, and ·
operate on the campus of a recipient unWeinberger said the milst controver·
iversity, if it received no support or~ ­
sial issue, judging from his mail about TI·
ing from the university. and did·' not ·
tie: IX, is sex discrimination in inter·
operate in. "'"nection with the ...we,.
ca'll!!giate athletics . . "The regulation.
sity~s eduGtJOn program -~- ... . '· .
would neither exempt 01&gt;1' .disrupt,inter,
· • GeneralfY, all lacilitift- .be!' &gt;
availabte· without discrl..-.iiOa
die_"· ·.••
basis of. sex; As provicled' fi) ~ -.it!. •:) ~
.,. ' 15, ;·· HEW , Secreta!'J. \- CaSpar
If!.
the direction of in&gt;uring bener· &lt;&gt;PI&gt;!&gt;•·
opportunoty. ··
·
h&lt;&gt;W&lt;;ver,_the regulation periNis~ •• •· .
housong l&gt;ased on .sex as wefl·as......,.... · .
... WeinberRer speculaiHi';it-a'news brief·
tllnities for women in athletic
A~ .-....
lodter rooms, toilets and · ~ A ··.·'
..- .. Ins that
~- ln 6nal form will
· programs:" Also, he,.said, the pr'OpoSal"Where atflletic opportunities for .
recipient may not make avallal*;.fo. .. ...
,.
becomeelfectiye.~ ·1_.1!1,75 at the
uoakes no distinction between ,.,venuestudentsofonesexhavebeenlimited,an
members
of.one sex lodter fOCIIIIS; ....S.; .
,, •_earliest. He also sild that_~ of his
pr~ucing spans a11ci. thoSe that aren't. • institution .must take affirmative efforts
and showers which are not com,JaAtJie .....
stat/ and. the Officle. for -Civil Rights,
(An· amendmentapproved .by the Senate
to inform
of that ·sex of the
to those provided to mernben al; the . . •
. which wiD adminisler the'iegulatiOn, wOI
exempting revenue-producing -interavailability of'equal opportunities and to
other sex. With respect to. houSJns, the •
· hold regional· briellnp aroun.&lt;l' the nacollegiate sports from the Education
provide supP&lt;&gt;rt ancf training to enable
regulation requires comparabllity as to
AmeRdments of 1972 reportedly was
them to participate." The following ex· lion this month aRd next.
the facilities themselves and non. The lo,ng·awaited document was
dropped by the conference committee
amples we,., cited:
discrirpil)ation as to their availability and · .
published June 21!. in tile Fef!eral
working on the omnibus elementary·
• A recipient institution which admits
as to the rules under whim· tney ate . 1 , •
RegisteF.
·
•
.
· ·
secondary education bill.) Weinberger
. male and. female students may no~
operated, indudins fees, hours. ·•lOCI' .......'-~~
' . '(he ~ r
latioi. forbids ~
and his staff saidi they . plan no _,.,.
provide vi(llty sports- Oj!PDrlunities· ex·
·':a'lmin.tlon by se:t...- educatii&gt;Aal
quirements for •Jmlxed. tttams, bt~~
. dus;¥el)(or.VIrti&gt;ally-eooc;tusivel)'fo'r.male
q~~irementsfor off-&lt;ampus ~ --~
'''~ &lt;
• An institution whicli has·iine swjip:, . :l
.inslitutionodhat recei\oe" Federal funds
eo:n~zed . tf;at expenditUres p-· _. ·. · siudents. ~. il.ft. not reQuirecl.-to
m'"- pool ·"must provide for use '
)•~ ~three pfincWarea~: ~: ···aA&lt;I)IOO~n engaged 1ft~·:~ '"· prOvide~~.._.._..., INnis If
noer.bers 01 both sexe&gt; .on il ~­
·~·s10n,..U..,..e(51udenis,ao14f..,..... . bea~~~Ptable.but-~' ~
it fur~--... _ ,....~
discrimlnateiy basis. (A sutf ~~ ,
ment
.
• a., Congressionllt!lemptioot,.,..,
wms.'' 1..-: a - te;iarate -...!nt;_the"'""' tul)iiles ..-.-·~- 1ft , =
furt'- explained, by w.,Y of ex....,., ' , ,.
jlropcised regulation woul!l·not apply at
department commented as follows abou(
athletics of compinble types and af
that assigning women to the single pool
aU to military schools, nor to ,.,ligious
the proposed effect on athletics: .
comparable levels of Competition (e.g.,
· from 5 to 6 a.m. and men from 1 to 5
schools If it would be II\C9f1Sistent with
"Where selection is . l&gt;ased on cymyamty, junior ~amty, etc.).
p.m., or vice ve_rsa, would constitute.dis·
controlling. relillious tenets. CongreSs
petitlve skill, athletics- m~y be pf&lt;1Yided..
• A recipient educational institution
crimination.)
,
woold' ,be ,P{ohl~ited from providing
also exempto!d,-lrom the ~missions,.,. ' through separate teams for malis, anif:
When a university offers athletics
quirement · only, private undei-graduaqr • f~les or thrpugh a.single team ~n to · fil1jl~l.support_for an all-f...,..le hiking ·
scholarships, Secretary Weinberger said,
colleges, oon-yocational elementary and
both sexes. Institutions must determine,
dub, an all-male lansuage dub, or a
there must be comparability. He said if a
at least annually, in what sports students
single-sex honorary society. However, an
secondary schoolS; and public un·
dergr,aduate colleg s which have
desire to participate. ~I separa_te teams
organization whose membership was
·
(tum ro P.re 4, coL lJ

The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare lasl week issued . a
proposed 'regula~ ~ns Title IX of
the Education Amendments 1&gt;f 1972
.; which . P,ohibits sex -~lmination m
, .. . '• educatkllq&gt;~OIJa.l)is: !If. iocilv!tles receiv· :.:~;: ini~Jilnilo. 111!!-~ .saip it.

sex.

Moot Conbo•....W

·

~~,~;~~~ ~~~;.'~~~ h:'~~~~~~'::':J.:~':.i.:t~e~r::~~ -~~~,;.~0t~~~~t'{'p~o!~~~
me

·

members

an·

�Jurw 'ZI. 1974

4

Teachers are 1A.,..~..,...
in ed_ucation, survey ' fi~Yk!

---

., ..... c-.n~o .

"11 t-=hins iS not your lim choic:e ol a
lite=lons career, don't make the choice
beaoM you an be~ that you are
ruinins sorneone's ~n."
That obsefvation didn't come from an
educational resan:fler who has spent
years IIUCiylns schools, but from a !lish
sd)ool student who has spent years sittins iii schools. The renwork sums up a
major theme clioaiYered in a survey conducted by resi!Mchers at U/8: the
teacher is the loey 10 the eduational experience.
.
the nation-wide survey of hlsh school
studeniS' perceptions of their teachers ·
and claes is hQded by Or. Charles R.
Cooper, ., associate professor in the
Department of Instruction. In 19n, .
juniors and seniors In 18 hlsh schools
across the United States, Including
schools in Buffalo, Hamburw. and North
Tonawanda. were~ to write essays
on various aspects of their educational
experiences.
Of an estimated 6.-cl essays, Dr.
Cooper and his graduate assistants chose
to analyze a representative 2-4-4 papers
written on either the best or worst class
the student had ever had in high school.
The researchers admit that the sample is
neither random nor strotlfied (no com. ments from Buffalo-area students are included), but they believe that the
·responses are represen'-!ive enough· to
permn seoeralizations . about A~ilcan
.high school students.
. .•
Teachers Deiermlne Anitudes .
Over 68 per cent of the student comments -re directly concerned with the
.importance of the personal relationships
between the teacher ar)d each individual
student. Dr. Cooper noted, "The
respondents in our study are so acutely
conscious of the teacher as a person that
there an be little question that this'con'sciousnesr d~termines the studen't•s
perceptions of his ,. c~~, , his t~ttit~~e
toward the subject, and to some extent
his achievement."
"
The personal traits.the students valued
most in their teachers were informal\ty,
persorl'al warmth, fairness, dedication,
competence, honesty, curiosity, wit, understanding, and liveliness. The students
wanted the teachers to respect them as
indiViduals and adults; they pointed out
ihatteachers with this attitude rarely had
discipline problems, since the students
appreciated the adult treannent . and
tried to act accordingly.
. One student praised his teacher with
the comment: "He always levels-with the
students, like he doesn't put•on a master

·a nd slave act." Another wtiose·~ e!'.
perience was no~ as p6sitive noted, ~'The
teacher taught us like we ~ere· 30~
statues."
The ~highest · compliment
another studen~ paid his teacher was that
"she treated us like human beings."
Dr. · Cooper observed, "Even though
students an t~~ccept great variety in
teachers' personal habits and Sl)'les, tlley
demand of all of them that they be decent and likable humin · beings. The
. _ teacher has a great deal to dO with
developing the social-climate in the class,
which is an .important part of the learni~g experience. Ideally. that cli!"'te

"'""··- -- -

;.·~~--;.,. ·- - . - --........
..
. _,.._...IF.,._.t~

~

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

•:r.. JO.I&amp;......, ....... ....., ..
-

21211.

....

JJ.t, 210 ...............
-

.... IPD"f'Ln" at:JIW£AJID

--.::a., .
.....,.,._..........,.,.

.......

--.!...~-

.Mit6 a. Cf•N'R"

a.--

should be a relaxed; ~one In
welfUS!ed,
which students feel !hat
respected, .and accepleCI
who and
what they ""'· Student achievement

seems to be hlsl-'in this kind of climate
. than in a very competitive and isola~
atmosphere."

..--.c.....-.""""'""'

The Importance of this learning climate should not be underestimated as an
element In student attendance at school.
As Or. Cooper pointed out, "Although
there are many social, personal, and institutional r~s for truancy, the- at·
mosphere for learning also plays an imPortant part. If teachers could discover
from their students what qualities make
their clas~ interesting and act nn this
information, sChools might be more at. tractive places to be and ~tudents might
come more often."
- Dr. Cooper added tha; Increased student attendance might also have practical financial implications for schools.
"Since le.sislative- appropriations ·. to
schools. are based in part on the average
daily attendance, more studen~s . jn
school every day would increase fundmg
_somewhat."

w

Discussion of teaChing style reveals
that the students want a teacher to ao
more than stand in f'9nt of the class
feeding facts to them, a method they
usually characterized as boring and
monotonous. As one student put it,
"Two boxes of NO-Doz couldn't have
kepr me awak"e in·· t~at class." M'ost
- welcomed a varied teaching style that
might include audio-visual aids, class ·
projects, outside readings, fu.rth_er explanations by .teachers, and, most •mportantly, diStussions. They spolte favorably
of teachers who encouraged their
questions and who gave them a c_tlan~
to eXpress l heir own vi~ Oil 'i 'top1c.
They w~nied to discUss what. thj!y"'I'(Pf~
Ieariiin&amp; cOme ·to theifown condUs.ions,
and ~ a.l&gt;le to make,practical. ~JeJri'
pi&gt;ra,.Y applications ·;,r the subject.
Coonpetenre
.
Students were ~also articulate in their
assessment of the competence of a
. teacher, which they defined as the quali ty of having a good deal of kn&lt;iwledge
. about a subject and being able to
transmit that knowledge to students. Or.
Cooper pointed out that, with few exceptions, students wanted to learn; and
frustrated outrage was the common
reaction to teacher incompetence that

hindered the learning process .
Since the researchers found the stu. dent comments so perceptive and
enlightening, they strongly recommend
that a teocher regulaffy and systematically assess students'..perceptio.ns of his OV(n
classes. In this w;n- _a, teachef cari.deter.mine how students feel about being in
his· class and get hints nn how he might
make the l~arning experience more
productiv':' for ~hem .
~So far, Dr. Cooper and his assistants
hilve reviewed students' opinions of

their classes in mathematics, -social
studies, and science, and are working on
reports in other disciplines. Dr. Cooper
has.also examined the results of the survey in light of psychoanalyst Erik
Erikson's the&lt;iry of adolescent development, ~nd he plans to compare student
comments with the lindin~ of such
" libertarian critics" as jonathan Kozol
and Edga rr Friedenberg to see if the
students perceive their schools to be as
repressive as these critics propose.
• The researchers fiiid the student essays
to be a rich -.rce of material, and have
yet to compile student comments on the
other two surVey· questions in which
students explain what.is wrong with their
hil!h schools and what the ideal high
scliool would be llke.Furtherreports will
iridude material from a second survey
sent outthk year In order to expand the
geographical base and diversity of-,the
sample sch9ok- Eventually•. Dr•. Cooper
envision~ edltlns an antflolOgy p.f
selected student_ ci&gt;mmeots on ~arious
topki that might as an , aid to
~-

.,_.

A lftodlfled ~ for approving

CSEA~ tuition suppori for Civil
Service . . . , . _ has been announced
by F. Marshal( Evans. manager ol train-

ing, Ulll Personnel Office.
Accordins to a memorandum circulated by Evans, the SUNY Central Of.
Hce has delegated the responsibility of
'receiving, reviewing· and approving
employee tuition applicatlom to local
campuses and has allocated to each cam- .
pus a budget· lor tuition reimbursement
in l!lch of the four CSU. bargaining units. Ulll allociiions are: Administrative,
$1,700; Institutional, $240; Operational,
$-46i; and Professional, Scientific and
Technical, $300. ' •
The progr~m is a reimbursement one,
Evam indicates, requiring the employee
to pay for all course ·&lt;X&gt;Sts prior to
refunds being approved:
Because funds are limited and because
the number of U/.8 employees applying
for support under the program is in·
creasing, Evans outlined the . following
policy to insure "fair and equotable dostribuJion of funds to as many persons as ·
•
pos5ible:"

Where are app&amp;cation ~onns anllablel
Application-fOrms, with a letter of in·
structions, are available from the
Manager of Training in the Personnel
Department either upon. written request
or by calling 831-S244. A copy of the
completed application will be forwarded
by the Manager of Training to Central
_Office.
How do employeeS applyJ
1. Applications for tuition support
should be forwarded to the Manager of
Training, Pe(sonnel Department, 1807
.Elmwood Avenue, and upon receipt, will
be " logged" in by b~rgaining unit.
2. Applications will be reviewed on a
" first pome-first processed" ba~;s for: a.
employee eligibility; b. completeness
·and ·darlty of inlonnation ·supplied; c.
employee s ignature and dat~ .
Applications lacking any of . the· ;ibOve
will be immediately returned and so
noted in the log. Corrected, returned
applications will be assigned the latest
log number.
3. Employees may apply lor only one
course during each half of a fiscal year.
4. Awards will be based on the follow-

.... needs In the~ below:
a. The tralnfnl Is ftMideclto Improve
employee perform.nce In the current
position.
.
b. 1be tralnlns is n.decl 10 uw.ade
emplOyees for~ exams that
will be g1wm durlns the ume fhcal year
the
is In 8ffec:t.
.
Any requesled c:oune or lnlnlns not
meedns the above cr1terta o,iU be returned to the applicant witblto ?; hours of
receipt by the ~ ol Training.
5. Employees taltlns courseut a SUNY
campus, or elsewhere, must submit their
applications priOr to the dose of registration for such courses.
How
1. Once the employee/course has
been · approved, employees will be
notified 10 complete and return the
folloWing "items:
a. The acknowledgety~ent copy of the
original application for tuition suppon
(from Central Office).
·
b. A completed AC-92, Standard
Voucher, beoring the O.mployee's
signature (an example will be forwarded
with Jetter of instructions on how to
complete the voucher).
c. A le!!ible copy of proof of payment,
i.e., invoice marked "paid," cancelled
chec.k, cash receipt, etc.
2. The above i.tems will be reviewed
loi completeness and returned by the
Manager of Trainiog to Central Office,
who in turn will authorize payment to
· the employee within three to four
weeks.
·

Prosram

ani_,..,._........_,

. What happens to applcallons thai hove
been apprond but fundo are not

anilablel

.

. ,Applications in this ategory will be
h;,ld in abeyance uniil -~dditional funds
~re received for the partocuiar bargaonong
unit involv~; UP.Q.~ , f%eip~ of _(unds,
applications will tie. proces~ as no_ted
above. Empl&lt;:oyees -..iin be 'nbtilied Within
72 hours of receipt of application by
M~naser of·naining' as to the status (being processed or held).
What k the maxim..;, alnount of ~pporl
sranted under thb prosraml
·This program .offer'! a maximum grant
of ,SO per cent for tuition, registration and
instructional fees up to $300 per fiscal
year to ~gible employees.

Two noted filmmakers. to screen
their works here this week"
Two important American fUmmak'ers,
Tony Conrad and Jon Rubin, wfll screen
and discuss their films tonight and
tomorrow as · part of the ~umrner
lnstitute •in ''The Making ahd Understand ing ·of Film and Media."
•
Conrad, one of the-Summer Institute's
visiting faculty members, will be featured

HEW regulations(from pi~

J, col.

4)

university offers-150 football scholarships
for men, and a group of women also
desires to have a football team, a com·
parable - but not equal - number of
.-scholarships would. have to be made
available to women.
.
Weinberger said the proposed regulation does not prohibit discrimination in
textbooks and other curricular materials
"because of serious First Amendment
questions." He authoriz\'d .the following
statement on this point :
·
"The Oq&gt;artment recognizes that sex
stereotyping in curricula i~ . a serious
matter, but has concluded that any
specific regulatory -provision in this area
would raise grave Constitutional
questions under the First Amendment.
The Department asoumes that recipients
will deal with this P,oblem-in the exercise of their general ~uthority and co~­
trol over curricula and course content.
For its part, the-Dep,artrnent wiiiJncrease
115 ,efforts, throusf"o the Office of Educa\lofl, to..provide ,_.rch, assisiance, and
IU~O&lt;e to local_educational asencjes in
elirninatlns sex. bias from curricula and
edll!2tlonal mal!!'~~~:"

tonight at 8 p.m. in HO. Uj)en. Conrad
leacties filmmaking at Anlloch; has been
a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in film,
and h.S been awarded grants from the
Cassandra Foundation, the Creative Artists Public Service Program (CAPS) of
New York State, and the American Film
Institute. He has shown at the Whitney
Museum In New York, the
Oesterreichisches Filmmuseum In Vien:
na, and at DokOmenta 5Jn Kos5el, Germany. His films Include The Flidcer (1966)
·and loose Connection (1973).
'
Rubin, filmmaker-In-residence at
Media Study/Buffalo, will screen his
work at 8 p.m. Jrlday In 140 Uj)en. He
was a recent winner-of a New :York State
Council on the Arts CAPS ·Grant for his
film processing · experimentation. His
work includes the directorship of a multimedia light show and the production of
special effects for National Educational
Televisio~. He Is currently tead)lng two.
groups of 15 Buffalo citizens in 12-week
long Media Study workshops.
The Summer Film Institute i1 being administered by UIB's Center for- Media
Study with the support of the National
Endowment for the Arts.
- The events are free and open to the
public.

�5

June Zl, 1974

_Full agenda~waits new leaders of professional staff
lbe

new liMe

of offiCers who will

as~~~me leadership of the two-yur-old

Professional St.H Senate July 1 will face • .
lull as-Sa of concerns reffectfng the_
ar-lng maturity of . tlie orpnlzation,
the lncomins president, -Robert J.
W..,.er, usioUnt to the provo.!, Fa~lty
of Natural Sciences and M&lt;othematics,

foreGIS!s.

.

. Assisting Wasner in guiding tl)e ad -

visory asoembly of campus non-teaching
professlonak throush 1974-75 will be
Walter S. Kunz, associate dean, Division
of Undeljrac!uate Education, serving as
vice presi'derit-president elect, and Sam
CriHnte, ~nt to the provo.t, SocialSciences and Adminislration, as
secn!tary.
....... , _ _ 01 - - with which
the lea* II eopected 1D clul In the

......,.,_lndudeo_ ......, __
of· ......, ID lloe ~ and Ito
........,...... .a.ff: aree. dewelop1ne11t;
;:,of iMwlns lncre-' NTP Input in
dechl;ono; puler NTP paitldpa· .
lion ID the Willi&lt; of the Senate; lnc:reaoed
Senate lnvolwenoent' -with orpnlutlons
.oulllde the Unlwenliy (for_ eumple, the
American Alloc:UIIon of u~ Allmlnlllr..orol; dewelopmelt of poidellnes
and procedures conc«nnni conllnulns
ilppoinlrnenb · lor proleulonal staff;
review of the NTP Job rarikins
procedure; and inneaoed Stilff Senate
inleroctlon With other Un!nnlfy sower·
naooce orpnlzalions (ouch as the UniYersity Auembly).
The PSS, Wagner explains before delv·
ing iil further detail into several areas of
this agenda, is an organization of all cam-

for horizontal mobility, and by the fad
.liNt lop NTP positions are normally filled
. lr"'!' faculty ranks. The report SUS~esled
lh.:t, as an iiillftftalive, the PSS "milly wish
lo comicler the desirability of enga&amp;ing
in a _spedal study ofu establishment of a
•career·taddrr' fbt the ~nlire SUNY
U~i t ed University~ Professions. Ther~ has
system.
.
been some confusion on this point,
The KaWi report provided still other
Wa~Qer saft'.. R~cof(lrrrwdations pf ' th'e
areas lot· PSS car,.er · development
PSS, as a[e,,tho!S"&lt;&gt;1. th~ 'f'..cqlly; senit~
'reQ:Strj'!\e"ndatio!'~ · tild ; a~io'ls . In- the
are simply advisory,lo the President and
c~ming year, Wagner says. The r~port.i n­
'are in no way binding, Wagner in.dicaJes.
docated.: · ,
•
, : .. _. - .• , .
Nonetht&gt;less, he feels that President
1. That it would be desirable and useful
Ketter has .. interacted elfectively" with
for this campus to continue 10 Qevelop a
the PSS in its first ~o years, taking full
series of special purpose workshops and
advantage of· the opportunity for input
orieniation (not train ing) programs to
on administrative concerns from a group
acquaint staff with the organization,
with a speciaL "interest in and loyalty to
operations, and procedures of various
the institution."
campus units.
This NTP loyalty, Wagner emphasizes,
2. That it would be important for major
differs from that of faculty who
units wirhin the University to pay special
··understandably and rightfully" tend to
anention to identifying their promising
identify more With their disciplines. It
junior NTPs and to providing them with
constitutes a .major strength of the PSS ·
opportunites for training and
organization, he says. Another strength,
professional development; and
he feels, is the diverse nature of the
3. Tha t the University should adopt
professional staff, ranging from business
clear guidelines with regard td the types
affairs people to artists and writers with a
of pJofessional development activ.ities it
wide .speci:rum of srecialties "in · should encourage its staff to participate
between. The scope o reports arid
in w.itb I he University'~ full or parJial supstudies prepared by the Senate to date ilport : ••It should be realized th&lt;1t just .as
lustrates ·theadvantige of this diversity,
faculty development is a .departmental
Wagner says.
responsibility in which· University ·
resources are considered to be Well inCareer Oevek.prnent '
vested, so is (~he development oO NTPs."
Career development, Wagner points
out,...has been a concern of the PSS since
lob lonldns
its inception and will remain so -in the
Wagner indicates that the Senate has
been asked by President Ketter. to name
year ahead. The PSS will, for example, he
an advisory comminee to assist in studyfeels, keep a close eye on the on-going
ing the NTP job evaluation and ·ranking
operations of the campus Office of
process which was completed this year
Human Resources (proposed this year by
a PSS commi«ee as a mechanism for
for most campus incumben~s. The system
used to date by the Personnel Depart·
assisting employees in their' professional
ment has drawn fire from many NTPs,
development and enabling the Universileading_ to a Senate study of the situation
ty to more closely match employee skills
and a subsequent call for such a review.
with job demands), if the office is es·
Since job evaluation is seen as a constant,
· tablish,d · by the administration. "We
on-going process which will come into
won't simply abdicate responsibility
play as new jobs are added and establishonce oor recommendation hu been
ed ones are changed, PSS involvement in
adopted," the new PSS president says.
refinement of the procedure -is vital,
The PSS report '!'hJch colecl lor the
Wagner feels. Meanwhile, he indicates,
" - leoouKeO office ............. a
the first phase of the job study-in terms
trlinlns
of securing State •pproval for upgrading
prop- on
Here, however,
Wasner _..., a further report on liNt
position• determined to be under............. ,,_ .............. dNirecl by
graded-has been quite successful, es·
pecially when measured asainst Albany's
KINiry A. law!, ............ doe necutlve
reaction to similv upg~ins requests
vice ............ has cleterllllned that •
submitted
individually In recent years.
.,..,_ of .the KOpe enAccordlns ID a report ,_...... by
rioloned ..
prlldlul for ... ~
l'rellclent Ketter' It the ...... PSS .......
slty ~~ ... JIMe,H 5udt • prop- 1loe '
the ........ to AINny ..........
IUwl report ""'"' ......., . ~ welOftf •posllion et&lt;GIII•tnd•lfi. ai(142
dell•ed · career ladder,. oo•etlolfts
............. ....., In 5tUdenl Afflln, ...
predudedJtt U/1 by the ..........._ of
NTP ~ _by liiiilled ~oltleo
• Under otuc1y on c.......-. Of
pus NTPs, including those classified
Its
_membership is not limited to those
professionals covered by the bargaining
unit; and the PSS has no ties, offidally or
unofficially. 'with 'the bargaining 'agent,
manageme_ret-confidential.

................c...,.....
......,._and

H-

die-

plus, 226 were lo rrmillin the w~; 39
10ere to be placed in Civil Senice; 4i
were lo be changed lo ill lower gr~,
and 66 were to ~ UPBraded. As of June
11, Ke.,er ..ld, 44 .positions had, in fact,
been uPBraded (with notices. now solnB
out or soon to be circulated). Of the
rem1ining 22 requests, 6 were disillpprow~, 2 were held in the Divnion of
t!&gt;e. Budset, and 14 were , returned to
campu, for further lliody. The · upirades
loicluiled 26 froni i'l-1 to I'Jl-2; 4 from
PR•2to '1'11,·3; t 'f!'om PR-J to PR-4; ?nd ~
from PR~ to PR·1.
University policy on the pOsitions to be
downgraded is that these will remain at
their present levels until the incumbent
leaves, Wagner notes. The incumbent
will continue to receive across·the-board
salary increases as they are negotiated by
UUP and will retain eligibility for merit
increases.
Continuins Appointment •
While the new UUP contract introduces the concept of NTP eligibility
for continuing appointment, the process
by which decisions on s·uch ap-·
ppintments will be made has apparently
been left to. the discretion of the University~· wagner reports. Thus, he says, Presi-

dent ketter-has also indiaited-a need for
Staff Senate involvement in establishing
guidelines and procedures for these
decisions. the procedures to be
developed, Wasner feels, will have a
tremendous impact both on individual
NTPs and on professional development
on campus. Criteria for these evaluations
will have to differ from the standard
teaching, research · and ·publications
gauge used for faculty, he suggests. And,
he submits, service to the University and
job performanCI! appraisals should play
an important ·role' as should, poSsibly,
peer review. Whatever standards and
procedures are ultimately adopted, they
must be clearly define&lt;!. Wasner says.
Otherwise both the individual NTP and
his or her supervisor will be in an
"inoperable position."
Wagner, who will head the PSS for a
one-year term, has been associated with
the University and with Natural Sciences
and Mathematics for 6'h years. He says
he is convinced that the professional staff
is as concerned as the faculty with ma"k-·
ing U/8 a university of, true excellence
and that the Staff Senate is the primary
vehicle for greater staff involvement in
Jhis work.

Adult Advisement has moved
The li/B Adult Advisement Center,
now in new offices 'at 3 Allenhurst Road
across from the Main Street CampUs, has
solved one of its .major problems,
lifetearn, the Division of Continuiilg
Education newsle«er, repqrts in an artide in its spring issue: "Nobody gets lost
an~more."

Previously, the newsletter indicates,
the Center h•d been located 'on the
Ridge lea Campus, which p&lt;J!senled
problems for community people unfamiliar with the campus. As Margaret
Nevin, director of the Center, put it:
"We used tQ. have a lot of 'no
. shows'-people 'who got lost trying to
find us. We'd get calls from people who
ended up in North Tonawanda or Grond
15l•nd, saying, 'Help I Where am il'l" Ms.
Nevin said the Center'• new location is
much more "available" to the adults who
use its ·services. "We get a lot more
'drop-ins'-people who just walk in and
want to talk to' us. In fad. the number of
people we see each day doubled In the
first two weeks" at the MW address.
Ms. Nevin, along witft the rest qf the
Center staff, advises and counsels adult
men and w;ornen who hope to continue ·
their 'education, need ·information on
new·ca..eer opportunities, or need.direcliOn and assistance ·in decision-making.
She abo teach" a course throush

Credit-Free Prosrarns entitled. "Counsel·
ing for Mid-Cueer Dec.islons fo r
Women," whic_!l is ~ series of goup
career-advisement sessions in which
women identify and explore new
vocational or education interests. The
new Center has room for all of these ac·
tivities and more. In addition to a larse
· classroom, a library, and 1 room for
small-group testing, there ~re .two individual counseling offices and a room
specifically set aside for the staH of the
entire Qivi~ion of Continuing Education.
Ms. Nevin said that one of the Center's
"long-range goals" is to have a counseling psychologist on its 5Uff, so that personal problems which arise when adu lts
are considering changes in tlieir lfves an
be handled at the Center . ind · not
referred outside. Also, the Center could:
then be open more hourS in the evening
and thus be more available to Millard
Fillmore 'College students. M5. Nevin
said that the Center often serves as a kind
of '"vestibule" tq MFC for adults who
want to go back to school but who h•ve
many doubts and need to be reassured
that they an do the work •nd do it well.
She said more and more of her clients
are Interested In further education, and,
in fact, "fully half" of the 5tudents in her
moSt recent "Mid-Career" course were
_thi~kli)J of sofns back to sch~l.

�rtrompqei, &lt;OI.II

· ty they felt on' seetns the stimuluS. finally, t'-e was a period during which the
acquired feJr was "eoctlnguished": subjects -remained In the chamber until the
•ight ol the stimulu. induced no special
electroderTMI activity. This · final ·s tage
was included for ethical reasDil$, amons
others.
In comparin_B the group shown the
snake with those shown the rope, Ms.
Deitz found no significant dlff~nce in
how long the subjects took to habituate
or to e•tinguish or In the amount of lear
e•pressed in the verbal "'port. In other

ment and family and community
Nlatlons at Buffalo State, devised an e•pertmeat uslflll a neutral stimulu. (a
rope) and a stimulu.-of the type known
to be associated with human fears, in this
case, ·a boa constrictor.
Her subjects were all males, screened
,befo"' the experimei&gt;t to insure that
none were phobic about snakes or suffered lrom claustrophobia, since the
subjects had to sit in a small chamber
during the e•periment.

•'fhe practial, non-theoretical reason
for using males was that females wear
panty hose and the e•periment ro;quired
attaching electrodes to the subjects'
ankles," Ms. Deitz notes.
f
" When the subjects arrived lor the e • 11
pe'rimental session," she explains, they
were told ti)at the study involved electric
' shock (a mild shock from a 6 volt battery
· wired to their inde• lingers). They were
told that they could drop out of the e•periment at this point and still receive
full credit for having participated. Most
of them went on."
for the first ten minutes of the study,
the si.o.bject simply sat in the e•perimental chamber while a base-line record was

words, the snake' .seemed no more
powerful than· the rope in arousing lear

or anxiety in the subjects. However,
labile subjects consistently took ' longer
to habituate to either the snake or the
rope and longer to eortinguish than did
stabile subjec;ts. Labiles also e•pres5ed

greater anxiety ibout the stimulus, she
tentatively reports.
Ouri!'ll the acquisition Jleriod; labiles
and stabiles . showed yery different
rewonse patterns. Alter the first shock,
the electrodermal activity of both groups
shot up to a ma•imum level. In subsequent trials, the labiles stayed at a maximum level, while the stabiles began to

made of his rale of respiration, heart
rate, and of his lability, as shown by the

~per

amount 'Of fluctuation in spontaneous

level of adfvity than· they had shown
before receiving the initial shock.

electrodermal activity (what was formerly known as galvanic skin response, a

Question Remains

measure of the ictivity 9f the autonomic
nervous system}. " Labile" subjects show

Although Ms. Oeitz!s study chal- .

lenges the

a high number ol spontaneous elec-

ho~o-;s ~cGa~ry

An E~~~erald Queen maple tree has
of Business Administration, Tu ri n, Italy
been planted in front of Crosby Hall to
(as visiting professor of marketing).
cerrimemor~te ind honor Professor
During his .career, .Dr. McGarry served
- fmeritu. !Jl; Marketing and Economic:sof
as consultant 10 a pumber of buSin.es~
Umuncl o., ~ry of the School
fiim, Peft,.,S the mosi signilicai11 being
MM&gt;agerneat who died November 2.
his M&gt;tk w_ith . the Cu,rti,ss-Wrisht Cor- ,
. 1!17J~A _....,....plaque will be installed
pc;&gt;ratio'n in Buffalo during World War II.
• tllilhln .~_..s. ·
He also made importint contributions
· -:r.olessor ' McCorry, remembered bY
in research and publications. Among his
!I School Of~mc:_nt personnel as one
books are Mortality in Retail Trade (1930)
of ll&gt;e 5 m o s t cfiStingublled oc~
and lletail Tr.ode Areas in Buffalo (1935).
. ~
,, H;tll; ca111e to1"' cam- . He contrib&lt;!led ~rs to a number of .
_ jp,ln
-..- ...-sistant pro'-"&lt;
books -and~ nu~owo "'rtk~ ,·
, ·. :fiW Aadl!(cit.the new SchOOl of8usineso, '··. on madcetli!l; aild retailing' · . ;•
·
(now the ·'School . of Professor..McGar,ry •also made ..,...
' ·:
_
)Which was founded thai
tributions to pcofessioila!_organizations.
'l'&lt; .Y,.. .
.
originally was· l!ased in
He was one .o;&gt;l the founders and one of
IUyes ~moving into the new Crosby
the "'!'St higl\ly 'resp&lt;!cted members o l
·
the American Marketing Association. He
· Hall when it opened in 1931.
Or. McGarry was also a member of
was also instrumental in starting the local
the faculty ol the former College of Arts . chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, the
and Sciences through his appointment in .
busin"':' school honorary society. He_was
the Depart'm ent of Econom1cs (then a
an actove m,!!mber of the Amerocan
Economic Association, The Rotary Club,
in the Schoo! · of Business
Adi!"i~iSitr~l~r&gt;) which was closely_allied
~nd many other groups.
ol a small
Among directories in which he was
Who, with
listed are: Who's Who in Ameticil, Directory of Arner'ican Scholars,.~nd Am'erican
Men of Science, Ill.
,..,:,...,;,ont..dcon"
One of the most outstaildlng im:
and t,Y. · pr~ll$ ·that Professor Mf;G'anry made .
Adimi~ni51tra1lic;&gt;n ,-,.,.. on· the aciideinic world wii&gt;!through. hts ·
::;-.~. Influence 'on students. He~
always a .
·l ;lever- ahd challenging te~cher, en-.
.. ~asing students to:apply their (Jwn if&gt;7
: ,illolive-in.think!ng througlj.the pr~ms·,_ __ presented. Being ask'ed; ~One' of.
· · '· \fie' UniVersity's ·crisis peri.~~- to ti!icli
~ law, he met the sltiaatiOn ,witf\
siit;h pcesise logic and sparkltii&amp; eyes thar
: he ...,...fhe appellation ofthe· "Judse?'
' '~icidte McGarry" maintained' contact
with many of.the al1-1mni of tN! IJniversi.ty ' Jons after their days in his -classes,
ptOVidlnB them with go.od ~ and

,::a·.

In the chamber was~ one·way mirror.

Seligman and the others are cor'rect, and
fears are acquired in a single trial. The
issue is whether the fear is maintained.
Phobip, she theOrizes, --may never learn
to extinguish because their fears are at·

~Iter- the-initial rest period, a light went
o rr behind the mirror and either the .boa
o r the rope (the assignment of stimulus

Emer.ald Maple

to .subject was raqdom) was reveaJed.
During, ! h is. period the subje_ct

ed no shock.
A&lt;quilitioo, of fur
Thv&gt;e~'stage was th;!t o t O!'qui~ion
of fl!llr, ' :IC:ti\rd ing· to a ~ciWICOI conditipn!,!t.l{ l)!odel. At j r!."'l'!arJ'!.t~als the
lig1ifs- wou.l l- so orr, revealing the
stimulus and, aftes five seconds, the subject would receive a mild shock looting a
second. Ne&gt;&lt;t, su~ were asked to rate
on a scale 9f 1 t.o 100 the dqree of .,.ie-

_ tile~ by receMns•. . . . - ;met

inteMM!o.W recosnition .. an outstandins authority in' the field of marlietifli.
Upon his death last Novem~r,- his
colle.aues rededicaled themselves to
strive Tor his standards of ieaderiliip and .
concern for students, as they 'oontinUe ~o · •
build the School of Management tliar 'lie
·
was instrumental in founding.
.

•

-RUTH COHEN

everyday lives. A child kic~ed by a horse

in o.ur qJiture need

n~ver

go near a

ho.tse. ~gain,. ~n i"\uJate himself 'frqm

nOn'· iVersive "experiences' with horses
thai 'lfC)uld eventually, e&gt;&lt;tinguish his ac-.
qu1red lear. The relative scarci)y of
horses makes it, possible lor him to maintain his fear of them . That, she
erhph~sizes, .

iS merely speculil.tion,

however.

'.

FACULn
Visiting AsSist;int "'rofessor (Fall, 1974), Mathematics.
Visiting Associate Professor (fall, 1974), Matherr!Mics.
VISiting Assistant Professor-(1974-75), Mathematics.
Assistant Professor (2 positions), ·Social Sciences &amp; Administration.
Professor, Social Sciences &amp; Administration. • ·
lnstovctor or Assistant Professor (5 positioll$), Allult Health Nursing.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Adult Health Nursing.
Assistant Professor, Mental Health-Psychiatric Nursing.
Instructor (part-time), Child Health Nursing.
InstrUctor, Child Health .Nursing.
Assistant, Professor, Child Health.
Yisiting Assistant Professor, Geography.
· ...
Assistant Professor, Information a~ library Sltidie..:
. , ~ Pr~, Occu~rionaf~.
· , ..
Ass/5iint';);O(essor, ·Psvchoatry. . ,.. ' , ...
~-~ncn:~airman, fa(flily l"hietic!.:· . · . ,· ...:•.lnstrUc:tor ·or Alisostant Professor, H.S. {il. &amp;. fval.
·l~.;"eademic Affairs. ·
·
' · ... ·

w..·

n~i.&lt;:anry reti~ i~~-1911;

countered or easily iiVoided in their

- !Pit~- . .

owt.,.,•.,....,.,,""""

•~~- a· prciduc:live- ait!er duriftj~~ ~­
. ""~ distinf;tiOn to 11\e ~and:

tached t&lt;\ qbjects or situations rarely en-

" habitUated" to til~ stimulus, and receiV·

cii\ -

~~hell' to .co~il.n~~~l,ear-

of "preparedness,"

question of why people don't
develop pajama phobias "'mains. She
speculates on that. Perhaps, she sa:y,,

relatively small number.

~-

conc~pt

th~

trodermal responses, ustabiles" i
'

off, eventually reaching a lower

+'

NlP: '.\'_.

~Analyst, Computing ~.: P.R-2.

Assi5Unt/~are Oean,Student

i'R-5. ,·

--

,, ·

~~ .Academic Affa!rs, Health $c1ences,

·;. ~

.

.

.Coumel,or, -Student Counseling Center; ·PR-1. ·
DirectiK of Day ·Care Ceilfer, Social Worlt, PR-1 .
Associate for Instructional Resources, ' Instructional Resources, PR-3. · !
Assist.lnl. DireCtor, Academic Affair&gt;, PR~3.
. J\sJisiioitlc to Chairman, Biochemistry, rR-1.
,
. .
For :
N.a1 inf.,;mation-.c:ot).C8nt,..
jobs and for ~ of t:lfP

·
jW
these
~:, :ee:~t ~ ~nlversity ~·consult bulle~- ~~~

. 1. ~ ~ liWMII 0153; 2. aldp LAo, lhliklins 4~, ,_..,
· cafetit:ta;,J;~Idje J,ea,llulldl"~ In corrliiDr neJCttoC-1; 4. Health Sciences

.:

Buildins, ln-Clorflddr OfiiiO'he HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, In the corridor between
Room 141 ind the lobby; 6. Lodtwood, ground floor in corridor ne&gt;&lt;t to ven. ·
ding machines; 7. Hayes Hall, In main~ foyer, across from Public lnfor~lon Office; 8. Acheson Hal!, ln CQrril!Or between Rooms 112 and 113; 9.
Parker ,E ngineering, in .corridor QeiCt to Roonr15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor,
Holis!ng Office area; 11. 1(107 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 12. Nonon
UnioO. Director'$~, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf. H.all, in corridor ne&gt;&lt;t to
' Rooin 106i 14~ John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floOr (Amhe!SI Campus).
•.

�June ZJ, 1974

School. I was a member of its first
graduating class of four . ... On May 12,
,
1974, there were 165!"

beau==lts

Heads ~ llure1u
Sanford M. Lottor, assist~nt dean,
School of Managt!tnent, has been installed as president of the Bureau of Jewish
Education, 7ff7 Delaware Avenue, for a
one-y~r term.
Edits New lloolc
Paul Kurtz, professor, philosophy, is co-editor, with Sidr&gt;ey Hook and Miro
Todorovich, of a new volume of essays,
The Idea of. a Modern Un;.versUy,

:r.w..

Dr. MdiloreJ
SaWNikal
Or. Ruth T. McCrorey, who is stepping
down as dean of the School of Nursing,
is taking a one-year sabbatial leave
effeclive July 1. She plans lo return to the
University in 1975 to devote full time lo
teaching.
Dean McCrorey will -complete two
major projects during the sabbatial, her
first since assuming the deanship July 1,
1966. She is planning a trio of
'monographs on administration, teaching
and consultation for AP,pleton-Century
(now a subsidiary of Prentice·H~II) which
will explore a new coru:eplual model of·
implementing roles for nursing. .The
other project in\'olves ·a research SIUdy
on assessment iii functionaJ.-communication. "Both projects will necessitate visits

published by Prometheus Books, Buffalo. Based on a symposium held at
R"ockefeller University in 1972 under
sponsorship of the University Centers for
· .Ration~! Alternatives, the .volume is said
to provide "a d;agnostic assessrt;'ent of
the current status of higher education,"
its governance, solvency, autonomy,
relation ~o the community, and moral
and educational authority.
·

to hc~hh 1 f.11cilitieS in · thjs · country, in ·

England and Scotland, and on the continent," she says.
The monographs.wlll be suitable ·as a
resource• fOr gra'duafe .study, I reflecting:
new rOle cbncepts arid dian@:iilg tierldS
of health care Clelivery . and teachinglearning theory, according io Dr.
McCrorey:
Dean McCrorey says she is pleased
with the increase in community servi.ce
actiVities of Nursing School faculty and

Two Awards for Sz8e:ly
.
Contributions to education and ·

......

representation of the county in relation
to federal, State and local governments.
Dr. Hullar, in his new ~sition, will head
a department compnsjng the Division
of Sewage Management, Division of Air
and Water Quality, the Office of Solid
Waste Programs and the Office of
Program Development. He will also play
a guiding role in the development of a
new Environmental Quality Code for Erie
County.
Named Direclor of VA Research
Dr. Marguerite T. Hays, chief of
nuclear medicine science at the VA
Hospital and assistant professor of
biophysical sciences - associate
professor of medicine at U/ 8, has been
name d to head the Veterans Ad ministration's medical research program
· in Washington, D.C., effective july 1. In ·
the new position, she will administer an
$86 million-a-year program covering 136
of ~86 ·VA hospitals iA the U.S: 'fhe post
has· a·four-year..-renewable term'·and Dr.
Ha ys has ta·ken leaves of absence from
bO'Ih her: h·o.~p&gt;ital al'd yniversity
positions. She will reta in her research
laboratory at the Buffalo VA Hospital. Dr.
i) married to Or. David Glenn Hays,
of lingUistics, who Will reta'in'

students: "They have made major' conresea·rch in chemical enSineering and
process metallurgy have brought two
tributions in the areas of mental heahh,
crisis and suicide prevention and
major award!' to Dr. Julian Szekely,
cooperative family planning in the Bufprofessor of chemical engiheering and
falo area." The. School has identified
director of the U/B Center for Process
many health needs of the community
Metallurgy. Or. Szekely has received ·a
and helped to do something aboutthem,
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
she feels:
·
Fellowship and the American Society of
"We have been responsible for esEngineering Education's (ASEE) Curtis ·
McGraw Research Award. As ~ne &lt;;&gt;f only
tablishing the nurse clinici~n in this
community and the School has playedjl
a few e_ngineers to . r.ece1~e a
significant role !n . pr~vidi!'g . l.ett\". O!Jr· . •.&lt;;;uggenhetm, Dr, Szekely .wtll begtn an •
sing are in high risk areas. This has been . ,· eigh_1-mo11th' . sij,b6~.ii~a (,~l Imperial ,
&lt;lone in cooperation with the SchoQI of
College . in Londpn .oQ J"!jj.qary 1, 1975.
Medicine, the other liealth. sciences _ There he .will ,con~n.u~ reseacch and '
schools, the Erie County Health Departcomplete a book on "TurbuleJll Flow in
ment, the Visiting Nurses Association
Metals Processing." T.h e "ASEE award,
which consists of $1,000 and an engraved
and several of the area hospitals and
health agencies.
,
certifi~te, is sponsored by the Engineer"Our graduate enrollment has tripled
ing Research Coundl wtth the a$sistance
because we have e~panded and
of tlfe McGraw-Hill f!ook Company. It
solidified our program. Our continuing
Wa} established to recognize outstanding
eduQtion programs are much improved.
early achievements by 1 engineering ·
The pedialric nurse associate program is
·college research workers and to enone of our newest and most successful. 1
courage the continuance of such
am especially proud of the cardioproductivity i~ the !utur:.
pulmonary . teaching unit, and the inHulbr Named to County Post
.crease in faculty research. Special proTwo rose bushes from the gravesile of
County Executive Edw~rd V. Regan has
jects in developing multiphasic teaching
Millard Fillmore in Forest Lawn
announced the appointment of Or.
materials in growth and development
Cemetery have been senf to Atlanta to
Theodore L. Hullar, ·associate professor
and a graduate projecl in Child Health
help r~;~und out a projecl 6f a· group of
· of medicinal chemistry, to ihe $28,108
are funded by federal grants. A threeamateur horticulturists there.
post of Commissioner of Erie County's
year contract on systematic nursing
Richard. Sebian, U/8 grounds
new Department of Environmental ·
asS«!Ssment is being reviewed for another
superint~rident, . sent .the bushes. to
Quality. His appointment will be
phase of testing..''
·
Stanley S. Jones of Atlanta, a represeppresented to the Erie Countytegislature
Dean tyicGrorey wants to help initiate
tative of an · organization which is
before their next meeting on July 2. It is
a doctoral program in the School of Nur·
attempting to collect rose cuttings,
subject to confirmation by th11 group.sing when she returns and to begin inbushes or plahts from sites aSsociated
The new department was created by a
terdisciplinary 'graduate health care
with e•ch of · the 36 previous U.S.
local law passed by the· Legislature on
management courses involving the.
.
;
presidents.
-April 16 'and signed by itte county exhealth scienCes, policy sciences, and the
t:he group' had been unable to locate
ecutive on May 2. Its purpose is to esSchool of Management.
. any such items f""'! places auocialed
tablish an environmental quality policy,
"I have resigned administr~tive dutieS
with Fillmore, who wis the first
to reorganize and coordinate the enthree times to return to teaching. I hope
Chancellor of U/8, unlll it ·sought the
vironmental managerrient functions
this is permanent. I really enjoy
vested in couii!)t "80vemment to 'assure ; University's ~1sistance.
te~ching-it is most rewardirg,'' the
Tile Atlanta project is expecled to· be
the highest degree of accountability,-'i~d ~
dean ~. "although it has been a joy to
completed in early st~mmer.
watch and live with the growth of this
to · pr0 vlde eff~ctive -leadershiJ! and

Fillmore roses ·
sent to Adanta

I

State University's lmdtute for
Policy Alternatives has
critial· State and llationaf lssuet lit'
ding five research projects
faculty members at .four Un~
Ce~ters, lnduding ' ProfeSIOI' , . _ 'f.:
McConnell of the Uta faculty of Socill
Sciences and Administration.
Chancellor Ernest L Boyer said the flnt
Institute grants deal with such diftrltent
concerns as: more effective lesJslalhe
procedures in New York Slate and aaos
the nation; neglected and delinquent
children; new implications of federal...
state revenue sharing; efficient reclamation of waste oil; and expanded" International trade for New York Slille
business organizations (McConnell's
projecl).
" We must relate the resources of the
University more effectively to the issues _
.
which vitally affecl the future of the
State," Dr. Boyer commented. "These
projects are not only positive and out·
standing exafl)ples of how the Institute
will draw upon faculty talent, but also the·
forerunners of equally exciting ventures
which will be announced in the months
ahead."
The Chancellor said supPQrt of the initial projects totals S1ZJ,275. Another six
projects, suppoited by $122,900 "of
Institute funds, wilt be announced in July.
State University announced plans to
establish the Institute in December of
1973. Initial staff re.cruitment began early
this year and the State Legislature ap-.
propriated $750.000 to .underwrite · the
lnstitute's·aaivities during fiscal 197~75 . ..
Joseph Swidler, former cha.irman of
the State Public Service Commission, officially began duties as head of the
Institute-on June 1.
Project directors, programs and funding announced this week follow :
Stale Uni•ersity al Albany:
Professor James}. Heaphey, director of
the camPuS' CoinParative DeVelopment
Studies Center, $30,000, for a project to
ex-amine the·,Way legislatures · corictttct ·
program evaluations and performance
audits . The objective is to help
legislatures .across, the nat~ on find ways to
improve thelr role in effective govern· . .
ment. The interim phase of the study will
center upon New York State.
·
Professor Robert· Rienow, Department
of Political Science, $11,950, .to find out ·
how much waste:oil is being generated
in Albany County, by whom (service·
stations, industry, etc.) and to identify. ·
present disposal procedures. Model
legislation wm be developed to deal
mor.e effectively with the problem.
Slate Unl•enjty at II'!Plamton:
Professor Benjamin Ch;nitz;, di{ector of
the Economic GrO~h 1nstitute, $40,000,
to" develop realistic eStimates· of per" ·
sonnel needed to design; ·manage, ani! coordinate manpower programs at the
local and state level in the light of the
present trend in Feder~l-state fisc~l
relations towards revenue shning and
away from categorical grants.

St.le u~ ai ~.: '.'

..

P.rofessor }ames f. McConnell, Faculty

1

o( Social Sciences and Administration,.; .
$20,000.. McConnell's proi!&gt;CI will lows ·_
on the trading activit~ of 400 busineso :
organizations in Erie and Niagara Coun, ·
ties. U will examine the reasons~ why·;-:
business firms do or do not engage in in- ~·
ternational trade; determine how ~
satisfied these firms are with assistance •.
now provided by State and Federal agen·
cies, and ascertain what additiO~~iil .ser- ..vices.these agencies, an prov)&lt;!e !0. ~P. ,~
the firms ·engage in more inJ,ernational,.
trade. .
·
':
.. : .• ~.;
· · ~·
Slate UIIIYersity at Sti&gt;ny lniOit:
Protessor Dennis R. Young. -Progr•m
for Urban and Policy Sciences, $25,325,10
study the economic •behavior of ·public- · ·~
ly-supported private voluntary t~~enci~ ·
which provide residential care ilnd treat.;
menl for neglected, dependent or
delinquent children. Over 200 such
agencies exiSI in New Yor~ and the study
is designed.lo investigate the social consequences of current methods of public
support.
·

�YouNG MUIICIANS OWiii fiiiiQl•

An OP"n rehnrul with the feot l.. l

Orchos1ra, Pornela GeMhon. -conductor. 100
Baird, 10:30 un.
COUNSEliNG

·

..

!iBSIOiil•

•

CounsefinB lot P.eople lnreresred ;n
Tronn ..wl S.U..,iy. Dr. Henty O.rmotodter,
chief psycboloa:lst. Jiennsylvant. Institute ·
Hospitol, l'sycholosial Clinic, ~230 Ridge L..,
Rm. C-21, 1:30 p.m.
RlM'

Odesso Sreps Sequence (Eisenstein), 140
Capen, 5 p.m. No admission d&gt;o,.e.
COMPUIIII BYICS SEMINAIII
'
PASS IV, instructed by HoNey Axle&lt;od, 4238
Ridge Lu. Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m.
•
COMPUTEII SBVICIS

5EM1NU1

Subcompile Qpobilirift :in COBOl, 'in_ \ structed by cluis Siderokis, 4238 Ridge Lea,
Rm . 12, 7-9 p.m.
.
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
l.fCTUIIP
-

An . introdUctory lect~re on a simple
techmque of deep: rest, Grane Library, 633
Elmwood Ave., 7:30 p.m. No adm ission
charge.
·
Presented by the Students' . International
Meditation Society.
·
SUMMfll RLM INSJll\JTt•
Screening and discussion' with Tony
Conrad, filmrmlc.er, Al\ticich College, 140
Capen, 8 p.m.
YOUNG MUSICIANS
CHAMifll R5TIVAL eoNCBT•
The Cleveland Qu.arte,, with Stephen
Manes, piano, Baird Redhl Hall, 8 p.m.
·
The program will include works b y
Sc~u~rt. Mendelssohn, and Mozart. ·Admission: s11.Jdents, Sl; facu lty,~ staff and alu mni. S2; general public, S3. ·
Presented by the Department o_f Mu~ic. ·

FRIDAY-28
FIUM"-

.

Shape of Films to Come (CBS), 140 C~pen, 5
,and 7 p.m. No admission charge.

CONCBT:
'
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAM8BI FfSTIV Al"
Pamela Gearhart conducts the Young
Musicians Cliamber ·F~t iva l Orchestra, Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admissi on charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.
INTtRNATIONAL fOI.J( DANONG' Instruction fOf beginners. In good weather,
. Norton fountain area; otherwise, 231 Norton,
8-11 :30 p.m.
Sponsored by Balkan Folk Dancing. SUMMB.RLM~NSTITUlt'

Screening/discussion with jon Rubin, filmmaker, Media Study, 140 Cipen, 8 p.m. No admission chuge.
·
UUAIRLM••
Let the Good Times ROll, Conference
Theiiltre, Norton. Call 831-5117 for times. Admission Charge.

SATURDAY-:-29
All AROOND IUfFAlO'
The Elaine Summen: Dance and Film Compiny in performa~ exploring -intermedia,

Buffolo Zoologicol Gorden&lt;, 1:30 p.m., and
Delaware Park Ulke, 5:30 p.m. No admission
chafBe.
YOUNG MUslaANS CHA- FfSTIVAL •
Studem Concert Baird Recital Hall, 2 p.m.
No admission chars~ .
Presented by the Department of Music.

140c.pen.

411 AliOUND IUffAI.O'

p~~~~~ ~':.,.;~~::
p.m., Horrimon T,heotre 51\ldlo. No admission

.

~-

Presented by the Elolne SUmmon Donee
and Film -compiny.
·

~~ Movie (Conrad), Troller 12. .-.,· p:m.
No admission chorse.

·

. TUESDAY-2
AU AIIOUND IUFFAlO'
lntennedi• Workshop, exploring techniques of combining film, dance, phot~ptl y.
video ~nd music, · by the Elaine Summen
Dance and Film Company, Harriman Theatre
Studio, 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 6-9 p.rn, No admission charge.
FILMS'
Razor Slides {Sharits), 5-p:m. Stares (Frampton) and Bade and Forth (Snow), 9 p.m. All
. 'films are free and will be shown in 140 Capen.
AU AROUND BOFFALO• •
... Kinetic Awareness diilSses for beginners, the
Elaine Sumltlers Dance and Film Company,
H~rriman Theatre Studio, 6-8 p.m. No admission charge.
COMPUTER SERVICES SEMINARI
PASS IV. instructed by Harvey Axlerod, 4238
Ridge l ea, Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m.
·
LA nN AMERICAN &amp; CARIBBEAN
FILM mnvAt•
·
Camilo Torres (Colombia); Campamento
(Chile), and Venceremos (Chile), Conference

Theatre, Norton, 7:30 p.m. No admission
charge.
CONCERT'
The Lost Art of Melodecl~maf)on, .';vith Paul
.Sc hmid t, actor-na rrator., assisted . by Yvar
Mikhashoff, p ianist. The program will include
. worli:s by· Schumann, Schubert, Uszt, Strauss
and Poule nc (with slides), Baird Recital Hatl, 8
p.m. .
.
Admission : srudents, $1; UIB faculry, staff
and alumni, S2; gener~l publi_f, $3.
Presented by t!le Department of Music.

WEDNE-SDA Y-3
MAlHEMATies-rtfYSICS
tNTtRDISOPUNARY SEMINARI
Quantum Mechanical Commutation
Rela tio ns and th e Theta Fuilction, Or.
Federico Gaeta, U/ 8 professor of
mathematics, 4246 Ridge Lea, Rm. 48,. 2 p .m.
this is a.cqntinuatiOJJ of last week's seminar.
•
FILMS'
Cl!n ic of StUmble (Peters on ); and
.T,O,U,C.H,I,N,G (Sharirs), S &amp; 7 p.m. Still
(Gehr}, 9 p.m. All films are free and will be
shown in 140 Capen.·
AU A!IOUND BUfFALO'
lntermedii Workshop, the Elaine Summers
Dance and Film Company, Harriman Theatre
Studio, 6-8 p.m. No idmission charge.
All AROUND BUfFAlO'
Kinetic Awareness classes for begtnners, the
Elain_e .SUmmers Dance and Film Company,
Hamman Theatre Studio, 6-8 p.m. No admission chafle.
·

FRIDAY--:--5

Theatre, -Norton. Call 831-5117 for times. Ad:
mission c:harge.

SUNDAY-30

UUAI FILM••
Devil !n Miss· }O!Jes, Confe rence Theatre,

.

AU UOOND IUfFALO'
The Elaine Summers Dance and Film Company, in performance outside the Albrightknox An Callery, 1:30 p.m., and at Delaware
Pa!"t Lake, SilO p.m. No admission charge.
UUAI RLM••
Let rhe Good Times Roll, Conference

/

Glllery ~. 5 p.m. Untitled au.lal.
9 p.m. llooh fiiiN ore free and will be st-n In

INTtRNATIONAL fOU( DANCING'
Instruction for beginners: In good weather,
Norton fountain~ area; otherwise, 231 Norton,
8-11 :30 p.m.
.
,
Sponsored by Balkan Folk ·Dancing.

Rt.M••

UUAI
· Let the Good Times , Roll, Conference

/

fiiMr

Theatre, Norton. Call 831-5117 for times. Admission charge.
COP OUT-GIIIAT AMWCAN PASTIME
Ment~l Rerardition : The Religious
Questions, with Fr. John Aurelio, Catholic
Stote SchOol. Hosted by
choploin, Wesr
Susanne~ Burns, WKBW radio, 10 p.m.
U/1 Alln fOliUM
Dr. _s.u/ EllcJn, octi'11! cholnnan of Ulll's ·
Theotre Deportment, will 1!0 intervieWed by
propom· Est'- Sworu, . - n t to the

Seneca

., ~..'%,~·~~.:~~=
oppeorona! 01 the lnternatlonil Festivolin

mo, lblly. WAD\1-FM, 10:~__P·'"-

.

p.,.
• , ., ,

Norton. Call 831-S117 for times. Admission
charge.

SATURDAY-6
UUAI FILM••
Devil in Miss }o'nes, Conference Theatre

:.r:::·

Call

~1 -5117 for . times. Ad~issio~

-SUNDAY-7 .
I'UBITO ~!CAN
SUMMa CULTUWAI. I'IIOQAM•'
The Buffalo. Puerto ',Jticin corrim~nity will

celebrate iU cUltural heriuse with ~nces
games and enterUinment,' Puerto 'Rica~
Center, ~1 Swan St., 2-11 p.m.
:
Everyone · Is invited to attend this event,
sponsored by the Puerto Rian .Community
&lt;;:enter.
'
·
UUAI RLM••

Devil i1J M;s.s Jones, ~ Theatre,
Norton. Call 831-5117 for times. Admission
charge.
·

MONDAY-8
COMPUTBI SBVICI5 SlMINAIIf
Introduction to KRONOS Time-Sharing, instructed by Sydney McCirthy, -4,238 Ridge lea,
Rm . 10, 7-9 p .m.
'
AU AROUND BUFFAlO'
lecture on. Body Reorient~tion, by 'the
Elain.e .Summers Dan~ and Film Company, .
Hamman Theat.-e Studio, 8 p.m. No admission
charge .
.

TlJESDAY-9
CONCBP
A Demon i n 1M y Vi ew, with Yvar
Mikhashoff, pianist, assisted by Paul Schmidt,
acto r-narrator, and-Robin Willoughby, poet,
· Baird Recital Hill: 8 p.m. .
.
·
Admission: students, $1 ; UIB faculty, staff
and alumni, $2; sener~l public, $3.
Presented by the Department of Music.
FILM'
Basic Training (Wiseman),· Conference
Theatre, Norton, 8 p.m. No admlssiol) ch__i.rge.
Presentea by the Ameriun Studies
Gri.duate siudent .Association.
·

WEDNESDA y__,.10
AU AROUND IUFFALO'
'!" intermediol theatre event by the Elaine
Summers Dance ind Film Company, Hirriman
Theatre Studio, noon-10 p.m. Through Satur·
·
· ·
doy, July 15.
COMrtiTBI SBVICIS sQuNA11f
Permanenr Files, instructed by Sydney
McCorthy, 4238 Ridge leo, Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m.
CONCEIT"
'
.A prosram of 17th o!ntury English music,·
with All&lt;frew Schultze, bar1tone, misted by
JoAnn Hwhner, horpsichord. The prolrom
will include"""'' by·Morely, OoWiond, Byrd,
• Donyel, Purcell ond othen, Baird Redtol Hill
8 p.m . .No .idmilsion chorge. ·
'
_ Presented by 11\0 Deportment· of Music.

THURSDA¥-:--11
AU AIIOUND IUFFAlO'
An intermeclia theatre 'event by the Elaine
Summers Dance and film Company, Harriman
Theatre Studio, noon·10 p.m. Throush Saturcjoy, 4uly 15.
~:·

EXHIBITS
UllllARY EXHIIIT'
First editions of the works of .»muel Bedett
from the collection of Lockwood Memorial
librory, 2nd floor balcony, loc;ltwood. View~~u~rs : MoncUy-FricUy, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ConloCKwOOD EXHtiiT'
J.iolifoh Collection, i!l.n exhibition culled from
the University's COllection of more than 4,000
volumes 01 · moteriol, flm floor, Lockwood
Memorial Llbri.ry, Monday-F:riday, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Continuins.

~~

.

-

--

- Poetry and Pictures, by Mike Finn, Hayes
Hill lobby d!Sploy cases, through Fridoy, June
28. Viewing houB ore Mondoy-fridoy, 9
a.m.-5 p.m. · Presented by the Office of
Culturol AlloiB.
.
suC!Itfi.uo E X A lMI from Dunlcirlc Comes Home, an exhibition o l the orchll(e of George Willioms
Eaers, noted an ·eduator, museum director
and artist, Charlet-Burchrteld Center State
Unlvenity Colfese 01 lluffolo, throusf1 Fridoy
August 2. Viewing houB: Mondoy-Fridoy,
i!l. .m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 o .m.

-10

NOTICES
ARTPAIIK lHEATRI 1'0UII5 The Artport. stoll is a&gt;nducting -tO!Ii&gt; of the
Art park T~tre ._.nd !ite every Sundoy ot 3
p.m. through JUly 21. The touB begin ot 3 p.m.
in the lowef parking Jot next to the Theatre 11 •
4 he end of South fourth Street In lewiston,
N.Y.
For more information, all ·fn6) 7~328..
liKE HIKE
life Workshops ond Schussmeisters Sid Club'
are sponsorins • Bike Hike to Chesmut Ridge
on SUndoy, June 30. The 40-mlle round trip
· will begin ~ 8 :30 o.m. ot Norton Hill (Tower
side}. Partidpants should brins their own pic~~nch. Sis~-up is .in lp. ~onon, or ~II
CHAUTAUQUA EXCU11510N
On S.turdoy, June 29, there will be • trlp to
the . Chaut~uqua Institution for a proaram ·
featuring • l&lt;&gt;lnt redlol toy Robert Metrill arid
-- RI_c hord Tudter of the ll,lelropollbln Opero.
The price of $II lor studenrs, S9Jor faculty and
Sliff ond $10 lor the generol public· includes
round -: trip tl"ansportatio·n in 1n airconditioned coadt ond admission to ihe concert. For further lnformotion, all the Norton
!lOll Tldtet Ollk:e; 131-J?I!4. '
...
T

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                    <text>"Teachers, not methods,
said key t~i ~eading success-

Summer-.Solstlc~~ s•argazing

planned, by

Qbserv~tory

·

r( J~hnlly can't read, there's a better
than random chan~ thaJ he is poor,
rural, and blade., Chicano, "'r a member
of some other· minority group.
·
The inability to read would be l'nefl!ly
regrenable if it meant only that Johnny
would never know the intricacies and
· multiple satisfactions of Moby Dick. But
in our demanding cuh~.:~re the a~bility · to..,.
read is a necessitY, not a luxury. Illiteracy
:or even semi-literacy is a severe handicap, as real as poverty or blindness. If
John can't read, he can't scour the
classified ads for a job or an apanment,
can't fill out an application form or an insurance claim, can't let his fingers do the
walking through the Yellow Pages. For
him, written language is a puzzle as
frustrating and impenet rable as a
hieroglyph. It is also a tau nting dail y
reminder of his failure and low status in
the sodety in which he lives.
-Aware that illiteracy and semi-literacy
are majOJ societal problems, not simply
ed ucati onal ones, the Federal government has launched a " Right to Read"
campaign, backed by S12 million in
public funds. As the program's director
Dr. Ru1h love Hollowa y recently told the
New York Times, the key to a successful
re.ading prograRl is: not ·phonics or -Initial
Teaching Alphabet or some other
specific m ethod for teaching reading but
the teachers themselves. According to
· Dr. Holloway,· "Teache.rs who have a
high level of expectation for the children
wilb.succeed .. regar.dless o£ method." ~-~
· ·sociologist--Edga r Epps; currently ·
Marshall Fie ld .professor·of urban education at the University of Chicago, echoed
·· this view on Moriday night in an a.ddress
to participants in the ongoing Inter·
disciplinary Seminar on Reading, ·cospo nsore~ by the U/ B Department of
Elementary and Remedial Education and
the In te rnational Reading Association
(IRA).

June 21 i the Summer Solstice, the
curv~. Vega can be view~ 1t~wards - the
- longest day of the year. .~
zenuh '" the northeastern sky. Arcturus
Jhis year the--.,vent coir\tides with the
is slightty . brighter than Vega, but the
regular Friday night public viewing hours
latter -is unique in that it is· one star
of the U/B Obserilator.y atop HoChstetler
among two others (Deneb in Cygnus and
Hall and the ObservatorY plans a special . Altair in Aquilla) that form the summer
evening' of oglirlg celestial objects, from - tri~ngle-a right ·triangle. On a very clear
9 p.m. Friday, June 21, to 1 a.m. on the
night the entire triangle can be viewed.
However, if it is only moderatelr cle~r,
22nd. Th.e stargazing is free.
- According to Christine Rusiniak, an
Vega alone can be seen. Antares rs _qUI_te
amateur astiOnom~r who is &lt;OndUcting
easY to .&lt;~_ocate be~ause . it !s in the
the public, nights ·ttus 'su·miner, ..it is difConstellation Scorpto wh1ch ts located
ficult to describe whanhe visitor 'will be
on the ecliptic. Spica, the brightest star in
able . to view F.riday because of the
Virgo, can be located by following the
vagar.ies of clou~s, the polluted at~ · arc f!f the Big ~ipper past A_rcturus,
m~phere;-light in the vkinity, etc. The
towards ti)e direction of the ecliptic."
water tower loc;ated at the eastern end of
f.:riday "'e venin·g, yt'eathe~ permiUing,
the campus· pose~ another set of
Ms. Rusiniak will be pOinting Out these
problems as does the amount of
stars, visible with the naked eye, in addi~
moonli@;tlt on a given evening. light and .
ticm to calli ng attention to double ~tars,
pollutiol), she says, make it virtually i(Tl·
nebulae, globular clusters and a h1ghly
possible to see obje~s rising or setting
magmhed vtew of the moon t~rough a
~ on the l)orizqn, ruling out glimpses of
10-inch Cassegrain Reflectin~ Telescope.
Saturn and1 Mars which, while located in
The U/B Observatory also IS equipped
_.
the visible Constellation "Gemini, are too
with a fiVe-inch refractor and two smaller , .~ .
close .to the western horizon.
refractors.· The· reflecting telescope, .Ms.
.. Six corlstellations are cutrently viSible
Rusiniak says•. uses mirrors while tfie
on the ecliptic, or apparent path of the
refractors .are made f~om . l~hseS. Th~
un, she indic~te5. Gemini, Cancer (eo
reflector collects more hght and mak~ it
'\.,; Y• 0, ·Libra, and Scorpio may be' See~
possible to see ; more · distant o~j~,
oc pying 180 degrees in the sky from
while the refractors provide wider fields
·the astern to.~es-~ern ~Qrizon movi~g in
"'sef~.1. for ~.xample, in studying the .
a
tltrecutm . ~
'7'
relattve positron of ·the planets, she
th bri · ~ ~ S in-Buffalo's summer
points out.
·
sky, .Ms.· u~if1ilk says, are· V~ga in the
. The Summer Solstice; Ms. Rusiniak
Consiell~tion: lyr~, ;Arc.rt\H"us ir't Bootes,
· reminOs, -is-that· dat~ qn which the sun
Spki 'in· Virgo, and '~Anfares, irl ScOrpio: · teaches its · fa1thest point -north o( the
" Arcturus is by far the !'•siesl to find. It is
celestial equator. It marks the liegin~ing
locai~ in a southern dire&lt;rtion. If one
of summer in the Northern Hemisphere,
. finds the Big-Dipper, he can easily find
that .time when the NortheNl
· Arcturus by extending t~e haridle of the
Hemisphere Is inclined 1taward the ~un
Dipper. mental~y, followin~ its natural
and receives the sun's rays most directly.

Mldclle-CJ.a ValUes

The expectations of teachers are based
largely on middle-class values, Dr. Epps
indicated. As a result, administrators and
teachers expect less ir. lOw-status schools
in terms of student performance. This
has had, he said, " a devastating impact
on lower-class children." Teacher expectations are skewed according to ridal
and class biases, and even by sex biases,
Epps said. ''Teachers who expect sex
differences in reading, get them," the
sociologist claimed. However, · recent
studies show that in classrooms where.
teachers believe boys can learn to read as
readily as girls, the boys achieve as well,
Epps said. But the pervasive sex bias i.n
the classroom may now be diminishing
somewhat. l!lflanks to women's rights,
women may become less passive and affable and get some bad ~rades too," Epps
quipped.
·
Parental involvement also appears to
be a factor in reading achie~ement , Epps_
indicated, citing the success in Chicago~
of reading achievement programs utilizing parent/child centers.
·
Too ohen, Epps said, poor and minority children are caught in what he callS
" the double bind theory of motivation
and aspiration." If their aspirationS are
high, ~ they are labeled unrealistic.
Conversely, low aspir"ations are. seen as a
co ntributing factor in failure tq achieve.
The single most important attribute of
an effective teacher is a . belief that
children can learn, Epps affirmed. Asked-'
how one goes about cRanging the attitudes of teachers, Epps replied, "We've
learned that you shouldn't worry about
changing attitudes. Change behavior,
and then the cognitive consistency
phenomenon wilf take over."
Matery Leilmins

Greater success in achieving universi:l
literacy could be achieved _by .wide-

�"You can't !Me
~ CiucA out
· of Prison ~1\d let him dc&gt;·l!,e lhinp I've
been doi"'l- II just Qn'l happen .•••"
'Thil's whll John Spider Martin- who·
will slve ~benefit concert on campus Fri• &lt;Hy nllht- toljla Roo-~~
•nd chronlcfe ~ - about hls-110$1..Aitk:a aree, _.,_,.. 'WUI'·
~ ·~lhi"'IS"the former in!Nite was
refeninllto in ilisbelit!f lodllde his job .s
assisl~nl slqe manaaer with th,e

Rochester Philharmonic. Ills OliWI concert

appear~ces. and his amllnued i,..,._
ment with Alllca through the In Prison
Concert Committee of Brklr!e. Inc.!" a
sroup which hopes to raise nloney towins rnu5ic and instruments to prisoners
still there.
His Friday . nisht Of!lpus concert
(Fillmore Room, 8:30 ~lso featur·
ins AIISiin Cromer.
with the
Dizzy Gillespie Stlte Depanment Bi&amp;
Band ancl'recently with Hawi&lt;•Crawford,
will cost U/B jau buffs S2~·head, wnh
• the proCeeds earmal'ked for the Attica

Martin wasfirst a prison librar!!'ll at AI·
dcar then coordinator·for volunteer ser- .
prWaro:
n"...r of me~l, will also
vices, finally choir director . .}. Jazz
broadcut
entire evening so Attica in~
Workshop grew OUI of the· choir dass
mates may listen in.
·
~
after Martin *'sneakedu mU~c instf)Jdio~
Manin, who plays tenor sax, began the
to Inmates who were supposed to be
Anica music prosram,Jor which he is still
singing. After the riois;-:the administracoordinator as well as lund-raiser, while _ tion was looking for-a bett~r 'image so·i.na prisoner ~ there (on a four-year
stead of hassling him, they allowed. hom
attempted forgerycounO. That was after
to buy $11,000 wonh of instruments and
the riot of 19n.
expand the program.
His pre-prison career a5 a mustaan
Money, however, is J he proble"l in
spanned 24 yea" and induded time
contin'uing the ·work. The State ~on't
spent;with..tionel•,ftampton, _AI Hlb~ler
fund it, so the benefit concens have· to.
. and·others: At one point;· he had his owr
· To ·make · the prograin• ·srrong is
group;\vrote music and rot a number of
Martin's aim. "If we could make it strong .
reeords. Since prison, he has appeared
enough '"'bring the minimum~ustody
with Lou Mcintosh and his " ExistinR
guys into town for a concert, f~r JUSt~ne
Reality" .Quintet· an'd &gt;has composed . · day~ thatwould be something.~ ' ·
works which have been performed· by
· There's also a possibility, he indicates,
the RoChester Philharmonic for prison
that a sinliliu program will be introduced
audiences: .
· ·
,
at- Auburn· and other ~tate ·correctional
Between .~100 and .125 prisoriers are in:.
institutions.
volved in d1e Attica music ·program, Mar·
"Then we could get the few guys who
are coininj put anp..get~eijl ic_Orki(l8 in
. •~tiD gn. ·~t's
_of the. most. popular
programs there/' It gives mmates "som~
the SilrOe_program,'' :.Spider s_ays. "Have
hope," offer~ the possibility of a new
them do what I'm doing."
sra~,in the rigbt dire.ction. Most of r_he
·for $2 Friday night yo.u can see and
'priSoners "remember wHen I was an~n­
·flear-first-hand justwhat it is that Spider's
mate. . : . They feel I'm representing
doing and help make it possible for those
.... th.em," he says.
others to perhaps join him some day .

n:

w

~.

I!""

.-Job a,}eni~&amp;s

-- ~ t ·

••

.,

Dllp. . al . . ~e •

Hayes mailroom to prun-e .services

.
. ·FACULTY .
Assistant Professor, Psychiatry.
Associate Professor, Psychiatry. '
.
Visiting Assistant Prof~sor (fa!_l, 1974), Mathematics. ·
Visiting A$sociate Professor (hll, 1974), Mathematics.
.
Visiting Assistant Professor (1974-75),_Mat~em.atics. · . .
Assistant Professor (2 ~itions),· Soc1al Setences &amp; A.dmrmstraflon.
. •
.
Professor, Social Sciences~ .4-dministration.
Instructor or Assistant Professor (5 _positions), Adult Health Nursmg.
Assistant or Associate Professor, &gt;Adult Hea1th Nursing.
Assistant PrQfessor, Mental Health-PsY.chiatric·Nursing.
·
Instructor· (pan-time), Child Halth Nursif!g.
_ lnstructor, .Child HeaJrhCNursing.
Assistant Professor, Child Health.
Visiting Assistant Professo•, Geography.
Assistant ProfessOr, lnlormat(orJ and Library Studies:
Assistant Professor, Occupational Ther•py.
Assistant Professor, Psyc!)i,;llry.
•

Services such as selling and ~cashing · and'letters, and insuring packages. These
same services, plus purchasi~g a_nd
money orders, regi!itering.personal mail
and insuring personal p~ckages which .• cashing of money orders-and resosterong
have been available in the·" Contract Post
mail for personal use, are available at
Office" portion of the Campus Mail SerHer&lt;og's Drug Stof!!, 3168 Main Street,
he pointed out.
·vice, 7i Hayes, will be d iscontinued July
1

NTP
Head ReSident. seven postions av~ilable, libusins, PR: 1 (.5 FTE).
CounselOr, EducatloMI Opponunity.Center, PR•l .
.
Assistant to Oirecror, Survey Research Center, PR-2.
Area Coordinator, Housins, PR-1 (].b fla,
., ·
Programmer Af'IOiyst. Computlns Services, PR-2;
•.
Assisrani/1\ssoCiale Dean, Student and Academoc Alfaors, PR-5.
Counselor, Student Counseling Center, PR-1.
· :_
;
-·
Director of Oay-Qre Cenler,6odal Work, PR-1.
For add~ i~ "concemln8 these ;obs an\1 for details of NTP
. openlnp dmiUshout the Slate Unlvershy system, consul~ bulletin ~rds at
.
•
these locations:
1. ·Bell Facility between 0152 and 0153;, 2. 'Ridle lea, Bulldii'!S.4236, next io
cafeteria; 3. Rldgela,IIUIIding4230,1n corridor nextt!'C-1; 4. Ho;alth Sciences
Bulldif11, In corridor oiiPosfte HS 131; 5. Capen·Hall, tn the cornd~ betWeen
Room 141 and the lobby; 6. Lockwood, JrOUIII! floor in corridor. next to ven· ·
dinS machines; 7. fta¥es Hatl,ln main eiltrince.foyer, across from PubUc lnfor·
mat1on Office; a. Acheson Han. 1n ~ '*-n Rpoms 112 and 113; 9.
Parker Engl._tns. In c:orridor nexi to "'-t15; 10. GocJc!yar Hall, 1st floor,
HousJna Officle area; 11. UD7 Elmwood, ......... [)epartrnent; 12. Norton
Union,~~ OHke. Room '225; 1J. t;llefeadorf Hall, In corridor next to
Room 106; 14. lohll Lord ~ Ha~ foWth .floor (Amherst Campus).
J

.

. According to Pa~l A.. Ba~on, ~ssistant
· vice president _ for busine~S aff~i.rs,
budgetary constrictions . and · se.vere
limitations on funding availableJro(Jlthe
Post Office Depanmeo:ot ~aye forced the
cutbacks.
·
.
The 24-ho.u r U.S. ~ostal Ser-vice
Pagoda, located between Norton and ·
Capen, will, Bacon said, continue to offer
individuals mechanized fadlities for the
purchase of stamps, mailing of' packages

.

BacOn indicated that the Qn\pus Mail
Service in flayes will Continue.to provide
the ca~bility to Insure, resister, and cerlily University.,.ilthrough use of meter
slips dti'ng a State or Resea&lt;Ch· account
for offl!'ial use Clttly. _Oificlal ,mail will be
sbrted into the various recipjent's.boxes
and the "cour.ier service will also be. con·
tinued . "Non-unive~rsity .. service,
however, will be eliminilteC::I/' Bacon .
emph~ized. -.

Reading success-.:........--,.---...:.-----,_:.,-''""" ,.•• ,; col. .,

•

.Sj!read aCceptan'ce of ,he 'concept of
"mastery learning," or; Epps SU88ested.
Formulated br. Benjamin Bloom at
· Chicago, the- mastery learning concept
OiSumes that 80 to 90 per cent of .a
classroom JX&gt;P.Ulation, 91.0 • g!v't"~·~quote time.and a~late P,t'esenta~iOJI
of th.e ~terlal,.learn· what;Only the' top 10 per. cent now learn. Advocates of thi•
aPP.roach bel_ieve that the '!Ormal. dis.tribution ru&lt;Ye-(10 per cent-"A's,"10 per
cent'tF.'s," with tht! averase srade a "C'1
was the ~·most damasing bit of
know'fedse" ever lnrroduced Into the
dassioqm, the sociologist said. Without
loweri"'l .standards, supporters of the
_ CDn&lt;:t!pl set "A" work•as the stanUrd of
mastery for. the whole ~- _!"'th the

realization that some children. will take
considerably longer than &lt;&gt;lhers to
achieve mastery and that individuaUy
tailored techniques may be required.
·..Assuming that he has no physical
h~'1diptp, _anY. · dlild, can learn ro read,
given •&lt;!e&lt;~.u.ue ll(ne.r:tPod'.PJ&gt;$-sai&lt;k .·
,
Th;. Reading Semi~ar ' continues ·
through June·:ill. A unique feature of the
prosram is the presence of, some 10
"junior-senior -~ tea~/' typically
made ur· ol-a unlmty wotessor and a
doctora canaidate fr.om the ~me in:
stitution . wlio · are- Sllbsldized by tbf.
lnternallonaf Readlns Associailon.
Thus, the Seminar hopes. :•to .lnflueriCe .
two senerotions of scholars at t~me- .
time," a spokesman expa_alned.
·

�grads_-~ear

rger reyiew Law School changes

_

"effort 10 strefltllhen our reliltionship
Case Method Defended
. his .Mews on '':fhe Olanalng Faa! of the
with the other social s.c iences by
Turning to curriculum changes and
Law Schoof" to 165 Ulll Law gradu.tes in
recognizing our .dose kinship and inteaching innovations, Homburger _
the Golden Ballroom of the SWier HHton
terdeperidency and by understanding _ defended the case method of legalSunday. It wu 45' yean to the my since- -their iny of th)nking and their approach
-education which, he said, "has few
he cornpleteillegal studies in Vienna, lie
to.the phenomenon 'of law." ·- .
friends afT!ong contemporary insaid, and l5 years since he entered VIII
In opel)lng Law's doon to the Social
novators." This time-honored approach
for ~ second round Of legal education.
sciences, Hamburger emphasiz~, "we
to legal education, he held, is " clinical in
Hamburger, a full professor. of law; · did pot anempt to produce in a -short
the sense that it deals with real cases
idenlllied and a$sessed for the
. three year sp;m of time what I might call
although they are cadaven; by the time
Commencement audience three major
quarter-breeds of lawyers sociQiogists,
the students dissect them." The case
areas in which the contoun; of the School
economists, and anthro;,;;logists. Crossmethod also, in his view, conveys a sen~
ar:e being reshaped: the legit stuaiesbreeding of fhat sort would not produce
of reality, is in harmony with .the legal
Prbsram; the drive towards n·e w
competent IJ)rofessional lawyers, but·
meth-od which proceeds from the
teaching methods anil a flexible
'social scier}tists with some legal training.
specific to the general, and is admirably
. curriculum; and efforts to supplement
-We al~ys tHed to preserve your identity
suited to a "Sociatk discourse that
the traditional professional program with
as lawyers," he told the graduates, "but,
deminds active and Contributory par. a praclice-oriented clinical experience.
at the same time, we encouraged you to
ticipation of the students in th~. process
Noting lean; of some faculty, indu_d ing
deepen_ and 0\repgthen your acquainof learnio&amp; rather than ex Gthedra comhimself. that fexal studies, started • ~
tine&lt;£,• or Pt:ihap.s I '4 houl d say ,
municatioq."
;
. •
..... ,·
li:ie~ip, wjth the-ather social_scie-nces
yean; ago, would submerge the SChOol's
On the othet hand, Hamburger noted,
professional sequence, Hamburger
to. which you must look in order to un-.
the long Range Planning Comminee of
granted that this has not been the case. ·
derstand and appraise your function in
the law School has.complied " a whole
laundry list of complaints" -against the
; · legal stu«!_~, !le_sa,id._.'!a.~~-~ _
society as laW)(~":~ • :
·
case method; making a '/good case" l or ·
ex perimentation with a restructured
.first·year curriculum that would in. t(C!luce.a n~w approachJoJeacl&gt;iog law:
"Ill undentand it correctly, it would do
away with the current division of the first
·year ~Urriculum into -doctrinal'• fields,
r
·~"'
Iff
. --'fl6:~--· ~
~ ~ t•
~
suCh as torts -oi Contracts. Instead, a
.On the Cower of J1me -; "'"
· ~ relationships with the' rharl.igement coritgroup of teachen, working together,
UIII Alumnus J. Mason 'Davis (law '611 ;. ·.munity and assists faculty and admini_strawould take a· global view at the law -as a
and his family (his .son ilecked out in a
tion of the School in planning, develoi!w~ole; free-from -the doctrinar restralnu
)Jniversity _of Alabima t·shirt) were :-- ment of new progri.ms, and coritinuin&amp;
of
ill-designed and functionally disfea.tured'on the cove,r of Time mag:"zine
educat-ion for experienced managers.
oriented separate fields of law. I assume
for June 17- The Davis family rep~nted
Andenon, who- received a 11".5. in acthat the teachers and students in that
"Middle-Ciass Blacks," Time's cOver _ - counting from YOungstown State Unive""fgroup would also be liberated from the
story for the week. Owner of a $35,000
sity, is a certified public accountant-and
home, a Cadillac and a Buick compact,
partner in charge of the Buffalo office of
tyranny of the case method. rartJc!Pation
. in that project would ~ voiUJ)tary:J totli Davis, 38, was found by the m~~'le to_._ -·.fmSJ-and Ernst.. Reilly, holding both the
on the part of the students and&gt;teachen;.
penonify "the growing self-confidence
li.S~ and M.S._from Ulll, is the senior vice
"i am in favor of the- experiment," he
and influence of Birmingham's black up- - president of staff services of Marine
per middle class." Active in State and
Midland Bank -Western. Voisine! is
said, " but frankly, ~ would like to know a
assistant to the corporate grouP vice
County Democritic drcles, Davis is conlittle more about its nature and design
sidered a potential candidate for mayor
president of the National Gypsum Combefore we go ahead-full blast."
of the· Alabama city, once descri~ as
pany. He holds a degree in economics
Simulated law firm
the toughest segregation town outside of
from St. lawrence University and is an
A significantly serious flaw in t~e case
South Africa. Davis is involved in real es·
engineering ""graduate of Cornell.
method, Hamburger granted, "is its
. tate (In addition to his $40,000 a year law
failure to afford to the students an opprKtice, Time says); his wife, June, is a
portunity for practical exercises." A new
psychologist for the Birmingham City
project of the School, he said, seeks to
Schools ..
remedy· that ilefect.
Computer Pioneers Honc&gt;red
"The project casts ou~ entire dinical
Two men who pioneered the use of
program in the framework of a Simulated
computers in clinical medidne .were
HNds U/1 Alumni
law
Firrn (Slf) . The Slf will)ntegrate-the
· James ]. O 'Brien, Eggertsville, a 1955 _ presented awirds for outstanding conlawyer's practical day-to-day work, trial
tributions in the field at the Sixth Buffalo
graduate of U/B _law, has been installed
practice and actUal dinical experience
Conference on ComputeR if.! Clinical
as president of 'the Alumni AssoCiation
with live clients in a sequence .o f
Medicine, held at ·the Parkway Ramada
for 1974-75. George Voskerchian of
pro11rams which fit together like well
Inn, Niagara Falls, this we_e k. Dr.
Williamsville is president-elect. Elected
desogned building blocks-and yet are sufThomas lan Cope, consulting
as vice presidents were Dr. Girard A.
ficiently independent pf one another to
obstetrician/gynecologist at the Royal
Gugino (ictivities); William McGarva
be separately viable. Our present trial
liospital for Women, Sydney, Australia;
(administration); Dr. Ann l . Egan (alumtechnique program administered with
and Dr. Howard Newcombe, director of
nae); ·Willie R. E~ans (athletics); Richard
the generous help of practhe Biology Branch, Atomic Energy ofA. Rich (developm_entl; Phyllis Kelly
titioners . .. will, of course, be preserved
Canada, ltd., C!_&gt;ald River, Ont., were
(public relations); ind Robert E. lipp
and become part of the project. If the expresented tbe awards by the Buffalo(public affaln;). Ernest Kiefer is treasurer.
periment .works, it will con5titute an inbased Journal of ClinicafComputing. Dr.
Five new directon have joined the Alumvaluable supplement to our traditional
Cope headed the team at the -Royal
ni Board: Dr. Ronald .J. Petenon of
professional
program, providiog the
. _Hospital for Womel\ which was. among
Rochester, Dr. Clarence J. Young of lexpractical skills training which is· now
the first to use .rompiled statistics linking
ington, Ky . , Alan M. Ehrlich of
largely missi ng. Only experience will
the births of severelY, physically hanWashington, D.C.; Pr. Charles-Sc Ttr'one
enable uno strike a balance of the costs,
dicapped Infants "with ' the drug
and "Nicholas S!i05ho bl BUffalo&gt; · • · :benefits and burdens of the new
thalidomide. Dr. Newcombe' received
program."
the' aw~ni_ for'fathering the new, widelyaccepted conceRt of using computers to
Hamburger noted that students in ·rereveal patterns of high correlation
cent years have become partners •n the
between
certain
diseases
and
commOn
law
School enterprise, "sharing more
On Mauee-ni-Alhllory loud
.fadors, - sbowing such ullnks" as in:
poweR and responsibilities with the
Three area businesS le.aclen have been
creased
incidence
of
cancer
of
the
. faculty and administration than e¥er
appointed 10 the School of Management
mouth in sul!jects with cirrhosis Of the
before." But, he said, "that partnership ·
Advisory Cominittet. The new members;
liver. ~Conference was co-sponso~
ends when they graduate.••. We are
appoin!ed·by O....n Richard G. Branden-·
growlns
apart once you !ea\Oe this
by
several
U/B
Med
School
departments
burg, are Thornis E. Anderson, Patrick F.
bulldins. It need not and should not be and the Joint Task Group on Ethical
Reilly a!&gt;d James R: lloisinet. The Adthat
way.
looking 'at our bls brother
Data
Centers:
Health
visory . Committe!! deals with
~Adolf

Homburger ~

liAR~e _.-:-:=-----=---::~- -==:::.
..rwv..r
.· . -:· ..:-~;.,.:;:~::-;~·- -.
.

'·

-

competitors, Harvard, Yale, Columbia
an&lt;! others, we find that the. association
between these schools and their students
lasts over a lifetime. The students proudly identify themselves with their schools
throughout their professional careers.
Both we and you are to be blamed for
the short term nature of our
relationship," he advised the 1974
graduates. "We owe you far better service than we are giving you now after
you gradllate, whether it be in form of
continuing legal education, oppor- _,.
tunities for active partici~tion in the life. '\.
of the school, listening to your counsel
and advice in the affain; of our school,
and -keeping in touch with you, socially
and pro fess ionally, aft.er y'ou
_graduate. ...
,
. ~ ·".You, in tum, should ...Oprocatl! ·t&gt;f
showing a sustained interest in all_that is
going on in our school after you
graduate. We need your help .._. ."
Other Spuken
·. Prior to the awarding of degrees .by Dr.
Bernard R. Gelbaum, vice president for
academic affairs, the: graduates received
greetings from law Dean Richard D .
Schwartz; Hon. 1Rudolf: iU. Johnson,
president of the U/ B law Alumni
-Association, and J!J5eph _R. Runfola,
president of the Erie County Bar Association. -Other speaken; at the· ceremony
were another faculty member,.Aibert R.
Mugel, -arid l.eSteo'G: 'Sconiers and Mark
J. Mahoney, two of th!' graduates.
The graduating dass of 165 included 25
women and :p minority students. _It was
estimated .by Prof. Hamburger that two
years from now approxiiT\itely 2S per
· cent of the graduates will be women .

Berdahl takes
Carnegie post
Dr. Robert'O . Berdahl, chairman of the
Department of Higher Education, has
been named to the Carnegie Council fo_r
Policy Studies in Higher Education; the
successor body to the Carnegie Commission on Higher Eduation.
Dr. Berdahl will take a one-yea·r leave
of absence from U/11, beginning July 1,
to head a study of state systems in higher
education. The Carnegie Council, headed by former Carnegie Commission
Chairman Clark Kerr, is designed tO
study and make policy recommendations
on various aspects of higher education.·
A specialist in the relationship
between higher education and government, Dr. Berdahl has been department
chairman here since 1971.
'
In 1965, he served as co-commissioner
· of a study of 'Canadlan university government, and was director of a study of
statewide coordination of higher educa-_
tion for the American Council on Educa·
tioninl~.

·2nd Ellicott tenant
"The mol("' to the Ellicon Complex Qn
the Amherst Campus continued this
week witti the shift of the Department of
Spanisli, ·ttalian and Portuguese from
Crosby Hall to Quadrangle E of the new
facility. The departmental office is
located in E-2, level one, Room E123.
General office phone numbers ·are 6362191 and 2192. Moiling address is Room
E123, joseph Ellicott Complex, SUNYAB
Amherst Campus, Buffiolo, N.Y. 14261.
Bu• service to EIHcon will begin June
2'4 (see bus schedule elsewhere In today's
luue).
.

�June 20, 1974

3 ·media events'
~for

*"'

cqmtng
more media .,..... _,..
Three

third week of the

Sumrller

the

lnAIIulle In

''The Makl1111111d ~ ol Film

and Media" ~ bJ th.. Ulll
Cena!r lor Media SludJ and IWJIII!Ifted
by the National~ lor the.Atts.The evenbi are free and open to the

public.

.

.

.

Or. Bruce Goldstein will lecture on
"Whitt Is the l'syCholosy ol FUm," Thursday, June 20, at 8 p.m. In 140 capen.
Goldstein, one ol the illllltute's vislti1111 ,
facoltY members, teadles p$ycholosy at

FRIDAY-21
MICIIOIIOlOCY SIMINAII
Quantit•tion of Complemeni Components
by ElectroimmunOCSQy. Dr. Martin Uver·

diere, hie County laboratory, Meyer
Memorial Hospital, and Cell M~iared lm- ,
munity in Experimental Syphilis, qr . .Victoria
Monte, also of rhe Erie Co. lab., 233 Sherman
..
Hall, 4 p.m.
UU.U RLM••
.
The La.st·Picture Show, Conference Theatre,
Norton, check showcase for tim_es. Admission

char&amp;e.

t&lt; •'·L, ;'; - ·

. INTERNAnONAL FOLK DANONG•

Instruction for beginners. In good weather,
Norton fountain area ; otherwise, 231 Norton,

8·]1 :30·p.m. ·
·
·
Sponsored by Balkan Folk O'a ncing.

SUMMER DANCE 74•
Harriman Theatre St udio, 8 :30 p .m. Admis-

sion charge. For ~dditio·nal details, see Thurs- .
day listing above.

SATURDA Y-2T
UUAIRLM ..

The bst PictUre Show, Conference Theatre,
Norton, check Wlowoue for times. Admission
charge.
SUMMER DANCE 74•
tbrriJNn Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Admis. sion cNrge. For additional details, see Thursday ltsting above.

SUNDAY-23
UUAIFILM.. ·
/
The Lisr Picture Show, Conference Theatre,
Norton, check showcne for times. Admission
. charge.
. CONCERT•
'
The Cleveland Qu~rret, with frio~
Arschanska Boldt, piano, Baird Recital Hall, 8
p.m.
.
The progr.1m willlndude works by Schubert
-and Ovjrak . Admission : students, S1; faculty,
slaff and alumni, S2; gener.it public, Sl.
. Presented by the Department of Music.
COP OUT-GREAT AMERICAN PASTIME
Ment~l Ret~rd~rlon : The PsychOlogical
Implications, a discussjon with Or. Donald
Kerr Grant, pediatrician, Children's Hospitiilll;
Or. louis Huzella, director, West Seneca Stiillte
SchoOl; and Or. Keith Currie, De~rtment of
Menial R~tiillrdation and the Physially HandiCapped, SUe/Buffalo. Susanne Cook Burns
is moderator, WKBW Radio, 10 p.m.
U/1 Alllli FORUM
•
Esther Swartz, assistant to the president for
cultural affairs, will condu·ct an in-depth interview irf·the arts, WAOV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

MONDAY-24
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMBER FESTIVAL •
An open reheiillrsiilll with the festiviilll
Orchestra, Pamela Geiiirhart, conductor, 1()0Baird, 10:30 a.m.
MASTBI CLASS•
The. Clevel~nd Quartet, 101 Baird, 8:30p.m.
RLMS• -.
,
,-_rnulf Reiner (Kubelka); The Flicker
, (Conrad); Cle&lt;Jn C~te (Brown}; and R&lt;~y Gun
Vlna (Sharits), 140 Cfpen, 9 p.m. No admis·

slon c:Nrse.

•

.·.

.T.UESDA Y-:-25

YOUNG MUSIOANS .ClfAI\4IER. FESTIVAL •
An open rehearsal with Festival Orchestra,
Pamela Gearhart , cond uctor, 100 Baird, 10:30
a.m.
LAnN AMERICAN &amp; CARIBBEAN
.fiLM FfSTIV AL •
Culebra: The Beginning (Puerto Rico), and
Pue rto Rico: Pais coloniudo (Pue rto Rico) ,
Conference Theatre, Norton, 7130 p.m. No ad·
mission charge.
.
Presented by the Pu erto ·Rican Stud ies
Program,
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMBER FESTIVAL •
Piano master class :.frina Arsch~r.slca Boldt
and Stephen M~nes. Baird Recital Hall, 8:30
p.m.
FILM•
Freighthouse (Pinney), 140 Capen, 9 p .m.
No id mission charge .

WEDNESDAY-26
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMIER FE5nVAL•
An open rehearsal with the Festi val
Orchestra, Pamela Gearhart, condut1or, 100
B:aird, 10:.30a.m.
MATHEMA~Y~CS
•
INTBtDISCIPliNARY SEMINARf
Qu&lt;J nfUm Mechanic~l Commutation
Rel&lt;Jtions &lt;Jnd th e Theta Function; Or .
Federico Gaeta , U / 8 profes.s or of
mathematics, 4246 Ridge Lea, Rm. 48, 2 p.m.
RLMS•
'
Odessa Steps Sequenc~ (Eisenstein), 5 p.m.
Nost&lt;Jigia ( fr.~mpton); 'Moving· Pans (Hykes) ;
and Production Stills (Fischer), 9 p.m. All films
are free and will be shown 4n 140 Capen.
SUMMER FILM' INSTITUTE•
Screening and discussion with Bill llrand,
· filmmaker, the Art Institute of Chicago, 146
Diefenporf, 8 p.m.
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMIER FESTIVAL •
Chamber musiC ma ~ ter class : ¥i scha
Schneider, ~Baird Redtal Hall , 8 :30p.m .

THURSDA Y-27
YOUNG MUSICIANS C":'MIER FESTIVAL •
An open rehearsal with the Festival
Orchestrft, Pame la Gearhart, Conductor, 100
Baird, 10:30 a .m .
.FILM•
.
Odessa Steps Sequence {Eisens.t ein), 140
Capen, S p.m.. No admissio"!, charge.
YOUNG MUSICIANS
.
CHAMBER FESTIVAL CONCERT•
· ·Th e Cleve l&lt;~nd Qu~rtet , with Stephen
M&lt;Jnes, piano, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
The program will iJ1clude works b y
Schubert, Mendelssohn, &lt;Jnd Mozart. Ad·
mission : students, S1; faculty, staff and alum-

To recllnf'lnf.,...,;..tion for the Weekly Communique, conlilct Nancy Card.arelti,
ext. :zna, by Monday at noon for lndullon In the followins Thunday lssue.
• Key: ~ only to tho.., with a professional Interest In the subject; •open to
the publk; ""open to ..,embers of the Unlvrrilty. Unless otherwise staled, ticllets
lor ewents c:harsfnllldmloolon can be purdtased al the Norton Haft Tldet Olflce.

n i, S2; gener.1l public, $3.
.
Presented by the Department of Music.
SUMMER RLM' INSTITUTE"
' . •
Screening and disc.u ssion wiih Ton y
Conrad, filmO'laker, Antioch College, 140
Capen, 8 p.m.
·

· EXHIBITS
LIBRARY EXHIBIT•
f.i rSt editions of the work of »moel Beckeu
from the collection of lockwoOd Memorial
library, 2nd Jloor balcony, lockwood. View!~!u~:;.rs: Monda5&lt;-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 _P.m.._canLOCKWOOD EXHIIIT•
Polish Collection; an exhibition culled from
the Uoiversity's collection of more th&lt;~n -4,000
volumes of material, first floor, lockwood
Memorial libra~y, Monday-friday, 9 a .m .-5
p.m . Continuing.
EXHIIIT"
Poelry &lt;~nd Pidures, by Mike Finn, Hayes •
Hall lobby d isplay cases, through friday, June
28. Viewing hours are Monday=Friday, 9a.m.-5
p.m. Presented by the office of Cultural Aff&lt;Jirs:
UUAI EXHIIJT•
New P~inters, paintings by students of Will
H&lt;Jrris, Gallery 219, Norton. Viewing hours :
Monday-Friday, noon--4 p .m.; Tuesd&lt;Jy and
Friday, 7·10 p .m.
SUCIIIUFFALO EXHIIIT•
A Lad from Dunlcirlc. Comes Home. an exh ibition of the archive pf George Williams
Eggers, noted art educator, museum d irector
and artist, Chiillrles Burchfield "'Center, State
University College at Buffalo, Sunday, June 16,
through Frida y, August 2. Viewing hours:
Monday-friday, 10 a .m.-5 p .m.;. Sunday, 1-5
p .m.
.
.

NOTICES
HILLEL TRIP TO lEAVER ISLAND
Hille l is planning an Outing to Beaver Island
o n Sunday, June 23. Part icipants are iillsked to
bring a bag lunch; supper will be provided for
a nominal charge. Transport·a tion will be
o1rranged, and students are asked to meel at
the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., at 11 a .m .
ReSerVations must be made by calling Hillel at
836-4540, or Renee •Cohen, 691 -7645.
.
In case of Inclement weather, an aher{late
· activity will be pi&lt;Jnned. Stude nt$_ should call
691-7645 on Sunday morning for information
on time and pliillce of the alternate program.
RECREAnON PROGRAMS
The lntr.1murals and Recreation Office is expanding its swimming program on a trial basis.
On June 24 and 26,.and July 1, tile pool will be
availiiible for use from 6-8 p.m. by faculty, staff
and their families who have paid the SS
recre&lt;Jtional fee. During the trial period,
regU'I&lt;Jr swimming hours will be continued :
Monday·frid&lt;Jy, 3,.5 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 2-4 p .m.
Intramural · Softball entries are due Friday,
June 21 , iillnd Tennis entries are due Monday,
June 24. Roster forms may be picked up in the
lntramurals Office, Cbrk Hall. A meeting (or .

soltboll uplilns will be held (!lond•y, June
24, 4:30 p.tn., Room 3, O•rk Hall.

1he University of Pllbbui1Jh, speciallzillll
in the areas of -tion and pen:ept!on
and the psycholoay, of the am. He lw
been engaged in .research In the
physiology of vision oince 1963 and has
published a series of essays in Visual
Rese;,rch:
·
Danny lyon, pholographer and film·
maker from New Mexico, will screen and
discuss his most recent films, El Mojado
(The WetNck) and Llanilo (A Litt1e
Place), Friday, June 21, at 8 p.m. in 1-40
Capen. lyon comes to Buffalo after
screening his films in New York's
Museum of Modern Art Cineprobe
series. He is best known for four dislin~uished pholographic books: The
Movement; with text by lorr.a ine
Hcinsberry, the controversial Bik.eriders,
the award-winning Destrudion of lower
Manhattan; and Conversations with the
Dead, the result-of 14 monlhs of turning
his camera on Texas prisons .
, Ro,bert Polidori, artisl·filmmake&lt; from
New ·York, will present his slide-piece,
Murmur Diphthong. on Salurday, June
22, at 8 p.m. ·al Media Study, 3J25 Bailey .
Avenue. Polrdori, a former student of

UIB fiimmaker Paul Shariis, has been on
1he slaff of Anthology Film Archives In
New YOrk .

Tamalonis ·named
_to J,::l/Bf. position
Frederick M. Tamalonis has. been appointed director ol developmenl of the
University at Buffalo . Found~tion, ln.,:.

TamaJonis, 31, has served as director of
alum"i affairs since 1972 and was director
of undergrad~ate and special programs
-during 1971-72 for the U/B Alumni
Association.
In his new post, he will be responsible
~for the Annual Fund, constituent alum·
ni fund raising, the century Club,
deferr:ed giving, and dass and reunion
gifts.
·
Tamalonis h.o lds both B.A. and M.S.
degrees from U/8 and has been a
management analyst for the Niagara
Frontier Housing Development Corporii·
lion, a leaching assistanl in the U/ B
School of Architecture, a research .Jssislanl . for- the Buffalo Organizolion for
Social an&lt;! technological Jnnovalion,
and a product sales engineer for 1he Carborundum Co.
·

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>History m~l&lt;es history as 1st
tenant of 'Ellicott Complex
The administration, faculty and stall of
the History Department were making

campus history this week, -settling in as
the first tenants of the vast 38-..structuie

Ellicott Complex on the Amherst Campus.
They weren't easy to lind (the administrative offices are perched on the
4th "level of an almost deserted Building
B, or Red Jacket Quadrangle as the Board
of Trustees have named it, in a space
further identified as B-4 by a series of
temporary location signS); they had, as of
Monday, only one telepbone line to '
civilization (636-2181); they were still
wondering if the air conditioning was
going to work; they were unpacking,

calling about drapes, making plans for
conference rooms, generally caught up

in the throes of "shakedown," as Chairman Clifton Yearley put it. But, he said,
were also: glad. to be _there; happy
with the idea of being " tiei:l together"
t~ey

fo t the fi rst time in recent memory;

pleased to be rid of cheesy, makeshih
quarters here and there.
Most aCademics have n't iA their
wildest dreams seen themselves working
. _in such "superb•' sun:oundings, Yearley
said. This cJmplex, of all those _being
built in Amherst, is sure to cop the major
architectural prizes, he predict~ . .
At 'fitst, he adrllitted, ·the·spr"aWiing; interconnected, mixed-use Ellicott
give the impression of a Byzan-

the Complex next fall.
Four Areu"
History has occupied four areas within
Ellicott.
The first consists of 25 faculty offices,
fronted by reception areas and carrels
for graduate assistants, stretched out
along one side of an L-shaped wing on
the ground level of the Red Jacket unit
(space areas B-1 and !!:2 to those who
know about these things)·. Each office has
120 square feet of space and a view of
what will eventually become a
landscaped green area (right now the
prospeo is of construction rubble). Opposite the entrances to the offices across a passageway - are floor to ceiling glass walls which also look out on
what will be lancfscaped spaces,
This L-shaped wing leads. into a
cafeteria area (which will provide service
for faculty, staff and students). Beyond
this are entrances to a covered roadway
whidl snakes under the entire Complex
and an elevator for the trip to the fourth
floor administrative suite.
On four are located a g~neral reception area, the chairman's office -which
features views of other toWers of the
Complex and of Lake LaSalle-and several secretarial offices. Immediately above
the a~inistrative
of the
fifth level,
dor-

lounge, and
spaces for the Graduate History
Association and undergraduate students
- amenities which the Department has
. (turn to

.

~ge

J, col.

f)

U/8 historian·finds 8uHalo
rich in Art Deco buildings
By Potrici;o Word llieder.un

.

'

"Ornament conceived apart from
function," wrote Lewis Mumford, "is as
barbarous as the tatooing of the human
body."
,Rules of aesthetics, like other fashions,
cRange. Today Mumford's austere dietum has the prissy, slightly comic ring of
a prpnouncement on the absolute
necessity of leaving engraved calling
cards set forth in a 1912 book of eliquette.

" Broadway;" even, if you are willing to
reach, the ziggurats of girls ~nd kaleidoscopic patterns of a Busby Berkeley musical.
The phrase Art Deco is shonhand for
Exposition lnternationale des Arts
Decoratifs, held in Paris in 1925. By the
early years of the Depression, the style
had been disseminated throughout the
United States, even C3rried to provi~l
capitals like our own by architects trai~
ed or based in New York.
Buffalo Has Its Sh.l~

an~ ~~ha;rd ~%~~~;e~~reh~~~a':he~~

la:~~~rk~hofBth~a~~at~:! ~0

•

•f!PO""" Sl.•ll

season. Currently, the nation is in the
throes of a revival of interest in a style,
expressed primarily in architecture and
the decorative or minor arts, characterized by the very thing Mumford deplores.
"Ornament conceived apart from function" might serve as at least a partial
definition of Art Deco, the decorative
style that flourished in ,._merica in the
1920's and '30's." To the dismay of those
who agree with Mumford, no less a tastes·haper than architectu_re critic Ada
Louise Huxtable recently devoted a
Times magazine article to defending the
integrity and authenticity of Art Deco,
and the related Slyle Moderne, or
Skyscraper Style,. as r a. major force in
shaping the look of American cities durlng the . ~JO's.
.
As tty~tabl~ observes, Art Deco" was,
and , is, many things: the to"!ering
· cn~ysler• buil.ding iri ~ew vo·rk; a
-dprette case of aluminum inlaid with
• black plastic; a . table with tubular
chrome legs; a stone facade with
"Mayan" motifs; • corporate logo
featurins the Jazz Age typeface known as

N::

Y?,M
Chrysler or Chanin buildings, it 'd oes
have its share of lesser Art Deco
treasures, as the Reporter learned from
Dr. Mark Goldman, an ur~n histori;lln
and instructor in the Department of
History. Goldman argues that An Deco is • ·
a transitional style and points to such
local examples as the Main Street showroom of Tinney Cadillac to support his
thesis.
"Since Louis Sullivan and Frank lloyd
Wright, modern architecture had been
moving in one mcijor direction: ~n
emphasis on functional buildings, and' an
end to the copying of academic and.
·
(rum to f».se "·col. JJ
AT DEADUNE
1M l'roleoolonol ~ - · -dloc at
Reporter - · hNnl " - l'tellrloirl
Robett L ~~--the Unhenlty'•-odlonplonlo&lt;_.,....._., .. ...,

•o~t-MCIII_....,._.,.,.

·. - - - . _ Tloe -

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. . be lleCftlorJ. lloer . . loire

�June
'

. A. 1111tional policy which would requlRi
users to pay the full, escalotlns c::osu ol

u. ft74

"'

En·
"-Ides to Media
Inc. liB support
prooutaoins 1111tional president of the Slern
·
ject, "The A.medcan Seminar In Film."
Oub.
'
Nudelt~, Mos5 said, offeR 6oth
Pr'ojec:t director;Js Or. Gerold O'Grady; .
• Speakins at a Friday workshop on "The
od.antaps
di$aclvantapt. It makes
director .ol Melli SCucly. .
Issues in NucfQr Power Generation."
use of luel which Is dcimeslicalty
Purpote ol the SenilnW II to bring
Mos5 ursec!:
·
available and Its routine·use pases no llr·
New klu ollhe. r.oocl life
toselherfacultyanct.,.ru.esaudentsof
• An end to energy production. subpc?llution problems. "On the other side;
In the final analysis, Moss said, an · dnema studies frOin New Yoili: Univenisldies of aH ltinds - oil depletion
hi' died questions of reactor safety, · owrall modification of demands on our ty, Harvard ~nd .U/8.
allowances, tanker subsidies, etc.;
wasl'e product .disposal, and the possible
resources by consumers is basic to a
Thtee limes each year representatives
• A. ban on -wbslclles for "energy·
u1111uthorized diversion of fissionable • · successful, self-sufficient, . non-wasteful _ of the three JKOiraniS'wiU ..-.for an
intensi¥e" activities, such as the airline
materials.
·
A.merian energy policy. "We have to
-extended pertocl "to dlsalss problems
and highway construction industries,
-One of the best moYeS to i115ure reac·
adoj&gt;t. a new iaea of what it Is that conconcemlnB the 5IUdy of the movt;: 1mwhich stimulate energy use; •
· tor ~fety, Moss 5!'id, would be to
stltutes the 'good.fife.'" •
·
•
h~';.,.~~~ ~~the~! _, ftheor·
•Implementation of a policy requiring
~parate the development and pro~
Moss's presentation was one of four at
"""'"""' "'
polluting industries and the users of their
110n functions. of .tJ:Ie prl!sent A.torn1c
the June 7 workshop which concluded a
mulating rationales for cilrricula design,
products to pay the costs of pollution
Energy c~m.m1ss1on fro~ Its "'fldatory
week•IOng· program on "Eiettric Power
pedasosical ·~ and development
rather than the victims (to make thoSe
responsib1ht1es, someti)IIJg which has
Generation , attimded by 40 college and
of teachi~ materials," O'Grady says.
who now reap only the benefits liable for
al~ac!y ~n proposed by the Nixon Ad·
community' college teachers of science,
Each seminar wiU also Involve dialogues
the estlrnatedStS.lobillion annual toll of
m1n1strat1an_. ·An mdependent regula1ory
engineering and biology from New York . with .outstanding pracdtioners of film,
crop damage, medical expenses, etc.,
age~cy could '!"lve ""?"' .vigoro~sly
State. Other speakers were Robert S. . visits of leadins foreisn film scholars and
would "clear the air literally and
agamst hazards 1n. r~ctor construct!""
Chapman, Envjtonmental Protection
American humanists, and ihe partldpa·
figuratively," Mos5 contended);
(bad wells, leaky p1pes •and otherdes1gn
Agency who dealt with the " Health
lion · of- lacu.ky from sou!!:lern and
. • A. surcharge on large volume energy
probl':""l than can an agency charg~ • fffects ~I Fossil Fuef and.Nudea,r Power
western universities. The ~ to be
u5ers which could be used to underwrite
also W!th spreading f!'!'.go~f of nu&lt;;lear
_ Generation,-"- Daniel F'-d·, Un"!on of
explored dudnglfle jbst year Is the infor·
the costs of deveil&gt;ping sodally and ·en·
po,ver
· •
"'
mational, aesthetic and moral problems
·
11
b'1
• ·h ~
'
· ·,. boo
. k"~ou_·1 a.,_
:~: . .ConcernedSdentisU,whoprovided"A.n
' f the il~ -"--- ~~ R 1 f th e
v1ronmenta y aC'C:epU n: energy supp y. _
A:not er , us in Moss s
~
Overview of Nuclear ·' Power;'·' and
o
U\.atncutary nm. esu ts o
technologies; .and
for 't'e nuc ear industry to ~rap~ pubhc
Herbert Krouts, Atomic Ene- Com·
seminars. will be publfshec! annually in
• Immediate implementation of con·
relations mask and to adm1t pubhcly that
. .
h
sked "H~ Saf·ea' Should
the new';,h
· umal, Mecla SJoodr.
miSSIOD,Wp 0 a Pia ts Bel"
v~ ·
W"ll
..
.
t h ere are questtons
o I safety .mvo Ived .m
N
1 a
...an ........
..,,~e, for~
nl'l:"f•Y directorof
servat .ton measures. .
These strategies, Moss maintained,
nuclear pawer plants. This alone, he said,
uc1ear ower
n
the Film Department of the Museum of ·
would promote a higher level of
The objective of the week's prosram,
Modem Art and. now lilmmaltlngteacher
.wauld offer a real potential lor balandng
.
sponsored by the A.EC in COOP."ration
at the State College at Purchase, is
energy .supply and demand at art op· . safesuards.
timum level in terms o' the "wise" use of
, Mas~· called "lllso for repeal or
with the Office for Credit-Free Programs;
honorary ·chairman of the project. The
resources. They wo•Jid also reduce
modiliqtion. of the Price-Anderson Act
was to provide faculty at other campuses
academi.; committee is composed of
adverse sodaf. and e nvironmental im·
wliiP, limits the IJabillty:ofnuclear plant
in the State system (principally the twoProfessors Ted Perry, · NYU, Vladimir
pacts of energy production and use and
developers In the ca5e of low-likelihood
year ·community colleges) with com·
P.etric, Harvard ; and· O'Grady.
move Us closer to national self,-.
accidents.
.
prehensive, documented instruction in
Ntiw
sufficiency in energy supply.
Although the physical volume of
all major aspects of electric power
The three univers;ties inVOlved are esThey would not, however, produce an
· nudear waste materials is small (In a solid
generatfon pertinent to. the rislt-~nefrt ~
tati!ishii1B';fl"W. P'OifiDIS in ihe.study of
"unlimited"energysupply-norshould
sia'te•an"suCh 'materiaiS to be" produced·
debate. The premiSe was that
the mo~ing im~, and are themselves
they, in his view. "The per capita energy.
through the year 2,000 wouldn't fill the
"wid&lt;;Spread pub~c ~ucation on basic . engij!ed in ·~ and ser1oos· debate
consumption rate in the U.S., is already
Fillmore Room), Moss sees no reason for
facts IS necessary 1f ,at1zens are to make
about .:urrlculum d"!!!J'!.o, ee&lt;fagogic ·
far abo~e w~at is req~ired or needed."
complacency.•The amounrohordioaCtivi·
intelligent choices on the future . 9f..·:.'ltra"thod!l&lt; -~~.,.-~';·iitaterials,
Tax subsidies for energy suppliers, a
ty involved is still potentially dangerous,
power generation."
',()'Grady says. ''Their 'flist:~orates will
keystone of current national policy, con· . he believes. More nearly "fail-safe"
Topics diS&lt;:ussed included the
be engaged in deve~l&gt;jfiJr!!lr..i''f" in
od of was e.dis
I are n~
~; en-ibl~ ~ ~~~rlog
stitute a strategy of(ailure, Moss argued.
waste products whl"ch have beern ~·"soelatedng
hea:Jth
; safety systems"ind
• &gt; ·"1Jie.IW' 25 "'"" Of th eentiiry,:'
.
I _at su.· . "ales provl"de econom'lc l·ocen·
· for finding
'!
· event that
d~mt ana IySis; and siting, regulatory .and - .The program pian ned at .lJ/8 as
" a non•
tives
new energy supplies, he
below ground in the
said. Still wprse, "these subsidies, which
• somet\&gt;ing goes wro~g.
•
economic considerations. • · ·
.
, ~rtmental University-wide endeavor
permit lower consumer costs, artlfidally
I he possibility that fissionable
Speakers during ,the week were 0/s
involv1;:3· a dose relationshi~ with esmaterws might be stolen or otherwise
faculty and selected "!fl!'.rts from other
tablish I shdepa~nts in the umanit~es
stimulate·an alie~Ciy.excessive demand.'''
TheMythofthePoor .
' diverted to potentially anti-social uses
institutions. Thewooohopo.fferedfield
~~gi ·~life' Mu$jc- tut,aso
Moss, who is associated with the
alw requires serious further study, Moss
trips to both nudear al)d fossil-fuel
atlnsJo · - ~ io ogy,
flhysloiDBY - and the. soCial scieJlces.
National Academy of Engineering,
said. pawer plants, and laboratol)' work in the
Wrth the' cooperMion of the Faculty of
c-ation Measures
University's reactor.
. •
£ducational StudieS, a prosram will
challenged the "myth" that energy costs
- partic;uiarly.in terms of gas and el~
In terms of ' conservation, the · sierra
• Drs. David T. Shaw and Robert W.
~fly be deo!eiOped fOr high school
tricity .- sl!ou)d ,be subsidized orrigidly
Club' offiCial :.U8Bested: · · , . . ·
Springer . were co-direct_ors of the
and elementary school teacherS, and, in
controlled in order to benefit the poor.
• l'hasin.g out the use -of • non·
workshop which· was conducted by the · cooperation with the 5P&gt;oof of Manage·
returnable beverage containers, the
Department - of Engineering ScienOl!,
ment, a trainini propan:1 foi-administra"The poor aren't the ones who use aU
the energy. They don't drive big cars and
manufacture of which wastes from 90,000
Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering.
tors will be established.
go hopping around the world in jet . to 130,000 barrels of oil a day (the same
planes.'~ Emphasis_on basic reforms in
amount which would be·&amp;aVed if drivers
the .distribution of income to help the
actually abided by the 55 mi!e·per·hour
poor meet increased costs for the
speed limit nationwide);
. .
relatively small amounts of energy they
• Further -encou..asement of tl'ie ' shift ,
use would be more effident, he said.
to, small ' ca~( and . eri.!'rgy"efflcie_rii
New energy sources have not been
public transportation and fr'eisht·haiiling·
fully utilized, Moss charsec!, beause of
(pre_sentgovernmentol trucking ind~ry •
"institu'tional rather than real ra.sons."
regulations, he said,
designed to .
Companies which now supply energy are ~
restrain competition and lead to· waste of
simply reluctant to take on- new
-energy, through encouragement of
technologies, he said.
dead-hauling a~d the use of drcuitous
Solar energy, for example, coUld with
routes);
·
present technology "provide 90 per cent
• Closer examination of the pote~ttial
energy jlmduction was championed on
campus this week by Lawrence Moso,

•lh__,_..

methods ol
nudeat fusion raciOI's.
NMdeor ..._
'

....r

.

Prop- · .: _ ·

·are

of the energy r:aecessary for low

temperature heating and cooling in most
pam· of the country," an energy use
which now accounts lor~ per cent of all
nat.ionalconsilmption.A.ctualgeneration
of electricitY. using solal energy,
however, requires further technological
breakthrough$. The development of
solar energy is lagging, he said, because
present subsidies for fossil fuel use make
it look· "second best."
Geothermal energy also holds
promise, Mos.s 1 contended. New.
techno)ogies whicn maRe it feasible to
harness heat stored in hot rock deposits
do pose environmental haiards, he said.
But proper regulation of processes and
, locations can hold thes!! io an acceptable

level.

.

Other safe technologies which he feels
could apd should be developed indude:
new combustion methods which utilize
"coal In • gaseDIIS form and make j&gt;osslble·
both hfBh' 'eff~Cienq- energy and the
rem0¥al ol pollutants (the Clea~ Air Act,

environmental impact of · government

policies (the aborted supersonic aircraft
which had AdminiStration backing'
would, for examr,~e, have increased by
millions .ol barres of oil the amount of.
fuel required to· fly the same,.,..ple to ·•
the same places);
· ..
• Insistence on better land use plannlng through creation of attr1ctive en·
vironfl'&lt;!nts in which liVing and working·
areas are in close proximity; and
·
· ·Development of criteria lot effident
energy use ·in industry (the cemeni in·
dustry, for one, could redu!;t! Its en&lt;;rgy
· usage "by a factor of two or thr:ee wltli
r&gt;ew techniques now bei'!ll developed'1 . •.
We have to dismlss'lhe notion that the
public welfare is tied one-to-one to the
Gross i'jational Product. Mos5 said. In·
creased JM?IIution and 1~ ~lth.
hazards spur tl&gt;e pu.m- of pr:oducts
and services Which, in tufJ&gt;, inflate the •
GNP, but these are by no means booRS to
the public iotelfare, he contende.t. ·E"" If • · GNP Is used as a measu~ of the ;80od·

�.Jttistory'#f'Om IMP f,. col. 4J

11eYer bi!fore enjoyed. A caoferenc;e
room for faculty meetings will also be
located here.
Acadetnlc: Spaces
'Classrooms and onother 12 t.culty offices are located in two odditional
dusters of space on the third level of the
interconnected structure. Unlike the administra·tive and first faculty office
groupings, these are located not in Red
Jacket but in areas Band 0 of the Millard
Fillmore Aademic Core, which is the
spine of the entire Ellicott Complex.
These clusters of space contain eight
classrooms and eight seminar rooms in
addition to the offices. The larger
academic space, closer to the adrpinistrative offices, is accented by a well
which looks down into a second-level ~
library (to be used primarily for History
reserve but also for associated .social
sciences). This fadlity will accommodate
15,000 volumes. A computer hookup
w!th the Main library will make it possi·
· ble to order other books for delivery to
Ellicott. There will eventually be six of
these small libraries - with a total
capacity of 70,000 volumes - located i n
the academic core, Yearley indicates. -"
In the fall, History will offer all of its
grzaduate, senior and junior classeS fn
these academic facilities. Sophomore
and freshman classes will be given both
here and on Main Street where Rooms
332, 333 and 334 in Diefendorf are being
retained as "visit'ing" faculty office space.
A theatre with a capacity of 175, located '
elsewhere in the Ellicott Complex, will ~
perhaps be used for large lectun;s "t
Amherst.
·
The residential and " lounge spaCes ·
which abut, surround and flow ihto the
History facilities can also make possible
,closer relations with mllegiat!';pr-Qgr~ms
which have conimon· grounCI With his
Department, Yearley said. Possibly, Vico
College, for example.
·
If ·the deseri ptlomdf'the 01\l'a!ll!ement
at Ellicott seems to
that the

Sta.t e

·uu.p officials to .discuss contract

A:

Or. Lawrence
Delucia, state presi'dent ·at. United University Professions,
will join Or. Sam Wakshull, UUP vice
president for aademics, in discussing
the proposed cpntract between the
collective bargaining agency and the
State ,at a }oint meeting of campus UUP

chapters, tOday Oune 13) at 4 p,m. in the
Faculty Clup Dining Room.
In addition to holding state office,"
Wakshull was a member of the UUP team
which negotiated the contra.ct this spring.
University Center UUP Chapter officials emphaSize that if members do not
ratify the contract, the legislatiqn ap·
propria!ing funds for raises automatically ·
dies. Whether or nor there woulctbe-any
roises for the cominl! year would then be
thrown opert to further negotitltioji, with
the Legislature i&gt;as!lf!li the fundil'g bill
qnly at some time after ratificatiP.n. At
the earliest, ! his woul&lt;t I'!' afterJanuary,
1975.

"We at Buffalo l'fOUid have no ho'" " of

doing any_bener in ~nother rounCI of

negotiation," a University Center
Chapter statement circulated on campus
~ this week contended. "Some of those on
other campuses who oppOse ratification
hope to do better in new negotiations &lt;~t
our e~xpense. So we .would. have no ex·
pectation of improving our salary raises;
and .- mlsht do WO&lt;W:"
In the statement, Professor R. J. Good,
speaking for officers of the Chapter,
again urged ratification.
The UUP-circulated statement also
point!!d out._that the new contract has a
~ ~clauSe....:...the Qme as one in the old con. tract-which' permit$ .';tt}e UniYI!{Sity in·
its 'discretioli" to make. "furthctr upward
salory adjustments to individual
employees/' over ahd above -contractnegotiated minimums.
'"
State Univ~rsity could Mv~~iven merit.
raises in excess of 1.25 per ~cent of total

salaries last spring and is free 10 exceed
the .75 per cent of total salaries mandated for merit in the new pact, the UUP
circular irldicated. · ·
· II is UUP's positi~n, the group statement said, that merit raise money is, in
fact, a m~tter that the University Administration should, itself, seek from the
Legislature, os part of the operating budget. " Such money is, by its nature, i1 reward for merit as judsed by the Adminlruatlon. It wos demonstra.ted last year
that facultY and U~P-partidpation in the
distribution wa.s a nearly impossible
th !O~."

.

UUP Will continue _to recognize thiS in
futi.rrf! ; ilegotiations, the .statement said.
"The effort to .get fu'!ds to give ~rit
raiSes should be a battle of-the University '
as a Wf\ole and not a battle in w~ich UUP
woul~ fight against the Universjty. UUP_
believes •in collegiality, in the issue of .
. merit money, and not in confrontation." .

4!h
the
ground .floor
wing than it was
from his
·headquarters .10.
some of the basement offiCeS thefe ..:._•·
not to mention the outposts along
Winspear Avenue. And no one will ever
have to go outside to get from one set of
spaces to another within the ComJ&gt;Iex.
" We 'grabbed the chance to move out - .
here," Yearley says - unlike Some other
units which had to be pushed hard, if not
quite shoved. He anticipates a noticf!able
improvement in how the De~nment is
able to function .
_ Olh~rs Comins
Before fall, History is slated to 'be j oined at Ellicott by the departments of
Classics, French, Germanic and,. Slavic,
linguistics, and Spanish, Italian and:Portuguese, by the Program in Crjtical_
Languages and by part of the Collegiate
Program , including the central
Collegiate System office. A.s;cording to an
earlier University announcement
(Reporter, March n, almost all of the
space in the Millard Fillmore Academic
Center will be used in the t.ll. In addition, space has been allocated for the
Student Health Service, Student Affairs,
business and administrative. functions,
recreati6n, · the Bookstore, food. service
and the Craft Center.
Dorm students are being _assigned
quarters in three quadrangles (of the ·
eventual total of six) -William C. Fargo,
R,ed Jacket and Peter B. Porter.

.Takes SUNY post
Regis J. Ebner, 37, former director of
public relations at Carnegie-Mellon
University, Pittsburgh, has assumed the
duties of director of communications on
the State University Central Staff. He
succeeds Bruce B. Detlefsen, who resigned.
Ebner had been associated with
Carnegie-Mellon since 1958.
At State · University, Ebner'~ major
responsibility will be coordination of a
cOmmunications-information program
throughout the 72-campus system. He .
will receive an annual salary of $24,000.

�. ·/IMNfi.1J14

4

ArtDeco------------------------~------------------~---------------cfrom ~ge 1. cdl. 4J
trains. They also favored, contemporary
the elimination of all ornament, th.eir
Gr1nt's, S46 Mil in Street. Grant's ,is " a

historical styles, an end to frivolous and
buildings ofte~ looked like an exercise in
superfluous ornamentation which had ·
solid geometry, or, as le Corbusier put it,
served to hide the way a building was
'a machin·e for living.'
.
built," Dr. Goldman explains. "The im"Modernism," he ' continues, " as
pact of these two American architects
taught by its most influential advocate&amp; at
was enormous. By the mid~ 1920's a
the Bauhaus, was.a stern, disciplined and
whole generation of designers was prac- . rigorous architectural ethic: Indeed, it
ticing a modern architecture that derived
was so pure, so rational, so hygienic that
from Sullivan and especially Wright. The
it made·human beings seem out of place.
most influential of these designers workFor this reason it wasn't until the-1950's _
ed at- the Bauhaus in Germany, which
that its lessons came to be ac~ted by
was dedicated to an uncom·promising
the )YOrld aL large. Arcliitects and
modernism in all of the arts. The work of
'designers could n·ot take the great leap
these men - Mies van der Rohe, le Corfrom Viaorianism to Modernism that the
busier, Walter Gropius - was based on a
Bauhaus insisted upon. Modernism was
philosophy of function - the belief that
too st rong a departure to be accepted
the form of a building should be deterovernight : hs blow had to be sohened .
mined by the way its Space is used and
This was the function of Art Deco, a
not by the artificial requirements of
style of transition between the severe
'symmetry' or a particular 'style.' Becau~
and rigorous requirements of Moderthese architects strove for simple, pure
nism and the more ex pressionistic and
and rectilinear forms derived from the
romantic forms of the past.''
~orld of machines rather than ·from
The Besi b•mples
•
nature, a perfection of Proportioos, and,
The best local examples of ArfDeco or
Style _Mdderne can be seen during u
short bike or auto ride down Main
Street, around Niagara Square and back
up Delaware Avenue. As Dr. Goldnian
ex plains en route:
Tinney C•dllloc, 2421 Main Street. This
A _.,... ~,j. _...,. pub&amp;lted
....., n.u.w., ., o. DririliDn c1 um...
building was originally designed as the
f1itr Re&amp;.dolv, St.IN U...._.ty ol Nshowroom and showcase for the latest
. Yorlr •t BullaJo, 34JS
St., BullaJo,
model Pierce -Arrow, the locallyN.Y. 14214. Zdltorial oi/W.. baNd Jn
produced cream of America's young and
Room 2U, 2.50
A_.._ ( " booming auto industry. · Duling the ·
2121).
Age and the Depression, the
Jazz
-~·dhor
A. 'WasTLZY
ROWLAND
automobile assumed unusual status both
" Jl,dJ~
as
a
symbol
of progress and as an an obROB-ERT T. MARLBTT
ject, worthy of the designer's att~ntion.
Art ..4 Produt::dotn
One America n automobile firm, Go-ldJOBN A. CLOUY'IZII
man notes, brought a world-famous PariI'ATIUCIA WARD a/JD&amp;RMAN
sian couturier to this country to design a
new model car. Art Deco desi&amp;.ners
lfAlfCF 8 . CARDAR&amp;'LU
delighted in the non-natural shapes of
.usA~~ ltl. •URQBR
roadsters, airplanes, steamships and fast

~
11•
'W..,._.

.......... ..,...
,__Jlrl...

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

materials made newly available by. an - total . statement of Modernism," Gold ~
acce lerating technology: chrome,
man argues, "one of the few and most
aluminUin, plastic, fluorescent light{ng.
consciously modern buildings in the city.
Everything has been sacrificed to func"Th ~ s," says Goldman , of Tinney
tion here~ This building is true to MumCadillac, " is a perfect example of how
Art Deco sohens the blow of Modernford's view that .o rnamentation for its
own sake is barbarous." Goldman views
ism." Stripped of its ornamentation, the
this byilding as a successful, truly
building is a cold, thorough.ly'modern
rectangle of stone and glass. However,
modern attempt to., resolve the
·the structure is humani~e.d by Art Deco
traditiondil conflict between an and ino rname ntation, .notably t.h e q.1rve-filled
dustry, a major concern qf die Bauhaus.
borders cut into the stone along the top
ThEt structure is a sleek horizontal form,
and ·around the horizontal . ex panse of
smoothly surfaced and precisely outlinwindow glass: ConvOluted brass bars give
ed. The windows form continuous bands
additional em phasis to the borders. Verand become a major decorative element.
tical bands of stained glass, a traditional
Attent.ion is focused on the horizontal
decorative material, are juxta posed with
shop windows, which are unusual in that
highly functional plate glass in the exth ey curve around the corner.
pa nsive window area, where the orBuilt in ·1939, Grant's was designed by
namentation serv~ as a frame for the.
A. S. Alschuler and Raymond Lowey.
cars display,ed inside.
Lowey was in ~ndustrtal designer who
. . The Courier-Express building, 785 . designed ships and also served as design
Main Street, is an " Art Deco jewel,"
consultant to the Greyhound Bus ComGoldman says, pointing to the highly
pany . Lowey ~ coined the word
de ~o rati ve exterior (compare this with a
" streamlined" and was frequenlly instark mode rn facad e Such as that of the
spired in his wark . by the speed,
M&amp; T building) . " It was chic to be
dynamism and streamlined beauty of the
decorative," the historian ·says of the
airplane.
.,
pe riod. " Things that had looked the
From the Pearl Street side, Gr3~nt 's
same for years- pots, pans, clocks, gar-.
suggests the Bauhaus of Gropius's
bage pails- all received a decorative ex- .... Dessau School, Dr. Goldman says. '.'This
terior." Motifs came from industry and · building recalls Henry Ford's contention
from . recent excavations of Egyptian
tha t ' Design will take more advantage of
tombS amt Aztec ruins. look inside the
the power of the machine to go beyond
loqby of the Co~rier building, which was
what the hand can do and will-give us a
built in 1929 and designed by the Boston
who le new art.'" For dramatic contrast
finn of Monks and johnson. Because of
16ok across Mai n Street 'at the utterl y
the lavish use of gilt and gold leaf, i he
derivative Buffalo Savings Bank buildinglobby i&lt;.lherally jewel-like. The unusual
erected in 1900.
lamps on th e walls (fi rst floor) are incorCity H~l, Niagara Square, is" Art Deco,
porated into a larger decorative unit,
pa r excellence/' according to Gol~man .
bright with gold l~af, that is painted
_.,Almost anything on or in the buil_ding
directly on the wall. Goldman cites the
illu str~tes th e style. Here more than
decorate d pillars in the lobby as a - anywhere else, Art Deco takes it revenge ·
"perfect example of Moderne Style."
against t he austerit y of Modernism .

�Structure and function are hidden under
ornamentation. The rrationalism of
Modernism, with its emphasis on concise, economic, structural solutions, is
gone,. The building violates one of the ·
most important precepts of modern
architecrure: that the style of the
building should reveal the structure.
Here the inetal skeleton is den ied by the
surface ornamentation :- the mountainous masses are romantic rather than
modern. this is c_learly not a modern
building as is Grant's. Instead it combines
modern. engineering with Mayan/ Egyptian decoration. It's hard to believe that
Hood's great modern classic, the
McGraw-Hill Building, was built three
years earlier.
Built between 1930 and 1932, and
designed by Dietal, Wade and Sullivan,
City Hall imitates the setback style of
New York skyscrapers of the '20's. Note
the sunburst seal of the City to the right
of the Niagara Square entrance. The lobby is filled with wonders, from the
massive statues representing the
municipal virtues of Diligence, Fidelity,
Service and. Virtue to the squirrels and
frogs carved in marble above the side
dpors. The ceilings bear g·e ometric ,
patterns suggestive of American Indian
art. The elevators are decorated in an
Egyptian style (King Tutankhamen's
tomb was opened in 1922). The frescoes
inside (notice the panel Over the main
entrance) were done by William
qeleftwichDodge (1865-1936).
The U.S. Courthouse, 68 Niagara
Square1 and the St•te Office Buildins, 65
Court' Street. In both these struclures,
built in the '30's (arch itect Edward Green
cOntribu ted to both), starkness and
purism are de-emphasized in favor of
"jazzinesS, excitement and movtiment."
This is best exemplili~d by the omnipresent ele~ric flaSh motif," Goldman-says.

The interior appointments of both
buildings are noteworth y: radiator grills,
letter boxes, directories, cou nter and
lamp units, floor lamps, and chandeliers
all mirror the Ari Deco spirit. The men's
room on the fourth floor ol the State Offi ce Building reflects cubist use of color
(here stark black and white) to define
·
space, Goldman says.
National Gypsum, 325 De laware
Avenue. "Although built in 1941 by the
local architect ural firm of Back us, Crane
and love, the Nationai'Gypsum building
exhibits the 'classical' features of the
Moderne movement : The color contrasts
of the facade, the cubist elements, the
broach-like ornaments on the 1acade,
plus the lette ring over the door, are all
typical cha raderislics of the style. It's interesting that this building is, in a sense,
ten years 'too late;· " observes Goldman,
hypothesizing a cultural lag between the
" hinterlands" and the pioneering East
Coast and Europe. The pavement decorations south of the building are noteworthy.
.
.
Peck &amp; Peck, 344 Delaware Avenue.
" Unlike the puriSt followers of modernism, desig ners in the Art Deco style
believed that a contemporary look could
be achieved through ornamentalion as
much as by its absence," explains Goldman. Peck &amp; Peck (1929) has an extraordinarily decorated facade applied to an
otherwise stark r:node·rn buildi.f'g. Notice
th e lettering style of the street address
and the ornament, with the ever-popu~
liir sunburst motif, above it.
Milbel Danahy's, 443 Delaware
Avenue. Built. in 1922, "Danahy's also has a
remarkaQie example of Art D~co ornamentation above its address. The cascading tiers with 'sunburst behind m!ght
have been literally translated into a
movie set of the period. Notice the
lettering-style vsed lor the name " JEAN"
elsewhere on the facade.

�. *"-'

of.fteltllh .........

~aild~funckK·
counted for the majority of 52
grantslcontracb" totallln11. $1,960,774
reaeivecl by Un~acutty and saff In
May, RQbert C. F
, aain&amp; vice
president for
reports.
Fltzpalriclr. indlca14!5 that Mlty also -

submission of SO piOpOSifs to prospec·
tlve·....,.._. In the total amount of $3,·
221,455.
Only six new-srents were reponed for
the month: Dr. Gecqe C. lee, Civil
Englneerlns, ST,200 from NSf for a flro-'
ject.of P. K. Ghosh entltled: " Aiterna!Mi

Land Use~ Futures for the Oty of Buffalo;" Paul Halfmann, Un~ Health
Service, ~,458 from Hollman-La Roche
for a "Bactrim ~ococcus Study;"
Om P. Bahl, Biochemis!fY, $6,466 from
the Population Council for salary -while
on leave of absence; Evar_l Calkins,
Depanment of Medicine, $25,000 from
NIH for a Research. Career Development
Awa·rd on behalf of Dr. Michael A.
Apicella; David J, Triggle, Biochemical
PharmacoJosy, $30,~0 from N1H f~r!
- otudy oL"Sources arid Roles· of Calc•um
ill Smbotli Muscle Excitation;': and James
Hilbert, Medidniil Chemistryr Sl,OOO
from the Amefican Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education, for a pOst-doctoral
fellowship.
Renewed, continuins or supplen)Cntal
grants Df SSO,OOO or more went to:
fidential environment, unlike schOol and
Robert
J. Genco, Oral Biology, 582,885
criminal records. They are created t~
from NIH for a ''Training Program in Oral
protect the individual while the others
Biology;"
Grant Phipps, Behavioral and
are created to· protect society/' -... Related . Sciences, Dentistry, $154,130
Cooper.tion from a..w
· ~
~ from NIH for a. " Preventiv~ Dentistry
To develop the best plan for handling
Teaching Development Progra.m ;''
these records, many prof~sions were inRQben Rosen, Biophysical Sciences, 585,eluded in the Joint Task Group whjc);&gt; .
181 from NIH for a study of"Generation
drafted the guidelines. Much of the legal
of Pattern and Form in Biological
framework was researched by nearly a
Sciences;" Guiseppe And&lt;es, Pathology,
dozen U I 8 I a w students who .
S6l,O~~jrqm. Nl.l:f f1&gt; .work on the· "!m-·
-;()l!lntlered through ih'e- Buffalo tegis1a-'
munopathology of Nephritis and Renal '
tion Project: Associate Professor of Law
Transplants;" Anand P.. Chaudhry,
Barry B. Boy.er, who is·on the Conference
Pathology, S69,441.Jr.Qm Nll:f.. fof~ " ui.'.
program ; -saicfr- :-~~ ~a~ · .sf.ite~ ~.,!
perimental Pathology;': G. Cudkowicz,
which deal with various ' rights'of privacy'
PatholofY, 586,003 from NIH for in-..
but the computer science aspe -:_t
vestigat1ons of "factors Controlling
presents potential problems not adeGraft·Host' Interactions."
-quately'Coveh!d urid&lt;!r-e listing law.
Werner Noell, Phyfoology, $139,239
"A uniform Federal law would specify
from NIH for studies of " Vulnerability of
the penalties for violation of confidenthe Retina to light and Other Agents;"
tial , pr ivi leged medical information; · Richard.Srebro, Physiology, $62,241 from
provide guidelines for training_ NIH for work on the "Molecular Basis of
employees; and set up a regulatory
Photoreceptor Activity;" M ..
system which Wo uld include periodic inHreshchyshyn, Gynecology-obstetrics,
spections," he added.
_·
$98,284 drom NIH for suppon of the
The lo cally-d eveloped guidelines
Gynecologic Oncology. Group; Su-..r
could provide the basis for such a law.
Yaffe, Pediatrics, $5§,056 from .NIH for
Two law students will con ti nue
" Re8ulation of Drug Metabolism During
research on legislative aspects this
Development;:• . Milo G ibaldi, Pharsummer under the auspices of the
maceutics, $90,364 from NIH for " Clinical
Christo pher Baldy Fund.
.
Pharmacokinetic:;s ...and BiopharSponsors of the &lt;!ompllti!~COnlerence
maceutlcs;" Phi~p CopPens, Chemistry,
incl ude U/ B's ·Clinical lnlornlai:ion:
$56,000 from NSF for studies of " Charge
Center, , Continuir}g ·Medical •Education
Density _Analysis _by X-ray and Neutron
Office, and -Depa[tment of Obstetrics
Diffraction Techniques;" and Marvin
and Gynecology; and the Joint Task
Zelen, Statistics, $57,813 for " Statistical
Group of the Medical Society of the
Models of Biomedical Phenomena" and
County of Erie on Ethical Health Data
$58,825 for support of " Cancer Clinical
Centers.
lnvestisation.s Coor!=linating Center A,"
both from NIH. _

Safeguards proposed for·'medic~l -priva~y' _
An approach to preventing unauthorized retrievar of computerized
medlcat records. which has nation-wide
poten-tial
· be ' arnong subject~
presented at the Sixth Buffalo
Confererte!e on Cofnputers in Clinical
Medicine June 17-19 at the Parkway
Ramada Inn, Niagara Falls.
Believed t'OJI-be• the •first •standardized
plan devised -for" establishment and con- .
trol of " ethical health data centers," the
guidelines were developed - by• a · local
~ group repTe'Stmting medicine, law,
philosophy, religion, lCOmputer science
-and tu.•IJh; g_r.e p~n!)ing: , ·• ·: ·
•
There are an estimated ~4000 da-tar
centers across the country handling
medical records information on some
basis. But 11re•i0\ISIV there bal!eJ&gt;eep,no
guidetines•wHich set standards for naming those who store and retrieve this sen-

wm

sit i~nformation .

Many Benefits
.
"Computerized storage of med•cal
record S at ·a data center can potentiall ybenefit the patient and his physician,"
according to Dr. Elemer R. Gabrieli,
Conference chairman and director of the
U/B Clinical Information Center. ''The
statistics collected could guide the physi- ·
cian toward the best method of treatment" for medical conditions. And by
having access to complete medical

Prof. Bunker
new president
of ~acuity Club
Barbara B. Bunker, assistant professor,
• psychology, has been elected president
of the Faculty Club for 1974-75 by the
Club's Board of Directors.
Other-afficers are Harry G. Fritz, dean,
School of Health Education, vice presi. dent ; Larry J. Green, professor,
orthodontics, secretary; and Constantine
A. Yeracaris, professor, . sociology,
treasurer.
..
Recently elected to serve two-year
terms on the Board of Directors are John
A. Buerk, director of University orientation; Ms. Bunker; Fritz; Milton Plesur,
professor, history; and M. Luther
Musselman, assistant director, University
·
Health Service.
Continuing on the board are five
direaors whose terms expire in 1975:
Lyle B. Borst, professor of physics;
GrHn; Arthur L. Kaiser, pro.fessor,
curriculUm development and instruCtioNI riiedia; John D. Telfer, vice presi-·
dent, fadlities pbnnins; and Yeracaris.
A. Westley Rowland, vice president for
University relations, immediate past•
~dent of the Club, will also rontinue
on the OO.rd as ex-officio member
· without-e.

records, the physician could · treat the
patient totally rather than piecemeal."
Such co mplete records are .essential, Dr.
Gabrieli said, especially if P.atients move
around a great deal or -are being treated
for a variety of ailme niS by several
physicians.
.
Despite these benefits, people are
becoming more reluctant to have -personal information computerized. Any ·
computerized data system Inherently has
dang~rs. ,,Compu~er . o""r~tl'"· ,supervisors anCI oiher personnel-untrame&lt;t
and unscreened-deal daily with confiden tial information. With .medi~J 1
nkoril~.' 7il' 'pallftUia'f.·'fhe5I! I!'Mp1byees
have at their fingertips all sorts of potentially damaging information.
PSjelooiQiiCol Haiigup$
" ~ .
.
"About 90 per cent of all psychiatric
reco rds and 40 per cent of
medical/surgical records deal wit h 'extra.
sensi ti ve' information. If a patient
thou gh t his psychological hangups,
recOrded on his reGards, could fi nd their
wa'y into 1he hands of someone other ..
than his physidan, he would refuse
treatment," Dr. Gabrieli surmised.
" No patier'lt whO has undergone an
abortion, treatment 'for venereal disease
or other medical conditions fro~ned on
by segments of society would want this
information to get in the hands 9f future
employers, credit bu(eaus, and .other
groups," he said.
..
•
,,
" We feel medical records differ from
other types of co mputerized records in
several ways-and therefore must be
safe ly guarded, " he .pointed ou t.
" Medical records are generated in a co n-

Job openings
FACULTY
Assistant Professor, Psychiarry.
Associate Professor, Psychiatry.
NTP

Head Residem, seven positions available, Housing, PR·1 (.5 FTE).
Counselor, Education~! Opportunity Center, PR·1.
Assistant to -Director, Survey Research Center, PR-2.
Area Coordinator, Housing, PR-1 (1 .0 FTE).
·for additional information concerning these jobs and for details of NTP
openings throughout the State University system, consult . b~lletin boards at ,
these locations:
·
.. ~ _J.
1. Bell Facility between D152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, ,Building 4236,_next to
cafeteria; 3. Ridse Lea, Buildins •230, in corridor next tO C·1; 4. Health Sciences
Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the corridor between
Room 141 and the lobby; 6: lockwood, ground fiQOr lh corridor next to ven •
dins :nachines; 7-J Hayes Hall, in main entrance foyer, across from Public lnfor- .
rnation Office; 8. Acheson Hall; in corridor between R~ms 1U and 113; 9. '·~
Parker Engineering, in corridor next to Room 15; 1(). Goodyear .Hall, 1st·!loor, .
Housing Offk:e area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Penonnel D\'partment; 12. Norton
Union, Director's Office, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
Room 106; 14. John' lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor. (Amherst Can:'pus).
'

Mohn to head
immunology unit

Dr. James £.' Mohn, professor of
microbiology and head of the blood
group research unit, has been appointed
director of the Center for Immunology.
The 52-year-old Buffalo-born and
educated physician will assume the post
July 1. The Center was created in 1967 by
the late Dr. ETAest Witebsky (distinguished professor and past chairman of
bacteriology and immunology) to assure
coordination and extension of a wide
scope of ."immunologica"l research and
teaching in Buffalo.
At the Center, immunologists in the ...
comrl'\unity can meet anC:t exchange~ information on all types of immunologic
responses·to forge be'ner understanding
of factors responsible for r.eSistance to
disease and to narrow the sap between
research and ~tient care. Bien nUll sym-· •
posiums and summer workshops~pon­
sored by the Center continue ·lei attract
Immunologists from around ihe world to
Buffalo.
'

�,_fl. ff7f

people
Jo,...,.....

· Dr. Edson X. AlbuQuerQue; prolessor
of- pharmacology' 1elt ui'B June 1 to
become professor and chairman of the
Un~YerVty of Maryland's Department of
Cell Biology and .Pharmacology. lie will
also serve on the staff ol the Department
of Pharmacology at Johns Hopkins aod
be assOciated with the Nation-al Institute
of Health's Department of &lt;;:hemistry
wt}ere he will . continue pioneering
studies with D". B. Witkop and J. Daly on
. the complicated electrical signaling that
takes place between nerve and muscle
cells. A be"er unde,.tanding ol this
mechanism may help to unravel the
mystery in such diseases ·as muscular
dystrophy. The Brazilian-born and
educated investigator ioined U/ B's
Department of Pharmacology in 1966 as·
assistant research professor. Four years
later, he became a full prolessor. , His
research studies have led to over 200
publications on. muscular dystrophy,
muscle degeneration, and problems of
the neuromu~ular !rans~ission system.

Faculty bluegrass group ·ta~es
top prize at Canadian festival
M'eOn~ · ~
Four UIB staff meonbe!1 and 11. local·
The original field of 22 competing
elementary teacher, .calling themselves
The Bluegrass Alman.ac, won first place in _ bands - most of which utilized
trad!liQnal bluegrass vocal harmonies
the string band competition at•Bluegrass and featu[ed mandolin, fiddle, banjo,
Canada 74, a festival held this past
guitar and string bass - Was trimmed to
weekend; June 7, 8, and 9, at Courtcliffe
Parlt," Carlisle~' Ontario.......... ,
-:'" - .
siJ&lt;.)!I ti!e,.~n~ S:!'IPi: finals ..Qp Satvfpay.,
afternoon before a festival crowd esDr. Williapm S. Hamilton, assistant
timated at 4,00().5,000. The Bluegrass
professor of Russi~n and director ol the
Almanac returned to Carlisle to compete
Russian langua~e Program for the
successrully in Sunday's finals against its
Department of Germanic a~if Slavic, aiid
five remaining rivals - three of whom
his colleague, Dr. G. lee Fullerton, assis·
were from Unada.
tant professor of German and director of ·
- While their -professional obligations
rhe dePartment's German language
prevent the band membe" lrom follow·
Program, shared the honor - and the
ing the tra-ditional contest drcuit during
$500 check awarded to the top group the summer months, The Bluegrass
with Dr. -Hamilton's wife, Cynthia, a fi"t
Almanac is quite active locally, and has
grade teacher in the Cheektowaga Cen·
been featured on campus at .the UUAB
tral school system; David .M. Soda,
Coffeehouse
on two occasions during
research .Wstant in pharmaceutics; and
· the past year.
adjunct faculty- member Richard T.

Med .School honors ni.n e faculty
at. its annual spring meeting .
Dr&gt;. Edward ·f. Marro and John ·B.
Sheffer were honored lor their services
to the School of Medidne atthe School's
annual faculty meeting, Wednesday, ·
~·
May 29. ·
Or. Marri, who.has served as professor
and chairman Qf the DepaMment ol
Sodal and Preventive Medicine since
1960, was dted "in appreciition of his
effective leadership, dependabl~ suppoM, and ol his service as co-chairman ol
the executive. commi"ee (1970-74)."
Under his leadership over the last 14
years, at le~t a half dozen faculty
membefs reeeived training to head
similar departments at~ other medical
centers. Dr. Marra was instrumental in
se"ing up a com~nsive University
training. program in family practice as
well as in helping to organize programs
in medial sociology.
Or. Sheffer, who has. served on the
faculty for a quarter centU!Y• was
honored "for loyaltY. to hi• alma mater
and for lndispeMable services in mainwning the School'• pathology program
·from 197:\-74." '
Seven faculty member&lt; who will retire
also honored: ·
August 31
Dr. O...W K. Miler, a faculty member
for 37 years, who headed the Meyer
Hospital DepaMment of Medidne from
, 19~ to 1!167.
.
1 •
· Dr. J. Frederldl PM!toa, s.. who join·
"ed the faculty In 1938 and se&lt;Ved as head

we"

ol the' DepaMment ol Medidne at
Millard Fillmore Hospital from ·1946 to
1969 and also as president ol the
Hospital's medical staff;
Dr. W..lteo D. Weslif&gt;Shouse, a clinical
associate professor of medidne, who has
been on tile faculty for 36 years;
Dr. Waite&lt; F.-Kins. a clinical associate
professor of ophthalmology, who has
completed o40 yea" of service; .
Dr. Anselo S. Naples, who has been on
the faculty for 13 years and was head ol
the Department of Ophthalmology at
the Veterans Hospital from 1949 to 1959;
Dr. &amp;elyn Alpern, associate professor
of r.sychiatry and c~inica1 . assistant
pre essor of pediatrics, who joined the
lacultjl in. 1948;
Dr. lnmo . G. Schutl&lt;elteo, a clinical
assistant prol1'5sor of psychiatry, who has
served for 26 yea" on the faculty.

·calendar change
for fal semester
The beifnning ol instructio,;- for the
Fall Semester has been pushed back one
day, from Tue.day, Septeml!er 3, to
Wednesday, September . 4, Richard
Dremuk, director of ad~ions and
records, has indicated . .·
&lt;.
Qremuk notes that this makes it possible to have one day for registration on
Tuesday, the 3rd.
. _
· .

Goodwill Tour
Harriet R. Simons, director of choruses
at U/ 8, is accompanying ~ delegation of
39 American choral directors on a 22-day
Peopie-to·People Goodwill Mission to
Europe, which departed lrom Kennedy
International Airport, May 26. The group
is conferring with choral directors and
composers in France, Poland, the Soviet
- Union, Germany, and England, and will
meet with representatives of the
governmerlts of those countries. The
mission will retu fn to the United States
on june 16. ·
NSf Grad.;ate Fellow
Eugene P. Goiebiewski ol West Seneca
has been awarded a National Science
Foundation Graduate FelloWship at' U/B.
As one of 64 e ngineering students in the
U.S. t o w.in • the fellowship, Mr .
Golebiewski is beginning mechanical •
e ngineering graduate worlc this summer.
Awarded on the basis of transcript,
leuers of recommendation and Graduate .
Record Exam results, the •fellowship
carries a stipend of $3,600 for a 12-month
period to cover tuition and fees. Depending on continued progress, the
fellowship is renewable for an additional
two years. During his u~ergraduate
yea" at U/ B, Golebiews~o served as
chairman ol the student chapter ol the
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers and was vice president of Tau
Beta Pi, the national. engineering honor
society. He was also sel~ed student
engineer of the year by the Niagar.. anti
Erie chapter ol the New York Staie
Professional E~gin~ring ~ety.
Named Professors Emerilus
Five retiring faculty members have
been designated professors emeritus by
the State University Board of Trl,lstees.
They are:· Dr. C. Perry Bliss, School ol
Management; Philip C. Ellio«, professor
of art and former chairman of the Art
Department; Dr. Marvin farber, distinguished professor of philosophy and
former chairman of thiit department; Dr.
Burvil H. Gleflll, professor of education;
and Dr. Olive P. lester, _prolessor of psy·
chology and former department chair'
man.
•
~by

Journal

The Winter Issue of the Journal of lndllllrlol Tocher Eduaotlon is dedicated
to Dr. Gerald B. leighbo_dy, professor
emeritus of education, in recoptition of
the "scholarship, teaching.effectiYet.ess,
research, and ·university and community
service" which , ha.., hfshlighted his
...Caree&lt;. Dr. ~eighbody, who holds three
degrees from UIB; has 5pent more than
half a century "as a profeuional in administration and te.cher educatk)n," the
........., dedication notes. "While moot of
his caree&lt;"has been spent in the schools
of New York, he is well known n.ationally
for his ~ publicallons, and for his
contributions as a spukeo and consultant. Among his·maJOr attomplidoments
· ~r~ 5ev!""al books which relate to instruc-

tion ·in vocational education, research
papeR published In the literature, 5Urveys completed to design programs for
the New York schools, and amtributions
made throu(lh · national and state advisory committees asembled to ~
and improve programo in vocational
education." After a k&gt;ng career as a ·
teache&lt;, as an administrator with the
State E~uati9n Department_.. and as an
associate superintendent of Buffalo
schools . for instruction-al services and
deputy superintendent of schools, he
joined the U/B faculty ln 1964. In' 1969,
he was appointed professor emeritus.
Fo,tesque fellowlhlp

~

David J. Reinagel of Kenmore, a summa cum laude U/B electrical engineering
graduate, has been awarded the 1974
Charles leGeyt Fortesque Graduate
Fellowship. The first student in the
· New England States region to receive the
fellowship, r.,lr. Reinagel was selected
from a 1st of international applicants. Administered by the Institute of Electrical
a nd Electronics Engineers JIEEE), and
mad e possible through the
Westin g house Corporation as a
memorial to its namesake, the fellowship
. carries a stipend of $.4,000 and is for one
year of full-time graduate work. Reinagei
is currently employed as a special projects engineer for Electro-Sciences for
Medidne Inc. of Clarence, N.Y. He has a
pending patent on a new bio-medical
implanted prosthesis device . Dr . _
Demetrios G. lainiotis, chairman of the
UIB Department of Electrical Engineering, noted that the award brings a
singular honor to the University and
department as well as to Mr. Rein~gel :
~'The awartl is not given casually, as it involves stiff competition. The winner must
display outstanding characteristics in
more than one area and for this we are
extremely proud ol him." Reinagei will
take his graduate work at the University
of'Califofflia~ r~rke!e-y.

1

·.11. ,

• •· ·

Dr: laque5 Honored
Dr. Mar.celine ~ Jaques, professor,
counselor education, was honored for
her leadership in rehabilitation at the an·
nual meeting of the American Personnel
~nd Guidance Associ~tion ·in New
Orleans this spring. Dr. Jaques was president ol the American Rehabilitation
Counseling Association from 1967 to
1968. A plaque for distinguished
presidents was presented to her at a
special awa.rds luncheon. The American
Rehabilitation Counseling Assodation,
chartered in 1957 as the fi." t professional
association for reh~bilitation counselors,
is a division of the American Personnel
~nd Guid.tnce Association with national
headquarter. in Washington, D.C.

......ec:m=.~

Dr. Thomas J. Bardos, a member of the•.
School of Pharmacy faculty, has been
awarded the 1974 JacOb F. Schoelikopf
Medal by the Western New York section
of the American Chemical Sodety. Dr.
Bardos, a professor of. medicinal
chemistry a!'d biochemical pharmacology, received the award for " his
outstanding contributions to the
chemotherapeutic treatment of cancer;
especially for the development of . the
dual antagonist concept and the synthesis of spedfic chemical agents design~ to implement this concept by the
i.pplication of mechanistic considerations, and for his inspired
leade,.hip and guidance ol research
st~nts. "

. .

He W• Tloere lelore Klal,....
"He developed per.onal diplomacy
long before Henry Kissinger," Dr. Steven
Adorian of the Western New York
Cou.nseio" Association said last Friday in
presenting a plaque from the Assodation
to Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti, associate vice
president fqr student aflai" at U/B and
president of the New York State Personnel and Guida·n ce Association .
LOfenze"i was cited for his skill in giving
students a sense of worth and value
while helping them on the road to the

risht career.

�June U, !f74

8

TheDepllftllll!i,it
a varied

THURSDAY-13

1!174 Summer
A Contempor11ry Music festival incidental to lhe Summer Study of Com·
post1on
di...cteclllf Morton Feldmlll wtll!ndude three~ bexln-

H.-

CONJNJING DINTALIDUCATIONt •
four
Demlsuy, presented by Dr.
, _ Collord, Ulll asoodate professor In
pedodontia. and Dr. Nelson llldmore,
U/11 prolessor ond oeclion director, comprehensi11e den10l are, ~ Hail. Also on

Course

nlnl Tuesday evenJns,June 11, The lim

wllf indilde works by the young
Alnetlcan compooer, Joel Chadabe.
Chadabe Is director of the ElectJOnic
Music Studio 11 State UniveBity at
Albany and this cona!rt features Jan
Williams and Dennis .Kahle, percusolonisls,
e.vid Gibson, oellist.
· Weclnesdn ewenlng, June 19, the
pioiram wlif COIIIisl of Monon Feld-.
111111'• "The Kina of Denmark," "NI Bruit, ·
Ni Ylleue" by L-ukas Foss, former music
d irector of lhe Buffalo Philharmonic
Qrc:he5tra, and "Spiral" by Karlhei'!z
Stod&lt;hausen. The Festival will c:onclude
on Thursday June 20; :wilh a cona!rt
devoted to works of the American composer. Pauline ,Oliveros. Both Oliveros
and Chadabe will be joining F.eldman as .
faeuhy members at ulll during !he"
lhree-weelt
All events during the Conlemporary Music Festival will be at 8
p.m: in Baird and are open to the public
withoUt charge.
"'
·
.
The .Young Muoicians Chamber Music
Festival will take plare Iurie 23-29, featuring two concerts by 1he Cleveland
Quartet. Joining lhe Quartet will be
pianist Frina Arschanska Bolde on June

Fridoy, June 14.
For further lnl.,.,.tlon, all 831-4911.
lJIAI..aJNG••
Sam Wlkshull. vice-president lor .ademla
ol the Saile UUP, wdl discuss the . -. con. tract, Faculty Club dlninR room, 4 p.m.
• Cod&lt;toils will be ser&gt;ed at 5 p.m. Also on the
pr08Tam, ~ A. Del.ucio, State UUP

an4

preoident.
MIDIA STUDIB PU5ENTATION'
A presentl.tion and discuuion of moving
holosrams, Lon Moore, director, School ol
Holosraphy, San Francisco, 140 Capen, 8 p.m.,
Presented by •the Center for Media Studies.

FRIDAY..:.-14
COMPUTBI

sOENCf COUOQUIUMI

course.

Some Results on l Systems, Grzesorz
Rozenbefa, Utrecht University, 4226 Ridse

lea, Rm. 41, 3:30 p.m. Refreshments will be
served

.t~ft:er

the coUoquium.

RlMS'
Stravind:y"s

Port~it

(Leacock); Huuerites

{low) , a nd High School (Wiseman), 5
Acheson, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
MIDIA~STUDIB Plti3ENTAnoN•
0

St~N~':!~la~ ~id:~:~~r~ ~3 v~=:rsa

23, and Stephen Manes, pianist, on
Thursday, June 27 . For complete
. program jnformation, contact the
Concert_Office, 108 Bai~d .

p.m.

Presented by the Center for Media Studies.
UUASRLM..
Murmur of the Heart. Conference Theatre,

Six excursions
. to visit area
cultural events

Norton, check showcase for times. i\.dmission

charge.

SATURDAY-15
MEDIA STUDIES Plti3ENTAnoN•
Rodney Wilson, film offi cer, ·Arts Council of
Gn!•t Britai n, will screen and discuss British
avant:Sarde films and documenury films in
the other arts, 140 Capen, 8 p .m.
Presented by the Center for Media Studies.

!Jf.lA"
filM"
Murmur of the Hurt., Conference Thealre;
Norton, check showcase for times. Admission

chorwe.

SUNDAY-16
UU,..RLM"
Murmur of the He~rt. Confe rence Theatre,
Norton, check showcase fo r times. Admission
chouge.
COP OU1-GRfAT AMERICAN PA511ME
Mental Re tardation : Reordering Our
Priorities, a discussiori with Bambii Abelson
kertzman, instrudor, U/8 Department of
Health Ed!Jcatton, WKBW Radio, 1Q p .m.
U/1 AIITS FOliUM
Hostess Esther Swartz Interviews critic
Dwisf&gt;t MacDonald, WADV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

MONDAY-17

WEDNESDA Y-19
MATHEMAnCS.PHYSIC5

INTERDISCIPliNARY SfMINAJII
Foclc Space.: Dr. Jonathan Dimock, assistant
professor, UIB Department of Mathematics,
4246 Ridge lea, Rm. 48, 2 p .m.
RlM'
B~ttle of Brit,ain (Capra), 5 Acheson, 7 p .m.
No admission charge.
FilMS'

Screen (O'Neill, 7 p.m. Adebor (Kubelk•l;

Group 4 {Gerson) ; Croup 5 (Gerson), and Un- _
titled (Pinney), 9 p .m. All films are free and
will be shown in 140 Capen.
CONCERT: CONTlMPOIIAIIY
MUSIC FESTIVAl.•
Featuring Jan Williams and Oenni!ii Kahle,
percwslonists, performinR ~rks by Feldman, ·
Foss and Stockhausen, Baird Recital Hall, 8
p .m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Deputment of Music.

s tx cultural excursions are scheduled
for the Summer Sessions, induding trips
to Chautauqua, Stratford .and d\ e Shaw
Hall lobby display cases, through Friday, .June Feslival at Niagara-on-lhe.,Lake.
28. Viewi ng hours are Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
Tickets and information on alllhe trips
p.m. Presented by the Office of Cultural Afare available al the Norton Hall ntket
fairs.
Ollire.
UIIIIARY EXHIBIT'
•
· June 29 is the ' elate lor a visil to the
First" editions of the work of ~muel BeCkett
100th anniversary season of the
from the collection of Lockwood Memorial
Chautauqua Institution. On the program
Libr.ary, 2nd Ooor balcony, lockwood. View!hal evening will be a joint recital leaturing hours: Monday-Friday, 9a.m.-5 p.m. Con.
ing Robert Merrill and Richard Tucker of
tinuinR;.
f
the Metropolilan Opera. The prire of $8
SUCIIUFFALO EXHIBIT'
·
for students, $9 for facuhy and otaff and ·
A Lild from Dunki;k ~Comes H~. an ex$10 for others includes round-trip
hibition of the archive of George Williams
Eggers, noted art educator, museum director
artist, Ch&lt;1rles Burchfield Center, State
University Col~ at. Buffalo, Suncby, June 16,
through Friday, August 2. Viewins· hours:
Monday-Ftiday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, 1-S
&lt;~nd

p.m.
UUAI EXHIIIJ•
New P,ainters, paintings ·by students of Will
Harris, Gallery 219, Norton. Viewing hours:
Monday-Friday, noon--4 p .m.; Tuesday and
Friday, 7-10 p.m.

THURSDA y_:_20 ·

NOTICES

AlMS'

Tilicut Follies (Wiseman), and Selling of the
Periragon (CBS), 5 Acheson, 7-p .m. No admission chorwe.

FilMS'

Wu Movie (Schindler); J/ 60: Trees During
Autumn (Kren), and 4/ 61: W•lls Pos. Neg.
W,ay (kren), 140 &lt;:apen, 9 p.m. No admission

chorwe.

TliESDA Y-18
LAnN AMBIICAN .. CARIIIIEAN
RLM R511V Al'
Mexico: The Frozen Revolution ·(Mexico), a nd La s ollas populares (Argentina) ,
Conference Theatre, Norton, 7:30,p.m . No admiuion charge.
·
Presented by the Puerto Rican Studies
Program.
CONCBT: CONTlMPOIIAIIY MUSIC
f1511\1Al'
.
feJiturins Jan Wilt~ms and Dennis Kahle,
percuslionists, and ~vid G ibson, cellist, per-

formlna works by Joel Chadabe, Baird Redtol
Hall, 8 p.m. No odmit&amp;lon cha'lle.
f'relenled by the Department of Music.

......

~cb

(Huot); Axlomarlc Cranul,arity -

IShoritJI, ond Color Sound frames

(Sharits),

140 ~. 9 p.m. No ad~ .cha"P.·

RLM•
Last Yeu at Muienbad (Res na is),
Confere_!lce Theat re, Norton, 7 p .m. No admission Charge.
Presented by the Depa.rtment of French:
&lt;;ONCBtT: CONTEMPORARY

MUSIC FBTivAL'
A.n Evening with Paulioe Oliveros, Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
Presented by the Department of Music.
SUMMR DANCf 74'
•
Dance pieces b)' Marilyn Cavallari, Frank
Mar~iello and linda Swiniuch, and introducing Zod~que., . a new resident dance
group, Harrirmn Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m.
Admjssion charge. Through Siturchy, June 22.

HillEL TRIP TO lEAVER ISlAND
Hillel is pla nning an outing to Beaver Island
on Sunday, June 23. Participants _p-e asked to
bring a bag lunch; supper will be provided for
a nominal charge. Transportation will be
arr.mged, a nd students are asked to meet at
the Hillel House, 40 capen Blvd., at 11 a.m.
Reservations must be made by callins Hillel at
836-4540, or Renee Cohen, 691 -7645.
In case of inclement weather, an aherNte •
· activity will be planned. Students should call
691-7645 on Sunday morning for information
on time and pbce of the alterNte program.
NEWMAN CfN1III SUNDAY MASSI5
Newman
Sunday Maises ve held a t
323~ Main Street, on
Situr~ .~t 7 p .m., and Sunday~ at 9 a.m .,
10:30 •. m. and noon. Spanish MasSes are held
on Sund:ays at 7 p.m_. at the Newman Center,

center

d\e Cantalicion Chapel,

EXHIBITS
EXHIIIT•
Poetry and Pictures, by ~ike Finn, Hay~

Ni.o81J;O "falls 'Blvd. and M3'n St. .

""

u--""!"'f, -lor~_...,._-.,..,.,.~ .... - "..

--·~

.

.

.

.

.

fCipeoo..., .. - --- . , . _ - In . . aubJecl
'Open 10 pollflc
"Open 10 .... - . . ,

, _ . . _ , _:,111·2221.... __

.

·,

transportation in an aif conditioned
coach and admission to the concert.
On July 12-14lhe first of lwO weekend
trips 10 the Stratford (Ontario) Festival
wiD be offered. The package indudes

round-trip transportation, overnight ac·
commodations (two nighls, two to a
room), and tickets 'o four plays. A
limiled number of single rooms are
available al $4 ·extra ($2 per night). •
Ticketr"will be provided" lor "Love's
labour's Lost." " The Imaginary Invalid,"
"Perides," and " La Vie Parisienhe."
Package ·price Is $52.50 for students; $55
for lacuhy, slaff and ~lumni; and $60 for
olhers.
•
A production of Brandon Thomas's
classic comedy, "Charley's Aunt'; will be
the focus of· a trip to the Shaw Festival,
July 28. Perlormanre time. will be 5 p.m.
and a steak bulle! al lhe "Pillar and Post
reslauranl follows. The packase price of
$17 for students, $18.50 fo.r faculty, stall
and alumni, and $2() for olhers includes
round·trip

coach transportation, theatre

tickel and buffet.
A relurn trip lo !he-Shaw Festival is set
.for an August 11 perlormanre of Shaw's

"The Devil's Discipk!." Prices are the
same as for the June 28 trip; lhe package
also includes the steak buffet.
A second weekend al Stratford will be
offered Augusl 16-18. Arrangemenls are
the same as !hose for July 12;14. Plays
scheduled for this visit are " King John,"
" love's labour's Lost,"'' ''The Imaginary
ln-.:alid,'' and "Lill V,Je ,P,.iisienne." .
The excunlon season ends August 25
with a third play-and-buffeUt the Shaw
Festival. The play I his ilrile- wJU be Shaw's
" Too True to be Goo(!."

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Trouble
brewing·over
ratifi&lt;:ation of UUP p~~
Dissatisfaction with the recentlynegollah!d contract between the §Ute .
and United Univenity ProfessionS (UUP)
. on.thecpart of some health sciences UUP .
me~ and some faculty and ~ at
·1w0-,year specialized collqes tlireatens
ralifica!ion of the pact, UUJ&gt; sources indicate.
'
•
The two-y.e ar cOntract, whose major
economic features are a six af'\d o~half

Yeracaris has issued an appeal f&lt;&gt;.r all
such-new and veteran UUP members to
for ratification. !'lis positioo Js that
failure.to endorse the new agreement with its economic gains and its extension
of continuing appointment eligibility 10
NTPs (see Reporter, May 16) - would
mean that "we have lost everything. we·
would have to start all over again i~ a less
politically-favorable climate" and
months 01ight drag on before any
economic gains could be real~zed, he
feels.
Specialized 2-year college personnel

per cent across-the-board hlle (plus· .75
Per cent for discretion,uy increases) ior
1974-75 and a six per cent raise in 1975-76
(with 1% for. discretionary step-ups),
will become effective July·1, if-approved
view the agreement as inadequate
by the collective ba111aining agent's paid ·
because it does not mandate " parity" in
membership. The State Lqislature has ·
salaries between personnel at the t.woalready appropriated fundsfor the raises.
_year institutions a9 d those at four-year
Copies of .the contract will be mailed to
colleges and centers, Y~racaris says.
the membership between June 7·10.wjth
H~altb sde.nces. members, he says, feel
June 20 as the· deadline for receipt ·of
. the contract strips them of their right to
ballots, UUP indicates.
, ·
~parate riegotiations.
Those faculty. and NTPs who.are not
. - veracaris. believes both groups bave
now dues-paying m·embers of UUP can
faijed to ta~e into account that UUP hi!5
becoml! eiiJ!il&gt;le-to-S'&lt;Ite•on the ci&gt;ntract :.
if they join by tomorrow (Fridiiy, June.ii, ·. fOr the fir.st . time recogn ized that
different _needs and negoti;.tions
Dr. Constantine Yeracaris, ~ tJ/8 Center
demands do exist within differing types
Chapter UUIP J!&lt;esldent, indic..,tes. . ,
of SUNY 'unit·s. A_ Committe.e on
mlitutional-aifferences has -rec-ently
been formed with Yeracaris as chairman.

Summer-'5essi(jil
enrolls 7,XJ.6
As of Memorial Day, summer enrollment was down slightly over last year, according to Summer Sessions Director

James H. Blackhurst.
Sorn.! 7,226 students -are cuireotly
enr•lled in one of the University's three
overlapping Summer Sessions, a dip of

3 .62 per cent from last year.
Undergraduate

enrollments

have

dropped 7.8 per cent, Blackhurst said.
Meanwhile , graduate (including
professionall enrollment is up 7.85 per
cent fro'm last ·summer.
The most .si(nificant ' decline in
summer enrollment is in students enrolled in the evening session, the director

The group is charged with determining·
"areas of common interest as well as the
unique needs of various types of campuses and recommending the best
negoti~tfng

model for UUP in the

future ." This, Yeracar is feels, cou ld
possibly result in a coalition bargaining

model which could effectively represent
interests within a unified
bargaining concept; this model could be

differing

especially effective in terms of the
clinical negotiations which are so impor-

tant to health sciences faculty, he says.
And it could be instituted in time fqr
negotiations on the next two-year con-

fract.
Meanwhile,

Yeracaris

argues, the

health ocienc1'5 faculty and staff haven't
really lost anything. Although the two·
year pact beginning July 1 does not call

said, speculating that evening students
may be the group hardest hit by the
depressed economy.
In spite of the slight overall decline at

for separate negotiations for this group,
they are already operating under a
separate two-year contract effective last

this point, totaf summer enrollment will

1975. That contract, moreover, provides

probably reach 10,000 students, a figure
comparable to last year's total ,

Blackhurst predicted.
RegiStration for the second and third
Sessions continues until classes~gin on

June 24 and July 15 respeaively, he
noted.
Professional-degree programs, notably
law, library science, and management,
are an increasingly important area of the

Summer Sessions, Blackhurst said.
A ~pedal _feature of the current session
is a three-week Reading Institute, which -

begins June 10. The Institute, jointly
spo!lsored by the University and the
International Reading Association, will

bring aistlnguist&gt;ed faculty and ~dvanced
graduate students together to consider
the linguistic and cognitive development

July 1 and extending through June of
for a re-opener ·.for an additional one-

year which would bring the health
sciences group to the June 30, 1976, ex·
piration of the general pact now being
voted on. If the re-opener fails to
produce a new contract, Yeracaris says,

the worst that could happen is that the
present health sciences contract would

. be extended for one-year, at which point
the coalition bargaining approach could .
be adopted.
0
1 can't understand the opposition,u
Yer~ris says. "I don't know how mush
this Union has to endure " he laments,

pointing to the troubles o( last year's
negotiations, the controversy over
separate ·representation for NTPs, and
now the flack over the new cont'ract.

of y!)ung children and Its implications-for
reading. Some 29 faculty from· univ~rsities here and abroad will partidpate in

the Institute, which is designed to _
stimulate serious reading-related

research. Dr. William Eller of UIB's
Department of Elementary and Remed ial ·

PM IIDIRRSHIP III!ETIHG
A gener•l membership meeting ot the
Professional Staff senate wm be held ru ...
p.m. In
Diefendorf. All

day, June 11 , •t

3

148

non-teaching prolessjonata iore invited. The

Education is coordinator of the Institute,

agenda includes: · 1· Approval of minutes of

which will include participants trained in
linguistics, psychology, ~e~rology,
anthropology, , sociology, -and ~h

mltiM

communicaliof!,.

~:.:,'::':,Oe!;,:::;ml~=n~~;;;:

and Elections Commlnee; 3. Q&gt;air·
man's Report; 4 . Pniaklent Robert L Kalter.·

Graduates hear proposals
for future ·of University
The University must: place a heighten-

ed emphasis on public service, expand
the constituency for the education it
offers, and forge new relationships with
private and other public institutions to
assure that ~ducation is not an
economically restricted commodity,

and Ed.D's, and 387 prOfessional degrees
in the fields of medicine, dentistry and
law.

:-l't"

Deliberate Choice
President Ketter used the platform at
the general commencement to move

Presi&lt;!_ent Robert l. Kener proposed at

beyond the usual congratulat!ons ana
challenge to graduates to an outline of

the 1974 General Commencement Exerdses, May 21, ilt Me·morial Auditorium .

his views on how the University must
chart its futur• 11 deliberately and

Simultaneously, the President .said, the

thoughtfully rather than in hasty reac·

institution must "demand" that "certain

tion " to trends and events.
The President noted l!)a.jor transitions

standards of purpose and perfor·
mance _. .. be met."
. The general comm,encement - amass
ceremony for· all graduates of Arts and

throughout higher-education in the pasf _
four years: "The haicyc;&gt;n clays of the Six·
ties, when funding seemed. available for

letten, Educational Studies, Natural _

a,ny pro,ect and any expansion, are gone.

Scien~

and by this tjme long-lamented," he
noted. "The clamor of students at the

.and Mathematics, and Social

Sciences and Administration, and some
from the Divi$ion of Professional and

Graduate Education and the Division of
Unde111raduate Education - was the
culmination of a round of 11 such exer-

cises between May 12 ·and May 21. A
twelfth ceremony, for 167 graduates of
the School of law, is scheduled for 2:30
p.m, June 16 in the Statler Hilton's
Golden. Ballroom.
With the completion of the law exer·
cises, UIB will have conferred 5,026
degrees this spring - 40 associate, 3,075
baccalaureate, 1,175 masters, 349 Ph.D.'s

gates of academe for the scarce space in·
side has in large measure stilled; and
scardty at many institutions is no longer

space but students at the gates."
If institutions of higher learning react

. deliberately to these changes, Ketter
said,

0

We can ayoid, and in fact restore,

much of the loss of direction and pur·
pose which occurred in the Sixties as institutions sought to ameliorate the symp-·
toms of student dissatisfaction, or

accepted and sought to encourage the
(tum to JMP 2. col. 1}

�June 6, 1974

2

-·
"en,.......

Gr~ helr_PI'OI....

.......

complishments. "I have a dual hope for
you," Ketter said. "The first is lhe hope
that you leave here with an awareness
no1 just of what you know, but also of
what you do not I&lt;now. The secood is the
hope that you depart with •lively intellectual curiosity which !VIII lead ypu to
continue to d"ospel those shadow areas in

~:n:.:=...~

nle .......,.,.. be tlld, haft been

and......,. period of '
- - ... valuable ..... lhe Wpe!flc:lil
from .. -that 1flniPiied In the $lilies.
Simi..._..,, !hey haft povlcled a
........ fcirthe-'Y*Iind~of

yopr

·:-!~~ lnsdtutlons
=~=·
C'~~..r:
~plliieaildrole ln-etr.But

.=. . ,._.. . . . . 1\ri. "Cole II that In

I

mntlc

,_funds

lnstllullons must realize, Ketter said, !hat

ist:'-"
.... 'n' .........
For U/11, Ketter said, the response to
today'• overriding edualllonal concerns
must beain with reconcilins the
"eountercurrems of eplitarianlsm and
elitism.''
This UnWenlty, he reminded, "h a
public Institution supported larsely by
public funds. As such, it k a public
resource which incurs an oblisation .to
use the resources entrusted to it by 1he
public in service of the public. What this
means k that in the ordering of our
priorities we will have to givejncreasing.
ly more emphasis to the University's service role than we have been inclined to
give in the past - service to specifiC
public needs and problems. We do indeed have to become more .deliberately
utlliurfan in our teachins and research
functions.
~~~r, becpqling .more must not
be eonstruecl as becomlns totally; to
brins sreater emphasis and appreciation
to ~ce is not fo adopt a training orien-.
tatlon. Training· involves only an imparting of skills and/or information. Education; in addition to theSe, k evaluative in
nature. Education entails the cultivation
of ion ability not merely to absorb but to
Judie the quality of what k absorbed, to
IJildentand the uses ID which it can be
put. end to IJii&gt;rec;ate the ~uences
of those uses. Education k therefore intended to create a union of knowledge
and of values.

sOund EducatioiW . _

"As I have insisted throughout the past
four years, the University must fulfill its
service function through programs and
projects that have a sound educational
base. In thk manner, a utilitarian purpose moy be served without abrogating
the processes of education. Actually, it is
my firm belief that the processes may be
strengthened, for through carefully
. chosen service the separation that can
exist between the community and the institution k briclsed, the sesresalion of
thought and action Is dissolved/ and the
union of knowJedse and values Is encouraaed. Also, it is through its service

___
u_
.
_
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... n...6lr lr ........... .,

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•.r.
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II#).

.

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.... .an.n'" IIDf/f'£AJfD
~

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--- . - r. ......un-

..&amp;.c::touna

.AJ"'IICU WAaD .-.zMIIUI£1f
·~ &amp;

CIP"'esrrr

- ~­

-

'

the 5chMI of lteolllh Relate~ Profeoalons

8IIICiftl
of public llid pdwlle ,_.les,
~ Will fall vlclflll ID the
- _,-sen wflldt toalt place In the
Sllliles; that It will dllni ID be the one
and only ..-y to lhe pel life for Ill"
""""- Is that In. l8pOIIIe to fewer
SIUdents .nil
"there willbe the r-'"e wllhln our lnsdtullcins to·
onler and mllnllln priorilles, and ~
!he N!llllt will be continual drfft.''-

In times of flnanclalllrinaency "the new
or the different often must be undertaken .. die. expense of what already ex-

knowledae-"

Dr. F. Carter ·PannUI conferred 179

cMirees and certifiCates to sraduates. of

functloli, in which an excellence of Intellect Is brous!¥ to bear upon a specific
need, that the University can add
leadership to. its more frequently
emphasized rol~ of servins as both a
mirror and a critic of society."
Of course, Ketter continued, the
University must be free to determi~ the
areas in which it can render such service,
"must be the final arbiter of that point at
which service does not convey ~he
evaluative quality that is at the essence of
education."
HONOIISUST
The complete Ust of names of graduates
recetvfng honors and awards
be.printed.ln .
a _....., brochure. being compiled by
Uo'-slty Publl-. Services, which will be
distributed to all graduatn at a late&lt; date.

wtn

·The t:lniversity's primary service " is
quite simply the education of students,"
Ketter maintained .. .Anct public· higher
education has perfolmed this service
"exceptionally well with the suPP&lt;&gt;rt of
the taxpayer, whose contributions in thi5
State have given access to our institutiOns
to persons of all ~nomic dasses."
Now, however, because of declining
birth rates and increased interest in
proprietary or indUstrial schools, higher
education's constituency is shrinking.
One response, Ketter noted, has been to
advertise the "fun and games" of higher
education; another has been to urge that
public institution tuitions be raised to a
level more nearly comparable to that in
- private institutions.
More ReiiiORible Reoponse
"A more reasonable responSe," the
President suggested, "seems to be to
choose deliberately to expand the constituency for higher education while
recognizing simultaneously that the
numl?er of private as well as public in. stitutions, as we have known them, will
decrease. ~me institutions may merge,
and other may emerge with more
specialized roles. .. .
" In expanding the constituency for
higher education, barrien of time, space,
and ige .must be removed. This University shall indeed remove them. Yet we
must be careful to remember that as a
University Center in a Sotal system of
public higher education, our particular
role is to identify and recruit .those per-.
sons .who have.,.the ability and the-desire
to participate at the highest levels in an
educational experience and not a training process - persons whose curiosity
indines ~them toward intensive evaluation, and npt just absorption. Addltional• ly, we have an obligation to the public, to
our students1 and to ourselves, to se-lect the most able from among the many
who are able, and to provide !pr thei!
·
,
special needs. . . .
· "Unfortunately, the popular assumption seems to be that the gifted and
talented are t9 be found primarily
· • among the affluent. In a report to
Consress in 1971, the CommissiOner of
Education ~ that this assumption
'may have influenoed · meqer search
and ~~~&amp;.a.~n ~ ~- ~!!'.:'. .

at the Roswell .Park Research Study
Center Auditorium, May 18.
• A call-for ending "runaway growth"
in fedel'lll spending and its resuiunt inflation was sounded by Western N~
York Republican Congressman Jack F.
Kemp as the 5c:hool of , . . , . _ . t
awarded 545 degrees- 443 B.S.'s and 102
M . B.A.'s - Saturday, May 18, at
Kleinhans. Inflation, Kemp said, results
when govern(Tient spends more money
than it receives'in taxes, \'{lien the money.
supply is irfaeased witho)Jt a cbrrespon-.
ding growth in GNP to back it up. He said
he has introduce&lt;;~ legislaiio~ tp ease tbe .
· ·
.' • '
,
problem.
He concluded that there is abundant
• The 5c:hool of l'hannacy' conferred
evidence which indicates that the highly
106 degree$. and 18. awards to its
gifted' are to be found in all groups . graduates in the ~lden CO~.:~rtroom ,
within the society. Our responsibility is
O'Brian Hall, .o;mherst campus, Sunday,
therefore to seek out such persons from
May 19. Four graduateS rei:eived the
all walks of life and to defend their access
Doctor of Pharmacy degree; five receivto this instituJion."
ed the Ph.D. in pharmaceutics; ten, the
If extending the University in these
Ph.D. in medicinal chemistry; and three,
ways to all groups throughout ihe public,
the Ph.D. in biochemical pharmacology.
while simultaneously demanding certain
Two Master of Science degrees in
standards of purpose and performance,
medicinal chemistry, two Masters of
is elitism, Ketter said, "then so be it. We
Sdence in pharrpaceutics, 52' Bachelors
should not shy away from t~ word.
of ~ience in pharmacy, an~ 28 Bachelprs
However, I ·do ·llot b~l1eve · th'aC
of Science in ·health· sciences were also
.
awarded: ·. .
egalitarianism requires · the opposite of
this, that no standards be-set and main• The largest number of minority and
tained. Instead, I prefer to feel that what
female students in the history of the
is. required - is. that· we ' not only .ac·
.school of M4!diclne -:-. 26 irJ.in.ority
knowledge our individual Interests and
sludeOts and 18 ·women - were among
abilities, but that we truly respect them,
the 119 who were awarded M.D.'s and
and that we always and in all insigned• the Great Book -of Physicians at
stances honor the achievement of exexercises, May ·19; i"i1 "Kieinh·ans Music
cellence within standards which are
Hall. Sixty students also received masters
applicable to the task at hand.
and doctorates in health scienCes at the
" lohn . (;ardner .has-said .th~t 'a~ exceremonies, About half of- the 128th
celienf plumber is . infinitely more adMedical School Class (54) will pursue inmirable than an incompetent
ternships or residencies in New York
philosopher. The society_ which scorns
State while a third (-40) will remain in Bufexcellence in PlUmbing . . . and tolerates
falo. Almost three-quarters are from
shoddiness in philosophy .. . will have
New York State.
neither good plumbing nor good
• The humanistic 'goals of 'physical
phil~hy. Neither its pipes nor its
education were outlined to the first
theories will hold water.' "
graduating dass of the 5c:hool of Health
Educallon in ceremonies at Clark Hall,
OtherCom~b
May 19, by Dr. Celeste Ulrich, professor
At other commencements:
of physical education, North Carolina
• Dr. Ray Krug, chairman of the
State University at Greensboro. The 76
Department of Fixed Prosthodontics,
degrees conferre.d included one Doctor
University of North Carolina, told Dental
of Education; 16 Masters of ~ducation;
School graduates that "there's more to
and 59 Bachelors of·Science in physical
being a dentist than bejng a first-rate
eduation. Nine outstanding graduates
toot~ mechanic." Feeling and concern·
received awards.
for patients, a commitment to fiamily and
self-replenishment are also important,
In two associated programs:·
he noted. In e xercises at Kleinhans Music
• The Educallonal Opportunity C-er
Hall, May, 16, the Dental School con(EOQ held its Firot Annual Achievement
Day Friday; May 17• .A total .of 197
ferred 88 D.D.S. degrees, one Ph.p. in
oral biology, four Master of Science
students received certificates of achieve·
degrees, 26 awards and prizes, and 26
ment for these programs , of study :
certificates. Chairs with the Universi\)'
college .preparttoty ·(!M)J hish • school
equivalency (34), graphic arts" (10J, midcrest were presented to four retiring
dle management (8), clinical laboratory ·
faculty - Dr. Harvey S. Johnson,
technician (2), secretarial science (32),
professor and chairman, Oral Surgery;
dental assisting
Certificates were
Dr . Edward J. Mehringer, clinical
presented by Mr\. George Unser, EOC
associate professor, Removable·
Prosthodontics; and Dr. MyrOn · A.
director, and Assemblyman Arthur 0 :
Roberts, clinical professor, OrthodonEve. Jesse Nash, assistant professor of
tics.
sociology at G.nisius, ,gave the main address.
.
.
~
·
• Dr. Harold Cohen, director of the
Institute for Behavioral Research, Silver
• And more than 300 mtnority
Springs, Maryland, and new dean of the
students from five Buffalo area campuses
u/~ lidoool-..f Archltedare anc1 fnparticipated-in the third-annuaf-MioMxfty.
riron-..tll Deolsn (see separate story),
c-Mement &amp;erdoe, May 19. The
sp(&gt;ke at the exercises for that School,
program, which was not an •ctual ·
graduation ceremony,.but a r~nition.
Friday, May 17, urging gr~u~tes to im:
prove the environment; Forty-fiVe • of ~ct&gt;i!!vement, took-place in· Norton's
Fillmore Room. Dr. Therr(llln E. Evans,
students received degrees - 24, the
Bachelor of Art in environmental design;
• chief of 'he Program Development
Branch of the Office of Health Resources
14, the Bachelor of Architecture; and 7,
· Opportunity, Department of Health,
ihe ~ter _o f Architecture.
Education and Welfare, discussed
• The Fac:ulty of fnpneerlns and
"Health care Delivery Systems to the
Applied 5dencet (FEAS) sraduated 251
Poor in the United States, '.' and
students Sat'!rday, May 18; at a ceremony
• outside Parker Hall. President Robert l .
Roosevelt Rhodes, director of the U/B
Office , of Minority Student Affairs,
Ketter conferred 170 B.S. degrees, 63
M.S. degrees and 18 Ph.D.'s. Ketter told
presented certificates of achievement to
all grad~ate$., Studenb from U/11, State
graduates !hat their · capabilitieS ' hiVe
helped shape the institution's aca!lernlc . University Collep at BuffalO, Erie Commpnlty CDIIege, Canlslus and Rosary !:till
reputation; and !hat the reputation will
_!urther be.detemllned ~ their future oc- · ~-- ·

·nn.

··-:·-!.-

�Harold Cohen
named dean 'of
architecture
Harold L Cohen, formerly executlw!
diredor of the Institute lor ~
Researdl (IBR), Silver Springs, Malylanc:l,
is the new dean of the ulll 5chqol of
Architedure and Environmental Deilpl.
Cohen had served as executive &lt;lbe&lt;;tor of IBR since 1966 and had been president of IBR's Experimental Collqe since
1970. Prior to that, he was an aiiOdale
professor in the Department of
Psychiatry and Behaviorai.Sciena!s in the
School of Medicine at )ohm Hopkins
(1967--66), and educational director -Mid
program designer for the Experiments in
Higher Education at Southern tnlnohi
University in East St. Louis (1966--67).
From 1955--64 he held several positions
at Southern Illinois including service -as o;llairman of the 9epartrnent of Design,
director of cooperative research in
design, and diredor of design research
and development.
He has been the recipient, as principal
investigator, of several research :.rants.. ·

Alumni will honor five at annual banquet
Five individuals representing the fields
of law, medidne, brf»dcasting and university~dministrationwillbehonoredat

the Alumni As&gt;oci&lt;ltion's annuallnstallatlon and Awards Banquet, June 7, on the
tenth floor of Goodyear Hall.
Dr. 11ourbert.eWIII, a 1921 graduate of
the Medical School, will ~ive . the
Simuel P. Q~n Award given in,nually
since 1950 tq 11'H!n and wOmen who hive
made notable and meritoriouS, contributions Influencing the growth and
improvement of the University and
stimulating other alumni to. give activ~
in~eresJ and material support. · ·
Dr LeWin's pe(sonal record o f
philanthrQPy 'as a dass agent and chair·
man of the Participating Fund for
Medical Education is being dted. He also
has served as professor of
ophthalmology at U/B, and has distinguished himself in community affairs,
esi&gt;e(:ially .as a leader in his church and
for the Boy Scouts.
o.. Cloude E. Puffer has been named
winner o( the' Walter P. ·cooke Award,'
given for outstanding service to the
University, its faculty, students and alumni br a non-.alumnus. The Cooke Award.
has been PresenteO ori lilhe 'Occi'stOhS·
since 1961.
"'
.
.
. D~: ~ufferd' ~~tjv~.gf !ow~1 h,a~ a_wi~~ ­
~ang~ ol t.&gt;us{ness and professi9nal experience in the State of Washingtori,
Washington, D.C., at the- University of
.Washington, University of Pittsburgh and
Stanford before coming to Buffalo in
1938 as an instructor in economics.
At U/B, he has been assistant and acting dean of the former School of
Business Administration, acting chairman
of the Department of Economics, dean of
administr,ation, treasurer and comptroller, vice chancellor,.. act i ng
chancellor, and vice president for
business affairs, his title when he retired
in 1970. He earned two degrees from the
University of Washington and his Ph.D.
from Stanford.
Dr. P.uffer was primarily responsible
for .setting up the retirement p'rogram
which ' covered University faculty and staff before U/B became a State unit. He
also was instrumental in· .securing the
Au.dubon Golf -Co_urse. (formerly owned
by the University) and the property on
which .the Slew campus is being built to·
day. .
. -· ·
•. '•
Three ' distinguished Alumni Awards' wiU .go to: Hon: Ann·T.· M•CIII, Class of
1951 and 195-4 (law); Dr. Donald Pinl&lt;el,
medical diredor of St. jude Children's
Research Hospital, Memphis; and O..wid
Chutes AdAmS, vice chairman of the
board of diredors of the National Broadca~t)ng Company. The three are being
cited for hav,ing distingulshed
themselves in tbei• professions; fprtheir support of and service to community,
and for· other · extrao·rdin'ary_
achievements.
Elected to the "New· York 'Stille
Supreme'.Court in 1971, Judge Mikoll was
/ the first woman to be elelied to this
bench outside of New ·Yotk City. \\(hen ·
she· was 'ZJ; she ·became_ the secorid ·
woman to be appointed to the City
Court· Bench and later won eledion and
reelection:
Her first appointment, in 1955, was as
assi5tant corpOration counsel of the City
of Buffalo. •
She is currently president of the
Busint!ss and P.-ofesslonal Women's Club ·
of Buffalo which she describes as the
"first significant organ!red group work·
ing for woRtert'5 rights in A~rica ... "
She has been involve(! In youth ac·
tivities for the Falcons Orgai)IUtion -trid
tJ:&gt;e Polis):~ y.'omen's Organiution, an&lt;l is

a niember of the Chopin Singing Society.
Dr. Pirlkel was formerly chief of
pediatrics at Roswell Park Memorial
Institute. A 19S1 graduate of U/B
Medical School, .he interned and served
his residency in pediatrics at Children's
Hospital following his graduation, then
was a . research fellow at Children's
Cancer Research Foundation in Boston
before returning in 1956 to Buffalo and

Roswell Park.
·
The father of nine children, he has
authored or co-authored 71
publications, mostly about childhood
cancer. He is also professor of pediatrics
at the u,niversity of Tennessee, Mem·phis.
· Dr. Pinkel, who will soon begin a. new
assignment at the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, is currently working
under four Federal grants for cancer
research.

.

During his 26 years with NBC, Adams
has earned a reputalion as an experienced executive with an extensive
backgfound in international com·
munications. An attorney and 1937
graduate of U/B Law School (1934 B.A.
Summa Cum Laude), Adams pradiced
law in Buffalo for five years, then served
with the Federal Communications Commission in Washington. He joined NBC
as assistant general counsel after the Se-

cond World War.
AmemberoftheNBCBoardofDirec·
tors since 1958, he has been NBC's
designated member of the National
Association of Broadcasters, Television
Board of Diredors.
,
He has also served as American
delegate to several United Nations conferences on radio broadcasting.
Adams will receive his award in absentia.

Smith gets Chancellor's

Y:: ~:~o~a~:U~! :f~:.::r.:a~~~

for "Preparation through Responsive
Educational Programs" and "Behavioral
Programs in learning Activities for
Youth." He has also won a number of
.design awards; his "Nylon Chair,"
designed jointly with Davis Pratt, was
seleded by the Museum of Modern Art
in New )(ork for its permarlent collection
as " one of the most important seating
advances in the past 50 years."
A native of Brooklyn, he studied at
Pratt Institute and Northwestern University, and received a B.A." from the
Institute of Design at the Illinois lr)Stitute ·
of Technology in 1949.
Cohen succeeds Richard K. Chalmers
who has been serving.as acting dean of
the School since June 1, 1973.

M~al;

Farber reeeives ·speCial citation
. Gordon M : Smith, . retired -director of
the Albright-lenox Att Gallery, received
the University's highest honor, the
Chancellor's Medal, d_u r ing general
commencement exercises May 21 . Also
during the ceremony, a Un iversity Citation was awarded to Dr. Marvin farber,
distinguish"&lt;! profes'sor bf' philosophy.
The Chancellor's Medal was presented
by President Robert L Ketter and
Williarri C. Baird, chairman of the Council, awarded the UniverSity CitatiOn.
18 Years ol Senke
Mr. Smith retired from the Albright·
Knox in 1973 after serving-as its director
for 16 years. He was then appointed
director emeritus by the Board of Directors of the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy.
Under his guidance, the gallery com·

'Best' team ever
misses playoffs
U/ B's best baseball team in history did
not have an opportunity to advance irt
distrid playoffs this spring. The NCAA #2
Selection Committee at host Rider
College in late May seleded Seton Hall,
Sl: John 's, Penn State and St. Joseph's to
form the field with the tourney victor
eligible for the Colleg~ World Series,
June 14-20 at Omaha, Neb.
The Bulls under Coach Bill Monkarsh
were 26-12·1 overall in 1974, including a
3-6-1 mark in-Florida in mid-March. The
northern record of 23--6 was the best
ever.
. "I was very disa~poirited that we were
not selected,';, sa1d Monkarsh, "and I
know the.players feel the same way. It is
my contention that this Was the finest
team we· have ever had at ·uts with
depth. in the pitching corps and through'
all of.'our 'personnel.
uwe went through our most difficult
schedule· and it's a Shame we aren't in
the tournament/'
COIIRECTIOII
The " job _,.ng .. lilting tor "d-/aulsWrt prot.._, ICC," wlllch _,.clln the

1-

~- Moy 1e. -

tnoarTct. The Per·

~. wlllch OUIIIIIIed the - motion, lndlcotea now lholthe job In -"&gt;"
ohouid hove-.
u "director, M ~~: -...-.
- Depa~rtment of Instruction." Or. Gerald
O'OrOC!Y Ia the eur.ctor ol ICC .., lhol pool
-

ll)oUid

·not,.,.-.-.. ....,._._.

piled what is generally recognized as one
of the most important collections of con~
tempora ry art in the United States. Mr.
Smith also planned and directed a
number of exhibitions, including a showing of recent works by Andrew Wyeth in
1962 and two Buffalo festivals of the Arts
in .l96S and -1966 respedively.. ,
A native of Read ing, Pennsylvania, Mr.
Smith holds degrees from Will iams
College and the Gratluate School of Arts
and Science at Harvard. Prior to coming
to Buffalo, he served for nine years as
diredor of the Currier Gallery of Art in
Manchester, New Hampshire.
In awarding the Medal; Dr. J$etter
cited Mr. Smith's judgment in choosing
works of art, his attention to the gallery's
need for expansion, and his dedication
to the highest standards of gallery
management.
" In his role as diredor of the Albright·
Knox, Mr. Smith brought joy and beauty
into the lives of the hundreds of
thousands of people who visited the
museum each year. More important,
what he created will remain for 1the
future," Dr. Ketter said.

uw !lfmNCi

A 'meeting a~ ·unnoci·uiflv.ifty l'roleoOions.
open to both U/B choptoro ol the bargoinlng agent for faculty end - , w:tR be.
. heid'ThurSday; June 13, at4 p:m. ln thedlr*lg_
room of the Faculty Qub. ~ d be
se&lt;Vedat5p.m. SomWoklhult,vlcep&lt;-.t
fo.- ocodemics of the 5mm UUP, wiH cllocuu
the now contract ot the ..-log.

~

Mr. Smith was the 47th recipient of the
Medal, which was first conferred in 1925.,
The award was established through a
bequest of Chancellor Charles P. Norton,
who specified that the Medal be awarded to a citizen whose acts "have
dignified both the performer and Buffalo
in the eyes of the world."
Outstondlns Contributions
The University Citation awarded to Dr.
Marvin farber was one of a series of such
recognitions given since 1971 to
indivi~als who have made "outstanding
contributions to the University, to higher
-education, a-particular field of endeavor,
the Jocal, state, national or international
community and to the furthering of
world understanding."
Dr. farber retired in May after being
on the U/B faculty for 47 years. He serv·
ed as chairman of the De~rtment of
Philosophy for 24 years an!l was _founder
and editor for 3S years olthe distinguished. quarterly, Philosophy and
Phenomenological Research.
In making. the award, Mr. Baird noted
that Dr. farber "has devOted his
academic life to fostering dialogue
between philosophers of many schools
ir:t many countries," and that the award
was being presented fOr "outstanding .
contributions to the world-wide lntellec- .
~I CO!IIinUQity."
.

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

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~

�4

RecifXents ~ of 1973-74 ~liOn~ry
Foll-inl

- · W.; ~. M.; ~I.; Atloson.
It, llandera. C.; Barber, !C.;~ W.; Bw·
dos, T.; Sorry, T.; laschowei;N.; ....... fl.;
lluchley, 0.; lieU, A.; llef!llcMdt, H.;

re the namell of non-

texhina ~staff members and
faculty Who received discretionary salary
increases for 1973-74:

Hus, M.!ltocliey, W.; Hall, B.; Halpern, 5.;
Halsteod, J.; .tlomber&amp; D.; Hommond, M.;
• Hanovon, f .; Hansen, I.; Hinson, P. Ill; Hon·
_,, 5.; !:lire. P.; Homod&lt;, R.; Harren, M.;
Harris, V.; Hiiris, W.; Hanley, E.; Houpert,j.;
Hasenslab, R.; H.,..rd, B.; Hastings. S.; Her·
mon, G.; Hesoiein, S.; H~, t&gt;-t Hobbs, W.;

1eneson, D.; llenlaht, a.; lefet!lln, R.; ~~erenbaum A.; ....,, E.; llemheimor, c.; 111net1e.
Adorns, R.; Ahrens, S.; Alexander, C.; . ' p~ - . . . 1.; Blau, II,; lloldto 1.; Boles,
M.; ~ P.;~, c:;,; .-.cly,J.;
Akucher, N.; Anclenon, (;.; Andenon, j .;
llrociJ.M.; lrO)'Ie)l, C.; -..,.;.H.; llrlnk,
. Bam, A.; _llamcheci, F.: laum. R.; llerJioss,
G •• - · D.; lrowft, H.; -nle, J.;
G.; l!io&lt;k~unt.J .; lllond. C.; Blatt. I.; llohoceii,
Buche&lt;, C.; ~ S:: •nn;"J.
L; llpyce, M.; e.-n. R.; Bryant, R.; lluerk.J.;
C.clenheacl, D.; cam-; J,; C.lkln, P.;
Burke, A.; llurrqw5. R.

NON-TEAOIING PROFESSIONAlS

c.tlo, A.; C.&amp;eri,l'.; Canale, R.; Urlfoeld,
A.; Copuono. j.;

c.rter,

j.; ClszitoWskl, P.;

Cloutier, P.; Colvard. P.; Conner, C.;
Cossro.., F.; Crlslinte, S.; Crump, D.;

Cuded, R.; Cutcher, 8.; Donleh; H.; Dechert,
N.; DeSanlk. J.; Deueli. H:;' Dnendorf, C:;
Didt';"", M .; Dietz, F.; Dillon, D.; Dinpldey,
1.; Dolm, C.; ~. R.;
Droke, L D.;-Drue, LR.; Duole, M.; Duffy,J.;
Dunn, C.
Edwanls, E.; Eilenhanlt. K.; Elmer, D.;
Enslt!rt, S.; Ermtnovics, A.; Evans, ·a .;
Falc:one&lt;, i.; Feltes. S.; flack, ~.; fraclln, F.;
j.; Ois.lvo,

~~0~~~; 5.6-~r·t,~h!:.,~~;
Gruber, J.; Grundhofer, B.; Gu~ley, T.;
Guuetta, F.
H~. A.; Har~v.an, 0.; Han~. S.; Hawkins,
B.; Hendrix, B.; Henrte~N~n, D.; Herdendorf,
P.; Hicl&lt;s, A.; +lurley, T.; Hutchings, R.; lngoll,
G.; lnnus,,V.; Johnson, A.; Johnson, K.; Jones,
R.; !Yne, P.; Kociecki, R.; Koepp, P.; Korner,
H.; Korosi, M.; · Kosz.uta, J.; KucharSki, R.;
Kuntz, A.
·
Lacey, E:; Lilnsing, M.; Lonor, S.; Macakan-

ja, R.; Midenzie, ).; Manley, J.; ~rinello,
M.; Mirle!t, R.; Monell, E.; Minison, W.;
McG~Mhi!n, H.; McNamara, E.; Metz, P.;
Meyer, f.; Miller, C.; Mitchel, J.; Mix, M.;
~loy,J. ; Moore, D.; ~imon , M .; Nevin,

O)Connell, M.; O 'Donnell, l.; Olsen, 0 .;
_Osolkowski, L; Perkins, W.; Philp, Q.; (!otiSZf·
zuk, A.; , Poss, B.; Pruitt, F.; Regna, ).; Reinig,
R.; Remillard, J.; Ridley, W.; Riszko, J.; Robey,
N.; Rock, W.; Rose, J.; Roth, B.; Ryan, J,

funds announced

.

Hodse, D.;, Hill, W.; Hocnlleld, G.;

Huddleslon, J.; )ioefner, R.; Hullcb, K.; Hull,

E.

lgeB, G.; Isbell, 1-~ l~hOra, 1.; J«b&gt;n, 8.;
Ja.in, P.; lamrt'YI,I.; Jaqtlfis, M.; )ech, T.; Jen f .;
Jepson, M.; Jerome, D.; johnson, E.; Johnson,
0.; Joyce, K.; Juehker, 0 .; Julian, J.; Jusko,
W.; Koplin, H.; Korselis, T.; Katkln,.E.; Katz,
M.; Kiltz, P.; IC~ul, R.; kauppi, D.; ~anqh,
,., T.; Kuarinoff, N.:- Kearns, ).; Kennedy, l.;
Kennedy, M.; Kenrick, J.; Kibby~ M.; Kilburn,
G.; King,).; Kiser, K.; Kline, T.; Klingman, G.;
)(lug. C.; Kneisl; C.; Koekkoek, B.; Kqrvneyer,
C.; Kothe, W.; Kt-oll, H.; Kunz, M .•
Ufi&gt;Untoln,J.; Lonsbury, P.; Lorkln, J.; Lowson, B.; Lechner, C.; lee, G.-; l~. H.;
lentnek, B.; levine, A.; leyine, G.; Levine.
M.;. levy, ~.; levy, K.; loewus, F.; logon, j ,;
Loubere, l ,; Loza. U.; LYons, 0.
... MaCGillivray, A.; Madubuike, G.; Magoss,
M.; Manes, S.; Mann, B.; .~~n n, M.; Manning, M.; Marfrno, M.; Marinsky, J,; Marra, P.;
Martens, H.; Massey, 1.; Mates, R.; Matilla, A.;
Mazzaro, J,; M&lt;;Cienathan, D.; McConnell,) .;
McQonough, f.; McGrath, R.; Mcintyre, M.;

C.llohOn, L; Cappeilucd, E.; Coppleilo, L.;
Capraro, V.; Carl,- W.; ~, C.; Carman,
C.; Corpente&lt;, E.; C.rrithe&lt;\, G.; Cqhill, R.;
Ceroto, K.; Oiong. H.; ChonLM.; Owls. W.;
ChotOY, R.; Chen, 1\.; cfiernielewlcz, Z.;
Clcarelli, 5.; Clorl&lt;, M.; Clorke, ).; ~fWO!thy,
W.; Clemency, C.; Coburn, R.; Corikfing. E.;

ConstJnt, J.; ConwJy, J.; Co~. P.; CorJ.; Cowen, R.; Cozurelli, F:; Creeley,
R.;. CuHinon, H.J.; Cusidt,l.
O.luiso, f.; Donnhauser, W.; Dayis; M.;
Delacy, D.; DeCapuo. A.; Dedter,J.i Depew,
5.; OesForwes, R.; Dtsu, M.;. DeYormon, R.;
Diesing, P.; Oimiziani, S.; Donato, L; Doran,
R.; Drury, C. ~ Dryden, E.; Ou8oi5, E.;
Du8gleby, C.; Duryea, E. Jr.; Duskin, J:; Eastcor~n.

ma:n, J,; Eberlein, P.; Ed:Wilrds, P.; Edwar'Os, R.;
Efron, A.; Ehrlich, P.; Elder, R.; Elkin, S.; Eller,

W :; Ellison, ).; Erasmus, B. ·
Farnsworth, M .; Farzan, S.; ·Federman, R.;
Feldman, 1.; Feldman, M.; Feal Deibe, C.;
Findler, N.; Finnegan, S.; Fischer, W.; Fisher,
J.; Flaugher, C.; Fly, R.; Ford, R.; Foster,ti.G.;
Foster, H ~L; Fottler, M.; Fradin, J.; Francis, G. ;
Francis, f.; Frantz, T.; Fried, M.; Frye, j.; Fuda,
M.; Fujita, S.; Fullerton, G.
Ganyard, R.; Garton, C.; Girv~r, N.; Garvin,
P.; Gay, K.; Cayley, R.; Gearhart, P. ; Geari-ng,
F.; Gentile, ).; 'Gerber, D.; Georgiou, T.; Getty, C.; tibaldi,1M. ; Gibson, R.; Giles, M.; .
Gilmour, A. Jr.; Girth, M.; Glenn, B.; Gold, P.;

:::~~v~~~~:; J~c'tu~~;~.J,.;J.;M~~~:~~:·

t;

Metzger, M .; Mey_ers, C. ; M idtiel, E.;
Michaels, A.; Milbrath, t .'; Miles, P.;
Milisauskas, S.; Milligari, J.; MUstein, M. ;
Mitchell, R.; Mols, R.; Monk, A.; Monkarsh,
w.; Moore, G.; Mummery, H.; Murdock, C.;
Muto, E.; Myhill, ).
.Narotl, R. ; Nascimento, A.; ~du, P. ;
N~whouse, W.; Noble, E.; O 'Grady, G.!
O 'Hara, M.; O'Neill, E.; Olsen, C.; Osborn,
C.; Oseni, H.; O'Shea, R.; Onerbeio, K!.;
Paaswell, R.; Pa9_wa, A.; Pagano, ~M . ; Palmer~
R.; ~apalia , " ·; Pardee, J.; Paigen, B.; Parker,
D.; Parkman, .J.-; Parnes, M.; ·Parzen, · E.;
Pauher, A;; Pearson, ~-i Pegels, C.; Perry, E.;

Goldberg, 8.; Goldstein, P.; Good, R.; Good·
man, N.; Gordon, E.; Gordon, M.; Grada, ).;
Greenberg, J.M.; Greenberg, J.S.; Greiner,
W.; Gre_xton, Edna;. Gross, l.; Gutierrez, 1.; GutteridRe. T.

Perry, L.A.; Perry, LC.; l'eny, T.; hay, W.;
Pinto, C.; Piscopo, J.; ?lelur, M.; .._,...._
M.; Preston, L; Privitera. C.; ........ I.; P.rultt.

.D.; Putn~mn, B.
Rolston, A.; Romalinpm, S.; Rotdllanl.ll.;
Rioen, R.; Roy, W.; Ro,._, J.; auik. T.;
Rechnitz. G.; R~ 1~ Relltlion floneoo,.
0 .; Reiss, H.; Reitan, ' P.; ltevollbr, N.;
Reynolds, T.; Ria:iaidelll, M.; Rilfllnllan. l.;
, Ril)(l. M.; RlsinS; G~ llltdole, -G: .............
B.; R~, C.; llopn, ·Q.J a...,.., R.;
Rosenthal, D.; RossiJerB. R.; Roussel, R.;

Rouk, A.; Ruland, W.; Ruql, M.
.
. Sochs, M.; Soloff, P.; Salzer, R.; S.nford,_W.

Ill; Santiago, S.; s._,, K.; Schanue~ 5.; .
Schanzer, G.; Schindler, J.; Schmitz, G.;
Schmitz, N.; Schneider, L.; Schou; W.; Scun,
P.; Schwartz, H.; Sepl, H.; Sepl, .~.;
SeldberJ, !·; Selig. E.; Severo, N.; Shames, 1.;
Sharrow, M.; Sh-, D.; Shaw, R.; Shechner,
' M.; Sherr, M.; Shmlehlr.y, M.; Shrauae:r. J.;
Shupe, L.; Shuell, T.;M.; Sliva. R. · '
Simmons; M. Jr.; Simon, J.; 5imon5, H.;
• Slak!er, M.; Slater,!.; .5!fllth, E.; Smithson, E.;
Solo,;.,.; Sonlheimer, K.; Soong. T.; Soons, C.;
Soukop, M.; Spero, J.; Stodllnser: J.; Storr, J.;
Steele, S.; Stei'l), W.; Steir,Nft, J.; Stem, M.;
Steveias, P.; Stevi~ R.;_St~~. t(; StimiOn, ).;
Stri!IUSS~ H.; ~llivall,; M.;, Swartz, C.; swqtowy,
A.; Sw•nonko, C.; Szekely~ j.; Sz~ely, Y.

Siesel•

Tarbet, 0 .; Tav:ires, J.; Taylor, D.B.; _Ta~lor,
O.M.; Thomas, C:i Thomas, W.; Tied.elmann,

~:~ J;~~V.;Kir~!:r:.f~~ 'fJ. t~~~~k~~~~;

. Tulkin, S.; Tung, C.; Vaghela, M.; VanDeVall,
-~:~ ~i~:~,Jj: Vasili~n, P.; Vella, A:; Viguer-a,
Wang, T.; Watsen, E.; Wagener, A.; Weilerstein-. 0 .~ Weinstein, R.; Weir, K.; Welch, C.;
West, 9 .; Whal~n , J.; White, M.; Wickert·, M.;
Wijnberg, M.; Wik, H.; Williams, G.; Williams,
J.; Williams, l.; Williams, S.; Williams, T.;
Wilson, S.; Wobschall, D.; Wokk, W.; Wolf,
H.; Wolf, M;-; Wright , E.; Yearley, C.;
Yeracaris, C.; ~unR, D.; Yu, C.; Yuan, S.;
Zadner, P. ; Zame, W.; Zarembka, P.; Zeller,
R.; Zionts, S.

Sc~=~d:;: 1-~~:~.u~~ s~~~~~.7.~ ~~~f;a~~;.

1

C.; Sigel, P.; Smith, C.; Smith, O.H.; Smith,
O.M.; Sortisio, R.; Stein,. R.; Stillwell, ).; Stout,
S.; Strau~s, M .; Swartz, E.; Symonds, R. ;
Syracuse, M.; Taggart, M.; Thayer,l.; Thompson, ·M.; Thorner, G.; Thvrston, j.; Thurston,
.J.T.; Tiedemann, M.; Towsley, R.; Trinder, 0. ~
Utech, N.; Volpe, R.; Wagner, R.; Wallin,
C.; Watkins, -D.; Wheaton, 0 .; Williams, ).;
Williams , U.; Wilson , C.; Wirth , j .;
Wischerath, 1.; Wolney, M.; Wyant, H.;
Wynne, D.; Zabaldo, L

FACULTY
Addelman, S.; Alleyne, M.; Altieri,· C.; AlNakeeb, S.; -Ames, S.; Anderson, C.; Ander-

U/BF gifts total .
$2.1 million in 73
The University at Buffalo Foundation,
Inc., recetved a total of $2,148,868 in gifts
and grants during 1973, John M. Carter,
executive vice president, has announced.
..
The total is down from last years
record ol $2.4 million which included a
major $700.000 gift, Carter said. ~
Giving in most categories increased,
however, he pointed out. Corporate·
gihs, for example, roSe from $70,000 in
1972 to $91,947 in 1!173.
The total consisted of $1l41,835 in
restricted gifts and grants, $270,716 in additions to the U/8 Foundation endowment funds and $136,316 in unrestricted
gifts and grants. ·
·
The largest category-grants and gifts
to faculties-received $917,021 . The
F·aculty of Health Sciences received the
largest share-$399,051.

· ?

PSS elections·

· Tomorrow is the deadline for receipt
of ballots for the election of officers for
the Professional Staff Senate.
·
' Campus NTP's have a choice between
Walter Kunz, associate dean, Division of
Undergraduate Education, and Helen
Wyant. assistant director, Student Testing
and Research, lor the post of vice
ch~irperson-chairperson elect. Sam
Crisante, assistant to the provost, Social
- Sciences and Admi('listration, and Jane
,..,... DISalvo, assistant .to the dean of the
Graduate · 5chool, are running for
secretary.
.
~llots are due in the Senate Office,
135.Hajoes. by Friday, June 7, at 5 p.m.

TUESDAY-11

Unlea oChenriH noted, tick• for ennta charging admlalon ean be purchaHd at the Norton Hal
llckot Office.
#Open only to those wtth a profeplonal lnternt ·In the aub)eet
•Open to pubic
••open to members ot tfHt UniversitY

_ _ _ _ __:__ _
eo_m_•_ct_N_•_ncy_eo_rd_areill,

THURSDA Y-f?

SATURDAY-S

CONCERr

UUAB FILM• .
· Cries and Whispers, Conference Theatre,
Norton, check showcase for times. Admission
charge.

Chamber Music for Oboe, perforined by
Ronald Richards, oboe; Darlene Reynard,
bassoon; Sumiko Kohne, piano; Toshiko
Kohno, flute; Dan Johnson, E flat clarinet, and
Amrom Chodos, B flat clarinet, Baird Recital
· Hall, 6 p.m. · The concert will include works by Rosetti,
Poulenc, Feldmyr and Ponchielli. Adniission:
students, S1; faculty, staff ~nd UIB alumni, $2·
generill public, SJ.
'
Presented by the Department of Music. ·

HlllR IAit-1-QUE
Buffalo HilleJ begins its summer program
with a Bar-B-Que, U/8 HiJiel House, -tO &lt;:apen
Blvd., S p.m . Bring frisbees, footballs, softballs,
and bats for outdoor games. A groUp will alSo
be leaving Hillel House at 1 p.m. to tour the
AllentoWn Arts F..estival, retUrning in time 'f or
the_Bar·B-Que: A' donation will be requested ·
to cover food costs.

UUAI AIM'
Cries · and Whispers. Conference Theatre,
Norton, check showcase for times. Admission
charge.

Heafth Effects of Fossil Fuel and Nuclear

.

· Nuclear Power Within the Context of a New
National Energy, lawrence Moss, Sierra Club

MoOney vs. Fowler (l'eacock); To Live with
Herds (M~cOougall)., 5 Acheson; 7 p .m. No
admission charge.
~ .
. ·

FOr everyone's convenience and pleasure, we-

Pediatric Pharmacology and Ther~peufics,

1

RIMS•
,

NOTICEs ·

QUEI.EC SEMINAR A DocUMfNTAitY AIM•
·Decaulli in~ Quebec, foltowed by a discusSion, 215 Crosby, 1 p .m . No admission charge.
filMS•
•
r
-

CONTINUING MII)ICAl EDUCATIONI

. C ~i ldren's Hospital, 219 Bryant Street. Also on
_... ~ ~~- 1!-l"!e 11, For furtb,r information, call

C9lBtATION•

~ Poelry and Piaures, by ~ike Finn,. Hayes
Hall lobby dispioy ~. through Fridioy, june
28. Viewing hours are Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5
p .m. Presented by the Office of Cultural Affairs. ·
~
JlUARY EXHIIIT'
First editions of the work of ~muel Bed::eu
from the cOllection of Lockwood Memorial
library, 2nd floor balco~y. lockwood. Vie&gt;¥.!r:u~:g~~: Monday-Frid~.~:g a.m.-5 P·n:'· Con-

CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER
Sumr:ner d.asses offered by the Creative
Craft · Genter include work in met,ak and
ceramics. Summer office hours {through
.;\ugust 22) are ~_Mo nday arJd Wednesoay, 1-10 ·
p.m. ,and Tuesday -and Thursday; 1-S p.m. For
further informatjon, call 831-3546.
NORTON SUMMER HOURS
Normal Summer building hours for No"on
Hall are: Monday-Thursday, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.·
Friday, 7 a.m.-midnight; Saturday, noon:
~-i~niRht, -a_nd_ Sunday, 3~10 P-f!t· For any ad.:=:~l~~~~~~~~rs m_formation, contact

MONDA y_.:.iO

Fillmore Room, Norton, 10:.30 ·a.m. ,
'.
WORKSHOP ON RfCTRICAl POWER
GENERAUON'
.
An OW!I'View of Nuclear Power, Daniel
· Ford, Union of .COncerned Scientists, fillmore
R09m, Norton, 1 p.m.
WOIIKSHOP ON RECTRICAl POWER
...
llow Sole Should They Bel, Herben Koyi•
Atomic Enerjy Commission, Fillmore Room:
Norton, 2:30 p.m.

EXHIBITS
EXHIIIT"

FRIDAY-7

GENERATION•

WEDNESDA Y-12 "
FILMS•
·~ .
ln!ide, Outside, Stalio n 9 (Marshall}; Scorpio _Rising (Anger}; Casrro Street (Baillie), 5
Acheson, 7 p .m. No adn'liuion charge.
PSYCHOMAT•
-;c
A listening and learning experience, i32
Norton, 7-10 p .m.
ALMS•
Retour a Ia Raison (Ray}; Emak ~kia (Ray);
Colour Box (lye}, 140 Capen, 9 p.m. No admission charge.

SUNDAY-9

WORKSHOP ON RfCTRtCAL POWER
GENERATION'
The Issues in Nuclear Power Generation is
the theme. of this day-lorig workshop sponsored by the Atomic .Energy Commission in
cooperation with 1he Office for Credit-Free
Programs.
Power Generation will be discussed by Robert
S. Chapman, Environmental Protection Agency, in the Fillmore Room, ·Nonon, 9 a.m .
. All workshop sessions listed-'today are open
1o the public.
WORKSHOP ON RfCTRICAl POWER

:3~~::~o: ltctlnp.
Cries •nd Whispers, Conference Thealre,
- ~~~;~check sh~wcase for ti~es. Admission

CONTINUING MB&gt;ICAL EDUCATIONM
Refresher Seminar in Pediarric:s, designed
for general practitionen: and pediatricians,
Children 's Hospital, 219 Bryant Street. Also on
Friday, June 7. For furhter information, call
831·5526.

lATIN AMERICAN &amp; CARIBBEAN
FILM FEST1VAL•
No Time for Tears · (Brazil), and l.a Paz
(Argentina), Conference Theatre, Norton,
7:30p.m. No admiuion Charge.
. Presented by the Puerto Rican Studies
Program.
AIM'
Tom, Tom,· the Piper's Son (Jacobs), 140
c:.~-n , 9 p.m. No admission .charge.

Timing Reel (li muril); Arm and ~sphalt
(Oppenheim), 140 &lt;;&amp;pen, 9 p.m . No odmis·
sion..charge.
-•
•

WI!ULY COIIIIUNfOUE COPY DEADLINE
like to pUblicize ell events taking place oir .
campus.' To record Information, contact Nan~ cy Cordorelll. ext. 2228 , by Monday at noon
for· lnduiiiOn .in the fOil~ Thursday issue.

-'!

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

Two~Year · Pad:

R~ached

by State ~nd UUP

A ~ve two-year agreement
between .United Uttiveraity Professions ( UUP) , the collective bargain-

ing asent for SUNY faculty and stafi,
and the State1 calls for across-theboard raises PI at least sio per cent
in each of tbe nen two years, provides
for -.it and inequity increases,
makes NTP's eligibl e for permanent
appointmenta for the first time, and
sets new procedures to be followed in
non-appomtment decisions on tbe part
of campus administratioal.
Announced late WedJIIladay, May
8, the agreement is still subject to

A'~~~~o':r t!n'ot~ i:'=f.; ·
all dues-paying members sometime
this week, campus union officials said
Monday.
Tbe time required for the ratifica·
tion procedure, however, is not likely
to defer the effective dste of the monetary portion of lhe agi-eement, UUPindicates. Enabling legislation was in·
troduoed in the Stau. Legislature to
provide funds for 1974-75 salary in·
creases as · ~ ·or· tbe supplemental ·
budget just PB8eed. U the agxeanent
is ratified, the new salary schedule
can go into effect m:&gt; July 1; UUP

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

The- oulllolo I J I - . . bo • - . . -. . opel{ for nany

. . . -. ---tar
IJI the 11,11!10 -

. . . . - liD

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

-

..uaa In the Unlwraltr'• thrwe CMir·

-.Mncllo~Jao-H.· -urot,

,_,............. lndudo- 800- 900

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

- - . . In .U _ . F - and the IJI Ma.,..omont.
the f i r s t - . which boclno"lioy 28.

Friday's Paycheck Includes
Retroactive Hike in Salary
- The payroll check to be delivered
on May 17 will include the 1973-74
salary increase for !h.- academics
(faculty and librarians) and NTP's
who were on payroll status as or June
30, 1973, tbe Personnel Office said
this week. Tbe increase is retroactive
to July 1, 1973, for twelve-month em·
ployees and to September 1, 1973, for
ten-month employees.
Withholding tai: rates for this check
have .been adjusted to prevent overdeduction.
Full-time medical and dental faculty and managementlronfidential employees ·are not included.
The salsry adjustment provides for
a 4% per cent aeross-the-boiu-d increase. In addition, 114 pe_r cent or
the June payroll could be awarded
as a discretionary increase to 50 per nmt- of the academic stsff and to 50
per cent of the NTP's. Each group V@li
treated separately as to the amount of
roney available and number eligtl&gt;le.
LAtT ISSUE OF THE YEAR

Today's is i he final issue of the Reporter
tor the 1973·74 academic yur. A~
Reporter will bo published each Thwsday, Juno 6 throtJKh Ausust 1 (with the
O&gt;Ccoption of July 4). " - ' - publico·

l ion tor the 1974-75 yur will begin
Thursday, September 5, 1974.

,._

~
---

· Tbe tentative -coutnct
a
"set of oonditiolls which · otreaatben our negotiating power in 1976 wbile
making major inroads in .tbe area of
job security ani! providing a sullstaritial salary adjustment;" n.. Constantine A. Yeracaris, president, U / B Center Chapter UUP, 81\id this week.
Yeracaris addressed what be ronsiders five major acromplisbments of
the pact:
.
" 1. All professional staff are eligi~l.e for pe~t appo~t after
f1ve years of Uruvenuty servJce plus
two years or service in tbe same position. This is tbe first -such opportunity
for non-academic personnel in tbe
U. S. It is a major breakthrough.
"2. Aeademics endo.-1 for promotion and tenure by peraonnel committees or their peers (~tal

and faculty) may appM} if rejectlld by
tbe . President to a panel ol _ . .
which will eumine tbe -(which
tbe _ . , _ aaya be) liWlll
by tbe adminlstlalioD, and aeod ita
-recommeadstion to tbe Cbancellor of
SUNY.
"3. Such .......... ol ........... given
for rejecti.Qa peer reconunervl•tiona is
also avaiCable to tbe Profeaaional &amp;aft.
"4. We have introduced in ..._
of 'diaciplinsry' action against academics and profa&amp;onals tbe priDciple
of binding &amp;lbilzation.
"5. Tbe tw&lt;&gt;-year contract includes:
a) A sio and ooe-half per- cent
acros&amp;-tbe-boald ~ foo:
1974-75 with an addilioDal
0.75 ~ oent for •merit in.,_with empba8is an tbe
allocation of such fuDd&amp; to

tt.:.e having below leYel
aalariea
(Jibnrians, otbeno) . and
b ) A sio: per cent ~
board increase for 19$-76
with. an additional 0.75. ~
cent for merit and 0".25 ~ ·

.="

for offaetting illequi-

-Ul!P ba. durinJ ita ~ 1!!!. ol
existauce, ' l t - aid. ~-.

...... Wial. ...

sry ina'eaae of )!1, ~ oeut (deal ..,
20 per cent wfal ilociUed) ; a vidmy
againsr fofl&gt;l8 aiming at ita diaintegnrtion, 811!1 a better contract for all
academic and professioo81a in SUNY."
linprovements ha... also boat ...,.,..,.
plisbed in terms bf grievancea, ietrencbment pr&lt;iceclwea, bMlth benefits, and travel be said.
Copies of the complete tentative
agreement were not available locally
at Repomr deadline, but will ac~!':..t~erend~m~ ballot, YeraHe noted, too, that ''imder conpressure" of lobbyisla from the
New Y oril: State Union: of Teachers
(NYSUT), tbe State T • ..; • ._.,_ bas
passed enabling Jegiala~~

-

(Conlinued on -

7, col. I)

.

The 1~ per cent "pools" of money
rould ~ be interchanged between

academics and NTP's.

Personnel provided dUs . brief analysis or the discretionary increase
distribution :
I .-Academic Swff: Total number
on June 30, 1973, payroll, 1,341; total
eligtl&gt;le to receive increase (50 per
NAM~ ON JUNE 6
The list of the approximately 700 recipients of discretionary increases for 1973·
74 will appear June 6, 1974, in the first
issue o~ the SUmmer Reporter.

cent) , 670; number who received a
discretionary increase, 495; average
discretionary increase, $530; range or
discretionary increases, $151 · $2,500
&lt;less than $200 increase permitted to
bring to maximum of grade or:Jor jle.rt- .
time employees).

June

2.-NTP's: Total number on
30, 1973, payroll, 446; total eligible
to receive increase (50 per cent) , 223;
number who received a diacretionary
increase, 179; average of diacretion8ry
increase, $38(; range of diacretionaly
then $200
increases, '-$54-$1,100
increase permitted to briDg to mu:imum of grade or for part-time employees).

o-

•

StudJIIII-the major act1v1tJ IJI the ~- ao tlnaleum lime
In full _
_. eJid F~, - . _ Ill 1uot 111n cloys
.--......._for-~ t o - fiLmll!or-

.

for

�.....

. . . . . . . . . , . , . . . . . . . . 8( . . . . . . .

SllS, Nursing Open 1.974 Round of Cqmmencements
or- Um-.ity. UDits bald p:adualioll - - blat Sunday, awarddellre. -tO 241 students..

me
Sil.S

Sewaty..U students reoeive!i Master of Liblary ScieDce degtees at
aftemoan !lOI!!l!W!IWTW!t eSerciaes
for the Scbool o1. Information and
Lilnry Studies in the Buffalo and
Erie County Public Library Alidi-

· torium..
·
· · Tbe comiiWIIli!ITWI~ adru-. was
,;..,.. by R. Katbleml Molz of the
U. S. Office of Education's Division
of Library Affsirs wbo warned that
future libl1lrians will face extreme
fundinK' difficulties for their institu• tiona . lieawse of· an American life-

qo/.le which is "oaunterintellectual."
Libmrians have a responsi,bility .to
oaunte&lt;...ct the cynical, 1'other-directad" American outlook on life
which mistrusts institutions, she said.
Miss Molz is currently on leave at
the University of Houstou writing a
book on federal policy and l.ibraey;
. planning. · A former editor of the
Wiloon Library Bulletin, she .is bead
of 4be Intellectual Freedom . Commit· tee of tbe American Library Association.
·
·
Degrees at the ceremoriy, the first
to be held 'by a U/ B unit this year,
were conferred by Dr. Bernard R. Gelbaum, vice ·president for academic
affairs.

Nwwlnl

dent Kalblean SbaDb and underThe School of Nursing confezred
graduate Rosanne GuaiDo for "the
165 degrees in Sunday night ezerhiat-t degree of in procises at Kleinhans Music Hall with
faBional r~, ltiadership
Dr. F. Cute&lt; Panoill urJinl padupotential liDd
professional
ales .to "never take ""J'fhins. for · and intellectual IJ!OWI;b." The awards
granted."
are named for the former dean of
Serious mistakes have been made
Nursing as is ~ citation for
by medical people wbo assumed Cbey.
"active ~lion on the Student
knew what was right and what was
Qxmcil" which went to Lois Buerkle.
. not; Panoill said. Bleeding was uaed
Patiline Mianow&amp;ny received the
8.s . a " cure" in a 1783 yellow fever
AIIIIDDi Award for "outstanding scholepidemic in Philadelphia, he recountastic ability, consistently positive ined, ''because it worked for the first
teJperaonal relatiaDa, emellence in
two cases. ... The next 5,000 patiants
nursing performance, and leaching
died."
.
.
and leadenrup potential"
Anne Walker Senghusch Lead~The S. Mouchly Small Award for
ship Awards went to graduate stuability in tbe mental health field was
wan by Marlene Rinde.
.

:Nine Commencemen·rs ·Siated This Week
Nine commencements and an
"Acbievement Day" will lOUDd out
the. 1978 " 74 academic year, tQday

duouah am Tuesday.

'· ·

' graduate Management Student Association; David D. Silvernail, presi•
Graduate Management Student
AssOciation; . JOSciph A. Bettinger,
president, School of ·Management
Alumni Association; and Dr. Richard
G. Brandeilburg, deB.n of the -SChool,
are also on the pro~ Degrees will
be conferred by Dr. Albert Somit, executive vice. president.

~ dent,

Pannill will confer 80 .degrees.
Tbe ·School of HeSlth Education
' will hold its first CODlD)!ln.oemelit Sunday at 3 p.m. in Clark Hall, with &lt;Je..
leste Ulrich, professor of physical
education, UniverSity of Nortb Carolina at Greensboro, speaking on ''The
Long White Road." Sixty-seven bachelor's, 41 master's and one doctorate
will be con!Orred br Dr. Donald A.
Larson, associate v1ce president for
health sciences. A reception will 'fol-

Tonight, 1!!1 DD.S. degrees, 1 PbD:,
and four master of science degrees
will be graitted by the School of DentistrY at 8 p.m. in tbe Mary Seatou
Room of Xleinhans . Music Hall 'Dr.
Raymond Krug, II8IIOCiate P,l'ofessor
Sunday, May 19
and chairman, Department of ProsThree scbools within the Fac:ulty of
lliochtti..., ..Univ=.,of North CiuoHealth Sciences plan 'Ceremonies for
low.
w.a; will be the
.
.
Sunday; May 19.
. - General Commencement
Two events are scheduled' for FriTbe
School
of
Medicine
coriunence&lt;General Commencement eurcises
day, -M ay 17.
ment is scheduled for 3 p.m. at Kleinwill be ·held at 3 p.m., Tuesday, May
The Eduoational Opportunity Cenhans
Music
Hl&gt;ll.
Tbe
ceremony
will
21,
in Memorial Auditorium, downter '¥ill i)old ita Fimt' Annual J,chieve- include an address by Bruce F. Midtown. President RObert L. Ketter will
mant ' Day- at' 7:30 p.m. in the sixth
be
main
speaker and will also conlEY'
'dendorf,
president,
Class
of
1974;
the
floor ~torium, 465 f Washington .
dedication of the "Medentisn," the
degrees and the Chancellor Norton
Street, downtown. A reception will be
School
yearbook,
to
Dr.
Thomas
G.
Medal,
tbe
University's highest bonor,
held ·immediatei~Jollowing.
.
Cununiskey; administering of the
given annually to "an outstanding
Also at 7:30 p.m., at 2917 Main
citizen o! Butralo." Dr. Frank L GraMaimonides and Hippocratic Oaths;
Dr. John R. Wright bas been
Street, the School of Architecture and
hoodiag and signing of the Book of
ziano, president, U/ B Alumni Asso'named professor and cbainnan of tbe
Environmental Desigo will bold comPbysicisns; and awarding of honors,
ciation, will . present a welcome to
Department ol. Pathology 11t UtB, efmeitcement eurcises with' Executive
in addition to conferral of degrees by
graduates from the Association. Units
fective June 1. He Will also bead the
Vice President Albert Somit conferDr. F. ·Carter Panoill, vice president,
pal'ticipating in the General ComPathology Department at the Buffalo
ring degrees. E8ch graduate will be
health sciences. One hundred · ninemencement will be Arts and Letters,
General Hospital. The announcement
presenteii individually by Acting Dean
teen M.D. degrees will be awarded.
F..ducstional Studies, Division of Gradwas made jointly by President Robert
Richard K. Chalmers. A ieception
Scbool of Pharmacy exercises, scheduate and Professional Education (inL. Ketter and Dr. 'lbeodore Jacobs,
for family and friends of graduates
uled for 1 p.m. Sunday in the Moot
oluding Roswell Park) , Natural Scipresident of Buffalo General.
/
with an emibit of student work will
. Courtroom, O'Brian · Hall, Amherst
ences and Mathematics, Social SciThe Canadian-hom physicil!n gradfollow.
Campus, will include remarks by Edences and Administration (including · uated with honors from tbe UniverSotunloy, ..., 18 &gt;
ward La Corte, senior class president,
the School of Social Work) , and Divisity of Manitoba's School of Medicine
Tbree units will bold comioenceand Jerry Young, School of Pbarmacy
sion of Undergraduate Education .(spein ' 1959. He completed a rotating in011 Saturday, May 18.
cial
majors).
·
Student
Association
president.
Dr.
ternship at tbe Winnipeg General
The Faculty of~ and Ap• Hospital . and a year's residency in
plied Sciences will convene at 3 p.m. '
medicine there before switching to·
in C1arlt Hall with President Robert
pathology at tbe Baltimore City HosL Ketter ~ degnoes. Provost
pitals in-1961~ and tbe Buffalo GenWilllam N. Gill will
a wet~ral Hospital (1963-64). Dr. Wright
cimbig adru- and w· •' R. TnsutTbe energy crisis, protection for the
an· assistant professor at State Uniwas
a Fellow in endocrinology at Bufman, president, Engineering Alumni
consumer and what happens aile&lt; diversity College at--Butralo, will deGeneral for a year ( 1961Hi6) beAaaociation, will speak .011 bebalf of . voroe are three of the topics to be .exscribe college after age 30, and Mary . falo.
fore
joining U/B as instructor in
fOI'IDI!r graduates. A """'Ption in honor
plored at a U/B Alumnae workshop,
C. Schwartz, assistant professor, U/ B
pathology.
.
of the graduates will be held in .tbe
Saturday, May 18, in Norton Hall.
School of Social Work, will ""Plore
Two
latelc, in 1967, be went
F~ Club after tbe esmcises.
The Up-To-Dater Workshop, Keepchanges in seirual roles and mores.
to
Johns
Hopkins
School
of Medicine
ing Yow Cool in a World of Change,
''Protecting, You, the Consumer;"
as assistant professor of )1!111hology, ·
il! ·being sponsored by ~ Alumnae
with Florence Button, director of conwhere he also served as vislting path- ·
with Mrs. Pbyllis Kelly. as general
sumer ·protection· for ; Erie County,
ologist at Baltimore's Union Memochairman. will open· the afternoon program. . rial Hospital and as assistant dlief of
Pumill, vice .........._t, beallh .
Registration is • at 10. a.m., With
Other workshop topics are· "Your Fupathology for Baltimore City Hoswill be~~ and
After·'Divorce," led by Marjorie
pitals.
'~N::.,~.,.:Sce ~ {:. . ture
~
cteBr-,
will folGirth. assistant professor of lew at The 38-year-old pathologist, who is
ginning ~ . 10:30. . Three worksbops
U/
B,
and
"Stretching
Your
Food
Dolnoted
for bis studies in the amyloid. At s::"~aat:urai!Y. in
starting at 2 p.m. will follow a !unclllars," featuring Bernice Deobecker,
aging link, is a member of the Maryeon.
.
•
tuma . MIIIIic Hall, gradUates of tbe
chainnan of the Family Garden .Projland Association of Pathologists, tbe
Scbool' of MaDQement will bmr an
Duril)g tbe n;&gt;oming, ·RuMell T.
ect for Erie County.
Medical/Chirugical Faculty of the
.am- by the H'CIIIIftble Jadi: KemP. Kaye, dlief ol. tbe Envirorunental DivState of Maryland as well as the
IQI!IIIher; u.s.:,Hoia of.~­
ision, N'
Mohawk p......,r. CoopThere is''a $1 registration fee for
American
Society of Clinical Palholttw., .88.th ·District. N- YorlL Dlwid
oration,
discuss tbe
· crisis
the workshops plus ·$3 fo• the lund&gt;ogista and the International Acs~
p; t.a:.a.lli, .,PMt Jll'8llidimt, Ullde&lt;. eon, payable at the door. ·
and what lies ~,Dr. .:::1:-EPn.
of Pathology.
.

Dr. Wright Named .
To Patholo'gy Post

Alu~nae Plan 'Up-Date' Session

,G::;nl

years

,..!1:!.s:~a: .~~ ­
~~-:=- ~~ ah.~c!'::

1tf;t

AaJ:"'Iion

:iT:
Kiem-

\

'!fir

�~

llq U, IP14

'Diied Up'
Manuscript Gifts ·ro l1bralies
Tax Relorin has

'Medentian'
Salutes Two

Med

Fa~ulty

--

By~ARD

'1'110· 8cDool ol. Medicme '-lf;y
~ beeD cltlld for dim cledladicJD
ID ......_ 81111 cuacem for llludeala '
In 1he Jl~.lbe ~ oflbe

~·attempt

to c:be 1he loopbole .......,. public oUiciaJa have
tmdflii1Dally .noceived a tax write-off
fw dftiDa the nation with their.._
baa-bad&lt;lired aa far aa llblariile and
lll'dliwa the nation ..... Olin·

lillie tbe l'llCBIIt ~of ~Ted
Walbr'a llllllli&gt;Dipl8. Mr. Gay .,.

_,_An!WIIe

plaiDa.

·3

2100 Frosh
To.- Be Accepted.

.for Fall Ciass
,...._Will
FaU
Twaty.- buadNd
be 8CCIIpllod for
1B'l4 ~ .....
u1ar admiooione, 1he Bqu.l ~
ity l'roKmm 111111 the 1llllllilil
alliliatail wllh Joeal '-'ilall.
Dremuk, ~ ol a'ilmiailall. 111111
recorda, aa.id lhia week.
Preaident Robert L. Ke&amp;la' told tbe
Faculty SeaMa 11111t W11111k tbat !here
bad been 16,876 IIPPiicaliolll for 1he
2100 places.
In accordaDce wilh a Facult)'
ate· policy adopted Jat ~1 , fnllhmen ......,
by .....
b.t
two of three admiaaioaa c:rileria for
each appllauiL The criteria ....,, hilh
acl¥»1 lrade aV'8l'IIIJIO, IRiik in padu.
ll!;inJ claM 111111 a atandanliJJed teatacore, either the Scholastic Al&gt;iitude

'l1le need to ~ what formerly given io a .-1 . ~ fo&lt;
all but the moat . . _ acadealic Ji.
~-Dr. n-o.~.
brariea. Few librariea, ..... ~
...... lllliodant deq far llladem .,_
ezplaina, have the funda tb purcbaae
fain who Is Clllft!lltJ.y a
ceraed.
'-ource materiala; moat can barely
deat .. 1he B. J . ...,. M-w
Aa reported in The Nt1U1 YorlTilrla
k e e p up with publiabed materials.
tbis ....... the tu reform ol .1989,
HGGi~ 111111 Dr. Jolm B. Scbl8er,
Ute other profesionala in the field
while -"';n• abu8es ol &lt;the law by
of patlaoiCJIY who baa
the U / B archivist ill particulariy con:
public~ baa also virtually
......S em tbe laculg. for~ a quarcemed that the law will eDCl0Ul11ge
dried up IPfta to libraries of aelf-prot. ol a -.tory.
fragmeotation of collections, thus ..,.
In eitilq Dr. Cummilkey, tbe year~
~terial by writers,;:ompooers,
ducinJ their value to acbola!s.
book lllalf ardd,' "bla oo1llce iDay have
Although 'Nixon is the .name most
The Libnuy of Congreoa reports
often asaociated witb the deduction
beeD CCIII8ideled miDar by bill
that it baa not received "one signifi·
for otliciaJ pape!S, he is only the most
be ... oflbe ,_ fdeada . .
cant collection . . . since the 1989
recent Prarident to treat documenta
AdminiatratiaD clwiDa the
act." A survey . cond~ in 1972 by
produced in public oflice at public
the .Associaticm of Research Libraries,
~ as private property. The
~=--Ot' Reg~ Scbolarsbip EDminwbicb is lobbying for anotber cbange
studenla; be could aJwa,ya be COUDied
T•mes revealed that even Gemge
In addition, admisoion off~ . to
in ·t he law, """""" gifts to Columbia
em · to help with a problem, 11atm to
Washington took his files home to
University down 9(1 per cent, with
~ve ~ta......, made Wilh '
M t. Vernon after he left office.
and ezaJIIiDo! a pievanoe or simply
the
objective of drawina 50 per OBilt ·
As
Ms.
Finnegan
reminds,
it
waa
olfer a ......., smile 111111 a frieadly 'hi.'
:~ra. 'd~ ~ reporting
Lyndon Johnson, not Nixon, wbo first
of the freshman c1aae from the
. . . . He kept us
of dewlap"Congreae
threw
the
baby
out
witb
em
NYork &amp;re&lt;l. geoera]ly defined
••
infuriated
some
right-thinking
·mem·
menta ClOIIClel'llinc aar educaticm and
the hatb water," commented U / B
as the Eighth Judicial District. ·
bers of Congress· by the inflated ap..
philoalpbized about wtat. tbe senior
Archivist Sbonnie Finnegan, wbo
Three categories of applicanta were
praisal he obtained from Ralph New·
year .._..t; in 1he lime of our most
. thinka tbat Coniress, inatead of optformed on .t he basis of oedeotiale preman, later Nixon's appraiser, on docacute ·be temporarily refin.
ing for blanket reform, wonld have
sented by students. Some students
uments relating to his public life. If
quisbed other _...a.ruties to write
~ wiser· to endorse a law Like thai
were offered admisSion as early as
Ralph Newman is one of the villains
ClUJ' Deut'a letlaB of iDiil!imblps. 'ro
on the books in Wisconsin, whereby
February 15; others ......, not """"1&gt;in the piece, its heroine is another
have 10M lllioalh Meclleaf Seboo1
the papers of public officials ezplicitly
ted. and a third pool of students ......,
archivist, Mary Walton Livingstone,
withoUt him would haw been our mi&amp;- · belong
to the public. The University
notified that they wonld be o&amp;red
wbo serves in the Office of Presiden·
forbme."
Atdtivee,
whicl;l
received
two
major
tial
libraries
of
the
·National
Arch·
admission
if vacancies occurred lifter
Dr. Cummiskey .e.....id as assistant ' collec:tiom from writer/ scholars in· the
tbe . May 1 deadline f&lt;&gt;&lt; payment . of
· ives. Ms. Livingstone revealed to a
deaD for atuileot alfairs from 1970.73.
year
pri&lt;&gt;&lt;
to
-the.
change
in
the
lax
tuition
deposits.
.' ·
CongresSional
committee
that
NewThe 41-year-old phyalclan pai)Uated
law, has bad no such gilt since, Ms.
}DBR had asked ber to collude with
In addition to the application&amp; fO&lt;
from UtB Medical Sebool m 1958
Finnegan
said.
ltim
in
backdating
Nixon's
deed
of
gift
the
freshman
claas,
6,666 transfer ap.
IUid&gt; interned at the Bulfalo General
Under the old law, many literary
SO · to squeak in under the July 25,
plication&amp; were ~ The UniRoopital. A residency in surgery at
figures
donated
their
papers
to
librar1969,
deadline
set
by
the
new
law.
versity
is
budgeted
.
for the ..amiaoian
Cincinllati Gene&lt;al llospital waa in·
ies on a regular basis. As Ctuator of
Livinl!);tone refused, and · at a recent
Of 1650 students in thiS category.
terrupled by two Ye&amp;n! in the U.S.
the
U/
B
Poetey
Collection
K
.
C.
Gay
conference
M
s.
Finnegan
archivists'
Dremuk
.said
tbat
adequate bousing
Army fteRrve Medical CoQ&gt;s in
""'!lains. writers; wh&lt;Me income• lreintroduced .a resolution, passed unani·
for transfer st:Udenta will be •vailabl&lt;l
Slmew!pOrt, l.ouisiaDa. He reniain&lt;id
varies diamatieally' from year
mously, commending Ms. Livingstone
for tbe fuat time in many Ye&amp;l1! bein tbet city for a year oL intemal med- · quently
to year, wonld often make theSe gilts
for u pl;!olding the ethics or her procause of tbe ezpected occupancy of
icine at Confederate Memorial Cen·
with an eye toward deduc;ting them
t., ibeo retwried to BulfaiQ.JD 1963
.r~ie
the ~ml •u!ilic ~ .wei· . ~~ Ellicott ~ex on tbe
~oo-..lele a resideacy in ~
corned' tbe new law .,: a Jons..-ed
........
•• lllilolio:IDe at .Bolfalo ~- -:.
gifts 'of lifA!rar:Y figures, tmlike poli.
reform, librarians understandably·view
shift of student interest in di8cipiinary
Dr. ~er waa cited wilh "hhiartticians, were often modestly assessed.
it wi th mixed emotions. As Mr. Gay
areas is occwring in the Health -Refelt appreciation" for " .. . • imJ!arting
Now that any lax incentive for making
says, "we ~ very angry with Mr.
lated Professions and natural sciences.
lmoorleclite to a helerogeneolis·groop of
sucb gilts has been removed, many
Johnson for do~ this to us. lf it
He said tbat transfer aclmi!lilcm .to
atadents," a task tbat the yearbook
hadn't been for his greed. . . ." .
writers will decide to 'sell their papers
the
University's ~ta within
staff felt is cme of Herculean cfimen.
at auction instead. lronics).ly, it is '
the Heallh Related Pror~Sions ia .,_
&amp;ions, iL one is " to achieve an aduc8-"
only self-produCed material that is no
tremely
competitive this year. On the
tiona! cuiaiJle p&amp;latable to stliderits'
longer lax exempt.- Norman Mailer
other hand, the social scienCes and
taatea. .In-our estimation one wbo has
cannot get a deduction~ for a gift of
humanities, whicb have esperienced
attained this level of achievement is
his papers without d e cla r in g their
the greatest upsurge in applicaticm
Dr. Scheffer."
value as income. But it he gives the
rates since the late 1950's , are still ·in
The Cougci l lor International E x·
A member of the faculty since 1950,
papers to a friend and the friend gives
change
of
Scholars
(formerly
the
Comdemand,
but not to the extent they
Dr. Scheffer received his me'dical dethem to the 'Library of Congress, the
mittee on International Exchange of
have been over the past few yeara.
gree at U IB in 1947, mtemed at Hack·
friend may simply deduct the gift.
Persons)
announces
that
applications
. enaack Hospital (1947-48) anti com·
Gooo1 Collections WDI Be Brolcon Down
are noW being accepted for senior
As Prof. Norman Graber of the Uni·
~~!ej a0
~~logy., at
Fulbright.-Hays awards lor university
versity of Virginia, chairman of a joint
lecturing and advanced research in
scholars committee on historians and
over 75 countries during 1975-76.
archives, told the Times, " If there is
The booklet on tbe program for this
no tax write-&lt;&gt;ff of any kind, there is
period is available on request to the
The Social Work Alumni .Aaaocia·
apt to be a sale, and good collections
Council (2101 Constitution Avenue,
tion will inaugurate a new prognun
will be broken down so as to maD·
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20418), and
witb
a reception at the Faculty Club,
mize profit. .
it may be consulted at the oflice of
Thursday, May 23, from 5-7 :30 p.m.
. uwe don't want another N i X 0 n
the U/ B Faculty Fulbright Adviser,
The
event
will mark tbe resumpticm
dee.l, but as bistorians and archivists,
107 Townsend.
of an active schedule by ·the .Aaaocia·
we are concerned tbat good collec·
Application
requirements
include:
lion
and
will
be 'an occasion for alumtions go into archives!'
U.S. citizenship; for ·lectureships, col·
ni to renew acquaintances, meet fac.
According to the Timu, many publege
or
university
teaching
experience;
ulty
and
welcome
graduates of the
lic Officials and literary figures are
for research awards, a doctorate or·
1974 class.
simply waiting to see if the 'law will
iri
some
fields,
recognized profession:
PUS: Di!fendcwf Anner
Plans
for
the
program
....,re initibe modified, an effort being led in
a! s tanding as demonstrated· by faculated at a March meeting of a group
by ·I d a h o Senator Frank
~~~~~ed~~flaa· Congress
ty rank, publications, compositions,
of social work alumni convened by
Cburcb. A few, sucb as Robert Penn
emibition record , etc. Applications
THDE W1.1. • MD U SDMC( OM
Mrs. Constance E . Miller and Mr.
Warren, have deferred outright gilts
tMY 25. a. 77. 1174
may be obtained by writing to the
Nathan D. Steinbart. Alumni preaeut
but have put their papers "on depos,
Council
at the address above. Some
......., interested in creating an organiit" (at Yale in Warren's case). Mr.
C.OUSIUSSIIMCt
awards are open to application by
zation to develop communication beGay notes that' there bas been "a
advanced doctom!• candidates.
tween the ScbooJ and the social work
~~=-~~)
sort of deadly silence" from some for·
July 1, 1974, is ·the deadline for
field, spokesmen for tbe group '"'Y·
mer
donors
smce
the
law
waa
changed
LeM'O'IIriln
l ""'Diefendorf
applying for most of the announced
Reverend William Zenns was cboaen
'""1~"' MO AM
7:30 AM
And be """""'""' doubts tbat the law
• 8110
~
research awards, and it is the suggestas chairman pro-tem and Louisa G.
will be changed again " not now " be
ed date for filing for lectureships.
.
Cielen, Melvin D. Kuecble, Margaret
9:15
8:5S
says, alluding ~ the ;..,toriecy of the
9:50
9:25
Mary Lenahan, Constance E . Miller
NIXon case.
Senior Fulbrigbt-Hays awards gen- I~
1 ~.20
9:50
IOM
and Peter T. RandazzO ~ to
em!ly consist of a maintenance al1~.20
The
reformed
law
has,
according
to
11:15
10:45
serve on ·the nominating committee.
lowance in local currency t.0 cover
Mr. Gay, "prevented the orderly
II. .
11:40
1.2:-lOPM
121lOPM
II:AO
The nH!Slablisbed alumni group
gi'OIIi'th of the [UIB) collection." " This
12;45
l2:10PM
~~!;'t'in~.:.:.:-and hopes for bJOB.der po.rticij&gt;ation from
collection is wiusually vulnerable in
12:5&gt;
1:&gt;35
1. .
graduates of the SChool in order to
1hat·
it
features
the
work
of
living
1:30
create a live and viable organization,
poets, precisely those wbo under' the
•.. ~ 2:25
~"
:&gt;25
wblcb could result in a lllrengthening
olil laW ·......., . enoourqed to dcmate
~
2:55
of the social work profession in Westtheir papers. Collection .development
~
3:20
·
Robert
Stein,
U
t
B
profeosor
'ol
~
4:15
em
N"ew York, its organizers indicale.
will
continue
.
to
be
"learfully
handi4:45
litical ac:ience; elected president
· ~15
capped,'' Gay aa.id; "unles we .find ·
The planning coDunittee· for the May
5:10 - ·
of the campus chapter of AAUP for
- 5:40
~ .
recepticm
cons,ists'of Cbaii-.person
an
ansei
lis
we
haw
from
time
to
1974-76
at
tbe
cbog&gt;ter'a
annual
meet~
~··
lime in the paat." ' Tbe Poetry ColSleinhart, Marjorie A Coll!lors, co,
ina April 29. l'!!ftY o. Hanaoa m of
cbairperaoa, Marilyn Loman,. and
lection baa received 110 major lifts
the~~waanamed
of aelf-produced Jmterlal 111100 tbe
8 . PeCman Additioaal infor.
-tary.u-uer. The chapter, Roliert
cbange. but it baa '**ved -..1
maticm may ba obtained by ..-:ling
whIch aunatly emolJs ...,. 800
.
Mra..
Franca
~ at tile Bcbool ol
gifts of ........,. to~
llll!lllben. will c:bo&lt;.e a MCI8tary folmanUICripC&amp;. A local doDor,cWbo wfllb.
Social Policy 111111 Community Ser·
Dr. Stein's ~ froiD aab.. to remain 8JII1II,YJDOUS, ....te !"'&amp;'
w... 881-2626.

&amp;boola of .Mediciae 8Dd DeDtiltry.

........,.u.l-

me::

allaiCal...,_

s--

me-n

w

:tu

c-'betler =..·-~~:!i'i

.

a.-

me

w-

~.:1=-.iii~!"t!':t,~

Jk.note4~~

~

Senior Fulbright
Deadline Nearing

0

~,.

.....,

...,

"""

...'""

.,
,..

Social Workers
Plan Reception.

,::::,%,

...

'""
'""
""'
,..

"""
""'

""'

'""

..

"''
"""
....
'"'
"'"

AAUP Officers

:=.

�~

4

Commencement luo

. . , 14.1114

h ~o Honor 15

University Retirees

'r-he NdriDa flll:ulliY IUid .... .

. . . . . . . \wo wilD baVe ~

~~:~ ·dledby
the

~

at the -ual Oam-

t!:r.:71-~

·-ll!u!l!':aoll!l.!ll-.•~

~~Kelillt'lriiiJ&gt;I!:

-'~of ApprecialiaD 011

llehdofU/B.
'l'be ..... .-,.....w. be NtiriDa be- -data
IUid ~
1 IIDII the
elllatfw
of tbelr ..u-ta
ue: Dr. C. P8n:Y B1i11, pn&gt;feolllw of
..,..... (.1- 30); Mr. Pblllp c.
Blllolt,
~
of artd.l(.J";u!'!2.i
ltiD
Dr.
.......
Puller,
.

~1.-'-~~(:::c.:l~

law -~&lt;l- 30); Dr.
Burvll H. GleiiL ~ of edualtloo (,J...::~~ Velma~
emrlq;!,~~ (Sept. 1);
Mila lllildied P . .._, ...mtant pro. ' - · Dlmlc:U tt.apy . (.JUDe 30);
Dr. Pmil F. lloftmml. ~. Btudeal Health s.vice (~~; .Dr.
Harvey 8. .Jalmloo, ~ BDd

dlalmilm. ~- Oral Surpey
(Aquat 31) j J:?r· OliW P. Lester, pro,_of JIIIYCIIDIDIIY (oluae 30) ;Mioicba
Sdmeider, p~ of music (.JUDe
30) ; IUid MnL Roae Welnsteili, pro, _ o f Jl81d&gt;oloiY (.JUDe 30) .
F'anMr ~ to be booon!d are
t&amp;a Marp!et Y . .Jam-, 111180Ciate
libnorlaD, wbo left the Uni..,..;ty February 28 of this year, and Mr. 'Theodore Siekmalm, 111180Ciate director of
tbe Univaraity at Buffalo Foundat;on,
wbo retin!d in .July of 1972.
'lbe widow of Profesaor Wan! Bullock, pro(esaor of mechanical engi.-ring wbo died March 3, 1974, will
receiW! his Cl!ltificate. Mr. Bullock
.....,Wd have retired June 30.

Dr.-

Or. Bliss has bad a cl011e association with the University and the
School of Management as faculty
member, administrator, and alumnus.
He bolda undergraduate, Masler of
Business AC!miniirtration, and l:loctoi·
of Pbilo!oDphy depees from U/B. He
joined the faculty 26 years ago as an
instructor m economics. He has served
as acting cbainnan and cbainnan of '
Business Organization and Finance
BDd as cbainnan of the Marl&lt;eting
Deparlmenl

Plai.Elllolt

Mr. Elliott has been a member of
ttie faculty of the Art Department
since 1.954, serving as cbairman for
15 yeara, from 1954 to 1969. A "8f&amp;duate of Yale and. an artiat by profession, be has been judge of many art
ubibits and has himself exhibited
paiDiipp in such institutioos. as the
Albright-Knox,
the P~lvania

· ACademy, . the Museum of Modem
Art, the O"licago Art Institute; and
the Carnegie Institute. Before joining
U /}J, Profesaor Elliott was director of
the Albright Art School.

Dr..Dr.
-

Farber, founder and editor fa&lt;
36 years of the distini[Uished quarterly, Philo«Jphy and PMnomeno/ogicaJ.
R-.:11, JOined the University faculty in 1927. A philoeopber of international reputation, be has ·been dean
.of the Graduate School bare and was
for 24 years the chairman of the l)e.
~ of Pbiloeopby.

Dr--

Dr. Franklin bas .been a member of
the uru..,..;ty's faculty f&lt;&gt;&lt; the past
yeara. A patfuBte of Harvard
and Harvard Lew Profsa Franldin
as-' 011 the ra.:i.Jty of Tulane Uni-mty Lew School fa&lt; 37 years prior

..

___ _

.... .........
,........,..
J:lrifNIM., .,u-....
.,
.,...• fl..,.,
,..

Ills--....,.,.

r.rr., ...... J.US • • sc.. • ..,..
• .F...., ... . . . . . ,
-2l,J.:JIIII .......... _ ( , . . . .
IIDIJ.

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

... W'DI'UT aarnAJrD

-r.MAJtutT
_

... c:r.oona

P..anac:rAIFAitDIF_,___

lfRICJ' a. c•••esrq

~

Planning to retire between
now and September.
to his appointment here. Recipient of
the .Franklin D. Roosevelt Awan! in
1958, be has been a Rosenwald Fellow
in Paris and has held a Guggenheim
Fellowship, in addition to serving as
U. S. reporter at the Congresses of
Comparative Law at the Hague, London and Paris.
Dr. Glenn

Dr. Glenn has been a member of

the education faculty for Z7 years. A ~
graduate of Ohio State, be bas been
instrumental in the organization and
coordination of several international
educational efforts, with emphasis on
Asian nations. He ·has served as di-

rector of the Student Abroad Program
in India, coordinator of the rotating
Student Program in Asia,- coordinator
of the U / B Visiting Asian Professors
Program, and as a specialist for the
U. S. Departmelrt of State.
Mrs.~

'I

Mrs. Haymes has held supe&lt;Viaory
positioos in the University's Food
Service since 1958. Fa&lt; three years
she was tbe Food Service ~ cook
and from 1961 to 1964 was manager
of the Goodyear Cafeteria. After two
years as superviaot- of the Tiffin
Room, she became catering manager
fa&lt; NO&lt;ton Union, a position abe has
beld fa&lt; the past eight years.

Prof~'::,. Heap came to .the University as the first director of the program in physical therapy in 1952, a
post abe held for 14 years. A graduate
of Ohio State and the Medical Colleae of v~ abe has been active
nationally m the American Physical
Tberapy Association, serving as .u
vice president for- two years,_BDd in
tbe CouDcil of Physical Therapy
School Di1ectors. She is currently
Pltllddent of tbe Alpha Nu Cbapter of
PI Lambda 'lbela.
Dr.-

Or. Hoffman, a graduate of the U~-

Dt. Franklfn

versity and its ~I of Medicine,
has been director of the University's
Student Health Service for the past
12 years. He has also served . as a
clinical professor in the Department
of Medicine and the Department of
Preventive Medicine. In addition to a
private practice for 16 years. Dr. Hoffqum has served in· the tuberculosis
service of E . J . Meyer Memorial Hospital "and has been a diagnostician in
the Chest Clinic of the Erie County
Health Departmenl

since 1952. She has served as a social
worker in the Ji'aychological Clinic
and in the Alcoholic Rehabilitation
Clinic, in addition to teaching in the
Sobool of Social Work and the Department of PsycbOlogy. Active in
community aff..U,. abe was executive
sec.etary oC the Planned Parenthood
Center in Buffalo, a member of the
Board of Directors of the Rosa Coplan
Home and Infirmary and a marriage
counselor fot tbe Council of Churches
of Buffalo and Erie County.

Dr. Johnson

Min-

Dr. Johnson has been a member of
the faculty of the School of Dentistry
since 1962. A graduate of the University of Southern California School of
Dentistry, be is a professor of bral
surgery and chairman of his departmenl He joined the University after
several years of teaching and practice
with the United States Navy.
Dr• . . _ ,

D r. Lester graduated from "the University in 1924 and joined the faculty
in 1925. She holds Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degrees from
U/ B and a doctorate from the Uni- ·
versity of Chicafo. Her 49 years as a
faculty member m psychology include
ten years as chairman of that departmenl She was the first woman to bold
a cbairmansbip in the University's
College of Aria and Sciences.
Prof. Schneider

Profesaor. Schneider has been at
U/ B for the paat 12 years. The cellist
fa&lt;. the . world-~ Budapest
String Quartet amce 1930, be is a
native of Lithuania and a graduate
of the . Cooservatory of Music in
I..eipzic, Germany. Prof. Schneider
joined the University when the Buda~ took up residency bere.
Prof. we..-n
~r

•

·

Weinstein has been a

lllellll&gt;M of_the U/B faculty and staff

Miss JobDston, a 1931 cum laude
graduate·,of U / B, joined the staff of
University Libraries as bead of the
catalogini cfepartment that year. She
served the Oniver&amp;ity fa&lt; 43 years
Wltil ber retirement this Pa&amp;t Febru-

:/iif ~fi:..~U'.!...~~

"dents, including Chancellor Samuel P .
Capen.
Mr. ~nn

Mr. Siekmann retired 1n 1972 after
some 17 years of service to the University's Alumni and Foundation programs. Holding a Master Of Education
degree from 0 / B, be Wa&amp; appointed
director of Alumni Relations in 1955
and, eigbt years later, was named
associate director of the University.
at .Buffalo FOIJDIIation, a post be held
until his retirement
Prof. llulloc:lc

Professor Bullock passed away in
March, d ·
his 26th year of service to u::'tfni..,rsity as a faculty
member in tbe J:lepartm8nt of Mecbariical EnginMrina. He joined the
University in 1948, after aeveral years
as a design eJ11ineer in industry and
as a faculty member at his alma
mater, the University of Cincinnati.
While at Buffalo, be annually ·supervised at least 20 undergraduate design projects.

�Re.IRTI.KIIIIIC
PRESIDE.N T

"We must have the vision and conviction ,to create and
mainta~ an atmosphe~e which ~ challenge individual~
to test the limits of their intellectual and personal
development." 1

... :

..-.JMn' i~ ~~1ft--..

.:

Ht\HtM~Of~O\'Willlt\T~e

�A Preilidenl's aelf-applilisal -pecessarily involves his IIS9I!Il8IDeDt of tbe "'behavior and perfot~D~~Dte" Ol tbe institutioo that be was chosen
to lead Such evaluations can be made from a
variety of vantage points. For emmple, direct
comparisons could be attempted with similar
inatitutionll and tbeir leadersli!p. However, .no
two .in&amp;tilutiona of higher education::.... or Presidents-are troly identical-. Every President must
operate within his· "own set of perceptions and
priorities; 8JJ!'( ·each institution has a particular
history, with different" customs, traditions, and"
aspiJ:ationa.
'Ibis distinctiveness is especially true for the
University at. Buffalo. It is both an old institution (founded in 1846) and a new institution
(merged into the State University of New York
in 1962) . It is a University Center (with all of
tbe advanood undergraduate, graduate, professiooal, and _research activity which that implies);
yet it is charged with respimsibility for the Eduaotional Opportunity Center for Buffalo (a post- _
sec:oodary, pre-University, remedial, and trade
program). In the establishment of institutional
policy, tbi.re has been a atrong tradition of faculty participation at tbe -University that can be
traood to Chancellor Capen in tbe 1920's; now
this participation is markedly inlluenood by collective bargaining that occurs not just outside
tbe University Center at Buffalo but even be·yond tbe framework of the State University
system. The "University's entering classes contain
some of tbe most gifted higb school graduates in
tbe State of New York. . Simultaneously, these
ciaaaes include tbe largest number of financially
and· educationally disadvantaged students of any
unit in tbe system, and more than most other
universities in tbe nation.
Evaluations uaing "ideal situations" as standards aJao migbt be possible, but I question the
~ of sucb COJJJillllisc)n in a document of
this type
the i·~·, is seldom, if ever,
"ideal." Tbemore, I bave ·chosen an integrated
form of evaluation: one which combines both self
and institution in terms of actual events that
bave occurred at State University of New York
at Buffalo. 'Ibis is not intended to be a complete
&amp;ciXIII1ltiJ1a, nor even can it be said necesssrily
to include all of tbe "most 1mportant events or
iEues"-since I aasumed office on July 1, 1970.
More lXJmplete recorda are ·available in - tbe
IIIOIIIhly and annual repoits of the President to
tbe a.a.-1lor and tbec Trustees, and in tbe
~t, "Portn.it of a Decade," issued in iate
1972. Hooooiva-, I bope that this overview - for
that ia wb8t it ia -will allow tbe reader to ""'
taiD tban just a aoaual feeling lor tbe
tJuuot and direction ~ tbe institution. It should

amoe

allow· bimlber to perceive tbe _rapidity with
which matler&amp; of importaDce t.ve been, and ru-e
being, llOOCifiiPiisl,; it aJao will identify some
Of tbe stumbling blocks- aU as seen through
tbe eyes of one individual: tbe Presidenl ·
The atmosphere at ~ University in tbe
summer-of 1970, when I assumed office, mirrored
and magnified tbe pbiloeophical and political
polarization that was then en&lt;lemic to tbe nation
and many of its institutioils of higber education.
The campus disruptions which acc:ompanied and
exacerbated this polarization bad interrupted tbe
normal functioning of tbe University and bad
contributed to tbe erosion interually of both
authority and collegiality. The University's relations with its external publics also were strained
in the ·face of a general lack of confidence in the
ni8.nagement of higher edumtion. · _ ·
·
Although the dilliculties and tensions surroundjng polarization we~ not restricted to .tl!is
institution, tbe setting in which they occurred
here at Buffalo was perhaps unique within American higher eduaotion. In only eight _vears, the
University at Buffal~hicq
its me~er
in 1962 with State Univeraity had been a comparatively small and somewhat parochial private
institution- bad ·become the largest University
Center in tbe largest university system in the
nation. Enrollment bad increased by 51 percent;
the number of faculty by 901. Moreover, as the
American Council on Eduaotion's 1970 "Rating
of Graduate Programs" and various reports of
tbe Council of Graduate Schools of Ameriao
would indiaote, tbe University bad emerged as
one of the leading graduate institUtions in the

until

nation.

1

This rapid growth had been acc:omplished
through generous State financing which, early in
tbe transition from private to public, bad produood an atmosphere of euphoria. All things
were considered possible; innovation and experi·

mentation were encouraged and easily funded ;

was heightened by a seriee of resignations and
resultant accusations and recriminations. Community alienation, which bad begun with opposition to tbe merser, waa at its peak.
The immediate problem!!. as I perceived tbem
in July, 1970, were to .-tablish,tbe leadership
and authority of tbe Office of tbe President; to create • functiooing 10dministration; to reduce
tensiona among .and between student, faculty,
and administrative factions; to nH!Stablish in-·
temaJ ccnfidence and faith in tbe institution; to
rebuild a cooperative community-University relationship; to IDOYe swiftly toward the start of
the Amherst Campus construction; and to define
a . valid eduaotion41 direction for tbe University
in the face of an anticipated reduOOd rate of
financing.
One· of my initial actions was to appoint a
number of · Task Forces directed toward these
broad problems. This action was taken not
necessarily for wbat these--grouJ!S might produce
substantively but to assure tbe University community that these speci11c problems, requiring
long0term solutions,- would not hll obscured in
the continuing daily operations of the- Univer-_
sity. The Task F.o!:Ce&amp;, qq University Governance,
University-Community Relations, Sense of Univeraity Community, University Goals, and University Organization served this primary purpose
and, in some instances, produood proposals which
have been incorpprated in the pplicies and oper~ti ons of the UqiveJ:Sity. For example, the Task
Force on University-Community Relations, in
addition to bringing together c:ommunity and
University leadership for constructive exchanges, .
provided a series of suggestions which assisted
the University in its relationship with the broader community. One suggestion was the celebration of our 125th Anniversary. The committee ·
assisting with that observance evolved into a
Community Advisory Council which constitutes
a permanent example for community participation in the University's activities.

indeed, "impossible" and uno" seemed to have

vanished from the institutional voaobulary. The.
aopstone of this growth was contained in the
vision of a new $650-rnillion aompus which bad
been. promised in Amherst.
But the new aompus, in the Spring of 1970,
had not been delivered; in fact, construction bad
not even begun. Long encouraged individual ex~
pectations concerning space and equipment bad
not been fulilled; and this failure was a major
factor creating the air of disenchantment that
began to permeate the campus. Other factors
which contributed to the frustration of expectations were the first intimations of an impending
reduction in tbe rate of State financing and a be-

II

President Furnas once poilited out that the ·
merger with State University was not accomplished witli the stroke of a pen. Long months
of negotiations bad preceded it, and tbe result
had alienated many alumni and members of the

ginning awareness that innovation and experi-

local community who fele that tbe University
was turning its hack upon its traditions and its
historically close relationship with the Western
n egion. This alienation was exacerbated by the
feeling of some faculty and -,.tatt, especially
among those who bad been attracted by tbe Uni-

mentation, boldly begun in response to national
and local student cri:ticisms of higher ,education,
often lacked direction, -purpose, and substance.
This institutional discontent coincided with
the divisive political and generational currents
which -were running through the nation and
which were related most strikingly to Viet Nam
and the Civil Rights movemenl Student strikes,
rallies, and protest marches, with some faculty
participation, incressed durini 1969-70. These
occurred in tbe midst of adminiStrative uncertainty: tbe President was on leave that ·year and
eventually resigned to head another P11!81iaioua
institution. Finally, after the demonstrations
reached a ~ci and beaome full-blown disruptioDB, in which a larte oontingent oi Police
were called to aompus, adminilltmtive instabilitY

pendent University-rommunity relationship was
no longer etsential. This attitude was reinforood
both internally and externally by tbe fact, tbat
the University was now acc:oimtable to tbe State
rather than the community for both financisl
support and direction.
· Raised admission standafds, which excluded
many local students wbo would bave been admitted previously; broadened aspirations, directed toward statewide, national, and international rather than regional needs and expectations; eduaotional experimentation, such as tbe
creation of a number of Ioorely directed and
controversial "Colleges" within the community;
and the planned move of the University from
· tbe city to the suburbs - aU served lo confirm
tbe comnnmity's notion that the University was

versity's burgeoning afBuence, that an

interd~

"REPC?RTfRIA PERSONAL AND IN~TITUTIONAL APPRAISAL/MAY 16, 1974/Page 2

�"._...c;,_

no lonser ch;..,rvini al 1111 interest and suppoi1C
AB noted earlier, a finill Cllllfirmation al this for
the community was provided by the student disruptions of 1969 and early 1970.
My attitude- low8nl .Ibis Uniwrsity-rommu- .
nity problem baa been from the beginning that
the necessity for an interdependent · Uniwrsitycommunity relationship must be acknowledged.
ln my inaugural address and countless appear·
ances before local organizations, I have defined
the parametera of such a relationship. 'The University had ·I n acknowledge its roots ln the· Ioi:al
CODlJtlunity and itS obligation to use its educational resoilrees within the community through
- projects having a Iegitiniate educational base;
simultaneously, the community had to under·
stand and accept the Univeraity's national aspir' '
. ations and its role as a Uniwraity Center within
the ~tate University of New Yorlt, ln repeated
public appearances- over 120 meetings in just
my firat· year in office - I emphasized, and con·
tinue to emphasize today, the two-way nature
of this relationship, expounding dn the fact that
the differences in opinion which inevitably arise
·in Ibis type of · rel!ltidriship must be acco~
dated in an atmosphere of mutual trust and
affection.

""

To establish that atmosphere, I have - .in
addition to creating the permanent Community
Advisory Council - opened new lines of communication thro11gh public and private meetings;
and I have included membera of the' community
as well as alumni on various search committees
for major University appointments and &lt;1n ad·
visory commi\tees dealing with important areas
of University policy. I have devoted considerable
peraonal attention to the revitalization of the
University Alumni Association, including efforts
to secure adequate funding for the. Association's
expanded programs. These prograins 8re attracting Alumni support for and_,participation in the
activities of the institution; they also are increasing the national recogmtion accorded to
both the ASsociation and the tlniversity. Too, my
attention-to this area has been related to renewed
attemp_ts to obtain supplementary financing for
the University ·t hrough the business leadership of
the Buffalo community.
Perhaps the must dramatic demonstration (to
the local communi-ty) of the University's recog·
nition of its obligation 1o proVide local citizens
accees to a major research University occurred
in 1971 when I made the decision that at least
50% of the entering freshman class was to come
from the 8th Judicial District. This decision was
viewed by some faculty as an undemiining of
their concept of academic excellence and our own
national aspirations. Also, some viewed ii as a
capitulation· to local political pressures. How·
ever, it was and is my belief that the educational
obligation of our University to the Western New
York community is legitimate; 811d my belief .
was that this decision would not have the dire
academic consequences some predicted. Subse' qtiently, this belief has been confirmed by sta·
tistical analysis; indeed, · the Faculty Senate of
the University has recommended continuance of
the policy.
.
My Alisessment is that these beliefs and ac·
tiona, that the establishment of an office aoces·
sible to members of the community, and that the
encOuragement of responsible faculty and student
participation in the community have eased the
strained relation,hip between the community
and the University. Much progress· has been
made in creating an atmosphere of mutual trust
and respect. and it is likely that the University

nOw enjoys the greatest community. support it
has received since becoming a unit of State
University. lndeed, ·the Urtiveraity is well on its
way toward fulfilling its formally stated commitment that it "will continue to recognize a
special relationship with the community and region, and it will serve in this relationshljl according to its academic interests and abilities."
HoweVer, this is not to say that the University--community relationship cannot be improved.
For instance, I could make more productive use
of the Cofnmunity Advisory Council by present·
ing_issues of greater substance for its consideration. Until' now, the Advisory Council has been .
utilized primarily as a forum for the discussion
of general issues rather than being requested to
address itself to specific matters of concern to
the University. (The Council of the University
at Buffalo has been used in the latter rol~
and with success.) Additionally, I am not satisfied with the effort and results of the University's
attempt to broaden its financial base through private contributions. Nevertheles;. recent administratjve changes within ihe Urtivenrity at Buffalo
Foundation, together with . the establiShment of
new and more aggressive fund-raising programs .
have already begun to havE" a posi tive e fl'f!Ct in
this area.

Although ·criticized by some personR for devoting tOO much time to the University's extema1
difficulties during my first year in office, I believe this effort had to · be expended for the
University once again to become a viable arid
re3pected institution within its communiiy. Admittedly, the time devoted to this problem limited the iunoUI\t of personal attention which I
cculd give that year to addressing the Univer·
.;!t·t's long-range educational direction. However,

it is my belief that the benefits derived from
this intensive short-tenn investment have justified the allocation of time. Also, one result of
this intensive initial effort was that such concentrated attention . has not been required in
rucceeding years; nor is it likely to be required
in the future even though the community and itS
members must be continuously educated in their
understandin~t of the Univer~ity " s R:oa1s and
a.."piration!'.

Ill
Prior to my assumption .of office, the Unive_rsity had been administered for · e year by an·
Acting President who had been appointed to

that position when my predecessor took a leave .
of ab!ence in 1969. During "this period, which
occurred at a time when the University was still
adJUsting to a major administrative and academic
reorganization, it was revealed that the Presi-

dent would not return to Buffalo. Therefore,
when I~ the Presidency, the administra·
tion of the University was in what best could be
described as a transitional phase. Uncertainty
was heightened by the rumored departures of
key administrative officers, actual resignations
by some, and by the fact that .many administra- .
tors were Serving in :-acting" andf or dual _c apacities. The ruJmin.istrative structure was strained
further by internal policy disagreements in regard to U.niveraity governance, particularly as
this related to student disturbances. Obviously,
another of my immediate and major concerns
was to assemble a group of Urtiwrsity admini&amp;trators wbo could worl&lt; tojrether :with me for the
University.
.

Page 3/REPORTER/A PERSONAL AND INSTITUliONAL APPRAISAL/MAY 16, 1974

A number of important ~ts had to
be made Without delay to &lt;XIUDier the atmoaphere
of uncertainty .which prevailed 11fithin the Uni·
versity. I felt that Ibis swift action waa """""""'
to begin to create a stable management structure
which could exercise leadenitip and authority
while remaining sensitive to the legitimate COD·
cems of student&amp;, faculty, and staff. Becauae of
the time-eleroent and the need tO have admini&amp;trative officera who were familiar with the University and with me, many- if not most- of
these early appointments were made from among
qualified individuals alieady at the institution.
Subsequent appointments haw been made with
the aid of search committees whooe charges have
been to seek the best candidates available anywhere .
Unfortunately, I was unable to rely on earlier,
defined search procedure methoda, since these
were found to be generally inconsistent or not
available. Therefore, to stabilize this aspect of
our operation, stanpard procedtires fo&lt; .the selec·
tion and functiiming of searcll committees to be
utilized in filling all administrative vacancies

including
Vice Presidents
wereannounced.
·'llle·
from tbe depa.""new procedures were desigoed to ensure a voice
in the selection process for all appropriate. Univeriity constituencies and to facilitate the appointment of the most qualified peraons.".It was,
and is, my belief that in all but the most unusual
cases the benefits of participation outweigh the
disadvantage of...a possible unwieldiness that is
sometimes associated with such search committee
procedures.
1n my judgment, the search procedures that
were announceil and applied, starting jn late
1970, have served the best interest of the Uni·
veraity. Nevertheless, I believe that in several
instances more satisfactory appointments would
have resulted from a greater peraonal invol..,.
ment on my ·parl, particularly m the initial and ,
in the fuuil stages of the selection process. bl·
deed, more recent appointments suhetantiate this
belief, and I expect to continue this more intenae
peraonal involvement in- the future.
When I was appointed Presiilent, I inherited
an organizational structure which, as noted ear·
lier, had been created only recently; it J&gt;ad not
been tested fully. Although I had been chainnan
of the Faculty-Administrative committee that
had proposed the new structure, I must admit
that, based on what had happened, I had ,_,..
vatiOI\5 about the effectiveness of the new plen.
These were questions on which I believed it
would be best to reserve judgment until other
issues had been handled and stability was evi·
dent.
.
One , of my reasons for reserving judgment
was that I felt - and still feel - that what I
view as the primary purpose of that earlier re!
organization is extremely desirable. That is, the
reo,.-anization was intended to provide for a
t!l1ified or cohesive University, one in which the
barriers among and between the various types
of education and among and between the disciplines would be lowered, one in which co-operation would be paramonnt, Secondly, while
realizing that the most opportune time to ,...
structure an organization is shortly after a
Presidenup change, I felt that the trauma which
necessarily would have accompsnied further or·
ganizational change would not at that time serve
the best interests of the Urtive¢ty.
A month of ~-leas concentrated lltudy
· and reftection in July, 1973, gave me the oppor.
tunity to very deliberately weigh the basic Pill"

�_.._1

cl tbis laherited .aactun. .,.mat a threeapedeDce. M,y coocluoion was
that iD a IIIIIIDr cl tlie Ol'llllllization (or
pcalbJy tba _.... fllliDa oortaiD positions iD
tba CJI'IIIIIia,tia) bid bad just tba ~te
eftect cl wbat was oriliDalJy intended. Instead
cl incrMsinc unity, tben! - - ' to be an iDcreasina drift - . . ! fnlctionelimtion ~ _disunity. This .... reiJecled iD the lact tit lheJe
W88 III&gt;-IIPJIBft!Ot. OIIOI'dinated, ........u (]Diversity
academic planniDg; tb&amp;t efforts """"' duplicated;
that DO Eli!&gt;us attempis """"' beiDg made at tba
opemlioaal _level to optimize dollar effecti"""""';
and that tben! were few coordinated and effective
education81 quality and quantity review meChanisms OPenltive. While I ._mzed that the
8 - bureaucracy wltbin which both the University at Buffalo and the State University of
New Yorlt must &lt;&gt;;J!'I8te does not seem to allow
for "real" ~t incentives, I concluded
that tboae that might have '-n &lt;leveloped locaUy bad not materialized.
A major cause of this seeming disunity, in
which academic areas bad come to exist as
aepamte ""!!'~· was that the &lt;ll'lll'nimtion bad
created such a diffusion ol ._,aibility that
there was, in fact, no direct respOnsibility and,
therefore, little accountability. Officers· who were
cbaqed specifically with having a Universitywide in~ in their areas, and-who amid and
should serve as cohesive forces, acttially bad
little authority or inftuence within the system.
Disunion, , lack of clear ~ilities for
which persons a&gt;Uid be beld strictly accountable,
and the fact that University-wide officers amid
not serve effectively in that capacity bad undermined the quality of our programs in the aeose
that there was a great inconsisteucy of judgment about program effectiveness. Additionally,
these factoc; bad worked to make it practicaUy
impossible to obtain timely, thorough, specific,
and reliable information or truly representative
advice from almost any level or from any constituent body of the organization. Therefore, decisioos were at times made for wrong or extremely amtentioils reasons and, not infrequently, in a crisis atmosphere.
Another characteristic which was supposed to
be inherent in the earlier ~ organimtion
was ita ability to intemally generate direction
and sound innovation whicb amid romplernent
bfoadly stated University-wide gollis. This innerdirection and innovation bas ..Ot '-n forthcoming. Instead, there aeems to have evolved an
organimtion whose OPenltion is ~tly characterized by ineftil. rather "than purPoseful activity; one in which major ollioem and/ or organizati.ooal bodies are more content with maintaining
the status quo or almost blindly emulating other •
universities rather than viewing this University
aa one with it&amp; own unique potential and limitations.
.
Some of tbeae problems, aa aeen from this
President's pempectlve, are pe!baps shared by
all, or ~MBtiy all, institutions of higher educa- ·
tim. HOMVer, I was convinced that ~degree
to wbich they ezisted oo this campus ws not
JQe

year

. deoinoble, appropriate, nor ~ required.'
Further, I believed that the institution bad
adliewd a level or.stability which wouid permit
full aad candid mnsidemtion of possible orpni-

. . . . . c:blmee&amp;

-

A."a ~. in Au;ust of 1973 I met
wllh tba _,... amdemic olllcen of the Univemity
..S CJUtlfDal to t!an my oancems with the
. - t .trualuN qflhe .l1Diversity. n- ·- -

~y ~with

the

FacultY Senate and the Pmfesaional Stall Senate.
In the ensuing weeks, aeveral .alternative organizatiODBI plaos were discusaed Tbe conaensus
among individual faculty, department cbainnen,
and acadeniic of6cers was that many of the suggested changes in administrative reporting refatiooships bad merit, but that a major .realignment
or regrouping. of academic programs and departments was not presently desirable. Accepting
this ieneral conclusion. I have cbaqed the University's senior academic officers with examining
.and justifying, on the basis of Valid educational
grounds, certain particular idiosyncracies in our
present academic alignments. This examination
is now under way.
Also, I have proceeded to make certain
changes in administrative reporting relationahips.
' At this writing, I have established ~bat bas been
defined as a Presidential Academic Cabinet, consisting initially of fhe Executive Vice President,
the Health ·Sciences Vice President, the Academic Affairs Vice President, the University
Libtaiian, and the three University Deans ifor
Graduate and Prolessional, Undergraduate, and
Continuing Education). The role of the University Deans bas '-n redefined to i nvest these
offices with greater authority and resporu!ibility
and to have the Deans report directly to me
rather than through the Academic Vice President. This change in reporting relationship bas
also '-n made for the Univec;ity Librarian. In
the immediate future, I plan to establish a
Budget ahd Long:Range Planning Office responsible direCtly to me; to redirect the reporting-,relatiooship of our Research Office from me
to the Graduate and Professional Dean; and to
continue to examine other possible admini&amp;tra-,
live changes.
Alth&lt;,&gt;Ugh these changes await evaluation, my
expectation is that they will rectify one-half to
tbnie-fourtbs of the problems previously mentione:l. For instance, the University Deans
should now be able to function more effectively
as unifying forces within the University and provide direct and timely, non-pat9Chial advice.
Additionally, it is anticipated that these offices
will be major University focal points for the
er-conragement_ and developmeitt or interdisciplinary and innovative academic.programs. These
administrative changes, together with · the crea~on of a Budget and Long-Ran~e Planning
Office, as well as ilie Academic Cabine£, are
expected to enhance the efficiency of the University's operations and increase line account-.
ability.
.
, Jt is my feeling that a major initial concern
of mine - the assembling of a functioning administrative team- was adequately handled under.. initial circumstances, and that we are now
at a · point ' where cootinued improveroents. in
per.onnel and structure can .and will 0e made.
Altllough some early appointments and my initial
hesitancy to make major organiZational changes
.could be and have been criticized, niY. own belief
is that the prevailing need at that time was for
stability and that this was achieved by proceed- .
·iqg as 1 did. Indeed, this stability, despite the
• shortcomings pointed out in the accepted organp.ation, helped create an atmosphere receptive '-9 my emphasis oo el6cii!ncy and aax&gt;untabllity in the. adminiatration's reapoosi'lll!llell&amp; to
the -Deeds of the University community. I a1ao
feel that ~ organizational changes -that ·bave
- t l y been made, and tboae additional ..._
wbich are. contemplated; will further lhe attainment of this aoaL

Although the Med for stability was important
in the Summer of 1970, the University -also
needed to regain the momentum which i&gt;P.d
eroded as a -.It of frustrated emectati.ons, internal and extemal diasensioil, student disorders,
and the fuat l'lliDIIft of reduced funding. This
momenl!un, Which bad begun with the merger
into the State Univen;ity system, bad vaulted
the University at Buffalo from- relative obscurity
to naticnal recognition in a number of academic
disciplines. Such progress was ·first suggested by
4:be 1966 American Council' on Education's "Assessment of Quality in Graduate Education" and
was confirmed four years later by a siffiilar report which fanked all departments eligible for
consideration a,s either "adequate." "g~"· or
"strong."
•
T&lt;&gt; consolidate these gains and continue to
improve the University in these and other disciplines, it'!!"" imperative·,to· establish a clesn!r
educational direction for the institution. Until
this time, growth bad been rapidly exj&gt;ansive but
relatively unguided in tenns of attaining institutional objectives. It was my belief that.once these
objectives qad been identified and adopted they
would serve to stimulate&lt;tb"e directed momentum
necessary for their achievemenl&lt;
As I winted out earlier ;p-this document, I
acted . immediately on my conviction that gnaloriented growth was necessary by_appointing in
the early Fall of 1970 a Task Foroe on University goals. However, it was riot until the Summer
of 1971 tbJit I was able to turn my attention
. more intensively to· this question. In additio!l to
.the Tas'&lt; Foroe Report, I requested from the
University's Vice Presidents, Plovosts, Deans,
and Department Chairmen evaluatioos of their
present situations, together with statements of
specific ·goals for their respective areas. These
two 110uroes served as a prefiminary basis upon
which I was able, aftef wide consultation, toestablish broadly stated and comprehensive goals
for the University :
1. The University will continue its evolution
towards becoming one of the nation's preeminent
graduate and professional center&amp; with a fum
commitment to the advancement of ·knowledge
through teaching and ......earcb in selected academic and professional diaclplines.
.
2. The University wil_l continue to accept the
obligation inherent in it&amp; graduate center aapirstioos of creating both an outstanding undergraduate.division. with a rigorous academic orientation
which challenges the individual to test the limits
of his intellectual and personal development, and
an outstanding continuing education division
dedicated 1o "the concept of education as a life.·
long pursuil
3. In each of ita major divisions-undergraduate, gradi!Bte, professional, and continuing education- the University will act to maintain
existing academic 8tz-eogtbs, to strengt!&gt;en areas
of. promise, and to develop new areas which
posaess indications of future importance to the
University and to society.
.
4.. The University will remain UDeqU.ivocaUy
committed to aCulemic freedom; it will simultaneou8ly insiat tipOn a commilmslt to academic
responaibility_
6. In- ita academic JIIOII1IIII8, policies, and
organizatioo, tba · Uni-.ity will be open to
. ~ and ....;tive to-the Deeds of faculty

REPORTER/A PERSONAL AND INSTITUTIONAL .APPRAJSALIMAY 16, 1974/Page 4

�and lludenla, baCh ~t and prospective; yet,
it wt11 IDRIIilbt or-ita academic pwpoees
and or the aeec1 to detemliDe and discriminate
in favor or the . - t e«ective methoils or advancing and 4nJ181111ttbw t-ledse. understanding,
and abilitiea aiplfic:ant and valUable to IDIIDkind.
6. 'lbe Um-aity will recogJliao the importance of all envirollmalt aJDducive to learning,
teaching, and .-.dl; it will seek to provide
the facilities, aervices, and pel"IIDl18J; examples
which create such an environment
7.. 'Ibli University will CDDtinue to recognize
a special relaliaosbip with the community and
region, and it will aerve in this relationship
Recording to its aeademic interests and abilities.
8. 'lbe University will DeYer be bound to the
traditional forms or higber education; it will be
willing to IU!t alone or oooperatively in using its
tesources to create new forms "which will further
the realization or il&gt;i aspirations, purposes, dnd
~oals.
'
.
9. The University_will strive to organi?.e and
govern itself in such a manner' as to make the
most productive ~ of thoae resources entm1~erl
to it by- society for .the achievement of these
goals.
In addition to- serving an immediate pnrpore,
the statement· of University goals also created '
standards against which the Univers;t;v cr.nl-1 be
evaluated during ita impendirig Middle States
Accreditation visit. This visitation was particularly timely, for it required the University to
prepare a self-study document whicb, in my view,
had I.e! be a completely bonest self-appraisal :
where the institution was, bow it got there, and
where it was coing. I considered this rigorous
Proce.&gt;s, in which the entire University was to
share, as an ideal opportunity for generating an
institutional commitment to goal-oriented edu·
cational direction. This type of direction had
become especially imporiant in view of the fuian·
cial stringency which had hit higher education in
New York State ·more rapidly and With greater
severity. than 11J1Y.0De .bad suspected was· possible.
In re~ I think j t can be said now that
my judgmeni. or the importance or tlie self-study
has been upheld. The persons charged With conducting it were instructed to produ~ a document
which reftected my conviotion of the n~ for
thoroughness and oandor. That they complied
With these instzuctions was 8ffirmed i n early 1973
in-the final report of the Middle States evaluation
team, in which it was noted tha.t "representatives
of the University were fully . eooperative and
helpful," and that "it was obvious that they
wanted the evaluation effort to IJE, coi131ructively
useful rather than a pro forma exercisl! in deoennial ai!l!liii!ltation. The self-st¢y report," according tO the evaluation team. "was insightful
and candid. . . ."
·
· From the self-study document and the team's
visitation, Middle States cOncluded in ita report
to the University that "the University has
J"ellched a plateau wbich allows for regrouping
before the nm:t climb begins." At the time of its
._,.., to the Middle States report. the University wa&amp; able to declare ita belief that it already was an the threabold of starting ita next
climb. Conatrudlon on the Amhelllt Campus had
begun; 1rey positions had been &amp;lied; some ezoelleDt faculty membera - on a hish!Y aelactiw buia- had been IIUClC888fully recruited;
the budaet outlook provided for some cautious
optimlain; and the Unlveraity already bad "made
a IDIIIIIed elfort to """"' to pips wit.b the """'Y.
problema toudJed upon In ila own aelf-atudy 1111!1
also ldentifted·ln the ft!POrt or the Middle Sta""'

~ Indeed, the institution was demonstrating
its readiness- to move into new;-carefully planned
ventures. It bad become apparent ·that we did not
want to repeat the almost reckless momentum of
the past, but that we did wisb to move abead
confidently in in our belief that this institution
would become a great one.
Our experience With the self-study provided
a strong base in "1972 on which to begin a camous
Master Plan, as was required by the State Education Department This Plan, following as it
did the University's self-study, represented the
first stage in making an operational reality of
the educational directions contained within tlw
goals and aspirations we had already identified.
It was conceived as a broadly stated document
which recognized the need for future ftexibility ;
its approach was more general than ~pecific. more
philosophiCal than mechanical.
HQWever, the Plan clearly defined a basic,
cvclical planning process to be adopted by the
University. Essentially, the process is that each
unit of the University will be expected to set a
series of specific objectives_to be achieved_ '11&gt;&lt;'
identification or -the means necessary to attain
these objectives will be formulated in light of
the long-range and specific goals of the University, its various major divisions, and the respoil·
sibilities which the University and ita components have as a University C.enter of the Stat•
Umversity of New York.
Procedures for attaining these objectives must
take into account anticipated resources, including
. fcClllty, students, staff, and support funding.
Subsequent performance will be evaluated in
terms of stated objectives and resources available during the period of implementation. This •
e\lllluation will determine bOth achievement and
shortcomings and Will l!"int to the next series
of objectives and the resources required for their
implementation.
This planning, implementation, and assessment cycle will be carried out annually, with
every unit completing and reporting an abbrevial.ed self-assessment With staggered implementation, one-fifth of the Uriiversity will yearly
at~in "five-year" status, at which time programs
and efforts ·Will be subjected to complete reas:essment, including -total objective reformulation, rejustification. reevaluation, and -zero-base
budgeting.
For annual or quinquennial review, assessment will include all courses and programs in
academic areas and all activities in supporting
areas. It will include the size, distribution, and
the quality of faculty and staff; support services
and their funding; examination of societal needs
served by the program; evaluation or students
who choose the program, and the extent to which
the program serves them; quality and extent of
researdl and creati'l(e activity, as well as the
quality and extent of community service displayed. Excellence of attainmei\t, Ure.pective of
unit size, will be the major criterion [or evalua·
tion, directly affecting budgetary decisions and
r-eSUltant program directions.
· 1bese procedures Will institute, on a formal
. a"nd standardized baais for all progmms in the
University, evaluations which the UniYe!Sity
previously has cooducted in only certain
This new ·emphasis unden!coreo the illlport8nce
I attach to periodiC aelf-eValuation. It also is
compatiblio with my ~ of the redellned roles
of the Unhlendty Deans, who Will be reoponsible
and -.untable for initiating and administering
theae- proceduraa thn!uPout the Uniwnity. A
major expectation I have for this prop8Dl Ia that

Pa11e. 5/RE~RTERIA PERSONAL AND INSTITUTION.-,L APPRAISAL/MAY

areas.

l6, 1974

it Will aid the development within the University
of ftexible goal-oriented academic planning; it
will facilitate making di8icult choices amang
priorities; and Without being atifting, it should
result in the more efficient use of University
resources.
.
Although academic planning is neceaa8!y to
any institution ol bigber ooucalion which wishes
to operate Wisely, this concept became especially
significant to our University during 1970-71. As
the year progressed, many persons became increasingly concerned with the fisoll &lt;li1liculties
facing the State and, in tum, the University at
Buffalo. · Budgetary stringencies imposed upon
the University and legislative forays into the
area of educational policy endangered academic
programs and created morale problems. Frequent
complaints were voioed by departments and Faculties about the shortage or space and insullicient
numbers o[ academic and staff personnel; also,
a major area of concern in many of..J.lle "hard
sciences" wa.6 that budgetary cutbacks in equipment p_u rchasing; as well as the lack of sufficient
supplies and expense monies, made it exbemely
diBlcult to adequately conduct laboratory comses.
It became more and more evident that the previous pattern of general growth which bad been
characteristic of the University since it joined'
the State system would have to be replaa!d by
growth in selected areas. An academic plan _
would have to be developed.
Words such as planning and priorities are
"trigger" words to many persons - especially in
universities - and what they trigger are apprehension and uncertainty. As noted earlier, these
qualities were already prevalent in the University
as a result of other factors. Therefore, my feeling
in 1970-71 was that to avoid aggravating these
feelings by superimposing an academic plan directly by and from my office, efforts toward
developing one would have to begin at many
levels, especially at the department and program
level. Additionally, I believed that this approach
would be consistent With the existing operational
structure and would provide sorely needed data
upon which the immediate and hard budgetary
decisi~ns dictated by financial stringency could
be made. Hence, the letter to Vice Presidents,
Provosts,. Deans, Department Chairmen, and
Program Directors, mentioned previously, was
sent in the early Fall of 1971.
The responses to thia request, in addition to
being used in draWing broadly stated University
goals, constituted an initial foundation upon
which discussions of academic priorities and.
planning .could be held. ~ discussions were
coincidental With our preparation of the selfstudy report prior to the Middle States evaluation and With development-or our Master Plan.
1bese early deliberations resulted in the aelaction
of specific areas for immediate faculty hiring and
a proposal advanced by the Academic Affairs
Vice President for what may now be referred
to as a "short-term academic (resource alloca- ·
tion) plan."
· Altbougb I realized that this loosely formed
approach migbt not produce a viable overall
plan - especially in view of my misgivings
about the institution's apparent inability to generate self-direction - -I believed that it would at
• - serve to create a University climate """""'
tive to the notion of education81 develapment
within the strictures of such a document Another
reuon for my initial doubt · was that, fo · my
"--edse. DD major University bad devel~
an operati"" plan With the decree.of 8exibility
and op8ci&amp;;ty which I desired; that is, one wbicb

�u-e

idoDtlfied IJII8!IIbiiuousy
~ In which
the University
to emol; tboee which would
be held ·-mlly ClDIIStant, and tboee whk:h
would be reduced or ellmlnated.
In "'~ this doubt was confirmed. Tbe
"abort-lenD" plan ~ bY the Academic
Affairs Vice President, as weU as other "counter·
plaus" which resulted from broadly based dis·
CUIIBions and deliberations Cll1 this topic tbrougbout the Uruversity, we"' never the beneficiaries
of non-parocbia) evaluation. Rather, they became
subjects of contention among groupe with vested
Interests. Tbe need was obvious for the Cre&amp;tioo
of a formalized process through which academic
planning could proceed; and a critical &amp;spect of
this proce&lt;s would be the extent io which it
allowed participatioo, not just by those persons
who must view the University in its parts, but
by those who can view it in its unity.
Tbe...rore, planning procedures' ·bave been
proposed&lt;4hich I believe will result in the de- _
velopment of an operational Academic Plan. The
procedure; define a process in which educatiooal
and budgetary parameters are. eStablished on a
descending· acale down to and including the department and program level. These parameters
determine the scope of a unit's specific -plan.
Simultaneously, the procedure; describe an ascending process of review in which the smaller
. , parts are joined progressively until the parts
become the whole. Vested interests are recognized and encouraged- indeed, these procedures
integrate the plans developed in response to the
program review and assessment cy~le called for
in the University Master Plan. However, in the
final analysis, the University interest will prevail.
As I stated at the beginning of this section,
the University, in the Summer of 1970, needed toregain momentum. It was my belief that to be
purposeful, this momentum needed to.be directed
toward the attainment of institutional objectives.
My personal efforts, especially during these past
few years, have been directed to this end. These
efforts, together with those of many others in
the University, have resulted in: (a ) a clear
statement of University goals; (b ) a completely
candid and thorough ·sell-study; (c) a Master
Plan which serves the purpose of goal-oriented
growth; and (d) a planning process which Should
result in an Academic Plan that accommodates
the principles of ftexibility and specificity, and
that recognizes the primacy of a unified University while providing for the needs of special
interests. I believe that all of these ·efforts have
contributed to regaining momentum and establishing an educational direction. I am aware, of
course, that one of the final products of these
. efforts- the development of an Academic Plan
- is still" to materialize.
Naturally, I am disappointed that this bas
failed to occur; however, my recent actions in
• ' regard . to reorganization and the development
of a planning process have been intended to
remedy this situation. Simultaneously, I am
aware that I can be criticized for not having
acted more sv.iftly and decisively in this aree.
Nevertbele&amp;3, I remain cohvinced that proceerlin~
In the lllllllllel'; &amp;nd at the &amp;peeJI that we did,
CCilltributed to the stability wliich we bad so
"· peinfuJJy begun to create. Indeed. I believe tbilt
we now have achieved a climate reoeptive to
aoeJ-oriented direction. The Academif P!an
wblcil is k&gt; be drawn in this atmosphere ebould
Mad .. the c:IIJl8fA*Ie to all the documents ...,
have drafted; topther they, wiU provide a con"tt'dDaiDI aolaeDoe which this Univai&amp;ity, to a
large atant, lacked.

me-

\f .
Another of my immediate concerns upon the
assumption of of!iq! was the extent to which
tension and conflict esisted between various faotions within the University and the degree to
which many persons bad apparently lost faith
in the institution. I realize that these problems
alway~ exist ih some gradation within all institutions and must be dealt with through an institution's Ongoing operations. However, the- situation at the University at •B uffalo was particularly
cjitical in. the Summer of 1970.
One of my first actions to resolve this condition owas to create an atmosphere of openness
and accountability m regard to the Office of the
Presidenl I established a well publicized schedule of office hours which would be open to any
member of the University community who desired to personally discuss any issue with me.
Later, biweekly ,Question-and-answer sessions
were carried over FM radio at which time any
questions called into the studio were answered
on the air. Periodic question-and-answer format
articles also have been published in the Reporter
to express the attitude. of the President on certain issues. All of this has been done to create
an atmosphere of openness and trust.
I also made· clear from the beginning of my
administration that I would seek the advice of
a wide spectrum of persons. This was acromplished informally through personal consultation,
and formally through the liberal use of broadly
representative committees chaned with deliberating and reporting OJ\ speci'fic issues. In general,
these reports have been published in the Reporter and discussed throughout the campus.
As a result of the report of the previously
mentioned Task Force on Governance, a special
committee was appointed to develop means by
which a system of University governance might
be established which would recognize the existence of the current individual governments (Student Association, 'Faculty Senate, etc.) and, at
the same time, provide an interface for their
effective cooperation. Subsequently, Articles of
Governance were endorsed by students, faculty ,
and professional and support staff. In 1973, the
University Assembly was created and officers
elected.
Other elected bodies, whiCh among their func·
tions serve to advise the President, include the
University's FacUlty Seriate and the Professional
Staff Senate. A Faculty Senate, in one form or
another, has been in existence at the University
for a number of years. The Professional Staff
Senate, on the other hand, is a relatively new
organization. It evolved as a result of a 'comradery that developed during the student crisis.
!The University at that time was kept functioning largely through the efforts of th&amp;e middle
level, career administrators. ~ An emerging senSe
of professionalism and a recognition by others
of the contributions this group can· make to important matters of University policy portends
well for the future of this body.
In December of 1970, after more than a
year of study and cjeli~tion, the University
Faculty Senate was reorganized. Amended bylawa replaced the "town meeting" Senate. structure with a represeotative body of epproximately
100 persons, and the first ~ting under this
new format was held in early 1971. -In my view
this representative Senate Is highly preferable ~
that which immediately preceded il It has served

as a useful sounding board and a 80illCe of advice
to me and baa demonstrioted ita ability to deliberate and aot on ~ items of concern to
the entire -academic community.
In my relationships with students, I have
attempted to encourage the development of
meaningful ties between the adminiatzation and ·
officers of the various student aasociations. These
efforts eventually resulted in the establishment
of regulallly acheduled ~t.ings of myseU and
.the Executive Committees of these &lt;&gt;rganizations.
In my judgment, the meetings bav~ · provided
necessary and valuable insights into student exPectations. They also have provided studenl•
with another means for participating resporu;ibly
in University affairs.
The working relationships established between my office and ·these student, faculty, and
staff groups have contributed -to the creation
of a~titudes of mutual trust '8Dd confidence. The
organizations themselves haVe served as effectivP.
channels for the legitimate participation of diver: e groups in the governance of the University.
This formalized participation has complemented
that which I have sought on a more infonnal
basis.
.
- -In addition to .the importance of having functioning representative bodies for the various
constituencies within the University, I believed
it was important to establish mechanisms through
which aggrieved persons, whether individually or
collectively, could have impartial attention given
to their problems.
· Although grievance -pi'QCedure; · bad existed
within the Faculty Senate, and there was a University Ombudsman, these w&lt;!re affected by two
events during the 1970-71 academic year. First,
a contractual relationship was established between the State of New York and the Senate
Professional Association. .This-contract contained
a formalized grievance procesS which superseded
the faculty grievance procedure; in all ixmtractual matters; i.e., those having to do with terms
and conditions of employmenl Further, it extended the grievance benefit to non-teaching professionals: Secondly, the Offiice of University
Ombud£man was discontinued as a result of the
decision by Gentral Administration of !)tate Uni·
versitv that State funds could no longer be used
for this purpose. This decision left students with
little access to an officially recognized means
through which grievances involving other than
student parties could be adjudicated. Therefore,
I supported student efforts to develop separate
grievance mechanisms through which the..&lt;e types
of problems could be resolved. Within the past
year, these have been established .
The effectiveness of the varioui procedures,
including. faculty ones applicable to non-mntractual matters, bas been subatantiated. For
inslance, when Alllany officials more recently
modified their earlier position regarding funding
of an Ombudsman - ip effect deciding such &amp;n
cffice could be established provided we funded
it within existing State resources- the Univer- sity cOn~us wa~=; . that this position was no
longer needed.
·
Deapite the benefits of the numerous procedures, which reduce tension and conflict within
the University by providing forums for all individuale and groups, they have served to reinforce an air of legalism which ha9 begun to
circumscribe the relationships between faculty
and students and staff and administration. Tbe
introduction of faculty and stall' unionism to the
University in 1970-71 contributed sifnillcantl.Y
to the creation of this atmosphere. The Inherent

REPORTER/A PERSONAL AND INSTITUTIONAL APPRAISAL/MAY 16, 1974/Page 6

�conllicts between the .,.,..Q.pts of traditional colleali!ility lind collective baqaining have not been
resolved; but, on the 8811111Dption tliat many of
theBe-differences c:an be modified or bridged, I
have attempted and wjJI continue to attempt to
maintain a reesonableness in which the two
concepts c:an be propedy aligned.
Tbe advent &lt;If unionism alao was a rellection
or the growing ooncem iunong many persons .
over the -"relationships between individlll!l employees and the institution. This quite proper
concem influenced the UJriversity in its very
recent development of lengthy policy statements
which ensure that .all faculty and profe&amp;~~ional
staff. are made a'Y!"" of the expectations the
institution bas 'ol them, as well as informing•
them of procedures which govern their appointment, retention, and promotion. These Policies,
established separately · for · faculty and staff,
should &amp;erY!I!· to dispel the ambiguity that can
exist in employer-employee .·relationships and
thereby contribute .to the creation of a more
harmonious atmosphere within the University,
A related action, undertaken by the University was the development ,of a comprehensive
evaluation program forcrion-teaehirlg professional
positions. -'l'he pi/IP()Se of this program is to
examine all such positions ('liS opposed to individuals) and rank each position according to
its level Df dutii!S in order to create a system of
P!lrsonnel administration which is more rational
and ensures greater employment equity. The program is under way at this writing, and we are
hopeful that the results will be acceptable to both
State University and the Division of the Budget.
If acceptance ~ we feel that SUNY oould
consider the application of such a program
throughout the system.
The most open manifestations of oonftiot and
tension bad been demonstrated in &lt;the student
disorders of late 1969 and early 1970. The crucial
question at that time was whether or not the
institution bad the capacity and the will to maintain internal order. The institution demonstrated
-that it oould. Important to this was the effective
functioning of the Hearing Commission -on Campus Diaordenl (Jiow refeJ:red to as the Hearing
Committee for the Maintenance of fublic Order).
I realized as a result of the events. preceding
m.v appointment that, in addition to giving my
strung Stt9port to the orderly · opera~on of the
H~ Commission, it also would be necessary
to make substantive changes in the nature and
image of the University's Security Foroe. ACoordingly, I moved immediately to change the
repo•ting relationship or the Security Foroe by
having it accountable to my office. A new Director of Security was appointed. Considerable attention alao was given to upgrading the caliber
of individwils serving on the Force, as well as
improving their equipment. The =ult of these
actions bas been the creation of a Security Foroe
which bas begun to display a greater profession- alism in 'Its · activities and, consequently, has
commanded moM r-e&lt;;pect within the University
community.
To further this transition, I moM recently
appointed a University-wide Committee on Internal Security. Many of their well reasoned
recolll!Dendations have already been iJnplemented, although the extent of selective arming remains to be resolved. In my view, one of the
moM impor!aJ!t recommendations to emerge from
the committee dealt with the creation of a
University-wide Student Judiciary. From this
~tion- and from genuine student enthusiasm, which I supported - bas emerged a

Student-wide Judiciary through which .students
may now responsibly exe.o&amp;e regulatory authority in many cases.
••
As noted earlier irf this document, one of the.
most significant factors in eroding the faith of
faculty and s~ in this University was the many
undelivered promises made to them in regard
to new facilities _on th.e Amherst Campus. Therefore, I . Wllftted to move swiftly to begin construction which bad been' long delayed. This
"eQUired CQnsiderable peMOnal effort in developing or improving cooperative and productive
relationships with &lt;the many State and local
agencies involved. in this immense undertaking.
Planning bad been protracted. Inllation had oontinued to depreciate the real worth of the $650
million available. The time had come to aot.
Although some limited site-preparation bad taken
place, it was not until the Summer of 1970 'that
construction of the first building began at Amherst. Presently, an approximate $190 million
bas come under -oontract for Amherst Campus
development; and this year we hope to increase
this .amount, including both new and reappropriated funds for construction, by $84 million. .In
fact, the Governor's Residence Complex and · the
John Lord O'Brian Hall ( Law and Economics)
have been comp leted and were occupied by · the
University in September of 1973.
These occupancies and the continuing construction progr ~s now visible on the Amherst
site have helped re~dndle an enthusiastic spirit
among University pe.sons. Instead of its being
an albatross, the new campus is becoming a
source of renewed faith in what the j.nstitution
can be. This positive atmosphere ~ been bolstered further, particularly for our . Health Sciences, as the University finally has started development. of its South Campus Master Plan.
This Plan will provide for an orderly and University-directed rehabilitation and oonversion of
the Main Street Cam ~ us into a center for the
Health Sciences. One early example of this t'80sition .is the conversion that began this year of
the University's Tower Dormitory into space for
the Health Sciences Library, as well as for the ·
. oonsolidation ·of certain departments of the
Health Sciences. This aotion was ·t aken as an
immediate =ponse to accreditation reports submitted by evaluation teams ·repre£enting the
· Commission on Higher Education of the Middle
States AsSociation and the Association of American Medical Colleges: The reports stated that
the School's accreditation was threatened by
irulde&lt;J..uate fa,cili t jes, most notice8bly in the
Library- area.
The. criticism in these accreditation reports
made o!he!'!'l dramatically ·aware of a condition
which 1his University bas known existed for several years-not just within Health Sciences but
throughout the institution. That is, on. the average 1he Univemity bas been ·a pproximately 35%
overoccupied. Moreover, scattered .entals that
· accoW.t for a goodly part of our available space
have created serious dislocation problems in
University operations. Fu·r ther·m ore, "usable
space" bas not necessarily been good space;
mere figures do not oonvey the faot that many
- basement o8ices and •ClasSrooms -have litUe light,
low ceilings, too much heat.: and infrequent yentilatioo. By-any reasocuible stand8rds, this space
would be declared inadequate. It is to be recognized. that these l:ilnditions have bad a demomlizing effeot upon all members ot the UniversitY,
~ as have protracted diScussiCIDS and del8ys in obtaining .Affiliation Agreements with local . hospitals, 'and in -..ring ~te and timely

Page 7/REitORlCR/A PfRSONAL AND INSTIJUTIONAL APPRAISAL/MAY 16, 1974
ci-

fu!tding for A.mhe!8t .project&amp;. Obviously, a primary concern of this administnltioD .;... even .in
view of the . Amberat - Campus progress- bas
been and will oonlinue to be to cope with the
effects of these problems.
Another conoern throughout my administratitn, and-one which I feel .relates imPortantly to
,the reestablishment of faith in .&lt;this inStitution,
~ been a · commitment to social justice. The
subject of my ;first major addn!ss after beooming
President was "Equal Opportunity at the Univeraity at Buffalo.'' I used that occasion to announce a reorganiz&amp;.tion and expansioo of campus groups charged with equal opportunity responsibilities, noting that the Univeraity bad to
extend this ooncept throughout the .student, faculty, and professional staff ranks. In the interim,
I have establisbed and appointed an Oflioe of
Equal Opportunity and its Director; a President's
Committee on Minority Faculty and Staff Re-cruitment, with staff; a President's Committee
on the Recruitment and Promotion of Women,
with staff; and a President's Panel wbich revi"""'
sean:b. procedures employed in faculty recruit.tneDL

.

.

,. ~· - -

The University operates a number of pro-

grams at the undergraduate level for disadvan-

taged studenlji. Administrative changes, including new reporting relationships, the appointment
of perSonnel, and the !'D&amp;Ctment of operational
guidelines, have been made to strengthen these
programs. Also, special' recrurtrnent efforts have
been made by the professional schools to increase
their enrollment of WODl&lt;ll 8l!d minority students. It is to be noted that in many of these
and other efforts of this type, the University
often bas iound it necessary to provide funding
from its endowment in lieu of support from State
and Fedeml sources.
These existing activities have been incorporated in a formalized Equal Employment Opportunity and Affinnative Action Program which the
University is presenUy oompleting in response
to State University guidelineS. Tbe baaic thrust
for this program was contained in a Presidential
statement - "In Pursuit of EXcellence" -pub-,
lished by the University in the Spring of 1973.
This statement clearly outlines the University's
oommitment to Equal Opportunity and fixes upon
various offiCers the responsibilities involved in
that oommitment.
The pe.oentage of black students at all levels
of study, 7.6% in 1972, plaoed this ·institution
ahead of any other Within SUNY and sixth in
the National Aasociation of Land-G'8Dt Colleges
and Uruversities' sur.vey of .Dember ~on&amp;
(In 1973, this figure bas risen to 8%.) Cwrently,
blac;k undergraduate enrollment at the Univer-sity bas increased from an estimated 4.% in
1969-70 to 9.7'7., Even ""'re impressive. have
been gains made in the Scbools of Medici!l8 and
Law, where .black enrollment-is now 12.8% and
11.3% respectively. Excluding the full-time qual- -.
ilied faculty ranks, blacks now constitute 3.8%
of our full-time faculty; combined minorities,
8.7.% In the' report 'Teaching Faculty in
Academe: 1972-73,'' Alan E. Bayer indicated
that the pe.oentage of faculty members nationally wbo are black in 2.9%. A University of Maryland at College Park telephone survey in 1973
of 16 large state uni\'ersity _campuses and two
state university sys:em&amp; indicated a black faculty P""""""' of 2.2%.
Th&lt;lse gains have not been made without difficulty. For instance, the University had -fed
from 1968 to 1971 under the concept ol an
"incentive pool" in which faculty lines were

�priori J'e9eM!d for minorities. I became increasingly ~ tbat auch a CODCI!pt was neither
·1ep11y nor morally justifiable. I therefore aboliohed the procedure and supplemented it with a
faculty recruitment """"""' which I believe inII

corporates the C&lt;IIICI!Pt of Equal Employment
Opportunity as well as Affirmative Action. There
..,.,tinues to be some support on campus for the
in&lt;entive pool concept, and the conflict be~
these two positions may be extended~ However,
sui&amp;quent to my detennination, "Albany" bas
ruled that in&lt;entive pools are, indeed, illegal.
Other difficulties have involved the question _
• of funding in the face of reduced government
support for the educationally disadvantaged student The allocation of increasing amounts of
financial aid to. this type of stu&lt;_lent distorts the
total financial aid program at the University and
constitutes a problem which must be solved.
The question of dUal academic standards also
bas ~ raised. In this respect, my view ha.•
been that, while students may
admitted to
the University under a variety Or programs, no
. studenC or students will be done · the disservice
· which resplts from the- existence and tacit acceptanCe of a double staiidard for graduation.
Finally, higber education is no different from
other 5e&amp;D!eDts of aopety in that racial tensioru;
have been and rontinue to be displayed. The
easing of these tensions bas been a constant
concern of mine, and I believe that the attitudes
and actions of this administration 'have more
often been JUDeliorating rather than aggravating
-although I am aware that actions taken in the
best interests of the University are not always
viewed with equanimity by those with more restricted intents.
The items in this section have been used as
examples of some of the major issues which recur
in the ongoing administrative and academic Ope&lt;ations of the University. They are by no means
all-inclusive. For example,. attention could have
been given to the progress the University bas
made in the resolution of problems associated
with its Libraries; to the creation of an Office of
Teaching Effectiveness and Evaluation; to the ·
specification of a new School of Health Education; to the great attention which bas been given '
to the Colleges; to the development of an automated system of student registration and a Management Information System; to the curtailment
of 'foothall; and to the encouragement and involvement of this University in the development
of the C&lt;~~~CeBt of regionalism - for both public
and private institutions. In these instances, as
well •as tboee which have been discUssed, it b8s
been my conviction that an admi:nistiation which
approacheS operational issues with openness and
dire&lt;:tness can usually act upon these in a
ma'nner :which heli&gt;l; ·maintain confidence in the
institUdOn.
~
.
At times, I have been criticized by other
" officers of the University for becoming too involved in- onroing operations in their areas. There
is .Orne. merit to ·thiS criticism- certainly from
their J?Oints.of view. However, n;~y s):yle of leadership;• aS' well as m:y cance;&gt;tPie;idential ni-~
spc;nsil;lility, ill one which requires personal involyement not just in bf'OIId issues of educational
policy bu~ in the narrower concerns of rvutine
affairs. M~ belief is that this style of leadership ·
has been ~; - that in addition to rege:terating' faith ·in the institution, it has served to
~blish · the authority of the · Office of the
·. PreSident, and bas, intioduced in a· small but
· yet meapm,fUI way an added degree of human.-. nes8 lo the eatire. operation.

oo

or

\II
These were• the broad problems I identified
upon assuming office: to rebuild a cooperative
University-Community relationship; to create a
functioning · administration; to define an educational direction for the University; to reduce
tensions among and between student, faculty,
and administrative factions; to ·r&lt;HlStablish confidence in the institution; to move swiftly toward
the construction of the Amherst Campus; and to
·re-establish the leadership and authority of the
Office of the President Although not all of these
problems have been solved, I believe that progress and even modest amounts of success have
been realized in the resolution of most of them.
During the next five years, presuming I continue in office, I will have to give increased
attention to the broader issues of education,
especially to the manner in which this institution
;will respond to these issues as we create an
academic plan within the broad parameters of
educational direction already established. A
grea!P.r amount of my attention will have to be
directed to the identification and consideration
or such issues rather than to organizational and
operations! matters, as has been the case in the
past. I believe that I can do this in good conscience now that relative stability has been
achieved.
It is already apparent that one of the major
issues this University must address .is the relatiollShip of public and private higher education
-or more precisely, the relationship of public
institutions of higher education to private insti- tutions of higher education. Once the current
economic situation has stabilized and enrollment
patterns in higher education have again become
predictable within reasonable bounds, it is likely
·that the number of public as well as private
institutions, as we have known them, will have
decreased. Others may emerge, but these new
ones will-have more specialized and transformed
roles. At that point- and the groundwork musi
be laid now-it will be critical for the public
and private sectors to have overcome the isolationist tendencies· which have characterized
them in the pasl arid embark upon an educational
philosophy of interdependence which enhances
U1e strengths each sector epitomizes. The most
difficult problems to be dealt with in the charting of this new direction will be the extent to
which each institution will be willing to forego
an amount qf its autonomy; .the ·extent to which
the desirable aspects of the individual characters
of esch can be protected; and the extent to
which educational opportunities at all institutions can be kept financially available to the
public. Solutions to these and other questions
will have particular . import to our University,
since it is the major public and only COIDP.rehensive institution in a region replete with private, denominational ~o- and four-year colleges.
A second isstie, an\i. one not unrelated to the
p,eceding, is. ·whether or not thiS University can
continue· to grow in stature. Although atlaiitment
of our projected physics! go:iwth appCars ·io pose
little TeSJ. difficulty, an incre&amp;l!l'd stature will be
achieved- only by making )lailirui choices. Some
existing pro;:n.rns will require pi:uning or perhaps
· elirniruition to acquire resources needed for ilnprovement of imPortant current programs and/or
to facilitate the introduction of new ones directed
toward the solution .o f specific societal problems. .
A third .inter-related issue is that of deter-

,

mining this institution'~ response to the thua far
incompatible phi!OBOphies of egalitarianism and
elitism.. In other words; to what extent and in
what ways "!lJl the current of egalitsrianismto which this University as a public institution
is committed- be integrated with the simultaneous desire of the Center-as a major graduate institution-to offer programs of the highest
academic calibre which will produce those refined
intelle¢is O!Qtlired for the continued development
and vitality of the state and nation.
Other issues involve the ability or higher education and this University to creatively develop
and adopt new methods and patterns of educational delivery. This will include the application
of available technology to both teaching and
learning; the expansion of the presently restrictive operating time frame,. so that formal learning
is more readily available ·at the convenience of
the prospective consumer; the adaptation of academic programs to oolf-&lt;letermined intervals of
learning; the greater integration of learning and
life experience; and the enlargement of the spatial envirOnment in which education occurs.
. 1:-l&lt;!overtheles:;, . the !Jniver;;i.ty, \1\hi!e qevelopin~
new methods and patterns of educationril delivery, must bear in mind that one of its moot
effective teac;hing devices is that of demonstration. That is, the institution and its faculty must
serve for students and the COmmlJ!lity at large
· as the highest examples of the 'scicial and intellectual attainments which man can achieve in
an open and orderly society.
The governance of the campus society has
. traditionally been grounded in collegiality. 'ThiS
has depended more upon inf9rmal g roup and
individual relationships rather than organizational relationships. However, one result of the
attempts of institutions to respond to the factional conflicts of the 1960s was the codification
of the-oe previously informal relationshipS into ·
fonnal organizations and procedures. This situation, coupled with the advent of unionism and
a propensity to utilize fonnal mec!tanisms for the
resolution of all dil!erences, bas created an air
of legalism which bas emded the feeling of collegiality. A real guestion must now be raised, in
fact, as to whether there are not at the State Universjty of New York at Buffalo too many organizations and processes involved in governance.
Another problem facing this institution, and
undoubtedly most State institutions of higher
education, ·is the development of a system of
incentives which will be necessary for institutions to successfully respond to many of the
issues facing higher education. These incentives
;must encourage effective and efficient management. Unfortunately, it is all too often the esse
today that such responsible management is dealt
with in a punitive fashion, while inis-management
.·
and non-management are reWarded.
It is my fundamental belief that an institution is no better or worse than the people who
compose it. Therefore, the resolution of these
issues and, indeed, -the academic future of ·our
University, rests upon Our ability to attract faculty, students, and. stsff of a caliber equal to or
gieat.er than Our aspirations. Moreover, we must
have the vision and conviction to create and
maintain an atmosphere which will challenge
individuals to test the limits of their intellectual
· and personal develo_pment. Only an institution
with this academic vitality will be able to relain
the best of its minds. As President, I am committed to the creation of a · University which
embodies these principles. -ROBERT L. KETI'ER

REPORTER/ A PERSONAL AND INSTITUTIO~AL APPRAISAL/MAY 16, 1974/Page 8

�5.

GR&amp;uclEI(,

..,141174

Y Se~te Drafts. Student Record Policy Guidelines
atuilent
Dew,_

EDI1'41J'B NOTE: TIN lollDu1iAI
,.,.._ for "'''M
of
· c_,.,. Polley- on 111e Cola/ideltliality
_, . , _ of 8ttldent IWeonli' we,.,
, _ ty ... SUNY 8_,. C o 011 , . . , . , Aflain. Tlwir "in-' """

*

.,.,._ ty
Senau at iD .--m
.-tial GC ,.,.,_ (Reporter, May 9).
~ "' - " indWidiMJl camp,.
,_ ,...-..1.
- n of
1M
l&gt;y 1M &amp;nat• and d tud&gt;_ _, .........-lation lo 1M CMnc&lt;llor for Uwir _,,._ will .,...,. lour.

,..lina F,_.,

The~~ below· are

!JOl a lilld ~~ J:!;

:fii ~
campus in creatinj! a
records- policy which effective~t

- tbe needs of the
~-prvvidee
the deaired
proteCtion to ita atudeata.

inslitution
degree of

risht abauld be c:aniully dellned. The
aeue of ~ wbleh tbla pllldice

• enhances • impor1aDt 111111 ................
of the JUDd ol relatiaaoblp
tion ofllilber education attaiQpta .W
maintain ·with ita atudeata. Of courae;
aome n!CIIt'da, e.g.,. lmlllcripiiJ 111111
admilllions data, C8IIDOt lea"" the phy:
sio!al conbol of per8CIIne) responsible
for maintaining their iritegrity. Other
reoords, e.g., c:ounaeling -and Malth
data, '~'QUire prolesional interpretstion add must not be examined unless
this condition is mel Still, 111111 to the
extent poasible, studeuta should bave
knowledge of what has been "tecorded
about them and additionally, ·the opportunity of aftecting their own file
by adding or petitioning to delete' information.
to Student-.
Persons (by tiUe or class of employment) authorized access to student records must be identified specifically for esch Clllegory of information. Access to student files by part.
time employees, particularly student
assistants, must not be overlooked. It
might be helpful to consider the following categories in determining acoess to information:
·
1. Campus Personnel
a. Fik Cus~ian(~ )-The perso!'
or persons bavmg prunsry respoD61bility for the maintenance of specific
student records.
b. Other Peisonnel A!U'!arized Acc~ss-;-A~ should be ~~~~ to spec!fic mdtvJduals for specific . inf?rmali~n and should not neoessanly tmply
dll'ect_ access !? the whole file in which
such Information may be kepl
. 2. Student Subject-Whenever pass1ble, student records should be "open"
to the student subjects themselves.
There will, however, be certain confidential files not open to the student
and other records maintained tbst re·q u i r e inte~iate intell!"!'tstion.
Smce staff time and supervwon are
typicaUy demanded in these instances,
appointments to examine or discuss

;nr;;at;,:

D.-

II!IIDOida policy.
1. C011«pt of Corumt-UDder ...,...

mal or routiDe circumstaDcea, infermatiao oootained in 8ludent fi1al

abould not be re1euec1 ..nu-t the
OIJD8IlDt of"the atudeniB ooocemed. AI·
though the institution must uae student II!IIDOida to fulfill ita educational
functions, the studenta concerned
should oonbol the
of the in- ·
formation contained
. therein, at least
tbst pel'IIODII! infonnation which they
bave been requited to provide regarding themaelves and their families.
Local policy should take into account
the need for members of the prolessional staff to exercise their judgement
in emergency situations or wben the
student is unavailable. 'The reasons
upon Which such a decision is made
·must be weU documented. Student
permission to reI ease information
should be explicit in nature, but may
be either related to individual requests or more broadly related to a
class or type of release; e.g., prospec.
live employers, other educational institutions, government agencies, etc.
Whenever possible, an "implied release" policy should be avoided, especially in the case of lists containing
stu&lt;lent names, addresses and/or telephone numbers.
2. Metlwd of Release-There are
three methods for releasing informalion-by telephone, by mail and in
'person. Only ·"public" information
:\'~~gl:".::::! ::f'eJ,.~:r::::
stsff may elect .to divulge additional
information to o the r professionals
when its communicatio!l is clearly consistent with tlie student's or community welfare. Information released
by mail should only be in response to
a request made oil official letterhead.
Identification should be required prior
to the release of any information in
person.
3 _ Record of Release--Certain files .
should require ,. notation for the record whenever student information is
released. The . foUowing questions
should be answered: a Individual or. .
organization to whom the information
was released; b. Nature of the information released; c. Date of release;
d. Indication, preferably in writing,
tbst the . student's permission to releaseb tbat specific information was
0 tsined; e. Name and tiUe of employee making the release.
4. lnformatwn Requested for Research Purposes--RA&gt;quests to use stu.
dsearchentrecost!osu\odr thebe· suP111l".15"b
tool there1
1biel:t
same considerations of confidentiality
as tbst for other requests. Information.
should never be released without student consent unless the research to
be undertaken is clearly consistent
with institutional purpooe and anonymity is maintained. This means,
of. course, tbst name or social security
number may not he released. A committee should be identified to consider aU informational requests lor
research purposes. Graduate students
may be given information under the
above conditions only' if they are under a faculty member's direct supervision. With individual student consent, identification may be provided.
5. Release Under SUbpoena or Othu
Lawful Court order-The president
or an appropriate v i c e • presideot
s h o u I d be oontscted immediately
whenever an institutional representstive is served with a subpoena or
other court order requiring the release of student information. Also,
camj&gt;us policy should stipulate tbat
the institution's legal counsel be noli6ed immediately. Once the institution
has determined that ~ subpoena or
court order is lawful, particular care
must be taken to provide only the
specific information requested a n d
that the manner of relesae indicated '
in . the subpoeoa or court onler is
· scrupuiOUIIiy , "'-rved. The student
· or students w"'-e records are releaaed
under the compu1aion of a lawful subpoena or OOilK order sbould be noli6ed of inStitutional compli8Doe immediately, alt.hauch their
• 'on
is not requited in this insta~

release

A. C8lllpoles ..,. All lnfonuation relating
to atudenta
111111 -mtained by a campus should
be assiped to categories defined by
Ieve1s of NCOrd sensitivity. It is suggested that the uae of t&amp;e following
desiJnations be considered.
1. Public. Information in this category typicaUy conlltms a student's
attendance at the coUege or university
center and is generally available" to
· anyone wbo ~ il Included in
this category lllll!ht be: Name, Dates
of Attendance, Department, School
· and/or Colleg·e Attended, Degrees
Earned.
.
2. Rf!Btricted- Information in this
category is available only to authorized campus personnel and, with permission, to pettons or agencies outside the institution as designated by
the studenl I.ncluded here might be:
Date and Place of Birth, Parents'
N a m e s, Identification Photographs,
Social Security Number, "Current Address, Marital S t a t u ~ Transcript,
Class Schedule, Admissions Data ( unless provided with the understanding
tbst this information will be maintained as coillidential), Disciplinary
Actions, !not sUbstance), Withdrawal
ce~ar~~~~':!~- stuand Readmission Information, Q.Iass
dents bave bonafide needs for informs-·
Rank, Honors Awarded (unle&lt;s aition concerning their children. This
r e ad y published), Membership in
is not to suggest, however, tbst it is
Campus Organizations (including ponecessarily desirable or even apprositions of leadership) , Bursar's Recpriate
to sbare any and all student
ords.
information wi~ parents based upon
3. Priuate. Information in this catetheir
parental
status exclusively. It is
gory is the ID09t sensitive and should
recommended t bat information be
be assigoed to one of two sub-categiven parents only with student congories--,conlidential l&gt;y instit~t~iDn or
sent or, if this is impooisible, at least
prwikged by law. Access to and use
of this information should be limited
with their knowledge. In an educational context, the issue of parental
only to the authorized personnel asstatus and its effect upon . the release
signed to those offices wbere the recof student information is sometimes
ords are generated and maintained.
only complicated by the legal designsIrlcluded in tbeae sub-categories might
. lions, minor, emancipated minor .and
be:
adull These legal considerations may
a. Confidential By l mtitutwn: ·
often be outweighed by a more apCounseling Records Not Protected By
propriate basis for. decision making;
J aw, Financial A i d s Information,
i.e., whether or not the parental rePlacement Files (There is considerquest for information is consistent
able oonboversy in New York as weU
with the institution's philosophical/
as in other states regarding the coneducational relationship with its stufidential--Status of placement folders
denta. In short, the legal rights of
including professional references and
parents are neither absolute nor a
student teaching evaluations.), Intermatter which can be disregarded enview Records.
tirely. For interpretive purposes, an
b. Privikged By Law: Communicaappropriate member o1 the professiontion with and records maintained by
ai stsff should _be present when inprofessionals with bonafule, legal privformation is shared with parents.
ileged status; ·e.g., physicians, attorWhenever possible, the student should
neys, clinical psychologists and ·the
be present alao. Again, an appointclergy.
ment to emmine or discuss a student's
B• . _ _ of Student record may be required.
One of the ri.ai difficulties many
4. Other Stwknt.s-Very few files,
campll8&lt;ll eq&gt;erience in developing an
if any, should be open to other stu. effective student records inanagement
dents. Whenever practicable, this same
program is the .many locations where
restrictive attitude should limit access
original and duplicate files are mainto stud t fil b tud t
I
tained. It is important that there be
5.
Pub~;'d,!"!!'P~
a comprehensive inventory of student
information, the- public has no inreeords being maintained and where
berent right to information regarding
they are located before policy con·
- individual SUNY students_
siderations are made. . . .
E. -of Student - .
C. - - , to c:-, Contrlbuta to ond
An effeCtiVe student records policy,
one
tbat
protects
the privacy rigbta of
It is stmngly recommended tbst
students, is only ., good-as the instifoUowing the thorough record identitution's
release
policy.
There are five
fication procedure suggested shove,
areas of conoem to be considered
esch campus determine specifically
~--=-•a
re1eue
policy
when
d
who, by title or class ol employment,
pertsining~~t records: (1)
is permitlled to add to or delete from
conastt
for
release,
(2)
~
ol
esch claasillcation of student record
release, (8). record of what has been
on file. It is further recommended
rel...-1 and to whom, (4) releaae foe-F . - - . - onci Qlopaoltlon
tbst an ancillary procedure be adoptresesrch purposes, 111111 (5) tbe reReconll
.
ed which wiU 8II8Uie a sludenrs knowJesse of infonilation under tbe OOill·
Carelul -lion DUll be 'ven to
ing that 1101118tbing has been either
pulsion
of
a
subpoena
or
Other
court
the
many
factors
involved
in
added to or deleted from the file.
order Except for "pubbic" records,
of records -mtanance, .-.tion and
final dispooition. 'l1ie Records ManeaCh ·of tbeae five , _ must be examlned prior .to die adoption of a · agement section of the SIGle u..u-and the procedure for exerciaing this

T:;

~--

of-

tbe~~~~f=t ~~-

£: ..-

~ N-

Yri , . _ , _ Jl__, ·

be eamlDed liar ita ........

bility. Record dlonnal+iftn ldilidaiM

• 1111118~tor .-aple,
in tMt ~
.
1. IUct&gt;rU Jf~
ic, diaciplinaiJ', flaacial, .....ua.J,
PSYCi&gt;oloDcal. ........U.. 111111 ...,.
m.iot inform8tiou
be ftled in
sud&gt; a 'III8Y that - - to cme ..._.
not permit UDIIUtborUai - - to another. All ol tbe abcMoe -.Ia IIDII.
~ oChen be -;m.;;;;,;;;
in Ioc:bd Illes for ........,. of - ' t y .
In addKioD, m.:r-1 ~ will
result if a separata, locbble ......, «
......, is provided foe- 1he alnlqe ol
tbeae aensitive n!OOI'da.
2. ColrlplliB ~ized systems for data alnlqe 8Dd
retrieval must be deeigned to,m.ue
their compliance with the- aame polici&lt;11 relative to the caa&amp;denliallty and
relesae of student l'8CIII'd, wblcb be followo!d by olber ~
There are dilferina ~ involved
when considering. the~. &amp;&lt;&gt;
"""" to, security of 111111 uJti-a destruction of oomputerimd data. But
the basic regti)atory need is the aame.
Two primaly problem ......,. to be ex~red~~
sys..

~

........a

(this~.

co;;:::ter

has~-.

"!""""'

""""em
""""""'~1Y
more compl~ "!' remote ter;minsis are
added to existing centmlized bani-

==f~J:d~toof~sep-

which may be oontrary to~~
of separateness stated in Section F-1.
Additionally technical documentation
of computer' records. must be maintained in order to describe file &lt;:On·
tents and prevent unauthorized access.
3. OffU:ial Versus Priuate Records
-Ounpus personnel maintain private
as well as official records_ Even if it
were considered desirable, it would
be impossible to prevent the uae of
these infonnal records. It is important
that the campus hold individuals ,..,.
sponsible for any consequence occurring as a direct result of their main-

~~~W:~~t

governed by the same policies as the
institution's ollicial files.
4. Active and Inactive Records Many student reoords have both an
active and an inactive life. It is, therefore, necessary to determine the Jeogtb ~of time a record is to be maintained
in either an active or inactive status.
Inactive files may be centrali2ll!d for
storage purposes, but must be Irept
separately within common storage.
Security should be such tbst access to
one type of inactive record wi11 not
permit access to any other.
5. Destruction of Records-With a
very few exoeptions, student records
should not be preserved beyond their
usefulness to the institution or the
individual. It is necesasry, therefore,
to establish clear time limit&amp; specifically related to esch type of record;
i.e., bow long it remains active, inactive and when it sbould be desboyeci
G. Monltottnc Publlclzlnc • -. ~

Once established, a student reoords
system must be commuaUy monitored
It is aJao important tbat tbe campus
' community, particularly sludenta and
newly employed faculty ·and atslf, be
informed of the institution's policy
governing the maintenance of student
records and the seriousneas of violalions of the policy.
1. A.WiM&gt;ry Committee-It is~•
therefore, tbst esch campus COIISider
establishing a Student Records Ad·
Committee. The membership
;;{"'~ committee should include
resentstives of the student body,
faculty, and the administmtive sW!.
Appropriate responsibiJitie&amp; milbt inelude the periodic review of established policy, the ooosideration of studeut ~ to add to or d e I e t e
-terial from their file, an unusual
~ to uae student records fat
reaearch purposes, the • .wn... ta pubu..:-'-- o1 the instit:uiiim's records
_p;;u;;;" and the _consideration of alJeaed violations of said JJOiicy.
2. Ad...W.Il'olion - ln older. to
monitor the student ,records policy,
prinwy admini.otmtive ._,.;bility
abauld be Ulliped to a """"'-of tbe
~ olaf!. This person, with
Cl8IIJIIIl8-wid authority, would serve •
the focal point for consideration of
(C-.1
7, t»L I)

":t

on-

�• ., II, IP14

6

Kaiser Aclins

~~

Cites 6 Students

LAJICiEsr

INSTITUTIONS
,... UnlvMII;J of 'Mew YOitt ..188,430

=: =..t·.
Cit1

~

Of New YOiit .... 126,412

~:::=:.:: :::

Un~ of Caralino ..
1-no UIIMisitJ ....................
UnhlenltY OfT- ............, ....
UnhlenltY Of Moryloncl -···
.
UnhlenltY of Illinois ..... ...... ·Ollie) ,... UnhlenltY -· .... . . .. ..

40,966

30,9116
25,979

24,436
21,560
20,394

LAIIOESI' CAMPUSES

t.onllnli ....

In UR Position

MiciiiiD - · E8ll
20,328
Clt1 UnhlenltY. ·~ .. .... 111.569
Ohio ..... Columbus ........ ..... 18,4815
City Unlwnlt1, Hunt.r .............. 17,1526
City Un-.llr,
17,228
r ..... Austin ..................... 16.466
M i n -. Twin C - ....... e ... 15,909
Mlryllnd,
Pork .......... , .. 15,197
Wisconsin, Mlcllson ............ ..... 14,758
Woyne - · Dotn&gt;lt .................. 14,583

o.- ......... ..

Col'-

TOTAL ENIIOU.MENT
FALL 1973
LARGEST INSTITUTIONS •

University of Now York . 384,899
City University of Now York . 241,738
UniverSity of Colifomlo .. .......... 147,355
University of Wisconsin .......... 137,749
University of North Comlina .... 90,454
University of TeXAOS ................ :. 72.874
lndlono University . ................ 68,869
. Ponnsylvanlo State University : . 65,541
University of Minnesota
. 65,237
University of Illinois ....... , .... 59,733

LARGEST CAMPUSES

Olllo State, Columbus ........... ....47,268
Michigan State, Ent Lensing ....41,649
Minnosoto, Twin 'Cities ........... _ 41,476
Texas, Austin ............................40,611
Wisconsin, Madison ..••........... ...35,986
Michigan, Ann Arbor ... - .............35,149
IUinolo, Urblno.Chempoign ..... 34,651
Washingto~. Seottle _ ... ...... • 34,524
City University, Bmoklyn College 34,382
MI'Y.Jincl, Colleae Pork .......... 33,399

WNYPI~G R~ps

Area Druggists.

The Weotein New York Public Interest Research Group t WNYPIRG)
has~ a report c:barlini18 -Erie
County pbarmaciata with "lax babits
and inattention lo danaaroua druc
combinaliono that milht harm conGRADUATE ENROllMENT
·SUJDem."
•
~
FALL 1973
"Not one of tbe 18 pbarmacista BID'LARGEST .INSTITUTIONS
LARGEST CAMPUSES
veyed warned a WNYPJRG researchUniversity of california ...•...... 44,986 Michigan, Ann Arbor .
------~---- 14, 516
er that the druas she boucbt would be
State University of New York ... 38,428 Colifomio, Los Angeles ............. 11,101
harmful if bWn tocetber," Myndi
City Univen;ity of New York ..... .32,310 Wisconsin, Madison _____ ....... 10,751
Luber, ·project director, • claimell.
Y"Jddisb, JiJaac B. Sinaer'a and SboUniversity of WiscOnsin .... ____ 20,771
Ohio State, Columbus ............. 10,723
lom Aleic:bem'a mother Ioupe, will be
"Worse, 13 of tbe 18 mislabeled the
Indiana University .
. .... 17,573 Minnesota, Twin Cities ..... . _. 10,.089
ollered for the fimt time at U/B in
p,_,nption druc 90 that if the patient .
University of Michigan ....
·.. 16,227 Wayne State, Detmit . .. .............10,016
September. Inlzoduction lo Yiddish
- had ~ adverse reaction, the physician
University of North Comlina .... 15,372
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh .. .. ...... 9,498
. will be 1aught by Dr. Phillip F. Veit,
would be unable to tell which drug
. prot_. in the Department ol GerUnM!rsity of Illinois ................ 14,649 california, Berkeley
·- ..... 9 ,170
had been p,_,nbed," Ms. Luber also
University of Minnesota
.. i3,098
Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
.. 8,871
manic and Slavic.
criticized pharmacists for not keeping
University of Missouri
12,799
Indiana, EUoomington __ . ~--- ..... 8,405
By making the course available, the
recorda of tbe 'drugs they dispersed.
Department not. only hop5 lo stimu"Only 2 of the 18 pharmacists 'mainlate ethnic interest in the languqe
tsined patient profiles," she said.
and-tbe rich civilization and literature
WNYPIRG conducted its research
to which it gave birth, but also in~
by sending a volunteer lo each of 18
lo serve 'students in linguistics who
· area drug stores to' purchase Digoxin,
.may find.it a rewardinc UperieDCe lo
a cardiae · stilnulant; ' wiilely'"used by
examine Yiddish 88 another essentialBuJWo hospitals and ph:tsicians. At
ly Gennanic 1anguqe which under· tbe same- time the researcher asked
fof tbe eold remedy Dristan. 0n ·the
went ita own, unique developmenL ..
According lo Dr. Veit, 75 1o 85 ~
Drislan label is the warning, "indic:ent ol Yiddish is a variation of Ge'i=viduals with high blood pressilre, diatending higher education ;_,;.titutions
. Enrollment at state univemities and
man; the -remaininJ influences are borbetes, beart or thyroid disease should
land-grant colleges neared the three
in Fall 1973.
rowed from Hebrew, Slavic or tbe
only us.e 88 directed by physicians."
million mark in Fall 1973, increasing
Despite early predictions of wideDespite this clear warning, no pharapproximately three per cent over
spread decreases in enrollment, only
macist said a word and one assured
26 NASULGC institutions reported
Fall 1972.
came relatively late in. its development
the researcher not lo worry about the
overall decreases. Seventy-four indiData from 126 of the 130 member
combination. ·
and the 1anguqe did not become
vidual campuses showed decreases, ininstitutions of the National Associawidely used by tbe educated segments
"The conclusion of this study " Ms.
tion of State Univ,10rsities and Landcluding some individl'lal campuses of
of aociety until tbe 19th century, Veit
Luber said, 4'is that oonsumei-s are
Grant Colleges CNASULGC) , repreinstitutions which had an overall ensays.
senliog 357 individual campuses,
rollment increase. At tbe same time,
!!ei"g protected by tbe p.resent
showed a fall enrollment of 2,9l1,219
42 member institutions had increases
The WNYPIRG study is one of a
compared with a 1972 enrollment of
that were the same or greater than
series of bealth related studies being
2,827,645, an increase of 2.96 per cent.
the total NASULGC enrollulent inconducted by the New York Public
This was a greater increase than the
crease of 2.96 per cenL
Interest Research Group ( NYPIRG) .
2.43 per cent enrollment rise reported
Institutions experiencing decriases
NYPIRG is a non-profit, non-partiDr. ~G. B~,d~
by these institutions in Fall 1972, but
cited less interest in college attensan research and advocacy organizaol tbe Sc:bool of Management, has
the rate of growth was smaller . than
dapce as the primary ·r eason "for ention working on a number of .consumbeen elected lo tbe Board of Directors
tbe 3.9 per cent increase reported for
rollment drops. Thirty-four individual
er, environmental, equal ~rtunity,
ol tbe Ameriam Assembly of Colleall institutions of higher education in
campuses mentioned this as- a factor
giate Schools ol Business (AACSB) .
and government ·aooountobility 'iMues.
Fall 1973, according 1o preliminary
contributing lo smaller student bodies.
AACSB is an organization of underCopiee of this study are available
data released by the National Center
Financial problems were Ji8ted by 24
for 25 cents from WNYPIRG, Bmt 70,
for Educational Statistics (NCES ).
graduate 4:!~uate institutions
campuses 88 accounting for enrollHall.
_
Norton
engapd in
and management
NASULGC institutions, represenliog
ment declin"'l.. These included: 14
education. It also llf!rYI!6 88 tbe accredthe nation's major public universities
campuses which cited higher charges
iting bod for all ecboola of business
and land-grant colleges, enrolled 30
as a prohibitive facto.r, nine which .
in lhe
per cent of the 9,662,763 students atlisted tbe general state of tbe"economy
as a reason and one institution which
mentioned
the reduction in financial
SfATE UNIVERSITY Of NEW YORK AT BUFfALO LIBRARIES
aid.
of -._ S4lmmor SosSions." Moy 28 · Aucus1 30, 1974
A decrease in tbe size of tbe collegeThe State's $115 million suppleage population was cited as a reason
mental budget, passed late Tuesc14Y at
for declines by 20 campuses while 17 . Reporter
deadline, included these ap9a.m.·Sp.m.
9a.m.-5-p..m.
noted ,that increased enrollments in
propriations for U / B, according 1o
• NIT
vocational-technical schools were af.
9vn.-5p.tn.
9a.m.-5pm.
press reports:
fecting theif enrollments. Thirteen
BELL SCDC£" , .
8:30a.m.-5p,m.
8:301i.m.·5p.m.
• $3.9 million in additional planning
campuses said that tbeir enrollments
9a.m..·5p.m.
12p.m.-5p.m.
9 un.-5p..m.
~ds _for ~ Cami&gt;us build..... CHE&gt;ItS1J!'(
were allected by the fact that more
mgs-mcluding
at least four projects:
students are attending community
8a.m.-9p.m.
8M~.-5p.m.
9a.m.-5p.m.
lpm.-5pm.
HfAlTH~
a ~ent !lct_ivities building, a eociaJ ·
colleges. -A variety of olher reasons
lAW
Tl'lf'Lawll:ntyWill'llolintM!ItSrepllitsctleddeunt~ theend~LIIwSct-ciol
sc•ence
building,
a chemiQtry and biwere cited by a few respondent&amp;
• earns. June 5- From June 5 • 16. the Lllw I.JQry d be open from 7:30a.m. to
ology building, and a gymnasium5 p.n. Mondliy · Fridlyonly.Simne-holnwil be putlbhecllltet.
swimming
pooL
l.8WWST\I)IESLA8.
9a.m.-9p..m.
9LM.-6p.m.
10a.m..-5p.m.
• $425,000 for inatructional-ollice
7:30a.m.-)Jp.m.
9un.-5p..m.
.. 7:30a.m.-10p..m.
LOCI&lt;WOOD
2cun.-8p.m.
space at Children's Hospital, in con9un.-8p.m.
~1-llic:rolonn&amp;Dipt.
9a.m..·5p.m.
1D-..30un.-3p..m. ••
2pJn.-5PI'I9~~.t~~.·5p.m.
9&amp;m.--5p.m.
neclion with tbe U / B-Cbiidren's affiliation apeement.
9a.m.-5p.m.
David J . Saleh has been elected 1o
• A $827,000 bond-money ape,ding
Qa.m.-6p.m.
9un.-9p.m..
lp.m.-5p.m.
lp.m.-Sp.m.
-UA ·
a one-year teim 88 chairman of the
authorization
. lo CDIIlplete conversion
8&amp;m..--9p..m.
8&amp;m..-5p.m..
9Lm..-5PJil.
lp..m.-5p..m.
SCIIIUlU/ B Univenity Aaoembly. The Asof T_,. Dormitory mlo an academic
la.m.·llp.m.
8a.m..--6p..m.
911.111.·5p.m. •
2p.na.-8p.m.
eembly. oompoeed ol faculty •. llludents
facility; and
and lllalf, eetabliabed in 1972 lo
• Funds for two additional faculty
CII08i4er ~ which iiMIIve 1IICll'8
in the Scbool ' ol Medicine.
·
than oae Uni.ty CXIIIIItitui!IIThe Budpt .... contoined $13 milA junior hiolojy -;or, Saleh a.wd
lion for SUNY salary u.c.-,
88 viar pnaideiit ol the U/B Sludent
8UDI8bly to implemmit the new
AaoociaticJD in 1973-7(.
contract

Viddish Course
~lanned for .Fall

Enrollments at State U's
Ne~ ibree~ Million Mark

~-r:~/~~~

i::'!..

Brandenburg Nained
To National Panel

ul

........

_,.,_..,.

...,

-1£-

--

,...,

"""'
"""'

""""

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

_,_,
"""'

Supplemental
Budget Passed

"""'
"""'
""""
"""'

"""'

""""
""""

Saleh to Head

U/B .~bly

....-.L

&amp;;

�JhiTU.I"4

~

51 Facu~ty Share $61,000
In Institutional Grants

DUE Says FOnd Fatewell
To

AcMsor Ethel Gldewell

Awanla io 61 ~ ud two. student orpa!Mdoas totaling more than

lion on the Disposition , }.Gnetics of
This July the DiviSion of UnderDrop, $840; ·o. T. Beachley, Tbe
graduate Education Academic AdviseA&lt;;i&lt;Iity
of
a
Transition
Metal
Hyment
will be losing one of ita comer~~~~:..by
dride, $892; A. C. Bell, A Preli.minary
stones, Ethel Glidewell, wbo bas been
Tile Committee also indicated that
Experiment ·in Computer-Aided Manwith the advisement system since its
an - t . eatly in tha fall
ufacturing, $1,500; · J. Berecbman, Opinception in 1961. (Mrs. Glidewell
would ll8t deadlinee and procecJures
timal Allocation of Public Facilities
initially came to the University in
for the DIIXt round ol proposals for
~ New Towns, $1,200.
1957 as a member of the Vocational
awards.
Robert Bereman, Model Systems for
Counseling Center staff.) Her husIndividuals receiving grants in the
Cu ( ll ) in Type (i ) Copper Enzymes
band, Oliver, is leaving Roswell Park
current round, their project title a!ld
$7_20; Marvin Bernstein, Economi~
to join Dr. James F . Holland at Mt:
the 81111111Dt .J'I!CIIived are:
History of Mexico, $100; Iriring BieSinai School of .Medicine, CUNY, and
Ridlard Adema, Catalytic lnYe&amp;tiderman, Experimental Investigation
will serve as the group statistician for
gatioas ol Cluster Compounds, $1,000;
for a Syntax of Vision, $900; Richard
the Acute Leukemia Group B located
Mila Ann "7!:.l.!ost-boopitalizaBlau, Polish-American Music and Cuiin Scarsdale.
tion Needs ol
• • in Relation to - ture, $705; Frank Brown, Data Bank
Mrs. Glidewell's genuine interest in
Rebabi1i&amp;atloD ·ol a Cerebrovascular
on Minorities in Education. $450· Barher students served as a catalyst that
Accident Victim ih lbe Home Setting;
bara Bunker, Temporal Sequer{ce of
made a difference in the educational
lntraper&amp;Onal &amp; Interpersonal Selfexperience of many a U/ B alumnus,
f!K'~~·~i'i::
Disclosures in the Development of
as evidenced by letters of appreciaFigurine CluoaolotiY ol Teotihuacan,
Dyadic Relationships, $1,000; Roger
tion and mementoes from them
$1,790; 1Ibeodore Bates, Effect of
Des Forges, Rebellion and Revolution
through the years. One student upon
Chronic Cbolestyramine Adm~in Honan, $2,280; Rodney Doran, Angraduation sent her a bouquet of flow~~ of N.Y. State. Regenls E:r:ams
ers; another, a bottle of wine ("It's
m Science, $655; Colm Drury Human
not the best, but it's the best I could
Skills in Process Control, $1,320.
afford"). Still another requested ber
Robert Edwards, Tbe Montecassino
(Colltinuod from- 5, eot 4)
autograph on a booklet pUblished as a
.Passion &amp; Paradigms of Medieval Drapart of the student's special' major
policy concerns raised by any member
the interests of individual students.
-of the academic community, be avail~· ~750; Ho-Leung Fung, Pharmacothat Mrs. Glidewell bad helped work
In so· doing, abe worked cloeely with
kinetics of !;.dopa on Chronic Adminable to interpret policy, superVise the
oul
istration, $990; Francis Casparani,
faculty and administrative officers· in
reorpnization and/ or destruction of
Dr. Milton Plesur, lhe fonner asefforts to improve the integrity and
student reconls, serve as an adminis-·
Tbe ·Superfluid Transition in Nearly.
sistant de&gt;Ul of University College
quality of the undergraduate prograin
(predecessor to DUE) , recalls: "I
trative liaiacm to the Student Records
Saturated •He Films, $1,000; Thomas
Advjaory Committee and, in general,
Gutteridge, Career PatternS of College
knew Ethel's work well and, in fact,
:O~J:l,~~. Her services bave
represent the student records program
we often advised the same students.
Trained Manpower, $1,000; Willihln
to the campus as a whol.e . It is 8.lso
Her fellow DUE advisors will be
Hamlen, The Economic Consequences
Undoubtedly, she performed her tasks
sug~ested that the campus archivist, if
of Simultaneously Considering Air &amp;
especially aware of her absence. Sbe
in a most unique manner. Well before
available, act in an advisory role to
always bad a position, usually backed
the 'era of concern for students' and
Water ~ollution ~ntrol Strategies,
both the administrator and the policy
with a proposal, on the current Divitheir problems that came in the wake
51,300; V1ctor Harris; Effects of Norms
committee. 1be involvement of this
sion issue. She functioned as the un&amp; Nlll'!ber of Beneficiaries on Helping
of the unrest of 1969-70, Ethel eviper&amp;On will belp prevent inadvertent .
official Division archivist, the one who
Behav10r, $1,150; M . Bruce liaslam
denced faith in lhem and was always
destruction of historically significant
knew the alternate routes for com·
Analysis of Competency-Based Teach:
available to counsel with them iri both
material.
pleting the management programs; but
er Education, $1,000.
•
academic and non-academic areas. She'
3. Sanctions ....,. Fonnal sanctions
she will be especially missed because
was finn but fair in informing students.
. Pete&lt; Heller, Studies on Freud &amp;
should be established- to deal with
of the zest for life she exudes and be· of regulations and most compassionate
Freudians, $565; F . Allan Hills, Quan·the improper disclosure of infotmacause she was always there with her
titative Dating of Weathering Profiles · in dealing with individual situations.
tion or any other violations of the
door open.
Undoubtedly, University Advisement
by the ''RBI"SR Methnd, $600; Deninstitution's student records policy.
Dean Charles H. V. Ebert, Univerwill be diminished by her departure
nis Hndge, Seismic Reflections on IgThese sanctions and the procedure to
sity Dean of the Division of Underfor she was the glowing example of
neous Batholiths, $950; Elaine Hull,
be followed if a complaint is ll&gt; be
graduate Edum.tion notes: " Somehow
all that advisement should be."
Effects of Environmental Variables
lndged should be .-publicized for all
Ethel belongs to our Division,.-having
Mrs. Glidewell worked with liberal
on Reactions to Crowding in Gerbils,
members of the campus community.
so faithfully and effectively served it
arts majors in general but spent more
$1,000; K M . Kiser, Pressure-Veloci4. Change Mechanisms-The aforefor the past 13 years. She performed
than
half
of
her
time
with
managety Probe for Aortic Blond Flow, $1,mentioned advisory committee should
her job so well and with .such a high
ment majors. She· became so 'well
700; Jack Klingman, The Catalytic
serve as a uclearing house" for aU
de~of devotion. Ethel's line can be
versed in the area that Dean Richard
Influences of Clay Minerals on Porideas or suggestions to change the
fiUed, but she cannot be replaced." ·
G. Brandenburg and Dr. Bhal Bhatt,
phyrin Chemistry, $1,000; Daniel Kosexisting student records policy. A pubAnd so Ethel Glidewell, we could ..,.
undergraduate program chairman, inman, Graphite Furnace Atomic Ablicized annual review would be an
not let you leave without expressing
vited her to participate as a member
sorption Spectrophotometry for tbe
appropriate way to solicit the necesour pleasure in having worked with
in the School of Management's UnStudy of Metal Binding &amp; Metabosary input from all segments of the
you and wishing you. a fond farewell.
dergraduate Program Committee.
lism, $2,250; Mark Kristal, Effect of
community.
_:: MARCABEI' O'BRYAN
Dean Brandenburg indicates, "Mrs.
Experience on Placentopbagis, $1,000.
Flll"' Requirement
DUE Advisement
Glidewell has consistently represented
Robert
Kurland,
NMR
&amp; Tbeorelr
Following Its consideration on the
ical Studies of Folic Acid Antagonist • r-----------~------------------------------------;
local campus and administrative apto
the
Enzyme
DHFR,
$720;
Binding
proval by the president,. the student
Irene Mahar, Feasibility Study · of a
records policy for each- campus is to
Multidisciplinary Approach to Health
be filed with the Chancellor of the
Care
by Students in tbe Health SciState University of New York. Qpon
ences,
$150; M. Metzger, Critical Edi,
request, central adminietrative staff
tion
of
the "lnstitutiones Vitae Aulcae
FACULlY
will review any local policy for its
nder Hof-Schul" by Aegidius Alberbroadly · based adherence to the prinAssociate Librarian (Head Cataloger) , University Libraries.
tinus,
$500;
Carlton Meyers, An El&lt;ciples set forth in this document.
Director/
AssiStant
Professor,
Instructional Communication. Center.
amination of Selected Physii&gt;logical,
Associate Professor/ Assistant Professor, Center for MediiJ Study. •
Physical and Psycho-Social Variables
Assistant Professor, Center for MediiJ Study.
in Elementary School Children, $1,500; F. Pabon, Area Code 809: A
Faculty Position - Nuclear Engineering ( Rank dependent
(co ..tiluud '"'"' 1, eot 4)
Portrait of Puerto Rican Culture,
upon qualifications and background), Engilu!ering Science.
the option to enter the State bealth
$600; Julia Pardee, Women in TheClinical Assistant Professor C2 positions), Pharmacy.
plan to those membera of the faculty
atre,
$1,440;
S.
Ramalingam,
On-line
Assistant
or Associate Professor, Pharmacy.
of the f«&lt;rmer University of Buffalo
Image Analysis for Material CharacProfessor (Statistical Science), Computer Sciences.
who elected to continue the old UB
terization, $1,020.
bealth plan after the merger. This bill
Assistant
Professor
(School of -Medicine) , Ow/.aryngology.
James Rasmussen, Immunological
is now before the governor for signaAssistant- Associate Professor, Counselor Education.
Capabilities Of Young Children with
ture, Yeracaris said.
..
Assistant Professor, Anatomical Sciences.
Atopic Dennatitis, $1,000; Joel RayYeracaria reported also that tbe
Assistant Professor, Health Related Professions.
nor, Future"'"Oriented Therapy, $1,000; ·
State UUP organization, "cognizan~
. HlP
Paul Reitan, Large-scale Crust-mantle
Exchange Tested by Ree Patterns in
AssociiJte for Instructional Resources (General Manager, WBFO),
Paragneisses, $550; M . Schwartz; A
lished an Institutional Differences
Instructional Resources, PR-3.
.
Psychndynsinic · Mndel of Litenuy
Committee of which he is chairman.
Assist&lt;Jnt Facilities Program CoordinaU&gt;r, Facilities Planning, PR-2.
Interpretation,
$230;.Eii Sbefter, SorpTbe
Yeracaris said, is
AssiStant tQ Director, Alwimi Association, PR-1.
tion
of
Various
Aluminum
Antipercbaraed with surveying and studying
Technical Assistont (Sr. Radiation Safety Monitor), Nuclear Scispirants on Human Skin, $450; Philthe SUNY system "to establish area8
ence &amp; Technology, PR-1.
·
.,.
lips SCevens, Tbe Stone Images ol
of common interest as well as unique
Esie, $1,700; Murray Stinson, Succineeds of various types of campuses
For additional information concerning these jobs and for details of
nate
Transport
by
Pseudomonas,
$910.
and to recommend the best negotiatNTP openings throUghout the State University system, consult bulletin
Thomas Storer, Cyclotomic St:ruc:
ing mndel for UUP in the future. This
_boards at .these locations:
ture of Galois Domains, $600; Emily
is noC only s major aocomplishment
'Iall, Kafka Criticism in the Soviet
. 1. Bell Facility between D152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building
but a sign of maturity, strength and
·union. $235; John Vitek, Impact of
effecti--. of UUP,'' Yeracaria said.
4236, ilen to cafelaria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to
Lan&lt;l-use on a Fluvial System, $1,~;
He indicated be is making a special
C-1;
4. Health Sciences Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen
Lillian Williams, Oral ~ Proj- .
appeal to 1be University Centers to
Hall,. in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
ect: Buffalo's Black Commuruty, $1.seriously explore the implications of
iround 8oor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, ·in
540; Larry Wittie, Pr6Rrammable Electhis deCiaion.
main entzance foyer, 8.CI'08Il from Public Information Office; 8. Acbe!!on
tronic .Mndules for Brain Modelini,
Hall,
in corridor between Rooms 112 and. 113; 9. Parker Engineering,
$1,300;
.D.
Wobecball,
Detennination
SUMMER SESSIONS SCHOLAR INCENTIVE
of Propagation Velocity in the Aorta
, in coriidor DIIXt to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor, Housing Office
No cradtt c.n be •werded for Summer
by
Thoracic
Impedance,
$1,500:
area;
11. JJm' Elmwiiod, Peraonnel Deparbnent; 12. Norton Union,
Sessions tuition baaed on Scholar lncen·
'The Graduate Students Association
Director's Ollloe, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
tlve Awerda. Students ore liable for the
and the Undergraduate Studedls AsRoom 1q&amp;; 14.. John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (.Amhemt Campus).
tuition and when t;he check Is received
sociation each received $5,000 for stulro~ Albany, It will be reiunded .
dent project awards.

Studenl Records-

Job Openings

State-UUP-

~~~:::UJ'thi!, ~'!~~~

commi-.

�8

Bulls Announce·
26-Game
Slate
,...._._._.......u.....,
...... 1974-76 - . . . . . . . . by
Dr. Jlm:y Plitl, diu ol tile 8ciiDal
ol Jlealtli BdDiilllah ad U/B _..
WID 4111eaa. Tbe 8dlodulll iDc:llll'liG ...... um...ity .... Oallep

DlwllliiD ..........
~ 22

with

.. . _

p~g~

ly, ViNIDia ~ad

.........

{0..).

IWumiD&amp; will be Clulloim. Army
ad Oeattal Micblpn. U[B last
piQed Omillaa Ill lJii8..M In lll•
IIIOdal AucJ!tadam, aa.iDI 118-'16. •

Twebe ..... liN . _ attnlct:ialla
- liwt to be ~ at a-rk Hall,
two at Brie oc Nadb, ad five, plus
~ the CaDislul .....,.. - - . to be
piQed at :u-ial AncJitadum
. Tbe 8dlodulll;
.
November 80, 8.Yn1cai1e at lilA De-

cember

a. 8l FDIIilb'.~; .;

~

-

at L.LU.; 9, N"sapra at ECC North;
11, at Broc:llp.t State; 14, at Albany
State· ad 21, at Vusiuia Common-

January 7. at ClewlaDd &amp;ate; 11,
Fairfield at ECC North; 13, SL Francis, Pa., at Cladt; .1:6- at Col&amp;ate; 18,
at Anny; 20, ~at MA; 22, at
Iona; aDd 25, CatholiC U at lilA ·
FebnJary 1, at G - . &amp;ate; 6, at
I..eMo,De; ·8, y~ - State at
lilA; 10, at Centnl Micbipn; 12, .Ann-.
stloal State, at Clark; 16, .Aiaon at
lilA; 19, at Comell; 22, Athlele&amp;-ln'
Action, at Clark; aDd 25, ~.

at Clark.

.ap. . . . . a- -

............... .._ In tile .......
"CCppn to ........
•OCipln .. - - af tile ~
.
. Cll*ct ....., _ . . , Dl-222&amp;

pme

.AibJea.~

at CIMit IWL
.
'nne ~- ad tile . .
MtiftdaD ol tbnoe . . _ - - liN
~ Gil tile bilL Tbe flm&amp;.time
appclllmlllllnl LaD&amp; w.llll UJ!hml.

...... lllale

........ .-.-. ..... tar ..... _ _ . . . , . - - .. ~ Ill tile
....... Hill 1lllolt oa..
'
- .

at MA; aDd 3,

1\len:b 1, Pittsbwgh
Bu1falo State, at Clark.

Human Rights
Workshop. Set
RilbtB

· 'The· Human
Commia1ion of
tbe New York State Persmmel and
Guidance Asaociation will bold its annual Spring Worbbop Friday, May
17, aDd Satunlay, May 18, at I.eiBwe
LaDd Inn, Hemburg. W!llbbop hours
Will be 3-11 p.m. ... Friday and 8
·-"la;m. - 3 p.m., Satunlay. Post-Workshop activities will begin at 4 p.m.,
Satunlay, aDd include a tour of Niagara Falls and!or a night at Buftalo
Raceway.
. .
'
.
·Eiabt Workshops an varying topics
have been organized around the theme,
"Human ru ..hts - A Multi-Dimen' sioruil v~-:-'" 'They are deaigned to
facilitate communication,• awareneea
aDd action to improve human oondi-

~~~=~oJ:i
1':
it begin with me." In addition, rep-

far-...

FriDa

A-~-=L-"'
............ Boldt, ..
~

THURSDAY -.:23
perform

=

-

--.uiDUCATJON.

Public ond Profea•ional ReiDtwra. ·
WorWop, part of a Dationwide propam
to promote public awarene. of care Qf
the .teeth. dooiped for practicing porio.
dontiato, 147 Capen, 9:15 a.m.-4:30 P=
For further information, call 831&gt;3848.
PIORSSIONAL STAff SINAft MEETING•• .

..,.nc1a will include: L SUNY
·!:'.trs."'rar;.;Jri~r";~c!~
Today"a

tution adoption res ta; 5 . Communication with coDStituents. and 6. Other busi·: 301 Crosby, s p.m. .
VAHRY IASUAU*

U/B va. Rochester, Peelle Field, 3 p.m.
CONaiT•

Recital by baritone student Kenneth
Fl'iaem4; BaUd Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No

"adn&gt;ioa\OD

eharge.

~~0:.,:::" 8U:.m.diocuooion with

WlfO-AIT &amp; TKIIIIOU)OY NOGIAIII

mi=~ico~, with . ~ M~eUo, ..

"&lt;

•

For further information, OODtact MIS.
F.,..,._ Burb. art 2626.

EXHIBITS

.oeveral

top1cs, mclDding the eDefiY crwa, pro- tection for the consumer• .and divorce,
P.,nference Tbeatrs, Norton, 10 a.m.

SUNDAY~19
COl' OUT-GUAT -

PASTIMI

W~

T~etm:?·~!:!::r ~0 &amp;:k

C""
are

~!:~k.o:'l!f!:ii;t"a:= ::

Erie County, Inc., and ·Jane McArthur,
employment and employee aerricel sup.
ervisor for. . . Fisher-Price 'Fo~ Inc.

Curren.&amp; Tren.tb in Pri.mary Health

~l2N~HAh!i~nH&amp;~:.m~~'ra:
For further information. co n t a c t
!fall, 831-5526.

Charles

WIIO-MT &amp; TfCHNOLOGY PROGRAM

Martin Book-

U/1 AITS fOIUM

'

or~rf~,.h.~ s"::~':.J':1:;

of the Tw11e Clan of the Onondap IUl·
tion, will diBcuss hia involvement with
Indian subject matter in his work. The
program ia hooted b)' Esther Swarts,
assistant to the presulent for cultural
affain. WADV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

MONDAY-20
M!DICINAL CHEMimrt SYMPOSIUM.

WlfO--.AIT &amp; 'IKHNOLOGY PROGRAM

Pa~iriri!Jfn";."'A =P~~~wi!

novaton., noon.

WlfO-AIT &amp; .'IKHNOLOGY PIOGIIAM

~~~. ~~~"8=..:X J.:i:.

mut Krauss, 1 p.m.

WlfO-AIT &amp; • TECHNOlOGY PROCHAM

Concert HaU, with Tom Newhot118,
6:80p.m.

Current Topic.6 in Medicinal CMnU.try: Bioreceptors and. DTUI Action is the lheme of the 15th annual Medicinal
Chemia~ SYD;Jpooium_ to be held today
and tomorrow·p the Conference Theatre.
Norton. ' ·

::.c~:~'te:"!.ti!.i=:.
iatry field. For further information, con.

tact the. symposium cbairman, Dr. Leo
Fedor. u:t. 2734.
·

from local aervice agenoies will be an band during the registration period, Friday. ·

NOTICES
U.SIC EDUCATIONAL OPPOIITUIIIIY oaAHTS

Tbe Ollil"' of Financial Aid baa announced - that applications for fideral
Basic EdueatioiW Opportunity Granu
are now available- for next year - and
ohould be filed ao ooon aa poosihle. Applicationo and information on eJiaibility -

~~ ga...,.':"a:~tx:=

ball Tower.

FAU SIMHtll DA11 CHAHOI

197~..!::te'!-{.."~~'::i : : L~

~ will

beiin

W.m-lay, Septem;

In addition, the Ollice of Admiaoions
and Records baa announceil tbat · rasiotration materials for the Fall eemeater

~lobew~~ ~~~Yu!,.~t

~~wa,=:.,isA=.!fo?::

Data Form. Under1raduale student. .
(day) are to update their fo111111 at the
Diviaio.n qJ J]ndenmoduate Education
Reception Area, Diefendorf; Millan!

bers, nan-members, parents, students
and all others inlere!ted in the are! of
human concerns. RegiStration is $6
per person.

=~'!.;:.':-: tb:"o&amp;:~d~~.::

'The Human Rights Commission of
the Weetem New Yorlt Personnel aDd
Guidance Asaociatian is host for the
evenL For further infonnatioh, contact the Program Cbairpereon, Ms.
Rowena Adams, 132 HSyee Hall.

and Records; and prof-ional atudenta

can update their follllll with the Medical,
Dental or Law SchOOl ,..;.trar.
Sludents are "advised to pick up their
Stuilent Schedule Cards on ~Tue.lay,
Seplember S. iR the buement of Clark
Hall, .between 8:30 a.m... :30 p.m.
1n:pen10n -registration will begin September 3 for thoee students who did not
advance ierister.

Acting Chairman

SUMMU SESSIONS IEOistv.TION

The Office of Admiaaions and Recorda

. ~o:~~:C~!~~~~=:J':i

g;,eu~'1t::!!t F~ n!:rm:'t!re:n:
must cOmplete · a Student Data Fon:il.
available at the Ollice, Hayeo Annex B.
Tentative ~ce boum are 8 :30 B...m.8 :80 p.m. on the following datea:
0

at

:.r-tian

p.m.

WOIKIHoP••
Keepiris Yo11r Cool in a World (1/

C~, a . w_orbhop explo~

reeentative~

Dr. Barbara Rennick has been
named acting·chainnan of the Department. of Pbannacology and Tberapeu" tica, School of Medicice, elfective
Jime L 'The appointment continues
tluough May 31, 1975, unle&amp;ll a permanent chainnan is nominated and
appointed
an earlier date.
.
Dr. Rennick, a profeeeor of pharmacolOgy, hils · bern on tiM, Medical
Sc:bool faculty since i965. Sbe received .her bachelor's and master's
"'! cl!&gt;greee from Wayne University in
Detroit and ber M.D. from the Uni. venity of Michigan in 1950. Before
c:ominB to Bulfalo, abe was at Upstate Medical Center, Syracuse,
Mount HolyOke College, and the Uni·
Y8lllit;y of Cincbmati.
&lt;.- · Dr. BeDnidt replaces Dr. Edson X.
AJbuquerqu8, wbo has accepled a simiat die UniYelllity of~-

oJ'!.'!:".:ti:I.J'!l.me:t~"C

Alllllllli ~-- Y,aacal"' Clab, 7:80

· SATURDAY _,_! 18

Care, Bulfalo · General Hoopital School

span. 11 a.m.

soaAL - - - •

U/1 ALUMNAE

CONTINUING . MEDICAL EDUCATION#

Forum~ -with

Fri-

eon tact

WlfO-AIT &amp; TECHNO«&gt;&gt;Y NOGIAIII

Mental Retardation: "Bu1

Com pour'•

Boa-

Bric~l&gt;ou, with Pat Feldballe. A special
dramatic preoentation by RePnaid Bitta,
"Untitled Scenario, •• 1 a.m.
-

WllfO-.UT &amp; TECHNOLOGY PIOGI!A)il

Prelude. with Andrew Schultze. A
biotory of the flute, tracing its origins
!rom the Renaissance to modem times,
8 a.m.
WBFO Radio devotes its entire broad·
cast day to special programs as part of
the month-long "Ezperiments in Art and
Technology.. event on campus.

,

in StUdio A of a pircuuion wnioo of
• Karlbeinz Stockha..-"o Spiral, plua clioc:uosion in the· Dada mode, 9 p.m.

~

.

· FRIDAY-17

'F;..
~ -llail,
CbluiM Hall, 88l-IIU6.

Lee Lovallo.

o:s~•:t!:.eoaoe AudiWlfO-AIT&amp;-PIOOMM
&amp;J.r ,..;omtion infi&gt;rm"&lt;lioo. call 831· . and
Aluiio. E:cperimem, with Jan Williama
li;berhanl Blum. A liw polfonnance

DINTAl-·

and FDIIIily

-~~ 219 "Bryaat 8traA Ahoo -

cbup.

Wwo-AD
&amp; 'IICiaocxooY New New JIJUic, With

7'/te P&gt;oblc.....orieftled Jledit:Gl Record
in otfi« Practice, • clomomtralion and
WOJbbop, Buft.Jo General Hoapital

1'11,_._ a.oa..·.

-,.0/fit:e ~
. .. •
~

t'~~~ ~ ~

THURSDAY -16

fJ'

7

1s~ilf. ~~~-~~k' fc::! JJi~ !~

9-1~,

15-19. 22·26, .80, 3~ ; and Auguot 1,
3, 6, "1, 13, 14 20·23. .

• One af

~. NwWtnc .,_ aut -

-nn ..htnc:.

by -

of conthe l974 •

~ .., the c:ampletlan of h e t - · To .a
..-the Reporter -Its..,.__--~---.
• lilt -"""' but equal - - , .

. WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For everyone's convenience and pleasure,
we like to publicize all events taklna place
on campus. To record -information, contact
Nancy C3rdarelll, ext. 2228;- by Monday
at noon for inclusion In the following
Thu?day Issue,

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="85485" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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        <src>https://digital.lib.buffalo.edu/files/original/4c9a29596648dab0d2625617510c14e3.pdf</src>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1715855">
                    <text>U/8 API'LICA!1ma Ul'
Ap'plications tor ad~ 1D U/8 .,. up

47 per cent from this time _,, Praident Robert L told the f*""'y

Sj!nate T.-ay. Kaller Mkl 15_,876 91-

cations have been - t o r 2,100 !..sitman slots next fall, due pertially to the
fact that the State now allows applicants

col'-

to

appy to four SUNY
or urn-sit)' centers for a lingle $10 fee; ~­
ously there·was a $10 fee for ud1 lnati-

tution applied to. Last year 11,000 had

:applied for admission at this time. Medical
Schoo1 applications are up sharply also.

Here, 5,500 applications have been
ceived for 135 e&gt;Penlngs. ,

re- ·
'

tbat U.0 pl'OIJI*d SUNY bwlpt W811
reduced this year by the Gcm!mor'a
Offioe with lilos attention tO acbieviDg
pari~ 81110111 ~ lmit&amp; tban in
the' -pa~~L
.
;
Within State University _·itaelf, recently legislated~~
direCted toward hilbet eduaolion aDd
other faciDn haw cauaed SUNY,
taken aa a _wbole, ID realbe ita fiiBt:
deeliDe in
in ....,.,.•
~ aaiil.
• patQwll o( llllllli&lt;ations wilhin ... ~ ... - - in' a.~
• with . . iltr

'I!........

~

8llooriul

o( 10~ Cll!llt

Stale Uni.-ersity a~ will

intemally oo· tbat we will he able to
make the tlaQsition more easily. If
we pay .attention to ear!Y warning
eventuaiJy Nbiming ID the 1970 level,
readings and the emerging dats we
.&amp;ate lhilwllaity Chancellor Ernest ·. can begin ID tbinlt about the future
Boyar poojeeted at the 47th regular
,ol the 'University artd .n'lake app!"Primeellil;r 01 the SUNY-wide· Faculty
a,te -campus-by-campus decisions, au
Seaa1e at the Collele at Pun:base, _ of which has major implications for
April 2&amp;-27.
any future Maaler Plan." Boyer added
Implicatialls for faculty -hiring and
tbat we have not as yet in thiS State
bJP- education in~ are obvibad- to contend 'Jrilti"the· "jarring dis~
jointedness" cunehtly being experious, Boyer aid.
"How we cope with major shifts deenced elsewhere in higher education.
pend&amp;- t-cleverweare," the ChanDepending -orr~ fate of ·the· supplepak ~ 19'19-81 and then slope
~ ' during the late 1980's,

:shifte ~poai-::..~use"""';.i"'cis~
will' reahape higher education.

==t~t:!t!':tS:tedCS::

· i&gt;uses.· ·he desCribed the. current .totsl
adjaatments aDd ditferent
finsncial J!8Cl&lt;a8e asi "conservative, but
ageDdloswill be I8IIUin&gt;!l for each osm- ~ not· inalponsible." Understandably
pus. We . - also a..Oid replicating
'
•
~ while keeping all options
open aDd- a.inta:ining' a healthy .monadam. If ·we consider potential
~
- · we
can keep &amp;Mad ol
any
a.n.ltion
without
adding ten- ..
- - - . eijber ID our own system or ID
Jd&gt;lic and private institutionS. We
hope tq COIIIIide'r proble!Qs before it
is 1loo !ale, and not be trapped by
· unanticipated events."
. 'lboii 'Chancellor warned lhat SUNY
must _ . . , for job ~ and
consider how it might adjust both in
a physicsl and educallional sense. This
has significsnt implications for -the
future development of physicsl plants, •
unless tllere is a change .in tbe · i:Jien. "
U.le preeently served . primarily by
higher education: Although much will
depend on increasing ·adult interest in..
the edJJcstional p - . SUNY must
do some lhPughltul pi(uming as it
·faces the possitiility of dramatic
change. All ol this will be .-ellected in
types o( propams, the .cbanlinr lili·
ture of the ·~t body, aa.demic
cslendan!; aDd lacuky biriDI aDd ....
cruitment patterns, he ezplained.
.
This a1oo has impllaatialls for Itt.,
lure Master Plana. "'lbere il no awe
incllm 1111 lb the: nature of futme
but'we hope to begin our disooullle
~

-.a..

unable ID predict• the fate ,;;--tJ;; supplemental budget, he still hoped
SI:JNY oould,.- in the future, become
mdre active in such areas as prison
refolUl, as had been enoompassed in
the Bedford Hills PI'Ofll8IIL
In discussing the declining support
of tuition. waivers, the Cbancellor reported -that the cuthaclt actions had
been a surprlae, resulting from "pS
excesses!' He was still 'UDCiear about
any final fOlUl of legislation copceming student aid, especiaJly since this
matter is -related ID ueeded support
for students at both private and public
institutkmB.

He

Ex1:hanp
re~rred
briefly to his recent trip
(Continlud o n - 4, coL 3)

-

_____

_...., ut..tJ:
~

ma-

aDd-• . Tbe 'Wibt ~ in the c:urnat
fiscal pictUre, IICCiiitfius ID the Pniai-=
dent, is Albany's .rec&lt;JBDitjClll tbat the
U/B J&gt;.lth scieDces have been underfinanced relatiYe ID ~
• '-lib
science unibi. Ketter
lhat
the $6,900 CWTeDtly _.t ID underwrite """' U/B medical student for .
one year is a natiooal low. 'lbe l'n!sident also confirmed tbat prof-x..al
education is booming: Some 6,500
candidates applied this yetir for 136
freshman slots in the Medical ScbooL
SUNY has ruled fullW!le administrators will no longer he able ID &lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;

..::'i!d

(Continlud o n - 7, eoL 1)

•

MOORE TO AUIAHY
Dr. Gilbert Moore, outgoing chalnnaA-of
the Faculty Senate, announced at T-·
day's Senate meeting that he will be
leoving U/8 July 1 ID become DMn of
Education, State Unhlerslty at Albeny.

__ _

.,J.
... _..,.,.. ....... ____
...be_.......
.. _........
..... '*' ______
Tille $1.111 ......
- : . . .Clmpua--.,
........
ID
-C
. ............. S11,3!10
__
. , . _ ...

�BY

WARD

......,_

BIBDBRMAN

oar WDde lanpilblnc·u. R.diQI

o.al I!IIIBIIIID . . . . CIIItlillbe-*'
-bat~~=- 17 miJUoD
~hllllll--·~1
rilk ~
tillll
llljlllllllnIn

==:::.tbi....,

t:::::':a7'~ -

whb llmliliaellliiDei.F- to be aliDDed.
In .1t llal,efaM ...... In modem

~--~-jail
• &lt;#.
fmiD tbnie IJWIIIIbi to lite. . termS
lbe ..... &lt;#. die Jaw, wbldl

m-

~ .__,.Ut;y, comln&amp;
out ol tiP - - .. BOt without .......
But at a·l.-l U,IB Cllllllanmce 011 "Ge.Y Rlibta aDd tiP Law," Mattit-

dllna Plioidet Pranlr,lin KaJzaly
uraed fellolr ..,. to 10 ...... further_
"(]0 Gilt 111111 liilll:it -.ebady aDd pt ..
)'OIIIIIIIlf anealiad," ur,.d ~.
who ~ lbe COIIB8I8l aodomy
aDd aalidtatillll .... .... UIIODIIIItitut:laaaliiDII that tbe' fasat way te pt
• !ban . . lbe boob Ia IIDt by the. tedi- · lllali&amp;-by«ate &lt;#. ~. -tfve reiGnn but by JitiptiOb.
-

tore-

oeive
- -. In .
also • partidpote.
- will
.
~ 8Y8Ilbig at 7:30, lbe -ScboOI ,
of N11n11111 will confer 168 ctep_, . _
-~ four special awards in the MarY
• 8el!lon 'Room. Klailibans Musie Hall.
• •QJ&lt;. F. Carter PannlB, ·viee president
for beelth acienoes, will JIIM8)t on
reply, • polite refuail 011 lbe pouDds
The
of Dentistry has a new
-aented as a gift to·the Sdlool by three
"N,.__ · M Error."
, _
· that "DDY wile ~ lland for
academic Jliace that is a _gift of lbe
Niagara Falls dentists, Dootora Jo---....
·
aeph AocardO Guelfo Canali and Keri. Dr. Ruth McGrorey, dam of lbe
it."
Admittina
that
the
pature
was ·
Class of i96L It will be used- for the
- at ....,. part thgater, Kamelly, an
- .,_,., --:z ~ ..:••
,....,._ .
- Sdlool, will present tbeoie ltudent •
1961
neth
attomey, was not arrested, but olber
· first lime at the MliY 16 Commence..,...-dB: The Anne Walker~ll ·
IIIQIB, who have similarly ~ te
merit - ( 8 pin..) at Kleinhsns Music
·- In 1be midpoint of U... 1Jody,"46
Leader•llip A~t~ard•- K'atbleen silver yerticaJ ribs repfe"!''lf lbe 'iliSt
Sbanb, paduate ·stUdent, 8lid Ro&amp;actively undermine aolidtat:ion and
Hall's Mary Seaton RooiD.
sodomy law&amp; lbey-repn1 88 diacrimlnThe design and -material of lbe
&lt;1892) c1asa of 46 stUdents. The rib!
anne Qucino, underpaduate; ·stlltknt
atery, now have c:ues ·1n lbe - courts.
mace n!6ect t!&gt;e ,history Of the SChool ~- are _ positio~ 'be~ \wo ai!.ver
Council A - Senr.6rucll Awarddecagons 'l!}'lDI;iQJiting the lO inembers
'Lois Buerkle; ~of.Nitninr Alum.
. "~tiw Jaw" ia Kameoly'e term for
iii! discipline and ita relatiotiships. ' It
of the original .fuJMime faculty. • · ni Award- Pauline Mianowany; ~
thill
litiptive attack on
is also uniquely repft,sentetive of New
anti..t.c..jo.mld Jaws, which, be beY ark State;' acairding to Dr. William 'lltree intheter.t•:.~Y~~-~verofplri;Mslbe
s. Moucllly ·SmDll AIDtlidMarJmie
represent
• """" •wa.-...ons
Rind..
;.. r; , - ., ...
ne-, will .....,tuall,y 1e.t te a SuM. F~·aean of the School of
pnme Court cleciaioa nulJ!fying ezist.DentiStry.
'
., '"' .,_
~- 'leducati6n, t'e8earclr' and . pa'&gt;:A~sro;;. todaY ('lburiKiay -May
•n• aodomy Jaws. With this apptollcb,
The maoe is made of wood, silver
ii8ld ~, who plans to solicit lbe
and Steuben crystal Its shaft or body
lbe three -i.nterl!ecting silVer planeo, is · .llfaiitsd· tiy · ~~~e~I Of Den'tliilly
eotire•District ·€ourt of, Appeals-over
comteS from a piece -of timber from
the Steuben Cl')ry!tal sphere. The sphere
ts.rting t -8
' · Kleinhans' MarY
lbe radio, "you cen have a lot of fun
'Glint· Hall :in Niagira F811S, wbeie
• symbolizes purity, the' lack t?f disease.
~toil ~D;. ~ JU:ug asand do an enormous_amount of good."
the Americen Dental Aliaociation was
and also represents quality, Dean 'SOCiate professor and cbalrlnan, 1);.
Appearing on the oilllference panel
founded- in 1859. Grant Hall WIM! re~eagans says.
~-partment of Prosthodontics, Univerwith Kameny 'W88 Buflalo Polioe Deoently razed and a beam was presity of North Carolina, will be lbe
poirtment ~Taiii 'Kenneth KennedY,
• '
-··
Dental. Commencement spea!oer. ~
·The remainder of lbe' •graduation
.acbied,ule
.includes:
~t~~pyacti~~
~wbatbe~Kam-

;!...=~~u.:..,~

-

.

-

Dentistry's New Academic .Mace
~;:,:;;"~~..:~ -- Is A Gjft of the ~ class of·1961
sd-1

·-au .. . . , . . . . ,. .

.,._tic.

ti'A~ U':.iummit&lt;~tthe hod;,&amp;- _~ ~~- ~~~~

0

!::':o:!i~ta~!f::'ktn~~ Dis_tinglli_shed J_apanese Thin.ker
•

=..,~~.!:w~t'J.E:~/:eu::

:W~~:.great~

p,..;.,....

&amp;nested . under lbe statute
outla~ eonseusual sodomy' ·are

of

•

-

'

•

To Visit Ph,ilos~phy · in 1974-75-....
Dr. Hajime Nakamuia will .be. a
Visiting professor in the De~t
of Philosophy -for the 1974-75 seademic yetir, Chairman Peter R -Hare
lwiA. ~dis~~-~;,..;. Ja~.!"::.. .,_,_,:.r,
fo-~ ~ ~~~of

.new~o.PIItoQ&gt;ePhiloaoJ!bycDe-

:partment as.well.as to:lbe Irniveisity
commtm.ity, Dr. Hare· fndicates. .The
.Department-,.,.rn offer a conoeulmtian
IIJIP!''in aid&gt; acts in a parked car or
. of ASian ~_.in .l97~75: in the
with lbeir Dd08 up.
,
_fall semester, Ji'Dll. 352 (MFC);'ConAa io.c:barps that 1be u· diff
·~ · ......uwau
""' ~~~
• ~rary Cliinese -Pbil-"Y~ (Rieelll:iallY baralla ~
of Indisn and BUddhist Studies, and
pe) ; ~PhiL 367, · Islamic :Rbiloaopby
iStini JOiteriilg Jaws, Kennedy denied
dean of t!&gt;e Hwnanitieor Division at
(.Hounmi); •1'hiJ. ·4,52,- 0riental .Ae&amp;that lbe Bulfalo. police practioe eli· the UniverSity of Tokyo, .he ·has held • thet;ics (ln!ldit); ·Phil 456 (MFC),
tmpmeot. "We ~ly station our- - 'visiting prof@SSOrships at Stanford,
Jewish PhilosoPhy (l.f._,-); ' in~
ael- in~~wbeJe we have com- · Harv~, Hawaii and the ~West
spring, PhiL-354, -Cbinese' and Jap&amp;- ,
plain~"
said. Don Michaels,
9enter. m Honolulu, ll!'d !'&amp;S.Iectured
-nese Philosophy (Thada) and Phil. ~
pr8lidaat &lt;#. th&amp; -Balfalo Mattachine
man~ of U.S. institutions. He
555, Buddhism (lnada). Di."Nabclemumld _,_._,__ tf1at reoentl'y .;_ ' has &lt;ecetved honorary degree!; from
mura will himae.J! offer courses in
. Jocal._,;,..,..~ followed around. · Nehru Uni'!ersity_.and lbe. ~vern·/Buddhist Ethics (PhiL 355 -' Fall) ,
lbe Bulfalo Zoo for almost an hour .by • ment of'!!~ by "'!ttle qf his unporJ . _ Buddhism (Phil. 352- Fall),
~ tzy.ing · to
tioe
tant studies m lnd1an and Buddhist
HistOry of Japanesil -Ideas (Phil. 452
~into an esplicit sOiicitatiOIL
philosophy, Dr, Hare.JIIlys. Nakamuta
- Spring) and · Indian - Philoaopliy
neely esplained lliat the only conoem
IS CUrrently . director of lbe Eastern
(Phil. 353 - .!!!&gt;.r ing) . Ha is also ached-of lbe VICe Squad is' to -nrotect the - ln;stitute in T.91&lt;Yo, an institut;!on comuled to present 11 public 1ectwe and
pu1ilic, DI8JI,y of wbom mfght be of~tted to Easl:el:J! culture~- comparto participate in a departmental ......U- ·
feuded if lxmoeemals were allowed
ative uilderstanding. He h8s just been
nar and in the Ontano-W...tem- New
to solicit in publie. A woman in the
~red~ being designated the ,offi• Yotk Japan~-,
·•
audience CDIIIltenid .that she was at' . cial.lec:tur;!!r to lbe Emperor _of Jllp8D
•. ~.g Or. Nakamura's tanwe, the
fimcled that ~passing man Can say
during the 1975 New "¥ear Lecture •
Pbiloaop!ly Department will sponsor '
.._ ...,.._
-'·t' ......... " 'th
Ceremony
Imperial fun-t.
a ~·um to be entitled "An "'~
0 -'-ientatofthe
!'&gt;.'"'!"1.__.-... . y, -.,. s •--.. Wl ·
lbe· Im--'-' Prize for
·
.,_..
JIDPUIII'&lt;l'· _
Li~
• ......., .the ..., .........~"':."~, _ _. . , -_Wi!J!t •
e in Ae8thetics," ·pJamied
111 lbe ooune of a ..............., evlllu- · • J
. • ... ~
"":;:.~""!u
• for April 18-19, 1975. 'Professors Dele
lion &lt;#. t1ie Ja ...~N~ City
In span, .........,....., IS a PIDn= wn~ Riepe and Kenneth Jneda wjiJ aerve
a
wa.......,..... IIIQI1I,
er ·.mo.·wqrks in bOth Japanese and ..
as: couference ·directors. OVer .20 paMuur ~ tbat-lbe
Western~ - ~ ov'er ao· •pem have already been aelected· for
will ~ofbe~
bOob and nearly 100. iliticles. .He is
the prosram fr8m acbolara throughout
~;~In~_.. ......_ _ _ ,
probBbly.best known m lbe West for .,. lbe ST:JNY sya111m and tram Ontario
a ~Ia
""""" .,....18 ~.ahis monumental ~ ·way• of Tfl4ol&lt;- . ' Pennsylvania, and N- J«.y. ,_,;
s - - will be batter protec:ted Wlfb. illll of Eut6n &amp;op~a· Illiiia CAintJ,
will be -'ion~~ on Western, ,Asian.
-aut d8mqe to ~ bee!~ and safety • Tikt Gild J/JIKIII, 'll1 ~ be1 _doeu- , • -imd Qomparative ~· An ever#. the caDinnmlt¥. •
: .-Ia !be nature of tl&gt;inkinc and ·bening . Public 1ectuno by the famous
Tbe eaar.-. beld ),by 8 In
baviomJ p&amp;tteme of 'Eaateni' peoples ·
Odnliae 111t laiatlai'l!l" at the UntverO'Bdan Hall, ....... by lbe
by the linguistic metliod. He has- just
Sity 0( MiddJan. Dr. Ritl;tal:il• EdStudeDt Bar A.....;•tion Conraraloe
c:cmpleteCI a Ufe.lonlln:oject,.lbe four_...._ on "lirhiltese . Landecap•·
c-dinatllwSbelley~
\'OlumeDietio
ofButllllli#-T •
, _ _,
v•
....._. bape
the ...- ~
to be publlabed~ Tabo lbls
~!iitt.;.:::.:a~
Jelld to laslitutlaD &lt;JI, • at the
bar.
,,
·,
'18 5in
UDlon ~
I.awScboolln ...,-l!lwDr. Nalr:amun's ~will~
n.atze.
,_~•.. :
~ - typically a couple who en-

.:der,::

.-:::.::n::_....::=.

Ken-

=r·A.

C:

1¥

n:;:: .

SCHOOL. OF ABCBrl'BCI'UIIB AND BN·

VIRONJIENTAL lli!IIIGK -

Friday, May

17, 7:30 p.m., at lbe -Scbool, 2917
Main Street.
·• - .PACULft 0.

ENGINEBIIINil

PLJBD llaBNID -

AND IIP-

Saturday, Mil)' 18,

3 p.m.; Ciadt }Jail. .

BCBOOL OF'IIBALTR'JIBLATED PBOPI!II-

May 18, 8 p.m.,
Eari&lt; Memorial· Iilstitute.

SIONS"-Saturday,

~

SCHOOL OP · lliANAGEIIIINT .,..- Satur-

~~1fi, 8:3!1 p.m.;"Klelnhans
SCHOOL 0.

~.Mil)'

19, 3 p.m.; Kleinhans Musie Hall.

Sandlly,
Max 19, 1 p.m., Moot Courttoom,
· O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus.
8CBooL OP PBABMACT -

SCHOOL OP &amp;EAr.TR i!DUCAftON -

. Sandlly,- Mil)'

1!1,

3 p.m., Cladt Hall.

Tuesdtiy, May 21, 3 p;m., Memorial Audi- ·
CBIOUL. OOliDODKZIIBIIT .. _

·torium. Participating in-this _...,ay
will be srad..tes ql Aftll AN_!I LII:T'I'DS,

BDUCATIO~AL · S't_UDIIC8, DIV&amp;Olf OP
.GIIADUATB AND PBOPI&amp;RONAL IIDtJCATION (including IIOIIWli:lL PAliK), NATO·
IL\L 8CIENCI!8 AND IL\TIIBIIIATIOII, &amp;oCL\L_SCIENCDI'AND Allll0N181'11A'l10N (including SCHOOL OP soaAL WOU!i) and
DIVIliiON OF UNDBilGIIADlfA'l'B li!IIUCATION
8PI!a.\L "JJA.JoBS. The Chancellor's

M"!!aJ, lbe Universlty'8-111P-t bon- -

-q.., llrill' be conferred at thia caianmly.

. Sunday, JWle 16, is 1be date for
the Law Scbool GomiD""ienwlt, ,.;th
otber cletsila yet to -~ set.

~amed to , Panel
Dr. Erika. Biuc$. ~. pediatrica, bas- be-. -IIPP&lt;'i!lted to . the
Pl-eoideolt'o Board ou 'Facuity-Appoin-18, Promotions ·and Tanlre
Jw a tam f!1SI!irinl AucUat 81, 1976.
Dr.
Dr. AIIIBl Bar- ; .
ron ·wbo 't. leavina te join lbe faculty
ollbe Uni-.Ity &lt;#. Arbme.'

Bruck...,_

�~

. . . '· tn4

••·~.:HEW Compliance V-isit

Date
saidu'm-atty
Sb11
lindetermined'
.._
1

-

Ms. Everitt

Gets CCF Grant
For ·Gr~d Study

lloQlae M. Everitt, North Tonawanda, bois been awalded tbe 1974 Clifford C. Furnas FellCJIVShip. . _
. Sponsoted Binoe 1967 by tbe Carbonmdum CoinJI&amp;IIY of Niagam Falls
in honor of tbe lale U jB Cbanc:ellor,
tbe fellowship is a........ted on tbe baais
of academic or professiooal qualifiCations, proposed IJIOSI'IlDl of study,
availability -of special facilities required and financial need. It provides
an annual stipend of $5,000 for three
years to cover tuition and other-ex-

The
110t yet ...,.
celwd DDiice from tbe Civil Rilbla
OOice of tbe ~ of Health,
Ed!Jcation ad .WelfaN on wben HEW
will review UjB~ witb milll&gt;rity hiri
~ President
Robert L ~ told tbe Buffalo
Euenin6 Nt!W8 tbis week.
'1bele is DCJnDBlly a 30-day not&gt;ce,
~ told tbe NetDI. HEW was originally ec:baduJI)d to visit bel'e this
montb or nest mantb to complete a
I'IIView started in 1971.
The N - reported tbat tbe deputy
director of tbe Civil RidriB OOice for
Relriaa D of HEW in :N..,. 'Y:ork bas
indll:itted tbat tbe visit bas been delayed to "oometime before tbe end of
tbe calendar year," because of a backlog of compliance reviews at colleges
and univelllities tbrougbout tbe State.
The comments followed a formal
'complaint to HEW and· tbe U. s.
OfJice of Civil Rights alleging discrimination in U jB hiring practices filed by

All Women wbo will be receiving
bachelor's or -graduate . degrees this
year are , eligible for membership' in
A.A.U.W., tbe American- Association
of University Women, a national organization of college and university
graduates witb almost 1100 brancbes
acroes tbe tiotintry.
Mrs. James E . Griffin, membership
chairman for tbe Bulfalo branch, will
supply information ab&lt;!ut activities,
study grOups, and membership application fonns. Mrs. Griffin ain be
reached at GSS-6207 or by .mail llt
Rd.,, 1;1• .Ambemt, , N . '¥·

l:t,gl.Dodge

iiel•

UGL Memorial Gift
A gift in memory of students slain
at Kent S - Univelllity and Jacbon
State Colleae bas been made to the
University. Librarios on this fourth
annivenary Of tbe trapdies, Libraries
Director Eldred Smitb announced to-

day.

.

The gift of $1,244.01 was donated
by a group of UjB faculty, students,
and stall. Susan l'.ops and Seymour
Aselrod, speaking for tbe p-oup, asked 8mitb tbat tbe funds be uaed to
pwcbase boob in tbe oocial aciences
and humanities for use in tbe Undergraduate r.ibrary.. The bcloks will be
bookplaled in memo,.Y of tbe slain
students.

_Grades Deadline
,----.-.. All grades are to be submitted within two weeh after 1M emmittation
UIU liven Cbarles H. V. Ebe&lt;t, Univelllity Undergraduate Education
n..n l'8Dlinded tbis week.
·
-nils will result, Ebert said, in a amootber flow of graile retums to tbe
OOice of Admissions and Records and
· prompt ....d. eoaluation. "As you realize,
~ a critical facto&lt;
for paduMiDg --._"
.
Faculty cooperation on tbio, Ebert
oaid, will awid ~which derive,
mostly for tbe lltndeat, from tardy
~fade •Jbnrieejone
.

u.r;;;;,

,.,._,._lion

cbar,...

All Women Graduates Eligible
For Membership in ·the ·M ·uw

penses.
Miss Everitt; a mechanical engineer- ·
ing major at Cornell University, will
receive ber B.S. this June. Sbe bas
bj!en an active. pjlflicip&amp;~~t in the Cornell Cooperative Program where stu.dents are placed in various industries
as part '!f ~ "!f'l"'ltions: , •
~
Participatirig at Harrison Radiator
Tbe Bulfalo Branch A.A.U$. coniDivision of General Motors in Lockpriso!s tbe metro area including Tonaport, sbe ·bas ""rked in tbe areas · of
wanda, Clarence. West Seneca and
• plant engineering, production engi- - Orcbaid
Park. Otber local branches
neering and tool deaign.
are locsted in East Aurora, tbe NiagAsked about ber. experience ,.. a
ara -Peninsula, Batavia, and MedinaWOIII8D in tbe indll8trial enviromrient,
Middleport.-Lydonville.
The Bulfalo Brancb admitristers tbe
Miss Everitt said tbat tbe
of
mechanical engineering as a career. f&lt;&gt;&lt;
Chamberlin Loan Flind which bas intelel!t4ree loans available for underwomen CIIIIDOt be discusaed in ~
graduate women wbo· bave successfulterms, "it just depends on tbe Woman."
ly completed one year of college. Tbe
A 1970 ~ of North Tonaloe.n
fund -is also available to women
wanda Senior Higb School, Miss Everitt apends ~ of ""!' 8J1&amp;re time
as a mechanic m tbe ptt crew of a
proleoaional Middleport, N. Y., motor-

cycle-- .
At U jB, sbe is looking forward to
incn!aaed fDPOIIUI'e to all aspects of ·
-mechanical engineering, before cboosing a· specific area in wbich to conduct
"""""""- Sbe plans to continue ber
education during lbe regular school
Ye&amp;IS and wort during the summer&amp;

Democntlc "-emblyman ArtJmr 0.
EYe of Bulfalo BDd tbe.l7 other black
and "'-to Rican momben of tbe
State l.egillatwe. The complaint asb
for an immediate
of hiring practices bere,-~ tbat only
4,6 per cent of full-time faculty members are black.
·
It also contends tbat tbere are only
13 blacks, two Puerto Ricans and no
native Americans among a group of
800 faculty members having tenure,
and tbat tbere are fewer tban five
blaclt and other"minority profesaional
-employees in policy-making positions.
Ketter noted tbat tbeae
are
not unusual for major univelllities and
said tbat lin affirmative action repolt
would 110011 be fortbcoming, reviewing
BBlaries and rank of faculty membem;
minority and non-minority, and setting "aspiratiot)s" for nunibers and
percentage of minority faculty to be
hired by eacb campus unit in tbe next
tbree years.
·

In lieu of a _ _ ..... .mual

--theJ--W.--

of "JKuiiJ - . the Re·
_ porter . _ 1o point . - of
-

fKuiiJ

Include .. ... . , . _ . .

...-.. 01 tao-.1 .,... ~
or -lo2!10 . . , _ , Rm. 213.

M . . -...... - .

IDEAS OF THE THEORY OF REUITIYIT'Y:
General Implic-ations from Physics to
Problems of Society -

by

Mi,nclal Sachs,

...-.... physics,- ..._ Yorlr. 1974. 200 pp. $11.9!5.
Tbis book presents a diocuasion of

tbe ideas of the theory of relativity in
licit
fashion, from tbe view of tbe
pby of tbe theory ra:tber tban from
its mathematical expression. The autbor describes bow a single mom - ·
1M principle of rtliDtwity - can lead
in logical fashion to a theoretical
structure tba~ bas tzeinendous predjctive capacity, and, indeed, bM been
verified in counUees observations of
tbe material univerae from tbe microscopic range of elementary particle
. physics to tbe oasmological, intergalactic. ~ coveri!tr tbe entire
range of tbe physical universe. 1n addition to tbe impHcations of tbe theory Ol
.mlativity in ._ro to tbe 'inanimate'
features of tbe u n i - tbe underlying pbiloaopb.y of tbis theory, wben
followed to ita logical ememe, -carriBs over to 1he 8eld of human relallona, for it ja a pbiloaopby of oneness, implyq a tmjflral;ion of man
witb DBtme, bumanlsm, 8lld mutual
respect " " - all tbe COIIlpCIDOilla of

-an informal, but detailed and

;bfloeo-

doing part-time post graduate study
in non-degree programs, Miss Zelia
Ruslaoder, fund &lt;;!&gt;airman. can provide further infoniiation; phone 8825668.
.
A.A.U.W. also offers funds to women · students for all levels 'of study.
Approlrlmately 150 fellowships will be
offered for 1974-75 at tbe doctoral
and post-doctoral levels, witb,stipends
ranging (ro_m_$3,500 to $6,000 and iip
to $7,500 for pasklootoral awards.
Six awards in tbe creative arts will
be ~Dade for tbe, first time tbis yeu:
four $2,000 KJ'Illllil in visual 8rti1, including printmaking, painting, photography' ,and sculpture; and two
$3,000 awards in filmmalring.
Astronqmy and Other professiooal
awards aie among tbe 150 available.
Seleotion of feUows tbis yeu will
stress tbe need to enco~e women
to enter new and non-traditional fields
of study.
Applications may be obtained after
July 1, 1974, by writing to: A.A.U.W.
Educational Foundation Fellowships
Program, 2401 Virginia Ave. N.W.,
Washington. ,D.C. 20037.
tbe world. As tbe .pposition of ideas
proceeds, tbe authOr &amp;Uempts to relate tbe pbiloeopby of relativity theory
not only to tbe applicalions of tbe
physical world of inaJoimate objecla.
but also to tbe implicatiODB witb r&amp;speot to human relatioos, •
seen
tbrougb tbe eyes of a physical scientist, ratber tban from tbe view of a
professional aociologist or psychologist.

For students and readers in pbysics
and tbe pbiiOBOpby of acienoe.

•

•

•

NEUROPHYSIOLOGY STUDY GUIDE

-...-...of

~

by Dr.~-.....
physlolocy, - 1
EDml- Pulillohlnc Co., Fluohl""

Second £dillon).-

N. Y., 1974. 199 pp. $7.
.
Tbis volume is an aid to u.._
studying neurophysiology, whether
tbey are preparing for medicine, dentistry, neurology, tbe healtb-related

=-~:=m~~

been completely updated, reorganized

~~

mat2rial

is organized

1:~~:~.:!.;\.e&amp;~W~

short, conc:iae resume for each subunit, wbich is intended to llUJiliD8%ize
tbe important underlying principles.
Multiple cboi!:e ~ similar in
format to 11..- found on bosrd examinations, ""' provided for each subunit. Sua:eaoive qwWons lmder any
topic are ~wly mom di81cult,
BDd tbe correct llD8WeiB are iocluded
in each of the. units 110 that tbe Bindent may bis _ , palfortllllDCe.
&amp;l(IMied readings for each subunit are ijated at tbe eud of a_,. unit.
These..........._ are byed to eomeat
lel:lboob, _,;fie Scienliflc American
Oll1lriDis. BDd c:unart or c:llaliall .....
ticles in' the periodical ~

-

Land Use Study
Set
forof BuJJalo
Summer
. The

City
ooald be ..,_
vitalized tlnouBh ll1temative . land
uses. Pmdip · K. Gboab. a doctomi
. candidate in tbe Sociofogy ~
ment, contends. 'lbe Nations! 8cienoe
Foundation bas a........ted Gbosb a flllll&gt;mer grant of $7,200 to study 1he topic
in tbe Civil Engineering 1lepar1meDt.
Accoiding to Gbosb, tbe project
will provide "a deoc:riptive atiJdr of
variations in land ...., change within
tbe City." .The -..::b will be..divided into two aections: The . first ·describes -lial pattems of land ......
and tbe seoond attempts to aort out
different comPon&lt;nla. of c b a n g e
tbrougb factor analytic techniques. On
tbis basis, tbe stwly will attempt to

~~~tba~

cbanges in tbe metropolitan area lllld
to tlll(gest tbe implicatioas of tbeae
trends for fullft urban ~

Tladitionslly, he indicates, -..:bbe.ve arcued tlpot there _.. two.
tlnouBh which . cities pby&amp;ically expmd: ..-..;on of tbe periphery, or subwttanimllon; and tbe
reuewal process, most evident in BDd
around tbe core. Ghoah's study will
attempt to demCilstmte tbat there are
many rather tban two
of
urban ~ To adequately understand the way cities· change. all tbeae
bave to be examined, the
~ ssys: "To illusCnte tbe
point, factor analyaes of !aDd change data for tbe City of Ball'alo
would indicate tbat from eilbt to indepeodent factora ·or dinwwjcwo of
~ can ba I8ClO(IliJ&gt;ed. These dimen&amp;lOilS can be finally grouped iDto
four hi'*'- '-dinp: 1) enbo"'-niation; 2) cme an!B . - ! ; S) ..-til
of
· · infrastructure
andtbe
4) -,._u.
- t e d lllltwolb,
by loealized concentmtions or clevelopneato.•
The ~ of tbe piOject is
-

~

expr........,

="=

~lallon
~t~v.:
tion trends using bolb liD-

and

logistic cune-fittinc JII'OCIIIIures. PurpOae of tbe 8D8Iyais ill: fin!&amp;.
to compare exlrapolated trends UDder
different aaunptions of ,._u. with
0ty. of Buffalo planning authority e&amp;timates; and, ...aDd; .to mplons the
sensitivity and utility of dur-t
jection metbodologies.
)110The final report of tbis study will
be presented at an NSF IIJII4ICiilinw
in WasltinJrton. D.C. at tbe eud of
tbis yeu. l&gt;r. ·Georp C. Ia, emuman of tbe Civil~~
ment, will act BB faculty project advisor. Four other llr&amp;dnate studmta
will participate in the studant-&lt;ld8fnated study. There is 811 OIJO!Ilinl &amp; a
particip&amp;llt witb - - - bi land
-.- planning and environmmlal· d&amp;aign. A stipand is available. Qnalifieif

ear

candidates may contact Dr.
(5325) or Mr. Ghoah (1628).

z-

To _Study -Here
Professor Rkbard Caldwell of tbe
Classics Deperlment, University o/.
Tems at Austin, bas received 811
&amp;neiican Council of l.eamed Societies' Study Fen-ship to study Ded
yeu at tbe U jB Center for the l'lu'1
cbological Study of tbe Arts.
- ''This is an '-!ant recocnillon
ol. tbe predominant- of our Cen- ·
ler in iiB field," aay8 Engliab ~

. Norman N. Holland.

;

�Boyer Sees i.19Ws
Enrollmel~
fill.
tbe
- ........ ep(C4Joolllooull , _ , .

I)

to~..!' ..u ..-l..t.....

Jlll'CIIIIWI

~=:::.,.=..,-=.

~-

llludeDIL It -

-

a •..trapper .t Jl'aculty
s-ta Bllllculi¥e OommiU. -w.p
... w~ .rtemooae Cit is the
privilep al ~ llllllllber to
I -

-ae;y Ooalanl, and we obciuld be
liYIIn more of the pie anyway.

. ;'=E~in~~
tiOD,
... ectw.ticmal lbeo-

ry). I all in cDe ol lbe few empty
c:bmno alcml lbe wall
Hayes 201
where I cu pt a aaod view ol the
~ ......._ I -tcb eapecially
'n.e Seliet8ry, wbo alwaya betlina to
nod wbon badalt -u.en are dis.,.... but peo:b vp ad . . the debale ......... - - is
educ:atiaaal. x.st WedDeBol.y, Tbe Secre'tary .,.... to doole . . when Tbe PresideDt ad .., Aaliatuat Vice President
for -'-lomlc Alralra . c:in:uJrded ....
tislicaJ tableo ~ that llie
o.u.u ol tbe Budpt a-1 i1&amp; allocatioaa to this Ullivemity em lbe basis
of a
,.tio between &lt;XIIIIect
boun ad credit bows. Since tbe
fOUJ'oCOW'II8 load ... instituted wbeo
IDIIIIY three CXIIIIect hour~- •
without any c:baDaes. panted f~
credits, lbe Bureau of the Budget bas
' - ' queatioaiDa an allepd inftation
of credit hours, and,
their view inftated budpt requeals. Tbe
dent, M welf M Tbe Academic Vice
Preaident, indicate that the hair is
aeUinl "'-t ... this issue and they
~t to baW! .., ezplanatioo or a
justillcatioa for this inftat:ion. ·
·

in

~

aae--

in

-

n..-

Presi:

in

'Ibree .J&gt;OIIitioua emerpd
the di&amp;cusaioa Which followed the ezpJana.'
tion of lbe tables. Fil1lt lbeC of the
Academic Afl'aiJ'B Council ( lbe Proand Deans), presented by a Provost, which echoed lbet of Tbe Presi- .
dent's Office, namely, that all courses
at the University be adjusted to the
on&amp;- to-one ratio, excep tiona to be
-made by the administration only upon
a tho""!~Jb · review of evidence presented by a faculty meinber for a-·
ception. A second position, articulated
by a SUNY Senator . Who usually
defends the humanistic disciplines,
~d - stand with the stalus quo, le~-'
ting each professor assign what credit
be liked to his courses, _and would
balk at administrative review which
would assume guilt until proven in·
nooenl Tbe third position, briefly outlined by The President, was that of
the Dean of DUE wherein the alleged inftation could be deflated by
requiring all lower level (freshman
and sophomore) coun;es to be given ·
on a ooe-4o-one ratio. ·
•
At this last Tbe Secretary startoa
lro!n what seemed sleep and, on the
heels of a Presidential pause, snarled
"Do it to Julia." No one on the ~
· mitlee seemed to get the allusion to
1984. Tbe Commitlee continued to ·
discuss the implications of each of
tbale three posi tiona and, in the

course of the discussion, another
SUNY Senator got fo the beart of
the matter by stating that the one-~
one credit hour/ contact hour ratio'
was the creation of a Carnegie Commission at the tum of the century to
facilitate ' equitable transfer of students from one university to another,
that the Bureau of the Budget was
using not only an antjquated formula
but an inappropriate yardstick. Then
began only half audible grumbling
among the members of the commitlee
that SUNY-BulJalo· was "better" than
the ether units of State' University,

A. _ . . ,

~

~

--

_.,__

·

A.. lrD'1"Ln' llC'IWLUID
~

..,._,,__

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

/OIDf .... cwutUif

1

~

~-

&amp; Cf•Q•pnu

·~- -

.
•

~":.i:!.t~ro:' s~ent. records

may

.~.

:==•:t!f·~ ~

tt:.

~-&amp;:

......
' Tbe=llllada
in tba

c.. ......

Alao puaecl .,._

fll.tudent
.

the -mtion,

Mo I -Ma to
tba tile .,;tilation
aay JIOPII!IIlll SUNY srad·
uate CIJIIIIIIII*d
JIIOIIUl ·-talallil • lllicnific:ant
ollliiiHelldenllllud

1be
-

~abould~c!!,i:ofr~te
" .
on

'lbe bactpoubd ratioaale for this
item. - * 1 ''tmt lbe UIIIW!I'IIi
~tor at BulfaJo bM ~ an·:I.
~tal JII'OIIIIIIII to teat tbe validity
of vanous ClODCI!IIIII Nlaled to 'alarnal .o-• · a:...- this

commit;.;' ~t!:,·=~-..;canUy in the inception of this_....
posal, we haw """"'-1 ~ ~

and also indicated our _.,.,_...;._ •participate in lbe eva!~~ ~
Tbe ~ would find it~~
to be mvolved in lbe evaluation procedurea for any other new non-resident study graduate PIOIJ'IUIIS so that
we can be better equipped to determine
the efficacy of various moilea for the
delivery of graduate edt~a~tion. It is
~ in_tention of the commitlee to subrmt a progress report when sullicient
data have· been collected."
In another
action of direct interest
~~
csmpus, Profeaoor Thomas
0
Y was elected to represent the
Four y..,... Centers on the incoming
· E~tive Committee.

-v.ua:s

BLACKHUIIST
RICHARD A. SIGGELKOW

CAC Plans Fest·
For ..the ·Retarded

men-

A One:!or-One Festivil for the
_tally retarded of ·t he Bullalo area will
be beld on camp':'"&gt; Saturday, May 11,
under sponsorship of the C'..ommunity
Action Corps (CAC).
·
._ ,From 10 a.)n. to 2 p.m., oo.ch men• uuly handicapped indiVidual in attendance will be accompanied by a
volunteer on a round of entertainment
(two live rock bands folk sillgers
c!owns and· puppet sbo~) and activ;: ·
ties (ra&lt;;es, arts and crafls, lrickball
story-telling, etc.). CAC hopes to su~
ply food and drinks to all participants
through donations from local lood industries.
·
- Events will be· held in the practice
area next to. Rotary Field. In case of
ririn, the Festival will be.postponed to
Sunday.
CAC spokesmen have Issued ibis
appeal to the ClliDJ'W' and local community in connection With the event:
"We need both 'VQ)un~ and mentally handicapped participants. We
also need "'!.PPlies, old balls, games,
old clothes -anything that you can
give .will II!' uaed. U -you own a puppy
or lritten and can brina them to the
Festival, pl....., do so. Il you can belp
.us transport lbe puticipanls . to the
Festi'(al, please notify..._
."PPease belp us in any way you can.
GIVe the mentally bandicappeid · son a full dar of joy and belp .::.,
the commuruty aware of what the
~ handicapped child is CIJPIII&gt;Ie
Donations of articles for use in the
Festival •should be brougbt . to CAC
Booths m Norton Hall and in the
.Bullalo State College Union today
and tomorrow, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. _

sJs~

further . information, call 69i-

· •
.1~· A J?"r&amp;OD Wlth campus-wide adFaculty-Student Annual AWards'ii:1JD!llllt.;ativt;~ responsibility for t&amp;e onquet. will be beld ...._,.,.. . (Thursda 1011111 unple;mentation of the student
)
...._...
y,
records policy and for making this
Dr
policy known to students faculty d
· A. T. Steesmann, Jr.1 associate
May 9 at 8 at .the 81a~ Hilton Hotel, ~ by a reception at ?_p.m.
stall'.
.. • •
an _ professor, anthropolot!Y, nas been
_Tbe B&gt;wi'WR!"'n of4he Year Alnrd ·
u. A repa!Sentative conimitlee to · _ elected to. the ~live CoDimitlee of
...: be re&amp;ponSible for. the
ofl'b,ysical
officer, Fi!stmBrk eon.oiation.
· · of ~. stud!"'t records policy and 1ts
Dr. Steegmann was
· ient of the
. Student -.do to 1ie ·given inCliidl;
tud .fo_r recommendfirst Annual Alnrd
in
the Graduate StUdent ill the Year
~~~' - Teacbing. at U/B in.~ He is
UndeiRraduate ~ of"tbe yea{-ciosme and
or "!'P.rtiper Ilia- .
preoently coaducting ~on buWaU'Strm.Joumal_AWard;-Natit&gt;'lilli
instituti ,
viOlatinns of_~
~ adaptation . to ~ under "an
A,.ard, *"'!the' Pea!i 'aDd ,_, it' -:"~ - ~~~~~
~t ~bas juJU J?Ublis&amp;ed a
II- acolis Awmd m ~·
• SUNY Faculty Senate reooi:nmei&gt;d to' ;y iiOloiY. . mlmual ~ ~ anlbro-

~ :;::.!': !iJ ~~ .

-

. aolJD7' T. JUJU.a1T

" P.i.nact.l W'AJtD

himseJ.

Tbe School of Management AI

o1 , . .

.ts-.-...,..,

witbout Stale ~ invo'-'*&gt;l 'lbe O&gt;lmclillor a1ao refem!d to "~ liJIIt," an .....,._,.,
propanl of. 10 undenlnlduate stndellls
each betweoil the USSR and aUniversitr. that involves juniom and
=:th
. appropriabl langoqepro-

'lbe Cbanoellor also _...ted to
inquiries from the floor. Concerning
voluntary early retirement, Dr. Boyer
quipped that .h8 also thinks dail
about that possibilitv. for
While no intem81. machit.ery bas been
as yet developed, the issue is to be
aamined further. There will ~- another report on this at the next Fac-ulty Senate meeting, after inore data
bas been atudied. Fiscal and educationa! trad&amp;&lt;&gt;lfs would be involved ·
and negotiations with the ~
unit are obviously • lied.
Updating informa~n presented at
lbe last meeting he re~rted that the
-SUNY enrollment pibture. bad improved. Althouih he did not have the
. ~c figures, ~ i.ncreasea in ap'-------~--_;_ _.J ,
phcations are being experienced at
calculate credit hours, b8sed not on
the University Cenlet'll. Surprisingly
the mere existential presence of facthe Corn!Punity Colle~"" seem most
ulty witQ student (conl!lct hour) but
adversely affected and oould fall beon the value of that contact."
bind in student numbers. Again reI believe that the faculty at SUNY.
-lated to these trends is the competiBu1falo is superior in . training, reaon with private colleges for elisearch and ~g ability to any of
entele.
the other University Centers and that
Included among major Senate acthese dimensionS of superiority can be
!'ions at the meeting were the followsimply measured. Filst, a scale like
mg:
.
IDY. butcher's ( bon!'st weight, no
~e resOlution on optional early
spnngs) should be mstalled in, say;
ret¥ement, "that the Unive!Sity Facthe office of an Assistant Vice 'Presi?'-ty ~te urges the Chancellor to
dent for ~emic Afl'ail'B, and, fin;t,
mvestigate further the feasibility of
all books written by faculty ~d be
developing voluntary early retinment
weigl;led. This woul(l show in 'red.
options,"· passed-'
Tben this figure would be automaticalStudent R ly multiplied by the . quality of the
Also passed was a resolution that
book, to be figured numerically , by
the ~~s:"doi1Llbe intent of augsome table l)f V&amp;luea, such as 10 for
gested suiuelinea fiiio the &lt;k!velopoient·
publication. by Oxford University
~t csmpus policy on the conlidentialPre!is or an outstanding New York
1ty and release of student records
~~&lt;?use, 7 for an ordinary univen;ity
Each Senator was instructed to pW,:
press, 5 {or a University-subsidized
lisb_ these !indinlll! on eacli csmpus
publication, 1 for a vanity press. To
as informational background J&gt;rior to
the result would be added 1 point for
formal consideration at a future date.
every year of leftchi.ng aperienoe,
It was also resolved that the SUNY
and, 6.nall.y, appropriate points for
Faculty Senate ·recommend- to the
origin of Ph.D., if any, say 10 points
Chancellor that written _policy on the
for Harvard, .9 for Berkeley, 5 'for · confidentiality and release of student
Wisconsin, 2 for the old Unive!Sity of
records should include at least the
Buffale. F(om the total figure would
folloWing:
I
be calculated the value in credit hours
• "1. All required information which
the institution, through its various defor any course given by any teacher.
qne COI1ll!"&gt; given by a &lt;leaching as- partments, maintains on each studenl
sl9tant, Wlthout Ph.D. and -no experi2. ~ information about students
ence but a: published- article might
which is maintained by the inatitution
amount to one Credit for u,.; whole
but not required.
•
course; whereas, at !.be other extreme,
3. Tbe information about students
a coun;e from a Jlrofessor with 20
which is prohibited. from inatitutional
years teaching experience and 10 · .files.
books by majo~ presses would amount,
4. Tbe local provisions governing
~~~~- hours, to a wbol~ ciollege
the .~llectiona, storage, length of re• ~ such system would not only
= t ~::J:.th'?'l of destruction of
JustifY the .p resent supposed inftation
5.. The personnel responSible' for the
of credit hours but would increase fumamtenance of student records
ture budget allocations baaed on an
throughout the institution's various
accurate rendering of SUNY-Bullalo's
departments.
supenoCentera..rity over the. other Univenoity
6. Which persons have acceSs to information from which student records,
The calculations could be made on
under .what conditions; and for what
a apecific day in early Spring perauthorized purpoees.
haps call!"i Weighing-in
and
7. A-student's right to el&lt;Smine and
accompsrued by a May-Jl!lle raising
cballenge the contents of his/ber recin ir!&gt;nt of the -ubrary. mid drunken
ords and lbe procedure for aacising
dancmg, the Professor with the highthis righl
. ·
est score proclaimed yearly Kil\g of
$. Provisions for . the controlled aclbe Scales.
cess to ~te categories of student
'-ERNIII!r POI'SYCLE
records m order to maintain the'
Assistant Professor of Myth,
' confidel)tiality and/ or security.
:'
Ritual and Games
9 . . 'I'!li' conditions under which in-

Banq·uef- slated

.......... ,.,.,..,
ol u......

. Ycd at ....... StU$
St.. II~
lf.Y. 14214. B41brc.W
In
a - 2U, 2Jo .,....,._ _.._ (~
2!27).

· U.•Ic8la
.
I came away from the 'meeting with
my mind . boiling toward the liard
ball state of resolution of this dilemma, but it was not unW I stopped at
my butcher's and .....td!ed him .weigh
ilp my bait-pound sirloin that tile
tally in my mind was ready for pulling. My butdler, I noticed, bad a new
_..., electronic and colorful, which
gi-tes the ..mght in 'red, the pri.ce in
blue, and the total COBt 1n gnMliL I
tbouibt. "What a marielous way to

tbe lint tm. that

Day;

GREPORTER., :
. -Drfrilir:le
....
*' ,........,. .,._
s,... v,..,_..,
.11•

. _ u- tbe odler 4bree Uni-

" ~... -.:11

g:! I,T~ty ~

?,!w;le!1j'

0 n National Board

peri~c ~

~ti"!',

::~~
'fo~enoe

.=

.

.

�~

wedmha.......,

A ~
aie _._. ol tile
Uni-aty
dlrecdJ' -..let
with fooe1p ....._. lllfalra ad I !w ·~
education. ad ......... ol tile ................ :
body armJII8CI bJ' tile ~ ol U{B 1 - .
rl4lionol. On T~ano~a,y; April 26, tile followiDc
individuala met .. ........ - - ol _ _ . ,
Dr. J.-ph William~, Dlreclor ol tile OIICe Ot
Fol'l!lip Student AffabB; Dr. AIIBt MlrJMelo,
Diteaor ol lDtematicaal 8tudlee; Mr.
Remillard, Admlaoioaa ~. Olloe ol Admissions and Recorda; Mr. 8liepl-. Daanett.
Direc:tor or the IDteuaive Enlliab .l..lmpqa •
atitute; Mr. Elhanan Kelnau, lftWMtionel Coordinator ol S.A.; Mr. Rej Ticb, IDtemationel
Coordinator Of G.S.A.; Mr. lllvid Yunc. 1..t
year's IDternatiooal Coordinator ol. S.A.; Mr.
Sudbir Sucbak, Editor o1. U f B lllkmiJliolltll; Mr.
Vijay Nair, Co-Editor or ll'/ B lllkmiJliolltll,
and Mr. Peter GI'0WIIp08, last year's Editor.. Dr:
Khajry A. 'Kawi, Assistant to the Ezecutive Vice
President, acted as the moderator. 'Tbe folloWing
are 90IIIe of the issues that were discussed.

.r-

FlnancloiMr. Remillard spoke on the impact
finan.
cial_ cutbacks on foreign student enrollment at

or

this University. ID the case or a graduate $dent
applying to U /B, the depsrtment to which one
applies bas the P&lt;IW1!f to decide whether or not
one will be admitted; but in the case o! the
undergraduate student, the student deals dii-ectly wijh tbe Office or Admissions and Records.
ID this case, the A&lt;il:niss\&lt;ms Office sends a preliminary form to the student which be must 1ill
out and send back to the ofllce. bne ol. the questions in tbe form requires him to state how much
money be will have available to him during his
stay in tbe United States. U one does not have
sufficient funds, the ollice sends one a letter to
the effect that one cannot be admitted ("sullicient funds" -means at least $25oo/ year plus
tuition). Dr. Williams pointed out that the U.S.
Consuls abroad have been instructed to cbeck
the applicant's documents ver:v. carefully to make
sure that he does have sulliciei:!t tUnda.
Mr. Remillard continued by noting that this
process bas significantly reduced applications
coming tO U /B lrom students abroad, even
thougb tbe number of inquiries bas remained the
ssme as in previous years. However, be felt that
tbe total number of students admitted by 8eJ&gt;.
!ember '74 would probebly ' equal the number
admitted last year. Dr. Williams ap,.;,oo the
hope that at least some o! the new foreign students coming in next year would be able to get
tuition waivers.
lnternotlonil Educi.tlon
ID ._...., to a question regarding the aims
or international edw:ation in the State University
system and the status ol IDtemational College
at U / B, Dr. Michaels aplained that not only
are there no stated aims ol. international educa·
lion, but also that - have never bad any inlel'nstionsl education propama here. As for Internations! College, it bas been a failure, be contended, for
Tbe first is that no one
bas any idea as to what IDiematiooal College is
or should be; and the seoaud is that little interest
bas been shown by foreign or American studeola
in tsking COilllll!8 within the College,
"I would like to echo what Dr. ~
said," added Dr. Williama. "When the IDternationsl College oooc:ept came into being !.ck
six or seven years agn, there were about liz or
seven p~ to c:reate the Colletle . . . , and
it was very bard There little in the way
of student involveD.ent in that type of enterprise
' ( program development) . . • •"
Wbile most of the atudeDta ~ a...-f
that the_College.haa been a failure, they pointed
out that COUlii08 olfered by the College in the
past were inadequate in .terms ol. ..-tina the
, _ . ol students. Some a p r - ' the
. •
-that since membeis of the foreign ~
c:t.nse everyJeaf• their , _ . and m- aloo
' c:banp, ~ therefore, that the prol.eMionals in
the ~ coocemed with foreign ....
dent iilfaira are in a better position io clevlilop .
the Collep, beaause ol. their aperti8e ad ..... . .

two ,_,.,...

Ita • ..,... to lila ....._•• rm.m.tiana!

~.

lias...- ........ - - -

lila .......
llx ....... the -.He ... the Olllce of
toralp ~- .. - t h e l4udaM- '-I'd
of U/8 .,.. X I. for the d - - of natlcoo, '

-

"--Il -

-~ of . - . Altlclol .......

-~---rd. .

�............
.....
............
............... _...,......., ... .
...,._......._~

- D r. . . . . ~ . . . . . ~.....

......... _.... ...,_,. ..........."'

.., .. I

.

I

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

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

.... ,...blmn.u.

lbbllllaid ........... .........

u . - G( . . . . . . . . . . ._}1-*lf ....

........... Wilt to haftllll ~ CIDI.................. ildtWiwt ia ..........
................ Jf . . . . towaltflllr'llllita
G( . .l
liw to liP ......,
.......-, w - liW.Y 1o be dlllppaUated. I
!

I

I

............... - ~ 111111- .mma
to .-It will .... Dr'. ~ liP Clll hla Giller
tollelp.
lk Kawl ........ - hi jail*-- tt..e
Ia DD ....-J palicJ' -m&amp; latemMiolaJ edu,CIIIbt, . . daea--hitlaeiaDO~

at---

............................ -n.nare
!ntenetlnnal ......... ,........

Jey.

. . . . . . . . "'lf8D,y ............... inter-

l'alltkal 8cilmae

~

be
........ ~ Ia .... CoaDdl Clll llllel-....... 8lallla- He .... died JII'OPIIIIII G(
......_.,._.. . . . . . . . , _ • wellaa witbia . . UaltedSiata
. . . . . . II IIIII

OS.s.A.

Ncr

•

.

NoliJII hi ihe .........

ia ~

edacdlaa ... loeeD upoa iateractiaa, c:ultuJal
--....
•bticm, ... 111111 tbot, in hi&amp;
apialan, "the O.F.s.A. ar anybocbo e11e bas -

...ny tried to .aiwte tbia 'thin&amp;" Mr. ~ Tlctu
aalllod Dr'. wuu.ma, "We . . _ tbeno is DO po1jcy
ol iDtenlaliaml ~ does tbe O.F.S.A.
....... policy? What CIUl 8lpiiCt from tbe

o.F.S.A.r

"We - t..lcaiJy a CCJU11881ina and l\lidulce ·
...,.,. Dr'. WilllaaMt .....-..d. "We are a 01&gt;CII'CfiDatial uait- tbcieo are tbe two buic funoc..
tioDe (ol O.F.B.A.); to war~&lt; with sludeuta."
lt paillled oat by Mr. YIDII tbot tbe
ftlllpllllllitl ol tbe O.F.s.A. in cliolributiDg tuiliaa - - mfaht dect ita flmc:tjao . . . 01&gt;ordillatlni unit. He cioalalded that far all practical--.. the O.F.s.A. ill tbit "'-dol tbe

inti.UtiO.il7 cllaieDaian

aD tbe .
" and
tbot in order to ful&amp;ll ita fundioa,~relati&lt;m­
oblp with foreiP atadeota IIIU8t be ~ upoo
IIIUblal J'I!IIIOICt aDd coocem. "But wbele It stands
rilbt - in lilht ol tbe c:unent flumc:ial ailullliaa Ia 1bf! tbe oo111co,. lia ,w.;,;.,.,_maker on

wt»' .... tliim;W'.".a''il ,.r,;,i.~ pl8o0a'" '
in a poeitioa ol llllllildon." ' Mr. Ylinl furtber ~.
stated tbot, '"lbe ,.,.,.,.,...tion baa loeeD JDIIde
tlat tbe deciaiona b fiDaDcial aid sbould be
~.to ..... ~· - odaez • ~.the
O.F.B.A., ., that tbia llllltual respect and con- ·
cern and tbe whole coordillation ol international
,activities, micht 'WOrlt more amootbly. . . ."
\. "l;loea tbe fact that - . in Oil' o&amp;e, haw to
8YIIluate tbe 'flumc:ial recorda ol individllals in
ol. flnaDci8l need, and tbe fact that ""'
haYe ooly .limi!A!id money aw.ilable and, therefore, many students do not qualify. . . • d.that factor ... cause exacerbation?" asked
WiJiianML '"lbe answer to thai is, yes; it does,"
be aai!l. "because tbere are always sluden~ wbo •
wiD be 4iaePPoiniA!id because tbey dtm't have
fiDaDcial aiel ••• Wbetber that sbouid be shifted
to aDOtber area . . . , tbe Financial Aid Office '
or 8lllllelhinc like that . . . , tbe answer to that
is that - are tom in tbe that on tbe one
baDd, tbe filwlci.oU decision-malting . • . is DOt
a likable kind ol ~ but our o8ice has infolmfl: .
tioa about tbe atmom as a ·-.bole ]leniOO • • •
Slid we, beinJ apeciaJiats in terms of International education, being apecia)iats in ol flnan. cial _ . . . ol fareip students, - feel that
we have -ter .._Jedae in ~ with that.
..• 'lbe tlat I have is that in what we
are doioa . . . , I don't feel that tbe danger is
that - t CXIIJIIIII!'!d to what tbe benellts might
be. ao.r..-, (it is) certainly ......-thy of fultber ·
ClOII8ideadioD. : .. I - your ~ It is ~
hard to be an adYocate, and we an adwx:ates o1
students . . . , on tbe one band, and then to be
• deciaion-malrer Oil tbe other...."
· Mr. YIDII aaid that at P"""""t tbe staff ol
O.F.B.A. ia taking up too IIIU&lt;h time· in dealing
with tuition waiven and is II8IJ)ecting olher tera. .lk. W'tlllams CIIIIDiered that tbe O.F.B.A.
ia anderatded. He pain!A!id out that according
to tbe National AMocletioll for Foreipl Student
Adman IUidell-, tbe O.F.S.A. at UjB aboUid
·lw,,. adviaan full-'lime and one part..time,
widle actually tt..e are oa1y three full-time advi8an and one part.tlme.
. AlDol wby It • tlat fareip 8l:ud...c. do ..Ot
. _ .ualil tbe Jaat ..-. 8CIIIIetblua
. . . . . hi micbt- thmD, Dr'. Wllllama
..........
that
..
be.
.
. . . . . atudenta;
JnformilUoa .._ ia G( impodaaae ..,...,......

or.

..... • tla ~ ._..tioll and H~
liaa s.ma. raiiDa IIIPidina ~ .......,._ .

On Privileges,
Duties and Rights
'lbe aat ID faDd8 fair tultioll wal-. ud tbe
raiiDt ol the lnwnipatim and NalulallzaJerviae tlat .......... Jallitutiam DO
............ atborilor to .... _ . . . . . ... - immlpnt ....... ltudoala tD -n: of--..
durllll the ftiCIIIiaa lw.ve ....,_. tbe
. . - . ........ llalloolt a . . - dea!ID bll ablliV w auppart biDalf cluriDI hla stay In tbe u.s.
In tbe Cllldlat ol the ~t ~ 8COIIIIII\Y,
u.e are perbapa II8CI!8BUY and juatifi~

lillll

ala

...... -o~~..~lbM..,.

~

fanip ........ ..,.,..... wblch Deed tiiiPiuation. ....... quite . . . . D1llllller ol .......
a&amp;udlal8 eiiiiPIDJed Clll C8IIIPIIL Dae to tbe ....
ollamlb- or ...U-kl-do llllatiWe, ~
in ClillaiDIDI ,P!IIIIialiCIIl to - " oulllde .....,...
and • ..-iDI rise in livin&amp; apallell and tuitiaJI,

U.. IIIUdeDtl,
- jobL
- Tbey
aredoClllllllleleb'
clepSidlal
uponinU..
liDt lw.ve
tbe aptiaD ol CJUittinl tbe job ..-. they lee!
that ao injuMioe bM loeeD dane or wlal they
..U.S tlat for dio! ame amount ol work, they
IIIDIIIIY eleewbere -an . option
lbot AmMbD students have. 'F W tbia - .
they f8ld to be _,. much COIICI!IDad with loeepina their ,lobe and with putlina a Httle more
elfart into tt.D than ia abeolutely 118CMBUY;
and III08t employera on campus are seldom cliaappain!A!id in liviD&amp; • job to • foreiln student.
But Clll tbe ·other band, for tbe aame riiaaon
_that tbe fon!ign student is .. IIIU&lt;h ~t
bl&amp; ~ • llmdency Oil tbe part·ol employsa to take him or her for llrllllbid manif - ilaalf at limes. It might be true that fareip atudlmts-are noj as 8Ql'lllllive aa tbey,
pmbopa, sbouid be. More _often than feer ol clia~~!and/or. ,Jaaing their jobs, t1!ill
mfaht ba. cau.l by tbe faot tbat their 8DCial
~ - dilferent from tbe- much mole
visible ol tbe Ameriqulsludenta. The, factor
ol pride, which varies from .nation to nation and
1 fnjGI..c:ultwe tp.culture, ainoe it is. p~
influoDced ll,y tbe accepted mn...Hty aDd ~ ·1
I· ol ~·o1 a c;veD ciitt:We ;j;d~ezialmce, ',
makes it dillicult, if not humiliating, for some to
~~or .make~ "'have done
wtiil/it' Wa8 lny du'ty .(p ao; why then, sbould I
go hat iri band to claim my reward?," mrne ask.
'I1&gt;ey perceive jusj;ce more aa a dUty than as a
rijht. Rather ~ ~ Jjgbta, tbey .........
and' ap8ct that aidio8 wiD be plrionnea. ~
haPs it ia dil6cult for oome employers to - tbe
rights ol their employees as duties of tbelmelves.
P~ tbey consider tbe •c:riteriOIJ for a right
as its espreased claim and tbe. ll8a!8SiliY caaditioo for tbe perfotiiiSJICe of justice as its demand

am ....U -

toWlS ~ to transmit it to studenta
the . .inteinational CDO~tors, ol lbe
student aEOCiationS andfor · tbe Report#. ·1n ·
. _ to a .qu5tion reprding tbe policy ol
O,F.S.A. coooeming.lta relation tOthe LS.C., Dr.
Williama aaid that tbe role ol Mr. Ernest Yau.
tbe O.F.8.A. rein$.mt8tiw in tbe ,LS.C., ·Is to
"provide belp" to"·tbe LS.C . .~ sbould &amp;bare
. (informati"")''With you as clcie81Y as poealble,"
said Dr. Williams. " . . . He is a srad .-iatan.t
and part-time stall member.' Any time you WilDt
anybody from tbe Foreign Student Office in a
full-time aopecity, such .. myaelf, to attend ail7
or all ol your meo:tinp we sball be ilad to go...•
I have never felt, though, that the Office ol Foreign Student ~ abould be in""lved in your
committee, ~ ... by invitation from yOIIl'selves."
In the s,.tam
'lbe students . present expressed dissatisfac.
tion with tbe current structure ol.tbe bureeUcracy
which ClDDIIiats ol tbe Intensive.English Languaie
Institute, tbe O.F.S.A., and tbe Council on International Studies. Better coordinatiOn · among
tbeae unita is. Deeded, tbe students said. Dr.
Williama ag-.1 that there cDWd be better 01&gt;onliDatiaJI, but be espreased doubts aa to wbelher
tbey could find tbe time to """"""Plilh this.
"I think tbe ayatam is tn!meudoualy inadequate," aaid ,Dr. MlcMela, "but. it Is DDt aoing
to· c::banP. IIIII- you llludeats .llrin&amp; tbe pre.
1R1J8. • .. • ,I think w lw.w to atop beinJ .,
damed pOJile ~ . . ~ to wbat you NalJy '
'WBJU. You. abciWd .cleulY articulate wbat you
'wint .,..t a,bkfor it. If you came to me and
tajl",me ~ YCJU,,..ut.,and if I qree with you,
men!, be

tbroulh

._ ,n.doq_

-VUAY HAJB.

Last ·Issue ,.
Of the Year
......,....,..

'

- 'Ibis is tbe Jaat iaaue ol U/B lnUnoatioii&lt;Jl
for this academic year. 'lbe co-editor and I would
like to tbank tbe membenl ol tbe editorial board
for their. - t elfart In belpina ua put toiether
a goocJ !JIOillhly ......apeper. On behalf ol tbe editorial boom!, I would like to thaDk all the•Cl811· •
tributor&amp; b ~ ua with a variety ol articles,. and,alm Mr. Robert Marlett b malting j t
poMible ·for -ua .to - publiab •UfB . l~
regularly.
•
,'!"e ~ ·~!""'a WODdeduliiUIIIIIW'

.1 •

--~

r-

, ,_ ••.•• ~U/8 ~TIONAI,.
._
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF: Sudhlr Solc:Mk (T•nDnla}
C().£l)ITO~

Ca. -

Vljoly N•lr (lnclill)

EDITOIIIAL -.a~ .
(Puerto lllco); JUIIIn

.

OloDrO Uilpebl

(Nialoria); Oor1tncton (NipN); Shlu
(Hone Kona); Ellen Bloc:lc, ..tvilor (U.S.); Pno1
(Ken)o8); Ernest YIIU, ..tviaor (Honi Konc); LIN Hut
, CHOIIII J&lt;ona).
~

RJout _ , (ttalyl: Audle

w~

{Hone Konal-

I will help you fight for · it." But "there Ia DO
real way that I come in COiltact with the faniln
students," he poin!A!id out, fillplaining hi hla
fuDction is to aee that tba. academic
' nm smootbly (thia 'is a S.U.N.Y. flmo.
tiail). 'lbough . . . ~ ... mfaht CIIID8 in
contact with foreign students wbo ill bl&amp;
claiaaes, "aa a bureew:rat, I ha¥e DO napallllibility
whatooever to foreipl atudents,• .. aplained.
"Y011 an!' quite right," Mr. DaiiDett ...
sponded '"lbere isn't tbe lUIICIUIIt ol coardination that tbeno obould be. We are people wbo an.
roncemed with imemational education on ~
pus. I am a teame~ first, I remind you, and an
a.dmini&amp;trator --.!, altbough my administrative duties became much heavier than my leech~ duties, and I doD't have a cboice. • • . 'lbe
Institute is (a) teeching llllit ... and we wpu)d
like to do only that. Unfortunately, - have in·
heri!A!id tbe keys to ·t be pies ol tbe University as
far as English· language pro&amp;iency is concerned. . . . U ..., feel that, an undertlraduate
student does ·DDt have an adequate language
pro&amp;ieocy, - wiD DOt certify him, and II*&gt; be
cannot'bave an I-20.
.
We don't lilre tbis fuDction ~ J!IUCII, but
on tbe other band, - would rat'-&lt; be tbe _ .
to aet tba. TOEFL (English prollcleocy - )
8COI'88 on tbe basis o1 .,... apertise .ln tbe an.
ol ......_ inalzuction and Janauqe prollciency
Ibm to have it decided eolaly-IJy tbe .A.dmiiBons
Olllce, • it ia ID _,. ecboo1L • .. !!be aludents
'I &lt;ol lha IBUl are fareip llludea.ta ••• , and,
I ~ they have ~mm~patioll ~ anc1.
~they Deed foreip IIIDdeaf.m-nent,·
' wbida ia fumlobed ID _..,. by~tbe Fonlicn

REPORTER-U/8
.' .

INTERNl\00~9, m4hage 2

.

~

�:a;re;,..u• rr• ••~=­

:-:r_~;

B.A..tba
..............._ . . GUJIIIIII.~ to-a

~ cledllaa, Mr. !WaD pnlemcl to
aalill' ID lha I.S.C. 10 that '"we Clllll
all . . . . . it....
lllr. Tldaa ....._. the that there
mlabi be . . . CID lha part Clf of the
....,_.._._.of tile~ - - they
... clbeelly ........ with the Plllblema the committee Wlll.a.dy. Tbe ..,.__ - 1D the_,.
bea of the Mmlnhtzatlm Involved with .......
etudmiB Uld IMoawlic&amp;d .a.dy. It .,..
.,..ted that PM)wpe_ it would be beller to law
the COIIIIJiittiBe ClCIIIIpcacl C!ldulhely of llludonta.
Tbls .... dl8ciMied Uld It 8flll8ll that the
aporieace and espertiae of a- admlniatrators
would ba lnvahwble to tbe CXIDIIIIittee, lllld that
*- they, tt-:..., law omp.-1. m-.w..
fac:tbl with the ailliD&amp; structUre. they probably
-"1 be 88 inten!ab!d in teltini Blepa to c:baDae
It u the atudeDIB.
Snnmwrizinl tbe developmenta in the diaculoaioo, Dr. Kawi said. " (it Jwa been suggeeted
·that) a CXIIIIDiittee be eatabliabed by the repaent;atlva of tbe foreiln atudenta md tbe adminlalmtors to wod&lt; toptbm md submit a report
to the President whiclloutlinm tbe problema 111111
maba ..,...,.._daiions, , , • Tbe ClOIICeiD ~ that there milbt be IIOIDe biiB Oil the
part of the administlatora. you ( tbe students)
can form your own CXIDIIIIittee md call upon tbe
admioistmtors to meet with the committee 88
resource people, (to) """""" ·queeijoa.s ••. ; yooa
(the students) p - tbe problema."
It was decided that a final-decision need not
be. made at the time ., that all indiYiduals concemed would '-"" time to think lhinp over. All
11..- present qreed that Oil Thursday, May 2,
they would meet again and try to reach a linaJ
decision.
''I hope you found thiS meeting as fruitful
88 I found it," IBid Dr. Kawi, an4 everyone
seemed to agree tbet the meeting was very fruit. ful indeed.
'Even though the meeting, itaelf, was rewarding, it aeema to me thet, in Older to benefit from
it and to take advantage of the willingness to
extend coopemtion md 8811istance ~ by
the 'lDembers « tbe administration, - . tbe atodeniB, md our repn!I!I!Dtatives Bbould contribute ·
our' 'Share in .the etrorta to change lllld',improve •
~~re·' !ozjstinc titruCture with wbicli many of us
haVii often eJ:P.-1 dissatisfaction.

•

lldDa tbl

_..

...

-.---·~--,._ ..... ..m.
{ii!~'t;,·;;.aiiiiia"i&amp;~wditiaa,;; 11be 1M&amp; that

__.. 1ar mteaJatb.l
edaCIIIIIII. ~~~- k . . . Jot tD dO wlth .....,.
~...,. .IIIIJMT.
bad_._..,. lftii-Da 11118 ba9e ID ' - I I wHh
IIQJIIIDt......... la
'-diem
...... ilot peld Clll . . pey«WWe • la_

1.,....,
DmV'-.--

- - «w

lltlai$D . . . . . . . Ia . . ~. by ...,.
W•-..... dat, Uld- daa't llJre it. We
-*1 JID.fD t i n a - cocllllbwlbl. .•• . We
_... . . . --~with . . comIIIIJIIlt;y. 'nle - ..... - _,. limited.
..,_ tllbaa1d be Gf . . . . But there .. liD
tD .... Clll . . . . . . . . . 'l1at ll:iDd Gf tlliD&amp;
Gf wart. • . • We coaJd co...U.... ...... that .. l:nla..
Mr. Dlalll&amp;..., ~that tbla- the
s.t em. "the four Gf lllf' (Mr. Remillud, Dr.
Mic:bMia, Dt.
Uld Mr. Dmmett) had
.at clallm Ill the t.ble.
Ill • Clnllr- the , . _ ID Campua
lllr. a..lblr saa..t ...... Dr. Williams if be
~ . . . _ ldllllfllf fD wily tbere ""' liD piiUis
for 1111 bJ!Imatjanal lll!llW' oa. the Nonh.c.impua.
Bu&amp;lo Slate CoUete 111-.ty ........ be pointed
out. Dr. ~ - . . . 1 thet Buftalo State
Collep liM • _._., -n forelp student P.!IPU·
Jation and that It . .... ODe interDatloaal club
rather lhllll • poolifonlioa. of etbDic dubs and
orpzailata., wbile law 1111 intemaDonal
~ Gf 1300 forelp llludonta and
13 or 14 IDienwtlaaaJ cluhe. "So when you are
telkiDI ebout 1111- intematioa.el center of the
. mqDitude of 1300 forelp_ students, you are
really telkiDI about ......thing altogether different • . . ," be coa.cluded.
'The point of the lll'JUDII'Dt. it seemed, was
that 1111 inlll!tnaficad center for ' UfB would be
too ezplllllliVe. 'l'be studeniB omplained that they
did DDt~ nor WilDt a "giant, gigantic" c:omplu, but only • place where they could . . md· bold lhaJr aativitiee; it•would help lltudenta
to develop lllld prliilerve of identity.
~ . . - - to the A'mberst' CainpUS, IIIBIIIil!ft of the edJpinislmtioa. admitted
that they did not know what the plans are for an
intemational center, if lillY· Dr. Kawi sugll""ted
that foreipl atudeDIB, perfwps with the help of
tbe O.F.S.A. mellor other units, work out "aolne
sort of ~ as to what you would like to
Oil the Amberat Campus for foleign stu...... 'lbe u~ can ealllblillb policy, '1llllke
deciaiOIIs and implement- them without input
from the st:oden1B. ''But if it did,.. Dr. Kawi held,
"it -"1 be ""!Y unforiuna1e. On the other '
hand," be added, "if the students rome with
p~ to the administration, they help the
Uoivemity make better decisions. 'Ibis is vecy
important•

..._a,._ _.

wnu....

"*'"

AdvioooJ~

Ilurblc the courae of the discussion, the idea.
ewlved that an ad-boc, in-bouse committee be
establiabed wbicl1 would stUdy the issues .....
ClerlliDc forelpt etudeota 88 well 88 intematiooal
educatian 111111 draw up specific pmpoaals to imp..,.. the oiluationa with which tbe studenta
mellor the uni1B of the administlation are dia•tislled. Tbls committee would present ita fiDdinp and DICOIIIIDI!IIda to the PresideJ&gt;t; the
grDIIIr qreed.

PJQPOBiDa the committee, Dr. Micbaels IBid:
"What I· want ia to put w.-ber a Committee .• .
to lUke a ~ ... , bring in a couple of outside -.ultanta, talk ID all the peciple on cam. pua 'lrbo are involved, .fiDd out wt.t is JlOing on
at oiMr ~ in S.U.N.Y. and two other
~ iluloide of S.U.N.Y•... Thill CXIDIIIIittee draWII up a report (as to) what is sood about
the ayMan, what is lad about it, bow the dillerEilt olllc:ea are flmcliotiin,- my oalce, Joe's '(Dr.
William&amp;') omce, Steve's (Mr, Dwmett's) oBice
-and wlwt can· be cloae, 'reaJiatically cloae, to
ebaDp the oi.tua6on; (lllld) eud tbe report to.
ltbe l'reaidmL . • . I 11111 wi!llna tO WOd: and
pnwlde f1mdlq to tbe beat of my ability. . . ."
Dr. Willllla.. IIPiakiDI for the admlniatrators
CDDOemed with forelpt llludonta and intemati&lt;mal
ed1aliiJa. ......t ~ atudeDIB that they will
"cata~DJ,y '11011&lt; with you to ...-rt-1 lhaL..
. "'aae • repcJft .. dewllaped, ,.... Cllll be '8lll'lld . . It coaJd.t. ~184 ... -the Preaidllnt .
md lt will be~" . . . Dr. Kawi. "''bis' '

I,_..,__.

"'

I&amp; ~ 'dadallhit cllacaalioD that ~
falbNd tll8t JoCt.JWaan, .............. I

1

.-VUATNAJa

.

.

Co«&lt;ito&lt;,

.v/B !nteli}S~ ..

Foreign TA's:
English Spoken Here?
'The following is. an interview wiU. Mr. Stephen C. Dunnett, DireCt8r of Foreign Student
English and tbe lntensiYe English Language Institute, conducted by Sudhir Sucbak, edito&lt;, U I B
lntuMlionaL
SUCHAK: There - · to hne n..._ , . . _ ... the pMt of--~
t,..,.-tnethoo)-nlifllla-of~ln

opObn Enifloh of foralln Taachlni In
. t depa-lnthe - - !c.turally, - a r e - about lhla •._uw !map

·LlTTt:Rf·Reader Applauds

U/B International
EDl'l'OR:

.'The _..nee of UIB IIIUmtJtiDIIIIl in the
Reporter is, in my opinioil, a ,great achievement
of the fcmoign student body. For the first time
the intematiaaal atudeniB haw a IDOft! """""""'
ful _ , . of CllllllllUDialtioD with the Uoivemity
community at larp. Besides, it provide&amp; a &amp;piC8
for foreip atw:lenta, as well 88 their American
counlelperla, .to voice tbeir cipinlons, wbicl1 will
clear """"' miaundentandlnl prejudices. and
thus ombanc:e mutual UDdentllndlni, deoplte the
fact that - ... bom auch· ~ ~ 111111
tradiliaaa. AIIO, it providee !DfonatiaD 111111 that .......
atudeniB find 'VIIl1Wble Uld
belpfuL
•.
To time wilD are ftiiiPOIIIible for the ~
ancie of U I B , , . , . , . , . I - ' d lib 1D eaiiOIId .
my appftiCiatiall, -to ..........Ia.. lhMo Oil lhoir
.....,.., and to wish lhMo1oiB Gf badd·

.

.

" •

"' . • '

..:.-·;·.

~.

"-EEIi'nlf uoilo

:· Blulleirt fiGm JDdrDiiiia •

�+.

e&amp;ICIWI: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~ llledy ..........
..,-.J
......... - i l l lhall'llilillji. B 1llilllll . .

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

_.....,.TA·.. NI-;ae~'·-wile ­
NfiuiNd Ill atted - ar
i;IJihl8 -a !NK.
We _ . .

_...

-t

~

Dllt _,. •

8lld---

- . . . , . . tWr
~ad

- b u t llllleJPDIII.a lllllpt tli ... AllllidciiD

callllp . . . . _ llitllatiGIL We -w _... the
Cllllll*atica ol ... ~t ol ~Ill
heiPiDI 8le I'QreiiD TA'a Ill ...._. their peda-

- aaclc8lll1dlla tbft!lllb ~
elc.

•

•

micro-~
.

I ~ lib tD poiDt GUt 117 the way ~t hi
the where - bave looloed intD ~ta
. _ fGnipl TA'a we baft foUIId their BniJlab
Ill .. aaliafadlaly but tbalr ~ - slr.illa•
~ This Ia • JIIIOblem DDt jqlt for
.......... TA'a, for a )'Diibow - do not haW
..... tlaiDina pnJII8III8 for •&lt;(OIJep tMd&gt;ers.
'ft8le- al8o pl'Gtilema olthe TA's cuftmaJ
............. Ao lie CJJIIIIdend.. Often \beie are
1liaDlll!mit clllrel!lacas iD. the .,_,_, style. and.
lllllllioiD ol baip unlwnities .ilDIDpared to
ours. 'l'llis is Ute 8Drt ol thiDa - 'IIOOIIId like to

Foreigners ~aee. .
A 'Catch-22'

dl!lil with in a~ CDD8e 8IICh as~ aoe
I lave just "-rihed to )IOU. It's a pity, .really, ·
such a course ......Wd not cast very much but n is

beYGDd aur budget.

- .

lliCRAK:-·
_,_.,

Do ,.... -

....

IIIINJOm':

. •

budpl · - for

On the contrary,;.., m8Y not even

be able to fuDd the -t1l'o credit ··courses' we now -

-

.

th8t. Why couldn't 11)8
c111p 1n ~ -for~

IIUCMAK: 1.8111 _ , ... -

.,...__ .n

-.-,·-.yr

IIIJN!Oin.-! 'lbat's a• very good "':'ggestio\1. I
shall eQ&gt;Iore.it With the Graduate School -

America &amp; Africa:,
·What's .in a Name?
Names ind.d but a miDimal function
-that ol ideatiflcatioi.. ~ then! ......Wd
be mudt more in common between Africa and
America since' the two IIIUM8 soimd 80 similar.
'Jbe fact that there are dark-Uinnecl people here •
and' 011 the other side of the AtlantiC is of no
relevaDa! and .&lt;X&gt;ID&lt;. is a lhiDg to be abboned as
a lasis for Intemational brotberbood. Besides,
~26 million Black Americans c:anitot be apectod to tw.ist their nation's policies in favor
of their Sahara brothers as much as tbe pre~t white populatipQ wgJlld tend :to ipclin~
their nation's besrt towards Europe and wherever
else the white race can be found Nevertheless,
when the Mrican takes stock &lt;Jfthe, humanitari&amp;n
bene!ill! be has.derived from America, .he appean;
to - more tl\an meets the-eye in the accident of
.....,_ that sound ~t alike.
'
American humanitarianism in Africa has.
manifested itoelf from rehabilitetion to assistonce
in aetting up industrial compl""""- U.S.4-LO.
has belped us ....,uy to aploit our agricultural
potential
.
'
American investment has deaiJ a savage blow
to our .unemployment problemS. Armies of Peace
CorJ,s men arid women'have ~invadedn our lands
to eKtond knowledge and help us eradicate our
problems- call them diaeaaes, .ignorance,
vation, ~r- if only to impress upon us
the euormity of what we !!1'1' up a~ Hun~ of young Africans have streamed int.Q
America in recent years in quest of knowledge
under A.S.P.A.Q. and . similar programs. Many
IDOI10 have token advanlage of the American
opeD door policy to come here and struggle .
pari paau with. American youths to work their
""'Y through scbool African atudents are among
the beneficiaries of the foreign student tuition
waivem that have been a common feature at .
many IJIOtln!68ive AmeriCIIIl linivasities and c:Ol-.
1-. And in the Middle East Crisis, which
afrec:ts Afri&lt;;!l in -a way, America has played a
role which_no one ......Wd dia:ribe as obnoDous,
realli:ing her owri political O&gt;mmi-.lli- com~ts that are equally, morally laudilble. 'Jbere
ia much to write bome about the J..utifnl ~­

sw-

-ODe

bas pth.ed here

(not

atreakin1,

tboucb. "" they ......Jd 88.Y that U... of W. over
here are already makiJ!1 an about tum in the
realm ol c:ivilization). ~ ia much -to. recount
about American boapilality. -We are patafnl to
the "Bic B!OihK.w
.
•·
•,
Unfortwialely, however, ·w~~m the African
brooda Over hla political ..._,. he Aaaic:a pcJIIey in the fanip palitlml ....,_.
to ' be . inlll..-l by ~ with Bdtain
111111 Panatlal • if picme!w!Mm ._. 8le ~
~ . . . Or elae, . . c:a- apiUI wlv' -.

the ............ ol African :trr.dam ftlldiD iD :
.South Wea&amp; and 8aallaD Afrlaa baft ..oeMd the~ ol the UJ!hod ~at

Foreign Student Heatth Insurance
_
It should be noted by stu!,lents currently on
the Foreign Student Health Insurance Program
that this cioll)ing year's billing for insurance will
be handled in a -different miumer. Tbere will be
a rnsiling of the information regarding the policy
and an application form sent directly -to. each
studeilt CIJlre!ltlY subscribing. Students &lt;X&gt;ntinuing with the University should O&gt;mPiete the
application, submit the premium and mail itback to the insJu'ance company in the envelope
provided. It wil! be the responsibility of. each
student -to -.,.,.,;ply with· the above to insure rontinustion of coverage.
·~

Foreign

studiont

..

..•

Tuition Waiver Schol8rslllpo

, ThiS' is to remind everyone .that applications
foLForeign' Student .Tuitiori Waivers- for lhe
Summer Session and Fall 'Semester are· due inthe-O.F.S.A. by ·MaY 15.
1974 Orientation

Students yiho 'are interested in ~cipating
in the 1974 F9reigli Student Orientati!&gt;n are invited to.. contact Ernie Y_!ll! _in ~ O.F .S.A.

...

~latiOns io. the

Gradum

:rhe Office·of Foreign Student A1raira -dio
&lt;X&gt;ngratnlations to those .foreign students griulu·
ating in June or Auguat. We hope each of you
will stop by before departing so that we m8Y
extend our peiSonal best wishea. We woUld ap-preciate having each student's forwarding address
so that we· may D&gt;l!intain- O&gt;ntinuing ron tact
over the Y""!"-.
#

•

.. .

• •

SUmmer Aild,_
.--;.
Studenta who change the~ addreos duringthe summer iue urged to notifY the Oflice of
Foreign Student Affairs as We receive and/or
attempt to forward man to ·~

...

SUmmwWootc ............ .
Btudi.nta 011 F-.1 -atudent visaS wbci wish t6
take summer employment must. IIJlPly for ..Ork
pepnisaicD ~the lmmicritioa Service. A'p. plicaU... and proceduzee required fcir lllina are
. available-in the Olloe 01 Foreign' Studellt Ml'alra. ·
Studenta are JD'IIId tD apply tor Wofk_pennllllioa
~ to allow timillar ~-

It our Amerlgm frianda happen to tbinlt that
, foreign stUdeoata are a haPpy tribe: . jldive. ~
~ sbidioue. and wllat DQt, let them bliJw
that ~ is not always trul!. that itc ls not ell innocence and 8ll&gt;ifing, that. California also I.. its
rain-aye, Jet' them hear a complaint.
'lbe stnlctur\l Of the situalioa face'd by any
foreign student who has a 6nancial prilblem is
basically a .Catcb-22 cireulat ~- Ji'inlt ol all,
since the foreign student ilr hOlding an "F-1 atu- .
dent Visa, be muSt be ,a full·time studerit during
the years lie is sta,Ying in the United Slates. 'lbe
tuition for foreign studl!ntS, m o - . is ftll!e- r
cially high, iulually 35-50 per 'oant than
that of the American Citizen. Now if a foreign
student has a financial problem, the .first thing
~ ;will do ifo to 1oo1&lt; f.,.. mone;y. ~ the most.
dire¢, rational, .and -.ninaly tba.-only way"to·
do so is to work. Sunimer .eBIJiinp at their mazi.
miqn seldooi exceed $1,200; .and finding a job ia
not at lill guaranteed. Even this amount is hanlly
enough to meet the educational CXJBt for a whole
school yMr. 'lbe result is that' the foreign student,JDUSt -wort part..tmie' duiinl ~ aCboOr~
dayS if he wants. to filiish his educatioo,..in this
&lt;X&gt;untry. He~ it must . also he noted. that the
· Departmez&gt;t fJi linnJiciatioo and NaiUra!UatiOD •
usually does ~t give out ' work, pennit, wlddl
is neceasary for. the foreign atudent if lie wants
to work olf-aunpus. On the other ~ on.......: .
pus work, which- does not 'reqirln, a :wodl peimit,
gerilfrally P!lYS lower than olf'&lt;8JIIPUS worL
'Jberefore, if the foreign student ..-Is to ~
a cel'lai'n amount ol money, and must - t Oilcampus, he mUst invariably increase his wmking
hours in order to -.pensate for the' !ower wnye.
Now that the foreign student must cany a
fnll·time studY load (and usually it Ia a core
lilad becaUM tJie foreian. student, aware o1 the '
financial, tiJ!&gt;e. aild aoai limitalioas, lays eaiPba·
sis on the practic:al value_ol the CIIIIIIE8 aludiad)
as wall as Wllrk part..time, he will find bini8elf
without enoUgh time to study. Fw - I a , a
studeilt wbo WOJb, IIII.Y; 18 hDiila a wek fDr•.the
. F~ Service is stud.Yinlr ooe day leaa' per wek
'than those who do }lOt liave ·to work.
The net result ol all lheae;· plus such aocjai
and j&gt;emonal factors as time OIIII8UIIIed. aettinl
to know the &lt;X&gt;untry; writing Jetton bame, or .
the language problem which ~aaYDidably and
considerably red~ leamina ~ Ia treinandous psychological and emotiOaal up1111
the foreign atudent. And, It unfortunately, the
grade=point average clropa, which very often is
the caae, wbat can the foreign student do to ~
bimself? With p1'1!811U18 adding U1J011 ~
· does 'the foreign student have unlimited CIQIACitY
til accept such a heavy wmght uplll1 ~ mind'/
Can he still he a good student c1eve1opJq tD the .
utmpst his intellectual potential? •
'Jbe catch is thus: one ~ he ·a
student becaUM one is ~ tD 1IIIOd, and
the lliw atotos that ooe Cl8Jinot ...n,y - t -. ..
• caUM one i&gt;omea'~·aa a atudent. Bere'a
• another way to put It: be,wbo..,.,..,. ani! tr1ea
hard to get a. &amp;ood ediicatioa Cannot IIi it, b.
cause he ha to ti)' hard to pta good eckDtbL
· 'Jbe meena to pt to lhe ·eud Ia at the time
the -a- which }:i)Ja the _., Y-*n ill
moved ....,. deopiT }ly the al.Wte ~ ol _,
lhla daiile ol. Ca_ich-22 ad Jetil aut • ~ -

wbiatle.
.
.
ODe catdl ia ~ tDii !IIIIey, . . - tb.. »

---

no 8Wieden.. Or do , _ want to hear

~

'

~

-~

Dllinl1 ·

R~RfER.u/8 INTERNATIONAijMiy 9; 19141Pa8e •

�!4 . . - estlmatad ot 5,000 visited compus Sunday aftemoon for the fourth
....,.,., CommunitJ.-tlnlveN!ty Doy Open House. While this -yeor's procr-m em·
. . , . , _ unclerJit'..tuote educolion through exhibits and Information seulons,
~ still found the more ..--pleasing cultural and scientific which . IYve marlcecl previous open houses- opera, bond conc:etts, ~
- . etc. Popular apln thls year _,.. the opportunity for a visit with the
Presklent and the chance to just sit and relax In the Spring sunshine (or whot
.
ollt).

___..,.............

�~

'

·--I.

· Feminism Still Undefwed, ·
Author juliet ·Mitchelt Sa"ys

--

-'111e tnt ...... Pb.D. 10 tmOil in
... School fll. MediciDe will receiwl
bill M.D. ~ May 19. He i&amp; 40,.......,_ :r.-iom. Dr. . . . . _
-mlled by Dr. Bdwud J. Milrille, ~ llll8elltiw flllaodate dean
aDd dllildDr ol ......,;c JlftiiNIIIB at
the lledical Sc:boal. aDd Dr. J Daaa, • diDil:al alaoc:late pofll.-.r
al.arpl)', _....... - allo. maDber "'
the aclall8all8 ~&amp;tee 'in 1970.
W.... . . _ . ........,. bla M.D.·
inllq,hawlll .. _alllim20
blidt ADabD ~ ....... also
- . Pb.D. ...... ·- mu, 10 Dr. w.......... Callb, editor, JOIII'riQJ.
NatiiDI liledia1LA8acdatlcm, Washmae-, D.C.
"' -led 10 be a pb,yslciaD tor as
lOIII as I am _,...., My parenlli
tallied a11out it an the time, -and my
father was 1111 X-ray tecbnician at
N- Huover Memorial Hoepillil,
Wilminltloa. North Camlina. 'Ibis im~ me, too," Dr. Freeman says.

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

.

"My 9&amp;-)leiiNIId IJI'Illldmol.be, Mloy
8usaD _Fh!eman, • ......, will come to
Buffalo from Hallaboro, North Carolina, 10 me l!l'llduate. was very
influential, too, Sbe is the daucl!ter
ol a ilaw IUld .-1 10 tell me, 'be
80iueiJcid.y'' • • • •

or

"In 1950 Profi!S!JO&lt; Ernest Swain
W'llmiDgton, N.C., CIOilvinced· my parenls that I abould enroll at Morehouse
CoiJe&amp;e. He "also introduced me to Dr.
Benjamin E . Mays, one of the leading
bladt erf!ICiltonl who was then president &lt;Jf M~ .He is now president ol. the Atlant8, Georgia, school

boanL"
.
After graduation DL Freeman will
intern at Buffalo DeaconeSs ll.,..Pital
in the Ob/ Gyn deputment with Dr.
· Normu Colirey, eli nical asao&lt;;iate
prol.esaor of Ob/Gyn. Dr. Freeman
will also be te,ching and counseling
future medical students at the u fB
MflC!ical School,. .
'
-,"Dr. Courey's program at DeacoDOilS
is dedicsted 10 community service.
'TheY. have 1111 em::ellent teaching ~
p;iiii ;8Dd pi\Mde -ceDent ' health
care. Tbat is wby I selected DeaCODEI!&amp;
for my intemship, IUld I bope to ,.._
main in Bulfalo," Dr. _Freeman ipdicates.
Wben . Freeman arrived in Buffalo
in the summer ol. 1970 he managed
the Health Sciences Summer Studies
Prot!ram- He helped slimulate and
motivate the 56 bigb school students
tmOiled to (10 oil 10 health sciences
CUMr~L Appnmimately 95 per cent
- t ... to col1eBe.
'I1Ie following September, he began
bis Medical School studies. At the
same time, he w. a lecturer in the
Biodwnistry,Department and tutored
medical students in biochemistry,
-Jiilysiologi, pharmacology and bi&lt;&gt;pb,yaica.

-

iD

'

.

Undo...,.._

~ =..:.*"~~- H.riu:; ..
years later, he received tbe Pb.D. from
G«qetown University, Washington,

D.C.

:
Dr. Freeman's prol.essionaJ aperienoe includes also two years (195860) at Sloan-Kettm:bJB Institute for
C8ncer Research -~ tfuee years
(196G-63) with E. R. Squibb IUld
Bona, N- Brunswick, N.J. ·(in the
eadc!criDOJogy department) ' 'Wbile at~~he waS 8 Public
Htialth Service Fellow and 8 Poatdoclaral FeUoor. He baa been inwh• in
CXJU!!Miing, -.:bing, and beJpina students -1n an o1. bis proteadoual life.
'MIIIly ill bia ~- students are _.
' rolled in ... haw llftlCiualed from 'such

what ~• . _ , . . .

- By SHARON EDELMAN

110

caJime

in whidl 'MIIDII! lbllir
- -Jllfmu:y
...._....
'*--aDd
.ocl8l

Juliet Mildlell, ....... two boob ... feminism, fDid a campus
audience MCIDday nidat tbllt tbe ~
ject baa naJiy "been de8naL
"Feminism ia undemtood oaly in
fragments," abe aqued. ''Its blstioly
is incomP.Iete l!iJoply because the bJ&amp;.
tory ol. women J.a not been writtiiD.
'Ibis ia not a failure ol. .........., or ol.
woman, but rather an indicatioa ol.
the aesist natum ol our aooiety."
.Ms. .Mitcbell, a visiting lecturer in,
the Women's Studies College ol. U /B;·
deecribed her own tbouJbts em feminism as "a hypolhetlcaJ and SOIMWhat
Marxist" appraisal ol the eexuaJ division o1 labOr c;baracteristic o1. an .,:
cieties, and a key 'to .the ~on .
'
Written

~laollllll'd.aninducIn llll .......... - ' c .aaty,
'Ma. 'Mitdlell Clllllli!med.- ......... COD-

~am

-rt ""-a_.,

ability to produce II damiDaled by ber .
haYing 10 ._....tuce. Man, em the
other hlllld, reproduce DOt ~
but the material caadltioll8 ol their ·
.a&amp;ty-matetlal aooda and capital. . . .
"A CIOiltnldletion in the social re1a:
tlonS ol. men and women edMal
tluoullhout blatory," 'Ma. 'Miticbell
added, "bqt the ante(IO'Ijsm .not
iDtenM until men and wamaa (lOt
cloear tqptber in a _claaa 80Ciety whale
ol.wmnen.
.
the - · · sphere Ia mecle a ~
cate(IOry of tbe mllll08. An eliiiiDJIIe is
Antliropologist Judith Brown, abe
found in 17a.-ry England during
suggested, bad p~ one intereirtacbools 8s Harvard, Yale, Stanford,
ing tbeory CIOilceming the relative
the rise of capitalism. Women were
Jofms Hopkins, Columbia,' Michigan,
value of women's work 10 men's: the
allowed 10 ..-.lve their _&amp;oeia} relaPennsylvania; Califomia (San Franamount of contribution women make
tiOns with men on a public Jewl,· in
·cisco and San Diego), Tufts, Caseto the -·L-'~-- 0 f the'
'ety M
an ideology ol. equality, and yet had
• WesteiD Reserve, New York Univer- .
"90Cl
•
s.
14&gt; subordinate tbein wor.t ·as repro-Brown"""""'""""'
maintained, was
determined
sity, Boston University and U{B.
by tbe competibility of the subsistence
ducer 10 the men's task ol. the ~
Dr. Freeman and bis wife, Allie, have
activity with cbild care.
'
production and productioo of capital."
14
She noted that "feminism was ·ex• Patrick,
tbree sons-James Jr.,
"Here," contended Ms. Mitchell,
11, and Russell, 6. 'Mra Ft'eemsn ;,
pressed under tbese 'cirewilslances b
a clinical asSistant prol.essor of social
."the relevant physiological fsct is
middle class ·women, initially as ~
work in tbe department of psycbiatzy
tbst the human infant is born prema, . re~pectiw aristocratis: ideal, tben
at tbe University Health Service. She
turely, and is less well-developed at
as a demand for equal rights and opis also director of social services and
birth tban tbe infants of other mamportunities.
lield instructor for the Graduate
mals. Hence it is more dependent at
"America," contended Ms. Mitchell,
-School of Social Wor)&lt;.
birtb, with a reduced capacity for in"has
given
a-new
context
10
feminism.
To His Family
'
stinctive behavior, and an increased
Confronted, as seventeenth-&lt;lOiltury
Dr. Freeman dedicated bis research
Cflpecity for learning. Women are ~
women we,re not, with tbe struggles
· thesis to bis family. Specifically to
quired by tbe -soPa1 organization to
of a class otber .tban tbeir own, fembis grandmother "for tbe bigb stanhelp tbe human infant become a social
inis.ts in tbe twentieth century fsce
dards, comptission , courage and
being; mother love is a social requi- . conditions
in wbicb they do not have
atreDgtb of .her oonvictions." '
.
- site, not a natural urge." - .
r
simply to react 10 tbe intensification
To bis mother and father "for guid" 'Ibis ' is one example, she added, ol.
Of
the
contradictions
betwf!en the -110'
ing me into inteJiectual piJ!!!Uits withthe insigDilicaiice. of biologiailly-detercia! position of themSelves and tbeir
out J11Y comi&gt;romising grass-~ts faith
mined. divisions compered 10 .social
own
they- bave had 10 oonsider
and principll!6."
•
". . : · pn!!;Ciipt:lf!DS; _')Wbat,co~ .!'t..tbebiotbe implication of the contradiction
To bis wife and children ''for their
logical level," she noted, ...,. tbe 'bi&lt;&gt;- .· itself.
.
.
.
endurance,- 88crifice and understandlogical cbar&amp;cteristics wbicb divide
''It is .Dot . then a Q!l&lt;!Stion," abe
ing."
man •fro!JI · tbe beaBis!
· ''
concluded, "of·our ll!ilt&gt;t;rippiilg 'libOUt
"After completing my intemsbip
''T)le notion of a biological opposi- ·
coming from middle claaa or eearcbing
and resiaency a~ Deaconess I- bope
tion (between men and women)," she
desperately to rope middJe.class womto get a one-year lellowsbip to becontinued, "is a static one. AP prien into r the women's •IIIOY8DIOIIt:' The
'rome a gyDeciOiogic endocrinologist. I
mates devise a natural division of !astruggle in the aOciaJ relations between
want to be a very good clinician, but
bor, but only buman kinsbip organi%es
the bourgeoisie and the working cla8s
I want to tescb. And I will tzy to work
sexuality in sucb a way that it pn&gt;is a claaa struggle, 8nd the struggle
in some research too," Dr. F'reel!&gt;an
scribes social relations. No matter
between men and women is a women's
says.
·
wbat tbe social relationships, or in
struggle."•
.
.Ms. Mitchell's talk was llpoiUIOft!(!
by tbe Ameriam Studies Department
and tbe Women's Studies Collele,

.

Dr. Freeman WIIS-'well qualified. He ·
was an 888istant profeasor of zoology
and a rl!llellldl 88M:iate at Howard
Uniwl&amp;ity from 1967 10 1970 and had
atudiad science most of bis life. He
teligbt endocrinology at Howard and
was t h e - for 14 graduate studeDIB. He was also medical llcbool admissions adviaor for 600 undergraduates.
.
In 1956 he r:eceived his bachelor's '
dellree from Morebouse College, A'tlanta. c-gia. After a two-year stint
(1956-68) in the armed forces in antiaircraft inte)ligeoce be resumed bis
colletle career at LoDa Island University, BIOOidyn, studying biology,

~~-

men;

Job.Openings

Bauda· Honored by

Pharmacy Alumni

'·

FACULTY

Assislant Professor, Medical Technology.
Instructor, Physical Thoapy.
·
Assistant Professor, AMtomical Science.
Associate Librarian (Head Cataloger), Univeroity Libraries.
Director/ Assistant .Professor, Instructional Comnwnication Center.
Associate Professor/Assistant Professor, Center for Media Study.
Assistsllt Professor, Center for MedUJ Study.
,
Faculty Position - Nuclear Engineering (Rank dependent
·
UPOD qualifications and background), E,.,ineering Science.
Cliniail Assistant l'rofeeeor (2 positions) , Phturnacy.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Phturnacy.
Professor (Statistical Science), Computer Sciences.
Assistant Professor (School ol. Medicine), 'Otolaryngology.
As&amp;istant- Associate :rn&gt;tessor, Counselor Edul:ation.

f

HTP
T~ Asoistant, Dentistry, TA-l.
AsoiBtant to Dir«tor, Educational Opportunity Program, PR-1.

Aisiatant Dir«tor for-Counaeling, EOP, PR-2
_ Associate for InstnuitiDnal Resources (General Manager, WBFO),
Imtructional Resources, PR-3.
.
.
·
· ·Aaistant Fcu:ilitietl 'Program Coordinator, Facilities Planning, PR-2.
_ AsoiBtcmt to Director, Alumni Association, PR-1.

For
inforination ~ tbeee jobs and, for details
NTP openinp tbrougbout tbe State University sYstem, Consult bulletin

additiOnal

or

:.n

!llller'.

~ ~aciliw:;=-. 0152. and Dl5S; 2. Ridge &gt;Lea, Building

4236, nest to cafeteria; 3. Ridie Lee, Bujlding 4230, in corridor nest 10
C-1; &lt;&amp;. Health Scieaces Building,_in corridor opposite HS. l81; 5. 'Capen
Hall, in tb8 corridor between Room 141 and the LObby; 6. Lockwood,
pound lloor in corridor nest ~ vendiJag mecbines; 7. Hayes Hall, in
, main entoance foyer, acna from Public Information Olllce; 8. Acb8m
u.an, in corridor between Rooms 112 IUld 113; 9 . Parker Eng~Mering,
mcorridor - e o Room 16;.1o. Goodyear H&amp;ll, 1st floor, Housing 0111ce
'8reili; 1L 180'7 Elmwocid, P111110111181 Depertment; 12. Nm;too. Unloll,
Director'• omce; Rocim 225; 13. Piefendorf Hall, in ..corridor. nest 10
Room 106; 1.&lt;&amp;. lolm Lord ~ Hall, fourth Jloor (Ambelllt Campus) .
. .
.

.

'

, l"barrna&lt;ist Joseph Bauda "' Buf- .
was honored with tbe W'tllis G.
Gregozy Memorial Award by tbe U/B
Pharmacy Alumni Associaticm at its
annual reunion banquet at the Cbar. ter House last '11niraday.
The award, wbicb beats the DIUIIe
Of the Pharmacy School's fourth clean,
is presented periodicaJJy to "an outstanding piarmaciat ....... peiiiDIIiDes
.the ideels ol. service IUld integrity in
bis profession and ....... bas dignified
bis profeesioD in the ol. bia .....
ciates." Bauda is .the 19tb pbarmacist
. 10 racei.., the i&gt;ollol' aince it was -.1&gt;lisbed· in ·1938.
Two fiftb-year phannai:y studesits,
'Mra Barbara Greomberg and Edward
LaCorte, were named wiJmera ol. tbe
Alumni· Association's Kmft ~
Award at the benquet.
Oflicers ol. the Pbarmacy Alumni
~ticm for 1974-76 are Maurice
Van Sice, pmeiclent; Dr. Glegory M.
ChUdzik, &amp;rat vice president; 'Mra
Patricia Jaworal&lt;i, MCODd vice president; Mrs. Hazel Wbalan, aacrelary,
and Mrs. Mildred S. Tambine, tzeefaJo

The . Alumni banquet capped the
Association's" annual Spring Clinic
Day activities.
.
~ ·suMMER

HOURS

Normal SUmmer bulldlftll houro for Notton
FlaQ ( e - "-Y 28, 1974) will be:

·

MonJiay-Thurodey, 7 -a.m.· 11 p.m.
7 a.m. - 12 mklnJslit
12 noon • i2 midnight.
5und8y, ·
• 3 p:m.• 10 p.m.
Frldlly,

· s.tu...,.,.,

,,

For any 8ddltloNII buHdlna houro lnfonna·

· tion, co'ntact Room 115, .-.on 3541'.

�:-five Atblet~ l,leceive . F~rnas $chola.rships~

-

.

.

prqWema.
.
.
ue llllta"JIQGI" ~ aor
we Jack
..........._ N"' 11.aD111F will lie
av&amp;ilalie tD-~ lalllilaf' lei&gt;OIDition. •

U we dealn! ..,._ -.Ieaiie -.!•
Jenoe and iaaa! .tiaa.I 'rialblllty, it
DJUIIt. evolw fr!Jm imaginAtive
uses ol tbllt COII&amp;idelable l'IIIOIIlCe8 and
the em.mdinary talent whicb is ...

this campus." -

Dr. Moore'a ~ in tbe- Sen.
ate appJauo1ed a "motion" ""Pft!98ing
the..biXITa "llincere ira~ and profound admUatiaa -for '"his enlichlened
Jesilenhip over tbe past two years."
AttbOup. teelleriDs 0.. tbe edge ol a
quorum, a baJaac1D1 act tbe. Senate
bas practiced all :pear, tbe bOdy worked efficiently. ~ a ayy aae00a.
finishing .up , tba-llusinoai ol a year.
The Senate reconsidered its advisory
endorsement ol 1l plan to me )..,ve
and ssbbaticaHines tobriqmiDority,
faculty to campus. Several faculty, including two sPOke apinst establisbing .. ~ IIJM!Ci!U; '--.J-class"
calel&lt;&gt;ry for mmority faculty, urging
insfeold tbit al&amp;nnative action J...d to
regular appointments. 'The President's
Office iJao ihlormed tbe Senate that,
_at 1his lime, llllt.a single free line is
expected for 1974-75. .'The propoeal
was refamoil back- ·to tbe Eucutive

, Five varsity athletes"-alencer, two
!"riJDmers, an, oaraman and a hockey
atar- bave been awalded C. C. .Furilas Scholarships for 1974-75.
Winners ""' fencing team captein
Howard Forman· of Brooldyn; varsity
awimmen David W. Gaeth of Tonawanda, and Ellen L. Shulman of Bayaide; rowing crew member Brian A.
Herman of the Bl'Oil%, and bOckey •
center John S. Strange&amp; of Niagara
Falls, Ontario.

lli8h

'The awards, baseil 011
ecademic and athletic standing, were pre-

sented at a lunCheon in the o8lce ol
President Robert L. Hetter last Fri-

day.
.
Established by the late u /B. President whose name they bear, the acbolarshi!is""' administered by the u~

Foundation, Inc. ·
.
. .
Forman, a pbarmacy major wbo
. plans to do gr&amp;auate study at U jB,
is a tmee:.year veteran "Of the fi!DCling

~ontinuing _Education Staff Holds
Series of pevelopmenta' semi~ars

a JriDning record all
three years, be ~ted tbe UniYeraity in both the North Atlantic and
• NCAA fmM:ing" ~
Gsejh, wbo . . . enter tbe u~
Scbooi of l"leatiaaly next fall, baa car-ried a double ~ in bioloi!Y and
cbemiatry. A hllh- for two - _,. with the awim team, be ·
one leg of a~ 800-yud
relay during the Upper N- "\'orit
State Gbamploosb!Ps in March.
Herman, .a bioiO(IY m8jOr Who plana
to enter .the U jB School of Medicine,
bas been .... member ol the wnlty
rowing talm since his freobman :pear.
As the "stroke" of tbe li&amp;btweSIIbt
squad. Holding

' =tyto'=~~iD':N:

'The Professional Staff Organizaticm
them."
•
of the Division of Continuing -EducaOUt"of this Semii.8r
material
Yolk Mell'Opolitan Regatta in N-·
ticm bas initiaied a series- of in-house,
for a Msn:h 18 .meetinir !&gt;ased on sp&amp;York City.
·
·
developmental seminars a~
·
to:
cific proposals from rofeasiooal staff
~d 11 sense of "COIDDiuni ; ill the
membel:s about~£! problems wilh" u. Shulmanisa-P!&gt;I!!SicalDi · ·
be &amp;~~ educatio • process
in the Division. n;:;;;p...;posaJiWoUia
~ .mo\iiin' aJaD imler ujBM"ilil
for~ of the Professional Staff,
have, implicit in. them. the Agenda
School. Having· broken records at
and provi_de. a forum for expresSion
Committee reasoned. tbe ideas and
many New York ·state meets, she
of aspirations and go;aJa - a new type
~ons of individual staff members,
placed eighth in tbe United States in
of venture, not only for lhe Division,
and would form a basis for diacu8aion.
the. _100-yard ~le event at .tbe.
but also lor the University. .
Among suggestions were: a .-lea of Tempe,
Arimna, National Swimming
The activity emanated from tbe Prodiscussions w:ith selected members of
Cbampioosb.ips.
fessional Stalf Organization Agenda
Univeislty departments on topics such
Committee, formed a year and a half
as tbe plriloeopby of human values,
Stranges, a pbysiCal educaticm masysli!ms ~; contemporary ax:ial
ago under revised Divisional By-laws.·
jor wbo plans to continue graduate
Tbe seminar series opeiled in F!lbscience viewpoints, etc.; a look at the
studies
here, concluded his collegiate
Committee, ~ ........ proposed guide- .. ruary with Dr. Charles Fall. profESsor
organization of the Divisi&lt;Jil ol Conhockey cueer as the seoond highest
Jines on selective arming.
of. Social and Philosophical Foundatinning Education' and its elfectivegoal scorer in U fB b!story. He was
tioos, disCussing "Di1fenmt Philosoph·
ness· and a ' "lhink group ' ' to dEeign
In other - ~ the Senate
team captein during 1973-74.
ical Views and 'Their Implications for:
an ~tal. educa~ dalivery
scind9d its _endorseinent of a +/system model.
,
Continuing Education."
option in grading and .affirmed its supAocording to Willism Greene, direc'The stsff sugge&amp;tion which drew the
port pl a progrtm for evaluating··
Weekly ~
tor of Urban extension and a. member
most response and dlact.mion was tbe
teaching elfectiveness.
.
of the Professiooal Staff Ori!an!Zation,
suggestion to lpok at' the or:ganizaticm
.Dr. Fall's 'talk "encompassed, in a
of the Division. 'The entire Division,
liroad way; many of ~ eoncems of
it was decided, should addreas itself
(Corotinued /rom 8, col. 4)
the staff.· He began by talking about
to. the problem of models: what kind
what it means to philoeopbize, describ- - . • of Division to be in five years. It was
GSA S11IDINY GaAHIS
~ Manes,"' member of the
ing philoedpby as . the broad orientsaleo. pointed out that a ' 1'!"1(-~
Application forma for Graduate StuMusic J:JeParm-t faculty since 1968,
tion which you bring .to your own
academic p)ao ·-.Jd ~te to.~ • dent A.ociation ..........,, cnmta are DOW
bas just ~Jeted his first oommef..
work. . . . He said tliat- continuing
!'14.. ..-n an orderina: of priorities. up
available. IDtereoted
C8ll pick
cisl recarclinjr. 'The release (Orion
forma in
GSA o111ce; 206 No......._
education
·reilly
is
at
the
'cutting
edge'
Improvement ,in·melhoils·of. communiRecords No. "74154), inCludes pm:forof'much of what 1s innov.ative ... and
cation, both 'formlil'an&lt;finformal, W88
IIIBDOeS of Tcbaikovaty's Piano Bon-g:a;!~"fl!':r_~=t!._M.=
that !&gt;Dfl of the things that lhe Divialso discussed at the' March ~ats in G, Opus 37, and "Indianishes
G,_.,wood. Department of Poychiatry,
sion needs to develop is a 'shared visA sujrgeation for a Seminar on OrpniTagebucb" (1915) . by Buaoni.
ert 8317.
ion'
of
wbatougbt-.t&lt;&gt;-1&gt;&lt;:,
in
the
future.
zational
Development
was
turned
Mr. Manes IDIIiqtslns a busy per- .
SI*Ma SESSIONS IIGtsnATION
· to the Agenda Committee for turlber
~ c:llleOr in addition to hiS du· ~ In the latter part of ·me discussioD
Tbe Office of Admiaoions and Recorda
discuaoion. ~ QUI!8Iions Will
ties as -.clate prot_,. ·of music at- people began to talk- about ·~
visions,' · and ways to ·move· tOward
"be COIISidered at tbe next Seminar, to
U/8. 'Ibis past .aeon be appeand
:....~~~~=-=r.i
be beld in May at the olllceoi of.
UniYenity need ouly complete a
as soloist with tbe Dalaver Sympbooy
- the Adult AdvianeQt eenter, a~
Cowoe Request Form. All new etudenta
and the Norfolk Symphony. In f9fttllll
muot
complete a Student Data Form,
- . a , be performed witli other maavailable at the Office, Hayeo Amlex B.
Education- Profesjor~ ordiMtras in N8w York,
Tentative Office honno are 8:30 a.m.PiiC&amp;I:JuJ:P, Baltimore" and
8:30 p.m. on
followiug dateo:
- 'The Office of Financial
May 9, 18-16, 20-22, 2S-81; June S-7,
to inform aligible students·tbat- appli. inllr ~ As G - CXlll!nwlfad: ,
11, 12, 18, 18. U-28; July 1-S (a.-1
cations for federal -Basic Educational
"HopefuJ)y; tbe Profealionlil ,8tstl
,,July 4), 9-12, 15-19, 22·26, 30, 81; and
, Opportunity Grants are now available
Siimin&amp;rs'orili evolve into an Ol'llimizafot next :rear and should be ftled as
Jilin 01 pet&gt;pkJ _ _ , We 1.-1 to look • Augaot 1, 8; 6, 7, 13, 111, 20-28• . '
800il as Possible.
.
at 'Wbat are we reaJI;y llhoul't What · UNIVBIIIY ASSIM&amp;Y M&amp;TING ~ n - grants may be Diade only to . is adulf edacatiaa, wbitt is ClOIIIimiioa the~=zr.!:ti~~
~Is wbo began . their post-bigh
. educatbi In tile'~ wodd'l'
Tbe -w.g will be beld in 70 Acb.m
&amp;cbool edUcation after, ApriJ 1, lll73. ·
We 1.-1 to~ to looli: Ill·
at 4 p.m.
. -&lt; Wbi1e the' BC0110111iC IUidelines for
qUeatiaal "- we 1.-1 to ba"fti tbe tiDd
tbe ilf8llts bave 110t yetlleob.dlillnit&amp;col ~ wbon am .......
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE
I.Y l!lllablisbed for 1974-75, tbe Finan- : ...... ...r .......
For ~·· conwmlenoe and. plenu&lt;W,
dal Aid 08loe indicalal it ~a· .,...ny
""'- . . ~-;;
- 11118 to publicize all ....nts taldna place
8lpected
that atudelita will quiiJif,y in
oL....... . . . . . . wbaie tbe' 1978 .... _ .. _ in~ ••. ~-to coate" on campus. To reconllntorinallon, conlal:t
..._
.......,.
'COiiditiGDs ..,, IbM a ~Nancy C.!do&lt;WIII. ext.. 2228, by , Monday

cam&lt;&gt;

re.

Communique-

RecE?rd by. Manes

the

over

. •
Ready_
A pp I1cat1ons
for Basic Ed Grants

=

Aid~

-to =

the

·=

~~tinuinl

~ul~.!':its~,==

the

=.

e-

.......__.,__==

~~~~

~

..

~ 3~~
c~

·i.~i.,-sl:.i::-c::u
:..~· w,x. ol biPui1Di to~
~

lit _ , for inclusion In the .followlna ·

Thu&lt;Wday -

·

-

�8.

SUNDAY-12
CIIATIVI AJIOCtA'IIS ·~

8

s.::nt=.:...:;,.~ ~t3.'t ~~

p.m. Admiaoion cbarp_

-

David. Tudor waa a C.. live Aeoociale
at U/B cluriDI! the 1966/ 67 ........, and
will be joined in~rformances by
Bill Vaola, .Jolm
Linda Fi&gt;cber,
Martin KAhe Uld
JODeL Tudor
craatad "Rainfi&gt;reot• for Meme Cm!nins-

=t

=-u:-

~ =:7!

......, name, iDwlvinc a eet deoiped by
Andy Warhol. The work was preeenled
in an ~ version in the I\1.IDIDer of

!:?!
·~-ti.Jl";, M~'Nlt"'!:;
which aD of_the preeent performero par·

ticipat..L "Rainforeat" baa been c:har·
ac:lariaed by Tom Johnoon, well-lmown
compoeer and critic for the Villa.ge Voice,

&amp;,;::o!:..~=

:o::t:s~

baneen, Cap, et al in the '60e and· early •
'60o."
InuJ:.rformanoe, "Rainfor.t"· permito
::.,;,_; ; :=.,on~:::"!oothe
~~
the environment created
VAUlTY IASIIrALL•

FRIDAY-10

P~ ~.:J'!1edicol Alltmn•
SJR'in6 C finical Dayo will becin thia
momilla at the.Siatler Hiltoo Hotel The

-~~':1u,.:tei::

=""Uid-~.0:7;::.,
':./"C:.:
clioMae. s-ioaa will coatinue to-

UUAIIIUII••

L'Amour (Warboi-Morrisaey), Conference Theatre, NottoD, c:hec:k abowcaae
\ lor times. Admission ~e.
SIUDEICT IKITAI.*

For lurtber information. c:all 831-5526.

Violist ThDmoo Halpin, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 :30p.m. No admission &lt;:barge.
Halpin is a student of Donald Weilerstein and thia recital is offerad in partial
fulfillment of the M.l'.A. degree pro-

EIUiircmmen141 Conoi&lt;krotiono inPower

COP OUT - GIEAT AMElJCAN PASIIMI

-GIUIJ)'

mo...,.

----·

f?~'t~:'= =~R:!.ty~
1:80 p.m.

-~~ ~E~~to

of In·

..rc:~·

K&lt;ml• ~o,\!::!!,tzehlo ~~

R:ft':.J•B.n, S p.m. No admiuicm charge.
&amp;-lad by the Department of Music.
CAC . . .••

- ·

Somelima a Great Nolion, UO Capen,
8 . 10 p.m. Admiooion: 76 "!'ftla.

Tlu U I B Srmphony Bond, directed
;r. Cipolla. with .....t conductor Karel H111111, Wllliamaville South
::...~aditorium,' 8 p.m. No ad- ·

by -

~~=·~~~
of 'l1aia - . " • 1970 oompooi.tioiL The
-

•

U/B vo. Bulfal.o Slate, Peelle Field, 3
p.m.

.,..,.r,

will .-. iDdude worb by GoldBemotein Uld

~Penlcbetti.

GAY IWICI .• CAfE•

.Flee admiuicm; driDb and macb will
be oold, Fillmore ~ Norton, 8 p.m.
Spoaaorad bY the Gay Liberation Fronl
UUAI . . . . . .

a!.f:t.!...~~~!':m~~
caoe for IDDeo. Admiaoion cbarp_
SATURDAY -11

=:

gram.

•

M enl4l Rel4rdotion: The Lesulative
Ruponaibilily, is the subject to be diac:uaeed by Aseemblyman John J . LaFalce
(Dem., !.roth Disbict) and boot Suaanne
Cook, WKBW radio, 10 p.m.
•.

MONDAY-13

capan, S •

9 p.m. No admission c:barp.

IUffALO WOMIWS ClNTH MEETING*

Film and clisc:uuion, 66f Fnuildin Sl,
7:30p.m.,...
.
11'UDINT acnA&amp;.•
SMiley Robbins, piano stndent of Fri-

g;~~~~·:;~
tolt, BaUd Recital HaD, 8 P""- No admiaaion cbarge.

TUESDAY -14

_CO_NTI_N_U-IN-,~r'-;_-ICAI.--IEDUCA--TION. ~.- . , - - -'-· Fel4f 111tmoiue Care: H~h Rislt Presnancy ond Feud Mbnitorins, a program

IXHIIIf&gt;

Atf~~: fa.nv:t~ ~

.Jiauny, Jon, Julie, Lalli, Michele, Pbilip,
Tamika. Tara and Shaianne, Muaic
~ 269-Nortoo, throucb Friday, May
10.

=

LANGSTON HUGHES CENTB: EXttlln•
Art · Work by Al&gt;diao do NosdrMnio

=·

prof.aor, Puerto Rican Studiea Uld ~

~n~UIJ::. =..!h" 8

May 12:
• ·
• '
The eahibition is aponaorad by International Studies and Puerto Rican
S!o!cliea.
"'

~:n:YJ= ~~ll&gt;d!!; caring.,'!dr lb.;

MUSif= UIIAIT EXHIIIT•

neonatal period. Statler 1lfton Hotel
Continued on Wodneoday, May 16.
~~ registration information, aill 831-

May 15.

CONc:in•

-

Cltuuhtu Brown, 10prano student of

~~~~s::frow:!:tt:!..li~~~i':~

admission c:harge.

. WEDNESDAY -.15
CIEATIYE ASSOCIATES IECRAL VII•

Clarinetist Amrom ChDdos will be featured in the final Creative Aaaoeiatea
Recital of· the eeason, Baird Recital HaD,
8 p.m. No admiuion c:barp.

.

b~~B"a~~do~.3'1 .s~..g..M)t~:
,....

·

VIDEO W&amp;K 1XH111T"

.J::'Iin'!""" ~ 2o{g~~.:!.l~
p.m. -~
AI.IIIGHT~X

Friday, May 17.

llOIIIIr

34th Wuum New York· Exhibition,
Albright-Knox Art- Gallery, 1286 Elmwood Avenue, throucb Sunday, May 26.
ElCPDlMfNTI IN

Alf

&amp; 1ICNNOLOGY-

IXHIIII'

Enuironmenkll I ...tollarwn, by Ralph
Jonea, Hayea HaD front lilwn, tbrousb
Mays~.
·
"UPRRMEHTS IN AIT &amp; TECHNOLOGYEXNIIIT•

Ezhibil 11011011, includes ODIIlJ!Uier

VAISttY IIASUAU*

THURSDAY ..:.....16

U/ B vs. Niagara (doubleheader),
Peelle Fielil, 1 p.m.

CONTINUING MEDICAl ioucAnON.

The Problem-Oriented M edkol Record
in Ofliu Practice, a demo.netration and
woibhop, Buffalo General Hospital
SchoOl of Nursing, Hiiinlin Houae Auditorium, 112 Goodric:h Streel

FOr

6626.

reciatrati.on information, call _
s:n.

DINTAL WOIIICSIIOf' • .

Public and Profess i onal Relation.
Woc.bhop, part of a nationwide PJ'OCl8.Dl
to promote public a~ of care of
the teeth. &amp;.ignad for practicing periodontiato, 147 Capen, 9 : 15 a.m.-4:30p.m.
For further inlormation, c:all 831-3848.
PIIORSSIOHAL STAff SENATE MUTING••
'l;pday'a BpDda will include: 1. SUNY

=~rs I.Rrt;...!·lri~:'t:~eo':

...
tutiqn adoption results; 5. Communication with oonstituento, and 6. Other buBinea 301 ~y. 8 p.m. .
VAUlTY IASUAU.•

t!IB va. Rocbeater, Peelle Field, 3 p.m.

CONCIIII•

· Recital by baritone otudent Kenneth
~":::; ~Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No

graphics, olec:tric: oculpture, eleetionic
music~
· tinp, GaJ!.eiJ' 2191 Nor-

ton,
b May 8L 6allery MUD:
MOI&gt;day,
011-.,y and Tbunoday, 11
a.m.-5 p.m.; TueodaY and Friday, DODD·
~ p.m., 7-10 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.

' NOTICES
COUNSIUNG

Ptofeuional coUneelinc 'is IMiilable at
Hille) House, ~ Capen Blwl. For an
appomtment, c:a11 1136-4640.
1
FALL SIMISTR DAR CIWIGI

Tbe &amp;rot day of ~ for the Fall
1.974 semeoter baa been delayad one day.
Claaees will begin Wedneaday, September4.
In addition, the Ollioe of AdmlooiDDS
and Recorda baa annOUDOed that JeCia- ;
tration materials for the Fall aemeater

~t!'"w~r!~ ~~,:'Ytt!:;.~i

Data Form. Undergraduate atudenta
(day) are to update their fonna at the
Division of Undergraduate Education
Reception Area. Diefendorf; Millard
Fillmore Coli- and gradual&amp; atndento
should report to the Ollioe of A.dmiooioDs
and Recorda; and pto-onal atudento
can update tliiir fonna with the Madic:sl.
De;ntal O! Law School ftgiatrar.
Studetito are advlaed to pick up their
Student Sc:badule Cards on Tuesday,
September 8, in the beomnent of Clark
HaD, b e - 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
In-ftgiatratioo will becin Sop- · 8 for tboee atadaato wbo did DOt

adwiiOO .........
(CDIIlilwcd on -

7, coL 4)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                    <text>' a"ft--==~
1he
to

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t....
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Yci!k. .._.

=

..,_ el New

=

........

Ill-·

t.cu~ty OIIID"

·~ $12,01111.

:..~'rlc!i::t=f

prGIIIIiDaotly Ill the tap. 181, eoce
domlaalied by -=h pa.upaaa private
IIIIMmdties u Harvard, SlaDbd,
Cb1tato. Yale and Jolme Hoplda&amp;.
'lblll year,· u last, half of the lnstitu- ·
tioaa In the •top ten" units ol.
City Unl-.ity. Olbera 111110111 the
fimt ..., c.lilomla Inslitute ol.
Tecbnolosy ($26,64!5), the New
School for Social ReMrdl (26,562).
Harvard (26,448), Hebrew Union Collep (24,841), and the Air Foroe Institute ol. Techno)O(IY (24,612) •
U/B's averqe oompeilaation packap was down slighlly over last year's
$21,810. The acbecluled 4.75 per cent
salary 1DcrMa for U/8 faculty, to be
paid notro.ctiwly, was not reflected in
aalaries at the time of the ·AAUP
. Stud)'. Last year U / B ranted 21st In
farulty compensatioiL
.·
According to The Chror&amp;il!le, faculty
compensation natiollally lnm:eased 5.9
per cent laa year (aalaries -..- 5.1
per Cl!llt}, ~,.,_.~since
·" 19'70-71." HcJooei.W; faculty' actUally . -

ldolt'UI'"~c:e~ln
~
over the ll8ID8
due to

This the irBt time In "the hlslmy
of the survey that faculty pun:basiiJg
showed a decline, fulfilling the
AAUP predjctlon made· last year that
"a new reoonl of adversity will have
to wait at t . - Jmtil oat year's report."
Translated into dollar temJs, the
averqe faculty member received $979
more in 197S-74 but was able to buy
$271 less. The average American
worker, by comparison, gained $9 in
Jllllcl!asing power over the """"' period. 'In the recent past, faculty compensation bas. outstrippejl that of the
average American worker. But, sai4
Harvlird !!OOIIOmist Ronald Dorfman,
who headed the AAUP's Commit'tle¢ Z
(Conlinu•d on PGB• 2, coL 1)

,

'

Contract l.et for Major Amherst Structure

Stale UniversitY Cons~on
Fund bas awarded ooritracts for the
central library and colllljUissary at the
Ainherat Campus.
·
Tbe Albert Ella-Buililli]g Com'Plui.Y
InC., Of N".agara ~s -was awarded ,;
$17,1103,356 contract to build-SamueL

Tbe

~tra~
'f:n~~ !~"%.azt.
Migliore Construction Company, InC.,

of Tonawanda received a $3,356,000
contract for co~ction of the C'.entra1 Food CoiDDilSSIIry.
The fiv&lt;H~to_ry &lt;;apen ~tructure, a
con_oem of Uru.venaty oflicials because
of 1ts ovm:aiJ Jmporlance to the. new
campus, will. ~ _offices for ~ UjB.
central a~tration, lh!"" libranes,
two food ser:vtce operations, 29,000
~-~teetbaseof~f
tumd spatce,ti_vityapd
, we uno
p
o B
en ac .

- space.
Designed by Kenneth DeMay of

the architectural firm of. Sasaki, Dawson, DeMay and AseocJates, campus
master planners from Wateitown,

M8SSB.chusetts, Capim Hall will conlain 250,000 net square feet and will
be the largest single building on . the
campus.
•
,
,
coouiUssary, a single-level sttu&lt;&gt;
ture designed by The Cannon Partnersbip ,o( GOlDd Islan'd, will contairi

n&gt;e

:=:;., ~,ttoa!=:-,.:r

=

in addition
storage space and of!ices for the Central Food Services
operation. _
The Capen Hall foundations contract was awarded last November as a
separate project to insure that excavations would be complete before the
- rainy spring montba. This work is expeeled . to be complete by this June.
-:;:oto~1or~ v;:'~:":rit.con-

lmporbnt to U/B
U fB President Robert L Ketter
commented that the size of Capen
Hall indicates "in very real terms"
the imparlance of it to the University and, in tum. the imporlance of

·Six Students Share in $420[J Essay Prizes
The University baa awarded $4,200
to six-student winners in a U/ 8-wide
prize ...-.y contest, Deans Charles H.
V. Ebert, Undenlraduate Education,
and McAllister ll. .Hull, Graduate
and Prof.-ional Education, announced jointly Monday.
.

Fimt, second and third place cash
prizes of $1,000, $700 and $400 respectively were awarded in bo-th
graduate and ~.a~dergraduate divisions
of the competition.
·
A study of "Kali on Main Street":
The Rise of the Terrible Mother in
AmeriCan earneil the $1,000 first prize
in the graduate division for Harold
Schechter, a doctoral student in American Literature.
:
.
Taking the $1,000 first place award
among undergraduates was Regina
Kociecki, a Special Major; wbo wrote
on "Social Gerontology - A Comerstone of Society."
·
Otbei graduate V(inner&amp; were: Robert Claire. Qeograpby, wbo - received
the eeoond prize of $700 'for a study
of "'The Spatial Dimensions of Interurban Crime;n and Gail L Mortimer,
English, who took the $400 third prize
for "Liteauy Study and the Refinement of Tbougbl"
Undtqraduate runner-up was Sue-

lllll:,.._..,.....,......,..
Knapp, an Environmental Des i g· n
major, awaided $700 for "Environmental Design: How It Relates to
Monitoring and to Evaluatioo of New
Communities. n Third place among
tat&lt;lergrads (the $400 award) """'t
to freshman Edward Szkotnicki, who
plans to· major in Accounting, for
"An EDmination ol the Houoing
. Problem and an ApproadJ to lln

Ground rules fO&lt; the con- required that """"J'8 be developed on
the general topic of the application
of the student's major 1D the explication and/ or ,alutiCII of aocietal problems.
.
A panel of faculty - t i n g the
diaciplinary
in18 in the University j U d g e~ anbmiseiOns and
(COIItillued
4, col. 1)
.

on-

the Amherst Campus .to public edw:a-

tion in Western New York.
"The multiplicity of func:Qons to be
oo..-1 within. the buildinc illuatrales

~diversity ~ Jlllllllilude of._educa-

tiU~ ~t servill,cebepiOIP8able-to ~~
ruvena l;' w

,..~·-·

~'!.~":'~ will_aerve both fu!Jctio~y. and symbo~y as the bUb

of aotivtty for the entire campus. We
:,g~ =ef~ to the lillY wben
Administrative oflioen; to be boused
in Capen include the president, his
assistants, vice "Presidents and" university-wide deana.
Occupying the largest amount of
space in Capen will be the Undergraduate Library the Science and Engineering LibrarY, and the Special
Collections Library.
The three, according to Dr. Eldred
R. Smith direotor of libraries, will,
together, 'have space for more than
one-half mUJion volumes and seating
for more than 2400 users.
Uper.dl111

Se..-

"Present comparable library space
on the Main Street campus provides
space for slightly more than 200,000
volumes and less -than 500 users. Occupancy of the new libraries will subslantially upgrade University library
services immediately and in the years
ahead " Smitb noted.
Food service operatioos, to be" ~
cated on ground level at the east and
west ends of Capen Hall, will include
a rathskeller and conventional cafeteria with areas available for catering.
The first phase of student activity
space, such as that now housed in the
Main Street Norton Union, will include office suites, reception areas,
meeting rooms and work rooms for the
Undergraduate Student Association,
Graduate Student Association, University Union Activities Board and
Millard Fillmore College Student
Association.
Other student space includes offices for information. reservations,
tickets, candy and tobacco sales and
an auditorium for showing films.
(Continued on pofe 2. col. 3)
. 1WO INSERTS THIS WEEK
This week's IssUe has two pull-out sec·
tions. A four-page schedule of events tor

Community-University Day (inserted in the .....
middle) and an eight-page section de:
voted to essays on "T-he New Manager"
of the School of Management.
'&gt;.
~members

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s~c-:~
Billcalhe
...
: :'~~cJ::."t

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

_...with Cia Slalit a(~ York."
..,. '1'll;tlar ....

widah~

JIIMIID8

. . . .....,_ baniiDbur . - - . .
oallaw *iba aad·OUP did Jq ape:
16 what "jab acta." mlcbl ·be iD-

...... ~ lllllllift "iick" calliDe bave bam
iD jurisdicdoaa.
UUP 1-s.a eppiO'i'l!d tbe job aotiGD ttu.t at a - t BulfaJo ..-t.iDI •• a -.It ol OER (Otlice ol
Employee Relatioaa) aod SUNY manaaea-t recalcillallce dllliDg •.. Deaotialiofto (fOr tba cOna-t to be eftec:live .IIIIT 1 of ttiis
year). elpeCially iD the of job -

tried

~~.u:,~~

~

aotiations~ issued by the ool-

l8cliw barpiniDc

.,.,..l .

UUP apabsmen bad earlier iildicated that • "a'ilis laoma" iD . _ .
liatioas for the llDIDina yau-. "Ex~ tense'' ..-tiDp .haw bam
held iD "!CC!Dt weeb, l1UP's Nego~ .Bulktin «116 coateudc!d. Tbat
bulletin llllCU8I!d OER neaotiators of
an "allinity for ~ties" and attrib~ ut.ed tbeae stslllmellllt to OER: ~
f-.11 work less time, .... paid more, ~
and baw better wortJ;;I oonditioas
than any other level {){ employee iD ~
tiNs counlzy;" "Employees (NTPs)
whO .j&gt;aw bem ~ a while sbouidn't worry about job security;" and
"We feel it """""""' to. set rid of esaillent people to set more excellent
people."
.
.
•
: , ·UUP also Indicated that OER "objected to our. Q&gt;lnmunicatins to our
cql&amp;tjb}eJicy by, ~ . of tbeae bulletins:"'
. .
·
-~
Jn, tem1s of specific items far the
new contract, UUP reported that
OER bas made a proposal which
would "reduce the amount ol time
~ for noticying employees of
termination. j
.
UUP said· Blso thal OER bas made
a 88lsry proposal of live per cent of
payroll - aU merit - for on!y one
year. "Salaries could return to tbe
prior level for subeequent increases,
if any," UUP iDformed faculty and
stalf. "'lberefore, if you receive the
maximum of 5 per cent ($500) based
on a 88huy of $10,000, it could be
yours for only one- year. Your salary
oould then be reduced to j10,000
apin. Further, OER insisted we withdraw our proposals," ·tbe UUP Bulletin said

U/8 Payrcontimud from P411• I , col. I)

tbitt produced tbe study~ that picture
is chansins ·and workers' wages are
besinnins to catdl up.
Of the four SUNY Centers, U jB
trailed Stony Brook &lt;$22,548) and
Binghamton &lt;$21,977) in aversge
oompensation_but ranked aOOad of Albany ($21,373) :
AVI!DlBe CIOIJJPen&amp;lltion for U jB fsculcy was broken. down by ranks as folIOWII: full prot...,.-, $30,200 (highest
among tbe Centers); associate professor, $21,400; assistant professor, $16,400 &lt;~est amons tbe Centers), and
instructor, $11,800.
.
.·'

~ =i=l~011an~

- cixnpensation since 195'8. The !)Ulrellt
survey encompassed more than 290,000 r.culty at 1,523 oollepa aDd uni-mties, more than ever biifom.

FJina'e

beDellbi acoounted ior · 12

par cent of this year's compenastian
pacbge, ~ to the survey, up

8iiabtlY ·~ last year's

U.3 par cent:
Moat of that inmlese wa 1be ......wt
~ raises in eontributloos to

~ritt institutiona listed in
!be current top llO ClOIIIIIIUIIitY
oon-, all units fJI the City Unl_.. •
slty;
"""';~';g.......,
beiU!r
-com_..
•
thaa II PriDcolan
or Yale.
.. ,u
"o. ~·w,o.J.p

RaP!d Transit .St~~ .-- .
.~~tive..!~!~
......
,....,,

::a~
...._
~~.:=:=tac

..

Ullla

~ alllid

8aW, 111111

' Faroe olebe c.-.iDIIt,y AdiaD a&lt;CAC) aad The· WIIIBiilm N - YaOk
l'ubJie ID~reat Research Group .!WNYPIRG) nota iD a ~ ie4be Nlapra Frontier
......,___.,tiGD Aulbority lNFTA),
~ Adminllllratioa, 111111 iDlereated student pOOp&amp; yeUa- to
antk:ipde and investip.te" tba patential Impact of the ·aystem, the f'8POI't
poinbi aul
~
'

~~

The study ,:........,.._ds immediate
talb betwam tbe "Uni\W'Sity Adminiatz-atian and tbe NFI'A ... on miDi-

the

&amp;(-·b ........... .,._
.......tilaal racllit8 Wblcb -w
otbanri111 be pUI b:r SONYAB ....

~

.

mecbaDI8m ·eould .... .the

~~ =:ru-~-rapid
........,
-· ,_...l'lletweeD lllatlaao!,

the Unt-mty

c:a::b

- =lniD~_.::t. =..:,"

the n!pCIIt ..... "the' p.-lent aet
by the '!nMmoity'a. ~ ~the

bal....-"""" operatiJII ..,.,_

Main Straet Campus and the ~
p.- in Amherst. We tb1n1t lhl!t "'!'l'i
a preceden(W81TBD~ the liubsldimti&lt;J!l
ol student mteManlpus rapid transit
travel or tbe continuance of bee bus
service. •

.

~primary
~tba

sram 1a to •
p.'lllrid8
In the

'-&gt;-,.r

=

at
~
.
tbepo,
....... (princol-

~

~) with
~
"We call attenti!m to .the data ptbtbe neptiw im~ of [ tranered by our questionnaire on student
..r
inotzucdaa mau
ot
electric
to
sit] plans on tbe slixlent community."
willilqpless-to ~ t&lt;;&gt; set. to c:lasoe!'· If
tbe rialt~
.
The repolt docum&lt;inta tbe dimencomplete subsidization ... impoalible,
iJJ that widllpNod .1iJbiiC ~
sims of this impact, as seen by its
then perhaps student diacounts oould
· on baaic facia Is ~· if Gitiza:Js .
student authors..
•
lie devised on thiS basis.
~.to maD in~ . . . . Oil the
With most students now attending
"We also caU attention Ul tbe de- classes
,future ol - - ......tloo. Particion Main Street and with-bee creased~ to.PI!Y as ezp~
panbi from olfier, similar inatitutions
bus service to other locations beiDs
ed by studenbi ol limitedtba~
and hish scboo1s will' alae~ be ~
provided; "the area -around the Main
means. Sug~a a l is
t ""'" '
to tbe eztent poiaible. &gt; .. - • •
Street Campus ( is) - most a!:tra&lt;*ive
case may deserve • • treataet. .
Topics to be' discuaaed inClude 'tbe
and convenient for oft'-ounpus student
"We stress that. 1t 18 Ule. reapoomtec:bnOJoo iDvoJWof; ,, ..,~t.aJ
residence." Twenty-two per cent of
bility of tbe UniversitY. to finance tl!e
and
beallh e«ecta; ...rety IY8IIema and
University. students live withiD onesubsidy, at least in part.
• 'u· .
acCident analysis; and aitiJra, lel!uia·
half mile ol1he Campus and ' approxi''We also recommend that the mt
o
r
y
and ecouomic COII8ideration&amp;.
mately one-half live within a two-mile
versi~y a~.tioo :look ~ the
• Speakers wiU be llli!Dibem of the
radius. A large propol'tion of, the stuhousms SJ~ti~ m Ambersl · .
U/B faculty and selected expertS tram
dent population is thus able to "someBoth Umvl'r&amp;lty "!'~ NITA officials
other institution&amp;. The 'Mirlalbop will
times .travel to classes by means other
bave expreased. a 'Willinsness to wod&lt;
include field· trips to both nuclear and
than car or public! transportation."
on tbe proble~C-WNYPlRG
fossil-fuel pow,_er plants, and laboraWith tbe move to Amherst and the
repart indicates, but esch group '!"""'5
tory work m tbe Univeraity'~react&lt;w.
adwnt ol rapid transit, however, ·''this
_ to feel to date that the problem 18 the
Each participant will be P.roVided
&amp;ituatinn will be significantly altered,"
other's - or tbe students'- to solve.
with a complete set of all lectures,
the CAC-WNYPlRG report claims.
.including
ligures and references. At
1n tbe Ambel!lt·era, UjB will proconclusion of tbe worksbop, parvide just over 5200 residential spaces
Tbe Nations! Association of Self. • tbe
ticipants will be in a poaitiou to oft'et
far an- estimated 30,000 students, the
lnstructionsl.-L an ·g u age Programs
an instructionsf unit on the subject
report . projects; only 1100 apartm':'?t
&lt;NASlLP ) ..will bold its firBt annual
at tbeir o...n institulions. Such instruC.
uni~ in the new .o_udubon po!!III!UDJty:
conference on ·'c:aiDpus, r·F riday,t-May , tion obu.Jd be 'directed. at Ullllel'(l't'lld(adjacent to the Amherst Campus)
turday ~ 4
ustes or olfel'ed. as adult ·-education:.
willcbe suitable for students and these
3, and
Participants will also : be bettar -prewill not be J:E&lt;~erved ·for tbem: ·• ·.·.• ''
~.A~'to &amp;::· eter Boyd-Bow.
·man, director of tbe U/ B Center for
pareil to offer gwdalice io students
Tbus, the report predictS, "it is very
Critical Langilages and executive eeo-·
interested' in the nuclear. field.
likely that many students will con~
retary of NASILP, the conference will
A participant must bold a becbelor's
tinue to live around tbe 'Main Slzeet
tski stock of the lan'""'ie learning - desree from an aa:redi.t.ed institution
Campus"
.
needs for. colleges and ""Wi.Tversities in
and be ensased in teachins'at a eeoStud.,;,ts in this sii;Jlation,· it is prothis countey for tbe next 25 years aod
ondsry school, community collese-or
jected, will have to spei,d an average
attempt to determiae tbe role " that
college. F.or this particular worbbop,
1
5rst priority will be given to faculty
ti~~ toto~-~e~~~'!::
self-instructional techniques tall.PlaY
froro, t)l(! various commilnlty college
port notes, "when Ia sample S\Jrvey
in meeting those .needs. ln addition,
c:alnp._ ol tbe . Stste University: of
ofl stu.dents were asked to rank tbeir
=~fwil~':';:'~'::t;~~ New Y'l{k. Persons iD tbe ....,.. of
willingness to pay for a trip to class
·
both
1arg
of tu
biology; physiology, radiation beslth
in units ol 15 cents, a distinct dropruques
to
er groups
s.Ptotection, economics and r e I a t e d
oft' in such willingness was observed
dents and to traditioqally tsusbt lans·
fields,
as well as . ~ or pbysafter 110 cents, W.O:thinls the cost
uages.
·
-.
.~
ics. are ~ II&gt; aoply. Tbe
which would presently be incurred by
Sel!-instructional techniques involvAEC
will
~de room; board; ·and
the use of public transportation, . . .
ing tbe use ol native instructom :and
travel e~ Jo1 85 participants. A
46 cents per ride: AU -of this inificates
tsped educational materials have, iD
the past ten years, come · into wide
few additionat ~rted participotential student · dissatisfaction wW&gt;
use througbout tbe country, Dr. .BoydPBDts.may be penn(
if spa,cie and
. an arrangement through which full or
Bowman says. Tbe method has prolled
ci&gt;nsideratioo of clasa ..... perinll
high transit fares would be a ·p rerequiextraordinarily suc:aissfui as an ecl&gt;For further information, 0011tact Dr.
site for class_attendance." ~.
nomical teachins technique, be indiSJ&gt;!inser, J:lepartme,t of ~
With free inter-atmpus bus service~
cates, makiag feasible lansuase offerScience, Aeroopece and Nudear Ento be discontinued (the report quotes
ings to as few -as two Ol' three stul!ineering, telephone 716-831-6336 or
831-5472
(depsr_tment ~&gt;~t ~::e:~ic!"
dents.
wben rapid transit is avsilable) , "opFor further iafonnation on tbe oontions open to tbe' student will be domferen&lt;ie, contact tbe Center for Critiinsted by either the expenses of car
cal J:..ansuage&amp;, 24 Crosby, 831-2306.
ownership, maintenance and . opera-John Greenwood, director of the
tion, or the apenses of riding the
Graduste Resource Access Deoeloprapid transit !!}'Stem. Either mode
(Conimu•d f;.,m P411•I. coL 4)
JDeftt Project, reporia that applications
could prove very costly for those stuApproximately 60 classrooms with
for the Summer 1974 Grant. period
dents with classes on tbe Amben;t
sesting capacit,ies ranging from 16 to
will cloae May 13. The GRAD ProjCam~ four- or live times a week."
60, will provide ·a total of 2,000 seats.
ect, 8pOIJ90red by tbe Graduste StuFuture plans call for extension of
A ·~ predicament" is fo,_
dent Association, ~ funds in
for Health Sciences undergr8.duates
Capen at tbe esst and west ends to . varying &amp;mounts to graduate atudents
who will bave classes on both camallow all-westber pedestrian corridors
in the terminal staps of ·tbelr degrees.
puaes and for stu.dents with "limited
·throughout th&lt;: entire academic spins
Both Master's and ~ Doctoral candifinancial means," 2:1 per cent of whom
ares.
•
'
dates are ·eligible to apply.
·
do not own or bave -resu1ar access
Tbe commissary , a 38,350-netGraduate students Wi8bing to apply
to a car.
IIQW!ri&gt;-foot structure of concrete,
sboul&lt;l ask for the Application for
While CAC-WNYPlRG supports
struCtural steei~ and metal sidfns, .will
·Reoearch iD the G.S.A of.
"the oonoept ol rapid transit and sup- ..
serve aU food service areas of both ' Terminal
fioee in Room.205 Norton.
poeee that it is poesible that students ·
tbe Amherst and Main Street camwill beneftt in a va-riety of ways l!y
puses.
•
·
the move to A!nberst;" tbe groups ilay
. Dr. John A Neal, ~t vk.,
their ............,., strongly SUSsesiB Ilia!
presid~ent for facilities Plannins at
a sreat many . . . will be dlsadvan· U jB; noted that construction ,of tbe
by tbeae~ plans.
. ·. commiseary _Will III!Cell!litatj!' dle cloeSome prOvision abould be made
ins of 11 portion of Sweet Hq,i,e Ro8d, •
for 011J8ins tbe travel burden which ~
between Maple 'arid ~ · iq late
would be placed upon studanta," the
June. Trlilllc between ihese two poiniB
report urs"!!. if the University is n6t
will hi! re:rOuted to · c8ni
-ro8dS •
to faD ... 'Ill ' .
to..
and
Dr. Neal aaid. .
'
pus_ • ; '
• provide ~~ ti:~,
Construction 1111 the ·"!JJIIInn8sary is
tials for~) to all segments - elpeCted to beci!J ~ and -is
of society equaU,v.
S!:heduled for cbmpletlc!n m ..,:ly·
.!1'he ' ~ N!x&gt;mJbends that the
1976. The edleduled ~letian date
~"~~II;,&lt;JiilPlll~hd~
on Capen Hall'li"l8111'"1f'ri:J ~ "~·

IJ!i!:inJ

NASJLP Meetmg
·
·
sa

.

. ..

!ll't: :=:l

Amhers1·-

t:set

-

GRAD Awards

'

�'3

SWedish Diplomat·· · • ~rts
·Chilean Junta Atrocities --·~-

--

_ _ the ....... .

By SHABON EDELMAN

Hamid Bdelatam Ia an~
in db&gt;lonmt's clolhinl- He
in Italy with the. 9wediob diPicr
malic eorpa when M111110lini marcbed
in; be was in Gennany durinl the intrflue of ~war ""''Df;iataou Aa
Swedish 8ll1baaBdor to Guatemala,
Edelatam ..... about io be espelled in
1972 for his~ socialism, when
_ hi llnally connected with what pri&gt;miaed to be the perfect job: the ambaasadonhip .to the Marxist Allende
government in Chile.
Within a year, Allende bad been
murdered, aud his regime tOppled by
a rigbt,.wing junta. Workers, govemmeut &lt;lllicials, aud any_o ne elae 'libo
had followed Alleode. Edelstam aaya)
were beaten, baraaoed, sent to oaucentration camps,.or ldlled. Aa a diplomat,
be was· immune to such threats, and
might have ridden out the storm from
the safety of bia palatiall!mbaaay. but
it W88 under tbeee cin:umstanoea thet
~

r.,... .

~W!.,tal~

-

Musictheater Advocates Present
2 Awards for ~Opera ·Excellence'
~.J- BeDeand_.y and .

costume cleal1ner Donis AI8IO re-

ceived the" 6mt Awuda fw ~
in Opera from the -tly..foJmed
U/B Muoidbeoder Advocates at the
finlll c:urlllin &lt;11 . the Open Studio's
performance &lt;11 The Tenor and' Four
D~ tor Two Voica and Two
Pimwa at Baird last Tbwaclay.
Ms. Bane. bas been a pafticipant in
campus opera sin&lt;e becinninl voice
studies wilh Opera Studio Directo&lt;
Muriel Wolf in 1969. Sbe holds the
B.F.A in voice from U /B and is
currently, enrolled in the M.F.A proliam. expecting t.o receiw ibat de-

.,....-y....,.

..

x.,...,..

&amp;"'..:·
~~J:"~~s;GJ"':
taad&gt;lng usial:snlllbip in opera bere;

abe ..... boaorable 1ll8lltion in the
1972 ftllioaalllllllitiom C.. -the Metmpolilan and bas been cDc.m as an
. _....ace arti8t far the 1974 _ , ""' the Wolf-Trap Feml f« the
P~ Arte lil Virginia where abe
will underatudy Bevaiy Sills. . .
AZ1110 t.s done costume. and set ·
clesilna tor Opera Studio "productiono
sin&lt;e 1971, including tboae ~ted
tills_, in ToroDto and N- York.
He alao .................. of the Studio's c.,.; Fa~~ Tutti wbioh played
.Bu&amp;lo hilh acbooho- with the
PbilharmDnic last I!PriniAmro tzaoaferred toU /B from Fordbam in 1968 and received a B.S. in
medicinal ~ in 1970. n. •..m~
this time, be 4ook "Opera w~
as an electiw courae, becinninl •
productive II880Cialion with the Baird
-..- ~ He -.ted the Sante Fe
ArUsta Apprentice Program as a ex»- ,
tume lqlpft!lltice in the Summer of
1973. and is ~ a -...tudent
employee of the Opera Studio. ·
'lbe M~ Adwcet.es group,
of tile opera IIW1I!'cis, Ia ye:t"
another facet in Opera Studio Direclior Wolf's ~ to develop a vital, comprebenalve, ~
lllU8ictbMter procrem at the
aity, an_.,...,. wtiic:h" abe ' - ...ru
- ' evtllllually to an .M.J.t.A deliM JIIOil'8ID. &lt;As abe deecribea it, AdIa ... ineamenbjp plan l.o
briJ11 totre1ber people in the University and in Weetem N- York 'libo
sbere an ~ in thla development.
While cha (of $16far .....,..I membaRhip, $2.60 foo: aludont ~
BD4"$100far ,_
. ·. ~)
are . - 1 . ~ ia DOt tb8
aole « even the prime motivation.
. "We ere 1ooklns f« ana hew al.-dy
found
wlunteara to blocame .
int.ereated and involved in our .d;"
Ms. Wolf~

um-

.........u

~ - or ~~~e-o....
Object!..,. of the pooP are '&lt;to suppoet a variety of illnovative musictheater ~; to epoii80r produclicns, Iii-\ artists, apecial pro.
,.....,. and scbolarsbipa
f:''ti:'"~of the University
prosram; to develop new audiences
for the medium; t.o . provide professional and teclmicaJ advice; and to
aaslat in the presentation aud promotion of produdiona."
The &amp;lvocatee ........, born sit a suoceoaful Ma!d1 6 meet{ng-l!lltedain-

~c~O .!:.o~:=,:
'•- ::!:...!t&lt;
far the Opera StudiO. Futuie 'a ctivities enviaqed by Ms. Wolf are a

• The "YOUIII Girl" in lsst ~·s
The
Ms. Bane bas IAIDI -m
rrvery production IDOUllted by the
Stu~ includin&amp; L 'Ormindo, Ca.i·
Fa11 ntti, and "Princaa Ida, 1UD0111
others. Sbe has been'80pi'8DO Soloist
with -the KenTon Sympbaay, the u /B

'='~u:!'t~

=

buckling political claredevil, battling
the forces of military dictatorship with
his wit, bia OODSCiemce. aud ofteu with
bia bare 6ats.
· He recounted the details of Allende's reform government, and ita after-

musicthMter brochure, neWslettera,
University Opera Studio scbolarsbi
IUiditions, a SUNY'-Wide opera oof.
loquium,_ and ~l'llhip of Metro:'
politan Reiforial Opera Auditions.
The group will aet up a series of
. _.w and general advisory OOIDIJiit.
tees, beaded by &amp; steerinl organization.
'
Additional information about the
Advocatee program for fl..- who
would like t.o perticlpate Ia available
from the Opera 08ice, 44 Baird The
mailing addreas" ia 3435 Main Street,
.Bu&amp;lo 14214.
,
The Advocates already have a paid
memboinhip. of some 30 individuals
aud more are espected, Ms. Wolf aa;ys.

math in a talk at U/B last week. Edelstam is on a fund-raising Ulur of American univers i ties. 1he proceeds of
which will go to Chilean' political
prisoners "aud the victims of 8DIDI! of
the worst atrocities the world bas ever
knOWIL"
Edelstam 'illustra~ his talk -with
what can only be described as political home movies. 'lbere were slides of
his first meeting with Allende in the
fall of 1972: sitting, standing, smiling,
stem.
"Here I am, trying to look modest,"
be narrated. "Actually I bad $10 mil. lion that I was offerinc Allende in
foreign aid, 8nd be's trying not to
look t.oo ezcited -about it."
In Need of Aid
Chile at the- time was in desperate
need of Swedish ilid In an unprecedented move, the United States had
denied credit to the ·Allende government, and all commerce was necessarily ronducted in cash. MOIIt fll the
money from Sweden went t.o buy replacement parla for the Americanmade machines on which Cbileen in-

d~ ;:k';::"'..t.w, and tbe bitter-

ness of the middle-class wbich felt: it

.ere

'l"beoli!
tbe ~ Bdelatam noted. that !ll*led him inti&gt;
battle with the Chilean JaDIL He lint
took action wbm be ~ that
...olcliera were alll!!ling the CabM enbaaay, and a~ to capture the
dipioiMIB.
"The Cubans ......... armed, of oaane,
being revolutionaries," be recalled,
"and they ......... ""''inB quite • bettie. .
I knew that the 1101diera oouldn't kill
me without embarraaain1 the regime, and 110 I made DIY way Into
the Cuban embassy after curfew to
see if I oouid help.
· .
'"The Cbileana were nahually ,...t
t.o djsoover me there. They llluted
!ICrelliJling, 'Get the Swede out,' and .
I screamed beck, 'The Swedilll ..,._
bassador stays.' They had 110 d&gt;Okle
but to stoP their abooUng, and I very proWl."
·
A little while later the eolaien!
returned, this ·t ime bmrin. ... a6:lai
oommunique. "Chile had·~&gt;roqm diP.IQDIIItic relations with the Cubena and
ordered them out of the oountry ;,q,.
diately. Aa they packed," be nailed,
" they appealed to me, .. lh8 8wediah
repreaentaliw. to look out far Cuban
interste in Chile. ADd of &lt;ourae I
said yes, even thou8h I ~
entirely wifPout authority."
EdelstMn recalled the tense waiting
period before his government approved bla action. '"I'bere silence
f0&lt; -three days, and I very nervous.
Finally, the teiegnm1 came. 'We will
represent the Cuban interests in
Chile.' it said, 'but plal8li do DOt do
such -thinp by yourself any more.•
" From -t hen on, of course, we Swedes
·treated as if we Cubans,
and it became increaaiDdY diJiicult to
gain any infliiiJIICe with-4be- - emmeot. We ID8D8ied, m-er. to
save a few people here and there." .
. Tbe ''few" that Bdelatam ...:ued
totaled """' 900 in, ha than two
m6otbs. At cme point be had erowded
over 400 polilicel . . . , _ inl.o bia
embassy, ,..nting them political asylum, and hiring 8DIDI! of them to lind
food for the others. Alain be wired
Sweden f&lt;W approve!, and apin there
was silence f« three days.
"I Vfit:Y nervouo thla time," be
"But the i r reply once spin the IIIUIII!. 'We grant aaylum to your friends,' it said. 'bat
pleaae do not do auch thinp by yourself any more.' "

"""""""'*

eoo-m•lluii camp

was being owrtued added to Allende's problems, and by the end of 1972,
be ·wea .forced to """"Pl three ~
level military men as bia adVisors.
Edelstam recalled that be and Allende bad discussed the lOYalty of the
military
forces only 11 day&amp; befole
Eldtlncii·Muriel Wolf believee strongly in the
the """P· " My Prime Minister, Olaf
role of opera and musictbeater in the
Palme, bad authorized me to triple
academic setting. "Academe Ia where
Swedish aid to Chile. But _first I "!"'
the moat ex_citing musical theatre is
t.o assure myself that Allende was m
being ·dooe ·today, free from the' reno danger of being overthrown. We
didn't want to Ioae our money."
strictions and limits of commen:iai
interMb." Yet, abe notes, there" is
Allende scoffed at Edelsbm&gt;'s fears
very little tangible support for 8C8of a military coup. The Chilean anned
demic apera·irt the na:Uonal, let alone
forces were traditiooally loyal t.o the
President, and bad even signed oaths
the local, level. Havii&gt;g been invited
of
by the National ~ Aa1ociation to
·
'"'bis reeaau.nmce,. plus the fact that
~""' as cbairman ot a oommittee on
Opera, ip Academe, abe intends to
only a few mouths before, Allende bad
been re-elected by a "JDIIllin much
devote "enerPe&amp; t.o the Iarpr, na:UonaJ
problem while ..........., .with M~
Iarpr f.ban bia #jrat one, oouvinced
me that we sbould loan bim the
· u-ter Advocatee to more opeciflcel.ly
money," Edelstam said
aaslat in program ~ at
"Lees thai\ two weeks law, the
U
'Thomas Putnam noted
bia
.
t had been aeimd by the
rave vieW of The Tenor and Four
A lleude refused to eecape, al- ~
Du.u.,r- ·in Monday's Courjer-E%~
waiting fot" him.
,._, tbe Advocates- in opite of ~
and
from the Presidentiel
palace until -his deeth.w_
atridea made by Q /B Opere in - t
hew their work cut out far
Edelalem described the violeuce
wbich folkMed, illustretinl his oouthem, paltic:ularly in of deyeloping , _ audielices:
1811ions with a homemade documen"It ia ironic," Po-... ""l'l'e under . tary ftlm in-the ''Potemkin" tradition.
the hmdinl "2 Operas at u /B 1)&amp;.
"The film blacb out~" be apoleerve N"otice," "tbet wbiJe people ere ,
Oiized. • a Chileail soldier on the
..,.._, aimed point blank at the .......
~ about the pooidbiUty of
open teldDi rQOt on .the
and lind "My - - - Frontier auch an ............, CllliM •
killed. I able t.o retrieve the film
the Ulllwraity of Bulfelo ope.. Stuonly later."
.
dio can Pr-ent an -m, fll muaic
Polluwinl-- .-led Bdolst.n tJ..ter and be an t111t ipiooal . • •
llllilinl patioDtly as his Mercedal- .
'lbe ~t production Ia beinl ~­
Benz .tripped-and ....:bed, and
-ed befan t o o - empty....... pnwIIDIIIininl Nhia fll Pablo Neruda"s
home tbadly afllor the Nabel x - t e
ing ~ ~ bu&amp;, 1'!''0ce calls,
DOt be IIUiellt~ ,piD&amp;ity.::
•
beelal to~~ QWean polijle.

allepance.

1!·

=-!e . . .

0:

y....,.-

N-...
..m

.

Edelstam visited the cxmceotuotion
set up in
a foolliall stadium in the Cllllller of
Santia&amp;o: He ~ in -~n~ an
the Sweaes, but said he-~
c:oucemed for the fate of a nlmlber of
Uruguayans, Brazilians, and Bolivi- ·
ana, .me- own govemmeuts- projunta and would probahly act
to flee them.
'"I'bere was one major in the llladium who was fairly sympotbetic,"
Edelstam recalled. "He allowed the
eustody of 54 Uruguayan priaonen,
and W88 really most Irincl 'lbe camp wbich tbe junta bad

. ~ !.en,~ f:..C..'":C' ::til;;':

major was not there, and I left bim a
note e%J&gt;iainlng my intentions. When
I returned~ followina day, the c:~~q~ .
oommander, a real bMat, informed me
that my note bad 110 i:ncriminalled the

major, that be, aa well as the Brazilians, had been emcuted. It DIY
fault and I am aorry."
On-another occasion, Edeiatem and . .
his staft fought a Iitenl tu,-&lt;JI-wer
over the hospital bed of · a ....,.....jed
Tupemaro lid wbom the CbileiiDa
hoped l.o take prisoner. '"The alluQie
.....t on for hours," be said.
tbough there were five of us and tweiYe
of them, because the 110ldienl' ~
bpt falling off and their riJiea bpt
hittinl them on the bead"
During the bmwi. recounted E-delatam, "the Swiaa and
aadors were running about ~
such advice as 'Don't fight the authorities!' and 'Don't hit ... lllllbaa.dor!' Finally the French ll!llba-sor
joined tboi battle with flailing fiate. . 'I
couldn't otand to them hit ...
emba-dor' be fated pPieinecL Anyway, be Ieit ~ it time far

u-

Freoch·....-...

(~MpCo6,eul.~)

•

�.... ..
:t=.

,~,_,...J,ool.~)
aelected ....._.. •
-

David.......~ ~~-==
L.-...u.:
Bont, ~ Ro ert

~

=-'.::=...) w

ie8. EMil Judie _.~in ­
bolb . . . . . . al the
01ec1ao the - w a1
awuda
will be illued 1D J - . PUDda lor the
prizes _... ..... avan.ble flam •
- t· for lnnovathe teacbiJw admluisleled by Dill: Blat ad HiaiL

m

-

• N_._,

-·
.

~,

...

Tbia ...... fll the Deaf~! ..~
. 8dleablier ..,... .._ • nichbilare
from ·whlcb Plath could DOt -=ape" And i1 li • Jlilhlmanl all A-""'
.... belwi to dreun."
.

Ia tbe ~ al tbla
lmqe paowmfUJ, llc:bec:blllr
wriliea, than "811111111 ~who
felt ~ ulBfy
!»Rae ina Koc:led&lt;f• ~
fore the WIIICious ..... ... ~
~~iam- 1111
.
illliiojlll)
war machiJie, who watched . . . tbelr
dllferent win. In tbe 'lOrds ol ~
Gmdualie prbe
llc:bec:bter,
nourishing
Mot.heJiand
lnmlform
itaelf
WlDIIIil!)': '"l'bls eaaay ~ itwt.. inbnlla _... em cantemporary papular cultme, D,yll lila _,. ' into a bloody deslloyer ol babes. . : ."
III!Jl to tlie .-raJ Mad and obllgatian
'Ibis IIIICI!IIdanoe al tbe Davourlng
ollbe Uru-sitY in the P~~ti
is
biS Work with .111111- . Mother
in the minds ol tbe ldds, be
' implementing"~ compmbeasiw ~ len
. "'t's
...ample al
asaerts, helps ezplain the - t 1!1&lt;the kind al
I've been cloinB:
plosion ol honor-pori! witbin tbe counarcbetypal aD8Iyaia al the rise of
terculture. Tbe "1111!11811ge is clear: the
problems a1 aging and the aged in our
horror-po~ in our cultme, a
world ol tbe love generation is under
·
and oommunity.''
dilltuJbiDa
.,...., in r e c e n t
the dominion of the Teeth l)fother,
yeel"&amp;" ft was w r i tt en, be adds,
Kociecki wbo has " - ....
the flower children have become the
"months before the leleaae ol the film. .- children
aociated
with ihe Universi:..l=
of KaiL"
_
1962 and- is assistant to the
•
'Tbe -Emrcist.' " "Terrible Mother"
in the ~t - ol Occupalialial
· Schechter fmds further evidenos ~
will ,aw-r in ita enthety in an )11&gt;pop
music;
"Several
years
ago,
DoitClOIIIiua issue ol TM Journtll of Popu- 'lbefapy, will graDuate
~
ovan would walk onto a stage, sprinkle
1111' Culture.
'
can
the boards with petals, and sing 'Wear ·
Tbe "Good Mother," Schechter conYour Love Like Heaven.' Today, Alice
tends, Willi a phenomenon in Ameripride to sophisticated technolotPes an!f
can culture in the mid-fifties and early_
Cooper, the man-hag rock star, .sings
a high_standard of living to &amp;J?I!"'Pnately justify claims for reotlfiUiian as
of 'Dead Babies,' butchers live cbicltsixties; years which """"' "PI08P8l!&gt;US.
ens and baby dolls onstage, and, like
stable, bland as milL" 'lbe most strik.a foremost and rightfull~_among20tb_
Hecate, .. . sports a live python."
tbe great civilizations ol we
ing sign al her III!OOI!f!•noe was the
century,'' she writes,. "we may be coo"full-breasted' Playmate" who . was
Even the ads reflect the presence
"tM Twentieth century ioon." Pleysidered backWard, if not -~t
one
of the Teetb Motber, Schechter says:
barbarian, in tlie management ol our
boy JD8111Zine was her "monthly paeand
"An advertisement lor a record by a
senior citizens." an." ~ a.-. years, Schechter
a pi06itive
- group named West, Bruce &amp; ~g
Tbe University She cootenda, "m~t
8llY8. "Ameriao ~ped the Bresst,
states tbat 'When West, Bruce &amp; Laing
act to provide t£,; leadership to ,..
-"It
l1'ni=:rtY ·
Russ Meyer became rich by ~g
played the Wuvulu Pop Festival, ·the verse the generaj:ional provincialism
the screen with naked knockers, while
and milieu that is lbe propei aetting
audience ate them up' and shows a
inherent in tbe present eduaotional
conductive to creatiVity and producflat-chested girls laid out a fortune for
photograph of glistening skeletons.~·
system. Multidiscipljnary, multigen· . tivity in seeking mlutiona to aging,"
padded bras, Mark Eden Bust De- .
Tbe same themes of butchery, de'erational programs of study dediaoted
velopers and silicone shots." ·
Ms. Kociecki concludes. .
vouring, and mutilation abound in theto . planning the future for tbe aged
Today, ~r, "The Good Moiber
increasingly-popular "unde r g round
nolo....,.. re.1gns alone;-her po~r bas
should
be
developed,.
coordlnatinc
~
comix," Scbecbter notes, particularly
dwindled significantly, and, just as
knowledge ~ging from_ tbe ~iolog­
in " the nightmare universe" of S. Clay
ical, psychological and social 8CieiiCe8.
the sign of her dominion was our
Wilson, "a re8l pioneer in horrorGerontology could well become the-_
national "'-ion witb the immense
porn" t recently fea tured in a Norton
bosom, 8o the mark of ber decl.ine is
practical application · ot such knowDr. Edward G. Giheon, NASA asUnion Spring Arts Festival of underthe de-aceentuation ol the breast tbat
ledg_e and expertise. Tbe SUNY oya,
. tronaut, will be tlie dinner speaker at
ground coniix) .
has been taking- plaCe OYer the _past
!em is consptcuous by the al;leenos of
the sprilig progrlun of the Western
any such eduC8ticmal coherebcy and
Cannibal Dtums In the Americon Psyche
few yeus. w-. "!' N--'«ll "!'"
New York Chapter of tbe American
ported in a recent article on al6IDetic
recognition of its responsibility," she
uBut insane as these visions unCollege ol Surgeons, Thursday, May
surgery, are no longer hurrying to
doubtedly are, they are not ... just
9, at the Wanakah Country Club. Dr.
have their breasts inflated witb siliworld, 'Ms. Kociecki
the nightmares of a lone San FranGiheon, the science pilot of Slcylab-4,
cone-indeed, the more popular ~ra­
says, " traditions nurturini respect for
ciscan psychotic," Schechter ~!'tends.
will diacuas his experienosa on tbe
pon ·these days is the breast reductidh
the aged were carefully p!OIDU!pted.
''Nor is the, new madness llDllted to
84-day space night in which he and
-and a glance at qment media JoveIt was a mechanism for survival m the
the worlds of rock . and tbe under·
his companions completed 56 experilies ' like Ali MacGraw, MUt Farrow
struggle for continued control of their
ground comix. Tbe shift witbin tbe
ments and 26 scienos demonstrations,
and Candios Bergen makes it clear
destiny against tbe ~ virile.ll!llcounterculture from reveries about
as "!PlJ as eJ&lt;tensiw obaerwtions of
tbat the era ol the big-boobed cellueration. Senators, pittriarcbs, phii080'
Strawberry Fields to fantasies of cansolar- priiceaaes, a subject of special
lpid goddess is, if not quite over (we
pbers,
teachers-aU
were
deptcted
as
nibal orgies is only one symptom . . .
intereSt to tbe Bulralo nalive.
still have Raquel Welch, but even
of the emergence ·or cannibal dreams · skill4&gt;':, knowledgeable, reasonable
Tbe geaeral theme for the Pf011'8Dl,
sbe, as /&gt;er self-parodic ·suggests,
men. Grey hair and fiowing .beard
in the American psycbe.''
planned
by Dr. John H. Siegel, proseems aware of herself as an anacompleted tbe picture."
He cites otber examples:
feasor of surgery at the School of
chronism) , fast approaching an 61d."
Medicine and chief ol surgery at tbe
Thrown In the River ·
.
. • "In tbe enoDDOusly successful
Buft'alo General Hospital, is ''DiJii( film) Night of t~.e Living Dead, a
HoWever, tbis respectful treatment
n.~ti~"'treast-has been recult Problems in the ~t or
horde of zombies devours the enwas frequently reserved only for tboee
placed by tbe devouring mouth, of
Hwilan
Shock and TraUIIIIL' A panel
trails ol a teenage couple while a
firmly in power: ''In ancient Rome,
which Det!p Throat is tbe mindlittle girl contentedly nibbles on ber
old men were thro1il&gt;n into the Tiber.
Of visiting specialiata has. been - bled,
eacli
to speak on his field of
dead daddy's arm.'' •
bere?,"
:nt!J~~/:es~ interest.
• "Newspaper ads for T·M Folks at
Dr.
Wortbingbt
G. ScheDir. Jr.,
Schechter asks. "How does one acexpected their aged to be a bit more
Red Wolf Inn show an elderly couple
count for tlHs transfonnation fro'!'
chairman of tbe ~t ol Sur·
accommodating and bury tbemaelvea.
clutching knives and forl&lt;s and hovergery, will moderate tbe panel discusnourishing motber to ravenous canruIt is no wonder tlult the aied strove to
ing/ over a volupblous, bikini-dad
bal queen- (lrom) Mamie· van Doren
sion which will be part olthe morning
develop a cult ot respect for age. . .."
torso. 'Welcome to tbe Red Wolf Inn,
program_
A 1&gt;ua1na. meetinc will be
to Linda Lovelace?" From tbe beauMs.
Kociecki
doubts
that
we
are
Regina,' reads tbe ad.. 'Guess what
held in the afternoon and tbe recepties o1 Pleyboy to tbe literal manany m6t:e humane or subtle today;
we're having for dinrier/ "
~
.
eaters of Screw.
tion '!"" dinner will .start at 7 p.m.
"We
may
not
throw
our
old
people
• "Roman Polanski is working on
One answer, he says, is clear. "The
in the river, or -bury tbem: but we
a film about tbe Donner party'' (the
image of the "Good Mother-Breast ·
have, n6netheless, effectiv.ely removed
frontiersmen survivoni or which ate
tbem from 'sight and aMllld. Tbere is
arose and took possession of our fanhuman fiesb ) .
eJ&lt;clusive Sun City, Arizona, for tbe
tasies in a.- y'eam between :wars
• · "Robert Heinlein's ~ in
when- America - was comparatively
' very weallhy; the -park be!)ches ol
Tl&gt;e SUNY/Bulfalo Omicron Chapa $trange Land, in which
· ism
serene increasingly affiuent, apparent.
Florida for tbe middle claas; and tbe
ter of Phi Beta Kappa will hOld _ita
is pmcticed as an act of love and
Jy ~; but in tbe latter y~ of
· county homes for lhe friendless and
1974
initiation ceremony, Monday,
which
apparently
was
Charles
Manthe sisties, at the height ol Aml;ri_ca's
poor." As the middle class moves into
May 20, at 4 p.m. in 147 .Diefeodori
son's bible, has replaced TM Lord of
invol~t in Vietnam, when ~
suburbia, nursing homes move into
Over 200 initiMa, with their partM Rings as tbe newest fad novel
the ~ qties, DeJ&lt;t to tbe ghettoes.
ents and frieoda, will be invited to
among the YOIIIII·"
"Tbe Veterans Administration, _in an
attend.
• "An article in the first iaBue or
attempt ·t o reduos administrative paOmicron Chapter President Cia~
TM American.Poetry Review suggi!sta
per work; by tbe single criteria ol age
Welch
will
.
be
the
spMker.
His
toptc
I tbat tbe popularity of the Alka-SeJtzer
65 relegates a large number ol persona
will be ''Tbe 'Scholar and Political
...
~
ad in which a man drones miserably,
as not only old, but oiJl and disabled."
Reality."
'I can't believe I atetbe whole thing:
--~···
~fiiU.,.,._.
Noting ibat work makes one import.
A reoep!Oon, with open bar, will be
olq--fJ~ci­
dBrives from ita appml to tbe audi)"Grfr- . . . . . ~..,... BL. . . . . .
ant in our society, she asks, ~'What
held at 5 p.m. in the Faculty ~lub.
ence's cannibalistic fantasies. M
lt.r•.J42l.f. ~ otno.. . . ~ •
repercussions can"we Ei1pect, hotb as
All faculty who aie either Omicron
• · "And 'Greative Woman's World: . individuals and as a society, when an
..;.... 213, 2SD ..............__ ""*members. (ttx.e elected clirect.ly_ to
2Uf).
~
the editorial column of Family Circle
increaaingly oomplex economy imtbe Omicron Chapter) or tberii880CI8U ~
JD8111Zine (I) ...,.,.,.,tly os-eti witb
poses premature obeolmconce al techmembers
(a.- elected to o
ru.... ....,.,...,. lt0fr£IJIID ~
the eye-catching question, ~ant to
nic&amp;l sldiis and lmowledge, with a corvemity chapters al Phi Beta Kappa)
~
1mow wbat humim8 taste like? . . . A
TeBpCIIding withdrawal from the active
_...,. r . .IIUJtU1T
are
invited
to
holb
8\'I!!DIL
lot or people do.' "
•
· wor1t force? • . . Ceo we ~ new
Kali bas rillan in tbe States, SdJec:h.
acoeptable ·aocial roles replacbii tbe
... CIDIII1U .
,
1WO MOR£ ISSUES
ter 8llY8. DOt C!'nlY in popular culture
worlt etbic CI;IIIIJ&gt;Ietely?
.
Thellopo&lt;Wr will publish. two mol8 luues
PAriiiGU. W . &amp; R J i but in hish eu11uie as well, -ially
"WWiat will be the e«ect ... the
durina the ,...... , academic )'Mr. Mtl)' 9
ecooom,y in JIIO'ridini- iDcr-.1 ...
•AIICr &amp; c•ltDfPD''
and May 16. A ......,_. Ropartw will be
vices and beDofita to an ~
published _ , Thu~ June 6 through
• 'Tbe Teeth Mother Nabd at
!nl number althe qed? • - , Jl •
AuiiM 1 (with the ~ of ~uly 4).

llle-CII-..

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

.nm-

tiD=: tiD

tiD

~~~~ ~

~

.1'.:::: tbJ!th~with_

~~t

Surgeons to Hear
NASA's Gibson ·

~'it anci~t

bo¥~t ~~happening

Phi 8efa Kappa
Plans Initiation·

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

-__
. _....._.._
.....

--

~

~~b~~

..

�A cOllection ·of essays
by members of the
School of Management,
StatE;! Univ.ersity of New York
at Buffalo.

�.... ,,.. ....... ., .

.

.......

........... .,..,... _.........
.....................................
........... __ _._ ........ ..
....,_ ....... ...., rA....,..
~··

............... lila .......... .......

................ ..;..w .......... ..

. . ........... . . . ..... •

.... alllclilaa Ilia

twulml aal
..._._, ~•••• ••hllwlloenFI..._ID
............................. wll ..

.........
....,.., ..................
..... _.......
.....,,........._
..................
.., -·
.....
titorn••··-·--....._,
bt
CICIIw .....,.,.. ..................... crlllco

., ~ ............ .,...... s.dt
........ I I _ . . ,.,.. tiMil fmwlly ond
....,._ ................ -their ,..r.a~';I...J
......... wlllt ......... ltloloriC.. penplctJ....
..aalllwllr .. lltit ...._, ..... IIOijWIIIIIbla _ , .

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

By LEE E. PRESTON and
.JOSEPH A. ALUTI'O
When ~ - " ' of the "managerial revolutiaa,. t~~ey ·- ..iall.v.,.,.,.... ... the appear- .
....... and_ -taal ............... of pror-iooal .
........,.,.... within the W.., orpnizations of 111&gt;ciety and, fbtally, within aociet;y as a whole. 'lbl&amp; •
""""Juticxt "has beal most ~ analyzed
within the CIDIPOI1IIe - · wheie it originated,
although it is virtually complete lhrougbout all
aectora of our ..,;,ty -education, -bMitb Care,
goyemment, etc. _In other countries, this revolution is aliiJ
much in proc!!SB, and in """"'
it has only becun.
'The attenticxt lliCilOrded tbia ~...,..,Julian" - '
puticular17 by ita Bllinal anal)'llls. • . J - ' .
Burnham &lt;Tiu. Manaferial Bevolut~n) and
.J. K. Galbntith "!Tiu. Nt!111 lndlatrial State)has obocured the fact that it was, in fact, the
second revolutionary transformation -associated
with the dtM!Iapment of manag~ as a distinct
activity within society. And, failure of hindsight
leading to failure of foresight, -the professionalizalion revolution bas been mistakeoly w.-1 ·
as a final stage of managerial dtM!Jopment rather ·
than a breeding-ground for new. "revolulionS" -as
far reodting and si_gnificant as any that have oc- ·
cuned before. Our contemporary revolution is,
in fact. alieBdy under way. It is based on a concept hmdamentally antithetical to profeosiona{ization-the concept of participation.
·
The beginnings of the participation revolution
- both in the form of participaliw """"'S....ent
within orpnizations and in the form of extemal
IIOCiaJ participation in the managerial processappear ·on all sidi!S, and are every daY. more
prominent. Further, participative relationships
seem peculiarly cbaracteriatie and appropriate
in poet-industrial society, just 88 hiemldlk:al
and technocratic relationships are for industjiaiizing and mature-industriBl situations. Finally,
and psradoDcally, it appeam that the p8rt.icipa.
lion revolutiao-eims to reestablish aome of the
natumJ i.ntr&amp;- and intm-orpnjwtiqw! n!lation&amp;hips that exist in a pre-industrial --'&lt;~·
·
The £artie&lt; - The first "managerial revolutiaa,'! both in
theory and in fact, was the appeatTIII« &lt;tl manqement itaelf as a specialir.ed fuDcticm within
hierarchical organizat.iabs. The - . . ! r8volutioa, '
prof~ stimulated by the aep.
anrt.ian ol....-.bip and oantrol in laqe ~
.,...niutMxn and by _the ~ in the acal\! IIIII
compleaity &lt;tl ID8II8II8rial' taab. Tbe • cunst .•

-r

lut, .. - - ....... ... ..... ...,...,
. olojedivo rA ihe laatll,. ......... .....,_ wiB

Ma---

be polnfviiJ slow. Tho School rA
II
commiltecl to achlevl,. lhal oblecflve llr buJiolo
,,. otep.hy~ on Its -plloh-nls ..- tlalo, .
ond_antlclpall,. society's requiN- hr _,..

.,..·.Mnt ct.velop~(lt In the "futuN•

Ma_....,.

-RICHARD G. llllANDINIUIG
Dean, School rA

management li-.re ..,.. and particularly the .
textbook literature- focuses almoet ezclusiwly
cin the conception of the professional functionary
within a hierarchical organization, which,we may
call the "mechanical manage?." The evolution of
tbe mechanical manage? from the earlier and
more primitive concept of. "economic man" directly parallels the separation of ownership &amp;om
control and the increasing sophistication of man·
age?i4! techniques. Thus, $ economic man is
the stereotype associated with the boiiBI!bold and ,
unorganized society, so the mechanical maaager

is the stereotype aMOciated with the bienucbicalprofessionaf orpnization and the industiial sc&gt;ciety •
~ .
-:.
~
.
tub and aclivilies &lt;tl ibe .mech8nkal
aianapr are ..OW the ataples of the management
curriculum: defining ....... analyzing ~tema­
tiVE6, IDIIkinl deciaiOIIII, motivating subordinates,
and manitorinl practice ao lhiK policies once
decided upon will in fact be canied out. The
compleal mecbanical IIIJDIII'!lr is readily identifiable. by the clarity &lt;tl hia vision, the rationality
&lt;tl·bis decision ~
lllld the precision of his
.., .

The

~

.

�__
......,
................. __ ....... ...a.s.
.&amp; ..._
..................
__ ,__.-

':'~~t=~toall.=
al ............
~tlllll
"lb!wGMI-

~-:'~: ..:...::-:.:..:....:..-=..:

_...,_
$ ........... _............ ..

....WP*'
1 11 s

__,. -.1 ........ al

~-w.w

=="'~ .-....lalic

Aa tt
........... ud ... ~jeclivlty al ... ,..._dcil _,... lleiDt d8doed

!be Jl8ftldpatiall ~ ~ ......
-"lilbed, and tile llfllllla1lrla .... ta ~
under way. Tbe . . - al. c:IJI!IIII8 .Willdd be
· llltloult to slow, aud. l*'lllwbl;y . ~ ..,

-

~

..........w

--....-.t

who

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

Intemal participation is by far tbe fa- miliar IJI!Ide .of operation. Usually .....m.ni'!""'
for increuing participation al orpnizatiooaJ
. member&amp;, particularly prolessional -"' nanpro- ·•
fessi,.,.J eiQPioy-, beve a decidedly. normative I
-basis., 11 ill - - ' d&gt;a.t everyone, currently
wisiJes peater participation orpnizatinnsl
d~-maJUna aqc~, Jf .1« 110111!' I'BB8Qil .lliill is
- not the ........ it is simply because the bieran:bic:si
strudure of ' organizati_ons baa retarded tbe
achievement of emotiooal maturity, such maturicy being evidenced by a desire for peater pe.rticipation. Tbe cirnularity of this I'8II80IIing is
fairly obvious, altbougb seductive.
.'lbere are also a number of empirically4!ased
reaaons why orpnizaticms are *ivinl ID deYelop
intemal mecbeniims for increasipg employee decisional participation. One al the most. iDlluioDQal
faciDrs is the belief"that if employees~
in decisiODS whose end product is oqjanlzatiooal
change, lbey will become far mOre committed "'
"'IY ~t alteration of their wort environment Thus, in periods of rapid en~
change, participative decision-mating is vieWed
88 a method of iDcreasing internal organizational
adaptability. Secondly, there is oome evidence
- that by u.c.-ing participation in orpnization
declsicm......ting, a number of beneficial ~
-such 88 greater job satiafaction, greater OODI·
inifment (loyalty) ID the Organization, and increaaes in job achievement -are attained.
'lbirdly, tbere is some lndicatien tbat 88 participation u.cr- at all levels of 8n organizatiOn, there can be a senemi incresae in the
"poMi" al all participants, and thus of -tbe ""'
pnizaQ&lt;in 88 a wbole. This ,_.,. that a "lbed
pie~ CXJIICIIIIl of powe'r is erroneous.. On the contrary, as a superior allowa greater participation
by subOrdinates, the _ . pool of power in the
orpnizatioo • IDcreiaM; the Individuals at top
hielardllad positions do n&amp;t Bimply lose authority CD tboas below them. Further, it is maintained
~ as participation u.cr-, power di11enm··
liiiJs bet-. and a c r o a a various• bieJ:an:bic:sl
lewis tend "'·....,._,and this lendeocy. - . . 1
eQuallmtinn facililates funclbaal conllict
Sino&amp; it is ...... ..,._.ny 8BIIII8d that
conllict is an inbezent aspect of all'oqpmiraticwwl
~ tiUs latter idea becomes a very J8*1a·
sive justillc8tloa far participative iDodea al mao-

m

=lion.
.,.._t

.

.An addilbasl atimulus1o ~ ia tile
fact that inc:taBin&amp; numbers"' ......... ~ .
- ~ are worthta ·in larae bw-.tit
lllncturaB. All ............. ..,. . . . liaCb !Ill

- - 11-. vadilbwl ..............d!Dde
• ...,.,...... al aull!aritY 81111 a J...el ol. Jilt»
.........,. ODIIIIIIII8Dt wiCb tbeir

~

....

-

dependence. 'Both olijectives manifest themselves
, in a desire for 1lfl!lller decisional participation
' than usually-experi~ by Subordinates in highly forinalized, complex organizations of any sig'
• nificant size.
•
• If all this sounds 88 though .managers ought
immediately to restructure their organizations in
~order to maximize participation, there are also
very good reasons. for not moving quite so precipitously. First, there is really a surprisingly
. limited body of appropriate research .Oil the ef.
fectiveness al participative structures and procesaes. This is in part due to the biases of many
writers in the ares (when one belieUf!B in participation there appears ID be little interest in
aystematically demonstrating its viability as a
mode of management versus other approaches ) ,
and in part the reluctance of many managers ID
aperiment with antt ·evaluate sucb novel (for
the U. S. ) &lt;methods. Secondly; there is evidence
.that not everyone actually desire. greater participation in clecision-making. Studies of clerical
peraonnel,' man~g employees; teacbers,
nu....., iond faculty demonstmte tbat, for many
individuals, increases' in rates of decisional participation are not desired. Thus, assumptions
about a universal desire for increased participation may well lead managers ID adopt dysfunc~ tional modes of operation. Thirdly, attempts to
pin £be benefits of participative structural con-fllw'8tions tend on)y to work wbm at least three
conditions are met: (a ) participants in the process actually control the relevant outcome - if
lheir decisions are overruled the p , _ is viewed
88 manipulative and the consequences for management are particul8rly severe; (b) participants
. actually poasess the ·skills and knowledge re' quired for suCcessful. problem solving- without
this, frustration appears ID be the primary out, come; (c ) participants view the decision of concern ·ID be of some tmportsnce ID them 88 well
88 the organization.~
Exlllmal ...rtlc;iplltlon

External participation by pei'BOns not specifically involved by employment or ownership in
the opemtions of an organization is a newer concept ltii traditional pre-revolutionary fonns in·
elude government rules and public policies with
respect to _sp&lt;icmc aspects of business .management, public 8J8DCY supervision in the regulated
- . , o1. the' ecoDOIJIY, aDd occasional public
• scrutiny • al specific . fiima and their detailed
operations in ._..., ..to economic crises or
public outcry. Tbere bas also been a tmdition
· in many large enterprises of appointing a few
key public figures - presidents of universities &lt;&gt;r
elected officisls, for ezample- to important committees 81111 boards al dinictors,. perhaps . . lotal
rep,_,tstives of society at large. Only l'801!Dtly,
however, has tbe Dation thllt 1'81luine repreeentstiv,es a1 tbe general J&gt;Ub1ic ~or al special publics, such 88 community ~ consum- . Clllllomers, etc.-might tate aignlllcant roles
in tbe tannatiaD ol. ~ plans and deci&amp;ions.
Some OCIIJIOiatiuiUI - (eucb '• the Pbii8detpbia
Natiooal Bank) bave-delllierateJ.y ..!dad~
bl6cb, 81111 )'011118 people to ~ a-rda; in
oil-. (mdl •-.....a-!-"lBM), 4op man....-.tt.a c__.t .............. ~CD do
jaat that. 'lbe CXIDQI!Pt. ol. lept-.tldives
~ tlw - . . • t lllructme ... of COill8e,
aaty -bidicstiall of !be '-.Ina recapilba .

Pap 3/REPQRTERITHE NEW MA~CERtMA¥ 2, iw•

.

-

Oqe am ceatainly espect _ , . .. , . _ _ _
"' be increasingly. NCeiidve to tile ....... al
participative .truetun. of iliMawl ~
lion. This will .-.It fJ.1)ID dlanahJa ~
(i.e., increuinB numbers al......,_ . .
siring participalba) 81111 from !be 81Dlll1111atioil '
of empirical evidence 88 ID tile caadilian8 requisite for ellective putkipative. - 81111 the
individual and orpnizalbaal benoeets "' be obtained frooi them. Manspm are coaaantly faced
with .uncertainty, and slrive ID reduce it ID
manageable levels. Research ... tbe limitations
of par.ticipative teclmiques, contrary to tbe fears
al some, may lead ID greater """"'P':snc of participative modes of management 88 a means of
l'l!llucinJ the level of uncertainty surrounding'
organizational
BOth internal and externlil participaticm may,
indeed, constitute means for the reestsblisbment
of an integrated structure of organizational relationships something lite those of the primitive
pre-managerial orj&amp;nizatioo itaelf.
Perhaps the analogy seems atrained, but several indicaiDrs point in this direction. Intemal
participation is clearly a reaction against tbe
increasing rigidity 81111 i.mpeiSonality of bierarchicsl structures, and against the remoteness and
mysticism al professional DliUl8Jl!ID8IIt External
participation is, at a minimmn, a 80UICe of in·
fonnation and viewpoint for ID81lllJ8I8 newly
aware of multiple complex interactions between
their oirn organizations and the 1ars1e&lt; environment Indeed, both the reality and the DI!!CeEity
of. the partici.paticm revoluticm are _ , by ....,.;
" analysts as critical features al the _.png post.
industrial societY-

v.m-

.._,rinl

a-

.... ....,.a~

flicloina IDiilnlla Chat_.. .....,.. - ,erial
- activifo7. 0.. tbe ~ ......... ~

al
lulll8 aut; bolb ... _ _ _ _ _al ...

an

!W J?i!!M'f

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

... ,
""'· ... cdtb cpalkpa ... -:1 - -" . . . . . _!fwe]lcwt -with Ill im]lllca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . - _ . . . _ .... 8Cihe

!..o..t,"

I

112--Jioodlm........_
..._..... -

.......... Jllhatr .... - - . . . . . .M
...... llliiiiiDalllriL
I
iDtoa
riPI ~ al - - . - . . . . . . . ...

..... ealtlillle ...... pmbleaa II&amp; ...., . . _

-~ PartialpMiaD ... ladu·
... al . . . - ~ lftiUIIB lmal..t imd ......
_ _ . with 1be Olllcoa8 al .......... activity
.. JllllicltNmta .in ...
plUmE itaelf.
l"artkfpelba ill ......; then ........y ... NCI!Iipt
al ~ar ... ............,.. al viewpainta,
altliouah recapilba by .............. Jllllll8llllllS al'
the ll8ed 1o tab lato - a the vieM 81111 attitude&amp; al ou- ma,y be 811 opeaing wed8e in the
revolutlanuy .....-. 1'lntlcipiiUoG ilnciWB what
Daniel Bell baa delaibed .. • Jlblk from the
mode,• cbeladaiascl by an i!mpbasls em JII'Oii!ldivito7 ud a· nK~oaa~ ~ ol.
8llda 81111 · ~a,._ ••'llzlnl JBb!Je; in ·.
wblda tbere is, fll8t, 811 ell'oit to eatrlllllb ·"aodal
- uatiee by the inclusion a1
~ ~
81111 dal an "elloif. to ,iull,ee a
s·
needil in
.,...,;a,.~ -.1 .•.. to do
80 ... the bais ol. ....... ..,.&amp;lc:lt COIICI!Ption ol. tbe
'public inllenst.' " •
•
In apJorinl the . in!pact al the ~tion
nwoluliaa IUid the 110 ch!a.l]lldJIC (ar pol!ticizinl)
mode ... !be Jllactiee of
wilbln the
individual ~ - ma,y djatinpdsb b&amp;.._, w.Ml putlcipatloo- IIY - milbt be coa8idered "maobenr"'al the IJI8D8II!rial
unit, eucb . . ~ 81i~ !ldeoa, . . 81111 .
.
. _ _ , perticipatioo by "aallliden."

.

Balla ..._.. -.1 ...._. J!!)IUI&amp; II SU!4B

. . . . . . . . . . . ~ ........,.ADd,

lbraulh ...... -INMikidoamy

e

..................................*""

...... ... ....... ....... "lb!w.., Ia
·~
.--1

a l . - - ...a.t ~ 81111

~

outco.......

•

TheMilDilF~

as·

Teileher
By JACK STEVENS

Man_.--Professionsls in management education rely
upon tbe inputs al ~ teachers and re·searcbers for imparting knowledge ID their students. An integraticm of these inputs mates possible development of a comprehensive, reliable,
and systematic body al management knowledg1!.
Synthesis of tbe manager and tsacber roles is
especially desirable within this community of
active, mutually supportive participants with a
common interest in atrengtbeninJ the fnnctinn
of III8DilJI!lll"
It would be utopian to SUJJI!Bl that tbe new
manager posaeeaes all the aolutinns for complex
managerial problems. EducaiDrs are s1i11 puasninl the · objective al maximum ell.,.,.veneso in
translating theory iniD practic:e. Tbe management
practitioner, with similar _.., bas not yet conceptualized his stills iniD a generalized system al
knowledge. However, ID8DIIJI!lDI!Ilt educaticm does
provide for 1111 intecratinJ role. This role- the
Jll8ll8l8l' as a.acber- is potentially one of tbe
more important mecbeni81118 for translating management theary into practice. Tbe roles of tsacber
al JDI!Dllgement 81111 manager should not be COilaidenid l!lldnsive. Tbey ate oriented -..ad the
objective, the eppli&lt;aticm al valid llB&gt;t' knowJedae to tbe managerial flmolion.

�TheNemQiillleJlfJes
.

' .

·(QrJius~essMan•F~
-

By FRANK C. JEN
Business managers as 1l .profeosioo have recently again beeO subjected to c:J... scrutiny by •
. the public. They are also-increasingly being accu-t of baing lllllaiPODSive to Public in1eresta
ID&lt;IMd, 'some - " ' of the poptl)aoe would even
go as flrr 88 aaying that such sOcial ills 88 unemployment, racial discrimination, pollution, re.......,... shortages, etC., are the resuliB of mi&amp;,fakes committed by btJsj,_ managers. There
are many reasons for such accusatiO'!S; wbet!ler
d&gt;eae reasons are justifiable appears to depend
to a certain e1tent on one's point of view. Howeyer, three facts are clear: (1) .Business managers 88 a group have tremendous ....,uroes under
their cootzol (2) The decisions of these manaIE!I'B affect directly· or indi!ectly the lives of "'~
.many people-lor analytical pwpoees, the per· _
sons affected can be separated ,into five groupe:
(a ) the suppt;ers, (b ) tbe customers, (c ) the employees, (d ) the stockholders and the creditors

ana

(e) ilie "public.• &lt;3 J WbUe .tile .direct f!ifeota oL 1D81Q' ......,...W clecilliciM ~ positive,
there are frequently b.t aide elreCia, eome of
whiCh may be •P"''P""'*'
Because oL ~ three facta IIDII bei:au&amp;e seldom are there any dec:Hana u.at. will satisfy
simultaneously all"five padie8 -...ad, business managers will always be UDder pressure
from, if DOt seyereJy ~ ~ cme ,or more
of the five groupe to aot to . . - ita .-18. From
the business manager's poiJJt of view, however,
actions to . . - these _ _ . . Often mean shifting I'I!IIOUrol!8 used to __.., cme poup to serve
another. Even if """" actionli Jlilenc\' the group
that is COJD!&gt;Ia!ning, they Often create counterpn!1!8111e8 from the from whidl I'I!OIOIIroeS
, &lt;"""!" ,t.ken .a.,.y.~;~ore, no matter
't ··haow ......,__....,..... aotdind react, managers
·ail a group will cootinue tD be pn!IIIIIIUed, criticized, or ....., abused from time to time.
For the p,_,t and future busineoa managers,

��-·

aAIIlOlDT

1

CD

0

INFOR,.,ATION BOOTHS

@TOURS.
Street Campus-The Student
Auociation tours leave every half hour
from 1-4 p.m. from Norton Hall steps
(FOUDQin Side).
Amllent Campus-Visitors ue permitted
to drift their own can; onto the campus,
1111nc the
porting taclllties.
•John Lon! O'Brian Hall, home of the
· Scbool of Law and Jurisjlrudence, will
be open for Inspection.
·
•Drift-by 'fislts to the Goftmon'
Reoldence Halls (dormitory units) and
the Jooeph l!lllcott Complex (a IIYinc·
......... facility to open in September,

.Main

0a.-

BUS SERVICE

wiD leaft half-hourly from the
Narlb enlmlcl (tile lide oppoolt8 the
FounQin Qudlu&amp;le) of Norton Hall for
the lrlp to the AmbmR Campus. Vllitors .
with their ·own lnDiparlalloo ue en.
CDIIIIIId to driye cllledly to the Amherst
Campus.
• "
•
.
.

.

Q) HOCHSTETlER HALL

The Deportment of Pby~cs lll)d Astron·
omy will ptesent demonstrations and
exhibits in phylics.
J!.oom 114/1--5 p.m.

e-"'

1974) ue encourace&lt;~.

HAYES HALL

Plt!&amp;ident Robert L. Ketter and his
administrative staff will meet visitors and
discuss varlo~Jf activities and programs of
the University.
&amp;ut·wing, {it&gt;l {loor/ 1--5 p.m.

-

(';\ HEALTH

\!J SCIENCES BUILDING

l'barmacy. Student eXbnHti, -demooitra-.
Uona and IUided toun
•
1..Sp..m.

r.i\ WOMEN'S STUDIES
\...!.)COLLEGE •
Open H0111e, 108 W1mpear
1.Sp.m.

0

r-

MAIN STII£ET RJ.5

0

DIEFENDORF ANIIIEX · .

The Department of Physical Therapy will
present special information related to its
programs.
.f!oom 23/ 1-5 p.m.

cunlon of undercradw
llj)llda, and coffee and donu

Achaon/1-1 p .m.

-The Deportment of Medical TecbnoiOCY
presents the followinc:
Blood Grouping'
Ms. Susan Depew

@0.PARK!=R ENG IN El

Bacteriology-Cultures &amp;.Slides .
Ms. Paula .0' Amore

EleclrlcU'En&amp;lneerlnc events
•Interactive Computer
Computer Graphics,
(Games Room) - Pro

Electrocardloeram
Mr. Terence Kanelis
Blood Slides and Hemoglobins
Ms. Betty .Murphy

:Aut&lt;o!Wedllr.
D l-t..~~~?-emlltry

........., ~""
un~ l'ropul
lla. Sera llarle CICONDI
Alliodate Cbaltman '
Deperm.ntof-Medic.ITacbnology

.~Hileo":.
~
Education .

''"

-Graduate

ACHESON HALL

'lbe Qaemlatry Deportment 1
by UDdeqiJIIduaie ltt!dents I
floor), opeetacular demons

Muteal.

:~

•DI&amp;Itil Systems and

sunment by The Thoracl
Metbocl," Room 214. -

.;J ;; ,,,

J

1 .!~;

clemonstrati:

, : • ;:):: ~-;-.--; ~...,meer~DCatu I
' •
•1Diullllal ~· ,
'-!' ulllfllt in Parker J!nllneer

R001111 29, 30, '31 and 32!1-6 p.m:·
'.

.

Coil

IIHiijll Laboratory, Rooll
reaor B. Scbmitt.
• Deaio-tion of "JIIOOI

,.,. A11"-tr 1-6 p.m.

�®cLARKH~L

-

ory

210
I.R.

lea-··
nae

1

' D. r 1_

• ·'"'

®uNIVERSITY LIBRARIES .
Underpaduate Library: Open House,
loUIS and refrelhments.
Diqendor/ Anni%!1.5 p.m.
Health Scienees Lil!rary: Toii!S and
demonstrations.
HtGlth Scrences/1-5 p.m.
Science and Engineering Library:'Audio·
Vilull demonstntions, NASA films, and
tourc. .
L&lt;ic:t1r~ Library: Self.gulded tour and
info~.eu\lled toun.
Poelly Room: "A Samuel Beckett. Ex·
blbltlon~· U.S. premiere. GOvernment
Docwilents: Display; Information on
D.d~ 1)clmology.
AU et*nlr 1-5 p.m.

.'""l.,. .

~ -: •. Jt

·~-·
·f'hf• -~:

n ••;,.rr. 91 : ....
..,!J.c.'j • . (._;t.t-.'.

OF . '"' j)

nt's " :· ;

Tbe School of Health Education's schedule of events:
1:00p.m.
Hockey Showdown
- . Large Gym
Basebsii-Battlng
Large Gym
Large Gym
Badminton
Basketball Shooting
Contest
Small Gym
Synduonized Swimming . Pool
Acheson Field
Sofl:baii-Co-ed
Clark Field
2:00p.m.
Lacrosse
Judo &amp; Self-Defense
Large Gym
Gymnastics
Apparatus Rm.
i'byslcol EdQcation
Small Gym
2:30p.m.
Diving
Pool
2:45p.m.
Baton Twirling
Large Gym
Golfing
3:00p.m.
Large Gym
Fencing
FendngSb:ip
LsrgeGym
3:30p.m.
Dance Concert
Pool
Canoeing
IAzgeGym
Folk &amp; Socill Dances
4:30 p.in.

Spectator Participation
S(IOl'tator Participation
Exhibition
Spedator Participation
Cathy Stnasburg '76
. lnlftmural Champs
U/B n . Kenmore L.C.

Demonstration
Demonstntion
Information
Exbibition
Bonnie Wlntergerter '75
Spedator Participation
Demonstntion
Exhibition
Spedator Participation

®eAIR~HALL
Tbe Music Department presents:
1:00: 5:00p.m. R&lt;t_l'relbments and chat with faculty, Room 212.
1:00- 4:30p.m. Music Aptitude tests wiD be given to anyone from 4th grade up, Room

-106.

.

,, •

@~~LEAR SCIENCE·

. ' . • ..
~!).',~(:HNOLOGY FACILITY

,'lb~;,f8ci!Uy will 1p01110r toUIS and periodie Jedurea ·lluoucbout the oftemoon.

',

.

1:15- 1:45 p.m. Mini concerts, Room 101. Music performed by students and faculty of
the Department 'Of Music. Open without charge.
·2:00- 3:!)0 p.m. U/B Symphony Band, Frank J: Cippola, Director, and James W.
Kuprowlcz, Assistant Diredor, wiU bold a concert of Uvely music on
the ltepo of Lockwood Li~. 1n caae of rain, FUlmore Room, Norton
lUll. Open without charge.
2:00- !!:00 p.m. · ....._ ~. Anclwlsll:a Bolclt and Stephen Manes, weD-known
U/B piallllt WID otrer J special daa during which the audience will be
............,S to parlielp.te alon&amp; wltli studenb .
2:00- 5'00.p;m. Villt the Miulc ~nt Library, 2nd floor.
- '8:15- 4:00p.m. U - t y opera Sludlo-MU!Iel Hubert Wolf, Dlreetor, -niB a fuUy
illllld ,porfomjence ol Otrenbadl'a cbann1J1t "Not in Front of the
·" .
• Wllllir Gl' Ulldar the AlpidlatrL" Doll't mlas lbll cbance to see tbls
,
doll&amp;l&gt;&amp;fld .,..,_._ It II otrend without clwp. _
4:00- 4:46p.m. Mlni .llCIIIcerU Rocillt 101. Jfln ftnd llUIIII: Performed by the studeDIB
' $
end fllculty.
•
.
8:00-10:00 p.m. . ~ for New Music.-~t Knox Art Gallery-tbls procnm wiU
lie de90ted to tile wort of Baird lUll compoeen end promilel$, be
. nry udlln&amp;.
.

�...............

. . . . llllf ......... C"'e. . .
)

lldra I

.

J:diJ.6:00 ....-

r

.....

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

.....
~--....,_.._._._,.,allllelt
AIID as 2 eJ

.a..au~J

IIJJ"r

nn n

................
,...,__
,ood ..
1112

Fin( Flocor-

M1111111 F1J1eDoee a-

..

1 r pll!ll. lllldllt-

l

I

I

~ ·- opoa . . wllb . . _
11111111 ~ Ice-&gt; .

_.U/B.,_

llulce au~lloel · aDd '

Fila

t:OI).:6:00p.m.
1:00.10:00 P.,!!L

• 8:00-4:10 p.m.

. B.ctamac at4 p.m.
l:~:OOp.m ••

Bte1J bllf hour

bef~a!!~DC•t1p.m.

11rae11 6 Bllbn O.CO Worbbop.
hnlelpadon eaeounced
'
Display of fhm..s!y authors-ftCO!!t
hooks'-Cj&gt;me Browae, Buy, Enjc&gt;Jr

'
2:00-6:00 p.m.

: 1:oci:s:oo p.m.

Room 214

Room 220

Room225
Room 231

Room 232

Room 233 ·

pat,_..

Room266

l:()().5:00' p.m.

· MilWd Fillmore CoUeee Student Alsoci·
alloll (MFC)
·
Open -to Public
:Graduate Student ~ation (GSA)
Exhibit 11011011-Environmental In·
stallalion desicned by Ralph · Jones;
graduate student in Music· at the Uni· ·
venity. Exhibit will COI!Jist of a S!!ries of
battery-poweiJ'd elec~nlc . "Music
Boxes" to be placed on trees located In
the area between Hayes liall and Main
StrHL The aounds produced are sen·
silive ·to 'beat, light and wind. The clr·
cuitry is designed to alter the sounds
· accordillf to ' cbanges .In stimuli. Maps
and dlainuna reiUed to the installation
'w ill be. ln the Gallery.
Sub Board . J, Inc.-Visitors may visit
with the leadership and staff of this
n'o n-profit student corporation which
provides student services including cui·
tural and social aclivilies, publications,
bousina, beallb care ana Norton Hall
operalions. The orpnlzalion fUJ&gt;ctions
.. the custodial IIQ_d dlsbursina aaent for
b mandatory student fees.
CAQ-Community Action Corps-This
voluntary aaency bas. enlisted 1800
volunteers to serve 45 projects In Buf·
folo. omcers and coordinators will be
anilable to meet villton and share
information about the CAP program. '
Norton Administration Offices. Open to .
public. Questions .and answers.

1:00:S:oo p.m.

1:00.5:00 p.m . .,
l :OOp.m.

•

'·

.

Third floor
Room ·325

Room 337-

WBF~ radio With
diversilled JllOilliDIIIInc at 88.7 FM, presents .
Open Houae and tours.
FOREIGN ~DENT QFFICB
PODER-Puerto Rican Student Unio!i"OJ)en to public.
·, ·
_
.
··;'
BSU-Biack Sludent Union-Open to
public
.
.
ScbiiSliiDOisten Ski Club wDI be showina
''Ski Movles''-Limlted Refreshments
Conflict ~tion Workabol'

Room' 340

LegAl

Room332
Room 337

"
Room344
Room 345

Room 346

·~31&gt;5
Room 358/361

Room 356/359

1:0().5:00 p.m.

Ne....Dan Club and SUNYAB Reliifous
Council will have various activities
(sonas, skits) and other presentalions.
Women's Studies College-showing of
- "Growing Up Fernsle" followed by diScussion.
·

1:00.5:00 p.m.

School of Nursing-Blood pressure
screenitig. resuscitation (mouth-to..
mouth) demoDJtration, and slide pre·
sentation of nursing stu'dent activities.

1:00.5:00 p.m.

1-:()().5:00 p.in.

Room 318

Fountain Area
CAC

U/BBand

·,

2:00-6:00 p.m.

orre..

RoorD 334

1:()().5 :00 p.m.

rr.

Sludeot Allildalloll will boo\ . .....
• hour for loc:al lellilatod. .1:¥ and
count:J omdals aad-CXIUIIIIlunity ~

Exhlblla In U.e aeeOIIIf llocir COIO'idon.ol Norton unlciD,wiD abow 111111! ol tlie ~ties
and functiOIIf of Student Allodali.,.;....s Sub iloard I, IDe. .ln. addllion, 1bele wiD be a
display abcnrliJt the aerrlcellbat the Unloealty
to the ~unity.
'
- •

RoOm 335

i:00-5:00 p.m.

~

otber beiP. to~ atudeella).
UU AB-flee yoanolf OD llllnbloeL "'
Courteay of the Vlcleo CommiUee, Tbe
Committee wiD alao r.tuno • UDDYI,e ol
the
CIIDpt!l ~

Room264

_

'student Asaocialion (SA) Office
(Siudent Government olftdals wUt 'be
nillable ~ answer questions-open to
.• public)

Open to .pullllc (piO'IIdoa ........u.a, aDd

~•

Second Floor A
Room 205

VelilraD'a Club--UmiW noflwaluion~

' Room260

bip1y

A!ll,

~ to Publie-

_1:00-6:00p.m.

1:00.5:00 p.m.
1 :110'5:00 p.m.
I

~

l':~:OOp.l!!,
;.

11''1;

-

1:00.5:00 p.m.
-&gt;2:CIO'll :OO'p.m. '
.r~p

• 1:0&lt;l-5=0J&gt;I!..m.

S!jtdenwtatfecl,. YOiunteer orpnlzatlon ·
to, aid Unlveridty cornmu!'lty repnllna
lelol matter&amp; - •
Studeot Pollih Club
WNYRIRG-:;Consumer protection
1f011p-Open .to public-Questions and
answers .
JSu-Jewilb Student Union-open for
visitation ·..,

1:00-6;00

Spectrum-Student Newspaper-Open
to public
Uni•ersity Prea-~ of poston and. ·•
arapbics· work. There ·wm loe an onaolni
tour of their studio
•

1:00.5:00 P..m. _

1:00.6:00 p.m.

Pjr

1:00-6:00 p.m.

ethos-stUdent .newapaper-Open tO
public
Scbussmelstera Ski Club Offtee-()pen
to public-Questions and -..era

Book sole (profits to 10 toward projectl
·
undertaken In community)
In c:Ue of rain, oale will take place In
front-of Room 220, the CAC of!lce
·(In case of rain, concert will taJfe place
in Fillmore Room).

1:00-6:00 p.m.

2:00.3:00 p.m.

�awlllillltlt-llallllllr ta

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

......

a..- --C11111r w111a

-.....bat~.

jab ~ IMb-.t ~ )II'CIIedion

....., - - tbe rilht 1111 perticlpalll In
row- 6
1 . . becamilll fDIIIowne - - In
collealhe ........... 8t " • " " - - aeclltcrs
' - . . . . ~- nlunia lor the&amp; IIICIIIey,
but tbrilallt-'~ -=urlty

-'7llla and

. . . . . tbore- .n0118 . . . . . . . . ol· mpita1 Clll a wMdwide buia,
t.o'1181al
to 11.-. tbe dlk ollbe .... ol equity IUld

!bey-...

podfoUo-.... I

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

debt~·
How ftiiiPC)IWible
bBl....,., lbe . - - flam tbe four poupa? In my
opiniau. a,. follGMq 8GtiaaB are 1111! minimum.
Firat, ' - ' - - - haw 1111 make their own
interMJ ~ tbe ..... e8lcient poMible. E81ciea1:Y ID ....-.I raullll In beaellting all
poupa ID tbe , . . run. Sud&gt; demand for peal&lt; elllcioac:r will call lor eaJIIiniq earelolly ~
idea, iDdudiDIIIIDIIII'I'N' own ldeo!s. dlllaudjng
tboae that - out of date, and bringing in tbooe
that ue , _ and appropriate. It will also call
for examin.inl ilyatematically old altitudes of both
liiiUiqers and employees 'lllld _attempting the
d~t jab of persuading the puties COilCI!lDed
to cbanae !heir im~ altitudes for the comman s-1. It also impliee that .....,.,..... will
continue to ·lea!n and develop,. manacement
techniques in the areas of prodootion, marketing, finance, ]leriiOIIblil, - . c b and development, etc., and will also -·p.,· tiiDjilio oppOrtUnitieS to
their subordinates to do 1io Second the buainess
managers. have to-canvey ~all f~ pouties that
all ue- In the same boat, 80 to speak. 'lbat is;
unless a Pneaa is strongly supported by all
Tout, ita future is limited. It may take many
painful confrootatiolls 1111 have all four groupe
reach &lt;this imdemtanding, but fommately for the
"""""""' many of tbe four iJ8fties in larse oec&gt;tora of IJusi.- such as the steel Industry. the
conslruction industry, the utility indUstry, etc.;
have to a various esterlt done 80 IUld ue ooopeniiq In 1111111,)' -ways to make the buaineas
more ellcialt and the diStribution of the benefits
to all four poupa equitable.

wm- .....,.,.....

--tile-' .
~.

"public."

I will discuaa the _ , r e from the -

'l1llouA the _.......,nt, the public

baa~ - a - t. !heir ricblll to resuJate and
influence . , . _ bebairiora. For example, many
lllltHnaat and ..,. iaws have been enacted for
such a IJUI'PCM8- R-.tly, """""-· perhaps as
a rau!t of inl:nwoiDa alll.-c:e and education
levela 11111011a the paaral populace, citizens ue
more inliaftiallld in attack:inl such social issues
118 ~ nciaJ diacrimination, aafety, etc.
Buainowli!a, a ...titiee wllh large ..-.urces, ue
freq.-!y blamed rw il-. social ills- by some
_ . of the populace at least. Much of the
blame ..,.y be caaaidered by business managers
as UQjusli8ecL Tbe IIClCIIIIO!I"8, more often than
not, appear 1111 to use the business to cbanae
tba bebavior of the public but simultaneously do .
not the buaiDeM to lead the cbanle in
80Cia1 mons directly at its own initiative. But
~ JIIIID8I'll8 sbould- at least _ . . , and publjcize eaougb atudiea on these issues to show
their the Ollll88qUilllc: of sUch buaineas
bobavion. Indeed, Iince nian.y of the social ills
8Dd WIIYII to baDdle them ue in uncharted territories because ~ do COIIIID8Dd significant ,_,.....,., it does not appear .. too inuch
to ezpeot lor businesses to support same Insliin "'ublic Policy to aplore, as impartially a&amp;
poowible, tba' _...,.,.,.. of dilferent policy '
111tematiwa ... ililrerent aectors. Tbe Inalilute
will fUI1bar cammunbte 1111 ~ public the ~
I&gt;CIIIIible policy alllnali-. In this way, buoioan euliliDe intallipntly the public •
mandl, cool doom tba public: ,_,_ Oil mQuolillt!ld-. but l8lloin - .wpport """"" .., ..tlan

Manavelile~t EdueatiUt:·

(QrthePuWieSeetQr
By JOHN .M. THOMAS .
It bas been "'-rved recently that the unique
problems of the public sector manager require a
cbanae in the familiar fable ol the blind men
seeking to diaoover the Dltlure Of the elephant:
In more recent year., we lu:we bein increo.~
infly broulfh_l lo noliu lhe •tro111f 'and ~
w&amp;de•pread in.t.udeperuknciu among tlu!
fu.n.ctiqn.~ in. IIOC~ty and the widaprecd in·
dinct and •ecorulary effecLI our aUempted
re~~ can have. This sueguu that it ia
not one but. a t.angle of elephant. we would

~ ·.qgaO:: ado,::;/:o/brt1d !':nu::d~
!,~C,.it,e. ofw.~14 ~

be an

In- response to this situation, a number of
graduate aCbools of maniisement across the nation
have designed and implemented }JeW J&gt;lOill8ID8 in
"public -sector management studies." A significant impetus for these efforiB has been the conviction tbot various decision-making tedmiques
{rom such fields as operatiODR research and ap-

plied

eocJ1!&lt;11Di&lt;s ue relevant to

government.

"managing''

•

Tbe problems of goyemmeot administration,
when considered from the perspective ol tbe
private sector manager,' are well known: e8iciency as a - . r e of IICICOIIlplishment must compete with an ever-flCc:elerating Pl"'""•patiOO 'llrith
issues of equity; a ~ck of COD8SlSWI on goals,
but inc:ei&amp;mt demaDds for~ priorities;
and an inability to mobilize sullicient resourc:eo
to effect ~ d&gt;ange. If it is typically
American to respond to our more inlladable
dilemmas by aeating a new cadre of ~
experls to provide acMce. the growing prominence of the~ analyat in ·~
is no eueption. Yet, while apeeing with tbe
de&amp;irability of this ~ it .fa impcriant to
realize that the education of such professionals demands more than the . _ aimamenCB in budgetary analysis, planning theory, or _
- t ecienc:e.

�..,., ........ _....

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

_.......ol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lldlll

IIIOil ~Ill . . llllkjae - " ' ..,_..
. . . . . . . . lllould be . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
louDdltlaaola~~-Pib­
lic r 1 r - · 'One irllportllll ...._. In

....... ,_.._ ...........,
Tile ....

1

1

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

N- ..,.._,.nat plaalrru ad policy-makilll uidla . . . to be
~ Killa in
"Je:4rawiDD'' tnlditiaaal ~ boomclariea, 'l'he&lt;do!dp of u - - ~ aboulcl
~ to tbe - ' '"-len of .........
mill alloded COIIItlluoDcieL For eumple, it js
ftiCll)lftbed that~ JIIQII*- are
..,.;on.J ratber than Joc:al, ADd poinliDJ in the
other direction, it IIIII)' be III!CI!IIBUY to riduce
the baaDclari5 of acbool districts and urben
- ' .....,. in Older to liw resident~~ "' more

-w.

......m.rut role in the pJannina and decision-

.um.-

-~~~-~

According to Banfield, an. """""tial function.
al BOvemmeDt; in addjflon to the provision al
£!Kids and services that cannot or are not pi'():
vided by private """""""
U to tleal with conflict . .. . Th e eflectiue
IIUUtflgcment o/ conflict ;.. valuable because
it ~rmits and encourQ~a the expreuion of
competin1 interata tuul opinioNB while 4t

~~:,~S:,.';~:J":,.r::,:;~:rb:!:.d:!:.';:i :f_

do/ orcnnization. But even more important,
it is ooluable Gl a IDCIY of diiiCOverint the

concrete control o/ the common good.2
....
It is easy to be cynical Bliout the capacity of
government to deliver on tbis principle. Nevertheless, the objective is sound and highlights an
important orientation b the management analyst in government. particularly at the local
level : the utilization al decision-making techniques to enhance the capability of gbvemmental
administrators and elected ollicials to obtain information about the .-Is and. concerns of widely
diverse groups in the community . .

--·--..

Apjncidon for lho-palillcal - l n t s In

Educational 1!f0P8ID8 in public management .
have considerable difficulty in communicating the
nature of the political context of decision-making
in govemmenl Part of ·t he ·problem_is that we
tend to operate with a rather limited definition
of "rational decision-making" in management
education curricula Scbools of management draw
attention to the application of econouiic ration•ality. but rarely debate the existence or essence
ol a concept of political rationality.
, 'Ibe most productive educationaf process in
tfl!s area would insure that both parties - management student and . government ollicial - increase their capacity for muiWIJ appreciation and
tmderstanding. The management analyst needs
to ~elate his values and skills more directly to
the milieu ol the elected official; and the politician neeils to develop more meaningful gools for
management specialists interested in careers. in
goVt!mmenl

'

In conclusiOn, it should be obvious that the
attributes and skills which fonn fhe basis of an
educational philosophy for public management
cannot be created by tbe university· in isolation. ·
Whereas tbis type ol professional ooonj&gt;etence is
often thought of as an area of major contribution
by the university to the community, inBuence
must also Bow
tbe other direction. In particular, an appreciation for the political Conte:d of
governmental decision-making cannot be developed without the active particiPI!tioo ol elected
o16cia1s and uperienced adminiStrators in the
fonnal educational process. Achieving productive,
mutual interaction in'tbis area is both a dilemma
and a significant challenge tq the academic community and government units 'interested in the
application of knowledge from the management
disciplines.

m

1J, B . ,.,._.,
•&amp;.

''PolleT~__,

U.M•bl,"

g'~tJ~ij"- ~

Policy~

2

...,._, edidon. i 11o _

Jobtt M~ ~ J. • ..,d.,_ ~--- o1 Or,.,U..Uon -.4
·AH.m • .,..,.._., ProiTem- _

~.

u'!-

By SANFORD M."l.O'I!r&lt;&gt;R

,~

,

· Today, mo~e ·than ever, the student of management baa a variety. of opportunities to gain
experienoe outside of the classroom prior to - _
graduation. Thel!e opportunities are available ·t o
both undergraduate and graduate ·s tudent&amp; Y~
the majority ol students looking for 'jobs upon
graduation present resumes devoid of management-related work experienoe. In today's job
market, one 'reads about prospective &lt;&gt;n:~Pioyen
looking for graduates who possess practical skill&amp;
The best way of attaining tbis expe_rienoe, outside of actually worki i/g one's way through
school, is to be pert of a student intern or independent study program.
The Scbool of Management baa devised several ways for nieeting' tbis ·n eed. For the company, these programs represent an opportunity to ·
draw closer tO the academic community,. a way,
to express responsibility .. to the community, to
~ managers to the youth and'l!nthuaiasm of
students and to .adYI!Jleed techniques of f!&gt;cuity,
and to preview possible job applicants. For the
SchOol, it is way. to become uivolved with the
businesa mrQinunity, open up job opportunities
for students, jUld bridge the gap between theOry ·
and practioe. Students, by being involved with
actual woriting situations, 'Can mo~e easily ~elate
theory to practioe, build 1.9&gt; work-~elated experience, learn about the .management process first
hand, try out a work-type, uperienoe, and,
some caaes, stay on with th.e oomPiulY after the
"trial" period is over.""·
.
.
•
The graduate student accrnes many advantages 1rom internship. In most cases the student
~academic credit while on the job or doing
a research projecl The student breaks the routine
ol ciasaloom-m&gt;e learning. And, be or sbe h8s
an opportunity to meet and Work with general
managers.
'Ibe . student- intern ia usually quite young,
.baa little or no work .-;eooe. and ia
in
the techniques ol job -.dL He baa catalogued his U:ills .or had his perionnance apprajaed 'in a "'ive" -woiif envirmment, Nor baa
he had ... opportunity" to ' - r I!UIXlllllful young
II18II8PIB tlielr.,...,. paths. In~ ........
the illudont i.e bad 110 models to aml)ate,
Tbe t.n&gt;icaJ ..eludfDt .... into ... inlem pi'Ogram DOt bowina quite wbat ·to aped, Some
1hlnk It wW be an _ , path to a Jabi otben
believe it to be • ""--t in ibeir
.cbool

a

m

naive

...war

~ait~~~~~~is
AT-..a
It starta
F

The procram is
ten-step prooeaa,
with preliminary planning to _. the stage; 1111
over the mechanica, and create a clearer under '
standins of tbe roles of SCbooi mill company.
this point..a commibnentto time and elfort'nnat
be mad~ Once a procram ia qreed on, the CIJIIt:
pany identifies lrianagers willing to pariicipate
and their project areas. These project areas are
explained to students; and tluoilgh • aeieCtion
process intereSted studeirta are cboeen to fill the
internships.
Careful matching ol stUdent and manager is
"""""""' to assure continuity throucb the 8er
Diester. &lt;'Ibe typical student· "worts" 12 hours
a week-for wbidl he receiYI!8 six hours of, graduate credil) 'Iben, u .initial orientation ia belcl
Students meet with managers and are introduCed
to company peraonDel ( Some feel that a pre:
liminary lll!68ion should be held prior to selection
and matching,)
••
After the orientation, the manager and intern
discuss BOals and objl!l:tlves. Later on, manager •
and student wW compare progJeBS with ~
set at the earlier ~Meting,
·
In additiim to working on his project and
observing the manager at work, the 'intem also
attends special COIIIpiiJiy seminar Msaicm&amp; Tbeee
seminars are designed to provide u awareness
of career advanoement and give insights into how
the company operate&amp; Some of theae secsions
have traoed the career paths or-both young and
high level managera Others were on career de:
velopment, enlly level P, ....m, mill interna
ail observers at high level stalf meetincL
· At tbe end of the semester; the intern banda
in a written report on his project with a critique
of the program from his penpectiwe. In ae-ai
instanoes, the written project "report baa proved
valuable to the company. Where this baa been
the caae, the student baa been able to see the
results of his- contribution while em the job.
Laot-~
'Ibe laat pbaae is the appmlaal _.,., For
many students ' this is the. most valuable part,
'Ibe individual obtains 'feedbeck Oil the J9b be
' - lllled all - - Whatbar he baa met his
~- and what p....- be ' - ..........
·wuda initW ~ are dilocl-'~- are
trMtad • if they anployeM of tbe CIJIIt:

. .

REPORTER/THE bliW MANAGERI,...AY 2, 1974/l'age 6.

�~~ cliiidiwe ....... tD - " ·

.., ._).

.... .....,_.. ..._...._~ pallc6e
'

.a.-... ..
-!t:!oetime•
_....._.,...........,
....... _.....,
..r-.
tl!llt' an....._.

Tbe . . . . . of_,__......_ of . .

A - - . llfedbl
sf I
............. Gil ........... , _ _ ,, . .
-.1
ptwo, or tba loml ...._
I

'lb be-.
tbllir....... wltb ialricae .... oiiJIIdelh- ..........
kliaai, bat "thqa ..... 110 11111Cb 11MB" II
"4hey . . . . . . , . oaly left alaDe, .....,
wbat - - natmally." 'lbey u- point to Cbe
...,_.,... doclrine, .... !DIIIIIbl6 ........,. tD
tbe.illrect thai it CD be JlftMid tbi&amp; tbi - n
in-... antl-t ......- II ~-..-t
from the UDdertingp in . . . ......... of
"""'''!' -18 left free to punue bio . ....
intenoot.

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

Unforiwlately, this proof le ftUd oaly 1!lldor
a number of very apecillc IUid delaiJed ...,...
tilms which in PI'IICPoe are atw.ya PQIII.y . .
1
~ ' Jated. There are indivisibiJitie (toy 8yiDt Wf
a plane) and retums to -'e (try IJI'CIII'idjqJ
• ~ at a f!.te of C... . - ,_.). Tbe
JIIU¥t IS not perfectly banapueat (wt.t do
diJferent_ doCtors cbarp?) IUid ~ 1e tbe
future (will be,
be be~). 'l'blft
are exiernalities, that ia, apilloYer , . _ of your
dec:isiOOs on outsiders, from beint rudely -.tened by a Sunday moming ...._ to
getting a cheap thrill from a low-art dn-. Pw
· all these reasons, the simple rule U.t each lor
his """" implies the largest ecooomic pie io invalid. Furthermore, there is no rule that if no
interaction is best under a aet of "ideal" "111&gt;s~ assumptions, then "IM littlat GIIIOfUit"
01 intervention is best under. "realistX"
. "worldly" conditiora In
life, there is nothing
intrinsically bad in regulations, altbouch aome
reculations may be intrinsically bad.
. The ad~ gut-feeling of tniiJUIIIel1l apinst
mtederence m part COIIM5 about because it is
always bard U&gt; part with aublootny IUid independence. In part, no doubt, it is endemic in
American culture, which views life as a .battie
between coo1licting interest, a zero-sum game_
That regulators and regulatees eould ba.., a
eommunality of interest is unthinkable U&gt; many
minds.
. A story, which I have not peraonally verified,
18 told of AT&amp;T violently objecting to a regulator-imposed rule that all evening long diatanoe
rates should be unified to a muimum of $1 for
the first three 'minutes. "Over their dead- but
kicking - bodies," this fee schedule was impJe.
men ted, and revenues soared because the demand
elasticity was much higher than anticipated.
Whether true or false, it is symptomatic; if the
regulators propose it, it must be ipso facto detrimental to company interests.

-·t

...u

But Re&amp;ulations A"' Often Bod

Mainly, however, the hostility towards regulations is a consequence of the ezperience that
regulations are often bad. It is extzaordinarily
difficult ·t o regulate wisely. Regulations often
have vastly diJferent short-run and long-term
effects. 'They often .have effects outside their intended area; they often interact in obscure ways
with decisions made elsewhere; they often have
to be based on incomplete or inaccurate date, and
they often create a whole new industry for lawyers whose sole task is to create ways to circumvent the regulations legally. The experience
has often been that for one regulation one needs
ten others to make it stick, and then these ten
::!,~ ten more and the system has gone

. TheMilDilfjer
._.theWQrldVl~m
G.

By. JOHN c.
BooT
Manaaen
a sUbstantial amount of time
U&gt; lllRkiDg swe that decisions made at lower .
levels __.., the objectives of the system as a
whole. 'They do ao by formulating a J&gt;attery of
rules Uld l'fllll)ations designed- to~ fbat
~ interests of the parts walk in 'step with the
mtereots of the wbole.
_·
,
L:""" as JDIIIIIIIIIr8 face up to this problem which .-.liB . from the inevitab~ decentniliza·
lion of ~~-others face fh!' larger
Problem Oflllllkina awe that the interests of the.
companiee or ~ eoincide with, or are
P8lallel to, or at 1 - don't ft.lr in the face of,
the inten8111 of apciety at larp. It is not tzue that .

..,ote

what is gooil for Shell Oil is good for the nation.
'The reg1ilatoiy agencies and the local, regional
and ne.tional governmeniB formulate a host of
rules de&amp;ignild to accomplish wider objectives
than the nanow interests of the company. Such
rules are eminently visible when swpluaes or
shorto:ges of IIOIDething or other result in ·acutely
felt discrepancies be~ the interests of wrious groupe or systems. 'Diey ·are less ooospicuous but equally pervas;.., in a boat of Ieos com- pellinl situations. 'Ibe vwy threat of formed
reg1ilations often acta as a apur to "aood I:J&amp;.
havior," wb&amp;tever tba~ may be in the opecific
motest (from "voluntarib&lt;" proc:lu&lt;:iq ftre.le.
sistaDt curtains to "wlunnarii.1" ealliDc bad&lt;

Page 7/REPORTERITHE NEW MANAGER/MAY 2,-1974

Managers, with their virtually complete ooo·
trol over and monopoly of eompany and industry
information, are pot helpful in shaping wise regulatioos. 'Their lobbying, and again that holds tzue
whether we are talking about the National Rille
Association, Planned Parenthood, or IT&amp;T, is
often designed to obfuscate rather than elucidate
-the facts; their objectives are shamelessly selfiob;
their arguments, curiously one-sided. Effective
"counter-Jotibying" is virtuaiiy impossible, for
data are bard to come by, and the "danJSge" is
always widely and diffusely spread, although the
benefit is quite pointed. Thus it is that stripmining eoncessions are liberally granted, ineJfective drugs aggressively marketed, import restrictions carefully nurtured : all cases of pointed
benefits versus diJfuse damage. Everybody's penny mai&lt;Os for somebody'~ capital. 'The fact that
guns are 91aple products in American households
leads of-ClOUnie U&gt; very pointed damage, but the
.probability of being so damaged is diffuse.
·
A d i l l - model, less adYe!Silry in design,
mare expert and less political in composition,
IOOI'e global and more .long run in vision, would
be advisable. and has proved workable in a number of.Eu!opNn countries. It ill worth ~dering.
/olta

c. 0 . lloot"lir ~ ol . , _ , . . _ , ~

�----=-Alta--

lllliliW

~f/1.

·~~Felad

.......

a.tlelal: f/1.
Jn . . . . . in lN'l ........... to .

8Cbool t o - - MBA. Ia ¥q 1971. . . ...
c:ialiDd iD . . . _ ... __.... fBbu....r'•
priiiNm and ia·CIIINltly -'dill - ~
8J)8).J8t for the
Colpanltlla ........ Ia
._..sble for the dealp ......
f/1.
- f/1. the' aaftwale ...................... utilbled ..., X.... WitbiD •. relldhel,y . . . . period
f1l tm., IloaJ4by eapecla to . . . . . witbla
t o . - paRtiaa in the~Mr. Robelt taut.. ~ pnaident f/1. the
Al.-1 AaaacWioa. obtaiDad Ills B8 in .JUDe
19'10. He Ia tiiiQIIoyed ... • .... accGUiltant by
the Althm YCIUIII CaDpany iD Bulralo. His
priDcipeJ fuDCiion Ia to plan eli impleawJt a
llnandal audit for client lira&amp; He prepares repoiota IIWIIIII8rizlal the tiDdiDp from this audit
and Ia IJequerally abel by dleala to - - iD
tbe deve~ of accoulllliDI IQIIIIaDI IIUd&gt; ....
prodUction Clllllzol 8lld inwatary II,YIIteins.
Mr.-.Jolm c. Haiumond obtaiDed bla mulenl•
desree iD .June 1970 and is ~ '-lib
ayatem8 coonliDator foo: tbe Erie County Division
cl Data l'rocesaiJII. In this capacity, he is re- .
_..n,le for development and implementation
o1 all IIIIIDqi!IDI!Il information systems for the
Erie County Health Ilepadmeot. As part of. this
aaaipmeot he works with the Commissioner of
Health and various pmgram leaders to clete~
their infonnation needs and then supervises several 8)'8tems analysts and comjlllter pqrammers
to establish the required operating sy'tems. Prior
to this assignment, John was· employed as lin
assistant ~r of the Office of AdmisSions and
Records at SUNY-Buftalo. His fundamental ~ '
sp(,usibility tt the University was the design and .
implementation of the SARA registration system.
Mr: Jay ~cKee ob~ his MBA in Sep- ;
tember 1973. 11pon graduation, he was employed
as business manager and project director for the
Sct-neisters Ski· €lub, -Inc.:· here at ·the Uni- ·
ve,rsity. His duUe&amp; cover a 'wide range of activities including long-range planning, budgeting and
financial control, and personnel administration as
well as providing ~g lesaons, He is the . onlj. ,
full-time employee of the Club and, as suci);.!!S
r&lt;isponsible for almoet every aspect of its, Qperation.
.
·
.
Other career examples include Thomas 6ettig
who is supervisor of pllint. industrial relations for
the Fibre Drum Division of Continent&amp;l Can,
Inc., in Tonawanda; Roger - Bollier who is an
internatiorial loan specialist for First National
City Bank in New York City; Donald Dunn who
is an administrative assistant to County Executive Ned Regan; Michael McDermid who is a
salesman for Masaschuaetts Mutual Life Insur.ance Company, and Paul Wharton who sells
computer hardware and software for IBM.

x-

mww-

x-

WreerQppQrtunitiesfQr Milllagers_
By THOMAS G. GUTTERIDGE
"What Does a Manager Do?" This is one of
the principal questions prospective students as
well as those already enrolled in a management
curriculum invariably ask. In essenOO, students
want to know the kinds of career opportunities
which are available to tnal)8gement school alumni.
There is no one standard response to this
query. The career paths of paSt graduates from
the School of Management have involved private
sector corporations; hospitals; Federalt state and
local governmental units; non-profit ·social service
agencies; the military; educational institutions
and self-&lt;&gt;mployment. Their occupations have
covered ~ a broad range of activities in.:tuding:
financial analyst, production supervisor, sales
representative, pemonnel manager, market research analyst, computer programmer, operations research and systems analysis, program
administrator, Joan officer. accountant, eoonomic
analyst, etc.
The School of Mana-gement has recently conducted a survey of the career patterns followed.
by alumni from its _baclielors and professional
masters ( MBA ) programs. This study reveals
that the most popular entry-level jobs for new
graduates aie accounting, general administration, ·
finance, systems analysis, production and sales.
The vast majority of graduates start out as a
trainee or staft specialist in a division of a rather
large firm (10,000 employees or more ) . Among
the industries which tend to attract the largest
proportion of alumni are industrial and consumer
goods manufacturing firms, banks and insurance
companies, public accounting and consulting
firms as well as retail-wholesale trade estshlisl:ments.
.
While this profile is typical of the career
experiences of the preponderance of School of
Management alumni, it is somewhat ditlicult to
comprehend the real meaning of a management
career simply by looking- at aggregate statistics.
'Iberefore, the remainder of tliis article will feature ~ 19ceDt management aliunni and the
careers they are- pUI8Uing•

............ ca-t.: lome CU. Examples
RiciWd Frederick obtained

his MBA frQJD

SUNY-Buflalo in May 1973. Prior to graduation
he was student director of the Minority Management Assistance Program ( MMAP) which, under the .auspices of the School of Management,
provides consulting assistance to minority. businessmen on the Niagara Frontier. Immediately
after obtaining his degree, · he bdCame full-time
project coordinator of MMAP and. was accolllltable for the day-to-day administration of the
program under a Federal grant from the Office
of Minority Business Enterprise, U.S. ' Department of C.ommerce. In this capacity, he supervised a paid staff of th11!1! persons and many student volunteers. In addition, he was responsible
for the development of a series of workshops,
seminars, and other educational programs directed toward the development Of business skills
for minority businessmen. In February 1974,
Dick accepted a position as regional medical
care administrato&lt; for the Rochester Office of
the New York State Department of Health. In
this job, he serves as a consultant to medical
doctors, hospitals; nursing homes and other parties involved in the delivery of health care services under the Medicaid and Medicare system.
His duties include supervising, evaluating and
reoommending improvements in the medical· ser·
vices provided by these various health care organizations as well as ensuring their compliance
with regulations ·governing Medicaid and Medicare systems.

'

..:-

Mr. Joseph Bettinger obtained his BS in
Managefllent in- June 1970 and is currently supervisor of marketing research for Iroquois Gas,
involved in the development and implementation
of consumer survey questionnaires. He is also
responsible for preparing future projections of
demand for natural gas and-its related products,
including gas appliances. J.oe is currently president of the School of Management's Alumni
Association.
'
Mr. William Godfrey obtained his MBA in
Jwie i973 and is preeently employed as a market
research analyst for Ford Motor Co. His prim&amp;ry
reaponsibility is to analyze and di...,inate da11y
sales data •for the company's retail auloaJobill&gt;
sales openllions iii the ~n Resion. He

Summary

/""---

The case exampl"" discusaed here indicate
that there are career opportunities in aianagement for. bachelors as well as ~ .tepee
graduates. Further, while the majority of alumni
obtain careers with private sector orpnizations
in areas such as finance, accounting and market- -'
ing, there is a broad array of attractive positions
ii:vailable in -SUch dive&lt;ae industries as health
care delivery o'1!111li%ations, public sector agencies, educ:ational inatitutions, and not-for-profit
cotpOrations. Further, new occupational areas
suCh as manpOwer planner, regional health care
planner, program evalua!ion specialist and human IJ!IIOUI'I)e 1J1811818r are providing an increasing number of employment opportunities.
It should also bli noted that career opportunities for minorities and women are increasing
ilramatically and the School of Manqemeot is
&lt;n8k.ing every effort to respond to this demand
by increaaing enrollments' of individuals from
these grQupo. Finally, as Dotothy -Feind aptly
illustrateS, age is no barrier to the pursuit of a
· managerial education or malring a career change_
The School of Management is p._,.ed to respond to the dlanging role cl ~ and
the .-. ca.-.. Which ate eVOlving and is seeking a student body which is'willing \0 participate
in and contribute to _the development f/1. "The
New&lt;Mulager.•

�~'

OU.. .-·Jp. ~e~~er's . Teaching Career Spans
49 Years of Distin uished Service -to U/B
1118 ~Oifw P. X.....

:-r.l:l'.... laelemicat~

m Offidal .

To Discuss· . · '
law Admissions
~

....

~~~

... -....ad'

mialions will be lbe IIDpiC fila~
oonfenmce, Salurdq, MaY ... P*lr
A. Winopad, dinlclor ol law pl'Dgrama for the Bducaficwwl Te8tinl
Service, will be the Jae,Dole - at 1 p.m. in Butler Auditorium, Cal*'
Hall.
'l'he -xm is deaipled to malre
prospective Jaw sc:boOI amdidatl!la
aware of eome of the IIIIQor CXIIMiidem.t iims involved ill planning a law c:a-

miDalllli . . . . of 48 )'1!11111111 ~
inl. lbe ~ to 'llllicb ..... ilevoled ......,. wltb llldl dedicalian
and cliiiiDetlaa - to ~ lbe aeauine ~Ill· ~ 8Dd oam-

munil;y....
·
Olive :a.drhala lAMer Ia a native Ill
the ~ 111-r..-t., N- Y~

..

~ nr::.:.~~

Street. A ,._. plaque, iDalallecl at
the hoot adzaiM!II M Cbe IBIUI.t Ill an
bislnriall ..--y Ill autbeatlc arddtecture' ill thil l8liaD. illdicata tbat
the 00... !!aiel! fnim 1883 aud is considered an -ue.lt aample Ill the

:fi·he~~~la••

voet, and William Greiner, ~
provost, U/B Faculty of Law lind
Jurisprudeoce.
Topics to be discusoed will include:
applying to law """'!9l; wbat is legal
education; job pnlfli&gt;ecl&amp; · for future
lawyers; and educational pren!quiaites
for the study of, law.
Prior to joining the Educational
Testing Service ill 1972,. Winograd
served as director of admissions at
Georgetown University LaW Center
and New York University School Ill .
Law. He is a graduate of Harvard Law
School and a former trustee of the Law SChool Admission Council. .
'The conference is being sponsored
by the U/ B. Office of Student Affairs.
Anyone interested in a career in law ·
and considering applying to law
school should attend the meeting, ac. cording to Dr. Jerome S . Fink, U / B
pre-law advisor.

pure arcbitlectale flllhat P8rio!L
•
Fartber liD lbe - o n Broadway, ..,
the I.JuJcajller GGif Caun!e ill Jocat.ecl
on the aile of her mother's pioneer
family. bomB, where her maternal
grandpan!lll&amp; ·liVed, arid wtae.e her
mother was bom and miaed, bel~
coming · to malal theiJ: home ill the
Village Ill l.analalar. Lepnd has it
thst ·the familx was startled more
than once to.come downstairs in the
motning. to 6nd an Indian asleep on
the kit.cben tloor in !'root Ill the fire.
Dr. Lester was a charter member of
thst I.ancaster Golf Club . and took
keen delight in . playing the 18-1lole
COUJ!ie which bad '-n carved out fll
the rollinl meadows of her' ancestral
home.
·
In the old rursl burying· ground on
Cemetery ROad just eest Ill the ViLlage of ~r lie her fori&gt;ears,
seve.r alfll whom fought in the American Revolution.
·

Charter Committee
.Membership Set

Villqe Life

As a child she kiiew all the early
pleasures of villaie life. slie played

Dr. L.Mer at

~Y•r

lhunlon..

The 12-member chartering commit. tee for the University's collegiate system was completed last ThursdaY with
the approval of the final two faculty
members by the Collegiate Assembly.
The group, which will determine
whether or not colleges receive charters authorizing their continued operation under the Reichert Prospectus,
includes:
FACULTY - Dr. Harry T. Cullinan
Jr., chairman of the Chemical Engineering Depal'lment; Dr. Larry J.
Green, professor of orthodontics; Dr.
Curtis J. Mettlin, assistant professor
of sociology; Yoram B. Szekely, asaociate librarian; Dr. Barbara J . Howell,
associate professor of physiology; and
Dr. Anne F. Payne, associate professor of English.
COLLEGIATE ASSEMBLY- Jackie,Finley of College B and· Susan COOk of ·
College F .

sandlot ,baseball )lrjtb the Little
Association; Fellow of the&gt;Americsn
celebnrted together at the famed old
Leaguers of her day. Sbe pedalled her
Psychological Association; and Fellow
Lancey House irl Pittsfield, sent the
bicycle over the .hjgh~Y~ .lllld byways
in the Division of Personality and Sobautiful bass to Skowhegan to he
surrounding the vill&amp;ge. -Sbe played
American Association of University
oiounted, crated and shipped home,
termis on a court built in the family
Professors;
the Eastern Psychological
where it proudly adorns her s fudy and
yard. One Of her Particu!ai pleasures
cia! PsY.chology. She is .a member of
provides a lasting and rewarding "fish
was laking long .Wa)ks with her ·disthe University Speakers' Bureau and
story."
.
.
has enjoyed great popularity as a
tinguished Ia~ fa~, whoee goldShe has traveled widely to Mexico
headed cane she still cherishes, and
guest speaker before cltibs and orand abroe.d and each year she tosses
proudly uses, not from necessity by
ganizations in Bufi!I'Io and the outa coin over her left shoulder into the
any means, but for the sheer joy of .
lying communiti es. Probably her
Trevi Fountain in Rome to insure that
possessing it and swinging it along
proudest claim to popuJa.rity came
she will return to her beloved Italy.
to keep pace With her own brisk stride.
early in her teaching career when the
.Dr. Lester attended the L&lt;incaster
Originally, .lbe roe.d coming into
Bee, tl¥' old student publication which
elementary and higb schools. After a
I .ancaster from the east was a plank
antedated the Spectrum, published the
year at Cornell she came as an underroad for a s1retc:h Ill lieveral miles
results of a student poll in v;I;Uch she
was voted one of lhe three most popuoutside the village limits. When East
TO HONOR DR. LESTER
Main Street was finally Widened into
lar professors of that day.
The Department of Psychology is honoring
Broadway, the plank roe.d gave way
Dr. Lester's scholarly attainments
Dr. Olive P. Lester's distinguished service
to a paved street with curbing on.eith. led to her recognition outside ·t he Unito the University at an invitational ban· ·
er side. As the work j)rojp'elllled along
versity
in State and community activiquet, Saturday, M8y -4, at 7 p.m. in the
the front of the Lester home, young
ties as well. From 1954 to 1962 she
Faculty Club.
Olive was fascinated· with the paving
was a Board· member of the New York
operations -and particularly with the
State League of Nursing; from 1962
graduate to the University of Buffalo,
crews of working men who .gathered
to the present time, a member .of the
at noon at the curb, and on the lawn, ·'.then located at old Townsend Hall on
Nurse AdviSory Council (N. Y. State
Niagara Sqiw.re downtown . . She took
to eat their lllDCI&gt;ell from ·t in lunch ·
Department of Education) ; and in
her bachelor's degree with honbrs from
boxes: The story goee Chat Oliv~ would
1971, a member of the Buffalo and
Bufialo in-1924, her master's in 1926,
have her mother pack a lunch for "her
Erie County Mental Health Associaand earned her PILI&gt;. at the Universo that she-cOuld join )he workmen at
tion, and President-&lt;!lect of .the Acasity of Chicago in 1931.
the curb and sbare their llmch hour. ·
demic Psychologists Ill the State UniJoined U/B In 1925
That childhood interest in people, and
versity of New York sy~tem.
Dr. Lester joined the University
~hat they· were doing, carried over
In addition. to her full profesSional
faculty in 1925, as an ·instructor until
mto her adult life. She still follows
life at the University she has found
1931· then assistant professor from
her innate curiosity wherever it leads,
time to devote, her unusual talents to
1931' to 1939; associate professor from
into ronversations and experiences
the civic and cultural activities Ill her
1939 to 1946, and full prof....,r from
with people in all walks of life. She still
native village. More than· 25 years
1946 to the present time. F'rom 1954
likes to hang around and visit with lhe
ago, she was elected to membership
to 1964,• she l!erved as chairman of
mecbanics who sen&gt;ice her oor; and
on· the Lancaster Library Board and
the Psychology Department, the fimt
from thenl she has learned first-band
has served as president dOwn to the .
woman at our institution to enjoy. the
what the -t hinp are .under the hood
preSent time. She was the motivating
distinction of being the head of an
of her car that inake if go. And woe to
fotte beliind the recently adopted
academic department.
the workman who doesn't know as
project to construct a """" $750,000
Her committee assignments at the
much as she does about the parts and
library building on Main· Street just
University
were
numerous
aitd
formed
lunotions of .her cais, from her earlieat
east of her home.
an ilnportant part of her teaching
roadster to her latest smilrt ThunderDr. Lester's honors include membird.
.
aueer. To the ' deliberations of those
h\!rabip in Phi Beta Kappa, .and Pi
committees she brought liD ' - " the
. Among her adler, edza-curricular
Lambda Theta. the Education Honshaip
clarity
Ill
her
line
precise
1Jlin4
mtereots is 1be gentle lilt Ill fishing.
1 •
orary Society, 8a well as the SUNYAB
her wise and practioal judgment, and
She did .DOt come Co that pleasant
Distinguisl1!'&lt; Alumni Award ·in June
a high -sense of intellectual and parPursuit until later in her adult life,
1973, tosether with numeious cita80b81 integrity.
.
when she' spent 'ber summers at a
.tioDs ~ distinguiabed service from
Her membership iri professional or' rust:c Jodae on Unfty Pood ill Maine.'
the :e:on- Ill AI1B and Sciences. and
ganizations· includes, Ill course. the
There she bad bar flrBt ezciting enthe Scbooil-of Nursing. This year abe
counters with amlill IDOiith'black bass.
-""" as c:bainJeiD Ill -the 56-yeai
RAP .SESSION
,
, With her tnllllied Maiiie JUlde · she
Graduate ReUniaD.
University P1ocemeDt and Cl,_r Guidance
fiBbed that JIO!Id from end liD end. To
Her ~ • pr~~~_. will
him, with bia braid Maine aliCen'l, she
and the Office of Forelan Affairs
· ar.i&gt;D1ub'
.......uher~intareaiB
Ill her
will -nso• --hour "r.p -""'" on
was always "'Doccab IAIICah.- 'The daY
and · ~
employment dlfftcU- for &amp;r.duatilll or
she caiJiht.the prbe 5-pounder, whicil
.in
t h e - Ill .,
social payddogy and
_,.._.
-rty11raduating foralan students, May B
pve her a _. .....-lrout belon yield,__
.,._
.
at 2 p.m. 1~}31 Nonon.
~. to b net, a pzoud day for
......._. ;~-'aDd~ I!Jiey.,

o

.

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION - Pamela Benson and June La:

pidus.
GRADUATE STUDENT A$0CIATION -

John Greenwood.
ACAJ:j"DIJC AFFAIRS COUNCIL;- Dr.
Rollo Handy, provost -of the Faculty

of Educational Studies.

Chile(Contu.u.d from page 3. coL 4)
lunch. None of them understood what
was really happening."
Edelatam spoke of the slaughter of
students and the torture death of the
leading Chilean folksinger, Victor Jarra. "In all," he said, "over 16,000 were
killed, and many, many more wound·
ed or waiting to die as political prisoners. ;Ibese people must be saved."
In October, 1973, Allende's ambassador to the United States, Orlando
Lej;elier, gave a press conference at
U / B about the continuing efforts of
the U.S. to overthrow the Marxist
government of Chile. I.eteller was formerly a president of the Intemational
Bank, and one of Latin America's
leading llCCJII&lt;imic experts.
· This reporter questioned Edelstam
concerning Letelier's fate. "Poor feJ.
low, be is somewhere in Santiago,.,
Edelstam replied sadly . Then he
paused and - t e d , "poor fallow."

Leaving

Binghamto~

C. Peller Murath. president of State
Pni..,....Uty Ill N- 'lork at Bingham""" bas been named president ol- the
~~~~ Mw-&gt;ta. The ~int­
lllllllt,. 'tll')iich will be elfective m late
Sejltaildier,- announced by1;he' R&amp;........ Ill the Universit;y Ill Minneaola.

�147 Grads Attend U/B 50-Year Reunion
BlLL

•

By
DOCK
-· __.-

1be brilht 111111 aa warm as the
JI&amp;DIIIjeo abared by 147 padualell of
50 or DMII'B ,.,.... wbo attellded the
Alumni "-dation's ..xmd umual
~-Year
Clll Saturday, April
"•
Early rePatranta. members of the
Clas of1924, bepn pthering et Nol'
- · · Fillmore Room before 9:30 a.m.
'Ibey had an appointment to have a
new claM portrait taken at 10, aDd
not one of i.be 51 expected g u e s t s
wanted to miss il 1be of the
morning was devoted to taking pictwes .o f the classes of 1904; '08, '09,
and 1910 through 1923.
Roland T . Lakey, a pharmacy graduate living in Sl Clair Sbo'les, Micbigan, was the oldest graduate in at• tendance and the center of conaiderable aUenlion. Dr. Lakey, w h·o s e
alerineaa belies his 91 years, told
members of the group about the time
a friend invitad him to - h e r son.
an ~ young aviator who suddenly became a world celebrity 'by flyiJI4 alone across the Atlantic. Tbe
aYJ&amp;tor was of course Charles Lindbergb. .
Setting up claM portraits in Norton
created oome i n - among students
who were ~ tbruugb. By their
comments, 1t was apparent-that they
did not expect giaduates who preceded
them by 50-or more years to be 110
colorfUlly attired. and look 110 zesttul.
· At the~ Frank Ja&lt;:talone,

Reunl!m

s=~J:. an~J!h. ~

50-year reunion in the year 2026.
"We'llaee you then!," one of •-'-·~s
--'· _.....,
.........,.
50year ,.._ •...,......_..
Jackalooe'• script was a teCOUilting
of tbinp ·aDd events as they 1.-1 to
be, in 11124..
'
Alumni' President Dr. Frank L
Graziano defined the sfrong thread of
continuity that ties toplher all gradualai aDd people alill et the University,
YOUI1I and old.

.

l

- "The University is ita alumni, be
they young men aDd WOIIII!!Il just pt.
ling atar1e11 in t h e -i r aueers aDd
t8ising families, ... tbaBe of .... wbo
are """"' abarin&amp; with our 8DIIB aDd

· A special r.ture of tide yeu'e 50Year Gmduate RamiGil- the pre-·
J)8111tion of :yearboob, ~ upto-date infllftlllltion Clll . . , .,..t..te
wbo ftlllllOillled. with c:mrmt pbaic&gt;-

and you ladies and gentlemeo, ...moa.;
grandchildren are, aDd will aoon be,
the newest. alumni."
1be Alumni Associatioo is bcinly
aware of its service mission to older
grildualell who still look to the University and the Association for some
identification with the past and contact with the present, said Dr. Gmzi.

1be men aDd WOIIII!!Il &amp;am tile._.
es of 1904 tbrouP 11124 tnded autographs in their y8aiboob In a reminiscent of high a:boo1 du&amp; .
Reunion day was capped wftb.lftlded bus of the Main Street aDd
Ambemt ~and a special_.
ing reception at the Alumni AaMiciatioo's Frank ~ 'Wrllbt 11...-.

daughters new

ano.

&lt;x&gt;lleae

~

·

University President Robert L Ket-

ter continued the continuity theme.

grapba.

Two .FacultY

"Your presence here today is a
visible symbol of institutional continuity which is very important to an
institution such as ours which is
developing 110 fasl!' '
1be collective reputation ' of ita
Two meinbers of the Univ.,.,;-;ty's
alumni is one of the main determinFaculty of Health Scierices are among
ants of a University's reputation, said
38 in the U.S. recognized for'- outDr: Ketter, who apresoed his wish
standing performance in the biomedithat the graduates could have an
opportunity to talk 'With students and
~ou:'J..ti: by the 'Josisb Macy, Jr.,
faculty .. He invited them" to send him
their impressions of the reunion.
•
They are Dr. Eric ·A. Barnard,
Dr. Ketter read the names of the
chairman of tbe Department of BioClass of 11124;and inducted them Into
, chemistry' who has made pioneer conthe Alumni Association's nmks of
tributions to ·t he understanding of '·
· H~ Life Members.
n..._,. function at the molecular levDr. Olive P . Lester, chairwoman for
el, and Dr. Jacl&lt; Znmnan. director of
the 11124 Class Reunion, received her
the Division of eomm;:u;Ity PsychiaGolden Anniversary diploma from Dr.
try at E~J. Meyer Memorial Hospital.
Ketter (otheiiiii!IDbers received theirs
Undet the Macy award which rovers
full aa~~u-y aDd travel _ , _ for
~ Cf!:"tion), and l1!flP(IDded for
rese8rcb studies anywhere in the
She, in tum, referred to Frank Jackworld, the British-hom imd educated
alone, as a representative of the pre- . Dr. Barnard will gO to. the M.R.C.
sent-day students, "who may look
National Institute for Medical Redifferent and think dilferently,.hut are
search in London"lor a short time in
pursuing careers with much the same
1975
to continue work on receptors
turmoil, _maybe more, as we did. .
for acetylcholine,_ one of tbe 1Jllljor
"1 can't imagine Jiving in a place
~ 1.-1 in the nerchemical
where there isn't a great university
vous ayatem.
wboee faculty, stall and students add
Explains Dr. Barnard, "when 116Ye&amp;
. ·something valuable to the communitv
and indeed, to our whole way of life;f. · carry ll188llllgl!li in the brain or -to
muscles, they rely on spOOillc 'recep&amp;aid Dr. Leat.er.
tors' which recognize a' particular
cbemical messenger. But how ti1ese
receptors W&lt;&gt;rit and interact with drugs
-is yet to be determined."
.
· 1be acetylcholine receptor, one of
several receptors of the nerwus system, is responsible , for -""e of
messages from nerve endings to voluntary mWICies. And in muscular di&amp;eases, Dr. Barnard feels there may be
· some genetic cWects involving this
specific receptor protein.
Dr. ZIJ8!DIII1 will take a one-year
sabbatical at the Stan(ord law School
beginninjr July 1. He will investip~
aociaJ policy imPiicatioos dealing with
violence aDd potentially viol- . pie. "H"" - deal wj1b this type of
.,.,.... witlbout violating the law and
the individual's .right&amp; is a · complicated problem," Dr.
asys, partirularty in view of the need to "con·
="ty'a ~and how to pro-

Win PrestigiousMacy Awards

=

z.-n

·Dr. ZuaDan will be woiking with
Dr. David s.-nban. piofe&amp;IIOl of law
aDd paycbolo,y Jlt Slimford. Dr. z....
man ~ taullbt at· the U/8 law

School for the last four years, in addition to l!iB Medical 'Sebool duties. He
bes ~ as dlraclor ol the Meyer
l.foapital 'JIIOIIBib e&amp;clive July 1:

(~.

'rillltlnll pbyaiclan..ru.:albrs
from Bt!&gt;ok!Yn, Milwaukee and -NYork City will be feetmed em the Saturday morning panel (10 a.m.-110011).
"Coronary Artery_
1974.''
'Ibey are Dr. Harold A. Balt:ue, aSsistant profeseor of radioJosy, Cornell
University Medical Center; Dr: 'W.
D!Jdley Johni!On, aaaistant prof_,.
of surgery, the Medical Coli* Ol
W18C0118in; aDd Dr. David Spain; ·
rector of the Pathology Lalloratory
1be Brookdale Hospital Center~~'
clinical prot_,. of pathology, &gt;:~ur&lt; r
. Downstate Medical Center. A Bdalo
physician, Dr. DaVid G. Green, wilt
alBO pe!ticipate.
1be 11124'" class (50 year) will be
honored at a special reception and
dinner Friday evening at the Plaza
Suite ~urant. Eight -other cl.-1929, 1934, 1939, 1944, 1949, 1954,
1959, J.964-...will have reuuiorJ dinnim!
8atmday

rn-

.....run.. Homosexuality .
Conference Set
~

.

LepJ Status of the llomoeoo&lt;-

ual" is the title &lt;!- an

aU-day ..,..,.,.._

"""" acbeduJed for O'Brian Hall, Friday,May3.

~~~.fu~

of 1M panel di.,'-ira with attorDI!Ya. U/8 Law School prolean. aDd
gayactfvilla.
•
1be penela aDd JI8DII)l8la are:
~ Clttmtle Gild Lobby"

10 a.m., Frank~. National (;1;
Tult Fofte; Illlll MiiDela, . Malila-

=.n.

Society; Jim Zais, gay political

EmpioyiMIIlD~ lia.m.,

Boanie Strunk. S,_,..e attcmey;,!.il!'.
Hay-. Mattadline Society· ~
McGinnis, Mattadline ~- Prof
Jacob Hyman, U/8 law ~;
~gan, American Civil Liberties Un.
1011; Kame!ly.
SflulmU, Cwil Ri411U Gild '&amp;r Allmiaion, 110011, Prof. Howard Mann,
U!B law School; Alan Ellis. U/8
Gay Uberation Front; Bnxm "~
National~
"'-·· Task Fofte·' · ..._...,,
"'--"'·
Strunk·
. Famby Law dnd· ~· 2 p.m.,

GaoY

~ ~ Bdalo attomey:
Prof. Louis Swarb:, UIB law"=;

Prof. Ken .Joyce, UIB lAw School;

Strunk· Voelltir.

c~ LDw, s pm., Juilae Jclaopi.
s. Mattina, County Court; CaPt; Ken-

....... P. Kennedy, Bulfalo Poli.ce DeVice SQuad; Dick Roo!c:be,
Bullalo attomey; Judae Aloia C. -Ma-

.,..-.t

~· City Court; Pro!· Dan Holley,
/B law School; MicbMia; Voeller..
Summinll Up, 4 p.m.
.·
1be conference is free alJ(I open to·

the~

a.m., 11 a.m. aDd 110011 alona will be bald in Alden Courtroom,
~J:l!;..the aftemoon _...,.,
For fUrther lnformatbJ,. coD~
SbeJJey Taylor Convar.at.-688-9126.

�THURSDAY~9

-'"

"-DDg8-6and
232A Nort.oo~.
P.m.~ - - -

~-- ucn.• .
Topic 1o bo ~ Prat I. A
g.;~n. Yale Ullivenity, 11?2- .w-.,

MONDAY-S
NlaSINO

COHfiiEHC:E#

Tbe lecture oerioo ill put al tbe 0...-

wifh~h= Jt=~i:"lu:', ~~~

~u!,~/6 r"~":.t~

a (our-day c:,&gt;nference for nuraes, phYsical therapists and respiratory therapists,
Millard Fillmore Hospital , through

tered by the 061conll the Vice Prellident
for Acadamic Aftain with the aid of the
Graduate Scbool '

Thuraday, May 9 .
Co-aponaors are the American Lung
Association of Western New York, The

STUDENT IICITAL•

Pianist Kathlun P..ol, Baird R8cital
Hall. 8 p.m. No admioaion charge. •

:~r~="'~;ful...:::r~
~~
School of NU1'8ing.

UUAI fiLM••

Last Tango in Pam (Bertoluoci, 1973),
Conference Tbolitre, Norton. Check ahow-

INDUSTaiAL ENGINEEIING SEMINAl•

caae for times.

Environmental Control:· The Roles of
Science and Technblogy and the Rupon-

EXHmrrs

sibiliti.u of Engineen~ and tlte Public. Dr.
McAllister H. Hull, Urii enity dean,
U/ B Division of Graduate and Profe... aional Education, 4242 Ridge Lea, Rm. 28. 12:30 p.m.
-

All-TOPSY- EXHIIIf•

Franlr Lloyd Wrisht and LouU. Sulli-·
oon in Buffalo. compiled by John D.
Randall. architectural associate, U/B Office of Facilities Planning. Hayea Hall
Lobby display cases, through Friday,
May 8..Viewing houn: MoDdey-Ftiday, ·

8

~~C:O~~~ utf fu'd~~~.!:f~

neera.

COMPUTEI SCIENCE COLlOQUIUM#

9 $ .m.-5 p.m.

Sexually Reproducing Cellular Automata, Paul M. B. Vitanyi, MathematiAch
Centrum, Amsterdam. 4226 Ridge Lea.

Sponsored by the Ollice of Cultural

Affairs.
All EXHl&amp;IT•

Rm. 41, 3:30 p.m.

ta.?.'f'Jo"'iJ'~'t!._~~u $J.::!:

FILM•

La R egion Centrale (Snow) . 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No adm..ission charge.

day, May 8.

IUFFALO WOMEN'S CEHnl MEETING•

Early Art, featuring works by Andrea.
Adil, Cindy, Cluia. David, Ian. Jenny,·
Jimmy, Jon, Julie, Lani, Michele, Philip,
Tamika, Tara and Shaianne, Music
Room, 259 Norton, through Friday, May
10.

EXHIIIT•

564 Franklin Street. 7 : 30 p.m.
LECTUIE•

Five ~ tJ ndergrads ·Cfited·- fer · • !::d P~y'l=:Iy;:ea;;"l:~i~!':~~~~
S¢rvic¢·t "Orie -SpLJ'rris-A:w~:fr-d
What It Feminism, Juliet Mitchell, au-

more Room, Norton, 7 :30 p.m.
.
-: Presented by the Program in Ameri~ S~~es. and Women's Studies Col-

lege.

~The refusal of 8 Community Ad-

_

foD " Outstandint service to Western
New York by one of five' undergrad=
uates being, honorejl provided an un,
expeoted dimeaafoll · to a nicogoition
ceremony on Good.Iear-10 last Thurs- .
day.
•··• ) :
•·
··
Martha W. Thqme, a junior, said
she could not accept the award because she ~- the University's
sincere commitment to' the commu·
nity~ The ,.Univel§ity, , sbe said; Was
honoring ilaeif in recognizing student
achieyement in "coG&gt;munity service.
Miss TIIorne and·imother recipient,
Mark S. carlin, a senior political scienoe major, Ul&lt;ed that the $25 cash
awards whicli - . , paJt of the recog·
nition go to community organizations,
not to ~ Carlin also asked that
his plaque .be iDscnloed with the name
of the Community Action Corps, of
which he is director.
Both requested that ~ $100 WOrth
of-boob being donated to the University Lihrarieo in the names of all the
award wirmera be given instead to ,
co""!'unity organizations.
MI86 Thome, an ad hoc special rnajor, served as Action Committee coordinator for the Community Action
Corps for the Past year. She has been
working· on a propaml for a CAC Day
Camp wbiqi would open the University'a facilities during the-summer
to childreil froiil "all racial, ethnic and
economic backgrounds. . She has also
been working with women on campus
·to develop a women's self-help clinic.
ledAs director of the CAC, Carlind bas
an o~tion of 1500 stu ents
who are mvolved in more than 50
different projects of community service to all types 'of individuals who.
need help, including the elderly, the
handicaP.I*.f. the' diSadvantaged ·and
the inatitutlonal&amp;ed.
.
ethers who ..eceived plaques and
$25 cub
were:
Robert J .
a -nor biology
major, who hai, for the past three
Ye&amp;nl, been aCtiw .in programs in
crisis intarVent:lon, community educa!:ion.., cbug problelDII and th8 devel·

YAUIS/ITYB ...
•AsaJ!oennU*
rom
ssocu Ion
~
Children. ~ Cbamher members have
Peelle Field, I p.m.
also volunteered to act as counselora
and ~ist with the programs.
.
mmSTICAL SCIENCE COUOOUIIIM'
Gail A. Tyes, a freshman nunnng.
J=~:=..eoR::!:tl~"ft~
student in, the Equal Ql&gt;port;unity
liuotitute. 4230 Ridp Lea. Rm. A-49,
Program, Who has ~t ~ a aenea of
8:30 p.m.. Coffee at 3 p.m.
self-belp programs m which student&amp;
P.-ntecl by the Statiltical 8!:1....,.
who have problems p&gt;t together to
-~-. Dopertment of Coaiputer Sci·
provide tutorial. IIIISistanoe to ~
other on class 88lllgiiiDI!Ills or examm- ~·
ationa. Often'--lhese .-Ions are held
U/!!, oe- State, and N'_..., Roin her home. Sbe has ~ ~ • tary Field, 8 p.m.
· •
a number of. commumty ind special
rosna

awams'

Bertone:

.:=.'t:'.:"'rm!'to~.J:;'
.&lt;t'[~~' llll'lhiil-

f~

lor ~-of ~~~

search Genter. U/B, l:angaton Haghea ·
Center, 25 High Sl, through Sun(lay,
May 12.
1.'he exhibition is spon.aored by International Stud ies and Puerto Rican
.Studies.

sruv%~i~c~::·.:uhan

jor source of infonnational services to
the commuruty through lectures, demonstrations and public discussions on
drug problems. Despite the fact that
he commits more than 40 hours a
week to this project, he is carrying a
full course load and maintaining a B+
avel'Bge. In addition, he has served as
coordinator of Drug and Youth Coonseling Programs for the Community
Action Corps and is '!.rea coordinator
for Human Services Coalition, a statewide network of hotlines and crisis
centers. He is a licensed paramedic
and has been a teaching assistant in
psychology and health education.
Marlene E. Rinde, a senior nursing
major, who has been chairman of
"O~ration Greenlight" for the past
two and one-half years 1111d has been
active in the program since she was a
freshman foor years ago. "Operation
Greenlight," a· proiect .of U/ B Hillel,
is an educational, recreational and socoal program for mentally retarded
adolescents and young adults. Under
her leadership, the project has been
expanded to serve 35 such individ=
During the past Y""!• it hal!
opened up to those w1th a vanety of
handicaps such as cerebral palsy, epilepsy and mild emotional disturbances.
In addition to supervising its planned
programs, Ms. Rinde has met with the
heads o{ the various comm'!!'ity associationsconcemedwithtbesameproblBIJIS. Recently the Bu1falo Area Junior Chamber .of Commen:e learned of
the program and is providing~
portation to ''Operation Greenlight"

visory Councii-Ut B Foundation awa:d

LANGSTON HUGHU .CENT£1 EXMIUT•

Art Work by Abtfi,cu do Na.cinun.to,
professor, Puerto Rican Studies and Re-

~

Shallit , Baird Re.
cital H811, 8 p.m. No admission charge.
EVENING WITH CHA&amp;A:D•

Featured guest is aclor ' and folk singer Theodore Bikel. Faculty Club, 8 :30
p.m.
Sponsored _by lhe Frienda of Chabad.

MUSIC UNARY EXHIUT•

1

TUESDAY-7

31th Western New York Exhibition,
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 ElmwoocJ Avenue, through Sunday, May 26.
EXPHIM£NTS IN An &amp; TKMNOLOOY-

EXHIIfT•

' EIWironmental I mtallation. by Ralph
Jones. Hayes HaU front laWU: through
May 31.

f.lc:St';.

h:~:i't~o,!:~toLih!,C~ti';.g

EXPEIJMENTS IN AU &amp; TtCHNOlOGY -

EXHIIIIT'

·
148 Diefendorf, 4 pin.
Preced
p
Faculty ~~ wllf'!..~~c':"::"'~
meeting, to begin at 2 :30 p.m. Senate
committee reporta and a ret&gt;&lt;&gt;rt on eleelions are on the agenda. ·
CHEMISfiY OF BIOLOGICAl SYsnM$•
I
Geru Synthesi&lt;, Prof. IL Gobind Khorana, Department of Chemistry and Bi~~rcY.ll:ft'A":O:n.~ :~~ of TechThis
ted
· ia presen
aa a joint aeminar
with the Department of Bioche~.
rNEAfl£, FESliVAl Of MINI-CLASSICS'
Arthur Miller"s A .View from the
Bridge, directed by Donald- Sandera,
Courtyard Thaatre, Lafayette and Hoyt
Streeta, 8 ' 30 p.m. Admission charp.
at!.':""'"ted by the Department of The-

Exhibit llO.lJOU, include• computer

graphica, electric ICU!pture, electronic

;::~ctb:d ~~·s~G:.Jr-:9~.;:;

'Wedneoday

Monday,
and Thunday, 11
a.m.-5 p.m. Tueaday and Friday, DOOD4 p.m., 7-10 p.m., Sunday, I-6 p.m.

NOTICES

-. ...
-oc-A-ur-0---...,.-COIIHE------.- C. P.- Snow Co"- ~.. o~er ~--' ~·· ~

..

u·

~

i'!~ lf=~~ f~ s!!:/on~u~
· coune will carry four credits. For further
information call.$11-5545.
COUNSEUNG
ProfOOIJional counseling ill available at
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. For aa
appoinlment, call 836-'1540.
GSA 511JDENr ou.ms
Application forms for Graduate Student Aaaociation summer giants ""' now

WEDNESDAY -8·

sta~ (doubl-~--~--) ,

·

.

Al&amp;RIIlHT-IC.NOX EXHIIIJ•

UCTUH•

GEOLOGICAl SCIENC£S
Application of Puue Tecumics to Pe-!'"?..t:.umDrE. xplomasrationL.atThConmtpsoinennt.alAmocoMar0
•·Th0
. Production Co., Bell Facility, Rm. D-170,
3:30p.m. Coffee at 3 p.m.
_PRESIDENr·s ANNUAL ADDIE$$• •

-liM·

.

University Opera Studio, Music Library, Baird Hall, through Monday,
:!((ay 15.

:~::: !"~JsiA ~:~No:

Deadline for application ia Monday, May

I3. For further information, contact John
of p chiatry
~Y
•
SUMM£1 SESSIONS llfOimAnON
Tbe Olfice of Admissiona and Racorda
ia.,_co
__ndAlluctin
~.g Summts
cuerrenrSeasitly·=.~r;JSred.traat'

~:S~· Department

-

0 00

~d
-~-~
the Univeraity need only complete a

~r"'.!;,\'!:t :o~~~t nD,;t!"'/:,:

available at the Ollice, Hayes Annex B.

Tentetive Ollice houra are 8:30 a.m."-ii:30 p.1n. on the following dates:
May 2. ' 6-9, 18-IP, 20·22, 28-31; June
1
1

_

=~.:..
=~~ ~ -lll=.
~o~_:"::'io~'":~:
i&gt;~9-~.~f6-tt~~iff.Y ~~jf :1
thi Eii)p SliJdoi\t ~ · •&lt;:;- --J"i
...._,._._._ ,...-- l'~
A - t I, 3, 6, 7, ~3, 14, 20-23.
' -"

�THURSDAY-2

¥_....,..
U/B •

~ 8 - (dauhleboacl-

•), ..... two~; l - -

IIICIIICM.- · · ......of
~eAooer

H~A-

~~a-.,M *'=~
'l'e&lt;loololoQ, II Pulaor, 2 PliL

-·-·--_,...

~~ ~-~~1'=

WBFO-FM. 2-6 p.m.

A 1iotaiq and leaminc experience,
282 No.-, 3-6 p.m.
CIASSICSucn.t
Pori&lt;ln, Dr. Glen ·w. Bowencicl&lt;, pro-

f.-or and chairman. Department of

a...;co, Harvard Univeroity, 372 Hayes,
4 p.m.

Dr. Boweroodr's l'.-ntation is made
JJOOOible bv a pant from the Raymond
l'uDd ancf b~ courtesy of Dr. D . R.
=1~, of-~~'!:: .JJs'!'e RayIICIUB'

Plannifl6 and Analy.i• of SC'ientific E:r-

fji~'S~~:{- ~:=~~t~;,c~~(i

Foster, 4 p.m.
Presented by the College of Mathe·
matical Sciences.
CAC FtLM••

BuUitt, 140 Capen, 7 &amp; 9 p.m. Admis.aion: 75 cents.
Steve McQueen and the classic chase
ocene.

FRIDAY-3
LANGUAOI CONfiiBttr
This two-day COD{...,.. of

the National "-'clation of Self-Instructional

L8ncuaP Procrams will consider lanr.;::" .::~;..for.;'rl:ri:"xt00:16

~~ s:"~~~:~t
GAY liGHTS CONFEftNCE"'

Cam-

.

The Lelltd Statru .of the Homo.e:mal,
five pane[ dDcussioNI With nationallyknown speakers. attorneys, U/B Law

~Pa:n.ss~J;n an&amp;!t~~~

Rm. 106, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
.
The panel discussions will include the

following" topics: legislative change and

lobb ying; employment discrimination:
students, civil rights and Bar admission:
family law and property; and criminal
l&amp;"!f.

The conference. which is free and
open to the public, is sponsored by the
Student Bar ASsociation.

1

STATISTicAl SCIENCE COU.OQUIUM•

Statistical Problems in the Computer
Evaluation of the ElectrocardioJ!om•

::.~JU'ci:'nn&lt;i;."f4d,ru~~- ~

COMPUTR 5liYICU SlMINAI.

ALGOL , instructed by Dono VanMierop. 4238 Ridge l.ea, Rm. 12, 7-9 p.m.

A-49, 10:30 a.m. Coffee at 10 a.m.
Presented by the Statistical Scienoe
Division, Department of Computer Science.

DPEIIMINfS IN AIT &amp; I'£CHNOlOOT-

SCHOt.AaSHtr AWAaDS LUNCHEON

LICTUU'

Th• Nature of Photo1rophy, Rudolf
Amheim. Harvard University, 70 Ache-

liOn, 8 p.m.

The five U/ B varsity athletes who are
receivipg the 1974-75 C. C. Furnas Scholarships will be honored a t a luncheon in
:;,.President's o~~· 108 H~es: , 12: 30

Sponsored by Media Studies. Inc. .
WCTIICAl ENGINEEIING SEMINAl# .

LAW LECTUif•

The-Inequalities of the Jury Pool Select-ion ProceA in Erie County: Marty
Feinrider, Moot Courtroom . O'Brian
Hall, 8 p.m."
.
UUAa

fiLM••

c!::~C:~!!::,eNo~e1:~ :~~

- cue for times. Admission charge..

A complex character study of a man ·

tom between two worlds- the ·refined
and eophisticated home of his musical
family, arid the brawling, oil-rigging life
style be lived. StarrinR Jack Nicholson
and Karen Black.

~~-cr~di~ ~~~- ~::l:~
-

1111ATU: FESTIVAl. OF MIN'-CLUSICS•

Arthur Miller's A

Vi~w

EUCTIICA&amp;. tNGINEUING SEMINAl#

to~~o~'i)~ Ad~~S:;S ~;s~

Control. Inc.. Palo Alto. 112 Parker, 3
p.m.
TENNIS•

UfB vs. Erie Q&gt;mmunity CoUege North,
Rotary Field Tennis Courts, 3 p.m.

PHILOSOPHY Of SCIENCE CONF£1£NCE:
THE NEXT TtN YEAtS•

Session 1: -Btalistitol 0/ld Explanatory
J .· L King, Rockefeller Uni·
venity. 4244 Ridge Lea, Rm. 14. 3:30
p.m. .
•
Co-sponsored by the U/ 8 Department
~t;'~~,!~
Buffalo PliilosoRel~van.u,

AMDICAN CONTEMPOIAIY TKEATIE"'

Admission chaqe.

PoWu Sy5t~m- R~liability Caleulatiom,
Dr. Allen J . Wood, Power Technologies,
Inc., Sahenectady, 112 Parker, 1 p.m.

from the

Bridtl•, directed by Donald SandeB.

Courtyard Theatre. Lafayette and Hoyt

"S!a!";.

PI.ASMAS AND APPLICATIONS SEMINAl#

• M ~n~tohyifrod.viUlm.ic Power

G~nera-

SUNDAY-S

UUAI FILM••

~!'!n~K!~~No~~e=k=~

case for times.

Ad.miuio~

charge.

THEATU: FUTIYAl OF "MINa..aASSICS•

Arthur Miller's A View from the
Bridie. ditected by Donald Sanden,
€outtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt
Streets, 8: 30 p.m. A&lt;lmiuion charge.
Also on May 7.
Presented by the Department of The-

COMMUNrtY.......uvusnT MY•
- Und&lt;,.,roduaU! B~ Cit

UIB ia
the theme of this yMr'a event, wbicjJ will
include academic and admiosians iDiormation, toun, concerta, etudent.actiYitiee.
exhibits and demonstrations, Main Sae..t
Campus, 1-6 p.m.
-

LACIOSSI•

atre.

U/B
2 p.m.

UUAI-COfFUHOUSE•

CONCED•

· John Jacliaon, with "guitar instrumentals, ra;gtime, country and western, bal·
lads and blui!s, lst Boor cafeteria, Norton,
9 p.~ A4mission charge.

SATURDAY-4 ·
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE CONFHINCE:
THE. NEXT TtN YEAH•

Session II: Phi!Oiophy of Science: -The
Limiu of Neceuity and Other Possjbi.Ji..
tin, C. Wbitbeclt, SUNY/ Albany, 337
Norton, 10: 90 a.m. ·
flACK•

·

U/ B InVitational, 'Rotary Field, noon.
LACIOSSE•

U; B . vo. Monroe Community College,

Rotary Field, 2 'p.m.

I'HILOIOPIIY OF SCIENCI CONfi.NCI'
TKI NEXT tiN YIAIS•

Session Ill: Conceptual Chtuotle, Crou
Theoretiqll ExC:,ion and tli• Unity

:{~!m""N~ ~:aci :~ _vru~rfii.M••

CAC

Alice'•-RaUJIUanl, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10
p.m.. Admieaion: 7&amp; .,..,Is.

UUAI

fiLM••

•

The KU., of Marvin Gcrd&lt;'IO (Rafel-

1111.

Kenmore L

c.. Rotary Field,

UIB Symphony Bond, Loekwood Library steps, 3 p.m. (In case of rain, the
COnO&lt;rt will be bold in the Fillmore
Room, Norton.)
COMPIIID SHYICH SIMINAI.

ALGOL. instructed by Dono VanMierilp, 4238 Ridge Lea, "ftm-. 12, 7-9
p.m.
EVENINGS FOI Ntw MUSIC•

~·

Featuring works by U!B composers-inresidence: Norbert Gsterreicb, Peter

~-~=els~tot!f~~~

-and Charles Casavan\, Albright-Knox Art
Gallery-Auditorium. 1285 Elmwood Ave.,
8 p.m.
...
•
Admission : atudenta, $1.25; ·g eneral
public, $2.25.
·.
• UUA&amp;

FttM••

The KU., of Maroin Gor&lt;hM (RafeJ.
son, 1972), Conte.- Theatre, Norton,
check &amp;bowcaee for dmea. Admi .. ion
cbarge.
·.
TIIIAT11l' RmVAL OF MlllloCIAUICr

~~~'~·~t:.

fayette and Hoyt St.-eeto. 8:30 p.m. Ad·
charp.
-

~

(Contimnd /rom- 7, caL 3)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1384183">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1384164">
                <text>Insert: "The New Manager"</text>
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                <text> Insert: "Community University Day"</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1384166">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1384169">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1384170">
                <text>en-US</text>
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  <item itemId="85483" public="1" featured="0">
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1715853">
                    <text>Ellicott to -l}p Bed c ·o unt: Host 7 Colleges
With 1.3)0 -beds to he available
iD the EUicolt Comp!U and Mic:bael
and Cooke balls on the Main Street
~ U. lie ocinVerteii to other uses,
U.(B ~a net ~ of 1;000

...

~~lll'fltl!l ua.~
A-..,......-.&amp;~lDr
"

_...,.
~t:.. ·lilil

...

atuae..lil)
-toiD · the Lehman Hall · Center
The Hous-.
m, Olllee-..lll ilave:.O.table tbenr·frOm
9 a.m.-4 p.m. StudeDts from either
campus DillY ~ af Lebman, but
y!!Bierday a illiDilar 11011Bicn was cob,
ducted at Goodyear for Main Slzeet
naidente. . .
•
.
Al the registzation, sllldenta are
lurl&gt;iDi; 1n complelled housing ~er­
eDce ~nai- totether With ap~

J:.ounie, Ambeu1t Campus.

pU~~ on-

materials iDdi-

a.te wtieie 'atildenla' Wut to live, the
type 'Of ' ~ prA!ferred
(SUites, ainglei, doubles, etc., coed or
J&gt;Qt) ; ~.-or 'not a collegjate as~ ia desired (ln.· EJiicott),
c:boWi ol ~ etc.

Random lottery nlllllbera will he
· nity of b . IIDd lmmallitis an'!J'd released to
pMsizina the role of villual IIDd perMay 6: The
"-f orming ada in edualtiOD; Vico ColJijijery numl!ers are used to eaiablish · - . b lb-. intl!nAid In ll&amp;udy of
PrioritY on
• ouly, widi the lower
the hi*ll)o of idMB, liDd CUtranl C.

..

~ by computer
~ on or about

.

~~
~-~~ 1_. lfle - -

'"..J:!r"~
~
time Ibis

=:: . ::·u!' Imoma~,..~e

first
year, computeJs will be
~
. _for
. asslgnmen_IB ayd ~ student

_.,
..
ana· :If~;
or suitematea.

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

~

t-OOt r...u..

IS.:tuyinf~

-. ~ .
SeYen coUeg'es and the International

· Uving P..,ter will have ~ in the
EUicoW Comple:r, present Housing
08ioe informatiOn indicates. A~
ing to IrvinR Spitzberg, director of the
Collegiate System, the """"" are the
environmentelly-focaaed Racbel Car9011; New College of Modern Education with its alternative edUCIIItion
~ the health oervi~
CoUeile H ; the College of Matbematical.8ciences; College 8 - a ·commu-

-=--~ :e,~n tbe

lria-

haft been In tbe ao.-. Compla
at Amherst.
:A tour of Ellicolt was held last
weeienci, ~ piospective-lellanCB
to examine ib! mm of f!X111111 ~
for one to six Students, its~

ollice, crVt, chama and dub

fac:ililie!L

Dining halla, recreation ~..tudy
lounges and laundry rooms will alao
be available in -=b Ellicott· living

a--

Donn ~-

The Ellicott Compla will be co.educational by altematinl -a.-.
Other donn oceupancy pattema b
fall include: ,
' CLEIIENT HALL-coeducatiClllal on
(Conliliu.d
2, col. 2)

on-

Commo_
ner Will Open. Cowper. Lectures
"In order to eatehliab ....u.......

~u.;: ~~le
theineel-.." Dr. Botrry

IIIU8t

eon!.'=.

director of tlirCeftter far · ~ of
·Natural Systems, Waahingt.on University. St. Louis, will contend - !he
first gue&amp;t speeter in ·the University's
new Cowper I...;tuni Series, Wednesday, Mayl.. at 8:15.p.m. in 147 Dief~
.
'
A leading biOIDIIist and · educator,
Dr. Commoner will apeak Oil "The
Human Meaning of. Bioi&lt;JIY."
•
Biology, Dr. CommOner contends,
"baa teugllt ua a ~t deal about the
world we live in and about ouraelvis.
. Nevertheleas, the relationship he........,
the · natural world IIDd the ways in
which .m-n heinp live in It baa
become the of coofuaian IIDd
' PI!DIIina tutrnphe.
un,'Given
like I1DY otalivin( ~ ....., oaafonn io the
princaplas 11. ~. there ia •
. ~ to .redUce tbe NladaD hetween biqiDsy IIDd bu:maD ~ 1o a
deoepliYely aimpJe fonD: Good IDCial
action ia aimpJy piDd eoo~o:ao.
ac:riDtiima far acicllll action lllllia ...S..
j}l loU..: If I*Pe- .............
citis ~ ....

:!t -.•

.-t
.....

...........,of ...

-..

~ ......t ·'P1..W· . . .. with

biology operate -reducing the - lation to an ecologiaolly atehle aUoe. w
This kind of solution, Dr. Commoner says, ''has the double allure of simplicity and of an appanmt grounding
in the linn terrain of science ndber
than the shifty sands of social policy.
However, on further e:raminatlon, !he
approach turns out to be neither simple, nor soundly baaed on science.
What we discover from such a reexamination of the relationship he·tween the world of nature and . the
world of people-in particular the
impact of human activiti'"' on the
emoironment-is" the need for human relatloosbips to fimt be ordered•
n.. Conunooer has received numerous awards ·a nd recognitions for his
contributions to science. Amana tbem
are the NI!WDI&gt;IIIb Cleveland Prile
(1953), the first International Humanist Award (1970) and, last year,
tbe Intematlanal Prize for ~
ing tbS Environment, giYen by the
City of Cervia, Italy.
Prior to joining the Wll!lilinetm
.Univ.aity faculty, o,. Commoner
_,.. on the liocUJtiea of Harvard and
~ 'Collep and, aa a 1ieutenaDt
in the Uniliod SCali!&amp; Naval ~ ·

aa a--.dl ...,.....,"-""'He was
(~ ... ,.:i:;:;;;nj

�Tree;)·lantlng
On. Community-Unl~O:~!•
May 5, locsl Boy 8cauiB, city
.
U /B studeniB and community people
are IIQinc to pt toptber to clo aometbing 00 nDil-&lt;XJillrovenlial that 1be
media may iplore it completely.
- Tbey .are IIOinc to plant treesthe &amp;rat trees to be ·planted in Buf.. .
falo's newest i-ecreation area, Mc:CM- •
thy Park, a 26-acre site .between Main
and Amberst Slreets that will eventu. ally .iDclude tennis courts, a spray
pool, a model creatiw 'playJlOUDII,
more than 300 trees, plus sluubs and
bushes carefully cbooen to abelti!r
birdS, rabbits and
living tbi'nasTo appreciate the park, you have
only to look out a rear ~ of the
. old BWf!1o Meter Plant. and C~
is there """'· Except for four
diamonds; the expanse is ~ wban
wasteland, broken on1y by
tracb, illeplly-dumPed conslr\ICtion
rubble, and, iD the far """""'· an abandoned quarry that collects stormsewer nmolf on rsioy days.

ou-

nulroad

ADump

Tbe

•
•
site was given

to the City 90IDe

26 years ago by Gerald Salt8relli,
wboee Hoodaille Industries bad quarried there. The gift was originally
made with the stipulation, that the
land be . used for recreelioDal pur~ but, In actuality, tbe site beCIUDI!l • dump.
Tben last year • studerit in Racbel
Caman Collep'unvironmeDial action .
clase-the one ted by Dr. Beverly
. Paipn that declared war on the "Dirty Dozen." If.- 12 industrial ciants~ f8III)DIIIdtile f« air pollution Jo.
ca1ly -decided be didn't want to
work Dll colre-oYen pollution. In studyina ~ of the P.os-t rapid Iran:
sit IIDe, the llludmt, Howard Mischel,
"~ · tbe UDdoowloped park.
Evaltually . be lnliereated ..... half
the cia. In hla
action
fGr. beltlor ~ M.-bile. hack in the community,
the polm1ial . putt J.d .... caucbt
tbe eye ol ~ KeilllnJtc)_n Little
I.....,. wt..e&lt;ta.Yinc lleld beina.._. out. NNati and frlimds of
that paup - - - inlloniW .In tbe
v-t Jat and ....-led. .jn .,&amp;tine
the.,_,_ qullll)' Ailed toloMol: Tbey
bad .... friim·tbe Cit5' tbe ile of_ .-.1 baobaB cllmnaadL In
......... the ll&amp;lk. tbe UUie r__.
ct.. to ..... .loe 'MclCadlry, Buffalo hMobaD .... wbo -.eel the
N- Yorlt ll'~ lnt almoat 40
.,..... (and wbo oelilnted hla S'ftb
blJtboley Ia 8uDdly).
c-inunit.Y and Uni¥aGty people
in. . . . . . in tbe ,..... putt bepn

,_,--violent

.._.._ ... ;,ar, ~tbe

City 1'arlal ~ .
~D&amp;telll···aewi!t

'tbe City'&amp;

~o

Launch .·MeCarthy Park·_
will

derle, ornitbolo11ist' with the Bu1ralo ,
also be protected "uturally.".
Museum of Science, the studenls
1bi8 .fall two important pbaSM of
learned what- and other pianiB
tbePI!fk~~~=~
would thrive in a bigb-use ....,. IIUCh
.PaomelanlliDa'$ u....,to.....,.~
..- - • ~ ~.._
as this and wtiicb were. likely to at1500
__,._ ,_,_ Inlet 'wildlife.
aopeciB of the' PI"
~
........... , _
~ elrorl&amp;
· eampus, llludmiB
'-·-·
iDvOlved
. fbe
-plapt!Da include
In the planning process rommunity
R'_,_..., in
o.~
• ..:.. (-_.._~ m· WNY.;
needs were considered without losing
......,... """"""' -~
ecoloiicsl and aesthetic conPffiG), Karen Kinney 8Dd Md.
. 'The City was consistently • Thorne (both with CAC) . PJaypOul&gt;d
deeign waa bMded by
~
helpful
supportive, reporis
sell, formerly a /B llludeDt m ilrcbiPaigen. . "We 'have had such tremen·~·-- and, .,.,-~~• ...._._,
doua cooperation from City Hall;" " -~
v......._ ... _ . .
sbe enthuses. F« ex:ample,. lhe· City
&lt;&gt;'The ~ that is aviliianed
had originally planned to fence the
foe the park is a 200-by-000' ....,. that
bu the students persuaded the
will include tire swinp, pOlea and
tot surround the pari&lt;;.-with 11
. _. for climbing, and imaginative.
.''living hedge." Danger areas, such as - multi~ play stnu:tureo, ID!Bily
the qll81'!y. will be isolated bv formade of wood. 'The ·playground, which
midsble Blanda of priddy wild rose.
re.llf'l9eDIB a City in,.,.._.t-of some
Tbe privacy of adjacent backyards
$30,000, will also featul!&gt; a brick
mountain for smill children to con.
and a large Wll&lt;iinl and llpi8y
A picnic ....,. will adjoin the

u---

~

and

-nr.

J.....

u

CJ:'

=

Ellicott-

~~"'.:rl~~.""L
GOOIJYEo\ll

4

p~~~ neilbborbood

)

•• .....:---•
HALL- coed ~uuw 011

an.:=~~ -RAUB-~
educational on an altematina Suite
basis. Rooeevelt Hall will be a gra.duate student aiea, housing a num!Jer
of law studenta. Underiraduates may
opt foe Rooeevelt but sbould understand that the facility will be. primsri1 t
maruy or graduate students and will
therefore be considered a "Study
Hall," the Housin11 Oftice says.

a

=· _. . _,_. ,._ " " " .
.-.... •.,.._ """'

lliACDONAU&gt;~tional by

it_;,sbe aa,ys. 'lbla BPrin1 t1&gt;B c;t;

expeciB _to have one LUlie c:limiJina
a1n1c1ure in p1ace, and wort: on infall.•ninc the 1811 sbould belin
_ • in the

Clompua. As· with Ro&lt;.evett Hall, 1mdeqraduateo may ae1ect Macdonald
but abould realize that the facility Will
be • "Study Hall." .

IICIIOG.LI&lt;OPI' HALL-coeclw:atiaaal
by w1np.
.
StudeDIB Wisbinc to live
all-fe..
mP « · all-male oeltinp .... ~
the fourth ..... of Macdonald (for
meleo) «the fourth ..... ol E~.d-~1- .
bpf (for temalea).
.
'
, _ nllideDtiU al~ -

10,000,.,..

':w,the.;,.,s:.:=,
•

•.

.

In anticipation of the tze&amp;.plantinc,
Boy Scout volunteen diatributed
_10.000 lber8.
. ~ 8Dd
poupa- to ~ $15 - . d . •
li'ee far' McCarthy. Park. In faa, with
tbe . &lt;XJCIII8I'ItiaD of the City, 'lrbieb,: .
ba-pramiaed to mall:b doaatiaaa two

m

Caomdl:;

-"'o"V'!

T ,000~~~ ~

~~f:nthebeuC::.C

·=

parb,

whieh are geared-to 8lllmD&amp;r activities,
· McCarthy Park will rellect the ....Uties of .living in Bulfalo. and Include
a aJeildini bill, in
spot where a
local contractor "~ and il·
Jelallr d)lltlped rer-,"
explains Dr. Paillen"Bill Price [University Dislrict
Councilnenber) baa decidecl this ia
one of the moat impoiWlt projecla in
his district," MY11 Dr. PaipD, wbo
pom' out that Price ·baa boosted the
18
to

~,

!:.t.'•'f!:u:U
~~': ~.
belnc -..idond·by tbe eetern N-

Aill canaitly-n•W.•I'istudenta

Yorlt Pouadatiaa. (Daaatiaaa, wbich ·
are ta dedacllble, lbould be lll!llt in
PeaY Wbeeler, 264C EwM
a - •1, 'WilllalmMIIe, N- YorltU2211 Maire cbecb Jla,JIIble' to "Me-

not livinc in Um-.i~.v _,_ .
llllldati!,laa may .-Ire~ far fall'
,...,._... at tbe Houalnc OJIIce, ·
~ Hall t:.a.Dont. ~
.

care of

~rm-"

Senate ·Secretary

Maude Holmes - Ar.
.
. ·A Week from • Elunday, with - Boy
Wayoe K. ~ of Medicinal , 8cauiB wleldin&amp; the abovela and a
a.imistry baa 1-. elected ~
~ eiDer Oil hand to add
of tbe Faculty Senate fGr a ~ . · to tbe feativitloa. the ,_ung of Me- . beainniDc July 1. He ......_.
c.rtby Pad&lt; will bePL

~~~.W~! ~ ·~~~~~~x·do(

·

5~1~!~~ 1 ~ .

�Plagued MIt 11M been t1u&gt;ouPow
the year by • ..... DUIIIber cil noabow ............... the Faculty Seaate wrestled April 18 with tfie iloue
of la&lt;:hiJw ellectiv- and iCB f!OIIIuation, a matter of lftliring ~
to faculty in lflbt of tbe ~
tenure and pramotioor aitua11on.
UDder dobUa was
lill
tead&gt;ina
...,...__ C
by a
Senate CoiDmlitee cbaind by ~­
pby 1 " " ' - . J - E.~).
callinll for lhlo a.tiaG d a campus
Ol6ce cl I-.ctianal Dewelapollat.
UDder the prosxal, tbe Ol6ce wauJd
be set up in the fall with • JII'CIIIC-.I
budget of tiM,OOO•

=t!pUlt

.......--

' T h e - ' was e&amp;ctively ~
in modified form, w'- tbe body eodo-.~. an amendment by tolal sut&gt;stitution olrered by Prof-.r .r-than Reichert. ArJuln&amp; for .._,_
tralizalica and ........ 6icuRy/lltudoat
particiPI'Iioa, Raicbert 11111"'1 that tlae
formulalica of evalualica instJumenl8 •
be tha preropllve cl a faailty/atndeot oommilible within each iJI. tbe
Facultleo, cbe
and the
Sc:bool ol ~ UDder tbe
allleDded prosxal, the 'c:baimian, rice
chairman, a paduate llludeot and ,1111
~ representative fram
-=h of lhMe Faculty
?cl&amp;e

eaue.-.

wauJdof1lloo
1ooo-year
staff
tbe Ol6ce
of
~
Jle.
velopmeat. 'The IIIDODdment also allows tbe Faculties to diOcide wbetber
to distribute tbe results of tbe .....Wation of faculty tp tbe aludents.
·

---

01~ b~ra -~tu(liq Of(.ering
Works by ~9rem, We1sgall ..

_,_

Forced to limit it8elf .t o advisory
action after looinc a quOrum, the Senate eoCiorioed a plan by wbieh 15 liDes,
made available by aabbaticala and
leavea of u.ance, would be' BMipled
811Dually to 'VIiiiting mill&lt;*lty ~
In other action, the Senate .,._
1'..-1 itii ~tion to
tJI; B budset euta by .A!baDy. that

baimouic, .will. direct tbe Old&gt;Mtra. .
., The compoarr, Czech-lforn and
'Ameiican educated, :is on tbe music
faculty of ·QUeena College .and ispn!Giwould
reduce projected
~
gram here" is now on notice:
dent of tbe AmeriQlll Music. Center. •• on
.thP. AmberBt
campus by
'iS Per-cOiit. ·
'The Opera Studio's spring prOdooIn addition to his musics! background
· tion ·ot two oontemporary worb, Hugo:
.and.-oomt&gt;&lt;&gt;sitiorr studY under. Roger
Weispll's The Tenor and Ned · floSessions; Weisgall 'holds ·a- PILD. in
rem's Four DitJJogues for Two Voices
German Litemture from Johns HOjr
and Two P~. opens t.on.ight .
kins. His Diajor operas include The
~ThUflldv, April 25) in Baird Hsll,
Stranger, Siz C~ters in Semeh of
running through Sunday, April 28. .
an Author, Purgatory, and Athaliah,
President Robert L. Ketter will give
And oompoeer .Weisgall will J?resent
eech based on works of playwrights
his annual address to tbe ~ faCa lecture in Baird at noon today' by • such as Strindberg, Pirandello, Yeats
ulty May 7 at 4 p.m: in 148 Dieleoway of intzoduction.
and Racine.
dorf. Also scheduled to report at this
'The weekend's performances climax
Weisgall's pre-performance Baird
time is Dr. Gilbert .Moore, outgoing
an opem year in which tbe Studio has
Hall lecture will oonsider "Contemporchairman of tbe Faculty Senate, who
gainedna#OIIIIlattentionandap_plause
ary American Opern: Realities and
is vice chairman Ol tbe voting faculty.
lOr',productions at two major convenChallenges." Tbe talk is free and open
Senate oommittee reports and a reticxuo.-tbe Nineteenth Annual Meetto the public.
port on elections are also on tbe afteragenda.
~(~JbeinN~.='toOC ~:~~
F~::·~ has made these com- noon's
'The meeting of the voting facolty
·(Wbere a presentation of Francis Pou-.
ments about his Four. DitJJogues For
will follow a oontinuation of the Sen1"'¥''8 Les MCUIU'lks de TU:esUz.s ·was
Two Vo""'• and Two Pianos, tbe
-~ April 16 meeting, ·t o begin at
piOilOUDOed . "-rb" by NOA vice
opening preeentation in tbe opera
2:30 p.m. Business wm include deterp~t Mary Elaine Wallace of
double bill: "The form is a strict,...
mination of tbe stsiUB of ft&gt;e Senate's
Southern · illinois'. School of Music),
nata whoee four sections relate tbe old
decision on teaching elfectiveitess, reand ~ . TweDI:l!-ninth Annual Conoomedy of boy meets girl. 'The meetconsideration of the possible ._ of
vention..of.tbe National Association of ·
ing is on a subway whoee mechanism
leave-lines for visiting minority fa&lt;&gt;
Teacher&amp;. of. Sinsing at tbe Waldorfis.j'yoked by tbe instruments while tbe
ulty ( now only an advisory recomAstoria (where tbe Studio premiered •
vo1ces flirt noisily. 'The second scene
mendation) , long-delayed consideraits Four. Diiilogues .in tandem with a
is of courtship in a car parked at an
tion of tbe report on arming, and restagjOg of Not · In Front of the Waiter
.airport where the pianos waltz lazily
consideration of tbe Senate's endorseoi'Vnder 1M Aspidistra, a Feydeituas tbe soprano yields to tbe tenor.
ment of a plus/ minus option in grad. like farce with muaic taken from four
Witbout pause the third nwnbet uning.
Oftenbach operas, and acclaimed as
leashes a conjugal fight denoted by
I
"charming fiuff'' by tbe Buffalo Evekeyboards clattering, lady screaming,
~ News after i'-' locsl exposure in
man grumbling. Finally they separate,
Mlu'dll.. . · •
.
and .. from Spain to New York sing
( C0 -•' -···d f
-·• 1 cot· 4)
. 'l'be 'Cilftenl dou!lle bill, made poe:'
over tbe ocean to eech other wonder'rom ~
•
. .n.1e by an iiJstitutii&gt;nal gmnt for
iiig at love, at jealousy, at * t to do
also former .associate editor of Science
Amelican contemporary o p e r a, pronow. But all ends in silence."
IUustrated and is currently Oil tbe
vides both a llpoof of tbe oPeratic
Rorem was Slee Profeslior of Music
Scienoo Advisory Board of the JOUl'lemperruDoint and yet anothM variation
at UIB from 1959-1961.
naift!~L!ctu,.., Series is JIIIIde
of \be boy-~ta:clrl ~. tlii staple'
··'Derus Azsro is scenery and ciostume
possible by a $27,000 gmnt to the
of ·the American musicsl .tlieatre.
· designer for both productions, with
University by tbe John w. Cowper
'The T - · . ·
·.
' ligbt.ing design 'by Paul Brown of State
Weisgall's The Tenor is '-1 on a
University Co1lelre at Bufl'alo. Tickets
Co., Inc., of Bullalo, a major conplay by Frank ·W~entitled
ate available at lilorton Hall ticlret ofstruction firm. lWf tbe annual in"Der .It.·~·"
floe : $.50 for ...........
~.~-oome
from the gmnt is being used
Cl!llters
ts, $1 for faculty
for
• L - T -~·- ·S eries and tbe other
around Gerardo, a flamboyant dramaand staff aDd $Ui0 for all others. Re....., '-"'''"'""
tic tlellor, at the peak at his car-, wbo
mainina ticbla will be available at
haU will be used at the discretion Of
8PIICil!llzl!8 • b8rolc -Cibaractarizlitiaos
BsinJ bef
......~-_
tbe President. Tbe inoome for tbe curon 8lliae.
i - - ' - himaalf to·
OM . - · - rent academic year is apprmimately
be of the beroic irbnr...... _
$2 ()()()
....u, whiah .invoha bim In
c(
ANNUAL FACULTY ClUB IIIIEinNG
Under terms of tbe ~ wellan~ with fomlniDe admlren.
The Allnu.l -~~~ of tho FKUJty Club
known - " " " ' and their topics are
The.c.t Udadeo ~-fiMidlie ,
will be Frldly, Apoil 26. 8t tho Club,
cboeen hr. tbe Presidmt after OlliiSUIJ - llue, 8nMm
.,.,..,... CbouiHllrrimen Ub&lt;ary. F- - - will
totion with academic ofiioezs.
. .
nard, 'lboluu ~
Pria&gt;_be'"'8t 3 p.m. Iw a - ··
'The pant was ·made through tbe ~-aniRadlel~Pnall&lt;~
..-tirw 8t 4 -p.m. The..-._. Is
University at Bulfalo Fou~dation, :
118JbdantCIDIIductaraftheBullaJo~
· OIJMiopalclrnernbil~ofthoCiubf ~·.,_.. Jnc; 'ta &lt;. I
l l &lt;li.J i l l&gt;~~-.
•·!lbat 1*entially Jarse campue-.and
communityaudieooewhich U/BOpera

Studio•. Dbectot-· Mnriel WeU• f e e I a'
"~'t know -'h8910'1Ul o}iela pro-

.....-r

Ketter to Address
Faculty, May 7

Commoner- '

a:..m.,

a.;;;;:;; .s

�~

uuP Contends N

Bo r
Tenure

Nece~ry ~n Tenure
United~~ klw!DI,.t:fW.--==t..':
ledl\18 ~ ...
~ ~~·~ .... wid&amp;-

e

BUNYC~;Mo~Uar .....
~~ ..........
hll
CampWle "Statement em
"
which fonned tbe liula far IN!por1B 111 tbe Nftl Yri TU... April 2,
and ill ' tbe Be~, April 11.
'lbe of that stalaneftt followa:

racuuy • JnfonDed .......
~ "fomW

::,... with UUP.

~Mid

wnity of New Ycirk called for a re-

-ruatlao of tbe ezlstina tenure flY&amp;"

...... "'t-

E"~~:..::-=
cliamaaJ
eiiPI'I!9Iinl lar ... pnMICiltive views.

Over the yean tenure bas contributed I!DOr1DOUIII,y to tbe stability and
strenatb ol the ~ prof-xm
and to lnatitutiaaal escelleooe as well.
Further, tbe oondltlons ol job security
haw DOW eztended far beyond the
fac:ultr. aDil haw beCome a part of
penaimet pradiCIOB throughout society. 'lbB lmdition of tenure has per-

=~!:,

y=

-:;:.,o~'feii

the abUses might outdistance the virtues of the process.
.
In .....,.,m years. however, the tenure
debate bas illtenaifled both within and
outside the proft!88ion. The excli8hge
bas bealime eepecia1ly M&amp;tal as the
growth of hill- education has begUn
to level off. So _loog as the Natioo's
collegea and univemities were rapid!.)' '
expanding, tbey were able . to preserve a fairly balanced relationship
between tenured and non-tenured faculty. However, the plateauing.&lt;&gt;{ enrollment and the resultant slowdown
in faculty growth have introduceil the
very real l!(lS&amp;ibility that ih many
academic departments most of the
faculty _will in lime be tenured.
Rapid increase in the ~tage of
tenured faculty will, it is being argued, restrict the IDstitution's capacity to respond to educational and
scliOlarly needs during a time of rapid
change. Some contend that because of
continuing shifts both in the content
and the methodology of education, it
is essential that younger faculty continue to. be ailded in order to keep
the program vital. It bas also been
suggested that larger numbers of women and- minority group members are_
becoming available for emplo~tne!"!t
and, if future employment opportunities are TeStricted, these groups will
continue to be disadvantaged.
In seari:hing for a University response t.o these issues, the needs of
the insiitutlona as well as individUals
have been carefully weighed. It is
clear thit as State University's_enrollment Stabilizes, we, too, may have

ari ever-~1 peroeotage of

ow:

&lt;iREPORTER.,
·(-

A __,.. CIDINitiMiq .......,.. pcila&amp;IIMd
. . . ,..,....,. ..,. ,.. DlrWon. ol u....
.~q · ....,..._ StaM
ol , _

U..._..,

F-* _, ll...,, ~S · - St.. •JJM.Jo.
11.r. J42l4. &amp;lhorW tlllicM . . ......, In ·
Jtot- 2U, 2SO .......... A - ~

2U7J. ..

·--

••

---.....

- A.. WDrz.aT aarn.A1flJ
~

ROaDT

r . IIAJU.nT

_._a.ourma

/Oillf A..

P.tnrlCU W'AltD

~

lfAIICF .. CIP '"l"
~-----­
Art·~~&amp;'-M
0

NJt.

JII!IOija-

-

State University of New
ita commitment to the
This tnulition
-m!&gt;OUBiy
to tbe atability
-.our profeBoD and,
nrolilema and poleDIIi ita exa:utlon, the
aound ..... the policy will

/

'f::tucatiOoally

.

wr o te,

Ia.

=.,.~~ ,llllf.!I'i':'

_...._ - _ ...-::. ~ __.__.__
_ _.... 5~-~to . . .,...,_ law far

===

iiiilt'PIIIIitiOD

~~
•• , ... ----..._."'
ClllltlmdDC- • • -· .,._
-: ~;;111!1. ........ by
our

BoY-. Mid.
• .,._,.,_
...,..._tror_ ..,..
~

In departments

.moae
fJIIrilllmaDia boo\18 dBelined. llld
8n
earlier JIIUIIIa!lllly ....u-t ace-

both to ..Ne SUNY to "'MintaiA a
- ·vital lmd creatiw r-lty." Boyer Indicatal1hat be~ a the SUNY
s-d., no rigid quota :will be
~ "' ~t _,orlc 1110placed . . tbe ~ of tenured facpoaa1a
to elfect
~far
ulty "permitted in tbe oyMem. While
com.......n..•
uticle
the 8eetezt of
a hilb percentllp ol teiiwed faculty
ao~ii;'tament.&gt;
illa •
~torona~
barmful. it al8o
Gu::::.. clair that liD ardadally jm.
timaut maintained in a letter to mempcad ceilins cannot be dafendecL
hera ol thii organimtion'a ~te,.
Such an .arranpalent iponla inllllaembly this week that "colle!:li.. bardepartmental and iDten:ampua differgaining
a Boyer I8CCIIII!Dendation
ences and may 'diactiminate apinst
~ the orru..-1 is the only lqal
unusually gifted non-tenured t.i:uky,
"""""'of~ terms lind..... .
ditiona of employmont for p u b1 i c
including and minority group
members as (bey becOme available for
employees ill New York State."
employment in largar numbers.
Ms. GuteDir:auf iiiBisted that "It is
Third, the proceu by which tj!nure
no accideot that [UUP's] propoeals
decisions are made muat be ab:engtbfqr job .8ecurity and on improving
ened to assure that continuing ~
grievance procedures are beil)g - pointment in the Univemity is ezuously resisted bY. the State's oego- •
tended only to tboee .wbo have demtiators at the bargaining tabl&amp;-&lt;md it
onstrated the highest comp9tence and
is probably not coincidental that
whooe future performance can be rea- .
Chancellor Boyer's tenure statement
sooably expected to be professionally
was released to the press When the
excellent
.
State was 'finalizing' its' posi.tioo -on
Fourth, to acb ieve this 1!88ential
job security.
·
goal of an effective prof-xmal re" Many of our coli~" Ms. Guview of each prospective candidate,
tenkauf saia, "still have not QI!ID&amp; to
the criteria and procedure ·for tenure
gri with the ....Utie&amp; of the pteSI!IIt,
decisions on aU campuses should be
of the benevolent yata·
clearly set forth and reflect both
na1ism of 'The IJODd old c~a,ya.•
•
standards of individual prolessional
Ms. Gutenkauf asted that the fol- competenbe ·and the needs and resources of the University,
.
Fifth, each college will .l&gt;e asked to
prepare &gt;m analysis of its current and
projected level of faculty stalling and
estimate the relationship between tenured' and non-tenured faculty durjng
the six-year period 1974-1980.. StrateEDITOR:
gies for maintaining a healthy tenure/
TJ&gt;e decision by Academic Vice: ~
non-tenure balance within and among
President Gelbaum to .terminate my
departments will be de-.ieloped in the
contract raises issues that are signifilocal caropus context.
cant for future policy at this Univer_ . _ , . Rule Continued
•
sitY. Opposing the recommendation
Sixth, the present seven-year rule
for reoewal by 4he Philoeopby Dewill be continued as a requirement for
partment and chairman, and the pertenure- in the ranks of instructor, assonnel committee for the Faculty ol
sistant professor, assistant librarian,
Social Sciences and Administration
and associate librarian. However, the
and the Acting Provost; Dr. Gelbaum
present "prior service credit policy"
attempted to extend the prerogative;
should be made negotiable on a caseof the Adruinistration into one more
by-case basis at the time of appointarea that bad been generally acmrded
menl .It would still be permissible
to the faculty. In an interview with
to count up to three years prior serme, Dr. Gelbaum in&lt;ijcated that acvice credit, but campus presidents
tions such as this one would become
. would have discretion to· negotiate
more frequent-uniess the faculty
this with each newly appointed mem. aligns itself more faitbfully with new
be&lt; of the college faculty.
administrative policy. .
· Seventh, while preserving ·t he posAdmitting that there might _ .
sibility of an initial appointment on
• oo the surface to have been oome form
tenure at- the senior ranks, the time
of discrimination against me, Dr. Gelperiod af.t.er which tenure is mandabaum denied that be bad been gui&lt;led
. tory should be extended lrom three
by political or idi!ological criteiia in
to four year&amp; at· those ranks.· ,
my case, or was influenced by anyone
Eighth, a progrl!lll of profesliional
wbo might be. Rather, be argued that
development to eqtiip faculty to serve
be is-attempting .to unplement new,
in other fielda and for ilppropriate
more stringent criteria in the area of
reassignment to interdisciplinary
reappointments and tenure. The de·teaching and research will be · develcision to terminate me at the end of
oped. Through the use of sabbatical
my first regular three-year contract ..
leave or special study · leaves, most
( the fact that L hod p~;evious one-year ,
faculty members wbo .find thern!lelves
lectureship contracts was not an issue
. in declinini: departments could . ,....
to Dr. Gelbaum) was, be said, a demain profelBionally: productive.
viatinn from the general practice of
Ninth,
might alao explore the
this Univen!ity. However, it is normal
possibility of Clelllinl a certain limpractice at the "great univemilies"
ited number of non-tenured slots ill
where it is unusual to ezpect ~
our institution which ·could be filled
than two or tbiee years, and where
on a rotafing b8sia by .!wmn~•'•'-'
the individual is grateluJ for having
visiting scholars inlen!Bted
~~
bad the oppoltunity to partake of lis
abo~ academic~ Such
superior almooophen,. Only if the ina plan would help provide 8dded vidividual is a clear ~ will be
tality in our academic pro£l'IIJD withor- abe . be given tenure. 'This is the
out jeopardizing thli -.tial prin- ·
way areat Ulli-..ities are made a&lt;&gt;
clple8 of ~ IIMbility•.
conling
to Dr. Gelbaum.
.
Tf!IIIA, ibe maUer ol ~ 'in
~ &amp;aldemica be);! re~ (be •
the UaiYemity obould be 8111JDined.llj)tion that a paticy of hifh. ~
, we may wiab to COII8ider tbe poadble
ol \IIW!nured -~ doe&amp; unprove the
(~010-IS,tol.J)
qUII1ity of edul:aticiL For awry 0118
~

v•nr.._...-,..-

~~~~~
He...
temDe iteclllaas .... made liiQ8t

'·

,

,..a~~

"ttNNID

.rl;er this month that
wblle SUNY wlll lmpoae no ~or
........ quotas ... - . It doeS recotJ;.J; a ·"naed to -mta~n..heart.by

~~Plan of State Uni·

clair," tbe plan ..;d.
"tbatJbe - - ol ~ tenure Is
evulviM aa a -.Jar -.. which llllllnal ail 'tllaald DDt be iiJIIII'8Il We
~a aiNful r-.baatlaa of~­
~-....,....... 'lbe Ql8jor ann
olthle . . . . . lbould be .., retain and
......._ the be* .-Ia ol tenure,
wblle clevelolllba -'IIIUUds ~t
ita$Bible ....._"
~within tbe UDMnity
boove
cueful and tbDucblful atteldiaa to the quMticlll ol tanae. It
timely and --sate that I
~ DOW; ludfC&amp;tilia tbe principlee 011 which the admlniatntion of
tbe . . , . _ . polldea 011 tenure will
be'-!.
'lbB history "of faculty eeoure IS
....U 1mo1m. It -aed early ill this

t.-:o..t: :::r

~lit. ....
.....
~~-:r-Jiallq

n.~-=~ Daoot~uroot

!::.\"'dream

in~-

"We .._
~ with
the Ollloe ~lfelationi for a
IIIUIIIIrCiiotndto IUee&amp;ct-with

-

~~~~rt:rr-£1
-

rc.~ona~

- oar
-. , . . _
......
Aiiloclaliall,
,

orpniatkiD

t:=-li\faa 'cCtli!

ur.r.:~~J.~Uol Uirllli iliifai&amp;iltiona
~

=-..::.

State

emp~ cootinuing Bs&gt;-

pomt~Dent-be~aaa. at tbat. !JI!IOI;iatinl table. 1be ...... gllllll:b material
as your poliqy ~ -- tawm to
tha J'i":-~~~Wr)o m.ome~t.at

whi

._,.;.u.... .. ·~ lllace-

asgi~ ~~fA!
gra~':"~u'-I!!!E_
~ ...,

- ·
...,, ..,..,.
allll· ~
·
~el ~ee Ra:
- • ...,a faith
u the UPR
· •
• ~: • • ;
. "I trust that the State Univert;ey
and the Olllae ol Bmptayee RelatioDs
plan to Ollllduct thelmelves..ntbin the
COI&gt;IItrainla ol the Taylor law and the
pou:ameters of the 1871 Arpemenl
Any propoeeil cMna!ll8 In 1mma and
condltiaaa of
muat be
l&gt;rolqbt to the ...,.otlalins table by the
State:~ be . . . - ~t ""' will
take wha~liiiQ'tia.~
and approprial:e tcr ~- thi f!gbts
of u.a.....,:~_, IIIII rilbts
of our- - ~ - . ~
~ ~._

Bitx

latkms• ~

......,..,._t

Lawler says 'Te~fninalion·~

Raises Wi(ler Policy ls5ues·

we

)'

~·

highly qualified f!!8Cber lllll:b • 8}'Btelll
may tbeoretic811y pro!IUce, there-.will
be III8DY more·taachera Who will bave
lees ~ and wbo will liave
fewer pro11pecta of improving ~Faced with a ~ market situation, p&lt;eaaured · famlt}l- ~ · ieel
forced to CIIIXIOiltlate~ llllnOW, Easily
mastered arees, 8llit- to a~ controversial . - 'l1D8 atmaoRil&gt;er8 not
only malcea it .-ler 1111 direCtly 'violate
freedom of ~ but IIDIOilDI8 ~ an
indirect attack 011 tbe ballc apJrit of
academic freecbD. The fact that~ Boyer bas
backed down an teawe qool:as . refleets stmng CJilii08lticm to this Jl!&gt;licy,
particularly tbrou1b Cb8 ·relaiively
s11xJnt1 faeUity union at C.Q.N."V. This
does not- mean, bcJoloever, that ~
effort will not be made by uniYerllitY
adminialrations to effect this policy
on the quiet.. '
. •
The tnad tD faculty IJIIionimtioD
is a .-It ol a ~ ~
that urilven!ity pql1cial are becoming
lees bene6cial not only to faculty, but
alao to ~Ia and to 8IICiety at large.
'lbe
and eocourqing support that l b&amp;w -received in !be past
few weeb- relleciB the fact that IIIIIIIY
faculty and 111u41en1a not only see ibis
but ..., willilll to act on the basla of
what 'they - .
Tbele ue a larp IIWIIhar of 'Uiltenured pri)f-.. wbo are in a very
llDdeoirable situation. 'lbB normal
~ of ~ and the flourishinJ of ~ -'"!"i 8CbolarshiP de,
pend an a relatively. Bl.ble•ucl encouragm, e n w - t . Whore lonlranp and .'""''l8lii:ive ..or!&lt; is ~
tbaJ1 ....,. a .DelliiiMa7 Clllllllltbt ,fDI'
aciemiflc 1UJd cultural developments,
the idea dlat only a eueplional geniua ~ - a. future may indeed
apply "' areat uru-.itie8- but oofy
in the Miildle Ala '

·gratifyinl

Sin&lt;:enliY.

&lt;.

JAIIIIB uwua
"-l8tant ~

-

��At .,. ~~~ginning of the 20th Oontury~
cuhlltw
iD the midst of odjustlng to • whcM . _ of
~-The writings of Fnucl, the dlniCJIIII)Jftt of
llhabJiiiPirv end cinoma, wi,..• .,..nd vMIIIIIissions,
w -....bile, mas production end the meclr1nlzation
cf· Mi tramiltic .-owinll Plifll lhroullhout the
coiiM:tive poyctres of EurqM end lheiJnitlld ~l_...;onism, Feuvism, lhe Brucke group Inc!
..._ visual ructions to MW weys o~ orgonizing
" ' - . _ . , . . , but It not-until the widosprud
..,._end dnpoir of World Wer I tNt the im~ of the
.-ipatent meclrine, the .._twmon eve of the comer•
tire svnthtsis of c:reotive forces cryotallized in ..,

w..m

~.lllti-.n-..t-Didl.
~.lll*!nln
"The

1aaa

-oi

~~

mer

the .,....._ · Slnlll'

Gratw.:,"- .the

4111111' ..,. were

the

fto!n Wblr!h uriPi.C..•tlld mixed mlllia" pie·

~

non-nerrltiYe tlleoM, el!l)8rlments in simul·
11neity, ~. lflythm.. were iounc:hecl. Through
1heir IIOPtive ruction to Inc! rejection of IBChnology,
1he Dodoists were the first group of multi-media ertists
"' ........,..... a..t ..........,t on tllehnology wilhin

...... -.t:
•
HUIID IIIII. flllow writers. drernotistl, IS well IS
wisull ertins, such IS JHn Arp r i Kurt Schwitten. tried
., deli bolh __.tationllly Inc! conceptuolly with
the ..,...,....ment of tiiChnology upon their l!ves. In his
cfOMY. Boll wrote:
.
.. 1814. when I thinking owr the pt., of •

..W

__

ttleeft, I w. c:omlinced of this : a thNtnt
Mk:h eKPjlrirnentl blyond the (tlllm of dly-to-dlty

__

==':'~=-':~on~:"~

....... but "' .., _ . . ;.. · The .......
.........,,
....
._, . ,._
.,-olcolan.----bo

..
"'""""'istic

. -·

-itongulfi~J;I·-···
Contrery
to 1M Dodo vision ·of being swlilowed by
prDCeiSIS. many ertistl ere now - i n g in

--jol
__
.,. . . . . . ,. . .
_i_lo _. ....__
nolotW -V· TMr 1111111 - · --~~~ tloo
lfodlnlpooipljlntti
........ lorldtll.. .... "" ....-.
1hlol 4annll

achnologic:li media, which lncludiS oy.- th-v.

..,..,..,.._, video, .,..nd svnthesis Inc! computer gon·
erWid an. in oddition to the long-otandlng modla of .
painting Inc! oculptura. ""'-' ere also oww words within

._,ibe
Ia.,.... -'Y ai

inventlld ·processes •
there ere MW
such
fortran to procoos
intornYtlon. Sound modulations can be trameribed into
visual patterns,, Inc! visual patterns jnto. sound. Through
video ~ loops, MW i..._ ara gonerWid Inc!
ragoneratlld, Inc! through the energy circuit, deVelop a
life of their own. Art can deli with mo'!8menl Inc!
enetvY representationlily • well IS bec:ome., anliogue
iaf9oago to

the

0~- illelf.

Warren Brocley, i l i - r of · M.I.T. Science

wrote In 1967:

nw.

is" -•

new

PGNntill

;..o...ind .nvironment if

c.mi&gt;.

for lhring fn 1

we mlrllly cen think

·our _, out of 1M._ procluc:tion ..,...allty'8fld
into the irnmenM choice end fun that indultrv'l
. new talents end teChnology c::en INke ewilable.
lmegine heVing meny, rreny forms of t1'11ft1PC)f18~
tion ctesiar-d to different use~. petSOnlll teste end
.m.tiC"
- It is the ertist whO the tepiiCity to creete
thi1 wrillbility, end to \118 and to meke "!f.wnt
what k outside the ' '8cc:epted IVItllmS.': He qm
point OUJ: ,..aationlhiPI .thlt were not seen before.
'lhe artit1 c::en crwtt the IUf'Prists that fOf'IIINdow
greet new culturllf inwntiont to rnetch our techni·
cal edvences. But "lilce .the t echnologin, the artist
mull unl e~m hi1 obloletetnce and if'jtentely Slnl8
the r:etevanc:e qf. the new technology • a source of
raw material.
..
\ ~ '
It il by Uli ng the ,..,.,. and m«M of
technology that the ertist: will help Ul to under·
nand the teehnology with which we liw. Artistry
• tnd indultry ~ can help ~ • PloPte-

ltYI•:

theKtlon .

"' '

It's not unu$ilal for the 811i11s end 'udrnleln to
exec:ute wortts jointly • the expottlse- of the tlodttik:lan
is of utmoSt I~ 10 tire Of blrtlill
artists' projec:ts. Technology 1hen blcamll In. Intrinsic
part of the art work. Tha sound t.:hniclm who makes
aesthetic decisl0111 about the _ , . ~ ba !'-" at a
concert or .the olectronlelst who opal8tas" a tepe delay
system or a frequency foil- ~rlfllla llica of music
is ... artist.
During May, GaiiMy 218 and W&amp;FO"wlll tnltiete 1n
envirOnment for IIICplltrnlna" In~ ~­
Gallery 219 will ......... ...,_~ -.~&lt;~.
compuW graphlol, outdoor ........."" ,...,. end
films. WBFO broadcaltS wllllnduda Oodillt j)Oetry, live
presentations ·of oww muolc,....,te!VIews wi1h wtlsts Inc!
.it criti&lt;:s, Inc! , _ c:oncopts In radio.
Gallery 219 ••. ~- ~~ aspo;ct of .
the projec:t Is Its .a.~Mear Gta:tlnt:libi!Jit
11011011 seern "to ~11till!lllhlllr lntaraetlon in '
· the enY!ronment. nr.Y·n M ~"'iiliili o.;..,;C •anciinorvanlc. l'erformanc:ils ·on Wl!fQ. ~ ariel Cit.
cussions, will be prasantlld /iw"llnd ,......._ c:h.,...
in sociuv • thev are h-ing.
·•. '
•
Rusint.k
1- r.'
~: .. 7 ~Tteible

Cl&gt;nsiine

....

ori---·

In tho joint.-.,.. of this
hina il'llights to the otbw end there
f'Nih eJUa.tenee to be •JCPWienced . I beliew people will went in . Thlv will .....,t
the perdcipetlon in inwntion that rNIW t'Kh-

-a.. eect1

bec:Om. i _.... of

think~ ~ ~

Matt peOple mista_;y
:'
heir a piece of music, thlt. they.,. not dol,.,.
... io boi"JJ _
_,.,
them. Now mil ... nol tNe, Md ~ .......
our. . mUii:t. . . mtat .,.,..... our .,.. we ""*- .

f

.......;... but tloot -

......,. .....,..... • ....- . oo,ttiot_f&gt;O!&gt;Pe'....,;a

"' 1Mt thly "thefNNIWI ... doing 'h1 andl not~ - .
IOfMthing ii being done to them. ' f
-.
'
I" '

'1 »..,C,l i'

((.)

G..• A '1

• ., Wo;jiiiW:
'
·-----~'"""'"
.

.~-.;.

_

CMDITI .

"'*

-4!0··-.
.....
.....................

. 0...: ~

..... - . . - Kli!Ollc--

- -i..n
-""

--jlind~

--~
-·
. - -..........uu:.;
t -.

~
PIOIIoct ........... - Inc! . .....,...s II¥
Oviltine llulililllt who is • ........ . of the Arts
~ of UUA8, wi1h 1M holp of Sharon TIU,
G*v 218 -~. 0.0. co.m-. and Ralph
......._ .~ In Art.AncUM:!r......., is ._.jo!nt
·e flart of .... .Arts ~ and W8FO. Wllf()'' •

KtiWitles -

: _ . , . . . bv WBFO ..., ....,_,

........ T;_.blii, Wally Gaiew*l, Merola Atdl 1&lt;1!1 Tenv
·G.O.. The Art "-arc:h Cantoir ....,..uon WIS
~-· by ' the

U/8· Foundetlon with •
-.~rillution from thi Offlc:e of Cultu,.. Afflin. Special
~hera ere extoondacl to tire Film Colllmlttlil (UUABl.
aiid to the ·s - Briirch of
lnstitl*. of~
anc1
eng;.....
·

e---.

it..

~R'ml/UIB~D1-ARTAHJ?~9LOGY
J~·"':I&lt;P.M ~~~·
•
.
..
•

\;..»

�""**·

Holmut
oc:tor, speaker and co-founder of
e.-tile 4'33". Currendy workingj n Berlin, Mr. Krauss --'
perfonns d!wnatic pieces and reailings for radio as well
musicians involved with
as working with avant• musical theatre. He has tr§Veled extensively in Europe,
- with Eberhard Blum and for - the past four years has
-specializad in performing" Dada .Pieces. Presendy Mr.
KrauJO is writing a rock opera with f.rinkenstejn as a
theme. After. hlt -rancs in Buffalo.' Mr. Krauss will
premiere· a Louis de Pablo piece at the "Days for New

9arde

-- MUsic'' 'festival

~oo~

._." .}\&gt;-

To continue with WBFO!o dey-long Broadcast
8875]4 on: Mav 17, Jan Williams Will join forces· with
• Eberhard Blum at 9 pft._ to present two more rendiVons
of 'S tockhausen's Spiral. Mr. Williams, who stodied with
· Paul Price lt,the Manhattan School of Music; has been a
member of the Center for the Cre8tive and Performing
·Arts ~ SUNYAB:.since 1964. In 1970, he co-founded
the S.E.f!l. Ensemble-a group which has performed new
... music both nationally and abroad .

-·
,,.).

)

..,.

iO Bremen, Germany .

....

Fridalt. MayJ t7r from · Ui p.m., Ensemble 4'33".
(Ebem.d-Blum,'lrid Helmut Kniuss) will present a live
broedc!!(:.Of'.li-~~~-~ ~i-o?iied lnstr~menial a{ld
SI&gt;Qken ~. ranging J,ro.m Dada word poems to a flute
composition - ·created this year, each of Whicl\ ls
.scheduled" to be repeated several times throultlolit .the
four-hour .event. KllniWIIIIB .by Hiigo Ball, Spiral by
Karlheinz Stockhausen, "10/o" for .fluf1t by Jobn Cage,
and UtTDnB111 by Kurt Schwitters ·are among works ~9
be pertormed. listeners are invited to the wefO stJJdioS.
to obServe the musicians in ,action during this Rl!d io
E"ent.

A special feature of '1lle ·dldy program "This is
Radio" will be an interview on ~,May 20, ·3 p.m.,
with Morton Feldman, internationally kMwri
arid professor of composition at Ufe. Mr. FeldrMn Slee Professor in residence in 1972-73 and presendy acts
as artistic advisOr to the" Center for the Creative and
Performing Arts.
·&lt;
In the course of )he interview, a premiere broad·
cast of his piece for cello and on:hestra, -performed· by
the Boston Symphony Orchestra under' the d irection of
Michael 'Filson Thomas, will be-presented .
' ·
Max Neuhaus, electronic musician and composer
said, u~uch of Feldman's music; blacalse it is so soft,
has the•effect &lt;Jf putting a magnifying ~on that area
of dynamics between pianissimo and piano- we find all
~rts of things we never saw before. Because of the
extremely quiet nature o( . . [T7le King of O...,ril,
much of it can only be h~rd (at least, in One sense of
the word) on a recording."

com-'

Robert A. Moog Will demonstrate arld discuss _the
music synthesizer that bears his name. Moog equipment
has revolutionized the production and performance of
electronic music, making elaborate paraphernalia and
time-consuming "studio techn iques" a thing of the past.
' This event can be heard May 21,3 p.m. on "ThiS
is Radio." ·

WBFO

oo~~©[}{]rn@GJJ[Lrn@

EYEITS

"Transistor Radios on 1he Moon"
An experimental drama produced at the Center for
Audio Exploration in Madison, Wisconsin.

BOSTI
A discussion with members of the Buffalo Organ ization
for Social and Technological Innovation, Inc., on archi·
•teclure-a f'teld which fuse ~ technology with the aesthetic.

N-Music
_
Eberhard Blum, flutist,~boro ' in Germany, 1940,
has studied with Aurels Nidot and Severino Gazzelloni.
Mr. Blum has premiered new compositions by Stock·
-hausen, Dagel, Alsina, Shinohara, ' de .Pablo ilnd
Fukushima. - and has toured extensively throughout
- Europe. He has been a member of }he International
O)amber Ensemble, was co-founder of the "Gruppe
Neue Musik" and of Enwrnble 4'33"; and is presendy a
Creative Associate with the Center-for the Cr8ative- af'd " ·
Performing Arts.

.,

.

Rebroadcast of a concert of New MUsic, presented by
Margaret Scoville, composer, and Paul Schlossman,
oboist, and originally broadcast live by WBFO on
Tuesday, April30.

Convei'Sitions wilh .. ..
Rudolph Arnheim, author of Entropy and Art, Visual
Thinking, Film BS Art, and Art and Visusl Perception,
among others. Steina and Woody Vasulka, artists in
residence at Media Study. Inc., who are developing new
techniques and concepts in video and audio-and other
distingu ished artists and critics. '

illilJ?ill ~ [ID

lAYER-.

Futo Sc111b

Atkecs

Mav.ltr is president - of Ionic Industries,
Morristown; N.J., producers -of se'venil tVPes of masic
~ ~synthesizers. He h• the u'nique distinction of biing the
only gr.duate of the Juilliard School of Music to major
in aocordi.an. May 23 it 3 p .m. on "t:his is Radio," Mr.
Mayer will clemanstrata Ionic's "Digionic," a smili'compu18f device disigneci' to be uS.ct in·-.li.nction with .
' 6ther syrm..izing equ'ipmont. 'Tlie memory systen\ of

...
"..)itliO!MC" - · it to ..-play """""""' on
tho snY1fiasiur-...a; in...rt.d, or • rindom, lild
can. be dWigod •without ._ing -4iev.• Seys
Maywr ''Tirii- ~IC deWlaPmant inn oingrowth of
peat' niuslc,lt ls18Chn01oili Cau:lriili upw~ 1rt.

tlompao

H

• •

_. -

· Take part in this experimental game of Radio Scrabble
while WBFO staff members invent, with your assistance,
words of the future, unknown .up until the moment 'of
their creation, live, on radio . .

Cllanllll Swiu:hint
An experiment in audio description. Much like a painter
describes an object with canvas and brush, musiCians will
attempt-to Create sound portraits of Objects with musical '
instrUments and voice.

"""'u............ -,. . .

·Poetiv which -

out of~

fliti..Y

~

nicient discovery of

' self~ and. a ruction-~nology will be

broa&lt;lcm througl&gt;out tha month.

'-"

�....

c,___

-

~ 11011D1t. a..y lnl, 2ndft0or .........

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

" ..... ......._..ftD!ng

u.y 1-31
Golleri Hours:

.....

..·...............
-... ....
--.-.,............

.FRIDAY ... MAY 17
~

...., __

SllndiV I-Ii p.m.
Tuoodly, Fridoy 12-4 p.m.
7-IOp.m.
lloncWt, Wodneodoy, 1hursdly 11 Lln.-6 p.m.

~w--.vl

U....MdOIIMn.

v-..-.....

11:tl0 cioMpola'SIORWI. with

§

:~

12:00 'W~--:-·-UNK~

Weclnnd.y Moy I - Exhibit 11011011 _-ing 8 p.m,

,
A.R.C. Outdoor Balloon Demonstration to coinciclo
with Gollefy Opening (CIII83Hill7 for euct location)

1:00

um n Helmut K
· ~: Kll&lt;t'~; Hu
~Janos n Ka1lleinz Sto

.

Live int8ni.W ond ·diM:Ussion with Art R....n:h Center

Thundly May 2 -

Artists, 2-6 p.m. (WBFO 88.7)
.

·.
.
Mixed Medio pmentotion on Art ond Technology by

.....

IIJS74 Rlldlo I
~4'33"

~t

t:OOp.m.

Art RiS.on:h Center, 9 p.m., Fillmore Room, Norton Holl.

1:116
1:26

continuous - "

K.1heinz Stocll

"

Kurt11obwittMI

.."1:30

~t

"ENVIRONMENTAL INSTALLATION"
by Rolph Jones
.

1:35'
1 :46.

•• ,f.0&lt;11JII8toDep&lt;
John Cage: ' 'sol

This """nt will toke ploce on the front lawn ot H es H&lt;oll -throu!tlout the month of
Moy. dey ond night. (see page 8 {o r further explanot ion)

2:00
2:06

Announcement
Kurt Schwitten
Ralpfl Jones&gt;s.
Announcement
KariiHiinz Stocl
Hugo Ball: Kon
Kun&amp;twwi!ten

'

2:40
3:10
3:15
· 3:25

lecture
~ur.day

May 2- · Rudolf Arnheim speaking p n ''The Nature of Photography"
Acheson 70, 8 p.m. Sponsored by Media Studies, Inc.

.3:30

..-..~t

~Rolph -'!!Qin :1So1A!J$t?~fter;

Moy 13-17. and

Moy 19

~ '«AArlheiot

Stocl
Hugo Boll : Kon
~and an.;.,
Ralph .Jones: S1
Kurt.Schwitter.
- John Cage: "so
pieces to_be performed:
•Karlllelhz Siactr.hauto"''Spi"
wave., receiver
• John'!Gago&gt;'looiO'I.tor-flulll 1•
piano ond orchestra (1957-611)

3:35
3:55_
4 :00
4 :06
4 :20
4 :55

conc:ert
So•nday May 12- Performance of Rainforest (Oavid Tudor) by David Tudor, .
•
•
Bill Viola. John Driscoll, linda Fisher, Martin Kalve, and Ralph
Jones at The State Univel'llity College at Buffalo.
Communication Center
Two performances: 1 p.m. and 8 p .m. Call 831-4507 fo r more
information. Sponsored by The Center fo r tbe Creative ahd
• 1 •
~rforming Arts.
'J
~- •
.•
• .• ~ ..

•Fo~aiD """""'' Cohzone,

Continuous showings of tapes by local video artists. Gall;ry
4

~~~4 l P:·.!":,J ., ~

·,- :J

s..-..-~ r;..~1r&lt;,

J1':,3(1

'· ,rJ. ...,t·

. ' ·,l&lt;;urt. ~ Uclooito (1

•Hugo Ball :

1wn

filins

ALL THINGS.c:oNSIOERED
A ni!tltly·radio •..._.ine" ol
the day

6:30

,CONCERTHALL-wi1hTorn
Randall : Muclgett:' Monlllogue
Wuorinen: Time's Encpmium
Varese: o.r.ity 21.5
Poerne Electronique (·
Janson: Canon for O.ambir {)
Feldman: Out of "Last Pieces'
Intersection 3-

8:00

NEW NEW MUSIC· wi1h Lee
A progrom of, rnqsic end discu
AUDIO,EXNIUMENr- wi1h
A live"lom•~&lt;:~~.in Studio 1
~;&amp;_Spir:-i,' plus disi
and Ebertwd Blum ~ followe&lt;
Stoclthau..,'s Spiral
SYNOPTICON • wi1h BiU Mo1
"ldus.in ICionce fiction grow
already token over)."
-_!~ejection letter from • sc
BRICKBATS·wi1hl'otFoldb
A 'spec'-1 cnmatic presentotio
Scenwio:• A pley. on~me-wa 1
"911trol, heraJolornnliscove•
that, chances.- youtdidn't e1
coiK:Iusion that will reveal all 1

Computer generated fil ms by John Whitney (Call 831 ·51 17 fo r dates and t imes)

informal lactu·re
Ralph Jones. a Creative Associate,.will discuss his works. (Time to be announced,
call 831 ·5117 for more complete information}

computllr music
Music compiled by Peter Gena of the Music Department at the State University of
New York at Buffalo can be heard during the month in Gallery 219.
(see page 8 for more informati on)

9:00

12:00

!:00

.·
.ADDITIONAl INFORMATION
For information aliout the 0f1110ing ond spontoneous
ewonts th.r will occur during the month, dial 831-6117
(UUA8) ond 831-6383 (WBFO): A free WBFO l'rQgrom
Guide, wi1h ~ information, can bo obtained by
coiling tho sutlon.
.

Korawone- ~19·17)

5:00

�INSIDE THE CHANGES c with Bill Sevino. An exploration of Mc:tronic: innov-ions

.

~~

Oecompesitlons -Compositions bV myself and two of 111Y ~. Rm-t Previte
and RicNrd Schul"'!"
May 12 Art Emanblo of Ooiclgo • Sounds of downtown Timbuktu
~

6

May 19 Q. Wh- hos two heads lind 12iegs? A. Tlie Herbie Hencock·eddio ~ SexteL
May 26 a.mn- Reruns- of tiN? of my pieces of coli~

..- • Monday Mey '20 INTSIVIEWWITH oiSTINGUISHED COMPOSER, MoRl;ON FELDMAN ON "THIS
IS RADIO" HOSTED BY WALTER GAJEWSKI. -3 P.M:

Mondays 9 p.m. CONCERT OF THE WEEK
May 6

Morris Kni;lt: Miracles, for chorus and instrumental ensemble
W.oyne_~: Who were so ilark of.hn!l
.·
t..lie Adsm1: Three choruses: Madrtp(. Hosanna to the Son of Dtvid, and Toll Toles

te

. ~· ' ~
,;.!_,

~

Edwwrl Mattila: And Then a Lot~l. for chorus, tape and dancers
Robert Mol)ftn: ~Ill : Klang, Premiere
Lori• ChobaniMJ: The ld
·
'
AMon Copland: Emblems; Aaron Copland, conducting Universiry of K.nsas cn.mbor
Oooir and lnstru....,QJ Ensemble; James Rolston, conductor; University of Kansas
Symphonic Band; Roblrt Foster, conductor ·

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'b!moonlb'Cio&lt;:!&lt;

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May 20

df r•1kt.-".tt';.of
:tl:.....,Cf''Jti

.to)t

i.(etlll'lloDUiryl•
piAl (cOntinuiJlgl

't-.:'2,_,_ rt

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lternoon/5 o'dock
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~fT...... llnMBity Of Wiiconsin New·Music Sy.m,.,.ium
Ktnl HuSIJ: String Chlartet Np. 3 (19681
Pro Arte String Quartet
Apotheosis of this Earth, for Wind Ensemble (19711
University of Wisconsin Wind · Ensemble; H. Robert -Reynolds, Conductor ·
Music for Prague (19681
University of-Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra; Karel Husa, conductor

: :~

Tu~ay

Jl;l,av ~1 . 1NTE~VIEW ~IT!t RO.BERT A ._MQ9G- 3 P.M. ON "THIS IS RAD~O"

_,

,;,&gt;&lt;! •
~....

1;;.1

Wednesdays- MidniQht- POWER TO THE MASSES· with. Walter Gajewski. Twentieth CentUry Music
May 1 .Penderec/r.i: Passion According to Sain~ Luke (Part II
May 8 Panderecki: Passion According to ~int Luke \Conclusion)
May 15 Ligeti: Requiem for soprano
May 22 -Henry: Messe de liverpool- -....
,. '~ "' 1ilt'1 .. ~-..
May 29 PencMrecki: Dies Irae (Auschwitz 0nrtorio) ~-l· ·
r ~ ' ';l,..(v·

1!\d 1Picall6',_,. cotdr1lfoc '
6C·'\'Ce r} tnJ eiri.i tO bf'!u

Of'l~ t q

:l&lt;lc!JC. (197tJ¥ !fOr: fl\lQI•. rl!J I&amp; R•
"in.•(~~IJI'tiil'ti weaer•1
ieee.for spo/akei'~ri -f6u( m~"!"ents
15J)e81C:efl ·•...
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..

Thursdays 9 p.m. EXPERIMENTS IN ART AND TECHNOLOGY- A series \of lectures and programs
' focusing on ttie month·s theme- stretching and expanding the current boundaries of
thought on-art, technology and futurism.
May 2 "The World of 1994"- A special two-hour symposium on the changes we face in the
next 20 years. The program was recorded at the annual meeting of the American
Associatibn for-the-A&lt;!vancement of Science held in San Francisco .

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May 9

•')10

May 16 "Collaboration and Creativity" · A speech about the succeso of groop.efforts in the
field of architecture, delivered by Israeli architect, Moshe Safdie, who is best k-nown for
his design of "Habitat" at Montreal's Expo '67. The speech is part of the Doubleday
Lecture series
•

- ondlEiilftl.nfllhom"i"l!J&gt;
:ussion Wrlion'&gt;of Karttteinzt;...,
11\e Dada mode l&gt;Yt'.-..Wimanl.
:ussion&gt;&amp;nd flute duet df.-3' ~ &gt;~c
~
;\.. ." ... ~.,r. ... ·;::~"'"' i

Ill -;;:r•~

And as a warm-up for the special BROADCAST 887574 Radio .Event, we will air
CITY ~!oiNKS, WBFO's Ohio State Award-winning program of new music

~~c-~ (T 01("..-?,

terv quicklrt~·t.m.. ~

1111 magazine

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.... .... ,iklt

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&gt;aid Bins entitlecf." Untllled' '·
&gt;ther insidioustiflithci'ds of•tnin.
!Ctad,• urosuspected •nd .&amp;oilais
~ wu·going on. With -.,lhocl&lt;ing
-:.. ~~-1!• ·

• r~

. May 23 The Futurist Thinkers: Father Anthony Schillaci on "Cinema: Humanizing the
Technol~ical Environment" and Marshall McLuhan's usual stream of future
consciousntiss. discussing among other things, how outside has become inside and
vice ve~
May 30 Computer Composer Peter . Gena discussing and playing tapes of h is computer·

~·,..

?

~· ..-~. 1.-;t .JJRa'"

Author and mediathinker Gene Youngblood on media, from a speech recorded in
May, 1971. In his boqk, The ExfNI(KI«J Cinema, he says, "The Paleocybernetic Aile
witnesses the concretication Ot intuition and the secularization of religion throu!tl
electronics."
·

v,~:.,, '~~"~:t•"

student'~

...

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Thur&gt;dayMay 23 DEMONSTRATION BY ALFRED MAYER OF THE " DIGIONIC" cqi!PUTER
DEVICE AND OTHER MUSIC SYNTHESIZING -EQUIPMENT- 3 P.M. ON
"THIS IS RADIO"

n NIIR'ln WiihlrijtDn 1 O.C.
atures, analysis and the 'hews of

·~··

~{!
t•

generated music
Fridays midni.;tt SYNOPTicON -with Bill Maraschiello
A synopticon is an index of ideas. This month Synopticon wilt focus on the literature
of ideas - speallative fiction with readings from Arthur Clarke, Harlan Ellison, Ray
Bradbury, John Brunner, and other refugees from the mundane paths of literature green 'c heese of the airwaves!

r: ··"'·

'

~~·~,8~1NAR'I'AND~O~Y

t.APIUL 211,11174

........

�in 1963 a eooperative gallery called

neW center u.s. an

was founded in kansas city. miSsouri. the founders of
this gallery were part ofan ualiStract" segment of.lhe 15
artists in -the...co-op. their background and impetus was partially influenced by ttia bauhaus and moholy-nagy
Bnd the new bauhaus in ct:!icago. the co-op was dj_ssolved
in 1964.
in 1964 the original idea for a.r.c., art researdl center
was conceived. visit with Oaum gabo, cOnn. by twQ
group artists, 6/65.
other artists- and people fiom di-ve·rse disciplines became
interested in inter-communication-holding ~a series of
weekly meetings'"for. Pa~and discussion thrOugh 1965
in kansas ci.ry. miSSOUri: ·
r
the fii'St'''Organirc:J;exhibftiDn; ot a.r.c. was ttetd in the
late fall of 1966 at the ~kansas citY, missouri publ ic
library. ·
the first Public seminar program of a.r.c. was held at
linda halt library of science and technology conjunctive
with the third a.r.c. exhibition. the 3 week SVrJlPOsium
was entitled relationships of art and science and
technoiO!!Y, 4/67 .

two art research center artists tour: north· and eastmake .firs\ contact with ~ ~ . number ofi ndividuals and
groups (1st meeting with anonima group, n.y.) and
mounted .package.exh'ibition in montreal 8/67.
the first exchange exhibition sponsored by 8.r.c. was the
work of laurence booth, chicago, in kansas city, missouri

1/68:

-

.

·,

'

the first informal "barnsto rming" event by a.r.c. was th' ·
group presence in buffalo, new york, 3/68, during the
plus by minus · (fifty yeilrs of constructive artl show.
a.r .c. organized a u.s.·canadian group contere(ice (in::- ·
cluding fusion des arts group, usco group, a.r.c.) and
shoWed two small exhiDilio.ns at the universi~ the
state unive~ity. a.r.c. hai~ J:!ed~ih'i6ft!wls..Jn""'liiliS ci~
missou ri; kansas city, kansaS; montr"tlaf;t;"Que ~
bost6n , ·
massachusetts; . buffalo, new yor~; new .york.. City; st.
joseph, missou ri; zagreb, yugoslavia;,.m~. 9nsas.1
·o~r publications {a.r.c. magazine·atsf!Jtari ng't'Wi'ce Yearly)
·are distributed throughou.f~e united states, canada. and europe.
the first formal multi·m:;t~ P!t~age lecture pre~ntation
by a.r.c. was at missouri ~ter'!_ college, ~69. ... · ..i.· )

,

r '

'l'honl8i "MicNal l!lbpt.n is curTendy an active
member of A.fi.C. He h• "'DD''cod conoistet)dy in' 'man'(
of oonnructlvism since 1963. Ra ha'worlced mOst
with th~ ldiletfc conittuc:tion butil• alsci
been ~ In pfi'o!Dgraphy, '.;riting. .leCturing,
thNtre, computer art work and clos9&gt;. si8pt,ens - a
founder of Art R-.:11 c.ntar ond is known for his ·
c:looe osoc,iotlon whi( tliis' gri.up, whh which ha has ·
shown' oild published ' wOnis intani'.tiOnOlly. recendy
~nii In 1he New
6 8itrillitioii' oind '
confwnnce. in~. Yugoslm•. and a Eu._ tour: .,

-,..-ondenci.

-·

'-

...;

~- ~

the· artist's conscioushess of his ·position in tha iociol
' contract h~ i~nsifiod, ha no b9f te.ts
-with this ability ·to mutullly evolve idee a n d - ·
lhe displaced empheis
consistency~of sty.le;' idontlfylng ~ristlcs of•·work,- 'lllk•~ wav to(. 'l'l!Jionll
bases of CfUtion more entirely.-n. staJ&gt;hans

clehnsi.,.

on

=-

�Phllip Von Voorn is originally from Amsterdam,
Tho NethOrlands, and is currendy on associate member
of A.R.C. He is,. presently the head of the Design
Department at Northwest Missouri State College. He
...,ived his BFA from Southern Missouri State and
MFA from Kansas University in 1969.
Van Voorst bu ilds scrolls of curVed surfaces in
plexiglas ·that are striated horizontally and vertically.
Tho sheets of striated plexiglas for th is exhibit are
constructed with detef'mined .progression 6f ·nterterence
for moire - with tight.

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---------byA.R.C.

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AS AN ARTIST LIVING IN THE MIDDLE
I personolly om involved with
aesthetically representing life
OF THE 20TH CENTURY I FIND
in th is -era
MYSELF BElWEEN ALL THE AESTHETICS
AND PI:IILOSOPHY OF THE PAST MILLION YEARS
my work is multi-medio ond my
Sculpture "i-1 -multiplex - response"
is an exomple of ICtive ponicipotion

.._....--~-·

ofthe-..s
OF MAN'S EXISTENCE ON THIS PLANET
it is 1 piece th.r has electronic sonoors
AND THE OPEN DOOR INTO THE INFINITE
th.r elkMI the sculpture·to be m.,ipulotad ond
controlled by ~· ..-ing obout it
the sculptoro-- ond

---~ly ·- ·
of ..,t·ond sound
FUTURE WHICH OUR ADVANCING TECHNOLOGY
she m o r e - irwolwd the
more _,..,..x ... the sounds and
light"""'bu~

rwquires _ , 1 hours, and as the rows of !*loons.,...,
siowty higher and higher into the lhomoon eir,
....,t is ......_iod by rocordod eloc:tfonic music,
llrilll pieces -..-1 by A.R.C. mombon and Robert
Scoaliotti, • music:1on and
who "-tlv
~- A.R.C. projocU.- the structure is
firiolty oloft.·-int in the ........... ......._ plont .
In
~ film,~ . . llkod.ID holp
pull. it iniD 1 .nos of ollffotwrt geometric~

their

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of

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ott.:hed

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dinwllionel _ . . . . • ._
-""1 of tilne It has infinit. ~ltv . . ..

the

This wii-~IIP. It.,.,_......_on-,.
'

....,7~~ ~ 11/8 ~IN A&amp;T Afil)ftCIQ«)LOGY I AP.aiL IIi, 1t7t

IS BRINGING ABOUT
ond Iince IIOOPia obout it more er les
tw1domly ............... has. founh

t.

......

-ZBIGNIEW ILAZEJE .
1 - In T-.• _. II ...,.
on 1o1ft froni 1M Electric Gollety

ZloilrHw ......

riluti,.

1 wgtt

�..._C. v.r ._...

~~· - bQm .ln 19421n
He~ wi1b a B.S. In llla1he- •
M M.I.T. in 1.11811 ..c1 . . - I an M.S. In IIWIM'
IIIMlco M R.P.I. In 111118. Alfir two y-. In a cloc:toqi
...,.,_ • R.l'.l., lie !!1ft 10 wen at 11a11 .MrotpCe
eon..., in ltniCIUral analyils .--ell of finite .-..n
. . . . . for , _ tnnofw, nonli.- buckling- thin
.,.. ~- He wcned daoely with compu18B
..cl .....,. inw.tlld 1ft eculpture thi"CJI41 forms JIO!I·
emec1 ..c1 plotted by the computer. ·He left full-time
-'&lt; at Ball Aenlopaca in 1971 ond wls accepted as 1

......., ,._ Yoott.
~

0

0

fNshman In the SUNYAB Art Department.· He is
......,11y -'cing on an M.FA in Art with~ teaChing
~ip. majoring in communications design. He
exhibited in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery of..
"Sei4CIIdWorks ofljaudenu ofSUNYAB" in 1973:-He is
contributing 1 miihematicaily &lt;:e&gt;nstructed, plexiglas
..,lpture.

OOElW[g

IARRISOII ~
In Exhibit 11011011 Dave Garrison, who is from
Buffalo, will exhibit several of his computer grilphics.

Si'nCe 1968, Dave Garrison has used computer rendered

designs, some of which have been used as a basis for his
Paintings. Mr. GarrisoO has~ won awards fo r"' both his
drawings and paintings. His roost recent accomplishment
was his acceptance in the highly competitive ':34th
Western Ne;, York Exhibition 1974 . The paiiiti ng
selected will be on exhibit at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery from Aprif 19-May 26.
• " Dave Garrison has also shown in the 5th Inter·
national.._ New Tendencies exhibition in Yugoslavia, an
international exhibition in Bordeaux. France. and the
Poltoc.Js:_Gallery in T&lt;wonto. CllfTently he has Works in an
exhibit traveling throu9hout Europe in conjunction with
the Art ResearCh Center••Kansas City, ~issou ~.

The selection Was compiled by Peter Gena pwho is
a member of the MUsic Department at the State Univer·
of New Vorl&lt; at Buffalo and recorded by Charles
CasavanL The wor,k.S of h.nnis Xenakis, Charles Dodge,
Lejaren Hiller. Gena• .and Leslie Kleen were chosen for
._
~
the exhibition.
The computer mUsic can be heard in Gallery 219
duJing the month o! May.

sit\t

For Exhibit 11011011 , Ralph Jones, a member
of the Creative Associates, is producing an Environmen. ,..,
·tal Installation. The installation consists of five·indepen·
. dent but functionally identical sound.produciOg cirCuits,
the prime characteristic of which ·is a r~ponsiveness to
changes in their immeaiate environment. Installed in the
tops of five tiees in the lawn area in front of Hayes H~all
(as .indicated on the map}. these circuits reSpond con·
tinuous~y to wihd: a~d ~-lter_nat!IY to li~ by d~ • •and,.
·- light and temperature by mght. 'Tii.l \::fo~fktenstu:s of
ft.le sounds which they produce are determined by these
responses.
_
.
Gb out and see! Return at different times of day
or night and discover what changes ~t. Have a smoke
and relax on the lawn. cheCk-it oUt at sunset, when the
sound;·· should change. most radically:. ~YO:U .willi'Very
swiftly gain an understanding of how the circuits are
reacting to their environment.
...
~
This event will take Place on the front lawn of
Hayes Hall throughout the month of· May; da'l and
night.
~
Diagrams and maJ&gt;S.r~~ted t? the inst'allaJ:_1on will:
be on view in Gallery 219; and Mr. Jones will speak
informally on his work (date to be annourK:ed).
'
In addition, Mr. Jones' piece, $aturdw Attsr: ~.-.
noon/ 5 o'clock, will .be performed live Friday, May 17,
on WBFO as part of th~ Broadcast 887574-flad!o
Even't. It will be performed tWiCe t&gt;:eiw~n 1 8nd'.S~.m.
by the Ensemble- 4'33" (Eberhard Blum and Helmut
Krauss) as part-of their cyclical presentation. ' •. _ .. ,..
Ralph Jones_ is currently working towards his "
M.A. in music composition at U/8. His background .
includes composition ,studies with Julius Eastman, Jacob
Druckman and Morton· Feldman, studies in electronic
design wi_th Robert A. Moog, and research in video with
Woody &amp; Steina Vasulka.
His piece for Flutes was- recently. performed by
the Creative Associates at the Evenings for N~ Music at ...
the Albright·l&lt;:nox Art Gallery.

T~®~ [P.GDu[gOO

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PEOPLE

Films by John WhitnW ~ill be ifll'luded in the
exhibit . .WI\itney •• president of Motion Graphics, Inc.:
1s ......,dy
research in computer

DERIVATE FROM AN IMAGE
involves th• tra~onnation of the ift\81111 of a •bilc..t· given in
dirk.-.- 1-.ls. into its ..dlrivation. •• This transtonn.tiOn
cre.t• anodMr im• in whiCh.,... contour chancUristics of tiM
lnhanced and in which sucldln ch...- in .wk:,_
liY• p~.ce to dirt&amp;: thin n.- whil• woft ch. . . in ct.r~t..- ere
..-ormeo~ lmo u.-.. bonds. Socond onc1 hltiM&lt; ~ , _
formation . . ~bli Mil th• 1.,..._ ,._.. con\pleuly differlnt
dn.ctuN.. The .procedun ·is IUCU1ed by compu• .net
image and ~ lntwpntation ,._. be studied • Will •
..mantic v.. u.. th~ c:t..na- in the~·
'
~

·..

.

' - ot.lh~~ ~•d9tallzad,___ in ,

_...................,._ ...
·...
- ....-., ......................
_.,
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u.....................
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_ _. .
.......

_..,_o{" ~.~ aimliu-,.of

dw-loioW of ... ' - ' • ..... . . , _ - ho _

c:ondu!:line

.......,. with grecluate SfU&lt;~tnt 1ef11inars undei' ~if0mio
Institute of, Technology m IBM IPC&gt;fiSOf1ihop. Call
1}31-6117 fore~ elites and times. for' film .,owings.

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REPORTER I U/B BXPBRDIENTSINARTAND 'I'BClOOt.oGY I APRIL 26: 1974 I

r.,. 8

�~

Artisis 'o n Prc)gram ~
Sl:JNY-Wide· Arts Fest ·
~

JIOltla. IDIIIiclaDa and
~ ~ the variety of
Cl'MiiWI artiela Oil ih8 U/B faculty,
flpm ~ Jn the Slate UniWmiW•Wide Celilboatillll of the Arts·
to be held April 2&amp;-29 at State Uniwr-'liY Oollep at 11'1a1ouie.
.AccordiDc to..Dr. a-Id O'Grady,
U/B'a ft!IINB!Idaliw OD the Univer.u;,-Wide CoiDmltCiae Oil the Aria, the
~ ~ the four-day
celehratiaD ,. an &amp;Uampt 1D ar...- atl8dioa to t h e _ , . wealth cl.
artiltic .....so-or in all of the arts in
the Slats Um-aity sywtem, with em~!be* Clll artiats aa ere a tors and
- - . . ralher than ,.. crities and.
.........

On Campus
Nolild llllklr JIDd lalk .mpr ~

dora Blrill will be featured 1Q111t
apeebl: Mmldq, Mq 6, at 8:80 p.m.
at liD "BMiiaa Wltb a.bad,. In the

~..:r:~ '!}-a:::"' is

Bilral bam In VleaDa In 1924,
and ~..ttb bla family liD ~
atiDe • the •
d. d. WbiJe -'&lt;iDe
on a Killllalz, be dilplayed aldl flair
for actiJII'Ihat M - llulfemid fnlm
the ~ liD tbe lilaly IIDd aUowai
to st.p looal ..........
In 11M3, .. jglaed the Habimah
n-1re In Tel Aviv, whkh - ...,.
cia ted witb SlaaialaWid'e ori&amp;iiDai ·Mosrow Art 'l'hMtre, !~~bon dusicB are
perfcnmed In
He left a year
later to llllabliob the brael Cbambe&lt;
n-ll'e, IIDd in 1.946 entered the Royal Acadiiny of Dramatic Art in London from which be ...,.tuated wilh
honors.
.
As an actor Bike! bepn to adlieYe
success in Loudon. Sir Lawenoe Olivier offered him the serond male lead in
his p~ of A Srnetcor Nantal
Desire, starring Vivien Leigh. Also in

a.a-.

~~t:f~~~~·£7v:

of Four Colo1111!., which won him critical plaudits duriilg its tw&lt;&gt;-year nm.
On Broe.""'-Y and on film, Bike!
has portmyed a full menagerie of
roles. ·
An author, ~. and raconteur,
Bikel is also widely known for his
.television perfonoinces and production activities.
•
As a follt ainger, Bike! has appemed
in concerts all over the world and has
recorded sixt8en albums Of follt music. He is one ol the founders of the
Newport r'ollt Festival, and ODDtinues
to serve on ita Board of Trustees as
well 88 appearing at the Festival each
summer.
Bike! views his work and his life ·i n
terms of survival. :'I'm engaged iri an
anti-phoenix crusade,'' be comments.
"Many people j.beee days insist that
their birth was like the birth of a ·
phoenixr suddenly one day they
sprang out of the middle of tbe deserl" Bike! ·mamtains that is quite
impoasibla "Yau must e&gt;oplore your
roots in the past .in order to pinpoint
your place in the present or to he·
entitled to a future. It doesn't v.uk
any other way."
,..

•

Hollis Fwunploo IIDd Paul SharitB,
ffii!IID8kmp and faculty ..-.ben at
UIB'1 Caller for Media Study, will
...... lbeir- ....... Clll Saturday,
April ~. and Bunda.y,- April 26. in
addition. both ~ will pouticipate in film worilabiJI&gt;a for students.
- WoodY IIDd. 8leina \Taulka of the
Center lor Media Study will p,_,t
a multi-manit.or video matril&lt; featur-

Boy~~s
(cOIIIinued

iDg !:leW tapee prepued for almultaneoua pr-latbl. 'Ibe contlnuoua
, video ai:Ubitian Will be on view Friday, Anril 26
·
UtBTii.fusic J::)eparm-t will be in .
evidenoe alao. A 111!111inar for atringa
and piano students Is ocbeduled for
Friday, April 26. 'Ibe ClevelaDd Quailet and pianist Stephen Manea will
mac:u. IIDd cljjmenstrate - " ' of ....
heusing and perfo.nnillg _...written
for atringa and piano-piano quartets,
~etc.

'Ibe C..tive Allaoc:iatea will
form in CODOert OD Saturday, A':n/'Zr.

Following,.,.,.._. Morton Feldman

will meet with inten!sted faculty and
studenta to mac:u. what be oonaiders
important issues in new music. Master
a - will be held before the concert
oa Saturday aftemoou.
Jobn ~ awani- . .
poet
and prot_,. of Eng~ read
from bis v.uk Sunday, April 28. Four
poets fnlm elaewbem in the SUNY
system. Louis Simpscm, William Hey.
eo, A. Poulin, Jr., and Louis Phillips,
will alao read.

Tenure Staten:tent - - - - - - -

from -

4. col. Z)

reduction · ot -t he present mandatory
age fM retinment of faculty from 70
to 66. In addition, we may wish to
give serious consideratioa to the development of an early retirement plan
whiCh would make attractive the withdrawal from State UniversitY •"lploy-

- a s early 88 ag1&gt; 55 or 60.
mcwes, faUn together, should
enable the University to maintain a
_vital and creative faCulty, the central
ingredient in tbe educational process.
I plan to present to the Board of
Trustees of the University specific
propoeais for _amendment of their .
PoliA!ia where necessary and appropriate - to effect these moves. Some
items will, . of course, require further
consultation or more fonnal negoti-

n-e

Women's Symposium
"Women and Academic Life" is the
theme ol a symposium to· he held
Monday, April 29, by Alpha I..emhda
Delta, the lreshman women's honor
society, on the occasion of its 50th
anniversary .
Guest-"""' will he Dr. Marjorie
W. Fart19WOrih, associate professor of
biology; Dr. Adeline G. Levine, chairman of-the Department of SOciology;
and moderator Josephine A. Capuana,
·chairman of the U / B pre-med appraisal Committee.
.
The sympOsium will he held in 231
Norton at 3 p.m.

- ation.

·I

Looking ahead, I .am concemed -that
we continue to eDmine the University

tenure arrangements and procedures
to assure that they remain effective.
We should, fM example, look for ways
through which the efrectiveDeiOI, creativity, and professional development
of faCulty members can be profeasiooally reasaesaed. for those on continuing
appoinUnent, as it now is for D&lt;llltenured faCulty.
Finally, we must remain. sensitive
to the human equation in this entire
issue. Discussions about tenure quotas
and ratios and enrollment trends
should not obScure the fact that we
are not only iallting aboUt the wellbeing of an institution; we are alao
talking about the careers of highly
qualified professionals. Here, as in all
other areas of University COncern, we
must be sensitive to the individual
faCulty member wh;Je responsibly

:rv~_b.:\:'d~!!"in~~c!',!~
kept in proper hslance, I am convinoed the appropriate policies will he
developed and sustained.
In the words of the recently releaSed joint AAC..AAUP report, a
tenure P&lt;?licy "rightly understood and
properly admtnistered" will he a
source of !;trengtb to this University.
I trust the principles set forth in this
statement will mntrihute to that understanding and administration.
-ERNEST L BOYER

Rochwarger Named
Businessman of Year
Leonud Roc:bwarpr, president and
chief ....-.tiYa ollicer ol FilBtinarl&lt;
Corporation. ,bas been selected to receive .t he Niapra Fron~ Businessman ol the Year Awani hom the.
School of Manaaemeot Alumni AssocialbL Tbe awazd, wbicb is pWlll
~ liD rftlllideolt of the Niapra
FroatW
heen "activaly ·enpaed In ~ 111111 a lee&lt;ler in civic
alfaln." will be~ at the Manaa-t Alumni'a .ADnual A-Wards
. ~~· May 9, ~t the
In addleiaa to bla'PQ~ftion at Fint-

who-

~,f!#Jr~O:.l!:
~~:=.:~
. - 1 cballmm a.·llolb tbe 1973

......

Uliifed Way of Bu«a1o IIDd Brie Coun- .
~ ~ 19119 United Jewilb P1m4

UG~

Supergraphic;:s

fnlm )lartan, !IIi ~ Mot
_ , . . . ~~~-· dlllle Ulnly• • •~..........

lt'a a

~an~· ...,.

"QUUafo ..,., 111 -

l!ilnl ... uat. In
- - - -·... . . - - - . .... _,111 ............ ........

. . --,.......a...-"""'--

(a_.,._.....,..._ Alt.,.........,.,.
....-..lola_,.,-"'..._
.... __._,-- .... -.
.............. crw--

I l l - altllallotlht _ . . . . . . . ......... - . . - - ........
Yer .......
In the
Yer .......

DoooldJmllal

-.)

Abernathy Talk
Slated by CAC
'Ibe Revenmd Ralph D. Abernathy,
president of tbe Southern Chri8lian
I.eadel'Sh;p Conference, will he tbe,
featured speaker at a campus oommunicatione coiderenc:e to be held

April 29-30.
'Ibe conference, spoosored by the
Community Action Corps (CAC), is
designed tO bring together community
agency IJ!Presentstives, University administratom, IIDd CAC volUDleeis to
discuas ways in which CAC can serve
the Bulralo community mo&amp;t effectively.
·
Dr. Ahemalhy will open the i!llent,
Monday. April ·29, with a lecture on
"Community-University Inlenlction:
Working Together in Bulralo." The
talk, which is free and open to the
plihlic, will he held at 7:30 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room, Norton.
Dr. Abernathy and CAC officers
and coordinators will participate in
a panel discussion on "A Perspective
on Community Action" . from 9 a.m.~~ April 30, also in the

Hillel Ends
Celebration
The year-long oelehmtion of Hillel's
Fiftieth Anniversary _will conclude
with a Sbahhaton on Friday and Saturday, April 26 and ~ - Dr. Jerome
Eckstein, chairman of the Jewish
Studies Department-at SUNYf.Alhany, will he the- guest speaker at the
anniversary weekend.
Dr. Eckstein will speak Friday evening following a Kabbalat Sbahhat
Service and Sbahhat dinner, to begin
at 6:30 p.m. at Hillel House. His
theme will he "Shahhat: A Day of
Non-Interestedness." Dr. Eckstein is
the author of a forthooming hook on
Interesledness and Non-Interestedness: Two Approaches to Kn&lt;&gt;wledge.
He will alao discuas the writings of
Abraham Joshua Hescbel during his
evening talk.
On Saturday, following Shahhat
Service at 10 a .m. and a Kiddush luncheon, Dr. Eckstein will examine tbe
work of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitcbik,
with special emphasis on his philc&gt;sophical tract entitled ''The Lonely
Man of Faith." The preaentsticn will
he at 1 p.m. in Hillel Hause.
According to Hillel Foundation
Rabbi Justin Hofmann, Profi!SIIO&lt; Eckstein will argue that J-st customs
speak to the disillusionment cl. young
and old alike by offering viable alternatives to the exaggerated materialism
of our time. It is Dr. Eckstein's contel1tion that Judaism represents a
spiritual approach to life while advocating that people take responsibility
for this world. 'Ibis is a position diametrically op~ to numerous East·em JIIYBtical aecls and philosophies in
which spirituality represents an escape from tbe 'IIO'CIIid of reality, Rabbi
Hofmann e&gt;oplains.
'Ibe Shahba- and Golden Anlli_ . y Celebnttioo of Hillel will he
concluded with an Israel Independence IlJiy Puty sponsored in moperatioa wil;b tbe U /B Isnoeli Students
Orpnizatioo. 'Ibe party will he held
Sunday, April 28, at 8:45 p .m. in the
P'illmale RocJc.e..Norton.

�CitiZens c;rooP._
Aid ..for Sexually -~iauJq:u
"Mea-)uat alinld

a.1!..~~~~m-

o1t..m. ooo-

.

~ am ~ to you. Rape · is
the (eateR 1rowiDI ~
~ 1i . . _ ill the Ullited:slaCea.
N- York Stale, Erie County and
Bulfa1o. It is an act of qpBJion. a
. serious c:rime" of -ult 011-the body
and the paycbe, in w)1ich the victim is
denied bar 181f.detenninatian.
In Erie County,~ 300
rape vk:timi - . . tieated at E. J .
Meyer Memorial Hoapital in 197a It
is eatimated. however, tbat ~
four and fleD time11 that 1I1III1Y raps
COIIllllitted but Dot reponed. In
otber words,. thera """" ~ 1200
and 3000 rapes oommitted in Erie
CouDty in 1973.
..
.
Until ~. little atteiitioll baa
heeD giwn to tbe vio1im. On .January
31, County EDc:utlve Resan cralted
a Task Fooce 011 Rape in ti&gt;
a reaolutioll ...-1 mwrimoo!Biy by
tbe Erie Comaty J:.esialatwe. '11!!1 l.WOJution" aslli!d that this iDter...-.cY
Task Force "moodinata jiubllc aDd
private elrma 011 the . rape )&gt;ftlblom.
8l1d • • . aaiile and

aidlnot __. .. . . . a are
of tJ8i1!1 ·-_. cib)ecla,• a ear.D aac:iaJ
~told a campus symposium

~?-~=
.a.

lhwa
lo
lo the bome ..
. . . . . . . . . U..bedr:lowodU,.-

=

=~~Dr~~
Deorelopmaot iiDd ~

~1:;..

IIIII) cbob wblltl8 lo
. . . or 110t. -'111eTn lcdlld IIIIo it

b ..0 ,..,._ A man am't take aff and
lo ildJool. ... aperiment with hill
artiBt, for .........
Dr. Flllclmu lhaNd the podium
with hia wife, Dr. Marpret Feldman,
of the ~ of Ilbaao ~ alao
a aac:iaJ ~at a Capen Hall
..-till&amp; boaariDa the 25th .AJmiver.
ary o( Prafesaor Dorolby Lyon's af.
fiJiatiaa with the u /B Scbool of Social Wed. Their topic was -n.e
ChsDPIIr A-an FUiily: A Male
and , . . , . ~ ..
Ml!ll a r e . e .lo be loulh·
miDiled, CCIIIIP8Iiliw. :
-arieMad,
._ the JMJe Dr. "l'elclmD
Teenace boys 11M do wall 111 ecbaol. 1«
eample, are tt.... 11M 8CIIIII . _ em
per80IIII( iDiepity. "MID have lo 8lill
u-IYIIII lo Jllllb it," be charaed
Ahd Jllllb it, they lllllllt.
M4kinl it, - . frl!quelrt1y in....._ .., older meDtor or role model.
11M IIJidaB the ~ iDBn'a career
and offers rewards and~';thholds
approbation. This raJa
• , Feld·
· man said, is often more
more JmtifyiDg, more painful for the
man than ralatiooshipa in the home.
How it is going 011 a given daY can,
in fact; aet 1he tone for familial rala·t ionshipa. And yet, Dr. Feldman
noted, this student·mentm asac:da·
lion must end 118 the younser man
· ~ away 8nd ~ ~ :•own
~gl'irl,.
d!~
-- ~
- - sigpraisal
wnich
lollows
as just as
nificant as that tbe woman faces when

=-tiel ....

...mw

. """'..,..._ ~ fcrl&gt;aDdliDC
aesual -ulta. ..•" In order ID- this ~ !he Task Force . . ~
has developed four subCaal4d II t :
Medical Servi
Coo!J1iie1in1 Crimi-

':!:'w

'-"""t.

nal Jaatice, :~
80
that input from tbe CllllllDlunity MJUid
be incalporsted into a llnaJ paakq8
of recoD1IIMmdatio a CiiUIIla· Advisory Ccmmitt.ee -III'PI!iad which
n!p1811!11ts pri;vate a,_,;e,i. orpnizais happier in rearing her children thim
t'ioos, and citizens.
is the Woman with more ''moaem"'
outlooks.
.
'Ibis Task Fon:e is oommitted to
eslablishing a totally linked rOtlram
~far-Dr. Margaret Feldman suggested .- of high qualitY, comp~ care
for aexually assaulted ~ctima. At tile
ll)at motbers need more support (day
present ·time. tbe.only medical service
dire facilities, in particular) in tbe
available to rape vic:tima is at E. J.
stzessful child-rearing days of marMeyer ·MerOOHaJ · Hoepital!CJt iS•)m•
riage._"Eveh a secretary ,gets a coffee
ticipated that from' tbe recoowi&gt;endabreak." she said. The Feldman&amp;, when
tions Of tbe Task Foroe, otber
·
tbey became ~Is, offered to
for medical sendces
pay tbe tuition for a maater',s degrOO

Alao.

~~~~~~l~t~:nt

bogged down by the child." TbeU.

son-in-Jaw ~ed his ~k ~
IIP-bei &lt;lOilid . ~.-,. oJ,J;he ,.infant,
during early morning· cl&amp;sees and at
"ii this is all !here is to Jiie."
night. Before this was worked out, !heUnHieiD~
.
female Dr. Feldman said, tbe husband
Moet American men are unable to
bad.,been insecure about tbe cliild.
love ~ Feldmlm suuested, because
"Under this• arrangement, the ch,ild
of
way
are brought up. Their
aa:epted 1rim·more and•our daugbter
intimate as&amp;OCI8.1i0118 with their moth"got other -things to talk about."
ers tend to make them repress tbeir
Perhaps tbe most crucial time in
feelings, thus perpetuating tbe mascumarriage, tbe Feldmans say, is when
line quality of American life. For -this
tbe children are all in · school, tbe
reason, he observed, "sex in America ·
I&lt;&gt;Wel't point OOCilrl'ipg. when the l8st
is gymnastic, non·verbal, llll.ri'OWly· ·
child leaves the home. If ehe baa degenital. The same phencmenoo inakes
• veloped no other interests, the woman_
science transcendent over art.~·
linda herself "out of a job,'' ready for
A "manly". man is not aftectioru!te
ureti.remenl" This situation, in tum,
toward anyone, Feldman contended,
provides time for """"""'"'ent by tbe
"let alone to another ID8IL Every othwoman of ber role in liie. Tbe results
er man has to be a potential enemy."
of tbe reassessment, often a decision
Men have to be- aggressive toward
to take a job or go back to school,
each otber.
frequently cause conJ1ict.
Men want to be more role free,
If divorce follows ("and there is lots
Feldm!m argued. "But they may not
of divon:e in Ithaca;" Dr. Marsan!t
be ~ un\il women are free," until
Feldman noted), other family pattenis
American society is ready to IK\(ll!pt
may emerge. One woman of her aca ''non-81!l&lt;ist adultbodd!'
quaintance, a writer, baa gone back to
Dr. •Margaret Feldman argued that
school; her former husband takes tbe
women are umoulded" in a similar
children on Sunday, leaving the womway to display opposite attiibutes.
an free for creative· activity. In anothFemale personality traits inhlbit womer case of divorce, a woman . with a
en from achieving, she contended, citgniduate degree has ·taken a teaching
ing tbe story of a female Jmduate
job at a university in the South; her
stwleDt who described "tremors" in
ex-husband will follow, to take a partbef stomach wben she tried to speak
time job and share tbe childrj!n. "It's '
up in a male-dominated seminar. But,
too bad 'ti&gt;ere couldn't have· heeD such
abe said, many women.need more than
sharing of roles within these nOW-ii!'Jit
children and home-making to find
marriages," sherB&amp;id. •
meaning in tbe modern .urban family.
"Our JrB.Ddmolhem used to be '!ble
to look at pantries full of preserved
foods IIJl(l say to themselves, 'Well,
Mr. Mou-sheng W- of TaiWiiii, a
tbey may not IOYe me, but they cel'doctoral candidate in. tbe Departmlmt
tainJy Deed me.' " No more.
of
Engineering ScieooO, died 5und!ty,
....... SetlofM:tlon
April 21, in E. J . Meyer Memorial
The Feldmana cited -results from a
· Hospit8) after a brief lllne88. Mr.
BIUitY they conducted,.among 800 midWang was Z1 ye&amp;lll old. A memorial
. die 8Dd upper middle class couples. in
service· for the deceaaed student was
SyracuSe to nOte that satiafactiorl in
held last 1lidJt il~ White. Memolial
D18f1ias5 today takes tbe fcrm
M~· ~
.
of a U-ebaPed curve -high at the

l:H~~""':k~~-

·a;.;

u.er·

Grad Student-·mes·

beliJminl, ""' ill the iDiildle (when
cbildftln are ill tbe homel, high spin

at the eDd. 'J'bla ~le• . of criti. .
c:aJ timell can be
m lllllici·
patina aDd plaDDDal to ....- - -

iii.J;bt~~~-

:n.ma....

-..:1 funeh.i being ~ by. .tbe CbiiMme
Sludmt Auoc1ation (P.O. Box A,
N - :Hall). Checb may be ll18d8
payable to_the ~ (please indicate )lurpoee On checb) .
. . .

' 8111

hoepjta)s, cliiifi,j, -;.n.l "

dlffill ~"'a~" ·
victims. Also, counaeJing aerviC&gt;IB. on
a 24-bour .baSis to aesually -ulted
-vicijroa Will,hoiCome. reality. There
Very ' limited services at present
and few pen!Ona trained in the area of
oounaeling the aesual!y-essaulted person. Recommendatioos to. P.!"vention
and criminal justice will revolve
around education, legal services, police procedun!S, and court procedures.
· An initi8J package of reoominendations will be submitted to County EJ:.
excutive Regan early in May. O!l&lt;;e

are

a.

Job
FACULTY
•

··

h•
,

~:

: ~ ·.J·

;rl.l\~ Ttd v
· ~· '
:.,:,.., l • • ~r ~ •. .ru,

Aasistant Professor, Archil«:ture &amp;Erwirr&gt;nmen/&lt;ll Qeai8J&gt;.,!,,ir!v •lJu ·'·
· Full Professor, Cl.a$Bics. •
".t.r•t\'
t
'Instructor, Dentistry.· •· ., -''If..,.:!. l,\·~,£. ..,;tJ '·":l.... f it~
.Associate PrOfessor, Gynecblogy-Oboteirics. ' ., ,I, ·· X•·u'""'•t '"'~ :·~ o.
Assistant/Asaociate ProfessOr, Medicine: ..~if_.;·. ;.-! !· ~.]"l ... j • .., ~~·t'·.· r~ ·
Professor/ Associate Pror.&amp;.oi; Physical .EdUcti&amp;n.
' ,. ')'nrl · • • ·.:
Instructor!Associate ProfEII,I80r '&lt;3 positionS; : •
~- '' ' '
2 full-time, 1 put-time), DentiJJtry.' ' •
_,
Assistant Professor, Mediall Technology.
, J_;~ o;
Instructor; Physical-T~. · ~ . :to:~" ;1,, &lt;i~_ H (lfl f .. ·.t&lt; ~~·
..Assistant Pn;.f~, Anatomical _sc~ .-.:~ ~~ ··l ~;~'' ;;:· ~
.'

'

•

..

r'\.\"• '

-

�VOCAL~~

.NOTICES

ACLUTbo

IICn'Al*

-=~::::re~·=~
~"!t"l-~ Hall, 12:15
VAIIIIY MSBAU.•

~

U/B n.

·s p.m.

annnal -be.-bip _ . . ol

;r-~~~-~~
tieo Union will be bold lkmday, A...n

State, Peolle Field,

•

•.

THURSDAY._2

.

~·
Plmuoin6 and Anolyoio of 'Scient~
E~..u. ,Prof. Marvin Zolen, cfuec.
tor, U/B Statiatli:al Scieooe Laboretory,
UQ Fc.ter, • p.m.
~
.. 1'!-~ by the CoiJece of Math&amp;.. malicol S c i -.
CONCHr

A

VAIIrn MSIIAU.*

U/ B w. Brockport State (daublebeed~ p.m.

er) , Peelle Field,
PSYQtOMAT•

A listening and learning uperience,
232 Norton, S-6 p.m.
IICYUI(•

••

Plonning and Anoly•il o~cj&lt;!ntific Ex-

~~ !:i~.!r t:;:::;::,.,~c::,.if:_

~':i,.~· ~I.abo":,;~~

B:i!d""

Recital Hall, 8" p.m. No aclmiuion
cb&amp;rp. .
~ted by the Depa-t of Mu-

-··
=-

Footer, 4 p.m.
Preoented by the College ol Math&amp;-

-~
FIUil••

aie. . '

Dr.

...

s~
&lt;Kubrick.' 1963l . ·and
oborlll: Serum, with Law-el and Hanly,
and Tltol Falal G/aa of Beer, ,.ith W.C.
140 Ca.-, 9 p.m. No admiMiCtn

FAll IIOIStiAT10N

Updatinc ol Student Data Forma for

r:t!i:l'Z!
~...:::.= :;.:.:;
atudento -ue to follow the ocbedule be-

-

:: ~ :.:=aatioo.)
.!lliol:"=
u!,.roc:.e

c :owur&amp; SRYICU SUWWtft

......... .._._y... - a . .

the deta form will have
to . : ;.....

U /B w . Alfred, Peelle Field, 1 p.m.
M y•ti&lt;:Gl E:JCpraoion of Love, Cir:iaoo

UUAI

R&amp;M••

~r~!m:.:..m&amp;.'!!:ff. 8::t . C:.J:!!c:~::;,·No=~
~ty, 221L Criloby, 4 1&gt;.m.
·
ciaile for limN. Admisoioa Charge.
ern Studieo, the Department of Spanish.
Italian and Portuguese, and the CounCil
oo lDtemational Studies.
FOSTR COllOQUIUM*

'I"H:£\Ta: fUTJVAI. Of MINJ..a.ASSKS•

-·

~~i~"t!. blaf1;::/!~~';t

=~~~o,?"r.\i'J:i:"~

!u~~ J;,;- !'':!';.~:~ b!
announced. 5 Acheaon. 4 p.m.
•

witb:

tlz -:::::=::~:=:::M-=:
FR~SH¥EN wboee

becino

tut name bociu

WJ.th:

.

~!z ::::·.::=.:~~~-=-..::~:~~~~
AU E.O.P. aiudento, regardl- of ..bore
they are adviaecl, will pi~ up reciatretion material in TownoOnd Hall, aco&gt;rding to the above acbedule.
Graduate and Mi114M Fillmore Collep
studento muot go to the Admiaaieoa and
Recorda Office to update their Student
Data Forma.

Streets. 8 : 80~ p.m. Admiaa ion charge.
Alao on May 3 and 7.
Preoented by the Department of 'Theatre.

GSA StUIIOHT MAJITS

Application forma for Graduate Student .A.oclation mmmer rrant. are now
available. lDtereoted atudento can pic!&lt;
up forma in the GSA ollioe. 205 Norton.
Deadline for apPli_cation is Monday, May
13. For further information, contact John
G~ Department ol P•ycbiatry,

Aliens-

( ContiluuNi from _ . 1, coL .1)
seeking 8lllllll16 emPloyment should
follow these new procedures, Williams

outlined:
1. Students should have .a current·
academic advisor form oo file with
tbe OFSA (completed during tbe last

=:

SOPHOMORES wbooe t u t -

ArthW" Miller'a . A View from th e

c;;::!~.lfi_

bMrinl ..,

JUNIORS Jut nome beciDo witb:
M-Z ..... - ... - ............Tbunday, April 25

==

A oom_plu character swpy .pf .J1.. rnan ,
tom between two worlds- the relined
and sophisticated home of hie muaicol
family, and the brawling, oil-rigging life
s tyle he lived. StaJ"rinc Jack Nicholoon
and -Karen Blaclt.

· Co-I)JODOO!ed•by the. Procram.in Com-

110

into the Dief.

endorf Reoeptioo A-.

The No.lW'&lt; of Photogmphy, Rudolf
Ambeim. Harvard Univenity, 70 Ache...., 8 p.m.

CONCIPTS OF LOVE IN TNE MIDOLI AGES*

The Third. Ma.n, 140 Capen, 7 p.m.
No admiloion c:harp.

Prof-ional' 00UJ10e1iDc is available at
mile! HOIUO, 40 Capen Bbd. For an
appointment, all 836-4540.

low. (Note: 'I:be time - t o tum in

~rop,

,

·

COUN lEUNG

CAC

IICYUI(•

IV 1ASDA1.L•

~r v.:-~TboFron~t

open to the public.

Bullitt, 140 Capen", 7 ~ 9 p.m. Admiaoic&gt;n: 75 -.Ia.
Steve McQueen and the cia..u: cbue
ALGOL, i n s tructed by Dono Van42811 Ridp Lee. Rm. 12, 7-9 p.m.

WEDNESDAY - 1

28, at 7: 80 p.m. in the U n i - UDiveruliot C2nin::h, 8115 Elllt..- A-ue.
SpMioon will iDclade Ira rn-r, - tive cfuector, NYS diliate oL ACLU• ....t

ert 8917.

Tbo

s - su-s

EXHIBITS

MOmaATION

Olice ol Admiaaiona and Recorda

. :....
""':tl:"!:::C:':".:-":;i;;;.=:t
the Univenity .-1 ooly """'''iete a

three mooths) .
•
2. Students should aJao complete, in

Cowae Req.- Form. AU atudento
muot oomplete a Student Data Form,
available at -the Olice, Hayea AniMx B.
Tentative Olice bows ue 8:80 a.m.8 : 80 p.m. - the followinc datea:
April 25, 29, 80; May 1, 2, &amp;-9, lS-16,
20-22, 28-81; ~- 8-7, 11, 12. 18, 19, .
24-28; luly 1-5 (~ luly 4), 8-12.
15-19, 22·216, 80, 81; ....t A...,..&amp; 1, 8, 6,

duplicate, ImmiJration Form 1-538PertnisiRoo to Accept Employment.
Tbe form should caretuJiy clocumeDt
that .the ...:am- work i'equest is due
to economic neceesity. Tbe student's
1-94 should be atad&gt;ed (arrivlll-de-

. recoid).

~After

completing tbe above, tbe
student should make ... ~t
with~
Adviaor to .....
view bia
· · and U.. to have
it COWl
After this ....... all
d&gt;e
• will be mailed to the
Bulfakl Olllco of tbe l'mmllratioll and
·- Naturallalion Bervioe.

7, 18, 14, 20-21.

Tbo

~CAUCUI..._

Weatetn N- Yodt ~ ol
the SUNY
Caucuo ....t the

w-·•

w.....•• CouDcil ot .BUNY/BulfaiD.will

~..!':.~~-~~a:

!':t' &amp;:.:~~ ~.:"~

wood AY8Due. 'l1oo - - ""-in .t
8:80 LIIL, will be bold in the - -

==~~~J!..L~

furtber informatioot, ..U Shirley Haninck)a. 831-801L

WEEKLY COIIIIIlJIIIQUE COPY IIEMIUIE
ForeveryDI!O'a _,..and~
. . lib to~ a l l - taklnl pillet
_.

on cam-. To,_,. Information,....-

~ -~~ ~
1a-. ~.Julia, ·
J?1!!1i1&gt;.
Tamllra, Tala

....t 8 aianne , MDoi&lt;

f:.- 2111 No~.,~~· ~' '-t'

Nancy C.rdllraiU, ext. 2228, by~
at noon for Inclusion In the follawlna
Th rsc111y _";__r:w:~:....._._ _-!:_ _.....;;;._·;·•.;.
.: ···•

.~·

�eommunttue I

1- weekJj
-

-

11018d, tickets f o r Hall 1'lcbt ·otllce. .

-

.oj;.,
"" •ap.n """""
jJuiJIIe
f

!'&gt;iAion

-

ConiKt IUncy

cbaqe.

c:llai!Pnl: - - ....... ~

8t tile

-

. -....-.. . •oop., .. -

~··

oullj8ct
.,Inthetheu-...,
831-2228, for .........

.

"-~ :U:J!i
VUiinia. peen.; · ~
•
..

.

Starring Steve McQueen and Ali M""'

Sp.m.

Graw.

~=~
:~;~~~
Byt,._
- f'ollor.t•r
ror•••· Dr. _
Geoip HorrmaDD. prof_,r
chair-

,FRIDAY-26

aDd

man, Doportmellt of Appliod MedWW:o,

~tat.:'! Yclt"~g,:-~l~m.• ~

atn.o.H DEMOCMCY ucn•·
n.e former Swediob - r to
awe, HOI'Old EdelotDm, will m.eu. the

September 19'13 Clilloon military coup,
147 DiefODdorf, 7:110 p.m.
Mr. • Edolatam wao oxpeileci' by the
miiifary
zecime
Deeombor - of
hia work
with lut
Clilleon rofuc-.
P._toci by the Committoo fw Chilean Democ:raey.

ii.c FILM••

1

The Strawberry Stotem.ent, 140 Capen,

8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admiuion: 76 CODb.
INTHNATtOHAL fiUlA 1974•

A ni,Jbt of oonc aDd dance, Oark Hall.
8 p.m.
•

c!:"'~!lll: ts=~~

and the Groduato Student A.&gt;ciation.
MEDtCAL PCTUII*

.

Ethieol hoblomo of llfodern Medicine,

~ .f"="'tn!· ~u~-:a.:~. t:':r

·-rod

A~':~~ o'i-'ili.,

Harrincton

Loc:turo Serioo
by the 0/B
Sdiool of Medicine. 11Je Weotorn No.w
. York United .Miniotrieo in Higbor Edu·
cation ia c:o.epouor.
OPBA•

The Tenor · by· Huco Weiapll aDd
Four DiDJDguu for Two Voica and Two
Pianos by Nod ROrom, Baird .Recital
Hall, 8 p .m. Adrniooion c:lulrge. Throuch
Sunday, April 28.
.
UUAa FILM..

,

N;.::,c;., G=~·~~.t;:

miaion cbaq:e.

CHK.DIIN'S HOIPITAL IIIGfll

LECTW~•

Eric von. D&lt;mi1wt, author of ChDriou

_

r.!c'~·r:Um:'::::!:.'~
Muoic: H.U. 8:110 p.m. ~cbaqe.

ProceOdo ·tbe loetme, opoaoond
~~,..:-n...-. - - a l T h o
''l Hoo&amp;1ilaJ. wiU ,.,..I the H&lt;»-

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

pital'alfem~

Biz

...

eo..cw

~

diredod by Terry,

~~:-~A-,8:110~
F• cloUIIo,~ 'Dnldd8y U.U.. ...__
...,. c:orw.1auae ~

~~ -~.:.M~·~

MONDAY-29

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>caJteaes ·

·ro Dellafe

. Eharter
list
c8ll.w. ...............
The

day (April 1.8) aU JL11L iD 128 Cioalby
to ...... .v-JI;y ~!~mate~ tD
the CaDeee a.n. ~ ...
beP&gt; aelei:lkm ol
facultar .......
fat the c-;tlea
Undar the Reiclat ~tar

*

=-~~~~s
the 1.2-momber CllarW o.-l&amp;tee

::~::=::.~-==
to the CoiJolioiB , .

........_flam

ally qn!l!llble
aembl,y;-

the Aaldlmic Affairs Council c h 0. ... .,. Chill
puup; two undercraduate IIUdeDia
cb&lt;a!n b,- the WA-ocletian;
graduate student~.,. the Gftldu-ate Student Asaociation; aDd two ....,_
bel'&amp; desip&gt;ated by the Collegiate , .

cme

~Cbarter-Commit11ee

will be. empc;w;erl!d to: review all ~ colletle
Cliart.en- 8Dd make ~
~ these to .the Dean ol. the

~tionsthl&gt;to~n!:m-::;

and

Ia!*' In _ _ - ~ - . . wui .,. comp1o11on of
the
D. ~ lljllldlrw, ochoduled tar ...ty 19715. The - · • _
_
.._t-funcllonl.-- of the $3.5 Jrillllon project . . llllllnlm~.
. ~ - -· fw ....,... tlw1 !10 ,_,. as a U/8
J1nanc1a1 •

.A -

wlih

a-..

,..._wll_fowlleilroof--~

-·

law ·...-.,.. -

APRIL 18, 19'1'4 '

Colleges
the President for diseolution of a college unit; and review BDd
make recommenc!•tions on tbe renewal .
ol. ~terms haw run out.
. The ' Commit:llee will, thus, det.emiine
• whidl coli- will be cbu1ered to begin opemtioas uoder tbe ...... Pro&amp;-

~~

the Reicbert Pl'oapec&gt;
Ius, PraDdent ~ wamed Chill if a
deadlod&lt; develops t.et- the FaCulty 8enlde aDd tbe Colletliate ~
bly OYer !tie faculty melabenhip ol.
tbe Charter Committee. aDd obooild ..
Committee DOt be _..tioual within
3(1 days (from April 2). be ezpecta the
Faculty Senate to make chanaea in tbe

of aelec:tiaD cl tbe faculty "'Presentatiws.
'lbeuilie individuals~.,.
Senate EDcaliw Committee are:

ID8JIJI8f

..

wn-

~~
·
~ci:t.

~.

di1~,.-=e

.r-.

. Rolat Gay~

- M.~i~~~-, . Ed~cation ~Se~n~~~Makii-lg.· Prob..lems_. &lt; ~=~~~
.

~

·'~. ·

,

.

PATRICIA W.ARD BIEDERMAN
.......,,...;.,_~ ~JB~-.....,.ft&amp; ~
-...............,....,. __ ~
the .Pni&gt;le!n of health care delivery in
America, nthef 1han io the solution,
black

'-J.th.Md:~~~r,/U!B

~studelitll &lt;it

Han:iDitoa. Lectwe..

Monday night's

.

~

·A....._...._..- Of ]he current

•.

l&gt;i.. ~~ljijhed, ;,; the"::j:

ili8lributioi1 of-the nation's 30,000
praol:iciDJ pby!licians (-approximately
one for every li60 pen!OIUI). Medical
Scbools help maintain the current
pattem (by_ which most physicians
are conceulnlled in wban areas, and
serve
middleand white,
npper-iilcome
groupe)
b,- ~wring
upper-in,
come applicants. At pre8&lt;!llt. Dr.
Haujlbton noted, OJily eight per cent
ol. Ameriam physicians are women,
~ two per cent, membel8 ohnioority IIJ'OUIIB. Tbis sele&lt;lC&gt;on prooess ' a major impact on the distribution ol.
health 118l'YJ01!8, be ooot.ended.
Dr. Haugllton, ·w. ho &lt;Hrects the
·Haa!th BDd Hospital Governing Commialion for Cook ·County (Chialao) ,
.._.....t at tbe invitation ol a group
of ....c....t-year medical students.
._..,.,.._- ~

·

._.~s in HEWt ~'t .thatto ~
,.,._.,. ...........,... """"""
....-

oontinUe

all ita~ ecbolaiship

· propams for health IIJIIJIPO'I'l'l and ·

replace a.em with l o a n - Dr.
Haughton rewealed. Tbis decision, if
en&lt;lor..t by Congress, will ~
discouraae poor students and per&amp;&lt;mB
fram III'OIIPB who have tradit:ionally
had traumatic _.,.,._ with loans
aDd~ fram ...., applyinl to
medical ~
.
T.bePammiomian-hompQysiciaae.:pialled .U..IillactiaD witll: miDDrit,Y

·
~r-~.ht-~,·
...,.
- .._.

....a-... .......

-DIM · »~'-&lt;!,~
~· more ·_...
''1-

..... :1

•

~ au D.eciicil students .to a
:~ of· bealfh-all'e. environ-

menta One .reason graduates rarely
cbooee to practice. in coml!lunity
health~ prison health services
("a national 8C81ldal" ) and institu- .

::::: r~~ ~!ti::i
. a8 settings for medical education,
Hau~ said. Instead; most medical
stud

iete

~

•L-'-

.

~:U""t:'~~

the
that
hospit.els." - .
_
Alternative seCitings would provide
an import.ent, .tiaditionally neglected
educational function by -allOwing tbe
pbysician-in.vaining to see the rellitiopship ol. the patient's . life to his
health,
encouraging
a more
view of medical
pmctice
1han humane
is regularly promulr;aied in hospital settings
where, Haughton said, the physicianpatient encounter isotypically "a technologicalreeponse to a disease entity."
Few medical educators see their fe.
'?"""'bility as ~ to inJ!uen.
cmg the .career dioices Of their students, Haughton said, and this "uninhibited democracy" has also bel
distort the use ot· the nation's

.
·
.
1han ~ health has resulted in
the deplorable flequeocy with which
physicians see "nth degree disease becaliae we ne~ to teach the patient
to pootect his own health," Haughton
said.

~!t.obJ:X~ ;~e:;t::,on..!
demicians and labonrtocy scientisiB,"
Haughton said. He belie-. students

~ =~.,:, ?."'~

..(Continued on pG#Je 3, coL 3)

ordinator of each colleie. and the
Dean of the Coll
_.__
as chairman. 'l'b!'t,.;;"'is
to be operational by January 1975.

~

·

Fe
.•

a Change
• .

to

a-cme

-~~
.._.. - r:-L?=t...,&amp;~
......-

.::=:

ti!!!:;
J:"ci...'Y'=~
tbe Faculty Senate, u-o(ficio, the .,.._

.NY's 1st .Woma·n .Law Dean·
d ·'Att•tanduul::.Jes~or tbemsel-a~lntheyglllllliY
Ch • I .
•"lbere.n bassbeen

=

...... in81._.........
,....--.,..,. . . ~'111e

English~· My&amp; Slatin, ~- ~lish and Y
S7;eb)y -=iate
lib~ oram
'
Under the Pl'&lt;lepecWs, the Collesiate Assembly iiBelf will giw wa:y to a
new College Council, an advisory body
to tbe Dean of the Colleaes. which

'

don't be&lt;iitate to say that rve been
the beneficiary ol such a change,"
Judith Younger, the first woman to be
named dean ol. a law school in New
York St.ete, commented J:eO&lt;!Dtly. Ms.
Younger, Who will beoome dean of
•the Syracuse University College ol.
Law this summer; will.on campils Satuide,y (April 20) to discuss
"Won&gt;en...and the Legal Prol.essioo."
'Subllrnlnol ~
Women with legal/academic ereDr. Hauafitiin· aawd his h8rsbest
demUils like her own are no ·longer ·
· words for the ''subliminal" d&lt;ihumanisimp~ IDlemted, Ms. Youhseo- said in
zation that is part -of the unwritten
a IIBlepbane· interview. "T hey are a
curriculum ol too mucb medical-edu-'
OOIIIIDodltyindemand.Ihavethesame
cat.ion. Moat. con~ pbyBicians
-credentials as a - y&amp;.r or two ago
are ''technology addicls," be ft!lCU8ed.
but"I _eee a peat [new] ~
''who ieprd the allevi8tion q~.· onlinof pe&lt;JP.Ie *&gt; &lt;Xlllllider them," a said.
ary humari sulrering as acutwork." As
~ .DiacriniiDatia against wOmen in
a pb,ysician hicher 111111 higher · die law will continue
decline as
levelil o1. Wining, his t..dth '.and
women enter the lellai pn&gt;f&lt;!S!Iion in
scope ......., nntit be as ·li
iDcreaainl numbers, She predict.e&lt;!. Sbe
. ~ aUebated fram !tie ornicalls 1hat
ol. two......_
diDary ~ ird&amp;~ in . ill her &lt;:Ua at New York Uni-..ity
the~ •
tbsefore
Law School (theotber dropped out),
"ill~ dl8aoder. Dr.
loa,
but ;ilia . . - eM ia about -

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

ogy; Anne Payne, IUB&gt;Ciate - - ' - .

third....._.
Ita to '-le lillenllioil, Ms. YOUIII-.
.-hellolw.hlr.eyialllltlelalct.l&amp;e
. . . . . . . ............,,'a , e,
_ w i l ...... tllda

....,.._.....uc.i ............ _........

or not"
Ms. Younger's address at 10:-CS a.m.
in Butler Auditorium,' Cepen Hall,
opens a one-day confen!ace desicned
to acquaint women with recent tz'8Dda
in legal educatioll, BDd to provide coi&gt;tact with women who have ...me-1
in tbe legal professioo. U /B LAw Plofesaors Janet Harring, Marjorie Girth
imd Patricia Hollander BDd law students Laura Ze;se1 BDd Regina Felton
Gwan will also spm!t at the O&lt;lllference, which is being 8pOIISOI'Bd b,- tbe
Ollice ol. Student .ABaiJa.
.
"We have seen a quantum leep in
the number of women who are con~ aueers in law," said Dr. Jerome ~ coordinator for otudoot affairs and U /B pre-law a4viaor.
Accoiding to Dr. -Fink. women constitute some 28 per oent ol. tbe of 190 U(B undergraduates aeekini
taw echoo admission currallly lllliac
tbe advisement _._,ice,
"As a paup,'' Fink'saioi, " t b e en teNd better and had beiW ....-

&lt;~~w&gt;themenJ'
I4la fl.a tbe

a......,.

~ty ol. Law aDd

J~.,..,._
up~tr...tlll"""-lo........_,._

. (~M-I, oel.l)

�~
'd1 ··Reg~nts'

Report ~"'-"Liu..iiiD
Costs -o f Attending

t:a :-.=- z ,. _, tt 111!11=.... . _......_~-~ODJ:
o;a '""
~
,_.•WII•aiid.ltit ... crt . . . tllrldiP-111- =~~-'C.-:
01111&amp;

....

..
=--- .t::rr:: =:....,...,.....,...w
=
with

: - 1. .

,1-r~~-=c-c
ludllw

tD

::fa~~e··==~·=..:.-:

~

=rc--~ :r!... tbe

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

~~.:·
~~
, ~= .~'ltlr!tol=~
- . . - , 8Dd IUOO at tbe
-rhe aiiiDcelb rilpadld CID a _,-

....... .lalllti!lr be a.d with tbt-

BI..a C8aa1a fliD tbe New Yea
State l,epl(atme 1llbla1l IIUibiDir
blm W117 bud lor dlfiDiive IJ&amp;:
. barior _ . . . . tbe ~ ol
' miDodty ~ and ald. Be ODCe
~ r8itaated hie- ...-1 COIDr

.~.,: .=..::.s--: ~-;~

~tlalt -.t wW be u tbe
lad&lt; ol. clemogotraNe
C1111i1:1aaa ol tbe
alllrmalift
adiGD ~within
SUNY -'1Y 8nd within l!p8dfic
UDito oi.-SUNY. Whm ~ qaln
with the idea o1 aome llliDd o1 1nconlive pools. be acknowledged the
. stzeaatb ol thai aqiiiDI!Ilt, but at tbe
same time 8llid be t.l not .-ived
any 11UP1J0&lt;t for that poaition 8!llllN
lepJ ClDIIDIIela. It may be that affS
the DeFumia cue io aettled, - m
this CIIJIIPIIII will want ... pullil that
point if the Supreme Court decision
eiws uo any bop§_ whatsoever. One io
ltrucll: in listeDhig ~ the Clvmbellor,
with the fact that ao a State Univeraity we ano CDIItinuint w -put CCII!Siderable sumo ol ....-y intu .allirmstive
action ~ but C4l this C8JDilliS.
and .evideqtly in. SUNY at Jarae, the
PII)'Oif js notimpreeaive.~

Cllllp'

llllllliV. collep IeW.l.
'l1lli report. buecf

a fall a'73
ZliDdam emaple ol 6,000 .N- Ycll'k
ltlate oollep llludmlll With 8dlalar
.r-tive AWuda, rocu..ldllmtlan C4l
• tbe IDijor ol fiDaDdal DJ ...
sludmiiJ and aplons bow N- York
Slate lludeaiiJ are fiDaDciDI their eduCID

~ tlie res-t~ with various

aa=·

petlema ol fiDaDciDI college, N!"" .
Ycll'k State
aiDiled
out
_,......
ol is
arant
funds
8cboW IilceDIM reciPienta.
•
the panla "Dot beiDa
able to even 8PPI'OIIch ....tina tbe
.hilb cost ol tuftlan at private lnati-•
tutlona:" Despite ~ tuitiC4l cost
at private · iDBtltuliooo, a 8ludmt · in ·
a lJUI&gt;lic colleae or 1IDiYenity. io lib1y ·
w receive apprmimalllly the _......,
8JDOIIDto in State pante • his CIIID&gt;telpart from the iDcame level
at ~ .imliarticJIIe, tlie . . .
notes. Wliile private inolitutiC4lo are
lllllldq some attempt w briDa fiDaD.
cial coats in line with that of the State
University, they are etill fallina abort
of the marl&lt;, II&lt;XlCllldinll w 1be-atuily.
Tbe avemge private institution arent
IUDOUDIB- w $886- repreoenting al·
mo8t"one-third•bf the IIOtal' arents"'

.....a ..

Vi co to Sponspr ~ 'ii:"" .oo-. .
·ralk
on Slavery·· :o::::3e;=:==
·
David B · ' Da ·
that few aid
am in the IJftl':IP
l-A'"-w

.
non
VIS, a . _......._ aulhoaty OD.slavezy and antislavery,. )~rill

~of~~~~-

rec}piento
outaide of State
grant ~te. •
1'ben!lore, the ~ ~-.-.,.
• mends- sr-ter ·ooordination · of JIDan.-

the ~~ !uti " t 2
on
cial aid 'prograinij by eombininf tM
Friday, April 26,
2'fo F~.PHJ;;
effort ruade1' tM oep of tM St&lt;Jte
lecture io IIJlOI)80!ed by Vico eoqege
Bofu'd of Regenls.
• . · •
8(lli tbe ~ ,..__~
•.; '
_'It~ tl&gt;at -~~ :-."' -':'e .
ProfeSsor Davi;"i;';,;u;;;; of The
~ m
Of greater ~ m
Problem of Sltwery in W eotem Cui.-.
the diolrjbution ol fundo by IOIDI •ID •
liu-e, which was awarded a Puliber
a more "complex IIIMSUl'e ol family Prize for non-fiction in 1967. One o1
fiDan&lt;:ee, says T.· E!&lt;fward Hollander,
the mOst widely acclaimed boob in
the State Ed_uc;atlon ~t's
t A
.
bisto ._,
..
deputy mmm•ss"'M' for hilber and
recen · mencan
nuu wnting,
profeeoional education Considering
The Problem of S~ces atti- .. ..__ ~• ,__ _:_L _ __. ~-tud.., towards human
e from
...., ~Y !"'ge .......,._ "' ....
the Bible and the Greeks w
lSth
dents who rec81~ State arento. and
Century and mmpares the sys1emo of
that net tuahle mcome Is a n!IIIIC!"·
slavmy that emerged in· the New
abil'
IIIMSUl'e of a family's inano:ial
strength. the Regents report concludeo
W0 rid. . A oequeI ... jlll.,_,_
......vmy - ·it wOuld be preferable ·tu relaiD the
menta m the age ol the Flen&lt;h and
· · 1e
•'-- ..___ ·
American Revolutions will be publish.
"""!"'~ · sunp ll)'lllem "!.._. """' eeed later lhio year
lablishing a more mmplicated system
Currently ~ Profeosor of Hi&amp;that lakes into.~t variableo whiCh
wry at Yale, Professor Davia previbe~~~Y ~I• and ~-~
ously taught at Comell and Dart. """""""''""c "" ..,..mcome ....,..
mouth. He served ao Harmsworth Proliee.
feasor of American History at Oldani
The report f.urtber ~· .
in ~70, and in 1967 was a Fulthat the cuaent Slate fi!w&gt;cia!JDMDB
. · brilibt Secior I.ecturer in India He
test should be amended m caoeo ..t.ere
holils a B.A in philosophy from .Dart.!"""' ~ one member of the famjly
moutli and a Ph.D. in American civiliJS ~tt.ending college. Tbe ~ umtion from Harvard. He has mceived
plains that the net tuable mcome of
a Guggeoheim Fellowship and 'a Fe!parents ill ~ divided by the
lowsbip at the Center for Advenced
number of cbildren m college. Accord·
Study in the Behavioral Sciences at
ing !'-&gt; the ~. this procedure io ineqw~ smce it~ the
Stimford. In addition to the Puliber
Prize, his writings be been warded .
deductiolls "' lhooe With tbe
the Anislleld-Wolf A.:m for
beat
"iDc:oaMB. Tbe study identified
1ar ·
book in rece relaliono and the Maeo
Incentive bolder&amp; whose family
Media A'llnlld of the National Con~le income eueeds $40,000. .Apfen!bCe of Christians end Jews.'
proximately 6 J,l8l cent ol the 8dlalar
. His writings also induile Bomkfde
~ve ~pienla are from familieo
"' American Fiction (1967) The
With._ liiCOIIIIIII ol S26,000 or more. .
Skwe Pot.Oer COIUpiracy tmd
ParaA syatem .cl apj&gt;lying a flat deduolion
noid Style {1969), "ftl!d The F.,.,. of
==~.for; tbe fint additiaaal familY.
"Ctnupiracy (1971). In 19'72, be m collep would DOt only be
a member of' the Democratic National
more equitable, 81Piains tbe ~
. Committee's Bllbcommittee C4l Intellibut it 'IIOOiild aloo save tbe Slate mcni·
· · and Security, end IIUb1iobed .a
flcant amounte in pant peyDialte.
paper in tbeir.Jepart enlit1ed surwa.
While Federal arento . . - . t 1m- IMce tmd Ea~in.a Fr. Socidi
portent _,....... ol lludeat lllli.tonce
He has also wrfUBa articles ...
funds, they do DDt equalize the cost

ln

¥w

E

':i.e

a,;

-Ameri:

~~~~and-~

V.ioo CoJJep Ia 11p11111C11'iDJ ~
Davis's lectuie .._ ~ ol a cailtiDuJua
Pftlll8l!l ol. ~ dllrenm apPftlilob8a "' the biolorY ol ideas and
Jll'&lt;)blem.. in \Vflllem CivilfraticD. A qUMtion period wB1 follow

e
. DdurilljJ

the JectuJe.

.

~lf.,.:&amp;:"w~- -

era! ara!11a uaed l;y atudanto in the
Reaenla ' IIIUV8y,
I*. oint cl -the
Feclera! funds "' private coUep ·lltudeato -- - derived froim1be 8odal
Securit;y and Veteran• AdmlnlalratiC4lo. 'n- ....... provide aiJIQt
80 I * ~ ol. tbe. ~funds Ul!8d

eo

�Documents.

awards, Dr. Clyde
Sciences, ~ a
. - 1 grant and IIUI'Piefunds of $191,369 fran PHS
for seneral research IIUJ'IIOrl, and
Dean Micbael Schwartz of Phamlacy
received BUpP~tal PHS funds of
$73,335 and $67,558.

.

..

ACT Questionnaires

The Spring 19'74 ACT q~MB~ion­
nain!s .,.m be distributed to all J)e.
llOII'IDalts liy April-19.
··- ' -- ~
'Ibis -_ . . , s evaluation fon:ns
wiiJ·be identiail to~ Uaed filr 'Fall"'
1973 semester. And, ap.in, class lime
shoyld be provided for comp~tion of

~~

evaluation- Coilslslil '
of the student forms as well as an explanation s h e e t for tbe instructor
which lists, at tbe instructor'.a optiooi,
two global questions whidl can he answered on the ACT form.
For MFC faculty, tbe forms will
either be sent to the Department
where the faculty--'lleiDher has an ollice
or mail box, or delivered to the c:l-.
room by MFG stall.
Faculty members are IIBked to tum completed forms to their department or MFC o11ice by Mit:y B•.

Law Dean(co.uilwed from - 1 . coL 4)
1970. That year 102 women applied

to the U /B school (out of 1259 applicants), and 46 -.e IICill!ptal last
fall 321 women applied (among m75
applican4&amp;), and 162 were IICill!ptal
( Tbe number of male applicants
• dropped 80ini!What between 19'72 and
1973, but tbe number of women applying was steady at about 320.) Between 1970 and 1973 the number of
women gm&lt;tuat.., of the Law School
increased fran 1 to 18.
"I would not be swpn-1 if, within three to five yean, women .COIIIBti.tute between 20 and 30 per cent of
the students entering lew scbool
Thet's a cilnaervative estimate," Fink
said.
.
Student Aftairs is also I!Jl(m8Dring
the ClliDpU8 appearance Ma:y • of Peter Winograd, lew programs ~
of Educational Testing Semce, wbo
will diseuas "Natioual TreDds in Law
School Admialions."
COIUIEl:TICIN

Sir John Eccles. dlstinaulohed profusor at
physioklml ·•nd biophysics, hn lnfonned
tile ..........
lltlri-ID
him by tile -.,phis • - .nd
q . - In tile ....,._, April 4, wete or·
,..,__ m.ccurno •nd com.,-,y out c
of .,.,__. a print..:t ' ln -.,phis. 1ft ,..

--r1cs

print!.-·---

tile Amerlcen _.,., we compounded tile
error, Dr. Ec:dea ~ ,.,
_. ~- ........~~-~

�, _ 1H11DU18Y 10 IBI'CIIIIJ FMIICH

. . . . . . CGNTJICMMt AND THE IIEWICATIIIII OF THE IIIICI' f1F IIIAIRD.

..... .............. ....,.-,....
...........................
of the ~ of

......_... ~

....... 1171.- ....... . . - 88.IA 1886 Louie XIV 'r8'9olr.ed the
Bdlo&amp; ol Nan•J:,::,~~
lltpJiaod PnDch
- ...
maet 90 ,....,. DuriDa tbe ~
period surroundia1 the~
l&gt;rolealant. and Catbollcs - - - . Bl
boob and ioumals. tbe hilllmy,ol tile
RerormatlaD and· tbe role ol the Refomal in French hilllmy. Dr. Peny'a
w o r J r . - the debate, analy1a
ita 80Ulll08 and argtmt;eniB. and &lt;1!&amp;ita importance m Freach hi&amp;-

solution to tbe ~ ol tbe buman
condition. 'lbe lli• iraQy oliDCh an
ideal Is aalf-erillellt. Ia the tnaedies
Deatlt~and
W:
as ....n
- in the a.t narrative
about the "'Dmme"
poet la;lz,
1671 1691 nearly 100 t.oob
tbe "aanely inane" ~ are
appeared in the French ''historii:al
oonfranled by •• wadil dooDinated by
controversy w and over half ol tbeoe -'--'y
sane 1orcoe which are, in
dealt solely witb matters ol Reforma~tally dBYoid ol nitioaality.
tion and Reformed history. Talr.inK
'lbe
~
8 t u d y explores the
part in the debate were almost 50
1
- many faeeta ol Ibis tbeme and offers
writem, including every major French
an
interpretatiOn
'aDd stylistic· analy, religious COD~lover&amp;ialist-- them
sis o/ all ol Buchner's works desigOOd
Arnauld, .Basnaae, BaY I A~
for
the
American liJader.
especially
Claude Jurieu, l i Clerc,
and Nicole. The debate alao ,bad a
E~w-ion: English and-GerProf. Hauser, a native ol Qermany,
2. The Joy of Su ·
man writers bet:ame involved, and the
holds the Ph.D. in German Literature
3. Chariots of the GO&lt;UY by Eric
journals o/ ti.e "Republic of Lettera,"
from BedleJey and hM beerL at U/B
von Daniken
,
.
roviding nMewa ol the books
aince 1966. He now works largely in
4, I'm OK, Your!' OK: A Proctwal 1&gt;
appeared, kept the debllte alive
Guide 1&lt;! Trat181fCIWrwl Arwly818, by
the erea&lt;lf German ~long after the revocation.
Thomas A. Hams
This volume is ODe o/ ~
Dr. Perry's book assesoea the results
5. Our Bodies, Ourselves
~alb-aeries o/ tbe publisber's ''World
o1 the oot:itroversy for bodt the revo6. Journey to I;ctim!, by Carlos CasAuthors Series."
. cation era and the Erilightenment. She
teneda .
·
. ~.
points out tbat the CODtroversy did
7. SerpUXJ
.
OVERVIEW OF BlOOD· 197..........ated by
not accomplish wbat either Catholics
8. August 1914_ .
Cllartes IIW!ap, ....,_, medor Protestanta envisioned . Catboltc
.9. Jonathan LiuUiflslon Seagull, by
ldiiO, . . _ . , lllaCheonlstty Labono·
' writers resurrected ReformaJ;ion .hisRichard Bsch
tooy, Bulr.lo - . . Hooplbol. Intory in tbe hope tbat 1'-..nt read·
10.
Odessa File, by Frederick
, _ Sendee, Bulr.lo, IU., 1974.
Forsytb
hoirified bY. their past, would acCept i:onvtll!li.Oo.; olf.en, however, Cath. ~ ' $8.
.describes aU aspec;ts
olic histories bardened the resolve o/
of
but authoritative
Protestant&amp; wbo found in their past a.
new commitment
their ,faith. eon:· manner, according to a logical outline,
Counci~
and 'Willi referenCe to review articles.
curreni;o/r ~testanfii hoped that dieir
It is uoefuJ tQ students ol aU disciversions of the past would CODvince
Dr. James F, Mohn, profe99or o/
tbe authorities that Protestantiam no • plines studyiiig blood for the • first
microbiology, bas beeD appointed to
time, as well as to pror-ionaJ.s who
longer
th~eatened
the
stabilil&amp;
of
the newly-aeated Council on Human
want to ·update their knowledge_ or
France. Instead French Catbolics """"
Blood and Transfusion Services for tbe
~ • p._,... lor examinations.
~
ou~
by
the
values
on
which
some
State o1 New -York. 'lbe 51-year-old
Protestants based their arguments from
The BlOod Information Service, 508
physician wiU serve a two-year term
arul
tbus
the
breach
between
·
Roail,
offers
tiotb
a
"catchbiatory,
GetZville·
on tbe Council of eigbt that, witb the
up" arul a "lr.eep-upw · service. 'lbe
tbe two sides grew wider tban ever.
Commissioner o/ Healtb, will establish
Dr. Perry
that the hi!ltoriCal
riodic ''Overview of Blood" is the
minimum standards for the proper col~tch-up" service. ·Tbe "keep-up"
debate
belped
p~
French
public
lection processing, fractionating, &amp;loropinion
for
the
revocation.
Almost
a
service,
the weekly "Current Literaing, dietribution, and supply o/ liuman
ture o/ Blood" ($50 _per year) is a
century paaoed before tbe idea ol tolblood "! blood derivativ.,._used for
eration
bridged
the
gap
between
Prolist o/ new referanoes on
computerized
transfustons.
•
blood lll'l'IIDged in the same c:lasaificatestant and Ortbolic tbat the biatorical
Dr. Mohn is renowned for bia work
controversy bad belped to widen.
tion order- as the ."'verriaw" so the
in blood group immunology. Buftalo
user can ~ bls. fililds ol. intorest ·
born arul educated, be joined the bacElisabetb lsraels Perry .received her
atid cooDaiile oo-coiRc bib~
teriolo~ and immunology faculty here
Ph.D.
in
history
at
the
University
of
as an mstructor a year alter gradua·California at Los Angeles in 1967. She
tion from U / B Medical School in 1945.
was a Fulbright S c h o I a r in PariS
He bas been bacteriologistlseriologist
( 1964-65) , taught at California State
'lbe . ~ ~ol Civil 'Service
at the Niagara Sanitorium (Lockpoit),
College at Long Beach (1961H;'7J, aru1
Buffalo General, Vetetans, and Deabaa receall§: ~ a regulaat the University ol Colorado at Boulconess Hospitals. He bas alao served
tion ~ tbe probatiaaary perider (1967-09) before joining U/B.
as a consultant in immunohematology
to the Erie County IBboratories, as a
~yin~~·-..,~
GEORG BUCHNER - by R - ...._,
member o/ tbe clinical laboratory ad~ clopanmanti tbia Wllllk:
p . - , Gemulnlc- Slnlc,
visory committee ol the State ol New
In the past, wbeliever • Civil SerT_.,. l'ubllshers, Inc., NoW Yoot&lt;, 1974,
York Department o/ Health, at ~
vice employee was JII'OIDI)Iad .fitbin
ltl-.
Walter Reed Army Iitstitute ol RiU/8, no probatiOilary period ODUid be
From the jacket blurb:
•
aearch, and on the National Research
imposed_
if" tbe promotee
Georg Buchner (1813-1837), loDg
CoWicil's auboommittee on'.transfusion
Clime from anolhel- 8lala lii8DC&gt;' or
recognized by the Germans as ODe o/ .
problems.
even
111iD1b«
llllit
ol
State
Univeaity,.
tbeir most intriguing and ·brillisnt lithe/abe- required to..,
erary figures, bas WOD a certain critical
acclaim in America: only in recent
DOW provides
years. His works fiJI but a slender
for a PI'Obetioauy period ol 12 weeks
volume, but they foreshadow some o/
•for all internal CiVil Service proliil)the major tbemes ol modem tbougbt
'lbe following C i v i I .Service EmtiOIIII witbin U/8.
and anticipate many o/ the cbaniea
ployees ~on ·olllcers wiU be
Since lll08t Pl'OIDDtions are to suPwl)ich bave inmslormed the U..tre
lDBtaUed at the May. JOO&amp;ting ol the
.
positions, Poppey said,. the '
during the last fifty years.
CSEA Board o/ Directors:
~
probationary period will give
.
More obviously relevant today tban
Administrative Boud Representathe del&gt;artment 1-'1 an opportunity
at bia i&gt;wn time is' his concept ol the
tive, Michael L Day; Clerical Boud
to evaluate tbe perfonnazic:8 ol the
self-destructive nature o/ the buman
Representative, Audrey Benziger,
employee before coallnaing J*Dlaiii!Dt
intellect. Wliat is usually called •._,_
Maintenance Boanl Representatives,
status
in the PI'OIDOiiooal lftle. .
ity" is taken to be a ~ held
Paul P. Faleski (2-year term) Gerald
In line witb the "newly-Instituted
system o/ deiUBions, and in ezamining
Caputo (1-year te~); Technical
probationary
repiatioa, • Promoted
tbia ,.Ystem, Buchner finds that it is
Boanl Representative, Edgar T . .Villa.
bound to lead to "inaneW behavior
i:e..lo~ ..CceberJ!,YI!IIJU!,~
AAUP MEETING .
.
founded upon myth and baseJees conmanent position. If the employee
jecture, @n tfie otbel' band, much o/
The U/8 Chapter of the Ame~cop Aaaocienot aatisfactorily .complete the probation of University Profesaoro will , _ .t
wbat Is labeled by society aa "inanew
tionary
period, he/abe is retumed to
behavior Is, in fact, a rational ""'P'Pl8e
3:30 p.m., Monct.y, April 29, In the Blue
the former position.
to a reality which C8IIDCit be fatbomed
Room of t!&gt;e Faculty Club. The aaenc~a
Normal
remindera ol the probationincludes: 1. Nominations of o~~~cerw; 2.
Unlike most other writem, Buchner
ary reports required lor promotae&amp; will
does not ftnd the llaw in social alnlcReport from the nationo1 AAUP ....
be
-sent
out
by the Penooanal Olloe
and 3. AAUP P.reolclent'o Report on· lacaJ
turea and COD-mo.. but ratber in
' just as is now. dane for aew employthe limitaWJas ol tbe huam. blain.
acaclemlc ,_om ' - and cor-..
ees.
bllrplnlna.
In the cOmad,y ~ 01111 Leno be
QueatioJJa abou1d be referred to Miss
. ~tbe~as · the~
1atira Kucbazald; 83L6lN4.
• : •.
'-"'

"'L.

~

Da,._..•

Seagul!' .
Atop U/8 Best ·Seller Ltst
By SHARON EDELMAN
-'lbe U/8 Booblooe reports that
The E~t hM finally driven, out
JOfiDlhtJn I,ioinpton 8«J6uU as the
"--·book 011 tbia
.
.
been
reported by at least 76 more college·
and university bookstores, aDIXIlding
to the latest iDlom&gt;ation from The
Chronick of Hitlher Education.
The Chronicle's national survey a1ao
tha the . 'Is o/
Casteneda still maintain poweiful inlluenoes over campus readers, arul that
the ritualistic purchase o/ diet and sex
books continues unchecked.
•

~-;;:.., phenomenon~

~ca~ ~;\!; ~ Car~m

sf::,~ ~~:a:~:

cism seems to bave been replaced

ey ·

the tbriUet' witb a moral: Serpico,_The
Odasa fik, Au,u,t 1914.

'lbe U/B favorites even include a
bit o/ literature tbia sprinJ. John
Gardner's Sunlight Diologues· JS about
life and love in Bstavia, so it's especially popular; a massive new work

~~thea~:W,'":

bave been selling consistently w e II
alao.
Finally, there's the return o/ The
Hobbit. Either there's a whole new
generation o/ Tolkien freaks, or every-·
body's ori&amp;in!d copies WQre out at ex-

a"LtJ:: ':!'
tf'B•a bestcampuses:
seller list
to that o/
other
U/8

compares

1. The Ezorcist by William P . Blatty
2. The Joy of Sa by Alex Comfort
3. Serpico by Peter Maas
4. Ctrio Calorie D~t Book by Donald 8. Mart
.
5. Our Bodiu; OU111elves by the Boston WODal'a Healtb Book CoiJective
~ AllfUBt 1914 by Alexander Solz.-

re

7.
Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
8. GI'UUity'• Rainbow by T h o,m as

~ht

DitJiofua by John Gardner
10. Rabbit Boa by Thomas Sanchez

__

.·

~

1. The Ezorcist

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To Blood

argues

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New ,-,;,&amp;.lion Rules

.. . .

a--.

CSEA Officials
To Be Installed

p~=-tian

•12--

J:;_

�·- U/8 Ubraries ~lain SUNY's New Open Access Policy
'lbe CbeDce11or ol the Slate UniV81'8ity ol New Yod&lt; IIIIDOUDCed 011
FebrUary • - Open " " " - Policy for
SUNY 1ibrariee - .a policy wtUdt
makes libnry rmoun:a~ ol Slate UniV81'8ity 8ftilable to any etudent, fac~. or.~Jiaft member ol the Univer-

sitar. .. • • .

/

. •

n.;, ..-ns, according to Mary B .
· ea.ata, ..uant director for public
IIBIVioas, U/B Ubm:riola, that any pereon, upon ..-tatiOD ol a current,
valid · ID card may baYe borrQWing
privileges in _a ny library in the SUNY
ByiJtem. 'lbeae privileg.., eDond to the
34 State csmpuses,-as well as to those
·community colleges_that accept Slate
Um-..ity's imitation to psrticipete.
'lbe chculation supervison ol any ol
SUNY/Bu«aao's unit Jibra!iee are·pr&amp;pared · to give our users precise information as to wtUdt community col{
1...,. are eurnntly perticg&gt;a~ in
0:- Acoess, Dr. Ca8lata l8pOI'Ia.
8be indicates that in meetinp att-*1 by the cinlulalion llbrarl8ns of
SUNY in ReciOD I, ti¥' pmcedarea.b

()pen A""""" in Region I were WO&lt;ked
ouL Substantial a g r e e m e n t was
reaebo!d as to length of 1011118, rOOewal
policies, recalls, fines and book retinn

procedures. Moreover, because book
retrieval may pmseJlt a problem if
books are nbt diiectly returned to the
lending library by the borrower, Hegion I Libraries will iden~ material
loaned out on "'pen ~· by b~t
orange colored book bands wtUdt
Clearly identify the lending libnuy.
'lbe procedures for taking :advantage of the Open A""""" .policy baYe
been kept as sunple as poaoible for the
user, Dr. Claaaala aa,ys. For """"'Pie,
it is not .....-ry for the wier to
obtain a referral from bis l&gt;ome libnuy, nor is it necesssry for the lisor
to """advance notice ol.· bis intention
to visit any ~- All the user ,has
to do is p,_t ~~.._~IJ&gt; his ID
csrd, to the SUNY ............, ol l!ls
cboioe.
'lbe ~ ol tbe usar are
simply that be/abe is l!olpected · to
protict the ~-teri&amp;l be-"bor.

.-... He/sbe is liable to the same
charges ·for lost, damaged or OYerdue
material as those normally levied by ·
tbe boet csmpus •to its """' pstrODs.
, Open ~ users are advised that
noti&lt;::e of overdues. recalls, or unremitted charges will be sent directly to
them; but upon the J:'8q1Bit ol the
lending libnuy. the home libnuy will
intercede. Open Access privileges can
be withdrawn from any user given

. evidence ol abuse.
·
Dr. Cassata Mviseil would-be Open
~ 'pslroDs that tbey may borrow
most.materials which chculate to locsl ·
campua users. alihougb Reeerve materials, and generally iournals. r.re
CODBidered NStricted. LoaJi ~
generally conform to tbe ..,labliiobed
foen ~ of tbe unit lending the
, material, b!lt material may be reqUMted for return before tbe due date,
il another pstrOD bas l'8IIUI!sted its
recall. Material being JeCalled lot Re-

~ma~be~o!:::i~lfi:
braries In

Reailll.. 1,. &amp;J:bulle d.

~

cents a day is cbaqed, but recalled

material carries a fiDe ol 50 oente a
day, beginning witb a new asigned
"due date." Open ~ bonowera
should make ever)' effort to return
material in pemon by the due date
to tbe libnuy unit lending the material. However, material may be returned til the borrower's home library_
on or before tbe date tbe book is.due.
Altbougb Open Access is oonsideft!d
·a bold and innovative policy, Dr. Ca&amp;sala says, all participating libraries
ate keeping careful statistics as to tbe
number of Open Access users and
number of items tbey borrow to determine tbe impact on tbeir own patrons
and resources. In addition, statistics

:f~~~j~:~

agreed that tbe Qpen Access policy

will be evaluated at tbe end of one
year of opera~
. It is hoped, however, sbe says, tbat
tbe Open A""""" policy will prove to
be successful and a boon to the elud~ stiiJf ol. SUNY~ ~

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. . . . . . . .raduate ad............==-with~ apporTo ,penllit the ~ 81:bedulilll ., r.:Ditill,"';; .............. ol
,.aJatiaill - - . tllelr - . ...
.... the ~ ol Nllldremaata
far llllllociU reapon-.lbiU ty, all requeD
far or
- JI')UDds,
"' . . fiFpe
thdllersity
8piiDe
Other"'than
that
requjnd far scbeduled 8l:8demie, intmmural, ..... intercoJieBialie activities, must be ...-.,d to the 08lce
ol Facilities l'lmmDII- .
.
1be r11queat abouk' be mede em
forms provided · by tbat olllce and
abauJd contain all needed iDfOnDation,
indudina but DDt limited lo:
h Name ad fuDctiaa flf the PGUJ&gt;;
. 2. I ' l l . - "' the meetlq;
.
3. Prelerred ...._-,.. *'-; '
4. Ulliveraity~ food aervice,
pel'IIOIIDel requited, aDd otJ.. special
needs;
5. Budaet aDd 8IJIJrCI!8 ol flmds.
1be CoordinaiDI' of Facilities PlanDin bas tbe. reeponsibility to check
the followinl, where appropriate,
concerning the ·availability of _..,
""'J''ested, support facilities, and propnety:
'
Oflice of Facilities Planning (for
classrooms, lecture balls and allied
-ces);
Director of Health, Physical Edu.catioo BDd Athletics (for athletic
buildinp and grounds);
Assistant Vice President for Auxiliary Enterprises (for dorrllitories and

.n'M

din.i.g,g,~);-"' , ,·~

'-,• .-·

\

.,.

Asilistant Vice President for Pbysi-

eal Flfc iliHes ((or general csmpus
I"QUDDIs and/or Jl8Iking lots); _ .

Designated olllcers of groups that
bold Oil eEieDded _assignment All ~ Will be nMewed b
the C oordinator for conforrllity
State U b i = regulation• and Ulli-vemity &lt;&gt;f
policy, inc.uding the
following conditions:
],. 1be purpoees of tbe meeting are
consisten~ with the gehera) objectives
of the Ulliveraity.
.
2. 1be neceasary documents (standard coilllact for non-'Jniversity
groups, documeDt of ~t for
Ulliveraity poups) are executed and
filed.
In a case where clear determination
of accoptance is not possible, the reCJI*l will be referred to the ViCe
President (or Academic Alfairs wbo
in conjunction witb tbe Vice Presi:
dents Cor Ulliversit,r f'elations, .and
Operatioos and Systems, will make a
determination reprding the appropriateneoa of the request.
1be individual having general responsibility for the _.:e assigned will
also bave ._...;bility for notification ol Campus Security, Maintenanee. Health and Safety, etc., regardlq ~the event
1be Ulliversity use of all facilities
aball l!ave ..-nptive priority. Amdemic use o( space aball have preemptive ·priority over non-academic
use. 1be aerciae Ol preemptjve pri·
onty in a situation ~ commitmenta a~...ty bave ~ made aball
require the approval of tba PNaident,
or the ~ve Vice President, of
the Ulliveraity.
.
On the basis o( availability of space,
. _ , . eervices, review olthe event
for propriety. and properly eDCIBed
~ of autborizatioll, the reqlalla acoepted or rejiicted.
-8Eti10II II
•
~ Cor ad hoc uae ol spaoe
come bam botb Univenit¥ and 11111&gt;U.u-.lty IIQIIPL Snbject to the
above * ' - I a , filii followin&amp; Jll'C&gt;-

t,

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illlo 81111 ....... !L!.:.~oaalty
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e-1 81111
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en-clal ........... lihDwlnllfta In- . ....... - - ~ 81111

~flf 11Bt m-ie 1D111t be
llleil witll the Ollce "'Cbe
Pres!a.t - Operatlaas lll1d 9yat8ms prior
4D Cbe ....t,lllld. atalialna1l oladual
iDaame lll1d 8llplll-. filed foiJowinc
the ewm. A oantract aimiJar to thet
&gt;-' b.y non-um-.Jty poupe may
be requjnd If the event or the damaae
polll!ntial, or botil, an1 Jarp.
2. Srudelll or Stulkrtl Group Req..- for Clllrll'fU Area or emu:
,..,.,.._
-·
'lbe m fi!ClCIIJlized studeBt associations ( Undergladuate Student Association, Graduate Student Associa,
tion, Medical Student ~
Denial Student Association, law Stu.dent Association, and Millard Fill·
more College Student Asaociation)
tbe Inter-Residence Council, and ..,.b
other student groups as certilled by
tbe Vice President for Student Af.
fairs are tboee representative bodies
from wbicb a student or studeat1""""J'
mullt obtain sponsorship by ~
in advance, through signature ol the
appropriate ol6cer oo the ~Conn,
agreement to SUJ&gt;POrt the ~ in
terms of· a~ting all flnaricial responsibility for damage to UllivmaitY
property and for inordinate cleaning
requirements. If fees are ~ Cor
tbe event beld and proceeds an! DDt
received into and disbursed 6Y
versity authorized fiscal and disbursing agent, fiiumciaJ statements showing ~ income and itanizal• ex-

v...,

a·um:

:r:.,=:'~ ~"withlJ!II'~

Oflice of tbe Vice President for Operations and Systems prior to the event,
and a statement of actual income and
j~zpensee• IIJed , foiJOwihg

lbi!o·-

·•A ·

contract similar to .tbat used by non·
Ullivel1'ity groups may be required H
the event or the damage potentisl, -or
botil, are large.
d;t.l:ac;:.-Universily Groups and In-

a:

The purpose of the meeting must
be educational in nature and p&gt;nsi&amp;tent witb the general . objectiws ot
the Ulliversity. ·
·
b. The group or individual must obtain !'JXlnsorsbip of tbe proposed. activity through a SUNYAB academic
department, administrative ofliile or
recognized student group (as indicated in points 1 and 2 of Section ll).
c. Groups or individuals bot -sponsored by 1!11 academic unit, administrative office, or recognized studeilt
group as set fortb in previous sections
must execute the approved contract.
d. All information and promotion
bearing the name of the Ulli~
must be reviewed by the Vice Presidentlor Ulliversity Relations l!!ior to
relaaae.
.
' e..1be ~P or individual may be
~ to pay to the University all
costs mcurred by tbe Uruversity as a
result of the event (Security, Main&lt;tenance, materials, etc.), including
damages, if any, and must be willing
to sign a contract to ·t bis effect. The
, contract will include appropriate requirements for insurance coverage for
the event
SfCT10N IU
In Order to facilitate and expedite
~ processing of ~ by this Of~~ following guideline&amp; 8re pro1. A ~ must be in writing ..._

a re&amp;er\'ation form providect. by tba

Olllce o( Facilities ~: 1be .....
erwtiao fonn must be received in tlie
Oftlce of Facilities PJannin&amp; ten · (10)
warkiq daya pri!Jr to the P10POied
.

:

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........ at-- four

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the ~ Wan ciJaaDit.
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the cai&gt;Mit.Y il ~ the

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2. 1be Oftlce ot Facilltlea ~
will idmowiecll8 in wrltini to the re~the receipt ol the _ . . , . ,
~ fonn and witbln fhoe (II) WOikint daya will 8Ulxnit in writint lo the""
--~the epptV9al or~

..,._.!:h~
be
frcm
~
tion o( nivaBity &amp;p8D8.
Room~., be oblained frcm

a.e "'

tba
lllaciJitie8 Plmminl- .
~ A CJIIM'IIkllon 1D111t be~
in writUIIr.-• 811 it ~ evidllld, .., iliil OlaL Orpllizatiaas will
DDt ~ anotber date mil:il Cbe
......... ~ ~ in
~ fram the Oftlce ol F.alitiell
l'lennint-lf aiPCJIIIIOr amcels a ecbeduJed event 81111 00.. DDt notify this
08lca, tllen the ip01180r may be . .
-.1 a._ that ia com.._,.lie ..nil
·filii aupp0rtln1 labor requlrementa
uked far by tba 1't!q\alor initlaUy.
Studenla or lfOUil8 who do not 1111here to the· aforementiooed timelines"
may_be denied use of Ulliversity spaoe
immediately upcm filing a ~
form.

6 English Profs

Win
Awards
Siz member&amp;
faculbo
o(

Dopu1ment
•• preeligioua

the

o(

.t he

or EIWish bave received

-tioiW a w a r d 18CXJ11li-

• ti0118 in recent weeb.
.
Charles Altieri, assistant prot-or
and director of underpaduate curriculum,' has been awarded a Younger
HUJIIIIiiist Fellowabip by thit NatiOnal
Endowment for the Humanities Cor a
study' of Wittpnsleinlan Adaptation
of Wardswortb's litelary, tbaor,y. "He
Will ~ the summer and cme &amp;em:
-Oil the project whicb he ezpecls

~ ~=.,t-ma: ~ .. :iilillol'''bBl'received a seriio~ell~p froiD
~ American Council of Learned So:
cie.lies for a project resulting from his
work in tbe Jli!YcbQitwi-• """'Y. o(
lit~~ratw.e. Hla.-sfUd· :iviii':'',.qii'Whlit

;::;rers'

has been learned ~t
peroeptioos to the re-analyaia of a major
writer such as ~- Dr. Holland will pumue tlie project bom September 1974 - August 1975.
Jobn Logan, profesaof. has been
selected for the $2,500 Zabel Award
of the American Ac:adelnY Ol Arts and
IetteiS and thit Natiooal Institute o(
Arts and !.etten, given ".to an Amer~
lean ~t of progreaJive, original and
experiments) teudenciea." n.. 8WIIl'd
will be presented at the joint annual
ceremonial 'of tlie Amdem.Y-Institulie,
May 22. Logan is the author ot five
volumes of poetry, the latest being
T~ AliOnymous Lover. He bas ~
poetry editor of TM Crilil: and T~

Nati911.

•

·Murray Schwartz, a~~~istant professor, is another· recipient of an Ameri. can Council of Leanied Societies Fellowship. He will study in the Prognon
in Advanced Psycbodynamic Education at the Ulliversity o( Rocbaiter in
1974-75, for the further develop1111111t
o( his current worl1 in psychofogical
literary criticism. psycboanalytic ·theory and tberaJ&gt;Y; CO.founder, with Prof.
HollaDd, of ~tbe Literature and PsycboiOIIY Graduate Program, Schwartz
has ciirered OCMftl8S in literature and
psychology and psycboanalytic Jherllpy. He is writint a book with Holland oo psy~c theory, attempting a synthesis of contemporary
ego psychology witb focus an lbe
ccmcepta of identity and transformation. 1be to.o expect lo complete the
book clurin,1974-75.
- •
David ~t, assistant JII'O(-.r
also received an &gt;\CIS study
ship to camplete a JIIOjact anti~ "A
Ree
- t ol the Phlloaophtcal
Gftl11!1da of the Enllilb 'Som!iitwNI'
Tradition in RatDration and 18tb
Century Literature." fie Ia CUI'Nillly
at wort in Belbley.
'lbe al:db ~ manber, ~
ACUI etady felloinblp wlnnn Ia

fellow:

Anne aa.an, ....:lata..,_ ...
~ year In Southern
~
wri1lnl a book em the etataa ol
28) .
--&lt;~.~

�___ _
.

.

--...~.

-~
HUIO- W~ ~r of. The TenIIASBAII.·
U/B vo. U11iveroit;[ of fiu.baqh
Cd')',NeMac!in-).
ll'ield, 1 p.m,.

Pee!!-

- IINNII•

.•
U/B vo. Piu.buqb. Rolaey 'Field
Die Courta, 2 p.m.
.

...

Ten·

UHIYQSITY ASSIMII.Y MilliNG••

Aldell Cowtroom, O'Brian Hall, Am·
- bent, 8 p.m.
'
liCIWI•

.

PJannin8 and Anc.!y.U.of Scientific Ex-

tJi~:"~; ~=~~~

Footer, 4 p.m.
...!;;':f'J:.;;~

the

CoDege of Mathe-

~IECrtAL•
PNHUt and Mruic,
Gerard, Dill•
Centre ntJtional dt! Ia
· rechen:he ~. 101 Baird, 4: 30
p .m.H·• '
·,; .... ,
·

oioolociot with

the v-

ct.::i}~ the Depar!Dients of -~u-

~-, (Paiolini)';

t47

p.m.4

Diefendow: 7
.....

COWUTEa SBVICIS• s~JotMAa•

SOCJm

COllOQUIUM•

···Ezotu: and lrra tion.a t Entertain-

-m~!'~t;~'";D=n"'!lfo
Max Wickert, aaoociate

10
..:,

prof'"""", ~DC­

liah, U/ B, Room 2, Annex B, 8 p.m.
Pieoented by. the Department of Ellgliob.
FILMS•

andeu:t.lt~ lf,..m;r_ );~= li:Z&gt;.
140 Capen, 9 p.m. No _admiuion

c:barP.

WEDNESDAY- 24 ·
IIAnSfiCAL SCIENCE COllOQUIUM!

Modt!ling Cl!llOOred Survival Procoau,
U/ B Professor Stephen W . Laplroa.
4230 Ridp Lea, Rm. A-49, S: SO p.m.
Coffee at S p.M. ·
·
LACIO,Sst:•
U 1 B va.

~

Niagara, Rotaey Field, 4 _p .m.

PSYCIIOMAT"

A: listeoillg and Ieeming experienoa,
·232 Nol-to11, 7-10 p.m. •
UUAI FILMS*

. lUot "' CeU Block 11, 7 p.m., and The
Grioaom ()ana, · 9 p.m., 140 Cape11. No
admiaiQou charge.
FIUl•

-

1 Love You Rooa (Mixrahi), Coufer·

eooa Theatze, Norto11, 8 :30 p.m.

Hl:..
~ =~n~i•L-r:k't!
It otan Micbal Bot-Adam, LeY1ma FillJt.
elotein, ani! Moobe TaL
• ~ted by the Hill8i FOUildotion.

__ THuRsDAY- 25

or, 8&amp;ird Recital Hall, 2 p.m.'
P-ted . by the U~ Opera Studio.

-. MAID lANGUAGE CONfHINCE-IUSION 11•

IMAGES: F . R. J1UM0011, ptofeooor of
Freach and comparative literature, Uni-

=u~~- g:eco. ~:::;;
~D{~~

• .l!.'ngliob,

Fletcher, viaiting ;:fl..,r of
UCLA, and U/ B profeeoor of

· EIIJ!iOb, 1832: T 4t R eform of Repraon-

t&lt;WOn; and Nathan Lyono, cfuector of

::.O~~bo=-~::U:~ui'it. FJ::,:
-~~&amp;,~:!,"
0~= K:f"t.~
p.m. .
PSYCHOMA.t•

A listeoillg and learning experience,
~ p.m.

2S2 Norton,
&amp;KTUH·

Pla.nning and A.nalyoil of Scientific
E zperinunto, Prof. Marvin Zele11, direc-

tor, U/ B Statistical Scieoce Laboratory,
110 Foeter, 4 p.m.
Preoeoted by
CODege of Mathematical Scienoes. _
_,

the

-· ·

CAC

'

T_eleco~idlw. ~ucte d~
~p~~~·.·~ • ·o·&gt; ~·•' •·

~\'IIIII AND

•

filM••

-

~.:~xs.;l~:.:L¥t~:. ~-

7

. · . .ahd
• TM'' 'renbf- 1'by-• Hugo•"WeiioPH·

Four DUJ/aguu for Two Voicu imd Two
· Piantn by Ned Rorem. Baird Recital
Hall, _8 p .m.. Admiuion charge.
,.,_Pretented•by· the U~i verait¥. -l&gt;pera
Studio. Through April 29.
LECTUU•

On the Science of Creative Intelligence
and 1u Practicol h pect U. Tranocendt!ntal Medil4tion, a lectutef.diocuuion, 242
Norto11, 8 p:m. No admiaai.on charge.
p,_.,ted by the Stwlellto International Meditation Society. For further informatioll, call 694-8489.
UUA&amp; ,.......

N;r!,~ G~%;w~e;:~~~
miaaion charge.

Starring Steve McQueen and Ali Mac·
Graw.

Ptofe.ioual OOUII88Iinc io avoilaNe at
Hillel Hoaoe, 40 Capen Blvd. For a11
appoinlmOilt, call 1186-4540.
fAUIIIOISQATION

Updatiuc of Studomt Date Fora. for
FaD 19741!'Ciotmtion will begin April 22.
Divieion- of. Underpaduate EdUcatioa
otudellta are to follow the ocbedale below. (Note: The lime otudants tum in

:t

=

~~J:j i:fo!:t'!::

~-~~~·":.:1~tobethe~
_ _..,._ _ a..

eodorf ~- Aree.

SENIORS wbooe lut name

1= ~-

boPns with:

~!z :::·~:=~=::~~~=:::::~..

JUNIORS wh.- lut name boPns with:
. A·L -·'···-··---··--Wed..-lay, A:pril 24
M-Z - ·---····--Tburodoy, April21i
SOPHOMORES wbooe Lut , _ ""-ina
- With:
.
A-L . ______---Friday, April 2li
M ·Z ···-·-·-····-·-Mooday, April 211
FRESHMEN ,.baM, iut , _ r.pi.
•With: •
:~
011r n£ nvu ·~

~!z :::::::::.::::::~.~=---~~~)'~
the~!;,O;!'~!in~=
tion material in Towrloelld Hall, ing to the above ecbedula.
•

·

Graduate and Millud Fillmore Collstudeots must go to the Admiloiollo .and
Recorda Oflioa to update their Student
Data F.,.__
RHD 1ME aaND WEB

April 22-27 baa biJen cleaipuoted ao

~ ~~~::.00~~;;:
print or informaticm about

~

or

QY~P~ ~...,:~f~

d...t..t.

Hft&amp;&amp;PIOOUMS

ing the Hebrew University in Jenuolem

duriuc the 1974-75 academic -year. lntar·

I'HOTOGUPIIIC IOOiiiiT"

People of Ctuter Street, photographs
by Damly Form&amp;ll, Muoic . Room. 259
Norto11, through April 21.
UUAI 'UHIIIfO

Six Women Printm&lt;Jitero: Pat Catlett,

~::~c:.:r~a.:vx;

26:

lery 219, 'Nortoll, t.biond1 April
Gallery houro:··MODday, ·w...m-~ay and
Tbunday, 11 a.m.-.5 p.m.; Tueoday, Fri·
day, noon4 p.m., 7~ 10 :p.m.
·
U I B Art !J•partment Faa&lt;lty E%/Ubition, 4240 Riap Lea. Rmo. 6 and 7,
through Saturday. April 27. Viewinc
bouro: Mooday-Friday, 8 : 30 a.m.-.5 p.m.;
Saturday; DOOD-6 .p;m.; SUDday, 2-li p.m._
. AI!T.JOPSY -IXH181J0

Fl'fl!'lt~tl Wri61lt, and Louio Sulli""" - "'
aiD, compiled by Jobn D.
Randall.;' arcbitecturol ...,U,te, U/B Office of ~ ~. lbyeo Hall
Lobby cliopliy tbrOUJh F'J!day,
~\ ~ _...,.,.., Mooday-Friday,

11&gt;8 08ioe

~.oox- ·
- 34do Watcm NOUJ Yori
AIJiriP&gt;t-KDox Art Gallery,
· wood Avellae,.Saturda,J'.
tbrough ~ 26. .

eoted ~tudomts obould coutact HiDel at
836-4050 for forther information.
Hillel io aloo opcmooriDC a National
Study lnotituta at Camp B'.W B'rith

f:ftoA3r~~26.~.J.t~·:

awilaNe. ID-led otudellts oboold COil·
tact RaN!i HofmiUin iillmediajely.

peo~ti=...~1 ~.:

. Call 836-4050 for detoilo.

•

-IISSIONSIIIOISQATION

Aai'·TOPSY -EX11181J0

The Ol&amp;oa of Admiooicmo and Recorda

::.....""'tii~~~~

":Jl:.=..:

g:~ni= ;::,_
must complete a Student Data Foma,
availoble at the 081oe. lbyea Allnex B.
Tentative Office houre are 8 :30 a.m.·
8:30 p.m. on the foDowing date&amp;:
April 18, 22-25, 29, 30; May 1, 2. 6-9,
13-16, 20-22, 28-81; June 3-7. 11, 12,
' 18, 19. 24-28; July 1..5 (Ciooed July 4),
9-12. 16· 19, 22-z, so....s1; and A,~ 1,
3, 6, 7, 13, 1~. 20-=
.

of Cultnnt

E%/Ubition,
1286 Elm·
April 20,
.
-

~--~~=:JI..~
Oouda Oomer, U/B, LaplioD HacbM

·"

COIINIIWIO

Hillel baa &amp;llllOUDood a opecial "EDrid&gt;ment Propam" for otudellts atiend-

EXHIBITS

.~
~ by

· NOTiCES

......,.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY OfADLINE
For evefY0110'1 convonlence and planu,.,
- like to publiclre all events taking placa
on campus. To record lnformati&lt;in, co.- •
Nancy C&amp;rdanolli, ext. 2228, ~ Monday
lit noon for Inclusion In the followJ"'
Thursday IUuli. ./
•
•

�8

.

-~~~

THURSDAY -18

~Y&lt;m·
.............................. _ . _ . . . , . ......................... .ttlle
............ '1111111 - -

............................................
...,. .. .....
UCipan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
. . . . . . . . . . CININII, lll.JIII, far . . . .
•

Umveroity of
2, 2 p.m.

Pittabursh. .\=ex

B,

- N O ICIINa SIMINAaill

RDi.
_

Pndiction and Idellti/imtion in LineaT
Elaoli&lt;: and Vioeoelaoti&lt;: Wcwe Prolion, Dr. J . L Seckman, prof_,r .of en. tin&amp; .......,.,, Department of CiYil

~~eeriD.g,

Univenity of California at
. .

~eley, 148 Parker, 8 p.m.

SHVI(U~UIII·
.
Tho Clooitlinl Amui&lt;cn Family : A
Mak and Female Pen~pective, wilh pre-talions by Dr. Harold Feldman, De-

partment of Human Development and

b.~J.::="t~:::!
139 Capen, 3 p.m.

v=&amp;u:::

Tbe colloquium honon Professor Dorothy L Lynn's 25th anniversary aa a
member of lhe faculty of lhe U/ B School
of Soci8l Policy and Community SeJVioea.
IAIMAU.*

~

.

U /B va. Beran ton, Peelle Field, 3 p.m. •
IKTUII•
P~npectiue• on Neural Modeli.n.g, David Marr, visiting professor, Artificial

~:i~.,.lr:l:;'t'ib!'!~;,~ ~~

~fo~e r!!:;!h,".~~~~Hall

Physi-

a:t.l.':.'red by tbe Physiology graduate
PlASMAS &amp; APPLICATIONS SEMINAl. SEIIES#

AppLication~ of Relativistic Electron
/3eam6 to Controlled Fusion, Prof. Peter

L Auer, dinoctor, Laboratory of Plasma
Studies, Cornell University, 104 Parlter,
4 p.m. Coffee in 107 Parker at 3:30 p.m.

Science.

FOSIB
1-ICn. · II, Dr. F. Albert
Mel4l-Mel4l
Bond.,
Couon, Robert A. Welch Distinguiehed
Prof-.r of a..miatry, Tau A A :M
University, 70 AcbNon, 4: 15 p.m. ,
CHINESE fiLMS*

OEOGIAPHY OHM HOUlE*

The open houae will focus on careen ·
in geography and planning. ~nta
will be ...rvec~. Ridge Lea, Bm. 42,
S-5p.m.
'
SOCIAL IJIOUCY a COMMUNITY

------

Co-aponiOnld by tbe Deputmoi,ls ol
Electrical Eacineerin&amp;. Pbyoia, .... En-

Jineerin&amp;

P,op/e'o Army and One NatiOn, Many

Poop~.

146 Diefandarf, 7:30 and . 9:80
p.m. 'Admlooion: oludeDfa, 150 oenta; aeneral public, 76 cents.
.
,
Preoented by tbe em..- Student AoeociatioD.
' .
11

'W!b~Jf='~

lead ~ Torah ·

B~f. ~n, Hillel Houoe, .CO c.p..,

~~:m~..:.:,ling tbe cultuno of
Ruuia, Germany and Poland, wilh folk

citof:.~~~~~p.::

P-ted by tbe Ruoolan, German aDd

Polish student cluho of lhe De~t
of Germanic and Slavic.
CAC FilM..

The E{fecu of Gamma Raya on Man
in the Moon Marilold., loCO Capen, 8 A
10 p.m. Admiaaion: 76r cents.·
UUAI FH.M••

lJ;tg:Je~ce~ai~~:~

showcase for timeo. Admiooicm clutrp.

tHEATII PIUENYATIOH•
Titanic Love, by Arthur Williama,

Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt
Street&amp;, 8 : 30 p.m. Throud&gt; Saturday,
April 20. For details, oee Thunday liet.ing shove.

uu~:l,'::":.nu.

SUNDAY -21

tbe SW&lt;Jmp Root

FRIDAY-19

MONDAY - 22
C..wre..t .D.to Alllllyoio f!M
··-~-­
(~--7,eol.I) •

~

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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No
On Tenure,
SUNY Says

State University of N- York--lbe
nation's largest uni\Wility-J.a _,_
firmed its support of faCa1l;y .........
and rejected a quota syatsm wbicb
would put a c:eilinc on the JlllnBIIalle.
of tenured farolty in the Um-.it;y.
Chancellor Emest L. Ba,w, iD a
.policy stal.eDalt to preaidaDW oiSW.
University's 29 S~ted .,....
puaes. this ...... allnDeil the
sity's commitment to a -'iDuadba of
tenure, a tradltioG wbicb lie ..W .,_
added enorDIOUIIy to tile ~ ...S
strength of our pro(eaion.." ·
.
Beyer further Dqled, "While there
a re problems and potential for ~
in its execution, the principle is sound
and the policy will be preaerved."
The Chancellor aiao stated:
'While llaving a hl4b """""'tsge of
tenured faculty in a pven department
or at a campus may be educationally
- harmful, it aiao aeems clear that an·
artificislly impoaed ceiling cannot be
defended.
"Such an arrangement ignores interdepartments! and intercampus differences and may discriminate against
unusually gifted nontenured faculty,
including women and minority group
members as they become available for
employment in larger numbers.
"For these reasons a rigid quot.ti .
sy,gtem js unaooepta.ble!'
The policy statement, which is sup• ported by State University's Board of
Trustees, does ·recognize, however, the
need to maintain a bealtby tenure-nontenure balance at a time of plateaued
growth.
·
Dr. Boyer explained, "The process
· by which tenure deciSions are· made
must be atrengtbened to assure that
continuing appointment in the University is ertended
tbc.e who
- have· clemonstrat.fd the 1
.,..__
tence aad " " ' - futule I* I M e

mu--

on1t !3-

..
./

.

~of~~~·

fanaticism for CObiJal that bact to
early childhood. Tliis attitude refused
to abate even after my mother filled
three large garblge cans . with aome
3000 comic boob wben I was about
12, throwing tbem all out . because I
was getting too old for that sort of
thing. Alas, at the time I bad a ..-1&lt;. ing suspicion that she was right, and
only years later did I feel my personality would probably have been
strengthened rather than warped if I
bad stayed• in cioeer touch witb Cap(Continued on paRe 4. eol. Jj

To the strains.of HaYdn (played by
the Mized Emotions String Quartet)
and amid flollriabes of purple (the program. tbe -Iii in the Atden ·eourt,.
room, the drapes covWinc commemorative plaque and portrait), State· and
County olllcialll, jmista, pmct;clng at-YR. and member&amp; Of the Jcibn
Lord O'Brian family joined the University M o n d a in dedicating the
Amherst Campus s f i r s t academic
structure to the aervice of U/8 lAw

:r

~I

:::e.""':n'.,t:~"

CaiC

magnif-

by Dean Riebaril D. Schwartz
"a great faciljty" which will house "a
co~i~ fine educational pro-

~a~~£e~o~and~

"Wori&lt;" which Professor Wade New-house "contributed to its development"
as cbainnsn of ·lAw's buildinj! committee. Prof. Newhouae recetved a
apeciaJ citatioii from his colleague&amp; for
the "industry, vision, dedication, persistence aJid understanding" W b I C b
haw! 111t1de John Lord O'Brian Hall
"available for the ric:b5t powtl:t and
~ of the hict-t aspi.ratiims of
the Faculty of lAw and Jw;iapntdenoe."
Ret&gt;r-ljug the .....-D's ~Y
at the centlllllDiea, and w.rina baDd( COitliluuil 011 paRe 2. eol. 1)

~~%~~~~-~

li:adi 01 tile State-operated ciuDpuses,_the. ChaDoellor said, will clarify
the cnt.eria and procedure -fw !entire
decision. In .addition, each campus is
to preplue an analysia oWta CW1I!Dt
and projected level of slafting and estimate the relationship betweeln liellun!d
and nontenured faculty during tile ait&lt;year period between 1974 aud 191!0.
In ·related actions, the CbaDcellor

p~

• A program of faculty developmenf
that would make it poa;ible for individuals in departments wboae enrollments have perDI8Ialtly and marbdly
declined to prepare tbemaelves for .op.
l'a':J~'tt"rt to o t be r, r .
• ·Reduction Of the - t
tory age for retiremimt from" '10 to 66

......as-

(Cont inued on

~

2. coL 4)

�law
Washington,

the principal

!see

.,;,:.~edica~ plaque was unveiled

by President Robert L Ketter, Gover- ·
nor Malcolm Wilson and William T .
Baird, cbairman of the University
Council, wbopresidedat the ceremony.
Maile Minor
At the podium, Ketter noted that
" for years the Amherst Cami'W' has
heen a magic mirror for the University," cine which reftects the image of
the future rather than the inadequacies
and •overcrowding of the presenl Although much 'remams' to be done, Ketter said, "parts of the image have hecome presen~ realities--true re8ections
:Or~~ today_ to ~cate:
R-uing that · Gov. .Rockefeller&gt;is
· said .to have -struclt .water when be
tumed the-first&gt; l!hovl!1 of earth at Am-·
herst, Ketter .asked Gov. Wilson "to
carry the message hack to Albany that
the University· is, indeed, afloat."
It is appropriate, the President said.
that "the fir:st academic slructure to
be used and dedicated on this new
campus should be that which houses
-the Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence.
As institutions, thi.• University and
others are among the great civilizing
forces which we have in. the world. Yet
without the law, the proCesses of civilization would cease. There -would be
no progress in man's enduring attempt
to live justly and in peace." ,
A Wonl

-

for- T._,s

Gov. Wilaon-uP .lor electi.o n -this
fall-brought a mess&amp;Je of apprecia- ·
tion. to the many ind1viduals .associated with the O'Brian Hall project,
particularly the "New York State taxpayerS." a group "too often over·
looked."
Momentarily flustered by a mis-

and the stall of P'tlcllit5aal'llmniDg and
the other DI!Oiile 88ICialed with 'the
building ol tlie ClUIPU8 t.w ~
atrated their cammilnalt to _,.,. the .
academic JII'CIIf8lll8-"
Newbouae's role In development of
the building, accordiDJ to ' his colleague, Aasociate lAw PnM.t William
. Greiner, was "to mediate between the
disadvantaged."
faculty
the llliDy . . , . and ofThe School ahould also be "availficeno .....,.....;hie for ciMIJD (and con~orme"! andreeourcehas·=·
f\)ftiaPted~T~
struction) .' .. . We think he repre""
~-.
lll!llted ua ~ and - think ha repreresearch, and a atudent program aimed . lll!llted the Uru-aity 'Mill.. . . Had it
at contributing to new legislation
' not been for Ibis) Ull8tiDtlng efforts,
throulh direct cooperation with &lt;r!'Orirwe might not be liere today, and tbis
ing legialatora."
_;. ~t building milbt not he 110
F-*J- ·
fitting a tribute to the memory_ of
Noting that the sludent body is "a
John Lord O'Brian."
ca,efully culled 10 per cent of all ap- .
plicanta,n Schwartz said, •-n.ey have
0
fi....-t pillar of good government."
come to ua from the tudJulence of the
(Continued from - 1. col. 4)
Wilson promised that John Lord
late sirtiea and they continue to ask
as well aa the development of an early
O'Brian Hall, noW iaolated, will soon
searching QOill!tinna about the pro!&gt;.
retirement plan which w o u I d niake
be at the heert of a BUb-cam~ for
Iems of . our_aQciety, But they have
withdrawal from State University-emSocial Sciences, integrated Wlth the
chosen the ·I e g a.l profession because
ployment attmctive at age l5li or ·60.
traditional social science disciplines;
they 'believe it ali'Oms a way, ~
'"lbeae
taken loln!tber," Dr.
education, and philosophy. This proxt/le way, in which these prob!ems=Boyer sta~..wile- the U.niimity is ·essential to tbe wide-ranging
. political, economic, aocial, technologiversity to mamtain a llital abd cft&amp;tive· .
~'T"':"' envisaged for U / B Law, he
ail'-&lt;:lih be handled ·in a manner confaCility, the 'centnil · ingndient in· the
fhe On!ll and CJ!nly
• ~ ,,
! I
• ._ t... l
-sistent . with lthe·. . - t ' llObstitutiiJDal-- edui:ationa'J ~.. ' .
•
ideala
of
freedom
and
justice:•
·~.
,
.
'
Tbe ChanCellor!liald··lba't hlS· otat;e: ..
Those prog,rams, D ~an ~wii!!Z
!Jhe faculty of'1he.Scboolr the dean &lt; ment- ·i n . _,to the i'elwalna-"
elaborated, will come m l'eSJX&gt;nSe to '
said, is ita ·"ClUCial 1 aaoet."·II'o•ii'1 ...,.,.. • -tion. of !lie 8l&lt;latinJ tenure system"' aa
the "distinetive J'lllii)Olisibili!¥"•11laoed ·
of classical inatruction in professional
called for .in the University's 19'72
on the Scliool as " the orily .Law School
subjects, 'they are "now adding- new
Muter Plan and to "the tenure de-of the State University of New York."
hau. whiCh 'baa intensified both within
subjects and new methods of teac:hitJ&amp;.
U/B's has, he.noted, "OD!! of the most
In the clinical prognu:na and-simulated
and outside the proleEiob." ·It ia...tbe
promising futures" of any law school
law firms, in the initiation of rese&amp;rl'h
·result -of wides,Prelid COllllllltation dur-·
in the country, according to the Counon the law in actiOn, in the uae of
ing the .,.t Sir' months. , ...
cil on Legal Education .of the- .Amerimethods
and
concepts
from
other
disDr. Boyjw ..Ud that' after appropricsn Bar Association.
cipline&amp;-the law l&amp;culty believes that
ate further COllllllltation with faculty
The Law School has great assets, as
it
can
appreciably
advance
the
study
administration
and students, be planS
well, Schwartz outlined, not the least
of law and that it can do 110 in a mail- ·
to preaeot to lh8 UnMmoity's Boiud
of which is a two-stranded, 87-year
ner that uses and combines the best
of 'Iiilstees ""' e c i f i c Jli'OPCIB8lo for
tradition of legal education.
elements of its tradition."
8llaldment of their Policies aa approThe first of these stmnds, he said,
Exac:lin&amp; Pion
priate,
. ,
'
"wae provided by Dean Carlos Alden,
Prof. Newhouse described ' O'Brian
So ~ aa the nation's co11eres and
who emphasized professio~ skiiiB as
Hall !"' " the culmination of a plan
universities . were rapidly tmpanding,
required in the' practice of law. . . . .
Dr.- Boyer pointed out, they- able .
The second. . ., developed under the . . conceiVed more than 13 Year!! ago."
Several themes were oa-1 m that
to prMerve a fairly balanoed 1!81ationleadership of Deans Frank Shea, Mark
Howl!, Philip Halpern, Louis Jalfe and , plan, he .recounted&gt; facilities to BBIIist . ship between. tenured and .....tenured ,
in excellent profeoaional training; a
faculty. HCJW~~Yer theilattioaing.out at
Jacob Hyman, emphasizes analytic
location in cloae proximity ·to related
enrollment and it.; resultmtalc&gt;Wdown
skills, -which provide the lawyer with
disciplipes; and a building aeparate
in faculty powth, he ezplalned, luiS·
an ability -to understand leg8} roncepts
and
distinct,
devoted
to
law.
"in
order
introduced the v.y :real_ pcaibility
and 10 analyze their interrelationship
to inaintain ... identity and integrity."
that. in many academic departments ,
as part of a body of legal doctrine."
The
.building
..
also
had
to
.have.
tbe
most
of the faculty in ~ will . be•
It follows, Schwartz said, t h a t a .
plan d•ctated, features which would
tenured.
.
· , ,- . : • . ,_
school seeking to integrate these two
foster our relationship with the -legal
'Tm ClOilfideot State .Univenity. will ··
pro!ession. These concerns have been
remaiD lll!lllllitive .to the•buman eqUa-. •
satisfied .. • . The courtroom where tion in this entire iiBue,• tbe Cbaneel-'
sit today !&amp;.not only bere to serve our ·
lor concluded. "Qiea•eoims a1JooU teo-..:
~t-run moot court activities, ..but
ure · quolaa and ratioe and enrollment
!t has already been ~- for live hear.trenda sbouid not obeCwe tbe fact that
mgs by the Appellate Division ·or the
we are not only ~about the wellF~ De~t; the supportintr
being of an ~~ We are also ,
f""!hties behi!"' .. : are designed AD·
talking about the ei!IlBI¥&gt;(of.. hillhly
8881Bt the.bann rom!l'B to us. Ano!hi!r , qualified·prof'!SSional·peaple,-As tllese ,
~pie lB 1he'· special laWyel:'s room • twin conoema are kept in proper balm the (l!OO,OOO volume capacity) liance, "I am convinced' the appropriate
~.:..!'•th ~ ~ other features.
policies· ,wjll be .devel"""' , 111¥L"""'
:re """"' to. have ...,rueved the
tained._"
. ,
, · . '" - , .. - .\ . ,. .. ..

taken reference to the "young men"
wbo provided the string music (overlOoking Mired Emol:ions' violinist
Maureen Gallagber), Wilson~- -·
ed with claasic political aplOmb, relating a remark liY the woman mayor of
Quebec wbom be ~ miel H.e r
Honor lamented to the Govemor"'that
"a woman has to be twice as good
as a man to get balf the credit," add- ing that "fortunately, it'a not 1Do difficult." .
John Lord O'Brian was the epitome
of "the highest standards of the legal
piofession," Wilaon recaJied. He remembered alao a motto from Foley
Square in New York City which, be
said, underscores tbe significance of

tbeme8 should be bouaad in. a facility
bearing the name of a man wbo eremplified both.
·
U / B Law, the dean ·suggested, has
a l'i!&amp;poDsibility to tmin to ''become
excellent lawyera,w stlldenta-'-'from the
entire State and from all segments of
the population. .incl~ thoee wbo
'fre· ecoiiiVnically and educatinnally

: .,

~= ~~=:~~

....r

N

para¥
wi~~~.::i!;i'C:~ani..=::

~loo!'n ne~gbbora.
·
. ,_
~- ~ F~- Nonntnc
.·•
Paying tribUte to cooperation and
~.work b)[ "a~ number of 'people m pushing. O'Bnan HaU 'thrOugh
to_ completion, Newbouae sin~led out ..
' the Universio/ Ollicle of Facilities Planningthefor "aeemg that the build!ng came ,
out
JII8Y tb&amp;t the law fac u It y •
~~ It obould. . . .
- •.'In this I:e8118Ct." Newholllli! said,
"and to counter what I found ti:&gt; lie
~ '!t * ",Implicitly, bY.~.
~- 8l6riee .911 tbe new r jllllpua, I ·
want to lltm. !hat at leaot as far aa

O'Brian Hall wao con~ ~ ~ .

."'mJac;lllfiY,~~~.

QuoIa-

Ste.y .i~ 'Appoipt~d · .~:·

Dr. Ri~. R. Stayic, p""-'r of
educati011; has been appomted chairman of. the ~t of Counselor
Education foi'.a fhrM.year term.effective Septamber J. 19'7f- Tbe appointment wail IJl&amp;de-bY ~ Robert ·
L Ketter.
.
Dr. Stevie hqs • e r.v 'e.d aa acting
cbairman of the dePill1:rlloot o4K:e ,January, ,19'74. A native 01. Ohio he received hiS B.A. from . W~r 'eou~e
and hiS M.A. and Ph.D: 6oin..Qhio·
State Univeralty. Dr:. s!e!ic ~ .the·
U / B' faculty iD 1966 add aa ibe coa q .thor of ColliiM!Un,~· T~. andP~·_and~ ~ = .Afyt'h ~ •

8 ~·a u ' vr o

"

-,,.c.

��vacarles.

(Continued'""" -1.&lt;01. 3)
· creators,
ol production and
- distribution, legal baasles and relation
tain Marvel."
to the culture-at-larp. Moreover, the
Captain Marvel ....- JODe forever,
but, In 1968 or '69, Batren picloed up_
massive boo!L is studded with little.;
a new kind of COIQic book while browsknown comic facts : that tbe dialoJue
; In tbe East Side Boabtole In the
"b8lloon" was invented by Benjamin
Franklin, that the fimt center ol un·
~- PerbaPe it was Yellow Dog,
derground comics was not San Franwith tts IOJO of a yellow doJ peeing on
Captain Abab la symbol rich with
cisco or New York but Austin, Texu;
significance for EDJIISb majors l, or
that Robert Crumb rul18 away from
pem.pe an early Zap. In the highly
his wife ooce a year; that Zap No. 0
politicized atmoephere of the mid '60's,
appeered between numbers 3 and o4,
· these new comics were a much needed, • and that underJround cartooniat 6on
U8Wllly humorous counterpoint to the
Cobb created the weD-known ecology
symbol, first published in a book called
dead aeriOusnesa of the underground
press In whidt many of them first apRowSe~.
·
peared. Crumb, Spain, Gilbert Shelton,
•Bad' on Women
Will Eisner and others mocked drugs,
Although . clearly enamored of the
the poli&lt;e, paranoia, the Movement,
comix, Estren does not ignore their
sex, and most relentlessly, straight society. ·Some -of the cartoonists . were
faults. No less than Playboy, be morgood and 901111! terrible, but all of them
ali•.es, they are a b a s t i o n of male

A-•-

,

chauvinism. Particularly since 1968,
when Robert Crumb began his association with S. Clay Wilson, an underground cartoonist wbose work offends
even other underground cartoonists,
the coniix have been bad on the women
question. Crumb &lt;who looks more like
a management trainee than a wild man
/ cartoonist)says comix like Snatch and
Jiz are not pornography but "a satire
on pornography" (an evasion worthy.
of Ralph Ginzburg). But a critic like
Trina, o~ of the few women cartoonists, doesn't care w~t her male colleagues call them, She thinks these
~ d':P""de women ("Rape,'' she
remmds, IS Nar FUNNY!») .Wi~n and
the others are disgusting, she says, in_capable of portraying women as other

and-....,.

.Hard language Jvent to Explore
Myth, f.mages,· Societies, Words "Hard language," a conference on
myth, folklore, literature, society and
art, will be held on campus April 25-

26, under sponsorship of tbe Center
for Studies in Anterican Culture, the
CounciL !ln International Studies, the_
Program in ComParative . Literature
BibiM.
.
and the Conl\!renoes in the Disciplines.
Schediiled for tlte Alden Ccurtroom, •·
The following year Eotren was at
John l.ord O'Brian Hall, Aniherat,-the ~
Columbia School of Joumalism Cwh&lt;ire
conference-will consist of four sessions
he was first in his" clas&amp; and .won a
- Myth, Images, Societies, and Woitls.
Pulitzer felloWshl ) and bad deCided
Session One, on Myth, will be held
to take these un:l'erground comics as
Thursday, j\pril 25, from 10 ll.m. to
the subject of his master's thesis. Co12:30 p.m. The program includes:
lumbia said "no." So "EstZen made a
Rene Ginird, professor of French and
deal. He would do the study "on specmodern thought, Stanford, and disulation." U they didn't like it, he
tinguished faculty professor, U7B,
would write another, more convention"Towsrd a Generative Theory -of
al thesis.
.
Myth and Ritual"; Diane Christian,
. "Because it wasn't an ollicially apassistant professor, English, U/B,
proved project, I was not bound by
''The Voice'of GOd: The Biblical .1mthe normal strictu.-es of theeis-writ~mW. ~.,i:'~ ~rl~~~~~
perative"; and Leslie A. Fiedler, Sam·.
ing," Estren recalls. A child of TV
Lenore Goldberg, who winds up with
uel L. Clemens Professor of Englisb,-·
and a .student ol MciAthan, Estren
a baby at her considerable breast.
U / B, ''The lmtgusge of Myth."
believed that any adequa~ study of
Trina, on the other hand, draws charImages will be the focus Of Session
underl[rOilllli comics would need to
acters like the groupies, wbo tum on
Two, Thursday from 2-4:30 p.m.. F. R .
include both- words and pictures. As
the"
rock
Jameson,
professor of French and
he explains ol the coma. "they are
If
-stsr masters in a panel encomparative literature, University of
almost always true cartoons not mere
f!~
''Tbe Liberation of the GroupCalifornia, San Diego, author ol Manillustrations, and therefore go against
Violence like sex and sexism is partism and· Form and PriSOn H0011e of
the -trend· in straight comics over the
and-paroel of the comix. In Estren's
Lan~uage, will discuss " Narrative
p8j;t 20 years. A cartoon, ·unlike im
view, the most violent of the lDlder·Log1c and . Political Consequences";
illustration, stands almost entiiel.y on
ground characters is Tra.slJri,an,' the
Angus Fletcher, visiting professor of
its own: words and pictures together
larger-than-life be r 0 of the under- English, UCLA, and U / B professor of
make an elfecl which neither words
ground's only true adventure strip.
English, will consider "1832: The Re.
nor pictures
make alone." With
Trashman, "agent of the Sixth Interform of Representstion"; and Nathan
thia in mind he·adopted a- McLuhannational," is the creation of Spain
Lyons, director of the Visual Studies
esque "fteld'1 or "lllOIIIlic apnroach'~ to
: workshop and professor of photograRodriguez, who fonnerly rode with the
his thesis, pasq illustrative..panels
"Road Vultuni!," a Bulfalo motorcycle
phic • tudies at U /B, fonner curator
on· typiDt paper and composing his
club. "Able to·.. ; alter his molecular
of photography ol the George Eastcommentary around them. Columbia
structure ~last week's copy of EVO,"
man House, .Bochester, will speak on
!:ought it---&lt;Uld so did a publisher. •
Truhman 18 a square-jawed revolu" Photography . and the Picture ExEstren's book conSiders every aspect
tionary whose appeal extends well beperience.''
of the comix: historical alitenedents,
yond student radicals. Cartoonist Guy
Session Three,- Societies, Frid,ay,
origins as dittoed "fanzines," ~.
Colwell, who aerved .a jail-term for
April .26, 10 8.1!1:-12:30-.p.m., will indraft evasion, recalls that Trasbman
elude: Neville Dyaon-Hu&lt;lson, profesWBB tlie idol or· one fellow prisoner,
sor ,of anthropology, .SUNY at Bingwho would brandish the strio in his
'hanrton. consultant · to"' the Wcxld
ra while acreaminc his hero1a name.
Bank, the-Rockefeller Foundation and
'Ibe retrospective air-of the .book's
National Geograp/Uc, ''Releases: Some
title (A HiBtory of Undergrowtd ComAnthroi&gt;ologiail No:es on I anguage to
_ ico) rellects the fact .that tbe comix
Manipulate Social Relations": Wit1111 lonpr have 9'!ite their old vitality,
liam a--t, Gordon McKay Profes- although more-titles are being publisbsor ol .Applied Mathematics, member
ed oow than ever befGn!: The distincof the &lt;'.ommittee ol Professors ol BitiQn between Clverf1'0!ID!l and underology, Harvard,-and co-author of
A..wasr£&amp;'r~D
JIOI1Dd bas increasinJ1y blurred .in tbe
Pri,...r of Populalion BW/Qgy, ''Inter-....c:a.w
past five feaia '!'" ao. with Crumb In
active · SeQuences ol Behavior"· · and
-....- r.lulwrrr
)l8rliC:ular lleCOminJ a -mstream perBruce Jacbiin, director of the Center
/OIIlfA.c:r.oonu
aonality, widely blown 88 ~ Cft!l1lor
for Studies in American Cultuie pro-.
r....,
of Enclish, and adjunct pdesP.£nuc::u • .&amp;ltD~""
.
MIDI8LY IIEETINI
sor of ~y, UjB, ''Killina."
The ,_. n-., of 1M U.-s~ty AainnSeaajOII Four, W!'Ods. Friday 6om
lfAJICr &amp;. CfPDtP8f1J
bly will be held at 3 p.m. T~, .April
2-4:30 p.m., .will ftia~: Joaepb H .
~
- 23, In 1M Couttroom, O'Brilin Holt.
. J?oherty, . ~t prOfessor _, of.. Eng·' • '
·
' J; :~ · JJ~.e.l!ll.t~ of Texas,'?tustin,
w e r e unfettered, decorating t b e i r
panels with body parts that hadn't appeered In comic strips since Mickey
humped Minnie in the old Tijuana

way, tbey'w left their mark on American culture. blaziD&amp; the trail fo• popular cartoonists wbo- 110 1onaer accept
the nl8tric:tion UDder wbidt _a Walt
Kelly bad to work, ~ tbe comic
pqee asle for Doonabru.y. :
. · McLuban ooce aid, "Popular art is
the c:J-.. remindinJ us of all the life
. . . that We haw omitted from our
daily routittm." The UDdergJuund comics helped -pOoh t.ek tbe bowtdaries
of what is I1Cil8PIItble In popular art.
Read it, r.ster Prona.

ol tbe "Keep on Truclrln' " poster.
Once found Ollly in hip bookstores, the
underpound comics have spa~
such ~ phenomo!na 88 · Arated animated ~ and the 8IID1e
cartoonistB 'Who . . - bad 1111 outlet
for their ..... but borQemade"-"f&amp;n· zines.. now receive commiasioos from
permiasi"" but UDqi1Mtionaljly overpound periodicals such 88 the Natilmal lAmpoon.
.
Can the~ comics survive
SUCCOIIS?. Maybe; "maybi 1111l Either ·

"Berserk 'l'alk: ~ Communicating
th!"ft11b tbe FWures ol language";
Richard Macloaey, dinoc:tor of. the Hu-rll8nities Center Md p~ of hu·
manities, Johns HopJdna, ''Eat Your
· Words: Towaid a 'I'Iteoey ol Alimen.tstion"; and R.oler 'Abrahams, professor of English•andl utkropolcily, !former director of the African and Afro.
American· Reaearch Institute, University of- Texas, Austin, fellow of the
American Folklore Society, member of
the Smithsonian Council, and author
of Deep DOUJn in the Jtiiigle and Positively Black. ''The Hardest Words:
The Struch\fe of Stereotyping in the
"Negotiations' of Culture.''
The conference is open to the public
without admission cbarxe. For further
information, contact Prof. Jackson,
Annex A.

Spray _Program
Now Underway
mrroa:

On Weilneeday, April 3, SUNY at
• Buftalo's grounda aew atarted aome of
their preventive maintenance spray

"""''J

--__

..,.

-·----

~-

p~first spray 1-.1 is 8 dorm&amp;nt
oil, the same. aa that 1-.1 in orchards
on fruita-. This Ia followed later by
the materials Sevin and Me~chlar
whidt, are very asfe-J&gt;roducts accepted
and sUuest.ed by-USDA and eomell _

!!ni~·=::=e~

aspirin and abould .,.._ 1111 undue
'concern to our Unlwnity people.
We hope this propazn will not in·
convenience anyone.
__..._ 8I!II1AN
Superintendent
ol Grounds

Rel'tgiou·s
-Hol'•days
•
President -RObert L. Ketter thia
week asked Univenlity department
beads and faoulty to --"- -•-•
81Tilll3"DDertts for ~
~
aervance ol re1iJioua holidays might
cauae them to mila 801111! aatilemic
wor!L
''I am sure that you are aware thst
we have, at Buftalo, 8 large number
of Jewish, Protealant' and Catholic ·
students wbo, folloWinJ the dictstes of
their faith, will" ........., a.e last day
of Paseover, Monday, -Aprjl 8, "!'d
Good Friday Apil 12. K.- S81d.
"Where ~ of• the relitii&lt;&gt;us
holiday will compel a student to miss
a teet, a Jlllll8l" ~lalion, etc., I
trust that_ appntpriale ~ty will ·
be prQYjdad -for the lllililent to make
up 'thla' "llilirk without penalcy."

______

__.._~

---

�~he !rite~ationai Living ·Center:

A Plac.e for Iriterculttiral Sharing
Last mOnth I visited the International Living
ing facilities, larger space, and more recreation
Center in Dewey Hall for 1M 'purpose of firiding
facilities. A library, theater, and lecture han will
out how residents like living there. After interbe in the complex. As the year progresses, more
viewing some students, I have the impression
departments and classes will be moving in as that the donn iS functioning well. The people
well. Due to requests from graduate students,
are really friendly, and nearly all of .them want
the Office of Foreign Siudent Affairs is also conto retu~ next year.
sidering the possibility of opening a wing for
Mr. Kirk Robey of the Office of Foreign Stugraduate studenb&lt;.
dent Affairs points out that tbe Iiltemational
-ANTHONY KWOK
Living Center serves to offer students opportuni:
ties for more intercultural ,.sharing than that
which tllkes p~ce . in the classroom, as well as
living-looming experiences. In the future, there·
will be informal non-credit cia"""" and social
activities designed to increase persoriaf interaction among studen.t s, understanding of why
people think and act differently, appreciation of
other cultures, and greater acceptance of each
My family and I immigrated to the United
other.
States from Holland in 1968 mainly because to
There are approiumatety 130 students, half
live in America is to be able to afford the ''better"
American and half foreign, living in the interlife. In America, to be able to be myself, to benational donn. Everyone is encouraged to have
have and dress tbe way I want to, appealed very
roommate from another country. The first Amermuch to me. To be able to afford an electric
ican girl that I met in Dewey said that she had
tooth brush, own a house or dishwasher appealed
no trouble at all mising vtith foreign siudents.
to others.
,A Malaysian student also pointed out that stuHowever, most people in America cannot say
dents ~ to live there; therefQre, they .are
or spell my name right; they can detect an &amp;cprepared to make friends with people of other
cent even though I learned English in the fiist
nationa!jties. A freshman gift told me that wheri:
grade in Holland; and not being Catholic -and
she was first &amp;ssig_ned ·to Amherst, she wanted
living in Buffalo meant that I had to live with
to transfer back to"'the Main Campus. After three
certain prejudices.
weeks, however, she decided to stay. She added :
r could change my name, "shut up" as much
"I love this place. The people are terrific. It's
as possible, or become a Catholic in' order to engreat living with people from all over the.world."
counter fewer prejudices; but thil; was not ex&amp;ctly
On lhe oiMr hand, students I spoke with comthe way I wanted to live under the' constitution
of America.
.
plained that there are not enough &amp;ctivitiea on
tbe Amherst Campus. They "'--IDt more D.ovies,
Thus tbe struggle began. I had to try to
parties, opeakers, and a collee hoUse in . tbelr
understand a wi&gt;Qie new way Of life, a people, a
dorm. The -ust area ol all aeemed· to be tbe
c:ulture, to find out why people behave ao difalmo8t 111111-existeace ol cultural propamming.
ferently in certain situations as ~ with
Although no final decision has been rnacte, it
what I was used to in my "home oountly." For
· is~ that in~ donn will move to
example: whit do people here in tbe U.S.A.
Ellicott next .yeu-. One for tbe projected
mean w11en they "'!!&lt; you,- "Hi, how are you?''
· move is that -students are apected to apply
ani! what are you BUPpoaed to answer. . . . I was
oto live there, and there milbt not be enough
shocked to diaoover that this question was merely
_ a formality, that people did not want ·to know
in J::loiwey for ~ One aioction of
Ellicott "!"'. bold 850 students compared with
emctly~ you were, and that it would be best
204 ill ~· ·:z~ also, often.adequate oook, -.- _ __to_.~. "' am fine." 'I'his _lliw!"'-..~l!g.y

Staying in U·.S.
Is Challenging

a

11a a MtVico tD the campus's intematlonal community,
the Roporl8r hes qreod tD make this space ...,.liable
six timas dUrina the acaclemic year tD the Ol1ice of
Forailn Studant All8irs and the student aditDrial bollrd
ofU/• _.....,..for the - - o n of n - .

--andartic:leSolintetest.-•,.•·
leclied by the_ student ~ltl!rtal , llojl!d- , ,.

�B.xwder. -~~ng

Options Necessary
....w. ......... -

~
of lbe ID8,jcK
alojeclha of . . , r-Ip alulllpta _ . , tD
.cud)&gt; ... lbe
'to 111M • tn.l leallllq
~ . . . tepid tD t'he American way ,
lila. We mi8bt ,._ lbe ,...aiCID: are we ..,.ny
obtaiDIDi lhlll aperieace?
I&gt;urinB the time - apead in Buffalo 8Dd 110 to

u.s. •

8cbool. ...... loreicn etudenla -

baft the op,
portunity to vioit other citiea. We do DOt baw lbe

em- tD fiDd Gat lor~ what ou. uni-

'!'l'lllltial are llloe or wbat· it Ia IIJre to be a atudal.t
al these institutions. Of CDIIl88, we ·aplore the

a

Guidelines Set
For Operations .
Of the ISC

'lbe lnfllrDalioaal Studellt Committee (!SC)

held a ~Melina GD April2, 1974, during which the
foDowina pidelhw- ~-by Mr. Emest
Yau, the repneenlati"" &amp;om the Ollke of Foreip Studellt ·AIIaln, 8Dd approved by the Committee fol1owinc ezteasive dioco •
. 1. 'lbe ISC will be ~-the International CoordiDator of bolb SA 8Dd GSA, one
repneenlati¥e from each natitmal dub recognized
by .SA or GSA, the Editor (or his alternate) of
Uj B InternatiDMl, a representative &amp;om the
Foreisn Sludent A1lilini Ollice, and two students
nominated by one or more ' members of the IS-::;
and .amfirmed by the ISC. 'They constitute the
volin&amp; JD111Dbers of the ISC.
2. Each dub repn!llenlatiV.. will provide the
name of an alternate wbo, in the' representative's
abeence, will baft lbe right to '10te, pwticipate
in deba).e, and propc)Se and second motions.
3. 'There will be a chair person and co-chair
JlSftOil ol the 'ISC. The International Coordinstors will take these poaitioOs.
- •
4. 'J'!&gt;e chair person: will convel.e and preside
over the ISC meelin&amp;s 1liHI represent the ISC to
the Uqiversit¥ and community.
5. 'The ~ petson will assume the dtrties
of the chair person in his absence.
6. Tbe teno of office for the voting membe~
will be &amp;om March 16 to March 15 of tbe follOwing year.
}·
•
7. The lSC will create different sub-commit.tees to deal with specific events. &lt;&gt;&lt; issues. ·
· 8. 'The lSC will name a member-in-clllef for
each suboommittee' and will define the goals,
scope, and authority of each subcommittee.
.
· 9. The member-in-chief of a subcommittee ..;.,m
appoint its own members, wbo need not t:Je voting
members of ihe ISC, but tbe member-in-chief
must be. .
·
10. The ..;.,mber-in-chief will be responsible
to tbe lSC for. the proper operation of the sub- '-committee.
•
"
11. Tbe lSC ',;n1 sponsor or &lt;»-sponsor natinnal and inteniatinnal events upon the recommendation of a member and approval by the
Committee.

-

.

12. The lSC will 'select voting members to
represent it and to work with the University and
tbe cominunity.
. 13. Tbe lSC will meet once eveiy two weeks
during the regular - r.
·
14. 'The .chair person~ will call
meet- inp if be d&lt;iems it necessary.
'15. 'The d&gt;air peraoi. will designate a member
. as a secretary wbo shall record, publish, and mail
· the minutes and announcements of lSC meetings
with agendas to voting members five class days
before each meelin&amp;.
,
•
16. ~ lSC meelin&amp;s.
be open,
.
17. 'lbe quorum for tS.g meetings will be 2/ 3
. of its voting member8. Decisions will be made by
simple majority Vote.
18. Amendments proposed. by committee
members to the aforementiolled rules must be
fi8II!IBCI by a simple lliajority of its voting members.
.
'
19. 'The aforementioned rules w}ll come into
·eflect upon ralilic:ation by a· 2/;1 majority of the

.seecW

wi!l.

Votiq~

.

~

.

city ol Buffalo 8Dd S.U.N .Y. at Buffalo, but are ·
wbat we see in Buffalo 8Dd leam at U/8 represeritiotift of cities 8Dd institution&amp; of .higher education in -the United Stsfes as whole?
.
'There are several programs that could be
organiZed by a combination of both the Ollke of
Foreign Student Affairs 8Dd lbe foreign students
themselves that would serve to broaden Our per·
apect.ive. One possibility is to create an -intercontinenlsl exchange program, whereby a foreign
student ,from this University c:Ould study at another university for either a .....-er or a full
yesr, lncludea in the exchange would be schools '
bolb within and outside of New }'ork Slste whicl)
would offer courses for credit lranaferable back
to U / B. Such a program would give foreign students the opportunity to compare study at an~
other institution with study at Uf B and ' to "expand our horir.ons through further cultunil. exchange with Americans &amp;om different regions as
· well as with other loreign students. ·
Another pos&amp;l'biiity , for . a broader learning
experience .could involve baving three to four
day worJ&lt;sbops With groups. of students &amp;om other
universities basea upon -our mutuai conCerns. A

,-

.

-VUAY "NAill

Inurnati.onal. Anyone Who bas lipjocific ~
tbat he or abe would' like answered oboUJd submit
them in writing by A:pril 20 to U7 B lnmnati.onal,
• Room 206 Towmend Hall.

'

.

U/.8 INTEJIIIIATIONAL
•EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: SUdhlr Suchak (Tanzania)
CO·EDITOR: Vijay Nair (India)

EllfiORIAL IIOARD
Carlos Alvarez (Puerto Rico); Justin Ol&lt;oro. Ukpabi
(Nigena): Da~ington Amadasu (Nigeria); ,Bobo Shi u
(Hong Kong); Etl~n Block. advisor (U.S.); Harish Patel
(Kenya )~- Ernest Yau, advisor (Hong Kong) ; Una Hui
(Hong Kong).
·
CONTfiiBUTORS
Anthony KwOk &lt;Hong Kong): Car1a HoOgeVeen
(Holland );. Herbert Morilenroth (W. ,Gennany); Raul
Roval (Italy) ; Sebastiap Zi raba (Uganda).

- a while I bave known tbal. "SaDcho" was a name
· of convenience, given to my ancestors when they
first settled in Trinidad during tbe nineteenth
·oen~y oolqnizati'!n peri~ ?f . the Yl,~ , ~&lt;!i'(",
During a recent trip to Trinidad, I began mtensive investigations into my family linel!ge: talking to relstives, checkii1g old family land deeds
and 'documenlin&amp; much relevant' detsil Subsequently. I asoerlsined from legal documents tbat
the name of my ancient ancestor was ''Yung
Sanco." wbo bad migrated from Southern Cbins
and settled in Trinidad -around 1850. Due to
Chinese tradition of placing the family name
before the first name, it is understandable why
:•Sanco"'and then "Sancho" ( under tbe influence
of the Spanish rolonists in Trinidad) becanie
tbe accepted legal name of so many of my previ!&gt;us family gene!'lltions. 'The question remains:
why bas tbe family name riot been •changed before now, considering the fact that I am the fifth
generatiOn in Trinidad? 'The answer .is simply
tbat my p..eYious generations bave not felt the
need to ;;harply relate to their ethnic beckground
in the t~asy-going, ea&amp;y..assimilalin&amp; aociety that
is tYPical of Trinidad.
.
I bave made the first step in sesn:hing for my
group identity. It -would be folly if I thought that
a change of name .would aufomatically soive tbe
apparent ronlradictiOns about my pe111011 and tbat
I could relate entirely to my Chinese heritage.
Nor do I believe that. it is necessary for me to
assume an entirely , _ char-@ct.er. However, I
•firmly' believe tbat it will clarify some of the
_ superficial contradictions and tbat with t j m e ,
patien'* and devoted intemrt, ' I may come to understand and. aocept the Chineae character, his- tory and language as part of m_y continuiitg edu·
cation about the world aJound me.

Narc': We•~ill print ·cu many ktter6 to tlu! ·eduor
as space permit8. ~Uers must be t)..ped. double
Bpa.ced; no more than 500 worda, and should be submitted to U / B Internstional, OFSA, R oom 206
Townund HalL
·

Yung Explains
Name Change,
TO : EDITO.R, "U/ B INTERNATIO NAL
RE : " SANCHO CHANGES NAME .7'0 YUNG"

~

lc;;.-,ues &amp; Answer8
·· Editm'o Nok
We are tryina tD anaDP illl .__ liDd an- .
- """""....,.;, ~ ll*llbers ol the administration and lbe foreign student body to be held
sometime this IIIOIIIb. 'The ..,)fa of this encounter will bB pUbliabed in lbe MD lsaue of Ul B

According to lhe legal document &lt;9-1-74 ), I
bave wholly renounced, relinquished and abandoned the use of my fo rmer sumame of SANCHO
only and in place thereof, do assume the su'r name
of YUNG, and so that I may heieafter be called,
known and distinguished not by my former surname of SANCHO but by my assumed surname of
YUNG.

The 'initial resction of ~y people has beeDone o( an eJqtcting curiosity as to the reasons
and events les~ng up to this decisiOn. My initial
~~r is always lh&lt;: Same-a sesrch (or group
Identity. Then, lhe resction becomes even more '
perplexeil. At this point in time, tbe slsge .is set.
for my_"short story! '
·
.
·
Ever ~in"'l I began my studies at U /8 three
yesrs ago, I have been made aware of cerlsin
subtle pressures and distinctions which I shall
define as "envirollJllelltaJ!I ...and !!peraonal." Ori
an environmental level, the University oommunity (a ssmpling of the larger Ameiican communiJ;y, self-acclayned more liberal) emphasizes the
'!eed lo "! distinguished along majority-minority
lines as ·e•tbeJ: black or while, Jew or non-Jew
American or fore!!!""'· etc. Oil p&gt;e personal level:
my forme~ name -_~:' my mann_e r of speech,
my bebav101'al attitudes and my pbysical festures
bave been the subject of much apparent. cOnfu•
si~n.. "~is ~bt a Chinese name;""..You speak
With a siigh( Engl.isb aa:imt;" "Trinidad? Where
: is .it?'~; "You look Chinese or maybe Japanese"
are a f""' of tbe recurring statements and quesijons.
•
••
A:B a result of these. environmental 8Dd per-..Jo_pressures, lielt it was ~ to' clear
up some of the apparent contradictions. Whereas
I bad no ~lrol over my present environment
I direCted my attention to the l"'1'llllll8L For

Siggelkpw Lauds
U/B International

-DAVID II. YUNG

For sume time I bave been following tbe U I B
lnterootw nal pUblication wilh some inteJ'ISl.
·It i; extremely inleies!mg and .i nforma\ive
and I ; imply wanted jo conpatulate you on your
excellent work.
'
It, il; not easy to put out a publication ·of this
nature, but you bave swx:eeded in developing a
resource of unusual value !o our foreign student
PQpulation. · ~
Keep up tbe good work.

.

.

·
Sincerely yours,

-.:CHARD 1\. srOOELKOW

qU;..;

YJCE PBESIDENT POR .B'I'UDBNT AFFAIRS
~

.

.

.

I

REPORTER~U/B IN'ItRNAlr
~Al/April 11, 1.974/ Page

2I

�Mon~ ·Canada with &amp;Taste of
., . .'Die,..._~---~ez­
. _ far ........ ...., ..........
llludlmla.

AJtbDucb - ~ 1llllllr .-.utt Gllllditiaas be- o f a lllonD that~ Moaln!al with 1m
fncla of
city- at:ill - .............
- dMcriled by . . ...., J.a . . . . . . durin&amp;

-.the

-~
- the trip ...-1 that Mcm~ of thaoie em

lnll .. liD- ~ eity all 'IOUIId 8le year." -.
'11111 HaW La 8alle_ located in ~
MoDtzaal, ..... ~ of the 8pDIII - ftllted

- to yWt. The ~ ayalem preciaely icbeduled ad tiiiiDe numeruuo. "Le Mello" ill
- o f ttie oimpleet ~of IIIIM!ml!llll, and It Is
demJ. quiet, ad ,__ It would have bam a aood
idea • ., lo Maalnal. in the - . bee&amp;.- could bave eiiA'ed IiilO ''Man and His W..-kl"
Fair; bull&amp; - ·icy aDd .,_. of the places were

....

-

I tbiDk that we could have Eell much more
if'- J.a J.a an orpuized ~with aome guides
to help . . foreiln students who could not
. - " either Bncllob or French -well, and had dif.
flculty understanding the peQp(e they asked for
inforlmtion. Ntmrilelesa, -it would take too loDg
to tell about ewrytlling we did see. We vi!Rted
"Mmt Royal;" the mountain that gave Montreal
its nan&gt;S and froui which one can see the whole
cit)&gt;. We aJao discovel'ed two important univerID!ies: The Univenity Of Montreal, a French·
speaking institution, qnd McGill Univenity, fa.
mous for 'its Bd&gt;ool of Lawc Fo. night-dubbing,
we encountered "t;)ld ¥ont.eal." wbere one .am
lind anti~ and places for entertainment. Many
tzeasures i!!!lo highligbted Montreal - the, contrast of lbe old buildirigs with the new ones and
the oldest churches in Canada, Notre Dame and
Saint Joeepb Oratoire, as well as edifices belonging to other denominations. I think that the
Canadian government should be proud of the
fifty different ethnic groups · wbo are enridling
Canada's world-famous city.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank
Mr. Stephen Dunnett, Director of the Intensive

Tw~_

Germanys

In··t.he .TJ.N: ~ · .
I

-

'

-

'•

,.

Twenty-eight years la.-1 after wwn before
Germany was admitted to the Uni~ Nations.
However, nOt. only ope but two repi:'eaentatives
were admitted-one from-East and another-lro.m
West Gennany. _
lui a I'E8\Ilt of the last · war there origina~.
for tbot time being, an Eastern and 'three Western
:r:ooea. While provisions for a democratic system
were provided by the Americans, · Frencb, and
British, the basis for a socialist s.ystl!m was
~ in the Eastern zone by_the Soviets.
In these fuat, ~t decisions directly ~ow­
ing the ·war there were no poaiibilities foi-.. an
:;'~nt decisiol). no. of ~ a i&lt;tint

Then in the following years, a West Genn8ny
established. Neither
alate acknowledged the other _as a . sePam.te
nation beca.- both their cionstitutions aimed at
a unified Germany. West Gennany's goal ·w..,_
unification 'in the spirit of western democracy,
and in East Germany it was the enforcement of
socialism according to the Soviet model.
, The third posaibility, .neutrality, Was cfi&amp;.
cussed, but offered no 'alternative because of the
contrasting icleolosilie: Due to the dilfering attitudee toward unificaticm, . an uncompromising
propapnda ensued in both the East and the
West after the war- Consequently, West Gerbecame allied to the whole of Western Europe and the U.S., while East Gemlany became
II880Ciated with the Soviet Union and all of the
other Eastern European nations. Tbi. suspicion
between the East and the West steadily incniased.
For more than 20 years each side coosidered the
other -the enemy. Both political blocs .built extremely expensive defense systems, including
nuclear weapoos and rockets for their· own security. The Berlin blockade, Khrushchev's ulti' ""tum and the Berlin Wall brouglit the world to
·the verge of a third. world war in the 'period
,
known as the Coid War.
The great change toward a new Eaijt-West
relationsbip occurred wben the West Gennan
government under Willy Brandt signed the Trea·
ty of Moecow in 1971 and the Basic Treaty with
East Germany in 1972. All these treaties. recognized tlie Gennan bciiders as they existed after
the war, sUch as the Gennan-Polisb border, and
the division of Germany. into two in~t
nations with dilfenm_t aocia1 systems.
·
and an East Germany were

rnaw

'

Twenty five years after the war Gennans
recogniz(!d . that this division was the price that
was paid for losing the war. Recent years have
shown that the easing of tensions in Europe bas
made considepllil8 pJOgteSS.' The J:lllationship be- ·
tween the two Genoan nations improved as did
the reiBtionship between Ea$"and West Europe
ill general. Indicators of this are more active
-political contact, cultural exchange, and more
intensive -tnrde than ever befom. ·
The ..,.,_u!!llce of this development is that
now two German nations are represented in in~
temational organizations of whjch membership
in the U.N. is the most importanl It should be
the duty of the German representatives to assiSt
in minimi7ing economic and ideological differences to ensure future peacd.
-HERBERT MORGENROTH

President Nyerere's
Hop, Skip &amp; Jump

Born in 1922 in the northern region of Suka-

maland in Tanzania, ~dent Julius K., Nyerere

is a member of the Zanaki of the Lake Province.
Like many Tanzanian lads of his day, be received the ~ important part of his education
beitting his tather's cattle in the beautiful tropical' grasses sround his home. Needless to oo.y, he
received his book-learning in missionary schools
and was one of the few univen;ity graduates of
his time. When he returned from studying in
Britain in 1952, he became a school tescher. .
President Nyerere's humanism is clearly reflected in the TANU ( the ruling party) constitution: . Among other goals, T ANU ·establishes
the !~lowing as ....00 of its basic objectives:
1. To prepare Tanganyika (now Tanzania).
f&lt;&gt;&lt; self-government and. independence,
·
2. To .fight against ·t ribalism an&lt;! all isolationist tendencies among the Africans and to build
'
a united nationalism,
3. To fight rell!ntJess1y f&lt;&gt;&lt; the est&amp;blishment
of. a democratic fo.m of government . . . to fight
foc the introduction of tJie ·election "principle in'
all bodies of local and &lt;;entral ~1,
4. To fight for the removal .of every forin of
racialism and ·racisl discrimination, ·
5. And to encourage and Ol'g&amp;llize Trade
Unionism and CooPeratiVe Movemenl ·
TANU's phi10eopby clearly bears ~yerere's
imprint. He ases his iesponsibility as. that of
benefiCient iiiacher and guide of T ANU and· the
Tanzanian. society,
.
President Nyerere is aware t.hat tlie West bas
contributed 'greatly in educating Tanzanians. He
'

·Page 3/REPORTER-U/B U~;rERMAfi0NALIApril11, 1974 .

_

.~

' • 1: •

••

•o4

1 ,

•

, , , .I I.J ,,

l

Englisb Language Institute, wbo offered his time
for the oi'ganization of the trip, as weU as the
I.E.LI. staff. Alao, I would like to thank Peter
Groumpos and Silviano CoJO&lt;nbano, as well as
others -from the S.A. wbo voluntsrily ~
the responsibility fo. the trip .and lodgings, in·cluding David Yung \;bo took care of us upon
the arrival of the bus.
We are lookil)g loN&lt;ard to having anot\&gt;er
trip like this one, wbere everyone can share experiences and enjoy themselves. I wish we could
-also see M(&gt;ntreal in the swnmer and enjoy the
greenery of her parks and highways; but being
there in winter bas provided us with wondedul
memories to be enjoyed forever and ever.

also knows that this fonnal education bas reached
mostly the sons of Occidentsl parents, a minority
in Tanzania, and, ·consequently, that Jess than
30% of the school-qe population bas -..Jly
received fonnal tnining. ~&gt; ':he number of peopl~ without fonnaJ education is increasing. Nyerere's first "liop," dieD, ·is lb educate the parents .of future Tanzania. In O&lt;der to
accompliSh this goal, Nyerere bas concentrated
upon developing e. system of non-f&lt;&gt;&lt;mal education which he bas labeled education for selfreliance. This bas 8IM!I'8l advantages over more
f&lt;&gt;&lt;mal education. In the first place, doubts about
certification are becoming more and more apparent. Degrees, diplomas, and certificates are
presumed 'to -be .qualifications for undertalcing
the nation's work,. but are they really? In many
cases, it turns out that graduates are certified
merely in order to undertal!e more schooling.
Only chance determines whether or not the graduates are actually prepared to undertake the
developments) work which the nation urgentiy
needs. Non-fonnal education programs suggest
the possibility of shifting certification to performance ~ to a measure of learning impcxtsnt
developments) tasks. Work, employment and
service would be part of such certification.
M,O&lt;OOver, Tanzania's expanding school-age
population would require many more schools to
be built, which would cause a depletion ol ber
energy and resources. But Nyerere is exploring
non-formal ways of educating these peQple by
introducing. the bealthiest of all classrooms:
classrooms under the beautiful tropical Uees, ·
classrooms for both old and young. If Nyerere's
experiment su~ he will have met the need '
to provide life-long learning opportunities which
would not take place in formal schools.
With these and ·with many other points in
mind, President Nyerere haS fonnulated his famous concept of familyhood, popularly known
as U jamaa. An area where this concept is practqd is called. an Ujamas village. An Uiau:village is similar to an Israeli kibbutz iii that it
is a rural community where the people share
.equally the work and the benefits of their work.
Tanzanians are shown the benefits of this concept, and, if tfiey lilu! it, they join.
The benefits in an Uiam¥ are many. The
Wajamas (people living' there ) seem to be
bealthiec and happier. There is more ·and improved learning going on both through f&lt;&gt;&lt;mal
. allll non.{Ormal proceoiaes. Most important, both
' children and adults are learning skills. that can
be applied right away in fanning, building, etCBy the end of 1972, 10% of Tanzania's 13
million people were living in 3,000 Ujamaa. vii-

�..
Summor Jolla

Early April is an !lPPOriw&gt;e time. to begin
-.china for summer empioymeot. Conditions in

...,.__,_lbe
____tr-..:
MJ Q:

has upiNof- I . . . . .

,dol to

A: StudeniB lla...Jing abroad in need of visa
renewal sbould vWt the Oftice ol Forei1111 Student AJfairB and obtain an 1-20 (lor those on a student ,
visa) or DSP-66 (if an a J-1 visa). The Oftice of
ForeiiiJl Student Allairs wlll also _ . . , a letter
· ol introduction fbr the- student. The student
should then take the letter and visa form to the
U.S. Consu,l•abroad lor visa revalidation. Note:
A recent and valid Academic Ad~r's form
sbould be on file with the Oftice ol Forei1111 Student Alfairs. 1be student's - r t should also
be valid for a 'period ol cme year. Formerly, revBJidation ol visas was bandied by the Va Office in Washington, D . C. 'Ibis is no longer the

""""0: My viu hao' upi...t but I Wont to visit Toronto
over the

~

-ncl. WIH

I ... -.,....._ l ! l _ - r the
'

u . s. on 111J old viu7
A: Yes. If the studeDt has in bis p&lt;l~BH!ion a
wlid passport and bis 1-94 has not apired be
may visit Cal'&gt;ada·or Mexico flw a ~ ol up to

30~

-:-BOBO BHIU

.CLU81

I

L---------------------~

International Fiesta
The "International FiesiB W74N has been

.checiuled for April 26 in Clarlt Gym The Fiesta
will ronsiat of short national (cultmal) perf""'
· mances by representative international campus
groups. 1be main. emphasis will be upon amateur performances. Each national il'OO!P will be
aliO'Cated a muimum of fifteen mihOiiiJs actual
performance tUDe. All are invited to attend this
rolorful event. Emct time will be announced

Tanzanian Seminar
· 'Ibis is to inform you that in aocordance ..,jth
the unsnimOus decisioo made by the T~
Who attended the first seminar in Washington·,
D. C., in June 1973, the Serond Tanzania Seminar will be held ih Tonmtn, Canada, from July 31
to A~ 3, W74. You are hereby very rordially
invited to atteDil and partic:ipe.te.
·
·
1be theme of the -.md seminar will be:
"Ujamaa Villaps .:.._ Strategy lor Rural Developm&amp;nt in TaDrania.N Details caoceming llavel ar.ranaementB, registration. participants, papen and
adm-es, -panel dlacuasioas and debates, and
8&lt;CIIIIIIDO&lt;Ietions and meals will be furnished .
upon the receipt ol your positive response by

moiiL

For ~ detaila, pleaae CDIJI!Ict the Tananian_~ in Washingtoa. D. C.

Chinese .StUdents

011 the eichtb ol March, moot Chii- lltuc
doaiB wei to ~- Hall to wte for theirdub ..,.._ The party ol Hem:y 1-Hena Hu
...tved the majority ol the Hem:y will
. be the l'lalident ol the au- 8IDdeot
A....;.tion far the &lt;llliDiDa IICIIdemic ya~r. Stella

the United Stslles 'are. not ideal and you •may
find that it will .take more eJfDrt !ban you would
expect in onler to _,.,.., a job. Before you beiin
work you muat obtain permission -for employment. The Office ol Forei1111 Student Affairs is
normally delegated the authority to gr&amp;nt Smnmer' Employment dt•ring the first week of May.
Secure two -ropies ol immigration form 1-538,
Permission to Accept Emplayment, · from the
ForeiiiJl Student Of6ce, complete and return them
to this oftice.. If you have any questions roncem- .
ing your eligibility lor summer employment,
please rontact an AdW.Or at this ol6ce.
Information Booldet

'•

1

.

'

...

for CommunHJ.UnlversltJ DoJ
Foreign students interested in participating in
Community-University Ds:~t on Sunda.Y.. May
5th, please CO!ltact Kathy Breuer. or ]Wiia Reynolds in the Office of Foreign Student Affairs.
OFSA will have bootha in both No@m Hell and
·Townsend Hall where the geberal Public will •be
able to meet.foreillll studeniB and * r aboot our
varinus prQIIfBins. such as the Home· Hospitality
Program, Speakers' Bureau. and our orientation
program.

Volunteers -

Siu-Jing Lee will be
new Vice Presiden~ and
the President of the Chinese Graduate Student
Association will be Shou-1 Wong.
.QfficiaJs ol the· club have also bEen appointed
as follows: Dan Ching Wong, 'l)OOsure&lt; of
C.S.A.;· May Ti;ui, Secretary of C.S.A.; Su-Ray
Lee, Seaetary of C.G.S.A.

the

OFSA

Africa Club
At a rooent meeting of the Africa Club, the
following people were elected officenl for the 197475 d.cademic year: President, Antoine Madoukou;
Vice President, Emman Dspo Odusanya; Secre- ·
tary, J .. Mubang; Treasurer, k A. Aneru.
Spesking' to the UI B International shortly
after bis election, the new President, Antoine
MadOukou, J&gt;romised that be would d6 all·in bis
power to unify African students and to_rooperate
with other . clubs on campus to promote inter. nirtional awareness. He regretted the very- small
achievement of the dissolved ~ve in which
be was the Vice President, and attributed · i1B
dissolution to the internal weakness within the
executive itself- a ~ evidenced by the
disaii-eement among members "during our meet•

Antoine,depkx-ed the apathy of many African ·
students towardS the aftairs ol"the club and said
that bis new albinet woulll improve' upon 1be
publicity given to meetings and activitiea of the
club. He called upon all African students to
embrace the club from which they would derive
no mean benefit, and advised all to lorward their
Buffalo addreilaes to both the Oftice of Foreign
Student Affairs and the African Club. '"Ille
situation Whereby an Afriam student here at
U/ B gives bis ~as Waahipgton, D.C., or Califomia beaiB one's imaginatiaii;N Antoine
declared.
During the forthoamlng AfriCa leetival (Aprii
. 1.2-"18). Antoine adcle4 tbat the activil:iea·1ft!Uld
feature an eohibiticm ol African crafta and a
parade ol ......., _cul1uraJ talents, fond-tasting, a
lec:tun&gt;, and · 8 daDce to .,._, everything ail
Saturday, April 13.
•
--,JUiftH 01&lt;0110 UKPABI

&lt;

_.....

To provide a roore effective OFSA and to
represent the cultures .o l the various nationality
· groups on campus, the OFSA is interested in
receiving donations of posters and/ or wall hang· ·
ings for the receptiOn room.

University Placement and Career Guidance
and the Office of Foreign Siudent, AlfaiiS are
joinUy publishing a booklet roncerning part-time
and summer employment. The booklet indicates
steps to be followed in a p.,n.on•s job ........,n The
pamphlet is designed especiaJly for those students
who have not had experienCe of employmeilt "in
- the United Sta- .However, other students may
lind }he inf."P.'P'P.on" !_l8eful. 1'be bOoklet will be ·
available during the mont4_ ol April from both

ings. N

__

Bullet!~

Boards . ·

.,

We have received vario~U~ . announceinenls of
interest to forei1111 students. The details appesr
on the Bulletin Board in the 0ftioe ol Foreign
Student A1faim. 1) Shipping: International Sea
and Air Shipping. Corporation oilers shipping
services to and from world·wide destinations; 2)
FU,hts to IM Orient: Asian Pacific Center offers
regularly scheduled ftights to Tokyo, Hnng ~Kong
and Bangkok from the West Coast. lnternatiooal
Asaociaticm -f.W Cultiqal Exchanle organizes special "charter ftighiB to Tokyo; 3) 81U111111!1' Crouroods: 1)ie lnatitute of ln~!&gt;mati&lt;laal Education
8llDDIID&lt;lll8 iiB annual 8umme&lt; Croaaroads prograrilto be held in 8sJi Diego, Los An(IBies, and
- COlorado Springs. Limited qavel funds are available. .
Job Anders

•

Job Fin~rs International (JFI), orpnbed to
aasist forei1111 ·students locate employmeot 'with
U. S.jirms having interest in .ibeir horne countries, reports that Procter &amp; Gamble Co. is a sood
possibility. 1be Intemational"Divialan ol P"G
currently has openings in the following areaa:
Ausiria, Belgium, Canada, Finland, Prance, Iran,
Italy, Japan, Federal Republic of Gemlan,y,
Great Britain, Greece, Lebanon, Libya, I.memboorg, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, Peru,
Philippines, Pueno Rico, Saudi Aral!ia, Spain,
sWeden, Switzerland, and Vepezuela. Job oppcxtunities· include I'I!IIPOII8ibil in marbting,
sales manacement. finance and 8CCDIDlting, purchasing, pei9onnel, D\8D1tfaol:uJ'ing, m;.Mpnvmt
' s)'Sieml!. ptpduce development, and engiJ)eering.
For ooinplete information on 'opeliings in these
,_., interested students abouJd contact Mr.
Stephen L. Reynolds, Recruiting Man.qe., lntarnational Division, Piocter I&lt; Gamble Co., P .O.
Box 599, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201. Citlzea d.
Italy studying in the U. S. may also wilh to
contact Deere &amp; Coqmry on their cummt 11181'keting opportunities in Northern Italy. Intlneted
studen_IB should wrife to Donald R. Marpnthaler,
Manager, Manpower Planning and Recruiting, '
Deere ... Company, MOline, llJinoiL

REPORl;ER-U/8 INTERNA1'10NAI!/April i1, 1974/Page 4

�s

~

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

Panel -Is looking

Dedication Is Way o(Life

-A~intments

For 25-Year-Facu/ty Member

BIIMthe' April

1, tbe ~. .
.,._. IDr tllo "Beview of Seerc:b ~
oea-ia ~ell NTP appoint-~loits-x-r&amp;­
~checldns procodureo ·
"";,
.......
re~. l're8ldent Robert L Ket-w ....
the c:banae. the .
Panel'a~ lias~ Gpanded-to lildude addilioaaJ faculty and
NTP t8piWdlllhw. '
.
Kelller iliaD clarified ..,_,u tiooa CXIIICI!IIIiD&amp; the Panel'o· juriodic&gt;tion:
"1. All ~ NTP appointments 1o
1m. of .4 or
gnllller UDder the purview of the
Panel. There wiD .... 1111 -=eplions to
this llUicleliDe ..w-t die approval of
the Preaidenl SiDca there Ia the possibility lbat;
1 - , it may
become ~ ... -deolimbki lo 'in~· an appoin-t, wbidi """'
initially made below .4 FJ'E lo that
bllber. 1t.e appointing ~
ment abooild delermiDe II !bey wish
the Panel to ftiYiew the 8Nrch procedure initililb' or at the time when the
appoinblleat ,_,._ the .4 FJ'E level· ,
or pelller; •
"2. While 1111 ~intments for the
summer seoaion or vblitiDs appointments for one -.lemic year (or
will be reviewed by the Panel r think
all will asree that a- ~ offer
an excellent opportunity to identify
well-qualified minority ancl , wi&gt;men
candidates. There will be 110 'tnmsfer'
from summer or visiting status to fulltime appointment without an, allirmittive action aearcb;
"3. No· appoinGnents to replace individuals on sick leave or -leave with,
out pay will be reviewed by the Panel,.
provided replacements are foroneacademic year or less. Again, there will
be no conversion of sucb 'replacementa' to full-time status wilbout .an
affinnative action aearcb."
.;.'fbe , lln!sideht-'&gt;llao reallinried biB ·
commitment to the Equal Opportunity ·
Program, caltiq for "full aasistance
and cooperation" from campus administrators.
·
The following are the steps to be
followed in affirmative action NTP recruiting p~ures:
.
Step I: TO lnftiate the reeruitment
for a specific NTP position, either
"new" or "replacement," the department head or chairman must complete
the Autlwrizatil&gt;n To Recruit Form.
In addition the Non-Teaching Pro{f!tl- sw/Ull Seroice Posilion Description
.
must be attached.
Step 2: These two forms · will then
be forwarded by the department head
or chairman Iii _his supervisor, Provost,or Health Science Dean for approyal .
and by 'them in tum tO_the appropriale Vice President for approval before
recruiting may' begin.
·
· Step 3: Upon approval by the appropriate Vice President, the forma .
will be forw&amp;Jded by the Vice President to: 1a l the initiating department; 1b l the appropriate supervisor,
P-..rt, or Health~ Dean; (c)
the 0111oe Of the Recruitment Committees, Box 25, 192 Hayes Hall; (d) the
OIIIoe of Equal Opportunity; and (e)
the Director of Personnel, for poeting.
and recruitment.
Step 4: Upon receiving the approved
lonns, the Presi&lt;l!!ntial Committees 00
the Recruitment and Promotion of
Minority Staff 8J!(I WOIMD will send
""""""" of prospective candidates to
the PersOnnel DepadmenL The _Fer-----• ......_·- rtment Wl'IJ l l l l'tiate
'
..,__
~u..,. ""'~
"""
posting procedure, as&amp;ist . the _department• in ..tvertiainl, and oommenoe
ou- reCruiting activities.

~~

of~ti-J

In_.......,,

In ......

'"""' ..r

'-&gt;

uamine Jbe 8Nrch proeedure for -'b.
pro_..t o&amp;r of employment. It
abould be undenlood that the review
panel 1o aolely fOLthe
11,.. byofthlo
.,.alllllllliDina the 8Nrch procedures fallowed, p js not coooemed

· By 'SHARON EDELMAN
• ' . -decide to
they'll probably have to cbag me out of DIY o1ice acn!8llling and ~ to
attend just one more meeting. '
For Dorothy Lynn1 -»or professor
in the School of'SociaJ Po I icy and
Commnot
aJIIIDitha.tyt --~!- theHerscenancareer'obaa
. is

"Whtin I finally

with the quallliclotions of the candldate eelected. Tbe review paDei will
attach its ,..,..,.....,........, lo the
NTP Seerc:b Procedure Report and
forward copies witJUn 12 1wun tO (a)
the appropriate , V'ac:e-Prealdeiit, andI b) the 0111oe of.EtiuaJ Opportunity.
. Step 8: . Speclllc approoa1 to oller ·
e_mploy- must be _ ....... by the
"'-appropriate Vice PretPdent prior to

.-.tire,

un=uuowc.

been cbaracterized by toto! and con• sistent dedication, one of many reaaons abe will be honored this mon't h on
ber 25th anniversary at U/8.
.
Sbe started out in the days wben
· total dedication was _simply. a minimum JeQUirement in her field. Following ber graduation with a B.S. in social
work from Northwestern, Professor
Lynn went to work at the University
of Chicago settlement house.
"This waa around 1929, the time of
the great stock market crash," abe recounted. ''We became one of the first
.relief atations in the country to qualify
for Federal Emergency Relief Fonds.
_ "You must remember," sbe continued, "that this waa all pre-Roosevelt.

i':.tv~a~~ ~

dent will approve such ........._ •....,, be
receives an NTP ~~ure
o-rt from the o-~- "'anel or the
,..,..,
.,.,....,. "''
72 hours have pasaed.
Step 9: After making bia detennination, the Vice President will 10 inform, by copy of the NTP Search
Procedure Report: 1. the initiating department; 2. the appropriate super-·
visor; 3. the office of the' Recruitment
CommitteeS; 4. the Office of Equal
Opportunity; 5, the Direotor of Peraonnel; and 6. the President's Panel
for the Review of Search Procedures.

r.:::e110~~ ":W~%!::
were

-

Hard-working p eo pI e
on the.
verge of starvation, and the settlement
houses were among the fin;t places to

Alumni Plan
-~~~Crisis
was
during
All-Star Contest - period. "As the C.LO.thewas gaining
Labor, also,

in crisis

this

a m on g the workers,
companies
would figbt back with lockouts and

'The U/B Alumni Association w'JJ
strikebreakers. Everyone," she noted,
sponsor a Western New York High
..defied the National labor Relations
School All-Star Football Game at RoAct-police, politicians, management,
tsry Field on August 16, 1975, to raise
everyone." Professor- Lynn recalled
funds for projects in sports medicine
violence at tbe time, culminating in
reaearcb and development.
·, .•
the South Chicago Steelyard Mll83&amp;At a Statler Hilton press confercre.
enoe Friday, Dr. James J. O'Brien,
"Tbe same captain who ran the leekgeneral chairman of the project, an' outs, led the massacre," she said ... At
nounoed that the Alumni Association
least we were successful in getting rid
baa been negotiating with the National
of him."
,
~
CoJJestate Athletic . Association &lt;&gt;Ver
Pl'!&gt;f...;;,r J:.ynn oondueted a number
the·put yair and e\i:pects NCAA ap- .
pro~ of the coritest 'later tliis year: ·· of worl&lt;sbops and ' institutes around
this time, some of which were attended
'l'be game will involve 1975 graduby Oedgling community organizer Saul
ates ' representing 110 schools of SecAIinsky. "When Alinsky came to Buftion 6 of the New York State Public
falo with his Industrial Areas FoundaHigh School Athletic Association, 18
tion, be complained that the social
schools &lt;if the New York State Catbowork approach was ineffective. I relie High School Association and six
minded him that a lot of wbat he'd
private ·secondary schools. All of the
learned about lahor in Chicago came
schools are located in Erie, Niagara,_
Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Wyoming, - from people like me."
Professor Lynn continued her t:duGenties.esee, Orleans and Allegany
cation at Columbia, receiving her
M.S.W.
under the guidance of noted
F\!nds raised by the proj!'Ct would
economist Eli Ginsberg. Her work durbe allocated by the University at Bufing this period included a study of the .
falo Foundation, Inc&gt;-, to provtde either
effects or unemployment on American
initial or full support fpr research and
life, and practice at the New York
service programs proPosed by the UIB
School of Health Education. Amol)g
g&gt;~}l:~·~ Social Services OffiC'!9
~ ~s
.=,;rch in heat
Frorri N..W York, Piofessor Lynn
exhaustion, water lossJIIld similar conmoved~ Cincinnati, where sbe served
ditiops;
_
as director-and supervisor of the FamA
.
f
. to d
I
ily Services Society. In 1949, she came
•
senes o sympo81A
eve op
to what wa• then the U/ B School of
a t h I e tic therapists, particularfy in
Social Welfare.
emerging women's intercollegiate and
At ~ time, she recalled, the School
interscholastic s Po r t s and in high
offered only specialized gradwrte work
schools and community collegeS;
in su&lt;h fields as medical or psychiatric
• A reaearch study in player aelecsocial wort&lt;: Only under Dean: Benjation and classification ,aystema, promin Lynllon were undergraduate and
.tective equipment, coaching competenMillard Fillmpre courses begun in the
cies and other facets of little-Jeagile
mid 1900's.
age group football competitive pro"':"bile I was teachin¥.'' sbe said1 "I
gran'ls;
continued my own pnvate practice,
• A cause-and-d'el::t study of injurand counseled for the Church Mission
ies incurred in football and bockey in
of Help, the Jewish Family Service,
the New York State High S c h o o I
and the U/B Psychology Clinic. Then,
Athletic Association program; .
becau.'
e the faculty was small, we all
• Tbe extension by one week of the
had to travel quite a bit."
annpal summer recreation program
Profe£SOr
Lynn was referring to the
conducted by the Buffalo Board of
social wo!'k programs which the U/B
-Education lll)d the U/B School cil
faculty establisbed ·and supervised at
H e a I t h Education for 25 sev~rel
the Universities of Rochester and Syrhandicapped students - · - t l
·
' ~~ ·~ Y
acuse, in SL Catherine's, Ontario, and
· Step 5: When a suitable candidate
Won~r the Easter Seal AsaociaBi~ton. Now functioning indebaa been Identified, the dtipartment
e : A .narcotics testing program and
bead or chairman will affix .his signallli!IOCiated reaearcb among hijlb school
ture to the NTP search Procedure
football and basketball partiapants.
= b e ~ the road ~ daya _p er
Report and forward it to his superPlayers for the All-Star game will
More recently, Profesaor Lynn bas
visor, P - . or Hea'ltb Science
be selected by a Game Committee atreduced her countll!lins ac:tivitiEs and
Dean. ·
· ter the ooecb at ea&lt;h school nominates
SUp 6: Upon ,approval .by the sutwo players. AU players-will be reprl=.,~ CODCeDtrating more
on
and -..:b. 'Tve always
))ei'Viaor, Pn&gt;vost,' or Health Science
quired to participate in at least 12·days
done aa much as I'w been pbyaically
Dean, lbe NTP Search PrOCedure Repractice on the campua.
port will -be forwarded to the Preei- Tluee coaches for each squad will be . able to do. But at_the oame time, I've
always done emct1y wbat I WBilted.
dent's Panel for the.Review of Seaidl '
selected from the membership of the
Social work is at tlie center of aociaJ
~urea, in~ of the President~
~=~~~ ,HiP :Jchool
cbanjno.N
K8ptCempuo -of~
~
Step,-1: Tbe President's Panel for
A toto! of 12,900 reserved aeats will
Profeooor l,ynn was 1UD0111 the U/8
the Review of Seerc:b ~ Jri1! :; be available.
·

"'lun-

.::.:d!ci:"'

=~tt'l:~~.u:, 1::

..,_
faculty members who, in the 1950's,
foUght to keep the campus free of
McCarthyist pressures and open to all
points of view. "I could never participate in any movement that denies freedom of speecb," she commented. "rve
always believed that - l e have the
rigbt and the competence to govern
tbemaelves wiaely, and that they could
do ao if properly informed and permitted real freedom of choice.~
Sbe baa obierved significant changes
in ber students and in the practice of
her field during the past 25 years. "In
the 40's," sbe said. "with the war g~
ing on, dissent and divisiveness were
put aside in favor of national unity.
1be 50's were too repressi,.e to allow

~s:"~ ~br.:~ ~ t

many ways it waa too much. n.e students of the 70's reoogilize now that

it was not enough to tear down, that

they must face the issues of replacement and reorganization."
Professor Lynn is sympathetic to,
the progress made in redefining the
roles of women and the nucle-a r family.
" rve always believed in the inherent
worth and dignity of the hun&gt;an being.
Being human is difficult enopgb under
the most benign circumstances. Our
goal is to belp families and individuals
achieve their potential."
.
She added, "I am not discouraged
by those who feel that nothing will
ever change. I do see things changing,
from a Ion g e r perspective. Rapid
change. I think, gets a Jot of people
in trouble."

EOC Summer Session
New courses in civil service -preparation, speedwriting and silk screening will highlight the summer session
at the U/ B Educational Opportunity
('.enter I EOCl. The sessionwill begin
Thursday, May 16, and run through
Friday, August 2.
Tbe civil aervice course will guide
the aspiring civil servant from job
search to placement. It will provide
students with ihformation on locating
job openings imd the skills to paas
City, State and Federal, Civil Service
examinations.
Tbe speedwriting course will present
the principles of "a b c" shorthand
with emphasis on reading and correct
writing.

In silk ~: the studenis will
be given the basic procedures from
preparation of art and atencils through
actual ailk screen printing. Individualized instructions will be conducted for
peraonalized projects and r_nulti-media
color representations.
Other offerinltB durin« the summer
aession will include college preparato~ and high s c b o o I equivalency
courses in communications, Englisb,
acienoe and mathematics; a reading
imJ&gt;rovement program, and oourses in
typing and abotthand.
Registration will be beld Monday
throuilh Wednesday, May 13-151 at the
EOC, 465 Washington Street tcomer
of E. Mohawk St.). All courses are
tuitioo-fiee and textbooks are -fumisbed

�6

Reiche~t -~ks
Changejn
'
McConnell 'Plan

Woman Dean
To-lecture on
legal Profession

The Facufty Senate will be aallal
at ita Tu.la.Y ~ to oubstitute.,
entirely redutlciit ... IMcbiDg ef-

beJ.:::d ~. t:,'!::..,.~
YorkSta~cm "W-tllid

poaecl by a So!Dale CDIDlllittee chaired
by PauleoRor James McCalmell and
CU1181ltly l8ldinlr before !be poup. .
fSae B.,..,.,, March 28, for the Me-·

s18rt of. CIDHiay _ , _ _ ~
to acquaint wilb of !be

~

~~~==-~~

evaluation far that pro;

OomleU CCIIIIIDittee

lrenl!&amp;de ~~...::
1::
adlleved In !be Jep.l ............
pg_,. JaDe t HamilL Martorie

~)

Tbe --.dments by oubatitutioD,
........- by Natwal 8cii1aDes and

Na"-tlco Senator Jmolban Reichert.-w:

Girth amd Patricia HollaDIJiir will aim

spMk at !be ClOIIIeleDoe, Wbidl ill beiDa
&amp;pCIII8DI8d by !be Ollae vi 8tudoDl

1. Decenlrall2e the responsible
for enatlng IMchlng evaluatim iDslnlmeDIL
2. GM facill~ and otudenla lbe
lllllior ._lllibllity for developing instruments.
3. Tempanuily ldve IDdividual fat&gt;.
ullies !be preroptJve for' de~·
·
lbe diapolailim of the dats
.
.4. Sid lbe m--' Center of struclliooa1 Development primarily
with faculty and students wbo are
· In leadership capacities in the
~ual faculty units.
"Only with such
faculty-student input with each faculty unit developing instruments which are app,..
priate to the various needs within each
Faculty, can we hope to gain the confidence of the faculty that their teach~

AffaiJa.

'lbe - t i l l - to hillb acbool eDJl
collep IJiudeotB from
New

'York amd to !be

followiDI

' Cook

on

Panel...

- Dr. Albat S. · Cook, · prvleB~r of'
. BDPiab. bas beml apppln1ed to .the
BoaJtl .., "-Jt.y AIIPointmeDt, Pro-' ·
motiDa amd Temue, PI'Mideot Robert
L. Kater -.nceillbia WMii:
Rene Girard for a •
~
....._!1~~ot'

.

cludedi~w-=~.t!'::

ican Arbilralim Association and lbe
New York Lawyera' Cmnmittee for
Civil RightS under Law.

proposed Center as serving a role of
coordination, lending technical assist-·
ance, proposing and dissem'inating
model instruments, and providing assistance to individual fsculty to improv_e ·t heir tesChing. ·
,
Under thiS decentralized alternative
to lhe McConnell Cmnmittee's p,..
· posal, Reichert aaid, ''The new costs
to the University w o u I d be more
modest and the possibility of success
considerably enhanCed. (I hope.)".

'lbe second raise under the current
Civil service Employees AssociationState Contrsct tokes elfect lbia month,
CSEA has annoimeed. Employees on
the instilulional payroll found the increase in their paychecks dated April
10. Employees on lbe adminiatralive
payroll will receive their raise starting
with lbe check dated April 17 Cand
distributed at,U / B, Friday, Apri119).
All CSEA-repreaented employees
wiii reoeive a 5 and one-half pei cent
increase; thoae elip'ble for an automalic annual increment' will becin
getting lbia hike In the same check in
which lbe acroas-the-hoard increase
tekes eft'eC:t.
A $6,500 minimum annual salary for
employees who have completed 52
.,.,.,_,.,tive pay periods In fuJI poly
etstus will alao be implemented at
lbia lime. 'lbe -$6,000 minimum for
26 completed pay periods continues.
CSEA will retum to the bargaining
tsble for lbe final year of lbe current
contract, 19'75-76, to "hopefuJiy . . •
'-&lt;1 off lbe continually spiraling coet
of living and hriDf State workers' salaries up to par Mth the economy," a
Ullim etstement indicates.
"-Jty and steff represented by
United University Professions are mr:pectecl to receive their 4% per cent
rem.ctive pay hike In Moy. A . July
1 raise for lbia ia otill being .
JIIIIOtiated In Albany• •

. farmal pie-

of
- Univet'llil:Y Bcbool of Law, baa beml •
appointed dean vi !be Sy...,...., University Colleae of Law1, elfecti..., July
1. A gradwlte vi Comeu, abe receiwd
ber JD. &lt;!epee from New York University Law BcbooL
•
.
·Sbe ia a cansultant to !be Nalional
~tioD of Women m marriage

=:=~=~~tJ:.'~~"'ti,~

CSEA Wo{k~is

public. Tbe

:::=:e .!.t"':cl.t~c~=

cloae

Get Pay· Hike

w.......

..-I

audience will bave an ~ to

Haughton lo Give ·
Harrington· Lecture
.. Dr. Jamea Haughton, embiU.... director of lbe H.Jth ' and HOilPitel
Gov~ CommiaaioD vi Cook. County In ChiCIIIO, will pe lbe amtual
studeDWponaored HairingUm• Lecture
at lbe Bcbool vi Medicine, Moodily,
Ap~ 1~ p.m.:
~will­
focao m
In
amd is baaacl ... hia _...,., with .
both !be clemetMtinc. problem-ridden
-Cook Cowity ~ amd the

Chuck Davis Dancers
The Chuc:IIDevls Dance Compe!IJ wu ell.,.... campua thla- for ..., ~MOO;ionl.
--·-,..,......_ .. pert of the M·T- llprinc Alta Feot. Here,
......,,.. of t h e - perform In tlie · I.Gurip. •. •

8

~

\

Prof fotudies. H~ndicapped Driving
' By JOHN THURSI'ON

u--..17 ,,.,___ s..mc..
Driving could become an easier lask

for lbe physically handicapped as a
result of ...........m by Dr. Roller W .
Mayne, assistant professor ol niecbanical engineering. 'lbe Eaater Seal Re8l!lltdl FoundaJ:im has awarded Dr.
ll,tayne a grant to study automotive
hand oootn&gt;IB for the physicaJJy handicapj)ed.
The ...........m will include a comparison of ~ting hand control melho:ls, a study of the inftuenoe of actualion force on hand control eftec:tiveness and an evaluation of .aophisticated hand controls which require

ti~-f~~~

that the diffi..
culty of transportation for the handicapped ia a major national problem,
citing Federal estimates that J,.5 million handicapped people In lbe
arelimi'ted.emplo~able but tnmsportation

u.s.

He adds thai while many other difficullies are r-1 by lbe handicapjJed
driver, the problem of conlrol.llng the
vehicle ia of ~ iinpbrtsitoe,
but has r&amp;CelVed JittJe serious eD•
•
d
gmeermg
otuoy.
'
"The most
sigDillcant. queatioDs fat&gt;.
ing. the potential handicapped dliver
an!, 'How is DIY driving ability ef- '·

:1;.22

:;.=. l:J:thvery

=-J..r:...~

~

Tbe 48:-year.old lntemiat/......,.,.,
ment?' Our goala are to. IIIIBWi!r t t adminislrator/writer ia a JNduate ·of
questions in hopes of ~ the path
lDm&amp; Unda'a Medical Scbool (1960}
to independent transportation .......
. and Interned In rollitm, medicine at
'lbe ...........m abauld alao help !be deBrooklyn's United Hoapital.
signer of driving aida to UDdenlaDd
: FollowiDir 12 yean In adminislralive
which control CODCePIB are Dlll8t depublic beafth paoitiom In .New York
sirable and lbe ~ of advanced
City, be ...,t to Chicqo wbeno.be.,..
techoiquea," Dr. Mayne said. - • ·
sumed N8PCIII8ibllity for beallb aervice
'lbe test _ . , . will be performed
.,..,._lew Cook County~ 1,600,000
U!iing a oomputer simulation vi • ~ amd for lb8
County
motive dynamics to an- a well cooHoapital, wblch CXIIIIJil'isM a acbool of
trolled otudf. of the driYilla task. T - -· nurliiDg, a 1,1100-bed acute '-ital. a
lng will imlially be ~ with
1,900-bed chraDic m-lapital, and
non-handicapped oubjools·and will be811 80-bed -.te ...., facillty for Ingin .with !be gatberiJil vi dato m tbe
matea of Cook Cpomty Jill! and ""'uae of atondard foot oontmla.
·
of CGrrectioDL
.
The ~ vi leMa will be re-·

eo!t

:!~"fi:.=\:a~t;

Broilowski to Visit-- ·

otrol syatems will fiDally be ueed In
Dr "--L _.., ..,~ ~
evaluating the Amo!mt of. force needed
· .,..,..., ~---... --.-... ;..
to 6perate tbem.
:
tbe Camcll for 8iDioiJ ill a Mayne iDted out that !be ·~~t ~!be
s.Jk ~
' mary purpoae~ ~~=,! 10 ~
~u-t~ca....
Jl'ilcuJty r' ~• ........__ __,
vide quantitative
• · .., 111e
....
perfoi'IDSJICe of hllllllins tJaiD&amp; bmd
Dr. D - - ' - ' _ , , --....L ...__ __._
controls In tbe cb'iviDg task. He .aded
vi beta!.~~
that lbia , Information can be 1euDed . _ !be _ , ..... --' ~ . ..,......._
using the non~ althoupl
~
- - - - .. · -...
£be tests will eYeDtualfY' be ...._._., ' ' KJ!DWiedje amd ~tiaa.•JDdlvld'
·-ual
will be. CDIICIIII8I
using
with~
amd :-.-:w-o '"lbe
•
·
~vi atuN,""'lbi~GI

'l:

·nr.

·:::r.!:t!:.t ~· ~.=.: ·

r---·

. · _..11.-.
/He___o-·_ &amp; Go&lt;?d~y~' . - ~~1.."-t~~e-.....·.~
handi"""'
*'"""""""
II' •· · ·• ·

"Hello and Goodbye," a play- "for
aeriea llpCiniOnld.by tbe-"-Jty.
parenl!l about leamiDc to love and let \.- ,
.·
0
JO," performed by tbe Btudlil AJ..
· Theatre Bcbool, will be - l a i d in..
, - .
01~ ~
,
231 Nortoa at 8 . p.m., WedlloeclaY,· ..._. Mn. M.ujorie Rum will Jo&amp; 1be
April17, UDder _...unp !I UUAB • Per.......r ~ • ~loyuart
bJ other aourcea on"cempua. Den· ·
""1_~._!:_,JIIIID8IIr, etrective Apri116, Hairy W.
-~
lei Elllbe'l did, In fKt.liw e
""-- ~ ,
'"'!&lt;-.the ... Poppjy, dlreclor vi~- ..... .
hie owa iiiiiDDIDc &amp;.~~~ember 1, 1974,
canc:ellinc hli achoduled cam- e_r.. · . performmce. .
;
' · "'.
llOUilDid.
·
·aDd apiriDI Aupatln,
ence on Moudt· 28. He ' hed the flu. The • •
~ play, . commt~loned by !lie .. ,- ID lblo paoitiDil, ·Mn. Rulb 1riD be
'lbe Wildt vi lba 8jlald ia -.....
~· aur-u eiOo lndk:elia- tll8t' !I ,:
Child Study .A.oeiatim ·.vi -AmBb' ' ...,..ub)e for aD ~ activily iDiparlllllt ....... ~ ~.hM boqloed u.s. _..... .~a.... ~·
~ lbe .Flomlly ~ ~ . . tiooi -.ept &amp;ealtiY.
•
.
vitllt.~O...... Ketterlllid
for the He-.~ ~!'22, • pert or....;. · • · beiDa preaent'd 'IDQo))y by - the •
Mn. ftulh t. a ~ · vi Slate ..
In~b
~ Ceak'a - 11s ''EI«:tton '74"-. Buc:ldly, tliecon- · Family ·Bnrlcbment Unit vi · C2llld.
UllivMdt;y
at FledallJa-.amd
~ ef ......... • a.,.,.,.-:. - · · conae-. ..c...u, sj8rue&lt;! • • amd. Flomily &amp;nicM, a -tJnited WilY_ - , ba hem with 11ie New York Stata. .
~...........,... , will add to lbe
..,..., with his can tor the -'&amp;N!IIon..of '
~'
•
•
•
Dlvislclll vi u - 8ervicM Ill a. ·,
alreldy 1lllh aremlum I pl8ce m
Richerd Nixon.
·. 'lbe' ....,..,..._ t. '-to lltadeD1:s. • • ~ of. admbilatrai!Ye amd -. _ Bolad-.-,"-Kaet. ·a.ld. . - . '
-- ~ · ~ ·: .- : AdmiiiiDil b Dlhero t.liCM!IIDIL'
. viaori '~ajnce 1988.
, , '

'·Cook=
-Aucuat•
-J-

......

JJJ'7!·

1 . . - . -·..o. to · - add~ -""'- .
· - - • ..........,
~-r
IM'I ni.s11EM AND 8UCICI.£Y"' ·•
T h e - Auoclotlon Spooilom' Bureau
l n d - thot, contnuy 10 e ,eport issUed

- -for .

J

. . ..

....:.,,

'

p

.

eau..

riel

�_ _Al_,__

-·

· (,-,.,.,.,_,
..!!'..IINIIeOf Tro,...a&amp;ie I~
Tlanouflt ~J. Dr.

J - H. ~-t;diaal . pn&gt;t..:
a.m.-6 p~ Doa~, C8J*l

ii!lt: w:,

...
(l,.,. ~ fiJJ!I:.
~ ~~) BJt lJ:.
,.;;::::;r. 1~ e':'."'foedmlooion

mCIIOMAt--

.

•

· A lioteoing BDd leanimc uporience
282 Norton. 3,6 p.m.
.•
'

"~

a.ASIICS IIMMAa#_ •

WEDNESDAY ....:17

-

.....

B.~~O:~~':r~f!~i~:

tory, Uni¥enity of Briotok~ 372
Hayec.- 3:30 p.m.
··
'C"f
- OPen to memben of the Oopertmento
of ClaMics and Hiatory, the 88IDinar ;..
made poooible by a pant from the Raymond Fund and by the courteoy of Dr.
D. R. Shackleton
of the
Raymond &lt;li8ir of aaMico at U /B.

Bailey, bolder

Uau.# -

.

. PHR.Osoftn.
A . ~elaphy•ico

of &amp;laUonr. ./apoa'
Anhctpatwn of Contemporary Er:peri·
enu, Prof. John McDermott, Queon8
College, City' Univenity of New York,
4244 Ridge Lea, Rm. 14, 3:30p.m.

UCTUII•

·

•

Plo~ning and Anolysi'B of ·Scie.ntific
Experrments, Prof. Marvin Zelen, direc~~ ~~~~~~~ Science Laboratory.
Preaented by the College of Mathematical Sciences.

- IOSTEI

LfCTUIE

·

FILM••

Ad1f.ri':o:f

fALl. IEGISTIATION

Capen, 7 1&amp;. 9 p.m.

COMPUTER SERVICES SfMIPfAI#

ALGOL, 4238 Ridge Lea. Rm. 12, 7-9

p.m.

UUAI FILM••

=t&gt;Rs"":l:::'.:Si,:·;::.

Tbe Ollice of AdmioDaao BDd Raoon!a
. will conduct a.m.- ,..utra- .

!t'.de,.~~~:f ~-u!P.

venity neood ouly eomJijete a OouJM RaAll ...,. atudento will baYe
to complete a Stodont Data Fonn, Which
will be available at the Ollloe on April 16.
:rentative Summer s-iona ,..utra:
tion boiirw at the Ollloe (Hayes Annes B)
are 8:30 a.m.-8: 30 p.m. on the following
datea:
.
-April 16-18. 22-25, 29, 30; May 1, 2,

queet Form.

ti~ ·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::i.i~J::: ~::&amp; ~
ti~ :~·::::·~·::.~··.··--~-~~:.~~y~~y~

· 6-9, 13-1~. 20-22, 28-31; June · S-7, 11, 12,
18. 19. 2•-28: July 1-6 (Q-.1 July 4).
9-12, 16-19, 22-26, 30, 31;. BDd Aucuat 1,
3, 6, 7, 13, H . 20-23.

AU E .O.P. student.. regardl- of where
they are advised. will pick up registration material in Townsend Hall, according to the above ~ule.
Graduate and Millard Fillmore College
must go to the Aclmisaions and
Reeord. Office to update their Student
Data Forma.

students

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For everyone'~ convenience and pleasure,
we like to pu~icize all events taking place
on campus. To record informatton, contact
Nancy Canla!elli, ext. 2228, by Monday

. · April 22-27 has been ·designated -""

!::::J
:m~~d:.OOwee!.u~tk: .::
print or information about blindneaa or

Under.ground Comic AriB (rom San
Fninci#co, an exhibition of original pan·
els h1V S . Clay_ Wil s on and Manuel
"Spam Rodriguez, G8llery 219, Norton:
thrOugh April 14. Gallery hours: Daily,
noon-S ·p.m ., and Tuesday and Friday,

.

.

The -e xhibit is presented in conjunc-

.tion with the Smill Mutants .Undergrouiid Comic Uub.
·
PHOTOGIAPHIC EXHIBIT*

People of Cu11ter Streel, photographs
by Danny Forman, Music Room, 259
Norton, . thro~~~th April 21.
All-TOPSY - EXHI&amp;I'r

U/B JArt Deportment Faculty Exhibition_ 42&gt;40 Ridge Lea, Rms. 6 ana 7;thiough Saturday, April 27. Viewing
hours:. Mondlur-Friday, 8: 30 a.m.-5 p.m.;
Sab.J~. noon-6 p.m.; Sund~y. 2-5 p .m.
Alr-fOPSY- EXHI&amp;lf•

~~~ nr:ti'Jo,w=~il:id h~J~t!"~~

'

F.iue Black Poet'S: Ama Bontemps.
Gwe":\dolyn 'Brooks, Lan~s'ton Hughes,

~jj~~~~~~~&lt;;:t'Lib~~~l~l&amp;o~ .

Continuing! •

U~l . EXHIIrt•

•

-

Women '11 Print Show. Gallery 2t9, Nor·
ton, Monday, April JS, thrOugh Sunclay,
April 21. .G allery hours: d4UIY. noon·5 .
f&gt;.m! Tuesday .d,..(id Friday~ 7:10 p.m.

INTERVIEWS .
ON-CAMPUS IH'TUVIEWS

•

!

0

Throughout the semester, GD+C:ampus will be ·condW:le!l for llludaata
who are, ipteJiested \1\~~ll'A

.

111" 1 1.l

~

• '.

-rio:-

·.

'

·

' •I' , , r'f"· ;.._. ...''~ '"'"·J
FACULTY

~-

..

•

.. - .., .
f'

E~ial Associaie, V.P. Health Sciences, PR-2. •
Assistant to Director (Admissions Systems), Admissions &amp; Rerords,
PR-1. .
.
.
Admisaion$ CoUIW!lor, Educational OppoJ:tunity Program, PR·L

-r·

"•

•

•
}0b Openings

N:TP·'

Randall. architectural' associate, U/ B Office b£ Facilities ' PlaruUng, Hayes Hall
Lobby diopla,v cases, through Friday,
May 3. Viewmg hours: Monday-Friday,
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
SflOIUiOred by the Office -of Cultural
Affairs. ....

at noon for "Inclusion In the following
Thursday issue. ~

Instructor, Music.
Professor ( Music Composition) , Music.
Professor ( Music Theory), Music.
AsSistant Professor (Voice) , MU8ic.
Assistant Professor, Geography.
Professor or Associate Professor, Geography.'
Visiting Assistant Professor, Computer Science.
Assistant Professor, Geological Sciences.
Professor (Siatistical Scienre Division) , CompUter Science.
InstructOr - Associate.l'rofessor, Dentistry.
Assistant Professor, Philosophy.
Associate Professor, Art History.
Assistant Professor, MatMmoti.cs.
Assistant &lt;&gt;&lt; Associate Professor, MatMmati.cs.
Assistant ProCessor, Pluu.mocy.
LeCturer (1-year appointment), EducatioMl Studies.
LeCtUrer, EducatioMl Studies.
•
AssiStant Professor, EducatioMl Stu.dia.
.AsSoc:iB.te l'n?fessor, Art Depart-_nt_
Visiting Associate Professor (1 """""""') , Comparative Literature.
Assistant Professor, Architecture &amp; Environmental Design:
Full ·Professor, CIDssi.cs.
Instructor, Dentistry.
Associate Professor, Gy/:!ecology-Qbstetrics.
AssistanVAssociate Profes8or, Medicine.
Professor/ Associate Professor, Physical E&lt;Wcation.
Insliuctor/ Associate Professor ( 3 positions;
, -, 2'full-time, 1 part-time), Dentistry.

AU-Y0..5Y - EXHI,rt•

inte~

•._SIS- -TION ·

with:

SOPHOMORES whose Iaat name begiM
with:
.

.·~~riits2o:~F!!
s~~s~a:uctu~n;~~~
mg above.
..,

_POEfiY EXHIIJT•

Friday,_ April 14, ia the cloediiDe j,.
student orpniza"-, . . , . . _ . . , aDd
other -mtereated iDdMctuala or poupe to
'subaiit material for the 1974 Summer
Activitieo brodlure. AD ~t iDformation ohould be forwarded to Paul
Keane, 314 Norim.

.JUNIORS
ti~ ~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~===~~~;~--~=: i:~ g .
whose last name 'begino with:
tf~ ·:=::::::::::=:::::::~~:: ~::il ~ ,

Electro Glide in Blue (Guercio-Hitzig,
1973) , Conference Theatre, Norton,.cheek
shoWcase for times:. Admisaion charge
·
· Starring Robert Blake and Billy
(Green) Boob .
• tHIA.~A.TtQfll•
,.,. _~ , .• '·:
••
'
' rii'Jt.'lc"'i.'~ v •. 'by- 'Xrtilur w:.li•..:~ •. . .. - ' /
Courtyard Thjatre, LafayetteJ"lri~£ .: ... • ' 1 · ··~ -,l""-"'

~w~~

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

Djviaion of Undergraduate Education •
etudeutl are to follow the acbed\lle be-low. (Note; The ·time students tum ..in
the data form will have no bearing on
the time of registration.) Information on
the registration process will be banded
:J.,~R!.,';,'ti!"~e into the Dief-

FIND THE..IUND WEEk

FILM•

Kino PNWda .(Vertov) , 148 Diefendorf,
7 p:m. No admission charge.

Nascirr1ent6 Shb.w

.

Updating of Stndent Data Forms for

FaU 1974 registration will begin April 22.

with:

-

rs~:.

Pro!..U.nal coumeling ia available at

.JlilJel lfouoe, .W Capen Blvd. For an
appoin!ment, caU 8!!&amp;4640.

- F.RESHMEN wboae iaat name begiM

Riiis•

· Meial-Melal Bond•. 1, Dr. F. Albert ·
Cotto.n, Robert A. Welch Distinguished
Professor of Chemistry, Texas A &amp; M
University, 70 Acheson. 4 : 16 p.m.

CAc

co-

NOTICES

•p~ ~tion ui Alban):.

'

'

For additional information cOncerning ·these jobs a.nd for ·deiiWs ·of
NTP openjnp' throughout the State University system, consult bulletin
boaniS at these loaltions:
·
·
'
~
lc
• ••
1. Bell FaCility between , 0152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lea, Buildinl
4236, Dezt ·tp cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Buildinl 4230; in co!ridor next to
(l.;1; 4. -H"ffth Scieba!s Building, -in corriclor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen
Hall,, in the c:orrldor between Room 141 and the-LObby; 6. Lockwood,
lllQIIIICi ~ !n' corridor nat to ""'ding IIIIICI&gt;u-; 7. ffilyes Hall,' in'
main-mtzanoe foyer; acroos fmm Public Information Office; 8. 'Aeb8m
Hall, in corriclor ~ Rooms .112 and~3; 9. Parker ~.
in oorridoi- next to"Boom lJ; 10, Goo11Yeoir H8II;' 1st liOOr, HOU4ing' Ollice
.Z..: ")1. ,'11!117 .Eimw_ood. ~I ~t;' . 12. Norton Union,
Ilin!ctor'.s Olllc:e, · Room 225; 13. 'i&gt;ieftmdorf Hall, in c:orrldor nat to
Roilm~OS; 14.1alm Laod _()'Bd.., Hall, too,a-th.lloor (Ambent Campus).

.

i.,.. -

.._

~

.

.

..ui.IA,l l'l Ul b 1I.J m

;

1 I• •

~~

...,

-

.~1 i•o:~:·l
•

_ ••

• .. .... ;
:&gt;

l t ' '-" Jo l

�I· weellB

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....,... _ _ _ .,...._ettllo

......., _ _ OIIco.

.a.- ...., to

................... Ill tllo .......
•
to 11(1 tllo ~
- . . . . . , - . Ulaa, tor .......

••Open

"'pen to pullllc

'l'HURSDAY -11

-OWrl-.
- - I aN
IIIlA_.
oae-act !lbo1 by

Alice

~'fi~1i!:.1r: 1f"!'.:.. w~.

-.1'h
- IGJI&lt;w,
-IN
IIIIA'IIII• . ~
Sylvia Plath. A poetry
by

; : : : , aad da.ace 'interpretation by

=-~~~DOOil~

---811MIA'flll•

Col•
• ,.ith Peter Bum. Betsy Cor·
batt,
Pan. ~- &amp;bultz, Scott
8imoD and
Stenger, Harriman
Studio TbMtre, 1 p.m.
Al'f..TOPJY- WOMIN IN TMIAIII•

s - s.....

-

/

MEDIEVAl STUDfU SEMINAl*

ME~ii';.n: :mC:"C"o.:'.,!":,"·~~r~

The Semiotics of Deain: Pet.rarch and
tl:e Augustinian Tradition~ John Free~
cero. Yale University, 225 Crosby, • p.m.
Presented by the Program in Comparative. Literature.

Stuctio 'J'boalN, 1:30 p.m.
Alf·TOPSY- WOMEN IN tHEA DE•

Woman·• lmqe. lt'eDel and readinp
from pla.v•. poetry, and IXM!IDOin by
memben ..of Acting Workshop: Roles for
Women; Harriman Studio Theatre, 2
p.m.
.

CAC FUM••

Sleuth, 140 Capen, 7 :45 &amp; 10: 16 p.m.
Admission: 75 centa.
AJ:t.JOPSY- THIATH:*

UNIVDSFn A.Sss,a&amp;.Y· MEmNG#

Medieval My1tery Theatre of the Ab·
surd. Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m. _
Through Saturday~ April IS.

Executive Committee meeting, 201
Hayes, 2 p .m.

.

MIOICINAl CHIMISTiY SEM.INAI.

Atf. JOHY- WOMEN IN 'l'ltlADE* "

~tudies on the Synth6i&amp; of Clinically
Important Anti-Tumor Agents, Prof.
James P. J&lt;ulney, Department of Chemistry, Uni,,enity of British Columbia. 244 Hea.tq. Sciences, 2 p.m.

AA1 DANCE will present a retrospec·
ihe look at American dance from vaude-\'ille to rock, Harriman Studio Theatre,
8 fJ.m . 'No admi88ion charge.
Hlu..Q. SKAqAT SEIVICE•

GKM.OGICAI. 5CIENCE5 I.ECJUif#

c:linuite for the eat•ltil/,014 Red Facies,
Dr. ·nonald W. Woodri&gt;w, Hobart and
\\'"tlliam Smith Colleges, BeU Facilitv.
Rm. D-167, 3:30 p.m. Refreshments will
be served a..t 3 p.m.

UUAI INTEINATIONAL IILM FUTIVAl**

Charlet: Dead or Aliw (Tanner, Switze rland, 1969). Conference Theatre. Nor~h~"rg~~k abowcase for times. A~n

P$YCMOMlt.••
A listening and learning expelience,
232 Norioa, 3-6 p.m.
Al'f-!DPIY--... ,.

MAm•

SATURDAY_:_ 13

Marilyn Monroe, a atidi! ohow by Mary

Martha Yeqer, Harriman Studio Theatre, 3: 90 p.m. •

HJU.a SHAIIAT &amp; HOUDAY SEIYJCI•

Hillel Howe, 40 Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.

AD-TOPSY- WOMEN IN THEATK•

ARJ.tOf.n -

Labi&lt;mo in Theatre, -performance. diseuaioll ODd worbhop by the Stan and
Dykeo Forewr tbealnt group, Harriman
Stuctio .TbMtre. .6 p.m./
CAC

tHIATa*

.Medieval Myatcry Theatre of the Af&gt;..

wrn.

....., ......................... -......: ...

Fillmore Room, Norton, 3 p.m.

CHINESE MOVIE$*

filM••

~ct:~ : studenta, 50 ceinta; ·all

of

otlfn.

cowura

Presented by the Chinese Student

An·TOfSY - YIDIO WOikSHOf,.

With SUi1111 and Woody Vcuulka, 232

Norton, 7-9 p.\n.

.

.

MANAOIMINT FilMS••

Time Piece and Patterm1 5 Acheson,
7-9:,!0 p.m. No ~on cna.rge.

C0NF111NC1: JUSTifiCATION
Of YIOLIHCI•

~

n.

three-day conference on the Ju.~
ti/icotion ofVioknu will uplore various

C:~ '!a~~:~:·J:;c!efw. ~

verted eo as to reduce the leVel of violence in society. Most meetinp. wiD be
held in O'B~ Hall, .Amherot, beginning
in Rm.-1.07 at 7:30p.m.
Faculty from U / B and universities

~nr!:.:'':::.~r ~ =~~!,;

the Department of Philooopby an&lt;! the
Faculty
Social Sciences' and Administration, in cooperation with .the Faculty
ol Lew and Jurisp~oe.

of

All-TOPSY- ntiATII-*

•

Medieval My•tery Theatre of the Ab-

.urd, Fillmore Room. Norton, 8 p .m.
Through Satunlay, /(pril lS.
LECTUU*
~I"''ULLCendental

Meditation-ThE! Proct.icol Asp«t of the Science of Creative

Intetu.ence. 283 Norton, 8 p.m.

tio::r~:lta':ronu:"~~~n:O, ~=;
information, call 694-8499.

UUAI IMntNAnoNAl FILM ffhiYAL..

The Li&lt;m Hcu S•ven •H.ado (Rocha,

~~o~~"'r::':' =~J!i!:

.;;.,; cbaqe.

•

n-om·

EfiGUSH - ·
COUOGiiiUM•
U/,.a u G - r y , Shari~.
Kent State Ullivenity, ~ B, Rm. 2,
2 p.m.

•~ii.e ~~Pauma.:

146 DiefeD-

IIHVICU

-..a•

ALQOL, 4288 Ridp LM, Rm. 12, 7-9

Auocia9=

p.m.

CAC FllJIU

IUffALO WO.WS CINIB IIIITING*

Sleuth, 140 Capen, 7 ;45 &amp; 10:16 p.m.
Admissio~ ; 76 centa.
filM•

COP OUT- OIIAT AMaiCAN PASTUil •
Two oonf....t alci&gt;bolic panmta and

ViTidiana (Bunuel), with Erudiah subtitles, 147 Diefimdorf; 8 p.m. No admission charge.
. Presented by GSA of the Department
of Si&gt;aniah. ltali!&gt;n and Portuguese and
the Spanish ct~.
·
UU~I

one of their children cn.cu. with mod·
erator Susanne Cook the elrecta of alcoholiom on their' family, WKBW radio,
10 p.m.

JV t.t.SBALL•

U/B VII. Niagara Community Co1Iep
(doulilebeader), Peelle Field, 1 p.m.

TH~~:~:~~~

Arthur Williams, ·
BIC'DtCAL ENGINIHINO ~·
Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt
Some New Algorithl"fLL Joi- Recuraivc
Streets. 8:30 p.m. Through Saturday,
'Estimation and Control, Dr. 'I'bomaa
April20.
·
K&amp;lath, profeseor, Depa..-t of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Directed and cboNOgrapbed by James
104 Patker, 8 p.m.
Waring, visiting professor, Department
.)liM•
.
.
.'
of Theatre, Titanic Love il a l.ighthearted musical set in Hollywood during
Chriottna1 in July (Sturaes, 1940).• 140
the late 20's. · The plot centers on an
• Capen, 3 &amp;: "9 p.m. No ...dmiuion charge.
impoverished film company which renta
THEATU I.ECTUU*
,
a ship to do a movie about the Titanic;.
On / a Rich Theatre, Arthur Wtlliamo,
The rental contract stipulates that the
company stop on a moment's notice to - New~ York playwright anO author of
Tit41Jic Love, Harriman Theatre Studio,
3 :90 p.m.
r:::::~
.rm~r:; p~nds to
Admission : general public, $1.50; alu·
CHUUCAL ENOINHilNO SIMINAI#

:1::

l!N.ented by the Department of The-

atre.

·

·

Some Recent Advan..ce• in Polymer

Rheo-&lt;&gt;ptic•. Dr. ROnald S . .Finl&lt;elatein,
Monsanto Compan-y , Indian Orcbard,
Mass.: 146 Parker, 4 p.m.

FOWn.~o;:!:~ Corbony~. Dr.'F.

HillEL PASSOYB I YIS«OI IUVICI*

. Hillel Howoe, 40 Capen Blvd., 10 a.m.
UUAI INTIIHATIONAL fUM fl:lnYAL••

LA Retow- D'Afrique ('l'lumer, Swi.t..
..rlaDd, 1978) , Conference TbMtre, Nortoo. cbock abowcaoo for tUn.. Admiooion
c:barp.

Albert COtton, Robert A. Weld] Dis• ti.oguiabed Prot-r of Chemistry, Tesaa
A~ M Uniwnity, 70 Acmoon, 4: 16 p.m.
Tbe theme for this year'o F..tm Lecture Sarieo io N011t:laai&lt;:ol PhentHM~~tJ in

. -.
~~=~!.'"':1':::!.7.~l
- autbo..W.. in the ...,. of in;

. -~~-#'

orpnie "'-niotry, -

n .t.t

&lt;U,_.f 1

·~

••

HAIIIM8f'Oiil
Proble,...

s-. 7:80 p.m.

~
--·
in Healtl&amp;
Can

/Hfiwry:

n;, Doa Jlidiml.Edlu:aJi&lt;m A"ffect

tAe

Diotributi&lt;m &lt;iiod Delioery of Heoltl&amp; -

~il. !!i d=~a~~!:c

:=;:
ca.

oioo for Cook County, Cbicqo. G-22

-

8 p.m.

I'HEATII PIISINI'ATION•

¥0NDAY.-15

INTEINATIONAL FILM flSTIVALu

La Salamandrc (Tanner, Switzerland,
1971) . Conference Theatre, Norton, check
showcase fo~ times.· Admission charge.

t::·N~~to~nf~~ ~reeT=:t:~lls-1:.~~

.

664 F&gt;aDidin,

SUNDAY--14 ·

F&amp;IDAY-12

111~.,....,..,......,.

thetic and atruc:b.n.l. inorpnic "m-;.try
hao the SOW'CO
DION than S60
oc:ientilic lJU(Jiici-.

ct.~~1s"~er!':d~~.~90c~30M;!

Dey• of Wine and R-., starru.g Jack
Lemmon and Lee Remick, 140 Cal'""·
7 lo 9 p.m. Admioaion: 76 centa.
·

_.

'

Pas110ver in ·Jewish HisJory. Dr. Mi·
du1el Silvennan. U/ B professor of Jewi ~h. studies, Hillel Hotue, 40 Capen Blvd..,
8 p.m.

Conline.ntal R econBiruC'tion tind Paleo-

Jdo~wod: OD IIYD·
~

Titonic Looc., ·lw Arthur Wllliama,
Courtyard 'llleatre, Lafay- and Hoyt
Streota. 8:80 p.m. ThfOUih Satunlay, ·
April 20. For detailo, - Sa!nrday Iiatinc

above.

·-TUESDAY-:-16'
IICI'Uif•

P/4nnin6 and Analyoio of Scienti/ie Ex-~-. Prof. Malvin :zet.a, CliNctor,
U/ B Statistical ScieDco Laboratney, 110
Fwter, 4 p.m. ·
Presanted by the CoUep of Mathematical Sciences.
WOMEN'S TINNIS•

U/ B va. Rochester, ROtary Field Tennis Courts, 4 p.m.
...
FOSTU

iEct'--1

SD.tu*

.

~~':to~ ~l:frF'A~W!icl,Dro!':
~':fl!:"u~~=~;OofA=tz'll:.':
FilMS•

Man with a

Mov~

Camero (Vertov) ,

iJ'~d,.&amp;·~·~a;::~~·Jut'::

dorf. No admiuion cbarp.
AIT DIMONITIArioN;

.

Ruthven Todd, Tlumw,. ConnoUy and

ff::.""~~-=~~te~ .

Ridp LM,--'7:30 p.m.
· (Contimled on~ ?• col. I)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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  <item itemId="85480" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>Ketter·oKs,
Collegiate

Prospectus.
'The Belehert Proapectaa far lbe
University's Colletliate ~ .,.
domed by the Faculty 8eaaiB J.t
month, bas been acceptad by l'nllldent Robert I.. It-. as the "..-tiona!" baais for the ayatem, Kaa
informed the meeting of the F-.lty

~~~-=-.

is primarily ""-! on tbe apectation of
good faith on tbe part of 11..- who
will be involved in the ---..,_.
interpretation and imp~i;bHe did, however, outline a "ocmt.at"'
within which the ~ is declared to be operative.
The terl' of tho Ketter staten&amp;lt
contained in a Jetter to Senate Chair-.
man Gilbert Moore follows :
"I have now bad an opportunity to
study the new Prospectua far the
Colleges, wbicb was recently approved
by the Senate and sent to me . • . on
March 12, 1974. I bave also ~
this document at conaiderahle leDcth
with the academic o11ioer&amp; who will be
concerned with its implementation.
"The Reichert Committee. the. Sen·
ate, and numerous other individuala
bave vested a great deal . of lboucbt.
time, and labor in the dev~t
of a system of governance fqr the
Coll~es. · On baJiu&gt;ce, I believe tbB

't-

u - _.a _,. -

to the Am- C.mpus 1nt to the
.of oub1utface 'rock In the .,.. neor the £ncJish onil - . . , J:.oBulldlng lite. He,. o Is being lowoi'ed Into o boring. -Fol-ng the - . ,
woter pumped out of the boring whUe c:onc:rete for foundotlon structu,.,. woo
poured ln. The obundonce of uncter&amp;round noturol water In the .,.. the~

Diving_in. Amherst.

~t~aa~

APRIL 4, 1974

..

PSS Hears Guidelines f~r Discretionary Funds
Guidelines for tbe dislributioD of

discretianaey fundEr (provided for in
tbe retroactive 19'73-74 Wage settle-

steutorophonie declarat ion that the
collective bargaining agent ought not
bave to negotiate to provide discrel:icinary funds to keep faculty "super-

ment between tbe State and United
Uni~ty··Pnifessiobs) were unveiled
by · ~ .R9beit I.. Ketter at a
genelaJ membership meeting' of tbe
. In unVeiling guidelines for discreProfessional Staff Senate I8Bt Friday.
tionary money, ..Ketter emphasized
Kette. also: announCed revised timethat he doea not '~ick times"· for ,..,.
tables for • performance approiSals of
leaSing silch .information. 'The Staff
, U/Q DOil·Jeadili!g . profeeaionals . and
Seruirte just h_aP.Pened to be the first
for deYelopment ·of peifon:Danc:e progroup he -had .met with ainoe the degrams for the ecmiing Yl'8l.i advised tbe
cision on the matter was made, he
Senate that a Human:~ Ollice
wbicb it .....,._t is 1llldt!r 111'rious . For the complete text of the Discnrtionary
c:oasideraJ:m by the a!lministmtion; · Fund Guidelines, see page 9 .
said lie will accept an individual's
said. And the decision, he noted, was
self-&lt;leclaration on racilil t.clqpound
not simplY. "adminiotratively" made;
for allil:mative actiOn atiditjn.i
·
there was consultation with both fac'"'; notea that be is not '~n~
nH!lection" to the U/Q ·.~
ul~and
as reported by tbe 1oca1 ·i&gt;aPem, but
is simply undergoil\g a five-yeu .,..Ju.
ation; and seemed to· exp.- satilifac.
tion with t!ie intenial procecluft.s for
job ranking evalua1i0i&gt;s Jibid&gt; bave
prompted mnoem mi the part of many
NTPs.
'
Ketter's wide-ranging report&amp; and
responses to questions from tba floor pre-empted all but a minor. portion'
of ·t be Senate's acbeduled business,
leaving unconsidered PSS ·committee
documenta which report on reactions
to tbe job evaluation process and rooommend· criteria for &lt;l.istribqtmg discretionary funds, tbe latter now especially "mOot" in light of the Presi• dent's guidelines announcement ( See
inset ho:.es, page 5, for summaries of
these reports.)
'The Senate did, however, vote that
a proposed •new cxmstitution be forwarded for referendum to tbe profe&amp;.
·and established
aional." stall at

~~~

'f,jfg·

- ~cu':t f~~aluati~J:ti~

dent. ('The entire Eltecutive Committee "Will·meet with -the cbainnan of tbe
evaluation panel.) It also hMrd from
Sta:te UUP Treasurer J.-pb Drew, of
tbe U(B ~ ~ Center, a

tion of 1'.4 per cent of the University's
June 30,- 1973, base salaries for re1roactive discretionary increaaes for up
to 50 per cent of faciilty and professional staff. Vioe preaidents, deans
and some University-wide directonl
are authorized to iecommend lise of
90 per rent of such .monies from their
sa1aJ:y roste&lt;s for such awards within
their areas-with 10 per cent to be
retained by the President's Office for
special cases University-wide. Recom-·
mendations will be initiated by depsrtmental or unit supervisors, who
will specify dollar amounts and attach full justifications in support of
their recommendations. ThiS l"'perwork will be forwaroed for rev1ew at
. tbe ned highest administrative level.
At the vioe presidential level, limits
on total dollars available and num(Co~

on

coL I)

advance over tbe arrangements under
which the Colleges presently function.
Therefore, I am pleased to inform you
that I am prepared to accept tbie
Prospectus as the 'operational' basis
for a system of colleges at our University.
" My acceptance is one wbicb is
primarily ""-! upon an apectation
of good faith on the part of aU the
major constituencies who will be involved in the interpretation and im. necesaruy
R!riD@IkPM~' dCJl'AC'~
pomt
understood! The Prospectus is a compromille document and cootaiM catain
provisions which leave nie with an
uneasy feeling. For el&lt;lliiJI)Ie, I lefer to
Section IILA.L (F) which aftords the
Faculty Senate and tbe preaent Col·
. legiate Asaemhly a· veto power over
each other's l'l!lipeCtive nominees for
memben!hip on the Chartering Committee. I find this provision most
troublesome and dillicult to rec:onciJe
with the concept .of collegiality - a
concept tbat is absolutely eaaential to
tbe well being of this and, for that
matter, aU institutions of higher edn-·
catiQD.
T-

1!t1Pu1otJons

"Nonetheleas, I am willing to accept

(Continual "" -

4, col. 4)

'

61 . from EOP

May Lose funds

Siny-aoe sti.dents of the umsity's total Edu&lt;atioDal Oppol1unity
Program (EOP) enrollment of 1.150
were notified last week that their ,..
istration records indicate they are not
registered for at least 12 III!IIIOIIIer
hours this spriM.
"This me&amp;tiii,'T a Jetter fiom Aaai&amp;tant Vioe President William H . BiuJm.
er notified each of the 61, "!bat you
are not a full-time studant, and *'that you are not in good abulllinl •
an Educational Opportunity ProPam
student It is, as yOU: know1• a l'tlllullition of tbe ProKram that llll lll:udeaca
in it must be full-time. This is, 8IDIIIIC
other things, a oondition for lbe ceipt of any tinancial aid under the
auspicea of .t he Program.
· "As a consequence of your enmllment being 1 e s s tlwi 12 III!IIIOIIIer
hours,'' Baumer continued. "any ,..,_
the.- financial aid for you tor the CUJ'- •
rent semester will be wilbheld. 8p&amp;.
cificaUy, you will not be eligible to
receive any tinancial aid stipepd on
2 April1974."
~
.
Student&amp; with queations or 11..who believe that the records are incorrect were WJed to see an- EOP

OIIUDIIelor im.mediali!!f.
·
At Reporter deadline, si:1: or eight
of the studenls in question bad seen
counaelom aDd cleared up the clifll..
culty.

�.2

Student Health
Group Planning
Service Changes
Tbe Advlaal'y Colllmlttee

Clll

Stu-

dent HeaHh Ia plaaniDc . . cbaDaeB
ia
..-...
delhay body.
"' J.a!th
vices
4D the"' atudent
8lld -for
.-viceii-CIIl the - - . Dr. :00,ald ,_ Laram. MIIDCiate vice Jlii'BI·
deat for J.alth ...,..,_, lllid tbia
.-k.
.
Modelll of '-'th oervioe 8lld _ ,
domic imlitutb; wiUch llle clevelopinc OCIII4Jieboasiw J.altb care aervices
IIIII beiDa atudled, be reported. Two
DMmbera of the CGmmittee have ..;,..
ited the Yale UDiYenlity Health Center, 8lld au- cent.erB will be visited

~ ianoYatioo ia iDc:nasinll the efliciency and qualiliY "' aervice ia the
area of women's health is beiai impJe.

mented ia the Student Health Center,
be said. A &amp;tell nurse is e010lled ia a
BYJII'COiolica) nurae practitiooer -pro- ·
gram. UpCIIl oompletioll of tbe program she will p~ under the su·
J)OI'Yision of a gynecologist and will
aJao ·have consulting peysicians. This
will allow the Student Health Center,
beginning ia September, to offer gyneoololical c:linics aa required throughout the week.
. Tbe Healtll Advisory Committee is
com~ of students and faculty from
tbe entiie UniversitY. Its members
are: Dr. Lawre1101! Cappiello, professor of health edw:ation and member
of the President's Review Board; Dr.
'lbe first building dedicatiOn to !Je
Robert Cooper, .-islallt dean for stu·
held on the Amberst CamptE is scheddent and profeissional affairs; Mr. Jonuled lor 3 p.m., Monday, April 8,
athan Dandes, past president of tbe
in tbe Moot Courtroom of John Lord
Student Aasociation; Dr. Robert DickO'Brian Hall.
man of tbe Buffslo General Hospital;
'lbe ceremony will commemorate
Dr. Georae Ferguson, c:bainnsn of opthe oflicial opening of that building
erative dentistry; Dr. John Fopesno,
as tbe home of the University's Facc:bainnsn of medical tecbnology; Mr.
ulty of Law and Jurisprudence.
Robert D. Frankel, student; Mr. WilPresenting the- dedicatory_ address
liam Fritton, Division of Undergmduwill be Charles A Horsky, a partner
ate Education; Dr. Edna Grexton, asin the late Mr. O'Brian's Washington,
sociate vice president for student afEl.c.; law flml. Covington,arulBurling.
fairs; Mrs. Elimbeth Harvey « 8ocial
Mr. Horsky will be introduced -by
iiDd Al:lininlstNtlo;·Dr. Paul
law Professor Jacob D. Hyman.
Hoffman, director of the UniVersity
'lbe first c a m p u s appearance of
· Health Service; Dr. ~; 0.:. EuGovernor Malcolm Wilson is schedgene Li.ppachutz, associate vice presiuled as part of ·the dedication. Wilson
dent for health science&amp;; Mr. Joel C.
will present a brief address and will
Mark, student; Mr.· James McDonjoin U/B's President Robert I. Ketough, ~I of Health Education; Mr.
ter and William C. Bsird1 chairman
Gene Nelson, Department of Biophysof the Council of. the Uruversity, in
ics; Dr. Earl- Noble, Department of
unveiling a dedicatory plaque which
Medicine; Mr. Roosevelt Rhodes, diwill be placed permanently in the
rector of minOrity student affairs; Dr.
structure. A portrait of John Lord
Jeannette Spem, community . health
O'Brian, by Buffslo artist Virginia
nursing.
.
,.
•
CUthbert, will be. presented by Manly
Subcommittees have been formed to
Fleischmann, a trustee of tbe State
study current services, ror· long-range
University of New York. 1111d Mrs.
planning, for facilities development
Kellogg Mann, eldest daughter of
and to idefttily student needs, Dr. LarJohn Lord O'Brian. Other aa,ught.erB
son said. 'lbe subcommittee on stuof Mr. O'Brian who will be present
dent needs"is cooperating with Subare Mm. Winfield I. Butach; Mrs. S.
Board I ia prepariag an inslnunent
Davis Boylston; and Mrs. Thurston
for ssmpling students' perceptions of
T . Robinson.
health needs. 'lbe facilities subcomSpeakers at the ceremony will also
mittee assisted the Health Center in ·
include Richard D. Schwartz, provost
selecting -ce in the Ellicott Camof the Faculty and dean of the Law
. pi"" for Health Center operaliolls
School, and Wade J . Newhouse, prowhich will open for the fall ....-..
fessor and chairinan of the ~l's
A study of case loads and procebuilding C&lt;!IDmittee.
dures in the Student Health Center is
The inyocation -will be given by
nearin completion. This sludy will
Reverend Harry D . Hawthorne, Asform
basis for recommendations
cension Lutheran Church; tbe oenef"! expanded services.
• diction by Reverend Edward T . Fisher, Roman Catholic chaplain at U/B.
Music will be provid~ by the Mb!ld
Emotions Qusitet. a string ensemble
compooed of low University students
-Thomas Halpin and Michael &amp;.:
Tbe State University Construction
enbloom, _violioists; Maureen Galls- ·
Fund bali awarded a $3,589,000 COiljlher. violist; and Dans Rusinsk, celltract to the J. M;.Uore CooslnJction
ist.
.
ComDAnv, Inc., of 'r-.nda. for an
A reception will follow the cereadmiDiSiD.tion and eervioe building at
mony, in the Charles B. Sears Law
the Amherst Campue.
.
Library on tbe "!lmt floor of O'Brian
Tbe fouM!tory IJ!zuctwe, I'! be of- ' Hall. An .exhibit, "Law in Westem
New York: A Visual History of Law,
ficiai!.Y ~- tbr ~
~
Lawyers and Lepl Institutions," will
be on display in the library.
Inc. of Buffalo. Its 47,000 uet ~~q~JBM
Non-publiC events lor the dedication
feet' will 11ouE many ol the Uniwrday
include a special meeting of the
sity's support_ luDctian o8loe8 ·¥.ud. University &lt;Council at 11 a.m. in O'ing purchasllil, pay r o II, facilities
Brian
Hall;-Jl tour of the building for
p~. information services. iatm-- . members of tbe O'Brian family and
nal auditing, permnnel, 8lld olhen.
special
~~ and an invitational
To be situated at the aoutt.w.t corluncheon in me Sears library, prener of the campus, DMr the elecCric
ceding
the
dedication pmpam.
aulratstioll, the stnJoture will hal/9 an
John Lord O'Brian, who has been
exterior of allver-toned rellectiw tdaD.
called
of tbe J11!18t. if not· the
It is I!QJeCial to be campleteil by
moat, outstanaing alwnnl ol the Uniearly 1.9?6.
versity," died at the age· ol 98 Clll
Georse D. Crofts ..-1 U/B for
April 10 of last year. .
~
more than 50 yeara as a law Pl'lll... A _~t .a~, ~ &lt; de'
and financial ollloer. ' ... . ... .

O'Brian Hatl Dedication . Siated -for Monday

It,;

Crofts Building
Contract Awarded

:p.

=c:.:=·~~Biaie

"one

scribed himself as "just a busy lawyer," be had remained active as aenior

partner in the Washington firm of
Co~ &amp; Burling until shortly hefore his death.
.
·
Born in Buffalo in 1874, Mr. O'Brian served the nation by appointment of six presidents - 'lbeodore
Roosevelt (as U.S. attorney for Westem·New York) , William Howard Taft
(in the ssme post), Woodrow Wilson
Cas heed of the War Emergency Division, .J u:atice ~t, .lil7' 1919) ?..uerl&gt;ert- Hoo;ver (as llrst sistsht' attorney ~-• ·in char.,. of
the Anti-Trust
~D.
Roosevelt (to defend the constitutionality of the Tennessee Valley Authority before tbe U.S. Supreme Court) ,
and Harry S. Truman (as c:bainnsn
of a committee to invest'iiate a strike
at the Oak Ridge, Tenn., atomic center in 19;18).

or;;.;r.;;;;.

During World War ll, he served in
Washington as general counsel for tbe

· Office of' Price Management, tbe Sup-

ply Priorities ·and Allocation· Board
and the War Production Board.
His 'legal work also· involved him
in such areas as labor and civil service reform, disputes before tbe United
Nations, and suits involving professional hssehall.
·
Ail 1898 graduate of U/B Law, be
was presented the Chancellor's Medal,
the University's highest honor, in
1940.

.

.

In 1950, he W89 rec&lt;JIIDized by then
Chief Justice Earl Warrel) on. the
occasion of the 50th amiversary of his
admission ·to the b8r as having served
"the Supreme Court i!l tbe highest
sense. Few men in history have bad
a Jonger or more active practice hefm:e
this Court," Warren said. •
Chief Justice Warren who to
have participated in ,the dedication
ceremo!'f. was forced to withdraw. hecause of ill he8Ith. In ""P~ hia regrets, Warren noted that O'Bn&amp;n was
·"a great man" who "was as muCh el'ttitled to be recognized as tbe dean
-- of our profession in this country, as_
anyotberperson."
.

...

In .f8!'POIIBe to inquiries about tickets for tbe dedication of John L.ord
O'Brian H.Bll on Moqlay, April 61
Mar rie . C; Mix, a&amp;llistant ·dean or
the
~1. has iasued tbia .,_
planation of the situation:
"Tbe aedication of O'B ria n, h
first such ceremoay on the" Amberst
in the Alden Courtroom.
S
ts who chafr or ~ the

t:

.
1§]
~s -

o~!':;.:::!:::S~

invitations: Student Bar Aasociatlcin;

~~~~s=ia-~

Law Society; lnlernaibtBi Law Clilh;
Moot Court &amp;ani; Qpinion; Law Studen~· ~.~~'?~~~. ~~;

Puerto Rialn Students; Law Review;
Society on Law and Interdisciplinary
Studies; Distinguished VisJ.1ors Forum
and Mitchell Lecture; BAlSA; National Lawyers Guild; American Bar
Association, Student Division; Student
Law Wives; l.:egal Obeervers; Athletic
Gommittee.

.Al~~~B:cl~~

tors, direclots· of the Erie County Bar
Association, Jbd..... in:tbe 8th .Judicial
.Bi81rict--.I-Court o(.~ filddty
and . deans floai iotbet· lilw • SChOolS,
members of the• family of,•.John• lDrd
O'Brian, ·meinhers oNbe firms which
have interviewed for 'plaCement, members of . the SUNYAB Council, tbe
U/ B Foundation, Uni~ty admioistrators, SUNY AJhan,y olllciala, members of tbe State Construction Fund
and members of the Bar.
"The dedication of a new University
building is a cieremonial function under tbe auspices of tbe SUNY:AB
Council. 'lbe Law Faculty has cooperated with the 'Council and the
President's 0 If ice in ptsnoing the
events dedicating O'Brilm Hall. It was
originally intended that' a Dedica.toty
Lecture would: he &lt;leli....ed l&gt;y Earl
Wamm, former Chief Juatice of· the
Supreme Court, but health COllsiderations made it . - r y 19 l"incel 'this
_,.,oo event.· Tbe intentiail was to
make this.4ecture ·~ to· .law
faculty and studenlll 8lld iiBDbers of
the Bar, but unfortunately the ·event
will riot ~He· place: . ; . . : .
: ..

".U sddi~
~b. , for
Monday's eeramonieo In Alden Courtroom are available, I will notify students and 1b8y : will be 'CliatribUted
through DIY ollloe Clll Mooday moming,
~nl 8. A remote taleYi8lon broadaoat

·ticbts ,.;;

will~~it!;,i'cl:r~:.

admisoion to 106 to the t!VI!Ilt Clll
televiSion will be avaflahle in
ollice alter April 3. Amberat Cable ~
(Channel 5) will aJso broadcast tbe
ceremony on live taleYi8lon Clll that

~t is

_.tia

the relatively IIIDall

IIUIDber

of
available-and the !agle number of friends of the Law Scbool and

tbe University that- made the limited
distribution of tickets 118Cf181!111Y·"

Bendey Named
Eric Bentley, well-mown dram&amp;
critic and author, bas been "appointed
Katherine Cornell Prof-.. of Drama
. bere, effective. immediatelY. ~Bentley
has been a villi~ profeaaor ia the
English and· n..tre ~
ainoe Jannary.
A IDI!JQher of hoth tbe academic and
theatrical communities for 30 years,
Bentley was hom in En,land In J.916.
He. was ed\la!ted there !""~ .in . the

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

···•· ......:.: ,: .. _,:

�~

IQ~lllt~
. . Major

8174 Start
~_,_will

lie ...u-

llble ......... ill MiDIIl'd llillmare
eou- ........ wllb tile f a l l . . ~ J.rl.{ Pnoldeot Robert L Ket. _ - - - . 1 tile -.NW.....t.,
tile MPC -~Ddhidua~Ued ~ ProflU' far a fiw.year trial period, clurUif wbk:h it will be autijeot 110 on- Some
ftaluatiaa.
li0-100 llludeniB ... apected

110 be earoiJed • tile T h e - . . _ ...ai 8JBia lor
U/8:
MFC will,
tile liNt 11me, have
authority 110 1~ that a student
. be awuiled a bea:ala-18 ......... by
tile UniWrslty;
·
Adult llludlmte will be able 110 deailll a complete eduadloaal .............
ileuafiiO tbeir OWD lllaeillc ob~
A , _ llexlbility
ha a
obiect1W8
will al8o be
. 8Dd

ror

ma=1beae

lt Ia ~ tbtt·
lect.ed "adiwic\" ~ty'" will boi at.
iii . addilJGe *'I Uniwnity
pror-n, iii ...au 110 provide ex- ·
tracted,

~~~~=
~ - --··· .

~

AllCIIIdlq 110 Dt. Robert F. Berner,
· Uniwnity dean Gi COIItin . education, a participating MFC ~t
desipa ~her OWD major-in
tetion with :a {eulty
8Dd
academic · advisor-if ~vidual~
ooucational goals c a n n 0 t be met
through~ of sludy. offered by
regu)ar,J.Jpiyeraitydepartmenta.

ml-. . . . . ~a
-'Y.;r:.:.
'• ...,.

:r-- ~
all..... ..~..w.::
tbelr QlllliQ'

d

.......,u.

cWea:aJ, ar reJeclka tD tile demL The

-.mitlee will lllllllllltale a -..1
IIIJCIIIIDr lor aD ...,._.s lpaCial majCIIL

Oace tile

Plarx-d

-,jar -

!..;

........... the llludrm will follow the
ol 8lulb" • it ~
l'rotlreM will be ftaluallod .m semo!is-

..au..

ter by the academic adviaor.
Apprmtimataly one calendar year
prior to the time Gi der1'ee COIIft!m!l.
the student will &amp;le an ,.PPiication far
depee form 110 begin the IIDal phase
of the 'lbe unifying project,
if c:aHed for will be UDder4aken during
this
time.
thewill
IIDalammge
-·
tile academic advisor
for
a joint ~the sponsor/menlo&lt;,

~

=-~the· M~~

Optional Degree Requirements and/or
the Committee (or lndividualized Majors who wish to attend. At this meet.
.ing, the progress of the major and the

=r. ~i'!.~""==~

40Houroof'lbe major muat con s i s t Gi the
equivalent of at least 40 bows of interrelated work, guided by the faeulty
ADDnllnr, leading 110 a _,;fie educatiOO&amp;i" obiective. A unifyina study or
piece of work, supervised bY the sponsor, will be _&lt;a;pecljod or- ~ as
a ciQJinlnating. project in . many c:sses.
. ''A , ~pie!&lt;! ~P!'QClllll! '!riJI,. be cle-

=,;p,;n.g~J!_~~

; inJ•upon UDiqu&amp;_aervioes., the community ~ suitable, 8Dd establishing ,crediiB by various 11011-tmditional m e a n s such as independent
study, c:ridit by examination and as&amp;e!IIID8Ilt · of prior learning," Berner

explairiS.

..

.

A special MFC sub-eommittee will
develop ""'-tency-based criteria for
such .-nent as -ll as n&gt;oommend
the limits and proosdures under which
credit will be granted.
• The inilividll8lized major will. also
Pe"'l a . - 1 studies' reqpitement of
four inlii!Jdisciplinary COIUIII!S which
are eventually be 110 offered 110 mass
&amp;udiaucea ~ such media as televisioo andlor ......,ttes, similar to programs offered . by . the . British "open
-~-~.!(' system. Until u- are
........._,, however the student must
earn crediiB eql!i~. to two courses
.in .m
aelect.ed .fnlm

c.n...,r ........

~~- ~~"!"'!'hY,

natur~

hM!th=

mathematiciiTiitallstica, ·aagiMering
and

lllllltbe~tD-..MFCCom­

tecbnoloKY.

8Dd - - t .
SllopatDHII8i8the ...........
.

fit~~ --.!f.;,~!::'

jobe and/or famil:y commitmenla keep
them from attendinl classee on a regular basis, Bemer liilya. Eligibility for
fonnal application is limited. to tboae
who have completed dbe semester of
work in MFC and a part_of the sener·
ai studies requiftlment. ~Y en-

rolled MFC students and adults not
now attending ·are invited, if interested, to contact one. of three academic
.advisors for .fUrther • .information Miss , Jbalme Koszuta (881-2208),
Mrs. Phyllis, Herdendorl (881-2212),
or Mr. Keith Jolm!lon (881-3809).
Miss Koszlita will serve as Coordinator
of the Individuali2ed Major Program.
Diocuasion with an advisor to review
format and prooedures is -the finlt step
in initiating the program. The faculty
sponsor/ mentor muat also be secured
"with a minimum of delay," Dean
Berner say&amp;, ''because the relationsliip
With a sponaoi'/mentor should be part
of the iJll!:ial plannina phase." .
. The desilll&amp;ted facuJty sponsor must
meet also with the MillUd Fillmore
College advisor to clarify obiectives
and proosdures. And the prclpCad progr&amp;m; · after review and approval by
both the faculty sponsor 8Dd advillor,

=-and~ ev.aluation~

· At the' completion of the program,
the faculty sponsor will submit a
grade and/or a written evaluation of
the individuali2ed major. With the
sucoessful ful1illment of the program
requiftlments, the Committee on Optional Degree "Requirements and t6e
dean of continuing education will recommend conferral of tbe degree.
Feculty Elilftllllty

Any individual with a U/B faculty
appointment (fuJI-time or part-time
adjunct) can serve as a faculty sponsor/mentor or faculty "supervisor of an
independent
project
in_1he
pre&gt;the study
pe!IIOil
,._
___ ..,._

-·if

pertise in an area involved in the
individualized major and an interest
in working with studenta'involved in
sue!&gt; a program. The faculty member
. must be approved by the clean of
continuing education. Continuing Ed. ucation will provide professional staff
members to serve as acsi:lemic advisors.
Millard Fillmore hopes eventually
to- be authorized to appoint a small
core of fuJI-time faculty ·to ~e as
.both sponsors and independent study
superYJaOrs 8Dd as resource persons
in the develapment of inteniisciplinary basic . general studies programs.
Until then, it will have to llraw on
members of the fuJI-time · and adjunct
faculty to serve in these capacities,
· over and above assillled work loads.
A stipend will be paid to tboae accepting such reaponsibilities.
A aummative evaluation of the ·en:
tire program will be conducted at the
end of the 197S-79 ~- year.

Marshals Sought
Names of faeulty wbo wish 110 march
in tbe ilcademic procession and/or
serve as assistant marshals for the
128th Annual Com~t ezercises, scheduled for Memorial Auditorium,~• .~ 21, are being
~by~ H. Glenn, Un!-veraity
Volunteers for the marshal posts
will lead graduates in the academic
procession, "h 0 0 d" doctoral degree
candidates and aid in .other matters.
There should be at IMSt one maisbaJ
for each Univeraity department participsliJ)g in the genenl commencement, Glenn indicated. Volunteer marshals •will be supplied with the appropnate cap and fOW!L
Individuals wishing.. to .pariicipate
should COIIIact Dr. Glenn no lata. than
April 15 at 313 Fcaer Hall, 881-2420.
Univeraity diVisions alated to join
in the general Mmmimcenient are:
· Faculty of Aria 8Dd Letters; Faculty
of Educational Studiea; Diviaion of
Graduate and ProleMional Education·
F a cuI t y of Natural 8ciencllll and
Mathematics;
Social Sciences and Administzation; 8Dd Division
nf Underpaduate Education (Spacial

Facuiv .,

Majors) .

. Other ~jiesand acboola ... ~­
' nmg individual ~

UIB Totally Opposed
To Ellicott Diversion Plan··
. The t1ni-.ity Ia -~ opposed" 110 a u.s. Corpa, of EaciMen
ad-. far Ellicott Creek IIQad cantrol, Prealdent Robert L Ketter -~
in a letter to tbe Coq\e with ..;;;;
t o - eon.,-nen and N- York's
u.s. Senatom.
The d r a f t report eml&gt;oclyjq · the
p~ (wbich is to be oOiwiilered
by Congress this year) omits, Ketter
said, "any refereru:e to the direct written policy statements submitted at
the various public forums by . _•
sible Univemity officials. •.. The clear
avoidance of inclusion of detrimental
views abou"t the plan or deeplY adverse
impacts upon the single most important and largest institution in tbe
study area should be su11icient evidence of the report's partialitv and
degree of bias 1to its credibility:... .
The Univemity's opposition to the
plan has been further strengthened,
the President indicated, by a public
policy statement from the Governor's
Office.
Ketter listed "three totally blatant
further omissions from the report:"
1. Total dwegard for carefully stated and ~nted Stak highway
regional p/mming in the area.
•
"'The Campus Loop Road (desi,- .

::t'~YN::O~tru~~u~::~) U:

Campus," the President pointed out
"and will cross Ellicott Creek and
the projected diven~ion channel with
no less than ei¥ht bridges, each of two
or three lanes m ~dtb, if this scheme
is implemented. The impact of this
upon the capital program of the State
of New York and likewise the desired
effectiveness of tbe Water Resources
Development program of ' the Corps
of Engineers in flood control should
be totally evident to the informed
and must be included in the finsi
reJX)rt." Moreover. Ketter said in an
_,-uer statement, . it must be realized
that for most of the year, tbese bridges
will be across an essentially dry chan-

neL

2. The extensive land-taking related
to the State University of -New York
al BuffaiD, Amherst.

UIB JIQiiliall ............. - * 1
... the eel
tile'
tal quality .......
., a - -.CDDDiuldty,
~
. ...
... .required ...
b~Uwua 8Dd the .m.ple beBI;y-of a
naturaf settint wbicb would be
5

•

.. .,

••••ril--•

.-n. ---.

sible tbriJu8b the aeUift ~
tile Ellicott Creek .a-;."
The 8andridp ~ Jli'OJect. in
the Univenity view _ . , pmvide:
1) flood protection .f« .Ambenlt, Wil-

liamsville

~

a-tto-

-flow augmentation
I..ai.caster, 8Dd
AJcJm; 2) lour
110 imp;ove waw

quality the entire length Gi the C!'8l'k;
3) a 2;150-acre multi~ . Naorvoir for recreation. and 4) muimum
resource" management 8Dd clevelqp- ,
the besin's multi-~

:_to""!!'!

Colloquium to ·_
Honor ·Prof Lynn
A colloquium honoring Profer8&gt;r
])prothy L Lynn's 25th ~
as a member of the faculty of the
SchOOl of Social Policy and Communis planned
~.
Scbeduled for 139 Capen at 3 p.m.,
the colloquium w i II COIIsider "The
Changing American Family: A Male
and Female Perspective," with pmsentstions by Drs. Harold and Margaret Feldman.
A reception and dinner in honor of
Professor Lynn will follow the coflo..
quium program.
Professor Lynn, during 25 years of
uninterrupted service to the University and community, has taught in
many _curricul!= areas. She has had
extensive experience in social work
practice, consultation, and continuing
education in Buffalo, Rochester and
Syracuse._. - - - --The Drs. Feldman are both engagi,d
in academic work in Ithaca. Dr. Jotargaret Fel&lt;!!nan, a faculty member at
Ithaca College, is a social worker wbo
received her master's from Westem
Reserve and her Ph.D. in education
and social psychology from CornelL
Dr. Harold Feldman, a member of the
Department of Human Development
and Family Studies at Cornell, received his B.A. and master's from the
University of Minnesota and the Ph.D
in social psychology from the Uni:
veiSity of Michigan.
The oolloquium program is open to
the public. The reception and dinner
in the Faculty Club are by r-.vation
only. A $7 fee for dinner is payehle
to Frances v. Staiman, '102 Foster
Hall, by April 12. Prot. Steiman is
chairman Gi the event's. tlpOII80iinc
committee wbich also iDcludee FnmC. Burke, Elizabeth C. Haney
and Berths s: Laury, aU ., the School
of Social Policy.
_

tru7.ces

for

The arrangements would take out
of effective use for ..all time a 120 ft.
wide swath of land across the eastern
portion of tbe new campus, Ketter
pointed out in a 1973 meeting on the
plan. ln addition, certain lands on tbe .
creekside of the channel would be cut
off, and could not be utilized.
"How is it that the mile Jon' and
very considerable devastating mtrusion into the eastern portion of the
University's 1200 acre campus rates
less notice than a single bomeownei's
inconvenience?," he asks in the cur·
rent letter.
3. Non-unanimous popu]Qrity of the '
c"""-l diversion tJChemL:.
''This report," Ketter said, "seems
to purport ·to make a conclusion of
total acceptance of the channel diveraion scheme and in so doing clearly
falsifies the public bearing summary.
''The transcript a n d the written
Eighteen faculty 8Dd staff Gi the
statements made a part thereof must
U/B-administered Educational Opporclearly show the general agreement to
tunity Center (EOC), located at 466
oppose this scheme on the part of the
Washington St., downUMD, have reTown of AmberBI, and the various
ceived second nbtice thet their .,.....
agencies of tbe State of New YOrk,
t&gt;acts will not be ..,._..,.r for Dext
year.
including the State Univeraity of New
York at Buffalo," be urged.
The non-renewals .-.!ted fro m
The UniveiSity, wbich favors the
staff cutbacks necessitated w1aa the
construction of the Sandrid11e Reser:
old Cooperative College Center(CCC)
voir project on the Erie and. Wyoming
merged last fall with the formedy
County line with minor improvements
County-operate&lt;! Urben Center a. fcmn
downstream, also opposes the diverthe EOC. The combined facility
sion channel on grounds that il would
an enrollment of about 200 hE thml
be a "denuded eyesore,'' trapping stagthe total of its pred...-.r institutiaaa.
nant water at certain seasons, and
AU CCC faculty 8Dd staff because "water quality improvement"
given a year's notice of dismisaal b&amp;is missing from fhe concel?t.
. fore the merger last July. Sevmty...m
Ellicott Creek is a IDSJOr problem
were invited to return nen year in
for the Alnberst Campus, tbe Univerletters sent out March 18; 11 faculty
sity contends: "During the January
five counselor&amp;, an admissioos CJIIJirJa'
thaws, significant areas along the creek
and an officer for institutioDal -reb
flood-not just in the vicinity Gi the
were reminded they would not be recampus, but generall)l along the entire
newed.
.
length. ParadoncsUy, the opposite
The "threat of student protest over
problem is realized in midsummer,
the dismissals, raised in the wake of
when viJ1ually no 6ow is reaiized and
receipt of tbi!se second notial!, '""""""
severe ~ter quality problems arise.
to have eased. at Reporter deadline.
Odors boialme oppreamve, moequitoes
EOC Director Mrs. Geotp Unaer at.
thrive,· and generally an undesirable
lributed this to studenla IJaiq informed of the facts behind the actions,
~ibly even an unhealth{..state
~ to a report in -ru-lay'a
Improving the water quality, the
C~Expras.

ces

EOC Cuts 18 Staff

a.

�~

(c-dull , ..,..,. .1, .w. fJ .·

.tbil

c= .......

-with=

tit -

.

e.pliclt

=~~a=::
toa~
••PI'Cib-

lam,
q tbat 't bil

p ' DO
ilf,ud.
. tJa
wa,y
blllmllarpo.
villloota relatiDI to NWIMiiaD ofaanbera to ~ at Ibis Uniwnity;
and ~. tbat tbiiiiiOde of &amp;election will not be allowd lx&gt; ~r
the estabu.lulalt of the Ol&gt;arteriilr
CommiUM or delaY ita. effective fun&lt;&gt;.
tioning. U a deadlOdi develops bethe Faculty Senata and the Collegiate .A.embly and llhould a Char·
tering Committee not be in operation
within a reaaonable period (and I
hope you will ....... that 30 days COil·
s!ituta such a period) altar the n!OOipt
of this letter, 1 will apect the Faculty
Senate to zecooaider Section In.A.1
(F) ud malr.e such ol'- recommendatioiiB for~ aa are required for
the Cbartering Committee to proceed
with the ft!IIPOIIIibilitle&amp; REigned to it.
. "Further, other 8lictions of the Proapectua praaibe ... rtt..o•••• reporting
rela~ ~ji;, fubctions
and general operallriaal procedures,
which may not be~nate, and in
fact, may be in.
· with ' nonnal
administrative pnii:lices and proced.
ures of our Univeriit)o and within
State University. For eX&amp;mple: if the
Chief Adminiatrative · Oflicer of the
Colleges reports to the Vioo President
for Academic Affairs, as do the Provosts, then recommendations should
flow through that o6lce rather than
comin' llirect1y 4o the President; no
administrative · o11icer awards 'merit'
monies per se .- rather, · within the
framework negotiated . for the aJieca.
· tion of such mOnies these tske the
form of recommendations; appoint.
ment of an •Acting Oflicer' by the of.
door himself in his 'absence' alao requires careful examination, as does
the p~ grading option-no cred·
it for any credit oourae; etc.
"I would anticipate that where such
conflicts might· ariae !luri!lg . implementstion ot the Pnlspe(:tus; the nor·
mal administralhre pattenlS and procedures of the University would tske
precedenoo.

~a

Who's .to Say What's Pornographic?
Bulfalo City Court Judse Theodore
far as 4o ~...umerate acts which are ·to..
Kuler doem't 1iJoe Screw .....,.m.e.
.be bmmed in literature, on film, eN;:.,"
A . car1oc!" in one ~ .mo_wm, a
ca...U., eome tunpoil in the capital.
priest with u erection ~ out
First
axnmunion p his Calholic up be
Kilaler said that, in the past, the
aaya. He .._,•t ematly thrilled eid.er
' Butl'alo Salacious Lite~. Squad
by a depictloll of the Parable of the
has tried to use pei'SU8J;lon With ther-- ud Flllbee in which a fisb was
atre mailagers and booksellers before
shown ''moomtiDg"' a loaf of bread. A
taking legal action. "They'd go to a
aelf«yled •._._," Kasler 1Ulllll8 this
theatre manager, for emmple, and say
kind of material with the $S comic
• We're getting a lot of community
boob in which Popeye Maqie IIIJd
pn!!II!UI'I! about this film; bow about
J'
ud 4lbe KatumJ•IIIIIW' Kids
stopping showing it?' " 'The same wid&gt;
~ tbeir wildest X-rated wbims,
booksellers and magazine dealers.
freed at 1aat fnm the alriclureB of
When actiOllS were taken, they were
the general audionoe Sunday funnies.
against explicit depictions only; not
He has I:OIIDded up a few of these and
against simulations or the written
tbeir punoeyors in his day.
word, the Judge contended. The
On the other hand, Ale&gt;: Allain,
ACLU has agreed, be said, that su~
president • of the Freedom 4o RaMI
local actions have befSl "according to
. Foundation, while not a~ prelaw.''
.
.
cisely the kind of material Judge Ka&amp;Kasler was at patns to pomt out
1er was referring to feels strongly that
that he, the Judge, does not make one• fJ'If'fY adult has ~ absolute right to
man determinations on these matters.
read anything he or abe wants.
The Judi!", he said, makes a prelimi·
The two spoke at a Monday nightnary deciSion of probable cause that
O'Brian Hall session on "Recent Su·
"reasonable men" will find the mapreme 'Cowt Decisions on Pomogmterial obscene under the law. The jury
phy and the Effect on the Community .
mskes the final determination.
and__the Library,'' part of the School
On the me.~&gt;~a' of "Deep Throat,"
of Information iond Li6rary Stuqjes'
he noted ~Je men m different
·"Mtemative Week" program.
communities have displayed . a varia·
, .
tion in stsndards. A Buffalo Jury 0011·
l..uillnC Mowle Critic'
.
victed the theatre management; a
In.troducin~ ~ as "Buffalo's
Binghamton panel lailed to convict;
leading ':""""' ~tic,- Judge ~er
and a New York City-Judge intpooed
traced . his role m lhl; f!iib.t ag~
·a $100,000 fine.
~ "? a 1964 'wife:swapp~g
The scientists can't agree, the reecheme" which be, as 811 assistant disligious and moral oommunity can't
trict ~'!"'Y• bel~ break up. The
agree, and ev"'! the judicial ""'!"':"U·
material mvolved m that case, he
nity reflects differences of oplDlon,
noted, was "Boy Scout otu1f compared
Kasler said. The decision on what is
to what we see 4oday.''
obsoeite then, has to he ·trea~ as a
'The literal definition of pornogra·
politicai matter; the legislatures have
phy, from the Greek. Kaiile&lt; said. is
to decide based upon what the com·
"story of prostitutes;" bow you define
munity w811ts. ·
obscenity "depends on your point of
Judges, he said, have to weigh the
view." But the legal definition of eith·
rights o1 the oommunity against the
er or both "is not so easy" 4o arrive at;
rights of the individual, striving for
be "'-rved.
·
halanoo. "The oourts aren't your en·
The rather liberal definitions spawn·
emy."
ed by ,t he President's Commission on
'We're In Trouble'
Obeoenity and Pornography have befSl
Allain, a Louisianian, told the audirejected by the White House and the
&amp;oo -that if the vague doctrine of
Congress and by acme eoci8:l and be"community standards" is to prevail
havioral soientists, Kasler said, citirig
in the judgement of literature, "we're
especi4lly Margaret MM&lt;i and a Proin trouble" as librarians. He foresees
fessor Leonard Berkooritz of the Uni·
the "absolute total oollapse" of library
versity of Wisconsip. The Commissystems which serve various communi·
&amp;ion's view that pomography has no
ties.
adverse Or. lasting effecls on lboee who
'The function of libraries, Allain
read or view it .carries little weight
with the Judge, who is especially concerned with the impact of such maoterials on thooe under 17.
Kasler emphasized the landmark
Supreme Court ruling in the case of
A course on "Counseling .for MidMiller w. Califomia. This decision, he
Career Decisions for Women" will he
said, holds that the protection of• the
offered April 23-May 16 by the Oflice
First Amendment does not extend to
~~~ ~~...;~!" Di·
obscenity; 1bat Staees may enact statutes apinst obacene materials which
The series of = t counseling oi!shave n0 "aerious" literary, art;istic, .
sions is designed for women who are
scieDtillc, or political value; and that
looking for new employment or edu·
local not.nadonallll:andards shall precational opportonities. Uni~ty and
vail. Written words alolle. can be 0011community consultants will lead .,.:sidered oblcene under th.ia finding md
plorations nf various options, ud in- tbe former, vague notion of "redeemventory tests will be given to identify
ing aocial value" ia no looger impornew vocational interests and possible
tut,. Kasler IIUIIl1l1llri-t
new career&amp;.
'll&gt;e oourae· will be taught by MarPornocraPhic material can be posgaret B. Nevin, director of the Adult
- ' ud uaed in the bame, be noted,
but ita cominercial ezploltation and
Advisement C...ter. Clasaes will . . dilaiminaliOii are proecribed..
at Ridae Lea n-lay and Thur&amp;J!ay
~ fnm 9:30 to 11:30. A · fee
IUght DOW, the Judge said, New
of $40 includes the cost of testing and
York Stata ia lftiPPiina to write IMvs .
in confonnity- with this ruling, but
materiala.
·
Registration information can be obthere has ~ cHaact-tt on ,bow
talDacl fnm the Oflice for Credit-Free
apeCiflc: the leJialation sbould be. The
ProtJrama, Hayes A, Room 3, 831-4301.
AMMnbly, be reported, ' - gone liD

Counseling Course
Slated for Women

·

said, is 4o. rellect al! _opini.:!t-:,'!
views, aJ.l ades; not SliDply
~~"~::, o;:;J",r::~ that
• •
• '~--~ •
states have '! l"f'limate ......,._, m

t!::

obooenity lesisla~~-~
no cause of harm m. ~ ........ ma
un_der the law.
be ~ depnyes ad~ of d':"'
~ .law

'!hl"•

,process

while abndgmg their abeolute right
to read an~.
.
Moreover, be asserted, ~ty decisions have. vi.~ the. First Ame,nd·

ment proh!~1t10n ~ ~ment of religton, PreVlOUS rulings, he

said, beve ):teld that govsnments can·
not prescribe prayer, cannot forcela a
belief in religion, cannot ~
ws
aiding memb~rs of !'; rehgt~n as
against ~-IJ!ilie~ers. ~ml?~stng '!
moral. ~t, he 881d, 'is worse
than. ~ a p~er. It amounts
to mding churches m church work
and is clearly proscribed."
.
Allain cited o~ le~ ariW!""'ts.
Knowledge, he S&amp;ld, lS esseiJt;!al to
intent; without intent there lS no
guilt. When 8 librarian or 8 bookseller
gives an adult what he or . s_be W&amp;J!tB,
-the lib'&lt;arian or bookseller 18 dealin~
with ineterial which is P~ until
it runs intx&gt; ~ifficulty ~th the law.
That' legal ruling, he S81d, comes later - after the fact-when 8 jury
finds the ma~ to he obscene. Thet;e
cannot he definite knowledge IJ;Iat 1t
was obscene under the law until the
decision has befSl made. To hold the
librarian or bookseller responsible,
~ im~ '?'·post facto ~t which
ts Constttuhon811y prohibited, be
mainlained.
Civil rights legislation, moreover,
mskes it clear that those who deprive
others of' their ~ts under the Con·
stitotion· are subject 4o legal action.
This could conceivably be used against
the librarian who refuses 4o circulate
a given volume, thus depriving an
adult of his right to I'Jllld oortailf ma·
terials, Allain pointed out. That libiarian might alao be •h auled before
the ootirts for denying the rights of
the author and .publisher.
'Piurol Jeopardy
Librarians could, thus, he in trouble
on both sides of the law, oould he
placed in " plural jeopardy,'' for passing out and/ or not passi,ng out oorlain materials. There must be exemptions from the law for the field, Allain
maintained. And there muSt he more
court decisions, particularly on bow
to define "serious" literary, .artistic,
social, or political value. "No librarian
has the right 1XI question why someliDO wants to draw out a book in order
·t o determine if his or her purpose is
seriowi," Allain said.
Allain recalled Thomas'Jefferson on
the whole lllBtter of governmental decisions on what can or cannot he read
or viewed. Jefferson, he said, was
" mortifuid" that in the " land of the
free" which be helped establish, the
question of a book could go to a '
magistrate. It was, Jeffel'8011 felt, an
insult to the citizenry. .
Almoat 200 Yllll'll later, ·A llain ask·
ed, ~·Sbail we-have the state legisla~
pla&lt;e its lmprimDlur 0.!1 what adults
read; t!te Supreme Court, its Nihil

=:=
Obalillt?"

·

media--...award...m-

SlUI "Altemative Week" concludes

today with two

ing a ~ of 1973'a

includ-

.-r;~ ..~

the Fillmore ~ Norton. 4

Fund

Com- _;

"Filially, ·the Senate passed firm
resolutions regarding the need for this
Administration's financial commitment
to the Collegiate System. As you
know, the Legislature is presenUy considering a budget which is significantly reduced even beyond that presented

:at"~v';;'%fs ':!tionw~~!:

rest.ored in the Supplemental Budget, ·
but having no firm data at this point
with regard to available dollars, I am
sure that you will agree with me that
it would he foolish -to talk at this time
. in terms of specific doll8r amounts
that will be made available for this
coming Fall. However, I am ...-. it
will be possible for Dr. Spitzberg,
worlring with other appropriate Uni·
versity .ollicers, to develop resource
pattenlS both in terms of release time
and 'real dollar' allocations which will
assure that the Collefes n!OOive adequate - ~ appropnate - levels of
support for Jegttimate Pft111BD1S they
may mount. My own peraonal commitment ia that for adequately docu·
mented and supported prosrams, there
will be adequate I'I!8DillCe8 and these
may necessarily involve reductions in
other areas of the University's aca·
demicpropama.
·
"I hope you find this response helpful, ud I am ~ 4o declaie the
l'rollpectu8 operative, 'lrilhin this con·
text, upon your receipt of .this letter.
Additionally, I trust you will convey
my sincere thal1ks to all· those individuals who spent 110 tnuch eftort on
this matter, for their ;amine assis- tance to the Uniwnity'a weHare.''

Basketball Camp
U/B's Summer Baaketben Day
Camp has hefSliiCbeduled for the week
of July 29 through August 2, at Clark
Hall, Coach Leo Richardson has 811·
nounced.
.~
The camp ia deslped for young
men. hetwaoin the aps of 11 and 17
who desire to impnwe tbeir basketball
llldlla aa Individuals and in a team
00111'ezt.

,

.

. Complete Information is available

tiUoulh the Baabthall Oftice, 200
Clark Hall, 831-2936:

�5

PSSHeanGuldelines------aoL
(CGdluolol , _ ,.,. I,

I)

. _ o1 iadMdaala Jll!lllli&amp;te4

far...,.....

.:a:==:-~.-~
ta,X....181lieJ!Maegually

wm 11e

--....,Ill

~-IIDU~wDlbe

lllliide

to the ..........

n-vm, illdiVIdaik "wbo ~!aft Dill
-.,.
aWto....,.ailarll
at liD - - - level ...__ ol
llacel or Olber awtaioluta" wDl. ~
CJII ••
w&lt;tJe!inna
tar-.~

to~-·

~·t.adedared

Jll'lllldealii 8ild flam~

Preeldmt'a Olllc8. All ,.
wt :¥. ·
..... liiUit 1-=b the Pnllidalt by.
April 16.
.

a:~~.%:JZ:. .

tiollu)' - - - to 1ils7t.r
•
..... to the ¥Ice PN8ideDt ::-..;:::.

u

!be~~--·· &amp;Upport the_.....
.
Dilcmlooiary ~ will JIIDII'

flam a miDimum ol $200 to a muimum ol $2.1!00 8111 ,._ ol all recipients (witboutdollRamounta) ...nr·
be pablilhed ~ ~­

.

oriiiDall.Y anIIOIIDCed by !be Peraolmel Dlip8rlment ..
a mlistab ..Wtina flam "COD· ,
fusi(JI1 in !be · developaient ol n e w.
foraiL" "pill 16 Ia the new deadline
few Jut
appraioals. be ~¥.
with ~ 1 aa· the due date for new ·
deadline ol Mareb 31

;frar&gt;.

~ ~ ~ ""'~'Pin~!.

to
8ild Ibm judging~
:::,.:c
l8qUinid
the s UUP
the Preaident
be

•
Ia
Jiy
CODtraet,
reminded. It Ia aimilar to a system or periodic

review ad - . t . DOW going on
for all Univenity academic programs
on a ftve.year 10tating basis, be said.
'lbe administration, Ketter adviaed,

is DOW drafting a job description for
the director of the Office of Human
Resources recommended in the Staff
Senate's report on career. mobility
(Reporter, Febniiii'Y 14, and Febniiii'Y

~~~J::&amp;n~:"~~

~tiin\l·~n.eu:-~
ot impQ&lt;bince 1D 1ttl's and to the
University." · .
On the biOBder matter or career m&lt;&gt;bility .per se, which the PSS report
sug~ted should be a concern of the
institution, Ketter noted his belief
that "a professional accepts his own
responsibility for mobility." Faculty,
be -pointed out, have traditionally accepted the ides that a move f10m one
institution to anotber is the way tp be

=~:n:t..~
a:~~'!:
tion" or career ladders, u that term

ill interpreted as meaning that a given
number or years_ or service .sliQuld
automatically make a PR-1 eligible to
be a PR-2. etc.
·

that
Ill Dill an A-an
JndlaD ...__ bellile
downtown
8ild Dill CJD a ~ or that a
black froai llermada ia Dill 'IUIIlcieDtly
'bl8ek' " - ' - be or
is flam
~tor Alabana." Ketfllr laid. "' -~ It to be . _ , . tt.t .
1 wW acicept the indiYiduU'e oelfdeclaiation. ........ -u.a."
Al8o to be li:nolrD, be .ud, ls tt.t
be bea •electad to nm few another
!he yeul . . .,...!dent" .. repoited in
Bu&amp;lo li8WIIIIIiii'D- "' ..... elected to
do a .alf~" and to Ulldeqo
-an evaluation. ol perfonuance in ollloe
.by a loeal cammlttee 8ild by SUNY
Central ollldaJs, be dllrlfled.
the
Truste., bued on tbeae evaluations,
decide . to CODtinue his appointment,
Ketter said. aiaVJar evaluations will
be made or bla senior Univenrity ad·
minlstrative staff.

u-

- - diiiCietioaary fundi held in the

~t.yeu=E~
piOp&amp;lill few !.at yeu,
tter said a

blnalf ormr-

lllf to be a "Nathe A-an or a
bla,~to ..... that declaratloo
--.....1
..... "l'w - . told

=~=-the tOe;

..,.....,.,_NTP~

He ...., b.J ..., oC....

............. ....t_.m.e ..

cam.

flam-=

"'heiDdiftdaal'a iUhfa

a

If

111? Jab

uoe

.-? .··

y.;.,

yeam

.- -

~

" " - ' - of lbe~; .s);rilitie&amp;.

Unfauoroble

2 (3% )

82 (97%)

.Totul

Com~u

C"'!'menta

84
Optional Questicas:
To what PR grade was your job assigned?
PRl - 80 (32%) PR2-84 (33%) PR3-38 (15%)
PR4 -11 (4% ) Other-S (3% ) Rank Unknown-28 (13%)
W&amp;S this an: Upgrade 45 (18% ) Downgrade 21 (8%)
No change 148 (59o/. ) Outrome unknown 35 (15%)
Potential Respondents- 520; Per .cent Responoe- 47%
Total sample- 249

""'C:

'lbe record shows, Ketter said, that
once piOcedures for the job study were
determined and the point system developed for ranking, consultation between representatives of the Personnel
Office and the PIO!essional Staff Senate took place. Various levels· or re- .
view for r a n k i n g s were set forth
(starting with the supervisor) . 'lbe
vice president for the area concerned
was given the final option of either
acoepting Personnel's evaluation or a
given jo6 or of taking conflicts to 1be
vice president for operations and systems and/or the President (for final
resolution if a g r e e m e n t was not
reached between the vice presidents) .
Of 520 poSitions evaluated, Ketter

Fauorable

Commenu

'lbe NTP job. evaluation ·
,
Ketter noted, grew out or a ~

~=: ;:!t W:

~o.ph

Necm.k, Williom Rock. Ray Volpe
· m: Outoolae 8ild Ef!ecla of NTP ClMiillmtion. Sy-..
'lbe attached awvey dosigned to uWyze the eflec:ta and or the NTP Cl8asi!lcatiOoi 8y8len1
at SUNY Bullalo:
1. Did you ~ in writing your job do..,dptillll?
Yea 197 (71!%) No 52 (21%) No COiiliiiOIDt 0. (C)%) Tofill 249
2. Are you satisfied that lhe PIOceBB cleUy eq&gt;lained ad that
the ultimate
was UlldaMood?
·
·
Yea 139 (55%) No 102 ( 40%) No COIDIDI!Dt 8 .(6%) Tofill 249
3. Wben your job ~ption was returned ID you. dliioe c:banpa
in level of education &lt;&gt;&lt; .,_ieooe required? ·
Yea 72 (28%) No 154 (61%) No comment 23 (ll%) Toflll249
4. Were you aatislied with the outcome or your gnode 8111 nmk?
Yea 105 (42%) · No 127 (51%) No comment 17 (7%) Tofill249
6. Were you satisfied with the pnicess which . , .
Yes 80 (32% ) No 143 (57%) No comment 26 Cll%) / Total249
6. Did
appeal your ranking?
·
Yes 57 (22%) No 174c (99% ) No comment 18 (9%) Total 249
7. Did your superviso.- appeal?
Yes 62 (24%) No 158 (63%) No comment 29 (13%) Tofill 249
8. Do you care to comment further?

Evol-

for upgrading of poaitions were
. Conaiatently ·denied by Albany. The
Division or the Budget, be oaid, would
point to varying job descriptions and
salaries for the aame titll!ll, and contend that it had "no confidence" that
"we bad any standards on which to
make such recommendations for upgrading."
After ll series or considerations on
bow to achieve greater credllrility for
the Univeraity's PR rankings, responsibility for evaluation was 8llligned
to the Personnel Departmenl 'The 500plus poaitions, it was agreed, would be
evaluated· independently or incumbents, some of wbom had been upgraded not because of the job's de-

._.EDcutift

Pu6iiiiltud Sid
Oommil:tee
nov: 'lbe Prof.......U ~ Oammitele
Pat Colvard, ChairpelaJn, Hilda Komer, Robert Marlelt,

'10:

If

are

any or tbe 66 up-gradings
rejected by Budget, they will be restudied and re-submitted, K e tt e r
promised. He Could, however, give no
timetable for resolution because, be
said, be does not oootrol the Division
of the Budget.
The job rankings not accepted b.J
vice presidents have yet to be resolved,
Ketter indicated,
be .has not
had time to make final determination&amp;
He said he changed his mind about
holding the entire package hole until
all resolutiOns
made
be
now realizes that job ~valuation will
be an on-going proc::ess, that the nature of the institution dictates that
jobs will be constantly changing.
Former PSS Chamnan Allen H .
(Bud) Kuntz complained in the ques.
tion-and-answer
rio d that there
seems to be "a disparity in the view
of the NTP evaluation . process between tbe President's Office and down
bere. It doesn't look quite the same
from the bottom up." Ketter agreed
that "oommunication concerning tbe
evaluations left a lot to be desired
.I hope
Jearn 110m our mistakes."

oaid, 378 were agreed to at the vice
presidential level ( al tbough, be admitted, there may have been lingering
disagreement down the line) . Some
confusion resulted, he said, because
some vice presidents failed to com·
municate to those below tbern that
they had, indeed, accepted resolutions
of contlicts which tbeir subordinates
had not agreed to.
.
These "Nsolved evaluations" ( including 66 up-grsdings, 46 downgradings, 22:1 with no changes, and 39
recommendations to·have positions put
on Civil Service)' were taken to AJ.
hany. for appiOpriste action, Ketter
said- first to State UniverSity where
the package was supported and then
to tbe Division of the Budget where
the 66 up-grsdings are now being considered.

because
are becauoe
"e

No 'Dry Promotions'

Individuals whose · rankings go up
will receive extra compensation (between si&gt;: and ten per cent, or more) ,
Ketter said. ''I don't believe in dry
promotions." Incumbents in downgraded positions, be emphasized, will
suffer no loss in money.

we

Results of NTP Discretionary Fund Poll
ro: Staff Senate Executive Q&gt;mmittee
no&gt;&lt;: Committee to Recommend Criteria for Use of "Discretionary

Funds":

.

.

Pat Col\(llrd (Chairperson)
Shirley Ahrens
AI Enn&amp;novics
Ray Volpe
Joe Lippert
Howard Deuell
Following are the results of our survey. 'lbe moet persuasive piece of
information seems &lt;to be that no matter what piOcedures are· followed in
the distribution of these funds,. a sizeable gl9UP will be dissatisfied.
Tboae_people who favor tbe notioD of differential salary increases at
all (as opp.-1 to all funds .being distributed "a~") offer
the following suggestions in response to quesb'ons 6 and 10 (the numbers
represent the number of times each response was made) :
&amp;.

If!uii:li:..i:oo§:~S:~77:t~t~=~ ~de?•

10. What criteria do you feel should he used in awarding discretionary salary increues?
Ou-..dlng job performance ......................................13!!

.

.

~t~ ~'biiii.i;;··::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::: ~

.

M~~~~:: :::::::::::::::::=::=::::::: 2~

In addiDon to the above oomments, a number or people. reiterated
their feelinJ that all salary increases should be acmes-the-bOard (99, &lt;&gt;&lt;
36% or ft!IIP(lftdents) .· (This is stronger support tt.n ._,... b.J NTP.s
to a questionnaire sent out last Y"!U" b.J a .joint commiUA!e appointed by
the Faadty and Staff Senates. 'That-questionnaire showed only 18% or
NTP respondents f.&amp;vored mandated money only.)
.
· Unfor'tunately, the questionnaire did not succeed in eliciting helpful
ideas about apeci8c criteria to be . - in evalualinl "outelanding job
performmce," "equity,'' or any or the other c:aleaoriea ~as deserving of """"'!nition. Last year's Profeasional Development Committee
did p..,_ 801118 criteria to be US!'&lt;~. Some or these criteria u.y -apply
to all jobs. e.g., Uzlivelllitx .Bervice, in cases where job .-ic:tions ....ke

such service impossible. It is ~ed &lt;that any criteria 1o be used
should be publicized. Faculty members are well aware that ..........m_
teaching, and service are the criteria used for promotion and dilferentisl
salary increases. Ful'lbennore, tbey are generally aware or the "Yard·
sticks" used to measure their perfonnance.
decisions about discreti&lt;inary salary jncreases·r.,. NTPs are to be considered as anything oCher tt.n
arbitrary, capricious, mysterious, ·and · unjust, there must be some well- ·
recognized basis fcl&lt; those decisions.
·~· •• _,.~ .'*- • trior ~ ..Do 7'00 1 - ,... ,..n..,r •• ~
42

If

=~ ~=

:,.-=.-· T,_ ..,., did not ,...,._, at aD

(1

• « .S""'J ...,.. •...,.,..

-Its

••znd..... DoP-r-r ,_.,,
Questionnaire

1. In what area are you assigned? I, 85; II, 55; m, 49; IV, 31.
2. Should discretionary funds be used for:
Merit 78 (28%)
Equity 33 (12%)
Both 147 (54%)
3. Should there be a limit on the number ~ individuals I9Ceiving
discretionary funds?
Yea 73 (27%)
No 185 (68%)
4. Should there be a ·limit on tbe amount or IDODey allowed per

person?

Yea 117 (43%)
No· l42 (52%)
5. Do you f.&amp;vor discretionary funds being used for IICI'OIIIHbe-bo
. increases 1o everyooe?
.
y.,. 99 (36%)
No 161 (59%)
6. See above.
7. Do you favor publiaotion or lhe names of the recipients or disoretionary funds?
.
Yea 138 (50%) ' No 114 (42%)
8. Do you favor publication of the apeci8c amounts or discretionary
money awaided to ·eam individual?
Yea 90 (33% )
No 172 (63%)
Do yOu favor ':two pots": One for faculty and one for proft!611iood

.atJ·

·
Yea 159 (68%)
10. See a!xJve.

No 84 (31%)

�~

6

Dewey Still Major lnfluen~e

PrOfessor Asks Assistance

ln_!~ng AO.~~~
0~~~
ec!m!nlelerl•t..'!:,~"-

-=..
AnaJya;. eom..
~(ACT).-.!~&lt;Jl

aDd
poe.
_ . . . to 7011 u lbe deViation &lt;II yourlbe
~ for .m ilall flam
u~
for that Item. 'lbia
romm a1- 7011 a -mpw ..,aluatioa ailly If your~· (unartiru·
Wed) peroeplion &lt;II tbe Ullheaity·
wide ill -'~,)' tbe • die
U.u-.ity_., ide ~ &lt;II )bat
....a. In filet, DOt oaly -tbe ~
means bu.t tbe (apin UDar6culatecl)
,__;ve4 di8trlbatiane s h o u I d be ~On 81ati8ticsl pOUIIda alone,
It is h8Jdly lllrely that this is ever
tbe cue; il you postula!A' (!"' I do) · ·_
that tbere ...., 8)'818matic di1fenmces
in the means perceived by etudellts
in dillereat ~ts and faculties,
tlwa you must conclude that evalua·
ticms presented to you *~ ~
~ 1111!8Dinileo8.
•
Y It
lillely to, me that studeots in
1111111her-orieted disciplines are l.ikely
(UDC0118ciously) to peroeive the mean
for any item as aatural)y being halfway between ~ endpoints (e.g., has
command of subject/lacks command ol
subject), while students in word-ori·
ented disciplines ale more likely to
view tbe endpoints u absolute, and
. favorably ~·
•
tbe University·
wide mean, men
put it _,_,. tbe
obvi"!"' ~favorable dency of tbe tabulated University
IIE811II to be .-r the favorable extreme for each item is good evidence
that, Univenli~·wi!le, • ~ u «!en t s respood to the questionn.aue m a .word·
oriented rather than number-onented
1973

-

way.

To test tbis hypothesis, I asked a
class to fill out ACT questionnaires
with two distinguishable responses for
"'!"!' it';''" one _!lymbol for !be !n·
diVlduals perception of tbe Uruver&amp;lty
IM81l lor each item, and another symhoi to evaluate me and my couree. I
then cal~a~ (by hand ). ~- rneon
:..__ _,:.
· ned dematwn from the indwidually
~"TJiiliJenily4Dii/i ......,. I«
~ item. The 11!6111ts were ~ly
dillerent from those P"":""ted m tbe
¥all 1973 ~CT format, for several
Items the diftefe!"": wu more than
two standard deVl8tions. .
.
The ~t of ev!'l~~on m terms
ol devisticm from indiVIdually per·
ceived stan~ appears not to have
beeo l18!ed P"!VlOI.IS;IY· pual responses
to ·each questionnaire 1tem w!"''d tell
us how each student perce~ves the
Uni~ty ab~Wlel)_' and ~course
and ~ re/atwe to ~ ~ ber
own perception of tlle. ~ruvermty as
a w~le. ! _presented tbis ides t,o. ACT
~thaDirectot
•t rulBdrucebe· ~~ wandho
..,..~
1 wo
m"?=~g .
useful.to. repeat _my_ ~t USJ!lg
a sl!'tistically SlJ!nifi"!"'t sample m·
volvmg courses .m dillerent d!'l"""l- '
-ments. and !acuities. We y;ould like to
~~ ratd_o tbisb• Wl~_,ArmaUCT Pro)eCpossibt
titbeop udt ofu ::.':?
yteas In lece,teda
en
uwo semes r.
-""
·
classes each s~.t w~d 611 out two
regul!"' &lt;l?Ut diStinguishable) ACT
questi0l1llllll1!!', one evaluating the
course 8Dfl llll!tructor as usua!· the
other stating his or her perce.,&amp;ti&lt;;&gt;n of
the U~versity-mean for "" chang1tem;
otherwu;e there would be -no
e
from the usual~~ure.
If you are
to volun~r to
~ve. one of _your c
partiCipate
m this ~nt, !:!,"""'!con~ me
by ~pus rna!' or P ne iJI!mediately.
The time required of you wtll be about

G!U:PORTER, ·

v,...

A. _ . , . . ~ . . . . . . . . ,.,..,_,
.... n . - . l q hr ,.. .Dmr.lon ol
•tr a.a.tioM,
v~
NYcwt- - B~I.Jo. 343$
S&amp;., BflllaJo,
Jf.Y. 14214. BffliOIJW ~- ltxaled M

s,.,.

.11-.

•

·--

ROGII 2U, 250 ......... A - (,.,.,_
2121).

AI W&amp;SrLBT ROW£AJID
~
JtOJtZRT r . MA.RL..B7T

_.,_.....,__
An_. PrOIIIfiOI:loft

... . . - -

JOillt A.. CLOvrmR

I'A.TIUCIA. WARD

BIB~RJIAlf

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

lf.AJIICY 8 . CAIUlAimUZ
SUSAN M. BURO&amp;R

111*111

~1bio
teD....:.'l.ute~
.
t~

t:"-·-::-lbe
..___ -6 ACT
for
.........., "'!
evaJuatioaa in ~-- 'llrill .,.....
tainly p-.e tbe- putlcipalina faeulty
more -m,rui evalualioaa than

u..y

ale

Cllftl!lltly

aettlnl.

su-nl,y,

.

-!OLYIN W. 8IBGIIL

Aaalatant ~ .
~ &lt;II Pbysic:s
aDd Astlonoaly~Hall
!"-: 831-5348 or 4021

VJeQObtU
•

_

The Ropootor ' - .., to
.....,.,.. o forum lao: the exr:honae
of an • wide vorloly of the
lss.__.focl"'the ocodemlc commun·
lty. Wo welcomo _ , -"""'
~
pers oncl lettets u opoce

M OSs Protests
.
d
I c rue II E it in g
EDtTOR:

How Cruel! You wield your editing
ecalpel with such finesse that an eight.
page· letter is reduoed to one and a
third columris (and even that space
is interspersed with comioents from
other peraons) . I could liardly re&lt;X!I· '
nize tbe csrefully thought out and
worded statement which r submitted
(not even tbe anecdotal materials! ).
It's enough to csuse one to best upon
his cbest and plead that in all future
statements by me published in the
Reportu, is it too much to ask, "aU
or nothing at all"!
.
The Chairpen10n's res p,o n s e for
the Sociology Department apparently
leaves me u tbe sole dissident within
the Department in Its conviction that
it has performed creditably in the recruitment of Afro-Americans. In slight
deference to the Depariment's posi.
tion, I would like to qualify my earJi.
er comments and conclude that perhahapsve' _mbeen·
deed:___';~d.y Alro-t
-•~rinocansne
"""'
bu """""'
have been chosen."
Very truly YO"'J',
-.JAKES "- 11091!

Professor, Sociology

h

Violence Works op
"To understand power and the
sources of violence, we must ask more
profound questions ·t han are customary. We must probe the problem of
what it means -to be a human being,"
wrote Rollo May in Power and lnnocence. In three consecutive Thursday
se3Sions, the complex question &lt;II hu·
man violence and aggression will be
taken up by participants in a Life
Workshop offered in cooper;ation with
the Division of Student Affairs and
tbe Student Association.
'The workshop will aplore tbe biologics!, psycholopcal and sociological
detenninants of human violence and
will also consider "rehabilitative" ef.
forts, according to Program Coordins·
tor Norman Solkoff, .professor of PSY·
chistry.
Dr. Peter Gold, assistant professor
of biology, will conduct tonight's ini·

f:ce~Je:'o:!?b.:!:~~

}!.:,:;

~•on will be ~'and animal aga·-....,.
cussed, as well a8 such topics as· tbe
genetics ol violence and the use of
psychosurgery in treating aggresoion.
Dr. Mark Krjj!tal, assistant professor
of psychology, and Dr. Seymour Axel·
rod, associate professor ol psychiatry,
will also participate.
On April 11 Dr. Solkoff will. discuss
"'The Psychology Violence." Prof.
Herman Schwartz of tbe Faculty ol
Law and Jurisprudence -will consider
"Prisons and Rehahi.libltion" on April
18.
All 90111iions will be held from 7:30
to 10:30 p.m. in 231 Norton.
To resister. call #4630 or register
in pen10n in 223 Norton.

8cxDe 210

· )'IIUa

Ed....S.~--

8fter bia death,

~otm~cantm.atolle~~""ll~
in8u1Dce on modem ._..,....

OilY

This _ evident ~eat"""* u DOted
experts in tbe field ptbered on c:ampus for a two-day colloquium em
"open" or "alternative" education,
...;;.....-~ by tbe J::)epa.-.t of ~
~FoUndations, Faculty of Educa·
tiOna! Studies.
·
. One· II08Iion fllatured talks by D.
Bob GowiD. professor of, philoeo{'hY
of education at Comell, and a pnme
m&lt;iver in tbe open education movement in Ithaca, and Joseph _Fee~stone of Harvard who a:s educstion
editor of the Neu/Republic wu ~
Jy responsible for introducing """"""""
ful British open educstion techniqueS
to American attention.
Gowin cited Dewey as· a founder,
in princip)~. of Ithacs's Markles Flll.ts
Junior High School, a remarkably
suocesslul alternative program which
recently cJO&amp;ed down for lack ol funds.
It wu dis~. noted G_ow!n,
primarily for the constant and Slgnifi·
cant range of choice offered its. stu·
dents, based on Dewey's iloncept that
"choice intelligently manifested" en·
larges ~ individual's range of a~
jlllides him to inSight, foresifbt, and,
m tum, makes his next choJ.Ce more
intelligenL
;
A Wideni"' Spiral

·

"'The Dewey formula is a -widening spiral, a tJue educstive event," Gowin
said. "'The ability to choose realistically is really a power, one whii:h
Dewey maintained can never be nul·
lified " Markles Flats students he
explained could .choose from a .;,leetion of 2o subject areas every five
weeks, dropping those that did not
interest them, or pursuing in depth
those which did "The choices they
faoed were fundamental ones'' Gowin
emph&amp;W.ed. No one foroed 'them to
go tO Class or even to enroll at Mar·
Ides Flats ~t all The students at tbe
school seemed ·to understand intui·
tively one basic premise of Dewey's
educational philosophy: that each in·
dividtjal is responsible for his own
learning and that tbis is a respon·
sibility ihat cannot be shared.
Gowin. contended that the function
of tesching is to provide a means
by which to make sense of human
experience· to communicste but not
to assume' responsibility ·for achievement ol shared meanin~. "Learning is
a radically' idiosyncratic process," he
said, "and when it is enforoed, schools
become oppressive. The teacher is
responsible for learning and teaching
what he knows and to see that what
the student takes away is what was
intended. But the initiative must lie
with the learner.
''Educstion," he concluded, "is only
one of ·many ways to understand hu·
man experience. Our schools shouldn't

four Added to

o.·centenn•·al Panel
Four additional members have been
Steerin~ Committee for
tbe University's participation in the
Bicentennial Commemoration of tbe
founding of tbe United States ached·
uled for 1976.
The newcomers are James Black·
hurst, d i recto r, ·summer Sessi0116;
John Buerk, director -of University
orientation, Student Aftairs; Shonnie
Finnegan, director of University Ar·
chives; and Jesse Lemisch, associate
professor of ·American Studies and a
member of the Committee on .the Commemoration of the American Revolu.
tion Bicentennial of the American .
Historical Association.
·
Other members of the
committee named last November are:
Richard G. Brandenburg, dean, School
of Management, chairman; Rollo L.
Handy, provost, educstionsj studies;
Donald A. Larson, associate vice pres..
ident for health sciences; · Arthur L.
Smith, chairman, speech communics·
tion; A. Westley Rowland, vice president, University relations; Esther
Swartz, usistant to tbe president for
cultural affairs; and Claude E. Welch,
professor, politicsl science.
.._..

named to the

Uta

~I;Y &lt;Jl QlialaO - . biaed

tbe

==.

;:,_=.::.,'1:"'wri~y~
'-·-"~-•

~
"Dewey'a

a-t

·,

~tberstone

contended, "Jeeatecl to tbe JIIICI'Ooiales
ol. education: peyc:boiOIEY ol. ~classroom.. tbe nalurel ~~be and
teec:binJ. EyeD - , '""!"
aeems
. almost foolilbly CllltimiBdc about. tbe
role-D( tbe odiOOl fn ~ BOC!ety,
his claalroom tndlliau, .a c:arefu!ly
worted-out body &lt;II PIIICtice. remams
not only an I!Zill!llmf lulde. tor toda:(.
but '!elped develop a reality that ."'
conac!""" and true for young chiJ.
dren.
'A Ufe In laolt'

.

Featherstone COIJlll8!"d tbis aspect
of ~y's work ,to tbe classroouiS of
Maria ~~teeson, SuMn lsaac:s, and
Tolstoy s ~ .~ "Dewey 1!8W
school "!' a life m 1tsel!, not m:;rely
p~tion. for ~ else.. ~said "~te tbeir dillerent philooopbles, each cil tbese four educators bed
il!" ""!!"' .i&lt;IP.s abQ.ut cleEroom tech·
ruque. Sumlarly, be noted, Bertrand
R"-'!""'1 who __.t J:letoey '!"' every
subject but Jled!lfOSYz publicly_ acknowledged that his 9Cb001 COIISC!ously wu hued_ on Deweyan principles.
Dewe~ behaved that Sf!hools shoul.d
teach children•~ to _think freely for
themselves .and irisb.l' m, ~.a sense
of cooperative morality. 'Yet, Featherstone. ot-rved, ''he was somewhat
evangeli&lt;:al ahc!Ut the overall role of
schools m 800ef::t. Schools, h;e felt,
~uld · be "'!gely mstrumental m savmg tbe social order.
"For his time," copunented Featherstone, "Dewey wu neither conserva·
tive nor radical, standing somewhat
sell-ronaci&lt;?Ul!IY i'! the midd_l&lt;&gt; of the
~om:Or:.cl.isclplli)e controv~rsy )hat
continues today. Skeptical of the progressive educstion movement of. the
1920:s arid. 30's.
be . aid•. qpt
see 1t u a graM-roots effort,· Dewey
fonnulateil a utopian ~ ~&lt;if l!du'
cstion w!llch he hoped ~d;,have_ a
far-reaching effect on 80Clety.

pecallBe.

, Blind Spols
The Harvard . scholar added that
bec:suse Dewey bved t.bn)ugh tbe ambiguous "progressive period" of 18801920, be also favored tbe establishment
of b~u"'!'cy and otber sol':'tio~ of
the time. 'We now recogruze, he
said, "that such institutioos can be
horribly repressive. In some ways,.we
suffer ~or ~~· ~lind spots."
Desp1te his limitatiODs, Featherstone
maintained, Dewey's work continued
to· grow and develop _a,t an age when
most P;I!OI!le cease Wl"!ting completely,
and his 1dees remamed remarkably
young. "Dewey waa ·saved," be con·
eluded, "by his awesome sense, grow·
ing more profound with age, of facing
up to the present moment's experi·
ence. Such idees are far more seemly
in an old man."
Featherstone Gowin, and tbe other
participants in' tbe colloquium have
contributed esssys to a book on open
educstion to be edited by Dr. David
Nyberg ·of tbe Social Foundations ))e.
partment u part of the International
Library of the Philosophy ol Educa·
tion series. The collection will be
published later this year. by a British
press. " It contains cantn"butions from
the leading authorities in the philoeophy of educstion and I believe it is
the first hook ol its kind to deal with
the issues of open education," Nyberg
said. "I expect it will brin'g· new life_
to the field of edllClllti_!IDal studies."

GSA Officers
1974-75 officers for tbe Graduate
Student Association's Executive ComMittee were announoed tbis week br
Moote Janson, outgoing GSA pre&amp;l·
denL
They are : Anthony C. SchaJn!'l.
president; William R. Oleszko, admin·
istrative vice president; Lisa Richer,
student affairs vice president; George
Boger, external affairs vice president;
and George Kobaa, treasurer•
-These individuals may be reached
at the GSA Otlice, 205 Norton, telephone 831-5505 to provide assistapce
to any gradtiate student or orgaruza·
tion.
·

�7

B·lazing

~addles'

Bergman

'Found . It 'at The Movies'

. -.a..

By
lWI'RICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Andaw . . _ found it at tbe
IIIIIYiea. A Cbouaand Busby Berbluy
~ snaked out of tbe ailYer
..,..,.., two thousand ldilterinl tap
""'- tapping, and banded him a di&amp;sertation topic. After
year siUing
in lhe dark wat.cbing Cagney and
Bogey, Ginger and Fred, Bergman
labored mightily and produced We're
in 1M Money, a study of Dep......U..
America and it&amp; films that satisfied
both bis dissertation committee at tbe '
staid University ol Wisconsin and
evolved into a successful tmde book.
The publisher, be !ldmils, was easier
to get lhan tbe Ph.D.
But what is a historian ol Holly·
• wood .t o do? Bergman spent 21 years
· in &amp;ebool preparing for a career ol
academic respeotability. '"rue joke,"
be recalls, "was on me." His shiny
new Ph.D. turned out to be tbe equivalent of a "mechanic's certification to
wO&lt;k on Ed&amp;els." Locked out ol lhe
faculty lounge, be ended up in the
Writers Building on tbe Warner
Brothers' lot; where, with Mel Brooks
and olhers, be coeutbored tbe !icreen-·
play of tbe cum111t near-bit 1314zing
Saddles.
Bergman, who still looks • like a
graduate student except for a •B ur·
- . . . ......-......., Bond brldpd tlie SA Speolrera' BureaU'~ -'&lt;·
bank tan so deep that.Bud Weslmore
would be proud, was on campus ~
_.. 11llndq In a.rt&lt; 1181~ 111..,. In for. the - -· Dan1&amp;1 -.. """- ~at the- minute -.out. (-the
day as a guest ol tbe Department ol
Reporl8r ....,. -to
Bond - t h e decllna In -nl for
History and the Center for Media
Study. He talked some about lhe still
politic&amp; palltldana, 11f111n1 men .,.o1lclpatlan In _......m
bJthe.,.aple.
relatively unplumbed richness of
American films as souroe material for
historians. But what be did IOOBt .en·
gsgingly was tell inside stories about
stars and making. movies, particularly
his own.
Uke a Nun
Fresh from tbe Madison campus,
Bergman approached Hollywood "like
a former nun on her firs.t dey as an
tion of rifllit occiput posterior yms
·;,tn. nineU!eilth ~tun&gt; ~ a
'Vedfted. " ,
~
eo .....-..
'
airline -..less." He acqUired extad .~ ailiiiifi dll;;Hf a'i6c!al ellsM~ Dr. White gave Mary
perienCe fast. Among' the things be
.ifWi talk aiiou~ it.,Contemporary
learned : lhat' godlike Charlton Heston
Watson $10. She bad-not coopemted
medical educatiOn was no 1.... con·
bas human vices. Bergman once look·
for the money, the woman subsequent!itraiDed. .Medical students 1eamed tbe
ly testiped in court, after the eamdal
ed on, in awe, as tbe onetime Moses
. facts of life, ru-se and dea'th in
downed a quart ol Scotx:h during tbe
that ensued had. foreed White to sue
~ h&lt;svy wilh propriety, a
promotion tour for a turkey set in
a public detractor for libel. Sbe bad
nioei&gt;ess that their patient&amp; were occ&amp;·
simply ·thought sbe'd get better care
Hawaii that, Bergman believea, ''bad
sionally tbe victim&amp; of. Physicians
it -been released earlier would have
at
the
Medical
School
than
at
tbe
out into tbe world certified to
poorhou&amp;e.
precluded statehood."
deliver babies without having ' eve&lt;
Bergman wrote tbe original &amp;tory on
l'ubllc
and
Prolealonal
P
seen a ioiw deliwry: modesty forbade
"Very likely," Dr. Jones .repotis,
which Blazing Saddles was based,
obstetrical and iYnecologicai claas"all
20
medical
students
said
somewbidt
brings us to that screwball film's
room demonsb:ations using liw pa·
thing to eit.bU their preceptors or their
co-author and director, Mel Brooks.
tientB. Students were -permitted to
"What
is Mel Brooks really like?"
landladies
.about
tbe
new
m
ethod
of
examine a Plitient manually, but viswas tbe que5tion most often asked
instruction at the ·Medical School."
ual examination was oonsidered . in·
delicate.
.
. .
The ba&amp;emellt delivery became the
Bergman on campus. ''He is the hm·
subject of public and profes&amp;iollal gooniest man on tbe face of lhe earth,"
The era of braille obstetrics ended
sip. SeVenteen local physicians urged
answers Bergman, wbo also -f ound
in Bu1falo · on January 18, 1850. Acthat such a scandalous procedure not
Brooks sensitive, intelligent, and a
cOrding to U f8 Distinguished Profes·
be repeated in a letter to lhe Buffalo · l!ef(ectionist "I bad exPected a Jewsor of Anatomy Oliwr P. Jones, writish comic animal wbo would eat me
MedU:al Journol. Anonymous band·
ing in lhe current iasue of The Buffalo
bills libelling Dr. White Were distribalive," lhe . lapsed historian recalli;.
Physicitm, the Medical School's first
uted door-Co-door and Slanderous let·
Unlike Groucho Mat'x, ~ oomic
prof.....,. of .obstetrics James Platt
teds signed ''L" appeared in lhe Daily
genius who once told Bergman to get
White (1811-1881) was tbe first Ame&lt;·
Courier. Dr. White and the Medical
lost, Brooks is a nice guy. But crazy.
ican medical educ&amp;tor to &amp;boiw bis
School IJrouglrt a libel suit against Dr.
B/4zing Saddks is about a black sber·
student&amp; a live birth.
Ifomtio N. Loomis, believed to be
iff who rides into an all-white frontier
"L," who was, in Dr. Jones's phrase,
town where be is as welcome as an·
A founder of lhe Medical School
Han active eneiny ol. the University."
tbrax. All tbe writers on the movie
8nd a lifelong socilil activist in the
Loomis was acquitted. But White was
were Jewish (all tbe Indians in the
Victorian mold, Dr. Whife was a lin·
absolved
by
history.
·
film speak Yiddish) , and they felt
eai de&amp;oendent of the first white child
Five years later, tbe gmduating
increasingly uncomfortable about writ·
b!lrn in Arnerim, a child actually born
claas
of
1855
asked
this
pioneer
of
ing a crazy "black Western" wilhout
aboard tbeatoyflower while it lay .in
bedSide teaching. if they might haw
expert input So Brooks · called black
Provincetown harbor. The patient
engmved
"a
lilhogmphic
likeness
of
comedy
writer Richard Pryor. "Liscbaal for Dr. White's educational exyourself, in order that we may take
ten," be told Pryor on the phone.
periment represented the other ex·
with
us
or
may
obtain
on
our
return
"We're
four
Jews sitting in a rooin
treme of Bulfalo's social order. Sbe
to our homes, some moments of so
and we need somebody to come in
was .a 26-year-old - Irish girl, unmarfaithful
and
efficient
a
teacher
as
yourand
do
the
windows."
ried, named, Mary WatsoiL Wben apself, and also that we may ·bold in
B14zing Saddks was not so much
proached b_y White, she was confiried
our possession a true likeness ol 1h&lt;i
written as composed, explain&amp; Berg·
at the Erie County Alms House. Nine
first [in&amp;tru&lt;Xnr) in tbe ~.s. vibo, has
man. The writers sat in an airless con·
deys before be• delivery, Dr. White
adopted tbe 'demonstrative' mode of
ference room for a year proposing and.
persuaded ber to move into .a base·
teaching in that d~",
rejecting ideas, while a stenogmpber
ment ap&amp;riinent in tbe Uniwrsity's
took notes. "Writing .c omedy is like
original bUilding at Main and Virginia
writing poetry/' Betgman learned
Sb'eets. The apartment .was occupied _
BLY TO APPEAR
from
Brooks, who boned bis own talby tbe janitoc and bis wife, 1"ho acted
Robert Bly, editor of The mag.
ent . griDding out classic episodes of
as the woman's nurse during ber conazine and author of the National B09k
· ''Your Show of Shows" week after
finement
Award:winning The IJ&amp;ht Around The &amp;My
week. ~rgman learned that word&amp;
Mary Watson delivered in a room
(1968), will present a · poetry reeding In
have both meaning and spund, that
adjoining the janitor's kitchen. Twenthe "Dining Room of, the FacUtty Club,
_.Tuesday,. sounds funnier than
ty students crushed into the room to
Harriman Ubrary, Wednesday, April 10,
"Thureday." Like poetry; comedy must
. wstx:h tbe birth in the glow of tallow
at 8 p.m. undar the auspices of the UUAB
eam. "In a comedy line, one word too
candles. Writes Dr. Jones, "Dr. White
Literary Arts Committee. The free event
many and tbe air goes out of it," Bergdrew .back tbe -bed clothes. They
is a late entry to "Art·T~... the Spring
man explains.
watched him support the perineum
-Arts Festival. Bly, one of the lew poets
BumettSIIatdl
with a napkin in each band so that
in the U.S. who does not teach, makes his
Altbowrb tbe finished movie baa tbe
anlllhe h&lt;Bd ol the child was visible
living entirely from poetry reeding&amp;.
feel of iiDprovisation, like a proti'actl!d'
an , not tbe vulva. The prenatal posi-

a

-&gt;·

. U/B Physician Created a Scandal
·With .· 1st Live Birth D~monstration
e./!•

an

--

-ERT

Cuol BumeU lllliBidl, il - . ill -filet,
all writtaL Bloob . . . DOt ...........
Oil tbe eel s-e-. tbe lliaotiq
scrjpt was almailt OIJIIIIIIIeW;y clllleftnt
from tbe initial - - - - Par _ . . ,
Berplan'a ~ 81111)' ..ned
"'''m&lt; .X" (as m Malcolm). Tbe.lftle •
was cbanced:bacauae on a -...-it
would baw ......,..ted a pomo w-..·
em. .
.
.
.The finished movie IMilved ill tbe
conference and cutting 10011101. AB
Nixon-haters, tbe writers .decidiMI to
call tbe Governor in tbe film, a lecherous bungler wbo appN1'II to be ill
the final stages of paresis, I.e Peeomsine, after a French en~
wboee entire routine ronsisted ol prodigio•JS feats of faltinl. lt·was Broob'
idea to name all Jhe people in tbe
frontier town "Johnson" ( Gabby Jol:m·
son, Dr. Samuel Johnson, Howard
Joim&amp;on). "That was Broob' revenae
against_tbe goyi&amp;cbe West. 'If you're
not Jewish you might as ....U be
named Jobnaon,'" recount&amp; BerKman.
Originally tbe town ·bad included a
':Lyndon Jobn&amp;on." Bergman remembers that be lllw .t he former - v i - t
on -television during lhe ~-;;;:;d
realized be wouldn't live the y~.
Nobody would laugh at a dead president, no m-. bow unpopular, tbe.
scripla's decided, and tbe name was
dropped. Jobnaon died before sbootingbeg&amp;IL
.
Group Casting

Casting, Bergman report&amp;, was.also
a group effort The part of the 'Waoo
kid, tbe drunken gunfighter played by
Gene Wild~. was origiDally written
for an olde.: man. 'Ibe first two actor&amp;
hired to play tbe aging drunk tUrned
out to be just that: one collapsed on
tbe set and bad to be carried oil in an
ambulance. The first Hedley Lamaar,
the part ultimately played by Harvey
Konnan, also bad to be replaced b&amp;causi! of drinking. Asked if Madeleine
Kahn, wbo plays the film's Marlene
Dietridt ~ was tbe writers' fimt
. choice, BergtDan reveals that lhey also
considered the Divine -Miss - "M."
Bette Midlec, be now believes, "would
have been just too much."
The critics have made mu&lt;h ol the
ending of Blazing Saddleo in which
the actors ''break out" ol tbe movie,
tbe good guy&amp; chasing tbe bad guy&amp;
onto tbe set of a lavish, limp-wristed
musical-production nwnber, lhrough
tbe Warner Brolhers' oommissary, and
finally into Gmuman's Chinese theatze
where lhe movie Bl=ing Saddks is
playing. The soeoe was added because
Brooks beliewd tbe picture needed ti
final "pulse." It's rbytlun, not logic,
that makes good movies, explain&amp;
Bergman, wbo believes "!here's enough
logic that stinks in tbe world." Brooks'
grasp of visual comedy in soenes like
lhis .is what tbe young screenwriter
lhinks distinguishes him from Woody
Allen, a comic wboee work can be read
and not seen without any real loss.
A major change in tbe script """'
away from "jokes that woul.dn't be
understood outside of Queens," aJ.
lhougb the finished movie remains remarkably parochial., miJ!lb. of it unintelligible to non-New Yorkers. Gen·
tiles and anyone unfamiliar wilh the
collected oeuvre ot Randolph . Scott.
Bergman likes to think that Blazilii/
Saddles is a kind of "anard&gt;onihili&amp;t
laff riot" in lhe great tradition of Duck
Soup and Horse Feathers. Wbait is, be's seen it seven or ~t Cimo8
and likes it. But movie-making itaelf
is harder than be bad ever im&amp;gined,
be admit&amp;, wilh tbe air of a man wbo
bas just gone lhrougb Tara's front
door and found out lhat it is only a
front "Get smart:, kid,'' Bogey_~d
have told him. Knowledge means fllV·
ing up an illusion or two.
. AFFIRMATIVE ACTION UNE
The ReportBr hopes to establish as a "''IJ·
lair feature ari " Affirmative Action Une" to
which campus woinen can tum for information on affirmative action status, work -

ilnd study opportunities, day care and
other issues of interest and concern. If
you hive any suggestions, questions, an·
swers, Information tO share or issues to
noise, please contac! ''Affirmative ActiOn
Une," c/o the Raportar, 250 Wlnspear

Avenue.

�Fiedler &amp; Panel
Will Evaluate
·'Fists-of F~ry'
........
-aFridaY ~r:.:w.fwlqlecJ
the ar- Lea

pUel
ol
K11111 Fu f11m aa.lc, "J''oM of 'PmY,"
put ol the~~ Arti ........
tival, will take loiil at. the ..__.,_
be.tion" ol tbe Oriental mutlai arts
lanD:
According. to Paul K-. NoriiDII
Union PfOifiiJII aDd lllullenl clevelopment COJIBIII~t, ~
EnPiab I)IOfiaor a n d critic I.-lie
Fiedler who "1iDe the IIMMe~ _ ,
• IIIIJOb-.4i1l delve into tbe roots ol
what tbe. Westein mlnd baa done to •
Kung Fu, mto q.-ima ol tbe West~~ ol violence and non-

a

F..,

at'--

"At the very least," Keane says,
"it will be filn."
- '
Jo· •
Fieclle.- on the panel will
be: J~es, fonner SA preaiclent
wllo, Keane says, bolds a "blact belt
in tarate·" Donald
a medical
student wltb bacQround in tbe Orient;
and Harold Sc:beCht.; a graduate student in E11allah.
'lbe
ecbedu1ecl tor u;:., MOotCourtroom. O'Brian Hall, begins at
7:30 . p.m. with tbe screening of the
film.
-

:uu.

event.

U/B Schussmeisters Ski Alta's Jagged PeaJ&lt;s
By MARION MARIONOWSKY

walks, open fielda, harrow U8ils and
A.liNanr 10 0.... Scftool ol -~
lipa of bowls that must be skirted in
It was early, very early wben weorder to reach a safer haven. We gratethe 16 wbo bad mgned for tbe U/B
fully Stop at one of tbe lodges b;athed
:,;chussmeister Ski trip to Alta, Utah
in sunShine and tucked amon the
-arrived at tbe Buffalo airport to ?
pesks. Here we rest and repl:::t our
check our skis, boola and luggage and
ei!ergy.
~
.
to depart for what we bopel1 would be
Some of our group even dare to
a powdery four and one-baU -days of
challenJe the most expert of runs.
sluing during tbe semester break. It
They discover that -t he narrow icy Vail
was cold but clear as the plane took
surmounting the ridges Jeading from
Oft for t:hicago. And it was sunny, and · chairlift to High Rustler is the more
' warm when we anived five and o~
difficult challenge. There is no tu:mhalf boura lster in Salt Lake City,
ing back from the trail that eeems
4,aao feet above ses level.
.
to drop straight oft the · face of the
A quick trsnsfer onto a waiting bus
and we were whisked oft to Alta o~
Little eo·ttonwood Cal)yon just -~
miles from the airport. It is known
for its 30 expert runs, 10 intermediate
ones and gentle beginners'· SJopes, ·easily reached by six cbair lifts, as well
In spite of lip-service paid to non"" for its fine . powder and excellent
violence, society justifies violence.
cross-country skiing.
As U/ B Professor of Philosoph,v
Altbough a little travel weary and
Newton Garver explains, "ViQlence IS
not yet . adjusted to high altitudes,
justified.
That is a statement of fsct,
most of us found ourselves skiing not
not an evaluation. That violence is
long after . checking into _our lodge
regularly justified is one of the im(about 2:30 p.m.). At dinner tbat
portant causes of violence. So tb reevenipg, we agreed that tbese were
dUce the level of violence we 'Sboulq
the finest ski conditions we had seen
consider
limiting or eliminating tbe
tbis year, even tbough · it had not
justification."
snoWed here- for several weeks. The
The
tbesis
that the patterns of jus-more tban adequate 93 iriches of base
tification of violence witbin society
covering the sloi&gt;es and sunny/ w8rm
t
e
n
d
to
encourage
violence is the
temperatures averaging about 45 to 6Q
theme of a three-day conference to be
degrees discouraged the icy conditions ·
11-13.
held
April
that most of us invariably face in tbe
Dr. Edgar Z. Friedenberg, the conEast. To our delight, we discovered
troversial former U/ B faculty member,
tbat the breakfasts and dinners innow
at Dalhousie University, will be
cluded as part of our ski package
among the speakers at the meeting,
($299 for transportation, ~­
which
is being- sponsored .by tbe Delions, skiing) were very good, at times
. partment of Philosophy and the Faculty
of
Social
Sciences and Administrabordwhll:~~=;t The Gold- tion in QOOperstion
with the Faculty
miner's ·Daughter were spartan (tbere
of law and Jurisprudence.
Much social scientific resesrch on
violence has "focused on tbe occasions
friendliness of the staff and its prime
and situations in which violent behavlocation just 50 feet from the. base of
some of the finest skiing on tbe North
American continent more tban made
~terns
up lor it. Witbin" easy reach •was an
Seven U jB graduate students began
assortment of ski ·c:ballenges tbat .inMarch
25
as
interns
on the stAff
work·
cluded bowls, narrow canyons filled
of the Buffalo Common Councit, with
witb · moguls (these are mounds' of
the
University's
-center
for Policy
snow about five to six feet 1~ and ·
Studies serving as the coordii&gt;ating
tbree to four feet high formed by -an
element betWeen the campus and tbe
endl- parade of skiers following a .
City. .
.
defined descent), trails and open
'Il&gt;e group members will eech reslopes. .
.
ceive a $1,000 stipend and _couree
For tbolle of us wbo were "in shape"
credit for an 11-week assignment.
as well as courageous enough to thrust
Two lsw stwleots--Josepn A. Shiftour weight forward while Skis pointed
left and Jan R. Morelli- will work
down a step pitd&gt;olf, tbere was .tbe
with Associate City Judge M. Dolores
reward ·of establishing a rhythm or
DemDan on possible revision of botii;.
pattern that is secood to nothing· you
inglsWs.
.
have ever experieb&lt;ed.
Other interns, as yet wia,asigned,
. Be. carried to higher altitudes via
are:
Joseph
A.
Calsbrese,
lDdustriai
· chfiir~ after cbair lift, one reaches
Relations; David M . Zebro, Managea world of jagged mountain Peaks acment; MidJael .J. Mombrea, Political
compallied by a .,.,.,W kind of-''quiet"
diticult to _......., in other places.
Science· Mark Mce-dy Politicill
and 'Bruce D. &amp;riner, Jaw.
We are iady to our skills-even
though rusty for some-and nerve. We
University District Councilman Wil. s t a r t to ...,.....,, bob and ' literally
liam A. Price sucoessfully promoted
"carve" our way tbrough steep tiethe procram between u jB and the
City.
scents if!ading to ......,.. canyons, cat-

mountsili. An endlea; eerieB oliiiOIIUls

must be conquered before - reaCiies
the eecurity of tbe base lodge.
· Skiing is adventure. For _,.., it is
a -chaDge of routine. For others, it is.·
an opportunity to improve_. mastar ot
Jearn a Jielw skill-to teet oneeelf in a
new and sometimes hostile environment. For still othem, it is- sbOOding
some of the fear that accompanies .the
skiing of higher and still more dillicult
runs.

While we sil&lt;teen arriVed iJi Alta as

a group of just aajllaintances, by departure time we were a cohesive boily.

Three-Day· Conleren&lt;;e. to Consider
The ~Justification of _Violence'

=

~

!rO:.~t~~

Grad I

Science;

.

.

~

Admission will be by free ticket
()!lly. At R~ deadline, about 2Jl
tickets remained at tbe Norton Box
Office; others were available at Lehman Hall Desk, Amherst Campus.
"Fists of Fu.JY' is be'
preeented
by SA, Inter-Residence ~unci), International StudentS Committee and
tbe Office of Foreign Student Affairs.

Young Child Week
Syiylpo~ium

Sat4rday

This week CMarch 31-April 6) is
the Week of tbe Young Child, a national focus on the ,-illhts.1ieeds aod
well being or· all young children. Af
U/ B, a symposium on early childhood
education will help oelebrste the week:
Sponsored by the Day Care Center,
tbe one-day symposium . will he held
Saturday, April 6, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
in 147' Diefendorf.

ior occurs, says Dr. Garver. Less emphasis has been given to "dispositional .causes," including individual patSuzuki Recital
tams of justification of violence adopted by social groups as divergent as
inJr:~oo~fa~e ~~~'E::Jti:
the police and the Bisek Panthers.
Dr. Garver, witb otber philosophers,
Prograro, an innovative approach that
distinguishes be tween juatificatiOIIS
includes teaching music to the very
and excuses. Justifications, he exyoung. Following a film and discussion
plains; allow harm · to be done witb
on tbe subject, several children, ages
impUnity, including freedom hem lia2 to 6, wbo have 'been taking SuzUki
bility ·for damages. They also serve
instruction · in Bulfalo, will give a
parochial interests. Excuses, on the
recital.
other hand, "admit a defect in the
Cilrol Shapiro and Jane Galvin
agent," he says.
.
Lewis, members of the ·women's AcParticipants in the conference, ention Alliance in New York City, will
titled "The Justification of Violence,"
discuss "A -Non-Sexist Approach to
are expected to explore variOUB pat~Y~hildhood Programming," at
tams of justification, bow they take
Infants
bold, and ways in which they can be
subverted so as to reduce the level
At 2 p.m., Dr. Norman Solkoff, proof violence in society.
·
fessor of psychiatry, will discuss "Cur· G u" s t speakers will include Dr.
riculum for Infants" and at 3:15p.m.,
Gene Sharp, chairman of the Sociology
"A I egislstive Looli at Early ChildDepartment aod professor of sociology
hood Programminl( will be preeented
and political science at Southeastern
as a panel disciEsion.
Massachusetts University, wbo is tbe
Throughout tbe day, 14 &amp;rea child· autbor of The Politics of Nonvit&gt;liilt
bood care organizations will have genAction, and Dr. Gerald MacCailum,
eral information displays and exhibits
chairman of the Philosophy Departin the Diefendorf auditorium.
ment -at the University of Wisconsin.
Dr. Friedenberg is ~ to speak
on ''The Privilege of Viol8nce," a top..
ic from his forthcoming bo6k on PrWState University College at New
·ilege, Bigotry and Freedcm (DoublePaltz
offering
academic~
day) . Dr. Garver will discuss 'd ispo- _ Seville
for those interested in
·
sitional causes of violence. ·
language, culture, and related humani. Otber participants from U/B will
-ties_areas.
include Robert F~ (sociology)kTerExact courses are determined each
ry Nardin (l!!'litical -science), eitb
yesr by student demand, but tb&lt;i proOtterbein (antbropology), and Richis flexible enoilsh to Include
ard Schwartz (sociolOfY .,..a Is!") .
and independent projects. All
K. T. Fan, of York UJUVenoty,~. &lt;:&lt;lito!
coursee carry SUNY credit.
of tbe Marxist journal Prw:is J!AWilM
• The ~ emphaaizea intensive
Muller Cpolitical science)·, ;, Stony
language-study on beginning, inter. BroOk, and Michael Pritchard (ohiloamediate, or advanced levels, which
ophy), of Westem M~ Univercounts as a three'credit course.
Sity, ·are also espected to parQcipate.
The New Paltz Promun iii Spain
· Moat meetingS will be beld m. Jolm
has been in operation for thiee years ·. LDrd O'Brian Hall. beKinniDa with
aod has _.,... for 60 •students in 1
an evening ...ton
7:30p.m.,
1974-75.
Thwaday, April 11, in Room 107.
T~ a~ to the Seville ~
For further iDfonnation and ,_...
UnivatiOmi, contact NeWton Garver, Dept.
veraity · COllege at New~b, N.Y.
of PhikJ!oopby, 4244 Ridp Lea Road,
12561. 831-1434.
•
. "-"

Study in Seville
u

an

=.,

at

:r::....~~.:~te

/.

�~-

-_ ,

Gtddelines &amp;
=fijf
" ""',_of~
-, ..,.

-

Discretionary Fund Awards

_..'liOill: "~;..., .....
~
,..,....,

'!9ft ......,.., lo -

:•-:·~,_,_

lltldli:EL

........

I

FACULTT IAJ.Aiiy IIAICIIIUM fOil 1Win4
ADJUI1tD IIWI:If . . 1174

~r':fu':e~

~

·M£DICINE, DENTISTRY (12 MONTH)13.800
Profeaor and Chalnnan
$44,000
(School of Medldne only)
~
.
'
41,000
Aoo9clal8 Professor
311.000
- n t Professor
33,500
Instructor
29,500
LEADING PROFESSOR (10 MONTH)
Leodlnc Professor Maximum
$40 000
Leodinc Professor Average
~500

Bomit's

~d~or:tl--=--~.;,w.

is • clelalled ~ from
Mr. P'oppory, "wblda outline• 4hoae
''merbanical" - - wbiah ..,_,
Ibis JIIOC8IIIL
All )'Gil ....,.., )'Gil bave Mrlier received • u.tin&amp; of 4he IIIUIIber of ·
faculty aad NTPa ~· :f'!'J' ..... wbo
are, in princiPle. eljpble for diacretioauy
well .aa lbe ~
8lllOUIIt of di&amp;creliuiaty fund&amp; wbic:h
are available to you. ' I ' - fund&amp; "!"?"
rilllent ~ pw cent of lbe tolal disaeac-ry IIIOIIiea 4hat are ...,...ted
Oil • . , . _ . . . . . . ballla from aalary
roslln within )'11111"-&amp;I'M. Tbe

-as

vice. To further facilitate making
these . determinations, you should be
aware that I am also soliciting recommendations from chairtnin of University governance · groups and chairmen
ol University-wide committees.
Finally, no diaaetionary award will
be made without appropriate written
juatifieation; the Ollice of Personnel is
inatruoled Co m:aintain these recocds
for at least a P_eriod ol two years;
upon all appropriate approvals in Albany, a listing 'Ol the recipients or
discretionary. awanls (without the
amount of award received ) will be
published in the Reporter; and, finally, a etatiatical summary of the allocation of tbeae funds will be prepared
by the Peraoruiel 08ice 88 soon 88
possible for publication.
I trust you will give your early and
full consideration to this matter, and
88 you know, all recommendations
must be received in this Office by no
later than Monday, April 15th. It
Should be remembered that there ui
only IV. per cent of the June 30, 1973,
base ..,1ary for up Co 50 per cent or
the facul ty and professiOns.! staff.

•-

......
department
or unit, yeara in mnk
or service,
and
ibe full juatificati&lt;iit and basis for why
ba or obe believes a diacretionery inereaae llbould be awarded to him. Any
individual who lnBY have made sud&gt;
application on his own behalf lnBY, in
turn, forward that teqUeSt to lblf next
tu,ber level-for consideration, should
it not bave received the support or
his immediaCe supervisor.
Each provost, dean, or inltior unit
supervisor (in 8DIDe inslances, vice
presidents), sbill review the recommendations be receives. He may review the requests and send lhem forward with approval, modify them in
oonsultation with the recommending
officer, or disapprove them, indic&amp;ting
his reasons for disapproval to the
recommending ollicer. It will be the
reapouibilily of the provost, dean, or
' mtJjor una hetul (in some instances,
vice ,-eaidents), k&gt; hold the recom-

·=~:=............
~~"':;

-m- .

08ice of tbe_1'Naideat.

~~C~:

Diaeretionary monies am, aad
should be, awanlecl· Oil ibe basis of
several clifrerent criteria. Primarily, it ·
is int.euded that lheee IIIOD8Iary rewards be cll8tributed in IIIICb • falmon
so that .-.!tent ' aalarial bMU!r rellec:t tbe contribution each individual
makes to the University. Consideration, therefore, should be given to:
out:atanding perfonnanc:e and service;
individuals """- aaJarieB bave beeri
lrozeh at certain levels because, under
older ciMai1lc:atioit ay1ltems, ibey may
have reached tbe bigbe¢ level ol pay;
~ acl'iolarly pub~i"'!­
tiPns;- depaioluieiilal, faealty, Umversity and community service; job
knowledge; judgment; quality and
quantity of work perfonned; altitUde;
dependability; -c:re&amp;tivity; leadeJSbip;
and involvement in regional, national,
and international academic and professional organizations.
·
I believe it is imporiant thet all
constituents have an awanmess of and
involvement in 1his proooas ·and, consequenUy, consultation should occur.
I further believe, however, that the
actual nomination and selection .of individoals for discretionary awards
sh!&gt;uJd be made by departmental _
cbainnen, supervisors, deans, dll:ectora, p.....-, vice presidents, an&lt;! ·t he
President, in the appropriate order of
progreeaion. Finally, since Ibis is a
''n!troeetive" increeae, fuJI and thorough Cllllllideration should be given to
individual ·ccnCributions made during
the 1972-73 year. While I do not believe more I9Cellt performrmce- can be
aepe!ated .from our present oonsider81tiona, l do feel that prime Mlention
must be giYeD to this peet perfor-

~~/e ~~

=.r":,

Procedures:

Each ~tal c:bairman or unit

supervisor may JeOOD1III8Dd faculty or
NTPa within lbeir area in aocordance

..

ro: Vice Presidents
PROM : Harry W. Poppey, Director of

.. ,._ Personnel
SUIIJ': 1973 Retroactive Salary
iruliuidutJU permitted. Vice preeidenls,
Increase ( Faculty &amp; NTP )
in tum, )lball review tbeee recomEnclosed are rosten; of Facui ty and
mendaliona in a fashion similar to ibe
Non-Teaching Professionals88of June
above procedure, and forward them to
30, 1973, who are eligible for the retrothis Qllice recognizing tbe.t; to mainactive salary increase.
tain the guidelines forihe entire UniThe following are not eligible: 1.
versity, modilkBtioris may have Co
Those newly appointed on 7/ 1/ 73 or
occur. It ill,' or course, understood that
thereafter;
2. Those designated Mantbeae will tate place only after conagement/ Confidential on 6/ 30'/ 73; and
sultation between the Oflice Of the
3.
Those
who received the 1973 inPresident and the appropriate vice
' crease under the Medical / Dental
preaidenl
Plan.
It is recogni%ed, boooever, that there
Guidelines:
may be certain individums who, while
fully deserving, !&gt;ave not been recom1. All eligible employees must remended to .receive an ilward at an
ceive a 4. 75 per cent increase retroappropriate level because of fiscal or
active to 7/ 1/ 73, &lt;12 month ) or
othei constraints. Based on reCom9/ 1/ 73 ( 10 month ) , (precomputed on
Roster ) .
.
mendations coming forward, in addition to their own, the vice presidents
2. Ob.ly L25 per cect is available for
should clearly identify these individall University-wide discretionary inuals in their transmission to the Presicreases. ( Two separate pools-one for
dent, ' so they may receive full conNTP's and one for Faculty and Librarians) .
sideration for the 10 per eent diseretionary monies beld in this 08ice.
3. Inereaaes may be recommended
Su&lt;:h requests, similar to all others,
for not more than 50 per cent of lbose
should be fully supported and docueligible. (50 per cent by headcount
mented in writing. Additionally, parnot F.T .E.).
'
ticular attention in . tbe awarding of
4. Minimum discretionary increase
·tbeee funds should be given to an
~~Maximum d~ increase
individual faculty member's or NTP's ·
contributions to University-wide aer5. Those who were separated from

manoa.

PROfESSIONAL RANK SCHEDULE. 1g73-74
ADJUSTED MARCH ~· 1974

Gr.1

2
3

4
5

•

Minimum
$ 7.425
8.600
11,400
15.100
18,800
' 21,945

26,330
32.315
311.750

6
7

8

-In

First
Quartile

$ 9,345
10.225
13.250
16.975
21 .300
25,020
29,925
36,515
43,325

~_..-

-

w11

-

Nonnal
Maximum
$13.185
13,475
16,950
20.725
26.300
31.-110
37,120

Mid-Point
$11.265
11,850
15.100
18.850
23,800
28,065
33,525
40.67Q
47,875

Exll1o Ordinary
eeu1nc
$15,100
15.100
18,800
22,600
28,800
34,180
40.715
49,065
50,000

____ ------------

-......, oUbject

to -

a - - of $20.000 or moiL

44,890

4B.ns

_,

, _ avallabla:
·

Only far - " " " " ' parfor-

al of Chancellor ( - of
......., tor .. ~ Ad-

&lt;-.

............ ........
.,~

Provost, V.P~ -

~. -

, ............... IJJU4...., __,.. . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . #II •
~,

24,400
19,100
19,100

Millan!,..-.,

ID
Dr.
~- to you of Narc:b ZT,
1974,-e.diJiiid·pleUe 8Dd a roetG- of
all ~ . ., . HTPa within .m
of )'IIIII" . . . . . . . . . . . to be u.d to
l"8CIIId )'IIIII" JW
w..wjcww _..t-

Technlcjl Assistant- I

10 lllanJil
$32.900

............
Aaodllllt , _ , .

..

x.....
&amp;Jay....,.__
lor lbe DiMrlbutian of

a:

9

'"·~...,...,,..~~.

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

,

s::=
2UOO

' 22.1100
22.900

16,600

· SUNYAB after 6/ 30/73 must receive
· the 4.75 per eent a~ increeoe up to the da1e of aeparaDoa,
(preoomputed Oil Roster).
6. Those who were promoted or bad ·
a change in position after 6j31Jj73
will receive the same .amount or increase added to tbe old and new salary.
.
Eumple:
Instructor
$12,000
Promoted Assistant
Professor 1/ 15/74
13,000
4.75 per cent inereeae
o( $12,000
570
Retro aalary 9/ 1 to 1/15 12,570
Relro aaJary 1/ 15 to
present
13,570
7. New maxima have been eatablished for Academic and Profeeaional
Rarika laee ~ acbedulee) .
8. The new muimum for rank or
grade may not be exceeded.
9. Mid-Point control is still in effect for PR grades.
.
10. Even thougb Librarians are in
the Faculty pool for discretionary increases, they are treated 88 NTP's for
PR grade and mid-point controL
11. Operating funds cannot be uaed
to grant discreti01181y increeaea. Diecretionary funds cannot be uaed to
provide increases for tboee paid from
Income Reimbursable or Endowment·
funds.
Thlnp to Do:
1. Pleese review the roster fo.- &amp;&lt;&gt;curacy of June 30th status plus any
title or aalary changes sul:isequent to
6/ 30/ 73 (these are identified in the
remarks column of the roster ).
Be sure ·t hat the F .T .E . is accurate
and those that are paid from income
offset or endowments are clearly identified .and/ or splil PleaBe call Mrs.
McDonald ( ext. 5244 ) if there are
any discrepancies.
2. Within the discretionaiy funds
made available to you (pleese refer
to the separate memo from Dr. Somit's
Office) show recommended discretionary increases for up to 50 per cent or
Faculty and 50 per cent of NTP's in
the first blank column. (50 per eent
headcount not 50 per cent F.T.E.)".
3. In acoordence with the President's guidelines, written justification
· for each recommendation must ...,_
company the roster and be &amp;PProved
by each higher level of administnltor.
(Department Cbainnan, Dean, Provost, Vice President, Presidenl)
4. Return rosters to the Presidoot's
Ollice by Monday, April 15th.
5. The Personnel Ollice will review
accuracy or computations, adherence
to guidelines, and mid-point calculations.
6. No individual recomniendationa
should be announced until final approval by the President and Division
of Budget, if applicable.
NOTE:

1. 'Ibe relroactive inc:reeae is expeeted Co be paid on pay period 5/ 1-

5/15.
INFORMATION DEADliNE
Deadline for student organizations. departments. and other illt!lrwstod Individuals or lrotlps to submit materiel for the
1974 Summer Activities brochure is Friday, April 14. Information should concern
-..~ea. tours, films. end any other prosrema - . to the Univarslty community
durinc the SUmmer Seulona. The bn&gt;chure will ' be distribut8d campus-wlcle
lllarlihs on the first day of ctau., May
28. Copy should be . typewrittan, llpacod and exac:lly as the Individuals aubmiltlnc it wish to appear, as there wil
be no edltlnc. Send lnfonnation to ,.....
.._.,. Kaane, Room 314 Norton Hail.

�Eccles Lecture
Aimed at
Lay Audience
~

belJefa 81111 lllillmdir81111 hi ......

~
llbOUt tbe llliDd

. both ocioD=:..-.:=~
Nobel Lam.te Sir .Jolm Bcdea will
attempt to clarify tbat telatlaalblp

~~·April&amp;. .In
UJIIIIIIal aboUt tbe lectuN Ia tbat, '

altbauib eciell~ are invi-.1, tbe
dlacuoaioD ill inlalded for tbe layman
• a ,__ledmlcal aqiload:iaa cl. '-rhe

Mind-Brain Problem."
.
Dr. Eoclea, ~-~
cl.11hnioloD ~~here
siDCe July, 1968, is CXIDiidered a world
~ on Dm\'e impuloe tnDmlisaioo. His &lt;XIIllrihlttioll to tbat area cl.
medic:aJ ..,.,_ ...., for him a obare
cl. tbe 1963 Nobel PrUe for PbyaloiOIIY IIDd MedidDe.
.

~:z,::_s~ra:-~
llmt cl. a eeries which will ftiature

cliaclaiiDI ocioDtiflc )ll&gt;alomfor ..,.,..,.J p u b I i c audiences.
'Ibere is DO lldmiasicm cbarp IIDd ali
~~ IIDd ODIIIIDIDiity people are

~

lind·f orstoOpenWomen in TheatreWeek
Actress Vivecs · Lindfors will visit
tl!e csmpus Monday to open "Women
in Theatre Week," a montage of performanoes, discussions and workshops
scbeduled April 8-12 by the Theatre
Department.
All events will be held in the Harriman Tbestre Studio.
On April 8, at 8:30 p.m, Miss Lindfors will perform her succesaful mlo
presentation, I Am a .Woman. Admission to the performance, CCHipoDSOred
by the Office of CuJtursl Affairs and
the University Union Activities Board
(UUAB), is flee. Tickets sre aVsilable at the Norton Ticket Ollice. '
Says the New York Tima' Howard
Tbbmpmn of this production which
_.-ad recently off-Broadway:
"Vivecs Lindfors is . . . a beautiful
womim who can act, which she pro.-ds to do trenchantly. . . . Miss
Lindfors is excellent 88 she mercurially brings to life a csvalcsde ol 36 ·
women, lrom Shaw, Ibeen, Colette,
Shakespeare, Sylvia Plath, Brecht, a
battery of women's liberation journalists, IIDd iiiiDy other sources.
'-rhe
~on of such a vast gal.
lery
from a rich lore, takes
intricate, balanced doing. Miss Lind- ..
fors, a born actress, doai it, although
the gallery itilelf bulges a bit. The
emersing word&amp;--lmd the interpreter
--&lt;lhspe the characters, some of them
popping brifbtly IIDd amusingly, like
flasbbulb sbippets, longer csmeos unwinding tremulously. like the first
kiss ol that angel child, Anne Frank."
'I'Iadsy, April 9, at 3 p.m., femin. ist ~ Myrna Lamb~ dis/
.
~

cuss her work and the problems ·confronting the working plsywrigbt and
actress. Ms. l.runb is the author of .
Mod Donna and Sycklon Z.

ic, M~~Y~"':,',:::.~ ~~
porary Tbestre ·a nd Dramatic Literature," Wednesday, APril 10, at 3 p.m.
Professor Croyden is the' author ol a
newly published bOOk on the .avantgsrdi, Lunatics, Leven 'and .Poets,
and is a drama critic for the New York
Tima and TM Village Voice. She is
currently an associate professor ol
English st Jen~ey City Stste College.
An ali-day forum is scheduled for
Thursday, April 11. Tbestre Depart.
ment students and guests f!QIIl neighboring universities ·wil give pra;edta- ~ workshops and' demonstrations.
Friday, April 12, will be devoted to
uwomen in Dance," with a discussion
scheduled for 3 p.m. At 8 p.m., Amdance, a young dance company, will
present a· retrospective look at Ameri- ·
csn dance from vaudeville to rock.

Externships Open
To Health Students

An eiabt.-week- rural ezlemsbip ~. deeilnBd to provide
beeltb """"""' ~ with an opportunity to Jhoe and work' in a rural
commODity, will be operated apin
ibis bY tile I.akea Nee Rellional t.fedical Pqnin, Inc. Tbe
propam ' - to apllk llludeDt ....
tereet in rural practice, preferably in

tbiaaree,afterpaduation.
Dr. .Jolm Iap1J, LARMP clliec:b-,
.t.out 80 ......... will be . ..

·Fall' Registration

8lly8

Undergraduate studeuts should update their student data forms
starting April 22, according to the iocbedule below. (Note: Tbe time 1

stu~ts
tratwn.)

Eccles; recently retumed from a Phi
Beta Kappa-&lt;lpOIISOnld lecture IIWing
tbniush the South, bes also pined a
reputation 88 a pbilc8&gt;pber IIDd observer of the American .......,_
"Americans are ., full· cl. unbappi- . materialism IIDd hypoCrisy, I
• don'-t know when they are ~ to
pow ujt," be told tbe Memphis p,_.
BcimitDr durin~ his lecture tour.
"American pbil&lt;BJpbers and
Y·
· cbologista are materialists," be ~
"And news in America re8ects unbappineea. .
"All is bed news. Tbe ~
. news is at the bottom ol the list, ' be
observed. '-rhe -preoccupeticn with
·the Waterp.te 9C8lldal is an ~le. "
He aaid tllat. altbouab Americans
baYe perfected "a -II}'SIA!m (rf cioWfng
food wbicb is "I!Dl8Jlfint,"- We . ~don't
appreciate" bow many , cirunlriee 'd epend upon the system.
"Americans would much rather conc:entrate on the bed tlriDIIB," according to Sir John. '!Spim Agnew pads
his income a little bit, and ~
~~ do the oame thing seem

tum in the dats form will lwve ,.,; bearing on IM tim1! of
·

·· fleJda
=:..~~~~
ol medicine, nuni~"':·

rep,

•

- Accurate data is essential for a tzooubl.,.flee registration. Tbe oonect
listing of a student's major and class can mean the di1fenmce between
a good schedule IIDd a disastrous one.
Infonnation on the registration process will be banded to st:udenta
as they come ip to update tbe data forms ill Diefendorf Reception Aree.

Doolcnates Your " ' - ' t aSENIORS wbooe last nsme begins with:
A-L ..............................:.. .Monday, April 22
M-Z ................................Tuesday. April 23
JUNIORS wboee last nwne begins with: A-L ............................Wednesday, April 24
M-Z ..............................Thursday, April 25
SOPHOMORFB wboee last name begins with:
A-L ...... -: .......................... .Friday, April 26
M-Z ··:·········:··-··············.Mmldoy, April 29
FRESHMEN wbooe last name.begins wiih:
A-L ······-··'·······················Tiadsy, April SO
M-Z ······-··········-··········WedneBday, May 1
.
All E.O?. ~ reprdJees of where they are advised, will pick
~lion llllllleiial in Townsend Hall, accordiDa to the above
,

_

1

1------------......:......:::....:.________....;:---:!::.1 -

den-t istry, boopital
t1oa,
medical tec:lmolotiY. lllltriliaa,
therapy,
podiatry. S8loic:led etudenta will ....
ceive a weekly stipencl
' In .1978, 55 students IIDd over 100
preceptors participated-in tbe p~
involving more tban SO commumtieo.
Tbe I.akea An!a RegiooiU Medical
l'rogrMn covers the Western N-

~

~ tberapy"":":i

York OOUDties ol Allegany,~
gus; Chautauqua, -Erie, GeDi!eee, Niagara and W_yoming, IIDd Erie and McKean in NOrti)westem PennsyJVODiL
Dr. Ingsll bes 8.IIDOUDCl8d tile appointment of Robert J. Beebee ol tile
LARMP sta1f to coordinate tbe ....,.
mer project.- Beebee is now acaiptlng
applications from inlere8ted students
at his ollioe, 2929 Main Slleet.
One student who paitlcipated in -the
p~ last summer remarked "I'm
gettinJ the kind of educaticn in Ibis
propam you don't get in medic:aJ
school." Another praised the ''ftezibility of tbe program and tbe reoepiM&gt;.
~by everyone involved." One pbySICI8D preceptor commented "doctora
get a rekin4Jing ol Jntereet in medicine 1111d tJie llludoot-~ rei.
tionship acts IS a stimuJuo for die
doctor to bop up.., date!'

�Dent Student· Exchange Visit Gave
2 U/B Se_niors Hospit~l Exper~en~e
aeem,

I!AtieDIB in a hoepita1 setting
was- rewmdina for two fourth-year

dental stuclontB, .fOIIO!llh Zamboo and·
Walter Zindahl. Jr~ who~ 30 days
obeerving daltal 'Piilctice m Guys Hospital and Dontal School, L 0 n d 0 n
Bridge. in January.
.
'!be two pariicipanta in a
student ia:lchan8e ~ between
the U/B Dentil Scbool and Guys
Ho&amp;pital and Denl81 Scbool tbat started in 197L Evsy IIUIDIIIel Jour British dentiil studeniB come to tbe st&amp;tes
-two come to U/B and two 10 to
Tufts Universit¥, according to Dr.
Norman Mohl, profelloor of oral medicine, and assialant dean for educational alfilira Ttie U/B atildenlll financed their own trip and' their wives
aceomllimied them. ........., received
tluee hours of electiVe
from the
·u/B Dental Sdoool •
-,"We ·.ere part ol ibe heBlth team,

.;;;m

....:........

- ,iliit' cibserver&amp;

,~~~=~
conferenceo JIVllPJ
dentiats,
DJ1I1!811, ~

Bpfilh studen1B.

. We also rotated and obeerved in sill:
dinkal departments of the d e n t a I
school, " Zambon and Zindahl said.
"We lived in a 'bed and breakfast'
rooming bouse near the hospital-dental
· school. We usually went ·to a local pub
~~~~,.. and a -local restaunmt for
Tbey did some traveling on -kenda through the English countryside
and to Edinburgh. '!be Zambons made
one trip fo the continent, visiting

~~trikes and the dim outs didn't

IKTUU'

Ed..D. IEOUU.TIONI

TranscendenUJl. M edit.a.ti.on-The Practical Aspect of -'the Science of Creative
lnteUigence, 233 Norton. 8 p.m.
Sponsored by . the .Studenta International Meditstion SoCiety. For further

The Doctoral/ Divisional Committee of
the Farulty of Educational Studieo hu
estsblished a regulation that any Ed.D . .

au 694-8439.

info~tion.

UU.U INTUHAnONAL filM F£niYA1••

The fk&gt;n Has S even Herut. (Rocha,

Brazil. 1970), Conference Theatre, Norton. check ahowcase ..for times. Ad.miasion c::harge.

EXHffiiTS

-Arter

AU-TOPSY- £XHIJrT•

.,

FACUL1Y

tio~~d.xhib~ iss=~~tan~ cou;;re~:
ground Comic Club.

Protes8or.(Music Composition) , MU8ic.
Prol-. (Music TheOry) , MU8ic.
Asslatant P.rofe&amp;BDr &lt;Yoice), MU8ic.

PH010GIAPHIC EXHIIIT•

.
Prof_,. or Asaoci8te Professor, Geography.
Visidng' Aaaistant Prof_., Compute Science.
~ J&gt;rofe8aor, Geoloiical Sciences.
· ~· {Siatistbl ScienCe Division), Computer Science.
.. lnBirudor- ~ ~e&amp;IIDr, D~try.
.
~~. PloiloM&gt;phy.
.
~te ~.

Art- Hiatory.
AaaisWnt .l'loleaaar. JIJJIMmlllia.
. "-'-'tor Atoaociate Prolestoor, MathematiCs.
-- · Aaaialant p,m_,.; PhtvmDcy.
.
'x-rer {1-year appointmimt), Edtu:ational Studies.
• Leoliuer, Edut:ational Studia.
Aaalstant Profe8aor, Educatiorud Studia.
· ~18 Profe&amp;BDr, Art Department.
.
Visl_~ Asaociate Prof.....,.. {1 ), Comparati»e Literature.
i .

Underground Comic Arts from. San.
Francisco, an exhibition o( original pan- ·
els by S. Clay Wilson an d Manuel
"Spain" Rodriguez, Gallery 219, Norton.
through April 14. Gallery hours: Daily,
noon-5 p.m., and Tuesday and Friday,
7-10 p.m.

~, -MU8ic.

-Aasiabmt~. ~hy.

HTP -

.Aiaoci!Ue, V.P . Health Sciences, PR-2. •
,._.llalit to Dinctor (Admissions SysteiDI) , AdUiissions &amp;: Records,
~

.
.
Co......,lor, ·Educational Opportutmy Program, PR-1.
•.l"aittlnB deaalflcation ill Albany. .

'People of Cust.er Street, photographs
by Danny Forman, Music Room, 259
Norton, through April 2L
ART·TOPSY - EXHtiiJ•

...Monday,
~:~21~' /l;'l;':'L::,' ~.u·~ ~ib4:
April 8, through ·Saturday, Ap-

ril 1:1 . . Viewing hours: Monday ~ Friday ,
8 :30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, noon-6 p.m.;
Sunday, 2-5 p.m.
AIT·TOPh'- EXHim•

.,:.i:.k i,.'f(:t,,w;::~il"::d br;''J~~'g:

Randal~ architectural aa8ociate, U / B Office of Facilities Planning, Hayes Hall

~~b";!';~y,"'M:,"y r.~~:&amp;~.:O·

Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sponsored by the Office of Cultural
Affai rs.
POETIY EXHI&amp;n•

~

~ adaitioual inlorination concernilig tbeae jobs and for details of
NTP' openinp tluoucl!out the State Universit¥ system, coosult bulletin
boards at tbeae loca_tioos:
-1. Bell Facilit¥ b e - Dl52 and Dl5S; 2. R,idge Lea, Building
4286, nut to cafeteria; 3. Ridile Lea, Building 4230, in corridor nut QoC-1; 4. Health ScieDcea Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
Paand 8oor In Corridor nut to veJlding macbines; 7. Hayoe Hall, in
main entrance f.,Yer, acrosa from l'ublic Information Oflic:e; 8. A"'-m
Hall, in corridor 1oetween Rooms 112 and 113; 9: Parker: ~.
In corridor ilezt to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st 8oor, HOusing Of6c:e
.._; 11. 1.807 - Elmwood, Pen!onnel ~t; 12. Norton Unioa,
~a Olllce, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall,•. in corridor nut .to
~ 106; 14. Jobn lmd O'Brim Hall, fourth fiCJ!Ir (Ambent Campus).

Five Blaclt Po e ts : Ama Bontem.ps,
Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hurl-.
Leroi Jonel and Oaude McKay, Poetry
Collection, Lockwood Library, 2nd 11oor.
Continuift&amp;.

JNTERVIEWS ooo.d:MPus

INTRYIEWS

_

. ~~t the aemester, on-campus

·

mtei"YJeWW: will be conducted for atudents ·

who are intereated in att.en4ing rraduate
achoolo or obtaining emPlo)Diei&gt;t. Fur~ ~onnati.on and appomtmenta for
• mil!~ can be arnmged throuch the
um....mty .Placement and Career Guid-

~&lt;e"tiu.~~·=~·~.t:
NOTiCES

Fra:

~r=ecr:s:rtonn~:U~:;-LF::
0\EI:GENCY AID NHDED

The Community Action Corps has re-

~~ cl:~rr:~ !.b::ft~!o~a:N;

whose home was destroyed by fire. Ootbing is needed for three boys. agee 3 and
5, and for girls; ages 8, 10, and 11. Oothing should be brought to Women's Studies College, 108 Wmspear Avenue.
FAU lfGISTIATION

Updating of Student Oats Forms for

~allD~~n~~~w::!.tehef:uC::.:

students are to follow the echedule aet
by DUE. (See page 10.) Graduate and
Millard Fillmore College otudenta muot
go to tbe Admissions and Records Office to update their Student Oats Formo.
SUMMO SESSIONS IEGISTIATION

The Office of Admissions and Records
will conduct Summer Sessions regiltra~
lion beginning Monday, April 15. All
students currently registered at the Uni~
versity need only complete a Coune Request Fonn. All new students will have
to complete a Student Oats Form. which
will be available at the Office on April 15.
Tentative Summer Sessions reciHra·
lion bouro at the Office (Hayes Ann&lt;&gt;: B)
are 8 :30 a.m.-8: 30 p.m. on tbe followinc
dates:
'
April 15=18, 22-25, 29, SO; May 1, 2,
6-9, 13-16, 20-22. 28-31: June 3-7, 11, 12,
18, 19. 24-28: July 1-5 (Oooeil Jtily 4),
9-12, ·15-19, 22-26, 30,. 31; and August 1,
3, 6, 7, 13, 14, 20-28.
USED 1001: SALE

The 20th Annnal Uoed Book Sale,
sponsored by the Buffalo Branch of tbe
American Aaoociation of Univeroity
Women, will continue through Friday,
April 5, at 270 .Pearl SL; between Court
and MOhawk, in downtown Buffalo. Sale ·
hours are 10 a.m.-4:30p.m. each day.
In addition to .the more than 160..000
boob for sale will be autocraphed oporta

items.

·

~L

· '

=.t

:~~::...':'t.Db; ::;'i~~

anticipates fulfilling all requirement. in
time for June or September. graduation,
must indicate his intentions by that date
either to his adviaor or to Florence
din in the Provoot'a Office (831-5447) .

September graduation, diuertatione must
be received in final form by August 15.

bother us, but we noticed - the sky~of
- . _!!.~ ~ nWSB DO abort- _ CUI.TUIA1 AFfAIH EXHIIIT'
_
~~"""M.,y 16 at the
So,., Rec•nt Prints, an ezhibit of stuDental S e h o o I commencement at
dent work from the U/B Art DepartKleinhans Zambon will be going to
lh:n~~ce~i"~~PB~.:!.,.=!j
the U .S . Navy for t1uee years as a
Robert Aull, Hayes Hall Lobby display
lieutenant in the dental corps. ZindahJ
c a • e s, Monday-Fridsy, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
will serve a one-year internship at St.
through April 5 ..
Mary'a Hospital, Rochester, N.Y. He
ART-TOPSY- VIDEO ENVIRONMENT'
.m~ wont in the deutaJ.:..d..iD.ic -and.
. Experimental video by Steina and
~pate in eDJel1lllDCY 100111 trauma
:,:.a-6,:;,~~S;.:l,~·~rii ~~- a.m.-4

Job -Openings

.

Ideas Wanted
' '!be Universicy's

BWIIIIII!r

activities

brochure for 1974 will include a oection called "Ten Flee Ways to Liven
Up a Summer Afternoon," Paul

Keane, summer activities director,
said this week iii asking for suggestions for the section.
"If you-as Maria von Trapp didhave a few 'favorite things' you do
that might fit in this category, please
aend them along," Keane said. 'lbe
address is 316 Norton; telepbooe, 8313602.
As an ezample of the t:ype of thing
he's looking for, Keane listed this one:
"E%perience the monumentalicy of the
ancient world by walking emong the
-diaaaaembled parts of an authentic
Ioaic column and capital, reposing
PMceful)y near the Clement Hall parlcing lot on the. U /B CIIIIIPII&amp; This
cheery ClODfisuratioa ol massive marble chunb forma an evocative, charming maze just waiting to be wandered
~ through on a aum-

:;:«-=..._

~ .., w

"""'' ·'

.

- ,

�THURSDAY-4

~-rN=-~ for 1M
·~,.~-~
~. eq,., IWI, 8:80 .....

:=.

-LS"J:t':,.
~-~RobOoomtY
Public

~

MONDAY-S .

(Minn.)
~
Ooiirelaco 'J'hoatoe, N - . 10

"-

--unaQASS•

'lYle Cltuelt Dni• O.U..:. C -•

._.., n.- W.........,, 11 E. Utiea, 11
......

IU-----:z..:~ ~

of this year'•

.Jnla•oaion• U. Fibtt, , _ Hoi·
boaOit, E ..tmail Kodalt Oo., Pillman

=:;.1:

~
~rbbop ... ....-. .
and 8lill pbotocrapby eqaipmeDt and

---

FR.M•

=~·~~-:-=::

COMPIIIU ICIENCI I.ECTIB#

Ch"d Dovi•

TM
Don« Company,
Hau Lou-. Norton, 3 p.m.

IMAOII &amp; COMMINT: LIC1'UB*

Film ocbolar Jon Bomo will diacuu
~ 3323 Bailey Ave., 8

Serpi

p.m..
.
.
S~red by the Center for · Media

filMS'

Metanomen (Bartlett) . Picture and
Sound R ...M. (Fiober), Anzio... Automotion (Serra), PO..I R&lt;vere (Serra) ,
Patriotum (Wieland), 147 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No admiaion charge.

PSYCIIOMAT'

A lioteniDc and learning experience,
232 Norton, 8-6 p.m.
LICTUIE~

A Cotton Pickini.Cotton G........, Prob·
lem-A £arr&lt;-Scok N&lt;tworlt AJUJ!ym
Problem, Dr. Paul H. Randuliib, profeOaor of mathematical .c:i.enoea, New Me:r·
ico State University, 4242 Ridp Lea,
,Rm. 25, 4:30' p.m.
This is P""""'ted u part of the De~~~In~~ring's Vis-

COMPUJU SDVICH SEMINAl•

~ Data Screeni.TIIl and Data Editina, instructed by Harry 'Piniar.alri, 4238 Ridge
Lee, Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m. . .

lUFf~ :r~:r!c~1~n~~G;ranklin

St&lt;eet, 7: 30 p.m.

Featuring filmmaker Geor1• Loru:!ow,
3323 Bailey Ave., 8 p.m.
Presented by the Center for Media
Study.

1 Neuer Song_for MJ- Father, 140 Capen, 7 &amp; 9 p.m.: -Admission : 75 cents.

COMPUTH Rtinas liMINAl# -

PermQIU!nt Files, instructed by Sydney
McCarthy, 4238 Ridge Lee, Rm. 10, 7-9
p.m.

LENTEN LECTUIE/DISCUSSION11
God in Hu1f14n E%perienu. Dr. Arthur
Cryno, aaoociate profaoor, U/B School ol
1

~~~ ~ria~~~!r :=.rt~

Aaf·'TOPST- LICTVII/...-s~UTIOH'

cmi!:nC!dc:=:a.~~&lt;=':ii
Ceater, 350 Muten Ave., 8 p.m.

SWEIVIStON &amp; CURRICUlUM
DIVIlOPMENJ MIITING•

Caner Education- Whot and How,
Dr. Lawrence Aronstein, career educa·

U-

otherwise noted, tlcketo tor events
Norton Hall Tlcllet ~

~g~r~naJ:rr, ~:.!fa&amp;!u~ro'Hi!L

UUA8 INTDNAnONAI. FILM FESTIVAl..

TM Aduvooty (Ray, 1971, India) ,
ConfereDCO 'l'bNtre, Norton, check ohowcue for time&amp;. Adm.iaaion charge:

AIT·TOPSY- fii.M/ PANB.•

Fists of Fury, the Kung Fu film &lt;:lassie ·
starring the late Bruce Lea, Win be
viewed and evaluated by a panel of Buffaloniano, including Dr. Leslie Fiedler,
literary ·critic and chairman-elect, U/ B
Department of English , Moot Courtroom, O'Brian Hall, Ambent, 7: 30 p.m.
· Free admission tickets are available at
the Lebman Hall desk, Amberot, and
the Norton Ticket Office.
·

a~~~re~~~~~~

and the Buffalo Project.

FRIDAY-5
-

Bio·f••dbock: Str... R•leos&lt; and Be-

luwior Modi/icat.ion for the Treatment of
Cknchin.f
and Brw&lt;i.sm, Dr. Andrew J .
Cannistraci.. fonper 8180ciate clinical pro-

COMPOSIIS WOIIUHOP NOJECT•

feaaor of restorative dentistry, New Jer-

..y Collep of Dentistry, Capen Hall,

8 :30 a.m..-5 p.m.
AD·TOPIY- dCTUII/DEMONSTU.TION•

TM Chuclt Dovi• Donee Company,
daDoen and drummers . Erie County
Children'• Home, 10 a.m. ·

==~y;r_cr~i ~w.:r~~

Prof. Shanei S . G..piiJ, of Purdue Uni-

·

.

_

1 Elli0 tt s·
~X B, Rm. ~:

PaWine K

~::r;u:;'C~mmflnt,

· 2 p.m.
~~naY AMINAl•
.,
"--~-h·- Chemical St .. di .. on tM
,._....,....
n..
....dw
~"!}ML.IIece
·
the~nut
F t of'
....._ ,._.
~
~. Mt. 8_inai
of Med·
ioine, 1ll4 HeUtb llo:ioD.- Bi4c·· 8 p.m.
~ by !"- Graduate Student

.;:C:,O,;,:f

~ti&amp;&amp;- --

•

~

-- ·

uu.uJNTEIHATJOIW.

-

ART-TorSY- CONCBT•

Featuring Mixed Emotions, a student
string quartet, Buffalo and Erie County
Public. Library Auditorium, 3 p.m. No ·
ad..mi.saion charge.

~bl:,~o~::;~a!.ait.I:!~

UUAI INTEINATIONAI. fiLM RSTIVAI.••
Chloe in the Afternoon (Rohmez,

tiatn:~~~ J::Umin~wftt ~~n::

sa8.a COUOOUIUM'

Ti.JESDAY-9

Open Education and TroditioJUJ! Education, Dr. Roland S. Barth, principal of
Angier Public School, N-n, M-.
Ridge Lea cafeteria, 8:30 a.m.-11:80 p.m.
Dr. Barth is tho featured opaalter for
the conference eponsored by the Depart..
ment o( Elementary and Remedial ~­
cation Graduate Student Aeaociati.on.

'IIOlOGY GIADUATE STUDENT

·nical lecture designed for the layman.
CAC ..filM*• ·
...,
.._
TM Sterile Cuckoo, starring Liza Minnelli, 140 Capen, 8 &amp; 10 p.m. Admission:
75 cenlll.
·

FILM om•vAL""

·

La Colhctionneuu (Rohmer, France,
1967), Conference Theatre, Norton, check
1lhoWC8IIe for ~- Admission cluii-ge.
AU-TOPSY -PWOIMANQ•
7'h.e Cf&amp;ucll Davi• Dance Compciny,

r-Ot.·

Clark Gym, 8: 30
Admission; atu. .
denlll, 76 cenlll; a! othera, $_1.50. ·
· -

TM Alie..Ut -(Dos Santos, Brazil,
1972), Conference Tbeetre, Norton, check
showcase for~. ~dmiaeion cbarge.

SA~DAY~6
OPEN EDUCATION CONFUEHcl.~

lin; Maween Gallagher, viola, and Dana
Ruainak, cello.

TM Mind-Brain PrOblem, · Sir John
Eccle., diatinguiabeil prof""""r of phyOiology and · biophysics, U / B , 147 Dieten·
dorf, 8 p.m.
_

lliofaDt pzolouor,. U/B ~t of
Civil En.iineerinl, 108 0 '9-ria.n Hall;
Amhe,.t, 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
'

GIIADIIATE STUOINT COUOQUIUM'

1 Am a Woman. Viveca Lindfon, Harriman Studio Tb&lt;atre, 8:30 p.m. Free
tickets available at the Norton Box Office.
. UUAI INTEINATIONA1 FILM fiSTtYA1••

Featuring worb composed and per·
forn&gt;ed by otudenlll, Baird Recital Hall,
8 p.m. No admission cha!p._
ASSOCIATION liCTUIE•

ADVAHCU IN TaAHSPOUATION PLANNING•
lauu in PIDnninl/ and~ Paul

10:30 a.m. Coffee at 10 a.m. .

All·TOPSY- WOMEN IN THUTU•

8t the

~

On Saint Ven£1!1t'• Prin.ciplt!, Di. Riehf
ard A. Toupin, Department of Mathematical Sciences, mM Thomas J, Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights,
N.Y., 104 Parker, 4 p.m.

Given.: No Bread, an Encounter and
for Fifteen, written and directed
by Morton Lichter, Harriman Tbea.tre
~S~-;:- A~~~~sion charge.
D~r

-

pu-

ENGINHifNG SCIENCE SEMINAl.

MJ..TOPSY -THEATM PIUIHTAJION•

~~Rld;! •:n~)"'A~

clulrainc admlulon 'can be·

Newman Center, Newman Center. comer
of Niagara Fallo Blvd. and Main SL, 8.
p.m.
-

• ()pan only ID UMJO.;" with a prvlesslonlll 1 - In the tubject
•Opan· to. public
• ••Open to membefs of the u~
Colitact Nancy Cai'dlotelll, 831·2228, for llstlnp.

8cbool, 8 p.m.

StATJmCAL

'

IMAGES &amp; COMMENT:
SCUlHING/DISCUSSION•

CAC FU••

CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION#

-

· So""' D&lt;Cid&lt;Jble Equi«Jknc&lt; Proble""
for Sch&lt;mi&amp;UJ and l'ro6"'-, .John Cber·
niavaky, SUNY at Stony Brook, 4226
Ridp Loa, ·Rm, 41, ll:30 p.m. &amp;l'reobmenlll will be oo.-1 after the lecture.
Co-oponoo'l"' by ·the ~t - of
Computer SCience and the Graduilte Student A.oociatiqn.

AII-I'OPSY - DEMONSTIAOON/IAP SESSION•

INDUS1111AL ENGINEHING

•

Criminol Cod • (Hawb, 1931), 140
Capen, 8 &amp; 9 p.m. No -.dmiuiott cha!p.

France) , Conference Theatre, Norton,
check showcase for tim'4!ta. Admiaaion
charge.
CAC- FILM••

The Sterile c..c~oo. 140 Capen, 8 &amp;
10 p.m. Admission: 76·cents. •

All-TOPSY~ UUAI

CONCEIT•

,/

AiC:.!."':'!."3"ii~r:t::tJf:rklf!;.:.~

&amp; 11 : 30 p .m . .Admission Charge.

AIT·TOP'S\" - THEATU NESINTAJION•

,

A Co~tion with Myrna Lamb,
Harriman Studio 'l'bNtre, 3 pin. No
admission charge.
·
fltM'

· Loot y..,. ot Morienbod (Reenaio), 147
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admisoion cha!p,
UUAI IHTUNAT10NAL . . . fiSfiVAI.*•

R•d Poolm (Jan&lt;oo, Hunpry~ 1972),
Conference 'l'bNtre, Norton, check ohowcaoe for run.. Aclmiooicm cbarge.
filMS'

Boot th• D•vil (Huoton; 1.964) , and
Ernot ·Pintolf oborlll: TM lnt&lt;rvi&lt;w, TM
CritU:, and TM Violiniot, 140 Capen, 9
p.m. No admioaiol&gt; cbarp.

WEDNESDAY -10
All-TOPSY - WOMEN IN THEATII•

A Co~reotion with Morfant Croyd&lt;n, Harriman Studio -'"-tre, 3 .P.m.
No admisoion cbarp.
STATISTICAl ICIENCE couOoiJUIM•

Di.stributioJUJ! L&lt;ngth·Bu...d Sampling

:-c::.t"P ~:tl::.~ior.:.c',hTlf::.. TU'iit

4230 ,Ridge Lea, Rm. ·A-49, 3:30 p.m.
Coffee at 3 p.m..
FOma COU.OQVIUM•

•

Given: No Bread# an Encounter and
DitlMr for~Fifteen.. written and directed
by Morton Li~bter, Harriman 'l'bNtre
Studio, 8:30 p.m. 1\dmiaaion charge.
Through Sunday, April 7.

Profu.or J.. P. Kutney. of the University of British Columbia, will speak on
: .-:pic to ~ announ~, 5 Acheson, 4
FILMS•

D&lt;Od of Night, 7 p.m.;·lmportonce of
Beinl Emut, 9 p.m. Both fiimll aie bee
aJ)d will be shown in 140 Capen..

SUNDAY-7
GIADUATE STUOINT' IICRAL'

AIT·TOPSY - WOMEN IN THEATB•

'

All-TOPSY- VIDEO WOKSHOP•
1
Fea~
·
lone Bone ooprano •tudent
With St&lt;ino ond Woody Volll&amp;lha, 232
.of'Muriel
Wolf, n~~ n-~ta) u ..n
~ .,....,
Norton, 7-9 p.m.
8 p.m. No· admiMiml.~
Given: No B,..,.W, on EliCOIUlter and &amp;up. · - •
PSYCHOMAT•
Dinner for F&amp;ft&lt;&lt;n, written and- cfuectecl
UUA1 INTRNATICINAL fKM fHTTVAL"
-A listening and learning experience,
by Morton Lichter, Harriman 'l'bNtre
My Niltht t ·Mruur (Rohmer Fran
232 Norton, 7-10 p.lil.
Studio, 8~:&amp;.m. Admiioion cha!p.
1969), Conf~ n.!tre; No~~
-~'l1uuqb'
y, --April 7.
· · -'"'· · 'lhow'CMe f o r - . AdmUioioo ~ ...... . • ~on-I.I,I:OLI)
Aaf;TOPSY- THIAnE I'IIESiiaATION'

-....

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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                    <text>anelf:'roposes lnstrudional Development Center
aliy . . . . . ~t In -.ballaD of. tMitiiu i&amp;cli......, at U/B
(lllllialr tllat While the Belate mandated ibe-IDaln!IDI!I!t it bad 1110 ~t
bdo illl ectual development) and-_.the Ac::r ~t wbich bas
been IMed - the past two year&amp; Tbe
Committee _ . t offers Dine major
it*
PJW! :fatima
....... , , .

t'

In IIIIIIIIIIUY, the Committee pro-that:
'
1. The promotion and rewarding of
quality -.bing ..must cootioue to be
priamy objecll- and obligations of
this Unl-aty.
2. InalniCiorB be provided with
1111 -wropriate ~to evaluate
' their ~ perlorm&amp;DCe and must
haw available to them 1111 established
......,., of. lnfonnatioo and """""""'
developmenla) which will
SIBbie them to contioue to impfOve
the quality iJI. their instruction. A Center fcx IQotructiooal Development m..t be establisbed on this
CIIIIIP\'8 .with sullicient financial sup-

a

port and atalliDa to povvide ~
lora with a Jevef of a.vice which en-

ables them: to evaluate their -.bing
elrec:tiWneaa, to _ , . , their relative
teaching performances with otbercom)l8nlble clasmoom situations Oil this
campus, and to secure aasistanoe in
improving their teaehing capabilities.
('"Ilwn&gt;ew Center for ~
Development will replace by name
and function the present tk facto Of.
lice or· Teaching Effectiveness. The
new title for the Center is much more
indicative or its chief funCtion than
is true or the former title, it avoids
the use of the word 'effectiveness'
which is often considered ambiguous,
~q~d it gives us a fresh perspective with
wliich to enter the future," the Committee report says.)
_ 4. The guidelines for establishiDg
and operationalizing such a Center
should foUow those already prescribed
by lbe 1972-73 .Senate Committe&amp; on
Teaching Effectiveness.
5. The newly created Center should
be established by September, 1974,

and should be Qdltiluted - .......
manent olfice Oil this CIIIJIIIU8 With

statu. aimilar to 1bat of. the Olire of.

Research and the Survey ~
Center.
.
6. Tbe Center obould be chmpd
with the (""-'ng specific t.b:
a&gt; It should.......,.. the ..-at .,_.
year experimenlal - o f te.bing
evaluation fcx an. additional aperimenlal two-year taiad (i.e., until
September 1976) ;
b) It llhould seek to paera4e evaluation instruments wbich are _ .

~!,:00~ ~a~

settings;
c) It Should de)Joelop a - i&amp;c1iw
process fcx administering the evaluation mstruments, for reporting the
statistical re§ll]ts, and for diaBnlnating lbe results to instzuctora; and
d) It should I!Ddeavor to do whetever is """""""' to better Inform
ilmructono em this ....,_ of ways
and · means whereby their tachina
( Continlu!d

Oil -

2 eol. . 2)

New 'Gro1_..1ps' to Enrich Grad Education
A n e .w Q®Uiizationat- structure
' ' w h i c h - the interdisciplinary,
Iask-I~ attributes of lbe institute without jts fonnality, and . . .
tbe strength derivable from the disciDJinary atandards of the depariment

.

To 1fleaa ,
. n. gJ"--.L
J~u~-···:'-'·'; . . .
E
Dr. Leslie A. Fiedl« bas been appointed to a tluee-year teml aa chairman or the Department of English.
The appoinblalt, efle¢ve Se~
1, made by Dr. Albert Somit,
elii!Cilti... vke~
Dr. Fiedle&lt;, a critic and author of
international reputation, bas been a
professor of English at lbe University
since 1964. He is alilo setVing as a
facultv member in Empire State ColI!'~", lbe noo-residential cone, .o f the
State Univeraity of New York. Before
coming to Bulf'alo, he was a member
of the English Department of Montana State Unlveraity for 20 years and
its chairman hym 1.954 to 1.9li6.
Boni and edUi:ated in Newarli;, New
,Jeraey, Dr. Fiedler receiwd a B.A.
from Nl!)¥ York University in 1938,
an M.A. fJom the Univeraity of Wisconrin in 1939 and a Ph.D. from Wis-

. ~~~!·books include The Re!

turn of the V.tJIIWaiilg American. Love
and Death in the American Novel.
An End 1o l~. EBMJys in Culture and PolilU:s, The U..l Jew ·;n
Amerial. &amp;inti Busted, and most recently, The StranBer in Shaknpeon.
Dr. Fiedler's wide literary &amp;CCOJJ!plisbments have won for him a nmnber
of remgnitions and awards, including
a Guggenheim Fellowship ( 1970-71 ),
a Rockefeller Fei.Jowship. two Fulbright fellowshiP!! and the coveted
·GaWI!l FellowoiUP at Princeton. In
addition, be haS won the Furimo
'Poetzy Prize and was granted an
awanl by the National Institute of
Alta and Letters in 1957 for "excellence in creative writing.'*
ASSEMBLY MEETING
The 'next mMii"' of the u~ Assem·
.bly will be Tuesdly, April 23, .t 2 p.m. in
John Lord O'Bn.n Hall. Apndll ~· for
tNt ..-ina should be diNC:tM to the
Assembly Secretary, F.culty Olllce,
135~.

-.llbo!'f.~'is.--

~~sa;i.t'lft.~~-

nr~t!' :f ~'fm:'-'i~v!'i-

sity dellll for graduate and profession-

al education, new units, to be known
"graduate groups," are being developed as "one of aeveral ways or
responding to needs which are ex. pre.,..,.Mrom- 1'.~ si~e: the need to
i-esPond lo socieW prill&gt;lems from an
. academic ba!, the Deed to jlduaJie
students for new career patterns, the
need to provide programs whil'b will
atlmct student&amp; who may question the
· value of tnuiitional graduate education, (and] the need to provide faculty with an opportunity to move between . . . lbe basic ocholanlhip of
the discipline and ... ' an area where
that scholal&gt;!hip can be applied, with
:!:d,~ .o f others, to complex
88

Tbe name "graduate group," Hull
said, ·is ·~tiooally less imposing
th8n 'center' or 'institute,' and hopefully indicates a reasonable degree
or lnfonnality" for lbe new units.
Any group of facul~ and students
with primary ties in at least two academic departments may apply immediately for ltlCOgnition by the Graduate School Executive Committee, H u II
said. The Executive Committee will
be advised by the "ablest scholars
the University affords."
·~ far Aa:epllonc:e

...lli\:i&lt;i'iteria' for formal acceptance to
]!noduate group status include evidence .
of -the ~ and continuing academic
IICCOIIIplishments or the faculty, evidence of their potential for ·addressing
lbe task for which the group is pro- .
poeed and interest or the students who
may be involwd, and arguments that
lbe task is consOnant with University
goals.

•

· ' 'It should be emphasized " Hull
said in a inemo explaining the 'CCIIICept
to all_padu&amp;te {~Jet!~. ty "lhli.t we hope
we
applications which include
faculty from
where task oriented
acholanlhip has not been COII1DIOil....
Participation from professional school
faculty is invited, be indicated.
Graduate School """"KDition of a
group will-carey with it. Hull said the
right to refer to the """'t''tized
in "!!Plying for outaide f1mds, and the
privilep of appealing, .aa a group
to the Graduate Schoci! for funds and

WI""""'

areas

*Ius

student aasistaritsbips.
·
·· Academic fonnalities will be coordinated through the several departments to which the faculty belong:
courses will c;:arry departmenlal deeig•
and be recc.:nmended

:::::m

4::1~¥-mta
lloaal way,
tmdd-

pated lle~ibility may allow new oambinatioiia ·.of ,C01J!91'8 to be aocep~
for student ptogr;uns.

-~
Support for lbe groups will be modest at first, Hull said: "We have relativ~ly few resources for which there
is not a stronger claim to maintain
existing programs. 1f the new program
auooeeds, however, we expect to increase the resources dedicated to il
In the first year, support will principally be in lbe form of student
assistantships."
The groups are apected to add a ·
new dimension to University activities, the graduate de&amp;n pointed out,
rather than replace valid, on-going
ones. 'lbere are already. several University units engaged in multidisciplinary attacks on complex problems,
Hull noted-ranging from highly-developed types, such as lbe Center for

Tbeoretical Biology, to le6s formal
Center (or the Pt;ycbological Study of the Arts. "1 trust
the opportunity presented bete will
encourage more such activity," be said.
Hull pointed out lhli.t "reaponaes
flag; tba .........,.. auch- tba_-.ii&gt;ftiiil!-- - '
·
liJtJIJp8 are a..lpii!d to •
1ioJve lieea-Uijlad fly a _ . . of iotUdios
· -tbe "Scholamhip for Society" report
of the national- Council of Gradliate
Schools, t!Je.report olthe Ul~ Faculty
Senate Collegium, and the Uni..,rsity's academic and masler plan pro-

ones, such as the

jections.

The original Graduate School pro-

posal for the groups contends "that

departments epitomize the Newman
view of the university as a place to
expand knowledge for its own sake
and . . . institutes respond to the Baconian view that know~ is justified only when· applied to tiuman affairs." U/ B, the p . _ t notes, bas,
"by deeigo or otherwise." already committed itself to both viewl&gt;-"an a&lt;a·
demically a n d socially responsible
position for a university developing in
a society or rapidly increasing complexity which needs the suppoJt of the
most h i g b I y trained independent
( Contiluud Oil 6, ool. #)

Ellsberg to Speak Tonight
Daniel Ellsberg, central figure in
the Pentagon Papers caper, will speak
tonight at 8 p.m. in Clark Hall under
sponsorship of the SA Speakers' Bu'
reau.
In October, 1969, Ellsberg copied a
Top Secret Pentagon study on the
war m Southeast Asia. After monthS
of atteuipting to bring the study to
the attention of various administrative -and legislative oBicials, he released rertain or the documents to the
press, leading to even1ual publication
by the New York TillU!s, Washington
Paslandotbe~
.
When he surrendered Jo U.S. Marshals in Boston, Ellsberg said, "1 felt
as an American citizen, a responsible
citizen. I could no longer cooperate
in concealing this information from
lbe American people. I took this action on my own initiative, and I am
prepared for all the coDSeqUeDoeS."
. Ellsberg was charged under Federal
laws IQ\'.erning espionage. treason. embezzlement and theft The """" against
him was dismissed last year because
of government interference.
Tbe Ellsbera lecture is open to tbe
public without admisaion cbarge. . .

�2

:·e

lndrudlanal ~eentet
-· ...........
· · .· ... llf.IIJIIn••_ ~
-~~~,.
_,_4)
.._.......,..,..__.

4-Man Panel
-To Evaluate

-

=.-:,.~

~-- ·

=~~~~

ForSpnng=:.·~~t ls22,946
President Ketter c-::'.. =.r:~=:
-'-ld la\111 tbe liabt
ol tbe beiriDr ol tbe

"· ~a:

~--==~&amp;::.ft:
. . . . L. Boyer tD ........ • CODfi·

t:wo-,..r ~lei

atruc:aB
to
~the a1a1t o1· ~

~
on.tudlm-•111117 ~dlfter
by level ..... dfaaiPine ad - 111117
~ n~~~ect· cIa • a perfolmaDoe em

--

Tbe ~ ..............
total~il~--

ol L76 ~ tali last ,.._ 'lbe
total iDdua. ll,8lili ibm ad 8,991
....... ~olhs-{CIIIIWICI!
....--tiYS
---..
Ul.8 ~Ra~at L ~­
While IIDdlDp ........ 8UII8IIl
DiYialanal bNUdowllt ~
,.........._ .. put ol tbe ......
lbat facul~ pcalbl,y impruve their
tbe Olloe ol ~
Becx
.......
~
11181111ated
by
-=tdl!l
elliecth'liY
lltUcl,yiJIIatuare:
uuderiPIIdlate - 12,000 (6,748
. . SlJNYBoal ol~ ,__,..
dent eVioJuatiau, tbe U/B. commltlee
a-, 5,252
paduata--6,1'19
privile&amp;e.
noles lbat our faculty bd tbia dl5- · · ~(3
, 1
2,108 _ , ) ; prcfea8. /( lltaJidinir committee ol th!!
cult to do with ACT -wta.
siona1
-1Ji112 (UIIO 1111iiD, 272
.....
~tDbereSena~ it the Senate's Commit.. .
Many faculty cbalJenp the applica, ad Willald J1'lllmore Coltee em 1Dstru1:tiona1 Developmellt..bility to tbem ol ·ACT ~same ·
1eae &lt;civiaaina divlaima)~ (2,876
ol tbe pnaidentlal review
sboald be establisbed to IDD!Iitor the
a.y the form Is too loQ. others bd
man, 1,31!!! _ , ) ;
.1.. •
~tlee, appointed by viJtue o(
propama and operations of the new
it too obort, too sballoW. 'the CommitFuJ1-tiJiie sludeats, tlae saainc at
1hllir ..._,are: a.u-n ol tbe U /B
Center for IDstnactionsl Development
tee recommeads a abort "roulh ad
1 - 12 credit&amp; pw - . total
o-.:n WDiillm c. Baird. ~ty 1bis
Committee should be requiled to
ready" iDdez of student pem!l!tions
16,059 (10,()69 - a d 5,1190-) .
. . . . Chairman Gilbert D. Moore,
report ~Y to the Senate on
as well as one or DIDft! !'l"'J forms
Part-time
ill 11,887 (3,886
......... Sludellt .A.datian ......
the activities of the Center and to
for periodic in-Ciepth aDalysia.
"*'ad 3,llOL - ) . •
dalt "-tben IlaDdee, ad E1aecutiYS
Tbe
way •ACT dale Is compiled
By
faculties,
tbe
biPMBtl!lllllllua!t
recommeod policy cbanses deemed
Viae Prelident Albert Somil M-..
""""""'UY in the conduct and operaand presented, the Committee a.ys,
is in tbe Social ~ . _.. with
........... ol tbe paup.
tiona of the Center.
makes &amp;Miysis end interpretation a
3,858. Health ~ is nst with
9. Tbe full Fsculty Senate abould
fD!\ior project which' few faculty are
3,819, Natuml 8ciollaes baa ;&lt;162;
.AalDntiDc to tbe published guidebe eDCOU1'III"CC to begin debate on the
willing to sttempl 'The recommend•Arts imd Lettem, 2,000; Educaliona.l
em presidential review (for comtion bere is that · each instructor be
· Studies, 1,751; Engineerine, 1.389, and
question of how the results of te.chplete tezt, RqNWt#, Jan. 31,
inll per(OfiDIIDOe evaluations abould be
provided within two weeb with a
Law and .nniaprudence, 662. Complet...
1974). tbe ad hoc evalualioD CXJIIIIDit..
used at various levels of Univenlity
compilation of their students' responing doe tolela are General Univenlity,_
tee Ia _.ted to ~a COQftdengovernance and who BbouJd haw acses and th&lt;i correlation between their
1,692: the Sc:IMd ol Manaaement,
tial, wriUeD - - o( tbe p,...;.•
oesa to sucJ&gt; results. FollowUig a period
response to a "global ~on" and
1,478, and Mi11oud Fillmon! College.
cleat'• pelfOfiiiBDIIe in repnl to: 1)
of fact.finding 8J1d debate, the Senate
, their responses te Cllhen. The present
Women oulmllnber men in tluee
.......uc leadenlbip ad 1118111l11"118t. abould establish a clear, apparent, and
normat:iw data and degree of deviaof the Univemity's &amp;eYeD faculties:
2) allminisllatiYS lMdembip ad man....U-publiciz.ed policy · regarding the
tion ~tistic:s;while belpful in terms
Aria and Letters--1,088 to 912; Edu....-st, 3) tbe inlltitutional tone set
o I e o( te.cbing performance and
of railking an individual against hial
cstional Studie&amp;-1,000 tD 751, and
.... the l'lesident, .. ) intemal rela- . rteaching
evaluations in all forms of
her peelS, ,are " overstress ed," the
Health Sclenoea--2,009 to 1,810.
~ 5) atemal relationsbi •
personnel d~liberations on the e&amp;mJ&gt;IIS.
Committee feels.
'
Tbe most sipificant enrollment difad 6) IIOIISitivity to tbe ..-Is ol
Tbe Senate is asked: to pa&amp;B re80:Adequately designed individual unit
ferences between S p r i n g 1973 and
Clllllpll8. 'lbe Committee may also
lutions to implement these proposals
evaluation instruments might be as
Spring 1974 are an increase of 12.15
llllcl.- Point&amp; raised by tbe ~dent
in the form of specific recommend&amp;accepta!&gt;le as University-wide evaluaper cent in the professional schools
in a l l e l f . . . - t which be is ..,_
tions to the Univenlity administratioo, the Cqpmrittee says, if certain
( Dentistry, Law. Medicine, and Pbartion, to assert the faculty's right to
criteria are
macy), from 1,366 in 1973 to 1,532
tbe Committee will
monitor the aperations of the' office
New, individualiad instrumeaiB
·this year, and a decrease of 12.46 per
act as a repreoenletive of a particular
to be.eStablisbed, and -to claim !'uJtiabould also be c:levia.l for such special
cent in Mi11oud Fillmore College
campus constituency (students, ~
mate control" over the use to which · : situations as multi-instructor courses
which emolled 4,838 1aat year.
ulty, lldminirtration and Council) and
any e_valuation of teaching perf_qlji!F
and clinical instruction. the · p a n e I.
·
will be able to submit a separate re: port from his constituency if be wish"Ad'!..~~ of July 1, ' 1974, ;;; ~ . f!!i!ls:
; - :-~~,
quested· for the Chairman ot the Senuse· by Students
As stated in tbe guidelines, the
ate to fomi the•pew committee on inA te.cbing evaluation shoUld propresidential reView process is quite
structional development whicli
vide useful information for students,
also aa&amp;ist in setting up the
the Committee says. To ' date, bowd
tin
- th r t-find '
·
evt!r, ACf ' results for · SP.ring . 1973
'denwl ~-'bi·'a
~t ~n~,~ po~;es ot"~
arl. the Only ' ime8 'av8il8bli! ti&gt;' sfu.'
Trustee~inlliateil and con- · te.cbin
11
dents. Just 5P copies 91 these .J'l"!!!~
ducted by the Chancellor on bebaH
~ -..!,.,';"ce en~: .. ,
have been!i:imuallia -~ tb liliianes iirid
of tbe TmsteaL Tbe !'llJIIPUS evalua'~:r,'i" SiiSesSing 'lhe'pli!Si!n£ ACT, the
provosts' offices) and ratingB on only
tion ·~ lils''i ' '&amp;inirultiVe role
_Teaching Effectiveness Committee
370 of 1,212 evaluated coun;es are
in this review process. ·
found that some faculty fear and reincluded, the report notes. Moreover,
Tbe evaluation committee was coosent it because they perceive its stated
the Committee contends, students find
veDed by G. Bruce Dearing, vice chanpurposes to be "less-than-straightforthe ratingB bard to interpret and lsck~
cellor for academic programs, who bas
ard." F
1
f 1 th
ing in· such usehll irifonnation as enbeen named by the Chancellor to serve
~ults giO:., fue~~':.ti: am~
rollment, boW '11iuil grade ' is deter:
as liais!m_ with the U/B campus for . munition to use ·against departments •
mined, etc., whiCh ·used to be available
the revJeW.
aod individuals who are "out of favor."
in SCATE results. 'The Committee
Tbe JUideline6 call for input from
The Committee, thus, inSists in its
urges that more attention be paid to
the vanous campus constituencies in
recommendations that purposes o( the
the student constituency: " Nobody
the review proceclunl bu~ preclude the . evaluation be made clear in advance
likes doing work which yields no ..,_
· creation of a committee other than the
and that facultY be involved in dissuits and students ate likely to resent
ad hoc group named by the Chancussions about the evaluation process
filling in questionnaires" if no useful
cellor. Tbe suideJines further mandate
prior to it, rather than in reaction
purpose is fulfiJJed.
that "all parties to the process will
The mport says, too, that many
against il
ot.erve the proprieties appropriate to
The Committee cites studies to infaculty feel that students take doe
• dicni1led Mld prof896ional adminisdicate that student evaluation of an
procedure "too lightly'' and 4hat this
trative procedure." Confidentiality is
instructor con be an excellent preis in part the fault of the iilstrumenl
to be maintained.
dictor of class perfonnaoce oo norLittle in the way of its importance
SlllfAIIII i1M1l
mative exams, but concludes that the
is conveyed to students.
Ricbanl Dremuk baa been appointed
ACT as presently constituted does
The Commi~ questions the 10director of admisaioas ad records,
Pnllident Ketter bas alleady subnot permit U/ B students to register
point scale used on doe present ACT,
replacina Dr. Arthur L ' Kaiser wbo
mitted to .the Chancellor a self-assesstlu!ir evaluations of instructors. 'The , noting that it can detennine "no comreturned to full-time ~ last fall.
D*lt o( bis four yean in ollice. To
pelling reason for il" Use of a three-· Dremuk ,.._ J~
' BII!CUtive
aupneut this document and the "'PPrt
point scale (w h i c h the Committee
associa!Ai 'dilsciOr
. . . llfld:'
of the campus evaluating committee,
the Chancellor is alao · m&lt;pected to
feels most would inte'l:.,ret as "sboYSrecords at ~ ~oC
•
aolicit written appalisals of the Pnlliand
dmt's perfOliiiiiiiCe from senior J11l!mCriticisms of ACT noted ilv the
head of lh8 OIIJCe•ot . . •
' ad
bera ol the SUNY eentral stslf.
After reviewing all u-e documeots
ad -cliscusablc ihem with the Presi.-deat, tbe Cbancellor will make bis
Community_ University Day 1974
and from subooectuent intervi""" with
. YtantorktoCitythe' dfromesn _l.'f"~...v:!t....,..New
.
will be held Sunday, May 5, with the
cbairperiiODS and provosts. Queetions
...
theme ''Undergraduate Education at
rai8ed by faculty concerning technical
York Univenity from 1957-1963.
: tbe
U/B."
details · and· general policy informed
He is a 1957 lfl!li..te ol Hunter
Ia ,_,_.Jec_ tbe Presiilent
This University- wide open bouse
the Committee's ~dat:ions for
· College and received an M.A. in ~
will be invited to . . - with the Board.
event, initiated three years ago, bas
the future.
litical. science from NYU in 1970.
'lbe Beard will then act on a formal
attracted .as _m any as 201000 visitors
Despite "somewhat overwhelming
Dremuk bas been in tbe U/B posi.-lutiall ~ s new periOO of
to the campus and "has DeeD a valucriticism," the report notes oome fac.
tion for sevenll months.
procesa Ia upected to be
able aid in strengthening Communityulty expreased the belief that benefits
University relstions," President Robhave been derived from the ~ear
CliJIIIIIlMed this 80 that-action
ert L Ketter said this week in urging
~lei ACT progmm. ACT ha
..,.y .be Uken at tbe June meeting of
~~~~ to participate~ the 1974
raised tbe c:oo1!ciousn1B of the camDr.. Jobn Piscopo, associate profes.
the Beard of Trustees.
,edition.
·
pus concerning · the imJ&lt;K&gt;rtance and
sor in the School of Health Education,
~ to Committee Chairman
Moon~, doe campus evaluating poup
'lb8 Community- University Day
usefulness of seU-evaluation via a unihas been elected vice president of the
form evaluation instrument, same proCommittee bas indicated that it inwill - . I t with ............. ol major
Eastem District Aalociation, American Aalociation for. Healt,b, Plzysical
amsdtuent ~ ... campus, includ~toaf: ~~eat,,':,P~
fessors feel. And · most faculty and
in&amp; the UmYelllity ~ly. UUA
Education and Recreetion, for-&amp;: term
- ..
in 1976.
available to visitors about undergrad....... AAUP. 'lbe Committee alao exuate programs at tbe Univenlity.
very useful or of "some use."
.
I!XJO.e~ Aalociation is doe lal:gpects to ~ a I8Ddom IBIDPie
o( ce&gt;pU8 individuallllllld
prior
Ketter aaid he hopes ell ~
The Teaching E«ectiveness Comest dis'trict unit within the national
to writing 1111 report, be
ments will participate in the activities
mittee report was prepared by Cbairbeallfl, p~ education and recrea"so that we migbt have a .....-ful
man McCoQn'ell; Peter Enis, Statia"We Would welcome any written
tion group. It includes 14 Eastern seaprognun to present to the
pro-·
tics; Peter u-r, Pharmacology·
001111181111," Mo&lt;n said, UJ'Iinl that
board states, Puerto 'RicO and ,the Virtt.. be -.t eitller to him or Co any
spectiw students and otber atizens
Ann McElroy, ~I"'IY; . iiiiJ-., gin Islands and has a membership of
!0,000.
.~
other ..-bet '61 tJijf '&lt;iiaimlttee: .
who .will visit ua on May 5."
Robert Rott, School ol-N.~.

ar

=e-r..-;:."'=-~

ol .wdeat ~ to their te.cbiDir
~ On the olber bud, if
inltruclols wioh to ..... their from the
•
lei evaluation&amp;
.-1 to aMist
-~faculty peen! ad
adminlatraton in making jlemoaDel
decisions, tben suoh should be their

......... ol....-atapinfon... Pulllnl

..a

-&gt;;

-=-

....,.._t

...... _......_
u-

t;

t

mel

~

....

d=...7..t~=~'= ~
r.:.':l

Dremuk Named
A&amp;R Director

. C-u Day

~~:t~

Scheduled
For May-5th

low':&gt; i" ~reo; , ~1J.tti.~

~r~td:!,~~ii=~

-

· , '\~

~a=~::.'t:~

d'!:'~"iii...!::=~

c

•

~

Piscopo Elected

~the~v:f=ti:!'r::"'!;J!,-;

...f:LP"

manr.

�for 1Shortage·,'··
• • II
Constitutiona

oil .............

'11111 ... aDd
Cll'Mied by
fiiiiiiOPOiiea. Jllld the
,...,.., • e • alan~ bead..

oil

~::;;::.r.:=11.s.

~

aa..u.:=

to view '-I'd during. Cbe
~...,.......,..on "Capitalism Tco~ just prior to

,::·:.=.

VictDr Perlo, c:babman, National
EoaDomlc 0\mmiaim, Conummjst

~~u:!oil'"*"~:!

e;::r..

is in order "tD iDclease
by
leaps aDd bounda:"
ADd UIB's Dr. Mltcbell Franklin
provided tbe diacuEion on ~
meat, ba-t 011 _ . , be Is doiDa for
a 110011-.11&gt;4Je.publisb article, "'n tbe
Role al Bam8Dist ~~~~ tbe Amel-ic:an Constitutlanal ~On 01. Im~l~... jd ~ !i&amp;. -;:h ,.r,._l~) i_,;n.J li_'-'

Theooil •.......,..•• aie""' Jl!llloa1ul.

PerloNIIIid,-•"lbat , tm.y i ~y
OIJII)tizec.to llalanCe
ly' and .demaud by .....:luciDg
and increasing prices." The
record-break·i ng profits and record-breaking eco~ strain upon the American
people. The feai
· · be noted, is
tbat of "evmyday
in tbe face
ol galloping - infla~ "fabriQted
. crisis wbicb imposes 8 special burden
upon the black cbnmnmity who 8m
always aubjeoted to tbe worst conditions with tbe atortion."
Perlo, an inatnJctor at the Center
for Man:illt Educalion in New York,
contended tbat tbe oil
lies
"have cleverly capitali2ed ~ .reclaiming by the Mld-Eaat countries of
their own IMOliroeB" in. order to promote their aims. He noted tbat the
U.S. ~t'e policy is to back
at all 006ts ·tbe oil companies' claims
~rigbtfully theirs."

"'F'

:.::Ft;i

="

, Perlo ~tiOn
!&gt;foil&amp;n&lt;l.~~with-.
m the U.S. under a democratically
electe,&lt;l, "~-.t.&gt;cb.':- While tms

~~~~~
ter. tion, tbe
!an .

tion, derived from R o m a n is t and

French Enlightenment r o o t s. The
statesmen and pbil.OGOpbers n$ponsi-

ble for drafting the Constitution Hamilton, Adams, Franklin, Jeffersqn
- and later theoreticians, such as
John Calhoun, Edward Livingston and
Thomas Cooper, were, Prof. Franklin
submitted, "profoundly inJ!uenced by
the thinking of the French Enlightenment and the force of ils Romanist
content upon legal thinking." To omit
this content in the discussion of im·,
peaebment, be BBid, is to display·
partisanship and to place severe limits
ui&gt;on democracy.

~·=:-....::u-~in~
underlyin"'~s~g~ in tbe

the

is P&gt;e Philadelphia
ned eciiDdmy ol
~d ecf"..Stittitioii; .the·;sOOo!l&lt;J,..the
Bill of
be "rationallY" priced at 19 cenla .a
Rights, and the third, the' 13th, 14th
:flon under a 90cialist system, be
and 15th Amendmenls. He noted that
"infamy-impeachment was introduced
U.S. and world imperialism are on
into the First or l'biladelpbia Constithe decline, Per)o · ~while
tution as a democratic weapon against
IIOCialism is in the aacendai&gt;t. Amli
oppr:esSio!'." ·Impeachment is intended
discovery of oil as-a• politiCal weap(m
to be a bridle· upon tbe executive, Dr.
bas, for eumple, be suggested, put
Franklin contended; citing Hamilton,
those nations on tbe road from feudal- ' in Federalist No. 65, that impeachable
. ism ·toward socialism. "The defeat in
crimes "are of a nature which may
Vietnam," P e r I o said, marked tbe
with peculisr propriety be denominatdownward turning point of QpitaJism
ed politi..,l, as they relate chiefly to
and the ~ ol a synchronized
injuries done immediately · to tbe sogeneral crislB of capitalism throughout
ciety ilaelf." Hamilton asks, "What . ..
the world: "We can now ezpect to see
an increase in working class and national liberation slnlggles." .
·
Tliis rise of IIOcialiSm bas, moreover, reduced tbe threat Of nuclear
war, in Perlo's view. Tbe DOW fashionTwenty-four graduate students repable policy of detente, .while not a
resenting 16 disciplineS have received
guarantee, is a positive step toward
GradUBie Resource Access Developpeaoeful coexistence, be Said There is
ment (GRAD) awards ol up to $250
a dilfereJlCll! between, ~te and enfor the Spring awards period, reports ·
tente, ~er-,-"detente is a relaxaproject
director .John Greenwood.
tion ol ten&amp;inn°ahd ....... ;, close 'fe!aSpecially honored was Emocy Hill,
~,. ,., · a~ '-: .r:-T~.,. t
1
· a .graduate student in psychology, who
11
,, ~~
- •
'&gt;.'riot;;~ rl"r
sci,
received the project's first Sigma Xi
~ . ~~l'"p~ ·~'i~:atJI.i
Award for Excellence for a proposal
ccinliit'uatioil: of ~~lj; su A.
on "Ciassicsl Conditioning in the Etiport of 'libi!ration moYeinents, tbe ~
ology of Asthma!'
against racism, and !be piOvision o1
· A tots! of 40 applications were iegood housing, ,i{ood eduQtion a n d
ceived for' the current period, Greengood bes.lth Berlllce.
•
wood ss~d. The director noted an up!UJ the labor Diovement continues to surge in applicants from geology and
gam mop&gt;entum toward these ends,
.from the master's program in natural
however, be foresees "reactionary and
sciences, a program in which students
.n&gt;pressive racist and anti-communist
typically do not receive aiiy funding,
8888ults" jntended to divide it.
·be explained. Among ·tlioee applicants
'lnhlmy'
•
who failed to get funding, a large
A professor Of law and phii...Ophy,
number applied late or failed to follow
Franklin observed tbat most of ' the
instructions ·for applying: Several othcontempoiary ~ons ol impeachers requested re-awards, which the
ment are based on Aniflo-American
project bas decided it QDDot support
coDDii'on law conceP,tions m which "ingiven its limited resources, Greenwood
famy" is not COilSldered
ssid.
.
Dr.· Franklin defined the term with
The 24 awards' have a total va'lue
a quotation fr;oni · the. I~. lega!ist
of·$4,816.07.
The
GRAD
&amp;wards
proj&lt;Cesare Beccaria: Infamy ... 18 a Sign
ect bas distributed almost $14,000 in
of public disapprobation, which dethree grant cycles to date.
prives tbe guilty man of the good will
A May 13 deadline bas been set
of' the public, the confidence of his
for those applying for summer grants.
countiy, and tbe almost fratemal bond
Graduate students may apply for up
to $250 to complete a research pro)T11is principle, Franklin contended, . ect leedhu: to a final UIB degree.
Funds wilf not be awarded for disis inherent -iii the American Constitu-

enci:i!J!(ift:

V"' . Tbe".F,irst

is tbe spirit ol tbe institution itself? Ia it not deailned 118 a method
of natiOnal iDaueat into tbe coixluet
ol public men?"
n-y of 'llllclllntl'
The thrust ol tbe Firat Constitution,
according to Dr. Franklin, is the separation of inf!"")'-impesclmalt on tbe .
one band, and aBlictive ~ton
the other. This is essentially presented
in Article 1.3!7, and is discussed more
fully by Hamilton himself. This separation ol infamy-impeachment aDd
alllictive punisbmeot and tbe "theory.
of'bridliog' throu~ infamy-~­
ment as a substitute for 'bndling'
through pbysicsl violence . . . signifies
that tbe A m e r i c a n COllCi!pt of
impeachmeqt in great DleljSUre
rellects public opinion and class struggle theory of impeachment." Dr.
Franklin noted tbat there is no exact
formuJa:tion of "high crimes and misdemeanors" in the Constitution. Further, lie ssid, "high crimes. and misdemeanors" are distinguished Lr om
"felonies." Thus, the separation between infamy-impeachment and alllicttive punishment is maintained, and is
not a f e t t e r on impeachment, D r,
Franklin ssid, referring to the text
o( the Constitution ilaelf.
But is the separation of the two
overcome in the Fiflh Amendment
which reeds, in part, tbat ·~no person
shall be held to answer for a capital
or otherwise infamous crime, unless
on a preseillment of indictment of
a grand · jury .. ."? Dr. Franklin's
position is that "although the First
Constitution accepts infamy-impeachment, independent of alllictive punishment, the Fifth Amendment reprobates infamy unless it is united with
afflictive punishment. The F i ft b
Alnendment requires tbat irifainiiig
criminal responsibility rests on an inlaming formulated crime, grand iurv
indictment and petit jury conviction."
At first appearance, be ssid, it would
seem , tbat
tes the position

~

'ru!li'e '~!
~&lt;in 'iii'

·on: l:ll!f the di&amp;-

Charles B. Ollbum ms ' - t ll8llllld
assistant director ~ Um-mt:y -Libraries for collection deYel~ U&lt;
braries Director Eldred R. -Bmith -

announcecL
In this

'
city, Mr. Osburn will .
for tbe ..-all University Libraries collection develop- ·
10!!11t program and for implementation
of this program thron"" ·tbe University Libraries Acquisiti;, ·Budjret.

be

~

Worl&lt;on-

·-

A graduate ol Grove City Coli"!!'(
Pennsylvania, Osburn bas a mUters
in romance languages and literatures
from Pennsylvania State University,
a MSI.S from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, and is concludinlf work on his doctorate in library science at the University ol
Michigan. He served on tbe French
faculties at Pennsylvania· Slate University and Wisconsin State University. Prior to his U/ B appointment,
he was humanities bib~pber- at
the University of North Carolins at
Chapel Hill
Osburn is an asoociate bibliographer
of the Modem Language Association
of America's Ann u a I Inlernlltional
Bibliography in French Litera1ure and
bibliographic consultant .to tbe Inter
Documentation Company of Zug,
Switzerland. He bas served as American correspondent for the documentalist journal, Repertoire Analytjque tk
Litterature Francai8e. He ·is the author ol three books and numerous
· articles and reviews in the areas ol
bibliography and . French studies.
TapQuallfic:atlons

.

"I am convinced," the Libraries director commented, "that Mr. Osburn
brings truly outstanding qualificatiobs
to this position.
"His combined background in scholarship, teaching bibliOgraphy, and li-

~~~~~

devezs::.:·

i&gt;UbliC ofa!S arid private citizens, and their
respective responsibilities. Dr. Franklin made referel!ce .to ':fl!e "i)j!riod of
struggle which gave birth .to modern

HiS rore&amp;iiaDal
ana
· ·
·ye ~ iD oollection development at the University
Libnily should be
:U~~licable to •his ,reeponsi-

famy upon the people in their struggles for freedom: "What was required

Amherst Rooms
Are Cheaper

::C'f~~'d'j:Wi![ch~u~:"'~

b:,thUU,~~f:r=-?!.~~~~r 'U!

oppressive besd of state, justified ultimately by the public opinion state
crested by lhe First Amendment, and
the ssfeguards against infamy of the
oppressed, j u s t i fie d by the Fifth
Amendment"

?!. ~'!rth_ CaroJ!na

Room fees for the Ambenit Campus
will be 10 per cent cheaper than
those for Main Street accommodations
next fall.
Prices for Ellicott occupants will
be $661.50 for tbe year for a single

=

.!t~·~~~:
Main Street double rate is $650).
24 Students.Receive GRAD Awards . :M..k"'S=
Ellicolit will also offer bsrpin rates-

u,.;•

=

.

:"'.:;gjt.:::'l~ g.,~~~ .

(the

seriation preparation, personal support
or tuition.
,
The grant program is one aspect of
the Graduate Student Association's
bread attempt to develop altemaotive
{unding opportunities for those affected by institutional and federal belttightening in regard to graduate student support.

J:::itu!~~=~~

engineerinif, $250; Robert H. Bear, Jr.,
natural SCJences, $150; Carleton E.
Brett, geology, $140; Carolyn Cave,
sociology, $72; Marian C. Cheung,
biochemistry, $250; Emocy Hill, psychology, $250; Stephen A. Hollman,
geology, $147.10; John F. Karlo, geology, $250; Deborah K.leese, psychology, $190; David R. Kosiur, natural
sciences, $150; Elliot Krieger, English, .$169.27; Paul K. Kugler, English,
$250; Daniel J; Kuna, coJJilBelor education, $186.70; Wynne Korr Oglesby,
psychology, $248; Patricia M. O'Maboney, b!ology, ~233; Anthony J{. Petrosky, .mstruction; $210; John E .
Roberts, occupational education, $80;
Daniel C. Schulman, sociology, $250;
G&lt;&gt;gineni v, Subbarayudu, Jfeology,
$250; FranclB C. Szoka, Jr., btocbemistty, $245; Mark A. Vacker, natural
sciences, $150; Raghunatban Vaidysnatban, medlan:icsl engineering, $240;
Adrian ·w a Ike r, computer science,
$240; and Ronald ~iner, biophysics,
.· .. , . J: ,;, ;;; •' """
$215.

triple occupancy (at $526.50 per perBOn), quadruple rooms at $468 and
six-unit rooms at $409 per student.
The 006t differential 1s designed Co
make up for tbe inconvenience ol tbe
Amherst location and to induce students to live tbere.
Approximately 1,200 beds will be
available in Ellicott nat fall, with
·another 2,000 expected to be ready for
occupancy in tbe fall of 1975. ·

'Blazing Saddles'
Co-Author to Speak
Andrew Bergman, film historian and
. writer who is ce&gt;-author ol tbe Cllflalt
m o v i e craziness, Blazing Saddla
!Boulevard Cinema II and Como 6),
will make two· csmpus appearances,
Tuesday, April 2.
Bergman will meet with Dr. Milton .
Plesur's "American Popular Cultural
History" class at 9 a.m. in 148 Diefm- .
dorf and will speak on his ezperienoes
as "An Historian in Hollywood" at
3:30 p.m. in 301 Crosby. Both appearances are open to the public.
Author of a study of the movies
of the 1930's, We're in the M onei,Bergman also wrote The Big Kisa.Qff
of 194~. a mystery novel in the Dashiell Hammett tradition.
His visit to the csmpus is sponsored
by tbe Department of Histocy and the
Center,.rl" ,Media Study. ,_,

�is to beciiDii ...... wltb (DDt Imitate) the atyle, IIDiuaP and . . -

Helb ........ tnt dq ..... iadu&amp;trial-arta &amp;eacber ill Menlw-'a
Haual Hilb 8rhool (the 8Cbaoi .m..e
Up IAe DiiMt 8ttlirctlae filmed)
IIDOit a tum far the wane rilbt after
hmch. Jllam out al tbe ~

"'- -

u.- •

crumpled-up

&amp;.

u

--·-

.....

.

,.. "- ~
Dr. Foster subsequenUy spent 16
teschins in several of New Yo&lt;k
C i t y's louJloeal inner-city scbools.
'J'hose e:a:peneooes, as well as his research at U fB as associate professor
of education and director of tbe Woodlawn Teadoer Education Center, are
tbe basis, of a book eotiUed Ribbin' ,
Jwin', and P/Qyin' 1M Doze"": tlu!
U~ Dile111m4 of Inner-Cily
ScloooU, to be published this summer
by BaiJ.inRer. .,
InstitutilliiBI racism is tbe mt cause
of tbe licboola' failure to educate ·m illions of inner-city cbildo:eto, Foster
agrees. But sincere repenlance on tbe
part of -liberal educators is not sufficient to aolve · tbe problem. Many
kids in urban scbools sbare tbe predominanUy middle-daBs v a I u e s of
·their tesdoers. But tbe urban te8cber
must alao Jeem to deal with a small,
highly disruptive minority of kids
~ style and values are those of
tbe inner-city streetcomer. Most middle-class teadoers fear a n d fail to
undersland those students wbo use
streetoomer behaVior to t e s t their
~ even tbe best-intentioned of
years

'lbe educator insists that tbe on)
wsy teachers can hope to cope wi;L
fl-. · polentiaJiy disruptive students

eiREPORTE~

A_.,_---.,· _....,.~
n.....,.,.-.~otv-.....

.sa.. u.-.....,
rortr., ......,_ :un • • St..

atr .....,._,

--...__

o1 l f . . ..

lf.r. JGJf• ..._..., . , . _ - Joc.tM" •
a - 2U. 2JO .......... A._~
2U1).

.

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

A.. lf'&amp;STl.BY ROflnAIID

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

ROURTJ", .If~
~

}OBif .&amp;. CI.DU7'lBR .

PA.rJllCIA W'~ ~
IIP'..tly~ . . . . .

lfAIICF

a. c.tRD'RKLU

~

ata-.....

tHBroono,

"'lbe abel!t,• ....,.. R
"is .m..e .JOUIII bloocil aet
• edu.cation. I llllamed bow to
in doe
~ fram rllllllinl about Did&lt;
-and J - ~
-tbe- and alltbat
lliDJI!Ie ablt."
. to Blown and
otber _ . . , tbe • who mekei it
in tbe lllnoet is loulh. ia IJII*Bive,
can lwlllle. am COli, Cllll -talk. is
ol. 1be put down, and -has
"style" as re8ected in biB clothes and
hie p._...,_ When be acta tbjs way
on the - t s , ba wins tbe awrovaJ
and ' - ' o f hie peem. When1ie-

·=baJel,y ........

ball
him, al
and~.
at a bumoious ...... - bill
-JIIIYdi -.bel'S bad
I'B' • " ... ....,_ quipped lamely; "If
that's • . _ ,au .,... do ,au better
...... up." 'lbe ...... -accepted the
ehallenp. Tbay &amp;lltied the din and
bepn l'llllllinl ...... tbe liopa al tbe
....,.... lablea, tm-iac T~ and
drawiDI bauds. .FDater .....ated to
tbe IIDeebole lboulb11ully pnwided in
hie dook.
After • -anct al -.~......mn,.
tbe "taacb" back in ocboOJ
on Monday. He bad decided that this
job not ...... to t-t bim. He
"""""' bill name Oil tbe baud ,and
waited far tbe pndictable moment
when , _ al tbe cia. would rib him
by~ it. Wben that 1110llll!lll came, F - picbd up a iool
stiek that lYiDII in tbe l'DOIIL He
walked up to the -alrendina &amp;tudeDt
and D'1lbbed him out al tbe dlair by
bill abirt fnmt. "Read that name to
me,. be a6id. 'lbe kid said ...........
F.-. drapped him back ~""'his
dlair. For the real of tbe ...... Foster
~ tbia ratber tbeatricol bit al
bmvado in """" al hie a-. a.leacber bad Similarly coofraoted
a ll&amp;udent in a mir!ctle-clasa suburblm
'hilh ~ tbe boy would probably
have bad a COIODIUy, but tlie effect
Oil Foeter'a .,._ .... eVidenUy cathartic.
"Fortunately," be !eC8IIs, .._. all
could relax now. 'lbey bad tested me
and I hid shown bow far I would aJ.
~ lll)'llelf to be pushed. I bad also
shown that I could bounce back; I bad
shown that I not afmid physically
.and that if 'pu8b came to shove,' I
woulil be able to bcld my own with
them physically."
What F - bad also done - tbe
crucial ·1bing. - was to ,bring order
to tbe dii8o. Unlillf&gt;ll T - siQp-&gt;
ped ftrina, he cauid not teiodJ and DO
""" cOuld .leam.

...

of the

::.::eis~

priJicipal.
•....,.... the Daains'

~aJ:!P~

"P~ tbe Dozens" ia one of
tbe pnlbleinatic ~ behaviors
tbet moat ed-ecbool l!&amp;duates ..... illequipped to deal wit&amp;. 'lbe Dollens is
a mean pme al mutual Yiliflcation,
~

~,...::! :Ul.eill.::U..~

motber. Unl!1lists have u-1 tbe
Dozens to vedlal contests beld by tbe
Asbanti and aociaJ psycbolosists have
analymd if as a mechanism by ..tUch
matriarc:bal domination ia broken
among Y'II1D&amp; black ·maiee. R Rap
Brown recalls that be and his friends
sJoarpeoed their wila by playilqr it:
~:!£"" us arithmetic to 8D!ft:iae
our ·
Hell, we eZereised our·
minds playilqr tbe Do2ieDs. . •. We
played tbe Dozeus for mcrealion, like
white folks play'ld -scrabble." Whatever its etiology or aociaJ function,
tbe Dozens causes p~ of trouble in
inner-city scbools. . Kids often excbange insults more or Jess playfully
for a ~ and then explode when tbe
slanders about mother or sister become ..intolerable. One teadoer ~

knew was baying almost daily cJ8Siii
room batUes between s!;!odeots playDig

tbe Dozens. 'lbe problem ceased one

day when be called tbe roll using not

~j~ ':.!~· but ~~

· Teildoara am.a~So aubjeded to tile
Do2ieDs. "' s&amp;W'your mother l8st night
on Chippewa Slleet," a student teach-

er..- .taunted: "17 &lt;l&lt;ln:tf"play tbat
Dozens game," be replied 'lbe teadoer
wbo does not know a ritual insult
when be bears one is liable to be flu&amp;.
lered or intimidated; knowledge, Foster argues, is power. ·
.
'Ribbin''

"Ribbin' " is snother form of verbal
interplay that can confuse and fright.
en uoprepared teachers. SYeetcomer
kids am often ertreme)y verbal ("it's
the con and tbe oonversstion that's ·
important," one such student tolil Foster), and ribbin', ·a more virulent
cousin to "niockin&amp; out," is another
popular classroom contest. Clolhes are

often tbe target in ribbin' behavior.
TO&lt;H!hort pants may be tenned "Pacific Oceans." A kid wbo cannot atfood Adidas, tbe SIIE8ker of tbe bour
is liable to be tatmted for wearini
"slip and slides." 'lbe right Clothes
are imporlant on doe street- they
mean . you baYe taste and money . (because of this, Foster is adamant that
his student tescioers dress neatly and
stylishly whenever they am in scbool)
and'J'!'bbin', like ·tbe.Dozens, often..,:
suits m fights and dosruption. Women
teachers are sometimes the target of
sexual ribs. Tbe inner-city teacher wbo
thinks "trim" means only tbe ornamentation. of Christmas trees or that
" jones" is simply a family name is at
a decided diasdvanla!le. Whether a
teadoer plays yerbaJ games back is a
IJ!&amp;lter of Jlei'BOnal style, · Foster advuoes.
.
Even those teacheo:s wbo coot deflect
' \' Y«boJ !nsuJt are often intimidated
WMl tbeU llludentil become physical
Foster thinks that tbe failure Clf
catom to acboowledge doe agiressian
and oc:casionaJ violeooe of tbe innerci_ty clas&amp;rocm has made it doubly
dillicu}t to des! with the proliiem.
. Many .1""!!"'-.:lass urban . parents use
au!borifariim methods in raising their
childn!n, argue&amp; -Foster. Both parents
and cbildreo expect the teadoer to
~ ~trol in clasS. Corporal pun~t .IS abaolutel.y unaccePtable, inFoster, wbo serves on the Boord
al Diredors of tbe National Commit,.
tee to Abolish Corporal Punishment.
But he does believe non-punitive
ph,ysica.J restraint is .........an- re-

edu:

Graduate Program in [!aris Offers
'Wtde Range of Study '-"IJ'~
Bt:..!,.~~CHIE~
'lbe Bull'8lo aJIIiliUa ol. tbe 8lalle
Univenity o( New York 1oM Jo.d during tbe put lour • Propam ill
Paris for edvanoed paduate llludenla .
who willloed, witb tbe . . . - ol. Ibm
- ~ to tab advantqe al1be
Uniwnity, library, and, in ....-..1.
tbe rich and varied
and cultural coppoliunitiea alrered by tbe Pliriaian meQopolis. 'lbe Propam .........
under - Mgls al tbe Council Oil IDtematiooal Studiee and alfem a unique
in~~ to llludomts.in
any department who milbt be capable

--=

of participating.

Altb:Juih

a

readiac ·

and listening Iaoowledae ol. Flaoch-il
_,lial, a student does not need to
write Flaoch -lluentJr if be wisheS to
work, for eu,mple, Wltb an historian at
tbe Sixth Section of tbe Haute&amp; Elr
udes, or an anthropologist at doe l.aboratoire d 'Antbropologie Sociale, or
a t tQe Paris Conservatory.
·.I t would be an..~ task to
list all that is poteDjially made availMilE; to our students tbrough=tbe ·p,ftjg
Program. Students in matbematica wbO
may wish to work witb matbematiclans in tbe "Bourbalri scbool" could
conceivably apply · to the Program, as
well as stiidelj.l:s jn music, bialory,, art

~.

anthropology, English,

~~

Ulra . . . . . . . .rtL

Pro,rrun· &lt;;&lt;&gt;st.. All al tbe instructilliiBI and admi.nistrative costs· for tbe
aetivities.u&gt;d.Iacilities described above
ar&amp;aboiorbed&lt;foylliniwnity- funda;.tbe
Prognom was appioved by tbe SUNY
Of6c:e of Internat ional Studies and
World • Affaino and ·doe Of6c:e of• ~
qloanoeiiQt, ~ in-1970-197l.,!f.be

~~1..'!!.~,_~~

parative lil'!rt~,~~.Pro!Pj~Ji .
.....,...ing.~ ~ wwu,n.......er.Otcnic~it
should tbus be aviilliiblii to any quali-· • ~ bours for which students are regosfied graduate student who might profit .
tered, and tbey may be expended uofrom it.
der tbe guidanoe of tbe resident reProgram of study. Students register
search advisor, with tbe awrovai of
for up to 16 credit bouis of indepeoa. budget, ~~· fo_r &amp;et\lal ~cdeot study per BeiJII!!Iler wbiJe. prepartilliiBl arid adlllinistrJltj'o(e cost~~ ~rding for their .preljplinary emminatjons
ing to an · explicit 8l!t of guidelines.
and/~r do.in&amp;. ~ for their dis·
Travd and liuing costs. Students
sertations. Doring ~ year_ ~ !""
are expected to psy their travel and
able to: (a ) enroll m 1111.y institutiolo
living Clll9l8 by means of fellowships
of advanced study (e.g. University of
888istantships and/ « independently '
Paris, Ecole Pratique d ... Haut.es Eli. . ..
.
.
·
Eli6ibi.lity ~ appllca.toon ~udes, Institut d'Etudes Politiques)
and take « audit courses, (b) enroll
duntl. At the time of their psrticopain special seminars of interest to -tbe
I!OJt, students ~Y must be fullgroup as a wbole organized by tbe
~ ~ candidates at a SUNY
Prognom uoder bne or several leading
uruveo:sity center wbo have completed
scholars writers and critics (e.g Mitheir Ph.D. · COUI)Ie' work. Students
cbel Fo;u:ault, Roland Ba:rtbes,. Mifram eny disciPline are eligible as
cbel Deguy Michel Serres, Gilles Deiool as their PIOif8lll al study iii aple~. Jean'-Pierre Riclw'd) , (c) atproved by ~ ~espective departtend special colloquia on topics of
menl&amp;. Applocatoon may be made
interest to tbe group of students par~ tbe Of6c:e o1. Ovenoeas Acaticipating in a given year, and (d)
~ Ptocz:ams, Cowocii on Inteme.take a tutorial with a French col1ional Studies, 107 T....-.d Hall,
Jesgue competent 'in tbe aree tbat· inSUNY/Bulfalo, ('716) 831~7. An
terests them, meeting with him reguin~tal ~or doe
larly to discuss their re8earch and
Program b8s .been
·
under
have their writing examined and evaltbe Council on Intematiimal Bfudies.
uated.
'lbe standanl application fomo should
F&lt;Jeiliti.es twtJilable. A seminar room
be a~nied by a slalement of
and reading room are available at tbe
research ob~ ~a copy ol.
SUNY building. 1 Place de l'Odeon,
tbe P~ for preliminary examtogether with e. small administrative
inations or tbe ciiasertaticou, wilh an
office. A larger lecture room is availindication of: (1) leagtb ol. time to
able when needed for colloquia and
be spent in Paris, (2) omnber of credlarger ~ Some practical help
it bows per' semester, (3) names of
is olfered for finding lodging, oblainfarultn•dvisors, (4) date Ph.D. exing uoivenrity resta11J'81it tickets .and
peeled, (5) type ot support espeoted
..u- student advantsg,..; and instruc- for travel and living 0&lt;8s. 'lbe"normal
tiona! and research funds are prodeadline date for applr·in4 is Mll!'ch
vided for direct costs such as photo15, 1974; however, applications will be
copying, microfilming, ollice ~
accepted beyOnd that date uotil all
mont, and for registration at academic
piaals are 6lled.
institutions. .
.
Re.ident R-=11 Advw.-. Professor Eugenio Donato of the Program
In a letter from Or. Adeline Levine, chair·
in Comparative Literature at SUNYI
man, Department of SociokliY~ in the•
BuJralo has been assigned to Paris in
Marc/i
14- issue of the ll!opooUr, • typo:_
1973-1974 to plan for doe general and
graphical error placed the membership of
individual instnx:tiooal and researcb
The
American
Sociolosical Association at
needS •of tbe students. [)ep8rimentsJ
123,000. Tl)e sentence should ha"" read:
advisors send doesiers along with in"Of
the
nea~y
13.000 members of the
structions for eado PhD. candidate's
Amoriaon Sociolosical Association In 1970
J&gt;I'OiraDO of atudy and remain in con-·
•
•
there
were
probably no 1110111 then
tact with tbe student directly and/ or
150 or 1.2'll&gt; who ...,,. black."
;
through tbe resident """""""' advisor.

-,.---.-C0RIIECTl0ft-----.---

�5
GradGrou~

} Collfinloaf/roM- 1, col. I)
minda awiJable to drart ila future..
In thiB . the padaale group will
be
.......,n. '-':bing, . .
...m and public ..vice, in .....w.
, _ mlz its .......... deem~
ate, within the available matriJt ol
instruments of 8CIIdemic 1ICXOUJitahility and ao:epled University gosla."

expected-...

a-

~

'

The Graduate 8c:bool projects aeveral benefits ol the amoept:
1'Arlvantqes 1D ~to ollllll:h
groupe are that.,.._ ............S the
group
beca- ol group status
are added ptopoi tiuoalely to the el.feetive n!IIOI1I'DOII ol the ~
The department, tluuuP ito membem
within the group&amp;, m-Iens the of its acijvitiea, bemefits from siUdents
attracted· dif[....,tially to the group,
rosy find new directions for ilaiilf. At
the same time, the illilleqndaate . .
spoosibilities ol the ciepartmenLari!
undisturbed by the paup . .octivi"Advantqes I&lt;&gt; the University are
that a degree of orpnizatiuoal llexibility is gained with minimal !lisrup. •
tion of existing pattems, the .widely
agreed need I&lt;&gt; atlend;wilh _,.,....,
ol the best -'emil: atandanls and
adherence I&lt;&gt; University aoals, to problema ol societal importrurce DIII,V be
· met.
"Advantsses lo the faculty are that,
for those inlerested in adcl.-ing complex problema with the oollaboratillll
of colleagws from other discipline&amp;,
an. orpnizational identity is easily
provided, and because it is easily p!Ovided """l be as easily dissolwid. Tbe
opportunity .f or faculty I&lt;&gt; IDIIYe easily
from fundaments! scbolslship 1&lt;&gt; interdisciplinary applications is en-

=

-____
---tropical-··

Africanists in Addis Ababa

Al!-w lila 2111-.;,. _....,. . . TNnl lorar alia II Can.. ~ In - . Ellilo!M. ohaltly

~ .... feoolllllty .. .........,.... ...........

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

tlllplaNd

..........

Dr.-.-_ ... Dr.
..--..-..-(-).---Dr.
Dr. onrolliiW-8,1100.. tunnoll " - - U/8 ef An" " - " - CliMiea ·(rllht) «;;eudo E. .......
Mllutlollllt,.,._ ..... ~ .. - - . . ..
........... e f - I~.- In A1ijQ,

..,

--llnb-U/II_African_ef

at Ilia~ .. Ohio,

.-wily,-..,
... - - oubcluod Lionl&lt;upot
.. Judolt
_ , ... 1961-

More Dental Clinics for

u·s Schools.Urged

Among the population at large, senvalue of their ·experieDees in the denTbe survey of· student reaction to
era! neglect of teeth and oral disease
ts! clinic.· Many of them staled that
.are increasing rather than decreasing.
~~fd::i'.tslr'b:db..J~onv;!;r:,:
they definitely felt !hat they have beAnd evidence is that it is unrealistic
each at the c:am
clinic. ~
~ more conscious of their dents!
!&lt;&gt;.expect that dental .lzealmeot.aloae
they repeived, :fu"'ded orientation ,tO.
liealth. They ssid that they brush their
dlln :'&lt;llllttrol:.~ental .decay. •l.larious
preventive dentistry, radiographs, diteeth less often (sometimes once per
ro~&gt;of dental health education along
agnosis, prophylaxis, topical fluoride _
day inslead of three times). but they
with counseling must be provided.
application, and individualized consuldo it more carefully and properly with
•'1'11eae·are•11111011g previowneeearch
tation 011 '!home care and diet."
r•
1iiidingll •hieb· foutc .(;J j,B · neu~.l
:..~~~~y~~
•Without 1liUcb •qualificalion. h'tu·
Sd1il61 1'facQit)' 'cl.t!o • a •.....ent. artiCle
oboe-a-day emphasis in brushing I&lt;&gt;
dents indicaled appreciation for the
deliCnbing stUderi(~GalJOn''l&gt;r -~ · !ei'Yioes oft:lhe Jl:!inic! ·~y felt the
include flossing for the first time.~
University's dents! health service ·and · amount of time they' hid 10 spend
For calleges" wbich"·do ·'flat- have
dents! schools, ·the a ·u~bo· rs"paint
arguing for similar operatious at other
there was "just righ.t " and indicaled
out, "much of the service thai recolleges.
.
a preference for obtaining preventive
ceived high praise was performed at
Authors of the article, appearing in
dentistry information on an individual .
a technical level more associsled with
the December 1973 issue of the Jourbasis.
the role of a dents! hygienist than a
nal &lt;1{ tlu! American CoUege Healih
The dental service identified as
Association, are Drs:.Cbarles M . Ga'v·
dentist.
•'tDost belpful"was the opportunity 1&lt;&gt;
"The dentist in charge at Buffalo
erick, aSsociale profesaor, behaVioral
have a tslk (consultation) with a .
was a part-time practitioner. With
and relaled sciences; John ·J . Bonghi,
dents! student.
·
· •
funds available for a part-time dendirecl&lt;&gt;r, Student Oral Health Cenler,
Ninety-seven per cent of those surtist and several dents! hygienists, colveyed indicaled that, as a result of - .
University Health Service; Grant T .
leges without aental schools should be
Phipps, chairman and professor, betheir experience at the clinic, there
able 1&lt;&gt; serve students in similar fashhavioral and relaled sciences; and G. . bas been a change of daily habits I&lt;&gt;
ion. Colleges •that possess prognims in
Donald Bissell, associale profesaor, beimprove health. Ninety-nine per cent
dentistry andj or dents! hygiene have
havioral and relaled sciences, and denwould recommend · their friends I&lt;&gt;
additional opportunities in that they
tal direcl&lt;&gt;r, Erie County Department
come I&lt;&gt; the clinic.
can use student health cenlers as labof Public Health.
Tbe authors report further that:
orat&lt;&gt;ries for leaching how I&lt;&gt; promole
The four contend that student health
"Tbe patients added comments to
preventive dental bea.ltb."
.service activities serve as an imJ»rthe questionnaire that emphasized the
tant part or a college's educational
pfogram, in Ierma of providing .education in preventive health.
. However, they nole, only 13 of some
2,500 institutions of higher education
and minority per.;ons would lead to
in the U. S. have been. identified- as
Campus monitoring of individual
the development of such documents
having dents! brialth l!rograms. Nearappointments bas been called for by
as: 1) letlers of inquiry and announcely all the~ wlrl_cb d exist are
SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer as
relaled I&lt;&gt; di!Dtals sclioo!S;f but only
ment 1&lt;&gt; graduate schools, placement
"the most efl'eeti9e single slep we can
offices, professional associations, miabout one-fourth of air dental scliools
undertake" to provide - a mechanism
nority groups, women's groups, and
are involved.
1&lt;&gt; assure that all OIJ!lll positions are
the like; 2) advertisements in profes"As compared I&lt;&gt; many other areas
filled on an "equal opportunity'' basis
sional journals, newspapers and miof health, dental disease is wideand to build that opportunity in!&lt;&gt;
nority papers; 3 f letlers I&lt;&gt; specific
spread;' the authors report But it "is
"all our attitudes and procedures."
individuals referred by any source or
subject I&lt;&gt; educational influences that
~~~en~
Kefr~
received by the University from those
can produce ~ts rather quickly.
individuals; 4) records of inlerviews
"As research at Alabama with nun;.
from Boyer I&lt;&gt; all local Vice presidents
(or invitations to interviews) with miing students bas demonstraled," they
with emphasis on "the docUmentation
nority persons and women; 6) letters
indicate, "Students who are responcalled for . . . , including declinations
offering positions I&lt;&gt; minority persons
sible fO&lt; their own dents! care can be
or women; 6) expression of ''no in~w:.,:tat,~~~~
ezPected I&lt;&gt; have grealer need for denterest" from minority persons or womts! care (in lenns of health•statusJ .
file in the appropriate:unit." U /B had
upon time of graduation than upon
already instituted. similar procedures. - en in response I&lt;&gt; inquiries, adve&lt;tisements, invitations lo interviews, inte.time of entry in!&lt;&gt; scboQI.
• .
According to Boye&lt;, the monitoring
views, and invitations to accept a po"College ollicia1s and students , who
syslem would approve filling- an open
are oonaideriog plans foc·student densition;
7 ) sound evidenoe that the
post only wben the·· proeedureo had
background or qualifications .of mits! health services might review data
involved an exle!isive search leading
~ persons and women who were
... that seein· overwhelmingly to favor
I&lt;&gt; either the hiring of a· minority perconsidered was inadequale, including,
the provision of organized dents! ser- ·
son or a wpman from the ''most qualibut not limiled I&lt;&gt;, such factors as
vices I&lt;&gt; foster regular and maintefied" group, or the developing of clear
lack of degrees demonstraled to be
nance ·care for college students. Also,
docwnentetion of -employment of the
required, lack of aperleoce demon·
some review might be made of reports
inost qualified person, regsrd1ess of
straled I&lt;&gt; be requi1ed, lack.or special
from Finlandr Demand for dents! r;.errace or sex.
training as documenled to be required;
vices are ei.tensive among college stu''While it is unlikely that esdi unan&lt;l 8 ) 90Wid evidence lhat the apdents ( there.). . . . Dental care for
successful search would yield the
. -pointee lield a background, training,
these students . . . accounts for 45
same documentation of effort," Boyer
and potential which. on au,tbe availper cent of the rots! expense of their
aaid, "it seems appropriale I&lt;&gt; expect
Student Health Foundation,"
able evidence, promises a performance
that active endeavors to find wom.en

hanced.

" Advantages to students are the op.
portunity I&lt;&gt; d e v e I o p disciplinary
depth at the ssme time they aoquire
interdisciplinary altitudes and experi-•1
ence in group activity which may JOe)l
increase their optioos after the d&amp;-

~ evaluation

and review Process
will be oooducted at yearly intervals,
lo consider eadl in
faculty ; student participation
and re&amp;C&gt;I;iou; """"""" in atlractint sternal funding; progress in answering
questious ~ for study; and r;uo.
cess ·in adding new dimensions I&lt;&gt;
graduale education.
.
Tbe prospectus for graduale ~
Dean .Hull ssid, bas been endorsed by
the Divisional Committees and the
Executive Commitlee of the Graduale
School and approved fO&lt; implementation by the President's Cabinet. Hull
also reported that "the concept luis
been discussed in the Academic Affairs
Council, wilh chairmen of graduale
departments, the Graduale Student
Associstion and infbrmally with many
others on campus. So far there is a
general endorsement. . . ."
Tbe trial period now ~g will,
Hull ssid, delermine whether the idea
will work in practice and can be socorded support on a continuing basis."

_-of,_

Boyer Asks Monitoring of Appointments ·

!Js

•

:I

- ·l-:"J·i

,.,, 1

superior to the oth« IIP,Plicanls COD. sidered !O&lt; the position.
'"The need for proceduia; or this
nature is ·d escribed in lire University's
Equal Employment Opportunity Plan
in the first three prime directives o{
expanded recruitment, explicit job d&amp;scriptions, and objective appraisal,"
Boye&lt; noled.
It wouJi be highly appropriate,
Boyer aaid, if escb SUNY president
would study .these provisions and
"take necessary steps to insure that
monitoring procedures are iniUeted or
refined."
Ed.D. REGULATIONS
The Doctoral/Divisional CommitiM

or the

Faculty of Educational Studies hal ._.,_
lished a regulation that any Ed.D. who has not completed his degree requirements by April 10, but who anticipates
fulfilling aU requirements in time for June
or September graduation, must lncl~
his intentions. by that date, either to ·his
advisor or to Flon:nce Fradin in the

Provost's Ollice (831·5447).

For June

graduation, dissertations must be received
in final Conn by May 1. For Sepbtl'nber
gn~duation, dissertations inust be received
in llnal form ~ August 15.

�_\

·"~

6

U/BF Thanks €

SILS 'Alternative ·~

For Donations of
··~.......,.. -tati\'1!8 ol corporations joined with U IB Foundatimi
&amp;Dd .student representatives at the Foui&gt;dation's first Annual Corporate Alliance ,
Dinner on Goodyear-10 Tuesday
night.
The dinner, sub-titled "Conversations with the President," was held
by way ol a "thank you" to representatives of the 43 rorporations in
West.em New :York who donated SllS,000 in undesignated f u n d s to the
University, tlUough the Ut B Founda"tion. in 1973.
· Another purpose was to preoenl to
corporate leaders in an informal at-here a basic knowledge of the
University, its goals and needs, in
order to establish a relationship of
continuing financial support.
Alter introductions by Daniel A.
Roblin, Jr., chairman of the UIBF
trustees, President. Robert L Ketter
presented a report on the State of
the University and outlined how last
year's donations were spent: .
A $25,000. "Seed Money" research
grants to University faEUlty members
for varied -projects including work di- ·
reeled speeifically toward problems in
Westem New•York, which include:
the development of a monitoring system for "the City ol BUifalo's program
to reduce urban bligbt; the development of · an effective home-based rehabilitation program for patients with
chronic obstructive lung d~f
particular interest to the Millard Fillmore Hospital; the study or spatial
distribution of crime in Bulialo. •
B. $25,000. Endowment Fund. One
half the annual income will support a
lecture series wbich will bring outstanding individuals to the campus to
speak on topics to enhance the pro·~University officials

"'mmnabmml" wUI

grams.
.
D. $21,000. Undergtaduate ecbols,rshi(lo! for academically qualified or
needy students.
·Uflt Foundation~ indicate lilat tbe financial support provided thi"OIQih private fund-raising
programs is v:ital to the University's

~.~~ ':intf.en~ ~~
guished institutions.
''Tiie financial support proviCied to
Ute University by the State of New
York creates an essential base fof this
aspiration," the Foundation leaders
say. "Yet, public institutions such as
the University at Buffalo are subject
to lhe leveling inlluences of bureaucracy; and the operational standanliza. lion necessary to ISrge, state systems
of higher education is ofren extended
and reflected at budget time in think·
ing that is undifferentiating in the
allocation of ""ources. Additionally,
State tax monies must be div:ided
among many competing priorities. and
thai rompetition is perhaps IIlOte intense today for higher education than
it has been in many years.
''The University at Buffalo must,
therefore, look elsewhere for the criti·
cal marginof financial support it needs
to keep its development within reach
of its aspirations to become preeminent
·
"While attemp!ing to broaden the
base . of private support among all
;constituencies of the University, the
UI B Foundation b8s devoted. particular efforts to corporate giving. Those
efforts will soon be expanded," Foun·
dation spokesmen point oul

Social Foundations Conference
To.Consider Open -Ed Philosophy
Nine educatois and philosophers

lucky ; ' 'Socializotion and Open EducaU niver-

~on ,'' K a thryn ~..O.!J:JU.!~ ,~n_.
~aty:._ •• .. •
, ,1 \ . . . . ., , , •
'

from across the nation will be featured at a conference on .. :.,'T,ba l'hi· losophy of Open Education" to
held on campus Friday and Saturday,

S..IO p.m ., "Authority and Responsibility : The Role and Functions of the

Education: Search For a New Myth,"
David E. Denton, Univenity of Ken-

Structure to Freedom," Muxine Greene,
Teachers ColleJ:e, Columbia Univelllity;
"That's ~st Einstein's Opihion : The
Autocr;tcy or Students' Reasons in Open
Edumtion." Hu~!h G. Petrie, University
o r Illinois.
Saturda y. March 30-10 a.m. - noon,
''Open Educat ion and John Dewey," Joseph Fea thert5tone, Harvard University;
" Subject Mat1er Knowledl!e as a M eans
to Openness and Free Choice," D. Bob
Gowin . Cornell University.
1: 30-3 :30 p.m., " Freedom nnd Desire
in the Summe rhill Philosophy or Education: · Leona rd Waks, Temple University;
''Au1onomy and Control : Toward a Theory or Legitimn.te' Influence," Kenneth
StrikE'. Cornell Unive~ity .

oo

March 29-30, under sponsorship of
the Department or Social, Philosoph:
icai !IDd H;storical Foundations of the
Faculty of Educational Studies.
Conference coordinator Dr. David
A. Nyberg, assistant professor of ed·
ucation, sees the conference as being
of interest to both campus and community, and all conference presentations will be open to the public. All
events will be held in 147 Diefendorf.
Papers presented at the conference
will be included in a book of essays
on the philosophy of open education
being edited by Dr. Nyberg.
The conference program:
Friday, March 29-3-5 p.m., .. Open

r~~~~m::lt,

&amp;r:!n Et1~f:e':i~;~ ·~Fro~

0

UGL Has 6,000 Gifts, Needs More
. The Undergraduate Library CUGLJ
has received almost 6,000 gift volumes
during the past year but still needs
"practically everything-monographs,
paJler\!acks, textbooks," Y o r a m B.
Szekely, undergraduate librarian, reports.
"Of special importance," Szekely
• says, "are back files or periodicals in
all fields of the humanities IUld social
sciences whicb would be of use to
undergraduates." All gifts to the UGL
are tax deductible, be notes, and UGI:;
- will pick up materials from any of
the. University's campuses. Questions
should be directed ·t o Szekely at 8313414.
.
.
'
The UGL, located in Diefendorf
Armex, bas been in operation for two ·

~~S7.!e~in~l:t;~~a,:~tyse~ .

v:ices.
''While not large, the UGL has comlorbble furniture, good lighting and
a cheerful atmosphere, and is already
used heavilf:.!'y students," he notes.

~:'teriais :d ~riam:!ly ':S:!:

However we also have a good reference coliection- containing many of
the ba.sie indexes and bibliO!p""phies

be

a. tbeall ol

ffllbllatlls foiJGr.
.....,,Apolll:
':8 e z io m Ia ChildND'o M.dtlials."
Media udlllm ~ Caoltena&lt;e
n-u., N..-. 10 .....- - .

lbe.....S-.I~Weelto

fessianal ~t olllludollta; tbe
other half will be Ul8d at the diac:retion ol the Pnaldeat.
C. $50,000. Universlt,y aupport PIO'

in the humanities and social sciences,
and reference librarians are available
from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
"We would like to see increased stodent use o£ these resources," Szekely
says, and would appmciate it if faculty
would publicize them to students.

be held April 1-6 by lbe Sdloal ol
IDfonMtbl and L fb r a r y 8ludiaa
(81LS)_

will IIUIIjlaMI ft!lll)ar . . _ .. students and faculty am . - t with pmctitloners from the 6eld to diaouE top.
ics of current interest in llbr!uY atuaies. Acconling to lleaD GeOr.., 8.
Bobinsld, "We bope to open channels
of communication ' * - theory 81111
prac:lia!. 1lte theme ol lnterrobang
&lt;the combination ol queations and ezclamations) accents 1he inquiry and
discovely that will characterize Altemative Week."
•
Scheduled activ:ities will include lectures, 111ms, and presentations on both
the Main StJeet and Amheat campuses, and field trips to a Bnilalo 01inter,
Calpsan Corporati!)p's T~ical Library, and vario1111 libraries in Toronto and Hamilton,- Ontario. A festured
spe8ker will be John A. Humphry,
New York State assistant commissioner or education and state librarian.
Tbe program is supported jointly by
sn.s. the sus Graduate Student Association, and the UIB GradJ.Ulte. StudP.nt A..&lt;sociation in cooperation with·
sn.s Alumni.

a::;:t
~~ ~ ;;_
roct ... L c..-aruty :'f.~.~~;mY."

AleJ&lt; Allaia. ~ ol a.
to
RMd FCJUJldiltian ol tile "'-ic:aa Li·
brary "--atian,- Bidralo Qty Oaoart
Judp ~.. Kaoler. CourtJolm Lonl O'Brian Hall, Ambe..t •
Campua. 8 p.m. .
Tuoodoy, Apoll 2:

"Tho P.-nt and Futwe Status of
Libnuieo in the NatioJ! ...., in N- York
State," .labn A. HlllllPbrY. F8CUlty Oub,
Harriman I:.ibrary, 7:30 p.m.

~ie=
's.,_ lor Today's
Library.~,_ Hoy., Computer Li·
3

.aem-.

brary
Inc., Welleoley. Hills,
· ~- 362 ;.n-;,a p.m.
ThUridlij,~- • ..:)}u:q . , .~·~ !• .,.

.

· "Media Style Llbrary 1tue." DOn Rob-

erts. Hennepan County (Minneo&lt;its) Public Librsry. Conference T'heet..,. Norton,
10 a.m.
..Exclamatiom in Film." James Hol -

brook, Esstmnn Kodak Company. In·
el udes a showing of the 1973 Cleo Awardwinninl;: commercials, Fillmore Room, .
Norton, 1 P.ln!'
"

Student-Community Awards
The Community Advisory Council and the U { B Foundation will
make awards to .five full4ime U/ B undergraduate students. who have
, made an outstanding contribution to the Western New York Community
in the past year.
•
.
A form for nominating sucb individuals appears below and must
be fl!tumed by Anril 5 to Student/ Community Awards, Community
Advisory CounCil, Office of the Vice Pre!jident for University Relations,
State University of New York at Buffalo, 186 Hayes Hall, Bulialo, New
York 14214:
.
'
The Awards will COilSlSl'' o( $100 worth of books, to be dedicated
in the names of the.recipientS to the University Libraries, a plaque Slld:." "
cash awards of $25 each.
A Panel composed of stu&lt;jents, University ~taf!.-""d community
peop)e will judge the nominees. Tbe Awards will be.fllll!le a,t-a reoeptlon
given by the Comm~t~ A,~-;iaory ~ .oq
· 25, 1974.
NOMINATiON "FORM-for awards to U/ B full-time undergraduate
stodenls who have made outstanding contributions to the Western New York community.

-Name of Nominee
Address .

.....

........... Phone ................. .

I.

What is tile nature of the contribution?

2.

How is tbis person .involved?

3.

W~y is this involvement and/or contnbutlon important?

4.

How mucb time during the current academic year has this person
contributed?

5.

Why is this perscin especially deseryi;,g

6.

What other activities, involvements or responsibilities does this ~
person hav~?

7.

Can vou suggest someone who would also want to nominate this
!,ndiv:idual?

•

Robbery Arrest
Buffalo police have arrested a man
and charged him with first degree robbery in connection with an incident
at the Governors Residence Hal Is,
Monday, March 4.
Arrested on a warrant at his home
address was Keith M. Anden;on, 21,
of -157 Winslow Slreet. He was
charged with armed robbery.
· Arresting officers were Detectives
Michael Guadagno and John Murchison.- of the Buffalo City Police Robbery Squad. UI B campus security officers cooperated in tlv.· arrest. Two
other men who were allegedly with
, Mr. Anderson during the March 4
robbery are still at lArge. -A wammt
has been issued for the arrest ol one
or tliem and the other is unknown:
Anderson is a student at the State
University C'..ollege at Buffalo.

.

_ DuriDc Altemaliw Week, 8 I LS

:

~

'

(".l,.i't

or;-:~ ..:ecogi:/l;.,.:? ~

"

Your Name •..·.................................• ............... 7

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

Phone ....................

Address .................. ......:.. ,.............................. :.

. ,
Return to:

\...By:

Student/Community Awards
Community Advisory Council
186 Hayes Hall 1
SUNY at Buffalo, Main Street, Buffalo 14214
April 5, 1974

�~.

- ..., ...'iW4
o.p., i . 9

JUIL No .................

cau.a m•••

Cllllllifuml A

".,~~~::"a!':::"'ll.:

-·
u~_-ltidp
Ia.
41. 1:80
.... ~
will be ....a .,... doe looclure.
•

~~·....._.Axle­

-·

md,.4288

Rid.. ~ -

12,' 7 p.m.

For EXIfJlltl&gt;k (Arakawa), 147 DiefeD.
dolf, 7 p.m. lio ......,_ cloarp.

-----

. -'=~f:'s!~: ~;-~~

=-~ROc!;,';b;Q.;::::mptf.:'.t;

~:-.!1-:.:r.-12~~

ta.

~by

tbe Deparlment of Music.

~ LINIIN LICIWI/DIICUSIION•

.

~~~~oi!"C·~:

cou.ooun••

NAaiNOTON LIC"RMM•

Bioc/oemi&lt;ol Gild Gelulic Aopeeto of
Hunum Dioeaoa of l'ouine Metaboliom:
App/U:ation ID Leoch-NyiKm Syndrome.
Dr. J. Edwin Soepniller, Scbool of Medicine,. Univenity of Cali!omia at San
Dieco. 189 Capen, 4 p.m. Co«eo at 3: 30
p.m.

Preoentecl by tbe Departmeot of Biocbemiotry.

.

a.Ass•

SIIS ALtHNATIVI WE1K1 liMINAl•

FilMS'

UUid IHTEINATIONA1 FILM FESTIVAl..

TUESDAY-2
MONDAY-1
..... .., l ,l()d

POSTII

Tht CJauclt Davie Danct Company,
Carle Gym. 7 p.m.

Sombiz4nl/a (Maldoror, 1972, Angole).
Conference Theatre, Norton, cbeck showcase for times. Admi.aaion charge.

o_Jf

-

An·TOPIY- MASTH

Alex Allain. president, ~m to R8a4
F~tion of the American Library
Auociation, aad Bulfalo City Court
Judp Tbeodore Kaaler, O'Brian Hall
Moot Court; Ambent, 8-10 p.m.
Alternative Week: ia supported jointly
by· tbe School of Information and Library Studio~! and tbe Graduate Studeot
!J':i~ration with the SILS

1'

Dr. .lo/ua Sinfelt.r. of tbe -

aad EnP-rinc U&gt;., Linden, N.J., will
~ Oil "Catalyoio by MetU." 8112
A~4p.m.

U/B Newman Ceotor, Main .St..
81111 Niapra Falla BIW.., 8 p.m. • .
Recent Supreme Court Deci6iom on

.; &gt;

CHIMICAL INGIIBI:IIJO IIMINM.

blar7,

0/&gt;ocenity Gild Por7UJ1mphy lmd the ·Ef·
feet on the Community Gild the Lib~.

•

To\c CltKell Dauio l&gt;&lt;alt« Co..,..,.y
( m u - ) , brina your ...... ~t,
Baird R.atal Hall. • p.m.

Pro/. E . Mwtk.rtia. Comell University, will lecture on a topic to be anllOUD&lt;ed, 6 Acto.on, 4 p.m.

Sa-t, 7:80
p.m.
- 1164 Pnllldin
WOIIIws-·

SUNDAY-31

-----·

To\c Cit••" Dauio l&gt;&lt;alt« Company,
---~--·
am- Hall Lomop. A8lbant, 4 p.m.

American in Pari6, 7 p.m. C4bin in tJu
Sky, 9 p.m. Both fiJmo will be abown in
140 Capen, and are free.
PSYCHOMAT•

A liotening and learning ""'&gt;Irience,
. 282 Norton, 7-10 p.m.
SILS ALTUNAnVE WEB: l.ECTUII•

·Computtrized Syetem.1 for TodaY• Library. Thomas Hoy, Computer Library
Services, Inc., WeUesley Hilla, Mus.,
362 Acbeoon, 8-10 p.m.
Mr. Hoy will discuss methodo to computerize ca.roulation, book processing, film
bookings. accounting aad budgeting.
UUAI INTHNATION.U filM RmVAt••

llhunin4tion (Zanuui, 1972, Poland) ,
Conference Theatre, Norton, cbeck: show·
cue for times. Admission charge.
Co-spoD!IOred by the Office of Cultural

INTERVIEWS

~-

interviowo
will be
......,,.
'l'broulbout
tbe....mct.d
- ·For
whO are intenot.d in a~ padllate

:::*w::....~

.=..:
..":;
eou-

interviowo can be ..,_,_
~t IIJid

Unioenity

tluaalh tbe

Gald-

-=..c~~Cbe83;!~::;

week:
.
THU118DAY-28: Comptek -..:h.
Inc.; tfew York State ~ of
Tuation lo Finance; U. 8. Atomic En·
ercY Commiuion; Radio 8back. Inc.

PIIIDAY- 29: Tnovelen Inounmce Co.
KOHDAY-1 : De~t of Health,
Education lo Welfare.
.
~~ :lnc.Bulfalo 8avinP Bank;

In addition to tbe above, tbe Plaoement Office baa announced that the
Teacher Corpo P~ at SUC/Bulfalo
is currenUy recr:uitiJ&gt;«. Final aoo.eptance
for preliminary applications to thia program ia May l. For further infoimation.
cell 862-5013.

NOTICES

Affairs.
COUNSBJNO

j(t

fl~'dll!rialla' Madftai {Ciapra. 1932),

Professional oounseling is available at
Hillel Houoe, 40 Capen BlW.. For an
appointment, call 836-4540.

THURSDAY-4

1 (.,.(\' " I . '

140

SILS .UTEI.NATIVE WEEIC: MEDIA SESSION•

M edio Style Librdry L i/&lt;, Qon Rob\ erla, HennePin .P&gt;~tv (1\.Jinn.) Public
Library, Conference Theatre, Norton. 10
a.m.-noon.

H!ii;!~J!~~:w~~"":rit!

the script for ~ film BlazinB Soddla,
30.l Croeby, 3:30 p.m.
Co-sponsored by tbe Center for Media
Stu&lt;\y and the Department of History.
BIOCHEMISRY SEMINAl#

Clwin Differentiation in Liland Binding by Hemoglobin , Dr. Quentin H . Gibson, profeasor of biochemistry, Cornell
Univenity, 146 Capen, 4 p.m. Coffee at
,3:30 p.m.

.......,

FILMS•

Spain's Arrabal
To.· Speak Tuesday
Spani!oh P'......,.;""t Fernando Arrabal will ~ an open discus'aioa OD tbealn! and . film at 3 p.m.,
'l'ueodey, &gt;\prj~ 2, in die Faculty Club.
Arrabal lias -., ...mting for the
ct-lre and 111m ioiuoe 1950, and is
the aulbar'_Gf:tqbt vol~ dl coiJect.
ed playa iDI:l'Jdinf The AulOmobile
GraDeyon~,
and The Tri,.
cyde. In 1982 be fOUDded a dramatic
lalown as "'1'-tn. Pan~" and In 1968 be bel!an a nMJB
billed •t..e TbMtze." His 4lms iDclude
a -.loa Gf hia play FtllllW el Li6
and Viualta Muem (1971). ·
A CDDinMD8ial filum~·
. and
Fnmce, Arrabal lao
·
an open
1 - to Fru&gt;co (1 1) and a number
. ol .......... about the tbealn!.

SILS AlTEtNATM WE£K: MEDIA SESSION•

~unity, COnference Theatre, Norton,

P.-ent,ed by tbe UUAB Literary ArtB
Committee.
.

FILMS• \

Sing in' U. the .Roin (Donen aad Kelly,
1961), aad 1 b or to: Steomboot Willie
(Disney), Su!eto.n ·Dance, The &amp;nd
Conurt, aad Pow-Wow, 140 Capen, 9
P.JU. No ' admiaoion cbarp.

WEDNESDAY- 3 .

tlie oollabozation ol the I:loopartalents
ol Enc~ llalian and Port~ ~ lbe OouDcil ...

An·TOI'SY- ucn./IIIMONSTIAnoN•

The Chuclt Davie Donee Company.
dancers and dl'UIIUDOn, Beird ·Hall. 3
p.m.

DIEMI!NC\' AID fEEDED
The Communltr Action eo,.. ...-. a n - Nil- for clollciNII'I doth·
Inc to aid a 8ullalo f8mlly home
_..,...,by tiN. Ckolhllll Is for three boys, 3 and 5. and for
sorts, s, 10, and 11. Clollllnc should
be brou8ht to Women's Studleo Collele,
108 Wlnopeor A..nue.

.

.

lCONOMICS - ·
olily~~~;·~

:t!:dfi~~a:Snds!Je~f~~=~

R~n; !?e~nisl~ ~:~kshop

suppers, and for Passover box lunches.
Student. may abo arrange home hospitality for the Seder in local bomeo.
For 'those who wish to conduct their
own Seder. Hill~ will bold an · informa·

ART-TOPSY- iMMONSTaATION/ RAP SESSION•

:lo.:' f~~~- the

on motion
and still photorrraphy equipment and
techniques . 1973 Cleo Awa rd-winning
commercials will be included in the pre·
sentation..
The Chuck Davi s Dance Company.
Haas Lounge, Norton, 3 p.m.
&amp;MAGES &amp; COMMENT: LECTUU•

Film ecbolar Jan Barna will discusS
Sergei Eisenstein, 3323 Bailey Ave., 8

A listening and learning experience,
232 Norton, 3-6 p.m.

poetry conteet wliicb extended into the

by~~~~'=

Exclamations in Film , James Hol brook. Eastman Kodak Co .• Fillmore

SILS AlTDHATIVE WHIC:: ~·

Aft·TOPSY - UUAS POmY AWARDS•

ficen and .members on Saturday. March
noon..S p.m.

Hllia PASSOVU'
,
Soudenta are urged to make theit'l'assover reservation now at the Hillel table
in Norton, or at Hillel Houee, 40 Capen

p.m.
S~~red by the Center for Media

Second AltiUUll Winne"' Poetry Readin8, featurinc the winners of this year•a

a,..,.,.,...,

·

waga, will be open to CSEA Chapter of.

·ao. from

Menilmonttmt (Kinanov, 1925). 7 p.m.
Mem.orie• of Underdeveloprrnmt (Alea),
9 p.m. Both fiJmo will be shown in 147
Dielendor(.. No admiaa.ion charge.
The. Pruent and Future Status of · Li·
' brari.e• in the Nat.U:m.Amd in New York
Swu, Jobn A. Humpbzy, asoistant commia&amp;ioner of education and state librar·
ian, Faculty Club, Harriman' Library,
7 : 30 p.m.

.

l~"':.~~~~#~a:::

AIT-TOI'SY:.:.."'MASJU. Q.ASS•

The Chuck Davis Dance Company;
Black Dance Worksbop, 11 E. Utica, 11
a.m.
IMAGES &amp; COMMINT: LECTUIE•

CSEA OPIN MOU5I.

PSYdtOMAT•

.

CAC nLM••

I Neuer Sang for My Fother, 140 Capen. 7 &amp; 9 p.m. Admission: 75 cents.

A.IT~TOPSY- LECTUI:E/DEMONmATION•

~=nC!dc:=~.~rri~~r!i
Center, S50 Masten Ave., 8 p.m.

UUAI INT'EIHAnONAL filM RmVAt••

The Adveraary (Ray, 1971, India) ,
Conferimoe Theatre, Norton, check showcue for t.i.mea. Admission charge.

:~ ~;;illel H~:e~fi&amp;?u.~· H~f~
0

proper prepara·

SUMMEI SESSIONS IIGISTUT10N

The Office of Admissiono aad Recorda
will conduct Summer Se.iona regiatra. tion beginninc Monday, April 16. All
sludents C!UTODUY registered at tbe University need on1y complete a Coune Request Form. All new atudenta will have
to complete-a Student Data Form, wbidl
will be available at tbe Office on April 16.
Tentative Summer Seoaiono reciotra·
tion boun at tbe Office (Hayee Annex B)
are 8:30 a.m.-8: 30 p.m. on tbe followinc
datee:
April 15-18, 22-26, 29, 30; May 1. 2,
6-9, 13-16, 20-22, 28-31; June 3-7, 11. 12,
18, 19. 24-28: July 1-li (Oooed July 4),
9-12, 15-19, 22-26, 30, 31; and A~ 1.
3, 6, 7, 13, 14, 20-28.
·USED IOOIC SAil.

The 20th Annual Uoed Book Sale,

~"ri'C: b~:!:,;~t'!':o Jrm:tm.'!l;

Women, will be bold Monday, Ap~

AIT·TOHY- THiA.TitE PIISENTATtoN•

GWen.: No Bread. G1l Encounter and
Dinner for Fifteen, written and directed
by Morton Lichter, Harriman Theatre

~t.~"f!t!'O::a~~rilan~ ~l'!.k.

downtown Buffalo.

in
Sale boun ate 10

charge.

~~-g; ::.'!.~y~.:\f!.;t;i::;;:

P.-ntecl bY. tbe Department or Theatre, tbe Center for Theatre Researeb
aad tbe Bulfalo Project.

::::: :~~J..;p~~u~~OO:::

~ss=:.J:.:;:- "'~m~~sion

EXHIBITS

In addition to tbe .more than 160,000

Braves. ao well aa cloaateil worb fn&gt;m
local authors, al'tiota aad c r a f l'loceedo will benellt American IIJid
foreign ....,.,_ oludenta, and will aJoo .
fund community projocta.
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE
For everyone's convenience and pleasure,

3:45 ~oe in 808 O'Brian at 8:16
p.iD.

we like to publicize all events' taking place
on campus. To record Information, contact
Nancy Cardarelli, ext. 2228. by Monday

tbe~ta~ot"CC::.!'~Y~

Thursday issue.

=~-~J....~"t
tory.

at noon for Inclusion in the following
·

�8

CONFEIENCE: THE PHBDSOPHY Of
- Of'fN EDUCATION•

Authority and Rupo1a..ibwty: Th~ Rok
and FwrclioM of the Teat:her in Open
Educotio11, R . D . Archambault. Brown
Univeraity; From Stnu:twe to Freedom,
Muine GrNne, Teacbero Collot:e, Columbia, and Thal.'• .hut Eiutein'• 9JJin·
--ion: The Autocracy of Stud~nt•' Rea.om
in Open Education, Hugb G . Petrie, Uni·
\&lt;"ersity of DJinois, 147 Dfefendorf.. ~10
P.m.

.......

Unless-- -.

- Moobe-ben Aki~ Ma.acbu...Uo lnati·
tute of Teclmology; Tbomao Golob, Carnegie-M,ellon School of Urban Planning
and Analysis. and W. Recker, aaaociate
profeuor, U/B Department of Civil En·
gineerin&amp;', 108 O'Brian Hall, Ambent.·
10 a.m.-12 : 30 p.m.
-for-

chloiP&gt;c ·-

..... be purdlued at the

- " " !WI Tldoot OllioL
#Open only to • ~ 1 - In the subject
•Open to public
.
••Open to
of the UnNerlll)l
ContKt IUncy CUdluelli, 831-2228, for -.p.

.THURSDAY- 28
Stati•tic. in Phy.ic., Prof. George Bar-

. narcf., University of Eaex and University

of Waterloo, 4230 Ridp Lea! Rm. A_.9,

10: 30 a.m. Refreshments at 10 a.m.
Preoented by the Statistical Science
Division. Department of Computer SciLAW~·

~lh A . Moody, pro!e!IOOr of law,
Cleveland State University, will discuss
her wor~ in the area of women's legal
r:igbta, 106 O'Brian Hall, Ambent. 11 : 30

a.m.

Ms. Moody was winnin&amp; coun9el in the
recent La Fleur case in whkb the U.S.
Supreme Court invalidated the mandatory maternity leave policy of the Clevelan,d School BoaJd.
den~s!~.':.a":.J.::"nted by the Stu-

v

Maoon, Western Michigan University,
4~ Ridge
Rm. 'rl, 10:30_ a.m.

r-

.....-s

. STATISJ1CA&amp;. KIENCE COUOOIIIWI•

INDUSTaW. fNGINfftiNG SEMINAl#

~Y~"j;~"P:':k:';).~ A.M~!:;!
SOCIOlOGY I.ICTU6•

FACUlTY COUOQUI\IM•
Th~ C~Llun o/ Estr'Gil4tement:
lemic on Po.t-Modemi.am and th~

A PgNarra;
tiue ArJ•, . Alan Spiegel, U/B a.Saistant
pro!eaor ol Engliab. Faculty Cub Red
Room, Harriman Libntry,.a p.m.
~ P~t~ by the l&gt;epartme'nt of English.
P'HYSICALOIGANIC atEMISTIY IECtUH#

,

Studiu in Stereocherniatry, Prof. Kurt
Mislow, Princeton Univei'Sity, 322 Acheson, 8 p.m.
The lecture aeries is paJ:t of the Conversations in the Disciplines supported
by ·the U/B Foundation and administered by the Office of the Vice .President
for Academic Affairs wit,b" the aid of the
- Graduate Scbool

.,_

al~;;://:f"'~e-:,.:;.:n~..::::,';"

4224 Ridga _!.aa. Rm. "47, 1:30 P-!1'- ·.
ENGliSH GIADUAft ITUDINT COLLOCWIUM•

CONIH!NCf, THE F'ltllOSOf'IIY · Of
OPEN EDUCATION•

' .

Open Edut:ation: Search for a New

NOF£SSIONA1 nAff SfNA.TI MII11NO..

PSYCHOIIAT•

UUAI INTEINATIONAI. FilM FlmYAI.• •

A listening and Jeaming experience,
334 Norton. 3-6 p.m.
IICIWE'

...ment.
!t::t~~ ~;~~·~!:t
University of Toronto, 310 Foster,
3: 30 p.m.
Prof. Zelnilin baa co-autho,r ed two
boob: The Souiet Rurol Conuruuoitjl and
Solzhenitoyn: Critit&gt;al and BioKraphit&gt;al

_......

Eacya.

.

'The lecture is preoented by the Department of Germanic and Slavic and
. the Ruooian Club.
~ .

A

~

of French lnduatri-

olimtion, Pro!. Ric:luud Roehl. Depart-

ment of Economics. Univeraity of California at Berkeley, 107 O'Brian Hall,
Amherst. 3: 45p.m. Colfee in 608 O'Brian
at 3:30 p.m.
· Thia .eminar is jointly spouored by
the Departments of Economics and History.

u..--.••

F-.ity Club Dining Room. Harriman
prio~ reaervation.

Li;l!nHY,' 5 p.rn. By
CAC . . . . .

· Enter ./AJM8hing, 140 Capen, 7 &amp; 9 p.m.·

.....

Admiomoo : 75 oenlL
~

Genu;. and Cot&lt;lt-22, 6 ""'-"- 79:30 p.m. No admiooioa ~•

•

~,~~

1

-

•

~

"The Zimbabwe Nationol R h y t h m
Troupe, Baird Recital .Hall, 8:30 p.m.
No admission cba.rge.
Preoented by the U/B Office of Minority Student Aft'ain.
Stale of Siege (Costa Gavras. 1973.
France) . Conference 'Theatre, Norton,
check showcase for times. Ad.mi.asion
charge.

-THEATII NUIHTATION•
The ~·a one-act play written inaida San
tip by Riclt Clucbey, and
· Performed y ex.-&lt;'Onvicta. Fillmore Room.
Norton, 8 :30 P:D'I· AdmiMion : f'tudenta,

$1 ; aD othera.

:f:r!::;c~V:.fs!!i:A:tw~m;!im3'~!

CONCEal•

sity of

SID.te- of S~ge (Costa Gavras; 1973,
France), Conference Theatre, Nortorr.-c-heck -~ ehowcue for times. Admission

marge.

• The Chtu~~~illll Rok of Ethnic Co~UCi·
.....,_., Dr. William J. Wilson, UniverChicaro. associate editor. American Joumol of Sociology and the lnter11Giio1141 Jou.rnol of Contemporary Sociol&lt;&gt;«y, 1.47 Diefendorf, 1:ll0 p..m.

SOCIOlOGY LICYWE*

a:s.A

~red by tbe Canter !or ~edia
liU..a tlf!lllliATiq!IAL FilM I'UTIVAL.&lt;

.QJ..TQPSY

SpeakerS' Bureau. Clark Hall, 8 p.m.
The lecture is open to the public without a dmission charge.

Donie! EU.but. the oentml figure in

_

MANAGEMENT F1LM5••

Genuio and Cctch-%2, 146 ,Diafandorf,
2-4:20 p.m. No admisaion charge. .

be~p~tm!o~,"'t'~~i&lt;=

2. SUNY Senator; S. Constitution Reo.
vision; 4. Pro!..-.onal Development Committee report oa the NTP· evaluation
'survey. 148 Dia!endor!. S p.m.
,
PHILOSOPHY Of 5CilNCE SOCifJY &amp;IC'RIIf•

Popper and I«olity, Pro!. -Mendel
Sachs, U/ B Department of Phyaica and
AatroDOmy, 4244 Ridge
Rm. 14,

3: 30 p.m.

•

r-

,

A ~on a¢ demonstntion o!. •lereoo&lt;:o(nc_perceplion by Alfome Schilling.
3323 Bailey Ave., 8 p.m.
_

Ed Murphy. of Yale .University, will
speak on a topic to be announced, Annex
B, Rm. 2 •. 2 p.m. '

·~n.~enu':.fe~ ~':~~p :fl

.

IMAGES &amp; COMMENT,
LECfUIE/DIMONSTaATION•

~ ..,

lnsideriom and the New Bttu:• Sociology, Dr. William J . Wilaon, University of
_ Chicago, and aaaociate .editor, American

Rdut:at.ion. Ka tbryn Morgan , Boston
University, 147 Diefendorf. 3-5 p.m.
Presented ai part ~of the "Conversations
in the Disciplines" program. the two·
day Conference is sponsored by the So-.
cial Foundations Department. A questiOn-and-answer discussion will follow the
lectures.

PUiliC LKTUI£·

~ecr:~~~; Lough , British instru.
mentalista -oingerw, fin~t ftoor cafeteria,
Norton. 8 le lD P-"': Admisoion charge.

·

~

SATURDAY -30
~ I'MaDSOf'IIY Of
OPEN IDUCATION•

Open_ E&lt;bicatior&amp; and John D.wey, Joeeph Feathentooe. Harvard University.
and Subj«t Matter KnowledNe Cl6' a
Meom to 0 - and Free Choiu, D .
Bob Gowin, Cornell University, l47 Diefendorf, 10 a.m.-noon.
CONfHENCI: 'IHI PtUI.OSOPHY OF
OPIN auc:AfiON•

FrHdom and Dnin in the SummerhiU

~=rJ.:te!t:;:a=:t
~~~
Ooiu.rol: T&lt;&gt;W&lt;Ud a 7'hory .of Lqitimote

ln{llwnce, Kenneth Strike, Comell University, 147 Diefandorf. 1:l!P-3:30 p.m.
CAC

FilM••

Portnoy'• Co..,taint, 140 Capen. 8 &amp;
10 p.m. Adrniosion: 76 .-ta
. _
(Contituud on -

-7, col. 1)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>~74 .

Pay-Increase Enacted; UUP Is 'Not Content'
'The State s..te ~ action
on the
lOt &amp;ate UDi~
~ iliomboia aiid non-~il_ching

tract. To con~ tbe OER ...(Office of
Emt)loyi!!! RelallotiS). tbet you are di&amp;qtiilled with" tobnlsm, \bat a 4% Per

lillllof$8,4:;1;.=·~
law ealiB fw -ttiia-to a ·
·' ted as

-~ ID

pry,.-

m:'t-~ ~f!)_. :1\'lic!rie!d!x
a

•-75 per cent &amp;CIOOII-tbe-Ooard mise,

:/~a~tO~~.:
.... aeward for ~ .moe."
Rai8es ...w be ...uoacti'W! to Septem-

t .

.

[~

cost of living; . . .

t-'- more members) 80 .that
UUP can tell tbe OER that UUP is

·~ • c:hranolacY of !be pay I'JIIIOIIa--• uplalnlna the nolaOER, U..-otty ernployMs
UUP, by two campus UUP

-

amona

' - 1, 1973, for tboae on 1G-monib ap~ the VIewpoints (4).
pointmeOis, 8Dd to July 1, 1973, for
truly .representative of the bergaining
tboae on 12-month appoinlmente. 'The
tmit."
.
appropriation bad already been pa-.1
Dr. Roberi FiAk. delegate to the
by the Aaaimbly. It has been sent to
Aalembly, UUP, and a member
the Governor for aiplature.
UDited Uni~ty Professio.ns ' of the negotiating team three yaus
ago, said, "' ·suspect there are times
estimated that m t.o eight
when we must all be grateful for
will e1apae between the dil.te or
~ favors: ;flad we approached the
the Govi!mor's sienature and the appearanoe ol -this money in paychecks.
A UDivetsity ~ana and aystems
spok......... estimates May 1 at the
earlieat. .
.
Prof. Constantine Yeraauis, president
the Buffalo University Center
chapter of UUP, was· unavailable for
COIDIIIIIIlt,. being away from Buffalo
.
.
this week. He has, however, previno-lv
'The ~ of moving to the Elli~ the inion that uUP~
cott CompleK on the North Campus
not
wi':&amp; this raise, and is
is either a " - t gpportunity, pbys...... _ . _ with the long delay
icslly and aesthetically" or a Pease of
since the BPriDa of·1973. '"The behavior
the St.te administzoaUon in op- • lalli.ezile," de!lendina &lt;in wbetber 0\1
. spa~&lt; to the cbairmaD of the ~
poaing for 80 long, and 80 stubbornly,
Department or the c h a i r m a n of
the """"'rnmvletion of the fact..findFrench, both or wbom ~re notified
ing board Cwhidl UUP 'accepted 10
last .....,),: that their departmenla are
months ago) bas cs.-1 real hum
8IIIOIIJ thoae scheduled
re.Jocste.
and financial loeB to the UDiversity
French Department Cbairmari Jobn
UUP
K. Simon has
. - 1 oppositiail to
vacating Croob~ for interim quarchapter commented on the DOIWS. _Mrs.
te)'ll .in Ellicott ever since the possiEthel E. Schmidt, vice president, rebility was first revealed to him late
sponCling to a question as to whether
in January. 'The grounds for bis opUUP going to use this as a t.sis
~tion 8Dd that
students 8Dd fao.
for a pitch for more members, replied,
ulty in tbe Department
summed
"Yes! We are making a pitch for
up in a petition 118Dt to President Ketbership, and riJhtly 80. WI: IQa) YOU!!
ter ......_ to bis announcement or _..,
NOW, more than ever befor-e,
~
'
.
to support the demands of our
neaotiating team for our second con10 ""Sla;ln&amp;
In that document, the French l)e.
partment listed t8n "compelling acaTWO I'ULL-OUTS ·THIS. WEEK
for staying where it is, .
This lssue of the lllopoiW contains two
including
~tion hardships,
tnsem. A tour-page U/B . - . . )&gt;UII·
concern that the relative iaolation of
out Is Included as part of Section I: Section
Ellicott will haVe a ·._uve effect oo
11 Is a spaclol colenditr and lnlonNtion
Frendl eruollment, particularly lllllOOI!i
piece on the campus-wide Spring Am Fes·
upper-daasmen and paduate Illude&lt;$.
tlvol which runs from Morch 25·1\pril 14.·
and fear that the move will estrange
lndlvidUills Interested In tho orts activities
the department both from adequate limay wish to uve this section for reference
brary reSOW'D08 and from thoae other
after thl! mid-semester break.
Univenity d~ta (English,

s-

......a

tsbll' last year with a greater-member--ship; we m i g li t have anticipated a
somewhat better 'package.' 'The 4uge

mav·gl

fand~s~wbO~do

not
ong to UOP may now 'enjoy'
the benefiiB that UUP'a members were
able to obtain for them through Degotistion. Someday, somebow, the majority many come to ·;~a senses, recognize that we all are represented by
UUP, and provide it the muscle with
wbich to bergain with greater effect."
Mr. James Schwender, treasurer,
said: "Uofortunstely the wbeels of
legislation work as slowly ·as they do,
and unfortunately the lelrislators have
not looked on this as a ruldt priority
item. Wbile it is a substantial improY&amp;ment over what the former governor
recommended, [i.e. an increase from
3.6 to 4.76 per cent) it is roo LlTlU!,
TOO LATE!"

Is ~~ Qpportunity or Exile~

of

·The Ellicott-Bound Differ

con-

or

w

~~~fee~ter

of

mem-

-demic_..

wen.

C&lt;llllparative literature, theatre,· and ut
bistory, in particular) with which the
department bas forged cka. ties.
''In particular,'' the petitioners argued, "the interdisciplinary ties with
comparative literature would be severely weakened, causing a return to
more parochial ~lions of lallgusge
departments as well as - t dissftection among some faculty an9 students
wbo are counting
these programs."
'The administrative argument that
Ellicott Y&lt;IOUid draw aufficieot numbers
of atudent.-residenta to j u s t i f y the
iliOYe was aJao countered. EUicott
"does oot appear that attzactive to
contemporary stud&lt;m1s. ..
'The document suuested as an alternative to a full-acale move that
teaching -w..s in modern JaDsuages
could be provided at Ellicott for thoae
students wbo c:i&gt;c.- to live 'there,
without moving the department's administratiw. olices there. Beginning
langusp ..,..,_ inwlve four or five
~ a ....-, the petitioners remibded, and thus the IIIOWl to Ellicott
will put an 8speciaJ1y beav,y bwden
on laneusae faculty and l!'llduste assistantS, who will Jose a blilf l}ollr MCh
· way in commuting from 1beh' o1ices to
Main Stn!et, where most lower division courses will continue to meet

an

(Continued o n - 2, col. 4)

'The first step toward ,.teN..._.
of a permoDellt Unlveniily CctmmiUae
on Innovation, as II!CDIIIIIII!II b:r the
Collegium in ita final report (see ·Reporter, March 7) was Cllbn at on-.
day's Faculty Senate JMetiD&amp;.
The body directed the Senate ~
utive Commi~ to negotiate the bmal estsblisbment of sud&gt; a committee with the administration: 'The
Executive Committee was further in- '
structed to sulxnit the negotiated plan
l;&gt;a.ck to the full Senate lor 8ppiOV&amp;I.
'The establishment ol a permBIII!IIl
campus committee oo innovation ill
the principal recommendation or the
twelve-page final report or the Senat&amp;appointea Collegium . The report
reached the Senate Boor 'l'l--.,.
without the usual Esecutive Coamlit.tee endol'SeiJH!Ilt alter it was iilqnuperly tabled by the Senate leader&amp; at
their meeting last week
Although the membership and jurisdiction of the proposed committee 8Dd
"the specific form of the adminilltration's commitment to the purposes
thereor• were not speUed out in the
report, the Collegium does direct that
" the composition of the committee
should rellect the primary responsibility of the faculty in the initiation,
development and implementation of
educational programs." Faculty members of the committee are to be chosen
by the Senate.
.The proposed committee is to be of
"entrepreneurisl cbaracter,'' receiving
and actively solicitibg educational
proposals of an experimentsl natUre,
particularly tboee that "would compensate f(!&lt; the lacunae b e - departments and CoUeges." 'The committee would al8o act as advocate for
sucb propooals.and work toward their ·
.......implemeotation by aecuring approval,
funds and facultY.
In introducinl the report to 4he
Senate, CoUegium Secretary Mac
(Conlilwed on -

3, coL I)

PSS Studying
Ranking Process
In an effort to evaluate react:ian9 or
non-teaching profeosional stsft to the
process and outcome of the recent job
evaluation-classification project, the

Profeosional Developmeilt Committee
the Profeosional Stsft Senate this
week is conducting a ~
survey or ~ campus NTPs.
.
The project bas a tildtt timetable,
Ms. Pat CoMud, ..u.tsnt to 1be ~
V06t, Social Sciences and Administration, and cbairpenon or the Profs&amp;.
sional Development Committee, - Sbe ·NTPs to mail· completed
~ before Friday, March
15.
A double-&lt;!nvelope system is being
.-1 to assure coofideotiality or ....,_
sponaes to sud&gt; questions as: "Did
you participate in writing Y,:.,C
deec:riptioo?;" UW ere you
•
with the outoome or your grade 8Dd
ranll:?;" "Are you asliafied -that the
process was clearly ezplained 8Dd Cbat
-the ultimate use was undentlaod?"
Space is also allowed for ......,..J comments concerning the evaluation 8Dd .
for "penionsl complainiB m be bwarded to the President."
'The . survey is an attempt by the
Profeosional Stsft Senate to cletenniDeif there is t.sis in fact for ~
reports of dissatisfaction and monle
problems "'!""'f NTPs broucht oo by
the job evaluation· review Jli'IIC8E.
'The Professional Development Cammittee will draft a repoot, &amp;aaed .., the
survey resuliB and other input, for
preeentetion to the PSS ExecutiW!
Committee and to the full Senate
meeting on Friday, March 29.
'The report, if accepted, will be forwarded to the Presideol

or

NO ISSUE NEXT WEEK
Tho RoporWr will not •be published Mxt
Thursdoy, March 21, beceuso of the
mid-semester break. The next issue will ·
ap-r Thursday, March 28.

�2

Ellicott--·.....
(~,_

~,

.... 6)

::L.--.. ~Lib ..m re:tbe jepulwaad-- . . . . . .

eiiiiY- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..aDd

~ . . . . . . . . . . Main

S1leat CUIJIIII. ......... ....

-

Altbaacb a. llliiiiiCIIl ._ bee n
made, Di. ........ 1111 have
.-iou8 w ..... libaut the . ''I~ ....... ~
"that
the
.
.. . . . '
"tbe
....,..._...] cloee't--lllltUB in.to
~ au,y ol
one
bas had all .........
ie further
~that~- baaa. fortb.
cominc from . . . . . ..... about
mattms the departmllat niPids as
crucial IIUdl aa ~ ol llclequate
libraJ:y aarvicel • Blllaoti aDd pro.

•.,r.-.walila

~fer"ma~-~
on~~ 8iuaa indicaled, the p!lllpCt ol beiDa cut
·off by tbe tram ather -.Ian.

TOTAL UNIVERSITY ·ACADEMIC STAFf .
FACULTY HIRING PATTERNS FROM JAN: 1 TO AUG. 15; 1973° 0

1-

~r/Chltnnen•

Assoc:laie•

~nt· ·

VIIItina

Cllnlall·

(ell

-&gt;

T- •

TOTAL
~ Femole. Femole
8
7
: 1
6
i 10; • .- ~ .-. 1 ' ' 8 '
1 ,·
76
56
20' .. · 53
18" .
18
5
13 5
12 ·19
18
1
•18
0

5

'3

-Am.

11!"'11" unltL I&amp; department, tbe" -

MI~ES

2·

2

2

-

1

Spenloh
femlole : -

o.

·o
·' 2
o
o

o

1

0

-

0

.
-

0

1
1

o
1
o
o

o
-o
0
0
o ·-:o
o - o

0

0

0

2

•....UO.. tl*: .,. at/« CWi leMI toltwlura.
.
••n.. ............ complied ~the Unl~ .t Bufhllo Of6ce of EQNI ~ as the ..-ult of •

0
~

~

- ~ .......
a: -.-:- 1&gt;' ,
0 .
o· · ::: f .. o
q . &lt;-· g: ~:- 0
o· ··:· o&lt; :::-'1&gt;
o
o -:o

.......

!&gt;

0

;- !1

!"fWY·

Ketter_: (:i;te$._pr~gr~~s Jn :A1irlority tli.riog
serves. • . .
.
munitY, and to "interested iegislators
The University has "mi.de subs~­
tial progress in .. . minority employ"In conclusion, I again must say
and otber governmental of6cials as
that I am deeply puzzled and tioUbled
ment eft'orts and expect{s) to make
soon as that Plan has been formally
· approved. You _also. JISk for certain
by tbe sharp shift of position that
even more sipificant pins in the fu·
seems- to be reftected in your recent
ture," President Robert l-- Ketter said
career date abou.t in.dividual OOh
ployees. For obvious reasons, and in
· public stetemenbi and in your letter
this week in a Jetter tO Assemblyman
Arthur 0. Eve. (Eve's recent allegaof tbe 27th. Only a few short montha
consonance with prili_!:ies !'slabliabed
in consultetion with our Faculty .and
ago, you expreased strong support. of
tions of "tokenism" in terms of tbe
nwnbenl of black faCulty on campus
Stalf Senates, peraonal information of
our- minorizy ,Pf'OIIl'lllll in-.urgins tl;&gt;at
have received wide publicity.)
the SDrt l'!!QueBl.ed iS DOt made public
tbe. Educational . Opportunity • Centerwithout ~ -ei:preas consent, of ihe in:
''These acoomplisbments and aspirat Bulfalo.-be ·pl.aceiL'ullde\" !U/B's&lt; ad,:
ations will be fully described in our
dividuals. involved.
ministrative jurisdiction.. I" am . .af a
''I have already forwarded, to ,you
Allirmlitive Action Plan," Ketter said,
lossJ to.J!II'CO'!Dr t.~!Pi~J· '4bquWape. •
"and we are prepared to stand judga great
of
nilaling . to
To oe sure, have biien reminded that ·
this is. llr74 and "that -the Unj...,;ty
ment on tbe basis of that Plan."
our ~inority employment program;
Ketter noted that Eve's letter to
additional inforinati.Qn \II enclosed;
makes a-conVenient. target "during an
and furlher 'dllt&amp; Win be provided, as
him of .February 27, to which be Vias
election year. I refuse to believe, bowresponding, amved March 5.
noted above, wben available. I trust
ever, that you would use tbe affirmausmce 'copies ~f this letter were
you will give this materiill tbe caretive action program, to which W., are
available to the local and student
ful lind open-minded attention it ·deboth ClOII\mitted, for such a purpoae."
preas several . days earlier - in fact,
The Spectrum, tbe student neWSPBper
on our campus, offered to send me a
. copy on March 1 - I am concerned
that the purpoee of your letter -was
not really, thatlof securing infonnation
on· whi"ch to "base an iriformeil judg~ srante- 8nd
toing, $26,800 fiom NSF for "Investipment but "ratber that of seeuripg fur·
f8liilg $1,172,778 were received by 21
tion of. Interfacial TenSion;" Grant T.
tber publicity for your previous alleU/ B faculty during February, Robert
Phipps, Scbool of Dentistry, $32,140
gations against both SUNY and this
C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice president
from PHS for geoeral resean:h supinstitution. My concern is strengthfor reeearcb, reports.
port; Om P . Bahl,- Biocbemisti:y, :$25,ened by two otber factors: one, by the
Sixty-seven propoeals in tbe amount
000 from tbe POpulation CouDcil fer
large distributinn given by you to
of $2,958,547 were submitted during
"Biocbemis~ of Gonadolzoppina aDd
your letter- I; of course, presume
the month. ·
·
~ Materials Related -to Animal
that you also sent a copy of my earlier
Only three new grants are .among
Rep~:odu.ction;" · EriC A._Bamard,
February 14th letter to tbeae individ·
tbe February total:- W. Harmon· Ray,
$1i9,1.26 from NIH tor ~A~ '
uals-and two, by tbe fact that" noChemical "EngiDeering, $49,00()' ftom
graphic Studies of. ~ion!. and. Enwliere. in you'r letter. do you aCknowlNSF for "Development and -Verifica~;" Feli:J: Milllroin, MiclobiOiocY,
edge even tbe j&gt;ossibility that the
tion of Delailed Mathematical MOdels
$416,629 fnlin NIH loi "AutDimzmme
'statistics' • attributed to you in tbe
fo~ Em_uision;" Giuaeppe A. Andres,
~ to Normal aDd ~t
preas were groasly inaccurate; !15· I
MicrobiOlogy, $12,650 from tbe Max
Tissues; Carel J . . Van Ooa, "loolicroearlier pointed oiiL"
Kade Foundatinn for a postdoctoral
biology, $40,564 from Nlll for "SepTurning to otber issues, Ketter said,
excbange gi'imt for Dr. Boris ,Albini;
aration of Blood Serum Proteins by
''We have never received any oomand Almen L Barron, Microbiology,
Ultrafiltration;" Robert J. Mclaaac,
plsint about lhe lack of cooperation$20,812 from NIH for "Cblaniydial
Pbarmacc;&gt;logy, $46,815· frOm Nlll for
from tbe HEW olliClais you name. As
Genital lnfection: An Animal Model
""Innueooe of Preganglionic Nerve ao
you know, HEW has very eft'ective
System."
·
Ganglion ~·" ~ J. Mil·
sanctions at its disposal if ita oflicials
· ~and/or continuation grants
ler, Pbysiology,:$31;661 from NIH for
do DOt receive adequate cooperation.
of $25,000 or more were. received by.:
"Glial Contributions' to Retinal FuooI am sure that HEW wouiCI have
.Robert J. Good, Chemical EngiDeertion;" Micbael A. Schwartz, Pbar·
prompUy informS.! us bad this been
•
"
.
!PB"Y· $63,927 from PHS for "pneral
tbe case. It is tbe _pOlicy of SUNY
uur:-oaf!n~r-~t
&gt;
=.r~port;_ ~~~and, I can _..., you, of SUNY at
Buffalo, tO coo~te with: ffii;w and
&lt;."lbe UniversitY eenii!r CbaPfer' of·
!be u.s.
l&gt;Urinotber siinilerly charged federal and .
United University Profe9sioiis" {UUP)
one Analop: A.Potentially New C1aas
Stete agenciee to tbe" fullest degree
will bold a dinner meeting 'Ihw'liday,
of Antimalarials;" Gerhard Levy,
possible in maltera of .aJlirmative acMarch 28, in the Faculty Club Dining
Pharmaceutics, $47~ from NIH for
tion and equal employmeqt oppor-. • Room. 1be meeting is o p e n to 8JJ
"l'barmacokineti of Salicylate in
UUP membera, beginning witb cock·.
Children;" G e o_r_l e ·H. N8.llllllllaa,
~~~- ,..,q,....t a vast amount of addi· teils at 5 p.m. Dinner is ocbeduled for
Cbemistzy, $49.2511 from Nlll fer
tional inlormation abOut our employ6 p.m.
•
''The Kinetica of Mlneralizaliaa ol
ment practices," Ketter continued.
Dr. Herbert ReisrDan. prof_,. enTeetb;" Calvin· Rltdlie ,.__...._
"Some of this informatiOn is conlained
•
. science, and chiUrman ;;( tbe
$44,000 from NSF for "SciJ~
in the documents (lists) attached.
~rievance Committee; will lead
of Reactivity;" ·and· GretoiY B r e H,
However, as I know you are aware;
an open discuasioa on ""The ~
Pb.vsica. $100,000 from ·tile ABC for
- curreoUy are in tbe j&gt;roc&gt;s of
of Grievance Proc:edlires at U/B."
"'lbeories. of Nudeao-Nucleao ·InterCOQ)piling detailed data, of tbe type
Reservations for tbe dirua', IICOOIII·
actiooa."
.
. • . ' •. . ·
,·
you have reguested, for our formal
panied bv a check for $4, must be
. ;Ruth T. McGrmey, Seboo1 o1 NUI'IIAllirmative Actloo Plan. Theae mareceived by M..,:h 20. RMervatioas
ing, .-m.c! additiODal PHS flmila of .
terials are ~ to be completed
should be forwarded to Mia. Ethel,
$821'194 aDd $11,217 In the farm o1
by mid-April. They will be made availSchmidt, Faculty C 1 u b , Harrimin
capitation granta for 1lllikqiiduate
able to all .in tbe .University com.
Ubrary,
.
.~
-.
aDd paduate~ ~w!y,

dew

material

Twenty-one Faculty Receive Grants Totaling $1A·72,778 in Feb.ruarx . .
c,.;mttact;

Arm~eaoioalc

chairman aaid, Ia an UD-.1 one in

wblcfltheatudYolFIII!acbisviewed
in relation 1111 die 8tud,y of oil* liter- atwes. A E r oL Fraach, as aeen
by lbis . · ·
· · t, Ia a IMcber of
cUlture
.;_ftly a ·
~~...~asid.
In tbe isolation ol the North CaiDpu.,
tbe ~ P&gt;ai 118 tbr!&gt;wn beck
on a DIIIClh. ............,., PllfOdlial
dlillidtian ol Cb8 4lieciPiille. "To. me

u-'"- -

irs a Iii&amp; . bit Jlb a ,...;; Ol aeini:'
ezile;" be aalcL • '
..,...,...
OriliDallY. lhil. ............ iif ,...___ _
ment,~&amp;lao bDuaeci ~ ~
considered ,._ · tfie - ~
Simon

nr.

asid. Man,........t is a much more
"self-&lt;XIIltaiiled" unit than his
~
feels, but the Manaaement ~
against vaa.ting Crosby and w&amp;s evidenUy penuasive. ·The French ~t is "very
enthusiastic:" about tbe P"""""" of
~ jp die NOrth -CaiilpQs---r:-)9'n
the projecteil ocicUpaooy ·date~of u,;;

~aDd·.Moclem ~Baild-

:::~,~::tar;~;;r~
center .. lbe"'' ~ _ -.J~;- . r.;.;.m

Milin-siiel!t 'til Abilht.~':- ::'t.';;
'"l'be•Gerinan; . = !.1:.o· riawQr

aild-"~~ ~ililri't
feeJ as-strllqly-lls"we11o liboiit'lf · · '
beCause tbet ' c!Ori't· bave - the~
kinda of alliliati
" be .d.

=lr

HIStaoy 'l.uot8d
~
Interviewed prior 1111 the :f&gt;residenrs
announcement, Dr. Clifton Yearley,
chairman of. the History Departmerit,
was elated at tbe Jll'l)llpett of moving
to EllicotL "We luSted after it," be
admitted:
Unlike Frenc!a. which dmcribes its
preaent space allocation aa "comfortab~... bistmy ill "bc&gt;tli ~ ahd
far-ftuna. &lt;With ollces . at .Six locati&lt;ibs .
on MaiD s~ and aDolber oil· Ridge
La. Manv flll:alty-aril doubled up.
Until Ellicolt came ~ histOry
faced 1lie Pfti8IJ8ct ol bainir. 'in" . the
chairman's pbrioae, _':'aluck · ~ in a
declininlt ~- fer 'four'Qr flve-

c; ·s=,_the~~;:..&amp;;
BuiJ.din&amp; in 1978-80. .
Ellicott "!raa a p!!lt -~ty.
·
eixl'aaatl"'icall.)!. 1be .n!llt
~out tDn maybe "Dice
on tbe inaicle, but aa a lllllal-perform-

. _ atructure it'• Ellicott that's gning
to carry olf every_lntemaliaaal arcbi·

lecture award," Yeutey m*-1.
-~ blaest problem Ia' Jlkely to

be the library," Yeutey aalcL "'ur ~
present ~ Ia tbat "" can
aoly take biatooy - . We hope
we can do betlllr than !haL"
The boolrstoni J!)anDed fer Ellicott
would go far tOw8Jd alleviating tbe
book problem, at least fer UDclergrad-

W!tea. tba cbainnan

~

..

A mov1rig- COIIIliliftae· baa been
the 1fistory Department,
"ever;vaoe baa pJtcbed in," and Year·
ley indicated tbat the Department
would be ""'dy to-IIIOWI "aa 110011 after
aiid~May [and tbe eixl ol a-1 as
the .·buildings anif tba movers are
ready."
.
.
formed "in

.-

. . ~- .. ~· ~
·, ~-..
A' !liMral me'mliershlp rneeli'lll of tlie P(O"
feUional Stell Senate Will be .~· .Friday,
Moich 29, et 3 R.m. in 148 Olefeodorf.
"fl\e tentative_ _apndo lfl!'l ......: 1. Pl;HI·

dent ~ 2. SUNY Sepelor; 3. Constllu·
lion Revision. All professional· ltd mem·
bers ere urged 10 - - _,._ 1)018
. . . In fnlm lnllla\ """'"'mont.

�.11-*.J4,

1,1,

Facuhy senate(~ , _ ,.,. J, eel. 4)
lfllmmoud ~hope that the . .
pcirt -'d be acceplied • fulfl1liDa
tha bedy'a ~ to tha CoUePam
"to write a ~ for the ac:ademlc c:lbilate BDd directioa ' &lt;II tbe

Ullha&amp;IW."

Collegium Member I.-lie A. Fiedler .... !bat tbe "'wmt" of tbe raport
"a plan ,.,.. plumiDa." Ill the
p.t. faculty have typic:ally '-&gt; Inwived "' the academic pJ.annilll procODiy at the dePartmental level
The "Committee on lmlovation is a
of iDalittttloaalb faculty lnIll .............. pJ.annilll, be ald.
Fiedler, wbo did the llllal editina of
tba ~ llllid it repreaented a COil_ . 8IDCIIII tbe aiz llll!lllbeno of tbe
CcJUePum, wbo differ widely both in
their lraiDiug liDd 4lelr baaie educa-

:t'

~~ Only . . painlB

em
tbe poup found "a CDIIIDIOI1
mind"
- Senators
iDcluded. ~ wbat
'
8evaa1

Somallar
Mad&lt; Sebedmer
- -the
bed - ~
qualm" about
~t, ........ to focus Clll the
repoot'a failme to ~ the
of
the -

committee aDd

jill

Bact far his ...................
c.Y.
ca.t arm..-

"* -

~ill a doeUmeolt.-1bet "tlirows
.,._ a lot d daonl; zioue of-which we

==-=~=-~""':...Mfn;:

BDd wbo Yelltmed 1bat his bsi~
tent CIDilea..- micbt be evidencini
"f~ of the Ullbown." The b.uty of
lhill ciDcumellt,- be · Said." is .that "it
dDeaa't do wbat- We wanted them todo." The JePOI't. be ei:plaiDed, is DOt
"a - - to be used apiDat. the administration" DOr is it a reaction
apiDst either..;[ specific administmtive
academic plan or student J&gt;l'l!ll8U!e.
"' think it's a marvelous document,"
Sc:beelmer said, because it sets forth
the prospect of faCUltY inwlveme..t in
the transformation of the Unhremity
~r a I~ ~::t of t4ne. . , • - ,

- siil~_tla-.!'~~~'10:"

BHARO~EDELMA~&lt;

~:~~t.;~.L
- ~ - ruf;ilfe~ ~tfiis~ u:U~tY lieS j,:
' -lerdi&amp;-

intemallransformalion l'or which this•
~ prarides ·a mechanism HoCb-

1

0

-· ·

Day :care·(:enter
Sets Paper Drive_
' The U/8 Day Care CentH will
- - ·a · peper drive next weelr: to
help keep its doon '!J*l Past Mareb
3L
Beginning lit 4 p.m., !'rid&amp;Y·-Mareb
16, papere may be brollgbt 1o the Main
St. BDd Bailey Ave. parking lot. The
drive 1!ill CCIIltinue ~ ~Y.
March :u,
Aocarding 1o M8JY Ma'rtbli Y&amp;egar,
cbaiiperaoo of the Center's fuDd-raising committee. tbe facility will have~
close at the end of March unleas $10,000 is raised. ':We hope 1o Obtain a
larp podion Of that amount ~
the papar drive &amp;Dd -we will~~~
aooopt doaationa ill lieu of peper,
0

=

Mt.YZt~i

..

--

those.. wishing to -

'C:&amp;::-=·=rk~~same number can be called If anyone

is lntaealad in' 9olunlieerillg time for
.....-inc _pbanee ar helping with

P~~r_._.

wbleb . _

Yicea al cbi1dnm ~-;1. located in
Ooob 'Hall em tbe MUD 8lmat Campua.
'

"' -

Israeli Landscape Offers Poetic Metaphor

··

field indicated, SUggesting that his
Senate administration would work to
implement the Collegium mcommendations.
•
· When the question was called, Coflegium Member Harold Segal, wbo
bed urged his colleegues in the Collesium to produce a true academic
plan, abstained_ - ,_
The Senate voted overwhelmingly to
pursue the P,llegiwp's -rooommendations, ,n .to 2, with 4 abslentiobs.
Ml!lilliers of ttiol Collegium are: David T. Bazelon, . policy acienoe; lawnmce Cbiliolm, Amefican Studies;
Prof Fiedler ~· Geo , T "vii. .. - I
'a-.• ~ I~
Cl
- - .,.,...., bioogy,
BDd Prof . ·
.Hammond
(aecrelary)
~ :.

_..,aUrtot
... _,"'-~

with • -....-v..JOballun of the . - c:ew- -._ art.
Wllllnc to • . - • vol....-. to mM8 his points rwMJ ID
-~bySA
with the curiaul,
In ....,
. . . . . ......_
• ..........

~tr that~~tal -~

Cb~li!c't 'r....ft..._

-In---

Tine-.

"'tbalure.-.

By
· : ......,_ _.,., ..
_
The stark and dramatic Isreeli landacape has provided a continuous
tfl9ugh changing metapbor for the Hebrew poet&amp; of tbis century, a noted
authority on Hebrew literature and
drama told a campus audi~ n&gt;dmtly: ' : · • '_ _
.' Dr. Arieb SachS,- chairman of the
Tbeetre Department, Hebrew u'niversity in Jerusalem, read from the-translata! lvo~li "Ot'-aeveral modem• Hebrew
~Ia /miL traced the-major ideas:whicl&gt;
influenced them.
·-"· 'fee'lipR of•do(J}jle alienat:ron: inspired mUdi of the arlisfic a ttitudes of
the 1920's and 30's, Sachs observed,
parlieularly among those who -had ..,_
oently emigrated to Palestine from the
Eastern European regions. The poetry
of t1!is p e r i o d reftected a nostalgic
longmg for the lush green forests of
Poland and Russia, associating them
with childhood itself, realities of adult.hood, and of the political oppression
which forced the emigratibD in the
first place.
It'• _, for m· tJ. dU.. oi &amp;.t• Y.....,,
r~: ·.~

m-

at..,.. t...t

fiOl ,,_.

~: ''This
~~~ih..~eCtiv~W.~·ofiheneQpie:-:· ous
""'tin biB ~:·· y.;...,;.,;,ls.f&amp;Jii.
· was a truly Urunodem view,"
poeril, ''Tbi! Egyp~" cOmposed

•

o.,;:::; ;;::';!.,....,...,... "'"" _,.,.. ....,

contended Sachs, ''which reached a
peak in tbe late 1940's witJi tbe war of
independence and the birth of Israeli
stetehood."
The 1950's saw the division of Hebrew poetry ·into two major; schools:
the JeruSalem poets continued, for the
moet part, in the heroic mode, and
perceived the Israeli landscape as an
archetypal metlipflor. Ill the liDcient
city, they found layer upon layer ·of
history,: and irom -tbe physicel-'existence of Jerusalem, derived mystiCal
irilplications. Thi!"poeti!ofTelAviv on
the other hand, recognized that their
city was built on sand, and their intellectuar landsCape followed suit. Biblieel references amoog the Tel Aviv
school were usually for satiric"or ironic
purposes; their emphasis, rather, was
on modem, international life and often moved to a pop rhythm and a style
similar to the ''beat" poetJy of -the
United States. The Tel AVJv school
was the first to {ully examine the artistic poSsibilitieS- of colloquial HebreW.
Even anpng the Jerusalem acbool,
however; ·the· heroic theme was -losing
favor as poets withdrew from political

w:,•u.f-:;:!,the alq», ol the rwtawanr.

~d~ :i~~ ~~ ~

~~wi~a!Uru in t•boc»heii lib

anti-heroic sentiment was r GPresaed

rurnM

"":..."11!;.=,,~ toUy-cl-tJoo~&lt;-&lt;Ic..-

~;.,.,. ··•~;.,;.::.::;.:; ~=~~»r-1
Uiiivi GreelibeN ·who still writes;
was 1be" ni!IP PQiit'of the period. His

origilial miiliiv'alimoe ~ the Israeli terrain nipidly evolved 'to an intensely nationalistic vision of apocalypee, a. Biblicel, cabalistic landscape.
''His atlnlclion," ezplained Sachs, ''lle- _
comee intellectual rather than .mst.ential, and be ...,.;, the poet as tbe
collective messianic v o 1 c e of tbe
-Ia_ Greenberg is," be CCIIltinued,
"a rationalistic fanittic, a fascist."

~= t'J:~!d

"*

y.:,ut.n

Jerusalem poets."

.z:: ~,.:""~ ::H'i.t -·

- a ..,_.._ "'• ., • ,___, ...-,. ...,,.,

-

~.::'::d"!",.~ _
- .... ~

-

,.,.,

after the Six Day War1 reveals this
attitude, j!Jitapoeed agamst both Bib-

lice! imagery, and an expression of

how every family in Israel was affected
in the 11106t simple way:
r~w " - ;,_., ...,., , _ ""' ili/USol• ala o1 _.._ ,.,., to ""' Oo4.

11

N-

a:;:' '- ...........,__,

:::,;•::,.-;_
"• -

~

&lt;bDdloood.

"-:..::;::,.,_~~':.f.-_.,

· """01 ,,. ,....,..___.,.. ,.. _.,. _, u. r! ::!';.;;. :'A-::t 7-'::,::Sol~---

,

...,!;~

!::, :::::::., ' : ::;..
~ '!:!:.~.:::::.:;_..,.

-

--

.

,_,..boat u.
bud,.

n.~ wodt
The } - . -.ot'lt

~

bom _,__

• r-~-And - . - d ,,_ Nn.

-"n. ·~·
ANC

(JHIJ),

Y .........

~~B-*1~

- "However/' Sachs main~ained,
'ltljel:e was very littil'•aood poetry to
come out of tbe 1967 ..... 'It led once
apin to a -heroic feeling, but tbe aura
was basically false -

definitely DOt
for pOetry." He added
that the October 1973 war was - tially a return to truth, hut that ite
poetry has not yet been written. "Survival;, what is primarily em oar
minds. When eoerytbing is reduced to
a matter of life BDd death, all elae is &amp;!wmry.•
Dr. Bach's tal1t was ~ l!Y
tba SUNY Task Fon&gt;e em Isnoellllid tba U/8 Council 011 IDtematiOilal
Studies.

aood material

Economist to Speak
Dr. Anne P. Carter,~ of
Ecorwm&gt;ira, Bnmdeis Uni-.ity, will
sp.It Clll "New EDqy, Tedmulo....
Pollulicm BDd a.-tb," under ..,...:- IIOIIIbip' of the ~t of Bcoaaics in 209 O'BriaD Hall, Ambanot Campus, Friday; March 15, at 4 p.m.
A coffee hour in 608 O'Brian will
be held at 3:30

Ci

~~~t·
=
on industrial cqanizatiOII. Sbe bea

te....... at Bates, BrooklYn eou-.
Welleeley, BDd IWYard. She

&amp;illb;

cunently holde the Fred P. Pomonmlz
Chair in Ecorwm&gt;ica, at Bandeis -.beoe

abe teac:lw8 ecanometrics BDd a _,_
inar on envilomnent;'" teclmolocY, mid
nBIUftll!ll.

�~

Pay Raise &amp; .the System: UUP's Ytew

-'*=::·
'"!J:f:;,"t":,-·
.._......
., ... ,..,
o1 11w

a-t
.. -Dr.
c..m.

__,. ,. _..,. . . . .
•• ill* IN!'-

~,.:w;r-=::;.1.,;-:'~':

t~·=
~;,~:-¥Jplal8
--

R.,._

........ . . _ ... Oftlt/lt "'"Eraploye.,
fOBil) lAc UIIUICnily • ploY:""• ct4 de 'iJ,;;red Uniwniry Pro, _ (fJVI")c

•

11111

, aDd

UT aDd APT Jo1J1w1M11 011111iDae ~

bylD,I ... ~ 1lie ~

•

~. 1974. Lecfalathe ~

Cllnl!ll*" 111a ,..;. llllla

tee mllkeilile re_p~Tt 110 LetdiWure.
BDl introduced, Pebrlwy, 19'74. BIBle
AMMnbly ~bill
.
Jlorcla 6, 1974. Slate 8ona&amp;e bill and aenda it to Gova1a far signa~ote on 1M TGYior lAD: It is in the Stete'll lep} code tbat, if the
Slate and the amPI-tbrouJb tbeir
boupininB qent, oome to an m!pll8ll8
· direct DeiQtiations, tbe dispute aball
submitted ... mediation. Il thia fails
to produce apeement, a Fact FiDdbur
board ahalJ be appomted, and 'abail
report a fair nli!Oiutinn of the issue.
If .the facts as reported axe not aooepted by. both the State and the Upion,
the Issue shall go to the Leaisl8:ttire.
The Legislature aball bold f&gt;earinp,
and im- itS resolution of the issue,
taking into aa:ollllt the best inten!Sis
of the geneml public and of ·the body
oi employees in question
··
'

Jlaro\. 1$11 IIDIIMie il dedued,
.........-UUP d OBR. OBR'a ollor
u
~ ol PQ'IVII.._.....
u; per~ dilcletbuiry,
._. ao. to ...tiatira.
April, 1.973. MediMiall falla to reoolt8 the ..._ c.ie au- to a Fad

FiDIIinl baud.

MGY lJJ.:m~~ aeport is
releaaed. I&lt;8COIIIIIlelllliall: per Cl!ll~
.lbe board, 1.5 per &lt;*It dilcn&gt;tionary. UUP llllDOUDCIIB: This Is far
too small, but UDder the coasidelation
that """"''''anc o1 thia propoaaJ 'would
put ..U.. in our poc:loete stalting in
July . (or SepL) ; UUP reluctantly accepta.
·

b.

llCI08B

End of Mtz¥ 197_3. Governor sends
message 110 Lelislature, aaying the
. SUNY faculty .._memben are among
the very beet pa1d in the nation, and
don't need what lbe Fact Finders have
recommendood
·
Administration bill ~trodUced jj; .
lite UUP and the
Legislature, givinl raises of 3.5 per
Admlnlotrallan
cent plus 1.5 per Cl!llt for merit, as
The Legislative action .on March 6
meuded by OER.
was the product ol the prolooged and
~~tics: The Governor and • exhausting efforts oi the negoti,ators
the OER have the full responsibility
for UUP, working with OER, the Fact
for all cleJa"y in salary raises, from ..thia
Finding board, and the Legislative
·
:n.., -on!
that UUP
committee. See the chronology, above."
::'.:'ve· ~eni'ted~ actual deUniversity people may not be aware
livery of our raiaes was to BCCl!pt 1he
of it, but under the Taylor Law, ecoOER's 3.5 per cent across-the-board
• nomic benefits s ucb as raises come
offer. It. would have been utterly ir·
only by "negotiations. Tlie OER is
responsible to have dOne 110, becall8e
kfl!'lly nw.ndaied to bargain with some
two t h in g s would have happened.
reoogriized bargaining a gent. which
First, all faculty and NTP's in tbe
negotiates on behalf of the employees.
The Chancellor, and the Board of
University would have taken this wage
offer as 8 slap in \Pe face, imd .an
Trustees of SUNY, irre apPoiri"ted' by
unendura.\&gt;le fmancial· blow, A,nd it
the Governor, and are responsible to
would have been regarded as all" the"'
him and to the .Legislature. So under
won;e becall8e !lie Fact Finding BOard
the Taylor Law, they can't ba%gain on
had found that a b!gh,er figure was
behalf of the University emplooyees.
• ~..,
II they did, that would not even be
justified.
Second, it would bave been a rati6forefinger bargaining with thumb. And
cation of the OER's tactics in ignoring
in fact, when it comes~ geneml saJ.
the Fact Finding BoanJ ·and all the
ary raises in the University budget,
other legally mandated components of
the Chancellor's office takes no part in
the negotiation. The OER could have
matters at all. This compOnent of. the
State budget is reserved,· by· order oi
announced its offer, the following
year, as, &amp;a)'. 3.5 per cent, and stuck ·
the Governor, to- the OER. And . the
to "it 110 tHe end, and ignor1!(! Fact
OER takes an adversary stance with
Finders' tip0rt8 slain e...,iy year. So ~ us, and bargains in the lioughest way
- ,!Jfe Ui\ivertity wbuld have been" locker · · ~t knows - as if we bad John L
into a CQWse in which salaries at all.
.Lewis, l:larry 'Brid.ges and Geoige
kuelB would steadily fall behind, the
Meany for our negotiating team, and
rate oi inflation, by several pei cent
as i! we had a tightly-disciplined
every year1 1111til the University dropwh1ch wou/4 go on strike. • ·
ped froin me educational scene on ac. The OER is the Governor's crea·
count of ~ resi~tion. of qualified
tu.,.;_ and it is under orders to prevent
any mcreases m salary budget items,
faculty. So 1t was .m the mterest of all
employees, not to accept thia Admin·
if possible. It is not under orders ·t o
istration bill.
.
assure quality -education for the citiJuly, 1973. Legislative committee
zens of this State. It iS. not iinder
holds bear!DBB oo the oalary im)i8ss:e. .orders 110 a,ssure a livins . wage, or a
Heats testimony Jrom OER &amp;Dd 1roin
wage compiuable 110 anybody else in
UUP. lobbying on· our behaH. is air·
the CowttliY·, to any group of State
ried on by representatives from NYSemployees. It is not under orders to
and AFI'. UUP _stands by Fact
give us a w,orkable grievance proced·
Finders' recommendations: 5 .p er cent
ure, nor a meaningful job-security
plus 1.5 Per cent.
clause in our contracL
·
July, 1973. A legislative CI!JIIDlittee,
It is standard tactics Or manageboJd!nl bearings within 3 days oi our
ment, to exploit the vulnerable points
~ ~ a repOrt teCOillllll!lldof the employee•a -bargaining agent
lDI a pay ol6 per Cl!llt across
(II tboee vulnenlbilities arose as con·
the board far the 8 - lrooJ"'!'". A
sequences oi the way the employer. set
bill imp'-t!ng this raise 18 intro.
up the election in whic:Ji the agent was
duced ill the Special 8es&amp;ion ol the
chileen-tbat doesn't matter 110 OER C)
Jf there is any issUe ~ the
j&gt;loyees, lll8llllplllellt will'~
•t. and will not JlO out oN.te way to"lud
ill1he heaJing ol any divisions. For
eumple,
l8st Y"ilr C8EA petitioDed ·
~
for the NTP's to be n!llllOVed , _ rep,_,taliall
by UUP. '!ben the OER
-~ ...... ~ollfW
r .......
said to UUP, last November, ''We

:J

unioo

u:r

GREPoRTER.,
" ....
..........,..,.,..

em.

0

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

....,..34U.,..._-..
.....
._...,it

__
_..__
_-..

••1"', JGJL . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
JJ,. uo ........... _
2121J.
•

can'tbergalnwi~.---don't

ment, tbat there .be a timely itart 110
bargaining, before the Olld ol tbe cur-

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

A.. IP&amp;S'I'Ur aarnAiflJ,
.
~ r. IMIILnT
-..

ren~om·ted~. ~

.,._,.....

.
Art.,......._,..,.....,
a. CARDfM!"
-~­

fiAJfC'r

ar1IIAif II. 81111!0D

~- wbat- belt for -16.000
.
.....
"'
•

........,_?

·r ~
(ADd one~
••. ~ lllere ~ • .._,. ol loPe m

~.!.....n.

~

ror

this point

-

IIDCII o1
•...,.
IIDl -

80PT em auapus (before tlie
ol SUFT ..,..... ...,~.
• ..__

·C ~
UUP) illlayiJ.lg ~ · te,the.
ama~~&amp;' ·- ~of.
,::'.J. -~ tt!t~directly~
the ~ delay wbidi Ia ending
.... """

uuu ,...,

oi

poGtloa. 18

ill UUP'e bar1aini':.'g
far UUP 110 m.:.- -&gt;ts

po~..,

... ~ ___._._

""i'~.!!kh;g::~...::
~

they WUit .... - - - -

, __ ,_,.

.........

~the le8denbip of UUP were

IIDt

x:tllml---

Blll'rOil:

Tbe. pitiful, lllillllfar-.l ~ of
tripe {811itJed "Ma IIIICDnuaii!IBUJn'-DLo"

and da~~ 19'l4), wblch was
-tly
c:a tbe SUNYAB
auapus by ~ NatMm.l ea- of

l..ab9r CommiUeea. lludl7 deserves

serious atlelltion. Ita ll'C8 illaccuracies,empty ~-dlche­
ridden -tioaali.a ---.... tbemsel.....
1 lsel obllaal to aet
the reconl allailht. ~ ..
the ao-&lt;l8lled "DaCCiir" with the allepdly aini8la- Mlllanl Pi11mare CoJ.
lege . courae in Blact Uterature to
whiCh the 1il&gt;eloua, NCLC "Pn!as Re-

a-.

ram

110 liSt out liD ~ ita~.
"wbe;re at l..t a true majority "!'
1t repra+~te .axe ~- 1t
I - " rafera.
would be UDtlUe 110 118 ~In addition to ap"-"'• the char· It would remain forever vWnenl&gt;le to
acteriatiao and the ~ ol the
the tallllt, tbat it may not be.negotiatBlack .-belie thraudl ' the f.- aning in tbe. beet inlereots ol a majority
alysis ol sud! tate a N..-rative&lt;J/ the
ol the S t a t e Univeni_ty !""PI&lt;IY"!""Life of ~., Dou,,_, an Amer· ADd the OER wouldn't' mind that at
ican St.w.; Abraham CbapmaD's anall.
.
.
tholoey
ol Black liteoatme, NPJJ Black
· UUP's membership ~ UtB bas
Voic"'; George Jacluion's So/.edQd
grown &amp;teedily, bi the last f - months, BrotMr;
Ralph Ellison's lrwuibk
adding about 10 per c:ent aiilce Jan~Man; Clieik Hamidou Kane's Ambigary 1. Our mem~p at B~_o IS
uoua
Adventure;
and Chlnua. Acbebe's
now a~t '!"e. sinh of tboee eJ!gible.
Things Fall Apart, the English 387StateWJde, 1t '" about one thin! ol
388
tw&lt;Hiemeeter
aequeDce ("Studies
1he faculty and NTP employ...,; and
in Black Literature") .bas as· one of
tbere is steady growth at all other
its
central
tWn&amp;
eacouraging
the stucampuses ol-BUNY.
.
dent to think far IUiueJf and to avoid
Jl the OER can make its charge
stick, that our membership ·i s 110 small
that UUP can be-disregardea and that
they can dictate our nest pay raise;
then we will be lucky to get even a
3.5 per cent raise nest year. Now that
· f last
· assured
. , . -. • forum ' for t h e - ~
~:..,, an~":.: that we
can see the 1D06t that OER would
on a var111tJ of the
-of -- facinllhe_,.,1111·
have given, if they bad bad tbeir way,
it's time for every eligibfe f&amp;cuity
~:..:::.J::
member and -NTP at 0/B to take
thought as to how to strengthen our
bid Jor'll decent and prompt pay .raise
precisely the ' kin'd of crippling, propsthis year, and a oo8t of living eBcaii- • • garidiBtic' "~gwasll • l!xhibited - ~ •the
' tot climse'·m the ne\v cobtract." l.f is ·~ · N€U? • art·~~ TbB~ pelfl8Pa;·'lB' ..on:e
very clear that the only way to aocom·
~n wh~, m _!He siX seri&gt;esjers,SJDOe
• vlisb that is to join, UUP:llOW. liJver:y t ., ~ts ..~~"l lQ-1&gt;~ -~~ -- ot: W71,
. member aflded loour ro!IB strent~thens . ;~tu4!es. m : n.la?\ Li~~:: ~~ ,s t·
the iulnd of .our '1"/fOtiJJtoNJ.
•
, tracted : ,1) ~llinenill&gt;ij; b!gn !,JS 55
Or-itis true thatwefeeloverp8id? ' 1n '"SOme . semeslelt 142 stu~U\,_for
Or that we wan t to continue withexample, completed the .English 387
raises that axe less than half the rise
day section last. !iemester) ; 2 ) stuin the cost oi living?
~ ·
dents from . virtually every ethnic
Application forms are available
group on this campus e~ry semester;
from : Curt Mettlln, 4224 Ridge Lea,
3 ) some of the best students at this
ext. 1631, ( Membership Chairman,
University; and 4 ) several graduate
University Center Chapter); Charles
students who have energeticali¥ sougbt
• .L ipan!, -G47 Capen Hall, ext. 2721,
official permission 110 audit the coun;e
(.President, l:lealth Sciences Chapter) ;
·because oi its instructive, free and
Ethel Schmidt," Faculty Club, Harri· open di9cussions "of significant literary
'ni8n Hall, ext. 3!!04; Bob Good, 302A
and aesthetic issUes:
Parker Engineering, ext. 4002, as well
That Mr. Biunett Wils extremely
as other Membership Committee mem·
nervous and tense (on . MiuciJ 12?)
bers. Dues· range from about $5.00 to
may indeed have · been due 1b the
at most $11.90 per b i week I y pay
frank and open nature of the class
period, and are deductil!le from your
discussion; and if it is necessary, I
Fedeml !lnd State income taL. J;&gt;ues
wl!;h p,u blicly -.110 apologize. However,
deductions start when your check.,otr
that be perspired may well have been .
card is processed; there is no requiredue to conditiw beyolld my control.
ment of paying -any back dueS for.the
But not to. be totally ficetioiiS, "wbat
past p&amp;;rt of the lll&gt;l~emic year, before
the bell, in this context, is "a striking
you }OlD. _If you .~. we can.. ~ld
~nality cbanp?" 1 am, you - .
your application imiiJ the pay nuses
ileltbef a deViotia CIA agent nor a
are actually issued SO if you are resophisticated Nazi ape~t 011 "men·
luctant to ,JOin right- now beCall8e you
ticide" but a baaically eimple man
can't "!'""ntiY alto~ .another payroll
who ls tzyjna 110 do an hooest job,
deduction, why not JOID now and pay
which does not eliOP with my bi-1ftlekiy
later?
.
.
.
paycheck, and eure1y doe9 not Include
Are you _mterested m an mv~manipulalilll my fellowman 88 part
ment? CoDSlder Y,our dues asf an m·
of NCLC'e JIUIBI!IIIed "vicious and
.....anent, wb!ch
pay off D!.higher
elabOrate ~~~ .etup." And
salary next year, Stren~ the
the ."Doctor" i.i, inl:identally, Deither
band of·OIJ! negotiators thia year,could_ •a medical covet 1101' a aelf-im~,
mean a dl!!erence. oi 2, 3, 5 or """:"
academic
to bide my
7 per cent, m _the wag~ settlelnf!nt thiS
incompetence.
a matter o1
year, and a similar .differeoce m each
recorded fact, a ' '-'timate and berdol a nlllllber ol fu~ years. But_your
...:--~ Ph.D .~..__ ·um·--'ty o1
failinj tO join boW' would weaken our
-;~
· ~""'
·~'
negotiatinJ teiun's positi~ 110 whlu
~~ vary jeast, NCLe .,..... me
you cue 111 UUP .dua thU Y.ear.• you
a prompt, pubJjc IIPC&gt;klvmay loae many tuna ouer, m lllCI'&amp;• Slnlierely
mente to your salary_in future ySillll.
-.
'" ~Hz, iiAMLBT
· OERh8s~us1hepolicyitwill
• , . 1 _
•
to

*-

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

J:&gt;'

an--to

' :::;.W:...."'"t!:

_will

...,......,e.
it''.'"';.

.=i

~=':... ;,.;::;;:;:~~ · ~':.let~~:.:

"'--

.. PAnriC'lA. IF.£aD~

... .....;..., ..__.

_........,

ow-.

UUP,

...- ~~--

·- ....... -

l.qWabn.lilld .................. . Gilly - · willa . . . . . . . . 8CiiaD
No aepor&amp; , _ the c-.iMie tiiB1
YllrcllE~
·
~
hM bMrc1
But....., ..,jf~·~
~ ,~.....
· miUee ~ •
• r•
w :Jo
ol lacu;ss our ..0 1111!1114.76 per-'
_. '
"-"t-S:&amp;!:~.:.!:

B.r4.

uvr

Meuljjl,..

Prof Assails
'NCLC 'Tripe·'
Asks ~pofogy

Gift to Phannacy .

• -·-·. •
rate o1 Inflation. The _,__,_ 18
u·-~- "'--'-·, a 1928 -"uate
~~to Mve''liloliey~ • ..ot.'!k~~~
1D1 0111' cun\ml lalan•
·
. ClOiltributed $6,000 110 tbe.Ufli. Foqndowil (and 8QOIPiilii OER's We-!) . dation 110 aat 'IP the l:larriet ShwnsJcy
or 110 iuveat in lllnlliltb far our ""''Iia· 1
Memorial 8c:biiluwilip Fund, ill honor
ton, IUXI in a very .IOOd ~ ql ' · ol hie lata wife.
'
• 1reepiua ~ of _inflatioll,~ lllllkiba". · · ' lnoame tram·:r.Cr. Sbumilly's gift Will .
......cm.-~intbenext . bemadeavailableadllii&amp;Dytoaptiar·
~.
""· tour YSillll.
-~ macy atuilent, wtlh pn1e1ence given to
.
_._ T. OOOD
defoervina pllduatea ol. Gnmd Island
~ IIK'l'JUM_ _ •. (N.Y.)_ Hilh..BcbooL - - . • - . •

'

�Colombian Visit

Prompts Thought
·On Problems
II I ..tred wt.t ~ _.
my - t ..wt to Ollaalllla ......
IIIOilth CODtinuaua llllly in tbe
I
could mmtlou the ~ tJ.uiy ol Celamhian - . tbe large IIIIIDUIIt of --.uotion, the Obtrea-Js ~ ad the hllh 1lOIIl
of living, IUid tbe incipient ............. ol -natural """""""" But, bowBww ~ .....
of' theae factore is by iiBelf, ....... they lltill
cannot be ClOJIIPill"!d to !be of tbe - - mous amotmte of people 00111l81ltrated In the
urban areas.
•
•
.
What comes nut to my mind is what we ae
Colombians and as members of the developing
countries are doing to alleviate tbe stegerliig
_problems of our people. There are tbaE who
believe that the shortest way out of our p.-.t
situation lies in a strict program of birth cantrol.
And although it is true that our J'OIIU)a.tion
problem is very serious, it must be repeated,
especially at this time, that the population prob- ·
!em lies fundamenlally in the rich aDd indlllltrialized nations. I am referring .to the high levels
of consumerism and. the fast depletion of the
earth's resources. It bas bee pointed out by an
American sociologist that the birth of an Ameri- .
can child is a bigger disaster to the world than
the birth of 25 childwl in India.
Others believe that industrialization is the
answer. They argue that economic .development
and gf!'Bter productivity will contribute to the
national wealth and thus to a more just social
systein. H owever, it must jle remembered that
to equate development. with economic develoP,ment alone is equivalent to proposin.g an eeonomy oriented to the foreigli marl&lt;et J?rirnarily,
where demand and technology are controlled by
the large international corporations.
Tberefore, I believe that before continuing to
present solutions, we must first define what kind
of development we desire and in what direction.
We must teJre resPonsibility for our own actions
and for the aociety we want to create. It sbould
be a aociety in which all the people have realaOCOI!S to political, economic IUid . aocial power,
a aociety in which all contribute in the dynamic
process of developing our own nBIU!all according. to the needs of our people and not jiCCOI'C!ing
to artificial needs created by imported tecbooll&gt;gies.

duriDr

•

- -.. Citr--

·German Delegation Visits Makowski,
Seeks-New ·Sister·City for Buffalo

..

~ "'~

l!liCb!Pae student and t.oiacbing

assistant,a~ lhi!-State~UI!J-..,ity· of- New Yo~ ,at

•

-BulJaJo; Hat tbe ;oppjll:tunity ·to Visit Ma.Yor, 0 , ~.
~·!in:'CitY.

lfaH' 011 'February 6 topther'

,_

-wim :Mm:~tl!il' GfiiiMii ConaW in Buffalo, -_.... · .

w&amp;ro· ~- "' GenMee-HumboldtJuniol Hlp school ui liuftato. The occasion was

aiut ' Mr

a discwlli011 about the paasibility of a sist.er-city
relatioDsbi.p ~ Buffalo and my home - .
Dortmurid (W. Germany). We t!IPiainBd _to the
Mayor in detail the -.adwntales for both· sides
of sucli an international relationobip between
two large cities. -Tbeae could include a high
school student esduuile (living with families to
gain more understanding of each other's CIJIItoms
and languap), a .college ,student ezcbanle be-tween the two universities of the two cities, as
well as stimulittion of 'cultural...t·economic re, latioolbipa. •
• .
My home - . , Dortmund, is an industrial
. city of·&amp;liO,OOO people which was founded about
1,000 years qo. Breweries (including the bigge&amp;t
' - ' p!Oduction unit in Europe) and the. third
largest steel . plimt in Europe are. toea ted· there.

Dortmund ,a1oo serves as an import,ant center for
international cultural exd&gt;ange in West Ger•• There
• t illready sister-city ~tionin Frana'. &amp;nd i.eeds in :Eni·
land; another is planned with a city in the Soviet
Union.
In reply to our prop&lt;MB!, the Ma.yrx !'B!d that
he had considerable in.terest in such a nltation. ship, i&gt;ailicularly because an important part of
the population of Bulfalo and its suburbs is of
German descent. Besides, he mentioned, fuere isalready a sister-city relationship with Kanazawa
in Ja.pan that bas proven SU&lt;n!S8ful sin&lt;:e its
establisbment. A sister-city &amp;grel!ll!eD.t with Warsaw, Poland, will be &amp;.t up soon, be bopes.
. At the end of the t:alk, Mayoc Makowski .
asked Mr. Ward, who is leading the first higli
school stw;lent group to Dortmund with me this
summer, tO preasnt a personal letter to his German counterpart, giving o8icial sanction to the
pl'OIJ&lt;IIIIll This will be the first step to open the
way foe a sister-city relationship between Buffalo
and Dortmund.
.

=~· Am=.

-BBRBEilT JIOJtGENROTH

Oversea8 Academfc Pr~grani Outlined
(NOTE: The followin6 .;. Part 1 .of a three-pan •
Hria ~ 1M ~ for 1tudy abroad
~' 1M . , . _ of 1M Uniwrlil)' at. Buf!olo.)
The
Academic Plopam is a venture
to provide students willi an c;&gt;I&gt;I&gt;Orlullit for an
academic and cultural eiperience. In most students are ollared.'a choice of CXJIUIIe8 thet
eitlier are not giwD at U fB, or are given abroad
·in a dl&amp;rent perspective. Cullunilly, it- is a
unique ezperieDce because the llludent is eJpOBed .•
tototally~-t~ .,•.
' .. _, 1 ,,
The Jll'Oirlllll is open to the entire Uniwimty ·
COIIIIIIUIIity. Durin&amp; 1.973-1.97•. 11011111 350 stud!mls
.....,t to study &amp;broad.aDd about lhe t111111e number
of etudents ~ apecled to 110 .,..._nut y,ear.
This number baa bee ~ sin&lt;:e the tebllobment of tbe Jll'Oirlllll but baa curreatly
r-=!;ed a plateau due~~ -~ in· for·

o-

AS •

_.tO U..

·~· lntlt"'-'al commiliilty, •' •

the ...... ,_ ~ .ta - - - ..... ~ .
dunrw· tt~e - l c ~·ta - ttle 'OIIIce or
' FDNicn Student Alfalrs HI' tho edltarlal baeid ·
of uta ......... tor the
of na11ce1.
.......
- _ .,_
ArtlcloS
-l¥the
__ iJf - bollnL_.
: ...' - '
ilx-

-·d•-

.eign currency achange. The ~ Academic
l'rotlrlun itself bas no funds to spcJIIIIOl' students.
However, if one is receiving grants from the
University, e.g., Regent's Scbolambip or Incentive Award. Tuition Waiver, etc., one can ·""!
u- funds to study abroad.
In the past, theie have bee problems regard.
ing ·transfer of c:redita f r o m - universities.
This situation is on: the verge of being nmedied,
hoooever. There are now peraonnel in AdmissiODs
;., lind~~ ill eyal'!"ting ~
',. -takal~ ... ,.\. ·•
. ,.. ... :· . . :· .,•
'
.: .
Cunently, fuere are ten undergmduate and
graduate propam~ in a nmp of C0UD1ries in
Europe IUid the Middle East, ... well - in
Maioo IUid l'l.w Rico. Four-.new JII'OIIIUII8
·are .bein.g ~- In Austnlia, ED,1and 8lid
FraDce to . . . OOursee in auch YUyiDg 6elds mnsic '"*npOsitiaa, ;Englloh li-.re IUid .....
. viroaDalta1 deelp.,
•.
.
·. ' • . • For. lbil.8 ......... in~ in tbe pracram.
, : thte ~- cia mfemationat 8ludleol "' located
in '1Wuo8ael·Hall, RoamJ.07. There.-e ..........
. to ql..tiam NPidlnl ....... ......,...,
mini.,.- Nqubaawts, etc. A~ ill a1eo
llftilable wbldl ~ the~ to follow

.... deCidinc to liludy ~ .

. ~PAftll.

u.... Sla...ao-

-Iran's New Year
Comes March.21

n.e lranian Club will begin oelebrating the
traditional lranian New Year (~) &lt;lll
March· 21. This tradition dalal bade about 1,000
years when, 011 the first day of spring, people
uaed . tO go to their neighbors• IUid relations'
homes and greet them. At the palace of the king
there weze 12 COIUIIIDB named for the 12 111011ths.
of !be year upon which wei-e . - 12 di1ferent
seeds. The people believed thet if theae seeds
grew , well,· there would be a bb&amp;Jming year.
, Nobles and aristocrala would bring ~Ia for
the killg, and people would give .m
ente 011 this day. For 100 day&amp;, the oelebration
would continue.
Nowadays, lranian people oe1ebrate the beginning of spring in much the aeme way. Tbey grow
seeds and exchange pft!llenls. Of couree. all fathers IUid mothers give pnBmla to their cbildnm,
bUt · relatives and frieuds may receive ~Is
. also. There ll!e 11011111 special custon. relating to
. this eYent. Every family •te in order a lable (it
could be 011 the floor) which must haw things upon it which begin with the Wier "rf'
(iin): apple, garlic, ~ vinepr, a type
of1llli with dark bzVwn wlvet aldn &amp;iid a flowy
conaistency lnsici8, mountain Mb, and a special
food IDIIIe only from .n-1. Alao, there are: milk,
bread, Clllldles J1U1Dberina as m any people ae
there are in the family, a aour oranp in a bowl
of water, t h e . - -'a, aome liw filii, a mlnw,
IUid our holy book, The Koran, with aome aold
Ol' ail\lllll' coins betWeen its pq. to~ to the
faziWy IUid tbe gl..ts who will arrive lifter the
year balun- 'lbe oldest penall in the
flmlly ..... The Koran, IUid ..mol to
amlaunae tbe· ~ JIICIIIiDt
t b e - year
belinL Whole faml1ioe tdla ....r peel .m other,
IUid If tbe year lloiciM duriDr the day
Cll' earb' at nlcht. they . , to vWt 'the e1dollt relative. Tbeae 1'illllll aantinae for a lldlth.
TbtoeWntion taete,lli daya, but011 tbe 1lltb

ou- _.

""'*'

�David Yung:
A Review

Nowlhatia~~.A&amp;IN~

Dar ... ._. elealed, it ill lillie for . . to - the ~ of . . _ Coaldinalar J:lavid
(Smcllo) Yuna. and to OIIDiider what -llbould
....,..:&amp; , _ the elided ..... Wla&gt; Mr.
Yunr 4Dak o11oe a,_....,. be clllplayed doue enlhmiiem! in IMding foreign llludents ....
warda crealinl a better ldmualiaaal almCillPI&gt;m'e
in the _,.,.. Cllllllllllnil;)' - .,..u - in tbe Buffalo --a~;y - · wbale. Hili pwloi- wl1b
....,.d to intemadaaal activi1iM on c:ampua quite ~ in the early Jllllll4iiB of bls tenure. The - - ol the faD orien!ation prop1lJD
and the food tsBIIiiil party lll&gt;eloted his 1mdei8bip
capahillties. -N evatheka. in Cbe past few -~ths,
Mr. Yunr ._ 8eomed to be an almost invisible

GSA Coordinator
Is Interviewed

~-

The U I B InknJIJtiDn41. in ita increasing concern for keeping atudanta abreast of the activities ol some constituted intematioDal cooniinalinl flmctionaries, - t l y bad a diaiOfiU" with
Mr. Raj Ticlw, the International Cooniinator of
G.SA The folloWing is the abridsement of the

-

~=
- - ~Mr. Tlclw, . . -

the -

.

11118 t o - obout

of ILS.A.

Origi,nally there was a Student
Association embraciDI both the undergrads and
the arada. The grads, lmowing that the SA could
not repft!81!11t them, bad to found G.S.A. .
Q : - ''' "tabid t h e - of t h e 10• ._ TICKU:

of -

tlofto or ..

c:-dlnetor -

-

........-~

... tha func-

The olllce was created eo that the
interaata of the forelpt araduate students will be
elfectively preaented and eo that, 8mong other
thinp. the forelpt araduate students' altairs will
be ooordinated with the Office of ForeiiD Student
Affalno. My• flmctian therefore is to cooniinate
•

IIIL TICKU:

the~,.;...,....._: i81i ""-- ii.e'd.A-"Is'

iUi1

-~
111L TICKU:

G.S.A. is run by a Senate coml!f,8!d of repreoeniatives elected from the different
departments by the departmental araduate students, and it is finaDoed from the G.S. activities
fee_ Our budget for-1973-74 is about $110,000.
Q: ... the ~ of the G-S.A.?
IIIL TICKU: The activities include:" (a) financial aid to"vari!JUII depal'lmental clubs; (b) arants
for the acti'vities OJllllllital by foreign. students;
(c) arJIIDIIIID8Dt of eocial ..,woretbem; (d) resmrcb arants of ~!~&gt;Put $250 given to ,lltudents not
on the basis of their academic records and financial - ' · but solely on the basis of approved
.-reb ~ by the students; (e ) a grievance procedure&amp; committee !let up to pft!81!11t individual student complaint&amp; to the departmental
administzation; (f) provision of funds for tbe
ap.Joors Bureau;- (g) belpfn; sb,liien.IB to solve
·altli and bouaing problems as they arise; and
(h) joining the departmental a~ in
maldng policy that altecis the respective departmenta .

.

·Mr. Yunr bepn his edminiotzalioa by forming an International Committee ~ of the
presideots of aU ol the national clubs and ouinterealed student&amp; What this committee has
IIODIIIDplished, however, has not been establisbed
The two lllllior proposals upon wbicb Mr. Yung
had prom.iaed immediate action IWben be took office were: 1) a program for loans to need.J foreipt
studenta and 2) a plan for greater invol._.t of

'

·

-DAJlUNCTON AllADASU

ISC Outlines
Its New Goals

The c ~ n c e p t of crealillg a mechanism to
cooniinate international student altairs (both activities 8nd services) and to repreeent internati&lt;mal studenta to the University and local oommunity is not a new one. In fact, it has a history
of several years marked by birth, death, rebirth
and redelllh- In spite of operational problems,
however, ijJe con"!Pt remains a viable one. The
present International Student Committee USC)
DOID5 closer to the realization of the ooncept than
any preced.in&amp; it, but further C01180lidation is
..-led eo that tbe ISC will function at its full
capeciity. it has g!1!8t resources and potentialities
wailinl to be tapped and actualized.
Recently, the ISC !!DJIIined tbe need for
clarifying its goals. The following were its suggestions:
1. CoordinDU inJernDliD11lJl octWitia. There
are a dozen national clubs which, besides serving
their own nationals, have tremendous resouroes

that could be ueed to enhance "cultmal interchange and exchange. Nevertbeleas, activities of
an international nature are relatively few on cam}Jus..lt is only through a central mSchanism" that
different national clubs oould be' effectively solicited and enCouraged to participate in international programming.
2. E:urcise the righbl of Wern&lt;zlio11lJlstudellt8.
The ISC as a representative of the international
students could exert influence on the University.
By oollective action the rights of international
students could be promoted 8llli pro~.
s.- Represept internalionql, stwklltB to the
1
UnWenity and local colftl!WIIUy. At times tbe
• oammunity requests international studenta' input
into ita system. Also, international student bodies
of olhe&lt; campuses extend invitations to OUr inter. national students to participate in oonferences
and worbbops. The ISC could be an establisbed
clearing house to collect. and disseminate information of concern to international studenta at

~

Eai&lt;JbW.h inkmalio11lJl atudent UkiltitiUI'B ranked 14th among all U.S. institutions of
higher ed)lcation in foreign student enrollment .
lor the 1972-73f academic "year, aoconiing to a
census report. International students on campus
may have individual. identity, but have ·yet to
earn a oollectiv&lt;! identity. An effective ISC oould
fill the I8P aAd be the spokesman of tbe 1,500
intenuitional students.
6. Provide a eontinuity of leadership. The ISC
could be a base for oontinUOIIS leadership. The
· gep between tbe outgoing and the inooming International Coordinators could be bridged. A
smooth transition would minimize harm done to
the general international body on campus.
6. Foskr a unity amo711 InUmlllib11lJl Studellt8. It "is a well-known fact that eacb club is
more concerned with its own national altairs than
with international altairs. This eelf-&lt;lelltered attitude in its ezt:reme form jeopardizes the welfare
o1. international students at large and should be
replaced by a oobesive morale and unified spirit
among international studeiits: The ISC could be
a eatalyst in stimulalinl this trend.
· A tentative proposal for restructuring is presently being discussed. We look forwani to its
beooming a reality.
_
Students with suggestions are encou.raged- to ·
oorrtact the International -Coordinator of SA or
GSA.

SA Coordinator:
Offic~

and {_jo~cept

S .A. el.ections are over and Mr. Elhanan Keinan has been elected International Student Affairs Co!&gt;niinator. With his promises still fresh
in our memory, perhaps it is worthwhile to take
a minute to look back mid aee what Mr. David
Yung, whom Mr. Keinan suoceeds, has aocom-

U/8 INTDINAT10NIII.
EDITOR: Sudhlr SUc:hH ( T - )
co-EDITOR: Yijey N~r (India)
EDITORIAL IIQIUID
Cellos Alviii8Z (PIIerto Rico); O.lfi....... (Nigeria); Yusuf Buamuse {l'Pisbn): Ellen_Biocl&lt;. ad·
.;sor (U.S.); Harish (Ke.,_); Ernest Yeu, advisor
(Hong Kong); u .. Hul (HORI Konc).

COHTliiiiUTORS
Kulmars Honiaium (Iran); Anlbony K - (Hong
Konc&gt;: Herbert fi!Ofll8nroth (Gennany); Bobo Shlu
(Hong Kong); Mong Heng Tan (Malaysia); Mario Y (Colombia); Raul Roval (Italy).

plished during his term in olllce and Mar what
he has to say about that olllce. .
.
Mr. Yung, wbo took on the reilpOIIsibilities of
tbe office a year ago, 8l:uled oft with the idea
that be would like to fonn an "international community." Now, in retrospect, be thinb that "it
was a very idealistic notion. When e«mta are
weighed against accomplisbmen111, this conclusion sometimes seems-inescapable. To me, however, it seems that the notion is not only idealistic, but also ambiguous. Usually it is interpreted
as ezpressing the view that the internaticmal studen Ia should a1J ~ -~aDd ~.i&lt;lint
aocio-cuitmaJ aetiwtim.bYJ 10 'ilevat.ip.'i ii::mter- ·
, national identity, even at the ' of their
individual ethnic idfntities. . t.Jr. Yunr- rejects .
these melting"' pot ideas llhd belleVee that -what
tbe Jnternatiooal Coordinator-as well es Cbe various ·mtemational organizaticas abould give primary importance to is the p-tion ol their
, national and ethnic ideolaties. International eocial
and cultmal activities cm a pand acale are ~
able in so ·tar as they facilitate cultural eaa:ban&amp;e
among people of various nalioualities. But if they
become too fniquent and tate ~ over
individual club activities, by would defeat the
purpose of the clubs, oaid Mr. Yunr- He feels
that the International Fiesta in April is PerbaPs
the only &amp;rand acale .......t -that Ia . - . y .
During his term in olllce Mr. YUill has tried
to belp the forelpt atudalt cbD with their internal organizalioli, as well as with the arpnization of eveniB that tbe dubs haw apollllllnd. He
has suoceeded in maldng lllllllY of the clabe aware Of wbat is IIOing on in the StudoDt ABx:iation, thus Placinc them in a better positioD to
belp themselves to what Cbe SA has to offer.
' On the academic the infliatiall of the
Foreign Student Scbo1arsbip Propam and the
Job Program are the najor 8&lt;lDCIIIIPIIabmts of
last year's Coordinator. The ellofta apended in
these areas have not produced _,. eatialactory
results and Mr. Yung is only too ..en aware of
the fact. "Now Somebody e1ae ba a cbance to
have a go at it;" be said. 'Ibis, perbape, is the
major reason wby be decided not to run apin for
the ol6oe this year. Also, be doM not think that
he can alford to spend the time required to do
justice to the role any loqer. He is, however,
going to be around S .A. for the 1&amp;l18lnder of the
semester, to belp Mr. Keinan in the initial stages.
When asked how the individual students and the
various forelpt student dllbs can ba of help 110
tbe Cooniinator and to themselves, Mr. Yung
called for more initiative, foresight and planning.
The CoOrdinator can be most ellective if his assistance is sought by those wbo - ' it, and if
he is informed ol the WlriOils eveniB that the
clubs organize well in advance eo tbat there will
be enough time for proper pl.anning.
While, waiting to aee Mr. Keinan's perfonnance and remembering his. election platfonn, we
can be sure that Mr. Yung is IIOing to be around
a while louger and I hope Mr. Keinan takes advantaae of his preseilce.
· -VUAY NADI

REPORTER-Uf B INTERNATIO,NAL/ March 14, 1974/ Page 2

�HESA Welcomes 34 LASPAU Sch9lars
-LIMA HOI

· India Student Association
· On 8uDday, Mardt 3, the follooring members
ol the India: Student Aaaociation were elected
as its new ollicials: Pra!ident: Ravi Prakash; Vice
Pn!sident: """" Anand; Treasurer: Sat Bah!;
Secretary: Salim Jaliwela; Chairmen: (Movial)
Sudbir Mehta, (Cultural) Harish Patel and
Allbok Kapoor.

Foreiitrl.~Studeiits .... · .

&amp;·: A~teiirt J'~b~·

· '·

A JOOCI number ot foreisn studoints. both thoee
who intend to return to dleir home countries as
well u thoee who wish to stay· in the United
States. at aometime ~mter the job mubt. Tbe
chances ol flndiDI employment have ciiminili&gt;ed
in lbe Jut few years and it baa become ODe ol the
'/ major """""""' of intamational students. I wish
to thuik the staff of the University Placement
and Career Gu:idance Ollice for their cooperation
in PIUYidinl the following inl&lt;&gt;mllltion regarding
the job situation:
~=--the--ofa.,......U"'I

foNip -

J!OIIInla Jab In hla own _ ,

This depeDds to Liarge - t Oil tbe opecific
camer lleld .that tbe student baa cbooen. Tbe
'-lth profesaions. ebemiall encineering, and accountina ...., hilh demand disciplines. Foreign
students in tt... ....,.. have been relatively suo.-ful in finding employment. ~Y . ~­
iDg, bowever, as hich as 50 per cent of our fol'eil!l
students will DOt be able to find employment in
tbe U.S.A. upon gnduation. U tbe economy continues to slUmp, this perlliiOtqe will incn!eae.
Q: Whr Ia ........-t- or -....rp ...
quiNdiiJmaRJ ...........,
.
.
- 1be majority ol U. 8. manufacturing llrmB do
require a PRV. Approsimately Olle-third ol these
orpnizatiaas speCifiailly require citizenship; in
aome ......a, ~ ...., demanded UDder
goyemment contnct work. In other it Is
intemal pemoimel policy which determines these
requirements. Most companies consider lbe first
year of work for &amp;nY employee to be a training
period. 'lbla tlaiJiini period is very ~ve for
the ClOIIIp8iJy and, ClOIIflllqiiOintly, the company
wants aome 8Blrllll08 that tbe employee will
stay with the orpnization for some tmie.
· Q: do the companila emphula lhen
PRY- -...,lpf
•
Companies generally emphasize academic
achi""""""'t and past work ezperience. In consideriDg foreign students, employers ...., specifically concemed with communication sldJJs and
abili~ to adjust to genel1li cwitoms in the work
environment. t
Q: about unsldlled Jabal
,
During a .....U job market, foreil!l studeilts
can ezpect to face the, oame dil5culties tbet citizens face in obtaining unsldlled jobs. Once again,

Tbe Higher Education Student Aaaociation
(HESA) welcomed 34 Latin American scholars
current1y studyiDg English in the Intensive English Language Institute at a gala reception in the
Faculty Chili on March 5. These scholars have
to the State University of New York at
Buffalo under the Latin American Scholarship
Program of .American Universitii!S CLASPAU ).
This cooperative progrilm of -Latin American·
North -American universities provides scbolarsbipe for advanced study and researd1 in the
United States. Tbe Latin American academics
·are given a leave ol absence from their home institutions which continue to pay their salaries
for the duration ol their' studies in the United
StateS. Prior to undertaking academic etudies,
tbey ,'are · plaoed .in )ipeeiil ' siX month EDslisb ·
langUage and orientation programs such as the
one offered by our Intensive English Language
Institute. .

come

the ability to communicate will be a major concern of the employer. This communication includes not only language but also familiarity
With customs, values, and norms in the work
place.
·
Q: about the futuraf
At the present time we are expecting a weekeniDg economy which will1result in a -more dillicult job market, at least through the fall of 1974.
If the economy improves in late '74, the employment market will respond in early 1975.
Q: Have you had contad with many forel&amp;n atu-

- . . , employment?

All foreign students are invited to utilize the
services of our University Placement ·and Career
Guidance Office. From past experience, a large
number of students have used the part-time and
summer operation and the majority of our seniors
have used the Career Placement facilities. Although PRV and Citizenship requirements limit
the value of our on-eampus recruiting program to
foreiiJl students, they are advised to US!! tbe
many other resources available in this office.
-VLIAY NAD

Foreign Students
&amp; Financial Aid
Since the apriDg of 1972, financial aid bas
been a problem for many foreign students. One
. long-tl&gt;.rm issue bas been tbe availability of tuition waivers. The Office of Forei111 Student Affairs bas revised its standards for detennining
who is eligible to receive a tuition waiver amordiDg to new State University guidelines, at the
ssme ijme tryiDg to do its best to belp foreign
students. Tbe new guidelines appeer to involve
a more ueven" distribution of tuition waivers
among AmeriCans. minorities, -and forei111 students. Actually, what we ·h ave 8Je just plain cutbacks, not only for foreikn students, but for the
·institution as a whole.
.
In order to obtain infoimation about other
sources of ftnanc:ial assistance available to foreiiJl
students; I interviewed Mr. Joaeph R. Stillwell,

Page 3/REPGRTER-U/8 I)'ITERNATIONAUMarch 14, 1974

1

Since the 34 LASPAU scholars currently at
SUNYAB ...., all in Educational Studies, tbe
Higher Education Student Association (HESA)
bas organized a series of spec:ia) seminars and
presentations in the various areas ol Educational
Studies.
'
Pat O'Kane, HESA presiderit, reports tbet
the response from graduate students in 4be Higher·Education Depertment bas been overwbelming.
LASPAU s¢&gt;olars interviewed at the reception were very e&gt;&lt;cited about this unique opportunity to meet with fellow students in education.
·LASPAU scholars are from Venezuela, ~
lonibia, Brazil, Mexico, Honduras and Costa
Rica. Indiviliuals inten!Bted in ..-ling .tbe acbol- ·
ars are inviied to c o n t a c t Stephen Dunnett,
director. of the Intensive English l.anguqe Ins,
titute a~ 831-5561.
-llAUL 80VAJ

director ol Financial Aid. He eq&gt;lained to me
that there are some unrestricted acbolan;bip funds
assil!l"d by tbe Univerai~ Financial Aid Committee for Which foreign stud.ents ...., eligible. He
also mentioned loans available from lending institutioos, tbe interest Oil 'which Is paid by tbe federal governJ181t. There ..... certain eligibility
requirements, however.
1) tbe student must be a state resident or a citizen for at
least ooe year 'prior to application, or 2) belsbe
must have applied for resident status/citizslship,
or 3) be/she must leplly certify tbe intention
to ·become a U.S. citizen. No student with a fOI'eign student visa Is eligible. A foreigner with ~
stu&lt;~fmt visa must prove that be/l!be bas tbe neoessary funds in order to enter this country
through immilration.
BesideS these poaoibilities, tbe only other
sourcee ol financ:ial
1) a summer- job, 2)
a job through ooe'a major field ~t, 3) an
on-campus or otf-&lt;::ampus job (Uiialance in locat- ·
ing job poesibilities Is provided by Univenity
Placement and Camer Guidance), and 4) financial assistance from over-. (contact your em• bassy for information).
Tbe problem ol financial need involves not
QDly foreign studems, ~t also students from
other states and from unemployed families. So,
I thiiik: we all ahould keep our eyes open.

n-·....,,

aid-...,,

--cABL08 ALVADZ

Questions Rais~d
Re: U.S. &amp; Mrica

At a point h. time when the U.S. Is telling
&lt;the world that it bas ·continually supported
"majority rule, human rights, and self-determinism," one must wonder whether the -U.S. is, in
fact, playing . this B&lt;&gt;-Called role of being the
leader of the free world. U one examines .U.S.
relations with some ol the African countries
wbere a majority ol the people are being ~
pressed by imperiallat forces, this aelf-edopted
role ol tbe U.S. seems perticularly challengeeble.
Rhodesia is one example. Tbe recime of Ian

�•·

c.-.

INTlMAnOOAL
o.-: -....,......... ... __
_ln_af_,_

Nqulred "'foNIIn
l

Each DDD-imnlillant foreign student ~'""""
quired by lmmignttion J:etlll)ations to app!Y for
extensiori of stay periodiailly. The procedure is
as follCJWB: the atudeut obtains a fonn to be rompleted by biJmelf 8Dd his academic advisor. This
is submitted to the 0111ce of Fomgn Student
AJiaira. The 'student 1'- obtains a special fonn
(1-538) from the . 08ice of Foreipl Student Affairs which be l:xJmpletes. The 08ice of Foreign
Student Alfain 1'the fonn. The student IIUbmita this fmm to the limnigration OIBce
with his I-94 (the small while card which is at.
llldii!d to the .student's JIIMIIPOrt). Studenla who
are IIJICIIIII0("8C and who have an ea:baD8e visitor
vias follow the ~as above exoept that a
dilfemnt fonn CDSP-66) . is ~
Q: • - t O Nluril home t o -

....oor-

. . ,..,..,. -

.. -

poriod -

. . . -. . .

-~
.
If the etadent's vias is still valid, be .-.Is ·
only to obtain a new form 1-:Jl from the 08ice
of Fomgn Studeht AJiaira. He pn!SI!Dia this fonn
upcm retum to the United States with biB _ .
port. The 08ice of ·Foreign Student Alfain will
issue a special letter to students traveliDg abroad
for idelltillaltion Students who have an
expired vias will .-I .to have their vias revalidated at a U.S. ('AJDSUI in the country ·they are
~

visitinc abroad. .

-. Q:yes,a..,
....if ..._visaemployment is not available in his
a -

the

-

full.4lme .........,_ and

pwduallonl

home country. A student may obtain this praotic:al trainina if it is related to ~ field of study.
The traininJ, however, may .not ....-! 18
JDODtbs. The procedure is as 'follows: the student
obtains endoraement from his academic advisor
,..,....DWidins such traininJ. He then must ob- .
tain a job aller from an employer specifyins the
nature of the trainins and aaoerting that an
American citizen will not be displaced. The student 1'- completes the form 1-538, obtains the
endoraement from the 08ice of Foreign Student
Alfain, """ forwards materials to the Immisration 08ice - tboulh be 8lEielllliDa his stay. .
Students who haw QUMtions about immipation
-problema, employment, ete., abouJd ,_ a fomgn
Q:..._
__
__
... ......._
student
advieor
for - _...,
deftnitive
inlonnalbL

__

low . ......., 11u1111!t Tulllan ....... , _ __. . _

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

. , . tar •

~

•

Infinitude

Gandharva, /lOd of """"'· /ooe and b«wl)';
Come, the whole ~"" N woiU,...

Waieinl. with it. eon o~n;
Waitinl, wW. ita breath Mid.•
Conu, ciondJ.mva, 1M treatul of ,00..,
And •inl lo uo ill• ,..,.,, of th• ullim&lt;ole lrulh;
For we Med W hear your .oothin8 ooice,
We need you noW, f!Wt"e tJum ea.wr before.

.ACTIOn
Llfll

•

;
Philharmonic ~ Avallalolo

The world famoios Bu1falo 'Pbilioannonic Orchestra, under the direction of MicbMI Tilson
1b&gt;mas, presents concerts at Kleinboons MusiC
Hall on Tueoday"and Satwday eYeninp and &amp;mday afternoons As a means of aidins the foreign visitors~ with the Unl-.oi~ in
- becoming aequainted with the . """-tra, the
Philbarmonic bas made a sift of IIOIIIiOD's tidrets
to eecb foreign student/ocbolar and his spouse.
To obtain these tickets, fomgn visilpla shOuld
coaie to Room 210 ToWnsend Hell, p.-K a
valid I.D. card, and reJister their name. Please
note that this prosram is available only for bona
fide U/B foreiJn students and adoolaiB (¥-1 and
J-1 vilas)·. The oontinuation cl this propun for
next year's ClDiiiBt aeaeon depeads upcin the
visitors' compliaJice with this reqiiMl ·

TM birdo, th• be&lt;uu, lh• ,00..
And IM d•vih Are aU waiW.,;

Waitin1, for you to come down.
The Ear;lh is wupilf8,
But ~re cue no tcan,
For Me doun't luwe any more tec:uw kft;
SM's be•n we•J&gt;intl for
lont/.

*'

Th• people are prayinf,
But thue an no word.,
For they don' I h&lt;we an;y !110,.. •lffnllh;
They've be•n pra;yinf for ao lont/.

'an

There
no more wara on ch" earth;
Men, don't ltiU men an)' more;
~
For 1/aey've learnH it io ....z....
Since 110 ·one hGI wo won a war.

-., •

lim• hoB •topped in iu path,
wUJ4,dou nol blow any mort!,
oceon io •till - lhe .....,.. ..,.. all dead,
whok unive,... io ho/dinf ita breath.

.we

lhe waitin6 " -·
And you ~·t come yet. ·
"'
So, maybe you too ..,.. dead.
In which oa.ae the univerv ;.. W.t.

*

. r ~ • '/'f

•• i

Applications for Fl:lreign 8 tude n t TuiW..
Waivers for the Summar s-ian and Fall
ter may be obtained from the 0111ce of Foreign
Studeilt Alfain after April 1. The d8adline dl!te
for receipt cl applications ill May 16. Altboulh
guideliDM and fundinJ levels have not yet been .
determined, only non-lmmlgraat foreign atudmts
emolled for a full OOWIIe cl liiDdy and IIIBkinl
satisfactory p....- towards a ~ lDIY aubmit applica~
.
Tu

- f a r Fcn11Jt lluli.ntS--.

~ CaDdee, a. tbitd , _ law llludent at U /B, is available on a part..tlme bMis
until April 1i to assist forelp atudmta and
adoolara with Wt onaUera. This ..w. will loa

IMr.

Forwlwm?
For whom " the unioe:rN: wai.tinlf
Wailinf, with iU lhroblea lif•- .
For wlwm, but you, Gandlt.anxJ'/
It'• bun .,..

I. .. ...

s..me.

Ti,;; don'l love ...:h oilier an;y mort! 1/um they did
before,
They don' I hoi• ...:h otkr either;
For they've lea.med it ;.. not important,
Sin« 1ooe and hotrt!d an jiUI illuoioM.
Th•
Th•
TM
TM

: 1

~· Fo..in~. T~, '"'~~ ~l hiE .

rendered in an

'

But then, you are immortolTM only one who ;.. immor1GL
TM lhouBht mako one 1••1-...d,
And then one OQYB. " There •till io hope.•
-VUAY:NADt

~

OtJptJCi,ty Gilly• .Appoint.

IDI!IIta (~ hour In duration). am be . - - by
...W.., OPSA at 831-38211. Mr. Cadee'e alice
hoimi are n-leya from 8:30 IUD. - 10:30 a.m.
and 'l1nlnll8ya from 9-11 ILJD.. Ilurinl the .......
of March 18, Mr. Candee ..W be avUWole cm)y
on Friday. March 22, 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Mr. C....
dee lliJIPAo that ;you hrin&amp; :yaar W-2 ,.._ and
a oop:y of IMt yem'e lnotoona lu nolum II IIIIPIIaoble. If ;you .-I ........_with,_ ..... in001118 Wt l8tuno8, pt.. brina Ia the appapriate
forms. Copiee of form 10.0 Nil for ledemllnotoona
lu re1uma are availloble In OPSA. Roam 208,
from Kathy
or in u:y poat alice or beJok.
~. state and federal IDcome lu relume
are due April16, 19'741!

a-.
•

•

to -

n-e

Ia Umited ftnaadel aid available for
unda:lf&amp;duate forNn students bmides the Forelp Sludeat Tuition Waiver ~ A
....... student may apply to his IICademic
clepUtDW!t for a Univenolty a.istomtsbip.
-.rda are sliD limited,~. and are awarded 1n Cllal CCIIIIII"'itiou with
odiJdeata IIPP'l:
Inc within an - - . . . : clepUtDW!t PtniiD
etudlonla In the proleBoaaJ 8Cbooloo, i.e.., I.w,
n.t~etzy, Medicine, abouJd me special applicatiai.. with the 08ice of Fboancial Ald.

n-

an

---..oEJD

R_EPQRTER-UIB J~~"!t'TJQ~Al/.March 14. 1974/.Page 4,

�~

,._~~Wamm

r:...

~ oi-=IDIdllilled 1..t ,.... 1a . . .._.
pqe Clllll lelllr OD black t.m~q-·
laialtiiwt II&amp; UfB tbat "feu. ap~r,
~. ' &amp;llOPDm aDd otla' .

~

..= ~tJ:

.._nf........,..mtamanfthe
IIIIDILen ol tamred biB famlty.

M--..,......

dedbtia&amp;.

~::
-~aa':'..'!r.!':
Lord O'Jirian ;;'dd,";titled ID

(a. 110m:
not
to ~t Keuer'a laa.t letter to
~ Eve, but to an -'ier

f_... m ~oauidry~~
.=
'Q tl;;p..;;._,

be -aecJ aa

bad both tbe mechen;.,- and data
available to it, for ~.Y inCNM~Dt and ezpCbdina ita black fao.
ulty ba8e.
u6. Solicitatiaas for ·voluntary 81&gt;
tiona In black faculty ...ciui- have
betD a clemoaalzated failure at the
Univemity nf Bufralo.
.
· "6. 'lbe Unlvaraity's . _ to"Mr.
Eve's demallll for tbe employuatt
nf more black faculty on tawre 1_&gt;10ducin&amp; liDes auuesta that J'e&amp;ilnatiau.
·indiffaence,
polite ratiaaaiimtiaaa aufflce here II&amp; tbe University
for putllinl our con...;....... at ease,
and for maintaining tbe University aa
a 'white male dominated preaeive.l"
'lbe University conteods that beao.u... it takes an inalzuctor five to
seven yean to qualify for tenure, incri!aaed numbers of blacb· hired in
tbe Jaat few yean are not yet eligible.
Furtlier, official University licy,
as stated in "In Pursuit nf Excelience:
A Basis for an Affirmative Action and
E&lt;t1lal Employment Opportunity Pro~.. (Reporter, May 17, 1973), emphasizes commitment to ' "equal employment opportunity regardleaa nf
race, color, sex, national origin, religion, or age." 'lbe University has a
duty, that document states. "to correct
any identified underutilizatiori nf women, minQrities, and other appropriate
groupings, and to provide them equal
COIIlp&lt;!nsation, in aa:ordanoe with tbe
principle of equal employment opportunity and applicable government directives and laws and State University
guidelines."
'
'
A passive stance is not sufficient,
the statement directs.
President Robert L. K e t t e r has
noted elsewhere (Reporter, October
27 ) that be "holds every University
officer both responsible and accountable for compliance ' in this area."
Agreeing that tbe peroentage of black
faculty is far from ideal, President
Ketrer ·reiterated in the Spectrum last
week that the University is actively
and aggressively &gt;leeking to recruit
black faculty and staff. "Departmeuta
must go out of their way to make aD
opportunities known· to minority
groups," be s&amp;id. .
Nonetheless, Moea says, "academics
almost without exception will not upon
their own initiative recruit affirmatively for minority faculty."
Turning to bls own department,
Moea alleged it "has hired white fao.
ulty membem with less impressive
credentials imd may have granted
higher ealaries than tbet requested by
the black applicants with comparable
experience. . . · . I would conclude that
the teast prepared white candicJMe in
the SQ:ciology Department is more likely ·t o succeed .in obtaining an &amp;JIIlOin!.ment than tbe beat prepared black
candidate."
Moreover, be added, ''1here ,is little
to suggest - .. that the record nf other
University departmenta bas been any
better."
M0111 offered no statistical evidence
to back up lheae allegations, supplying
instA!ed oaly anecdotal information.
Supposing for a moment "that the
pool of qualified black applicanta for
faculty appointment&amp; at the Uni_.
sity Is Dllll-eziall!lnt," M0111 auuested
still other aHematiYI!II to remedy tbe
situation. "A · prOposal cleaiped -to
breelt this ' - ...... to tbe
University· at 1eaat four yearB' qo. ·
Tbe JliOP&lt;*) IUIIJ'l8led that tbe Universitv ... initiate a prop8m nf joint
~ for altemale yeaJB be' ~ preodipooa b lac .. iDatitutiaaa
aDd tbe Um-.lty.'
Ia c:Jeu alao," be added "that ·
tbe Uni-.~ty • . • baa not eoucht to
~ tbe a..ailable t a I en t • ftlllidual
Wlthin the lallbd ita own black Plld-

Be-~.., an -=111m1e Jl&amp;.
1 - . ~ Arilmr Bft.aad
· ibe Um-.~ty cencernln1 Eve's

Will .tam the

lhto deom nf our pro-

8IICbaDae. Tbat Jateat

.... ...r.m.ruied tbe pointa In his
followa:
. -

IIIUaiDear •

"L~=o..a-muy,
~Woe
~
lw and are t.d&gt;.• in
white coiJeces.
tbe percentaae nf hlad&lt;
Ph.D~Ii baa DOt inc:reaaed dramalically, their numbers bave in&lt;:reaaed llteedlly over tbe yean, and at a pace faster
·1han white universities aeem disposed
lo employ tbem.
· "3. 'Ibio University nf Buffalo earCampus aecurity ollicen are looklier aa a pnvate inatilution, ;;;I pr&amp;ing for three lllllles ~ allegedly held ·
up a student at the G&lt;wembm Resi- .. lelltly aa a public universitJ has been
and
is resistant to &amp;gllfe&amp;llve recruitdenre Hall on tbe Ambertit Campus,
Man:h 4.
AccorcliDa ID inveatiptor Charles C.
Scripp, ,the trio, ' two arm~d with
kni-. entered the niom of David
Wanbawski, 311-B Dewey' Hall, at'
10:06 p.m. ln: the room at tbe tiJne
TO:
Ms. Hilda Korner, Director
were R..-11 l..eviDe, 311-C, and Mike
President's Committee on the
AlBbam, 311-D, Dewey Hall.
~tment &amp; Promotion of
Officer Scripp said· the studenta re- · _ PROM: Eric A. Barnard
ported
Mr.
lAMne was all~edly
Faculty Statis' ti·Quoted m·
held in that
311-B
by two pf the men while
RE :
~
the third man forced Mr. Arsham to
Reporter, March 7, 1974
his room where .he~ tW&amp;S ordered to
. I woul&lt;;f ~ike to po~t out an error
hand over his walleL , . "'. /' •. , ·.
m the listing for this Department
An altercation betWeen Mr. Arsb8m
'concerning female faculty me~m
and the IJJill1 lQI!e~ !'lJd Mr. W~
as of Nov~mbei' 15, 1973. Dr. Mmam
shawski wti&amp;' 'Wii!'not'ih· his~'r:iidmr-it :•.2 '"Mhl!iler joined our faculty last April
.the ~ came to• Mr. Anbam's -aid.
and should appear as an un~~
n.e intiudiDg trio 8ed with Mr. Arfemale faculty member on -this hsl
sham's wallet..
·
All our PI!,Yroll-personnel records in. Officer Scripp noted that a """}cl&gt;'of
dies~ her on the ~t since her initial
the area was conducted -immediately,
OIJ!pom"'!""t as Assistant Professor ~f
but no one was apprehended. He addBIOchemistry.
ed that good descriptions of the .men
Also, allh?ugh it does n&lt;_&gt;t "'?ncem
were supplied, and W!lffimts are tieing
your Committee, I am noting m ~
obtained. The three students filed
same memorandum ano~~ Ollll£&amp;On
depositions.
under our Il!!Partmenfs listing m that
During the altercation, Mr. .Arsb&amp;m
section. There is one lecturer in U?s
sustained a small cut on his lip but
Department, a matter of some sigrefuaed -medical treatmenL His wallet
nificance to us, since tbe individual
contained a student ID card and 1llisconcemeil is one of the black faculty
membem in Health Sciences.
cellaneous papers. .

""'i.

Amherst Robbery

Korner's Data Off, ·
Biochemist Says

·.,Job Openings·
' &gt; I •

~

...

FACULTY

Aaaistant Professor (Foreign Language Education), Educoti&lt;mal
8~.

0

Aalistant or Associate Prnfesaor (Social Foundations), EducatioMl
· s~.

Aaaistant Professor (Plant Ecologist), BioiDif)l.
,
Aaliotant l'rof.-r (Molecular Geneticist), Biololf)l.

~.'Th«&lt;lre.
.
Aaoistant'"Prof-.or, Computer Sc~nce.
AalistantfAslociatelor Full Professor
able), Ela:trit:Gl E~.

&lt;•

dilferettt positions avail-

NIP

- 'I'eclulit&gt;al Aaiitlllllt
- H,...

GeoiosU;aJ

Sc:ie'nCee.

~ JD~; . Housing, . PR-2.

.dcii~ b.bm.'tiaa concerning
.lobe and for detaiia nf
NTP CIIJIIIlhip tbroaibaGt tbe Staie University aystem, coasult buiJelin
board~ at tbNe locatiaaa:

. 'h

d-.

L Bell Facility' ' * - &gt; D152 and D163; 2. Ridae ta_ Buildhal
'238, .-t to cafeteria; a. Rldp
Bulldina 4,23Q, in corricl« iMatt to
C-1~4. ·a..Jth ~ BaiJillng, in Cllll'ridar.Cijlp08ite HS 131; 6. &lt;:.Ia tbe ~- RMon"'1G mjd tbe Lobby; 8. lDcbood,
·' ~l&amp;Or In
'-Ddt ~- J1!8CbiDea; 7. lla3ea Hall. in
ctiuce IO:Yer• ..,_ &amp;am Public Iufonnatioa Ollce;
~
Hall," in carillor 'betiweoib Roam&amp;· 112 mid 113; 9. Puloer. ~
In Conidar .-t 1D Roam 16;' 10. ~-Hall, 1at floor, HouoiDI Ollce
' - . ; 1'1. 1807 ..ElarM!od, PenoaDe1 ~tment; 12. Norton Uaioa,
Dii8c~Dr'a omoe, RoalD· 226;' 13:· Dlehildorf Hall, In corricl« .-t to
108; 14. .Jalai Lord 01kJan. Hall, ~ floor &lt;~. Olmpoa).

"'t

x-.

.· r.OO:
· ·mam

a-n

uate 8ludcla. BI8CI&lt;

e.

-

. . . . . . -==
• Om-.lty

ar black, .,.

IICIIIc7

Ill filii&amp;

ID

,radu-

eltlawblte
for
.,pay.

....t, ...... ~_.__
informed tbe ~- .

'

-

M_.•

Facul~7at
Unl-aty
of
B
" ,.nkularly$be
aalt
n6ra to
tbe
DeJ!Artment. I am
pleaaed to
t1illl ~1.7 to
discuas tbe qaatian.
Dr..... baa liDadlllillapOD tbe heart
nf the problem in hia lllalaDIDt diU
there _ , a tolal o l - 2.280 bladt
cloc:t:cntea in 1888.1
2.625 inatitntiall8 nf hlala' ........ In
the United Slalaa in lli"'I,1 tbe adio
nf black cloctorala to u- lnatitutions was Jeoa than 1:1, aaJiilln&amp; that

su- .... -

~~~~~

industry or IIOYemiDI!Illal ~
'lbe conclusion ia ~ that
tbe potential pool nf blac:k candidates
is a drop in the much larger ocean nf
559,()00 faculty members reported in
The Statistical Abstracts nf tbe United
States for 1972.•
As for sociology, a recent study in
The AmD'iolln Sociologist pointa out
that "Of ~ nearly 123,000 members
of the American Sociological Association in 1970 . . . there were probably
no more than 150 or 1.2% wbo were
black."'
In November, 1973, tbe American
Sociological Association prepared a
roster of the 1973-74 Ph.D.'s from 103
of the'l59 Sociology departments with
graduate programs. 466 students indicated that they are available for positions starting in tbe Fall of 1974-75.
Of these, there were. 7 men and 11 women who identified themselves as
black, a total of 18 studenta (including
2 of oum) for whom hundreds.of institutions are competing.
Our pemonnel committee has been
working for months, collecting and
screening vitas. collecting lettem of
reference, and m a k i n g preliminary
.calls to possible candidates. As or this
.writing we have examined 234 vitas.
Of the 8 people w)&gt;o ·identified themselves as black Americans, we have
already invited 3 to visit our department as candidates.
In ~972-73, 9 candidates visited our
departmenL Of these, 3 were women,
and 4 were non-white, including 1
black male candidate. We offered positions to 2 of the women, and to 5 of
the men, including -the black candid-ate.
. .
Every candidate was offered an excellent salary, fully comJll!tilive .with
other institutions.
Our department is made up of people who are interested in increasing
the numbem of minority group membem and women studying sociology,
and serving on sociology faculties. We
will' continue to work in every way
ppssible to llttain that goal
Sincerely yours,
...

-ADELINE LEVINE

Chairman. Sociology
--:,--,,.,:-_-.}:--.--::•.,..:-::Open lAtter on Bl8ck p_,.
ultr R~ at t'- Urtirenitr til B_,aJo",

ll.rclt 1, 1974. p. 3.
2.
o/ tile
Stan.tical ~
streets o1 u. Uabd s:.tea: 1912 runt ..titiortJ.
·~: D.c ., JP72. r~ 200, P. na.

u.s. · -

c.-.

~·C:~~"f" . '!="N~ ·
19~~Jn!.07A!!!:. ~~. ~

-;;;-m._,s

, .. Ph.D... A...U.W.
~.l9'T3).

197S-

PolitiaDI m~

·Computer Head
Gives Warning
Some students "have been using tbe
system in a malicious manner," Gordan Lilly1 eli"'!""" of aca-

. KIIONOS

clemic computing, c:oargea in a -

distributed to all faculty and studenta ·

this week.
"'lbe details nf these· actions need
not be ezplained l&gt;erelt' be said. "'lbe

effect ... baa been to liDocl the aystem
queues, thus ao.usina ba~ and ti;meaharing ....,. to _......,., aenous
decradation nf tumaround time. '
'"l'be peracins reoponsible are wamed
to Immediately stop," Lilly said. ''H
they are C&amp;lllht. the full degree nf
' Unl_,;ty disciplinary action will be
blouiht to t-r."
.
Lilly urpd anyone who may~
. wbo' is ._..mte to contact him

,....,_111udenta ·

wbo mitht well be CCIIIIIdered - ~
pective black r-lty ._. t.m II·
--'- ~ ar both.'

'

'lbia Jetter ia a ....,..._ to Dl:.
James
"'pc LIUer em Blal*

ana

Jetter _ . , .

elaewbere in today'a Uo!ue.)

:;::..," : . I
a
of
viaiiiD8 wilb him brWly .oal)' • day .
or ao bilore bll death," .Jaetlce Warren
lllid
.
.
The J;.aw Scbool baa aUiceued ita
activitiaa acheduJed foi April 10, but
'the decllaltiaa cenmaniea on Monday,
'
April 8, will be beld aa ecbeduled.

&amp;111'1'011:

~nivenity ol Bufralo baa

. . . oiBaflolo-.DDt ...........
........... 111111111. ol biB r-Jty.~

1D a~ til 8&lt;bwartz, Wanen ex..

liall ,.. -

- t ol blac:k fllculty ... tswre pro-

=.:=.:::·~rat~ t:!
lJt

aad •titatnw ~ OD·hia ecUvitieo
bybll..,._. aathe .....,.Jorhis
not 111111.!1 able to lllaDd.
lll'l!at- ....... -

SociololfHead
Comments on
Moss's V~ews

Mass:AIIeges 'Hostility'
Ill Black Hiring Practices ·.
,_A. u-.
av.-

~··
diU f.~
be~ • , :Seboal
.&amp;the Law Scbool
ct='!.t~
18 . w_... cited m..~
h.lth
=-Jqaed=~

5

~tely.

• .

�Tbe capilaliat sy8llm, rlaed ... the
have's apiD8t tha have aoif., Ia aiclt.
drua of lollatioa, onliDullJ a
tonic, bas turned laDe. Tbe palialt is
addicted.
"Social aylllem8, tboucb. dao't die )
like bWD8D patient&amp; Tbe,Y. have to be
·
overthrown by tbe worm., peaple.
tbeir victims. This CIIJIIIot be dOubted,
1t will happen. But we dao't know
when or how too, 'it will tate."
Paul Sweezy, oo-ed.itor of Monthly
Revi.ew1 an independent "'!Cia1ist mag· .
aziDe, DI'OIIght this _ , . . , t to a
well-populated Fillmore Room, Monday night, as tbe final speaker in a
fiV&amp;-part conference on "Capitalism
Today,"&gt; sponsored by a variety of
campus OllaniDtioos.
As Maoists, Stsllnists and AoceptGod-or-Perisbists mingled at tbe doo&lt;
p
·
a similarly varied spectrum
o~ts into tbe grasp of the asoembling audience, s-y, plagued
by tbe now almost standard Norton
micropbpne failure, painted a low-key1
scholarly and documented portrait ot
1:.~ eoooomic gloom and -up'

"' evidlaoe . . . . "'ffili ~ .

.:-.=a..::.r~....

auil
In tha , _ ol tblli ....._, tid ....

Tbe

Chase to Give
Witebsky Talk
Dr. Merrill W. Chaae, profesoor of
immtmOiotiY and microbiolot!Y at ftoc.
kefelle&lt; Uohlersi.ty, N- Yorlt City,
will
the fourth annual Emest
Witebalr;,y Memorial Lecture at 8:30
p.m. Wed.-lay, March 20, in Butler
Auditorium, Capen Rail.
His topic: "CoDiact Dermatitis to
Simple Cbemicals."
Dr. Cbaae was a pupil._;ate of
Dr. Karl LaDdsteiDer, wbo discovered
bWD8D blood poups. at Tbe Rockefeller J:nsUIUie for Medical Reaeareb
hom ··~..9 to 1943.
'.
His~ .-teis on hypersensitivity ti&gt; siDlple chemical allergens.
Tbe recipient of many honors and
awards, be is a paat president of tbe
American Asaoc:iation of lmmtmOl&lt;&gt;gista and is active in otber professional

.,.-.t

0

~""~ is :open to tbe public
and is spclD80leCl by tbe University's
Department of M"ICI'Obiology an4 The
CenlerforJmmunology. Dr. Witebsky,
distinguished profi!IIIIOr of bacteriology
and immtmOlot!Y. established .t be lJe.
partment of lmiotmOlogy at tbe Medical School. He was tbe fimt director
of- Tbe Cenlet for Immunology., He
died December 7, 1969.

Ballots in Mail
For CSEA Election
Nominations for Board of Directors
representatives were concluded at- tbe
annual meeting Of tbe CSEA-SUNYAB Chapter, March 7, at tbe Faculty
Club.
.
.

~ts:fj!~U:.,~~1~

~~~· ::=.~·as

candid·

ate&amp; are: Adminiatrative Representa-

tive: Adrian L. Biel~1 • Michael L.
· Day, Matilda R. Wiuceo; Clui.cal
Re~: Catherine J. Massimi,
Audrey Blloziger, Marion Ryan Petraetis; Mtiilote~~~J~~Ce Representative:
(1.wo to be electad, tbe one with tbe
laraer number of voles for tbe two~ -~) Gerard Ca{'Uto, Paul P .
Fal5ki, ~ Paoowicz; TechniciJl
. ~ ~ T. Villa, NorIndividuals who do not receive bal-

lots irithio a reaaooable length of time
are requested to contact Mrs. Jerry
Frieday, election chairman, at tbe
Science and Eo,ineeriog Library, 8312439 or 831-41.25.
·

GSA Nominations ·
AreNowOpen
Monte J - Graduate Studenf

Aaoociatlon (GSA) President, bas an-

IIIIIIDCed that DDminatiCllls for tbe GSA

~.=..~~d:t,nc;"dm'fn':

tzative V.ice ~dent, Student A1fairs
V"a President, Eneroal Alfainl. Vice
President, and ~Graduale llludeota wbo are senators
or al-Ias to tbe GSA are elilible
for DDmmation T b o s e interested
abouJd npod to tha' GSA ollioe, Room
206 Nartoa Hall
Nombwticww will _ba open tbrau8h
ihe ~ GSA ..-tine. to be he1d
March 211 in 284 NortAm at 7 p.m.
N-maticww
and elections
will be held at that

wiD""""
u-. .

_........, c.pitalllrn

Tbe U.S., be said, is in tbe advanced ·

stages of monopoly capitalism. One
thousand or so giant corporations out
of a total of some half million nigis.
lered in tbe nation todaY dominale

tbe economy, wielding unprecedented

power.
.
Since wages and purchasing Ji&gt;OW"'' ·
of workers must be kept at a mirumum
while capital ·increesea, Sweezy · said
·out of Mars, mooc)poly capitalism is
in danger of stagnation-an iribereot
flaw in all-stages of tbe aystem.
.
Two counler-actiog forces are at
play to keep .lh.e system going, .he
noted. A mllss injection of purchasing
power is necessary to spur consumption, while at the same time, there
must be continuing incentives ( higher
prices, higher profits) . for tbe rich to
invest
'"
·•·
_ul...ilte ja leaking tire~ the eOO.iomy •
must be pum_ped up," in Sw.ieZy's
analogy. And tbe monopolistic forces
work overtime to increase their share
of·the' take.-' ..
' - '
. • .· ' '
With tbe passioJ of time, however,
both tbe tire and tbe leak grow, requiring larger and more active ptlmps.
This, be said, is "tbe theory of inflation under monopoly capit:al.i.siiL"
Three Pumps

Tbere exist; S~ outlined, three
primary, closely-reJ&amp;ted pumping
mechanisms: tbe credit, or ( perhaps
more accurately, be said) tbe debt,
system; government financing; ilnd
tbe central b a n k (in tbe U.S., tbe
·
Federal Reserve Syslem).
The credit system ( commercial and
sav~ banks, loan companies, industrial and · releil Credit ·agencies,
and loan sharks) borrows money hom
lbe rich at one rate and 108116 it at a
higher rate to those who are in need
and those who think tbey are. Money·
cin:ulates; debt ioOuols. ~Government financing, Sweezy said,
oan, in theoey, be used to inflale or
deflate-in practice, however, inflation is, tbe usual aim. "Veblen said
'tbe ballmark of sovereignty is tbe
rigbt to make war,'" Sweezy pointed
out. ''He might have added, tbe right
to make money." II a government
needs more than it takes in, it can
print more or ~rrow from tbe·

. :::f!:

Tbe Cent.al bank is allegedly in·
dependent, but is as I01ld1 a part of
government as tbe treasury, Sweezy
chargecl. Any time· unemplQYment in·
creases· or fioanciaJ panic threatens
(as iD tbe wake of tbe Peon Central
collapee), tbe baoka are oressured to
pump up the money supply.
To prove ... pomt on tbe frenetic
pump~·
be perceives going on currently,
haDded out six tabl
four derived
tha 1974 Econom~
Report Of 1M Pruilknt.
Commerclal bank loens have soared
since tha wind-down of U.S. involve'
JDODt in V"tel:oam (presumably another

a-

~~~~~l::,t~

were $279.1 ~at tbe eod of 19731

$4«.5 billioll.

'1118

IIDilD81

rate of . ioaae8e since 111'70 bas ,_,
1

~ ~t.

cftd.lt

baa bam

CIIII8UIIIOir

~-n!t"':.....w ~in COD-

oord of tha -

8oloeev aid,

.....

iDdblars point to ...............
.-Jc doomlum u.L one tbat Ia already evident and wllf ..,. inla!Bified

~'the;~ 8lleiiY Crilola," rlaiog
·~ a viruJeDt COIIIbinatioa:

="inflation
n.-.-o.-,

NX&gt;otllp"nied by ,__

..

~

swoer ioatalhlalt cndlt in 1978 .was
$20.8 billion ($15.6 billion in 1967
rlollars); in 1971, it bad bam $9.2
billion and in 1967; $3.2 billion.
In 1961, net new morlpali debt in
tbe U.S. was $21 billion-$17.4 billion
for new bomes and $3.6 billion for
otber uses. By 1970, tha total was
$32.1 billion; it liiOOiiled to $62.8 billion
in tbe first lvllf oU.973. Tbe latest
figures, Sweezy said, ludicate that
where most Df net new mortgage debt
once went for new homee, fully one
third (in 1971 and 1972, more than
this,) -now goes for "other purpoees."
~ f_r om new mortgages on

·~· -

RepOrts of -on ···C.pbllsm will - ·11M&gt;
~
In
the March 28 luue of the Reporter.
pm~y. 'pru.i..,H

reai ·ealele,, wtiidl

has increased in value, -lbeioft~
for boats and otber. major conSpiCUOUS
consumption purpooes, be suggested.
F.teral Btudget • '(. ...

•

.

:: •

Tbe federal -budget, moreover, bas
. run a deficit e v e r y year but one
(1969) since 1965. Tbe 1965 debt was
$1.6 billion while 1971 and 1972-saw
red ink totalling $23 billion and $23.2
billion respectively. In tbe first · four
years of the 1970's, Sweezy noted,
feder31 deficit.totaled more than tbe
entire over·ruo of tbe 1960's. And
buge deficits seem. to have become tbe
rule. Nixon, he noted, bas pledged to
''bust lbe budg~t" in 1974 rather than
permit a reooesion. '"I'bere's not going
to be one," tbe President has prom·
ised

-

s;.eezy's final "pump,'; lbe money
supply, bas been_working overtime as
well, expanding from $463 billion in
1965, to $641 bi1lioo in 19'70.· A quantum leap to $822 billi&lt;in took place by
tbe enil of 1972. l.aHt year's ioaae8e
was held to 8.6 per cent, a rise to $893
billion, through a . conscious effort of
tbe Federal &amp;!Serve System, tbe econ·
omiat .aaid.
.
With all tbe p~ wodrlog at fever
pitch, you might think tbe ecooomy is
running at capacity, Sweezy offered.
"You'd be wrong. We're not es ""to capacity as we were in tbe ~960's
and are falling further and (urtber
beblud." For eumple, tbe looveet rate
of unemployment in tbe 1970's ( 4.9
per cent) is above tbe highest rate of
the 1960's. And while tbe ~laf.e
of manufacturing ·capacity · utiliZed nibouoded from a low of 6 in
1971 to 83.per cent in 1973; it sbould
be remembered, be said, that 1973 an ''up-swing". year..;o swing qp, bowever, to a lower ~leau than tbe latler
.1960's. Further, Sweezy submits; tbere
PAYM£NT OF FEES
The University administration . this - k
cautioned students thAt the only tor
!Which they -Me-· lil&gt;ble lot poyment ·.,.
thoSe bllllld by •Ill! col-b.. lhi'OUih
the Burs•r's (Student .Accounts) Ollic:e.
Students ilhoulcl muse to IM&gt;Y any Ieos, an lldministrnw spoi!esman "uid.

-Is...,_

If ony
lldmlulon t:o any
course beciUM he/&amp;M . . - to pay a
• fee di...:tly 111 an inotnK:tDr, he/abe ohould
notify the lldmt-on.

Tbere is an alta'llative,· of courae,
tha eoanomiat said-« cood old faabiooed depnllllioo. 'Ibrougbout his- .
~.be noted, ibis bas bam tbe 08·
amu corrective of tbe capitalillt II¥&amp;'
tan, one which 8IIIB!8ed tbe inflated
debt 8lrudure and billh prias out ol.
tha flllCDmy. Thea, lie aald, another
round of ~ty .....wet begin.' "Toclay. four to lb!e years miPrt be n!QIIired Joe tbla ........ction," be llllll""ted.
a--, s....ezy eaid; -the Great
~ ol tbe 1930's acared · tbe
ruJior a-u world and u.s. capitalists. "Aflet ·1929 they ...-!: ~
Mon1~"
The ~K'eynes provided
their aalution, "" said. Keynes aug.
1Mted tllat by manipulating _....
meat ~and tha - _ y supply,
it would be )IOijBible to oounteract
Dep.-ioo teudo!llciell and maintain
the economy at a higb level of em·
ployment. Utilizat.ior! of manuf-.i-iog C8P!lCity could be kept at .a cor·
respood)n,ly liish level.
88l!llmed
hMvy - = - t speodiog "for suitably_large objects" and an increased
money supply. thus fostering h111e and
rising military b u d g e ts arid easy
money-credit syslerns that have become t"'e ord.er of tbe day since
Wc'.rld War II. ''EverY time a recessiOn·
looks likelY, you tum oo tbe spigot."
All UU. ~
"c'ight, 1M; a

nus

~ pjlrs.1l

F

&amp;:''tba il}fla~,~·

~. ~~' hi!~~~~;

~ · ~have~,Witli

h!!ii!ii'tJ:-

tiifi&amp;!ioil p~ ' iu a
~:n~l~.=_t ~

. So, be said, 11!1 loilg as tbe capitalist·
system remruoS, hard decisions have
to be faced: Amept a !leeP reoession or
keep on boosting 1be money supply
and watch Prices rise further and fast.
er.
Either way, tbe worlrlog man siJifers.
Tbe conference oo "Capiljllism Today" was sponsored by ·t be Graduale
Student Association, tbe Graduale As'
sociatioos in Plill
hy, History and
Economica, tbe ~uate Economic AssociatiOn and Social Science ·
College.

Architects Named
For Service Project
Milstein, Wit:lek, Davis and Aaoocistes of Buffalo have bam commissioned by tbe
un~verSty Construction FI!Dd to plan a .moe building and ..........,._ facility for the
Amherst Campua.
According 111· Jobn D. Telfer, vice

s-

~re::=~ t;m~;~

o11ioes for
~ plant and abcipe
for ca..-trY, pamtiog, electrical work.
sheet metal ....rk.. air Cllllditioaiog and
plumbing, as welt .S a service praae
and warehousing for .-tral

J:"

stores.

..

Tbe buildings will be located in the
service area ai'the -.lhwmt comer
of tbe CIIJIIPUi MeMaj&gt;le Road."Olber
buildiop in tbe area will iDdude facilities foe operational and atelf ollioes,
a commisaary and C8mpu8 Seeurity
ollioes. .
Milstein, W'Jttek, Davis and Aaoo.cistea performed assoc:iated ardlitectmal eervices for: tha
P. Ellicott Coooplex,_which is echeduled to

J-"

=~~~~

~==-and the Gov·

=

In addition, tbe linn bas fumished
.services for seYeraJ rehabilitation proj-.
at .tha

tbe

~a!::!,CamiJI;Is - :

~area including~

Cou!)U&gt; 08ice Bolldiog.

•

I

�·Penn's Dr. Fox
Is Visitor Here

Dr. HeMe c..Fox, d:tairman 01 tbe
Department ol Soc:iolosY and profsor of sociolOIY in tbe Ilepartments
of I:'Bycbiatzy and Medicine at tbe
Uni\ll!rllity of P8DIISylYUtia, will be on
campllS ~ (March a) for two
addresses UDder the auspi01!8 ol tbe
Visiting Scbolar Program of Phi Beta
Kappa's Omicron Chapter.
At 9 a.m., in Rooai 4, Diefendorf
Hall, Dr. Fox will discuss "Is Tttere
a New Medical Student?''
At 3:30 p.Di. in tbe Conference

~~~~~~

~~ of

tbe Congo. Rebellioa, 1964-

Her chief research in~-

~~~:a~'=~
to make first..band studies in Europe

and .Central Africa, as well as in tbe
U$. A fellow ol tbe American Aald-

~i:.t":' u:mE~=-~

Gifted Teaching Award in 1970. Sbe .
is author ol T~ Emer;U., Phylician
and CIHlUthor ol T~ COUTflle to Fail:
A Social VU.w of 7'ranap/Dntatit"' and
Dialysu.
Dr. FOJ: holds a Ph.D. from Harvard. Sbe tau l 'h 'i for 11 yelllll at
Barnsrd College before joining tbe
P8DIISylvania fac:W.ty.
Ttte Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scbolars Program was beJun in 1956 to eoable underKnuiuatea to meet and talk
with establisbed scholars in diven!e
disci linM. Under this p
spooby tbe United~ a
scholar spends two or three' days at
universities and coiJegai Cb&amp;t abetter
Phi Beta Kappa cbaptera, taking full
part in tbe academic life of tbe institu.tion. During his/ber atsy, tbe visiting
scholar ·students and faculty in
a variety ol formal and informal encoun4iers, which lisuall include clas&amp;room diacusaions, ~ and public

::.=f

~

Yotatan Venture

Being Offered

---RidpiAo
.
Ar-.st .

-

-._
&amp;ODAM

ISS

,.,..
""

11:40
laiPII
1:&gt;0
• 2:21

:t20
U5
5:10

_.........

M~ Semester·~
Mardi 18-22

._

9:.15

._
_,...

,.,.

1:30AM

10:.10

IQ:20

11115

11.;15
12:.10PM
1115

'"""'"'
,,..
...,
.,..
,...

...

t=

...
2S5

.,..
""'
.....

A Yucatan III'CbMOlocY trip, under
tbe directMJn of Dr. Stuart So11tt of
tbe U/B fac:ultyl has t-n acbeduled
by tbe Office or Credit-Free Programs, AIJIUSl 24-Sel&gt;tember L
Part of tbe World Venture Series,
tbe tour will vi 8 it _ . major
sites, both on Cozumel, an olf-abore
island, and around Merida, cultural
center ol tbe Yucatan.
Ttte trip is open to all interested
adults, and will feature on-&lt;lite lechuediscussions, ides intercbanse, lmd a
OeDble scbedule for p r i v a t e ercursioas. ''Each particip811t is assured of
combined educational quality, cultural
enjoyment, and rr-lom from detail,"
tbe Credit-Free~
.
A $590 fee will
· tnmsporta- .
tion, bouain&amp;
• y lriekfaD. and

~::su:..~i!.f~

n- interested· are encouraaed to
...pater em, beca.- of limited--

RePstratian may be made by aeodiog a $35 cbeclt pe.yable 4o lbe Division of Continuing Education'-c{o
MIL Etbel E. Schmidt, Faculty Club,
Hamman Hall. SUNYAB. Buffalo
1421!;_
...rna, ~ ... Certified 'lliMil Tows, 1040 North Payne
A.-ue, North Tonswands' 14120.
"$100 deposit will reserve a sps&lt;:e.

""".by

�......................... for_........,. ___ .,.__ ....
...... .... 1lcllel OllcL

._... ....., to -a,.. to .......
-

.

N8ncy

• ...- ••ap.. to -

c:.n...m. 831-22211,

-....... lllllj8ct

for ...... Uni.-IIJ
.
of ....

-YSIMIIIA&amp;.

THURSDAY- ~4

-

B Lymphf:£I/~-Wte Fe Recepton on

!:!1i':'.:.~o~~t..?;..~~~~·d'e=:

. Norway, 146 Capen, 4 p.m.

•

DANCE• .

c~~~~ [:n!:-.::r ~.,.::!.';!.:

ben of the U / B Theatre Department and
the Company of Man, Temple Beth Zion,
Delaware Ave., 8 p.m~
UUAI fiLM••

Seuen Samurai, Conference Theatre.
Norton. check showcase for times. AdrniMion charge.
THEATRE PIISINTATION*

. ..:.: f;·~~ ~~~.=,:ckn,'!
at~;e

Studio, 8: 90 p.m. Admission charge.

Tbrougli Saturday, March 16.

SATURDAY -16
Sf:NfOI lfCIT.U* "

Joon.ne Castellani,

c.=

clasai~tar

~~~la.ofb~~tJ~~~.

atu-

aod others, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
No admi.ssion charge.
THEATRE NUENTATION*

The DeerkiU; by Murray Mednick, eli- ·
rected by Rick Alongi, Harriman Theatre Studio, 8 :30 p.m. Admissi?n charge.

. SUNDAY-17
EMPHASiS: EDUCATION

-

EUilene J . Morte~ director, University Placement and Career GWdance Of.
fice, will discuaa with mOderator Susan
Camardo tbe -general employment ...situation for college graduates, and will u plain the efforts of 'b is office to alert
students to the alternative career opportuhltiea open to them, WPHD-FM,
_10: 30 a.m., and WYSL, 10:30 P-!D'
CAC. .....

KU... Rm. 140 Capen. 7 A 9:16 p.m.
Admiooion: 76 ~Ia.

-

-~UCTWI·
Acid-&amp;. CGIGlyllio of Carloonyl and
Acyl Group Reaction•. Prof. W ." P.
JODOb. Bnmdoio Univenity, ~ AcheODD, 8:16 p.m.
oories
is. Put ofaupported
the CoD. ."The
, _lectllJ'e
_ in the
Disciplines
by the U/B Foundation aDd administered
by the 08lco of the V1C8 Pnoident for
Aaodomic Affairs with the aid of the
Graduate 8c;booL

·

DIIAIII PIISINTATJON*

fOU[

SOiiO COHCOfO

c!t.""~C:~:'!'::i ~!.,~~

guitar, Uniterian Oniwroalist Church. of

Amherol, 6320 Main St., Williamsville, 8
Donations for fhe Church Music
Fund: studeots, SL60; all ·otheno, $2.50.
COP out- GlUT AIMIICAN PASTIME
Part two of a oimulated Aloobolica
Anonymous meeting, WKBW radio, 10
p.~

p.m.
•
Cop Out is produced aiid -...! by
Susanne Cook, in conjunction with U / B.

TM Durltill. an Obie award·winning

plu by New York playwright Munay

Moilnick, Harriman Theatre Studio, 8:30
p.m. 1'hrouch Saturday. March 16.
.
"The J&gt;!aY. c1irec:tec1 by Rick Alongi,
cloala wtth a ¥0UJIC folk singer's search
for IPiritual eilf-attainment. Action centen around the cfuect conflict between
his cboMn life atyle and .the demands
Pill upon bim by bis wife and friends. Admisoion: students, 76 cents; all othera, $1.60.
.
Preeented by the Deportment of Theatre 8Dd the Studen_t Theatre Guild.

--·

s -· &amp;uruuVi.

Conference Theatre,
Norton, c:bock obowcaoe for w.-_ Ad-

misoion

charce-

EXHffiiTS
UU.U ElOUut•

1Jio~~o::e:;r:.·.;£rt::. =~ t:::

.day, March 16. Gallery bouro: "Monday,Wednesday and Thursday, 11 a.m.-5
p.m.; Tueaday and Friday, noon-5 p.m.
and 7-10 p.m.; Sunday, .1-5 p.m.

Recent Pain~and Sculpwre,

bf Du-

ZJ:~lt~:c!.,":-"JU:'J.':'""t2sso ~

CIATUIAL AfFAIIS EPtiiiT*

IIIIITAI. EDUCA,_.

,.,!~ ~~~k;:t~t~~~

Hall Dental Oinic, 8 : 30 a.m.-4: 30
p.m.
Thia NMion ia for dentists and auxiliary pencmnei,

ILICmCAL- - ·

G.&lt;;,~=-~=:~:rti!:f:

cal Eqineerinc, Unrvenity of Florida,
GaiMoville, 112 Parker, 2 p.m.

.-ssuolloAa•

New Ene~echno~ Pollution;

:::.f;w~~r8Ddeis &amp;.u~::~:

2109 O'Brian Hall, Amberat, 4 p.m.
:~will be oo...-.,1 in 608 Q'Brian at

8

C.... Dioloootiono
ICIINCif Paa
- Throul,h
·

664 Franklin Street, 7:30p.m.

wood Ave, through Sunday, March 3L '

FRIDAY-15
-

BUFfALO WOMEN'S CENTEI MEmNC*

AI.JaiGHT""NOX AIT EXHIIIT*

Some Recent Print.. an exhibit &lt;&gt;f student work from the U/B Art Department's Etching Workshop. Created under
the guidance .of Hervey Braverman .aDd
Robert Aull, Hayea Hall Lobby cliaplay
~ l!,~-Friday, 9 a.m..-5 p.m.,

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS IN1'IIVIIWS .

· Throughout the semester, on-campus
interviews will be conducted for atudents
wbo are interested in attending graduate
acboola or obtaining •employment. . Further information and appOintment. for ·
intervi!'WB can be arranged throuch tlie
Univenity Placement and Career Guidance Office, H'ayflO C, 831-4414. "The folapnciea will be interviewinc this

=

"rriUUlSDA.Y-14: Travelers Inauranoe

the

t7te~V.:::ty"Prof;~;

DMiioa Dl E..,;n-rinc. Brown Univiroity, liN Parbr, 4 p.m.. Coffee in 107
Parlier at 8:80 p.m.
~

Co.; Aetna Life aDd Caaualty.

N&lt;YriCES
COMPUT1NO . CINIH SEIVICI

Thirteen membeno of

./
~e

~

_No

::k:a~~~~::~
~

refefTII), ·or appoinl-

mentio q · nebeasary. }.' .u.·· ,.. •1 • l••.
AI all other timee uaen may cimoult
witb staff upon referral or appointmeut.

For further ipformation, contaCt Ms.
Calato, 831:1181.
COUN-

Prof.,..;onaJ counseling is available at

Hille) Houae, . 40 Capen IDvd. For ..an

appombnent, call 836-4640.

SUMMH SUSIONS IIOISTU.TION

Tbe OOiee of Admioaiona 8Dd Recorda

Academic

9-12, 16-19, 22-26, 30, 31; aDd
3, 6, 7, 13, 14•. 20-28.

s·~~ -. .

•

, •

AUJW~t

1,

-

' al.are

liis~..,·~"'"'~;~~~
&gt;~~ iii the
tala;. · --~ swu:

[oq~thO.

urland and Lake Como. or further infnrmation, write to G. Previtali, 2946
BenDett Ridp Rd., sante Roaa, California96404.
RIP TO TOIIONfO

An u:curaion to Toronto ia plaDned for
Saturday, Man:b 16, to a parlormonee of La Comeclia FNJIIC&lt;IiM at the
O'Keefe Canto.-. For abow tickets and
cbarterecl bua

-to.

contact Dr. Hennin,

::!
=::~M~ T.~
students currently recis~at the Uni-

Roaary Hill CoiJe&amp;e. 4880 .Main St., P.O.
Box 897, Buffalo, 14226. (After 5 p.m.,

Tentative Summer Seuions recUtia.tion bouro at the Oftloe (Hayes Annmt B)
are 8:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. on the following "
dateo:
. April 15-18, 22-26, -29, 30; May 1, 2,
6-9, 13-16, 20-22, 28-31; JUDe 8-7, 11, 12,
18, 19, 24-28; July 1-5 (CCJ!«! July 4),

- like to publiciza all events taklns ~
on campus. To record infom}lltion, contact
Nancy Cardarelli, ext. 2228. by Monday
at noon for Inclusion In the fotlowins

venill need only complete a Course Requeol Form. All new studeots will have
to complete a Student Data Form, -whicb
will be available at the Oftlce on April15.

MONDAY-18

·

::-=

Sarvicea-c ataff of the U/B Computing
Center are now a~le frOm 10 a.m.-

call

839-Ml!6·)

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For eviryone•a convenience
pleasure,

'nd

Thursday laue. ·

3 Visiting Scflolars Will Discuss
'Concepts of Love in Middle Ages~
A surge of interest iti !be culture

and thought of the Middle ~ has
given rise to a graduate semmar in

medieval studies within the Program
in Comparative Literature..
The seminar's unifying theme is
''The Concepls of Love in ,t he Middle
Aaes." In addition to meetings with
U/8 faculty member Dr. c-reo Bandera. Dr. Joeq Schaefer, Dr. Berry
T . Buermarln and Dr. Robert R. EQ.
wards, students in the cowae will hear
from lhree well-known visiting schol-

an;: .

On Friday, March 29, E ugen~
V anre, _88110ciate prof.-.r of comparative literature, UniverSity of Montreal,
will give a lecture on "Love'e_Conoonlance: language&lt; and Desiie in
Medieval Literature." Prof.-.r Vance
has written numerous articles on med·
ieval topics ·ana autho!ed a book on
the Song of Rolahd.
John Frecx:ero, prof.-.r of Italian
literature at Yale and one of the most
distinguished Dante scholars in the
ciruntry, will speak on '"lbe Semiotics
&lt;&gt;f Desire: Petrarch-and the Augustin-

ian 'liadition," Friday, April 12.

Hi=~=·~r~~
at ComeJf. will apeak Wean-lay,

May 1, on "Myatical ~ of
Love." l'lofeaaor MDniii·Ano,o baa to
his Credit the most
Jete 8IUdy of
the Spanish ~OrleAY Gassett and has written edellsivefy ·on the
work of Spanish mystical writers.
-Alloo~ to Dr. Bandeza, 8BlCiate
prof.-.r of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese and director of the seminar,
"today'a stud~ are surprised at the
oontem)l&lt;lnlry thought prevalent in the
Middle Ages. The M1ddle Ages has
acquired a special releV811CB in tOday's
intellectual community." _
The lhree 1eclrues will be held .at 4 p.m. in 225 Crosby. The JJUI:&gt;Iic is
invited.
Co-sponsors of the lecture series' are
the Program in Comparative Literature, the Departnient of French, the
Department of Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese, the Committee on Middle
Easjem Studies ani! the Council on
' International Studies.
'

�</text>
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                    <text>Innovation
Group Urgec;j
By Collegium
Tbe creation of a pennanent University_ Committee for Innovation is
tbe major ·recommendation of the final
report of lbe Faculty Senate's Collegium.
ln a document dated March 1 and
distributed to members of the Senate
for consideration · at next Tuesday's
- meetin&amp;-tbe-aix·JD&amp;D. CAJ\!Iginm ~
"' that-a .faculty -.c:ommittee oo in- ·
be estsblisbed for the Pur·
pose
receiving and evaluating ~edu­
cstional proposals of an ezperimental
nature, most particularly such as
would compeiiSilte for tbe lacunae between departments. . . .
''We propose," the Collegium aplains, "a committee of entn.p...,.,m.
ial character rathe'r than merely an
agency for disbursement of funds."
Tbe pro~ committee would "actively ferret out" innovative proposals.
act as advocate for them, and "belp in
trayersing administrative thickets" in
obtaining approval, funding and faculty.

_law School Stresses Teaching Effectiveness
Tbe Law 8cbool taloes
seriously.
· ··

teadlini very

Not 'that Cllber 8ectors of .ti&gt;e Uni~ don:l But in law, teaching
eDJOY8 a uruque s:fl!lus. and plllys perbepa a . more decisive role ~ faculty

.·

=::'~~tenw"ff\';.~R.
"-'-~

~ """""•
="!'fgesta, tbe
classroom •sa tbe cJoeest

thin&amp;. we

have to an opening theatre.

It's as important to legal education as
the laboratory is to the sciences. To- .
getber with tbe library, it is our Iaboratory."
·
. In other areas of graduate and professional education, Greiner notes. tbe
cliniail setting, tbe laboratory, and sup&lt;!!Viaed scbOiarly researcb activities
are '!'8-ior vebicl"'! for teaching and
leammg, 80 that lesser empbeais may

N~mbers -of Wom.en Rise;

Tenure Ratio Remains Same·
Altboush 1be numbers of "both men
and women have increaaed since 1.9691970, relatiwty little change has occurred in tbe male-to-female ratio of
·tenured. faculty, a 1973-74 profile prepared by tbe President's Committee
on tbe llecrui:tment and Promotion of ·
Women rewals
on page 6) .
Accorcting to the current report,
• some 88 per cent of 1be tenured faculty are males, 12 per OIBlt females.
. Comparable dats COiq)iled in May
1970 indicated lbet 86 per cent of the
tmwred faculty maJea.
Tbe ebart _....t by tbe Women's
Committee aboWs 1be numbe&lt; of fulltime faculty in each department, bmk-

&lt;-chart

en down by sex,. mnk and tenure
status. Director of tbe Committee Hillla Komer noted that the report includes Slate-line faculty only;
fore some 1aculty, nobilily in the
Health ' Sciences, bave been oinitted.
Sbe further csutioned that the ebart
gives the pemmtaje of tenured· faculty in relation to the .total number
of faculty of their - only,l1tlll« than
the total nwilber of both male and female faculty.
Tbe raw dats for tbe report was
provided ~:..~.!i'"'"" 16 printout
~
Department, Ms.
~ moat il;nulcant gains 1n dini.-

u.e.;e..

=.:.

(Continued on-~· col. 4)

be placed on classroom instzuction. In
the l.aw School, however, classroom
teaching is psramounl I~ is in tbe

=mandtha~c!ri.wtam=ysisof~
make up much of tbe lawyer's art
must be mastered in order that skilled
prolessionals
be trained.
• Here. a
rot
r'
fail
1he
I! esso s success or
ure.JS on

maY

~N:~~~·.2,:"on~

part of our faculty about tbe quality
of their teaching. 'They spend a lot

·of time worrying. about it, and working at improving il"
.
Tbe administmtion of tbe 8cbool
worries about it, too: Provost Richard
D . SchW&amp;Jtz cites a long tnuiition of
serioUsness in regan! to teaching. Tbe
tnuiition continues today in 1he form
of a teaching effacti"""""" evaluation
process 80 ·careful and .thoroush that a
Faculty Senate Commitiee, DOW readying a repozt proposing a Universitywide
for improving teaching,
~ tbe bmt tbeY'w came
acroas in tbe University.
u~ in approach, lbe Law
Scbool s method · 18 also u n i q u e in
oterms of who participates (II tbe proceas. Tbe Scbool is committed tt.&gt; tbe
c1octzine of active participation in lbe
decision-lllllkinc ~ by tt-e wbo
t-n and tl...a wbo llludy there.
Greiner ·~ the evaluatioll
lJl'OCil8ll .. 1-.vina two basic put&amp;
, (C""""'-1 o n - 3, col. I)

.

Tbe Collegium was named bY the
Senate last year and cbarged with the
amorpbous task of facilitating faOOlty
input in academic planning. Members
of the Collegium are: David T . flue- .
lon, policy science; l:.ewrence Chisolm,
American studies; Leslie A. Fiedler,
Englisb; George Lee. civil engineering; Harold Segsl, biology. and Mac
Hammond, Englisb, secretary. All
bave profesoorial rank.
.
Unlike a number of nuts-and-bolls
academic plans under consideration in ·
recent yews, the Collegium docunient
makes its specific recommeodatioo&amp; ·
within the context of an eJ:piiJI8iw
view of the nature of education and
the university. An underlying assump- .
tion of the document is that the university, an institution whidt has survived since the 12th century because
of its ability to adapt without losing
sight of its "original mission," must ·
continue to respond and change if it
is to remain viable. .
"It psys to remind ourselves from
time to time of wbat that traditional
mission is," the report says. 4'An institution of bigber learning is sui~
its logic is that tbrougb knowledae
comes understanding, and tbrougb understanding, wisdom."
Keeping the traditional mission in
mind, the university, and particularly
a large publ:ic university such as this,
is faced with a changing array of con-

~~~u:'~~~ ·to serve a broader clientele than simply the }'OWIJ. ~ facilitate the integration of lmowledge by bl . the disurr:fture and
tinction between campus

. (eo..tinM&lt;d ~- 3, col. 4)

�~:

Former Inmate Says
Treat Women Like utlffQrt:en
. u - - - to . _ wt.t a - t
Ul811utaitutudlllta,-*a.U...
.._,
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time _...,
-.......__
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..,._.
·
or
c1 wt.t 1118 um.to . . . 111111 to fiDd aut 'ftat
. 8alile lall ....,. .._, belll _ .
what dube
Jai!l, or wt.t elallold .........,m

w.ay- .............
clodtle!
4

dlalia 111111 fiir •
1••......,.
clllle
-..Ia ~
edAbaQt
to 1Jealldn'l
............
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Ill llll
~ or a..llaa1 ..tliill, 111111

lillie....,....,.
:r.:

to- .... - to....,. .....
. . . . . . . -.part.

s-Ian- ftllld,y to...,., -

-'Y • tblrcJ ~ tbelr - •
llri!DB17 'IOCidlallill role be that cl.
"'! • CbsapiBt, or

:.=:":r.:::!..

The ciJuacled8tb of

----.. llli

-

~. ·n6octCIIli.- tbelr U/8 ·
..,_....,. ..... decled tbelr faluN.

~ . .... -m.--' by
m ~sm=.
~. l!t

H. Wil1lllln 0o1a1

~of tbe

Paul- ·

111111

~ill~ .fonwaod ';,

tllal dlb-a ·

fourth Ill • - - cl. 8eaior 9aneya,
111111paduataiia of 1972
-~ 1a .-pled from 8
..........,. of tbeir .-JD:
RaadiJm
of eoo 1972 __

-ma

m

to

•Job•-

--

w.Jb BIEDERMAN· to~-QY,:Aiiti'~

01' li!aallrulilliaaa IIi
priaon, ~ - lluarda usually lear
tbek- prl!ll8rilY 'ftl1rd World Jll!eaaln.
It's 1lb ·a .,0 when tbe 1iilllbePela

- "Mill ... -

lave a healthY 181J111C1t b tbe Baa.
MeD Ia pdoon ue -lied 1fb lllliw...... Ill priaon ... -lied

most ................ llldialte
·---~
.. _._
tim tbe J'IIIIIICIIIdllla lltraal).y ~tloa far ~ develop-

like cbi1dreD."'

~~

crimea, - Bruce .Jacboo aptl)o ca11ecl
lbem. that paro1ea SbanJo Krebs ...,.
-cuaed tbe _,•a priaon aylllem of Ill

118lt, puticu1arly .. tbelr alr:i11a 111111

-

PA'l1UciA

llODtrihu-_

mala.

The wideapread bdmlilimtion of inmalea """' Ol1iy one of the injgdicea,

The fact tim 41 ~*' eimt of tt.e · a recent adclreaa to U IS law 8ludeo:da
8iimon rai8ed tbefr iaft1 of eclucMion- . llpltiiiiiJled ~ tbe Studaot Bar Aalociation. Looldnc 1i1ae a litudent betaelf, '
al aapiration duriDa ibe , _ . of their

~ lllilleDdaDce

:r::

~it-

:=~..:!:..t.to~~
to puraue ....., ' - 1 eduattioD lban

"'*'

tbe blu.jeaned lormer ~ . .
called ber eigb-. lllllll1iilat Bedford
Hilla Correctional Facility. tbe Blate'a
Ol1ly priaon for - .
,
-- A political activlat conYicled of conspiracy to OOIIimit IIJBOD (--ci de\ gree}. abe d8plored tbe - · s priaon
as an institution ...rum·liiiiX-.Is Ol1ly
in ~ people 1.- to aurviw in
priaao, thus ~ a revolvinJdoor pettem home aut by high recidivism.rateli. "Priaon ckJM not aDd cannot l'IHICicia1i.oe or nbabililate ....._

'iCJJ3!f'7···~

: . . . . to . . . . . . .,..
'Ndic:.Ja, IDaladllilr Min ....
but
bad
other bcda by COil~ !;!&amp;to
-.Jed to J.. AD
mM1

to ..... ....,........

::::z:;a.=r~"l1r.::_

of-~

;;:,.~IIDd

.:t....--=.:

*tbe
Alice Cr!DD~a.llllll .......ollllr .._,_
alioDa1 ~ to .. ftiiUiad7 -ri8ltad
by . . danley. . . . . of tbe lamatea
bad belll ......... 111111 . _ llban-

~.:eu...--=:r,-J:L....i;

•'s

pri8aai . . .. . . .

~

without llleD,· Ibe IDdic:alled.
tbet iidD ·w. PniiV' -.:It a p,y
'11101'10wbele the waiaildlilll _ . a
"'-llhY ~\" _.._ibe · lack of.
any ma1ea OlliiCollt-tile' l*-l'aa'a •outer
rin1 of old Jlll'lll." MCIIII of ibe iD1D11tee
......, not p,y "aa 1118 111118ide." aDd
in pdaon. ... .._._,..__don't
-

they ~ to atlaln
they
' - " aillege. Altbouch ~ inquhiea ........, not made mprdiDg motiva;-"~ ~ i,;ir ';j_
tioD for c:banginJ clepee l&gt;1anS. for
' - -laat&amp;i 111111 aclivitiea and · eome at IBBBt, ibe UDIIVailability · cl. a
;;:;....,- - - Uaalile ~
job DO doubt left tbem wi1h advaDced
NCei9ad from 4411 lltUdSata (40
·sc:booling 88 ibe Ollly allemlltiw.
- . t of a..--'-' -..s. ~·&gt;Ut8 clearly bad an impact on 11.~
........,..__... • seniors. Academic activitiea, tboee exThe a8mple (~ from ~ . perienoOs obvioua1y initiated by tbe
prt... .. linal. 'l'b8 iiw.IIIUOilline
years .cambiDed) CXJIIIialed .of more
University, ......., cited 88 llllllillg tbe • fur the -~" "!&gt;e saicl
..... Compuo n.n ~
ma1ea lban fema1ea {68 ~ to
most important c:on1ributorB to valua- oaok.
--far
aiii!r for
.(other
....,_ wuuJd
. tbem,
.ex41 ~ C*lt). Propottiooately more
ble outmmes of collere attendance.
Most women's prisons are more like
ample). Mau.Y f1l 1118 .,.me _ , tban.- entered U/8 88 fNab- • Academic 8tltivitiea contributed edencampusaa tban ~ said tbe
also P,Y, abe ailded The prison admare 1ilr:ely than
sively to 11.- 8I!Diora' inle1lec1ual·deformer inmate, who is now a lecturer
ministration allcially forbid ~
law IDDsfem!d into
· - • .-t, _ _._ _1o.-a_'-.-- de!nee. to
a1
•
.and
.
aama1ity but lllllllllcia11y encouraged
1
tbe Ullivaaity.
~,_,.,.,;j'~
'The l.aur . :...m~ua: J"~ lw ~
il Anything that kept the prisoners
Two other QDDiributora of major imporlance
ReaeoudL !nDmtea aDd o6:Wa of Bedquiet _waa-oby with tbe warden, abe
The Senior SUrvey reaeardl project
(peraonal reac!!nJ, friendsliip8, meetford Hills reler to the facility .. "tbe
saicl
• .
- •
bad two func:tiana: to emmine stuing
aDd inConna1, impromptu
campus." "Going to jail" ia a term
Nat - . . ,
denta' perceptiona of their mllep exdiscussions) were, DO doubt, · faciliusually re&amp;eiYed for pun:isbment with- •
lnataod of priaon reftinn. which !!he
perienoe and
eva~.- bow U/8 aitailed by tbe soci41 environment of tbe
in ·the facility. Bedford Hills (which
viewa iiil,.~ -Ms. Krebs advo, _ stuc1enta mtarms of their experUniversity,..JiboUsb the extent of the
'i.i l scheduled to open a8 a "priaon &lt;01.'c atea 8'--lnn.. tbe
· , IIY&amp;t!m
iebc:es. aDd ezpectationa.
University's initiative in facilitating
lege" 'in the SUNY ayatem) .iB not so. • for. al~
~all
Attending co'llete waa a ,eDerany · . non........Jemie experienoe!l remaina unmuch brutal ,aa futile; abe argued.
of the women libe met
~rison , bad
poaitive ~ - ~or-tbe--._.
clear.
Describing herself "'!' a participant!'IJildn!n. Wb,y lbe · ·aeii!omte
dents. All of tbe 1iated outcomes of
College -experiences _...... to be
"'-rver because' Of bier·lelatively ' motlient from ibeir c:liildi-en' ana reooUege a'ttendiulcle ...,n, valualile
more related to · tbe ~6{' Cll!'e8&lt;
short senlei)ce. abe· foond that the
move tbem from tbe tu roU8 when,
them, indicating tbat they eq&gt;erienoed
cboice and preparatioo '!han expect,prispn, mtentionally or liOt, .-.! b&amp;- - !l&gt;rOOgb a probation-type ayatem, tbey
peraonal and inle1lec1ual ..-lb. Their
eel familial """"""""""- Choosing a·
bigh reprd for -this peraonal -&amp;Dd inVOQation was illl ~lved p,_-oblem
teilectuB1 growth is rellect.ed iJi their
for the largest proportion of lheae stu- ·
bavior.' "'t'a the squealr:y wheel that
some $9000 a ~ Ha1fwa,y , houses
- deecription of the ideal univeniity. For
dents (a fourth) . It bad also ca.-.!
gets the oil," guards would aay. "The
ue another alternative that ilbould.be
them, tbe ideal unJversity should f"fa great amount of ooncem to anotbez
women Would have tantn.uos, scream,
considered, in ber · view. Parole, a
ter an actiw involvement in intellecf'tfth, wbo bad resolved tbe problem.
fight, come, act out, threaten to 'go
"plantation syatem" in which ' tbe
tua1 pwsuita, and it should encourage
Courses bad been. of some (avemge)
oil,' " abe said "This behavior is what
, priaaoer is denied all civil rights and
studenla to develop their oovn stanbenefit in developing a vocational prefwas demanded and rewanled by the
is ,p~ to fail, Ol1ly "prolongs
. dards and v.aloes. In other words, ibe · · erenoe. · ·
system.
.
the agony of prison," abe said.
ideal university should belp others to
c...... ~ .
"Tbe prison ayatem aa a re"I don't know if prisons are inherent
grow in waya they have grown.Regarding c a r e e r preparation,
suit of its own failure," tbe young
in capitalism," abe aajd, indicating \DlTheir peiceptioDa of their faculty
courses Were of some (average) beneparolee said. Wbat, abe asked, does
certainty wbetbet revolution or a betat U/8 were ..,.,.,...Uy positive, -- fil ·'lbough valuable,, preparation for
prison teadl tbe woman who-has comter ayatem for dealing with those
cially ~ intheirmajor~ts
a career was the least valuable of' the
mitted a Bingle crime and been caught
found guilty of c:riJma muat come
( wbom lbey pmrumably knew better .... eight autmmes of mllege attelldanoe;
( tlie -only differenCe, "'n ber-view, be'
l1ml "' may · have been c:oavided of ·
than other faculty) . Courses bad been,
it was· elevated to a middle position
tween priaoDelii and the great l!llljora crime of violeDce, but rm really
on the •ver&amp;~e. of at least some benein terms of~ proportion of students
ity of "criminals" who live free on · • veey- COIIBelVative. I don't like yiofit in more than baH tbe areas 1iated
(slightly more than· one thin!) who
. the outside)? "Sbe's Ieeming bow to
lence." Sbe would prafer ·ll! oqanize
on tbe ~
expected it to be one of tbe most imbe a priSoner, learning bow to bustle,
for ftM&gt;lution, al~ _tbe linea abe -obTbe reapondenia decisive} Changed
portent outcomes throughout their
::...: attend to~" s!M&gt; an-:ti:' ·in·CubaJ:.=:tbanaaeblood
4beir educatioDal plana wtJie in ml- ·
liv&amp;~. Students preferred (on the a v....,. cent -'-~ their
erage) ihat tbe ideal university proWhat women in prison ·are not Jeam"
Sbe
·UIII8d her -audience in
I - .,..,....._~
....,~ .-~"""""'
vide vocatioDal tmining; this function
ing are useful vocational a1dlls, Ma.
· tbe I.aw: Sd!Qal's Moot Court to work
aapirations. A alightly higher percen\vas of middle rank in comparison to
Krebs asid. Bedford baS two voca-lor repeal of .tbe ~ dJug laws.
tage (46 Per cent) did not change,
tbe otber hmctions. Respondents were
tiona! prognunS_ -Women with aoine
Aa .til .ber .own pliin!t, abe ia applying
however. Sligbtly more than a fifth
not asked wbilt ........ would haw the
of tbe BBIDPie currently expected at
~~,
education are usually assigned to
to law , adiooL ''I . think rm a good
most 8 blccalaureate degree. Advanced
ideal university provide as helP in
learn ''low-level keypunch" using obrisk," .l!i&gt;e liBid.
.
.
.
degree ezpectations revealed significboo8ing a vocation.
cant differences between men and Whether aatiafied wi1h 1he available
women. Women Wen. more likely than
vocational aids or not, moat managed
whom have already bad too mud&gt;
·
. •L-'- liv- that •"-y w.ill be
(Contilwetlfro"' - J; t»L-2) ,
men to expect tp at1a1n at most 8 mas.to have some career choice by the time
failure m
"""" ~
.....,
alive hiring of-_ , I!PP-r in the
ter's degree, wi)ile men were more
lbey were ready to graduate: only 6
able ·to get &lt;lecent jobs)_. Others work
lllOVI!r ranka. In 1970 &amp;pprmdmately
likely (cOmpared to women) to ex- . per cent of this aample did not have a
·at piecework sewing, stitcbing up \Dl20 _per cenf of the aaalatant profeBJrs
pect a profeMiona1 degree. Similar
career choice at ibe -time theY comderilborts and pajamas on antiquated
were women.-'lbat f18iae has risen to
percentages expected to attain a dooplelled the questionnaire, (Anolber 2
sewing macbines.
.
30
t • ...__ -~
torate (14 per .,.,t).
per cent did not lllliiM!l that queatimi.)
''Tbe biggest . job ill a prison is
per cen .cw ..., ~·~ year.
About ball ibe aample cbiuiged their
Theae -nora bad already bad excleaning ,it up," Ma. Krebs asid Her
tic!:~~~~
cboice of major field aometiine during
tensive experience in developing and
first assiiP!IIII!Ilt in prison waa Pll8liing
be cfuec:ted to bor at 831-4019.
their coUere YeaJtl. The largest pormaintaining close friendsbips. 'Ihnlugba ~. aiid, like sisters everywhere,
tioD of the aanior r,:ear cboices ( &lt;&gt;ver 8
out their. livea, lbey expected to contbe
women
escaped
·
t
he
Sisyphean
.._,_, _.. ..__
)
• ..__ ...
tinue to spend a great deal of time
monotony of their cbores by spending
.
"""" ""' ...., aamp
waa m ..., """"
with close frienda;,, aDd--"' to "'-'--' . a
as much time as possible ezperiencing
The oontracts between tbe State of
u1ty of Social 8cieDcea aDd Admini&amp;good deal of ~ ~h.
tbe
Ieeser
boredom
Of
daytime
TV.
New
York
111111 tbe Civil ·Service EmlfttioD. Nearly ball ibe -.iora reRelationships with llll!lllbera of the ·
ployees Aaaociation, Iuc., for 1973-76
ported that thoy would cboose ttieir
other· aex_aDd developing and main- - . Countering a """"'t TV special em
women
in
prison,
abe
siUd
that
inmatea
(cow
•
inalitutioDal
.mcee, adCllft'l!llt major if ~ could beiin mltaining friendshiPJI bad not been. •
lep qajn as freabmiJn. Forty ~cent , 'tl'e8t _,_,_ for ....., ..___ ..___8
cit Bedford Hilla were not invollDltarminiatza~· operatiaaai -"ces and
would ma1re a cbolce in a dilfeioent de.,•...,..,...
....,. .....,.,.
ily drugged, """"Pt 88 a laat nBllt.
P~. acientiflc 111111 tec:lmica1
However, in tbe deperic!ency-I&gt;Mvy
aarvicee) lave been dl8tribuled to all
p&amp;rtuatl
~oo::::,,~ ~Coursaale:
claaDlied ·employees, . _ . liOIDI!
'Fewer lban 1la1f dian,ed their cahave bec:oine inlpoi1ant to
(Pre- . atmospbme of the priaao, man,y women routinely ~ aDd received . members of operatioaai~ Tbe
reer
plaDs
after
they.
'-'&gt;
coUeceof
"'-~-"'About two-CIUniB of tbe c:boicoe (bcilh
............,, aome
......., are .........,.)
"downs" from tbe prison phyaician_
local CSEA did not lave (!IIOUgb
initially.llllll in tbeir -.lor year) The averqe ._..-a. tbe functioos T A of community among the . oopiea of .that c:oatract to go around
in in·-"-tive (--'--=~) or aocia1
of the ideal uni,wrsit&gt;y augi!I!IIIM a
women .waa ~ abe reported. · and will· diatribute the ba1anca at a
........~. or ~~•--) -~
slifhtiy positive desire to liaw - tbe
(................
New pnaooers were -tedly wamed'
later date. Anyone m other units not
........... ~
UDIYeraity develop lllld foster atudente'
suriea- .
.
~ties for cloae peraaaa1 relation- _ ~, 11WBYlot~ !!:,_~towomen.be
receivini ll copy of their contract.
8
r·--~
Bbould COiltBct tbe CSEA olliae, 14A
The otudOala' IDf.erMia ....... the priabipa.
.
jealoua, higb«bbOO tmitcb," abe aaid.
Parker ~. extension 3040._

._ _ _. E-

_._ _

-t

::c:.=~ty~
~

-. wblle-........,

_,........,to

-'e.

to

to

Aboo-••••t

to

=~ri::i':~:::

=::::::~to~~~

:=;

=ta~":'t~r::i~~

Women- -

CSEA c·on
. lracts

---t.t..

S::.

88

,..

�CcJIIesium-

(~,_,..l,==.

-lladitiaaU
caltaNbarrtera
.,.
pllaea, and 110 ...-&amp; . . . ~
politiall . , . _ liDd . . ...
ne1 Wlllol&gt;cy to ~"''t Ia deu," . . . . a. ~
"that the ~ ......... of a.
pubUdy~ univenlt:r il 1111.
""""'· wilbout .......serinl .......
valuable in the .... in tbe diNcliaD
of innovation. 'l'boulb -:r of aar
gne1s certainlY remalo ...u.l .... 800
years, no baditional way of lll:blevin&amp;
even tbeoe gnels obou1d he CDII8idereil
sacred or~-"
The Collegium pi'CIIaed a list ol.
projects that the , _ Commililee oa
Innovatian might consider, ~
"intramural traven::te!o.ror-.hips .
through which a p
in oae di&amp;cipline would tempoaui1y ...... in
another, interd.iaciplinau facultr _ .
inars, freshman seminars foc:ming oa
incoming students' ~ experience
(with familY and h 1lledia, for ....
ample), creation of ~linary
magazines Co pabllab studoat
encouragement of "~inll" oa
c:ouroes by atudoDtl not formally- .....
rolled or matricu1aled, "bnncb ....,..
in sbopp'
mall8 and airporta, and

....m.

Law Schoof..:...·-~----~----------'---

/'

(Cot&amp;tiluled troa ~I; coL .3)
Vlolllnl c:-IIIIM
·
Plac:h - member of the Law SChool
faculty, as· well as each veteran mem"M still elicft&gt;le:lor promotion to tenure ·or in · mDk, is aasipled a three,
"penoo visitiJic CIIIDIIIiUee of tenured
-&lt;ioll...,.s. app'ointed by- a suboommittee of· the ~s Commilte!! on
Promotion and Tenure. In the case of
a visitinf prof-.r being considered
for appo-t, the committee may
include non-tenured faculty as well.
Two students, appointed by tbe Student Bar Aaaociation, work with each
visiting committee. Tbe committee is
appc)mled well in advance of dMdliDes
for dellbention- and decision· in the
cilse of most neir faCoilty" ~ in
the fall ·of the finlt year of thii initial
term.
-a • •
• .1 :..;.. ~- • ·.:..«

.£.~:...~18'!!'Pti;"~-;;::

several CICCIElons over a specified
period to make firat.-hand evaluations
of the indMdual's teadling performanoe. The group discusses that perfonnance with the .inslructor, often
suggegting IDMII8 for improvement.
The hope is, Greiner says, tbat this
oootact will pn&gt;Ye to be of value to the
teacher as well as Co those who will
eventually malie• recommendations on
his/her oootinuilnoe. The aim is to be
helpful, hot· inqUis&gt;torial, he empbasizes.
• ··
ThiHn&amp;icbl&amp; pined· in these classroom-visits, diacus8ions and follow-up
vif!lta, alonlr with a check.,., the ocbolalship of 1iie Candidate as reflected in
publi8hed wri1inp, fonD the basis for
the report which the visiting oommillae sul\mits to the Promotion and
Tenure ComaiiUee. The report, Grei,_. indieates, is_a·maJ&lt;ir factor m the
...-.1 FIICUity reoomnwwlation.
'lbe idea of priJI- 'visiting anotber'8· ~ wbi1e not UIIU8l in

of~~~cltt!'

:::::,
{!!
School's promotion and tenure pro- . IMw baa an open claalroom
- '- .........-'-•-•,• •LG•
...., ~
~
~.
.....aorum is Wl·
known in O'Brian Hall. 6 - - III!IIDbm
of tbe fao:ulty CQIIIIIIUnity
._.is flee to
attend anolber'a e1-, to ezd&gt;ange .
ideas or p8rbaps -eo "brush""" .
.., an .... ol. law in wbKib he!sboi may ·
be fuzzy. Rarely does a ooJleague objec:t.

N:r

·

·

1

The second majorp&amp;lt o(.the evaluationnrocess involves-.- of statistical
ansi r
of informati
.........
elf:Veoess derived f':o'' : ~
The Law School, with much of the rest
of. the University, now uses tbe Analysis of Courses and Teaching (ACT)
Program, nearing the end of a twoyear trial period mandated by the Fac:ulty Be.- in 1971. Five questions drafted. by 1he Law Scboo1 are added

,_8

pn;;..

pierformaDa,. And still
Co 1hat,
Law students were running a much
more informal survey, primarily as a
guide to selection of c:ouroes and inatructors. SCATE and A~ results an
each · instructor are available in tbe
Law Library for such "oelection" use,
but Greiner asks, "who's 10ing to read
a scientific instrument when they can
get tbe -'word' from an active student
·grapevine. 'The ACT results rarely are
checked out of the Library."
Tbe resu1111 do bave their IISE6, haw- ever. ·For exan,p1e, eaCh instructor is
given the oomment sheets filled out by
his/her students: While .•L-- occa.....,.,
sionally oontain some "cheap shots,"
Greiner says. l!l06t of tbe comments
are ''right on," in' terms of PinPointing
annoying, dislzaoting mannerisms, for
example, as well 8s more major failings
of· the instructor .As in other ·&amp;,re!IB of
the. Univeisity- \vhich participate in
ACT, each instructor also receives his/

Frank Iin Gets
Eme ntu
• s TI•t Ie
Dr. Mitchell Franklin has been
named prof~ssor emeritus by the
Board of Trustees obState University,
effective September 1, 1974.
In a letter notifying him or tbe action, President Robert L. Ketter said
to Franklin, "This new honor in your
distinguished career is indicative or
the high value which the Uni versity of
Buffalo places upon your oontributiona to this institution and to your
• · cbooen. discipline."
More. than a ....Ward upon ooncluaion of formal duties with the Univer' ty K tte
'd, the bono reftect.s
~my a.!ue~ well as tba{ of your
other colleagues, for you to oontinue

!:

:uu.: ::!"'~ ~==

::

bers of this acadejnic' community."
"'--'-"-· a professor of law and
,.,_......, joined the faculty in 1967
philoeopby,
after alioost 40 years ·as a professor
of law at Tulane University.

'DeerkiiV Slated
The Department of Theatre and the
Student Theatre Guild will present
TM D«Tirill, an Obie award-winning ·
play, by New York Pl• .....;..,. MurM...._,.,.. u • ..o..1.· =:::- .-:.,.-·,.-~
ray
......-, """""' 12-16 m .....-ri-

~M~Jz~ ~ 8 ~

by

Rick AionBi. deals with a YOUDg folk
singer's SMn:h for spiritual oelf-attainment. Action centers around the direct
.(9llllict between his cbaoen life style
andbis wife~andemandsd
....., __ ~_put Upoo him by
"""""""-

'Ibis young

man's

.
SMn:h for .aelf-

her own resultS, University-widenonns,
and norms by class level, class size,
and cless type for each instrument
item. As might be expeded, the Law
Scboo1 goes even furthel', providing
each professor with special anslysesfor example, results by section, as well
as combined data for Law courses
which are taught in more than ooe
section: In this way, a professor can
check individual perfott" ·ce against
hislber peers as well as 81. .nat overall
Law School averages. This is particulsrly ey.,_;ng for younger faculty,
some of whom ·bave brought poor ACT
results Co the adminislmlion to seek
advice. And ·tenure-promotion decision
makers tum to these results for additional information to weigh in arriving at their reoommendaUons.
Further lnslcht

Still furthel'
'ght for decisionmaking is provided in the fonn of letters requested from fOfDie!r students of
each candidate for pl'OIDOtion and tenure. In the case ' of a seminar, a letter
is requested frolli each student in the
class the previous year. For larger
classes, requests are made by random
selection. Finally, through open post.
ing of an annouooement, any student
is invited to submit a letter. These
letters, along with the visiting committee report, ACT resu1l8 and other
information, become part of rather
thick, detailed dossiers on each can-,
didate which are presented · to the
Promotion and Tenure Committee. .
Each visiting C111D111iUee makes a
presentation to the full oommittee ccmcerning the candidate it has been as·sessing. Student members ol. the visiting committee also may make a presentation but, because of tbe ,__
sarily sensitive and ccnfidential nature
• of the process, they are not parties to
the actual deliben.Uons. The Promc&gt;tion and Tenure Committee is, inci- .

bicultwal~

TMdling personael for lnmvathe
programs could be obtaiDed . . by
released-time tram the ~
and eventually through hiring of . regular faculty. the Col1ePum Bllg·

gesta.

The protracted consideration of the
Reichert Collegiate ~ ended
· on the floor of tbe Senate TuMiay
with the body's bldmoement of a
PSS MEETING

A general membership ..-ng of the Pro.fesslonal Stall s.n.t. wiU- be held Frl·
day, Match 29, at 3 1J.m. in the AllmoN
Room, Norton. The tentative agenda
includes: 1. President Ketter; 2. SUNY
Senator; 3 . Constitution ReviSion. All P..,..
fessJoul staff memb~rs are urgad to
attend.

series of enabling provisioas, iDcluaiDa

a timetable for
· ·
tbe existizqJ
Collegiate 8)'$tem~anuary 1975.
The approved proviaiobs also eatablish the Senate Committee on tbtl
Colleges as a benevolent -tcbdog to
ensure that provisions of the ~
tus are carried out. 'The Senate also
strongly urged administrative support
for ·t he nwamped SYStem. Queried as
to the present budgetary status of the
Colleges, new directo&lt; Irvin" Spitz,.
berg indicated tbat, at this time, the
Colleges bave not been promised "an
additional penny'' over last year's
budget, which he estimated at $292,·
000. The oocupation of Ellicott sbould
ezpand the Colleges' ro1e u. the educational enterprise, Spibb~­
caled, and, em this basis, a
• te
budgetary
of tloto
:0 three ...,..]d
IUJIY he ftiQIIIi8llocL
The Senate
bec:ked 1'81X111111aldations to the Presidenttilat the.._.
idential Review o-d ... Promotion
and Tenure he apanded by tbe ..tdition . of three IIOD-wting IIIOIIIIben, •
senior, a paduate lltudeDt, and a IIIIDtenured faculty member. The ':.; .
sity of ~ student particistudents in attendance.
pstion at the cleparlmontal level At this point, the Law School pnr t .also diacuaal.
major thiDc that.
motion and tenure eValuation ·
•student .......t.a can do is ~ that
enters the mainstream of UniversityBoard l&gt;aDEt, ~ in livinc
wide prooedures
Reporkr, Deweilbt to teadling ~ ai a
cember 18, 1973)--prooedures ~
criterion for pramotioa and tenure,"
Greiner characterizes as being almost · """ adwcate' said.
"so elaborate as to prewnt ~intGrading, a hot iMue in the Bonate
ment ·or promotion of anyone. "lbe
last year, re-emerpd at ~·
Promotion and Tenure Ownmittee
88!Bion as Senators considered a which Pro\108t Sdtwartz cbaim, lllllbli
lulion that the University's - t
a reCommendation on, the Clloe; the
A-F .......;.,« system he retained. 'lbe
Provost P._,.... a letter to the AcaG,....lli;g-c;:.,.,;ttee had sCodied the
demic Vice President embodying his
relevant literature and rome to the
own reoommendati
and
conclusion that no change could be
reasons and ~ the ~tsd
.iUstified as an improvement oa U.
the vote of the Commillae (this letter
preseot, clearly unsatisfying ayatem,
is available to the faculty llii!IDiber conspokesman Lionel Lewis saicl Aa
cemed). And tbe doesier goes upward
amendment tbat gives faculty the ~
and onward through University chan- · lion of aWSI)iing students + or ~~t'tualls
~.!L finding ita -Y to the
letter llr8des was endorsed.
i. n s J

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increase=a factor

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Whatever the """"tual oUtcome. tbe

~==~:,::
ACT, baweYer, the School's Faculty-

~~~·&amp;n~n:':~
problems facing today's youth.

~i~~':'~=:
a thorough, incisive~-

Studeot Relations Board, in cooperation with the Survey Research Center,
bad developed ita own Student Course
and Teacher Evaluation. (SCATE)
instrument to ~re prof~

The March 12 performance will be
a preview.
·
Tickets are available at Norton
Hall Box Office or at the door - stu, d~ta, $.75; g~admission, $1.50.

sessment which does service both to
the instructor wh-. career is at stake
and to tbe Scbool wh-. traditioo of
~ teaching is equally 'o n the

MICROFILM PROJECT
Tha University Archives has completlld •
· project to put over 50 years of mejor U/8
student newspapers on mic1'0film. Tha
titles are The - ' which began as a col·
umn In a Buffalo newspaper In 1921; The
Arps; and The SpKirum. The R&gt;opootot
has also been filmed thtouih 1972-73.

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the lialbar• .00,..., bee tried tD look
..... Twin'• ~ - '111111 • - bia
llhaulcla-, to ......._ .,.,. the BDtl!al'a pt'CibMIIe IDeoatiaas and to .OJVIIIuate the bllpa fll the uteraliaaa "

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be-~ a..._~, a
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Twain

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.00,..., edmlriaii.Y- On...,....... Twain
aa lolled clowD a - vivid ~
.,._.._ '11ail k t h e - In Had
with , _ wm., wtio - . - In
the JIQblilbed .....tt • a lllllllil , _
. detailed, much . . . amusiJI&amp; cbuacler
tl81• Twain ad8IDaJly ~ • •
"Our biaa ia that dianp is IIIQli'IM&gt;meat bat that's DOt always the •

-.ya Do~ wialful perbepa for wbat
Twain Wt ~ tha cutting-coom &amp;or.
~
.oo,..., . _ that Twain's reriiion ,

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lltk-darilllr

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bia 1lriof
dial be
down to .......... put.-.- ad
_ . . . . edlllar fll the Buffalo Bs, _ (pueat to the C__.). WhDe
anoideDt, be -ned OliYia ~
IDoved Into bia llnlt rMI ldM 1lince
c:bllclbood
the aile """ ~
by '"l'be Cloiltera") bed bill flnt
dli1d, 81111 llbared with Uvy the trq..
edy fll t - fatt.'a death. I t - bole,
In ~bart, • the binpwpb!cwllyJllillded of hia critica heve noted
('.Oo.,no DOt beiDa UJ101111han), tbet
Twain opted for life with "A...t Pol-

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fll Hue&amp; .......t
to
·ci!rlain -"'&lt;!.
tbemm dlat
for ._..gbility,. ....,.,.,tability 81111
: underlie b noYel Three W.... for
the lOYe of a ..,00 woman. · ·
'evooemwbople,
basbe ,..H~~~
._, ......~
........
Only a CCIIIIIUIDIDille ironiat like
a ~ for the ~ of free. - Twain would have chosen to lift thia
in&amp; Jim. 'Ibis pattern, always marked
particular city -with Huck's story of
It ia ~
nllllll!lllber tbet
by tbe udlanae of . . - J v ....," ia ai8D
the eternal quest· for rr-lom, with a
_minors and IIICIIHlllml!llting adWia .will
~~
cbouacterized by ~~' imposloyal companion beside him and the
not be affected by the ~ fll this
their oldest __..- :;::~--- 13
sibility of freeiDa the nmawa.y slave.
women left far behind. . .
law, . . tbeea people iue fully protect.
in her -'--'~- dilldhood bicJcraphy
Hud, despite ita · chum and hUIIIOf:
ed by c6er eectiOila of.lbe Psal Code,
fll "'--~~ .-1 H~
is informed by a vision as inberentlv
just u they are prollected Jrom heleroF~ t;"118 U: ~ just before
dark and pellllimi8ticas any of ~s .
aezual olfendeiL u nothinl elae, the
it """"' out, 81111 d-. be would leave
later, barely ft8dable denuncialioos of
o--ml 8odamy ~ aboiuld be
mankind, Doyno believes, althoogli in
repealed on the. pouDda that it is an
pari&amp; of it with mama to ~te.
Huck . the darkness is relieved oouieattempt by the State to define ap_pro- .
~one~~
what by the fact that the attempt to
priate alaDduda fll ~ morality.
~t.;;ru.1e, that
ana I used to
tree Jim is always repeated. As Doyno
As an ~..to .....-I tbia law a
Fifteen rion-teadlina pro(eosional
delight in and ...._ · with what -de8pair
says, joining Leslie Fiedler and others
state-wide l!lllition _ . . be&amp; b,;:
positions
on
this
campus
formerly
....,
leaf on
in speculating· on wby this particular
'
'l1le
fll Ibis petition will
~:Wit":
~ rnes':}
book bas so preoccupied the American · _ with no assigned PR rank were this
to ..,_
the people of New
week officially designated technical
that some delightfully terrible part
imagination, "Blthough the struggle to
York Stale mpport the ~ of the
assistant, PR-1, within a 88lary range
ust be ....tc:bed ~ we thought
win freedom is ultimately unsuoces&amp;eona-oual 8odamy .l.aw. We ""' saltof $7,425-$14,200.
book would am..::~ ~ withful, the attempt is continual, cyclic.
. irig all ...-..L. zeiardleaa of their
t "t. B t we ...,.m,.ny""""' to think
The immanenqe in form of this. paraAccording to spokesmen for -the loaezual ~&amp;... to sign the petition
::;:,:,_,: did.,.,---.
-do:rical moral insight, that the atcal chapters of United University Pro..wben it is ~ted to th!m- we~
fessions (UUP), the change came beNo one knows for sme whether
tempt to gain freedom finally fails
urge citizens ,to write to their State
cause of UUP insistence· that the
Twain too """"' "to think as mama
and continues, indicates why the book
Le,islatol'8 demanding the repMl of
did" or whether be intentionally
· both renders and haunts the American
Memorandmn of Understanding imthis law.
consciousness.'; At the cloo;e of the
plementing Articles 33 and 34 of the
planted titillating but nonessential .
-&amp;&gt;cerely,
- i n bia .manuacripts, like the
novel, the cycle implicitly begins
contract between the. bargaining agent
GAY Ull!llb\'I'ION ftONT
almond in a Chria1mBs pudding, ~
again, as Huck who bas already tried
and the State calls for assignment of
SUNY A'l'. !IOPPALO.
all professi&lt;mal jobs to PR grades 1-4.
afford Livy- the moralist's pleasure of
once and ultimately failed to break
~•--'-· the • din ---=-d
away from usiviliza.tion"' announces
A grade of technical assistant with no
~it out. ouen g -~an_
hiS n&lt;&gt;W..famous plan 'Ito light out for PR rank is, thus, illegal, UUP oontends.
In atudymg
· the Buftalo manuscript,
the Territnry," in Doyno's analysis,
" expanding the attempt to ¢n the
Qualified lblnk
Doyno found little evidence of "experslave's freedom to the pUISWt· of inThe U fB Pers&lt;iqnel Office, however,
• Publlc adlools In New York must
~" -~-:i'.'.naid,= J..""'~~
dividual freedom in this peculiar timesaid the situation is not that clear
provide opecjaJ education ~ for
-~
g)oas,
belying
space
we
call
America."
·
highly
cuL In essence, Personnel indicated,
all iclenti&amp;ed bandlcepped student&amp; or
~ lifelong ' P90" -.., a natural-born
Doyno can bolster his argument for
face poaaible lepl adian,- Dr. Wade
the State continues to recognize the
artist who never ·bothered -much .w ith
an underlying m&lt;iral paradox in Huck
15 positions in question as -falling into ' Newbouol!, profesaox of law, has
by pointing 'to the .textual fact that
the finer point&amp; of style.
T w a i n, in revising ~ - ''Territo.y"
a • oeparate, qualified PR-1 ca4ei&lt;&gt;IY
warned ecbool olllciala, IICCXIIdinl to
"Clemeua fostered the view that be
passage, originally wrote "there ain't
("overlooked in the Memorandmn of
the NitJBaro Falla Guelle.
was·a caraleas, naive geirlus," explains
nothing more to write about, and rm
Understanding'!) with a lower 1'11111"
SpeUina at a coafaeDce _.-ed
Iloyno. "This peno1IG was ~ve
~ glad of it," croaaed out "powato.rting salary than the regular PR-1
by the Wealem New Yod: Bcluadioo·
but untrue."
erful," tried several alternatives, and
' rank.
al SeMcea CouDc1L Newbouae noted
~ Twain made c:hangea in ·
finally choee "rotten," oi-eating an
tlllii State ~tlon ~
Buftalo Center UUP Chapter Presithe manuscript of Huck that ~t
oxymoron ("rotten glad") that reEwald B. NYI!Uiat 1188 · ruled that
dent Constantine Yeracaris indicated
edraonlinary concem for precimon.
fleet&amp; the cloWie vision of the entire
acboola with Waltinc liata for student&amp;
that if PR-l's had not been assigned
Huck, for ezample, ·i s written not in
-liook. But the critic ia well aware of
unable to be placed In .....- aeUIDp
to olbe 15 positions in Question, a class
..., dialect but in at , _ - . At
the dan!le&lt; of assuming too much
..... In violatiOD fll State Jaw.
grievance could have been filed on
d&gt;e beginnina.of the novel Twain cauabout Twain's actual intent. "For the
behalf of u-e NTPs and compliance
fll
an •
critic following the creative step&amp; of
timated 4li9,000
student&amp;
with Articles 33 and 34 J:eq~MBted.
a writer throuch the paps of. a manu1n. the ..state
(The UUP position ia that the Memorandum .of Understanding, llflcePted
atte. the original conlnlct was drawn,
upon ac:hool illatricta
Pioride IDnow COII8titutee those articlai.)
~ members of the Academic
'atzudion "auitahle
fbe cbild'•
Services staff of. the Univemity Ccmneeds," Newbouae termed the ._uer
puting Center ""' now awU!able from
No grievance was filed, Cent«
1". . . . . . - . . . . . . . . - .- . . .
- 10 a.m. to noon eedl -a!ay for
. 11.1". JGJ4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....,_. ..
Chapter N'I1P Vice President Ethel
a=:~~J:i cllatricta
. conaultetiml with all UMrll Oil • flnlt- .
Schmidt indiattes, because the matter
may come, Newholise Mid, If a a&amp;
oome, ~ baia. No pnwloua
2121').
gent&amp; poupoi,ai to intepale apeci8l
"""'-d or appoin-t ill . - . y .
.. II'D!'UJ' llOW£M(D
· At aD other timM, the Computing · ~ had _been ~by
-...o.w
Center adviaea, mo;y COII8Il)t lbe
the Loclalatme. 'l1le
hew ai8D
- r. --..nstaff upon refemt1 by an Information
asked, be pointed out,
a ciDubling _
· The elfort """' a joint Wlllture by
clerk or by
• ~ airanled with
in Stale aid for~ etudoot&amp;.
both the HeaMh Sciences 81111 um-.
Ms.
(Room ' " 4250
Newbouae &amp;lid be woiilil811viae Jl8l':
Bity Center UUP Chapters, Ma_.
Rldae
I.e&amp;,~ 831-1181).
- Schmidt · &amp;aid. The . _ _ of PR
mta of chlldlal unable to be ~
.A llat fll the -n.hle ......u.nta,
by ac:bool dlalricta lo aet lapl ~·......
l8lib for the 1li lllola, abe Mid, lfAIICF &amp; Cf PDfPBl11
go ihroulb aD lllepa In the dlllrict~
their fll _,;alization and their . ~ 011 a print-out· of all NTP
~­
room numben at 4250 Ridae 1M mo;y
seek l'l!llllldlea for the llitDatiOD: ......
~ which bed been provided t,o
d-.
auit, If aD . . faiJa.
be oblain8d from_the ~·
'
:
. _ _ . ""

·

'

Twain bad a ~tandy i-.;aation ·
that, lib Had&lt;..IKIIIIBiimea alipped the
~~billy haade ai the fraat pal'!« 81111
11
far wilder terriloly Twain'
but uu.ty ria
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Legal Obligation

Twain

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--

. Ludwig WrHgenstein
Philosophical Investigations

·-!tM19r!-

Piece 1," JIM STEFFAN

��Page 3 I SOME REC~ PRINTS I REPORTER

·.

�REPGR'I'St-/ -SOME ~ENf4'JINTS/ Page-4

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�REPORTER I SOME RECENT PRINTS I Page 6

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"When SMw F•lls Softly
I Think Of My Children,"
SUSAN M. SHEVAT

Page 7 I SOME RE~ENT PRiNTS I REPORTER

"Here's looking At You," BARBARA EVANS

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�Law Career Day ..
Set for March 8 :

but will conduct some ol tbeir lower
division courses at Main Street and
Ridge Lea...to facilitate instruction for.
tbose students not residing in Amherst.

'

•

. .
Buses will link the Governors Resi-

dence Hs11s with the Ellicott complex
and the Amherst Campus with the
Ridge Lea imd Main St. campuses. It
is anticipated that the Start of classes
will be offset in 20-minute intervals
on the three campuses. Claases on
Main Streel wiU begin on the hour,
those at Ridge Lea at 20 minutes past
the hour, and Amherst courses at 40
minutes past the bour. This allows
30 minutes tmver time between classes
scheduled for dillerent campuses.
Telfer notes that the allocation of
spsce, IOC&amp;tion ol classes and scbed-

Job Openings
FACULTY

Lecturer, Educa~io'nal Opportunity Center.
A.ociate or Full Professor, Spanish, ltolian and Portuguese.
Director- Professor, Associate or Assistant Professor, Educational
Opportunity Progrom.
Aasistant Professor (Foreign Language Education), EdUcational
Studio.
Aaaistant or Associate PrOfessor (Social Found&amp;tions), Edw!ational
Studio:
Aaoietant Prof_, (Plant Ecologist), BiololfY.
Aasistant Prof_, (Molecular Geneticist), BiololfY.

ll.tructor, Theatre.

NT1'

CoWIM!Ior (Bilingual), Educational Center, PR-1.
Tecluoical SpecitJIUt, Instructional Communication Center, PR-1.
A&lt;!miaimu &amp;sistont (Registmtion), Admissions &amp; Records, PR-1.
Tecluoical &amp;sistont (Horticulturist), Biology.
\
For additional inforr;nation concerning these jobs and for details of
NTP _.mg. throughout the State University system, consult bulletin
hoards at these locations:
1. Bell Facility between . D152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building
4236, nerl to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building· 4280, ill corridor next to
C-I; 4. Health Sciences Building, in corriiior opj&gt;osite HS 131; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor between Rooru 141 and the Uibby; 6. Lockwood,
pound floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in
mairi entrance foyer, 8Cl08S from Public lrdormation Office; 8. Acheson
Hall, in corridor between Rooms ll2 and 113; 9. Parker Engineering,
in corridor next to Room 15; 10. Gooclyear Hall, 1st lloor, Housing 0f1ice
._,. 11. 1807 Elmwood, pa~-1
· De-..._t·
, 12. Norton Uru'on,
-~..-~
Director's Oflice, Rooru 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
..__Roam
__•_os_;1_4_._John--Lo--:-rd_O'_B.:..·nan_
· _Hall___,,...'_rourth-..,.-11-oor_&lt;_,Amherst~--Cam-

_pus_&gt;_._J .

uling were all determined by a twoyear study CXIOlpleted last 'year. The .
study involved use ol a computer
which, using all available !lata. determined which ~ts abOuld be
moved and how classes sho6ld be
scheduled.
The Ellicott complex, comprised ol
38 buildin all joined at the second
level by
Millard Fillmore Academic Center, is Damed for the man
wbo bas been called "the founder .of
Bulialo." Joseph P. Ellicott, the first ·
resident ag_ent of ibe Holland Land
Company, surveyed the western part
of New York State in 1798, selected
the site and drew the first plans foo:
Buffalo.
The facility, designed by arohiDavis, Brody and Associates of New
York with Millstein, Wittek, DaviS
and Associates of Bulialo, is located
on .the northernmost point oltbe new
campus. It will accommodate- a tolal
of 6,000 students, 3,200 reaidontial,
when compleled. It provides as mudt
space as all ol the physical plant of
an average size liberal, arta ooiJeae.
In a widely-circulated memo to University ollicea blvolved, · Ketter said
the '1.-tion of reacbiDg decisloll8
about the """""' to E1lioott has been
tmder intensive disc:uEon for the last
• two or three months. "' need not tell
you how critical this ~ is to
tbe future of the University • it
phases into ita new pbyliica1 lacilities
at Amherst and .r ,- _.,a at the
Main s~ Campus for oooveraion
and ~&amp;-utilization by the HMlth Sciences. Such a proceas can gi!III!!B.ta
many problems and it is evident that
we ehould ~in a fasbion .which,
from a University-wide perspective,
to minimize inbenmt diliiKetter asked that all administrat£11'8

&amp;

=.:.!."

The University Placemeot and Career Guidance Office, in cooperation
with the Law Alumni Aaooc:iation, will
llpOII80r a Career Day Pqram, Friday, March 8, from 1-4 p.m. in 112
O'Brian Hall, Amherst Campus.
The Law Alumni Association bas
developed a ·procram in two parts for
the event.
.
Part one will feature a number ol
Bulialo- law alumni who will describe
t&amp;e psrticular kind of 1aga1 workc dOne
the"!"'!"" ol
day, tl;le amount
1

::f

.

:tz

in.:r.:;;~lg:tq...uty ~=ti~

~ the necesalty ol bringing in
, business, and tbe advantqes an&lt;1 disadvantages of a psrticular field of legal work.
'
.
Part two will focus on seeking emplo~t; i.e., whatJ empJoyers look
for m a resume, whilt q.-tions em. ployei'B might ask at an interview and
what questions might be asked of an
employer, what part personal appear. ance plays in an interview, who does
the hiring for a law fum, and what is
the value of a summer clerbhi:p in
seeking pennanent employment.
Law careers .19 be covered include:
~cial. clerkship,. ~t agenCJeS, pnvate practice 111 vanous size
firms, corporate law, and bankinli.

Ship-ShapeWorkshop
Regialnition is under way fo.- ' a
"Shii&gt;-ShaDe Workshop" fOr
which begins Monday, March~
5:15 p.m. in 233 Nodlan.
led by MFC student ShaiOII Saunders, who ' - been attiending Elaine
Pt&gt;Wen~ foo: a1moat two yeam, the ~
:""'
~ include Yop and emrcises
According to Carole Hennessy ol
the Norton otalf, "The idea ol offering
such a workshop pnerated from the .
women stall in the 8tudeat Teotingand ReaeaJd&gt; Oflice, who tbousht it
desirable tD have a oooveaient place
~ time where they could 110 imme-

diately after work to get some uercise
before they returned home."
Sbip-Shape is being offered free of
charge on Monday, \Vedneaday and
Friday from 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. and is
open to aU interested University wom. en. .For information and registration,
contact Life Workshops, 223 Nori(Jo;.

concerned "move 1!1Peditiously on this
matter," noting that "I am sure that
you can count on the cooperation ol
,a ll the ollicea and~ involved." He
also asked that appropriate ammge- - 831-4630.
mente be made and information disseminated well in advance ol that
JAVITS lO SPEAK
time wben students must determine
Senator Jacob Javlts Will speak Ill 8:00
p.m. Monday, March 11, In Acheson 5 on
where they wish to n!8ide for the oomMain Street campus. Senator Jovlts'
~~• •l~-~ the
lecture will be ' the first of the SpeakeB'
•'""""""
ouun•
~ureau "EJection 74" seri•, which will
oomp..,. wiU be given to students wbo
anclude appearances by all candidates for
are
majors
academic departments
slated in
forthe
occupancy there."
senator and governor from New York
. . 'Tbe President asked for wtiekly .,._
.State. The lecture Is open to the public
without admission charge.
= o n PI'Otlft!IIS on the projected .

"=.

... ,.
~

.....

�7

INTERVIEWS ·
~-

.

in~:!'"..::::=-:........ ..

wbo .... i D - iD ·~ .........
aDd KOIIIII!th Davidaon of the U/B Law

~J"::%;.:::=:A-~ted~

I..ibertieo Unioc.

T&amp; '-"'~
...
. . . . . . . . . . . wiD .
-~..ia-a.~
March 12. at 8 p.m:.
'fb&amp;. . .

C11EATIVI ASSOQIJU mAL IV"

JLji,A

TUESDAY -12

~

- ~z:r'd:~
of 'l1IMire

naliaml 8CDdiiL

-·

sponsible
100
•
in
the .Amerioau tta.tze. He ia CIIDIIidered a fonmo8t director of tbe avant
pnle, bavinl booucbt "' prominence
tbe oriciml ADierlcan pmductioos of
Samuel Beckett's playa, aa well aa
those of Edward Albeej Harold Pinter, .
and early productiona of Bertold
Brecht. Ria ~n...ot ....,.![ in New
York wil!l tbe Becbtt Festival at tbe
.FOrum&gt; ~ of Linooln Centerfour plays by Beckett, inc:ludina tbe

Carolina POst

All~~:~ D. Saw. former director· of
cul1uraJ affaim, Music Department
bead and colleae masw here and now
on ~-.e with the American -Council
on tbe· Arts and Education, is among
amdidstee for the post of dlanoelJor
of the North Oarolina School of the
Ar1B,_h W"llllllon-S,alem Twin City
SentiMl repona. .
.
A final aeleclioft ia Q.:pectecfby midApril, the paper ~ .
.
Tbe acbool Ia part of tbe University
of North Caro1izia system.

-

Tlte Ltidy Eoe (Btmpo. 1941); Laurel
and Hanly oborlll: Two Tan and Tlte"
Muoic Box; Bicycle Thief (deSica), 147
Diefandorf, 7 l!.m: 'No admioaion c:harp.

fOS'IU. COllOQUIUM• '

Dr. J . E. Andenon, Ford Motor Co.,
will IJ))6a.k on a topic to be announced.
"""-n. • p.m.

LECn.;-

-

.

~ - ~rVto~

!'nd dU! Folllen: Zur Gacllidtle - tkr~lhutoclu!" Ko~f~Qdie, Ecbhard Catholy, prof""""r at SL Michaela
Collep, University of Toronto, 334 Nor·
ton, 4 p.m. (In German.)
Prof. Catho!y is an in!A&gt;mationally recosnized aulhority' on the history of the
theatre and dramatic li!A&gt;rature, and bas
writ!A&gt;n an important history of German
comedy from the Middle Ages to the
preeent.
.
The lecture is aponsored by - the De~ of Germanic and Slavic.
UUAI FILM: CHAIUE CHAPUN

$01ES••

M OM~UI" Verdoux (1947). Conference
Theatre, Norton, 4, 6, 8 and 19 p.m. Admission charge.

FII.MS*

Top Hat; 7 p.m. Gay Dioorue, 9 p.m.
Both fiJma will be obown in 1-10 Capen.
No admisaion charge.
PSYCHOMAT"

-zJ Nr::~-~..!._eaming ' experience,

p_,ted

-·

Proceaa (Bauermeisw), 148 Diefendorf, 8 : 15 p.m. No admission ~
UUAa FilM**

IKTUitE·

Urban Deaign aa Public Policy, Jonathan Barnett, an:bi!A&gt;ct and urban i&gt;lann~r. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30
p.m.
Sponsored by the School of Architecture and Environmental Design and the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

Wo'""" and the Law, 244 and 246 Norton, 7:30 p.m.
.
Paneliats will include Marjorie Glrth .

unh..""Y--"" aYalloblo census tract information which. can be usee! to
computer programs to facilitate car pooling amongomonts for employees.
Under the P"''lf11m, l - e d employees in a given aree of ' Wostem New York
could receiVe an infommlonal print-out· (name, addrass, telephone number) of
otheiS In their -raphlc aree Who could _be contacted to fonn pooling amongo·
ments.
lists can be se.paratoly d"""loped according to UnM!,.ity·d-na·
.lion (EI..-; Rldse Leo, l,mtlorst, Maln Street). Before such !"f?rmatfon can
be released concerning an indivtdu~t. however, written penmSSion must be
granted. The Prolesslonol Stall Senate has agreed to act as a coordinator for
both non-tuchlng professional stall and clas&amp;ffl_od em~ In_ this process.
. Atry NTP or classified wrker interested In the posslblli!Y of ontenng Into a car·
to fill ·In and clip out the fonn below and rotum it to Tho Ctlalrpool Ia man, l'n&gt;fessldnal Stall Senete, 135 Hayes. Thoro is no guarantee that lndivid·
uala In your a,.. will bo Interested in car pooling, ~ut """IY idontlfi,cation effort
Wlll bo ~ Individuals will receM! matcll,-up i~fonnation as soon All poaalblo.

a~":'3~ bltu~:mDee:~l"""
THURSDAY-14
DEifrAi_ EiKJcATJON#
Which WiU It Be: Tlte Portiol Denture, the Overlay Denture. or the V~t
Blade lmplant1, Dr. Harold R Ortman,

CONTIN.UING

~~d:tic ~~t.m:.:d' ~b

Geo""'

Quinlivan,

Shutko and Robert

~"'f:r'·~~ &amp;:;!:.~·n.'!'t!l

Clinic, 8: 30 a.m.-4: 30 p.m.

_

,__

b;~nuJB~.!:.t..~!".!f:m:t:r.:er::

· by the Ollico of the ·v..,. ~ .for
Academic A!faira with- the aid · of the.
Gndna!A&gt; Si:hooL
-

······················-----------·············-------------i
Io: The•ChaJnnan '
~
·

Sianature ....: ...............- ............. --......, .............. _......~ .............. -_. ....-....... ..

I
I
I

......•..•......... •.•.•...............................•...
NOTE: ~IGNATURE
-

IS

REQUIRED

.;.,

_

counted8oap.m.
in 837 Norton

ProfMOional

at

•

counaelin&amp;' is availabli

at

NEW F.W. ftiT51CS" COlMA

I'EACI EDUCATION CONfiiENCI

The W..!A&gt;m New York Council for
Peace Educa.Qon will eponaor a COilfer.
ence on Saturday, Man:h 9, 9:30 a.m.• p.m. at D'YouviUe Collep. Fron~Ura
of Peace EductJtion il daoiBned for edu'catono of all levelo: elementary to oolJames Moran,.889-3600, ext. 295, or M-.
Suaan Tbomaa, SIU-7869.

On WedDeeday, Man:h 13, there will
be a bua excunion from U/B to the Shaw
F-val for a performance by the Royal
Wumipeg Ballet. Tidleta are availahle at
the Norton Hall Ticket Ollico: - t o ,
$7; faculty and otalf, $8; all othe11, te.
Only a limifA&gt;d number of aeata are available. For further information, contact
the ticket ollice, 831:a?o4.
. _ SISSIONS IHIS1UTION

The Office of Admisaiona aDd Recorda
will conduct Summer Be.iono registre-

tion beginning Monday, April ..16. All

oludents currently regis!A&gt;red at the Uni-

venity need only complete a Courae Requeet Form. All otudents will have
to comple!A&gt; a Student Date Form, which
will be available at the Office on April 15.
Tentetive Summer Seooiono registration boura at the Office (Hayes Annex B)
are 8:30 a.m.-8: 80 p.m. on the following
da!A&gt;o:
. April 15-18, 22-25, 29, 30; May 1, 2,
6-9, 13-16, 2().22, 28-31; JUDe 3-7, 11, 12,
18, 19, -24-29; July 1-6 (Qc-.1 July
9-12, 15-19, 22-25, 30, 31; aDd Aucuot 1,
·s. &amp;, 1, 1s, 14, 20-23.

•&gt;.

I

I .

Man:h 9,

COUNSIUNG

SIIAW fUtiYAL EXCIIISIOII

SUFfAI.0 LOGIC COUOQUIUM*

Acid-Boze Cat&lt;Jlym of Carbonyl and
Acyl Group Reaction•. ·Prqf. W. P.
Jencb, Brandeis University, 322 Acheaon, 8 p.m.
The lecture aerieo is part of the Con-

Printed N...,. - .... ...............................................,............. -.--..............._.

carda are aaked to parlicipate in the ooting. Ballota will be
Saturday,

l:"d;.~rurwor::U:.":u~

A liatening and learning experience,
232 Norton, 3-6 P.JI1. •

PHYSICAJ..OKANIC OIEMISTIIY IKTUitE#

I
I

The aw-e Student Ao.&gt;c:iation will
elect a new preoidant on Friday, Man:h

~fO,i..!!!, '!:d!t!'!ithinvo~J!t~

The Department of Phyoica aDd ,..
tronomy will offer a new coune for the
Fall, 1974, aemes!A&gt;r, l':hyoi.&lt;o 229, Radiation PbYaic:a. Tbe COUl'lle il e.entially
non-mathematical, .and will ~
the origq&gt; of· nldistion aDd the !Ole it
playa in everyday life. For further information, contact the Phyaica Depart.._
ment, 831-3132, or .Dr. M . L. Rwqi,
831-3288.
.

rected by Rick Alonci, Harriman Tbeetre

CAC RIM**

,._... Senate
•. :
1311 " - I
I
I am 1 - In the possibility of Jglnlng a carpool with other ·Un~rslty
I
I
om.,._, and grant permission to have the necessary lnfonnation released to
I
I
others Who ma_y also bo Interested.

NOTICES
OIINESE miDENT ASSOCtaTION BICfiOH

Studio, 8:30 p.m. Admia aion charge.
Through Saturday, March 16.

KintJ Rat, 1-10 Capen, 7 A 9 : 15 p.m.
Admisoion: 75 cents- ·

n-

B-., Inc.

. . . , _ y -1S: Lucida! Div, P~t
Corp.; Dravo Corp.
TllllaOAY -14: TrAvelers Iuuraoce
Co.; Aetna Life aDd Caau.olty.

Hillel Houae, -10 Capon Blvd. For an
appointment, call Sll6-4640.

Meonin(f and Method in MatltemaW:.,
Prof. John Tucker, Department of Mathematics, University of Waterloo, Ontario,
4248 Ridp Lea, Rm. 38, • p.m.
This is a joint meeting with the U/B
Department of Mathematica Colloquium.

The

in'terviewo ..... be arr8II&amp;'Od throada 1M
Univeroity ~~ and C.... Guidance Qjllce, Ha,.,O C. 881-4414. The fallowlnc' .......... will be iDlemowiDc llaio
week:
..
.
mtJIISDI.Y - 7: InfA&gt;maJ Rev.me S...
vice; Amlonr-Doel. Inc.; Talet Bearch
of New Yo'rlt Qty.
l'IIIDU-8: Pnadootial ............ Co.;
Jewel H-"oppinc Bervi&lt;lo; Bunoucbo
Wellcome C..
·
II:ONDAY -11: Pratt and Wbilaey.
'l"VVIIDAY -12: Aetna Caaualty and
Surety ' Div.; H. J. Heinz Co.; Noimon

THEA.I'IE PIESENTA.TION*
The DeerkiU, by Murray Mednick, di-

,PSYCHOMAT*

lAW SEMINAl:*

Want to Join a Car Poo/1

-op

. Sur(U:tiott: A Pooition, Dr. Raymond
Federman, ProfMM&gt;r, U/B ~t
of F""!'Ch, Faculty aub Red Room, Harriman l.ibrary. 8 p.m. - ....
by the ~t of English.

Seui!n Samurai, Conference Theatre,
Norton, check obowcaae for times. Admiasion charge. 1
•

WEDNESDAY -13

.......,.~of

Sapp Eyed for

a moclem day Blue-

I&gt;Mrd. Aloo with Martha Raye.

the-,..,
lor -

at Boston Uliiversity, ·and 1-.res
frequenUy for university and community a . . _
-

CIIAa. OIAPUN - · ·

mi;;!.";un~

n.e aaly. cllte!*!r to .......
the "'l'oD)" IIJid "'bie" Awanla in
8otllleider
~ re--

only ~for stqe, ftlm· &amp;Dd tel&amp;vision, but is now lllliwi:!Uty professor

fACULty COUOOUIUM• .

n!.':..~o~.~u:.\·1~~
UUM -

.-1 1118 OolmC:il Clll llilm-

hiii"Not L"• .
As a .-.It Ill bill work Clll Beckett's
"Film,"~ be collected various international ft1m prizes. Mr. Bcbneider not

Delmar SUwart. violiat. will be featured, Baird Recital Hall. 8 - . No .
admisaion c:harp.
.

..

~mr:.....~-::= ~

UUAifaM**

~

...

Scwa s.u...u..i, Conferenco Tbeatre,
Nortoo, chock obowauo for
.Ad- '

=-.

miolioncbarp.

G~

For everyone's convenJence end pleasure.
like to publicize all tMtnts taldng place

we

on campus. To retord Information, cont-:t

EXHIBITS

, ~ . · UUMEXIIIUr

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE

_

Worb of the Vimna

s-

Nancy - C.rdar:eJII, ext. 2228, by Monday
at noon for Inclusion In the followlna
~ISC!ay Issue.

�-

. ..0 _ . . IALIIII

Today'• broodCut will bo to
women'a prop8mllliD&amp; iD . _ ; - of
Intemaliollal W....O..'a o..y. Tbe acbodule plana iDdude: Ul jaa. :
worb by. f-..Je _ . . _ 1 p.m.; a

M!'~:"'oit.ofAlt'~~=·w.:era.:

in 1M Arta, 10:80 p.m. Tbe ~
acheduled Thio l o Radio al 2 P,.JD. 8Dd
Preunt Tenu, 8 p.m., Will conaider oud&gt;

~aau!7J:;:''!iu:rf~k~
women'a "bontory." The broadcut ia
=:c'!,.'4j~FM, e:_7~ otalf of tbe

woa:d

MANAGIMINr F&amp;MS••

'

Runl; Three ApplVlticu; Day After
Day, 8Dd Peo,m and Power., 1.0 Diefendorf, 2-4: 20 p.m., No admiaaion cbarge.

TIME SR11S ANALYSIS I.ICTa.l IHIH•

Meoaurinl Frequency and Pht»e, Prof.
E . J . Hannan, Auatralian National Uni-

r=t...antJs~:: ~~JOi&amp;ir!Z: ~
m=.~~t s:=~~

enoo.

PH.050PHY LKTUII*

Need. and Wanu, Prof. Alan Wbite,

Temple UnM!JOity, 42U Ridge Lea, Rm.
14, 3 :80 p.m.

EHGI-INO SCIENCE SEMIIIAII.

Followed by

a meal,

3292 MaiD St.; 7 p.m.,

Cbabod Houoe, 3292 MaiD St., 8:80
P.JDJ
WAI

FilM••

Supo:Fiy .(11112) , ConfeniDOII 'IlMatno,
Norton, cliedc ahowaioe for limN, Ad-

miaoion charp.
PANtc THUnE

•

Chabod Howoe,

Featnring Garr/on Bok, iDatrumenteliat,

~=:..~~!!~~~~
tar, witb aanp from the Ozarb, lot /::,r

cafeteria, Norton. 9 p.m. AdmissiOn
charge.

LECTUitl** .

A Biolosiot'o Look

a~

~TION•

Anylhinll Gaa (muoic by Cofe Porter) ;
Fillmore Room. Norton, 9 p.m. ·
Free ticket. muat bo obtained• iD adat the Nortoa Hall Tiebt Ollloe.
The musicel will alao bo p.-ted tomarrow.
UUAI COFfEIHOUSl*

Aopecu of Faot Reack&gt;r Du ign,_ Jobn
G. Yevick, senior oonaultant, AtoDllc Energy Comm.i.uion, 104 Parker, 4 p.m.
SHAIIOS 5HVICIS*

.MEOUAM IIAI*tO•

~~="t..1! rJh•c.PzSf~Ze.f.,.!~:~~ve~~

Anylhinll Gaa, .Fillmore

ton, 9 p.m.

Room. Nor-

Free ticketa muot bo Obtained iD ad- •
vance at tbo Norton Hall Ticket Office.

uuAa

COFFIIHOUSI*

Featnring Garr/on Bo• 8Dd MCU'fl&lt;Uel
MacArthur, lot Boor cafeteria. Norton,
9 p.m. Admiaaion cbarge.

SUNDAY-10

Followed by a meal, Cbobad Houoe,

cbarge.

S:~ «:ci'~n~e;nP!.~=~~

WOMEN'S CWI SCMOLAISH. IAU.**

Memben of the Quintet are: Edwin
Betta and George Novalc, trumpet; David
Rogera, French hom: David Glasmire,
trombone, and Ivan Hammond, lobo.
~ted by tbe De~ of Muaic.

aion cbarge.
PANIC TIIIAlll - A n o t r

MUSIC CUNIC*

COHCliT*

charge.

IIUA8 ,...••

Super Fly (11112) , Conference Theatre,
Norton, cbec:t ohowcaae for limN. Admia-

3292 MaiD SL,- 10 a.m.

Membera of The Bowlins Grfl!n Brrut~
Quinlet will diocuoe perfo"""""" problema, review brau literature, and offer
demonotrationo, Band Building, 1749 Millenport Hwy., 8 p.m. No .admiaaion

CAC HlM ..

uvr.:;::-r;olm

Prine and opecial .
t
otara Happy &amp; Artie Traum, Clark ~­
nasium, 8 : 80 p.m. Admiaaion charge.

SHAIIOS SUVICES•

Watermelon Man, 140 Capen, 8 II: 10
p.m. Admission: 75 centa.

~·tidn.

.

WCitcrmelon M01l, 140 Capoio. 8 I &lt; 10
p.m. Admiaaioo: 76 .,...to.

SATURDAY-9

the Bio/osiool

oily, 148 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.
Preoented by the Cbineoe Student Aoeociation. the Undergraduate Student
Aoaacintion, and the Graduate Student

CAC . . .-

Suddenly Sprinl-io tbe theme of the
19tb 'annual event, to bo held at 1lle Pellamwood Houae, 7 p.m. Dinner will begin
at 8 : 30p.m.·
••
Ticket and table .-.vatioo information may bo obtained by c:ollina 839-0106
OT~.

'

MONDAY-11

.

-

mM·

1.:"&amp;::, Cs":";"::'
m.HWo
~~=J:
.
.
-

charge.

CIIICHHtllt RSTIVAL TIIIAlll
NODUC1'10N Fti.M*

Cbekbov'a Uncle V.anlo. Confenmoe

~~~'~:8&amp;e:~~r~

•uo.

•

.

Tbe cut ·includea: Sir t.iinaoo Olivier, Michael Redgrave, Sybil Tbomdike,
Lewis Caaoon. Joan ~1, 1\l'u: Ad'
~ Fay Compton and ROoomar7 Har-

. J:'red.

by tbe Office of

(Continued on Pa.e 7, coL 2)

Cu!_tural'

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>A
tival is
(March
13) .
A commlttae C1J11111C*11 of ..........
stalf and facuJty .................
meeting for four .mthe plamaiac the
festival which will ....._ - - in

"We lllld YG!l fiiJ," cynim reminded
Dr. OmoJ,yn 'Thmw• after ber WB
, _•• ~team l'ost tbelr
opener to Canlslua by two point&amp;

music,bothPDPUiarand~tbe

visual arts; tbeS:tnt; ...._; 8lm; ¥idloo,
and poetzy.

"We lllld you you aoiDir to lo8e."
"Wflre - aoblllto lea," a b e lered. '"1' b. t'a the 1zouble aJOUDd
here.
tbouPt like ....,..
for too loDa."
. Her c.m - . t ... to win sis in •
1'011" befont ~ . _ tbla put

The committee is JM.ded "" ......Keane of the Nortoo lllelf and .......
by Terry Charlea Sdnran of the Department of Music. It is- the illlalllaa
of the festival. they aay, to , _ . the great number of aceDeat &amp;li8 tivities taking laoe- 011 no.

w..--bave

;;;;J..-.....m; ill lbe . , . _ the . . .

wluiilDI recoril ill .the lbni&amp;-;year history o f - · · intemolle!liale.....,.
ballbae.
.
Dr. Tbomas. ~~ .........·t just
taJidDi about ber team, uUs year. Her
C01111181IB direc:led -.rd. UtB
- · · eporta in pnera). "Bullalo
bas been the doormat .of lbe Stele,"
abe ebarp8.
. On&amp; · of the 1t!8IObB ·(-. hr. &amp;JW •
III8IDI8, 1M .~•'I 1811SQD) for •• abe
indlcates;iB;'ibl:t: tfJe' WolDen's lntercolleliate piOJIIJiqJ bas .- . content
to "Bit back ,aad take wliatever. iS «fered." iJi p.m.iof. tK!&lt;IPt.' equi . nt,
scbedu!int of . ftoclliti$, etc.
to
U/ B this year, llhe iiciean't buY this
"don't rock the' boat attitude." .Other

Committee

=

younger women mac:beil ate of the
same persuasion, sbe saya.
·
" We might be called militsnta by
some," llhe granta, "but we'm not asking for any mom than any. one in a
similar sitoation anywbem in tlie Univer&amp;ity .would -want.-«Jougb fundi,ng
to eliminate inequities and run a ·~ ·
siatence level' ·pronam."
-to.

....,.;... Fuiliq

FiiP!t ~ . '
races

. Dr. 'l'booaB-Is aware tbet abe
· . other .problems tbet subsistence funding can't begin to 1101ve. The limited
facilities and busy schedule of Clark
Ha11 pose limitetions for both men's
and women's programs, she concedes,
and will continue to do so until the
day when the proposed Amherst field.
houSe is mady. ·And women's sports
as well as men's ate handicapped by
a State University ban on athletic
scholarships (yes, women's athletics
programs elaewbem may now provide
grantS-in-aid in much 1be same manner as their male counterparts. The
AIAW-Asso&lt;:iation of Interoqllegiate
Athletics for Women-was recently
forced to drop its prohibitions against
. "pilly for psy'' because of thmatened
legal action). Like most men's sport&amp;,
U/ B women's sports have to mly for
playeis on students who attend the
Uruversity for other reasons. 'We
can't even count on physical education majors like a Brockport can," Dr.
'lbomas points out. ''They tum· out
(Contiltued on 9, coL 1)

'

Geneseo Invites
sOizhenitsyn
Alexander Solzhenitayn, tbe RUBBian
· author and winner of the Nobel Prize
for ·Literature who bas been exiled
from his native country, •has been offered a visi~ prof~.P at tbe
State Univeisity College at Geneseo.
n.e offer was made by Dr. Thomas
S. Calahan, acting president and vice
reaident for -academic~ in · a
&amp;eDt to Mr. Solzbenitsyn m cam
of German ' author Henrich Boll on ·
February 14. '
Dr. Calahan . said "compassion ana
""""""' for a hra'!!!' member of the
intellectual eammunity wbo was being
exiled from tbe countzy he loves" motivated him to make the a&amp;r.
,t hat die faculty will support
me in this'action because I was countinl
their · -to
-the
of life
spirit
their011oommilmellt
of and
the

!:,tier

"'lnllt

-~':.'-.Je.s.made

my decision,~ Dr.
No _ _ , from Solzbenitsyn was
noted -bl-Gie"report of the invitaticin
which appeanod in the ~ Com..

··· ~ last-.IL .

~''packa~~

pl'OgJ'8lll8, and bas attempted to .,_
courage campus groups to add attlactions so the festival will be repn!&amp;l!lltative of leading arts activities.
Included in the music plans to dale
is a concert by the M .LT . Sympbaay
Orchestra at Kleinhans Music Hall 011
Wednesday, March 27.
In connection with the MIT gyphony visit, the Music- ~t is
asking for faculty and sta1f volunteers
- to provide housing for two night&amp; See
box on psge 10 for details.
·
Film will be represented by a festival-within-a-festival, the International
Film Festival and the International
Independent Filmmakers Seminar.
Also scheduled are the latin-American
band of Eddie Palmieri, as well as
activities of the Center of Creative
and Performing Arts and Evenings for
New Music.
''The Cage,'' a theatre production
e.x-convicts from San
as well

Poz

'

U/B~On_aho ...~Tho---

Full information about the Spring
Arts Festival will be available as a
special Reporter insert in mid-March.
Campus individuals andf or groups
planning activities which 101ght fit into
the festival are urged to contact Mr.
Keane, 225 Norton, or Mr. Schwarz,
108.,Baird.

Confererce to Consider 'Capitalism Today'
Victor Perlo, chairman , National
Economic Commission, Commwlist
Party, U.S.A., and Paul Sweezy, coeditor of Monthly Review, an independent socislist magazine, will be
among five' speakers at a campus conference on "Capitalism Today,'' March
1, 4-6, and 11.
Sponsored by the Graduate Student
Association, and the Graduate'~
ciations in PhilosoPhY, History, and
Economics, the Undergraduate Economic· Association and Social Science
College, the conference will also feature addresses by Bertell Oilman, professor of politics, N .Y.U.; · David
Mol)!!f_c&gt;mery, professor of labor history, University of Pittsburgh; and
Mitchell Franklin, professor of law
and philosophy at U / B.
·
Perlo, an economic consultant, writer and lectumr, will speak on the
"Energy Crisis and General Crises of
Cspitalisf1!,'' Tuesday, March 5, at
7:30p.m. m 240 Norton. He is author
of a number 'of books and pamphlets,
including American Imperialism Tlu!
Negro in Southon .AgrieuUure; Tlu!
Empirt! of High Fini»K:e, and, most
moent, TM Unsl4bk Economy.
• Sweezy, a former Harvard faculty
member who-in. recent years has been
a visiting profeasor of eoonomics at
Cornell, Stanford and tbe New School
for Social, a-n:h, will Pl'!llent tbe
final addreas in the Cont..........; series,
Monday, March 11. at 7:30 p.m. in
tbe Fillmore · Room, .Narum: He is
author of TMoly of ~ Deoelopmt!llt, TM Pre.mt at HWory, So. ciDJWn lind Motkm C~ G1Ul
O!Mr Eacya. His topic will be "Capi-talism &amp;l!d Inftation." .
.

Profeasor: Oilman will open the &amp;el'ie&amp; of prognuils, Fridey, March 1 (233
Norlbn, 2 :00 p.m.), with a " Mamst
Critique of Capitalist ldeolotly." Oilman has written a number ol .artioles
on social theory and methodology and
is author of Alit!AtJtiDA: Marxist Concepts of M011 in Copil;Jliat Society.
He provided tbe inlmduction for s-.
~'Eaaya, 19?9-1934, by W'Uhelm
On Monday, March 4 (233 Nortm.

!;;::~&gt;·&amp;!:;•go~~

G1Ul tAt! ll4dii:Gl RepublicaM, 18621m, will disci&amp; Ml.ebour's 1mpsct
Oil

.ca~·

. .

U /B's Franklin will look at ''Roman
law Aspects of . the Constitutional
Grounds for Im.-chment," on Wednesday, March 6, again at 7:30 p.m.
in 233 Norton. Franldin, a 'graduate
of Harvard, and a prot_,. of law .a t
Tulane Univarsity for almost 40 yeara,
has been here sinoe 1967. His more
than 120 publications include "'n tbe
Role of Romanist Infamy in the
AmeriCan Constitutional Coooeptian
of Im.-chnw~t;" "The II&lt;JIIY of tbe
~~.:-urn.:..~;:'
cal

l'bilorlollbY of Z..w~ and "'n~

Magic of -Meritocracy.

All CODferenoe procrams are open
. "' ..to tbe ~wilbaut c:barp.

�-~

Public:Education:··......·~1n
To Kee~rtt.itio~. q ~~ :- .:.- ;. .
et1lll\lill'llaaftt
Iaiiie
~.;.., tuiliall ebaras
as'\!:. •
Ia far from ended
-·"''- imiwnlty camputl!lll, a reOD '7,;;;; the NatkiaaJ Aaaodaliall of
~ta Uni-.ltlea ~ Land Grant

~le_C .::-~t studli.s:~

have. ~ 1aip increaaee m tuitiOil in order lo reduce the .PP ~?&lt;&gt;­
~ fees at public and pmate mlltitutiana, several uni-.itiea have.
tabo-aetiOIIS that uaderline CODtinued
. commitment to ~-coat puhJic bieber

ed-i'i!~ve.rsity of Mlchipa regents,
for emmple, approW!d a fiWI per cent
- reduction in tuition for the !"inter and
IIJirinl terms in 1974. The tuition adjustment, eatima~ to tow) $1,()9Q,~.
l!tea:ls from an 11riexpetWed eJ&gt;Qeas m
student fee .income this year. Tbe IDI• expected income results 1a~:~e1Y fiom
the.:fact ~t ·r..-r ~--~til Bludents are applying for· an-state sllltu9
than were projected when thia_year's
tuition rates were aiJ9pted. ,
Despite the fee redUctiona,-the university's fees for resident students are
· · · _-._ - • :. still the 8eventh ~among all
,
~t ln8titutions for
higlieot (Of
reoent ac:tlon the· Unison. on leo!ve at Flinders University
versity of Colorado Board.O! Regents
from Flint College in Michigan, began
unanimously approved a resolution entheir atudies in 1971 from a sligbtiy
dorsing a state policy of maintaining
different app.-:b. The "John" and
cUrreilt tuitiOil rates fpr ft!Sident stu" Anne" CU88 given not only to
dents ot the state's colleges and uni- .
their correoponding" ~ hut to ~
versities. The resolutiOD also c:aiJed
in an attempt to. fill 111 !Pe. gap . !ft - for· continuing an equitable tuition
HOmer's ~and to•determinewhllt
· policy for llOD-ft!Sidenta. facton could he termed "general" to
The 1973 session of the Ohio Genthe culture. 'lbeir JeSUits· were CO!"
-eza1 Asaemhly ~ students riJ.Jg out
siderably lower than Homer's: fear of
loud and clear for low tuition
iesuccess imapry appeared in 28 per
sponded by imposinJ a two-year freeze
cent of the women's stories- in their
on tuition at all public institutions in
studies. Of males who wrote to the
the state.
'
.- "Anne" cue, boweYer, Feather noted _
"Our customers believe that ~~
thaf ti" full 50' ~r ~t hiJ.\ted 1lf !lie• ' 'tUition
di1ve thefu &amp;Way lnim our
·female fear of sucoeas issue, suggeating • co)leges and univer!!ities, ~ ooted;l'Nsithat males ...,... in . fact • stereotyping • ilerit Harold- Enan!on of Ohio" State •
women into specific and traditional
University. "I find this pocketliook
rolt!s
testimony more perswtSive than agFe8tber DOted that aome of,the varigregllte ei:onomic aiutlyais.'' · · ·
.
ationa he~ hia results .and Ho&lt;- .
· 'The educatm-, wbo participated in
_ner's probably had to. do with the
a - panel "discussion in Washington,
D.C., on -the Carnegie Commission's
basic elemerita of -t he research. He
tuition proposals, obso;rved tha_t the
cited, for ezample, the poosibility that
medicine, &amp;8. a male-dqjninated occustudy makes a nUJIJber' of undocupation, might naturally -seem more
mented assertiON!. He cited as one
appropriate for "John" than for
such assertion the claim that steady,
"Anne."
.
substantial increases in tuition year
He said be and Rafelson then. conin and year out foe the nest_decade
tinued their study, based on theil' the- .
in ,state-supported ~titutions ~ not
ory that success ill more valued when
deter students from seeking access to
it is oonsist.ent with aocietal views.
the
ded oppOrtunity which bas
Their ne&gt;&lt;t series of experiments were
as an OW!rricfui&amp; goal by indesigned to determine how ~ing
stitutions and by the country,."
people deem failme in ligbt ol ~~&lt;&gt;"I CllllnOt tielieve" fh&amp;t 11rty ·state
ciety's sexual stereotypes: waa.1t, for
legislatures are ready 1o emhiaile a
·example, worae for a man-than for a
'sock it to the Bludents' formula in
woman to fail. nursing school?
the vague hope fliat narrowing the
Feather and Rafelson then tested
tuition dillerentials between the po.JI&gt;.
for the relative status as well as e&gt;&lt;-lie and private institutions will ·""'!"'tent of male-dominance ol t w e I v e
how solve, or signifii:antiy ameliorate,
COIJIIll6o occupations. Subjecte """'
the pligbt : of the private schools,"
asked their reactions to both the suePresident Enaraon:. added. .
:
The particulai-liardshlp that tuition
cess and failme in each occupation by

n..;·.;~
. ReeoDia.......,...
,.-.llllitlaD 8Cbecl-of
ule for the - . . - . -.....t::t,:s-

tem, to heoDM ....... Ia.
ts
a ~year period etutmc in the
fall of 1974. The llr.creliee will
approximately dQub1e tbe Jll-.ttui. tion for resideD~ ~ - ldudents and u.c.for nlllident
graduate studenla IIPPf'Ollimat.ely three
times their &lt;UlNIIt rate.
The Illlnoi8 Ballrd of Risher Education has &amp;PiliOWid a - . 1 budget
of $6769 nilllion for running the
state's ~olle1e&amp; aad ~ !n
1974-75 ~th . fuadiq~_::' ~~~ m
put on a ""' per «*11 - - waa.
OWif

mua-

, 1Moman May Be
- ,r.,.:•ure,.'So
Feather Jar.,
c~ ... ; · ·~~ ~
A
Taill
,
in~

-

.

A man's failme to achieve 'his occu-

ll':an~~~~J=

esteem than the conespondlng """"'""'
of a female, Dr. Norman T. Feat,ber,
visiting pmfesaor of psycboloey ~t
Harvard Uni.ersity, said here this

~ther ~ "Sex-Role Stereotypes" and related .--.arch be bas
conduct.ed since 1971 at .F1.inders University of South Australia where be is
on the psychology faculty.
"Women are expected by others, and
indeed, programmed by their own
needs and motivations, to fail, especially in male-dominated occupa-_
" · tions;• Feather noted. "The pbeJ),
omenon called 'fear of success' bas
been ~ for quite a while as a
"A· few years
I remeuiber en.. ~ factor .inhiblting a female who
countering a large, yellow acul!!~
is verginc on ·a c:ueer."
in a group shaw at Southern DlinoJS
University, wbicb atrudt ~ hecat~S!'
He noted that anthropologist Marof its vigorous and forthright qualipret Mead bad onoe presented the
ties unsimi1ar to a.liything else I had
""""' from another perspective:
seen since David Smith's pioneering
''When!as men are UDSI!lU!d by failme,
work 8.l'OUDd 1960. This particular
women are unaezed by success."
....Wk
was labelled 'Duayne lfatdaett,
Citing earlier .--.arch in this field
SUI!dUlt.' At a later date only a few
eooducted by Mattina Homer, now
-u
after ooming to Buftalb, · I was
preaicleot of Radcliffe, Feather added,
equally t.';.:.,: ~eli 1o i!nbounter the
work llllPPOri&amp; the aecond
sculptor
.
whose PI'!'80ilal ~ premiae of Mead's o!Mervations. My
itiea, I ~ at the tinle, not
work aapporta the tint."
.
unii1te tbe work I lmew. Since that
He Mid he . _ however, wi1h
tinie, epproxima\ely . four years · ago,
HorMr'a theory that. "fear of sucoeils
and~'ofthe
in _ , is a relati"':!L,.=,_,table mo..... giuwn steadtiw, Jeadlna to the avo·
of com- .
ily. , My llllmhaliall fO. Hatd&gt;ett's
petltlve aituations, and inhibiting
talent, equally unadamed and . unafad.reil-t of occupationaJ stanfected, is COMidenlble..
.
dlllda and pta. Women," Feather
Rclbn T. Buck; Jr., direcloc, Aladded, "often anticipate· aome forD!
hrigbt-Knol: Ait .Gallery, ..... this
of ~ ~ as a result
in· the f.....-d to the ea~ for
of their acble\wDeDta. They know
a shaw of· "R e e ea-t ·Piaiatinl · and
they are-~ to~" .
Sculptme" ..by- Hatdaatt, ' ~ ol
In ooe ~t, Feather's method
art -at U/B, .wbidl CJilOil8 at the· AlduPIIc:ated Homers, hut obtained ·difor tmhappie~ Ullde&lt; each given cU'- · wa8 ~ by President Ferrel ·· hriidlt-Knol: Friday -mt Mardi 1
fenat -.Ita. Both used the projecand continnM 1hrou8h Marda SL
cumstance.
Heady in the Uni.ersity of New .Me&gt;&lt;tive Jll'CIC)I!IIure ol· Iavin« the subjeCts
The ...... i8 de8cribed ... heiag "tJ:ae
write bdef M.torieo" from a series of
~ Oca.!pationa Morellftpec:tM
ico . alumni . ~. ·NeUJ ;Merico fimt significant expoaiJre of Held&gt;ett's
One of the most obvious results was
Allunluu. ·ne DOted that if·these pro"cue" aituationa . In Ranier's _,;.
painq and aculplure IQII!ttier.~.
menta, ...-.1 fa1ae cues _,., prethat the '!"""J"'tions which were re- · . posslo _ were . carried . out · the •result
-. ·Hatchett; hom .in · Sbawnee. OklaWPUid he .that future college populaIBited; finallJ', ooe aipificant cue ' garded as· havmg the moSt 'stabis were
homa, took both. the B.F.A. and the
.
thoee which . male dominated.
tiona woUld he . drawn primarily from
waa ~ted to a poup of f~
. M.FA. •from the Uni-.ity- of Okla· Other results were quite oonsist.ent
the extreme ·ends of the income scale
and llllOIMr to a poup of Jlll!ll;
homa m Norman. Ha taught at Okla.with no significant llllriations due to
-the rich and the poor.
.
homa City University, the Uni""!f'!ty
Tbe - . • a cue was "At- the end
the sex of the subject. Mal·es who
Despite· efforts to keep tuition
of Tulaa, ·and Ohio State, before JO!"·
of the term, Amle finds beraeH at the
failed
in
male-dommated
occupations
charges
as
low
'88
poesibl!l,
at. least
ing U/8. In. lldditioa•Jo. _.al .·mtop of Ia llllldlqiJ school class." Men
were deemed significanlly .more lOt.... uru"n-'t bas alread - been
dividu&amp;l. ~ .M tJiw,.R;o.!iai.Marks~ted an identical cue, e&gt;&lt;happy than fenuiles who 'f~." .Simi- . ~~
inczWes·lot.the . Gallery
in. .N"'!f ·Y!&gt;d&lt; .Gat¥. ; ~- - ~
cept that the name John auhstilarly, the succeaa of a male was eWiu1974-75 academic year ana three othbeen il)cluded in group exhihi.tiell&amp;· m
1uted for that; of Anne. Resulting storated mori. positively than the success
fa ·
rob&amp;hle ·
such galleries as the Whi!DeY. in•New
i e s - examined for imapry of "fear
of a female, just as ·a female failure
ers are cma P
mcreaoeo.
York the Middlebeim. Museum Anto f - " Homer found the imapry
CORR£CTION
·
was a more respectable situation than
~ in 66 per oent of the female's .. ;weip; and tl!e ~-M~ ·P!PI&gt;fu;
the failme ol a male.
In I!'S'
of l!le.b9ok, Nudur ·
atorieB, hut in leE than .10 per cent
18
Feather added thet among hia COD-rd! Emujllons, Vplume u; byd he
of the males'. 8be cooc:Judecl that the .
elUsions ooncern.ing the fear of SIICC888
late Wo~er H. Barluls, a typograi!IJi.;iol er·
females, Cl0118ciously or not, perceived
eums ino Atlan!a, Milwaulaee and Fort
in females were the fl&gt;ll.,...;p,: that • ror at one point in tile 'rtid~ led to the :· worth and,· ' ·~eollecti&lt;&gt;r!f!on
the canllicla inherent in Anne's sue&gt;
""""""" and feinininity are both- desir· atstenient, 1t1at "Dr. David Banks'' Of .the
. ....., and found in them a basis for
Such Pau.~~ . r~.........,lnstitute,
able, hut generally considered to he ·· U/8 f*cuity Is ,tl!fi pdftof qf, the 'IOni. The
~ .Univeiaily~ Pl. ~-r-.ol&gt;je State•
her potential 80Cial rejection. ' Horner
mutually
exclusi..,,
and
th,9t
the
feeditor .- '\ In fact •. !&gt;r. ~llid ~ :f"!'IIJ• '"De·
also ob8erved tbat the &amp;ame. women
the Ul)i~ of, MianSo'o!ta liP'! ·the
male motiW! to avoad succeas.doea DOt • -~rtmeril "! f!hysics_ ~d ~IIQII1Y, .U/8,
' .m.- stories contained fear of success
DllOI!Illlllrily ~ a will, ~ flill,.,~- _ as Jndlcated· at the outset ol the nQIIce.
. p~~ winOk~tbe ·~:
imagery performed hetler in DOil-&lt;XliDt h o'u g h- It 18 a . JogicaLi&gt;Oasibui&lt;y. - Dr.' m!&gt;s cahitic! t!Je volume· tiJrtiu8h:to • Jll&lt;lllt of hla ~ 'IIIith· J;)oucl8s G.
·petiti... llituatioaa.
Whereas females who fllltlvilly seek out
publiCation ofler the deoth of Dr, Barluls. . Schja)~ ~ OOI:!:ry .~I!'!·J:!

\

anll

will

"H........

-

Gallery to Show

Hatchell's
Art
ago;

1

been"="

~~work·

.:

~m::~~~~ ::f~!ir:.:===

&amp;

....;.;.."'ci

-··notice

.... ....

-~
~
·l·c ~~ljt~~-. J;,~\':l'Hffep~ U?-~ !'~'!:""· ~t "\.1!i!ttna.JJOrtl,.ri~-~"rorip..t!on,.: ..: , .· .

·- ~ rtt

2Il41;;;,ur;;:}f£

·!l¥int"

.wt&gt;~k t.al) .;aa;d;;l.

· ==

~ti.FWbi~. ;.r~

8:110_p.mt~~.m .

' Albrl(li~ ' . ' .

.

' p.f. tiPJIA

·

�·AJts:Celnplex .
For.Amherst .
~aidngNews
·4

m ·miJikiD.flU lllllliau 4beiltre

COIIIPB-Wilb tbree..Uiod-. wbidl

..

~--,.not
~-·
tbe
u:b1tec1a
ol tbe Vivllai
BeilUIIIDilt
' n.tn iD New YOik'a UDCDID C.·
ter; II beiDi ~ for' the Ambent

Faculty
Friday, March
ciate •prot_,.-,
of the screening
Nominations
rials ahould be
Irving Shames,
ing, by ~ date,
The awanls
stipend and

c....-.~-~"""'
lbl8 .....
-

report~"

ODe of the balls _ , be ~
hom 1,200
CJriljDaiJy proposed, to a apecity, of 3,200 iD orclec.
to •
....,.te perf.,.__ by tbe
Bull'alo Pbilharmonic. A ~ reprdilqr tbe fMaibility ol tbla • portedJy beiag c!oaduct.ed by '.Jabn
D.-Telfer, vice presicleat for fadlities
p~-~!." _.ted to be com-

-m. ..

en,,..,, .,.,..

ber to a
University
!&lt;n ~~~:':i;.
her as baYing
recognitiOIL
A- parallel Student Screeninr Committee is also receiving nominalillla.
Recommendations hom both _pwpa
will be fotwarded to a Campus aa-ing Conimittee of two faculty, two
students and two administndom. 'lbia
group will select a final list of nominees to be forwarded by the President,
with his own recommendations em
each, to a SUNY-wide panel which
will report to the Cbancellor.
Winners will be announced by the
Chancellor at the beginning of academic 1974-75.
U /B, which bad eight winners in
the program this ~ear. may submit up
to 14 nominations for awards, according to a prescribed ratio to full-time
equivalent undergraduate stydents.
The awards were established by
SUNY to give 'faculty members an
opportunity to participate· "meaningfully" in what has been descn'bed as
the University's "new emphasis on
teaching." Persons recommended may
be ol any academic rank and must
have completed at least one year of
teaching at the campus concerned.
Previous winners are again eligible.

.t:!e~~

. ·

.&gt;~ · ~balj ~: -· ~tianal

:~· - i=~-~. uni---

· -ai~:y~ has~ ail.tdi-

tioMf ~ of $16 .millicm if the 1,200aeat ,..... is to be 8lqJIIIIded. OtMr

· -tb8atieo . ~ tbe proposed complex
-wOuld aoti·BOO:.md 400 ._tively.
. . :n..,·iiJO..ca1Jed Pedonnin, Arts Cen-

. ler)irQpected to have a fall1975 oon-

struction start with a projected com. · p1etion d.ate of spring 1.978. · ·
. Roche and Dinkeloo of Hamden,
. · Conn., designers of the Beaumont
:: Theatre, advised tbe Courier-Express
: that they bad been contacted by tbe
· State University Construction l:und
about ilesignin_g the complex but llllid
they bad received no final word on
the matter: The Buffalo EVf!ning News
said tbe firm was one of six being
considered.
'!he stud:~~ concen;~ing eolargement
of one of lhe"hallS Was reportedly requested of President Robert L. Ketter
.by PhilhanDoruc directors Robert 1.
Millonzi; 'lj)d Maply F1eiscbmann,, the

· ~t~~~a~~~~ ·~ . ~

csEL~A"~s.service ~

.·Three.Concerts at Kleinhans
·Will' Be 'Firsts' for Music
• .

,Xhe U/B Science and En .
. g
Ubrary bas · been approv~
Department of Defense for Defense
Documentation Center' literature oearch and repol't services, Robert '
Ting, SEL librarian, has announced.
SEL is now· able to provide these
services to members of the academic.
commUnity: on all wu:IDssified scientifiC and technical reports sulmitted
to .the Dp.!partment of Defense by de-f"'!"" . ~tiee and their ""'!tractors:
•. , A. Likralun, !S«ueh ServiCe, - 1.
. Report Bibliograpby :'. P.repared in re'. spoose fo ·a .specific· request for J:efer, ences to tedmical reports having a
partic:ul!lr, kind of Je)atioliilhip, in sub• ject matter o•lltber· re&amp;peCll;s such as
..,.,._t source; .contract. or project
, number, or -peno.nal authors. With
· apeciflc descriptive ·information, the
. 'Defl!n&amp;e Documentation Center
t-DDC} · will: conduct. ·a · computer
8BIIJ(lb to locate documents which are
· most•pettiiient Jo a problem oi- project.
. The reoultant bibliograpby ·is sent' to
-SEL as· a loound ·document,. free · of
charge. Elich ooiltains a separate
repOrt description.- 2. Rapid Re,Bibliographies: May be reque81ed em the $L 1WX for a listina ol AD number of technical reports pertinent to -a req\Jestor's problem or project. No abstracts.
B. Docrunenl &amp;Tv~.- Copies oi
tedmical reports in either fu,ll-size or
microlorm, u.y be requested. DDC
_
, a $3 aervioe charge for full.
,size oopial ol technical reports, 95.
cents for ~onn per ilocuttl!mt.
Tbe cbuPs mpst be p"peid by the

.-Y·~

,.._ . .., ..

~

-

•

A series of.three Music Departmentsponsoted concerts will be held offcampus in March and April in an
eflor;t to make the .U/B music program more available to the general
community. · ,'
The concerts will be the first ever
sponaoted by the Music Department
in Kleinhans Music HalL
An appearance by the &lt;fuarneri
String Qwutet, in Kleinhans' Mary
Seaton R&lt;?om, 8 p.m., Wednesday,
March 6, a March Z7 concert by the
MIT. 'Symphony Orchestra, and an
April 1 progmm by guitarist Oscar
Ghiglia Will make up the community
Series. .
'. • . . .
"' .
.
The G)181'11e'ri, a long-time favorite
of 'Bufta!O audiences, will be making
its second local · appearance of the
season. Cbaracterizeil "as "the world's
master of Chamber music"' by Time,
~ ,Quartet's 110ld-out toilrs have taken
them to music ceniers tbrouibout the
U. S .,. C4nada, Euit?Pe, AI!Stra)ia. and

Criterill

New Zealand. . The Guarneri was
founded at Vennont's Marlboro Music
Festival at the .suggestion of the Budapest Quartet's second violinist, Alexander Schneider. The name of the
Quartet was supplied by the late Boris
Kroyt, also a member of the Budapest,
who recalled that he had once performed with a European ensemble
calling itself the Guarneri Quartet.
Members of the Qwutet are Arnold
Steinhardt and John Dalley, violinists;
Michael Tree,. violist, and David Soyer, cellist.
The progr&amp;l)'l for the Guarneri Quar·
let's March 6 concert will include Mozart's String Quartet in B flat major,
K. 458; Bartok's String Quartet No. 5,
and String Quartet in C minor, Opus
10 by Debussy.
Tickets for the concert may be obtained at the Norton Ticket Office. Remaining tickets will be available at
Kleinhans one hour before performance time.

·histituiional Funds Committee
H~-_$70,000 for Research Support
The Institutional' Funds Committee
will 118.ve -nmimately $70,000 available for suppo~ of research, Dr. McAllialer H: Hull, Jr., chairman of the
Committee, has announced: He especially invites , _ faculty to submit
p,_)a.

All ~ must be submittad by
Friday, March 15, 1974. Application
fOrms and · information u.y be ob-~ Ting saya .t hat BEL is · tained from tbe following .....,_m.
U JB'• aole autborl2ed rep~ in
tives:
deallna with tile !&gt;DC and acta .. the
AII'IB AND LErnD: M r a.. Beriiice
central point of communication with ' Pose, Provost Olioe, Old Faculty.
that qeney, the National Security
Club; aKJCA1'10NAL IJl'VIIIIIJ: 1""'-&gt;t
. Aaomcy Reference Center for SciiDHolden Baker, 806 , . _ ; -- ·tlftc aDd Teclmical Infoniiation and
INC: ~ Lawrence Kennedy,
Rm. 1649, 180 Race St.; JIBAL'DI 8CI·
tbe ~t of Defense InformaIINCIB: Prof_,. Ricbard J - , 138
tion Analysis Center. All service reCapen Hall; U.W AND Ji1liillritOIIKHC&amp;:
queota b information from these
~ M i I ton Kaplan, O'Brian
Uencies mUst lie channeled tbrouch
SEL.
.
Hall, ~ .Campus; BCBOOL or
IIANAGDIDft': ~Howard FoeTbe SEL reference atalf will be
fer, 322 Cralby; NA'I'UIU.L 11CDNC1111
happy to BEist any member of' the
AND IIIATIIDIADIJI: J'ror- Hany
amdemic: commu~\;y in ~
such in!Cidl\itllltr;'--;nli; • •• . • ' .,)·K.!Dco' 1&amp;7 · ~- aoa&amp;J;' 8CIDig&amp;

techniques.

2. The candidate must be a broadgauged scholar who keeps abreast ol
his own field and who uses the relevant contemporary dala from his own
field and related disciplines in his
teaching.
3. · The candidate must serve will. ingly and ably as an academic advisa&lt;. In his relations with . students
the candidate must be generous with
his time and easily -role. He
must demonstrate a continual .....,....
with the intellectual and social poMh
of individual students.
4. Tbe candidate must set hilh
standards for his studeiits and help
them to attain academic eu:ellmce.
He must require a quantity of -.k
that is not Jesa than averaae for hia
subject. He must work actiwly with
individual students to help tbem improve tbeir scholarly or arti8tic: tech-

~

Proffta&gt;r Lester
Milbrath, Rm. Bl, 4230 Ridae Lea.
PropcaUs which involve human subjects ahould conform to the University's policy, see Rnearch #3, distributed September 13, 1973, 01' call
Ext. 2501i. the Ollice ol tbe Vice President for ~ for copies ol that
stateD)ent.
AND AlliiONISl'IIA110N :

'Success'-~~aa::.~:..z)who

Criteria to be followed in selection
of persons to be recommended are:
L There must- be positive evidence
that the 1'8Ddidate performs superbly
in the classroom. He must maintain a
flexible i ns t ructional policy which
adapts readily to student needs, interests, and problems. He must demonstrate mastery of several teaching

fail

can expect DO IUCb .,..,_torY posi-

tive .-:tioaa..
FutuJtl proapeda for ODIItinuinr the
study, Feather aaid, will C1J11111U8 the

==:.nt;r-U:~in,.,.=
situations, and caoaicler tbe variable

elfects ol ...,., factors .. aoclal claM,
and
tbe iDIIueDce ol ....ual -"""""""'
-~ty.

candidate's evaluodiaD ol.mdent's work must be stmugly ported by evidence. He must be willina to give much goaater ,.qbt to
each llludent's final level ol OCJIIIIII&amp;tence than to his ~ at tile
beginning of tbe COUlBI!. ~ tlllal:bers enable students to adliew ·bilh
levels ol scholarship. ~tly, i&amp;
is poarible that tbe amdidate's -.Itina record may be ......tlat . . _
the average of hilt~ H i&amp; io,
it sbould be IIUPIJ(Irled ~ .........._
Tbere must alae) be evidooce . . . tile
amdidate does not hesitate to ~he
low evaluationo to students who do
poorly.
6. No perallliDQ' be.r•
• -led
who has DOt ..,.w.rJy carried a fuU
teaching load both in - - of. tbe
number ol - ' e r houn 1aulbt IIDd
in ol tbe number ol studenla

---- ·

s..c...e a ompport'llle must be -

pared for each c:udidate lf&gt;CGLtiWDd-

by~~~);·"'~ ·~..:=~~~~

�- ~·

4

Instructions for.ACT Proftle
· lnterpr~talioq:··
.m

ACr-

By JOHN BRUCE FRANCIS
lllld ALAN nNBnm

Tlie um-.lty al
Acritem ill autamatiiallY lll!t at-liO by this

Bf ?¥1W ~ feculty ....mers who
putic:ipated IR the F'8ll. 1973, AnalY·

metbod.TbeebleolagivenTecore
lndiQI~ whether • pUdcular c1ass
a_,., 18 abo¥e·or below the Univer·
aity a--ae, lllld by bow much.

sis of Couraes IUid Teachinl (ACT)
PftiiiUI haW! ~ a praf'Jie ol
the results. 'Ibis indudee a Cllle-JIIIce
computer printout in a """"'· maoe
oomplct format, and an A'CT Inter·
P!'81"1ion Cbeckliat. delligned tx&gt; Pr9'
vide step-by-p IUi&lt;lellnm for under-

1-putallan af T ..._
Oanaider the pro&amp;Je for your class.
At the top of the profile ia aT Score

Salle with a mid-point of 50. Fa&lt; '"'""

item. that mid-point bas t-n

...

. .. ..

Can't Believe

B1= EzlraDJp_..,..,lim.mt of 101
lllld above.
·
.

C.aA!Bftl'll-bMedupoo_~ .
mronDation:
· ,
•
·.·':

•

I n· .A'CT Scores

BB: Lecture
• • . • ••
89: Seminar
• - EIJITOII: .
BIO: DiscuiBion
WhJ 1 ...... In the of
Bl I: Recitalion
the -...... -... -..~tan':
BI2: Laboratory
.
·Maybe"-'- (01' In lpite) of my
Each claaoBbould be compared only
backcrouDd In the ..-:t aoences. I am
with the tbtee. proliles which describe · never iJnpraM! by nicely fonnatted
a claas JQ08t similar.
• oorppu~t,r
wtp~ 1 always try tx&gt; find

equa_ted
with the University Mean (tJNJV
and desipated as utypicaL~
(Mrall£.w.aon ·lcON
•SOllie
1D tbose.well-desigoed
For ~le, if itam #6 of your claao
A study' carried mit last ~
charts and
of figureo, and il
profile bU a tJNJV llllWI of 5.5 this
showed a hilh deJree of mlationl!hip
they do DOt make aenae, I ask the
, _ that, for ilem #6 a T....;..., of .
&amp;mCIDj! the last five items ol the ACT
questibn: how much it may have 006t
50 equals 5.5. u your individual c1aas
questJonnaire. :n&gt;!' five ilems were enand ~ paid for -il
·
of .._..., lltaDdard deviations and peraverqe for that item were also 5.5
tered intx&gt; a principal oompooenls facThis 18 what happened the other
ceotaps (~from tlle -"'-r ~
your T-aoore for the item would ~
tx&gt;r anaJrsis which yield"'!_ a _singl_e .
~-I reCeived the~ eyaluol nUDiben) 18 the lack ol any basis
50.
however-. ')'O!tf C1iiiJs -T1mres • • factOr ill:countiht Jiir 74.,. -per emil-or .: ':!itiotr .Dt. &amp; eoGrfl8. ~ · Science
for oompl"- I~ is, as a result, very
were h;gb; .,.Y 00.7 it would indithe variation in the items. Tbe corCOS) 101i I bad caucbt in the Fall .
difticult tx&gt; tell just how hish or low
cate that yO:.. c1aas ~ was higher.
relation of each of the five ilems with • semelter. t was ......._med by a
Since 60.7 is just over 10 poinls highthis · single overall &lt;!,val~tio'\ ~r ! sheet-a! instructions on how tx&gt; ina given ecore is. F'!f example, an instructor's score on 1lem 27 (elemenls
er than 50· and since on 1he T-Score
was greater th8n' .75, mai&lt;ing 1t fe&amp;81terpret 1t and a set ol 12 COIJlpletely
ol the course reflected and enriched
Scale ..,ch.1(}.p;,int shift ia equivalent
hie oto· combine . theoJ ilJ!q II Jriogle ·
meaninalees "norm -profiles" that sepone 8JIOtber) IIJ8Y. be..._.., i.e., more
w one standard deviation away from
acale' by'! sU)&gt;ple ftd4itjon:_(itl!jn.28.:. arau,. various ~duate and gradfa~e, than his score on item 30
the mmn, one would conclude that for
wlli.ch correlated -.75 with the overuate ~jlifrerent claas sizes, lee( the ODDtent ol the course was pro· ilem #6 your mean is one standard
all factor, was simply reversed). Tbe
lures, leDIIIIIIJ'II, etc. for the purposes
~easionall,v/~tionally re~t); but
deviation above the University mean.
resultina sum ·was diyided by 5. tx&gt;
of compariaon (how, for heeven's
!f every ~s score on llem 27
Note that in the rightmost column
yield an overall e~uation ~which
sake?).
IS very low (J.e., favorable ); and evof your profile the UNIV 8 D for item
can be interpreted m the same manner.
However, the crown was the sumery ~ctor's. score _on ilem 30 is
#6 is 1.5. This 'represenls the standanl
as aU the others.
·
!D"fY of ml! students' op~on. Every
substantially higher (1.e., less favor-.
deviation for all participating classes
Cunent Anlllysls Plans
.
1lem was rucely in the Jrudd.Je. of the
able), then the higher sco_re 011 i~
in the University on this item. Since
Tbe ACT group is ~ntly prepar"typical" range. And this is just ';lOt
30 '!"'Y be more tx&gt; the UJStru~r s
in the example the class mean is one
ing a second set of pnntouls for a!-1
bloody possible. May the foUowmg
credit, than the lower score' on 1lem
standard deviation unit above the Uniinstructx&gt;rs which will contain- their
three reasons auflloe:
27. Sounds complicated? It is, and_ the
veraity mean; it would .be appro:riindividual class ~ and s~
( 1) CS 101_ is an .in?OOuctx&gt;ry but
laclt of a staiJ&lt;!ard for companson
mately 5.5 + 1.5, or 7.0.
deviations; correlations of descnptive
terminal, aenu~escnptive course on
comi'OU;"''s the difticulty ~t every turn.
AU 1he ilems can be analogously
ilems (4-26) with the evaluative
computers, . theu role, progmmmin_g,
. Considerable ~ '!' beJDg .carinterpreted with the foUowing cauitems; and T-Score profiles based.l!pon
etc. No maJOr. would or could take 1t.
ried out tx&gt; fiDel an objective standard
tiona:
·
University Division norms. Other
lMY department does not even have
for the """"""' of a course or a teach1. Positions of individual classes are
kinds of analyses can be made upon
undergraduate majors 88 yel ) But my
er, but:~ ,flr tho; resulls have not~
ref4tWe · w the overaU University
requesl
•
res_ult ~88 almost identical with the
conclusive. Unlil such a standard IS •
mean which may itself he quite an
uruvemty mean!
1
found. the only a!te~tive tn_no .~is
~ ocore.' Thus, it is possibl&lt;! for
(2) Tbe audi~ce was overwhelmat all for OOtnpan&amp;oiJ IS one mvoiVJDg
an instructor w have·a very favorable
mgly undergradUate. In my class, acreference , tx&gt; _norms.
.
score and still bJo in a less favorable
cording tx&gt; the' com_puter print-out,
. N~. ate group resulls tx&gt; :wh1ch,
position than his/ her coUeagues beA study 00 detenhine how pediatric
there ~ere a little less of them than
an indiVIdual may compare hiS/her
cause all have very favorable scores.
house officers perceive their residency
the uruversity mean. Similarly, the
• own. Last Y"!'f _such group ~ and
Be sure tx&gt; note the overall mean beexperiences at Children's Hospital in
"percenlafle silting in IM required
Bt:andard d~~ ~puhlis!'ec! for
fore making interpretations.
t
·ti·
has
course" a~ tx&gt; be 'ghtly more
· ~ their
1
different Umvennty diVISions, diff~t
2. Careful at.ention should he paid
re ation ~
presen pol!l ons
than the 1:lniver8Hy average. · (Re~
~levels, clas1l tr,Pes ~ c'!!5" ~•. -~ tO the;nature of.· the descriptive ..words
been oomple¥, the HospitaJ's Mediquired· by whom?)'""· .. , __, ... »:.: , .
These appeared!"' part of the Sprmg
and phrases used in eac)l ilem. Intercal SUJff Bulletin' reports.
.• ·.
(3) ' btdlled; 'I'tlevet'•illjsaed"tl clllss •
ACT .Interpretalion Manual (Repor.t- •
pret the 'position ' 'Of 'the''X ·for· .any··· w~o~~res'fdenc;;,nt~~~
nor 11(88 L~er.Ia,te.&lt;llbis,.I.nnpember,
er, ~ 8, 1973) ·_Unfortunately •
item in terms of its being "closer tx&gt;"
sponded 00 a questionnaire devised· by .
was mvariably reflected in the stutit!' difticulty of chooa":'g the approone descriptive word or phrase than a
the Department of Pediatrics and
dents' answers. Howeve; flY results
pnate 110~ for &lt;;"ch Item, !'¢ the
certain percentage .o f qjb.er, classe$. , .
m8.ileil ·by ' 'the 'Westeirl N..W Ydrk
were in ·the· "typical range that was
~ clencal work mvolved
3.' Ilems 27 'thiough 32 are based
U B
not so good.
led few ~ctors tx&gt; make use of
upon a five-point scale ranging from
Educational Service Council, I ·
Of course, the evaluated quality of
them.~ semester, the DOJ'D!".~re
Seventy per cent of the former
my teaching was also "typical"-!
1 (agree ) 00 5 (disagree ) . You will
made .an mtegral part of the uutial
note that all hut item 28 are couched
house stall who responded believe that
hope, it is all righl
reP911;in&amp; prpcedure; ~ as such,
in poaitiye tenns; therefore, ·a lower
the pediatric resiliency program pre-,
·
-NICHOLAS v. FINDLER
shOUld 00 clmrer "!'d !'SS'er 00• use.
score signifies a. more positive attipared them adequately for their presProfessor of Computer
A common practice m repoflli!g the
tude. The comparative nature of the
ent work in practice, academic medi·
Science ,
results !"'
on very d1verse
T-Score is best unders!Dod as the
cine, subspecialty training, research
~ JS .the '!"" Of ~tandard scores
proportion of classes more or less .than
or administrative work with govern~ automatically mcorporate apa given class (e.g., Class A) whose
ment agencies. Ninety per cent subpropnate nonns. We have ~ the
students agree or disagree a certain
mitted suggestions tx&gt; strengthen some
T-Sco!"' (J1?t ~ be confused_ With the
amount with each statement.
areas.
J,.teat of mgnificance of difference)
.
.
Three findings are of particular inbaaed upon the overall University av. 4. 'The gen~ companson wtth
terest, the Bulletin notes; Over 43 per
erage as the primary reporting device.
all otrn:r classes "! only the begmnrng
cent believe lh&lt;iy- were not assisted in
The T -Score, like all standard scores,
of ·~ mterpretation. A f':'ller ~derdeveloping good intra-pe1S0118! .retashows the relative position of a single
st&amp;Jldmg of the student ratings of &lt;:"~
tiona w;ith patients. Only one. physi·
"'!urse comes only u_po!' ~parJSOn
cian felt he was assisted ' in learning
caw score in a · group of such scores.
It does this by representing each score
With other~ of similar SIZe, type,
about the economics of practice, 8Jld
as a difference from the overall averand level. SJ.Ze, level, and .ty~ hB;ve
only six indicated they receiv!!d asage, expre&amp;Mld in tenns of the stanbeen found tx&gt; be. factx&gt;rs _which _m·
sistance in learning about the organi- _
dani deviation of the overall group.
fluence s~ent ra~!!" ol i.nstJ:u.cti.o n
U!tion of medical practice.
Each individual score is transformed
and provide a~dlhonsl n~ve
Residents were asked to rank their
w a different scale which does not
bases for companso!'· See AJ&gt;Pe!ldtx B
House . Stall experiences in order of
:
''
.
'
a1te&lt; ils relative standing in the ~up.
of the fi!terpretatio!' Cbecklist for ·
importance tq ~ir prese~;~t work.
T-Scores are a form of stanilard
such specific normative data.
Their average rimkings from most tx&gt;
score · which transform the overall
Specific Nanns
least important were 88 foUows: ward
group distribution tx&gt; a hell-shaped
The only appropriate single stan,
experiences; Acute Disease Clinic;
curve with a mean of 50 and a standard against which any class may be
Newborn Nursery; house staff conferdani deviation of 10. The T-Score for·
compared is the average of all classes;
ences; rounlls with-house staff; rounds
mula for each ACT itein is;
but, use of that standard is only the
with attending M.D.; electives; week- .
ly pedi8,tn,c co.nferencesi ahd continu·
T~ _50
Individual Claas MIOil1- Univemity MIOil1
ing medil:al ronterenOes:
• .
_
t 10 x
·
University StaJJdard Deviation
.
A precis of the survey wiU be dis.--------------.
heginriing. More ·..,.Piicit comparisons
tributed to the Pediatrics Faculty in
t;n,.....
·
may be made by comparing individual
the near future.
·
•
.
c1aases with other similar classes. The
c.~.~
standards for such .comparisons. are
. . , ~~ . , g~n ~the T-Score profiles of ~erent ~
The Faculcy Senate will ~ Tues- ,
..... ..........,. br u.. DlriliiM ., u.....
levels, class size, and claas ty,pes. In
day; MarCh · 5, ii.t. 2;30 p.m. in 148
Appendix B, twelve aeparate profiles
*r....,.__S....U~fllllDiefendorf to take up the foUowing
1'~ ., ,..,_ .uJS . . . IlL, IWI. .
are presented: ·
·
aaenda. moat of which is twice pootIf.F. 14214. ....W om.. .. ......., M
A. CLASS LEVEL- baaed upon the
pooed from February. 5:
213. 250 . . . . . . . . . . . ...,._.
course numller:
b Approval of minutes ol Jan. 22
2J21).
BI: UDdergraduate Lower Division
and 29. 2. Report of 1he President. .a. .
· ;- nUDiben Ieos tban 300.
•
Report of the ~ 4 Report
.&amp;. wzsrur aotn..UJD
B2: U~uate Upper. Division
from the Adniiaaions' Co~tiee on. . ·
JIOUin" !'!, lf..6.JU.&amp;TI'
~numbers froin 300-499.
EOP admisSions • 5. " Reolution: "bn· ·B3: Graduate-numbers above 500.
student representatiOn on the Pri!si- '
IOIIJf L CI.001"1D
B . a.AaJ lllrZ- baaed upon enroUdent'• RevieW Board 6;. Resolution on · . ·
ment:
·
,
.
junior faculty on ·the Plesident's Re-. .
PAJ"JUCU W£JrD 8I&amp;DGUfAJf
IU: Small-enrollment ol16 ·or
view· Board. 7. Report from the Com-,
•.u~CF . ... c••n••n rr •
Medium- enrollment- ol 1:6 tO
milltee on T~ Eft'ectiv........, 8. .
Report from the~ on ;Grad-.
50.
•
ina- 9 . ReaolutiiJI\ 'caL~ or
&amp;r.'·~~oUI'tblOO. "• ' lale ~ 10. Oltillr' ~ '"' ~.
staDdingiL'Ihepul"J))Roftbisarticle
is tx&gt; provide further c:larifieation.
U. af ..._
Tbe mejor difticulty with interpre.
tina evaluations ~.ted in the form

$.-

KEAN)·

,

u

h.,d

S

C I ren S 'I:Jrveys
For mer Resl'd. en ts.

.

r;l.i
,

measures

.q . .

.-

vi~ ·

'Don't
Blink ,- ·
. .- . . ' ' ...
We Ar~ · Her~! ·.

V

C

- nt:!.PORTED ._

Se- te A

.......... ___.,., .................

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

--_.....,_

..-"'-~-

re.;t;

d .,

�SENATE

CARDR MOBILI'fY
FINAL REPORT
ne·c ember 1973
EDWA·RDGRAY
fULDA KORNER
STEPHEN MANDEL
EUGENE MARTELL
JOSE~H NECHASEK
LEONARD SNYDER
HELEN WYANT, Chairperson
THOMAS GUTTERIDGE, Consultant

BACKGROUND
One" of lhe prinwy concerns of the
SUNY/8 Professional Staff Senlte hos
beorr, since - its Inception, the ca.clevetopment of its ·membe~; the nonteachina professionals (NTPs). As a consequence of !his coricem, the Executive·
Committie eonstitu~ted a . committee
Coreer l&gt;e¥~t to·'.i~~li..,e the .
presenr ~llls'of Nfi's and suae&lt;t moons
te itnproool. the status. TheDevelopment Committee-established ihree sub- ·
committees to explore vorious ~ts of
NTP c;,reers, -one of which wos coreer
ladders. (The committee decided !hot the
term "coreer ladder" hod too vertical a

oii

e..-

final version of !hat proposal is presented
in Port I of !his repon. A third investigation _ was simul taneously ur&gt;dertaken to• determ ine wh at
personnei data were available which
would provide the baSis for a description
of SUNY /8 NTP career paths. It slion ly
becOme evident !hat some of lhe necessory data were !!nflle bi.t'riqt available to
the committee; the rem.1inder were not
on record. ~tly , the committee
constructed a questionn~ire to obtain the
required data md odministered the Su rvey to all SUNY/8 NTPs in April 1973.
The results ore reported in Pait II of th is
reporL

connotation, and the term "cMeer
mobility " wos substituted to denote a
wider
of movement in career progress._FirWiy, "ureer mobility '", ••career
PART 1: PROPOSED CAREER DEVELp~ths" and "career development" were
OPMENT PLAN FOR SUNY/8 NONperceMd .S si&gt; intem lated. tbat the terms
TEACHING PROFESsiONALS
ore used by the committee and in this
This Career · Development Plan for
.report inter~ably.) In )anuory 1973,
SUNY /8 non-teaching professionals is
the Subcommittee on Coreer Mobility
desiir&gt;ecf to bi a mutually benefi,ial progrorn. It will provide an opportunity for
(hereitter 'refe rred i o .os ' "the comemployees io develop their _present promittee") wos cha/IOd to: r
fessional skills, acquire r&gt;eW or&gt;es and to
(a) pi'oPQ!&lt;! a pr(,grorn to improve
explore, evaluate ~ plan iealisti' career
lhe coreer mobility of NTPs
paths. The University will be enriched
(b) d.S.ribe the c;areer patterns of
and strenglher&gt;ed by~ ~ inc;reased skills
SUNY /8 N~s:
·•
,
per se, by more effective use of employee
The committee first initiated a seorch
skills through better matching of lnterests
for car-: cle'9elopment · l&gt;'Yirorns - for
NTPs in effect at other universities • and talents to Positions, by ready access
to information ·a. to availability .of skilled
lhrouah library research apd correspondence with NYSUT and vorious unipersonnel in Yirious xademic and
odministrative oreos and by lhe IntegraveNlties whidt hod been suUested ..
possibJe sources of information. (A list of
tion of coreer .paths ·ionjoi~tiy desigr&gt;ed .
the universities is presented in Appendix
t o meet the needs· of both lhe individual
A.) No appropriate procrorns were found.
and the institution.
Discussion with .Dr. Roben Wright, BirThe committee recommends that the
ector of SUNY InstitutiON! Reseorch,
following .actions be taken to achieve
revealed that in his review of some 4,000
these mutually ber&gt;efiCial objec:tives:
references to a related 111&amp;ject, he, also,
1. develop a f!ow chart specify in&amp; the
hod found "almost nolhin&amp;''penaining to . · """'"' pallts (series of positiON!,' educoreer mobility in hil(her eduQtior&gt;.
c;,tion and trainin&amp; experiences) leadin&amp;
The committee then 'investijated
to hil(h-level NTP posi~
career ~lopment propm~s in the
2. develop specific c:areer ladders
privaic soc:tor; some models apJl"ored
indic;,tin&amp; _a series of laWai IIIICI vertical
moves-possible from NTP positions .
.
appropriate fur odaptation to a universitY
• envlroMMint. The consultant to the com3. initiaie anooal meeiinp between
mittee, ~ facultY mem~r of the SUNY/8
eadi NTP and his or her ~ to
Sc:hool ' of Mariapment and a private
d i SCU SIS and Mlu~te the irlcJivldual's
Qreet Prosress -and, if. desired, dhelop
con!llllllllt in lhe O!U of-.c;,reer de_velopc:aroer
plans for-, lhe followinl v-· and
ment,' was asked to • prcwide ·~~~e corp~
mittee · with an outline -fa&lt; a prosrorn
4. cleYetop a skills Nnk to:
ba&gt;ect oil models use.!' lri iftdustry, suit~) fadlitale optinW matchi"' of perfor modlfic;ation.-1 imp.em.ntati!&gt;n

ran.,.

years

able

in.J~.~-~'!1.'~~~·,

SaN.~~.~ .........- .

(b) identify oreas of strengths and
we~kn esses

in personnel resou rces

5. refi ne the SUN Y statew ide openposting system to improve in ter- and
intra-uni t d issemination ·of informati on
abou t available NTP positions
6. provide release time and/or re imbu ~ment of tu ition to NTPs to attend
such cou ~s . which will con tribu te to
thei r professional deve lopment
7. identify, foster and initiate programs of in ternsh ips and fellowships for
graduate students and NTPs to provide
opportunities for the develop me nt of
professional personnel
8. establish workshops and /or courses
desigr&gt;ed to:
(a) teach NTPs how to plan thei r
careers mo re effec; tive ly
·(b) forniliorize supervisors and managers with lhe importance to the
individu al and the institution of career
.
and human r!'SOUrce planning
(,)introduce or improve sup~rvisory
techniques
j d) introdu'e or improve. other
specifi' skills
Some of these h ave already been
initiated with in the SUNY /8 community;
some need modific;,tion; some need to be
desigr&gt;ed and implemented.
The committee considers it imperative
to designate one person to serve as Director for this progrorn. This Human
Resource· Director would be the University offi,ial reSponsible for implement·
ing and maintainin&amp; the Professional
Coreer l&gt;e¥elopment Propm~ of lhe University. The fun,tions of !his position
inc;Jude responsibility · for development,
coor&lt;lination and evaluation of educational and training experier&gt;oe, and collection (where necessory ), inteiration and
dissemination of data r&gt;ecessory to
implement the prop:orn. Additional
duties ir&gt;elude:
Professional staff counselin&amp;
Mmpower planninl reseMch
Consultation to ~nacement info&lt;·
~tion systems·
Support ~nd implementation' of
Affi,......live Action Pr......,..
To achiew these lpecified activities,
the ir&gt;divldual in this position must
polleSS lhe ~ experience Mid
skills ~ to relale effectually to the
Univenity COINIIUJiity.
The committee fur1her recommends

~~J!Ie ~~-qf·""""

fessio nal Senate m~ke a commitment,
either th rough an existing standin&amp; commi ttee or through the establishment of a
new commi ttee , to woik: with the Human
Resource Director on a cOnti nuing b~is.
Th is effor t could be in the form of condu,ting surveys, ossisti ng in lhe design
and implementation of workshops and
seminm, condu,ting litirary or applied
research, providing liaison with d ifferent
areas of lhe !Jniversity-1!enerally supplementing the skills of and providing assistance to, the DireGtor. •
·
Partici pation by NTPs in design and
implementation of career development
activi t ies will foster communication
among NTPs, wi ll tontribute to bet ter
understanding of the ind ividual and institu tional benefi ts of the progrorn, and
will encourage greater commitment to
·~fessional growth of lhe members of
lhe SUNY /8 community.
PART II: RESULTS OF THE · PRO·
FESSIONAL STAFF. SENATE SURVEY
OF SUNYiB NTP CAREER DEVELOPMENT
In the Spring of 1973, the committee
designed
questionnaire to elicit information necessary to describe the career
paths of SUNY/8 NTPs. The ten-page
questionnaire, a cover letter explaining
lhe purpose of the Surw:y, and lhe intended method of handling lhe data to
assure confidentiality of the respondents,
md a return envelope, were mailed to
ea'h of lhe 550 .NTPs. Completed or
partially completed forms were returned
by 170 respondents-30% of the SUNY /8
NTPs. Since !his 30% sornple wos not
randomly sele'ted and the anonv.mity of
lhe respondents precludes deterrnination
of its representativeness, caution is
odvised in interpreting the results. They
ore not ger&gt;eralizable to SUNY/8 NTPs os
a whole, but rather, ore limited to the
specifi&lt; group who ·returned their questionnaires. BeQuse of these limitations,
the committee felt considerable reservation about releasing the findings. The
decision to do so wos bosed on the following assumptions:
(a) ~ is a substantial proportion of
the population,
(b) the results ore intereSting if true,
(c) if oot true, the report may motivate the non..-espor&gt;dents to respond to a
su~nt survey in order .to refute the

a

l'el!!!l1.. __ _. __ . - · - -

- -· - ·---

�........... UN

·6
CtQ .the -'IS lllllllanliato the need
fora--illlj II t,..,.._,

(e) IM110...,..._danefeed·

....... .

.... In for . . . . . and effort
llllftt in _ .. . . ,.s of
-

visor(l) ·

e1ti1W IMIIIIGIIIiiY"'fflllf

theY
.

M appanunlty tO ute1helr sldlh·job conditions for whidJ
~:espondeft IS asked to lndk:ate
or ablen&lt;e Ill their p..-t
posilioM, and· deiJee of importance·'ui
them. Three-fourths or more NTPs sa1d
their jobs-indllde:
sood. relatiomhlps with _their coworkers
·
reasonable flexibility in sd&gt;edulirig
their time ID ac;c;Omplish their·work "
usiJnment of responsibilities for
'
which they were qualified
aood. rela~onships with -~ir super·_

one ~the 13

Presence

The .-115 of the Surwy . . reported
ln'llllt and tlllles. The data . . described

.. """' of the ....,..t of the IIUIIIber of
.........IS 1D each ilem who selected
aach option. Not all respondeniS
- - Ill ' - : the number respond. . lD each 1- Is reported In the tables.
Sewral surwy 1~, ID which .a lqe
....,anion of the sample biled ID re.,..S, are not lnduded In the report.
Tllllles n ..-led at the end of the

por&amp;ed dlac their si&lt;Uis _ , · beiiW.

u.-...-:a&amp; 'penlint Of 1llem felt
- " " ' udllad. .
'

JOB SATISFACTION
The majority of SUNY/8 NTPs who
respOri'ded to the Survey were satisfoed
with their jobs-ln bet, nearly dfteefourths of them so· indiullld. One contribuiDr ID their satisfaction was the
-utilization of !heir professional skills.
Nearly three-fourths of the lfOUP re-

...._._

' • -••

_

_...~_,

.1; ,. "

opportunity touse411i1NtDii '
-nablfity · of proper· eqillplllent or
,...,..

.i"

-:

~

.. , . .

'lliiiWelol SO 'IIIII 6S percent ·of the
II'OUP aid 1helr' present posidOns provide!" _,
t
-• ... &lt;r,
,..._ •. ,
p~uSant phv*aJ-Ironment •
n:asonobleoallry
.
•
opportunity for professional &lt;om·
muniution with olhen In their f'lelds
· oj,poi1unity·ID develop aew·lkills
probability of an inause In respon .

sibllitles at reasonable inlllrYals
The only condition reported by fewer

,..... u

RANK ORDER OF IMPORTANCE OF
~":It: ~CTS OF PR~ ?l'il~

, , ..

SUNY/aNTP

CAREER DEVELOPMENT

OpportunitY to we my skills
Good reletionship with my auperviiCWtsl • •
Opportunity to dlwiop neW WI ..
Reeloolble fMJifibilitY in sd\edWing my time
to accomplish my wor~ F
_

SURVEY"TABLES

w

...·- · .
.....

1

_

Reaonabl• ulary
Prot.bility :ot in&lt;re.e in.-.rv at r...or\llbll! ,.
. • Jn~t
.. ~ .
.....;~
Aaignment of f'ISpOntlbilities for which I

.· t

ITEM:

---·
,._. indic:Me how

T. . . 1: JOB SAnSFACTION

sidsfled

you . . with your ~nt job situ-'-k»n by checking the

~ainterwls

Awilebilitv of proper equipment andlor
metarial
pPponunitv for professtonel communication
with others in my field
,..._,t phy.ictl an~ronment
Raaonabla · distribution of ..uninteresting
but neols.rv"' Wb

.

17-tocOio: 1-wtv-oodto7-wryutisf'oodl

~

?'OF RESI'ONDENT1'

-- -....
· · ··..· :····
· ··· ·· · · · · ···· · ···· · · ·· · ----·· ········ 72
. ... ..... .. . . . ......... .. . .' . . .. 41 :

-----i#*l . . . . . . . .... . . . . ... ..
~· :: ::::::: ~ :: :: ::: ::::::::: :: :'

:: :::

:·~~ ·- ...... .

Very . •. · : . - .•. • . . . . • . . . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . • • : . . 6 •

0

· ·-~

:u

- · · ······ .·· ····· ············ · · ·· · · ····· 16

?t1

4

::):..;r.l

OpportunitY to use my tkillt
Good .relationship with my tupervisortsl "'
Opportunity to dllwlop neW tkills
Good retetionship with my
ken

co...;,.

.

--7
To

N • 170

wh8t-e.._,t__,do- you-t.t-·your-pn:~fessionat

stdtlr .-e--t:Jeing-ut#ind in -your

pni!S8nt

C4-t»int - .: 1-.ry underutilind to 4-fully utilized)

o'

.._

"'OF RESPONDENTS

~-·: ::::- :: : : ::: :: :: :::: :::: ::: : :::::: ~5 ··· ··· · · ·· ''

1
11 V1.
!
P.robebilitY...:OfJ nc:reu.t iD.IIliU:Y tl..!JIU.O!!f~e _,

irrif'wls

Reesonlbie se ~ry
Opponunitv for professioN! conwnunication ..with others In my field
~blbilitv of inause in responsibilities at
NaSOnable lntllt"VVIIs
A•llebilitv of proper equipment end/or

to accompl ish my work
Good "relationship with my superVisor(sl
Awilability ·of proper equipment end/or
....ttriel
Pr-ot.biUtv of increase in responsibilit ies at
• -t"8et0NNbb• inflni!W;
Miw-ment of ~itlilities for which I
amqUIIIified
()pportunitv for prof-ionel commUnication
Wth others in my fieid
'

Pl .... nt physiCIII turroundingl
Reasonable distribution of ..uninteresting

~ retationtNp with my co.brbn
Reuoneble distribution of ..unintefesting

AssiSf"lment of responsibilities for which I
em qualified
' _.
Probabil itY of lncre.e in salary at reaionable
intervals
#

,..terieJ

Fully •••.• ... • . •••. . • . •. . •.. . . ' .••••• .• •.•. 26
~~-

Alaonllbla N~
,
~unity to:U.. my ski jls

-~~~~~~--~-~
- ~----·~----~-~--~·,
to acxo~
ls h trrf work
• Reaspn~• J I~JCi~litv
.\~ ~'!Pi mv ..'\1"8~h

• 'I

T. . . 2: unuZAnON OF PROFESSIONAL SKILLS
r 'fftll:

·······....
.· ;.·'

..,q-.llfild _ . !""
~ ·Prot;*Jility ~f incnne in ,_,.,nsibiliti• at

11-111

... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 29

. . ..•• : • • • ·• •••• •. •• ·.. . ... . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Very . . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

~t pf\vsiCIII enVironment

but nece-.ary''

..

.

· , ......

but~···a·'

tislcs

,

.
ITEM:

~izin~ that there n.y be both desirable and urd.ir8tft .,.cts of any foi,,.,tMse"indicate by a check ,;.k wh;.}.llr
cond1tt0ns !' ,.,.,r lh)f'8 often then IM:king or IM:king more often than pnrsec'lt in your cUrrent jOb'situation. Also indicate
poruncetoyouofeiiChconditionbVlaingthefollowingcode:
·
~ · - ·· -c.

...

Ntdt of thi following

•''

(5-point .C..:· 1-.ery unlmpo~t ~o 5-wry important)

' ··

tiM_.
~·· "'~
~~~-.. ,

of im·

" · ::- "'• "· ' • .. • -

MEAN DEGREE DF -RTANCE"
"' REPORTING
AIPECT I'A£~NT

I

~-

--

THD1E AEPOIITIJIIG
IT LACKING

IT I'"ESENT

• ~TA~
's,tujr~E

,· .&amp;'

· ::.:...
l! ·

&amp;

92

uli

3.80

4A6

88

4A6

4.39

4'A5

"'

. Good ieaetionshiP ~d; ~ co-workltn

~- REPORTING

'•.

Ae.onlble flexibilitY In scheduling ·mv tirM- tO
occomplilh my - k
.
~mint of riiPOftlibilitles · for whidl 1 . ,

1M

Goodmotlonohipwithmy~(sl

'
Aeelonlble distribution of ..~n~ng but ~ne~:' t.b
.
-

.J ... : , •__ -

81

Opportunity to ._ mv sldtts

Aoailabilitr' of proper equipment and/or material
-tphyolc:oi.,\Oronmont
- u l o r y .•,

to-

_m__

~,~--;,::-:::·:::.)~ - .:-~=~~--r:~

79

3.74
4S)

77

4.11

86

3.75

• 3.93

62

4.25-

I 4.89'-

Opport:unily for pro'-ional c:onwnunk::ation with

-lnmyf'Opponunity

61

1- --·

fWblbilitv to

ma-:

-'"'""*

Prvblbillty of

nowsldllo

i~

·

58

in 1'8IPOftlibiUti• at .._..

in ..tary 'at ,_,.,.,.,

.

'

52

4.16
4.28

• 3.88
' 4B2

•

.,

.: ...

' 4.27

-·

4.36

- _ 4,53

j~···
,4 .\4
3.81

- - - - ...44 '
. '~""·""~~ ""':.."'':

�--

~~~~~~-~ but

dian lulf &lt;JIIhe IVOUP ('"")CO be.-

,.,

~

.,wabbllty Q/•. inc:reaoe.. lq

-v

lalively less lmport3nt than other con-

Wb and

...--PhY.*II ~t- con-

at

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . inlportant to eadt •

-::-:::-~i~- illllld

. - . T~ ~In 1he woups'

GCIIIIIdend important by both ......,s-

anllr of ......,._ lnlemtinllllllle who MdiODd nlatlons with their
Pftllllll.and , co-an lndlcal.t lhat c:ondilion ..
.... wbo:llld
laddn&amp; ln their
OM liMy nlued ~ 1he hi&amp;hest,
..,_...tl*. In most c:.ues, rank ordorllif whereas such nlatlonlhlps, while lmPor.._of.~ -wry similar for
llllt to lhote who IKiced them, were
bolb 1he .,._and the..__.. Both 'rated by them a les important thi111 oll
II'IIIIPS inclicatlld that tJppCI&lt;IUni&amp;y to use
but one of 1he olhor c:ondllionolloted. On
-. o.JIIer lin, ao,•IV""P. 111ote who did
lhelr -lldlls, clewlop111111t Of skills,
and - - . . . . .luibllity 1n ICI!adulirw • not 11M a reasonable oolary atlributed to
it primary importance amorw 1he conlllelr ... 10 _...,ushlheir warltdillon• lloled, while lhcHe who c:omidered
c:ondllions MIOI1I 1he hiJhest In lmportheir ~ reasonable rated it .. re-10~ dl5lribllllon of.

.... who·llill--I!M¥....

(~Tilttfa f.--PRtieR~~Lrrn:JF
. .N-

.

-~-

b! For .. _ . - 11101" vooo:s •• d Foret'-'fiw.........;y...
...

dlfor-ol~-..,.e--

--'---:

At c - t
I Mere v...

,..~

4

1-

,,

20-28

30-311
411-48
liO-li8

10
I

fi0.69

:. 7 _

~78

-

1,
1 16
4

J

, •. ' fl0.69 ' •.
10111'
,1

!4
~.:;1·- ~ :v

"

'c1:,

~

~~

. . _.
.~

... -

.·. ·-•- •• •.

·.• T - 7 ' STARTING A CAREER AGAIN
N • 116

ITEM:

tf you .c:ould ' start your career over .Pin, what, if anything, ¥110Uid you do d iffe,.,tly?

..,,. education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . .
Different e.reer • . . . . . . . . . . .•...•. .
Same ~/on~y ..-tier or quicker . . . . .
More specific .tlout job specifications
fetore education and different Clnter . . • • • • o
Not gone or st.yeci with SUNY/B . . . . . .
Tried a greater "'-"etY of jobs . • . . . . . • • • o
Increased self4xamination . . .. ••• . •••••
Miscell~us
. . . . . . . . . • • • • . •

I

-3
16_
5
11

15
6

5
6
13

.. .

~

c.wr

43
7
10

~
2

,1 6.
9
11

• ·t 4 ' -.

9().89

Of Your

26
5

13
5
5

•1•:!

For 1M R_....._.

.·"'

'"

-

"

----- "

3MoNY-.

11).18

were those reported a bein&amp; ~y
used by 1hese NTPo in enllanc:irw 1he profesoional v-rt~ · of lhcHe whom they
supervised.
Two-third• of lhe respondento oaid
they pli111 to continue lheir formal edu·
cation. Amorw 1he holt of 1he voup who
indicated lhe objective of lheir continued
education, S3 porcent plan. to obtain a
doctoral or profeooional decree; 38 per.
cent, a masters degree; 6 percent, ~
bachelors degree; ;ind 3 percent, certi·
fication .
A third of lhe NTP• who completed

rocoo&lt;d.,-

--

.

al For • ' - t one more! ver-

For this WOIIP fit N11'l, ._.,. .,.._
opmetlt" io '-ed 4lr 110111 Ill* ...,
effons iU1d lhote fit others; llllcn illan
' holf of 1he .-p llid Chat .........
visors had COIIIrlbutlld 10 lllelr - . In
one way or IIIOiher-by prowidllw a
warm, suppol'tM atmotphere, ~
reoponsiblllty, ~ filrlher. educalion, iU1d etiCXIUI'IIinl partidpalion in
professional c:onrer-s and/or ln.-vice
trainin&amp; p'rqv3111S. Thete ...,. functlom

-n ., -of

--n
'

mpondinJ NTPs ascribed 100 percent
c:llancle 10 their' rWlnln&amp; at 1eaot one
"""" year. A fifth of them oaid they were
sure they would be here ot leaSt three
vNro or more; an e!Jhth oaid fiW! yean,
iU1d a tenth Wd they eKpec:ted to re'main
at SUNY/8 for 1he rest of ~heir tareers.

CAREER DEVELOPMENT
SliJI!dy fewer than holf of lhe NTPs
- who responded to the Survey said they
were S&lt;~lisfied with the career path for
their present position; more thin i third
were dissatisfied. More reopondents
·
rtaaJNWO )4T...,_,. -,
_ indicated - dissatishction than indiQted
,.
Satisfaction with their career progress relative to that of SUNY /8 fa&lt;ulty i111d to
you win
employees with similar jobs outside of
Job?lor
the University. Howevei-, more expressed
satisfai:tion than eJ&lt;pressed disS&lt;~tisfactiori
• l'i!c)WILITY OF REMAINING
with their_ prostes.s rela~ive to other
.. -,
,-- .... ·
SUNY /8: NTPs and to classified employees. When asked what they would do differendy if they could sto.rt their careers
over again, the largest proportion of the

10 bo ~ ..:-..tv.lit,._,.Of'""_,.,

111511:" ,-- - YoU·SUNY/I,-

ditions.
Wilen asked the probability of lheir
ranalnJrw at SUNY/8; thne-flflho of 111e·

4

" OF RESPONDENts
. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. ~ . . . . . . 3t

.. . • ..- ••••• .•.•.••.•••. ... 16
. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 15
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 7
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

6

. . . . . . . . .. .•. . . . . . . .. • . . . 6

4
.. . .. • . ••• •••••••••••••.•. 3
. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

o

•

10

Tobie 8: SUPERVISORS' CONTRIBI.!II9!! J_O_CAR~E_ILD~~L~.!t]' __

- - .. . . . , _, _ , _ •• • •-.... I.. ..... -..

N • 116
.. Tobli.J: 'SATISFACTION. WITH CAREER PATH FOR PRESENT POSITION

ITEM:

What

~ oru ~

your

superviso~

taken to ·. -itt your c.reer de'V'elopment and progress?

·• N • 1541

I

ITEM:

po~ltion7

How satisfied . . you witll tht c.reer peth(sJ for your

RESPONSE

(7-point .:ete: 1•very dilaltisfi~ 10 7-very utisfied)

RESPONSE
:

· :

s.tisfied . . . . \ . . . . . . .

: : ~· :
1

•

:

::

:::::

•••••••

•

•

•

:::

:

:

:

:::

•••••••••

:

: :·

;;

•

••

19

•

•

Very 018onofiod
~ .......- ... ! ....'~:---:-..-:"'

.. , . •

~

.o

•

.-

••

:

".

..,

"':'

'

ITEM:

. -vili'to&lt;.mv....;..h' · ·=-

Olhor---

-~~-~~- ~:

)

_._,. __ ·

2 ·•. - ·- -

-

RESPONSE

.._..

.:

SUNY/I
Foiiolty

a..Hiod
~

11 OF REIPONOENts

s.qiti,d
·:-~

.........

t!"-.,

t:":.). '

Mkly

-

'Wv

«J

19

16

II

·:M

8

•

No!:"! ~ied-

~
I

... t

i''
~ '-

..

• ~.
- _ . .Don'tk,_;..J;;I;'
, __/0110 _ - - -

~l ,

19
6

. 22

16

---,s

'-

-

- - 'IZ

22
14
8

-·R-

IUNY/8

.....

A. ,.... to continue fCM'"INI education

.... .....181i '

2S

NO

ZJ )

35

18

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

-

-

83

futuro-· -ion
11 OF RESPONDENts

... ................... . . ............ ..
r • • • • • •• •• · ~ · •• •• o • • • • • • • • • • • • •

6
. . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

Blctlllors . • .• . . • . . . . • . . . . . •

22

11 OF RESPONDENts

. .. ..... ............ .. ...................... ... ... 38

8. Objocti ... of
-

13

TMII!t 10: P~ TO CONnNUE FORMAL E~nON

ITEM A: Do you haw any pl.-. to continue your fof'JNI education in the future? Cl Yes Cl No
IT£M8: If Y•. what .-e your object:iws, i.e., CPA. PhD, MA., MS. MBA. Orothereenificlt:ion1
In ...... fiold7
.

15

2S

48

. . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . • . • : • . . . . . . . . . . • 44

•1n .am. c.-, reiiPOf'lct.nU indicaNd more then on11 tyJM of contrlbutkm. When muttip ..
~,_ wwe ehen by re.pondent, each wes coded in the ~ ~ry. Tt.refore,
percenug. .,. ..-clfic to that catelfOrv and .,. not ~dftlw.

v•

41

2S

. . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . • . • . • . • • • • • • • .

[)refegate responsibility • . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • . • • . . ,...
attenc:t.nce at conference andfar in..,rvic:e tr8ining
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 21

13
13

~

fJ:Y .

?•-:...-

43
23
21

de\Miopment and

E~,..a

8- ~-don't know .no"'#t ~t other jobl
Olhor
IUNY/8
Nn'l

cereet"

11 OF RESPONDENTS'

E nc::our.ge furttMtr education

,'
~INOSYSTEM
1 -wrydiaatidied •
2·miklv~id'ooc~ ·
3 : ne;~_ooj _ _ _ lsfiod
4 • mikly ..tisfiod
5 • vw¥ •tilf'ttd

SUNY /8 but performing "
~ limi. . to yours •·-' •

,

\\tltt actions have you taker~ 111d found effeetiw in .silting the
~of thbse whom you supervise?
·

Providt wwm, supportive Hmosphere

Uaing the utisfection code bllow, pteese indiCitl how satisfied you are -with your career
~in coqJeriton with the~~ of other employees.

~ • · • - - · - · - • --- CODE
.. odtti-suNYIBN~·.:_ "5 ".! ·:(· -~

T-9

RESPONDENTS' CONTRIBUTION TO CAREER DEVELOPMENT OF SUPERVISEES
·••• ~
N•61

T1111e6: .COMP,4UtATI,VE SAT.ISFACTIOf!l WITH CAREER PROGRESS
. .N dllltd froa:11li!l.to 182
'

ITEM:

~

.
"1B - ..

. . . .. .. • . • . • . . • . . 20

r-.ponc:t.nu lndk:ated moN than one type of contributiOn. w..-. muttip ..
r:-pon- ..-. gtwn by rftPQnOtnt, each wn coded In the IIPPI'OPf"iattl canvory. Thetwfo,.,
percent.... .,.. ~lfk: to that e~~t.,ary end .,. not eddittw.
• 1n mme

37

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . I6

l".- •' . ~ -':"• .. "':'"·.... ;:- . ..: .. .".,.,... ~ , ~.....~r": ......-~ ... ·.-.~";- -o •! o ~ .~ .~.:

I . 1: '

Encourega attendlnce at conference 111d/or in-service training

1 . . . . . 47

_iEf;~~~~-- ~ :~: ~:~:&lt;:: ~:~ : ·:::: :. : ~ :~j~ ·_
··_·....

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . . . .. 39

~::.~:~~ti~ · : : ::: : ::: ::::: ~ : : ~· :: :: ~~:-:- : ·: ~ : : :~ : :: ::

11 OF RESPONDENTS

~r::Y~i.fi~·: : :~0 : :

11 OF RESPONDENTS'

Provide ~m . supportive atmosphere

~·/Pro-

~-- ··· ··· · ·· ·· · ······ ·· ··· ·· ·········· ··· ···· · ·

63

3

�--of----==··

«,..,......,..Ill

Suney IIIII lleln

-

wriltyd......
......
bu1a ._...., . - L ........... " '. . .
whocespoiiCW ............... ....
witll PlY for fuiHinle 1i'Ditl ....,. a

.. ....u.n .......

IICIIHndit -

....... jhllr 'wwt.. ~
ac..,.lies - also inllicaiM •
'-riluliiWIII~ ~ llalf
« d N respondenU ~or IIIII
...... . . . . il! profll55ional societies,
c0111muliftY IW1ric:e llrd/« Unhenlty
COIIIIIIia. wwk. More ·..., 40
have eJqllrienc:e in ~ and a lhinl
aoe ar have lleon illwolwd ill ,.ect
of .......... Political activity hat.tribllllld 10 lhe -Weer propess d a
number ollhe~.
NTl's . . . to indicate lllelr
-

in Oilier

. . . .. .-dficaliolllltd/or ........
wilh fuH a.ltian far ClOIIep lnel . .

courses. Nearly a founh 5lid IIIey -

....-t

inweSi.d ln Iealie . _ wilhout PlY foi
full-lime WG"k -.rei a . . ..,. wrtiftcatian.

•

Nearly all of lhe mpondents weni
interesled in release time wilh full reimbul5elll0tlt of eiCP"rue5 ·to ·attend pret-

fessionol meetircs; twet-lhirds

were inter·

.....,_DEGREE EARNED"

TIMl n:

.N•1•

No-- ......········ ................................

5

=:: ::::::::: : :::: : : :::::· :: :: :: ::::: : :· :::::: : :::· ~
4

~
--~
0

....

••••

............ lher ....ld lie in--'
In . . . . , _ r

f

't!!•

at

iheir

Qlllll8........... IIIey _..pet~

.......T__... of

lhe

own

......

l'lfPCIIIIIItc NTPs

wwld Jib an apporllllll~
teac1o .Pllfl·
~ lltd !han 40 penent would
like lhe ..,...,.lty to lransfer frCMD
· NTP 10 faMty positipns. Allhoutll most
of i.e pau, wwld not be inlefelllld in
wansler ID c:lllllfled .mao positions, 1S
percent ._,lti.IIC. A simllar number Slid
IIIey indifferent to tudt a transfer.
When asketl what activities !hey
_.lei lilce lhe l'rclrellional Staff ~
to inillall .. lllfPCII1 to ~job ....
faction Mil caNfl' ~t ol NTPs,
mpondents JIIOSl frequently -ntloried
c'a.--relallld workshops and counes,
caNer p~iclance· .and knowledp of NTP
position """"""' better PliY and oppor·
bJni~s for sabW!Icals.

--1111

........

~ wi .. pMtial ·
,.._,...,._., and - . lhan . _ .

.... ill ...

t "' ~ •• . • • • • • • • • • • • •~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • o o • • • • • 47
. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . : , . . . . . . . . . . . 13

TH£SAMPLE~

••

vey

The NTPs who respOnded to Ill is "'"'
ranwe in • from 23 to 66, wilh ....

averoge ..,, 39. Sixty percent are men,

TIMt 12: ENROLLMENT IN

-

~REDIT COURSES

RELATED TO WORK"
" OF RESPONDENTS

=':'*.''.::::: ::·:::::::::::::::::::: :: ::' :::::::::::: :

lhree-fourths of whom are married .mel a
fifth of whom · are. single. A somewhat
IP'ealer
oportio(1 of lhe women are
· sinpe (~); 60 percent are mmied. A
tenlh of lhe ~dents are · divon;ed,
widowed or sep&lt;ll'llted. Thirty pen:ent of
the group hil'le no children-die rest hnoe
from
to seven children, wilh lhe
average, two. The averoge work week
ranges from 20 to 76 hours, wilh lhe
averoge for lhe IVOUP being 411 hours.
Half of these NTPs report to supervisOrs .
who are NTPs, 28 percent report to
facul\)1 members, and 6 percent report to
classified employees. Of lhe 135- who
specifoed their bigtlest academic degree,
nearly half indicated ~ters degrees; a
third, bachelors; .13 percent, doctonl or
professional degrees; 2 percent, associate
degrees; S.percentrno.dqee. •

one

•
T8111o13
ACTIVITIES WHICH CO!IiTRIBUTE TO
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF NTI'I

N • 167a.dc wltich, if

.nv. of the following activities you

,_,. ~ rtlliU conlribu• 10 your

hew beWt involved In that you think
dewlopnwnt.

proftuion~l

ci eomJ.,.tY..... .
~

0

-

JOCin:ilsheminers
0 UniwriiiY committees, etc._

0 Politlc:s

0

0 PlAllicettons

0 Other h&gt;le-

Teac:hing

... ".

~~~~

•'

Un-.- -.. . . .... . . . ...... . . .·..... ... . .

"OF RESPONDEN TS"

~

IOCieties/lemin.s
CanvRunitY..WC. •. •••
0

.

...

..

• • . • .. • • • • . • • • • • • • • • .• • • . . . . . . . . . . .

62

~~.

55

...

0

•••

0

•••

•

·

'•

·

' ·.

:

· .

:

••

"! ' . '.: . '•. .• •

"

SUMMAflY.

EVALUATION
AfW lhe tlme.liallt fDr die~­
lhe~lllll . . . . . . ltHl'Ps
were infonnaHy askell 111 - . - &amp; Ill
writinl an lhelr leactioniiO h Sulwy,
The positive apectJ nparllld .l ai:Wid h5
being ......"ffiiOIIkknn. N1Ps wllo IIIII
not-"v lhOIIIItt.nautly ._1helr
professional futures did so ....._ or
not IIIey could « did describe, • ~
quested, lheir deslnod lltd anlldpatltl
. - palhs or lheir P'- for furlher
edllcatian. It also piOWfl ID lie I IXlflo
suucdw experience for - t o evalua18
various "''*ts of their pre1011t politlons.
Olhen found it oncouf'llllnl lhat the
l'rofasional Staff Senal8 -. . . . jllelr ojllodaM and w.lfare and
planned 10 act an lheir boiWf•
Most neptive critidsms·""""""*' lhe
questionnaire'• bieina too lcq, .aquiriqa
too IIIIIch effort to respond ID wllh lhe .
deplh of lhoatht dMinble; .. 501iciling
Information whidl could identify lhe
resppndenL
The committee beliews lhat lhe
Su:wy can arid .hould be !hortened and·
modified to 501idt informatian in a nonlhrealening woy .-~t of ....
information requlr'fl!d, CX&gt;miderina anilability of data at 1f!e time of adminislration :and lhe purpose to which lhe results
would be put, wHI be neces5ar(. We
antH:il)llte lh'at there would ' be a ..,ater
response to a iilodifoed questionnaire.
This woulcj assure more confidenc:e in lhe
resulting description of NTPs and provide
a base for comparison wilh data which·
migtlt be collected by reaaministration of
. the Survey lhree oi five years hence,.

DISPOSITION OF DATA
~se of lhe identifying data presenf on -"""!' completed questionnaires,
all questionnaireS have been 'destro'fed.
The computer cards and progi'am used to
analyze lhe data contain no identifying _
data; lhey have been turned over to the • ·
Pril.fenlonit Stiff .se~~e1 ·ExeSi.JtiYe;
~ '..! ~ •
Committee.

.In general, this gr,o op of non-teaGh,ing.••
APPENDIX A
professionals expressed sotisfaction wilh
Un iversit in with whom the committee
their present positions-less satisfaction
correspondld reg.rding Qreet" development
with their career paths. They are, have
pt•ns in
ecb::8tion :
been, and would like to be involved in
Michig~n State Univenity
· activities which contribute to their pretPennsylvanil SUite University
fessional growlh, particularly formal eduTemple UnrJIMiitv
• Unlveflity o f Mii'M"teeitll
tation, teaching, profession~ conferWayne
State UniviwlitY
ences, seminars and workshops.

50

hl"'

T-lfttl ...• .. .. ..... .. • . ••• . • ••... : •••• • ••• ••.•• . . . •... 43
Public::8tions •• ••• •••••••• • .•••••• • •• • ••••• • •...• • ••.• . • . •. 34

:.:-.. ::::::::::::::::::~ :::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::: :~
•tn IOfiW ~. ~ts lndic.awd 'mor• th., oM tY~ of Ktivlty . When multlpM
.......,.._ .,.,... ..,._., -.ch ~ w. coctld l n the approprl.llr. ~ry . ~er.tor•.
percenUIIiiJI . . .-clflc to
cetegOry Md ... not ..:lditfve.

!".t

T8111o 14: PARnCIPAnON IN PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES
N rongod fnlm 153 to 165

iO ~rticipet i ng

Uaint thl following mdl , pleese indicate your degr" of . interest
actiVities listed.
.

ITEM:

in the

T8111o16
SUGGESTIONS FOR PSS'1'ROORAMS TO IW'ROVE NTP
JOB SATISFACTION AND/OR CAREER .OEVnOPMENT

ISiJoint scela: 1-deflnitely not interested to 5-d.finitely Interested,

·ITE'*

ACTJ VITY CODES

#

a . L..w wfth IJ'Y for full-time work towwd a~ or c::ertific.tion.
b . LMw tfl1llthoflt p.y for full-time work towerd a degree Ot" certification .
c. ,_._ tinw with full tuition for college4ewl day courses .
d. Alii_. time with full rwimb,..,.nt of expenses to attend profltlion~~l meeting~ .
e. All- time with /»fttM tYimburNtrWnt of lxpenMS to mend profissionel meeting~.
f. ,...._.time to .nend prof-ionel ~~,..with no ;..;mbu~ of·~·
g. Opportunity to teKh 1*1-timl
h. OpPortunity
from NTP to full-time fec:ultv po&amp;ition.
I. ()ppartunity 10 ..,.,.._ from NTP to c:&amp;e.lfied tlf'vice po&amp;ition . ..
j. Opportunity to trllnsfet from SUNY 18 to... NTP poartion lpromotion) in enother unit of SUNY

-·

to..,......

k. Opportunity for ...W of tlbeence to WDrk in other orgllf'lizltiom such •
firiN, public ..c:tor, lnd non'91"0fit co,......

uniwniti•. pri...u

IIEII'ONIE'

-

.

.--

...

Olfilolloltl

10
15

-DEGIIEE .
OF INTEIIEST

·~ 'T')."'ff

L

..

h•

...

23

"'

II
19

~
7

"'

· n

I.

It

•

311
23
21
5 ' 45
(13

ttl
34

7·

4
II

I

1111

B6

18

I.

, .u
14
30

II

10 .
14

12

2D

•""l .,f~ " ' •

"

I

~ I If

~~:::0~~~-~~~ · ~':'.; ~~

-=.:,c;,:=.o:::;:u~~-) . : :::: : : :: :: :: :::: :: ~ :::~:: :: :: :: .

-In

• Provkle orientation for NTPI: . •, • • . • • • • • • • • . • . • • . • . •• . • • . • • • • • • • . • • • 7
~tiel for leews of .t.nc:e to work in other orglnizetions . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . 5
All...,.. NTP-ngi from
tl!• ronb roth• thon 'Firlfl to ·
•.

r". ....,...t.

5
5
5
4
4

f1

n

II

13

21

:

i

,

13

8

13

,.

•.. ••••••• • • . •

Opportunity for ~icels . . . • • . . . • . • . • . • . • • • • • • • . . ••.••.• : • • . • 13
l~.communiQtions emong NTPs end between faculty end NTPs; social
functions .. ... .. . . . . . :- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : .. . .. :---. . . . . . . . . . .. . . 10

38

b.78 2.23 3.72 4AI 3.81 2M 3.73 2JII ,.7 3.31
..... "'l~- J ..

•wr.

0

• :n -.
»

10

11
115

3D

"

38

7

.a.l -. •

Ml"negement workihop~ ; courses in supervisiOn; caner relettd-workshops •••••.• _ .••• 22
Reltwnt COUIHI "-t-time) with or without tuition
but with ree . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
c.r-.,oc~onceonc~ ~cnow~oc~go o1 NTI'...,.aon·opon1.., ......... . ....• • .... t&amp;

(13

16
.B

. N~ER OF RESPONDENTS

RESPONSE

.

i.

"OF R-DBn'S

16 - 13
12
18
38
52
9 . 411
75
211
• 211
10
112
211

-·-·

f.

L

..._
,,_
Dofinltoty

·i

ACTIVmES

...

L

What PfOiJ'8ml or ectiviti• would you like to ,.. the Ptofes:lioMI Staff 9tn1te initi~te
and/or support to foster th•1ob ·•tidxtion .net cerwr development of NTPs et SUNY/B?

3.73

...... ...

,_ .

prOWJidt job dllcriptiOnl. lnwn.iglte

-~

·

~

•

r

�, . . . , •• 19'14 :

·.n.'~Spo~ ·

n:•s:,_~
· fj,.,,*)

~

-==:·"So

"'I

.

·-~-~=
ber' lf&gt;.
~Oil

~.dear,"a~
abeiiQII,
ao&amp; out ID:IIalld

rcl~ID-bt l!ble~;.~.

~~~WUU~it."
. . . . . IDiienlteil In bailcliai 1lp

to • ~- bublllell ..:bedale, for
~t ~betoo .much for ...

d:.m'
~ ~~-c::·
1~ ..... (wbkh
.
from

N.....,._ 1D Mladl}, abe'd Ulre fD be
cbldale ..... "we .... fD
l*baPI aet em cl tbe 1m-,

~

• able to

play,• 1D

iueiliate We&amp;lillliLN-.Yorlr. (-tbe
pr_.t . edledule iDcludea' CaDisiuo.
D'YoomJie,..' Bullalc) State,· !iliqlim;
~ ellc.') IIDd li!t' it lie ~
that UIB has a - " • bubiiJaiJ

=

~~11~.·~\=~--=~
IIP'il;'"~(.q_tt q8iDBt qwility

wipe

teams from otber 8reaiJ) the East h\rt

we WuuldD't be wlliectup;'eltber." The
~ badiet ~410,801HOI' all 'MilD·

·

.

U!8wa._D"Y...... IIt:Ciarll:

'Wot_... .......................... .....__.,.

requested by the women's stslf (so
en's III!OltB) . faila . tel· prpride enough - venlity' setting which ·offers so many
that men and women can use the fs.
tmvei fwldli for this sort of achedul- . . opportunities, want to make a comcilities
simultaneously) has been ap. ~ '#.-~menllmits.ts.:•:.::,
~"-- rob'
mitment for three or four days pracproved by Clark Hall administration
. r~
......., JXl!ICI......,. p
. tice each week. Anothet reason might
Jems· '• •· r.- ~ \ ' 1
.....
,be that We're 09t communicating well
but ~· tbis ....,•t be done ovetnigbt."
The .regwsition for the work went in
·· ··the~ teun -llhare&amp; &lt;jer&lt; · enougli' about the variety and extent
seya .y!th _,•a, volleyball~lj • of '' intercollegiate' opportwrities, al- ' in Jan'uary. Ms. Dilobold, however,
does not "think we should ask for
no~ Uilltwei8bt ~ for .
I
thoucb' we ·post noticee, make claas
additional t r a in e r s exclusively for
and · j!!t aoUedl &amp;rid there are no
8JliiOIIDCeJD&lt;!ts and _U!IC' • the student
women; instead we should tske the
wan;nuPs ("We ldok like 'a 'rq bag'
press." Interest in women's spans is
approach of increasing the stslf for the
on 't he OCJUi-t");
'
definitely on die rise in high schools,
benefit of all students."
• • the. taun ·'bas only 'e!J!ht basketshe notes, "but we haven't detected
halls , (:'N¢ -year, we'd like 12 and
any great Ul'ffi'1'ge here as yel"
The coaches-men and women-sit
down toge,ther to hammer out practice
if we Del"!- Ji!, ,.,...,ought .to be Jlble to
Funding IS about adequate, Ms.
time schedules. And, Ms. Diebold reget tbeni 811 ,ai once arid nol have to
Di~ld -feels, 81!&lt;1 ·will increase as
'gradually'' add one •or ·two a year");
interest builds. Budgets come ' from
pons, not one of tbe women coaches,
• women's spans are dependent
student fees-tbe source of support for
despite complaints voiced elsewhere,
has ever come to her to express disupon the men's program for tmining . the entire athletic program. And the
room costs ("Jf they get cut, we're in
uncertainties· and ditliculties involved
satisfaction witb present arrangements
trouble") ;
.
..
in budget approval precipitate an anor to seek her assistance in working
out more favorable schedules for next
it other mil)or bUt" ewnillatively denuaJ - crisis in Clark Hall, complete
year.
bilitsting irritations like that.
·
with threats of "lock outs," coaches'
Equally troublesome1 Dr. Thomas
strikes, etc., a crisis that bas been
She notes, too, in terms of tmvel
ssys,i;UI•the• clliliculty.,sne;'bas getting - fully reported elsewhere.
.
arrangements, that the business manager who bandies these for both men
"p~~j' !o~ f""'tice iQ_Ihe Qyo;~.
Ms. Diebold obviously feels she bas
aruLwomen.is.more than acoommodat:~':@!111fio:P.Je .m!:ll;,li ~ !'J!l o'lliJ'o ll! , ~ to Work with .·Mihat.• .is,.iiWhile • tbose ,
\oUWu;me praCfiOBfinie we get·is ~ , whose activities she coordinates are
ing to the needs of women's sports.
ly during dinner hour, The men can1t
freer to press' for what might be. At
Women are often given greater choice
prsctice"'tbert because 'they have 'lo
the same time, she welcomes "young
in ordering team meals and men's
eal' Wben are· Wll' SJPpoeed to eat?"
bloOd," witli' ideas ro. change. New
teams are sometimes doubled-up or
Lest anyone think the major p,robpeople can often stimulate those who
otheiWise inoonvenienoed so women's
have · tried and met with brick walls
lem here is a ~·male-female thing,' Dr.
travel needs ,...., be met. "You have
Thomas assures that it is nol " Philoto pick themselves up and try again,
to look at the tots! program,'' Ms.
sophically,'' the men "go along with
she. says.
women's sports;" some have· even
Students Set BUflget:s
helped out in ooilCbing; they come 'to
Ms. Diebold ei:npha¢zes that stuOn the whole, Ms. Diebold is opthe women's games (which in basketdent leaders have the . final say on
timistic that student leaders are symball have been _drawin&amp; mixed audibudgel Women's interoollegiolte •athpathetic to, interested in and underences of around 100). - "But. wben it
letiOB, like other programs, submits
standing or tbe needs or women's incomes to them having to give up somepropoeed funding leVels, item by item,
teroollegiste sports, that tbere is pothing, that's a dillerent story." Ideally
to the students. Coaches draw up their
tential for increased sup p or l Dr.
men's programs shouldn't hilve to gi..;
own budget requests based on the
Thomas
feels there's hope bere, too.
up anytbing"-but space, time and
number of acheduled games which
Their diJferences, and that word
fund&amp; .are limited:- ·. they also set' "I place rio limits ori
·A Stance of Conciliation
•
_ what can be requested,'' Ms. Diebold
Ms. Viola Diebold, for several years
says; "in fsct, I often make upward
the chairman of womenrs physiCal edchanges 'in some'· of these requests."
ucs?on IJI'OIIr&amp;lllS' .and · currently coTo prove it, she displays budget sheets
ordinstor of women's intercollegiate
submitted and signed by Dr. Thomas
athletics, finds in the same limitsand others, on which she hils pencilled
tions that diaw ihe ire of Dr. Thomas
in changes whiCh are, in fsct, hi~ ·
The Bowling Green Brass Quintet,
compellini reasons for a stance of
than the originally requested amounts.
from Bowling Green ~te University
con~on: "If we _s t.!-.r t fighting _ · Admittedly, &gt;this.. is the first step in
in Ohio, will visit the campus, March
among ourselves, the entire athletic
the budget cycle and later, in all
8-10.
pro~or-niaf Bnd' wOmen.,-is in
probability, there will come a ' time
On Friday evening, March 8 the
troUble." Ms. Diebold, who baa been
when cuts will have to be made. But,
ensemble will offer. a full conce~t in
at •U/.B for 13 years, r e c a lis . that
again, sbe does not determine the aim
Baird Recital Hall at 8 p.m. under
'women's spans have come a long_way
of the cubj. The students work with
the auspices of the Department of
since 1963 wben Miss Dorothy Haas
the Athletics business manager on this,
Music.
then ~r "! NOtion Union, ~
and' if cuts have_to be made, usually
In addition to the Friday evening
FSA fuDds available for the first intera specified percentage is lo:Jlped . off
concert, the Quintet will offer a clinic
collegfste team--4n swimming. "We
across-tbe-bciftrd. "I do ·sometimeS get
in the' 'U/ B Band Building 0749 Mil!&gt;ad cme or two 1hat year but
mad ·at this poirit," Ms. 'Diebold adlersport Hwy.) Saturday, March 9, at
it was a start."
• ·
mits. "It's hard to tske a 10 per cent
3 p.m. Dupng the clinic, members of
To d a y1 Ms. Diebold points out, ·
cut, say, wberi we have so little fD
the Quintet will discuss performance
there are e1gbt women's intercollegiate ·
begin with:" But on the other hand,
problems, review brass literature, and
teams, seven of them currently active
10 per cent of the men's larger budget
offer demonstiations.
- bowling, golf I)'DID88tiC:S, swim- · Is a ·much bigger ' bite, in terms of
On·Sunday, March 10, at 8 p.m. the
ming, tennis, ;;;;! VQlleyhall,,.m addidollars and,amts. "Tbere is a time to ·
Quintet will join the U / B Symphony
lion t&lt;tbisl&lt;etbell. A field hockey team,
fight IIDd a . time fD fall back,'' she
in·conoert
in Williamsville South High
· wbicb cbad been given a budget, failed
feels.
SchooL Assisting artists will be
to materiallie last fall because not
Addressing other problems m-1
Charles Lirette and Ronald Mendo~,
encJUSii women were · interested. The
by Dr. Thomas, Ms. Diebold DOtes trumpets, and James Kasprowicz, asteams~ bave been fielded, she says,
that limited funds have always mansistant U jB bcmd director, trombone.
!!!-,.,..~ ,_,;ty been "doo~ls."
dated rotation in the pun:baae of -uniConducting
l!uties will be divided be-~bj! - . • a bowling team, · to menfonns, even in _.,••. sports. Bo this
tween · Director Frank Cipolla and
tioil 011e, ·last ~ claimed . its
year, volleyball got the jerseys it reKasprowicz.
'
tbihi State title in many YI!IIIIL
·ques~Ul , Dr. Thomas bas been
•· Members of The Bowling Green
P,ts...Diehold maintains that cainP!JS
promised basketbell ' shirts for nezt
Brass
·are
Edwin
Bette and George
aren't ezactJy breaking down
....,.;. A do2l!ll warmups· bave also
Novak, · trumpet;' David Rogers,
~ cloon at Clark to participate. in ·
been purchased aDd will soon be d&amp;FrencbJ1!1111;
Da'lid
Glasmire, tromm~f4! propams. ·~ c:ian't say
liYered for the' we '01 1111 .......,•s
W!7.· JSaii ol it mi&amp;ht be our antiquat- sporis.•':With- flmda limited 111111 price8 hobe, and Ivan Hammond, tuba. The
•
Q\lintet
ron-!
in
1966. All are
ed •building-hpart of~~be the
hiiJh.- have to be able to worlr.lhillp
~...QUtan l~la -~
..-t oooperati'lleiy" ML · Diebold 811'- . ..--... of the realdent faculty ol the

~~:ebo!~, ·~;s;uture

should not be given undue weight,
lie ptimarily in bow to go about realizing that supporl
Ms. Diebold believes that the program should not be "sold," that it
should develop naturally in response
to student needs.
Dr. Thomas might go along-but
only up to a poinl She's not looking
for a ciash program to make U / B the
Notre Dame of women's spans. However, she does contend that "the time
is right for women" to efi-;,,~~ .a par
with men through the · · tion of
inequities in ezisting programs,
equipment, uniforms, 4hings like tbal
" It might tske a little extra hlnding
for a year or twO· to· bring us up to
that point. But after that, the balance
could be maintained."
Would Dr. ThottJBS go s0 far as to
chsmpion total integration or intercollegiate sports? Perhaps, in some
spans, such as fencing, where finesse
and skill are more important than
sheer strength, and _in others, such as
golf o,r bowling, where a bandiqp
could offset strength differences. Perhaps, too, in Little League basehaiJ
and, again, in a number of high school
sports. such as swimming; in high
school, she feels, the strength gap between men and women isn't that great.

me~~~~dbo':""me~ewand::'."nen00:.~

favor "separate but equitable" athletic
competition. After sll, she notes, atbletes like to pi t their strength against
one another on an equal basis.
"And there will always be a man
who is better than any woman, pbysiologically speaking. But-tbere will,
nonetheless, be some women who are
better than some men."

The Bowling-Green Brass Quintet
Plans Campus Visit, March 8-10

as

~~ -:~0llloi
. ~·~~'~!_~~

tive performing careers.
Tickets to the March 8 campus
concert may be obtained through the
Norton Union Ticket Office. Remaining tickets will be available at Baird
Box Office one hour before the event.
Both the c:Iinlc and the Sunday evening program will be offered without
admission charge.

Student Arrested
On Robbery Count
U /B ·campus security ol6cers arrested a junior student on campus
Wednesday, February 20, and charged
. him witb first-degree robbery.
Twenty-one-year-old Glen Garrison
was sought on a warrant resulting ·
from an slleged incident in which he
and three other males robbed two students in 909 Goodyear about 9 p.m.,

~=.~~~tGar-

rison and the others beld them at gunpoint for almost an hour and robbed
them ol $126 in cash and a gold wristwatdL
.
·
: Garrison was arrested shorlly before
7 p.m. in the Diefendorf parking lot by
Campus Patrolmen Frank Butler,
Frank &amp;czublewald 111111 Harry Bollman.

~~--~-~- ~~~~~

�·..:~~!Ue

lllletated-.Sbe~the

,_..,

~

a lanle British ..t

arbitn=

- - - aM]XINiiall, wfth l't!lll8drable
IRIIhoriLy; ' - daily routiDa •
peraanuel,
lei, and IIIIJ'III'Yisia rmt colleetiolls.

In~
t:,:
ia a I88II8Cied aulhoriLy in JepJ
maltionl inwlvillr ' - _...., and
iD the ~ ol CMnerllbip disputes
.... ourviwed IUCb inaedibfe )leJ'80IIBI
daqon as l&lt;idnappiJIII threats and

-

an atladt oa ·her home by 1,000

armed-

Ha eiPt c:hfJdren attend day care
fadlitiea of oorta, aJtboulh Ms. PasiOn
alweya llllllral time to help them .,.;th
major decision&amp; Nor does she neglec:t
' - duties around the taou.: ' - cbildnll only haDCI-made clothes,
~ are planned months in advance,
and she writes ~ daily to her
husbeDd, a !&gt;usY London at:tomey, who
can only get home about onre a month.
An ideal faculty appoinbnent for
the Business School, pemaps, or the
Women's College. But Margaret Paston is rather hard to get hold of these
dayii. She died in 1484.
-

· onMediowaiW-

'lbe remarkable strength and independence of Margaret Paston and other medieval women is the subject of
a book to he written next year by Dr.
Ann Haskell of the u .n:\"Department
of Erudish. The recipient of a grant
from die American Council of Learned
Societies; Dr. Haskell will spend next
year in Southern France compiling
material she has derived !rom four
major collections of the letters "and
written testimony of several 15th century women.
Margaret Paston, for example, operated against a backdrop of chivalric
·ideals, in which women played supportive rol~. merely complementary
to. the central male figure. "She was,''
notes Dr. Haskell, "necessary first as
a subordinate, to give relativity to ·the
mal.e's ststure as -superior. Second, she
was requisite as a sexual partner, usually to fill the role of wife, and third,
as an agent of ~ve virtue, she was
needed. as a foil for his active virtue,
i.e., ' - virtuous function was to resist
vice, while his was to prosecute il"
OlliciaJ requirements for women of
the gentry seem equally oppressive by
the standards of today. Adulthood was •
synonymous with marriage, and the
adult years were spent entirely as
wife or widow. Similarly, obedience
was absolutely expected and behavior
variations relating to the married state
Were intolerable. However, marriage,
surface virtue and the formalities of
obedience were the only areas in which
upper class medieval women were
compelled to conform to the feminine .
ideal of the day. They were, therefore,
n.. Haskell adds, relatively free elsewhere, to direct their. lives as dictated
by uecessity.
~-

,._..,,.. Not Unusuol

The circumstances under which
Margaret Paston became a person of
authority and independence were not
unusual for the time. Her marriB.ge,
llJoe moat others of her class, was an
arrangement of permanent separation,
with John Paston practicing law in
London and"vlsitin!l home only infrequently. Aside from the daily decisioas which bad to be baDdled alone,
Margaret was ~le. in~
for 1he eilntinued welfare and survival
of ~ family property. In fifteenth
cmtury England. Dr. Haskell comments, "owiienibfp of land could be
.hal'-~ on slight grounda, , . _ .
~~ be determined simply .by
.uperianty of -,th. and r e oiea, if .....;r,pJiohed at all, depended
... llr:iiHul legal ......euw.rin&amp; and tbe.
faww of the .......... " Margaret p . . . .
lhoe, responilble for ~
qaiDBt poMible chaJJongen. an ."ab8Dhdely - t i a l and obviously equal
pariDer in ail eaterpriae lormally coo.alidated by marriqe."
•
The _....... process oonile.-t!T o f - - imponance, espe..., for . _ fudUee with a great
cW~t .Paston­
by her futwe
role In
1,*;...
•..........,...-

...... -~-~for-

........

-.Idly . . . . . well-ftliii8CW •
~

.

the

......... . . _ to Jolm iJidlmle
that within a ,_ yeus the maniqe
of OIIIIVSiience bad t.oc.- a Jove
match;. quite ollen, bowever, tbe eitu-

ation did not work out_ quite rl_o
smootbly. By the time Margaret's
children were ready for ~
John bad died, and abe was left' Wlth
the total . burden of neaotiations. f\11'
!her evidence of ber remarkable
strength and determination.

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

.MDBt of the marriage negotiations
aborted, for- 80t'De reason or another,
at an early stage, due to the importance of choosing the most appropriate partoer under the circumstances.
Yet the procedures aerved to illuminate the precise limits qf woman's
freedom during this period. Jolui's sister Elizabeth, for example, was promised as a teenager to a wealthy but
disfigured 50-year-old man; to the horror of the Pastons, Elizabeth refused
the match, as she was entitled to llo
in principle. Her family, however, re-tained the rights of persuasion, placing her in total isolation (except for
beatings) for a period of two years.
Yet, she~ did not give in, and one
decade later, marr ied Sir George
Browne, .hemming one of the wealthi·
est women in England.
Just as Elizabeth had the right of
refusal, Margaret's daughter, Margery, exercised her nght to positive
action: she secretly married Richard
Calle, the family bailiff, a t a time
when vows made in church could not
be broken. Margaret's first response
was to ignore the situation, keeping
Margery incommunicado for approximately two years, wlille still retaining
Calle on the family payroll. D r. Haskell attributes Margaret' s attitude
toward Calle as the ultimate ostracism: there Was no recognition of his
behavior at all, and as such the (amily did not have to admit its vulnerability to a social inferior. "It is also
possible," she adds, " lbat by uneyen
criteria
juaglnent, the woman was
considered to blame for binding herself to an inferior, while the man was ·
blameless for attempting to marry up
in society."
Once she was released !rom her
room, however, Margery Paston's punishment was social death, in the eyes
of her family and her social ·class.
Although she hlld the ultimate right
to marry whom she wished, ber family's attitude, and economic and social
considerations, played an ever-increasing role. Men, however, could marry
or not as they wished, without fear of
any !A'Jl!-ity at all. "It is interesting,''
Dr. Haljkell comments, "to note that
Margaret was able to destroy the love
match of another daughter, Anne, who
ultimately married according to her
mother's wishes."

ot

Medioni M - oncl DoUifrter

Margaret's attitude toward her
daughters' marriages was significant
not only because it defined the extent
of their freedom of choice, but also
because it typified the relationship
between the medieval mother and her
cbildren. Emotional involvement and
tenderness, Dr. Haskell contends, are
rarely mentioned at all in the Jettem.
Children were sent away !rom home,
or rai)oed by servants, .until they were
old enough for marriage. Daughters
were treated badly by mothers who
felt guilty for revealing their husbands' inability to sire &amp;ODS. '"The
bitterness of medieval women," Dr.
Haskell maintains, "seems never to
have reached greater depths than in
cleaJ.ing with their dauglrtes, with .
wbom- """"' degree of self-identiftc:ation must have been present."
Margaret hen!eJf underwent the
same sort· of trealmellt, and deft..
nltely the tou,her for it. 8be was
known
her COIIlpelmce in _ , .
ing the aJfairs of the as well
as ita JepJ and political battlee.' 8be
withstood an orpnlzed siege by 1,000·
lli1Ded soldien of Lord Moleyns wbo
were., Intent on ~ the Pa&amp;ton land that they rated the
abe in. In 1466, she """
.
' - own Jepl ..-.tation, a camp ·eated~t
•
the

for

9

• midiliP'eiiWe"~&amp;~~

~ alanaed by
tbiii-....CJidaiN, and ...S. DOc6D
to llllla to Yalplet'e ald. He .tildY

·ID IAalaiL -

for '-

, . . . bls wife a Wiler, .-cribinc hls
pride in her, and thuking ' adivllies In his beball.
.,.._. 11i;:a altRha
Her .other reaponalbUUiea J!C111a11Y. as~ if las dramatic.
She ..... required to ........ ~
hold which induded cbens of pioople,
and to supply them all with. food and
clothing as much as a Ia advance. According to Dr. HaobiJ; Marsaret's letters Indicate that a111t aJao particularly astUte in oblalnlng
iond analyzing of local tnnda,
political and otherwi•e, which she
would report to her huaband with
appnlpliate -Jltionary advice wben
necessary.

And In another 'Yf!1:Y real . . . . her
family's lives depended on this power.
It was her job, for example, to keep
the household out of the path of the
Black Death, to decide when a location was safe and when to move far.
ther into the country.
Margaret Paston's importance, ultimately, was more than equal to her
husband's. John was "'fucated at Cam-.
bridge for his life's work; Margaret
lesrned by necessity. John gleaned
the status•of the landed gentry; Margaret maintained and upheld . it.
Tough-minded as she was, however,
she never found it necessary to reject
or resent her female identity. Her
attitudes and behavior remained, under all circumstances, within the b&lt;;lundaries of marriage and subservience
defined by her society. She, therefore,
survived and was, by all appearances,
·even happy. For Margaret Paston, it
was all part of being a good_wife.
A portrait of Ms.rgarel Paston, much
of it in her -own words, Will be included in Dr. Haskell's book. Dr. Haskell- is the·:third, ,p enon from Y.)(B to
receive a grant from the American
Council of Learned Societies "Since it
was founded in 1919 as a private, nonp rofit federation of scholastic organizations in support of the humanities
and the humanistic aspects of the
social sciences.

Two Linguists
Back from Chile
Dr. Paul L. Garvin, chairman, Department of Linguistics, and Dr. Madeleine Mathiot, associate professor,
have returned from a two-months' visit
to Chile wbere they both held FuJ.
bright-Hays Jec:tureshipe. 'They were
faculty members of the Interamer;ican
PrOgram in Sociolinguistics at the
CatholiC University of Valparaiao
which Garvin bad helped organize
during an earlier trip to Chile (MayJune 1973) and of which he is honorary director. A third U.S. participant was Oswald Wernsr of Northwestern University. In addition, six
Chilean linguials made up the faculty.
A total of 12 couraes was offered.
Garvin taught a asninir of direc:ted
research in sociolinguistics and a Jec.
ture course in Jingui86ca and pedag&lt;v~
taught a seminar in
ethlbemftntic lesij:ology and a course
in introduction to etlmo- and sociolinguistics.
Several colloqoia and eeminars _,..
alao organized during the Protram.

Malhiot

ttOU.-

NE£IIEI) .

Houslns for 112 )'0Ur111 meo oncl women·
of the MIT Symphony Orchestra Is ur·
pnt1y . - , the Music Deportment ropons. Thirty-four women from Wellesley
Collo8e oncl 78 , . , from MIT moke up
the JR&gt;Up. TIM! O - r o wiH aniw "on
:r.-y, Non:li 26, oncl Buflelo on
Thundoy morning, Morch 28. Individuals
to ohr '-PI!Jollty In a home- or
opertment for two nlahls should telephone
the Baird Concert Ofllce, 831-3408. Flilol
- • of the Orc-ro·s ltlnerory during
its two-&lt;loy visit ore lncom~; - r .
Muok: Department spokesmen hope "that
our visitors from wiH hove
the _.tunlty of oxporlenclr111 tho -nnth
~ frienclllnlioo of - . t.culty and

--

Jen is ebaifman of
the din...,.'-dance and Mrs. 'lbeodore
L. Hullai is co-chairman.

Dr. Corton ofT~ ~

Is Foster Ledllrer
The Foster Lecture Series for 1974
has been scheduled for April 15-19,
featuring Dr. F. Albert Cotton, Robert
A. Welch Dlstinguished Professor of
Chemistry, Texas A &amp; M University.
Theme of the series will be ''Nonclassical Phenomena in Inorganic
Chemistry: Structure and Dynaniics."
Dr. Cotton will present four lectures
-in 70 Acheson at 4 :15 p.m., April
15, 16, 18 and 19.
The Foster Lecture Fund, established by the late Mrs. Orin D. Foster
as n memorial to her husband, provides monies to bring experts in the
field of chemistry to the campus. Each
year, notql scientists are invited to
spend a week to present a seri&lt;&gt;; of
public lectures in' their specialty under
the al!spices of the n..~t of

·;uc~ JH.'i4~ t&lt;r; ~ b~'(. .,~..... '-~'

Phar~acy s~~ihar ·

Set for March 31
The "Second Annual Pharmacy
Management Seminar,'' spoDsored by
the School of ""•~~ and the Pharmacy Alumni ~tion. will be held
Sunday afteriioon, March 31, at the
Executive Motor Inn, across from Buffalo Intiemational Airport
Scheduled topics and &amp;peekers are:
"Pharmacy Practice and the Emerging Regulatory Climate"-Carl Roberts, director of the Legal Division of
the American Pharmaceutical Association.
"Marketing Your Professional and
Awdliary Services" -Glenn Farr,
Pharm.D., director for clinical aJfairs
of -the American College of Apothecaries, and assistant professor of pbarmacy administration at the University
ofT-.
''Manqement ~-A Professional Necessity'' --: William 'l)lrerme, editor of The· Lilly Oifat and
The NACDS-Lilly Oilaf, and director of the Lilly Analysis Service. •.
The Seminar is to all practicing pharmacists and offers 4% clock
hours of COli~ education credil
Regislzation fee 18 $15 per peraon,
payable to ''U/B Pharmacy AlumniContinuing Education" before March
22.

Nominations~~:fit 3;.:!/l-tant.
Doyno eJIIIIhalh7J!8
A,Jl mOIIIii8IB Or the Unl-.ity oam- ·

munity, as well as f.....- IIWdents
and Alumni, are invited to submit
nominations.
U fB winDers of the awards for
1973-74 are: n.. Saul Elkin, 8BICiate
prot_,.- of theatre; Milo tu.e Ann
Hawkes, inatructor of halth educa·
tion; Dr. Elizabeth KenDedy, -'slant
~r of American~Irving Sbamee, III'Olaa&gt;r of.
ing science; Dr. Norman
prof-.r of psychiatry; n.. Warren
'l"hoo..a, -.c:iate ~ of indu&amp;trial ..,.;-ing; Dr. Howud Tieo· kelmann, prot_. of chismistry; n..
Sol W. Weller, prot_. of chamlcal
...
.. .
..... . . ·'

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

community-·

.........

,._.,t-IP If you con."

-----· .·-

�~ troa-

n. eot

4)

-·-cu.~~---

ftoe a-t Dietrrfer tliNO), ~
~'=- 4,
8 - 10 p.m.

-·

s.!::'teP!_"'f:tl.1sl'.:~ ~

in 1(0 Capen. No odmiooioD charp.

PIYatOMAT•

~ N'=.~-fo"!..!,_~

expOnenoe,

CONfHINCE: CAPRALIIM TODAY•

Ro"""' Low Aopecu of tM Conetituliolllll Groruulo for lmP&lt;!Qdtment, Milebell Frsnldin, proC""""r of law aDd pbilooophy, U/ 8 , 233 !'!orion, 7:30 p.m.
CONCHr

The Gu.arneri String Quarut, Mary

Seaton Room, Kleinh&amp;no Music Hall.
8
by tbe U/B Department of
Music.

~:....ted

'(IANSCEND£NTA1 MlDfTATION•

An introductory d iscusiio n on The

e.'ricti&lt;:oJ Aspect of Sci•nce of Creative

Calf for Feder--al Grad·Assistance
Falls Short of Students' Wishes

. _ in federal aid for graduate
thoulh hardly the
ones tbat the studenlll had IIIJUiht.
Were IIJ'II'Id this month by the National
Bo$rd on Graduate Education.
The Board seeks • $108 million
annual p~ of support, approximately a thinl to go directly to graduate students.
.
As reported in The · Chronicle of
Higher !:.u-tion, the propQea) calls
for . an iDcreaae in federal fellowships
based on academic merit to some 6,000
students annually. Tbeoe fellowships,
to be awarded by the National Science
Foundation &lt;which currently supporlll
aome 500 such fellowships each year)
ani! the National Endowment for the
. Arts and Hulilanities, would rovide
' three "Ye8n of -..lpport ..u:JOO;.annually, With an annual griiit' cit $4,500
to be made to the students' university.
The' Board estimated the cost of the
program at $48 million per" year and
predicted that it would benefit approximately .25 per Cl!llt of the nation's
graduating college seniors.
The Board also recommended a -aeries of 200 five-year irants .to universities to support action-oriented graduate programs conoemed with "uzgent

social PI'Oblems." Half of each grant
would be earmarkeci l&lt;&gt;c..direct student
_support, the rest for institutional COBIB.
Some 5,000 students would be aided
under this a_,t of the propoeal, the
Board estimated.
Currently,
.6,&amp;10 graduate students are receiving fedeml aid The
proposal would increase the number to
11,000, a dramatic reduction from the

aramatic

·atuden~a,

some

51,000 level which characterized the
high-water mark o( federal support for
graduate students in 1968.
•.
The Board also urged that federal
support of basic research increase with
the G.N.P., recommend"mg that the
budgets of NSF and the National Endowment be increaaed whenever "mis.rsion-oriented" federal agencies cut
~' bad&lt; tlleir ~ch -beaie reaearch.
The Board also urged Congress to
create a new Joint Education Committee, along the lines of the Joint Eco. nomic Committee.
The Board was established in 1971
by the American Council on Education, the S o c i a I Science Research
Council,
American Council of
Learned Soci •
and the National
Research Counc · .

~

Dr. C. Y . Tint/ , acupuncturut, Clark
Gym, 8:30 p.m. Presented by the Student Association Speakers' Bureau.

Lecturer, EdUJ:JtitiDntJl OpporiUllily Center.
,Associate or full Professor, Spalli6A, Italian and PoriUfllU!Be.
D!mctor- Professor, Associate or Assistant Professor, EdumtiDnal
OpportU!lily Pr:ofro11L

·

NTP

CONTINUING DENTAl EDUCAnON #
Diagnosis a~ Treatment of Combined

~:C:;,i~~~ p"r'of~r ~£:~~~~

0

tology, University of Pennsylvania School
of Dente! Medicine. Capen Hall Dental

Clinic, 8: 30 a.m.-4:80 p.m.
ThiS session will continue on Friday, ·

r-

March8.
~I
1VTORW IESEAICH LKTUH SHIES•

Recent Aduancft in Time Series An.alysu, Pro!. E. J. Hannan, Australian
National University and Yale University,
4230 Ridge Lea, Rm. 'A-49, 11 -a.m. and

4 p.m.

Presented by the Statiatical Science

ence.

PSYCHOMAJ•
A listenin~

and learning e.z:perience,
334 Norton, 3-6 p.m.

SCMNCIS lim.•

Colinselor (Bilingual), Educational Center, PR-1.

• ' .· .

·

·.

..
Fot lldditionsl' information concerning these jobs and for details -of"
NTP opehings ~t the State University system, consult bulletin
~ '!\. ~- ll'qlU'!"":
,
1
I . Bell• i'acility between •D152 and D153; 2: Ridge Lea, Building

~ next to cafeteria; 3. -Ridge Lea; Building 4230, in corridor nert lo
·C-1; '4. Health 8cil!lleeS Buikiirlg, mcorridor opposite HS. 131; 5. Capen
lfllll; 'in tbe1corridOr betWeen Room -141 ~ the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
~ lloOi i_n' corridgr ~to vending machines; 7. Ha~ Hall, i!'
~ •):nulbe Joy.er, {rom Public Information otllce; _8. AcbesoD
-~.J!&gt; ~ bet,ween .lWoo;ns 1~2 and 113; 9. Parker ~··
• m ~ ~ ~ ~ 15; ~0. Gocid,year Hall, 1st !)oor, Houomg otllce
""": 11. $Y1 ElmWood, Per.mnel Depanment; 12. · Norton Union,
~· Qllae,. a-n ..226; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
~ JOII;..l"lalm!~ O'Brian Hall, four:th fio!r.h\mbarJit;Campus) .

~:.= ~NF~kFriday. 9 a.m.The ~ of Ma.itxa: Coapoeer, Theonlicilm, Teacller Gild Pe-r-

--·

(b= ~i;~~~

COMPVtlll
IBYICES
· FORTRAN,
lntrodu&lt;:lion
to TS-RUN

4238

•

1rxm IM Terrible, Part 1 (Eioenstein,
1914) and lrxm the Terrible, Part 11
(Eioenatein. · 1.946), 148 Diefendorf, 7
p.m. No adaWoioD charp.
'The M &lt;lilklh
be read. by Pro£.
Philipp F. Voit, U/ B Department of
Germanic and Slavic; Purim delicacies
will be oerved after tbe oervice, Hillel
House, 40 Cajlen BIW.; 7 p.m.
UK WOIKiHoP•

DyMmica -of Human &amp;zu.alitY--&amp;=al Attiuutu, 231 Norton, 7-9:30 p.m.
An "interdieciplinazy panel
examo

will

:r:.::d~t:::.,t=d~~~

at.Utudeo aDd to h._.. eexuatily. Paneliota inducla: Dr -Adeline
• Levine, chairman, ~i of Socioloey; Gerald 'Thorner, - - . . . COWl·

-r=-!I

~ri..t~.\ ~;S:r'~

ate proC-.r,
MediciDe: Rod
SaUDden,.
ol tbe ~Minilltzy, will moderale.
-

•.

Run!; Three Appnntica; Day Aftu

· ~~&amp;o~

Peort:.:t::::oe•c£!..~·

-~. UUMFU•• ~.

U:..\ .Su'
• lo

• -"

.

li!!~~~~w= ~ ~ ~

5 p.m., throucb February 28.
'The lill-inclusive aablre ol lbe collection ill evideaoecl by tbe exhibitioa of
material not found ebewhen!: tbe &amp;.nt
dra!t of Hughes' BolJtul of Harry Moore,
Japanese trana1atione of his poems.
scores of his poema .et to mwD.c. and
scripta aDd programs of hill ' playo.
Workabeeta for three poems by Gweft.

~dwo~=i.b: l'!.,;~~

-~x'i:lbit.Baraka) are aloo feabJr!ld in tbe
UUAI DMIIff•

Native American lnditua. Am. an es.-

hibition repreoeatinc 13 I o cal Indian
artist. from tbe Onoadap, Tuc:arora,
Narrap~~~ett .-rvalicms,
Gallery 219, Norton, through •' ebruary
28.

Seneca and

Some Recent Print., an eshibit of atudent work from tbe U/B Art Department's Etching Worbhop. Created under
tbe guidance of Harvw,y Breverman
Robert Aull, Hayes Hall Lobby display

and

:;.!"~~~~~"-'A;Ji-t· beUUM EXHIIIT•

sio~:-"8~~.;'2~~ N!.:!:. ~~d.":.~

1, ~ Satwday, March. l6. GoJiary
boun: Monday, We&lt;laeoQy and 'Iluus-

and

day, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tueoday and Friday,
noon-5 p.m.
7-10 p.m.; SUDday, 1-0

p.m.

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS IN1Hvt£WS

Throughout tbe oemeater, oa-aompus
interviews will be oonducted for stude!ata
who are interested i.n attend.i.ng paduate
schools or obtaioinc emplo,YIDOilt. Flutber information and appomtmenta for
inllervieww can be arran&amp;ed throucb the
Univenity Placement and Career Guidance Oftice, Hayes C, 831-4414. Tbe following -cieo will be interviewinc this
week:
~Y-28 : Texaco, loc.: Reliam:e
EiectPc Co.; Metropolitan Life loour....,. Co.: Travelen IMuraaco Co.
PIIIDAY-1: Ortbo-l'barmaeontical Corp::
Carborundum Ca.; C..de&lt; Hammer,

NOTICES

Th• Moll... Falcon, 140 Capen, 7 aDd
9 p.m. Admiaion: 75 conta.

~wu,....,a,..

HaD,

Fiue Bl&lt;u:A Poet., featwint tha of Ama Bontempo, GwaldolyD Bmob,
Lanptoa Hucbeo, Leroi Joaea. aDd

CACFM.M••

w;~~.b~tf'7~9 ~-

ediiWt ol

MUSICm.!r

'/!:

fiWS•

8D

~~,.:~~;

FornuJL Onto/Dfy and FClUidalioM of
Mathent4tico, Prof. Nino Coccbiarella,
Department of. Pfillooopby, lDdiaDa Ullivenoity, Bloomiocton. 4224 Ridge Eea,
Rm. 37, 4 p.m.

will

.Teehnicol ·Specialist, Ibsb-uctional Communication Center, PR-1.
~Y' 'Aifmisalblui A88~t tRelistmtion) Admissions &amp; Reilord!i, PR-1.

, _ . P.-,

aDd editor of . Slow Loria P-. Preoented by tbe Olloo ol Calbmll Al'ain.

Divilion. Department of Computer Sci-

HIUII. PW1M savta.-

Aatutant Dt:an, Credit-Free Programs, PR-3.
AdmisaiDr&amp;s COU1l8elor, Admissions &amp; Records, PR-2. 'SysteiM Analyst (2 positions), Computer Services, PR-2.

Tlw -

lumcl-jJriDted ........... ol _ . . , "" •

CUI.JUIA.l AlfAIIS EXHIIIJ•

THURSDAY-7

~!=~·
:1:: ~~ofD~J:1,~
p.m.

Aasistant Prqfessor (3 poSitions open), Econolnictl.·
· Asaociate ~. EcoTIDnlie3.
,
Title and rank dependent upon qualilicatmns and background (1
poeition), E"6in«rU., Gild Applied S~ncea.
~t to Full Proleseor, Sociology.
. Aaiiatant- ~. Erwirtmment4/. Analysu &amp;'Policy, M~.
" Asoistant, Proleseor, Or(ltJIIization &amp; Human Resources, Mafi4/Ie&gt;nent.
• Proleaaor, Co"'("lter ~nee.
·
•

.

W/::r ~'ti~;~r~

LECTUif./ DlMONSTIAnoN•

IUffAI..O LOGIC COII.OQVIUM*

k.istant Proleseor, M!Uic. -

.:

A:;G:ij~

ies.

0

E%traterrestri.a.l MapJJi!!J and Analog
Dr. John S. King, aaaociate

r:JIIiver.#ily Libraries.

•.. 7;~~ ~.O~UW. &lt;H~rtiCultufii.t&gt;: Biol~gy:

Ut~""~i'~i~~d~=~~

development of his work with. Douglas
G. Scbultz. Mllistant Gallery curator, Albrich -Knox Art Gallery, 8 :30 p.m.

Stud~•.

FACULTY

Lilirari8n,

PUIUC IKTI*'

OOOlOGICAl

.Job _Open~ngs
Associate

lnteUiBenee, 1'rtUI.8Celldental Meditation ,
110 Foster, 8 :15 p.m.
.
p,_,ted by the Student lotemational
Meditation Society.' Ror further information, caU 837-5198.

----·

EXHIBri'S

rFzJI ' {l!l'/21., 1"l~.::l::!:.'!:• H" tre,
~r~ .. 1 - ~·~(~'''tJ?6t~ .~

-

ProlNOioaal ~ II awilable at
Hillel Houee, 40 Ca.- BIW. For an
appoialmellt, call 1186-4640.

. : .':. r--·

CUA -

at lbe

COIIIIIS

-~t : - ~­
eaa7'~00::., Z

:!!"a~~~~inu:

- . . Bulfalo, are: Buic Ma~tiee
. for 8'-ocmohen, Typiata aDd Oerb;
~ Sbortbaad: lmptoyecl Grammar and Punctuation san.: lotermediate
Sbortbaad: ~
~ Skill Refreaber for Stenocra
ra, ;;;d Skill Refreaber for Typiata.
rtber inform.otioD
ill available oo CSEA bulletin '-nla.
lfQUIIWIIMTS ~
Dr. "McAllister H. Hull, Jr., Uaiwnity
Dean for tbe Division of GradWltiO Prof..Wnal Education, baa llllDOUDCed
that, due to the eo.rly c»r!!JMMMrr!ert
datlo of May 19, 1974, tbe deodliJM elate
of tbe Graduate School for completing
-

:!!.-~willi..~t f3:4.tbis

epring

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE
For everyone•s convenience and pleasure,
we like to publicize all events taking place
on campus. To record infonnation, contact
Nancy C.n:larelll, eld. 2228, by Monday

at lloon for inclusion_ in the following
a""2.~~~ jss"'. ""a .
n\IL,..:W a&lt;!Z9X::~.1' .qtcl \.J::;st»'t )1_,~ 1 •,-j,

-·

�12
THURSDAY -28

~~ ~-,·:et-~

·_,

.... __
£h~~~~
-u.·-·

:. ~lt;»:T- ;::a
-=::t·cl:" .P., ....,.;.,0: ~
.

.,...,.... •...........

=
ci=-.. . ,
---= -=:ra
~~·.J-1...· r1:f

2:• ......
...._,'II_

KNioo,
. . - N........
ad iaotnoetor,

-r
----- .

...-..a .._

~

·a;p.,_~

--·
-----·' ......

p.m.

'I'll&lt;! Hardlr 'l'ltq co-. CoDiereDee
TbMtre, Nortoa, cboc:k . . . . _ for

,.,.,._,_. CoM pater Groplaia and
Prof.

~_._ln/omtiJlion S~tem..

~~~t of "Electrieal

-

~==·~
:.::!t~~
p.m.

AdmlooiaD c:baqe.

,,.,..".:..,~~willdaT..!: 'L,a At

will

~~ ~~:Nwrm"w.io;.:
MONDAY-4

Pftll. Boyle
dioc:uoo his work on
intanoctive cli8ilizatinn aDd map compila·
tion .yetema.
P,_ted by tbe Department of Geography.
/

mM'

IWfALO LOGIC C0110011R*•
Problem.~

llladlodo; aU

Dr. ~ " - ·

A ......., aDd 1eaminc experience,

Deciaon

-

tbe IDdia Sladoat ~

~ lly tbe U!B _Siadoo!t Bar

112 Nootaa. I

p._

dod,

soa.J ~ ....t tbe Nw-·•
Sdlool, 106 O'Brian HaD,
"-"-&amp; c....- u:ao ......
8allllal b
Y ...

=

fiUII•

-•,.._:A~Pn-

'

It Happened One N~ht (Capra, 1.934),
140 Capen, 3 It 9 p.m. No adrnisoion
charge.

lor. Quantification

r=~ !;X~~:'""~~,;

u..:;;;;..;t;;

SL Louio, 4224 Ridge Lea, ·
Rm. 87, 4 p.m.

FilMS'

CAC fiUII''

!.'t,.;et::'l~?iefen orf, 7 p.m. No ad·

Af.:J ~~~~&gt;&lt;~y~~.Jot~c;:Ysr:~i

Rebel Without o c:.w.e. 140 Capen, . 7
and 9 p.m. Admiooion: 75 cents.
Jameo Dean clasarc.

--

aufFAI..O

DyntUflia of HumtUt SUULJlity--Coup-

I weeklg eGDUUUD!tu~ ·1

SUDioUCIWI'

·Exprno
FJ;~'v'::r.?'P~~ot~=ieJ~~t ~:u!:t:.~
newllpaper, :US Health Sciences,
Caorec~ by tbe MFC 351 Journalism

HILLB SOCIAL•

Unless othe!Wise noted, tk:l&lt;ets ·for even!s

. '- Norton Hall Ticket otllce.

GAY UIRA.TJON FIONT WOIKSHOP•

IDdivic:luals interested in working on a

Vo~~ta:u'Cnsu~l =YthLa~::
invited to attend tbe worbbop, 330 Norton, 8 p.m.

RI.M••

Sacco and Vonutti (Montaldo, 1971).
Conference TI.eatre. Norton. check showcue for times. Admission charge.
'l1ris film is an account of the famous
=-JJ~~ta~~o:fa~ Maria Volonte

••Open

Thia is the firat in a series of five
by aeYeral U/B sto·

OIOIOGICAl SCilNCIS IICJUII'

0,_,;.., of the Nor'rlt Atlantic and the
&amp;y of Bi«:oy, Dr. Carol Williams, Dep8.J'tme!Dt of Geopbyaics, UniWrsity of
Toronto, BeD Facility, Rm. D-170, 2 p.m.
IUC1IIICAL IICTUil' .
.
.... Trenda in De/enM Communication, Dr.
H. L Van Trees, p,.,Caaaor, Department
ol Eleetrical EDgineering, Mauacb-tts
IDatitate oi ·TeelmolocY, and Defense
Communication Apsu:y, Department of
ner- 70 A~ 8 p.m.
.

--

....'Dieo.::=::..r~cal..~~
inc ~ Leclluen Serieo.

____,._
-rrow
,._...,.. ,..,.,..=!

~

tillnB':'11/:f.,/r;:-JI:; ~::UE~

z.-. lo tbe title ol
-w 1w tbe

a conference pra-

U~ Weatem
Ed~Mslioul Servioe Council,

Yodl:
hokl ~ ....t
Hlltaa, Bl6olo.

.....,., R.,

New
to be
at tbe Statler

tbe - confe~

-

Fl!Der.

fulariol

Dr.
to tbe Stale
Dr Harold Tq-

.............._ . . . . . . . . . . , clomo;
~

.

._,..,,

· Following with a meal, Chabad House,
3292 Main St., 7 p.m.
·
·

' CHINESE M-OVIE:•

of Capitalist Ideo/-

~ ~o~u?J:t:.~N:~:,2li;_::
~ presented
dent~pa.

SHAIIAT SERVICE•

U/ B VB. Western · Michigan, Holiday
Twin Rinks, Cheektowaga, 7: 30 p.m.

COHFIIINCl: CAPITALISM TODAY•
Critiqu~

of Undergraduate Education ; and Dr.
Robert S. Harnack, Chairman,. U / B De- .
partmenl of Curricu1um Development
a nd Instructional Media.
The prognim thit; evening (beginni.ng
at 6 p.m.) is open to ihe Western New
York educational community_-at-large on
a first come-first served basiS. ' For reserva tions a nd additional information, con~~~-the Council office, 317 Foster, 831-

HOCKEY•

FRIDAY-I

~

~J:
.....Dltloloa

~

Also featuring a abort_f:ilm on Hong
Kon( styles. 148 Diefendorf, 7 :30 and
9 :30p.m.
.
A4_miasion; students. 50 cents; nonstudents, $1. Presented by the Chinese
Student Aasociation.
FILM•

Trutono (Bunuel, 1970) , 147 Diefendorf. 8 p.m. No aclmission charge. ·
This film attacks the hypocrisies of
church and society. but in a mild and
ironic way. · Spanish with English subtitles.

th!''Gr.d~te bltu~::'n·tSCl:,ti&lt;;.:'~r "th~

Department of Spanish, Italian and Portu~.

CACfliMU

Up the Sandbo:r;, 140 Capen, 8 and 10
p.m. Admiooion: 75 cents.
"Starring Barbra S~isaud.

GaADUitl

IICITAL•

JG~tta Do~er.

Martha Strongin_ Kats,

viola •tade:nt of

will

Pre&amp;el!t a

~:r:
.u!d~:a. ~R!J;.f~
8 p.m. No admiaoipn. c:baqe.
HIUII. IMAIIAT IIIYICI•

The Role of Women i.t ./114oiom, Jadt
Sbaltact,
follOwed
Onq8Sltobbot,
Hillel
Houoo,
40 Calw
_ an_Biyd.,
p.m.

--·

~..,;~';"~;,.~

piaDo, lat lloOr caletaria,
AdmlooioD .......

No.-,~

~ •

'1:30 p.m.
HIUB STUOYJMOWS•

.m.

UUAa' FILMu

Sacco and Vonutti (Montaldo, 1871),
Conference Theatre, Norton. check showcase for times. Adm.isaion cbarie.

SATURDAY-2
HILlEL SHAUAT MORNING IRYIQ*

FoUowed by a Kidthuh and a ·Torah
B~
Hillel H~uee. 40 · Capen

W:::· ·

CHAIAD HOUSE: SERVICES•
Shab~oo of Re"'!'mbrGlJ(!e,

CAC FILM...,

,

Up the Sandbox, 140 Capen, 8 ·aDCI 10
~.m. Admiaaion: 75 cents.
'
FILM•

Rood to -Rio; 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m. No
admiaa.ion charge.
Bing Crosby and Bob Hope embark on

cl~theJ:et:~~u;!Ya:z:, ~: ~

wild eocapadoa aU aloua tbe way. Alao
with Dorothy Lamou&lt;.
Presented by tbe Spanish Club and
the Grnduata Student Aooociation of tbe
~t ~r SPanish, Italian and Por:

~

Franck and Prolcofiev, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m. No adrniuion chaqe.
.

TM Fiur, Conference 'Iheatre, NOrton, 8: 30 p.m. No adrniuion c:baqe.
Baaed on Bernard Malamud's novel .
about tbe Bei.liss caoe of 1912, inwlving
the Jewiah vietim of a Czarist frame-up.

TUESDAY-S
IIIOCIIIMISRY liMINAl#

The Problem of the Mechtmiom of the
Euolu.tion of Proteina, Dr. Eric A. Barruud, profeooor and chairman, U/B Department of ' Biochemistry, G-22, Capen,
4 : 15 p.m. Colree at 4 p.m.
UUAI fiLM1 CHAMJI CHAPUN lUllS••
The Groct Dictator (1940), Conference 'Theatre, Norton, 4, 6, 8 and IQ

P·'~,,;p\'J:i'l:i1d~·Hynlcel,

RNCING•

HOCKIY•

•

Diuul Rruinllk, ceUo student of Paul

tator of Tnmania.

U/ B VB. Weotem 'Michlgan, Holiday
Twin Rinb, Cbaektowaga, 7:30 p.m.

,

Katr, will per r or m worb by Bach,

FRMI'

· U/ B, Notre Dame Univenity, SUNYI
Binghamton, Rochester Institute of Tecb-

•

ORADUAO.IICITAL•

foUowing
WJth a meal, Cbabad Houae, 3292 Main
St., 10 a.m.

·c~f·H!il,d 1 ~;r,e
~tate uruvenity,

'

Talmud, Conver&lt;otionol YiddUh and
He.bnw ConuerMJtion; Hillel House. 40
Capen Blvd., 7:30 p.m.

HIU&amp; FU•

#Open only to those with a professional 1 - In the subject
•Open to public:
to members of the UnlveNI!y
Contact Nancy canlorelli, 831·2228, for 11st1np.

IV IIASI&lt;ITMU'

U/B vs. Niacara Community CoUege,
Clario: HaD, 7: 30 p.m.

Morp.t

charclnc admlulon ""n be purdldiC( at tlio

·

•

HiUel Howe, 40 Capen Blvd., 7 : 30 p.m.

UUAI

7:30 p.m.

Impact on Copita!Um,- David
Montcomery. professor of labour history,
Univenity of Pittsburgh, 233 Norton,
Lo~Jouro

f.e~~~~~~F:~k.'!s.PS~~

cluo.

Stree~

CONIUIHCE: .CAPITAliSM TODAY•

dent Counoeling Center, 231 Norton, 7
p.m.
A diacusaion on marriage and other aJ .
tematives by couples or various socioeconomic backgrpunds and lifestyles.

7

WOMfNt$ CENTEI MHT1NG•

564 Franklin

tbe dic-

·

Hu Girl Frilksy (Hawice, 1940), 'How
to Eat (Benchley) , The Sex Life of o
Polyp (Benclilay), and AIUIJIUkr Ne»s/ty (-lain, 1988), 147 Diefendorf,
7
L-(L!mJ), 147 nierandorr." 9. p.m.
No_ admiooion chaqe.
Ha&amp;.ll. STUDY ~·

=

Jewiolt Prayer: The Work of the Heart,

?,.s.m.th.
ar;t.:=:t,rn 8~""':='
Houoe, 40 Capen Blvd.

·

-~'lOilAr

c!':Cm,~~~N:~

lional Eecmnmie Commiooicm, Communiat Party, UBA, 240 Nortoa, 7:80 p.mr

WEDNESDAY -6

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Spitzberg
· Gives Views
.On Colleges
"How ,..a ~ ID 10 about
aaviDI the ~?. · . .....
&lt;*l&amp;ly .ad Irvilll Spitzberg, only
ball ,iolliDa.
J&gt;i.. Spitzboq, lbe boyiob . - di·
(perhaps a.n) ol the Colleai·
ate System, Pfomptly and ~ily
.-...d; "I daa't tbiDk theY ,_t

•YiDI-"
.
' StillliviDI out ol a motel 100111, tbe
direciDr ' - I - . ill bill Croaby Hall

office aiDce Maaday, ~ wbo doeS
wbat in the admiiUatmtift bienucby,
waitiJII for -the Faculty Senate to
wrap 1111 its deliberations. 011 the new
Co!Jesiate piOIIipectuB, tbe Initial step
-..:1 "!epimi~ the CoUecea.
the braindilld the m-wity broulht
into the W&lt;l&lt;ld in 1968 aDd basn't real·
ly lmawn what to do llbout since.

. aDd

'lbe -

..---... -

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

leges is on

... ......-.

~
...,. _
_ _ ...._,laft)Uj8-TODI~L--...., . . . . . . . . a f - a.. Dhlna.' on~ Ia
1:30 p.m. Tam
af . . . Tadlol,
11J
Cantor for~ - . : i l ' o -

lo-._--

tile

tile-.,_
£,....• .-,.,-tile-

1974

to revi1aliJe the Col-

now bacabM Ellicott, the

firSt and only -truly CoUePal ardli·
tectur,! unit Of the Nord:&gt; Cempua, is
slated for s.p......- OCCIJPIDCY. Some
eou- will, DD doubt, move to Elli· ·
cott, liut at tbia paint all the ezi8tiDg
Colleges are in a atate ollimbo, wilbout cbarlera, witbout a timetable for

c:barterina. ..... in r.ct, witbout ollicial ~.... approyal ol tbe new
procedures.
"In the best of all poaa;ble worlds,
when do you tbiDk the chartering
process will get under way?," Spitzberg was aslred.
" In .the bst of all poosible worlds.
the_ Senate would have 6nisbed epproYfni the prospectus toilay," he an·
swered, afte&lt; Tuesday's abortive Faculty Senate meeting, post;poned until
March 5 when a quorum could not he
mustered.
.
Spitzberg described the new prospeclua • -a.. document "one can live
wi!h.

..

~

w.itl!. the

~

~~~~="~&lt;&gt;";'::

trolliric;1he mdi&lt;:al penpective ol the
DOt .in die
letter of the docuioent, but will depend on .the pemons who sit an the
chattering committee." Spitzherg does
not want to see the process used in
this way and . emphasized the impol'
tance of " good faith" on the pout of
all parties to the process.
"It's possible to misconstrue the
prospectus from both sides," he said,
"either as an exe&lt;cise in sitting on
the radical Colleges or as an exen:ise
ill puttinJ the imprimatur of approval
on questionable educational enter·
prises." Instead, be oompareil dle document. ·to an old..fashioned marriage
contract, involving parties wbose
stormy paSt marital experienCe makes
· them approach this contract with con·
siderable skepticism.

appl.yinJ Colfewee. · That's

(Contimud on -

3, coL 4)

fense

of the Termessee Valley Author·
ity ill the landmark case ol AMwczn.
der v. T.V.A. He died last year at the
age of 98.·
On Wednesday, April 10, Opinion
reported, Earl Wart'I!Jl will deli~
the Jolm Lord O'Brian dedicatory lecturi&gt;-the date is the first 'anlliven;ary
of O'Brian's death. 'lbe Wednesday
ceremonies will he primarily law •
oriented. Special music c:ompc-' by
the Inns ol Court will he preaented for
the law· faculty and students, aDd
friellde of the Scbool. 'lbe .,.,......,.,;.
will take lace cluriDg tbe day, aDd.
OpiAion
law 8cbool . , . _ may
he .._..ted &lt;for tile festivities. .
'lbe C8rloa
Alden Moot Court
the report Mid, will aJao he
the lliie ol W&amp;llal'a...tdrea 'lbe 101m
' - a ..till&amp; capiiCity ol · only 388,
.. clc-.l c:ircult lielevislon will ha provided .... the 8llticipaed CMdbr .
aowd.
'l'l!e law Liblary will 1IIOUilt . . . .
play o1 prinlll o1 ._,.. in w...._,
(C...-"" J , col. 4)_

.:i.J.

s-..

c.

�~

centive Pools
Sena~eA~

I, U

••.= .......

.

P.;'!!*·~

,..b:tw...-...
:.~~ ~.:.::

.......
:.-....rr:..,
lar.--wldda ...&amp;!»

==
--.
.
............
..

~.:1":',1..':1:
..
- A,,_
~
,.......
~
__...,
~..,
•

~
s,:~)

U''""-'-'-Pt F

-

..._.._SUNY o.tm~ ,A.........
tlma "af ......... - - ol tbe
........ crf . . . . , _ , , . - 'n.llall4118.-., a , - . . -.
lil a ~ ........ - · pendmi! 110

IIIII __.__
,..~
e&amp;ctlila hf7 L

llialil1
.
~ . . . . to

=:t-

~s~::-d
....- : - . . : : : :
~
~~~--il!l-d.!sm_~-,

s

:s-cM OaaliiiiiiM ~ Gil-

=.. .... u3r.!:="
..~
o
7

~
~ ~&amp;..-..:
::r.~::::
......
crf _...___.,_ actiaD
7.':'.. ~
~'llwbD==thattbe ._.,
~,;:n;paal
..................
a ""'•allramiwaction.

~ .. .._ ........ ...with tbe
..-&amp; ~
Irs
-

.......

........... far..._ - - - .......

.. . . IBIMt,_.s ""n. ec.m-•a
r•
h•!incrf~percaat........_• DeLullla ald. "whiie can~ .... the State ~to live, faa. fR "'-t ol tbe
~ 1D b colt ol llviDis" He

vice fat

~.....

aobnildllrathe

:...u;,--~
ad ~
..m a~
oi.J:::
..=;"":&amp;
undln&amp;aDdlna
lncendve
lalla

=Ja
bc6 tbe

...

Heallo~tbe:":aUilude

~t:'c:.;::.~ tbe aettles

Wldle alut.- "an Important inol ,....
~ DreiMcla aid. "there 111
iilal:tl _..--prtlcal8rly an improved
. . . _ ~and "due ~
lor .... lid ....... wbetber tens
111'1111 • _....._.,. •
Be ...-.a a 8IIIDIIIUY ol Cllm!llt
.............." III"'' IPPICC into nine cates

o1. ..,

J)OOI:

"It ~ iDVOL.e tbe aettini Mida of
b e - 10 and 20 per cent o1. tt.
t.ea!'hllll liDes available each year for
miJiority and women appoin._ under
the direotion of tbe Committee of
Mu-ity Employment, The appointee·
would ba.e to meet tbe level of competency demanded o1. all members of
aorta
· tbe stall ol tbe department (or scbool )
Under l&amp;lmy, tbe "demmds" c:all · involved. And tbe need for tbe addi•
for a four.mnk ~ IICbedule which · tlonaJ pel'80IIDel would have to be""'
abell be tbe llliDIDD IBHDOilth oaJs
iabJisbed. The role of the Committee ·
ary far all UDit eonployea Twelvewould be to allocate tbe available res
IDOilth emplc&gt;yea. UUPIDsiats, should
semoc1 liDes - ~, 8PJ&gt;Iyinlt depart- ;
be pUd for the eleventh and twelfth . menls on tbe buis ol aepSrtmeuta
IDOiltbl Gil a JII'O rat. betiia, Other oalneed foo: minority or women on i!lf
ary paiDIII bela( -.Jrt are: guanmstall In sboct, the plan would funct.c1, automatic mc.-; promotions
tion as a positive ihcell:tive !or · vigc&gt;" ·
bc6 t . t - NDb and by steps withrous affirmative action by providing a
ill mnk; m adjusted coat ol living "'!'
JiDe which , might not otherwise be
ealatGr claWie; and Janaevity reoogrus • available, The number of liDes allotioa ~,
· .
c:ated tn the pool would depeod upon
In ol frinle benefits, UUP
tbe depee ol uqency of the need lor
..,. It Ia 1i111:fDc for: fmpnJwd '-lth
Jines ill various ~Is and .proand dental plans; tuition waivers for
grama And the ylan would be res
employees and de~ts: life insur•
viewed · einiuii!Y. tD De 'rechioiid ill s
ance and accident iDsuran&lt;:e plans;
scope, and ultimately dropped, as the
onsthesjob automobile.. protection; job
need for such incentive diminished."
liability iDswance protection; and an
0oo1o, Nell QoMa •
~te pension reopener'wben,.,..
Stalutory piohil)itions, Hyman conaotJable.
tends, do not condemn all quotas out
UUP Ia also eeetini a mmmitment
ol hand but "more important," the
tbet all employees may be eligible for
incentive pool does not establish any
continuing 8ppolntment, with no more
quotaS. At most, it """'!&gt;lisbes goals,
than sb yean ol term appointments
And there is a difference between the
prior 110 ..xta eligibili7.. Amoog other
two, By con!last, be says, affirmative
thlnp In tbe job II8CIIllty area, !t wants
action programs dev~ by the fed·
iDdiYidual...,tradB for all employees,
em! government, particularly ill.. the
~ job dasoificalion, job deC&lt;liiBinlction indUstry, "require . each
· ~ job perf01'1118Jl&lt;e, muc:ontzactor, in connection with his bid,
qreed upon by the Individual,
to declai-e the number of minority embis
t and tbe ~denl •
ployees he will attempt ill good faith
Still other . . . - . t s being &amp;ought
to have at wock..
Failure to meet
include: a 3flsbour per~ assigned
these goals does not automatically res
wort limit for profeEional employees;
suit ill any penalty but ratios·are used
defsmiMtlan ol the work caleodar by
as evidence ol compliance and as trig~ ol !'8d&gt; unit; "democnl!'ic
gers for iDv....Ugation and review, be
OPiiratioDa" m departments, wtth
says.
c:llainnm elecled by IIIII!Dbem; fellows
SUNY CentmJ aouroes cite "inf&lt;&gt;&lt;s
!lbilt ..._ altar sb YflBII!' ,-..ice
mal" nilings from HEW and the State
with full ~ fat a year; !Dining and
Division o1. Human Rights to back
~lion leave; famllt,:.fi leave; .an
1be notion that "reservation of liDes
incl-. In llic:k day
ta; a mck
CDUid be &amp;rllled to be discriminatory
day llmk for eDelided illneis; COIJis
and poMibly a quota.~ Hyman points
peiatiaD for ua.-1 llic:k Jeaw: beout, adding be does not know what
. . - 1 lea.e ol fhe days; emers
iDJormation was placed belore these.
.-::1 and .....-1 ~bo:f.,~ ~s
agi!Rciea, However, he says, "the in8adl; ~ ~ .......,.. wuo;•;
oi!Jitive pool plan, as I understand it,
1Denioolod olflce ..,_, ~ 8CII!'P"
is not subject ID any constitutional or
- t and ....etarlal llllli&amp;tance~
other legal infirmity of which I am

....a-t" 1D tbe eurn!llt roUnd

7

s

7

•

7

. "

7

s

c:'~~a~~~t

for all
pqiJIIcation cootll; ~ .-n:h
fundiDc; and 11J81'111!teed ~for at:
taldanCe at ~ a.etiniL
lllfom* C8IJIPII8 ~ 110 the
"domanda" l*'ble - miDd. Some

lndlvlduala .....,_ 110 feel th!'t ~
U.. palnta - ~ ~

ol

- ~ ~=~-~· ....., - DDII tba tbe
tbe ~

t
Individual

e;:a :!*~:.,:
•m- lilt,
lllwd ~

U

Gll8

n!s

a
mrd, ad the
that...,. 8lata will CXIIItin. - . . . . . . . . - - .....
- far.aalY.
.......... Ill ... SUNY •
s • s tllat

.. =:
,. •
•

,

:~J;':.:~:en.~~=

:
...
undertaken by an , employer whose
staff is inadeqUately otaffed with mis
nority and woman ~ consli·
tutes unlawful diacrimination. I am
~--A~-· that It does not, ei!Mr ...s
~ic principle of interpretatioJ:&gt;
given to the Equal Protection Clat~E
of the Fourteenth ~. ~&gt;_!._~
Supnme Court, or UDder ...,.. _.,..,.
Jlsbed linM ol. .•pportins als

&amp;nnative IIC;tion deaiiDed tD improve
mlep1llioa ill a wm\ force « in a

ldloiol' .,.._, 'lbe ~-=
' - - beld, and oaly an

~ ~ ~.
-.._.::;:;:.
s

.__

(~·Adp)

~~by tbe Equal
Pftltection Claan rr- beins

~ _,....

pyeramental ~ 1'be

-

"-

• • • . ~l&gt;.s_, ....... ........:. •. ,

-~!10.':: •-

~

~a:~
.
-- ~~:;.~
...., ---

10!11111 cr1 11110'

.......

II,,,.~

p . -.y CIIMidelatiaD .....__in

.

:~~ llloaad ID tbe.
~
OIIDIIIIPt ~ ~~
- ~- - )adlaW autiD,yWIII ........ ..,_.

:::czs
tlmaw::,~:::r :.=
-

a., -

IMit

lllial utiJilld ....

Ill ..... - - - .......

'bad' dlecrim!netic!n "
Sa, llyiiiUl nole8, "bu QOtyet . . .
8ljll8ftlly beld by . . 8apr.- Oaalt
110 be a ~!Lw!lna _ . . .

a - ; ....

•!&amp;•• _.,
.......,liMit

tbeBqual

lbenlan be Ia. j
~ 110 , . _ tbe
crf
- . Utile~ {nailartlaalar
...., iDdlcated that ..xta a Claim-

~:.."*':tax:~.;-...::

api!lllt malea. It is liJialy !bat tbe

caurta ~ l'iDd it • bMla far lnfm-

- - eltber UDder Tide vn crf tbe
Civil 'RIIbta Act ol l96t « tbe Bqaal_
Protection a.-,"
An m.:.- ill miDority and , _ . .
~ ooll'!! Uru-.ity'a fao:

ulty 18 DOt ODiy justified "b!lt~
ly ~":i!:J ~oi.U~
overall edt
......
,
Dl
yeraity," Hyman ~~t~i
'I should ,
~
assume that no mmonty ~~
woman would be added to tbe r.c.....3
)f,he~r abe =,.!W~t:·~ofty
competeoce
y
or department iD\oolwd or if hirinl
that peraoo would deprive tbe faculty
or d~t ol.qualifi~.,!.:"!""" of
clearlY_ ~or
&lt;:"~
.. ,
An mc:en.tiv&lt;; pool might m 8 difs
7

•

•,

...-.

I

I

•

whicbeYer is 1- - for freobmen. and
increuing· tbe moiximum inNi'd for
oopbomorea. junion and eenion tn
$1,200, 'The. II!DDla 'WOUld ~ be

110
~.~~!!('ol.operate un·

acaled cliJiwl1 - fllliiQy illaooUe. -"'
.
s above- file DliDIIDwn. • .
"sr ; •
• 'Ibe pnilrUi Woul41i8 ftil[y~
date, Hymanaays.
.
•
meolled ill tbe 197&amp;:77 amdemic yeer
"But ~I"Y alljnnative 8j:tjoO ~ , wben award8 tn 1-..r diviaion stubair""""' 111;1ch If&lt;&gt;!;en~And : ::;!;
denla would be at tbe $1,700 level, and
all ~~~~ aclionli imi::t 011 by
grants tn ~division atudmlll would
~l!.,.~~di~~ve would be
-~
be $200 leai,
....,...,~ m 'yiduaiB
qw
Tbe Repn1a also ~ a chanse
Ull.Juslified."
in the 1111111111!1' oladJl!stiDI tuable' iDcome fat famlllea With than 011e
In
member attendinl coUeae full time.
Rather than dividing iatal iDcame by
tbe ni!IJIIas ill ~~s $3.000 would
:/ •
be deduoled for Clllll aaaitlonalllludent
Despite aome forecasts Of a ~
ata!oding co1Jeae and $2,000 would be
sion ill the first half of 19'74, 1luMeal
deducted for all addltianal studenl&amp;
Week magazine tFebrwuy 2, 19'74) ·
The Repntll also lflCOIIIID!!IId relens
' repc)rts that MBA's graduating Ibis
lion ol Repntll -=bolarablpa 88 a
year can look forward to more. job
11108J18 ol reeo.nlzinll !lmdemic erceJs
offers and slighUy bifber salariea-than
Jence, By 1976-77, the 8 - a achol·
last year - women m particular.
arabipe
a 11At paJ~t ol
The magazine notes that finance
$250 110 all
Tbla WOuld be
and accounting majora 'are in greatest·
in addition to
bulc ecilolar lacen·
demand - by large commercial banks
live granl F'tu1llennole, tbe Repnts
and public accounting firms.
recommeod tbet tbe nwnber ol JldlolAccording to the U / B Scbool ol
8J'IIbiP! be inCI-s ao thai tbeno
~ Monthly Report, tbe
would be award winnllra ill
bigh
same preference for . finance and 11&lt;&gt; - school In tbe Slate Gil the bema ol oae
counting MBA's is reflected ill a res
ocbolanblp fat every 40 IIIUdealll who
cent survey ol 250 companies by the
graduated from thai school In tbe
University Placement and CaJel!r
previaue year. Tbla would beBin in
Guidance Office. Their tally sbowa
1!!74-75.
that 47 ~cent of all MBA's expected
Tbe coot11 ol 4be Repnla propoaal
to be bired in the neXt six years will
for FY 19'74-75 ~ be $36.8 million
come from tbeai! two fields, Eighteen
more than eunent fJKIIaldlturee f&lt;&gt;&lt;
per cent are upected 110 be drawn
student aid; it would IDcrMae by an
from marketing and sales; 10 per cent
additional $19.2 ml1lloft ill 1971&gt;:76
from technical management; 7 pet'
and by another $13,5 ml11klll tbe fol
cent (rom industrial and labor relaJowina year,

!..,....,..... """"

~•:003

•-

7

•

5

lu!oiRrl quAlified '!bite· or male_ c:aadis

•

M BA'. s • Une f or

Higher Pa"'ng Jobs

Would=

-n

7

.=

::t';!~"';!::m

Dedication(Coruu..-1 from- Is coL 4}

·zali""'!:

N- York history, ill addition to an
emlbit ol Jobn LOrd O'Brian memorilbilia,
Other side event&amp; are '-'n• COIISids
ered by the PJanninl ~ the
law Sc:bool said. ~
reptdinc any activlt:iee -,y lie made
by cant.dfng memben ol lbe dedlcas
lion oammittee, ~ crf Pnlfea110111 1'boma Bwqeotbal, Jaoob Rys

tion imd miscellaneous other Bpecialis

AMHERST TRAFFIC ENl'OIICEM£HT
D ...... I
25 onla af
1 M nda F b

ih:N:: vo.: ~ ~~ at r::.,..

-rt

port.tlon pertalnlns ID opoec1 Umlls, otop
ollfiS, one-woy marldnp and tum SiCnO
win bo . , ; - on tj)a Cempuo,
E. Hunt, Environmental--

. .-. . ,_

Safety, has announced. Cempuo Security
will baCin anforcement In acconl!lnce-

Hunt -

8t--

on ctm. Hunt aakl
lnd- no Pllrtdna on

~
=..•
...:::'::..::.:":":"S::
.... -

--- --

1111 or_...,......,.,.

ID 1M

~

... llapn I IlL

~~~
~
.._.__~ .,._ ~· _ _. Bd ...
. .~
~-~ ~..... ~

: . ;:~~ plana 'lbe dedlodao- aridnaiiY ldalalecl far IIIII&amp; Oclialla', but a
res
......., ' - - - ol cilaltrudiall deIQa,

�c~
(Cololilwe4 tr-

- I, eel. 4)
The dbectar .ud that be waitwhat ~ ol -.Jtation" will be adopted by 4be adminis- ;
tzation ""''llnlini tbe documml "'
- will baYe a peat deal to a;y about
tbe praopectua lJi deaD, in tbe fu.
lure,.. be .;d.
.
.
Spitzbers arti&lt;:ulafion d pia
and ~ as an obliptian ol all
.. eqwn _ . , J3I'OII'8Il;JI. and a apecial
obliption ol .......ned ntdlcaJ ezperi-,
meniB.The_...,.torypiOCI!IIB(wbich
is "not a qumtion d ._an.
logical c:Iicties") is an eduaotioual ...,.,,
be aplaiDs. MC&gt;n!OYI!r, be said, "thooe
in alternative· institutions beve to be
clear about bow 8Dd why tbeJ are
dilfereat. By articulating tbe program
clearly, ooe .allows it to Bland .as an
institutional critique to· existing institutions. In this way, ooe ~ tbe
larger aocial system."
Altbc;&gt;ugh tbe new director has not
yet toured the Ellicott Complex, be is
confident that a number of Colleges
will establish "~ bases" there.
"Hopefully, none of them will be-co~ completely residential," said
Sp•~. who ~ tbe Meyer-soman idea oLa re&amp;ldential/non-residential population mii. "'l'he cballenge before tbe Colleges will · be to
connect the CoiJue 'neighborl&gt;ood'
with tbe neighborbi&gt;ods-at-large. Some
Colleges may feel that they can do
this better by
establishing residential bases at Ellicotl
·
"I view the cballenge as coming .
dbwn to very basic community organizing," be said, "of getting out among
the unattached and unaffiliated and
enlarging the 'neighborhoods.' I would
hope that in time most of the students
on the new campus wi&gt;uld be affiliated
with ;, College.
.
':I see my role as being that of a
local Saul Alinsky, or a Paolo Freire "
he said, referring to the Latin Ame;i.
can political/ educational activist, author of The Pedagogy of the Oppresaed, whose approach to education
involves fust listening to the people
and deteunining their needs and prob-lems.
Spitzberg was in ·Nairobi, Kenya,
studying educational policy for the ·
Institute of Current World Affairs and
advising the Kenyan government,
when he was queried as to his interest in the U / B posl At that time, knoWing little about the U / B Collegiate
System per se, he wrote a long letter
clarifying his views on aperimentsl
programs imd universities.
· "I still believe everything in that
letter," he said, in which he writes:
in&amp; to -

m-

Chinese,
· Puerto .Ricans
Celebrate
• A Saturdoy_ nllht celebration of the CIIJ.

, _ -Year at Rlcl&amp;e Lea -

-

• -Puerto Rican Cultural - . . , lnc:kJd.

lnl• concert-cia,_ In - · ~~hated the
........... opotlllht this - . A din- -

-Chi---··

twO hours of entertainment hl&amp;hlltllded the

welCOme of .
the "Yur of tile Tlpr." The Puerto Rican
student 0 raarilzatlon,. festival also "'"'

_..__.._

- . - - - - -.tlop1ialur·

not

On the Colleges and Society:
"I must comment on a major problem facing all universiti"'!. which the
Collegiate System attempts to solve but on I! scale which does not begin
to meet tbe issue: that of making tbe .
resources of the universities available
to those who have not in the p&amp;$t bad
aooess to them. The problem is not
just one of broadening tbe admission
policies of the institution, nor of adopting ''relevant" themes for academic
work, but it is more one of developing
new modes of aooess to 1bese resources
without requiring formal studentship
in the university to study or formal
institutional identity to draw on tbe
university's research capabilities.
Some of tbe colleges are presently attempting to tske their activities to the
community ... but new institutional
models need to be developed. 'The
colleges need to be seen as institutions
for both the campus and otber sectors
of society: to use Meyer&amp;Ofi'S metaphor of tbe colleges as university
neighborhoods, one could say tbe collegiate neighborhood m\lSt develop
close relationship with community
neighborhoods; indeed tbey could be-come one and -t he same. 'Ibis approach
could help overcome the segregation
of class, age, and interest which presently aftlicts all educational institutions and in so doing break down the
discontinuities which are the source
of many contemporary social prob-lemS. To break down these disoontinuities will require -not only institutional change but also tbe use of new
methods of communicating knowledge
·from tbe university to tbe coiDmunity
at large and leaming _from the community 88 welL The Collegiate System, if it is not viewed strictly as a
Clllllpu&amp; institutional arrangement,
could make a sipiftcant 0011tribution

·1" jbis enterprise. • • ...

�~-

4

_ _ , . 21, JP74

Dr. Kristal Studies Animal Placentophagia
For Clues to Quality Parenti in Humans
PAnUCIA

-- .

w.db BIEDERMAN

.

ably

~ dqe . . . -

~-·-"'"

pmctice that is ~
• in almalllllllbenl,
opeciee that ilo- aot

-=..::....

the ea.
ol the
aftelbirtb, IDllil _ : ; , . , : . ob- - buf aot studied inlellsively·' by
llludeala ol animal· behavior. But a
U/B ..u.tant pral-.r ol poyc:bolo&amp;Y,
Dr. .Mad&lt; .Kristal, has boogun a atUily
ol plaamliDIIbuia in rata that !D8Y
show it to 6e ciDe ol the mechanisms
critical 1D the development and main- ·
teamae of that blah level ol matemal
_.a........,. . - r y ID insure the
aorvival ol the olfapring.
l k Krislal lalow8 ol DO human culture in which plaoBlta is eaten (allbowlh be has belun a paiDstaking
ol the an~IOiiall litemlure). And, unlib Alicia, be d.- not -remotely IIUiseat that women
lhould eat placenta. But the physio........... PII)'CholotPst does thirik that
~ 8tUilies ol placentopbagja could
lead to re-thinking of our presently
I1Cili!PIIIId cbildbirth practkes as more
Ia leamed about matemal behavior as
an intecrated hiohehavioral phenome-

-a.

-.
,..._or.._.,
DOIHmman

Mostmammalian females, v. i t h the exception of moet
11181111.:Wials. certain aquatic lll8IDID4ls,
........, and 8CIID8 ot'- .. ~~·•·tes, eat
tbe plaamta shortly afterg'l~ birth.
Several reasonable-sounding explanations have been given for this widespread behavior. One~ (the
least tenable, aooordinli to Krista))
ilj .that .the act is a .hygienic one, intieDCitif to clean the nest.si.le and disoourage predaiD{S. But, the psychologist points out,- many non-nesting
mothers eat placents, includfug DI8Ilf
~ predatory species sucp

is more likely ID occur if the nonpregnaot female has already Jiven
bitlh. In _other words, placenfDpbagia
seems ID have some erperientUll componen.l Along theae lioes, the scientist found that in rats whoae nonnal
f~ behavior was impaired by
damaging the lateral hypothalamic
area Of the brain, placentophagia was
eliminated only in thoae rats without ,
previous parturitional experience. The
experienced females, in whom nonnal
feedina aod drinlrin behavior had .
been eliminated by
surgezy, continued to est placenta after delivering.
Kristal concluded that placentophagia,
like otber ingestive behavior, is controlled by' the lateral hypothalamus in
the. absence of previous experieq.ce. but
once ""J"'''ienoe has been acquired,
control by the hypothalamic area d.i-'
minishes or even ceases entirely. With
experience, cortical fuhction (that is,
activity of the oortex, that'~ of the
brain whose activity• !s nlodil!ed· by
experience) plays the dominaot role
in inducing plaoeniDphagia, he by-

:f..

,;. r...tbes~;;; i.a'lemai~:'

Supporting this view is evid""""
from otber laboraiDries that certain
other oomponents of matenlal behav• ior become emancipated from phyaiological (particularly hormonal) •conAnother hypothesis is that placento- . trol mechanisms With the acguisi.tion
pbagia results from hunger: - eitheso.f parturitional experience. Evidence
is mounting, largely in the pioneering
_ . t hunger resuiting from
dework- of .J .S. Rosenblatt and -his rotcrease in food ilriake prior to parturileagues at'Rutgers' Institute of Animal
tion or specific hunger, evidence of
specilic nutritional or hormonal needs · Behavior (where Kristal worked as ao
undergraduate ) , that maternal behavrelated ID childbirth that are satisfied
by ..,ling the placenta. The "general
ior has two stages: the first, largely
physiologically-based, t h e s e c o n d
hunaer" position does not hold up, at
least in rabt, Krista) found: rats con:based not .on hormones or other purely
tinue to ..,t nonnally before giving
pb:ysiological faciDrs but on expenence. For ezample, an inexperienced
birth. Moreover, even when rats are
denied food aod water prior ID parturifemale mt acts maternal (rettieves her
pups, cleans them, nurses them, and
. tion, they will eat- placenta but not
the like) immediately after she gives
at'- meat substances, he discovered.
Tbat leaves the "specific hunger"
birth. A virgin female, on the other
thesis, and Kristal found that this,
haod, will begin ID show the same
too, is insufficient to explain placento"matemal" behavior ("parental behavior" is a better term, · Kristal sugphagja. PhysioJ~cal changes in the
inother at parturition do not seem ID
gests) after four to six days- eiposure
be the single causal factor in placentoID baby rats. Even males will care for
phqja. be argues, since a proportion
the infants after a somewhat longer
period of exj&gt;o9ure.
of nonpregnant female rats aod mice
will al8o eat placenta if it is presented!;.
And .yet there is good evidence that
to tbem. _Intereatingly, placeJl!ophagia
initial maternal behavior at least has
a strong hormonal oomponenl Joseph
'Turkel, a student of Rosenblatt's, took
blood from rats whicl! had recently
given birth 'lllld iJUected it iniD virgin
females. He found tha~ the injections
significaritly le&amp;aened the usual four
-.~
._. .,......... ,
•
Dlrilbl ol v......
ID six day latency required for the deflltr ---... .,_.,
o1. • velopment of "matemal~ behavior in
uu •• St.. • • •
the virgin ·rats.
a&amp; Rosenlf.r. 14214• .._... o~~~ta. - ,__, ...
blatt and others haw ola!rved, the
spontaneous·
hormonally-bal,ed
mater2!3, 2$0 ......... · - - ~
&gt;pt).
nal behavior declinM in the daya following parturition as rapid .honnopal
... .L W&amp;S!"Lirr ltOf/lfiJJID ...
changes take · place In the mother; si-....a.w
.,...... r. ILUU..&amp;TI'
multaneously, he JI08!ulale8, ao ex. perientislly-determined matemaJ (or
JOIIlf .t. C£0117'lD
~) hebavior - - . U..Uy
the tranaition ~ 111D001bly, at
·~ WAaD amD&amp;:IUUif
least in rata. 'I1ila eay tnmaitiaD may
IIUICF
&amp;.
CARDfwpr"
•
come
about ~
-a flinctian of
-~­
timing, Krlatal
• or it may be
facilitated by the
ol. catain
~suaurw.phenomena that occur at Pll1'tiXitlon

a

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

...

r_..., ......

u-...,

·-....

-- .-,_

.

period

l1l'tl

ill1 fl-

.... ..,. 8l1d 80!md bMia. All
.Jolm~- ll1lllic critic, 80

uu

. •.

-

tra I11CIIdti, that .. it Ia wilhln this
""""*
calomdar
tb1llt vipoua
eflarta
heiDI made to put

....... ial:luiB . _ , . the NCqlllll b
dlger IJI-.d lllld directiaa8 for tuDilla
- ~ the followblladvice to •
...., ... jaa py.. birth:
. . _ - the~ lbauld eat aome
althe .........
Aa · -- or
- t , Alida r.n. to cite
1IUihoritlloll
embnlider ' - Priml·
live ........ with-~. liut in
...... &amp;Ilia ....... poa-partum rile
-

~J)rivefor
P~J-..monic
ll'ellluar:r Ia PhiDwnwmic On:bee-

Ba.Y laulel,
in - ~
IIIII.....,_
pide to £Win~. 011 ~
Alicia

Help Asked

a.............

such 88 ~tophqia. Krislal t _ .
ID del:elmiM whether, in fact, the eat.
ing of the plaamta provjdes the female
rat with some honnooe (or other crit.
ical substance) or provides 8CIID8 en. vironmental stimuli . - r y ID the
tnplsitioo from matemal behavior dependent on honnones to matemal be- .
bavior dependent on _...., to the
young. . '
Human Mothers Not a

-

tbilproject-tly:

to tum the Cll'cheetra 8IOIIIId 8l1d I.-Ill flnandally the
ftiY It Ia .... lll'lillbllY. -.tily upward to ihe tap. • • . 'l'be need
ia to ~ ~ bank Joana,
nanow tlie ,..n.J GpllalinJ deficit;
~ . . . . llidowa&amp;!t fund,
and 1llloit the Old1eltra out of ao at,.
IDIJIIPbsre ol 0011tlnual crioia.N .To 'do
this the ~ drive II to mise $1.000,000.
' In Tilu ll1llll8zine (May 7, 1973) ,
. the BulWo Phllhannailic 18 compared
ar1iaticaiJy with _ . _ _ of Chicago, Philadelphia. Nft' York, etc. The
review al the Pop Conceit (Feb. 1,
1974). dewled eDtUe~y eo Act n of
Verdi's "'Aida" and~ ·from otheswith .fiw eoloista, tile Schola
Cantorum and the Men aod Boys
Choir of Sl Paul's Cad1edra1, include&amp;
tbMe stataneDta: ''I don't mo.. where
1bey (the """'-l found tbe time
to bring it off this well. . • • It stili
- . remarialble that tbe maestro

vieQoiiU

.

Tbe_.,._._.., __

Human mothers are often not as
ID
fortunate as mts in experiencing a
I;IDOOth transition from hormonallyprowlde • for the UICilanp
1-.oo ID experientially-baaed matemal
of .... wrlaiJ of the
behavior, as Rosenhlatt noted "Postfac:inc the -..tc: cammun' partum depression" (a ®ndition that
lt)'. wa po8llon patypically foll9ws a rapid decreaae in
paos .._.. - ~
hormonal Ievela) is not unoommon.
Tragically, 80!D9 women neglect and
( Conduotor .Cole) aod his buncl! were
even h a r m their newborn children,
able to put .this b1ockbuater IDgether
aod, eVen among tbQee who do not,
and move it ao musically.N To have
many women now admit with unusual
these comments from a music critic
candor that they don~t feel the conof Jobn Dwyer's expert qualifications
stant surge of love for their little ones
confirms the fact that the Buffalo
that Johnson &amp; Johnson depicts as
PbilhaJ:mooic is composed of profithe norm.
.
cient musicians and merits the high
- • lJP.. .Kristal, who believes that studies · ol animal partUrition and infant.
s~, it baa achiaved in the world
of mWilC..
.
ca're behavior may shed some badly
needed light on humao maternal beUnfortunately, in a recent comparhavjpr, wondem ·if ao unreCognized
ison of the aonua1 budgets of '1:1 ortransition-facilitatinJ practice has not
chestras' in metropolitan areas. the
somehow been 106t m our age of aotiBuftalo PhilhannaDic is 22nd on the
septic hospital delivery and routine
liat, "" estimated
being
segregation of mothera from'newbom8.
$1,444,000. There are 21 ~
"What maternal behaviors are ea- · ' hliving higher budpta; aevera1 have
the advaotage of l1l1balantial income
eential at parturition, especiall¥ the.
from endowmeDt funda. Income from
first, ID help facilitate a sufliciently
the present small endowment fund o(
high-level of subsequent maternal behavior ID protect the inf&amp;nt," be won- · the lMfalo PbilhanDonic had to be
applied against -interest indebledoess
ders, "especiaiiy in a culture like ours
on borrowed money. ·
w h e r e everything is done for the
mother? ·
The current drive for $1,000,000 deserves tile inlel'eat and cooperation ol
"Natural childbirth practices, sucl!
many individu8Ia. Be a· participant in
as having the mother actively particimaintaining ~ promoting the adp
pate in the dl)livery, holding the newvancement ol this worthy institute of
born and nursing the baby immediately after delivery, may someday be
the performing arts !&gt;,v sendiJig a contribution (small Qr lirge) ..-.to the
found ID have· real biological significance," he speculates.
Butralo Phillwmonic On:hestra, 26
Richmond
Avenue, Buftalo, N.Y.
Hormonal or nutritional therapy aod
' 14222. Two Cickets to a symphony or
greater poetnatal contact he~
pop
COI1Celt
Of your choice will he
mother aod infaot may also be {Quod
mailed to you for a donation of $15
to he useful in easing women through
or
II10ft!
as
a
token
of appreciation.
the transition period, says KriataL
HAIIOJ,D B. JruuAT
. To · a considerable degree, buman
for
the
Bnlfalo
Philhannonic
childbirth aod child-rearing are activiOlcbestra
ties in whicl! what is · ''natural"· is
deteimined not by biological considerations but by aocial and cultural expectations. H .u m a n infants deserve ·
high-quality parentin~1 m o s t of us
would agree. From ' U&gt;ov rats in. Dr. - fta..-y Clark, former Attorney General ol the United States, will be the
Kriatal's lab, we ma)!- find clues on
11\*t of the N'Ulpi'll Frontier Chapter,
how ID guArantee our children that,
N.,. York Civil Liberties Union, at' a
·even after the first surge of maternal
fund-ralaing cocktail party, February
hormonal activity has waned.
·

-rutures

NYCLU to Hold

Party for Clark
24.

Named Editor · Dr. David G. Hays, prof-....' tinbeen appointecf editor of
the A""""""" Journal of Ctnrtpa14liorvzl U..,.U.tU:., sponsored by the
AaKlciatbi b Computational Lin-

.wsti&lt;;B, has

r;;:..,~~~~

to the Ceateo- b Applied ~
The addrela of tbO bunal fa Twin
Willows, Wanakah, N'- York 14075.

Mr. Clark is presently chairman of
the Citizens Inquiry on Parole aod
Criminal .Justice. Attica trial counsel,
ani! attorneJI for NORML, the Nation·
al ~ for Reform of Marijuaoa lAws.
.
The party will be held at 219 Depew
Avenue (at Voorhees) from 5 to 7
p.m.
.
. .
Ticlr8ls are $5 fot students. $15 per
couple, $26 and over for patrons.
For -v&amp;tion9, call the Chapter

ollloe, 883-0IN6.

•

�5

Faculty Seriate Co.mt11ittee
· on the Colleges
ROGER COOK, Gladu~ Sllldent
J. DAVID EICK, Den~ MaterUis
RUTH ELDER, Nursing illld Sociology
NEWTON GARVER; Philosophy
JOliN HALSTEAD, History · .
ROBERT KOLE, Underwaduate Stlldent
.
GEORGE LEVINE, English
TERRY NARDEN, Politicill Science
JONATHAN REICHERT, Physics, Chil.irperson

STATE U'NIVERSITY OF NEW YORK-AT BUFFALO
.FACULTY SENATE

Preamble
The Facuity Senate Committee 011 the Colleges has, in this report,
attempted to accommodate the tensions between innovation and ·account·
abilitY within the university context. We have carefully Ustened to proposals
and ideas from the various segments of the university community ~o are
con_cemed with the present college program. We h;ave SIUdied both the
i11ternal and j&gt;xternal -evaluations,--..held extensive discussions with representatives from the colleges, heard testimony from ·several key personnel
within the admin"istration, met with candidates for Dean/Directpr, held an
open meeting with the entire university community, met witt"~ the Academic
Affairs Council and Faculty Senate Executive Committee, and had numerous
discusSions with individual students and faculty. Our report is in ac~d with
the main conclusions of the external evaluating team, and could even be
considered as ·an attempt to implement the team's principal _recommendations. In pllrticular, we agree the colleges ire on balance a valuable addition
to the university, and that their special strength lies in the motivation and
enthusiasm of the students, iri- providing a sense of community for many
who Cililnot find it in departments, in attention to neglected perspectives illld
values, illld in the opportunity for innovative, experiential, interdisciplinary
and socially relevant learning. In the words of the external evaluators, the
colleges are "too valuable toJose and too chaotic .to survive." We present OIK
proposals with the
hope thf t dley will facilitate and expedite the
rapid growth of viable, exciting, intellectually honest, and creative under·
graduate pr01J-i11115, both residential and JH:ogrammatic, at SUNY/Buffalo.
What follows are our recommendations for a new set ·of procedures and
guidelines for the colleses, as arne~ded, . with cOmment (attached in
appendices) whic" we thoupt best to present iii-writing.

earnest

�{b) one member from the Au-

dlllllc Affalr5 CouRdl (ex·
cludlna Academic V.P.),
" - b y ... A.A.C.
(c) two u.......,.te students,
to be dlolen by the Student
Auociatlon or Its suc:c:essor,
(d) one .-.ate student, to be
dlolen by ... Gradullle Student Auodation or Its suc:ces-

sor.
(e) ·two members deslplated by
the Colleae Council from

I. The Name
A.. •The ..... Ct1&amp;gu shall refer to the
spedal ..........ate . , . . _ , I&gt;Qth
reslclecnlal Mel nonresidential, to be
desaibed in Ibis clocumenL
B: The combined efforts shall be named
The Cdletla Mel shall be ildminislerlld ~ a unhenity offic:er with the
title OMn of the Colleges. (See
oppendix I.B.)

II. Purpose$
A. The aeneral purposes of the academic
aspects of the Colleps shall be:
1. Top~ a coonext in which
arearer enc:ou~t can · be ·
_..,, wlihin a ~ble ad·
ministrallve framework, to edu·
caticlnal i-lion, to student
Initiative Mel enthusiasm, and to
the- wider forms- of intellectual
creativity.
2.c To provide worbble subdivisions
of the la!JC university, mor~ tO,.
aenial units for students 'to deal
with, · and closer academic con·
txt.
3: To provide apportunity for students to participate actively in
creation * development, and
~ministr.ttion tJf their own educational program.
'
4. To make possible greater inte-gration of ilnderaraduate education and to encourage a wider
variety of intellectual integration
and intellectual style.
5. To expond the ranae of education•! opportunities !hat the
university can offer, by wider and
more effective use of community .
resources than is generally
possible through departments.
6. To provide a vebicle for creation
of coordinoted interdisciplinary
programs which attempt to deal
with current · problems and social
concerns."
B. The aeneral purposes of !he residential aspects of !he Colleaes shall be: ·
1. To provide identifiable 'physical
space for living-iearning experi·
ences. and effCGtive utilization of
the Amherst Campus facilities.
2. To facilitate faculty-student and
• student-student interactions.
·
3. To reduce alienation and anomie
by maintaining units !hat students
can more fully identify with.
4. To provide opportunity to
develop unique prozrams by
utilization of specialized space.

Ill. Creation and
Dtssolution -of
Colleges
(see appendix Ill.)

A.

~bership of !he Colleae Otarter
Committee
1. There shall be twelve (12) regular
voting members of !he cor...
.mittee, as follows:
(a) six faculty members _designated by the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee. (See
appendix Ill. A: 1. a.) •

amonJ its meinbers. Until .
January 1~75, or, when the
ColfeF Council is oper~tinJ
and the members desi&amp;Nted
to the Otarter Committee, the
places should be designoted
by the' members of !he CoiICJiate Assem!&gt;ly.
(f) members of the Colleae
Otarter Committee desilnated _
pursuant to-subpar (a) shall be
mutually aareeable to. !he
appointins body and to the
Colleae Council, and, until
- tbat body has begun to
function, ''to !he Collegiate
Assembly; and members
designated pursuant to (e)
shall be acceptable to the
F'a culty Senate Executive
Cornmi~.

2. It shall be the responsibil ity of
!he !'acuity Senote Executive
Committee to see !hat the Col lese
Otarter Committee is duly con·
stituted and functional.
·.
3. The Academic Vice-President,
V ice -President fDr Health
Sciences, Vice-President for Stu·
dent Affairs, Dean of Under·
graduate Studies, Dean of -1111.
Colleaes, and !he Otainnan of tGe
Faculty Senate Committee on !he
Colleaes shall be non.Yoting but
otherwise fully . participating
merribers.
4. The Committee may . a~d; on ari
ad. hoc basis, add itional . nonyoting members whose -expertise
is needed to make decisions about
partic ula r charters. Recom., mendatiOf)s for such persons may
initiate from !he group proposing
!he new tharter.
5. The regular YQting members shall
be appointed for-one-year terms
renewable, at the ~le discretion
of !he original appointing authority, for one additional year.
B. The powers of the College charter
Committee shall be:
1. To review all proposed charters
and make recommendations. con·
corning these to !he Dean of !he
Colleaes and !he President
2. To make recommendations to !he
Dean of !he Colleges and the
President for dissolution of a college uniL
3. To review and make recor...
mendations on the renewal of
charters whose terms have run
out; this review is to be Con~
dueled during !he· academic year

in which charter expires.
C. The operational procedures of !he
Otarter Committee sball be the pre·
rogative -,f !he Committee. A quorum _
for !he c'onduot of !he business of !he
Committee shall be two-thirds (2/3)
of !he regular and duly ·appointed
voting members of the Committee.
The Committee shall elect its own
Chairman.
D. The procedures 'and gulc(illnes for
chartering a Collegl: shall be. as follows:
1. O.arters for any Colleae shall be
first submitted to the Dean an&lt;l
the College Council for their
advice and suaestions.
2. Within one month of originally
recieiving a proposed tharte~, the

Dean shaH submit II to the
Charter Committee, without
lhe form desired
by lhe proposers.
3. The Charter Coinmittee may:
(a) oec:ommend the charter be
adopled,
- {b) - d the· charter be
rejected,
(c) oecommend the charter be
modified or delayed-.
4. The Charter Committee shall
stipulate In wrilinJ the oeasons for
Its recommendations.
5. As a minimum picleline for its
-deliberations, the Otarter Committee shall expect each proposal
to include:
(a) the intellectual purpose of the
proposed college, its
appropriateness and unique·
ness within the university
setting. Ol)d the studentneed
and demand for such a collese;
(b) !he education.! or pedagogical
style of !he colleae, through
whith it intends to achieve its
purposes; (See appendix Ill.

- t and in

D. 5. b.)
(c) a description of the courses
!hat will initially be offered; ,
(d) a list of the initial personnel
Of the college, including but
not necessarily limited to the
participating faculty, with
vitas;
(e) a statement of how other
participating faculty will be
chosen, ·and of their powers
and duties;
(f) !he vita of !he proposed
administrative officer;
(g) evidence th•t !here will be
substantial · facuU;y participation in !he colleae; ·
(h) a statement of whar-constitutes membership in the collese, of whether !here are different ci.Sses or kinds of
affiliation with the Colleae
and of !he rights, privileaes,
a nd . responsibilities of
membership;
(i) a statement ot .how student
members will be chosen;
01 a statement of how representatives of ·the Colleae to
!he Colleae Council will be
Ghosen;
(k) a statement of how -courses
and i nstructors will be
seletted and evaluated;
(I) a statement of budget process
and fiscal controls;
(m)a descrip~ion of internal
governance; and.
(n) a specification of the duration
of !he charter (normally three
to five years), and a statement
of what would constitute a
fair, practical, and &lt;Objective .
evaluation procedure for !he
Colleae at !he time the charter
needs to be renewed. ·
6. All Otarter proposals shall be
considered, after !he Otarter
Committee's recommendations,
by the Dean of !he Colleaes for
his/her independent,recommenda·
tions to the President, unless the
proposal is withdrawn by !he
proposing group. On· !he basis of
all !he evidence presented to
him/her, !he President sh•ll sigri
or reject !he Otarter: Should !he
dean fail to concur with !he
recommendations of lhe Otarter,
Co,;;mittee, and !he President
sustains lhis opposition, the
reasons for !his rejection shall be
staied in writins to !he Otarter
Committee.

to the Collelt.C..nll and lhe Dean.
F. The . . . . . ..S PRIOIIItn for elk'
solvlna .. Collep ...... Ill • l'dlows:
1. "-'-lllllloa for cluolvl,. a
Collep IDII ~ Its cbarter
may Ill llllliallld by any of the
followirw!
(a) The Dean of'lhe ColfeF Pro-

(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)

.-am
.
The '-lenllc v_,_

The VJ'. for Healdt Sciences
The Dean rA DUS ·
The Admlnlslntive Officer of

theColiele
.
· (f) The Collep Councir
(g) The Faculty Senate ear...
mlttee on the Collops.
2. The initiator shaU .,bmlta-bill of
particulars to the a..ter Committee, listq serious problems in
theCollefle.
3. Grounds for dissolvi,. • COifeae
shall include, but not necessarily
be limited to:
(a) failure to abide by _the
approved c:harter;
(b) loss, '!l'ilhout adequate re·
placement, of key faculty or
•of the ·administrative officer;
(c) failure to follow University
replations;
(d) insufficien~ student interest.
4. The Charter Committee shall
notify the DeOn of the charaes
and shall, after consulting With
him/her, ·determine whether !he
chaises contained ·in !he bill of
. particulars are grave enough to
constitute, if substantiated,
grounds for revocation of !he College charter. (See appendix Ill. F.
4.)
.
5. If !he problems are determined to
be not serious enough, to warrant
' revix:ation of the chari£r, tile bill
of particulars shall be referred to
the~~· • I ' J I - , -,, - , • •
.6. If !he problems. are graye enP,U$1&gt;
to warrant . revcdtiJn ( ilf- the
charter, !he Committee shall so
notify !he Dean and !he .COIIeae,
and shall give !hem two weeks in
which to attempt -to resolve !he
matter. If no resolution is presented at !he end of two weeks,
!he Committee shall give due
notice in !he campus media of !he
initiation of dissolution proceedings, shall hold hearings open to
all interested persons, and shall
deliberate and make cOnclusions
of !he issues raised. It shall send
its report to the Dean of the Colleaes and to lhe President, recommending either (i) !hat the charter
be ~voked and. the College dissolved as of some 'l'itable date; or
(ii) that the Colleae be given a
specified period of probation in
which to remedy certain specific
defects, or (iii) that the Colleae be
continued.
7. The President shall take action on
the basis of ihe O.arter. Committee's report mel of recommendations !hat may be made to
him/her by the Dean of !he Colteaes or the Academic Vice President. If the action of the Pres; dent is differeAt' from !hat
recommended by the Colleae
Otarter Committee, he/she shall
justify his/her decision in writing
to !he Otarter Committee.

IV. Governance
and Membership

E. Ali effort ,should be made for rapid
but careful deliberation of all new
charter proposals. The norm for' such
A. Every ·college must have either a
a complete review should be two to
regular full-time faculty membei of
three ~onlhs after initial }"~mission . :
!he U~iversity, or a suitably chosen

of Col1eges·

"'

�al. . . . Pf'O'I· who has . . . , to
.....:
MfiiOIIIII!Rty fgr the
operatlan of 4he Collete for· ~ period
of at INn two yurs. The lide of lhis
'tlall be left to tbe dlscnllon d tbe lndiriclual Colqo. ·
Suc:b • penon lhall nonnally be•
- ... "' .... for at ~ -.balf full
tiMe and for ~ ·minln~m af onefoldl fuH lime, "InC! flail haw 1he
NsponsibiUty for assurina that 1he
followlna are canied out:
1. lq·nnae plannina ·
2. budlets

lndivl....

3. ~ofpiarsonnel
4. c:oordinatliln of prosnm '

s.

democra*
aovem
IV. A: S.)

efl'ecllve llld
ue». (Seuppendix

B. Individual Colloaes ue free to dloose
any mode of inllemal .,....ance in
whlc:h all IIPPR'Pri•llely c:onc:emed
lntereSIS ue adequately represented,
u IOIW u It has been explicitly
spelled out In Its duner. Can!ful
.attentiOn must be ~id so u to define
membenhlp in the College, internal
ri.portina, md aulhorization pro·
cedures.
C. Budget, personnel, wrriwlum, md
suffirc decisions shall be m~e
initially at the Coileae level md lhen
presented to 1he De~ for final oction
lhrouah resul~ Univer&gt;ity clwlnels.
D. It is to be the norm lhot resu~r Uni·
w,..;ty foculty will actiwly pMti·
cipate in eKh College prosr~. Such
faa.olty porticip~tion shall be stated in
the charter, with. bculty roles
~propri~tely defined. The , College
budget sliall include funds to comp·
, en.s ate lh~ ~lty _by .P.U~asina
relused time froin lh&lt;ir departmental
responsibilities; where relused time is
not at J$sue, other forms' of cC;mpen-

.'~tipns sj.~Td~,proppsea.

•

I

E. Colleges may use the resources of the
outside community (national and
international if ~propriate) and
graduate swdents to enrich their pro~ - Such persons wlir be recommended to the College Council for its
review and to the Dean · for his/her
action. It is incumbent on the College
to justify this person 's ability,
expenise~ judgment, and teachina
ability to the-Council and the Dean.
(See appendix. IV. E.)

V. Governa.nce
and Administration
.of the ~olleges
A. The chief ~minisJr&gt;tiw offioer of the
Colleges shall be the Dean, who shall:

1:haw ot lout the rm~ af associalli
p rafessor with tenure ··in . an
esliblished Uniwrsity deparT. menL
2. haw authority equivalent to a
provost in the current organi·
zition at the State Uniwrsity of
New. York at Buffalo.
.
3. be the printipal negotiator for
fUnds md long-ranae planning
with the University administra·
lion.·
4. have pri~ control far disbursement of funds to the several Col·
leges and Workshops. '
.
S. a~d at his discretion merit in·
creueo to f.oculty teac!!!.na1n the
Colleses fiom uniwrsity merit
funds allocated to the Colleges.
6. ~point 1he administratiw offioer
- of eKh ~lege. upon the recommendation 'of the College, sulfJOCt
to confirmation throu&amp;h "the usual
Univer&gt;ity channels.
7. ~prow ' (or nat ~prow) all col·
lege courses forwarded ta him by

the Colllp5, tubject to allliPIJiiCIIIIe unlwnlty IIIIIs .... DUS
..,tatiaM. Each .
may

oft1lr ~tal - o n a
ane _ . . lollk up to 1111 per-

cent (101') or Its oft"trinp. The
Dean ...., ...,.-- (CII" disapprcM~) ...
c:ounes
IIIey h- ..... rewiewed
(lntemaly) and thall partlci~te
In llle eriluallon d these c:aur;ses
at tbe
tbe in
wlllc:h they are offered. (See
appendix V .A. 7~
8. apprcMI (or reject) all Instructors
1ISIIFed to courses within the
Colloaes.
•
9. h - authority to Initiate action
throuah 1he a..ter Cornrni ttee
tO dissolw a College.
10. haw responsibility for input into
Uni&gt;WSity pracedures for llinure,
promotion, , llld rewards, includi,.- but nat limited to full partl·
~ipatian
on the ~propriate
f-lty committee at the provostial lewl when collegiate
faculty ~ under cOnsideration.
"11. have a voting .Ut on the University's Academic Affa.irs
Council.
12. report to the A~mic Vice·
Presiden t and/or the President.
"13. have the power to hire faculty
members foc teachi~ ~tioos
exclusively wilhin the colleges,
silbject to peer review and subject
to the -approval of the Presiden t
of the Uniwrsity.
In the absence of the Dean, the
person he shall designate shall serve as
the Acting Dean. · In the cue of no
permanent ilean the PresidentJ!all
immediately appoint an Acting "D'ean
' and begin a search for a new Dean.
C . . All powers and responsibilities of the
Dean shall be exercised in consultation with the College Council, and
subs!2"tive decisions shall be taken
by him only after consultation with
the Council.
•
D. The College Council shall be com·
posed of
·
1. One designated representative
from each College, other than the
admin istrative officer or coordina·

an.

in their initial~ may
defined their pis,
may not h - ptheled si&amp;nifiant
Sllldent or faculty Interest, may nat
have dtorouahtv wwbd lhrouah
their . pionS, but may need funds far
wor1dns out their ideu.
B. Ewry new· Colqo must begin u a
WOI'kshap . and ..,., a mlnimum . of
OlllJ semester in this swus- before it
may be considered by 1he Charter Committee for full colle&amp;iate staWs.
C. The existin&amp; eallege units are
exempted from the preoedina require· ·
menL In the case where merpd or
fracmented p~ts of existina colleges ·
~ ~plying. The Dem shall deter:
mine -opriateness of such units
surtirc as Wockshops.
D. A Wail&lt;!hop may be initiated by
undergr~uate or graduate swdents;
ar faculty members within this uni·
wrsity: Prapasals foc Workshops will
be made direcdy to the Dean for his/
her approval.
E. Workshops may offer noncredit
seminars and other activities. After
ooe semester, a Workshop may also
. offer courses for credit, following
. ~proval by the Dean and th~ DUS
Curriculum Committee. Fund's shall
be made available far Wark!hop
activities out of the overall budget for
the Colleges.
F. No Work!hop prbgram can exist for
more than three semesters. After this
trial period, it is expected that any
Work!hop would either apply for full
ch~red status ar disband.

the CharW CGJnmi- Is dlqed "widi
creatirc Mil cllwohinl Cai1Cp. tbe C'.cJm.

VII. Grading .Options

APPENDIX Ill . D. S. (b)
While we think it important that those
proposing a College be articulate about
(a) and (b), we don't. intend these requiremenh as an excuse for heavy-handedness.
Enthusiasm and self-determination have
been among the notable strengths of the
Colleges sa far. We trust they still can be .

~

&lt;101 .._ c:learty

c:.ou.

......._til

w or

:s.

The College program shall be granted an
addi tional grading option: For any credit
course, a student may be given two pos·
sible grades-pass ar no crediL "No
credit" means that neither a grade nor
any record of participation' shall appear
on the stJ,Jdent's transcript; "pass" will be
treated in the same..way pass-fail is done
in the uniwrsity. Such a grading method
must be chosen and rationalized by the
instrucipr at the time the course is proposed . (See appendi x VII)

tor;
2. The Chairman of the F acuity
. Senate Cornmi ~ on the Colleges, ex tJffkio,·
.
3. The administrative Officer or
Coordinator of each College; and
4 . The Dean, who shall serve as
Chairman of the College Council.
E. The College Council shall be an
~visary council to the Dean. Its
Sl)e(!ific powers and respOnsibilities
shal-l be
1. to advise ttie Dean on ~II policy
matters.
2.- to ensure that each College
adheres tO its ch~r .
3. to review the course -proposals,
budget requests, and personnel
recommendations of the Colleges.
4 . to ~ge for the election of
senators to serve as representatives of the Colleges in the
Faculty Senate.
F. ' Tht Co4!ncil may appoint special or
· standing committees and delegate to
them cemin specific responsibilities.
G. The Council may, by a two-thirds
{2/3) vote, challenge the Dean in any
matter where the Coun.cil reels t)e/she
has acted contrary to their recom·
mendatian. In such a case, the
Foculty Senate Committee an the
Colleges shall attempt to mediate the
dispute.

VI. ·workshops
A. The Workshop pro.,-~ is specifically
designed to help facilitate 'the
dewlopment of new pro.,-ams. Such

Appendices
APPENDIX LB.
Various types of colleges ~e ·currendy
envisioned, some primarily of an academic nature, some primarily of a resii:lential ch~cter. Both residential· and
academic progr~s should continue, for
the immediate future, to exist together
within a single administratiVe framework.
Although the two kinds of college units
may have somewhat different aims, problems, and requirements, separate
administration would at this point in the
development of the Colleges be both
burd~nsorne, complicated and practically
unnecessary. The Committee recognizes
the possibility that in the fuwre, Colleges
m_ay have grown and diveraed in their
character to the poirit that a sep'~te
adminis~tive organ ization might.became
desirable for - the primarily residential
programs:' We therefore recommend that
the Faculty Senate reconsider the
question of a single Collegiate- o~ni­
zation in two to three years.

-

APPENDIX Ill .
For the creation of a collese, the following procedure shall be instituted,
wha"se purpose is to. provide a forum far
informed discussion, idvioe, and recom-mendations. for consent (or rejection) by
represen~tiws af the univer&gt;ity community. This process shall be canied aut
by 1he Co/lege Chamr Comm/ttu. While
swdent enthu5Wm and ~rninis~tiw
support ue vital for the ColleF Pragr~.
the Policies of 1he ~of Trustees reserve to the fawlty the power to initiate
and dissolve academic progr~s. S!noe

miUeo CS' ._ Calloaes bellne5 It have a --..,1p drawn pr.....,.wody
from 1he faculty llllll ,...,._.... to
f~~ultv. The specific prapoul IS :a
camprornite-a sound one, we belicocb e - the prindple af fatuity responsibility and tbe principle of sllldent
PM~i&lt;:ipation. In
~ predomin~dy faculty committee and considerable administrathoe saulfny for the
charllorina or dislolution of Colleles, we ·
h - had in mind the conclusion of the
Extramural Evaiua!ini Tarn that "Coo·
lesi~te ~10n0my Is possible • •• Ontv insofar u the pracedure for the esublishment •
or · ~ colie~Yte unit ensures ~
integrity. The eisier it Is to esbblish a
collegiate unit, the more evalu~ scrutiny will be necessary to .Ustain iL
The ~der it is to establish, 1he mare
·autonomy it wiH enjoy once established.
There is no way out of this conflict, nor
should there be."

*'

--Miinl

APPENDIX Ill. A.l. (a)
While ihe Committee does not feel
that it would be ~propriate to legislate
what ch~acteristi~s the faculty members
chosen far this task should have, it
expects and trusts that they will be
chosen sa as to help strengthen the Colleges. In pmlcul~ we would not expect a
'.' representative" from those openly
hostile to the Colleges, and ,we would
expect the Ch~r Committee to include
faculty wilh subsUntial academic prestige
for both teaching and research.

APPENDIX Ill. F .4.
While there must be a mechanism for
d issalvi~ a College, the Charter Corn·
mittee cannot be expected to concern
itself with those inevitable minor griev·
ances and complaints that plague mast
programs. It would be an abuse of th is
provision of the Prospectus for the
Ch~r Committee to consider any but
the mast serious charges.
APPENDIX IV. A. S.
We do not have in mind that this
person with primary administraltve re·
sponsibility will necessarily be the "head"
or " master" or intellecwal catalyst af the
College. There should be sufficient lati·
Wde within the proposed framework for
retaining the decentralized intellecwal
initiative that has characterized the pre·
sent college units. The proposal is for
instiwti~ determinate lines af admini·
strative responsibil ity, not for putting
uch College under one authority figure.
So long as responsibility is clea!:cut.
decisions can be made however the group
wishes .
APPENDIX IV. E.
.
Undergraduates may teach in the colleges if they satisfy university regulations,
as is possible within Dep~nts under
current regulations.
APPENDIX V. A. 7.
The term 11experimenta1 courses" is
defined io the Stem Praspecws as a one
semester trial course which does not
require approval -by the university DUS
curriculum committee. Such a course
may only be offered onoe without DUS
approval.
APPENDIX VII.
Such a ~ing procedure should be
appropriate fQr many (teW, innovative,
truly experimental progr~s . The normal
A, B, C,-&lt;otc. grading procedures may
also be applied to college courses.

�A major_notice of U/B faculty is
contained in T11B tJNCBIIrAJN IIIDACLZ:
Hyperbaric (hy~, by V.- IL
Trimble, Doubleday, 236 pp~ $6.96.
Acoording io Ron Maselb's·1'89iew in
1be Buffalo Er&gt;eltinf N-. '"I1Ie ten
includes 8 directOry of byporbaric
chambers, J.istiDa those at 1be Sta1e
UniYelllity ol Bull'alo, Millard Pillmme
and Bulfillo VA Hospi~ It lllao bas
. a lengthy lleatmeat ol'1be atudiea of .
Bu1falo's Dr. Eleanor .JaCobs inio 1be
impact of
on senility aDd citations on
·aDd related
studies of Dr. Edward N . Lampbler.
. . ." Dr. ~ .J•. Alvis of 1be U/B
Medical School, who ...... a CCiilultant
on the book, proyides an introductmy

=cv:ing

note.

..,

Borst Resigns

COI..I.fliE E COUIIIES
At~-~~~. i t - leemecl .thot
at the 19 disl&gt;ut*f Collep E c;ou,... oris·
inally ancellsd by Acaclemic Vice I'Jesi·
dent llem8nl Gelbeum and submitted for

Loss of confidence on the part of

twther - , , aU but th""' Nlve - n
by the University upon the I'IICOII1·
mandation al the Division at UOO,.Srailu·
• ... EdUCIItion. The th- not rHtorsd
·- f _,. ancelled alther by the'Coliq8s or
· by the instructors concerned. The · th,_
arw: 165, ESP and Hypnosis; 194, Con·

· temporary' FICtion;' and 122, Raja Y-.
In the CIIH al Raja
all four - n s
Gelbeum two wllich- n o t ) - Cllncellsd
by the
. • instructor.. FOf • lis! of . all _,,_ In- · - ......... Jan. 3 1 , - 2.

&lt;- ......., -

¥-.

..,.

students, and laculty epproval of uew
Collegiate bylaws which would,--in el.fect alter the present "spec:ial" lllatus
of C.C. Fuma8 Colleae prompted last
w e e k's resignation by Dr. LYle . B.
Borst lrom his PQI!ition ..
· ter.
.
Borst will oontinue u a prol-.rof astronomy and physks.
Master of CCF ainoe ita •
tion
in 1967, Borst said oollege~'o....
voted almost 2-1 apjnst bim in a re.
cent con1idence vote. ·
Borst wu the last o1 the. original
Collese masters of the. Meyenan era.
Allen
of tbe ~ six,
- resigned
•
late Jaa yeer. .

ccr ,......

·demtandable.
:•:.n... attitudeMost
01 the authors is unof them have or

bad • share of authority, u lldmiJJi&amp;.
tlators or Benior. laculty members, under the. sysiem of shared eulbority.

.a

Sap.:ftlo":lb.ther

�~

, _ . , 21, 1974

Two U/B Seniors Publish First Analysis
Of Urban Studies Pr~g.rams at US Colleges · =~. ...... Ratb IUid Muir Wu-la,

_ . ,. 6oc urbu lllucll-. maJom
at U/B, -- llldban ol a ....t1y
pabl,flhl!d ....... laveatary IUid an·

to be

8Dt oomprebeaoive

8Miyai&amp;

- Aaaa af tbia IJwwaoaing educa'
lioa81 lleld.
!Iii avallabilit)' baa been DOted 118-

___ _

___ _

,•'·,

J•

: ', : \

'

·'. :'

:='::J ~:.::~d-

IUjor ~
T b r e e major coocluaioos emerge

from the ....a1th of program date analyzed ill the report:
"L Urban studies has become an
increaaiqly offered course of study
at both UDde&lt;graduate and ~uate
levels,• -at private and public institutiona, large and email, in both metropolitan and less densely populated
areas.

•

"2. Further expansion and develop;mentor oroomuns in urban studies is
ro,__" ·- ·· ·
"3. Gnduall!s of urban studies procrams c:boc.e a wide variety or vocational and educational areas or pursuil No one specific area predominatea." Gniduates entered ~t
__.-tlcularly at the IIIUilidpaJ Ie.ei,
DOIDIIIWlity organizations, ·private in~ and educational inslitutioos.
BaYood u- pneraiizatlooa, readera ol the report will a1ao fiDd, 8IIIODI
other iDformatioo ·lllld atatiatica, that:
• 'The maat COIIIIDOil pqram empbass at the unclenlnlduate ieYel are
a -.tratioD in the aociaJ aciences
and imlol-t in COIIIIDIIDity proDlem-aolving; at tbe padilate lev e I,
traininc in llldlls for public policy IUid
urban pl.aJmiq. . .
.
·

'

'

A

• • • t1

'

11
1 I

'I

)
"

- ::_;,

...mar

hilblr.

••
: ',

•

't "

liaaellY Ia the MBiellior ol the Com&gt;c:ll af Um-ity ID8tllutll8 for Urban

A&amp;in, ..,_ will ha hllblllbted in a
fulure ..... olthe.l....,....,ofHOUIU.,
publiobecl by • .tbe Natioaaf A81ciatioD of Hauoiaa aDd Bedevelopment
oec;.Ja.
•
'The project, wbk:b l8qlllred almost
a year ail a half to complele, grew
out ol a
ill urbu and recionaJ ~ wbk:b the authon took in
the IIPriDI _ . , ol 1972 with Dr.
.1811108 H. RY8D. -.ciate director nf
the Ollee ol Urban Affairs.
'The .-!for the study -.ned compelling. Aa Ma. Roth and Mr. Waiwada iDdic:ate in their . introd~
"Tbe paat decade baa seen a I'_'OWIDg
a - ol lUblin pmblems m the
Uni~ 8latea. Urban !illgbt, -~
poUutioo, -...,...-ty, - 1 prejudice,
and imodequate bouaina. transport&amp;~ "!"~ health aerv1cea have .-.!ted
man incleaaed demand for competent
!lnd
~ manpower tno,inild
to aeek ao utions m the urbu envuonmenl" A fedeml study eatimatea, for
example, that by 1980 local sovemmente alone will have _to recruit as
many '!" 300,000 profesaiooals. At the
same time, however, even though col!ekes and universities have increased
....__ in the field, the authors felt
u;,;;-~ are generally unaware
ol the educational as weU as employment .opportunities open to them. ..."
1be study was undertaken to provide
a aource "to wb1cb atuilenlll can 'tuni
for this iDformation."
This student-information aspect of
the project ill further atteated to by
the fact -.that the report booklet is
available to inlerested atudenta without charge at the Ollioe of Urban Affairs, U2 Crosby Hall:
To carry out their research, Ms.
Roth and Mr. Waiwada first identified
191 colleaes and universities as po&amp;sibly sponaorins·an urban studies program. To do this, they read coUege
catalogs and brochures, reviewed listings of urban studieS institutes and
resesrcb centers in various publicationa; and talked with urban oriented
faculty and students. Information on
the programs was then requeflted from
the inatitutioqs by means o! a questiOnnnaire to which 1« coUeges and
universities, 75 per cent of the ideotified - l e , responded. Eighty-four
inatitutions were found to offer 100
urban ~ at the undergraduate ieYel, 'J:1 at the master's level, and
six at the doctoral level Thirteen col-

IUid 8teplwt Halpern ol Poll1ical Sci·
ence have been inatrumomtal in-=·
A tlndaf..-t ........... ~
ing DUE awmvat or Ma. Roth's and
. Uni"'!!JJft,Y o6:iala .-.tile~
Mr Waiwada's ad hoc majora.
~ ,.._ bllld by
Ms. Roth and Mr. Waiwada, while miDoritleit
at U/8 - .,_ ..t -!Ill
dmwing lotlether their cour&amp;e work
a. 9~ doellme af -u. ..-..;t;y
from ~ regular University de- .
hirinl ~
parlmenla, have aiao found it helpful
AbOut !he I * C8lt af U/8 fllcalW
to """""' iarge.cbunb or their educa11111-bld, a U~t,y . . . , . _ IIDid
tion ihroudl still another "stepchild"
the Buflolo ~ N - IMl week;
area, the COUeges. Ma. Roth has taken
IUid the IIUIIIbeas ......... ID lacouraes in CoUeges H, where emphasis
&lt;:"'8"" UDder dmwtlve aatiall .,UCS.
is on health and health care, and Z · 1~ adopted IMl .......
which studies the realities of-the I;,pi
S - ~ Arthur 0. Eve
system&lt;in the context of health care,
(0-Bullalo) lllillecl the thiMt af '-1
scbool JaW consumer allairs, etc. Mr.
action durina a hMrlna em the 19'74Waiwada i,;;; . tumed to C.P . Sqew,
75 SUNY budpt l'llqUMt. H e where socio-tecbnical system.r-eft('emquoted u II8,YiDi tbat U/8 Ma anly
pbasized.
23 black facull;y, IUid tbat they haw
Wort ao ln18mo
trouble ~ lllmil'e. HEW elao Ma
Ms. Roth, from 'the New York CitY
dilliculty Fttinc information 011 miarea, bas au~nted ber stwlies with
nority hiring here, Eve was reported
"intem. wodt 'at the Erie County Lead
to have charged.
Detection and Prevention Program.
University fitures, ""-ver, pointed
After a period of full-time wodt in
to 64 black faculty--&lt;lill: full proleasors,
the field of social services delivery, she · 10 associate prof~ 32 Ulistant
plans to continue pursuing ·t his interprofessors and 16 inatiuctors and Iecest by seeking a master's in urban
turers. This is weU above national
stwlies or community health planning.
average flgurea, a spokesman aaid.
Mr. Wai~ a Bulialonian wbo ~
A Ford Foundation survey indicatbeen aBS0C18tA!&lt;f for ~ years WJth
ing that only .8 per cent of Ph.D.'s
the Commuruty Action Corps and
in the U.S are black was cited as.
Lack;awanna'sFf!endship House_Comunde...,.,jn~ the dilliculty the Unimuruty Center, JS a volunteer mtem
versitY-bas--:, recruiting black profeswith the Community Planning Assistsors I:lejipite this, however the spoke&amp;!'11"" _Center (CPAC) ~cb specialsaid, 5.6 per cent of 'new faculty
lZeS m advocacy planning for comhired from January to August of last
munity de~lopment i:" poor areas. ~
year are black ( 8 of 141 ).
current project. of his at CPAC . JS
Fourteen black faculty are tenured
writing a grant P':"possl far a poup
the University reported (1.7 per cent
known as TarsVISlons, Inc., which JS
total tenured faculty) s·
1 822
~king funding for a .res~t-train~nure comes at the full and ~
mg center !or ex-addi_cts, similar .I? a
professor level, the figure was said to
San FrsnClSCO vocational rebabilits•'--- blacks
tion project featured recently on
rep':""""t 8_7.5percentof""""'
.
CBS's " Sixty Minutes." He plans for
"\iPble. ~inety-three per . !""'t or elia time to involve bimseU more fully
gible white full and &amp;SSOCiate profesin grass roots plannin' before entering
sors are tenured.
I' graduate program m planning and
'lbe ov~l low percenta,ge_ of black
policy analysis.
_
.
f~ty- w1th tenure was similarly atAs careful scholars, Ms. Roth and
tribu~ to the low supply ~f black
Mr. Waiwada dutifully point out limPh.D.~ and to the _fact that 8IX ~
itstions of their study. There is DO
o! !";rv&gt;oe are required for tenure eliway of being certain that aU programs
g&gt;b1lity.
in the U.S. are represented. ConstrueFinally, the U / B spokesman said.
tion of the questionnaire was not per.
the University bas "always" nooperfeel But, they say, "1he study gees
ated_ with _Sta!e and federal agencies
a long wsy towards fulfilling its purseeking mmonty employment data.
pose. Faculty and students wbo might
'The University is vigorously pursuwish to conduct more extensive reing equal employment practices under
search in the area will certainly find
its affirmative action guidelines and
the !]!SUlts section a valuable reprocedures, the spokesman emphasource. Alao, those wbo wish to get
sized.
a good reading of urban studies programs acroos the countzy will certainly
find it a very useful source · of inromi8tion."
.
Finally (and possibly most important to them in light of their own
CarMVal, the pre-Lenten Bacchanexperience and · interest in a course
alian celebration enjoyed in various
field that didn't exist for them until
forms throughout the · wocld as the
they "invented" a curriculum or their
Latin counterpart of Mardi Gras, will
own ). "It is hoped that this study
be celebrated at U/ B, Saturday, F~
wiU help those ... wbo, in seeking a
N'!X.n~·~ ~until dawn in
career in urban studies, wish information on the educational and vocations!
The community is invited to join in
opportunities that exist in, this relathe admission-bee celebration that lest
tively pew and , expanding field."
year attracted some 5,000 visitors.
Dancing, singing and other festivities
will be accompanied by music ~
vided by a Brazilian band from Rio
de Janeiro.
C&lt;J171&lt;UNJl..goers ""' urged to wear
costumes, although they ""' not ,...
'Ibe Cleveland String Quartet inquired for admission. Prires wiU be
residence at U/B, has been n&lt;llllinated
awsnled for the best coatumec and refat a Grammy Award, the recording
freshments will be availabla.
industry's top professional bonot, for
ita RCA Victor recording ol Brahms'
Seveial U / B studellt and graduate
String Quartets.
student organizations are spoosoring
the
evenl
The Quartet bas been invited to Los
Angeles to , . _ . on the nationallyAID FOR Sl1ttK£RS
~ Gramlny Awards presentaThe Unde111noduate Sociolotl)' Asooc:IAon,
tions at 10:00 p.m., Saturday, March
in coope~tl on with e local and hational
2 (CBS-TV). 'Ibe QUartet will perA F l.C 1 0 campaign to support strikl"'
form a movement from BrabmB' String
wort&lt;ers at the Farah Company In Texas.
Quartet. Opus 51. one ol the worb inwill be collecting foodstufls and ctothlng
cluded In the rei- by RCA Victor.
tor the approximately 3,()(X) M • xI c a n·
In addition to the GnlllllllY Award
American strikers at a bible In Norton,
~ the Clevelapd's reading
March '4-8. The workers have been on
ol tbe oO.npiete 8rahma String Quarstrike for more than two years and are
tets was selected as one ol the year's
said to be In -parote need of food and
. _ claMical IIIU&amp;ic reoardings by
clothins. In connection with the collection
Time MapziDe IUid the cycle alao won
effort. a 20-mlnute AFL-CIO film on the
Stereo Review M~a Recording
strike, "The People vs. Willie Farah,'! . will
of-tbe Year eitatioa.
·
be shown on Tundoy, Fobruary 26, at
M"""-s of the ClevelaDd StriDg
3:30 p.m. In Room 42, 4224 Ridp Leo.
Quartet are DoaaJd Weilentein ancl
For further Information, contact Prof. Roy
Peter Salaft, violinists; Martha StrongKaplan, ~olotl)', -.,hono 831-1635.
in Katz, viola, and Paul Katz, cello.

bllll:b-,......

= Z::..

~ af ~ ~ ~
uiiJa .....U. JlftlllUIII m ADaican

~ IIIUily unusual 8IIIODI
IW'~M!e pojecta in ·a IIOOpe
aDd
-' wbk:b ill bellewd

L

--

~

'

I

"-'

I

1

\_.

.r·

•......,.,. ...._ "' ...,..!' .,._..._
• -&lt;lnly one of the 100 programs

studied was founded prior to 1963
(that at Brooklyn College whicb dates
to 1952), with most dating to the
period 1967-71.
·
• Most graduate programs insist
on no specific acadermc qualifications
or educational backgrounds but are
"just looking for food students."
• 'lbe intemship experience ia one
of the most frequently u!ilized teacbing methods oulllide of clasaroom in- struction.

v..:f:ag~~ pp~=J~ ::,o~take
~

field to complement their faculty.
• A total or 5,285 students are ¥ nroUed in 90 responding programs ( 4-,
084the amast
theter~sccalalevelureaandte 1Ie08
velm
' :ul93h.Dat_
1"'1'b.
programs).
_. 'Ibe actual total number of participating faculty (full and part-time)
is 1,021.
• Forty-four per cent of baocalaureate graduates for whom records were
~'available wenron to aclvanl:ed stUdy,
with 56 per cent entering the job market-34 per cent taking- jobs in govemment and 15 per cent, in private
industry.
• Forty-eight per cent of master's
graduates on Whom data was available
took positions with goverrunent, 15
_per cent with community organizations
and 13 per cent in research, teaching
or adv'!llced study.
l.....mty Section

· 'Ibe report is cclncluded with an
extensive inventory section providing
brief descriptions of the 100 urban
stUdies programs on which information was derived - their founding
=-gesem,sppecial~ l'..r:'trui&lt;lctedctionaflu met
uthr~
~

ods, numbers of students and faculty,
B!ld areas of pusuil
More complete catalog information
and course descriptions on whicb the
inventory is based are on file for stu~,_!"'rusal at the Office of Urban
ruuun&gt;.

Study co-authors R?th and Wai-

J:~rs"':nM.~. "t,';b\'ii!'faf'J!;
ides that this major urban university
bas DO formal program hi the field.
'lbeiJ: inventory and analysis is especially u&lt;eful here, they feel, because
an ad hoc major wbo bas to design
his or her own program (subject to
Division of Undergraduate Eaucation
approval) can find in it a useful ~de,
sucb as Waiwads himseU bas. 'Or, if
interested in a more structured -i&gt;rogram, they can use it to find out where
to transCer,'' be says. Not otbat either
be or Ms. Roth have major nlServationa about· the ad hoc_ option. 'Ibey
feel they have accomplisbed a great
deal throuih an educational alternative. 1be freedom and cballenge of ad
hoc status, the two - · provide an
opportunity for in-depth projects such
ae their own . that ""' rare in the
traditional undergraduate courae of
study. Although they feel that more
guidlihl:e from faculty and practition.
ers in the field would have added to
their ad hoc experience, Ma. Roth and
Mr. Waiwads have received hacking
from -.a! members of the U /B community. Considerable 8SIIistance has
been provided, primarily by Dbector
· Frank Corbett and Dr. Rvan of the
Urban A1rairs Ollee. In addition, l'zo.
ressors Sidney Willhelm of, Sociology

.

man

Latin 'Carnaval'
Set for Saturday

Cleveland Quartet
Up for a Grammy

�Panel Usts Ways~ lmprowe SludentUfe-::--------...... 'lw•.-...allobe~Moto
............ -

................ Ia
'~mit who

............... thilwnltr

~~tit~,.:-:::=

to

oea.. .......

to . . atadalt

~­
iufwwliaaallild
..._..
- eaa.eliaR
............
«
in the .tudem cloruiiiGrs. dariDir the
two ... tm. .-It~ ..,. at
the bePnnlal d each ....aerto pmvide illlaiJatlallto iDcaaltDI 81udeolta.
4) SltlffU.. A l l j - . It i1 out

oplnian iMt ........ ~ ...
counlll!r IIIOblemB Ia &amp;heir ....atioas
with the Uni-.ity ~UidMdual
stalf ........ with ...-. they deal are CN&amp;bwdeued at paJtioalar
~... with bppropriata resp&lt;llllli-

'lblrt -=b Uni- -mty ...., wbich deala with a llllbalanlial DUiilber ol i'tudoata oo a I'I'IJ·
·ular bMis ..m- ita . . . . . pau.n
. relodicm to iicl&gt;eduiiDI foi .-It
!i':.tivity perioda IIDd ~
of Individual ~ Specific
atl&amp;dion obouJd be •
loiiUCb - ~'110!&lt;.

Futurist Fuller

'bb;

To Keynote
Ed Conference

-t

R. Bnc!nnbwter Fuller, futurist, P'&gt;deaic domei8&amp;,
inwnloNii&amp;-

....u-r.

~ ~thor~tru;'!'7,.,-==
-ing 1011&lt;1.canditiaa,
the at will
an inslitute-worbbop

~ fu::ti~aow=~
~tional

York
Service Council at
the atatler Hilton, Friday and Saturday. March 1-2.
.
The conference, Connally t i t I e d
''l&gt;.......nn• Futun!s ili Public Educ:a~S:,Tving Our Moat Critical l'roblems;'' will also fealwe Dr. Robert
Bundy, futurist and ronsultant to the s t a t e Education Department; · Dr.
Harold Taylor, humanist, phil.-pher,
former pn!Sideot of Sarah Lawrence

~lletf~t!:t"'st!t!'~~="'/:.r 0::

United Natioos University; Dr
Charles ' H.V. Ebeit, University desn
of undergraduate education, U / B, a
recognized planner in the fields of
- . economic geocraphy, population and
transportation; and Dr. Robert S.
Hamack. c:bairman or the Department
or Curric:ulwn Development and InstrudiOIVII Media, also U / B. .
Acmrmn, to Dr. Conrad F. Toep.
fer, ezecutive aecretary of the sponsoring Edilcational Service Council,
the conference will coneider "problerne centering around the energy crisis, negative population p-owth, the
need for mass transportstioo, the decrease in population base for schools
and a 'number of other critical issues
which are ·
·
in their daily
impact upon~c achool and the '
educational community at il!rge."
n.e propam will _ . with dinner in the Statler's Rendezvous Room
at 6 p.m., March 1. Drs. Fuller and

e.

~4., ~tercl:":t

sessioos the following day.

=::

nw=~.!"'f.:.k ~=~

the
community-at-large on a first comefirst aerved basis, Dr. Toepfer says.
Reae:vations are $20 for the dinner
and presentation, or $1!1 for the preseutation only, and may be made with
!he Council olllce, 317 Foster, telePbone 831-6142.
Saturday's ewmts are open to school
district pe18011Del only and will mnsist of a aeries of smaU group sessions
with Drs. Bundy, Taylor, Ebert and
.-; Hamact, focuaing on how schoOl districts may plan to deal with "emerging
imperatives fa~ our society!' Eadt
of 40 acbool districts belonging to the
Council has been asked to Send a team
of four people.who will ''have t11e Clipability to go bact to their districts
and develop · means to locally solve
~ their problems," Dr. Toepfer sax~
CIEA IIOTIC£

.

CSfA - - lor the followlna wiH
be field March 29: raprnenboti11e from

Clerical, - - f r o m Mal.........,.,
__......... flam T*hnlcol, and ...,....
~ """' Administrative. lndividlataowl:l*l In .....,. ~ or m.klna
for ..... of poaltlons,
_.., . . _ Vllone. .4735.

Alvin ReiE, national arta management consultant, will be at U/B
Monday, February 25, and Tuesday,
Febniary 26, under 8)Xl11901'Ship of the
Office of Cultural Alfairs, to meet with
campus and community representatives on a variety ol issues.
Reiss ia publisber of the bi-monthly,
Arts MtJ/IlJBeiilent, and has written a
number of articles and hoola! in the
fieTd, most """"'tly, Cullure and Co .•
which Alvin Tolller has described as
"a piece of oociaJ ~ that will .

~~~~~~.U:r:~

Arts and Business Technical Assistance Program of the New York Board
of Trade and !leads the Performing
Arts Management Institute in New
York.
•
_
Tbe Office of Cultural- Affiiis has
identified theae topics to Reiss as being of special mncem to the campus:
the potential of the fine arts complex
on the new camims; the planninlf'of an
arts administration degme program;
the creation of a coherent student-faculty-staff planning body for arts programming; University-&lt;lODUDunity relations; -fund raising for the arts;
interdisciplinary and C1'0fl8- departments! approaches to the arta; and
career opportunities.
According to Esther Swartz, alllistant to the president for cultuial affairs, Mr. Reiss will be available frOm
noon on February 25 through the evening of February 26 for discussions on
theae and other topics. In addition to
formal meetings, which will -be aet up
in the Hayes Hall conference rOoms,
he is open to luncheon and dinner
meetings, and willing to participate in
informal evening coffee hours. "'lbe
la!Jter," Ms. Swartz says, "might be an
appropriate settinJ for those with
more Beneral questions."
Those wishin¥ to make appointmenta
to see Mr. Reiss should contact Ms.
Swartz, 831:2735, as soon as poasible.

CSEA Starting
Local. Bargaining
Tbe SUNYAB Chapter of CSEA

( #2803) wiU commence negotiations

with management February 26. Tbe
committee, repoJ'Is Chairperson June Boyle1 was pleaaed with
the ~ to theu request for items"
to discuss. Many of theae are on the
agenda and will be distributed on
March 7 at the general membership
meeting, abe said. However, becauae
salaries, '-lth insurance1_ and o!=ber
money items cannot be ~ or
bargained for locally. tbeae are being
forwarded to the SUNY Ceatml ~
partmental Neaotiationa Ia Albazly.
'"lbaalb to out lil&amp;llbera ... their

negotia~

-=
or

lfayaa

~
to Booi
16,
Any - lonraJd
Jripee,
l4Ma
.· Ma. Boyle oUd.

lenlaa not requi:riq
........pionieta
to .......,.. telepbonea aa well aa deal
.with in-peraoo inqulriea and lbe .. .
tabliebment or clerical ..- 80lCft!larial
. pools to )IIOride laS-up q,port for
peak ll8l'io4a and ~
5 ) Stulknt:UniDenity P~l Inkracti{)M. We beliew that It Ia bilhly
desirable to 5tabliah a I'I'IJU)ar prooedwe and fonnat for ln&amp;mal a :
change of information imd opinion b&amp;tween studeots and University stall.
IIEOOMKENDATIOM. , 'l'bat periodic
student-sta1f "rap aeasions" be ~
lished and publicized, perhaps under
the joint sponsorship of the UniYel',.;ty and the Associated 9tudeDta.
6) The Commilt« ;. concerned
about the need for """"' ilwolvemenl
by specific: UnWenity offu- in the
tkvelopment of 'policia and programo
which they must implement.
.
.REOOMKENDATION. That each University office ia requeslied to emmine
its role In- developing tbe policla!-and •
programs which it must implement
and recommend any areas in- which
it should participate more actively in
the development of policies and prooedwes. Specific attention. should be
given to tbe involvement of the Housing Office in the development-&lt;&gt;f the
University Calendar and to the involvement of the Admissions and Records Office in 1he developmmt ol
coUrse scheduling.
II.

Student~

A number or problems relating to
the advisement of studeots have been
identified by our Committee. Theae
include: (a ) the need for more clarification of policy regarding transfer
credit; (b) the need for more lmowledgeable ·assialance regarding altematives and requirements related to
courae selection; (c) the need to
strengthen the interest of advisors in
individual studeoti and continuity between individual students and individual advisom; (d) the need for more
knowledge of requirements and necessary forms and procedures on the
part of c:ounaeling sta1f.
IIEOOMKENDATION. That specific attention be given to the &amp;election. and
training of counaeJing stalf to insure
that they are knowledgeable regarding
pertinent University policies and- pro=
, and aympatbetic to studmta
IIEOOioOIEND/&lt;TIOH. That concerted
efforts be made to insure that undergraduate students retain the same advisor, in so far as this ia possible,
throughout their undergraduate years.
Ill. The U-rally Ubnu1..

Several problems have been ideotified within the . University Libraries
which adversely a1fect studeota. Theae
are J:!!lated to the followinJ areas= (a )
the quality of bibliographicBJ coverage; (b) inventorY of tbe coUections·
(c ) physical facilities.

'

That' the quali~
of iiEOObibliogra~!'!?H.
,.._ ':E'
in the li-

~ catalop and
· indi!DlS be
. reviewed wil.h the aim of providing
full card records of all materials and
specialized, indeze&amp; to larp and llomplex. collectioos that are presently
without auch bibliopaphical

'l1lat ~
PI'OCI!dure ... -.bllebed to provide
tcw the l'&amp;IIOVal, .., a rep~ar baoiio, or
carda In tbe card eatalol tbat ralw to
lliiOOlOONDATION.

mat&amp;ial thM -~ lml ar ...._
DOOIIIMmN- . . . . . . _ _ . . . .

e«ort be . . . . . . . to ........ ~
inr and
atad&amp;lla
Ia
...)II'CNide
a.Jow ~......&amp;

..:::::-r:;to~
a .........

with ........ ' "

appanmt ,...,.,... . . . . . . . . . d
.... ~ tliwlac* d )lall!rtaiiNiiad
toilet .paper ... ~ the .lMI8d
f..- ""'- .....,_ llllitii,
:::::, freQI8It c~earaDoe ., nm ...

....s·

lliiOOlOONDA'nON. Tbat - Jnwsti.
IIBtiaa be - - of the feMibilfty ol
_...w.~ Jow.oaet ... he dOak-

..

Ia
~ Library anita for
Ubraiy c:lloatale.

_

*-tlr...._.
_..__...._.

IV.~ . . .
~

.

Tbe ........ d lala-alihtllludYfor stud!mta on the Main 8aeet and
Ambent~ ........ ldeatif!ed
~t pnJIJiem.
. . . , _ ' I ' I O H . Tbatt

as a

OODO&amp;t8d

effort be - - to ldeatlfy and ...labliob a ..U, quiet, ....U..IIt area on·-m
cempua to~ up to 60 llludmta and be _ . untU at -least 2
a.m. Allboouib auc:b etuciT ..,_ _;..,t
dealrably be l.ibrari8a, this ·~
by the Committee .. abeoluteJy

~of--C8mpusst­
.--.-~

It ia the Committee's view tbat, by
Fall of 197-f, the problems of Ambenit
Canipua occupancy will require the
direct and full-time attention of a competent coordinator.
RalOKMENDATIOH. 'lbat a coordinator be establiabed for and located on
~ Ambemt · Cao:lpus with reopons;.
bility for apace utilization and Dpel'a·
tion of the campns by Fall, 1974. •

Vi.,....,._ of...,-

F-

The Committee ia. conoemed about
the adverse impact ol some of the
University's preaent .pbysical facilities
upon the quality of life of the student&amp;
REOOioOIENDATION. That there be a
thorou4h r:eview "" J:ha University's
physiail faciliU...,1ncludiiur the Amherst Cao:lpus faciliU..., with particular attention to the foUowina : lighting,
temperature control, elevatorB, suffi.
cient space where students are fon:ed
to wait in line, writing areas where
studenta must fill out forms. Particular attention should be given tO reviewing the erlerior lighting and pathways on the Amherirt Cao:lpus, for
'-lth and safety reasons.

VII. studont Hultll s.r.tc.s
The Committee has identified several health aervices areas wbich-shoUld
be reviewed for poasible im"""""'*'t.
lli!IOOMKE!&lt;DATIOH. That the preaent
Student Health Services and facilities
be reviewed for possible improvement,
with ~IC attention heiDI Jiyen to:
(a) UilpiOVement in the qualfty of
the facllitlea; (b) ezpiiDIIion of 1"'-.
atory -..ices and the X-Ray~:
( c) provision of a mobile unit

rO:

emergency care.
VIII. FuM.._

. Tbe Committee bellevea that att&amp;ltion should be given to the stUda.t
food aervlcea, with regard to . .......
ment of the qua]itv of the
and
clarification ol policie..
IIEOOKKENDATION. That the po1iciaa
and practices or the UniV&amp;'sity Food
SerYJ~ be · reviewed with _,;tic
attention to the . foJlowing: (a) improvement of the ~ of the food
&lt;!'-!1·· reduction of calories, ~ proVlSJo_n of salads, imPI'O)'&amp;D&amp;lt JD the
QW!lity of -..t, the availability of
frw~ _iuic:e at 1each meal); and (b)
clarif1cation and broader publici~
policies such as the ability to
- ••
tute_eggs or " ' - for -..t at meals. ,
IX. ~ . , _ Adlvllles
The Committee 18 ooooemed about
the_ need to clarify and ~ AsSOCiated ,..Studeota policies and procedures more fully aDd the need to
~ student activities in Order 'to
achieve
involvement of minority studenta and commuters.
. RalO~ATIOH. That Consideration be pven to the development and
!lul!lication of a foonal procedwe and
manual for the University

r::s

greater

=.

• lli!IOOIIDIDmATJON.

CIIlted 8tud&amp;tta

That the A.o-

live lll*ffic att&amp;ltion

to ~of J&gt;l'OII8DI8 whkb
wouldln
lor . - la~t
mliMxity ~~ by

-

�Hillel .Plans Talk.on Soviet jews,
1st Shabbaton ofSpring Semester

1WulbldD, 26, ..m be the 1!11i111t of
HlDel 11111....._. r. the 11111t Sbebl.tolaet the ...... - - - . OrdlliDed
a Billllllait ,_, by Ytllbiva Ulli~.be ilrcan.lb' ~dot&gt;
tDnl ...a iD lewWl Jliljiary a&amp; ColuatiL He • .,_,... dlndor 01 the
HIUII. CIAJIIS•
'1'loe UIIMIIImlilule aDa -mbatiDa
~-Prayer: The Wor~ of the H.an,
e d ito r of tbe 2'ima. f _,_,. ..,a ·
Wlld4 I..W. RaliaD. . : ia editor of
1t~7'aoE~:'?i.=.
~
Yanelt RetRaD iDd 11M Pllblilbed in
Capen BMI. .
T r a d it i o a, N..u-1 Review. and

TIIB~.U.UbeBu&amp;loJflfllib
wm beYe u oppaduDilY . . ~
to . . . - -aocount

al..._

* - a Jlllllll AmerliD the Soriet Ulllao
-~War.
......
JGiiillliu
...,__;,_wtio wlll....U at
8
- UlB i
..._at~~~~
fGaDd
blmletr fa 8llieda 1ait October ..._
the Wa 1llab out. Ill fad, be lint
c.t

leuDed llbc.t tbe fllblfal . frca -the
Slbldlll Jewilb Uudoijiiliiiwl TaluabIda ud bill tlaWII ~Inn N-.iay, _ , o1bera.
'
the ,.,.....
llnt..Jto ....
Cllldllct with ( . ......... .............~ _.., ......._._ · 'th
the
lllllhllllo
of 8lblrla.
• .., ......_..... .... ....,.... .., a
llllilaJJik. 'l'elulbtla the ODIY
~ Sbabbat ServiDa at 6 p.m.,
Jflfl wbo beli~a visa to J&amp;.
~. iD tbe U/B Hillel Houae.
--· __. iD
be ~ an·
'lbeni will be a Sabbath dllmer fol,_ ....,.
loorina. Mr Teluablrin will •
tbe .J- wbo - clellhoaa of ~eav~Da.
lecturil at
.m. on "Tbe M 1!\'e ~
JJr'~ be talJald with tbe 'IUIIIer&lt;T-"'-·" --&lt;..L
y •
•
MDA~
1110111111 U&amp;pan c.cben and bed a
' ~ ,";'-.. ...wsm an"":" of
a.-.hoar tiderview with Andrei Silk'Ratlnnality.
.
lluvv. Be met, too, with 1be .J'ewiab
• Sbalibat Mlllninl Serviceo will b&amp;ardliiii'I!IJIO bed'beai ldcbd out of tbe
gm at 10 a.m. A ~ush Lunch will
Ualciuif&gt;AiHBI&amp;
be served after sel'VICI!8. Mr. ·Telusb'hlallllda will also ta11t about his
kin will make his second presentaill M - Oil Simcbath
tiOD on, "A · MOdem llltroducaoo to
'llUrah.
.
·_
tbe Study of Tomb."
~ is &amp;poJI80reCl by ~
'lbe Shahbatoo -will conclude with
Nlqlllll Frontier CouDdl Oil Soviet
a party on Satorday eveoing a t 9 p .m.
JflflfY 1illd .t he Hillel J:l'ouadation.
ill the Hillel HoUse.
.

s/.·

ttqlel.._
:rt-

.

-

\

'

istence and elfectiveoess of the units
depeod on it, be emphasized.
Since · tbe vitality and eothusiasm
Or tbe Colleges "is not always matched
. by their ~ility to articulate their
· goals and plans in a form that is effectively presentable to a ·llOlllewhat
skeptical academic community," Hyman said. it would be "most useful"·
if they could be assured of belp in the
eharlaring process
"I have no do.;bt," he ssid, "that
the assistance of a good lawyer could
greatly ease the i&gt;rooese. · . . . In the
aboence· of -such disintereSted e.pert
belp, there is liable to be unnecessary
tension and confusion .involved in the
process, which may get tbe new plan
off to a bad starl"
Besides, he said, "It .should be more
fun than p~g a public· offering."

··Seminar Offers Wornen Career Aid
Most uni'Wlfllities, including this ODe,
have 110
in top-levef administmtive J:&gt;llllitioaa, DO women provosts,
uniYenllty-wide deans, or vice presideata. As a female administrator on another Clllll_l""' obaerveil recently, sbe
and ber c:olle&amp;gue8 are the "4 A's:
a&lt;!l:in~r. aaaialallt, IISIIOCiate and ad-

igan administra.;,rs orf such problems

""""*'

as budgeting, collective bargaining and

tbe federal government's relation to
higher education. E a c b participant
will also be ILSI!igned an individual
for analysis a n d solution,
on actual problems facing Michipn administraton;.
·
Tbe course- Will be giveo May 20
to June 28 in Ann ·Arbor.
Tuition (excluding living expenses)
is $300.
Faculty women with a terminal degree "and a tenure ladder position"
are preferred. · Male ""''licants will
also be considered. Applicants must
be DOminated by tbeir institutions.
Applications and recommendations
are ·due March 1. Fo111l8 and further
information are available in the Office
of' Women's Reefuibnent, 192 Hayes.

l:a'!tlem

,iUDCll' .

A siz-""1!11: seminar designed to prepare faeultv '11101111!11 for full-ftedged,
noD-A perik;pation ill academic adminlstriltion is being held this 8IIJIIIDEir
at tbe Ullivendty of Middpn.
Created "to prepaJe faculty women
for .,;_,...._, admillistrative positions~ and unM!nlities b
educating fheDi intaasively in the
cies and~ of university govemanoe, the courae will consist of a
series o( intensive 80IIBions with Mich-

poJ:

~~~_;!_!le
~ ~m:t ·
._..._ nor

process forced registmtions after
March 1. ''To save tbe studeots later .
1 hardships," Ebert asked faculty to
"d&gt;eck your class lists carefully and
- ask aU studeota ill your classes to
check their class registration cards.
Ulliess a ~ is shown on that Card,
the student IS not registered ..." .

of~~ti~tt!:~~~ .

ma:tically" this semester thanb to faoulty "vlcilance and CDOpel'lltion."

-

TumiDa to tbe smoking~ Ebert

Salzer to Speak .

said

studeats. and laeulty.mem·
large lecture
bave complaiDed "bitterly
about the near wibreatt..ble air."
He ubd that all COIICI!ftiBII be 1!11-

.-ciaJ:J:.

Dr. Richard Sal-.
feseor, Faculty of Educational
·
will dfaeuas "'lbe Open -Education
Center .- Its Bervioes, Awil8bility1 •
and · ~ Oil tbe L d p t - t ..
~" at a public meetina of
the Wtllllem AtWate of the N- Y ad&lt;
Slate Aaooclatlnn far 8uperv!ldoo ....s
Curriculum Develapmalat, February
'Z1 at f!..P~ at lbe Ambeat CeDizal
Seolar Hilb School, 4801 MlliD ~

lll8lly

hers, particularly ill the

-aona,

WEDNESDAY _,2:7

ia

EXHIBITS
CULIUIM _

_.

Tu Blow lArio "'-· a abibit at
hand-printed mo.dololeo al PMtiJ' by a
variety nf ~ aDd~ ,___ poe1o.

~~byof~~~

CONTINUING OIUHINO EDUCATION.

P""'-d C/umge: The Key to Surviual
the theiJ&gt;e of a conference featuring
diecuooiona by a nune team from the
Long Uland Jewish Hillside Medical
Center, New Hyde! N.Y.• Sheraton InnBuJfalo East, 9· un.
Present..d by tHe U/ B School of Nuroing.

-ted by' the Ollloe o( Oaltoral Aaain,
Hayes Lobby, Monday-Frida.J', 9 a.m..
6 p.m. 'l'llroqh Feb. 28.
MUSIC:

·' The

Dii!Ur

Di~MmiDna

of MeaiDero:

eo,..

po•er, Tlu!oreticilln. Teacher and Per. fortMr. Muaie Library, Beird Hall.
throuch Thlll!'iay, February 28.

POETlY EXHtiiJ•

MINORITY CAIEEI PROCJaAM,•

Labor Marltet Workshop and ReuUw,

233 Norton, noon-4 p.m.
nu .1$ the final 'workshop leading to' a

sored by the University Placement and
Career Guidance Office.
FOml COUOQUIUM•

Topic to be announced, Prof, B. Rosen-

. berg. Michigan State University, 5 Acheson, 4 p.m.
COMPUTER SHVICES SEMINAR•

The B-ASIC LangUJllle (Version 2.1).
instructecfby Harvey Axlerod, 4238 Ridge
Lea. Rm. 10. 7-9 p.m.
This semina r is for the novice.
FILMS•

The Love Parade ('L ubitsch. 1929), 140
Capen, 7 p.m . This is Lubitscb's pioneering effort in the creation of a 80phisticated sc reen mu s ica l. With Maurice
Chewdi er. Jeanette MacDonald and I.illian Roth.
.
Gold DiBgers of 19~ (Berkeley, 1935),
140 Capen. 9 p.m. With Dick PO?Iell.
Adolphe Menjou, Gloria Stuart and Alice
BrildV. Songti include: .. Lullaby of Broadway," "I'm -Going Shopping with You."
and "'The Words Are ·in My Heart. "
Both films " "' free.
PSYCHOMAT•

A listening and learning
232 Norton , 7 p.m.

expe~ence,

THURSDAY- 28
CONTINUING D£NTAL EDUCATION#

AppU..d Anatomy .of the Head and

Neck, De. Thomas W. Mumane, associate dean .and associate professor of o"ral
surgery, Tufts University, Capen HaU
Dental ainic, 8 : 30am. -4: 30 .p.m. Continued tomorrow.
Dr. William S. Feag&amp;ru~. dean, and
professor of anatomy. U/ B School of
Dentistry, will also lecture during this
two-day meeting
PSYCHOMAT*

A listenine: and learning experience,

232 Norton, 3 p.m.

ol'~t!= ~ynu.s=.

l..anpton Ruches. Leroi J onea, ana
Claude McKay, Poetry Collection, 2nd
ftoor balcony, Loc:kwood Library, 9 a.m.5 p.m., through February 28.
The aU-inClusive nature of the col-

~~~ia~= ~~::..~tJ!on~~

draft of Ruches' Ballad of Harry Moore,
Japane9e translations of hia poems,
scores of his poems set to music. and
scripts and programi of his plays. .
Worksheets for three poems by Gwen-

~T'wo~bh=i..~: ~~~~~~!;~

Amiri Baraka) are also featured in the
exhibiL
UUM EXHIIIJ•

Native American Indian Arts, an es.-

hibition representing 13 I o c a I Indian
artists from the Onondaga, Tuscarora,

Seneca and Narragansett reservations,
g;onery 219, !'lorton, through February

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS IN1'DVIEWS

Throughout the semester. · on-campllll
interviews will be conducted for-students
who are interested in attending graduate
schools or obtaining employment. Fur-

ther information and appointments for
interviews can be arranged throuch the
University Placement and Career Guid·
once Office. Hayes C, 831-4414. 'The following agencies will be inteM.ewing this

week:
TlltlBSDAY-21: Weotingbouoe Electric
Corp.; GTE Sylvania, Inc.: W.T. Gr&amp;nt

Co.; Xerox Corp.
PlUDAY-22 : Xerox Corp.; U.S. Anny
Material Comm.: Easbnan Kodak Co.;
Abraham &amp; Strauss.
MONDA.Y-25• Consumer Value Stores.
TuESDAY-26: Eu.on Corp.
WEDNaiDAY-27: Exxon Corp.; Ideal
Electric &amp; Manufacturing Co.; Texaco,
Inc.
THUBsnAY-28: Texaco, Inc.; Rell:ance

:~~:;~!f::O=ceWCo. Insur-

CAC filM••

Rebel Without a Cause, 140 Capen, 7
and 9 p.m. Admission: 75 cents.
James Dean classic.

NOTICES

LIFE WOIKSHOP*

COUNS&amp;JNG

. Dynamics of Human.

Sexuolit~oup­

l ;r&amp;ll and .Uncoupling, Faith and Peter

Lehenbaum.. supervising counselors, Student Counseling Center, 231 Norton, 7
-·

A discussion on marriage and other alternatives by couples of various socio-

Kidney Specialist
On-Academy Progr{lm
A specialist on kidney diseases will
be tbe speaker at the Buft'alo Academy
of Medicine · meeting, Weilnealay,
March 6, at 5:30 p .m. ill tbe Farulty

Professional oounael.ina is available at
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
appointment, call 836-4540.
CUOJT UNION MEETING

The State University Credit Uni011 will
bold its annual meeting on Wedneoday,
February Z7, at 12:16 p.m. in the Moot
HaU Dining Room of State Univenity
College, 1300 Elmwood Avenue. The
agenda will include election of board
members and reporta from the preU.dent
:!~~urer. AU membe_p are urged
TAilE TlNNIS TOUINAMEHT

•

A US'ITA-oanctioned table tennia

tournament -will be beld on Satmday,
February 23, in the Norton Union reo-

~;..n""f;."J!~:!.: :!i J!:

~:,~gr~
olocY. ·Cbildnm's
tal·- Medical
and s.

eventa for 811 Ieveli of playe!O. Partici-

Medical School

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COI'Y DEADUNE

Center, Boston,
Burt Wolbedl ~ at

Dr. MClCiusby, ~ c:ba1nnan
o( tbe J)epartaatt of PatholocY at tbe
~!" ~ =..~the·
U/B Scbool of Medicine, ia lr:Doom
.,._.,.,..,. w......
~
IIIIOba to iDbale ibe reaiduee of this . Woddwide far ... ~ . . . . ill
studiee of tbe relallaalblp fit the .....
cpwlhwble pleuurel"
IIIUIIe .,...... to JddDey cJ--.
Tbl8 hint offered to "lmObra
'lbe IIII!J8Iinlilr Clpl!ll .., all ..........
wbo williJII. to breU away . from
tbe ....ty ~: c.ry - t ...tobeil" .
indmdliala.
.

...!'.

J

.LS..:.:;

p.m .

March 1 is last Day for Adding Co~:~rses

March i is the deadliDe for addina
studl!nta to eouraes, Charles H. V:
Ebert, University desit of Ulldergrad.uate education, reminded. the campus
community this week.
.
•
Ebelt also appealed fo&lt; individuals
to refraiD from IIIDOking in classrooms.
0n the ~ close-out, Ebert

TI"OUI&gt;Ie in l'tuvdUe .(Lubitoc:b, 1932) '
and On Approual
~). 140
Capen. 9 p.m. No
· · cbaqe.

Minority Career Day in March, spon-

Ass1stan£e of,Faculty Is Sought
·In Drawing up Coll/e ge Charters ·
Faculty vohm-.. williDg to aaaist~
tbe Colleges m'preparing and QrelieDting their propc-.1 c1&gt;arters lor the
approval proceoiB lll8lldated by the
recently-adopted ReiChert Prospectus
are bemg IIOUiht by Professor Jaoob
D. Hyman of tbe law ' Scbool.
• tioos f ~-~-Is ·
· ·
S ug~
or Douucu m ~
wbo DUgbt be ab"! to serve m this
capacity are alsO being sought; Hyman
ssid in .a· recent IJII!IDO to full-time
faculty. .
· .
Tbe Cbaiterii1g opemtion is tbe. key
eleJiiefttill'tlie- ~-Hyman
noted. "AU c:ollegea, including tbe existing .ones, .must preseDt a detailed
plan o1 proposed operatiolls c:overing
their organizational setup and .stalling
and also, of course, theu educational
goals and plans," 'lbe . continued ex-

-·

~ma~r_:~~t.~~

letin board in Norton.

For everyone's conWnience and pleasure,

we like to publicize all events taki111 place
on campus. To record Information, com.ct r
Nancy c.nsa..an, ext. 2228, bJ MOnday
•t noon for lndlllion 11&gt;- tho
Thunuy laue.

fol_,...

�----·

-.....-~----.....Open on1J ID •Open 1D pubic

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

' In the 8lllllect
••Open ID ........ of the - . . ,
~ Nalley - . 131-22211, tar - aDd Eue&amp;diue Suiu, 146 DiofODdorf, 210 p.m. Admiooioa: 711
4:20 p.m. No edmiooi!'fl cbarp.
CAINAYA&amp;.•
_,

a .,._... -

MONDAY-25

'

sta.

~ON

will~:~~=.

-APKYSICAl

EXPlANATION•

·

R~t~rent:e and Truth, Prof. E . B. AJ.
Iainl, Univenity of Teua, 4244 Ridge
Lea, Rm. 14, 3: 30 p.m.
. .
~ted by the Deparlment of Phil-

oooJiby.

•

•

CIIAbuAii iKnAL•

'

lNOINIBING SCilMCt SIMIIWI.

•

The EtwironmellltJl Coou of Prod&amp;U:ii&amp;B
El«trie Powu, Dr. 'K. ~ CadY.
uaociate profeaor of apfJ!ed aDd eD· .
~!:;;,,'!.:''•~~· Comell niversity,104 '
Dr. Cody will dioeuao tbe ....ta .......
ciatecl with the mining, bumill&amp;'. -porting aDd reprocessing of fuels.
PIIMI'

Interview with Allende~ a documentary,
and What i.6 to be Done1, a featurefilm, 147 DiefeDdorf, 8 p.m. No

Jeoctb

•d;£;;,!oru..,.~··color)

r:=

a Bru:iliul beD&amp;! from Rio do ............
=~~orion, 8 p.m.-dew~\, No

by

MU:hael jlndriaa:io, claooical J!Uitar
otudent of Oowald Rantu&lt;ci, will peifonD
•• worb by GiuliaDi. Guerau, StaD, Beob,
aDd otbe~ .Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Noadmiooioo~
. ,
·
UIIAa .....
D~r

=-~

=
•

(Millua, 197sj, Confef!IIICO
ohoweaoe for

.!!:'.::,.

.S~arren Oalo!e, Ben ,......_
aiid Clodi Ceiichman ao "'n&gt;e ~
Red."

were ~~uced

by Sol Landau on loc:ation in Chile in
1970.
-

s~a':1!'6.
~~~te=J:::l
Studiea..
CAC FilM..

A Warm December, 140 Capen, 8 and
' 10 p.m. Admiasion : 75 cents.
·
· Starring Sidney Poitier.
UUA.I FILM ...

19i~: t~r:r.':!.~~.;~:.~ ~!':to~

check showcase for times. Admiss ion
charge.
THEAll! PIESEHTATION•

&amp;roh B. Divine, by· Tom Eyen, Har.
riman Theatre Studio, ,8 :30p.m., through
February 23. Admission charge.
For details, see Thunday listing above.
~

UUAI COFFfiEHOUSE•

From the Buck 'n Wing Mu.icitin's Cooperative, featuring Mik~ Allen, J&gt;.laying country and western blues and ragtime, •
and Bob Franke, singer and aon.gwriter,
ls-t 6oor ~eteria, Norton, 9 p.m. Admission charge: ·

SATURDAY -23
CONFBIHCl ON METAPHYSICAL

IEXPI.ANATION•

How to RuciU Fact•. Prof. H. -Hoc&amp;0

~~ ~R:,~ ~a~e::,'\it~~~

10: 30 a.m.
Preoentecl by .the Department of Philooopby. • .
woMbrs IOWUHO•
New Yorit State&gt;Cbampioaobip; Norton La.-, 11 a.m.

IV-•

UtB w. Bryant aDd Stntton, Clark
Hall, 2 p.m.
..

FJ;tiDAY -22 ·

---·

-~

COWiilllcl-oot
Tile 'Gillm' GJtd H- to TaJre i t &amp;1,__ 011 P"---1 OJuol.

Some

OIY, Pnf.

i. ........... 1'-tw

CM:-·
w-

»-tnkr, r40

Oab

-a-.~ ~. ·2:ll0 p.m.
- ~'-:"'teclbythe~tof . ~

:.t

a.-, a 81011

Emil '0' eft~~ the . . . . . . , _ . . lie llllplnl the U / 8 -

.......
,._,a..... a...-...z.--

---~~~--Aooill, , _ , 1111111t.
n.VJa- AIIIDciiiiiM; In . . . . . . . UAW Yea~ 1171, lo .......
tD
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ID the U/BfuiiiL , _ . . . .
. . - . - - . . . . - • tile ......... Cllllee, 121 J...e

..........

�</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1383968">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451234">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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                <text>Reporter, 1974-02-21</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383948">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383949">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383950">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383952">
                <text>1974-02-21</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Format</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383954">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383955">
                <text>en-US</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383956">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383957">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
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                <text>v05n20</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383963">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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                    <text>taff Senate
Ur~s - NTP .

Care r Plan
A-~~­

U/It~
tolli
hllldecll;i
~a-:·

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- wllhlil
l;lja:'OikiNf 1be ~
......
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Sid
~
. 'l1a......
JIS8
...n!MMIQ llllt
to 8DIIIIpt .. ~ embocly-

"l1lundq

1111 ellllil••

• • • a.-mteee
...... I« ........ .

~flail

c.MCJbllilir .-d em to assica "fkat '~ IDr u. Jaipleaallation .to. a-daB' .,.. tile ~
of the ~ _ . . . . paaltion.

- an~=~~

~=~

..the
• •
Pullda araat piOinllll; •
bepn 1111 iDqDlry Ulo WhetbW or the job eYBiliatlaa
''morale" ~ . _ , NTP8; ad
lllPd a ban .., re~eaae by the
sity of personal infannlllio!l about
NTPs without individual C0118811l
Tbe .,.,_. development PJOtll'811l
1Jrop&lt;ll!lll was part of a 25-pqe final
report fmm the Career"Mobility Suboommiteee (the full text of which will
be carried in a future issue . of the
Reportq).

s-- - __.

um--

T- Olljec:ll.-

.

Tbe plan bas twin objectives: first,
to proVide 1111 !'PP"rtunity for employees '"to develop their present pro!81111ioaal akills, J1011Uire new ones "and
to explcn, evaluate and plan realistic
ca""'r. paths;'' and, second, to eruicb
and lltn!nlthen the University "by
piMa ellective 1188 .of employee slrills
tbrougl} bettet matching of interests
lllld tsll!nts to positions, by ~ -!'C"""" to jn(ormation
to aviallability
of llkilled pei'IIOiillel in various ac:a~ and administnotive
aDd
ililiilpitblw·..,_":::. c1e.
to m1!llt the DliecJa' cJr'"IIOtb 4be
indMdiJ61 lUid the fll8titutlaiL" ~ "spec:ific_ actioos ...., recom-

as

"

~

~~

• llow chart specifyiD.g
the carep-patbs (-"'a-of positional,
education and tmi1tinl experiences)
leading· to high-level NTP position~;.
2. Develop specific c:areer ladderS indicating a es1es of latera! and vertical
moves pc&gt;Mible from· NTP positions.
3. Initiate annual · ll!88lings between eacb NTP and his 0. hlir superl!isor to discuss and evaluate the individual's ·c:areer progress and, if desired, to develop c:areer plans for the
following· year and years.
~- Develop a skills bank to: (a )
facilitate optimal matching of personnel and positions; (b) identify areas
of strengths and 'weaknesses Jn personnel fi!80IJJ'C88.
. 5. Refine the SUNY State-wide
open posting system to improve interand intra-unit· dissemination of information about available NTP positicms. .
6. Provide release 1ime and/ or reimbursement of tuition to N'l'Ps io
attend courses which will contiibute
to their professional devel~
· 7. Identify, f011ter and iiDtiate programs of intemships and feii&lt;&gt;WIIIlips
for """'uate students and NTPs to
prov1de opportunities for the development of prof81111ional pereonnel.
8. Establish workshops and/ or
courses designed to: (a l teach NTPs
how to plan their ca.....rs more effectively; (b) familiarize supei-visors
and managers with the importance io
the individual and the institution of
career and · human l'l!llOUI'&lt;le planning;
(c) inlloduce or jnlprove supmW!ory
. t.ecbniques,· (d J lntmduoie .ar.inlprove
other opecillc skilts
•Some of theie have already been
initiated," the repolt notes; "scine
Mad· modillcatim· aome need to be
~ (Coftlillued .... _ : 6, coL 2).

-

, _ - - - ,.._ "UnlwNlty
o;uu.ca
t,. _,..... far minority and

.. ha ..__, calle!IJor ID-

e!.,- M 1 p.m. In the l'lllmol8 "-'&gt;, Nor·
""" by a campuo C O i l - et.cdtilnc
ibalf • "a broad .....-..ell
and.

8f0Upa."

By
PATRICIA

W~

'-*

BIEDERMAN

For·-iliree ;.;;-~ts ~roin Rachel Carson Co1Jei1e have been battling
for clesner air in Erie County. Tbeir

=.

tl'l-* · ~~!he.~m·

r=

~"'1J;-

sound legislation passed in recent
yean;. Emission-&lt;lOntrol devices were
beirig i(ullalled .in plants throughout
the COmity. Only ltie ook..:OVeils re{
mained unchecked; belching into the
- air enormous quantiti'lS of poisonous
· rjuJfJlr ~ !1114 1\~ero':.'~· air-

~~~

can-

ci:"~....;:.::.t"Ut:'~-, titn ..

odds. ~ list month the: 1lrilt
. of lhl:ee- Bethlehem Steel- bowed
to tlie .pl'8IISUI'e ~ by t1uee generations of erologiailly-eware ·S tudents
and announced publicly that it was
budsef;ing $40 million for pollution
ooolrol The groundwork for this unlikely
victory was laid in the Fall of 1971
when .students in anRCC environmentsl action class, taught by College Cooniinstor Beverly Paigeri, turned their
attention to tbe laet uncontrolled
source of air pollUtion in the County,
tbe coke-oven operations"of Bethlehem
Steel in Lackawanna, Donnei'-Hanna
(partia))y owned by Republic Steel)
in South Bulfalo, and Allied Chemical
in Tonawanda.
By that time all the other major
p&lt;illuters in the area -had begun to
take steps to clean up the air as prescribed by new, more environmentally
-

have an increased likelihood of developing cancers of the pf06tate ana
etomach, as well as hing cancer..They
also fOUnd evidence in studies conducted in Pitlaburgh that coke-oven
woikers have 1111 extremely high rate
ofiUDf- and a.!UJl--~ver­
Gdll&amp;i-..

- ,... or

...u.

~'Willi ihfs ~ .........
of the law: a majot problem was the
mentation of the Mad lor better conla!V il.tl!Jif. fdisting -l!!gjslatjon.govemtrols, 1he students JobbU:&lt;f bard for a
ing coke-oven emisSions .allowed 1evels
new, tougher law. The ..,1 comof pollution even }!~eater than those
panies, they knew, would argue that
already darkenin:g the skies. And
better control was imP068ible, given
whenever tbe State tried to toughen
current technplogy. _So tbe students
its law, as it did periodically, tbe ·
set out to prove that- better doritrols ·
steel companies, which use coke in
were possible. LitUe was known abbut
their blast furnaces, insisted that the
controlling coke-oven emissions in tbe
technology necessary to clean up coke . United States but good control had
production was simply not available. . been achieved by Germany and Japan,
the class discovered. So the class
This was tbe situation when · the
learned the technology for contrclling
RCC -claas adopted the: cause as its
air pollution produced by coke ovens. ·
own. The students were generally
When a public bearing aS to wuetber
aware of the health threat posed by
there should be a ne!V law was held .
air pollution , but, in class, they
in May, 1972, RCC students were able .
leamed the distressing particulars. Dr.
to ~fy knowledgeably as to the
Paigen, a biochemical geneticist arid
availilbility. of good techniques for cononetime cancer research scientist at
trol That summer a new, better law
Roswell Park:, directed them io studies
was passed.
which ~ that people living in
highly pollut¢ areas of the County
(Cont inued on {KJ8&lt; 6, col. 3)

Minor in Dental Education First in Nation
There is a new minor in denial education . for dentsl students at U / 8.

the School of Dentistry, tbe Faculty
of Educational Studies, and other departments in the University. Eleven
courses totsling 18 credit hours have
been recommended as electives. A
minimum of 10 credit boure are reqwred for the minor.
Coopeiating with Dr. Garverick and
the Dentsl School - in planning tbe
new program have been Dr: Rollo L
Handy, provoet of the Faculty of Educational Studies, and Dr. Marjorie C.
"Mix, assistant dean of tbe Faculty of
Law and Jurisprudence.

The new program is designed for those
who may wish to pursue an academic

.ca....,. and at tbe ssme time be a
·
general practitioner.
'"We may be the only derrtsJ ecbool
in tbe nation to have a' minor in dentsl
education," Dr. Norman D. Mobl said.
He· is associate dean for academic a!fairs and .professor of Oral medicine.
Dr- Charles M. Garverick, associate
professor in tl&gt;e · J)epartment of 'Be-havioral an&lt;f Relatacf Scieoces in the
School of Dentis'lry• ..is the PJOtll'8l1l
aa~. "'The minoi' in deiltsl educaticm· ia ~t becalme we, as dentaL. educators,
~ good
iMcbDgi
.....u.timuJate
a . -.in...,.
.......::
_ • _ _ " be.-.id . .. ~. ..
.

•-••••

-~

~· IIAu.y SET

" - ..uy -mini the~­
folelln _

Students Gain·Victory in Clean Air .Fig~t _.

• ..,_.. • • _....._

~-n

. .

. brf~ P!mled,.CJUl that he
will~ tlle.. J11'011111!l.IICCOI:'diDe ~ .............. &amp;cb dental

depa. . . . M a potaJiia!U. ff joint
illlls8lt fat~ clelitaJ tljUdell1L

_

'1111

21st Centuiy CUr.rtculum

~ - ROIIU'--- fonDa}

.. and-WioWual ...... in.

·.

·.

Tbe , _ dental education · minor,
School ......,__,_,_
. anotbe ete
............., say, IS
r
p
'"in providing a flesitile curriculum for
today's st:udesita wbo .will be~
ticins in the 21st century.: • The .
Senior Elective Propam for dents\
atudeplil was introduced for the flrat
time at U/B in the .;,.;ne of ""'0.
Tbe ·dental edticatian ~ ii a~
cmd Step. . .•
"We- believe 1heee curricu1uin in-tioas will -..-t the daaaDds. 01.

..

&lt;do.tai~~!Jithe~~-

The trend in dentsl practice today is
for two or more general dentsl practitioners becoming collective partners.
In this type of group practice, one of
the partnec; may favor one aspect of
dentistry (e.g. root canals) , while another ~er may do more of the
pf06th!lics for the group. 'I'hls &lt;:oncept
does not negate the need for special- ·
ists in dentistry," Dr: -Mohl said.
He further explained that this type
of group practice tor partnership)
should keep costs down to . the consumer apd assure better patient care,
while allowing for more flexibility ""d
consultation.
The last- year of Dentsl School is a
simulation of the actual practice of
leneral dentistry for the studeiiL• in
the \] /B Dental Clinic. In addiiJon to.
clinical skills, clinical judgment is alooemphasized. With !aclilty •upervi'iion,
students tire responsible for complete
diagnosis and treatment planni.ng, as _
well· as the evaluation of the rcsullo;.
"Gnduating a -'ificd IICJICf1ll
practiticmer is still the goal of OUt
dentsl school," Dr. ..Mobl.ooncludcd.

�2

SfJNY ~nate Asks Low Fees,
·Improved CTad StUJfy:Access.
a-· •• ea~~~a~ · .. ......,...
holaiDi
umv.at\r"'=
::1~~
":..
~SUNY
........ ~ llftiiiUII.
llle.IIDII on public

be

CXIIitfioued-.
~for..,._
mtbe rub a1. inalruclo&lt;, --.u

tiN

and...=t

::i."f:-'~~~

servia~

'prior
cndi1 policy' abOuld be
made more 8exlble .net neaotiable on ·
a&amp;
Buvh.......,.. Sci, a cue baoia, perhoops at- the time of
in~ ,.,_
appoin-LR-w .au'!"~
181117 1-11.
.
to ,a-at Up lo threll
.AiiaaaiiDI to a repw l ........, by
cmdilil but-UJIIIIUII presidents Would
.181111!1 IL Blackbunot, PieQe B. Hart .
be authorized to nesotiate Ibis with
aad lUchal"d A. 8ilplllqw, stftiY
each newly-appcilaled member of the
Senator&amp; from Ibis _,..., . . at-1""
colletle faculty . .. ·. .
.-bly al8o 1 - ' -..bdiolli _..,;
· " ... While _.vina the possibilto 8eaale Uld ...
ity o( an inftial appi&gt;illbnent on ten~ from ChaqceiJor ~
•
we at.._ the seniclr mriks, the time peln its paduatetile
riod after which tenure is JD8I1datorr
Senate • • """ -lerl 'CU. the 0 . .
should be extendedJrom three to four
coUar t1..t I!IICb campus be arpd to
years at 1ho&amp;e ranks."
·
IIIOIIIIiDe the merits o( loeal require" ... A program of retraining memments II8ICilded with paduaCe ~bers -9f the faculty to equip them .to
tion to delamiDe boor ·tbeae requue&amp;eJ:\'1! ilf other, though not neoessanly
unrelated fields,
for bQnorable rementa micbl be fulfillea by Chooe'
wboe c:imJmala""'"' would !!reclude
assignment to interdiscipllnary teach-,
or iahlbit auollment in ~ . proing and research should be developed .
......,. wt.. suc:b regulataons are
Through the use of ~ad leave
MrictiY enforced.•
for retraining or through special study
Reapoading to - t ~ l&gt;Y.
leaves, -.faculty members wbQ find
the ~ Qwmnjoojon to sbarply
_ themselves"m departments where. en·Typical of tho .................. of ~ rnol!i"l of - ·
inl:rease tuition for public mlleps and
rollments have pennanently declined
amlcs - l n tho c-11w c..tt Cenl8r In Norton's-.
universities, the Seame wled tD "rea&gt;uld be restored "to full productivity.
..-t.- _
.
The
ject ..,_, JIIOPOI8( t1aa1 would limit
" ... A final facet of Ibis issue reCroft Cent8r his contlnulftll ~ ln ' hancl bulldlnc. as
bjpaer educational oRiartunllies to
lates to the matter of retirement in
well as In
throwi1J8.. CaH 831-3546
the "'""""""'lly privilo!led." and "de\·the University. We may w_.ish to mnfor-IlL
plore any JIIOPOI8( that would undersider the possible reduction of1 the
mine the 10Bfs and objectives of inpresent mandatory age for retirement
stitutions originally established JO&lt; the
of faculty from 70 to 65. In addition,
purpose 01 making education accessiwe may wish to give serious considerhie to J&gt;I'OP)e whO cannot pay high
. ation to the development of an early
tuition cbarps." ...
retirement plan which. ·)&amp;'Oul&lt;J. . make
~· ParitJ
• .
•
attmctive withdmwal from State Unanoted, ''Police have often fought reDo poucemen's tmions have any ef. Turning to affirmative action, the
versity employment as early as
55
view boards and other mechanisms
fect on the way police departments
SUNY Senators urged the University
or 60." . ·
·
by which non-police personnel have
te?
and.the,qralll!ctive bargaining .agent to
"The Humon Equollon'.. .. :
,-.• ••. . · . ·, !''g~pben c. ·JWpem; asslstlmt pro-~
meaningful influence in the. · depart~upon ''early and sel'ious~eg&lt;&gt;'
. Boyer said SUNY must continue to
menl They want the same closed syslessor of politiad science, has fo~d tia~ and [rea_ch an] agreement to
look for ways through which effectivetem that such professional groups as
't hat they do.
·
attain salary panty for all employees
ness creativity and development can
doctors and lawyers have for intemal
For .his doctoral dissertation, Halof ~~le duti!"', hack!l'""und and
be ~ fqr non·tenured faculty,
iegulation.· in' 9oine 'C86es, a· departpern 1examined police employee or. training; m compliance W!Ur Federal
. as well as· for those- on
\iJ\uing &amp;P'ment wil use the police association to
sanimtiana in Buftalo, Philadeli!.hi!&gt;i
.
and ,State guidelil\es." ·A secol)d n;sopointirlent- He ~:Ciuded b.)l emphahelp fight outside review or interfer·
•and- Baltimore 1o .find 'Out' boW: .UCla·
!. lat.illol.~~~~r . " t•
sizing lhat "we must remain sensitive
ence. In Philadelphia, for example,
organizations affected the adminisb'auiiift d"'lill Jilllniiiit.... """""
r on
to the human equation - we are talk- , .. tiQn 1\Pd. operation. of 'the poliO!'. ~e: ·
the ·lpca) lodge of. the -Fraternal Order
each ~
ing lloth abOutr the well-being 'Of lhe · pattrbents. He"chose these lfuee caties
of Police was instrumental in stifling
the
civilian review board in that city."
because
the
organizations
in
each
var~~'f"~ · =t.!l
~on' "j'd.. the careers of wellied in strength. Philadelphia has the
Symbolic Conflict
from new units or of additional SensOn
~pies · Boyer· endorsed
strongest union, with 99 per oent of
Halpern suggested that symbolic
- tors .from. ~g units. n,ot .exceed
regularizing : begm;.ing ·and ' terminllthe force organized. Bulfalo's organconftict will often take place between
three )'ears Cm, ~. to provade. a!"
tion dates for SUNY units rather than
ization, the Policemen's Benevolent
department and union leaders to make
propnate _staggenng of terms Within
moving toward a single overall calenAssociation (P.B.A.), is at the midit look as though the union is not
any ~tuent pouP) and that the
dar; noted · that the 1974-75 budget
dle level, and Baltimore has the weakunder tbe t bum b of managemenl
~tive Comm1t1Be, eve'! five years,
"seems to have provided sufficient
est group, with only 70 per oent of the
"Both groups have to answer to the1r
!""""W the ~I pattern of Sena!nrs
funds to regularize programs for forforce belonging to the city's two policeconstituencaes. The police association
m ~ constituent group and adJUSt
eign students;" announced a policy
men's ·organizations.
leaders are sensitive to charges that
tenns. m order to ~ they are ap,
providing open access to library reHalpern found that despite tbe difthey aren't doing enough for the men
propnately staoered! wath no term to
sources on a State-wide basis, extendferent levels of strength, the three
who
elected them, and police adminelceed three years.
·
ing library privileges on each individgroups sbowed more similarities than
isb'ators wish to project the image
T.,...
ual campus to all members of the
differences in terms of their impact on
that
they are seniing the public by
Boyer's remarks to the Senate cenUniversity community'; said be "was
departments.
working to eliminate inefficiency and
tered primarily . on tenure and were
pleased with the six per oent increase
One of the major changes to occur
waste
in the departmenl So they need
beaed ·on a draft statement on that
for faculty and NTPs ( 4o/. across-theas a result of the unionization of po.
this symbQlic a&gt;nftict to show their
subjeCt circulated in advance of the
boanf and 11,4 merit); supported the
!icemen was the bresk:down in what·
mnstituencies
that they are doing the
..-ing. Noting that the number of
merit 'COncept; noted that management
Halpern terms the "military ethos" of
job."
fsculty on tenure within SUNY is inconfidential employees received five
police departments. He explained,
Aa:ording
to
Halpern, unionization
ciesslng four per cent per year and
per oent across-the-board; described
''Police deparbnents have traditionally
was fostered by, and a lao contributes
that continued rapid increases in Jl!"':·
the 1974-75 budget as "tight but not
been run in a quasi-military manner·
tbe
professionalization
of police.
to,
centsges a&gt;uld restrict future opporpunitive;" noted a significant decrease
the men wear uniJonns, there is a
''The push tOward proft!llli9nalism in
tunities for younger faculty, women
in SUNY fuel and electricity ussge
distinct hierarchy on the force, and
early
1960's
was
precipileted
by
tbe
and minority group memhersjust now
despite a seven per ce~;~t increase in
there is a strict authoritarian strucentering the field, the Cbancellor ofspace last year; and reported that
ture. But the introduction of collective
~con~:,...abQut~
fered these nine considerations:
SUNY applications are down 15 per
bargaining has begun to dissolve this.
ri'i:tts of suspects, ~ campus
·'"!be State University of 'New York
cent but that budget enrollment tarManagement bea&gt;mes a bilateral prodisruptions, and protest against the
sbould . . . -mm. its commitment
gets will be mel
.
cess, and police departments can no
to the principles o( tenuie. . . . :
Vietnam war. 1be police were asked
longer be run ·in an authoritarian fash"No specillc and absolute. quota
to perform sensitive and diJiicult tasks
ion. Police organizations noW have an
ceiJ.inc sbould be placed on the bumin these areas and often, aa in the
impact on the decisions a colllllli&amp;tier of tenmed fsculty in the sysdioordeis at the 1968 Democratic Nasianer makes."
tem.' .••
tional Convention, they were roundly
Chinks In Solidarity
". . . U ·w;, ~ject a quota system,
criticized for their performance. This
·Another result of police unionizaThe Department of Philosophy will
we then · m~ stress still more vigorcriticism
led to efforts to upgrade detion noted by Halpern is the developsponsor a Conference on Metsphysiad
partments. by imp .
facilities,
&gt;USly ·the .,..,Cess of tenure review to
ment of cbinl&lt;s in b'aditional departExplanation, Friday and Sattl'rday,
.......e that continuing appointment in
equipment,
and aalari~ by' getFebruary 22-23.
mental sol!darity. For: ·a number of
the University is extended only to
ting better trained and educated men
. . Prof. E . B. Allaire, University of ' resson&amp;-tbe kind of bouts policemen
on the force."
·
those who have demonsb'ated great.
work and the sometimes unpleasant
Texils, will presen~ tbe first Confercompetence an&lt;l whose future perfor- ··
jobs they have to dc&gt;-:-police departence paper, Friday at 3:30 p.m. in
Although first attempts tQ. unioruze
manoe can be reasonably expected: to
ments have always been cloee-lr:niL
Room 14, 4244 Ridge Lea. His topie
police OCCIIlled after World War I.
beyrofessiQnally excellentPolice unionization has foatered more
Will he "Reference and Truth."
the idea took hold 11106t firmly .in ·t he
. . . Criteria and proosdwe fD&lt;
&lt;At 10:30 am., Saturday Professor
of .a ''management-labQr'' copcept be1960's; ffi!lpem" said. ''Police lilamed
tenure on all campuses should be
H . Hochberg, lJniversity 'Of Minnesofa, . men of the--force and the ~acimini&amp;­
I r o m the militant example of tbe
·clearly set forth and the slandards
b'ators, which breaks down solidarity
will deliver a paper on ·"How to Resyoung - l e , minorities, women and
should reflect both profes&amp;iona) OQJDu.· a certain eztenl
·
cue Facts;" and at 2:30p.m., .Professor
Vietnam proteslonl and came to conpetence and institutional reqUire· This breakdown is not ao great thel
J:.&amp;senbeq will discuss, ''The 'Given'
sider themselves an aggriewld minorments..•.
It cancels out what Halpern sees a6
ity- that had lio flgbt for rilbts. In tbe
"Each CDIIeae should aillo prepare
a third result o( o~tion : the al1960'e,. policla fought bani to organize,
nn anafysi&amp; of its cunent and pro~
liance of police admililstrators l!lld
urday sessions !I!" schedul~for the
to win legal dglibl, and to establis!&gt;
lt"Yel o( fsculty stallinJ and estimate
union leaders to continue Uld perhaps
a Viable berpining
· "lion. Now at
~~ Faculty ~ub in.
the relationship between tenured and
even incnaae the police ~t's
is accepted that ~can o~
non-tmured faculty dun.. the . sixiSolation from"1he oiinmlumty.
ReceptiOns are planned for those
and bargain; ~y~lice bad .to
Yt'llr period, 1974-1980. •. .
This is true, for eDDiple, in the case
attending the Coofenmce on Friday
'1M present seven-year nale should
~ Saturday njpta. •
.
• of ciYilian teview boanla. . Halpem

Replar
Faculty1Miale

years-......,.,

=a

and

,_

Craft Center

....,Is_..... . . - - ....

bale- -need-

Police ·unionization Studied

aa

DEte'&amp;k=·

J:::'

S'

Philosophy Slates
Metaphysics Talks.

=.~-~~~

::::e~~~

�fl~

3.

J4, JP74

sUrvey Samples;

Booklet Planned
On lnfornaation
For Graduation
Plaal"plaDe
caoD-

Drug Pricing
In Area Stores

b tile 1974 UIB
...., ......... . _ -iled Ia.

w-

The
New Yod&lt; Public Interest a-rch Group (WNYP!RG),
a U / B ltudent organization, baa oomplel&gt;od a 8U""Y of pres.criptiaD cb:ua
pricee at pbarmaciee in the U.u-.ity
area: n.e survey unclertllla!n bDih
to sample price ftriatioaa ........

booldet wbleb pruvldea all _ . , .
IDf-*IDa ... paduate&amp; and will be
. avallable Ia tile Olfice
~
and Raxm~a at t11e ~or JMmt

or

~ bookliit ii.dkates that. paenl
mmnwDCW~W~t U!d

11 dlvioioDRI

pro-

~~lsiChed·
ulecl ... -n-~u. Mil;y 21. at 3 p.m.
in Buffelo'• .......w Auditorium.
CaDdidat.a will _.... at 2:80 p:m. -

~tr.:rv:.:ndl:si=-will p&amp;r-

ticipate,

·=.

Faculty .of Arts and

Letten;

.otofEciC:,*::;'!iMI~

aional Education ( lncllllliq ao.weu .
P.aik graduates, and graduate&amp; of the
blsic science ..__....._ts · of the
Schools of M.,.fici;;,D;,t&gt;stry and
Pharmacy);
Fai:ulty of Natw&amp;l Sciences and

Mathematic&amp;;

·

Faculty of Social Sciences and Adminialration (incllllliq the School of
Social Policy and Community Serv-

ice&amp;);

ana

•

.

Division of Undergraduate Education (Special MIQors).
. Graduat.a will include thoee receiving degrees in Sep!A!mbe&lt;, 1973, .
February, 1974, and May, 1974.
A rebeanlal.lor this commencement
will be held at 9 :30 a.m., May 21, in
the Auilitorium.
n...e divisions and schbols will
have separate commencements as follows:
SundDy, May 12, 3 p .m., .School of
Information and Library Studies. Auditorium, Buffalo and Erie County Public -X..bJ:&amp;l'Y-' r.
•.... • • • ' •
. ' .
Sunday, May 12, 7 p.m., School of
Nun;ing, Kleinhans Music Hall, Mary
Seaton Room.
.
'l'lwnday,- May 16, 8 p.m., School
of Dentiatry, KleiDbans Music ~.
Mary Seaton' Room.

.

Friday, May 17, 7:30 p.m., S!:hool
of Architecture and Environmental
Design, 291'l Main Street, Second
. Floor.
.
S41W'day, May. 18, 3 p.m., ·Faculty
of Engineering and Applied .Bcienoes,
Clark Hall Gy.mnasium.
·
, S41W'day; May 18, 8 p.m., School
'or Health Related Professions, Roewell Park -Memorial Institute Auditorium..

. S4turday, May 18, 8 :30p.m., School
of Management, · Kleinhans Music
Hall - Main Auditorium.
Sunday, May 19, 2 p.m., School of
Pharmacy, John Lord O'Brian Hall,
Moot Court, Amherst Campus.
Slllll(ay, May 19, 3 p.m., School of
Medicine, Kleinhans . Music Hall Main Auditorium.
Sunday, May 19, 3 p.m., School of
Health Education, Clark Hall Gym-

Isaac Bashevis Singer
•uthor 1ouc a..tA Slnaer .Ua from his worts In Norton'•
FilimonJ Room .got Wed.-.y u one of t11e hl&amp;hlighb of the Jewish
~- :w- -&amp;pl!fii;ONd by the U/ 8- Jewish Students Union. · •
·

.

sessiori:'dn 'P,ubli'c Accoimt'abrliiY-closes Minority Planning P~ogram .
'The Minority Group Planning Program, directed by the Oflioe of Urban
Mairs, ended with a three-day In'tegrating Institute January 29-31.
The January 29 activity involved an
all day workshop on the theme of:
" AccOuntability of 11\Jblic Servants."
The Norton workshop featured Mr.
Philip J . Rutledge, director of the
Office of Policy Analysis, National
league of Cities/ U.S. - Conference of

~'ifli'crs~:S:::~'b:.~rn!~an"J

'The M inority Group Planning Program was funded by the U.S. Depart. ment of Housing· and Urban Development and co-sponsored by · the New
York State Oflioe of Planning Services
and Erie County Division of Planning.
The program, which was in operation
from mid.July, 1973, until JanWll}' 31,
1974, was a pre-professional tralni.ng
experience for eight minO&lt;ity students
who were involved in · a work-study
program in urban planning. The student-fellows were participants in weekly academic seminars conoeming the
skills and theories of p(jmning and
maintained four months of internship
iri ·locsl planning and planning-related
agencies.
·
The rest of the final three-day
Institute inllOived summarizing the
learning experiences of the program,
viewing and discussing ·t he movie "Fu·
ture Shock," and . a critique of the
program by the student-fellows and
agency supervisors of the internships.

What Can Be Done About It?" Mr.
Rutledge's t a I k centered arowtd a
number of challenging questions that
he · encouraged the audience of students, University officials, and locsl
public servants to ponder for later
nashua
.
discussion: (1) Whether professional· S41W'day, June 15, time and place
ism in government can create more.
to be announced, Faculty of Law and .
public confidence; (2) Is there a realJurisprudence.
istic alternative in trying to modify
governments' goals and objectives in
· order to inqease accountability and
in~ty in the American system? (3 )
Forty-two U / B law student&amp; received
Is the manner in which se&lt;vioes are
Juris Doctor degrees at a special middistributed one of the major causes
year """""""'t, Sunday, FebruTwo mechanical engineering stu. of the lack of public confidence in
ary 10, at John Lord O'Brian Hall on
dents have won first ap.d second place
government? ( 4) Government has a
the Amberst campus. n.e commencehonors in an international ·metallotendency to build in disillusioruhent
ment was the first to be held in the
graphic uhibit competition.
by the way goals ate set arMI by its
Law School's new buildinf!.
Dennis Ca1farelli of Kenmore and
inadequacy in delivering and bringing
Mattbew J. Jasen, semor associate
Jay Hazra of West Bengal, India,
about' fulfillmenl
judge of the State of New York Court
both doctoral candidate&amp;, were awardof Appeals, was main speaker at the
n.e day-long workShop concluded
ed first prize for their entry, "Slow
ceremony.
..
with a panel discussion on "AccountSpeed Machining in a Sciuming Elec- .
ability in Planning," with Mrs. Gertron Microscope {SEM ) ."
~uf!;, ~'ij=· x=aenJ,~ aldine Memmo, executive director of
Sponsored by the International
and Robert Kot:n, president of the·Erie
the Buffalo Native American Cultural
Metallographic Society and the AmerCenter discussing " Community Par· Co u n t y 1lar Association, also adican SocietY for Metals, the competiticipation: Interest in Pleasure _ tion was entered by stUdents, faculty
dressed the graduates.
Graduate&amp; recognized {or achieveGroups;" .Mr:_ Ralp'! Barnes,. deputy
and practicing engineers from over
county executive, ErJe County, speakments included:the world.
ing on "Managerial Responmoility "in
Buffalo La.w Review members n.e two alao placed second in a
Terry DiFilippo, Linda J. Mead, - Planning;" Mr: Stuart Almomder assimilar competition especially for stusistant _planner with the City of BufGeorge B. Quinlan and Barry Taub.
dents with their entry, .,Behavior of
falo, Department of Community DeMoot Court o8ioers - Cyrus KloFree Machining Steel During Tensile
velopment, on the "Lack ·o f Precise
ner, Peter M. J8ll0ll and Thomas F .
Test Directly Performed in the SEM."
Methods, Goals and Evaluation in
Quinn.
Callarelli anii Hazra both received
Trial Lawyer Program Awards P!anninJi" and Mr. Rutledge discw!sribbons, certificates and prize money
George R. Blair, Jr., Michael G.
for the uhibits which were displayed
~t;"tf~~~t~.;
O'Rourke, John W. Park, Hugh B.
at an IMS Technical ConferenCe in
.Tile pane I was moderated b)' Dr.
Scott, Vincent A. Tobia, Maryann
Beverly Hills and at the 1973 Metals
Hswco, James Mcl.ecld and Richard
H. Ryan, Office of Urban Af:
Show and Materials Engineering Congreos_iri Ctiicago.
•.
•
Schisler.

law Commencement

Students Win Prizes

t:.

-arM! to00
ten randomly~
determine
if storee were ·
complying with a new federal J:'I!IIU)ation
. which
•
the poaling of a price
list of ~the most used ~
tion _drup.
S4oreo surveyed were: Lee's Drugstore, University Plaza; Henog's
Drugstore, 3168 Main Sl; Leader
DruPtore. 400 Kenmore-Ave.; Linroln
Park Pharmacy, 540 Niagara Falls
Blvd.; Dethurst Phannacy, 695 Kffi more Ave.; Varsity Drugs, 3378 P.1;Jey
Ave.; and Hi2hgate Profes.o;iorljl( l ' !&gt;armacy, 3435 Bailey Ave.
A!!OOrdinf! to WNYPffiG, all stores
had the pnce list posted.
Otl!er findings show that, on the
average, the difference between the
highest price paid for an item and
the lowest price paid for that item
is $1.49. 'naerefore, the group contends, "in many instances it would
be · profitable for the shopper to da
some price comparison between stores if be or abe is interested in saying
money. AS for price trends, most of
the stores surveyed had one or two
items priced at the top of their price
range, and one or two at 'the bottom
of the price' range. Herzog's Drugstore and Highgate Pharmacy were
two stores whose prices tended on -the
high side, while Varsity Drugs · hail
the most noticeable tendency · toward
lower prices.
"Consumers -must be . reminded,"
the WNYPffiG report continued,
"that the" prices of prescription drugs
may include the costs of auch llefVices

~::.~-=~~

• ... ~. ""'-~ Alao,
the jJrf&amp; llbDirrii &lt;Ill the ~· • cror-·
tain drug does not neoessaril reflect '
the price which would be psi':tror that
drug' in ll size 'and· quantity .different.
from that on the lisl"
Additional information is available
from Richard Futyn:&gt;a ·at .831-3218 between 11 am. and noon.

High Blood Pressure
Campaign Planned
High blood pressure is a silent killer
that stalks millions of AmeriCSllb every
year, It is the largest contributing
cause of death in the United States
today and most people who have it
either don't know they have it, or
more s eriously , don't do any thing
about il
The Lakes Ares. Regional Medical
Program, a federally-funded agency
concerned with improving the quality
of health care to all residents of its
nine county region, is undertaking a
massive informational campaign urging everyOne to have their blood pressure checked as soon as possible. Information warninj: persons of the
:lf;:'J;'i,~~- the dlSe&amp;Se will also. be
The Project, funded by the Region-.
al Medical Program, will work to support proposed screening efforts now
being conducted by such ,agencies as
the Heart Association and the Erie
County Health Department., It will
also provide the public with vital information on the disease itself and
ways to control it. T)le LARMP does
not actually do screening.
·
·
Dr. John R. F. Ingall, director of
the Buffalo-based LAR MP; ha• "'1nounced the appointment of' Mrs.
Eleanor Walker of Buffalo as coordinator of the Hypertension lnform.ition
Project in Erie County. Mrs. Wal.k cr
will coordinate public infonnation and
education efforts throughOut the com-

~~:ty,;f ~":.d~::au:!o::' !lf'.J.•r:~~~

Upstate Medical Alliarice, a group or:
·
black health professionals. ·
Persons or groups interested ·in further information or a .preseittation fm
high bloo.d pressure may contact MrK
Walker at' 855-1173 or 884-9078.

�"*-Y

14, 11174

WBFOPians
Womenis salute

Friday, March 8

Proximate Environment Class Into Design
J

. By SHARON EDELMAN'
· a ,;.,rking appreciation of wbat
R.,_.,_ sUJU
' · pline means to design. "All design,"
A 'clever ot memorable ·p""""-'tation · • he inSists, "is based on selectivity,
can make a bad idea look gOOcf and.a .' the removal of frivolouS distractions.
good idea look marketable. On the
Once a concept is reduced to its basic
other hf!nd. even the most innovative
·shaP.!!S, it may be perceived in an enooocep~J) are often diamiased. out of · , t.ift!ly fresh way . .All •sorts·of new pertiand &amp;imply because they ·d9 not genspectives suddenly ·become poeaible."
erate a spontaneous interes~
This concept is dramatized, be beThis is the tautological premise of
lieves, by
photograph he took last
the visual communications projects
year of a Johnson Park bo,me in the
now being conducted in the S&lt;:ho9l of·
Allentown district'of Buffalo'.
Enviro111be.nta'l. Design' by, Vincent
for a long lens has abbreviated..the dis"Buz" Miranda, a well-known area
tance between the tree and the-t-.se,
photographer and graphic artist, As
juxtaposing the structures and forms
a result, the studentS·in bis•Proxiinate
on the basis of a new perspective. The
Environment seminar hjlve begun, !o
pboto actually presents an !)ptical ildesign and construct an article· of furlusion of sorts: in reality, a sidewalk,
a street, and a large, ~Y mall sep· . niture and will attempt, at the semester's end, to package and market it
arate the structures by a significant
as well.
distance. Yet it is the perspective and
A recent faculty appointment to the
composition which communicate, and
School; Miranda is committed to 1he
which render the physical reality unconcept of visnal art 8§. a _universal
important.
.
' language with immeasui'able impact
Similarly, Miranda hopes to help
"'Design 8lJ:d oolor;' he contends, .,are
his students isolate and conceptualize
·the direct means by ,which human rethe forms they want to use in their
actions and emotions cannot only be
• ·
predicted but oontrolled."
·

a

The use

Principles •nd TechnokJcy of Design

The seminars essentially offer introduction to the principles and technology of design, with particular emphasis on the graphic representation of
architectural and environments] concepts. Miranda's personal and · commercial art serves to illustrate his lectures, and students are encouraged to .
participate in some studio work,
including instruction in drawing perspective and the preparation of photo=~- slide81 and thfe!Hii~onal
• The furniture project, Miranda
maintains, provides his students with

·--CiJrePORTE~
A . . . - - - . . . , . . .........,... ,.,.,._,
nm.icM oi v ....

. . . . ,..,......., lip

a.e

Jll.

. , ........_ Smtit U~ o1 N1'-* at llullalo, .Jn$
St.. Buii.Jo,
lf!Y' J112U. IUltorW ollie.. . . lot:aled ;n

a - 2U, 2.50 ,.,...,.._. A - (,.,__
- 2U7).•

..

a-a-IUifot'
.t. Wast"lSY ROWLAND
&amp;fitotr-itt-CIIiel

ROURT .f'. IIARL8TT
Arl . . . l'rod..:Uon
JOHII A.. CLOUTIER
'

~Uiu.

ioAf'RIClA WARD BIBD£RJIAN
w....u,.~adhc.

lfMfCY B. CARDAJUL.U
Comribufinl ArU.t
SUSAN lltl. BUROaR

furniture designs. ''Their first consideratiop/• he no_tes, "must necessarily
be U&gt;at.of functioi), but ~Y must also
understand tbat form cames an equal
importance and can never be saccifioed , especially in the case of multi· • purpose 1umiture designs/' .
_
Another group of students m Mmmda's Proximate Environment project
may develop a slide presentation l!lld
; ~onal . exhibit to oommunicate the eonoepts and objectives of
the Regional Medical Program. The
exhibit, mounted on aooordion-type
display boards, could be. used to disseminate progral!l information to users
of health services as well as to the
general pub!ic.
Tbe projects· are actually only a
small part of the academic work invalved in the Proximate Environment
course. Conducted on a team-ti!aching
basis, the program features guest talka
by experts in related fields, and is urider the direction of Scott Danford, an
environmental psychologist in the
School of Environments] Design_

University Faculty and StaH Share in·
local United Way OrganizatiOn Awards
The United Way of Buffalo and
Erie County has awarded $197,000 to
local hospitsls and universities, U / B
included, for medical research in 19731974.
Research ranges from the typical
test t_ube variety to field work in the
inner city to demonstrate proj&gt;er dents] hygiene, and also includes, among
others, studies on heart disease, cancer, stroke, cystic fibrosis and mental
retardation.
Three general grants totaling $24,850 were ·awarded to one researcher
- at Roswell Park Memorial Institute
and to two at U iB.
Here, an $8,700 grant went to Dr.
Theodore Herman, assistant professor,
medicine, . for a study. of "Hormonal
Regulation of Sodium and Water
Transport" .and a . stipend of $7,450
was awarded Dr. Peter Nickerson, assistant professor, pathology, for research on "Identification of Gonadotropbs in the Anterior Pituitary of the
Rat"
Nine clinical grants were ·approved,
totaling $48,470. Three went to· U; B,
two to Roswell Park, two to Buffalo
General Hospiial, one to Veterans Administration Hospital and one to the
State University College at Buffalo.
Recipients of the Uj B clinical'

gJ:aDts were: Dr. larry Creen, professor, orthodontica, $1,870 for "An IDvestigation of Dentsl Trait Abnormalities .in Cleft Lip andj or Cleft Palate
Propositi and Non Cleft Siblings;"
Dr. Miriam Meisler, assistant professor, biochemistry, $3;450 for reseaicl:l
on "Biochemical Basis of Human 8Galacto-Sidase Deficiencies;" and Dr.
Michael Reed, assistant professor, oral
biology, for studies on uRole of Delayed Hypersensitivity in Periodontsl
Disease."
Four full-time $6,000 fellowships
were given to ~ researtbers at
U / B and to one at Roswell Park.
· U/ B recipients were: Dr. Sarab
Camiolo, postdoctoral fellow, pharmacology and therapeutics, for ••A Study
of Bacterial Drug Resistance m West.em New York Hospitals;" Richard
Glenrion, for work on "Tryptamines
and Mentsl Disorders: A Structural
Activity Relationship Approilch;" and
Dr. Rustu Onur, research associate,
pharmacology and therapeutics, for ..,.
search into "Trophic Influence Q{
· Nerve Upon MU9Cie."
•
Thirty-three other U / B reseaichers
recei"ed $600 part-time fellowship
grants from United Way. Fifty parttime fellowshipa totsling $30,000 were
awarded in totsl.

On Friday! March S. WBFO'a bl'Ofldcast day wi I be devoted to women's
programmin' in reootlnitian of International Women'• Day .. Programming
will follow a similar format to regularly scheduled Friday fare; however,
each show will focus on women and
:will be produosd by women on the
staff of the station.
International Women's Day has its
roots in the American women's labor
movement. On March 8, 1875, women
garment-terlile wodws marched in
New York to protest their 12-bour
work day, low wages. 11J1d poor work. ing conditions. The women marched
from the working class area to a more
arnuent section of the city, where
police broke up the maJdt and arrested many of the women. In the 'Ill- ·
suing chaos, many women were
trampled.
On March 8, 1908, thousands of
women from the needle trades industry again marched in New York, demanding shorter hours, an end.of child
labor and the right to· vote.
In 1910, Cfarii Zeitkin, a German
socialist leader, asked the Sooond
International to recognize March 8 as
International Women's Day. The resolution was enthusiastically approved.
Last year, Erie County Executive
Edward V. Regan issued a proclamation declaring March 8 "WBFO International Women's Day," in recognition of the special programming broadcast tbat day. A similar proclamation
is anticipated for 1974.
The schedule for 'lfomen's Day
will include: women in jazz,at noon;
works by female compo8ef1' at 1 p.m.;
a performance of Gertrude Stein's
opera, "Mother of Us All" at 10 p .m.,
and "Women 'in the :Arts"' at· 10:30
p.m.
The regularly-scheduled "This Is
Radio" at 2 p.m. and "Present Tense"
-at 8 p.m. will consider such topics
88 Lesbianism, working women, women's "herstory,'' welfare mothers and
minority women.
· WBFO may ba beard at 88.7 on the
FM dial.

Christ-ian Science'
lecture Slated
"On the one hand there' -is a rejection of time honored religious ·concepts, but on the other, a great desire
to find God in a framework of new
concepts." This comment on current
f""lings toward religion, given by Harvey WoOd, C.S.B., a Cbristiarr Science
lecturer from Chicago, will be mare
fully explored in a campus lecture
next week Entitled "Grow We Must,"
the lecture will be primaril;y concerned
"with the widespread destre for spiritual growth, or which spiritual healing
is a natural result," the local Christian Sc!ence Organization indicates.
The lecture will be held Tuesday.
February 19, at 4:30 p.m. in 233
Norton. .It will be followed by a ques.
tion and fiDSWer period.
A native ol Texas, Mr. Wood is a
graduate of Tulane University. Prior
to entering the pub I i-c practice of
Christian Science healing m 1951, be
was a manufacturer's repri!sentstive
for a steel products company. His
visit to U / B will be part ol an extensive lecture-tour of colleges and universities.
"'

...,

.- Rape Conference
Sunshlni! _House, in cooperation
with the Erie County Citizens Committee A~ Rape, will sponsor a
day-long confecence on that topic Fri. day, February 15, from 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
~~H~
Church,

'I§fty Lutheran.

four separate workshops will be
conducted: education and seU defense,
~ina! justice; counseling and medIcal aspects of rape.
. The conference is open to the publ!c. an~ lll;Dch will be provided. PartiCljlllt:ing groups will incluile the
Buffalo Police Department, the U/ B
Legal Aid Clinic, 'and Women's Stud-l.es_College.

�America:

STA~NIVERSITY OF NEW YORK A! BUFFALO.

\ Impressions of
ANigeJian

U/8

. By IUSTIN OKORO UKPABI

I -.pled the olfllr to aludy m .the Uirlted
Statee wltli mba! feeliq&amp; For one thin&amp;. Amt!rica'a foNip libel ~c policlea have &lt;!YOired
diacordlmt voiCM from without her borden. My
muntry was 110 'emoption. On tbe ·one band,
the Un11ed Statee ia a nation from Wt-e
ecoaoadc )&gt;l&lt;lllperity, rule of law, arul parliamentary democracy otber nation&amp; could draw infpiration. On the ott. blmd, 8UI:b ~ squabbles
.. raclal riola libel •-""ation ol her promiuent
1--. do DOt podray ' - in' a fDOCI light. Besides, ~ - bar u a bully In ber inledma~&amp;
wilh the polltical aet up ir! the ~
world. However, ocie ~ act of lhe U.S.
Government libel people 8bmds out In m,v Dlind
libel ' - . ., to say, beclouded m,y I'I!II8IJDIDI. It
a_.., tbeq!fore, that I lake her critics' view
wilh a pain of salt. Tbe fact is that America
contributed more thaD any other nation towards
lhe aalvaclni of h--ilb'icken "Biafran". cbildraJ clurinl lhe Niaerian Civil War. I. happen
to come from that part ol lhe country; I am a
human. Shall I bile lhe ftngera fhat fed me? I
am a ·realist. Shall I mortgqe my oonscience
because I fed fl91R lhe "crumbs" that feU off
lhe IDiiater's table? ·
As a matter of fact, what meant most to me
was that I was c:omiitg to study in a country
that has taken great strides in scientific endeavors. Since science is my field. I nursed lhe ~
that I would be tapping scientific knowledge from
it&amp; true oource. I cannot deny that I alao came
here wilh what sociologists may te,rm a "latant
motive." My being bere and my daily intaraction with the American people would offer me
the soope to analyze. what her critics say of J:&gt;er.
I might not get all the facts, but I was sure I
would grasp a handful. Thank goodneas, I have
learned to make an objective """""""'ent· of 'a '
situation in which_ I happen 'to find myself.
'Stand with: Pne ~ If! .
,.
) J'
'
,; Tbot .JOinll-has.....,t ,!&gt;een IIOUIIh with me ~
my arrival in tbiellOUDtry."'My granny hed•bid
me goodbye wilh an old local proved&gt; before I
left home: "Son, like tJ:&gt;e chicken in a strange

land, atand in a toreign country just with one
loot." What she meant was that I should not
go knee-deep into the new 9'1ture around me
until I bad studied the people. I have writtan
her times without number to acquaint her with
my fascinationa about America. I· have writtan
about the priority the Americans give to the
:time element. In DI06t cultures time is an involuntary journey to which one must submit. The
average American, on ·the other band, attampts to
oonquer time or· atr least to bring it under control U be "111111!8'' time he will doubUeas try to
"make it up;" be tries to "be on time" or !Jettar
yet "to gain time."
·
. Words fail me in relating the extent to which
the American culture js iri&gt;bued with 'the ideals of
&amp;elf Initiative. · There is no hope bere for the
fatalist who has lost confidence in the ael£. It is
for this l'88IIOil that many studenls from well-todo homes 'p.eter to work and to -pay their own
way throuih oollege rather than !,&gt;ecome a ~
to th!!ir pan~~ta. There is the ·prevalence of mdependence libel Individual freedom in religionf!,
economica and political affaira. Every American
citizen is free to rise to the peak of his ability. at Jaist within the.lramework of lhe constitution.
I am Jll&gt;t -.yiDg- tbU then! are not people who
are 001111 in odler ~·s wheels. I prefer not .
to give it a racial interpretation. It is not that
I am shyjng away from a supposed bi.ttar trulh . .
Even in BOCieliea that are racially homogeneous,
lhere have alwaya been inBtances of people manIpulating others to get lheir own way. I don!t
have to stretch m,y neck to fuinisb examples.
My country is one. Our own problem rests with
tha diffmalt tribes that constitute what is known
asNiaeria.

....,,..,.,..
Ameriai

..

is a land of busy people who stress
disciplined. pnxluctive activity as worlhy in itaelf. Especially valued is work that bring&amp; rna;;- .
tary over the environment or an improvement 111..
socio-economic poaipon. Americans highly esteem the applied aciences as a means of asserting
maatery over the environment. Belief ~ . the
potential of acier~&amp; amount&amp; almost to a religtous
faith. In many ways, this scientific orienta~
• iellectB olher vaiUM highly prized such as diligence boneaty and elllciency. U there are J?eDPie
who ai1ow the put to shape.. their future, it is
not the Americana.- Hera orientationa toward

Chinese t6 Welcome 'Year of Tiger'
With Ridge Lea Event on ·Saturday
By YUN-FEI
1974 is the year of the "Tiger." As a celebration of the iunar New Year, the Chinese
S tude n t Aasociation is organizing a "China
Night" which has been scheduled for Saturday,
February 16, at Ridge Lea Cafe ria, from 6 to
10 p.m. This is a cultunil event, including a
Chinese. dinner and two hours of entertainment.
Some of the items on the program are: song&amp;,
dances, Chinese music, a play, martial arts, and
danoe drama.
Sponsors of lhe event are GSA, SA and the
International Committee. The. admission charge
is $2 for student&amp; and $3.50 for non-students.
Tickets will be on sale at Norton Ticket Office
a week before the event. The Chinese Student
Association hopes to see you there on the 16th .
· and wishl!s everyone.II'Kung Hei Fat Choy" (a
traditional Chinese New Year greeting meaning
!M.st wishes for pl'06perity in the New Year).
-~ -

.

..

for the New Year's Eve Dinner which is an occasion for family reunion, just as Thariksgiving
and Christmas are for Americans. Some Chinese
believe that if children stay up aU night on New ·
Year's Eve, their parents will live longer lives.
This so-called "Watch Night'' is of coucse a
supen~titious belief or an excuse on the part of
the youngsters to have fun on New Year's Eve.
For alD106t a week following the ' New Year's
Day; there is a period of visitations to relatives
and friends to willb each other the best of everything in the new year. It is alsO a custom for
married people to give children "red packets"
or lucky money for bl!ying candies or firecrackers.
( Infonnation is based on material provided
by the Hong .Kong ToUrist Association. )

.· ..

- The- formal ·celebration of \he Chinese New
Year began in the Tang Dynasty (A.D. 61S.907 ).
Twelve animals comprise the symbolic cycle of
,;• 'the Gb.ineae- lunar ·caJendar-~t.·.ox. ttiger, bare. ;;
' dnqon, . . _ l . j horae, .nun, ·monkey, I'OOIIter, :
" dog

a:IKI"lxler. '"'

-,r

Some TI'8CIItlons ond Customs

·: ·

a

•

•••••

1

•

{

,

· In prepiu'ation for the new year, ~· il&gt;-"!'''tqm,ary for people to thoroughly clean their houses.
They do ·not sweep the door~ N"": Y~s
because sweeping the door dunng thlS time m•ght
mean. the sweeping away of all good luck for the
ooming year. Red paper scrolls with words of
blessing&amp; and good fortunes written on them are
pasted on \be walls and doors. M6st of the people,
especially children, put on new clothes, new
shoes etc. to mark the occssion of lhe new year.
Bef0~ tb~ start of the new year, housewives
·h ave to stock'enougb food for the period of.feasting and lhey have to make sure that they do not
"run short'' of any thing, since running short of
something is a symbol of back luc~ _for the cor.ni~g
year (especially to the superstitious). This l5
alao a· time to clear old debts, and to worship
ancestors and gods. It is important . that all
the members of a Chinese fa':"ily try to be home

J?&amp;Y.

the future are more approved than orientations toward the past. Americans have a conviction that
thlngs should const&amp;ntly get better.
·
I have oftan imagined the countenance of the
average American when a preacher would say,
~'lay not up treasures for yourself. . . ."
For
the Americans love :'the good life" and constantly seek to improve lheir standard of living. They
like to enjoy material possession&amp; and physical
comforts or all kinds. EcOnomists say that consumption 'llppeam to ~ challenging production
BB a major national goal.
In acaderliic circles, Ame&lt;ica continues to progreSs by leaps and bounds. If you expect to
recognize an American in~llectusl by his mode
of dreS&amp; or lettars after his name, you'd bettar
tbihk again. For in ;;pita of these people's great
. learning, they are bumble. These ~s a new
Ph.D. is oftan referred to as aomeooe who has
j'!"t come off. tPe aSsembly line. You can imagine an' academic . "Liliput" like III,YIII'If having
aeceas to tboae renowned. professors at Sl.TNYAB.
NotlonoliomondPotrlollun ·
Perhaps the most fascinating of aU impres-;
siona I have gathered so far is the American

nationalism and patriotism. The sentiment&amp; that
tbe American people attach to their fatberland
are of overwbebning importance to them. "A.-;canisl!." is almost a rigid ·orthodcmy ana unAmerican lhinp are viewed wilh IUSPic:ioD and
disapproval. Most Americana feel that their-,

country baS been good to them libel few 'express
any desire · to liv~ elaewbere. I have bad to
renew my vow to my country. I vow "aU earthly
lhin'gs above." I vaw the "love that never fal.
ters."
I have been bere for six months. I have 119'
experienced. apy cold lreatJ:nent for any.-~
U it bas happened, I have not recognized 1t.
Maybe I !1JD short-sighted and insensitive. I ·
have writtan my granny that I have brought~
the other foot. She may BBY that I am an unpetuous child, but my experie_nce has taugbt me
bettar. I sing pQliseg of Amenca for her generosity towards victims of war or ~· and. for
her "ubi 'tous charity drive." I smg. pnuaes
. of her
her contribution towards learrung and
world peace. My head aches, it droops, !"' the
realization of that strong undercurrent m the
American value s~the diff""".'tial evaluation of racial and ethnic groups; I pu% up courage, for this one stain glaringly points to the
limits of human virtu....

foi

As a servic8to the cempus's international community,
the RlopcM1er hoi agreed to moke this space ovoilable
six times during the academic year to the Office of
Foreign Student Aflolrs ond the student editoriol !&gt;&lt;&gt;"rd
of U / 8 - for the ~!notion of noticeS,
news items •nd articles of internt,. Articles •re seIKted by
Student .edit?rial boord.

Y"'

�~orld Cooptmition~

Is It a Necessity?
.

By

PETER GROUNPOS
Toili.y·. woftd ill - ol. c:banae. c4&gt;Poclualty
and ehaiJen&amp;e. The world ... .....,. boom in a

alate ol. revolutionary c:lwnp ill __,;c, eocial,

polllbl, and tedmolockal a - . lliDce
the end ol. World Waz U. the note ol. c:lwnp ._
been faster, particularly ill the field ol. tlec:bdoiY.
Some people d8im that - &amp;n. at the " ' - - ' "
for cnJMpOJnt) ill almoat every upect ol. life.
Our eavinlameDt ill puticuJar and the -wboJa
world Ill paera1 are tbrealiMied by Ibis rapidly )I'OWillg induatria! nM&gt;Iutioo. N~
. humanit;y is fllc:bJI ~ dillcult problems: the
-..v crillia, illtematioiW _....me ~n,
moral corruption, nociaJ tenslaa, overpopulation,
pollution and a poteotial third .....rut war which
could .......-.1 death te lllillioall ... even billiollll
of people.
.
.
Profesaionala and 111111-prol.aBanals alike are
......terillc towards what ullimate &lt;liUoome the
world is ~ by tbla ao-ealled aocio-industrial
llftlln!l8. Ia tbeJe lillY limit te this progress? Will
it ever eM&amp;e? If it will, under what c:ircumst"'lCC!S
and ill what COIIdition will it leave IDIIDkind? ' If
W.. can predict with .some degree of accuracy
where the preaent trends of this progreos will
lead us, aze we ill the position to alter undesired
tendencies of the world system so that the generations to come will be Uving ill a clean, ellicient,
well-fed and _,aful world? And most !)f all,
a"' they going to be proud of us in the futu...?
~ .. ltunninl Out
.
The u.sec.etary-Generill of the UN iii 1969
said: "' do not wish to _,overdramatic but I
can ooly conclude bom the information that is
available to me as Secretary-Geueml, tliat the
members of the United Natioos have perhaps
ten years left ill which to subordinate tbeir ancient quarrels and lllunc:b a global paftnenWp
10· cwb the arms race, to imi&gt;tDve the · bumari •
en.v~t, to defuse the popUiidori .,.PIOsiOn,
and to supply the ri!quired momentum to' develOPment efforts. U such a glObal parlner!ihjp is
riOt forged' Withiit'the nen .deC&amp;de; ~ 1· ~
much feaz that -the prot&gt;lems I have mentioned
will hllve reached such staggering . proportions
that they wj.l\ be beyond our capacity to control."
, : Many;'J&gt;I!OP)e ~ ~t ·!lie tUtu... courae
of the -..oriel~ peduijls """1' Jts sWv;val, depends
upon the opeed, . intelligence and .. elfediveneiis
with which mankind responds to these issues.
))f've(tbel._ .C¥l~Y. a ·very. SI1Jil)l fractipn .of ' the
world's POPulation is actively concerned with
understanding these problems or with seeking
ways to. sol~ them to _the benefit ,of .the whole

--

..................................
w..................
w. .._...........,_
..
:
ol. .tblll1

.

Wb.J ..........

111-.&amp; .........
.... ..,....., .........
ta _.... .,. u-.
-.. • 4illr .._.tile
ell
pan
nt.._~_..._....,..__.....,

&amp;-. 111e wL

•

~"­

dlla
w fll Miura.
. . . . .-.,.pt . . _ . . . • • whole ..
o1. tbll ~ -..-~~~D~aPca~.,._ ad at lhe
..m m.m-t ill ita
destructiaa. If IIIia bialaP:al .,.._ u ID be
IIJialyJJad ..... ita _.,.. - . . ultimate pi,
then our tMk II _ , ~ 81.- • ... the
-tem (•
'liateUiaeat
CJIIIIillila ill .... b6alaP:al
at .__ we c:Wm we
ad m. we believe that lhe lllll\'i...I ol. a .lllllgle " ' - t

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

-&gt;.

being !lle8DII the survival of the world as a whole,
then we bear even heavier _..n.;lities for

. its fu1me

CDUIIII!.

•

.

-~-Enaulh
Becauae IM!rYODe iii in faVO&lt; of peace, everyone should be ill favor of m.-tiollal coopers-·
tion. It is neither surprisina nor astonisblDc that
nowadays - 6nd the idea of helping to achieve
intemational underatanding -a n d cooperation
through science most attractive. We also believe
that through scieMe mankind wiD solw elfectivelv most of its problems and will win the battle .
against "the world system's tendency to colJar-;" as Dr. . J. Fonester claims in his book
World Dynamics. Should we sit beCk and wait
for stich a· collar-, or should we act wisely and
quickly? I think this is wbe"' international
cooperation should come in. Now is the-time to
launch. a clobBI partnership ond carefully evaluate the SociaJ, scientific, political and economic·
impact of fu.ture intematinnal decisions. All
nations shoUld try to participate in planning and
implementing _actions and ...actions which woul~
be in the best interest of all human society. For
the Last few years_a lot of talkinJ has taken plaoe
during international conferences and symposiums; hut I would say that wry little has been
accomplished. The German nioralist and philosopher Immanuel Kant said "Goodwill alone
is not enough to get anytbillg done."
And it is ~ that goodwill exists. There
are many international agencies either within the
UN -or independent, and many more 'are established eveiy yeaz; yet there is no owrall effort
to face the world's problems through a large-scale
scientific coopemtion among all nations. In realJty,.intematipna) cooperation ,remains 8Dlllli,~Yen
with so many international agencies and organI7JI~ lncluAAotrtbe: U:N." (and : 1&gt;fe" cah go
ahead and create a dozen mo..,). Vast quantities
of infonil{ltion; data; 8hd 'ri!sl!atcb 1u;t! dui&gt;tl.c ate\i
throughout thii world every year. At the same
time, many problems remain unsolved because of
.la~k- o( knowledj!e,
.
. :.
At this moment when mankind faces so many

j· lDITORIAL
Welcome

As the sprinJ begins, I 'would like
to take this opportunity to welcome new foreign.
~tudenl.!! to 'this campUs. Although· the numbers
of new and tranider students have declined in the
pas£ years or so, the enthusiasm and eageme&amp;'l
shown on these neW faces.remains the stuDe. Let
us all hope that your iDitiatiw to .Jearn, not
only academically but also culturally, increases
in this new and friendly environment and helps
you .to acbiew your educationlil gosJs.. 'On beh8lf
of f:he Edi~rial Baud. the 0f1!ce of Foreign
Student Aff8JJ'S, and all &lt;!f,the foreign students,
I would like to wish you luck in' the coming
semester. To the old studentS I wouia like to
w~ a yeaz .of suc:ciiss in 19'74.
U/1 IIIITEIINATJOHAL EDITORIAL .BOARD
Act11111 Editor: Sudhlr Suchok iiawnia)
Conttlbutors: Ga~os Alvarez (Puerto Rico), Una
Hul (Ho111 Kong), Vijoy Nair (lndi•), Abu ·Ayyash (Jor·
dan), Yusuf ' Baumusa ' (Pakistan); Em.est Yo~ (Hong
Konc) : Ellen Block (U.S.A.), Justin Okoro Ukpabl (NI·
geria), Eddy Tse (Hong Kong) , Peter Groumpos
(Greece), Herbert Morgenroth (Germany), Yun-fei Yung
(Hong Kong), Mo1111 Hen1 Tan (Malaysia), Anthony
Kwok (Hong Konc). Mario Yepes (Colombia). Mo·
basher Chaudry (Pakistan), Antoine Madoukou (Cen·
tral African Republic), Mohammed Motiwala (Paki·
stan), Sudhir Mehta (India).
U/8 International Is seeking interested students with
skills in reportlng ·and writing. cau the Office of Foreign Student Affairs (831·3828) and leave y"our name,
address and teiephone number. '

-

.

The next issue of U/B.Intematton.J will appear on
Man:h 14.

UNAYOIDAaL£ IMrACT ON FOREIGN sruDUn-s:
". · • Oh ..... we*w only ...... one ~r peu.,. ,_,..,..

U/ 8 lntemallonal

I!nder ~ur n~ editorship we shall -try to
continue the great efforts of former editor Peter
Groumpos and the Editorial Board in putting
together a successful newspaper. We would Like
to ·take this OPportunitY, to thank Ms.· Ma!y Loinax Torres. who, until recently, has been the
_advisor to the Editorial Boara. Unfortunately
Ms. Torres has left this campus for S.U.N.Y:
at Stony Brook. -we wish her good luck in her
new position.
At this time, I would also like to thank the
Rep_orte;, . and: !'Specially, Mr. Robert Marlett,
for the1r continuous cooperation in making it
possible each month for us tO publish U/ B International.
·
·
-&lt;ruDHIR SUCHAK

Thition Waiver
Process Examined
bow,
eubcb

Aa most ' peQPie
~
in
. tuition waivers !01' toreipJ atudenta bave reduced
the amount of !DDIIey ....nable to~- New
applicants cannot reDI!ive partial 1188istanoe.
Restrictions on who is eliclble are much stricter.
- After the deaclline for aubmlttillg applicati&lt;&gt;ns
for the Foreign Student Tuition Waiwr, the
OtBoe of FQ!eign Student Aff!oln (OJI'SA) takes
action on the acceptance or "'jedion of the applications. Letters are Ell~ to the students giving
either good or bed ......a about the tuition waiver.
'The nerl step-;8 for the student to file a written
appeal ~th the OFSA otalf tG. give the opportunity for uplana_tions. If 'the foreign student
is not BB!isfted with the fust appeal, then, there
is a final appeal which consists of a written or
oral personal appeanonce before a committee
· made up of student 8nd staff repreaentatives
from the Uniwraity Financial Aiil Committee. A
non-voting member o£;lhe OFSA staff presents
written appeals to the committee. The decision
of this committee is final.
--cARLOS A. ALVAREZ

Waiver Di~cussions
StiU Continuing· ·.· ,._

By YUSUF BAXAMUSA
.; !The decision by.··the S.U.N.'Y: . officials Last
spring•&amp;bout 'cUrtaJJing ·the tuition waivers byr4&lt;J
per ......t · has left many foreign students worried.
This 40-per cent reduction in tuition waivers ap.plies t&lt;J all &lt;lludents, including fo..,ign 'Students.
The drastic cut has been blamed on the S.U.N.Y.
System's budget, which p...viously provided $15·
million in the form of general tuition waivers.
·This fi(U"' bas been dropped to $11 million. The
decline in tuition waivers will put many students
in a state of uncertainty in their academic careers. The hardest hit will obViously be the foreign students who depend upon this -iwr molt'
than IIJI.YO!IB e\ae.
In an interview with Raj Ticku, the G.S.A.
International Affaira Coordiasto., I learned some
reliabl!o information concerning the fate of foreign
V!tuden~ tuition waivers. He recently attended a
meeting. in Albany held by the Advisory Commit,.
tee on lnliemlltional l'rotrrams of the S.U.N.Y.
System, directed by Dr. Putuam, at which major
questions teprding the .forelcn student tuition
_waiver ~ diacuaaed. A Oon-.ial proJ&gt;ll8aJ
was made by Dr. Spindler, vice cbancellor for
finance, management, and IJoosl-. ·that grailu. ate foreign students not be eligible at all for the
tuition waiwm and 'that l!lldeqraduate tuition
waivem should be loept at cme and one belf per
oenl of the total -undergraduate enrollment. He
also ~ an increase ol. a quarter of a million dOllara in tuition waivers for the fiacal 'year
:1974-75. This first ~ woaJd affect "" estimated 50 per cent of the liDO fore11n graduate students at U/B.
·
Raj noled that U/B-enrolls 40 per .....t of all
foreign · students in the S.U.N.Y: System,
. that, on thla.bssis, Dr. Spindler should have consulted the U/B administration 'before making
such a propossL In view of Dr. Spindler'&lt;~ proposal, Raj cotmter-proposed that a "status quo"
be msintl$ed and that both undergraduate and
graduate fo...lgn students be eligible for the tuition waivers as bas been the case in the past. The
_ committee, be said, was seriously considering his
proposal; they should meet again sometime in
February to discuss it.
Raj's proposal of "status quo" was based upon
-the following guidelines for 1974-75:
.
1) Tuition waivers be given on the basis of
need, supported by documented evidence
2) Some n.W students "under cerUiin conditions" should be eligtble for waivers thereby
the formaintaining a good academic standa'rd
eign student wpu\stion.

and

h.

REPORT~R-U/B INTERNATIONAL / FEBRUARY 14,1974 / Page 2

�............... _.-....;....,....,...
............................

~-- . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . .-tO-diet . . tDIIJ•i81ra of tultba WIMt .... to

·iasuf.s

3)

0

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

............. -..wa.t ...... ..

. .--ill

be . . . . . .., 8IIY ol the a.Joi' ....... .....
Ia
1lbowed ......... of aptl...... h t .... .tudenta who rejeclad ,_

..u... ... ..,

cantribution to the social life oC the comimmity
far, ollld we are most crateful to tboae who haw
helped make it possible.
~people might think that-811)' cant~
dealing with African Liberatioa b8B to dO with
Africans, and with Afriams only.. u thia Is the
case, it.certainly is a terrible mistake and it ha8
to be rorrectecl Let us keel! bi mind that the
issUe of African Liberation is not different fmm
the struggle of any oppressed people. 'Ibe questions ·we seek to llrlSMlf are:
-Does thia world have to he the
it looks
today, or rould it 1M! better?
-Are Capitalism and Communism, as we know
of them, the only two alternatives that exist to
developing oountries, or is there a third option?
-Should the people of a particutsr area be op. prea;ed in the name of freedom?
-How long can this world survive with all the
evils going around these days~
These questions, We be!-ieve, are everybody's.
Workers, students, presidents of rorporations, re- - ligious leadem; and others. We are all on the
same ship. When people are crying, starving and
undergoing all kinds of tortures, it means' that
this "ship is about to sink, and, therefore, something must he done ..
Again, we like to he given all possible chances
to participate in building a better world for everybody. Oh, yes, believe it or not, this world can
he better, and we have to get involved right now,
or else. .. . .
·
110

p u t - w . m!ptbetlllleiiO . .
... - - qain dUe 110 tbe ~ mooelaty
- - Iii tbe luitiaa - - budpL
.
At ... amdulian ol tbe aleetmc In Alb!ui,y.
R8j -malad - . etudont ~
by tbe c:t.Jrmua ol tbe CIIIIIIIIIUee, IDcldealally.
. be Ia tbe anly 81udeot ......-tative, ollld will
~ ID w.k 011 tbe committee for the 1.974Tii..-.~

way.

U.S. Aid to
Latln Ameriea.
Said Inadequate
By 8UDHIR SUCHAK
Note: f'llil u tM ~ in a lwo-part artick
an 1M rriatiDu klwem .tM UniUd Stata and
Latin AJ~teriaz. • ln 1M tint part, we emnlined,
in rmm&gt;l. UU. rellltiouhip and how it htu de~ TM ~ pari d«JU IDith U.S. for.
eip aid Ia Latin
·countriu in lertnll
of i.U · mtJilnibuk and eqiiDlity.
We haw .w-ly seen that the United States
commilmont abifted from the Western hemisphere 110 ~after the Seoood World. War.
'Ibe Latin American countries· have felt themselves the victims of special neglect as U.S. aid
bas barely trid&lt;II'Cf into Latin America.
Stntiatica have shown that, sime the end of
the war, only a little over S4 billion bas gone to
the 20 Latin American countiiea. Only 6 per
cent of aU"'he foreign aid that the U.S. government .has given out bas gone to the Latin American partners of the Inter-American system. Two
rountries, one of which W&amp;B a major enemy of the
United States in World Warn. Japan and Taiwan, received more than this amount in foreign
aid. Korea,-,.a c:ounbyr lbat. ~ thaJi aome
Latio American" republics, received about S4 billion, almost: the B&amp;me·amount sent to Latin America 88 a ; whole., T:he. bitte.._. ,&amp;nP .f.JUII#atiQn ,
'"""""'·by Latin Americans bas iocnloo-' .. tbey
look at the 'continulnir decline m the' jliicos of
product,. they export to the U.S. and"" a steady
rise in the prices of .goods they iniport fmm the

.A""'""""
..

u.s.

.

One of the ronditions of U.S. foreign aid, 88
set up by the State Department, is that the
rountries which -receive the aid should
it to
preserVe independence and to speed up their own
internal developinent in the direction of freedom.
Now, Jet us look at anothet example. At Jeut
nine oountries in Latin America received leas aid
than &lt;tid Haiti. And it is· a world wide fact that
· the dictatorship in Haiti is not but to develop
its oountry as stated Jn the rondition by the
State Deoartmenl Almost 90 per cent of Haiti8118 are illiterate ai&gt;d exploited by the hierarchy
to the fullest extenl But still the. U.S. ·supports
the military dictatorship in Haiti with subsiantial yearly aid. I will not tie · surprised · if this
~J:'S the military strong 110 that no rommunist
infiltrators make Haiti another Cuba.
All U.S. Presideolll in this century have
atreeaed ·the fact that .Latin America is the most
critical area in the world for the United States.
B11t tbe U.S. JIOYefiii'Deot bas not yet• prepared
110 pay tbe price for the . loyal friendship of the
J atiD Americana. -One of the Presidents of the
United Stoia has staliod tbat nations, like pllople, have pride and digni~, and that only if one
respecls the rights, cultures, and intereats of the
other aball there be cooperatiaa between the
nations. Tbt! U.S. ·i n my opinion bas hardly followed this in its histoey of .relations with any
"''ion, Jet-alone Latin ·Ameridl, ,ollld frankly I
do riot; aee it coming in the near future ~ its

use

powers Ill""'·

'

On the other band, dilliculties in increasing
or even ·maintainins their rates_ of growth anc:J
indimtrialization bave forced Latin American nations, auring the last decade, to tunrirom inwardlooklng industrialization t o"w a r d international
trade as a vehicle for developmenl . Also, these
countries have started to band together in opening up their economies to one another in ..
process of integration. At this point, l would like
to romment that, just as the European-rountries
in a drive to regain self-ronfl.dence, clamored for
"trade'not-aid" after the fimt few yeam of the
Marshall Plan,. so now Latin Americans tend· to
emphasize more favorable trade ronditions from
the developed rountries since U.S. foreign aid _is
declining._

that-~ critieal .. _..._,.,.

ricia club lualudeid~ ~
the S.A Our 11181 Ia 110 ...._ • i h4 "
I
understaDcllq .Ia. the - - . i t ) ' o f - ........
~ "'-t 1&amp;ia ~ .,..; be; • • '--4
to achieve this 11181 by aD pa.ibre ollld 8CI:'liiPIIIble
means. We beliew that - haw PYa~. our 1IIDdeBt

The U/B - - . . Club celebmecl the Lunar New

• dl.....,. 8t the UniyersiiJ Pres~" Churdt, s.turd8y, J•nuory 26.

Year -

CLUB/
~lib Organizations
The Arab students on this campus are rep-

'l'eBented by tWnn :•.tltutal and' soc:iat•duliso lhio

AraJ?

G~;&amp;'duats

~ \GS~

~ ~ '

Arab Cultural Club ( Undeigra.diiate) ·. T6e grad.uate . cl"'? i~ head&lt;!&lt;~. ~YL Mr. A Y ;)'\l&gt;u:.A.p:ll!'P
8.nd ·tru. undergraduate club· by' Mr. Mtifid AbuZahra. The two clubs ronsist of about 60 students.
'Ibe llllliii, objecp~e of both cl ubs is. to serve
Arab students on this campus by 'bnnging them
together through social and educational gatherings. ~ clubs also offer assistsnce to new Ar&amp;b
students by helping them to find housing facilities and to prepare for their registration and their
course work.
.
On the social level, the clubS have been involved. in several activities both inside and outside the Univemity that tend to promote the
cultuial aspecl;jl of life in the Arab world: For
example, the clubs rontributed to the success of
the lnterna1ional Food-Tasting Night that was
held last October in t&amp;e Fillmore Room. During
that night, a special section was set up to serve
different types of Al:!lbic food and to play Arabic
music. · Last December, the clubs responded to
an invitation from the American Association· of
Univen;ity Women by setting up a display of
Arabic crafts and books about the Arab way. of
life.
·
On February 3, an Arabic SoCial Evening
W8B held for all Arab students and their friends.
The. evening ronsisted of fOod, drinks, music,
and dancing ( Dabkeh) . In the next few .days a
speCial dinner will he held for members of both
clubs. •
A special word of thailks and appreciation
should. go to Mr. George Giacaman for his efforts
anjl .dedication to the suocess of" these social
events. Also, we would likl! to thank _ _several
pemons from the Arab C'.ommunity in ·the Buffalo
for their help.

area

Africa~-Club
The first National Anti-Imperialist Conferin. Solidarity with African Liberation took
place fast October in Chicago. This ronference
was sponsored by "d ifferent concerned groupll,
churches, and indiviauals in search of ways of
crystallizing the American people from every
strata and !rom every background arouna the
issue of African Li)leration.
The Afrjcan club came up with a delegation
of four and seized the opportunity to raise some

. · enCI)

Page 3-/ REPORTER-U/ B INTERNATIONAL/ FEBRUARY 14, 1974
I.

-

ANTOINE llADOUKOU

Pakistan Students
The Pti.kistan Students ASsociation celebrated
Eid-ui-Azha, or the Feast of Sacrillce, on ·Saturday, J anuary 19, 1974, with a dinner and an evening. of ent.ertainmenl The dinner .. was . wei!
attended by about 100 people from 1111 over the
Muslim world and by some American frlendS.
Something or oneness Is shared by the whole
Islamjc ,rommunity through participation i.D.Eidui-Azha, the "great festival" of the Mushm Year.
On tile tenth day of the pilgrimage month, Muslims ~&gt;verywhere commemorate the i9Yful saaifi&lt;l!.!&gt;f Al&gt;nll¥un wbeo, followina tbe in~
or the:anJel &lt;;labrlel.':he Jeimied-tlmt God Would
aroept .lbe olll.riDg of a lamb as· a substl~ foi
the sacrifice of his son. In the Book of Genesis
this 'mcitlent ~keS- ·pJaaha Pa:lestine, ' ana AD'
raham's son is Isaac; in Muslim tradition the
locale is Mina, a sufiocatingly hot valley between
Arafat and Mecca (Saudi Arabia) , and Abraham's son is Ishmael.
_:
_
On this day Muslims who are not on the
pilgrimage celebrate with congiegational prayer
and feasting, following the "custom set by Prophet
Mohammed during his years at Medina when the
hostility of the Meccans made it impossible for
him to visit their city a$ the pilgrimage season.
The pilgrims, themselves, · gather at Mina, and
each one slaughtem a lamb, a goat, or, if he ;,.
wealthy, a camel. He also throws stones at each
of the three rock pillao; symbolizmg Satan, at
whom Ishmael hurled siones in terror on three
occasions when he expected to lJe sacrificed.
OOMINC EVENTS : CRf.X:K CAMPUS PUBLICA'n'ONS
FOR FURTHER INI!ORllATrON: Saturday, March 23,

1974: Celebration of PAKJSrAN DAY; Sunday,
April 21, 1974: Symposium on IQBAL: POET OF
.THE EAST.
-MOBASHEll CHAUDRY

India Student Association
Tile India StUdent Association, with its membership of over 200, is one of the largest foreign
student associations at U / B. . · ·
"What is the purpose of having foreign studeot associations and what have you, as president of such an association, tried to do?",. Mr.
Bachubhai Solanld, the president nf the India
Student Association, was asked during a recent
interview. " Well;"the Association is for the benefit of ·~ s tudents on this campus, Indian and
other foreign students as well as American stu- ..,
dents," answered Mr. Solanki. "One of the basic
purposes of having an association. such as ours
is 'to promote better understanding between ourselves and people from all other rountries who ·
are here and thus facilitate an exchange of the
various cultures." But this ideal is not being
realized, acrording to Mr. Solanki, because of the
lack of student involvemenl He believes that if
the A•sociation bad an executive rommittee made
up of ·several seriously interested membem willing to work and share some of the responsibilities
with the elected officials, and if more people
would attend or ron tribute to the various cultural

�~
Clllllldlle_........,
JJi
IIIIi
lmNII...- " ' the Aaooc:ialiall

mutb -

apllie fJl tile
fJl lltUdent
and the Yf!rY llmiW fuDtla available (about '&amp;00
for lhiR year, alJocated by G.8.A.), It hM ~
llble to orpn~ze durlna the COQI1Ie
the , . ,
the celebration of the major Indian bolidaya 8IICh
as JndependeDce Day, Divali and ~ Day
with a I'IIIIIDII8ble amount of IIUCCOII8. Indian
em buld
lllllllldans ancl. other performers -

or

dUJ'ial
..-..d.

tt- OCCII8ions

Q: Are . . the Chi~.-- ............. -

on__.?
A: No. The lunar caleudar, the t
and
&lt;Mm most of the cuatoms from the duallBtic

a

and In ian food Lat - · the · Aaaociation ale o
an Indian movie to CIUIIPW' and CODtributed to various int.emational cultural evenlll
such ae the Int.emational Food Tasting held in
NO'IIelllber and the International Colfee Hours.
WJa&gt; a party or Indian artiSIIt &lt;inctudinl the .
famous dancer and movie star, Asba Parekh)
wbo touring the U.S. visited Bulfalo and
perfonnod at the Slilte Hospital, the Association
aaisted the India Asaociaticm of Bulfalo, wbo
11P1J1..nc1 the event, in Dlllldn&amp; it, in Mr. Solanla~s -..Is, "a jp'lllld """""""'" I have also been
informed by I'I!IIIIODIIbly reliable IIDI11'Cf!8 that at
the Int.emational Institute's "folk ball" held at
the Statler Hilton, certain memben of the Associaticm waltzed their way in and -put on an
astonishina performance UJ!der the ilirec:til!n or ·
~}fr. Solanld which the attendinl populace learned
- W&amp;s an authentic Gujualhl folk dance.
In the immediate future, the India Student
Association will sponaor. an Int.ematioll!ll Colfee
Hour and another ~ movie, 86 well 86 participate in the activities during the International
Week in Man:h. · 1be dates and . other details .
can be obtained from Mr. Solanld (832-4564) ,
who will be glad to tslk to any one needing iniormatlon or offering help. "We need a lot of
help," be said. "If more people would come
forwari ancl get involved in our activities, all
students at this University 86 well as the outside
corm.Junity would benefit from what we have to
offer each other, and the basic .pwpose of having
associations such as ours will be realized to a
greater estent."
·

braulht

·eooke:ry Worksliop
On BU&lt;lCI!!ilive Mondays through March 11, the
Int.ematlonal Cookery Workshop will be held em
the Amherst Campus UDder sponsorship or the
Life WorkshoJlll in cooperation with the House
Council on the Amherst Campus ancl the Offioe
of Foreiin Student A1fairs.
.
Mrs. Carole Hennessy, coordinator of this
program, says, "Last semester this workshop was
held in my bouse and it was really fun. A group
of 20 persons representing seven countries joined
in to lead seven different cooking sessions.' Some .
people wore their own native clothes and brought
records and music in. Often we ended with dancing. This program is more &lt;than a simple cooking
workshop. liB ~ is also to bring together
people of different cultures and to .create a new

•~o_ -\'I.JAY N~

Tanzanian Trip ·
A proposal hM. ~ made by the Ministry
of Education, to sponsor a trip to Tanzania in the
summer of 1974 for those students from Tanzimia
who would)ike to go ~:1om!&gt; but do not bavo; the
chance. 'l'lle•trip will provide students with the
opportunity to""!' their'psrenls..or .families and to
see the progress of their country for' themselves.
• The !dinistry wif1. deciJI!! who is quaJifit!!f. to
go. Any student who is interested in this 'offer
can contact Sudbir Sucbak at 837-2357 for a form
which he is required to fill Olit. This form 'must
·be sent back to the Tanzania Embassy which Will
report' the names to Dar-t!S-salaam. Those who
meet the .Qualifications will be informed by the
Embassy. in Washington.

.

The Otlice oi Foreign Student Affairs has begun to send letters to all students who started
their studieS at the Univemity this ·past Fall.
The ~ of the Jetter is to invite you to make
an appointment with an advisor to talk over any
questions or concerns you may have following
your first semester at Buffalo. Students are not
required tO see an advieor; but OFSA hopes they
will "even ~ if it is only to saY you're well and
doing fine."

&lt;'~
~Several opportunities are still available ior
clubs to sponsor coffee bounl this spring. The
followihg dateS are open: March 8, April 6, 12,
19 and 26, and May S. Any club wishina to
sponaor a coffee hour on one of tbeae dates should
contact Ellen Block in the Olice of Foreign Stu, dent Allairs ( 831.a828).

.

au-u

..

1be 08ice of Forei111 Student Allairs is currently in the ~ of establishina a S~&lt;a
Bureau which would provide foreip studenb!
with the opportunity to ~ about their home

4

.,

...
·

, ·

-

A .N THONY KWOK

Opportunities
From time. to time the Office of Foreign Student Aftairs receives information from organiza-,
· · tio,. listing a number of opportunities for forei~
students. The majority of these opportunities are
available during the Sl!lllmer vacation period. Included in the above are travel, excursions, special ·
seminars, and workShops.. Students. are ~ncour­
aged to check the master bulletin board in the'
Office of Foreign Student Aftaim for additional
information.
·
OII.Campus

·orJA

Spullerl

·•: . ,

..

This semester's Intematicinal Cookery Workshop will be held in Dewey Hall with Mr. Silvana
("~lol'\~o as .host, Since ~ . program,. !". ,o~ .
to the enW:e Univemity communi~y. participants
wm ~nclude 'UniversitY staff as well as student~;.
Anyone attendmg is required to prepare and
, samJl)e.li,Olll8 of JYs .e~ ·her native food,.. This sem•
es!er, eighteen persons representing six different
countries have signed up to participate. The
remaining program schedule is as follows : Feb.
18, Thai Cuisine; Feb. 25, Chinese Cuisine;
Ma rch 4, Brazilian Cuisine; a n d· March ·u ,
French Cuisine.

countries to schools and civic organizations in
· the Buffalo area. Any student wishing to participate as a speaker sbould contact Ellen Block
in the Office of Foreilin Student Aff$irs (8313828) .

NlW/
fROm
Leti.C!rS Comina

:u~tivitv ~n O!Jlinev.:'-~pus.:•-. ~

- · Stall Appointment
Ms. Maryann Roby will temporarily' join the .
staff or tN. Otlice ' of Foreign Student Aftairs in
February. ·· Ms. .Roby -will serve as an advisor
during the ~iod ' wJ;&gt;ll&lt;! Mrs. Fnince Pruitt' will
be On l!'9Ve of absence.
. Orionbtlon

-

During the past several yeari!, the 0ffice of
Foreign Student 'Allairs has functioned in a n1im:
ber of role&amp; regarding orientstion for new foreign
.. students. Many students ba:ve participated both
in the planning and in the Conduct or tbeae P"":'
grams. Now, it's tiJpe to rethink-past approaches
and seek new designs for ~g students' needa.
Thoughts or ideas hbout orlentatiim should be
. directed to Joe Kraiwwiait at OFSA. ''What we .
need now," be •Yilt ''are fresh new idear, yourthoughts do not have to be well developed. Please,
let's bear from you." ·

theory of Yang and Y'm in the old an- eo&amp;molOilY. This basic idea is ve&lt;y old, but, - theless, lhe notion of Yang and Yin still persists
and . has governed the ChinMe thought for a long
time. The Yang or III8IICIIline repn!8ellts the
aci:i:ve, while the Yin, or feminine, repnJMIIlt8 the
passive. The twO elements can ba applied to
everything: heaven and earth, BUD ancl moon.
light and darlmess, men and - . -totny
and medicine, and even temperament. Universal
existence requln!B the concordant ooopezation
of these two' elements; and the overbalance of
either will create entropy or disorder. 'lble qoi&gt;ce"t also applies to the and months of
. th~ year. The seasons, spring and summer, which
occupy the first six months of the year, belong
to the order of Yang. The Chinese symbolize
them by the festivals or the Sun. the Tuan Yang .
or the Dragon Boat Festival 1be second half
of the year, occupied by autumn and winter,
belongs to Yin which is ezpresaed in the MidAutumn Festival or the ;Moon Festival. The sun
is Yang and the moqn is Yin. Approaching the
end of the year,- the two meet each other and
·give birth to the New Year which is symbolized
by the New Year Festival. Of course,~.
legends, and superstitions evolved around theoe
festivals, but the true origin remains. In fact,
theSe festivals act as a very important timing
factor for tlie Chinese farmers in their agri-_ .
cultwal work. Many of the smaller local festivals
are dying out but ~ of the big festivals remain
and are greatly celebrated in moet of the Chinese
populated areas in Asia .
· -EDDY TSE

Q: What is_ Eicl? How is it celebrated!

A : In the month of October, Muslims all over
tlie .world ce1ebrated One of· their. &lt;high holillsys,
Eid-Ul-Fitt. Actually, it iii the day at the end
of the month of Ramadan, whicfi is the fourth of
tlie ..ftve basi,c princjples . .of Islam. From the
· . break• of daWf!i til,\ I!UJlll'),t du~ ,~,.mon~ ~f .
Ramadan, Muslims observe the ntual of fi!Siing,
abs~g from . !'Sling, drinking, and not allowinir anything to enter their bodies. They, therefo~ voluntarily vomit and abstain from selfpollution and ~ intercourse.
i\ question arises as to the reason for the one
month fast. ActUally Muslims believe that after
eleven months of busy and bard life, a person
cart forget about bis fellow human beings. If he
does not know what is happening with one of
his hungry brothe&lt;a, what kind of life is be spending? A month of fast allows hiJJJ. to reflect on
the life of bis brother and to refrain -from many
·unnecessary acts. It also should train him to
be a better buman being for the rest of the year.
At the end or Ramadan, Muslims celebmte
a day called Eid-Ul-Fitt, to thank God forl&gt;aving
given them the understanding about o.t her people
during the last month and for having given them
u..; ~ge to go through. the ~ On ~
day Muslims wear new clothes m the mommg
and go to the Mosque for special pr&amp;yeJ;. After
prayer, they give gifts to their own childrerr
as well aa to poor children. · 1bese children are
invited to the Muslim's Cbrisbnas lunch ancl
given alms. But 'don't misunderatand, it is . the
birthday of MoHammed. Peace be updn him.
#

..

ca-- •'

·-IIOHAJDU'.D KOTIW.q.A

1......,

Q: heently ihe
-on
brated Diwllll. _...., is -

· A: Diwali (Featival of Ligbm) is one or the
biggest ·fflStivals celebrated in India. Indian
pe&lt;fple of al1 csstes and religions celebmte Diwali,
not only in India but in many parts of the -rid.
It is celebrated, just as Christmas is here.
The origin of Diwali has a very interesting
story. It is believed that about 2000 years ago
tbeie' WE a king Dlllriid Narlrasurs. He was :very
cruel .and tyrannical ancl everybody in the kingdom was frightened Of him. 1bey all prayed to
God and complained about him and 6nally God
came dOwn on l!arth and killed him. Since that
time, bis death .( the death of cruelty and evil)
is celebrated by tiring tlrecrackers and lighting
the houses.
This year the Indians in Buffalo celebrated
Diwali on the 27th of October by having a dinner
party. Tbe function was attended by a large
number of Americans as well as other foreign
students. · ·

R£PORTER-UIB INTERNATIONAL I FEBRUARY 14, 19(4 I Page~

�P~

14, IJ14

·Legal Aid ·
-Opens Office
In O'Brian Hall"

~
.Staff senate Urge5 Career Pla.n-~-------:---___;,_ _ __

-DI-

applicatwn&amp; was included aa IV.·B.4):

(ConliiiWd fro~ pop I, col. 1)
designed ...., implemented." . '

The PS8 ooncurred especially with
the report's ''imperative" plea w the
administration "lo designate one per- aon to serve as direcWr for this proThe. Lepl Aid Bureau ol Bullalo
gram."
.
!LAB) opened its first suburban
This indivi,dWII "would be tbe Unio1iae Moada.Y, February 11, in Amresponsible 'f9r impleversity
ollicial
herst. Nathaniel Barrell, eucutive dinlellting and maintaining the Profes·
rector ol LAB, explained !hal the new
siobal
Career
Deve)ovment
Program.
oliae will be e cooperative venture
. . . The functions of this position
with the U !B law School end will be
include re&amp;pol18ibility for developrplmt,
housjld In .John Lord O'Brian Hall on
coordination and evaluation of educathe Amherst campus.
tional and training ,axperienoe; and
Thi8 will be the ECillld selellite ofcollection (where necessary ) , integrafice of LAB operated by the law
tion and dissemination of dale necessary' w implement the proGram. Additional duties include: professional1&gt;taff
operation since September, 1973
counseling; manpower planning reNorman a.-nberg, aasislent prosearch; oonsultation · to management
fi!IISOr ol lew end supervising aUomey
1 infomu&gt;tion systems; support and imfor the LAB project, asys that the new
plementation of Affirmative Action
olliae will follow the pettem of the
Programs."
downtown branch end concenwte iin
The subcommittee rejx&gt;rt further
Family Court cases. lt will be staffed
recommended (and the Senate again
by law School feculty end students,
concurred) that the Executive Comend a cooperating &amp;Uorney from the
mittee of the PSS make a commitLegal Aid Bureau.
· _
ment~ either through an existing stand·
Ten Jaw students worked in the
ing committee or by establishing a new
Prudential Building office during the
committee, to work with this Human
fall semellter. Tbey bendled 120 cases
~urces Director on a continuing
end made over 80 court appearances,
basis jn such areas' as sutveys, workunder the supervision of a faculty
. shops and seminars, research, and genmember "!l'bo · is always counsel of
eral
liaison with various areas of the
record in each case. Tbe C8Se!l inUniversity.
cluded supp!!rt, family offense, paterSenate
discussion of the proposals
nity, separation, neglect, foster care,
indi~ted initial reticence on the part
juvenile delinquency, end persons in
of
some
Senawrs
to go along with
need of supervision.
~
endorsement. Fears were expressed
According w Prof. Rosenberg, "Tbe
that,
if
the
plan
were
implemented,
law School is committed w clinical
some supervisors might peualize NTP
programs such as this, end considers
employees
who
are
not
interested in
them en imporlent pert of the stuprofessioual adv.ancement. PSS Chairdent's legal educstion. ln , the LAB
man
Gene
Martell
(
University
Placeprogram the studen~ handles every
ment) aild Helen Wyant (Student
aspect of a case, in the operational
Testing
Center)
,
chairman
of
the
!iltr.sense, thus gaining valuable experireer Mobility Subcommittee, inllienCe, while at the same time learning a
csted,
however,
that
the
program
great deal about Family Court."
would be 'voluntary. ln any eveot,
Tbe L.AB·ptlice in•O'BJ;ien Hall.will
lioth pointed out, the present contractprovide assislence for those persons
mandated job performance review ·inwho. would normally qualify for legal
cludes
consideration of continued proaid, but wbo csnnot get w the· Buffalo
offices. I:egal ' assiStance will be• pri&gt;!:"ualempdeyv:!_~"'!,t "'! :~ . ~ of
v'ided'WidloUUee 'to"tl\oSi! WhO Q1J8.iifr!-D
Tbe rell::.se tiiiier&amp;na tilitioo · nfun'- '
Office hours will 'be by appointment,
bursement provisions of tbe ptan, Ms.
and evening appointments will be
Wyant
nclted, amounl· to a ' csll for&gt; 'a '
available. jO,ppointments csn be made
slendardized University-wide policy
by ceiling' 636-216'7.
in this area. Current policy, she pointed out, varies from depertment w depertment. Guidelines for implementation of this would have to be drawn
up, following the basic policy decision,
sbe indicsted.
ln backing the plan, Senawr James
Tbe Division of Student Affairs wili
Blackhurst (Summer Sessions) emsponsor two workshops this semester
phasized
the absolute necessity for
designed w improve self-awareness
mobility on the pert of NTPs which
and w· explore al.t emative . lifestyles.
bas
resulted
from the job classification
Tbe "Enriched Living" workshop
process. It used w be possible, Blackwill combine transactional aualysis
hurst
said,
.for
University administraconcepts and Gestalt exercises, includwrs w hire an individual at a given
ing aualysis of ego state's, games, and
level
and
then
bring the employee
persoual interaction. Completion of
along w successively higher levels as
the series qualifies one to ·take an exhis
or
ber
experience,
responsibilities
amination for certificstion w teach a
and cspebilities increased. Now, howsimilar colU'IIe.
ever,
be
said,
every
job bas been
ObJKt of TA
"locked inw" a certain level and "any
Tbe object of transactional aualysis,
advancement
involves
a
move. If tf:he
organizers of the program say, is w
individual wants w develop, he or sbe
"strengthen and free the 'adult' from
lws w move. · We have to get this
the irrelevant traces 'of 'perent' and
across w 'the University adminisw'child' in hislber makeup. Tbe techtion" and make provisions for mobilnique is a liberating and dyiuunic one
ity within the University, he observed.
which expands the options. available
NTPs, he added, must also become
w the individual m the decision-makaware of possibilities for advancement
ing process and in personal interacin other units of SUNY and outside
tions."
the system as well.
Tbe ten weekly sessions will be beld
lnstltutlonol Funds
TbursdayB from 9-10:30 a.m. in NorTbe PSS moved w refer reaction w
len Union, beginning February 21.
Morriaee .
.
the Institutional Funds award policy
w the Executive Committee "for furAnother workshop, entitled "Simuther study." The E:treCUtive group was
lated Experiences in Marriage and Its
authorized w Dlfike appropriate recAlternatives," will examine the family
ommendations ·W the full Senate once
unit in revolution, aild the cases for
study bas been completed.
a ·"standard" family p8.ttern versus
COncern o.ver the current policy
Oextbility. Innovations in peiring restems from the case of an NTP who
letiolll'hipe and perentbood will alao
be explored.
Sessions will be held Tuesdays from
dividual, also a graduate student, was
February 19 through ...-pril 30, from
wid tbat he must go through a fac3-4:30 p.m. in Normn Hall.
,
ulty sponsor becsuse; as an NTP, he'
Both workshops will be conducted
was irieligible to share in the awards.
by Mary Cleesattel, a counselor with
This prompted an .inquiry about tbe
Child Family Services and a member
wlicy from the PSS Executive Comof the lntematioual Transactional
mittee w Dr. McAllister H. Hull, Jr.,
Analysis Association . ,
chairman of the awards conunittee.
A I)Ominal fee of $10 for stUdents
Hull explained in a memo w PSS
ail.d $15 for non...tudents will beChairman Martell that: ·
, ·
charged. Registraticm is required and
"ln setting up the guidelines for
may be completed by contacting the
allocation of institutioual funds, a polUniversity Activities Office, 223 Noricy relevant w the question of NTP
len Hall, or by phoning ~1-4630.

~k~tot!: ~thehas~u:::

Workshops to Study

The Self, Lifestyles

:J:r!i ~~ i!J~-ri: ~:

'

.

'Only fecu1ty members holding un-qualified academic titles may be prin-

cipal in~' This excludes,
among others, adjunct, visiting, clinical and """""""'faculty, graduate and
undergraduate students faltbough
small block grantS are
w the
GSA and SA .for redistribution w -tbeir
membership- they offer a maximum
of perhaps $250 per student)". The
policy was set on tbe basis: (a ) that
tbe available fund• are n&lt;-l large and
are , declining, (b ) that the funds
should be used as seed monies · for
faculty eligible (o seek outside grants.
In _practice, the award in ~ oommittees
bave fayored younger faculty just getting started (since they will be judged
on their research" and· scholarship as '
one criterion for professional advancement). rather than senior established
faculty. This is not a rigid policy, but
is consistent with a number of views
on the best use of a scsrce resource.
Both the exclusion of the qualified
titles and thi• implicit favoring of
younger faculty is Challenged by those
excluded or disfavored. ·
"There is a further implicit assumptiOn in the guidelines," Hull ·said . ·
''The activities w be funded should
lead to the usual external presentation
of the results (a publication, perform
, show of art, etc.) , since such
presen tations hopefully add w the
S£hO!~rly reputation or the Univer·
srty.
.
.

m-ae

emphasized- that the PSS· E-=uthte
Committee is in no position to lw:iDI
"undocumented" beanray or
~ oomplalnta w the
•
tration. He ~ instead that "con:
crete concerns' be expressed in . writin~ w the Committee which _,)d
then take appropriate. stepe. .
. ln its final action of the· day, the
Staff Senate responded t&lt;• a oonoem
expressed by Senator Ray Volpe
• 1 Computing Center) that persoD81 information (home . address, telephone
number) about NTP staff members
might be made public, witbollt individual consent,- on lists which are
w be used for the possible formation
of car pools. Altbougb assured that
this would not be the case, the Senate
nonetheless approved a resolution urging that no personal information about
any NTP be given out for any purpose
without the written """"""t of the
individual concerned.

.,:i".J.:

jDivine Sarah.'·Wil/ Return

At long last, Sarah the Divine will
return.
·
The Bu(faw Project of the Center
for Theatre Research w i II present
"Sarah B. Divine," a musical biogra·
phy of the life of Sarah Bemhardt,
February 2Q-23 at 8:30 p.m. in the
Harriman Theatre Studio.
'More Pragmatic Than Principled'
The great Madame Bernhardt is w
ln setting up the guidelines, Hull
be brought back w the Buffalo stage
said' he could recall no consideration
in a ftourish of laughter, music, and
·of NTP applications per se. U there
dance, choreograpbed by James Waris a desire on the part of some stafl
ing. Joining .Sarah will be recreations
w make such applications, he offered,
of no lesser figures than Oscsr Wilde,
" I shall be. happy w take it up with
Alexander Dumas, Ellen Terry, and
the steering committee (which wrote
Eleanora Duse.
the guidelines)." He noted,. howe-ver,
that the commibtee has so far " reTom Eyen's play is being staged by
sisted requests w change the eligibilMartin Tacke!, direcwr of . such Cenity requirement." The largest poputer for Theatre Research" productions
as "Subject w Fits'' and "Woyzeck."
lation, of _the University which can .be
ex)&gt;ected' w meet' all qualificationS of
As tbe perforinance unit Of the Center, the Bu(faw Project has also prothe policy i&amp; already included, he
duced Jobn :Webster's "White Devil."
pointed out, and there are already
The group will becin a European tour
:!:::"'oo~ '!"!"Y applipations._as.
at tbe Festival of the Arts in Parma,
.: ::naly, Jeter this spring.
· .. ''Tbl!Se' grolinds '·cJt!arly iare IJKlre
pragmatic than principled," Hull con- ·
Tickets for "Saiah B. Divine'" are
tinued. ''Ideally ,. each application
available at Norton Hall Box Office
or at the door. · · ' · · 't,.. ,
· ·~
should be considered on its merits and
w maximize benefits w the University,
rio matter what the source. But prag.matic considerations are always with
us, and if the Staff Senate wduld wish
Fifteen grant sf contracts wtaling
me w go w the steering committee,
$651,084 were 'Swarded w Uni\&gt;ersity
I would want w do so with a carefully
faculty and staff during January, Robmade esse based on the guidelines
ert C. Fitzpatrick, actiog vice presi(except, of course, for IV.B.4 ) and
dent for research, reports.
showing a benefit w the University in
Sixty-eight proposals' wtaling $3,expending the eligible applicstion
173,138 were submitted w pros~ive
populations. I would think the prosponsors during the period.
fessional development of the individFour new grants went w: 11-.argaret
ual staff member is one appropriate
Acara, Pharmacology, $5,000 from the
benefit w cite if this is coupled with
Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Assochisfher required job . activities or opiation for "R e n a I Metabolism and
portunities (you will recognize that
Synthesis of Choline and Acetylcholsuch a coupling automatically exists
ine;" . Milo Gibaldi, Pharmaceutics,
for . .. feCulty) .
$137,571 from NIH for "C I in i cal
"On the other hand, all proposers,
Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceut.including ineligible ones, are supposed
ics;" Frederic J . Fleron, Political Sciw come w the steering commi~ for
ence, $17,000 from Americsn CQuncil
a review, and your oonstib.lency might
of Learned Societies for .a "Conference
wish w try a test case." ·
in Technology and Communist CulSenate response w Hull's explanature;" and Geoffrey Gibson, Sociology,
tion was guarded, primarily . on
$32,208 from PHS for a visiting scholgrounds that Senawrs could not dear program.
'
tennine from Thursday's debate if, in
Continuation and/or renewal grants
fact, any problem exists.
·
•
of
more
than $25,000 went w: J. WarIndividual Senators expressed views
ren Perry, · Health Related Profesranging from advocacy of a ·"wait and
sions, S88,490 from the Kellogg Founsee" policy ("It seems senseless to act
dation for "Health Sciences Educstion
lDitil-'8. solid"NTP research proposal
and Evaliration Center;" Robin M.
- and not just one trumped up for a
Bannerman, Medicine, $28,004 from
test case- comes along and is refused
NIH for "Iron Metabolism in Inheritconsideration") to expressions of outed Hypochromic Anemias;" Hermann
right indignation ( "It is offensive that
Rahn, $140,()()0 from ONR . for "Higb
the Awards Corfunittee should make
Pressure Physiology;" and Thomas
judgments based not on the merit of
Bardos, Medicinal Chemistcy, $114j'"
ideas but on a:instituency").
819 from NIH for "Chemical and BioNTP 'M~Ie'
·
logical Studies in Cancer ChemotherThe Executive Committee will probe
apy."
.
the matter further as it will the quesDavid A. Cadenhead, Chemistry, retion of NTP "morale" in connectiOn
.
ceived
a
renewal
granfof
$13,773
from
with the job evaluation and ranking
NASA for '"A Surface Area and Pore
process. One Senawr prompted a barStructure
Analysis
of
Porous
Moonrage of rumblings when be said he has
Rock Samples."
·
-~bee.-, wid that, "Tbe administration
has received no complaints concerning ·
HOLIDAY BUS S.ERYJCE
the evaluation process." Senawr after
Senamr joined in a series of off-theThere ·will be no bus service for Elmwood·
record uatrocity" stories about: the
Bell or Ridge Lea on Washi ngton's Birth·
process and its outcomes, alleged inday, February 18. The Amherst-Main Street
equities, discrepancies, fllld reports of
Camp;us Bus will opera\e on that data;.
confliclling information ftom adminisacco{ding to the posted Sunday schedule.
trative sources. Chairman Martell

January Research ...

�~

6

Welch Book Eyes hifluence·

Of the _Military in Politics
IIIUTAIIY .0U AND AUIL-.s~
on ~ - . 11J Daude L

_, ..-. pallllcal-."'~

.,._....,of-

-

K. . . - . YCIII&lt;III.......,__IIulllury-.-

1974. 2 M No politial poup · - - inftuen- .
tial md ._studied tbaD the .military,
tbe authors DOte in their pref8ce,
Nallaul ......,.....,.... SPelld in .,._
. - fll $200 biJJian anDually on their
armed ....... af than devoU,..
up to Nil their ............ 1be
_..ta aJ&gt;P~Ql&lt;i~Mtely 88 much on tbe
military 88 Oil education and pulilic
....-."

I

-

u.s.

~tb

combined.

1be poliUcal impact ol tbe military,
Welcb and Smith lillY, "is even more
profound tbaD ita economic wei&amp;ht.
More tbaD a third ol the meuiber
siB I'"' af the United Nations are bead.:!od by individuals who seized power
in coups d'erol-the classic-means -by
· which members of the armed forces
move from their batmcks into presidential palaces. Despite extensive efforts to subordinste the military to
civilian control, the failures have been
more pronounced than the Successes.
The number of governments . under
military leadership hns recently increased: in Latin America, the total
roee from one in early 1962 to ten
by mid-1973; in A f r 1 c a, the total
jumPed from two to fifteen in the
same period."
The authors identify three types of
military involvement in politics: influence, in which armed foroes act as ·
a powerful pressure group or as part
of tbe boreaucracy; partU:ipalil;/f!, ex~rciaed indirectly through vetoes of
policy c;l&gt;oices or ol individual candi_dates, or directly through measures
which may culminate in tbe Olll!ter of
elected &lt;&gt;ilicials; and COIItrol, ·the most
extensive form of involvement, in
which tbe armed forces decide who
will hold leadership positions, what
policies will be followed, and how .

~ ':':,"U::!' ;-~~vi'!:i

In lieu of a comprehensive annual
wrop-up of faculty -u, the Re·
porter hopes to print notices of

boolcsastlte)'._.,. we-U...t
faculty include us on publishers'
m•illnc lists rw - " ' - ' " onclf
« - - t o 250 Wlnspeor, Rm. 213.

All submls-.s will be

nltu"'Ofl-

tbe fact that "whatever tbe background of the individual reader," the
volume "should help him be r understand · tbe undoubted politiCal prominence of tbe military throughout tbe
world."
.
The Research Foundation of State
University provided fellowships to as~tin pre~tion.o~ ~ ~L

MODERN FRENCH CRITICISM (from
Smith examine in t e r m s of states
Proust oncl Volery to.-structuronsm); Cltl'
where ,memberJ ,of tbe armed . foroes ,
cogo; University of Chlc:ogo Press, 1972,
lbeii- roCes as requiring them to
exercise direct politi&lt;'BI leadership.
xvi &amp; 405 - · $12.50, edimd lty ProJohn K. Simon, cholmutn, Deport·
1be book, tbe authors say, sprang
ment of French, to be Issued In o poper"!'{rom their mutual interest in analyzI&gt;KI&lt; edition In Februory 1974.
ing tbe political roles of armed foroes.
A theoretical framework is. compleFrom the bOok jacket: .
mented with case studies of EJOSPt.
"This collection of essays explores
France, Nigeria, Peru and Thailand,
and revi~s the work ·or tbe major
"illustrating different varieties of miliFrench critics of the twentieth . centary involvement in politics, rangin~
tury, an area of &lt;intellectual endeavor
from the military's acceotance of civils,u rprisingly neglected in Englishian control to its unchaUen~ed disspeaking countries. Each chapter explacement of the elected government."
amines an important critic's work or a
Lessons of the hook J!O (ar becoherent body of criticism, and esch
yond the case studies, S m i t h and
is supplemented by an annotated bibWelch contend : "The wide-ranging
liogmphy of works by and about its
political responsibilities exercised by ' subject. Included in this volume is an
officers in other nations indicate that
es.&lt;;av on Albert Thibaudet b y Rene
civilian control as it exists in tbe
Wellek, Michel Besujour's examinsUnited States characteri7.es only a
tion of Georges Batsille, Robert Cham· small fraction of nations. Even in the
pigny's analysis of the criticism of
United Slates, the political and ecoGaston Backelard, a discussion of
nomic impacts of tbe military are vast.
Merleau-Ponty by Nesl Oxenhandler
Debates rage over what former Presand Paul de Man's critique of th~
ident Eisenhower termed tbe 'militaryworks of Maurice Blanchot. Valery
industrial complex,' over the aU-volProust, Remy de Gourmont, Du Bos'
unteer -armed forces, and over defense
Paulhan, Breton, Sartre, the Genev~
expenditu~1or the · United States
School, and Ba,rtbes are a!&amp;&gt; analyzspends as much on its armed foroes
ed by leading scholars in the field.
as tbe combined gross national prod"Slarting from Baudelaire's famous
ucts of all countries in the Middle
dictull!-'To be right, that is to have
East and South Asia, some sixteen
its raison d'etre.. criticism m~t be~­
slates with a total population. of close
tial_. passionate, political, that is to say,
to_800 million. Unde{lying · all these
w_ntten. £rom an exc1usive point of
areas of ' heated controversy are two
vtew, but from tbe point of view that
fun!iamental questions: How much
opens up the widest horizon' - the
power should be allotted to the armed
French critics have poured such enor. foroes? Can states in which military
!"ous talent and intellectual energy
~niTOl of politics exists move lowilrd
mto this new tradition that they have
-"tnilitary influence in politics?
changed the nature or criticism itaelf
"The importance of MiliUuv Role
"Given tbe irrelevance of ecademk
nnd Rule," the authors say, c;lies in
criticism and tbe wrong hesdedness of
responses ~ these !JIIestions;" and in
professional critics ~t the tum 01 the
century, Valey and Proust initiated a
PRE-TEEN WORKSHOP
· new dev'eloJMi,ent by being tbe firSt
authors to take up criticism . in selfA pre ~ teen ceramic worlcshop- hand
defense. They sought to put an end to
-;building, wheel throwing, and glazingpersonalist evaluation and positivist
·will be held in the Creative Craft Center
· critical beliefs as well as to tbe spread
for eight suCcessive Satuidays, beginnirlg
of loose impressionistic forms of apFebruary 23. The workshop will run each
-preciatiOn. Increasingly, tbe attempt
week from "10 a.m.-noon. Twelve students,
has been to transform criticism from
- ages 9-~2. can be accommodated. The fee
an auxiliary discipJine..Jo an intellecis $45 .and enrollment is open to the Unitual activity that IS an end in itself ;~rsity and community. Registration is in
a cconsciousness of' consciousness• and
Room 7, Norton. Telephone ~1--4106.
a 'litemture about literature.'" -

see

,~

(Conlilootod , _ l. coL 4)
"We felt wry pciwerfuJ that we bAd
been able to bring about new letJiala·

lion," Dr. P.usen ..-11s. "but 1 think
tbe State wanted a new law all alonrTbe State Willi under consider-able
~ as a reoult af the Clean Air
Act. Our citizen p , _ , was just tbe
extra nudge that the State needed."
Rachel Carson had won round one
but there waa stiU a long light &amp;head.
In the fall of 1972, Dr. Paigen had new
faces in claas wbo took up where tbe
earlier students had left oft. Under. the
new law, tbe ccike companies had Wltil
October, 1972, to submit acceptable .
compliance plans to the State. 1be
deadline came and went, without .the
appearance of the required plans. -1be
State took no action against tbe companies for failing to comply. Instead,
Dr. Paigen remembers, the State began negotiating a lenient timetable
for compliance with the companies.
By February 1913, the companies were
still unable or unwilling to produce
acceptable p)an s for compliance .
Moreover, the State had failed to bold
a public hearing on the matter as
mandated by U:" new law and further
had refused to allow RCC to see the
compliance schedules that bad been
submitted..
•
~
Just as the first phase of tbe project had immersed students in pollutioncnntrol te&lt;-hnologv. t~is phwe sent tbe
class to the Law Library wbere they
explored · their legal options in bringi"''! nb::ut the desired COIJlpliance. The
clll&gt;;.&lt; retained a lawyer, and in March,
19'13. the students filed a letter of
intent to s ue U&gt;e State for failing to
enforce its own law.
''The action was taken in the name
of tbe local Sierra Club because we
felt, as a . unit of State University,
that we could not sue the State," explains Dr. Paigen. Copies of the letter
were filed with the Environmental
Protection Agency in Washington, the
State Department of Conservation,
and tbe tbfee offending companies.
Stole Held Heorln1

Threatened with a suit, tbe State
agreed to hold a public hearing. The
class was also· ·gtven a0oes8 to- 'the •
scbeiliiles that the companies bad submitted. "It was our opinion afl!!r reading· the sChedules that the steel com_panies were still claiming, incoirectly,
that better controls were not feasible
and that tbe State did not know just
bow much control was possible ana
had been achieved elsewhere," Dr.
Palgen ssys.
The students, riieanwhile, had acquired a new and powerful ally: tbe
coke-oven workers. "The unions were
originsUy opposed because · they
thought poUution controls would result in loss of jobs. At the first hearing
workers came up to students llbd
threatened to throw them in the cokeovens. They apologize for that now.
. .. But from the-very beginning. we
had emphasized tbe dangers of uncontroUed conditions to tbe workers.
Under existing conditions in the plants
a coke-oven worker is ~ to benzo (a) pyrene, one of the most dangefous particulsteS, at levels equivalent
to smoking 200 packs of cigarettes a
day . In order to convert to tbe pro_cedures we recommended tbe plants
wouldn't need to shut down for e\'en
a day. The control devices can be in- .
stalled while the plant iS in &lt;ipe'ration.
In (act, our plan would create jobs
instead of causing layoffs. One of our
major points is the need to hire more
men in order to achieve better. maintenance," she says.
Worl&lt;era Bec:ame Sympothetlc

By the time the second hearing
rolled around the workers were "very
she says. They were

~ympathetic,''

K~mp

to Speak

Congressman Jack Kemp has agreed
to be tbe main speaker at tbe School
of Management Commencement scheduled for 8:30 p.in., Saturday, May 18,
at Kleinhans MIISic Hall.
• ltOUDAY UBRARY HOURS
On Washington's Birthday, February 18,
public services units of the Universjty

libraries will maintain their regular ser·
vice schedutes. wrtf) these exceptions :
Science and Engineering library: 9 a.m.-

5 p.m.; Chemlslrl(: closed; Archives: closed;
Bell Sciences: closed,

J4, lP74

also -mad about their '-'111: On
their own, the -r~oeaa at the BelbJe.
hem Steel ~doQ · ~ that
tbe Federal ~tlaael Safety md

Healtb Adminlatniian &lt;OSHA&gt; oaoduct an ........,..ey inlpectlaa af wwk·
condl tiona em the oolre-oveca.

. m,

OSHA inspected the plant and
promptly lllapped Betblehem Steel
with a "toeriau&amp; violatioll," 08HA'a
mortal-&amp;in cateaory, indicaU,.. lbat
exisU,.. conditi0111 p-ted a .riaas
threat to tbe ~th af the wodrera.
&lt;Bethlehem Steel contested the
charge.)

Four RCC students teatlfled on col1:.e
pollution-&lt;lOiltzol technologv at the
public '-ring they helped brlDr llbout
laat May. 'The claas also located two
expert w i - to ai1lue tbe cue for
better controls. One waa Marvin -Fein,
chief attorney for Peanaylv8nia's Environmental Strike Force. AUePienY
County baa tbe highest concentration
. of C&lt;&gt;Jte.o...Ds in tbe United States,
and yet there tbe same companies that
·ctsimed nothing could be done in Erie
County had abeady achieved better
pollution control. Fein had negotiated
for tbe Commonwealth of Pennsylvan~ to bring about the good levels
of control attained in Allegheny County. •• Atrocious" was the way he
described tbe agreement workell out
between New York State and the local
companies. ''1'he State," he said, "has
been taken for a ride.''
''The hearing had tremendous impact," Dr. Paigen recaUs. TOO State
withdrew tbe compliance schedule it
had negotiated and tumed the whole
case over to a new lawyer, David Vsn
Epps, an attorney for tbe Department
of Environmental Conservation in
Bullalo. ·
"David Van Epps did a tremendous
job,'' she ssys. "He wrote a tough,
very detailed new compliance schedule. The companies refuseil to sign il"
The coke companies were subsequ'lJltlY Sj1rved . with court orders for
failure to comply.
·
Round Three

.

Round three began last month when
.Betl:&gt;leoom Steel appeared at an administrative -hearing to defend· itS' refusal to enilorae tbe rigorous compliance schedule. Students enrolled in
the current environmental action
course helped Van Epps, wbo now
teaches a course in environmental
law in RCC, prepare tbe case for the
State. ·Dr. Paigen also served tbe State
as a technical expert on tbe role of
coke-related poUutsnts in tbe epidemiology of cancer.
In an administrative hearing both
sides p,.,sent their arguments to a
State-appoin!ed hearing officer, who
makes a ..judgment t-el on the facts
and tinaUy makes a recommendation
&lt;which may be appealed in court) to
1lie aPJhopria)e State Commisilioner.
Robert Reis -pf tbe U / B Law School
was tbe hearing' officer when the ·case
was heard last month:
"The hearing was a tremendous
success," t:eports Dr. Pai gen, even
without knowing the official results.
"Bethlehem Steel did not contest that
there was a pollution problem created
by tbe coke-oven operations. And they
agreed at tbe hearing to spend $40
million over the next 3'n years on
poUution control. No matter what tbe
official outcome, the company has conoeded lil06t of the major points. ·Bethlehem's commitment should result in
such a major cleanup of the air in
Lackawanna and South Buffalo that
tbey should actually achieve 'clean air
status! I don't want to minimize the
&gt; fact that there are still contested
pointS. 1be company's concessions
will result in a dramatic reduction in
sulfur dioxide and particulates in tbe
the air, but tbe State is still concerned about dangerous levels or ·
ammonia and phenols. But Bethlehem has made a inajor commilmeut.r
or courae, there are still two cokeoven companies to go, but they are
also expected to concede. And when
the compliance order is actuaUy
sign~ 1 .it wil~ be a step-by-6tep, lepJ,
ly_-bmo"!g document. 'The companies •
wlll be m contempt of a&gt;urt if they .
don't comply according to the schedule detailed in tbe compliance order.
''Each successive class achieved a
p&gt;ajor step,'' she says proudly of her
students, "the first, a new law, tbe
second, successful . legal action, and
now t.jlis, which iS really .the culminatio'! of everyU&gt;ing that w"nt l)e(oll!-"

�~
W~~C~umqu~----~~-----

-·
r=,=

(Coratiluoed '"'"' -

----

TM thnm&gt;l Line

I, coL 4)

·

(~

111211)

7~~ .!f!.=:"'J:.~

~at~"":: .!:t"";:X.,.~

Birlh Comrol, Dr. John Bocl.m, ........
ciot; Dr. Morris Unber, U/ 8 dialcal

aooistan( pro!eooor, GyneoolosY-Obotetzial
Department, and rep,_.,tati- r._
Planned Parenthood, 231 Norton, 7-9:30
p.m.
" - the topica .to be w.cu..ect will ·
be -..a! diaordero and dysfunctiono,

venereal diseaAe.. vaginal infectiou, pn.tate problems and cancer. A ru.cu.;.,n of
contraception and eteriliza:tlon.11rith em-

- C;~ ~~~m:unl~uaedbe ":~..::!

INTERVIEWS

during the worbhop.
MANAGEMENt FILMS••

A Plain Man's Guide to Advertising
and Executive Su1~te, 5 Acbeaon, 7-9: 30
p.m. No ad.miB.sion cha_rge. •

ON-CAMPUS INTRYIIWS

Throughout the aemester, on-campUB
interviewa will be conducted for students
who are interested in attending craduate
schools or obtaininc employment. Further information and appon\tmen ts for ,
interviews can be arranged through Lhe..n.Univeraity Placement and Career Guid ·
ance Office, Hayes C. 831·4414. The following agencies will be interviewing this
week :
THURSDAY -14: Equitable Life A.Biura nce Co.; Babcock &amp; Wilcox; Burroughs
Corp.; Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.;
Raytheon Co.
F1UDAY-15 : Raytheon Company; National Steel Corp.
TUESDAY-19 : Union Carbide- Linde
D ivision ; Household Finance Corp.
WEDNESDAY-20: U.S. Social Security;
Chase Manhattan Bank; Dames &amp;
Moore; Xerox Corp.
THURSDAY-21: Westinghouse Electric
Corp.; GTE Sylvania, Inc.; W.T. Grant
Co.; Xerox Corp.

Hlua socw•
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7: 30

p.m.

PHYSICAl-ORGANIC CHEMISTaY' LECTURE#

-Student-Initiated Clinical lab
Joins Health Services in MiChael
A

student-initiaiecJ

c fin i cal lab

opened in January in Michael Hall

to -red and· ·white blood count,
hemolllobin, bema torri t, urinalysis,
. pregnancy, mono, glucooe, bilirubin,
and dillerential white count. 1be new
Sub-Board Clinical Lab is a pait of
the Univemity Health Services, heilded by Dr. Paul Hoftman.
·
Directing the lab jg. Dr. John Fopeano, professor and chairman of medical technology, School of Health Related """'f-ic;&gt;ps. Chief technOlogist
u;) ~ unal!!wood, a 1973 Died
tech graduate. Drs. Chester A. Glomski, associate professor of anatomical
sciences; and Ro_ger K . Cunn4tgl)am,
associate, J!~~~l"~c;&gt;,f ,.!Jlic.r;9l?'!l&gt;!'!!9'•
are speci81 "couaUJ.umts.
.. One of the goals of tbe n.eYt- lab is
more effective and efficient health
care for studentS. In the past . all
testing was done at private facilities
in Buffalo.
The new venture is a cooperative·
one involving students and faculty in
the Medical Technology Department,

Structure of lon·Pairs, Prof. E. Grunwald, Brandeis University, 322 Acheson,
8
~ lecture series is part or the Conversations in the D isciplines supported
by the U / B Foundation and administered by the Office of the Vice President
for A cadPru.ic Affairs with the aid of the
Graduate School
UUAI FilM..

· University Health Servicos, and SubBoard L Sub-Board donated $25,000
foe salaries and equipment with the
hope that the lab will be self-supporting by the end of the year.
"We are doing about 50 tests a week.
and expect to donble this in the near
future," l;)r. M. lAlther Musselman,
assistant director of the University
Health Services, says.
in ~:w~~~~ ':\;~~:
no~ogy students, according to Dr. Fopeano. Five medical students (third
and fourth year) will spend some ·time
there during their rotation in Uni-

~"a~t =~~~ne-~~
spenil three week&amp; in 1he-w&gt; as -One of
five electives.

_ .Two,..otbe~ •.Unj.veJ:Sity. ~tu[len.tA l'l'l'

involved in the new projecl Albert
Campagna, a medical sociology graduate student, is the director for health
programs for Sub-Board I , and Rjch&amp;ra Hockman, a senior business major,
. is division manager for the Sub-Board
Health Care Division.

Job OpeningS
FACULTY .
Assistant Professor, Physiology.
Open Title, Engineering ScU?nce.
Asaoci8te Librarian, University Libraries.
Assistant Professor, Music.
Assistant Professor (3 positions open ) , Economics.
Associate Professor, Economics. .
Title and rank deperident upon qualifications and background (1
position), Engineering and App!U?d Sciences.
Assistant to Full Professor, Sociology.
Assistant Professor, Environmental Analysis &amp; Policy, Management.
Assistant Professor, Organization &amp;·Human Resources, Management.
P rofe&amp;Klr, Computer ScU?nce.
HlP

PI!NIOnnel Asaociak, Personnel Department.
Techniail Specialist, Theoretical Biology.
Techni.cal Aasistant, Geography.
Assistont Dean, Credit-Free Programs.
Ad'!'issions Counselor, Admissions &amp; Booords.
· Syskms ~lyst . (2 positio~) , Computer Services.
. ' For additional information concerning u,.;, ·jobs 'and for details of
NTP openings throUghout the State Unive,j.ity system, consult bulletin
boards at lbeae locations:
'
L. Bell Facility between 0)52 and 0153; 2. Rldle Lea, Building
4236, ned to cafeleria; 3. Ridge_Lea, Building 4230, in corridor
to
C-1; 4. Health Science&amp; Building, in corridor opposite BS -13~; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; . &amp;. ~
ground ilbor in ccirridor next to vending machines; 7. ·HaYes ·Hall, in
main entranoe foyer, aaOss . from Public Information p!llce; ~.' Acb.m
lfidl. ·in.-'corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9. ParWr ~.
" ' ~ ned tO Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st floor, Hc!usinl oa'lc:!l
.._; 1L 1807 Elmwood, ~ ~t; 12. . Nortm&gt; Union,
Dinil:tor's~ Room 225; 13. Diefeodorf Hall, in corridor ned to
Room 106; 14. Jobn Lord O'Brian Hall, f~ floor (Ambeat CurlpB).

nen

...

The Friernh of Eddie Coyu (Yates,
1973) , Conference Theatre, Norton, check

sboTh~~ ~e:· ~~;'t!;:rft~

caught between being an informer and ·
keeping in with the mob. Starring Rob-

~~

Mitchum and Peter Boyle.

THEATU PRESENTATION•

Sarah B . Divine. by Tom Eyen, Harrima n Theatre Studio, 8 :30 p.m., through

NOTICES

Fe~;::a~t!l~. ~w:tn:~elisting.

ACTION IEPRESENTATIVES ON CAMPUS

Representatives from ACTION will be
on campus, February 19·21, to speak to

EXHIBIT$

-;~~-:a~~it:=~~-=9p~

UUAI EXHIBIT•

Kohl and Susan Kerstein will be in Norton Union to answer questiona and pro-

A group exhibition of work by gradu-

ate students in the U / B Department of
Art; Gallery, '219, Nbrtoti: through Febru- '

ary .46.""-Gellery houn: Monday , Wednes-day and Thunday, U a.m.-5 p .m.; '1\tesday and . Friday, noon -S p.m . and 7-10
p .m.; . Sunday, 1 J-5 -p:m; ~ '"' ~v 1~ .,, • •ut•· •

Char/u Clough , paintings; Elizabeth
Grossman , photographs, and Erich Rassow, screen collage, Music Room, 259
Norton , through February 20.

10 a.m.-4 p .m.

EXHIIrT•

The Slow Loris Press, ::m emibit. of
hand-printed broadsides of poetry by a
variety of major and lesser known poets.
Compiled by Tony Petrosky, publisher
and editor of Slow Loris Press. Presented by the Office o! Cultural Affairo,

COUNSEliNG

Professional counseling is available at
Hiller· House, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
a ppointment, call 836-4540.
·
fOREIGN STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS

A limited number of schola rship.. are
available to undergraduate foreign stu . dents who have attended U/ B .or at
least one year. Applications are available in the Office of Foreign Student Affairs, 210 Townsend, and must be submitted for consideration by Friday, Feb-

Hayes Lobby, Monday-Friday, 9 a m.·
5 p.m. Through Feb. 28.
MUSIC EXHIIrT•

The Dimensions of Messiaen: Composer, TheoretU:.ian , Teacher and Performer, Music "Library, Baird Hall,

through Thunday, February 28.

ruary

POmY EXHIIrT•

15.

GRAD IESEAICH AWAID DEADliNE

Five Black Poeu, featuring, the works
or Ama Bontemps, Gwendolyn Brooks,
Langston Hughes, Leroi Jone s , and
Claude McKay, Poetry ColleCtion, 2nd

The deadline for applications for
GRAD (Graduate Resources Access Development) research awards is Monday,
February 18. The awards, which provide
up to $250 for research-related expense5,
are available to those graduate students
who are in the final stages of completing

Compute r Services
Discussions Set

~~fa~t a~~e ~fad~CP§~de~~"l=

ciation Office, 205 Norton. For further
infonnation, contact GRAD prQject director John Greenwood, 831·8317.

Tbe Academic Services group of
University Computer Services bas initiated a series of discussion meetings
with interested faculty members and
research users for the purpose of upgrading the quality of the UCS-supported computer program library.
Tbe meetings will attem~ to obtain
from the user community in,formation
concerning their needs, so that UCS
can make decisions regarding acquisition of new or'better pri&gt;grams for the
library. Tbe first meeting, concerning
statistical piograms, wils held aanu-

1be remaiJ:ting areas to be discussed,
in separate .meetings, are: Business
1: FirUmce - Tuesday, FebnJflfY 19;
Mathematical &amp; Engineering-Thursday, February 28; Interactive Ubraiy
-Tiuuaday, March 1-l; SimulationThursday, Marcb 21; and File Man=~ Miscellaneou&amp;-Tiuuaday,
Site of the meetings is 4238 Ridge·
Lea. Room 10. DiacoMsions will start
at 1 p.m. .

Placement -and Career Guiclanqo ·&lt;Miice,
Rm. 6, Hayes Annex C. .
On Thesday, Feb. 19, at 7: 30 p .m., the
re,resentat:Wee Will . hold"'-a" genenil fn!".

formation session which includes a slide
show of VISTA and Peace Corps volunteers in action.
The recruiters will also be at · 4236 ...Ridge Lea on Wednesday, Feb. 20, from

GRUUP EXHIBIT•

my 17.

~ai:Uf.~~~

HIUR SHAIU.TO N

Reservations are now being taken for

a · HiUel Shabbaton on. February 22-23.
For further information, visit the Hillel
table in Norton, or call 8364540.
SPRING VACATIO N Ski DIP

The Schuss{lleisters Ski Club is sponsoring a ski trip to Alta . Utah , March
14-19. Less than $300 will cover the costs &gt;
of airfare (American Airlines) , meals,

.~:J~fun~!f~~~
~· ~~a=
'dated, and interes ted individuals are
I

askeCI to sign up by Thun!day, February
14. For further information, call 8312146, ar otop by the Club's office, 318
Norton.
· ·

--------------------~---~
WEEK~Y COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE
For everyone's convenience and pleasure,

we like to publicize all events takina place
on campus. To record infonn•tion, contact
Nancy cardarelll, ext. 2228, by Mondoy
•t noon for i nclusion in the fotlowing.Thu_rsday issue.

�v 11111D-

~-r:==~ wor•-

olwp, r..aturing mllSiciaM, .araata and
~ from. New York City" Coaference

~~'t'y"' J;! ~erto

dent Oqanization.

Rican Stu-

_

JV IASDTIAU*

-

U/B vo. .Qenesoo State.. Clark Hall,
6;.110 p.m.
'
.
HOCJ&lt;lY'

U/ B vs. Ithaco, Ha~day Twin Rinks.
Cbee.ktow-. 'T: 30 'p.nl. '
., •
- CAC fiLM•

-·

-

· 10 ' Billington Ploce, 140 ' Capen, 8 &amp; ·
.. 10 p.m. AdmisSion: 76 cenia.
·

•

eo~nn1que
-

-.~be

-

Hall 1lqet •Open O!IIJ to_ _
•Open tD public ~.

nollid. -

-

c:an- ......,

a ~ ~ In the subject
tD oneml!ots of the Univefsitr
c.rdarelll, 831-2228, for llotlnp. '

Den141 lmplimtoloBY, Dr. Henry J.
Skerman. Boeton University,_ Scti_pol of .
Gr..taate Dentistry, Capen Hall, 8:90
a.m.-4:80 p.m.
·:..,;.
--:"
For further info~tion, call 831-4911.
learning experience.,

~~~:ucn... ·

PHILOSOPHY OF SCIINCl SOCIEJY

~::::;~"~~ lto:'~~~K~NN::

!'!if=r

profeaor of philoeophy, McMaster University, 4224 Ridge Lea. Rm. 37, 3:90
p.m.

-

4

•

••

Presented by the Graduate Stuaent
Association and the Buffalo Phi!OBOpby
of Science Society.
PHYSICS COUOQUIUM#

~=zi~ fi'JBP/)r~f~fPiMi~to~~

uut&gt;~r:~u:i~. Conference Theatre, Nor~
ton, check showcase for times. Ad.miJNI.ion
charge.

~

GRADUATE tECn.u•

Violist Maureen Gallagher, student of
8

~~~ ~c'lft~~· a:J'Uu:d'.'!%:

CAC FILM*

FENCiNG*

Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. No admission
charge.
' -

•

U/B va Elmira College, Clark Hall.
7 p.m.

HILlEL SHAIIAT SERVICE•

UFE WORKSHOP*

Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
UUAI FILM••

Dirty Harry, Conference Theatre. Nor.
ton, check showcase !or times. Admission
cbaige.

en~J'.:::'':~~=h= '!!
bavior which ahould have no eocial, po~tical,

THIID ANNUAl.
PUHTO lfCAN_CULTURAL FEmv.u•

moral or leg8! sanctions apinat i l ,
-

TM RU. Clld Fall of Eatern Euro-

pean Jewry, produced by David Roslties,

former edito-r of Yugntruf~ Fillmore
Room, Norton, 7:90 p.m. No admisoion ·
cbsrp.
Tlirougb . the of slides, tapoo and
telldinD, f:be.obow porlnlya the.rii:b culture ol ' the ohtetl, the amall Ewopean
J_ewish COIIIIDUIIity. ~ ~~: ~•
;r_.,_

•' N WllEITUHG•

U/8 n:
OorimWnity Gol1-. aart&lt; 'Hall. 7:90 p.m. _
·

10:90

a.m.

.

Concert-dance, Fillmore Room, Norton, 9 p.m. ·
Presented by the Puerto Rican Student Organization.
.
: ·

SATURDAY_-16

.--

rv

IAIICITIALL•
• U/B vs. LeMoyne, Clark Hall, 6:90
p.m.

COMPUIH SUVIC:U IIMINAA.

· Introducing: . BASIC 2.1, instructed by
Harvey Aslerocl, 4238 Ridge .Lea, Rm. 12,
7-9 p.m.
'
This seminar is for experienced l!ASIC·
UBel'S.

.,:J.";h&lt;;,=J;,J f.;,"N~~~. ~nl~,l:i~oo&lt;f.~
pen, no adniisaion charge. ...

A listening and Jeaminll experience,
292 Norton, 7-10 p.m.
UTUAnME I.KTUIE~

·

l

STATtmCAI. ICIENCI COUOQUIUM•·

·...

..

On 1M E•timatiOn of 'BiaMl• P4rGMete~ in the CGH ·w._~ 1f Ia i .t e

~~L~~~~l

49, 3:110 p.m.
Calfee_at 8 p.m.·

'

-...:o~--·
~
666 FJaDklin .Stn.l. 7;110 p.m.
~i

"""':

..

TalMad. ~ - Yid4iM -and ,
Hillel~ ..,
CapeoliMI., 7:110' p.m.
.

...

.

This is· the first oolloquium of the
the Literature and
Society· Prograin of the Department of

ae~DP.Ster _preaented•by

Enclish-

.

Room with a View (Brakbap), Ftllm'•
Room Yak, Offi« Suite, Hote~ and Open
Field, 148 Diefendorf, 8 :16 p.m. No ad~on cbarp.
THEATII PIUINfATION•

-

•

&amp;rtih B. Diuine, by Tom Eyen, Harriman 'Il&gt;eatre Studio, 8 :90 p.m., through
. February 28. Admissioa cbaqe.
• l'lUected by Martin Tac1ooL PN.ntad~ ~~~i!ctTheatre n-Idi and
•

-

&lt;;

•

Vocotion, 140 Capen, 3 '&amp;' 9 p.m. No

eo--.

•

TJ.'iit~~'l.."~fu:~Krl=.
~~.
Rm. 2, 8 p.m.
•

fH.MS•

:
. bhtfr{'!}~j:'n~~~~
Endowment for the Arts.- "Video: Evolution of an Art Form;:• ecreening of
Scope Mate•. by Ed Emsbwiller; Steiaa
Vasulks,.Let It Be and_other tapoo; Sbioeko Kubota Video G i r l1 tJiid Video
Songs for NtwtJjo s•y; Jane ,Wpgbt,
l'ula6ki, 147 Di!'fepdod, 10 a.m. • · .

He~~._

•

- I'SYCNOMAr

Lillian Schwartz, computer Jilma; Wanda Be,.ben, film scholar, "Some Remarks
on Criticism, Feminism and ·Film,'' two

......_aiJm..

..

fiLMS*

WOMEN IN FILM AND VIDEO•

· _.

·

saw••

· Modem Tima (1936), Conference
~=·~~ 4, 6, 8 &amp; 10 -p.m. -¥·

MONDAY-18

·

r&lt;•

nounced, 5 AcbNon, 4 p.ut

Two recovering alcoholics dMCribe the
Alcoholics Anonymoua program and the
gnidaooes used by AA in the recovery
process, WKBW radio, 10 p.m.
This program is the seVenth in a "Cop
Out" sub-series on alcubolism, entitled
The 19th Hole. The program is produced
and hosted by Miss SlLIIUUle Cook. -

UUAI fiLM• •

COUOQUIUM•

UUAI fiLM: CHAIUE CHAPUN

and WYSL, 10:90 p.m.

~on charge.

FOSn:.

Sir Joltn Eccle•, Nobel Laureate and
DisUnauiolbed Prote.or of Pbyaiolacy at
UJB. Will •P8&amp;k on ~ a topic -to be an-

·

COP OUT-GIEAT AMIRICAN PASTIME

Alan Perl will speak on GrowU., Up

.

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 362 Acb.oo, 4 p.m.

~~~';!e~~Uf:, S::,d =blW~~Ftt

in Poland, followed by an Oneg Shabbot,

Dynomics of Human Sexuo.lity: On Beinll Gay, Dr. Jim Haynes, chairman,
Mat:tacbine Society of Buffalo Health
Committee, 2;11 Norton, 7•9:90 p.m.

Htua MULn..m..., PIESINTATION*

·

~-Q'·...

Dr. RObert F. Beiner, U/B University
dean of the Dlviaion of Continuing Education. will discU,u with moderator. Suoan
eam..rdo the ......,.,. for the increoaing
popularity of. continuing education. the
varioua continuing education proarams

10 RiUington Place, 140 Capen, 8 &amp;

U.u; 140 Capen, 7 and 9 p.m. Admission: 75 centa. '
·

r,:~. ~=~ r:r&amp;.'ii:! ~

•

c!.h,:~R=na:i"~~C.:r~e~

screening of M uhu of tM Afternoon;

-Toward a Theory of Aperozimote
ReaonU.,, Prof. Lotfi A. Zadeh, ·University of Cahlornia, Berkeley, 70 Acbiiscm, a p.m.-. . . • . '
Presented as patt of the Department
·or Electrical Engineering Distinguished
Lecture Series.
Mt~~:!.~:re~i~P!~tion of Hutn4n

10 p .m . Admission: 75 cent&amp;.

· atelier, 4 p.m. Refreshments iri 112 Hochstetler at . 3:.30 p.m.

Ollip!.

CNIMICAL INOI,NEBINO· IIMINAA.

EMPHASIS: loucAliON

CAC FILM··

!i:'N':.~!e.'r:m u~=~~~rfo%:

.

'"'

ogy, 145· Capen, 4 p.m.

PnibU., La lntermetaUic Compounda
wieh Nuckor Mbfjtic Resonance.., Dr.

~

1

RICTIICAL ENOINDIING LECTUU•

LECTU~

~in ~~y~~~1~h~~p~d:~1

VJDlo•

sreit:!':c!n~ 1.'"~~~:0rema tor
0

~duate s~~· ....""' ,_ ..... ,

lnteru~ Worblu&gt;p, 233 Norton,
noon-4 p.m.
~
This is the oecond in_a eerieo pf tbft&lt;e
worksbopo leadiq tD a Minority Ca!eor
Day jn March, oponaor.cl by the Univemty Pl8cement and Ca!eor GUidance

Carolee Scbnoeman: Fuse.; Chick
Strand: Angel Blue Sweet Win;•, A"'
selmo, Water/all, MoA&gt;ri MonilltJ; Wandio

Pre.ented by the Engliah Department

Upper DevoniDn SeilimenlJJlion in the
Central Appa/«hi&lt;zn Jlooin, DL-J. DouaJas ·Giaeier, Uaivenity of North Carolina, Bell Facility, ~· D-170, 3:90 p.m.

MINOIRY CAIHI PIOGIAM•

SUNPAY-17

NonNo'rn4&lt;1L 'Sttible ReD6rio11, ·U/B , lino, My Name I• Oono, Toke Off, 147
Prof. D. BeueDnllllt-4230 :R.ia&amp;e Lea, .Rm. ... Diefendorf, 10 a.m.
· ·
~-49, 10: 90 a.m.
_
.
lliiEfiT eoioa-.J. .
. '
Coffee at io a.m.
The Cleueu1nii Strinlf Quortet will perENGliSH COLlOQUIUM•
.
Corm a benefit concert; for Chilean refu·- New Myth in Contemporary Poetry,
gees. 140 Capen, 8 p.m.
--~~S~~rew Uruvenity, Anne:r.
Ticket&amp; are $1 for etudenta. $8- for

•

lia~
and

.-

_!~::i'Jc~ 1.:"~~ ~~

.

wEDNESDAY- 20

U/B vs. Geneooo State, Clark Hall,
8:90 p.m.

FRIDAY -15

rinJRsDAY -14

A

VARSITY IASICfTIAU.•

WOMEN IN fi&amp;M AND

••Open

COtiTINUINO DINYAL IIDIICATION.

.PSYCMOMAt•

Dirty Harry , COnferenc6 Theatze, Norton, check showcase for timeS. Admiiaion
charge.

chaiJilnc ..tmlsslon con be pun:hased at the

.f or -

The Man Brothen' cluaic, A ·NWtt at
the Upero (~) • ....! It'• a Gilt (1934),
with W.C. Fi'elda, 140 Ca- 9 p.m. No
admisoion cbatp. ,
.

UUAI flt.M••

TllqRSDAY- 21

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>.Reichert Prospect Passe§;
College Partisans Walk Out
Overftow.
.
By
PA'l'RICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
R._,_ SWI

While an angry contingent from the

Col_leges held their own impromptu
meeting in the hall outside, the Fac-

ultY Senate closed its Tuesday meeting by endorsing the "Prospectus on
the Colleges" submitted by .Jonathan
Reichert and his committee.· •
A single "nay" was heard during
the roll-&lt;:all vote, which ended more
than seven hours of Senate debate on
the document over the last three
weeks.
The endorsement followed a spontaneous wallfout by spectators from
the Colleges, who left their seats led
by Liz Kennedy of Women's Studies,
when-Senate Cbainnan Gilbert Moore
ruled that the speaker on the floor,
a member of Women's Studies College
and "the Attica Brigade," was out of
order in reading a written statement
on recent cutbacks in funding for
higher Jl(lucation.
·.
.
.
" It's like the old days" sorrieooe observed, and, in fact, the inoiden.t did
~!ash back ~ the volatile . ~es .and
early sevenlies when Senate 'business
as crucial as this prospectus could
·n!'ver have been conducted in the 0011•
trolled . a!Jna!J&gt;bere _o_f. :the : last few
weekS. AB unexpected aa the incident
was, tension had been mounting duriN the lQJ\g hours of debate. SeQators
·• re
q.

.}b

_,..a

By SHARoN EDELMAN
~

Keeping . insbet ..-ns D;IOre than
never having to say "B.LT.~ After

=

haralll!tie or, worse, free-associate and

~rill ~era-of ''Oii·YlJI!IS" and

:l:'ir
.;J..:=~~ =o~
on almost any issue have ·come to be
predictable. In the gallery, the spectatOis, ' many of wbom J~l that the
quality of their academic' lives is tied
up with the future of the Colleges, had
been fairly restrainiid, limiting their
editorial expressions to hisses and
rounds of applause at the end of
speeches. But sources of frustration
· bave been obvious: the Collegians cannot introduce legislation directly, they
must d epend on the good will of
friendly Senators, and the S!mate
Chairman, in an effort to expedite the
b~ness at band, ))as, with the genera! support of the body, consistently
interrupted precisely those diffuse,
emotional, highly politicized speeches
that the radical Collegians find most
relevant.

"Mr. WOoderfulrs,Surprize." .

-

Bel--the Label

Operating under the motto, "Any_tbing . you don't e&amp;t is kosher, and
anything you ea£ is questionab1e,"
Rabbi Levy prooeed!!d to warn
the
:..Jilional""1ietary laws, following
llangers · whiCh )urk beneath supersuch procedures as separating meat
and dairy ..-Is by time· and _.,.,, . market packsging. "Never believe the
avoiding • pork, abellflsh, aDd certain . ' label,': be began, .''unleils you don't
•..care what you eat. What is listed ·as
other fooda .JJS uilcletm, and eating
'natural flavors' in a food can repreonly tboae commen:ial-producta which
sent · any non-cllemical additive .i nbear the (!) .or (!) symbol, . signifying
that preparation bas been supervised
cluding 'Such common flavoringe as
cat or beaver teSticles." He added
by an authorized -rabbi.
.
that anyone who eats.non-lrosber gelaOne ouch supervisor ia Rabbi Beryl ·
'tin, which is gelled by a-vegetable
Levy of tbe @ lAboratories, who
spoke 011 campus this week as part of
the onaoinl Jewish l&lt;rta Festival.
ism. "Gelatine is made from the bones
Blending the tm.t ~ of Ralph
and skins
animals," noted Rabbi
Nader, Adelle Davill aud zero Mostel,
Levy, "tbe source of which occasionbe left 110 brand liiUDe unturued in in(Conliluud on fXJI• 6, coL 3)
.'
Birllt:liaa hia audience about .keeping

- ~·of:-:wrr~=

·· '

.aav..s wt10 -dit! not- ;,rgue ..,.._ •

of

=~iBk~~=o!aJee:::,a::r.

of

-

1be · walkout emptied the
ing gallery of all but a handful ol
College spokesmen, inc;luding &amp;eW!J'Bl
from un-affiliated Clifford Furnas College, and, a few reporters. 'Roger COok
. of Social Sciences College left fellow
members of the Senate Committee on
the Colleges' to join the protesting
spectators. A brief sl:ullle broke out
between the undergraduate · representative to the Colleges Committee Robert Cole and the protestors, who stood
at the door of 1411 Diefendorf .regaling
the Senate with scatological verses
about Drs. Reichert, Ebert and Ketter
and chanting "Ketter says 'cut-back,'
we say 'figbt back'!"
Until the late-afternoon incident,
the Senate bad worked efficiently
through the documeitt according to a
well-&lt;&gt;iled procedure adopted when the
document first came befote the body
January· 22.
•
Before voting to accept the prospectus as a whole, the Senate endorsed
several modifications, all of which re· fleet to some degree the input of thoee
supporters of the Colleges wbo take
issue .with the Reichert document.
- p~ were lll!leDd!nents' that allow
individuals without.dej&gt;artmental fac..
ulty status' to be hired by the dean aa
·full time Collegiate teachers'; that allow the ~lieges to ofte&lt; experimental
courses (up to a limit of 10 pe&lt; cent
of their : tot.al progralnnling) on a
·
- ~ aDd that ·

-

~

a

u.e
o1 ~t
rathe&lt; than to aulomatiCallj .,.

.111

~ J:ti~~

Vic:"

~~t ~ .

The issue of aperimental courses
was a crucial one. In a brolidside isS\1~ by the Collegiate Assembly, supporters argued lhat' an ' explicit proviSion for experimental cowses in the
document would institutionalize "the
expectation that Colleges should be
receptive to new instructors and
ideas." Jonathan Reichert argued
against the motion that educational
experimentation and aperimental
courses are falsely equated. Prior justification and review are appropriate
before any course is offered for credit,
he said. 1be unamended prospectus
would not stamp out experimentation
but would simply eliminate a loophole
exploifed in the past by unqualified
i.nstructors teaching unjustifiable
(Contiruu!d on fXJI• 6, col. 2)

WilSon. Requests-$587.~9- Million Appropriation for SUNY
Govemor M81colin WilBon in hia
1974-76 budaet ~ to tbe State
I..ePiature lias reCommended $587 893,000 in ~•- appropriati01111 fur
State Uai~. in the fi8cal

-

~ ~Aa reporied
f.::
...e.., Utll'a 1Dm is $73.9 mjlliorL)
-

'Jbe ~Oil W,8D ~ I
ol. $81.5 mlllioD over 1973'7•- appri&gt;priatiaua. SUNY inaime funds will
jmMde $68,000 the total, tbe budg-

of

·e t _ , a _ .

_En__ _
(Conliliued

01t

ia

btiaed

011

~ _2 , Qol. I/

an emoll••. -

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priation, Wilaoo requested $117.7 D!illillll in State func:Utlg for aasistance to
community co'..._ ( a bike--of $5.3
mlllion) aDd . t e d that ~ lJniYWIJity system .will have ....,vai)able
$89.917 million in federal funds and
$11M.353 million from gif~ grabts,
endowment, f-. food -..ice aDd
other reimbunlable programs, 'tuid"lrom
N- ·York State Jlepnta aDd SdiDiar
Incentive Awatds. 1be graDd totalof all lunda 1or SUNY operations .ln
!'ilu:!mina Yf)Br• than, is $880ll13

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"')6

6.081

. +328 ·

SIO,C31
+613

858
+40
1.112
+43
675
+27
113
+42
649
+42

49
-27
24

+I

12.479
+!.1 54

......
....

..

$438

.... ...
.... .....
.... ...
...
+2.835

19,967

$1.5 million for 8ome hospital employees to an inoome reimbursable
account; a reduction of $290,000 in
funds for campus scbools; $934;000
for new building opetiings; $500,000
for graduate feUowships; $500,000 for
the first yeu: of aperations for the
CoUege for Prisoners in Weatd&gt;ester
County; a $1.5 million increase to im·
plement fully tbe Institute for Policy
Alternatives; $2.5 million for utility
price increues fin addition to similar
funds . bucUeted for each camj&gt;us); ·
$107,000 for planning a podiatry
scbool to be located at Stony Brook;
an increase of $1.1 million (to $4.25
million) for building ._us; $300,000
to begin instal1ini a new
t
information system d~ ,..Natianal Canter. for Higher Education

the Student Aaanbly ud Faculty
Senate (SUNY-wide bodies not included in previous budpts); $1.00,000
for "pilot funds for a basic eumination of ~ciee and plans
.
the creation, ClOiltinuance
tion of - . c b in&amp;titule&amp; and programs lhrouiboat tbe aystan. ud for

lOS

+4

+29
_.,

SfATt PURPOSES- flml.lNt

ne"''

prosram costs; $75,000 for support-of

113

~~-

. ... ;!II*

-!'~

Other major change items and
SUNY programs cited in jilstification
of the $31.5 million increase are: an
increase of $5.1 million for two teacbing hospitals tDownstate and Upstate) , partially offset by 'transferring

~:"t.!:~m:p~~~

143

73

·

.......,.mo

U6

,,

The budget hike also contains, how·
e"!'!L! '!"" increas•f -of· ' 1,052 : posit:ilm8
· SUNY-Wide; biiliging' the total stall to
' 33,620. As noted in last week's Reporter story on the U/B budget, student-faculty ratios are being made
uleaner," despite increased personnel.

ond -

.313

7•
119 .

• _31! •.

"'*·

Chao-

+362
+71
+96

• • ·--133 •.

717

2.001

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&lt;theI Governor
fUrSBJ'S,
the
budget
...., fiDd C0618 - classified employee
raises, annuallzitlion of part-year positions from ibe previous budlet,\ build·
ing openings, increased utilitY costs,
etc.

. .:

~ ~-·

l~ .

1629

L.lllOf RelltJonS .••..

Vt'tfnnlr)' ·····•····

New York educatiooal televiaioa network and a studenfloan fund)" Will be
reduced by $228,000 wifh the student
loan fund earmarked for significant
paring.
•
. .
•
•

···•en
-70

-~~

. 2.!121

4.531
1.100

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5.871

3.142
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973
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230
134

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412

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415

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-~

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~ --······ · ···

a

J&gt;roirams administered by SUNY (the

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....
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ar..onta ••.••••....•••

- - . . . . SUII,OOO; ~ cadoA
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pii:Jgiaml; . $5.0 05 iDillian; alld .. pro.

•.• . • • • •

=:~_::::: ::::::
co...o ......... : ... .
~ ............ .

~~::.000., SUNY mer-;,.

18-.

3.176

.~

6.270

'$1.480
.millian; Mrleultural ud tac:hJUeal col-

8,039

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........ sa.cec.ran ....

ll&amp;atutmy {ClOillnet) ~

=

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3.876

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12.423

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~
mlllian; ....nw.ity collepa, $7.?18
mil~ .
JiaD; opeci•lirwl coUeeee. -$1108,000;

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malel,y '181*' l*lt al tbe hlcb eehool
-

'lbe _ . , . _ _ . . . . , . . . .
data an iadMdUU. uait opaatia&amp;
~ ~ lllld....n-.t. ·

fwlda tithe~..._ 19'16-71); mid
a $100,000 lacul'&gt;' pant paopam, far

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~Said t0 liick ·FiicUiry Pal1icipati0n;~

·

-V'ICO·Called 'Straightest of~ siraiglM'.

By

·

·PATRICIA WAIU&gt; &lt;BJEDERMAN
;
_
._
'
(EDITda's· NO'l'll: ' l.q., wmeore tM
Repolter loqan 11 ~ 011 1M untJe./
publiciud ~Df, p.e (:o,Uq~ ;~ almiJBi 11 year tJfO by ·
leaiM of focuJly 11ppoinud by tM Facrdly Senau. That wria continues
ttU. weelt willa tM fU!dillll• of ~ in·
tenuJl eualualora 011 Socill[ Sciences
and V ico Collqa.)
'
SOCIAl: SCIENCO COU:£0E

''Tbe aim of Social ScieJices College
{SSC) .'' the evaluating team of ProSlatin (English) , Darold W
(electricaJ. engineering) ,
and William Stein '(anthropology) repol'led, "is to el&lt;8JDine the varlaus
80cial sciences discipline&amp; from a mdi·
ca1 · ~ve and :to apply tt-l to
tbe study of current 80cial problemS
in 8D integrated fashion." Such a program represents a legitimate approadl
and .perspective not offered by tbe
·traditional 80ciaJ science s depart__.., felt tbe team. Standards in ..__
....,.....,
w~
College, which enrolled over 400 students last year, are high: staff and
f~"/'

Apprec.latl·o· n..
.nner
ate'd·.
DI
I
.
•- •....._...•.._
L--: of

s

_.,_:..~In
""' ~~ ww....
.......,,

Gerald C. Saltarelli ' who ~ complated 10 four-year term a8 cbainitan
of the Board of Trustees of the U /B
Foundatioo, Inc., ·wlll b&amp; held llt GoadHall Tueaday February 12 be:U.ai7:16p.m: ·~ ·-· · ::- ' : . ·
Saltarelli will be: ikCiaimeit :''for'
his dedicatioD ·u; 8\hlciltiqn, 'liitd' .i
parlicular to the Uai......'"· at ~

propoeedcoursesare~inten-

·--v

'

and the University at Bulfalo ·Foundatioo, IDe.• by a aeries' of ~:

t::: ~ '['~G OuJ&gt;da·

preaideot,' Ui'B. AJIDDDi~ ~:
,..,_,_,
,L.
•

.........,. A. Roblin, .Jr., ...., n- U t B
Foundation chairman, and President
Robert L Ketter.
· ·
• • • · .. •
plaque from
the Foundation
will
beJ,.p.-.ted
to Saltarelli
in ''heart'

==·

!fc*ilii·
' . , a post
• be
m Marcb; l
"'!tt month.

sivel.Y Pli!&gt;r to the offering of courses
students
graded on perfo~
according to published criteria, and
teaching performance ia also evaluated.
On the minus side, the team cited
i1s a · major weakness of the College
"the lack of facUlty participation." As
the report points out, and as sse
spokesman Roger Cook has said re~tedly, .
.has had substantial
faci11ty su_pport in tbe pas......,.owever,four radical facul ty ( Raf'"'!':;
O•u Boddy
and James C ro tty in economics,
Thomas Rainey and Gabriel Kollro in
'rus~7
.-:, _._,) who were a cti ve m
· the program left th:e University (at least one,
Rainey, claiming publicly that par. ~on in · the College bad hurt

are

sse

fe I t appreciation" and "in gratilulle
for~~l~p and llenilce.''
S&amp;ltarellL ii U'/ B buSineiia 'aiid ' JaW:
alumnus,' 18
· ' chairman and
'dent
of H~
e-'
. ." . · ~,W,.W.
..~
~-

He Is uedttad; in concett •• wtth otber trustees, faculty, alumni,
students and the Greater Buft'alo com-.
munity, with having increaaed private
philanthropy through !be- Foundation
three-fold. He also gwded the· U/.BF
!hJough a cycle of internal reotructur-

like an· academic de!Jartment, a Col·

lep does not have the ,_,.,.,.,. and
sbould not be expected to cover an
area or a discipline from a balanced
viewpoint. It ia truer .to the concept of

tile CQllel!es and to its own charter if
it a&amp;lleDJbles courses which lit its

theme.'~

lri an aside, the team expressed horror at some of the courses being offered by the Colleges. The evaluators
faulted both the Assembly and the
BUS Curriculum C om m i t tee for
"sometimes lacking . . ·. a will . . . to
apply strict or at least 'reasonable
standards to the approval .or individual ~ .• .. . Qocasio~ failure is
the pnce of expenmentation and can
be expected in an activ_e· College," the
team argued, but experunental courses
need to be evaluated on their complelion, and "frequent or overwhelming
failure ahoul~ not be tolerafe&lt;!."
Among tts recommend.alions the
team suggested that l;be ~llegiate Asaembly and the Umverstty work togetbe_r. to en_courage ten. ured faculty to
Coli
·~"!pate m
egt&amp;t.; programs by
credtting Coll~e teaching to the fa.
culty memben( departmentsl record
and by developm¥ a system of alternative ~ards wtthin the C'.ollegiate
system.
VICO COLLEGE
"We are the straig htest of the
straight;" explains Coordinator Elisabeth Perry of Vico College, named
for an 18th Century Italian philoeophec of . history and' committed to an
"integrated, interdisciplinary approach
to liberal education.'' This "history of
ideas" College is an anomaly within
tbe Collegiate system by virtue of its
unquestionable academic respectability, its b'aditional sub"-' matter • the
·
· , and its· ability
"""
''
humanities)
to' retain
a core teaching staff of 15 to 20 regular faculty. Just how far Vioo diverges
in: the ditection of res pectabili-t y is'

~~~
=~-.: !r~6iculty
---~the College is done mostly b)' non· ·
than the Collegiate Assembly's nemreliiiJir leachiiig s faff, -the ma]onl:Y of

esis, George Hochfield.
Uke the other Colleges, Vico a t-·
tempts to fill a gap in the educational
fabric of university life. But, as its
evaluators noted, "Yico does not represent a new educational departure - ·
rather it represents a 'Cil!ssical' b'adition that has been lost at. SUNY/ Buffs lo, but that should be provtded at
any university that purports to offer
a liberal education.:• Within _the Coilege, _faculty fro!'! history. phtlosophy,
English and political sctence offer core
courses &lt;often team-taught ) b'acing
"western cultural, social and intellectual development from ancient Greece
·to modem Europe and America." In
' other words, with minimal funding,
Vico provides the University with its
only undergraduate humanities pro-

them U / B graduate students.
Although tbe evaluators did not
criticize the quality of teaching in the
College, ·the team "W8S d istressed by
the limited it.volvement of regular
faculty. The inability of the College to
"reward" its faculty in the traditional
ways was lamented here as in other
. Reciptent of last year's Samuel P .
Capen Award for University services
intemal-evalualfons. The learn thought
by ~ alumnus, he was the Buffa!o
sse might be able to draw more faEvenmg News "Man of the _Year" m
culty if i:t relocated on Ridg!' Lea,
1966; He bas devoted energtes to the
wbere most of the regular social sciUnited Fund, Salvation Army, Buft'alo
ence departments are ftoused , and if it
Philharmonic 'Ord&gt;estra, Roswell Park
did a better job of making itself known
Memorial Institute, Canisius College
to 1ts regulariZed brethren. The associ!tnd Buft'alo city govetnment.
...
ation .of tenured facul ty was particu'lbe black-tie appreciation dinner 'i s
larly imporlant to the Collflge, the
by invitation only.
tetim felt. in light of tbe suspicion prec
of
~~ .,1.,
dictably aroused by the College's unrJ\ .~u~u:y
orthodox approach and subject matter
gram.
.
,
· ·
.
.
(a variation on the legitiniacy leit·
The evaluating team of Professors
·A team of ~1'\1 m the_ Psymotif that recurs throughout these reClark A. Murdock (political science) ,
ports), One member of the team (ProEvelyn L Smithson (classics) , and
chology Department 18 d!""'lopmg a
treatment to remedy a !hlld's fean&gt;f
fessor Stein of antl.ropology ) apCareiJ. VanOss (microbiology ) were
!he ~k. baaed on """"! recent lind·
parently convinced himself and curconvinced that Vico didn't belong in
~ m aelf-&lt;XJntrol. Desianed to help
rently offers a course in " Latin Ameri-the Collegiate system. They recomchildren cope with BUCb problems as
can Revolutionary Movements"
mended that it be given pro g ram
"!'~ a dark room and going outthrough the College.
·
status by the University. As a prom!~&lt;&gt; m the dark, the - . . t , whidt
An Eolmed 'Controvenlol'
· gram, Vi&lt;::o would 'be able to offer a
will be olferecl'free·of charge, is availsse earned its "conb'overslal" last major in huinanities. The team preable to seven and-eight year-olcis. The
year when,-in the j&gt;ages Of ' the Specdieted that a separate humanities prolrum, Eric ~ow of the Co II e g e
gram would atb'act many interested
program begins F~ 23 and in·
.volves three successtVe 'I!Oeekend aesclaimed that his proposed course in
students who were currently reluctant
sions of apprll'!';imatslY one hour each
"Pop Music" bad not been fUhded on
1o take Vico courses because they
at the Psychoi=Clinic loCated on . · the grouDds that -it . lackecl sufficient • feared College credits mildtt not be
the Ridge ' Lea
•·· - ·
•
Mantiat eontent. This was; Claimed
accepted by graduate s c h o o Is. The
Parents in
in obtaining belp
the grievant (who is now a dee jay in
team urged that tbe Vico program be
California, Cook reports ), a political
expanded to encOurage in-depth study
for a · child who is afraid of the dark
should contact -the researchers as soon
test. This complex- question of What,
of themes introduced in the core
aa poosible at 831-1829 between 2 and
ahort.of a loyalty. oath of one kind or . courses and to develop a speakers
4 p:m. and 6:30 and 8:30 p_m., toda:y •
another, constitutes a political test . series.- For faculty, joint appointments
and FebnJa.ry 11-14.
..
was eventuaUy divel'led to tbe Senate's
in a ~t 'and the program were
·
·
Academic ~m Committee, which,
reoomniended, with the burden of ad·
.
WASHINGTON'S 111m/DAY
at the Senate!&amp; request, wrote ""!'!")'
mini&amp;trative funding to be shared by
The Unlvlrslty will be closed on Mondoy; ·
answerscal- buont also.wbat:tuthatest~L~~
theSociaJF~~ Artsand anAdmind
I,etistra
_tersti!"'on.d
Februory 18. in observlnce of George
...., ~
~oshedhlunllloled
n'andBI -u
_l-.:....
au-willbe"c"'l--~. in band flll'8 through established inSeparate status .and greater support,
~
temal gnevance mechanism!; (a Colthe evaluators hoped1 would ''protect
_
1
1 ~~
TiJeldoy, Februory 12. Uncoin•s Birthday; ·•
legiate Aaaembty Committee f o uri d
!tnd insure tbe survtval of a highly
Is 1 civil Mrvicl. holiday. Cllua will be
' against Isralow who eventually With- . suoceosfUI program. . . .''
In -lon, ·h - r , and 'lillk:es operi.
drew the -complaint) . It was the imBut Vico baa cboaen not to go that
Proleulonol Mrvicl ampl- required
p.-ion of the evaluating team that
route and, at least for the time being,
to worl&lt; should ntcelvl a compensotory
"no blatant political test ..nsts [in · is staying with the Coll~te system.
doly. Civil Servl"" amp~oywes. requi.-1 to
SSCJ but that a tk facta aalectiOtt oc- ·
"It ia true," aaya·Coordinator Perry,
w'orl&lt; on - · m.oy have alther 1 com·
cura becal!ae « the Coliep's adber"that DIIIIIY of us hal"' felt that- our
~ry day or IKilldaly pay, whlciMMtr
enoe to a ntdkal ~ 'lbe
aaaoci&amp;.tion with the ColleJdate system
they how pJWiousty electld
team · - - ' that such "8electioo" in
bas DOt beml to our benefit. Students
• - • - • • - - · .. ·
~~ la .iustifi8d beeR- "im- · '...t.o;'8l'llfntei'e8ted in tbe CoUetras are

' ma·- . .

.-f&gt;.ar

.

Da-'-

-

.

often not interesteil in an lnlerdi8ci·
plinary approach to tbe hi&amp;toly of
ideas." Enrollment in Vico courses
has been largely tbrough tbe departments rather than the Co(lege, Dr.
Perry say&amp;. Sbe finds that her students
often question the integrity of the Colleges and wonder whether credits eamed in Vico will be accepted elsewhere.
" We still discuss it ar every ~­
ing," Dr. Perry says of the decision to
stay with the Colleges. A major attraction of Collegiate status is the OJ&gt;IXW·
tunity to become residential, which
V:ico hopes to do in the fall. Many
Vico faculty also feel, with Dr.· Perry,
"tbat the Collegiate aystem is where
we belong." if onlY the ColleJiate BY""
tem can be made respectable. "We
wisb to seek legitimacy in tbe eyes of
the University, and we wisb to get
released-time for our faculty so we can
develop our program," she says. Minimally, Vico would like to have four or
five faculty ·balf&lt;time on a rotating
basis. "It makes a great desl of sense
to us," she says, "for faculty to have
the opportunity to escape temporarily
from the~ disciplinary focus (of
the department) and to renew them10elves" (by participating in an interdisciplinary program like Vico's) .
Sbe thinks 'too little attention is given
in the Reichert document (which she
generally supports) to mechanisms for
involving and rewarding faculty in the
Colleges. Her own colleagues in Vi&lt;::o
have stuck it out this 10111(, she suspects, because they find. aa she does,
that tbe intelle!:tual .atmosphere of the
Qollege is enormously satisfying. . .
. .To this point the Vico PI'Otiia'D lias
a\tracted mostly upper c1aasmen. Currerltly the cwriculum ia b e i n g mY81Jlped to . emphasize fre&amp;lupen 8Dd
.sOphoinOres (in piu-t, becaua of. the
desire to enroll 80 to 100 llludomta in
a residential program on tbe Amherst
c a m p u a) , including t:e-inilia!;ina a

eou-.
.. - . ...... ··' . . . . .

aitD ol-tbe
to ....-idl ,___
graduate educatiou," Dr. Peny ..,._

Program Planned
On Women -tn -Film , ·_.
"Women in Film and Video" will
be tbe theme of a . three-day program
being sponsored by a cooaottium. of
campus agencies, February 16-18.
'lbe sponsors indicate the event
will feature "~es presented by
some of tile most itDJimtant contemporary women in independent film and
videi&gt;," as follows:
Satur®y, February 16: Joyce Wt&amp;land: Dripping Water, Sailboat, Barbara's Blindness, Catfood, Hand Tint·
ing, 1933, Water Sark, Rat Life and
Diet in North America, La Raison
Avant La Possum, Pierre Vallieres;
Professor Annette Michelson, New
York University, Innovational Filmmaking: Lives of Performers by
Yvonne .Rainer.
Surulay, . February 17: Carolee
Schneeman: Fuses; Chick Sb'and:
Angel B/Ju Sweet Wings, Anselmo,
Water(aU, Mosori Monilta; Wanda
Bersben, film scholar: Some Remarks
on Criticism, Feminism and Film:
Meshes of the Aft.ernoon, TM Very
Eye of Night; Gunvor Nelson:
Schmeerguntz, Fog Pumas, Kirsa Nicholina, M y Nartll! Is Oona,.T ake Of(.
Monday, February 18: L iII ian
Schwartz. romputer ftlms; Wanda
Bersben, hint scholar, Some Remarks
on Criticism, Feminism and Film, two
works by Maya Deren; Chloe Aarori,
director, Public Media Program, Natiotial Endowment for the Arts. Video:·
Evolu.t ion of an Art Form, Scape
Mates, by Ed Emshwiller; Steins vac
sulla!. Let II Be and •other tapes; Shigeko Kubota, VUW. Girls and Video
So1111s for Navajo Slty; Jane Wright,
Pu/Qski. •
. ,
All events are scheduled for H7
Diefendorf' under sponso'1'itip of the
Center for Media Study, the FacUlty
of Arts and Letters. the Office of Cultural Affairs, the Humanities Club,
University Union Activities Board,
and American Studies.
· ,
. For infOrmation, contact Chris Ny:
sren. Center for Media Study, 831·
4804.

�4

= ·-

" . ....... ..

SpedaiiRI4!leiiS. :NIUJI

ar-wl....ttc _....., tN.Itie• im~~~--:

UniWIIIIib' Olllllllsulilty. rn.la)...
artlcle . . • will lltlaiula\e auCh dieCWI!iiaa. Me.. B~m~-'• piece. is aa
abrid....,;..t. mMe at DIY eugestioD,
ol a much Jonpr - - • • .

~J~
•

~~TER SIMPSON
- -- r
!."":"inrr~
- r .. ,._

a

I am bicycle rider aDd a pede&amp;trian. I do not_, a cu DOr do I
especially lib them.
toe&gt; many
C1CC118iona I haw J.d to breatbe tlie
.,..;...ous fumell or car abaust, have
my ears and peace of mind ._ulted
by the roar ~ bot-rodden, and see

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~n+:'Jr. ~ :=:'.-~fZ:.'t.,~;

~~,=~
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tlaiUdaed (llalb e9Jidillona ~)a
*-'-'-~ ~). 'lbe Pl'tf:&lt;
ol rapid lraallt·.....,. ill -Chi ~
CeDtral P..t:aad u~ ~
'Will 1118!4~-lbt - ·

tiaD ArilariiiY 1ar • .. . . . , cil _.
- n o t the s-t. af w11kb- ita ·
ulller lack ~ .,..W. ~ JIU'" ·
~~ ~ dlncllod
the TBI l&amp;udy, wblch- fiDaDcojl b)'

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::. '!.t~"-'.a COIIIIIIMd81=-

bank-

lllriJdDI _...,.....,to the plaa
r-ia G 1farriman. J
J.d ·
er
· -uer .Ia
'•
~

piece, ••. aDd. in all

~t;;u';:

man's land" foe '-·mcome
It .iii ~· to DOII8iciK in.tldl
1i1bt .certahi ~- DIMe -by Mr. .

='~~:-bank-

of

"'::
.tw;::.,;;:.-rio-aes: for

er's aDd the engiMer's plaDs -ma
Jolla A. Neal. aa aasislant vice ~·
odd. AfiB all, tbe N.F.T.A. pbm was
.dent ol the Um-.ity or Bufralo. At
. BliPPI*d to be the outcome .a1 an il!&gt;an October 10 JDBBtinl bt- arJU8d lor
instaDce, why and In whae in"*partial study performed by. ~
an ofr·Main ~ route. i:lallninl
Ambent ct-&gt; for the- u /B
tatian and environmental experis,
that ·~ ~"C ~~~
campus lite? Surely, it 110 ooin!!;'ly~~,Jt::SC:
while Mr. Harriman's plan Willi,, I
~tal in the IOUte.~WhDe Mr. --ddeace that tbe creatioD, 1oc:ally, of a
ceot.er
of·populatiaft
of
lhat1118111itude
oVer-dependence an automobiles is
:'!:"'4nctbaal!d~otber soda of m- . N:f'bas other~ it sbould be
(-&lt;l0118ider alab Audubon) tended to
highly destructive to oursilves and ilur
Wny did both Mr. Harrimlln and
noted that Mr. William ~tt, Jr.,
· justify a rapid vanslt sysllem for .Bufsociety, and I would welcome a aenMr Widdecombe propose thot lhe an owner of the Statlm Hilton and a
falo. AB a matter ~ fact, the 1971
sible · alternative.
ruP;dtransit be on oVf!rheod slructlllft
Dlajor Westem New ~odt land=
Maas Transit Feasibility Study projects .that_about ooe-lourth ol the paL--~!_'foctunam
" ·-•-~m·'
and M_Vf! on .alilnnlf!llt which IJf!ered
r~st.:
~~of
,_.,....,
""'""" -~
..., morerapid ~
ofl
MIJUI Sired, mov111g ...,tward, and
or
tronage is to come from meinbers of
issue here in Buffalo, the more I have
causinf diBTuption lo Milhborhoods
New York.
.
,
•
the University C01111111Dlity, especially
come -to 8ee bow ll p edJOl bUsiness
•- K
·
M · C trol
'SINnp Plclun ~
interests have dominated the decisionin 1"" i!nBl!'lt~n- a~n. en ·
' Fr_om all this ther:e emerges· a .
~; ;!-~ cxmipletian (promaking and planning p - .and.
Park, and U~ty E~:e~Rhl8 ~
stranJe picture. Imagine jf !lie. line•.
jecled .for 1981 dt 80) . tbe tranait fare
. in eo doing, have distorted the whole
· The ·reason which was gtven -for.
• W..re fully -dasiped by ~ eState inconcept of public rapid lnulsit. ·In
eastward bulge was ihat of~ need to
. . wOuld
. and taro.: add ;
should adll m1raculously be ~. those
coming to know this issue, I have done
serve Meyer Memorial -Hosp&gt;tal. Yet .
:"""!~ l:!,p like ~~ 8nUe . It • studenta who live in tbe city and who
some work with. the coalition of oomthis rationale appears !'&lt;&gt; have ~n a
. .:::id
this piece ol develoPoble
don't own cars will haw to pay !Kit
smoke ·screen. ~rding to W&gt;ddeland here and then that one ewer
a day just to eet to class ~ back.
mWlity poups known as N.O.T.; No
This is !Kit more than many students
Overhead Transit. I have wen .bow
".
there, and it would leave in ita wake
presently pay because they can walk
the public Dew&amp; media ba.ve often
.
'~
·
the disruption f&gt;f many residtintial
or eyde to the South Campus· and rely
~
which unfortunately happened .
short:cbanged coverage of 1-l.O.T.'s
on the inter-campus buse_s for travel
to exist in or among the new developwork and concernll. And I have witto clssaes in Anlberst. 'lbe !Kit figure
nessed a part of the history of dis.
.• • _
. . •
, ment sites. 'Iboee de~ing the kind
amoilhts'. tO $4.50-'a Week, perhaps
~ -the-· N.F.l'.A: has bad .for .
···-- · ·'-:- ·
- -··- '·
· of development enVlSlooed by men
more if some classes are on one camN.O.T. and its legitimate attempts to
Tile Repao1ilr ' - ..,
to
like Danforth and Hassett claim that
pus and IIOIIM! on the other. For a
prevent the n1pid lnulsit line frll!D
- * • forUm for the
np
it would benefit the entire cX&gt;mmWlity
~t manv stildJ!Dts IIIia will be a
ruiningresidentialareasOf.thecityby
:.:-"...1::..~~ ,by providing jobs and by increasing
iWdstiip';'.l'nd·inOvmg· to 'tbe Aml&gt;erst
urging that it be placed deep· undeP- ·
Ky. w. · 60th .,.,.._. pa: • - • · the city's -tax base. These may ~
dorms
or finding low-rent housing in
ground.
I
...,. • psrmlts.
• things we need, yet sbmehow their
Presently, we have been told by
argument seems beside the point when
Audubon JDa,y -nnt be -sw1'tlle or possiblie·
'nlele
·~ · 1 b!-&gt;ca
't
Bechtel"Associates, the OOiisulting finn
the price to .be paid is the deteriara·
irl" tfie nililllle iiDd the
~ liP . . ......s IUiiminatY .
combe'• p...-1 ~
.
tion of already ezisting neigbborboods.
ottww•-cityr....miepta;....i:
·I!Oinit'tO •biJ
-II" .for tb: ~. tt.ill" \bey are
was supposed to serve the hospital
and the solialllcatlon of the decision. not ·beinJ--prejudiced by 'the iU-con- .
was located al Kensington and Grider,
making processes . ~ the ~ _Qf '!,
PBYini diaproportioaately 'for a line
celwd and environmi!ntally disastrous
one-third of a mile !rom the hospital's
few
which will likely be of l11C!"l benefit
M- Transit .Feasibility· Study of ·: D1llifioentnimie imd s:n even flfrtber diS:&gt;
~ Tr.l\slt · - • · ·.- ·
to special businees interests.
1971; the orrginal study which advO- , tance from the Hospital's new facility.
But I have not dealt with the quesAs _the .oil companies charie more
cated the use of aerial structureS and
This station was hanlly suited to servtion of overhead -t.-ansit. ,First,. overand more ror gasoline, the need . for
an alignment which would have eut .
ing Meyer Memorial· Hospital: •
·
bead cOnstruction Ciui be
of the
alU!mative means of travel is a real
tluougbJower-middleend middle class '
· What; then; Wai; "sei\&gt;ed by inaking
cheap.;..t ways to build a rapid l:ran!!it
-one for Westem New Yorkers. It is
neighborhoods, bad adverse eftects on
the line curve off Main Street? The
line, especially if you are unconcerned
important that socially aild environcommWlity institutions, and dimifact that Widdicombe's plan projected
with the environmental and soclal
mentally 80U11d altemati.... to autonated badly needed recreation facilipark-and-ride facilities at the two eastciosts, and if the land being acquiled
mobile use be instituted. Yet an overties. My response to our current situside stations ("T ASalle" and the sofor the transit -' .... t-of.way is relsriding~ confronts us: In whose
ation is the belief that if we are" to
called "Meyer Memorial" elations) is
tiVely inexpelisi~~=
.•
interatr
understand this situation we must
somewhat sugges tive . These would
Also, overhead transit would have
It •would be iefresbing to see our
closely examine the history 9f rapid
make it a lot "'!Bier for people coming
a significant ~ct on already uriUnlwnlity aclminlst.ration take a"stand
transit in Western New Yarit.
from the suburbs to get to downtown
stable working class neighborhoods.
in. behalf of its neighbors and its students by endorsing an undefii'OWlll.
(Dac:idod; It Why1
shopping areas.
'This im~ .w hile potentially- verr .
Who decided that Western New
Bulklinc Boom?
disniptive and .damagirig to ti¥i .J1¥11· :
Main··S - alignment (recently enYork needed a rapid transit system?
It h a well-known fact about Urban
dents; 'could' a.Ct--'1!', a )&gt;ulljiQier .cleer-•.
dorsed by the N.O!I'. orpr;ization)
As•early as 1967, Mr. Lewis G. liarridevelopment that the alignment of a
ing the land for wioespread futuJe de- •
and.bylieoiking a 1DI!an8 bl&amp;ubsidizing
man, Jr., is ssid to have come up with
rapid transit system significantly · af.
velopment. As to wbere the people - student riders. Such a stand might
a plan for rapid transit in Buffalo. Mr.
. feels the ways in which the surroimdnow livmg in th,ese IH&gt;igbborhooda are
ezpedite the adveat of ..,;,n,re rapid
Harrimai1 has described himself as the
ing land is used and valued. In other
supposed -to go, liWe"answer is liven.
transit for Westem New York and
"selt-eppointed unof6cial liaison man"
cities, the construction of r&amp;J?id IranIt is doubtfUl that .they "'IUld be able
demonstrate a viable concept of soclal
responaibllities.
. .
sit lines has been accomparued by a
to afl;ord the ney. high-rises. Considfor rapid transit an&lt;! .bas been called ·
"Mr. Mass Transit." Mr. Harriman is
building boom along-the tracks-and
ering the personal attachment people
a vice president at Manufacturers and
arowtd the stations. In particular, the,
have for their. J:.,mes and neigbbo~Traders Trust Company. While the
. prospects for. building shopping Cienhoods, and givJ!D the infllitionary_eoonexact extent of Mr. Harriman's infiuters, office buildings, apartment comomy, they could move only at· sub- .
ence is not known, and while there is·
plexes and high-rises become very atstantial suffering and loos.
some reason to doubt that be himself
· tractive. Even before, thl!· San FranA v&amp;,iety, of .representatives from
has made many of the bard decisions,
cisco BART line w8s COI!ll&gt;leted the'
Oity , Hall and -the big business com- .
what is evident in Mr. Harriman's
big -bui;iness commWlity .J:iaillld lf aB
munitY. continue to Pre&amp;l! for overflo:ad
A - .
'ol 20 daDcen will give.
role is the initiative talu!li:by Buffalo's
"a building boom in the billiOns," in
lnulsit. They 'are doing this ·deoj&gt;ite
tho,
af JIOilP ol
big business community in bringing
Forturu: magazine. the fact that Metro Construction and
eight new danCe worb, uMaJaschino
id transit to BWfalo.
U an eastward alignment were
BeChtel -are -beginning to talk subwa.Y.
Cantaloupe," in the. Haniman Studio
piltusnal lhe NF.T .A.'s (int
adopted, it would croes land whiCh is
to. the ~~e. .TI&gt;e.acrobatic!l of.u-e
f...,ibilUy study for rapid transit in
preseptly iuid~eloi!e&lt;i ·o.r; in lhe.,eYI!!I
~tativs
becoining AS ODmic
of some, underdeveloped and ¢ten·
as they are inilecent. For instance, a(
at 8:30p.m.
tially developable. Recently, Mr.
a '):eCeDt community forum Mr. Ridt•
. Cboreograpbers are Weady Biller,
Richard Danforth, the City's deputy
ird Danforth llhoweP . a 15-.minute
Janice Bimballlll, FraDcis Yuuchielcomriiissianer of commwiity developslide show of,.his and his ~~· coyr:t- ·
lo, Susan ~ and LeeUe Satin.
ment, has spoken to thil! E!ft'ect, emship and tove afWr:BDiidst-lbe· beoiu.-. ·
WOrb - t e d will be to IIUic by
phasizing the o;ieo!iribility of baviilg'an
·tiful pillara . of overhead· ~. of•. George
__.
~.,.,...._ e1 u,._..·
F,ed8rick .Handel, .A1eunder
-·
--~
off-Main Street J'olite" eo that .ttie !iDe
San ~·s BAR'F ,line. After Ibis ·.'
~
SCrlabi
' Robert Lo Cab and ADdrew
would "tiD tO areas where tbeie " is
tear-jerker, be · J.d the.nenoe 'to . tell .•
velu:Af~ .8J18Cial J-ty · · -will be
room for fulUie development." It
the audience that be was not trying ·.
If.F. IOU......., ..... .-. .......r~ io Flm!k 8inlltza~ ..
- 2 U , U O ....... A.-~
should be aeen that the JIIOIIP8Cl of
to sell .u s ~ tnmsit. At. the
~~will ba Jay
JI.D). ~
land deve~t is probaloly the pri.
same meeting, · the city's Dan Hoyt . ·
Hbidier,
wnth lllddilur c!eeipwd by Mr.
mary ....., why the original. alignsaid , (with a sfmigbt faee) tbeie ··.
L lt'ZSTUr ftt1'11nAlfD
.
ment W.. to vem: oil Main Street, and
some. ceocernild· citizen&amp; in· the· com- . Hln1l&gt;er and AJin,AllalmaD.
why. there is cpntinq"_..., for
munity who-wanted ovem-1 t.ai.it; '· . •'Thi - UDder ..... artistic
- . r. ILtltl&lt;n'l'
coordlnatiaa of ._faculty nieiDben
it to do 8d.
•
~ ·
ao. that the riders ....wd-be-i......t to ·
fOlD' ,.. c:r.DUnDI
· TI&gt;e outoome of an ..-ard &amp;lip·aee the PJ'!lhlema ~ the neigbborbnoda .
Linda ~ and . J - ·Waring
and ... ...-mtted by the Department
meat Is that th8 soclal and environrather than ride undei tbeiD. Yet, Mr•
of 'Iloeatre. I
.
PA.!'JUCU W£RD 111811tat1UJJ.
Dl8ll_l!ll CIMI8 would be, dealt to the
Hoyt evldolltly did not realbe Char
'I'ickel8 b -. .. .... . . . . _ .,.,
~ livinc in the . neilhboJbaa""sudlu:r;c~......,the .
lf#JIICF .. CIPDfpsrtr
ea
d
Main,
while
the.
"-'~ita·
of
__ .._,_ . -•'--t, ,_,_;. _, __ _,,,:. -'-riders JIGl't of
.Deigbborbood's psob-. • . 11vailllble ..t the• None. -'l'kbt -OIIce.
Admiaslool·ls:.·- -.......'75; •otheis,
~­
...... ....,......_. ... .... ~
lema. Aa the
and '
.L&amp;O,
c "' . •.,.
'
metdal, would be beatowad. ~ ~
rldi&lt;ulou&amp;.' 11se m~ ..

:::-::..=

iouch

"vieQO':'IJI.,.
.......

,._..

:C

.

i.e~Mlf~··

·one.

Dane~

Program
At Harriman ·
;;;;q;f'fotuw,.,..

raw/to

are

.*'r_.,a.J_JUJ_....,-...,
.... u....., ., ,..

----

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

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

llfllllllllllla--

a

=t.r;o.~~t1Yi!:l:;

�~

from ChemieSI EnsJ.neering

·~,,.'""" ...r~

Hi-F1 SySJe~s

5-

Legal Aid.Bureau
Opening Office
In·O'Brian Hall
TI&gt;e Aaalyslaol Co..aes 8lld Teaching Project CACT J last week began

deliverinc to Individual inslluctors the

first ~ ol tbe Fall 1973 sludent
evaluations. n.e Project, which is now
entering tbe last semester of a two- ·
year trial period mandated by the
Faculty Senate iD 1971, continues to
grow and develop, its director, Dr.
Bnace Francis · of Higber Education,

-

says.

n.e number of classes particiPBtin&amp;
has increased more than 45 per cent
ainoe Spring 1973 Francis indicates.

w'f:.:ai.r~~~
bam II)I8Uea fllmk-

Greater participation by individual
faculty members and departments, as
well as decisions by the Faculty of
Engineering and Applied Sciences
and Millard Fillmore College to join
the ACT program, have increased the ·- ·
)lumber of classes evaluated from approlimately 1,200 to more than 1,700, .
Francis reports.
n.e time between completion of the
forms by students and dissemination
of analyzed results to all concerned
has been sharply reduced, be ssys, as
·a result of:
l. ' The greater eq&gt;erience of tbe
Project stall and the ACT Operations
Committee which incorporated into
present distribution and collection
- procedures the Jes!lons teamed -in pre'
vious semesters;
· 2. An organizational shift of the
data processing 8lld analysis from -the
Survey Research Center to a separate
unit funded through the Office of Student Testing and Research; and
3. n.e efforts of a faculty and ad- '
rninistmt.ive Task Force on Teaching •
EffectiveneSs, coordinated by Dr. "Al- ·
len Kimtz, "which exteuded the legitimacy of ACT and induced greater
cooperation at all levels."
·
ACT- results now being distributed
are in a more succinct and inforJll#ltive format; Francis _ . t s: "'lbe

• pair ol

qba ~--..; aad Vetmey-

dlllll: to a larp coiJecllan ol raxJals
("I haw • bjd vilu'l bllbit," be ad-

mila) lllaY!d fbrou8h tnnani-icm
llDe .....-.In hla - - t (at
full volume oaly when tbe ~
81'8 out; •a aood eat can be played
softly_ 8lld .still . be ~.. be
says).
.
· Weber's
81'8; "as big as a
playpen,.. .Jdentbl to tbe 39 tMatre
hams wbic:b trumpet IIOUJid In Radio
City ~uaic Hall, 8lld built inJo tbe

-are

waDs ol his livins . - ..

~ - set

~~ ~llll!!'lsa:~~ wbeit .

Vermeychuk's rig is aiore mobile.
His twin speaker-s Me 14 inches
square, tlnee and a baH feet high and
Weisb about 100 pounds apiece. TI&gt;eir ·
. oolumnar apPearanQe enables them to
double as plant stands.
.
Neither, however, would recommend
his OIJl1l system to Jlllother point blank. .
Where and bow you live and your
budget obviously are. factors in selecting ~ system, .they &amp;pee, haMMna into
a · IJivprite Bubu...t .........;~~tree
coiuae in high fld;iity~' offered ·
thmugh the Divjiion ,of . Continuing

£~-~
tosot.:~"~
~: - ~~- ·~:~·

=~~~

viations has been. replaced· by a 8iqJe
duced. · 'Jln overvi- of the sound
ap~ t1wi just simply to the Contiripage report contsiJoing standard. scores~ .
uini! EdUcation crowd .., -evidept from and
system is presented, with detsiled cov:
a visual" profile. An explanation · •
a
rep&lt;&gt;rt.from
State
University
&lt;;ollege
erage of each component. and how combooklet and normative profiles for
duction to 'sound reproduction, deat Oswego that" 400 students each seponents are matched and assembled
class size, level, and type will enable ,._
sigDBd not oaly fo~ the. beginning lis'Into a. system - wjth emphasis. op !hi'
mester fight, foe. "'}}lt,f; in..a si.m iiM ofinstructOrs •to :oompare .fhek classes -;
tener planning the purchase of hik
Si!lection,"wie'and csie of "ccimpcinents·
f&amp;ing in tlie regular oral communicawith similar classes as well as with
fiiBt sound system but also for the
tions curriculum there.
such as turntables, tsi&gt;e recorders,
the entire .University in a more
IDOle
lmperienced enthusiast . who
Any dlance that Vemteychuk, who
tuners, preamplifiers, power amplifiwants to Obtain muimum performance
also plays guitar and ·banjo, and · straightforwnd and unambiguous
ers, receivers aDd speakerS. 4'We emmanner." Articles in the Reporter will
for his system or who wisbM to keep
Weber, a formet' trumpeter who now
phasize," VJ!nDBychuk and Weber
elaborate on the instructions and exabreast ol the latest clevelopuw;ms In
confines his musicsl performance to
say. "bow t.1l select and match complanations.
the field.
piano, have ideas aloog this line ponents, bow to choose systems which
A· second report will lie d.isseini"P-Ie get all enthusiastic about
maybe in the Colleges?
will work well together. A series of
nated ~uenUy containing the
sound and spend a Jot ohnoney, often
good single pieces doesn't necessarily
Not likely.
oJ
the means and standard deviatiQilS fo~
without wry good results," Vermey"Cbeurical engineers aren't · supmesh." Price versus performance is
all items ( includil)g those added bY
cbuk ezplains. "We .wanted to PIES
poSed to know wbat sound is," Veranother · ares of consideration. Tbey
the Faculties, departments, and indialong IIOIDB · ln!ormafSoo that might
meychuk quips.
advise, too, on how to ~e speak- .
vidual inst.ruct.ors). Iri addition,. a
belJ1 them out." U you 1tnow ·what
em .IIi' ·a roo)n - ~deocir baS nothing'
to "do Wi1h it.... ' .
•.
.
table of .co=lations between the evalyou re dOing and llh&lt;?P. around,.. be.eays,
uative items· ( 27-31 ) and the descripyoli can set a quality pre-esaembled
V ermeycliuk imd Weber are also ·
tive j tems (4-26) will permit individcomponent -set-up for about ·$350.
Willing to' provide individual consulual instructors to begin making teu'"lbat's the lower limit," Weber adTen national Visiting Scholars have
tation on any -special problem raised
tstive inferences about which class
vises, "the sky's the limit at the ottbeen named for 1974-75 by Phi Beta
by any member of tbe .class.
. end."" n.e do-it--youself kits have a
dimensions have contributed in diff~­
Kappa and may be available for visits
A unique· feature of the course is
ent ways to the student evaluation,
pia~ tbe two agree, "if you're bandy
to the U/ B campus, l:'rof""""' W. Lesthe enensive use of sound demonstn!Francis eays.
with tools - if not, forget it."
lie Barnette, Jr., U/B Phi Bets Kappa
tiOOs and visual disp~ Many ·resecretecy; bas announced. ·
Tiris Spring, final administration of
'Ibis bow-lo-tobop - ~ ol the
cent developments in high fidelity,
· The ten are: Hazel E , Barnes, prothe ACT· trial· project will take place.
such as MW -'ter designs, highThe Faculty Senate Sub-Cotm!rittee
fessor of classics, UniVersity of Colorapower basic- amplifien;, and quadraoo Teaching Effectiveness '-ded by
do; Jean Sutherland Boggs, ~.
phonic sound are covered in detsil.
aeries last - · "Tiris CUY had
Dr. James E . McConnell has begun
National Galleiy of Canada; Renee
$J..lm.$1400 for equiCt and, br,
n.e two instrucfors haVe &amp;llllelribled
a • targe selection of equipment ·fck ·
c . Fox, prOfessor of sOciology, Univer- a study of the extent to -which ACT
c. sity of Pennsylvania; Martin Kilson,
has met the Faculty Senate's policy
· demonstration pwpoees and fuU demprofessor of government, Harvard;
objective of 1971, and will recommend
balf way through, be bought_a set--up
onslnttions of all equipment functions
to the Senate wbether and in what
Ray
D.
Owen,
prof.....,.
of
biology,
8lld malftmctions are 8chedulecl
on ~ ~~ - . and we
form student evaluations of teaching
·
California Institute of' Tecbnol
·~ studentS · entering. ·ihe a1rha::.rtt!.;' ,:m~,· w~·
Cbarle!l~ Thomas Saniuel$. prof.:.;; effectivenees should be continued. Faccondl!ioned ~acoustically -IDiiellerit"
is required, tbe coUrse- mcludes suffiulty,- students, and administnotors are
of English, Williams College; Eugene
Parker Engineering classroom (it's
cient tec:lmicaJ material to enable
M. Shoemaker, professor of geology,
urged to let their feeliogs about this
the GEMS-lTV studio) wbere the
thoee enrolled to intMpret
'pmeitt
California Institute of Tedmology;
class meets each ·T u e s d a y evening
::U~ be known to the Senate Com- , _
specifications intellipntJY
James Tobin, Sterling Professor ol
through April16 wili,in fact, be greet-plain tbe jargm," weber~
ed - hy ;a . bigb·-~Jity •~ c:obcett
Economics, Yate; Donald W. Tread. gold, prof........ of history, ,University
cbuk ~te: ''We te8cb bow co ·.
( from-demonstnotion-~ tbe instnic- :
read ads- 8lld look oat · for ,pUffeil-iq, :
of ·WasbiJiaton; aDd Carl · Woodring,
tom have put togethe" at home, olilyed
A program which will allow students
through• ~ "scri&gt;ungedof . •from
claims." ~ ~ appMf oof "'!!Y. ·~,o~
professor ~ Englisb, ColUmbia.
to Observe security guards at .....-It by
a variety ol woilld-68 COII8UIII8r8 (an ~
tbe·'I"-tre· Department) '
.
Bi-hicsl atetcbes of' tbe scholriding With them in squad cars has
airliDa agent, a~. •a~ ·­
alona with information about
n.e·oow&amp;e is ~ted in a sort of
been announced by SA Student Rights
a pbannacist, aDd an le-iey tedmician
CfliUII!Ii'&amp;alioaal ·ronnat, with . Vermeyavailable dates, maY be obtained
Coordinato.r Cliff Pale!sky and CamUWI ' - ' 8111001 a- en!Oiled)' bU.t . cbuk IUid· Weber apJittiilg ·tbe leclwes·
' from Prof. ,Baa!ette. ~ ol
pus Security.
aJao to oome ·JocaJ oiquipmant dealeta Psyebdloly',
4230
Rid-,
tea.
.
.
and:nndoubtedly oomelimM ~­
' To be modeled after tbe·highly sucDepartments which . . wish to rewho ~
aaJeoo penoonel baclt.
ing.-l n a "Bob and Ray" manner which
cessful Pilot One Hundred effort (in
to. oc:boOI -tm.~. ~~tian
quest ODe ol tbe· ~ acholan
~ lifteD :display in casual con-which students rode with the BuJI'alo
for tbe ClDiine Ia' atill CJI!IID.;- fM in- :
sbouJd Contact Prof. Barnette DO later
ti.OIL. ~
Police), the
· hopes to estabf~ contact . tbe Credit--Free
•"After tbe Jeclures," Weber ,.._
than Mard115.
lish .-mode ~way communicaBamette - c:autioaa, however, tbat
ollloe, 881-Mk)
- .. ' ~- •
Cllllllts lncnoduJoualy. ''people ~ tion
between
students
and security. ~
"priority
will
be
li..,
to
~
come
ap
and
lillY
they
aQoyed
them.·
Hclwto . . . . . . . . . . . ; •
•· :'
It is scheduled t6 begin this month.
~ ~ IIIOt lai:ated' In
.
In ten yean of ..,...Jar -.:bini tbi8 Tbe
..nth-. cllaculaloo ·
For further information, contact
.
. wboiD .-ten, or wbic:b do IIIOt' :
of"tJie . . . ..., 811111111 Wild·Jlllislc:, imd . never'--aed-" ·
Jeff Samek or, Palefsky at 831-5507.
Jar.,e ..,.duate facuJ1ial."
-'That ibe coume milbt bave wider
ol bow 80UIId Ia -.led 8lld repio- lntrDductlon -to Sound .. ' . . ' .. ..; •··'That use t8kes the form of an intro-

Visiting Scholars

=~'J'i'::"~~f~

!: :Um::'::'n-....ber~~

"T.W .. -

v.:U::-.·

Security Program

ti:i..

...wsa

caune......,.

�IDd
maiM
Ia no ....,-,
CnJ8hed human
an "'lllimaa, althoulb
menl ol

Alriculture

.

, f9f·

bida~uae.otber

..,.;.._to' &amp;.wary

~

he contKmed. 'lbe

of product

u.s. Department of Agriculture allows

food manufacturers to use up f!\!11&gt;lus
JI8CI&lt;alinl even after the UijpedientB

ol' -the Product h!iY1' been ° cbanpd.
Altboilsb this practice does nol apply
to kosher foods for which..oihe ® or
® trademark cannot be .-1 wit.bou1
authority, it is e common praclice
llJDOIII non-lroeher food companies, be

lnn~r

aai~ Levy tllao cautioned his audi-

c;ity Bound

ence that when the iaitial "K" appear&amp; Oil . . pack.qe Without tbe circle,
it simply means tbet a rabbi bas 1111perviaed production, wi-t hout cuaranteeing as do the @ l.eborstories, thet
the au'pervisor is profeasiooally vain· 'te to the
ed. "You bave to wn
compuy to see whO -the rabbi is. Then,"
be
added
with
a
sh&lt;ug,
"if
you
want
to !ely, rely."
A comn..nv that wishes to PfOlluce
Rabb'1 Le
Jain8d
koeber fuuu,
vy exp - '
will usually contact the ® LaboJ:a.
tories (or the ® Laboraoli&gt;ries, the
major OCimpetition) for inspection and
consultation, ''Often I so ·t o these factories and find incredible violations
of tbe. food labeling law," be continued •'and more often than not 1hese
are U.:, companies we reject." Others,
wishing to serve 'the Jewish t;ammuoily, especially in the New 'York fnliloket, alter their procedures to comply
witli the laws of Kashruth despite tbe
4J~Iy' i:':"!'tl.Y ve~~ture !Pil' :.o~ten
proves to uoi. ·
•

~---oftho~~(lelt)-Jim
Hllblcht _ , . to ....,. tho ~ lot With on
......... of tho 1500 1 - city - - ... ...,. .
of o dolo)' In 1au1n1 of-~
Qll .., • - . . . from ..... Sealrllr poJmMb. ............ of
tho ~ COIIIII&gt;UIIIIJ ... tho ...., drop off
..... . . . . - otoptoo ot o - , tllblo In tho Naotan
C... " " ' - ow ot tho CAC - · 2210 - ·

por..u,-...,.-

="

·Grad Research Program in Paris Seeks Faculty Director for Fall . ·
Faculty members are invited to apply for the position of .......aJd&gt; advisor of U/ B's Graduate~
Program in Paris for 1974-75. 'I't!e
Program now in its fourth 'yf&gt;U, · JB
being~ in i97~74 by PiOfesBo:i
Eugenia Donato of the Program in
ComDRrative Literilture The assill'!"
men{;;broad will' oo'ver ·the fall temi,
1974
The Research Advisor is expected
to·
.
I!Dii' ...v-u...~ oeminara,
sy~~ ana ~du;j tutorial .,_.
rangements.-Some of the academic actJviJjes, .may,,be_ .o~, Ojl• the bw;js
of 'Cooperation 11nd rec~procal exchange wi.th otber American univerEities.sponsoring comparable programs
.,.., of ,study . . :- •• .. ,. . .
· • ·. ·
2. Advise Participating doctoral can· didates wbo have completed formal
courze work and are engaged in preparing preliminary examinations Ot.._
dissertations; help them to. register
for courses they may wish to audit
and take; cboose the most appropriate · tutor from among French colleagues; administer preliminary examinations and report back to the cam-

P~: Manage tile modest budget.of the
J&gt;rogram which, aside from the seminars, symposia and tutorials, provides
for a number of other individual academic expenses.Candidates must be full-time faculty members with aperience tea~g.
and advising ·gra'd uate students m
Ph.D.-level research in the humanities
and social sciences. More specifically,
candidates will be"expected to pbssess:
! l ) an extensive .knowledge of the
French language and civjlization and
of contemporary European tbought;
( 2) familiarity with Paris and France,
including acquaintance and good !""
lations with intellectuals, acadenua;
and authOrs in the French capital; ( 3 )
ability to advise doctoral candidates
engagoo in research in a variety of
areas, to organize seminars, symposia
and tutorials, and to handle basic accounting and budget supervision.
-\
The Research Advisor remains on
the .regular SUNY payroll with no
differences' in fringe be~~ts, etc. His
AFFIRMATJVE ACTION UNE

The llepol1er hopes to O!lllbllsh as a rea·
ular feature an "Affirmative Action Une"
to which campus women can tum for in-

.. . , formation on affirmative action 5ta!Us.
won&lt; and study OJ&gt;PQrtunitles, clay cora
and other issues of inhrest 1. .'ntf concern .
If you have any suaestlonS, ~ questions,

answers, Information· to share or iasues
to raise,

"J

p~ase

contact "'Atrirrn.tive Action
Une," .e/o Tho 118(!cwW, 250 Wlnspoor

Avenue. The "Une" proposed bJ 1..-d·
uate stuclants Clauclino Schweber-Koron
and Shelley Toylor-comrissar.

or ber ~ Vlmsportation ~ paid
from his or. ber home to Paris '!'Jd
baclt (fromBu1falotoN1!9fYorkCity,
econ""!Y class; from N~ Yoa to
Paris 'tind back, on the basis oP"tbe
lowest possible fare). There is-a modest accoant for. travel related to ~
gram · ~ -office . supplies and
e&lt;jttlptilent; It inay' alo6·&amp; pOssible-to'
- hire a part-time _...tsry. .
Applications are to be submitted to
the'· Ditector of Overseas · Acailemic
Pro!!rams. 10'7' oro..-d\ by March

KoohOr ChiMM

La Cboy Chinese foods,• for ·uam-

11.
.
· -,.
• ~ application consists• of .a letter
' of-'1Jl1J!nt ~ac&lt;o~ed ·I!JI lt -'ritll. 'I'M .

faculty-w1de corruruttee f!'r the ,Gra~ua~ Resean:h Program m P"!JS wtll
sc~ candidates, ~d appo~t ~
strongest and -rrioSt BPPropriate applicant.

Senate...:._
( Continuea from page 1, col. 4)

courses. The provision for experimen.
tal courses was endorsed sbortly after
Dr. Beverly Paigen of- Rachel Carson
College pointed out that the- Hlstory
Department bad a greater percentage
of courses Wl&amp;pproved by ·the DUE
Curriculum Committee than the Colleges.
The issue on the floor · when the
walkout- occurred was a further unsucces3ful 'proposal that worksbops be
permit~!!&lt;! to offer courses for credit
with the approval of tbe deen. Dr.
Reichert reported that the Colleges
Committee bad deb&amp;ted this question
at lengih: ''There is a notion that noncredit is non-existence," aaid Reichert,
urging renewed acceptance of the concept of extracw-Pcular •""vities '&amp;nd
maintaining his 'Opposition Co permitting any unchartered group to offer courses over as many as three
semesters for ,credit. The Cqllegiate
representatives walked out ·witbout
presenting thei,r argument, expressed
elsewhere, that' credit "adds validity,
and reward to a course," and ·t he
motion was defeated.
. 'In the fuial ririnutes of the session,
· Senator Daphne Hare proposed : that
the sexist bias of the language of !lie
document, typified by the repeated
use of the tenils "master" and. "the
dean
be," be modified.: Dr. Reichert apologized in' the name df the
Colnmittee for any socb bias in the
p,_tua. Dr.· Hare's motioo. was
overwhelmingly adopted with a single
_opponent, · Engliah Professor George
Hocbfield, who 8JliiiSd for retainina
the integrity of tbe ~liah Janauase.
''l!aqe baa. its . rights, he ~
"Boy," said tbe Cout'iB'a JQa ftitz .
aa be left the ..-tin&amp; ·~ IJ~Id
reeDy • . . . ~
0

0

•

.:~
--

0

0

.

app~~~~
:;..":~Chun King~ ba4 o0merild' th1f

DW-.

=)~ontt!,~~r~~

pie,

New York n:iarket. Although the ChwJ
King .products aie not rsbbinically
supervised, La Cboy felt that the ®
on their own label would secure a
place for themselves on the big city
grocery shelves. Accordingly, Rabbi
Levy inspected tbe factory .ana pre- "
sented the · La Cboy manufacturers
with a list of tbeir production techDiques and equipment which would
require alteration before the products
could be approved. Mere removal of
some objectionable paint from the fa&lt;&gt;.
tory walls cost $20,000, and an entire
set of new equipment to be used eolely for vegetable products was •elao
necessary at great in~t, After
two years, ,t he plant was approved,·he
said, 6ut one further measone eventually scuttled La· Cboy's plans. The ·
® Laboratories require that during
the period when a company is manufacturing kosher foods, all· non-koeber
food (in this case, pork an!J ~P
chow mein) must be kept- in a BePII·
rate, locked room to insure the purity
of production. In tbe interim, bowever La Cboy discovered that nonkosher Chun King products were•
usurping their shelf space, forqng La
Choy to market their own non-kosher
products before the allotted time. "As
a result," Rabbi Levy aaid, "I bad to
remove ,our approval, and it appeara
that the only kosher Chinese food IVNi
available on the American market
comes .from TaiWli!L"
Similarly, be noted, Gene'f!ll .Foods
has gone to great expense .c.. m excess
of $100 000 per year to maintain kosber sW:dards for their Post cereala.
· Only. pure vegetsbltl .J~h;orteni)lg •i:!&gt;·,
used, .leaving ·lhe ..II!SS ,expensive ,eru,
mal fais to Kellogg's; who have never
been interested in kdeher productioq.
"Even the vitamins in Post cereals,'' ·
be added, . "are- -manuf-.red in . a
little •Hasidic Jewisli factory,•
lot" Vitllmin ·.n,- wbicb is. imported
trom Italy!~ Rabbi Levy said· that he; ·

''Remember," be ....__. "Rioe

Krispiea are nol kosher, and AlphaBits are. I think General· Fciods W&lt;?Uid
be very bwt if -they knew bow little
'reiii!OIIS'l they are getting for all their
timo\ and money. Anyway," be coneluded• "-'-·
. ~--•- are not nutriti~3 " " " " " "
aus;' tbeY'm ooly like a vftamin pill.
U you want to feed your child aometliing ·really nutritious, give him bot
cereal."
.
{It sbould be noted that sometimes
the circled K does not appear on the
package, as in the case ol Post's cereala, which nse a plain K, 'altbouah
the -products are approved by · Rabbi
Levy's laboratories.)
~ The subject of koeber JDMt was ol
particular interest to lh8 Buffalo audience, especially· as two .loc!al- kosber
bUtChers ~- teeently r-inspecled •,by
the ·State Deparlment of Agriculture
and . aocused of selling non-koeber
meat. ''The reliabilitY ol lriJabero meat

· · tiOO: of'"enobnou8 ·'difficulty,"
of the prob-

~1:i'Le\iy''Siiia. '"Mucli

)em stems from the eerly union days,

when corpomtioiu! such IE General
Motors were hiring murderers .t o kill
'off union organizers." Referring to '
_union hearings conducted by Wisconsin Senator Bob LaFoll- around
1920 the Rabbi added that
these
.m~erous practices- became oommon
knOwledge, the unions themselves
hired killers, both as leaders and as
retaliatory agents. 'lbe reault Wll8 that
the scbecbet union was run by nonrelig;jous Jewish hoodlums wbo in turn
placed' cronies, -rather than religious
men, in the slaughtering bouaee.
"Finally, the religious achecbets devis€if 'their own label, 'clat,' or pure
koeber, to distinguish their ..-t from
tbe rest. Ni&gt;w, however, everyone~
the term 'glat' and it's eesentially
meani!lcleas," be said.
.
.
. Inspection processes, although fairJy strict in the slaughtering boyses.
become considerably more lax by jhe
time the meat reaches tbe butcher
sbop. 'lbe raid in Buffalo was tbe flrat
.. 25
although
- · " the
~:'"Council of ~~~
fonned to prevent further abuses
through a regular inspection p..,._._

"as

Kraft,

Lac

Cabin -

Gum

He added, however, that although
he could not o6icially approve BUcb
products..as Kmft jelly or Log Cabin
maple syrup ·because bits of pork fat
are used to redu,ce the foem during
the boiling proci!ss, these foods are
essentially kqaber. The amount of ' ·
pori&lt;, be aaid, was_ oo ;IIBignillcant
that, by Jl!wisb law, it .w y rendered
- meaningless by its dispersion.
•· Other questions related to apecillc
brand nanies and various produCia j.n· ;cliidiil chewing gum, apple.uce, and
·~ Cbeese; Rabbi Levy llllid, "is .
.not koober because i~ .is cwdled with
· the ~ from animal_ stomachs,"
·.· thus~ the law wJ&gt;Ich~

-t· ,

musj;· a!'(lOniingjy ~ · tl)e-

1\aJ.ian , :r : JOOSt ancl,dairy PJOduc:U!.

plarlt at Jua three - - e )leer. · • "Despite ·thla ellort," Rabbi Levy
declared "oae can viait a crOce!Y ,
· ' ' ' Jewiab -~·
in ~:
store · '!'_.anr_,_..._'tbe
Wly H8a;.; . , _
:c-Jv•:-o .~~ fiDd h t•tbe :-:

':only..wben
then dried, does the

the ,substances· come frorn a · kosher

anjmal, and are

cb8eee become kOsher " be annOunced,
''tiild I leaml!d
aomeihui'i~
.,_ today.
~
~ 1a·8lw8ya'
even

Wilhilut'~ 'beamlie lt'dinnea

atonia ~with Kelloa'..,pood- ·- 'with-albumin; _. Nnnet.'1-

-- .......:.

�~Q.,
~~~~~~--~------------~~~~--~~~-

'Bfack:Sports~ ­

----CIWPI- -_AI. ___
=·4,

n.a-{a.),a...Re'a
Pr • e~ Wrigh~
.......
_........_._CIIIIdloi. ....IWJY.
n.
,_,..,.,
~F~Bdlll';:==
6. lliMI
AAindooioD
A...s-y
A..,.;s.,._hoj . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

INTERVIEWS

THURSDAY-14 ·

~-

(JIIIf), .~,........

DeMol /m~. Dr. Henry J .
:
·
Skerma. Bcinm UDIWnity S&lt;hool .of
)V Mllli'IM&amp;l..
. Gnocluate Dentiotry, Capen Hall, 8:80
U/B vo. BJO&lt;:i&lt;pcJrt State, 0ar1t Hall, -. • a.m.-4:80 p.m.
8:10.p.m.
For fulotber information. call 831-4911 :
I,

.....mem-~

"88lldd: c-:b WiDDiB£ at
Wll1li ........ o.m.," ~by 0/B
. . . . _ ....,. .LfiJmaa, wbo a

.,_,..,. ... JII!BIIIber •

---·

8D - - -

~
•a free.laace wdllllr In
~ DDtea tbllt Wdabt "Ms

BATCH Saboyote"' UNkr KRONOS,
4288 Rld&amp;e Lea. Rm. 10, 7-9 p.m. .Jn.
atrudor: Rotnn- Compbell.

foull4~- • • BlaCk atblete
In • ....,...,.,......, llpOrl tbai1 ~
J,y 11117 oil.- BID bocby player."
"Ant ....... Clllich
'Die . . BIMk ClCI8&lt;b bare aad "the
lint Black boclby ClCI8&lt;b at lillY level
1D ~... Wriaht is a ll8lfve Can.tiaa....., .......... the lee aiace
qe 10, I4aaa poiata ouL A .....,.,..
In o.DIIdlim jaallw baeloey followed b)- a ecliDWahip to o - Uaiwalty ..-.. Wrilbt stayed em to
work lillllrud a muter's depee. Dis- ·
courafed 11,v_ ble aize ,(6-3"',- 138
pouadil), Wrllbt pve _up tbouibta ol
pro boclby for. a coacbiDI ...........
Hie appoin-t at u~ In 1970
waa ''tzaiJiaatlc," Upmaa writes. Black
a~ ... bluDpue IICCWIIId blm ol
beinla .......... Upmaa ...,.. because
ol bla _ , . _ , )lritlu "ww!ill!,~s

~tail

HIU.IL QASSII•

1:t!.~"s~':".:.-'
Kiif:'~::=. ~
Capon m.d.
VAURY IAIICRIALL•

m

"·~ in\:li~d~( sliex.id: lie

team... .

232 Norton, 8-6 p.m.

PHILOSOPHY Of SC:IENCE IOCim I..ECYUU•

"TM Corutructional Pattern of TMoriu
in Phyaia, Michael Radner. assiltant
·profeooor of pbilooophy, McMaster Univenity, 4224 Ridce Lea. Rm. 37, 3 :80
.
p.m.
p,_led by the Gnoduate Student

:,~::~:a

~·

GIOlOOICAI. ICIINCES I.ICTUH•

~

w

~hilooo~y

U ppei Deuonilln. · Seclim.entation ill tM

e"'rn.!.!f~~f:':r· ::~;4; ~

!ina, Bell Facility, Rm. D-170, 3: 30 p.m.

WEDNESDA.Y -13

FENCING•

U/ B va•. Elmira CoUege. &lt;lark Hall.
. 7 p.m.
.
Ml~cuia-·
Reaume Worbhop, 238-.Norton, noon--4
CAC FUM•
p.m.
•
aion~?t: ~pen, 7 and 9 p.m. Admis·
Thia ia the lint in a ierieo or three
worbbopo leading to a Minority CaNer
Ufl WOIUHOP.DliY, in March, 'OJ&gt;ODOOnocl by tho Uni·
. Dy~ o/-HIUrUUIS«luJUty: On&amp;om:.ty~t and'C.~ ~ ·• ·int
Goy, Dr. . Jim Haynes, . cbairman,

11

.... ,

. . =: ~~rto'! ~~~·p::.-

- ~~

ToPic to be announood, Prot D. J.

Triale,.V/B l)epartmeot of "Biochemical
Pharmacology,~ A-_~

UUAa filMS:

CMAall~

p.m. •

-..a••

The Circuo (1928) and TM lmmi8r&lt;mt
{1917), Conference n-tze, Norton, 4,
6:, 8! a_ud 10 ~~ ~OD .cba~ .
UUAI RLMI**• ~ ~ .,...- r
• • . &lt;~·..
.• ,
Yankee Doodk, 7 p.m., and P.ublic
JiiMmy, 9 p.m., 140 Capen. Free admisllon.
'· I\· Jameo Cagney festivlll ! Cagney · all

~·p~~. c::;;.;,:::itthii.~~;
blonde'• •race~

• ~

looked

=

._, o-ua,

Rm! 10, 7-9 p.m. lnstructDr:
Han.en..' • ... :
•
....
. ' .• '· - ~

·

PSYCHOMAT*
A listening

&amp;J?.d teaming experience,
~ No~n, 7-10 P.~
.

WOMEN'S SWIMMING*

.

'

U / B vs. Rochester, &lt;lark Hall. 7 p.m.
. U/ B vs. Rochester, &lt;lark Hall, 7 p.m.

•
Leila Melandinidio, piano student of

Frina Anchanska Boldt, will perform
works b) Schumann and Beethoven, with
the assistance of pianist Shelley Robbins,
Baird Recital Hall 8 p.m. No admiuion
charJe." Preoenled hy the Department of
Mwuc, .
•

-

Htl.l.El OISCUSStoN•

Ms. Lee Ann Huff. regional director,
Erie Qounty Mental Health ¥socialion,
wiU diocuM the ~k, I'm Okay. You'n

the February Blacl&lt; Sports now on
sale.
.

litical. moral or lepl sanctions against it..

HW.B. MULn.MID&amp;A NESINJATION*

The R iu and FaU of Ecutun Euro -

pean Jewry, produced by David Roskies,

foaner editor• of Yugntr~uf •. RiJlftK)te
Room. Norton, 7 : 30 p.m.
Tlirough the use or slides, tapes and
reading&gt;, the show portrays the rich culture. of the •htetk the .small European
Jewish community.

· Dirty Harry (Siegel. 1972) , Conference Theatre, Norton. Check showcase
for times. Adm..isaion charge.
Clint Eastwood in the tiUe role.

lob.Openings

UUll EXHI&amp;n~

A group exhibition of wor.k by gradu·
ate awdenta in the U/ B Department of

~ 1~~e~9j,.;~~..~Mo~d:~~~~~:

day and Thwsday, U a.m.-5 p.m.; Tueo-

, GIOI.R' EXHIIIT*

Cluulu Clough , paintings; Elizabelh
GroaiMII, photographs, and Eridt Roosow, screen collage, Music Room. 259
Norton, through February 20.

FACULTY
Assistant Professor, Physiology:
Open Title, E"'ineerinR Science.·

Aaiatant to Dean, Schot&gt;l or Nursing.
Technical Specialists (2 positions), Instructional Commuaieations

.

'

'•.

Par edilitioaal Information conoemibi ~ job&amp; and for de1aila of
NTP opooingB tJuoucbout t1!e State University" .Y,.tem, oonsult' bulletin
bauds at u- locations:
• ~'·
.
·
L Bell J.l'adlity "betwesl -Dl52 aad D153;" 2. RidJe tea, Building
4236, . - t to cafeteria; 3. Rid8e Lea. Building 4230, in OCil'l'idcw to
• C.l; 4. Health Sc:ield&amp; Building-, ·in oorridor-OIIIICSte HS 181; &amp;. Capen
H.n, In the -ndor ..,._, R&lt;on 141. aad the Lobby; 6. l.ocltwood;
paaad 1k1« 1D CCiftilla..- -10 WDdiac ..ma.~ 7.1fayea· ~ In
llllliD - - - ra,.. - - flaal Publle Iafonaticm Olloe; 8. AdaOn
lfall, In caaidar illltnc H-.. 112 .... 113; 9 . . . . . . BnP-IDI.
In~ . - t to
111; 10: -~ llaU, Ut Joar,llaalibl Olloe
ua; u, ~ ~ l'er8ai1a.l ~ 12. ~ Vakm;
Director'• OIIIOe, RoaJD 225; Jl!. DleleDdqd lfall, ln. caaidar JliliJi to
lOs; 14. John l,ord O'Brian Hall, .fourth . . (Ambent

a-

a-

week: ·
.
THu.m&gt;AY-7: Bethlt!Mm Steel"Corp.;
Xeroz Corp.; Conbol O.ta CorporalioD;
!;":ithtown, N. Y., Central Sc:bool Die-

• ntiDAY-8: ConUol Dale Corp.; Weat.vaco • Fine Papers DiviaiOD; Bendix Elec&gt;
~~.fu"..:.e ~-Price To)'ll;
&gt;&lt;OHDAY -11: Corninc 0... Works.
• '1'11181lAY~ 12: J"""- Service Co.·
~one Olain (B_on W~); Goodyeat
Tire Co.; lroquoia 0.. corp.
'll'a&gt;NaDAT -183 Stackpole Carbon
Co.; Sinpr • S.P. Diviaioa; ArmaUoac ~­
Cork; Contineatal Can Co.; Allstate Jn.
surance Co.; Equileble Lifo Auunnce
Co.
THu.m&gt;AY -14 : Equitable Life Aooutance Co.; Babcock &amp; Wdcox; BllriOUid&gt;a
Corp.; Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.;
Raytheon Co.

-N&lt;YI'ICES

.• ea-.-:Forum, Ine., imritao all Weat.'
. em Naw Yoc!aon !o a opec:W day al
multi.-;. winbbopo .0. topics of COD·
au:Del: .ac:mc::em. 'I'be Coosumer Main
Clearinc Houae Eclacaticm Conf"""""' .
will be held Saturday, February 9, 10
a.m.~ p.m. at tho .Campua S&lt;hool Auditorium, State Univemty Coli- at Buf.
falo, 1800 Elmwood Avenue. A S2 registration fee inclndeo luncheon and cock·

~.;-~t~~ -~f!!&lt;\1
COUNSSJNG

Professional counseling is available at ·
Hillel .Jlouae, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
ap)xiintulent, caU 886-4540. ~ ~ '
·

FOIEIGN STUDENT 5CHOlAISHIPS

A limited number of scholarships are
available to undergraduate foreign stu.dents who hive attended U / B for at
least one year. Applications are avail·
a ble in the Office of Foreign Student AJ.
fairs. 210 Townsend, and must be submitted for considez:ation by Friday, Feb-ruary 15.

The deadline for applications for
GRAD (Graduate Resources Acceu Development) research awanU is Monday,
· February 18. n.. awards, which proVide
up to $250 for raearch-related. expenses,
are available · to tboae graduate student.
who are in the final stages of completing

~:t.~':!t.?:. ~..;,!PG:::1e~ns,.;;::

ciation Ofti.ce. 205 Norton. For further
information, contact GRAD project director John Greenwood, 831-8317.
SPIINO VACAT10N SKI

a.

The Scbussmeiatero Ski Club ia opon·
soring .a llki trip to Alta, Utah, Man:h
14-19. Lea~ will cover tho coota
MUSIC EXHIIIT*
of aidare
ncan Airlines), meall, ,
The Dimen.tion.t of M~n · Com· '
I"' lodging, trana en and lifta. Only a lim·
Tlleo,..,tician, Teadlu and Perited nUmber of people can be ~
fornur. Mu ai c Library , Baird Hall.
dated. and intereated individ.uals are
through Thunoday, February 28.
asked to oign up by Thwsday, February
POITIT EXIUm•
14. For further information, call 831·
Five Bl&lt;u:k Poeu, featuring the works
2146, or atop by the Club'• office. 318
of Arna Bontempo, Gwendolyn Brooks,
·Norton.
Lanpton Hughes~ Leroi Jones, and
VACATION IN ' YUGOSLAVIA
Elkin Tours, Detroit, ia oll'ering all ing:~~~~~ :t.,=.o~.!_~
dlviduala alllli81ed with the · University
6 p.m., through February 28.
community a mini·vac:ation in Dubrov·
Tho all-inclusive nature of the •colnik., Yucoalavia, tor $859 (baaed on
dooJble occupancy) . The packaco in~ia
~~~~on~
cludao: round trip jet tranoportation
clnft Of Hucbea' BaUad of Harry Moon,
from Bull'alo; all airport-hotel traaoft!lO
Ja~ tranalations of his ·poems.
- - ol hio _ . oet to music, aad
IICripta and prosra- of hio playa.
breakfuta and daily dinners. and onehalf day aighleeeing trip. For further
· Worbbeeto for t h E f £ by Gwen·
doiYJl Broob, and
·
braadsidea
information and reeervationa. call Arlyne
· and~ by
· Jonea (l:mamu
Sbelter, 634-7617.
Amiri Baraka) ... olao featuncl in tho

-r.

HTP

c-ter.

=.~y~ua.sa;!:~ :t

GlAD IHEAICH AWAID DEADliNE

EXHffilTS

day .and Friday, noon-5 p.m. and 7-10
p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.

RaUkn« Holl Dii-ectoT, Housing.
P~l Astlociate, Personnel Department.
Tecllnicul SpeciDlist,. Theoretical Biology.
TecMical AaUtant, o-raphy.

...,.,_1.

FACULTY COU.OOUIUM*

TM Semon.tia of Parodor in Carrof11
Allele BO.I&lt;o, Alwin Baum, ....Wiant' pro-·
lessor, U/ B Department of English, Faculty Club Red Room. Harriman Library,
8 p.m .
f&gt;....enled by the Department of Eng· .
!ish.
UUAI FILM**

WOMEN'S IASKETIAU*
GIADUATI UCITA1*

The entire profile"IUJI!I five Piles in

A preeeutation ol the bomoeemal ori·
entation as a Ylllid method of aexual be·
havior which abould have no social. po·

'

'I'hroa,Pout the - · ............
interviewo wiU be ClOIMiuctecl · - ..........
wbo are inle-.1 ill atl8aclinc .........
IICboola or obtablln«
JIWthor inrormalioil and . _ . , _ for
intern-. can be .........- lhrua,:h the
Univeroity ~t and Career Guid·

• •

~~dUO~~

L.: :!~•!"1-1:)

at In terms or biB poteritial as 1l ODaeh,
in terms ol biB penonality, and in
tenns or his !&gt;reparation. I like to
think that my experiences have been
varied enough in au asPects or the
environment, dealing with whites,
dealing with Blacks, dealing in the
ghetto, -dealing with very wealthy
people, that I'm cspahle or handling
any type ol situation. :
" 'I think that any ·cOach, be be
Black or white, who's had these ex"periences, who feels the way I feel,
is going to be cspable in any wsi·
lion, whether be's dealing .with a !'&gt;tally white team or I' totally Bl&amp;ck

•
A lia...UO. aad learninK experience,

nYCHOMA~

ti/B w. Broc:kPPft State, &lt;lad: Hall,
8 :80p.m.

Zuo de Conduite (V'I"o 1933), aad
I Wcu Bom, Bul , ... (um, 1932) , 140
Capen, 9 p.m. No lldmiMioD diarp._ •

~.

vittliifc~ '"

•

JalliM Pruyer: Tltc WMlt of the H«JTI,

.my deya'.at
•
•
out, the DOW 'aucceaaful ~ ccmfranted with .a
dwil l8t ol related ~ Can a
COliCh ol oae ODlor relale to a team
~ """""-' ol piayea of .an·
other c:olm? ADd, at a acbool where
di!DIIIIId for Black """"'- bed oome ·
from 1JIQen In a - BID~
sport, hoW much allect QOUI4a: bDckey
coach have on Black athletes?
"Wrilbt said, number one, that biB
backpound qualified bim to coach
players • ..., ·matter what" tbeir color
and number two, that he had proven
at . BU that other Black athletes respected. J hhhJ~]•. ,_lilitfi..J! J'1 ••• I't · .).j:f)lll.
ibe

10 p.m.

CuPa&gt;.

:;:.;:1

~~ ~r=. ~J:c:"H":~e~~~

atW&gt;it.

a;:"SlDw

Lo..V Prao, an ubibit of
bud-printad broedoideo of poetry by a

~~,.:~~J:;

u4 adltor ol Slow Lorio P.- Pre-aod by the Olloo "' Calbmol Alrmn,
.J.al&gt;by, MODday-Friday, 9 a.m. ·

a-

. 6 p.m. .l'l!laalb

,..

28.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADliNE
For everyone's convenience and plUsure,
- like to publicize all ..... nts taking place
on c.mpus. To record information, contact
Nancy Cordaratli, .ezt. 2228, by Monday
at noon for Inclusion In the foUowina:
.Thu~-·

�SUNDAY-10
HUB flllGWIIIIt _ . . . .••

The~IIW Y~ Wor""

=~H...,;. fu:"".atun ~-~. . _
...nit7. JoiUoiolaa. Hillel i i - 40 -e.'*'
BmL. 7:80 p.m.
• '
'
All '-!lty medlben
are welcome.

l!!&gt;d th8ir ~
..

- UUA&amp; . . . . . .

Grimd Hotel (~ . 1932), Confei'OIICe 'I'b.tre, NortoR. Cbeck obowcaae for m-. Admiaoion charp.
DAHCI PIHINTATION•

MorooehiM Cantalou~. an evenibg of
atUcleDf cbo_..phic work, Hanimmi
Sludii&gt; 'll&gt;utn, 8 : 30 p.m. cAclmiooian
=~See' '11uinday liating for_
COP OUT--T _ , . , . PU'rljol
-

- - -. lbll TlclieL- .

' ,Jcii!iin« - - 8a&amp;anne ~two -

events~"""rat"' ...tmlsslori can

for

=.r~
,:::e~::=ry. ~w~~
. .._
.

be pun:hued ot the

-

.

•Open ~ ID lhoo!t with • proleuion.ol I~
the aubject
•Open ID puhUc .
••Open 1D of the Unlwrslty
• ContKt NIIIICJ · Conlro,.lll, 831·22211. foi llati,..:'

P.m. ~

.m

U/ I A m -

Hootl!ioo Eother Swarts interviews poet
Ro/Nrt Cree/ey, WADV-FM, 10:06 p.m. ••

-- • MO.NDAY ~ 11

iiloici PiitiNf£tlb'i.·

Manuchino C=talou~. an evenibg of
student choreographic work, Harriman
Studio Theatre, 8:30- p.m. Admiaoion:

CONTINUING DINTAL EDUCA110N • •
Denture Prwthodori.tics: The· ~election

·-ilr.- 76" -to~ aR otlien; "$L· p,.,.
· ~~hb~el,';:}..~~rtment of Tbeat.Je.

and ArtUtic Arrangement of Anterior
Teeth to Verify Verticle Dimension.. Dr.
S. Howanl Payne; clinical profeuor, U/ B

School of Deiltiotry, Capon. Hall. 8:lj9
a.m.-4:30p.m. " ,
~
For further information, call 881-4911.

HOPHJloNAt ~~~ ANAn MurrNo; • ~
The &amp;Jt!Dda includes a report oo career
mol:iility and a discussion of institutional ·
"'" ) ~reb !unf!!ng,_337 .Norton, 3 p.m.
PSYCHOM.I.T"

FRIDAY-S

- The Theatre of Aeschylus and His
Sta8i1tl of Prometheus and Persians,
Prof. Nicholas G. L. Hammond. Institute
for Research in the Humanities, University of W~nsin, 290 Kay!'"!, 4 p.m.
Professor Hammond's ·- visit is ma'de

.,.

CAC FILM* .

~=· fn:!i'rura:Zr Au:U::~b'E';r~;t

and The Futurists~ 146 Diefendorf, 24:20 p.m. No admission charge.
'

JV &amp;ASkn&amp;AU.•

ENGINEfiiNG lfCTUIE• ·

.-..

GIOSVEHOI SOCIEIY CONCEIT•
. , Bass · bari~oe
ein£

U/ B vs. Brockpo&lt;t State, Clark Hall,

· ..

~JufJti"dr~;.ceu/~ L;~spe:;~~:
104 Parker; 3 p.m..
This is presented as -part of the De- .,
partment of Civil Engineering'• Distinguiolied Lecture Seiieo.
,'
ENGUSH COUOQUtUM•

The English "Catch: A Lecture! PerfOrmance by the Fredonia Catch Club, Mal- c
.colm Nelson, State Univerait;' College at
Foedonia, Annex B, Rm. 2, 3:.30 p.m. •
graduate studenta.
COMPUTtl COU.OQUIUM#

MANAGEMiNT FH.MS ..

The Great Unfenced; Man and the-lndust.rial Revolution; Aaem.bly Line· and
The Futurists... -5 Acheson, 7,-9: 30 p.m.
No admission ~e.
·
HIUR SOCJAI,•

'Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 7: 30
.

.

.

ference Theatre, Norton, check · show- .
case for times. Aclmission charge.
Starring John ... Barrymore, Wallace
Beery, and Jean Harlow.
.IEWI511 AITS WHK &amp;.EC1'WI•

w~:.ep~~~~~ ~~Yd:.,~ffr'!':

0

brew literature. Hebrew Uniwuaity, ..Jerusalem. 332 Norton, 8 : 30p.m.
" .......

•

Neural Networks for the Control of
Movemmt,-Michael · A. Arbib, UnivenUty
of Masaachusettll, ,4226 Ridge Lea, Rm.
90, 3: 30 p.m.
•
Presented · by thO Computing Center
and the Department of Computer Science.
rHILOIOPHY

.~

Dinne r at Eight (Cukor, 1933), Con-

Lfc:tuiE#

.

.

Philooophical Nouels, Jeue Kalin, uSQciate profeseor of philosophy, Vasaar ..
College; 4244 Ridge Lea, Rm. 14, .3 :30
p.m.
• 7.
~
Presented by the Departmetit af Phil- ·
ooophy.
·
•
ENOINHIING KIINCI

lliweM.

The-6o~ of New T~-in.Meet- - ~ tJoe .EnufiY Crioia, Dr. T.- Frederick

~

- ~~=~\v~.~~-P~ker, 4 p.m.. "'
·
!

·

,··

•.,

H
Reh/uss and
Carlo Pinto, pianist. will perfonn an all· _
Rachmaninoff conce&lt;:t, Buffalo and Erie
County Public Lilirary Auditorium, 3
p.m. No admission. cb.ar,p..•
~
The concert )a "presented In "cOoperation
with the Departmenf Of Music.

Presented by The English Department ',

WOMlN'S IASUTBAU•

7 p.m.

•

· 0 / B "!- Hilbert. Clark Hall, 2 . p.m.

IJ::,rg[ei/e~f:f/f:~7dis~:~b~ i~

Dynamics of Ruman Sexuality - Psy.
choloRical Aspect~ of Human S exualfty,
Dr. James Serapiglia, clinical assistant
professor, U/ B Deportment of Psychia- '
try, and Ann Loretan, -bead nune, E . J,
Meyei Me!J!Orial Hospital, 281 Norton,
7 p.m.
~
. An expl~ratlon of the psyChological -....
peels of human sexuality including liody,
impotency and trust.

--

noon.

man, 1 p.m.
--; ~
•
Presented by the Deportment .o(- Mi·c robiology and the Center for I.mmunol-·
ogy.
. .'

fUM*

UUAI FtLM••

~~~::a~~~&amp;patatio:·r. ~e:;

~lmore Room, Norton. 9 a.m. GYMNA.Sncs•
1
U/.B vs. ~ling Green, Clarlt. Hall,

ous Diseases, Bethesda, Md., 233 Sher- ,

MANAGEMENT FILMS••

p.m.

and -divorce, fainily p~ birth con·

,

.. Tales of Terror, 140 Caj&gt;en, 6:30, 8 :30
and 10 :30 p.m. ;&amp;.dmission: 75 cents.
Potemkitz. (Eisenstein, 1925); 148 Die{.
endorf, ~· p.m. No ad..mission Charge.

-:;r

Emotional Crisu Women Face. an aU-

day workshOp on topics such as marriage

1

Shacldeton Bailey, holder of the. Raymond Chair of Classics at .U / B. • "

...... \

SPECIAl S£MINA1#

AAUW WOIKSHOP• -

B &amp; T Cells in Dis..,.. SU.tu, Dr. Ira

~~yb; ~~"; !fp~Yj)~~ -

UFI WOIKSHOP•

./

National Survey, fir. Stanislaus D'Sousa,
Johns Hopkins Univerllity, 4230 Ridge
Lea, Bin. A-49, 10:30 a.m.
Presented in conjUJlction with the
MedicaJ Sociology Group.

ILLUSTaATID UCTUH••

·

SATURDAY
.'
. .-9 .

1!~~..:~~ ~'Z"~~~- 'AfBhan

•

. A listening an&lt;! learning experience:
~ Norton, 3-6 P·ID;

TUESDAY_:_ 12

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1383920">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451232">
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383917">
                <text> New York</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383918">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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                    <text>· WilsOn~

$73.9MIIon
U/B ~ Budgei

Eagf~t~f]; -a:~~mes 'All of.Us'
__..f orCurreili fnergy.Crunch
By SHARON EDELMAN .
II a . "f!il1gll!- finger S.UO
of bhupe~ co)llji

~::: =:.:;.-=.,~':!i.:,~-

. ,. . ,_
~~~
Ill
. ,., •

..a: "-''· ~·la"~s~
-~·•-- ,

.-~-- .

••

.

I

i:

r

~~"k&gt;o~~ ~~

to NaDie:otbe oil ihdustry for tbe entire. BituatiQD ·. ~siiDPlv. bec:ause •it is
priifiWilf·liY -iC- ~· ·or'1i?-faiiner8,
doctom, workers,_ politicians; find oil
· erecutives-must !~late equal respon.. oibility in a participatory ilemocnlcy."

R •

ff.
.

s ' .t

t:ra(:Q__t_y~~t@. __:~....a§,. - ~ ,· a

Eagleton avoided a tansle with aud~
ience activist!! wb!&gt; suggested that tbe
sbo~e, if. ~~ exif!18 'at•aU,. IS lhl&gt; fault
not elf tbe w&lt;irliing ~· oot of thoie
who control the,_,_..,~

- ~~
..:.=
_ ~~
wtilcB O!i&gt;

.....

ODly ;tbaae clo8e -tb ·UUP can underst:alld.tbe JDII!or'~les that bad
was limited to an obacure article in
to be OYei'COIIIi! m IUibieviJ\g this pay
raise, be nOted, "m-ite of tbe organthe back P a _g e s of the New York
izatioo81 difficulties'-~ bad and wbicb
Timett.
·
.
~~n~~l'!iaOi-t in .u.i'~
bave. now-been reaol.ect"
·
"Only now," EagletOn continued,
_ Tbe relatively·· small -•·-· adjust,
"do.I get panicky, ill-informed letters
dispute ...........___ Uniied "niversi'-•
3
Profeiiilioas
~) and ~ State.•
ment this · year, Vera~~
from constituentS. begl!ing me, of all
ACcording- to eor..t.U.tine Y.....2ris,
wiJJ lead-f!! ·the foimula~ ol am~
t:bil)gs, not to take a'Yay their cars."
pfeeideDt: ·ol.tiie BWfa1 -center UUP
.m ore meaninJ(u1 and effective arrangeN - , -It All
Chapter; tbe · 14isla,ti';.,- COmmittee
!'J"'It-for ad~~ to tbe 'ris- • •· The one sure thing about the ener· recommendation •· will - beoome the
mg coSt of ~ In the new .JII8Ste1
gy ·crisis, - bie s a i d, is that nobody
guidelii:le for saJai1y inm!inen1B to -be .
contraCt. ·Be Jlll!i:l_UUP wiJJ aeek an
knows ':everything about it. Although
included in the Statb's ·IIUP!ill!mental
auton.tic •east ~ -J.¥ng ~i most authorities agree that the debud3et.
: .
factor to """"" inf!ationary
mand for energy definitely exceeds
.., •
•
'"that
__
,__
of
tbe
as tbey occur.~
~ , .-. •
• _.the
present supply, the extent of tbe
.eracans 881,.... . """""""'
'The first Jiego!,.iition ..;on 'lOr the
shortage has y e t to be accurately
faculty .and. prof~ 8laff can_ ex·
new masteMan~ Is to be l&gt;e1d Febmeasured. Former Presidential energy
pact to recel¥8 ~pay adJlllitruary. 4, y_.... i8ld. Other major - advisor John Love eati!Dat.ed the short-mmts to last JUly 1, or~.};
tl!emes for the -~tiims,)&gt;e .indifaJJ at 3.5 million barre1B of petroleum
as tbe """1' may ~ bY.
end
cated, will 1Dcliid8• ·a ~ • per dsy, a level Eagleton considered
February or..,...ly March at tbe Ia~
and ellicieat~'pioioeduie; ·J!!b
to be of emeJ:'l1!0CY proportiOns_ HawY ~ indicated ·'tbat 'It is hls
ailcuri.ty lor NTIS;'imd piOIIIDti!lft aiid · ever, Eagleton said, _,., after be tonk
understanding that tbe . 11&lt;20111 tbe
tenure~ 'Ibe COiltract · ollice, current energy advisor William
boaJ:d increase Will be -handled ~
is to bi alrect:iw July 1 ;, 'tbia year,•
Simon revised the estimate consider· matically._ .Procodurea for ~
It will~1Ddude a furlliOr;
ably, suggestinj that the petroleum
lqiOD ,merit iDcreii1oints for-certain.Mlary .:bDo8t 110•-be ~ ali ttiaf
sbortfaiJ appeared to be more like
ploye_oia; be ~ wiJ1 be 1111_ adminl&amp;-'
dale; -batdtia liDo.lhllr laaa roaild' 01
800,000 barrels per day, easily man, tratfve· matler- b- Wbfdt ~
deliys aud n.dblodis in tl&gt;e 1111101i!tageable by voluntary - - . .
wiJJ bave' to be eat up .JocaJiy. In lillY
ti0J1B pn;..._ cmJ 8iirrice ~
''Eatimatee, """""""·" EqJetnn ;,.
..-.t. be aaid, the ~ tbe boen1
will bit 18CBivilll a 5% per cem .-.. . sisteoi. -"are not good eD1JU1b- We have
,.... • DOt to be fiela "" ~
in itielr..cc11111ni ~z-:.m
to know tbe J)leCise of tbe
thea&amp;-diiCiaiilliiL It Ia UUP'a ~
of a · ~ ~ in
abortage so ·that CoiJsreoa can bedn
be~; that tbe Union
19'78. 'l'lley NQ!Iiwd a ·
I * cem
to implena,t rimediea." Until a te..
bave ~~~~thine to !Ia ·with procedures
hibt tbla ,..._
.
.
•
be added. u..t Americamt,
for - a . , IIIIIDl t1lJP Uo hJa,
DanllhY llalaabuf. . 8tUe ~ tbaae in ~ can.be aUf; that~ lllllrit fl!nds tuy-,'GI UUP,- wDJ be .., .......,.. . •aidered our eqerv r8aources ~
abould DOf b! P.UtGI the ~
~- .....- at a C1plll Jll8ll&amp;. ' ' - " - and aa iudl found DO n!II80il
~- bat.lbauld II!' bJllt~· ~ · "'Uti cit h1.lliialiiatica :a 4 p.m. lit
iOln-.tory ' tbem.· "'nJt DDW," be
a-1_Staf!ll__ ~ · ~·
.
ad!. 'Bcilb' tile _....,.
aid,-. eaa,.- ~to cJ&amp;111(' Ledal&amp;tlw. - ~etim Ia
~-ad 61 - -~ will · ~a real dala 1-. aD .-atlfy our
. "a hiM JHhW ~ -~ar· our
be ~ Y - ' 1 llld that .all
-.:r ._._._ We are t17ii11 to
~- al81&lt;iQih lt -~
a
r...llir...t NTPa a tlriltllcl tD tile · mab up for-laR time.•
mininium ~ ~ ' In
•
l1lllillli oilllllah wlD .fNe
. .. 1118 laDt .................. noW.

mcreases

rears--·

ol -majQr~~ - ~_...Jd:_.
•

• •

•

•

•

i

tile_.......,

~ '• ·

~

. .

-81.788,
alae

:

l&gt;udjet is a r&amp; ••mer WI....,_ ·;.,·
student-faculty raU.. from 15.9 to-liU
iii thiriOO-beailtfiiicieDCes RDd'eaatibuation of tbe present 5.6 atudent.fac..
ulty ratio in tbe health sciences. ('Ibe
SUNY-wide recommended ratios are
15.7 and 5.5 ~vjily.) Accarclmg
'::''-

~ti:e ~:t..~d~

~93it~~J=
~=~~the
'to
dd
to Con
'The Executive Budget request ou~
=i~\9':ro.= !ve;ofwhich
lines these c:Danges at .U/B
part of

A: 1973-T.4·payb0ostof 4%.pereenf
acroat tbe boiud· and :l'A per Cl!llt for
merit 1\as been recnmniended for -fal:•• to..·and .........: "-· a Wn~
· • tive
~·3 •
A-:.!:.!,:2:.. f£i"
~ man-

:t:

time~ ..........

an u.cr-·GI 1.064 i'TE'a -

..
'~ - ~~~

~;,edci~;:~boY:'il:f:.~:

.43AJ···~p-· e r~·~C:enr-·
- ' •' · .Plus-~Merit-· ·.. ' -·

f!3l!fabel,:~~,\.:

~~;~~~
· - ;;;-=.:-=~~~~;;;~=~"::!~
=-

ftllw-Of liW'AmeriaUl~ -'"We ·are a crisis-orlenied aocii!ty,"
be--sb:llsaecJ. .'!W41 ll"Yet Jjst,eQ ~!il it
is tOO 18te. We never demand mtobiied
responses to critical questiODB. until
tbey reacb crisis proportions, and' now
we're paying tbe price."
The" Missouri Senator and shortI

· Governor Malcolm W&amp;aa'a BDcutive Budget J:eq.-t few 8ta1e u.n-sity ·at Buffalo ''""
ww do $73,1181;000 (or salaries and _ . . m , for the fiscal year beginDina April L
In additioil, u /B will abare in - tain Jump sum app_ropriationa for: building opeuinga. sewer contract
funds, graduate ~ utility
price incr-. tbe edllaltioaal portunity center and SEEK~;
and is earmarked for a apec:iaJ appropriation· for hospital a{liliatim-.
Wilson's budget also estimates that
U/B wiJJ rec:ehoe- in fisca1 1974-75
$14.755 million -in federal funds and
$13.889 million from gifCB, pants, endowments, fees, food~ and other
reimbwsable programs. and N""' York
State awards, sum as Repnta &amp;:bolarships, and Scholar Incentive ~
$2.7891111an'Ibe ~. request few J73.991
million ~~State~
is $2,789,000 abowe the _ . avaiJM&gt;Ie
for 1973-74 opeWions. . W&amp;lbin tbe
overall iDCI'8II8ed total are __,. a&amp;. backs. booooe\w.
- - •
'Ibe budcet req.-, subject to ......
islative approyal and tbe ~

~

(~M-3, eoi.S)
•

as
the $2.789111illion inc:reaae:
. •
.
In""""""' in fDed !Xl8ts and the annualization Of supplies and ulilities
· for part-year buiJdiiJ&amp;&amp; opened during
1973-74, $1,442,000;
· Telepho~ and library acquisition
price adjustments, $251,000;
InStructional.Cl08ts for 39 faculty, 16

:=;::'

~=~andaddi""C

s tudents ( in academic areas),
$573,000;
Funding for 32 health acieDOes , _ .
ulty, 22 support staff, and supplies for
an additional 157 students; incn!ues
for the dental, clinical medicine. and
basic aciencO faculty, m4fl!JO; .
naTwot.ed!f~thisf~_!"""
• ~~
-~
""""""
"""""""'
compared to Other nursing procrams,
- $30Den
,oootal ;clini"c staff, $5l """,·
"""'
Special contractual payment to tbe
Erie .County Water Authority for water aervices provided to tbe North
Campus, $200,000;
BuSing and moving expeudi1urea relat.ed to the North Campus locatioa,
$238,000; .
·
Increase8 for library IUl!JU!!Iiticins.
.computer aoftwale, aateJJile inllnnary
ael'Vices at the North
municationa and mail and clerical
staff, $251,(}()0;
~other, $84,000;
. ·
CJianae in the 1111.vinp rate, $82,000;
Reduoed reata1 payments ,... tbp
.A1Jeaburst Apartments and YeyaMemarial Haapital for buildlJII-..
-$81fJJJOO;
~summer aeiaion cadit
boum n.dtlnl in decreaaed ....... .

18

c.- .,.,_

(~•-:J,eoi.IJ

·

,

��.. ·

/'

. . ·. .......

·~~:.~~-~~

. . .....

:'This

~~~~~­
~e~~ner.:.r:
~-SclileiliJi8er'Sallf - t l y tbit

. •Whillr"Houoii"·'in~
.
,:;..... ~....·;Eulei&amp;·.. ~...
;;;;;-~-;;;~tli - p,y~·
nation is more enlightened and

E:gj.;~~~:~~~ii:.~-'

ness-still carries stigmatic implications." Nevertheless, be insisted that
· during his short tenure as a vice presidentUjl candidate, he neve.: once felt
persecuted -or abusea by McGovern,
the presS; oH he public. · · ..
:. •
su.talnlnc the veto

•

• . :

Another question referred to his
vote- to siistsfu the l&gt;residential veto

on the war powers act. "You may not
know," Eagleton commented, " that I
autbored the bill as it wu firBt introduced in Congress. It was originally
intended to restore the constitutional
balance of power between the executive and ' legislative branches, and to
make·the 'President more accountable
~~gri!ss :for' his

"!""·ma}&lt;ing act:ivi-

EagletOn claililed, however, that the
.bill was significantly altered by Congressional committees, so mucb ao
that it actually gave the President
unrestricted war-making powers for a
. period of 90 days, anywhere, for any
reason, witbout reguiring the cOnaent
of Congress. The President, "tbrougb
aome apparently misguided 9e1111e" of
what be thou£bt his limits should!':!
i:'':!.~b bas too resm:~
or override the
verdict.
" At the time," Eagle!oJ! recalled,

~tial

Acti~Jg

Heads

In-Two AreaS

"NixOn ~- ~ -vetoed~ billa

~~~

IU!il..-.m.~-·...... - .

the new war powers bill was almoat
uaed to aend troops to the Middle East
during the October war.
"The President ¥etoed that bill and
we sbouJd have ·l et it be,"' · ~
groaned, "We'll regret the .lov We 80
blindly let thea. powers slip
"into the
wrong band&amp;"
Refe ·
to the Preaideatial elections of~6. Eagleton p~ "no
instsnt cobMioo; it's at:ill too early
in the game." Did be. think the Watergate . revelations could have reversed
the 1972 reaulta? '" I believe," EaPiton
replied, " that bad Wateraate t-1 ex1--' ·i n. 1972, Ricbani Nimn would
not bave been the Republiam Clllldidate for Presidant. But," be added,
somewhat ruefully, "hindsight is al. ways 80 easy."
Eagleton's appmranoe wae sponsored by the Student A1180Ciatian Spmkers' Bureau.·

U/B Is 14th in
Foreign Students
UJ B ranked- 14tb amnn• all U. S.
ins~tions of higher~ in foreign student ·enroUmenta in 1972-73,
"Open Doors 1973," the lJIIicial oansus
of foreign studeot..foreipl acbolar en. rollment in American coli- and univeraitie8, reports.
The report ·indicateo that 1442 foreign aludea.ts and 181 foreign scbolars
were on c8mpus during the perio4.
The University of Micbigan. Be&lt;keley
and Columbia -re among tboee ranking hiaber tban u /B. .Acconiing to the campus Stuthnt
Attain N~. approximately
1450 fC)I'eign studenta were enrolled
her, in the fall ol. 1973; two-4hirds of
them pursuing grill!.- level studies.
- About 40 per cent Ol ·all foreign stu- denta enrolled in State University are
on tbis c.mpus, the ~t MfairB
publication aid
&lt;

•

�---

came t o - . . , _ as an
or
• pdld devtc6 ....._ motive is to pmtect lh'- ~ ad' CJheo!eei:iq
lae!Jlty ......_ the .,.. to bqbel~ or to the llludenta, or, lor .
Taaae il Ia CldiiL 'lbe ~
that DaUer, to the panuit
_ _._
.......,.
..
.-..
..
. .llllaciDie
ol ...._
'llmme lor 110 loGier·_, as ·a.:m.ns •
for tbe luq)ao¥&amp;J64·of tbe qnaJlty vi' . ·
er......_la_..U~ ·
~ - edwatiall ad ;lor, beneftt.,to..
. ad 1111.-lY '-1. 'lbe .........
8oaletY nor _ , as 1\ IDI!8D8 for -tbe
.. .---.- Ballt .. - ........ -,
_...,_.t.flwmbdautan ' ~tba ol aCademic f r e do m. .
Rather, 'it is ieen as a meMJa for tllJI'
p.-rvation of the old guanl apinst
.......... .-lyllia adequate
tbe needy incwsioas of tbe
pali1ical ad arpuizatioaal lo tbla eriala. . • •
•
ad better faculty. Flutbermore,~
Taaae Ia 1JIIIIor attack. not alone
tenure freeze and the tenure quota are .
by ~ or 1'ruateM or . seen,
in ~tiall, aa a cold-blooded
.&amp;.Ida ol ......
by ,r.culty, aDd
.· ~-Yl!il ---·--'·' device: 'JO
- - • tte f 1 lo -t,
tbe public, ad
COIIIJ&gt;!'IlSilte or the COBII! ·of· ~ .
t~a....a.maaa
•.. Wbat Ia -·
ten.ure, · tbe.non-~ll!c:uJty is
... ill tbe pla!D.t ........ js - .,.;.,.
Joiced to , rlin in a · ,qwm;l~ .i n
.-de CIUIII:b, a -.lor c:rials at tbe
~ch the squirrels are replaced every
. . . ol tbe eCaaoaJ.y ol hi8ber
tiine they set high up C!llOUgb on the
;.tion. We aie beiDa reminded that
wheel to make tile tenure .iumP. This
..., not &lt;lilly _.m for the, truth, teech,
cooatant.replacedlnt of a,dv~ DQD, ,
iDqWie, · lillil 'benefi€'imcounteii mil. tenured faculty by beginning junior
lillm by our aalfJeos activity. We· are
faculty keeps the IO'Wer raiJb lower
beiDa ~ that .... work for lj
still, !'¢, 1he. lower ~ lower j!
livllll." tbec • - jp,t"paia for "iVhllt. w.. · ttiio lioostant tumciv....; ·a.nd·&amp;ce ~ ·
do, and that ..., compete in tbe mar-·
is no up, there is only oat, as faculti.., ~oo~p~..., for the privileae of benefitinl·lllldel;y. -'The tenilre&lt;c:rials -w ith ita
~p&lt;O~.~ttn.- !W«l-·
~~I.JlJI;,
Henl;· the•attaii&lt; on 1anure·is''·

"''truth.

"-bD~

Q;but

' - ~~~"·

_

....jt n6icl&amp; a ~ c:banp
~ ol bicber.educati&lt;m,

in tbe
ad a
IIIIIMl dlmp·&lt;in 1 h r - 111111-role
ol tbe prafaa&gt;r. . • .

..._,

...

What, then, Ia tbe shape ol tbe

c:ri8le in teDure? I can't PIO!ta&gt;d to be
.... to ciMJ .with it in ali.J.IB c:omplexi\7 bela. But,let me ablcb six .........,.

far iL 'lbe 8nlt, I&gt; believe, is tbe under'
IYinl ad fundameintai reeaan. Tbe
others derive from' it.
(1) 'lbe prima!y .....,., for tbe tenure c:rials is pWnly tbe current IIDan. c:ial aipDcy of h i 1 h e r education.
'l'biaugh this aipDcy is cloaely linked
to the ..,._a! economic&gt; picture . at
~t, it is a dl1fe.-lial enieocy
with ito own root&amp; At a time when
.the fiDmcial ._,..,. of higbm educatba became stmqjent, tbe inBtitutba of toinure ~ to burden
the uni-mtiao ad cxiiJeps with a
built--in ad systemaW: commitment
to~ costs. 'Ill" administrative
__ _ . here is that the teoure sys;::.~ the ''flezibility" needed
to make aewre economic adi!Jstments
·-i.e. the flezibility to replace highwith lower-aJ&amp;t.l.abor. 'lbe ..,;..,
of clecreuiDg ._,..,. ad lbed or
incn!asiaa faculty coals cl081!8 iliemr·.tlly ~ that lhNIId ol ecoDOIIlic
ja~Hoiearity ..........t by Mliority-ie.

~) ~

from the economic

GREPoRTE~

__

-£ ...... ~ ...... _.....

_,..,._...,
,._.
._. .. -•u..__ ·

.

!'!r~- .u-•­

-..__
---

113. ...... ......,..,.__ ......, ..

· =~,..- -- ;~a-.

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

&amp;.IPDFUF~ ·

-...aw

lqllli.L-

P.&amp;n!JCU W ' A I I D -

----·

.AIICF .. Cf . . f . .U ­
-~-

~­

atcid ,b)&gt;~.tiJe.lllilualioa • olr: lhe&gt; ')'Utibger"

faculf$, and a strange alliance of adminislrato18 and non.otenured faculty

·llll!Y - . l o.be·lormecl;· tobrea\.lhe ·

tenure 1m- by abolishing tenure, or
.,.,...tiating it away, in favor of a coo·
traet-.lystem. or of a competitive .free.
for...U. . . .
(•) A further consequence is this:
as tenure till!teris, there is an upward
shift &lt;in .UV.. lle&amp;demic criteria for .a.:.
taininl tenure. Suddehly, academic excellenee illleH becomes an argwnent
for lllving a bucj&lt;. But tbe differential
elfects of this shift upwards are not
lost upon the faculty, tenured and
non-tenured alike. The tenured faculty, who earned their tenure under an
easier dispensation are the very ones
who now come to judge the eligibility
for tenure of their junior colleagues
by standardS much ~ than they
-the tenured faculty-;-had lo meet.
That· to 'Y there &lt;level
li!lit
and ~!: in
faculty morale, as younger facUlty are
denied tenure, oo pounds of insulficient merit, by tenured faculty wbooe
merit has not been u.rted by tbe 8B1De
standard. 'lbe double-standard senerates a ~ breach &amp;lllClnl tbe facul· ty. . . .
(5) A further " " - - ot tbe
tentlll! system. in a period of eco- ·
nomic stringency, follows from this
~tening ofJenure slalillards ·.(or;'tci
llllX a metapbor, this bel~ !if
tbe t e n u r e 1m-) : the probationary
period determined by the tennre :rule
no longer su8ices to meet" the more
slzinaeot !lcholari.Y demand&amp; •.l or ten-

acade:x, ':hwtice

~ap'f2:ie•= ~-:,:8Dd the abUae of - x , -..rity
now • e e in. to became a _,m of

J:lanlinl OWir the J..da Of.
.~be·')= ~~-~or~~ .
Damocle&amp;

~

WIUWI · -

-

·-·

after the ~of tbe Ph.D~ aDd
blatantly paNel to

·011= •88
·

pvblleatim as~
·--

~
. a·.c..-~~~t.!_~l~~.
~

ClllleiDIC .............

·--.......,

temite was always linked to &amp;aldemic

' freedom, as a means of sel:uring the
IOaiof• of !rl~,~
• tiallthe: ~~~of,_tbe\m ,
~ """"'
..._..
en......,...,,. ln Jeamini; Wdriri1 "9'1.
the-:"'~
cillnitli•
BcCIDOmicf
ECUI'·
,·ty · - · ~
· - __ 'as ..., .....,.
· m.·
-~·
,.,. "'""
illleH but all ·
•
10'1biii b '
demic goal. Security on the ' job; aild
adequate compensati011 """" '"""' aa
cocditiCIIIS for raising tbe academic
stanclalds liDd ""'morale of tbe profession, and
att:mctini to it 'llie inost
capable practitioners. Tenure thus catried a . double burden: academic freedcim 'and joli.s8ctirity: -: : .• ·,.·, : ·, • .,
The bwden· of tenure--the weight

18

for

~-~~:.;-:..c.==::.
no~ . p,.ral~ i,bY ; ~al i~~

- or mo . comnutment one. :.to-put-It
differently, unless·tbe principle.of tenure is supported by coctzac;plal and

!(!gal~;JID.cq· :~.

m tum.are supported by strong faculty organization and action, the erosion
and elimination of tenure, or its retention 'as a clispeoaatiall In ,tbe bands
of economically desperate administzalions, is SUlJ' to pqcur. \Vbe.t ,t epure ilj
meant tq secure (lrlnll!&gt;t be :~ by.
ii tenilre sySt.eiD W,biCii i8 ib!eJf liable
to' such ·e....._ ·Tbe ..~'is: , ·if
tenure itself Is 'a
· w· !lie pn;&amp;er.
vation Of job aecuri~d.Of iWademic
freedom, what is the me8na 'Jar tbe
preservation of tenure? ....
To be sure, tenure by law and by
contract already exist, in tboee public
institutions where State law includes
tenure. prOvisions, 'br in 'tlioae J&gt;ilh!ic
and rivate inStitutioils h r e·the
~ by-laws 'OOntaai
'pio,"
visioN~; or iri tboioe' oollecti~ing
which include' timihe
clauses: BUt in' all Of~ · - the
modification or 'elbiiinat&gt;aii of sui:h
provisiona is not Ollly a ' cllstinct po&amp;sibility, it has already begun to .occur.
T.,.... ~
·
,
'lbe introduction of tenure quofas.
is not simply a limit4li.on of tenure,
it is a violation of the principle' -of
tenure illleH, BiDre the aWard· of teimre
is to be baaed~ merit, 'I!Jid~
of; 11;11!1it .~ DOt. quot,a..JiJ:nitable.&gt;:lt.
sllOOid be - ~ t!ai; lbaMbe.
81'11Jl1dlt for tenure quotas a!Jeady
entails a radical revision of tbe ......
tUmic criterioD 011 which tenwe. baS

w

or
contracts•

..\:b.

..

~ .!1811Bd..an.•L~ ~~..m. .

:;;:.-=.k;~~

October 291 lll?3, adoptioD ol a lhlDly
diogUlaed de facto tmura quota policy.
by the N- York City Board Ill~
er Education for tbe C.U~'!· aY*m
ia just IIJdl a move, • • ;" · - o-.1'8
lll'JIIIIIBlt iDIIsiB that tbe -ned

"maahematbl riDrmt/' ( - ~quotas,N
otCXJUJ-t)1118~wlthaiDBit· .

. ad piouoly with
~~ ol !IWIJ'!Iilil· - - ...... die
·a bout tlie
. o/. ·
the c-mtu.e .011 'feD)•se ol. the •
ll!ac::bialr. 'l1le - - - r u l e , .._ a
p.U'-lf.:V-~ ~--·~ ·
ablelcl-"r the facultY, -. .becaaie-a
Dllthe ~ tir.-.~~~~~~~-at81001d wleldecl ~ edDifrdil alio • DOt
iajJ ~..........1t1e ~ Of '

1-.

Clll&lt;f&gt;=.~$#5

..-., the-lafte ahm....._tnct.'
~ ~ bellm.· ......

=-~~tiiJi-~-;t;
te):_~.~ Jli'CICiiduiB

uJty "'en"

adciPI8d ..... 1111

.........

I'8CCii!!mm- • .

�Tenure(~,--,·-· .
: LiDJr.ed.. All dw lllcalt;rL.,-....&amp; -- ·
OI'JIIDizial
fw ID
rill*
.... - .fll6e ~
-.r
be CJI*l
abuae.

~ir~-==-

,-:,

"""" dealt with ill ....... ...,.. . . .

ciaely ~ the ..-t ......
mands ... dw faouJty lladealip,

111111 the OlllllllizalioD 111111 .........

, _ . , for aoiJecliwl bulaiDiaa.
"politbl" firiDp Clll tl8e lmu!&gt;da

~~~·===-m:

the a.dmini81ntioll" ia bopofuU.y ...
""Pft!t!8i8D of • primitive .llitua. lion !ban maDy of . .. tlljoy. But it
will become a more euneDt ~ If
active faculty O&lt;pJiizatiOD fw' _ ,
nomic security into caaftict with
9e'lel1! administmtiWI injUDCtiaas in
the name of ~- Aaoaemic rrdom entails lbat oae a faculty appoint.
ment, renewal. promotion 111111 tarure
be determiDed by one's ~
as a facully ""'mber-in ~. resee.rc!&gt;. etc. 11D11 not hv mmplilmce, or
by pitiasmg the ~ Ten-

de!:.U:~~~~

p o I i t i c a I abuse, on nOD-academic
grounds.

Tbis, perhaps,

pn!8UIDI!B

too tmu-

ti:!' !i:"!:!:i:r.::..:::...~""::
evilable now. 'lbey are not. But the
118

strucf,!:,'!,':,

debate IIDII
policy in the
face of engency
slwper, collegiality can be uau-ed between faculties and administrstione oaly if full,
open, free 111111 often conflicting fac..
ult,y. partic:ipa.lion in gl)vemaDce is
guar8nteed ·. against political a b us e.
Thus, -mgful faculty participa.tion
in governance, on oollecial pounds,
requires those protec:t:ioml of academic
freedom, which tenure bas tmditiooally"·
Faculty
tion it.
selfaftorded.
is a matter
of tenure · ts, since
freedom . to ."'~~ 11D11
t with an
adniinistrp.ti~~requireol ~ faculty .·
particiPation is to be more than a
rubber stamp. Mor-eover, in tbe Dllnllal

='·

~~­
!:k~~ orur&amp;.~~'T:~
dom to disagree wKhout repril!aJ. . • .
nit ""the;,. "~~ ' A• .,:...tier ~ ~etP, .~

lightened self-interest (111111 not self-·
ish interest) for non-tenured faculty
to fight for the syatem which ,.......
ales tbeir strongest support and protection, in terms of equitable treat. •·
ment on academic pounds; 111111 for
tenured faculty to earn the support
of tbeir junior ~ by ..mg
their own seniority as 8 11trcJni lila!
for an equitable tenure-decisioD. procedure and 8 fight ap.inst quotas.
We are into hard timeS. ~ will
n'?t im)lrOve quickJY., and I lhinlt theY
will get much WOI8e ho;!fore they ret
better. We have the opportunity to
help effect an improvement by militant and intelli8ent action, ovet the
long run. Ovei- tLe abort nm, - have
tbe ._,.n,mty to unify the faculty
in def8118B of its own security and tbe
security of higher educatiOD, to mitigate the effects of the crisis.

Report Indicates
Firings on Rise
JJec:1injn, enrollments have

betlun to

fon:e many oollep!s 111111 ~
to dismiss large numbers Of (acuity

members, including aome Who have
tenure, the Chronick of Hith6 E~
cation reports on its front pap dUs
week.
In addition to the Southern Illinois
situation, the Chronick citad ia,yoffs
of 88 tenured faculty in the University of Wiscioaain ,11Y1111em, the poali., bility of 50 terminations in the Ne. hraaka State ooiJeile8. eiimjnepon o(_..
73 positions at IDdaula: Slate University, IIDII the ~ of 33 faculty .
. (four tenured) at _Antioch. ·
'lbe report that lbe number
of oomplainCa bam cliamiMm faculty
.._.,., received by the AAUP bas
' increUod dramatically . to than
1,100 during _,., of the last two
~ Coau&gt;lainta this year are aaid
to be Blilbtly al-.i of Chat pace. .
&lt;"

�Job Openings
HTP

"Hous;;., &amp;siatont Director, Housing.

- - v~. Animal .Facilities.

• .. &amp;siaiGnt tO Director, PoliCy Studies Center, School of Managemenl
A.ai!""" 'to Deali, '8cbOoi of NwsiD1. - ·
Techniall s~ (2 positiODS), ]nstructiqnel CommunicatiODS
Center.
Retlidencti Hall Director, Housing.
.
~
'
'
For -"4&lt;fitioaal illformation c:oooeming ~ jobs and for detaila ol
·
NTP openiDp tbrougbout 1he State•Uniwr&amp;itY 8)'8lem, Cioosult bulletin.
_boaJds at u- -location&amp;:
-·
,_
1. Bell Ficility ¥-en- D152 and D15,{ 2 Ridge 1M, BuiJdi.,g
4236, .-t to cafeteria; 3. Ridge 1M, Building -t230, in corridor .-t to
: e-1; 4. Health SeiBnce&amp; Building, in corridOr !JIIPCI!Iita HS 131; 5.'e.pin ,
H811;' in the corridor " " - Room 1~1 and .the I,pbby; 6. I:.OdiwOod, •
pound 8oF .in corridor .-t to- vmllliDI macbba; '7. llayea . H4ll. in·•.
~ ·entruce foyer, · IICIOIII fJom PuhiJe IDlormation Olllce; . lt- AcboeDD .
}lalJ. in corridor'*- Ro111118 112 mid _Ull; 9. Pmbi . ~
in con:ldor ...,.. to Room 15; 10. Good)'llllr Hall, lat lbw; lf!IIIBina: Olllce
8{'M; 1L 1807 'E~Dnoooc(' ~ ~ 12. Ncii1oaD Ullian, ·DirectOJ'a dl&amp;ce, ~ ..225; 13. ~ Hall, in ~ Dimt to
Ro0111108; l~.Jolm ~ O'B~ Hal}. fourth fkil!r lAmlaat. ~} ; :;,_

�PSYCIIOMAr

A liafmliDc and leemiD&amp;" -iienoe, ·

234 NorioD,

u

p.m.

'

CAC . . .•

Tala of Terror, 140 Capen, 6: 30, 8:30
and 10:30 p.m. Admilaion: 75 oenta.
filM'

Potemltin (Eillenatein, 1925) , 148 Dief-

endorf._7 p.m. No admilaion

charge.

Ufl WOB:IHOP•

Dl!""'"" of Human Sexuoli!.y- Poy,

clu&gt;-1/&lt;:al A.opecli of Human S eJCUOlity,

~~:u~~~'!} P:~~
;:{.;y~M".:'.~"'~p~ ~~o~~:

7 p.m.

An ~ora linn of the poycbolapcal as-

NOTICES

=~":'.~' ~ty includinc tx.iy,

MUW-

MANAGEMENT RMS••

Tbe Bulralo Branch ol the American
AMociation ol Uniwnity
will
sponoor an ail-day workabop oa EMOtional Cri•e• Women. FtJJC:e, Saturday,
Februaiy 9, 011 the U/B MAlin 8 Campua. Re,iotration ia $1, but - t a
of area collepa aDd univenitM. may
haw the fee 'll'8ived by obowinc their m
cards. Luncbeon ia-18 and ia by -'&lt;!
reaervation only ( - ia Feb.- 1) .
The worbhop ia open to the public. For
further information, call 688-li020 or 839-

w-

The 'G reat Unfenced; Man and the In-

~'7ute::":n;.J:;::.bl)/_9~:;:.

No admUoion charge.

WOMat'S~·
U/ B va. Brockport State, Clark Hall,

7 p.m.

UUM FUM••

.

Dinner at Eight (Cukor, 1933), Conterence Theatre, Norton, check -ahowcaae for times. Admission chu!!e. '
'slllnloi Jolin B'a rrymote , w.illaoe
BeerY, and Jean Harlow.

0933.

•

COUNiaJHo

Ptofe.ional OOUDMiinc ia available at
Hillel House, 40 ea-. Blvd. For appoin-t, call 886-4640.

DANa'

The M41'tJ8Chino Cantaloupe, perfarmed and choreographed. by otud&lt;mta, HarriiDan Studio Theatre, 8: 30 p.m. Admioaion cbaJ:ge. Preaented by the Ileputmeitt of Theatre, ,throtllh Febr'\UUY 10.

RDQAL SHYICE

-....a

IXAil

.

Tbe Federal Service EntraDoe Eum
(FSEE) will be ci-&gt; oa Saturday, February 9, at 11:30 a.m. in B-. 28, Die(.
eniiod AmleL bite.- atudoalo ' are ·

Ep~mrrs

=~=-':.:..~~~
~ci.

~~

~~ . . ,. n'lOTf

uu-.1. EXHIIlf*

,

• ,
•"A' 'JI\&gt;Up)dJilbltiokt-1&gt;1 "'tlrk by

~

cradu-•

A':t_·~-::; rl9~o%! ~~~1~~

Gallery houro: Monday, Wedneaday.. and
Thuroday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tueaday and
Friday, noon-5 p .m. and 7-19 'p..m. ;. Sun~' 1-~ •.I?:JD· .o..
• . .
·.

.,..._.

..

TM.·-BbD l.oris Preu, ah exhibit· af
hand-printed broadaidea of ,poetry by a
v.netY •of major and lesser known~
Compiled by Tony Petrosky, publiaber

-=~edi.,';r~ JA':: ofLo~.!.t._Air~
Hay_M Lobby, Mnnday-Friday, 9 a.m.5 p .Di :rtm&gt;Uih Feb. 28.
POITIY_.JXHIIIT*

Five Black Poet•, feeturin&amp;' the .....0
ol, Am4 Bontempo, Gwendolyn Broob.•
. I;imptim ~ Rubel. Ler_oi J on'ia, ADd
ClaUde' M'cK.aY;"I'O..l..Y Collection, 2nd
8oor balcony, Lockwood Library, 9 a.m.5 p.m., .thrcJQsb J1l!bruary 28.
Tbe all-induoive ' nature of the collection ill evidenced by the exhibition of
· malarial not fouDd elaewbere: the lirot
draft af Hucheo' BoUad of Harry Moore,
Japraneae translati.o na of hil poema. .
ecores of hia ~ eet to music., and
·acripta aJid program~ of hio playL

!!19f

A limited nambar ol ocbolaftbipa are
available to underpaduate foreicn - dento , Jilh&lt;&gt;,liava., allllndal :U/ Jl , fa£ ,.&amp;&amp; ,
, least one year. Applicationa arit avail·
able in the Oftioe of Foreicn Student Af.
fain, 210 TOWDaend, and muot be oubmitted.for conoideralinn by Friday, February 15.
.
•

GIAJi"IISIMCM

AirAID DUA1NE

n.e (or application• for
GRAD (Graduate
A..- 0&amp;.etopment) ·reaearcb awiuds ia Mopday,
February 18. Tbe awuda, wiW:h prUride
up to $250 for reaearcb-related . ..., available to paduate - t a
who BJe in the &amp;na1 ' " - ol compleliDc
their -last U/ B depW. AJIIJiieationa are
available at the Graduatio- Student. ~
ciation Ollice, 206 No-. For farther

a-u.-

~~= o:::..:ittg.~m.ro.t*

cli-

IUCEIIINT-

,U/B otudtmta ~their courae
w&lt;irk in May or A_.. 11174, are invited to tab Part in the jab ~t
interviewinc p...,.,_ at the ti.U....U,.
PJaeea.lt and Career Guidance Olllce.
Hayea C. Tbo'campaa Ujtarriew propam

=ty~~-::t..=a':=:

calional, boW-. induatrial, ooci&amp;l - Yioe and _.........tat r e p _ t a _
Reciatra- forma are availahle in the
Olllce.

c!P~rr.=,f~~Y~~':

STATE COUIGI HUB P.d'IT

exbillit._

~ t.~~~2,st the~

:n-:=r-!'i:. ~f!.o::J~

A Middle E&lt;urem Night Pwty will be

Ehmroed Ave., 9 p.m. All
are invited.

utB'iilhJltao

SlUDIJIT. PIOIIWU AND AcnvtnES-

' A aeminar ia

-tar

beiDa' oft'ered

tbia opring

on Probk,.. and Iuua Co,..

/rontinl S!WUIIUI and Student ActiDitia.

Tbe four-credit bulletin board ooune
(DUS 301) is beld on Tuesday .......mp,
20, Diefendorf Annex. 6 :30-9:30
p.m. Inotruction ia beiDa' ' conducted by
All;ert El'IDIIDOYico with the aaaiotanoe
af Carole H..,_y_ Tbe couroe recia·
tration number ia 217001.
For further information. contact AJ.
bert Emumovica, 115 Norton, ext. 3641,
or Guole H......-y, 22S Norton, ext.

a-

--

-AccordiDa 111 -6 ~ this
rellecta a powth pa-.. .ol 40 per
~- ~- life~-=-- and 90 per
_.. ,,..

WEEJ(l.Y COMMUNIQUE COP\' DEADliNE
For everyone'• ..,............ and plusure,
- like to publicize all events tioldns pe.ce
· on campus. To record lnfolmation, c:ontKt
N•nc:y Ca..S.ralll, ext. 2228, by Moncbljl

-. I!OOfl for Inclusion In the followlllll
tlturoday !que.
~

...... ..,.... --------·'""'
--""
· ·=--~=====""'

�-......hJ

·

WAAc-

.' wea.•.~JDJD~n•que I. _teria~·N~-:~_·p--~~_Y_·.
I---....,.,_far--lldJotfar -...
e

·

~

Featuring Leu LondOro, 1st ftOor
9

·care-

·2_cbatp_
. ·

Hlll.B. SHAIM.t

c11a1111n1- can . be

.Cipen •a,.
tD

. .,; pu1111c
•

•

c:an.t Rene,

-·

• ...-... -

•oapen .., -

~ 831-2228,

~

In tho oubjoct

of tho u~

GYMNASTICS*

U/B , Nortbem Michican &amp;Dd
land State; Clark Hall, 1 p.m.
.

-

a- A.M.

(Cbaplia), TM Cure '(Chaplin), &amp;Joy

admiooimt dlarp.

.u~~;mpriMnBioii: E x,eri-

Street (Chaplin) , &amp;Dd The· 1~
. (Chaplin), Trailer •2. 1 and 3 p.m. No
PSYCMOIIIAT*

J

N~=-nJ.a~~eemi.ng experience;

Ezcn of
~:n!!'l~r-"::''"O:.f ~

l'tiYSICS_IIIl •

.

Hubble

the Universe and
fro!" .

U/'B Dijlli 'liiiiioil Jl. l'bYiiiCa. :tll t'~
- 4 p.m. RefrMlaaeDa iii 112

~~ ~.~:80 J&gt;!li,, ..
...,.__
..

..

- •.•

Toclay'r apl&gt;(la · will include a report
on l..e«ialative action on salary increaaea,
ar well aa )be status of current negotiationr for a new OODtract, Faculty Club
main dining room, Harriman, 4 p.m.
IDdivlilwdr inte-ted in. joining UUP
are cordially invited to attend. Cocktails
will be-CAC FUl*

Mfor Murder,

Di41
140. Capen. 7 If 9
p.M. AdmUrion: 7&amp; oenta.

w.-

.

~~~ J:.r..-::~· ~~ School of NunA discuasion of the body and its respoue to erotit: stimuli in-order to understand human ~ty.
WOMEN'S lrASICIIIAU.•

U/ B va. D'Youville, Clark Hall, 7 p.m .
The openin&amp; home game for the women'a ~ethall team..
w~·s SWIMMING MEET*
U/ B va. SL Bonaventme, Clark Hall,
7 p.m.
·•
.
.
H&amp;IA IOCW EVENING*

Free mreabmenta, Hillel House, 40 ·
Capen BMI., 7: 80 p.m.
. .
FACUL!Y .COI.I.OOfM.IM*

F/aubut and Mode....Um, Charier AJ.
tiari, arrirtant p,oferror, U/ B De~
ment of Enclirh, F.aculty Club Red
Room, Harriman •Library, 8 p.m.
PIIYSICAI.

zy~

-IC

:;:;.

UUM . . .••

tiOil.

IN!IIiiiliiiOiiAL COrfii ,:to,;r

Sponsored by tbe Intemational Co-

~"¥!~!~ ~~T~

aend, 4 p.m.

.

CAC FQM*

~

IKTUU.

t"1:m.~.::. "8u!:d

322 Ac;J-&lt;m. 8 p.m. ·
.

.

.

T"" From Your. ShouJ of Showa, ·eon.
re- '11oeatze, Norton, cbeck rbowc:are

AdmierioD charge.
SlarliDc Sid c..ar ~ Coca &amp;Dd
.Ceil Remer. Tbe Golde.. Ap oi1V 00111•
ody to the hie-for -

. FRIDAY ..,.--1

SWI-ING MEET··

. .'

.

.

.~7~,?'==&gt;~~IUFfAIO WOMan

cena IIIIIIHo•

564 FrukJin Street, 7 :80-p.m.

•

• Y.i41diM Com/er;ration; c~
Hebrew, &amp;Dd Talmud, Hillel HOUM, 40
Ca~ Blvd., '7 : ~ p.m.
' ' ' .. .

TUESDAY-S

-

VARSITY IASK.fTiAu.•

U / B YO. Co l gate , Bulfalo M emorial
Aucij.torhpn, 7 p.m.
UUAB fiLM* *

S l i th er (Zieff), Oonferenoe Theatre,
showcase for timae. Ad-

Np""""' c;!!ecli:

m:rmf~;
Kene~ ~-J~
•
.

Caan.

UU.U . CQfFJEIIOUU•

.•

.

_

. .

Feeturing Leu Londori, lat ftoor Cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m. Adini.ooion _charge.
GROUNDHOG DAY

SOCIAl* ~

COffEIHOUSE fOI WOMEN* ~ ' ·

frae to
graduate students ~ witb ID) and tbeir
guest; all otbera, $1 . . Preeetited by · tbe
Graduate Student Association.
·

a:.r '!"d pop .~ ~ 0~~ J~C:

~ - aJE'l'J:"·=-""Admiuion:

•

Mr. Louis Glickman, regional director,
Anti-Defamation League, will speak on

~:r: '0n~,t'Shc;!b~~et ~ ~:r:_r JVillei

1

Ho....,, 40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.

·~

Portrait of RamoNa (l!:acbar) a!&gt;d TM

acn~·
Pele n T illie, 140 Capen. 6: 80, 8:80 .
and 10:80 p.m. Admiuion: 75 oenta.

Featuring entertainment by AI John·
son, Fillmore Room, Norton, 9. p.m.-1 ·
a.m.

Refrerbme!lta and entertainment; Buf·
falo W&lt;&gt;men's Center, 564 Fnmltlln, 8
p.m.

t:t;&amp;o~ a-. -

U/ B ""· Cortland S tate, Clark 'Hall,
2 p.m.

Pete 'n Tillie, 140 CapOn, 6 : 80, 8 : 80
and 10:80 p.m. Admiuion: 75 oenta.
Couol Bumett &amp;Dd Walter Mattbeu;
tbe female ocreen ficbt of tbe CODlury Bnmett w . Geraldine Pace.
•
!

BaiOe, - .
ale . ~r " ' - ' - a.il&lt; UDi·

H~QASSU• -

U/ B Invitational; Norton · Hall Jan.,

venity of Ereibws, Germany, 331 Hayer,
3 p.m.
· Preoented by The Linguistics Compo- ·
nent of tbe Graduate Student Auocia,.

, HIU£1 SHAJIAT SHVICE 011

~="A:;=.~='~!~

I Uniye~ty,

~':J.:.!o~ofAJ'=;!t~'!,~:

.

1 p.m. .

P-ted by the Gnduate Student

"-&gt;c:iatioD and tbe Educational Prycbol·
OCY Department Graduate Student Aaaociation..

Oo~

WOMEN'S _,WUNG•

I.eamili6. Dr. D. E. Berlyne, 232 Nor-

~: ~ fL"8..~ diacuarion

TM /'dum Shop (Cbaplia),
.

H~

.......

lnrtwdiou~. CJatlola

..:.S• .•· ...

..-nci•.

Followed by Kiddluh, Hillel
40 Capen BMI., 10: 80 a.m.

at tho

-----

~T'-,..,~-~Pulil;aol

·

· UUAS CONCHT*

Featurmg Eddie K endriclui, 'wi!Jt spe..
cial ,....ta . TM -Perruaiionr, · Century
Theafte, downtown BUffalo, 8 :00 p.m.
Admiuion : students, $3.50; all ·otbera
$4.50.
. •

uua· FILM**
T en From Your Show of ShOW6: Conference Theatre, Norton, cbeck showcare for times. Admiuio~ Cbup_
·

SUNDAY-3
ONE..DAY ltiTliEAT*

The Newman Club is participating in
a one-day religious retreat a t St. John
Vianney Seminary. Buses will leave the

~~~Jo=~~~ct ~Y·J',.&lt;;~
gare~

834-2297.

EMPHASIS: EDUCAitoN

"'

FILMS•

of

Joining mode rator sUsan Cama.rdo are
· Strike '(Ei..,.\8in). and 'Meehoitic.
Dr. Robert 0 . Berdahl, cbainnan, U/ B
the Broiti (Dciv&amp;bealul) , 147 Diefeadod,
Department of Higher Education. and
7 p.m. No admirrion charp.
Dr. Michael Langan, vice president for
GYMNASTICS•
.
student affairs at Canisiur Oollep. Orr.
U/ B &amp;Dd Brockport State, t:larll: Hall,
Berdahl and Langan will talk al&gt;oot tbe
7p.m. :
.
problems facing colleges and universities,
and bow tbeee problema opecilically af- • · HlLLII. a.AUH•
feet ·priva t e and public iDatitu.t:iou, .
. PrCyer: TM Worlo of the Heart,~
WPlfD..F'.M, 10 : 30 a.m., od · ~SL, .
1Q: 30 p.m.
..... •
"'~ .... . Blvd.
•
•
tiiU.I( UUNCH•
~
A movie &amp;Dd dircuuion -will foliO.V,
~ Houae, oiO Capen Blvd., 12:80 p.m.
WEBNESDA:Y -6
MAS1U: .QASs•
.
.
·Jily ~ lroir, noted F"'!'Ch .o~t,
FOSTII COlLOQUIUM•
=~:Hall, 2: 80 0J&gt;:m..._, o ad,;: .. 'Topic to.ho eimounced, Prof. W. DannbauMr, 'U/B · ~t Of CbmUrtey,
5 Acbeecm, 4 p.m.
UUAIFILM••
Slither (Zielf), .C onference 1beatre.
UUAI fiiMII CHAall CHAPUN - - · ·
Norton, .cbeck rhoWcare for time. Ad·
TM Kid (1921) &amp;Dd Tlrc ldk Cl4oo
-mirrioo ebarp..
(1921) , Confe,_ '11oeatze, Norton, 4,
6, 8, &amp;Dd 10 p.m. AdmierioD c:bup.
•
COP our-oa.T AMHICAN · Dr. LaciiJe ~ ebief of• a).
UfB YL a.v.lland State, H._
~ 8c:bool, 6 p.m.
.
cial worbr, moe- the truoiliml fnlm
a1cobol u.e to alcohol abuae aJDiml'
~·
U/B vr. Penuylvenie· Stata U-·
- . WKBW, 10 p.m. ·
•.•
rily, &lt;luk Hall, 7 p.m.

!:.~·I=.";:'.:""~::'~..:, ~.c:,:;;

=

=·=.:,.'1t::.. ::r::

JV-·

....

A~

;.

7

p.m.~

9 p&amp; Both

&amp;':.,.~-"""wiD ......... ~
(CoratiluMrl""

-7. r»&gt;.,.

:J)

140.
.

·'

~ ·• i

.

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

---

W~BlEDERMAN

. -tiai ol the Faculty
oru.lay's
01 tbe brio ol "tbe
Senate hid hid old ...,. " " - Senate ..-tm,s
did DOt ·. - r i l y accampliah much

~~i!'~Y. ~~ ~ ~t-~
-~· . . . . . . which will- be- •

~~'n-lay

baa also been oamed to a three-year
tenD as asaociate prot_,r ol education at U

t't!

I'Wtnl~
. Speaking
to
the document at band,
Prqfesaor Reichert acknowledged that
tbe heart of it is tbe elabom.te charterin~ procedure, to be undertaken by a
f8cultY-&lt;IoininKteCI "cbait8r OaimDittee,
which is required ol all existing and
future Colleges. "We IIOUgbt a new

-~~;,:"1:!. ~~....;~
~.~ guJng that tbe ~ c:har!erin&amp;
the.COIIi!ps '-dad by Prof- Jonprocaes wou1a give ·the College&amp; a re-

athan Be~ (Pbyslcs) (see Repor~. "IIIIUB!7 17).
.
Supporters 01 the· Colleges packed
the Side sections of 148 Diefendorf,
si1tin&amp; ·oo the otepa when conventional
ae8.tm, filled up. The "guests ol tbe
Senate"· were here hopinl ,u, modify
tbe documaJ&gt;t which many see as
threa:teliing to tbe autonomy of tbe
Colletles. .lf tbe ~bere wasn't
&lt;lDCtly carnival, it w8s ·at least livelier
tbllii:lJsual: Someone carried in a yellow ballqon urging "Up tbe Colleges."
SomebOdy else brought their baby.

- Eschewing
Colloll&amp;t&amp;tbe
- usual Presiilent's and

Obairman'a reports, Moore early turned tbe meetm, over to Prof. Reicitet:t,
wbo began . by confirming tbe rumor
that Dr. Irvm, J . Spitzberg, Jr., bas
been named the chief executive officer
of tbe -Collegiate aystem, effective
Februazy 15.
Dr. Spitzberg, who is currently a
fellow at the Institute of Current
World Affairs in New York City, will
The Civil Servi&lt;l!l Employees Association petiti&lt;m lor a 91!PIII8te baraainbe &lt;m campus in March, Reichert said.
inl unit eleCtion· lor uantiers of tbe
Under the new prospectus, Spitzberg
State Universilf prOfessional stall and
would serve as dean of the Collegiate
System, reprilsentm, ita needs to the
tbe ~ AAUP petition for
a new electiao for faculty reprMeDiarest of the University ~on
and serVing as top administrator withtion sbould tbe split be a~ have
been denied' by the Public Employees
in the Collegiate System itaeU.
A native ol Little Rock, Arkansas,
Relati&lt;ms Boanl, Albany
for Uilited University Profeoaions, tbe
Dr. Spitzberg received biB BA cum
laude from Columbia University in
1 P.rMeDt faculty...taif bargaining agent,
informed tbe Reporter 41t deadline.
1964, a bachelor ol pbiloeopby from
Constantine y eracaris, president Of
Oxford University. in 1966, and a JD
tbe Bldlalo Center UUP Chapter, said
from Yale in 1969. He teugbt at Pitzer
"I peniDII&amp;lly feel' thiS is a vindication
College in . Claremont, California,
ol our ellorta to sustain an organizafrom. 1969 to 1973, and was founding
tion whieh Will protect tbe interests or ·obainnan o1 the Prog'ram in Public
·all faculty and professional stall."
Policy Studies ol the· Cbiremont ColTbQae who- part!ci_pated in tbe seperaleges in 1970.71. He bas-been a fellow
"tion movement, be said, "made a very
of tbe Institute ol 'Current World Afgrave error anl:l in many ways could
fairs aince 1971, and a member of the
ha-Ve, diagwili1led themselves for any
Bar of the s - of California since
1969.
•
=-~service in our orgim•
· Earlier Dr. Spitzberg served as asC!onoeming tbe salary
nesistant 10. tbe reaidelit of Columbia gotiations for 1973-74, Yeracaris said
Uoivarsity (~-64) and . . . _ to
at dMdline that JII!IOI;iati&lt;ms were
tbe auperinlelldent ol . tbe Darieu,
coatinuiul;. lD opite of a Senate Bill
Coan., put,llc acboola(l967-811),111110111
(6687) . wbich be Mld be UDdontood
. . . . pasta.
'
.

PERil Nixes

CSEAPiea

""'*-"

rna-

(Caooliuoool
~

.

,.,.
'· .... J)
.~

.'l'bl -

CciDIIildll

eclmiple!jucir

newed legitimacy within the University. Tbe queetion ol legitimacy was
a-ucial, said Reichert, who reported
that it was discussed repeatedly dur-

inl biB committee_'&amp; hours ol deliberation. This legitimacy was not to
be won at tbe cost ol independence,
however. "We believe we have pre-

served [for the Colleges] the essen-

tial freedoms," be said: Asked to
elaborate, Reichert said be regarded
as essential a College$ freedom to
determine its own form ol internal
governance and its freedom to choose
its particular theme and mode Of operation (residential or programmatic,
for eumple). However, Reichert
stated emphatically that be could not
support the tbesia that a College bas
the right to judge or evaluate itselL
Graduate student Roger Cook, who
is a member ol the Senate Committee
and author ol a detailed minority report, endorsed last week by the Collegiate Assembly, disagreed that a
clean break with the past was required
if the Collegiate system is to be renewed. Cook argued that the existing
Colleges should be involved in the initial chartering procedure, as recommended by the Extramural Evaluating
•
Committee.
Reichert explained that &lt;the Senate
Committee bad intentionally excluded
Collegiate representation from the fust
Charter Committee as a means of
heightening the lef:itimacy of the
process and protecting the Collegiate
system from yet another charge of
seU-&lt;Mlluation.
I.Atcfllmac:y ond ContinuitY.
· The !&gt;win ·t hemes of legitimacy and
continuity appeared and reappeanid
throughout the meeting. Speakm, to
the question ol continuity, Professor
Larry' Chisolm ( American Studies)
urged Senators to remember the still
vital coooema about the quality of
undergraduate education in_ a large
univelsity that bad·insPired the earlier'
Stem ~ a document rellect0.,. be. said, "a spirit ot · geuerosity
m...m, In tbe Majority Report."
Cbl8alm nitemtea 1be D8lld for -.11
011'1-a!!tioadoa_ witllm 4be
~

w.-

Job Study
Neats End

. "The job evaluation project, whiCh
supervisors and tbe PeiiiOIIIIel Depart..
ment have been working on fur months, .
is nearing completion as far as our
campus is concerned," E. W. Doty,
vice president for operati&lt;ms and &amp;YBtems, said· tbia week.
'
Since February 1973, Doty rec:op,lled,
over 450 NTP positi&lt;ms have basi
described and evaluated: "The~t
of the Program bas been to inlzoduce
a greater measure ol internal corisiatency and equity into our prolesaional
service classiiications. The prooea8 was
started with the P"'PPII8tion of job
descriptions, whiCh were either prepared by the supervisor or in some
cases by the incumbent with" subsequent review by . the supervisor. The
job description was then reviewed and ·
an evaluation ol the position was conducted usinl a new Professional Service Job Evaluation Plan. The plan
iteelf was developed on tbia campus,
with appropriate input from the
SUNY Central Office, and i ltitb the
knowledp ol the Division ol tbe
B~

.

Wbile there was considerable participation in the diacuasion ol Mch jab.
by - t a t i v a l from each VICe
(~ .011 I, ooL I)

'

.

�Hare Reappointed
Dt. Peter H. Hare, cbairman ol !be

Philoaopby ~ ' - t._. appointed to tbat poaitioa for a threeyear term; ell'eclhoi 8eiJtember 1, 1974.

Dt. Hare hM . . . . - cbairtMD ol

!be clepartna,t aiDCB ' 1972, aDd. bad '
• t._. ~ c:balriDaD for 19'7J·72. He
received his B.A. from Yale aDd his
' M.A. aDd Ph.D. from' Columbia. Dt
Hare, who jciiDed !be U/8 faculty hi
1982, received a Nadoaal ~
lfumeWea FelloorobiD in 1968.
He io a 1lll!lllber Of !be American
PhiJoeopblad Aalclatloil aDd -

=

:~~:.;:.:=:

ol Ellil and lh.e CON:qt of. God 8Dd
written more than 26 iOumaJ ·,

�·-s•u Fire$, 1M
facu~~

Staff;

7:

WiD ·Sue·Them

=

For yean temaa1 ficult,y liad aaiy slishtlYeo,ut
..... ~
w. iecurfty lbaD ""'"
with lbe llllh!

....,....:.;;~...,.........

::r.

i1:a1 professor like Sbmfonl'a Bruce
Franklin. But wbat may be tbe initial
aipl of very dilfeft!llt
alwad aignalJed last manlb by tile , _ &amp;r- ing ol 104 faculty aDd stslf. including
28 tenured prot_,rs, at .Boutbem
Ulinois 'Unive,raity in. Carbondale.'
As repm&gt;ted in- The Chronicle o(

=-

.~~~~~~ t!:,~~i,::
cline in enrollnii!nt aDd a slaabed budpt.

on .

,..,)e,

..

~="'~~
:·
a~ :fiY. tJi'e ' " ' .• ' lOi " '!B! · IIU~:

~~
.."~-:c:r~~~~~~
~ ~ . ~~i~f

.,, ~,. ·~·~--

.

.

.•

g:&gt;~~~=~~~ 11... ·eai:re--? Oe
_·,,;
_
rarii:YienFsMies··: ~, ·
~~~~~~
-'Ampitious' 9-P/ay Proorarrt·
:
For !J:1e f!rst time this. year, •I\W&amp;nls
0'
aolutioD of .the cliai.rs PlOII'Bli&gt;; and .

Studenlll, oddly enough, ~ consid-

were gzyen m a new category, applied
"""""""' in aC!dition to the Categories
of wbm desip _&amp;nd pJamiina
d
architectural desipL
• ' an

ered an asaet by the U jB Department

of Theatlf. They are enrouraged to ·
write, to act. to design, and ""'M'Cially
this-year., to direct. 1n fact. nOfes nr.
S.Si!l Elkin, pJ;Oies110r _ol ~:

=

~
-uer:s
.
G.0 I''rege·• B. 'ou

Seminar on Arts'-=: ·

~~. -u,.;a!

Ciiiiep B is o«enu, ·a ••aeimnar·in
Coatiomporary Aitii? t hi s eemestier
(CB. 11K-A) ·wilfl Esther SwartZ, assistll!,lt to the preaideli:t for Cultwal
liftaiis, as instructor. 'l1ie format will
be, -tililly . series' of co1JociWa
given by ~ _.t.erB, .,....live
and perflll"Diing artist8,' and Critics, so
that - .. of __ _wilf.be botb tbeC&gt;-'

a

re~· ~tllil ·. · - ·'

FOllowiq:;:;;_llitions .w ill be .
diacualions m: Which 'stUdimlll will be
gi....., the ~if- to·interact witb
the ~
' .
kt fOnDs 't o be·'euminec! are art,
archilec:llml, c.daDCe · ~
mental ~ fllDl and otbei~
music ("-'. L•......__
· 8llil ...__
fiction
ope~a • ~ ...-&gt;'
· Weekly : w i l l·btclbde Micbael
Br!ll; ' R i c h a r 'd chalmers: Joseph
DUnn, -Saul Elklil, MOrton Feldmim,
Leslie_ F i e d I e r,
· - J~
Charles Kell, Irja .
- .JOhn
Gerald ·&lt;Y......J:;opn; Dwilht Ma
Q!ail.y, Martin• pQp,; - ell Simon. Ed~- S~i"tb. ~ .~, liDda
SwiniDcli. 1'. •; ~&lt; ~
WoOay &gt;VBsuika; J '. W •· M '
. iel W""i..~
D~~ ~Ill§, NY~
~~'7.¥ '"''P&lt;;'
MU' W'ICliart aild -;;:;{"F.oater~'
. --~ On- w.....---y, ;r~· 23 · 'Eric
Bentley, '"'ibe~ b.;;;;;

.::d..._:

.·

;:::!,
--

anuiia critic;,. Writelj ~ ~ :or

theoitre- Uterstme. at ~ .Uni-·
verility~- tbe SOmmai's lint "-t,
' a - am beld on the Nortb Campus in CliJiton Hall's Piano 1:.ounae
( ~ Residence) -on "W...m.daYS. fmDi 7-10 . .
~
' For. further ~tion; contact tbe
Olllce of ~thrill ~ ¢
'2736.

-

bitiOusperlo"l''IJllO ochedule pi.anned·
for tbis ...-t.er.
Nine productioDB -are slated from
noW ( last eveping BBW ·the first perfol'IDBl'CI' of •: waiting for Godot")
tb!:ooih 'early May. All but three are
diiected by stUdents. ''There is a new
groWth, an ipcreaaed energy, in tbe
'l'beiltre ~t this yetU," coiomen IS -Elkil!,. wbo att1ibutes some .of
this ilcllvity: ·tO•the Iiir'tb, in Sept,ember, of the ·Buffalo"J&gt;toject.
·
A _..4' con&gt;Ol'lltion. the Buffalo
Project cw:rently·!XlDsists of sii graduate fellOWs who are essentially master's candidates in the Humaniti""
program, but - wbo reoeive stipends
from tbe existing Center for Theatre
Resesft:h, Wijh ~ belp ol tbe faculty, .
tbe four actoiB, one director, aJl!l one
production administrator are attempt1D1 to .,..,;,~ a l&gt;el'fOI'JIIIlDClio unit entirely_ distiact bain, eitber the Center
· for Theatre Ri!seiin:h or the University,
ar.. siieldng llepelate funding in order to do-so.
. :
'I'I'hisil!aflnp~." Elkin.adds, "to
tum our paduiliOs into~
We' want to help, them -continue 'll{itb
~-k an&lt;! to hBip them achie\oe
lenae· of wbat. they are !Uid wbat
they_-want -tD "be." WorJ&lt;iq witb' the
studilnt81:his-"" will· be DOled
theoijm critic aDd historian: Eric Bentley ( .Visiting. prof_,o of tbeatrs) aod
pla.YW'riaht I~ Van itsllie
wloO-&lt;will _j)QIIS\Jlt;witli tbe caat•during
rellearaal 'of his "M;-.tery 'Play.':'
The pciosibllity thal tbe poop may~
~orm- m Isle APril at 'the Jntema- ·
tiona! ',Festival of 'l'healle' in Parma,
Italy,- is tile potential-lUPlilht of tbe
- - Morton· Li!Dter's "Given:

a

·a

All the terminatiOOI! are el/.ective at
the eod of the cunent academic year.
In the wake .o l tbe firillgs. Southern
111inois took the unp~ted f!tep of
filing a claas-action suit againSt six
urepreseotativesn fro·m among the
fired faculty in an a~t to preVent
any of those .fired from talrlng the Univeraity to court or from appealing the
terminatiOIIB by means of · internal
grievance piocedures.
In ezplaining this Wlusual move, a
University spokesman -told the 'Chronicle "we felt this was tbe most humane
way we could get a determination ol
tbe _rightS of all psrti.., 'in the case."
'The fired faculty questioned the
University's apressed humanitarianism. A fired asBoci8te professor of Englisb, one of the six pel80il8 named-in
the · University's 8uit, BBid "' feel as
though I'm bemg sued for no · dlunn
reason other tban tbat I'm being
fired."
In its su.it the University ~ the
court to rule that illl "finaricial exigency'' is "bona fide" · aild · tbll8 'thatits acti()n in tbe mass fjring was legal.
Botb the AAUP and the American
· Federation of Teachers (A.F.L.C:I.O.) have. entered the caae on -the
side Of the fired, witb the .AAUP expected to attempt to .pt the case out·
or tbe state pourts altogether.

e8moadaleh.a ; . .
&amp;·ro'pe&lt; . - ~~ ­
u;e .Yet-~' liudset 'for the ·

institution recommended by the nnnois Board ol Higher Education, a
$2.7 million reduction (between 4 and
5 Per cent Of 'the 'total budget) was
mandated.
·
At Carbondale, faculty, including
tbose Who .were fired, wonder if the
University could not have found some
less drastic way to tighten illl bell

No Bread, An Encounter, .a nd Dinner
For Fif·teen," preSented here last
spring as a work in progress, has been
selected as one of two plays to represent the United States in tbis evenl
Sb®ld the cast IUid crew be .able to
pay tnl!lsportation costs ( a fund-raisA.r:l~Jf!Un,ces
ing elfort iS ~tly under way),
they will, at the BUgg..,tian and under
the sponsorship of the U.S. State DeA series of
c:hanga~ and
psrbnent, extend the periormance tour
a!fditions have been IIIIIIOUDCl8ii by the
to several other countries in W1!6tem
Office of Foreign Student AfJaim.
Europe.
Mr. i.srry Candee, a tbird-..-r law
The Buffalo schedule, however,
student, will 8ll8ist the Office in-advislooks h"ke this:
ing
foreign scholars and students re''Waiting for Godot" by Samuel
garding tax regillalions. Mr. Candee
s,.ckett, directed by Steve Adler,
will
see perBOII8 by appointment only,
through January 26, 8 p.m.; Harrieffective· February 4. For an appointman Tllestre Studio.
ment,
can 831-3828.
"Maraschino Cantaloupe;'' a stuMrs. Deen' Pruitt · will be on .leave
dent's cboreogmphic evening, Februof
absence
d . the
. semeste
ary 7-10, 8:3Q p .m., Harriman Theatre
She and ber~ ~ n ·
!·
Studio.
"Sarah B. 'Devine," by Tom Eyen,
Paris wbeie Mrs. Pruitt will""/! ':
visiting fellow at the Intemational Indirected by Martin Tacke!, Febrpary
stitute for Educational Planning. 'Mr.
20-23, 8:30 p.D;l., Harriinan Theatre
Joseph F. Williams, .director of the
Studio.
• "My.s_tery Play" by Jean-Claude
Office, will 8ll8ist foreign ac:bolars and
Van Itallie (Buffalo premiere), di- • ~-;:u~~~~ witb !oreiiD
reeled by Saul Elkin, Mareh 4-9, 8:30
· p.m., Courtyard Theatre (Hoyt and
Miss Ana Maria Loinaz is lea lafayette Streelll) .
tbe University as of January 30.
"IJeerkill," by Murray MedniCk, diwill II8BIIIDe a new pbsition aa IIIBisrected by Rick Alongi, March 13-16,
tant director of financial illd at the
8:30 p.m., Hamman Theatre Studio.
'State University at -Stony Brook.
"Given: No Bread, An. Encounter,
Mr. J&lt;l8eph J . Krakowiak will jo;D
and Diimer For Fifteen," Written and
tbe Office as an advisor in February. ,
directed by Mo~ 'Lichter, April 4-7,
8:30 p;m., Harriman Thea~_ Studio.
. ' 'Titsruc," by Arlhur 'Williams
A challenge to the use of mandatory
(wodd ~)'. ~ bj: James
student fees to Bllppori controversial
Waring, April13-20, 8:30 p.m., Courtspeakers and publications failed last
yard n-tre.
. . - .
.
~ the Chronil!k of Higher Educa"Once Upon a ' Time: An Evenipg
twn reports. •
·
.o f Fairy T~" directed by MarleDe
The U:S. Supreme cOurt iefused to
Rosenthal, April 25-29; 8:30 p.in.,
review a court ruljng tbst tbe University of Nehrasta Was not constitutionally_ prohibited trom' providing a po_by Donald SaQclem; May 1-7, 8:30
UtiC&amp;l and persona·! opinion fonnn
p;m., Courtyard Theatre.
witb mands!Oty student• fees.

OFSA
Personnel Sfflfts ·
Peraoooel

'Si! (

Fee Ruling

-:~~~"directed

1

�_·-__
.._.,_
__
-.....----'-

_.,

Feo$ _ _ _ _ . . _ _

_JU; _ _ _ _

• .F.IGJ4......,..._ . . ...._, ..
JJD).

...,;,-.-

£.~

_.,._JUIIUIT

-.

-- '
-"'"--·--.,..,~

--.-

l'.&amp;nrJCUW---•MJCF ..

c•-·eau

- ~-

PERB(eo.uw...t /rom- I , col. I)
bad been intmduced to provide lhree
""llDd oa&amp;-balf per &lt; B l t - tbe board
amd one amd OIIIH&gt;alf per ciDt Jll!!rit,
Yeracaris ......p..!jijd tbet "'!. .p....
mont had been ~ Tbe LePJa-

·

tive '-rins• cammlttA!e ' - 1111t . yet
=~ieport em tbe-Uar. Yera-

·Wba.....,. agreement

hmda for tbe retzoaetive

io

'D!8i:b8d,

~ -are

-'&lt;d to "be Included in the supple-

. mental budget.
·
· With tbe petiticm for a ~te
unit for NTPa deaied, lleiiOtiatlons ·
for tbe new master Stat&amp;-UUP ·contract, to be effective July 1 "' this
year, am pnwrumably begin

110011.

�. _.......

Job~

rc--~,_,...~,
-J.

:=-..:::......
~,

Palllowiqfhla~

...-.
alaaa took pl8ce . , . _~ ..... .
delitial i;p-.lati- ... the ~

110111181 Departmeat ... . _ Jalll
ai.Jout which !here ~
lnllliiAY-.dae....._..
were .-.ived at this lltap, but Ia
a- .,... where aueh - - "lhe
case, furtber diacuEiaa took pl8ce b&amp;the CDIIIiemed vice JlN8ideDt
and Doty, the vice prtllicloat sible for the ~ ~
Tbe """"""' baa not JII'CQeded bel"QQId
~ point, Doty ..m-1, but u..e
pomtions ... which !here is still dis~t ~ l1imMlf and the
"!ce president cancemec1 will be ..,.
viewed by. Dr. Ketter prior to beizuL.-.sent to Alhaay as a paJt ol a total
recx&gt;mmenda!Oon Plld&lt;aa.
.
~-are still 8evenil levels ol disCWliiiDil to be held in Alhaay Doty
eq&gt;lained, the first being wiih the
SUNY Central 011ice l"a1amel Depar1menL "AasumiDg I'8IIIIOI1IIble
n;ae:at there m the majority of

:.::=·

SJtions evaluated," be said "the next
step will be for SUNY C..:.tral Ollice

and -tatives from this
to p .......t the J)rOiram to the~
of the Budpt for 'approval A number

.,.......lions

Dr. F - - - .

~"": · for their

meeting ~ .
double·

their competence in
demands .
of bbth home and .......... 'lbere will
be extra reprisals for lbeir public
stands. "Women are ezpected to be
ladylike, paaaiw and , -L-- .u
quieL"
•
""""" ....,

of ...........
have aot as yet
"-' llnaliJal, and until there is linal
campus deciSJon, no recommeadation
on theae positions will be forwarded to
SUNY Central Ollice." ,
It is anlicipele!f. Doty said, that,.
becauae of ·our 8Uie . and compledty
and · beeailoe time ·coi.staaUy and in'

'Avoid FKUIIJ WMo' a .....
Sbould this nearly insurmountable
tenure hurdle.I&gt;!&gt;~. there remains

evitably brings cba1qe, !here will al·
~ be some positioas in the evalua·
remmmenda!Oon process .
~"'"'· Professional Seivice ........_
ficat.im pl&amp;n sboWd Dot iloly ' ~
eliminate grade inequities in
at lh&lt;; preseat time but .-lao help
to """'ID grades P - ' Y to VlllliiDCieB
and new ~ons as tbey, occur."

her

~~~ ....... [All&amp;..._._ -

the problem ol homemaker ·va. .........,
!'Oman, despite the fact that the duallty. , JDflY, pot _.~ ..,;,tin the

'--milid.•or.-:ibe·..ua.lo,.,...

&lt;family. Sodei¥' deems lhe· two "
roles mutually aclusive, Dr. Famsworth maintains, and therefore such
practical and """""""" aspects as day
care provisio111&gt; and 00818 are dilficW.t
to· resolve. Above all, abe advises
avoid faculty wives' clubs and
groupe which will add extra p-.es
·to your schedule 'and damage your
professional imqe. ''RemmDber " abe
adds, "that faculty men tend tO look
down on their wives, and ~y·
you wiah to be considered and treated
as· an · equal, not one of liectmd-· or
third-clasa status."
.
•
Why, then, tolerate the' intolerable?

oU...:

"Like men," Dr. Famsworth

women c.cademicioma

'b&gt;ost

•
.::"!!::

sumed with an intellectual curiollity
and a zest for the ~ ol trulh,
..=~ can be aatiafied fully

:::=

- Nevertbeiesa, abe reca11a an apborism coined by a . femal8 oo11euue
which would tnmslate the State Univemit.,ol,.!:,- York motto &amp;oln "Let
"N '
be is capeble ol b&amp;=~ too
~ eDOUib;
"I have watched it in aclicJa," abe

!"""'!-

ap

o:::::::e_

- . "for over~ y...,.,"

Peter Scott Wif}s
Improvement Grant
Dr. Peter D. Scott, aMisbmt prool eleclrical engiDeerina, has ....
oe1ved a Faculty G&lt;ant for the Improvement of Uadeqraduate lilstrui&gt;!Oon from tbe RMMld1 Foomda!Oon ol
State Um-.ity ol N- York. Tbe
$2,000 ,....t is for a project CCIIICI!ming the "Nature ol Eleclricity in Uv~

~T;u... ~ ~

pant proin ila ti8ClOI1d year, is to
and II1PPOit _..,., and
developmoat ol inatructional techDiques r e I a ted to the appllamt'a

-

-

eDOOOllllp

peraaaal

-=

inatructional

mtMr than

.-a!

~

applicable to
problema ol instruction. Dr.

Scott's pant """ cme ol ·38 awuded

thJoud&gt;Out !he State Um-.ity oy&amp;tein. 'The total fuDdlng for this year's

IJr&amp;llt program ~ted· to $86,200.

!i"". and

poe.i.t,:

us

Senate-:. · · · · ···-· ·'
(Co~ from -

I, coL 4)

~=.td (Engu:i':: ~= -

an amendment tha't would ha¥e
changed the recommended membership ol the Charter ~ ~
include the Senate Colleges Coaiinito
tee and representatives of tbe preseat
Collegiate Assembly. Such a li1Dve
would "subvert" the Reicbert
pectus, Hod6!id said, which be
!'cterized .. ... , _ to the crisis
mthe~"
.
•
,
In ~ $D. qu;,.u..., about the
role of..the ~lOon in .the new
prospectus, Reicbert emplwsi...t the
importance of "aood faith" ... the
paJt of all parties if the CoiJePate
~ . . . _......_ Tbe doaaaeat
he aaid, - - oplimiam - to inCI'I!BEd
adminialzatiw auppwt tar !he
~ b8aed on hie ...... ........,
dian-... with by admla.........
Tbe ~ charteriaa JII'CIIlllduqo

=

=facilitate

a kind "' ......
adminim ~ fllculty, lllid
&amp;eiVIItOon that tn..::l~~
disapp...,..} in the pllery•
. Tbe CoiJeaes came to a.. li1lllltina
wi~ tbeir ...... miJajty npart in
haDd. A.ooordinc to 8oaate PI'IJ(llldure,
the CoUeaes were able to aet their
........m-ts to the Majority ~
~ton~~~ the JDOtiaa ol

~

"'~the-­

8aal bour
ing -.timent in favor ol 1J11Uriaa !he
pre&amp;l!llt Colleaiate A-..bly role in tbe ~ Jeol to
the body's ooly af6ra.tive acliaD e1 .
the afternoon: endut- ol 1111
ameadmel1t to the li!pOrt tbet would
put two -tatives "' the ColIefiate ~ly ... the Charter Cam- '
m1ttee until such time as the 1&gt;1-'
new CoiJep CouDcil is in opemtioa.
A &amp; R HOUIIS
The Olllc:e af AdmlaioM and Records will
be open from 8:30 a.m•.SOJo p.pt., Monday
thi'DUih Friday, thi'Oligh Thuisday, Fef&gt;.
ruary 28 (not 8:30 a.m.-8:15 p.m. as stat·
eel last MM), with the eXception at Mon ·
day. February 18, a · holiday. The hours
fn&gt;m 5-8:30 p.m. or&amp; Intended primarily
to serve students attending Millard filf.
mo"' College, A &amp; R says.

-

�At least 164 Univenity ......,.,_.
were eapaad In wt.D-n!lalled IIIUdlea
duriDI 1872•13. ofteriDI M w.lth ol
-ror-m.
the
aMIIIIIIIDity," a.c:cordlnt Jo a_
in-.tory -~ pubtiobed by
Olllce ol Urblm Alfair&amp;
. Dr. ; J - H. Ryu ol that Olllce,
leader ol the m-~ory PIO.iei:t. notes
that the Information in the study
~ ..... ol the a&gt;anY beDeiiiB
that - - 10 the -unity
the Uallllnlty'a ..-.ce."
The l!k&gt;dY. be ayw, "mat have ·
i ....!coJiiib!e value 10 caamnmity
•
elll and IOC:ial ~:Utions that play
.....U.., rolea ill the CDIIIIIUDity's fu.
ture srowth and ~t." It
oboWd be ol "apedal i n - 10 - ei'IIJIIMital ..-cleo. commercial and
industrial IDatltutiolls and ClPDIDIWlity
~~ carporations." An eu.minadoli ~ the document, Ryan explaine, reveals that the .-reb reMeded ·to pedorm l wt.Dl
· leadaahb&gt; roles maY be .-lily available anile Univeraity. Such .-reb
talent can be utiliral to aasist in the
critieal analysis of oompleJ: .aocial
problem! and the development of alternatives for improvement in "the delivery ol public aervilli!S."
· All too frequently, Ryan believes,
" the impeet ol the University upon
the' ClPDIDIWlity ls wholly eYaluated
on the buls or.-tivistic ·and shortsighted _,.,._ Such inclU!Ie the straiif that studenlll plaqe
U))Cb 1be local ~ supply oi the'

~
--;: = .......

~....: ~=~·!f tf!r=~

~~~oi!=M~~

mooh 80 that the ~ts'-of the
University's presence in the community .are ftequently overlooked."

80

, A. mcp . objectiVe .apprsissl, Ryan
--~
rontends; reveals that the benefits

greatly ~ - the disadvantaaes.
''Tbese benefits include the .c:mtribu-

li!ult!

9J.bXh.~ }.,.

C!iiJjtf~fil..;,fbit . ~@" _;
nomic, cultural ad -aocial -vitality~
the area. Only occaJiioDally is the Uni-

versity visualized as beiDa a major
resource ol the community; a ,._,_....,.
which may be utiliied bY ~~ti­
tutions for problem anafysis and p.roJllllll di!ve~t throuRh activities
that n!late directly to the University's
functions or teechina. .......,., and
community service." Tbe in\'ebtory
is desiJned to enhance this view.
The catalog ol reaea1d. studies I!Dd
areas ol inlj!reat, Ryan says, does "not
.-rily" illclud&lt;f, all that ·is J!li!JJ"
ou at the University in thiS area. Results were obtained from respouses to
a ~tionnaire distributed -tu all full.
time faculty and.staJI. Responses were ·
classified accordina l.o aeven !ields of
study. suiH:lassilied by various public
affairs themes.

p

.~,

.

dq."-1 . . . )111111~-.,_10

....... ~ ...... Ndir(-r.-

..... Gll1&gt;.

~
loll,' 8a&amp;aldiiJ, 8Dd
2-li ClllBIDda;r. •
.
'!be ..... ~ llneap 111dudea bclaloiJy,
a badbaJJ

--~.

-.u.
............
.....
~

. cllafiiiCIIIIIIIIIirlum

"'

.,.,.... Jwtmln!m - co' ed
lnneriube
- - topolo
and -.
bowliilc.
Jn additiCIIl
the bea.,bee-

~.::

'::..... the total a&amp;rma
iDiepal put .ol a ...........
clemic ~ ~ K . - CODcurs in a - . e Ia, the l1lll1dbocilt olacbedulee and • ..vioea aval1able in
the intramur.al--tion olllce in
Clark:
"A tradltiaaal conaem in American
hilber education bas been.io provide
--.. r... 8!udmiB to-obtain~
pliysical . . well . . mental aan:lse.
n-~tieli . have v8rled from
1M c:u1tivation ol prdeno, wl1iC:b - .
eocouraaed .at many early .........._th
CODtury inatitutions, _to ~
grams c!evaloPed in a ~ Ollports
by. our CD1tllmponDy . ciepartDaJta ol
pey.ical edUcation. In each inotanoe;
the ofterinp have relected an institution's- to the Greek poet MeoBDder'a _ . that 'Nalth and intellect ...... the ..... bta.inia ol life.'
'"lbe Intramural pi'Oirs1l1 developed
by this Univwsity'a 8chool o( Health
Ecfueatioli . . . is avall8ble 10 students,
facul~ and stalf, and I hope that ..U
wbo .... ina.ted will _take advantap ol the opportuilities it often for
beeltbful earci8e." '"' .,
; 'oJ
Nobody~ with 'thllt pliiJci8o.
pby, but &amp;cilitiea-to implement It are
clearly. ano11Jer ~ · M~
beJlliSIII••IiiiiY' ,.. Mid '
...,._ with larp floor ePeoe" Ia 1;&amp;.
ina planned for Amhenlt, ~ with

. . liD

/ Deadline Nears foi
GRAD AjJplications
.

'!'h.- ,;..dwite studenlll wbo are in
the final atqes of cooppletin,l! their
last U jB degree will ha.,.. until February 18 to apply for a GRAD (Graduate Resoun:es ·A""""" Development)
research a-.d, GRAD project director Jobn Greenwood announced today.
"'The application forms are beiDa
prepared now and should be avalli!ble
iq the GSA otlioe, 206 Norton, l?Y the
en~ !&gt;f the week," Mr. Greenwood
said. .
.
•
.
\
Graduate otudenlll in all ~
ments may apply for the smalL pants,
which provide up to $250 Ior resean:hrelated expe&lt;JW. ucluding livina expenses, tuitiod!':stipeod and disaerts·
tion preparation.
• .
c'Tbere will be a special award given
during this pant period, the Society

~r~ic..~~~~!&gt;i~

cal chapter douated $250 to tbe award
project, which will be given tO the

r.k',.ao-,..,

appli~ ~~ tho;:•best..PVe~~p~

J)OIIal!

. ...

·- 1::.:.. .~ .. _ ........

#

"It ilrltot &lt;'clear '!Jt ·this tiine.ezactly
how much money we will have to distribute, but it should be about $7000,"
GreeuwoOd estimated. '
"Decisions ,. oD app.lications will
probably be made by the 1st of March.
We are tryina to support traditioually
tindersupported disciplines 80 students
in &amp;alish and· the humanities, for
example, should not · besit{lte to apply," he said.
.
Further QUOI!.tions - should . be direCted to Mr. GreenWIIod a~ 831:8317.

Slakter~

"'The: ~""!:e·.6ef..e
it &amp;elll better, be iiya.

Life WorkShops
Qpen to All ·
Life Worbbops have been cqanized .., c:ampua to'- provjde· ana11
poup8 in which people can obare in~ akilla, idea ...:.learnl!ll apar;.

outside the classroom. '!be
~ .... - t o all inembers Of
the 'UniWraity CDIIIIIIUIIi~ and 1boiir .
..,.,._; are voluntary em the put. &lt;!f
the leaden; and .... free to ·partici-

Named

Professor · Malcolm J . Slakter has
been named . actina chairman ol the
Department of Educational Psychology for the period, January 1 throuab
June 30 of this year.

pants.

~Analplo

.
. Environmental quality commanded
· the atteution of 23 reaearcbers; diviiled
50-50 into ·air and -ter pollution
studiea and ecoJoiy (land uae, waste
djsposal, COIIlll!rY8ti~) . .
. .
Twenty-&lt;llle were involved in stud1
ies of demography and human behavior - 60 per cent concemed with
race and ethnic relations; 35 pl!r cent
with the &lt;!llects ol1Jlbenization and 15
per cent ,.Jth population studiea.
EiJll-. studies of· methodology
and mterventiV.. lechnlqueo weN c:mcemed with: modelinJ and decisionmatina &lt;eo per cent) ; Planning and
pn&gt;Jl8JD &amp;li'J'lication (20 per cent),
abd evaluati&lt;m (20 per cent).
·
Thirteen urban and realonal ecano:ny projects are listed - 50 per cent
dealins· with manpower / and poverty;
35 per cent with• manufacturina and
diStribution, and 15 per cent with taxation and pablic &amp;ance..
•
- Ten J0V8DUD1!1!l, law and public ad-'
evenly di·
ministration· atudies vided betwem ~t structural
and law enfon:emeat while nlnj!. stud-

-

·~flt.BaU
;;:~:t:
~

=-"'.!.'
.:=
~
......
~.............
....t.~

There were 60 .-rchers with projects in "public systems" - 40 per cent
in education, 35 per cent in bealth, 10
per cent in transportation, and 10 per
cent in houaina. communication and

-lion.

.

.

·

Jo#;) Openings

-

Faculty

•

of Survey Research Center (ap~tment ·anticipated at
asaociate or full profeaaor level ) , Socwl Scil!nce ReM:arch fMtitule.

·i&gt;ireotor

' NTl' •
Assisl&lt;lnt to C~mtJII, Geography.

.
Aaio~ant to chairmal., s~ Communication.
Housing Asoisllpll Director, HousinJ.
VetointJritm, Animal Facilities.
AaiotGnt to Diret:tor, Policy Studies Center, School 'lf_ Manqement.
· For additional !nformation:conceming ~ - ~and for eli~ of
NTf openings througbou the State UniYersity ll)'81em. ClDIIsult bulletin
boards· at tbeaa locations:
1.&gt; Bell ·Facili~ be~ Dl52 and D153; 2. RUtpi Lea, ·Buildin,
4236, next to cafeteria; 3. Ridie Lea, BWillini -4230, in Cl!Dfridor ..n· to
C-1; 4. Health SdeDce&amp; Building, in corridor opsx&amp;te H8 lll1; 5. &lt;Apen
Hall, in ·the corridor-. , _ Room 141 and the Lobbi~ 8. Lockwood,
iround floor in coriidor to vendina ~ 7.. Hayes Hall, ill
main entrance foyer, ..,... from Public Information Olllce; 8. ~
- ,Hall, in corridor ~ ROoms 112 aiJ!I 11ll; 9. Parker ~.
in corridor to Room 16; 10: Goodyear Hall, 1st floor, .Jiaumn&amp; Olllce
area; 1L 1S0'7 Elmwood, Penonnel ~t; 12. Nort10a' Unian,
_to
Dilector'a Olllce, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in canldor . Rooln '108; 14.' Jcbn Lord O'Brian Hall, (onrth ~ { Ambent _Ciunpgl).

·

'

'l'waJty diverse........_, oPonaored ,by the Diviaian ol StudeDt Affairo-and the Stuilmt ~ ....
beint ..e..t lbla _.,., AlWM!ive
EducBtioo; America r t - W"mea,
Tool! Creativ~· Life ~t;
Deam and J)yjDa; DeCisiaali; Declllkiae, What Sbaii My Major Be?;
Dynamics of Human Se&amp;aality;
Freoch Culaiae; Guiile to Graduate
School; H- 10. Find a Job; How to
· Save MCIDI!Y (On IDoome TUJ; Inter-"
national Coobry; Need a .nace to _
Live? - a Worlalbop Clll OJl-Campaa
Hpusina; Preventive Health Que;
Psychomat; The Ina and 01118 ol Ster-'
. eo Equipment; 'FryinJ 10 Maire BDila
Maet?-a Workshop em- ll'inlmdaJ
Student · ~ V"10a-~,_
Survival; · wmter aDd
6oUc:
Worbhop r..- "-'~lea·
,..._:
Veterans.
"""'" •
.
- ""'
Regiatradon is ~ aDd
be done in peii!Oil, Roolli 22811Niliton '
Hall, or by ca1Iina 831-4630..belor8MI .
8:.30 a.m. and 5 p.m. A aapy ol the.
Lif'! ,Workshop IIPrinl broC:IIure Ja
available uppn ~
•'
,

.m

OIIIWIIST

ro-wft. ·

Andre -lsolr, the noted Fftnctl otpnlst,
will live a maNr c1aa In Baird - 1
_ Hall. Sunday, Febnla,Y
at 2-.30 p.m.
under the auspices of the Dopertment of
Music. The claa Ia . opan to the o.publlc

a;

without cha-

. .

�AmiD Banb) .......

~

......a
-

Symposium on _

Ia . .

Quality Control
Is Set for May

'

IJn'ERVIEWS

. . . . . . I-

~~~Oal*ul."
1111 .., ...
. . Cndit-

CDJI

:-~~wu~

~r.~f=
.... ...,
......,.. b...-labuiaeu,

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

..

far . , . _ . . . . . _ .........

........ r:; c,:·:tz.~
:tra
Pas,~
o..r.,
. . . . of
Ual1

t1aa ~

~In= ~Diar7. '"11aiiii-

III&amp;D

beiaJ ..

part of

IIIUI)'

-utY

cDntml . - - ...... of .... ebiJity
to detect a ~ 'I'Uiety of delecia with

the aid ofllli1llble inMnmwtla, .... to
tilab deciaioaa' Gil the emoplabOity of
1be product t..d ... wblt be dolecla.
But tbe bu-.
renoly perfect in eitt. deteCtlaa « in declaian-

m..-a ..
-~
~ty ...;c. nlllllinl almoilt
10 per cent of
oaete,..
~

Drury ...,..., "it Ia Yiially important
that the ~ ayBtem be
deaimed with apticit boirladae of
tbe huiDan iDspeck)r. 'llUa aympoaiwn
will bring top!tber . _ 1n induslzy
who are reapoaaible far ~ty -.ranee aud tN.e human fadon 1&amp;sean:bers, in industry and outalde,
whose teclmiquea, data, aDd theories
are ..sbowing ·.,_ ways of improving
~ performance. 'The aims of
tbe symposium are: to improYe inspection per("""""""' by tbe wider
application of human faclom data and
methods, and to formulate and unify
...........m policies in ~ .., ·as
to improve tbe utilization of n!88lir&lt;:b.
resources."
. ~ 8nd delegates are~ ·.
from lioth North Amieiica aDd ~
'The ~of the ll)'lhpoaium, mcluding the finolln- of 'IIOOrbbop -....; will"ile~ aftor-.tloe

'r-..,.,;.;; tee

of '$100 incliiclai"
registntion, pre-printo of all papers,
lunch and dinner on ClODferenoe days
and a banquet. ACCOIIIIIIIIdatlaa is

available in siligle rooms in Univenilty
dormitoriee for the nidt1a of May' 28- 31, at a total coat o[ $26, ~

brealduta.
'

.

Registratlaa deadline is April L
.
Inquiries may be ~ to tbe

08lce of Colltinuinc .Education, 831-

390(.

.

Management Plans
Film Showings
Speciel film ~tioas - both
featwe-Jenatb and aborter aelectioas
-are heine .-!. to illuatrate oome
. . . . - of ID8IJII8'I!rial life aDd the historic evolution of .....t in ....
ciety .. part of the - · UDCierpaduate inlzoductory COWIIII, ~t
100.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For ewryone•s conwnience and pleasure.
like to publlciza all events tJiking ,piKe
. on campus. To record Information, contact
Nancy Cardarelli, ext. 2228, by Mondoy
at noon . for ·Inclusion In the following

-

Thur:sday Issue.

2600 Late Grades?
More than .2600 p-adee _.., sub-

mitted late last - . Jonathan
DIIDdea, president of the Student ABtbe Buffalo
A toial of 2,632- bad. DOt been submitted by Jbe lllllUUy • deadline,
DaDde&amp; aid, ooupling the camplaint
with a tm.t to llle ~ civil
suite qainat inalruc:tora wbo mi-.!
the grades cto.fline.
. UniYI!IIIity ~ are 111101her
pooaibillty ~ both olfend.inl fac.. .
ulty aDd "ouulqaaus departm8nts,..
DIIDdea ........
·Cams&gt;u8 meilla will also be asked to
print• the ,__ of tbio a«eadera, be

--t!&lt;m. oomplaiDed in
EvenU., N- this week.

~-

....

.

.

'The obooriDp will be opea to the
public, and paJticu)arly to Ullderpaduate Bludoato wbo millbt •came to
view tbem .. IIIIIJOICIB ~ Jllllllllll!lll
in society, .. 'IOell .. for their ...tertainmomt value," Lee E . Prstoo, Melvin H. Balr.er ~ of Amoriam
Enlerpriae, has aDDOUIICild.
Each 8lm ~ · will be .........
twice, ... llllcceosi'W! Thundaya aDd
Friday&amp; Thumda.Y llhooriDjpl are in
~ 5 from 7-9:30 p.m., .and Friday abowinp, in DieleDCiorf 1.f6, from
M:20p.J1!.
'The ldledule:
•

January 24-25: "Now Wh&amp;t? ;"
"How to eu.x-1 in~ Without
Really-Tryiq "
.·
February 7-8: "''be Greet Uo~;" "Man and the Industrial
Revolution•" N"'-nhly Line•" "''be

'F uturists... •

•
.February 21-22: "A Plain Man's
Guide to Advertising;" .. Executive
Suite." .
March 7-8: ''Run!;" '"I'bree Apprentices;" ''DIIy after Day;" "People
and Power."
'
March 28-29 : "Genesis ;" and
''Catch-22."
April 11-12: "Time Pi e ce ;" and

''Palllems.~

&lt; •

�ume. ....... ~ .... fDr- ......... - Nartooot -

Tldiit -

•

ID ~ 00pen ID pulollc ' · _· .

•ap. ....,

-......,

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

•oop.n

~

ID -

11314228,

-

fDr-.... .

~ 8, p.m. MmiooloD cbarae.

R::t. ~~

imI
uc~.;.,~o/~
-

-TIOIC

~~,..:;.1!:: !:""0::::
phioal Dele-.,. ."""~ 109
O'B~_ I{el.l. Ambenf
P"""

c.mpu.._s

...!';; '!:;,=::,_~~ ~n'!t

=::.

~

ti.

In, the oulljioct ·
of thi _ _ , •

e ............... -

·~-··-

see

..

' .,
·
II Lay• (Perry). GonlerODCO ;rr-ae. ·Norton, ehecll: ~
for AdmiooioD .c:haqe.

' l!laY . ll a

UUM COffiiHOUSI•

FeaturiDg Utah Phillil&gt;o. " tbe co1.c1en
_"'*"'
o!-, tbe.
Sou-.;,.t;"
lloor
9 p .m. Adm'iuion
c-t

!Jit

=~ Norto~

Iaforma- S:v-tem IUid hu

_ ..

.

--~--.~•.;.'flii~~~- .
~-

a:N'='L

.

~.m.Jeaming experi~

PIIYSICS ·COUOQUUIII•
PiUno.Wnolol)' of lf;lt Nucki, Dr.
Robert Aruo, Depertment of Phy.ial ami
A:sl¥onomy, Ohio Stele Uaivenity, 111
HoChstetler, 4 p.m. Refreshment&amp; in 112
Hochstetler at 3:30 p.m.'
~

FilMS•

By 1M Law (Kuleahov) ami Mechaniu ·oj ~· . Bruin ' (DovzheukO, 1926)','

Kiddiuh to follow, Hillel HoUBe, 40
Capen Blvd., 10:30 a.m.

-~

...... "l.-·~'J.

0'/B'Yii. ~rt State, Clatt Hall,
1:30 p.m.

UINAI NEW VEAl CB.EIIA.TION

.

T.bti .U/11 Vietnameae Club will celebrate the Lun.ar New Year with a dinner
and show, U n i ve rsi ty Preebyterian
Church, Main SL and Niapra Falls
Blvd., 5:30-10:30 p.m.
CAC filM•

Bkss

t

~~

.lle&lt;uts and Children 140
10: 30 p.m.. Adm;..

~~l;;o~:30 "

vAisin~·

.

CAC fiLM•

THEATII NHurfAnoN• ·•. ; ....

Hlu.R, ICE CHAM SOCW i

"Make Your Own Sundae_, .. Hille-l
House, (0 Capen Blvd.. 7:30p.m.
IHEATIE PIISENTATION•

The Department of Theatre · and the
Student 'Theatre Guild present Samuel
Beckelt'i Waiting for Godol, directed by
Steven Adler, Harriman Theatre Studio
8 p.m. Through Saturday, January 26. '
The cut inCludes:. Steve HeWer. Samuel n...,o, Steven G1aaman, Richard Az.
~~A~=.,_DePaolo.. Set desil!n
Ticketa are 75' centa for atudenta, $1.50
for pneral admiuion.
.
UUAI "fiLM••

Pl4y It cull Lays (Perry) , Conference
Theatre. Norton, check showcase for
tifD!S. ~dnPssion charge:
Starring Anthony P.erkins· and Tuesda y Weld.

INTEINATIONAL COFfEE HOUI•

P.reoented by the Intem,ational Coordinator of the Student AsaoC::iati.on and
the Ollice of Foreign Student Affairs, 204 ·
Towmeud. 4 p.m.
·
·
CAC Fli.M•
Bkss_ the Becuts ·and Children, 140
Gapen, 6:30, 8:30 " 10: 30 p.m. Admiosion: 76 ceDta.
•

Hiua -T.$UYICJ•.

.,

.

of,Ou~~'\Ji'~~

Proopect• for Peou in the M iildle .Eoil
Hillel Houae. 40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m. '

JllllllllfA-·

~
...._. BecDtt'• W,;,;.,j ' fW OodDt,
clbecWI!y- Adler, aam-.. ..,._,

Hy~,

NtUriuresU and Reno!

~·Do.~- Lee, U/B pro,....,..,.~146Capen,4p.m.

Co!f~

at 8:80 p.m.

...

do'!-7 .p~No~~··-.

o.U/.B_,_,.. . Albany State, Buffalo Memorial ~uditori~ 7 .PA · 1 ·~·

The Point, 140 Capen, i &amp; 9 p.m. Admission: 76 cents.
'

':\;,;::t

II&amp;LII. QAII.lt,

HIUA SHAIIAT MOININO suvta•

::r:.et~~rf;. , 1,. . J!·tt':·· No ~~ion
.

rM Poum Blaop (&lt;lla!Jiin), O.. A..II.
(&lt;llaplinJ;..~~ Cure (&lt;llaplin), Bay
TM 1~
(&lt;llaplin), 140
8 IUid 9 p.m. No
admiooiaa cbarae. .
Scr.t (

~~"'Gold RuM (a,;plin), 147 l&gt;iefea-

~~~t":f":.!;~~

t.n= Tblo lec:ture Will ·cover tl&gt;o bale
atructure Of - p b i e information ey.,
!:"a;w~ p.-nt ~ future po-

-·
--·

Samuel Beckett'• Waiting for GodDr,

• '

.

Jewiah P'raxer: The Worlt 'of the

f~ ~~I ,tt~~· . :c!l ~~ . !!J.vd.,
YOUN~- ~ ~~~.. ~·
Georte

qu.i1

.

~

.

(Rooier, I973Y, 7 p.m.

~!.~ilf.:~""i&gt;O('!C!!:: . ~

Conference Theatre, Norton. French film
eritic Claire ClowtOt will be - t io
~ tbe lllms. No admiuion cbarP.
Becauoe ibe aecond film doea DOt have
~ · aubtitl
a
· wiii be
available in 212
~ !be Coioference ~ Theatre priOr to the IJCI'8eDina.
Preaented by the DepartMent of
FNDCb.
'"it'
•
,

""c..!t,

H'Wi' ciAJr

.

.

~m EuroP«m Jm, and 1M Hoi'
"""""'· Hillel H - , 40 ~Cal*l Blvd.,
8:30 p.m.
.
.&lt;

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379775">
                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379776">
                  <text>Reporter</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1383874">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451230">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383853">
                <text>Reporter, 1974-01-24</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383854">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383855">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383856">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383857">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383858">
                <text>1974-01-24</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383860">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383861">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383862">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383863">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383864">
                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v05n16_19740124</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="91">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383865">
                <text>2017-07-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="109">
            <name>Is Version Of</name>
            <description>A related resource of which the described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation. Changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383868">
                <text>v05n16</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="113">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383869">
                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383870">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383871">
                <text> New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383872">
                <text> Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383873">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="105">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1392171">
                <text>Reporter</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1392637">
                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                    <text>�----t . . ,_,.

B7 SU8AN A. CAMARDO

=

IDI:reMIDIIY aopblatlcated tech-

.
al ..,.tic manipulation lave
inlo qUIIIIIian the WlfY - t
al dlaoeae, 80lOidiDI lo lk .Richard
:....~-all
al

"'ii':.'1i::ii
conlendo that what thinlt of • a m- is determined
not by hl!llolical fact but by eocial
ru-

-

Eagleton Plans
Energy Speech

thdtad Sla._ S..iar 'lbamas F.
......... (D. llillauri) will -'&lt; on
CIIIIIPIII llaaday, January 28, at 8
"""' in Cliuk Hall UDder sponaonnp
ol1be &amp; ~ Bureeu. His topic
will be "'DDe &amp;.V Criais-Beal or

"'Cr
... the Senate iii vice
llllis, the
iJHtazred

1972 Democratic
presidetlal -m- has been involved ill
puhlle .-vice lliDce he - elecled circuit altamey &lt;Pn-:utor) of at_ Louis

-:...l91i6...:: ~ '! 27tl.a~~
n.-

NOMOE ,

"" . _ . . . . . . by Moe _ , . , of. the
~ ~ by the student

-

Spukers' Buruu •nd sched·

C:.o..c:ened.

Uloil for .1Hu8oy 23; .... -

followed this by .becoming ~ youngest attorney general in Misaoun~s history in 1960 and its youngesi lieuten:
ant sO-nor in l!l6,t. .
.
In the Senate, Jle bas bee'n active
in legislation dealing with environmental problem, urben allairs, health
care, ~
- and foreign policY.
Senator
eton has aerved as c:bairmsJi of the
te's Committee on the
District of Colwnhia and bas been an
lldvocale of'booie'rule for 'the DistriCt.
He bas sponaored legisl&amp;tion lo restrict the availabiUly of .._hetamines
and lo ezpand the scope of the Civil
Rilbts legislation of ~ 1960'._ He ·
supported the withdmwal of American
· foraa from Southeast Asia.
Senator ~eton's lecture is open
lo the Public Wltliout admission charge.

-Dr. Walter.Cohen
Dead at Age 52
Dr. Walter Cohen, professor of psy-

c:bology, died Thureday, December 20,

in Bullalo's Sisters Hospital after a
brief ru-.
A native of New York Cily, Dr. Coben, ~ved his B.S., M.S., and
Ph.D.
from tlie University of
Mic:bipn: Before joining the U /B fscully in 1949, be had served 88 a teachina fellow at the Unive.rsily of Mi&lt;¥pli md 88 a reaearc:b psychologist
with the U.S....,Anny Air ForCle. In
1960, Dr. cOhen spent siJ: 111011ths
.abroad ao a U.S. Public Health Special Fellowship studying at leading
~and perception Clenlei'IL

.

valuea: '"lbe notion of
is evaluative. U - c:hanae our .value 1asia,
we c:banae our definition al ru-."

tiooi _ . . lo lie iD the ric:lmMo
of aeoelic ~. lliDce , _ . wbicb
c:any tnlta 1bat ...... OOII8idered
IIDIIilodNble micht .be aUptive md
milht aiiO aury llaiiB whfch· iD the
future could ..,.. hqbly deaiJoable.

T,..A___

.

'l1llo proved true iD the ease of a
lor Type A blood wbic:b pre~ the carrier lo lllll8llpox but
aiiO IPvea him reaialaDce lo du6denal
. ulcera. Altbouib camera would ~~ave
·been iD jeoperdy before Y11CCineo vir. tuaiJy . elimiDated 8lllllllpox, the 1IOIIILbas a positive value iD an

Dr. Hull dellnM diaaaae 88 a Whic:b is undesirable, has the poosibilily al being controlled, and occurs in .
•
a apecies in whoae continued mstenoe
- are inlen!Jsled. He furtMr nolod
that people's aUitudea ue conditioned
lll8llipull!lio
Hull -""""'·
by what is reprded 88 atatialically .
~ u.e of Dr.
"~tbenica,"
the modi- -..Ormal,_-.00 that the dominaDt valuea
llcatioa of the enVll'OIIIIalt 'I!' a _ , .
of a aoclety clejermlne what is I'IIYaof treatina or avoidiDa ~ diaeaae.
David K. l\licMel ' - mumed 1o
ically ahDonnal or. undesirable, md
This ~ CIJ!IId take the ~arm ' die Um-.ily. at Bullalo Alumni Asthus diaMaad.
of controlling the mtemal envuonsociatioa 88 liB ID8CUiive director. He
CG!oNd liP.olo 'l'fooulht _.....
of the bOdy by clrup 1o make up
was ·on the Aaioc:iatlall's ataft from
- He cited the ezample of a South
artUicially ~t is lac:t!n~. ..,atically.
1966 lo 19119, before be bec8me direc. American tribe in which 80 many
¥otber
-Y of IDDCiifyina the enlor of medical alumni daire md demembers had colored spots on the akin
Vll'OIIIIalt would be lo .-...., 1*&gt;velopualt .for the U/B Sc:bool of
that it was ihought a nonnal .-_
pie's attitudes about. - l i e disoimes
Medicine, bis ,_,t- pOsition.
Altbouib in our sociely the preseooe
md lo remove the ""~ attac:bed 1o - A
ti'
of ...._._,o, • .,..._ __, tof suc:b spots is considered ·a -tic
tboae With llai'!' ~ered undesira~Jlc ~~~~ ...........,. a .
disorder, for that tribe the absenCle of
ble, _suc:b 88 albinoism. .
He earned a bac:belor ~
spots signified disease. Dr. Hull point~ln&lt;l8 man has~ gnoen_80 ID!'JlY
gree in busineos administration from
ed oUt that the. concept of disease in
It~~
c:~=:
Florida !bte in 196,t, ..;tMl taught
this cue was determined by the preabout the a1•---"'
·
commercial COl1I9M md coac:bed bsae·
vailing eocial valuee. .
18
tion
-~.
"!""""
·
ball
at East Aurora High Sc:bool. He
Dr. Hull, who bas done research on
~_,"'!
fu"t:e.'H~
earned a master of edllll8tion degree
c-lic clisea8es for over a ye;uo, bas
..........ons .
·
e
· from -ufB in 1968·
• reservations about the extensive use
that P,revalent attitudes about 4iaease
Mic:bael bas tu~ all qe groups
of geoetic'lnanipulation .:.... the attempt
"!". reinforced md ~li!'i m train a variely of sulljects for Leeming
to aoientifically alter man's genetic
-=~"!!..~:"
:::.:stipeopletutions,=
Foundati'?ns,
lnc, of Bulfalo, 1111d
&amp;tructure' to ~ the · ~ !Jpecies.
'
....,. ' ' ' '
'
'
""'--L'
leaches business m11J1881'1D&lt;!Dt. marl&lt;et·
He noted that .the. gieatest aafeguard
o~ lo the-duu:iles ttiat cOuld """"'
ing and ecanomics at Erie Commun:ily
for ~ future of the human populathis cycle.
College. He is currently· fund-raising
.
djreclor for ~ o•~ics, lnc, a

~c~~~ -

- ul~~t...-of~

=

M1cha.el Named
AI umn1• o·rect
1 · or

J:.

ca-ndidates Bei'rig Soughffor Post · p~~~.::=i~~~
Qf pir~ctc;&gt;r pf Greno b.I~ Progr~m :~,:""~d:~~~~Nt: :;~
sucneeds Jobn M . Carter who is eucu-

Candidau;., ;,.., being sought ·for the
position of resident direclor for undergraduate programs of study abroad in
Grenoble, Frenoo, for academic 197475. Tbe programs are sponsofe!i by
U /B as part of a conaortium of SUNY

colleges in Western New York.
Professor Leo Loubere of the U /B
Department of History is serving as
director for 1973,74.
Candidates must be full-time fso- ·
uJty members at a SUNY institution,
who can apply for and acoopt an assignment abroed at their current sal-

ary.
Alao, they should:
l. Have extensive knoWledge of the
Frenc:b lanll!l&amp;ie.
2. Have experienCe in having lived

in Frenoo.
3. Be capable of offering serviCleS to
the host institution, the Universily of
Grenoble, in the area of instruction
, and f or research on an advanoed level.
4. Have proven ability lo advise students and work with the Universily of
Grenoble wisely and tactfully; administer an educational program in close
coordination with University of Grenoble colleagues; handle some basic accounting; maintain peraonal relations
with host families;•and resolVe organi' zational and logistical problems of
housing, transportation, recreation ,
med.iail treatment, etc;
Tbe resident direclor remain&amp; on the
regular-8UNY payroll with no dilleren""" in fringe beriefits, etc. His per-

=

C. tp: :;:.

Tbe author of numerous artictes in
~~eonan~
proiM&amp;ional journals, Dr. Cohen was
bocne to New York aegment, economy
a member of the American PBychologiclass is supported; the New Yorkcal Association, the Eastern PByc:bo.GrenOble put, on the basis of whatlogical Association. the Midwestern
ever' group flights are arranged. He
Payc:bological Association, and Sigma
bas a moilest account for travel re-Xi
.
lated to program business, office supDr. Cohen is survived by bis wife,
plies and eqtlipment; be may be able
~; two daughters; Sarah and Jento hire a· part-time aecretary.
nilel'i and his father, aiste·r , aqd
hro!Mr. •
- ~~~to':..~:~~
Friends wishing lo - - ' -" Dr.
. - AcsdeliUc ~ 107 TownCollen
Cllll8ider ~ to
send Hall, SUNYAB, ·by February
what Is
the Marvin , Feldman 28, 1974. '
.
WUC. Collen ~ Fund for
An
lication consists of an intro- ....-ncllna 'IIDIIelpaduate hoaor8 studuc:lory~. accompanied bi a rele"denta in die ~ of Payc:bolovant vita. T.he program's advisory
~tion8 ~be-t lo the
4290 ,lUdp Ia.
. committee, coq~posed pf SUNYAB'

"':i..r

,(

members of the Department of French,
the Facully -of Educational Studies
and· the Office of Overseas Academic
Programs, as well 88 representatives
from other participating SUNY col_leges, will screen candidates and ·ap/ point the strongest and most appropriate applicant.
'

Oxford to HonQr
Sir John Eccles·1963 Nobel Laureate Sir John c.
Eccles, distinguished professor of
physiology and biophysics here, will
be p"""""lod an honorary doctorate by
Oxford Universily next summer.
During tbe Encaenia, an annual Oxford C!'f'!IDOny which recognizes former students for distinguished
achievement, Dr. Eccles and 20 others
will be given the British university's
highest honor at a ceremony on June
26, 19,74.
'I'be award&amp; will be preceded by a
procession through the Oxford main
street and followed by a spei:ial lun:;':"'• g&amp;rden parly and evening din-

Or. Eccle8, a netive of Melbourne,
Australia, received bis B.S. and M.R
degrees from the University of Mell
bourne and bis .M.A. and Ph.D. from
Oxford. He is currently an boriorary
fellow of Oxford's Exeter and Magdalen Colleges, His 1963 Nli&amp;el Prize
in Medicine -and PhysiolOCY was pre-.
aenlod in """'''Jlition of bis work .in
estsblishina: the rel.aijonahip between
inhibition of nerve Cle!la md the repolarization of a Cle!l's lilemhrane-a
fundamen~ in the physiology Of the central D8f¥OUB sysl.eaL
Cambridge ac:bolara Alan Lloyd
Hodgkin and Andrew Fil!ldina Huxley, who we~e.J!tudyina nerve impuJae
~ llhllnld the 1.983 prize With

Di. Bccles joined tb8 u /B f8culty
in 1968_and, at '10, is continuing
.-..:h COIICmled with the cerebellum. He aiiO niaintiiiDs full taac:binr
ft!III"'Wibiiltlea md pai,lilla ~-

1

Asaocistion.

.

Chaplin Films Set .
All of Charlie Chaplin's starring
6Jma will be presented in a unique
campwi ·aenes by the UUAB Film
Committee. 'I'be Chaplin festival will
be hel!l in two pariB, with five features to be acreened in-February and
March and the remainder ac:beduled
for fall 1974.
•
Tbe aeries opena February 5 and 6
with The KUl (1921) . Chaplin's &amp;rat
feature 88 writer, produeer1 director
and star..-it is the &amp;1m that brought
Jackie Coopn to stanlom at age aiL
Chaplii1 plays 'two JOles iD The Idle

=

.rith'TZ~·

short to be
Chaplin's light-bearted silent feature, 'I'he Circru (1928), made when
Hollywood was ClCil1Wirlinl to "talkies," will be shown 'February 12 md
13. Written" produoed and clirecled by

Chaplin, it' iec:eived a special Aaldemy Award. The lmmifrant (1917),
a short written and clirecled by Chaplin, will accompeny The Circru.
In T.M .Gmzt Dictator (i940), bis
&amp;rat talking Jim. Chaplin played . the
dual role of Tomanian dictator fll!ll
JeWish berber. Tbe &amp;1m, written and
directed by Cbaplin, will be acreened
March -5, 6 and 7.

so~'a~~linm7.,!; ~;.

dow:, which be subtitled "a comedy
of murders." It is ac:beduled for March
12 and 13 and CCHIIan Marlha Raye.
Tbe aeriee coD.tini:- th8 fall with
The Chapliil Reu~. a ~lion of
three rare Chaplin .._.., A Dol's
Life (1918), Shouldet Anu (l9Jlll
Snd The ·Pilfrim (1922). Other &amp;lms
lo be acnieued biclude the auu-i&gt;ed
version of The Gold Rillh (1925),
City Lii~ C1931J, and I..Uulilhl

.m

-{ 1962). ·. .

•

.

l'icbts. tor thio. aprina _ . are
avaljable at 'the Nanan 'I'idalt Olllce.
Subacri~' ticiebl·ue bein(cillaed:
otudeniB, $."-76; Oli!en, $11.26. IDdivid)181 tldleiB will be 'IDid for e.c:b &amp;lm:
aludents, $1.(10; othem, $UO. Scnen·
ina times will be 4, 8, 8, aDd 10 p.m.

�~­

~J1,lP74

Filmore- .- .
(c-bulaol

t-i .,.,. ,,:~ 3)

•

-i:!~rmt~~
...,... or .•; cjarruptiOa,

t11e

=-=:·.:t::m~-=
........ ~bMdtlleCIID­

_... or an a-Iled IUid
:-.=t..=::-.-;~~
Ill ~ aatkia'e pillke by. I.YIDI. by
t11e a..e or -s d8cait, -

~.,:Utt-oillo..,.._us
...,
1!111!!1 • nop8llt far"tlle.•
IIDd • ciiJdibility IIDd cleboacy
..,.. or edmlalslllltiaa. BPue

ua mour u- ,_tile ,..u.. wbicb b8
. .

.. ClllllpibaJy cleacrlbed.

. "'n • •Uma wbeu. - . . .. D&amp;lioD
baw belia templed by farce In iMpe
tb8 pKiales or ll&amp;tiaall.and bave~
tluiJalb -a IDD8t difficult decllde or
mjlllluy bml~ - would pray
that oUr lmd ..., rac:aJl with .........
ll'illDae'• ......ts at • time wbeu.
be )n8 beiDa ~ eJao tO be In·

_

vohed llimilally: 'Our- miaaion
is DOt In propapte aur oplnioas or
~ llpOil other cauntriea our form
or - t by artifice ar farce.
But In lelldl by aumple, moderaticm,
IUid juatb tbe bll!8ainp of .,;u....,...
emmeat IUid the
of free
iuatitutioiiS. IAit every ' -.... cbooae
for ltaelf IUid make ~ter ita-political illslibllioaa In suit its own conclition IUid amveaience.'." •
Tbe accDiadee IUid bomlliee au_,ted by tbe lnlclitional laYinKoo or wreaibli at tbe pave amid tlie
allo-traclitional f.a1llna """"" Fritton
p)aced tbe Univeraity wniath with
Col. John E . Blewett, COIIIIDBIIder of
tbe 107th Fighter Group, New-.Yark
Air N~tional Guani,_Niapra . Fa1,1a..
p-~a wreath fftlm President
Ricbanl Nimn. il81m8 D. ~~ '!
~ from Lockport, aowiaecl _
"'!'~ -. !f\ ' ,-~ ··H ~ , ....... :,.'?l~ : ~ -:~:

lldvan•·-

--

. Y'B

ltAs Fillmore. was being feted In For-

:in''the
J:~'J:p
·:Jan .. ·

~~1e-

e" ili'illi"arlicle
Miller, "A Few Lessons in
·
from. Harry Truman," exoerp
from the authOr's ·forthamiiiig
book on HST, Plain Speakil!g, to be
publisbed in Febl'WliY by G. P . Putnam's Sons.
. . .
Tbe late Mr. Truman, recalls Mil·
ler, beld tbat Fillmore was "not much
of a President. He forgot all about
his origins. He'd been born in a· tog
cabin somewhere in New York State
and was app'renticed to a wool carder.
He married a scboolteacber and started worJ&lt;ing his way up, but at the
same time be started toadying to the
rich, which ·be oonjinued to do all
the rest of his life, including when be
was Presidenl As a result, be was
never 8ny kind of leader. He did just
_what be -Was told, and what be , was
told was not to do anything to offend
anybody. Which, of course, meant
tbat be ended up by offending everybody.
''But be was just a no-goodi be took
to having his bath water perfumed,
and be llll1'rOIIDdlid himself with every
kind olluxury you could think of.·

~

Merle

=-. ;,·

.tel;~.,:.,~u!:
•trona man. what

we

~r;!

sot. was a man

.that swayed with tbe alilhteat breeze.

About 'all be eoer iccomplisbed as
President, be aent Commodore Pen:y
to open up JIIJ&gt;BI! to the Wait, but
tbat didn't belp much .. far .. preventing tbe Civil War was ClOIICelD8d."

uae In ·deYeloi&gt;ina-car pools:
' (l) An ~pbabetical listii!g

of tbe
MFC stUdents in eaCh cenwith the address and home
teJepbane of each. .
.
(2) A- similar alphabetical listiJi,
or the IIBDIM ol students other tben
MFC students· lllicoidin, to C8118U8
tiact wl,th tbe addiia and home
phOae Ol eei:b IUid ~tli • ileaipJ&amp;tion
as In wbetl&gt;e&lt; eadl ,. an ~­
ate, ,Nduate;- ar ~ lltildenL

DBim8 of
8118 traCt

tel&amp;-

Ail~ u.t.lnt;,_
In zip .oacle Q * - coulil liol-ba ciMiifled in

'-...:lin&amp;

cleats wbo

~'l".J;. but far

'-.etary:
· '"lbe ftnt order of busineas was a .

- =:!~!..tKetter.- H~;;;
Uniftlllity Aasembly ~Esecu·

-Is

live Committee aa outlined in the -As-.bly Articles of Governance. Tbe
Aaselribly ia the only body in the Uni·
ftlllit).l which
all of the
oonatia.&gt;t groups in tbe University;
its ~ ia to c:oosider matters of
tm.l University concern. and main·
tain the individual interests of each
oonatituent group 1n tbe .Uniftlllity
community. Tbe Aaaembly provides a
vehicle for ~lion of the constituent groups, niilring I1!ClOIJl1Jielltions
to tbe President of tbe University and
tbe Board of Trustees; advancing the .
scholarship and concern for human
rigbts in the University. 'The Aasem·
bly maintains the ael!-definition of
each COilBiia.&gt;t group and continues
the juriacliction of each group, wbile
extending participation in University
governance to the students and stall.
Tbe Esecutive Committee conducts
business b,etweerl the Aasembly meetings, determines agendj&gt;. items for, and
the frequency of Assembly Meetings.
It-is the vehicle of action for the Assembly .busilless: .it III8Y. adv.* _tbe
President , on 8ny -matter · conSidered
by the Assembly, or tlie Executive
Committee; i t may request illfonna·

·IT!&gt;~~~~~:.~~~~~

committees of the Assembly.
''The Committee turned its a ttention to the , procedural matter of an
agen(la 'for ·!be ~xeeuuve Committee,
and &lt;the ASsembly . Mr. Neil Goen.
professional stiilf representative, suggested tbat the oourees for agenda
items were: tbe President, the consli·
tuent bodies, and individuals, both
within the Assembly and the University. The Committee agreed tbat the
Secretary will receive a genda items in
writing, prior tO the Executive Com·
mittee meetings. A notice will be sent
before the meetings tbat will include
- all suggested items. The Committee
~- then decide wpich items to _dis·' 'It was suggested tbat prior to the
next meeting of the Executive Committee, a list of agenda items be submitted to Dr. Ketter. H e will prepare
a brief evaluation of e~~ch matter to
familiarize the members of the Executive Committee with the status of each
item within the University. 'The matters which Dr. Ketter will review for
~on at the next Executive Committee meeting include: the status of
women in the University; the arming
of security, ana the role of security on
the new campus; parking; the colleges.
''The Bl!enda for the Assembly will
· be determined by ·t be Esecutive Com·
mittee. /ony matter that is to be in·
chided in the agenda of the Assembly
must be suggested to the Executive
Committee. Tbe Executive Committee
will review the matter, and decide on
the nece&amp;Bity of forming a committee •
to consider the ·item. Any subcommittee of the Assembly ms.y take its
membenlhip from the University-atmi\tee reports. Mr. Jon Dandea, rep-

&lt;continued '"'"' _ . I, ci&gt;l. I)

'=-

Procedural ....-.. and aplld8
. iWM clominllted tbe ........, 1 0 ilia 1111 the z..utiw Committee of tbe
Um.-.IV Assembly, with the JIOUP
votini!ID ~ J:eiiU)arly em the ascond
and tiluJth 'Ibundaya ol every month.
ADcordinl to minutes submitiSd by
Ann Obalmer, Executive Committee

~be~,:S..l.tter;::::.. ~nn~

CarPools-

(5)

AsSembly's Executive Group
Tackles Procedural Matters

wham zip . . . .

presenting undergraduates, cliscuased
the poeaibility of • · a matter from
tlile ftoor ol the A'a:::,'l,ly: the/ members of the Esecutive Committee felt
that a matter ms.y be brougbt to tbe
floor under New •B usiness, and it
would then be ooosidered in the next
meeting of tbe Esecutive Committee
before cliaculloioo bY the "'-mbly;
· "A ascond procSdural ~batter was
sug1181ited by Dr. Marjorie Mil&lt;. Aa-aeiiibty ~ She mimtion8d that
I'EIIIOMEL --

NUIIIIEJI

One - . , . _ ·11ne. 5244, an
~- and lndlvidualo I n - Unl·
ve~hroonna!OIIicL

the Executive Commit tee ..-.ben
fftlm Millard Fillmore wiabed to be
allowed oubstitute representation at
~- Ms. Sara Ciauelll, faculty
representative, JDDYed that the representatives of Millard Fillmore be al- lowed to aend substitutes to the meetings of the Executive. Committee. Tbe
members of the Executive Committee
agreed, and wished to make clear tbat
. only the representatives of M illard
Fillmore be allowed substitution due
to the conflict with work.
· "Dr. Ketter wished clarification on
· the 'definition of matters of Universitywide interest. Dr. Mix suggested tbat
the President's use of the Executive
Commi.t tee and Assembly determined
their role. Dr. Ketter felt tbat nonbroad base matters would be easy to
d istinguish, i.e., academic issues. However, many University~wide matters
have been under the consideration of
the Faculty Senate, and creates dif6culty in determining which issues
may be the jurisdiction of the Asaem·
·bly or any one constituent body.
"The next meeting of the Executive
Committee was set for January 31
1974, at 2 p.m. in 201 Hsyes Hsll. Dr:
Ketter questioned if additional members should be brougbt to the Executive Committee meeting, and the Committee agreed to keep the next meeting closed.
''Tile busiDess of the Eiecutiv e
Committee and the Astembly will be
submitted for inclusion in campus
publications, and minutes wi ll be dis- ~ribu ted to every member of the Assembly."
Ms. Chalmer emphasized that agenda items may originate from any indivjd\'81, !'T .ifO\IP Wi~ the ~niV'l[·
s1ty. Anyone wishing to submit a
matter of interest for discussion to
the University Assembly may send
that sqggestion in writip g to: Ann
Cbalmer, c f o ·the Faculty Senate Of-

Tentative &amp;Iii:;~~'''·

Outlined for
Commencemeht
Altboulb tbe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

just under ~. tbe ~ ....

released weJimjnuy . . . fOr 6e
Spring 1974 COlD"'"' ~-,a..
which combine .both a ...-I C011110cation and cli9ialanal pniii&amp;DI8.
'Tbe general - - - t w i l l be
beld Tuealay,
at 3 p.m.
in Memorial Auditorium with ..,_...
sal set for 9 the aame llllll1linl in tbe
Aud. 'The Cbancellor's Medel will be
presented at this C)IMIIIIM!D&lt;8!Mt IUid
President Robert L Ketter will be tbe
· speaker. Participation is open to any
division of the University. Tbe Faculties of Arts and Letters, Natural .Sciences and Mathematics, Social Sci·
ences and Administration, and Educa·
tional Studies, the Graduate School
! including Roswell Park and the basic
science departments of the Schools of
Med icine, Dentistry and Pharmacy )
and the Division of Undergraduate ·
S tudies- Special Majors nave indicated that their graduates will be
included in this general ceremony. Tentstively electing to bold sepa·
rate commencements are the School
of Architecture; Friday, May 17, 7:30
p.m., 2917 Main Street; Engineering
and Applied Sciences, Saturday, May
18, 3 p.m., Clark Hall; Law and Juris·
prudence, Saturday, June 15, late afternoon, possibly involved with dinner
at the Statler Hilton; Library Sciences, Sunday, May 12, 3 p.m., site
undetermined; School of Management,
Saturday. May 18, 8:30 p.m. Kleinhans Music Hsll; School of Dentistry,
Thursday, May 16, in the evening m
the Mary Seaton Room of Kleinhans;
Health Education, Sunday, May 19,
3- .p.m,: Clark Hall; . Health Related
Professions, Saturday, May 18, in the
evening a t Roswell Park Auditorium;
School of Medicine, Sunday, May 19,
in the afternoon at Kleinhans Music
Hall; School of N ursing, Sunday, May
1
•
fice.
12, in the evening
the M ary Seaton
Members of the Assembly ExecuRoom, Kleinhans; and School of Phartive Comm ittee are : Chairman , Dr.
macy, Sunday, May 19, noon, Moot
R o b e rt L. K e tte r ; Classified Em~!~to~~ -Lotd .O'~~ Hall,
ploy ees, Mrs. Jea nn ette Schaefer ;
SUNYAB Co un c i~ Mrs . D a vid J.
Laub; Professional S tudents (dental,
Jaw · and 'nledicine ) , · Mr, ·J ames' McLeod; Faculty , Ms. M ary Brady, Prof.
Sara Marie C i car e lli ; Prof. Leslie
Fiedler; Prof. Lee P reston; General
Alumni Board, M r. William Dock;
Robert E . Hunt, director of the OfGraduate S tudents, Mr. T erry DiFilfice of Environmental· H e a I t h and
ippo; M ilkud Fillmore College StuSafety,
bas issued the following redenlll, Mr. J ack Bunting; Professional
minder of winter Pl}l'king regulations
Sro{f, Mr , Neil Go e n , Mr. Robert
on
campus:
Wagner ; U ndergraduate S tuden ts, Mr.
uln order to insure maximum parkJonathan Dandes; U niversity A sseming space during the 'snow months,'
bly, Dr. Marjorie C. M ix, cbainnsn,
winter parking restrictions are imand !-fs. Ann CbaJmer, secretary.
posed (rom November 15 to April 15
between the bours of 12 midnight and
6:30a.m.
" After midnigbt the only spaces
whirh may be used are designated
Noted systems theorist Walter F .
areas in the Main-Bailey, Shennan
Buckley will teach two courses at
Faculty and Parker Faculty lots. Stu- U t'B this semester as visiting profesdents as well as fac1il ty and stall are
sor of sociology.
required to park in the designated'
His underpaduate course (Soc. 349areas.
I
BU ) will present the historical backuin order to facilitate snow removground and aystemstic analysis of soal in areas where cars are parked,
ciological perspectives such as func·
Maintenance will first clear adjacent tionalism, symbolic -interaction, sysJots or areas within the designated
tems approecbes, structuralism, and
Jots prior to 2 a.m. Vehicles are . to
contemporary Marxism. 'The applicabe moved to the cleared areas and
tion of c yllernetic principles and
should be returned to designated areas
methodology to basic socio-cultural
until
all Jots have been plowed.
problem areas will be the focus of Dr.
"On the Amherst Campus, vehicles
Bucliley's paduate course ( Soc. 575-need
only be parked in portions of
BU), which is open to students withJots closest to building access. Remote
OJJt 8pecial training in math, logic, or
portions
of the I o t s may then be
formal systems ·theory.
plowed to provide areas for exchange."
Professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire since 1971,
FEW WOMEN IN SUNY
Dr. Buckley bas also served on the
In 265 top administrative poSts within
faculties &lt;Jf Brown University, Vassar
State University, there are only 13 women,
College, and, most recently. the UniDr. C. Eugene KnHz, director of SUNY's
ftlllity of California at Santa Barbara. Equal E.mploynlent Program, said at a
From 1957·1962, be was 8880ciate huhearing i nto discrimination against women
man factors scientist for the Human
in
the administration of education held by
Factors Directorate of the Systems
The State Assembly Education Committee,
Development Corporation.
the
Buflalo Eventna reported recentDr. Buciley's publications include
ly. Only two of 200 jobs at the commis·
numerous articles on systems ._.-c:h,
.....
sioner
level
in
the
State
Education
Depart·
88 well 88 tluee books: Sociolofy and
· ment are held by women, tht same report
Moden Syatema Theory ( 1967-) ,
Indicated. Dr. KndZ noted that all 34
M&lt;NIBn SyaJelfU RU«&lt;I'CA (01' 1M Be5--operated SUNY campuses are preluwioral Scien1ut : A Sourcebook
· ( 1968) , IUid a ascond edition of Claa
:-~"!u:!~"!l~::ntpemr:s~~=~·
and Society l with Kurt Mayer ) ._,
al posts.
'

M8Y21:197i:

m

Rules lssu~d for
Winter Parkjng

·suckley to Visit

~-

�~17,

'

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(c.iolioooell'""" ~ '· f!ll._ ~

- waa~a ...

~
.........

~
=:?·:~
a~~~e:n...

1laB
~

etlit

llllllDUBfortheir

•

l o b'

~~.:-~~It/:.

cllah ............ IUD - - t o
tile a.t.o...alttee'aae
• r1e •.
tiaq,. ~ aatlaaale Ia to'
~ lla:;t Ia ~ to .. . ~
a.iaiiD Reicbort a-ledpd
tbM ... .._._.. ciouteriDK protied-

-a---thiitaame

...... flmdiaoliDr 'tiOU1d
~ . . . . . . tile s-oc-. But
~
lbat do will dluter&amp;
will ....... - ' t . much ~
~ wilbfa tbe Uai-mty,
crl . .

eaue.-

Reli:bert IDdlcmd.

.
ctlad iD tile proepectus as a raticmale far tile JIIQCIIdme tbe ob~ crl tile Bdramwai EvaluatiDI '1-.m lbat -uy acrutiaimd

-:ltt ~....:::~..;,.!t';:..8~

=
-for_..,.
Colleliale uait;

1be more evaluaticm

~ ~;'."':'~~ '
the more aatanomy it will enjoy ooce

""'aN!ebed "

.

Collolln
'lbe new proopectus also outlines
pi'OCIIIIwes for ilisoolviq Colleges.
Any crl the tm...aicio members of the
Cbafter Committee.· the College master or chief administrative ol&amp;cer, or
the CoiJep CouDcil may initiate a disaoluticm proceedina on III'!IJDCisw.cludiDI (but DOt limilad to) tailure of the
emmt COih!te to abide by its cbarter,
ka crl Joey faculty or the College's
.chief ac!Jninistnltive ollicer, vi9lation
of Uiliw!r&amp;ity' procedures, 8nd laCk·of
student interesL If the 'i:barles are
deemed insu8icient to warrant dissolu·
tion, the problems are simplY, referred
-. to the Ilelm ol the. Colleges !.o handle
in less drastic, routine fai;hion. But if
the chaqes are aerious, and are not .
resolved by the Ilelm or the CoUege
d ·
a two-week "ll!8!»'.' period,
: ~barter • Committee• 'will notify
campus media that dissolution
ceeclinp are being initiated
open to aU interested parties will follow. ,Tbe ·Charter eommittee will consider the iaaues, make itil ronClusions,
and recommend dissolution, probation,
or CDDtinuation of the College as chartered 'Ibis repo_rt will be sent to the
Ilelm of the Colleges and the Presidenl 'lbe President will then act on
the t-is of the report .and additional
•

u.....J::

n,;:•:,.•J:l:S:v!"~~

If the President does DOt act aooording
to the Coqunittee's remmnwvlation,
be is """""""' to justify 'his d8Ciliion
to the Committee.
I..oominl -very 1aqe in the new proopeotua is tbe fiBure ol the Ilelm of the
Co~ wbo would, in effeCt, replace
the directot of the Collegiate Assem-

bly. Aithoulh the·positioo ol Ilelm of
the Collilps is nOt ouly ·- t at this
time, it does DOt exist, oeveraJ liOi11'CeS
: told tbe Jl.ef'!'rlo that there is a fa.
voted candidate, a young professor
from "outside." Tbe timetable inoor·
porated into tbe proa'pectua is based
on tbe 8SIIII=tion that a Ilelm will
be named by June.
_ As outline~~ in the
tbe
Dean -or the Collegeo will have authority equivalent to a J&gt;I'C)VOIIt (perhaps

eroopectus.

---.-

..., ......... .,... u.,.,., ., ,_

...

~.,.,...,......

.t 11......

.1'-':.,..,....JUS . . . . .,.. . . . .

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=--'~=--=·~
2121).
.
A.

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. r . lfARLftT

-·------·---. Art . . . . . . . . . . .

' }fllllf.&amp;.~

·~·.AitD~
lfAIICF &amp; c:.&amp;anAUU.I

Jll74

-Researe Rrobes
life ·s..,. in
-City vs. Suburbs

a::::-:;::.

1he faculty - - ... . . - . : :
Cbe Doualbould haw
tlo •
- aldiaa ill merlt _ , ~.
a-m partlclpatlni ~ . . . .......
• ...
Adminlalratiall eDu1d actively ....
~ the recaui-f by ~
Bl,~
ll8lla - crl faculty. eap8claJly ~
(tenured) faculty, who mi&amp;ht aoti-velyin- Sbt ~- iD !be' u.s.
IIUtloiPate in an 'axislinl {)oUep.
belllllliillld- a oUIB 8ll!liolaiY
ltlate a new Oollep, or ~'te to . . ua
~ ... . ~if a!burb8D
the clevelopaa~t crl ~~~~~ De- . iesidenlalhe . . . . e.a dty dweiJen.
partDalialleou- Jil'CIII'8Di and Dr.~A.Y-.Iabea
livltiM,. Cbe clocuD'dllt UJI'lL
•• .
~ to - " BiriDIDibUa. Ala.;
Althoulh administrative auppart ..
BufrP»;
Rartti4.-Culln.; IDdlanopo. ~-....t, and, Ia lac( a p-eat: deal 'of
lis, l'liliL; aa.be. Neb.,llllll Roebesier,
......... Ia .......s in the adminlalmtioo
N.Y.
Ba
II~ 1he aur....io8
~ ~ RakMrt and his
'*-' dty
,lllliltillity
Cllllilliittee lliliiliben alllnn the belief
rates iD tt.. to wbetbet
' that the JiiOPM&amp;I paooeduaes will
tba
rates
.....
clailnled
tbe past
A number ol other new aptiolll, pao- · llllt Ia "8&amp;aug indi!pendeDt, intelleo20 , _ 1n4. H -. ilb:J. Dr.
cedUftll • and aelatjcJnabipo also
tuallll viable ~ thet will ......
caria
II
Uo
loo1dac
lnlo
the
aelatioospelled out in the wicl&amp;ranBing c!Ocua lillnificant Impact .., the tmde&lt;_a bip . . . . . . Lilw .... ic 8tatua and
IIIOIK:
paduate education ol many ol our
. mOrtality n.tes. '11111 -reb project
• Tbe prooipectUs acknowledaes tbe
studoa4a." !lbe piUIJI8Ciua. if """'!P'
·II
funded by a 1116,000 t.o-yeer grant
poOsibility that non-tesidend81 - &amp;J)d
lad, 'tiOU1d run until June 1J 1978, with
residential col'- may develop in
from t h e = t crl Health, Edu• Senate reYiew ol tbe documellt called
catiall and eJr.a
very dilfaalt ~ bt the for in 1977-78.
.
Dr, y
painte out that each
future. Althoulh a single Collegiate
lollnortiJ llllport
of the matropoliiD c:t- for
sYsliem is reoom.........wt at this time,
Althoulh no ooe 1mowB as r.et wbat
tb8 study Ia • etandud metz':lpolitan
the Senate is uqed to ~ the
the effect of the document will be on
statiatlcal uait with a tnt8).population
mallter in "two to three )'I!!U'IL"
the
existing
Colleps
or
even.
for.
of . _ lhllii. one- ud a ball -million:
• The thorny issue of how to in-·
that matter, if Cbe document will ·be 86
In metropolilell
crl .larter popusure liiculty ~cipotion is-grappled · cepted
- ·it Cllllll! into the wodd over
lations, the. clear di&amp;NDces between
with oeveraJ ti-. Partici tion by
at l east ooe proliesl A minority re" regulllr University faculty~is to be
wban and suburban tend to be
port accompailiee the proopectus. Tbe
obecwed, be II&amp;YB.
.
a Collegiate ''nonn," aocordini to the
report, prepared by CoO- CommitSince be iii also ............ in the
documenl GoUege budgets are to&gt; intee
member
Roter
Cook,
a
graduate
telatioll bolt-. aocloeccilomic status
clude funds to rompensate faculty,
student in sociology, argues that tlie
and mortality rates, Yen.caris bas denormaUy by pun:basing- relj!&amp;Sed time
p~ "yield (&amp;) too much ground
liben.tely c:t- a- siJ: cities befrom their tei[Ular departments. ·
(port;all unintended) to bieraldUcal
cause they rep.-.1'811!&amp;8 having low,
• Tbe College Council is deftned
rontrol ..r,d bureaiicratiC cbannelling.'•
middle; Jlllil hich "quality of life inas an ·advisory body to the ' Ilea!~ of
a
concession
that
violates
the
spirit
dices." A ':quality ol life index"
tbe .con"!!'!"! capable of challenging
of
the
old
proepectus
and
is
further
measures tbe pneraJ socioeconomic
tbe Dean if 1t can muster..&amp; 2/3 vote.
status of an uea by considerin&amp; more
In .such•disputes, tba Senate Commit- . .WJ.~!j&gt;d- by either the intemal
' than'' 24 6ICtors such as the area's
. tee on the Colleges will norrilally me- • . O'r ' extiainliiaf . reViews. Mote&lt;~ye&lt;,
Cook II&amp;YS. jhe mejority report, .""'?eo
median income, years of schooling,
diate.
not adequately encourage continwty
juvenile c:lelinquency rate, etc.)
• AU new (as opposed to existing )
between the existing system and the
~ll- ,mus~ bei!Mt .as .wprla;bops.
Jil-su-off!lcirllllltfnew: syfilj!m, . e.g., go, ~ fro~:~~
~ ~- bY Jimg-"H. Kim, 'a reWorkshop status is tlrprecede CoUegethe curierit COUegiate ASsembly are
search associate working .for his docbciod for a minimum of one semester
participan!l! on the Charter Comn!ittoral degree in sociology at U jB,
(during which rio credit can be earned
tee."
by participants) and for no more tban
Yera~ bas 8p!!l)t &gt; d,'-'i 1-P!lSt' year
'
In
an
interview
with
the
Reporter,
.three semesters. Proposals for workptberiml .ili!ath • kic:ordB, pOpulation
Cook explained his roncem that the
. shops can be made by any interested
--census data; and ·birth rates of the
document
is
overly
precise
in
estabfaculty or student directly to the
past 20 years for the ail&lt; metropolitan
lishing procedures by which individareas in· the study. By using com·
Dean.
.
uals outside tbe CplJegiate System
. • An additional grading optiQD is
puters, the resean:bers now will match
can supervise particiP&amp;nts in the Col·
also proposed for the Co)leges. CoUege
population· staliltica with death recleges. Tbe propcaci chartering profaculty may offer their students a
ords in such categories aa socioecocedure, Cook believes, -is "unfair,"
grading option of ''pass" or "no credit"
nomic status, city or subwban resiexcluding
to a large degree thoee in·
- the latter. meaning that neither a
dency, and ·cause of death. In this
· dlviduals' now actively participating
grade nor any i-ecord of participation
,way, tbey will rompute ..-surements
in tbe CoUeges. A prefenible procedwill appear on tbe student's tranof mortality rates (such as life expec·
ure would be one in which tbe existing
scripl
laney and probability ol dyinJ ).
Colleges _sit down with the new Ilelm
All existing CoUeges are urged in
Y eracaris noted that there IS ample
and tbe Senate Colleges Committee
the prospectus to apply. for chartered
evidence to suggest lbat a suburban
in order to uexorcise negative aspects"
status, which would be- required for
ale&amp; bas a higher aocioecooomic status
of tbe current system.
rontinuei'l 'existence after January 1,
than the central city and that aocio"M y own "'-rvation," Cook said,
1975. During the changeover period
economic'iitatus is inW!IIIIely related to
articulating
tbe Worst fears of supportall CoUege .rourses and instructors
moriality (that is, the higher tbe soP.rs ol tbe CoO- "is that tbe paowould require tbe approval of the Colcioeconomic status ol a poup, the
spectus will be .-1 in such a way lbat
legiate Dean as weU as DUS approval.
lower the moriality rate, and vice
· tbe present CoUegiste "Plea&gt; ~ be
The prospectus rerommends that ad·
=.!,;Th~be. e~~~
virtually destroyed CertainlY the
diti'!nal funding be, made available to
powers given to the ~ Comstatus' .:I•::::Wty rates.
the CoUeges to beef up faculty partimittee aUow i t to be .-1 m that
cipation within the system during tbe
He IIIJIIP8Cia lbat neither the city
way." changeover period. Tbe CoUegiste
nor the aubmban uea is aa homoAssembly would rontinue to exist as
geneous aa it - . ·and this factor
an advisory body until Jimuary 1975.
may have broulht about dwlpa in
tlie moriality ......... tbe last two
Ao:I~~Urpd
Prol&amp;~~or Allen ri. Sapp, master ol
deaideL "8ubuddu Ollllllllllllities," be
" A [CoUegiste] program more cenCollege B since 1968, bas l&amp;lipied.
81iJ18, "ue no laaaer as adusive as
tral to the roncerns of the University
hom that post effective immediately.
tbey l..t to be. Blue caUar Wlilbrs
cannot succeed without veiy substan·
In a letter to Pmf-.r Sapp ...,:
tial support from the ~..
haw ..... IIIOViDI mlo the euburils
cepting his reailna~ Executive Vice
at an inc:reUn&amp; rate tilnce the midtbe p~ insists. As evidenCe of
President Albert Somit ,ap,..ct- his
that liUJ'I1"ri. the document caJls for
1950'&amp; Since - kMw that ooclcalotbanb for 1be "effort, time and
nomlc otatua .Ia relalad to moriality
an·administzative ClOIIliDimalt to loogthoulht which you have devoted to
rates, tbe dl«eniDcea betWeell central
range funding ol the Collepe, adminCOllege B." He added that College
city and suburban IJIIII1ality rates
istrative bel in finding ways ol obB~a "pn!!OI!!lt exi-.ce 111111 vigor" -is
taining ,.::t'ty time 80 that College!
due in ~e part to Pmf....,r Sapp'a •
-::~ popu· ~tal ciiiiflicts can be teduoed,
efforts dWUII its formative yeous.
sulllcient fun@lg to operate a laiaiy eracaris will four - aocioecoDr. Somit said, "' ,very mud&gt; hope
nomic indicaton in his lltudies: inmum of ·&amp;is reoidential and &amp;is nonthat you will continue your inter&amp;lt
come, rentals, edueatioo, and percenresidential Collegea, fundini for the
1n. and affiliation with, the rollagiate • tage ·of · paof.-......J ........._ Using
Charter Committee, ana indus!Oo- of
enterprise .pnerally and, bopeful]y, . factor analyaia be .bU develaped an
a , CoUegiate n!ple&amp;!lltaave _.., tbe'
some college in paiticular. 'lbe eolDUS curriculum oommlttee.
indez that llri1l dilfaaltfalie '!be aocioleges-urgently nSed tbe guidance and
'"lbe Committee' cannot ~
=~ · i!&gt;_the- ~~ _ci}Y
- h tbe neea at tbe pn!OII!Ilt time
:If~ ~ senior faculty such as yoiufor a positive attitude. publiCly u- . "The 'Collegiate System' is now in
He aplaina aame- ol the 1.ues to
pn!liiii!CI, toward the Collegea, and visbe eumined: "Malea haw a hilber
tlie PIOCI!SS o{·bem, reoqpmired .a nd
ible willincness on Cbe part ol tbe
mortality rate than femalea, and as
I trust you will cionlribute geoerousty·
Administration to partici te in tbe
the aocioeconomic status lnaeases, the
both to that pao0esa and 1D lurtbei'creation · ol stimulating C:uege prOdifteaellce between male lind feinale
ing tbe succesa crl whatever n8w or-grams and to support educational in'IIIOrtlility rates a1aD mea-. There
paizationod &amp;tluctwe - - "" Dr.
ilovalion and atudeot initiati-," tbe~
also to lie· a C111JV81111!DC1 of
Somit Cl&lt;IDCluclecl
.
'
prospectuscfimpbasi- ..
. lnortality ·miles of whites and lion·
· " . . . 'lbe Administraticm must aec- .., l'lofeBJr Sapp will Cl011tinue to
whites; pnMoualy, tbe non,w;bite moroerve
aa
a
facUlty
II8Dber
in
tbe
OIIIIlm. -..rei; and value te.dUng extoillty rate• W.. m.la'. We will be ·
Department ol Mllllic. Hi&lt; join8d tbe
cellence wlal it ia-clemonlitlated in tbe
cbeckinc to - if ~- theori&amp;i bold
U/B faculty in 1961 aa Jll""-w and
CoU8pl8. Oepartment.c:baim'dll abouJd
1rae in. our study, and If lhore bas
~ of tbe Jlepartment crl Music,
..... any llign'lfiaant cbanp in the
be obligated to solidt
a post Which be-beLl ODtil"1968 'wlal
tiona""~ tenure, and merit
past 20 yeua."
be ·~ maater ol ~ B.
increo!aes from tbe Co1Jeae in which
(ContUwed Oil tJfJ4e 6, coL 3)

011.-_,__

and...,.._

ae-

ra

a-

Sapp Quits College B

=

!tJ: :..ca::...

reoDIII""'"""·

v--

�Julie~ :Miteholl, a ~ .llpDe in
the Englisb feminist - t , . _
a v!sillna: faculty {IBIIber
in Americon 8tudie8 lor €be lllriDII meSter. Ms. Mitchell wiU t.ch a
l[i'adus!!&gt;-level cowae in" "R.dlnaa ·in

been named

Feminist~:

J&gt;syehoJoiy, S'au-

ality and the Famll~ . ( ASIDI). Sbe
is also expected to p - t a public
lecture and to conduct worbbope on
the 'feminist- """""""'t ln. England
and on the continent.
-· .
•
Ms. Mild&gt;ell; who Jeciured llt U / B

i~.;,.theinsp~...:t:'..,:.:,...~

1966 wben sJie•:.i&gt;uhlished "Women:
The Longl1St Reyolution" in the New
Left Reu~w. Thia piece, explains Prof.
Lillian Robinaon of American Stud·
ies, was the first major article .to deal

.....
tule
siUll,y

"DDIrlDa 4bia perjad of rapid dumae. •
-Uaiwmllty
relate
tlie - to the c:rucial
oi thoi
aiore',freely
- - wblcb vitally dect the future
of lbil ~ of .tbe ~ 'Ibe poi~~&gt;.
leme - facie must be UrpDtly piobed

and . lhe Unl~ -became ln.~

t!lllllled." J)r.

Boy&amp;' .;d.

'"l1uouuli this Unl-aty-wide In-.
stitute," be u:PJa)Ded; "We'll be able
tO dnrir faculty tal!!nf &amp;om~
lilaDy ·- problemsfocus
on ~ •
c:urroat
and ,communicate
illore elfectively with .letli8lative, .,..,.,.
utive, busiDeos and labor leaders. Ot!r .
hope is ~ future trends,

n"f~~ration'wi:,&gt;'~
iJationa1

Commission oo the Critical Choices

Tree·TransfOlf!JCirion

for Americans" ( beaded by former
Gov. ~elaon Rockefeller) .~tbe Chanl'lillor cont&lt;n. -',.''Will .~y- acceler­
ate
!hi; Institbtil im~ dra·
~ly extend the im]&gt;llct , of our

.

More thon lO;Oll!l .. ,-'kt.ristmos trees weno tronsformed Into "Useful"
·" -'' ' -rilulcth it ~ MConct annual ti/li Christmos ' TrM . Recytlirig 'Project. Jonuory
s-:6. Here Mrs. Mllry Hennen, member of the co-sponsoring Community
Advtoory Council ond c:o&lt;hoirparson of the .....nt, fills the firot bqs of mulch

tlie'w.;r.;r

·&amp;tb .Dr~~'ltd C,hai. ~ man

1

·
of. the natiOnal
Comm~~· .:::.·.-T.
•

·- ·, ,.

~

thf

~~ ~ by Ken Service

of Information Services.

Swidl

- :A""!'rding to Boyer ,'"l'he Institute
will ·~" 4riilke studies now 4or ·the
. ~ In 19'76, the Institute
willlieoome the ~ of all Commisaioil )JI:uilies, papeis, panel reports
and _Commission reCommendations.
The Institute will tben carry tbis
· work . on as a . DBtional and .perliape
an international center."
'Die Policy AllerDBtive Institute's
adminlstrative"lieadquarters Will be located in .Albim,y. . "

l

even

Wilson Seeking
Amherst
·Funds
AD
mi1lioii

~

appropriatijm of $20
for
construction of the library. student
activities and ~tion complex
lbe-Amberst Campus,
1mown
as Samuel P. Capen Hall, bas. beim
requeatecl ' by GOvemor MalColm Wilaon 1or iDclusioo in the ·State's ·dellciei!!:Y. liudai&gt;Uor the 6scal yau ehd-·
)IWdi 3L
·
1be bullding bad been un~ a6ui!bt at the regular LegiSla~ . . . . . lillll.January.
Gciastzuctioa, ~. bas already
been alllrted, ~,.;;;. . of $676,000
autbor'imd by the DiVisioo Of the BUdpt fiam .umad Cooatruction. approPriatialla. WilD lbeee fundS, Albert
Elia 8qildiu Company, Inc., of NiIIIIID! li'Bils.~lias been .......aed a con.traet for the foundation of-the Capen

for

tou

"'t.: for

~Jilulti.Je.:mboDding, ~-~

·:Jr~~for~
.AiaO a; P1z:t of--W = $26:6 · million l'8lllil8r and $26.4 millioa-capital
defic!aoicy . ft&gt;queat are $5 milliclh
.

for

t """ fumlshinp throughout .

~~ aome

at Amherst,

=..$4~..ride.for ~

l!ller8Y

Man9gement Group .Is Addressing
Problem of Bl&lt;?od Supply Shortage
A UJ B' SchOol -of Management re-.ch group hopes to alleviate some
of the severe problems connected with
shortages 'in blood bonks throughout
the country. 'Ibe project. ·supported
by a . grant frOin tbe U.S. Healtb Services and Mental Bealtb Administration, bas developed a computer-assisted bloodmobile plaruiing model which
can-forecast blood Inventory levels.
The model .will give a " preview
snapebot of what inventory· will be if
a regional blood bonk goes ahead with
an unscientific raw collectinn ached·
ulti,ri explained Dr. c. Carl, Pegels,
principal investigator for ~ the grant
and associate dean or Management.
By using a jime-sbaring computer, individual blood bonk operations will be
able to feed data to the computer
which' will print out a yauly time
sChedule.
.
'lbi! ~y- $lll0,000 grant grew
out of a pnwious four-year study ~
blood bank management ' which revealed the·ueed for more planning in
a
of blood doDBtioo procedures. Because the Jeg&amp;i lile of blood
is relatively short, only 21 da,ys, there
is a· problem ·in -deciding how inuch
blood .should be collected and wben.
s-mat imbalances cause severe
blood abor!alles in sOme """'"' The
reeesrch poop has fOJID(i that because

most' banks depend on their blood supply from volunteer donations, blood
collection has become a function of
chance rather than "supply and demand needs." The researchers predict
that systematic planning will help to
predict tbe needs of area blood bonks.
The present study will analyze the
collection procedures and practices of
eight nationally dispersed regional
blood bonks - in Los Angeles and Orange County, California ; Portland,
Oregon; Connecticut; Massachusetts;
Great Falls, Montana ; Milwaukee,
Wisconain, and Albany and Bulfalo.
n,.; developed· model will be tested
in all regional areas.
Also engaged in the study are Paul
D . Cumming, Kenneth E . Kendall,
and Jobn Shubsda, graduate students
and research IISIIOCiates, and Dr. John
P . Seagle of State University at Albany.

nUmber

Quartet on Tour
Tbe Cleveland Quaitet, in-residence
at U/ B, has embarked on another
European tour, this time to Germany
where it will perform 14 concerts during January, iDcluding visits to Munich, ·Bonn, Dl,lsseldorf and Braunschweig. 'Ibe Quartet is com~ of
Donald Weilerstein and Peter SalaH,
violinists; Martha Strongin Katz, viola, and Paul Katz, cello.
. In addition to tesching, the enSem·
ble maintains a busy concert schedule
·which has included· the performance

~t ~':~~=ins~

Buffalo and New York City. 'Ibe
Quartet records. excluSively for RCA
Victor.

Job_Openings

-"

FKUI!y

Direoto&lt; of Survey Research Center (appointment anticipated at

IISIIOCiate or full professor Ievel l , Social Science Resetli'Ch Institute.
NTP

Dr. Kaiarinoff
Renamed in Math
Dr. Nicholas D . Kazarinoff bas been
reappointed cb8irman of the Department of Mathematics for.., three-year ·
appointment, ·which begips September
1, J.ll74. . • .. • ' .
. Dr. Kazarlnolf,. who 8lao holda the
Martin Prof-ahi in .MelfwnaOcs
at lb8 Uniwmity, ~the fa&lt;:ulty in
AIJI!!S!. 1971, ~ fllliViDa at the. Univen~~ty ·of Michiian for l]; yeal'S.
•
He received his !Jacbalot'• and master's ..,.._ . from-the Unlvaraity of
MlchQiui 8lld hisl'h.D.frGm the UniVersitY of w~
·'

witb tlie feminist movement from a _
New Left perspective, and IIJlOke, Prof.
Robinson says,- 1o an emergent group
ol feminists whose political views alienated them from Betty- Friedan ani!
other liberal feminists. Ms. Mitchell·
subsequently published a booklength
study of feminism entitled Women's
Estate. A second llooklength study in
which she attempts tO reconcile post·
Freudian thebries or sexuality and
Marxist theory -with feminism will be
published in Ma.YMs. Mitchell's. course•will focus.. on
her current ri!search interest in psychology, sexuality, and the nuclear
family ~ n a feminist context. Students
interested in applying for the course
should ' ron tact 'Profs. RobinSon or Liz
Kennedy ( #4143 ) , indicating their
b11-ckground s in psychoanalytic and
feminist theory. Students who are accepted will be given a resdin¥ list
pnor 1o Ms. Mitchell's participation in
the course which will consist of an
intensive Six-week umodule" lollowing
sprif\g break. · .
The English feminist, who has lee·
tured extensi~ely' · in EurOpe,· brings
with her an international perspective
on the wo~·s movement, Ms. Robin·
son said.·" We .-are especially · pleased
to have her with us at the time . ber
most recent research is being pub-'
lished and to have her tesching bere
in an area in which. nprie of us . bas
specific expertise," Ms. ~inson said. -

,Assistant to Cluzirman, Geography.
Aaiolant to Chairman, ·Speech Commurucstion.
For additional information conooming these jobs and for detsils of
NTP openin)p! throughout the Suite University system, consult bulletin
boards at these locations:
1. Bell Facility between D152 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Building
4236, next to cafeteria; 3. Ridge .Lea, Building 4.230, in corridor next to
C-1; 4. Healtb Science&amp; Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor be~ Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
........,0 -floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes ~1. in
main j!lltrancie foyer, acroos from Public Information Oflice; 8. Acheson
Hall, in corridot between Rooms 112 and 113; 9. Parkei Engineering,
in corr-!dor IJel&lt;i l9 Room" 15; 10. GoodYear Hall, jst floor, Housing Ofli9e
area; 1L 1!10'7 Elmwood, 'Personnel Department; 12. Norton Union,
Director's Olllce, Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall,
corridor next 1o
~ 106; 14. .Jobn Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor (Amherst Campus) .

in

1

"'·

;·

-.

·

�. . ._ _~:!$

IMd

Higher Ed ClasS

...'""'"......

Aims to Proviiie

~In,.....,....

._daD "'1811¥1...,.

222. AllllllnMl PI.YddODI
tbla 11J1iD1 by Dr.
Nwill .,. Uliderpad............. ~ ..-...nts
far lnfara* recite"- ~- Wbich

..,... c1. •
leuliilw
In wbWa tllii; flit --..nable to ..-It ap, . . . . . . . . . . a&amp;r
lbeir apiialam aDd tldlrMt wftb CIIMn

::ua:-~tbe..;r-" ~........

-i:ii' .i~.Ai:. ~dW

l:.~inttl~~Child-

~-=~.,=~i:::..\t:..:
tioo oo toplca beiDa
· In*"

~~.!:~ L~-

Solloofh•d tbe -system -heu.-1 to ba Ulliqua jb· the University -

hood.-! A............
Ida t.sk&gt;all,y to ndul:e ~ty and
. . . . . . . . Oil tbe part ttl the massive

~t tmOIIment In the lectwe
. . . . 8Dibft, Ollll8idered aue ttl U/B's
lheller lecta-. and , _ t wilmer of
a Slate Um-.ity Distinguished

~~~~In felt
~~.~~:
223

-

-

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

tbe ebmaa to do DKIN Ibm just listen
..,._.-1 tab ._Tolbe~be-m·
YJ··~ .~..'!!'""stury....- o Jll'O--.
_, ,.__,
clel8 witb A's or hilh B's in Psych
223 In tbe IPrinl of uns to &amp;erve as
IIBal:biDI lllliatants CTA's). ~
......, -u.aJJy selected to partiopate, with .di recei.ving four hoUrs
of· IDIIopae • t "Bt:udy aedlt for the .
_ _ . . . aperienoe. Some 25-26
llbly to he .-1 this · drawn
from a 'pool of volunteeri who have
· bad two abnormal payc:bology courses
and at least Biz lllllllths experience in
waddna
with patienla in clinical setlinp. Mmy ~te psycholIllY and pre-med majois serve as volun._, at the Veterans--Administra· · H....:.c•~· ·
·
~ .....n..
::'tms ~~:. 't'_vanousand m·-::.~___,re-g
~... ~..
.....,,
laled activities as natient Pal pron.~
lains"
So
. gnuns,
........ exp
.
_....... .,.,._
.,
Tbe format for the hour-weelily TA
recitation groups this spriog will he a
studied rerJhement of t.Qe· program
used In 223 this fall. Then there were
15 recitation' ' groups with two' TA's
i&gt;'!r group. Tbe TA's, who were given
texts, workbooks and reading lists to
facilitate the i r leading discussions,
,..• ......., ilh::
·~i\';;t"~~rs • ::;r:~gta[=
over lectures with students, hopefully
going into greater depth in some areas
or at least malring clearer material in
-..the lecture wliH:h may not have been
· thoroughly wtderstood. Most TA's attended lectures and each lecture was
taped 10 facilitate further reference.
Solkolf met regularlr with'ihe~A's to
diacuas ongoing progress, problems or
difliculties. TA's also attended two
1 - -mns with SolkoiJ on aspects
of teaching. Each TA turned 1n a
weekly summary and a final critique
of the program and his role -in iL
Although student attendance at the
recitations was optional Sol.koiJ reports tbat more than half the class
·atteilded more than half of the group
Bellllions. Particularly well attended
were eumination reviews. Tbe TA's,
however, did not havlf access to ~
in advaru:e, 80 these reviews were not
simply macbing Bellllions for test queslions.
,
_
Euminstion BOOres were extremely
high oo the mid-terms, Solkoff reports,
quickly adding -however tbat he has
no "hard" evi~ wbicl&gt; would attnbute this to the recitation group·
piOSflll!l. He feels nonetheless that
the proiram is ''pedagogically good,''
not only far the lecture class students
-,
but also for the TA's who discover
"bow bard it is to he a teacher'' and
become less critical, 'or at least more
understanding of the shortromings of
•their own teachers. One undergraduate, Steve Weinberg, was in charge of
dealing ,.ith Facilities Planning on
'- loom assignments for the diSCussion
groups, thus learning even more than
many profeaaors about the "m)'Stique"
of UmversitY operations.
.
The TA's were evaluated on their
effectivenea&amp;, qualifications lind preparatioo by students in their recitation groupe. Who had attended at least
~:";half the &amp;eEiolllllmd, ~(~!nerally, Solkolf aays, the evaluations were good.
On the other aide of' the coin, for stu· dents em the b o r d e r line between
IP'&amp;des, TA u,&gt;ut 1II8S a determining
lactor · in their reeeiving either the
hil!W or loww mulL - ·

are

-'&amp;olnll• .... ........

Students alaD evaluated the pro-

pun

itaelf.

..-Jbi appla~ding

the

be ro u bllinDinl tbe --.~m.IJor· dJerPeelnm Ill Cilia' &lt;-&gt; npal1ecl to tbe d.- about_..

=" _...,line .....

taln - - before lnitiatinl cliiiCDAt other tiaa, d.- maben

More Flexibili~
Tbe typbl aJ.dt¥8 le .U · too
often a _.... c1oWD ......

,"!J!

(.-It·

sister c:our. ...... to-..-.
. . tlalll
flelpDtl)' Caa8Ded to
- ~011
~-''or--'-'-.._ . ..._

aa - - . beDelita tbe . . _ per.-1-.ralmolpllon ttl the recitation

Catbollc echoo[) to piovide added
ilimenaiona to our ~tationa. ~

metbod. HEJj -25W; 1be CIJII;r UllllerJr&amp;duata .,.,.,_ a&amp;ald by tbe :0.

-

billh

--tlabiP tbl:r
- ' - - - • - .......

~

..__

•~

Some _ . . they often
motiVated to
further rading seJectad fram aupplemeatal lists supplied In the recitatioo poupe..
Moat ~tly wio:ed criticisms Induded ~1!_meriit
m·t~~~ therem·
~~-.~not tbat m
· terwhidl ........,_ ......,
t!lltiDJ." Othem felt that the ~
were t;K&gt;t loug ~gh - tbat when
-lhinl interestinl finally amie up
there wasn't the time to .pursue iL
Aa a .-.It, Solkoff will striw for
mpre structure and uniformity in this
spring's recitation &amp;elllliODB, perhaps
· through more use of films. video tapes,
case presentations and other methods.
He has already met several ljmes with
the TA 1\t&amp;ff prior to the beginning ol
claM!a, building on the leo&amp;OilS lesined
the first semester.
,
Neither Solkoff nor the TA's feel
tbat the program is perfecL But even
though it is st.ill being refined1 benefitS
are already apparent 88 unaerscored
in comments from the final critiques
of two of this fall's participatinl TA's.
w
Seth Eichl
f Flushin
• ro~
•
er, 0 •
g,
N.Y., "Lertainly I now view teaching
with added insight and perspective.
Tbe
·
larif*l- f
experience c
d-'s or me the
~~ of_ PreJllirstio 8 teacher of
any kind must have in order to.be.effective, and the overall dedication necessary for competence. During the
summer I served as an educational assistant·at a city high school in New
York City. From the experience, (also
a teaching one) , I gained further in. si~bt into the inadequacies of the
elp.Stin ed cati na1 5 te This
deiSia~dingu wasq now~ a ~ i'e d ~~
different level, yet some things are
relatively invariable. When a mediocre
stude¢ of little &gt;insight does . finally
try to participate in a classroom discussion, frequently he is ignored or
not rewarded for his participation, and
the response of attentiveness and enthusiasm drops out entirely. I saw
this happerl' consistently during the
. summer and to a smaller extent In
these situations . . . Hopefully, in a
similar role, I'll· he able to he more
effective and helpful with the insights
and . understa ndin g I have now
derived."

ao

m.="...:!·

'I Lumed . . . They Lumed'

Gary Cohn, of Massapequa, N .Y.,
summed up the semester this way:
"I learned a great deal about teaching, and the satisfactions and frustrslions it brings; I gained added insights
into various issues of developmental
psychology by researching, preparing
and presenting material in the recitalions; I learned from the students in
our section, who brought diversified ·
backgrounds to the class.
"I also believe our students profited
from this experience. . . .
"Each week, we attempted to intraduce material that was both..interesting to students (and ourselves)
and relevant to the course. Among the
topics w,e devoted individual sessions
to were: Jensenism and IQ· education
in public schools vs. Catholic schools,·
'vegetable' b a b i e s and euthanasia;
drug abuse and adolescence; competitive behavior vs. cooperative hehavior, citing examples from Liberia
and ·the United States; and obedience,
child rearing and education. Additionally, a few &amp;ellllions were devoted toreviewing for the examinations.
'fJNe tried to vary the format during
the semester. Two of the above toPics
wete discussed by speakers. One, an
anthropology graduate student, spoke
about his experiences as a teacher in
liberia and Harlem. Tbe other, a
senior at Buffalo, tallu!d about childrearing, education, and adolescence in
Israel Cwhere he nad lived on a kibbutz and served as a tour guide the
las~ two summers) . ln other sessions;
we xerozed relevant, coilcise •articleli
and )ISked students to read the~articles

their

·

;;":ith';~ ~ttandillll

_,... __.

==~:=
case study (drua 8buse in a jmdol'
""'-1) to the claaa, aiid Ibm

splitting the claao in two 'task ,__.
to di8CII8I and ~t JXI'IIible aolu-

·l ions.

"The ~ behind our llell8ions
was manifold: to 8UpPlement the Jec:..
ture material, to Jiw students m opportunity to diacuiB ~ issues m
a small group aettinl, to liw students. ·
a fonun in. WhiCh to impJOVe their
communication skills; to hUIDIIJlize •
the large Jecture set-up 80 preva)en~
in our Unive~ty; to review lecture .
and textbook ma~; to ·get students
THINKING about .,.._such 88 Jtmsenism and coridil:icminl; to plovide a ~
link from the stl!dent to the instructor
to the profeeaor, Ill abort, we were
trying to heigh!Am the inte1lectual
curiosity of our ~ta.n

~ ~~

~tJA..mr'....s~~

student-contend IIIIPft*ll. m.truc1o111
Mark Finkelalain Dd Paul , .... aay.
Tbe "2M" eectloD ttl t b e - - will
COIIIist ttl Ul Initially CXIIII!IPtual iirienta!Mm to the ,._til and tnmaformat;on of higher edualtion'couDied With

an lntensiW group iuveetiptlan ttl the
p,_t state of AmerleUI hlaber edu"catioo. Tbe flrat ph.- of this section
involW!II establlablna a leaming ..MIOiliDellt in 'whlo:b the putidpanla are

l!llCOUIIIged to ......., )llllmD8l YBiues;
attitudes, and experieDcea boaqht
with them to the cl8aoom aa well as
op· · ns and criticillm&amp; of CIIIDIIIIQII)y
:.:r'materiala and case studies. Tbe
second -phase involves 00111lacting IndiYiduaf learning agniementB via negotiation between the instructors and
participanL Tbe
t8 Will deru-te Ul
.__
L----' ~
•
3
or oompe~ ......,.. ~
or proJects,Tbe~~~~~ IS ;;,~ to
"""' -~·
(Contintud from _ . 4, coL 4)
allow the more hi!!h!Y motivated, ar
Yeracaria will also try to find the
knowledgeable participant; to ooDoepextent of dilferences in mortality rates
tualize, refine md elU!CUte ~
the six metropolitan areas, and
baaed on his personal interests In
see •L~,:-_.,._
..... ~ reflect.•'. .veri-..
hi~·her education
.or tl..- shared with
""""' ""'~"""""'
,...,.
·
· ""---~
Tbe
ous quality of life indices. Here, too,
o "' acting as a = - &lt; = team.
he will see what has happened in the
commitment, scope, and end-product
past 20 years.
nego~le. in this ,section. .
. ·Yera--'• will- also -eonsider eight
Evaluation m ~D 254-5 will qon-.. ' f 3'4.,_.........._. 'l!llalultti
• ·
major~caUses •of iieath': cancer, tuber-· ~ 0 ' Y•VJO•- .
Oll'~D8
culosis, diabetes, cardiovascular dis!'f'd a wrap-':/'. """'!"?n at ~ ~
ease and diseases of the circulatory,
mstructor an. parti.,r.t wtll ~ve
respiratory, nervolls, ,and genito;urinat!' co~ reg · . g. ,tl)e ia:tter's
ary systems. Dr. Yera~iS exp~ed.
pro~ ai ~ured, atamst _llili 'pre"The major causes of death have
arranged lesnunl ·agreements:. Gradchanged in the last two decades For
in¥ options in!'lu e ~Iter grades,~~/
example medical improvements hav11
fail ; or SW (I.e., wntten ·evaluation) .
greatly :00uced post-natal female mor. ~r info""!'tion and answers to '
tality and resulted In a lower mortalmqwnes &amp;!" available '!t the Depart.
ity rate for females than males. Inment of Higher Ed11cation, 16 Foster
creased industrialization and technolAnnex. ext. 4806.
ogy have increased the.. likelihood of
tension, which could ,result in cimiiovascular disease, for example. _Since
women have a more protected role in
society, Ill!lies are more likely to he
subjected to these pressures and subsequently will have a higher mortality
Twelve registered numes will hegiD
rate than females."
a 16-week Pediatric Nurse Aasociate ·
Yeracaris hopes to fini$h his study
Program January 28. 'R&gt;e program is
by next June. He mentioned tbat the
olfered by the U /B School of Nursing
results might have several .practical
in cooperation with Children's Hospiapplications. ''If our slu!ly dispe1s
tal and the Pediatrics Depsrtment of
common myths about urban and sub'
-·
the Medical School.
· urban differences, some metropolitan
Two previous classes have oomareas may find it necessary to reassess
pleted the program - 20 were gradutheir public health needs. Presen~ly~
ated in May, 1973, and January of
many health services are concentratea
this year, md received certificates
in urban areas, and perhaps we will
from the SchOol of Nursing. They
show tbat there must he increased
services available in the suburbs as · have all aasumed positions in a variety of ambulatory situations In clinics,
well. The participating metropolitan
areas are waiting for the results of
-public health = e s , scbools and
according to
our study, which may provide a sound . pediatricians'
basis for future planning of health
Miss Norma O'Hara, project director.
Dr. James R. Markello, asaociate proservices.
"The results may also he helpful .
fessor of pediatrics, is oo-direct.or. Sevin projecting population growth pat- ·
eral members of the
of
terns in these .areas in the next 20
Pediatrics are preceptolll.
yeMs, since mortality rates are a ma"Our objective is .t o pieptre regisjor &lt;;omponent In populatioq growth
tered nurses to update and ~expand
and Change."
their knowledge and skills In the area
AI he
1
this
d y
of ambulatory child health 80 they
ter
comp etes
stu y, eracan assume primary care roles in apcariB would like to do a ~ one
using larger metropolitan areas and _
propriate settinls,'' Miss O'Hani said.
ha
t his findin
She is also an asaociate prof..ar of
~ s~areas as NeJ"Y:k
nursing and chairman of the DepartCity, Los Angeles, Chicago, and
ment of Child Health at~ School.
Washington
.
.
Miss O'Hara received a $308,430
grant from the Bureau of Health
- Manpowm: Education, National Institutes of Health, far the three-year
program.
.
Joei!ph D . Drew1 progJ'811\meranalyst, Data Processing CenteJ:, and
INTERNATIONAL
EVENT
CIWIGU)
state •treasurer of United Univei'Sity
The "Solute to lnlwnlllional \'iSltors,"
Professions (formerly SUNY/United,
belns
sponoonld
by
tile
Buflalo
Council
fotmerly SPA), will he the 111'!81
on World Affairs, Friday, 'Janu.ory 18, and
of Nolan Johannes on WKBW-'IV's
orislnoll)c
scheduled
for
ttie
tenth
floot
ril ·
"Morning Sbow,w n-le,y, January
~r Hall wtll now be In tile ·
22, at 7 am. Drew will· cliscusi "'IlFaculty Club 'beiinniiiiJ· at 8:30 p.m. This
equities of the Taylor Law" and the
Is an annu.or event oponsonld by tile
UUP salary . _ , e r neaotiations,
Council as • welcome for fo,.!ln with ~ an bow these dect
and scholars.
·
both Umvenity and community. '

mveati'::i':.-lnstruCI:ive,

Life Span-

::1'?1

are

1i Nurses Begin

Pediatric Course

n...-t·

;.!

On TV Show

�1!2!..~~!~~~~in
~$1·,1~1
·.re =.lk. ~~5~f4i:.J.~
,._..........._aDd
........

i n un-.-w-m-eid

0

"....t b

8MI'Ch Awada Program, the U/B
s - d l Olloe t.a IIIIDDUIJill!li" Pro~ oubmltted by Ulll U/B
'---'""~ to Mn. Sbirley D . Stout
of. tbe ~ Olllce, 689 grants were
made 1IJider lbe JIIOif&amp;JII SUNY-wide.
Granla awarded in tbree pro-

UtB Poun-

....:::.OOO,_b ~

~11-HallJL,

dilll!l.:.flji!f!l~ ~bum-

ia=~~r:T.J:f.
,. ... 11-.t time

two.
1:
A Unlwnlty-wide Awards Committee -review&amp; aDd ranks -Ucatioos
h:om full-time faculty member&amp; on
S - Uaivemity campuses.· Tbe sti-

-~~Pwlde­
. . . . . ~-,870.

==-=to
__

~to Dr. JlaJl, licullyllliu.. aailde!la pelhaiaaJy - be fUDdeil b.v tbe
,..~b=t:

............ tbe fiDal eelection
- - r.y tbe
Pu!mdatioo
....t
PNIIdalt
Ketler
•• At tbe Bollid
same

=-~~~

· ~ enable faculty to carry out re-

=r=:::;;:;":,"l:="~

a:...U

U /B
recipients, their ~ject
tiU... and stipeuda received follow :

Blmwollcp!

Dr. Ricbard D . ~ Cbemiatry,
Tbe ~ of Metal A - OD Pyramidal - . . . . . , "12,342; .Dr. Robert D .
· AIIAIDdoeder, a-.iatry, Sim..ua~ • ESR M-Uft!IDOllta,
Sl.fi84: Dr. Cbar1eo F . Altieri, E,..u.h,

_,.

~.r.:~":::-7~ :..~

8CieDce· 8!qJport Gran\,

aDd by PrelideDt Ketler..
HuD Doled that tbe bilb level of.
l'l!qiBia (totaliq 1800,000 ovenill)
illlllllatee M........,tebleocbolarly activlly Clll ..... part of. tbe faeully, but

='!fuS:tu!r
~~~~~=
A. AJutto, Maupiaent, Career Orien-

Illno-

lnterlayer Bonding in Layer Silicatee,
$1,440; Qaq_iel J _ Gifford,. Law, Diocte~?' Decision-Making Some Soaoloci&lt;al Aapocta, $1.264; Dr. RmWd
K. Goodeoow, Social Foundations,

~:"$8io';"f&gt;~N~~~u

.~ ~":~:~::;;~~
$1,264; Dr. Jo111e J . E. Gracia, Philooophy, Fifty Yean of ~pbic:al Anthropology in Latin America. $1,2114:
Dr Bert S Hall, Hiato
Ge
T~ogy in. the Later

Mf'd.u.

=

$1,986: Dr. s~ c. Ha\pem, Ponti:
c:a1 ScieDA&gt;e, Tbe Supreme Court and the
Impact of the 1925 Judiciary Act, $1,440; Dr. William S . Hamilton, Germanic

..

~ ~cs8"r~f\t;Pillla!lat"'~s~

veraitv. Bolh tbit Foomdatiaa aDd In. stitutiOaal FuDda 8nl intellded,n be
said, "to~ tbe p~tion of

~=.t :-:~'!'7~;..~

veraity StudeDta, $2,296; Dr. He\ju A.
Bennett, Hiatory, In-ligation of Soc:ial

gen . Heberle, Phyaics, F .. t Method-An·

vidina -.!-.monies to allow scbolars
~~~~oftbe

:::\,.~~ ~~:~6:a13

p._)a

:t;s~-::r l!d~~ ~~:
440; Dr. Nolmllll Bilker, Hiatory, Volitiao
of the City of I(OIIdon, 1760-1786, $2,076;

-Rec!rvm, UIB

FOundation

grants

...,, ........ AND .UTn&lt;llll: Diane Cbristian, ~10; Yvar Mikbasboff, $690;

(!;.::,!,~iMo'7~~- 8&amp;";:- t~.~;d:

R. IDumberg, Art, Spece and .:l'onal
"Field Conoopta in Pbotocraphy, ••440;
Dr. Richard D . Bourgin, Mathematico,

Hiller, Music, Chamber Music for Inotrumenta and Tape, U ,440;
Dr. Norman N . Holland. E,..u.h,

:=.mu~, ~.,.Arth~

·=

David Tarilet,. $325; Muriel. Wolf,
$2,500; II:HGINBIIIIING~ Atal Emlp, $1,Hiatory, Tbe Social Composition of the
400; Marilyn . White, $800;· HEALTH
American LOyalist&amp;, $1.,725; Harvey
BCIENCIIIJ: Wayue Ai&gt;derllon, $980;
Breverman, ... M
•Diacontmuoua Sequences' Comhil!ing Frqlnento of ExRicbanl betticOie. $1,200; Walter Conway; $880; Fred EmmiDp, $1,000; Hope~~;~rown, Engliah. Chance,
Lamg Funs, $1,000; LAW AND ruBJS.
Self. ~ History in Thacl&lt;eray'a Vanity
PlltiDENCB: JIUIIM Atleson, $350; IIAN·
Fair, $1,440; Dr. · Edwud• J . Buehler,
A~: David Griffin, $1,100; J~C , Geoloorical Scienoeo, Middle Devonian
ice Lodabl, $1,325; NATUIIAL BCIENCBS
Epiaoditea, $1,2114; Dr. ;John W . Case,
AND KATHEIIIAnal: ijobert AllendoerComputer 8cieDce, Computational Comfer, $366; Parker Calkin, $940; Cbarla~
~l.~!r. oD(rH
. ~!!"to."'n '"w".·ca~l.~
• WiL.
Foura-, $1,600; Ap&gt;es Hadord, $1,150; JIUIIM Mciver, $700; Larry Wit,~·in
T~""~.::f.'i:,
tie, $1,425; . SOCIAL BCIENCBS AND AD$1,1100; Dr. Anand P. &lt;l&gt;auclbey, PatholIIONIBI'RATION: Bert_Hall, $575; Percy
:,;. !~J.;..!,.t.="gr.ln~:
HaDaon, $500; Susan HaDaon, $5QO;
Dwme :Marble,.$550; Laurence SchneiKyung Cho, Philoaophy, The Phenomde.-,
Stuart S!:ott, $300; Arthur
enological 'Theory of Intuition, $1.,2114;
Smltb, $1,200.
,
Dr. Ching Chou, Mathematics, W.A.P.
Functions and Almoot Convergent FuncReceiving Instiliitional Fund awards
&amp;nl : Alrl'll AND UTn&lt;llll: DaYid Fuller,
~w:;, a &amp;'::'iio'~440',.!j'.!;i,:l;=.!;
$300; Edwin Gordon, $~; Anthony
Comparative Anal)'OM of. Shared Deci~-- ~; Gerald O'Grady, $500;
aion Making, $1.,2114; Dr. John P .· CorBNOINiaiiiiNG:.' Hinricb Martens, $5,·
coran, Philooophy, Locical Studies of
240; J. Peter. Sadler, $800; HEALTH
&amp;::'!:'n.J;.;440;
Po~~
8IDNCIII: Sbaheeo AI-Nakeeb, $1,000;
Study of Peno':!f Identity in Ovid. $1,Joan BIOWilie, $1,200; Robert Genco,
264;
Dr.
Roger
V.
Deo
Fo...-,
Hiatory, .
$1,500; Jerrold · Greenberg, $170;
Honan in the Chineae National Revolu"Tbomaa · Kalman, $1,100; Sheldon
tion, $1,725; Dr. Jonathan D . Dimock,
WiDlder, $1,500; LAW AND Jtlll&amp;'llU· · Mathematics, Perturbation" Theory in
...a~: Wade NewbouM, $2,750; IIAN·
Quantum Field 'Theory, $1,2114;
AGIIIIBNT: Fred IlaDaemu Jr., $1,075;
D r. P. J . Ebedein, Computer Science,
Numeric:al Linear Alpbra, • $1,2114; Dr.
AnJD .Jain, $1,000; NATUIIAL IICIENCBS
RObert
R.
Edwanlo,
Enc\ilh,
The
Mon·
AND IIA'l'llltiiA-naJ: H. Dupont D-.mrt,
tecuaino Pcuoion and Pa~ of Me$1,610; Francis Gasparani; $1,740;
dieval Drama. $1,2114: Dr. Atal E. Eralp,
Robert Gayley, $700; · Clyde Herreid,
Civil Enginoerinc. Pboaphorua Aboorp$900; A. Isiham, $600; I. Neil Plwnlion oo Goetliite. $1,679; Dr. Car\oa Feo,I..-;.$1,135; liOCIAL IICIBNa!S AND ADDeibe, Spanijlh, Unamunci, the Other and
IIONIBI'RATION; Edward Katkin, $1,·
Don Juan,_$1,440; Dr: Frederic J. Fie000; Terry Nardin. $750; INftiiDIIICI·
ron Jr., Politic:al Science, Tbe· Scmet
Politic:al Laaden.hip, 1966-1972, $1,1100;
I'UNArl: Curtis Mettlin and Dee
Weat, $500; OI'RBII: Graduate Stu~~'i&gt;~t.~~
_dema AMociation, $2,500.
Dr. Richard A.
EDiiiah. Shakes-

11;.=t,"":d

.aoo;

a:;.l.eo

-_

7·

Brady Named
Associate
Provost
Dr. .._
B. Brady, ._..,;ate pro-

~ ~. -st.~;~ ~?:.
!J..-::r;,B~::.:~m:!..::'

re-r of.~. bas"-' ~~PPC~int­

K Y U - MATERIALS
The following materials have been refrom Kyun&amp;PC!Ok National Unlver~. Korea; as· part of the - ...-nent -~ t11it Uniwfslty end
U/B: paP8fS from the Seminar on Inter-

ed - t e piOY08t of. .the Faculty of.
Soc:ial Scleniles
- - Adminislratiaa,
immediately:
Tbe appoint.elfectiw
-t made by l'tesident Robert
I.~llli.b bu __. --~t
tbe Facully aDd ~ its
curriculum Cllllllllli- aiDoe ~UIIISl. 1972. He ~ bi8 BA from

PftMI8t-.,

~~~9-fe!:

r1rS

JAw Sc:boc!l. aDd hla Pb.D.
Uniftally . al 'lWaL Debe
tbe UIB facully In 11167~ bad
:,_~lllllfllslut at
Uai..aity

~~~n~~t:!~':!..o~~ue~

~ D~ c::'d~£lm~~~~

to oul8i4e .,..,....... by pro-

national . Reoources; R-Ings In 0 - 1
StudiB (Vola. 1·3) .., the Diopartment of
Oriental

Studies;

~La-

~

Col-

of

-1.118tRi.. (Yolo. 1-7)
by the D o p a - of Llland utaNture; - r c h on Chi,_ Ut..-.tuN: on Kotun Pomy: Re_rch _on Sal1et. The~ - .,.

· IIYIIIIable

lor ·-

the UbraJY.

~

&amp;:,. ~- ~~~-

l'bllution £ontrol Stratep.. for Bu!rato, New York, $1,2114; Dr. Perry Haneon, ~Y. Tbe Spatial Diotribu:f.~~ Dr.· Ap.!: 8.1lft"~o~ewsJ~
- Natural Mecbaniams for the Correction
of Gene Deficiencies, $2.958; Dr. Ann s .

tatioaa of Eqineeis and Mal&gt;qem. $1.,-

lbe of. ~ over aftilable
funds illdleataa the uaed for iDdividllllla to eoelt aa-t outside tbe Uni-

\

·

r:u.-~1100~~~.2:':!; .
in Nearly Saturated 4HE Fi1-. $UJS(; ·
Tyroae G. Geor.Jiou, Art, Noa-Silwr

:::':'in".:t,lriea~~~

lliiiiiOI!IIUl PIIIJecta . at

~

N,_; ~ ·UN· Dr Bo~ ,..,._ ~ n.;a·~
ill f'wftwnati&gt;UD ~ Ami·
_.., .1,841;
Dr. MidiMI D. Garrick.~.
Molecular Evolution of RaminaDt Haao-

c1er iile umJ Stela University Be:-

and faa~~~)' uoe ~

.

~~~· ~!;1.;.i~~ St_~; ~,Po_t

~~~;:;,cP.'~~~~f!~d!~~:
gy, Leaden.hip Proceooeo and Social
Change, $1.,579; Dr. David A. Hollinger,
History, Scienti&amp;ts and the American
Ideology . of Science, 1875-1.91.5, $1.,471;
Dr. George F. Hourani, Philooophy, Ethical Philooophy in Medieval Islam. $1.,-

~2,;1., D.{;,...~~~ ~o\i~ef.n~r·~~~

Secto
$1,264 D
R"chanl - T Hull,
Philo!;,phy, E~i.,!j ~ues in Genetic
Manipu\apon and Engineering, $1,440;
Dr. Georg G. lggen, History, Eigllteenth
Century Origins of Modem Historical
Science, $2,100; Dr. Kenneth K. lnada,

~:0..:3• ~ ~;'Pri.:'~~~~

Dr. Roger M . Ioaaco, French, Jean Arpi,

~J:,f:$~('A~~ Jt,, ~~:=

Implicit Information Seelting Behavior:
A New Approach, $1,2114; Dr. William J .
Jusko, Pharmaceutico, Computer. A..ut.eel Drug Therapy, $1.,026;
Dr. '11&gt;011180 I . Kalman. Biochemical

~~ha;i~~iestg';!':f.:~

tt;, ~~

Lawrence A. Kennedy, Engineering &amp;
Applied Sciences, Modeling Pollutant
Formation in Continuous Combuston;
Dr.-·Tbomaa J. Kline, French. L'announce
Faite o M&lt;p-re ao Marchen - A . P~pi­
an Analy.,., $1.,440; Dr. JaCk D . Klmgman, Biochemiotry, Fatty Acids of Infant "P\aama Lipids, $1,140; Dr. Paul
Kurtz, P~phy, The Concept of N~

i!U~J:.~:'B.to~M=:

ment, Correlates of Reputational Change
in University Department., $2,955; Dr.
Edward H . Madden, Philooophy, Nonlogical N.....aity, $1,440; Dr. Kenneth D .
Magill, Mathematics, Green's Relations
for Semigroups of Endomorphismo, $1,440; Dr. Jerome L. Muzaro. Engliah,
Robert Lowell - Our New Augustan,
$LIIOO; Dr. Ann P . McElroy, Anthropol'?l)'. Cultural Transmission in Modemizmg Iranian Villages, $2,260:
Dr. J - W . Mclwr Jr., Chemistry,
Theoretic:al Calculationa of Transition
State Geometrico, $1,440; Dr. Yvar E .
Mikhaaholr, Music, Tbe Concord Sonata

Annotations, $[,928; Dr. J-phine M.

eN.

~ tfatbematico, r::,.~

$1,1100; Dr. ~er, Mathematics,
Confluent lmqeo of Cbainahle Continua,
$1.,2114; Dr. Stanialaw G. Mrowka, Math·
emetics; N-Compactn.a and StroDe 0Di~Mnoioaality, Sl,IIOO; Dr. Jobn Mybill,
Mathematiao, E%tebcled Dialectica Sya~~~Doaalcl. 'E.of.Nicbola, Art,

--tal~.~

8binpei 'Obki, BiOpbyoic:al ~.
StudY ol Maloic:u\ar .Meobaniom of Nerve
.Meaihnae E&gt;ooitallllit)', $1,()80; Dr. Lawia
C. Perry, Hlatiory, Rauy C. Wrilht and
RaMatllc Refoom In America. 11.2114:
Dr. 'l1lomas D. Perry, l'lln-phy, ~An~"
~: A Study of. lla DeWJecl

Vall,
Social

Upoa

ae~~·t"!.!'"Ti-~~~·D~ ·
Dallas E . Webster, Mathematico, Tbe
Natu~ .and Structure o( Co~. SJ.,·
264; DL Sol .W. Weller, a.emic:a\ Engineering, Kinetics of Heterogeneous Catalytic Reactions, $1.,440; Dr. David P .
Willbem. Engliah, The Elizabethan Revenge Play: A Psychoanalytic ~ ·

~~~J:Jcthbi~ ~~'ti~n, -~i,:

583; Dr. Larry D. Wittie, Computer Sci-

::ces=~=~:!n~Sf~~~~,;2:

Shih Y . Wu, Biophyaical Scienoeo, Equa- '
tions of J\tmospberic Aerosal Particle
Size Distribution, $1,71.4: Dr. William R

Zame, Mathematics, Holo:oprpbic Es:·

li~~s1.:i: !t'O;~.,;A~=:

Economics, Capital and the Neoc:lauic:al
Production Function, $1,600.

Communique-·,:--

.,.

( Continued from page 8 , coL 4)
CERAMIC$ K . .DULE

·Jan. 21. 22, M , T-3-5 p .m .. Wheel
Throwing
Jan. 23, 24, W , 'Th-3-5 p.m .. Wheel
Throwing
·
Jan. 21. 23. M . W -7-10 p.m .. Hand
Building
Jan. 28. 29, M . T..,3-5 p . m . . Hand
Building .
Jan. 30, 31, W , Th-3-5 p .m ., Hand
Building
Jan. 28, 30. M , W - 7-10 p.m .. Advanc:ed
Wheel Throwing •
Feb. 4, 5. M , T - 3-5 p.m., Advanc:ed
Wheel Throwing •
Feb. 6. 7, W . 'Th- 3-5 p .m .. Wheel
Throwing
Feb. 4, 6, M , W-7-10 p.m. . Hand Building
Feb. 11. 12. M . T-3-5 p . .;, . , Hand
Building
Feb. 13, 14. W . 'Th- 3-5 p.m., Hand
Building
Feb. 11 , 13&lt; M, W - 7-10 p.m .. Advanc:ed
\Vheel Throwing•
Feb. 19. 20, T. W-S -5 p . m ., Wheel
Throwing
Feb. 19, 20, T , W-7-10 p .m.; Hand
Building
Feb. 25, 26. M , T-3-5 p . m ., Hand Building
_
Feb. 27, 28, W, Th- 3-5 p.m., Hand
Building
Feb. 25, 26, M , W -7-10 p.m., Wheel
Throwing
• Advanced Wheel Throwing- Students
must have' previous experience in

:'h:li~:w!:ftfc~'h;e c!~!~ ~t ~ :r .
take you two houn to throw one) .

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEAOUNE
For everyone's convenience and P'easure,

we like to publicize all events taking place
on c.mpus.
recOrd infonnatio!1· contact
Nancy C.nUrelli, ext. 2228, by MondOY:"oet noon for inclusion in the foflowin&amp;

Tp

- Thunct.y issue. ·

�---Ollie&amp; - . -

. _ - - .·-for Mnts .;..,..,. with

_. •9Pen """ ta •apan to 11\Mc
-

tOOs&gt;eot

......, C.Urelil, 831-2228,

'-·· ~

Clln

lie pun:hned at the

THURSDAY-24

int.lf.st

a .....,_
In the subject
1o "*!'f!et1, ot tt. u~

for llolinp.

fluli• -

By th• Law (Kulesbov) and M«/r.-

-

anico of th• Brain (Dcn&gt;zbenko, 1926) ,

~'

~endorf, 7

: THURS~AY-17

p.m.&gt;:li!o

idmloolon

~-:.1:"'..:.....-=r.~
Crooby,
.

'")' 8 p.DL

SUNDAY-2_0

. . . . 1 ' 0 1 - . a PAIIY'

J'lee &lt;olfeo omd doochnula, Hillel
H - 40 Capen BML, 7:80 p.m.

HWB. MUNCH*

UUAaMM••
-Wioal'o UI!_Docf (~ 1972),
~ ~ ·NOJIDD, che,clt obow-

Featuring a slide shQw on the rise and ·
fall of Eaatem Eoropeao Jewry, .Hillel
Hoooe, 40 Capen Blvd., 12:30 p.m.

EXHIBITS

CONCEIT'

baud-printed 1&gt;roa&lt;lsici'!O , of poetry by a
variety of·major omd 1 - ~J\'!e
Compiled by T~ Petl-ooky,
·
and edifor of Slow Lorio Preee. Presented by- the Olllce of Cultural Aftain,
S.,yes Lobby, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-

-rw-.
.
.
·
Bub111. B-...! omd Ryao
B~

O'N..t

•

•

Coruroll•d Tlaor-Nuckor P.ta.ma
Plot. H: GJOd, Courant
Iutitate. Newv :York Univ.eraity, 104
Parloor,4p.m.
.
Culree will bo oenoed iD 107. Parter at
~.

:i80~"7~
~=~
..

-noNAL-

' BcieDoo 8nd Pbyoico.

IIOir-.'

Today'o aclivitioo ..,. iD honor of new
- t o , llOC 1'owDomcl, 4 p.m.

oJI:::~ ~A-~~~~ F':;_

eip Stodoat AlfaiJa.

:

YARIIIY WIII'IUIIG• ' -

U/B .._ GeoJBia 'Teeb, Clark Hall, 4

J?:DL

.

.

IIOCICI\'*

•

U/B .._New E.,.Jand Collep, Holiday
Twin Rinb, CbMittowap, 7 ~ 80 _p.m.
,r,

UUM ,....

Wllal'o u,_Docr (&amp;.daDoricb. 1972),

· ~ eoor.......,. ThNtre, Noitcm. a..dt llbow-

f o r - ~ cbarp.

YAISIIY IASKITIALL•

U_tB ..._Jooa,

•

auk~.

8 :80p.m.

- ~-=!n~~·nai
B'rith Youth
Olpaioilicm, and followed b'y Oneg

• . Bbiobbat, Hillal Hooao, 40 Capen Blvd.,
.ol-8 p.m.
. .

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

.........

~

U/.B w. . SUNY/Biqbam...,, ..Clar.k•
. - ?&lt; Hall, 2 p.m.

-

Di«rdo Clrima of 1M ~

. (Boaaool).

c:aar-

T/ao Slow Lorio Prou, an exhibit of

be;:~~n::n~~~~~

be

PlASMAS AND APNCAtiONS IIMINAII.

1'hMire, N - ,

EXHIIIT*

8 p.m. Resenoed tickets an&gt; available at
Norton; remaininc tickets will
oold
at Bainl Hall one hour before the conoert.

. · Johu
s.t!~ ~ ~~~':;~~::
KocbanoW.ki, viola, omd Norman
Fioeber, oellisL
1'1&gt;e· oonoert io preeented by the Department of Muaic. •

5 p.m.

Throuch Sunday, January :rT,

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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                    <text>Waiver RuleS

·for ·~

t:Jnctianged

'The Unfwnity will ......a ita tuition waiver alloc:alions ill liO!IIelaJ cateIOries before the end or the --.uc
year, but baa been authorized to .,.....t .
second semester waivers uaiJ11 the
same criteria
lied in the finlt lle'JneSter, Dr. .:&amp;:; Bomit; C!IIII!Ciltive
vice president, 8lliiOUIIC8d Ibis week.
l.ast AllgiiB!, U/ B bed been authorized to- iiuike tuitiOn waiver&amp; totaling $2,590,290 durina Jll73.74 - •
re&lt;luction of $1.1 miJIJOD _from 197273, in line with an OYel8lJ State Um-

versity c:uthacli nl 4.8 milliml to a
ceiling of $11 ml1lioD SUNY-wide.
The brealalown, by c:alejrOriea, tablisbed for U/B at tbaUhne '11118 :
EOP, $429,900; Sia.te Uni~~ .
tion Aasi8tance A...m.,
,
Foreign Student Waiver&amp;, $.'156,259;'- - ·
Graduate Student Waiven, $1,220,700; Critic Teachent, $215,400; Employees (full-time only), $77,750;
Other Waivers, $7,400.
"Although it ·has not always been
an-easy or pliissant taSk to implement
this mandate," Somit said, ~ have
done ao to the best o£ our ahili~."
And although it iS estimated that sev- .
era! categories may be ....-led,
"SUNY has been kept informed of
this situation and understands that
we have acted in a resix&gt;nsible and
effective manner."
Procedures to be followed again the
second semester are:
,
The authority to approve tuition
waivers is limited to a relatively small
number of individuals. Graduate and
Professional tuition waivers (for all
Schools and Faculties) will be controlled by Dr. McAllister Hull, SS:
sisted by Dr. Andrew Holt, in the
Graduate School. Fnreil{ll- Student
waivers will be controlled bY Dr. Siggelkow or his designee. E.O.P . waivers will also be oontrolled b_y' Dr. ·
~~~elkow _o r hiS ~esi:'ee. Employee

"-.M;eya'~~- ~h~~

s i9''s Personnel Ollice. Dr. Somit controls the "All Other" catepy. ~
is no control locillly exercisable- over
Cri tic Teacher waivers or State Uni(Cmll ;nu~rl

on

ptJRe

7* coL 4)

•

-.sPECIAL INSERT .
The newly-issued ..Policies, · Procedures
and Criteria for Faculty Personnel Actions"

are included as •

spec~U nsert

In today's

Repor1er.

Dean Ebert·
Will Remain
In DUSJo~

_ Trimming the Tree ·

Cera---

0!1 the IOal of 'the - , s 1ut Fr!Uy ..
- - the U/B 0.,
the Club's -..
f - ·_
canylng
out .
.-t h e
- .u . . ... _
, . lnclucllni- . . . , w -o
_
.. Adult
The F-*r Club -

llle-

--the~- Club-... hllped In the trim·
.... pnljlct- . - wltli iwb""ll•nenla far
wrtists:
11wot - - Nd," uld • Club apa11amwn.

."ll'a the

..

"Dr. Charles H. V. Ebert has re-:
swnded tp my peniatent ursiJip by
deciding to continue to _.., as dean
~ of the University Division of UDdergraduate Studies," President Robert
L. Kelter announced t.odlly•
Although he originally intended to
resign on June 30, 1974, to ...cum to
fl!ll-time ~ and .-eeeardl, El-l.
Ketter said, "has been made to n!alize
the iinportance to the UniW!r&amp;ity n1
eration, as well as other imminent
his completion or and participation in
developments in this area natioill!lly,
a variety of significant projects and
within New York, aiKI within . the
educational d_!!velnpments which alSUNY system;
.
ready have been initiated. His loyal-b. Increasing specific pressure upon
ty to the inStitution, and his 1lOaJlnit..
this University and the University Limen( to wofk now ill proareas have
prevailed.
·
braries £rom the Division of the Bud"Both pez)IOQa)Ly and for the Uniget to reduce processing costs and justify any decentralization in this area;
versity, l ,!un delighted that Dr.
· c. The urgent need to improve inEbert's exemplary iDterest in the welfare or stud&lt;mts, his emphasis on .,._
ternal processing ellici~cy. standardi·
7.ation. and effective coordination.
celleooce in ~. and his ooooem
for the acadelnic intearity o[ Ibis inC4 ) . The designation "Faculty Listitution will continue to have their
brary" and. '~Main Library" (for
strong and positive influence on our
Lockwood l will no longer be llse!l to
di• tinguiah among the major Univerundeigrad98te propams."
Dr. Ebert has __.oo as dean or
sity Libraries units. AU units within
Unde&lt;graduate Studies since 1970.
thiS systeni must be recogni~ as
He had tiUIOUIUled his intention to
University-wide resources, Smith emstep down last October. He has spent
phasized, It l!}ust , also be recognized.
20 yean at U/B, illcludina 12 years in
be said, that all Univenlity Libraries
administrative rolea - eiaht Y"""' as
units are tied administratively to the
chalnnan of the llepartment of GeogUniversity Libraries System. This is
raphy and fQUr yean as UDdergradunot intended to diaoourage close ixm-

Libraries' Administration Is Reorganized
/

An adminislrative reorganization ofthe University Libraries, which takes
place ' immediately, has been announced by Director Eldred smith.
'The reorganization illvolvi!s the following major elements, Smith said ill
the current issue of Library N ews:
&lt;1 I Elimination or illdirect reporting lines between major units and the
central library administration. Consequently, Smith explained. the Art Li·
brary, the Music Library, the Undergraduate Library, and the Univen.ity
Archives will report directly to the Director's Office ralher than through the
. Lockwood Library as in the past.
12 1 University Libraries-wide facilities will be under the jurisdiction of
LAST SEMEST£11 ISSU£
Today's is the finwl iss-. of the llopor1wr
for the fell semester. 1M first issue of
t he oprina sernesur will be published
Thursday, Jonuwry 17.

the appropriate cen~al ad.;uni•trative
otlker. 'The Bell Storage Facility, thus,
will no longer report to Lockwood, but
will report to the assi.tant director for
"public services, Smith indicated
13!" 'The new,assistant director for
technical services will be given system-wide responsibility for all Univen;ity Libraries technical services ac"
1ivities. Following his arrival, . Smith
said, Mr. Sakditas Roy will conduct
a system-wide review of technical services acti vity and develop a plan ana
program for this area. Despite their
several locations, . all University Libraries' teclulical servia!s -ations
must be seen as system -wid~ rathru'
than related to any particular. unit,
Smith noted. This is an a~lute necessity, he said, _for the followillg ..,.••
son&amp;:

a . The arrival .of shared computer
cataloguing and its implications in
tenns of jmprovillg el6ciency and effectiveness through interlibrary coop-

{Conl~

on PGI• 2, coL 4)

a~~

.

�~

2

SUNY'~ ~&amp;n~srate College
Oilers PersoiJalized Altemafire·Education

Ubraries- : : _- ·
(C....,.,._,

,_.J!We I, qat

tact aDd fcRiaJ
llbnuy

I) .

llaliaa' bl&amp;weal

lillY

.wd~-~dia!ltele

tbat lt - - .
Illdeed, be aald, . . .
..... llalacm
are 8Dcourqed, "aDil I M.w made
cllvldua1l..,.t plana of study or "con~
B7
and will continue to mab lltroag ef~ n - contracts are ~­
'lbe local. ~ to tbe CoJ!ele.
PA'DUCIA Wo&amp;RD BIEDERMAN
loaldbc documents tbat
out prewblah baa been Yirtually Ulljldvertised,
forts to further.~
lt must
be recotPlized .....t all Univeraity Licisely
what
tbe
student
aud
mentor
baa
been
remarkable.
DeLoach,
who
Oae of AJiea W. DeLoacb'a stubraries units ....., tbe total Univerwill do for a period of one to six
make&amp; up the one-man Bulf8lo branch
doDIII -uy ....--! ~ be
sity clientele, and that they compose
months. Each contract begins with a
of the Genesee Valley Learning Cen- ·
hid .ta.YB wanliod- a coUaae dipJo.
a total Unlveraity Libraries System.
statement of the sb,Jdent's long-range
ter in Rochester, esWn&amp;les tbat he !&gt;as
... Ill part . . . r.u!t of winnintl bis
aspinltions" (a complex matter that · bad a lho"uasnd local iaquiries aince
'The elimin&amp;tion of tba ~ desigclepae, he aot 8IIIDIIIhlns else be wantEmpire
State
students
are
regularly
nations listed above ahould further
bis
tiny
branch
unit
opened
on
the
ed - a parOle. 'lbe
JPalluate was
this by removing artificial internal
called upon to reassess). With the
Bulfalo State csmpus several months
doiDII dine at·AUica wblle attending
distinctions. ..
ultimate
BOa!
art!culsted
in
fr:ont
of
ago.
"I
feel
that
it's
absolutely
essen4-yeer ~ Em( 5) To further overall quality and
~ the student and mentor "negotial that we have a Learning ~ter
pire Slate. 'lbe wudea at Attica also
cooperation with tbe University Litiate a contrac:t. This narrows the
for Western New York in Bulfalo,"
"altalda'" tblll New York collefe with-_
overall BOa! to a specific area of study
braries System. University Librariessays DeLoach. Two years ago be was
out wall8, aa .., ball a dollllll 1111118te&amp;
deemed ..........,.tile lor the period of • told there ,..,Wd be a Learning Center
wide commi- will be developed in
-~...-.
tbe
. functioDaJ areea, includin
the contract. "Learning activities" redeveloped here. Those plans appear
'"lbere J. 110 typical Empire State
lated
to
the
~
are
decided
upon:
tefer:'"
aDd !nformatioD aervlces,
to
have
been
dropped,
largely.
DeetudoDt," ap1ab18 Dei.oad&gt;, an EmLoach
says,
because
top
administra_
books to be read, COUl'lleS to be taken,
culstion, catalOJing, -ws, collec:tion
pire Slate - a aa tbe CoUep's facfield
work
wbether
in
a
suicide
pre.development,
"etc. n - commi-.
tors
in
tbe
SUNY
units
here
opposeulty . . ..ned, wbo IUIIIIben 8IDOilg
vention center or a string of European
, Which will be COIIlP'*d of· appropriate
"Empire State coming into Bulfalo."
bia etudeots ..... ,_students poet
museums,
preparation
of
written
re'The
conoenlnltion
of
IeUning
reline
pertlOJlllei
drawn from all of the
Dlue dePdma. a balpital admlnislm- •
ports or tapes or a film, -perhaps com:
sources (including other SUNY camUniveni"r LiiHariea units, will work
tat. a U/B faculfo)r ll&amp;llber, ........J
pletion or a relevant thematic module
puses) in Bulfalo makes it natural as
~ Wlth. ~ aaaiatsnt directors in
with yaulll c:bllc1nlll, ...._
p,_red by members of the College's
a site for a Center, says DeLoach, wbo ,
._.._ - hla"b«:booo paduLearning Resources faculty wider Prodeplores the politicimtion of the Issue
Wi~con"t':t tbe by· Uciati!a, aDd a ll8llber of tbe Nmpra
wst
Loren
Baritz.
'lbe
contract
will
and Empire Stale's apparent capitulaversity Libraries ailmlnlaln.tive offiCounty l)epartiuent of Sanitaliori:
cypically call for regularly scheduled
cers will play" tbe following roles,
to
1L
'
tion
Empire State Ia a
in
mretings with the mentor. Conferences
"We are not going to encroach on
Smith outlined.
hlllber edualtioa. Froni idea to teality.
with one or more tutors, located by
U/B and State College," says the
( 1) 'The three asaiatant directors
it
tbe ~ aestation period in
the
mentor
to
provide
instruction
and
poet-mentor
bluntly,
emi&gt;J&gt;asizh!4
that
.
will
have
Urliversity
Libraries-wide reedacatioaal blstory. CDIIC8ived late in•
·expert evaluation, may also be plaJiEmpire State students are seeidng a
~ilities in tbe three major func1970, ....-ell by the Trustees early
ned.
Longer
contta~
often
call
upon
difterent•
kind
of
educ:stional
experitional
arees
of
public
aervlces, techniin
in aDsteDce by fall ot that
the student to produce written docuence than the camp..- pr:ovide. ·
cal" services, and collection developyear. (A millloll dollars in IPliDt mon' ment integrating the experiences called
'The phone interrupliod DeLoach.
ment, lor overall coordination of opel'ey helped hurry it alonl.) Now iii its
"Your work," be told the c8ller, "bas
for in the contract.
ations, for operational 111111 program
s8coad year of --tion, tbe College
When the tenns are found to be
all heeD processed. You sbould be
· qualitY, and for system-wide P-Olicy.
emolla 2.000 _... Statewide.
mutually
acceptable,
the
contract
is
getting word any time tl\at ~·ve
'The assistant directors will work, in
I Wbat- Empire Siate ofters them that
signed by student and mentor and ' been recommended .for ~duatiOJL
their areas, with all of the unit beads. .
amventiaaal
continuing-edusent up through the College hietarchy
You'll get yOur- diploma through the
• ( 2) . 'The University Libraries unit
- cation propams and conespondence
mail
..
.
who have the option to ~~e or
hMds will be reeponslble lor lOcal imacbools do not is~ altema.I
.;.;,;~
to
bum
"Pomp
&amp;
Circumreject
iL
A
studenf
who
has
maxiplementation 91 policy and for protM education culminatina in a SUNY
mum advanced standing may need to
stance" on the wa.y out.
giam and operation in their areas.
clelfee. Uneocumbered by a residence . complete
only one contract prior to
'lbey will also be directly invalved,
requin!meDt. distribution teqllirements,
graduation. Such was the case with
throUgh the Library Administrative
floaJs aDd .....-. motivated individone ,of _DeLoach's students, a Ssni!aCounGi~;- in: o;v.er!lll ·University . Li,
uala can incorporate education into
tion Deptirtmenk worker witli·pre..!bed
brari~de poli~ · and . pr;ogr&amp;ll) ~.,_
their l i - without living up fuJI-time
training who undertook a multidisciThe second annual UUAB Poetry
terminatiOn.
.
• •".
. •
jobs or famiJieB. Aa....DeLoach says,
plinary study or migrant workers in
Contest, held morder to afford lO&lt;;al
. {3) 1.1te II!ISisl!mts_ tp .the: ~
"We are ollering" to meet student
Western New York. His single conwriters a forum lor, ~ :m&gt;rk, if'. CIPj!n
lli!eda, DOt make them meet our rewiJl. rebillill~ olliel!rslwJ.~,~
tract
culqiinated·
in
·
illustrated
to ;the en'tire Buffalo c:omniunitY wil.b.
~w ·sibility,.for .-lJl!)nitorQlgJtho!.t.Jnlyepjl4iy
tliesiS Of more than a 1:"undred psg~
an entry ileadline of January 1"0, "197.&amp;.
Empire State baa aome ol the J.rapi.l!&gt;n!flesl m.'lP~ ••~.upp.q~!. ~"l~es)
that his former mentor thought worthy
Awird.s include an on:.,S,pw( P.UJ,::·
l space, frudiet,: jiei&lt;aom_,el,..ffll~ ,
pinp of a conventimal college)includof publication. In completing conlie rejlding of their work for the win- .
and for ~ -~ ,state,.U~p~
IJ!C an administration with offices in
tracts,
students
are
encouraged
to
ning pbets 11s well as J)otentilil i&gt;~ihlicac '
Sity, and LiDriry proceoures and rmt·
Sidatop 8prjnp an&lt;i a College Coun•
make use of any community resources
tion "opportunities.
·
'
lations are followed. 'lbey Will also be
cll ·twbooe Ddbbers !Ddude quiz-show •
that c8n contribute to the learning ex:
responsible for monitoring ,_,.,...,.,
perermiaJ Kitty Carlisle) . While it has
According to Edward McQueeney,
perience.
utilization, in their area, throughout
DD campus, it does bave Learning Cenchairman of the sponSoring- llUAB
Sb!nct.rds High
the University. Libraries S"ystem, and
ters at a baJf dozen locations, includLiterary Ar!s ~ttee, :·.the. C\)ll).est
for maintaining liaison With the apis an eice1lent ·opportunitY for young
q IIMJ'by · Rod&gt;eiilter. 'There is also
Academic standards are high, Empropriate University olllcers. _.
writers to gain exposure for their
1111 ~ oenti!r in lilndon and talk
pire State personnel insist. More than
( 4) The associate dUectof of Liwork, as well as tapping the wealth
of clevelopins another in China.
half of the College's 76 fulltime faculbraries and tbe Director of Libraries
of talent in the Bulfalo mea. In the
Empire State oilers associate aud
ty bold terminal degrees, a substantial
future, we hope to make the awutls
will share .,Wrall administrative rebacbelor's degrees in familiar subject
·number from Harvard. Columbia· and
fields (Dal:ural sciences, ibe arts, busisponsibility lor. the Uni~ty ~~­
other prestigious universities. Others · a significant honor in the national
ies System. All other Umven11ty Lipoetl:y scene."
have unusual but impressive credenadministration and economics,
braries administrative olllcers will re8IDOilg them), but in practice the Colo"
tials. DeLoach, for example, is a
Contest rules follow :
' lege
a radical departUre from
port directly to tba .associate diJec:tor
poet, prose writer, editor and publish1 ) All members of the Bulfalo mettba ...w undergraduate experience.
and direc:tor.
.
er who is currently collaborating on
ropolitan community are invited to
'lbe Lib...u-r Administrative CounNew students are admitted ·to the Cola book with William Burroughs.
submit their poems. Facull)r members
cil,
Smith
88ld,
will
remain
the priJete 1111111thly (tlie basic unit of mea"We do not have open admissions/'
of all colleges and univer&amp;lties in the
mary vehicle within tba University
sure in tbe College is the month rather
points out Empire State President
community are disqualified.
System
lor
policy
and
proLibraries
tbiUI tbe c:redft hour) . A basic educaJames W. Hall, who sees Empire
2) Entri011 must be original unpubgram development and priority detertiaaal pnmise of the College is that
State as "walking a tightrope" bety.oeen
lished works.
mination.
Its
membership
is
being
exleamin&amp; also takes place in settings
the extreme non-sjructure of a Univer3 ) No more than 3 poems, maxipended to include all of the major adother dian the classroom. In this spirsity without walls and the standardi:
mum "3 pages.
ministrative olllcers within the Unization of conventional colleges. Apit, etudeots regularly apply lor
4) All poems must be typewritten,
versity Libraries System.
advaDcad standi n 1 by preparing a ·
proximately 75 to 80 per cent of appliaingltHII&gt;IlOI&gt;d. on only one side of the
piirUollo documenting experiences for
'The Library Administrative Cabinet
cants are accepted. However, fhe
page. .The pi&gt;et's name, address and
will continue to include tbe four as- .
application, or "Prospectus" as it- is
~ College, by IDMilB of an
telephone number must appear on
elabcilate . _ . t procedure involcalled, is itaell a kind of entrance
sistants to the diJec:tor aa ....U as the
~ ·:.:m!':·ror all entries is . director and associate· direc:tor, and
- . requiring applicants to detail
villl /A lamina ·Center Evaluation
Committee ..... ultimately the Acatheir educational goals, descnbe what
will continue to """'t regularly to deal
dMDic Vice PNoldent, may give ..,..
:~·will be selected by a
learning resources are available -m
with matters relaliod to badpt, facilidMDic aedlt. n- _....._range
their communities, predi~ what li!e
ties planning, penoaael, aDd systems
judging committee of SUNYAB facadjustments will be necessitated by
flam torm.l .....-~&lt;and eguivaulty poets to receive awards of $50
for the University .Libraries. Tbis is
enrollment and evaluate their compelalcy aaminatioD credit to credit for
each. 'lbe recipients of the awards
not a polic:y-matin1 body, Smith
tency for independent study. Few
t.cbinc ill a paiOddaJ echool, work"must read their works at tbe SUNYstressed, but is concerDed with furtherstudents who are not highly motivated
AB &lt;l8Dlpua at a mutually convenient
qln a llbnry, writinl a boolt, coming effective resource utlllzation withmtioe it through the initial orientation
date in ~ 11Prin11974.
·
in tba U ni verslty Libraries System
worbhop required of .aJl students.
and maintaininJ practic:ea in these
Hall eiltlmates tbat the rate of inout of a total of 36 mquired for a
areas which COliform to State aDd Uniquiries to enrollments is ten to one.
be DOtified by mail in early apring
.......a'• depee can be....--! in thJ.
versity policy.
'lbe attrition rate is also low: .De1974.
'
.
Wliy.
"I believe that this reorpnization
Loach puts it at under 6 per cenL
8) Entries may be submitted or
will improve tba operationaf elllciency
.
mailed to: UUAB Litarary Arts Com'lbe
.dmiDialratiaD Ia eiDof tba University Libraries and will
. Accordinl to Hall, educatina a stumittee, 261 Norton, SUNY at Bulfalo,
.pbatlc in la•l•tial that ..tVIIIIC8d
dent at Empire State coats tbe state
better enable us to proceed with our
3435 Main SL, Butralo, N.Y•. 14214.
lillaDdiDI Ia not _....... pro (orrrtll",
DO mere 1than on other SUNY camcritical task of plannina, propain development,.and quality 1Diprovement,"
tbB ..... Ia liD lllaDdanl for .
(biatructional coats are IIOIIIe-a- IIIUdl credit ... you pt for
wbat blgber, coats of pbyalcai plant
Smith said.
'
FINANCIAL AID
' 1111.- ,_. in tbe Navy?" AU eYaluaDd IIIIPPOrl aervicea are conaiderably
Rnona.J old •PP!Ications for 1974-75 ""'
..... me lllldoliakiD In tbe contat
Ie.). EWIIltually, Preaideat Hall annow ovolloble at -tho Rnondol Aid Ofllce,
ticipetes tbe oaat per lltudent can be
' of tbe llludoDt'• ........... .....
-312 stockton Kimbell Tower. Deadline for
r--1.-la a d , - - a ........tial
siplficantly ioweled. Administrative
John V. Bell, aaaociate accountant,
return of Rnanclal - n t s to the
BIIIDUIIt cl credit Ia reqlll!8(ed, in relacoats of tbe College are already nmChief Accountant's Olllce, baa been
CoiJeae Scholarship Service lo February 1;
tioD lo bla IIP8Cillc plan of study withper cent leis tbiUI bad been
named actlnJ"director of tbe Payroll
1974; Form U.S. must be rwtumed to the-.
ted, Hall 118)'1, wbo lists cost,.
in Empire State.
·~t, Cliarlaa'"ilalkin, assi&amp;Rnonclol Aid Otllc:e by Mlln:~ 1. Under·
. tant vice preaident lor. bus~..- a!- a.- tbe que•tioa of advanced
w education
residents of tbe
1!'8duoti EOP ltudents lhould obtain
State IUDCIII tbe collep'a pia. Tuiatallllin&amp;. If lillY. is out of tbe way.
faln and contmlle.&lt;, baa linnounc:ed.
forms from their EOP counselor, Town·
tion aDd faculty ealariea are oimllat
: Mr. Bell ...,._ Mlli Helen Walsh
oend Hall.
tbe llludeat with a mmtor to
draw up the lllllt of a ...... of in-.
to tbo8e tbrouPiout S\JNY.
who dled..-tly.
- . . .

--

SUNY&gt;•,.,......

_.1

...........

.

H-.

.....r

c:J..

r•"'' .._ ••

w

urn.

a

col._,

l)U_AB. ~o~trY.. ~~q~~st

..

.,._to

""t)

• JS:rn.:·

C'':fu":;y~:"'to"':f..:,.~

--..........
eou.··

..J&gt; se~-.:....~ .=.!.~ '

"",_

.Bel H&amp;1ds Payrol

ror

�·UVP Grievance:

Research Funds
·Dip Sharply ··

Set-op Ser.ves

fac~:, !:!}!S.vall ~

..u"'Z tbe~nlted·Univeraity
. _ tUUP,
SUNY/United,

In November

A •tiona! panel of ~eduea·
ton bu ilau8d a report
lor ·
mojor . _ in .American
uate

· lorecaste,
be fairly
"!8DlY
~pant ...... ~oberp.
divided
b e - will
the ......,;
at lea8t
20 ·
ly in Nqvember with cmly -~/
per cent of ito numbers will be drawn
farmerly
ccmtmcta
~ S1811.IWO b
refrom
m:inority
poops.
education.
~8P.M_..._ .............
.,.,;ved by U/B laeulty, Habert C.
Becouae of recurrent education, the
1n 1he report; entitled Scholtzrahip
patrick, ........ Vice jlleoident lor 11!. ....... - ,... hi 11M b!llll ~
ages of students will correspond more
Jor Society, ileueil December 12, the
Panel on Altemate Approecbe8 to
closely with thoee of the pneral -u110 wifllr ~~ 'The
Graduate ~ questions the
latinn. It will be standard ·practice for . ~~propoaale totalini St.·
students·and teecbers alike to examine • 7871089 _ , submitted durbqr the
empbaaie
-on .-reb as the single
twe"'J"'tb;'~ Up 110 411 days
Period.
the social implications of projected
criteriOn
lor
!'Valuating
.
all
graduate
(ioqer upGil mutual
New grants were ......Jved by Robert
· research. Standarda for measuring
and their' fllculti1111 and urges
a.-a COIIClemlid lliutiei) .afll!r formal . schools
Paaswell, Civil Engineering. $2ll,lil98
faculty performance will be applied
that all doctoral students opend time
&gt;11Dd8catiaa
_lie ~-to eettle
from
DOT/FHA lor "CollectioD ol,a
greet
variety
of
professional
activto
a
woddn8 outside llllivemity walls in
the •
oe ~- PAillni in·
Disaggregate Date Set"· and .bY Rob- - .
ities. For instance, commUnity activity
mated to their major fields.·
~a farDl '1Jgp t• ....
ert Allendoerfer, $3,725 b R.iaeucb
could be part of the assessment
More than 18 months of study by
l1'illnDce Is ftled with tbe Prealitent
process.
Corp. for "Simultaneous Electlocbemthe panel preceded .the report. The
o11hli UJiivenlty. A 8lep 1 ~
The panel also predicts that ~
ical Electron Spin. Reaonimce ·M•·
paDel was supported by two organiza~ 1'8llnlre qp 110 86 dQ8 for aeftle.
graduate professor will become more
~~"
'
tiolla-the Graduate Record Examina..-t. U the ~ ill DDt atfolfac.
of a "mentorand preprofessional coun·
Continuation and/or renewal grants ·
tions 13oard, whose wJ.icies .affect the
tiOriJ,y .-woe~ at 8lep 1, the IIIII!Ciltive
selor" · through expanded use of new
went to Carl Arbesman, Medicine,
entrance recpnrements of most gradu·
hoard o1 the local ....... ol UUP
educational technology. 1n addition,
$80,500 from NUl for "ClinicBI and
ate institutions, and the Council of
~ i*WIWiiDd 11C1:1aB ki UUP Cen·
significant I i n e s of communication
. Graduate Schools in the- U n i t e d
Immunologic Effects ol Specille ImIIIII. &lt;H-. the plevalllle bolb a~
will connect graduate programs and
munotherapy"; Garry Redmitz, Ohem·
States, whose 307 meinbers include
·• Step 1 aD4 8lep 2. may.!!!__
aJed wlthschools of different functions w i t h
istry, $36,017 .from NIH for "Clinical
universities awarding 98 · per cent of
each other and with other institutions,
o u t U U P - ........ sUcl•
the doctoral delirees in the nation.
Analysis with Ion-Selective Membrane
such II!' two-year colleges and state
The 15-mem.be.r panel was apEli!ctrodes"; ani! Marvin Zelen, Stu·
~~are: . pointed
educatinn ·departments.
_
by the two groups in the fsll
tistics, $1,000 from NUl for a fellow·
FACULn: Univelldt.y Co-Cbalrman:
In addition to Dr. Page, the panel
of 1971, with J . Boyd Page, president
ship supply allowand! in behalf of Tai
included Daniel Alpert, direcl&lt;&gt;r, CenHerbert Relama~ 39«;
of the Council, serving as .chairman.
S. Kang. Ben Papermaslet, Biochemiter for Advanced Study, University of
AIITII A1111 ~:
E. Comiol·
Educational Testing Service ! ETS)
cal Pharmacology; received $20,000 in
Illinois; Warren G. Bennis, president;
ly, elllelllloD 44411; DM:AftGN&lt;\L lm.ll&gt;in Princeton, New Jersey, provided
additinnal funds from the New York
University of Cincinnati; Albert H .
~tratiYe ljUpport.
. ., Walter Hill, 2421; Cancer Research Institute for ''EvaluAND Al'l'UD IICDNCJIB: Harry Supri·
Berrian, associate commissioner for
ation of Potential Tumor Suppressing
a~~:"::f'~'j D~af:;
nicS, 2MB• LAW AND ~cs:
Higher Education, New York State
Properties of MIF and Other LymphoEducation "Department; Edward E .
be added to graduate schools, that
kines Prqduced by Cultured, Human
Louie A. DeiOotto, 6-208'7; - Booher,
president,
Bl&gt;oks
and
EducasilnlfiCllnt
modifications
need
to
be
Lymphoblast Cell Lines."
-AND IIA~TICII: . ~
Zelen, 12«1;
80C1A1. IICDNCSI AND ,_.
tion Services Group, McGraw-Hill,
made, and that horizons, of concern
Inc.; Jean W. Campbell. director, Cen8elll
Adler,ll528; UNl·
ter for C..ontinuing Education of Wo- ~~:(-m) •
.
men, University of Michigan; Benlftl': Unlwn~Co..Cbairman: _. .ne8ds of society."
jamin DeMott, professor of English,
-.mendatlons
Amherst C.ollege; May N. Diaz, ·pr&lt;r
The panel report recommends that:
fessor of anthropology, University of
All teaching faculty have been asked
.ordo. Colllinnllltl ~ Graduate
t Gradiiate school faculty be en·
California at Berkeley; Patricia Alb~ .~ 8ummel' s-laaa. Unclerlrad·
to "show consideration for students"
couraged to take a wider view of their
jerg Graham, professor J&gt;f historY and
with final examination problems.
uate Studiee, Coclperative Collere Cen·
profe&amp;sional roles, and the decisions
education, · Barnard Co II e g e and
1n a memo this week, Charles H. V.
"for teniu'i; promo~ion, and ·satary in.-,EOP. B~t~.~;G~
Teachers C.ollege, Columbia UniverEbert, dean of Undergraduate StudieB,
B: Aalo1emic AIWre: CeDten, Col·
crements no longer (should be) based
sity; Cyril 0. Houle, profes.o;or of edupointed out that; "For a . number of
....... Councile, Departmental and
on the single criterion of research and
catiQn, Univendty of Chicago; Robert
reasons it always occurs that aome
Provo8tial Unite, 'lnetruc:tialla Com·
p~icatioo."
F. Kruh, dean of the Graduate School,
students end up with more than two
~~ More·experts who may oot possess
miliiicatloll• Cenw.· ~'!Eduai·
Kansas State University ; W. Edward
lion;• UtbUt ~ ~Jollllfinal examinations on """ daY, 81the _usual a~c ~entials .be
Lear, dean of the School of Engineerthough this is a verY undesimble sit;
added to grailuite schOOl faCulties.
1611' ' 1in"-ladJe! Glouil' c: lbiiciftive
ing, Univen;ily of Alabama; Lincoln
uation. By the time a student labors
vicit PnilldeDt, Facilitie'a .Planning, '~uccessful achievers in busine93 and
E . Mpoos, &lt;lean of the Graduate Di' through his third - ezami.net:iGo. cme
Realiucb, UniWiniltY Rel&amp;tions. ./tr
vision, Stanford University; Rochus
cannot but wonder whether we are
llq1la ~ 1381; Group ' D: OperaE. Vogt, profes.o;or of physics, Calimeasuring his academic performance
ence in redirecting academic energies
tiona and ttyStems: Aocowiting, Am·
fornia Institute of Technology; Albert
or his level of fatigue!"
the servicing of social needs."
iliary eem-, Budpt; Bursar, CollN. Whiting, p..,;ident, North Carolina
• More intensified efforts be made
To ease the problem, Ebert BUB·
tro!Wr'o Oftlce; Financial 8ervicee, ln·
Central University.
gest,ed . to faculty, "It ma,y be poosible-:
~ Audit; Payroll, 'Per&amp;onnel,
Mr. DeMott was the principal
:~e w=~{l\:i~cu't~::
to have the student take an euminaPbyalcal Plant, l'lin:basin,. Neil
writer of the rer&gt;&lt;&gt;rt. Both Drs. Bennis
"Statistics can be cited confirming
tion with a different section, or it ma,y
Golos, 4012. Group B: Student AIand Rerrian are former members of
that the politics of graduate education ·
be possible to give him a make-up
. fain: Financial Aid, Foreign Student
the
UI
B
administration.
reflect
the
influence
of
a
.
.
.
discrimexamination.
This is particularly easy
• AlfalD, Ko!!einJ, 1natructiona1 Ser·
inatory society."
if you give ezami.netioaa in a
vicM,_ Minority Studegt Main, Nor•
Often
rigid
institutional
requiresrriall
class.
1n
any way, give the stu·
liOn Unlan, Plilcement; Student Counments, such as residency and fellowdent at least a d&gt;aDoe to cliacaa this
'eeiiDc. &amp;rtlta ClllcMr, '3721 .
ship policies, become more flexible to
A memo confirming a new policy
problem With you and -rk -.ud a
meet the needs of new g r o u p s of
on the wbmis."iion of grades, fully ensensible solution."
students; for example, pari-time wodorsed by the Faculty Senate Execu·
Ebert also asked faculty 110 "be sure
Campus residence halls will remain
men students. "Graduate administrative &lt;:Ommittec, the Academic !Jfairs
to have students :petition with the
OJ*' IDllil 10 a.m., .Monday, Decemtors and faculties must arrive at a new
Council, and the P..,;ident's Office,
appropriate Dan's Office if they wish
ber 24, iDsteed of closing as echedperception of the worth and dignity or
was circulated recenUy , to departto take undergraduate COUllle8 for
uled .., Saturday; Deoember 22. The
'recurrent' or 'intennittent' learners."
ment chairmen, deans or .schools and
graduate-credit .{Dan Hull) or gradUnivenity adminlatration decided on
• Every graduate student should be
provosts by Charles H .V. Ebert, dean
uate cOunii!S for undeJ'IInlduate credit
the action because students taking
required to undertake disciplineor Undergmrluate Studies. The policy
(Dean Ebert) . This' Should be done
ezami.netione .., Saturday, December
related work outside the l!niversity if
is designed "to once and for all end
as •rly· as J&gt;OIIflibJ!I and not U.ter
22, would encounter difticulty driving
he has not previously done so to inthe variou.• kinds of hanlship situathan the second week of lns1nJdion"
home on Sunday due to the energy
sure that no advanced-degree canditions which result to students because
in the coming semester.
crisis and the closing of gasoline studate graduates without exposure to
of g r ad e s not being submitted on
·. tiona.
real working situations.
time" Ebert said
·
Madison L Boyce, direetor of hous• Certain institutional policies be
The policy is, Ebert told faculty and
A second annual 'I'nd: aild "--!'&gt;11 said that residence hall servjces, altered to allow faculty members more
administrators:
Country Seminar, aponaored
including dining and buses, will be .
time to play larger role in the solu"1. Please submit final grades aa
provided on a reduoed basis for stu:
tion of major societal problems. "It is
early as possible. but not later than • Office for Credit-Free Protlrame and
dents who will stay in the dormitories
a matter of recreating the graduate
the School of Health Edu!:atlon. 'llrill
two weeks after the end of the 6nal
faculty as l!'&amp;ders .in the search for a
be beld on campus, Jannary +6.
over that ~.
examination period. Since the final
Ebne 169 examinations, involving
new understanding of the possibilities
The two-day propam, which bu a
r examinations end on Dec.ember 22, all
of human society and of recreating the
4,6511 students, are scheduled for ne:
grades should resch the Office of Adregistration fee of $16 or $10 per du,
&lt;'f'mbe&lt; 22:
graduate institution as one that is
is open to interested coecbM, .U.:
miAAion.• and Records by Friday, ./anletes, and fans. Students may attend
4.
:;::rw~:. ':!.:'~":nlin~yr'~~ti:!u~: . ruuy
for a fee of $1 per day. The propam
~·2 . If you carinot establish a grade
meaning to the structural · Chruiges, of
by that time. as.•ign an Incomplete to
will be held in the ConfereDCe Thesociety now in progress," :the panel
those students who have· a reasonable
atre. Norton, and in 'Clark HaD.
concludes.
chance to complete their course reFeatured spesker will be Stan ·
...
'Culturol 1.ac'
Huntsman, heed track · and Cl'CJiiii ·
quirements and have a passing aver· The 20,000-word rep&lt;)rt cites a "culage in your course. rThe Incomplete is
country coach, Unlveraity of 'J'ennm.
tural lag" resulting from an enonnous
g\ven at the discretion of the faculty
see, National Collegiate Crooa-CounY-'r ., a•t.-, 3US 11-. St., IJWI.-,
member.
....
lf.Y. 14214. ~oil._ . . looi!IM M
increase in the past 50 years in the
try Coach of the :'lear in 1972, wboee
~ 2U, 250 W'iftlpMr A~ (l'ltope
proportion· o( per;sons o!&gt;teining grad:
"3, If a studenLshows on your WM · topic will be ~'Cham ionship Croaa2U7).
Country TechnlqiU!&amp;f Also particiuate degi-ee&amp;. W h j.l e this increase,
~e list; but has never attended, do
according to the report, lias dramaticnot pve an lncom.Ptete. Mark a 'No
pating will be Gary True, heed coach,
·~·4Jtor
Grade' and briefly explain."
ally altered "the. relatinn between the
Binlbaniton College; Ed wmr-,
:~·; L~~~~D
The issue of late grades "is taken
university and Society as a whole,"
head coach, Brockport State College;"
· a.oa&amp;RT r . 111AR.UT1"
very seriously, and rightfully ao, by
there J:&gt;as been little change i.n the self,
Meade Burnette, bead coach, Ohio
~ ..... Prot/~conceptions of graduate deparbnents
the student b!&gt;dy in general and by the
.
/01111 A. Cl.DUTIU
. ..
University, and others.
\
...
.
present student government in par·
in, the ·~ ~year ~ri!Jd.
Resilltralion deadline is Deoember
· Eollowmg 1ts spec1f1c recommendsticular," ,Ebert.Bilid. "I llf8e all facUlty
28 and only mall registrations will be
PA~::AJ!l&gt;;-r:!~
t!o~
•.
and
"'!ll"'!llons
fo
impl~:
members
tO
cooperate
with
this
~
KMicr" a. CA~U~A~tiu.t
s8rl! ancJ~niBaoiiable policy .., aubmittuf.iQ.n, ffie report. goes on to maike
For fw:th. infomiatinn, contoct the
projectionS about the future of gradutinl ftniol grades to avoid I!JIIbarras.
08loe for Credit-Free Programs, ·881:
:'SfbAlf•-~ · -·· ·''
ment and · poalil&gt;}y grievan&lt;;e caaes."
. ate ~Is; Student po~tions, ~
4301.
Profea.

g:. ~-~...~ 0~.::::.
.....,.._t .,..

-.v

-=

0

no{:.

Help Urged iri
Exam Problems

::!,~a:' =t~~~ S! ~~r:!:

~A:t:'~.!i~

~~~~ ~rr!na:.e ~~:

"""'rd
:..;e!

Grades Deadline Set

Dorms Open longer

a

'GREPORTER,
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.

Track Seminar Set
.,ra;

,

�~
LettersIt._ .... taa ~ lliDce 111118\. ol the
.... Ndcm CXIU!llriM pmllod iDdepeoid.
._ w............liwp ODe ol tlae
......... -r.-Ja (llllice ol Taqomyilra 81111
llllllillilr), ~ .pecilll atleatlcm at tbia mo'lllilft • Ita people Gelelnta tbe1r iDdepeadence
dill -IlL Tanzania acbleved iDdeRencleDce 011
llopllalla 9, J.li8L
• ........,. back 011 the past twelve years, Tan-

~

- * ...

acbleved treDaMioua both
pGiitblly aD4 -'ce'br- UDder the powel'fld ........,;p ol - , I'Naident .Julius K.
N,..., aliD ClhUrman ol the Tanpnyika Al.rlam Nalioolal UDion, tbia Dation bas emerpd
fl.- palitiCal ebaae in the eady sixties lo a
well orpDizecl TAND Party. It is the belief
o1 Dr. N,...e that eocialilm ia !be best policy
lo follow in Cll'der lo ualta the - l e of the
• CXIU!ltry aD4 lldlieve J'I'OII8I in a ~
Dation. Now in his thUd Presidential tenn, be
. . . pnJOal Ibis. Hill .......rui aocialist policy
o1 ~"unity ballll-in-ballll with JHOIII"I!SS" is not
oab' beiDa" followed by the entire nation but bas
- alao lllftllll inlo other developing nations.
Bcnnnmb!ly, Tanzania is deYeloping at a
JI'Mt - - fast as lillY developing nation. .
The Tanzania-Zambia railroad being built preoleDtly will be a firBt bleak-through for both aruntriea. The completion of the rai1ro8d will mean
thet Zambia (a laDd-Joeked country) will no
lonpr be under the ol white-ruled Rhodesia. Mozambique 81111 South Al.rica through
wbicb It bas ..., uporting ita copper. Tanzania's trade will alao increase because the railroad will help the ~tion of goods from
inland !o the .-at. At the Mme time, it will
a-eete still better relatiooa between Tanzania
and Zambia which will be the firBt move by
President Nyerme _tq unite the black African
natioos,
.
Another ~ move made by the President is the development of "Ujamaa Villages"
&lt;Villages of Familyhood) . With the belp of
the government, people have been motivated lo
move inland and form villages where they ·can
live and work logether and belp develop the
nation. 'lbe result of this movement has been
quite encowagillg.

So the 1JBOple of Tanzania had a lot lo talk
about while they -celebmted their· thirteenth Inde!&gt;en!lence Day. Na!urally, Tanzania has had
ita oelback8. but the progress this country has
...me-t overrides the problems. Al.ter all, it
takes a lot more than twelve years for a nation
1o develop. It has taken almost .200 years for the
United States !o.be what it presently is.
--'1'118 u/a INTEitNA110NAL EDri'OB.lAL BOARD

Holiday Welcome
Being Offered

IIBAit--=

MIIJIY lntemational s t u d e n t s have ssid,
"Christmas Ia the loneliest time ol my life,"
True! The campus ia a lonely place at Christmas
time. We as B1!J&gt;tis1B are joining Preabyterians
.in ttying 1o .,..,.. for aome of the intemati~
students during the Christmas holide.ys.
We will provide a place lo stay, food, and
propam from Dacember 21, 1973, lo January 2, '
1974. We have 'ZJ cities set up throughout the
United StateS where · the intemational student
can go and spend b. Chris\ma&amp; llolide.ys.
The inten,.tional student may stay in boat
family homes, church dorms, BSU center, or a
combination of tbeoe. arrangements.
Last Christmas hundn!ds of intemational
students applied for the Christmas hospitality
program but were turned away. Please tall yo)ll'
students 1o register early. Don't wait! We have
planned long and bard lo olake this progmm a
success. No cost to the international student
is involved except that he must pay his own
travel expense 1o the City wbere he is 1o spend
his holidays and back lo his campus.
No student may work and be a' part of the
program. This ministry iS provided as Ia aervice
of love. We do not have ulterior motive nor
-.; we trying 1o pr;oselytize, just JDinister. H
you have any questions, call me--area. code 615,
254-5461.
Moot sincerely yows,
BENTON WILI¥HS, Consultant
International Student Work
National Student Ministries
Nashville, Tenn. 37234
For more itiformation, please come lo 210
Townsend.

Sancho Said Doing
An 'Excellent Job'
EDITOR,

u/s INTERHADoNAL:

It has been almoot six months since David
Sancho took office as the new International Coordinator of the · student Association. As the
fall semester comes 1o an end, I would like lo
look back at the International atmo6pbere, which
has increased tremendously on this campus in
the past lew months.· Although I haven't had the
, cl!lmce to work with David Sancho and the
International Students Committee, I had tbe opportunity to attend some of the events that have
taken place on this campus. With the excellent
leadership of David and the Committee, support
from the Foreign Students Office, and the increasing response from foreign and Ar:Derican
students, there has been a great uptrend in
International activities· from the past couple- of
years.
I would like to congratulate David Sancho
on his exce11ent performance as a coordinator
and wish him lots of luck in continuing his good
work in the spring semester. I would also like
to ask all the foreign and American students to
continue their support for the International Committee.
--8UDHLR SUCHAK

MEMBERS OF
U/ B INTERNATIONAL EDITORIAL BOARD
Car1os Aivafez-Puerto Rico
Edith Frail-Peru
Peter Groumpos--Greece-Editor
Ana Maria Loinaz-Puerto Rico
Herbert Morgenroth--Germany
Sudhir Suchak-Tanzania
Eddy Tse--Hong Kong
Emie Yau-Hong Kong
Una Hui~ong Kong
Articles and/ or announcements for U/ 8 totem•
tional are welcome. They should be submttted at least
two weeks befoie pUblication (first Thursday of most
months). Articles ale not to exceed 300 words, due
to space ~limitations. Send or bring all material for
publication 'to room 210 Townsend Hall.

r-. -. - .., ""'

n.
- __
,_
....,...
...
_ _ _ _ _ .,
_ . ,_
_
__
,____
-~·........
o f l l l It
e - o f F.......
Ciub,~llle

---

_ _ , . . . , . . . . . , . . _ ...... o f _

As a serylce to the campus's International community.
the Reporter has agreed to make this space available
.. six times during the academic year to the Office of
Foreign Student Allol"' and the student editorial board
of U/B ln!lamotlonal fortne dissemination of notices,
news items and articles of interest". Articles are select·
ed by the student editorial board. ·

Coffee Hours F(J
It is a tradition of the Office of Foreign
Student Affairs (OFSA) lo coordinate the weekly International Coffee Hour. The purpose of this
event is twofold: 1o expose people to dilJerent
cultures and lo create an atmosphere conducive
to intercultural dialogue.
Looking back at the different coffee hours held
this semester, we have achieved, to a certain
degree, our first objective. Various international
programs that are entertaining and 'educational
have been presented. We have introduced people
to Indian food, Chinese cooking, Al.rican drums,
live Latin American songs, Iranian tea and, of
course, unique music from each of the above
countries or continents. Participants resjxmd
quite favorably to . the programs and share a
feeling of solidarity.
The p~gram alone only partially fulfills the
goals of the coffee bour. We intend lo ptilize
the p~gram lo facilitate the interactions fbllowing thereafter. Ordinarily, people stay lo talk
and chat over a cup of coffee. In a pretty relaxing
atmosphere, people exchange names and, of
course, cultures, too. Hopefully, some genuine
.friendship will resull · We also- witness, .oftentime&amp;, people of the same nationality coming
together. We si!lcerely hope they will reach
out in a diversified fashion.
Looking lo the future coffee bows with optimism, there is potential for further innovative
moves. This is probably the ONLY international ·
event held weekly in t,hia University, which has

�December "· 1973
DEAB OOu.EAGUE:

For the past aeveral years. we have
been working on the· revision of our
policies. procedures, and criteria for
faculty appointment and promotion.
In parallel, the Faculty Senate also •
turned ·its attention to this important
subject.
This document results from the Senate's recommendations, thooe made
over the paat aeveral years by ~
President's Board, suggestions sent to
me by variouil faculty and admini&amp;trators. and from my own experiences
as a faculty member, Chairman, Dean,
Vice President, and President at this
University Center.
I look on these policies, procedures,
. and criteria. which become effective
January 1, 1974, as another step in
our evolu-tion into a University Center
of stature and greatness in !be academic world.
Very truly yours,
-ROBERT L. KETrEil

President

I. Introduction
This document is intended to lsy
down procedural guideiines and local
policy concerning appointment to the
faculty , promotion from one faculty
rank to another, and the granting of
continuing appointment. These policies and procedures are the product
of experience at this and at-other institutions, various memoranda from the
Office of the President and from the
Board on· Faculty Appointments,
Promotion.:; a nd Tenure, and from rec-

ommendations made by the Faculty
Senate.
Material covered in the SUNY booklet Polic~s of the Board of Trustees
will not be repeated here except when
necessary. However, nothing in this
document can be, or is meant to be,
in conflict or variance with those Policies. It is incumbent upon each faculty
member of SUNY to familiarh-;e himself with the Policies of the Board of .
Trustees, especially Articles XI and
XII covering appointment, promotion,
and continuing appoi ntment

II. Sequence of Review
Personnel actions which lead to the
initial appointment, re.b.pp0intment, to
promotion, or to the granting of continuing appointment., follow a logical
sequence through the various lev~ls or
academic organization, beginning as
recommendations at the aepartmental
I e v e I and proceeding through the
structure with endorsement or rejection or the lecomme.ndation at the
School, Faculty and Vice Presidential
levels. Final authority in such actions
rests with the President, the Chancellor, and the Bosrd .of Trustees.
The Department

.

The academic excellence of a University is established and maintained
at the departmental h&gt;vel. It is established in a first instance with initial
appointments at the instructor and
assistant professor I eve I s. gathers
strength with appointments as associate professor aDd promotion to that
rank, and is maintained by the careful
• selection of those who receive continuing appointmenl That e&gt;:cellence is
then signaled and reallirmed by- the
quality of thooe who are appointed
at or promoted to the rank of full
professor.
Unless extreme care is taken at the
departmental level, and at the lowest
of ranks. no satisfactory degree of

euellencle can be eatab1ilhed • JD11iD..
tained.
The lll8jQr ft!IIPOIIBibili In . . . .
Jiahing and mainlllininc a bilh delree
of ezce~ 1111 the......,._..
tal c:hairman' wbo mu8t be the auidi.DI
fon:e in moving the recrui-t aDd
evaluation proci!MM forward. In llriDIing new people into the ~
and in improviDI lbc.e ~
aboard, and wbo must .... - - the
bard decisions which lead to .....mating faculty w b o a&amp;\ teadliDr and
acholsnbip are not above tba a-...
All actiona leedinr ·-... ~
tion or the granting al ClllltiDular appointment belin at the~
level with a regular yearly review and
evallljltion of a faculty member by the
chairman. Aa a part of that review,
the chairman should study and record
the following:
. ( 1) teaching load
( 2 ) student achievement
&lt;3) research project&amp; being carried
out by the inatructor
•
( 4) student research project&amp; supervised
l 5) thesis or diaaertation advisement
( 6 ) departmental, Faculty, or University committee 888ignments
l 7 l evaluation of teaching by students and colleagues
18 ) works appearing and works accepted in that academic yesu:
( 9) acac:Jemic, University, or community service
.
If the faculty member is to be re-.
view.ed for continuing appointment or
promotion, an analysis of the data
collected in the chairman's reviews
should be a part of the dossier pre·pared on. ibe faculty . membet's be-half.

,

-

.

Naturally, the departmental'laculty
cannot and should not abdicate total
responsibility to the chairman. They
share in responsibilitY and must take
an active role in recruiting, reoommending, peer evaluation anti decisionmaking. They do so at the departmental level, as voting members of
elected personnel committees, ad hoc
committees, or as faculty members
voting by rank, status, or members of
the whole.
·
It is at the departmental level that
s t u d en t evaluations become most
meaningful. The student's ambitions,
objectives, and expectations are focUsed most finely at the level al the
acadernie major and interesl Evaluation by students and by former atu·'
dents should be a part of the material
prepared in support of the recommendation and should be collected in a
regular manner through the liE of
some type of standard ..-suriDr instrument executed by students in the
faculty member's claaaes. "'pinionnaires," especially those collected at
the time of decision concemin&amp; !DOmotion or continuing appointment, are
of litUe value.
School oncl/or Focully:

Nore: Where Schools uiat witlain·ti
Faculty, an' addilib114l level of
and ncommDIIllltion uiats. W lo e r e
Schools uiat ow.ide a Faculty •trucwn, tM respoTU&lt;ibilit~ pltxed on
tM ProUOflt and Faculty are carried
by tM Dean and School reporW., directly to 1M appropriak Vice Prai,.
dent. ThiB .U.O applie. i!' 1M Facully
of H&amp;lllh ScienCe. iDioU:Io g "-kd by
a Vice Presitknt rutile tlr4n a l'roIJOflt. TM IWide ahDu1d .....- thiB
where neceaary tllroullt,..
• ""' thiB

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.......... _....)11\1.

• a(wlpehp I UW Bill .al M criti•
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tbecta.u-IIDd

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tbe IIIII k $ 1 \1 or paiiiiDiiae . . . - ,
_ . . ..,. ,.,_ ... l@l!!l.lltO:-

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Ia bela!L ~ -~. iJa!lltM

nor Dllll.ti¥8 •• ... • -letiart em be
...re, tbe ~ b lbe neutral
J6
I W
JaJion tilould, be fully G •
plaiMd.
•

~ ....... volo8 tbelr critical
~ by tbelr advl8ary YOte at
~ 7evela of reviinr u-elecled mem-

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

bem of tbe 8cbool or Faculty per!IIIDnel cammitliael, wbicb are NqUired by
~- fJr'pcedu-.

'lbe Vice Pnmdenta for Academic
Affaim IIDd for tbe Health Sciences
.,.,..,.. both --.ue qqality ClODtrol
IIDd budaet ClODtrol by their review Of
the- ~ actiops of their - IMI -*"ie uniiB. In the C1180 of
appolna-&gt;t or promotion to the ranks
of IDstructor or 811Bistant pror-.t or
the quall6ed _.s.nuc ranks, esclusive
of quall6ed titJes at the profaa&gt;r lewl
(Visiting Profeoaor, elinic:al Profeoaor,
elc.}, the Prsident bu delepted decision authority to Uan.
In .,.._· involvinl mntinuina appoin-.t, ~ appoin-..t at or promotion to the ranks of IIIIIIOCiate profeoaor or any of the ,.,..war or qualified
ranks of full professor, the 'Vice President mllllt criticaUy review the doosier
IIDd the recommendations from the department, School aDdlor FacultY, and
pall! forward an analysis and recommendation to the PresidenL FO! all
new appointments, the Vice Presi&amp;nt
is also responsible for certifying to
the President and his advisory board
that a poaitive search for minority and
women candidates bas taken place.
· In. addition, the mspective V ice
Presidents are responsible for est.abliljhing procedures for and supervising
the review Of au cases of non-renewal
of faCulty appointments involving the'
d e n i a I of ClODtinlliDIJ appointmenL
Where such review &amp;bows that the faculty member's caae bu sulfered from
procedural irregularity: the vi&amp; President sbould act to correct such error
and to reinstitute the process of evaluation of the faculty member at-the
' point at which the procedure was violated.
The-

Appoin-t, promotion and the
granting of . ClODtinuina appointment
can .-.It OGiy from a poSitive action
or reo'" e elation of the PresidenL
In certain of the lower faculty ranks,
he t.s placed authority in ·the bands
of. the Vice President for ~c
Affaim and the Vice ~ for
Hl!alth 8ciences; in the granting of
COGtinlliDIJ ~t . and in certain claBfications of hilher ranks,
the authority Ia in- the banda of the
Clumcellor and/or the Board of Trus- . who .ct OD the uawmmendatiOG
of the Preaident. Actlono at each of
the varloua levala of lbe Univenity
... 8dvi8ory to lbe Prsident but not
bindina oo blm. Under ednioldiDary
cinmnatwncw the Preaident may act
in. of ~l, -wointment, pi'CliDDtian or tbe Jlllllltina of
ClODtinuinc IIIII' d b ...... without . .
oortina to ... full of review
and COMIIitation, .......... .-cnbed.

GBdldallll, eYidenoa of ~ lba!7

The ...............

'lbe

an.: r-dty- advl8ary

body to

the PNoideat Ill !r:nDinl - tbe .....
dent'a B o a r d OG Faculty AIJP.plntmenta. Pn.Dotiaaa and Tenwe; 'Ibis

Board of . . . . .tamred full ........

Ia eppoipted by ... Preaidllli from
slates ., lb!w· per ~. - mended by ... &amp;.:DIM! Committee
of the Facult;Y Senate. 1be President
does not arbitrarily ..,j~,ct IUcb a1atea
and DO appoin-t to the Board ia
IDIICie
from IIUcb alatea. Board
II8Dbers are repreaentatives of the
UDivenity..t-larp and are appointed
for three yean~, staaered terms. 'The.
Board reviews all recommandations
for apP,Oin-.t at or promotion to
the rank of IIIIIIOCiale . prof-.r, the
various titles of flill profe8sor, and the
granting of COGtinlliDIJ appointment
at any rank, and bas as iiB· IIDie COD·
cern, the demoristrated academic quality !!fld p.....,.;,., of the recommended
in!lividual. It may cany out investigations independent of the department., School or Faculty, may request
new or additional .information from
those sources, or may invite the per8Dnal testimony of advocates and adversaries. The afl.visory statements and
voles of this Board are wusidered
privileged communication with the
PresidenL

be watindued with-each

l'W"'Mme!! ;t._

f/1-..
In maJdni recomnwvlationa 8D im_.

lion.
A.

IIWit

en.t criteria eat fodb In wbat fol7oora
lndiaata the ldnda 111111,.,... of at-

~t to be -.1st In oandldallol
for appoinm-t- or pramotion to the
various r-alty l8llb.

portant to -!be futqre of the University and of ... illdividual fa&lt;:ulty
member, the·· various revifio bodies
will wish to be .....ad that a full and
fair beariDi ia given eacb case. Wheli
·a ~ does not support the case
before the~ or Faculty, or
when a Provost does not support the
case before the Faculty or Vice Pres. ident, the fac:Uity member may select
an advocate. The_ written· dipst of
that testimony shall be forwarded to
the President and the Board as a part
of the dossier. 1be facultY member. being reviewed should not be directly
involVed with the review bodies; to be
_ 8D would endanger bOth objectivity
and collegiality.

- 'apeelfic8tion
EWolollaol:
.A. The
111111 lmplenwita- tiOG of any crifllrla fw . , . _ , eva).
uatiOG muet IDdade a~ that
some ~ wDI
ID way
&lt;&gt;thera in another, and that it Ia
"""""'*Y t:o ..... • balaced evaluation of eacb per.m under Ollllaideration. With reprd to W:ulty appointments at a univenity, two..,.. are
particularly noteWorthy in this ..,.
gard: ~ and - . d l or Clell·
tive activity. · Both ant lmponant;
bOth &lt;lMerVe niCIIIDitiOn- Some members of the faculty will ace! at the
f1111t; others will acel at the IIIIOODd·
a few will IIDl8l at both. -Similar """:
siderationa ob..taln with reprd to uniB. Multiple_,
venity aervice. &amp;q.lleace in this
As an added protection to bOth the
regard may ecc:ompany ....ne.- in
University and the individual faculty.
the other ol. aervice, but it may
member, University procedure calls
serve i.o i'educe lbe quanUty of outfor mandatory review of all recomput
that
would
otberwlae
be upecled
mendations for appointment, re-apin leaching and acbolanhip. In reachpointment, promotion or the granting
ing
a
balanced
evaluation
of a (proof continuing appointment · through
spective) fa&lt;:ulty membei-, ~ dif.
eacb' of the levels of academic organ·
ferences
must
be
taken
into
8ClOCIUilt.
ization, including the appropriate
At the same time, however, there are
Vice PresidenL In cases where the
certain minimum standards thai must
recommendation at each of those levhe achieved. Ezoellence in taachin.g
III. Procedural
els is -to deny the l!ropoeed action,
is to he valued; it cannot, however,
the process stops at the Vice PresiRequirements
COW)Ier-balanoe IIIICCI!Mfully 't total
dential level. If each Iewl approves,
The standards and procedures stat-'lack
of· achievement in· """""""' or
or \here · is disagreement with one
ed herein should be considered mincrestive activity. Similarly, excellence
level approving and another not, cases
imal for the University-at-large and
in
·.--reb
or creiltive activity is to
of appointment, reappointment at., or
will he printed as a part of the
be valued and recognized, but this will
promotion to instluctor or assistant
Faculty Handbook.
•
not, counter-balance a failure in the
professor are decided at ·the Vice
Standards and procedures specific
leaChing role. Service to ·t he UniverPresidential level, while ciLses at the
to individual departments, Schools,
.
sity
and its coinmuDity is also imporranks. of,.. associate professor, any of
and Faculties:
tant, .bu~ present widt it l!lust also he
the btles of full- professor, or of Con0) shall he specified in writing
att:aihlnenf
8s ii leacblii and i8iearch' .
tinuing appointment move on to. tlvi
• and available to all members of the
er or creator. it ·is the ·~iJity
President and hiS advisory board as
unit, and shall be forwarded to all
they do if the recommendation of'the · of f!le f.BcUity."to rec.ocnize these facts
higher faci.tlty review bodies for their
and ' to' tiae .tl\eit ,W.enta
. -.,.;
Chairman, Dean, Provost, or Vice
information;
according'Ji~'lt -is 8180 " ·:
President
differs from· the -reoomnieri'
!·2 ) shall include a specification ·
bitit:Y
or
'
U
ie'
UniveridiY"w
·
't&amp;( '
dation of the elected personnel reof those who .are eligible to vole on
what it expects is cmisotiant With the
view
bodies.
.
each ~ of petSP11,11el action, j.e.,
oppcirttinitil.s olrered.
C. Notice of Action:
appointment, reappointment, pfOIIIO'
Two further\generat' commen&amp; with
Notice of approval or denial of a
tion, and the. granting of continuing
-regardto the evaluation of teaching
personnel action should be made in
appointment;
and research or creative ·activity · are
writing to the faculty member by
&lt;3), shall state the method of preneeded
iri liliht· of the wmplexity and
the Department Chairman witrun
sentation of candidates for appointvariety of the University.· First., creseven days from the dale of ..,_
men~ or promotion, including the speative activity has been linked very
ceiving notice of the decision. In cases
cification of the minimum data which
closely with research here to e,pha.
· of non-renewal, the faculty member
must be incorporated in such a presize that the creation of works of art
must be notified in writing and, iii
. sentation, and the method of making
!l!!!lt phrase taken in ' the broadest
accordance with the Policies of the
that data available to those eligible
sense) . is an integral wmponent of
~oord of Trustees, such letters being
to vote thereon;
.
scholarship in a univenity. In the
s1gned- by the Provost and the appro(4) shall stale . the compoaition
area of performing aria, creative acpriat:e Vice Presideni. Denials by the
and methods of selection, operation,
tivity is bOth the development of new
Pres1dent (or by the approPriate Vice
and report of review or personnel
art fonns, e.g., ·music wmpoaition, and
President ill the case of instructors or
committees, Including the powers of
also
the performance of an art work
assistant professors l will be noted
such committees and, · in particular,
e.g., in theater. In theoe areas per:
in writing to the Provost of the Facwhether the committee recommends
formance is part of the ,..,...,;.,d, and
ulty involved. Approvals-will be noted
to ~ eligible voters in the unit in
question or acts for the unit in quesmo;rely by re~m of the si,ied ap- _ ~tive activity to be ezpeeted, and
It 18 to
evaluated aPPf&lt;!Priately.
tion;
·
pomtment fonn to the Provoat of the
Second, clinical competence and inFaculty.
( 5) shall stale the method of votstruction
is
a
major conceril of the
ing, and if this be by mail ballot,
UniversitY. In such .,._ evaluation
IV. Criteria
whether or. not eligible voters not
leadting
must
be an evaluation of
of
present at l)leetings at which the can~ selection, evaluation, and pzo...
the extent to Which clinic:al skills are
didate is discussed may participate
motion of members of the faculty _of
imparted. Evaluation of - . c b and
in such ballot shall be indicated and
State University of New York at Bufif eligible voters may participate' in a
falo is of major importance to the de- · creative activity in clinim! areas must
include evaluation of the development
mail- ballot although not P""""'t at
velopment of the University as a pri.&lt;&gt;! n~ cliDic:al teclmiquM and pracsuch a diaeusaion meeting. the ballot
mary center of excellence in scholartices,, JUSt as evaluation in the perCirculated shall include a brief liWD·
__ship. The basic considerations to be
fonmng arts must include that of
mary of the various consideratiODa ..,_
included in such oelection, evaluation
.
the
development of
method&amp; and
p.rding the candidate presented . at
and promotion are mastery of
patterns of performance. ·
any such meelini;
matter, !~ectiveneos in leaching, scholl6} In CUM ol. new appoin~te,
arly ability, effectiveness of Univera. E..au.~~on....,.Dulleo:
prooedurea oball insure a poe;. . aity -w:e, and potential for ClOD·
A balanced evaluatiOG of ·a (pro~ -~ for •minority and ........,
- tin~ prof-mnat growth. The cen·
spective) ~lty IIIEiber must""iake

-t

-a

trru.: _

"!'

.subieci

new

a-

REPOR!ER-FACULTV PERSONNEL ACTIONS POLICIES I DECEMBER 13,1973 I P~ge 2'

�review lhould be ~hen to performIICOOUIIt ol tho! ~ that •
. eq&gt;eCied In ol the reapcllllilbD- ~ ...... ........,JaJJy Ia tboe wbore
faculty hold tiJrm appabs-t or
ltlea the per-. Ia alllliped. To peraubject to COIIIIideratioa for farther
mit ~ and equftBie evalua·
tlaa. tba ~illtiea ol each mem- appoinblalt or promotion. 1be ap_.tate 8dmltil8balive •oiJicer lhould
ber ol ~ facult¥ obould be aped.
tied In writlna•. • a ~t to the • advile each IUCb faculty member of
..-J criteria oet forth below. A hi&amp; etlqu8, hi&amp; .miewmenta, and hi&amp;
llhortcamlnp, at . _ annually. U at
- - IP8Ciflcatloa obould be pmvidelt
1111 poMible, thi8 lhould be done by •
_with each appolnblalt, .. well
.....,. of a ClOIIferen&lt;e where the per.. at time durin, the - - ol
foniiiiDCI! ol lbe faculty member can
aD apDIIinm..t wbea 8Ul:lb lfliPCIIl•
be ~- 'The, l!mphaais here
lllbllitiee cMJiae. "8udl ....,.ficeticww
sbould be upoo aupporting and aiding
ol.datiea obould be a put ol . . _
the effort&amp; ol the faculty member rathol .............. 8Dd obould be iner than finding fault with hi&amp; achieye- .
cluded Ia the diWiar ..-ted for
menta In thoee .,._ where performreview. SadliPIIdfjcatloa ol l'l!lllpOD•
ance is deficiopt, however, this delllblllliill .. pulicuJarly Important bi
o- ....._ In wbldl a facult¥ ficieoc:y should be made quite clear.
......,_ curlee a bMvy -..viae" Obli·
c.~..,- ptloa, ....... ...mate a..Jrman ol
1be criteria set for the faculty ranks
a depertmaat, or ebairman ol a major
in pneral uae at State University at
Uniwa!tY Cllllllllittee. In 1UCb Bulfalo'. recot~Qize. their hierarchical
the l!euial ol fl8l{unDaDoe In . the
ordering. In addition; these ciiteria
admhDitathe poeltloa upCia IUCb
incorporate recognition that the backpoaomiel acdaae .. ' - - - In 811ground experience that people bring
ariea or IJI'CIIDIIIiaDe In nmlt abaald be ·may vary somewhat and, therefore,
DDdentood by all imoloed wbea the
'alternative patterns of evaluation are
appoinblalt Ia iDllialal. AI a ~ . set at some ranks. These criteria also
eral rule, fatull1 ,_,.,_ .who ,.._

m

recognize the University _policies governing leap and continuing appoint- · Mault~ 1101 be~ dDum
relationship of these
p&gt;ents and IDitlt ~ lalb, ""' Mould
to the variouo faculty ranks. More
be aliDuletl full opportunity to tkuelop
importantly, these criteria emphasize
... ..,.,..,. and ,_,.,.,_ Universiw
the prospective element in faculty aplllllYiae in IUCb a posltloa may 'be . pointments •and promotions.
taJrm into 8CCDUIIt In determining Pro·1. Instructor
motions In ruJL Such -w.e alobe, .
Practice varies throughout the UnibcJwewlr, abaaJd DOt be the basis for
versity in the use of this rank. ln
a promotioa for msy fac:ulty l'lll!lllber;
lieolchinc effeetivaleE~ and qu8llty . some scholarly areas, the rank of in(altfiouab DOt quantity - tor obvious structor has virtually disappeared. In
others, it is still a vital rank. The
reasOns) of -n:h or ereative'activrank may be recommended for one
ity shall be evaluated by the aame
who has · yet to complete the Ph.D .
standards that apply to other&amp;.
or
. o~r appropriate terminal degree
Tile~ .-n:h or . creative activity
and wlio doeS not have other scholarly
role".cil· a tae.'.itY ·D:..imber is an
or
professional attainment that would
in which · the. evalUation of performserve in place of such a degree. Such
. . - light ol """"""oil&gt;
a peii!on is at the beginning of an
academic ..career, and -- thus -must- be
~~,.,ue~ttie~ , evaluated
principally on the promise,
didaie'!' l'llli8arch,. creative .activity,
evidenced
by graduate or professional
and the promioe of oontinuingpfirst.
study,
of
a
successful academic career.
rank peoformanoe in -this area are in!
Such
evidence
should strongly support
deed primaty considerations here. In
the
completion
of the doctorate or
fact; one ol the !D&lt;J8t important facother appropriate degree or equivalent
lm:ll in distin,uishini University facor
professional
attsinment
scholarly
ulty from faculty at other levels of
within two years. The evidence must
hillher' education is the continual wiltbe
prediction
also
strongly
support
llngni!IJII to place one's ideas and
that the individual will be 8. good
works before peers for their critical
teacher and researcher-creator. For a
iudrment. Recommendations and
second one-year appointment, the pereYitluations by scholars in the approson
should virtually have completed
priate diacipline(s), public reviews,
the doctorate or o the r appropriate
discussions and citations of the refinal
degree or have equivalent scholsearch - or "works of art'' are appro. priate bases · for -evjlluation in this · arly or professional attainment, must
ha~e a satisfactory teaching record,
area.
and must continue to show high promThe 11881!861nellt of teaching elfectiveise as a teacher and researcher-creneB!I, whether' ln classroom, laboratory,
ator.
seminar, or tutorial, should rest upon
much inore solid .ground&amp; than a ran2. Assistant · Professor, no prior exdom colleCtion of.anecdotal comments.
perience
Documented systematic surveys of
Appointment at this rank is normalstudents in the claliaes taught by the
ly granted to one who has just comfaculty member under review shall be
pleted tbe Ph.D. or _equivalent tenninsubmitted. AsSessment o(class design,
al degree, or who possesses scholarly
k;nowledge apd abilities imparted to
or professional attainments which may
arid developed in students as shown
be appropriaiely used in place of such
by performance in subsequent classes,
a degree. Evaluation at this_ level is
and _ , . t s of quality of theses
principally on ' the basis of promise
and di.saertations directed are infonnashown by the individual's perfonnance
tional IIOUrCe8 which shoula be em·
during his graduate or professional
ployed. Again, one should expect that
study or teaching at other levels of
University level faculty will automateducation or work in professional life.
iailly begin from a high level of teach·
This evidence should strongly sup-'
ing competency. • .
port the prediction that the individual
will be a good teacher and a researc:bTo provide for the fair and equitable
er-creator of the ftrst 'rank.
-'lcatloa of tbMe criteria, regular
1101 ~- Ot:hiMied ~ appoint-

..:rea

.,1 .

~itadw.·•~);'=~t&amp;~~

or

..-L .
A..UtoiJl Prof- wilA priDr es'l1lanllara, to provide ................,
perien«
Qualillcation for this level ol apfor major _ . . ol fMii1li7 clllring the thhd )'em'.,~
po_i n - t includes .-Jon of the '
the basic ~ ~ ,_ ...,.,.r.
Ph.D. or equivalent appropriate ler·
tu&gt;o-y- appoin_,. foiiGwll4 .,
minal degree and appropriate ocbolar·
ly or profeaaiooal attairimenL W1i11e
further
- oiDO
IQf_ + b.........
...... . .
propdate,
,._
a candidate for such further appoint.
ment should have high promise as a
is directed for lbe lllllb ollnMractlar
teac:ber and reaearcber ·creator, be
and a.asiatant ~- Ill
ahould alSo hSYe scholarly attainments
where the att.. ol lllldltloaal term
already In hand. For th&lt;.e '""'appoin-t iol ~ vpoa eam- '
previous ezperjence is as a faculty ·
pletion of liJpe ol """" I.e., •
memberJlj!re or elsewhere, this sbould
book, play. ....tt 'fll art, lbe tenDiDal
include positive evidence of· teac:bing - degree, an iDllial .-ye.r tiJrm liPability, and completed research or crepoin-t may be made. Ill ative activity beyond that Involved in
. where the obllptloa is DDt faJ8Ued
his graduate or professional study. during that period, a clopartmiDtal.
When_ a candidate brings with him
review may lead .to li aecoad ~
prior service in the rarik of instruc· tenn as an esteaaion, or • a termlDal
tor or assistant professor without the
appoin-t ·
doctorate or its equivalent, one miiSt
ThiiS, fo• the inslnlctor or .-la_tant
be extremely sure that research or
pJOfessor ranks, a pattern of one ye.r
creative activity beyond that involved
plus one Y'l"". pillS two yean, plus
in graduate or professional study exthree y....,., or two yean pillS two
ists and is of excellent calibre. In
years plus three· years ~ with
those cases in wbich the candidate's
evaluations spaced throughout in
experience is in a non-academic posikeeping wfth the timing of notice of
tion, credit given for attainment in
non-renewal specified by ~UNY polthe field must be balanced against
icy, Promotion from Instructor to a&amp;opportunities for research or creative
sistant professor may occur during
activity, particularly where the prethat period. Because of the standards
vious experience has been in .a fulland criteria' stated herein, faculty
members can nortJ!B(Iy be expected to
time research/creative activity position. In addition, the value of such
· be reviewed for eitlier continuing apextm-academic experience as a basis
pointment or the associate professor
for teaching and research or creative
rank during their sixth year of service. Academic experience elsewhere
activity throughout a total academic
career should be carefully weighed.
or unusual performance WOuld modify
the pattern.
If seriouS consideration to promo3. Associate Pro{e880r
tion to associate professor with conCandidates for the rank of associ·
tinuing appointment is to be given
ate
professor m.ust hold the PhD.· or
during the term of appoinbnent as an
equivalent terminal degree, or have
assistant professor, the evidence supother
scholarly or professional attainporting tbe candidate's appointment
ments which may appropriately be
should also give strong positiVe indisubstituted in place of such a degree.
cation that he will qualify both in
In addition, such candidates should
teaching and in research or creative
have teaching and research or creative
activity for such continuing appointactivity
achievements · in hand, with
ment by the time such a decision is
s u c h research or creative activity
to be · made. . ,achievements extenaing well beyond
The developmental nature of the
thoj;e involved in tbe attainment of
time s pent i n the instructor and .asthe iloctoral or other. deJrei, oi ttie
sL•tant professor ranks should be recexperience substituted ~be reI or e.
ogni7.ed and - reflected in tbe length
Where
the candidate has no previous
of the t e r m appointment received.
teaching experience, or when other
Such tenn appointments are used _by
questions
of qualifications exist, tbe
the University to allow faculty meminitial appointment may be a term
bers to demonstrate their abilities to
appointment or a ~leone-year visit-contribute to the scholarly communing ·appointmenL A 'very careful evality. For persons just beginning their
uation should be made of the- teaching
careers, the period prior to major
effectiveness of tlie individual before
review should be sufficienUy long to
continuing
appointment is rae-.
p e r m i t them to initiate .their own
ommended. In all C88l!8 of p~
scholarly activities while not being so
continuing
appoin-t
as an associlengthy "" to mislead them with reate professor, the evidence of individgard to prospects of continuing apual attainment miiSt support strongly
pointment through undue delay of
the prediction that the individual insuch review. To achieve this reasonvolved will continue a high level of
able period, a major review during thti"
perfonnance as a teac:ber and rethird year of full-time service In acaseardier-aeator. It must ilso support
demic rank is appropriate. Because
his commitment to h i 1 h ocbolarly
of SUNY rules concerning notice of
standards. . Finally, evidence of effecnon-renewal, such a third year review
tive participation in University aemce
cannot be carried out within tbe trashould also be provided, if at all availditional pattern of two successive
able.
Where ..,.tidates for prOmotion
three-year term appointments. Within
to associate professor are "'-dy
that traditional pattern, it is neces. members of tbe University faculty,
sary either to review tbe beginning
data, evaluationa, and recomnwu!afaculty member after but one year
tions with repnl to their teaching
and a half of full-time service in acaand
University ..vice muat be )JIOdemic nink, or else to grant casual,
vided,
as it muat with repnl to their
virtually automatic · renewal for the
researc:b or creative activit¥.
second three-year term. An early seri1bere should MIJD' be U1Y doubt
ous review of a young scholar can be
about the quality of lbe ~ or
traumatic and unfair; a casual or curcreative activity of such u appabstee.
sory review after a year. and a hall
may lead to false expectations ol the
4. ProfRf08PIICIB of
oontinuing appointThe criteria applicabla to 8PPOint.

Page 3/ REPORTER»FACULTY PERSoNNEL ACTIO~S POLICIES I DECEMBER 13, 1973

.-

.......

o--

a

�=;;

Ap.in, 'this letter should aerve to
explain any irrelulariiles or anomalies that might ezist in the case and
should amplify the letlier ol the Cbair-

part of tbe dossier. The eftluatlon
should .. diatinguiohed acbolur, bold
a rank equal to or above that being
~-k G( I
with
propoaed and &amp;bould ._ ~ at
..........
,..ulcationa.
an institution of like 81ature to eur
man~.-ry.
..... - - - .... il • eudldale for
own.
In aelectina evalua1Gn, 1boae
Section IV The Ch81nnon'o Latl8r
•r I •• at tbil ra. l!bouJd be
individuala wbo have c:loaa. ~
.. cllad,y N!!eNWhod, •tiaaally Yi&amp;This letter transmits the dossier
ties to the faculty member rbould be
....... ......, ....... ~in
to the Provost and the Faculty level
avoided .
port anaa.
. . Joold. 8eaaad, evldrroce Gf ability
review bodies, and ahouJd contain the
The evaluators should oCOIIII!Iellt ...
Letters
of
appointment
to
these
.. cliniCt lila ~ Cit advanced
Chairillan's peraonal n&gt;eommendation
- tbe quality of the faculty
l'llftb aball CODtain explicit statement
....._.. in blr field rt.old be avalland the quantita_tive v&lt;ite of the Decurrml
.-n:b and publieedona •
that the appolnm..t is not one in
allle fiW cy ... I ' W t wlae tbia
partmental review bodle&amp;
(worb or perfonnanc.) and em the
eca&lt;Wmic rimk as defiDed by the Pol.;.! -will .. a pert Gf lila ........... duties,
The Chainnan's letlier should ·i n-·
potential
for future ..-tb and CODit:ia of lhe B«&lt;Nl of Tru.alfts ol
elude a thorough explanation .of the
.
i.e., for ...,.Jar laculty appOinttinued CODtnbution.
SUNY, and that it does not lead ~
~ Tbiid, e&amp;ctiwl eGiltributiana ..
work of the faculty member, includNatUrally, the blgber the mnk beward consideration for continuing ap- lila u~ aDd lila -....unity in
ing the impact ot that work on the
ing ,_,...,.,.ted, the more outatandpointment. Pattern and extent ol ..,.
. . _ Gf Ulliwalty Mr9lce alooulcl also
discipline, the rating or quality .of
ing
&amp;bould be the writers of the eftlview
of
such
appointmenis
,aball
be
the
publications
(or
galleries,
shows,
.. pert Gf h _,.,
uation lettara.
that appropriate to the corresponding
in h .... Gf all other appoin-ts
reviews, etc. ) , in wblch the work apAll
letters !IOiicited · ahouJd be Inacademic rank. AI!PlOPfiate advance
at all olt.r rub, h evidence suppears, the past aooomj&gt;lishments and
cluded in the cloosier. Whom a ~
notice of non-renewal of ·term appointportiac h
,.,."
¥tion lor an
future promise of the faculty memlor
a
letter
is refuaed or _iJo!oied, a
ment •shall be pven as indicated
appoin- At h mnk ol profber, 111;1d an analysis of student and
notation to that effect &amp;bould - - ..
above.
!!bould .. forward-loal&lt;ini. That .is,
·p eer evaluationa, including an analyTo aid the reviewm8, tbla aeetian .
h .......t abouJd Jive cleRaad ~
sis of the chairman's yearly reviews.
ol the dossier obould include a abort
V. The Dossier
lllpiXWt that CODtinual ftnlt..mnk perThis letter should also )lighligbt
bibliotJr&amp;pby for -=b outalde evaluaform&amp;Dce .. a ..,... aDd ,_..,.__
Tbe following pages show, sectionthe faculty member's service contributor, j!llllablisbing the evaluator'&amp; ecbolby:fleCtioo, the basic minimal ma.terial
creator is .. be apec:ted, baa been
tions to the University, the communiarly reputation and stating any apeabown, aDd will CODtinue. Promotion
to be included in the dossier as it is
ty, and his discipline. ·
·
cial reuon for aelaction.
·
to professor, or appoin-.,t at that
presented for final decjsion.
In cases of ,.,.,;, appointments,"-tbe
The letlier b:om the Chairman eekI'IIDk, is to be simply a reward
chaimum's letter should certify that
Section I The Appolntmont
ing
these
letters
of
evaluation
&amp;bould
for. aerviceo already performed. Tboee
an affirmative search lor minority and
~Form
be included as 11 part of this section.
bolcling this mnk CODBtitute h facwomen candidates has been conductAs an administrative convenience,
Section IX Lltlerw from
' ulty ha.ving primary _..;bility for
ed.
·
the
appointment
authorization
form
lnllde Eval..-..
.
h acbolarsbip of the Uni.....,.;ty, and
• Section v Condition,s of Employment
should
be
attached
as
the
first
item
At least ;two letters sbould be:fiOm '
- their attainments as acbolars in their
The letter (s ) from the .Cbairman
ol the dossier presented to the Vice
disciplines .must be of the first rank.
colleagues
Ot
"'1be~ty
~.
to the faculty member outlining the
President an.d /or President, at the
Nothing Jess than excellence is 8,():
preferably in tbe same ~t.
duties to be performed and the expectime of final decision. The appointwho can comment op.tbe facul\)1 memceptable bere.
tations of the DePII-\'bnent should be
ment form is not subject to review by .
5. Disti"lluiBhed Profuaors
be#'s -~~~ exten(and
any of the advisory bodies.
.. ;,, ,
~f.~~d~.
... ~
t
qilollil;y o1
0: r ·- •~ eeo
Three distinct titles-Distinguished
The form should be complete in all
Section VI Tho Curriculum Vlt.e
ability to work with graduate lltulleDts,
Professor, Distinguished Service Pnr
aspects and ' bear the signature of "'"
. Tile curricul\11!1 ,v itae as. the~aca­
will~ and 8ldll in working with
fessor, a.n&lt;;l Distinguished Tea&lt;;hing
Departmentl Chain'n.\'n lind ' Pio'V~t
i\emic md professional history of the
colleeguea, on mmmittees, etc.
Professor - are reeerved for a highly
when presented to the Vice President. ·
faculty member is an extremely imFor extemaJ candidates for initial
select group of OU£ faculty. Only those
The Vice President's signature should
portant part of the dossier. It should
appointment u.e.., letters should
faculty who are clearly outstanding in
be added lor presentation to the Presbe clearlY. ,Present,ed and be up to date
come
from colleagues in the departevei'Y, way should be nominated. In
ident.
in every way, including the following
ment where the candidate has most
addition, two of the titles hold special
If the Chairman, Provost, or Vice
minimal information :
recently been employed. A syno~
.significance: service to the University
· President do not ·agree to recommend
I a l full name and date of birth
of the report of a local search commitand to the discipline, and reaching at
the action requested, they may withof the faculty member
tee may be substituted for local inside
the undergraduate revel Since these
hold their signature, explaining their
1 b l academic history, including de- .
letters.
are distinctive titles, the rerommendareasons in an accompanying letter.
grees earned, institution granting the.
The letter from the Cbairman seektion lor their granting must be disdegree,
and
date
granted
ing these letters of evaluation should
Section II The VIce President's letter
t i n c t i v e . One, the Distinguished
I c) employment history, includbe
included as a part of·this· section.
This letter transmits the dossier
Teaching Professor is granted through
ing name or.employing institutions,
to the President and the ~dvisory
a special process prescribed by the
titles held, and inclusive dates of emVl Scheduled Deadlines
board. The letter should contain the
Chancellor and the Board of-Trustees.
ployment
In order to help assure a more orVice President's personal recommenIt is-suggested that units desiring to
I d l professional and academic
derly opportunity lor CllJll!ll to be condation, includjng the reasons lor his
rerommend a faculty member for a
hbnors
sidered at each of the nece1!B8fY levels '
support or lack thereof. This letter
Distinguished rank check procedures
I e l memberships and offices held
of review, the following deadline dates
should also, when necessary. explain
and documentation needs with the
cfl university servioe
are being established. 'Theae dates
any ·irregularities that may exist and
~larY of the President's Board.
Cg l other service (community,
refer to receipt of the full documenadd information that may be ·helpful
etc.)
6. Emerilua Acadetnic Rank
tation in the Office of the President.
to
the
President
and/
or
the
Board
.
•Academic mnk emeritus is granted
I h l bibliography, separated by
Vice Presidents, Provosts, Deans, and
The Vice President's letter should
by action of . the Board of Trustees
boOks, monographs~ articles, reviews,
Chairmen will have to establish their
also .certify that a positive search lor
films, TV tapes, talks, presentations,
upon recommendations of the Presown schedules of procedure.
minority
and
women
-candidates
has
showings or perfonnances, using full
ident and Cbancellor. Tbe title is not
Janu.ry 1
.
been carried out in cases ·or riew apbibliographic style shOwing all aulll8l1!ly an ....,_;fie one, bu~ carries
All cases recommending promotiOn
pointments, showing the actions of
thors and inclusive' page numbers.
with it certain privilep&amp; of conseto the rank of lull professor (includ,
the properly designated University
qlBICe to- tt. department and to the
Section VII Tuchlnc Eva!Uoltion
ing qualified titles of lull professor) ,
oommitl&lt;i!!s.
I
Uni...,.;ty. Thua, the recommendadistinguished professor (including
The results of teaching evaluations
tion for llll:b an action mnst receive
Section Ill The ~. Lotter
carried out during each year of fac"service" and "teaching") and emeri·
the ......, - - and is oubject to the
(Su Nan&lt; under II, "School and/ or
ulty eXperience should be included in
Ius status.
......, buic ~ - other pei'80IIIIel
Facully.") .
.
the dossier, with a summary -and an, . April 1
......,...,.tations """"""' by this docThis letter transmits the dossier to
alysiR "" part of the Chairman's let- ·
All jbose cases recommending conument.
the appropriate Vice President and
ter.
tinuing appointment or promotion to
should contain the Provost's pe!BOIIIil
In addition to the results from some
associate professor.
• 7. QUIIJified Ac:olktnic Rank
recommendation and auj:Jporting reatype of standardized measun!ltlent
· Qualified !Db are u.l to desigObvioualy, the~ are meant to be
aona. It should also contain the quaninstrument, such items as letters frotn
nate - . d l , cliniC:el, adjunct or visdetulline dates; the earlier the coies
titative
vote
of
the
Faculty
Pen1001181
former
students,
reports
of
student
.
iting . faculty and may . . full-time,
come forward, the better. Clogging
Committee, and such ou- FaCulty
and/or faculty evaluation committees'
put-time, or voluntary. Tbe proper
the &amp;ehedule toward the end of the
level advisory bodies as may be auand, where applicable, the placement
second semester causes delsy in lull
d.crlpti.., prefix obould ~ the
\borized
by
that
Faculty.
and
career
record
of
former
students,
consideration
of critical cases involvrank, i.e., Clinical AaeiataJ}t Prole&amp;should be included.
.,., Adjunet lnstnlctor, etc. Qualified
ing continuing appointment, and in
Tbe Provost's letter should also
processing new appointments.
titiellllll:b as Artist in Residence, etc., •
Section VIII Lltlerw from
discuss the work of the School or. Demay alao be u.l where -riate.
par-.t makina: tbe recommendation,
6utoide Eval""to&lt;o
I Nou: These policies will be printincluding its future growth and direcA minimum .of four letters, aolicited
r-mrer i&amp; also • qualified title but
ed and distnbuted as a supplement to
tion and the place of the faculty memby the Cbairman or &amp;·designee (never
is .-ict8d lor ,_ ol Ieima . ol no
the Faculty-Staff Handbook in ihe
ber in that clepar-.t'a aclivlde8.
lanpr than one year.
' by the fa~ty member) , should be a
near future. &gt;
~-lila 1811kaf ...,...__lboee

.._., ............ •l!lllllialble .. lila

::::=:J

Such qualified titlea have their obviouo l!bort-term but &amp;bould alaii
. . employed for lboee faeulty wbase
primary Cllllltributian will ._ in one
area of academic fulfillmoDt, i.e.r
teaching with no .-n:b CODtribu,
lion, .......m with no taaching ..,.
sponsibility, service in academi~ sup-

member'.

a.- -

...

•f:

REPORTER.FACULTY PERSONNEL ACTIONs POLICIES I December 13, 1973 I

P~ge 4

�GRmunHI(,
Clubi-

_Qfficers' Roster
The following Ia a list cl club alicerB for
this year: African Club, President-Abdul Lebi;
Vice President-Anlmle Madoukou; Anm Cui/ turlll Club · (Graduate), President - A. AbuAyash; Arab Cultural Club (UnderJraduate),
Presidellt-Mulld Abu-Zahra; Cbineoe Student
Association (Graduate), President - Wai-ning
Mei; Cbineoe Student Association ( Undergraduate ), Presidenk-Frilnces Yung Wan-fai; Gmek
Club, President-Peter Groumpce; India Student
Association, President-B. Solanki; Vice President--Sudhit Mehta; Iranian Club, PresidentHossain , Kam Y abi; Vice President-Shabrang
Mani; Israeli Student Association, PresidentMichael Mayer; Vice President-Bilha Keidar;
Japanese Student Association, President- Yutaka Kojima; Liitin American Students Association, President-Carlos Arteaga; Pakistani Students Association, President -Mobashir Chowdhry; Vice President-Saeed Khan; Viet.narilese
Club, President-Pham aub , Dung; Vice President - Thai Pham; Coordinators, SA - David ·
Sancho; GSA-Mabar&amp;j Ticku.

·~ Latin

American Club

The Latin American Students' Association
sponsored a Latin Dance in the Fillmore Room,
Ocrtober 20. This event, which was very success.ful, was held in conjunction with POBER.
On Friday, Nove_mber 9, a well-received lecture was given by Professor of Linguistics Wolfgang Wolck on the subject of Educational and
Socio-political Aspects or Language in Latin
America.
On November 16, the Latin American Students' Association sponsored an International
Coffee Hour in Townsend, during which a threemember iroup played typical Latin American
songs.
November 29, the organization participated
in the International Food Tasting by preparing
dishes and presenting a cultural exhibition.
. A series of lectures will continue, , as mentioned in the last U/ B lnternatiDnal. Among
the scheduled topics are: "Cultura Afro Latino- ·
americana"' CAbdias I&gt;o Nascimento); ''Colomliian Politics" I Adolfo La Rota and Fernando
Salamanca ); "Education: Domination or Liberation?" (Jose Aliaie and Maria Maldonado !;
"Gabriel Garcia Marquez" ( Martha Gorman ) . .
Additional lecture topics are to be announced
in the future.
In the bi-monthly Friday meetings, efforts
are being continued to establish relations with
Latin American embassies in this country and
to continue to present various aspect&lt;; of Latin
cul ture to the University Community. All events
will be announced beforehand, and any further
information may be obtained by contacti ng Jose
Alzate at 834-4163.

Vietnamese Project
a contingent of 1so0 ' foreign students, and we
would like to see the eventual creation of a group
identity among the people attending. The group
! not a collection of people) will hoP&lt;llully act
as a basis lor further international experiences.
Again, we rely on solid programs as well as
enjoyable interactions. /
Lastly, the presidents, officers, and members
of the sponsoring clubs, in concerted effort, have
contributed a lot in · preparing the coffee hour.
The effects may be 'Jar-reaching. There is a
growing sense of community. We would like to
invite more clubs to sponsor, more people to
attend, and by this involvement we hope we will
realize some of our objectives.
--()FF1CE OF FOREICN STUDENT AFFAIRS

·BCWA Rec·eption Set
The Buffalo Co unci I ~ World Aftairs
( BCWAJ will hold its annual welcome for foreign
students and scholars on Friday, January 18,
1974, between 9 and 11 p.m. on the 10th ' floor
of Goodyear Hall. Invitations will be extended
to all new students and scholars. Those who are
interested in joining a family for dinner prior
to the reception will be matched to a family' in
the community.
Fo.r more infonnation, rontact · the Oflioe or
Foreilft Student Allain.

There are 102 S.O.S. Children's Villages
around the world: 12 in Germany, 9 in Austria,
9 in France ... but there is only one in South
Vietnam where more than 500,000 orphans arc
waiting for relief and love.
"Aid to the Children of Vietnam," an .organization founded by the Vietnamese residing in
the United States for the sole purpose of collecting contributions for the care of war orphans in
South Vietnam, is working together with an international organi?.Stion, "S.O.S. Kindred of International," to build orphans' villages.
The first S.O.S. Children's Village in South
Vietnam was completed a few years ago.. Over
400 .children, victims o( war and misery, are now
finding a home . and joy in life again. For the
construction of a sect&gt;nd village which will be
built in the very near future, "Aid to the Children
of Vietnam" organizes ll "Chrisb:nas_Card Campaign" every year throughout the United States,
Canada and .Ome countries in Europe to raise
funds for its purpose.
The Vietnamese Club at U/ B will help this
organization to distribute these cards during
early December in Norton -Unioii.
Please come and buy Christnias Carda .there,
or contact: DUNG PHAN, 37 .Minnesota Avenue, ..
Buffalo, New York 14215 (716) 838-2224.
COMING EVDITS
January 26.t1974, lndieri Republican Day Celebration;
February 16, 1974, China Night; _ March ·2, 1974,
lnl!moilonal Fiesta; March 21, 1974, ...,,..ian NYear Celebration.

Israeli Students
The Israeli Students' Association has several
varied roles. First, it is desilfted to help and
assist Israefi undergraduates, graduates and post
graduates currently enrolled in the University.
The Association and its membe111 help new students settle down and get acquainted with both
U/ B and Bufialo.
Secondly, the organization attempts to acquaint interested non-Lo;raeli students and others
with Israel, its culture, its way or life, and its
struggle. The Association sponsors lectures with
prominent Israeli guests, and plans exhibitions
about Israel, too.
Finally, the organization plays an important
role in the social and spiritual life of 1srae1i
students by arranging parties and holiday eel~
brations. Any students who are interested in
our activities, please call 832-4950.

Pakistani Students '·
a;

· SflturdaY;' ·November
-~ the date of"an·
Eid Dinner and Poetry Reading to celebrate the
¥oslem Festival of Eid, sponsored by the Pakistan Students' Association. Eid is celebrated
each year by Moslems all over the world to mark
the end or the month or fasting.
The event was well-attended by about 125
people. The menu was strictly Pakistani in style
and flavor and included such delicacies as Kofta
curry, Chicken Biryani, Jalehi, Beef Stew Ala
Cashews and Almonds, etc., etc.
After the dinner, the Mushaira or Poetry
Reading got under way. Poets came from 8s far
as Rochester and Cleveland, plus some local
poets, to recite Uleir work.

Chinese Students
1.

Chinese Speakers

Chinese students who are interested in speak- _
ing at Bennett High School 6ome time next
semester on topics such as Chinese language and
Jiterat~re, art., poetry, music, science, etc., please
contact Mrs. Pruitt at 831-3828. Try to make
use or this opportunity; it will be a meaningful
experience.
2.

China Night

The 'China Night' will be held Febnwy 16,
1974. 'Students are sincerely invited to participat.; in the various performances and to take up
other responsibilities. So far we ha:ve planned
for a one-act play, songs, dances and Cbineoe
music. Other suggestions are welcome. We also
need students to help make the costumes. Pt.E .
contact Mei Wai-ning at 834-8473, Hsu Te-ChaDg
at 893-3543 or Yung wan-fai at 838-1864. The
success of this cultural event depends on aU cl ua.
3.

Chinese Students Aslodatlon -

Students interested in working on the editorial board of the Chinese Students Association
Newsl~tter next seinester, pleaSe also call Mei,
Hsu or Yung.
4.

The Arst U/8 Chlnne Sluclant

Pine ,.,.,. T -

'l'he U/B Chinese Student Association held
its first ping pong tourn&amp;ment on· Friday night,
November 16, at Norton Union. After 5 bows'
or exciting competition, the champions" cl the
various ·matches were: Men's Single: Alemnder
Che; Women's Single: S. ·H. Wu; Men's Double:
N. J . Lin and H. C. Lin; Mixed Double; S. H.
Wu and S. Y. Wong.

;-

�A -~.

u ~ ucept Jn . . ~
. . . . tO - - . .tbJoucb tbe

law, IIDCie\y's outrqe a~
tioa ol tbe """"""io'm d. the crime.
we ua .no.. about tba laws we
ba..., apiD8t rape and if we ill&gt; Indeed
inlaid 111 do IIOIIIIItbiDi' to once gain
eztend tbe law's .piOieCtioa to 88 a c1as, !ben laay it is ~- did ·
- away witb tbe last~ of t1!e cor~~ ~ts in
support of com&gt;boration. attemptinr
to "determine whether any· of tbem
either sinlty or together justifies wbat
certainly appears to be a denial to '
women of equal protection of the deterrent elrect of the criminal law."
Tbe JustiCe re~ the IICCI188tion
that "falae rape chari!e!l _are fteqUeOtly made." 'A&gt;ese charges, 90 the .a&lt;&gt;cusation goes, "are often motivated by
Shame foJiowing consensual inter: .·
course, by a desire to lind a blameless
excuse for pregnancy, by liatted, ..,.
venge, blackmail or a desire lor .no.
toriety." Yet, Cool!e said, ''theri are
equally sUGilg, if not st;ronger, deterrents to making such an ai:cusation."
Society, be pointed out, attaches a
·stigma to the ~·
. . The resultant
.
'lia · " 'The
publicity "mayhwm tjng.
process of answering debiiled questions "of the DJ08t intimate aspects of'
one's life to strangers can intimidate
an
bot the hardiest of victims." eon,
fronting the assailant and possibly
. exposing oneself to retaliatioil are also
powerful deterrents to -m&amp;king the
charge. Cooke feels that "tbe fear of
.false charges iS exaggeratecl. In fact,
according to the commander of New
York City's Rape An!&gt;lysis "Squiiil,
only about two per cent of all rape

.-u

t.bele.-\

~u:::IT971,.
~

a-~

1971 -81111 1972; and in the
finlt six IDDDtba ol 1973, there has
'-n a 19 per c:ent inaeaae," Justice
Ccioke pointed ooil '"'bese figures are
aU the more alarming ~ one considers that reported IIIP5 repteSent
IJII)y about 201J81'&gt;c:enl ol those actual! ClOIIIJDitted. FBI statistics indicate
~t a woman is raped every 21 min. utes in America."
In New Y&lt;&gt;rt City in 1971, only 100
rape charges from 1lDIOllg 2415 CD~
plaints were ~ted to· the Grand
Jwy, Justice Cooke said. 'l11ese ..,.
suited in ;14 indictments and. J.S convictiOD&amp;. In the first six months of
1972, cbaJ:Bes ........ clismissed ouuight
in more than half ol 613 cases iniiOlving aerious sex ollenaes and only 9
conVictions Were obtained on original
diarges. onhe rest, '138 of the acc:osed were convicted of lesser charges
and 110 cases are still pending.
·
"The situalion is far. from satisfac- "
tory," Justice Coolre concluded.

- . - t ......

In tho

u.s.

PriOr to 1972, be ni&gt;ted, New York
bad aoe. of tbe stridast ClDlJ'Oboiatioa "
rilles in"-tbe ""'!DiiY.. "requiring that ~
corroboration extend to "every mati!Dar;racit".......U.I:ial. to constitute tb8 ,
.erime," including ideiitity of the alleged rapist, penetration of the victim,
and lade: of consent. "Since few rapillts
. 1( attack in the presence of .witn.....,.;;•
be·llllid, suCh evidence was simply not
available in DJ08t cases "despite the
~ of other credll&gt;le proof."
ether barriers to BUCCell8ful prosecutions were enicted through tbe proc"""of judicial decision-ma)dng: ''Prosecutors· could not "circumvent tbe strict
corroboratioa requirements . . . by·
charging leol!e&lt; olrenses for ·which no
corrciboiation was """""""'. And, to
add insult to mjury, if the unfortunate
. . . victim was assaulted or robbed,
floe ..-ied corroborative evidence to
proye U... charges' as well."
In 1972, Justice Coolre continued,
tbe Penal l.aw was loosened .somewhat. Corroboration of penetration is
no 1onRer required, only corroboration
' of an attempt -to engage the victim in
eemal cooduct. In a fQrcible rape
proa(!CUtion, identity . of tbe alleged
rapist need- not be corrobora.ted, al~ though .t.bele IDII8t be corroboration of
use of force. And corroboration is no
longer ..-ied to prove liUch crimes
• robbery · or .a ssault which accompany ·d&gt;e, r8!'8:
Yet, convict:ioos remain "erlrenM!Iy
dillcult to obtain,"- eopecially .where
a victim is raped at gunpoinl Here,
"1bare will be lilltle resistance and
little, If any, phyBical evidence of
force unleE the -uant is Captured
and tbe WMpclll ....,.,.,...,_ • • • A sui-·
llcieDtly and cliaproponionately largenumber still avoid justice due to this ·
Jaw."
.
.
'

---: -

E*-"'1-..
Juslice. Cooke noted that the ·penai-

U. fDr rape are

....
,
,

"~ly seyereI.'U8t Degl)!e Rape carries a maximum
25'year
Yet the bi.w revaoti
tbe dee.PJy ambivalent attitudes that
-=iety Pas to Ibis most predatory of
aiL
tbe picture of iimoamce
violated coedsta witb tbe vision of
fantasized rape, or that of a complainaDt who was 'ukiac for iL' u....,.,, on
tlie oae baud we have utnmely aev:c
em penaltiea and, Clll tbe other, "'!'''
bave the most . - I rules of evtdellce which have tbe elleet cl.~ '

..r.teoce.

m--

antodbere!"alsetedansexd chargthis...
esaboareudtethteeO:

Ia 110 tl'lidlllce to 8IJIIPIIri tbla." Jurioa
Ull Clflea - - dominated, be COil·
taadecl, and ediBmely ~t- t;o
OODvict !JI .._ .,._ UDl-. PlOOf 18
~
. Cooke __ _.

M....,_, J -

Dahlberg
~-Named to
.
· Facilities. Unit
Alberl

=

~ baa hem ap-

lor facilitiell ~ II

bel:t J. anm.

- .. ~. ,

.

tbe remedy fa&lt; the emotiOnal -situation of a black man and white woman
·• is not "coriOboration • .. for, deeplte

w

· "poillted aaai8tant 'io the~

Who-.,.

a

r.cutty' P08UiaD In tile Ileputijiiat cl'
Induairf8l Engineerlnl at Ge1q1a

-

Tech elfar:tiwJn ~~.
I:lablboq, wbo bas hem director o1

[~ ~thet),Souoe~~~-- tbe Cl\aJitauqua County Career Edu;.d'~ted. 'Ib!&gt; ~ ratbcation Project fttt tbe" Board ol

er is to insure that blacb are not u-~)bt ~:fJ1 1ba~
Cluded from the grand or petit juey or
sllila@r space alJcailan and~
· !o seek reversal of a oonvtetion where
cation-Oil the tbree U/8 ~ ud
an obviously bisaed jury bas ~
.............
He -"" ~•'- ,_ _ _,,_
'garded 8Uong evidence of inn~"
in ~
w"'....,..........,
, 'The 'finill argument, "that the..gzav~ lot' :mand~~
ity of. the chuge mandates conobora·
:PiaDninl 88
as aiqlenrise tbe
tion can be dismissed swfunarily,"
8nd non-ilcademlc utlliza• Justice Cooke said, "smce otbeuqual- ·
·tlon -olfioes.
ly -ious crimes requino no corrol:ioCctmmoafint Oil tbe appointment, •
."'lltion.W
• ._: • .h. as ;.,:..,;_. the
' --boration'
Jabn D. Telfer; UfB vice pa'esident
...1
,...,.....,..
~·for facilitias pJannlns, noted "Mr.
requirement and contin\J!'S to do ·so,
Dahlllerl brinp an 811a!Pu-l aoope
be said, "is-the 'gUt' feeling that wom- ·of responolble administr!llive
rias a clas&amp; ainDot be trusted to tell
ence in edueatinn to 1his talk ~ch
· the.~thresueven
,_ unof~~-~d;:~-_,_."__ • "involves productive mteraction witb
.,..,
~
......, .....,.......,.
aU
of tbe University.
ttera
tion are apj&gt;arent: women are-outside
,r,ol
ma
the ft .
tecti of the Ia and
~ ---- '! ective pro_
on, "'
"Tbe - - ' · ' nature ol tbe nat few
cnminahi know &gt;t. • . ~.
y~- an··~a· -'-'-,_......_.--~
-·
..._.. - - · - - . , . ... "
gr&amp;n;!S will - be 1J10Vini ...,.._tally
~
from cratilped or temporary quarten
on tbe uisting campus or in .,.ttered
1•0·
leasecLfacilitli!lt to tbe developing Ani- I\. I · ·
·,L l. r 't
berst campus J)IOvideo il UDiq!J8 ~
1)1,e W _Or:'!\: :Y.!~{ . .
;
~ of I!UPlJ(IItive nr vI Cil to tbe
·
lJmveraity commUnity. It will be Mr;
The University Qpera ·. Studio, will
• D8hlberg's ' duty to b:rit!l u inucih orperform at the tweoty-runtb annual
der as pOosible to tbl!iee trabeler aetivconvention of the National Asaociation
. ~ties 90 as to provide tbe least clisnu&gt;of Tea!'bers of Singing in New York
"tion to tbe educational tbrust of· tli!o

iocbeduliDi

en

1

--u

..'!.'!''-n•--l

...__

O pera Stud
. . Plans
.
y

}!Z.::M~:f:J:en~A~

v~~~,.%·

~eatieil:~~~at·llla ~'

I
....Batty
the OPera Studio•. 'has announoeCi ..,.paitiCulal talents will .be 8Jidolil tcf the
ceipt of an invitation to perform dill'facilities team."
•
'
. ing tbe conv~tion,'s-showCJIS" at 11:00 .
A ·native of J8DIII8towzi; ·~
lllllnllet Requirement -Unjustified
a.m.' in tbe ·AStor_GaUery·attbe Waf~~.=~·~~- Cer.t ainly, he said,,~- •;q~ •.not, . .&lt;Jorf-Alitoria.,..Holal:~ J - Olfen' "'
·
oGelleje&gt;•lll
·
justify a blanke£ reqwremem .t hat aU
bach's ''Not in Front of tbe Waiter"
· aJid bf8 M . Ed. from ·Wayne' BW; ·in ·
such charges1ie corroborated, particuor ''Under. lbi', Asjlidistra'.'..and ,:'Four.
Detroit He is p~~
-WaotiJ!g tolarly when there is n0 corroboration
Dialoglies for Two. Voices and ~'I'w!&gt;..
wards bia Ph.D. in · • · edDi:at!On
4
•
·
requirement for otiler serious crimes,
Pianos" by the contemporary Amari- _ . at Wayne State.
physical assault for emmple, which
can, Ned Rorem, will-be perfpnDJ!d.
Prior to- joining tbe BOCE8 project
can as easily be falsified ,and which
, The p~ ~II also fll!ltwe perin 1972, be served u an.~lack .the disinC&lt;&gt;ntives of a -r.ape -- forinanceiby tbe Natiiiilal AsBoclation
ate and graduate a.dmilsioDs coUimelor
charge."
·
of TeaCherS of Singing New ~orJ&lt;
ani! emcutive assistant to the dean for
'The belief that a charge of rape is .
Chapter under the ilirection of ~graduate study at Wayne Sfilte..He is
difficult to disprove can be traced to
eric Popper lind the Lilditbouse Muidc
also a foniier inatntctor and atbletic
English Comm&lt;m -Law, Cooke Bl!id.
School under Richard Krause i,n a
ooach at Lat'nJ&gt;bere ~ Sdiool in
~w.!"'i':'!i:'!/i=1~t;:-';i:'d.,1:;!:
pro~ of opera lor the bijnd.
Madisot! Heights; Micbipn.
dan! has no alibi; or was with the complainant but never bad sexual relations witb her or bad sexual relations
with ber consenL 1n such cases, be
agreed, corroboration protects the innocenL uBut is this tbe only way in
which such a result can be obtained?
And is the price- tbe exoneration of
Assistant ~fessor, Che171Utry. ,
.
the guilty as well - acceptable?"
Hill-Noether Research Inatructor, Mathe17UJtiC8.
Available empirical evidence is, JusAssistant Profelisor ot Comparative Literature and French or Encliab,
tice C'.ooke contended, that tbe corroboration requirement is hot neoes-.
Arts and Letters.
· ·
:- ·
sary ~ to inslJ!e exoneration of ~ inno-Full Professor, Anthropokigy.
cent. Why? Studies have shown tbat
Assistant Professor, Physic8 • Astronomy. ··
where corroboration is not required,
Associa'le Professor, Physics &amp; A,stronom)l,
few cases are presented to a jury
AsSistant or Associate Professor, Adult Henlth Nursing.
without it and convictions solely on
InStructor
or Assistant Professor, Adult Heolth Nuning.
the word of tbe complainant are e&gt;:·
Instructor
PJtysU:at Educatwn.
tremel~ rare - "partly because juries
ABsistant Professor, French. •
are reluctant to send a man to prison
for a long term unlesB the evidence
NTP
.
is overwhelming and partly because
juries bave apparently created an ex~istant Director {or Registratwn, Admissions
Recorda, PR-2:
tralegal doctrine of contributory conPersonnel ASBOCiate, Persollllj&gt;l Departtiient, PR-3. ·
duct on the part of the complainapL
- TechitiCGI Speeililist, Assistant Facilities Proift1!11 Coordinator, Facil-..
Thus, in cases where a complainant
ities Planning, PR,.l.
·
:· /
•
·•
has been previously acquainted witb
Assilt&lt;Jnt.Director, Assistatlt Coordinator for Vocational &amp; Technical-the ilefendaht or accompanied him to
Education,
Educational
OpportUnity
Center,
PR-2
.
.
his. apartment or invited him to hers,
·in the absence of an aggravate:d as. , For adci;tiOhal inf~miati~ ·co~cernin11- these jo~ and for de ~,ails .of ,
sault. acquittal is virtuallY a certainNTP O()eninp throughout tbe. State University system, consult bulletin
ty." While not condoning thiB ·theory,
boards
at 1heae locati0118:
:
·
•· ' "
··
Justice Cooke said its eiisteilce "demonstrates tbe frivoloUSDe88 of the arguL :B.;ll F,acilit~ betwee~ Dl'52 and D153;. 2. Ridge Lea, Building
ment that rape is difficult to disprove." • •
4236, next fo"caleteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building' '4230, in corridor nat tO'
·s,mp.thy Arpimont
C-i; 4. Health Sciences Buildiilg, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen
Another justification for ci&gt;rrobora. , Hall, in tbe Corridor betWeen Room- 141 :atiii' the Lobby; 6. :lliCI&lt;woOil,
tion, be said, is the belief that, witllout
. ground ftoor in corridor next to vending ~; 7. Hayes Hall, lit'
it, the "defendant Would be ~_pped of
main. entrance foyer, across from . Public InfoQD&amp;tii&gt;ii Olllce; 8. Acheson
the presumption of iimoamce and' vic- , _
.Hall.,in corridor between Rooms 112 .ltd 113; .9. Parker Engmeerlng,timized by tbe sympathy of t!&gt;S jury
~ Corridor next "! Rooin 15; 10. ~Yfll\1" ~1. ;1st f!oor~J!fouainc ~ ·.
for tbe "wronged woman." However/
life&amp;; 11. 180'7 Elmwood, ·.Personnet QeJI8flnl!tnt; l2..11Nprton Umon,
be contended, "witb, tbe exception o
Dirtictol's''OIIIce,:
ROom .225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, iti corridor next to
the situation~ when! a black man is ·
Room-106. 14. Jobn LOrd O'Brian ·HaD, fourth ftoor (Amhl!rst Campus).
aCC\&amp;d'of raping a wliite WblnaD; liiJd~
"'
''"-~~.
•
i :-.;
~~,~·:t ,cJ ··' .•.,... t .. ..
.•
is tried before '!It all-white juiy, there'

fe't.!'!s_• ~te of false charges of other

-

-

Job Openings

-&lt;Daiice&gt;,

ana

�·Waiverrc........,,_ ,.,,..,_.,

-~-=-~ .be a - 1 :

AllOllae
taitlunof- - ~
-at 1.tbe
Student
within tbree - a fram ... liNt ...
of ciase. EDleptiabs far~ SllideniB only III8.Y . , llllfbariJJed by Dr.
Gelbeum or Dr. P1umi11 but they 111111&amp;
be beld to a liiinimwn. EllcePiiaaB far
other categories of tuition.,.;_. be authoriZed by tbe respoasible VIce
President """ they alao be held
to a minimiiiiL
2. Tuition waivera must be routed .
through and approved by the appro- •
-priate a&gt;ntrol individual befcre tbey
are for:warded to the Oftlce of 8l:udeat
Accounts.
3. AU ln_.te full-time otudeDta
l Graduate Students. Carrying eicht ar
more credits and UllllertlradWdB Students carrying a.elve ar more·credita)
must file for Sc:botar .Incentive for Cliie
semester (and 80 In writinc if
the certif"IC&amp;te has not been noceiwd)
before IJilY tuition wai- for that _.
mester is approved by the appropriate
oontrol individual. 'lbls doee not apply

..

~-

==..~

00

iiJeu but
ent ~ or poupa

a&gt;lleps In

a

em a

"''iaD worldill· ..,...._

c:am-

moa ...t. We'N -..mltted to study
all ~ recelwd, 111111 we anticipate a by-product of Ibis review will
be that people with alliad idees will
be put In loal:b with CID8 imother.
"We're mtae.lled In waya to
look at ulatiDa )IIOIIiuDe. ani! we _.,
as well the truly bmovat!YJI idea. We'll
. _ t the arioaymiey of those wbo
feel their !d. too frqlle. or In too
formative a staae. to lt!lld lbeir
to lt publicly. We _., IJUigestions as
elementary as bow to pt IIIDft! people
out to amcerta.· as well as aophisticated rellnements of our IDOIIt advanced pqiama. We hope that your
.
PlAt - tbe

name

~1;;~~~-sicy)i,ttmg.

m
·=

ii;'W,:'W.u~~u.~,r'-~~;,
~ ·=,.,~~
dent

C01111i

the J!laii

qf tile:.varlous arts ""' your ~
and.aa.IIY. the atatwi.of tbe-arls; Uni-

1: i ! , ·.~~· :

versicy.wide; and from these COIIIIideratioos ""' ask you to share with us
your bopea and plans for tbe future."

Among speoific areas Boye( IJUI·
gested for ezploration are: tbe arts
and tecbnoiOCY; tbe Universicy and its
communicy retations; new opportunities for exhibits and perronnance: new
means of supporhng creative and
scholarly endeavor; more eftective
ways of teacbinJ tbe arts; relroupiljg
of present forcea; new thought !)n tbe
University's dual role as creatorpatron of .the arts. '
Acconllng to Patricia Kerr Ross,
~:Universicy-wide Programs In .

''P!os&gt;&lt;-ls abould be cyped, single
em no more than two sheets of
paper, using a two-inch left-band margin. W"' want no developed proposals.
We want only a precis, and we want
eadi to include a feasibilicy aeci.ionthat is, simple builpt and.spece needs,
etc. We need original t~pts, not
zerox copjee to facilitate reproduction
-

~proposals

will be reproduced

aDd dialiibUted io.t tbe' Celebration, unIe. you indicate that .you do not want
your~ ~

publicly."

~ lbould be sent to Ms.
Rca at State Universicy of New York,

Horticulturists and environmentalists say the mulch bas a variety of
uses. It can be !lsed to: retain moisture
in soil; prevent the growth of weeds; ·
provide nutrition for several kinds of
plants; create a slightly acid soil a&gt;ndition required by some plants, and ·
provide protection from frost for bulbs.
It can even be applied on top of SDO"(.
around stems of newly planted trees
and shrubs or as a a&gt;ver for beds of

Commun,ique---;

Qt-uons may be directed to Ms.
Rca at &lt;618) 474-tll62.

Modem Heblft' Literature, and the
State of brael. The coune is tentatlwly

An Ulldlqnoduata llludy in
John Lord O'Brian Hall on the Amhem' CAmpus will remain open until
!!'idnilht until tbe end of 8I&amp;DI8 on
December 22. tbe Oftlce of Facilities
Plannln, aald Ibis WMk.

_ Accoraln, to tbe announcement,
Room. 108 and 109 In O'Brian will

be open to J!llilnllbt with doon and
elevatora leedinlto upper Soon being
locbd at 10 p.m.
.A ~ check will be made at
IDld.nlP,t to that the bulldlni
Ia freoi of occupanta """ - - -

.. -._,

~&gt;'•

-~i

.,.,~

rtp~ffiili~~~:,~~l'~~l

•''l ........ , ,

&lt;:;hti~tiJia~ .Tree.Recycling ~
UjB's Community Advisory Council will sponsor its Second Annual
Christmas Tree Recycling Project on
the Main St. campus, Saturday and
Sunday, January 5 and 6, from I 0
am. to 6 p.m. each day.
, All members of the University oom·
mun.ity and area residents are invited
to bring trees tb campus on one of the
days and to receive in retufll a bag of
garden mulch. The trees will be ground
in tree-&lt;:hipping machines supplied
and operated by the City of Buffalo,
the ' Town of Amherst and Niagara
Mohawk Power Corporation.

99 WublnP&gt;n Avelwe, Albany, New
York 12210. before January 16. Propoalo ibOUid includ&amp; tbe Individual's
:::-- title, campus, and phone .num-

Amherst Study Area

4~~=b.orwi~~=--Scholar

lncentive awards- must also file for
State Universicy Scholarsbip at tbe
Ollioe of Student Accounts.
5. Eligible students ( New York
State Residents) must f'lle for Scholar.
Incentive by June for the fortha&gt;ming
academic year.
6. The "OIIioe of Student Accounts
must have a Power of AttQmey on file
for every student receiving Scholar
Incentive.
7. Full' time in-state students receiving tuition waiver will be charged
for full tuition until tbe Scholer lncentive award certificate is received at
the Office of Student Accounts.
8. A waiver is valid ouly for thllt
portion of the semester during which
the student holds the appointment. A
process will•be insugurated at tbe authorization points to detect terminations (e.g., TA's, GA's, etc.) during
the year and to cancel the belance .o f
any tuition waiver held in oonjunction
with the appointment.
9. No tuition waiver will. be grant..

... differ-

(Co.Uinued from

(IGI&lt;

B. col. 4)

Americ&amp;D Judaism, Jeww in Russia. Zioll-

ism,

achedulecl to meet Tueoclay (104 Parker)
and 'llbunclay (150 Parker), 12-1 :~ p.m.
- D IUIISTII HlstOaY couaR

Hiatory 462, A-"&lt;an Po,.,.W Cal- ·

tural History 1900-194/i, will -~ in 148

Diefendorf on Tueoclaya, 9-10:20 a.m. ,

:tte:r;,.,'!7'Jr::Jff..:~~=-~~

tatlon of fllma, recorda and video ta-.

ftowers. Saved until spring, the mulch
can benefit tomato plants and other
vegetables as well as raspberry and
strawberry plants.
·
Tho.o;e with trees to recycle should
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Faculty, staff and students are needed to
serve as- shovelers, handlers and supervisors for the Christmas tree recycling
event. Those interested in assisting, on
either or both days. should contact Mrs.
Juanita Monteith, Office of the Vice Pre$·
ident for University Relations, 8314501.

enter the U / B campus either from
Bailey Ave., using the entrances near·
est Main SL and Capen Hall, or from
Main Street, using the Main St. entrance near Baird Music Hall.
Volunteers will direct tra5c, remove
trees· from the cars and &amp;II and dis"
tribute the begs of mulch. It will not
be necessary for drivem to leave tbeir
cars.
Last year more than 11,000 trees
were recycled during the t--.lay project, which has drawn the oupport and
a&gt;operation o f - ~.firms and
municipalities and ae-.1 orpnizations providing volun- 8Eistance.
Mrs. Mary Herman, public retatians
specialiat for the Nft York TelepbOne
Co., ucl Fruk D. Laven. preaident
of IM.vers and Fruk, Illc., bOth memben of the Community Advisory
Council, are ~ of Ibis
year's evenl The Cammomity Advisory Council is......-~ o f - than
100 communicy Ieadanl ham Western
New York.

WEEKLY CoMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE
For everyone's convenience enc'! pleasure.

-

like

to

publlela all -

taklna place

on campus. T~ reconMnformation, contact
Nancy C.rdarwlll, OJ&lt;t. 2228.
•

•

FAI:ULTY CLUI .IWITY

for membels at tho
Faculty Club,. fMturina Hollcltly COcllbiUo,
will be held in tho Club. FrlclaJ, o.c:.mber
A Chri- Party

14, lmm 3'.30 to 5:30 p:m.

~

tion is charged for EOC attendance.)
10. No tuitioo waiver will be grant..
ed to employees of other Sta~ County or Municipal' agencies uniess" tui-·&gt;
tion waiver credit accOmPanies die
quest.
11. All Others - Authorization to
grant tuition waivers against Ibis category is reserved to tbe Executive Vice
President.
The tuition waiver -t&gt;Olicy for employees is as follows:
~- /~e68ion4l Service ( F~cy .

re:

a . Full b.lition waiver will be permitted for a specific course of instruction which is pert of a formal
, training program approved and re.
quired by the -ropriate Vice Presi- .
dent and which will provide improved
perfonntmcle In tbe current position.
It is ezpected that few approvals will
be granted In Ibis category.
b. Fifty per cent support will be
permitted for a specific ClOt1lll8 or
courses not pert of a formal trainin&amp;
program but having a direct relatioDship to' ¥ G f o " ' .."""·
c. The
• of an advimce d&amp;gree is beaeficiaJ
is mreiy a ....
quirement of tbe pramt position.
Tuition waivas will not be granflllcl
for oouraes -ted solely to atioly
a depee
•
l
·
2. cL~.,;.,., EMploy-.:
EachCSiA~ unit basfl')tiated • dollar &amp;IIIIIUDt to
'"" .many lr:lnda of· edUcatioaal ....
grams wbelber at Bryant • ~
the Um-.tty at Bdalo. BdaiO

-we

....
a:·=::t:

~ i:'.ti-:r~---

miiB up to a fifty per
such trainlnc- Pat all Claalified ployeea In • C8EA barplainc unit.
tuition nmisoliln will be._.... by
the~~ and ·not tbroulh a
State U~ cl N- Yodt taftioli
&lt;niveo:. l7or thOee - a&gt;vered by the
C8EA contract (~Oaafidolltial """ Seeuriey) tl.e JIIO. - . . - ............. asforttIn the ~.......... 8errice will apply.
All of boua.
iDibucliaD
be
Ulldertabll
.,_
wbDe -on leave

:::....~the basis of an adjulted

.,.

�. . . . far-.. .

~----far---~ a.
Tldollt •
~
- •••Opan
...
""''ed .
"'pen
to"""""
...... to .........
.,1fta.1ha_...,
~......, ~

n-u..

NortoD, · c:bedt lboweue for
times. lulmiooioa .........
Thio Hitdlcodt lhrillet ciMia wilb • sen.. ol necktie lllllJ'dan.

THURSDAY -13
stAnsncAl SCIIIICI

c:ou-*•

Li/e Dwrribaliolu

83l•ZZ21.

in RelUJbili

The-

Albert w. MuohaJ1. 'ilmver-r.

ory, J'n!L

oity Of
4280 Ridae Lea; Rm.
A-49, 11:30 LID. Oolfee iD Rm. A-49 at
11 LID.

PIOIISIIONAL AAJif

-.AJ1

J1111810••

Apada: 1. Pnoidaot Ketter. 2. Ap.

·proV!I of minuteo ol - r 1

D&gt;Mt-

111&amp;· 8. Oaomoi- reporla. 4. Career mobiliQ' - _ 5. Budpt report-Pat
Colvard. 6. Mike ~ AAUA. 7.
CboirmaD'o ._n. 8. Otbar· buoiDea
Fac:aJQ- Cub DiDiD11 Room, 3 p.m.

- - N O C I O U O O I I I U M#
TOOl R«!~ in Support of Pub-

, SATURDAY -15

lic G r o u ,. d TI'IIIUpOHotion Syatema,
Samuel -B. ' Moore, Vopabt Aeronautics,
' Co., 152 Parbr, 8 :30 l!.m.
PATIIOU)OY _ . _ _ _ .

The Prope...W. SyoUm. Dr. Irwin I.e-

pow, Department 'of ModiciDe, UniversiQ' ol Connecticut. 145 Capen, 3:30p.m.

~-

....,

.

p:;~ ~~~ W:'~i:iti~~i
Science, 5 A~n, 4 p.m.
·

.....

~.:!o~'7';:."m.(F~~t.!\'.:..;~%.,~~
IIUffAI.O WOMEJrs

cana _.,.,. •

General mutinM~ Open to all women.
Buffalo Women's Center, 564 Franklin
at Norih, 7: 3()' p.m.
For further information, call 888-5474.
NlW AMEitc:AN CINEMA SCWNING•

Introduction to Artist'• Vaudeuilh~ u
show'' by Ken J acobs' Appari .
tion Theatre of New YoTk, North Auditorium CommUnications Center State
Univeraity College at Buffalo, 8
No
admission charge.
Pre.ented by the U/ B C-e n t e r for
Media ,Studies.

"~w

P.m.

IUFFAlO POUTtcl SESSION•

•

Butra1o Police Coinmiuioner Thomas
Blair will participate in an informal
question·and·an.swer' session, 337 Norton.

8 p.m.

This is part of a COUJ"8e on Buffalo poli·
tics offered through College E. The pub.
· lie is invited to attend.
THEATH Plf51NTAnON•

FRIDAY-14
KONOMICS SEMINAl#

Co!l~y~=y Au:ho-::a~~w:r

Science, Northwestern Uni.
veroity, 101 O'Brian-Hall, Amherst Compus, 3 :30 p.m. Coffee in 608 O'Brian at
3 p.m.
M~t

I"HYSICAl.QIGANtc CHIMimY I.ICf'Uft#

When A.ng• trom Meet• Gc.u.a: Meo.s uri.nst Interatomic Distancn with Ma,.
nets?. Prof. Jock D . Roberts, California
Institute of Technology, 70 ACheson. .4
p.m.

CAC FilM•

lnveslitplion of a Citizen Aboue StUipic:ion (P..etri), 140 Capen, 7 : 30 and 9 ~ 30
p.m. Admission: 75 cents.
·
This film offers insight into the mind
of the wielder of uncontrolled power.
Winner of the Academy Award. for best
foreign film, and the Olnnes Film Festival award for best film.
IUFFAlO POtRICS SESSION*
Councilman WiUiana HQyl wiJl pa rtici·

IJOte i.i. an j nfo:maJ question-and-answer
f&gt;eSSio n, 231 Norton. 8 p.m .
This is part of a cou rse on Buffalo poli tiCII offered throu~h Co lle~e E . The publi ~ is invited to uttend.

deOign

by

~~~tp:ul 'B'..!..theruJ&lt;•t.~;,;n~

pioduetion •tace manager, and assistant
cfuector is Abbe Raven.
~ted ~y the Center for Tb!"t'"
UUAI fll.¥••

Fimzy (Hitcllooclt, 1972), Conference

lnuafi«ation

,.a

picioA (Petri) . 1

p.m. Admlaion:

Ciliura Abcwe Stu·
Capon. 7:30 aruf9 :30

&amp;-

SCI&amp;NING/DISCUSSION•

Filmmaker Ed Emohwiller will screen

m:. ~ed!ws~~ye~~a:J

~'io

Bailey Ave., 7 : SO .. p.m.. No ad.miMion
charge.
Presented by the Center for Media
Studies.
·
-

ntEATH PHSINTATtoN•

f ..uis de Pablo. Slee Profes..owr of Music

THEATIE PIESENTATION•

UUAI filM••

Frenzy (Hitchcock, 1972), Confe rence
Theatre. Norton. check showcase for
times. AdmiMion charge ..
IAlUT PI£SENT AnoN•

Nightp;ue a nd Etern ;ty BoUnce. chor.

·H

~~b:o:::~·l~l'~~~iln::

~~r:· J:~~t~~~~:fr.~~'·c .
for details.

UUAI fiLM••

,

Th~U:o!$~:roo. \~~~L&gt; ·ah~=~~

eographed by J a mes Waring, Harriman
Theatre Studio. 8 :30 p.m. : Admisaion
d':~fi:: See Thursday liating above for

Nightpiece and Eternity Bounce, chor.
eographed by. Jameo Waring, Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Admiasion
charge. See Tbunoday listing above for
details.
·
-

SUNDAY-16JEWlSK.AMEIICAN EVENING•

Tbe Bureau of Jewish Education will
present a Jewish·American Eveni.n4, a
program about the ethrUc: heritage- of
Jewish folk art through vocal and in·
strumental music. humor; and dance,

~:f: &amp;.':1 ~tu""t,:'~U:: 7s~~u~

t1dm.isaion charge.

EVENINGS fOI NIW MUSIC 111•
0
0

-,n!.~a~:ltt!.

EG6';"~-::. blu~ d':nfaj,'{!~

a nd .Kazuo Fukii.shima, Albright· Knox
Art Gal.lery,. 8 p.m. l
.T ickets are available at Norton Hall

~-~~ t:b~12~tu;e~t ~~':G~

i:~!il!bl1eLa~~~Je~c~= ;:r~

fore the concert.
Presented by the Center for the cf.ea.
live .Ond Performing Arts.
SCIUNING/ DISCUSSION•

Filmmaker Tony Conrad will screen
and dilcu.u a aelection from his work,
Media Study Inc., 3823 ·Bailey Ave. 8
•
p.m. No adm.iuion charge.
Presented by the CeniA!r for Media
Studiea.
•
UUAI FUM••

. ~!U:o~:t';,n,&lt;~:~~) ,ah~=~
times. Admission charge.
IAWT ~llSIHTATIOII"

Nightpieu and Eternity Bounce, cbor.
eocrapbed by James Waring, Harriman
. Theatre Studio, 8 ' 30 p.m.c Admiaion
:t:'~:: See Tbunoday listing ~ for
~

uta •m

.

•

.r:...-.t.r Hill Mob (Chriebt.on.,
:,:1~~ ~~0:~':::::. t:h

~ ~ in 140 -Capen. No ·

THURSDAY- 20
IUPfALO WOMIWI CINIII

MIQINO•~

B~~=~~~~
North, 7:30 p.m.
·

. For further information, call

11113-6474.

EXH!J3ITS .

BAUD PIUENTATION•

Lichter, Saul Elkin and Beverly · Wide-

:::!:
~~~U!;rr:: ~~
Reeean:h. Set
is
Ralph Fet-

ut/i""o..,..rtment

. Instruction in ha.sie s teps. 2 Diefendorf, S.ll p.m .
·
SLE£ lfCTUH/UCITAl•

.John Webster's Th e White Deuil. directed by Gordon Rogoff, Courtyard The.
a tre,· Lafayette and Hoyt, 8 p.m. Ad·
mission chnr,:::e. See Thursday listing
above for details.
·

Tack.el. Michael Pe1onero, Martin Mo·

rector, BuftaJo 8Dd Eria Couoty ·Public
Library, 8 l'·m. No odmiaoion charxe.
Tbe . . I C011Cert ia c:o.ponsOrecl by
1be
o1 Mlllio and lbe
~alo and Erie Couocy fuhlic Lihrery.

times. !tdmiaaion charge.

at U / 8, will j)erfonn and discuss aelec.
lions from his work, Baird ReCital Hall,
8 p.m. o admission charge.
P~nted by the Department of Music.

man of the U /B Theatre faculty_;. Marl in

Ul B Cll4mber Wind Eillcmble, Frank
J . apolla, coaductor, Jamao Kaoprowic:z, .-iotant ~r. 8Dd U/B
Pen:uooion 'Enaelllbk, Jan Williamo, di·

CAC FilM"

fiLMI.l .

The

•

INTERNATIONAl fOLK DANCING•

· Jobn Webster's The White Devil, directed by Gordon Rogoff. Courtyard
Theatre, Lafayette and Hoyt, 8 p.m.
Admiuion: students, 75 cents; general
public, $1.50. Tbe production will be

ilia~ J~ ~~:;Yiea~~;rt~~

CONCIIff•

- - - ...... -~T
I;'
· ~t ol Aoai&lt;ay UiilwaiQ- r , 306-ca-. S:30 p.m.

UUAa All EXHIIIIT"

Phototropho by Clare BoU, GaJ!ezy
219, Norton, lbrouch December 14. Gel·
lery bouro: Mcmda)', Wednooday 8Dd
Tbunoday, 11 LID.-5 p.m.; ~ """
Friday, 110911-4 p.m. abd •8-10 p.lb.; sw;.
day, 1-5 p.m.
OlOUP EXHIIIIT"

_
Paintinp by CltGrieo Clow!lo, oonalrW&gt;Io ~ Emh ·a ~
jiij)ho liji;7~~-Riiiilil;1
~ .Norton., throaaf, FridAy, o-nber

...a

MUSIC UIIAIY IXHJII1'•

The Life and Times of U!B'• Chorol
. Groupo: 1967-1973, Mlllio Lihrery, Bainl
Hall; lbrouch Dooember 22. ·
AIT EXHJilf•

• Se~irrf!plu by GeortimuJ lfm60/8 tmd
Phok&gt;lroplu by Willidm lfm60/8, Hayeo

lobby display oaoeo, Monday·Frit'J; 9

~~-~:"ihotb= ~~::
NOTICES
IIUWTIH lOAID

coliisl

A oeminar iO being oflerecl 'tmo opring
semeeter on .. Problema and t.ues Con·
fronting Studento 8Dd Student Activi-·
ties." Tbe fourociedit bour bulletin board
ooune (DUS 301) will be oll'ered .on
Tueo:daY ~ lroin 6:30-9:30 o'oloclt
m Diefendorf Annex Room 20, beainDiDa
January 22. Inotruction will ba cotiductei!
by Albert EI'IIWIOvioo wilb l b a -

:to~.!.,.~~r·

-

reciatra-

For further information, contact AJ.bert
Ennanoviao m Room 115 Norton Hall
ext. ~1, or Cerole•Hannaaoy in ~
223 Norton Hall, en. 4530.
DINNEI/COHCDT
- · _,.,.tiona
'I1&gt;oee wiahinc-to·make

(limited to 100) for lba dinner and show
package for a performance of the ••M•· ·
aiah" at Kleiubano Muoic Hall Oil Saturday, Dec. 15, should caiJ '831-3282.- Total
coal for the dinner (.aDd coacart is 110.

~:~~ ~n"'.i'~~w:.!-:

Club.

HAIIIMAN "USEivt LIIIA.IY M0U11

.

H Du_fing esam peritld, Dooember 14·21'.

r.:!:.Z :: :.o:ill

8 a:~a~f"r:e
be served startinc at l l p.m.
LAW UMAIY H0U1S

The bw Library - fn O'Brian Hall on
the ~ent-- CampWI hu extended ita
oLpe-;atifll: houn. Until further notice the
ilirary will be open Mcmda)'-Frlday
7:30 a .m.-midnight; Satunlay,- 9 a.m.-6
p.m.; and Sunday, 2 p.m.-midnight
M00HH IEWISH HtSTOOY COIIISI

rotUM

E~aft~e~~~u!~~e:o~C?!

guat, WADV-FM, • !O:Oii p.m.

WEDNESDAY -19

-IWt·

.oNATOMICAI. ICIIHCU
~mp~terized T.echnf.quu
IGiwe.. IMIU'OGnotomy.

for Quanti·

Dr.. N . W•t. ~-

The foUowing course Hsting was inad·
omitted in the claae schedule

verte~

~or Spnnc 1974: Ju&lt;laio Stuilieo 280

J:t~;... ~ ::O~t
~~~~~

talll\!.:i..::7.

~eit.

Adler, M . Pleour and
Topics in·
olude lbe Jew. in Potand and Germany
(Con tinued on pt~.~e 7, col. 2)
'

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>QJtnpu.slmpresario ~ers 'Backstage' V~ews· of th~ FatriOus.

W.=·

_ . • a student intern b. Dllnois
.rick recalls, "and Jon [Dsndes] and "I
had permission to go out onto the
8oaallar
olfice. ~ bll8
&lt;:barlee
olb«Percy's
covert ~
: . runway to ioeet him. I could have
that Rod Berling Is not above red g
sworn be was going to fall off tlie
dirty limericb when his wife's back
platform. He looked like be was on
is tumeil1 that Leonard Nimoy got
his last lep."
· tbe idea 10r one of Mr. Spock's cbarThe ~. his eyes bloodshot,
acteriatic g e a t u re s In an Orthociox · worked his way slowly down tbe steps,
gave tbe sWdenta a limp handshake,
shule, that Mr. .Justice Douglas is not
what you'd call a glib convemationathen collaJad into tbe back of the
gym van bOrrowed for tbe ·occasion.
~ and that Jack Ander&amp;CJn has a
Clearly not dnmk, tbe man was dying,
bad back.
Burrid&lt; !las ....., his guests at their
Burrick thought for a _,.,nd, wondering momentarily bow that was going
best- and worst.
. , . Men w~ Drtna'
··
to affect his upcoming speech. He
barely spoke throughout tbe trip.
Dandes and Burrick monitored his
condition in tbe rear-view mirror. At
state of Mar coiJapee:
• "He was flying In on Eastern," Burone point, he mlled down tbe window,

ri;:ar= ~=tio~lnar~

Dandes Warns

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

made a great rumbling noise1 then spil
"Dandes could hudly drive he ....
laughing eo hard," Burrick recalla.
llowtiYer bizarrely tbe private man
behaved, tbe- public man more then
fulfilled tbe tenDs of his c:onlmc:t.
Placed before an audience, Lazaruslike tbe speaker came to lile and de-·
livered a ~. anima~,
tbe miracle apparentlY
t by
tbe mere presence of tbe
4: thought be dyinc, then be
put his bands on tbe podium and be ·
was transformed . . . it was like be
was two different -le," remembers

===

~=
his _bead.
Many of tbe speakers in tbe current
(Contiriued on page 2. coL 1)

VOL. 5. · NO. 13

' DECEMBER 6, 1973

Sen~eAbOut

LateGr•
•Allbliaab he:a.iated 1Jiit lie

diilii t -

want "' e.tallliah . . ~venery relatianslalp". with: _the faculty, tbe atsnd
on late aubmliaion Of grades

E~glish--Modern

:iorticu-

JaliM '- .J011 Dandes at ·n-iay's

Seaati"
-meeting _....w like an
matum. .
..
.
~

Languages Contract let

ulti-

"we think tbi&amp; is one. of tbe few
right and :w!OIII iasua8 on campus,"
uplilined 't he Student' Aseociation
president, who came before the Senate • cbainnan of the body's Studeot-Faculty Advisory Committee. •
Last year, Dandea niported, only
4500 grades bad been submitted at
tbe mandated deadline of two weeks
· after llnala. Sixteen thousand students
were lliising one or more grade. A
.month .after ftnaJs, grades for aome
lniO studeota.:had not reached · Admiasiona a. Recorda. Some.175 faculty
IIDd 500 involved, tbe
student 'leader ll8id. 'Ibis figure does
not include incompletee, tuli&gt;ri&amp;JS, or
~ ~ with special grading

~outlined a

get-touch policy

desiiJied "' end tardiDeas In submittina grades, which, he aigueo, unfiirly
_.m. stUdents tryinc "' gain ad-

.mlsaion to piOf-xmal and graduate
achaola, tboee whose flmds are de,
~t 011 their receiving final ~
and otbj!ra. If grades .are not in two Weeks after .......
c1asaea, Dandes aaid, the Student As- .

;~!': ~ ~caru:

olf.....U... faculty. Yt will then ask .
that a letter de8criblng the matruc-

tor'!' failure to ful1111. hili. contractual
ohlipliaa he placed m his penonnel
8le. ~ a c1asa ~.., civil. suit will
he Instituted apiD8t the (A'ttomey Ricbard · l.ippM has been
retelned by tbe A.saoclation). Ani! finaUy the names of Jate-aubmitters will
he broadcast by what o.ndea 'termed
"our--media" - ellu», Spectrum And
WBFO. Studeota wiU he asked to
boycott COUI9I!II oftered -by theE fa&lt;&gt;.
ulty. Only fac\l)ty who have Indicated
""1"'0Piional circumstanceo" will he
ezcluded from tbe process.
'"lbey've lbouaht of everything but
hit "!"!!!" one Senator nnittered reilpeCiti1IJy after Mrr o.ndea' preeentation.
"Before you start tatooint, wby
(COII&lt;illued Oil 7, eoL l)

AtchltJM:t"a .......... of new Amherwt atructure.
'

EOP Screening Panel Named

Frank Corbett, director'oftbe Office
· of Urilan AJfairs, will chair the screening committee for a director of tbe
Univen,ity's Equal Opportunity Program a committee which will comJ&gt;rise
~tatives of the faculty, EOP
·staff and students and the corfununity '
President Robert L Ketter annowiCeci
this w.t.
.
· Other members of the screening
group are Mr. Charles Banks, coordinator, Model Cities Procrams, New
York State Off'lCB of Planning Services, -.munity rep_,tative; Dr.
William Fiacber, Endisb. aqd Dr.
_ Charlea· H. V. Ebert, "Undergraduate
Studies. faculty -representatives; Ms.
Elsie Pacheco, C011118elor, Ms. Shirley
Po""'-, ~-. and Mr. RaDce
.Jackeon, aaoilltont clirec:tor, EOP atall
rept'Mentatives. EOP 81Udent -

.sentatives are Ms. Carmen Rivera and
--Ms. Louise Hopki,na.
In letters inviting the Committee
memheni to aerve, Ketter said "tbe
University is finnly committed to pro. viding tbe best ~le educational
opportunities for u,_ slu_denta who

~~~~~~

versity is similarly committed to all
of its students, the.esoeptjonal factors
of tbe educatlonal opportUnity concept
make it imperative that we constantly
aeek to infuae our Educational ()p.
. portunity Program with greater substance and vibility. I consider this to
be one of the greatest c:hallenjes facing the University today."
To (aciUtete the work of the Com(Contw-1 Oil 7. eoL 2)

The John W. Cowper Company;
Inc., of Buftalo has been awanled a
$5 million contract for construction of
the English and Modem languages
Building at the Amherst Campus;
Tbe contract, which includes related site work, was awanled by tbe
State University Construction Fund
and is the fifth Jet to Cowper for
buildings at tbe new campUs.
Designed by Ulrich, Franzen and
Associates of New York, the 1()-story
structure, which will contain 71,000
square feet, will provide classroom
and ollice sP.ce for aome 2,600 students and 200 faculty members. .
As phase one of the .Arts and Letters sub-&lt;:ampus area, tbe new facility
was designed to aocOmmodate the
U /B Departments of ·English, French,
Germanic and SlaVic, and Spanish,
Italian, and Portugueoe. The scheduled completion date has been set for
September, 1976.
Looking forward to tbe new building, Jobn P . Sullivan, provost of Arts
and Letters. ~ted that he is
delighted and "hopeful that tbe building gets ahead of ita constructicm-timetable and is completed before tbe 1976
deadline."
Dr. John A. Neal, asais-t vice
president for-facilities planning, noted
that work on tbe new facility whic::b
will be located east of Jobn .Lord
O'Brian Hall, tbe Jaw and jurisprudence building,_will likely begin immediately. The contract for tbe structure is
- tbe second major Amherst award In
as many weeks. Iast week, Albert
Elia Building Company, Inc., of Niagara Falls was awanled a contract
for foundation construction on tbe
new Capen Hall.
FINAL SEMEST£R ISSUE NEXT WEEK
Neit week's Reporter will be the final
issue for the fall semester. Individuals
• who have infonnation they would like run
before the end of the semester, should
contact the Reporter (Ext. 2127)
prior to noon on .Mon£tay,- December 10.

�.........
.........ee::''£!......
("-"'-" ,_

~ aatilltiereaiiDI ....-

z. eeL I)

- . , flu" ~ Nlmoi, Sltllr 'trelfa
~ Valcla, Mr. ..,._ At
...
NlmD.J aut fill Oil . . . dPt
th • _ . . about Allllhal1
.Aid~.- -llllll be aJao picbd up tbll.
bar ..., at '"l'be I..itftr)"' after h1s

=_._
. _._. . . .__.,. _
_...,.._.,....
~loa

~

. . . . . . . . . . . the

lill1i. Ill ............... ttie-&amp;illrMD

PI!*** cl the

aalkiC

'1

~

:o.mo.

'*$tic.C...blapedact~

of

-=-=....... .-p cl that pmticuJar

--clthe---meat.U. _•.
Icba'ti!Mw
Yea._for that jab.
.IS-~
.
'nie palJtic ~ ..-1: oaly
200 peOple tunilid aut for 1m. West~'a ~ {Her fee aJao tho&gt;
...... - t'1&amp;0 - cbqlld bY allY ol
the........_..,,. ..... ,...)

Nimoy llllll bia brother bad bmbn
tbe Orthodal: lll1ditian ol avertinc the
eyes llllll bad )JMked at the priest
durin&amp; a holiday bleasing - the priest
cl.-1 and stretcl&gt;ed his finlers in
• benedidioa juat as Spock wu to do

.......

Olieolthe~-o(

the..- .... w~ Columnist
.Jack ADderaL ADdlaliiD- the firat
ape0a cl tbe ,_, llllll Bumd&lt;, a

~..:n..:.~""'=ta.!:i
~ time few ADdenaa'a arri1lal

DMrad.

-n..n'the -day al the talk ...., sot a
call from bia. oftice. I tbouibt the

wont."

-~~=Ct!"!t~~

minute caacellaliaD. 'lba columnist
bad lbrown out bia bad beck, Ander..... lllaJr reported. wrbey told 118 we
bad to baDdle him with kid IICM!O,·DOt
to ruah him, DDt to plllb him .. . They
aJao told 118 to . . him a lllocil so be
wouldn't baw to stand cluriDI his
taUt." A atoOl wu -tually commendeM-ed from a Delaware Avenue
Your Boa, but Burrick wu frankly '
....mad when be llllW Andemcio step

~~=~...:r:..r:

. a crowd,» Burr:idt admila, particul.rly
in
ol Andenlon's fee, a whopping

llSr.

118

_$2~ ~~ worried.
There were 2,500 people in Clark
. Gym when be IIDd the columnist ~t
thete. And Andenoan, a Monnon w1th
a fiery, preacberlike style, rose to the
ocx:uion. "For an hour and a half or
two hourB, be forsot his back. He .,_
ploded," l3urriclt recounts. Only an
alerted eye would have. botieed that
Anderacin reached from time to time
for his aching back. Ander80il was
aJao 0118 of the few spMkers to meet
luformally with students in the Union
after h1s taUt.
turned out to ·be a
very succeasful evenini," the young
impresario acknowledges.

"'t

R-·--·

One of tbe most pei:IIODable speakers
was former Assistant Attorney Geneml William Rucldesbaus. ''He was
really a Jl"81lt guy, very down-to-earth,
very funny . . . I can't.imagine him as
part of the Nixon administration,"
Burrick adda.
,
.
By far the most colorful speaker
was Lester MaddoL Burrick and his
staff preporecl for the Georgia governor's visit as. if for a military action.
'Tve never been so psyched for any-

~C:,: "';;,~lr ~tWU::'~v":'r,

programmed where to move, what to
do,'' says Qurrick. Cliff Palevsky, SA
Student Rights Coordinator and
Speakers Bureau assistant director,
studied the floor ptans of Clark Hall
and mapped out a -strategy for insuring that no one was hurt during Maddox's appe8I1li1Ce. Says Burrick, " Cliff
ran the Ooorshow," placini -=ityminded s t u d e n t s in spots where
trouble was thought most likely to
occur, coordinating the whole scheme
by walkie'tallrie. From the time the
controversial speaker aooepted the inr vitstion to appear here, the Speakers
Bureau worked closely with CamPIIB
&amp;curity, who, Burric:k adds, ''have
been fabulous to 118 this year."
At the airport to meet Maddox was
Campus Security Officer Jerry Denny,
plus two D_1e1J1bers of the State Police.
The Dixie politician """'rged from
his
a bright red sport coat
and
pumping arms in greeting.
"Have a good night. sir - and if you
don't it's your own fault," Maddox
told his wellwishers amiablr. if somewhat nonsensically. A pobce motorca!le, complete with llashin_ilights and
sirens, escorted Maddox, Burrick and
the others to the nearby Executive
Motor Inn ( Speakers Bureau invitees
IISUally s tay at the Executive-or ~the
Statler Hilton ). '"They were really excited," recalls Burrict of the motel

=in

with lila bolla. 'lba Vulaula

_......_ hiUid palure bMod
a cblldbood (11811101)'! be l'8ft18led.
Aa boya ..-inc up .Jewiah In Boatoa.

Oil

1I1111111&amp;M1"Dt that nigbl '"l'bey gave
us two rooms for the price al one IIDd
had champagne waiting when we arrived"
Maddox was .excited too. ''Boy, that
-was fun," be said al his tWo-hour confrontation with jeering U/ B students.

0::.,.. Burri::

"'l.t
He
mll8t wonder why
be does this. The Scheduling Office
· regularly balks at his last-minute refor a bigger room - the reason

Cta

~·t:=:::u~~re~

of time from his pre-law s~ in
,political scien(:e. The financial reward
is a less than princely stipend of $150
a semester, paid by the Student AsSA SP£AK£RS' BUREAU

In last week's story on the . campus appearance of Mr. Justice William 0 . Doug·
l as and in an ear11er repqrt on lester
Maddox, the ~r inadvOrtentty omitted reference to the fact thet t h e s e
speakers were brought tO the campus by
the Student Association S peake rs' Bureau.
The outstand ing lineup of visiting speakers
which this agency is maki ng possible for
, membe"rs of the campus community to
hear merits not only recognition, but our
appreciation as well. We regret the ove r·
sight.

soci!rtion. And tbere is always the
chance that something will go wrong.
Sometimes , it does. Like the time
basketball superstar Walt Frazier de-

~;!;~ ~s:~ :n:!:~ti~:

tion of Knicks forward Bill Bradley.
· Sometimes the speakers are fun to
meet with wben they're "off," and
· sometimes they're nol Venerable Supreme Court J us t i c e William 0.
Douglas was pleasant but put off easy
conversation by pausing an unusually
long time before answering a question.
The silence did not mean that Douglas
hadn't heard. He was simply fonnulating a deliberate reply. But his style
didn' t encourage lively dililogue."
Some ChoU Up

.

Some speakers are personable ~·off,' '
but choke up onstsge. At d i n n e r•
(speakers are usuaUy taken to ''The
Scotch &amp; Sirloin" or ''The Crouching
Lion"), writer Rod Berling howled
as Jon DaDdes did Don Rickles' routines and amiably swapped dirty jokes
and liniericks with his hosts when his
wife went to the bathroom ("If was
like 'when the teacher walks out of
tlie room in Sixth Grade," explains
"Burriek). But like The Twilight Zone,
the podiumdoes strange things to people. Berling seemed to tenae up duri!lg
his talk,' became hyper-11en8itive to tile
flawed 8mbience of the bulging Fillmore Room. He finally walked off
early, claiming be coUldn't continue
because of the lo118y sound gystem.
Later the Speakers Bureau got a letter
from Berling's manager detailing the
writer's disastisfaction with the visit.
' "I was upset, I felt we had developed some rapport," Burrick admits.
The student responded with a letter
of his own and eventually reoeived a
personal acknowledgement from Berling of the gracious treatment aftorded
him and a promise that he ''would
~ here on a soap box with a bull
hom if we asked him to." .
Nlmoy Pldo8d Up The Tu

Sounding for the moment like a diebard Trekkie, Burrick"selects as " the

most pefSOJ!al&gt;le, most friendly, most

Alcohol Facility ··
-Formally Oj&gt;ens

.....
.:=::

'n.SideU.W ...... n..n,

.....

-.-et-=t,lallllidi• AlGal.
~

~,...._

aDd **'-or of

~ea-=:.
--..w
28·
- "L lofada --~..-tic..

cl ........,cJ.tzaalhoa ~ and

~

=w.,,

ibe baarda to tbe
Individual aDd liD IOCiaty ol aleoboliam
andcbur . . .;
"3. EarlY ideatlfleatkin technJques
for thea people 'at riok' ol develoPinl
alcohol or cbur Jll'llblema;
"4. Better llllll effacliw !Jaatmeat few thaae ~~on

20 years later in a very dilferent setting.
An entire generation lr:nows that
N"liDOy ·was responsible for ~·s
alcobol and dnip - more efficient,
pointed ears, but he also devised
1.... costly prewmliall IIDd !Jaatment
Spock's -=ret ...;.pon, his knowledge
systems;
of a crucial p.-.re point at the top
"5. Idtlntificatlaa cl tbe truly critof any hapless anl'81[1110r'a spine. The ·
ical factora in the Initiation IIDd mainp-point ides came to Nimoy
tenance al adclid:iw ststeo, thU8 the
Qne day wben the script called fclr
best tq_ols few apecific !Jaatment and
Spoct to hit menacer ove.r the bead.
prevenliaD.
Such behavior, be decided, was un"In short, dO for each individ. -becoming a Vulcan.
ual and ioc:iety at leas cost!" .
Nimoy was asked a question about
l.oca.ted
in
the
old
~ Ouilding
· the·Sstunlay morning cartoon-version
at Main IIDd North strseta. the Instiof Star Trek for which be did the
tute bas a staff al 50, includint: 15
voice al Spoc:k. ''The pfOII"IIID is an
-..:ben.- Some 12 reanimtzud Star Trek," the actor cor- ' profesaional
SBBrch projects and four coUahorstive
rected, balking at the use of the term,
studies are now UDderway, including
"cartoon." He considers it 0118 of the
·studies of the mechanisni of etbario1
best Saturday morning shows (not
ellects on aenaory net"YI!8 and the sites
much of a field ), althoogb be admits
of the .......vulnersbility in the that the ,half-hour format preclude&amp;
nervous ~; a study Of the methe careful story development that
chanisms mvolved in the dev8lopment
-characterized the "live" Star Trek of
of tolerance and dependence to ethblessed memory•
anol, ll8ing soldfiah as experimental
After his preaentation. Nimoy took ' animals; studies of ~ relationship
time to give autographs (unlike Berbetween pJ;enlltal alCohol and drug
ling or Douglas, who declined even a
abuse and the newborn; a caae-loai!
press conference) . Why? Burrick
survey of alool.olism care delivery to
asked, and Nilnc!y .IIJIIll1'el8Ci with an
determine the ~t of duplication
anecdote in which We. imitated Joseph
Mankiewicz.
As a child Nimoy was a great fan
assisted; a survey of patterua_..o f alcoof comedian Denny Kaye. One time
hol 1188
school -stunents; a
he and his friends hung for _days
stdily, ll8ing rata, al -the effects of
around a thestrs where Kaye was
exposure to alcohol ( throtigh mother's
a ppearing, waiting · for the star to
milk when the mother has had Ouid
emerge. Finally be did, his manager
containing aloohol ) to . examine
in charge. "Go 'way, kids," said the
whether adult preferences for alcohol
mans§er, who claimed that if "Mr.
.are in any way affected by early exKaye' - signed an autograph for one
posure to the drug; a study of alcoholof them he'.d have "to do it for everyism prevalence in both the City of
body. Nimoy's friends hou'ht that and
Buffalo and Erie County in order to
scattered But Nimoy, realizing be was
determine the existence of any trends
alone and tbere were no others to
in alcoholism rates; and a study of the
overburden the comedian, chased Kaye
pharmacological interactions between
for blocks. Finally he caught up with
ethanol and Cannabis.
the Jl"81lt man as be was getting into
While the physical facilities al the
his car. "No one elae is bere but me.
building are being rehabilitated for
Can I please have your autograph?"
optimum use in ibe Institute's proNimoy asked, breathless and incredigrams, Dr. Smith said, "ctinical-medibly excited.
·
cal -.ch will be done in the
hospitals IIDd clinlca of the State,
· Kaye never even looked up as be
where the action. is, so to spea!C"
pulled away.
On behalf of the University, President Robert L. Ketter said be "looks
forward
to a long aDd productive ref
latinnahip with the Institute. 1be
Univeniity provides a reservoir of
falented faculty who can engage in
collaborative research with members
"Rape: The Real Culprit?" will be
of the Institute. Some of these persons
the topic of a speech by Lawrence H.
may hold joint faculty-Institute apCooke, associate justice of the Appelpointments. Conversely, the Institute
late Division of the New York Slate
contributes to the University's totalSupreme Court, Third Department, at
research effort and is a """""' of po1 p.m., Thursday, December 6, in the
tential faCulty who can aid the Uni-.
Carlos C. Alden courtroom in John
versity in meeting its educational
Lord O'Brian Hall ( Amhers t
objectives." .
Campus). '
The oonoept that this Uliiversity-'
Institute affiliation embodies is im- ·
Justice Cooke has served on the
portant,Ketter said, "IIDd will become'
bench for 19. years. He was Sullivan
increasingly so in high&lt;!r education as
County Judge, State Supreme Court
more and more resources an. directed
Justice, and has been serving "on the
toward
mul t idisi:iplinary, problemApP.,Ilate Division in Albariy since
oriented research. The multidisciplin1969. Last year be. proposed a Stateary
aspectS
of those efforts are especwide unifOftD sentence reView court to
ially critical,- for the ramifications of
establish more uniformity in criminal
f e I o n y sentencing throughout the · such problems as alcoliol and drug
abuse - or more speclacularly these
State, and he has also , advocated
days, the shortage of energy resources
opening up courtrooms to television
- are so great and inter-dependent
and ro,dio coverage with appropriate
that they cannot be dealt with from
safeguards to protect the rights of the
the inSularity of a singfe discipline."
involved parties to a fair trial.
Also pn the opening program, for
which
U f8 Health Sciences Vice PresCREDIT UNION
,
ident F. C. Panrull .served as master
Representatives of the Morton R. Une
of
ceremonies,
was Dr. Alan D . Miller,
State Universjty Credit Union, domiciled
commissioner of the New York State
at Bul!alo State but open to U/ B faculty
Department of Mental Hygiene, who
and· staff, are on campus each Monday,
noted that 100 years ago, New York
in the Ha)IH Hall Information Booth from
State opened a hospital m Bingham1:30-5 p.m. and In the Faculty Club foyer,
ton to treat alcoholism and that openfrom 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., to tolul
ing al the Institute is "a significant,
membership and l011n applications and to
tetlin'
event" which " will give us new ·
provide Information.
cap&amp;c~ties to cope with the problem."

a

: f ~ o~in~..Jdt!t~::
among

Rape is Topic
Of Law Talk

�~~ .·

Harvard Sodo

HOlds

t 'EthniCftY IS am.tDwa.
ChOsen
a-

By SHARON BDBUoiAN

-.
"Cme ~.-... bla akiD.
or a .......,Sm. .poca?" .... tbe Bible.

'lbe aD awe r, a euapua a..u..re
lemled lbia . - , ill imllevaDL
~ lliullicaJ or otbenrise,n
CDillmlled OrlaDdo PatleaaD, prole&amp;.
- of 8IICiDloiY • Harvard
lity, "Jadal or ellmlc ~ ...,
arbitrary qmboJa. It would be
falladoue to attach ol111iftcomm to

om--

.....
tbe coland
Ol1aili . . . able to ....... Cbelr
~· cw- ~ Uid .-h:lola.
8DII to fuad Jhe ~ al tbeir
8GIIL

'-n. patlem darial thla period,"

be ODDtil!ual!. ....... - of '4egmentary
creollratlall.' • -ntlaD UDder wbich .
each e11m1c JIOUP 1n • cauntz:v e:r.tes

Design Work for the Worker,
Ergon·omist Urges Business
..........,t

To llOive the ~ problem of
job .wm-niation,
bas
to design work compatible with
ple'a needs 8DII wanta, to 1mb

J::;

ego-involved, Alan D. Swain, Systems
Rellability DivlsioD, Sandia Leboratories,.Aibuquerque, told an Industrial
Enaineering Seminar on campUB Mon-

day.
Swain's talk was the first of t6ree
I,IUtleular local culture.
•
be presented thla week on "Design
"Later, boooevar, tbe culturally ezfor Human Beinp At Work,'' sponeluslw 8aiPnld au- forced,
sored by · the Industrial Engineering
~ witboutJeaud
Caatribatin,
by ecDIIIIIDic~ty to ..tmllale,"
aoclaJ or 8caDoqdc faclan.•
be Cllllllmded. • Aa tbe bi8ck iDdepeDd, Visitina Scholar Lecture ~
Citina a hypothesis contending that
~ • speclallat Ia tbe eocio-- t took root Ia Jamaica,
every organization o~rates either uil101)' of ellmic P!U1JB. -""'1 his
- tbe ODioNd CbiDMe were eevezely critder 'Theory X (which assumes that
.,... !we early ihla Welt IDr tbe ii:D-' .
iciral for remaining aloof. 'lbe eciopeople are lazy, hate work and want
porlaDce al Clllltad 8DII Clboice to
nomic makeup of the island also
·to avoid it) or Theory Y (which
ethnic allelliance.
cbanaed. n Patterson ; added, "as the
holds that people have a need for work
. All etJuiic group a:istl, Pal*enoo
B r i t I a h bepn to move out. 'The
with ego saliafaction) , Swain said too .
ita ilaDben ~ 1D ·
youupr pneration of colored Chinese
said,
many companies operate under the
be1oai to it. H,e daiiDed "elhnieity"
added to the .........., 88 they iecogfirst set of assumptions, believing that
88 "a me-. form of lclmti8catkm;
nlzed · the
to adopt Western atpeople have to be "driven."
liven a social c::G111eD, tbe .-bers
titudes 8DII Increase the scope of the
This, however, he said, leads to
Will ~ to ideDiily tJoea.t. . Clll
trade business."
grievances, ah&lt;ienteeism, high tumtbe buis of Ol!ldlliD social 8DII etlmic
Ultima~y, Patterson asid, a "aynover rates and, often, sabotage - all
attributaa." All elbnlc groap, added
thetic creolization"' process·took place
to the detriment of the Orflf!nization.
as the colored Chinese attempted to
Patteraon. acludes ldn, anll ceases to.
1930's Stereotype
eziat In Ita native country or in: a
transcend their self-contained culture,
Management, in the·u.s. especially,
aountry In which it forms the majority
and develop a more worldly, and proS.wain said, still thinks of the average
of tbe papulatipn.
fitable, approach to tlleir work. .
in terms of the 1930's stereoworker
~~
.
No Chinatown
type, as an individual who "fears" for
Padelaon llelec:ted- ~ case bis~ry
Today, he adiJed, a Chinatown no
his job and is scared to lose it. Here
of'!"~' -=h group, the color!&gt;&lt;~ Chinlonger exists in Kingston, and the Jaand in Britain, however, welfare has
~ of the ~ to ill'!"trate
maican population has become more
removed the threat, Swain noted, leadhis ~ basic ~: that m d_ehomogenous as Chinese bloodlines are
ing some managers to grumble that
~ ~ cboiol! of an e t h.n • c
bred out of existence. Those colored
"what this country needs is a good,
idtmtity, a penoon will: (1) seelr "!«Chinese who have not merged comold fashioned depression."
IDIIIIY. or ~ least !"""""t of conflic;t.
pletely attempt to maintain an ethnic
The real need which managers all .
b e - his v a r1 o u B .memberslh;ip
identity, but have become a smaller,
too often overlook is, Swain said, the
groups audl as class, ethnic, 8COilOllllC, ·
more racially defined group.
need to do something about the work
(2)=
willthe "'!"'!"'
In contrast, asid Patterson , the
situation.
Automobile manufacturers, in parti~ty ·
and ~ survival
C~ who entered Guyana !it the
·
Jlllll8
• unable
_
_,,.
same lime and under the same clrCUmcular, he said, have complained about
risb when be 18
to ~e
stances, faoed a very different situasloppy workmanship. Xet they never
~ .1101!1'!&gt; and l~) allow class m,_
tiori. The Portuguese immigrants who
seem to cons1der the laments and com~ts to wm. over ~ other .mernbel:preceded thein were favored by the
plaints of assembly line workers. One
ship groupe. mcluding ethnic allep~riti&lt;h colonizers, and· as such it was
of these, whose job it was to put on
ance.
.
the Portuguese who controlled Guyanfront bumpers day in and day out,
The .-cplored.. Chineoe, , J;'attfilrson
e9e trade •fu surv1vl!, the' Chinese
once complained to CBS news cameras
note&lt;!. llf!' ~cujariY. IJilited .t;o this
_chose to aSsimilate. and )Nithin ten w
that "I don't·even get to work on rear
tbeory ¥&lt;;ause as ~ ~u cui15 years, the aynthetic creolizatioh
bumpers:• Another auto worker, when ·
tura1 onflDS _were unified, Le. conJlroce&amp;S had been successful to the ex·
pressed for a .reason why he "!~ alstant, altbougb .theY ultimatel~ were
• treme.' B - -ihi!bim·of'the·e entuljr,'the
ways abSent .one dsy a week, reto aetlle ~ more,~ .one of. t.h!;
Chinese kd independently become
sponded simply that ''being off one
Can'bbean islanda. 'It 18 mte"!"ting,
the country's professionals, ceasing to
day is all I can a11ord.''
· be ~¥ "~
1:.- ?ifterent
use their tan~. practice their reThat's job dissatisfaction, ·Swain
oountri.., With different. SOCietal d~
Jigion, or mamtain ron tact with their
said, and it's a growing problem ainong
~ fostered chal!les '!! tbe ethnic
natiYe country. Soon the Chinese exthe 82 million Americans who worklC!I!Iltity "!.these ~
.
isted in Gurana only in appearance,
19 million in manufacturing jobs and
. 'The Bntiah ~pue e'!'a.n.c1pated
a trait which, Patterson said, will
·one million on assembly lines.
118 black ala._ m the mid-nme~th
probably also disappear in the next
Swain identified and assessed eight
century: In~ "! the AmBWilg
generation.
approaches to job situation improvelabor crisis, Palterlloll laid, inde!ttured
"'The colored Chinese of Jamaica
ment which have been tried by various
!"'f"ADIB, "!l"tracted for a certsi,n perUsed p~ty to maintain their
iod, _ , imported to the Caribbean
ethniCJ.ty,' be concluded, " for the
or~r~~':id, companies have tried
ClllloDa Firat ~ tben PortuGuyanese Chinese surrendered theirs.
the traditional threats of dismissal but
..-, lbe!l Chineae, ~ as the '
Both case histories were based ·on the
this "never was effective" and is even
labor fanle; yet no natinnal!ty would
crucial element of choice. The conJess so today in the face of Union
.-ID indeiltured. FiJ!ally the. prostraint of reason was their only conpower llf\d the burgeoning welfare
pam waa abeDdoaecl m the 1870's,
straint."
state.
althauah toan,y
settled -perP.ro"-&gt;r Patterson's three-day visit
'Zero Defects'
maJIIIDtly em the .isJanda.
. •
to the campus was \oonsored by the
Motivational programs which at1'be early Chinese settlers m JaDepartment of Sociology; the School
tempt to persuade workers to do better
........, noted Pattemon, '!1ft chara!&gt;of Social Policy and Community Serthrough a barrage of promotional gim- ·
Wiraf by tbe edremeiy hilh """.ratio
vices, and tbe Faculty of Social Scimicks and contests tend to be "tuned
of fiw Cbbae males to~ Chinese
. --~ Adminis
" tra"-out," Swain said. One such device, "a
female. To IIUrYive, be BBid, and to
ences """'
~ .
zero defects" awards program, has
maintain a raCial identity, Chinese
been especially unproductive ~use
took Oil black OOIICilbiMe, proof its basic assumption that the worker
ducing, in 2D years, a . new generation
can do better simply if lie wants to.
who CBIIl8 to be .known , as colored
U/ B ia cooperating with WKBWThis causes a vicious circle of blame,
Chlneee.
.
TV on a new 'television program,
Swain contends, resulting in worker
"'lbia waa clone," Patterson main"Here and Now." Hosted by Nolan
resentment. Besides, he asid, defects
taiDed, "with no appll'l!llt sense . nf
Johannes, the half-hour program will
can be too easily hidden. This apIJrimordia1 lea to the punt Chinese.
eumine toPics nf community interest
proach also fails to reco(llrize that
Race entbely abeDdoaecl as a
each Saturday at 7 p.m. on Cfuumel 7.
those workers who do more have more
bllsia of ellmldliY."
Using a discussion format, the proopportunil¥ for error. "'Ibe demand
Inste.d, be added colored Chinese
gram 'features a panel ' of four indivifor !!"!"action is unrealistic," he asid.
males were Bl!llt to ~at the age nf
dilals who are involved with the topic.
Higher pay .and increased benefits,
fiYII to be "acculturated." Fourteen
At least one panel member each week
Swain commented, have been shown
yean latar they returned to Jamaica,
will be a U/B facultv member. Tbere
to ha've litUe impact. on worker· permoooJiniiWiy and culturally Chinese.
ia also an "aUdience"' of eillht peraons,
formance after a certain level has been
primarily U/B students, Who can parreached. 'The chief result of this apticipate in the disCuMion.
.
proach, he CDDtended, is to keep the
"However " Patteri!Oil COiltended, "a
Saturday's
proji8.IIl
will
be
the
dissatisfied
worker on the ·job because
uniform ~ cultura served only
first of a two-part oeries on ~
be "can't alford to leave."
. to euppGit the real buis al the Chingrapby.
Participatina
faculty
members
Automation
am remove some dull,
- ellmic identity. that ia, economic
will lie Howard Mann, pre~_,. of
detlrading jobs,-Swain • ted out, but
~ty." ~:· be remarked,
law and · · rudence, And John Lick,
it can be dangerous if 'l:'tituted withthe colored
had made ......
of psychology.
out considering workers' .-.Is. Caremarkable ~" dominatina JaThe program will run for 38 weeb.
ful to emphasire that be did not wish
maica'•- entire retsil and wholeE!e
· to seem to be singlin1 out GM as a
trade industry. l'he ethnic unity
t , .t he Alboquerque ersono-.
.
_
CLOSING
R£-+
he~-~ colored Chinese develOp
mist (an eraonomiat ia one devoted to
a ~busi-.lcommunity network,
In the event that severe winter weather
tbe acienliAc studY al the relalioDship
lon:es tile dOSiftll of tile Unh(efslty. that
between _ , 8DII his workinl environ- be, "'bis consolidation," commented
lnlonNtlon will bo cerried on tile Dolly
mmit, be cieiiDed) cited tbe disastrous
PattAnan, · .._. eapecially aood for
Report. 831-4343, . In eddltlon ID bolna
~of .a,_
plant where
~ The lllronplt community
tw.dcnt by oru radio ond television
everytbina that could be autoorpnlzations- aleo tmde ~­
-Ions.
mat8d.
'l1&gt;e
left.&lt;&gt;vers
_
, liven to
atioDB, and all ....... lo&lt;alllld II! Ktop-

ita -

tar

beca...e

:J

T...., .

:::!..::

l':;;.

-

em-

"*'

---

TV Program

nus

assistailt":.:f-..

v-

/.

'

tbe workers who .-rded tbe eltuation not • a bodD,l&amp;rt • liD affrclllt,

tJoea.l- Clll!J' . U . . . . . . . . .
~chin.. 'The .--lit ia, 8wilin ......
that workmanabip baa bel!ll ahoddy. ,
He baa heeD advilled by a ..__.
triend not to buy a car tumecl aut at .
that plant em MCIIlday or Fride,y
· {when abeeriteeism ia nompant 8DII
less skilled workers called In). One
buyer, Swain noted, """" found a .
wrencn welded to hill car's enJiDe ·
blodt.
.
-lne

N o - . . of LJmltM ........

Wbetber work is dSblllllllllizinl depends on the man not the job, Swain
observed U a job requires little ehility, then one answer mar· be to employ individuals with linuted talents.
"It romes as a surprise to many that
half the population ia below 11veraae,"
he said. Many companies have made
the costly error ·of overtraining and
overselecling. "Tbere ia no shortage
of limited people,'' be added, noting
that for years the Telephone Company
has found it productive to hire as
operatOrs only those with mid-range
I.Q. scores of 90-110. Studies have
shown also, he reJ&gt;?rted, that taxi
drivers with the hlghest I.Q.'s haYe
the most accidents; they find it difficult to keep their minds on the relatively undemanding task of driving.
Horizontal task diversification,
Swain pointed out, has been used successfully to enable workers such as
the complaining front-bumper specialist to realize their dreams of handling rear bumpers as well. Volvo fias
pioneered this approach through its
use of semi-autonomous production
teams which, instead of fastening one
bolt all dsy, assemble the complete
car. This is admittedly more expensive on the face of it, but Volvo has
realized savings through fewer defects
ana a sharp decline in employee tUrnover (down from 40 per cent to 10
per cent). Other companies have
found that allowing workers to serve
as inspectors one morith at a time has
carry-over benefits when the worker.
returns to hjs regu)ru; job. •
.· . _
An even better approach, in Swain's
view, is to let the worker uengineer''
his own job. After all, be knows better
than anyone about his own work. A
Motorola ·plant in Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., haS found that asseinbly teams
which set and monitor their own goals
and discuss their own problems with
management turn out better quality
products. This concept has also reduoed the turnover rate by, 25 per oent
and produoed a 95 per cent weekly
attendance rate. A Gaines 'Dog Food
plant in Kanass has 72 wodrers, each
of whom has been trained to. do all
the jobs in the factory. divided into
reams of 16-17 members who hire and
fire and discipline tlieir own members.
'There are no f~persannel
department, etc., alfo · companion
administrative asvings.
· plant has
a 37 per cent higher production rate
than a similar unit in Dlinois, Swain
reported.
Slmillor ID c:..tls

Vertical enrichmeilt Swain defined
as being similar to the old craft 8)'Biem
in which one· penoon built "'-- .
This is tbe opposite, be laid, of tbe
fractionalization ilpproecb wbich baa
come to characterize American industry. 'The Bell s~ ..... also a pioneer here, be B&amp;ld, in an effort to cambat· turnover problems 111110111 Clpi!Dltors, linemen, ._m.-. etc. Under
this method, one per8IJil now does all
tbe work on installini a telepboae.
for example, where teams al three or
more used .to be involved. Customer
complaints are now h8DIIIed by one
individual who sees tbe whole !&gt;r"'through (working with whatever clepartmenta are onooemed) and - " '
beck to the customer. Fon.-ly, a
complaint report Willi simply fllled out
and routed by the individual receiving
it.
Job astisfaction, Swain concluded,
comes from the job itself and from
such factors as achievement, """"''nition, increased .._...;bility and the
opportunity to - ·
.'
' .
Citina Masloor'11 hierarchy of human motivation in wbich ego fulfillment and self-ectuallzalion are moat
important after basic needs have been
met, be urpd that "we make """"'
what people Wllllt to do."

I .

�r.

~
~~~· - ~
~.I b ~
-'Y _... Ill
8. 'l1ley

Kyuu.pook Natiaeal tl.....l;y
&lt;KNU1 ._ .._ doKribed M lhit
major developiiiJ ..U-mty In KGI'IIIi
- -Cifte wbidl ~ IIIey ~ the
Uni_,.;ty Ill Seoul 'lbe ~t

m-

DDt fJaD t.ba m.ti&amp;utiGD it8elt
but flOOD ............. - 1J;S. Em'-Y allciU In 1(-, t'l1lbdlbt J'lll&gt;"
.-t.tnw tbere aad iDdlvlduala...
aocialed with the IDstltute of s-t.
Weal 8ludie8 at the Univenil;y of ~ ·

Ha.U.

Fliunded lD 11162 throuth~ of
I1IIIOikm teacher•' aad
tural ·

~

eo

MWb'

wblcb -

fonDed m.-llllta aad........,.., law
aad palital acleDae, aad ~
unite, KNU toda,y bdudla .._ , .
..... aad ._ pEuale aehoola. It Ia
lbwldally
tbe It...~ Scime 6J
atudeDta aud

IIUIIPaded::

318

r.cu1fiJ (Wpplel;y

180 with

the U.S.) --.eel
-m

c~ocaae..r.-

in 1111111a ud
ca ID llll6«re
campua (developed lliDoe 11162) ud in
other facllitaln ............. .......... Dr. YOUDJ Hee Kim, 11iatb precR'
dent of KNU, liM ......S lliDoe JCIDU~ 1972. UDder a policy of revitalizm1 the Um-.lty, ID eunenf mta·IOJU8 IDdicatea. be baa "aet about try1n1 to eatabllah """" inatitutioua and
1'8JU)atioua and refol'lllint old oues!'
"He baa," the mt:alotue ~tinuea,
"...........,..J CGIIIItrudion and apensioD of facilities to C!llllte au environmeut ... -.duclve to 80IIIId edualtion
and COIIIIIIl'VIltica .. •. (and) bas put
bis wbole bea:rt and -.1 into makinl
the UniYelllity ~ for ita flilbt into
the '1IIOdem worid.
Fir&amp;t among the liat of aaoomplishments sup~ the latter statement.
~ mt:alotue atea formation of "a
sisterhood ~tionsbip wit&amp; the State
University of New York at Buiialo."
Obor*- -

Cultural DilhNnces

_

According to a ch!oool~~ of """!'ts
leading up to that al6liation which
KNU's monthly En,tish language
p,..,.. provided on the eve of the formal signing of the pact, President Kim
proposed the idea after visiting ·U / B
in August 1972. Perhap&amp;.be was taken
with some obvious parallels betw~
. tbe two institutions- both are rapid·
ly developing public urban universiti.., with multiple locations and in·
terests; eech was formed .through a
merger of established institutions;
botb ha.Ye, mAjor asp~tiohs' ~or . the
future. Qr maybe President .Kim was
imp~ witb equa))y_ ~VIOIJS .P?n·
trasts, differences- oltermg pro!DlSmg
a rea s for reciprocal relationships.
rTbe KNU Pr~ noted, for exampl_e.
that "SUNYAB 1S more advanced m
scientific' fields, whereas · KNU engages in more extensive Oriental
Studies.")
The Korean educator followed up
bis original proJIOI!&amp;) with._a six-point
plan for reciprocity l whicb was accepted here), sugg..,ting further that
PI;'!Sident . Robert L Ketter m8ke a
goodwill visit in tbe fall of this year
to sign the formal agreement. Tbat ·
· agreemeut was signed . at a _ceremony
on tbe KNU campus m 'I;&amp;eJU ~
ber 17. It pledges the two uruvel1!1ties
' "to cooperate witb each other for mutual benefit by the exchange of· edu·
mtional .and ~ P'C"If!""" as
well as fnendship aud &amp;erVlce m order
to promote the advanoement·of scholarship, culture and peace and friendship ~ the United States of
America and the Republic of Korea."
•
•
•
Britbt. cleoir aldea, invi2oraliDJ 40-

50 delree teaii*Bture. 200 KNU stu-

___ _

denta, and a IDIIltterint of Americans
· (including MicbMI Frlacb of the U/B
History and ADaicau 8tudiee Depart.-.ta, currently in Korea ~ a FuJ.

..

.... ,.......,. .,. ... oww.. ., u.....

*' .............. fhiNnltT
1"-.,
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..,..,~

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2J.J.
2U1).

uo ...............

~

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..-P.iTJUCU IFA.aD .,.,....._,
.......,. 1'. .ILUtt.a1'T

·------··-

... e&amp;.OII1Ua

a. c••n••n"
~­

IIAJIC'r

bad - - a t 8eaul'll
Airport
~ ..... ~~~ ~
u.r Pnaleat..., ....._ . . . _ blld lallllr pUI CliiiUtlaq Cilia at tbe
U.S. BIDJIMw aad CID tbe ~
miDlater 1/l ......liaD.,. baar.llitbt
..uh eo ,._.. followed U..t
bmDedlalaly by a welamdJat dilmer
with KNU'a ....,._ 1Ddicati¥e of the
rapidly . . . . 8dledale wllkh tbe ~
, _ bad anu.,cl!for the brief livec1ay 'YIBIL
' Equally rapid, . the Ketter&amp; leanied, waa tbe &amp;r.D way of a- .
pecUiiDJ lnclilental dellllla. For a- ·
ample, at tbe 'ru.day Dflbt dimler,
fiDill wordinl .... qreed UJICill for the
formal . , . _ . l By 9 LID. wedne.lay, the tat bad t-1 aet in type
and printed- in both KoiMil and. ·
EDtJioh. "Tm aot ..,.. we could have
done that here," the President mused.)
AJ.&gt; ... Tl-tay evenlna • group of
W01D1!11 .....ured Mra. ketter for 11
traditioDIII &amp;r.D coetume. Some. bow, between 'ru.day eveDiDt and
late WednM!ay afternoon, a: bandmade silk brocade gown was produ&lt;:ed,
with matching shoea and purae.
Tbe Korean dinners, iucidentally,
proved to be extremely Mrdy, Presideut Ketter t:eporta. Aud botb Ketter&amp; ·
fared well with cbopaticks, except for
the silver on..,, about ~tb of
au inch in diameter, wbich proved
challenging. Equally challenging, fo!
the President at least, was tbe custom
of being seated on cushions at tables
barely twelve incbes oii tbe floor.

Other cultural differences spiced the
visit and alerted the Ketter&amp; -to the
difficulties which many of our foreign
faculty and students must experience
when enoountering Buffalo for tbe 1i:rst
time. As a result of these first-band
cross-cultural enoounten;. botb U / 8
and KNU will be even more sensitive
to smootbing tbe transition for laculty and students who may eventu- ally be exchanged under tbe sisterhood agreement. For example, KNU
is looking into providing w...tem-type
living accommodations on its campus.
The second day in Taegu began
with a formal meetiog in President
Kim's office attended by deans .and
directors of program~~ at which time
President Ketter received a briefing,
in English, on KNU. While interpreten; were provided for tbe entire visit,
most of tbe administrators spoke Eng)ish, so language WIIS not a major
problem in tbe official discussions.
This was not always tbe case for the
more informal contacts.
The ceremony sealing tbe sister·hood agreement took tbe fonn of an
academic oonvocation at whicb Ketter was awarded an bonorary degree
and oopi.., of the signed agreement
were· exchanged, In its final form, tbe
pact calls for: 1. tbe eichange of prolessors for lectures and research· 2.
- tbe exchange of students for advahced
studi.., and tbe promotion of international understanding; 3. tbe exchange of research materials and
- equipment of mutual interest; 4. tbe
establishment of cooperative research
programs; and 5. the "energetic pursuit of other useful projects whicli
will benefit botb" universities.

Exc:ho,._ otGifto

-Tbe ceremony also included an exchange of institutional gifts: a motherof-pearl oriental plaque from KNU to
U/ B and a piece of star crystal from
Coming as this UniYelllity's present
to Kyungpook. The Coming crystal
selected Ketter 881.d
'
=..tive or ' the b...t .in'
craftamanohip.
•
A twcHiay lntematiooal Seminar on
"Resouroea: Korean and International
Needs ai&gt;d ProaPecta." aponaored by
the Amerimn E~y. the· Q_.S. Information Service, Kyungpook National Univanity · and the Republic
of Korea, opened 011 the KNU campus. Wec!nea4ay afternoon, attended
by 60 acbolara " - Korea ·and Japan.
PleUdent' Kettar presented the openint remarb .. well . . . formal paper
... "HiJber Eduattica and Miuapo,.er

:.=

~While the .l'n!8lclent .... occupied

with the aeminar, Mra. Ketter visited
an elementary achool dlliated wltb
the UniYelllity, beint -ted to folk
diiDcina and ~ted witb - ~
rean dOUa m-1 in .....tdint eo&amp;tumea. Moat -of, the teac:bera at the
achool were the Kettera Np&gt;rt,

noting that the role ol women in Korean prof-xmal life ia limited. Only
. five women are members of the KNU
faculty, for example, although many_
are in attendance at the University.
Wednesday eveDiDt. President Kim
was boat for • JeCepticJq at the Student Union. Students, participants
from the international seminar, the
mayor of Taecu and other Korean
university presidents were 8JDOIII
tboae attending. Strinp playing Mendelaaolm provided a baclcground for
informal converaatiooa. In several exchanges witb atudenta (wbo spoke
En,lish well) ~ty members,
President Ket r
that' the
Watergate affair, at
the opin. ion of tboae wbo spoke to bim about
it, has increaaed rather thau reduced
confidence in the U.S. ayatem beCIIuae
of oar approec:b' to bandlina iL
The o8lcial rilaideoce of Preaident
and Mra. Kim waa the site for dinner
on Wedneeday eveninJ. Tbe bame ia
one thet- used by 11 J - ditnitary .when that DIIUcm rule Kon!a.
Dinner ended In time for JUeata to
reach their """- before curfew Wbic:b
extenda thrbucbout Korea from 11

p.m. to aanrlae, lilllely, Ketter
aaya. in ,_,.utica of a pera!ived
continual threat fJaD the North. A
Squth Korean military ~ ia
eYerywbere, coltbougb IIIICitibUiive. and
moat people to tab tittle uotice.
On the other band, ........... of the
remaining Ameriem military forces
are rarely seen.
'Ehuraday in Taesu broudlt • meetint witb KNU faculty ud 11 visit to
the ll*!ical 'coUeae and UniYelllity
hospital. A faculty deleption of 60
~ the 1;ypea of propalllll under
way at KYIJIIIIPOOk, with President,
Ketter reapondinJ with information
about U/8. "P.reaidenta Cllll sign
agreemenle," Ketter told the group.
. "but the agreanenta Cllll ......-~ onlY
if faculty and atudenta flDd areas of
mutual lntereeta."

_,__

It would be premature to diacuaa
future -mtUtlea for -.d&gt; at ltiia
point, Ketter aaya. but acbanJea will
be Immediately betJun of mtaloguea
. and reaeardl and other publialliooo.
KNU'alustl- of Oriental Studies .is
~ ben • camplete aet of ita dia-tlcaa and the Medical Scbool is

�,'

were pll!8la of the- USIS for a dw.
at DMJby Camp Beary ja tbe- -

pany ol Fulbright ~1\.oe
Corps wolbrs arid Kcniiiiedaliaa

~of~

wbich tbe Eft.
ten; left Friday llllll'lliQJ, pnwlcled
extreme c:ontraabl, Preoicleai 'Ketler
obaervecL 118 amtral -=tioa Is modem but is rinPd with bJrn.clf.IJI&amp;.
oontury lookiDI DllilhbodiCICida .,bani
.....,;.,., can be obs•'l'ed 1l!1llhlnJ
clotbes in ootdoor- and bMting
them 011 rocb. A tatiJe ~­
!nf center, Taecu Is alhe with color;
bright yellow and red.&lt;fyed cloth ~
~Y dried oolside In the - light, spread out in ribbons sometimes
stretching for a quarteo: ol a mile. ~
cated near a valley in rup, mountainous terrain, the city_. abmucled
in early
• -mist, a ai&amp;bt wbich
~
from the Window of
3
the ~ .;:.., at the I.akeside
Hotel which commanded a panoramic
view of the City below.
On the -relum trip lo. Seoul, tbe
Ketteis were driven via the nation's
major highway (the Seoul-Pusan Expressway) , a four-lane limited """"""
route compamble lo tbe Thruway,
built in the last 7 or
-and ..,_
quiring a grest outlay o resources on
the part of the developing nation. Inten:banges along . tbe route between
the major cities are just now- being
constructed in order that the road
may facilitate both oommen:e and
tourism.
South Korea ap~ to have three
nations) . goals, .President Ketter indicated. It wants lo develop economic
stability-~ highway construe- ~
tion, rural electrification, purification
of its water supply CKNU medical
students are currently engaged iJi
coiQbatting a severe parasite problem
in rural areas), industrialization and
improvement of farming methods in
order to increase production ( the
a mount of farmland is.mesger in light
, of a rapidly growing population, particularl)! in urban areas; Taegu with
a population of 1.5 million and Seoul
with 6.7 million ha,ve both doubled
their populations in tbe last 10 years. )
The nation also strives for preparedness to meet any possible threat from
the North (while at the same time
keeping open lines of communication
and negotfutions) : ·The third priority
is the r&lt;H!Stablislunent of cultural ties
with the nation's past.
In short, Ketter says, South Korea
is "a ·nation running fast to catch up."

.,.,..J"t

sreers

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suppiYID&amp; - " " ' publications. TheY
..... 8llll!od tbat - do the same.
Am11n1 olla beBinninl steps, Ketter 'sal;! tbat the Fulbrisht Commission In Kora has .Indicated that two
-atudeota (with 111118ter's ~) cur' ...,tly aaolled at Kyuqpook have
bel!ll ldaatflled for' ~P. and
IIUppCIIt at Bu«aJJ if 1his is .ftiasii&gt;Je
-one In matbematics and cme In ~
litical aCiomce. We would accept any ·
ol their
'who- our requirementa, Keu8r lllld. He also noted that
ew!Dw.lly one 8Miior visiting profesaonbip may be pnwided annually.
The ~ty ol "" t!liCbanae of
~..!..t~ pn!llidenl!l also.hasi&gt;Mn

-a

Several U /B IP'Aduates ""' members
.ol the medical laculty at"K)'UJIIJX&gt;Ok,
Ketter fOUDd wbeD visiting the clinical facilitiee In dotrnfillwn Taegu. At
the KNU medical 8Cbool, lbele was

ap~n a~ and ~tatioa or·
a ecroU to Mra. Ketter- one deco-'

_.,..,

rated witli .,..._. and~-. aymbola of ..... life.
Fifty-tour~-

lie&amp;

~yaqju, ....,

ot.or-u

the capital of die

Silla Dynasty (57 B.C.-935 AD.) and
·today the site of a comprehenSive glrv-

'J1'-,{~ ..r.j
..... ~~~

v

'1+0i'lz

-l': 'l'f4· ~

stitute of Oriental Studies, bas .;f.
fered assistance to U / B in the devel. opment of an Oriental art collection,
Ketter reported.
One of the peraonal gifts preaented
- to' the Ketters during tbeir visit was
a handsome reproduction of the Golden Crown ol the Silla Dynasty which
was excavated in 1921·- a gift from
tbe KNU Alumni As.&gt;ciation, presented by ita president who is the
retired 8UflleOI1 general ol Korea.
''My curiosity in regard to tbis ares
was heightened by . . . a reference lo
the Taegu apple and tbe comment
that it is noted · for its outst&amp;Dding
flavor," Ketter bad said in his address at n-lay morning's aoremony
at KNU1 ~ that one of his aVocaticins 18 the cultivation ol 'IPPiee.
HiS Korean basts promptly arianged
recount&amp;
a Visit lo an apple farm on the relum
The KNU Museum In downtown
trip from Kyongju 1o Taegu. lntel'Taecu has many valuable artifacts of
estingly, the 'IPPie&amp; under cullivalioa
. the sma Dynasty, "eepScWJy In pot-- _ .., the farm prowid lo be not Taegu
lery and sllllne worb, and renb lint '~ apples but American Jonatba{ls wbich
the ' father ol the Korean Iarmer bad
ol all the uniYerility in tbe ..
counlly," the UruWil'llity catalotlue
brought in '(rom the u.s. 'lbe ' farm
lillY&amp; 'lbe dln!ctor of thilt facility,
was "lilapi&amp;eotly kalpt," Ketter ssid.
also lbe bMd ol tbe Uni-.ity's InReturnina .to ~. the Kettera
emment effort lo ·~reaerve," "nurture," and restore artifacts of tbe ancient culture "as an international cultural and tourist. center." The Ketters
spent 'l'bursd&amp;y afternoon there sight-mg, guided by a Buddhist monk
who granted special permission for
the Ketters to photograph-many ol the
""""vated and --restored national trea..,_, Of particular interest was a recanstructed Buddhist temple (dating
lo 50 B.C.) and a J.2.14-inch-thick, 72ton brooze bell -lhie 1arpst eW!r aist.
Known as the Divb)e ·Bell ol King
Seongdeog, it is said. to be "the most
beautifully ............t beiJ in Asia."
President Ketter was aCcoriied the
rare privileae ol lltrilting it. "It was
·still Yibmting fiw. minutes later," be

Unity of Man

Having arrived back in Seoul, the ·
Ketters, accompanied by President
and Mrs. Kim and their daughter, bad
an afternoon for louring historic palaces of the Yi Dynasty and the National Museum. The KNU Alumni in
Seoul were hosts for a reception and
fonnal dinner at Korea House Friday
evening. Traditional Korean folk
dances performed by' an "exmllent"
troupe of 21).25 dancers provided the
night's entertainment.
The lour was scheduled lo be capped by a courtesy visit with the South
Korean Premier on Ssturdal:' morning,
October 20, but that was at tbe height
of tensions over the Arab-Israeli war.
The meeting was cancelled. The Ketters left Seoul that afternoon, as·
scheduled.
"President and Mrs. Kim were gracious," Ketter said ol his bosta,' "and
1 look forward 1o the time when my
wife and I may act ft!ciprocally."
Earlier, in tbe visit, President Ketter bad noted in an ' addreai 011 internationsl education that "reason lllll8t
be 1.-1 lo create reasonable rules of
behavior to (10\'em the conduct ol
riations no ' - than nations _ . .
the conduct of tbeir citizens," that the
''ultimate national interest is
simply nationaL"
The tense internationsl situalioa
which coincided with his d_.ture
served to provide still greater
for that "development of a true
national cooperation, the »-m.nln'~ ol
an acknowledgment ol the~tiona
. ~~'i.!,t~=~tionofrea- . .
Meanwhile, be ·said, !'my hope is
that the University at Bulfalo and
KYUIIIPOOk National Univentity can
create a sisterbood relationship ' tbat
can as a model lo be emulated
by othera. 1 will work toward that ..
eod; and 1 know President Kim will,
too, for 1 ·beJieW! ·we share a common
vi- of our work. 1t is dUec:ted toward
the unity ol man..

"'1

me

�., _ ~

6

Md-Racism ·fi ~Jultect PERB Now Hearing Pleas.fgr
With .that for Free ~cadente .separate NTP Repr~entation

..-:
n.. tlnee

letters ~ the

"Raaiiuttaal AaiDst Racism" (m.the
~

of !(qv. 29) IIUIPOit to be

lllllliliJII to ttie der- 01 fJeedam of
lllaaidit ad ~ n.. rilbt to -

........

~

• •. , . . . . . . . . . .

Ill Jale

A1JIUI&amp; CSBA lied witb

tbat 11-.- a ~t7 ol

~=~
~=~~uni~for":Cwof~!; · !~!&gt;u;:_~

==
na-·

the initial .J-:rlnli tbet the demic - jii'OhaiOD8I8 are a millariliY
group within the current barJalaiDI
unit who are halnc aubjeated to doable
!Jarplniq; fiDt With the fecult7 aDd
then with the Slate; tbet &lt;ibere _ .
• tnJde.olrs made in the fqnnatiiJil ol. .
ad cultule.
informal
·
of in~ parties.
the demands for the Initial CODtract
But tbla rflht doee DOt include the
orilit$ in the ~tereata of a healthy
- .the State,
A (SUNY/United,
tbat. woiked -to the det:rimeqt of the
ricbt"to allmderand iDsult a· people or
now UUP) 8itd CSEA (repteaenting
professiciDal sta1f; tbat the Slate has ·
a ..:e. Tlie fact that JIIICh alaltder and
the petitioners)' 'The interested par-permitted poaa inequities in. the aal- "
ballt is beiDI coucbec1 in acientific
(union of facultY and professional
ties were 'llsked what their respective
aries of the nonacacWnica 811 eontenuinoiOIY, the fact tbat the "hypothstall) denouncing propoaals for tuipQSitions were on the petition and . trasted to ita -lualt of the acaesis" tbat a certein i:ace or JMlOp)e
tion increases should be repeated by
(wbetber bla&lt;:k or slavic or Jewish)
wbether or not they felt tbere was a · demics; tbat the lllll&gt;llllademics are inall organiZations on campus.
is "iDferior'' to aDOtber is being posed
for a formal bearing to be !Jeld.
")igible for continuing appointmenl!l;
as serious subject matter.lor "scientific
The Stele took a neutral ~lion.
that they 1adt a de6ned opportunity
. The fight against racism and for
investiption" - this only leeds to a
SPA
indicated
their:
prefereilce
for
for promotion such as exists for fac&amp;aldemiC freedom al-e tf.o sides of the
clemeaniDc and a depading of the • same
keeping the be.rgainini unit aa is, one
ulty; ihat many of the ~c
coin when, seen in the light o(
-m, of intellectual freedom.·
.
unit representing both the faculty aild
profeaaionals 'Mll'i&lt; for anjl are"BBlpe1the desire we all share for a growing
'J'here is no such thing as "serisi- · university whose doors will be more
professional staft. They argued tbat
vised '11)1 faculty who determine ~ir
tive facts" which are supposed to be
the
decision
issued
by
the
initial
bearworking
conditione and aalary mand more openeil to all, and where
taboo because of political or moral
ing officer was in fact a sound apcreases; and that many nonacademthere will be increasing and not clim;
reaaoos. It is not racist to emmine the · inishing opportunities for teachers,
ics are denied a ~t role in
praisal of the conditions within .t he
effects tbat tbe practice of racism for
University. 'They argued tbat in their
the go~ of the University.
bh\ck and white, male and fem&amp;le.
'centuries in tbis country bas bad on
opinion there were no substantive
S••.........~athe i n ( · - • bearin
the lives of racially oppressed people.
- ANN HASKELL
changes tbat have occurred which
...-.~t to
.,......, . g,
And such emminationa, to be true to
.J Al4liS LAWLER
would warrant a rehearing of the
PER~ •~ &lt;;sEA to pMVl~ a
the high responsibilities of intellectCURT MEl'TLIN .
case, and tbat.without such significant
depo&amp;ltion "! wptten form setting
SIDNEY WILLj&lt;ELM
uals. Should lead to the earnest atchanges there would be no reason to - forth the prmc1pal ~Ia !h'!t·
tempt to combat the poison tbat has
suspect that the original decision
CSEA would. use at II'!'~· if _It
destroyed milliona of lives and cripwould be reversed.
were granted. 8a..,.t on CSE~ s wntpled millions more in this century.
Origtnol PERB Decision
.ten· respj)Dse, the fo11Z181 bearmg was
Did Bertoli Brecht, one of the
The original PERB decision iricludgranlell IUld co~ on October
"oppressed" of, the McCarthy ~.
ed such statements· as "The record · 30.
become an "oppressor" wben, turning
· makes it abundantly clear tbat all proto his ~ravaged land, be ·app8aled
Thooe Who.lta¥e
iessional employees of SUNY ·across
The Faculty Club and the U/ B
to th4! German ')leople for:
.Richard W. Glasheen of Stony
Women's
Club
are
sponsoring
a
"dinthe state have a substantial commu1. Full freedom of books, with' one
Brook, organizer of tlie petition, gave
ner and a show" packsge for a pernity of interest in tbat - almost ,all
.
restriction;
the initial testimony. His refei-ences
fonnance of the "Messiah" at Kleinfundamental terms and conditions o!
2. Full freedom for the theatre, with
include that &lt;if being one of the nego-hans .Music Hall, Saturday, December
employment ·are uniform at all cam-.
one restriction;
·
·" .
tiators "of the originill contract, secre- ,
15.
.
puses or locally detemiined in ac3. Full freedom lor -the visual arts,
tary of the Faculty Assembly at Stony
cordance with uniformly applicable
-with one restriction;
'
·
Dinner at the Faculty Club, which
Brook, founding member of SUPA and
standards or guidelines;" and "The
4. Full freedom for music. with one
begins at 5:30p.m., will include : fruits
vice ptesident for· Universi9' Centers,
basic community of'-iillerest between
restriction;
with iced champagne; wine consomme; ·
membe• .o f -Committee 33; SPA deleacademic and nonacademic profession5. Full freedom. for films, with one
chicken breast and baked ham in
gate (rom Stony . Brook, and member • ·
als as. evidenced by their common
restriction.
'
Jirape sauce; Potatoes Aona; broccoli
of the SPA Advisory Committee on
fringe benefits, related salaries, com'I7be restriction&lt; .No ..freedom forwith ,dilled butter; endive ·salad wi1J:r
Contract Negotiations. Others· who
mon mission, and substantial amountbOoks or 'works- of' art wliich gloncy
wine d ressing; relishes; dessert, and
have testified so far. are &amp;bert Gran·
of interchange, is not overshadowed by
war 9r represent it as inevitable or
Liebfraumilcb.
ger of Alfred, former president of SPA,
any demonstrable conflicts and would
whicjl encourage racial hatred.
president of SUPA and chief
T otal cost lor the dinner and consee.m to mandate a conclusion tbat the former
It is our opinion tbat true freedom
negotiator-for SPA's oriltizml contract;
cert~ $1(1.
•
two groups be incluaed in the same Jobn Price of New Paltz; a founder
71 of thought is enhanred, not· denied
unit for p llrj)O§eS of collective negotiaby such a restriction.
Reserva tions, limited to 100, may
and first treasurer of SUJ'IA, and chair·
tions."
Nevertheless, we recognize the conbe made by calling the Faculty Club,
man of Committee 33; Phil Swarr, a
831-3232.cern of academics tbat any formal reCSEA argued for the petitioners
founder of SUPA, vice pri&gt;sident for
strictlona will be misused or bureaufour-year collegee. fonni!r presideD! of
cratically applied in a narrow-minded
the SPA chapter at COrtland. a member ·or Committee 34; Margaret 0'wa.r;..,w=d~~n~~~v~f
Bryan, former member ·of the U/B
thought does not'lie in either opposing
. '·
SUPA aild SPA Elleeutive Boards;
or defending the right to promulgate
chairman
of the local SPA Moni~
Foculty
the ~tifio hypotheses conVisiting Professor '(1 Semester Only), Theatre.
&lt;!!DWIII race· and intellil!&lt;lnce. .
Instructor-Associate Professor, ScJWol of Dentistry.
· Freedom of thought mvolves being
sional sta1f
toGA
Assistant Professor, Mathematics.
able tb master and use the intellectual
Adviso!y Cominittee em Contact Nep
tools of thought, just as freedom of acVisiting Professor or Plofessor, Mathematics.
tiations; Jack D1ari. SPA deleptil
tion involves being in po89eSSion of
Assistant or Associate Professor, History.
from Downstate Medical Center aDd
the materials and instruments neededProfessor, Chemistry.
,
member of Committee 33, ·and. Joel .
. to attain certain goals. At the present
AsSislant Professor (Physical ), Chemistry.
True
of Albany, foundiDir member of
time tbere is a serious danger tbat the
SUPA. former Ylce president for Uni-·
Assistant Professor (Organic), Chemistry.
tools of tbauJbt, with w&amp;ieh we as
.
versity
Centers. and editor of tJ:ie
Visiting
Professor,
Chemistry.
educators eqwp our students, will beSUPA N"ewsletter.
Assistant Professor, Chemistry.
come leas and less accessible to the
Hiii-Noetber Research Instructor, Mathematics.
cbi1clren of poor, .....ming-class and
The bearing is acheduled to run
moderate income families.
, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and French or English,
through December 7, 1973. SinCII the
Enormously increased t u i t i o n s ,
Arts and Letters.
·
.
make-up
of the barll8inina unit ia In
however mucl)-cusbiooed liy proinises
~ negotiatimi8 on tlie new mas,.
NTP
of added grants and loans, is "" attack
~SPAeontracthavebeen~ '
Assistant to Chairman, Theatre, PR-1.
by the State, until tile OOIIC!Illlian of
::'.~~~-~
Assistant to Director, Physical Plant, Amherst.
the beerina and P8RB bas made a
society. on- increases, as with nrice
Assistant for I nstrw:tional Servius, StUdent Testing.
ruling. If the PERB deciaioD is-~­
increues of all
affect riocf8ii Assistpnt Director of Recreational Progtamtrtinf, Student Activities,
able"to
the ~~ the call for an
01111.-1 minorities mo a t _of
.
V.P . Student A1fairs.
~lec:Uon of~ ~ apnt for the
nlelr eftec:t is therefore not only unAssialant
to
Chairman,
Microbiology,
Health
_
Scienceo.
nonacadenuc
r.rofeasionals will be
democratic but racist.
made. Probe.b e contenders would be
Tech!tical. Speciolist, Chemistry. .We ohould,aJao recogniz.e tbat in a
CSEA
and
SP~
If the PERB d8c!rsion
Assistant
Director.
}or
Registration,
.
AdmisSions
and
Records,
PR;2.
tigbtening economic situation tbere is
- is unfa:vonible, SPA will continue to
Peraonrael Associate; Personnel Department, ~.
•
·
"" a definite' tendericy to divide white
' be the barga:ining agent.
BDd black students and faculty. Token
For additional informatiOn- ~ these jobli lind for details of
conceaaiona to the "poor" are hypo-·
NTP openings tliroughout the State Univeroity system, consult billletin
crit,lcall:y J'l"8!'1lted 88 the JOB) of iuiboards at tbese locations:
dini tuition burdens on~
Building
1. Bell FaCility between ·Dl62 and D153; 2. Ridge
=:,tere;=lt:'l:llty'~, ~
t236, next fo cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in -eorriaor next to
unhealthy. climate is beiDa created in·
C-1; 4. Health Sciences Building, in corridor opposite HS 131;. 5. &amp;pen
white males are
led to
Hall, in the corridor between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
Dr. PaulL GaMii, ~of the
77 which
think tbat tbere is an .,pp;;ftion beLinguistics J:lepertmSnt, bas been reground ftoor in corridor next to vending JJIIII:IIin5; 7. Hayes Hall, in
.tween their intereata and theMe of
appointed to lhllt position for a tbreemaiD
ent:rance
foyer,
acroat.from
Public
Ioformation
08ice;
·s.
A"'-'
women and racial and etlmic minori_. ·
:.'_ear ter;m effective September 1, 19'14.
Hall, in corridor between RooD. 112 and 113; 9. Parker EngiMering,
ties.
.
.
The
• lualt .... made by Piesiin corridor -next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, let Boor, HoUalni 08ice
Such a climate, whidl Is a breeding
dent ~ L Ketter.
•
,_; 11. 1807 Elmwood, Peraonnel Depertmant; 12. Noriml · Union,
ground for racist Ideas, can only be
Dilector'a 08ice, Room 226; 13. Diefendorf Hall. in oorridor next to
7 d~ by tbe Ullitlnl of all memDr. Garvin bas served aa cbalnnan
bers of the Unhenlty to oblaln a ,...
Room 106. 14. Jobn Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth 8oor ( Amherst Campus) .
of the departmmt since 1971, aDd W88
orientation ~ nal;laaal aDd _otate priacting chairman fn:&gt;m 1970 to 1971.

dlmlC fJeedam ia a belllc - to whidl
aD acllleiDics ad inteUectuala arust
be·-..i1iw. We abould I8PCIDd vlaCiriiUIIIy . . . .. tm. rilht ia beiDI atlaabd. n.. defense of tbla rilbt is
-u.~ to the advaDce ·of acieDce

the '-1\y, ( 0 . . 100 alaabbomllil aq this aunpua
during two ...,.. of Alquat. with only
a portion o1 the pofaMiunal sta1f be.- _ing conbil:ted; the 9/8/78 issue
of the Reporte. )
On ~ember 21, i&gt;ERB held an

=~..:;:.~ty~f11:.,""8~.P.~

need

T- .

Dinner and Concert
Planned by Clubs

Job Openings ~

=~~~tation~tift

tn-.

=.

::iJ:

:r.,;,

.._..«

Garvin Renamed
ln-_Unguistia

�Senile

l

~,.... .... l,eoLl)

.=.

dail'l ~ call . . fllealfiJ up ad . .
thea, 'WheN the hall are the
. . . , .. . . . . . . . . Mired.

'IW ...... o.-dtiae fll the
*-b' ... Clll ncaal

Clll tbla ...tier ad
. . . . .•. .-. . IIIIIPCII't
,.. adJaa to
~ ,tile llfluatJOD. A qaarum -

Jd ~ 117 the time llllnd.llplll[e
ad liD . . . . tUm by the SeD. . . . . wilDie.
• .
A' ' ' •w.ithea.Jor~fll

euUer......,

~---The matear, whim

- amw-bam
the JIO(Iify attended

:.m
•lled-10
.-.....:

~-

4:15 the quQrum bad
)ll'llbably a I8COI'd for a

l'alllpa the root of the lad&lt;
cl bdenllt In llllmlaalam Js the far,
....-! In vulaaa ways by mem-·
bon fll the body, thet they are being
...... to . . . . . . . admialloaa 'J)Oiic:y
-«~ fll a POIJcy- thet has UO
inlririldc -.lemli: wOrth, that Is de' tl!ruiiDed 117 such praet;cal, politiGII "" conformity with

THURSDAY -13
PIORSSIONAl STAFF SINATE MEETING*•
1

N!=~: 1 ~!"J:,':.""J. &lt;fc;:.::J= :.,~

porta. 3. Career mobility discussion. 4.
' Budget report - PI!$ Colvard. 5. Mike
Langan, AAUA. 6. Chairman's report.
7. Other busineas. Faculty Club Dining
Room, 3 p.m.

~=-~m~~=

and

beda. .

MICH.ANICAL ENGINHIING COU.OQUIUM#

Tbe Seuate did endorae IXIIltinuation for 1111 eddllioaal year of the
preaat .pOijcy fll drawina 50 per Cl!llt
cl the freabinan eJa. fiom the 8th
Judicial Dlatrict. No academic bene-

Tui Requirement. in Support of Pub-

~~e'ioB.n;tJre~Vouih:~e:~~eJ::

Co., 152 Parker, 3:30 p.tD.
PATHOLOGY SEMINAl#

fit-..«~

be loomd
in the curnGt policy. H......,.., President' Ketter c:redlted the 50/(iO policy
with beplq U/B emollmeut stable
last year In the face fll a D&amp;tioual declina (bec:auae of the ..nn,· coat of
rl!8idencie many loc:al ~ tuden to decided to stay at home and attend
U/B, be 8P8CIIIated). Tbe policy also
helped . rally toea! legislators to the
Unlveraity'a aide wlat $30 million
for a library was "'oat" in the capital
budget, Dr. Ketter ~
Tbe Seilate also endo.-1 the followina pcilicy in regard to transfer students: "that esoei&gt;t "" limited by
"'"""' in some acboola of the Univermty the foll~ policies be impl~
mented in admittinJ transfer students.
c1) Students with fewer tbllll30 credit
hours be evaluated by the regular admiMions criteria. (2) Students with
. 30 credit hours or more be admitted,
(a) in order of merit "" indicated by
Grade Point A"""'''l'. (b) by class
level, with lb.- transferring the largest number of hours being accepted
ftrsl"
Ttansfer students will be ilicreas.ingly imtxriant to the University

1d!,li.:O~~:Wc~~

ward Hovorka) in light of two developments: the projected availabDity of
some 3200 dorm vacancies next .Year
and the determination in the SUNY
Master Plan that future erowth on
this campus will be frozen in the lower
division, with the only major increases
in .enrollment pro~ for the upper
and graduate diVlSions.
An attempt ·t o amend the resolution
on Jzansfers .to add standardized test
scores 1111 an alternative criterion for
evaluating transfer applicants fai!ed.

lack cl a quorum precluded a defiaitive vote on the further resolution
of · the Admissions Committee that
U/B a c c e P. t 15 "early admissions
scholars," llifted students who have
not yet completed high acbool but are
capable ( w I t h appropriate advisement) cl University work.

In other busiJMiss, the President told

=.u.ae:: ~ t

=:;!ra;!~ 3:.;

presenl All of January 1, however, the
University-wide deans will be functioning aa an "academic cabinet," reJ&gt;Ortina directly to .the President and
advisin, him on campus-wide matters.
The l'Naident also revealed a previously UDIIJIDOUnced ODDOem that the
aepemtion of housing functions in
~~t jurisd'JCtions may be

UGL
Tho Und.,.l'8d...te Ubrary (UGL) is now
open in Diefendorf Annex for use as e
lludy ~~an durina the ...,.;nina - k i of

tho - · · Call 831·3416 for haurs.

The Properdin Sy1tem, Dr. IrWin Le.
pow. Department of Medicine, Univer•ity of Connecticut, 145 Capen, 3 :30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY -12
GfOlOOY IICTUHI

Upper Devonian Sed.im.entation in the

Cmtral Appo/Qchian &amp;uin, _Dr. J . Doug.
las Glaeoer, University ol· North Caro.
lina, Boll Facility, Rm. D-170, 3:30 p.m.
!!efreahmenta at 3 p.m.
. Preoented by the Department of Geoloaical Scien-.
FOSTII ~OQUIUMI

pilOU~BJ:rUJ:':t;,~rA~!,~~4
p.m. Coffee in 50 Acheson at 8:45 p.m.
NlfTZSCHf AND THE UTEIAIY TEXT*

Some Common Serue Objections to
NUtzscM, Charles Altieri, assistant profeuor, U/ B Department of English, An·
nex B, Rm. 5, 4 p.m.
Presented by the Program in Comparative Literature:
FILM*-

The Wqard of Oz, 140 Capen, 7 p.m.

No a_dmiasion charge.

EOPSearch(Continued from page I, col. 3)

CHEMISTRY SEMINAl#
0

.

P!r~I! ~i~ e'if w~~u':~i
Science, 6 Acheson, 4 p.m.
FILM*
Zorns Ummf;J. (Frampton, ·t970), 147

Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
BUFFALO WOMEN' S CENTEI MUTING*

General meeting, open to all women,
Buffalo Women's Center, 564 Franklin
at North, 7:30 p.m.
For further info~tiori, call 883-5474.

2

SPIING HGISTIAnoN

Undergraduate students should con-

tinue to pick up their regiatration ma~
1

~~wi!:'; !l:~e n~~~ca~

a student's present class) . Information
on the registration procesa will be haDded to stud~ta as they come in to pick up
rHEATIE PHSENTATION•
forms in Diefendorf Reception Area.
John Webster's The White Deuil, di(Note: the time a student picb up and
rected by Gordon Rogoff, Courtyard Tbereturns material will have no besrinc
on lhe time of registration.)
JUNIORS wbose last name begins with:
. for details. ,
,a
M-Z ................................ - ..... .Deoembor 6
UUAI FILM••
SOPHOMORES wbooe last 1U11De begins
Frenzy (Hil&lt;:hcock. 1972), Conierenoe
with
:
Theatre, Norton, check showcase for
A-L ...................................... ..December 7
times. Admission charge.
M·Z
......................:............ .Deoembor 10
This Hitchcock thriller deals with a
series of necktie murders.
FRESHMEN wbooe last name begins
with:
u.un PHSENTATtoN•
A-L ......................................December 11
Nigbtpil!ce and Eternity Bounce, cborM-Z ............... _.. _............- ..Deoembor 12
eocraphed by James · Waring, Harriman
Theatre Studio, 8 : SO p.m . Admission
AU E.O.P. students. regardless of
cha.rge. See Friday listing for details.

=i~':· J:~~«seean~~~~ ~~gA=

EXHIBITS
mittee in fuiding the best possible
person for the directorship of EOP
UUAI AIT EXHIIIT•
and in conformity with equal opportunity provisions on the campus ,
2l:.h~~fr:t.'ili:Zg~to:c.::.::; 1~al~
Ketter said, the job has been adverlery hours : Monday, Wednesday and
tised for several weeks, eliciting inThursday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. ; Tuesday and _
quiries and supporting vitae · from a
Friday, noon-4 p.m. and 8-10 p.m.: Sunday, J-5 p.m .
number of individuals.
GROUP
EXHIIIT•
This being the ·easel he said, "the
Committee is specifical y charged with
st~~tib~
c~a.!:w.c~xh·pb::
reviewing these credentials and, if
graphs by Joseph Hryuniak, Music Room.
considered necessary, continuing a
259 Norton , through Friday, December
systematic additional search that will
2L
I
result in a list of three candidates for
MUSIC LIHAIY EXHIIIT•
the EOP director" from which he will
Th
e
Life
and
Tim
es
of
U/
B's
Choral .
make the final appointmenL
·
- Groups: 1967-1973, Music Library, Baird
As the search is being conducted,
Hall, through December 22.
Ketter said, "I urge the Committee
to pay close attention to five gualificaINTERVIEWS
.tion areas which are consistent with
the University's personnel policies
ON..CAMPUS INTHVIEWS
that govern the hiring of top-level
Throughout the semester, on-campus
interViews will be conducted for students
administrators. 'nlere areas are: acainterested in attending graduate schools
demic hackirround, administrative
or obtaining employment. Further inability, character attributes, knowformation and appoinbnents for interledge of higber education systems, and
views can be arranged through the Uniexperience. As to the latter, the Comversity Placement and Career Guidance
rruttee s h o u I d especially look for
Office, Hayes C, 881-4414. The following
evidence which will provide solid clues
agencies will be interviewing this week:
to an applicant's-ahility to administer
THURSDAY-6: The Trane Comorograms dedicated· to the advancepany; Westinghouse Electric Corp.; New
of opportunities in higher educa- '
York State National Guard, 248rd Medition for minorities and other disadcal Co.
vantapd elements of the population."
FRIDAY-7: The Trane Company;
1be Committee DUlY establisb other
Burroughs Wellcome Company. ·
qualifiaition areas, Ketter said, .but '
MONDAY-10: E . I. DuPont; New
each applicant should be measured
York State Department of Taxation @Dd
"objectively and uniformly' against
Finance.
each of these five aa ·weu 88 any others
the Committee DUlY choose.
NOTICES
Ketter requested that the Committee.
C01J1plete its assignment 88 expeditAI.PMA LAMIOA DELTA fi:U.OWSHtpS
The National Council or. Alpha Lambiously as possible. ,

;;ich

ment

SKI SWAP

The Scbuamoiste'iW Ski Club will bold
ita annual Ski Swap on Friday; Dec. 7,
from 1-9 p.m. and Saturday, Dec. 8, from
11 a.m.-t p.m. in 231 Norton. Equipment
registriltion will ·take place on_ Fljdoy in .
~~~'!.f:U 83J.~ ~J6~ For further

;~~ra~e: ~~~~~ickd,

according to lhe above schedule.

SPI.ING SEMEmt lANGUAGE C0UUU

Two counes not previoualy announced

will be offered in the Sprinc ~r
1974.
.
An elementary intensive~ Portuguese
course (107-108) will be offered · beRin-

~~r/.:J.""~~-~=

will be hetf from · noon-1:20 p.m. ewry
day in 148 Parker. The registration number U 172289. The coune is equivalent
to one year's study for a total of eight
credits.
Spanish 104JSS/404 io a fourtb-eemeater course which will emprbui.ze a read-

~~;:~e e!!;J:f:= .fhe~

Q for students who have had Spanish 103
or who have a previous, perbape inactive
knowledge of lhe 1anguap which they
need for their undergr.aduate major or

IF!.t
G(:t.).tep~~;:..rei~~
be the inotnu:tor.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For everyone's conventence and pleasure,
we like to publicize all events taklng piece
on campus. To record Information, contact
Nancy Cardarelli, ext. 2228.

FELDMAN RIND
Contributions ·are still being accepted for· •

the Marvin Feldman Memorial Fund, es·
tablishod in memory of tho late U/8 pro·
lessor of philosophy. 0'l!anizers of the

fund hope to present an ann~al prize of
$100 to · the outst.nding undergraduate
honors student In psychol-. Contribu·
.tions should be addressed to the Marvin - Feldman Memorial Fund, DePartment of

Psychology, 4230 Ridge loa Road.

�·a
- . lAw·"...,. JWil"' ·~
lldar;- -n.Boa.., tile~

.

.......
~udl!h l!!::v.~ ..=7.:

;.~~~~:-Wham);"

.

._....~

and

~

..=...s-

llMn1 - - . . or the New
LoPilatun wiD a1oo JIUII&lt;i·
~ further . , _ - . ._tact Mn.
ODalee H. , . - , JldiDI:obaizman and
.-.w.t ~ ., -tilm!Da eclaca-

Yari&gt;

tion, 8c:baOI CJf No......_ 881-6648.

.

"":~~Voice,-

wiee

OD

SATUROAY-8

trainiJ1c :for acton, Kriotai&gt; Lillkloter,

:r'u:'
:~~t!eus~
p.m.
•
~~totioM

and Mooiaa,
Eric G. Tumer, profe.or of pepyrolOIY,
Unive,.;ty ol ~ EnPmd. ~

~~:.!t!i.m.by- the De~t ol Claa-

aico.

•

MIDICIIW.- _,.....,

Today's apeaker will be R Carapelloti,
Uf B. Healtli ~- Bide.• 2 p.m.
VlsnJNGiCMOu.a~

MECHANICAL INO.._.O•

,.

M &lt;OATeJMJJI Techniqua in Fluid Mec/rmaU:o and Hetll/M""'Tr-tlMfer, E. M .
• ~. Department ol Mechanical En-ring, U~ty of M~ta, 148
Parker, 2 p!m..
·
ECO-IC$ SIMIW.

.

.

.

u~=ac~CI8f~~P~
Mehra, Depe.rtmeut, of Economic:o. UDi-

veraity of Minnesota, 109 O'Brian Hell.
Amhent Oempua, ·S:SO p.m. Calfee m 608
O'Brian at S p.m.
PHh.OSOPHY LICTUII•

Is it the True that We Punue When.

-~..::n~'~::.!=-z.:ri~!=:
4UI Ridge Lea, Rm. 14, S:30 p.m.
I..TnNAhoNAL WINI HOUI•

Fealming Greek muail:; wine and
snacks yill be .aerved. 204 Townoend, 4

p.~Po...;,red. by the G""'k ~uh, the International Committee, and the Office of
Foreign Student.Affain.
CAC FILM•

·I.WeeldJL~ommunique I
.-.-for events chafllnc admission con be purchased at

Unless-othe,....
NottoR Hall TlcMt

Otnc:e.

•

.

•Open only to •Open to publlc:

the

.

with a profeulonol Interest In the subject
••C)peft to members of the University
ContKt Nancy Conlorelli, 831·2228.
llstinp.

for

THURsDA)f--6
lrATiniCAL SCIENCE COU.OQUIUMi

-

Recent Advances in [~tonic Regression, Prof. Henry 'n. Davis, University of
Rochester, 4230 'Ridce Lea, Rm. A-49,
11:30 a.m. Coffee will be served at 11
&amp;.Presented by the

S~tistical Science

Division, Departmelit of ~~mp~ter Sci-

enoe.

COLLEGIATE ASSEMILY MEETING••

Agenda .to be announCed, 129 'Crosby,
3p.m.

staged through Saturday, December 8,
and December 12· 15.
.
The Jacobean tragedy features Morton
Lichter, Saul Elkin and Beverly Widemnn of the U /B Theatre faculty; Martin
Tackel Michael Pelonero, Martin Ma~ niak Lynn Bowman and Toni Moisiewicz' fellows in the Center for Theatre
~reb. Set design is by Ralph Fet-

~-d
Brown. R1ck Alo~ 18
manag~, and ~tant

terly: costumes by E sther. Kling,

lighting by Paul
production Rtage

director is .Abbe Raven.
According to Rogoff. Webster's scri~t
is a "great, marvelous, gorgeous tragicomedy that doesn't suffer from 'classicitis' It is relevant to American behaviond politics and is a wonderful vehicle
for straight actors."
.
Wine and ooffee will be served and
music played during the two intervals at
each perfonnance.
Presented by the Center for Theatre
Research.

FRIDAY-7
CONTINUING NUlliNG
EOUCATION PIOGIAM#

TMJ • OU/Ihto Bi a Law!, sponaored

by the School of Nuning, Sheraton Inn-

Buffalo East. 8 :45a.m. Continoeo throuth
Friday and Saturday, Dec:emher 8.
"' . Billed u an· opportunity for nurMS

. ~b..aJ";1:"j a_bou~o£':\.!:V:.i.

fects their proCn, the two-day pro.
gram will includa welcoming remarks by
Erie County E:recutive Edwanl V. ReF-l.~ono of the "I'Aol Baaia of
U/'h)tion" by Howard W. Mann of-the

... r~=J~~-~ilii
,.
.
. .

~

Sounder · (Ritt), 140 Capen, 7:45 and
9:45 p.m. Admission: 75 cents.
A powerful study of a family_of black
sharecropper&amp; and the hardshl~ tl)ey
faoe during the Depreeoion. The story
centers on the elder son (Kevin Hooks)
as be learns to undintanCI life's more
evil aspects. Cioely Tyaon aiui Paul
Winfield star as .the parents.
INTUNATIONAL FOUC DANCING•

lnstruc6on in basic steps, 2 Die:endorf, 8-11 p.m.
tHL\TII PUSENTADON•

John Webster's The White Devil, di·
reeled by Gordon ~· Courtyard The. :!::io~f~;:!. ans!e ~~y.m.lis~ .
above for detailA.

uu~!:J.LMtiwsseu. 1~1) : Confe~itoe ~e-

atre, Norton. check ahowcaae for times.
Admission ~arge.

u.un PUSENTATJON•

tJightpiece and Eternity. Bounce, two

lf.l~~~~~/s;p~~:

mission; students, 76 cents; general pub. _
lie, $1.50. Through SUnday, Dec:emher
9 and December 13-16.
N iglitpiece is aet to five nocturnes by
Chopin, and Eternity BounCe to twelve
pieces of rag-time music from 190()..1920
(featuring four performancee via piano
roU., cut ~Y James P. Jobnaon, including

uu.u-

Feafurinc Hedy Wur, bollad · oincer
ahd banjo player, lat lloor cafeteria,
Norton, 9 p.m. Admiuion charp.

SUNDAY-9
MusicAL--Net• '
·• '
' A reconalnlction of an eleventh cen-

tury Gregorian Maoo for Christmas-Day,
)&gt;erfoemed by U/B atndenta..unde&lt; the
difi!ction of Dr. Charlotte Roederer of
the Musil: Department, St. John's Once
Epiooopal Church, 51 Colonial Circle,
Buffalo, 4 p.m.
PiJu.o. IICITAL•

Featuring Linda B: Smith, a atudent
of Frina Anchanaka Beldt. Baird Recital
Hall, 8 p.m.
'
•
The recital ia open to the public without cham&gt;. Presented by tl&gt;e Depart.
ment of MusiC.
UUAi iiLM••

lJeath in Venice (V"ISOOnti, 197l),.ConJerenoe Theatre, Norton, cbeck shOw":""' !or times. ~c!Jn!asiop&lt; charp.
IAUn PHSIHtAT,lON• •

"

Nightpiece and Eumity Bounce, choreographed by Jamea Waring, Harriman
. 'l'heatre Studio, 8:30 p.m. Admiuion
charp. See Fri~y Hating for dabiila.
ENGINIHING IWIIO IINOW

Space Slwtlle Program, with Or. Mort
Shor:r, WYSL,AM, 10:30 p.m.
.
•

s!;= ~f Encmeer-

ini':f~pp~edthe

MONDAY-10
Fl~*

-

•

. Two or Three Thilll/• I Know About

(Continud on-e 7, coL 2J

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>UGL Will

O~Doors

On Monday
.Attar • fnlstraling series of delays,
tbe Ulldeqraduate Library (UGL)
~Y3.CJII8D its doors Monda,y,

But tbe Ion, wait for a full-fledged

unde...,...W.te library is DOt over yet,
~~ _qui_te. The UGL is being opened
IDltiaUy as a study ball, ezplained
UGL Librarian Yoram Szekely, providina students with a quiet place- to
study in the hectic last weeks before
final exams. ·Studerltli' !Wiu find no
boob on the UGL abelves, which still
must be painted before the UGL collection is installed.
Although sl!elves will be bare, students can brlni -their own·books. Users
will find the facility fully manned·
most of the time· by professional
The stall is making a special ellort
to. serve the student body, Szekely
pomted &lt;&gt;Ul Members of the stall .will
be worlring ~ong. non-routine hours,
including an 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. graveyard shill
The facility will be open as a study
ball for the first three weeks in December. Hours are ( December 3
through December 21 ): Monday
through Thursday, .8 a.m.-2 a.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-midnight; Saturday, 9
a.m.-midnight, and Sunda,y, 2 p.m.·
2 a.m.
.on December 22, hours will be 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
The following pbones are in operation in the UGL: reference desk
(3416), UGL Librarian's office &lt;3414);
and circulation and reserve (3415).
Efforts are being made- to have a
coin-operated copy machine iru;talled
in the facility f01: use d\uina the study
period. Szekely reported. ·
The Hsniman Heaerve Library will
also be open durlni this period, be
reminded.
"We hope. to open as a full library
facility ... tbe first day of next semester," tbe UGL Librarian aaid.

staff:

::..., .. ......

PERil._....., • C~D~.-......
-m.

hNrina to -the
for •
HTP bllr........ unlt,lt_IM.......,thls-. Tho
!&gt;-.._ .,. achoduled to run thi'IJIIIh
Doc:embllr 7. Further-~~~ will bll,..

I&gt;Ofl*l noxt - -

-Douglas
By SHARON EDELMAN
R.epamr St.t/

The legend of William 0 . Douglas
was up for confirmation in Clark Hall
Tuesday evening. Mr. Justice made
some preliminary remarks -an hour's
worth - before the interrogation began in earnest:.
Quelltion after qtiestion probed his
personal views about Watergate, and
time after time Douglas hedged. Finally ho cleared his throat and confronted
his audience head on. "I simply can't
answer these questions," he declared.
"It seems as H a lot of people bere
want to disqualify me from a lot of
cases."
'l'l!e man wbo spok_e here Tuesday
ev"'lllig may be a folk hero, but he is
hardly a demagogue. If Douglas' legend was altered at all, it was because
of his apparent sense of his own role
in history. He is the longest-sitting
Justice in the history of the Supreme
Court, ana its only true activisl When
he came to U/B he _seemed painfully
aware of his delicate health and of his
Special importance, and he chose tD
risk neither.
His speech, however, was clearly
provocative., Addressing himself to issues "which profoundly affect us but
are not discussed under our present
regime," Douglas charged that traditio!"'~ abuse of the 14th amendment's
due process clause has allowed corporations the riP.&gt;ts intended aolely
for humans. He Identified this as the
aource of our current environmental
and enetgy criseS.
•
- o f Inti-

. "This is nothing venal or corrupt,"
Douglas maintained, ''but simply a
Jl!lltler of i!&gt;fluence. The 25 lar&amp;est
ml corpotations own our major coal
gas, and uranium supplies. Even U..:
tUIIIbet ln-ts control our forest service. 'Their lobbyists bave nmarkable
i n f l - _,;a)Jy ..,_ tbe -=&gt;a!
entqy ..tvia.y comml-."
As a 1811Ult. :llouiJaB c;laimed, ~
1 per cent ol . . _ t -.a.
80lar and nuclear - . y eoUrcoa bas
been funded. "Reed tbe ~

mto

ReCord," he uraed- "Every day Senator Mike Gravel enter. another acien-}
. tific paper about - - The I"'Yefflment la10WB that oae ......U ~
fusion box in Yuma. Arjzoaa. can
light up tbe entire United States.
- They telJ UB this wilJ tab 50 years.
and yet tbe acillntists cl8im it can he
perfected by 1980."
.
."
.
Our ez-p edmenta with w.paao.
~ COiltinaod, .....-~ · Ulldled&lt;•
!d• ....___ Radla..:the material, he COilliMMied, Ia .w-ty beciD-

.
to escape from its COill;ainera.
many to believe that our nuclear destructioll will he u.vtlllble.
"Yet the~ lot carponlll piolit
in thio field .... very """t." Douglas

i::fm:

aaid. "We ue.-ftnancina tbe dMirul&gt;- ·
tioo ol our mviJoamont."
Our mly COilllmded Dauc·ia tbe UestaiJI!ohmont ol private
~ P'OUIIL We .l lllllt Prove to tbe
- - - ' tbat tbe _welfare 01. tbe·
- - . . . - he -.red by tbe
cc....wu.e.~.,.. -'·coLI)

�.2

By

PA11UCIA WARD ·BIBDBRMAN

late,.,..

a.rial t h
e -af the
... fll..,.,_.._, .RMbe! Canan

u

(ROC&gt;

-..-.s Ita peel af

Judleil ..... wartbwblJe

~~~'T:i:r~
1d
'I'Mdiolaaf~lllliformly
lldled ......... t.labllnc In
af_..toTA4Iiilrlll'

1

the lleldo they lauibt, -.~ina to the
taDL 'Die teem DOI8d, bD!oevw, tbat
In the af CCIIIIIIIUBilil ....... the
Collep bad~ ..............
""'peel eafaree envinlalneDiiol le!rillatiall.
_
'Ibe Collep scored "unccMirabby
bich~ in tbe amount af "autodidactii:

-~-. ........ wllb. a bard~a~ llld a with ·
allludiilliiCICl;r af abclwi ~ cJ.di,
caliaa ad _..,.~.__:_._
~
-'--RCC
IIIIa GGDOiaded~ ..,..
..__,_~~ qpan _. en- . '-niDI by ~ta·. mcc !binb
~
·
•
• tbat'a a II'OOd thiDa. said Dr. Paipn).
Not tbat the Collep Wltbou:t - The ....... aleo obaei'YI!d tbat, peibaps
prableaa ~IIIIa- Rablb Rumer ' becauae •or the IIII!!Ye!l ''pfo&amp;iency"

(dvil ..,.._...), . . , . . . , HuJiar
af the RCC -.bing 8laJf lin £act,
(medicla8l_ dllmimy), and Arthur
..._, c:red!!llliala bad "-&gt; cited),
C.,. (palicy ...._) •+W-=~
eoustudents freq\B&gt;Uy IIOIIIbt
the _ . . thai BCC ..,_
DOIH:OIJeaoe facu)ty for JUic1ance, a
fnlm Ia-af a - - . . 'trithout wham
practice that would aeem to .....,...._
"llnaa . af IIDihodt,y ... doarly
.... the ties that the ....... urpd else'
~~ leavlna ..lminlatratloa af the
where in the· report ezoept that such
Collep lmpli In 'the hand8 af "a
initiative by the students is "not al.,....-tium af equalli • • • at tlliles, •
wa,ys responded to poeitively by the
bit too ......,.u.l ad democratic."
lnon-RCCI faculty so sought oul"
Altbaucli- 8ludoDia- ianoohoed
In tbla
they
In
last issue's piece on t..w end Society
....-led a ....,
tninarlty of
the ldudenta, an "uahe6ilby" altuatiou
Collo8o (lloparW, November 15), - · rethat ........... the _ . _.....
ported the College's eflorts to recruit
Englis~ Professor Bruce JocJcson hod led
Since the ...... flied their NPort,
to
•
eoope,.,tive
oppointment wltbln the
the ~ ........ the . . . . af a
FKUity of Law and Jurisprudence. In ~
~ ...... to the Olllep to
Professor
Jackson
has lnfOnned us, nogo-IMdenhlp ad DaDBI .........
- tilltions along · t~ose I I - -.,
tar, ar coordinator !the -~
when
the
Low School ruled &lt;tllot non-Law
democratic label by which
faculty could teach within the School only
DI08t of the Collep l...ta ..., now
under the supervision of a member of the
: : : : / Dr. Bevaty Paipa, a U/B
Faculty teaching stall. We regret the enor.
biolotlist and ........,.. of the
...mate faculty lhlouP ~
The ieaching function_of tbe ColPm'a Jlaipu1aall af ~A further mncom af the team was
lege is over-&lt;!111phasized, tbe team
· .the relatiouablp af RCC to the Uniclaimed. Expansion into other acti~"
W!I'IIity .. a Whole. Ill dlacuslng this,
ties, particularly counaeling, would enthe evaluators touc:hed CJD a troubled
banco the College's program. RCC has
cbaid that J,l!!rWWiea the Collegiate
responded in this area, Dr. Paigen rell)'8lem. ace, they noted, "aisls ana
ported. As a result of meetings with
the DUS.advisory staff, RCC staff and
hmctioaa in a state of virtuall.Y vacu-.
oua autonomy," without atensi.., restudents will be available to answer
lstiouablps with olber u /B departquestions throughout the upcoming
registration period. A booklet_listing
ments o r = : s t y members outside the
'Die ....... attributed
all environmental courses given on
this to the .
perception that
campus has t;een prepared by tbe Colthe CoiJeaea are in a state of "mallege and will be available dJUing regaise" and further that they are subistration in 133 .Crosby. The College
ject to the admjnislration'a "beniin
also devel~ a program of non-cur1181lect"; the .inability of the Colleges
ricular activities this semester, includto "advance the career inlen!sts ol the
ing a two-day bicycle repair worbhop,
a
wwtemician"; the in&amp;bility of
an evening seminar on backpacking
~ to at least pey decently
equipment, and a series of facUlty
"fireside chats. n
for the ~ of £acuity """'- academic Cllftlel8 theY ... not adVIIDCing;
~Leeming
and a certain failure 011 RCC's part
The team specifically recommended
"in lllllkina its _ . . , . felt on camthat two credit-hearing RCC CO\U&gt;ie&amp;,
pus... An ~ effort by the ColOrganic Survival and WorkshoP in
lege urpd. (Without !IIDiling out
Outdoor Living, although "appsrently
this particular. teem, it Bhould be
ID06t enriching," be o f J e r e d for
nolecl that the faculty lams rarely
non-credil The team argued that both
perceived the isolation of the Colofferings "PI'I!Vide students with a pre, _ aa,· at least in p!l!'t, a failure on
dominantly
experiential form of learnthe part of the ~Is or on the
Ding." These two courses have conUniversity aa a w.hole to come to grips
siderably more academic content than
with the realities of undergraduate
ID06t ~hearing couraes in pbysilife, particularly in a large university
csl education, as recognized by Boston
where students often eq&gt;erieooe eduUniveraity and otber institutions that
cation as an~ force.)
C'W'J'en.tly offer similar OOUI'8e8 for
As to tbe RCC curriculum, which
credit,
said the RCC coordinator in
focuaes 011 ecoqy and related COID· defense of these unusual offerings. As
munity actioa, the evaluators deemed
she
also
noted, both couraes re8ect the
it ri&amp;orous- Faculty did "not ]IVII8te
College's educational goal of enhancclsss time 011 "purposes other than
ing "the ~Is' ability to perceive
sulaantive leamm,." "Soft" """"and identify with the l.ivinJ[ environ......, not being o&amp;n!d. But the team
ment in a holistic manner that generdid &amp;a... ..,., llDIICert!8 about tbe
ates concern and conunitment for its
proper development and preservation
and which lays the foundation for a
slilhted in tbe curriculum in favor of
peraona.l environnlenta.J ethic..,
.,.,..,_ "l"'ln!d to an analysis of conFew RCC st\!denbi 'fail ODUI'!II!8, the
sumptive bebaviora of people with·.,..
team found, terming grading practipes
"rather generous." Motivation among
students is high. This, in c:oinbination
eow- tended to reflect teecher inwith the ease with wbich couraes
terest more adequately than the overthroughout the University can be
all philoeopby nf the ColJeaie.
dropped, may belp ""Plain the - ·
Dr. Paipn told the Rrportu that
Gauasian diatribution of grades, they,
said.
,.
tbe College took this and otber - - seati&lt;llls in tbe internal evaluatiou to
An mteresting footnote to tbe rebeert; this yeer RCC baa added six
port
added
by Dr. Rumer. who
core-type .,.,..,_ which deal with asnoted that, wittingly or not, RCC was
pects of tbe environmental crisis, for
"on
tbe
path
leading
to 'dePartmental'
eumple, air pollution, water pollustatus. ..
tion, an introductioo to environmental
~
""""'- and an ecoliterature ClOWIIe
entitled "Man in tbe Guden."
Ill an analysis forwarded to Team
Chairman cryns; ltume&lt; obeerved .
r-...~--..,....,.
that, "in tbe development of RCC,
Although the ~ty af teaching in
major--&lt;IID)Ihasis hu " - ' liven to
RCC was found - . I l y aood," tbe
-.NW.inl credit-bearing ODI!l'8M.

pallcy-t:s::rniam

=~.~~l:t

b~~~r~:-u:. &lt;~

......

-

u

illY p8I'CIIIplila II - - ' . I Jaile tbi.
~ .. to wiiiiiMr this 'unstalecl'

.-1 af RCC I I _ . . . , for a Collep. My impnillaDia end feelin&amp;a.

eou-ey·

baaed 011 an lntilpdan af the ~
., the
the-....
yelllll) , are that
not con:
oelved .. mini
Is.
"If the full po1ential of the Collegm
ill to he ..u.c1. I feel they should
r:id tt-lves af the 'c:lepartmeiltal'
1mqe. I heJleve that innovati.., and
atilHul
will be the key to
_ achievinglll!lstsra
~· for . tbe Col' - 'Die ColleR8s can Oft'er the University CXIID!Dunf~ the mast h)! providinl opportunities and expenences
that will- not likely be available
through the regular Prot1J'8!11. I do !"'t
want t.o- relepte Colleaea to 'fraternity'
or 'sorority' status. On the contnry,
tbe ties
the appropriate aCademic ~Is and a psrticulsr
college sho\lld be atmng." In £act, uacleraccind Rumer, this is
a ''policy issue with ._m to the Col' - more than 'a crilique of RCC."
"Our DI08t serious JHOblem." Dr.
told tbe R,.portu, "is that we
can t get fltculty to teed&gt; in the Col, _ beca.- the only way tbey can
at p,_t ia by teaching 011 over~
-lind that leilds to he ahaustil)g.
And in aame departmenta ....O.tiim
with tbe Colleges haa a negative ellect
on promotion and. tenure." All a result,
five of the six new core ~ being
olfered by RCC ""' taujlbt .by com-·
munity people (a situation that the
Colleges value on one hand, but that
often leads to questiCJDa of academic
respectahility 011 the otber) .
Loolcing beyond the parochial issue,
Dr. Paigen ""Pressed concern about
tbe status of environmental education
in tbe University-at-large (abe mifbt
have said tbe world) . In surveymg
courses for its registration hooklet,
RCC found that, in many cases. environmental courses previously olfered
by departments have dissppelln!d from
the courae list (the curriculum in the
Geop'aphY Department waa a dramatic eJ:ception). · ''PersollS' interested ·in the environment are not getting the support from
the University that they need. Perhaps environmental courses are still
not perceived as more t;ban appen,
dages of the curriculum," abe ...utured.
"This University badly needs ail
interdisciplinary program on the environment," Dr. Paigen said, predicting !bat the success of any such program would depend largely on faculty
supporl
~

oo-

Pai,....

Rubella Testing
Program Is .
Being Offered
The Health Care Division of Sub
Board I, Inc., and Bulfalo Children's
Hospital will sponsor a free Rubells
( German Measles) screening and
treatment program for U/ 8 litudenl!i,
faculty, staff and families, December
3-5.
.
.
Dr. Pearay L. Ogra, associate professor of 'pediatrics and microbiology
and director of tbe Division of Virology at Children's Hospital, will conduct the teSts.
·
In order to provide sutlicient staff
and equipment for the screening, a
pre-registration will be conducted to- daY. November, 29, from 9 a.m.-noon.
l.Ocations for the pre-registration
...., the Center Lounge, Room 214 and
General Information Boot h. "'I in

~~L,.,the~~ow:f.!.tak~

• State ~ fll._ YGirk'a to.
liol ~
hi par
cent thla fadl and~~

--.s .,

f:u~·.e...

week.

-

... ...,.=r~

FuU-tm. ~ at the Uni~~ '12 . . . . ellmbed to-316 and Jlllrl.tm. to 188.4111 for ..
camhined toliol Gll82,'1117. '11lle ~
ICtB a pin af ~ l8,000 etudiftta

01181' laat faJl'a !7nlwaltY-wlde llludent

body af -.soL
Both run ad PBd-tm. to11o1a ,_.

~ pNVIoae

-.IL Iat )'ear's
lull-time student 1 row t h lncnase
over 1971 bad heeD 3.8 par cent with·
tbla fall'• .cU:ulaled at 11.3.

-~
At the ,34- Slate cmnax- overall
enrollment grew by 11.3 per CI!Dt, fn;lm
1,69,074 to. J..711,228. ~ enrollment was , 132,912 and part-time,
411,316. Tbel!llloea~Jx~ community ~
under the
of Eftste
• ty rePorted
pin, from..l95,728 .to
204,569 students. FuU-tbne COillmunity
oollege enrollment reil!:hed 111,404 and
part-time, 93,166.
larpst enrollment .,._,tap in.,_......, -'"'d at the~
of developing Univeaity aaUeges: Empire Slate Coll!!le. Who. llludents

~~overall

P"'ll8M "'-d....._~lsrply independent ~
by- a
mentor, showed an
IIIOWth of

1411 Per CI!Dt, fnlm 764 to f,878 fulland part-time Student&amp;. 'Die C o 11 e 1 e at Utica/Rome inCI'e!IMd part-time emollmenta at its

~~~'!:"::

=."'Wto
46 full-time student&amp;. Bmollment at
tbe Colletle at ~ In Westcbe&amp;...ter County pew fnJm 1,li82 tb 2,236
studenl!i, a 46 J111r cent ma-_ LaGuardia
ln&gt;Long
Island City
overalf ..-tn of
55.7 per CI!Dt, with full-time registratiOilS climbing froin 1,428 to 2,600.

c.o.:t·Collolae

.._1111Among the State cam~ six reported modeat total emollment dips
ranging from 0.3 par CI!Dt, or 31 students, to 4.8 per cent, or 236 students.
At tbe community co1lelre leYel, nine
cau&gt;puaojs reported slightly lower enrollmenl!i, ranging from 0.2 per· CI!Dt,
or silt studenl!i, to 1L2 per cent, or
163 students.
'
Applications to State University
campuaea COiltinued to be received at
aboUt the 8B!IIe l11te during the past
acadeni.ic yeer aa in PftOYloua years.
The 46 cam
whkh participa:te in
the Univmao/suniform applicatiOilS
program recetved 268.540 applications
~ted by 150,378 individuals.
n- appliCants IIOIIIbt admission to
IIPJir'OZimately 62;000 fresbman and
14,000 tiansl8r places.
A - current breakdown of full-time
enrollment by ~ cstecories COil·
trasted with 1972 (igww ..._,
University centera: 41,258, up 2,074;
•
part-time 15,425.
- Health acience centers: 5,052, up
444; part-time 799.
U~iversi~y colleges: 57,911, up
3,116, part-time 21,483.
Specialized mU-: 2,501, up 4;
P&amp;rt-time 441.
~~=~colleges: 6,602, up 115;

Agricultural and technical colleges:
19,588, up 1,310; P&amp;rt-time 7,146. #
Communit_y cof.leges: 111,404, 'Up
5,288; ~time 93,165.

Ma'~r.~~nne
o-'

forc-t-1~

An "Importent Magazine" is about
to be bomeless and is up "for adoption, or sale, lease, or transfer," an
ad in tbe current N'"W York R,.view
of 'Book&amp; advises.
"'

Govemors Residence Hall on the Amherst Campus.
Tests will be conducted from 10 · "o~ot~~t.I-~,
a.m. to 4 p.m. in Room 262 Norton
emble" aiid ~
/cuion Dec. 3; Room 234 Norton on Dec.
tural/ critical .louinala In
· cur4; and Room 334 Norton on Dec. 5.
tl
• led .... ~~
- _ _,
Vaocination ·w I II be available for . "!"' Y ~- ;,Wlwo I'
cv~-anyone who ia found 'to be 8U!Icepb'ble
I!'Jnal UUI!lution. (Not
idenafter test resulta ...., analymd, strictly · lifled.)
on a wlunteer haaia. Tbere will be
Serious inquiries are invited to Box
no cherge for lb8 IICIIIening, vacclnaNYR5, N- York Review of Boob,
tion or any follow-up trea~l
c 250 Weat 57th Street, New York City.

�~·

Ilia"' ~k!s Majority of Dental Students _

..

~rr
~r
. rado~~ · Bad&lt; School's H~J~S!!.~.m
Dr.

8z ~~ _

'l'lalolb.r C. 'WiiiiiiiDe, 8llillaD1

o1 ~ .__.._._.
...__...
---tbe ...... ud
~ mi·

!l!dir.-~ __.___.,
......._.

~at

tar~ ~

r;:.rwmr.m.~bla~&amp;lud-

By

s.v!.,~AHAN
(&amp;8 Per cent) of U/B

The lllll,jority

...tallltudeotl fal tlilfScbool ol Dent&amp;try'&amp; baDor eJII8m Ia aood or GllSIJet. AIIDCher 28 peper cent Judie the
~le.

ay~ Ia wliah 19'72 aurwy revealed.
n - made bY t1uee University tac~~~

other. 'l1lla ~-be leola
the baDor .,-.. ia -*~; pro&amp;~
aional ,_, must IMm to fully the reopaoeibllity of llllf.......-t.
aDd it Josiq1J tbet tbilllellrniDI
ohould begin in ecbool.
"I ......til be crazy If I eald there
ia DO m.ting in the Illmtal BcbooL

-~::..r:'f;tm~boJ!

lllld related . . . . . .i~'lf~ward R.
baDor system aDd practice it.
~ UICJI:iate __,.. of educa''To make it work students must be
tioilaJ PQ'Cbolocy; and NOI'IDIID D.
involwd 'lbey must review ..,_ aDd
Mohl, p""-r of om) medicine.
have the authority to act. 'lbia t&gt;biEflbty-t.l per e en t o1 &amp;tudents
losopby muat have the backing of the
~ -~ they are mature eiiiJU8h
faculty'."
·
· 'C:'':"a~-=::.:~mn.: "'abide by the boaor aystem. 'lbey
ud - aJWude fraaf 8,000 "' 10,000
alao fal !bat the faculty of the Illmtal
feet ...... ...... .
Scbool ha&amp; caalldellce in the aystem.
_"'l11oaP to.. ill &amp;till a lcK to beOn tbe neptive side, 8Q per cent
IMIIIIil ~ bini _._..._ tbe Ilia- . of student&amp; feet tbere ia probably as
ill&amp;uoe o1 lilt. ~ wrlfl- . much et-ting aoinl on with the sysailiall tbat.U.. t. an Onr-Wat. ml
tem as there Would be without it; 41
Dr. Richard G. Brandenburg, dean,
patlaa ud tbat It ill ~
per cent of faeul~ believe this. ThirtySchool of Management, baa been ap...,._ • 81111 lillber lhUa .._
~ '?""t cl faculty feel there ia
pointed chairman of the Steerina ComlllaUdd ......._. Dr. WDUiiml aald.
The ~t of the Dental Student
mittee for the University'&amp; participa!'WhattM&amp;e OW. ..adpiper&amp; (llhlri
Aaaoc:ialiOn, Steve Roberta, &amp;&amp;ys, ''Tbe
tion in the Bicentennial Commemorabinll) 81111 Wllllas (llmd bini&amp;) -are
baDor system ia ~ well and
tion (1976) of the founding of. the
daiaa
they ......... lllld wbat ~ . . . . . . and faculty abide by it." The
Uni~ States.
they 1D a"'*' m&amp;jor atbrms \. system eonsisls of hoDor code, rules
Other member&amp; of the group are Dr.
lllld 1o
where they ant, are anof judicial procedure, code of ethics
Rollo L. Handy, provoat, educational
--.uelo!lldnafarln lhlllstud.Y," - for ju&amp;tiaee. cOde ol ethics for ci&gt;unsel
studie~ ; Dr. Donald A. Larson, &amp;&amp;. be added.
aDd judiciary reaul&amp;tions.
aociate vice president for health aciDr.
ai&amp;D noted that the
TWo l l o q ences; Dr. Arthur L. Smith, chairman,
mipat(aD jolimey .,.. -tar inwtvee
Roberts pointed out that there are
speech communication; Dr. A. Westley
a ~~~m-elap, tJuee.dlll:r'!Jillt!P"Wllb DO
two requimtes for an honor system:
Rowland, vice president for university
Iandini
eating filr lbiee ci&amp;.Yo. the
"'t assume&amp; that the student ha&amp; such
relations; Ms. Esther Swartz. Sssistant
..U lilnll aniw at tbelr destination
integrity as lo be neither dishonest
to the president for cultural affairs;
minua ...,. lhlrcl of their body weilht
bim&amp;elf, 'nor lo encouraae others to
and Dr. Claude E . Welch, professor,
- acucely than featberB lllld
~ be diabooe&amp;t, and that this inte,rity
political science.
IJanM," be aald.
ia entirely personal, reDIQVing the need
In letters announcina the appointTbe ~ wbic:h wme made
for facul.t y aurveillan&lt;e in activities
ments, Dr. Albert Somlt, executive
In early Oclober Involved radus at
aucb as examinations; and secondly, it
vice president, said, ""11lis is an excel·
Tabqo, s.ut.da&amp;. Anliaua, . Miami,
implie&amp; that the &amp;ame personal integlent opportunity for this University to
the Vlqpnia
i God, Halifu,
rity which prevents the atudent himbecome involved in a series of importNCift&gt; Scotia,
• well as
oelf from being dishonest compels him
ant activities demonstrating the key
the nodal' 1111
Oceanoto tepOrt any violatiDIIS of the honor
role that higher edueation (especially
_papble -lnlllitutioil'a .-reb }"881
aystem which be JD&amp;Y observe, and to
public higher education) ha&amp; played
llf-"*i· ~tfilrtlrAtlantfC.
;
willingly aerve ·as a witness in juin Ule develOpment or our country:"
'lbe .-ai pattem followed by the
dicial court procsedinga ..
Coincidentally, he noted, the Uni- bini&amp; tbill fall included departUre from
The hooor system waa started in
versity at Buffalo will be commemoratthe oout ol Narlh America. after peathe Dental School in 1964 by Dr.
ing its 130th anniversary on May 11,
...,. ola major cold front. 'Then moveJames Eniliah, who was dean at the
1976.
ment clown aero. the Atlantic, time. He IS now a professor of oral
The following questions should be
ol Bermuda and a tum aa the birdS
bioloaY in the Dental School. Dr. Elllpart of the Steering Committee's depk:bd ~ the trade wind&amp; in the BOUthli&amp;h admits that he bad to do some
liberations, Somit said:
-erl.y latitudes, befo!e arrivina in the
"arm twisting" to oell it to the faculty.
1. What goals sho.u ld be achieved
Caribbean.
While the faculty finally accepted,
by such a commemoration?
Dr: William&amp; noted that the result&amp;
certain lDell1bers had reservations re2. How can the University best orwill be IIDillyzal in Wm&amp; of wind patgarding_ workability.
ganize itself to achieve these goals?
t.n&amp; aDd lo determine what -an of
Dr.. E1111ish believes when students
3. What constituencies within and
naviptioG the bird&amp; 8re &lt;C&amp;pable of
enter Dental School they should be
outside the University should be indurina lheae annual flichta:
responsible. And if they aren't responvolved?
Funda fram the National AeronauBible they must be taught lo be.
4. What sianificant pro g ranis,
tie&amp; aDd Space Admlniatr&amp;tion, the
''If P.!!&lt;&gt;Pie want authority, they must
events, and activities should be carried
Nationai"Seienoe Foundation and the
be wtlling lo assume responsibility.
out during the commemoration?
National AeadeonY of Science&amp; aupTbia is the basis of the honor system,"
5. How might the program be fiported the miaradon study
Dr. English BBYS. "Young_people must
nanced?
·
·
learn to. make decisions. The only way
6. What should be the timetable for
the commemoration (from now
r:L-- - n .L1---.._..J
. they
can learn ia 1o 'be .pven the op~lld
I'"JUIIUR!U
portuDity to make decislons. If they
through 1976) ?
make poor ones ! cheat or steal ) , they .
A preliminary report is expected.
-'l!be Board ol Truateea. of State
must pay a penalty .so that they learn
from the Steering Committee next
· Uni-.ity have clesianated Dr. Oscar
that they are responsible for making
spring.
A. Silverman profaBJt emeritua, effecthe right decision...
tive NIMIIIlber 21.
The former dean recalls a student
Dr. Silverman..-! in the Depart- '
who waa eaught cheating on his State
matt or Enallsh at U/B from 1926 1o
boards. It waa decided by the Student
September 1, 1978, when be retired.
(Continued from- 1, col. 4)
Honor Board-that the student sbould
wealth of the corporations.
He chairman of the Department
repeat his aenior year and the adminfrom 1955 liD 1963, aDd director of
''The expertise of the aovemment's
istration went alona with this. This
Libraries at U/B from 1900 lo-1968.
advisory groups is vastly overrated,"
waa an eu.mple of students assumina
Bom in 1903, Dr. Silverman rehe continued. "On matters of aucb
responsibility in a proper way, Dr.
ceived his B.A. aDd Ph.D. from Yale
great importance, I' would rather truat
English feels.
·
aDd his M.A. fram 'the University of
the people in this room."
Dr. Engli&amp;h believes that when stuWiaooasin. He .,... a ~ Felv.a at s-ecy
ilenta do good work they should be
low at Harvard in 1953 and his inemTbia ollicial veil of secrecy and of
reooanized. Stud@nta· appreciate this
benhlpa include the Modem Lantechnical mystique, said Douglas, is
and it tend&amp; to make them think posauqe&amp; Aaaoc:iation aDd Phi Beta
also evident in the administration'&amp;
itively about their profession.
Kappa.
political attitudes. ''When I was in
Don't lnoult lnt.pltJ
the SEC," be commented, ''I bad a
''Don't insult the int;epity of the
at&amp;mp marked SECRE.'T which I nevstudent. Impress upon htm ll)at you
er uaed. Now I find it everywhere.
don't ~ him "' cheat, aDd he will
It's a aood way to cover ...,.•• tnodal
be • - liable to; impress upoo him
Dr. Harold ~. ~ and
for tep or fifteen yeara."
that he should behave in a professionchairman of anatomical aciences, was
Douglas recalled the extreme lieeural . manner and be will; impresa upon
elected Pftl8ident for 1974-75 of the
ity ~ which were taken by the
him th&amp;t you have conllderice in him,
Geronlo[ogical Society at - liB 26th
and he will reward you."
aovernment dw:ina the Pentaaon Paannual ..-ting held in Miami 8e&amp;cb.
pers trial. "AnDed auanl&amp; would deDr. Eo,liah notes that the honor
Tbe SOOO.member nalional aociety,
liver the document&amp; to the ju&amp;Uces,
aystem is than juat DOt ebMting
~ -pi aectiODs ol bioqical
and atand at attention as- we read
It al8o ~ ufeluud&amp;
them. When _... throuah with
ol ....u-t. "There - the
files they were whi&amp;ked awtQ', aDd
Plannlna. ~- practiCe, ill devoted "'
~t~v!:\'tyof:~~~
made available to ua the next clay in
- " " ' and' teachinl
. the
once was.,.
the &amp;&amp;1118 manner.
.
~ of &amp;gina. It Ia
the
Dr. Engli&amp;h point&amp; out t h a t the
"You know, I read every one of
International Geronlological Associa._lth l'.rofamionals, who are given
a..- paper&amp;, and none ol them contion aDd Ia the w-t aociety in the
the privdeae of enforcina laws regardtained-one fact I didn't alre&amp;dy know,"
~·d dealing Willi the proceii' of
ing professional behavior which they
he added.
agllll.

....._to

led &amp;D - · - - JDipitiaa fram
Nadh
tbe ~ that
ill 2,000 aile&amp; laal ud l'llllllb&amp;cL aliitudl&amp; ~9. ID liO,OOO leet.
Dr. ~ ~ tbat pnrv.Jiq ~ . . . , lDdkated tbet

Bicentennial
Committee Set

=

.mo.
a-

wou«

both

3

Fatuity Senate -

Lists Ag~Jor
Qecember 4tli

JPaeaiWapada
Smale will - - followlna
et Its repdar
at 2:30
p.m. in 1411 DiefeDdarf:
The

tbe

..-tina~. Deoember 4,

1. Approval o1. tlie mlnutea ol November 6, 1978.
2. Report ol tbe l'n!aldoat.
3. Report ol the CbailmaiL
,.... 4. Acljnlei!cn Cammltlee.
5. a.-lutioD 1111 Taachina Etrec-

m.e.-.

.

-.

-

6. Es.:utive Committee Riioolution
Gmde&amp;.

1111 Late fJubmiooicm ol
?.Other~

.....

Ill regard "' late ......-. the s-:utive Committee reso lved that it
"share&amp; the concern of the StudentFaculty Coordinating Committee for
u...e otudeniB wbo 8nd a-~- in
di81culty as a result ol the failure of
faculty memhen lo aubmit aadea on
time. The Faculty Senate ~live
Committee joins' with the StudentFaculty Coordinating Committee in
aupportina the idea that it ia clearlY
the ,_.aibility ol faculty "' respond to realoonable req1151B for the
aubinia&amp;ion of arade&amp; at the end of
every oemeater and, therefore, the following resolution ia directed lo lh
Vice Ptarident for Academic Allair&amp;
and the . Academic A11air&amp; Council:
1. 'The ElleClltive Committee of the
Faculty Senate aupports the efforts of
the Academic Allair&amp; Council "' provide a more clear-cut statement of pri:&gt;·cedures and follow.up for the &amp;ubmission of oemester lf&amp;des.
2. 'The Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate support&amp; Dean Ebert's
request that all grades be &amp;ubmitted
wifliin two weeks after the termination
of final examinations.
Oppootunity to u.-nc1
3. The Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate agrees that the procedural responsibilitiea of Admissions &amp;
Records and Deparlments shOuld be
clearly specified and that faculty members be given every opportunity th
understand the necessary paper work
involved in posting and m&amp;iling lf&amp;des

to student&amp;.
4. The Executive cOmmittee of the
Faculty Senate support&amp; Dean Ebert'&amp;
suggestion for an intensive educational
effort by way of the Chairmen and
others for helping faculty undemtand
the student'&amp; needs and right&amp; in 'this
matter.
5. Tbe Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate concurs with Dean
Ebert in suggestina that some &amp;anCtions may be necesaary, but emphasizing that due process for the faculty
members must DOt be neglected.
6. 'The Executive Committee of the
Farulty Senate recommend&amp; th&amp;t it
shall be the ._,.;bility of the Provosts and/or department chairmen lo
have delivered arade sheet&amp; lo ...U faculty member&amp;."

Douglas- - - - - - - - - - - - --

Brody Elected

011--.
aoc:JaJ ·~~ - - ..una
"':';'':1

Douglas remarked durina the qwstion period that he knows very little
of the political ~ in Washington. This, he explained, .. why be ....
honestly unable "' - " ' "' ...-..
tiona OODCel'l1ing the recent CJJjjjjjj,
coup, or the validity of the W&amp;In!n
Report. "If I think a cue will eventually be heard in the Supreme Court."
be llliid, "' try DOt lo .-1 al6!t 'it
beforehand."
Hi&amp; comment&amp; 1111 Gerald Ford wme
re&amp;l:rained. "I like th,. man very
much," be ventured, "but let me lillY
this. The quality ol charity is 1111 extremely important one in public life."
Douglas &amp;eemed mo re ~
about the euergy cri&amp;is than tbe i&amp;&amp;ue
of the SuJ'I"m."' Court'&amp; cantinuina
authority m the ta... of a powing
executive branch.
"' do DOt believe the court&amp; will
ever become ve&amp;tiaial," be declared in
reapooae tO a quMtioit. "Despite this
P""""'t cri&amp;is the court&amp; have done
very well lhrouabout history.
''I would DeVel: fear or avDid a ronfl'ontatioo with the President," he roneluded. "'t's a Jood and healthy proceoa. Conlrontation ia what this system
is all about."
.

�.......... ,.,
Readers Voice
'Anti-RcJcism~

(J:Dln»rtr NoTE: P....... to

.N""'
._!=:,.r:;_~=::
-v~Af:i:~~.c:
Yor.. r-.
I ..., emtbiDI
the 6iit lid 6e "Deeat

c-;u.
..,.,., '*If ,.,_,.,. o/W-

______

aJtllaQib

Biw.By~CB~

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

bll..-l by it. I~ mje 8QPIICidllra
ID initiate etePo here UDder_.

D*ldatian •(2) Urp ~or-

~

pm,.tbw and~.........,
aes--ta,
8lld ediiGra ol. ecilolad,y
jcllumla ID c:GIIdemn 8lld reba ID

Tbe-- «7 tD be ...... tD ...

:c::r:.-..

;;"ii ibi

t1l . . _
..... Wldte _..

~

••-..itel~

-m......

~le radat
tbii ~ community

that
haa .., apporiunl~ ID lllllnd up 8lld be counted
an tbla -tier. ·
.For it is my hope that - would

-

ladillllt~tDIDd
..... ,~ ID ......._ (Daopite
_
_
....,... to 111e co~atru:r.:~z1:;' ID
"

.....
.---~---adu­
.._~

=-ta=~~.:=

~~

a1 . . . _ ID lhli J11111111a el -

......,... . . . . . . . . . . llllliaa.
far b•:J,~.~ llew -olla
~
lbat !.avll,y a&amp;ct

tlie........-_.. ..... _

-Ne-:=t'...,....._N
l\llob' .:...-;_ -

claim.... tblt
Ia ...... Pvm
tD - . Coupliid -with
the~ t1l . . _ dlacrimmatiaDN Ia a dire prediclirm lbat tile
..... lllaDdu!la ol ......... - beiq
th118 hired
qualified than the

dilUted ' - - ... -

-

-

~
Wlio ......

tumecl cloora.

........ Cenoplolals

Same ol tile camplainta haw been
tDiallv JIIIO!Cious: 8811ia1 men have
COIIQ&gt;IioiDOid
discrimiuation"
simply becauae a woman was hired•
8lld they were DOt. 'lbe mere hiring
ol a WOIIIIID, DO matter bow ....U qualified, is IIII8UIIIed by aame ID be evidence of ''Ievene diacriminatiOlL" In
fact, the few women that have actually been hired, even wben hired as
to1oeua, have ...,.,..ny been superbly
qualified_ Our pzojeCt flas been unable ID locate a Bingle o-nce where
a leaoer qualified w 0 m n haa been
hired in preference IDa better quali-·
lied male_
'
.
'
On· occasion, some administnotDrs
haw used allitmative actiml as an
acuae to tum down.J!,pplicants they ·
did not want ID hire. One department
' - I at a large Western university
wrote four of the five applicants he
COIIIIidered that be could not hire them
becall8e H.E.w. insisted that be hire
a wamaJL 'lbe candidate wbo got the
job, ~. Willi DOt a woman, but
a white male. Needl- to aay, the
practice of IISing a8irmative action as
an acuae for not hiring males, either
deliberately or unintentionally, is illegal. .
.

of...,_

a

Other complaints have been justi-~lled. Some adminisllatDrs have JDi&amp;.

Wlderstood federal requireinents and
have erroneously believed that only
women 8lld minorities, including IDI·
DOrity women, c:ould be hired, and not
white ,_._ A8irmative action upressly forbiiU any preference based on
"""' or BeL What is required is that
tbe institution .make a "genuine good"
faith elfort" 8lld document ita activities to _., out qualified women 8lld
minorities, that criteria be objective
8lld iob-related, 8lld that they be appliecf equally ID all candidatea of any
lf!ll: or IIICe. Wben a department bead
haa done this 8lld can justify that the
white m81e be wants to Dire is indeed
the ~ candidate, he aimply 11'-d 8lld hires tbe white
male.

.

__ __ _
·-___
_
-···-

Numerical or percentage goals for

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

~,.

J"ort:.,

••tltlo.

•

.DiriliaafiiU....,._

.uJ$ • • Ill., . . . .

lf;J", ICJ4, a..a..rw' o1s-. . . ,_.,..., ~
213• .uo ................ ~

2U'J·
r

...,

• A.. WDTLQ" ltOWU1fD
..........,_

80BJr!'T.K.utLn7
}Olllf .... C£01777D

~­
PA.TIUCU
IF..urD • •,_llJIAJf

_._
IIAIICF • •
·-~­
CARDfPI'UI

/

:::::1. tii!IY......,.. 8rilllat ID tile

-..roa:

~,..tide-......., by
Clliitl'rwi~Mtr•
011 . . . . . . .

ferentiated between goals 8lld quotas,
. with goals being ordered and upheld
in a g!VWing liat of cases under the
Executive Clrder, Title vn of the 1964
Civil Rights Act, the 6th Aineodment,
8lld the 14th Amendment. ·In conlnlat,
quotas have been struck down by the
oour1l! as unquealionably violative. of
the ~w.
Throughout academia in the past
there haa been preference, but it haa
DOt been for women or minorities, but
for white males. One wag put.it this
way: "We've always bad a8irmative
action for white men; now it's time
to have it for women and minorities,
too." Affirmative action is not aimed
at creating preference, but at. ending
preference for 'wliite males.
SlllndanlsUicelytolnc:ruM

Academic standarda, contrary tD

myth, are likely ID increase as a re-

sult of affirmative action. D e s p i t e
claims of a gloriously objective merit
system, academic judgments have IDo
often been intuitive and subjActive.
Now instead of being able to justify
a candidate merely by saying, "He's
a well-known and respected scholar,''
department beads wiU have ID develop specific objective criteria, and be
able ID demonsllate that the candidate is indeed the very best person
recruited ftom the largest pool posSI'ble, a pool which will include qualified women- and minorities.

aC:.=e
.!'l.o~~m...'i~':h:
principle of academic freedom have

shown any conaim for tbe &amp;aldemic
freedom of women wbo have lost their
jobs as a result of their activiliea to
end discrimihation. (On one campus,
for example; all 10 women who formed
a women's rights committee subsequently had their contracts terminated.) None of the men who worry about
preference have shown any concern
lor the lladilional academic preference for white males. None of tl..wbo are concerned about "high &amp;al·
demic standarda" and the merit sys. tem have noticed that the "dead wood"
which ensts on any campus is predominantly white and niale, peraons
wbo were c h o s en by the ao-&lt;:alled
merit system: Thoee who' live in the
glass halls of ivy seem III08t lilu!ly tD '
throw stones at allirmative aclic!n:

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

n.

Cllrooide ol.

__

llicb« ltduc:atio.

Georgia Speeches .

ter bow well intealiaaed tile Umitera
are or bow ~ to 118 are 1be
viewa of tl..- CXIIIduclinslhe -reb.
Failure ID do this would place 118
with Bialq) Wilberforce in bia d&amp;-,
batea with llwdey 8lld with WUiiam
Jenning&amp; 8eyan at the ~ irial
We don't have to 10 back m biatory
1D find arees of - . d l that strike
us IDday as eveeything from ailly ID
repugnant: aatrOlOCY, ]IYiwr saucers,
spiritualism, parap~YCbolocY the adverlioing indUstry's self-~ ef-

forts, to name a few. We "obOulil . be
vigilant ID point out the mytba associated with 1'- activities juot 88
we sbould tl..- in ''harde!" ocience.
But surely we should nOt aay aiDp.
We've had IDo ·much of tb&amp;t in our
intellectual histoiy.
The~ is an aspect of the battle
between Jensen, Sbocldey, Hermatein
arul their dellactors that is not communicated by this ad. Sbocldey in

~~k,aue,h=\:..:=-

tD
tbaar~ do llllt ..,., b
lfP.t
ID _...... freeiJam ~their
work t. l'al8e JlDcltrJDa (JW illdeed,
that'ai!Pt ••• l'idie Diic:lrD) ap-

Ill-' ...... ~ et-r.. Doetrine ..

impmted fliB (lla ~ ID the Cam~ttee Aplna&amp; . . . . .
Aa tbli Cmlalltee ~ the

-.do t1l ~- .e al tD Nulim, •
it is nat IDo bald to ~ that tbe
True Docldlle ellba Oliilmittee doe&amp;

=;:=~~u:
..-..rca

., ~
1D
death or . _ . , o r fMIIl the more

- t aperieDce ol the McCutb,y-.

Tbe .....--d ol. tbat ~ it would
-liBve become 4be ~ in
this, u eN' ln wbicb tbli poUticize4'
atale ol. h
it I!88Y
~-~te ~ ~ ~
......_
In the mt.ellectual fOrimi that .bouJ.r
be tbe uni-.lty, tbele is only one
way to combat ....... 8lld ...-reb
of J - l!t al, 8lld that is with better
ideas 8lld -.dL Tbe doctrine of
int.ellectual iniD...._, p!OJIOUIIded ao
Blridently .by the Cominilee Againat
Racism, Ia haniJ,y

nni-.lw ......

to tbe doctrine of a~~
for intellectuaf.inlolerance 8lld ~
are ID01II readily ..U.. than -.nies.
Idees, it is lnle, do ncit enst in
. oocial YIICUIDD, 8lld IDdeed, theories ·
innocuouo IDday may justify IDmorrow's opp.-ion. But as the only al-

~"::'~;'.:~

:=m;;;:fi

because he haa turned their own stating repreoaion of ideas qua icleaa1 tbe
tislical tecbniques on them. WhateVer
risk associated with the problem aDOVe
kind of archangel be is, Shockley's is one the university IIJU8t beai if. it
statistical analyses have not been at
is to remain loyal ID ita
the
all successlully attacked. In fact it
- advancement ·of truth &lt;~1 ) in
becomes e~ident early on that bia comits widest sense. Only lhro!lgh loyalty
mand of lheae tecbniques is {ar greatID -that - - w i l l lhe'.J:efutatloil 'bf '
er than that of his attackers. Emberunfounded theories, such aa t1..- of
rassed by this situation the advertisers
Jenaen et al, ever ~ achieved in such
have subslitui1ed for their ineftective
a lll8llllel' as ID nmder them intelintellectual sparring this knee to the
lectuaUy . impotent in tbe future.
groin.
'lbe appm]s for inatiluticmal reHow many of the signers read-or
pression m a de by the Committee
could read-the original articles? I
Againat Racism ate an dront ID &amp;alclaim few. Because Jensen et al are
demic fieedon&gt;, and t1..- local faculnot nicists. They have apJi&gt;roe.cbed as
ty who have participated in such apscientists extremely sensitive subjects
pm]s are naught but a diagrace .fD this
and found d a t a that support what
University.
.
they tbemaelves have stated are un·- y IIOWIE
attnoctive mnclusions. What sbould
,t-·0:~ ·l~ 'il . •
they do when they are faced-with this
EDITOR:
•
,•
data? The advertiaers would have them
suppm&amp; these oimclusiona (or have
'lbe letter in your--., of November
this done lor them) . Inatead 1'15th about tile . . . coaferenoe an
Raciam- and the U~ surely
e p i to m i z e a an ideolotlical posture
by ·m haae upon them recommendawhich this Uni-.lty 8lld all others
tions of ways to face mality: We can
would do ....U to avoid: aome tboughta
disagree, we can reinterpret, we can
are untbinbble ud llbould not be
offer ·contradictory evidence when it
IDletated; tbe ~ty of racial in'
is available, ·we can _., ID alleviate
feriority cannot- be atuil.ied, much
the situation... But we cannot.:-I . hope
lesa ~- Ill the joumsla~·
Jet us
atamp out this vlee 8lld atart
•
;m~ as~~:..-:"~
the boob of J - , Shockley, d
this campus of perhaps the least in- ,
Our
freedani
baa
a-.
IDo
hanlly
tellectual man. in this countly, Lester
W!ln and remains IDo frqile to survive
Maddox, marked the reo~ of insuch · attacb from within, from our
tellectual freedom here. I realize that
own colleagues, ~ Lawler,
the door is .only 01"'!' a crack. since
Haskell, Willhelm 8lld ~· Even
Maddox presents little rea I threat.
my bishops have 10111 since pvat un
BU:t it is my hope that we could in
the doctrine that "error haa no rightS:"
lime even allow the President of this
8incelely youra,
counby ID speak bere. (Tbe Odd work-80~ B. PUOIIING
inga of. attitudes would; I suggest, al~roi.Law
low BUchanan to speak now but not
Nixon, and yet the lirat presents much
more intellectual danger.) Let 118 not
allow this door -to .be cl.-1 by -support of this kind of ouppreoaion.

~':.,:f'~m:==~:::

lly

--GERALD L BiBING
Dr. Peter M. Boyd-Bowman, direcIDr', U/B Center for Critical LanauuEDITOR
:
es, and -live aecretaiy ol tlie·
The doctrine of intellectual intoler. National Aaaoc:iatlaa of SeU-Inatrucance haa infillnlted the academy once
tional Language Prosrams (NASILP) ,
spin, or ao it would . seem from the
~~~ in Georpa, Norecent manifestD of the "Committee
· Against Racism at the University of
On tbe 14th, be opoke-on "~
Connecticut" signed locally Aw. Curt
Dialects 8lld 'llieori8s ... 'lbeli Orig.
Mettlin, James lAwler, Ann H&amp;sken, •,
ina," at the I:Jni-.ity of Georgia and
on '"lbe Spanish lnquiaitionN at Geor- . Sidney Willbelm, and Roger Wooc:t,
of whom the University musi be duly
gia State Univenity. On tbe 16th, be
-aabamed.
reviewed "Current llc.arch in SpanThe above mentioned Would appear
ish Lburulstics" at AgnM Scott ColID want "tbe ap.,.,&amp;rance of legiumacy
len ani! ~~-~~ South AIJanlic
by academia" ID advanoe the
provided
Modem ............. Aaaoc:ialion CDDdoctrine ol intellectual intolerance as
ference in Atlanta an self-inatruclional
remedy -to the doctrine of racial su:
languqe piOiraniL
.
.

,

FEAS Scholarships
Awarded to fite _

Five engineerinJ atudenta from New
York State have received scholanhips
from the Faculty of EoP-ring 8lld
Applied Sciences (FEAS).
Winners include Michael D\W.e,
Tonawanda; Paul· M. Horzempa, SyN~ Tonaracuse; Suaan J~Pe
wanda; Steven
$t.
anj'l 'Roberta 'Tambor, .J'IIIIi.

J~~~~~~~~r

.•

Tbe •new FEAS ocho~ are
(unclad through donaliona froiD- tor-

mer U /B

eJ1iiMerin1

atudenta and

a~ to incominl freshmen and
transfer ~ atudenta on the
baaia ol. blgb acbool record 8lld itan-

dardized teat aoo..,..

�~

5·

Prqppsals for Tuition·Hikes
Said Squeeze Aimed at Poor

Par~p1 ncket

.

Appeal System .

Being SetUp
In . .

lp

t of lllldlllt .......

inl debt . . , . _ - - ' - - .
yaa-.,
IIUI to.......-.-tbe-ap-

portuniliea iD ..... ,_ yaa. . . . .
than Cllllfal: to-pq a 1itll8 fciiiiii8Yor a fot .iif
latK, · yaa ,-_,
•CIIIIIl! . . . . .
to appeal ,._
... before·i ...... - - - . iD the

-=.,

hope of

ClleaiDa

9118 and aD.

yaar -

bolan

..1l:~~
~'blli15&gt;' b parking a.t11a II

tranoferred early - ' ,.... from tbe
Buffalo Pollee to the City ~
ol ~ In olber aya, the
Clllllpll8 Jl8l')Wic II!Vataa will reaiain
oatenaibly ·~
"We're attiiiiPiiill to put a Utile
w..- intu a liluation ..t.e there
wasn't any befole," aplained Qity
EDITOR·:
TransporbiliCMI Commissioner· Dan
We, the undersigned students en~ who ' - to ata1iliah the bearrolled in the College E co u r s e in
mg system as aoon as the- Common
''Palmislzy ," take esception to the dis~-the principle and the
paraging remarks conoeJ;Ding the value
.bw!Pl "At the.pniioent time, the cmly
of the course and the' ~tioos
recourse for parking ~ is a
of the instructor, quoted m the ["R&amp;summons to court, wbich U!nda to be
port of the Extramural Evaluating
coetly and inefficient"
.
Team on the Collegiate System of
Under the new procedure, parking ·
SUNYAB," Reporter, November 8] . _ floes may be appealed before a bear'Ibe article states tha~ the. study of
ing examiner, one of a number Of
palmistry is merely "trendy" and falls
attorneys recommended by the Erie
into the resJfu of ·peeuiloacience. We
County Bar Associatron . Examiners
find it impressively naive that the
will be bired on a per diem, rota~
committee's evaluator, who apent only
ing basis. Each will serw for one year
ten minutes in the class, would char:=r=-~ no more than one cJaY ·
acterize the 3,000 years practice of
palmistry as art and science as a modThe system is a definite improveem fad, and that be would measure
ment from an o~tional viewits intellectual value solely in tenns
point, Hoyt maintained. "New personof modem scientific "method."
nel will be trained to meet administnt
More jaundiced and unfounded is
~ve.and c:le·rical needs," be~
the implication in the article that the
while uniformed p o I i c e, who are
instructor's only qualification is that
currently performing this function will
of enthusiasm for the subject. The
:....~.~. to go hack to work on the
evaluator ignores the fact that the instructor holds advanced professional
This has been one of the city admindegrees from both SUNY and the
islnttion's primary goals he added
lns~tute of Technology in Bombay, ·
The administnttive cb,ange.,.er will ·
not affect current or future parking
lndUl, and that he has been studying
palmistry for twelve years. Nor did
regula_tions on campus. . •"'bese are
· the evaluator question the students in
established and enforced by the University," Hoyt said, "and campus
the oourse. Had he done so, he would
police will continue to iswe parking
have found that they share the entickets to violators."
thusiasm for the course and for the
mstructor, a criterion which we believe
Until several :Years aao. the ·unn..rshould carry much more weight in the
sity. dealt with parking violaliCMls as
evaluation procedure than the unin"'!- mter:na) ma~ preventing lhoee
formed, biased, and cursory judgment
wtth unpaid tags &lt;rom re-~
or a "disinterested'' observer.
· 'Ibe 's witch to local police'enforcemeni
We believe it would be an insult
was . probably made, Hoyt said. b&amp;to the free academic climate of the
cause of the "enonnous coet to the
coll!'~iate system to allow the final
University of administering such a
decJS1on on the future of this course
Procram."
in the curriculum to rest solely on
~ti":.,al~~~i',~mmittee's purely sub-

Palmistry Class ·
Takes Exception

First Capen
Contract Let
'Ibe Stale

Unlversi~'~

Flmd baa awarded the Albert Elia

:~COO!i:!.tr~

f::..:::::

lion Of the foundation of SamUel P.

~thebuilu: ,:ct~
bent

CllllllpU8.

•

Oqlen Hall will be the _siDgle larg-

est bUilding on. the , _ campus, and
the fOUDdation Willi bid as a separate
~ to iD{we that ezcavatioos

oPrl!·':.;..~~~the~

itaelf haw not yet beal advertised.
The contract iilcludea rouah grading, acavatioll lor approzimalely 160
mam . . _ t eolumua, a retaining or
. fOODdation ~.ADd elevator pita. .
Deeipled by Kenneth Demay of the
Clllllpll8 - - plannina firm, SaSaki,
JJemaY and · Aaaociates of
W.bulla~.!'::"u, Maa, the multi-level
...... will contain 260,000 aquare
feel In addiliCMI to 8COO!!!modations '
for the c:enlml administration, the
buildillf will contain two libraries,
two food _..,;., -tioaa, IDIUlY
claaooms and student ..:livity space.
Jobn A.. Neal, a.istant vial president for tacilitiea Planninr, llll.Yll that,
upOn COillplatiou, the building will
provide the first est· of.
to acCOillmodale activities sucb as tb&lt;iae
bol!""'i in the Main campus Norton
UmOIL He added that .work on. the
fOODdaliCMl could '-in 11DY time and
should be completed by June; 1974.

na......,

'Ibe' pretense that the average family whoee children attend public oallepa and universities IS wealthy
enougb to pay the enormous tuition

increasee is called by Selden "the
height of hypocriay coming from a
group of corporation l!l&lt;eCiltives with
aa.1aries in excess of $75,000 a year."
'Ibe CEO argument is that the
"middle class'' abould pay more so
that the poor can receive more. In his
column in the Nt!lD York Times Oct.
14, AFr Vice Pn!sident Albert Shanker, responding to the mood of teach· era throughout the ' country, points to
the aame hypocriay: "It is·not surprising t:l:Jat tbe push in the direction of
sc;&gt;8IOng the poor to help the · poor ls
VIgorously supported by wealthy oorporations and foundations eager to
. preserve their own tax advantage."
Shanker cone! udes: "It is to be
h!&gt;ped that some day, soon, a prestigiOUS report will be issued, with appropriate fanfare, which will call for
the financing of public higher eduea·
!ion ~ ail equitable tax program
m w!rl&lt;:h .the coet· would be borne by
multi-bilbon dollar corporatiorui which
can indeed afford to pay--m&gt;d not by
=
"who now can hardly make ends

Far from helping the poor, the CED
proposals only help to hail out the
!"'althy private universities by mak'!'g. ~ ~p&lt;&gt;re co'!'petitive with pub.
lie ms~tutions of higher learning. In a
stud,r m the AFL-CIO American Fed-·
erotwnist, "College Costs Squeeze the
Worker Out," authors Sessions and
Ostar argue that the- CED report "ap. Pe&amp;J"! t? .""Press the views of a few
multi-bilho!' dollar corporations and
affluent pnvate universities and does
not· speak for families of students for
veterans seeking an eduCation ' for
labo~ union and farm families,. n~r for
pubhc colleges ·and ·universities."
. In fact, the CED recommendations
,1l&gt;e Uniwrsity-wide student evalu~or increased grants and loans will not
ation of teaching, the Analysis of
unprove the educational opportunities
Courses and Teaching (ACT) will be
of the children of the poorest families
administered in the period nOOember
A~ most. additional grants to the poo~
3 to 13, Bruce Fr8ncis, project direcwill sl~ down the present rapid rate
tor bas annollll&lt;ed
of decline of such opportun"ities, for
&amp;;;b de{'8rimeni will distribute the
the poor '!"' hardest hit by. inflation
QUeStionnaue to instructors who will
and
reoesSion.
be asked · to administer them during
Token progrsins in this direction
regular class time and mtum them
!"tould
become
substantial but
to tbeir departmental office by Decemm the present context bypocritiaJ talk
ber 16. Ilepartmenta abould return the
.
~t
~!ping
the
poor
by redistribut:.
completed questioonaires in their-enmg the lllCDme of 'the near-poor should
vel~ to the appropriate Faculty
not blin!l us to the fact that in the .
off1ce by December 19.
meanwhile the main 80UI'CeS of income
No. 2_I"''Jcils must be.used to comare untouched. Billions for war re- ·
plete ACT since the answer ~Ia are
main sacred, while corporate incOmes
scored by machine.
!JOntinue to benefit both from the skills
Tbe .F aculty Senate bas apeed that
of .college graduates and from the risthe resUlts=
,
BllrVey for eachJacing prices that are J'!!SI)OliSible for the
ull5&gt;' memboit lJie.
e avatlabte !d.-the · P""""'t Crisis in education.
Student
tion · for publication "
University rac-,olty especially should
~ ::rootion with the consent of
be concerned about the fact that the
ICIIley nwnber.
.
CED looks for higber proc'luctivity by
Anyone with a qu.tion about the
teacbers and a reducti911 of the number
evaluation procedure abciuld call either
of tenured faculty as a partial solutiOn
Dr. FranciS, Ma. Victoria Dzillba, or ·
to students' problems. lt is silggested
Mr. Alan Fenster at Student Teetina
to llludenta that tuition increasea are ·
and a-reb. at. 4CIM. .
.
' - ' Y bec:a_use faculty don't .work

-ceo

ACT Evaluation
Set for Dec. 3-13

more

-GALE K1TZNE11
CAIUIEUTA ROSADO
SHARON BILVEUIAN
XICHAEL Bn&lt;RN
Bt.ri'A BURKUNAS
PAULA EINBENDEB
CAROLYN IIAUM
mWARD RAir'l'llANN
CYNTHIA TROIANO
J'UUi:S WEI9B
JF.ROKY GERBLEU
llll'I'CHKAN

Hillel Concert
The "':""nd e~t· in Hillel's yearlo!'g Jubtlee Anniversary Celebration
· w11l be a folk-&lt;Oncert, Saturday December 1, at 8 p.m. in the Filimore
Room of Norton. Featured performer
will be Y echiel· Eckstein lead singer
of the ~did vocal
Eckstein, also a guitarist, has appeared on both American and Canadian !elevision, performing Jewish Israeb, and "American folk music. ' His
"Kol Salonika"·- album - a Greek
Cbassidic sound-has Qt!ickly become
a Jewish best ·seller, Rabbi Justin
Hofmann of Hillel says.
~ c:onoert, which is open to the
Umwrsoty and Buft'alo communities:
will lie p""!Jeded by a Hillel
ton beg~ at 6 p.m., Friday, Nc&gt;wmber 30, m the Hillel House Mr
Eckstein wiD I e a d the Kabbalath
. Shahhat Service. A aahbeth dinner
will be served. 'Ibe Oneg Shahhat
followin11 ·· will feature group alnging
to be led by Mr. Edartein.
,Concert \icketa are-available at the
Hillel House, the Hillel Table. and
at the Norton Union Ticket Clftice. ·

group.

Shabba:

Preston Predicts
Phase V Coming
Phase V,

wbetbet ca1ted

by that

name or not, Will represent a shift
toward a permanent system of ....,.,_
. price . monitoring, according to Dr.
Lee E. Preston; Melvin H. Baker
Professor of American Enterpriae at

U/B.

. Dr. Preston's COillllll!llts were made
m a speech to a joint meeting of the
Robert Morria Aaaociates and the
CPA Aasociation at the Statler Hilton,
Nowmber 13. He explained tbat,
''The new system will include formal
recognition of the actual prsctice of
!be
whole '!'IJiti-phase control - lena., ~t Ill, the .-1 of monitoring
and s1'!""1J1JI, but not prewnting, ecaaomy-wtde inflation."
· ~e. stated that the principle of aelectiYity among industries,
. ,
and wage settlements that bas
been prominent in Phase IV will be
~ key element in Phase V. "The
dilferenoe, however, is that the Pbase
V' system will be expected to last at
!east until a new administrstion."
Other aspects ol Phase V mentioned
~Y pr. Preeton included formal rationmg of certain items, most likely
petroleum ~ucts; rationir.g by
IJI8!UI8 of specific lues, and the application of __.,.._ controls only in

=

"non~ industrlo!s.
. Dr.. l'restoll held that this likelY
Jl!'ltem Of dewllopment ahouid not be
~ as a bad thing. "It is better

to think of our problems and tbeir
solutions in lll!rma of long-term adaptation and treatment, rather than in
tarmo of criais actions."

�_......... .,...._,_ _ aa.
SBNIOiis wlae l a s t - beciDB with:
A~--------------·---·-···.December
December 34
y.z
____________________

lUNioBs wlae ~- betliDB wllb:

A-L -·----------------··-· December 5
M.Z ----~-- ---------- ------------ Deceaiber 6
SOPHOMORES WbiMe last name tJecins with:
• A-L .................................Illlcomber 7
Y-Z ___:....................... DeceiDI5er 10
FRESHMEN """- last..,. betrins with:
A-L .............................. December 11
. M-Z ---------------------- December 12
All E.O.P. studenia, reprdJess of where they are advised, will pick
~~- -~in Townsend Hall, """','''ling ' to the .@b.o.'ve

' ... Helert Walsh: 'A Devoted CareerThat Covered More than 30 Years'
Tbe cleoid. of Helen R. Walsh. on
job hec:ame ·almost legendary. She was
aware that sbe had wtder ber adminisNovember 22, 19'13. ended a term of
tration probably tbe -m ost highly senservice to State University of Buffalo
sitive area in tbe business office of
90 long, 90 varied, and 90 biP&gt;lY deditbe UniVersity. She set for benielf and
eated tg U.,.-inotitution sbe serwc1 as
ber slaff tbe film precept that the payto ha.., few, if any, panillela wilbin
roll must be computed and issu\l(l on
the ranks of tbe civil lll!rVIlllts of our
University. Her association 'first with
time. There could be no delays. She
1mew tbe areas of anguish that would
tbe old University of Buffalo, then,
since tbe merger in .1.962, with tbe
arise if -a paycheck were late or lost or
inaccurately computed. ln90far as this
State 'UmYen!ity PayroO ~
writer is aware, there neyer were any
was- tbe major interest of ber life. She
devoted -beraeU siDiJe.mindedly to this
avoidable de~
1n 1962 when the old University
interest in &lt;me c:apacit,Y or auolber,
merged with Slate University of New
often in more tb&amp;n OJite Sllllultaneously,
through an unbroken official connecYork, Helen Walsh managed the
tion with tbe University which covered
transition of ber openltions into the
State Payroll System with reinarkahle
'!-.third of a-c:entuzy.
·Helen Walsb joined tbe business
fa~ty. She quickly estsh~ a good
rapport with her ocrunterparts in Aloffice of tbe University of Buffalo in
tbe. early 1940's, first as bursar of the
bany, and her office seemed to funcE...rung Session, known as Millard
tion smoothly from the beginning.
· .Fillmore College, when tbe business
Alwars her meticulous attention to
_detsi and punctuality prevailed. More
.office of tbe University was housed
in tbe Old Townsend Hall which stOod
than oac:e sbe js known to have sent
. a special messenger to the· Buffalo
at tbe comer of Delaware and McKinley Cin:le. 'lbose who remember those
Airport to take tbe payroll from an
days can· stiD aee tbe' IiJbts of Town~/t:Y
~ ~;!,~~
send Hall burning Jar mto tbe night
distribution on tbe due date.
as Burasr Helen Walsh calculated
tuition and fees from tbe throngs of
Sbe was responsible as well for all
retirement and slaff benefits for tbe
niglit echool students who came at tbe
entire Uni...rmty.
clolle of lbair workiilg day to' ptUBUe
ln addition to her church affilistions ·
COIII'Ii&amp;ll in higher education. Her own
which have been recited elseWhere, sbe
working day newr ended until tbe last
was a member of tbe College Univer~ student had tended his· paysity. Personnel &lt;Association, ·and tbe
ments ami gone his way. . And even
then, not wttil tbe reco!ipts for tbe day
Civil Service Employees Association.
J&gt;ad been halanoed and· recorded and
At tbe time of her death tbe State
Payroll administered by her office
tbe day's coiJection c:arefully locked
~gregated $2,500,000 bi-weekly. ooverinto tbe old Can safe for the night,
mg 6,000 faculty and staff. ·She mansbe inak8 ber own ' looely way .
aged as well tbe payroll for all rea stray v~t from
search contracts and grants at this
More than
location aggregating for the ·year 1972
tbe railroad trscb down behind Town$8.3 million dollars and covering aP:
send Hall 'would make his way into
tbe buildina looking for a warm place
proximately .l!.700 persons engaged in
contract research.
to spend ihe riilbl Helen and tbe
The fact that all these iasb were •
failblul old huildiili caretaker toselber
performed quietly and without effort
would usher him on his~- Her only
-prolaction in those days m that old
on her part to secure personal fi!COtllli·
·neilbhorbood of the Lower Tenace in
tion makes.. it all the more impiemve.
Hers wa&amp; indeed a dedic:&amp;ted life. It
downtown Buffalo was tbe 90litary
was m-to a degree obi! could not
buildina custoilian ·and ber own inclomita61e
'have realized--a fruitlul one. All pre-. 1n addi~ MUlard Fillmore
- sent members of this irlstitution are
her beneficiaries. :. _.
Colleft; eli8 waa hunar as well of tbe
Sc:boOl8 of Nuraing and Social Work,
POBlOIBA&amp;IISr~~H~
also housed at the. downtown loc:al:ion.
Tbe tuition and , _ for the ......,..]
POa-AWADIS
diYisicms under her administmtion in
those early days aggregated well o...r
STAFF SENATE MEETING
a million dollars annually.
The Professional Staff Senoia wiH meet
ln 1961 when the busini&amp; opemtion
Thu~. Decembo&lt; 13, at 3 p.m. In the .
of the University was transferred to
--Faculty Club Dillin&amp; Room. All NTPs ant
tbe Norlb Main St.eet Campiat, Helen
invl1ed . The _..sa lncll-: Approval at.
Walsb was· a.ipled _...n,;uty for
Minutes, HoY. 1: Commlttiia Reports;
.the Unlvenity payroll and tbenlUpon
-i:a,...r Mobility- dlscuulon; Budget Rebecame dizector of JliiYIOll which poai.
port: MUA; Chairmu's Report; Other
tioa sbe QODtinued to bOld untif her
Busio)OSI.
·
death. Here aplD her devotion to lier

.:7:t

=

once

tt:

'&lt;
A "11...-ln" for children-- at the~
Club's Holiday Mini-Ma~ 5ale af -

at lha' U/B•W -'s

lifts, 'bOld on lha

~~.!':t':'-.'*!;...~....::- .:-....~:

=..:::

selllnc enamels, weavif1p, patnti.,P, botlk, poltety, etc., . - an ·
estimated 1200 lndlvlduols, nattlnc~. $1300 for the Club's
Grace C.pen Loan Fund.
'·
~UI b~·~·'{l

"Job Openings
FKUI!y

Instructor-Associate Pi-ofesaor, School of De~try.
Assistant Professor ( part-tUne) ; PhyaiD/ogy, School Of DentUtry.
Assistant or Associate Profe890r, Hi.atory. .
As¢stant Professor...( 2 openings) , Speech Compu.uaicalion.
Visiting Profe890r (1 ~Only), ·Th&lt;!atn:
.
Instructor-Associate .Piofe890f, School -of fjenmtry.
Assistant Profe890r, MatM11141iu.
'·
Visiting Profes90r or Profe890r, MatMmatictl.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Hi.atDry.
Profe890r, CMmi.atry.
Assistant Professor (Physical), CMmi.atry.
Assistant Professor (Organic) , CMmi.atry.
Visitjng Profe890r, CMmi.atry.
NTP
AUU.t&lt;mi to Chairman, Theatre, PR-1.
4"i.atont to Director, Physical Plant, Amhersl
Aui.atont .for lnslrucliDnal Services, Student Testing.
Aui.atont Director 'of..RecrealiDrial Programniing, Student Activities,
V.P. Student A1fairs.
• •
-- ·
Aui.at&lt;mt to Chaipoon, Microbiology, ·Health ·se;eiwes, .
TechnictJl Speciali.at, Chemfstry.
·
·
F~ additional information concerning thesif jobs and for · detsila of
NTP openings throughout the Slate University SYatem. consult bulletin
hoards at-these locations:
. _ 1: Bell Fl!ciJity between Dl52 and Dl53; 2. Ridge Lea, ·s.illdinli
- 4236, nat to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4280, in corridor QeXi to
C-1; 4. Health Scienc:es Building, .in corridor. oppoaite HS 131; ?· .ca~
Hall, in tbe corridor, between R~ rn and tbe Lobby; II ~ ·
• Vl!'"n~r
--'~- -·tor---,_
.. , ___ ....~.- 7 -.i:d." '·
•m
. ,, ...
ground
floor . m
.
~.-... ~.. ~ · .... ~es~,
mam entrance foyer, ~ from Public lnformation Office; 8!~
Hall, .in corridor between ·JWoms 112 and ' 113; 9. ·l'arker ~. l·
in. CQrridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Han, 1st floor, Housing Olllc8 •
• area; 11. 1807 Elmwood, · Pe!aonneJ IJepsr:tment; 12. Norton Uninn,
Director's Office, !Wom . 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in corridor next to
Room 106. 14. ·John Lord O'Brian Hall, fourth floor ( Amherst Campus) .

�-'!&amp;.-- ::::e:

~

follaoR:

.

80: 2 p.m.J Dr.
Clbalralu 01 tbe

~ _.._

~
Dlf:tjji::

~
:r-RaiPl r-----~
ti-~~- tbe1i:il'at~:80

p.lli.,

!t~.:!:fiilivic, utd"'4C-

MII .R • J!o !oe t" 7 p.m.,

Dr. Eaoa

=:'i-:.=-u:t-ma.::m~~:

Ia. '"Die Belie Oali;" 8 p.m., ..,..a!
~:

-a-:

pro et oaata,"

fACULTY

::::r:.~~i
• llftlfealr of. Ger-

atUtB.~

- - 9:111 a.m., Dr. ; J - SIDaw,

DHION fOI: HUMAN IIINGS AT

Dr. David
le ~
of re11Paa. ~ Um-.lbo, •Ad_

llllliora&amp; .IDrialro c-u.. J:Lirmu
1 ' - IUid Mytbolocbl Oomcioua.-;" "11:80 a.m., CXIDCiudlna diacu&amp;slan moderated by Dr. Peter Heller,
. . . , _ of Germanic IUid Slavic at

t1tB.

The ConformUt (Bertolucci, 1969) , 140
Capen, S and 9 p.m. No admission charge.

SOCW SCIENCES LECTUIE*

So""' Cultural and Moral Aopecu of
Black-White Re/alioru, Orlando Patter~

Tbe Olllae of Urban Allalni (OUA)
Ia boillial tbe Olltuio-U~te New
York RePmal Meetlaa of tbe Cowdl
of Uufvwwlty IDstltuteo lor Urban Illfain &lt;CTJIUA), NIM!IIIber 291U1d 80
a~ tbe Scbrafft'a Molar Inil, Nlacam
Palla, N.Y. CUIUA is tbe coordinat&lt;n• body for 11111-mty-'--1 urban
.bici'le. IUid putiUc aJrailll sRocrama in
Call8da IUid the

W0M1N AND THE WOILD Of WOK•

TradiiU&gt;IIGI Appi'O«hu, an exploration
of alternati- for ...,men, 384 Norton.
- noon·2 p.m. Child care is available in 337

~ ~u..f'tbe~.!.i!7!
cardlDa to Dr. 'J:r!:'{ Ryan, ~

Division, Sandia L abo ratorie s, Albu·
querque, ·4238 Ridge Lea. Rm. 10, ll a.m.
Presented as part of lbe Visiting Scho-

•

,

I

·set f or Satu,.rd ay

1be Moot Court Boerd of the
School of Law will conduct tbe final
Char
S
round of the annual . les . Des-mond Moot Court Competition in tbe
Carlos C. Alden Moot Court Room,
Jolm Lord O'Brian Hall, Sa41nfay,
December 1, at 2 p.m.
~~~~traParticipants will present onil argutioa8-will be led by Dr. Gonion P .
ment based upon briefs prepared for
· Fiabef, director of tbe Center for
the competition· to a four-judge panel
U-'-- "--1
t D - - - ' - ComeU
com~ of H.011. Cbarles S. Des"""' ""'"' opmen
mood, former chief justice of tbe N..W
Univwaity; and Dr. Larry 8 · Bourne.
Yiork Court of A-•· 81'""~- as
director
of the Center for UrbanJand
,.,_...,
Community S~ UnivWslty otTo.
.Chief Justice; H_011. Matthew J ; Jaaen,
roato. ·
·
aaaociate justice, New · York Court of
-Fmnk Logue, director of tbe NaAppMlS; Hon. Jobn S. Manb, IUBICitioDal Urban ~ellows Program, will
ate juatide; Appellate Division-Fourth
p_,t a _ , . , on '"DDe Chal~
Department; and ~ennetb Joyce, profor MCIUJiting Efteclive Intemabip
f.....,.. of law, U/8.
Prosmma." and Fmnk Corbett, direcThis year's PrOblem involves an ap-·
tor' ot OU~t
UIB1 will ·Jead the dis-·
~ to the Onilied States Supreme
cuaaicJn 01) •
umty' !lervi&lt;e. - - · •.
CO!ut bY. a writ ol Certiorari coocemDr. RYial hi"'lllt aieelini'io 'lllllll'ei&amp;1'l"'~ • the rl,ht ol an individual to_...
1«. Otlw PrinciPal participants will
. ji:.f; a church in which narcotic and
lie Dr..:"'lliBy CabeR, )X'i)Bident of
haiiiiCiDofenic drup are uaed as part
CUIU~ IUid Dr. .r- L Cox, the
oL the JeiiJious rituals. IUid ceremonCoomail 1 eDCUtiloe dlractor. Dr. Coiea. The question involves an ana.lyais
. _ 18 c11reetor of tbe Center for New
ol issues aUied wiUt First Amendnalt
York~ All!aln at tbe New 8chool
ricbta. IUid tbe nebulous "ricbt to pri-·
for
~
v,q:'
.

s

•-=·

and Community Services and the Faculty

socw sc'i~Ncu ~.ECTW~•

;:=~!::!ban:.!:'t! Moot Court Ftna
·.

-~ol~:;;~~ s%...'/"'ofDe~P'!Ii~
of Sociai ·Sciences and Administration.

tenon.. ·profeuor of eociolOCY. Harvard
Univenity. -Conference Tbiatre....Norton,
L p.m. S-red by lbe Department of
Sociology, lbe School of Social · Policy
and Community Serviceo, and the Faculty of Social Scienoes and . Administration.
-

.elate c1irector of OUA, "Deliberations
will be primarily deYoled to fonnulatinl delinltive jlenpecti- 011
academic, Nllllllrdl and caninnmity
aervice CIOIICBDtrations to •the
cballenpa in urban aJrailll educ:atiCIIl

:~ir;,&gt;ra::r.;:, ~to&amp;~·~~1~:~

Norton.
S-red by lbe DivUion of Student
Aft'ain ADd · UUAB, in cooperation with
~ U/B Foundali&lt;!n, ln&lt;:.

fo~tl't!r'fJ'2;.. ~~f.!lo"'~:r.

u.s.

EXHIDITS
AIT EXHtllt•

pt.:.:::::::::~~~-

WEDNESDAY~

urban Affairs Hosts
Regional Meeting

lading diaeuaaions on academic
CIOIICBDtratiCIIl will be Dr. Robert C.
llocww, director of tbe Urban IUid
Envizonmolnlel
t u d i 8 8 Institute,
Brock Univwai7J8S.l Ca...._.__ On.~- .. tarlo; IUid Dr.
vid L J')uyear, diractor of the Center for Metropolitan

woa•

fiUl'

TUESDAY-4

.

All of tbe 8WIIlla .... free IUid to~ public.

giea for tbe syatematie cleYelopmant or
-:::..J!I"P8"'8 and expanding ~ting

minut.eo of

Human Roliobility Aloo!,YOia, Dr. Alan
D. Swain, Syot.emo Reliahility Division.
Sandia Laboratories, Albuque~que, 104
Parker, S p.Di.
.
'Ibis ia the .ecoocl in a .me. of three
loctureo of lbe De~t of Induotrial
Engineering Visiting' Scholar Lecture
Program.

10:80 a.m.,

wm.,

API'~ of

AclmioOiona C!Jmmittee. 5. -ution on
teachinc ell'ecti-. 6. EIUICU!iw Committee re10lution on late .w.m.ioD of
grades. 7. Other - - 148 Diefe&gt;;&gt;dorf,
2:30 p.m. •

~~C211aqo, "C.G.
..... J

1.

~~:~.;c~~~

lie.... • . .

Club; t:80 p.m.. ~ IUid lndivida81
M~~-- 1: 9 a.m., Dr.

MldiMl
IIIUiicad:

JiMAtE MBnNO••

A&amp;&lt;mo~a:

DESIGN F01 HUMAN lliNGS AT WOIIC•

The Human Ekm.ent in Job Safety#
Or.. Alan D. Swain, Systems Reliability

lar Lecture Program by lbe Department
ol Industrial Engineering. .

lobby display CIION, Mooday-Fridlly, 9
n.m.-5 p.m., through Nov. SO. ~tod
by the Oftioe of Cultucal Allain..
PHOTOGIAPKY EXHISIT*

•

Verbal Payoff. ·a collection .of photo.

""'phs by Joe Hryvniak. Music Room.
259 Norton, tbrouch &amp;mday. Dec. 2:
UUAI AIT EXHIIIT•

Plw&lt;oBrapllo by Clare . Ball. O.,U..ry
219, Norton, December 1·14. G.ll•ry
houn: Monday, Wed.-.y and Thursday, II a .m.-5 p.m.; Tueoday and ,Fri·
day, iloon-4 p.m. and S.J.l) p.m.; &amp;mday,
l...S p .m. .

INTERVIEWS

FILMS AND ISSUES: tHE FUTUIE*

Future Shock and Leiaure 2000, Conference Theatre, Norto~ 12: 30-2 p.m.
A discussion/ reaction will follow each
screening. Presented by lbe U/B Campus
Mi~islries.
l.fCTUU'

Pathophysiology of Di.suminated ln.traooscular Coogulation, Dr. Eberhardt
Mammen, dean, School of Medicine..

Wayne State University, Research Studies Center Auditorium, Roswell Park
Memorial Institute, ~ : 30 p.m.
~
ECONOMICS UMINAI*
Sc~nce

Verscu Ideology : Nftll Find-

ings on the Economica of Slavery. Dr.
Robert Fogel, Taussig Visiting -reb
Professor, Department of Economics.
Harva'rd Univenity, Rrn. 106, John Lord
O'Brian Hall (Amherst Campus), 8 :30
p .m. Coff~ in 608 O'Brian, 3 p .m.

,

CHEMICAl. EHOINHIING SIMINAII

Di/lu~n cuul Reocti.oii, Prof. Rutherford· Aris, Department of Chemical Engineering, Uruversity of MinneaotA. 104
Parker, 4 p.m.
NlnZSCME AND 11*: UIIIAIY nxt•
On. ~ EterntJl R«:urrence. Oaude
Lewsque, Annu B. Rrn. 5,.4 p.m.
p,_,ted· by lbe Procram in Compara.
tive Literature.

NOTICES

FILMS•

The Lonelinao of the Lo716 Diotmu:e
RUIUler (Ri&lt;:bardson, 1962), 7 p.m. A
Tan• of Honey (Richardoon, 1961), 9
p.m. Bolli 8lmo are bee and will be

.-

in 140 Capell.

~

. ~~"R::iat~~y~~
-charp.

.

TMIA'III ~A1'10N'

w-..a

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COI'Y IIEADUNE
For~··-•ndploMu,.,

"

·

John
The Whila Ihl1il, di·
rected by Gordoa . Ro&amp;&lt;l4. Courtyard
T!Mo.tre, laf.yella ....C Hoyt, 8 p.m.

.... lllot to publicize all

ca-. m.

- a lllkllll ......

onc.~mpuo.To-lnforrn.uon,eontac:t

N•nc:y

2228.

�___

--··
um.. , ·-#
-.1:......
'

CJ .... •Iibrrr o1 A•to-*la. Pat~ Corp. 1611 Part.:-

dol: II.

........ tD . . - . . . d , Ill Hodlotootllor, 4 ..... ...,
Ia llJ Hoc:bI

-ata:•p.a.

..

c:aen-.. ..... ~.

,.::::= ~-&amp;::·RaM-,.._,.
~=~:

s-ud 'DIUr, A

_Ap-

, _ tor

Bodal Hallm, ud 7'- &amp;ria

Date. Jolm
Anol-J:
of

~~"i.!:."~~""T'p.DL~

...=r:n::::: :,o'!:i-;7

~t.d by lhe Sllltiotical SeieDco
~t
a-puter Sci-

of

DivioioD,

~liONAL fOOD 1~·

J:~~~~e~:

ll.liO.

-ted

by the lotematicmal Club
ud lhe Ollice
Foreip StucleDt- M - -

·-·
WrL

of

SATURDAY-!

(at:,Y ~i~'T,~~::•.(~'l'l; ";~

CAcRilil• ·
Go Wal (8uDoll) 140

(H-t. ll188-119f, Window Wour Baby
-Mooilt6 (Brakhqe. 191111); T/Ufh LUv

~

-

C O LUMBIA ~ C TU R ES .u-;.1
RAS1 AR PRODUC T!ONS r,,, ,,..,,,.
STACY KEACH
.

PIIYSICA&amp;.OIIOAHIC CHIMISTIY llCTia#

.JEFF BRIDGES
SUSAN TYRRELL ...

at Urbana, 322 Ac:m.,n, 8 p.m.
'I1le leetu.re eeritS is part of the Conversations in the DiKi.pllnes supported
by the U/B Folllldation and administenod by tbe Ollice of the Vice President
for Academic Affairs with the aid of the
Graduate Scbool.

RAY S .-t .Rt&lt;

Tlu Clumiatry of Tetnwo~Du Sulfur,
Prof. J . C. Martin, Uniwnity of Dlinoia

Cho1J:,~be OD.!~~ah=

A J O HNHUSrONP~ r)~UCl l()f\~

MEDIA sn.Y , . _ .

Nai(o (Mannu) , 0111 of Into (Krieabei'J). NiaaoA Ariona Window (Jaeoba),

LEONARD GAR D NER
....... , ... ,b&lt; . ..

ft%.'~&amp;::.:.j~· ~te{ftoftr'~

Produc&amp;d by RAY S TARK
OtrectNt by JOHN H USTON

Study, 8328 Bailey Ave., 8 p.m. ·-

~==~

fU••

·uu.u f,1U11••

11aea.tre, Norton, check s how case fo r .
timea. Admission charge.
An Andy Warhol Production starring
Sylvia Miles, J oe Dallesandro and Andrea Feldman.

p.m.
u!_"""""ted by tbe Depa-

ent of Eng·

.

HIUB. JUIIUE CONCIII*

I weeklg eoUuique I
Unless otherwise noted, tickets for events charalnc admlaalon can_ be purdJHad at lhe

tHL\DI NIIINTATION•

Gain' A Baf(olo, by Ed Bullina, p reaent.d by lhe Department of Theatre

Norton Hall Tlclcet Ollice.
#Open only to •Open to public

Throach SUDday, December 2. Students
• .75; pneral admiaoion, ll.liO.

FILMS AND ISSUES: ECOlOGY•

~~th:t~:,~, ~~

~ i!''r~hill~ s':i~•."=:::1

of

proleaaor
black atudiea and adjunct
uaiatant profeaanr of lheatre, weD-known
in tbia area aa the founder and director
of the Buffalo Bladt Drama Worbhop.
1o the aotea for the play'a propam,
Smith aaya: "What yoa are about to ·ia not just a play. It ia an ezperieDoe, a
lUck ..._.....,. in the lilo of a dejected
c:alture. Oo not try to digeat iL But let it
roll tluoach lhe memb,_ of you ud
you will real macic."

.J~:':~,;.~~:O~!"s~.:: ­
~rio ~ ~--"'rra~ ~

~Ray Stooo, Deborah Dis:

oa, Scott

~

and the Zimbabwe NatiOnal ~ T!oopo. Joe McGlone
t::.,~ production ; l.ichtlac by

-'

Admiuion ia free to memben of Hil·
lei; a nominal fee will be 'Cbarpd all
otbera, Fillmore Room, Norton. Call 886-4540 for time.
Presented by tbe Hillel Grad Club.
THEATH PIIIIHTATION•

.

Brotlr.er FrcmcU, S itter E arth and TM
Eighth Day, Conference Theatre, Nor·
ton, '12: 30-2 p.m.
A diacuSaion/ reaction will foUow each
screeriin(. p,_,ted by the U/ B Campus Mimatriea.
.
~DICINAL

CHEMISJIY SEMINAl#

A!t:J:/d.h&gt;:i~~: Pe~~~;Z,Pf&gt;.,~

of Chemistry, Univenity of Toronto, 246
Healtb Scien-, 2 p.m.
Co-aponaonod by tbe GSA Medicinal
~~- the Department of

=:r

CIVIl INOIN&amp;aiNO LIC'1'\MI*

p=~~~~

director, U/B Center for Theoretical
Bio!ou. lot Parbr, a p.m.
~.. will be •ned in 142
Parl&lt;er at 2:80 p.m.
Dem.tllld-Supply llnbolanu : UMJ&lt;peet-

t..!:::..~Dr~~er1~.3n7.

8COIIClllliot, Auatrallan

or-.,.

Depart-

~~ -:;t~ac p"":.;ofR:'!.rwnl07;

John Lon!

SUNDAY-2

~

0'8~ (~Cam­

r;~8:80 p.m. ~in 1108 O'Brion,

~~T.:.u-u.
~--Dalwol,.,..,__,
Dr. a.q..la 'll:- H. Ua. ~ ..

mechanical engi neering , University of
Minnesota, !Of Parker, 4 p.m. Social
hour in 107 Pa rker, 3:30 p.m. •
PHM.OSOPKY Of ICIENCI SOCim UCTUIE•

.

Th~oriu.

'ParoditrM ond R e 1earch
Prog1'CJIIW: An Empiricilt Account, Prof.
F!*f W'~Diwnoity. of Toron!O, 4244

RidTf::.~ihe ~·!= :O_:~of invited

,

Goin' A BU/folo, Harriman Studio

~";.;r8:'talk..m. See Thuraday liatlac

with a prvfeulonal l - I n the aubjoc:t
.. Open to membera of the Unlveni!J
Contact Nancy Cardarelli, 831-2228, for llatlnp,
'

ICONOMICSIIIIIINAr

FRIDAY--:-30

•

Fot City (Huston, 1972), ConfeJeDCO
Theatre, Nor t o n, check abowcaee for
times. Admission chaqe.
;
Stamng Stacy Keach nod Jelf Bndf&lt;.":i.~J:~poaed and aung by Kria

Heot (Morri.saey, 1972), Co nfe r e nc e

Faturing Brian Cara.h ~r. PettY H en deraon and Mi c ha e l Loudon , Faculty
Club Red Room, Harriman Library, 8 : 30

of

Laraaon, a_ paduate otndea.t.at /8. Ud
will include worb by DowlaDd, W'dbye,
Weeldea, Gibbona, Pun:ell and Hudel

"FAT CITY .. · Sc u'{'l•~lay hv
I)., ~,(!(J

p

A 1
EDclioh buoaue muoie
· by the ~~ M~RoLert Doo=....~~ ,8p.DLNo

Clldll _,.....

POIIIY .aADINGS•

7:4$

faaiUon-tbia ia tbe ' Man: Brothera at
their~
-

o-ral lltfttinl, to all women.
BuJra1o Women's Center, 564 Franldin
at North, 7:80 p.m.
For furlber informatioo, eall 883-547·1.

UUAI

~

udz.:;4$~clm~76u:-~

~io~(~~j
~~~ ~~~- 7J!.ID.

IWfALO

...--

IIECITAJ.•

Violiat Delmor Stavor~ , a rraduata
fellow witb the Center of the CJeative
and Perfonoinl Arts, Bainl Recital Hall,
3 p.m. No admiaaion cbaqe.
. _Mr. s-.rt will be ioiDed by viollaiat
t;~..J~ ~to~ Vivian

..,..t opeake ra addJaaing the problem of

MUSICAL~*

HOCICIY'

~O:.;''N~:t:.to~972~-~

.

,A reconatruction of 1111 el-th _.tury
Gresorian Maaa for Chriatmu flay, perfonned by U/ 8 atucleDta . . - r the di·~=~isc:C:n:u~..{~ 204 rection of Dr. Charlotte Hoedenr of the
Town.aend, 4 p.m.
Music ' Department, SL John Vialmey
Presented by the International ComSeminary Chapel, Knoz Road , East
mittee of the U / 8 Women's Club, and . . Aurora, 4 p.m.
•
~ Office of Foreign Student Aliaira.
UUAt filM**
theory comparability in the lciencea.

U/ B va. RI.T ., Twin Rinb, Cbeek-

towap, 7, 80 p.m. .

times. Admiuion chaqe.

CAC FIUl•

.CirAdr!:!!!·
. • :

Morr Brothen at the
_7;.,4$ ud 9:4$ p.m.

r;:n.

MID&amp;A. STUDY .flLMJ*

~~. &lt;~-:;!) 'Jl:ft Al:!J.:o"[s1.,~:

Mruic in tlu Air (Lanzer) , ud A Muaicol About Me (Fruit), Oeatar for
Media Study, 8328 Bailey A.._, 8 p.m.

ia the ~ atoey of how
a •troncman'a uoiatant (Hupo) , a ru,ht
waldunan (Chico) , ud a lawyer ( who?) aave the lunda
a c:ircua ........,
from a bend of c:roob. Marpm Du-

...,.,. am.: ,.ar, .

...........
(ar=).

- · 49 CopeD
'IIIIA111_A
_ m.a.. 8 l&gt;.m.
Gain' A IWifol#, lluriJDm S -t lld i o'

'rhia

of

=~ ~ -:.:"""'~ :::""ti.eia ahot
inebode Groad&gt;o'a f.omocl "Lydia,~
Tatoood Lady."

_.

-.

·.

&lt;~;1;.",1; ,.~..!(D:
.

•.

'

' "rfii H,UJiol Orad CIUti Ill~ all _...a.
uate atudanta and ioinCfe faculty 10 ''~--

. .=·=

~!:.=-~~

(ConW...d'o .. -7.eoL i )

-.

.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>Reporter, 1973-11-29</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1973-11-29</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383765">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>U/8 Malii~g
Cutbacks·•n
Energy Use

Tbe ligbts on tbe Hayes Hall clock

tOwer were turned off Monday njght
as a symbol-of tbe Univenlity'•· reIIPDD'I'!'1D"'l''!idiial"llnd -state calls"for-"'iuntary ~ In _ , . , ...,••

-...~o~-.y,,_

__ _

Let.Thorisand Flowers Bloom,
Lemisch Says ol Bicentennial
By
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
-Sioll

Only 'Jf1 more abcM&gt;ping days left until. tbe 200th Alllliversary of tbe
Boston Tea Party, tbe first JDitior
event in tbe aeries of commemorative
milestones that will marl&lt; tbe Bicentennial of tbe American Revolution.
Tbe Salada Tea r~~~v is marlletin _,;at aouvenir~of tea for
tbe L':vities. Or, if you're in tbe
marht for aometbing more ezpensive
in Bicentennial 80IIIV8nlnt, ;ou abould
OCJII8ider m"--'h;ne for tbe
Jete
set llf. 70 .-:oiiicial
"Bfcentennial~
edvertiaeil by tbe Franklin Mint { no
181ation. to either tbe '1lUtobiopapber
• ol tbe ... ......., IJOY8IDIDI!Ilt
apocy _lhat iMalllB coiuo) . ' n - are
. an exdaai.,
eet ta-a cuatomeJo)
- - of "aalid eterlhia ellver inaots...
Ollldl tbe D ol a mocli!at belt budde,
Ollldl ' ...... "'nccaebr .... tbe 200th

c-

-AIIIIl-....uy c£.tbe..,....,t n ...........,_

.aua• Sabacrlbti-

c~

l'lllla .... NoWaller JIOI) ;-111111 tbe
llllia- •Ill 'cfeli¥ar TO · YOUR
BOMB, "iD . . iDdivldaai.&lt;Wbet, .....
......... willa ... - - tbe ad-

~oflbe••·.,.~~
Ja .a-. ..,.
~

.

at Yor~," "Tbe Battle of Saratoga," all· tbe scenes you loVf!d in your
history books, for only $19.50 an ingot
- or $1,365 before you're through.
Appropriated by tbe money-makers
and overshadowed by current-day
crises (like "Where Are Tbe Tapes?,"
sung to tbe tune of "Gas-Ratiorung Is
Just Around tbe Comer'), tbe Bicentennial is, in tbe words of WB Asso· tiate Prof""""" of American Studies
Jesse Lemiach, "limping toward its
grave."
A member of tbe Committee on tbe
Commemoration of tbe Americap Revolution Bicentennial of tbe American
'Historical Aaaociation, Lemisch thinks
that tbe IICtioas to date of tbe o8icial
· American Revolution Bicentennial
CommiBSion (ARBC) in Wubington
COblltltute a "little Wate!'Pte." But

-~inw~-·t
. .
ADd • a bistoriml, Lemlach
pro-

bep tbe m-tlolmlal flllm

::...::r:::".::J::~.at

IDa lble ....... ol belihta&gt;ed

pub!¥: -

. ' ~ ill w.lory ............. ott..
~ wiD a •lioul CIDIDIIIia-t ..,.
a ..__,.. propu~ .tbU .waulil oalJect; lll)d pablioh _ . . . . .
(C..mu...t- _ , . , eoL J)

sumption. .
.
.
Additional· COillleJVation ..-sures
are also •underway, Physical Plant
spokesmen indicate, but effecting compliance is not a· matter of simply turning a central switch. Cooperation, byall individuals associated with U / B
is essential, tbey point out.
Tbe University is a major COilSIIIDer of energy in. the forms of c;oal, electricity and gasoline. Physical Plant
figures indicate an annual usage of
16,000 tons of coe1 and 95,000 gallons
of gasoline. Tbe annual electricel bill
approximates $500,000.
-Measures are being taken to reduce
consumption of all three energy sources, up to the limits of what is poa;ible
through administrative &amp;Ction. Tbe
rest is up to each individual, Butr
Folts, BSSIStsnt vice preeident for physical faciliti...,

"""""'si-

15 ..... Cent ec.t - -

To reduce overall J:M.ting costs and
energy consumption by 15 per Cll!llt,
Folts said. all tresb 111r fans and B•
h a u s t fan · systems tbroulbout tbe
campus are being cut oft after . , . _
each evening and on WMbnda. 'l1ie
same procedure is beiDa: fCillowed for
air condif:ioniJI units.
In buildin are also ~ modified ao' they
no longer remain _ , automatioally.
'Tbe Main Street """'~"'!' has a
variety of beating systems m illl buildings and there is no one way to 111111&gt;matically induce campus-wide J'llduo.
tions in ollice and classroom temperatures.
In .campus bull~ with zone or
central .controls, beating thermostats.
will be automatically reduced to 68
degrees, Folts indicated: In bull~
where ~ual valve controls ft!IU)ate
(Contu..-1 em 6, col. I)

noon.

:!ifi'

SIMULATED EMEJIIIEHCY
The ' Urilvoitstty will cooperota with the
V...,.ns Admlnlstmlon Ha.pbl in otqi n.a · a oimulat.d medical on
the Main StrMt Campus, Friday mom~,.,
_ . . . , 16. The I'Miistic: si~ is
dftianedtD-theowc:tlonof-·...
police- , _ 1 _ . . . . . in .............

to a n - olt\I8IIOn . _ , . .....
·numbats of people. No

lu,_ -

----~~~-

"

�~
.....
. .....
~Trio~------~----~~-----­
~,_-J,.,.,J)

-....w. .....atloDal leveL·
Unioa .....a..hipiaa

~

~_pre­

g:w,of.:-~than echOOiiDI.
ol .,.._ as criteria for entry
into tbt ~t mubt .bas'-'
atndt down by the courts, "" aaid,
~ dilutinl the popularly...coepted "value" of educ:alion' as "" know

J:'

it.
...........
...._.F_

Traditional education's sortinr and
aeleclion methods have ~ Hoclg-

.=:c-~ ~=onshi~ r:.:

tween ll"'des and ....,... alter -coHere
Cno matte.r how....,._ was defined!
found no relationship whatmever and
the 60th IIIICOYered a nepli~~e correlation, he .._ted. "U we hold that
~~"'des J&gt;10W! that one p8I900 is bette.r than another, we have to do b!!tte.r
than that."
.
There is also too much empl&gt;asis
on c:redlts, the Berkeley reaeud&gt;er
lliiQ'OSIIecL Credits eamed have no
• correlation whatever to scores on gen.
era! knowledse tests, be BSid, for; in
, ....Uty, "c:redlts mean only time ex-

_..,_..

.

R e c e n t studies of second grade
children cast even more doubt · on
selection methods · in Hodgkinson's
view. Hilh academic adiievers have
been fOUJ!d to BOOre quite poorly in .
RUCh areas u 8Qinmunication, ere&amp;·
livity and decision-making, he BSid,
adding tartly that anyone who had
ever been to a fa cuI ty meeting
=do't be at' all swprised by this

within

-

"- ·-peat -.bi&amp;

.
be
Jet"'_,

hone at IJuildln&amp;,~ Robertaoo ·com:
menta, "'mud! like the on,inal Bauhaus. Aa an iDduatrial ~ .lflert&gt;
were no ...OS for 'us to fear 'iiowli·
t-n able to· divide it
utility of need." Different lloor
turee and color codes Will · identify
studio and classroom. waJhi of.
.......... eamplelflchttor paint· •
- . and
of facilities
bein
rea~ie for ~S:,.k.
~ libmry will be tailored to
atndenta of studlo art&amp;, while. the arthilllary will. remain 'on the
maiD aoinpaa lo' facilitilte""" by otber

by''
.a.

"" :t-ve

I

cle!lartmeDta.
.
· ltob.l8aa is enthlllliastic ·about the

=_(or -~

m .Art

and
be COIItends, could be

DIUtually beaeficial in the de....aa..-t and woe of new malerisls

. -

and .....,... Tentative plans have al·
ready beinJ!!"""ted for the develop-ment of a &amp;bop" in the Mete.r
Buildlnc ' - - &gt; t ; where "enYironmental and an:hllec:twal m o d e I s,
llalled ~for theatrical and
IDII8icaJ
el&lt;l,'!may be ere-·
!-~.~ 1WaiW&gt;1e . equipment. Tbe
CX1Uid iwattually be opeDed,
~ ........., to students in
olbilt . deDartilii!Dta . for wham ezper;.
With new malerisls and - cieai.,.
~ m I 1 h t be academically
Tile altbata pi, which Robertson
projeca lew 11184 or beyqnd, will be
aahthe Amherst~ witb-

-r..0::..

.-tlwe arts

~~~a.:!

fully and COIItbmoualy. '-n.ie is
the natnNI clirectlaa for the art&amp;," be
iMim, "and to divide art, or an:hi·
tedure. or both fnlm music or tbeate.r
Ia • ......,... Interruption. Tbe prob.
- - Inherent In eeparatlu the visual
arts from the· r e • t of tfie Amherst
will ewntually came home to

-='2"

DeSantis Named
. 1 - R. De 8antla, director of

lnfamatian a.¥icee, baa t-n elected
........,_ ol the Pub I i c Relations
ol the State Uni,veraity of
Me. Ycft. Tile CouDcil, which met
......... In Bfnlhamton. is made up
ol JdiUc ................ of the 72
of the Slate UDMnity.
l&amp;iaa Joyce Jl'lnk, dlmector ol publimtiaM at the State UDiwndty Collep
at Bdalo, elected to the Coundl'a s-.tive Committee.

c.-o

As a result of these failures Md
the seneral loss of confidence in the
educational establishment, he noted
only- -seven · million Americans werti
enrolled in lrsdltional post-secondary
educational institutions in 1970 while
00 million were engaged in some sort
of post-secondary work outside colleges · and- univer8iti ~in: · corporate ·
training prognims, proprietary schools,
newspaper correspondence courses
etc. "Many• people. in higher educa:
tjon are ala~ ," he said.
~
r .I~

Altemllh

Belna

To1ed

Listing alternatives now -being tried .
by the esteblishment, .Hodgkinson .
cited Antioch's "Uriiversity Without
Walls" which he pictured as a network
of learning outposts which the North
Central Accrediting Agency has givenAntioc:lr the P.QWer to accredit. This .
is !tie . &lt;;:olonel Sanders, Holiday Inn
fl'lll'lCbiSe model, he BSid. The power is
in the network and not in a central
place. Other examples, he noted, are
~';:1'r\r.' Stale College and Minnesota

. Also being -tried, as at U/ B, is the
•dea of small colleges within big universities, N:ew College at Hofstra, New
C.ollere at Alabama, small enclaves
within larger units which serve as
laboratories for the development of
programs for the larger 1m1ta.
. Even conglomerates are being at. tempted, Hodgkinson said, in which
banks, newspapers, old people's homes,
colleges and other agencies work tosetber .. a unified educational enterprise.
. Other schools are soieking alternatives to departments and ways to abolish the committee system as approaches to trealior educational ailments.
Still furtber innovations, Hodgkinson reported, e.mbrsc:e college creCiit
banks l where c:redlta earned wherew!r
!'f'd wheneve.r can be brought togetber
m one place for eventual use toward
certificalioo and degrees, much to the
distaste of collese registrars, be .....
ported), competency-based 'curricuhullll (such as at Mars Hill Collep!)
the aiiVBI'diq of ~ hv corpora:
liObs &lt;such .. A.D. liwe'8 master's
degree), intensive five-week one~ formate, modular and indlvidua!Ued Instruction, and inc! . of aU. ~ty constillalcles
harpining process which deterrrunes
hoW hilh8r- educ:alioo will operate.
. HodPinson provided no CXJ11C1us.
lODII, no edvocacy, 8 imp I y c1osinr
quelilions: How do "" coordinate hisher education? Does a BUPerboard have
any particul_ar nwit? How do we go
about shutlinf d o w n mating programs? What alternative uaes can be
made of collese ilormo?(Many co~
are on ~-brink of simply detaullil!l
oo F~ loans used to build wi.occupiedH
do reoldencO h all-a, be said.)
ow
""' finance hicher education7

;::i:

no. ...

llllddle ........

Ill&gt; J!AY

_ , IJbw do . . 10 about ..ndlta·
tlaa' Can ·any aae theory of lUber

--

educaliaa be 8ppllcable to all? What
value
we WBilt to m.till?

suBAN!=.&amp;.~~!!!~IS

do

--.......e........

By
MulDe a-, prof- of phi.
IOBOPh.Y of education, Teadlea ColTbe Caaalitutioa al
U'n it e d
t....,; Columbia, - tbt evenlnl'• pbiloiopher, c:oncemed J&gt;rimarily -with
"the COIIIOO"- 'of 'buma111l. within
diverse educational instltutlona." callinJ for ''flexible IJI'Oidlll8," "ilexible
"I the CXIII8tltullla • a white
access," "education in which atudenta
document that larp D-beu of
are enc:ouraized to raise embarrassing
questions 'a b o u t how d8cisiaaa are
~~to
~
made and why," a system in which
Smith stale&amp;. ''I Cblnk ..Jt ~ a.;
"we stop taldna tblDp for panted."
fantastic U "" _ . . haft a -.tiToo many of us, Ms. G . - SUI·
tutional ....wn~~aa that .-lei ~
gested, accept the p.-.t state .of
topther e l l - ~ al Aaaicanii
things as priH&gt;rdained. We must a4·
to eamine ... Ollllltitatian ill Iicht
dress, she insisted, the m a n n e r in
of the campledtial of~ today.
which individuals interpret social reAfrG-Americana
DOt filii • daae
ality, how self-understandinc becomes
action-oriented, how indlvidosls sense . asthey_..totbet~ We
had
DO
input,
and
If
W ~it _prob.and realize alte.rnatives, what teaChably would law _._
ers can do to arouse individuals frOm
submer1len&lt;:e in reality-DOt to ell&amp;-cover ~- u persons but · to
Dr. Smith to tbia .....
pluaiaa - • ..Wt ol hia atudy of
dlscover cultural ....Uty and re-make
COIIIIIIUIIicalioo ' * - various atrlthe world
~
. Die and racial ~ in ADaic:a. His
Otherwise, she BSid, the individual
.-reb roc.- aa the American
will be Overc:o{DI! by powerlsymbol syslem-euch thlna ~- statand cynicism.
ues, ~or events Wbicb have
Educational communes and otber
came to staild for a
trscllli
such "free" approaches to alte.rnaparticular dee or principle. He conlives she characterized as ·~elitist aptenlls that the ~t "'!f"'BDtaliza·
peals," warning that "the proletarian
function of education cannot be served · lion of our aociety is a direct result
of the inadequacy ol the American
by volunleerism or abandonment of
symbol syatam to accumtely mlleCt
oppressive institutions; these instituthe multt-etbnicity· ol the country.
tions must be transformed."
Dr. Smith is a p""-r in the studY
To brinJ this about, she reiterated,
of
transmcial communication, which
we must work for the rejection of the
is becominr lncreasini!ly pop u I a r
given. "Students and teachers must
among-" commurucation special.
·become wide-awake, conscious of their
ista, and his recently-pul&gt;lislled book,
own consciousness, aroused to critical
Tranorocitll Co~ is the
reflection..,
first volume to address iiSJr to this
'Ole alternatives to bureaucratic in·
thorny problem.
.
slitulions which manipulate and aJfect
As Dr. Smith sees it, the Anierican
our lives are there, she BSid1 ~t they
can ·only be created and acnieved· .by
syf~li).BYt.~w '~Sf)t ,up bY.·~le _
0 W~ 1 e,
eBlC.Iu EUropean uac..·
individuals free to reflect on the world
ground. This 1110110-racial and monoand bring about otbe.r modes. · . . •
ethnic
oj'ientation
baa heeD perpetu/ Dreary Topic" ~ - . :
.
DubbinJ !he : t,Opic ~·d~- 'WJ~~ atej:J pth~ " the"JY:"'u.'! d.!!sPite the
waves
of
imllll
....
tllm
th&amp;l iiave made •
llarilz, cultunil historiaii ana provosf
·'lli'iiiti-ethnic'llil:ial '' o
of SUN'('&amp; E_mpi~ ,Sta~ Colleg"&gt; ~' natloii'it.isth!&gt;'
todAy.
And
this, Dr. Smith ·
rerved tliaf •evety ' society 'turnS ildlf;
says, has led to the p-eat communicacation .Jo its .own purposes and .that
tion gap between Americans of while
the liberal, pluralistic, American· mulwestern b&amp;ckground and those of other
tiversities are 'Do 'exception to the
racial and ethnic groups.
,
rule. The American political economy
He notes that "the lack of communrequires manpower trained in certain
ication is not so much. COIIIIcious and
0
~dsld~..::,~~~': ~ ~ld~y del~te, as it is ~ result of an ambiguous and c!Ivislve symholotiY to
However, be BSid, because socialwhich many Americans simply caninstitutions don't ftost above social
not relate. What we have is a JlOUP
needs, this iS the university's legitiof people talldng to each other and
ID!lle function.
not re&amp;ll trsnsmlttiJur
informa.
Baritz described two ''pure" modtion or ~ving posibve
els of the traditional liberal arts and
Sonto
Claus
sciences curriculum, rejected ,both,
He cites BS an· ezample the simple
and cluunpioned a third. He did not,
and seeminaly innooent idee of Santa·
however, m his formal remarks deClaus. He notes instanoes in which
scribe the operations of the al~live
a J e w I s h community inatituted
system which he heads.
"Hannuclaus" and a Slack communTbe disciplinary model of liberal
ity a ''St. Soul" becauae neither the
education, be BSid, focuses on a body
Jews nor the ' Blaeb Could relate to
of literature; the non-dlscip~ on
Santa
Claus, which they .. •
the student who learns. Tbe
white western symbol of 'beaevolenc:e.
arian BBYS that the non-dlsci' llnarian
Thus,
each'
i"'UP
chooe
another
has no interest in studies·
nonbot which would more cloaaly meet its
disciplinarian, that the other has no
own culbual needs.
interest in students.
Dr. Smith tbia ldnd of tbinJ
Tbe
. t, disci
~"'.,....._.., Baritz noted, is
as an unfortunate dewlapment, just
e litis
appeals to intellectual
as he sees Santa Claus as unforbmate.law arld o r e r, advocating human
''Benevolence am he e:rpo-t in
~ ~h oppression, .throuJh
quite • cWferent wa,y that will trans''purification by the fires of allliction."
cend • YBrious ethniC and racial perIt is dlfticult to argue against such
&amp;Pecliv88
and~ the coacept more
men of the academic cloth and tbelr
"'!e~.Y· I am not aaWnc. for tbt·
century Protestant nolimis, be
elimination of aU etlmic and racial
since tbeaa are important to
n,;non-disciplinarian, on the other symbols,
the communiti88 involved. But the_Y
band, is no less. a zealot in his advoshould
not
be imposed aa other ethnic
cacy ol "innovative education" hesed
groupe. n .
not on what is teamed but on the
To
foste.r
transradalllDIIIIinmk:atioa,
learner. This model Baritz said, ·
Dr..Smith p~ "8YDihollc eng;.
the ftip aid!' of the. first, steeped ;;_
Deering"COD!Prehenslve ft!lltructurE~ se If- actualiza~
U., of our symbol system. He says,
Brook Farrnism and tbt concept, of
"National
symbols
must re11ect mulliedw;ation .. therapy. fuJI of
elhnicity if "" are. to baWl harmaoy
oatic procedures to "guarantee the
in America, for it Is B.YDibola. n&lt;it
!'utbenticity of the individual,n yeam88011"'Phy or any otber 8demal fee.
IIIJ to free students from "oppnaion"
tor, that hanr a society topther." ·
and needU., very badly students wbo
want to be ~-the epitome of 18th
Century political ltJiuU-(aire.
A &amp; It H0U111
The Olllce of Admlalona and Records
Tbe first model turns out H
will be open from 8:30 a.m. t9 8:15 p.m.
Fo~ ~ the eecond, Horalio.AI:;;r
on November 19, 20, 27, 28 and 30,
Baritz said. And neither is appropriaate. today.
December 3-6, 10.14, and 17-21. On other
What . . Need
.
~ thi'OIIIh the period, will
be 8:30 a.m.. to 4:30 p.m. The ot11ce will
What .... need, . Baritz insisted, •
(ContillUft on - •· 6, CoL 1)
~ be ~ NOve!nber 22 and 23.

~= ~t r:-~.:.::

=~~~~~
otdo-;t..ttz

do

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

Anil!nca

mr

"brteraction."

a

\fisciPlin-

ft...

"---=-- .

!ZJ3

bureau-

�c ... ,·-r•--t :r j;l;t
CD~
- .n.J:CUAI r.l'\!)

, . _ _ 1$, l , l

3

36 Graduate Students Share Law &amp; ~ QJ11ese Said
$7,180 in GSA.Grant Monies More Concept than R~
'1111nY4bt ......... llbdiDta llbuad
$'7,180 ID GNdade S&amp;udeDt .woeiatiaa -.reb ........ tbe eune~~t
award -*1. GRAD (Giaduate ReIIOUI'G8 AcoilillevelapDmt) a-reb
Couacl1 DINckw .JaliD c. a.--ad

._wtoday.
Tbe

~ ~~~e:

a-

G. Ab-

lrariaD (1118idt __.p,!mdall). $210;

Pea ... .AdlqDa (hioloiY), $191;

Nila V. A.mJar (......

!WDJ!!!mlce.

tiaa), $207.&amp;0; Dililtrla. BebeJetU!a
&lt;l~laaba~), SIIS; KUor
K.
(~). $250;
ChiDI..-..
(ebmiiCial .....,._..
• ), $260; Suman CboDa (biodlmli·
phe~). $200; Wilma Reid
Clpclla (illbmatiaa and I i bra r y
~; Mi&lt;bMI A. Coh.en
l
) , $260; B r i an Currie
&lt;Natw81 Si:iiiMa and Mathematics
lcterdleciJ&gt;IInary P r o 1 ra m), $21i0j
Harvey ~. Fre.lman (bicdwnim •
pharDiacckJiy), $246.70· Evelyn Heymann (bfoiDtly), ando; Roaald · ~.
lacDotti (JI8Ydx&gt;lcly). $260; Charles
C: McCllniod&lt; (~,$247.1!0;
Deborah KeUer.:cc.a- l ·
· 'cs),
$214; .JacqueliDe Levllln
)•
$260; ~ W. Moeller (anthrq&gt;olOIY), .'!!i ~ M.,. (EDsJiah),
$160; MX:DMl A. Morpmatarn(lllicro-

an

::f

~

tioDal med

Patrick

!Dd~

~am

Overing
(Eccliah), $60; William A. Navero
(EncJilh), $40; Bernice Noble(mi~

~- $249; MlebMf M. Roaen
~ '-1 DllarmacclOIY&gt;, $225;

w. Sc&amp;roder

(miaobioiotiY).

$260; .Jamea P. Scnle ~).
$249.80; Anita Miller Sooitelt (pay·
chololy), $241.86; Carl Stineman
(b = r ) , $260; Yac-cbuni Tsac

~olm ~elte (pay··
) , $1~~~&gt;:; M. GecrRe Feeney
loly), $21i0; RcbertM. Hocbscbild
$250; ~thalle D : .
Joy (piyi:bblct!Y ·$250; .JilaD J!:.''&amp;i· .;.
dow-~~ aiiCf.--GtOtla \Yhjt..' '
lalr8r (aceial
aYMl' ccimmunitY~ ,
'aeMcea) $66·
Marlelie Sla..,..an,
Ventura '(t;;ith eduiiatiaa). · $160.
•

J210;
5 CiiiOIOIY
(payii,
(pay

lnollt!Md Tlllo -

'lbe - . c b put IJIOir'IID ...... instituted this 88 part of a
-;or, coordinated elrort em tbe part
of tbe GSA to deVelop alternative
lundini ~Ilea in lilbt of na·
ticmal """tbacb
in -~r
studeniB.
1c order
to
·
for te
a
grant, wblch ia Hml
to $200, a
student muat bs undertakini - . c b
related to a terminal depee. Some 60
students applied for grants during tbe
current fundinl period, Greenwood
BSid.
.
.
Succeoatul projects ranpd from a
study of laniwiae development in
blind children to - . c b oc W.E.B.
DuBois as a IIClYellat and editor. Students flllllllll'8d in - . c b ...
tbs effeCts of lmic metals ... ~
and a comparative ~ of "open and ClODYI!IltioDal claasroomo also received paniB.
~Certain natterns emeqed," a ........
wood said, 'ID ""''Ud to tbs diatribu·
tinn of pl!llts . , _ . tbs departments.
"Studl!lits' in ~. E--"-"' and
biocbemkal ~--;; tbs
word aruuDd. Nine out fll tbs 36
lecipients are paduate studSnts in tbs
Psycbolot!Y Daparlmmt, wblch has,
bs poinlilil oui, 0118 of 1he 'i:ampus's ·
lanlest .craduata IIP&gt;dent JiXII&gt;Uiaticlls.
CIUDC!Ud.
~ aiembers of tbs GRAD
n-n:li CouDeil fer tliis aWard
••
od Were in llllditioD to tbs
Art. ;m;J Letlel, Gorden Hough
Ush) 'waltar Bebnlie (Enilish) · Ed-

obssJ.tr.

.U..::

&lt;Eni·

~ ' Studia, Susan~

(c:urric:ulum develcpment and instruotional media), LeiJn G,_ . (edui:a·
ti~ ~cboqy); E~ and
Applied Scknt:U, Gary Laraec ,..,...
c:banlcaJ
Noo ~t
(c:lanical ~&gt;. Mark 'Prclp.
star (c:ham~W ~); HeallA
Be;-, Mark Pidillmm&gt; (biopbya.
iea). Paul &amp;beak &lt;~. Jb. '
well Park), Donaa Ylllllmloiy (mJcro.
blolotiY, RasWell Park); N-.1 Scimceo and MG~Mrnatica, Bct.t Mo.

.....u-rm.&gt; . .

Laucblln (........... );

aatl

leek

Social " Scw~. CI!Rioie McOJin.
(~).

a..:r UJeblk (an-

lhlopolocy), BU1 Sldl8r (mtluopol.
...,. ) • and Md 8ololllae "(lll!;dloiOIYl·
•

a-wood

to 70

IJIOjeda

that -

66

lltudlati will apply for .....

clurini tbe

:=-

MXt aW8Il period, wblch

in tbe llllrinl- Application form&amp;
c urrectly bsini NYiaad. bs BBid,
aDd wDl bs dlatdliuted in 'March ...

~

pant IJIOir'IID ... initiated
wilh~nm lhia IIWIIIIII!I' and an
inllial
of $10.000 (half from
lnsti ·
Punill, h a If from tbs
Gnoduata StudeDt A.B&gt;ciaticm). I.e.
thac $1,000 of that IUDOUilt !'8nJ8in8
undistributed.. A£cordini to Green·
wood tbs
expects additicmal
. ~ fro~ IICIIIa!8 aDd is also
ezplorinl[ other pooaible IICIIIa!8 of
mooies. l"or example, ooe of tbs current J1811lts will allow a graduate student in Freoch to rent two Godard
films for bsr studr of tbs French
filmmaker's revolutionary aestbstics.
GRAD also plans to show tbs films .in
Capen for donations.
"We anticipate a reasonable amount
for distribution in ·the spring," Greenwood BSid.

m~~:JY~~"':~ID.

eftort to develop resources for graduate studen&amp;s. GRAD bas also been
worlrinl with the University's Re111!8n:b Office to develop files on grants
8nd otbsr research ..funding open to
paduate students. "Packages" detsil·
mg such opportunities broken down
by Faculti"'l, are being developed. 'lbe
fin!t of these will be distributed to
~uate students in December, be
indicated. GRAD also plans to contact
local agencies for placements and donations; however, this aspect of tbs
GRAD Pn&gt;JmUil bas not been implemented to date.
·
.Formal notification ·is· on the way
to all thoee "'Who applied for GSA
awards, Greenwood 88ld.

Teachipg .Office· ·: ·' ·, :'
R~e'v~ Supp()rt
Support for a Uni~ty Office of

Tesdiing Effectiveness-;&gt;ropceed by ·
a Senate subcommittee-was approved
by tbs Faculty Senate Executive Committee at its meellng, November 7.
T:bs Executive Committee a o
moved to support four otbsr recommendations of its Teaching Eft'ecti....,.
, _ Subcommittee:
• 'lbat eftective teaching be given
~~ """"t'nition and monetary re-

Is

• 'lbat eftective teaching be given
demonstrablY. more IXIIISiclemtion in
lill Univemty advancement proced·
ures;
• 'lbat there "be voluntary faculty
participation by de~t and Faculty in peer t18111l11BD181lt of teaching
pelformance; and
· • 'lbat tt&gt;e assessment of tbs func.
tionaLim{'Rct and utility of tbs Office
of Teacbbur Eft'ectiveDesB bs a con·
llnuanc:e ol a Faculty Senate Subcommittee having sucb !l cbaqe.
Executive Committee Chairman
Gilbert Moore reported that a reaacmable aun of money has been allocated
for tbs ' tsacbina: eftectivenMI operation wblch will be houaad in tbs Student Testing and Reaean:h OfiiCe. ·
On ~~her matters, tbs Executive
Committee:
.'
.
• Heard a . review of ezperiences
with tbs President's Budget Commit""' from Prof_,... ChSrlee P811111&gt;8lli.
'-lth acienceo, and Stanley llruck: ·
enstein. (Tbe minutes of tbs 8ellllon
indimte that "it ...... ClDDIIeD8US that
•tbs Chairman write tbs President ClOD·
cemin,l! faculty participation in tbs
fo~tion "' tbs buda8t. It .... felt
tbst our ~t rep,_,tatives em
tbe Row!- Commi..... _._ 88

advi8ftll)"

. ........

• Heard a "di.eu.ion of minority
fal:ulty recruita'*'t by Preaident ftob.
ert ·L Ketlior ·who lll'flld that 1he
Senate COIIalder tbs PIOblem bsfan
botiM In :o..c-t.er.. (At&gt;
OIII'CIIni to tbe minutae, "tbe Plealaint
f • e I• that mlnllldty aacrnitmiot ill
bsadinl in tbe rilbt cllnoetila: ·Tbe .
maia ~to bs _ . . . . il,
obould theN bs . . . . . . far
hlrinl; 0118 for mlnoriU. and Cllle far
otbsn'l")
-.
.

........w...

. &lt;EDITOR'S NOTE: The Reporter
oeries "" the inkmtd ~ of
the ~ continua hen IDilh Law

orad

~rety Collqe.)
.
By .
PATRICIJ\ WARD BIEDERMAN '
-s..u
Law and Socie~llege (lBC) '
waa first propceed,
y by interest.
· ed faculty in Law · Jlqisprudenre,
in 1969. According to spokesmen for
tbs program, tbs piOp&lt;Med College "is
an attempt to develop an innovative
::!"t!f"fi!~. program in law and

When a team of Faculty Senate
evaluators looked in on lBC this
spring, tbsy found tbs College in a
"semi· dormant, yet develo""""'tBJ
state." 'lbe team of · J. Da~-Eick
(dental materials), Constanlln Tung
(critical languages), and John Tbom88 (organization and human ,_,.,..,.
es) recommended continued support
for tbs concept of tbs College, but;""
to date, a concept, iatbsr thsn a
functioning College, is what lBC remains. However. non--&lt;:areer law courses, some of an interdisciplinary nature, that w o u I d appropriately fall
under tbs aegis of tbs College are
currently being offered.
lBC bas two goals, tbs evaluators
reported, namely, to provide students
with a "program (that) would study
man and tbs works of man through
an approach which focuses on law and
legal institutions" and to "concentmte
on 88Jl(icts of law' and social reform;
on reform of law, and reform thTough
law." The evaluators note further that
tbs College is "distinctive" in that'it
w o u I d be formally authorized and
supported by the ' Law Faculty/professional' school. Like many of tbs
other Colleges, lBC would take an
interdisciplinary approach to its central theme-tbs stUdy of law-"both,"
write tbs ··eval'uatoia,. "tO furthei il·
luminate theoo areas and to critically
evaluate the role of law and legru
institutions in society. n
.
'evaluators' i11dged thai'' LSc
had the "reasonable" support of U / B
law faculty aa a wbole and "serious
commitment by a significant giQup of
individuals," including Provost 'R ichard D. Schwartz (trained 88 a· sOciologist). LSC Would benefit from a
strong commitment to underiP'a!fuate.
education w i t b in tbs FacultY, tbs
team predicted. As expressed in curriculum, this emphasiS bas resulted
in increased undergraduate -offerings
dealing with tbs inter-relationship of
law and society ratbsr thsn "tbs development of a specific undergraduate
lall[ curriculum," a thrust tbs College
could build on, the team implied.
1c keeping with tbs interdisciplinary
nature of tbs nascent College, "there
bas also been a sincere and conllnued
effort to involve faculty outside of
the Law School in tbs development
of tbs College," noted tbs team, citing
tbs appointment of English Professor
Bruce Jackson as an e:mmple..
It waa felt by tbs evaluators that
tbs move to Amherst, where tbs College hopes to establish a residential
facility, would- help accelerate devel·
opmenL

n.e

An ldu Without

N;.....,.

To a large extent, lBC appears to
be an idea in tbs minds of involved
law fa~ty. · It .seems to lack tbs
nucleus of enthusiastic undergraduates
that 'characterizes many of tbs otbsr
Colleges (not ~. given that
tbs Law School !s WJie!r involved in
vaduate.level educatioc). Repeated·
[y, however, tbe evaluators commented on tbs commitment of tbs law ad·
minlatration to this program, noting
for example, its ·efforts to find a -

tar.

. lt, was tbs team's "distinct imp_re&amp;tbst tbs p~ of tbs Couep
ia related to .tbe ovena1l develoPinollt
p.bui for tbs Faculty ot
.Jur- ~ as a whole, .and CXJIIII&amp;o
CjUODtly, an,y evaluatiaa of !hoi ()ol.
IIIOD

uw ana

"""'" powtb muat bs withtia Jllia .
-"""'tart
In this to lie
beth· tbs .

u.u.a-

of tbe CollepJ ud a real .
oppadunity for ita """"*-'~ ~- .
mmt" (tbs . . ~t appanm
~ tbe team'• ba1W that c .
~ ~t develop·
tbs paotec-

un!*

Jtioo of Mlablw.cl ualta bawl a to.
1.IIICIIda,ln f u t u re thsa . _ that
doD't) .
.Amoni tbe
were 1M Mlabli..._. of a
steering committee wilhln tbe. hmllty, support from tbe Um-.tw ~
ident and adminl-tiaa In tlie ,..,.
ulif.a a~ to find a ....._, IIJIII.
continued eirorta by CoDeeo fllcult;y
on tbs Amlaa ~,...._
plans for a reaidential
• and "iil
buildini liaiaoo "'!lth
law&gt; students and fal:ulty.•
lcien.sting}y, tbs team . amde DO
menticm in tbs bodY of ita npoot of
n poBSible .OOIIftict ol inlarest ~
lBC and alread functioaiDa eouz, which also
as its tr.eme die
interaction of law aDd acciety.
Appended to tbs team'a ~ ~
tbs "!'nJ'Ie notes" of a ~ •IIi .

team'•••

_.....,_

eao..

c-

t1ke.

:,VW,'t ~~o~Jif,ti;;:

GreinJ!r anil Assoc:iljte t.'lw Prate.ar
Al Katz. In this 'clocunie#oti ,tbe '( )ol.
lege's, tk facto steering' committBe
Pointed to a shortage of "pror...sional
resources" (i.e., faculty), not a lack
of ideas, 88 tbs major problem in ad·
vancing tbs program. Althouih law
faculty are interested, an mer- in
tbs enrollment of tbs Law School has
increased tbs normal teaching obliga.
tion of law professors (tbs faculty to
student ratio in tbs Law. School ia
~tly 1!25, tbs -~te Provoist
mdicated ) . L$G IJluat, be perceived
contributing to professioi:lal
ment (promotion and tenure), if tbs
~~ege is tO be viable, a supporter
mdicated. Currently four to five fao.
ulty 11 r e teaching undergraduates,
Katz "said, and tbs College core fao.
ulty hope that eventually 25 per cent
of facul,ty time can be devoted to
und~rgra~uate law education. Similar'
quarter-time releases have been discussed with. other ·Faculties w"'staft would like to p&amp;rtjcipste in LSC
Apparen,t ly · fhe College has
done some inilirect recruiting.. AU .
candidates for Faculty apPOintments
are queried as to their mterest in
undergraduate education, Katz said.
AocordinJ t,o ,G reiner, "We have hUed
people wttti capacity to make a fTeal
~~ution to . tbs Law and Society.

as ·
a.tvm-..

ru...tY

, _ Willi • -

·

~

One problem with recruiting·a :mas.·
ter, Katz indicated, 'is that tbs Law
School will have to give up whcewr
is hired 8s a teaching
Greiner l?"inted to a " ·
..,.
garding (a) master. It ia a vicilxs
circle-(we) want ( a) master to help
shape tbs College-but n e e d and (a ) concrete plan to shape ()he)
College."
.
. .
Undergradualli lnlllnist iS -t; blit :
unexploited: GreiDer -liai&lt;l '""""--"
Law 201, the -Couep -plan..;."'!i; ~
to "develop (an widergraduate) ataident nucleus . . : We haven't "t!qlped
undergraduate l'I!IIOU!'Ces ·yet, o.;.;:.;.e
we want to have a slow, steady -not anarchy, as in """"' otber Col:
leges. We will have a well-dellnea
framework before students become U..
volved," be ssid.
' A major cohlerence em ~
uate legal education, to bs 11po118018C1
by tbs Faculty this spfinl.sbould a111o
constitute an important step towaM
establishinll a functiooing Law lllld
Society Co1Jege, supporters said. ·
.

""":/fl;.,";:o""' .

New Council Member
Governor Rockefeller has 8llllCIUIIiled
the appointment of Mrs. David .J.
Laub of Bullalo, a civic leader, as a
member of tbs Council of· tbe Stata
University of New York at Buffalo,
for a term ending July 1, 1982.
Mrs. Laub, a llusliee of tbs s.dralo
General Hoepital a n d tbe Buffalo
PhilharmoniC Orcbe8tra, Ia a boud
member of Planned Puenthcod Aaaociaticn, tbe lnPeside Heme a n d
~e vie 'tl - Commi~ ,of Unit&amp;!f

--·

Manbsrs of tbs local ociimcil. of
SUNY aarve without llnuclal . ..,....
.
Mrs. uub ....._.. .John A. Dole

·.. ..

whohaa~

.

,

�Use Of Aeailerriyftir

·Scoi:ed in Call to
.,-~

The doctrille ol -::.,~ Is
with ua qaln. N- ..............~~
to dlmonlltlale ......,............, inleria&lt;
notloll that black ~ ....In profeshllve '-&gt; NPidiY ~ respect·
~ Ulela~ Even IIICII8
is being taught as
fact i n . . . . _ . . . - the country.
1be Jeadilil' conJemporary prolal·
onials cl this theory Include Artbnr

I dldll't lave
~
llbaalbc
•"' *- (i.e.,uli-py)
llills
In tile "Report af tile ~
to

Bva1aatbw TeMa ... tile OoiJeclala

~

8.Y*D" {~. Nov. 8). But_2!
..... - . billb ... ..., ~:
.. tile lllllladlllr
1D • -W..:.lfaat
carreded.
it'a Jlla1r tD . . . . . . Oollole ., - ·
llwlY Clllldll*iJD 11111iil• ..............

aut,_......_

JC...~~·u:=em~
!am&gt;, .nd wu~ Shock!ey &lt;Stan·

a:~!'J:":'C. ':D:d
~llbaal-----~·
...... aalealllada. tiiiDia. (:tt::::
., ....... of--.~ '
-

Gl

...........

.

'l'be BvaJua- write: "Wlal P)ato
etudied in
OoiJep F, the~
.....,_..ut;y
,._.,......

..,_..a(.
.lp=--..,
'

f:.,u.

whl&amp;;joauld'l!Jo;plaiD ·~

~co:rn::'~~ .:r~t N:"w..':i
·. Co erence &lt;a .more detailed version
of which follows ~) :

Jensen

tile tllllt' tbat ' " _ , .. ~.•"Paaadly ..........
eitbiiJ' ~ the .lulructor,

"a_.. cit

12 September 1971, Sect. A, p. 6.)

1

~) whicblocln• iato llei!'&amp;~.;
ialed, WwafwlaWe. ~ve, .....

-

ford). "Basing tbetr ~USlODS 00 ~
results ol aptitude, a~t, that
I.Q. ....Is, tbeae tbeorista claim
black or other opp~tb¥"P~:;'
genetically endowed WI
ess m - ·
Jigence than. the dominallt group. 'Thi!y
aside the fact that !"st8 of !lilY
oppri!ised group In a stratified ~­
measure· only that ~·~ soc!a1 rejection and not its relative '!'~
asserts: "There!'!" m~
genes,·which are found m populat:if!ll8.
in
proportions, somewhat liie
the distribution of blood types. 1be
number of intelligence genes _...., to
be lower overall, in the black population thai. in the white." &lt;The N~w
York Time• M~31
1969, p . 48.) And
ey
of
"Nature has color coded groups
individuals ao ~t . stl!tistically !'!'i·
able predictiOD!I of their adaptability
to intellectually rewarding and ellective Jives can easily be ~ and

different

un-

any

intelllllont peaoii, etoa&gt;idl1. JDJBIIller·
pn!lild the tllllt or lhat, well aware of
" preoerved." Wh&amp;t gives? Simply, I
the "ricbt" inlarplelation; be unacrupuloualy lllialnleliJrel - i.e., that be's
think, that as in all matte_rs of hw;oan
either a fool or a baW!. Naturallf. as
opinion there are changing .fashions
the ino1ructor invohed, I take Deltber
in •'parti.sansru " and that right now
ol . . implk:atioas kindly: LuCkily.
in America, at -f east among the sort Qf
1 don't have to. For um-1. to put the
full professors who are &lt;:hose? as Exq.-tion in terms of whether or not
tramural Evaluators, Marx•sm and
1 kDew r ......,.,.," ~ eYe!'" of · Women's Liberation are less unpopu·
Jar or at least leas threatening, than
wbetbel' ..- iaot I, um ,,......,..~, ~~l_?
"d!ntinue"~ 'tfie' vmY issue-vu., ·
Liberation. College_ ~- used .to
their Oliil''~.:....tbe . Etafuil'
come in for much less crJtiClSIJl when
it J&lt;ept to anaichist philosophy, .alterobaeUnid in the first,~ 1be
ia: H- could in
.
t peo- _ native communities, and free schools
pie ·call an inU!rpntatitm
tenUy
- though it was just as strong an
Wron('? "Patently"!? !,::hrlst, in_ . ~
"advocate,': just as .''partisan!' thenthaD now that we've turned m&lt;l6t of
humanities and social ocien&lt;l06,
ous few statements ol "face' are "patour attention to sexuality-.:::aii..
ently wron(' (or '-'right") -let alone
politics, particularly to male
. intespretations of the writing of dead
zation in America, thereby becomll!g
men wbo can-no longer be oonswted
a~ of "Men's Studies College" ·( so
as t.O "what they really - t . " What
far as I know, 1he only one jn the

GaY

:a...

=-

bapp8Deci? '

I

.......-...~ ia that I lead 'a
-What'
- Slm!llli

-mar ~(Male f Litera~"

which Tbomas Gould; one of two pnncipal Evaluaton of College F, '!"Yer
bOthered to aUeod . .Instead. amvmg
at our trailer just as a aessiOn on Plato's Sy~ was ending, be and I
got into (what I thought was) . a good
argUD)III1t about a - " ' m that
Won.· 1be i&gt;aao8Ke as I recall, bad
IIOtbinl directly . do· with "homoaemallty " but mtber with "love or
the
and institution~! of the
city." Gould interpreted cerla!" words
one way I another. We disagreed.
Some
I must admit, would
support his interpretation, others
mine. It was---"- or seemed to me that simple. T
•
Criticism cif my course appears m
the Report under "Tolerance of Par·
tiaan AdvocaCy," one of six ·~­
......,r of the collegiate system which
the Evaluators - as "mo!'t in!po~t
to combat." 1be diaturbing tmplica·
lion is that a course dealing largely
with'~ty"~ be ta~t
only by wbo JS not much m
favor o1 it. (Somebow I find it hard
to believe that the Evaluators, par·
tic:ularly Tbomes Gould, would have
taken -lion to a course .on Gay
Lilelalure taught by a.~ .deof ~-l. 'l'h;ia unplication llecomM even more disturbJill, ad an _ , dearer indication of

u;

cust&lt;'.ns

scholars,

r__.,

_.__,_.,___
___
..
--.....
-L-·----..

..

...,......._ ...... -.,_..
r_..,_,___ ... _

•.r.JGJII. . . . . . . . . . . . . ....., ..

-Ju,uo..--.,,.

L..........,._,_..,
-r.~

I'AJ'JIICU ......, -

-

-~a. ctepfMJU

~

cOOiitrY).. .

To!Ophone

c.n

to Gould

.

.

Last Thursday, quite angry, -I telephoned Thomas Gould. In response,
he wrote a Jetter (which I hope you'll
print, as it consti~ an "amend·
ment'l1to the Report) apologizing that
Colleg~ F "was mentioned by name
only in derogatory comments and was
only included by ~plicati'?" in lauds·
tory ·passages." DlSregarding my ac·
cuaations of anti-gay bias, be ascribed
this error entirely to "bad luck" and
"carelessness.'' Nonsense. I say ..nonsense" for three reasons. First, because of the Report's internal contra·
dictions with respect to "advocacy."
Second, because this is the same
Thomas Gould who .recently got into
a (rather hysterical) dither about an·
other College F aeminai, "Male Sexism," in which each .member tells his
"sexual-political autobiography" to the
rest and at tbe same time, if he's willing, to a tape recorder. 'Then, again if
he's willing, and subject to any re- .
strictions be may cbooee to place on
it, a' transcript may be IJII!de for further study. Gould, well aware of bow
careful we are to protect students'
rights to privacy and free speech, nevertheless inaisted that we sbould riot
••pennit" students, however eager they
were to "come out," to say they were
"gay" in such a transcript-lest
"twenty years later II am quoting him
almost exactly I when the former student is in the Foreign Service or running for Governor, some Jack Anderaon comes snooping around College F,
discovers the transcript, and jk!&amp;troys
his reputation." This ia the Gould wbo
inaisted "" should ''force" students to
uae ~ and t6 plant "faaae
as to names, dates, places becalme "people under thirty tend not
to know their own minds." 1'bis is the
Gould wbo 'M!IIt with .his bystaria to
President Ketter ·and to members of
lbe Faculty Senate Committee on the
Colleps, as a. rMU!t of which · an annoying ''inqui!y" was initiated as to
both lbe SMDinar and my "quaWicationa." Third, I say ......,._.. be.,.,_ tbia Ia the United Stall!&amp;, where
at·'! beilbt that
Ia
tad even m the other
cuJturee of J~" and
.,.__,;.nty ~ m..-e social
(C.,.,._. 011 6, coL 1)

cl,_..

"'=is

·=

:'~s!ie"ef~\%,.~,.'S=:'a=:

ren1J:'.:"'un~f:'by~!%.,;
-L'-'--·: every · po~ticulon

o!!"Z"tTma:!de
;t!.'7t~~
in virtually all our governmental, ildu-

Or

human ""'~3
bas developed lis own com ex . •u.re, Contrary .-to•. the' suPremaCISt
view, .t he JJ&lt;l!&gt;P.Ies _of Afrial and "'!i&amp;
have at vanous• timea; produoed. CIY·

cational..
· •-' ...,.;.t • titu.·,.~--': ' Ifli'~.V~ii~)~
• ii"'!::...~"tillc~advanoed
m·y "l"'~our ·-::.~..i::' about the
I!"¥¥Y ..
.,.....,...._,

. , the consbQit •Jleo.
rope. - Mo'·~·~·
cui
graphical
.shift
of.. j)811teraooi
lure
·I S m·
•'tself
proof ;of -the _ . . . _.

'-" lf~ ·aDd
ield .... receiving
a\.ta...,;ve
' 's pa
·
~
Yl\1 " 't betic treatment ·m

~~~~~;,;~

·.tt:;~.,.s~PY.![~~
_r,
ist· t h e·o r

bilities of all jJeoples. I.t ~ ~d
to suppose genetic supenonty wan er'·
about the world.
·
m'fn: doctrine of ra.cial inleri&lt;?rity
is thus unscientific as well as__ll&lt;!.c!&amp;!IY
vicious. Its aole claim to &lt;JI!jectiv•ty
rests on: the veneer of scientific tech·
niques that covers distortion and fal!!e
assumptions. I n d e e d. the ~t
"master-race" ideas are once agam
being discredited in the scientific li~erature ( cf. R. Lewontin, BuU. AtomiC
. Sci., March 1970; S. Searr-Salapatek,
Science, 174:4016; 178:4()58; C. Bmce,
et aL, Anthropologico.l Swaia, No. 8 .
Am. Anth. Assn.) Neve~ t!'e
- to rs o r this new 111C18UI --&gt;-+
genera
in their bigotry. 1beir theories, ' .
spite their acaderitic prb, do not eli!·
fer in their scientific Chai8cter or their
social ellects from thoee a~ by
American slave-owners. the NIWS, or
the advoca..., of apartheid In South
Africa. Raciat .ideas, if it were not for
their political and economic role In
justifying oppression and exploitation,
would long since have joined phlog- _
-iston and geocentric tbeoriea CJ! the
universe in the mausoleum of """"""'Our common human heritage has
end-oo all gronps of people with
ua1 intellectual abilities. or COUI1le
::i!ere are ~ physical dill~
ences. Nobody denieis this. But they
have nothing· to do with intelligence.
Research involving these dl1ferenoes
must not be misused to support theoriea of mcial inferiority.
Racist theoreticians have recently
sought sanction" and protection in the
concept of academic freedom. This ia
subterfuge. It is true that academic
freedom protects the right to free
~-~~ theBuexptt'trea&amp;IODI&amp;
• .not
"""""""' ......._
to Justify ~ It was no more
intended to protect racism than -veriJal
-ult or lil&gt;el, with wbicb racism has
more in CODllDOil than it has with free
intellectual inquiry. Nor, In the Iicht
of. all the evideOOS, can the ideology
of racism be teptimately called "COil·
tmvenial" and . _ to debate. It
a fal8e doctrine that oaly te facilitate brutallzatlllll and exploltation. 'lbna, becauE It Ia both aoclaU.y
penticiqnl and acleullflaolly laConect,
lis J&gt;l'lixmenta fndeit any right te
academic proleclion.

,..,.-de-·

a

-:f.:

is

,J.; ..... -~ . ....

~-~

lhilee
~J - ,

the pOpular pft!!lll and are being ._.,e"t
fact m
· our . ..L~-Is. .,._,, are"'i.:!:w .
""""" ~~3
........,.
uaed to jUstify government cutbacks
in educatiOn, bMlth, and welfare, and
to rationalize IIC!!:ial and ecooomic opp~m·~n:nlion. of __._ not
•......
,_
onJr blocks further social progress but
actively thre8tens the hard-won
ocf,.vii!""Ri~ts M~l,yt ofthoeetbe ,,..J&gt;ees.
....
v•&lt;XAW
Its effects, lurtbermore, 8Ie not confined to bladt and other minori~
people; it underminea the living ooodi·
tiOil&amp; of white people as well No one
can eacape Ita IXII&gt;IIIqUI!IIC And because
of the
aurabyof....,;.
reapectability
•-t ---'~
..___,_
·---:ty
""' --r.:- 11111 ~·origins, we In 1111iwftilies have a
spacial ,_,.o,wty te combat them.
It
time ·to 8cbt &amp;.dd
'nteiefme we Invite ·you to a

88

J"t

is

NAftON.&amp;L o o . - c r o N UClSII
AND 'I'IIB ~:

·( 1) Academic RocUt Ideo.. Including genetics and ~-" "cui·
lure ol poverty·" "bladt matriarchy."
(2) l!latfUt · ~ itt 1M Uni·
veoily. For eumple, in hiring, ad·
mislims, financial aid, curriculum and
taztboob.

&lt;3&gt; Academic BacUm and Gouem·
mmt Policy. IDcludlnc Moynihan and
welfare; J - and idtool cutbacks;
psycboaurpry and '-lth care.
(4) BacUm Cit ./,.,;ffctttiDII of Socitll and Bconomie ()ppraliD11. In·
'cludlnc dual ~ ..a.ldarda and job
diacrimlnatlon; UDewploJDB~t; role or
media In m-nlnating racist theory·
AT:

DATE:

NEW Yout ~. IN NEW
'fout an
~
&amp;\TUaDAY, NOVDDIIII 17, 1973;

10 a:m. te 6 p.m.; SUNDAY
18, 1973; 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
·
Out of this coafereDoe; - hope to
form an ~- ~ to carry
on the fight ·ap~oa radmL The .Con·
farence has l!!e IAJIIPOirlol Oommittees
Again8t Rai:lam .foaned · in colleges
and univallilies clurlu tfie peat year.
l!IOVDOIIIII

WE URGE YOU TO' AT'l'END.
At U/U. CXJDiact- Dr. Jamea lawler,
~ of Pltiloeo!ltiY Room 22-

D, 4244 lUdp Lea, 831-1442; for de.
RaPtratlon ... ""'.-$10, general;

. taUa.

$6, studoa~,; ~~ no ~e.
-

�.

Faar -

"'

AI an - l e ,

tea. .... p.m. - .

· to.cw X laalbt a

a C1G11J111e1e .at ol me a n • ud
elaDdard ~.., tbe Af:r ..._
-u.tM ud eftluathe , __ nport..
ed In !be foiJowiDJ way8:
Clll8

n-aaoo....a-.
type, with '17 eludeDia.

mean ratina •

deviation ol 1.88.

spring adminialratiOD included Arts
ud ~ (.U.S), Educational Studlee (FES), Health 8cienllea (FHS),
the Collepe (~),tbe Diviaian of
Undergraduate
tudies (DUB),
Natural SeieQoea
d Mathematics
(FNSM), Social Scien&lt;es and Administration ( F'SSA), and law and
JUrisprudence (LAW). Means ud
standard deviations for each are presented in Table 1:

Tbe· . . . , _ -w ... 1aa1t • .
Table I ud DOte lbat tbe li88A. ~
....... 6.86 and ita 8 D - 1&amp; --- .
would enter tbat'CIIl ~ ........
Then would look •
~that the UGID mean &amp;.411 ....
SD ol U2. Nat ..Jd - a t 'lWIIe
3 ud nota tbat tbe b~
rourae was 6.74 with an SD 11[1. 1MFinally, he or abe ..W DOia ll.s
Table 4 tbet tbe mean ol !be d.size of ' * - 61 and lOO .......
was 6.84 wltb an 8D ol 1.44. llil •
ber pro8le
him - . . .,
be more demandina " - oCia . . _
of aimitar.eharactariatlc: (At .........
ly more tecbniealleftl, he adlbl illo
note that his OWD mean OD AlJr illlll
6, while bieber " - tbe . . _ . . .
of other ainWar ~ ID ..,
case as far as 1 SD a-ny frmB IL

'liilii

n. c1aa Leoel: On the basis of the

SI'ATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
SPRING SEMESTER, 1973
JOHN BRUCE FRANCIS. Pnlject DirectOr
ALAN FENSrER. Rlsnrdl Associate

~ORIA DZIUBA, Researdl Assistant

This studJ - i:anducted as Pnlject 6166 1iJ the sUrvey R_,m Center of the State
University of Nft York at Buffalo pwsuant to a policy ISI8bhhed by the Facuity Senate
in 1971.

·-

give a teacher is tbe standard deviation. This ·statistic is beat interpreted
:B.ob teach e r whoM ClOUllle was · _ as an inverse measure of tbe degree
ewluated as put of tbe Af:r Propasn
to which student ratinp were Clus.......... tbe BpriJII s.m.lar ol 1973
tered around a central point, the mean.
;ui~ a COIIIIJIIIer PrintoUt ol
1n other words, the standard deviahis or ber ••ulla. On It there appeer
tion inc:reaaes as student ratinp of
a teacher on a particular item spread
three lr;iJD of ... peraibtapa,
a.-.. aDd elaDdard deviations. Each oul 1n ratings of instruction, where
bas ita OWD JMBDiDI and IMS. Tbe
virtually all mean sc:ores are close to
I D M i l - . or -·.....;...• a~'- Ia
the pos~tive end of lhe scale (for Af:r,
calcilliallid fur ~ by adding
this means the I o we r end of lhe
up tbe miDp lllllde by stUdents Uf
acale), a teacher esn increase undera claM ud 8ividlnc by tbe number
. standing of how atudanta viewed him
of studenta · who• answer 1bat item.
or be" and .his or her clail8 by rank'Diu.--''............. 'illil-Diit rate ........
Dir '~ ..... a Dertic:UJ8r item, tbe
number . - I u denominator in aUdeviation. . This will provide s o m e
. culatina tbe ·~Ia decni8Sied by
sense of tbe degree to which students
ODe;· Tbe number Who responded to
agreed on their ratings.
each itmn Ia alao displayed and from
II Norms
this a taac:ber can determine tbe deIll"" to which students felt each item
Mean scores on the Af:r items canW8s applieable to him or ber, and can
not be interpreted in a single preinlerpret · his or ber sc:ore on that
scribed manner. This is especially
item accordingly. Obviously, a partictrue because of ACT's UnivefBlty-wide
ular IDMil retina which is the result
nature. A single form used to evaluof ratinp by oaly one or two atudenta
ate courses in different University disbould .receive 1..., attention than if
visions, at difFerent levels, in classes
·it ~ the ....Wt of ratings by lhe
of di&amp;rent type, and different size
entira class.
classei! generates problems of d a t a
adequacy and accuracy which must
Tbe mMD .is a -..re of lhe cenbe considered and resolved.
tral
·of a group of scores;

~=b'!."'t!'.:'~~-=~

were divided into: Undergraduate
Lower Division (UGID); Undergraduate Upper Division (UGUD); and
Graduate Division (GRAD) . Means
and standard deviations for each are
presented in Table 2.

ctau

~ug.~~~a:;

Type: All classes whoM

type were designated were divided
into 5 groups: Lecture, Seminar, Di&amp;cussion, Recitation, and Laboratory.
Means and standard deviations for
each type are presented in Table 3.

tbe lenienklomandlna cllmenoiOD not significantly di6erent flam tba
ratinp received by others.)
To c!omplete tbe interpretatioD, he
or abe inight alao note tbat his or ber
standard deviation was hicber- tMn
tbat of any of the larser groupe to
which .compariscms are being made, an indicatiOD that his or ber OWD
studenta held decidedly diverae views
about his or her position on tbe
lenient-demanding ·dimension. A similar analysis of all Af:r items would
yield a general picture of tbe studi!nt
reaction to the class relative to others
like it, and not simply relative to
global measures on tbe entire set of
evalW.ted. courses.

IV. Claa Size: Each teacher whoM
clilss was evaluated was asked to specify his elilss size. This estimate was
used to divide classes into five categories:
( 1-10)

....

-w .._

eourae number, all evaluated classes

m

IIIII:JIII'•t!J.!~ •.

....&lt;!eme1llllinl" - Ac:r
6.82 ......_ __

Uni~Mnity

DiDWDII: '!be dllrerent diYielaaa which participated In tbe
L

-..-•;1...

of Social sa.-.... ..,.........::-...:

c;Jaases witb 1 to 10 students

( 11-30) classes witb between 11 and
30 students
(31-60) classes witb between 31 and
60 students
·
(51-100) classes witb between 51
and 100 students

As further sets of norms are developed and as· data from the study of
teacher assessment of item applica~
bility are completed, the resultS wm
be made available. 1n the meant:imo!,
L111Y questions whieb facultY, stUdents,
or administrators bave about Af:r can
be addressed to:

t lOO+ ) classes witb over 100 students. ·
Means and standard deviations for
eacb of tbe categories are presented
in Table 4.

The use to he made. of tbese tables
is straightforward and quite simple.
A teacher simply notes his or ber own
division, class level, class type, and
class size; and compares tiis rating
on eacb Af:r item witb the ratings of
all other classes of similar characteristics in the University. A simple form
for tbis can be prepared as in tbe
sample which is included bere.

Jobn Bruce Francis, Ph.D.

Project Director
Analysis of Courses and Teaching
Office of lnstruetional Services
Harriman Library, Main Campus
831-4404

tenclenl:y

ud a particular mean can be arrived
The Af:r ·project is attempting in
at in a number of -ys. For instance,
three ways ·to overcome these proba IDMil iatina of 3 on a particular
lems:
item am occur if all students rate tbe
taac:ber at 3; or if 50 per cent rate
1. The form itself was developed
him at 1, and 50 per cent at 6; or by
by a group of faculty members .chosen
virtually any niUllbM of other comby the Provost of each Faculty to
binatioos of retinae. Because of this
represent its different needs. Every
interpretation should never be ~
attempt was made by tbem to include
aolely on tbe elllliDination of means.
items of widest generality and applicRather it is _._.-y to calculate
ability on lhe form; and provision _.
.._...... of the spread or variation
made for individual Faculties to add
in the class. Two -..res of this are
i t e m s of particular importance to
preaanted OD the individual printouts,
them.
·
taps and standard deviations.
2. A separate form was made avail~taps abow the proportiOD of . able
.to teachers on which tbey could
students retina the items who cbooe rate the applicability of eacb Af:r
each point OD the acale. For '!DJIIple,
item to their class. These ratings are
if 40 students pve ratinp Clll a certo be used as weight factor in the
tain Item, and 10 of thoee rated tbe
cillculation of any overall evaluative
taac:ber at 4 on that item, then Under
score. At present this program is in
reapoD811 c:hoice
would aPPMr 25
a trial phase witb tests being made
cent - ~use ~~~~on":
to ascertain which items are judged
more or t.... applicable by all teachers
percen"f:;:'::Gf give a teacher aome
.and 1;&gt;r teachers in different Univer- o f the - t to which students
sity
d1visions, at different levels, and
apeecl in retina the class. Small perin classes of different types and sizes.
centqes all alonlr the acale, for inThe
results of these tests will be used
stance, would indicate that students
to ·modify and make more ftexible
· disapeed aubl:tantially on tbe retina
~ Af:r forms and sc:oring
their teacber abould have. Sometimes,
procedures.
.
teacbera wm find tarse percentqes
at Clll8 point and larse percentages at
3.
Any
direct
interpretation
of
ina point a om e distance away, wltb
dividual· Af:r item averages obould
amaU
taps in b e - . This
be
made
in
terms
only
of
comparison
mllht l:i:'te that tbe teacher's peramong lllre elasaes, i.e., classes which
f o r m a n e e in that dimension was
are similar in terms of division, class
viewed in two
•ta distinct
by
level, claas type, and cla9a · size. The
sub-poOp&amp; withk tbe cluB. we,Y8
data' for such rompariaons are called
A alnJie measure of the
BmCIIll atudenta OD· the ratinp they

!:l

TABLE 1. NORMS FOR EACH UNIVERSITY DIVISION
r~o~s

":00 lt.IS
-'"'

u..,-

;....,e._,t ~00:1:"~'*:...~

PAGE 1 /REPORTER/ ACT ANALYSIS/NOVEMBER 15,1973 \

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•REPORTER / 'ACT ANALYSIS I NOVEMBER 15, igjj I PAGE 4

�~-

-

~::-dwr

~

to ICieoceb
HomoeezuDI.

L~~
~~Valet, p. J!'l.
.......,....

e

'

a ·llakt ol all this- 8lld

AJ1ea G~
a Juet a little PY '
M

..,..

(111111. . . . . . . . -~and
terrtW4it&gt; ,;.._I eouldn't have been
ahocW llllaiD. afl8r 1 lipl!!ed m.Y
IDialt to . _ abJeelii- m the Col- ~
leliale ~•• ...,._.tative of
aJio118 OaiJIIe, wllhllut - . botheriJ11 to ..-k-tD-. an.ed "Anti-Gay
DiM ID the Bepcft" to be · 8lricken
flom the~ ...... .epnda and
~~ (
d!') to · persuade
,.._,
'

Two major admlnistmtiw appoint-

menta bave been made in the Univeraity Libraries, Director Eldred R.

Smith aDII&lt;IIID&lt;ll!d today.
•
Ma. Millicant Abell has been I)8JDild
asoociate director of libraries 8lld Mr.
Sektidas 'tWy has been •nnninted a&amp;siatant director for
aervkes.

tecb!ifc81

ab. Since~. 1971, Ms. Abell has been

th!

_

Office

h ".IJ ·

Mr.

Yawa tzuly,
•

cc:

--'I'HOillAII OOULD

~ Joaathan

Reichart

~~::e
....~:::
lndividuak Wad:lnll

To Posts in Library S)istem

Clll . . . . . . .

are urged to _
_ . . . 81111er cJolhinl ~ ll'olla Mid, .._

Pn!peratlana Division of the v· · ·
Polytecbnic Institute IUiil State~
versity T . . . _ _ in Bl8cla!burg, · Vir• ginia, His
p~
includes
bead of the Seriala
Dlviaion
at the Harvard College Library, - a&amp;sistant a.qllisitions librarian at the
University cl Californi&amp; at santa Cruz
Library. dlief llbiarisn in the American-Lo.Dmrieor Book Procurement.Cen-

IUI&amp;istant director of Libraries for unde~uate ~rvices -at the
Ui:U.veraity of W ·
in Seattle. ·
During this period,
also served
&lt;::bar'- ~-~ ~r
for a year .. acting assistant director
Oollele F, to ..,... me
t
of LibrarieS for public services. • In
..-tiDL
_ . ~tatives were
these ..,_
........_ she ,_._
L-~ cfuect ad·
viaibly IJIIDIIIII(artl with the topic
~--.
_.~-tried to ehanae
ministmtive responsibility lor one of
_......... · ........._ Nieed
• ts of
the most substantial operational areas
the ~........ _ ,
~
within the University of Washington
~ prooedure,
others
librarY system. Sbe also participated
~ loobd 81INY from me- 8lld
dimctly in ovenul Libraries-wide plan~~~u~ ;.:;...':!!~ ~~a~tj
uing and \"'licymaking as a member
sbould put the nat of m.Y objections
of the Uruversity of Washington Li·
"in wri"-•,• S-lrtlm, although its
brsries Administmtive Conference. In
..the
"~~
recent months, sbe directed the manreporter ~t at
mee~.,.
agement study that is currently being
and interviolwC me priwtely alter·
. carried out at the University ·o f Wash·
warda, repiirtad nothinl either about
ington ·Lo.'b........, in cooperation with
the A.ssocia' on o! Research Libraries.
the Report'a intemal contradictions as
to "adYoc:.cy" aor about the matter
Prior to IISBW11ing ber present reof the tapee,_ ~ .--1 to accept
.sponsibilities, Ma. Abell beld increasuncrltically ~· esplanation of
ingly important positions in a variety
"~ ~-..1 thougbt, I
of locations, incluiling the Busii&gt;ess
~-~ ol ,..._ oL-&gt; word -...~entiyv'" _ ' Administration Brs,ncli of the Univer.......
...., .....
,..
sity o( Washington Lo.'brsries, the Penhom the I.atiD pakre, "to at8lld wide
rOoie P u b I i c Lib::J' in Colorado
open." It ......,..m to me· an excell~t
Sp ·
Col d
the So •L---t
attitude for « "tead&gt;er" to have: .vlZ.
Asi.~~ra
of the fu'stit:'te
wbeU. "richt" or "wrong," to remain ·
o! International Education in Bangalways open M to who you. are -and .
kok, 'lbailand, and the "United States
therefore as to wbat your bl88f!8 '!%"
Military A&lt;ademy at West Poinl
likely to be, rather than to . m)'Bt!fY
Prior to. securing ber h'brsry devee,
peoj&gt;)e, as our Evaluators did, wtth
•"- was IUI&amp;istant dean o! women at
talk of "objeetivfty"' ~''academic ' stan· ·
'ty. of Arizona 10
· ·Tu
douds 8lld IDtegri~-=aDd~~"' ·- Ms.~ g[aduated from Colo':'d:;
pretations that are patently wrong. ? .- College where she majored in psycboi-BtJII'l'!IN WEI!IB • ''6 , Sbe has masters' degrees from
'
•
•
t l 1~ "1 ••t'oJL;It('l..,\-l:lft.,( u,).a.&amp;'hlmtiia Uftiwrsity (student personDEAlt II1L WE1118,
·
nel administration) and the UniverI do not have a copy of. the Report
sity of· Colorado' ~political scienoo).
before me, but I"lhink 'I ba~ a clear Sbe secured ber master of llbi-ary scienou&amp;b memory ol the ~ you
enoo degree-from the State University
refened to in your 'telepbaDe call.
of New York at Albany.
Firat, I regret ~ much indeed ll!"
Ma. Abell was vioo president and
apparent implication in our rbetonc
president-elect of the Association of
that you.- amOng the instructors
Librarians of the University of Washwbo were "beyoud ']&gt;eriJU8Sion." You
ington, served on the executive board
were not.in our minds at all wben we
of this organization, and was directly
wrote !hal You _.., most oPen to
involvea in matters related to the
perouaalon in the brief esdlanp I bad
evaluation, promotion, and compensawith you.
,
lion of llbrarialis; planuing h'brsry
Secandly, lt was Mt our contention
i1oaJs and objectives; evaluating dethat you atlempting to persuade
cision-making procedures within the
anyODe to take up any particular se&gt;t·
library; and promotinJ participation
uaJ life and that you falaified1he text
of librarians in univennty governance.
deliberately for such a purpose. 'That
Sbe _has'-!&gt; an _active,member o~ the
. , _ t in _your claa8 was cited as an
Bibbograpbic lristruction Committee
esample ol aometbing common in
and the A&lt;ademic Status Committee
many co11eae courses: your enthusi·
of the Association of College and Reasm made )'Oil bope tbat the text
seardl Libraries. Sbe was a ~r
meant IIOIIIIIIbing that (in my opinion)
of the By-Laws Committee and-chairit Could not mean.
mim of the Faculty Status Committee
Tbird, we did not mean to oensure
of the Academic Section of the Wasbthe particular enthuaiasm tbat ~
ington ' J ·i,brsrY Associat;ion. Sbe ~
your COUI88. Aa we said elaewbere m
also pubJjsbed on a vanety of topics
the Repxt, "advocacy" is msponsible
in the Jibralr literature.
In IIIIJIOUIICIDI ber appointment, Mr.
for lood as well ali bad features in
the Collellate syatem. Aa you aay, we
Smith COIIIJDe!lted, "Ms. Abell is II!"'·
could as eMily have mo-. an uamerally ~ as an- outstanding
pie from Women's Studies College,
university ll5rarY administmtor, with
for ~DstasM».
.
particular aiDII and demonstrated exAs we stated aevers1 times in the
perience in public servioo, persoonel,
Report we deliberately refraiDed from
and planuing. I believe tNlt we are
raDidng tba ClOIJeaea or singling out the
most fortunate in having attmcted ber
beat and tba pcJOreR. Wbat p&gt;d
to Bdalo."
about the aylllem could be found in all .
"Quite frankly." Mr. Smith told the
the colletea"as well as what was reReporl6, ·~ thinlt we got,.ODe of lh;apettable. It was a piece ol bad luck
best peOple m the oountzy. As aaiOCl·
that your coJ]ege was mentioned by
ate libnlrian, Ms. Abell will serve as
name only in deroplllly comments
"a pneraJ number two in the Libraries
and W1l8 only 1ncluded by impli&lt;ation .
syatem," Smith lllid, reporting- to him
in laudatory p88llll8'88. No, it I)Ot
but sbapriB many overall msponsibilijuat bad lud&lt;: It was a lapaa ID our
ties.
cue-p~ mine, siJ!ce I bad
IIDJ
partial
'ty for evaluating
M o-. 18
•
t1 L--d of the
Colleae F . apolotlize most sincerely.
r. ·~~
P""""' Y ...

-

~~~~ .

Two Major Appointments

5

.
exc::

:;m~ne~~c.:-

ter in Hyderabali, India, and serials
cataloger at the Balrer Libracy of tbe
Harvard Business Scbool He is a
graduate of C a I cut ta University,
where be studied histOry and economics and earned a post-graduate diploma in library science. Mr. Roy- also
holds a master's degree in h'brsry
science from Simmons College, ·
Mr. Roy brings to the University
"a record of ~ency and effectiveness" acquired in 18 years of library
experience, which baS involved him
directly .in all areas of technical services, Smith said. Mr. Roy has a " history of "Outstanding accomplishment"
in these areas, according to the director.
At Buffalo, Mr. Roy will be charged
with .upgrading efficiency of such operations as procurement and &lt;ataloguing and will also examine technicsl
servioes throughout the Libraries system. Mr. Roy's appointment is particularly timely in light o! the fact
that the Libraries have recently begun ·
participating in a machine-readable,
shared cataloguing pnllll1llll througb
the 0 h i o College -Libracy Center,
Smith lllid.
Only one major administrative vacancy remains within the Libraries,
the director indicated, the position of
--assistant director of collection developmenl "Two outstanding candidates"
hllve recently been . interviewed for
the jlost, Smith said, and, hopefully,
an appointment will be forthcoming
in the near future.

,,,,

Engineering Talk
Dr. Britton Harris, cbairman pf the
Graduate Group in City and Regional
Planuing, University o! Pennsylvania,
will present a lecture on "Metropolitan Computer Models," Friday, November 16, at 3 p.m. in room 104
Parker Engineering. Refreshments
will be served· 30 minutes prior to
the talk in 142 Parker.
· Dr. Harris's address is sponsored
by the Civil Engineering Department
as part of its Distinguished Lectures
Benes. Professor Harris, a graduate o!
the University of Chicago, is an in·
ternationally-lmown .,_rt in the field
o! urban planning and is the author
of the Pen n.Jersey Transportation
Study.
At Pennsylvania, Dr. Harris teaches courses in planning methods and
the theory o! urban forms. His Friday
afternoon talk, open to the public,
will be concerned with the uae of
computers and simulation models in
urban planning.

lll1ad;y ~ ~ . . . .

=-.perature 18 Ill 'I(.........

-

Elldlldlr
'
I n - ol eleclriclty, tbe ~

Plant l)epartmallt . . . . . . .
uaJa to tum • liP.!,a 1 D - ....
they Move&amp;
leave ale
· -........,.
" " .In . .to. .
~
p.m.
..,.._

corridor lilhliDI lbrcluabout tbe pus by abiJttina • _,. olber lilbt
wbere the wiriDK .,_.. peaaita (or
every olber bulli m .,... wt.. tbe
former Ia not .,...a.le). ~
cella will aJao be lnalaiW to replace
lMa elllcient tim&amp;doclt caatrcJI8 Clll
automatic lilbliDI. and llluiJiea will be
· made ~ reducliaD clwattqa
• wbereve&lt; -~ Out8ide aafety and
-=ity lilbting will in DO WilY be
~~IlespJte will
the c:utbal:b,
buildinga
still aeem - to be- ablae
with lights 24-boun, Folta nollei!.. This
is be&lt;auae cleaning crew a llllUally
work the third sbift and require lighta
lor their operations. Clean-up .,._.
will, hoWever; tum .• all lighta . . . .
they have~
·• · ••

-

"CooaerVe Fuel/We Ale Rationed"
stickers are beina plaoed m all University vehicles, l'Olts Said, to underscore the fact that "we are already
limited to an ellective six per cent
reduction 'in gaaollne by our suppliers." Actually, the suppliem are ~­
ing available 100 per oont ol Uruversity requirements, for the same quarter
of the previous year; the presence of
additional vehicles accounts for the
problem. Reii tape
•.. -remindeis
will be mounted on~ometers bf
University vehicles at the 50 mph
mark, underscoring the lowered speed
limit which the State bali adopted in
compliance with Federal requests. In
addition, the Physicsl Plant operation
is asking a 10 per cent reduction in
gaaoline consumption by all campus
users. This may result, spokesmen indicate, in some reduction of services
by . " u c h vehicle-dependent campus
agencies as security, grounds crew.ll
8lld maintenanoe.
In a further attempt to conserve
gasoliue, users of pool cars are being
asked to uae public transportation for
uavel involving more than 400 miles

~~taken on~

Folts
lllid, are in response to President Nixon's call last week for lowered themJo.
stats and reduoed driving speeds. Tbe
President's reqUMI for a 15 per oent
reduction in the consumption of oil
does not directly affect the campus,
Folts said, .because oil is OD!y a _,.
ondaJy IIOUI'a! ol hMiing fuel bere.
Fom coal.fired boilers provide bMt
for Main Street facilities.
NODe ol the meaaures being taken
will affect 24-Gour reeean:h . facility
~for enBI'IY COiliiUlllPiion Folts
Campus eDeriY CDIIAI!Mltion sures were also called for in an Oc&gt;

a=

Iober 22 directive of Gov. Nelaon
Rocltefeller. On that date, Roc:bfeller
~
all Sta~!&gt; apocies
buildinp they
~intain ·

....rm

trnt&amp;J!

· An Indian Miniature

Abu! Hasan Shah, Sultan of Goloonda, you
Ale still walking, this fine morning, througb
A late 17th oontury field of llowers, ru-t
In your tent-like, 8owered dressing gown,
Your beard cloae-cropped already at dawn
By the servant wbo carries your blue 8llllSbade
Umbn!lla. You are fat and happy. I remark
You bere, in this museum, 8lllOilg a thousand
Others be&lt;auae we look aJike..-.are deiil
Rinprs for MCh oU.. You have pluclteci'
!. llower at your feet and BJDetl the . 1 alwaja do that too wM1 I wallr. throush flowers;
And, this morning, Chiclt Tbe BubM cut bad&lt;
My black beard, ooverinl m.v great girth
With tba pitcbed tent ol his flowered barber's cloth.
Mili1nl, as I take this n~~~&gt;ite from DIY rounds
wort. as IODletime teadJer and old-time academic pol,
I am happy to bave fouDd you: we' are both
Potentate&amp; ol miaor and provincial atatea.

·or

--MAC ILUDIOMD

Prof.-.r ol E1111lah,

Secretary cl the Faculty Senate and the CoJleilum

~1973

,

�' , _ , _ . , , , JV13

6

.
Two
Named to
~------------------------------doatlal ..... .-1 tbe W.lbould not
ed oat evldlaoe al caallict alllltereBt
raiiJa
tbiDkl
Medicine Posts
b:J llolb ....... ~
~·-··-... • alp..twblio =~--~:!:~
)

-~-"-,... J eol. I)

~ IIDW the AHA
~

a,...--

"J tblak the whale ...,. ·
la
It-

..... ...,..... bt a C8PIIalilt Dation

......... loaDcliDI Ill ..,..
,.. ~ llllll tblak tbe a -tD
' f _.., • _ . . . tbet it
....... - - . u - 1 .. _.,w.
.. . I tliJil" ~ miDd if _ .
lleV ..... a ,_ lloidal olf Bunblr
~_T..wrta...,..

ue bella--

!'f,............ cllllllldDI tbe Bicenta&gt;0.. af the IIIR aayo Lam...... theARBC. Tbe ~ Times
npaded ~ tbet tbe C'AimmiMion
11M .,_, ~ far montbe, -wailin&amp;
far a jaiDl
-..mittae dedllaa tbet _... CIID.-t it into "an

.._...tive

:::u,·~n::.=i :d.

~ mlalltaatlua, with a fat ~ and,
~. a - · ....-ve.. dy-

. deputlld ....... the

Accbomtilla

aloud,. o-at

()jlce mw.tlptlon Into
with tbe blidpt .-1 tbe a-_..Eva~ tlie Commleolnn'•
.,..._tal tbe JIIOIIC*d Natianal
Hlatoric Reconlll ~ Ma oolituy
lather In their ~· is not an IDl·
blemlobed acoompliohmen~ Lemiach
indicated.
But fallwe, or wonoe, on tbe part al
our ollcial ....,..cy on the Bicenteruiial
is lnaulicient """""' to abandon the
COIDttBDOralion to the inaot-Jiers,
Lemiscb....."Tbere is 110 much to be done on the
stole and 1oc:al Jevel," be told the
AHA. "and, ittbe federal Bicentennial ·
Commission seems telatively hopeless,
that doesn't ,_., that historians will
not be able to work fruitfully with

hill -

~T~~"':~::!g~~~
-

to-

Drwna

be eoiJeded;
ia ....

be

hiatory

...S ....,. tbet a aatianaJ· ef.
fort be Jllllde to coUect. ...-.... ....
~

&amp;'

Two_
............
...,to
have.,_,_..
Jll tbe
ment of Modlclne:
P. Ole
has bela llUIIed viae mm- .-1

Dr.,_

publilb dacumilllto ~elating to tlie adJ..
er Amerlcano. tbe "dirty people with
no - . " as ..,. partic:uJarly IDl·
pleuan-.llng historian called
them.
IDst8ed al issuing eDdleoe IDliform
editbla , tbe )&gt;lll8lll ol Jelleraoa,
Franldin, Weshinltoa.
Adams,
d al, the ollcial nlachinery millht ClOD·
aider alternative activities, Lemisch

~'=!' J!in~7'~

f _ , ct medicine, will a11o
.. chahman , tbe J)eputaad ,
Madlc:ine at BulfaJo GIDiraL
In announdnl tbe a~ Dr.
Evan CaiJdlll, who liiiadl tbe Uai·
verslty'a ~t al . M,Jdidae.

-'obn

1:::Y.C.

sugpats. 8llCh as Ptherinc aouroe material on popular paolest; publication
~tedDr~ Nolari
~
of docwrslto writtea by and about
tinguished reputation 88 ........ outblaclls, women, ladianB, and members
spolam ...-totlve al tbe r-dty
of non-elite aooiaJ groups wbo are, in
in lllMtina .wr-t altuatlaaa, .-1
the historian's ·Jlhrue. "not 110 much
as ac8demic leader al tbe *-t .n•
historiographically mule .. unhMrd";
A cum ·~Dude medical paduate al
yale in 1966, Dr. Nolan CCliiiJI)eled
publication of documents in the aelected field of American J8bor hi&amp;his intemahip and reaidalcy in medo
icine at tbe Grace-New Havm HOII~; computeriration of basic aociaJ
pital after serving two yean .. Lt.
data to aid in tbe oonstruction of "biographies of people o~ 'anonyCommander with tbe U .S. Navy Medical Co1J18. He ia a fellow of !hoi Arrie&lt;mous' "; ~or otherwise malting
ican Collep of Pbyalcians, Dlplamate
more avaliable legal recorda and news&lt;&gt;f tbe American Board , lnternal
papers, both im.portant source materials for ~ the "inarticulate";
Medicine, anll~on
tbe editorial advisory board of .J
of MediciM:
and the ll'!!&gt;lication of radical papers,
E:qerinwltol
Cl.iniaJL He came
including overdue editions of tbe
Works of two great white men of the
}:.!~:at:~~t
Revolutionary period, Thomas Paine
versity.
and Sam Adams. Lemiach aJao proDr. Noble; wbo ia clinieaJ p""-&gt;r
poses learning more about non-elite
of medicine, has, Dr. CalkiDs said, a
groujls through studies of art, ~
lecture, ar&lt;:!Jaeology and city . P-; ·· . broad bacqrouad In clinical practice,
ambulatory care, c I o e e familfaiity
ning.
with community agencies and with tbe
-WPA-structure/operational pattem al coun"We need a new WPA- for history
ty goverilment. "To thia be has added
and historimis," Lemisch- told the
AHA, looking beyond the fturry of .. a very elfactive !lhility as admini&amp;trstor. I am \rery pleaaed with the
interest in history gellel'llted by even
~totanding job. be has done .. ala limping Bicentennial and beyond
coholisai P·r o gram din!c:tor at the
the eventual passage of the proposed
Meyer."
.
National Historic Records program. '
· A 1962 graduate of the U/B Med- 1
Look, be told his mlleagueo. at what
ical
SchooL
be
.
completed
his intem- ...,
the-old WPA acoomplisbed: 1M slaVll '
slilp"and ...l.idebcy in midicine at tlie
.narrative mllection, the stole guic&amp;;
Meyer in 1967 when be joined the
the Historical Records Survey, a beU/B fal:ulty as clinieaJ luaistent in
ginning at indenng American newspbannaooioJY. r
•

AB an alternative to "costume dm- ' c admlilio&amp;rat«."
mas" and television interviews with
Ia ell'ect, I..emiodl explains, "the
Peter Ustinov ''who masquerades as
C«nnJioiian 11M llled ~ bankLord North but sounds more like a
• ·
graduate student trying. to fake his
•tbe ARBC both "a bad
way tJuough his orals," Lemisch has
job
~ .-1 «a Tory Camproposed that historians celebrate the
mioalon," I..emiodl told his fellow hi&amp;Bicentennial by eepou.sing a pluralislioriana Ill :o...mber, ~ly the
tic program in which ''we throw open
only tbinc I caD aay m ito faYO&lt; is
the doors al the laboratory in which
~ it ia inellectUal: it toi!JI li~: _
historians work, an~ let .the pll;blic in
naHber-tbank God-.._ 1t spUL - ' on a bill """"''' histonans disagree·
Wbm it .._ toil, ito work is liable
about how to do history, and they disto be al a partisan political nature.
agree about the American past, just
Tbe inwtente Waallinlloll Pool sniffas they disagree, along with other
-• 1
Americans, about the present and the
1::....-a.--..· ;_~
;i ~~
future:'
F.:ll"-"1~
"Let a thousand Oowers bloom,"
0
(~ /TOIIl 2, col. 3)"
Lemisch urp!8 (echoing
friend of
weatiaaa1 education; Jlf'OPI!Tiy UNJBHeory Kissinger J . Let television net.u.od, an education fOCUSllll not Oil a
works invite historians with opposing
bodybutonof"theli~~tonotbe :,!!~
views or participants in the makigg of
w~
history to debate slavery. the rise of
~
~~
unionism, the riae and fall of Black
.......,.,
Mountain College, what the Plymouth .
cowae, p._nn, him for the walk of
Colony was reoUr like. Let high school
historian. Tbe wcatioaal nature of
students do social history by tapmg
the cowae, thua, has .ni&gt;lhinr .to do
the
. .
f their grand
P8.1,!el'B.
• '. •
•
o&lt;-~:....~ 1
with ito cont;:,l;..,~ with till' ,ambiremuusoences o
par· "Today,''Lemisch said, ''record&amp; are '
tioao of the
be aaid.
entS.
. .
still
rotting
mid
uncataiOIIlled
and
Re.......* ..'a o=-&amp;=+=•l .-1 .....o. •• u; .
Pluralism is nlso the foundation of
• .......,. - ..Lemiseh's proPMaJ that the nation
CJl!eotly trealejl•as garbage.. And today;
adouola.iln•ti l8p ·'Provide this
--L-.. the belief, niftected in ito existonce
again,
historians
are
unemployed
Dr. Gloria Roee, a noted musicol&lt;&gt;type of education, Baritz obaerved;
"""~w
- or drivina cabe. A few million dolgist, has been elected to the National
tbe roblem lial with the undergi&amp;duing historical documents publications
lars would put a few thouaand A.B.D.'s
ale 1
arts cuniculum.
programs, that history is the ezclusive
Council of the American Musicologprovince of great, white, articulate,
and recent Ph.D.'s to work in locol
ical Society. Prof-.. Roee received
h
historical societies and archives, cataa Badlelor of Arta degree cum laude
~
~~
document-producing men in positioils
loguing and indenng, updating guid..,
from Hunter College and a Pb.D. from
.-1 aay to 'tbe aludent:-out how
of power. As a scholar;. Lemiach, wbo,
to manuscripts, oomplelin&amp; the "Wort
Yale. She was _,...., 8Slllstant to
Yf!ll W,.Ot to make a livina and what
·while at Yale, edited tlie papers of one
of the Historical Records Survey...." ·
Leo Schrade from 1967 to 1968 and
ou
Deed
to
do
it.
Learnthat."
.
of
the
greatest
and
whitest
of
these,
Y '1'1111 tuJub1e ia tbCJUih. be Bllid,. jt's
Somehow, that sounds like a far betmusic librarian at Wellesley Collep,
Benjamin Franklin, .has become inter way to commemorate 200 years of
19511-60. She was senior _,...., ofnot alftya obvious what to 1eom. And
creasingly interested in the "other"
a common past than with 110uvenir tins
fleer of the National Boot Leque In
how or BYell where to Jearn it.
Americans- the non-white, the preof Salada tea.
~in 1964.
This -=iety demaJida that people
sumed inarticulate, the non-males, the
b8 trained .for work, Baritz said. But
"nobodies" wbo alao participate in
thla dooml't mandate the production
historical eveots. ''Who built the seven
of "vJJh».free tedJDicians"
•
towers of Tbebes? I The books are
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Tbe aim sbould be an individual
filled with names of kings": Lemiach
who JaJoo,a hfs c:mft. the stills needqUotes Brecht to underacoN the need
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROORESS
eel ra. hia own work situation, and
to document the enormous lacuna that
aJao mylerwl;onda tbe political system
tunnel-vision histoiy has "left us with.
llllll ·ltl ~ This is not an antiHistory From Bottom Up
Faculty of Arts ..-,d lAtt8n . • • • • •••
------intelle!:tual or nanowly vocatioilal edFor himself, Lemiach has begiDl to
Fw;Uty of Ec~Yc.dbtwl Studin .
ueation; he said, but an education
study history "from the .bottom up."
FKUiry of Enfineering.ci
-----tbehliakss a amnection with the way
His recent work has focused on AIDerApplild~ ••••·•··••••
we Jiw.
.
ican Revolutionary seamen, including
FICUityof ..._.thlciencel: .••.•. ..
We have to come to understand
the more than 10,000 "nobodies" wbo
FacultyotlAwend~ - • .
thla CIOillliiCtioa, be argued, abanaon
spent 1he war years in British prisons
I~
Sdloolof~t . ••• • • . , •••
tbe pmtlemanly ideal of the cultivatand priaon ships (notobly the Jeney.)
· ~ with knowledge for
along the Eastern ooast, By studying
... . ..
's oalte, and COllC8lltrsle -on
the records left by these "inarticulate"
·
the linlt
knowledp and wort
men. Lemisch has been able to learn
-becauae work, after all, is Wliat we
a great deal about the life and attido.
tudes of a group of people that the
=-~~.::. :
history boob havt traditionally igDivtlionofContlnumtEduce1klnend
nored. Among his findings is evidence
of a remorlrable deiree o( devotion to
~:=~ .:~ : ::~ :
tbe American among tbe prisonOffice of ... ,.,.....u Md
em. Forced to cboose between contin~
E.acr.rth. Vice,...,.t .... . -~ . -~!1!1!--••-.1111!1••-=:::J=+=:::::J
ued imprisonment tinder abocious conditions (and pooaible death) or service
in King George'ii navy fighlin&amp; their
oubof Vice PNiidlnt tot
brotbera, only eicht per cent of the
_ · ··-· ···
.iailed seamen ""'- to defect. AB Lem- • '-c:uhy ........ "-dedon
•.•. •.•
1-"'!UU
isch concludes.in an article on "ListenOfficii Of Vice,....,, for

8:.1:"

a

;:-ted'i,

ev::.,

• Rose Elected

C

J::t!fel":Z:i,•.::.J'
:'

...... --,..---....,__.. .........
____
_ -.......
,__1··----·
........
........
.. .
........
...........
.-...
,..

,

..-..

FICUI~~~ -~······••::r::::J=::r::::::J
-===~~ ~ ~

OO:t:.'": .. ..... ..-lllll•lliliil••••lllli••IJ=:r::;:::::J
.,__
~---­

-------· ······'····~---------=:::r::::J ·--·--·--.......
-.........
...

!'C'
~m:~ ~~~
as tbe natianalism of a Jelleraoa, an

Adamo, or a Franldin; Ill thla - ..
the Bevolutioa bappeaed bam· tbe
bottom up u well 88 tbe top down."
But, for·tbe part, tbe Natioaal
Historical Publications Ccmmiaoioa
remains deaf. to tbeao other wicoe.
the hietorisa - - - (lllalltatemeat
in the AHA.,Newlettior), .-1 ODD- '
tinueotopa'nueaJJDiicyinrepnlto
cloc!Jmmlto that. • w-id In ,._ ;ct
"the popem al American Je.den."
Lemiach .._ DOt . . . . - tbet . . . .

....... ,

........

........
4,JOI.DD

'-

Offke of VIol ........... . .

.............
......... .
OfflolofY'-...........
.
.. ........ :

....... .
U.l. ,......._, lllw:J..... Nfllrl .
. . . . . . . . . . Fcillty ••••.•.•• .

OfftolofV...~for

U.l.- - - - ·
~·
·· ·· ·.·· ·•

-

f':

I

---- I · I

~-.1

Aa .. , ........ 11. 2.7»· ....... - - $101,417- the . . . .
.-...~--altua.D-.• . . . . .. , . - . . '

�HOCICIY•

U/B vo. Kent State, Twin Rinks.
ct.ekfowap. 2 P.DL
UUAa . . .••

~ ~~~)~~0o:::::a~
timoo. Aclmloolon cbarp.

IIACI&lt; _ , CCMITOOma

..,.,ac PEOPLE• • .

7'IDo Open E;ya, a ~tary .111m
on .1.- Albea' color tbeorioo, Galleey
219, Norton, hourly ocrwniDp, 11 a.m.4 p.m. No ~ charp.
AIM'

Mon with the Movie eo-ra (Vertov,
1929), 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admis- ''
'

aion cbarp. -

•

Featuring Niltlti Giooonni. Freddie

•

~~~n:u .!'sa~·P·

Clark

Spomored by the Black Student Union.'
FOr furtbe&lt; information. rail 831-6346.
U/IAm-

--·

•

~~~S.:!:"W.A\J~. ~

by

p.DL

3:"

·~c&amp;· and M~~ ~::!!;

=--~~=~t~·
Preaented by the Department of Music. .

-MOIADIO-

Minority E..,-ro. with e-ta Aud·
ley MacLean, ......._. of reaoarco - . _ t , ~Corp., and

=~~~~r,
MONDAY-19

--·

co;:;;,.; baritDne

Andrew Sc'lwltze,
voice otwlent of Heinz Rehfuoo, Baird
Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
The
will include woib by

(Renaia, 1963) and Lu S14tuu
A,_i (Renaio, 1950-53), 140 Capen, 9
Mur~l

p.m. No admiuion cbaqe.

TUESDAY-27

~ ac~":r.J'..n~'

11 a.DL-4 _P,JD.

The 111m includeo - t a Oil MaD!yn
Mnnroe, Bini Crooby and M'u:k Jagger.

FILMS AND ISRUt &lt;liMINAl.

.ruma•

J

Jruti«, Conference Theatre, Norton,
12: 30-2 p.m.
A diacu..u.ion/reaction will follow each
ocreening. Presented by the U /B Campus Ministries:

Two Open ,Eya, Gallery 219, Norton,
""::=n "=.!p.m. and 8-9

:."":k

WOMEN AND THE WOilD OF WOlle.*

How to Get What YOU Wont, an in·

vestiption of ret10urcee and means by
which women can prepare tbemaelves Cor

work and best utilize their own talents.,
332 Norton. noon·2 p.m. Child cue ia
available in 334 Norton.
Spoll80red by the Division of Student
Aflain and UUAB, in cooperation with
the U1B Foundation, 1nc.

USU OF COMMUNICATION IN A
lEOtNOI.OGtcA&amp;. AGE*

fiLM*

Me Tarzan , You Jane, Cheetah Come
-A Couideration of Primal.e Communi·
ootion, Dr. Frank Dance, University of
Denver, ~2 Ridge Lea. Rm. 28, 2: 30
p.m.
Sponaored by the Speech Communica·
tion Departm.enL

Vets Counselor

Elizabeth J . Hamm bas been aP'
pointed veleraDs COUDSelor in the Of6oe of Placement IUid Career. Guidance.

.

Miss Hamm, a W!leran beraelf; bas
sefW!d aa a rehabilitation &lt;ounseior
with the N- Ymk StatiO Colllllliaoion
for the VI8Ually Halldicapped, the
StatiO Sc:bool for the Blind in Bata .
and v a r i o u a private qencies.
served aa an olicer ·m the Women's
Army Corps frdn 1957-J,ll61, and was

FI1M5*

Blood of a Poet (Coeteau, 1930) and
Dog Star Man (Brakhage, 1961-64), 140
Capen, 7 p.m. No admission cllarge.

JJ:ti~"wifu::bO~D!'ug~Cia~k ~
8
JN:; lecture is free and open to ~e

Th'liTo~i;;.W.. M jillr; WoOdy Vaindka,
videoartist·in·residence, U/B Center for
Media Study, 283 Norton, 3 p.m.
l'Noented by the Center for Media
Study.

~~~Z::l:!:"(k= ~~.~~~~;
IHTHOYEN 5TtiNG QUAaTtl CYa.E y•

A paduate of State University Collf!4e at N- Paltz, Miss Hamm received u M.S. ~ in rebabilitil-

TUESDAY-20

Dela;;;

m 1988.

Symphony Soloist
Stes&gt;J-

~

•

rnemba' of the
U/ 8 Pimo faeulty ~ ·aa aoloist with the
SYIIlPbonY Or- ·
cbestm for Ita CIDDOIIf:t. NoYemlier 12,
13 and 14 In I::lenviif. Mr. ManM ] * formed Bela Barloll'a ''Collcerto for
Piano and Orm.tra No. 8," under
~c t Ion of --'uclor Brian

Den.;,.-

lfCTUIE'

On the Role of Cp,clic AMP in Con-

~~ T8he~~~r. ~~

USES Of COMMUNICATION IN A
TICHMOLOGtcAL AGE•
.
Communication fJIId Education, Dr.

Janice Laine, Univenity of California at
Loo -Anpleo, 104 Diefendorf, 3 p.m.
Sponsored by the Speech Commw'Ucation DopartmenL ·
FilMS'

.....

--·

Dynomil:o of Humma Sexuality: Health
Proble,... Rel4ted to Humtm Sexuality,
Dr. Jobn Hodaon, uroloaist, ahd Dr.
Monil Unher, clinical auiatant profee.
oor, GyneoolOCY-Obotetrica, both of the
U/B Scbool of Medicine, 231 Norton,
7-9: 30 p.m.
.
Thio worbbop will focua on boalth
pn,bl-. oucb u venereal diaeeae, vasinal infections, p-tate problema, caneo&lt;, ancl other aezual diaorden and dyo·

-

H OaiiY'

U/B -.._

-

.

0oweco State, Twin Rinb,

~7 : 30p.m.

........

WEDNESDAY-21 -

Richard HamiliDft, Gallery 219, Nor~
u ......... p.DL

.;;:t..ocz;;p

CIIIIUCAL INGU-IG 8MittAI#

Filla Stadia o( Sptn Label CeU Mem-

LtiJ!H:

~-~riM~!_tuclies Con-

RichDrd Hamilton, Gallery 219, Nortoo., hourly acree.ninp from noon-3· p.m.
and 8-9 p.m. No admilaion charp.

U~ of L~ Groupo in Theo,ticol Phy•·
ia, i\eV. l'rof. Jameo McConnell, Dublin
Institute for Advanced Studies and
SUNY at Stony Brook, 111 Hocbstetter,
4 p.m. Refreshment. in 112 Hocbstetter
4_t 3: 30p.m.

0

. Vanderbilt Uni..,rsity School of Medi·

AIT FILM*

La ChinoiK (Godard, 1967), 140 ea.
pen, 3 and 9 p.m. No acimiN.ion charge.

.ana

. pus Miniltries.

eo!~..C:ut:ffi~ad':~:t ~~~:ti~~

PIIYSICS COUOOUtUM#

r..

A d.iJJcu.ssionJ reaction will follow· each
ocreerung. rresented by the U/B Cam·

(Nelson) and End of the Art World
!=:"~.!:7 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No

l'n~::OP;~workinJ

in 11188,
bwibt at :"f..~L!'
the Unl-.lties of
~~
ida, and the Universities of Rome
Bologna in Italy. Dr. y~ receiW!d·
a GUambeim Fellowahip m 1970, a
~Hayea Lectureahip in Italy

fiLMS AND ISSUES: fCONOMJC SUIVIVAL.•

The Great Depru.sion, ConferenCE\ The.
atre, N orton, 12: 3().2 p.m.
,

Croczu (Kraning), Cin:lu I (Chase),

may be available one hour before the
concert at the Baird Box Office.

Dr. Clifton K. y earley. acting chairman of the History Ileparmalt, bas
' - ' appointed lo a three-year tenn
aa dlaiimu, elfecthoe immediately.
Ur. Yearley hM ..-1 aa acting
chairman aba March, 1973. .
A natiW! of Baltimore, Dr. Yee.rley
receiwod bia B.A. a n d PhD. from
Jola Bllllkina. Baf01e
• 1o U/B ,

WEDNESDAY-28 •

ALM5'

8:;

Yearley Named

public. Presented by the S.A. and the
G.S.A. Speakers' Bureau.

MEDiA STUDY LECt\llf*

The Cleveland Quartet, Beird Recital
~.Sp.m.
.

tioo CIIUII8IIliDg from Syracuae University, and an M.A. in colleae counseling and student development from
HWlllor CoiJep.

.

II P011to (Oimi, 1961), 140 Capen, 3
and 9 p .m. No admission cba.rge.

Hirwhima Mon Amour (Renais) and
Toute la M~moire du. Monde (Renais),
Trailer 12, 3 p.m. and 140 Capen, 9 p.m.
No adinielion· charge: :
·

~

--

Sowea
..
=ion~.
W'o.~t&amp;.~ JlBall,

~rtou, throacb 'l1ruraday, Nov. . '
Gallery boww: Moaclay, w~
and Thuraday, u a.m...6 p.Dt~ Taooday
and Friday, IIOon-4 p.m. aDd 8-1.0 p.m.;
Sunday, 1~ p.m.
AU ·EDI.rf*

Seripapho by ~J'fionc ~..,..a. and
Phatolrap/oo by Williom ~..,..a.. HaYeo
lobby clispla;y cueo, Mooda;y-Friday, 9
a.DL-6 p.m., throuch Nov. 30. ~ted
by the Ollioe ol. Cultural Alfaira.
PMOTOGaAPHY EXHIIIT*

With a T"--ht (or St. Cordia, a collection of photographs by J.O!&gt; Hryvniak,
Music Room, 259 Norton, ~SliD­
day, Dec. 2.

Alii.IGHT-ICNOX EXHIIIT*

From the Picture Prt?.U, a collection of
news photographs which provide the history of visual communications, Albricht-Knoz Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Ave.,
begiruiing Monday, Nov. 26.

PUIIJC LECTUIE*

filMS*

Hamm Appointed

0"'"'-_.

- ~~~~~

AD AIM'

Ridzard Hamilton, Gallery 219, Nor-

EXHIBITS
-.c _

AIMS'

Chriatophu Stro"'l, 140 Capen, 7 .p.m.
All About Eve, 140 Capen, 9 p.m. No
admiaion charge.
Wrutling : U/B vo. Geneseo

__,.,

'

or~ • obtaininc"t • employment { Further ~
formation and appointments for inter·
views can be arranged through the University Placement and Career GuidJmoe

~.:'desHa~ ::Ol':~~n=

ol.

s...m-.

.. .

Ni•&amp;::.lohawk

NOTICES

I

c=r.~=
. ~~A:..~

p.m.

~ted by the School ol. Infonnatioo
and Library 8tudieL

THURSDAY-29
MICHANICAl INOII-10 COUOGUI'*#
~

of Ardomobila, Pat162 Puk-

~Corp. ,

Pll'tiiCI _ ,

'1'oDic .. be - . 111 Hocl&gt;otetp.DL RafnoluneDta in 112 Hocb-

w, "

.....
-

at 8:80 .......

Early A61troetioJu (Smith), ~

~= l:l811r,to~!,L

w;.::; .::::,

(......_ ' ~). T~U.
L:::'\-rU.II••Ior (Brakbep, 11181),
~~~ (BiU:bap, 11188), and Prroht
(Brakliap, 1986), 147 Dief-rf, 'r P.J1L

It.

·

WEDNESDAY- 28: Eaotman Kodak
Power .
Co~y -29: 'aotman Kodak
Company; Prudential Inourance Com·
Company; _

Women in Publialoi"'l and Lilmui&lt;JnMip, Mary Gaver, cliNctor, Libroiy Coo·
oultina Se...U., Bro-Dut, and ~

rick M. Millor,
ar, 8:80p.m.

""

THURSDAY -15: New York Life
Insurance Co.; S.S. Kresge Co.; Continental Can Co.; Metropolitan Life Inaut-·
ance Co. '
·
FRIDAY - 16: Factory Mutual Enc.
Corp.; Aetna Life and Ceaualty; Unioo
Ceroide Corp.-Carbide · Products Divi·
sion; Travelera Insurance Company.
TUESDAY- 20: GTE Sylvania, lnc.; ·
University of Pittoburgh Graduate Scbool
of Buainea.
·
MONDAY- 26: Reliance Electric
Company; Firestone Tire and · Rubber
Company; Eaotman Kodak Company.
TUESDAY-27: Eaotman kodak
Company; Rocbeoter T~ Corp.;
UniYenity ol. Rocbeoter G.-ate School

Sta~

~~7 &amp;:...~iy.&amp;.~~8!!
Hall, 8 p.m.

'l'hroughout the semeater, on-campua ..
interviews will be conducted for atudenta .
interested in attending graduate ""'-lo

.pany.

WIUn.ING/MiiiCETIAI.l CONTE.STS•

•

INTERVIEWS
ON..c.t.MPUS INTEIVIIWI

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DfADUNE
For everyone's convMienco and plenure,
- Ub to.pubUcia all taklne ~
on " " " - ' To J'8COrd lnfonnltion, contKt
Nancy Cuda..UI, ext. 2228.

�-

FRIDAY-16
.

F-·

~J=s:=l~~ in
U&gt;-FO« lllleracliol&amp;, "br. Adam Kendoit,

Project oo Human Comm.unication.
B"ronx State Hoopital, "Media Study
Workshop, 3328 Bailey Ave ~ 9 a.m.-noon.
• This is the -..nd pert ol a two-day

~ ~~ ~.!"'-~=n:
~ts:!..:~==r.;.:,: !:rJ!;

Deportment ol Lincuistics. Toclay's ..._
sion will include a J&lt;Nndtable discuoaion,
filmo and olides.

~;in«

ain.·3 p..m.

Theatre, 8« Norltin. U

.......mr.-··

CurrenL S41fd.in~ and Approachet in
Cli.ni.col TritJU -on Acute Leukemia. Oliver Glidewell, Acute Leukemia Group B,
4230 Ridce Lea, Rm. A-49, II : 30 a.m. ·
12:30 p.m. and 2-3 p.m.
Preoented by the Statistical Science
Division, Deportment of Computer Sci·
erice.
FilMS AHD ~ ISSUlS : TME CHAllENGE Of
VJoU~

.

Crunc'h: Crunch, aDd Death of a pea,.
unl , and The Hwu. Conference Theatre,
Norton, 12:30-2 p.m.
·
A d i9cussiori/reuction will follow each
.:creening. Preoented by the U/B Cam·
pus MinislrieJL

•

Theorie~~. Dr. Lynn E. Boee, profaaor.
U/B Department of Philooopby, 4244
RiHge Lea, Rm . 14, 3,30 p.m.
.,
This is the aeoond in a series of lee·
lures by invited guest speakers on the
theme o( ~ t.he problem of theory COm·

parability in the sciences:
EH:GiNHIING SCifNCE liMINAl#

BUffAlO WOMI:N'S C£HTH DISCUSStoN ,
GlOW•
-

• A c::liscussion session-on women's health,
utiliz.in~

the concepts expressed in the
book. Our Bodin Our"M-lvea, will be held
at the Buffalo Women's Center. 564
F"'!lldin at North, 1-8 p.m.
This ia the tint in 0 series
discus·
sion sessions on subjects of interest to
women. The session ia open to all women.

or

MEDICINAL CHIMimY SIMINA.I#

Today's speaker Will be A. Schroeder.
U/ B, Health Scienceo Bldg., 2 p.m.

CIY1L EHGINERtNG SIMINAiff:

Metropolitan Compul.eT Motk.Z., Dr.
Britton Harrit. University of Pennay).
vnnia, 104· Parker, 3 p.m. Coft'ee in_ l42
Parker, 2:30 p.m.
PHilOSOPIIT 01' SCIDICIE SOCIOY IKnJII•

The Role of Simpljdly in. lire ChoU%
&amp;tween the Copemican and Pkikmaic

Benard Convection in o Compreaible

~~h~1:it:~~rp2{~~~-~
Pol¥tec1mi&lt; J,nstill.lte, 104 P!rk~r. 4 p.m.

aDd

P,...nled by the Oftlce of ForeiBD·Sw.
de.V Allain, the International Commit.
tee, and the Latin American Student
Aaeociation.
PINQ...PONG TOUINAMIHT

Open only to Cbineae student., Norton
buement recreation area. 7:30 p.m.. 12:30 a.m.
Preoented by the Chinese Sb.ldeDt .AsIJOCiation.
CAC fiLM•

B lockhead• (Blystone), 140 Capen,
"7:45 and 9 :45 p.m. Admiaion: 75 cent..
In this film. Laurel and Ha rdy are
World War I buddies, with Laurel guard.
in&amp; his - t for several yean alter the
Arm.i.ttice becaUie be waa not relieved
from duty. He returns ' home a hero,
.n.ito his friend .Hardy, and ruins Hardy'• home life. Alao starring Billy Gil·
bert.
INJaHA_TIONAI. FOLk .DANCING•

_

l!u"truction in basic stepo, 2 Diefen.
dorf, S.ll p.m.
MONTI CAilO NIOIIT••

Featuring blackjack, roulette w'-lo,
dice pmes and came wheels, Lehman
Hall clinfng room, Amhenot CamP..., 8
p.m.

An ad:mi.aaion charge of 25 oentl will
include one rallle ticket for a record, album. Preoenled by the Inter-Reoidence
Council.

CAMSIUS COUHI !MAW

~AIJON•

Arwnie llltd Old Lot¥, dinoctecl by Dlmiel Gndol, Cuioiuo ColloD Litile TheaiN. 8 : 16 p.m. 'I'brooalh Siolwday, N.,...
17.
For tic:bt information. eootllet the
Litde 'n.eatre ollice, 881-7000, en 28L
. . . . . CIN1II

...a. . ~·

.CIM/I, wn- 'll_!;I/B Bacliela~

c:.~ ~~,a;; ~~.in.':
.-....~Noor.l7.

Tn:o~=~;=

- ~~"'Pa;oo~.~!d
........ F.W... ..wtiloa .....,_, - ._

El CilramGrron-The B1.froph&gt;' of 1M

~~YJu"':~wri=hi fu:

Werner Hense, ~sCulp.ture Court. AJ.
bricht..Knoz Art G811ery, 8 p.m. Admission: a2 for ...,.rat public, $1 -for studenio.
Tbe concert will f - . . . .J ulius Eastman. beritone: Eberhard Blum, llutist;
Stuart Foz, Buitarill, and Dennia Kahle,·
percuuioniaL Stqe dizection ia by Bev~~~~~on of the U/B ~t
p,_,led by the.e..ter for the Creative aDd Performing Arts.
UUAI

filM••

I ""'1ft (Allman, 1972) ; Conference
'Ibeatre, Norton. cheCk ahowcaae for
Admiuion cbarp.
'
Starring Susannah York and Rene
~

Auberjonoia.

CAM~UI

tMIATII PIUINTATJON•
~ Sewn M editotiom on Politicol Sado-

Admiooion cbarp.
.

1:c

IYINJNGI fOI NIW MUSIC•

.t!,"1{~~c:be!r~C:To:"'~

UUAIN.M•• .

187!l;,.C:::'!liefor - .

Never Give a Sucker an Eucm. Brealt

(Cline) , 140 Capen; 7 :45 and 9 :45 p.m:
Admiooion: 75 cenla.
This W. &lt;!:. Fields clasaic feaiure.
Fields playina himoelf, the actor. as be
triee to go ix&gt; E.oterie Film Stuclioo for
•. atory conference. On the way be ceta
beaten up and thrown out ol an airplane;
"f;l. ~=~ bas difficulty reach·

lege Little Theatre, 8: 16 p.m. Admiaoion
cb8rp.
kiNAN CINtH TMIATII PIISIHTArtO•i~
Chaff, 'f!lylor TheetN, Kenan Canter,
Loclr;porl, 8:30 p.m.
For detailo, - 'l'hunday liotiGJ .00...

- KiM~e-dman and the Tem. Jew, ~~ c:!r::.=- Norton, 8_:30 p.m.
UUAI . . . . .

a.m.-p_ p~
CACfaM•

CANISIUS COLLIOI IHIA;.. PIISINTAn0N•
Arunie and Old LaCfl, Caniaiuo Col--

UUAI CONCIIJ•

A4ri/l (Ktodar,
. atN, N...-, cboclt
AdmioUoo&gt; &lt;!wp.

-----

The Livinl Theoln, 344 Norton, ll

INTEINA'f10NAL COffEE NOUI•

ltD::.~~ri= music

IKJ SEMINAl

Discuuion topics Will include physical
lib&gt;eu; equipmilnt, clotbinc and oafety;
• and tiki louring teclmiqueo, Conference
Theatre. Norton, 9 : ~ a.m.-8 p.m.
Attendance is by re,iotration only.

COUIOI JHIATU PIHIHTAYtoN•

A.-...nie and Old Lace, Canioius' Col·
lap Litile"Tbeatre, 8:15 p.n Admiuion
cbarp. Throlllh Saturday, Nov. 17.
•
lElMAN CBI1'U: 'IMIATII ,...,.AnoN•

CiwJff, Taylor Theatre, K...., &lt;Mlter,
Lockport, 8:30p.m. Throucb Nov. 17.
For detaila, - Tbun.t.y ·liolinc lll&gt;oYe.

IIAac--·----·
---

a&lt;~CS':Il;~~.:_-~

. 111.-..
s - - ~coli
by the Bladl StadeDt
Ullic!ft.

F..rlarther

uuuca,..aa.Faalolriaa Billy Fain, ~~mojo, _ let

lloor

~t!~i't...%::~~ ~~~
::.,~A:f.'i'!ion:

.-rat

publie, a2; ~tu-

- P-led by the University Union
tivltieo Boud.
'

As,.

ltACIC -OMINO, COMI TOOinl&amp;"

,

IIACII _ .

•

Ooacert t..tarinc 'XM Moin IJVtwdi·
elll and lndo,.,..Unce, 08rlt Hall, 9

p.m. Titblo"an 18.50.
8_...t by the Black Stndobt Unioa.

For fnrtb.r

ild--_ ..U 881-5846.

; UU.U CO. . .IDIII•

~

• (CFoatarinc
Billy_
bulo. let lloor
___
_Fai6,
7,eoLJ)

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>&amp;temal Group P~oposes Transformed Collegiate Systein

Staff Senate
Backs Plan
for Arming

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 5 - NO. 10

'lbe Proteaooal &amp;d Beaate(P8S)

by a roll .call vo4le ol 17-2 (with .ODe

Ketter Airs

a!Jatemion), endonoed last 1buraday a

res-t ~ the Hull• Committee's BUkleliDee .,for selecthe arming

Plan for

of Campus 8ecarity . . . . .
'lbe noport, from a P8S 1XIIDIDittee
~ of
·Adams, Student
Aftalm, Edward Salndoul&lt;: Sludent
Accounta, and Clift Wilsall; Housing,

n--

. ~"8':.: t

1

fteordering'

·~to~

PSS and other U11Nersity llOIIStituent
groupe for their reaCtions to the Hull
~ prior to final administrative
decisiooL
\
~
Tbe report DOted. that the decision
to endolae the Hull ~was "uit~t" and emphasbed that acceptJill· .elective IUIIIlDa •Is Mt or •h9uld
~be • . . _ .......... lull-mc.of
~-~iip'iis ~ty."Oiie ~ad ofalemenf and two· suggestions accompanied the endorsement.
"It abould be remembered," the report illdbted, "that oelective arming
·.. ~ only 'I&lt;! provide an adequate response to _the threat ~ by
armed individuals who a tt.a c k or
threaten to attack per!lOilS on campus
and is intended only for that purpose.'
Although incidents of this nature may .
be few in number, we clearly need to(
bave the ability to deal with · tbese ·
ailuatioas when -they occur. Our
choices _,.. to be limited to: 1. ;g.
nore the situation; 2. c:sll the Bulralo
Police; 3. utili!e selectively armed
Campus Poliee; 4. utili!e dogs.
''Of tbese alternatives, selective
arming of the Campus Police seems
to be the most aound lof the campus
community. The tone of Hull's committee pro~ i6 criticol to our accepltulce of eelectiue arminf. 'lbe p.ropoo81 both lnlining in using a
WMpon and lnlining ~ to insure that the weapon is only used· in
critical sitwrtions. The latter of these
two types of training (described in
Part L Number llA) is tremendously
critical and cannot be overstressed.
"Another important aspect of our
aooeptanoe," the PSS mport empbasizeil, "Is our belief that the Campus
SecuritY Department bas greaUy upgraded itsell in .the past couple of
years. We believe that they bave
earned the respect of the campus community .as a whole and are· competent enough to deserve the trust inherent · in granting oelective armipg:"
-C.IIeciFor

'lbe 6rst suggestion offered for
aUIJD8Dting the guidelines was "that a
rnandiltory review of the ·selective arming situation take place between one
year and 18 mcmtba after oelective
arming becolnM a reality. 'lbe review
abould be thorough and abould be con·
dueled by a committee made up of
faculty, atd; and atudents. 'lbe ..,..,_
mittee abauld be charged with reviewing the selective arming situation and
making reoommendatioas to the Preaidj!nt relative to its continuance, alteration, or terminati011.
"Whiie canlllant review ol Campus
Security and ito policies Is part ol the
cbarp of the Security Committee of
(ContinUed o n - 6, coLI)

A proposed. "re-ordering of re~
ing relationships" at the University
was revealed by President Robert L.
Ketter to the membelship of the F..;:"
ulty Senate on Tilesday.
Dr. Ketter proP&lt;JI[ed f o u r ""'jor
ch&amp;nges Jrom the present structure.
They are: that the Libraries report
ilirecUy to the Preaideilt~ that -the
three University-wide · deans report
directly to the President, ~.. stall,''
advising him on University-wide matters, includmg the -academic reviews
to be conducted at five-year intervals;
that a unit of academic support functions or services be created to include
and consolidate such activities as Admissions and "Records, the lnstnictional Communication Center; the Nuclear
Research Facility, and the Comfuting
Center; and that a small office o long-

Ruckelshaus on WatelgCite:
No Heat, Vel)' Little Ught
'By SHARON EDELMAN
R•p«tw Steil

Choosing to "contribute to

ihe light

rather than to the heat of the Watergate situstion," former Deputy Attorney General Wiltwn Ruckelsbaus abstained from expressing his personal
convictions during a tlilk here Monday
afternoon. As a result, he generated
no heat and very little light. Wbat we
got was a lot of jokes about unemployment, a pitch for the "essential decency" of the American people, and a
p,Iayful ~der ~t · as J:&gt;e badn'.~
spoken WJth the President smce . .. ,
he bad no more knowleqge of recent
developments than any of us.
For ~ite his strong resemblance
to Steve Allen, Ruckelsbaus 'very definitely remains a Republican. His presence and his recent history served
only to remind bow thoroughly Nixon
bas managed to alienate the majority
of uright-think.i.ng'" Americaris who
only a year ago comprised his "mandate."

I'Wiple--

From his ~. it was bard to 'leU
just where Ruckelsbaus stood. He remarked oeveral times -that the catchphiaae of the radical movement, "Power to the People,'' bad t.en realized
in tbe past two weeb; duriJig. which
"Concr- and the White Howe were
bombuded witli ~0118 ol diaoontent" following ·his and Cox's diamisoals and the resignation ol Attomey
General IUehanlam. "We ahould bave

confidence now tbat the system does
respond," Ruckelsbaus stres.ed, "and
tbat tJ\e outpouring of public sentiment has proved the primacy of law
in this country."
He continued with an expression of
support for Richardson's views and
Cox's mandate, maintaining tbat ''the
break-in, the cover-up , the indictments of former Cabinet members Mitchell and Stans, of former aides Haldeman, Erlichman, and Krogh, the
oonviction of ronner Vice President
Agnew . . . are facts which cannot be
escaped ... which must be taken into
account by the media and by the
people."
About his distnissal, Ruckelsbaus
claimed, ''in public lif@ the option to
resign is a very real and important
one which should always be kept in
the forefronl ln public life one IS always asked to do things ooe doesn't
a,gree wit!l. It is not always important
to win except on fundamental matters
of principle, such as I perceived the
('.ox issue to be."
.
Ruckelsbaus traoed the "ste&amp;ciy erosion of trust in our institutions," from
the late 1960's to the Watergate crisis,
noting tha:t the .Present situation was
preoeCled by a long war, and too many
rspid !'banges. in our society. ''We
must recognize that tbere are limitations in our ability to aoiYe human
problems," be said, adding that "'eaders abould recognize not Clllly our
promise but our limitations u well.
(Contilwed o n - 6. col. 3)

:"~P~~fb;:!g~~=~

insure that "accounting individuals do
not run the University."
Arst Specifics

The · President bad previously discussed the reorganizatiooal ropOsai
with ·the Academic · Alfaits ~.
the Professional Stalf Senate (see
story in the Reporter, September Zl) ,
the Faculty Senate Eloecutive Committee, department chairmen and others, but this was the first time that
. the faculty body as a wbole was made
aware of specifics.
The proposal was prompted. Dr.
Ketter said, by four factors, including
the inability of the Middle States
accrediting team to determine clearly
"who was responsible for wbat" at the
University. Additionall,r, "upward of
a hundred comptaints h a v e come
into the President's Office from deans
and cbairrnen as~ for clarification
I e s an responsibilities,

rf.e:t::r..J3.

The President also indicated that,
under the present system, be bas
found it increasingly diffic:ult to obtain
"bard data on what's going oo" from
administrative officem such u the proV06ts. ln thinking reorganisation, be
also wondered wbat could be done to
strengthen the role of the department
chairmen--the administrative level at
which most contact with students
lakes place, Ketter said.
ffis proposal is not a sweeping, fun.
damental re-etructuring like that the
University experiencecf in 1967 Ketter assured, but an attempt to d.anp
re~rt:ins relationships in a 'lll'&amp;y ibilt
will draw the University closer together.
~"'*-

The President ruru-..eaJied on..the
Senate to ...,.;der wbetber the Uni(Continwtd o n - 7,g&gt;LI)

, '

�~J?l\.;

",..._" m;,

Ntifh Sdences College found

80th 'Yal~ and Unique'
(EDITOR'S NOTE: More

011

tile !n-

Urmal eDCiluatiDna ot t11e c~
motk 6y Focally Senate ,_,., in 1M
Sf"'in4. Tl-.e report 011 Law and Soewy CoUeae--,. which, alphabeli.cally,
.nouJd follow hen ...:. will be IGMn up
in a laUr iaue l&gt;ecauae certain suppkmentDTy material&amp; had not been
obtained at Reporter deadliM.)
By
PATRJCJA W.AJID BIEDERMAN
•

The

..,_.,_. SUif

Co1Jece of

M - 1 Sclencoo

of~~=~thecan~~
to plsy a-. disoover bow to opti-

c:banoes or winning at
blackjack, mUe music on a computer
and analyze lbeir own hormone dyD8JIIics. 'This
the faeulty
evaluators tell 1111, is devoted to malbematics as a "human entmpriae,,. or.
• the Colleae itself explains, "traditional education in mathematics has
tended to empbasize . . . . uiomatie
development, (but) the College wjabes
to emphasize aoolber aspect - the
study . of concrete or pfactical t.opic:s
and the devel~t of tbeae topics
mathematically.
Althoush the curriculum is .....,.
times flaaby (&lt;Milton l'amea'• 00U1M
in fiiiiDbling caught the eye or the national television networb last year) ,
the Coli• is not an easy way out
for students wboae malb stilla are not
up to departmental anuff, the evaluators judged. '"The teaching propam,"
they reported, ~·renects integrity and
high standards.
"We were unable to evaluate each
course oJfered by the. ColleJ.e. (but) ·
we are certain of the integrity of the
instnlctors-and lbe. maste&lt; .( Richard
Orr) and their desire fo .offer &lt;XIW!Ie6.
wbich are as demanding . • - .those
mize lbeir

U/B -

the

atu. . . _ IJc:hoai G{

...:='=

....-t,_llft.,.Dr~F~~r.:::m
-......... ---~Dr-SolonA.,EJIIIM­
Dr.-...........
.

uUIB, Gifu Sign Pact for Dental Ed

""'It .. - ...... cle8lre tbat tbroulh
-..-!ian
...,..._ the U.s.A. a

,.. -

..., -

falls on November the third, a national holiday called Culture Day, Forthe day was called 'Emperor
MeJit Day,' in memory of the great
emperor who laid the foundation of

=--=

-~

• 18...-...I aDd frioadly
111a11 an~ llllfal-.

:: :=..rr=
-u.re

~··1~:/:r·al~~~~

me '

.... lmprovoe the
tJi •·
ldDd."
The lbouPIII thla tJi Yooblo
Umemalo, :OD.S~ PhD - - - '
at II» ..,.._ llicDiDI d • clocumm&gt;t

c:natlu . . . . . .

warm hearted welcome ~veo to
by new colleagues and friends." .
U/B Dental Dean Wjlliam Feagans

~-.,...

-

ibe Glfu. .181*', 8dlool tJi Dendstzy wblcb be beada 111111 the U/B
Dental 8c:booL The - , y ...
held Clll Gooclyear-10 last Friday.
The relajkabip will becln. the
~- cleDtal educalor aaid, "WWIb
"""""""' tJi stalra lllld atudenlll tJi bolb
ecbools .. thet fmltlul results
maY be attained bt the education end
.-..:11 tJi dOiltiauy."
The visitor ..-! tbat "according
to the ~ calendar, Ibis day

noted lbat the sister relationship will
further involve eJ:cbange or ~deas re-.
garding curriculum and treatment concepts.
.
The visiting party from Japan also
included Dts. Kenji Sbiota, professor
'of pathology, and Tamizo Kasai, pror.....,f of mediCo-dental Engljsb, as
reJ&gt;resentatives of the Gifu ·raCU!ty. Dr. Paul A. Mashimo, associate professor of_onU biology •bete. is a former
s~t'of'l&gt;resideiit Uinemoto·wbo is
al110 profesilor emiritos of Osaka Den1.91 University, Japan.

Coli..

C

!:.:nolbe;;,~=e~~

lbe College -attracts students looking
for easy credits." "'PI'rted Paul ~-.
lich (chemical engineering), . Jobn
Medjge,, (~gipeezjng. "scienQ!&gt;l. · ..8Jld.
Dean G . Pruitt ( psychology).
· The College is interdisciplinary,
dtswing Caculty from lbe Departments
of Mathematics, Ststistic:s and Comp uter- Sciences. The Matb . Depart•3 J ·.,oni.ct worDei; ' holding · profesment is particularly active ( as evisionaL positions in independent redenced by 1he ultimate test, the ract
search institufions, government, etc.;
lbat it &lt;:ontributes to the College's op4 ) contact women who are cuirent-erating budget). "However," the'team
ly candidates for advanced degrees;
noted, " . .. all
of
College
5) contact women referred by women
see lbemselves flB constitutini a unit ·
currently on the faculty; and
wbich
is
more
tban
an
eJ:tension
or
6 ) consider unsolicited applications
the Department or Mathematics. . . ."
and inquiries.
The
team
urged
lbat
Ibis
autonomy
be
f4s. Komer emphasized lbat she
preserved and lbat the College. not be
and members of 'the Committee are
allowed -to deyolve into "an appendage
available fo a,nswer any questions reof any eJ:isting department."
~ted to• the recruitment and promOh! the team's view, the College , of.
tion of women aild to S.RSist in the
fers courses of academic merit "which
recruitment propee.q.
' could w.&gt;t have been offered by . an
academic department or would have
been unlikely to receive departmental _K~zol
approval until an established suCQeBS"
(e.g., the ·gambling course). The tesin
Noted educator and 'author Jonaalso voiced approval .of lbe College's
. tban . Kowl is visiting the campus,
tuto~
program for 11Jldergraduates
today and tomorrow, November 8-9
and bigh school students and praised
·. to. disCuss political indoctrination ;_,;
a seminar series sponsored by the Col• • _the Pl!i&gt;1jc schools and the free school
lege.
- j
•
.
movement.

Handbook: on ·. Women's Recruitment
Viewed as Affirmative Action Aid
A ·new bandbook designed to Caciii. tate 'campus recruitment of women is
!!einf distributed Ibis week by the
l'rfllident's Committee on the Recruit-ment and Promotion of Women. .
The M - - document is being sent
to President Ketter, all vice presidents, provosts, deans, directors, det:::r'·t , chairmen and divisional

: Prepo.re,d by Committee Director
Hilda Komer, the .b andbook contains
btC~tian on publications listing po:
sitions available and wanted in bigber
education, d a t a on "talent banks"
wbich aerve w o m e n, addresses of
women"s caucuses and women•a Comm i - wilbln the varinus professional
alisociatl01111, and a supplementary section oontainbtg statistical information
on women in higher education (includilqJ, for e:aunple, a breakdown bysex tJi the doctorates awarded in various academic disciplines i!1 :19.7.2L . .
The book bas a looaelelil' format,
and, Ma. Korner indicated, the Committee will attempt to keep informs- · · ·
tion in the. bandbook up-to-date.
'
The publication is intended to add
a further dimension to each . depart.ment's eftorts in affirmative action,Ms. Komer said.
·
At present, many of the organiza..
tiona listed in the bandbook are not
-~ to perform recruitment functions; the Introduction notes. ''Tiley
are, however, specifically involVed
WI~ . the ~ of women witbin
lbeir field, and, the mtroduction ad- .
"'-·"departmental contact wilb
tbeae pups can help pro1110te witbin
each &lt;li!lciPline the mechanisms necessary to provide candidate referrals." .
U s e r a tJi the handbook are also
Ulpd to •include • man,r of the
followjnl atepe • possible • part
of lbeir regular departmental recruit-ment procedlln!8:
1) • eo n t a e t profeMional women

womn, Clll

panlll;

.

2) .-tact women wilb doctorates
known not to be uU!lzlna lbeir tzain.
iqat~

members lbe

on Campus .

• U/ B is Kowl's first stop on a nation-wide sP!'81&lt;ing tour in wbich be
'will appeal !0 oollege stuJients to rast
or pray on Thanksgiving Day to "d&lt;&gt;'
clare· Thanksgiving, 1973, ·a' day of
red~cation ti&gt; the struggle against
raClSm, hunger lind - starvation or the
poor of every race."
Kozol, author ol Deoth at an Earlv
!'ge and Free Schools, bas long beei.
mvolved m the free school movement
as a,n alternative to the traditional
public school system, especially for
poor ~lack, wbi_te, and Sll8.llish-speakm_g children. His Thankspvingl appeal
will also stress the urgency of the
financial crisis fa:i¥'1. the rree school
;:'~t and call or funda to supKozol's agenda includes: Tbi1J'Bday
November 8, Lecture, Fillmore ~
N"!''.on. 8 p.m.; Student reception,
'Jbir9 Floor, Nortoa. 10 p.m.; Frid4Y.
November 9, News oonfenmce. '380
Notton, 11 a.m.; Reception for' U/B
~ Bulralo Board ol Education,
5-? p.m,' Build· ~· 288 Norian,

VoliW&gt;Ie • ond Unique Role

·

' ·The ·College plsys a valuable and
unique role for . 1he University, the
team summarized, by encouraging
"malbematiai outside the traditional
~!'l an!l the welding of 110me
Uruvenuty-community bonds (through
tbe tutoril)g program, for eXample) ."
The team also gave major credit to lbe
College for the development of an interdisciplinary major in mathematics
statistic:s, and computer science.
'
The-ambience or the program is congenial rather tban collegial: for the
most part, -the Colleg., does not serve
faculty or students lis a "center or
identification." The program is headed by a mMter (referred to in the
curreilt catalogue • "director") but
not dominated by bim; in the team's
judgment, "lbe lack of dominance by
a single individual constitulea perhaps '
the greatest single au-en,tb of the
College."
At S&gt;nHnt, the team reported, the
Colleae is a "biliHiuallty, but low~ operatioii which will draw bt
primarily able lllld -"-motivated

atudentlland wblcb dla DOt- ~
out eolicltinl any Gila ldnd... The
College doel ln1ald to 10 to Ambenot
a residential ~• ..,.,.,_., aDd
COIIIIIICIIl lnlianllts ol the perticipanlll may blcaoin lilto 'tra·
ditionill collegiality, the team implied.
Wben visitecf in the SpriDa, the College W88 apparendy dlaciainc the
question ol whether to become residential. The team advili!d lba\ course,
bolb to strenslben the eon- • a
center or identification lllld because
" the facilitlea thet go wilb raldential
statua sbould aiBO mUe it .aier to
attract broader partieipetim by malbemstie!Hlriented faculty flam olber
fields and would facilitate studentteacher oontacts." '
fl8

tbere the

The 'futuN'
In dilicwosing "the futwe"
lbii
College, the team cut lbroucb the .

or

!'QUiBbY J:!letoric that oftlm accompan-

Ies eJ:el'CI8ell In fofeC!IIItinl lllld got
down to the survival-tevel qw.tion of
bow the Collegea can hope to atuact
able faculty unleas they can olfer
them some reward. At - t most ol
the Colleae's faculty are members of
the Math ~t and the pro~ also eagagea "lbe inlllreat tJi senlor Caculty" in Malb and Statistics,
fl8 well 118 two .-..:11 acbolars 11om
the Medical Sebool. But bow, the .
team wonders, is ' the cle8lred and desirable ]18rtic!P8ti'!"' of faeulty ~ pay-

cbology, eDjpD8erUlg; economic8 lllld

other fields wbich uae mathematics to
be acbieyed, when "d~tal credit is not given for teaching In the Colleges?" 'This is a problem 8llell for
lbose faculty now enpaed In the program. The Malbematica Depariment
gives colllll&amp;-load credit to its farulty

'WhO teiicll

Co~ OOill'8e8

lbat have bigb enrollments (such ·
courses are also joint listed by . the
~~lr ' ?aCilltY,~&lt;!o 11&lt;\t rec;eive
siidl course relief for ;unp~ed ix11uses, and wbile, as the team noted; ~u
is easy to defend the Department's
l!O'Iiti.ot;~, the ~tis probebly _subt,le
preasure on :tlie College to be popular, rather tban ezperimental. Theproblem is a University-wide one; we
would not like To see ·a situation develop wbere only the Colleges wbich
can amaas credit-hours for a given
department will be the ones to survive."
Furthermore, lbe team continued
on the crucial issue or rewards for
College Caculty, "there is a general
feeling, supported by a good deal or ·
evidence, lbat involvement wilb the
Colleges often I _ , . an individual's
cliances for promotion and tenure.
Elimination or lbat feeling, wbich now
impedes the ....,..U. of the Colleges,
demands University-wide recognition
for College-relsted activitlea."
Active lll1pp01:t or · the College by
the University was•urged by the team.
"Tbe. Coli• or Malbematical ·Sciences does not seem to bave 'any mil·
jor problem not-aiBO -Caced by all the
other Colleces," the evaluators commented' in closing their consistently
favorable report.

Ski Seminar Slated

A C1'088-Country Ski Seminar, cosponsored by' the Olllce for CreditFree Programs and Nor-Ski, will be
beld in the Norton Cooference Theatre, November 17, from 9 :45 a.m.3 p.m.
Intended to introduce P4HiciR~~J~ts
to. CI'OB!H:Ountry skiing, the seminar
will cost $5 per person and is open
to the public.
On the program will be . Norbert
13ascbnagel, U/ B lec;turer in physical
education; Jim Koloeotronis, manager, Nor-Ski Ski To u r i n g Center;
'Thomas Kendall, Nordic program director, E as tern Ski As80ciation·
George Ginther, Nordic ski
patroller, and Viols Diebold director
or physical education for
at
U/ 8.. Discuasion topic:s will include pby&amp;•cal fitne38; equipment, clolbing and
safety; an&lt;! ski touring tecbnlques.
~tion deadline is November

tourini
,;.,men

12

For further infOrmation, contact
Mrs. Elbel Scbmidt, Univenlty conference ooordinator, at 831-aBIM.

�Georgia~s Maddox Blah . . Biahs- th~ Yah-Yahs
-

·~

•

-

...

"Yah, yah. yah. yah, YAH, yah,
screaiDed , an agitated WOIDIID,
. leaping to ber.feet like aomeone seized.
• 'lrith t0n,ues at a ·reviyal meeting. She
hurling pointed insults -..1
the podium 1M her flirious~R:=: IUid
Pllll8 reocleied them unin
• Je.
"Bllh. blah, BLAH, blahblah,. blah,
- blah,'" tbe mou&amp;eJ: little man in rnan1g11 blazer imd grey ''with-it" 1lares
lfirieked in ~ He was at -the
miczcpbiae and clear~ audible. Tliat
Is -"&gt;- wbat be 11111d
..- ·
He wils Looter Maddox aDd ~ ~wbieh came early on m· his
·
'lrith U/8 atudentB illCiazk
Hall last~. was typical of tbe
8lllll8thiq leE_ then ~ debate
that this IIIIIClb beralded.COIIbontalian
'lrith eoJ181irvatism 'eYObd.
·

yahlr"

=

-NoBut
_.,_,
then Lester· Maddox· ain't DO
WWiam BUckley)

~~

Help for Consumers

lleing Brqadcast ·
omce

-

-He.'s just- ~

._......._fried

cbicbft

mar-

chant wbme terms as gowmor and
lieutenant governor of Georgia are
preilicated prin:larily ·uJlClll notorio&gt;tv
gleaned from cliasinll blaclrs fto~-jili,
p.....U.. 'lritb a _pf c k handle ("'t
....,•t no u handle; they ain't heavy
enough.") rather than comply with
the lJU)jlic acimlimodations dictates of.
the Civil RiEhm Law.·
:A self-ilt'y1ed "honest man" who
"spmb his piece," who'll ca II "a
_.je a ~". (aDd frequently does,
-the- pllD8Iar would add ), he'll even
tell· you you f!l!lell bad· if you pa.
a question be dOesn't like.:_or can't
undeisbmd, as a hirsute pbiloeopby
major. learned. That yOUil(l man replied appropriately with a fast finger
to wbich.MaddOJ:, stamp"
his foot·
like a petulant four-year~, pouted,
· "Same to you!'
•
In fairness to Maddox, be ID081laited. Just as be's not Buckley, his
audience was more "It Pays to Be
Ignorant" than "lnfo!llllltioo Please."
Bright yellow "~ sigDs, supplied
" by the Plogressive Labor .Party, dotted the gathering, aDd two'PLP members beld up_a "Fight Racism" banner which faced tbe crowd for lis long
u Maddox did. Intermittent epithets
from the. audience punctuated his remarb. And ~ ~ Pe-l by
students were, fOr, the most; part,_ as
inane as eome Of his~ "Tbey
deserve each other," a 1filrcusted spectator obaerved a f t e r be!irinlr such
The UtB
for Urban Ei:t.ezv
braiDhaster8 posed as: "WhY did the
sian ill ...... JI!'OCiuclnl • CODIIUIDer
iDfCIIIIIIlliOn niiJio ~ p 0 t in SpaD.iah
wbieh Ia ~ oy WXRL in lAmHou. 81 a .........m. stone to the
~.
.
lieulenant ~ of' Geonda?"
Aired durin&amp; the fiiat bour of the
"If you bad t - i IIOY'II!KW -of New
station'• Sund8,y a.m. Lv. Voz H~
York would you hew slain the Attica
(9-11:30 a.m.). the spot IUII8 from
b!Othe:rs?" aDd "Ale you aoiDI to
ODe to ten minulaa aDd -dealt with
nm for Preoident?"
ouch topics ... obtaiDJDa credit, alp,
Mad dOl&lt; appeared to ea]Or it,
inc!""'~ improvemmt aDd '
thougb-he 8Wlll aeemed to strain to
be "CODtriM!nlial." ("Anybody's not
il selected hom Cancontrowrslal, 's not uium ol. anythiilg
sumer FOIWII, Better Business Bureau
else," be volunteered) A:t the oula!t,
aDd Comell Uni...,..;ty Pft!llll releaaM
be pledaed plenty of fl.-Irs if the
IUid the FDA.
audieD&lt;e would ...rram ' from "acting
Accardlna' to Lucy 8aDebez, an •ugly" aDd bear out his p_.ad. re;
lalsioil ~tatlve .., tbe stall' of
marb.
•
the
of Urban ElltenaicJe who
Most of them did, to tbe pOint of '
~ the braadlut, "the Ballalo
sometimee~app)audhur'
his I t- ' - a aSpen .............. .,......_
dowus of
- ~- beckleni: ~
i1iY of ....t 21,(100: aa..aa.. ..... yaWIIed.
walked out.
eatiaD Ia .. -but IIIIIClb .-led ....
M a d do" bad apec:ted courliesy
in ~ -..lty.•
preftlL Alter
be said, DOt

=

~.,. rc::;

~
omce

.....s

.n.

'3:. itv=

-

~

&gt;P"

•

+..

-

"';,

more than one pez- cent.. .of students
be enoounterli as be "foes all over
the countzy'' are ever cfisoDurteoua
HI~ In Hl&amp;h " ' -

His iarfet for the. night was "high-

· pocracy m. high places," a theiDe
guaranteed to gel a bearing from the

"now generation" who, be l!&amp;id, "is
inore, honest and open than my generation." 1 believe "there are more
addicts, alcoholics aDd cheaters over
26 than under," be posited. "They're
just better able to cover up. .It's ,easy
to be a ~te, but it's twgh to
be honest.'
Self-seeking, arrogant, dishonest
men in office, Maddox said, threalen
·today. to destroy .the ~~&amp;tion-wbicb be
- c:balacterized aa :'the, be's t in _the
world," otlerin( "everybOdy, eveb Lester Maddox, 1be chance to......-!."
Except- possiblv, be sugK!l8ted, those
' who make a. ~ Ol ~ ~
advantaged"-"Wby, my IBmily was
disadvantagad for 26 years and didn't
even know it. We just thought we
were. 'l""t•"
.,.
.:
•
Tb{;li'rotilem todAy, MaddOJ: con'.
tended, is not a generation gap but
a . truth IUid honesty gap. "A poll toriigbt," be predicted1 would find Nixon
with tbe support or less than. 20 per
cent of the American people. "He
ought "' resign," Maddox advised,
because of the ''"""""' aDd disgrace",
be h!ls brought to- the colintry. "You "
shoW me. bow !D8DY people believe
that the true tapes y.ill be turned over
to tbe courts," be said, "aDd rn abow
you. bow many fools there are."
The National Democratic leadership wasn't spared eitber-radicsls,
Maddox dubbed them, "socialistic."
'B o t h DemocratB and Republicans
have to disassociate themselves from
the' national party be ·urged.
'
Maddox assBil;;J -the war in Vietniun -as another example of "lies and dishonesty." We were peddled the
story that "our bOys were ilent to
Southeast Asia to fight Communism.
.

·

~·
.·
.;' . ;:
- : .
We're not fightinc Coninnnrif!l!l We're
soft on Communism; 80ft on Amaricanism!"
.
. .
PWaplo M~ •

: :

· The Georgi an aJao laslied .out
Sharing . (a Cue, :;be
said, of a broke Federal ~t
helping !R!fPlus-ridden llata governmenls--&lt;t ploy to short-cbolnge nual
areas and aend more people to the
cities thus creatine more slums), the .
JaJI!jly ·assistance program ("$$ying
thiS isn't a guaranteed income is 1i1r:e
saying a dotl's not .a n animal . ••. It _
would CIOubTe the welfare ·rolls 8nd
destroy initiative."), aDd foieipt ·aid '
l"We should keep that mcmey at
home. to build .highways,. water - t IDiiqt. plants ·and .........., facilities.
Tben we'd bave less pollution, more
jobs and less welfare.").
All of these proposale, Madd&lt;m said,
an! presented: by the _.P.,Iiticiana m
ways that "miaaoood people. I f body .told the truth in Washington
·tomorrow, you couldn't prove it aDd I
wouldn't believe it.-"
..
. Civil ·rigbts, Maddoa-cbalactclmed
. as "a way for the government to nm
our lives. If they can tell you wbo·to
hire, they can tell._you where you can
work."
1
·
On race, Maddox j!enerouoly ~
that " the color of a peraan's skin
don't make them superior or inferior,'' that be &amp;esn't care if tbe mayor
of Atlanta is white or blaek u long
as· ''be is bones.t IUid open."
''8ullshit," was the BCn!lllD8d response. "Racist!"
·
"It lakes a racist to call somebody
else that," Maddox huffed, deftning
a "segregationist" 81 . . . . , _ "lirbo
cares about his awn rae&amp; aDd other ·
races and wantS to keep · them ~"
aDd a racist as "one wbo ·oo., t care
iibout any race." Some of you _ . ,
be. told the audien&lt;e, "are o6aeoiied
with race."
·
· "Yah, yah, yah, yah, Y Aa, yah.
yab!"
:_..
against.

revenue

-

..
F-.lly

.

Four qpenings, rank dependeiit_upon qualifications aDd backgroaDd,
Speich Communiaztion.
lnstructor-As8ociate Profesaor, School of Ihntislry.
Assistant Professor (part-time), Phyoiology, Sclwol of DenliWy.
Assistant or ~tarProfessor, Hisiory_.
A!!Bistant Profesaor (2 openings), S,-ch Co~
.. NTP
Aasistant to Dinclor, Educational Opportunity Center, PR-2.
For additional information ~ these jobs and for delafla Jll
N'J'P. openings throughout tbe State Uni...,..;ty system, consult1lulletin
lxmds ·~ ~: locationil :
:
1. Bell Facilit&gt;j. be~ D152 aDd _D~5S; 2. Ri~
BuildiDa
4236, OBit to cafeteria;, 3. Ridge Lea, Buildinc 4230, m corridor lllld· to
C-1; . , Health Sciences 'Buildinc, in corridor opposif!! H8 131; 6.
Hell, in tbe corridor: between Room 141 and the Lobby; s: ~
~'round 1loor in corridor next to vendinc lllll&lt;lhiDoe;" 7. ~ Hall, In
main eotnm&lt;e foyer; acroas from Public Jnfornwticm
8. ~­
"Hell,_in corrfdor . between Room!! 112 ad 113; 9. Parbr~,
in corridor to Room 16; 10. ~ Hall, l8t lloor,
o.e
lL 1807 'Eizqwood, Pezaoomel ~t; 12. Nortilll UaiaD,
DiNctot'e 05ce, Room 226; 13; nw.dad Hall, m ,_.jdor ~ to·
Room 106; 1&gt;1. .Jilbn ~ ~ IWI,IaUrtb,_ADGr.
.r.,
.

r..;a,

c.- .

omce;

�~~~l

to "'fact.- aliaut
Ullilell liMII8lb"ii ~ '(far-:
_...,. $UNYIUiiiW, SeaUe Profea..
8ionB1 Alillbciatkwa) to wblda I leal
~ to l'OIIPCIDik TlPo -m ..
- - o f --til....,..lbe'linlled
Oaf: C.l tlie political aM. (b) tlie

fbi!D;~y

:of a- unio11 .:in a

~- HJa. Jetter loud&amp; I!PCJil
!be ''iDdmduallstll: ~ ID&gt;d tbe

f
camjletithe tJu:aot, ~ bMid m..
.::m..ta of !be-American ideoloiY of..
....,.. !be 19th Cebtmy. Tbey remind us-!"
tlie early DOiioDs of enllepreDeunbip
011 the ecxmomlc .apbere ID&gt;d 'tbe!r ilub~ ab!orptkwa Into ctbe corpo~ate_
system. Our profeaskia In 1111111Y ways
reftei:ts a~ adho!re!&gt;ce to. !be

.. I see·

- -•.,.·~::- _..__ of

~

:;:.-:""".,_::.

trate

on,fqu-r academic.
~
tber8 are a W.., number of .......... wbo-are penmtlad to
l8liateLfor Aw. aix, aoiVen ID&gt;d """"
e!Pt -.raee durilllnme 88lllfl!ller. AItbOach llllft.... airanted
boor ' * I the Dlviaion 01 Uudorpaduate ~Jullily Permitlfaa a-m&gt;dent to i-eidita- for up to t.enty-three •
credita wiibout ..., COIIMIItalicll&gt; with ·
a ra.uJty .-.ber or adYiaor aDd 'ati.ll
maintain die iotesrity_-of that ll)'lllem?
campn II •
•
1bis pUiilea;l is ilnmeDaeli oomplicated by the Ulln!Uiatic-9f
tuition c:buaea ID&gt;d a llberal cowae

_;;_.A_ for _, _ _ io - - - :
·---·
~~ --~

~~ ~~";a.?."~.=

=

::loom:~~~-=:..::

ior'ia the gu&amp;rdiu at:u.e ~
Aa 'IIJUCb. aa 1 ~ identify

.::".::=

~hir:i:r;·...,

E'oliliDal

~of UUE'.

.

8oliie of

"" ~~~~'!: ==.
_,

~

ih-

~~:
' '11Jeie are In t:m.. of~ lnftatlim-

p~

of~

aey
!be DDly way
" aomewbat the .looa '&lt;\( the
._ . of our aalarieiL 'The UUP furtime counterpart
,
ih:,_~'--"'~ a _,tic
tbennore bu ~!OCBUY l9.iected
• u:studenta.who registered for IDOl!'
paal
•
!be Bureau of the Blldpt"a'imJ)aaition
• credits; paid mOre, some_or~ presKnin!ledP ~~
~of upper ilalary JimlW: 8al8iy lnflez.
sure to increase' tuition misht be diTbe "lmowleclle" t;!IPI..OOO lolether
iblllty does }lOt COIII8 bom-wL The
r miiUsbed •• ·With tile immense speciaiJzatiODa ~
-Govem6r'ii iDBi8laiCit tliat cinly 3\4
C3l ~ts· should establlsb . the. ~ 011 . ~li~ -:.
per cent ~ ll!id reafiatic class aizes and studen-t.&amp;
stzudwes bave: Cl811ted aa IDCII!II&amp;-.
l'h'l;&gt;er cent for ment be panted IS
sboUJd rePf,er oruy"on a first CljliDe,
lnsly co~lex ~t whidl bas~· ·• tlie one 'which io fact. eliminates com,,__,_ b CRF ..,_........._m
"escapab 'm.~.- -'"'.m•~
•. IBUbord
. .•
pletel~ an~ -•·-· IJexibi1i • • _.
~~st!.id o;,.;Ab;";;;;;j ~ inate diJfereri~.-Wi~IDCI'I!8SIDJ , Much to eJ..-~
. ·.
io atenuatiog circumstances.
•
assumption by it of deCisi011-lllllilng - • . (b) Our state '(N'YBUT}-tand na• ~~poliCy. A_me~ted
up·
•
·.
c4)
The
'cbimge
of'reg~tjon:P!'aboutefth
tbe-basjcProf~
l!l&amp;b
:
tioDal·
a81lia~
(NEA,
A!T&gt;
bave
derJm!IU&amp;te student 18 ~ only fOr
riod shouid be cut to two weeks after
of ita facul~f WitbQ!J.t attributiiig any much. to gam by IIUJ&gt;l&gt;Oi'linl us. In
a mamnum of twelft credit bours. If ·- classes begin. Students bave a lensthy
"m a 1 ice,' • the fact, rema~na·~ thaL
fact, if UUP faJJa they have m'!ch
he resiatera lor lliztiien bows be io
advahced registr,ll~..bef&lt;&gt;"'t' &lt;:lasses~,,...: ~t"Y_i-R
'
.,J;x&gt;tiLptiblic--aad . ~ to~"!"'- Tbey are !'h-IY contiiliUting
""""""" aeta one .free courae, ~- ' oogm and 'serioii1t·~ ileliiCtio!i . ' !&gt;riYtlte -n.; ' • ~ fed. tci coordinate
COIISlderable 8ervic:es _and per&amp;Oillle(
bows, two free C0U111e8, etc. 'Ibe com- - should not .require extensi)'ll. changes. - and administer
diYOftle functiobs
in &lt;ilil' cunent wase, and new muter
moil situation which I bave fotmd to
If departments wol.rd lllli'ke available .
of a university and an inevitable aild ~ contract ~
be unreasonable is, when-" ~t
te cOun;e syJialji before ~ . ~~ly ~Clive waY-to-do 110 ia '
(c) 0ur:)I08ture all aiODJ bas-been
'\ resia\!!IS for anL_!"'thanumberbewil?fl
much of ihe "necessity:,cif ._ ;tl'i~ ~lliWlty activities to their. ·-!hilt as Iolli aa ~~r111thety cenUUPters
"free" ..,..._ .....,..u.,.'
t
·
''
·
woUld be eliiDin· rr ow "speciiilf¥" Ree8lirCh 8i1d
are actiw and • .....,.., m
finish only those in which he ia sue- · - "":fe of l'j&gt;llSii'~ti'!_n
,
~chini are no looP. ~ by ' we will be able to Pl'OD:Il&gt;te and proteci
cessfuiiiJ!dthatbecan· ~thdmwfrom
nawe' cannot afford· !O ' saCrifiai the If.• the Individual inatructo'!'-theY are
atlf "condH_io.ns Of !""Pioyment"
others Without academic J?,&lt;!llalty. In :----&gt;wJuabl tiJbe t~ and fa~ • ..del&gt;enderil upon sop~cated techuru9'1"· to them. Tbe WJde spectrum
~ .,._ sfudents do''not' even at;. ' on ·such DOD:a"caderilic,' -aJOOif iieCea-•. ' nologies 11/hose bandliDg '(acquisitioD;
of'campuses.included i11 SUNY neoesteDd some..,..._ in which they bave
..;ry matters as registration. Tlie ayailabilliy, etc.) .is done by the uq;.
sitates a~te representation from
registered. 1bis practice leads to ""!BY frusiration created by the ciirrent sysversity managetnent which ' in- tum.
the 1\.ve .geMral J;ypes l'tlOOg!lized. A_t·
cl.-1 aectiona and stud""ts beins
tam does nothing but sap the inteUec• cannot bu-t ~lr determine
titudes . sud&gt;. a's 'Professor Ma~'· m
turned a!&amp;Y even thOull!&gt; ~pty seats ,
tiiai •atamina of ~ of the Uni. wbat ia tausbt and w""t.IS ~ • fact, ":ill '!ri!m abP,ut the demise. of
are In evtdence:
·
·
versity community wbo.seek producaDd how. 1l&gt;e phantom of public blithe uruver&amp;~ty centers. SUNY admin~ . n, e:meptional registration proceiive learnios environment.
reaucmcy .ia--not limited to politics
, istration, io illi budgetary, and other
c1ure, whiCh ia meant to ane.date some·
-KEITH a. ~OHN90N
or economics. It has inevitably entered
actions, ..is -~noring the cenof u- problems,'ia discriminatory at
the institutiona of rus~~er tearnios aDd
tera and the
ocboOl8: 'lbe
beat While aome stwlent.lfoUow the
it 1s here 10 stay. Aa such; .it'results
scare bomb or shrlnkinB ~ for
correct proeedare of applyios for a .
.,_
' - ·
in .an entirely dilferent model of Inter· graduate educelion'1!an best be Olfaet
cowae by CRF (_comae ri&gt;ques~ fonnJ.,
r~lati •
Alt!&gt;ough coUepau~ ia
-: by orga:nizjng"tbe facultY of_t~ srad.. - otben laliw 10 ~Y to the '!"'t:nic- ~
BDITOR:
·
·
~b~ f
m some uruversJties,
uate centers W!&gt;o together With that
.Jor aM, plead to be fbn:e regJ&amp;tered.
I am in strong asreement with'John
1t JS m
replaced by super/
·of the oilier nnll&amp; can create the most
Aa the aqUMky ~I usually gets the
Corcoran's Jetter (Reporter, OcL 26,
subo11iinate mod •·. It .is I)OtAillicult
effective.ll!pJ n-aa f"!' arrestin&amp; the
r - , ' the eSx:eptions are regiatered
·t973) where · be 'explains that pay.
to search and find matances of theee
eromon illto our ~es8101l. Td'--adbere
at~«
with ~ty
. . are !&gt;~oSed .
' miiles
oruy justified if ·the ra~ae
-'clwtges wiJhin our· own campus. _
~ 1a
~:;_G~ to "support
· oul ·
·
ia io inverse proportion tothe already
othe&lt; ta,..-s
-actiftly aDd
.lllllW!Ifort on
When one combines tliia policy fi.
existent salary level. He argues, l&gt;y
To' &amp;~~r&amp;vate matters m&lt;&gt;re and
lhiacampustodiaelllliritewith~/
aicxl. wi~ a six aDd one-baH week
givin'g twioo aa ~much of. a· raise to
ainoo Professor Maf4!5 includes ,lbe
United_" wiD be to commit an institu·
cl!uile·of ....-.
.·
tion period it• ia no
JacUlty' member&amp; making $10,000 than
Governor in his comments, io additiQD
tional suicide.
_ ~ tf;&gt;at' many students do .not
tboee·tDl\lrinl ~2Q;OOO,_ those:who need
to our own ' local mana~t, there
S~.
besio aenous oludy until well mto,
·tlie "most relief from the effects of
are two more lay~ of increaslna
~ _. --alNBrAH'ftNit ..._ YBRACARJS
.the semeater. To IIUIII"St that a .sJtiinftati011 will get-it. •
-- ~ll)~ty--and control: T!ie· centra1
· (Preaiilent, UQP, SUNY/
ilent can ...te.· a """'!"' that. LBt,e. in
. . Aa 1 have said, 1. asree ~th. ~ :- SUNY)nanq~t ana ~ state gov. ·
·' AB Center Chapter/
the aemeater Ia to senously' -.tion
ap_proach, !Jot I would like to expand
ernment (B u r e a u , of the Budget).
...... .,
the academic riBor or that"course.
it tinake into aooCsunt the~plighf of
T'h'e 8 e bureaUcratic SU~Iruc:ture!l
wpet'
EJ1m1not1ni till ~neq.•
·
·
U/8'8 man.Y ln!dnate 8.EISi.!ltanta wbo,,
bave in effect, created a c&lt;implex sy&amp;~.
rr•
How can we eliminate ~ inequilike · faculty members, teach claases.
tern of oontrola which are mpidly :..
ties?
• .
. ·• . A ~ a.osilinment can )le juat - affecting the conditions of employ··
rU
·
~ ~...,.
, C-ML.(1) !A's 10111 ·aa we are under the •
aa demanding 011 a grad..te assiatant
menr aa ~ aa ""' profiBiionil 1011&gt;~~-L~~~·~ .;JCIJC)
four coura.ayBtem, adhere to' it. Addiaa it ia 011 &amp; ·faculty.-.~. Siinilar . &gt;of the .faculty.
,
·. •
'
Tbe
John·
W.
Cowiidr
Oo., Inc., of
tiona! Cl0Urll8811hould be adaed only in
reilp(msitiilities are bOme bi"the Dll!lll- ·
Universities C&amp;nnot ilDd do not op- .
Bu«alo bu .awariloiif"a $27~ pant
unusual c:ircumata'""'8 and, after· conhera of both' IJOI!PIL Where the faculty '·: ·erate outilide ' our soCiety. Aa -an · iosultatioD willf a_pproprfat" faculty
member- aDd' the ;al'aduate •assiatant , tegral_part -they are 'subjected to the'
to tbe UniversilY.
~
·
.., · :
·
· •
!l'lrlia' 011 !be .qu51ion or
same soCial ~ ID&gt;d are ·inlluHalf of ctbe ilcome fmm the award
will
fund
•
·
,C,owper
Leclw'e
Series
l;llDIIe or pay lor Cac-.
enced. by wbat ia happening in either
Jl'IY·
8nd ·tlie-other baH WID be-used at the
ulty members ia about ~10,000.26,000,
institutional areaa Stated ~ the
diacretion of !be Preaident.- Tbe in~
a ·grarinate 'assiatant is COIIIDJOI!Iy exuniversities today are draa ·
. af.
J'OIDe for . the current aaidemlc: year
P8Cfed to ~ by oo $2;60!1' to $.3,000.
fected&gt;by the fiodal priorities
our
ia aPPJOXimateJY $2,000.
,
lt aliOuid ~~e· ckw that tliia &amp;mlllll&gt;- ~ society. In addition to' the much deIa at alf fair. Alld ~.... '!be
- ba:ted ~ or !hi. co1Jeae marlretU.llde&lt; lefl98 of tbe pan~ wellkitown ~...-and tbeii topJc;a will
he chosoin by a.., OI,B ~t after
l!!ivlnc a fiunlly to IIIJIIPCirl. .the .,..
""'''llrdi .&amp;Dd teilcbin, or our PIOfaeconsultation With: acadelnlc olllcers.
. . - t i a ( l BiYeD to' ~be. pGuate . .
sioii but 8lilo ,_ ...... inuneDoe ~ "
Tbe grant from, the Bulralo-besed
is DOt Olily ..unfair,aad ap!oita.
auras which ba'lll! a clliect ·bearbiif oo
conattuct:lnn linn 1!1lll{ made through
tive, but, alao. inadequUe fot,auvlval.and
our~ of life. In a paidc, pmate · the .Univenoity at.'Bulralo F-.lation.
,'• R8i.. abould be ai\Wl io ~
pub~ ioali~J;ioui, fat 8Z8IIIPie. - ~
..
.
"'"'
• to atm.dv. aistllrit _.__
• are '-IIe8aly ~ the poaslbl)jtY
· •
be the
to'd;"(t: .
tuition·aad ftiOs
Older
•

..,..tioas,

·• paya subatantially "JDOie for -the aame •
number of aedits than does his .lull-

mic- aOtivities are indeed

~-'in .our·......_._ et'lldi!'B 1nt.a

only -

:m

':0

= · .-

a

c'rad A.SSJStant
.
p·
ay ..
I . .·-

Termed l:xp OJtatJve

u..

.re

&lt;

·

rmr.......

rrant ···n·

Go.

nd •

.

~

~':i·:=~:- ::..'r;:i..!:~~~~= ~-

..-..t

to=

-~
Aad

61lr,~

~- uaiatanta .

~
to pt a miae "
W:bidi• &amp; tiD8 t 'ldaim .. giwp .•
to the faaJlty .-.ber .already receiv,
Ins a $20,000.
·
• •
-

-W.U:ftll -.eoN

Of~

1J!

~

~PHONE

to o&amp;et lbi!«n~·lnteiJectual ~ties
T~nhlenltr Boolcslore. hn' an tddl·
or oar ~- tiOMI -.,...,.,..nna. Tht number Is
,
brief ob.na~ PDint· to.r&amp;.c . . 831·3442 Thlo II 111 llddltion to tl1e
""Q' I'! e 8 caPable coni:lllllioo: I&amp;
numbers · - In tilt 1973·74 Unl1111rwlty
~rth of the ~ Ia DO
l)j-...,
lbnpr the ~ Cllllllll8lldio IIPFI' .. . ,_--...-:-:...::;~
:&lt;-"----....,.-.;:.....__:.-._.__

n-

�M ralionallzina the ~ sys1llll,
elef!lent&gt; M Orilor and inlilllect in quartas
lmlr oppear to us ...... We ................
c:a11y, to ......,... of nain a u-~
em:lawism, aid • - (on 1he part af1IIJiiWillpSI
both M subject mauer ~ IIIII of.........,

lions of acMemic lnte&amp;rll¥. a.t ihe _ . , rllhfll.
docu11)011t who hunts in liS-~ fGr iNQOf: el
"intellectual .scandal" or endonement of 1he llatU5
quo as "untouchable" will ~ve missed both the spirit
and substa~ of o6r efforL We lme not 501111111 to
layblame or to dislribute praise but r.alher 1D define
obstacles tha~ preven~ existina c o l . from ~Melina
needs that can appropriately be met wilhln a un;.osity (aoo that can best be met in a col~re-settina),
and to discuss procedures for eliminatlnJ them. Our
common belief, based On what ~ lme lumed
through attendarice at classes, intemews wilh
studen'ts, fac;alty ·and· administrators, and !hr...,
perusal of relevant course descriJ!tionsr evaluations
and other materials, is that SUNY/Buffal", .throu..
the collegiate system, has on· QPPOrtUnity 10 contribute to the 50iution of what ranks among this
country's most crucial domestic problems-how to
share the cultural wealth while ~t the same time
insuring that what is Offered as '!wealth" is truly that,
ratl\er than i'&gt;Ste and sham. We regard the cOllegiate
system .San instrument of high intellectual and SOI'ial
promise, resource whose rTM&gt;St significant uses have
only begun to be perceived. Our hope is that this
report will bring these uses into clearer view.

a

II: Streqths and

Weaknesses ol the
Collec!Ate S~ste-..
B.·s.-Cha_n draokhar
BenJamin DeMott
.....

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

,samuel C.rovltz

Thomas Could
Ruth Mary Rill

We have been asked to provide an assessment of
the strengths and weaknesses of the colleges and _of
the collegiate system. In the time made available to us
for the examination of the collegiate system and the
preparation of this report, it is plainly impossible for
us to come to ~ any definitive judgment about the
. quality of individual colleges. Further, we believe that
the question of strengths and weakriesses is a complex
and somewhat misleading one; wha~ needs most to be
addressed is the total interplay of characteristics of
the collegiate system as a whole. Nonetheless, certain
paiterns of strength and others of weakness ha.ve
emerged as beyo11d question .. · .W~ ,,therefore '!'ill.
enumerate what we see as the principal strengths and
w~~knesses of _
the system, in the hope of helping1ll\'
to rest the continuing controversy about which claims
and which charges are credible.
The characteristics that we see
most valuable,
af!d therefore as most worth preserving are these:
1. Motivation and enthusiasm
2. Attention to slighted perspectives and values
3. Sense of community
4. Fostering of 'social awareness and involvement
5: Provision of experiential and interdisciplinary
~
learning

:at

I : lntrcNiuctlon
The body of .this report addresses strengths and
weaknesses of the colleges and of the collegiate
system' as a whole, spells out the broad general
principles on which, ·in our, view, effort at reforming
the system should be based, and offers, in addition, a
number of specific r~commendations for immediate
change. But a sound approach to the problems at
hand requires something more than a brisk fl!n·
through of virtues and defects, followed by_ take-itor-leave-it proposals for attion. To an extent unusual
ir. orth:o$:1ox academic departments or divisions,
SUNY/Buffalo's collegiate system is fixed in a web of
complex, contemporary cultural ci~~_!Jmstance. Its
character and itS traumas are tr:_aceable not alone to
internal developments Within the disciplines of
learr,ing, but to a congeries of eruptive, external
forces. Chief among these forces, as ·we make them
out on the basis of brief visits, are the following:
1. The expanding energies of .democratization
within urban society;
2. The growth of distrust of the pretenses of
rational intellect (a partial consequence of the
visible failUres of those 11 trained minds" who
shape public policy) and .
3. The emergence of widespread protest against
technological society os a culture of slots (no
communication permitted or encouraged
between, say, the craftsman and the scholar, or
between the committed advOC&lt;tte of social
change and the "neutral researcher" in the
libraiy or lab).
'
Everywhere in the collegiate system the impacr:of
one or another of these forces is apparent. And from
thi~ it follows that attempts to "reform the system"
or to "milke a fresh start" must reckon with the
character of tr.e forces and their ·probable future
influe~. The collegiate system is a significant event
PAGE 1/RUORTER/COLLEGE IIEPORT/NOVEMI!ER I, 1!173

in the conttnumg American ~xperiment in mass
higher education; it is also a phenomenon reflecting
in a thousand ways the powerful if erratic tides of
American counterculture. Only when the system is
considered in these contexts will true issues begin to
appear.
_..-One can, of course, stand too far back from the
heat and exacerbation of the present moment.
Granted the interest of historical or cultural over·
views of the collegiate system, what is to be done
ab.out this or that immediate "outrage?" Within the
university 's core departments and divisions, proposals
for research and teaching in new areas of inquiry arc
postponed for lack of funds, yet here on the outer
rim of the learning community a course on palmistry
is funded, ·money is ·paid out for supplies for a workshop in leather belts. Is it not wrong to ascend misty
heights of cultl!rology when it is plain that hard
decisions about priorities must now be made?
Obviously practical problems exist and ·they are
dealt with in detail t;elow. But it bears repeating here
that faculty and administration alike will make •
costly mistake if, i.n confronting the collegiate
sYstem's problems, they invoke no other standard
save that of conventional intellectual respectability.
bffbeat course offerings within this system that draw
significant audiences serve, at the minimum, as a
guide to current growing points of popular curiosity.
Teilchers aware of .these growing points_can shape
jntroductions to the traditional disciplines in accordance with livi(!g interests as distinguished from
academic habits. Or, by concentrating on one or
another of the areiS of curiosity, they can go fv-thcr, ·
and establish the claims of their discipline os an
instrument of understanding. No human interest. or
activity exists, ifter all, th&lt;~t Qflnot ~-set on a firm
intellectual footing, cannot · be "placed" histori&lt;;ally,
cannot serve as a training ground in the modes of
scholarly. analysis and judgnient.
In the sections below, we propose some methods

1. Motivation and Enthusiasm
In four years enrollment in college courses hos
reached approximately 6,000. A sense of zeal and
crusading search for new educational and expressive
forms permeates some of the colleges. This concern,
shared by students -and faculty, hos persisted even in
the absence of substan_Jial support. from the univer·
sity, and has been largely a positive force in which the
university can take pride. We regard this spirit os
precious, and worth nurturing. The dedication and
sacrifice .of students, faculty, and professionals from '
· the community, and their coniag;ous loyalty to the
l)rinciples and practices of free exploration and selfd~termination, should not be smothered.
The well-springs ofmorale vary among the colleges
from the freedom-movement vitalitY of the Women's
Studies College; to the . sense of effectiveness os I
citizens found ·among those engaged in community
action programs of College Z, C.P. Sriow College, and
Rachel Carson College; to the shared search for
scientific excellence in College 0 (Oifford Furnas
College) and the residential congeniality of College B.

2. Attention to Slighted Perspectives and
Values
'The colleges offer an opportunity for the
expreSsion and advocacy fJf unpopular views and
areos of inquiry. To the extent that they expand the
forum for ideas out of fashion or theories ·out of
favor, their effect upon the-u~iversity is wholem.
For example, the Social Sciences College and the
· Women's Studies College ;oppeared to ~be meeting

�--.

............
.....,........
.,..,__...
...
..........................
.........
.........
.....
-,........,.-sans••..__,.

_

~

.......... ,

. . . 1 "-. . . . . . , •

.,_

pollldlilr, IIIIJ •wfi a Iii eiital ..,. enfo(&gt;celnent; n
W..'s SIIICIIIs Collllt .. Its lntlrat In .....

equal rfljltsfor-"'iilhln ... unhenlty IIIII on a

f!A.,._.,_
d......,

ID_...•. _ . . . , ..........
I t hlwf........UI _ _

wldtfNnller.

cllldudan . . . . -.;. . . . . . . . . Clallllt

5. Provls1on flf i!Jt'P'e'rientlal
.· t~lftary"
.
.

with M4

-.paiD-ajllid ' &lt;rllfill~
of1115tary IIIC{Jiollllcll fonles'111.. a ~fnlm a
fenle penpectHe.
'"'

c:ou..-

Widlln a ·lqe·and toiMtiiiiH IIIS1IIie universitY,
- "00111115 .._ aftillld IIUdenll 11111111, personal,
ClOI1flllllll units Wilhlll whlcll a sPirit of $1Udent·
'-"Y·. c:oaperallcln - - flaurlsh. ~ Ill!
physicll c:oncl1lons _.. NSidllldalllvq sltuatiCxls ar
siqlle CIIIIIIIS far 1be -.ePtion of Uke-mlnded
sllldents lild faailty, 1M of intimate cOmmunity nlllllnod illlllllec:lult and !10CiaJ c:anc:ems is
hiahiY coniludve liD lllrnina exjlloration.
A beuer unclerslancrq of clomocrallc: processes,
1110, can be ~ die heallhlest ouqp-owths of a
c:ollole format. The participation of SIUCients in lhe
policy-making and -.,;nlsnlion of academic ~fe
c:onslitullls an Important experiment from which
other pans of lhe univeroity may benefit, learning
both from lhe failures and successes.

Social

Awareness

interditciplinary approaches in"the c:olleJOS.
·
The charKIIIristics that we· see as most troubling.
.net'
therefOre as most important. to combat, are
these:
·,
..
.

i. Bad

md

ABOUT THE COMMITTEE
l

-

· B.S. ChandraseJ&lt;har is Perkins Professor of Physics
and first dean of Western R~e College at recently
merged Case Wes'tern Reserve University, Oeveland,
Ohio: ~ A torm\or chairrliaiP &lt;if- 'the Department of
Physics, Dean of Science, and first chairman of the
Faculty sinate at lhe University, Dr. Chandrasekhar
tw:· a longtime- interest in quality undergraduate
edUcation. "At case Western, ··he helped institute
numerous inoovations in undergraduate education,
including the 4 -.1.-4 calendar reform, the
underpaduate scholars program, and revitalization of
lhe phtsics program for undergraduates.
'
.

t

•

Benjamin H. DeMott is professor of English at
Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, and a
wellkoown novelist and critic. His most recent book .
is ~"'!"'ng tht StvMtits.

2. Selection of Instructors

Samuel Gorovltz is chairman of lhe Department of
Philosophy at lhe tJniversity of Maryland. Dr.
Gorovitz· was formerly dean of Adelbert College of
Case ·Western Reserv.e University, where he was
actively involved. in ·r undeq,i'adu~te education,
inctudina &lt;the uncler;p'aduate· 5d\olars program, lhe
""perimental ·colle;ie,. and ·the· intersession program.
At Case Western, he •also Served as· chairman of lhe
CEMAC Commission, established ·to ; · study
restructurina of· lhe · Universi~'s undergraduate
colleles..
.
"
.~.

: Thomas F. Gould is·prote$or of classics at Yale
Universi~ . .He · has written extensively on Greek
drama and phljoSophy. .
.
-

·.Jtuth Mary Hill is actina president. of Friends
World -cQI;e..,:-Huntinidon, •Lona .Island. Active in
alternative~n~ civihilhts for 11\0re than 30
years, Ms. Hill has also had a rich and varied outside -lhe Academy, including a stint with . lhe
thep-mirneolraphed Consumer Roports in lhe late
'thirties· and \WI) years (1953-CSS) as editor/producer
of lhe late Edward R. Murrow's daily radio show,
"This I Believe."

reiard

faith in
to agreed upon rules and
procedures '·
2. Lax"standards in selecting instructors
3. Tolerance of partisan advocacy
4. Ojsregal!l . for university standards regarding
w~kandgrad~
•
5. Lacl&lt; of adequate financial and faculty supp~t
6. Lack of internal cohesion or. healthy relations
with the rest of the university.
Most-perhaps all-of these weaknesses also occur
in some measure in regular departmental offefings in
any American university. The special nawre of the
collegiate system, however, depends in part on the
absence - of some of the machinery universities
normally set up to keep such abuses at a minimum.
Therein lies the . strength of unusual flexibility. and
concomitant dangers. The university community is
understandably suspicious about wh~t is " really"
going on . The hostility generatlld ~y this .suspicion
has irf turn generated self- ~ous contempi in some
colleges toward the upholders of the. normal
machinery. Even the usual presscJre from one's
colleagues which constrains regular faculty to
maintain standar9s ,is_th,er~f~&lt;; ofte)J~~k or absen L
However uncfiarac'telisti the&lt;e aliiises'!Ttay lie of the
col legiatec system taken as a .whole, they are highly
visiJ:&gt;Ie and I!J!dermine. !he credi6ijity pf'the colleges
gen&lt;&gt;r~ly . · '·,
•• "': '"--~ ._
en~~,.- . ~ -~ ; _ _~, • ...,·~..;
.
h BaaFait!j ;:,;..,.~
'
. ·
It is not,Yn~~~)i!' College ~foo:. instaoo&gt;), to
repeit"" m "ei"Peri rQeritiJ" course Without -submitting
to the procedure for regularizing it, introducing a
slight change jn the name and catalogue description.
Some" instruciors are disarmingly fiank abotJt. :this,
and no one seems to try to stop them. Nevertheless,
the bitterness .o f the opponents of the collegiate
system can be traced in part to just siJch practices.
In some ,colleges the content of an approved
course has been changed radically, without the
instructor ~ seeking approval for a new course. The
gradual metamorphosis of €ollege F, for instance, was
accomplished with the aid of this procedure.

" Involvement
lnllllle&lt;:tual punuits are augmented in several of
the c:olleaes by the application of lheory to real
problerris of the community. Analysis and study of
social problems leaves many students unsatisfied. An
active address to those social problems oan add an
important.dimension of learning and toll increase lhe
student's motivation. Moreover, it can contribute to
the university's educational role in the community.
P.articularly striking exarnp"les include C.P. Snow
Collqe and College Z in th;eir siudies·and activities in
leg;d aid; housing rights, counseling, and urban
studies; Rachel Carson College in its address to local

...

and

1lie c:oll,.as .._ ':c.il¥teamlng beyoiid lhe
of --~ lind ... disdplines.'
SemiMI'i 'in a'hillillll ~!~sib lmolvlng SIUdents in
cunent
tase'i ~ Z), environmental
act1on involvlnl s1lldents In loc:al pollution control
enforament (Rachel Canon Collep), ""ploration. of
-w-. ~ In lhe field (C.P.: !inolr Collole). and
lhe exaniiriation of crisis- ~ as an alternative to
lndittollal psy~ 1heones {WC?III"fl's Studies
Collep) .....,tify some til lhe experiential and

3. 5enle of c - I t y

of

• (

ccinfines

~r

4. Fostering

•

L

, Critical ref!larks ;obout the collegiate system almost
always include a list of. course titles in trendy or .
pseud,o-scieQtific subjects such,. as palmistry, yoga,
e.s.p., Mid . ,~tarian diets. Subjects of this sort
account too: • small numl&gt;er of courses in the system,
and some. pf these· cour~ seem defensibje. As we
have argued,. ther~ .is nothing inherently wrong with
the at12mp.t .to e~alualll f~s and enthusiasms still
excluded. from ordinary course offerings. It depends
on how lhey are llu&amp;h.t. and •some are taught badly.
Some of ·the cOntrOYersial courses are taught bY
people·.• whose Qrlly :qualification seems to be .
enth.usiasm~ If enthusiasm had led lhem to maslllry of ·
the history · and , scholmhip · of lhe subject, an
investigation· of the merits .of criticisms often
launched. _against] respectability of the subject, etc.,
lheir lack of formal credentials would not matter. In
son:te cases, ho-wever, the worst fears seemed 1o be
justiroed. One course in palmistry appeared to be of
this sort. · ~ c:Ourse was a stnijhtforward exposition
of an essentially unexamined and undefended
practice. There are oilier courses, like ·one in
parapsychOlojy ,. that are taught by instructors who
are .well. prepared but not really able to unde!'tand
why !heir subjects are scorned by the departments.
Their faults are of a sort that miaht ell disappear if
there were .a .healthy dialogue between lhe colleges
and the rest of the.university.
. University regulations require. that . every
nor&gt;-faculty instructor . must teach under the
supervision of a regular faculty member. The
regulati'ln is not enforced. The gradu·ate,

I

3. fart!lllll Alittoal;y"

•

•

A Iacher MID filels~~ lbotlihls tubject
will try his 11M. to
IJ*I t1UdeiiiS of 1he
correctneS of his dleorWI, and It 1s aiily human ID
think IIIORJifihly of._._.......,'lhe
point" than of Chose •
Nlni1D ........... The
collegiale
may ..,.t to·iln ~- • an
especillly soocJ P'- to , _ . . I theOry too spec;iaJ
penona1 to be accepllld wtlhtn a ~t.
.Partisan advocacy, lhiliefcn, is 1118¥1taiity more
common in lhe colleiK than elsewhere. . - ··
• 1;. number of soocJ otlllfWS ~ slllhlly more
par'iiSIIlthan is nonnalln a 11niWnlty. Coi...,.B, for
' instance, offered a
In which Plato was
interpreted from a p~~ fl'!ilit of view.
When P~ato was studied in...cotletle !:, hcliW8ver, lhe
partisan dofense of homosexual~ty-· ·gen&lt;&gt;rated
interpretations of the text that were patendy wrong.
In a few cases, teachers ~ to be beyond
penuasion; if they cannot proselytize they are not
interested in teaching. This seems to be most
comm·o n in courses on explosive social issues.
· At the opposite end of the scale were courses in
colleges like Vico and Social-Sciences which were so
unadventurous as to lack excitement. Social Sc:iences
College even appears to be deliberately striving for a .
. forbidding format and forbidding course descriptions.

-..n

svs-

. or

eourw

4. Undermining
Grades

Standards

in

'

Work and

In some cases the r.el~ation of University standards is part of a deliberate effort to.counter what is
felt to be an evil in the univerSity system. More often
it appears to be an inevitable consequence of two
common feab.Jres of oollege courses, the fact that the
teachers may be students themselves: who shy away
from what they see as an invidiouS judgmental role,
and the fact that the subject matter of the course
may be divorced from books and laboratories.
Of the courses that require less intellectual effort
than is'· Usual, some -require work only of a oommunity ·o r ·manual sort:... Others-...require litde more •.
than participation in bull sessions, encounter groups,
co9A;ss)pl)als, _Of, c_ornm~l!.al e~p.lo(atjons. Courses of
this sort vary from the intense and exhausting to the
aimless and boring.
There are apparently -cases Where even attendance
is not ~req~ir:.¢, let i.lone" examinations or written
projects. The_ percentage.· of courses of a very
undeman_!iing .sort is much higher in some colleges
than in others, and tl!is kind of course may not really
be typical of the collegialll system as a whole. Never·
theless, the .general - suspicion that undemanding
courses
more numerous in the col~ than in the
~partments may be justified.
A's are given in "!iignificandy higher numbers in tjle
colleges than elsewhere. Thec:olleles2fP~e 'that ·this is
because-students often feel a greater .commitment to
collqe courses than to lheir regular work. This is
apparently true ·in a number of cases, but by no
means in all. In (;Oiisequence, lazy, untalented, or
unscrupulous students may -use lhe colleges to· earn
lheir degrees with less Intellectual effort or with a
..higher grade-point aver;110 than they could olll!orwise
have done. Distribution reqUirements and lhe requirements for .various majOIS make It Impossible f~
students to take more than a few such courses, how·
ever. Nor is there · aoy .&lt;:onVinctng evidenoe that
gradualll schools, professional schools, or potential
employers have becpme wary of Bufhlo ~uate.s
because.of lhe c:ollegiate ·system. .Henc:e,lhe problem
may -not be quite_as serious as it is sometimes thought
to be. ..
.

Me

s..Lack 'of.SUpportfrom the.!Jnivenity
,
The failure of the departments to provide gen&lt;&gt;rous
fao;ulty contributions to college teac:i)ing has proved
disastrous. The problem is partly one of faculty
inlllrest, partly one of departmental budgets . .The
budgets f(!r·the colleges .lhemselves are also woefully·
inade_qualll 1n many cases, iuaranllleing not only
barely reputable projects, but also a hostile outsider
mentality.
6. Cohesion md Ll;alson
Many of the faults listed above are perpetuated
;because of inadequa,te self-discipline within the
collegiate syslllm and ruinous confrontational
relations with lhe administration. As lhe internal
evaluation pointed out, part of this stems from alack
REPORTER/COLLEGE· REPORT/NOVEMBER 1,1973/PAGE 2

I

�fA.........,• • Colliiilaa

~

ts.....,

·~

nat-...: .. ~ "-!!bbY Nllel:ls.'lnlllllll'
· n~~~es 6111dMI!Ions'-- ........... ....

. . il......l. . . . . . . . . . . . af. . . . . . . . .
foniill flflilliinnlflent, ...._........_ and .
till lllillloilitaadun Is fonild lniD an ahooltarlan

- '*w.-IIM ..,...m,..._. ~ af ~"and a nst
cl ............,.. •

lhoulh

IIIey could• rally .. .

~ Is It cancelwable, " - - · t!m .. cauld.

_......., .... deplorlllle1111eranco fAunqualifle6
............ still .,_.e Jn l1s en1ltety lhe fnMiilom
flalideplnmental anclblnaucnllc111li\ldnc 1hat we
admiN in c:ollep COU111Sl Could lhe cofterlos
- conmc. lhe administration of lhelr mponsibllty and yet maintain uncllrnlnlthed their initiative
in leUfiW 14ftpojMdar Ideas ln1D their c.oursework?
TheN Clll bi no end to lhe lienSion caused by Jhe pull
• -.rd academic respectability on lhe one side and
lhe pull -.rd ~in&amp; imalinatign on the
olher. Furthermore, 1t Is precisely ~attxken
and defenclen of 1he ·colleaes often nil to see the
complexity of the situation lhat the arpment
b e - them has so ofllon "-' !hrlll and unproduc;tive. lsolatina fe.aJwes worlhy cl lieinc saved and
separalln&amp; lhete from features -that 'Should be eliminated can hefp to illuminate the judiJ!ICnts and prin-·

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

lrilllllec:UI adllrer.tD .... .... .

- . . , _ , . .sr.rtllnl

joct ihat IIIIIs: lt.lallfts
. lhat- of . . , . _ . ..... .
cl lllbstaMial tlildlet IIIUIIIlon

• • of ~ , . , ; iii'Jt.
~ ...... to *MII«t

111at..,...

thollld ,. lllfonMd, ~
fftl altlall, fftl ,.. , . , , .

1ilou/tl..,be JWIII/tW/ "' ~ '
1M!!* llttlt lr ~· to fn.
- f!!mred a#IRtl/. SCI'IIt/lfY. The

(Acadernlt

lnapity)

too.dtuteanjec.
,- don f!l-"'d.AD, prapedy.sideNcl, ~ the .lalil for;o

(SubjectMU1er)

and

c:alleles •Ice, it is

:.:·

psycholo&amp;lcal

out It the Jife of .the mind can,
..Ot· flourisli. L.ike
~
de!nic integrity requires ~tenia!
visilanoe, and lhe colleges must
learn ejlher to exen:ise or submit
to it.

sufficJent} prot«tion of the
Is

nonetheless real.

~/c ln~ty of cout'2s
the requ/remu~t that th02

..no

9 . Experimentation should
be encourvged, "'d the results
must receive objective, llldqJen-

tl!t1Ch ·them have the requisite

~t~ntAn~uca~

experiment, like any Other, is a.
trial requiring a judgment in 11M,
end that' can bear scrutiny. The
conception of experimental
education that takes it to be an
unscrutinized -opportunity for
individuals to do something they
(Experimentation) want to do is indefensible.·
Experimental courses should
take place only under circumstances that are genuinely experimental. This is not incompatible
in any way with innovation,
flexibility, or other collegiate
virwes. On the contrary, innovative enterprises should • be
encouraged, and the inhi biting
effects of fear of failure should
· be mitigated by a spirit of
adventuresomeness.
I 0. It should be possible for

01: Geaeral
Galdellan
We have found a ccinplex situation, in which
boasts and accusations cloud the air and questions
about the colleges are often coudied in terms of
praise or blame. We do not see the
lity of the
situation as admitting of simple onesi d judgmenL
But we are unwilling to equivoca
citing the mix
and interplay of strengths and weaknesses as an
impediment to any clear position. We do take a stand,

obsolete ventures to be termi·

and •-do make · specific recommendatiOns . . They are

-..n...,. --'

sigence in

~

(Obsolescence)

(Teacher·' ·
Competence)

number of quarters·,

yet there is too much at stake
for either.
2.· The possibility of abu~ Is
a price wOrth paying In return
ftx the prhellce of virtues.· The
collegiate system .can never be
completely free from
flaws.- like the academic departments, it will inevitaJ&gt;Iy result in
some abuses. The gumntee that
there will be no abuses, for ihstitutlons as for individuals, comes.
only with death. If a collegiite
system is to flourish, it will err.
To refuse to accept this fact is to
will the death of the sysllOm.
3. Collegiate wtonomy Is
possible, ti&gt; a 1/mlr.d deft:ee, ·
only lnsof11r as the procedure for
the estxlbllshmu~t of a collegiate
unit ensures tiC4dem/c lnr.grtty.
The easier it is to establish a
collegiate unit, the more evalua·

(Teacher
Diversity)

made

(Virtues and
Abuses}

tion

and

scrutiny

will

be necessary to sustain it The
harder it is to establish, the more
autonomy it will enjoy once
established. There is no way out
of this conflict, nor should there
~~e.

PAGE J/ltUOitTE~OUEGE REPOitT/NOV.EMaU. I, 197J

or

phenomena, bellef5,. or experi.o
. ences that, lhouah not Jhem.
sel1les rationally conceived, are

TIOI&gt;"-

ciples lhat lie behind our rec&lt;&gt;mmendations fpr
chanp. But only If all sld!:s conie to appreciate the
complicated interconnectedness of lhe good and ·bad
featunes can !here be some possibility of the ·g;..,.
and-take bargaining that is necessary to secure
improvement in the situation.
'

shaped by. 411Jideliner 110 which
without dissent, subseqUent to ~~amination of
the collegiate system, and we -wish to" te them here:
' . ..
1. All patti, to the contra.
~~ersies wrroun&lt;if9 a collegiate
system must be accommodating.
The- present collegiate system is
too valuable to lose and too
chaotic to survive. Its virtues can
be preserved 1111d its abuses cur·
tailed only If its critics . can
acknowledge its virtues, its adve&gt;(Accommodation} cates can acknowledge its
abuses, and all parties can come
to understand lhe re~tions
between those strengths and
weaknesses•. There has been ·evi·
dence of ·intoliorance and intran-

~

exalftlnatlon of mystical
experience, can-· . provide a
v..aiuabfe . IIIUIIS .f!l· ei1IP&amp;i!ll .
student Interest In the -liQ.
tion of aitical Juc~Flent to .

·nbirtv•.

-5. A~ (thouV.

~.

lntellectuil punults as wort. in
crafts, studies f!l~­

~value

.most worth JnseMOJ. for with~

rwpDIIIIble academic

Spe~flcally. IUCh ~
anti-Intellectual .or• • non-

-..! of a unlwenlty io its aca.domic in~, In departments

(leadership) .

competena:. One who knows a
subject well may teach it badly,
but one who -does not know it
well · will surely teach it badly.
Whoever has primary responsi·
bility for teaching a course must
have demonstrable competence
in the .s ubject matter and must
be demonstrably committed to
intellectual integrity. Viol•tions
of this principle, in departments
as well as colleges, should be the
object of correctiVe measures.
6. A collegiate system should
incorpOI'rJte the taknts of regular
faculty and also of th02 -..h02
· competena Is not judgM on the
basis of normal academic cntkntials. The colleges, muCh · more
th·an the department$, have the
· potential to make'"gooil use of
those ·who lack normal &gt;Cademic
credentials, but who nonetheless
may have' riches to offer.
7 . Colkgia12 · units should
11atte strong,-responsible, ·Compe-tent Jeadershlp. Insofar as
collegiate' units are aeatures of
·the uniVersity, partaking of its
support and utilizing Its forms of
wrrency, they must grant cerWn concessions to "the universlty.:S -_standards. This requires
that each such unit have stable,
identifiable leadership capable of
sustaining the re~tionship with
the nurturing university, and
acc.ountable for adherence to
appropriate standards. '
. ... 8. There is no sub}«t matter
that Is lnt7inslalllj unsultol*
ftx ««*m/c. lttliufry. It is· not
the subject matter that is the
crucial !.....,client in the -quality
of a c.ourse, it is lhe ki!'d of ·

(Credit and
learning)

noted gracefully and without
stigma. A collegiate unit that has
outlived its time should be
.accorded the dignity • of ;-a ·
respectable process of
dissolution.
... 11 . The f')(lstont ,association
of legmfng with credit Is pem/clous; leamlng opportunities
that do not carry credit should
be tneouraged. College" years
· end; credit ceases. Luming, presumal?ly, should go on. It is no
more reasonable to think that
leaminc experience has value.
only if it is sanctified by .credit
than It is to think· a· sunset hts
beauty only if admission is

charzed

(Gradinc)

(Residence)

·'··

;.. -

·1 2. GrrKies may be usrd or ·
not. They should not.be abused.
like a~it, grades are part ·of
· the. normal academic currency.
Every gradinc system has faults,
:.,d some .courses do not admit
, of grodins in lhe usuoil fashion.
.· Where normal methods of
JP'Idinl are inappropria1&gt;0, they
should not be used. The colleges
that have violated this princ:iple
h;we also violated. canons of
honesty and of justice, given the
present p~ce of · grades in lhe
academic world.
13. , The col~ system
shou(d ·not be i'estrlciU to 're!J-'
dcntflll colleges as orlfllnG/Iy conce/~~ed. · There are"maily forms in
which-collegiate units can enrich
the university, and it should be
possible for ~ variety ·of .uch
forms to coexist. ··
14. Adequate suppon for a
coll"ff- system must be made
tlllollllble. As part .,d paroel of
the transition to a healthy colleJiate system in which the admin·
istration has confidenoe, support
-sh&lt;iuld be i&gt;rOYided ·at a leYel

�......... for

lhe.,......

oldie

coiiiiiL Such -.,on willlibly
. . . . flllac:alion of unhenlty
- . $udl ....aocatlon, in
.,.._. form it tabs, wiH c:on-

(Resource
RM!ocation)

sdlulll ., inc:reacl conlribution
10 the colleaiate system by the
academic
An ·incnoa ls wholly Wlmllled, howewer, by the factlhatlhe present
fiscal ..........,..nt results in
heavy 111bsidy of clepMtmenw
activities by the colieps, .at their

..,.,_ts.

own · The reallocation
should include bolh direct
fundina of collegi&amp;!lo activities
.and financiol inoentilleS
desiped 10 reward reaular aca·
demit units for commillin&amp; lime
to collegi&amp;!lo activities. The
notion lhat incrused collegia!lo
support presupposes university
srowlh is un!lonable.
•

- - lt'lmlllwry......._lllrm5,.nd
lhen~ ..,..,....._ tpdic:a.
•

.... _ _ .. , . , .
1111,.,. , _ _
dlot!lly. , _ • ..,..,..~,~
~ IIIIo ·-~~In 1M spltlt of
cMntllnf one /Mtlf , . . . , lllto tiiiOIIw without
lt/Hinf lhll
of life In N , _ .
We recommoncl lhat lhe tmllformatlon be c:omplellld by the ... ollhe 1974-1975 academic: year, if
not sooner. Durin&amp; lhe interlnr.period, the praent
colleps should oonlinlle 10 be. funded at not less than
·current levels. 111!1 c:olieles and lhe As1embly should
make every effort 10 elimlna!lo abuses, .and 10 enforce
academic sundards including the requirement lhat
unlversif;Yfac:ulty-members ~h or directly supervise
all courSes. The&gt;e
very important requirements for
the sue&lt;&gt;essful completion of the process, for lhey will
crea!lo lhe atmosphere necessary for the -re!lontion in
the new system of alllhatls good now.
The process should contain the following steps:
1 ) The creation of an ad hoc Committee to urry
out the process,
2) The prepmlion of a new ProspeCtus for the
'
colleges,
3) The preparation and submission to the Com~

a.nc.

are

JV·: 8pec1Rc
aec. . .eadatlo..~ endolv 1M retention .,d streng(Mning of a
co/kg/lite structore tmd progmms ot SUNYAB. The
University is fortunate in possessing_ an apparatus,
distinct from lhe departments and other units of a
tmlitional university, lhatun be a testing grournf for
new educational ventures, that can support the
symbiotic interaction of traditionally U.!JCOUpled aca·
demit disciplines, and lhot provides a way for lhe
university to mobilize its rich resources to analyze
wilh intellectual rigor some of the major concerns of
contemporary society. All this, furthermore, can be
done as an integral part of the undergraduate experi·
ence; lhis is a particularly attractive and vital aspect
of the matter. In the coUegiate concept, this univer·
sity has a precious asset which should make it the
envy of many other universities.
We httve concluded, howei!U, that the present situ·
Q/fon regording the colleges is unstable. They are
subject \O a number of forces, some internally
generated and others externally ·imposed whose
resultant will inevitably drive them into a decline, and
PQSSibly to extinction. We .have identified earlier in
lhis report !he nature o( sOnie of tlieie forces. It
would be unproductive for us to alleinpt to judge the
welter of mutual recriminations or to assign blame.
What is important is to recognize the reality as it is
today, and to act swiftly so as to save the collegiate
concept without losing those gains which have been
ach~ved during the brief fife of the present colleges,
in a way that will ensure the vitality of the future
colleges. We have considere\IJour ways in which this
iould possibly be accomplished.

The first three are:
1. Susi&gt;end lhe total collegiate operation imme·
-diately, and then start building a new structure,
asking each· college J!l apply anew to some
appropriate aulhority for approval. We reject
this solution. It would cause a traumatic and
undeserved shock to the present collegiate
system and It would make highly unlikely the
transfer of whatever is good now to what is to

cOme.
2. Separate lhe present colleges into two groups:
the good and the bad. Phase out or eliminate
the bad, pour increased support into the good.
We jeject this solution. We find it not possible
to make a clear separation of the colleges into
lhe two groups. IUiher, we find in practically
every college lhat which is admirable as well as
that which is unacceptable.
3. Keep all the present colleges, ·and set imme·
dia!loly to work with each college weeding out
~ the pernicious elements and nourishing the
heallhy elements in it. Likewise with the .
Assembly. We reject this solution, too. Given
prietically unlimited resources and time, one
mii!ht perhaps want to consider this solution
further. But even setting aside the question of
resources, we find lhe present state of heallh of
lhe patient to be such that there simply is not
enoulh time to carry out lhe complex set of
difficult operations needed in lhis solution.
We offer a fourth solutiO.. as aur recommendation,
not because we are forced to it throulh the process of
elimination, but because we find it most apt for lhe
pment amtomy and patholocv of lhe collegiate
~syS!Iom .and Its alling in ~·university. we·shall first
;$1

the -

-re

shOuld c:ome, c~ur~ac• ~

period, only from FIIIIJ wldiii)~J
~ ~ .....

c:o1llllf..

wid! . . . . . . . . . . . ~~
1M -..-JhcluldlleJIWIIIPIIIII_.....
of poups whk:h han .a-~
thrust, synthesized ·from PI'IS chwn frolll Mlral
exlstlna colletK- The prCJP05'1 tbauld Alesl:rille l#le

. educadonal abjocliws, the ~. and . . . . . . .
menU! st~~KIIn of lhe intended collep. It thould
name lhe .faculty- membeB, ~ and any
olhers who would be lnvohed In the collep, and4le
nature of their lmolvemenL The sruap tubmltllna
lhe proposal shouidJnclude.atleast line rnember5 of
the university faculty who will be invohec! In the
college. It should specify procedures for lhe Internal
evaluation of Its eduulional prQ~m!~S, induclina
me !hods-for lhe approval .and elimination of courses.
It should conwn a budJiet for ot least a two-year
periOd. Committee approtllll of a proposal should
imply lhat the Committee has assured itself that the
college will have a coherent eduutionai procram of
substance and quality, that lhe progrotm does not
duplicate what is already ayaila~ else~e in the
uniYe(Sity, thatlhe college will have faculty and other
resources which are adequate. Admlnlstrrn/lle ITlllflt»tlon of a Comrnitree:approved proposal, while ,not
•automatic, is expec!lod to be the norm. If lhe administration rejects a proposal, it should give its reasons for
doing so to lhe -ad hoc committee. Administrative
ratification should imply that an adequa!lo budget can
be provided for the college. In lhis connection, lhe
proposed budget sl)ould be reprded as a negotiable
item by both the ad hoc Committee and the administration; and should· not be the sole basis :without
~gotiation f?~ejeCting a proposal.

When these five s!lops are completed, the college
should be duly _established in the new structure. Its
approved proposal should be its charter for lhe next
four years, and it shoilld have maximum freedom in
its internal operations consistent with its charter. If it
wishes to continue beyond that period, it should
reapply for another four·year charter, and so on.
We remark here that the foregoing process is
intended ,only for the interim period, during which
the transformation from the present structure to the
new one is taking.place. The process for ihe esJ;.abiish'·
ment of new colleges which will be described in tl)e
new Prospectus should become effective only after
ihe ~nsformation is completed. The process we have
desc'ribe'd here fOr Use d~rihj the 'inferim piriod
,be apP,ropriate for the .n~"!. S!,'UC!l!re also; we recorn· ·
mend its essentials to lhe drafters of the new Prospectus for incorporation into it.

maY

mittee of proposals for the establishment of
colleges in the new system.
4) Approval by the Committee of worthy proposals,
5) Ratification by the administration of the Committee 's dedsions on the proposals.
We comment on these steps below:
The ad hoc Committee should consist. of the
faculty and studeni members of the Faculty Senate
Committee on the Colleges plus two masters/coordin·
ators and two students of the existing colleges
(elected by the Collegiate Assembly), plus the
Director of the Colleges. The Olairman of the Senate
Committee should serve as Chairman of this. Committee. It should have executive respOnsibility for all
phases of the transformation, and should go out of
existence when the transformation is completed.
The new Prospectus, to be preparect ~y the ad hoc
Committee as its first order of business, should state
clearly the, criteria which a college must satisfy. It
should provide for colleges which are residential as
well as olhers identified only through their programs.
There should be a Director and a College Assembly
along lhe lines described in lhe current Prospectus.
The Director should be responsible for seeing that the
colleges adhere to their charters, should represent the
colleges to the hilhest levels of administration, to
faculty government and to the external community,
and should have vested in him budgetary authority
commensurate with responsibility. Mechanisms
should be provided for the proq&gt;ss of establishing a
new college, for regular review (at intervals of not less
lhan three years) of each college, and for the orderly
phasing-out of a college which has outlived its pur·
pose; such reviews and decisions on establishing or
phasing out colleges should be" made by a joint
'Student-faculty·administration group. Each i;ollege
should have a head, who shou!d have budgetary
aulhority and should provide educational leadership.
This person sbould be a member of the university
faculty who 10nerally has the respect and confidence
of the university community (students, faculty,
administration).
The proposals for the establishment of colleges in

When lhe transformatio~ has been completed, the
university will have in place a new collegiate structure
which has retained the strengths of the old and has
acquired a systemic insulation against rriany of the
problems of the old. The system will be located more
securely lhan before in the overall structure of the
university with a minimum diminution of its poten·
tial for doing lhose things which are eduutionally
sound even if academically untraditional.
What .,ve present; abo¥e is a process designed 10
lead to tlie desired goal. We have not tried to antici·
pate every possible decision along the way or after
the new structure is in place. Th~ decisions should
rii!hdy be made by lhe appropria!lo members of this
university. We urge, however., that the people making
such decisions ;idhere to the general guidelines pre·
sented earlier in this report. If this is done, there
surely will be .a secure anll significant future for lhe
&lt;;QIIegiate system.

Postscript
The five coauthors of lhis report each faced the
task of evaluating th~ collegiate system with mis·
givings. We were asked ~ assess a complex and con·
troversial educational experiment, and to make
recommendations for .its future. To our -surprise# the
main features of our assessment emerged rapidly; and
with substantial uniformity in spite of our diverse
backgrounds and diverse expOsures on the campus in
Buffalo. We have tried to articulate the principles and
to set the directions lhat we see as inost appropriate
to the circumstances, but we have deli~rately left to
lhe principal players the task of de!lormining how in
detail lhe drama is to be played out.
. · .
We have been sraciously received · by students,
faculty., collegiate staff, administrators, and university
· staff, and we want to express our appreciation to all
those who gave us their time and allention, often
when it Suited·&lt;M.n convenience more .than theirs. We
shall follow the development of lhe collegiate sys!lom
at Buffalo wilh in!lonse interest.
ltt:PORT£_./cOllEGE REPORT/NOV EMlER I, 1t7J/PAGE 4

�__
----__--..--___ _ _
.. --'-·······

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

.

.......... .

~~~ .... .jllli!.jllljllii,lili••c:c:::JC:I=:J
Ftcutty of

ax.. ..... .

~

....·.. . ..... .

~ol~ ......... .

ar....ldtool ..... ... ....~. . .
~of

Cofttinuinl Ecll.lc8don...t

eo.._. ...... .
._..., ..........
,.......t.: ...... : .. .
........ Fi~inn

OtfM:Ie of . .

and

.----·
...···

-

""""'"- _,_,.,
- - · - ..... .

.

s-DU;y. . . . . . . . . . becpme in~ ~- Ia the possible
ril1e . . . . r.&amp;~ by a

~~~ :
I.~

lint~

~u~=~~~;
-:;t'~ta N- York
.my. . . . . . . . . . . ~1

.... nr. .sv-Udldns, ~
U/8 Jlepanment of
MediciDe. wbo I!;Nt cll4 IIIOdiea in~ 8111)'loi4.- - :pema "'l'·

attllat
c:bairaD fll

=-aloil-il .. .,.,. ~

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

lbe
~

~

lbe.liaaua Tbereare tw6major ~: •
primaJyl
IJili!'va in •"- Din
toncUe. ...... ~-tiact-i;'t­
el-"ere in ibe body for unbown.
.-ma, and -.lary. wblcb is ·a

wf&gt;!d'

~f:=-~~

leprosy, and ~ artJnitis.
"Amyloid," Tima reporter Lawrenoe K. Akman, Wl'OIIe, "ill common
in old JI80II)e and atremely oommon
in the wry old." 'DIIa flDdlna bas led
scielltiata to .......,.. it11111Yioid is "a
tzue piOiain fll ~
- , •.
In Bludisa nnd•talum aevera1 years
ago with Dr. J.olm Wrilbt Of Johns
Hopkina, Dr. IlbaJil Ozdlimir, and Dr.
Donald Pacbdda, Dr. Calkins found
tbat, · by ....- 90, 90 per cent of the
popu)atiaa evidmcad amyloid deposits.
IIOIII8Wbore in the body.
Earlier, Dr. Philip Schwartz had
found traces of amyloid in brain and
bmrt tiaaue of old peraons who bad
died in mental lilstitntions. Dr. Calkins and Dla IXIlleques IJUbJiequently
diacoverild llimllar amyloid di!posits in
a nm-insijtuliaaalhed population .
'They atudied the tiaaues of peraons of
vari&lt;M. ..-_ (from late adoleoceoce
on) wbo h8d died from causes other'
1han tuben:al08is or other diaeaseo associated with Ulyloid. Tbe &gt; fOund
traces of lllllYioid in J'8l'l!o."8 :,. young
as 80 and an iDI:rea8e with ago in ~­
~~ fll amyloid deposits.
~

to-(:aUdns, • major braal&lt;~ in ~loid ~- u.,
d'-.Y
- - 16~t
,.rs
"" Dr.
Hana ..........
theago
liUb&amp;tarfce
DOt llll llllDjlbaaB lllanlh. but ..
pro4leiD with a apeclflc atructme. By
Blainllla • 8IDPle with Caqo l8d dY,

'

and el:llmiDinl'tt~ a ~
in polarlaed liP.( . Mialmabl found
that Ul7!aid- lbe ~ of i&gt;i~ .ad. tlaefore, must have
a lltnaclure. ~
~ Dr. Alan Cobs&gt;, .Dr. Calkins,

U..lzt Baetoo. ~tly loobd at

8DIYiaia--- ~

Uld. fauad that 8111)'Jold 0111J11ista m .
larp Pllrt - tlbrfla. (Tbe IUbslaDce
·Do 11M a --ebroua co~=t,
k-.autlleP~L
've
Bludisa fll tbe c:ilaDice1 118ture fll tha

P ~are cumm~~ c:arrled aut by Dr. Paul
U!B ;
c:llntc.l ~ ~ of medicine at the"Me))er, Dr. Callr:IDa pointed
out.)

Unkllllllllnlltr

.

,..... .._, • 111M alink- found

betwela IIIIQ'Iold and ..... of the ....
8llll ~ catly,.-

~

amyloid lb&amp;

~

cause or these

Offioeo&lt;_.......,,
- - ._''"
...... . .. .
- Off. . ., v~oe - · " "

-

Fodllto....,..,.

•••••lllillllilll••••••

&gt;i-·

this type of eeaility?

0: •~~~~ri~l:'d.,=:

~

'.1011'10

,

""'"''"--'''"- ·
U.l. ._,ln&lt;./Ah...

5~5

- - ....u.., .. ' . • •.•• . ~~~~~~!~~!~~~

plaquea or is it a byprilduct oL an - u.s.:.:;:_,."~="';~·, .... 1
1....,....,t of nerve cell depneraticJn which .is the real cause of

mJr,"fc::.t evidelice of a close relation-

·-···--.....- _

1 •1

'* -

......
-

As or NcMKnber 5, 2,293 S8B.541 _ ... t1to .
Unlve_nlty United w.., - ' or $120,000, or 73.7 per ..m or tt.. tat&amp;
----------,----~------,--------

~:=typically
~~"!;:£~
.Liane
~' I Abel's1 'Cha.lf'
t'o
."'· rn;.amiefie
IISIIOciated with
II
r -c
::U..t·olree:=::en~~.:: Mo_tiday at Lockport's Kenan Center
amyloid was deteCted for evidence of
Mmllllit!ee

illaaPt · to be' an
that is laid down in .

...,.,
..........
Aoocriinc

~the
mlcroaCopicaJefiB
of nerve
·&lt;ell
~
in tha brain
that
have laac been --=iated with senllitv, are compoaed of amyJoid~ This
~raised a bal}ic ~ that
scielllista .&amp;re }llilJ wrestling with: is

·--·........

......
·--.__

.... .. ..

MedicalScbool diacoveredihat oenlle

....,....

~---

"llilil••••••~:t::I:=ci:::::J

Offkll of Vb ,....,., for

pljcatioas olqina, senility. Dr. Rob.,ert D. Terry of the Albert Einatein

------ - - -

....... .

~Off:.-::.~!

for~Nt.in..

-

senile bebayior such as inability;.tO -,_, ~·chllff" ,. new play by tJ/B Eng.of the young people.
foUow InstrUctions or an actual ,d ijq-Ush Prof~ Lionel ~1, will preOther cast members and their roles
noai&amp; Of senile brain. diseaae.
mie_re at the Kenan Center's Taylor
are: Napcy .Kochery, BuJfalo, as the
found an iporeaae ill bo.tl)~
, 'l'beo,ter, in Ulcl&lt;pbrt on Monday, Nowoman; Len Kadlubowski of 'lloaaplag1J!!8 and•abnaimal behaviOr
- vember 1.2. 'll&gt;e...prodildion will be
wanda .as&lt; Dale; Janis Golainan .ot
iiG!i)Eicts at 70-75 ,_rs old:"
- • direCbla b'y Jfelen Touster of Buffalo,
Buft'alo
Deidre; Arnold Alt.; Bufthey found no significant relatiC)Jlllhip
with music by Lukas F098, co-director
falo, a. J . D . .Smith; and John Nabetween amyloid..-.! ~be. ·
of the UnivelliitY'ti Center for the CreVaiTo or LoCkpOrt al;' Peter'. 1\11 meni-'
havior among either the younger, or
ative and Performing Arts, and Morbers of the cast hi:Ve credits in other
the oldest subjects in the sbldy. A
ton Feldman;visiting professor, music.
Western New York productions. ·
Additional performances are sched:
Tickets for "Cball" are available at
British physici:m suboequently ronfinned a link between senile behavior
uled for .Noyerpbe'r 13 tluouglj 17;
the K"""" Venter· ~ and at Norand amyloid in the 'brain, i9,J sludy
curtain time is 8:30 p.m. '
·
ton Union. Resc!i'Yations may be made'
"of much rnqre -elegant design," acCompleted this year, "Cball" is
by calling the Keoan ('..enter, 433-2617
cording to the U /B scientist, but carcontemporary in subject, conceriied
or 625-8096. ·.
ried out with institutionillized subjects
with the problems of communication
and with an inadequate control group.
between generations. The cast includes .~ Energy Crisi~
"I don't think senile brain disease
a group of· five disenchanted and nodis due to amyloid," Pr. Calkins says,
ical young people, and a middle-aged
in spite of studies such as his own that
man and woman who ·attempt to rompoint to lihlyloid as a faclor associated
municate with the youths and avert
The FOurth C.C. Furnas Memorial
Conferenoe will .be held November 11with senility. "Dr. Terry doesn't thirik
a clisast.er.
12 in the Presidential Suite ol Goodso either,"· be adds. At this stage, a
wrJ~1 · ~~ ~ears~:h: .':,r;:~a':l
year . HaU c'm the theme, "The Steel
:::.it!'~~ ~~:C ~e~~~~
articles have apj)!!ared in The Nation,
Industry ani! the ~"SY _Crisia"
brain: (a hypothesis that Dr. 'Harold
The New Republic, Partisan Revi£w,
Profesoor Julian Szekely.~ director
Brody, U/B Anatomy Chllinnan, 'is'
The New York Review of Books,
of the eenter fOr Process Metallurgy,
studying here, Calkins says) .
Commenlory and Dissent and have
is ronferenoe- cbairman.
also ~ted .for French and
More tban_lOO people are~
-"'IIIB Seen •• lmmunoloclc Breok-.,
Italian publications.
_
to attend, repreaenting indusky, aniAccording to Dr. Call&lt;ins. three of
He bas written three o~r plays. versities '\D(I aOWmn&gt;ent ftom both
the major figures in amyloid n!9e8.1'Cb,
"Death"of Odysseus," "Absalom," and
the U.S. and abroad. Contributors
Dr. George Glenner of the National ''The .Pretender''--all ·o f which have
will inc I u de represenlatives from Institutes of Health, Dr..Ead P . Benbeen produced in New York City and
Japan, Germany, Canada, the Netherditt of the University of Washington,
in lheatres tluougbout the United
lands and tha VA •
·
and Dr. Edward C. Franklin of New
Slates. "Odysseus" bas also been perAmong theae are: Dr. Tabata,"execformed in Swede!' and Italy.
York University, have recently found
uti,ve_
director
of
the_
Japanese
Iron
stiuctural links between the type of
In 1956, "Absalom" reCeived the ·
and Steel lnStitnte~ Frarik x.uer-.,
amyloid IISIIOciated with qina (prifirst ''Obie" award given by the Vilvioe 11resident of inland Steel; Promuy amyloid) and immunoclobulin, .
kJge Voice for the best oil-Broadway
fesoor John F. Elliott of the Muthe protein involved in tha .bod.)'!s de- play of the . year_ Abel's "1be p.,_
fenae against infections. In fact, the
tender'' starred James Earle Jones
~~~!I:...O~'::erofw~~
scientists fOWIII that bY treating im-.
and -Roeroe Lee Brown and was l!ii&gt;Tec:bniscbe Hocbachule, Aachen, Germunot~lobulin with certain en;ymes
duced by Frank Perry at the Cherry
~they f'IU! make amyloid. "This -disLane Theater in 1900. It mc:eived exContributom will· examine possible
covery,., commen·t ed the Timea.
·oeUent reviews from Brooks Atkinson ,
ellecta· of enersi "sbo~ on devel" . . • ( strengthens) the theory that
_ in the New York T,imell, ari&lt;f Harold
opment
of new irimmak:ina and steel
somehow aging results from a bniakClurman in Partisan Revieu.
'
- p....-ing
•tiooa and modificaaown in tha immunologic· proOOss."
Abel is also author of Melallt«lur,
tions -~ ezisting p.lant praca volume of critical """"Y8 on lheat.-e,
tices. J a - projecliana and JfiJ&gt;'
~-~ ~~~~" and bas mc:eived' Gupenbeim and
anese ~ will be empbasi.M
._,.
Rockefeller
and an awaril
Millrom on the.relaticJn of ~loid to·
from .,_ ··'"·ti·--• -"-~y of ·~-·
In additicJn to Dr. Tabe.ta, othar Japthe immunololic'-J)nXleiS) ......adera if
""' ""' """' .__..,...1
~ ...
anese Plll'ticipanta will include Pro.mtity is not, in fact, a conditicJn re- ' ' and. Scieuces.
f-.r Omori (of Tohulru University),
~•....,~ of brain'
The playwright tllumt at Pratt Inthe d........~
• Dr. Asaki o{ ~to 'University and
jltitute, Rlitaem and Columbia before
ciells
immunolotlic p..,._,;, ......,
joiniD&amp; U/8.
. .
_.
.• two rept"Mentativaa or Nippon Kokan.
awry in tha. courae of whic:b llmyloid
Ms. Touater, tha·. ~dr.~ .bad
Prol-.l Wellliel'a-'P&amp;I*' will c1ea1
ia produced lllld clepcmted. But this-is
lhMtre '---'eooe in the
.....,
..
:;~tha pcill8ilil_e ~atomic"""""
OoDjecture, Calkins .;mpbep!- '.
. ~~· lllld ~ Tbe
Acoordlat to the Tilwa, the nation's
cast wili lncluae•·a 'l'oroa1o pooh,
while
• br..t -w... fll tha etrectB of the
8lliylold -.men hope to obtain
aional a - Sutbmand ill: the 1018·
~ c:riai&amp;. Mr, Clark , Elliott ol
. . . . .te laderal fundins to.CIIIItinue
of the ~. man. Bulr.Jo..l..t
STELCO and Mr. R. Bouman of
and eopmd their aiUdleo into the IIIJb.
pror-iooal" acior Tom Mardiraaian
staDce and ita poEible role in the ,aniwill • - in the role-Of Allan, the
Betblebem Steel will diac1a pnoctical ~ of aw-gy flhort:aaa.
- t JINII8IIi o f - . _
&amp;J&gt;Pill"!!t leader and provocative

as

is
Conference Theme

1

--

U'

f=r't

sul~ftom

Ptt~ wSf'=

,

�II
~1::.:o-..................
~.=:r.t=·ra=:

~--=r=

aarvicea to

"-.:f

wlmlp........

',.......,_llal

Clilllir~ .

vilora, would olfer f inllmrJud- NTl'l, aDd wwld

.ri'tt.&gt;lil!'~~.:i

~au
....,.t ~awn~
!:!'12,.
thll....telrectne
~-~lion, the u~ m.

...__I

be lad to

::~.
_....., incldoota

abMt
poe1ed

:' bni."icce- bella, the Unioo, the

DUS Of!io!er the EOPOiice, aDd~
Ill bilh IIIUdmt IXIIICIIItra-Pubtic ·"""""tanct~ Ill the
...... to IIUCCI!illful
tation ol
aliiiective ....W., Jll'OIIftiiiL"
e-n far Anlhoo.a
By way of • "taclmical atatement,"
tbe document DDiad that "tbe atatement in tbe ~ llllller Part I,
aection UG, ,.......,.menda that- per1101111 Oil each obift be armed when
qualified With the additiaD Ill the AmberBt Campus, feel that the
number ol people per IIIUft ~ beve
to be increased in order to CXM!r all
- - " [This point bad .w-ty "-'
added to tbe Hull Committee's final

,.,.,.,.,menda~l
We "are .......- 'acieep~-·~
~~ve

8l'IDi.q as described in
's cammittee report and with all-til the stipulations spelled out in thet ~"
tbe PSS Committee ODDdudod, m the
belief "that seledive arming is tbe
&lt;lilly acceptable 1IIIIIWet " ' this point

in time to tbe threat Ill armed individ-·

uals on our c:ampu&amp;"

Approval ol tbe

_

~

posa-

-.1 NTP IIIIIJIP(Mer. 'ljlo afta:l UDder the .,._t , _ , liolh 8Qyder
and Ms. Wyant noted, an NTP poai.
lion on~..;a a dead end,~
DO opporbmlty fO&lt; advancement. 'It is
all but ~ they aaid, for job
incumbenta to achieve a ~ of
employment levels within the Univer-_
sity
to eYeD develop a ptan for
ouch advancemi!DL
·

or

NTP-

.

Ms. Wyant skeldled some of the
data compiled hom , the NTP qwstionnaires (""-! on returns hem 150
of 650 NTPs) : The "averace NTP,"
according to ber repO&lt;t, is 39 years
old, 1Jiala (50 per cet1t of """J'CJICdenta) , _.-jed, .and works~ "'!wB per
week. He is "aatialled" Wlth his prest
'tion, has ~ IJ!]ationships
:lth "':. co-worbrs and supervisor
{who is-al8o an NTP), feels his stills ·
are being eftectively ut:ifual, is less
than OODtent concerning "tbe probability of ~ increaaee at reasonable
intervals,~ JS sure that be will con.tinue m&lt;his positiori for at least another- year, has a master's degree,
ptaos to· continue his formal edllaltion, is interested in leave With pay
{or releaae lime) to· clo ao, and would
like ultimately to have the ~­
Dity li&gt; teach. He ..._~. -~
6ed with his own position wben compared to other NTPa &lt;Ill.._
but

aunpus,

aomewhat ilisaatiai6ed wnen ~ comtion followed~ aud debate
his
'lion to thoae . , faculty
diJected - . d both the draften of
::::"'indivi~ in aimllar fields out='"
the PSS report and Dr...MaAUister H.
sfde
the
University.
Hull Concerns . . - tbe .introduction .
The most signifiomt II!SUit of,.the
- of IIDD8 in lillY form ~ ~ survey was U... eq&gt;ression by ·NTP
by two or three ll8l&gt;8lor8 wbo f......d
Tesporidenls of the desire lor additbet the _ . . . . Ill Jllllll would intional education, Ms. Wyant pointed
evitably lead to their use. Hull Blood
out. Fully one-third of the .respondenta
by hill PJeYiouoly eliP.-I ]IOIIition
would
even be interested
leaves
al being able to olfer "no iuarantees,''
wilhoUl pay in order to punrue eduabout Poesible incidenta (...., Reportcational
goals.
Thus,
sbe
said,
the
data
,., Oct. 11, f« an in-depth 8CCOWit of
clearly suppods the Queer Mobility
the Hun 11111H:ommittee's defense ot
group's
recommendation
for
adoption
ita 11!1!0!!111""""""ion)- Tbe. Graduate
. of a career devel&lt;&gt;Jlli&gt;ent program.
Scbaol Dean emphesiral, ~.

m

that lllb-cammittee data DDOCI!I'DIIII
~ where -.urity forces are
armed yielded no evidence of 8UCh
incldoots, tbet the guidelins presCribe
riPl amtrols Oil _ . , _ , and
that the IIUIHx&gt;mmittee, in any event,
bad " - ' c:onceriJed~'th estsb-

lisbini procedllftl8

adequate
to armed IDIID
On campus and • could determine no viable
~... to seledive amrlng to_pJOvideeucb.Aabd if the oub-committee bad "-'
p--s into its position by Campus
?oHce, Hull ft!IIPOIIIIed in the negative.
- -

c.--,
_ .
A -.oDd major a11enda item at

'11mnday'a ~ WBB an oral preview Ill a lloall-to-be,dislributed report·

on NTP Career Mcbility fnlm a subClDIIIIDittee Ill the PSS'a Prole!lllional
Developmmt Committee. BaSed on a
quMtionnalre wbieb NTP ataft' memben noqustecf to &amp;II out last
apring, the completed
of the
llfOUP, ebaired by Helen Wyant, uslatant directot, Btwhmt Testing SerYiae, will p - t both a profile of
NTP ataft'- incluclini such data os
7t job ealisfaction, job _.,.,.,.,, J08]a,
etc. - and recommendaticoa CODOerning t!8lablishment of a University ca,_. deYeJopment propam for NTPa
-eo&lt;teoding to auch as workaliapl &lt;Ill atills and ...._. PtanninJ,
releaae time for University ClOWIIe8
.-zed to career adYanc:ement, manqement internships for · Univwsity
....,.._ to_JI'OOID them for adminlofnldye poaiB, ete.
Accoiilina to lal Snyder, chief ac~and 8 member Ill the Career

._rt

~""~
. !Y ":ria'::.=~
-.11 lor eataNiolnnaat Ill a -

position to be bown as
.......... 'l1le in-

01110&lt;--

.

In other busineas last Thllli!Clay, the
Professional Staff Senata~ ,
·
• Learnea that a "class JrieVBIICe"

concerning the University's change in tuition waiver policies for faculty ~

professional staff bae "-&gt; filld by tlie
local SUNY/United and is being
beard by a joint c:ommittee of three

(Conlinwd from- I, coL 3) '.
'Diere is tremeudous power m each
citizen." be CODtlJiued "and' the greet,_ of our COUDtry Jles in the diver-

...,,...,.__

....· _.,_, ile.:

-;;;u;;~' ~~ ro~~~......·n L;'~ !'P!l"
~

sity,

lm~

·

A questioD about impeachment im- ·
mediotely and inevitably -followed this
insp' ·
note. Did COl&lt; have ,....,.,.b~
OD ~~ to .fon:e him from
office? ftudelshaus disclaimed' faliiil.
iarity with Cox's work, and.fieldeil the
question on · procedunl grounds.
" Coz," be said, ........ Dbt there fA?
trigaer the impeachment- Only
Congress can-do that. First there's-the
Judiciary Committee, thea there's a

B~ei~ ~ -~ ;.;;;mmit

himself

to jleraonal observation llOJICelllinll tbe
President's 8hility to ~Could be
diamisa' "out of hand' reports of Nizon's instability, IIOIIIf,IOD!l asked ''I
couldn't diSmiss them 'out of hand',"
· be replied, "becauae the President has
'-n under a greet ·d eal of strain."
(Lauahter.) He &gt;:eroll8iclered then declarecl· ·his fimt answer inOperative.
"Well, then," be falteled, "maybe rd
bette• aay I would"
As a hypothetical Senator; would be

NTPs and three faculty-Frank
Bl'DWil, 88110Ciate profeaaor, educational administmlion, chairman; Stanley
/ Bruckenstein, Gooczyear Professor,
-chemistry; Edwin Gordon, prot.....,r,.
music; HaYIDCIDd Dye, Student Peraonnd Services; · Phyllia Herdendprf,
Millard Fillmore College; and Richard Macakanja, Health &amp;ieDces _Com_ m~ The pievance protests
a reduction in the amount of the percetltsge of tuition waiver available to
· , "Tbe Minority Student and ea-rs
faculty and NTPa.
.
in Business" will be the tppic of a
• Heard fnlm Peramlel OGice repronfl!fi!D&lt;e at the Uncoln Memorial
resentatives a reviaed, delayed timeUnited'Methodist Church, 6t1 Masten
table for both the ~tion of NTP
Avenue, Satnrday, November 10. The
appointmenUetten aDd the .compleconfeJaace. o p e n to minority blah
tion of the NTP job position evaluaschool stwlenta iii tbe City of BulfalO,
tion PIOCie88. Appointment letters
is beiJig· ~ bY the Buftalo Pubshould """" be uPectecl bY the end of
lic Sc:liocila and the. U/B Minority
November, the 11ft1UP WBB told Job
ManaprOent Assistance Proaramevaluation pl'OCli!CiureB -.e said to be
Tbe conference will feature a -aeries
98 per oant llOIIIPiete. Within tbe MKt
two w e e k s, Ka. Conldin. ·aoaistant
peJ'IIODDe! diJector, oald, ell ..;ob derepreaentatives from area rollepa.
- scription&amp; will be . .typed with their
The PIOJllllll Will nm fnlm 9 a.m. to
final fiiDkinp and distributed to 'rice
' 1 p.m. and liiDCb will be provided 1or
pn!Oiidenta. ' The 'rice president will
studenta atteuding.
•then have further opportunity to apSpeakers at the conference will 'be:
peal in ..,.. where be feels a position
Mra Colette Girard, llimctor of aufdbae been underranked. At time
an&lt;e, BulfaJO Public .Bcbools; Sanford
from early to mid-December, a pack,_
M. Lottor, &amp;allstant dean, U/B School &amp;lie of zatina ..,._. ill espected .to
of M•D'IIII""eDt; Richard ~
receive loc:ar IIR'IU'II1 b fonra¢inllconfeft!ll&lt;e coordinator; Larry Drab,
to tha Divi8imi Ill lbe Budpt, Conk88!IOclalie director of 11'-nent at
U/B; lsoy c..les, dlreetor, BulraJo
lin
said
he
DOted,
Budtet
mdlra'ted tbet ita
Urtlaa Iealrue: MIL Geoitlil Uncer,
workload
lillY ...... Ill the
diJector U/B ~. ()ppcwiim:
pacbee Ulllil at leMt ~IIIIIW'y•
~ c.i:tar, and Bmie W~llclt aDd

tv1inority Career Progr_a_m Slated

~~:~.,:;;=-~

=ClUe. --....

Cli1ford

Bel( area busi_.

Co1Jepe participatina Will he: U/B,
Canisi
NiuanL Bu«aJo State, Roa.i
ary
Erie Community and Niapra &lt;A&gt;11t&lt;
munity.
#

mit V~ari_!!,~ D'Y~1

Edmund D. McGarry

�K--- .

~,_,...z,coL 4)

~~)lathe !at~

.

~! =)~ a ...~vlalonfour.
01 adil .,.... _,
IIMl
.......... acbool model" (clivi&amp;- til Mallb or life ICiences; aocial
and bebavilxal-'-- incl·~'--law
__.. edal:atka; -;;:;;;;;,;;..- ~
""" ry aad_ ~atunil

~-::.
~~ D8
'-n. letlln OIIIIIIIDi Into 1D.Y ollice

iDdlcate that the tlauma 11880Ciated
wilh mil' .....,m.tion DillY just DOt
be worth It," Ke&amp;ter - t e d .
Ill IIIQI1CI8IDI that the Uni...at;y.
widecleoma,~IOie--clear

UDder the ~
lion,
be ~ to atalr ~llol
olllcen," the Pl'Midaltaijjiji;f that the
. provoate, tbouah C18118asibly Uni--'ty _...._ _..._ '--·~ ''-·
· - - - - - - . .,..~
.roc:blal" lnten8t&amp; ....
to advise
bim flam the .-..ectlw of the in·
dividual Fllcul&amp;e ·aatber thaD the
v;~~ ~ edministratiWI tilaD&amp;ea ..di U the creation of a
support alrvlcea unit would eliminate
&lt;O&amp;t.ly clupUc:atioa of .mcea, partieularly in the health acien&lt;e&amp;, IIDd
"""'d _,., to ~ · the University
u a whole, the Pn!aideat aaid. Ill several instBDcaB, oucb • tbat of the
Ubrariea, tbe realiped unit would re0

~::J.:/3.::~l;,t.t...~

Vacie Preaident, a position ~
IIOIDIItime after the real of the Meyer-

;: ~;""!!::..:::'t implemented,

The ~ b d
ollice
motivated, Ketter~&amp;; a...,.:
that "the budget prooess was controlling &amp;aldemic decisions BDd DOt the
other way around." The bw!&amp;et o11ice •
Wbuld lie '11 8mall, apjlai'ailtly- watChdoc-type operation, the President in-

dieated.

~ .u-niU...,..o­

--

.....

·W0411a-~~~

::~(==-~=
.......
dlvlllaa. • unit of 8llldemic

ca....----, .
_,...., ........ 4288 Ridp

.IUIONOB n..~ &amp;ria: KT8
r.-. Rm. Ill. 7
p.m.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . oapDized (with

0

.....
A M...md WoiiiGII . (Goclald, .1964),
~~ 8 IIDd 8 p.m. No Umlooion

-SUDI - A n o N •
l~na o/ MO«&lt;W. by Herbert

M - l h , 282 Norton, 3 p.m.
Pr-Ied by the Cub.

-Of~
SYSIIMSI
M~ Proba tor
Vinal Elioloey
'

4

-reb.

of HIUIIGA C&lt;UtCer, Prof. Sol Spieplman,
Inotitute of ea-r
Columbia
Uaiwraity, 70 Acb.lo. 4 p.m. Colfee at

Ufl- 3:80 ·p.m.

DyiiOIIIica of Human SeJCUOiity: Couo

Plinl and Uru:ouplinl, Dr. Gerald Thor-

ner, oupervioing counoelor, Student

eou-!iDi Center, 23~ Norton, 7 p.m.
A cliocuooil&gt;t1 on. marriage and other

altemativeo~eo of variouo

~

-w.

and life atyleo.

·=-~~~
7 p.m.

State. Clarlt HaU,

·

IIAIIMINTON

....... cbarP-

~":l~-~ncbarp.

:k": '::,me

The foiiDwiDc
tblo ..... ,
THURS_DAY-B: Arthur y - ·and
Co.; American Metal aJmax, Inc.; Tnwo
elero lnonranoe Co.; WMt Soaeca OoDtral Scboola.

Local, state and private transportation

Squibb

now

in limited circulatitni

were meaningless without "exegesis.,,

Adm._
In 'other business, the Senate COD·

tinued to WJ'Illllle with the report of
the Admisaions Committee. After a
debate that .relied heavily on the parliamentarian, the bodv endomed the
foUowi!~i

recommendations 011 regular

admissiOns (excluding EOP and other
special categ;,riea) :

1. For the clase beginning in 1974,

that students 6e ranked
on: a) Percentile Rank in high school;
b ) ~l'A; ,c) RSE (score on Regents
we ' propose'

ScboW11Dip Exam);
2. The lowest of the three ranks be
discarded and the other two ranks
averaged;

~-J:!:eoru,.,""i'~:

be cbooen by the average rank 80
obtained;
4. Step II. After 95 per cent of the
clli".as'1i selected, up to 5 per cent be
cbooen by raw rank in high school
(minimum of. 1501!10 RSE/GPA).
The fiilal minutes of the meeting
were devoted to the Colli!Jrium. Secretary Mac Hammond said that the
final report of the body would be t'eady
by DeCember 16. Among the recommendations likely to be included in
that document, which will include a
u-retu:al defense of the CoU_,Jum's
commitment to "the integration of
lmowleclp," is the eatahlisbment of
~~ faculty committee Oil

Tbe pooajbjlity of a wminority report" raised in lillht of the ('()llo
cern of DaDb8r Harold Bep1 that the
CoUecium'• report will DOt I&gt;OllStitute
an acadomlc ,plan.
,

Olllce, Hayeo

to ~~':=:::d~~
!:~r:y~:!?~~~:lb~~..~

The U /B Badminton Cub has an~ that ~.:/!.y~~~t
HaU, 7:30p.m.
For fuither information call Ravi at
83701278
·

a: Bona;

FMC

Cor~.;

Arcata Gmpbia..

B. R.

TUESDAY -13: Geoeral B1-x Co.

Jtou.•

WEDNESDAY -14: Ortbc&gt;·l'luuma·

David Richar&lt;U will read !rom his
translations of the worb and !etten of
Buclmer, 244 Crooby, 8 : 15 p.m.
PreOented by the Department of Germanic and Slavic.

ceutical Corp.; Mollil Oil Corp.; -

York State :eJactric 0.. Co.; Ae- Qu..
ualty and Surety Divioion; Col.amllia
Preobytarian Medical OoDter.
.
THURSDAY-15: New York Life
lnaui'ADOe Co.; s.s. ~ Co.; Colltinental Can. Co.; Metropolitan Life Inonrance Co.

.......
time.

eveninc.i:"'l:t.Jk

ill~

~AY-9:

planaero· haab it out among tbemael-.

St;:,~, ~i~~~ ~.:f"Sft.5~1~'f!';

-enCl..

C, 881.,..14.

...-..wiD be

WlfO HIOHUOHTS

LYIIC UND

THURSPAY-15

N&lt;Yl'ICES

S£MINAII"

to-~~o=:::.oJ:~~ ~=:

CNA8AO -

For further information, call 837-0894.

Qu~ ~=::.u: ~.!tio!~~

day. evening at 9 o'clock. All - - take

mrr•
Part l l - Writin&amp; 4B Weapon: MeanSty~ in Nietzche, Bernard Pau-

Department of Linguistica.

m: :::==-ion on Tran.cenden.

tal Medil4tion will be held by tbe Stu·
dent International Meditation Society,
~cheoon, 8: 15 p.m. No admiaaion
-NIITDCNE AND lM£ LITUAIY

inl and

~~ "s:..rie:.~ ~~ria~f'.J:~:::.I~o~:

8:30p.m.
. P.-nted by the Program in Compar·
atiYe Literature and tbe · Council on
lnternatiot\al Studies.
.

Noted author Simon Wieaentbal dis-

hl:":!t"~ 1'0:1:"~ANa:f ~

still at large.
---:--~--------

WEDNESDAY-14 "

I.ECTUIE'

· Di6po.ition Concept. in Beluwioral Sci·

enq, Dr. Morris Rosenberg, National In·

stitute of Mental Health, 4242 Ridge
Lea, Rm. 25, 10: 30 a.m.
Sponaored by the Social Science Research Institute, in cooperation with the
Departments of Payc:hology, Sociology
and Political Science.
~
AIEl

SEMINAl!~

John Pilitsis of Western Electric will
speak on the engineering sbJdent's outlook toward prospective employers, 4224
Ridge Lea, Rm. 47, 12:30 p.m.
Preoented by tbe U /B student chapter, AIE:j;:.
·
FOST£1 COUOQUUJM #

Topic to be announced, Dr. K . Yates,
University of Toronto, 6 Acheson. 4 p.m.
Coffee in 50 Acbeaon at 3:45 p.m.

'I.~;;-..;'A5J.i!·ill"'ta:!t.~~
(for women only) io helil each W..._,

pla&amp;-at Chabad House, 8292 Main
Striiet. For fllrtber information, call 88S-

~~ts~-&amp;":!:t~r'.a~ ~au.t;

8334.
COUNSBJNO

BUFfAlO WOM£N'S CI:NTU MHnNG•

Professional counseling is available at
Hille), Hou.e, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
appomtment.. call 886-4540.

Gene.roJ. meeting. open to all ·women,
Buffalo Womeq's Center, 564 Fra..nklin at
Nortb, 7:30 p.m.
For fu.rther information, call 883-5474.

GSA IEUAICH OUNn

GSA Researc}t Granta · have been
awarded. and' announCements of awards

The General (Keaton), 140 Capen,
7:45 and 9 :45 p.m. Admiaoion: 75 cents.
Buster Keaton directed and wrote the
this~

NIDZSCHE AND THE LITEIAIY TEXT•

Part lll-'Wrilin8

ing and Styk in.

4B Weopon: MeanN~tuche, Bernard Pau-

trat. profeuor of philosophy, Ecole Nor-

male Superieure. Paris, Annex B, Rm.
5, 4 p.m.
.
p.....,ted by the Program in Comparative Literature and the Council on In·
temational Studies.
HIU.S. SUI'I'Eij

-

'l'he guest will be BOOKMOBILE driver Danny Horwitz, Hillel .House. 40 Capen Bl\'(1., 5: SO p.m.

Ewell in ASia

~ ~~:_~·b.;,!~~r~p8~~:
fice for information.

whicbrisJ;:Onsid·

Hu.ra .OOOOiiii ...... ·· '

ered by many to be tbe last great Bilent
clauic. The story takes place during the
Civil War and depicts the hijacking of a
Confed.era.te train by Union saboteurs.
The outraged engineer Of the stolen train
(Keaton) deAperately attempts to retum
it home.

:W"":.t
"!.i3. ~~te!i~=
DeWilopmeot Propam.

adVisina the
Philippine 1QV1!1!11D81lt Oil teclmological and economic ~of two .larle
His work will involve

fertillllar plant&amp;.

'

•

"'tl•

On Wedneoday, Nov. 14, the ATID
BOOKMOBILE will be parked all day
in front of Norton Union. Student. are
welcome to browse through tbe !acil.ity,
which includes works on Jewish laws
and customs.

UUAI fiLM••

Adrift (Kadar, 1971), Conference 'Theatre. Norton, check showcase foi times.
Admission charge.

HIUEL SHAUAT IN HATlJRE

CANISIUS COLUGE THEATtE PWEHTATtoN•

Camp at EUicottville, tbio weekend, Nov.
9-11. Students will arriYe at tbe camp
on Friday afternoon ; a Sabbath dinDer
witb traditional and Israeli oonp will
be held that evening. Informal oervicea
and discussiona, a Saturday nicht aoc:ial,
a Sunday mom.ing brunch and other activities are planned. For further information, call 836-4640.

'The U/B and Buft'alo State Hillel or·

=~ili~~d!u=t;t

Arsenic and Old Loce, directed by Daniel Gradel, Canisius CoUege Little Theatre, 8:15 p.m. Tbrougb Saturday, Nov.
17.
For ticket information, contact the
LitUe Theatre office, 883-7000, ext. 281.
POETI:Y READINGS•

Featuring Jim Guthrie, Louise Nayer
and Pol Ndu, Faculty Club Red Room,
Harriman Library. 8 : 30 p.m.
Presented by the Department of English.

Cob;;

MINORITY STUDENT fEllOWSHIPS

The Council lor Opportunity in Graduate Mnnagement Education (OOGME)
will have representatives at the Univer·
sity PI.Boement and Career Guidance ot~
fice on Tuesday, November 13, 1:80-6
p.m. The Council repreaenta .10 institutions (Harvard, Columbia, Comell, Stanlord , Dartmouth, Wharton, MIT, Univer·
sity of Chicago, Carnegie-Mellon, and

EXHIBITS
Al.IIIGHT..«NOX EXHIIfT•

~ti~:u:r ~d'ia!~:~w:;

:::d
~'!!:::treu!=.!rr::~~~
dents for graduate etudy in ma..napment.

!\lli~:~~;a~~:fl:;, ~~o.::

wood Ave., tbrougb Sunday, Nov. 11.

Interested students are invited to atop ill
Hayes C6 to make an interview appoint,..

MUSIC UIIAIY EXHIIIf•

Sources of Information about Music
.. Education. Music Library, Baird Hall.
throUgh Monday, Nov. 15.

menL

·

SUMM.ER CAifH OPPOITUHITIU

fess~"ru.J&amp;s:.:&lt;r;:1o'::.::"~~

UUAB EXHIIIT•

Contemporary Seri.graehs. Pratt Grapbica Center traVeling OJ&lt;bibita, Gallery 219,
Norton, tbrougb 'l'huraday, Nov. 15.
Gallery hours: Monday, Wedneoday
and Thursday, 11 a:m.-5 p.m.; Tueoday
,and Friday, noon-4 p.m. and S-10 p.m. ;
Sunday, 1-5 p.m.

for 1974 is now in the

p~

etap.

~r:{oe~~~.':"~ ~-~
!,hgyJ!er::d~~i~~~

ill

addition, there will be a (ew ~tiono
accounting, computer science and market~
ing. Candidates must be within one year
of completing· their undargraduate program or at any level of graduate atudy.
Application forms are available in the
Univenity Placement and Career Guid~
ance Ollice, Hayeo C, Rm. 6.

All EXHtUT•

Dr. Raymond Ewell, former vice
preaident for research and DOW professor of chemical engineering emeritus, left for the Philippine&amp; BDd India
NOvember 3 for a weeks' as-

QASSIS •

On Sunday tbJooush Tlmnday -.IDp.
Cbabad Houoe often a - on J«&lt;Jiih

Project on Human Communication,
Brona State Hospital, 4242 Ridge Lea,
Rm. 28, 3:30"-5:30 p.m.
This is the first part of a two-day

CHAIAD HOUSE CLA5S•

Translations of Jewish Prayers, Cha·
bad House, 3292 Main St.. 4 p.m. For
furtbet" information, call 833~ .

,.

veraity~tllllllc.-~

Pruent Tenu-The City and 7'nlnoporuuion.., 8 p.m.
'Will ~transit be a paruu:ea? Will

acreenplay ,.for

ganization

or obtoinina ~1. Fartloer 'laformation IIDII. ~ far bdetviews c:an be llfDIDI8II tiDoalb tba Ulli-

~\'t:~~M..c.~

l':"'~:.~~;r:!I:W,~:

insure that the University is capable
\ of modification aad future change.
One Senator, espresaing interest in
the ~. asked the President ~for
somet.bina in writing" 80 that faculty
could ClODSider the plan further. Another Seoator suggested that the socalled "bubble charta" on the reor-

...........s

'11avalhold
tba - ·fol'
..........
iDteroleww
wiD be
.........

illtelalloll ill •teoDIIiall .................

and FriDa Aneh-

=..rey,
The pelformaru:e will include worb by

CAC fiLM•

riera ~ BDd 81D011g disciplines:
to enable the University to genera~
innovation intemally; to create an
atmosphere that can attract and bold
exmllent faculty IIDd ecbolara; IIDd to

•

• FACULtY IICIIAL •
AileD~ clarinet,

His primary objective&amp;
bout
tbp .Pioua!lill8 .K!~.,_.....;W;,;.:;;.~NIOLRAHUOMfS
IIO
.
said, to cfreete a miiiiBa ba&amp;oilve Uni- . ore Tunkl•9'";,~~vid Wolfe and Len--

we.,.,

INTERVIEWS

A B~ree,_. NtuMt!. Daile (ltaaD,
1961) 140 Capen, 7 and 9 p.m. No ad·

Berilropho by Geo'1/i&lt;rna Juneelo and
Pho101rapho by William JU111/&lt;~. Hayes
lobby display caaea, Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.·6 p.m., through Nov. 30. Preeented.
by tbe Ollice of Cultural Alfain.

UIIARY EXHIIIT*

60Ch A....W.I'IIU'y of tM Publicolion of
tJu--, part ·ol the _pennanent , _
Joyce ezhibil, Poetry Room (207), Loc:lr:~ M-nol Library.

-IIICNIIIr

in y::.,:~n:r:-:~;=.;"C
wbo -

cluriDr 1.872. BalcoD,t-, -

WEEKI.Y COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADliNE

,

For everyone's c:onvenience end plllllsur..
- like to publicize oil ovents toldna ~
on cempqs. To record infonnetlon, cont:8c:t

Noncy Cordarwlll. ut. 2228.

'

�---

World of Opera, with Dnlci.J!I-;. ~

P-=';-enli: La na..iGIG, with MaM ~
ao Violetta tmd Fnm01100 A n - u
Alfredo.

'

CNAIAD IIOUII

a.us• •

Yiddioh, Cbahacl Houoe, 8292 Main
St., 8 p.m. ~or further informatlna. Ciill
888-831U.
CHAIAD HOUSI a.ASJ•

rewilh .Law. and C...tonu, Chabaci
Houoe, 8292 Main St.. 4 p.m. For fur.
ther information, call 888-831U.

MIA IICn:AL•

Koi NinB Clwing, wi&lt;:e atudent of
Heinz Rehfuoo, Baird Recital ~ '8
p.m. ..

UUAa , . .••

fe~':'"~~N~~~1.9'12~
~

for lim-.

c:harp.

·

MONDAY-12

week11J ~IIURuaique

1

----

--,-.*"*tor- ·chol'llnll odmlaion can
.a,.n

be

~.,~ ~':!d C!ulh ~

~ ot \f&gt;o

tha~~~oi;!"~ &lt;:..."rJ.".i'::/.

This month, ""'ll be lootinc at anme of
the lhiDp tliat don't to mind wben
you thinlt of Buft'alo. Todoy, anme of
the line opera companies that calliJCI
·Buft'alo baa. at the tum ol ~~tury.

....,...

~~/'!f";...~IO=·Yi:'ti:

tute for the Study of the Languages and
Cultures of Africa and Aoia, Tokyo Univenity of Fo,.,;p Studieo, 4238 Ridp

'"';;!::t!ri;"~ f:'"African

8tudieo.

PA11101.0GY SEMINAl#

ClttrfllinB Cona~ptio111 of D&lt;lay&lt;d Hy_,..it.ivity. Dr. Harold Dvorak,. De-

&amp;:::''
H'!Jt!J~~~n.M~~u.;;:.
8:80p.m.
--.oc:anaSIMINAIII

ICRONOS Ti.me-SharinB S&lt;ri&lt;o: Th&lt;
BASIC Lon«UGI&lt;, 4288 Ridge Lea, Rm .
10, 7 p.m. .
IUffAI.O WOMIWS CINTD MHTtHG•

Ge:nnol muW... open to all women,
Buft'alo WOJDeD'o Center, 564 Franklin
at North, 7:80 p.m.
For. further information, call 883-5474.
FACULn COUOOUIUII•

Don QW:rou and Bo171u: Pe,..pectiu;.m. Ve,.....-Likrary Tu.Q~ Arthur Efron,

~l.:::;oa..'i!'N..t~r~~

...... Library, 8 p.m.
~ted by the D&lt;pertment of Englioh.
~•

.Jonathan Kozol, author

=-~·
:'!f:t!:.~a::.
.. Room. Non-. 8 p.m.
·
~

-·
........

~ted

by the Community Action

Corpo.

,::Wt;ro: ~~~

6 t=:.~
-cbarp.

•

Gue.f lecturer it C. C. Paige, MeGill
University, 4?;l5 Ridge Lea. Rm. 41, 3:30

'n-ire, No.-, c:bod&lt;
Admiooioa
8tarriac
~cbarp.
!Wfoall

omwcaoe for

FRIDAY-9

2

dorf, 8-11 p.m.

Education: Are There Really· Altemo·
tiue•?, Norton Hall, Rmo. 281, 284, 242,
244, 246 and 248, 8: 45-6:15 p.m.
Sir groupe of infonnal d.UM:u.ssion, hosted primarily by U/B faculty members.
will range widely acro u the general
theme of alternative 9Chemes in education. Among the topics will be: "The

~~"J,':~":!~:?~":d ~~?-'.&amp;~~

ferent About Alternatives?
·
For further information, contact the
Office of Cultural Afrairo, ezt. 2785.
INGINEU.ING SCIENCE SEMINAl #

Low-Reyno/do-Number Fluid Mechan -

ic• and Micro-orlltJn.Um Proput.Wn, Dr.

Theodore Y.T . Wu, professor "of engineering science, California Institute of
Technology, 104 Parl&lt;er, 4 p.m. Social
gathering in 107 Parker at 3 :30 p.m.
INTIINATIONAl. COFfEl HOUI•

Featuring Iranian mtisi.c, dance and

.re~~::· ~J~~ 8i:b4

4

the
International g,mmittee, and the Office
of Foreign Student , Afl'~
CHAIAD HOUSE SAIIATH SIIYICI•

Special guest opeaker Irving Block.
professor of philosophy, University of
Western Ontario, will lecture on Jewish
topics before the eervice. After the Sabbath tervioe, a free mea'l will be eerved.
Cbabacl House, 3292 Main SL, 5: 80 p.m.
i'~or further information, call 833-8334 .
HOCKEY•

·

:

IICYUII*

Educational and &amp;.:io-politiool .Upecu

of Linfuiatica in Latua America, Dr.

~"'ti! =~=:r r:~":.ri~

can Studieo, U/B, 804 Town.end. 7:80
p.m.
Preoented by the Latin A-rican Student Aaoeiation.

The New CenwriD111 (Fleioeber), 140
CApen, 7:45 and 9 : 45 p.m. Admiooion:

w-

76 oento.

Georp C. Scott playo a 20-year police
veteran
esperience hao ..Wted in
of bio OWD "..W. of the
_the fommlalioo
.. whicb oaly
oa:uloaally coiDcide
with of other oopo. Alan oWriDc

Stacy .K-&lt;b....cou.IOI I _ _ _ .

fiLM•

Pickpoclut (BNOOOn), l'railer #2, 8
p.m., and 140 CBpen, 9 p.m. No admiosion charce'

tiiefen-

COMPUTING ClMTU liMINAl#

sfs1gN~"r,t::S1tf:.•t=, ~
10,_7 p.m.

fiLM•

do;/;'7 ~:.""No{!!J':·J:?,e.Dief':'.

_

Chile Beton- the Coup, midnight.
.. Christianity and.Revolution , " part
two of a five-part serieS produced by P..acifica. This aeries ofl'en "information OJl
the culture and govemmeni of Chile---Under Allende, and will perha~ provide a
backdrop against which the events of
recenl weeJ&lt;s in Cbile can be placed.

FII.MS"

Un Chien Andalou (Bunuel), Muhu
of the A/ie rnoon (Deren), At lAnd
(Deren) . RitiUJl in Tromliltured _TUM
(Deren) , The -Way to SIIG&amp;wt::lardcA
(Braltbage) , and Flult of M-&lt;Jrnine
(Brakhqe) , 140 Capen, 7 p.m. No edmisaion

-SATURDAY-10

Yiddilh and Talmud. -Hillel House, 40

Capen l!lvd.,_7: SO ·p.m.

..

' ' " ,a:NTON

v!a:~~!:u~ vit:re;~~ 1::
pire State CoUege; Maxine Greene, profeasor of philoeoJt,y.of education, Colwn-

~ro~crH:\~~n,!:_c~:r~::.

Conter for Reoean:h and Development in
Higber Education, U~ ol Califor-

L_indi~:Sk~~r~:, ~ncii!b t::~

ture at U/B, will moderate.
Tbe Fenton Lectureo ore arronpd by
the Oftice of Cultural Main in oollahOration with an an.aually appointed committee.

WIIO HIGtiUOHTS
PnMnt Ten.e-Crinw

•

even-handedly with poor people? b the
Public Defender,oyotem a Viable alternative for the poor? b the 9ll oyotem doincit&amp; job? What about police erime? .H ow
much erime it drue-related?

Diocusaiono

i~!..~. ;:;. i.!tl~·

'

The New. CenturioM (Fleitlcher), 140
Capen, 7:45 and 9 :45 p.m. Adrniaaion :
75-to.
COMPOSia WOIUHOP CONCIIT rtpJEa•

a:c-~tat~~t of

Mu-

police,

TUESDAY-13

!Jinks,

..

·,

Ia our legal syatem accompliahing .anything? Does our judicial oyotem deal

WIIO HIGHliGHTS

'rNin

in tM City, 8

p.m.

Speolri.nB of Science Fiction, with
Jameo Gwin, 2:80 p.m.
_
Dilcuaions of ecience fiction wittr 80me
of the leading writero of the genre. Topics renp fiOm the history of ocieJioe fie.
tion to 'how plots are coutructed. ·

CAC filM•

I

ti!;tcat!'n'¥e~:ceT~h:a~~:-!~

HOUDAY MINI-MABOPLACI SALE•

U/B .._ Bow!inB Green,
Cbeektowaga. 7: 80 p.m.

·

LknluS•

p.in. ..

Featu..ring over 50 exhibiton aelling
enamela. weavinp. paintings. ceramics,
batik, pottery, jewelry, toys and other
handcrafted gifto, Ridge Lea Cafeteria,
noon-8 p.m.
Other activities will iaclude · a performance by the Moonberry Puppet Co.
al 2 p.m. and a sing-a-long with Roe
Magorian at 4 p.m. ·A glue-in for chil·
dren will be open all day, and food will
be available.
An admission donation of 50 cents for
adulto and 25 cent&amp; for children (children
under 6, free) will be ooUected at the
door.
Presented bY the Univenity Wonien'lf
Club !Or the b,mefit of its Grace C.8pen
Loan Fnnd.

'

charge.

HJUEI. a.ASSH•

Followed by a free meal and .a lecture
by Irving- Block, profeaanr of ,~ooophy,
Unive nity of Weatem Ontario, Cbabad
House, 3292 Main St., 10 a.m. For further infonnation, call 83S-83S4..

HOCt&lt;IY*

-

,

PIOFISStoNAL UAFf lEHAn 1X1CV1tV1
COMMttTH MIITIHOI

Agenda: 1. Approval of minuteo of

~-m;"ti~!n!J::;!~'fn;!,=r::

Conotitution

Colvard.

of
5. Report- Pat
6. Other busine.. ll4 CIOoby, 9 a.m.
WOMIH ANO THE WOil.D Of WOIIC•

BiB Brother'• BiB Bribu, a dioauaion

of .how tu Ia- imd ancial llllC:Urity ciacriminate againot woman, 882 Norton,
nocm.-2 p.m. Child care ia available in

887 Norton.

Erie Coallty Eueu~ E - V. Re-

c:..=~~--=:::t2ro

!:::: 8 p.m. Tbe pahllc io invited to .
CONCBJ·

.....

~ ~~~DIY. Soc:ioloo'

The Candidate (Ril&lt;:bie, 1972) ., Conference Theatre, Norton, check showcase for times. Admiu.ion charge.

CHA&amp;AO HOUSE: SAIIATH SEivtCE•

sa-

SponanNd by the Social
Research ln4ti-. in cooperetion with the

UUAS fUMU

WIFO HIOHUGHTS

p;m.
fENTON WOIKSfiOPS•

CAC fiLM•

Tu Colll1idaU (RitdUot, 1.9'12), Cooler-

-

COMPUTU SCIENCE COU.OOUIUM#

U/B vs. Bowling Green, Twin Rjnka;
Cheektowaga. 7:00 p.m.

PlaiC ....,...

PrH

Today's speaker will be H. Kung, U/B,
He&amp;lth Scienceo Bldg., 2 p.m.

a.m.

Unanld ticketo will be available at the
Baird Hall Ticket Oftice.one hour before
the CC&gt;I1CML
Presented by the Department. of Music.

·~": ~~=.

. MIDICIIW. CHEMlmT liMINAl #

Bu/falo-&amp;ldom Told Taln, 1 p.m.

~

Membero of the enoemhle are:

for-...

WlfO HIGHLIGHfS

Supp..-r Variabla, Dr. Mo.rrio Rooenbeza, National In o ti tu te of M ...tal
Hoaltll, 4244 Ridge r.-, Rm. 16, 10:80

~~·8~r~;=., s=~~~~
1 Hornibn&gt;Ok,
~rd.

~ to I pror.alonll Interest In the IIUbjeC:t
•ap.t to . , .
••ap.t to tnltl'lbers of ~ Unlversttr
- H i n e y Cilrdarelll, 1131·22211.

THURSDAY--8

IICYUII• .

~If.::~~~..:.::

Bainl Recital Hall. 8 p.m. Admiooioo

,_.

Sponanred 'bY the Division of Student
Aft'ain and UUAB; in cooparatiou with
the U/B Foundation, ID;e. HILlA

a.us•

Et.ment4ry He.brew. 262 Norton, DOOD.
IICYUII•

'The Diooo111Ult Conte%! and &amp;If-Co,._

cepu, Dr. Mom. ~. Natioual

(Cont~d on-~ &lt;0/-ll)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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.

.

..

.r

. P~TRICIA ~~BIEDERMAN
":-1-'SUIJ

:PeriocmB-UDilympat.u;til: With" the
Women~s· Mlioement ..-! to say.:tbat
all Jemiriilita bate men (code for· all
feminist&amp; - are l.esbiana) . Yciu don't
bear ~t one al&gt; ·mud&gt; anyniore (a ·
tribute tO Gil)' Lib) ; wliat you bear a
lot Of is ·''Movement Women have ·no
sense .9!" humor" and the rhetorical,
DOCl"-m\'&amp;!cal· questi&lt;1f!, :•Why iS the
Move~_t 110 humorlelis?'' ( ':_What's
~?
1S 't.Everywoman's gut receot, weoe not lKiceptable
sponse.) This montlr two well known
m criterion." The rec10111meod&lt;d feminists, including U /B ProfesSor o(·
chanKe, the Committee
.Psychology Naomi Weiastein tske up
"deaf witli this 1Ul01118)y. .
the question of Movement h.imorlessThe chan'ges in· oelectim criteria
11e88 in two very different national
were, '!t .He~ deadline, the only
magazines with..largely female readerComniittee • endomed "rec-.
ship.
.
0
Writing in the November issue of
Ms., Ms. Weisst,eiD tells "Why We
deociibed as "an extensive' rennrt of
Aren't Laughing . . . AnytDOJe"; in
the Admissions Committee." '~'(,;
this. month's CosmopoliUm, Elizabeth
plexities or the admisoions : ,
Janeway, author of Man's World, WoMoore .said1 "made it impossible for
171411'1' Pwce, alBO anslyzes why the
the committee to bring in definitive
Movement&gt;
doesn't leave 'em rolling .
~tions on every point."
Since ~ Emcutive Committee had . in the aisles. •
!he Moyey&gt;e!lt-does ~ a certsin
not yet completed its discussiollB on
gnm
quabtY;Ms.
Janeway
admits,
the repol;t, howeVer, qther reoommen·
but why, she asks, should it be any
dstiollB to the fiill Senate were still
other·
way?
''DO
you
burst
into
hilar- possible, Moore s&amp;id at aesdline.
ious laughter reading Maloo1m X or
. The Hovorka-Cominittee report proSelected
Works
of
Moo
Tie-tung?
The
VJ&lt;,Ies Deckgrouod · on current policr• .
Movement is serWus, aon:ietimes" reVO:o:
I8.1Se&amp; problems and mikes some minor
lutiOIUjl)',
ahouUts
aims,
and
one
im:
reco~dstions 'in four other areas:
.special admisoions; regional &lt;iuotss· ., portant' aim is td subvert the tDale
ideo. that women's woik and tlieir
transfer students and housing.
'
goals are seoondsry if not actually
(Continued on JlOie 9, coL 1)
•
frivolous. A good way to support this
RUCitEI.sltAus' TO SPEAK AT. UfB • •
chauvinistic :view and hold down ria' ~ntly· ll&lt;tPOsed .u.s.. Deputy •Atlorriey
ing feminine ~ence is to deocribe
General .William : Ructcelohauo ·will
Mqvement actiODa as jokes."
on - r p t e conti'IMIISY and tlie
A ~'.!~Utica~'"-' ·
·
. • '
cln:umatancea· ~ to )lis oustar,• lhls .
Like Ma. JIID8WIIY, Mo. Welastein
Mondiy .at noon . In the Norton fOuntaln · · :belieVes that·humor has toO bfteo:....,~
courtyani.,.Mr. IIUcAIShaus' visit, Is .IPCJII'
ed u a ~ ·.turned
~the- - S p M k ·
qaliJat-- 1'- Ia
era' . ._
~ tpecirum, CAC. _.,.. ~ ol the political •rid tiUAB. Tha~publlc ~s·trwfled
of hmbor aa It",.._ to the w_.
, ~
.
•
'.
~t, iDcludiDa- oimbryoaJc ....m-.

-

and 300

festo as to .w hat a gelluine women's
humor might -be.
,
What -~ are no ·tonaer able to
lauiih af ate"ic11ies that ~ down wo,men. Of tliis Sexist humor a1iin to
racist hinnor, she says. ~uiiior as a
wespon in .the Social araena1 constrUcted to mainf:a.iJ&gt; caste, class, race
and sex inl&gt;quali~ is a -~ common
thing. Much of this humor is pure
slander; it oerves to w~ whoe~. they
(Continued on .p~We 3~ col. I)

1,257 WODal). '

1

. (1;81

....

by~~~hrobb. duwn

(wit&amp;~~~

entHeoes)' -· •
parAtta Gild Letun, 2,130 (2,128)lllllleqraduate_ 1,633 (1,578); ..-1uate, 697 (650).
• Edut:otioMl Stu4ia, 1,750 (2,096)
- undergraduate, 168 (385) ; padu.
(C~OA-3,col.3j

=r,:

' Sena~ c~t!rt""b. fM~

•-k"

to-

-tiall;J&lt;.•

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

fNi--af-.--tn~..,.n.,llii...-.i on ·-

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

. . WM~~~J.c-rnunlque far

-

·

~~----· ·

'l1lao[IIN. Allo ....... .....-:• ·...-.....~
.

.

•

-

��Faculty Seriate--:~

--~-" ~ ~

to M~f'Tuesdat - -----~

The D8Et
recular
-~
- "' Nodoe Faculty
Senate
'will be
vember R, at 2:30 p.m. in 148 1
dorf. "" •
, On the 'agenda are: L APiiooral·of
Minutes of October 2; 2. ~ · of
the President; 3. Report of tloe a..ir-man;
4. Beonianiza- Pr:.eo••.,!:
(Pn!aident
ketter) . 5
- .
.

'COmmil*!e·
6. - ~ 7 Olb8r
B~ •
•

Collegium will be ~ •
"""" ber """'P'ion in tbe
Room; IIOCOIId floor. N~ immediately after the u-da,. 'l1Ua--..,
planning· ~ bopoa ''!bat IIIIOBt "'
the am move bmrwl!fcWJ
upon adjQumment lo the Cbadll8
Room • • . to CIU'I'y Oil iDdivldu.l ell.
c:ussiono with -'&gt;eiB of the
ium and each other ~ doe .......,
...u-1 at the Seaata n-tiq...

• The
(Cblttbwed fro,:page 11 coL 4)

ate, 1,582 ( 1";710) .
Engin«ring and Applied .'Sciences,
1,~73 ·(1,322) .. undergraduate, 894
f7S. )~ graduate_ 57a._(558).
H.ealih SciencU, 3,948 (3,091) undeTa!Jusle,-.2,263 (1,655 ) i graduate (mel~ Rqiwiill· .Pam), 805
(581); Medicme; 522 (492) ; .Deoli&amp;·try, ,353 (.'13t) ; Pharmacy (professional) , s; (8).
,
_.. Lam and JUI;i8pruderu:e, 702 (600)
· -all profeSsionaL
·
·
Nalural Sciences and Mathematidl,
2,250 (.2,028).-undergraduate, 1,796
' ( 1,527); graduate, 454' ( 501) . (Nom:
totals here reftect.· 25 1973 Roswell
Park students deleted frorq FNSM
and added to Health Sciences and '26
1972 ....,~tions similarly trea!M.)
Socuu.Scie~ and Admi.nistrotion,
. 3.973 (4,110)-undergradua!e, 3,001
.
(3,208); iffduate, 97% (902)·,
School of Manogement, 1,43,'1 (1,. 132) ·- unde~duate, 1,000 (699);
graduate, 4SS ( 433) .
· A total of 1,875 day-time students
are claailified "'no n:iajor,• ~ maj&lt;
0111, etc. Lest fall the"' """" 1.,1)(7
in lbeee c:ate&amp;!&gt;ries.

a.a..

cau...-

.

,.

'

' .

·~

Library

-

f&gt;ay Ranked

• The "-iciation · of .Reamcb Libraries -.tly mmple'ted its llllllli8l
salary survey for profeealonal nel within libraries; Iesdinr the :UIB
Library NI!.UJ• to prinf the foJJoirinr
under the beading, "Ripley's Believe
it or Not De!&gt;artment1' : Of 81 major
University!, Libraries polled, SUNY/
Butfalo came oqt in a three-way tie for
· tltird plaoe with .,. starting 88}a,ry of
· $9,500. Only Howaiil University aDd,
Rutgers offer'belrinnlrur aalari.., higber
than SUNYI B- When a~ salaries
were ranked, SUNY/ Buffalo was in
a two-way tie for lOth place ($12,500).
Of the top nine higbeat paying libraries, tbere were four in&amp;titutiollli from
• the California ·state University ayaUmL

.

-

•

�,

___
r•·----.-

......

GREPORTER.:&gt;
.,. ........,_:..., .......
.,_
~- ._lr.__.,_,

__
--------.

.:r.~lau.

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

-· 2U_---~
.....,...., ,
-~-

A.·~

..,.

-1'.-..n'

-A.-

-

...... - . u J'

IUIIC!r ..

c .....,

~

�r.Fiie. DJC Offers.·
Op~unity for ·
·CUlhttai ·SWap·::

are not
such; they are
came-here to..,....,.
and, of' ClDWIII!, in aocializiDg. I! they ~
with. other foreign students, it is often simply
because they found it banier to eocia1ize with
Americans. This is !I'll happenini in Dewey Hall.
Activities and parties are SPringiqg up BROntaneously withoUt any Jtbel on them. Again,
I think this is the way it sbould be.
'There are,,bowever, mariy. Ameriam students
who cboee' the. ILC because they are interested
in .particular cpltweS. .Our Progri!ID sbould be
aimed especiai!y at them and, of
open to .
all members of the .community whO shale their
interest. This -UniVersity bas great human ..,_·
sources and I hope they will be available -to .us.
Tbe foreiP, ~ts who came to this· pountey
and the Americatl students who wanted to live
With thend 11ove Sliown .a deep involvement in
their own education. I am honored in having a
)&gt;flrt in this exp8riment and I hope we will not
let,tliem down.

ested in in-tiona!

actliYltles &lt;18

~ .in • theollllbjeoH&amp;ey

oourse,

'_flie U.stt·Has Its Halloween and

-China-Haslts .'Feast
~

~

By UNA HUI
I believe evmybody knows what Hall"""""'
is, except- probably foreign 'students who just
came· to the States. · 'The following paragraph is
a brief ~ of Halloween in America
written b). my friend. Meg Gptard. for thoae who
~ not blow •wbat ~ is. In addition,
hive yooo beiud of Obineole Hall"""""? Actnallllo ·if .is :f!l)t1 eilJed.. H&amp;IICI'IOBOIL by Cbiilesol.
but Yu·lan Festival (or the Feast of Ghosts') ,
yet y.ou will in the thild paragraph that
......._
' jlo
lot of similarities between
d;,~~~
..nil )be-Chinese Yu-lan

'

Feitival : ... , : ·:.::

.

.-• .
~ ttie U.S. is ~on Oc:td&gt;sr

~.,.. .

3l ..'Ibe~ p.,.,~floafM~
wbeiJ ~ ·~ preceded Tbo FMst of All
Hallows wbidl u - ~ Feast of All Saint&amp; , ·
On the eve of All Hallow., it was llad.itional f01

w.-.

of Ghosts'
.

.

spirits to retum to their homes. Later on in
history, peOple believed that the spirits came in
the f011DB of wiiebes, ghosts, an~emons. Tbo
custom. of '"l'iick or ,Trest" bas eVQ)ved from the.
'practice of mischievous activity on this "Dight.
FrOm- clcJo&lt; to door- in the neigbborboocl, ''Trick
or Treat" is shouted and goodies of some kind
aft! given out by each family. Trick or Treaters
are III!Ually dresaecl ail spoo)ts of some sort but
any cllspise is BPPJOPriate. In the U .S ., niischi_.. activity ·is still carried .-out by older
!'filldren. 'The Jack o'Lantem, the major symbol
of Hall.-n,.consists of a bollowed-&lt;&gt;Ut pumpkin
with a carved faCe and a llgbtod candle inside.
probably IIYJIIbolic of a nigbt watdlman.
a-111,te
'-"
.
· Tbo' Yu-lim ~Val is ollao!r.ed on July 14
( Chinese' lunar caJenclar). It i8 lJelieved by the .
traditional Chinese that on !bat ~t the clcJo&lt;
ofbeu is oPeoecl iio !bat tbe gbosta ( 01 spirits)

all go back to the world to loot fOI food and
clothing. Therefore, the families have to prepare
a ~ .._:! fot these ghosts, meals wbidi are, in
fact, eaten by the families tbemsolves aftelwards.
Paper clothing, paper moi.ey, and inamae are
-burned as 'the traditional Chinese, especially
those who are superstitious, believe that these
bum8d articles can be u8ecl by their de8cl rela·
tives in hell. In addition, the families bave to
csst some coins.on the spot where they do all the
burning and l!onoring, which the ldds pick up
later to buy candy or toys. Nowadays, only some
trllditioilal Chinese families still obeei-V8 thiS
festivaL
'
·
' In conclusion, I want to bring out the point
that people in the world, no matter from what
nations, are not as dilferent as most people think.
Ameriama have Halloween, just as Chinese hilve
Yu-lan FestivaL It is only that dilferent ClOilil'
tries have their own traditions! way of dOing
things:

~TRIP

On Frldlly, Nooembor 23, lntem.tionol Student Altaln;
and the lntenolw Enafllh La~ ln&amp;tituts will coSJ&gt;O!ISOr a trip ·to Toronto. Fdr more lniormation, .

cont8c:! lEU, 211 T-ncl Hatl, 831· 561.

"&gt;--')

�f.-"

:»:· ."

"We the people of the United' Naliiin&amp;:
:'lbeoe are the -~- words 'iif·'lhe United
Nation&amp; Cbariier, signed-in"Saai'·Frlilll:ili(;o ili-1945:
·E very year-on the 24th of Octoboir.- Uni!ed :Na..
tioa8 D8y is celebhoted all over :tb8 'world '
• !l"be United Natiaoll. is lln .OJ'Iiuilmt!On of
aovereign nation&amp;, not ·a 'liorld ifoYemiiient. • It
provide&amp; the machinery to help lind- _aolutibns
to disPUtes or probiems iDd to 'act· on-virtually
any. matter of general~· to humanity. The
-only JlOWt!l: and au)hori~-. it bas iS moi!IL . It
· cannot force nation&amp;' tO· obey itS .-.luti0118&gt;and
- injunctiODS. - Wtiat coUld ...., aay, tbeJn. for the
effectiveness of _the. UN ·
• ·28' years
of'rur existeiioo?· AitliDIJl!i
•fiWed iiie·
area · of ''pearekeeping;" it'
BUroes&amp;fui
and-effective in' inany other areas. By 'judliinl
the UN's · ''cdias ,_._.d ~~ ·~ - .0181 ' ·
sg
....- . .,..~!"~-~ . y lqlOD its "peacekeeping recom, ~ · is~r;nis~dging.

.

m:

On Novemher- 2, the _OFSA
-~--

and the .Africa
Club Will ' ~r - a ''Colfee• Hour'e t 4 "p.lh: in
Room 20( To.m-.d Hall. __All ~rican · and
!oniiiD sludepl. . their friends and families are

. . . ""· -:.

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

~).&lt;: ..., -

.

-- ......... '
,., .,.,..,,
.....
·····''''
Forelp ~~ ~ ./\)it as.,~,~! iu:w01
Jffi toreliiJl· swoenlli':Wbllliji.ve been billed for
-

.

health. insunmce· tiuOUgb the Student Accounts
Of6ce this year sliould ba)li! received ip· ~·
a stA-~. ,af coverage, a claim form and an
identification card 1or the policy year 1973-74.
.lf you do not wish the health insunmce you must
notify the F:oreiP. Sludent-Of&amp;ce before November 30, 1973. If notification is not made by that
date, you will be· responsible for the preuifum
up "'ll&gt;e. date of .DJ!I;i8CII,~ _,If you, .were 'llQt
iDsUiaDce bUt wish to be oavered,'
please notify the Foreign Student Office, also
before November 30: .

·'

ct.arPd' for

LASA Picks Officers;.
Sets Lecture Series
The

Latin American Student Association bas

8Jected ...,W·Dffioers

for the 1973-74 year 88 follows: Carlos Arteaga, President; Jose Alzate,
Cultural· lo.ctivities- Coordinator; Enrique Orjueala, Social Activities Coordinator; Jose Barberi,
8pOr:ts ~toi; and Cesar !fo, Public Relation&amp;

Coordinator.

-

•

LASA bas 88 its main o!&gt;jectives to promote
the imaae of Latin America in jts. beterQieneity
' of social, cultural and"political dimensions; to:;. create an atmoopbare :a8uiluciV11 to'a better_unci&lt;!•· ·
standing among our . COWltries and the United
States· to establi8b elleclive JDeiUlB' .of c:oaiiDunication' 8lDOIII latin .AmeriCans and tpe UliiYl.rsity community in generaL
..
II( order to fulfiJJ the Asaociation's objectives,
.........Of aoclal and cUltural 8ctivitieol.are being

p~series of 1~-dealing :;.;th latin A,meri· ~

-am perspectives is beiDii sdleduled. The ~en and 1'1Pictl are:
·
_ ·
·
Dr. W~g wo!ck; Educationa) and~&lt;&gt;-

, . a ·oervjce to the campus's lntll,.,..lionol comll)Unlty,
the RopaoW has ·~ to make this spaC!J ovalloblo
during tho acaclomlc year to tho, 0t1ic:o of ·
Fo.., Alt.lrs and tiNt - n t t'dltorial-rd of U/8 • .,.,,_,..for thof-lnatlan of nottcos,
, , _ lbl?i'. a n d . - of lntllrest. Artk:IM "" Aioct.ed by, tho SIUdlirlt odftorial -rd.

Six -

·l

!i~~tJ!W;t~~fi~-~~&gt;:..
ing intematioJial, aooperatimr-'in ' llpace,' iiiricultute, modem telecommunication, ana- healtfi; to

teaching a. mother bow to care for'ber cbild, the
UN&gt;.bas .lisbeiHtiili-in'4t'milltitlliWot 8ft!88

of liuman COiicem add need as ·a pioneeripg instrumimt sjlently .l ayirig the fOilndation for true
global cooperatiqn and communication: :An example of UN effecliveneas is the ..,vii&gt;Diimental
problem, to ·wbid! the organiziltion hils ft!llllOIIiled
creatively. The 1972 StOCkholm Conference on
Human Environment drafted a' World Plan or
Action and the United Nations Emiiroqment Program was establisbed!
·
' .Evidently,.· if humanitY is ' I!) suilcalsfully
_,. _emi.qp, .froln . itll transition erisis· as··one .entity,
. : -. -i-_ ~J :o.-IJY;;·SUDHIR.&lt;SUCIIAK ,,,:.;'!. · ,_..,. ..h~."fl . ...
new IIJ'PIOIICbeil and lli!W ' aolutioha are~. Sincere indiViduals rec;ognir.e ;today- lhlit WI! Med
~, - Note:. ·This, /4 tM 'first in ·a' two-part• anU:k
a global approach to !world·- probl~' wbicb no
. on: tM•'rellltiona&gt;befipee~ t~ United SuitU'brid
single, -natioil coil attempt ·to- ecjlw ' on ili own.
Latin America. ln' the- first part; !be are, roin6·10"
Many people fail to reailz8 that-"'liilch a global
emmine, in general, thi.- relst wnship and lif&gt;W ·ll '·
approach bas already been oftljnated W'die
1uJs deterioratetL T-M aecond tft!rt will~ witK"
ation' of- the l!JN 28 Ye&amp;rl! ago. Now it is up to
·U .S. foreign .aid to Latin AmerU:an cOwltriu in. '
the .riiember natiODS to participate actively in this
terms of·. ita mognit¢e and egiiiJlily: l- ''' '•'""·
~
-· ~ ~ . . ~~-.t ,. .r ,(' ..effort to create "under heaven, oDe 'fiimily,"
Jt -is esaentiai that buinahity ~ its
It is generally believed· by historians· !bat
unity -and mlerdepencteno,e. ,.. NatloiiB, -liii!iii lind
United States relstions with Latin America Startwomen o{goodwill _wbo give livinl ~tO
ed-in 1811 with ~ ''No Transfer Resolutii&gt;n». of
this reaJi'ty~ can ' be the decisive, factor in · the
the Congress conc,erning Florida which was tbep
under Spanish· conaol.: Since then, some ·of the
b~·of: the one Humanity.
• -.
.-·
highlights ot·tbia relationship bave' been•the.mt ·'
""':l'Btes ~. "w,ben you ~J•W!d y~
'
major li&gt;ilitaryl~iDteiv~ in 'tile' earibbe.ln .
~ 't
cowrtry, """"' f!!Pb: 'l-am At!Mmian' 01' ~ am
and Central Anieriat. and this bas· brought Critii ' ,·
Corinthian,'--but ,.J "'' am .._ eitbeii--&lt;&gt;i the
cism from all the nations of Latin' Amel'ica; The r.
world.' :• Will-we ever be able to consider ourselves citizens. ;of ~? iet U. hope!
COUDtries in which the United States 'has inter.
v!!Jled by .the..use of force ·are ll8iti,' Domirilean
Republic, Nicua.J!I8. Guatemala, PaQama and
I
MEMBERS oF
, ~ Cuba.. H.l
,.. '
•
'
,.
... - t - . • _.r'\ :,.
U/ 8 I~TIOIW. . EDIJORIAL -..D
Tbe,&amp;ze and 'power·of-lbe United States lm! ·. •
C,rtos -AJwleJ--P.uerto-'"Ric:O . ~!i t· · !T
such that if 'the U.S. played ii'!oJ.e i.t'laolatiaft, ...
Edllli Froli-'f'wru ·
this would ba've a · great- deal of effect on -tl!8
Peter Groum~dltor~n-Chlof.
econOmy of Latin Ameri&lt;&amp;. It bas 1&gt;een aaid that
~· ~~.... ~rto- 11101)1; ·,; _.,
., 'the, Uilited Ststes' id:iiio ~ power 11ft! like a '
.,,., I:W.rl&gt;!rt. .fo!OIIBDI'DII&gt;,-,Germony ·p ;.,,.,
· permanent shadow, protective or· tbreateaiJ!g ar y
••
• Su'dhlr Sucbok/ i:onzaniio · •r ' •
,·
may be;.'but ~le and unavoidable, : But
~ ·
Eddy Tse-MQng -Kong
this bad an eDOnDOU8 biftuence'Jn. the better ie- .
Emi- :ra~oili ..-Kong·, - ~ . '
lstions betweom ibe two nel8hliors when the Unit•
,. Uj\8 Hui-5--Hong IKOn&amp;- ~1:(f1 • • -:"1~ ' ( .'
\• ed States enterei!, ~ .$econd World Wer wi~ full .•
"rtlj:les and/or announcements for :wa • tnt.m•-~
supP!)rt from the ie8t of the beniispbere. U.S.llonal are welcome. They should be submitted at least
.-I.Jwi,American ri!lationa hive iieverbSon 88 ,good -~
two weeks before publication (first Thisdoy Of most
88 they were iulot .before the ~ar.
·
.., . •
months). Articles are not to..JOD .wordo, due
·
It was a4S the war that tpe reletions deteri,.. to space lomitatlons. Send or ..brinl! ' all material for
orated 88 the n8igbbora asked tor IIIDrl! economic- publlqtion to .room 210 townoend Hal.
·
,; l.
' ~
~
_ajd and 88 this bi.Ciune bard because U.S. eom-

---

us.:.Latin Relations

soon.' n~wriotathlg;~,..

9e-

�ond

Ministerial

Cabinet; and the .. tremendous

rising alf!ts of foreign ~, bediu,.; of the
need to acquire products and food as a .. cooa&amp;quence of sinister boycotts. Epilog, I repeat, of
a non-final stqe but· of a period of crisis which •
history will revive.
'The great spectacle is OP."Ptto.l#ill&gt;..l"'hl,\c ,and .

all of us are participating-aetively·or passivelyin the soehario·of historical J:eiiPCiosibjlities. 'There
is no excuse to iscape, and the death of a. peraoii.
age_is . tile ml)li¥&lt;: oJ
.foJ'•tile oth- ·
ers. 'The syatem, anjl not Allende, :rep~ted
a danger to the economical cil ot!Mn and

:'perf""""""""'

, it-t-.yfortbe~lo

.....
1
•
Anyway, anybody is Clllllllcious that tliis - - rowfuJ '"""will not13\IOP the' ~ ' but ~
be " . cat.BJ.Yst. and will
itli' ..,..
peace and freeslom become a privilege Of all

mu

Sln..;B,r

hUJ'nlm · beinlis.
•

~- ,

.,

.,-•:•1&lt;

•

•

···-~·-••··· · · -· ········

~revious

..r·-\-"';················•·········•······
(Type a nd I..Dcatlon)
·

-

Employment

A) - e.g. . Bank Cleri&lt;-Hong ·Kong
B)

- ---~-

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

&lt;;&gt; ' ........... _ ..................................................

Jl) ........................:....... -.. - ........................ ..

l·

Do you plan ·to remaio In .the Un~ed States,
com~ of .your Academic Stud.l•f ·l
; ...~~ ... -:~· ;No; -:~, ·JJndecidid ., (clrcle'one).
,

1

9"

:.M

,pull!,ybu,-J&gt;f,

•

lnterestec! J n -ndlng:a •.aem'·'

•.• 1~! '!!!~n . :Employers and the United

, .,. ·

'\
!

~ .EIJiploymert Marl&lt;etl

.

~hi
l~~~~
- :_-:.!'•.:-. ......... :-j' ........ ,..• ..•.
~-:.

(cirele•one) •·

t ;,• •.•..•••..••• : _____ ••••.•.••• :.":...

i·~· ... ·:•· V..!r1:o· 4.i-~ ,, ·•···.- -··· ···.,.·-··•··--·;·-·······!... .. .

.r'

Pleaae· ~~~:tt_~-;}~,;;; ~~-~~ ~~;-~ibi; ' ~
to 1t~ ·\)l!ic:e oi(J~!Qn $W.&lt;lent Affairs or 'to ..your

Club

Offtc:i81s. - -~. . r,

--~

~

.: .:. ., · . ,· ··

•r -

-

GSA GOOrdliiator
UrgeS.
Participation
- ·-)

EDrro.:U/B INTBRHA'ftoMAL::a·

.

I take this opportunlty11to brielf;r 'introduce

the Graduate ' Student

~tiim · !'GSA)

as it

rela.... to foreign . . . . . .. . 'llla;QSA.jo,a=-- ~
ful stUdent body ol the ll!lidUata'l.tuaents Oil the
campus. It baa been - ~·in· the last feW
an'cl t:ep.-nts~~'t!M ..._ alld problems that face the ·aludoDII
this University: •
The BOWming body of the GSA is the Senate,
composed of repraoentatiYeo from all the aca-

years

m

demic departmenta ' 'bl.~ the Uriivenjty, electad
esrly.in th£Faii ·Semester. ~~are the~
who formulata and enfon:e the 'policies of the
_GSA. Tbe GSA-'1'- ab..W.t rep-tatiou in
nearly all deoiaion~mmi- of the •
University. ~ ._dni or oo-aponaoting various Sub-Board activiti110, -the 8pMI&lt;eni' Bu"""!-o etc., jt a1ao fundi! moat of the academic

r,.

&lt;1; ..

'r .....

"?" ~-·1

=

and cuftursl groups of 'tl1e IJ'nivei'BI.ty. The grad- •
uate foreign student clubs are classified under
"inteft!8t , grou1!5" and. under. the; piesent •gl,lidelines; ltH.Ir"ffirlmng•iid irilltM onfy 'to i&gt;toglrui,s
such as orientat,ion and public service enterprises.
.•41~ the GSA has..been morgatlized dur1. ing, .!he·.\ast .three years,, its relationS with and ·
repreeentation of foreign ..students has · not improved. Tbe. forei8n students fonn the largest •
· minori\Y on ~ campus. Under the present 8et.
up,_the funding of various interest clubs is not
aslequate' and the interests of foreign clubs are
not well Tepresented. It is so partly ,because of
the lack of interest of the GSA toWilrds na·-~ty ciJ,Jb activities. and partly because of
!be lack of organization of foreign clubs. At
presenl,, thm,o are not enough 9enaiors in the
" GSA who can understand and represent the
interests of ·f oreign students. Thus,· it is oiMous
Gul( if ...,; .ftnt to benefit our student body and .
m.p,ove our. image, we sbould try to get better
-~ti.on in the Senate by getting electOO
tbrotqJh our depattment8. At the same time, the
fo~ student clubs tleed to reorganize and
· revitallm themielves. Foreign students h :ave
mum Ill offer to this or any,other campus in this
oountry; it is just. a matter of exploring .our tsleniio~ttini, involll!ld.
·
--II.U TICKU

-

InternatiOnal Coordinator

'· . _ GSA

Greeks ~rgallize
..miTOB:

-

"

-

Sigma Epsil~ Phi is a non-politicsl, totallyaocial and academic organization with the pur~ of .uniting students of Greek c~Mcent among
- univenritiaL,: ~ - a t aoe time a baaon-'liri~
·. organization, but slowly died out becal8! of poor
Executive Council managemenl As president of
SEP, I iptend to, &amp;lain make it nation-wide, and
hopefully hold a national convention in the ~-

'

o:ti)~•"6 V 0 )~ ~

(• ) Rudoll HeberJ., ot-natiou oa the

~

ai \mfi!

8odoJov o1

S

SodaJ

. . . _ . _ , - - ("""""", UU)

any~.;.;;.,~;~ ;rl '~ ~~-~~

future. If
Greek society out ol the New Y-odt .C ity area and
are interested in having bonds with SEP, or if
' you merely wish' to oor:respond with me, please
send a letter to: 6eorBe Mamas, 122-20 Ocean
' Promenade, Belle Harbor, New York UEI!N.
Thank you.

CULTURAL· DCHANGE
It is still possible to portlcipote In the lntemationol
Women's Cultu"' Exctuu,... Pl'ognom which allows
foreign students to , _ an American flunlly. If you
registered for the program and have not ywt heard
. . . . _ from your family, please lnfonn Mrs. Pruttt
tt
In the Ollice of Fonolan Student Affairs. Reai.tnatlon
'&lt;" rds are available In the Reception Ollice.

_•bout

.Cooking Classes
Have Waiting List ~
· Life Worbbope, ~temational Student Alrlli1'l,
and the OFSA-are ClOOrdinating an lntemational
Cooking Wlllbblp in wbidi aome forillp atp:.
.dents. U / B staff, and IDC!II1boft of the OOIIIIIIUIIit.y
are demoostratini cciolrini recipes from tbelr ·
home countries to a "daasn compoeed maAtly oi
American stUdimts AJDd stsft. Tbe. worbhop ill
!M&gt;ld every ~ at - 7: 30 p.ni. in an dl.campus location.
_.
Bruillan .food, ClOObd while dancing and ~ ·
tening to ~ and Greek food and music
have already been covered NUt on the acbedule
are En,lisb, Fnmch, lnctian, and AfriQm CX&gt;Okiiig
demonstration&amp;.
E""" thougb the recistratlon lists are full, if
interested, contact Life · Workshops a t 831-4630 ·
for a place on the waiting lists.

.... :_ ......

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PATRICIA WARD BJBbBRMAN
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-., Dr. 'Db!- J . .........,
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md ~) ratbortbimtortbe ' . "OD an intelleet,i';iif"'hiilj;r~.;;;d
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• ~t ol the llladiDt. Ria ..... " .,._. Intellectual level, intiiMic:ally . . f - . . . .
:
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ll!li1 ...._.. .alf at8ld ·
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to u.o to Iii* auflicioat alfim;l111018 imaginatiW. 111111 mrcitinl" ~
DiB~ Pn.f......_:'lbis title
. - iitC
~c..ft CaiJeae
ticiD to lbe IIJIIIer;!Nduat ..abetic
tbe 19'13-'14 ~ that resulted J1l
;,j confemid in cu c1 8 r In III!CIIJIII!!2I
iaJC. lor....._.~ )'-tla
~ we llftihaliD&amp;."
... tbe ~~ by lbe. Colacbievement' ot fame and' edcllai in
• Collemalle 'p iOIIIIJII
"10.........
IIi lbe ~~~~ ~t, ; 1eliate .............,..
.
.
lbe "-'d 88 - • t of ari.m.l
•
· / _. 6' to 7 inillndan ~
the teem ~ that lbe
~ "?' • · • • •
. ••
•
"!"
a...,.. · illY11e·e can
U. pauaee ~
opciialiD&amp;GDa
(for 1
At tbe risk ol undenlcoring _lbe ob·~
.JIIay
pined
...._hnulv!IJW*dwltllCnftL"lBa
. . .
fl!" ·Cotleps
ap wl*l 1ifttb.it ~-to
iatenid by • coordinator, a salaried
(e"l"l ·f&lt;!l' defunCt onee) J8 tbe.cnm- ' 'Nominatioils from tborc:am...-muat
lbe ~·
b'the.JIIilla&lt; ~
,pm.time Jlllll!tioli.
.·
mon ~that runs~ lbe ~...,. be-IIIIPilOlted by W:.. 'frolll
•
dediad flam .~ ...r "'· en 1be basis of ~t ~ ~ re- . L.w_ty ~~-this midway pomt." . eminen£ in tbe-llei&lt;L n ~
.,._, llllaa lbjrd ...... de.- macprded 88 a n - nl!fii!W (iDi:lud·
GIVen the Iii.,..,. aflbe Co~ re__._, that
of'"-Jettaa .._,_,
~-lt ~ 8lltprilllaa . to ..,_ tbat'
1111 aolicitatiOD ~ ~t· view&amp; , by
~faculty ap~ ~ 88 a . ~from~ · 'facult.Y'';;i!'
~- Jn crafts are
~of a queetiCIIIDIIll'e),. lbe MJ. 1 ·
.
For one, brief aliining.,hour
•
. - •
·
llftiWJie at the
IIIIIY . _uatGrs make th!! following suggestiona •
Mey""""! tq;s """!"SJde
tJuaaahtheCollelle-'lbeUfaArt.I¥. 88 to "directions this Col!ege .mighV
pus~ to~thie notion 'ol~JlSJU~PJY{eaor--'lbiatitle~t cll8 ......,_in ' · tab in lbe .-r fu~"
. deDtial cnlleps _aa iL lbey ~THE
formerly used for peraoD8 wbo were
CmfiL ~. aJncllo ~WMre
Jn ""P.ni to ..... poeeibJe ~~of,
AAl!wD, tlwi anivenaJ IM;&amp;deDUC pcm- • . distiiigu'isbed &amp;a above but wbo -..eci
a llludoDi mlldlt ...... ldo ..abetic
&lt;JCC WJth reaiilential Collep..B, the . acea by Which V / B would Ji"" and ·
on--lbe faculty at a M!Jo- mt~aa- than·
aaPillll.¥ ~art - · tiYiilaatGrs]'eCII)gllizecl the po&amp;8ibl8 ad· ' learn .ita wto P.BtDees. But in lbe
a unlvel!lity center ;,mr~--.,_
llicl to"'!.....,; Ji&gt;- '
~
to facllit!_es , staffing, ' ~ period~ cpsrupt!on that_{,olloWed; no y ing- iii 'tiiU titk .Den· intllk "m.tin-.
tbe' COC._..tilll _ , « . ~!pice and budget, but-inpd that lbe . ..u- campus urut's stock"fell 88 preguished Projeuor•·~· Board of.·•
Kliae ·{llrtldstaeyJ, Elizabeth ~ aattB ctirriculwn remain "Plooram- · cipiti&gt;usly-88thatollbeColleges.Part
7'ruMees action in (he sprinf of -1973 '
W. 8lllith (inlonDa!loo and library
malic," so that OOif-OollegeB.Btuil!mte
of tlioneason was #&gt;ii lol)l sb8dow ·' oiid tM fitk ;.··no ;__ ..;... UMil.
studies) · _ . .Adam Bell (mecbanical
could continUe 'to pl!!l'tici te.
"'·
cast ..by since diobaDded,. Coll
A-...•
~).
· -~ Growth was Stnmgty ·~':' ; · you didit't-bave to be a fascist~~
- DiBtinguished.X~liinll ProfeuorCCC ofteN tso CDUI'II08, Craft'Woo:l&lt;The College shoUid...eJ:Plmd beyond
llPpalled b,Y tales of tralllcking ·in
A new title, added Only -laat yeat,
sbop 218 and 2'19, -with 8IIC!ions .·in
• fewer thari 100 ~ts· a semester
classca:rds and automatic A's for any- · which is used to reoQI!Ili2e eztraordin~
-ving, leatbor, ceramica, 111111 jew-"to lbe point Where it answers the d.,. . • onewbo liyed · out the aeinester. Af' ' acy achieVements in teaching,· aa pl,r.
mands of lbe ~ swdent:" ~ Ei:about that'-tinie, the Bniveri!ity olfic.
ceivedbystudents,facultyandadminelry-maJdns. .Because ol the--limited'
.curric:ulum, a atudellt ean take no
p8!18ion sh6uld be acmmplisbed by
ially Swi!(:hed direction on fhe Col- r istra'tion at lbe home campus. '!be.
more than 8 hours in lbe College. 'lbe·
hil1ng more faCulty not increasingjegee. 'lbey'Were no longer to lie lbe ~ empbasis is on ~cal success
prognun · - IIIBIIY .more students
class size. More crafts and advanced
be&amp;ic unilll of lbe new campus (the
rath8r than on publications an dreo
than lbe 76 wbo eDftlll each~r.
~truction should~ offef'!"'.' A budJ&lt;!l
s~le C..!J"l!es -rolnpl_ex jlOinJ up...on, • ·.: ~~yi~ "·'·~' . ~ ••• . ,
but 't he Collece has purposei,Y limited • mcre&amp;S!' to underwrite thiS ~oo
the Amlieftlt campus IS beautiful, but .
Dl8tUJiws/u1d Servu:e Pr:ofeaoor sec:tions:to 10.15' iitudtlnts in order to
was urged.
_
' ,
·
• it also bas the lonely aura &lt;if a sole - Tiiis- title ,recognizes a level ·of perassure' "'--nn.n-o instruction. 'lbe
.
The College was _t. ......_ adyisecJ to
survivor)',-But by Spriog of ;73, if w&lt;! ; fOrmance m teacbi)lg lind in UnivereValua~~eDdoried this" aim~
change its iilime. ~-w;difi.wfee! tliat
can trust these reports:· a.;;; Oo1lt\tes
sity activjties which· Is ~~ ~&amp;V
mitment to 81111111 claaaes, but tboulibt
(Communication .Craft College) -deshad survived lbe cnnsiderable obsta- :
lbe .lengtli of Service" as b8iDi niui:b
~ 1the crafts olfeiinp "too' nanaw" and·
-.:n'bs,the. CoUege; in fact, it aeems to
cles ;p_ted_liy an anti-intel'-"1
above tLe-....m. ' · · Olt'•h"!'i&gt;&gt;•
• • • ,..
iH o.t _.tiM! CllaiJep """""
'be miti\eadin!t?' they oiiiid.~ (The Go!iDiioge, toltewa:rin oinstitUti&lt;iiial BUj&gt;jiOrt. • nition \Jn:!lbe
"~
inli&gt;-ad!litioaalarees such as "'fashion
~lege agrees and bopee to be 'identifieil
and ~ :SinJuli!!:~t&gt;-tbat
teachinl' ability"'
'th -.Dan,y
&lt;!mlisP,.l"!l'll! ~~'tiM ~
simply 88 Craft Colle8e+in-'tbe' f1Ituoe,--- - tlie'y'functiOD m lbe fishbowl of public1 . years of- Univemity aervioe are- @UB·
funiitur(; deSign,perhaps wool
"ComJ:nunicatian" ill &amp; holdover from ~ scrutinY.:Tbe Colleges were fOUJ1d to
gested bY-. this -.title.
lipinning." 'The. team also- noted lbe
lbe Collej!e's beginriinis 88 a)&gt;rogram
be alive: several were reported to be ' ,;:.'A.sal-.y. •incleaset' Dr. Peterooil '
need for advancecl'wori&lt; _il), ~ ,(In.
~zmg in~rsonal comlnp
IJ!riviJig, -wemJfeunil&gt;to· belffiaksaid, "might or might not fOllow ele.·liilbtnW, the Qoqege's,oomplaiot of incation and medi8.') .
ing a limited but wo.r tbwbile contrivation to , the title of ,Distinguiabed
adeqwile budget and lack of facilities,
'n&gt;e faculty was ena&gt;ura¥ed to cnnbutio&gt;V to tOO ~c fiducatianal misProfe8sor, Distiniuished T e a c b i n g
~would llPpeatt to l!e. unrealtinue emphasizing the "hi_gher goal of
sion of f1!" U~veJ:Sio/, and !hilt, it's
Professor,'l and Distin~
istic, unless lbe team was s 1m p I y
the College" rather than sunply teachworth· noting, m the JUdgment of facProfessor,": at. the discretion of lbe
pointing to an i&lt;teal future;)
ing teclmique!!- "Finally," lbe teem
ulty evaluators, few if any of whom • campus• administration. and oubjeCt to
'lbe team found present OCC facwrote, "we strongly recommend that
approached the task with a pri&gt;-Col-· • the approval of the Dilector of the
ultybigblycnmmittedand,tecbnieally
this University do""erythiilg ~"'"le "
lege ,b~-. .
· .
·
Budget of" New York Statli."
allte;':a1L demilOslZatinco' -a' " Pevef 'of.
t:O cnntinue and nurture lbe d~of
·
·
ability . .. far above that of lbe local
enthUsiasm we..found in both students 1
amateur craftsman." All instructors
and faculty in this College. -It is a rare
bad gained ooioe- public 'recognition of
experience lo find suCh ehfh.usiasm.-"
their work.
·
International Collop
•
Ae to ftiffilities, lbe College· moved
"A fUIUI,Y thing bap~ed -on the
last year from Allenhurst to the Crea-·
way to the evaluation,' Dale Riepe
\ive Craft Center (which is supporle!i
(philosopby), George .0. Scbamer
by ~Board I) in !be basement of
(Spanish), and Gordon R. . Sill&gt;t&gt;r
.Norton. Iilost of lbe College personnel
(French) reported beck to lbe Senate.
liked life in a fully-equippeil, func.
International College Will' dissolved.
tioning craft tihop. They did have
At that point the teain abandoned a
"rather carefully" planned study of
. reservations about paying the Center's
lab fees and using pi-e-mixed glazeS
the College. Before bowing to lbe inand clay. Another camplaint was lbe
evitable, lbe teem did manage to com-·
lack of ade&lt;nlate library reooun:es in
pile some interestinj! figures on lbe
lbe crafts areas.
College's course offarings, enrollments,
Like tbe other teeii:1s; lbe CCC eva!and _grades. (This is tbe only instance
uatora were chaiged bY. lbe Senate
so far of a teem trying to evaluate a
with ..-ina wDether the...COllege
College's grading policy by · actually '
was. "COilllistent with/and supportive
obtaining lbe record of grades given.)
ol lbe role and objectivee ol lbe. Uni-.
In-the fall of "?2, 169 student&amp; enrolled
-..ity 88 a whole." In their vieW, the
in International Col~e in ' COUJ888 •• .'
Co~ W88 provi&lt;liJ!g an ~rtunity,
ranging from ''Revolution in France, •
una'ftlilable to the~ stuMay !968, 111111 Buffalo, Spring 1970" _;
dent elsewbare in the OiliveraitY, for
· to "lntrpductory Arabic" 111111 "I.eial ;'
an active- educationlil ·experience in
History of lbe North· American ·tn- .
aeatbetics. Aealbetic eiperience, theY
dian." Twelve students reaiped with~
said, is an im~t aspect of lbe
out penal.ty, ft1 receiYed A's, and 43,
liberal educatiOn traditianally wlued
incom.:!.letes. Of lbe relllllinini lll'ades. :
in .lbe Weat.
•
.
lbe loMll!t-was a single C aWilriled by ·
'lbe Collece's1101lla""'"" alao jUdged · - James A. Micbielll.' to oiie of ihe stuto be cooiPetlble with tbe "Report on
dent&amp;- in' llis ''Ovezaeas 'Study: 1111
Objective · 111111 Bqard Poticiea' of the
Value· and ·Dim&lt;maiona." •
· ::;•
Uni_,.;ty at Buffalo• alluded to iri
C&lt;incluilioils drawn by the team were
lbe Universihi :Self-$!ldy, w h i .s:'h
frankly theoretical. They judgeil •"-t
stata that, ~tliin" the insti~
"in . lbe presence • of ' lbe
goals of, "freedom of inquiry,· deVotiOD
and (Jlture p~ aDd (XlAJrN-ta
to truth, and lbe joint advancement
of-tliis Univel'8lty jn lbe intttrnalion&lt;il
of oi'eatiw teecbinl and creative re, ....., broedl)' defined, a futwe lnter.-rdl," U/B "is committed to further
natiDMl Colkge cailllllll abould eventthe undendandinl, ,ima,inatinn, In- .
ually be a major eoterJ&gt;ti8e in , tbe
terlrity _ . ~MBiaaat ""'*'itlea of
Coltetliate,syateJ!!,".' •
,r • ·.
•
illl tdudeftlll. At this pOint; the teem
CQiceiVIIbly, aUdJ a ~ could
raised the ~ ol wbetber lbe
JIOW up &amp;n!UDd lbe Intematiooal
stated P1a are u - 1 - adecjuate
· Dorm OD tbe Amberst C8ll1pU8, th!!y
to define lbe as(&gt;iratlaal ollbe institutbeorizeiL 'lbe teem le!t tbirt a neor
lion. Ac&lt;lording_lo ~ -~ ·~ International Colte'ge mfaht ~

&amp;!lillie _

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.

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Wea Y.

Chon,

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bas

Professor of nu·

been elected to

ft diii!Ciora of Kint.ex; IDe:,

the

III8DUfacfurer of plate

-

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com~ p'r&lt;id~

'

�fOSTEI COUOQUIUM #

Recent St ructuro.l Studies on Organomel&lt;llic Mo~cules . I;lr. M. R Churchill,

~~!'f~~~!t'lt~'t~~ ~
at 3:45p.m..

-

CHEMICAl EHGINEEIINO SEMINAl#

#~~~i$.tfJ.:rg~~k"~~~

ment of Chemical Epgineering, North- .
.l""!..l'lrn. Upiv.eJS\9'; lo'( P~. 4 p.m. , ~

'HIE'IiscHf· ...... nfr' UllLU1''11Xr' 0' " "

-

O"'\t''llljlw.&lt;l¥.-itU.,-~.-Ms.m..,

and Sty~ in Nietaelte,'tlernard Paotrat.

~~.!eri~f ~~';~'ex~~e~S,t:

p.m.

r

•

""'

· P""""'ted by the Program io Comparative Literature and.. the" Council on International Studies.
COMPUTING CIN'TH ' SEMINAl#

TUESDAY-6
~·

t
v:!t.~t~~=iy~f·t.':

ANtHaOPOI.OGY

:

•t

KRONOS Time-Sharing Serieo: Botch
!lidge Lea. Rm. 10. 7

Supoyn~,.. ~

I

Studies, 4242 Ridge ~..!!a . . Rm. 28, 9:30

·a.';"po~
~ropology:

by,thO

'HILLB. QASS-•

O.,partmen!-of An- ,

. ...

.
,

: •

-

llCf!llf'

.

Witchcraft Among the Jukun of North"""tem Nit{eri4; Prof. Masao Yamaguchi,

ii'.\YruY;v;.:~~ J.ofl\l,np~dies.

Preoeoted by the Department of -./&lt;nttuOpolQu.
.
· fiLM•

, .

.

- ·-·. .

-· .~-

..

fiLM• "

p.!h"a!:Tn!t({Y--u~~ar;;s;l ~9flku7.
Both films are free and will be shown

io '140 Capen.
EDucAOON

uduU·

•

·:. :~knie'!t!U}_ H~brew. 262_Nort.on, noon.
ANTIIIIOI'OlOG.Y

P:ni : . ··-~·- .

. I

Education Dowh Un.thr, Dr. Charles

~~·
of~=~o:U~~:~E~!~!':~
BOCES Reaource Cepter. 455 Cayuga

Dr., 7:30 p.m.
. Dr. Fall's add"""' is part of a meeting
of the Western New York Association

:~n~ulThem;!~li~! f:vi~~a~opCONCRT/FACI14.TY IECrTAL•

. My Life to Liv&lt;: (Godanl, 1962). 149
Capen, S ·p;m: No adDfiuio"'.charge.
CMEMimY Of IIIOiooiCAl SYSTIM51

lnformance with Gwen , Gwendolin
Sims, oopraoo, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
Admission charge.
The program will . include. works by ,
Schumann, de Pablo aod Eaftmao.

iotry Deparlmeot!i, SL Jude · Clilldren'o

,.::u:r:::;:.,.~~}a
~~~:-=~=
charge.
.

1
cZ'::,;":ifi:::!b:=
~ M==
Proteilu, Dr. Martin Morrilloo, .I}iocbem·

~oH=...ur:z.~&gt;:~.J·:t

3:811 p.m.
Ufl-·
- 1·
.
·.
' Dy1141ffia of Hu'""" 'SUuGUty: On Be-

:=fttf"~~M~.;.,~:;':i

HILLEL fii.M•

.

tt!d~n
~=~- ~ :::::.~
~ogue io in Hebrew with End,iah 11Uh-

Bulfalo,.281 Norton, ·7 p.m:

THURSDAY.....:S

en~J:.':":':~of~~~ ~

havior which abould have no aocial,
fL'litical, moral-or lepl ~- apinot ,

.

Plti&lt;OIOOY SIMINMI

ChmogU.. Concep&lt;iano of Delayed HyperoetWtiuity, Dr. H.ilrold Dvorak, Departmlmt of PatholOCY, Muoacbuoetto
General 'Hoop;taJ. Bootqo, 147 Ca-.
3:80p.m.

-·

.~
~ 'l.::.:.ic::;;::,_~~~ \i.!..""N~ .
admiooioD charge.

•

--

~~=;:
lhrin: T~ ,
BABIC
G18 .Ridp r.-_ Rm~.

• 7pm.
fACUL1T '- ·
Dtm ' Q-~ and !Jorra~ ·PuapectW-

WEEKLY

OOMIIU~

COPY DEADLINE

f'or _,.,~,.,• . . , ; _ - •nd ......... .
.... "" pabliclzlt 811--.-.ta - . . ptace
on - - To NCOrdlnfDrni.tlan. coniKt
N8rq . CMI8NUI, ut. 222lL

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>J"oiai:U/B ·Hea1th ·care System under Study·
.

"

. .

By

Demonstration Systan

Tbe ~ce president c i t e d 8&lt;!veral
reasons .for building such a system
here. "First," the health sciences administntor s a i d, "students lleserve
quality care and they are not getting
it now: • However, the most conipelling
a rguments for the system are educa.tional .ones, be indicated .. '[he srstem
'will be"in'vtiluable in .the. eihication of
U l health sciences stwli!J:&gt;l!!;,.he~

· r ..._._ aJicL~h\1
B'";rlidii.g ~Amherst&gt; ·
be Jl&amp;lll8d SamUel P . CaPen Hall, with
tbe,.p-t ~1fall Jo be renamed
a fiiiwe cl.ite.
• 'Ibe Tower Dormitory on the
Main Street Calnpus be renamed
.. 'llbe

AdmiDIIolft

at

Stock too Kimball Tower.
• Tbe Physics Building (Amherst)
be Jl&amp;lll8d Fnmcls E , Froncz&amp;k HaiL
._ Tbe Central CoUrtyard ot Christopber:;&amp;ldy Ball (Education-Philosophy ) be named Adelle land Court•
yard.
.
Mr. Crofts was a lawyer, teacher,
and piooeer IJniveJ1!ity financial offi- cer and administrator. A member of
the Jaw faculty from 111!)4-1925, he
was vice chairman of the l9ro -university Endi&gt;w.ment Campaign whiCh
rals8d $5 million. Following the cam- '
psign, he w8s assigned the_ tsak of
orpniziDg and centralizing the busiDe88 structule of the University, and
1921, elecled treasuier, a position he helil for 110 years.
Dr. F'umas .,.;. niilth cbanceUor of
· the Univeraity of Bullalo and the fin.t

-.-m

...,_ (Conw.-d

on-

3 , coL 4) .

-

·

oiKl

·..wa -provide .com

bula~ry

nmen.FV:!:l:: .

(that is, non%:pital) care,
initially for students. Dependents of
students would be phased into the.
system over two or three years, followed by ·facul ty and stslf ancj their
cfependents. Complete non - hospital
services, from filling prescriptions to
pediatric care, w o u I d be provided
under the plan:
·Dr. PanniU emphasized that partici!:'rtio::.::."d be on an entirely volun-

~

newly

e ~ panded

care system iri whim indi: 'reParlttg for all of"tlie' heallll
professions .work iogethet .as a team.
The health science student will, under
supervision, he_ both . a _provider . of
care and. when be or she oomes down
with the flu, a oonsumerof care. Tbe

working/learning enviroDDelt provided by such a system would f - mutual respect s.moog thea. entering the
health professions, Pannill aid.
· '.'It won't replace hospital &amp;peiience," the v.ice president aclmitted but
it will p~vide students with a "lUD;,.
tioning health care delivery system in
£! Qlicrocosm.."

.

··bm··

'to educate studeilts ~ vi tal
-health matters as .nutrition, re-&lt;:onditioning, and drug abuse. Tbe vice
president hypothesized that the e'ldst(Continu~d

on pa,e 3. col. I)

University

Health Advisory Committee, beailed
by Dr: Donald A Larson, associate
_.v ice piesi.dent 1or bea.lth sciences, met
list week to begin planning the program. Tbe health oolDII)ittee, wliich
is advisory to the President, includes
representatives of each of the. health
sciences schools, two student representatives, Dr. Paul F . Holfman. director- of University Health Services,
and others.
·
Many universities, including Yale,
Wisoonain and ...Michigan, provide
ooml'rebensiv!' ~ for campus peroonnel, PanniU 88ld.
·

anaugh said that students appeared to

be "over-reacting'' to the proposal;
which is now under oonsideration
only.
A case for the merger can he made·
on several grounds, the admiDishators
said. French, Spanish, Italian BBd
Portuguese have Latin as their oom- ·
mon ancestor (''Italian -and · French
are 'closer than either to Spanish," the
Provost reminded ) . Many prestigious
universities oomhlne these ianguaces
into a single academic unit on the basis of their oomman derivation and -

:::~~~t,::~~

U., a minor in a -....! Romance language and the like. Practically, the

merger woulc! al8o moen a largeo: pool
of fac:ulty available . to sit em dl-rtation oommi.
But lillvl•nwitally, ' Dr. KavanaiJih
said, the propcal W88 the result of
(Con~Uwed .... -

.

\3

3, eol. 2)

In-··

.._....,--~_,...but.-·

llclnll-

~

Lauloe-

...-..-.-......,..&lt;of

wll.,. on_,_ for

--fil..,- • public-... M 8 p.m.
FlllnaN - .

.

:J~ ~~~-saidtAJ~ .

Language Merger Proposal.Seen_as
Solution to Departmental Troubies
Fonnatloo of a Department of RomaDCe lanauaa'es was proposed by the
Fac:ulty of Art&amp; and Letten as a "freeh
start" for ....., departments whoee intemal problilpJs have diverted thei.r
eneigies from inteUectual concerns,
dimmed their national images, and
damaged their ability to attlllct re- _
sources from Hayes HalL
·
This waa the ppsition taken by Arts
and•Letten Provost John Sullivan
both in a position memo sent earlier
· this month to E:rec:utive Vice President Albert Somit and in an interview
this wiek with the Reporter.
The meraer question surfaced tast
week when graduate students in the
Departmeot of Speniah, Italian and
Po..wgu.e CSIPl and, to a lesser degree, u.r.e in the Department of
French publicly stated opposition to
the ~ that the departments be
joined.
Aaeoc:iate Prov_oat 'l"boopaa M. Kav-

~

''Typically, students in .a university .

know lf3S8 about their own Clll'!iiovaacua;
*h.
their carbu-

tile -

-.diin'o

�. sbe pointed out, the prime~ bread winners for families.
,
Women now ronstitute 40 per cent
of tlie U.S. l8bor force; and by ·J980,
the figure will be 50 per ceo 'n.e.e
wo~WQinl!l!. Ms. Jiawoei said, are
-'ous about eqUal pay and equal
rights for equal work. While ~ majQr COI:JI(!Illlielj are not. "overmed"
witb ibis,- she- noted, 'tl\eY'" ha9i!' relt'
the pressure of government action and
lawsuita, such as in-tbe recent AT&amp;T
case, and have begun reluctanUy to
comply.

The Al1s, Hl&amp;her lection aa an oullllanding citizen by
From the arts, Helen Yasgur was
the· ~B~ilt- 1961:-aUilited
selected -on.-tbe -besia of her: involve-: ',Auto. Worbn award for community
1 ment witb . the "Y!KIDI-~
service in 1983 and ~ Gecne ,W~
· music appreciation ~ . M~
ington HOilOl' 'Midal ·ftoiil tJi&amp;.
·
Y-asgur, whO iriitia'f.Od Yoiiili ' Aiic:lidams Foundation in 1970 and 1971.
ences bere in tbe late 1950's, baa made
Joan K. 8ooJer Willi the selection in
the Buffalo chapter a mOdel""for oiber . tbe social aervices cateao!Y•
c'ties which pia"'\~ l!hilba~.c -Currenlly.-pmaiderrt of•. the -League ·
o~tra lll1lSiciahlj iii the a-oomB.' of WOIDI!Il Voters, the main tbrust 'of
She baa ·also been an active
her eftorts baa been in the lield of imand fund raiser· for tbe Buffalo Pbilproving educational opportunity, inharmonic. · •
tecration and tichool financing. She
Allalie Babbidge
. , the first womlin
was a member of the advlaory committee of Bulfalo "tbals who
. n.~.
Doy c....
.
~~~: ~t...:ci~~ ticipeted In th8 -~li!'n ,of the,
W«kiniWOD!M'I't"f,qua!J,y~.
her leilderi!hip ·in busmesa · aninn-New ·Yort State EdUC~~,tiaD . Report,
sbe said, about having employers pro- dustry. .
•
·. •
~~-range
stUdy of Bulfalo schOol
vide adequate day care centers and
Miss Babbidge baa held various·ofnurseey- ochoola- for their childllm.
llcial positi0118 in' State and .national
She helped farm the Junior -L eague's
This is now being' demanded in mliny
banking organizati0118 and hliB bei!il
Cotnmimity Education .(:oanci1 and is
labor contract negotiations, Ms. HausactiVe in · lDiiny Community activitlee.
a member oL its 8Ploabrl' Bweau. ·
· er said, adding tbat ' 'it is just as ·
She was tbe Buftalo Buainlllll and
She """ the 1IMIII :rec~P~omt or" tbe
• appropriate for employers to pl'O'Oide
Professional Women's Club Woman of • and
Brotbelm.lbood' .w~~~-L£!~Cition~
..
ti··'
1973
day. c8re aa it'is for thenl tO build
the Year in 1962, and the fo'"'-'-.....-. cuuuo;
partinr lobi and recreatiooal facilities
~-....,
of the Y
by the W
· N
for workets."
·
. ~:feu!:":':.:~':! ~ ~
Chapterearof the N a =; _
It is equally appropriate, sbe said,
en's Council
-ciatlon of Social Warbrs foi . ~·for companies to relu the rigid rule
Representing higher education Was
beiodina the ~ of the Citizell&amp;~
of the 9-5 job in order to proVide
Dr. Anna Porter Burrell, a psycj&gt;ol"' ·
Commf~ for -~
. , •.
greater opportunities for women. Some
gist, professor emeritus of education
The ............... , .
••
-.
. ·
employers have found; sbe ooted, tblt
at Buffalo State. and currently prates'Ibe citation for ~ __.;.., .
their ~ do not oollajl8e when
· sor of educatiim and peycllology at
· in the p~ """ .PWID to Dt.
they allow women to work from 10 to
Medaille College.
.
• · ·· ' .
Mary J . Kuinlen:zak, 'retirect.
3 - around acliool hours. '
Dr. Burrell, hailed as "a distinDr. _.Mary, aa abe -Ia IIDown, opened
In tbeae and otbei areas, Ms. Hausguished teacher who ~ - touched the
an oftlce.Jn the East Buftalo Deichbor·
er sunested. women are compelling
· heart and mind," ·liegan her i:areer in
hood wliire abe was bom and baa althe managers of our society 1111 ._nd
education as a high schoOl --'A--· li•-' abortl Iilier her ' 1918
and are tbUB ~the ~can
munselor in New. :Yort ' Ci~-~
:uati~~- Care of dill- .
lifestyle. The nation, sbe said. must
acute eenlle of ' soci8I cOnsciouanees,"
dren """her
· ty.
. apply the aame intelli&amp;ent and Crea·
her award cita!ion read, ·"is rellected
She aerved child '-ltb clinlal for
in the myriad urban programs to
the Buftalo Hsaltb Department from ·
tive elforts to aolvinJ tbe problema of
: : . . - lifestyle, as 1t did to the -ce
to which, you contribute." She was
1919 to 1943, and from 1920 to 193-1
. D'r. Albert Somit, l!l&lt;eCUtive l-ice • called an "enemy of prejudice,'' witb
headed the mediaii et.ft of the Gerl!Jftlident. of the University, Jl'l!'8ided
"a ·concem for. aU humanity."
man Roman C,.tbollc ~- Dr.#

worm

0

-

the awards portioo of the

limch-

_, wtiich was also the kickoff for
"National Buoineaa Women Week"
activitiao being ~ by the Buf.
falo s..u- and Prof.-ional Wom..,N•a.:!".."!!t~

___..,,_..._

Y!s

wR,::

~~ ll.,t )A~

- - - .nd Socl8i Lucille Kjnne was the government

and 'public service citation zecipient.
Mrs. ~ director of the Amherst Senior C1tizens ~ Center, Willi

""""'nized for.""'!" t6an 25 Y~

of

•

ing a 1920 diphtlieria ~a program which .-""---h •led ~ ' lmmunlzat:iobs ~
ocarlet ,.,;; let- ·
anus and pertuEI8. In '1930, abeli8Jped
eatablish St. ftit.'a Home fol' ~
tiona! ChildJm.:":;l •• •· • ·'
· ·

.._, .... ..._., - - _....,....""";"'
dedicated __.,., m worldDa Wltb the
inwlved m pvtng....,... their due~
.-apd. Membenbip--•.in the ADihtem •
:Qurlq;lier l:lueei•llbia'w'Mell'ical-•
- -=iety, Somlt ....-ted that the t.l!ft· · C...ter, -76-in' J.u ne .of l962, •is-:now J. WOman of the Yeari967,~ of
dilley olloi*bllr l*kwanl at peat mover 2,000. - . c
·. " -~ • · • •. -"""'~ _ , . !DOdioal ~ .u1d
. jutkabeawoidedinfavurofadd,leiia-/
_Mro:,~ hM __.~ _.;.. -DIIII' ..-- ~. Of
~P
ina the quMtion of what 1111 do~ - "';''taatl_in · llllftinlup ~ -aiaior- :awardClDiilmiUiile,·~.....-and ~-He eald be ioolald ~ atbon omta:a and PfOII8llll Jn . aJt.
-:of-BiolfCI'ollo'Of'W~New
to a ~ a poup r:A ·Unhenity;"
parts ol the- ~ !lbe haa-beld apYork; the lint woauiD to lie.ele!:ted a
mlilbt ~ a ~ ~~
poiJlm-ta to commi- 011· acini at
delep.te to 1tie Stata medlcal COIIven·
to ._..m.e- wboee·IICtivitleo bid · loaa1, alate and national le¥eiL ·
tion and the 1 1 m - of bar-ethnic
_ , . , . . been ovaloolled.
- She baa ' - ' a proWic 'on:iler about
to llfaduale from· a miedlcal
Tbe. award ...UU.... wwe eleote!i .
aaina. ..,..,.tion and ,JVOIIII!IL Mn.school In N- Y-olk . SCale.
from ~t JudliDI .._....,..._ . . •
IGnM'a. many citatioae laclude: ' Ill!'&gt;
( C - - o n - 7.·t»L I)

f,ffatllllltal.

,-:-

�~

•

.aot
-

Pl*i : •. - ~&gt;
. . . . . ...,
. "BD li wiiiJ)d be

~
...

-~

,... - -

•

· ..

.•. .

WI'OIII for Jbe to
~-~lh ~ ~ fat atu11118":'~ laid; ~ Jhat
lllldoiOU'ilillft ad a IUI8:01 iliudent
~ ...... illvolved 1n

!hi ~ ~
'I'Iie ~ .I!Mllh llll'Vice will
JII'CII*IIy be llafled by both Uniwraity
. . . _ . . a n d belillh practitloneia
ham the,
unfolds,
it -w be
to mra-t U/B
fliaaUy to be the ~ ;'PIOriders
Gf Milth oue," Panidll .-Jd. At JlimlJar facilltlll ._._., -.Jth profe&amp;~ !JaB!. the ~ty &amp;erft 88
lid 1111•~ bMia: 11118 woUld
. . ; , :the JII'8CIIi:!e' "'"- 'The .

==:.t.:AIIbii

• not IJdead to -.-rp .
' il oommimltj hea1t·h
aile l"l"'!'.•g:•
.~.,te.~81111ill empbulzed.

: .,.....· ~of .the
~·{,.
ienovalicill of Miehaiil ' ~· bome of StUaent
Heellb. · • Qll h a v e to' be well to
~ ·ib!:l .
aDd of the el&lt;istina
~ faC:IIl3. whidl will be J1101i.
~·-"' elevatOn ad to proftde.iU.
. -. . . . . . for ·~ who are
~
·
•
•
~t tit· the propam will
be .-as-~ ~ em el&lt;isting
~ .RNitb Related ~a.ions
hi~!~...,... IQ lleibl ~dine
~laly ..me. ali C1J11P118. Pan:.
:!....~ and SuB Board I has .
for a c:ampus
--..--. Tbe ~I of
~ ~.:in.~ ilbidY prelilillnM.Y- to .Jiioiioi!I!I-IOibl! kfnd of
~-&lt;liS=""A
r.:ility. Tbe Schools
.~t. .
, and the ~r
.,...,....._.
. bl·!lftlalaoesplormg'
-~~clpate.
evident """"" or
• Nillil.- ...... ,,, ..• .
Feclllllos Ill T..;.-.;.. . . . • · "'"',..."',
FaCllitiea will be developed on the
~ !'JIC! Main ..Street ~
"iii''~"' PUiiilll"a&amp;ic:('' TJie m..
tem will Include "
try
· flY!"
.. :......_.
an en
pomt . m
--::"'~ where most ·of ~ ~
!:ijj __._.~comC':.:ve facility
':~ on
S~t where
::::aDd willho!a~Urofealiooals are .

"'---= :..e;ooo

~ta'whd. ~l-a!bey!Je=~-

capibllll): ' of · ~k;..liirst facility
- c:ouJd be ·tnoispm'ted
•
.10
'"!be Uniwraity .-as ~~
this to tie the~ ........~
witli Uoe ·ilew main"''~ CIIJDP!I8

PfOII0!8[ ."We ..Pe8ci~l~

DOW liofore .~· ~te J"!""!-" .
ate~'!' ol. !fl?·wt~lh"'~1 coordin...._. 1hop
·,~_,.;._....._. etlpBed
m ~1 . &lt;:""' P~ for Audubon

llnk

111811

•

andthe. ~ IROUJ18.~.noted ~t
·~ ~tration might
eventu8uy beJii&gt;'!&gt;ioVidini lilribulalory
....., for dependents . of veteian8. .
spite of the setbed: of President
on'o - t ·-~ ._ ......this_,_,,..
·sa'ta"- ___...:""_~.:.::l:.~ ..:..l""""the ~

N:

.., -

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

neigh,

borinl Veterana Admjriisfration HO&amp;pithetal.
Ln.,
Tbe Planneno are al&amp;o.aware .thet
. SUNY~
~te 18 CDIISider-

l:~tons~~
.
-

·be ......

""'ve to 80 to
"""""•
881d, lndlcalillj!
thethat~~YP.':l'nium
that steP
be deferred until
would

detalla -had &amp;eat Wlll'ke!l out and the
8)'lltem was "--nnln• to fuDction.
"We

~ ~~ ·~ tbe

-v ___.
out.¥e

io

""!'l IS-Jiailll(tObti," UJe vice'p,;;,ii~ ·
88ld. WhO Will
whether
deni funds

vaUab1e

or

•

•
stufundipc ~ .be

"""'! """

~a~~~;n~n?e~ect:~!~W· .
A ciiDICa1 derbblp foull fifth-year
pbanucy llludenta .. olated to~

curriculum,._

a nqUind PlrlGf the
rat fW, the U/B Pll«mot:y N_..
letter l'llpOrta ID Ita October edition.
Tbe del;bbip·- « exterDIIblp,. 88 it
ia ..., eaUed- will l!e earried ""\ ill
Buftalo.«rea IXJID!IlUDitY aDd baep•tal

Lan u=tf!".;!;,vo.w·

~!o!'Jof~the~~~Said .~t,,
1
~oon4

~tioo:L. Fre~

,

Jll'8lidoJDt /

WS: tJ!:

i&gt;oi:b

A.r m.· s ··St·r~toogt·s·t
T.9.·. L'.e"ctu ·r.· e' · Here

r

Wl:..:

=

lh;::-::'..:!:.; ~~,:St.,':

EJIIIIoh _,..,.. '
·
Tbe _ __.. ,.____, , "lh ~ .. -~ ·
..._,~ WI

::::a;:

J'IVVUIO'

.-

-

.....t the
' ! : : t !lr 3S fac:~....~.~ lbe ~&gt;:elY UOle·
,.~

cm,aJDpJe

of the
· Doparlmedt whidl baa
771aCulty. ae~· the COD·

, M~ ,N 61;mjoq
OoD8n
. &lt;C•• ee-, f!.,., be.!
~cbilriilim .or. the ....._._~

decillaa .., , re,looate ---.... ..fhe ~ ·
~
· pJc. ol. ·~ 8ludieL Tbe F.&gt; •
uJtar~Mwwt!.maJ PollcyCclmmiUee,
'!hicil aladoDta C"'llll'•hwl Jadred SIP ~
....- Pnmch ~· ·an ~
body, be a110 DOted
.
:
•,
. N'o
·
. ot a mille atudant h..t ~ · ·

--

.... -

1

BIU&amp;

The

•"·

w':::;:

;- S':!!~~~ 1:..,&lt;:',:»~ was
~~,:::. ~~.rl~~ !I:
on the staft here When the Sc:bool

no JoOser justify sinkina Univenli
reaources illto the trouliled ~
menta.

-

·,

~........

aDd dlnocllw Gf Qlmell ~
. ~ ( - CaJ!pa). He al8o

F

one Gf.S,. ~ fllcalty.who loft UD·

118

f:.lhPiiar liD . .

.IDSit, - - -alw ftae

w'

'lift
' ---"
wtlh

Se,ero:
Ap'.nniritect. - :;:.:t:"!!;r!s:":.....:.:k""':~
.
' · .· , . .. r":"."
-lnlllbtaf·~RbnStudies'

_....__
"'"""'
... ol. otatlltioa. . . · ·
.

•

Merger

. . . ~l)r · NJ~,· lie --.1. ·
·~ . --, ·.·· · ···: · . ' ·-· •. ; . '

rep._ •

~

• Detect adverse druc
auch .. allerJiee, illteractioaa, etc.
Make appropriate c1ruc pmcbaa.
ing deciaians baed 011 quality otandarcls """ CODtrola.
•
• Apply p~ law aDd ethical
codes to daily practjce.
• Adviae patieniB on drug . - aDd .

......-! .the . . . . . . ....... Ia otbor
educatiaaal aDd........,~
notably - llll!illat ___,. .,. ~
r,_ far -.:11 aDd deYelopmOnt
pharnwc:iee Ita PIJIPCiel! ia to ...wble
effecta.
·
.
· . UDder PJelldaat ~.
llludenta to apply daaoom ieaming
• Communicate with pbarmacis18
Pbillp•Halpon, a 1918 ...,tuate of
to actual practice aDd to besiD develother health profeosionals. aDd pa:
the U /B X.. School, eirved liD the
oping the aldlla """ tmdemtandings
tients.
•
faculty ., tbat 8c:bool far 18 ,... 8lld
they will later need 88 practitioners.
'The pharmacists and the pbarmawas dean ill UN6-1'1. In J.IM7, he was
Il'or tea&lt;:binl the student. in' the
cies utilized ill the clerkship program
etected a .JUitia! Gf the 8aplam Court
cler~, .JXIOCii&lt;:inl pbannacisla will
will be expected to ~t a specific oet
of the Sta~ -miDI em the bench
be aali8ted to 1erve 88 preceptors, and
of professional criteria established by
until his ciMih In 1963.
will be Ji_, PIU'l'time- facility -status,
the Sc:bool of Pbannacy. Some of the
Samuel P. C.,... the lint dumcei_the N,.,.Jetter article aaya.
• ·
requirements for the participation of
lor of the Um-.ity, ._ t-1 hailed
Rlcht DOW, tM!Il tboulh it is nearly
community pharmacies are:
as ~bold arcbitect of Ita em-tiona ;rear. before the , _ clerkship re• t.:f"'!t dispense at least 5,000 new
al deoilln OW!l' a periocf of 28 -..m \
~t lloe8 illtp effect, the .Bchool
prescriptions per year.
(1922-1950)" aDd a c:bampiQo Gf - · Of_ ~ ia ~ ~ !-&lt;&gt; .
• Must~ a repreeentative line
~ "-1om. He - al.o the lint
. talie Pou't Ill~ limited, pilot ~P
of over-the-&lt;:Ounter products aDd sickdiJec:lol; of the American Couacil on
PfOIIdUD dllllll3 the ' 1974&lt;spnng aeroom supplies..
•
Bducltion. During the period of his· meeter. 'The pilot will illvolve about. a
• Must- keep patient medication
~tion In BullalO, the Um.·~
dozen fifth-year s~udents who will
records and engage in · petient con.satygrewfromaBIDallpoupoflooEiy
have to put ill 20' hours li · week in
sultations.
1mit prof0811ioaal ochoolll aDd a liberal
pharm8cie&amp; for 14 ........U.
• Must have an up-to-date profesariB college illto an illtegrated catlel'
Because the clerkship is, ill actualsional library.
of bill- educat:liJn. ·
ity,anolf-aunpuscourse.the 1students
• Must project a prOfessional imA Univemty .medical school alumwill not be paid (or the time· they
age.
nus and long-time ~ty member,
spend ill the pharmacies. ·
Although stUdents will t8ke pert in
StoCkton Kimball was dean of the
Part of the ~l's. illtent iJ! settipg:
~ cler~p program concurrenUy
~I of Medicine fmm.1~ to~
up the c:lerla!bip reqwrement 18 to·exWith theu other college cowaes, there
and 18 remembered for his "mterest m
poee studeilla to 9&amp;1)C)UI( types 9f· prac:is a possibility, the Newskttu says
teaching, studenla and their probleli\s,
tice environmen~ before they gradu-.
that the New York State Board oi
and the adv&amp;D&lt;ement of medical eduate.
:
Pbannacy may one day illclude the
catio!t ill ·seneral" Nationally, be was
Among the ·besic competencies :the
time spent ill the clerkship as credit
a member of the American Medical
Sc:bool hopes iiB studenla will acquire
towards mooting- illtemship requireAssociation's Committee for Aecreditin the clerkship are the abilities to:
ments for licensure. This possibility
ing Medical Sc:bools and treasurer of
• EXtemporaneously prepare drug
hinges on the outcome of revisions in
the Am!erican Association of Medical
doeage lonna.
·
the State's internship requirements,
Colleges;•
..
• ~tm: !lruc tJieraPy of bi&gt;lldil-' ·~-- pow uoder consideratiOI} by the Board
. Francis E. Fronezak, 'Who•held both
patienla and out-patienla.
•
Pharmacists interested in partici: .
law and medical degrees from·~ Uni• Interview petienla and take drug
peting ill the program are asked to
versity, was -recognlzed 88 one ol. the
histories..
, . , . . . .
·.
contact the School.
foremos~ public health authorities .ill
•.• . .. ,. · . .• ,. ., . • • ..... ·:
•. ; . . . . • , .
tbe Uruted .-5tatee&gt;JHe .was comoiisPr.n-~~-·
sioner
or: the
. 1910
Buffalo
Health
.
. !!"
.
• _:r. 'J:.~
_.
,, ,.,
ment from
to ·l946.
As a~
lllllJOI'
(CD · ~·f!:Y.
l L ~ · ' · ..
11·
· ""' · ·
.
•
in·-dle "U.&amp;""'-y..,Medical' Corp&amp; ill .
'1"r/1af.;tiy"!' ·· t'1) um.Y~l
~ ~~lhi,~Jl"l ..d~"l. f!W.'li Wo~lcJ Wa(' I.' be was a~=g by .
a way to ~~ 'the ~Is ~f
whop esplailled tha~· : had ="'~
Sec:ietl.ry !lf 'Silite'
RObe~ -~··
Spanialj, Italian and Po~ese and
constant contact with Arts and Letters
membership 011 the Poliah Natiqoal
FrimCb' a'-RehaisSance.'" '· " ·"·
·
acJyjSQ~ · lK!Ii· v • . . . • 00
·Commi~ ill Paris ,1o reptesent .the
'
the -'..':.:~-~• 1as""' 1\lllfll\ - ··
, ......,.e~
Poll!i·Of Aliil!rilia!''The'Pblisii'Nati.&lt;!IW"
l'al!tlc8l Sln.llllleo
P~
t summer~ that be
Committee re resented Poland iii theBoth departmenla have been divided
would continue to moot
faculty
Council f
Allies and Dr ~recenUy by illtradepartmental politiand studeots to esplore the matter
c:zalt
designated directoc · r the
cal struggles. SIP, the administrators
further.
department of physical
. ..,:: and
esp~ has., without a .chairmaterial welfare of the
Army
HewasalsoplacedillchargeofPom.b··
m, sp•fi! .~;;. • _.......,d'd · ""'hamardbeen...,t, ,
·
·
."C;
war p,risooers, -refuJees, expatriates
no """""""' e can 1 ate
and qrphans ill France Siberia, Mor·
ror the
In
there
·oooo
and England. As 'director of the
18 .!- ~ce penilins . agamst ~ ·
..
Poliah Nationa) Committee's Ilepartchiiirtn8!L ~ ·t:be\le problems h;ave bement of Public Welfare rmm· May
':ta~t't2: =:'h.~
Donald G. Brennan of Hudson In1918 to February88191!1, he was desigsuffered, .,ttimately to . the detriment
stitute; a stral.egiat and student of DB·
::::::..:
""'!" o"f
of. their atudents, the administrators
lional security problems, will be ill
Poliah
After the
88ld
.
Bulfalo, ~.October 30, for apWar se
him
Sullivan esp.-1 confi!lence that a
pearances at both U /B and Canisius,
an '
citizen 8Jid be
award
nationally.prestigioos chairman could
as another venture ill the growing reed an
MD . . _ •L~ m·:
be found
the btoede field r Rogionalism movement among local
"""' '"''
· ·
m
r
~
SUNY and private institutions in the
venli
W&amp;l88w ill 1919. Dr. Franma,nce, ~ for a recons~tuted
field o( iptemational studies.
al8o a
of the Coun~t
~~·hisoflo!'Ythe
. ·
Tuesday afternoon, Dr. Brennan
. of the Uniwrai of Bulfalo _and
1
'-..
una
ve. """&gt;'
will
t
'lh ~- .. ·-~ of Prof
te prot_,- of
- uoiwa ~t woul4 ala!&gt; have an
" ~ , W1 ..,.......,..~
"''"'"
by
live _ _..,-"--· here
op nun;ty to start fresh under
Glen -Snyder's Political Science class.
for 25 ~~
l~p aDd return to more
aRt.!_Pe~-ill Conference Room 9, 4238
•-lectually rewarding business than de....._
Adelle H. Land was a member of
~tal poliW:a, they sUgl!'!lted
At 8 p.m., he will speak on "Strat- · · the U/B faculty rw 46 years, from

~ ·':t .ft'l~ !"" .aJioo UD· ten~· of SIP
te studmtl that
'One' 'tbiu ia; clt!a'r Q&gt;.-D;· hi.iwi,. ·. =::thatan~~
~· •:t£ Will~J!' a !:'t~lhaJ_I a-, ftleil ap1aet the ckipuimenf by

oi. ' Sta~ a...!. . . ; _. ,...,.._,.._.t
.
....- .a ....-Y88' .1a'm. .
Dr. -8evero
Dr.. Emanuel
Parra, hlrnmi 11nao .January, 1971,
. who - a at the .U-'·-"""ty
a

-3

.... He

· BOth lectures are open to interested
faculty and students.
Brennan's special illteresla are ill
&amp;fillS CODtrol, alliance relationshipe ill
Europe, and advanced military !icy
such 88 policy . _ relating :;:'....,:
tical and alpl~ nuclear forces.
Prior to joimng Hudson Institute •
of which he was preoident.from
6(, Dr. Bremum worbd fw-nine.ye&amp;!ll
as a --.:b mathematician and comIDUiiicaliaQ tbeoriat at Lincoln I..abor-

of Education was established ill 1931,
-became a major prof-.r and was ill&amp;trumelltal ill the development of the
Teaeher Education Prosram. She is
aJ&amp;o credited with initiatigg the "team·

Iuter~~
. l::f~~
~~~
~
e-lhe coo
..........., ~r
1962:.
. •.,
w..-;
. t M eet
.
. umen 0

~ ~:r=~~

T'bcl Women's CounCil is

sponsor_-

~i:..~~:: ~~

_......,L In ..tdition to hia tech- · Fillmore Room, Norion. Dr. Daphne
nic:al--.:hthere,bedevotedtime
Hare,profeaaorofmedicine,willspeak
to lltudiee o f - CODtroland national • :&gt;..:...~Expomen~al _PressUre and
eecwity ·pobleaa He- cq:anizle&lt;
"""....
·of two 8UIIIIDII'-....ru. on ume COD·
.According to the Council "thiS
trol. JJ,Id In Cambridp, M-. In
topic ia one which has ~ variUIS8 aDd J.98li llllder ,,..,;._ c~' the
0118 eectan of the Uft'--"- c:ommuoAm.ican .. ....._._.of~
ity .._ ---•
•u·--•.7
.._
Arta 8lld SciGf '"" ....,... Yearl. Tbe uoiversal.ity
He a lll8lllber Gf tbe Jocad.
the concern makes it a subject of
~· Caaunitlee em International i l l - to a """"' section of women."
8tudioiw of~ Ccmtrol fmm 1961All - . faculty, staft and stU66, .mn, !"ita c:hainnan '!' 1961-62. .
dentil are urpd to attend.
·

·

�:ra.a.:::;:.':·~-=
ColltP ....
lbeli l'8PGd 'Ritb
U..'a IIDt lnatb GD·tbelr necb. No
evaluatlw .......... the. ~ that

:cIt~.:a-Ool1!..
..,_a:m~
be intereettn. to - ..If the

extenuJI evaluafol8 Who lll1llll cover
much more territory iD much ._ time ·
are aa tJoubled on th!a J&gt;Oint.)

CIILLI8E H

..... Wlllllder Ia DDt that eou., ~u.
-bllldto ....... ~­
,_
11Jat that It faDetioDID at1oll The

~ a--s wJtb ....lb ud
....... _....,..,_ .... budpt wbat.. .... JS'IS.'ll.IJIIIMd it operated
-. will thw from ~ts.
D1e111e aero·faaclin1, tbe Collep
~ ........... Well...taffed,
.
ad well-a--.! CIIIIDIIIS
to a ......, IIUIIIber ~ OIIDCIIrDed stuthe .ludlaalt ol evaluators

=:.::
Bllabedi

=

(~~

~b'

..,._) ud AJiaa Kom
(.avlawwadlil ud studies,
BallaJo Slate Oollep) .
Oallea H fonaed illl972. The new-~ 1be .......... coupled with lbe
llmit8d lime avaiWIIe to lbe evalualan, led lbe ...... to olfer aiiJ.y '!a-itical - · - •. DDt deftniti"" judg...... bf!lbeir nport.
~H '--'.-Is, delailed
Ill the - - Colle1e• aotaJocue.
Moat ,.,.......,.,ly, it ia canc:emed
with -.Jib ID the ""--eBt __,,-beJu..m.. that ....... iD '-lib deal
;jti.~ ud '-ilieB .in their
tolal llllYinlmllelll- Purtl\er, it hopes
to llllhe as "a CliiiiiiDIIIIiction -center
"tll'bldl will
up aYeiiiii!B for providini lbe beet paible bMith care. ..
Lib moat ol 111, CoUeee 11 believes
lbe uistiJqr "'-lib care deli'l'er)' sys,- - ill iaadequate. In """P."!'!" to
lhia · · j t edYoao._ aa.~- ·
~by - - ol wbil:h "we
aoa became acliW! detetmiuets ~ our
'-lib bebaviar." Educ8ticnally, lbe
Collep'a approach is -m-tsJ,
ClOIImNIIity-oriollle!f. 8lld chaa..,..,neated. s ....tuaJJy, "the Collece aspires
to be noldentlal.
.
Lilre IIWiy ~ !tie- Olher Colleges,

"'*'

H --"'to~ ~lprett.f ;
well without a Master. The troika is
lbe fcrm ol ~ favored by lbe
Participsnts elect " - thn!e~ Coardinalillf Committee whicli,
m tum, DIIID&lt;!S noo!denoe, cuniculum,
public re Ia tiona, ·ud spedaJ (nondedlt-b.ring) --committees.
'1'1111 evaluators were aomewhat concerned about "the ambiguity of lbe
~- ollbe Collt!fe (a recurrent dilli:Ulty fGr evaluating teams) .
'I'bey ~JBiifiratiana foe memI:Jenbjp
abarper delinition.
BeiW, ''m9re alllciU" membership
lists abould be maintained. The evaluators ai8D r8ClCIIIIidided that broader
participation in lbe Coordinating
Committee be....,....,....,, - t l y
.both to broaden lbe pblioeophicaJ base
ol-lbe College ud fo ...... lbe workload o1 aa overburdeDed f..W.
What aoa you aay about a zero budpi? With _....t lack ol irony, lbe
IMm commented that "ateady 8lld
P""'tar oupport" from lbe University
IS . - r y if lbe College is to realize
its evident promioe. (.John ~.
- ollbe CoUeae'• three co-coordina.
tors, aplained 10
that
H had not simply
to wing it
but had expeclad a budpt: ''We're
not ..-.chi...." be -.red.) Curreatl,y, . _ t for Collep H is in lbe
$15,(100-$1.8,000 ~
.
"-db' ol the CoiJep are tarply
oelf...aected ... the ~ ol pemmal

eou..e.

:=..:.:r:.rm

____ _

~PORTER,
..

.. -.---..-.
...
n..._ lr.,.
r ...

.........

~

~.,

-r.w... ...

.,......_MB .... ac.,....,

---

•.r. JaJ4...._..,...._ .. ......,...

-·u.---~

2UPJ.

_

An.... ..........
c:&amp;DIInU --

---·-

P..&amp;I'JUCU IFMID

~

~

IIU«:r •• wpnf•ftll
·-~­

Writer Contends
Students lacking

team
'The
did not study lbe curat&amp; ' Claaaes bad alreedy ended for
ricululn in depth. !This semester, lbe
lbe spriag term whea lbe team began
catalo100 lists oome 21 f'.QIIege H
its study of the "College so firat..hand
cou"""'- n- include an overview
evaluation of courses was precluded.
"hMith aue aeminar," "J:lellth"· and
Documentation that might ha"" helped
Dyi'!ll," and COl1nle8 on aglag, dnlgs,
fill this void was not abundantly availnutrition, geoe!ic counaellag, abortion,
able, it aeems.
community health, 11olunteefs in
In deacriblag the {:j&gt;llege, the team
'-lth care, marriage, alcnboliam, day . . noted the ~·· "strong applii!d,
care, aad alternative appr:oac:bea in
paraprofeosional emphasis.'' Comnnmmentsl health institutions.) Concern
1ty-action projects !notably involvewas expressed by lbe team that cour&amp;e . ment iD lbe sentencing p - of the
ouUines were not more readily availBuft'alo courts, worit in lbe
of
able. ·
prisonel8' rights, and first and·fOUJth
As to gradlag aad courae evaluation,
amendment activitieo) are lbe backthe ...., alluded to a atstement on
bone of lbe CoiJep curriculum. In Colu- -tiers prepared. by the Collese lege Z classes, the rslitieo ollbe legal
in December 1972. The team """"'-!
system are typk:ally ~~ through
the College's expressed commitment
"'!"" histories oe tbrouth mvolvement
to cmgoing evaluation o1 courses. John
With actual C&amp;SM-in-~ Legal
~ told lbe Reporter ·that that
theory is cle-ernpbesi..t (but available
document is now being revised. Origelsewhere em campus, notes the jeam).
inally, students had been" req.-ted
AI.~ !'re-'!'w B\&gt;Jdenla do regislei,
· to submit written evaluations of Colthis ll! not primarily a pre-law pro.
lege H courses. Otlier mechanisms for
gram. Sl!'denta rep~t a ~ range
quality control are also being disof ~ 8lld incl~ ~)icemen,
~ by lbe College. Duringer said.
~
worter&amp;, and mmonty-sroup

l ' baft bad COI!tacl with
stu!lents
em..ticm acbooJa. I
found them l!H*inl iD "'pbiJoaappzy.''
They know their partiealar niche- of
pedagoo ud COI!tillllt. But lhia Ia ~
much not ~ Pram the ftl)' !Je.
linninl of their &amp;b;\."/:~ should
be taltinl cour.. iD
y. WithQUI pbi1aeopby llae CUI
no real
cbnteot or ~- T.cbera cannot be ipoiam
and
Quine and Ryie and
a n..d
Nagel a n d au.eu. WI
t them
there aoanot be the ~ subtlely 8lld del&gt;tb ud ~ticm 8Jld
insight. Without them we haw the
~ ol ~ ud banal1ty.
·
I haw COI!tacl with .__.._ I find
too maDY ol them ~ from tm!:aJltr. aad illanib' &amp;1111 -=uib' 8lld
fatuity. They do not Mdfw beaoUE
they do not know tbly 'lack · the
iDtellectuaJ.ity for 11J011. -.:blni. It is
we who ~ lbe!n. who W they
are dellciimt; ud in tbia I
the word "BIIIrerini.· liE
It doeen't DJ&amp;ltior what level o1 lbe

z

~~=~Yin§.==

area

&lt;!rad~L~indi
·cy_vid~ all~~~~
dol~g:"'spokesm":n ~. ",;.

though both grading. and course evalu·
ation are much &lt;ljscwpled I&gt;Y. ij&gt;e CUI'nculiun coouilittee. To his kDowledge",
no Colle~ H instructor gives automatic "As." Duringer said.
In IIWDIIling up, the evaluators were

Faculty ... d "---"le-"-~ ·
~" in~
· lb;'·~~~L·

"!'Is were

wn~

at least m part on
The College's lf&amp;diDa

.

Pf!lcpce&amp;li nat~~-- "fairly

co~~;ven o .,: Wllb .the further obaerv'!tion tha~ a "hlgb P~ ol ~
A 8 and B ~ "!" llWllriJec!, .
we do
ini~'thlit; e~wilboUl' fillailcOO
nottllnd ~,41o ~;-:nor ' dd··
support, lbe College "lias provided a
we regard It as disturbiag e.,pt to
setting foe concemed faculty members
~ ex~!'"" that this ~.is
8lld students J toql a number of·tradidl&amp;turbmg ~~ .the .Uruver'sity::
tionally .defined disciplines to fOCIIS
as a W!&gt;&lt;&gt;Ie,
.
. ·
!heir a~tion on some of lbe most
( ~~) •tsColfirstl Y~ _of operation
diverted' fege ZCooperaltedE on $2,Important areas related .to beallb and
500 .
bealth care."
rom :Oilege . The
Beyond the obvious problem of supprojected budc&lt;:t for 1973-74 .was $23,- ·
port, lbe team t&amp;iight the College's
000. In fact, the College received $825
biggest handicap was " the lack of a
more than tbs,t foe the Cllr1'0Dl Yel!'·
permanent bome where the faculty
. The team ~med """""'!' erno;ra8lld students can interact more fremgelem~ m the C4?llege, including
queotly and more in depth."- Slill
devruopms programs m legal -=ts
committed to lbe idea of becoming
of beallb. care ~ sc:bool law ud !"'·
·d tiaJ t t the Coli
·
pressed mterest m consumer alfaira,
""" en . • a presen
ege IS
landlord-tenaat relati
and Ia
uncertain whether to move to Am- ' form reaeerc:b.
ona,
w-re~1, where lbe majo~ty of student;&amp;
Several students who had been · ·
will be, or to "!"'k a· reBldence convemcepted 1a law sc:bools outside Buft!j
·
0
ent to the Main Street campus, where
aaoounced their · leoti
to
most.of lbe · University's health proColleg Z-type m . on
at art
fess!onals will. be c~ustered. ~ matlbe
reported~ elsewhere,
tar 18 under dl8CUS6lon, C&lt;HlOOf&lt;li'!"~
"Exciling,-vigorous, and valuable to
.J~ Fopeaoo reported, but a d~on
the University'' "W88 lbe team's samWill probably be deferred until the
mary reaction to College
quali1ied
College has a . better sense of lbe
on 1y by .the eva1 to18• '
·ous1
"llavor" of the revised Collegiate
cited qualm8.
ua
PreYI
Y
system.
. The evaluators urged the UniverCOUEGE z
'soty. to provide the program with
greater moral 8lld financioii supporl
Unlike some of its dilfuae.goaied . Instructors cannot nlake 1""'
· ·ranp
fellows, College Z gets right to the
plana without b!ld8ela!y secunty, lbe •
point, with lbe following atstement ol
~ ~ "Stepe [abOuJdJ be bw, '
purJJCMe (from lbe Cllr1'0Dl Collfiies
to Jive [the College! a · more Penna·
.cataJocue): "'lbe Collece Z Proimm
~tstatua and administratiw contin- ·
iD lAw begins with the 881W11ption
wty," the three advised.
that the 1elal procjeao in America as
n.e· notion that the CoUops 1DU8l
it is ..,. COilStituted is aperijenCed
have aome ~ ol .-an!iq faculty
~ most ol the - ' - it decla aa
participation if they are to ·be ilbll!
mcomp~ ud remote. 'lbus, ill
to attract 8lld retain faculty was in- .
, (Mill part, -tile 1111-.ce ol Ccillele Z , troduced, "More ,permanent SUNY
~ .!'L~~ upcm our at.
poailicma ud_titlea for at Ieut "some
temp .._,...,. ..... taat new metb- · of the inatruCtora . _ -lial· in
~
&amp;WU"IIJ!"'I 8li1CII1g · order to ........, a IODJ:range c:nmmitpeop
t ... the part of the stA!ft. 8lld
they will be able (at lea£
y)
ultimately a ftill-tlme -u.r · or ·ad
~ ~ ud defend tbemlel¥)!11 from
. miniatrator will be !-sed- the teamillepl inc:maiona 11{11111 tbelr riabta.
adviaeoi (Do...:..- .
•
to ei1able ~ "! 1ll1dentaDd Iaw8and
a caonllnaiar":)-"tl,y,' the Co~ !JBa
p._.- legislation ud bow it alfecta
College
abaree 1111111). . ~
them. 8lld ~ enable them tO iD-. interests wiill l.aw 8lld Society C&lt;&gt;l
focmedly cntic:lze Jeaiolalinn 8lld tbelr
lege. The evaJuato18 took" the · • ·
~~ "'! well aa initiate ~
that the field •of leal· pri!t,Ieina~'ew .
ti"" ~ m - the Cll8l!ll of existent
laiae enough for at least two•Iaborew.:!
~
.
.
and -nwvtecr "that all concerned
11lia sprmg the Collese made a
look for waya to nurture CXJOpention
"favorable ~" em evaluatora
" " ' - the two law-related colleges
Robert Fleming (law"), Robert Ge.Yiey
without reducing the ,....,._ _,_.._, ._,
. (pbysics 8lld aatmnam,y), ' ud Nor,either."
~ ~·

1

7

te!n

z

Ill"":,J:-1!'OfDIIIUili.!t.t:.:U ....

z

... trarUl' _....,.,

--.caw
__,.,. r. lfAJt£ftT

. The IMm baaed Its )\ldlmentalarply on meetinp with aa eotbusiuUeally poo-Co!Iege of Colle,e
faculty ud student&amp; 'Ibe evBiualms
were impi'I!SIIOd by what they heard

~t!y
myour

Gt-wiE

~
- . -~;..t;d;~.'-~~
~a';~ em all~

a

p!l888. Philoliapby
a ftr): flourisbmg eaterpriae iD oar COUDtly; N

let:a malr.e .lt lbl&gt;' ~ -~
iD the 8Chooia ol educatiaD. U a fl.IWll
taacber starts em bia ftrat day Without
~ R....U ... •cloDOtlnK" ·-or
Ryle· !I"J"'ttle ""ldlliilt ·m "tbi inaaUDe"
or Quine an "tlie value o1. a variable"
or Cbomaky on "ayntu" oe Descartes
~"~.to
Sum" or Madtain an-, . mleriority," .lie ~'t do a IOOd "job;
~~ evea as a nurae or guard or babymtter.

!rzo

-IIIAII'DH WOLPBON

Woodbridge, N .Y.

Professor Suggests
;Scaled' Increases
BDI'l"'R:

I understand that SUNY/United is
interested in the opinions ol u /B fac.
ulty membera ClCII1IleriJinl matters to
be. -tiated in tha State contmct.
. In my oPinion the acro.-tbe-board
1I1CI'I!a8eS are not jUaWied in their
PI"'!!IIOll ""!" beeinM the people at
lower saiariao 'IJbo need the nioney
the moat ana wlili .... hurt the· most
by lnllation are the _,. people wbo
aet. the111nalleatare
vanous WQB ol cbanliDI tha formula
for diltribuliaD ol -lbHJaarcl m~ to ameliorate the .!a..tian. As
a alert I 811J11Mt that -lbHJaarcl
~ abouid be COIIIIIIIled fo ia~ticm to l&amp;luj., that, for
-~"
. a . . . , _ . _..... $20,000
ww pt balf. as much in _ . , _
board
a~
$10,000.
I haw ~ tbla with - . 1
other faculljY rnaniJeiS In tbla del&gt;art_,t ud m oiMr ~to-dd
the onlY !lfi'Ul8lthato -m.t It haw as
~.... of tillllurad faculty

u..:r-. n.e

u.crea- ..

..m.a

�Parking Problems Here, Too
~
- · porld"'
.. this shotTlieni's
of the
.
blqocle- anpauncl
bohllld..-....
. _ _ _too,
-••balai.
_ . - SA~
1
, _ , lelt far cholnlns and loddne. An,one .........,. to In

=::.::"the"":or

8

of"::::"
....:::.-...__ compound ..

.BuUs
'M_a. y ·Surprise/
.
~~~~~

"We may llleek up and surprise a
f""' pepple,." ~ .Coal:h Leo RichardsOn. of 1be Basketball alills Said
Jaat week as the Bulls opeDed practice
for their 57th varsity -.on which
betliDa
at Stoey(MorriS
Brool&lt;,. '51)
November
28. ·
'Rii:llardscio
·aa.iwi;oo
command af the basketball li'rogram
._..,~--the """gouotion ·
of~· -Mulol •-Herwaa junior varsity ·

coach here last year and, prior to
that, apeut ten varsity coaching aea110118 at Morris ( 3 ) and -• Savannah
State (7).
-. ,.. ...
• 'The Bulls look thin at the outset,
but J{ichardiion is optimistic that
aome pieces (players) will fit together
before the 25-game chart eq~irea How
quickly be can mold his game is 1he

big question.
.
.
Senior Horace Brawley, a 6-3 forW!'nl or guard, is the lone returning
starter from 1972-73. Brawley 1100red
15:8 with 6.1 rebounds 1ast season· in
good company. He's the key at tbe
momanL
.
' Five other Blues retum with letten!
~ 6-10 senior guards Rayfield Goes
and Ken Pope, 6-3 forward Sol) Dickinson, 6-2 forwani Otis Home and 6-1
sopbomore guard ~ Domzalski.
Sil&lt; junior varsity pls,yers from a •
year ago are alao avBilable:
Thnle of Richardson's initial recruits may determine the won-loes
record. JC tnmsrer Tom Tobias is a
6-5 forward who aW11l118&lt;1 16 points
and 16 zebounds ·in . .JC play.
Freebmen Mike Joaes, a 6-6'12 forwant from Akron, Oblo, and _Kevin

c:loolnc

Co~ch
.

Says

Judge, a 6-3'12 forward from the
potential varRi~said, ''Our team is aware
that ihere is oo curtis Blaclimore
arilimd anymore to carry the load at
.both ends. Su""""" 'this time wilf be
onJY •Luuvtigh team contribution , a .
~~t pei&gt;p~e eXecuting a niunber
-ln ~Bulls' appear to He dD
the esmllll''· side; however;&lt;Richardson
and Assistant Bob Case, believe that
there · be be
will
tier firepower over a
~go. Reboun~ is 11:·.maior

:~~':ribu~ia:te

Dr. Walbesser Dies.
Dr. William J . Wslbesaer, a professor of electrical engineering, died
Monday, October 22, after a short illness.
.
Dr. Walbesser, 45, bad come to U / B
in l96,'J as an associate professor and
was named professor in 1966. A native
of Bulralo, Dr. wat.......er 'reoeivtid his
B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from U / B
and his M .S. degree from Stevens
Institute of Technology.
Prior to joining the U/ B faculty,
Dr. WalbeSser was a member of the
technical staB at the Bell Telephone
Laboratories in New Jersey. He alao
held various positions with Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratories, including
~ in the J'!&gt;ysics Division

:::U:

Dr. wan-r is survived bY his
wife, Joeephine Catherine, and three

~

-

•

r~"

Rockefeller CaliS·.. ~., ·
For. Energy Cutback
''chillini

Press report8 CaiJed it
news" and an invitation to State.....,..,_
ers "to play it cool," while morning
disk iocl&lt;ies on Monday OIJIIiund up
vi!OOns of Nelson RockefeUer· turning

..

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

~:! t~
.in - baaiY
Ca.- for the ~ty was Gov. Rookefeller's dMd serious Sunday order
to all State qencies, includiDg State
University, to take steps to ..,.._
enei'JY by lowering beat thermostats
in public bulldinp wherever. poaslble
dropping water lemperatureio and low:

li&amp;ht kMIIa. .
Calling on tbe III!D8I'a1 public to do
the same, Rockeleller aaid in a letter
to all cle!&gt;ar-.ts that the State IDUBI
"take the initiative."
In addition to reduoed beating be
~ for a ahut.down of air condition1111 em .....,... and bolidays and for
sWdies of bumldlty levels to provide·
·~ CXIIIIfort at '-er temperin
"and bilher tempera. x-tlon and ~ of all inaulation, ca~, -tber strippina- and
storm windows alao called for.
eriDg

:!:"

o:.=:.

Parking Fines Upped
. ~~ elae, CIUDpU8 park~ 1111 ..._... .... 1101111 up.
,
Not .. much, ~. as City of ·
Bulfalo ll8lldDI a- wliii:b will eaclalate from $6 to
On CIUDpUII, the
bike will be froai $6 to S6.
. ~ E. Hunt, campus director .of
en"""""*'tal health and safety, ezp._t ~ahock" over the City-wide
il{ ... October 15 letter to
Daniel Hoyt, mrpmjeejoner Bufralo
Department of ~tion, but
alao noted reliof tbat- "the ordinance
. ~be~ to permit the UniverSity to _,., • $6~tag
. the
lots and on the stnoe
. Altbow!h there · be a one dollar
mcreue lor campus tags, Hunt said
.to Hoyt, "it requires no change in your
approyed program other than tbe
~t &amp;DC! will not require the
pnnting of special tap or the keeping
of _..,te records."

.12.

�6

-Cllilcl lln·ess,
New Uberal
Among Topics
u.. ......
._, ...... ...-....... ....
.....................
............................
. -dol...................
........,........ .._ .

-

~

caLIIHOOD

~

~

--~.

llleolclloo; -

.

.......

~~$11.11.
.. .
Of~..........Wnp:el inter-

:*'.~=
- •• ~ -~~ue ol tile
Bde~

New York SlUt

~t,the
~t of

a.ltb. and tbe State thli-m~ ol
New Ycn at lk6lo, School ot Medldaa. 'lba .......- ol tbia tbree-year
.-Ject.
~ in 1986, to
pi'Ofide 8laliltbl u.ram.tioa ._.._.

r::=;:r:..~.:t.~::m:J:
_ , to

ol tbe State ol New York. : . .
'lboi ......,. abJecd- to determine the iDcldeace, ~ and
llllldali~ ol Jan,.term w- in chilciND ill Brie Coua~. and to determiDe
the burden or_~ ol MCb ru... the c:bild, ~. and ClOIIIDIIIni~.
AllolbR lllalled abjective to determiae the epldemiolocicaJ relationJiblpa ol dlaoooae to variables such as
ap. .a.~ and &amp;ill cit
wwoinic stat~

....

suneots tbet behavior deviation indicative of emotional disorder may
precede the onaet of conditions witli a
p6ycbooomatii: component. Unusual

:==

~

muy

a lolaJ

in~

ing one of the ;n8wer typea ol com· · prehensive cara. _.,...,. ~'to
meet the tota.J needs o( U.. dlildND.;"

UDdertoolt a tbree-

,.... term ol studY ol aD residents in '

~

aoae::::ti

~

;::

'dea~u.s-!:.r~:iex:

orda,
cluaicins. A multidisciplinary approadt
~a rea.rd1 atall with~

'l!, ..~J ·-~~,;-"the~

epmemw"!W• Dlll8llljr, · IUKI
van!"!" specialties oCpediatrics and med-

'TI'.e' ~de

~~-

·.;r .....k...

i.llneoaes in childboocf - ~~
......, from the moat ·common, 3,737
..... ol aotbma,
to •
~t.ed·' Ollf!,
..,..~ ~ ,ua~~ h
was --a
~ ratio of ooe.lon&amp;-tenn childhood
for every 30 live births.
Doapite 1f&gt;!s bich motbidi~, the overaD llllldali~ rate was low, 3.8 per
CI!Dt. Tbia influeDCed by the very
low case fatality. rate of 0.3. per &lt;ent
for tbe. ....a- patients, wbo ·coasti- .
tulad more . than ooe balf the study
-atioll. Althoush tbe number of
i::biJdren involved was relatively small,
candltiona such as oephroliis; hypoplastic ~ cystic fibroai.s, ani! cirrbosis of the liver had very hish case

..

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

-

w.-

:..,leli~.~"dJ":, "!'i:hl!

the' ,..... of diqnosjs and am-t 67
per. &lt;ent had died within two years
after diqnoala. One fourth of all the
deatbe occurred at leal than ooe year
of and two thirds of the deaths
occurred before qe 6. Although the
8V!!ftlll len«tb of oo.,pitalization for
all diionically ill ~ was on!Y
19.4 ~ ooe patient out of ten m
every en- eatetorY ~an
unusuall ' - oo.,pitalizatioll.
~y ill mildreD expe&gt;ience
-a variety of ocibool-related ni:oblems,
many ol which rallect n.:di~ and
lack of underataDding ... the part of
tbe acbool 188Q11DeL..Tbe chronic illwblcih ...n. moat Clllllducive to
acbool
bmnopbilia.
........._ aiJMiteelsm
tic ulclor- .....uc
flbmsia,

-- - pep
and ~arthritis.
per cent ol 'the ....pie
chiJciNa of ocbool q e - reported to
bave mlaaed at leut 6 WMiai'Of ad&gt;Ool
and below apiiC\Ied ~ level
Tbe Dmll' .acbool r81aled ~ of
u- chilciNa Ia a dlsturbinlr ·camllll!lltanr ... the 1act ol underatandllul
of tboiU C&lt;llldltioll and the 1act .;; .
COIIIIIIUilicatioo ........ ..J1U8&gt;:18, pbyaiciuls, and 8Cbool p8riiaGnel.
In - ' - cbroali:ally ill oblldran
ablbfted mOre behavioral devUulcy
lban coalrol children. U ~
diloorden wae eimply a -.q!IN M
ol c:liildhoocl
it midlt
• lbat t1oe m
1oould be the -.iouii.Y
.
Actually,
they
far
accordinc to lbaaulban, lbandiatudled.
ddld.i

=~

_......r

m..-

.

with the -

fled ..

-

=

Olllldltiolll .,..._
Tbia bclloc

''psy~tic..

thia

ol~
value to pe11101111 P.luminl or COIIdact.-

coat ol $150,000 the pri-

Erie c-ty under qe 16 :veam, a
paiod ol in~
the
16 ,_.. prior to 1861. ~ .,._

~ :r.=.u.uaer.:::-in~-

United States. For tbia

rnonoiraPh obouJd be

.

At

abould be of ialezeet to pediatridaDs
and to all IIJIIIIIbela ol the ..-tb jii'Or...uons oinvolved in the provisioo of '
children's JM.Jth MrVicos. ee~. ,
the medical ..... syalem of the Erie
County communi~ demoastratee the
'fragmentation of aervicee and the in-

/

.......

·•

temper loss . was the most common
characteristic of .children with psycho. ·
liOIDIItic conditiODS legaidle&amp;.l or age··
' and sex.
.
One !'lfdboodthe ~~ces . of, Io~""""""',lllihe.An'aru-;•1
le nn.-&gt;.1
buri!eil" 'fli tlie 'faliliiY of''tlier-~·

•

~.&amp;._GBPBY, II.D,

Cincinnali • •

•

,.

Am .J Diil Child/ .
Vol. 1.26, Jan. 1973
•·

•

THE .__,."' .,....,.... , _ _ . , ...:

..,_r::::_
. ,...,.
. ._.~
.
,

&lt;&gt;iw --~.l!""""'l
·

--. """"' •,_,....,

nat1ono1- _.,,..,,,.,
ScJcqJ

·-·

jaurMI 111.

....._.,,The-- Uni-J

"'!Pftr~el~,*"- •

~r ~t~t!es~~-.!

z.' Nunib.r, 1--a.;tdi,'8.'.rAI!Ini,~~• ...,.. ........ . . - ..... lici.

• tance
SUI

J&gt;TLAmold Kaufman _.__ lived "-'-' ·

was· •L~ •.- · "--~""
met need
costs;;'.;"~
into four categofi!as: physician's fees;
hospital ~·'"""''"" mediaotions:

Th::

ancf-f"ouier"•~lllli!s;~clfas' '~-

serv-

foods, transportation, laboratory
ices outside the hc8pital and special
equipment in the home. Tbe average
total cost per case was $201 during
. 196:t Of this sum, 15 per cent was for
physician's fee$, 35 per cent for bo&amp;- .
pitalcosts,22percentformedicati&lt;ms,
and 28 per cent for other oo8ts. During
the ..-t costly year o( .treatment,
medical apeoditure averaged' about .
10 per cent or gross family income,
followed by regular yearly apeoditure'
of 'almost 5 per cent of annual income. . . .
[In terms of disease relationship

to certain variables, .the researchers
found : a striking asaociation between
air pollution level and the incidence
of asthma and eczema among boys
under 5; tbat the fatality rate for
cystic fibrosis was one of the higbeot
in 70 diseases studied; thst the prev- ·
alence of blood dyscrasias is ezooedecl
only by asthma and eczema, with a
strong asaociatiao between incideDce
of specific blood conditions and lower
socio-economic status; tbat the prevalence of peptic weer 811101!1 .Jewish
children was two to three tin&amp; hisher
than the rate among Proteatant or
Catholic children and that, similarlY,~
Jewish children· constituted 16 1M'l
cent of ulcerative colitis eaaea although representing only 2 ~ C&gt;ODt
of the c)tild JIOI&gt;UI4tion at riak.)
.~
Many iocideDtal
are i11moat
as inter,ating u the-;r '-.IIB of
incidence and prevaleqce. 'For
pie, a controlled study of the fertili~
ezperieoce of women aUbaequeot .. to
their a - of - the . , _ of
lon«-lerm m - i n their Cbildren .,._
vealerLDO diacemible chanp in their

fl""'"-

exam..

1m_ to197l,wasau'm~~~ .

found ~ ~1atora. .
~ -.
"'l''IW aort ol idivity eilabled K'nf- .
IIUIIl .to prove the ~ Olliis .......
liberaliam,· bla willhiiDeoi eiiihqPerb
capablll~ of 'edina ... bla ~·
~IIIUU for an" ~tbol
fact that ~ ·im-

=:;:;...in

8~~-'i;:

stitute for the Ccapa,.IH8 -~ al ·
History
the 8c:ierioa,

~.
•
.

Ltd '
·
Gueoot edlior EddiDo DOtal lbat Kauf.
Jll8!;.was, killed on J-..6, 1B'1
, 1, wbenthe
uuoltary aln:ntlt ~ ..;fth
~ afl1inef On wbiCh. be m
travelina, IMII' tbe San Gabriel Moun,.
tain Rance Dlllif Loa ADiaJeo:;; '.'At
•that time, .I ... nearinj the camp)&amp;.
lion of a tour as Villi"-- Fallow at the

Gaiter ' - lba ...__.--::-.
· ·'""' · •·...._.,. · of~tic
Inatilutionio at · Santa ~ Ciilifomia. ·Aa Amold Kaulmaua· lliat
CloctoraLatudeot ·at thor UidWrst~ ill
Michlpn (1966), l was invileillltb•
speak attbe memorial aeMce' OD .JUDe
18, JJI?l, at UCLA. UJlGft ~-

tothe-BUiraJo&gt;inedl~-of~1971
T~~!.'~-

tice that": memorial~".;'"~After graduating at New York~out. Tbey .-lily accepted the J&gt;ropii&amp;- .
College, IIIJI!IIdinl two Ye&amp;r~c• a
a, al; ~~ JU1!8t editor. Tbe ar- , liright scholar at the Lond&amp;i '$c:h&amp;OJ.
tiCJai were &amp;eliio:ttld. by me, as -n aa
of Economics and in Oxford, lliJd ac• the cover deaisn and layout. It obouJd
qulring hia Ph.D. at Columbia Univer-,
·alao be mentioned tbat my wife, Bade
sity, be' taught political pbiloaol&gt;b,y for
A. ~ worked every step o1 the
14 years at the Univerai~ of Michipn1
way with me, since we both Jmew perin Ann Arbor and for a further two
solially each of the contributors. . ."
)ll!anl at the Univemity of Califo~
•
•
•
· ~
il08 Angeles. W.,memorial is a 8ym- ,¥,c JHE AXIOM OF CHOICE-by Tl!omaa J . ·
pj)8ium by a nwnl&gt;er 'of , univemity
~ . . - ........,, ........._.. .
people of wbom each shows a different
Studiel In LotPc end tho Foundetiono of
facet of the subject's personali~ 'and
- . . . . - . Vol. 75, Noo1la flallllld - . ,
activi~.
•
- . com pan lf, ~ ,
"His m08t Important contribution to
Ainorbn ~ PuiJIIIilnl ~ ; '·
political theory Arnold Kanhoan "pve
~. 1973.-2112 IJOia · •
'
in hia 'book The Radical .Libevl: A
· Written, 118 the auth!&gt;r ~"In the •
Nt!UJ MGII in Anleican Polilia, P.!Jl&gt;-·
long Bullalo winter of 1971"12," tbia ·
lisbed in 1968: ~~ the ~
volume is an attempt to~ the place
opinion tbat ~litical liberallam i8 the
of the axiom o1 cboJce in coa~ ;
theory of rismt induatrialiam in the
mau-tlea. AllllouP lbe role o1 tbia .
19th century which ·C&amp;IUIOt bave any
axiom in d)e -loulldiotiolll ol matbe- :
bearing on the problema of today,
matics is~ the malo part o1
~ufman aet forth bla belief tbet it is
the book. ia ~ - to tl&gt;a illdepend- !
just liberaliam in the opirit ol' .Jolin
ence of the ·axiom .8nd ~ 1'1'1»St:larl .Mills which can ·..at our lane. A """"Y is made o( !Ddeiialdpirations fO social p...,..._ combined
....,., r e • u I t a
a ·lltucb' o1 the
with individuaL libe~. He was well
relatloboblp . . _ the oJd8i- method
aware, oo-ver, tbat thia bad to be
of pannutation modelo and lbe a new_'and moaem libe~ libmethod of ~ ia Included. A uniera! who could make a ·worthWbile.
form metbod ia -lied f o r contribution to the i&gt;roblf1ID8 of our
lion of modelo ol eet theory that """"
~~. wolild· bave to be' a -Radieot
as '";'liD~ to eartaJn InterLiberal. . . .
relations betweoin varioua lllatements
· "Far from conlininl himoelf to aeainvo.lviofthe u:iom of choice.
demic disc:uasions in boob, articles•
Although moat of the coatent o1 thia
and lectures. Kaufman played a lead·r · .book is at an adVIIDCBd level, the three
•• ing part in puttfna them into practioe.&lt;I.
.chaplen r.eferrlna to the o1 the
Orie of' the most mtireatfna oootrlbli- 1 . - aDam Ill.~.,_._ in ma
tiona to the memoriil J8 a deacii ti00
be 'o( :liite-;;;rlo· -~
~
by a participant of bow, In 1:i'&amp;l at~ · erillly.' •
'
,
'"' , ~ ' ·
the Universi~ of Michipn, Kaufman~ · Eac:h ch&amp;~ contaili8 a ·nU..mar of·
was inaliumental in ~ the&gt;&lt;. , Problems. Aa Prot hch put. It· "To
fb:Bt. 'tMCb-ln.' ·· We - tbii. Uberal•.- , help the~ ·I·'adoptell· tlle ·~minded facul~ wOrried by ·
flcation. uaecl .b.J ·prcxiucen•ot"f'rlmch
the Amer!am
of Nortb Viet---;'
brandy: the &lt;11111 star ~ are

ana

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ditiona ~ eertalilly not be camplete wltbout poetic COIIIIII!Ilnt ror
gram&amp;

the~tiaticaldalaaccumulaiedin .

lhk1xtok are.ao voJuminouo tbet the

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receive 'a low level ol a.ppart· ad a! .'

hiP level

ol active tfilaPinvaL' Aa
the latter laak. the Jonn ot ~ • .

loui!B•a
is tbB 1118in '
theoran ol a laiJa paper) And llnaiJY '
three atara-inc1J1:i1 tbat:u.e 111abJ1iiD

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rela .
~ue. N~ the Sod- ·,· Kaurnian helped to or1anize and
. ~ In tbia communi~~ lltUt:lx ·; . ~ which !Jecame IUCh a~ lbaUi

. lYALUA11CIN OF

'

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As
~ 23, 1;186 - - . hod S45.2&amp;3 _
Unive"nity United Wrt 10'11 of $120,000, or 38 po&lt; cent of the IDUI.

....

......
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~

the - •

Weekly Communique----------(Cominued from page B. coL 4)
,.,. dig, jn:ize-winni~g essayist and professor
o( phiiOsOpb_y, Northwester'n .University,

·~~gethe~':i:; !"&amp;!:

::r.o:;,-

rc'~...~!,%"~·~n~Ji.::!.em
HIU.El QAU•

•

'J:M, )::~_,KI/.

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Firework6 (ADler, 1947) , F!ominB Crentlll'a (Smilh, ,1!\63), .P...,. Mo-nL (An·
ger, · 1949), aDd 8/oruk . Cobru -.(llat:r&gt;l'la, ~
1959-Q) , 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. No admission charge.
·

•

Ufl WOikSHOP•

.

BiokJgy of' D&lt;pr&lt;#ion, Dr. Zebul9n .
Tainlor, uoociate proCeuor, U/B De. •
~nt of l'Bycbiatry, 231 ~orlQn. 7;30
A &lt;:Onsideration of ·the- ~ · · •
cholopcal aDd oocial dimenoiono of'T..
pft!OOIOD. ftecent genetic evidence will be
. contraotad with exisiential aituatiom aDd
the peychodynami&lt;: ID08JliDc of clepreosioo u anpr .cfuected qoinot the aelf.

INTERVIEWS

PUIUC LECTUII*

Former Governor Leate.r MaddDz of
Georgia, Clark Hall, 8 p.m.
P.resenW by the Student AMocialion
Speakers' Bureau; •
UUAa

fiLM••

Two · E"'I!Uft Girlo (Trulfaut, 1972),
Conference" J!i-. Nonon, ·cbec:k ohowcue for times. Admiooion charge.
Tbe story of two sisters in love with ·
the same man for years, aDd his
vacillation them. Sta'rrinc JoanPierre Lea.ud, Kika Mukbam aDd Sl.cey
TeDdeter:

NOTICES

I'OITIII'IIADINGS•

Featuring William Na~Htro, Jan MoeKenzie, &amp;y Neinmin aDd Jolur.. HoweU,
Ji"acnfty Olub Red Room, Harriman Lib~. 8:30 ~.m.
. .
the,~t of Enc-

tuf:-

THL\TM PIHINTATION•

UDCI~·d~orw:;·~:
~ 8~~ J~ ~:..::.;
charae~

-~·
· aDd Ed O'Rcill ,
Featuring Jim RWHr
tat-&amp;or - . u , Norton, 9 p.m.

miooion c::batp.

::1.

'WEEIILY COM-.QUE COPY DEADUN£

For . _ . . , . ....._.lonce ond pleasu,.,
......... , . . . _ ... - n b -

... pUce

o n -· To lnformotion, contKt
~ c.rdatdi, ext. ~-

�............... _ _ _ _ _ ...,..........,.._ . . . . . . . . . at . .
........ 1111 'lldllt OIIIIL
4Hipoa ...., 10 "'pen .. pulllc

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•"Cipelo 10 . . . . . . . lllf the ~

CoiiiM:t ......, Cenlenll. lll-2DI, ..........

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Slarria&amp; Mu ...,. Sydow ud Bibl An-

THURSDAY- 25

a.-.
~

p-.....

IUIIIl
llllVICI'
Clle.... ·
atyle,
Hillel H....O, 40 Capen

Nt-.:..tfj

ram on .Ruuian Jewry,
c:oordilaated ~ Lauh, will aJoo be
thio evel&gt;inl.

"'?:,%:""basi~.::::.

2 Diefen.

dotf, 8-11 p.m.

.,.....
(J"""'y

~972).

Bollen (Z"liDIDOrman,

Conference Theatre, Norton, check . - ,
-

cue for times. Admiuion. charge.
UUM CO'FfiENOU$1•

Featurin.g F.ox WC~t5on and Bill
Staina, lsllloor cafeteria, "Norton, 9 p.m.
Admission charge. .-.
·

H1UR ~t HIIVICI'

.

£.,.._ by Kiddush, Hlllel Houoe, 40
Ca- ~-· 10:30 a.m.
.
socca•

-·

U/B va. Geneseo· Stele, Rotery Field;

1 p.m.
CAC 1NGMA1 1DGMAN fJ~ FESTIVAL•

=

Tile v:u-,u. SprU.,, 140 Capen, .7:45
and 9:45 p.m.. Admission: 75 cents. ·
~

tJJ! Kh:r;~;f J:.:: ~~r?.f

~("'hi:~ J:~l:r.ra;:= ~~t
1960 Aaodemy Award for the- foreign
film. Staning Max von Sydow.

fvENIHOS fOI NIW MUSIC t•

\ T~nt/r. ~iveraary Con.Cet) in honor
of the Uninnity's Center for ~ Cre-

:~~~=t!=~~rf:he~r!J.

. lion or Lukas . Foss •. Albpght-Knqx Art
Gallery, 1.286 ElmwOod Ave., 8 p.m. Admission ch:arJte.
'
•
UUAif'RM••

• Si&lt;te,.. (de Palma, 1972) ; Conferenee ·
Theatre, No r ton. check showcase. for
times. Admission charge.
UUAI COHHHOUH*

' Feafu-ring'. Pox Watson and BiU
Stoines, 1st floor ,c afeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.
Adm.issior charge.

SUNDAY-28
HllUL GRAD QUI BRUNCH ..

Followed by a multi-media concert at
Kleinhans ,Music ,Hall, ~Jillel House, 40
Capen Blvd., noon.
IJUAI CONCERT•

Doc Walson and David Bromb'erg,
Clark HaJJ, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Admission
l'harge.a.
Beer, wine; coffee and other refreshments will be on sa'le. ;
UUAI fllMu

- ~:!:e~ ~d:r~!~~~:)~~=fur
times. A~.ion charge.

·

MONDAY--29
COMPUJING C£NTU SEMINAl#

Introduction to KTS a11(f' TS-RUN,
4238 Ridge Lea, Rm. 18, 7 p.m. ·

HIUEL ClASS•

Eknientary Hebrew, 262 Norto'b noon.

WOMEN AND THE WOIUt OF WOIIC•

Damned if .You Do, and Domn•d i/
You Don't, an ove~ of the realities of
the working world for all wo~~. ularly those whO llappin to be lilacl&lt;,
single, gay, on welfare, or all of the-above,
332 Norton. Doon-2 p .m. , Child care.- is
aVailable in 3S4 Norton.
Spomored by tD.e DiviliOn of -stuaent
Alfairo and UUAB, in cooperation with
the U/B Foundation, lru:. , ·

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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AskRdiel

In Parlcing .· ,
.l'f.TarCIA

· ·. · -.

--

wdb BJEn.ERMA}f: · ..·.·.- .

.

; ·.

·.·

...:

·.· . ·.·

.

~!t-~t'to~~-rc5.~ :·Proposed L'anguage Me.rger
~~.:;._the
.;::,.•
twist 1o the

Diacuosioo of possible merger of the
As Ms.· Rissell said, "First of all,
Departments of French imd Spanish,
on simple organizational grounds, we
Italian and PortuJU!!Se
an inoppo•tune time to
and
·
!OiL «ni ~- arid • ~t- of 'ROmance tailguages
collSider a merger on the departmental
the-· · · ~beiDa doiilecL 0umpua ' bas caused what Student Association
level wben the reorganization of all
_,..._ ·
~ to the atalfer or
Pn!aident Jonathan Dandes "-:ribes
the Faculties and their upper level
~ wilD ___..,_,,,
liCbeo
as a "g r o iJ n d s w ~1 I of opposition" _ administration is presently being con· ~ "I:_ up a ~-students' in lioth' departments.
sidered. ·
- · ~ ~;...~~~-~ is hllld·
n.e idea of uniting the two limguage
"We also object to the tact that the
· ' •·· tbe · ~ '7riiJC!'~
~.tmen!B was ftosted in August in
recommendation to merge the depart.
l!.--.v ~ • .,.,...~ ·u;e annual report of Arts and ·Letters
ments came, .without COilBUitation,
' .,.._ 'f~ ~~-.,.~~
Provost John SuJUvan.
nlii!.Jb•i J?.d•icatioorl Policy Cmnmit.
~ '"F8ciilty '-~~.. .
fee of-tbe Faculty of Arts and Letters
-~two ~ta i;"'p.'"iikUiar luive ?,PI!.rtments had been units of a DeJll!ri-·
!'D which neither of the_departments
~-tlie ·dldaicD
prciVill6 •
menl Of Modem Languages, which
mvolved has representation.
:;;;"i';;~ ~ !dna
~lso enoompassed Germahic and Slav'An Admlnllltnltlve Nlglltma"''
faeulty a atudeats.
par
· or
Jc languages.
"There is a history of a similar
At-this atqe, IUoob like tbe""MUsic
'- Grounds for opposition to the proadministrative unit, the .Department '
faeulty may _,tuall
t....., relief
posed move were outlined in a letter
of Modem languages, having existed
Hard ~
~ tbe verdict
sent by President Dorothy Rissell and
in this University. It was broken down
for !be~~
•
'at least twenty other members of tbe
in September of 1968 into the 'sepFa c u 1 t y diaJatisfaction with tbe
Graduate Student ~anization of tbe
arste language departments which now
reamt m'lu&amp;ticJD ftrst 8llffaced ublicDepartment of Spanish, Italian and .
exist on this campus for the simple
/ ry at this month's &gt;Faculty ~te
Portuguese to Joseph Poveromo, head
reason that the divas. interests that
meetiJ!g
•·
of the GSA' Student Rights Coordinwere encompassed by the larger unit
~...; ~ ·ati~ Committee.
\
created an administrative nightmare.
. ~- tar the -Music Department,
.

-~~~ ;,:,.~Faculty/atalf

into'!--~~!' .

~li~tve .it)s

·

• ':z:t:e.- ·

"'f'

k

· ==J:r~~.:;:

• from lots OIJIM!a8l1 to Baird. 'We ve
never aSkad ab,ldents to leave faculty

~ta..:.3!..-~ed==

ent on ""''Y . - to their l?uif~.
be argued. All faeulty ~ m Baird
· are &amp;bared, oo many of tbe atalf work
at 1K!me aqd 10 ho!ck and l!ll1h betwem home~-~ f9&lt; lestl011,8.

,:;ll~~urJt:;,~ ~~e
ina studeiat le8cbeiL - · ·
Gordaa
_._.
_ __. cted
•
••

:;:

a -........

=

.

...-t •that be carries
WJth him on many ·of

.=.~-~

fa"'!l:J

lnstnmieata.
mUSl
'Tve been told that one of the
_ , . Cameroo Bairil cho8e tbe present aile for Baird Hall was beca.- it
prcwided aonvatlent parking lor everyone - wilD would use the building,"
Gordon added.
Pro!_,. Thomas E. Connolly informed the Senate that the English
faculty, too, have a parloinr problem
since lots ._.. Annexes A and B have
been designated for student use onJr.
"Bailey AVI)IIue has become our park·
ing 1¢;- Connolly ,said. ("At leastydu
don't ·have to carry a stringed ·bass,"
Gordon chided. "Tbey have to carry
James Joyce," a voice sbot back.)
Chairmen of both" departme!&gt;ts were
invited to preoent their case8 .at tbe
October 10 meeting of tbe Trallic
CQntrol Acm-,. . Board (tbe body
that milinaJly ·~mended the aepara!ioo policy lo President Ketter) ·
May IMt ~.........

.Prior to that ...U... Act.lna' Music
ChaiJman J - It ~ told
(Colllinwd on - · 2, cOl. I) •

Ke_
tte. rfSay_
s ~·unity. of Man'
A•
Ed
• E h
.

-.

~m,

·

o

ucatton xc ange

"Tbe p,rimary purpose of intemationa! educational exchange is to keep
before the nations of .the world a con-

1

~aol:!rt~-~:r.,rot, ~

audience at the Commencement Ceremony of Kyun'C National Univer. T aegu, orea, yes~....,.
.A... A•• (Oc•
61' tv
••m
tober 17).
Ketter, who received an honorary

~ft":, ~o:!:' .:.X..~ ~~~

a sister relationsliip between Kyungpook and ' U/B, urged that the U.S.
government begin 1o fund the International Education Act, which was
paS8t!d in the_mid €0's for the purpose
of creating direct rillatiOnships betweeu U.S.' and foreign educational
systems.
Meanwhile, be said, U / B and the
Korean university have an opportw:lity to create -a relationship that can
serve -as 11 'model for others.
In another address yesterday in
Taegu, tbe U/B President warned an
int.eJ,Iational -seminar on "Resoun:es:
Korean and International Needs and
Prospects," that "any nation with its
ere 1o the future m~~~;t have educational leaders wbo can transcend tbe
STUDENT RULEI .AJID

RHui.A-

·The oiJidal Studellt Rules- Roilul8tlons
to
. r 1973:74.. ... edopllod " ' - 1M Council

·

_,

::-~~~~~~ n

• lour-

pamchialism of vested interest if students and the public are to be served
- if human and capital resources are
not to be squandered as recklessly as
:':'U:.Ier!:~·te to many of our
Institutions of Survival

Certain tmnsnational institutions of
civilized living must be created to

~'i:~mr:::;~~iv:Jd~~.f.:!,d.,!::
institutions or law and welfare wliich
must engage in the "comple&gt;: and
Hereulean" task of creating "reasonable rules or behavior to govern . the
conduct of nations no less than nations
govern the conduct of their citizenl;."
Immediate distractions, he said, must
not be allowed to obscure for any
nation the direction' which all nations
must take.
Noting that tbe most developed of
all international communities 18 that
or scholarShip and intellect, Ketter
said that 'while international educational eXchange may not in itself over· come tbe disp'roportions whiCh ae'parate nations, "it can indeed produce
men arid .women who . ha!bor tbe desire and will, and who have the skills
an~,~ltledy.~~·;,_r~rUthe/B taskPresi.'dent _
...-.~.
....
-~portad, "aome 40 students from Korea
are studying on our campus with many
other students from many dilferent
countrieS. As our sisterbood relations
. . .""''mdve, I look forward lo the
(C""""--1.,.- 7, col.~)

.

.

Dr&amp;Ws Dissent
W~

~

cannot f!'resee
administzatift
advantages m rewu~ two of the

lf""thed~~'f" of'i.f..J::

o'
.
n . -..........
of RoLan~ mto a ~ttbe .
mance.
_guages.
y,.
IIIZe
and _divemty of the ~ um~ would
J'e&lt;IUll!' that ll!'th a Chairman and an
Associate c~ be appointed aDd ,
that separate. romuuttees be formed If
none· of. ~· m~ "''lft181!11tedM

to~ tho:i:e .........
be no BB"'!'P on tbe time GJ!I ~ ·
normald
thely mves~ turein~be
an
supra-i!wuC
....,. wuuou
required to. deal ,with tbe ~

ss a w!'&lt;&gt;le !'Ol!id eYen JeqUJre added

expenditu.es.
"It has been suggested that the
merger wou_ld enhance our • of the affinity b e - tbe programs
of tbe two departments. We, as students, .a.re already . aware of the opportunities for enr1chment offered lo
us not only in the French D!'~t,
but ;in . other departments JDBide and
o~lsi~ o! !""'Faculty. In~

~?:~:~~=:t=

courses in l''nmch, Engliah, and Comparative Literature, as well as in Lin-

:is:J:·=·~~""::"'~·":!

Faculty of Educational Studies. Why
sbould we 'eoter into a . _ structure
which would emphasize tbe affinity
that s 0 me students' PJ'Oir&amp;lll8 have
with 'tbe offerings in the French De_partment, while ~=Y~ pursuits of ~:::er indi ; . red byve more
affinity
W1
COW808
e
anumber
of different
deD&amp;rtments
thmulbout the University? ·
...._Would . .

~

of

"The educational pbilooopb,y
the
Department of Spanish, Italian, and
Portuguese presently reCopUzes the
value of tbe study of literature in the
comparative vein, as ""'-'1 as that ol.
the study of national liil!ratures llli'd
language. Tile latter two of a- app&lt;oacbes have led us jnto inlereiting
new territory. Not only do - - help
pmduce bilinguals to serve the COIIImunity at lar~ in '-lth, community
service, and instnJctional capacitial,
but we also afford an opportunity',lo
members of two large i n - J110UP8
in tbe State of New York, students'-Of
Italian- and ~ badr.grounds, to familiariZe tbemselve!l
with 'the lan~ and literature Of
their' cultural heritage; A D:lergllr with
the -French Ileparbpent, which apPMfB 1o he ~ interested in
literature with a leanmg toward COIIIparative literature, would not onty
mill- qainst the !XIIltinuation
a- other facets our educatioaal.
outlook, but it woUld alao put us

of

(ComilwH on -

6, col. I)

of

.:

�find

a

or the
walking
Jle!!ringll't..
have 'been
· student lol by

J:rted: -~-

~t

='Or ~;

re-

~ty inoral~.

i:riljSini ~!1. iooa-

ing for a 'vai:Mt spa-ce can euily inaire
a teacher 10 Diinutes' late foi ·a SOminute music 'leseoiL Students are
the ones Wbo:~;.~Y sbort-

~~;r~t."I.'Fradin,

-- --'

By sHARoN~

~CUI lliiU)y ~

tbe 8iaJpbul Myth. 'l'be7 IIIUit ........
t h e = = aad ,_tiaaa al. all
acielllilla, but ... r.-1 - well with.
a lllllque ~ their prim a r 1
eiJarce Of dala, ~~ !8
at the
rate o(

--nn.
2Dll.OOO .au.

..-I.

Tbia- the ~estimate"
ol Sir 8enlud 1.-.11. Dilled .........
mer aad cllrediDr ai.BailaDd'a Nulllald

' Radio~

u-m

Labcfttory, who dea . . - r£ 1aur ~ecturea 011 ·
last ..t. Gitlua cliaccweries

:"l'.. 1he last 25 yean, 'Looell dis-

a.-~ tbe .a.tiflconce al. ~ &lt;&gt;&lt;
quasl..udlar objecla, ....._ ~
be DOted, "reCall~ the "'" the uniwne
Willi eilht or aiDe billiOII yeua qo."
Two features al. the quaaar-make it
remarkable, L o v e II aid, aad have ·
opened the door to..UIIderstandina the
bilUOIIa aDd trilUOIIa of extra-p)actic
syatems wbich populate the univene.
The lilllt is 'that wbich ia the primary
data for-· the exp8Diioo hypolbeaia:
that is, !bat the velocity of ~
or the_,. at which the quaaar moves
away from our p)axy, ia up to rour
times aa ,_t aa1he speeil at which
it transml'b.lilbt.

-.......

.

'¥ho' Used . 10· carry ..~ Jrl!iiaelf

that the quasars would lie UDStable in
our eovironment, emting instead as a
ronn or anti-matlel:, OOIII!tlucted or
positive electrons and neptive PI'!"
tons, and stable only further ·out m
OllwsY.tU-..1

-

The r a c t that most quasars are
known to us only by radio ~ons
sugpsts that tbere may be o t he r
eztm-piactic systems yet undiscovered. l.ovell estimated · that tbere 'are
.=at· the &lt;~ery least" 42,000 outer galaxies per squaie degree or sky, as
observable through the .a" telescope
on Mt. Palomar; extending visibility
to each lowe&lt;. magnitude of star light
increases this number by 250 per cent,
and with the aid or electronics equipment, another 1,000 per cent. Within

the observable univerae alone, LDve1J
estimated, this ~ would reach approximately 100 billion -galactic
tems outside our own. Even reducins
this figure to-..o billion systems, the
n umber or i tani could be estimated..&amp;t
a billion trillion stars consiatina ol
(our trillion tons or mass, c:onsuming
4,000 trillion triltioa tons or riuclear
filet per liecllDd. . . ' . •• •
'ffl you bold · up .)lour hand to the
night sky in any direction," I..OYell
contelided, "you will obscure about
one million galuies.~ -Sir Bernard,
however, was not impreaaed' bj'' his
own sensationalism. He remains convinced that these aie but a mere handful of the systems which ha\le been
concealed in the universe for untold .
billions of years.

srs-

Recroitnlent -C ommittee Reports
Minority faculty Dowri by Two
The total number or"minority racuJty at U/ B ia down two this year, Prolessor Billy R. Ballard, head or the
University-wide 'Min(&gt;rity Faculty and
Staff Recruitment f'.ommittee, informed the Executive-committee o(·'
the Faculty Senate last week.
Ballard reported that the University had a total or 54 minority group
(acuity at the beginning or the 197273 academic year. In the OOUJBe or
that year some 195 requests (or "au·
thorization to recruit" were received
by the- Committee. .Approximately
333 candidates were interviewed ·on
campus (or £acuity positions, including 19 minority group peraons. E;,ht
minority (acuity .....,.., eventually appointed. However, the' campus lost
ten minority faculty over the same
period, (or a net lolls of two. (The
report of the Committee, prepared by
rormer Chalrperaoo Will Brown, said
that the Committee had re£erred aome
175 minority candidates to departmenta for consideration, none of whom

The remarkable_.,., between qua&amp;ar and eartli ia precisely the eQ&gt;lauation (or ita strona radio si8naJs, LoVell
said. At . Ibis distance, lllllCb lilbt ia
converted to radio sii!Mia aDd becomes
evident _only on a radio tel_,.,.,...
~ sipuLis are a III!COIId feature or
quasars, one wbich ,baa made it po&amp;sible both to locate tbem allll to fur'
nish the data (or the espanaion theory.
The emtence or tbeae objecta ..... discovered in the early 1950's when aatronomera, using b 0 t b optiaol aDd
radar ~. realized t b a t the
stronpst radio siKna1s came not from
the br;,hta.t or cl'- stars, but from
tboaa previouSly tboushno have little
si~nce
rollabolatioa of radio aDd op:
· ~vein~ minority appointtiall teleaoopes, Lovell n o t e d, baa
menta were in Arts and Letteril, two
doUbled man's penetration into apace.
in Educational Studies, ooe in Social
The discovery of the quaaara, bowSciences.
.
ever baa ~ whole new The Senate· body alao heard from
w h I c h aeriously ~ eziatin'a
Mr.
Frank
CoriJett
and
Prof.
Marceknowledp about the UDI~ and
possibl the in~ ..... of PhYIIica
.. wei~
•
lion PIUoedun!e. The Committee, they
There ia evidence, Looell said, that
reported, is in the ....,._ or formu.
the physical realltiooo of our plu.y,
latina~ In the c:urrent procedanc1, indeed, or miJat ot the universe,
ures wbich will be diacl-t with the
- do not apply to the q._..._ One ouch
Presidont.
~..:!2.: that the _ . . . wloc:ity
Future ptm,. of the
Comor
ia c1ue to the pavltatioaal •
mittee 6a the ReeruiiD8lt 111111 Procollapoe. or "a mllUOII IIUJia," aad the
quasars are - n y C)C)II1IJCied of .99
per coat - . y - an ~
dude a - - al. •orimtation '110111·
" " " ' - wbich ....... to . . . .
el•d•ou....-tlc Wllve&amp;.
•
- . .._" -unp with indlvicluod de-partment chaimloa to cletennlne their
Anotbei' JXIIIIibJUb'. DOled Low!ll, lo

:,~'C:;.,;-= ~~
c.-

eloiorJ:..-~. ~-=

::

needs and criteria ror hiring, aDd i&amp;suance or a handbook on women's
recruitment.
·
The ED!cutive Committee ~
the reeling (as recorded in their minutes ) " that progress will not be maae
in minority recruitment until the departmehljl do . the j&lt;!l&gt; themaolves ins tead of relying on committees.•
~- Senate heads Pi;&amp;n to ~der
~nty and women 8'n!cruitment
8j!llU1 next month. .

Swtm• A-Jh on
· Slated
_

U/ B Will participate in the N '
District ~U "Swim-A-Thon ro:-&amp;:

cer," October 27-28, at Clark. Hall
William H. Sanford m, diJiector or

aquatial and coach or varsity swimming, will conduct the swim-a-tbon
for the American Cancer Socieb'.
Entrants are requested to reciater
between 9-10 a.m. and 2-3 .p.m. in the
pool ollice, 109 Clark, Monday
through Friday until the .swim WMJt.
. end.
Sanford said that varsity swimmers.
men aDd women, as well u undergraduate physical education majora will

~lB

enlist llpOII80IS who
pledp a monetary amount (or each
completed length of the pool. AU .
Proceeds are for the benefit or the
Cancer Society.
· .

.

~Faculty

Seminar

Gerald 'lOOmer, a staff •nanber

· (rom the Student Coimseling Center
is oonducth1g ·a seminar on teachinj
ror Univenity £ai:ulty, wider apoo-.hip of the Faculty Club, every
~ from 4- 5:30 p.m. in the
Club'a Palmer Room.
Tbere ia room for aevera1 addltiaaal
' Caculty.
'

aDd aYinPBtbiJal with '.biB SlPllequl!s
in M .. . -tbfnlis the ~t .
'
at ~ ~

menta"':;.;

........,_ .. '•IIW!t'

-

· Parking ia a rilbt, · not a priViJeae,
be~ and i t - to bim that ibe

'10-faculty Engliah ~t, which,
·registers a ........c~. 4liOO atudanta a
·beini
ia beini
doubly
&amp;rat by
sbUDied
ol{ topenBlized,
a comer

or

lhll ~ --1\D!J ~ .by · beiqg:

CClll)leDJCt ~ ~a..Atleir or-.
Ub - ~ Fadin· ~
ii;;itw;:..;~liejl,.!ft~~!g,~~ ~~ ~';f~.
.

deoied

........

~- -~-

v

__,

•ii;.

be--~:

"are~~ ·;,a·. bi ~ ttiai

make faCultY ~-" ' .-.
.
Parking ia by no ._.,., .the IIIQ&gt;r
PraklCUP8tibli of Dis colleagUes, Fra·
din assures, but be wondi!ra that an

institution that presumably wanta to

keep ita distinguished fadllty is not

''more gracious" in matten like tbia.
According to Robert E. Hunt, cam-

pus ditector o( environ"*ltal health

and safety, parking IIP.BCIII blive-been
divideCI as ecpptabf 8a _poaajble be-·
tween (acuity Bpi~ ~Ia, :Apsi,W. ,
=16000 lltuilenfa ~.their
. thii -aeiltef, anti IJOine 3100 .

have beMI

assilneif· 10 tMm.

c t y and' stair ,.Jitrationil numbered_~000; they have nicelved some
~700-llMJ &amp;paces.

•

•

, "Thia ia an . ·aie-olii
taint,"
Hunt told the Re~.•..g:&amp;_~Usb
Ilepartment d&lt;81i't wlmt ·;; ~ in
the Capen lot and wall&lt; ID tboiir or.
fic.a.."
•
"".
.
· The Music' ~t, Hunt J18Y8,
does have,a "&amp;peci81 CDQIPlaint." •
"Baaed 011 their lack il olllce III'IIC",
they are required to be tnm&amp;lent.
Parking baa ._, 80 limited, particularly in the lll&lt;IIIDini boom, that we
will probably have tu maloa aome .
special oonsideratioa lor them."
•
!ltuclaoa
- ia not his to make,
But the
decision

Hunt reminded. Trdlc~tiaaa are
determined by the
•
t, advised
by the Trdlc Control
Committee &lt;Hunt is not. a votiJ11 member) . The tra!ic OOIIIIIIiltl!eia'Diade up
or £acuity', stair, aDd ~ At last
week's mBinll:, Hunt ~'there
were more students the 'faculty pte&amp;ent. When aalred to open~·~ ·
lot :~near the "ruuna" behind
'&gt;
to both faculty alii! atudan!B; the
..
mittee cast a DOIHxlmmltal 3-3 wte.
"Studenia are ~t that they
keep all tbelr pJac., Hunt aaid. ·
Nat step is to poa the 'minutes
aDd the committee.. Don-I!JOOIIIIJII!ft·
lion on to President Ketter. Hunt in·
dicated that be WCIUid ...,...wJy reoOIIIIIIIIIId that 8DIIIe plaD be clevi8ed to
...._,_.te -1he Mulic faculty.
U Dr. Ketter thinb ao, too, then

-tbiqwme-.tuallybedone.
Hunt saiil.

·

·.

_

-

�~­

Co11eges _E .andf1l«~e ~avorable Evaluation
(BDITOR'B '/'IO'l'B.: I• ,_, .-11•

~a.r:=;:-c:

,...._,.,_ ,_, ...... n;. ...-;

, . - - . lalatlet&amp; ,.,-...,..,.,._..,
·~
· ....,_, of • ,.,.,. fll
~_:_- eilerlial....,_,_ •
lllitA .... "-"'-- on coil.t

T:. F.J

,.•

.

··~
•

.• .

By

•

-

PATRICIA :wARD BIEDERMAN
~~ IE .
-~tbe (~tbe) ;!~,IY-~
...
.,.._ .....
uatina team that
ted Colleae E
(o.ilnr Collep) In April o£ thla

year.
·
On tbe team were l.pn E. Rose
G. M.usolla

-(~). 8lilllbm

(~~~lnRumantbeBuf
.&lt;a_
special educl
falo Pllllic SdiDala).
C'AIIIep B ma canafateDIIy lillted
~ ..,., - .........,., that hoe
....... CUJIIUI ~' to de- '
ol. IDilovatlw aducation. 'lbe
team iuovea to p&gt; beyoad tbe OODIIoway by paiJina tbe ol Collep,
E CC~~~ra. out ol. a lat 8lld actually
'attomdiall *- Mul:ll tD their own
IIUl'priae lt the team 1udaed all
Biz _ . . . wortbwblle, Wbeiber •
oaHo-aae -m.r Cllllll't 8lld politica
or an "ova:8o!rinl" Yap daa
FUi ~U.qpilio •-.dad"Tbe 1ft
· " tiuPt by sellstyled "Hebiew.Plopbet"
Miebasll.onaJIIOD. ;Heering ~
chant hie~..- : ~ (better bMrd
than ...t, Marpllia 81y11) 8lld listenInc to ~. oc:lane to 10 oo
national televlaian In .w- ol. "the
Waterpte 7 or 9 or 11," Marao1!s
·found · hla IIWii ~ atretcbed,
be reportil, In spite of IIOllle initial
prejudiee•qainst the poel 'The -team
ccmsiatently rated their I'IUlCiom sam·
ple.ot:Co$.£ .feliclieril·liiib'oo ·I!Ucll
oonili~ty:t .
~~~)· ~

-a

ab

.,
~~F ......-.-. ,.,.. auu
i~ &amp;c&gt;~t ~ 'partidpatidn." ·•· ·
h;t.~tly "-tuillg
,~ .
cndte li~y tbe team ile~ a

'lbeir

Cboiit' oftbe -u,;.i;~ •pial8'~~
lalea bolh bY lOiiiier ·Prec!id&lt;:nt },leyeraon 8lld Dr. Ketter (in 'tbe Univer•
sity Self-Study, for eumRie). Colleie
F was 11*1 'judged In terms of its
propeas toWard· each of tbeae goals.
In this exercise as well, the College
eamecl ""'''''CCabbe to high JiJarb
·from the team.
·
For emmple, the College was seen
as COIIllliitted, to academic freedOm
~ma~.W:~-'-~J'e
. " ~-~wouwec

•...,

'lA&gt;I

lege 'was llllliiJj8)ly suoCeOsful In provil!ipg ~II! wit,!&gt; ~ves (notably' tmough' use o( .cioiiununity and
suJ&gt;.&lt;:ulture faculty") not readily available e1aewhere · In the University, In
the team's juc!Jmenl n.e unit was
alao cite.J by the·......tuators for ita attempt, central to the Collep, to ''interrelate Intellectual ' 8lld aocial val\18," a Univeiaity goal tb,at Meyerson
had ~-'
team alao
' E '.- 'lbe
· . "ad~
.- noted
.taelf
that Co
-:0 the O 1
!Jty"':d "-'
. ~.....
P&lt;?,rtan
." ·"':.to
. the_ niver..........,..,.

.~ l'llllc!loPIIJ

At 110me lengtb; · the team took up
the qustion of E's underlying philO&amp;ophy, sell-def'med In the Colleges catsIogue as "a· Jelational epproacb to the
symbolie imaging 8lld pbyeical' ac
tualization of a humane (nonvioleni
8lld cra~tive) · aocial future."
"After oonversatiaos with the College E faculty and among ourselves,"
the team reported. "we understand
Ibis to that Co1lep E is atlemptillJ to ,ezpo&amp;e ita studc!nb!, ·to
alternalive sysfems of expression and .
~uation Which .they . call .symbolic
Iorino. 'This ezposure to alternative
ll}'lllbollj: f~ is ,thought to . bring
about a oonCIUTellt f0Cil8 oo .~ studenta' awn methods of exp._.,.. and
evaluatloo. 'The concu'nent clarificalion of 'differing perspectiws' gives
riae to the ability to interrelate_ the
two perspectives to form a more .._,..
ingfUI third perspective. 'Ibis third
perspective is not neoMsarily one per__.._ viewed In terms o1. the other,

=.:o!!:'
fo :..r~=~ :!;
dmerina
....--·~

two
'penpectives' eo as to
draw on both In a movement toward a

deeper

Ullderstanclinl-"

Tbll_

~

...-

~

~_.-=-.,..e~

tbe ....,....

.i ..,.._: tbe CJol-

._ • ...,.. ..._ecl•a....,.....Uwe,
...._ GD.Y ~ _..q •
....... w-. tbe &lt;lollote Ia loMt
IUIIIIilllfa1 1n ~ 1t11 re1a-

donal pbilollapllytaoal. tbe team felt,
ill In Ita diUane wi1b tbe of ttie
Umv-~ty. 1'be team lbou8ht tbe
C'AIUep bad dane too Uttle In llrticulatin&amp; ita goals to tbe reet of tbe cam- . ~Y. the ....al.uallon .....,.
OIDIIlmded """"""' tbe~ E
c8taloiue (curnady an·
"album" liiUdded with.,.,_ 8lld - ahota as well as couroe information an Ullll8UIIl document ooly when
'udaed by tbe narrow atanclanls set
moet calalotluM) 110 that it "am
.be undontood by people wbO have no
foremowledae of the goals of Colletle

.-ted oo tllil lnl&gt;d IMt

~-iiQ~lfj

IPrial ad

:c;:..~u:.~~~

intlnet m ~ _IJ)Ciel , _ _
ru- • · In oiMr Collop8, .,.,.._
doll't .have tbe u-ti&amp; they ckt In deJI811D*Jta. 8lld - " " ' often
-.Jt 1n
- curric:ular ~
within t~J!~ limits eet by the
of tbe College.) .

defiDina
;-"
·~o1p . , _ .

Tbe students 8lld faculty Ill College
F Jelate llOIJI'!IIially, tbe team report.
ed. 'The College relies oo an "apprenticellbip" system by which 8l!llior faculty recruit 8lld lllqlerViae junior faculty 8lld faculty -recruit -ieoced
students to teach. 'Die team reported
that it ''was impreaoed with the ninse
of couraes being offered with minimal
full-time faculty 8lld with loa than a
minimal budget," as a resu!N&gt;f this
approach to academic staffing. .
E."
Reoomli&gt;eodatiaos were specific.
'T!wnr' -., ar-..
'The Colletle .-.led a Master, an ID'The team urpd College E to take
dividual "with adequate credenlials"
up tbe tbQm.y issue of pading, par"""oommilment was to
ticularly In ~t ol. ita bMvy reliance_
tbe Co
but "with cloee ties to
oo llOII-Inlditional tMd&gt;en. Grades
aome
· deparlmenl" A!kli......., not lllllip&gt;ed by tbe oollective,
tiooal)y, Collese F abould be prcMded
110 far as the team could tell. Tbe'
with two faculty (full-time equiw.....tuallon IIIJIIII!IIIed !hat padiDg
Ients) 8lld adequate budJiel
milbt become a collective task, 8lld
In eftect, College F"s aelf-&lt;lludy
fudber that the College milbt conwaa the report of tbe ....al.uatinll team,
aider
• .
oo1y paa!!faif grades,
8lld this is what the College had to
~u!dg ~ps by a written
say ""'!u~ itself last sprjllg:
Mfuation.
·
.
CurricUlum. 'The College cbooaes,
·ManY Ill tbe team's reODIIllDI!l)da
In ita awn 'OIIIOrds; to "inquire about
tiOa8 ........,.directecf at. tbe Univemity,
. political, ediicational 8lld aocial cbange
not tbe CoiJese': 'lbe ....al.uators Said
from a 'perspective clc.e to the Uber"attempts of [Co=~ faculty to
'tarian aocialist and communitarian
submit .....earch
had been
8ll8IC;hisl Our pedqogy," the selfIJIIIII*d by the Vice President for
evaluation continues, "is experiential,
~" 'The team ad~ qainst
practical and experimental." Some
continuation of diften!lltial University
100 studenbi per. semester ·e nroll In
policy In the evaluation of ' reeean:b
College F: open to them are five to
pro-·•- !EDITOR'S NOTE : Acting
'
.eight .course. _offenngs..
.
iDcluding "alVi~dent for Reaean:h Robert C.
ternative institutiaos" (one y ear, parFitzpatrick denied tb&amp;t his office disticipanbl b)lilt a log bouse), a course
criminates A-ln•t · the Colleges. 'The .
In ''Revolutionary Males" that draws
~oftk;"a-;;..,pts 'proposalsfrom
many gay men, "Fascism In Amer@y ~rc!gular faculty member," that is,
ica?,'' and classes foeused on "antianyOne 'hoi(Jing a tea~g or """"""""
specialism" Tolstoy and Paul GoodPosition · awarded . by the standard,
man.
•
.universitywide procedure, Fitzpatrick
-S ize and Operolional Slyle. ·College
silid.l
.. . .
F wants to concentrate on issues that
·A dditionally, the team estimated
are' topical or relevant to its students
tliBt the CIUTellt College budget was
but more than this it wanbl to give
insufticient " by a factor of 10" in light
them an opportunity to examine these
of the 1,000 students per semester enpersonally felt issues from a more derolled in College E cowses. A subtached, critical perspectWe. 'The Colstantial increase was urged.
.
lege learned through expe~ience with
As to "near-future directions" for
a cowse in " Social Change in Amerithe College, continuing autonomy
ca" that drew 900 students that Ibis
without substantial growth In size
mission is ~t aooomplished on a
was ad~ by the evaluatoJS.
small scale. A aocial change-oriented
College E did , not respond to the
program, the College typically be,evaiW!tiOO with a written sell-appraiscomes involved in community-related
al, but the College is willing to discuss
projects (starting a food co-op, foundgl'l!ding policy !JD&lt;i other issues raised
ing a free school, or studying Buffalo
In the Jeport, College member BenCity policy-making) that combine
jamin told the Reporter last week.
leamin' and social action.·
•
"
•
Sl&lt;lffmg. During its first few yean;
Collep "'F (Tolstoy Collep)
the teaching staff of the College was
Because the team assigned to Coldominated by political scientist Charlege F was sorely pressed for time.
les Planck (who last year left acatheir evaluation of the College was,
demic. life for. fanning ) and Char!es
by their OWil admission, superficial.
Hayrue, who .IS now College ooordinEvaluators Donald R. Brutvan (conator. Increasmgly, however, the tone
tinuin(l education), Stefan Fleischer
of the College is being set by a new
(English) and Egan A. Rlngwall
faculty member, Burton Weiss, whose
(psycholoel confeaeed that they
interest is the interface of sexuality
were !ln&amp;ble to explore penionally Colan~ pol}~cs...
.
lege ·Fs course content in any depth
Awoliary staff, moot of whom are
Only one faculty member and ...;
not paid for teaching in the Colletle,
CIUTellt or former students were interconsist of U / B faculty. and graduate
viewed. What the team did do was
students, plus some undergraduates
to briefly summarize their impressions,
and graduates of other schools who
baaed 11106Uy on interviews with Colhave themselves completed College F
lege initiators aiul staff and on lnforcourses. "Co-teaching," in which an
matiooal materials with 'which they
experienced faculty member keeps in
were provided. Additioiially the team
"periodic contact" with a new teacher,
·decided to submit aloog ~th their
has been the favored method of conOWil summary and recommendations
trolling quality of teaching. 'The Colthe College's sell-evaluatioo as "read
lege is alao moving toward a collective
edited 8lld approved" (and under!.ineci
evaluatioolplanning method in which
in red) by the evaluators.
all Interested students and faculty
'The f:o!ie ot the 8UIIUJIIlry report
particil'!lte.
.
.
was po111tive l tbough largely descripGrad.,.,. 'The COllege has no o16cia1
live rather than evaluative). 'The Colpolicy on pading. "Rel.ianoe on .,._
lege was SI.IOilllllllful In ibl goal of protema1 incentiws for student motivaviding studenbi ·.. witb an intensiue
tioo is uru..!thy,'' the sell-study delearning experieDee concentrated oo
clares, but, when the moment to face
one aspect of a political institution or
A&amp;:R actually arrives, padiDg pracaocial force1 the~ implied. In con-·
tices vary. "A's" are often given. One
trast to a aepanment olferinc JiJajors
time all the studenbi In a Tolatoy
Colletle F provides a worthJOhile 1n:
seminar received the aame collectiveterlude ( or "moment," in the report's
ly~ wriUen ....al.ua~ (a soterm ) in a student's campus - - " Jutjon that tbe toriuoualy divided aoul
ence. .
~·
01 Tolstoy, artist' 8lld eplitarian,
Wrltinll m the Spectnurs recently
'would probably have acoept8d far laB
Ron Sandberg noted that Co~ F
easily than the clasa did). Jud~thad emerpd this year as a virtual
al. l!llldin&amp; .is ~ , _ _. as
''male studi101 college;". the team comeYJdence Of bad will as long as a stu-

-1:;

e·

''One of our 'core' students Ia ..-ting aevera1 hour&amp; a weelt wi1b..a_poup
of post hig!Hochool men
~
·towap who, while ~ tbe a.
ditional racist 8lld aemt atlitudaa, ,
admit they are 'fuc:bd up,' BlpiiCially
about women and conie to our tiiiDoir
(Trailer 7) 8lld ialk.
"Another eludent meet 1 ....a1
hour&amp; a weelt In a County clinic wit&amp;
young boys wbo are 'diaturbed.'' 'lbeY
· are at an earlier point of lllicialimtiod.
Other students worlt In community ·
free schools studying the attitudes 8lld
sex-role socialization of even emaller
boys. Another 'core' student frilm our

rr..n

~~=~~~=~co·

· workers at a nearby tire factQry, wbem
he, his brother and father have worked
for yean;. He is studying their rebelliopsness toward the job, their aocial
class, each other, and so on.
"Our fulltime faculty member, over
35, is beginning to get together two
different groups of men also over 35:
tbe first are younger faCjl).ty here at
U/ B who are aware that the academic
process has in some sense 'bo\lght
them o.ft' .iond wllnt to sit down !Qietber •and see how that happens; a iiecood
group are single, divorced or separated
men, who are lonely, worried and Deed
some plaoo to talk with other men
about themsel9es and their sexuality.
" We are attempting to locate IIOmeone working with returned veteransthose who feel compelled to come to
grips with their ~les as •murderers'
abroad. Other possib,le groups milbt
be wit!) gay men in prison; el&lt;·r.rison·
ers; male guidan~ counselOJ'S; eadera
of local boys grciups, and the like."
At tbe time the sell-study '!'as written, Weiss, as de facio director of Ibis
ambitious program, was receiviDg an
annual compensation of $2,000. 'The
C'.ollege reques\e&lt;). that his salary be
subslalltially increased as part of a
total budget request for 1973-74 of
$21,500.

Managemffir Plans
Introductory Course
A new OOUI'Be on "Contemporary
Management" will be offeree! n e :o: t
semester by the School of Manapment.
Numbered Management 100, the
course will serve as an introduction
to the School as well as an elective
for students not planning to ta1re a.
concentration in the field.
The WaU Streel JOUTIIIJI will be
required reading, along with a tezt.
Treating management both as a Wd
or study and as an a~ity In aoelety,
tbe counie will iDclude brief attelilion
to the disciplines and ~ IDvolved ' in the practice of~
and a survey of significant canlelllporary issues as revealed In tbe literature and current ~ A mf:o:ture of lectures, cliscuMiono, cue .,..
alyses, films, field trips 8lld olhor
learning experiences will be provided
to aoquaint students with the ecope
and variety of manaaeria1 activity 8lld
to orient them toward prof~BlicJ~Md
educatioo In the field.
' 'The School's U~duate Ccmmittee and other faCUlty members ani!
studenbl have rr..n time to tm. mrgested the deairability of such a ......_
at the freehmanlaopbomore '--' II&lt;&gt;
cording to Prof-.rs Bhal s'i;ii' 8lld
Lee Preston who p......_. the COillllB
to the School's ~tion.

�4

·==,..a.
+..r-...
.,..._.

'Tbi. ... cWiolt . . . . .
bellavialllll
....... al
al
wllllcfr,

»;; ~

..

I

.....

diledilr
~.........

••·• Liildlo-.. .... .,.............

.. Malt tallllal~ whkh
........ lbellllh
afh
U.mo.nltr'a lli9Wcw af Oaa&amp;iDuiDa

~~ lllld . . . . . .

all!-

arq ill . . llllman ~ o( . .
~ MOIIWJmaBMt, "we
toaiJ.y wfthaal11p!18 ellilltr lo help..

Re.erdl, . . .us. .... n.Jaa in
which . . - hape lor .. . l'ldure u..
F. . . . . . . . . . .

PeaDie Ulat lo lldDk, BotwiDic* .
said, ihat they Clllllhe ...... Glt-

_...... . . eirpedad -..:..at bebavicnl or A~ decliDe.
''Tbeym'IIIIIP
.....
-fhelr In. in-;,.,.,... witb

..::-=-

:!iZ_!-fbetler-1..-haoinl
1be adds be - , : ; - · - ht
diffic:ulties will . . .
lat. life
aaly becal.a af dlocna8ed
but becal.a af ai....UC.. in the .....
viroomaat: '"Then .. af _ ,
fuDctioaa; af
af

abilitY

~.af

;s:,ca-tor -'TMnia
~

af ~ aDd jab· ......
throulh deatb, there .. .;, ; : .
baDd or wife aDd flieadL 'lbere ia a
~world af iDcrealallY al~ mud&gt; a bunlo&amp; lalJina ..,ye..
ailht will be ......... way~.
Oil ...... bad the .,..qbt Ia, but it
also .................. mud&gt; aDd •lor .
what ~ llilbt ia uaed. It - -·
a cliJreNnce wll8tta a man alt8 aDd
meta with ~moot a1 lbe day
or wbetber ...mit ia ~ Ia moot
important. Not all actlvitie8 require
top pade . . . . . ability. Slmilul,y
adjualmmta lo dee:tb _af "f'!!UR ......,J
Oil the , _ ~ with lbe
.._but they .... d..-1• wbetber there are. lrieDda Uld how mud&gt;
they !U1! needed. It also depends Oil
whether there is IIIMDinlful wodt or
also -

bobbis to

...._,.te.

Pemapa moot

important, it clepeDds Oil how well adjualmmt to adversity
Ia babitually
made..
.
. Tm- cent of lbe U.S. ~lion
18 over 65, Botwinick J10Ulted out.
~ about fi.., - cent of tbMe are
institutionalized but most ..., poor
1l&gt;ere ..., fewer men than women. ·
0

Senlofy

~

!Jl

studying Ibis ~p, BotWinick
&amp;alii, most psycbologiata 'prefer to take
~ ~ ~ of hmctioo, teodmg to JgDOre SUDple lleDSOry 10111 which
c:tuaes 80 many day-to-day dilficulties.
~
Older ~Ie. be reminded, 1.-1
Iarser prmt both at rar and c1oee
!""ge;. they 1.-1 moie illumination
m a. room . to see well; their ability
to differentiate color in the blue range
~r the spectrum declines; their &amp;earmg deteriorates, leading them to Prefer loud sOunds at all frequency ranges; ~Y looe ability to sort out oonven;ai!«&gt;Ds when many people are gathered m groups Cat cocttaiJ parties,
(or example); taste sensitivity~
as do the ......., or pain, touch and

=~cui~~ looses pooe po.
More time is needed in old age to
carry ~t even simple functions such
!"'ck~ the street. Onoe, Botwin-·
•
..._,rved, Ibis was attributed to
al~tions in muscles and, J&gt;erhall6. to
penpbera) nerve B)"8tems. Now. -bOwever, be said, ft is thought U.:.t ibe

'REPORTER:, ,

·-__

....

A. Wan.&amp;T IIDWUlf1J
-....eNol

aoaaar r . •~
/OII1f A. ctOI71"tJU!
aJ&amp;UfJI• • UJ!OU

..__

PAnuct.t. WA.aD aaDDUU.Jf

c••"••nrr
·--~­
lfAIICr • ·

_._--......... a...~e~'

. _ .......... ~.....

.................. .._......
alllla iilallllllaiia ...,.n.

. . . , . ;wie4

...........
lo,.'
- ....,
~~

z!=. ....,_

af
~ iD---t1ie
af......,......
uU or tla ....... af lflbt..........
"Thha .. - to ...,. that tbe old. will
be - ... - the YOUIII. but pedorm.
auce 11/.lbe eldarly am be impmved,"
be poedided.

.......... -

'-lllnl

,

~ inaeru- decline._

_.wed tb-.b LQ. ...... Botwinick beld tblit "tbe 111. ililfm-.

-

IUIIIII&gt;I ap Jl'OUll8 in lntellectuaJ

fundioniDt Ia a flmction af: tbe JDBtbod ...t lOr ..-&amp;JWt." ~

be aid, . . _.]izations bold!
"LQ. testa ~ ecbievmnent or
stored iidormation tend to show main' t:enaDce of fuDction in lalar lire. 'l'be
initlally able remain more able,
BDd may even impnwe 801118 in Ibis
type of fuDctlon. On the other hiUid,
maDipulatJ... -Bkills. perceptual fuDc..
tiona, a abilities or mtesratinr
inronmtion decline. 1be
.-~ts are seen in. the initlally least

greatest:;;:

Testa Of rote ~ or vedJsJ materiala point to
decline in learninl
ability ~"i'II&lt;W people; Botwinick
. ootecL ''But when perfOI'ID8DCe limitations (response~. etc.) are acClOWlted for, learning ·18 seen to hold

a

:X...,reradfaa~f~u:!ft!t.!.ea:~

estent."
.
In some tYpes or ·eaperimeats, the
S~ Louis ~r noted, the old
diaplay behaVIOr -markedly different
from ibe youag in die same laboratory
CODtqt. When. stimuli are ambiguous
or weak, older people simply fall to
respond, he said. 'l'be y o u n g may
- . 'l'be rear Of falling often takes
~ r&lt;&gt;l"!" or cautious behavior! Botwin•ck pomted out, but in at east one
study, "it became evident that the
cautiousness might be more in the
natu.re or avoiding problems than in
dealing with them timidly."
-lty

'l'be least investigated area or aging
~twi!Uck said, is _personality.
!"ves_tlgators, be said, tind their studies
m ~ area unimpn!&lt;l!ll!d by the scope·
and magnitude or change with age.
Yet, . be noted. there is a slight but
C011818tent trend for greater depression
among the elderly than the young
· ";Hypochondriasis and social introver:
i;~,~ are also seen but less persistent-

Man.Y

Constriction is another evident characteristic, partieularly in Rorschach ·
protocols wbere. some s tudies report
''f"'!""J" reeponses, a ·d""""'"" in the
yanety o~ content categories, and an
·~ m ~ based upon
fC?~· He~, especia!J.y., there is conflicting evulence, Botwinick said

Thus, his oonclusion that while u~
area or persona]jty study in later lire
seems to he an unportant one . . .
Jl!uch more needs to be done to probasis (or meaningful generaliza-

ti:;_.'!

Sexuol

AdMty

'"!" thought or sexual activity in old
age 18 "often ~ or repugnant to yo~ger peraons,' Botwinick
contended. 'T.he semal Jife or older
~pies is often thought to be non=~t; lbu.tl Ibis is flagranlly . unA severe limitation to satisfactory

life in later years, he said · is the
of widowhood. Approzi.
mately 44 per cent or
between
the ages Of 65 and 74 are widowa, but
only 14 per cent Of men in Ibis age
bracket are widowers; over 75, 72 per
. cent of women ..., wldowa BDd onJ
38 per cent or men ..., widowers. M~
fiiRttY later in lire and die earlier.
_Thus, many more womea thaD melt '
are left without marriagi, partuers.
_Men also lind it easier to remany if~ mates die. Botwinick pointed out.
.
~ facta become ewn more
stark," be said, "www! «maidered "tb
~ •vail.!!ble evideoce of a ~
m semabty of men. In wooDea, the
decreeae is UDCertain or I&gt;OIHd&amp;teat
up to age 60,
!eat. After Ibis age,
there may be aome amall decline. o.i·
~ . otbei hiUid, for men the decline
18 linMr fftJm tbe late - . . on. We
~ _up'Wfth Ibis fact . plaed flam
mterview.data: when inleiooume&amp;topped, •t at mec11aa age 88 lor
nat and80 for waa... Women fthual
se&gt;:

rrequency

"""'*'

at

t~qpe, Bobri

«--' ~av~n~..uatm--....-.
"' • . _ . . ......... 1be
lor ~ auributad
,__
alta to a lack af ID.,.... •

the'l'lllle
_ ..are
pm
or '
lo -bill dlmla':
lor lbe
af .......,..,_ in ...... BotwlDki: aid, and .._ 111. tbml Ia ...
. paeiaJly Important Pl1c:hn'olleally:
fear ol failure. Maslllllll ..... ,JGboaon
_ point ou that, when aPnl 1111111 • ~ a lack of in~ in ....aJ
Performance or when they BMk ...W
stimulation edraneous to the III8J'o
riqe, their wives are often left withCJUt iDaicht into their buabeud'S fear
of performance.. They may £eel pers6naiJy rejected by the withdrawal
from marital semal activity. If under-

•

·

~~
to
...............
lllaDdlaa.

11/.tbe ..........
af enCiiYe ,......_ lit

-.

....,....~a~~~5:z:~~~~~~
that, ..._
-lltlmalaW.,..

uaJIt
Ia

time, bill I Ill D... II ilii
'l'lllle Uo ~ ..... It
lliaintalaed
111.
sexual
•
adequale llbYabl
ud beiJtby
1111111taf ~ 110
a1iJ!1 111'0cess, will~to"JII'CIIriilea-w.
ly lltimulative c:Jm.lill witbin a Dm-

e-. that

• . riqa. H •
'l'be decriue iD - u t y IDOieover, Botwinlcli aaicl, Ia ji8rl 111. an
(Co,.,uu.ed-.- IS. &lt;OL 11--

Shih t6 Adult Emphasis ReqUires
University Change, CE Group Told
puhllc aervioe, ~ty or OtlloTwo ligures prominent in. lbe field
of adult higher educa.tioa deveJOI,!ed
:.:::n~ ""'~at ita_fiaal
the the m e of Ibis rapidly:JIIO""!'f
. L Adult i8upen waQt to move
phenomenon's future .implicatioaa for
the educational establiabmeat at Mon·
ahead. ·in td&gt;lcb . . . ~
day's 50th Almi.....raary BYmPoaium or
foe tbem; , ·
-the Division of Coatinuinl &amp;lucation.~
2. Adult ' " " ' - want to move
ahead. from wbat"they m.dy bow·
"Millard · Fillraom ~ ·
SUNY Bufialo have t-o pa
·
s. - Adult - - want Ill- ....,..;
- ~ at times aDd In ..._ which
pioneers in the establisbment cl. biJbi1!
are conveaieat for~
•
adult education as a field cl. pr:actice,"
In lbe fUture, Dr. White pred~
Dr. Malcolm S. Kaowlea, Boston ·Unitian will ootlor two bMic
versity ~ of Educatio_u, said in
"tie&amp;-Gie m the cli&amp;keynote remarks at the outset of lbe
cip ·
·one in Jife.Gneated proSymposium. Aad, be noted. from the
.
au
.,. will;Jmtlcitheme of the ewnt, "SUNY Bullalo
pate In bO
•
still wants io be a p~. For it is
now looking ahead to the establish'J."wQ ad.iustu-ta - iadicated, be
suggested: "{1) the o!leriaP in the
meat Of the theoretical BDd scientific
disciplines will ~ be rearfouridatioas of our field." .
rani-! around topico or modulei 80
For that "aellected apecies, lbe
that adults will oaly _..t time on.
adult Ieamer," Dr. Kaowlee suggested
what lbey don't know, Uld lbe teach·
six obliptions (or the future of the
ing will sometimM be done Oil weekUnivemty's ·Division of Continuing
~ In- one-week- blOob, by directed
Education: ·.
reading, or in aome other DOD·trildi"For one lbiiig, yoo have an obligatioual pattern; (2) the ofteriap in
tion to coafront your administrBtion,
the life-centered JIIOIIl1Uil will be recolleagues, and publics with the £act
organized
. into academic .IJI'O'!PII or
that S_UN_Y ~~o, along with most
degree, diploma, · Uld
, proother mstitutions or higher education,
portions. ft r _.,
~
~
is no longer """""tlally· a y outb-aervThis calli for aclmipiftoltive
ing agency. It has become predOmin_ganizatioo, White said, proposing-aevaaUy an adult- ·a nd communityoj!erviag
eral models for ~ •
agency; aad this dwure will accelerate
Perhaps lbe aiost administrative(in the years ahead. You have an oblisimple, be said, would- t.e a
gation to help them look at the· inl·
college for part-time adult learners
plications or Ibis change in institutionsuch as Empire State Coilele. ''It can
al character (o! policy structure, govgo a long way toward tot8l teachini
ernance, curnculum, allocation or
unificatioa by servina as a home for
resources, aad institutional climate.
m .o s t or the continuing education
What I am suggesting is thaf forces
units, by appointing practically everybeyon&lt;! our control ·are moving adult
body in the miiveniity to' ita~
education from the peripbe~ to the
and
by providing to
center or our institutions' lives and
all of lbe Claase8 cl.fen!d Oil· BDd
we have aa obligation as empl~yees,
campus
to
lbe
adult
part..tlme
ltu·
educators, and cliange agents to help
dents. It can after ~ d]pJOmas
them adjust to Ibis mutation.
·
ce~tes.
and
con~
ecfucatio.i
"Secondly, you have an obligation
umts. It can be inaovative, aperimento Proclaim the integrity or the adult
~ and croative. It am do.,... tbinga
Ieamer and to inronn lbe public in
""!'PlY becall8e they
them lor the
g_e neral and your colleagues in pardoing.
1be c1eaa8 Uld facaltles or
t!cular about the unique characterissome profe8onaJ llchool8 Ulat 1be idea
tics or adults as leamers and their
very much. 8ecauE, wblle they UDdermeaning for educational programming
stand BDd appreciate ..... .-1 for
''Tirirdly, you have an obligation ~
~
educatiOn to ~ the adult
apply~ pnncipi!!S of andragogy (the
part-time student, tbey .... drivoen up
education or. the adulf) as rigorouslY.
lbe academic walla by tbe at.urd deas Y!'U can to your own program, ani!
~ adults malre for apeclaiJy deto rid it or all vestige&amp; of pedagogy
~hove all, this means mouating ~
:::r~..:~o6nld at -k1ve efforts to help your stuCienta quickqui~ candidly worry ~
·to ~earn bow to be proactive, III!Iftraditional slnlam af activity Ia polrecting leaniers aad to help your
luted by all tbla they will
teachers 'to learn to be facilitators and
Iooe their praleiraicxW accreditation.
,_,.....,., for self-directed learners
:Wt ~
that cleaa8 £eel
be''Fourth, YoU have aa obligation. to
! ~ ea&amp;ler to move a - - . y than
·( agfl'l!!lsi~e in eDergizing your col1t 18 to cbange an accreditalion stand·
eagues m the oogaate fields to tum
ard Arul easier than ei!W .. to- put .
mol'!' of their attention to basic re~~I
kool;y adult typee In a colletre
~ on human deyelopment throum
OWil.
the lire span and, particu)arJy, to tlie
''I do not bow and aUIIIOt pndicf
~ Of adult
~t you will do in BdaJo," White
. •·u..., you have an obJigation to
!""d. "But I can J)IOIIIi8e you that
~ your owa staff and fiu:ulty in
m Oklahoma we -ue 8lllllPilUur our11UIOY8tive elforti tO improve the tecbselves to be lbe edw:atliiilan,.,m., for
!"'k&gt;gy Of adult education, particu),.rl'l
lbe ~ who ....Uta to llliimd a part
m the areas Of need diagaOeis
or ~ lire all or his !He In study and
en~ lt'l8llling, and evaluaheapen.
leanung. Every year "" add a rew
'Finally, you have an obJigatioa to
more Protrrama which .relate to the
share
"lb the fruits or all tbea8 elforta
~ult of our people, bulld on whet
WI
your leas enerptic colleques in
students biOto, ..... 10 .to tbem
other ageaciea cl. adult education. •
limN Uld placa
to
~~~
tl&gt;eJI!. . We boP tinbrial· with our
~ ..., three oompeJJing ciJarac.
administrative
an.a-ta
imd
I
hope
= · o f adult Ieamers which beve ·
"" alwa,ya will or that we will at least
tions lor the future of bigber
until lbe time we have our life'&lt;leaedUcation; Dr. Thwman J . White, vice
~ PlOII1'UI8 lllOftt ftrmJy imbedded
~lor CODtinuing education anct
m lb8 ClOilCIIrll lor ta.c:blaa· •

.

~

certillcatie

5

•

reo&lt;:

apec;a)

0

•

m

:tJ

11:[;

0

0

. , _

t:

0

0

0

Jl!fU!Iini

at

0

conveniaat

�,
Approii;d by Uni«r&lt;Uy C&lt;HUICil &amp;peembu 10, 1973

ceea. Due prooeea is not an evasive legal
concept btit rather simply requires the

:d=~r/l;!:':""~i~!. "!tor £\!Y:..~

=

a II Univenity diociplinary procodures
will at laaal alford the &lt;lefendaul a clear

!:tla':l:'l..::.!"ot':~~

~~~!Cit:~~~:·

ing, be allowed to confront and crossexamine wib'lellel, and preaent his own
~tion, II!Mdenc:e and explanation. Last-

~=~£aU: :~ti~~ =y~

reuoD&amp;ble doubL Tbe courts have indicaled thai ii tbeae minimal elemenla of
."fair play" are fulfilled, the defendant
will have been ' alforc!!-J due process
under the law.
.
... In summary. the University m:"pects
8nd asb for Ita members no greater or
no lees freedom or liberty than exista
for other penona in 80ciety. The University's position. tbel!!lore, is not to
request or agree to apeci.al considerati.on

for a student because of hia status aa a
student. The Univenity will not interfere
with Jha1aw emoroemenl and other agencies. As part of ita educational mandate,
it will ~be ooooemed about student rehabilitation.
I.

GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS

1.00

1. All rules of the Board of Trusleea

~~n..::"or"i~~fs::., ~'r.,,::!
Yorli, and Uniled Stales of America innot limilad to the New York

clu~ but

s:.:

~~cle e,:l ~theLe~~..Jo~
:!'.:'r~S=~u:!ilio!bat"i,.,·~~~

part· of the Student Rules and Reiula-

tions.
2. Campus aecw:ity ol&amp;cen•are appointed peace oftloers UDder the Education

r:~

=•

=.:e.r,.;"'!:e..:=':!3

to eoforco 11-. reculaliona and all ap-

thai

.:.~r:..
"1::: ~u!"'tf".J:
...-.ticm.
P... campuo

a-nt

oity.

oiBcen the aame authority •
the campuo duliaa.

eecurity

of~

~~

;.~~-=

diction, nor remove or use auch property
without authori&amp;ation.
(d) Without pennisaion, expreaaed or
implied. enter into any private oBice of
an administrative officer. member of the
faculty or atalf member.
(e) Enter upon and remain iiL any
buil~ or facility for any purpoee other
than its authorized uses or in auch manner as to obltruct its authorized uee by
others.
(f) Without authorization, remain in
:.1t~ or facility after it is nor-

fJEty ~~;e:;..= :w~
an authorixed administrative ollicor.

~

..tbeae
!!')!r=~~anymo;;::"~'!l,'icl;
ruleo apply;

!::"= =o,::r;.;~~~~

(i) Oelibera~ diarupl or preYenltha

inlerfere with the freedom of any pe18011
to express his viewa. includinc mvited
speakera.

uJ!~ ~ha~ ,!hl!\!" J:":

apply, any rille, ahot«un,

piato~..........,r.

::n~r ~oJo:e:r~wi~ !X
ministrative officer whether or not a
baa been

Uconae to ~ the aamo

~;t $ufu'n~

/:ci:""others

to
·
any of the acts herein prohibi.~
specific inlanl to procure .them to do ao.

UNIVERSitY

,

STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS
3.00 A-..pj ( I D - - Ru1ea I.
- - or ID commit a crima)

viS..:"'::'s~~&amp;\.,.an~~
tiona. or to commit a crime, wbeD he.

'With intent to violate or amunit ume,

_ , . . in conduct which Ianda to effect
the violation of ouch atudenl rule or
..,walion or the commiaoion •of ouch
c:nme.
3.05 .Disrupllan
A penon ia cWlty of diaruplion wben
be, by actioD, by_ threat, or otherwiaa:
I . inlarf- wath Uniwl'lity activiliea;
or

fi~ ~~=ty~~t

ara

�Ill.. ::s~~ANJ~
CONDUCT
5.00 -~ .
The developmoat of in~ce llDd
·~ of moral r.eoponOibility ~

:,:~ ~.=..u:.r:u~a::..:-pl..r.::
ment of

~

i&gt;u- ia the , duty of

~C:r:~uJ..~ m:alrm~_of hia ~

fo~"Joll=~~.:dO::U~u;.=~

eoty amonc otudento: (a) ouhmiaoion:
to oatiafy academic requirements. of material previouoly IRihmitled in whole or
in IUb.tantial part in another coune:,
without prior and ~ OOJUeDt of

::..::l!Jur~: a(b~'l'!' ·0~~

:i~~~~~ tb!

o:ae:tiz. _

Source , (quota tiona, . para·
phrases, basic ideas), or otherwUe. nipresenting the Work of another. aa 1 one'a
own; (C) cheating: receivint informatioii
. from another sl).l.dent or unauthorised
80Urce or giving information to another
11tudent with ._intention to deceive while
completing an eu.mination or individual ·
~ment; (d) falsification of academic
nU:tt.eri&amp;B: fabricat:i.nc laboratory materi~:~la, ootes or ~porta. forging an Wtructor·a name or initials, or submitting a
report. paper, materials, or examination
debts to the

::'redLY ~";ide~:~~ ~~ ~::

dent retpo~ for the assignment; (e)
procurement. dit!tribution or ~ce

~!nfi~:'tl:Tu~~'::tZ~ wi~~

prior and e:rpresaed content of tbe inatl ructor!'
...
AU aUeged caoes of acaderuic diabon.
~ ty ure at present" bandied by the academic areas oorrofiftted.
~
5.05 Unlawful 5ale of DisMrtatlons, ·

·

Thesa-T•nn.._,..

I. No (lenon shall eell or ofl'er for 18le
tu a ny peraon enroUed. in a univenity,
coll~ge. academy, school or other educational institution within the State of New
York u.ny assistance in the preparation,
research or writing of a d..iueriation, .
0

~~:·n~~·t w~:rr~ ~~

Bion to 'Such educational institution in

~~~d~:f~:!a~:.,~u:a~m~nrta!:r:e ~(

11tudy.
- 2. No penon aba.U aell or offer {or aale
any clisaertrition, thesis, tenn paper, essay, report or other written ~t

!':.;n~er=~o~tr:m

:.:=.

etaay report or other written uai.rnment
to any penon enrolled in a university

~ 6:,~e, i!act=~ ~\~ethe~t!feuC:i

New York for submiteion to such educational institution in fulfi.llment of "the
~uirementa for a ~ree. diPloma,~ oer­
tificate or coune or-iiudy.
A violation of the provisions of thia
oection ahaU conotitute a Clau B Mia~=::!:w, Section2186)

A1cobol bow- are .oold in NortM "
HaU by tbe Uniwnity Food Service

~~ ~==-~ ~F=\
~rk~~~ f:'wNt'i:

ndee of the Stata Liquor Authority; llDd
reculationa eatablialied by tbe Norton
House CouDcil (For ._;&amp; rulee lOY·
eminc Nomn Hall. - Section IV.)

11.15_...._,_.._..
-~U. ·

AU pnwloiono of tbe N- York State

OCTOBER 18, 1973/ STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS/ Pag!! 2

�tile 8lato

IV ....,_~MD

.'1:'"
&amp;ll--tloe u.......lhllaia at
Beato u..n..1W at tMW
at
Yed:

tile

.......... ............ u.... . . .
llulldbll.

~ iD ...

8ailoll!llr ...

~~
"a:-'"'=
=.,:
....._ 1111 ...u.-:m:
...r lloor
-. ·-r.u-....~
~~f.

........, _ _

floor ue tile~ Cnoft o.e.r,
,::o;a.:,o;'i,~
b) MaiD Ploor--IDcl""'d .., lllio lloor
...
... -"!.'!!- Dorolhy M . ~. N - .,... Mmilllltratiw Of.
&amp;e. N..- 1b11 TieDt Ollico, laforma.

..-. - - . ...

*'-~·=..e
"' ...r Oouate~::..~:
Lailby

Maill .l'laor~

11.- IUid lbe

e) 8ecxiDd 1'1&lt;1or-iDdadecl OD IIIia floor
are 1bo S~t Gowt"""""t 0111c., "GeJ.
1ery zte N..- u.u- Adminiontica

- ~~: !:- ~nr:

brary/Muaie Room. D&gt;Mtinp """"" IUid
otudeat-.
d) Third Floo.......uu:Juded OD tiUo lloor
are Univeroity Pre., CreatiYe Craft Cen.
tar, Admi.niotrative Oftlceo, WBFO, 1be
Tbird Floor Lounae, Study Room 339.
Studaot Ac:tiviliao Room, all publieati01111
' -Tbird · Floor
workrooms
aDd Maebine
darkrooms,
lbe.
VendiJ&gt;c
a rea
..-tine rooms, IUid otudent ollieeo.
Amplilleatica eq .
t - all rodioo
tape recorden, reoo~en, bull boma:
.. televiliona, public addre. ayatems, and
their accompanying apeaken.

· Poota..........U paper. eardboard. or oilcloth announcement~.
6.00 Norion Holl Bulldlnc Houn
1. Norton Hall building bouro are to

be posted in the foyers. Announcements
are 8IOo to be made prior to clooing.
Any perwon found in ~ Union after

~wi=Je:Joi!~fot!ti~r;;a~

Section and any other relevant Rules
and Ordinances of the University or of
state, federal or local agencies.
2. The Night Manager on duty may
grant student&amp; or faculty special written
permission to remain in the building
alter houn in emergency situations. , In
all other inltances, the A.sa.iBtant Director
of Norton Union may grant written permission to student&amp; or faculty at least
24 hours in advance.
3. Any group wishing to use the Union
outside normal building hours may be
assessed a charge for the services of

N~~WB~Fk£'::li~e)Peraonnel shall be

allowed a minimum staff for the opera.
tion of the stiition and its prUgrams as
a s tanding exception. This exemption
doeti not include guests or family of
personnel.
6.05 Amplifieation
l. Amfl:"cation equipment except the

~r:a~~t e:u&amp;,U:~~t =~n:swir~~tudi~

and the Amateur Radio Society may not
0

:p~~thanc~dr:an~ ~ ~n ~:~~:i

of the Norton House Council and all
appropriate· agencies.
a n;

:FJ:~~~n~£Jar:~ ~all~ d~

rected out any windows.
6.10 Core ond Use of FIICIIIties
l. Intentional misuse, vandalism, or
destruction of equipment or facilities of

the Union iB strictly prohibited and may
be .prosecuted by the Norton House
Council. Any prosecution by suid Council
shall not preclude action taken by in-

,temal authority.

2. No equipment of any nature or other
item, including but not limited to pictures or furniture, may be move«~- within
the Building or taken from the Building,
excePt by special permission of the Asso.
ciate Director of Norton Hall.
3. Animals a.r e not permitted in Norton
Hall at any time, except Seeing·eye dogs.
6

1

'~~teGo!':.~ ~ty Ia,.. and ordinances
prohibiting gambling will be strictly enforcecL 6.16 Drup
IUegal drugs sball not be posseooed or
used in Norton Hall (See also Section
3.85).
6.17 Donpn&gt;us-- .
No weapon~~ are permitted in Norton
lbll (See also Seetion 3.90) .

~uo~

no authorization will
be given to priVate commercial enter-

~ :~r:te~ti!.ta~nli~

tbe Univenity olber tban to pro.ide for
food, earn pus bookstore, laundry, dry
cl~. berber and beautician eervioee •
ond culturo.l OYento. Tbio reaoluliob abaiJ

r.!tbeCo=o:' ::tfti: ~~
lbo U.U..nity." (Board nf T . . - Rooolulion u 111118nded February 28, 1973)

. . . . . --red

. ch.._-

...... -'.

-r..r.:.:..a..
'I

. . . .

aWiaCleiWidiMifdla

~·by alllJ......._. ....

-

------·
--fDr--::"\.
..:..-cr..:"-==
&amp;AO

.....

L Notka IUid - - '
I _,_
benoJuPrlbaG_...__

1111 to ... ~., Seciioa 6.111-

.....

Nalbo

::'
:t::W
Tboce _,.be ... -

.............
-·
(JuPr tban ~ bodlloliD
, ....
pooled aNIbil; ..,. at 8ither ...S at tile l6iD

-or_...,

:1:'~ ~~oMf.-::..= ~j

to opeeific: by tiMl N - &amp;.e
CoomeiL
2. Prior to .-cu.. .0 ad..rt'
II
·or bOIIeeo be ........... to doe Ja..
formatioa Oouater for ....,_ ~
- IUid properly dated widi rDK .......,_.
8. .Pooten ~ ~ til -claD

~=:-!~~~.:

wallo....,·
- be ~
-ropr!Me.
~
en
tapedo..roiae
to ~
aluminum .....ru- Oaly.
• · Ride Board
Help w...tad Board
notieeo moetinc doe ~ nf doe
cleoipatad boaido do Nq1lire 1\zrtber

...r

==. =.=
IUid dioc:ard.

~

tn"'r.....':ti:="=·

5. Noticeo will be cliocarded after lbe

:Jy~~~~~ -...r
~n":'~o~

:yu:=.:

tb!

fOIIloval and deotnoetion .of any notiee.
Notiees pootad in autborizecl . . _ but

not eonforming to all olber provioiona

~c~::.~::.=~":i:u~~
to immediate removal IUid dioeard.

- 6.45

~

Senllce oncl

.._-Found
I. Tbere io no public ebecldng oerriee
provided. Leaving any belongin.p in a
public area is .trongly diKourapd. Nor·
ton Hall auumes no responsibility for
lost articles.
2. A Lost and Found service ia provided at the Main Ploor Information
Counter. Those people using it mutt
assume any risk of loea.

3. The Main Floor. Checkroom may be

made available to re.ervation groupe.
Arrangements for this service are made

through the AS!Iistant Director of Norton
Hall.
6 .50 Reservations

I. Only otricially i-ecognized · student
organizations, department&amp; and other
units of the State Univenity of N;ew

~~. a~cP'1!~-liti:-h 'No~n 1i:ii:

Rooms and dining roomo ohall be usigned by the Reservations Office. Reservation requests after Reservations Of0

~":n~~';' ~~ fu~':" ~~tJ: :t!,~

under reasonable circumstances msy il·
Jotue a spontaneous reservation.
2. Conference rooms and other facilj.
ties shall be assigned on a ruwt-come,
fint~served ~ but oonsideration is
given to the time, size end u.e of roome,

r:!Ii~.:f ~~~·J:!:~i~;:!

scheduled utili.zi.nK Norton Reeervations
Hpace. In 1.¥1usual- cii"CWDDtanoee, exceptions to this rule may be granted on
petition to tbe Norton Houoe Council
3. Any individual making a reeervation
takes full reoponsibility on himoelf and
his o~anization for d..amqe, theft, or
YBndaliAm u a conaequence of the ue
of the reserYed room(o) IUid/or equip.
ment, or from failure to notify apprOpriate Norton Hall olaf! of lbe termination
of" said event(a) in order to insure that

~::~ w'li\ui.!"::!..:.fto~

pniu.tion.

•· Cancellation of room~ muat be made
to lbe Reoervationo Offiee at lout 24
hours prior to the date of ihe reservation.
Failure to meet th.ia requiremeut may

J:r'",j~~~ ~~ ~

original reoernlion.

·

.,!,P::;:&amp;:==..m~~r -

lbej~ of lbo ~~
Union Aclminiotration _in ~
witb 1be Norton HOUM ~ - t
entails epecial blledo, ......,.rno IUidlor
problema. A ''"-'ial - · oball be
J&gt;lanned in eo-.ltation witb the Norton
lfowe Council IUid lbo Adminiotratnoo
otaff. 'l1&gt;e "Norbl U.UO.. GWdoli.- Reoe~ IUid Procodureo," - eYenta" if in

i:..!f
~:_ ~r::Jl ~fo.!f
tiUo 8eclioG.
6. Reoopiaed oludcmt orpniaalicmo

:=no~ !' i:f"':f !':.l:t~

~A~o"f any - t .

-peoe;.. orpniaationo Ud -mtain lbo

=at"':.~~.:::-:

Stata AleObolie

pJOdaol, or ·
bOil•l:Jaiftmi.ty
related
..
~
iDdmduol
oball _,....
appear on tbe i.nterior or ederio:r

Page 3/ STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS I OCTOBER 18, 1973

or,..,...

-~.~:!:f&amp;cr'

by •

outborizecl to make reaenationo for lboir
liot .. eurrenl
6.55
1.

......... Alc:ohollc: - AT..!',!:::"'
at-lbo N..., Yodt
s-ap Coa*"&gt;J
~

I

�ft.. .....
..
,....--.ill.._......
H:ft'&amp;\11•

ell
. ~ ~JtD~ ..an
==r=~a:=
U!IC..
......... ......

............... llliaDdlilti

....,...,..,.. edt.........
..... --*"'
.....

.. . .

YL
.._ -

.,...

~

:u= ............
..a
:;,.,.,~~
~

b.r

New Yalk:

Aaooolllk ··~

4P......

!!!!..!t'l!.'!.ni~-. or~ 0::

A. 8481 llllla 8a.ot.

.__.....
.. -'--" wltbiD or taka from
;::'~,.._ opeciai,_ :E-m1oo1on haoi -.n -ftlied by tbe Dilec-

iaflioa .......... .:.~ iiiDIIoDt

P---A-,

lurA~-=

;.:t
':""~
..!.te.:-.::;
thetbe ....... o f - Ad41,..wr.lion.

be . . - 1 for Jato.
late pe)'D*It. ud " ' -

of
7.10 -

'I'

tional -

U

-

~-- ocx:upanlll

...t- .

~nt.at~~of=~"::

--

the

DOt permiMec! ill

l:'i~~~~ ~--~=ified

.._..,. ~011

a~~of Attorney

.

Na idlde of~!:."': to

.a..J4..

Bdlolo, . _ Y..... lG14 'l'lw.-s.it
n....... olooald be .-d to ~ -.11
IIQIDIIIIL . 'l1le ~ "' ~

of

..... -...w..
..... oflbafami&amp;ue,
buildiDI

... iwaaln!JataD-

=

nl -

,_

ue JinaDciall7 ~lor bep'
their . _ Ud i!o contanlll in
onler &amp;nd free from damap bolh by
u-1.-· ud by othen. lloQm. dam' - w i l l be . . - 1 on-..! W&gt;or plua

ma_t~~

.•

fOW&gt;d

~ UDi~r­

~10!71'~ntbe X~~~

-

lion aDd Scbolanhip, CeMer of&lt;ward Certif'""'le on or before tbe doole (~
about 2 . . - alter ~ ~~ indicded in the f'IIIAI&gt;CW information llheet
t.bat ..,.,.,_..;. his in1!!&gt;ice. be 1DO.Y
deduct tbe ecijuoted award unount !'tom

deDta will-be .refened to tbe appropriate
Ciril Authority.
n.. uoe .of opace in the nooidence balls
is reMMICi foi the ooll! uoe of &lt;&gt;CCUpanlll
·of tbe balc!i,..- The !om» and procedureo lor ~ reoerva!M&gt;ns of

S:d:t.
:"CC::~~n.!:/':l.,~~tb!
State University -Scbolarahip. Nou: Tbe

peCn":': the' ,..idence

:-~=.,.~":.. n:r.::::

::= ~':~ ~~thet

pected to Qide by anc1 dinanc:eo, rules, ...,.W.tiono aDd otand-

combined New York Slate ~

' cl:r;;_t :;:;t ~

~:ftofofv*:.:,~~

Awards.
7.20 Univenl!Y Scholarships Loans
If a student ,bas approved Scbo!Am~
. ·
aad Loans p&amp;Jd f!&gt;rough the UDM!tsl ,
•
h• may defe r paymc the amount (
ly one-half of the annual award) from
his !'barges until the ch~ is recehoed.
· He lS responsible for aJ!I&gt;IYms the check
in payment of outstanding charges:
7.30
~~:.
~
fil
__ ,
tifi
. If studenta
e an app.nn·ICII,l. no calion at the Offlce of Student Accounla
by !he B!""'unced ~te••. (I) 8.1! app~
notification, (2) !"' official notice of theu

~.,:'ytt,U~~~~=

,They will aJoo comply with the tem»
and conditions of oc:capancy and uoe of
the lacililiea as stated .here, printed in
the University Houaing Office HaDCIbook, and u PQIJted in ~ reaidence
hall. Studenlll ~ ohall not hold the Univenity ""'ponsi~ for any ~· lou.
or c1ama1&lt;e reoultins from violation of
" such ord.ina.noee, rules, regulations or
becauae of the necJipnce of
8.05 Cooldnl .
•
.
.
In compli8.nce with the New York
, State Multiple Owen;.,. Laws, cooking
is not permitted in aleeping room~. En'fon:emeot of this statute is by the Environmental Health and satety Office.

=

!::,"'"-=

~:,'!..,~U::=Y ~J!lth~ !rr~

.:~

area are
·exthe or-

:::..T.,;'f

&amp;10 ~
~ ' ...
ffom their charges. (Tuition waiven do
not cover fees.) Not&lt; : Credits for antiIDeg&amp;\ dnrp- ~hall. not l_&gt;e ~
cil!!'ted acholarahipo, loans, panlo, etc., ._ or used m the '!Jruvenuty ""''~ ~.
Mil not appear .on the invoice. Deduct
(See aloo Sectio~ 3.85)
~
.
the amounts as indicated above.
8.15 Danprous -~
.
.
7 40 Student Fees
No weapons are pemutted m the rest• The' Collep--Fee is'"£ otate -asaesaed
dence halla. (See aJoo Secjion 3.90)
mandatory ·fee. The Student Activity•
8.~0
pe...,:;tted in the ,;,n
Fee " a student asaesaed.rnondatory fee. .
d
haJJs. (See a1ao Sectio 3.85) '\_
7.!50 Tuition ond Credit Refunds
'a,";;f
of Ras1c1ence
When a student regDtel? it ia s~cAll ..,.idence ha1la Will be locked from
8:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. or at other howo
ally undemod that he will pa;r m !uiJ
for. all ~es _'!"'umed, at """"tration_
as jointly determined by tne Uniwnity
Failure or mability to attend class cloea
H"""ing Office iond the Inter-Rsoidenc:e
not change the payment due or entitle
Council tO help aafecuard tbe n!OideD!ro.
the student to a refund Students who
Arrangemeuts are iDade ao that reai-

=

i:

Se&lt;:uritJ

f,ffl=_YW:.~o::r:.:= ~i.m:-

duoe ~heir ochedule '!Y _directly notifying
the Duector of Admissions and Records.
will be cbarBed on the. f~llowing basis:
Week
Twlwn
Fee
!at week
. 0%
, 0%
2nd week
0%
0%

~:J!

::t

1i,g~

-

i~~

~ :~r~ia:J!'i:!::; ~e"'~
pay~ent

to request the refund, or it is

forfeited.

b:O:'~'fn!.iifl~ ~~.,: !'!~ ~~

a refund of tuition and fees upon im·
mediate ·presentation of his active duty
· orden to the Office of Student Aocop.nto,
Hayes A. In the event the atudenf" baa
completed sufficient academic work to
receive academic credit, no refund will
be made ez.cept in euch instancee where
1... than full credit is given, in which

=i

0

H:e~ ~:! :-J' =~~rebe

to change without notice at the cliscretion of the Univenity.
7.fitl Unpaid Unhlel'llty Accounts
A otudeDt with an unpaid and ovenfue
university account will not be permitted
to ~ter for the foUowing aemester,
nor will be be entitled to receive a •tate·
roent or tnmocript of his credilll until
his inclebtednesa ,. eettled. The Uniwraity does not act as a collection agen
for commercial outaide poupa or
viduala

-

m3l

1,70 P.lllllaa
&lt; No llludent is eligible 1o receive a degree, certificate of ~acc:omplialunent, or
honorable dismisaa1 until all charges due
to the Univenity or to any of ito related
divisiona era peic1 in full. aDd all u,;.
·ty rope~ baa been ..-.....a in
condition
·
Uniwe.,;ty .;,..,... the ricbt ~
~ or lldil io Ita f - at any lime.
Off'u:ial infotmatiOD -CODCtlmiDC tuition
.....
· - fri&gt;m
and their
peymento
obou1d Acbe
obtaiDecl
the Office
of Btudetrt
oounta (881-2041) .
. ·u a ~ is dismisoed
tbe ·
University or any of ita related ~no
for .,...... other than ocodemic defiCiency,

~

fm

=~

Hafts

:.,ve~

a:=:n:
aft:;
· · the time when they are Ioclted. Rnsidenla
enterins after lock·up are required to
. show identification to Campua Security
Officers or Security Aide~ manniJic the
entrances. Any r.ilure to OOIJ1I&gt;Iy Krictly '
with the peeled aDd circulated' Policy for
!':1;;~-up entry is a violatioD of this

cu~1r'da ~-= i;,n~~

the express d•ire of dormitory raidenta.
The program is under , the
ol

•:-fi::

~.,.eam.Jr.., ~!!: ,.:
who . usually live in the ~ ba.UI.
leCUre the ball en·
trances and to check all· peraons oeeltin&amp;
entrance for valid identification and
pauea. For the .purpoee of aect:ions 3.00
and 3.05, the StudeDt Security Aide is a
UrUvereity Official
8.30 • o - of lleolclont Students

Their function is to

All viaiton ~ the residence hall must
~-guests of reSldenta or staff. Gueot facilitiee for parent. and ~dren wtder
1~ yean of_ap are '!"~ available. O)ie_r·
nieht JUeala of reaidento . muat :00 '!'
~1on of a Guest P~, which. 11
available th"'\';«h the Rsoulent Adviaor
of the epoMOnng student The h.~ .w.
dent assumes ~mple~ r:eopo~ty for
gu~ and theu actions while m the
residence hal[
.

B:»!b non~nta ~ non·~1dence

students who Wllh to 'Vlllt a resident of
the balls mu.;t ~e ~ for ·
t.bat penon tO meet theln at the main
entrance to -the ball, and they m~ be
""'!'rted bv. ~t . penon at. all while remaunng m \be bull~. All
~~ Hall Cou!"'if~ recuh!tions on
vwtiJls iond gueot "'CC!·lD ~ moorporated hete)Jl by reference aJl!l are controiling' u to tbeoe ruiL Failure to comply
'!ith incor;po~ Je&amp;U]ationa .ia a wolamn of this oection.
8.3!1
• of tbe State U'nivenity
·B y repletion
of New _York at Buffalo, palll are nnt
_allowed m the reaiclence IWio. This ;.
the reoult of aalety aDd health ruleo and
for the welfare of tbe polo, Tbe Office

OCTOBER 18,1973 /STUDENT RULES AND REGULATIONS/ Page 4

�5

CACO~s

Drive to
~~dNeedy
'lbe Community Adial1 Corps
( CAC) II """ ooDcli&gt;ctlnl lit 811111181 ·
drive for food. clolbinll imd ..._...
tiona! materials needed by vuioua
area lllidal apnclea with whkb CAC
atudeat volunte.a are 81B1C1ate4. .

ian;

~~tt.
- cl Mluml
- ~ -'d. lllld tt.
..~. . . . nlatiwly - to
~ llol:lrilllak u.tecl, tluee
~ 'llbicb ...... . _ . .
=:::,~
death

..,~

a..oaw"t.
":~
..::

e:tbat

death.. be . . .

:=.~-a-t." 'l'bae
is 110
tioD-'

.n.,.

tbae ....... fuDo.
}IIJ to ~

-~ tile ~

.........
liD

pldund - . . . In • ahule, tile will tanilllt to their joy In tho Tor.h
....... tile hoppleot of ol1 _..._ Simcas Tonoh. Apln this
- · a . . d - . 32t2 Main - . lnvlt8o _,.,.,. 14&gt; daiiCIO In
t i l e - 1n of t11e comploiiGn of t11e r ....h 1ts boclnnlnl ...... - . to Gunory of a..bMI - . artiSt
the Choslldk: belief tho chlldlli&lt;e joy
- -· br tile Toroh ...,_,. , _ from their ~
!hot .. - . IMmed or .limple, on equal ohare In the &amp;1ft
of tile Toroh. o.ndnc .t Chabod HouM belins .t 6:30 p.m.

iDdlcatiaD ol bia

OOotmued ....._...

A Jl'ldCI!l Ja 8DCiaJI¥ clllid, be COD·
tinued, •..._ tl.-llilbrriDn - liM·
to be dbacled -..1
a · livinl~ llboaiL • •· Jl&amp;.
l:iojoaa
• a.de for bim
as 1f be a--t. • - • 'Ibis
kind of dlloth alia ""'- the
Icier pemm II 811mitlllcl to a IIUIIIiDs
bame or ............., ¥Jit;y."
Most ol the
.bout death
and clyinl cenlmll aiOUIId two.BotwiDick l8iated. '-n.e llrst 18 COil·
cemed with fear ol doalb. Wby ue
people afdid ol dyjnc'/ What Jrlnd
of people ~ lfiiB feer'l How does it
deYelop~ 'lbe 'olbel' idea bas to do
. wit\&gt; ~hi. ~- lif• the dying .
maUy apec:t

-m.

P~Uieo·· ~.

_

........

OI*IIYe;about

unwilfulB to ·~
the"
~ ~ol· -dy;iDa.
..... """""
to avoid, aWtalDiy to
, telliDI: .a
patient tbat••bil end is ..... 'l1Us
to be .. for DUII!I!8 and
physiciaus aa for 1111yo1111 else. But,
ii it really ~ or etblcal to deny
a d~ periiQII tbe 'opporlunity to
make bia peace'? T-o deny bim tbe opportunity to aettle hill dalm? 1'11 _provide for the future ol bla familY! Pra&lt;&gt;tical medic:al a.nd nlllllilll tzaining
should involve matters of bow to approach the IUbject of drinl, not ooiy
with tbe patient, but Willi bia wife,
childn!n, and pua~IB."
BotwiDick'a was writtlln with
the partial support ol a
lf&amp;llt

ap_...

-m.

='=::a!r'=:

:rt:.:inJ
man Development. His sn-tation
was part ol . an aftemoon PIUll!l di&amp;cuasioa wbidl alao featmeil Dr. J~
sepbine Flaherty dean, Pao:ulty ol
N~, Oni..,.lty -of W-.n 9'&gt;tario; Dr. Ralph H. Monp, UIOCIIlte
prof-. JII!YcbolotiY, ~ and
Dr. Paul B. s.l,_ iiBioodate prof_,r
and director, .IiMaion ol Individual
and Fmdly Studies, Penn StaiB.

r~..--nay

For Adding Coulse
Tomorrow (F:ridit,y, Oc:tobe&lt; 19) is
the last dQ' to add .students to COUI'Iiea by ~tal IICiian. Cbar_!es
H.V. Ebert,
ol tbe Division ' of
~te Studies, reminded this

a..n

SiudeDta can be adiled with permiaaioo ol the inalhlctor aDd by tiline
the~ BePtration -Form ( if
the .,.,.,_ II c:l.-1) only lbroulh

tomonuw, Ebert .....
"There II the 1Daorrect JIDtion that
facult;y ......-. can 'fora! reclater'
students aftl!r tbe October 19 dead!ine,.. be DOled, addlnc that "''bis
18

not .,,..
~ facult;y- ubd to have

all
. lludeodil cbecli their CIIIIIPUter rec-

istration cuciL "'f tbe ooune li not
on It, the atudiDt II not ~"
Ebert ald. "'f 1be 8&amp;udlat II not
your mM cia. lilt," be told faeulty,
"be will DDt NCei9e aedit for !lie

...........

~

.......

ao

CA'P

Task Force Is Now Studying
·.Audubon-U/B Health Care
By SHARON EDELMAN

-s..u

As the Audubon new community
rises fiom the swamp north of the
new U / B, some new and somewhat
ti.ilique problems will also surface. Not
the least of these is the need to develop a total system of health care, which
must provide for the enormously varied needs of a university and a town.
A special Task Force, comprised of
a croes-section of the University and
Amherst populations, bas been establisbed for this purpose. Headed . by
Dr. William Feagans, dean of the U/ B
Dental SChool, the committee will investigate not only the existing health
care facilities of the area, but must
devise new and appropriate means for
delivering health services in both
emergency and maintenance situations.
Specbll . . , _ , .

Because of -the nature of the Audubon and UniVersity populations, Feagans noted, special problems will be
involved. Many of those in the target
groups, such as U/B students, st.alf,
or faculty, may not live in Audubon,
yet must nonetheless be considered in
the planning of emergency services.
Many Bulfalo residents ue alao expected to make·use of special Audubon
or new Millard Fillmore Hospital facilities, and will1 i!! the future, travel
on the Bulfalo-Anine.st Rapid Transit Line. As a result, Feagans said,
the Task Force will include in its
at;udy a consideration of the special
· needs of the handicapped and elderly
who must use public traosit to reach
Audubon. •
Although moat of the University's
Health Science leeching facilities will
· = i nF.:.

t.~~etl!Fn.~ 3:

u::=, t:'J;

:~~tcJ:rlca

f1tB and Audubon ....Udenta and to
provide ........,..cy care. .
Feapna .nr-1, h.owever, that
. Audubon will moat likelv ma~e use
of exiatinl Amberat facilitieS IUcb aa
ambulmce .-vice, fire an d polioe
f...,_, and telephone and power
cables. However, ~ and
an .adequate ll)'1llem ol ftood CODtrOI
will-be ileveloped within the Audubon
land pucelltaelf.

llc!i';!

=.:.:.-:m

Sweet Home

scboo1 districts which overlap the Aud-

ubon territory will be another faclor
for consideration by the Task Force.
Feagans said he is convinced that with
better health care education, problems
such as diet deficiencies and ·cigarette
smoking c o u I d be significantly reduced: problems, he adds, which are
the responsibility of parents and teachers, but will remain within the general
concern of the committee.
The first meeting of the Task Force
was held in late September, and sessions will continue on a regular basis
for the next two years. 'l1&gt;e comp~&amp;­
hensive Health Planning Council of
Western New York, which originally
formed the Task Force, is providing
technical data and coordinating assistance for the committee members woo
range from sewage contractors to the
administrator of the suburban Millard
Fillmore Hospital. More than 20 propie currently serve on the Task Force
representing, among dther groups, tbe
Civil Service Employees' Association
at U/B, the Amherst Town Board, the
Williamsville and Sweet Home School
Districts, the Amherst Chamber of
Commerce, local medical and dental
societies, the Amherst L e a g u e of
Women Voters, the New York State
Urban Development Corporation, tbe
Erie County Health Department, the
U/ B Student Association, and a local
real estate developer.
Feagans cited eu.mples in Reston,
Virginia, and Columbia, Maryland, in
which total health care delivery sya.
!ems have been planned for a single
l)eW community. What will make the
Audubon
unique will be the
impact an input of U jB both as Audubon's centnil institution and a simple
component of the total community

J'"'ject

structure.

ol I.inguiatial is

negotiating with tbe Enaliih Lansuale
lnatitute of Adam Miclilewicz Um--.
sity ol Poznan, Poland, to flltablish an
A ........ft_ ol acbolaro '~ the two
~ lbe ~ N..,.,_
. Ia' ~ All lingulsta in ... Bufruo .,. intereoled ·in opendlnc time in Poland under tbe ~

.,._,t ...., ..aa 110
tact-the Department, 808 IUyeo Hall.

8lld!anle

however.

•

Other materials which CAC hopes
members of the campus community
will donate include used toys, records,
and musical instruments. There ue
also special needs for a vacuum cleaner, a sewing machipe and used furni-

ture.
CAC student volunte.B ue active
in more than 50 community agencies
which need assistance. Faculty and
st.alf are particularly urged _to help in
the collection effort for needed mater!
ials.
Donations may be brought to the
CAC Office, 220 Norton, any time
between. 8 :30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. MaJor d~
nations are tax-deductible and receipts
for that purpose will be supplied.
For -further information, call 8813605 or 3609. ·

Eccles Appointed
By Phi Beta Kappa
John c. Eccles, distinguisbed professor of physiolot!Y and bi5c:a,
has been appointed-a Pbi Beta
Visiting Scholar for 1973-74. In
,
Sir John was awarded a Nobel· PrUe
in Phyaiolot!Y aDd Medicine . for bia
diaroveriea ol the nature ol ezdtatory
and inhibitory synaptic . action ..,
nerve oella.
As a participant in the Visiting
Scholar PloKrem. Sir John will travel
to five inatitutdiS: Reed Collep in
October; and Acnea Scott Collep, ,
South-.n at Ml!lllllbia. Soutbem
MethodisfU "wnity aDd the Unfversity of 0~ in Mardi. During
bia two-day s~ at MCb institution, be
will ..-t with oludenta and faculty in
a variety of fonnal and infonnal mCOIDllera, whidi. usually include c:laa&amp;-

~d.!::u.,~~3..:

Polish Swap Eyed

n.e Deputment

warm· winter -dolhinl. illpeciaJly
"Doota and mittens, is bema 80UIIht
in both childrl!o'a d
adult .a- partic:ularly, CAC ~ 811,Y, for
y00ng people. at 4aY care Clllldera
where whmte.B ue active. Some
cbildren ue repartid to bave only
li(lht ja~ and tennis ....... to during cold ......a-. 'lbe rising coat
of food bas severely atralned tbe welfare budpta ol many motben and
warm clothes have in 1101!18 c:aeea become an unaffordable - . CAC repreaentativ'"' lillY·
Puente in the icbooll and cenlmll
which will receive clothing will oqan' izA! the distribution effort tbemoelvee
after' CAC NOIIIDIMrB deliver their
collections:
c-ued fOOds are being 80UIIht for
such agenaeo 88 T......,., Hou8e, 264
~ Terrace, Nlsbt PeOple, 60 W:
Chi
and 8unsbiDe Hou8e, ......
ciee~ provide ..-Ia for the indigent and 11..- in trouble. Table
pmea (such 88 en- and cbeclrera)
and cards are .alao needed for ·a facilities where adults alia bave little
with which to .
tbermelvea: In
these settinp,
:~tcihmte.B work
on a one-to-one basis with individuals
and have found that ~ even old
magazines, ..... useful
Games, incidentallY., can be brokm
or incomplete and will be repaired by
volunteers: Clothing, and ~!specially
boots, should be in good condition,

COil·

IIUCh topics as: lbe brain and CXIIIIIcious
aperience; cultural evolution VL ~
lociad evolution; and UDdentandinl
tbe brain.
MONIMY ltOIJQjiY

Monday, Qc:1Mw 22, V........ !My,
• f u l l y - un~wn~~r holiday.

.. will not be In . will b e - .

i

end oil -

I be

u-

�6

Concert to AA!• ..,.

.Mtqer..:....
~

lroa

-J.

col. 4)

Tenth Year of

under the hilbJ.y . . . . . .-=-~
RamaDce I..upqaa tllB
to bide the aVail8biUI;y ol CJ!1r ci8ar1Dp in Spanlab, Italiul, &amp;1111 l'Wtu, _ fJOID tlludeDiil 1D other ~
meots ud from the CIIIIIDIIIDity at

CreatiVe Center

......

"''be merpr would, ID other Wll,y8,
....... the .....t ·ol the~
in Italiul, ud in the latin Ammau
Uterature ud Hispudc ~
~tiolls ·of our paduate JII'O'
pam wbllre the i n - ol the - jarit;y d the IAUdenla lie. Almost fifty
I*' .-t d the faculty llll!llllbel8 -.:bqiD.u- .... )'CIUIIIW profea.
.... An amalpmaticin with the
Fnmd&gt; ~t wblc:b baa a Jarp
IIUIIIber d ........ faculty llllllllben
ud fuU ...,._,.. would reduce ttioa
juDior .,...,_,.,.. cbaDcea for ad_ . , tbenby eDCDUl'8linl them
to ....
el8ewbae. Tbe
....
do ineparable
. . .·
. . to
the could
~t'·
prosram
~ in the ...,.. -where It attt*D the larast llUDiber of craduate
atudeats, ...r wbllre COIIIIDIIDity In·
ill beet--s.
• • Aside f rom the afcrementicmed
n!UOIIII for our oppoaitian to the merpr, as paduate students we are also
CODC:erl*l about the p . _ t ol unitinl with-. ~twbooe graduate
studenta- - t l y forced t o -

A pia~ ID the Allldlilal-~

Art Gallll7 at 8 ~ a.tanlu, 01&gt;
tobR ~,.UIIdet llli dlnoctiaa d 1m.

, . _ , &lt;lrW . . . . . . . . the tadb-"-..., d the U~Oiater-tba
ea-e.tiw .... PafouaiDa Aria
. Tbe .....- will am • ,-... CJD
tbe ......... d ., .. Q MqiiiiiMicaad
wDT fe8iUie worD ., ~ .Aa.i-

=. ~'U':~':!t!'f:

Jlns" by Wallinlford ~. Jn wblc:b
each violin llilbiiiM a Y8E in the Center'• .......... to lie followed by

"''11nmody I &amp;1111 II" by AmaD Copbmd. "V.. au-~ by GeorJe
Crumb &amp;1111 Stlavinalry'a "L'l&amp;toire
clu Soldat" will CXIIIIPlete the ............
Ticbla !MY be CJblaiDed by C)QJI-

-wam-

u.:

~W~t ':i':v..

viable wortena. lelationabip with the
majority d the faculty members in
our department ud are able to rationally diacuM aDd ..-.he our problems before they pow to srievaDce
proportiona. As eYidenced by the
pie!ance that the graduate· students
m French won laat year, the atmosphere of faculty-iltudent· cooperation
which we enjoy does not exiat in that
departmenl We have inveated a lot
of time and effort in eatablishing the
apirit of cooperation which l""' now
have. We oertainly are opposed to any
m o v e. administrative or otherwise,
which would put that apirit of oooperationJn •jeopardy."
·,
·
The GSA endorsed a .resolution at
its Monday .~t;ll\g o]&gt;W6ing me~
and expressmg support for graduate
students in both departments.
After meeting Tuesday with under- duates from Spanish,' Italian . and
f.':rtuguese, SA J&gt;resident Dandes sent
a letter to Provost Sullivan expressing
''unequivocal undergraduate opposition"' to any such move.

...

An intervkw wfth Provost ' Sullivon
of Arts and Letters will appear in
nezt week's Reporter.

Campus United Way

Reaches $32,196
Eight hundred ·and forty-nine University employees bad pledged $32,196
in the Campus United Way Drive as
of. October 17.
The gift total was 26.8 per cent of
the overall University goal of $120,000.
1be top division to date in terms of
the pen:entage of goal pledged is the
U
Foundation/ Alumni Association
WJth 84 per cenl
1be Ollice of the Vice President for
Facilities Planning bas raised 77.7
per cent of its goal and the Nuclear
Science Facility, 77.2 per cent. Other
leading divisions include: University
Relations, 76.3 per cent; Graduate
School, 60.8 per cent; Educational
Sludies, 44 per cent; Office of the Vice
President for Research, 41 per cent;
the Office of the President and Executive Vice President, 38 per cent; and
University Libraries, 37 per cenL

,m.

Tattle Tape System
Tbe 3M Tattle 'TaP., Book Control
Detec:t:ion system is installed and op.
erating in. the Health Sciences Library,
the University l,ibrariee report. A special taak fon:e placed the elec:trcmiC
markers in boob and ioumals over
the smnmer. "Now that the system is
in operation,• the publication Library
New. aaya, . _ are ....., that the re.Wt will be ......, materials available
for the .-_of_ our patrons and less
of our u,ht-budpted IDOIIeY spent on
rep~"

tactlns the ticllet ollice d N or ton

,

=~~..:-~=-~
will. furt!a the work d tbe Center.

n,._,

Fast for Funds
U/8-*

_,od .., - . . , -

T . - y - - cllnlnl(

- to ~
toFund.
- -tanllhl5erviclo
In
to - to-tum thefor
~
-of-~·- aoior to the Flnl. O..SIOO I n - .
--,.......--to--... -..,, _...Ellen
t . , t h e - - F - - A I I _ _ ... _ _ to..,_
the 1orM11

order
liB . . , _

-

-je-

. . , -an

mln, _.......__ ... - · ......... - - the pnljoct, - - - -

--.a-rian._.........,. ___

......,... far._.. Injured In the EMt'o ''Yom Kippur
_
War," Mo. -jamln Aid, uplainln&amp;- the appeal far fundoJ _
._

-

.t -

to

to---

all partlclj&gt;atlna40 c_, - . tonlaht .t a -o•-.~

Invitation

-·

Arms Panel Reviews Four Points
The Subcommittee of Internal Security on Selective Arming, at its
meeting of October 3, address&lt;id 'il&amp;elf
to four points conceriting its SU(!8'ested
guidelines on selective arrnmg of
Campus Security 'personnel beforl!
forwarding a final draft of ~ guidelines to P,residebt Robert' L. ' Ketter
I see Reporter, October 11, for further
information on the guidelines situation).
'lbe four were:
1. As a result of the Open Hearing,
September 25, the committee discussed IL G. of the recommendation
guidelines t Reporter, September 20)
. and agreed to amend that section as
follows : ''We recommend that two
persons on each shift be armed when
qualified , We recognize thai' the
growth in population of the North
Campus may require nwdification of
this recommendatio~ in future.u
2. The contractual agreement the
Secu'nty Office has to provide uniforms
may pose problems in clothing the
armed pen;onneJ in " plain clothes"

Court Dedication
Set for Monday
Dedication of the Carlos C. Alden
Moot Court Room of the John Lord
O'Brian Law and Jurisprudence Building on the Amherst Campus will be
held at 3 p.m., Monday, OCtober 22, in
the Sears Law Library.
Princip&amp;J spoker will be local attorney Frank Raichle.' Executive Vice
President Albert Somit an-'1 T fiW and
Jurisprudence Provost Richard D .
Schwartz will also be on the program.
On the same date, the Alden Moot
Court Room will be the scene of bearings by the Appellate Division, Fourth
Department, of the State of New
York, beginning at 10 a.m.
The court room facility is named
for a former dean of the Law School
wbo served from 1904-1936.
All members of the local bar and
local judges are invited to attend the
dedication 'll'f'!IDOOY·
EOI' CHU:KS
The 40 per cent EOP chocko will be issued
on November 8 and 9 .t the Black student UniOn, 335 Norton, from 9 a.m. to
nOon and 1 p.m. to 4 ·p.m. Stud;,ents must
allow proof of "''iitntion for .t least 12
hour&amp;, and be able to identify themsalwo

(otudefrt ID card).

·

t IT. E.) . 1be committee decided to
leave their recommendation as is until
final negotiationa are made.~' '
3. Firearms Regulation .H regarding the Security Review Bollld 'Was
.f'!vjewed, -discussed ....,d amended 1o
read : ''The Security Review Board
will, after ,..,..,gnitiori of the )JOIIBible
prior need of criminal courts to bear
evidence, review the case with the aid
of volunwily offered or oolicikd testimony from witne8ses to the event,
and will recommend to the President
appropiiate action with respect to the
officer involved in the incidenl
4. The committee decided that the
PWC Bulletin Carticle describing the
type of weapons and cartridges being
recommended for Bnning) Bbould be

:b.::=..~~ ~~f~!!r.
ing guideline proposals.

U/B Elects Top
Ranking irt Sports
-~I ~~:f; ~.!;a::.::,d0~i.!:

tor of athletica, bas 'announced that
the Bulls have el_ected Division One
status in the recent membership poll
of the National Collegiate Athletic
Association.
U/ B competes in 12 men's intercollegiate sporta administered by the
NCAA - baseball, ba8ketball, crew,
c:rot!IHX&gt;untry, fenc;ing, goU, ice hockey, soccer, swjmming, tennis,' traclt
and field, and wreatling.
The Bulls atarted participating in·
the larger university division of the
NCAA in 1962 when varsity football
was granted "major" atatus by that
national body.
The NCAA anticipates a tbre&amp;-dlvision clll88ification with a cbamJ?ion·
ship playoft structure for each diVJaion
starting thia fall. Fencing. hockey and
traclt and field will not be affected by
the new three division framework, but
will remain in one open diviaion.
"Our coeching ataff and faculty
committee for athletics voted oveJ'wbelminaiY for major or. division one
atatus," said Fritz. "I concurred with
thia ft!IIUit, based tipon our recent efforts to acbeduJe competition againat
the- best opponenta available within
geographical feaaibility.
"For the Dast. three years we have
qualified indivldnali and/or teama for
NCAA major cbampionahipa In beaeball, fencing, golf/'~ and CI'OIIIIcountry; and I - can cantinue to_compete in thia ID8JUWr."

Tan ye&amp;lll . . . .
II*&gt; .....
director of the Bullll!o l'hilhamMmic,
. and ~.Allan 8app II*&gt; cbalrman ol the UIB MuaiC-~t,
conceiWJd the idea that a - - abouJd
be eatablisbed in the United Btatea
which would Jive Y11UJ11 ~
muaiciana ezperieace In music
and the can~ performinl arta.
Durina the mterwning yean, the
Center at U/8 bas I:Jroulbt In nme
than 76 artlata from all OYer tbe ......td
as C..tiV8 ~tes who participate
in such activiliea as -the Eveninp for
· New Music CDDCett series, bald at the
Albright-Knox. and tour concerts in
Carnegie Hall and throuabout the
eastern U.S. Individual- and peup
, concerta by Creative Asaoclate mliinbera take p I a c e at the Uni-.ity
·tbrougbout lhe.year.
A sample oL prilsent and
Creiltive ,Asaoclatea• Includes George
Crumb. DOn Blli8', V.inko Globolair·
• Terry •Rney, 'F.raderlc'RiMoald. p,.~
'I'lldor and PauJ&lt;Zulia6lkY. Til¥·~
10ey of.•.tbe -Cen~e~~ tias'Ini:ludeil' ever
300~ by' .dODtemporllfy COIIlPOIIetil
of all -stylistic. penruaaion&amp; . '" ·- 1be Center lB . DOW· ~ IIY·
FOSB and Lejaren Hiller, with ·com- poser .Morton Feldman serving 8s ad~io~ ReMe Levine as managing

.rormer

Hodge Na.m ed Head
Of Geology Unit
Dr. Dennis s. Hodge, 8880Ciate profe&amp;IIOr, Department of Geol~ Sci:
-ences, bas been named chairman of
that department for a term not to
extend- beyond AllgiiBt 31, 1974.
.
By that time, President Robert L.
Ketter said in appointing Hodae, the
conclusion of a ~ operation
by the Search Committee for the
Chairmanship of the Department . is

~odge,

wbo baa just returned
from aabbatical at Cambridge Univeraity, joined the U/B faculty In 1966
aa an aaaistant prof...,r. He bolda
the Ph.D. and M .S. from the University of Wyoming and the B.S. from
Beloit College.
.
He is a member of Signia Xi the
Geoi&lt;&gt;Jical
of America,' the
Mlnerillogical Society of America and
the American Geopliyaieal Union.

Societr

Israel Committee
An Ad Hoc Faculty Committee for
Iarael bas sent a letter to4tolleques
urging participation In campus funo.
lions in BUpport of Israel aDd ••"'-w •
financial baCking.
•
-;Cbecb for . the "Israel Eineraenc:Y
Fund" will be receiWJd at the Hiii8I
Foundation, 40 Capen Bl\ld~ Buffalq,
·
14214, the letter fiiiYB.
Member&amp; of the committee BiJinina
the letter are Robert SamiJel'a. Politfcal science; Marvin zm.n.m8n; phil.
osopby; Philipp F. Veit, GermaiUc •
and Slavic; Nathan Back, biocbemical

~~~~oJ..!~Iha~i1.t=;

rvmg H. Shames, ~ ....
ence; Myles Slatin, Enaiiab; JUrold
L Sepl, biology; Leon E . Falhi,
physiology; J..ep~&gt; M. Marr1ct, mi·
=lo~":!ia.and Micbllei u.· 811.....

�OoM6or ... ,,,

~pt

Grants
(CotttillaetlJr- -

Top $2 ·Million

hiP- education Diuat _.., lor tbe

l, ..,_ I)

' in~

~~-~~~-=-~
pook Nalblai'T~ty. Aim,~

aDd c:reatlwly elite. ••.
"'1"- .._.,. are not unique."
.US. - "Yet tbey do NQIIire
ct.,.. or -um.ed c:Mnp in b!Pedumtioo. 1W&gt; ,_work to GPPC*

· r JC.-

certain that both our 11111-.118 will
be euriel!ed by tbe pcalbiUIIM wbidl
are ..... c:reallad m IIUCib ..
fac:ulty ~ lllld coapemliwe reMarcb. 'l1le CJPPQriUDitial are ezcit-

tbia ~ Pint, educatioa .. tladitloo bouJ¥1. not ju8t in ., ita
but iD the- ., ita
luDcliOIIIIII- Secaod, education il a
uou..
siiBpa wbidl called for
involw de-&lt;!mpbasizlng the credentialJarae orpnizatiob--im ~- It
bas been a popular lllld -.fawred Inlng function Dr hI 1he-r education.
dustry in .....,. all counlrieL As
breaking the 'loc:k...tep' pattern ol. educatiCIII, recognizina tbe value of DOllsuch. it CDIIIIIitutes a strong veated
interest which can ezert tremobdoua
formal education. restoring poeral education to a place of promineDoe. and - active or · paasive p.......,.... to ralist
change."
developing re~ PJ'OiflliDS for
tboae wboae learning 18 no longer eco'And this; Ketter contended. mnomically vi a b I e. Simultaneously,
not be the
in the future.
(IIUIIC!III!II!

- U..."

c:amo-. .._. _ f.ducatlan

'l1le lntematioaBI Ed~ Act,
approved by ~
no"t fund~ Ketten11Ud. "'lst fol1b lor the finrt
time a nalioaal U.S. commitment expliciUy directed -.rd the enduring
of int.emational education ...
as '! ""!ted and proper giJ!Il of national

.,..t

'*"'

pobcy.
. .
Although the U.S. today is focusing •
increasing attention .on-domestic concerns, Ketter oaid be d.- not perceive a reaWakened ieolationism.
"Instead, 1- think that what we are witnesoing · is the first development
of a tnJe international cooperation,
the bllginning of an acknowledgement
of the limitations of ideologies and
aftinnation of reBson.. If this is the
case, then it represents a greater step
outward rather than inward. Therefore, the time may be appropriate philcieopbicl\UY, foi the government. to reconsider ilie Int.emational Education
Act. A funding commitment would
- indicate clearly the new direction in
which we are loeaded.."
In the paper OD "Higher Education
and ManP.OWer ~urces." Ketter
deslt wj_th two ·~ concerns of
bigbei education Which are emphasized varYmclY in ililrenint countries"
-tbe production of needed, sltilled
worbm and the process of civilizing
people.
In the U .1!. and such countries as
A~ Britain, Canada, Japan and
s-~en,· Ketter oaid, the view of higher edlicat;on as economically beneficial-both peraonally and nationally
-bas led to and moie demand;
~ apansion of faciliti
and
rismg costa to the student or"% the
gowemment or to both. In the U.S. last
y_ear, be noted, $96.7 billiod was spent
liD elblcat:illn..($35.2 billioo on bigber
educatioo) and "education now may
be ooasidered the natioo's bnjest en~.. In the past 20 years, be
pomted out, educational expenditures
have riaen about three times as fast
as gross national product.

--Pianni. -

Weekly Communique--====~::::===-:

--s.

(Contitwed from
col. 4)__,
dwtrial Engineering and the U/ B otu-·
dent chapter, AilE.
fOSTU: COUOQUU.JM•

Topic to be announced, Dr. G. Bums.
University of Toronto, 4 Acheson, 4 p.m.
Coffee in 50 Acheson at 3:45 p.m.
CHEMICAl. ENGINH:IING RMIN.U#

KiMtic.a in Complex Reaction Sy•tetm,
Pror. M. Feinberg, Department of Cbem ~

it;al Engineering, University
te r, 104 Parker, 4 p .m.

Job qpenings

Th , .Aaim.ilatinll, Harmony: The Fit ·
ure of Ni.etz.Jche in Artawl, Carol Jacobe,

Z:::.nr!.o~:OLe:=h!!!m~~fibn.
4

Olllce indicates that the following faculty and 0011teadlina J&gt;I'O(eoaiooal . stall poaitions are open at State University at
Bo6Jo:
~

IIIWiily ~

t.

in Com.

lnter~wing, a seminar on how to be
interviewed aucceufully, 233 Norton,
p.m.
Pre a-ented by the De~t of
Speec:b-eom.munication and the University Placement and Career Guidance Office. Studenta from all diociplineo are
invited to attend.

•-6

\

H IUB SUDE PUSEHTADON/SUPPH'

-·

~h~ ~...:::·;tor=~"::~~:

s::lfaJo State Univenlity College, Hillel
HoWIO, 40 Capen Blvd., 6 : 30 p.m.

.,. (Nyby, . 1951)
·-, 7 p.m. lnThe Thing
rxuioro, of 1M Body Snotchen (Siegel,
1956) ; 9 p.m. Both filmo will be shown
in 140 Capen. No admission charge.
CONCEIT•

Music from Iran. an ensemble .of musicians, Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Admission charge.
Tbe ensemble performa on authentic
instruments of their nation includ.ing the
118Jltour (dulcimer), the tar (a fretted
lute), the kamancbe (a bowed fiddle).
and the zarb (a drum). Also featured in
the program is Khatereh Parveneh.
Iran's most noted singer of traditional

muaic.
_
Pre&amp;ented by the Department of Music
in conjunction with the Office of Cultural
Affain.
'UIUC LICTUI£•

Women and the Law, Jean Westwood,
former chairman. Democlatic National
Committee, Job,p Lord O'Brian Hall,
Moot Court ROom. North Campus, 8
p.m.
p......,ted by the Student Association
Speakers' Bureau.

The c,.;.,., of Mo,..i•ur

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS INTRYIIWS

Throuchout the ~emester, on-campua
interviews will be conducted for atudenta
in~reoted Ui attending graduate ocboolo
or oblaininc employmenL Further iDfoJ"'D8tion and appointment&amp; for interviews can be a.rranged through the UDivenlity Placement and Career Guidance

~.!"'~:;.; 1':~~~11=

THURSDAY-18: Price Waterbouoo
-CPA.
FRIDAY-19: Price Waterbo..CPA; National Steel Corp.
TUESDAY-28: Ernst&amp;Ernst.-CPA;
_r~tc!&gt;eU. &amp; Co.-CPA;
WEDNESDAY-~rnst &amp; Emat.-

§;:fd.r=

C~%'t':t~25~~.;,.Inli......,

Hospital; U.S . General AcoountiJ&gt;c Of-

1""6.8~~r~:~-~-~
N&lt;ITICES

Lona• (Ren-

oir), 231 Norton, 8:15p.m. No admission
charge.
.

THURSDAY- 25
CONTINUING DENTAl. EDUCATION#

Th• Auxilianl• Role iA R
nizin1
Oral Abroormalitie1, p,_,ted
the
faculty of the U/B Dental Scboolo Department of Oral MediciDe, Capon Hall,

orogl'

9 a.m.-5 p.m.
LKII*'

irTP

.

Applicctioru of 1r,..venibk Thumodynamico iA Biolofy, Dr. Daphne Hare,
auociate prof-.r of mediciDe at U/B,

C...,....lor: (part-time), Minority Student Alfairs.
AdDUor (part-time), Minority Student Alfairs,

For llddltlanal informatioo cxmceming tbl!ae jobs and for details ol.
NTP apealnp liuouPout the State Uni1ll!l'llity system. OOIIIIU!t bUlletin
"-rda at a- locatiooa:
l. N PadJity ~ D152 and D153; 2. Ridae La. Building
41,36. --.xi to mletl!rla; 3. Ridp La, Building 4230, in corridor to
0-1; 4. &amp;ahh 8ciomcos Building, in corridor oppoaite HS 131; 5. Caia&gt;
. Hall. iD the cOrridor ~ Room 141 and the tabby; 6. Loc:ltwood.
IIOUDd . _ iD corridor to vending .....:m.-; 7. lUyea Hall, iD
maiD ~ lo,et, fiOID Public Iilformation Olllce; 8. ~­
Hall. iD CDiridor ~ Roome 112 lllld 113; 9. Parloer EnrD-inl.
in corridor to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, Istlftclor, HousiJig Ollce
-...; lL 11107 ~ l'enallnel Department; 12. ' N - "UIIiaD,
na-&gt;. 06:e, BaGm 225; lll. Diilfeadorf "Hall. to corridor - to

.

P~

....,.....

F~

Aaoiatant ·Full Prof011110r, Speech .Comtnl.Uiicalion.
Aaaimnt PrOt-.r, Speech Comtnl.Uiicalion.
Inarudor, Phy.u:al TMrrlpy.
.
- ~t ~. Phjla;col Education.
~ or Aaaociate Profi!IIIIOr, School of Soci4l Poliey and Com-

a- 108.

~~nted

by the
J.MI.nttive Literature.

FILM•

J&gt;amxiDel

ol Roches.

NIETUCHE AND THE UTDAI.Y TEXT*

Becauae of this tremendous ~
in the U.S. and other countries, I.e
.oaid, "a new or renewed interest bas
been ""!'r:-...1 in national academic
planning," particularly in light of a
woraening economy in wbidl unemployment and projected unemployment haw become factoni in the lives
of many graduates.
"'The result of these developments
has been the realization--bowewr resisted-that bigber education in the
United States must take manpower
supply and demand into greater con'

'lbe

EXHIBITS

.

~~ \:U;.

matical ScieDce.

I

Collep ol Matb&amp;•

HIUB. ClASS'

. H.!"!:,

~= o/u!1':7'::-·

Hillel

~~ci=~~.:..
i
Brauman, Stanford Uniwnity, 822 Acb-

eeon, 8 p.m.

=

ve~r..!..4: =-~~ of the ~
by the U/B FOUDdatio.D
by the 08ioe ol the Vice· P.-ident for
with' the' aid ol the

t::::

=-~

..........::;;··

~.,_~tre.'~~=: .

cue for

aa-.

Admiaoioo dwp.

CCiiiMuloQu£ CD'\' ~
For_...•• --~ pleasure,

WEEICLT

. . lllca ID publlcla .U takl .. place
oa campua. To Information, contact
Nancy c.nlaraiH, ut. 2228.

�~

IOCCB"

U/B •.._ 8t.

4 p.m.

v....._..- .

•--caro~--•
~of
Bid_p.t.oa.
Rm. 10, 7 p.m.

_ __
.....

-._ - - -. -

for_ ovents challlntr odmlsslon aon be

••Open

•ap.n to , . -

•a,..

pu-...

•t -t he

to rMmbers of the Uldwnlty
"""
to - NMey- c.nsu.JII,
• .....,.._
- for llotlnp.
In the subject -"
c:oo.831·. . .
WOMIN'S VOti.EYIALL•

THURSDAY -18

U/B vs. D'Youville, Clark HaU, 7 p.m.

HILLB. SlMCHAT TOIAH CELH&amp;ATtoN•

C~IOO DBnAL IIDUCA1»N.

Including a Torah proceosion, liinging,

Pmodontal IMtrumentation /or the
Dental Hygimiat, Dr. Sebutian Ciancio,

dancing and refreshments, Hillel House(
40, Capen BIYd, 8 p.m.

IJ!rii&gt;-

AUon GUW&gt;e111. author of the Howl. Fillmore -Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
Ad'I!*ion chal'l(e.

~~tics,~~~~..=
N::::Cnl, usiamnt prol-r of
~~
UIB.

=.robioloc:,'

• t:h.

CtrAIAD HOUSI SHYICUt

peil

•

MAnll ClASS•

With pianist Sidney Fenter, 101
10 a.m. ~
11C11111•

Baitd.

d)~&amp;:fl:'i:B;:/o,~~n&amp;.~~hii:!.

auociate profe..or of medicine at U /8,
malia~~

rOnrt

fUTIIrAL•

WlfO HIGHUGHJ5

Following with a meal, Cbabed Houoe,
3292 Main St., 10 a.m.

Tr;"..:..,~.;{~;'-the

UUAI

CoUege of Mathe-

·Ford HaH Forum, Sir Beman! Lovell,
''Man, His Univerae, and His Environmen-t." 9 p.m.
UUAI FILM••

..

A -Senu 'of Loa (Ophula, 1972), Con£erence 1'bentre. Norton. cbeclr.: ahowcaae
for times. AdJniuion chulo.
Another lllOYing d~nt from an extraordinary filmmaker. this is the story
o£ civil strife in noitbem Ireland. A New

York Film, F:estival

SciOilte.

sel~on.

CAC FRM*

FRIDAY _::_ 19

MUSIC LECTUH/DEMONsnATION·

By pianist Sidney Footer, 101 Baird,
2 p.m. -

Butch CCJBIJidy and the SundDACt Kid

CHAU.D HOUSE SEIVICES•

i'!~l.-.i!:O ti~!':.";.~' 4.fs :~'

45

p.m.

FoUowing with Hako/os, C h a b a d
Howse, 3292 Main ~L. 10 a.m.

UUAI filM**

by French filmmaker Ag,_ Vania, loiO Capon, 3 p.IIL
Sponoo.-1 by the Departments of English and F)'ench, the Center for Media
~&amp;ft~oru~:!.!r~;r~uee, and

IIOMmtY suUN.U#

Norton, check sbowcaoe for timeo. Ad:

MICHANtcALENGIHIIIING COLlOQUIUM #

DiviSion, Department of Computer Science.
·

sci&amp;NING/DISCUSSION•

£ion'•

.

•

Lo~~

s:O':.!~ 'bn!~dF:;.~j=~~~~ Mo~
0

endorf, Western, )nectric Research Center, 142 Parker, 3:30 p.m. •
ANtHIOPOLOOY

cOu.ooutuM•

.

Emic- Etic- Typo/of,, W a r d Goodm~~~78~~ :=-ylvania, 4242
1'lle diacuuion wiU (OCUli on Chapter 4
of GoodeDDQih's Dacription and CompariM&gt;n in Cidturol Anlhropology.
a.ASIICS 11C11111• •

From Claaicol to ·ChrUtimt Latin Pi&gt;etry-Prudentiu ond the· Tram/ormation o/ Gonra, Dr. Walther Ludwig,
_prof- of daaico and Chairman, Department, of Cluoico, Columbia Univerlli~, 290 Hay•, 4 p.m.

sible~-:o~~:Ju~~e~

s~~~dp=~~Ufk ~~~~rif:bo~~

tory, 4230 Ridge Lea, Rm. A-49, 11:30
a.rn.-12 :30 p.m. and 2-3 p.m. ~

Sponsor-' by the Statistical Science

W&amp;fO HIGHUGKfS

•

Ten Y ear11 of lnnouo.tion : A Creati:ve
Auociat.u Jfei.TWJH!CI-ive. Produced by
Le! Solomon in cooperation With Renee

Levine. The U/ B Percussion Ensemble,

with J an Williams. director, performs
works by _Ter-ry Riley, 1 p.m.
GOVUNMI:NT CAlER DAY•

The University Placement and Career
Guidance Office will spoJiaor a Government Career Day, 231-234 Norton, 1:30-.
4:30p.m.
Representative&amp; from Federal, State,
county and city agencies will be available to discuss career opportunities in
government work. Student. from all disciplines are ·invited to -attend.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTIY SEMINAl#

ruJ:,taJjv::S;e~f ~~:eJ::: ~~tJ!

and by the courtesy of Dr. D;R. Sbackleton 'Bailey, bolder of the U/B .Baymond
Chair of pas,.;co. ·
INGMalHO SCIINCI JIMIHAI•
Tho Mud Oceon CiN:ulation Model,
Dr. George F. Carrier, Gordon ' McKay

PHILOSOPHY LECTURE•

p.m. Coffee in 107 Parker at 3:30 p.m.

ENGINEIIING SCIENCE SIMtN.U* '

~~tee:!. N:!:i~ 1:,,::;:~

-

PHYSICS

uen.-•

An ExperUM.ntol Study ofthe-8u'[;a.Ce·

~[{f~~~~.,"~· :.:n~rre::
menb in 112 Hocbatetter'at 3: 30 p.m.

IUICAJ 'TOIAtl CILEIIAJIDN•

Free reaeohmonb, Cbabed Houoe, 3292
Main St., 6:30 p.m.

-·

IOUIIVAID MAlL PilfoaMANCE•

_

.,.!:'~..n.u~~=

Noteboolt (Menken), Water &amp;r~
.
(WielaDd), W,.,.,_, Roell (Mobl), aDd
Wo/dftl. ReelS (Kobo) , 6 Am-on, 7
p.m. .No8llmloolaaC!barp.
•

Sciences Bldg., 2 p.m.

.

Sc~:!:~~~("\/~~P~!~es~ ~o~

Institute of Technology, 4244 Ridge Lea,
Rm. 14, 3:30 p.m.
The DynomicB of Taunomill, Dr. George
F. earner. Gordon McKay Profeuor or
M~

~~~.

No~w-~m

University, 104 Parker, 4 p.m. Oltree in
l07 Parker at 3:30 ·p.m.

SHAIIOS SUY.JCU•

'

Chabacl Houoe, 3292 Main St., 6 p.m.
.aoULIVAID MALL CONCBr

U/8 Symphoroy Band, Boule:vanl Mall,

Amhei'!Jt, 7 p.m. .
CAC FIUI*

ButCh Caaidy and tho Sruultuace Kid
(Rill), 140 Capen, 7:46 and 9:46 p.m.
- Admiooion ·tickelo ""' 76 ceniL
- ·
. Paul N........, Rollert Rearord ...d
Katherine n- opond much of their limo
avoidiJI&amp; a -

·

- · • •· ,

Felli.iti

;-

Roma , Conference Tbeatte

mission cba!'4e:

·

Part autobiOgraphy, fantasy and realFOIJ.ini treats • w to brothela, Gore

ity,

VidBl, and a Papal fashion ab,ow.
UUAI COfftiHOUSI*

Fealuriog Erie Juotin Kaz and Debby
A Bh, lot ftoor aofeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.
Adniisaion .cbarp.

SUNDAY-21
WUO H'IGHLIGHTS

4

World o/ Opere, wifll David Bloom.
W. A. Mozart: Bastien und Bastieftne,
3 p.m.

. WEDNESDAY_:_ 24

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>CIIJI1CIDSl~ol
the
~
are
.,.

the
ilayB,

.......... u-ly . . . .

YDIII' aDIJWtflr,,. yaa ..a
outfor-lliulbr-

"''m -

~

-

clalminl tllet it111l't s--

Bible to do -

~

-m

tllet mble e-........m «wouldn't
..... ~

on lbii matter
ougb

llll't Pliiiil

-r

ent
he ellllllana. "Bat I am
sayinJ that our look bM a-; latoi&gt;sive and that our t.liaaa
reGec:t the judgll8lt of ......... .af
- l e who ...... studied the IIIGblaB
seriouslY" aliif at 111111111 IBDaCb- The

~=~-t"":u:::..~

We feel quite tiimply that - amst
have tbe capability of _..m, to
the presence of armed iDdlviduals on
campus and that we do our I,.,..t
. to reduce the JKIIIIil!illty of aeddeDt
·within such a.~- Tbeae _liave
been our two guidina principles. Tech- .
nology may develop other al
effectively dealing wltb tbe problem.
Such tecl\noJogy DlBl already be in
existence. But in terms of our ability
to understand existing teclmo.loi!Y and
our ability. to understand the situation
guidelines to be." But be is careful to
offer no absolute guarantees: " We ·- on this campus, we judge our prodon't expect even this tb be 100 per
posals to be the best of unpleasant
cent effective; no one can guarantee
alternatives.
tbaL"
" - - ta • SpecHic ~
"We are not ma-king proposals
What we're proposing isn't revelageared towBrd-effecling a further, gention, be emphasizes. "But our proeral reduction in tbe campus crime
possls are .the result of serious study."
rate;" Hull emphasizes. "Nor are we
Calls for 'further research priOJ'"' to
final decision, being voiced b! some of
( Continued on pafe 6_, coL 1) -

VOL 5 - NO. 6

rary Staffing Que5tTo~ed

. concems about recel!t changes and

a po&amp;llible decline in the level of servios at the l!jdge Lea Library were
voiced this wee k by Dr. -Lowell
.:-.Scboenfeld, professor 'Of .mathematics
and former cbainnan of the ·Faculty
Senate~ Committee ·on Library and
Information Resources. Tbe Libraries
.replied tbat service is not bem,_downgrsded.
'
_ Accoidinll .t o Schoenfeld, insullici.ent
stalling is the cause of several problems at tbe soci8l scienoes and mathematics .Jilim!y- at rud e Lea.
"Tbe RidJe Lea ~;~'! bas an insullici ' of studenti;(p," claimed
a reflection .of
the !'""""" drying-ui&gt; of work-study

~~\ a~t!Y

~a .mOilt, the Library's clerical
staff must help man the circulstion
desk, waiting on customers, and certain c:lericaJ. activities are not beinl
done. For eJ:SIIlple, curient journals
are not beiDa ~ and put out
on. the tables, he said. ''For us in
mathematics, this means the current
literature is not available."
Schoenfeld alao noted that the actinl Rid&amp;e Lea librarian left the University several weeks ago: "The decision
made_pot to replaoe -hiin
witb a ~ librarian," said
~ci, Who said he was informed
of that decision by Libraries DiJector
· Eldred Smitb. Currently,- the matbematiciap· said, an .SG-7 derk is in
charRe of the Rid&amp;e Lea operation.
Sd&gt;oenfeld' pointed out tbat the Library lost the services of anotber pro-

bas.._,

=~~~"':'...:.~

and . half to other Ridae Lea library
activities trsnafened to Loc:Poocl
'Ibat transfer was-felt eapeciaUy bud
by thoee in matbeaiatics, be indicated.
"''be Library baa lost two professionali and gained ooe addilianal.
clerk,.. 8cboeilfeld IIUIIIiDed -up._ . : .,
· _''Ifa stnnae tbat Uba LlbmrieaJ
tblillt lbej 08D .,......"' Ridae Lea

-.I

AIIIIIVEIIIAIIY

Toclay'o lllpaotor - - an

insert -

oillhtCoot

.. the· 50111 -An--

o11 the u~. Dtvtojon of
tillulnl £duc8tlon.
1&amp;1)1

witbout a. professio;w ~" the
professor said. "This ls n ot a Hsiriman-type opersiion, mostly reserve.
. It's a small, functioning library witb
a range of services, including processing of some 600 current joumals."
Schoenfeld also eiJ&gt;resaed concern
about t b e future of the reference
service at Ridge Lea. This is currently
manned by a library intern for approximately 24 hours a week, be said.
"Sbe'U be graduating from the' Library School in December and we've
hesni tbat no decision bas yet been
mad4. as to whether she'll be replaa!d,"
be .said.
.
Queried about the Ridge Lea situation Libraries Director Eldred Smitb
told' the Reporter tbat the library
tbere is beinJ l'IHirganized but tbat
service was not being down-graded in

any way.
.
. Tbe decision .not to "'I'lace the former acting librarian WJtb a profes-

sional librarian was made, Smitb said,

''because we believe management of
reserve circulstion and stocli-mainterian..; are more ~ppropristely bandied by a qualified, ezperienced su-

·,

-

pervisory person. ·'Jbat's precisely who
'We have . plaa!d there," Smitb said,
adding that "so far, abe's do~ an ezceDent job."
.
·
Mr. Smitb said tbat before her current assignli&gt;ent, the appointee bad
very successfully managed evening circulstion services in Lockwood
In regard to tbe shortage of student
~lp, Smitb sai!i that probl"'!'" outmde the rontrol of the Libraries bad
prevented it from retsininl its full
quo~ of work:StudY students.. The Libranes does mteud to pJOVJde adequate student staffinl at Ridie ·Lea,
even if it must find otber dollars for
this purpose, Smitb said.
Functions of clerical staff were being
upgraded to include clrculation and
otber routine library activities, Smitb
- said, "in an effort to rnske the beSt use
we can of our
"""!"'f""" _
~ to . tbe mathematics librarian,
SIDltb said 'tbat '1be penon bad 'bee!&gt;
~erred-to Lockwood but the pcl81tion bad noL
''We are now oonducting a sean:h
for a qualified mathematics h"brsrian
(Continrud on pGIIe 7. coL 2)

human

Dr.-Preston Named Director of
Realigned Policy Studies Cen(er
Dr. Lee E. Pres~ chairman, De• partment of Environmental Analysis
and Policy, $chool of Mansgemept,
baa been .named director· of the University's Policy Studies Center by
President Robert L Ketter for a .tbreeyear term eztendinl tbrouih August
31, 1976. -

i~ton~';'
=~wit
include:
•
Overall cfuection of courses of ·
detlree !1'Qilirelnents for students currently emolled in tbe eUstinl doctoral _...., in Policy &amp;ieooea;
• P~. _,..tion and performance evaluation of new educatiooal,
_,m, llDd nilated ~ de•

study and

velopment programs contributing to
the objectives of the Center as a multidisciplinary endeavor lodged within
tbe School of Management;
:
• Expenditure of assigned l.lniverSee Viewpoints page tor further infonna·
tion on the Policy Stud ies center.

sity fesouroes and any ezisting grant
funds as appropriate to efficient c:onduct of Center activities; and
• Development of external funding .
sources for support of instructioaal
and """""""' programs of the Center.
. Preston will repOrt ~trstive!Y
to tbe dean of the ~1 . of ManagemenL
. .

�The 'Maids'? .

Speech Job Prosp~ Better tha~. Some'

=

The Mad of the natioaal s - h
CommuDication Aseociatlon (SCA),

the.::::::".,. ~=8 ~

= :.,

:"'the DllliOWini emploYmer&gt;t...
rtunitiesofthecurrenteconomy.
William Work, """"'ltive aecm'therapists." The classic "configuratary ;, . SCA, told the Reportu thst,
tion" ·of 2Q Year!!~ ~..!! siJWe dealthough f..-r jobs ani aVailable for
psrtment . witli. programs m IDea~
new graduates in speech, the comniUn·
mesa media or mterpemooal commuru-,
'lbe Univeraity will be ollicially
icatlon field bas not been bit aa bsid
cation, public address cir rbetori!'o oral
c:l....t em Monday, Octobe.L-22, and
aa many other disciJ&gt;lines.
interpretation, and the speech soences,
TbanbPving Day, N......nber 22. It
"When the gmwth pattern of the · incluiling audiology and _pathology.
will be _ , on Election Day, Novem1960s began to slow down; thera was
Over the past ten years !his umbre!Jath
- ber 6. a State boliday, with 111011t em- · immediate distress in· certain - .
.pattern bas """"' to break up, wt
pJoye. taking a compensatory day on
sudl 88 pbilceopby, English and even
theatre separating oH at many ~ovember 23, the day after__
some of the hard acience fields. The
tutions (including all the Big Ten uru•
job market for speech communication
veraitiea; aceptlowa) . Pathology and
em the fall boliday
graduates bas contracted over the last
audiology are · alao aplintering off at
ecbeduJe was ~ thiB week by
2'f.a-3 years," Work admitted, "but we
many acbools, "which may be in the
the Pelaalel Ollioe which reminded
are not hurting aa badly aa some other
offing here, I understand," Work added.
that em both October 22 and Novem- · fields."
.
. . ;
· ''Personally, I ~ perlla~ thiB
Ia 22, claasee are not acbeduled and
Work a&amp;ld thst the· Aseociation s
trend toward fractioning or fractionalol6ces abouJd be :closed.
·
..- placement service liated roughly 550
ization may have gone far enough,"
· On Election Day, however, when
openings thiB year, compared to some
said Work, wbo sees speech communiotber State ..._ are . closed, U /B - 700 vacanciea ih1ee years ago. Comcati&lt;in's marriage. of humanistic and
claasee are in MEion eo campua ol6ces
peting for t.hiJ! aomewha~ 8JIII!ller num-'
scientific insights aa a major historic
will be open. .
her of profe&amp;Slonal openmp 18 a aomestrength.
The ~ ~ ~ving ia not
~t larger ppol of gradua~. ~~
Along with these oti&gt;er · changes,
an alllciaf boliday, but 18 a day on
68 and '71 the number of individuala - speech communication _is undergoing
wbicb no claasee are scheduled and
receiving advanced degrees in speech
·a
asive sliift in empbasia, Woti
for atudeats becomes part of the loog · communication jumped from 2618 to 1
be~ The Speech Communication
'lbanJaociving ......Jtend. Since ol6ces - 4601 . for thoee earning master'a deASsociation waa founded in 1914 when
cannot be clcfaed em auch a . greea, and &amp;om 360 to 559 for~
17 peraonswithintheNationaiCouncil
ooa-boliday, ezcept by the . Governor,
awarded doctorates. Although strictly
of Teachers of Engliab broke away
Personnel aplained, the Univenity
comparable date '!" IIIQ.l8 recent grad·
from the parent asaociation because,will be "ollicially" 'open em thst date.
uates was not available, Dr. Work aaid
in their view it paid too .little attenHowever since it will be open em Electhst, acCording to the Aaaociatlon's
tion to apoJtei, Jan¥""-ge he reminded.
ticm
and all employ- wbo work
1973-74 · directory of graduate proUntil recently, an mtere:.t in oral comem thst day are entitled to a 00111""'!·
granJS, more than 13,000 Kf114uate stumunication has been the common point
aatory day, "that day ~ be Fridents are currenUy enrolled in aJn;&gt;oat
around whiCh· the disparate elements
day, November 23.
300 ~ua~ speech programs·naticmthst made up a speech department
"Paat--- indicates ths~ ~is
all~, mcluding 2~ students undertraditionally rallied. But . today, he
method for haDdling the 'I'hanbgivmg
taking doctoral. ~
said, a "new synthesis" ' emp~
weeJrsnd will be satisfactory to almost
.[EDITOR's N&lt;n:E: S"!"" .1969 U I B h4o
hu111an communication, regardless of
all our operations," Peraonnel said.
~ 17 Ph.D.'•
."P"""f''"
the. mode, bas emerged. Aa a reault,
u:ctu&gt;n (a peak nwnl11!r of B 111 '71- 72,
persons in the' speech communication
4
/at Y=. "ffil one thU yt!QT). AU
fitld are lindinJ .new. "bedfellows"
. ~owul prof~ Plo&lt;:elnenf, accordamong aociai &amp;CJentiats and, -at the
A $2,500 Student Aseociatlon United
IIIII to ChtJirman Arthur Smith.]
same time, renewing 81Jianoos with
Fund commitnient aa part of the Uni- .
- . . . . , on ~
their !'riiU!aJ colleagues,_ ih!'ee · intervenity - wide $120,000 .-I was anIn~- to thiB changed market,
ested m vmtten_commumcation.
IIIIIIIJDI!d
thiB - - tg,~t Aseocia"the ~tioll has nwm&gt;!MDC!ed a
rEDITOB's NOTE: T-he recent l!utory of
ticm Presideat .Jcm
moratorium on new graduate Prop81118·
ihe U I B. Depart~ruml re(lecto thU noThis pledge IIIUb the lirat auch
~ ~ iml- there ia a special retional trend. toward · decenbulization
ellort by SA; it ia alao •the fJrat """"
IJlcmal nped or unleaa ~ ~Q1l!l the drift toward the aociDl .,;,.
:"J&gt;Iedle by any U/B atudant group,
llaDilea pointed out.
~
offers something ~ for
enca. When the u~ IWR'I/OIIexamcuJh•!!.'
:
'
•
~
~.e!
~the
ized in July 1967, the thin DepartDllndeil aiao IIIIDOIIIIC8d tentative
-... .
. comm.......,_
ment of lJram4 and Sp«ch beCame
plaaa for a "Beet Blast" to _ , the
SCA
olliciai
aaid.
the
Department of SP«Ch CoiJUIIIUSiSA Dri.e, commenting thst arrangeWork pointe;d ~ thst II! -t1:r !Ill
cation wilhill the Faculty of &amp;cilll
menta ..., being lilade to piVVide free
1967,.22 ,American inatitu~ of bflb&amp;~nca and Adminiomuio11. 1Jram4,
tefl...,_ta and entertainaalt to aler leaming planned to iniUate howeoer, •{Jtii'Olettw beeome the Thelow all PI'OOIIIICII ol ah admiaoloo
clepee.grai:ating pnllftiiD -in ..-:ll
aw ,.,.,.,._ ,._, ~~ wilhill·
to llelunled. ........ for Fund ....
com'"'micalion.
-xbiit
bald
Iii
......
Am aM u~Un.]
•
~ ~ if .-led, other.
levelinlr off." be aaid. A few , _ J110·
in the
pama haW been initiated, but othen
lloppiwlw•be , -.ced
auch aa thst at UCLA, haw been
For bill part, Work aald, ~
phaaed cmt, be uplaiMd,
.
ing' thst be·III'Ob aa an lndiYidual, not

Holiday Schedule

Listed for Fall

-

~

naY

"'•p«ch

- SA Pledges $2,500 ·- _ ·

=

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

-::;:..iii7. . _.,

=tl';.:

="=

~noted ~t:!, d&amp;- concems
"Jk,;~U:
a..d c1oeoo not awltch all 11ae
=~"" ''Traditiooally ~~- way over to .the behavioral .ac:m"a ,speech de~=co le ~P
"T_b_._e_~t,"
word.be
-~: .':'_.:!..;:;,
the spectrum from lhl
peop ~
.........,.._
• ~· ·

Work
a
over lf!e. lastof =.,~

the future . rel,ationsbip -between the
arts and, SCI~ be· ~d like ~
.
At jmeent, SCA 18 laqely bigbereducation-oriented; drawiq some 85
per cent of its 7000 members from the
campuses, Work asid, He Jhinb thiB
pervaaive campua - onmtstion Bbli!lld
cbanae. Peraoually, be 'lllllllld like to
see ti&gt;e Aseociation turn a Jicm!a obare
of its attention. tp "liUI&amp; ldda in classrooms, cbildl81 in gliettoa, bi-linlual
kida," all of whom have heretofore
1a r g e 1y neglected ODIIIIIIltniCatlon
needs.
"Wbeil we could ba ~ helpful,_ in
the early years when _.micatioll
skilla are- clevelo!&gt;ina and habits are
. being f~ ~·¥e·6em J.st acme,"
IBid the CJIIic!a!, wbo Ia dJatreilalld thst
8pM)dng and liati!!linl are not _tsugbt
in the acboola aa ~ 118 their
aiater C011111111J1ica ildlla.
.
·
nit nti.;.a ~
for
· . At p,_,t. ate •
DDmlll · .
speaking and liatlming are ncm-existent, . .be ad de d, . • void SCA ~
Natioaal .will~t ol ~0:
Progreaa
_ . J'8CDIIU88
reel
. ·
•
·
. .
Free speech ·Ia another Clllltinuing
concern of SC.O., · Work &amp;aieL ODe of
!he ~tim's miambera in f!awaii
18 working on .a. ""'!"id ~tioll &lt;J!.
human ~lioo l'illhta, a ~festo deaiin&amp; With the Whole critical
issue of ~teeJna,penaus ~right
to commumcate- and the right not
to.
Aa to Watergate, the niodir ollt:ml!!·
ican communication eUU., Work said
SCA basacbedulediii!YI!I1ll 8ll8lliaaa em
the subject at its IJPClllll!ing annual
· ·ronvenlion.
. ·r
"Peraonally, ·x, t1iq1k we 0118ht tq
say something. Here we are the 'Speech
Communicaijon Aseociatlon and .. we
remain mute.''
.
commumca~ to a~

'

·

-"

Dents Name· Cuttuso .
· Dr. James Guttuao of WilliamsVille
was elected president of the U/B Dental ·Alumni Aseociaticm at laat week's
71at Annual Meeting held at the
·
·
-

Jer Hilton.

Sts~
·

He ia an-~!e.!':'- of tmdodontlca in the
of DIDiillly and
put Pl'llllidmt ol the Erie 0oaz14' Den·
tal Society. Dr, Guttu.o . - d l Dr.
Ftuk L GIUiano ol . , _ ,

�~

................ ......
;.

villed ., :that Nlowllalp in the Col... Wllald "tbn!aten DCI diminution
c£D ar..iaDal cliplity" fao: tb&lt;a with-

In~-..... coiumunity and "would

evidence of .
"tion
piUffde of the _.titule of time':::Fe.rort

111!80Ciated with Fellowobip"

for thcee
draV{D hom ttie communily-at-lanle. .
011 1M bfUIIet. Co~ B has been

iuaderpla:r .!:::'"ted u::'":b.!':·
a1foce~

~te

fUDding by

too much of ita budget lor "administrative f1mctionB IJf no value other
tban self-perpetuation" and too lilUe
for lundinf of cn!Siive PJ'011111118 and
compenaation of teaching stall. -n.e
University," -the team Cllllcluded,
"must acknowledge its commitment to

::::::::.ve..:=-..::-.. ~~

IIII1ID hope as the ftiiiiiR_,. to 1111..,. the adwat of a masler."
EecbewiJig the "cult ol
Collele g laid many of its .
•
troubles to atemal ~
ing the "advenoe and .w...ed image
of the Collegea pnerally," lack of administrative ~ and the failure
of the Univeroity to grasp the changing role of the fine arta and humanities
"in higher education on an international scale."
Tile College' spokesmen seemed to
feel thal explicit p
definition was
·
- pressin&amp;
findingthough
increased
support
for its than
functioning,
undernourished humanistic effort, wilhoul which, "the 'University will become an . oveJ:IfOWI\ lrade school al
besl, and, more likely, a contiouing
foroe in the social alienation of its
constituency."
The College representatives denied
thal they had de-emphasized the perfonning arts; rather, College B had
nol been able lo fund any "a&lt;:ademic
aCtivities in any llf'!8 of the humanities."

:ei,"

. . . . tlalWIIe - . 1 .,.,... ha .de-

.

... !that U, at a level al wblcbJ the
College am move beyond a CIODCI!Illraticm on auhalstenCe and administratiw eonlillnity .to work measurably•
-..1 the acbievemenl of _.._ ..
On pncram~. The C o 11 e g e waa
lludptl~
laudeil for altempting to re-cqanize
its "varied and multitudinOus" comae
The College agreed that its budget
olfetinp into a more coherent rore
was inadequate to the point of being
.-mar formaL · (Inesplicably, l'llCC&gt;"farcical." The total annual operating
pltlon of the College's eftorta to imbudget for the College ' "conaistenlly
P"'M.' prciii'8JI1IIli were nol reflected
averages less than the salary of a
· m the team:s IIUIIIIIIIUY report, only
-'single tenured member in any departin the 111&gt;\:JeDdiL)
ment," tbe spokesmen pointed ouL
On Ocik.toM fl'drm. 'Ibis oft-aunThe College countered the charge !hal
oollec:tive-living experience, beaded
loo much of its small budget was being
~fum-. Master of College B Jonaspent on self-perpetuatiog managerial
t6,.;; Ketchum, waa cited as "a "';~
functions : CoUege B is a residential
emmJ!Ie of whal am be aooomp ·
college, they emphasized, which~
in a community of scholars." Imthal il bas a round-the-clock obligap . - ! both by the spirit of the place
tion lo its students unlike thal of any
and by the physical facilities ("the
other campus academic program. A
principal meetiog room liears a slrikoflice operation is
smoothly-running
~· B-waa found aufteriDJ from
ing resemblance lo the Old Common
essential if such a program is to func"lack of strong leadenhip and dear
Room of Princeton's Graduate Colt.i&lt;in, they claimed.
- univenal WICierlltaDdiJI ol _ita purlege," the evaluators noted wislfully) ,
Tbe CoUege fell residential pro- pose" by a team tbat eoacluded that,
the team asserted unequivocebly thal
grams had been neglected by the evatrith strong laulerabip, 80IDie reorpniseminars at the Farm should remain
luators in their discussion of College
zalillll, 8JlCI Unlwrsity oupport, Colcredit-bearing University courses and
B ptograms. An innov8tive " system of
lege B muld become l'a &lt;rilal establishthal CoUege B students should hav!'.
s tudent commitment'' by which resia serious '&amp;ltemative to
the option to join fbe community ~
dents of College B participil.te in some
the regUlar degree programs of the
However, the Farm's s~ng orien~­
academic or College-administiation action toward philosophy, with little emtivity was cited.
u~,:&amp;l:,.ting team, ~ up of · phasis
1 The College agreed that Oablone
on the performing arts, forced
Madison. A.-!3oYce (housing), J. Grethe team to recommend thal Oakstone
Farm was a success and ·explained
~Vermeycbult (cbemic81 f!lllineerFarm be "nurtured llS a valuable asthat il had never proposed thal the
11)1), and Marilyn D. White !Jibrary
set'' to College B rather than as its
Farm be more than an adjunc:l to the
and ioformation studies),
ft!lllll!d
center.
College. Commilted to an "~ding
' enthusiasm for the basic (f3iege B
On finding a suitable . resi~J!!ntilfl
. esthetic," the College
the
concept of a residential program in the
{aeilily. Tb e CoUege's quarters m
importance of another o its adjunct
hwnanitiJ!S, with special empbasis on
Scboellkopf were deemed ina&lt;lequate
programs, the American Conlemporary
the fine and peri
.
aria. "Some
by the team; which supported the ColTheatre. " College B," the respondents
. activity al0111lradic:::::flines is neceslege's decision to seek interimDousing
noted, ''bas been aimed toward a
saly and ~le wilhin the U.niin the Governors' Residen&lt;:e complex
residence-theatre interaction, w b e r e
versity," the team~ "lackon the Amherst campus. where, in fact,
the idell of theatre is understood in a
~ acceptance of this premiae • . •
it is now housed. The team urged that
multi-media sense, from the outB!eL"
this lJnil(eniity becomes an overiize,
the CoUege' strive to atlain a commitThe Colle¥e considered at length its
MCOI!d-rate ftaile scbool."
ment for 111!81&gt;! in the Ellicott complex,
problems m recruiting, attri6uting
lii an appendix, the team zeroed ·in
which was sPecifically designed as a
"""'¥
of them to dorm living's lack
on the leadership Q111!8tion. lack of
living/ learning center. It was felt that
of cbarisma, especially on the Main
learlen!hip had led tO loao of unity of
isolation .in Amherst might be a probStreet campus, and the non-vocetional
purpose and had aJao resul~ in slulem (one not raised in connection with
dents ll8lllllllinll lnlijcjr ·,_a,mty
e;!clJJesof~ &lt;;&gt;v.,ereofB~"".fUfe::
Oakstone Farm, intereatiogly) ;"thougli
for policy. 'lbe team viewed this as a
not an intractable one.
- •
ence," the spokesmen contended, citpivOtal
llrgUing that, in poOn recruitU.,. CoUege B has been
ing the ease with which remote but
licy
students oihould have an
misditectiog its energies in this mah
allractive Oakstone Farm finds resiadvisory role only. An ideal leader
ter, in the view of the evaluators, who
dents.
waa depicted. He would have a broad
favored an effort directed toward upFinally, the College emphatically
orien1aticm in the Humanities and a
perclassmen rather than fresluDen.
denied that il was underutilizing the
deep commitment. to the Colletle. ·p lus
On .tlte Co~• N!IJJtionahip to the
community, given its own limited re.the ability to enlist profeMionaJa (parcomnuutity. To dale, thr. College has
soun:es, and charged !hal criticism in
ticularly tt...e in the performing arts)
failed to lap the enormous related r&amp;this area was aimply unrealistic.
·
from the larpr community for Colsourceo ol the community, the team
In an "Pl-l afterword thal emlep participaticm as well as the ~ The evaluators pc-.1 several
sary panlaaJaDshlp to win foulldation
phasized College B's pioneer role as
-a&gt;le cooperative ventures (includand JOV8liiiiiOilt oupport. Such a leader
the first CoUege to move to Amherst,
ing increased oolidlation of g r a n l
the respondents commented:
would 1-.1 to be ':&amp;ee from IIIOiliea from cultural foundations).
asiY oo-ucratic C01181zainta and to
. again. urged ~ of the per"As in any organization, we l'llCC&gt;openote autonamously .(~ pubforming aria, and suggeeted increased
gnize the 1-.1 for continuing aelflicly) w i t b i n the Uru-a.ty.......,.
ezploilaticm of the avocation4l interevaluatiOG; the scrapping of
old
whole. u the portrait of the idaaJ Colp~ and its replacement by an
of University faculty.
entirely new one for the fall !of 731 is
·
- B perbape
leader -- !bat surprisiqly
de.......... the c:..._.
t8lJ8d,
is beawse the
I n - - to the~ eiP,l
indicative ol this commitment to
team luid a specific per8Dil in inind:
memhani of College B 1Dclnding Jona?vu,eecleaning! We also realize that
the _evaluatms reported !hal Prof-.r
than' Ketchum, ~ a cl&lt;&amp;&gt;lywe are accountable to many agencies
Allen 8app had apraB!d williDpMJ
em this campus; nobody openoting on
t;yped documMrt of 31 reopoodto _ , _ the ~ role in Coling to MCb ol the _POints raised by the
a slate campus and receiving its fund...... B, under certain caiKiitiona. The
team and JJrObina mkl addilillnal areas
ing flam thal aouroe is above acrutioy
team ......._dec! that the UIIJWI'o
that tlie ColletiO ~ felt had
and the responsibility for working as
oity administration meet with Mr.
ellicienUy
and as effectively as poooibeenAmoover~ ~-ecn~­
Sapp to discus the matter. Sapp has
ble. In return, we ~ a certain
since become maater of the CoUeae.
tions," ~Ueae B
the relaamount of 1--.y !:'~:our ideas,
The team made seven additional
ticm of B to .the other Collegea, which
to experiment in
. and resipoin1Birecommendations in regard to
migbt ha envisiooecl "as seventeen
dential Pmcranuninl in Order to come
Colleje B.
•
persons on a liferaft, doing theiJ, best
up with the beet organizational st:rucnot to cannjbaliw: cme another."
On 1M FelW.U.Itip profNJm. The
ture time, money and h~ resources
Fellows of the Collep, although ..,..,.,_ ~
As to the evaluators' remarb on
will allow. All of these actions are
whal weaireDed, were reprded by the
College leadership and definiti&lt;ll("of
complel&lt; and dillic!Ul to fully comprelean\ as a potential major strength. AD
objectives, the Collq!e members. while
hend without months of experien&lt;:e in
the current Fellows were professionalacla.-ledging "gnevous lalderahip
the Colle~ B milieu. We appreciate
problems,n rugge&amp;ted thal "il would
ly well-qualified, in their view. The
the elfortf;of the Evnluatio~ Team to
~val uators rooommended that tbe perseem lo border on the naive to pin as
e'en a~tempt such an impossible task."

eou....,

-

mr..m.

emrbasized

Noted Designer
To lecture Here
Pieter Brat;tioga, ~year-&lt;&gt;ld, internationally known designe&lt;, eclualtoc
and tiusinessman, will ~l two
campua lectures today (October
uoder auspices of the.Scbool of Management and the School of Architel&gt;ture and Environmental Design.
Al 1 p.m., Brattinga will address a
class al the School of Architecture,
2917 Main Street, and al3:30 p.m. in
3f17 Crosby, his topic will be '"Graphic
Design in Industry."
'
Mr. Braltinga is best known !or his
develo;,ment of a new conc:epl of corporate visual identio/ for The Netherlands' steendrultker.J de J0111 r. Co.,
for which be is director of design; for
his organization of museum exhibitions, and for his wotk in the devel!',!&gt;"
menl ·of new educational systems. His
work is Collected and exhibited by
museums over the world, including the
Museum of Modem Art in·New York
City. U was as professor of art and
chairman of the Department of :.\dvertising Design and Visual Communication of Pratt Institute in New York
lhat be developed a new concept _of
graphic art education.
His design finn, Form .Mediation
International, has offices in Amsterdam, New York and Tokyo, and be
is editor of the Quadrat Prints, design
editor of the Journal of Typographic
Research, and n consistent contributor
to design journals in Europe, the U:S.
and Japan.
Braltinga i3 author of A History of
the Dutch Poster (Scbeltema r. Holkema, Amsterdam, 1968) and PlannU., for lndWitry, Art &amp; Educotion
1 Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1970) .

nr

• Reception for Bishop

......m-.

ma"""

our

"l

::::::::00

The School of Social Policy and
Community Services and the Catholic
Charities of Bulfalo will sponsor a
reception for Bishop Edward D . Heed
of the Catholic ~ of Bulfalo,
Monday, October 15, at 5 p.m. in. the
Faculty Club.
Acoording to Dr. Sherman Merle,
dean of the School. the reception is
being held to introduce Bishop Heed
to the members of the social welfare
community of the Niagara Fronti«.
Dean Merle noted thal Bishop Head
has bad a long association with the
Catholic Charities movement ID New
York City and is fiiJIIiliar-.wilb the
issues facing Social welfare eclualtion
and the social work community. Bishop Head and Dr. Merle are aiiO fellow
alumni of the School of Social Work
al Columbia University. , .
Approximately 300 people have been
invited to the reception, which was
arranged by Marvin Bloom, associate
professor in the School of Social Policy and Community Services, and Monsignor John J . Conniff, diocesan director of Catholic Charities and an
alumnus of the U / B School.
PROOUCTION ER-

Through • production_ error •tr Western
New Yorlt Offset Press. poges in last
week~ issue of the Reporter were printed
out of proper sequence. We regret any
confusion this may have ca used.

�=

!t::'~-=

£::1*-'=t--:!.·

- . . . . Jato --=t lbrolllh tbeaci:M"ol tba Cent.,- dlriallcma

and--- b ~ aad teecbinr" can be ut:lcipatad.
-_

......,Cini!IMM
'lbe -

c.Dter will be beaded by

a Dileclar and u AdY8x7

in Folley~ will--be beavfly ariellliod towind applied profeasional
Naeoud&gt; and --..vice
- policy Anafyata with appropr\ate
institutions and ......,;es. 'lbe remain-

...n. including

Commit-

tea. 'lber-.lty
· - D8llben
will be asl8cled
from
··IIJDCIIII
and ·dopart, _.. ..tbrop1hout the Um-aity
claeel,y; - t e d with the wad&lt; &lt;II ·tbe
·Center, and will have priDmy ft!IIIODsibillty for deleitDiniD&amp; ID Pl'OJI!""L
Major ..,._ for immediate consid-- .
ticm involVed the-.tructure of the~
c:iallmd. cloctoral prosram - .incl
core . olfariniiB and ftrieil optioins -:- ·
and the criteria for atlmissiila8 of new
stuc1ea1s. - AU lailg-term plans for the · ·
Center are, oL ......... Within the province of the Committee.
_
We ...,.. come til the ' 'trick:" feature
of this COIIIIIdll I should like to invite all peiiiOD8, whatever their~
,_tal a8iliaticm or rol8, -wbo ·have
been inlen!sted _ ..... to tad this
far to comm~
--;,id. me, in writ-

c-t. ... to be located
within tbe BcbDol &lt;II~~ bem, funds from the orilinal Ford
erperiliDce iDdicmd
m, ...... it did DOt .......,., a·llllmd....
l"oandaticm Grant will be .-1 pri~
......
'
.~
l"''riil'
to provide stijJends for these
c:illllt . . . &lt;II acliYIW to lltiJded,¢ .
linuib'
&lt;II - - - - aad ~
Minorlleld8
in
Poli.cy
Studies
will
'lbe Sdloal ol "-....-t poovidal
an haepi1llble " ' - b tbe Centi!r,
~be=~~~":!;
. . _ it is abW,y ~ an
.... in olbar ~....!' 'lbe Policy
inteMii8ciplinary - . d l ·aad t.l:bStudies minora~ priDcipally
m, JIOOIDIIIl ... a .;pillc:ant -'e. and
-&lt;Bl8 as a Wbole eUbject to imProvecl the COle oflerinp. ·Orientation of . TO ACADBIIICII OP THB
.........., &lt;II 1D f!liP8IIIIinl activilieii in
ment? !!bould - be a.bled ,to grieve
the .minora will
priJmrily toward
NON HEALTH IICIBNCI!B:
publlc and policy
substance as..-11 u pniCedure?
·
acsdemic
study
and
teachins
of.
poThe
process
for
negotiating
a
DeW
• ana)yaia. In addiliaa, a IIUIIIber oL in- lic:y-relsted mateiial cioonecuid With
agreement between the faculty union
._ dividua! faculty IIIOIIIbem -..ciated
On acadeaiic lriieclam; ·is' academe
~candida-· te's-prina
_ .~fieldofstudy..
(SPA-SUNY/U) and the State bas
with the earlier l'ropam Me DOW
perhaps better oil ~t a statement
~
begun. 'This agreement will supplant
..-.ben &lt;II the v.,.,.._t facul, in the conlnlct? -Some :have Sllllle&amp;ted
Establisbioent of the Center will althe present tbre&amp;-yesr contmct when
this. Or bow would you improve the
ty. At the """"' time, it abould be
so permit the ezpan8ion of ~
it expires August 31 nert. While some ·
stronsiY -npMmw tbat the Center
piesent, stalilmliit? ~
oriented grilduate work at tbe masters
may be confused by the Union's seek......ms, like its predecessors, a
On sslaries, do- want to return to
degree level. This activity will draw
ing a neW contract when the salary
SUNYAS-wide eatity; ita appropriate
annual incrementa? Is merit still viadjustmentS .for t6e cmrent year are
cl&lt;mllopmeat and ....,._ depend criti- &gt;&lt; " - an existing !'Public AJfairs Manableand desirable? What should be
qement" option within the School-of
still to tie seWI!d1 the · two _prooesses - the minimum
cally upon putic:ipaticm by individual
coat-«-living adjustfli&lt;:ulty and students, as well as
- ~'memenPotU'ticalas~~-~-existingand.
• o,!!&gt;'r - are not signifialnuy-related except in
ment?
Should - ileek COIJIIDIJD min~
~
...,
~ {.by 8ccident) and, of course,
formal departmental coopera.tioo,
ima
for
all
ranks
tbroud&gt;out SUNY?
progr&amp;JDI! availsble elsewbere within
- &gt;politically: TI&gt;e new contract will
tbrouabuut the Unhwaity.
Common_ muiliia? What autonomy
the University, 'This ODDCelltrstion at
negotiated under new leadership .which
'lbe c:hanp &lt;II name from "nn!;....
the masters degree level will aJao·in- .
I judge to be much more ~tent
=?be penni~ campus adJDini&amp;.
~ to ~ etudies"
volve a small poup of core. cowaes
to represent. faculty interests aDd at
accidental and ia c:1oaaly Nlated to the
'¥bat about Work load? Sbould we
and seminars, plus speci1ic areas of
least equally aware and concenled for
cleaire for multi-djaciplinary participl- .
let Well ~ 8looe or so to IIIIIDI!
. applicaticm within existing programs
NTP concerns.
·
tloo. C«rectly- not, the tenD ''policy
and new courses crested on sri ad lwc
I am presently somewhat more op~!:las came iniiiiiDI! quarters to
NTI'HEARIret. to a jlarticUiar theonlical analy- · ~or·... ~~~..~~~- ~tabbele
timistic that we will 18111: a contract
10
...... ~~ . .·~ will """'
whiCh moet ·of the academics at the
• and viewpoint~ the pn&gt;e&gt;
~=ona"i"':.~·
avsilsble
as
electives
within
o
t
h
e
r
University
Centers
can
endorse
.with
- &lt;II policy fomation. By ...,~
masters programs within the Univergreater enthusiasm· than we could the
the p~· SPA contract; to INIIce ni!Xlm·
tbe - -clemandiq term "pooicy studmendotions for ctuonaa In the existing
sity. It is not cxmtemplated at the
lasl What will emerge from the table
....... In recii!nt ,_,. been increasis another matter and you will recpresent time that any stipends Will be
- conmct, anll to ,..._. propouls.
inlb' uied to dMcribe a rile Yllrietyavailable
for
masters-levet
studentS;
ognize
that
it
will
be
a
politicsl
clocuAll
professional encourqed to
&lt;11. propaJIIII; institulea Uid
ho.wever, assistants@ps and internment as much as an eamomic or an
attend. Miri*!Wt O'B!Yin. the locoll pro·
•....._. COIIC8I'IIIId with both the
ships may llecotnQ avsilsble for stueducational one. To repeat, I believe
tosslonal lt8ff re~ on the sate
AdVisory Committee, and members of the
dent&amp; as the Pn&gt;gi'IUD develops.
we will be starting from a base which
:~~~&lt;II~
local .-uttve _,.. will be avalll!ble
, _ .,.,...,..,._ Application
more
recognizes the nature and
own activity is inlalded to empbaairJe
· 'lbe Center will focus .., the praccharacter of higher educstioii and the
from noon to 1 p.m. on Monday a · the
the Center's boapitality to diwrae
lice and. __._.___ of public'
licy
·
le f the U '
.... Cen
Moln C.mpus In the Plllmer Room·
rnetbadololies -and viewpoinliL fQ11DSticm ;;d'i.::i&gt;i'-tation, ~ ...
~~
~
ijy ~
of the Faculty Club qolft tram noon
'lbe Center will in three
purely acsdemic or tbeoredcal work.
time that once the process of actual
to 1 p.m. on T - , . a Rid&amp;e Lea; In 1
~ ~(1) fomal inolnlc'Iberefore, active
of all
negotiaticms is under way very little
sect!oned-olf arao ·of the --dlnl'/8 room.
per8CIII8 involved in the Center in the
will be known publicly Until tbe
~
(2)
cibeervation and analysis of - " - ~ is rescbed or some lees fortunate
and(3)a
Nlated actiVities -11!1. for ~k
event occurs such as im-. fact
kind &lt;Of stalemont of cxmtact bours.
All three ~ &lt;II activi'.)o will be ...
intemshi~ field"projects- is a finding or lefislative Maring. '
=?~~-.&lt;II ~ ~
ricbed by · tbe CODduct &lt;II a ·..,.war
crucial
t of the propsm. These
At this pomt, however, -and for but
lber
......,. adi1tel,y
•
011 0
seminar - - and periodic canf«field _
......... will ~ {&gt;leal pria very ohDrt time SPA-SUNY/U ia
~ Are - correct ID
maftly em the .state, regioaal, and lo- - actively seeking input em priorities for
bolding to a banda-dr poait!oD for the ·
related to -.lor &lt;II ...,.
tivi'.r within tbe Center. 8uch o«er-.
csl levela. Not oaly ..., the number _ the new contract. I know Ms. Mar- ·
Centers?
'
inp form an '-taut part &lt;II the
instructianaJ - - . -til addition,
a - &lt; I I poup learn- /
Ieveii, m CXIIIlP8risoD to the fadmal - to the acsdeOiics of the llOil'beallh
&lt;-mcMJ or tulticm wahwa? Travm, and &lt;II distilliill rasuiD from inlevel; CIIIIJIIIIlai&lt;&gt; and •'""""""nctinc
sci"""" unita of SUNYAB wbelber
el or - . c b auppart? More equity
temobipa and.Jield wwt, .. well ..
&lt;II
~
and
problams at these
members
or~
of
the
union.
for
TIAA·IIIIIIIIail• COIIJIIUIIIi with
from _.a,.It .should "be lfJCOIIIIiZed. however, that
State ·plans or eftoit at _...terlevels &lt;II ,.,_,...,..,t ...,..._, -tial
to tbe etfective dasip and 8III!Cilticm
DAly members will later vote on the
ina the _........., impact ol ataedily
'lbe Center . . Polley 8ludieo, like
of federal-level projecla. It ia -COillamacceptability &lt;II the IIBlltant. ~
in&lt;:reaainl 8ocial Security dwps?
ita p.-lent ~ will ~t
plated that r-.Ity and l"''88ers level
meul PNaiim&amp;bly tllroulhout SeNY ~ What about our leave DOticies? hiP
atudenta will join tbe doctoral atudenta
their input will receive """" priority.
ID8jor ad,Juatmeula beref RoW about
em a llllllm '-is wbenl appropriate to
What; then,..., faculty concems and
-~ lllaa't W be re abDuld we
carry out tbeas endea\lllft. ~ • ._
priorities? Oq lemDe and Pft1111!111on.
stand em alllrmative a c tl ou? What
~
·•
• do 11110-lebure flimlty want-to JDOVe. . about IIOIIi8 atteotiim til lb8 retire'nle Center for Policy• Studies will
' to a form cl.-...ble cxmtnacta mtbmeut PIOVisiolla. lo as to apeD up
becDiie the toe. and Jiladenlblp unit
- than bold-to the ~-out 8Y818m•
tenured sloiii? Shall- atrill8 b ~t- ....
lr _
. .- ~.,
u--.
r _,_....,.
__
_ .._
_
b lnlardlaclpllno--=~ .
wish to for
er C8III{&gt;UI Ul~ ~ ~
J'llla~_to__pulillcpaUcy--..... alated ,.-~
with~
What about lePtiJDizinl cunpus by:
II.F.JGif.. ......,..._ . . ......., ..
out 8UN'i'AB, A IIIIDihw &lt;II
tiQe , _ aabject to review under
lawa? How detlillad,a jirOvlalaD should
-~~~ .......... .A._....._
and Jln!jected activities are
the pievUce PI'IJCI8'1 Should there be f&lt;ilt ~tal or r.culty
Dm
to be drawn Into the Center tlally. somehow evolve ~ c1euer syateo, for _ _.wice? ADd, lqiefully
.Amaal tbeas .... a ltudy &lt;II collective • informiDc the r-.lty ... criteria for
bilatedly. what direct atudent conbullolialnl and o1bar poliCy - . . II!
evaluatiaG for J11Q1D11tioD and tenure?
cams are relewnt_JIId bow do we
hiPer edUcaticm; a ltudy of tba coliADd put thaD in the cxmtract? (Kilobtain Olllll8ideNd input ~te
necticm - - - . "''ti6ual priorltlasand
_ . . article In the AutUma 1973'
to fu~ paeratb» of atudenla ~ and COlpOnlte
i11u- AAUP Bullelill wairanta critlcsl .-t- · withoUt be1D1 pa~ or ]Jatrcma;. &lt;II health CaN JICIIlC7 Jllmmlnl
m, by the eiJtile 8C8demic - izin(!
8lld 8iU.tiM &lt;II . .
ity.) ·
Well, tbeas 818- &lt;II tba -tters
planDiq, tranlpoi tatlua, eavf()a ~ do - lAili favor peoir
wblcb lllldoablecllY wDl be m.:s-i
roameutal prolectioa, etc. n..8 vari~t? Should the campua PneiI "am aure tbat cldain &lt;II thaD live
- eadama involw ~&lt;II the
ilall' be ~to _ . bla )'Oil.tbe "bonaa"
tbey do
imd
'"""~-..;...~...;..--;..._.....:;;,:., r. :liciMIII )&gt;I ..........., ~ l_
-~? Ia llie
II 'I'~"",.,. :...t.,4J , me, .•
-

..

f.isk Asks fo! Input 'C oiJcernfng
'Issues 'for Inclusion in Contract_

_ne.,.._t

be

be

rnOt..

=.,"!!:e"::",.:

.......m

clearly

=·

=

·profU::

&lt;11.~~ --

they--

-..

be cl:,ve;:;.u

.............,.t

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

rn;~b!':l~a:=;

grea~~~n~m::.!:

.....

·-------"'-

no- -

""'!'1irini

- ·too

::.._,.,.._t;

_,_,..,t;

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

-..o.-,,

��Continulq edllca&amp;IOII.-.tlWODI l~t
............. -~ ,...,..._., ........ ...,...., ln
.,.. mlndl To IGIIIa ..... . . . . . . IIIII ~ 1D
alherl lhe . . _ ... boolcl, llie tDcils ol educaliall. !kit

11ere,-10-..-cJIIIId
as in-~~~~~-----~.
lhelewonls
.._
the8dultllilalf,lhe 11111101'wllo ..,_IDc:ontlnue hlsorller~,ID !elm- about
........_ but ""'- OCQipatlon ,_rs attendanoe in ciollele

~a~
of Continulna Education was founded SO
yean . , 10 IIICh adults In Buffalo and lhe uroundifiC
CCIIIIIIIIInide In 1llese SO yean of senice, lhe l'..,inl Session (as
it -called in 1923) has ~ tremendously - it has lll"'wn
&amp;am an enrollment of 1071 In 1923, ID ower SOOO
in
1973; It has ~ its name twlc:e, 1D MUIORI Allmcwe ColleF
1"7 and then 1D lhe OMsion of Continuin&amp; Ecluution in
1!167; it has IIIIMd and expanded its pllysical lpQiion: it ~s
added deparlments ID atisfy the chancin&amp; needs of adults;
lnd it has prminallld Pf'OIVIIII5 !hat~.. ...,. on to become
independent units of the Unl..,mty, such ~s the Schools of
~~~~ and Ecluution. !kit the bigest chantle of all has been
~ chanp in aUIIUde - . d lhe adult Ioomer - the realiution
!hat adults &amp;e.n in a different ny !han youlh, and for different
,_,._ Adult education, . then, isn't just reaular day-school
eduution !hat's held in the evenin&amp; - it's a whole new way of
loolcln&amp; at &amp;e.nin&amp; one e&gt;pecially aearecf to the needs of adults.
And -.Its ~ chantled, too. In the past SO ye¥0, mcwe ·

ow':!;

a-

in

and more adults have come to look at continui111 hiaher education as a way to IVOW and ''better" themselves - O«U~tionally, SOf:ially, and personally. As Peter F. Repnf Professor
and Buswell Fellow at lhe State Univenity of New York at
Buffalo, said in lhe April, 1972 issue of IWNt'S Htlppenlllf?:

*

"The modem clrizt111 Is dmwttdltrg &lt;JCC~SS to higher
edualtlon thfOU{Ihout his Ilk.
Is lllso dmJond/llf
that this «&lt;uCJIItion be -t.ble •t times tlfld plllr:es
that in cotrptlble with his pusonal life style tlfld
caner, tlfld thttr the conttltlt and teaching techniques
be geared to tlflrlous levels of agt ond Ilk experience.
He
«cess to life-long /Nm/llf."

_,,._red

It ·was a diffen:nt world in the
1920's - lhe ''Great War" wai over and
an ec:onomit boom was on. It wna'time ·
of financial _security -and one of social
excitemenL Names like Warren G.
Hardin&amp;, Calvin Coolic!F, Babe Ruth,
Rudolph Valentino, O.arles Lindbe'1h,
and AI "Upone were on eVeryone's lips;
words like Tupot Dome, Prohibition,
ftOIJper, speakeasy, jazz, and the Diarieston were either added to the vocabulary.
or S~ven new interpretations. The automobile was on the rise, ~ were all forms
of modem transporUtion and communication, including airplanes, railfoads,
radio, and telephones. Literature had a
Renaissance of sorts, with novelists
Hemioaway, Faulkner, and Fitzgerald;
poets T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound; and
playwri&amp;ht Eusene O 'Neill. Still, it was an
innocent time.
At majOr universities across the
country, a new service was being extended to adults - evening classes for
those who had to work during lhe day.
At lhe University of Buffalo, tlfe Even ing
Session had its birlhplace in old Towfl:"
send Hall, downtown on Niagara Square
(shown here). Allhou&amp;h many adults still
could not afford to go to school, even at
ni&amp;ht, lhe Evening Session gave many
others an option !hat had not been !here
before. And, like everything else in the
1920's, it boomed.

�The 1970'' ·-

~ly.

Willi •

In IJIIe a b . . , . . . of..llle . .

lent, proleSt.filled SlxJies llnprlnJ IB our
mouths. The Vietnam W• d linJered,
100, drawh!c to a wary dole. 11lewe hur DOW are Riclqnl Nixon, Henry
Kissin(IOr, Joe Namalb, Mick J,.er,
Ralph N*r, GI~L Stelnem, ~
lnvis and Abbie ttomnali - 1M MW
words are Wa1erp1e, counter-cuiiUre,
ecoiOIY, women's Iiberati..,, rack music
and memory bank. The world has bec:ame
compu!eJ;ized, and we've sent men to lbe
. moon and back apln. The automobile
has definitely '!&gt;.ken over~ and all of our
tnnsportnion and communication syotems are infinilely faster and more·effl·
c i ent. With the birth of the
counter-culture in the 60's, we saw a
flowering of life styles, which hu led in
the 7D's to a greater freedom in personai
and cultural expression. Still, many are
concerned with what we are doina to our
environment, and are uraing us to 10 bad:
to a slower, mo'nf natural, more #!~Jmane
st)lle of life, in harmony with our envi·
ronmenL It's a time oJ experience.
Continuing education here in
Buffalo has experienced many changes
since 1923. Adult and p•rt·time students
'now comprise 1/3 of the totll student
population, and the trend toward
life-long learning is certainly evident in
the large numbers of adults who now
attend Millard Fillmore College, !he name
given to the Evening Session in 1937. As
more-and more adults demand the oppor·
tunity to continue their education, both
in traditional and non-traditionaJ ways,
the Division of Contin.uing Education
must oontinue to grow and change. The
future points to a new fusion of life and
learning - 1973 is just another step along
the way.

The .Eveni111 Session
In the foil of 1922, a remarkable
man was named Chancellor of the Uni·
·versity of Buffalo: Dr. Samuel P. eaj,en, •
brilliant educator whose ideas were far
ahead of his time. Or. Capen made one of
his first priorities as Chancellor the ere·
ation of an Evening Session. He hired
a.:rence S. Marsh to be Dean, •nd by the
foil of 1923, the new Evening Session was
set up and operoting, with. cl•sses held in
·the old Townsend Hall, down on Niogaro
Square.
Dean Marsh, in the first paragraph
of the first bulletin for the Evening §es.

sion, wrote:
"The Unlvetslty of Buffalo exists
for service. For more t1wn
thfOklullfUrs of a century In Its
Day ~on It trrllned young men
and women In the - Arts ltlnd
Sciences and the professions. Now
It seeks to exWid Its sphere of
usefulness by offering Instruction In
the Ewnlng Session to youths (Ill(/
adults · tMiose oa:upational niUs.
s/tles p - t their attmdana upon
the day session of the UnMn!ty. "
Public response to this . new pro-

grom was overwhelmin&amp;. Planners for the
Evenin&amp; Session hod only anticipoted an
enroii!!Mint of obout 400 for the first
yeor. The public was.so enthusiastic, how·
ever, that by the end of the year, 1071
students had been enrolled. Of these, 10'1'
were collqe graduates, ~ hod had col·
1... work, and 1
hod had Normal
. Scl\ool troininc. Another 30'1' hod &amp;rod·

s"

Page 3 I OCTOBER 1], 1973 I REPQRrut-cONTiNUING EDUCATloN

1tfsiRt ·

�g.ar.~-

• .,..,., ~ S...t
8r'll,!pd,..,.,t~-,

::L:,-;--.:.:

"""',., ol........,tll 1MJatltjl -of _ , dials , _
/ll'tWIId t1 IIIIIIC ll!'lile
111s1J. flltlon...

""'*

Bv U33, when the E-ing5es1ion
was 10 "years old, men than 10,000
adults bad been avolled at one lime or"
ailother, At that lime, exlef\5ion c:oui1es
were also bei"' offered in surroundi"'

communities such as Angola, Dunkirk,

~- and Ni~P"a Fills. Ho-,
_perflaps beQuse of the political and ec»nomic silualion In the 1930's, the
emphasiS had shifted somewhat from the
oriflinal purpose of providing "new and
unorthodox" adult educational SOfVices,
to a more traditional conoepL As Olan·
eel lor Capen wrote in his annual report in
1936:
.

"It has become ped.;;;dy pa~nt
lhflt. 1M community looks to tM .
Unlvetslty to pruvide for persons
employed_ during 1M · tfa¥·time
courses that ilre for the most part
fully equ/VQ/ent to, If not identical
with, those thaJ It offers to its
,...~lardoystuden~" .

MHianl Fillmore College

• When the nome of the Evening §es.
was ch-.nged to Millard Fillmore
1937, in _honor of the first
· chancellor of the University, Olan&lt;ellor
~on

It had become apporent, then, even
at that early date, that . adult students
were differenL In a faculty meeting on
April 4, 1925, the - discussion centere:d
around the methods and objectives-of the
Evening Session: As ~ Manh reported
it: The .c omments revealed a full comprehension of the fact that this work with
adults demands in many &lt;OUrses a technique of its own. - This .marked the be&amp;innings of true . adult .education in
Buffalo.

Colfetle in

capon reported tl!•t

"All but fillf! per unt-of the stu·
dents atr persons who hallf! vodu·
- aiel/ from high school or h - engaged In further study beyond high
school graduation. fn the early · ·
years' of the undertaking'&lt;only a
·handful of.students --.ln~res~d
- In securing acade!JIIc degrees. Now
the number who are candlda~s for
~- such degrees.is conslderoble."

Survey
The number who were enrolling
Around this time, Dean Marsh was
was considerable, too: By 1943, the en·
• in the midst of dire&lt;ting • survey of adult
rollment pe.r Y•¥ was up past 3,000, and
edueation for the City of Buffalo, under
continued to climb. At that time, Millard
· the auspi&lt;es of the Buffalo Edu&lt;ational
Fillmore College had more than twi&lt;e the
Counc;il and supported by' a grant· from
. day-time enrollment - although statistics
the Comegie Corporation of New ,York.
may be misleadiQg1 since the Division of
This importint survey was one of tlle first
Nurses Training, the School of Eduation;
of its kind conducted in the United
and the School of Social Work were all
States, and be&lt;ame a landmark contri·
then departments under Millard Fillmore
bution to ' the liter-.ture &lt;&gt;f adult eduCollege.
&lt;ation. Published in 1926' in a book
- Under the leadership of Dean Lewis
entitl'e d Adult , Edu.cation In a
A. Froman (1934-1948) and Dean John
Community, the survey reported on the
A. Beane (1948-1952), the edu&lt;ational
extent of adult edu&lt;ation in Buffalo; "its
programs also- increased in· the number
d istribution among all the agencies in the
· and variety of courses offered. Emphasis
Ci.!JP, the unfulfilled needs of the com· .
was given ~ the development of certif·munity; and, for the first time, a detailed
i&lt;ate and associate degree prwams_which
analysis of the adult student himself encouraged work toward a more imme·
who he was, what his background was,
diate goal. Also, with the ending of World
and what motivated him to go ba&lt;k to . War II and the resulting boom in student.
school.
·
enrollment, the develo-pment of
The published ••port had two note· ·
non-credit courses (both general and ~·­
fated to the needs of spe&lt;ific groups) had
woethy results; it gave to lbe'University•a
a new surge of growth. •
-:_
"definite formulation of the desir-.ble .development of the tlriiverslty's ·offerings in ·
. In 1953. Millard •fillmore College
the field of adult edu&lt;ation "; and it
moved frail&gt; its downtown base in old
attr-.cted wide attenti.on throughout the
Townsend Hall; to take up new quarters
country as the first comprehensive at- ' on- the 'North Main &lt;ampus. Although at
tempt of a &lt;Q111munity to analyze its
first it was thought that there would be a
adult edu&lt;ational problems and to plan
drop in enrollment, sin&lt;e the Niagara
· for their solution.
Sguare location was in the heart of downt6wn Buffalg and .t he North Main &lt;ampus
Continued Growth
.
was on its outskirts, nevertheless"the en- ,-.
The Evening Session continued to
r~lment remained the same and in&lt;floed
grow until by 1928, 5 years after its - increa§ed in the next few yem. By 1959,
in&lt;eption, more than 5000 adults had
Millard Fillmore College was offering col·
been enrolled in its classes. These classes
lege credit &lt;DUnes leading-!!&gt; both .baccovered an extr-.ordinorily wide r-.nge of
calaureate and advan&lt;ed clljgrees In artS"
subjects, from GOUrses in the sc::iences and
and scien&lt;e&gt;, business administr-.tion and
the humanities to technical and scientific
engineering,, with associate deJree pro«WJrses i~ busirless and j.ou~nalism; from '
grorns in general studies and in Sj!Veraf
~Nsic courses in engineering to non-credit
business and engineering .technOlogy procou~ in life insurance, grain grading,
grams.
radio, aeronautic_s i1nd current Europun
When . the UniversitY was absorbed
conditions. Dean Morsh, in his annual
into the State system in 1962, Millard
lel!!lft, had this. to say about the Evening ' Fillmore College be&lt;ame heir to the genSession:
eral State chorge for continuing edu&lt;ation
' as presented i!l the State University-of
"Its students atr drawn from all
· New York (SUNY) Master Plan. This
«&lt;&gt;nomic classes and all social
charge included: programs for peoons

~EPORTER-cONTINUING EDUC.o\TIQt.oiiNSfttll loCToB'ER 11! 1973/Page 4

�,., wblled to keep' abreast ol Illest
dMiopmenls In their fields; ~ity
- - to assist c:ommunllielln efforts to
lllhe their prabltms; and wltual enridtment to aid ln.-lleetual and esthe~
.,_u, of the people of the Stt!e. MUiard
FUlmore Collele moved qulcldy to fulfill

lhete demands.
Under the leadenltip of Dun
Robert F. Berner (1952-present), MUiard .
Fillrnore Collele wu transformed from ~ _
si,.te purpose Evening Adult College too
full .ale Division of ContiiWing Edu·
ation. in ~ remarkal&gt;ie decade of progreSs f~om 1962-1 972, four openting
dep...-tments were ~dded .10 the strong
Evening College base: Tlfe Office for .
Credit-Free Programs, the Office for
Urban Extension, the .Adult Advisement
Center, and WBFO-FM Rlldio Station.
. In the general reorganization of
1966-67, the University admin.istration
endorsed a change in name from Millard
Fillmore College to the Division of Con·
tinuing Education. The Dean was given
status as a University-Wide Dean along
with the Division of Undergraduate Stu·
dies ~n and the Graduate School Dean.
Thus Millard Fillmore College became
that part of the Division of Continuing
Education which was responsible for providing credit programs to adults in the
Buffalo area.
Throughout ali of these changes
and growing pains, Millard Fillmore Col·
lege has maintained its strong position as
an_adult evening college. In addition, it
has wntinued in its role as an initiator of
departments and schools (previously,
Millard Fillmore College was the pro·
genitor of the Schools of Nursing, Social
Welfare, Management, Engineering, and
Education), by supporting in 1972 the
riew Dean of the School of En·
vironmental Design in developing and
implementing a baccalaureate curriculum
in architecture for adults engaged in ar·
chitectunl and planning activities.
As the Division of Continuing Edu·
cation enters its 50th year, it looks for·
ward to continued service to men and
women in the Buffalo area who desire
further education and who cannot attend
college ·on a full -time basis. It hopes to
continually grow and · change so that it
- m&gt;Y tru ly provide an opportunity for
life-long learning to any adult who desires
it, at whatever time of life he or she
desires it. It seems fitting to end with the ·
following quote from the 1926 survey,
Adult EduCIJtlon in a Community:

"My original contact with Millard
Fillmore College goes back to September,
1933 - that ...,. my first registration. I
continued going to school at night fronf
that time until October, 1943, ..tlen Ire·
ceMd a diploma In 'Business Admliils·
tratlon .... l_came back ogain In 1962- I
rejiJllellated my proJgrtJm and I receMd an
Associate Degtw In February of 1966.
Then this year In May I received my
/Jachelor's ~. and It ...,. a Business
~ -I majored In acc,ountlng ...
. •• The gap from 1944 to 1962
might be of Interest In .that I got married
In 1939 and I had 2 children. They were
born In 1942 and 1946- and if you remember your histoty, · those ""'re '''"
yea:s. With a young family and the pres·
sure of business, lwasn'table to continue
night school, so I dropped It By 1962,
they """" just about through their own
college careers - so I came back and con·
tinued on till now•.My wife accUses me of
being a prof~onal stvdent!"

. Raymond C. Boehmke
Page 5/ OCTOBER 11,1973/ REPORTER-CONTlNUIN,G EDUCAl'ION INSERT

/'Division of
Continuing
Education
'roday five departments work sep·
arately to meet new challenges and fulfill
new needs as the adult population
changes. Millard Fillmore cOllege, the Of·
fice for Credit-Free Programs, the Office
for Urban Extension, the Adult Advise·
ment Center, and WBFO-FM Radio - 5
departments, S avenues for adult learning.

MILLARD
FilLMORE
-COLLEGE .
,.
Millard Fillmore College is the
oldest and the largest of the departments
in ihe Division. With the creation of the
other four dep...-tments in the 1960's, ihe
.:Ole of Millard Fillmore College became
that of providing acfults with the oppor·
iunity to continue their education in programs consisting of formalized credit
courses leading loward an academic_de·
gree.
Most adults attend Millard Fillmore
College with the intention of earning a
degree, although there are a good number
who either hold degrees already and -just
wish to broaden their knowledge of a par·
ticular field, or are studying Real Estate,
Insurance, ..or Traffic and Transportation
courses in order to prepare for the New
"York state Licensing examinations. Thus,
Millard Fillmore College is presently the
. most traditional of the five departments,
although it is heading toward a goal of
non-traditional educational experiences
designed specifically for adults' needs.
Who is the adult that Millard Fill·
more College serves? According to a
study publishetl in 1960, most adults
start their evening college careers betw.:en
the ages of 20 and 31. Women were
found to comprise only about 20% of the
adult student body, although that is
changing somewhat these d~ys. (Enroll·
ment figures for Fall, 1971, showed th•t
rouchiy 42% of the students we&lt;e
women.) An overwhelming percenlale of
the students in 1960 were married
(9'7 . 5%), most before they entered
Millard Fillmore College but about 25%
were married during the time the~ were
students. Another overwhelming per·
centage had children, either before or
after they entered Millard Fillmore Col·
lege. And the majority ~dents came
from working class backgrounds, 45%
from lower-middle class and 25% from
upper-lower class families. 95% of the "stu·
dents had finished high school, and 90%
held regular jobs ail during the time they
were students. Thus, the average adult
student would be a mature person with
all . of the responsibilities of a job and
family in addition to evening classes.
Which brings us to th_e next ques·
tion: How is an adult learner different?
Obviously, someone over 21 with a full·
·time job and a fatnily is going to feel dif·
ferently about the world and about education than 'Ill 18-year-old, fresh out of

~

�,..... IC:hool. He's . . . . . b e - can...rwldlt.a-,Md . . . .
. . . . "forhS-Ab.N~s.

~ llllllor~- boot .,. ,.,.,
.,.,.. fii.AMt Edlallon, IXIInllil ...
W4Jtll ........,. liD 41ncribe, Iii his
WIIIIIJ; .... _.... fi!IW 'lleChnclloiV of
lllllt tllucadDn wtrioh Is based on a set of
__..,.. abouu c.tain _,In which.
...Its are different from youlh as
----~ What, !hen, Is the difference?

llilefiW' !J10 adult Ieamer can cleflne
' l l f l - ;;:ds and partidpa1e in plamlni
. ltls own education; he Is capable of .
own 1J1'C11re5S -.rd his pi;
liD IC:hool a wullh of experienc;e
wwtd;" he Is ready to learn a
particular IUbjec:t at a

8Mn

lime In his

1lfJ. pnMded Ills~ to his sac:lal, oc·
CIIJ!Mional or familial role; and his
lllilmiiW Is oriented to ptoblem so1virw
rlther than ......... Information 1n - . to the samna of problems
nllallld · to the business o(
~
.
At MAiard Allmore ColleF, the

...........r

adult Ieamer wllh his special MOds and
Cllpllbllltles Is the cenler from which all
prolfams radiale. As he. continues to
demand the opportunity to acquire a col·
leF dowee tllrouF classes In the oveninc,
Millard Fillmore ColleF will continue to
offer c:nodlt counes re.di"l toward the
baccalaureate cle&amp;ree in - a l major
areas. At Milani Fillmore ColleF, the

adult learner comes fir&gt;L

MILLARD
FILLMORE
COL~EGE

STUDENT
ASSOCIATION
~thoush Millard Fillmore Collese
was founded in 1923, an active Student
Association did not bewme a reality until
about 1938, when the Midnight Oil, the
~nina Sludent newspaper, began regular
publ~tion. Unfortunately, there are incomplete r-~cords, with whole years
. mlssin&amp; but it is apparent that the association had many ups and downs, with
• periods of fairly intense activity, and·also
of dOldrums.
In its formative years, the private
uniwrsity years, \it was ~ly a social
orJanization, for- there are rewrds of
Winler Weekends, formal balls, and "Chit·
-chat of a social nawre. This wa-s also true
of lhe day Kll!IC)I student bodies. They
had their moVina up days, formal wmmencements, fnts and sororities.
However, this, to a larse extent, has

d\anlld nodGelblv

since lhtl UMenlly
joiMd . . . . . . - . ~!ld!Dai­

tt.nts, do • • IOQI tludlin1s. 11M
chan@il - - «&lt;iiiillion.
Ill
their iiclll llniCIUie In . . COIIIillullhy
are NlleQIId In lhelrln11mUon

a-..

They .........,. and

trend, are

~

Ibis

l$ a

than their

c:ounlerparts, ~ the
and sac:1a1 problems fadna them, and also
have- to lean.
factors have .,.....Uy tumod
the Student Association from a social to a
senic:e orienled orpnlutlon. Tho asso-

-n-

ciation as sPoJcesman, advocate,
and provid&lt;.- of necessary servic:es, .. well
as a problem 501_. and; In some ~.
referee. It maintains ties with administrations, with other sllldent wnstit·
uenc:ies, and with the·wmmunlty.
The~tudent Association lias also
grown flsc:ally. Supported by student
activity fees, it must disburse them i9&lt;
conformity to 111idelines established bY
the Board of Trustees. All Millard Fill·
more Col lese students ari members of the
Association upon payment of the fees.
These fees are administered by an Executive Committee of 5 elected and 7 appointed officers.
The Executive Committee also has
the responsibility for deiermining which
areas of greatest importance and interest
to students should be examined, and of
taking appropriate action on these dec~
sions. Sorpe of these areas are: legislation
to benefit part-time continuing education
~ tudents, scholarships, social and ac;aOemic affairs, and efforts to improve Vriiversity wnditions for MFC students.
The Student Association has made
the name of Millard Fillmore College
known and respected on many levels. It
has been involved for many years wilh
other sc:hbols on a parochial level, and for
the last twelve years on a state and na·
tiona! scale. It enjoys good relations with
administutors both in Buffalo and
Albany. In the state capitol, it is also
heard in 'both houses of the legislature
and in pertinent committee rooms-again,
in the interests of students. A continuous
watch is kept
state legislation affecting
continuing education students both locally and throush S.A.S.U., the State Uni·
versity Student Assembly. It has partie- .
ipated in programs presented by national ·
professional educators organizations, and
it has org;aniz~d its own _programs, both
locally and nationally.
·
The Student Association is.growing,
as the University is, in many directions.
As a project is &lt;ample ted, it is succeeded
by another, usually more ambitious, more
sophisticated. Those who participate rec·
ognize this as a genuine learning experience, u effective and in some ways
more satisfying than classroom lessons.
While there are students with needs there
is a need for student organization. '

on

OFfiCE FOR
CREDIT-F~EE
PROGRAMS

Quote by MFCSA President Jack
Buntina:

..-

"IMr spend much time trying
to resolllfl lnd/tlitlu#l cCmpllllnts or reqwsts, bec4use
""' Mllet!e ""' 1ft prtmllfily a
..ma OfJIIfl/ztltlon. Jlle laclt
only the ,_,....., to do
more In tlrll -·-·We feel""'
I n . . efftiC- Olf/lfllzatlon
now, 11nd we piM to do
bettr. How much bettr will,
to 11 l•rt• exlllrlt, depend
upon the ~- tllld
hdp ""' 11d from 1M people
who d«t""" support~ .. .

The Office for Credit-Free Programs is
a vital, ..growing edge" of the University
- flexible, imaginative and experimental.
It was formed in 1965 to develop
educational pro&amp;rams whic:h would
uup-date skills, add ·new skills, improve
u_nderstandings, and enhance an
appreciation of the fine and -performing
arts" for adults who want to learn
)IVith~t · the need for_. earning degree
credots. Because of ots freedom to
experiment with new methods of
tuchins, new curricula, new ~diences.,
and new methods of evaluation
Credit-Free Pr011arns has been able ~ ·
provide pr..,ams to meet a growing ·
~her of wmmunity needs. Flexibility
os ots strenath.
The wide ranae of activities sponsored
by Credit-Free Pr011ams includes not
only 10nera1 courses, wverin&amp; topics from
Art History to Hatha Ycop to Casualty
.Insurance, but aloo con~nces
institutes, seminars, workshop pr...,-ams'
certifocate.pr"'tam• and contract course:

REPORTER-CONTINUING EDUCATION INSER_! I OCTOBER 11, 19731 Page 6

�__

........,..,~..,

~llllds.Saml

......

......... to

Ulldlle a spedflc I n - IJOUP, IUdlas

lhe Annual Tn lnstilule; .. a
specQIIzed topic, such as a ,_,t 2-day
Seminar on Tec:hnopnlc D i - and
some are IIHiepd! Wlll1&lt;shops deallna
wid! Parenlhood. Tauaht by members of
lhe University faculty or by equally
quallfoed penons in lhe community, lhe&gt;e
proarams are consundy c:hangi/ta
in response to lhe needs and demands of ,
adults in lhe community.
-who are lhe adults who enroll in
Credit-Free cour&gt;es? Statis~ show d!at
approxima~ly SO'l6 of diem are women,
and d!at d)eir aflj!S range from 17~7 wid!
die .-age aae around 30. Most of diem
are .:ollese gradua~s. and lhe majority
take' courses for " personal interest and '
development" - afliiough occupational
uJHiatina and prepa,..tion for rollese
work also rank high as reasons for
enrollment.
·
With . the shorter work week, an
increase in leisure time, and l change in
life-style for many approach ing
adulthood, the' role of Credit-Free

OFFICE FOR

URBAN
EXTENSION
We'd all like to bellew that liiFw
education Is available to every- equally
- but we know d!at !hat's not always lhe
case, especially in many diSidnnapl
communities. The Of6c:e for ~ Ex·
tension was formed in 1969-70toprowlde
a communiutions and acti011 link
between die community and lhe University and to be an ....,t for c:hanlo- It
developed a liaison wid! community
leadership aroups for lhe purpo10 of
design ins J&gt;Rll)ralnS to meet lhe edu·
cational needs of disadvan~ communities. Urban Extension is just what Its
name implies - lhe extensiOn Into die
urban environment of lhe knowledee and
resources of lhe Unlvenity in order to improve the quality of urban life.
This ex~nsion has taken SOYe&lt;al
concrete forms : introductory courses for
disadvanUJI"d adults provided at die
Community Education· Center in die
inner city; credit courses for advanced
studen~s at t_he Cooperati¥e " Coll~ge
Cen~r '" downtown Buffalo; and workshops desi&amp;ned to meet the needs of
specific groups, such as Public Affairs
Awareness Wor·kshops for the junior
League and Orientation Programs for
Parents of Incoming Freshmen. The most
recent project grew out of the Office's experiences with off-campus credit courses
for adults, and has obtained funds
through a grant received from lhe Stare
Education Department under Title I of
the Higher Education Act of 1965. Entitled " Educational Planning Program for
Adults" (EPPA), it is seen as havina a l'tS·
t lbule function; that is, it leads disadvantaged adults, who otherwise might
not avail themselves of the opportunity
for higher education, to the doo.-.tep of
the Unive.-.ity with the expectation that
'they will continue toward a degree
through Millard fillmore College.
EPPA carries out this function
through a course offered in Millard f illmore College, centering around the need
of many disadvantaged adult swdents for
additional knowledge and emotional
support in order to feel at home on the

Programs should be increasingly
important . in the years to come. As
Jerome Bruner, one of the world 's luding
authorities on learning, said recently:

"Such a conception of
educational continuity ·
through the life cycle Is not
just a means of equipping
people with a sense of
occupation and work. It Is
also a iWy of making leisure
meaningful and not
something that Is an escape
from work. For I think It Is
reasonable to suppose,
though the conje cture has
never been tested, that the
more skilled and elaborated
leisure activity · Is, the more
deejily satisfying It becomes.
Also, this more
comprehensive continuing
schooling may, in -effect,
make possible a more skilled
voluntary service In the
community - In the care of
the yo ung , i n th e
management of the

Like many of the students in the
EPPA class; Dolores Berry 's education
had been in~rrupted by marriage and
family responsibilities:
.
" Returning back to the University

't

Fran Monkarsh is probably typical of
many swdents who take courses d!rough
Credit-Free Programs:"-She's already had
considerabje education - a Master's
degree in Education from U.B: -and is
married with two small children, aaes 5
and 3Y.. She taught ~lementary school in
Buffalo for several years, and then did
substibJ~ ~aching when her children
were born. Since lhe second child there 's
been a lull in her career and school life except for Credit-free Programs.

"/ /Ike to be Mf/th people who
share Ideas, or to be with
someone, /Ike the teacher or
leader, who is giving me
something to think about. I
think It's refreshing for me to
be out. I /Ike the Ideo of
going to the University and
being with d/ffennt people
than the ones I see ...,1)1 day.
It's on oudet, I guess. from
the usual routll'le. Also, f
think taking thest1 classes and
ttJ!klng wim other people
makes you more lntrrestlng. I
think /'lie become more ·
lnteresdng!"
Page-7 I OCTOBER 11, 1973 I REPORTER-CONTINUING EDUCATION INSERT
·
·
'
f.i1t l"ll1n l ', .,_
• ' .; .H?.O' H I

losi: ~~ gr:r;n,:r ~tr\:e-~~~n~!':mf~~
things. And bein&amp; an adult swdent you
feel a little awkward and uneasy. This
way, I feel more attached to the collqe
life per se, now, through Millard Fillmore
College and through this course.. I f~ ·
more a port of the college life. I have received a lot of valuable information contacts with die rorrect.departments' to
go to for certain problems - the people
to see and how to go about iL It's a splendid orientation for those adults who are
in the same careaory as I am. Even
d!ough I've had SOI1JO collese background,
still and all, it was like starting all over
again!"

.....

�Wlf.~FM

RADIO . .

--

Ullimelely die Office for Urbln
durwo by
"~
modifyinl die . procedures of die u~
venity In on1er to lhe needs of 1M - W8FO-FM radio prob1b1y has die
COIIII'MIRlty, and 'by educatJna die aimlarpst pi;tonllal "JtuCCent body" of any
munlty
the ....,. tllld die reof lhe departments In die Division of
souR:eS of lht UnMnlty;lbroujl pro' ConliiXIII]J Educadon - rwiilly, -v·
~ like
the coounes at
one In 8liffalo and lhe •noundq camIlle Comnalnlty
tion Center ~
rnunltles with an FM radio! As a mOdg
of liS &lt;i1her ~ Urban EXf:e
: bridle botwMn die UnMnfty and the
seeks to provide 2-way c:ommuntca~
, 0 mmunlty, WBFO bri• lhe Unlbetween the Unlwnity and ~f. disversity's ,ultunl and edu~ rea&lt;lvantlled adult. It seeks dlanp.""' ~
sourc:es to lhe Jlsteni!!l publiC ~the vast
key operalirig que~ Pf -Urban Extonrna· ; of whom ate non-matriallaledl)
sion as Ieos: "Ht&gt;w· 'an we do thlnss ., in :"'~ way that redUces lbe sterility
' better?"
of ·t ypiul "eduutional broackastina." At
the same time, it reminds the Un'-sity
that it, too, is- part of the IMP.r rommunity .- and gives the . oommunlty- a '
c:tW&gt;U riJ. talk back. Thus, WBFO pro. vide• on-goin&amp; eduutional pOssibilities,l_n
bo!h a. broad and. a narrow 'se_J!se1 _!0 die
Buffalo wmmunity. Attamed to the Divioion of Con·
tinuing Educa1ion ,i.n 1968, WBFO.
changed from _ca student~ and
student-oriented radio statoon, to a
rom.OOnity-wide pul!li•· radio station, a
•
lhe- Adult ·Advisement Center
member of the National Pliblic IUdio ~
offers a unique seA~ice to adults in the.·
Nel)vork and the National AsSOciation of
Buffalo area: open counselina on the edu- ~ Educational Broadcasters. It soon de. velopeda superior r_!lputalion nationally:cational, voutional, _and service opportunities available to them. It all started.in
as a high-quality publk: railio station,
with emphasis on 'public affairs, rom.the spring of 19§7 with a course, Off_ered
tbrouih -Credit-Free Programs, entttled
mtinity . interface, edu~~n •.
~ ."Counseling for MidUreer Decision_s:' ·
music;; programming.~-:- '! '
~ . ~'"··
ln-tfiis class, a series of group counseling
In a very-real sense, WBFO Is alter:native · radio · in' 1he cBufh.!o 'ill'ea,' "P"&lt;&gt;-" ·
,sessions helped. men .aoP..;)YOmen to e_xplore -new possibilities in employment,
&amp;rammin&amp; rmterlal not readily •vail~··
contJnuing educ,ation, and . vo1~eer ser~
from ' commerciai i..Stations. Music provice and helped them to defefmme new
gramming includes ' cla!isical anct mode~n .·
dire~tions via vocational aptitude -tests
.. serious" ruusiC -(WBFO is ttle sole outf~t
and self~aluations.
for cqntemP.Of¥}' serious m~s!c in tl)e
The course-was a great success, and
area); jau, ·fol k, an~ progr~~1ve fOCk.
it soon became obvious that there was a •
Much of the music programmm&amp;. offers
tremendous need for this· kind of service . _the listener especiall)1 .theadult listener,
in -the romjllunity. TherefO..e, the Adu_[tan- opport{.nity iO share in ;.nd_learn
AdviSement Center was sre ated tn ~ about the musical herita:g~ .of the world's
cultures. Although. not couched in a
1969-70 as the newest department of the
Division 'ot Continuing Education.
formal instructional forl1'\2"t per se, most
-'""Starti ng out a t the Extension
ITllisic programs have. historic or thematic
Genter in Williamsville and subsequently
ron texts (e.g. ''The World of Opera" and
" From Rags to Rondos").
.
moving to_ its present location on. !he
WBFO's · exten~ve public_,affairs
Ridge Lea campus, the Center hasasmted
programming· has w_oii~ accl~tm !rom die
thousands of adults since its inception inp.ress as we·ll as from governmental
1969. In addition to .t he "COunselinj(forc
Mid-Career OJdsions' ~ course, which W45' ·
bOdies, and hils providedlia -kind ~f eduthe spark for the entire Center, other at·
ca~-ion in local government that,
tivities of the Center include: individual.
hopef~lly will contribub&gt; 10 intelligent
interviews by appOintment; referrals and
and thou'ghtful dtizen participation in
iri·formation via the telephone; edu·
the community. In ·addition, there are
cational advisement for Veter"ns; vou-·
various programs appealing to special segtionil testing and eValuation; and main· .- rrients of ·the liStening public, such as
tenaQce of an ex.tensive library of
' • • Aging 'in Today'$ Wotl-d'', "·
Occupational" and education~ ihfqr. uwomi.npower'', "Working Oass IUdio",
.
and "Howjido-Sadooale-Doogie!" (a ·
mation.
·
The adults who use the center are
chilpren's 'program). Finally-, more than
men and women who need help at
20 hours per . week. are prwammed by
decision :ma~ing _points in their lives.
and ;tor 'BI~c~ and Spanish-speakihg
Those who make appoinunents for indi· people - ¥' attempt to provideminority
communities-with """ss to the airwaves
vidual counseling are_approximately 50%
m~n; 50% women, while"the ."Mid-O!reer
so that they can eduu~ themselves and
Decisions" c:Ourse has one class just for . others in the problems that they face, and
explcire possible -soiljtions to:.tbese '
women and one for men and women. The
average age o(· woinen in _the "~id~eer
problems.. • .
. ·
·Decisions" ·'OUrso is 39; most of .them
~ WBFO l'adio .is workina to. create •a
in thio home, iaising children
, rommpniutions medium that allows, peohave
and h'elplng th~ir - husbands li!_roligh
pie .to
each 'other, ' to !.Ugh_
school, anll now desire to pick up the
-..iith each other, and even occasionally to
thread of their education and plan a
get' an.JVY with each., o!her. ,To, quob&gt; a
recent slogan - be1ng used around the ·
career. Men using the center are usually
rontemplating~ change in jobs or are vetstation: "WPFOis People -Radio!"
erllf!S needina eduuti!"'al and -voutional
counseling: Almost all of the adults who
This lnsirt commemoivtlng th~-~50th
use the Center, however, are interested in , Annlvttwry
of .tht Unlrtrsll)l ~ D/11/s/on of ....
w:M:atiotJtll roupseling;·even when the immed~te goal is a return to collese to con~~:u':::!'::!::J:C!/x:~'::op::,C::,ron;h:
Divls/o/, · Is Issuing. Tht booldtt m~Uliol WQJ
tinue their eduution, their long-range
wrltttn and designed by· fanlci! Mt~t;Ktnzlt,
goal is a vtiaitlonal change. •
DCE groduatt tlSJisttmt· tmd editor of the...
In tile future, the Adtilt Advise~ D/YIJJon •s ne;wslttttr, !i!l!1IIr!J.
·'1
ment Center hopes to do more voutional
.
.
....

Extension ~ to effett

aout

EPPAeJ::""

ADUtT·
_ADV-ISEMENT
CENTER ~

drama,fnd

·can

Barbara Fenn was a student in the
Adult Advisement-center's 'class
"Counseling for Mid &lt;;areer Decisions for
Women" this past Y"l'· When asked what
she got out of the rourse, she replied:
"Confidence -

S«lf·

-c'bntidenee•..And an Idea that

I wasn 'r fllone. I aiJNrtYS
thought thtrt ' ..... the only
person that hod this p~m,
not knowing whitt to do with
my life; and I found out there
.,e.alot of otlws!"

been.

,, ._g,;,e li;lf"•.:-"'. 4 ~

learn fi'om

......,,

~

...

• Jt

"t;,

.

h:

\'

•• •,

..t.,:,:

REI!ORn!R,C::ONTINUING EDUC...1'10N INSERT/OCTOf!ER 11,1973 /Page 8·

�Rq«fer Gf OGiallw 18; 1.872), I'NIId&amp;lt Kattlr auouaced tlllll llleJie
1110111d6e (114M,_.,...~ tha

I-.. i!$J~ Be-

~
4~- ·of~
..,
and
armwry~

"'\b'l:
~ lntemal
8ecolrfty Oammittee, Run -u.. in-

............
;;A&amp;
~¥~~
.
JIO......
M.._._H a---.....
.....:~·ernotirmU...........

aelec:tiwl uua1n1 um ....- detaiL·
Hull ~-- ellaaand
tbla .......... ol' ......... ata~r....-n and.- faculty ........
l1D ~ to the ........._, ...,at- .
......s...mc 11172-73 clewllopiiJI the apecillc pideline pnJpCJMia.

--·-

tallal

Paeitiaft...........

•. ~aflolput

'O&gt;ere were III!YI!l'lil eoun:ea of input.
. 1be aubcommittee wrote to 30 mil - and ani.....ailiea-of U/B's size,
lilcated ·in aimiiar urban environllarta,
oociallan, the Millard Fi11mare Co~
where campus -=wity f.....,. were
Studoat Aaoociallan, the B1ao:k Student Union and the Pt-110 Riean .Wknown to be armed. At leaa half of
denlorpnizaticm, in addition to .......
these responded with their IIUidelinea
faculty memben,.aeven ataft tepnllellanct~ with arming. The usual
conui&gt;ent, Hull asya, was "don't .,..
- ~ cme tepnllelliatiw each of the
consider selective &amp;QDing, do it toAlunmi and · U1B Counoil, and """
tslly." 'lbe Uni..,..ity of Waabington,
mmmunlty tepnllelltativea, .Judie .Jo· Seattle, in fact, repOrted rather proudaepb S. Mattln4 and Thomas R: Blair,
ly that by instituting lots! arming, it
deputy MID!!!iaoioner, City of Buftalo
~t of Police. Admittedly,
had won a citation from the FBI for
Hull aaya, few of the student repre-.
being one Of the reporting districtS in
aentatlvea played active roles in the
the
showing the greatestdecreese
committae's deliberations- as is bein crime rates.
Some 20().3()() campuses in the U.S.
inc c:baqed - by some of the membave armed security forces, Ht'11
bers- of the student OPPOsition to
noted, and in the course of ita reartnin,. But, be inBiata, this lack or
student interest was not due to any
search, tbe suboommittae was unable
to discover any instsnc:e of an armed
abortcominp of the mmmittee itaeU.
fl4!CIIrity oflicer accidentslly - &amp;booting ·
l.e«otrs were sent and follow-up phone
anyone. Of a&gt;urae, he added, tbat
calla were made to each mmmittae
member, notifying tbe individual of
doesn't mean that such an incident
· scheduled meetings. Peraonal reprelvisn't occurred since our study or that
to
three couldn't take place tomorrow.
aentat!Qns to less active members were
live
At Wayne State in Detroit (after
alao made. All reporta, minutes and
which the subcommittee patterned its
other documents were sent to each
·idea
stance.
•.
_ c;ommittae IIIOIDber for response and
selective arming guidelines), there had
To lboae who p'-1 the eample of
appropriate action. It baa beeo argued,
beeo in tbe course of """ Y81U'B only
Kent State, ........ State 1Uld Southone occasion when an ollloer bad
Hull notes, that there _iitight be more '
em Uniwnlty • the inevitable outdrawn and fired a weapon. This was
student cooperation now if tbe process
come of the ....,_ oflll'lllinl campus
when an armed bank robber, a "listed
were started all over again. Bu!, be .
officers, 11ooooever aelecllvely, Hull republic enemy," had come on campus
says, someone ousht to ask why,' tbat
millds tMt, ill _,.. of
obooling
and fired on the officer. In thio case,
opportuoity was not taken before.
incidenta, out.ide police the of.
Hull noted, the oflicer took the fire
On the matter of arming, which was
without returning it until be oould
fepden.
but one aree of the original oommit"'lbat's oiuctly the situation we're
remOve himseU from a crowd of bytee's deliberaliolis, the group tmanitryina to aYOid lbroulh .OW' recomstanders. 'l'ben and only then did the
.mousl.y recommended tJiltlins;t the genoflicer fire.
.
merlCiation to ielecliveiY ann a tboreral carrying of firearms by the Securousbly traiDed few C11!1JP1111 ollloers.
J This is the type of careful restraint
ity Force.
which Hull feels bia subgroup's rec"No, ·we can't guarantee that there
ommendations would build into the
Instead, several alternatives for
will be no incidents wiiiM aelective
propooed U/B system of selective
meeting armed thresta were examined.
arming," be aaya,• !'but we baW&gt; recomarming.
Using the Buffalo Police was ruled
mended proeedwea to mde aucb inciThe guidelines subcommittee also
out, Hull aaya, becauae their response
dents a 1ainimum poliiibility." 'lbe
studied the literature of so-called nonto an armed man call was judged
lethal weapons and the literature on
likely to be difticult to control - ''You
training,
review by
udthe
-:.=~·
lions
m1Uldated
•
he
weapons and charges for weapons. On
might bave 30 cars converging on camconteoda, "are more lltrinaent tbao
the first matter, the group found tbat,
pus, in response to such a call." Furlboae for &amp;IIY police ... campus securdespite the nomenclature, non-lethal
ther, the mmmittee felt, a response by
weapons such as rubber bullets can be
ity force of which - ..... knowledge.
outside police would be in the nature
Some ma,y ,_. ._1bat they're too
"lethal" in some circumstances. "This
of a routine Jine.of-duty assignment,
strict." 'lbe p111p0e, be illdicates, is
is not to say tbat a rubber bullet is
rather tlian in the vein of an unusual
to train a body of cdoera aware both
the same as a .38 caliber steel-jacketed
"special-iesponae- required" situation
of the reatrictioaa em -.pcma' ,_ and
projectile," Hull points out, "but the
as would be the caae with a trained
or bow to .-:t IIUitehly ill a g;-.
group felt there was no point biding
group. of campus patrolmen. A sugsituation.
whole pblbophy of
behind this nomenclature." Especially
gestion to uae faculty-staff volunteers ,
our I'I!(&gt;OI'ta," he aaya, "can be charsince this class of weapons is regarded
in lieu of Campus Security was reacterized by the Idea of liDAIItJDZ)
as "not as effective" for most security
jected as impractical, so the commitpwpoaes:
UIIPONS, ac:cardlnt to piOWICiltion."
tee recommended the mmbination ap'lbe initial report by the campus Comproach of increeaed uae of dogs and
mittae ... lntemal Security; in fact,
Yotl&lt; Study
selectiue arming of security pei80Dilel.
'lbe group was informed by a study
listed eilbt IIIICI.-ift levels for han-·
'lbe committee's thinking on dogs,
of the New York Police Department
&lt;lti.o, a IMm illddeot -from dlacu&amp;Hull recalla, was that their uae would
in its recommendations on weaporui
sion tbrOuah aQolery to ~ and
not be suitable in all instsnces, pel'
t the .38 special revolver ) and cartissuance o(• m - culminating in
ticularly becaUse they might prove
ridges. A special cartridge "soft" bul"am!8t wiiiM ~ aa a last remore, obpoDous tO some tbao the
let
was recommended because it will
threat of arms and becauae they are
lbllll with a W8lllin8 to
aort IIDd ~ of the
of their iDftict,
not ricochet or penetrate a wall as
difticult to uae in circumstances o1her
a steel-jacketed bullet might, thus lowmg IWIIIII8ry (&gt;lllllabmeat rather tbao
tbao petrels .and some "open situaering the probability of injUring byenforciJqr minimum detoutian... Tbis
tions."
standers. A reoommendali9n for a low'lbe committae's decision on this
principle
f-*
er charge alao reduces the bullet's efbe
"11800Ddo
aatwe"
to die
policeforce,
recommendation for selective arming
fective range. ''You don't need somein the original report was voted oo
Hull aaya, with lethal re-....1 oaly for protec:tjan of life. or
thing lethal at """ mllea," the subseparatelY -as was each clauae of
mmmittee concluded, only something
'Rol
_•
limb, .., for ,_ ill the of a rabid
tbat_
document.
with stopping power at three yards,
or injured aaiiMl, aa is BDCial custom.
perticular\y in light ol the something
M~ Hull points out, the
.:the report itaelf apells out the cirless tbao perfect accwacy-of "the' occumatan.,... sunounding this c:rucial
guidelinea
-1bat
in 11.IIII,Y """"
casional user" as the campus ollloer
when an armed
a6
abia
vote:
would be.
wrbe adherents to the majority
- - . be ud hill lhlft .apervisor
. 'lbe recommendations fcx plainopinion (8 of 12 preeant) arrived at
must 8Je a fuD repartud 11108 a beer.
The beuinl oommlttae to be &amp;pclothes and ~ed weapooa are
it reluctantly: they acc:epted all the
lotri&lt;:al utensions of the notion of
in ...eli an - t would aJao
~ Ill&amp;¥ their opinion but
selective arming, HUn feels. Plainempowa:acl to _,..,t udl.., MBkweiJbed them dilfmal!JY.. The ........
liW&gt; copmiittae ol .... student ....,. . clolhea help prewnt the lup body
out ~ aooounta -fmm otben,
of uniformed po{icemen from bei!llf
ciaticm authorized ita ...,._tative to
in ~ to the Campuo Sec:uritS' tupta of armed individuals and 0011decluatiaia
IIUIJIXId the majaftty. Tbe.....-tacealment reduces the Libllbood ol a
Tllo'-w.t!
livea of four otMr student aaoocialiona
IUilman heine able to tell ...... is ... \
_..,
.
.
.
.
t.
Two
CliiDIIittae
'members
Tbeaa lllllliDc l1lidelinea before
is-DOt armed.
the,.....,_ are die .-It of two years
preeant apln8t the motion, and
Otba sources of inf.....,.lion for
ofHull«DDIIIIittee ...... with wblcb Dr.
""" I'8IIIIIYed opinioo."
the 811bcoaunittae's ........_..,.tiona.
....... iatimaWy in.YOiwd
Eech of those ...... voted for the
were: the .,...._tinp of two naliaoal
Hull 8&amp;Wd • ~of the 11r8t
· aelectiW&gt; armi!11 II&amp;IPI&lt;*h Hull
s)'11111081a em c:ampua security -ttera
said, a "raauctant OOil..t to the Idea,"
Cooimdu. Clll ~ 8eaarlty wblcb
atleDded by ..tminiatnlton, security
incl~ hbmell.
cNrpd by l'relldlnt Bob&amp;t L
,.,._
initial
re
JI!Wid•tim•
W'Mt!l
otudent ..-tat~- and
Ketter chiriDc ..saa.Jc um-'12 with
lawyers; and writt&amp;l poaticm .......
......Jved and accepted -.n. aome
_ _ . , i , . .,.ya ill wbldl the Unlfrom poupa ... CIUIIJIU8. The 81ud&amp;ata
..,aid~~~" ... the put of the Prai=
~ -.Jd _
.. thas:--.r
dent. They _.., .aJao &amp;Miar..t by a
Apinat ~ reoalved a bearing
tow.nl tha ...aluliaD of
Sethouih th8lr-- of appoailion
Faculty
Seaale
- -•-tartbet
- - Hull
Mya.
IIIGblaaa In four
Ketter lbllll
named
......
to arming in allY fatm not ......
and
mane to the IUbcammlttee'• cbaJwe.
mlttae ol the original Jntal1aU Seourity
tee (J~Ub~W~ed Ia ..... ailirety Jn.thel' ' tliiiup to maim ,.
• ..~ . - ~ 'lbtat IP'CIUP'• oontatiaft that _ ,

. . . . _ g&amp;I&amp;B)

~-

wn.e

M._

~

ru-..

""1!&gt;'

r! ":!

:u:: ~ "'7~

r

anniDI .... .

troUed. well-t:ralned, llliioll ..... aperatinc wiiiM rilidlY ~ Md

supervised conditions Wblcb lie ....
is the crux of bia •d
d!MQ popooals.
'
After """ye&amp;n. of ~:an

.....

sell is oonvinced that,
....-...
from both aides, this i8 tha ~at- alternative open to the campaa ..,..
munity.
"We baw to do somethin&amp;• bt leela.
"And I doubt that that .....cblq is
further study."

u.s.

_.....,...

•

~

eu.iDft
olteD dilladl.~
appoainJis llludalla,
be
Cllll't ... - · t make the

~lathes of the Studoat
AMildalicia, the Gmd..te Studoat Aa-

eluded

u-

iar ........

Symphony Band
t oGive Concert

,

'lbe ' U/B Sympboay· Band. wiiiM
. the direction of Frank .J. Cipolla, will
open ita season with a CDIIC&amp;'t In W'dIiamsvilie South Hilh 8cbool Auditorium at 8 p.m., Sunday, Oc:tabK 1"'lbe occasion will alao _,., the intzo.
duction of the band's MW &amp;llllilltant conductor, .James Wayne Kasprowicz,
who will be featured 88 trombone soloist in Ted Frazeur's "Divertimento for
Trombone."
'lbe rest of the program will include " Antiphon" by Fisher Tull; "Le
Journal du Printemp&amp;, Suite No. 3"
by J , C. F . Fiacher as tnmacribed by

~~~~~u!..~:!r.

cbetli's ''0 CoOl is tbe Valley;• and
·"Tunbridge Fair" by Walter Piston.
The SymphOny Band provides -the
University and mmmunity with four
mnc:erts each year. 'lbe Ban&lt;;! baa beeo
invited to perform throughout Western
New York and Canada and baa the

~~of~~inAv!':

Presbyteril!n Church.
Assistant Cooductor Kasprowicz
holds degrees from the Uni~
Indiana where be studied
with Lewis- Van Haney, formerly of
the New Yodt Pbilhannonic. While
at Indiana, be was a member of the
Cootemporary Chamber ~Ie. He
baa perfonned with the Cuala Festival
Orcbeatra, lUid the BulfaJo Pbilharmooic OrdJeatn,

'lbe October 14 c:onceri ia open to
the public wi'tbout charge.

Rah-Rah Revivai

._ve

Scbool-relilted producta
made
a comeback, the WaU Strut J01117t1Jl
~~this~~ the 1-.lline,
"Students are more tradilion-orianted tbao they were a few years qo,"
Don C. l.ein, vice president Of a ..0..
manufacturer, told the JOUI'JitJL He
sees a l'8IIW'II800e in the ICbool ring
business despite hilher auld prices.
LG. Ballour Co. alao reported ita ring
busiiMa up 6 to 7 per cent from last
year.
Velva SbMn Manufacturing Co. .in
Cincinnati reported that ..,~aaJea

t~~~~L"Y~

boob are haclt in 88 well 'lbe Stanford UniverSity Quad, fcx oae, reIIWIII!II this ..lwae after a two-year ab- . W.C. Bunting Co., East Liverpool, Ohio, ,_. sees an incnlue in
buaiMM from fraternities fcx beer

~=~~~

ita -raJ ~· "but we aren't
.

starving anymore.

Pnited Way Progress
E a r I y returns from the Campus
United Way Driw indicate that $4,105
in ~~~edam and gifts have IJem recaived '-ani the ooerall UniW&gt;raity
ami of $120,000. .
'lbe Maintenance Department~
reports 90 ~~~edam totalinc $1,447,
Drive o8lciala -.y.

�Milbrath Gets
$82,000 Grant
Dr. 1.-ter t::rt.~..::.=

~-II» _,.

$8I.CIOO
. , _ , _ . . ...........
O.WP.~
~
Gill . . ant
.....
IICDib'I "'...- - ."'.
....~
......

a-.a.-..111 1be U.S....BnliiJ. J•
..-,__. Narw,y will iDrvilw tile
........... "' .... ClaUDtdel call·

=:=....
-

!!om

.mra.:·

'*;': ~
cadwaleiJ"~

vi ....

_...will .. ~ ... llleir
.............. with tile ..... ol
&amp;bold GOO - .......-1. acilllli&amp;,
ud IDduatrilil........
.
a-tile
feel that envi-'&amp;1 ww. will be aticlad by
tbe ~ aviacJaaait.l ~
in wblcb !! ~ u-. tba .beJiofa
"' _ . . ll9IDI in iDdalllriUired. and
polluted ....,. cltioe in _,., CXIUI\try
Will be ...........t with tbe ideM "'
.... livinlln lllil1 Juaely 1Jil-

-ra-

tooct.d by

~tian.

...m- ...,
.beJiofa to be

-'111e .....

.Agnes Varda-~o Screen Her Films
•

""''J8Ct envirapmental

lltnJndy allected by 1111•
tiaaaJ cultuNs and level ol eeaDOIDlc
cleYelopaalt, and have mo-. to com-

!\4anda.Y.

ber 01 ber llhua on ~
~ 15, throuch 'lbunlday, ()o.

:r-~=

tobel18.

wbidl contrast abuply
The -..ben believe fhat JmowJ-·
ol environmantal beliefs ia .....
_ , . to develop edw:atiaaal alrat&amp;
P. to help man with the enviI'IIIDI8Ital crisis. S11 c h Jmowledae
could be 1-.1 by - t a l aDd
private .......,... in various countries,
cm-n groupe interested in envimnmental matters, or interlllltionsl organimliona with reopoosihility for developmental planning and protecting
the environment.
In preparation for beginning the
project, an interlllltional working aessioo for members of the n!ilearch
teams from each of the countries was
held Manda,y through Wednesday of
last week at the Lord Amherst Motel
in Williamsville. ~
Dr. Paul H. Reitan, pivject co-director and professor of geological sciences at U i B, explained that the
initisl part of the .-reb, to be conducted in Bulfalo, will develop methodology and design instrumenls for
the intemati'onal project. Last week's
wod&lt;ing session was the finlt of three
conferences at which reeearcbers and
...,Piesentetives of governmental agencies from the four countries involved
will make their contnl&gt;utions before
field woil&lt; begins in 1974.
U/B representatives to the lbst
session included Drs. Milbrath and
Reitan, Dr. Theodore L. Hullar, 11880ciate professor of medicinal chemistry,
and Dr. Jobn A. Howell, IUIIOciate
professor of &lt;!!emical engineering.

"What Coletta was to the novel,
A..- Varda is to film," one French
asid in praise of her wort,
-which includea 11 &amp;lms acheduJed for .
aunpua ahowings, the lbst pair, bJ ·
Poinle c~ and 0 .u.an., o chtJt.
eo~a, acheduJed for 140 Capen at S
p.m. M on day. (For the complete
schedule, checlt Weekly Communique
listin
for "Screening/Discuasioris"
Mon~ through Thursday.) -~
A native .of Belfium, Mme. Varga
wanted to be a pamter
followinlr
university years at the Sorbonne ana
study at the School of the Louvre,
she became instead official photog·rapber for the Th«Jtre NalioMl Pop-

criiiC bas

flllle

_ _ ......,. _ _ (loft)

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

-

- I l l .. - - - .... a.dt. - -

---~~~---~~~

Cl8rll .... T'lluNIIII)o, 74-92. n. $70 far 1118 .,..._ ..,

.

FSA(conlilwed from [!01•1. col. I)

~

before :April or May, 1974.
A committee will be a{'I&gt;Ointed . to
ft!IIOive any remalninl' amblguitio!s surI'OUDding the sale and cl.isi&gt;&lt;Jo!ition of
the p~ Ketter said. . -

...

News of the proposed sale of the
506-acre parcel of Amherst land. purby FSA in 1964 as a longinvestment to bellelit the Unity community, was leaked in the
local late last week and further
reported in a . copyrighted Spectnun
article .on Friday.
Tbat article, termed "substantially CliX'!WlC:t" by E.W. Doty, U/B vice Jml&amp;'
ideot for operations and systems who
is treMurer of FSA, indicated that the
sale was to ' have been ellected by this
November for a· pun:base price of
apprmimately $1.5 million with . the

=t!'

r.::,::s
atudmts.
of

~tru;'.!/~d

=

Earlier _praposala for the land, the ·
Spectnun article said, centered on

~~"A~~~~

197~~to:~~;..,.ny ·

_.. in a c:J.-f -.ion on September 7
to &amp;CillePt a bid from the UDC whose
2,0CJO.aae Audubon city deYelopment abuts the liSA ~- At that
point, UDC apobsmen seemed to
=-~
in the pmposed ac-

- ....

Friday aftemoon, however, UDC
Plelldent Edward J. Lotrue was rePOrted to have ordered a "tempolll!y
halt" to lbe pun:base ellorts in reaponae to lbe Amherst Town Bo&amp;nl.
UDC l:al not witbdrawn its olfer,
apobsmen said, biit was simply not
takina any " ' - toward pur" ' - - Amherst o6:iaJs were reportedly wary that UDC is 1a1Wur "too much·
laDd from .local control and endanaer·
llil the town's tu base," the CourioE%11N!M reported.
1'be Courio aJao UMarthed "one
Slate ~tor" who-indicated opposi:
tian to the pun:base and on 'Sunday
an a carioaa "analyais" atory, . I Uaiwenity administrathoe ~
•
not outright deviousin
. "a tidy profit Oil the
laDd " &amp;1111
ering -.-hat· vague
&amp;IIII~'CCIIJ infonnation about
- tbe price
• y paid for the paroel.
A
editorial also ntn.

C.

w?i

but

ulaire, later doing both free-lance

length film was Cleo (rom 5 to 7
(1961) [schedUled for 7 p.m. Monday
in the Norton Conference Theatre].
More recently, Mme. Varga lias

made Bl=k Panther•, a documentary

filmed at an Oakland demonstration
ag&amp;inst the trial of Huey Newton and
containing interviews with a number
of black activists, and Lion'• Lave,

tw;\pproximately 30 awards, for ten-

of either 9 or 12 montba, will be
offered to citizens or nationala of the
U.S. Stipends """" from $9 000 for

Un!B

nine:

12 months to $6,750 for
'J:ravel
aiiOWIUlCes up to a total of $2,000
a n d dependency allowanc:es in the
amount of $720 per annum are aJao
made.
•

made In Hollywood with Viva. tile
underpound aupenlu, and Jim Rallo

ud J8IGIDII Rqni, authoa &amp;1111 8laD
of BaiT, which l8 hilled • a kind vi
Warbol- JUre impsoviatiaaal - t
in EnaJiol! about stan ud political .....matian in tbe Movie Yecca.
Both ..... ... the c:ampua

achedule. ·

"""-"nc

Mme. V a r d a is married to tbe
French film director, J - Demy.
They 1M with their cbiJcban in Paris
Where their home comhinell trappinp
of tbe ordin8ry hawabold with tbe
p - of film ~t and tbe
tempo of film· productiacl. For &gt;\gDe6
Vania, 'Ture complete cimma-tbat
ia IQY paaaion.,
.
Mme. Vania's llppearanee at U/B
is beingaponeored by the Departments
of French and English, the Center for
Media Stully, tbe UUAB Film Committee, and the Office of Cultural Af.
fairs.' Sbe will BJlPMI' at all or maat
of the showings to diacuos her films.
'

....

..-

Fisk..:::..'···
(Continued from

ptJIO

#, col. #)

others may_..suggest attractive chan.;..&amp;:
Tlie point to remember is this: you

=. ~:u:ru:w~
BUg~Jr't!;

at· tbe table and,
postures and even p.-.res will be sought
and neeiled, the basic positions for this
round will quickly evolve. The time
is late, but not too late for individual
and group input. .
. May I suggest that- you aend your
tboughts, in wrifinl, -aa early aa pos-

~bu:6.f~~:'=v~

earls at 4224 Ridge Lea or to me at
119 Foster. 'lbank you.
.
-BOBDTS.I'IIIK

Campus Delegate

Job Openings "

Deadline for submission of applications for the National Science Foundation's NATO Postdoctoral Fellowships in Science ia October 29, the
U/B Resean:h Office baa been in-

G ::;&amp;fu:~-~ -:....
planning ·to upon or continue
postdoctoral &amp;tudy in the matbematical, physical, medical, biological, en.
. and aocial acieaces;.IIJid the
~and/or philooophy of tiCieDce.
A I a o included are intenllaciplinary
fields oompriaed of overtspping , _ .
among two or more acieaces (e.(.,
oam&gt;ograph,y
opel&amp;tians """""""'
meteorology, ~ blopbyai&lt;a). Fellowships are not 8WIU'ded for aupport ol
wort tow.-rd the M,D., D.V.M~
.D.D.S., or J.D. degreee, oor for ~
port ol naidency training or .,ii;;
clinical wort, or for wort in edw:alion,
h~~ wort. dlploaa:y, hi&amp;-

ar-

ticles and photographic work for a
number of ~ ma~.
Her ..m-uent development aa a
writer-6Jmmaker was sudden. Sbe became one of the foUilden! of the "new
wave" in French cinema, making creative film essays on limited financing,
outside the normal system. Several of
these are included on the week's program bere. And La Pointe Courte bas
been hailed, by !Alain Resnais wbo did
its editing, as revealing most of the
characteristics of new wave films..._
Mme. Varda's first "sponsored" fuJI.

NATO Applications
Due October 29

formed.
Applicants an&gt; ...m-~ to obtain
the """""""' forma from NSF at 1800

Agn. Vania, French lllmmabr oansideled by many to be the maat jm..
portant woman film clliector in the
world1 will .....,.. and cliacua a num-

U..:t

The Peraannel Office indieates
tbe folio.ring fllcalty and teaching profeaaional italf positions are open at State Uni-.ity at
B~:

.

I

F&amp;aii!J

.

Assistant Instructpt, Oral Biology.
Clinical Instructor, OccupationQl Thuapy.
Clinical Instructor, Fizaf l'rolthoilontia.
Instructor ~time), Occupational Thuapy.
Aaaiatant- Full Profa.&gt;r, Speech ColriiiUUIU:otion.
Alaiatant Profa.&gt;r, Speech ColriiiUUIU:otion.
Instructor, Phyoical ThD-rzPy~
Alaiatant Profl&amp;or, Ploy~ Edlu:otion.
'
NTP •
haociiJte 'Libraritul, Science and ~ Library, PR-2.
~iatant to Director, Student Peraannel Service&amp;, PR-1.
For addltiaaal infonnation ClClDill!!lling tbese joba ud for detail~~ vi
NTP ~ throughout tbe State Univenlty syatem, conault bulletin
board8 at tbese locations:
·
1. Bell P'llciJlty between Dl52 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea,. Building4236, next to cafeteria; S. ~Pdp Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to
C-1; 4. Health Sciencee Bulidlng, in corridor oppoaite HS 131; 5. Ciopm ·
Hall, in the corridor b e - Room 141 and tile Lobbn 6. Lockwood,
ground lloor in corridor next to vending madlinM;· 7. Hayee Hall, in
main •Sitnmco! foyer, acroas from Publlc lnfonnatian Office; 8. Am...
~· ~ oonidor ~ Rooms 112 and 113; 9. l'altr!!r
m corridor next to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1at floor, Houaing
area; 11. 1807 EJmw:ooci. Permnnel Department; 12. NortoD Uiibl,
Director's Office,•Room 225; 13. Diefendorf Hall, in conidor next to

Ensn-mc.
omce .

. Room 106.

�L.Se --·
..-":...--=
=•iS
lepl-Conference on
ervices ·
or Amherst

w~ tor Coupla, 218 Micllael•
8: ta-G p.m. -R4IJter ia 228 Norton.

,C-rinl Hen tuad 7'/tD-e,Dr. David
-~-~
~ UlB ~~ ol Cotpputer
ScieDoo, 4221 Ridle r-. Rm. 41. a: ao
p.m. Belreobments will be oervad after

tlllll-=-~

.....

~

the
-the

eventever

M~.'~~~~~Va~

c1a, Coilhinace Theatre. Nc&gt;rtoo, 7 p.m.
Spcm.ored by the Depa-rtment• of
Fnoch and EJUdiob. tbe Center for .Me·
dia Study, the U1JAB Film Committee.
aod the Ollioe.of CuJiunll Alfain. ·

m-fll·
J e.l-------. 'lba _.._wlll•IJII Wd.ia Roam

210 ollalila Lard O'Brian Ball, betlin-

at 8 p.m.

-n. · by nr.

U.~-

or

114 Crooby, 9 a.m.

for todaY~ meeting io: L
minutes from October 2; 2.
clcson. obeerver for managemeot/educaticmal cbaoge; 3. Final com·
mittee charcM and memberabip; 4. Staff-

~~~G~~~~~ !:';!;~

D-

No-Fee tm4
Lepl Services
by Priftm AttorDe,a... Pbillp R. Loch-

Sc:boc?'· 1:..-:;,; ~'!:. ~

~~ Lepl Services in the Uuiled

States," Barry Metzaer. JnWmatinoal
Lepl Ceater, 2 p.m.; ~tation
. as a Social Institution," Leoo MayheW,
DeparluMmt ot So!:ioloo, Ulii\waity

Univmaity

or California Law ScbooL

PIJblk

-

.

8DIHJI•:=

"'*'

at leut -

. . . . Benldal~

:r=:o:::!t~

.

Pteisllocen.e. Development of the Vir-

ginia CoaBtal Plain, Dr. Nicholas K.
Coch. Queens College. CUNY, Bell Facility, Rm. D-170, 3:30 p.m. Coll'ee at ·
3 p.m.
·/
ANNUAl JAMES McCOIMACIC MIJCHBl
LKTI*'

Notes Toward c History of Jrat.ice.
Lewrence M. Friedman, prof_,r of law,
Stanford Uni'l'_enity Law School, John
Lon! O'Brian Moot Courtroom, North

Cap,::;.~-~

the Faculty of .Law BDd

Presented by the Program in Comparative Literature.

cttliUCAI. ENGINHIIHG SEMINAl#

Battk of Algiers (Pontecorvo, 1966) ,
7 p:m. Burn (Pontecorvo, 1970), 9 p.m.
Both 1ilms a re free and will be shown in ·
140 ~pen.

Stude~~?t,B c:,~~ti~~~d!

8

the U/B Fouodatioo, Inc.
UfE WOIIICSHOP*

r

Death and DyinB, 232 Nortoo, oooo-1
p.m. Register in 223 Norton.
LECIUII'

dy~"Bw"L,~:-'I&gt;":.'"ts~m?:.he&amp;::

P.-ntad by the College of Mathematical Scieoce.

Du core' de 14 Core ·and Salut lu Cu-

l&gt;tJiM, by French filmmaker Alliles Varela,

Cooference Theatre, Norton, 2 p.m.
Preeented by the Departments of
French and Eodiab. the Center for Me·
dia Study, the WAB~ Committee,
and the Office of Cullunll Affain.

fiUl'

Shouhine (DeSica, 1946) , 140 Capeo,
3 and 9 p,m. No admiaaion charge.
FilMS'

--··

•

. Hwry! Hurry! (Menken), Say Noth-

inB (Noreo), N - Arino Window (Jacobo). Geo1rcphy"of the B~Maas),

El.!ctrocuW., an El.!plt&lt;Jnt ( · ) , The
Act of Seeing with One"• CJWn Eya

Ridge Lea-

~ ~ ol the~ Laa .....mli-

AUen Gu..but, author oi the HOUJL, Fillmore ROom, Nortoa, 8 p.DL
Tickets can be purcbued at the Norton ·Htill Ticket Ollice.
,
,
UUAI. fiLM••

A Sense of Loa (Opbula, lll'/2), Coaferenoe Theatre, Norton, cbeck ..............
for times. Admission cb.arge.

-

....

EXHIBITS
UUM AllT IXIIIIIIT'

' Paintiiap by_ Chria Britz, GUierY 219,
Norton, tluouP Frida)', Oct. 12. Galleey
houn: Mooday, Wedneoday aod 'Duua-

~. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tue.lay aod Friday,
-noon-4 p.m. and 8-10 p.m.; Blmday, 1-5
p.m.

Mt.i51C EXHIIIf•

New Muoic Depor,t,.,nt Facr:dly: 1!11374, Music Library, Baird Hall, . tluouP
October ij;.

UUAI AD EXHIIIT•

French Art PoSters, Gallery 219, Norton, Mooday, Oct. 15. tbrolicb Friday,
Oct. 26.

CONCEIT*

VUitina Artists Selia, featuring Sidney Foster. piano, Baird Recital Hall.
8 p.m.
Tickets are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office. Presented by the Departm~t of Music.
PUIUC LECTUU*

Absurdities of the •20th Century, Rod

i::i=~na!~. ~~:'., ~":£"/..~':,
8
f&gt;:;.,.ied by the Studeni Aaaociation
Speakers'BurealL
UUAI CONCHT*

Molt the Hoopk with New York DoU.,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8 : 30 p.m.
Tickets at $4.50 can be purchaaed at
the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
UUAI POmY KmVAL*

Theatre, Norton, 8 p.m.
LYUC liND PltOSA*

Ronald Hauser, professor, U /B Department of Germanic and Slavic, will
preoent introductory remarks leading to
a d.iscuasion on Third Penon Narratiue
Forma and -the [,.,.,r Man, 244 Crosby,
8 : 15p.m.
Sponsored by lthe Department of Ger·
manic and Slavic.

THURSDAY -18
CHAIAD

HOUSi

SHYICH*

(Conliluud /iom pate I, col. 4)
Following with a meal, Olabad House,
3292 Main St., 10 a.m: __
who will be baaed at Ridge Lea," the·
director ezplained.
MASTa. a.ASS*
With pianist Sidney Foater. 101 Bainl,
"Our long-term plans for the Ridge
10-«.m.
Lea Library include tbe addition ol at
least,one other profeaJioiW subject li~· Applicolio1Ul of lrTf!vuoibl.! Thermo·
brarian in one of the social ~"
d)'lUimia in BiokJty, Dr. Daphne Hare,
·be added.
'"lbere is DO question, that tbe li;;ta,.r.'i"~" of ~ at U/B,
brary intern, if lind wial sbe laaVIII,
will ba replaned. We..., maldna ef- · P.-teel Cy"'"the College ·of Mathematical~
fo.ts ID provide good refenmce -.&gt;ice
MUSIC llaWI/-11CIN•
at ~be~t . . durin~ daytime

zatloll, Smith aald, il liD _ . the

.., Ca-

•

FilMS*

Open Poetry Reading , Conference

TENNIS*

- U /B ""· Rredooia State, Rotary Field
Teonis Courts, 2 p.m.

~

SIMCOS TOIAH ca.oaATION*

tion on future workshops can be obtained
by calling 881-4630.
of

rAil are wekome, HiDel
pen Blvd., 8 p.m.
•UUAI POEnY fUTIVAL-.

The Gay Sci&lt;mu-Aphoriom 23: A
ReadinB (part two). Rene Girard, U/B
Distinguished Profesoor, Annex B , Rm.
5, 4 p.m.

Free refreshmento, Chabad House, 3292
Main St., 6:30p.m.

sb~da~n;;r~s~ J::~=

fiiWtSUICIIATH-~

NIETZSCHE AND DIE UJEI.AIY TEXT*

ticipants uiiderstand the impact and implications of work for women. It is free
and open to the public.

SCIEENING/DISCUSStON*

In
an increase in membership-from
in August .to cunently over 950 abarebolders, Dr. Ged&gt;ard
Falk, the Cledit union's president, reported that the Board of Directors baa
been ~ to include Tbomas
~ 11811istsnt vice president at •
U/8.
The cndit union, which cunently
bas asoeta of $335,000 and $167,000 in
looms, is supervised and audited by the
federal governmen-t . The Board of
Directors baa declared. a 5-5'h per cent
dividend twice each year lor the past
several years. Loans ""' made em ap.
plication ID the aedit committee at a
cost cif 1 per cent em -the unpaid bal....., per month. All aavlnp and loans
are insured and collections may · be
made by payroll deduction.
Peraoas wbo wish 1D join lriily do so
. by payina an entry fee of $1 to Miss
~ Fcm, ........., or the credit
· uruon at Roam 111, Peny Hall...Buffalo State, em any MCJDCIQ or "lllUJ&amp;o
day. N"" JDelllbela &amp;II! al8o required
ID
an 8CCOIIIil in the - t of
16 or 111111'8, so-that ..m111111111er bolde

332 Norton. 2-4 p.m. Register in
223 Norton.
.

to the provoot of Arts and Letters, and
law itudent Shelley Taylor Convisaar.
The -tbliop io designed to help par-

Credit Union Grows

t_

Droppin8 Out, or ln. l s lt a Good

~Idea.? .

The Formulation of Probkma of Di!fu.ion and Reat;tion in Porotu _Cataly•t
PeUeu, Prof. Roy Jackson, Departmeot
of Chemical Engineering, Rice University, 104 Parker, 4 p.m.

aaaociate piOfessor of medicine at U /B.
Trailer #5, 1 p.m.

A sharp increue in membership in
the Morton R. ·Lane State Uniwrsity
Federal Credit Union, located em the
Buftalo State campus, baa been noted
followina approyal anmtec1 by the
NatioDaf Credit Union Administration
~ or employees of U/B in

.

Of.~ WOK•
Sex and Geruhr, a diacuiUon on the
develOpment aDd etreCt of eemally atereotypinc women wbo work aod the clamW:
problem of role oonflict, 322 Norton.
noon~2 p.m. Child care is available in
337 Norton.
•
&amp; THE WOII.D

The
is invited both to attend
the Cllllference ·and to participate in
disct&amp;ions fou-tng each presen-

::..0.

Aff81nl.

Jurisprudence.

..!i::':.':
J~ru'l;~r.:=r~t:~&amp;
Dental- Bcbool. Bernice p._, aasiatant ·

or Califomia, a p.m.;.Ciooiins Remarb.

~O:s!,':''ltural

..

U/B va. D'Yoaville, aadr; Hall, 7 p.m.

tioo; 6. Formulatioo of agenda for November I· Senate meeting; 7. Other busi-

w0..,.

r..w

WOMEWI VOLLI.YIMI.*

.CHOlOCIY LECIUI£'

The

of

w.

8
by the Pt;'!;,ter for Media r

- - ST- SEIIAtt EXECUTIVE
COMMill&amp; MEETING••

~~===
'-·lllle

Marc Galanter, prof-.r, U/B law
Schaal, 4 p.m.
.
Each aPeabr's .,-tatloaW!ll be
foll......t by a 1J8111!1 discussioa. Panelisla will be: Robert
Gordaa, aasis-.
tsnt pro'-&gt;r, U/B Law Scbocil; Quinton Jobnstone, prof-.r, Yale Law
Scbool; AI Katz, a8aociale prof-.r,
U18 aw Scbool; 8eQiamili Lemar,
chief or the 0111ce of Criminal Law,
Pennsy!YliDla Department of Juslice;
Walter Probert. ~ director for
law and IKiciallk:lences, Nation&amp;! Science Foundation; Provost Schwartz;
Robert B. 8t.eYens. P&lt;Of-.r, Yale-Law
Schaol, and Plebte. Stolz, professor,

~0 rton,

TUESDAY-16

-1', 12: "l.aWyem lor
the Po«," Marjorie .Glrda, .-ciate
U/8 Law Scbool, 9 a.m.;
"'JJbe 1'1W1118.ol Lepl Services,.. Harry

llll!lli&amp;tmtr= U/8

::

Study.

~

ner,lr~

233

~r8oented

La

Creoturet~ and

Black Panthoo, by
Frenc;!',;_~~N r Agnes Varda, Cooference a..uc1u..... orton. 2 p.m.
. Sponsored by the Departments of Eogi l.ish and French'-the CeriiA!r (or Media
_ Study, the UUAt&gt; Film ~mrruttee, and

~~::Jr"~"'::;.,.=:;&gt;talin.J:.

ta

=-·~=~~
Bu l1'oUDdatioa, 9:80 p.m.' .
..

•

WEDNESDAY -17
SCQENING/DIICVSS-•

-ING/DISCUSS.O,.,

the

·
.
'lba Clilalp1ia acheduJe ftillcJwG_
- 1 ' , oc::rc-11: "l.eiialServicea lor...._ ol MlllleiUe IDoome,"
Badlaaa Canea, Aaaiam Bar Foundaliall, 8:80 p.m.; "Tbe ProiJian oi
Lack &lt;1. Bvalualhoe 8tlqWda in Lepl

Medco, 10 a.m.; "Tbe

7

' SCI&amp;IIING/DiscuSSION'

bowc.a' . . . . .lle imallDoBd. what
awl1alile, ad what

Ri&lt;:hud D. ~ - '

8 p .m.

P_!'nN~F:!C:f;.i~J;.::J_ ~"'?'rf·

ID~ liaaiiBJDbe - = : i n - .
elude: wboll~ lli-lapl-w.e,

ning tm!~Octct&gt;er 11)
widi ~

UUAI POEm IHRV'Al*

Featuriog Diane DiPri1n11 and Jery
Hoth•nl&gt;Uf, Cooference Theatre, Norton,

the &lt;lOIIoquium.

_,_.

'2

~piaDt Sidney F~Mter, •l01 Baird;

r-.""

brary there "with aD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
£iDu
.......m .m-ar "«·'
vara.. 1-co c..-.
a .......
:.::.~~ r1a1111111W:- . - a-reel
by ·-~•ott..·

INTERVIEW~
~rNtRYEWs

Throughout the aemeater, on-campus
intetviewa will be oooducted for otndents intereoted in atteDding paduate ocboolo
or obtaining employma11t. Further information and appointment. for interviews can be arnmpd tbrouP&gt; the Univeroity Plaoemeot 8Dd Can!er Gaidaace

-=--Ha~:;.; r::.~tJ..U:
'VHURSDAY-11 :

Raytheon

Com-

~j,,'f.."%':"P~::.f~'/!caod_11&gt;e
FRJDAY-12: Proctor ll Gamble.

NOTICES
COUNRUNG

ProfM&amp;iooal counae1ing io available at
Hillel Howre, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
appointment, call 1136-4540.- -·
GAY COMMUNRY

saYtas

CENtH•

./

m~tyr;:!=~~~- ~ ~enC.:L

(2rul ftoor) at the comers of Allen .aod
Franklin. will be hold on Suoday, Oct.
21, 1-10 p.m.
The Center, which offers lepl, medical
and social counae!ing. is open Mondayw
through Fridaya. 1-10 p.m., and Saturdays, 1-6 p.m. For further .infoi'IDAion.
call 881-5385.
UfE WOikSHOPS IEGISTIATtON

Regiotration for the many Life Workshops opoooored by the Diviaioo of Student Affairs and the Student Aaoociatioo
will begin on Monday, Oct. 15, in 233
Norton. Fo~ further information., call
881-4630 .
~COS

ON WHEaS

Cbabad Rouse ia sponsoring a Suceoa
on Wheels in front of Norton Union,
Sunday through Thursday, Oct. 14-18,
for those' wbo would like to 10 into the
Succoo to make a blesainc.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DUD1JNE
For ewryone•s co..-lence plenure,
welllteto publiciJio . . - - . . _ ~
on campus. ToNCGIIII~ contact
'tloncy
eiiL 2228.

c.-.

�. . ... ____

.........,

~- .... ~.,

:..=wc:..;.~~s-

... .._ .................. c:lolhiDI
N-.
........ . _ 101111 wiDter

10~:r-. . tloa r.non.tk..t..{loma - e l t1oa O/B w--.&lt;hb.
·

-:-'o-sa:::-i;_ dw Tllird NIJtiimal
::;r~NatiO..ai~:!:'ti:'::

4230

12

Ridae

X.., Rm. A-48, 11:80 ....,_.

~-~~tiaiical Scien&lt;:e
~ Oopa~t of Oompular Sci-

- ClliiiiiiRr
_Mr.
, E. LaVoie, .
'1118-.
_..rio
U /B, Health Baill:liq, 2 p.m.

· IHTaNATIONAL COfl8 IIOIM•

~

...!':~~"':"p_.:uaic and

a

- Presomted bv IN Olllco of Fonilm SID- dent Atraln aDd the India Sllldent Aooo-

.
eommunifllle- "Cipool ... puMic

.

·~ • -

.Cipon ...., ... -

• ..,_... -c.- ......,- Cenlerolll,
1131-2228,

THURSDAY -11 ·
With Steve Reid, Baird Recital Hall,

UCIUII'

ApplialtioM of lrnvttnibk Tlrumodynmnidr in BiolotY, Dr. Daphne Hare,
a.ociate pmfe.or ol medicine at U/B, \

~1f,;,/ &amp;:'"the Collep

ol. Mathe-

matical Science.

WOMIWS QUI ANNUAL

~AZAA~:••

Hoo.obolcl i - aDd willter dothinc
will be .., - · Fillmore Room. Nortoa,
1-9 p.m.
.
Today'&amp; admiMii&gt;D ia reoerved for foreip .-nbeno of the Univenity oocnmunity.
P-led by the International Committee of the U/B Woman's Club.
C1AISfC5

~..~CTa.••

Prwperity and Decline in Roman Citiea

.

to the public.

Fealurinc J.- GI'GWO, lint lloor eafeteria. Norton, two abowL Ti&lt;keta are
availahle at the ~rioll HaU Ticket Of'\

·

UUMfUI••
/
~ Mmuih

(Ru.ell, 1972), Conference Theatre, Norton, c:boclt obow- _
~ for times. AdmUsi.on c:lJ.arce.

LU16...W.U:., Se•iotie• and Litei'GI)'
Taw; .Julia KrWeva. pmr..... univeraity of Paris vn. , :F8culty
ub Red
Room; 8 : 80 p.m.
p,_.,led by the Department of_Linguiotico aDd the Department of Compara-

a

-~Ye Literature.

THIAtB:•

_.
-

Gi«n: No Broad, on E"""""tu and

e:.'oc..= '¥i::::!. b~~~tt!

:lthJL~~~~':rpJ!::

"aDd Hoyt, 8 :81) p:m.

oica.

:&amp;.f~~~r=N~~

oico, Univeraity of Michipn, 1172 Hayeo,
4
~led by the Department of Claa-

Tic:bU ..., available at the Norton
HaU Ticket Olllce: liO _,Ia for otudenla; ,

1'hroulh Oct.

TM Odwr (Mullipn), 140 CaPon, 7: 46
aDd 9 :46 p.m. Tlclteta at 76 _,~a are
available at the Norton HaU Boz Olllce.

~ tt..';'"~~mL"'~

Encland

family. Set in the B e p yean, . the &amp;bn ....tera on tho nilaticm-

HIUB

SliAuAt IBVICI*

Onet Si!&lt;&gt;bbol will follow, -Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
.
tldiiNATIONAI. POlK DANCWfQ•

UUM_,__•

UCIUII'

CACfU•

lmnt for the cauae of unuplained family
miObapa.
.

::~a::=~~~
aDd Matbematica. All Jectureo liie

fice.

-

:tf-e!'tet;!l'n!:.~~- :.U~ =.:t,.fo!

~~~e· -.r

of

-

Followinc
with
IMAI&amp;OS
-· alileal, Cbabad Houae,
3292 Main ~t.. 6:80 p.m.

In the IUIIject .
.... - . . .

fiee aDd -

MASl&amp;CIASS'
DOOIL

ciatioD.

12.

WII'O HIOM.MHIS

Inatrw:tion in bUic .tepo, 2 Diefendorf, 8-g_ p.m.
ORGAN IICrTAl*

.,..

Chcrlotte Roederer, orpniat aDd aa-

;::fo'~P,:f~~ :;.,:.~ ~ ~
d uti Hall, 8 p.m.

.

Admiaaion ticketa ani available at the
Norton HaU Tlctet Ollioe. ~
ticketa will be on lillie at the Baird R&amp;ciuti Hall Bos Offioe one bour before the
(\ODCOri.

p.....,nled by the Deparlinent of Music.

"MAN'S liBATION TO THE UNIYHSI
lECTUII SHIES*
Man's Rel41ion to the Vni«.-.e,

Sir

Bernard Lovell, director, Nuftleld Radio
Aatronomy Laboratory, J odretl Bank,
England, 147 Diefendorf, 8:15 p.m.

Preaenled by the Faculty of Natwal

Scienoeo and Matbemalica. Free and
open to the public.
UUAI COfNIHOUSI*

Featuring Je.ue Gravu~ fint floor cafeteria, Norton, two abowo. Ticket. are
available at the Norton Hall Ticket Offloe.

Ford Hall Forum, with Carl Bemllein
aDd Robert W-...ud, Pulitzer Prise
1Ninninc _reporlero on · the Wao/tin6ton
Poet, "Watergate: A National Calbar-

IRu.ell, 19'12); Canference Theatre, Norton, c:boclt obowcaae for timei. Admiaaion cbarp.

FRIDAY-12

Genet'• TM M&lt;JUU directed by Eliaa·beth Al&lt;elrod, Harm,;., Studio· Theatre,
8: 30 p.m. Admiaaion cbarp. 1'hroulh
Oct. 13.

oia," 9 p.m.

DEUVHT Of 1.aGA1 SHYICIS CONFIBNCI•

Today'• apeaken aDd diacuoioDo will
focua on lawyen for the poor and tbe
failure of I~ oerricea, Rm. 210, .JOhn
Lord O'Brian Rail, North ~ 9

UUAI fi&amp;Mu
-~e Meaialt

THEATil'

THEATil*

GWen: No Briuul., on EncoUI).ter and

=..to~~ ~-b~=

SUND.A:Y-14
OPIIATION OIIENUOHr'*

Couzaee,ora for- Hillel'• OPeration
G.-ilid&gt;t will meet at Hillei H-. 40
Capen Bbd., 11:80 a.m. '1118 lint - ·ity with tbe younpten in lha-propun
will be bold at 12:80 p.m.
CCIOICaV

V/B Symphon.y B4nd, directecl by

Frank J. Cipolla, Williamavllle South
Rich ~I. 8 p.m. No admiaoiaa ~-

UUAa,..••

.

TM IJqy Fri6n&lt;l (Ru.ell, 1971) Coa.ference '"-tre. Norton, c:boclt abciwcue .for._ AdmiaaioD cbup:

MONDAY-15

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

Pies. at Ten Paces

~~~~..to!:~"'--= .

.,.._

L _........,.the rulos a bit bJ .......... SA .

_,....IIbout-.

l l l l n p - quito.....,..
point-I D - on1J • tiny which t o ; - .
but- the
he ocoredllls ........ .......
.._,_, 101 into the oct." . . . _ of the to on the Compus Unltod Woy
fao $1211,000.

VOL. 5 • NO. .S

Fri.
LAB

AM

70
35

PM

X X
Lecture

LAB

LAB

LAB

94

82

180

75

180

92

. Lecture

LAB

LAB

LAB

LAB

LAB

180

180

180

180

180

180

180

180

180

180

the~--=~ ;~

--Enrollment -€ run.t h-Strains
-

-

.•

...
since 1970, will raaipllrom lbat poat
oo June 30, 1974,
In..... Ausust 8 letter to Ulliwnlt;y
President Robert L Keta, Dr. Blled
"said ~that his decisioD ... .........
"after long 8Dd careful ....... ol ~
own pro(OIIIIiooal 8Dd ~ _..
8Dd priorities." He liDied lbat "by

=~~

Chemist.r_y to Oute~ Limi~s One-"'
~7"7~

Tbia ia the
o~· the ·cioe...bot"
step-up in ~ .......um..t - a
'jump from 1700 to 2500 deoipled ID
start fll.lina 1.be ~.. -.rd the
sreatly-~Dc:rea&amp; lllildent capacity the
Uni...Uty am provide 88 1110n1 8Dd
more Amherst facilities come "em
liDe" ~ 8Dd 1980.
It's a year in which the aumber ol
tnmofer atudento also has . . . in~

1'100 (a jump ol-800-'100)
the first pbas8 ol il a-_,._
build-up in tbo8e ..........._ Apin. 1D •
Ill the Amberat "pipeebooL"
GiYea this dato 8Dd .the fact tlat
no ~ UDiYelllity-iiE ~

..,__is haY8

~ facilities which

alreoldy
in Amlaol; It's
also a year ol "enmdl" in .....,. ol

both _., 8Dd the ecbedulin&amp; ol c:lasa-

~-::::::::'""' ai~Dificoptly

211 y -

in-

Nowtae is the •CIIIIIdl" felt more
M&amp;vily than in -""'-' Hall where
the demand r. in a-.istey
101 8Dd l!lll ia n.c.-inl at a rate
"""""'""' lbat ol CM!rall Univeraity

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

ha~ ::,;~u.::...~

~...~.,.:;~'2""

lirpr percBDtqe ol the .muoiDoomDr. Ebert cootinued, "1 will leaYe
inl IIUIIIbaB ol Ullderpaduateo are
the deaDahi with a f~ ol ~
Interested in the booilth aciencos.
equalled :\'; by the feeliDg ol pride
Nat _ , . 8Dd eballen8e with which r took the
It'o DOt tlat c:baaildry oa a 6eld • poli1ion in 11170. 'Ibrou8bout
deanfa attnldiDII - . 1 llllllllaa
~. I bi!Ye eojoyed an ~ reCbomlotry DB (1'b.Joicm Cbomlotry
latiaaablp with the P"!"""t admlnisa c:oune tollm - . , by a.joa with
tratioa, with the IIIIQOrity of the fao.
a llplinJdinc of llludeata froaL..bil&gt;ulty,_!J&gt;d. above all. with the student
cbeoDistry 8Dd cl&gt;ombl
body(~ 0 1 1 - J, coLI)
(COIUilaued 011 - 1 0 , col. 4)

ot..;.a.

&gt;.

...u-m..

--

the t!llllOPtion ol aae clarinc
which I took a IIIIID.tiall leaYe in Au&amp;- aai.ia. At this- point in': IllY life. ·I
desinl to return, 88 a fuJI-time faculty
member, to my ~ ao that I

�· ~=;;.:;.~~
~e-~::

-

--:.s

primarily
Ill
oatlafy ~ of Giber
aaila ill

the Uniwnity, DUtleularlY the Malth
IICieDca. 8erifdl a lltUdeDt ill 101 or
201 11D11 ,au're libly Ill liDd a
a pre-cleat, an uplring

l:i:i;'!,a.Jar.
-~to-be,

adlemiall
futiue ~
a
•
• :0/!::.~ ha_(&gt;S
..,_
11ft! the~ iDcreased Btu·
del!t hater.t. As Dr. Gerhard Cook;
eiiiiCiuthe allicllr of the Department-trbo Ia a.latinc Dr. 'J'iecblnwnn ill

== =:. .

'"d:"""'~ower""'£'~

COUIIII8 ._;red hy *'- ~
miDdo, "a - t survey at Harvard
fouDiJ that ovw J.lf of lllldeqraduatea
CCIIIDIInd tbemael- pre-med majon
and it'a - tao far from that here."
8IDce the ill Chemistry ill·
'...,._ both 101 and 201, Jt poses two
_.ale of problems/challeb&amp;es.

--101~-~

At ..,_t. the 101 cballen8e for
this...-_,. to-,.w '-&gt; met,
Dr. 'J'jerblnwnn Cllllteada. And !¥&gt;- ·
the .JIUIIIbenJ of fre!llmal will
..,..;,. the aame from now to Amhemt,
~ thlap ·- ' t likely to become any
acute. Fifty per cent c1Z77) of
enterina fre!llmal are right now being
~Y IICCIJII!I!IOCited Tieckel·
mann points oul "And r dOn't think
_that """"
..... _
than_
J.lf101,•
of the
be enlerina
IliOn!

believe~~.

1 Last fall,

856 freshmen were enrolled
ill 101-::"f"'D, roughly 50 per cent
of the- Umvmsity's total.)
H....iever, while Di. Tieckelmann's
filures show some 40 available Jab
·..-ftllllainiDg in 101 this term (see
c:bart aecom
. this article) , SA
President J~ is reported to
·haw eharpd that .4()0 freshmen were
cJoaed out of the c:ourae.
''I don't believe that," Tieckelmann
says sood·naturedly. But if those 400
.. are wandering a r o Jl n d &amp;OIDeWhere
cJoaed out, it's hecauae of conflicts
created hy scheduling tzaditions elae""""" ill the Univmsity.
Both~ and students, Tieckelmann reminds, like to schedule their
lectures 011 Mooday, Wednesday and
' Friday JDIII'Dinp from s~a.m. Ill noon.
It'e simply more Cllllftnient that way.
Chemistry attempts Ill &amp;aX&gt;mmodate .
this jllltlem, he says, by scheduling
ita lectures from 8 a.m. to noon on
'I'IEedays and Tbwadaya. But with
the lecture COIIII!II a four-hour Jab block
- and many ~people have four
hours for Jab qn Mondar, Wednesday
and Friday marninga. The 101 Jabs
offered at fN«Y other time periodinclUding that Old buptioo Saturday
morning wbal pmctimllv no one else
is Btirrinc ill the Unl_,.fty_, "sold
out" c- chart, again) but Monday,
w~ and Friday mornings Jag.
- If 400
ClpiiDno
more freshmen do need

to

be accommodated, the only answer,
'J'ieculrnann aaya, would be night Jabs
or a Saturday altemoOD Jab (additional lecture -ta ... 'I'IEeday and
1'bur8day 11ft! DO problem). 8 i n C e
frealunm Jab CBJ*ity is 180, Chemistry oould CQDCeivahly take
of
up to 6 timea 1110 more . . : , :
CMonday thzouah Friday ...-inp and

-~~~llza~=
whme, lhou8b. you'd have to IIUhtract

150 MFC studenta already enrolled
ill ....,.;,g lalla.) Any any rate, right
...... 'thare limply &amp;-t't to be
that mud! 4emmld.
"We'll !mow more about those al-

leied 41XJ,.. -Tiedeh..-nn 88,YB. "after
opring . . - Jeliatntlon for 101."
Tbia syatem .of. a&amp;iinllllll! "reversed"
aectioa of hecfnalnl m..lstry eacli
- - Ia anoiiJer device being employed to beat the IIChedulinl cnmeh.

In more leisurely days, 101 was olfered
ill the 'fall and 102 ill the spring and
that was thal Now both are olfered
each aemester and again in Summer
Session. A student "closed out'' of 101
in the fall C8l) pick it up in the spring
and get 102 in the summer. He'd still
be ready for 201 the following fall
and wouldn't wind up a year behind
in his :•muat.-lalce" class schedule for
med school admission, for eDIDple. Or
agaiD, he oould: taJce 101 in the spring
or summer and catdt 102 the next fall
·(as llOstudents are doing right now ),
pick up the "reversed" 201 in the .
spring, lalce 202 the next summer and
still not be behind. The possible combinations are endless. But the point is
that '(,"-'istry is olfering all the llexibillty it can muster in -tbe face of
the . rigid givens of space and time:
Using all these methods _it is now
providing clasaes for a total-of 1,689
freshmen [1277 in 101, 110 in 102,
152 in 123' &lt;chemistry for nunies ),
and 150 'in MF&lt;'~101] -more than 400
"'!"r last year's 1,267.
The Trouble With 201
Which brings us to the' challenl!e of
Organic Chemistry, or 201 as 1t is
numbered,· the rise of which can be
traced in the following figures :
Fall 1966 - 240
1967 - 177

1968-356

1969-420
1970-426
1971-508
1972 - 609
1973-644 . '
'These are da}'time enrollment figures only; add some 60 MFC students
and the 201 enrollment for fall is 704.
And that is virtually capacity. 'l11ere
are only 709 drawers for 709 seta of
equipment in the organic chemistry
lab &lt;.and soUnd academic practiCe dictates that each student is reapooaible
for his own equipment which he or
abe alone uses and has sole- to) .

Incidentally, the CBJ*ity ~·t
be this hiP&gt; if the Chem ~t
&lt;in collahoration witli Main~
which emcuted the project) t.dn't
rather cleverly added amne 100 equipment drawers, or bcDm, araund
the unused perimeter - - of the
organic Jab (the origiDal .drawers liN
built into the Jab benches). Room ....
mains for 32 more drawers to be added, to bring the maximum 201 capecity to 741.
.
Demand, howeVer, will likely soar
well beyond this capecity · For all
~ reaaons cited in · ~ w!lh
~ enrollmerita m 101, an m~g percentage. of those compJet..
mg 101. - ).02 m a g~ven· year go on to
201. $ i n c 'e tbia year's 101 ffteh-

the

man
Or, 88
tiona! dnJwera
on flat truckbed8
the' 1ah for ezperimenta.
with this, 1;bouih, is findinK ...... to
store the fliltbeda.
,
Aa an ·more extreme a l - tive, Dr. Tieckelniann 8IJIIIIIIla that
the Cliemiatry Department milbt cut
laha ill half or eliminate them altogether (as bas been. clone Bt ~col·
leges and universities) for bOth l01102 and-201-202. 'Bu~he
anphe. . _ 'tiiiJWd .,..tall
....t ' ' "aeaiieniic soul~ llll
put

=·$.-!:~=-:~~~ ~ ~~~
..~~==
it serves. ''It would" ill any · - t

can be expected to· rise &amp;~gJ{ilicantiy
just on that haais. But there's more.

Tn:-u:= :::- ~

j!J[perienced this year, remember, is J'ust the

beginnlng of a jump, ;,. transfen that
will be stepped up for the next five
years. (One figure floating around is
that next year 30 f.6 cent more tran&amp;!era will be adtrutted. ) And1 rightly
or wrongly, Dill8t transfernilg illto
U/ B ocienoeilelds from two-year
, leges wait to take their _.....t-year
chemistry here, fearing • junior

colcol-

::~ ~ :.:: ~S::P~1!":;

''take a long time to study all the
ramifications."
Another 'small · ~" fm- bo!h the
first and .second year cbemistry COUlllea. Dr. Tiec:kelmann feels, would be to
r · te
ter registration I

~or ~laast

revert

to~~

regiStration for the filial 50 . or io
a Jab. Drops aDd adds are
·
all the time,' he
and
gomg 00
......,
the computer can all too easily close
when, m fact, . . - . is

spaces ;,.

::::tl ':.:.!

Tbia last wgpatkin may aound like
deJD811!1 for 201 - a degrasp~ at straws ill ·Ierma of the
mand that will require the u - in ·
=~ ~
ingenuity to BBtiafy until at laast
is liDaJiy deYiaed 111 meet tt- perSeptember 1975.
'
licular deliiands, a.nistry is trying
In that year, Medicirial Chemistry
everythinl! it can think of 111 came to
I a department in the School of Pharterms wiib an 111lPftJC)8dented oilua·.
macy which - holds a apeoe in 368 tion - a ldDd of situation that will
Acheson) is expected to be translike! ...,_
and
-ferred to new quarters in the Cooke ·
Y ,_.,...., more
more ... ~
Tower, n0w under construction
cedented" for88atiJI other U~
in Amheral Medicinal Chemistry's
departments
the era of "par-up
current apeoe can be reCOIIverted to
and "phase-ill" for Amherat unfolds
orgarlic l8b -ce for an additional ' during the nan dec8de. •
·
250 students - 400 if the perimeter

still

ftn:th!or

i:f"anoJ!:

Eight Member Panel
Seeking Music Head
- " " ' committee
:;c:n
and charged with
a new chairman for

An eight,
has been

recommending

the Department of Music.
The search coiDIDittee, '-led by
Prof. George R. Levine (Endish) , illdudes Winifred Black (graauate stu-~
dent, music ), James B. Brady (~­
loaophy ) , James B. Coover (ml18lC) ,
Tyrone Georgiou (art), Arthur Levinowitz I under!!fllduale student, music ) ,
Harriet R. Sunons (muSiC), and Sol
'- W. Weller (chemical engineering) .
The s e a r c h COJDDJittee -ICOJr,es
nominations of potentlal candidates
by all members of the Univmsity community, Dr. Levine indicated. Rec' ommendations may be aent to him at
,the Department of English, A1uMz B.
The Music Deparbneht waa formerly '-led hy Dr. Albert Collen, DOW
at Stanford University. James H.
Blackhurst is acting chairman.

�3-

Ketter to Get
Reco·g nition
On Korean Visit
. U/ B President Robert L. Ketter
will receive an boDomry degree and
deliver two major addre&amp;aes at Kyungpook National University in T - .
Korea, on_ October 17. •
Dr. Ketter will visit tbe University
~?resident, Young Hee Kim, for five
days to formalize a sisterbood relationship between U/B and K)'llDIJJOIII&lt;.
~ will.inc;Iude the (!Oilsibility of the
exchange of faculty and students fa&lt;
teaching and reaearch p - . He
said tbat the "new exchange prOp&amp;m
being celebrated bt the ..ceiemoaies
will probably ini tJally involve the
health sciences, natural sc;ieooes, ..,_
gineering and mathematicS." Ketter
noted tbat Kyungponk is the Iarpst
and best provincial university in Korea
and has a distinguished· faculty.
Ketter Will deliver a rotnft'M!DCieiJMIII•

(:ontinuing Ed to Mark SOth Anniversary
The

, tinulna

u..mira;ty'a Division

o1 ConEducation, founded in 1923

as the Ewaing s-iaD, ·will celebn.te

eial boOks on adult education, inclllding The Adult EducatiOn Movement
in 1M U.S. &lt;Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winilion, 1962) and his latest, The Adult

AdUlt Learning Ability;"· Dr.· Monge's, " Age Differences iii the Capabilities Adults Bring fO the Classroom;"
and Dr. Baltes', "Intellectual Deere- ~
ment in Adv~ Age: A Myth?"
Foll.,;.;,g cocktails and dinner, Dr.
Thurman White, viee president for
continuing education and public service, University of Oklaboma, will conclude the program with a discussion
of " Contemporary Adult Learning:
lmplications for Higher Education."
Registration fee. for the anniversary
program, including dinner and cocktails, is $12. Those interested in participating should register before October 8 by calling Mrs. Ethel Schmidt,
ext. 3904. Students are eligible for a
special $2 rate (dinner and cocktails
not included) _

or-~ Mniceo to the
Learner: A NegiLcU!d Species (Gulf
niversary 8ympoaium, "Adult t.m- .
Publisbing Co., 1973) .
.
•
PliYcbOloi[y: Implications for
A 2. ~.m. panel session, moderau!ci
Educatliia," Monday, October · by Dr. Hugelski. will feature Dr. Jack
Botwinick; pn&gt;fe880r of p!;ychology
15, in the Fillmore Room ol the Sher' and director of the Aging and Develaton Motor Inn East.
.
opment Program, Washington UniSil&lt; ~ authoritiee on adult
versity, St. Louis; Dr. Josephine Flalearning will .JOin Dr. Robert F. BerD&lt;\f, dean . ol Con~ Education,
herty, dean, FacultY of Nursing,
and Dr. B. Richard Bngelski, U/B
University of Western Ontario; Dr.
distinguislied profi!IIIIOf ol psychology,
·Rhtf H . Monge, associate professor,
for the afternoon and dinner program
I'Sl1chology, Synicuse; and Dr. Paul
which begina at 1_p.m.
B. Baltes, associate professor and diDr. Malcolm Knowles, profe880r,
rector, Division of Individual and
School of Education, Boston UniverFamily Studies, _Pennsylvania State
sity, will keynote- the symposium with
University.
"
an addreas on "Issues in Adult LearnLater in ·the afternoon, each of the
i{lg," Joli&lt;!Wing introdoctory remarks
panelists will present a - 30- minute
by Dean Berner. Dr. Knqwtes, who a;r
paper, .t o be followed by a summary
peared on the NET lelevisiim aeries,
discussion by Dr. Bugelski.
'"''be DYnamics of Leadership,.. and
Dr.. Botwinjck's topic will · be "Beon ;\!l&lt;l Wes\inghouae Group's "Anil·
havioral Aspects of ·Aging;" Dr. FlaNo.w-W e Am PeoPle," is author of_ oevherty's, '"''oward the ARsessment of

50 yean

w-.. N• York r8gion with an An-

Lr

~rrn~rig!.PJJneJ,;!~:

·/:, · ·

·

_

::!~::-~:.:=

Universities" and receive the hooorary degree of Doctor of Science dw:ing
the mOrning of October 17,
To mark his visit, an intemationaf
two-day seminar on ''Reeoun:es: K&lt;&gt;- _
rean a n d International Needs a n d
Prospects" will be sponsored by the
Embassy of the United States and
the Korean nation. During fOjlr separate seminar sessions, manpower resources, food resouroes, energy resources and petro-dlemical and heavy
industrial resouroes will be discuaaecL
Ketter will deliver the keymte address for the session on manpower
resources during the afternoon of October 17. Other keynote speakers in- ·
elude the Honorable Cbu Won, former
Korean minister of construction; Professor Imai of Tol&lt;yo University, and
the U.S. Ambassador to Korea. In
addition, Japimese and Korean scbolars and representatives of other na~ns~~vited_as ~ ..

Members of the symposium" committee are Dean Berner, chairman; Allan
L. Canfield, co-cllairman; Phyllis S.
Herdendorf, Patricia A. Hollsnder,
Dean K. Olsen, Jr., and Mrs. Schmidt.

.

. - • ·

~ld"'"D' ·· :"'· . -, ~- ·,_ 1973rReseatthbpendltUres
n'9 S "-.~Y.IeW,
. • . cl• .Lfl..-,
Plans a Rep.ort ·- RISe ..:Hignuj; Grants_Down

'

The Uniwraity IIUbcammittee on the ··
arming ol Campus Security 'met yes.
· tenlay morning to review student testimony opposing its latest' proposal:
the arming of two selected plainclothes
ollicers on each sliift. Tbe meeting was
closed to the public, although subcommittee cbainnan Dr. ·McAllister Hull
announced tbat the minutes would be
made public withfu a week.

A further report, ·incorporirting the
- opposition and other teaWnony gi'Ven
at last week's open bearing, will be
submitted. to Presiilent Ketter for final
consideration. The decisioo to "selectively arm" campus ofticers, however ·
was made earlier this year, . and
cording _ to Dr. Hull, remains "irreversible;" Only after careful delibemtion and a survey of 30 comparable
campuses, he added, did the SUbcommittee arrive at its recommendations.

a,;

Th-. Huti emphasized

tbat selective

arming would '.' provide. an adequate

response to the threat ' - I by armed- .

· individuals who attack or'- threaten to.
attac;k persons on campus."
Student ob.iections rang&lt;\() from feaJS
of increSsed sliooting mciilents to the
fact tbat a previous referendum on it1e
subject, representing 12 pei cent of
the student body, defeated the anning
proposal by .a vote of 1112-250.

CHINESE STUDENT DIRECTORY, 1973-74
To facilitate compilation of the chinese.
Student Directory, students who ~ have not '
yet contacted the Chinese Student Association should\submit the folloWing informa tion this week to their departmental rep·

resentatives: name, addRfSS, telephone,
major. grad I undergrad/ Representatives
are: Chemistry. James Hsu; Physics, Mei
Wa i·Ning: Chemical En&amp;l_,.nc, Fang SunOrin, Yu Kwang·l'l_ua; En&amp;l_,.n&amp; (Parl&lt;er),
K.B. ChanR. Chell Kuan~·Hsiung; Health
SdenQo, Josn Yang (Department of Bl·

-1

ologyl; Pluorrnacy, lawrence Kwok; Jlkl&amp;e
laa. K.P. Lee (Computer Science);

~,.! ~~28~~: Others,

Chiu Shuns

Sponsored research and training ac·
tiviti.., augmented the University's
State operational appropriation by 25
per cent .in fiscal 1973, Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice president for research, says in -his 1972-73 linnual
report.
.
Expenditures of sponsored funds ·
totaled .$16,571,481 for the period,
Fitzpatrick said, up one per cent from
the previous, year.
.
" Howeverr he pointed out, udue ·to
several factors, some unknown, we received 21 fewer grants, 347 in aH,
with a total value of $17;054,548."
This was $2.2 million less than received in the previous year.
Explained ' Fitzpatrick, '"''be most
signifiCant factor affecting our research
activities at the University was the
uncertainty generated by. limitations
and· restrictions imposed on the 1973
Federal ·h\Jdget. The impact of the
PreSident'i restrictions on ftindjpg has
been felt in a general stillerung of
resistance{towanls granting continua· tion funds at a level of previous support, and irenewal of some long active
programs. Failure of agencies to act
on proposals in hand have left us with
nearly $52 million in outstanding proposals at the end of the fiscal year.
Almost as a reactionrto the apparent
tightening of sources of support and
uncertainty as to continuation by
agencies of programs, there was also
a slight decrease in total proposal activity during the year. However it is
anticipated tbat some withheld will
1&gt;&lt;: • ubmitted as Federal research in,t erests become better defined in FY
1974."
A total of 706 proposals were submitted in 1.973; Fitzpatrick said.. Of
these, 581 were to, outside a~tencies
for a total amount of $38,587.,900 and
125 to the University A-wards Committee resulting in 76 grants amounting to $1!J1!,646.
.?
According to Research Office figures,
the Health Sciences Faculty/llccount.ed for 66 per CJ!!Dt of ·the University's
total sponsored fund expenditures, or
$10,859,630. Non-health science areas
expended $5,711,851 or 34 .per cent of
the total. - The Faculty of Natural

will be traits ted simultaneiOusly.
Mrs. Ketter will accompany ber
husband on the trip and will tour
Kyungpook National University's primary school, hospital and -health center.
Before visiting Korea, the Ketters
will spend three days in Tokyo,'lwbere
Dr. Ketter will meet with the President of the University of Tokyo. Alter
leaving Korea, they will stov in Honolulu to discuss with the President ol
the University ·of Hawaii the problems encountered during tbe period
wben tbat University was under construction.

Sciences and Mathematics with $2,262,973 and the •·acuity of Social
Sciences and Administration with $1,398,674 'were the most active in nonhealth science areas.
In. addition _to these funds from
SUNY Research Foundation, the Urnversity at Buffalo Foundation administered $1,055,026 in funds expended
in sponsored activities, Fitzpatrick reported. ·
The Federal government provided
96 per cent of the University's spon&lt;sored fundR, with the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare granting the major portion, 73.9 per cent.
The National Science Foundation and
Department of Defense provided 8.4
and 5 per cent, respectively.
ResearCh activities accounted for
66.4 per-cent of expenditures, or $11,007,108, while training -activities
amounted ·to 31.2 per cent, or $5,164,-

Danforth Deadline
· S~ts wishing to be nominated
for Danforth Fellowsbipa for eou...,
Teaching Careers, 1974-75, are advised to submit a Jetter of intenlat,
including brief biogmpbical data, to
Professor Howard E. Stzauss, U/B
~'N"!!'V:n2~' prior to FriAwarded by the Danforth Founda~on since 1952, the feliOwabipa are .
mtended "to give personal ~
ment and ~cial support, to seJec:ted
college seruors and recent graduate,.
who seek to become college tead&gt;em,
and wbo are vitally interested in &lt;re-"
lating their educational plans to tbeir
basic values."
In selecting Danforth felloWs, at!ention is given to evidence of: fleEible
mtellectual a b i I i t y and academic
achievement; personal characteriatics
likely to contribute to effective ~
ing and constructive relationships witb
students; and a coi:tcem. "for the relation of ethical or religious values"
to the educational process and to academic and social responsibility.
Students applying for the awards
should take the verbal and quantitative GRE on Saturday, October 2fT
Personal interviews by a faCulty ;.,_
lection committee will be beld for each
applicant before November 16.
For additional infonnation, contact
P1-of. Stzauss, 114 Parker-Engineering
ext. 3104.
.
'

335.-

One hundred twenty-five new p,rojects were initiated with 126 previously
· ~mmended continuations approved.
The University ranked 62nd in the
nation in total awalds during 1972
according to National Science Foun:
dation figures cited by Fitzpatrick.

At' Coli Tournament

Kathy Pericak, a sopbomore from
Cazenov;a, will represent U/B at the
Seventh Annual Eastern Golf Cbampionship!; of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, Fri·day and Saturday, October lH&gt;, at the
Country Club of New Seabury at West
Barnstable, Mass.
Last falt· Katby teamed with senior
Sue Brodzik '73 to win the Eastern
titJe with a combined 347. Cornell was
second at 358 and Penn State third
with 369.
Individually, Kathy sbot 93-82--175
·. for third place. Her 82 was the low
1S-bole tour of the tourney.
This fall Kathy's best score was an
84 -against Brockport State. Sbe will
leave campus Tburada~ for the tw&lt;&gt;day tournament near (Jape Cod.
Katby ia a mathematics and physics
major.
·

~

MONOIIY HOLIDAY '
Monday, October 8, Columbus Day,

Will

be an observed University holiday. Classes

::::wi'7;

~ : :. and

an University

�~

.-s
........ -- . . . .
..... _
.............

St.udents Say Ene~gy:Cr is
To Alter Urban lifestyf s
By

tbeir~~-cmtba

PBIItila
they felt
to be bald . . tbe ....... The ...
tiliaDR- ..... to ~ ......
- - ............ iDdiCate tbat if.
............. lbattbe, ~-....- ..... tbe initialaae

=-.. . .

&amp;.daB
lbat

...... totba
iD tbe -..It

.
aait.
lao' •
electiaa CIIOIId ~~aft .,_, .:beduled to
decide wbotbe ~ .....t Would
be.
.
-n.e &amp;ate and tbe Uniwnity look
a -mal
-tiau. They indicaled lbat
they~-_..,. tbe ......, at
tbia time_ This • ellift from tbe
paeitiaD tbat they look in 1968-wben
tba
riL
tbe baqaining
unit.
~bi~
At lbat time
arped lbat tbere
llhonJd be • llinlle ~ unit.
• (Tbe . . . . . . in tbe Slate -tiau is .
ClOIIBidend aip~i~cairt• if tbe ~
- t o . r..-1 besriaK.)
"SPA (SVNY/Unillld) arped tbet
tba IJI!4itianon llhonJd be dollied tbe
beao6t o1· a r..-1 -.m, ud tbat
tbe petition ~ be rejoocted. They
arped tbet iD their ........ .....
"""' ... 8i11Mmbtiwt . , . _ tbat ......
OCCIIln!d wbidl Would wm:nmt a ..re-.m, ol tbe ..... Thet without such
signiflcmt ......_ there Would be no
, _ ·to - - that the deciaioii ol
a bearing ollcer Would be dilferent.
They arped lbat tbe decision issued
by l'llul Klein. tbe initial
olficer, wu in- fact a sound _.-aiss!'
or tbe conditions within tbe University wiljdf led him to decide tbat
tbere should be a single berxainiiUr
uni[ Tliey MJ!!ed' tbat .il a -fonna1
bearing wei)! granted then it would
encourage ew!IY dissidefl.t minority
group within the berpinirig unit to
do the same if tbe union &lt;lid not
DepJtiate • • tbe . beoe6t8 that' they .·.

Opera Studio
To Play Toronto
The Uniwnity Opera Studio bas
'-n cboEn to perfmm belore a aelect
audieace ol its peers at tbe CJI8liD&amp;
..-ioD ol tbe Natiollal Opera Asaociatiau's 19th Aunual Coilwotiau in
TOIOillo

nen week.

UDder its din!clor, Muriel Hebert

~~~~.~~

MameJJes de Tiresias" at tbe- MacMillan Theatre, Edward _Jolmsoo
Building, University of Toronto, 011
Wl!dDeaday, Octabeo: 10, at 3 p.m.
'l'be -represents
- to Ill .in
the
convention
thelatest
a
aeries of eftorts by Prof....,.. Wolf to
make academic opera a viable educatiooal and entertainment force in lhe
·community. Over the past five years,
she_ bas assemb!ed a st;u!Jent company
wbicb bas reoe1ved cntiml praise for
perf"""""""" of some of the lesser
blown, but worthwhile, works in the
operatic repet1oire.
· .
"Lea Mamelles de Tiresias" is a
chamber opera ""-! on a 1903 play
by ~ which ezpresses aome
surprisiDIIy contemporary ideas including womeu's lib and the buinpersticbr pbiloaopby, "malce Jove, not
war." Its "'Jproach is surrealistic, using such dramatic tricks as sex changes. role revenals and instant resurrections to produce a total eftect of
lighthearted satire. 'The music, composed in 1944, is similarly eclectic,
employing themes o1. such' composers
as Milbaud and Stravinsky as well as
echoes of jazz and ragtime.
Sixty performers from U/B will
participate in the Toronto production.
The orehestra and chorus will be conducted
Dr. Harriet- Simoo\s, alao
a rnemlJer of tbe U/B faculty, and
the scenic design is the product of a
student, Denis Azara, after an original
by Robert Wiilkle. ol tbe Metropolitan Opera Company. Lighting ilesigner and technical ..._w.,r .;, Milce
EngJisl!, a -member ol the faculty of
the Stile University College at Buffalo, wboee """' waa aeen during Ibis
summer's Cbautsuqua (tpera Festival.

bY

GIU:PORTER.,.
A. . . . . . ~-....-,.,.,..,
._.~bJ'tltel:lfri.ia.eiU....,..
flitr ~
111 , _

sw-u......,

11-.

lhtll.-,.

Yod • a~-. 3-US
St..
lt.Y . 14214. a.&amp;orW oiNt:.. . . 1octa1.4 ...
:;;;;. 2U. 150 ........ A.,.._ en.-

·---

WBS1"'UY ROWLAlfD

L

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

llOIJIUrT T • .ILlalA1T

...

......

}OBit L cr.oUTlD

-

~

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

PA.TIUCfA W'AJrD ~

-~­

lfAJICr • . CAWDfU[U
SVSA.If·. ~

tstiau lllillhalll, tbe

!XJPilaliaD
- 'lbe report

t:bea!&gt;-.AIId .. mo.tol .. fullyex-

p&amp;:&amp;locarry llltCIUr _ .

= .

milled,·.._.. •n•

. - - ...... wUJ - - - · .,,._......
larp mo.- 1D
Wbile
permitllas_..,..t - t o . . .m.J
~ ~ aad
lw' ' 'c lOw

........r ----.ad

.c:fti:

::$

SlfAROlif EDBLMAN
-- -

The ..... ~tiaus wblch lldc
in oar
baw ...,.
to bulb deD.Y udaploit
tbe ~ - v criidL We lia1111
bY-·
~ they llell1!1, ~
aU
ol oar - . y ··~the

-t

u-. .-.y-

~

al--Bae.Jo·~

•.......me
tbe

. . . . woalll . . .,........ -

poedieiiOIIlflidMI&amp;•.
. . . . . .~The
Ambemt,
a.-, ~--jllilil
and
futme proJectiDiiit,
ID be ilble
to beat . . . . . . u d - * tbe
_latiau mea- - .... _popu
- - . . . . . _, DDIIIII'...The report .................. .
ol U.. three JUIJwt,s
'-'t
o1 ~ .__.__ ·

fuel•-

....bfood.
- -lllilliviDc,
- baatud
do
~- ...... .....,. liftil, 'lfMtiDc ud .
OYel'COIIIIIIII in tbe pellt American
traditioa.

The .............. effects,"""""""· may

:;nundei:.:t"'-~·
:· '
lbat wbiJe tbe
abonace
=:";!t
not be quill8., aimp1e. A ,_rm re-

c:atss

_

.t:•':e =:,JW..::::.:!
::.'1"Ra"':;
~-ol ~

lli8IY

~

baw JDi!limal effect 011 our ~
today, oar lifeotyles ud oar l!lltite
urbufaubarben-•htc!iDIDlwill beve
~- cbulic ud ineveraif!bart.
""' ~ Urban
:
· New
York," tbe ~is tbe project of tbe

-~Ztnr;,..,bY~=

·

~

--~ multiple~~
'.

dewolopuailll, Would be 1lulit IIIOiJ!Id
.-b.~:,"::a.~

:!ctlden.:~-~J;:
.'
ol __,_an_ . .tbe· · •
~ 18:.,.,., • , _ m
~

c;-~ llaalit..,.. Would--!

·-

• link " " ' - the- aMIIIIIUnity

Cll!llters and tbe ...tzal buoiiMs eli&amp;-

....,.._,.., propam, under tbe directian ol Dr. Robert E. Puawell ud
fuDded by a put from tbe NatioDa1

trict.

•

The lmditiaDal 8llbudJan atli
. _ _ , bas .,_, ....,pdaus o1 ~
dimaityt·= - - tbe:s.r:higb-The

ScieDce Foundati!iiL Using cea;oua
data, survey ...........,., ud analytical
- -.
,..._., '
metbodoiOSY, tbe clau delennined
~A ~te~
t in
tbat, a-1 011 projected CDIIIIUII!PtiaD
~ Aurora, ....,...
~
rates,. most ol our pnamt EIIBriiY
~-owlied loornhooasl.and smsouroes Will be depleted within tbe
gle;family bomea. .bas - - ' to bring
century; and tbat, Cllli8eqUI!IltJY our
11111:1! feam to li!" 8UI'fal:e. A village
p - . t ~tiau 8nd iiiDd uae
~.!! 'tbe-tmacm tbe 1JU1D11er of
systems will soon become obaolele.
........ ""'!'
' Eastpte - which
By tbe year 2000 tbe students pro.
bawe receDtly--'-' put up for sale,
jected, ~ .populatiOn OJ Bulfalo
clahml tbat ~te is partially ...,_
~
• , and
areas will· ba"'! me.-! .-., :;;~~-.~~~u"
&gt;
EI!BriiY will be ..,...
..__
• ....,....
· _..., , ,..-~
sumed..at 2.3 times tbe p - . t rate. ... .,......, umts ""'! COIDIDOil ~lion
U tbe increase in consumi.tiau rate
, .lll!"!r be ~
an attitude of
iii Biilralo~ pil'ml}el~ ' •
&lt;•·•· iniiUmlif''Beif- - ·
ir.'.he de*liWie -cOuntry the oo:::.::~~ol
I clami;in"'Eii'sf'A'
ieA'n! self~t.~~in= ' 'thi!"
natural ps,
'iiiid
llldlic:iont,&lt;'illid• ~
"of loainbetween academic and NTP titleS that
will Shortli: exoeed tbe s~Jpply-- tbese ··•: ~ "t1l'e4r,~ves.
they sbooJd all be pert ol tbe aame
resouroeii' Will
to be ra'- .
' • High~!¥ ~ it"aeems, is .......,.
cobesive unit. . . .
with tbe amount-.allowed to tbe~
~· 8lien to tbe l;:;,t Aurora tradi"'n supporting Paul Klein's original
falo region stiictJy limited. Despite tbe
tiOD.
• ..
decision they - (mJNY/United) wen:
fact that coal will remain an available
The ~tiilos ~ wasteful ~
reinforcing stst.ements made in bis ·
fuel souroe, a new fc&gt;rm of EIIBriiY
OOII8UIIlption and !nflezible attitudes
decision sudus 'tbe m:ord makes it
most likely of nuclear origin, will ba...;
~-tnu;&gt;sPortation and land uae,
abundanUy cl!m- that all professional
to be developed to replace the de""""""';• .will "!' .__..,.mie_ for many
employees ol SUNY have a suiJstan:
pleted supplies. It is estimated tbat
of the iliJ!iculties_ wbicb !"ill be entia1 commw:ity ol interest in tbat al67· pel' cent of the energy CODBUDied
counte!"'f m altering American aociety
most
fundamental tenus and conin the- year 2000 will not come from
aocordina to new EI!BriiY-U&amp;e requiretraditional souroes. .
·
ments. 'Jbe ,~s.final.....,mendaditions ol employment are uniform at
all campuses or locally detennined in
~ T.--it s,oano
~ simply that legislators,
acconlaooe with a uniformly applicThese projections, combined with
City illaJ!ners, and all who b.r reable set ol standards or guidelines;' or.
!he increasing rate at which Bulfalon~~If for tbe filture ol tbe urban
'the fact that there is no administratorums are moving to the subwiJs (levelform IDitiale an all-out effort to insponrored employee organiration seekiJ!g olf at 400,000
the late 1980's)
fluence and chan&amp;e public attitudes"
ing to repre!IEflt the administrators • present ali enormous transportstiO.:
· !'&lt;&gt; prevent ~ EI!BriiY shortages
&amp;e1'8rately indicates that there is no
problem over the next ten years. Tbe
m tbe approaching decades.
felt community ' of · interest'
energy Bhortsge, the report predicted,
"CSEA aJgUed rex the petitioners
will make gasoline-powered vehicles
that there were substantive changes
d_ysfun~onal ; yet public ~rts­
within the University sinoe the initial
tion will not have been sufticienUy
decision was made and that they were
expanded~to serve the needs of the
of such a nature tbat a rebearing of . .growing subwban population. As a
The Life Workshop
inithe caae roouJil lead to a decision to
result, the students proposed a com!-i&amp;ted last y~ to ~~-separate the uniL They pointed out:
binatipn of three new transportstion
that tbe figure uaed for N'I'Ps in the
systems, to function at full capacity
Klein .decision was around 700 whereby
2000: ( 1) a Private Rapid
.al life of~ o1 tbe SVNYAB
as the figure tbat was uaed by the
Traruut (PRT) comprising 44 per cent
Stole at tbe outset of Ibis bearing,
of the total system, and using a ve~-~·" '!Vill ,continue tbia year
.._........,. October 16. .Registration
which defihed_ the size ol the nonhicle called urbmobiles, or electricallycontinues _daily ·.in Room 2ZS Norton
aca,demic unit, was around 3400; 'tbat
powered cars.•Urbmobiles would run on
and 8ll&lt;!ed infoanatiau "-Y be- obthe_re was !!""'.a ~r felt community
a . "~deway" in tbe central business
tained by ciilliDg 83l-4630.
of mterest as indicated
the size of
d16tricl, and off tbe guide\vay wben on
the petition; tbat in many cases facregular s treets .or ezpressways Quiet,
~ ~tbe be!;ief that positive
ulty were in fact managerial to nonpo11.ution-free, and with a seating cagroup !nteniction
com·.acaciemic,s; tbat the professional develpaaty of four -adults, the PRT urb- murucation 'ilni:l contributes to an inopment route for faculty was dilferent
mobile combines the advantsges of
tellectual and aoc;ial Understshd'
than that for professiooals; tbat · fac- · rapid-transit in the central business
the workilbops p - . t
ulty had. peer evaluation wbereas prodistrict and mobility of highway in
(or any member of tbe SUNYAB
. feBIIional.s did not; tbat faculty could
less densely populated areas· ( 2 ) a
cOmmunity to become pert of such a
obtsin. tenure and profes&amp;iooals could
Metro syslen!, comprising 39 Per J:ent
group, and to develop new interests,
not; that holidays, - . vacations · of.all lransportstion in · the area. Opideas and skills. Subjects to be disand work .......,.. are dilferent for facerating singly -or as part of linked
cuased
Ibis semester include Crestive
ulty than for professionals. We argued
ltains, a light volume coach would
Life ~t; Death. and Dying;
tbat if the petition fdf'a formal bearnm _on s u ~ways, overbesd tninsit,
Inte.matiooal Cookery; Depression:
ing ....... dollied, it would be the ultimedian strips, between ezpressways,
Causes, Forms, and Tniatment; Dymate put clown for the~
and, on surface grade like trolleys.
tbat it ""'''ld be iildicating to ~
'
namics ol Human Sexuality; WorkThe !J~etro system currenUy functions
shop
lor Couples; Cboice of a Major;
· tbat t¥r majority ol numbers ~
well m Europe, where it provides exW.odaibop for \felerans; Bicycle Main. tbe umt woUld Clllllbol what would be
cel!ent mobil_ity with low noise polnegotiated at tbe taiJie. . . .
""""""'
'!nd Repair; Creative Draw. lution and no air pollution; (3) ..Xmg; Existential Choices through
"J,' E R B indicated tbat it would
p.-...sway expansion, comprising 17 pe&lt;
make a deeiaioo'l em· wbether or not
l&gt;i'a.m&amp;; 8Piritual Community Life
cent ol total transportation, to accom~ ~ be '! 1M.ring: CSEA inmoda!e private, speedy, oomfortsble
and a Guide to Graduate
dicated . .. tbet if tha formal bearing
electric:ally-powered cars.
r.n.t
uae, .. well, will undergo.....,
_
The
Worbbopa
are ~ .....
~
~they _ would permanent chann8 -due to projected
tbe Division ol Student Main ..;;:i
if_,.~ tbe Issue~ : energy
needs. WI~ tbe new tranopor..
the Student Aaociation.

-.me

ana

250000

PetroJeWn..
have

eJectrici; '.,.

an

bY

Registrai'ion on
-For Life Workshops

u..:.rear

~~~b=

bY

"""""""'eB

opportuni:i!;

-u:=

=

�s
Wornen &amp; Work .

SeriesSI'lbe complex aoc:ia1. ~ lllld
sexual ; - - wblc:b ..... "' lbe
"""""" who worlls wiD lie eorplaled
in a aeries of free ........_ bellnning October 16 in Nortma Ulliaa.
Sponsored by the u~ Unian
Activities Board and the Division of
Student ABainl) in cooperation with •
the U/ B Foundation, "Womeo aud
the World of Wor:k" will be presented
Tuesdays from noon - 2 p.m., lo in- .
crease the .II!ISSiliility . thet working women will attend. Cbild care aervioes will be available.
I
Coordinated by Carole Willert Hen,
nessy of the Norton Union ataH, the
worksbops are designed to "help par- "
t icipants understand tbe ·impact imd
implications of work for women . . .
to discover resoliroes,' means, and alternatives in dealing with tbe realities
of the world of work."

~~t~

:.d ~~1r.:.~::.

Norton 322, with child ciare available.
in Room 337 for the first session and
·Rpom 334 for&gt;'the second.
·
D iscussion will focus bn the development and effect of sexually stereotyping women who work, as weU as
the ~lassie · problem of -role conflict.
Resource leaders will be Dr. Jpdith
Albino of. the U / B Dental Sc:bool,
Bernice Poss, assistant to the provost
. of Arts and Letters, and law student
Shelley Taylor Convissar.
The- series will continue with the
following workshops:
" Women and the World of Work Damned if ·you do, ao\d damned if
you don't," ..OCtober 30 and November
6, Norton 332. Child care-Norton
:J34. "An overview of the realities of
the working world for all women,
particula rly those- who happea to be•
black, single, gay, on welfare, or all
of U1e above."

The Ellicott Comple~ Takes Shape
One of U. ftm tours of the Jooeph Ellicott ·.llvtna-mlna r-~"\'1"'-:""~""'...,.:-.;...--~,~~--..---~'1
In the last " ' - of !'fl. the
- -.- - The Yorl&lt;
-Amlierst..,.._olall~lalt
lleturUJfor.
38complex. -

~

-~

of ""' int..-connec:tlid residence
of 3200 -rroundl....
- l c and library fKIIilles,
of the llvl"' • - ttoe.. are
................ of . - - . • -.bloop, • cnott
-·
Mit's
-IIIMII_
city,"
,
. etc.
_
... ...
the •_
_
.. __
_ m.ny

builol"' .......... -

. - - • ....-cltl'

_,. wlolclo ~
fKulty ~ etc. In -

-

a t t h e - . . . - . M_...,the-drem.llcnc:illty

" Big Brother's Big Bribes," November 13, Norton 332. Child care Norton 337. " Most WOmen will probabl be
rprised 'wbell- they learn
how tax laws and social security discriminate against them.''
" How to Get What You Want,"
November ?:1, Norton 332. Child care
- Norton 334. "Investigation of resources and means by whic:b women
can prepare themselves for worl&lt; and
best utili1.e their own talents." '
" Non - Traditional Approaches,"
. December 4,, Norton 334. Child care
- Norton 337. "An exploration of al-

ternatives for women."

Those- interested in participating
should sign up in Room 223 Nor!Qn
Hall or call 831-4630.

Bridge Winners
A.W. Rowland and Costss Yeracaris,
placing first in their section, were one
of four winners at a two section United Fund Bridge tournament beld Monday evening in the Faculty Club.
Other first place winners were Rita
Reddick, Mary McKenna, Peg Pekins,
Mary Dowd, Marvin Morris and Robert Spero.
The game attracted a number of
outstanding Buffalo bridge players,
and netted $142 for the United Fund.
A total of 17 tables Wen! in 'play. The
ACBL Director was Mrs. Marion Bingel. Local bridge groups, includinir
Frontier Unit # 116, the Whist Clu6
and the BatTett Bridge Club, that
normally meet on Mondays, cooperat-ed with the University on the event. ·
Other faculty who performed well
included Morton Rothstein and Jobn
Boot, placing second Norlh-South in
their section. A I s o placing second
East-West were Andrew Holt and
Richard Siggelkow, who co-chaired the
everit. Prizes were donated . by the
University Bookstore.

ASCAP Awards
Two M u s i c Department faculty
members are among those being honored with 1973 awards from the American Society of Composers, . Authors_
. and Publishers ( ASCAP) . .
Lukas Foss and I;ejaren Hiller, coairectors of the Center for the Creative· iiio.d Performing Arts, iue &amp;DIQng
those sharing in the cash' awards in
_,ution of their unique contribu- ,
)ions to music.

-·

�.... _____ ......,
__....
.... -

.....,,...

.Aaatddle . . . . fll. ........ - -

trUatiBc diet ....
, . . will be Ill wblaa ~~.,

... atiJbe ita i~Q~a~IW 1D ~
_.. We ha• to bellele thiL T11111'e
- . lat fll. ~ ll8liDp. ........ fll.
..._, U1111111 tbe fwelcn atudmt leaden. UDder
tbe elllllllllmt leMenlaip fll. DaWI 8aDcho, SA'a
~ elfaira_.,tjnalar, ... IalolrDatblel
CaalliUee bali._ eeteNWwl 'l1sla CDIIIIIIitllle
is ~tly ~ fll. ns--tativee from
verioua duba, aDd Ia IDvitiDi all duhe Oil~
to. ~te actiwly. AD blbmatiw article
writliell by DaWI 111JPM111 In this ..._
We take this opportanity to .....- our apprecialioa for tbe wodt diille by DaWI 8aDcbo
I ' cluring tbe first hlllf of hill teim. His eatblllliasm
aDd lnlen!St ...... .been • ~ aDd . - r y force In tbe intemalioalll daiiiJ 01 tbia campus.
We wislr him CDDtiDued succeoa In carrying out
the .-Ia be baa eRibllabed for the rest of hill

term.
•
And what Ia U/ B IraUriiDlitHtal cloini this
year? We am ooly pramiae thllt - will work
hard IUid do our '-t to became tbe \lebicle Of
COIIIIIIIIIIil!tion for the intemational mmmunity. We tblnk !bet we have to CDDtribute .to mutUal
omderstandingUIIIIIII all tbe etbnic IIJid American
JIOQIIB oo C11J11P1111, to tbe e&amp;ctive eoordinalioa
of tbe dub's activitiea, aDd to tbe .,...,.tion of a
true intemational frieDdsbip IIJIIOIIIl all In order
to do this - .-1 ,__help. Only with yOur
CDDIIIII!Iliii· IIJid articles, will we truly repre-tl

- yOu

Oil

this

c:unpuiL

-

me Is Not Covered
By Mandatory f~
BDli"'R:

Tbe Inter-Residence CouDcil is the ollicial
IUid representaave of the dorm stoIXIIDinunity. In addition to this, the IRC
~ various activities IUid. ~ avail~ to ..... aluiMnta who paid ita , _
't'lieSe · liiclude IIUdt thlnp as parties, movies
almost every weekend on both campuses, bicycle rentals, refrigerator reiltals, buses to
CIDI&gt;CeriB, IUid many more. Aside from the rental
progrem, almost all the activities- are free. In
order to provide these services, the IRC is funded a&gt;lely by a voluntary activities fee of twenty
dollanL
~
Meanwbue, many foreign students have ex~ a ~ to partake in a variety of IRC
activitiea, sud&gt; as the beer blast tbis past weekend. Most of tbeee students bad a misconoep!:i&lt;Jn
that all their fees were paid for them, induding
the IRC fee. Tbia is not the case. 'The IRC
dorm fee is ooly paid by each individual stodent clesirinr ita activitiea. Any studeitt wisbing
to pay hill fee abould come to the IRC ol6ce In
the -.th lounge of Goodyear Hall between the
hours of 12 Noon IUid 5 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Anyone who feels that they cannot a11ord the
fee should come IUid fill out a waiver. For further information. ple&amp;ae call 831-4715 whic::h is
now in operation.

_.BARRY PBLL

Tbli ,.....

UtW. forelp alud . . . . . r!l.acthitlea cWpBI
to - - .... May iD BuiWo ad at tbe State
Uahallll;y r11 ~ YciHt- at BuiWo --.loY-

IIble;

'Cultural Forum' Pla.Dned
Ever .......,. what's the ancient philoeopiJ.y
behind acuPuncture? What's the_ meaning Or
Sbadi K"- Abad.i? How do other countlies'cuatoms aDd habits dilfer from yours IUid what
do they DaD?
n - IUid many other similar culturallyoriflnted questions Will be entertained in oUr
Cullural Forum In the .,.,.,;.., a..- of the U/ B
ll'llenullionGL Basically, the forum takes the
form of questions from inlen!Sted readers, muoemins cultural ~ of countries that interest
them, liDd brief provided by membera of
the editorial tx.rd, which Is COIIIJIC-.I of stu- .
dents from many r:Merent countries_ ·
Questians may nmae from one- country's exotic customs to a cooltina recipe.
.Anyone wbo kDows of interesting foreign
is aJao invited to
information to
the forum. or c:owae. it 1a hard to ........tee
that every q,_tion can be .-red IUid every
.,_tation publisbed, but we will tpo our best
to satisfy .._,..,...;. By ~ling this forum, we
hope to stimulate more infenat In intemational '
cultural .,..,.,._ IUid """"""mlcwlioa So pt
Involved IUid -write 118 immediately. P*ee add.- your mail fo: Edward K.C. Tae, Intemational Cultural Forum, UIB I~ 210
T...........t Hall, 8UNYAB, Bo&amp;Jo 14214.

cus-

-

.Adivltiee bepn 8uDda.J allemaou, September 2, at 1:80 p.m.- ·~'-- rll UtB's in.,_
•tlaaal _...uty tooired -~City. 'lbe
IJI'ODI8IIed dowa Mala 8lreet, ~
4 - aDd Fillmare A - with oocaalanal
trlpa ClowD llide streela deslpid to revee1 the
entire apectrum of human encles_¥018 that am- ·
stitule the urban rePon.
.
Our _ , . to the Niapra Flmtler aaw
cburi:Ma of all denominations (Catholic, .Jewish,
. Protestant, ~) , public acbools, private ecboo
aDd ~ hospitals, banlal,
·· public aDd private .ollice buildinp, bistoric:aLaites, IUid little known but inles'!!BIIDI sbape aDd
residences. 'The tour plaJmed to paM two
of tbe three bouse&amp; designed by Frank. Lloyd
Wn,ht withiJ&gt; tbe city aild tried to tliroUgb
not ooly"tbe wealthy IUid Immaculately kept portions of tbe city but also drove through tbe middle c:lasf!, peor, tbe clean~ not ao .~ areas.
'The luD!:tion of the city tour ..... to_familiarize U/B'a , _ foreign-students with the !J111DD1!r
in wliid&gt; ~ is organized. 'lbroui!&gt;out tbe
tour· main bus routes were pointed out and variOus shopping IUid cultural 81'1!!18 were high.
lighted.
Around 3 p.iii. tbe buses arrived at the Albrigbt-Knol&lt; Art Gallery on Elmwood Avenue
IUid tbe studelits -either roamed through the
lialls of tbe Museum or ezplored Delaware Park
whic::h borders the MIIIII!WD grounds. Later In
tlie evening everyone feasted on a -delicioua dinner or submarinB alllldwicbes fnm the Avenue
-Submarine Sbop. After dinner tbe stadenta

...,.,_t .._,.,

_.._t

deilt

~ G(

deatll ......

COFFEE HOUR
The Chinese Student Associotion will hold o colree
· hour, Soturdoy, October 6, at 8 P:")· I~ NQrton I,Jnlon,
'!100' nunibe( to" be an"'?!!~· ' G~..pj&gt;!IO...fl will
be Prof. Un Duo·Uong and Prof. Tuan Ron -Deh wt1o
will discuss their recent 1rips to China.

reboarded the buses 'illld 111!"1"' transported to

the Canadian city of Niagara Falls, Ontario.
'The balance of the week saw a well atteDded
picnic: at Fort 1Niagara State Pari&lt;
Monday,
a night of recreatjon at Norton Union on 'fuesday, and an outdoor square danoe on Wednesday evening. 'The orientation program culminated with a beautiful banquet held in tbe• Tiffin
Room at Norton Hall 'The featured banquet
speaker was Dr. Charles Ebert, dean of Undergraduate Studies at U/B.
'The 19'73 Foreign Student Orientation prooeeded on a amoolh and steady course due to
much hard wort&lt; done behind tbe scenes by many
dedicated people. - DB.vid Sand&gt;o IUid Adam HybaYeb acted as coordinator and ro-ooordinator
respectively, of ~rientation profii1IIIL Their
efforts were effective beeause of many ·other sto- dents and stall members IUIIIOCiated with the
U/B Foreign Student Office located in Townsend-Hall.
A partial list of people wbo contributed to
the IIIJOC!198 of this year's Foreisn StudenfOrientation Program muaists of: Ravindar Prakash,
Kathy Pender, . Michelle Bickler. Sam ·Sudhir,
Barry .Fell. France Pruitt, Kirk Robey, Joe
. William&amp;, Ani Maria I.oinaz, Badia ~cia,
Anna' Fanone, Bill Breuer, Sat Bah!, Frances
Yung,l'I!W Groumpos, David Yoon, Sail Khan,
Daniel Wong;-Ernie v au.
Chona, c..sar
Ho, Amir Tamqwnned-;-'"Nila Aquilar, Sowaley
Lemotey, Rl9 T&amp;u.
.

em

auman

MEMilals OF
U/B ltnDINATIONAL EDITORIAL -.a!
C.rlos Alvaroz......f'llorto Rico
Edith r ..iJ....-hru
G~ditor-in.Chief

t*tJort -....~ny
Sudhlr SUchak-T•nunlo
Eddy Tsa-Honc Kons
Emle Y•u--Hong Kons
Una Yuan-Hong Kong
Artldoo •net/or •nnouncemerrts lor U/B
.,. welcome, They should be oubmlttad at lees!
bofora publication (lim Thunday of most
montt.). Artldoo ..., not to oxcaed 30ii words, duo

r-....

~ - · Send or brt"'l "" _ ,
PlltJIIc:ld!on
ID ,_, 210 T - ~-

ID

Byl&gt;ETER GROUMPOS
Tbia siUnmer the Inte81sive Engliab-Language
Institute enrolled lh8ll 200 lareipi students
fnm 40 di1ierent oounirlell in a variety d. Engliab and orientation _111'0111111118 'The repul8lion
of tbis fairiy institute baa ~ far and
wide and for the f'llllt time students bad to be
turned away due to lilcl&lt; of fecilities.. ·
'The stodenta emolled in tbe Institute spent
an excitinl SWIIJDI!I" living aDd otudying together
on the Main Street campus. Tbey - of all J
ages, from 16 to 60, IUid from divene cultural
backgrounds. 'They
tbe ~ part of their
day in the inte81sive Encllsb daaees of the institute. Weekends and free-time were - t visiting
American families, on cultural escunions and in
diacuasion lll!ll8ions with :.\meriama.
'The majority of students .....nt on to advanced ·
studies In other universities tbrougbout tbe
United States. A fBw .-~ned in Bu1ralo ·and
·some returned to their home countries. There
was widespread sadneoa 8mona tlie group during the last -'r. of the procram over their
inevitshle-departwe. Tbe spirit IUid feelinp of
- the students about their experiellice In Buffalo
are openly esprellled In the words of two of
them: .

-.t

-

Ana Maria lol~rto Rico

.,._t

Summer English P

for

~ Clrodu'!!!fl~ Chl!e

"' would like t6 say aometbing about tbe
Intensive Engliab Language- Institute. From all
the continents of the world, many stodents have
come to study English in this modem and new
institute.
.
"At ·the betinninl. we were nervous. everytbina was , _ for 118, the USA, the city, the
other stadents. With time, we built a ~­
ty, a real mmmunity ~ atudeitts an
teachers IUid IIIDIIIII us, the studeots.
"In this eommunity there wereil't any dlstinc~ .fDY aodal or racial problems; we alwi!Ys
found "WDJjHebeuaion, . _ t for our cultures
IUid oountrieo, underatanding about our problems

�-

t .... -opportunity

to - - you

- .,.., 01 the Stadmt Aa.x:iation. ,.. tbeJidevtlmal Coonliatar, my piMaaable teak
- will be to orpllile and coordinate ~ties de-

rograin·Enrolls 200
and pol!llibilities, sincerity and friendly relationships.
'"Then! are III8IU' things I could· write about,
but I don't hive time to do ao; for es:ample, this
was a f8ntastic eJ&lt;perience to leain about the
world and about 011r11e)ves, that there _are good
people in· all the cantinenta, that ..., are more
similar tban we thought and that many differences can be solved if you lmow other people
and spMk like friends with them.
"We give thanb to this institute, not only
because ..., have leamed English with good
teacbers and . _ methods d. learning lllnguages,
but also because ..., had ~ exceptional ·opportunity to learn the various cultuml expresiJions
of humanity throughout the select students who
have participated in' this program.
"Here, teacbenl and atudents, ..., have worked
for the pmce of the li'O&lt;Id, ..., understood that
the~ and the friendships-are possible if the
people have i n - and respect fo&lt; the others,
like dilferent members of the big human family.
"Thanks Mr. Dwmett, teacheis, people of
the )JfQiriiJD. 'Ibanks .from all of us. 'Ibanks
because ..., studied together English and human
relations."
~
_
FroncGio Dupuis, u~. Fronce

"' wish to iha:nJt you for the ezcellent stay
I spent in Bulfalo. I believe I have enjoyed notonly the English Course, interesting and efficient,
but- also the atmoapbere d. the group and the
relations with teacbers and staft.
.
' have been very happy to meet the other
fore.iiln students, 80 far from us in their language
and customs.
"It's wben we 110 back home that we estimate
the importance of such expedences. I hOpe the
institute will keep on with ita pretty good job
and that you wiD alwaye animate it with the
same enthusiasm I edmire as well as with the
same IIIICa!88.
''Pieeae give' my gratitude to your teacbera
and staft."

aiped . to mer- tbe a~ d. liD internatioaal communlty on campus. At the same
time, It Ia absolutely ..........ry that fbi; interests
and rights of foreign student&amp; be · MrVed in the
admlnisiiative decis1oos d. the ·university.
Tbe - t slrudure d. lnlernatlonal club6
is tbe bala olcunent activity. '"-clubs are
fuuded bi your actMty r- wblcb are. admiJii&amp;.
" tered by the Student Aa.x:iation. In addition,
your activity r- 118111st·in eupportfnJ Universitywide a~vities, e.g., recreatioaal sports, movies,
oollee hoUses, speakers, orientation programs, the
Browsing library,~ etc. For thoeewho
are .not allliated with any national or ethnic club,
there is alwaye an opportunity -and the posm'bility
·of. adequate resc111roes to introduce international
activities of an experiment~~! nature.
On this -campus, the ·major coocem in Jnter..national Student A1fairs and Activities has always been the lack of any effective coordination
· and -ntation by an individual II"!UP or
organization. We ~realize that we are 'deal, ,!ng-. with a variety d. cultural backgrounds, eecli
with its own individual priorities added to the
- daily academic commitments of University life.
· - An ll)~tiooal Committee ~ therefore
been set np m response to the need for more
coordination of activities among international
clubs on campus. -Representatives from clubs
have been invited to si£ on this committee. Tbe
committee has stated that more activities Should
be organized on an iDtemational level to encourage a higher degree of exPosure to and pali.icipation by the. University community. Furtheml!)re,
the suggestion has been made to have bi-club
activities 80 _as to develop-a working understandin" of other clubs. l'lesently, the committee is
reviewing proposals for upcoming activities, e.g.
cooking workshops, -aJ! international ball, movies,
trips and cultuml nights.
However, the · International Committee baa
explicitly ~)hat It willlnvolve i taelf'ln arees
of administrative concern to foreign students. As
such, it will a ttempt to consider the nHOvaluation
of .the tuition-waiver situation; develop a job profile for foreign students; determioe the possibilities of developing additional scholarship resources; and the formation of a soccer club. Hopefully,
the committee will become a consolidated..&gt;~nd
continuous soiuce of international activity and
concern for foreign students.
In closing, I look fotward to this acsdeinic
yi,ar with great enthusiasm and will be available
for discussion on any matter related to International Student Alfairs.
~VID SANCHO

SA lnlllmotlonol CoonlinoiDr

Annpal Bazaar Scheduled
Over the years, Tbe Jnternatioual Committee
of the SUNYAB Women's Club has been an
integral part of the OFSA's services to foreign
fac!llty and atudentii. Members of this group
- have volunteered their time and energy toward
making Bulfalo an enjoyable place to live for
foreign visitors.
Among their Dll!llY activities is the Annual
Bazaar which will be Jield this year ,in the Fillmore Room of Norton Union on Thursday, October 11, from 1 p.m. ti&gt; 9 p.m., and on Friday,
October
fro"! 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Household
items ana winter dothing which were donated
by individuals and various community groups
wiD be sold at prices ranging from five cents -to
$1.00. Admission to .the Bazaar wiD be reserved
lot foreign students Oil, the first day. Don't IIIia
the bargains.
Other activities COII!IIst d. a cultuml exchanp
PI'OIIflllll wbere_ foreign students are inaoduced
to American familiee in an elfori to create lasting
friendabipa. '11lere will be a reception at the
Alhrilbt-KDm&lt; Art Gallery on October 19 at 8
p.m. Imitations wiD be .nl MaJWillife mort!
plijisant fw Wives d. foreign students and profdlaors is the other big eudeeW. which the group
mabs. For more infOnnation, call- R.y Selig
at 688-9884 or France Pruitt at &amp;11-3828.

.E-

-the..,....

' As a lix -

to tho cempus•o International comi11URity,
hal ac....t to maM- _ . , . -

--of-·

durlnl tho academic ~· to

the- Olllc:e of "

Fontiln Stl-.t Mairs and tho - - -nl
Of U/8 . - --ft&gt;rtho
,_ and articles of ln\efMt.

Qreetings to the old and to the .-1 Tbe .:
OFSA wishes to extend a cordial ........... to our
newcomers and ~ ·our returning students. We
hope that this year wiD be a fmitful one fo&lt; all
The. ol6ce will be using .the periodic UIB llllernational lor ofticial 8DIMJIIII('eft.,..,ta. ao do read
the issues airefully. We hope that you wiD ptan
to visit us from time to time, even if you don't
have a problem.
- Tbe Stall
Joseph William8
Ann Fanone
France Pruitt
Badia Reynolds
Kirk Robey
Provideace-&gt;'l'ripi
Mali Loinaz'
Kathy Peoder
Ernie Yau

TuitiOn

w-.

Tbe · deedline for applying for the Tuition
Waiver Scholarship for the Spring Semester is
NoVember 1, 1973. Applications submitted to
the OFSA alta that date will not be Considered.

...

.

Rama Watumull Sc:holanhlp

Tbere are still funds available for this scholarship. Only studeiits from Jndis in their first
year d. stud_y in the U.S. are eligible. For mOn.
information, contact the OFSA.

...

~ofWe at the OFSA have to be informed at all
times about your address. Many times we receive urgent information froin embassies, home
govermilents, families. and others that have to .
be passed on to students. Please come or call
us if you have a new addiess!
~

~

...
...

. Tbere are many pieces of unclaimed mail in
Room 210 Townsend. Please come over amd
a-It if you b..... received anY1hin&amp;.

~Every Friday at 4 p.m. American and Foreign students, as well as faculty and alaff. meet
for a time of informal conversation and a cup d.
coffee at the International Coffee Hour. This
activity is sponsOred by the OFSA and the different nationality groups on campus. Come over
on Fridays to Room 204 Townsend Hall, meet
other )ltudents, make friends!

...

FOftip ..._ _ _

All foreign students who have tM.en billed for
health insurance through the Student Aaxlunts
ol6ce this year will receive a statement o1. age; a claim form and an identification card for
the policy yeer 19'73-74. in October. U you do
not wish health inSurance, you must Dotify the •
Foreign -'&gt;tudent Oflice before November 30,
1973. U notification is not made by that date,
. you will be . _ w l e for the (ll'emium up to
. date of notification.
you not c:l:wged
. for insurance liut wish to be covered, pleeae
notify the Foreign Student Olllce befo&lt;e NOYeD&gt;-

u

. ber30.

Love &amp; Marriage Course .

Al~ relatio'nabips among ~ought to
be the aimplest and most natumJ thing, there' is
much in this area that .,.,_ canfuaioD, quae.
tiona, and much miscommunication. This is . .
-pecially true .wbere crossing linguistic and cuitum! ' ba!riera.
For the purpoee of £Jiimcing """""'mication
among people, the Foreign Studeint Olllce wiD .
!18 holdiu&amp; a workshop .., Looe, Frientbhip and
M~, the lleClOIId weekead in November. Tbe
aoaJ of this worbhop is to eDCIIUfiiii'O studanta
from various coun~ tu express ~ feelings
and -ieoase in these areea. n is a worbbop
for people who are in~ in meetinl J!80P(e
.from various other cultures, making friends
8Jid.-perbaps most importantly-discarding already established prejudices. It wiD be a week- ·
end d. Ieeming, sharing, and ~
Tbe -.bhoP '"will be beld outside of Bulfalo
in a natuml setting. To cover the cost o1. ltiMis
a fee d. $5 is I'8Q!1ired from eech member. Both
sinaJe and married foreign students are encourapd to partidpate.
For further Information, cantact the Fqreigzi
Studellts Olllce in Toomsend; (Miss Ana Maria
Loinaz or Mr. Kidt Robey) .

�.

Jt.-~

::.~.._

"'ur ahlalala PIIIJICIIII • to ~
the pbyGaal ..... ~ Man, wblle .....
~ ..... iiMwpft
what m...
01 form
the aature
to 1oobd
arrive
at what.
anlte mould be

of·

L~Seton

Man &amp; Universe
Sir Bemard Lovell, director

ot the

Nulfield RadiO Astronomy Laboratory,
JodJell Bank, -elaDd, will present a
"~~tlng lectut:e series"

on "Mlin'a Relation to the Universe,"
under auspices of the F.aculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Tuesday, October 9, throush Friday, Oclilber 12.
The first bolder of the Chair of
Radio Astronomy in the University of
Manchester, Lovell is the architect of
the 25G-foot, steerable radio dish at
Jodrell Bank, whic:b until recenUy was
the 1sraeat telescope o( ita lrind in the
world. lie is author o( The lndioidlllll
ond· the Unioene, based ·on a series
of lectures for the BBC, Science ond
CivilUxJlion, Discovering the Universe
and The Story of JodreU Bank.

·

~ ~re.-are·

"Rela\lons and
Oc- '

Eoaoomics of Space Exploration,"

Iober 9.
"Man's Astronomical Knowledge of
tbe Univerae (1 ) -Tbe Solar System
and the Milky Way," October 10. ·
"Man's Astronomical Knowledge of
tbe UniYer&amp;e ( U ) - The Extragalactic
Byatem," October 11.
a:;::·~tion to the Universe,"

All lectures will start at 8:15 p.m.
and will be beld in 147 Diefendorf.
The lectures are free and open to
the public.
A public coftee bour for Dr. Lovell
will be beJd Wednesday, October 10,
3:30-4:30 p.m., in the Fillmore Room,

Norton.

.

Student Cagers-·
To Meet Faculty
A student all-trtar bal!:...tball team
will play a veteran faculty five tonight at 8 p.m, in Clark Hall for the
benefit cl the United Way. Dr. A.
WesUey Rowland, vice preSident for
university relations, will coach the
faculty stars. Student Asaocistion
President 'Jon Dandee is in charge of
the student squad.
Both caac:bea bave been hesitant
about revealing preinformation
on the line-ups for
Coac:b
Rowland did indicate tbat his team '
would include 8n exciting coJJection
of establisbed pefllOIIDel.
Some of the talent from whom Row- .
land will select his starting line-up
features Dr. Albert Somit, executive
vice president of the University; Norb
Baachnagel, coach of tennis and former varsity MVP; Bill Monkarsb,
coach of baseball; Dr. Jim Ryan, asoociate director of urban alfairs; lli.
Jim Hansen and Dr. Tom Frantz,
counaelor education; plus other campus aportsmen. Dr. Diane DeBacy.
cbairman of phYsical education, will
aleo be a faculty team member.
Dlmdes bas been mum about Jiis.
plans, but pre-same COIIWmlation inclicalao. the undergraduates will employ bump and run tsetics.
·
. Oanatioa for the game is $L
'l1W OOIII88t - reecbeduled . ftom
Wecm-t.,y nilbt tJec:m.. of conflict.
iq activitiee - kic:b df the 1973-74
bubtball _ , at U/B.

if!':ntest.

for .......... to loot for it.
•u 1:1ae ..ia not life ar if - are
UMble to ~ ita ~ ... .the
p~ what. 1o1m cl life could be
mttoduced? U tbere is life, sbould. it
be left alone or ........med and perhaps even c:banged to accommodate
human need?''
Tbese are queo,tions, U / B scientist
James F. Danielli aays; that "our
people will belp NASA answer during
the coming years'' in an ihtensive iJ!·
vestigation of the possibilities of the
existence of life on Mars whicb began
on campus this week
-'The new multi-disciplinary program,
funded by a $120,000 National Aeronautics and Space Administration
~t, is aimed at providing essential
information regarding present and future erploration and life search on
tbe Earth's nearest neighbor planet.
CMnce In Approach
·
Dr. Danielli, director of the Center
fo.t Theoretical B)ology and principal
investigator for the program, erplains
that recent findings by tbe Marin"~:
SpaCecraft prompted a revision of the
Center's research a pproa&lt;;b in respect
to NASA missions. ·
"Recent Mariner studies show tbat
sufficient water exists in some parts of
tbe planet to sustain a form o.f life
with a chemistry similar to terrestrial
( earth ) organisms,'' D r. Danielli said.
'"'llis led to a revision or our research approac:b,'' he said, "so that .
a major part of the Center's wi&gt;rk will
now be done by the Mars Working
Party an~ the remainder by the Qrigin

,.~...,.w~
~.which.~
arid~~ from 18

acienti&amp; lleldB. Ia cltridlrd iDto live
committe. eech with iDdi9idual ..
&amp;pOI&gt;IIihilltla reladDir to ar mme
1111P1!CD
NASA.'a Man .....,._
Tbe Olbltal l.abarakll:f Coaamltlee
will be COIICI!rDlld with tJie pcaihllity
of sludies, to be rude em an -

of

ned &lt;fully au-.ated) earth orbital
lab, if mall!ri(il were brouaht bad&lt;
from Mars. It will also consiclenneth- -'
ods of collection and storage, as well
as
·ble contamination of tenestria1
Ii
through contact with returned
samples.
Tbe Mars Model Committee will
detenDine the prol!able distribution of •
water including permafrost below the
planers surface and methoda of detecting water l!'hicb is close to the
• urface by oitiiting instruments.
,
The Viking Data Qommittee wiU
consider the interpretation of data to
be forwarded by future Mars landers
and tbe possible implications with respt!ct to life on the planet. ( 'The first
Mars lander is ac:beduled for a 1975
take-oft aDd 1976 tandina. )
The MinimSJ Metabolic Rate COmmittee will at!eJ!lpt to determine wbat
sort of'fnstrumentation will be ll&lt;!&lt;li!S-sary for detection of Martian life. .It
will also consider the rate of decay
of organisms by the deterioration processes (ultraviolet radiation ) likely to

I':"'

OCDU.

.

The Martian Adaptation Committee
will be involved with deciding .wbat
terres~ organisms migbt. survive on
the plallel Some factors that will be
considered include the lack of water,
p resence of permafrost and llltraviolet
light dangers.
'
• ·

·Laurie.Wilson ·Named'k.lr-nas lelfow
Laurie Wilson, Buffalo, bas ·been
awarded U / B's ClliJord C. Furnas
Graduate Fellowship for 1973.
Sponsored since 1967 by tbe Carborundum Company of Niagara Falls in
honor of the late U/ B c:bancellor, the
fellowship is awarded on tbe basis of
academic or professional• qualmcations, proposed p r o g r a m o! study,
availability of special faci.lities required, and financial need. It provides
an annual stipend of $5,000 for three
years to cover b.lition and other experu;es.

.

Miss Wilson, .a native o! Hamburg,
is a doctoral candidate in industrial
engineeriri.ot operations reaearc:b. She
received both her BA in pgycbology
and 1118.Sters in industrial e ngineering
a t U / 8.

She commented tbat ·ber switch in
interest from psychology to indusl:ri41
engineering occurred as a result of
working as a program .analyst after
receiving the BA.
Her masters project, a study of
" Non-Jury · Misdemeanor Caae Processing :::- A Simulation Model,~ involved a plan for more efficient use
of judges' time, and · shorter perioda
of tiine between indictment and hearings.
M i s s Wilson .attended Hamburg
H igh School and graduated in 1963
from the · Grier School in Tyrone,
P ennsylvania. Sb!l is the second
wollllln to receive the Furnas Fellowship since its inception seven years
ago.

Job Openings
The Peraonnel Office indicates tbat the_ following faculty and DOD· ·
teac:bing professional st.afi positions are open at State Univenity at
Buffalo:

'
Faculty

Assistant Instructor, Oral !Jiowgy.
Clinical Instructor, Occupational Tlieraf&gt;y. _
Clinical Instructor, Fixed ~rosthodontics.
Instructor ( part-time) , Occupational Therapy.
NTP
I
.
Programmer! Analyst, Computer services, PR-2.
I
.
Techni£al Specialist, Instructional Communications Center, PR-1.
Counsewr, Senior ,Counseling Psychologist, Student Counseliilg Center, PR-2. ·
A"!l'Ciale Librori~. Science and Engineering Library, PR-2.
Assistant to Director, Stu_dent Per5onnel Sei:Yices, PR-L
· For additional information concerninjl these jobs and for details of
NTP openings throughout the State University system, consult bulletin
boards at these locations:
·
1. Bell Facility· .between D152 ·and D153; 2. Ridge L&lt;1a. Building
4236, next, to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, in corridor next to ·
C-1; 4. Health Sciences Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5.• Capen
Hall, in tbe corridor between Room 14f and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
ground floor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall, in
main entmooe foyer, across from Public Infonnation Office; 8. Acheson
Hall, in corridor between Rooms 112 and 113; 9. Parker Enllineering,
in corridor next. tO Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st oo&lt;, Housing Office
"t""; 11. 1807 Elmwooil, Personne_l Department; ~2. N~rton Union, Direc:tcir's J&gt;llice, Room 225; 13. Dielendorf Hall, m comdor next to
Room~-

Marvin Feldman
Dies at Age 51·
ProfeBIICir ·Marvin ~. Feldman, for
25 years a member cl the University
faculty, died Saturday after a brief
illness. Dr. Feldman, profeiii!Dr of
psychoJosy, was 5L
Born in Minneapolis, Dr: Feldman
earned his undergraduate and master's
degrees at the University of MiJmeoc&gt;.
ta. He received a Ph.D. in psychology
from the University of California at
·Berkeley.
Dr. Feldman joined tbe U/ B faculty
as an assistsn.t ~rofesso• in 1948.
Prior to his appomtment, be was a
U.S. Public . Health fellow at tbe.
langely-Porter Clinic in San Francisco• .
D~· Feldmlin Will! ilirector of clinical training in the PsycholOgy De-" partment, froin 1951 to 1967. During ·

a 1962-:63~ 1~1~Wls, '
visiting BsS&amp;iat..! at the . Tavistock
Clinic in London. In -ceceot

be 1\as

y~

bojeflf ~ Of~ ~

menrs undergraduate honors program. At tbe time of his death, be
was undertaking- .-reb into the
personality cbaracteristics of cbronie
nightmare suflerers.
Dr. Feldman was a longtime consultant to tbe BWialo Veterans Administt&amp;tion Hospital: He aleo .er-1
11956-1967) on the advisory council
in psycbology far the New York State
Department of Education. A past
president of the Ps cbolotPcal AIB&gt;cistion of Western
York, be was

!few,

There will bo en lnfonnll

..-na

in

memory of Professor Mervin Fe1dn111n in
the Rod Room of the Feculty Club It 12
noon .on Sunday, October 7. Frilnds ere ·
invited to ltt&amp;nd.

a member of aevera~· profeMioo81 organizations, incliKibqJ the American

PSychoJoclcal Asaacis~ the Eastem Psycbological Asaacistion, and the
New York State Psychological AIB&gt;cistion. .
'Throughout hia tenure at the University.
Feldman showed special
interest in faculty ...........,.,. and
academic freedom. Acth•t · in tbe
AAUP I American Asaacislion of University Professors), he was presidellt
of tbe campus c:bapter clui'ini the turbulent period 196S-1970. He was alio
a former cbairman of the "-oci.itioa's
C'-ommittee on Academic·Freedom. At
tbe time of his death, he was a liiember of both the U/B Faculty Senate
and tbe SUNY Senate and a regUlar
contributor ' to tbe Reporter on the
deliberations of the latter JIIOUP· .
He is survived by his wife, Dr.
ThsJia Phillies Feldman, a da~ter,
~~- and stepchildren,· N .
las

nr.

a

As a tribute to Dr. Feldman, his
col)eagues bave· establisbed tbe Mar-.
vin ,J. · Feldman Memorial Honots
Fund within the PsychoJosy Department tclo Chairman James Julian,
4230 Ridge Lea Road}.
CORIIfCTIOtl
In an article in last week's iuue., pace 2,
col. ·1 (CoordiJ11tll1(j Group), .lonlthln
Trelbll should hiVIi _ , listed as the
GSA representative.

t

�__

U/B'Team Preparing ·Cell Experiment for Astro~auts
.,.....,..,..
ott-

.·
&amp;,.
PA1JUCIA W-MID~
UIB w· a '
il
'5 !' 3

\t!;t,""'NASA
c.llll ,.., Ow
b e1eo-

trit:itl,
a ~Iiiia- , _
- .....
.... the ap.,.,

collo, em the

baud, are Jar&amp;ely
l'!lllpOD8ible f9r the body's defeaae ·
«PiDst C&amp;ooer. (On the damer side,
T cella are also l'!lllpOD8ible few the
.,.,..,.. rejection of truoplants.)

Van Ow uodemoore&amp; the obvious d&amp;ainlbility"of separating the two
of related - 1' - ......bidi - .....:~ groupsm
'
._..,
~inthe
Daldilliiia .,_._
fll. the UIB
human .body. In .....ling cbroaic lymImnw• + . 2 ., ~ ..... his
pbatic Jeukemia, for eump!e, it is
""""-- lire Jllllfectlaa a .-bod for
dssinlble to increase the number of
..., . : : iii liw aio ldnda of
T _eeiJa. BUt, until the two. JympOO.
2iviDa
llld d-.:aJt to JEPcy1l!8 can be separated in quantity, an
em ..tiL . . . _ oflbe mien).
iDiusioD of one kind of cell _,.. that
IJiolaaioP8' ...au, .... f1dure - .
a peat many of the other type ma,y
naut will ~ jlllllb a baUan and
be introduced at the same time.
then!iJy tUe a .JiDt . . . b a.nkind
At pieaent, B. and T cells can be
and for~ a •. . , 2owlll"d solving
~ted ool.y. m minute quantities
the t.,sie
n1 . _ _ , _ , __ •. . by,,.l;llia:oanslytic, meJh9da In tbeory
·" .
...... ~~· · the cells aloould, be resdil separab?e
·I&lt;~ ~· •
(riMii, elf
using electrophoresis beca~ of their
.
But t&gt;ebe
.
~ • . · 1 dilfering eli'Cf;ric charges. Tbeoretical""'-ta\!1'~ .
- -~ r. .. it bOt"h.
-cells in· 808" '"lelil' ill'
'"";j&amp; ''" l]llln8ion. the .more negative! charged
&gt;911~ filr 2bl!
'1'4-'anr- • T i oella.wi!Lrace ahead
B ' cells
. me the ~ • t,
be
-t 0.,; a .! d 8 a: positiw-...,Pectnide. 'But,
., f - . '""'t ""'Ubas eledliCity. Van
when e!ectrophoretic separation is
Ow baa reqiles?lol eDIIUih eJiidricity
attempted in fact, gravity intervenes
to lm;!ep the cella a:t a c:hiiJy -180'
and before meet of the cells can be
The ap.,., Aae!acy ' - COIIIller-o«er
separated, virtually alP the cells sediwith aniY I!DIJiish 1o maintain tlan
ment to the bottom of the vessel.
at -20'. Vin Ow predicts be and
In Spew It Should Be Possiltle
NASA w iII -.~u!l~Jy ~But gravity is a problem only on or
....-here 'in" ~ of -65'
,_. earth. Qrbiting in space, where
the force of gravity is ~ro1 • the elec. Campn,m;,., is one of the facia
. life in ~ a 1DQor NASA
tropboretic separation SDOUJQ proceed
·· =~ ~::..cme 1J!Iderwa,y here,_
without a hitch. Eventually, the team
. .-

~

• ........_.
·~

' "":""""a

Ji.

oi

........~ SkyJab also olfem the team a
~"""?' for ........ ilw?al ~ that
are 1ilerally ,.,..nebJe" .., earth.
. Befo're an ""''l!rimiln?al PI'CII&gt;08al is
accepted by NASA, -the "IJIOI)Oaers
::::"~·":::=,..that the project canearth. ~22 is tha~ ...

~perfect lbe ~
we m an earthly labomtory klllg before ""'!"tdowu, and in the ClOUI8e of
PI'&amp;-~ tllf!Y llllllletiux5 find a
P":VJty-one IKilutioa, thereby ~­
ifyinl the~ 1..- _ , . ftichL

A ......... fllr~-Cols

As van Ow eap1aina, the team of
u~~ acientists, headed by Dr. Pier•...., E. B~ -.ciate _..m
. ............ "'~· is clevisU,.
a lll!!lhod for separalin&amp; blood cella at

=. . . ).

&gt;a!'!' ·~J&gt;y- -of~
....,;, 01

.... &lt;.that .... separation .by

~Diking with Dr.
• .........m.81110ciate Dr. Cetewayo F. Gillman and the staff of fDe
~=··lsby
team is seelting a
y, the lAboratory.
way to separate tWo typ5 of lympix&gt;cytea. bloom as B Cbone-marioW d&amp;nved ) aod T " (thymus derived) cells.
These cells diller in electric charge
(the variable that ........ it caoceivable to Sl!pllrate them ~ eJectro.
~) aod also in~ properties. For emmp1e. while Loth typ5
ofbodoellsy'
~t part in the
8
"'8inot m-ae, their
· ~ dilfer: B cella make antibodiea,
while T cella are
for cellular immune defam
Much of -t..t.,y imnwmoJnPcal

-

c

_.'hie

=:::-.;..~~:

aod T ci!IJa. A do&amp;ioaey ..- JliOiifera..
~ of oithr!r type of cell can ope11
w-_ Par tlllllllple, B cella prolifer.
a:te in cbroaic lympbatic 1eu11ania. T

kinds.,.,

·otrle

. theorizes, _,. Paboratories, true skyIsba, ......Jd be ab?e to separate B aod
· T cella routinely aod in great quantities for use in ....,ling disease and
also for raeudi pwpoees. In the
.._..lime, van Ow aod his coUeagues
, _ that a sf&gt;inoff of their NASA
raeudi' will be a separation method
that is feasible for use oo earth.
Certain prob!ems must be solved
before the team's experiments! apparatus can actually be packed aboard
that future Skylab, a!oog with the
Tang. [It is possible, van Oss says,
that the experiment wiU be scbeduled
for the cooperative US/ USSR ApoUo
Soyuz 'l'est Project ( ASTP) . ] One
difliculty is devising a viable method
of freezling the live humAn and gUinea
pig ce?ls uti?i7.ed in the experimenL
To date, the best method for freezing the c e 2 28 invo?ves the use of
"DMBO, dimethyl 'SUlfoxide.
' "'But"DMSO is a very nasty smeiJ.
ing substance, very nasty," van Oss
"'-rYes. "II a container of it were
to break during a Right it 'Woula make
Slcy!ab uninhabitabte for some time."
Quite reasonably, NASA refused to
okay the use of DMSO, so Dr. Bigll7.7i and his collea~tUes hit upon g!yce ml as a substitute. Glycerol works
welt and its smell is unobjectionable.
But the ce?ls, in any case, must be
fro7.en at very Pow temperatures, which
NASA is somewhat reluctant to pro-_
vide. Dr. van Oss is working on thaL

In their Shennan Hall laboratory,
the team canncit acbiew! """" G but
they can devise Vllrious ""'Y'Y of making the lymptiocytea beba- acme
degree.-.a if t h e y - i n - 'lbey
can, for eumple, stow down sedimentation of the cells by increasinc the
density of the medium in whim ~­
are suspended. H"""""", the fact that
the raeudi involves lioin« cells narrows. the raJtge of IIOOIIible media. At
present, the team is working with dense
solutions of polymers. Moat BUbce&amp;Bful
so f!lf have lJ!!en experiment&amp; with
Parge molecules of deztran, a polyBa&lt;&gt;
charide. Dex:tran is dense, but not too·
dense: it is important, van Ow •,.,_
minds, i.hat the cells be ab!e to move
through the medium, not simply Ooat
on top like ping pong halls: Unlike
the more familiar ~ its polymer deztran .exerts tittle oamotic presoure .on the liw c:ells~ ..., be e&amp;·
p!ains, "the cells get squisbed tess."
Although superior to heavy water
!'I'd other media tried and rejected
m the past, deztran too has its drawbacks. One is that it tends to clump.
Clumping occurs when the cells become entrapped in the polymer "like
meatballs in spaghetti," the scientist
rays. But fortunately, deztran is availab?e in a wide range of moleculai~~g~~t,\.!!:j lowest of these, cl~p"At this point, we are engaged to
dextran, if not married to it," van Oss
ssys.
Although the team cannot prevent
the cells from sedimenting altogether
in these pre?iminary tests at normal
gravity, it can slow· them down considerably. Besides stowing down the
cells, the team s t r i v e s to stabilize
them so that they will not sediment
random!y but wi?? move downward in
a regular mass. The scientists do this
by creating a density gradient withio
the experiments! vesseL The density
of the polymer so!utioo increases-from
the top to the bottom of the tube.
Whpn an electric field is introduced,
tbe more negatively charged T cells
separate from the descending mass
and move ahead. However, they too
are stabilized by successively denser
cushions of dertran, and so two distinct Payers, one of B cells and another, c!ooer to the bottom and the
:fu'~v':J~· ~ ce?ls, are proJn the Paboratory the team's experiments! apparatus must be iinmenled
in ice water. Unless the apparatus is
constantly cooled, the beat produced
by the electric curren, used to separate the cells causes uneven expansion
of the .medium and the solutioo begins
to whir!. In the absence of gravity
whirling does not take p!ace.
'
Millions fw Little

Critics of the Ameiican space program have scored NASA for spending
mill_ions . of public d"o!taJ:s for
engmeenng and . produCing little, if
anythiog, of real scientific wort!L Van
Oss thinks this is cbangin .
''NASA was too long
on
its own," he agrees. "But now they
~ve !&gt;egun ~ seek th_e best Pll6Sible
SCJentific adVJce by gDlDJ! outside the
. agency." One p!ace NASA has turned
is to the Universities &amp;ace Research
(Continuedon-10, coi I)

f!asbr.

Ltw,g

_.../

�10
Cel Experlmentfc:..otinud ,...... ,... •• col f)
A . . . . . tjoo &lt;USRA) · al wbk:b U/B
is a llll!mber. Van 0.. wbo aila Oil
lbe "'-'iation's CommiUee Oil Bleotlaplaesis and other a.amicaJ Sap.
matloo Methods, is ~ to PDiDt out
lhat NASA's past DliBtakes, laCludiJII

• dllmally ~ elecb~

ic aperimeat on the Apollo 14 mill..., were not the ..wt of stupidity
bat al laclt of l£iantilc eapertiae.
"'MASA ._ 111m17 ~ but not

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

.

Jlecopitjoo allhia:....... along

with lbe NalialoD tbat Jon..,r fllabts .
...._... 1-t IIIOie to do, bas
~N~totum'llle cnatjoo al USRA bas resulted

Jlllllllitude of imin the scientist's o · ·

iD "aevaraJ Olden al

. . - t .•

PI'Oblems remain.

-

ic*l,• be

"Commi~

BByB,

and USRA op.

....... tbJaush • committee- system.
All dedsioa8 made by the Alak:iat!on
- t • compromise, be admits.

capi:r.

()II,. di8iculties arise from the
_ . . commitment to
"Undiir , _ enterprise system,
NASA farms oot projects to whichever
firm iD with the loweet bid ..
tbe -=iantiat explains. Too often the
low bidder bas • product to push
and tbe ~s special interest iS
impcad em the apmcy. Van ClGs ran
into this llituatjoo when preparing an
~etic aperiment for Apollo
1 The ClOIIJilUY that wan the conbact for the necessary ezperimental
8piW1ltua. bad just developed
new
plaatic:. Unfortunately, the plastic
- cracked ., badly that tbe apparatus
bad to be jllllked and the backup ap-paratus, cracked but repairable, flown
instead In J1!Cll'l1t months, NASA
seems to be turning more and more
lo its own workshops as a way to
cin:umvent. this, van ClGs BBys.

New Books Cover Wide Range·of Sciences
THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE BRAIBy John c. Ecclos, -~­
ol f'llrslololy lllophJslcs. Hill, New YOOI&lt;, 1973. 238 $3.95
(lOft - ) ; $5.95 (hanl ......,,
'

__ ____ _
lnU.Uol·---,_..,,.._...

ora present a "tool box" of &lt;XIIIIt"'t.iN
~ for finding this optimuiD.
Mathematical pfOIIBIIllliinl problems
are treated first and then ~
optimizatjoo problems, with emphasis
on numerical .,lutions and the uae of
the digital computer. The tec:hniQu5
. are illustrated with numerous ·worlred
examples of real PlOOI!IIII l!)'lltema.

Acc6rding to Sir John, "the signifi~~..,ol , _ . , _.., the fie.
cant feature or this book is that it
porter ' - to print ol
sets out to give ao amount of the
brain which is not lost in detail. Tbere
is detail in the description of higbly
lllllillnrl-or-capla.-t
significant peaks or experimental ino r . - to 2!10 . . _ , , Rm. 213. . .
RANDOM .DIFFEIIEHT1Al ~TIONS IN
vestigation, but the attempt iS made
SCIENCE' AND ENIH~ T. T.
lo give a general account of brain
-......-.~-pepormsnce slresslng the essential
poses. Instructional environments, by
dvll ~ VD1ume 103 Iii Motilecharacter of the new-onal machinely
definition, are concerned with chang:
malics In Science •ncl Engi11Mrin&amp; Aaand showing the principles of neuronal
ing behavior, both cognitive and
~ PNss, YDJ11 •.ncr Llfn!lon, 1973.
action in a way not. previously actiona!: increasing. reading atiiJ, im·
. -• ~ $1~~
A s-.tul Dry lll.w1
compliShed in o t h e r hooks oo the
proving problem. f1!&gt;1ving• strategies; -::: -:" This work JS mtended to aerve as a
Tbe U/B team bas already had a . brain. It also bas a wider scope rangtex~. for a one-year course in stoinducing positive attitudes toward .....,
ing all the way from the deti.i!s of
successful dry run. On the way to the
ious ethnic groops, and ao on. In
' ·" cbastic calculus, random difterential
neuronal s t r u c t u r e and runcfion.
moon the crew of Apollo 1.6 performed
daily
J&gt;1:001!88
of
inslnlctional.
·
llfluations,
and their applications.·In re~ oimple lN.~ _
....pal a:periment • - ~ to!;.I)Jo! ~ (unctionir-of.»M,i , - tbe stuilents -themaelves • tbelt
."'l:: tyears,_lhe author says, due~ •
cereb~ ·cortes '&amp;od uicidentally; aeai'. m electrophoresis usmg . inert latex
ers,"tbeiradministrator&amp;'tbei~
_..,;_loa
generil! shift from ·a determin- J
mg
w1th
the
fundamental
problems
particles in place of live cellS.
• 18\.ic to a .stochastic poil_l~ of view in
cor&gt;e&lt;;med lf!.the building, of.thei&gt;rain l.. and others all interact' ailil
·~ thcee days," says van Oss, "all
one another's' ~t ..behioviors. •' the modeling and aoalyms of pbysical
and m learrung."
eqwpment to be flown oo the space
Tbe
complexitY
of
"their
behavior
canP~. P"!'&gt;lems described by nm!-fe states further ihat "necessarily
capsule .bad to be quarantified for
not be overestimated, but ' n e i t h e r
~om dilleref!tial_equations have arilien
lh JS personal communication will be
weeks, even months, in terribly bot
should
it
be
altowed
to
overwhelm""·
'ln.
an amazmgly wide variety ·of liP'
somewhat biased in its treatment and
WBJebouaes in Florida. Under those
Much is )mown about the- eJfecls of ,· plied 8le8B; "It ill the objec!:ive of the ·
in its emphasis. An overall review
conditions it was not possible to plan
environments
on-behavior:
this
know!,
book
.to 11ve the reader a wor:lrilig
of brain research would entail multian experiment using live or even killed
edge can be applied to instructional.
~owledge of random difterential equa•
tudes of volumes if it were lo cover all
cells. So we devised ao experiment
environments
to
improve
tbe.
coodi·
·tions
aod
1o explore their applicati0118
fields.
Such
handbooks
do
exist
aod
using inert Jates particles. ..
tions of hotb students and te&amp;cbers.
lo probl"!'fS ii_I a number of ~
more are being written. I assume no-Just as the scientists' predicted tbe
Such application and improvement is
areas. It IS wntten .for the reader who
body
reads
them
through-&lt;-rather
their
lates particles did not -sedirrient ,;.ben
the purpose of this · book."
!&gt;as had a. good introductory courae
great value resides in Uleir use as
freed from the gravitational pull or
Tbe volume is called an appropriate . m stocbas~ P~- The reader is
tbe earth. A camera attached to the · ref~rence texts. I have written a hook
test·
for
undergraduate
or
graduate
al
sobasi assumed to be familiar with- the
wh~ch ""'! be !"4d right pu-ougb and
~tal apparatus recorded bow,
s tudents who want to see the a.pplica. . c ~~!' in Ordinaiy · deter.miJ&gt;.
wh1ch wdl giVe some vision of
m the zero gravity condition of the
!ion
or
~!f~Ychological
principles
to
such
theistic
clillerent!aJ equations. Tlie aim of
man-¥ aspects or brain ~hat
spacecraft, the more n e g.a t i vel y
vo.1ume 18 not only to provide
mstructional problems as motivatjoo
I think are !Mime of the • ide&amp;ll that
charged lates · p&amp;llticles coursed abead
and
discipline
and
·for
in..-vice
·
or.
a
"'!~ledge in randoin difter:
are fundamental for the further onof the less negatively charged ones
pre-servipe teache""' No previoos backethen -~tio;ms. but alao to provide
gomg enterprise or brain research, and
toward a positive electrode. When the
ground
m
psychology
is
·88811111Bd.
,.,......,. watb the degree of under!'lso
for
the
conceptwi.J.
developmentS
same experiment was- dooe on earth
•
o
o
standing . and maturity ' - &lt; Y . to
· m the related diHciplines of psychology
the partie!.., were pulled downward
THE STEE.L INDUSTII:Y AND THE EIMR·
further studies in.. a fast expandingan~ philosophy. Yet, I have hopefully
before tbey could be significantly sep•
ONMENTbJ
Jui!M
,
,
field. .
wntten a test which is 'SO simple to
arated.
read tha~ it should be within the
Tbe photographic record of the sciot
c:t.nlc8l
.
..........
competence of a college studenl -ln
entists' first success in-_.,., returned
Eb~rt-:tor of' the
fact, the b 0 0 k has gradually ' been
to the earth with astronauts YounJ
Mil- · ...... 1973.
-cco~ from- 1, coLI)
- formed by the many series or lectures
PROCESS . OPTIMIZATION: w;U, Applies·
Duke aod Mattingly. But the costly
~e ss_id, "My devotion to this Unitlons in Metallurgy and Chemical En&amp;Jneer·
I ha_ve given to college •Indents and
experimental appazatus, including the
vemty
.IS as strona as ever. r Will do
lnlt-l&gt;Y
W:
Hol,_
lilly,...-.-.,.
med1cal
students.
NeverthelesS,
it
also
platinUilHO&amp;ted camera that took the
ever;vthing I&gt;Q8IIible in my profes&amp;ioDiil
may If!! of help to thoee actually enpicture, is still oo the moon.
~ .............. - Jullwl
gaged m research in the brain sciences
1 - . New Yortcr 1973.
Tbe Apollo crew dumped it there
to the further
.
'ty ..
Clevelopmant
Of tb;s
I hope it may broaden their· outlook
to. msks room for moon rocks.
TM Steel Industry and tM EnvirDlveJ'Bl • ,.
!.
••
on .the problems of brain science and
onme~t brinp together authors rep'1181~_.,..,...,_. _
entice tbem to move into fields of
~ting !iifferent viewpoints to eat- .
.
~t
.
K~
said
he-tedresea_rch with probl~ that are most
anune vanous controversial facetS 'of
the l'I!Signstion watb :'rehQanc:e .and
a llurmg . and most rewarding"
the ~plex interaction suggested by
deep regrel" In a Jetter to Dr. Ebert,
The _test evolved from the· Patten
Tbe University's new multiconstitthe titte. The volume contains tbe
be said his "efforts to have y.,;. retain
Memonal .Lectures which Professor
uency governance· body, tbe UniverproOeedinga of the second c. c. ;Furthe deanship have apparently not been
Eccles delivered at lndiana University Assembly, met for the first time
nas Memorial Conference on the Steel
successful,
but it is not difficult for me
Bloomington,
during
the
spring
Sity,
Wednesday, September 26: At that
lndusuy and the Environment, held at
1o '!f'dersland aod appreciate ... your
of 1972. The work on which these
initial meeting the body look steps
U /B in November, 1971. Material
desire lo return lo vour "'-'-~-t
lectures were based was supported by
tows.¢ choosing_ a president ~d secranges f!"m ~ strictly technical to
on a full-time basis.'' · -.-.~•
a grant from the National Institute of
retary. by appoanting_ a nommating
more philomphieal issues relating to
Dr. Ketter said, uvour reputation as
Neuro.biologi"!' D~ and Stroke.
COlJlllUttee. Tbe COlJlllUttee is expected
the _in~!J!relation aod enforcement of
one of '¥a University's most effective
to suggest candidates for "both posienvuonmental legislation in ·the U.S
and dedicated teachers bas certainly
INSTRUCTIONAL APPLICATIONS OF BE·
tions by nert week. Candidate's names
the United Kingdom, and
been reflected in your philomphy aod
HAVIQR PRINCII't.ES-4&gt;y J. Ronald QM:
will be forwarded to the President's
Other papers deal with the ecoo01mc,
performance as undergraduate dean
tile, suoci.ota . . . - . - I'OY"
oflice aod distributed to the Assemsoc;ial and physiological impaCt of pol·
over
the past three years. You served
choiCJIY,
•ncl
TbcJmn
W.
F..-,.ncr
1bty
blY's 87 voting members by means of
lutio'! ~hawmenl Still another 18 a
!"' · ~e&amp;J;l during a period of intense
a mail ballol
_
~escnptiop of the actual problems
c.
-S.sic
· ............
..............,
consulmstitutional
self-evaluation intended
tants.
Concepts
in
EducstiONOI
PsyMembers of the nominating com·
- m~lved m compliance with tbe polto- serve as the basis for the reevaluchology Series. /Cole l'ubllsbln&amp;
~tee are: Proft!ll80lll Ronald J. Genl!.~~
abatement laws at the ptant
ati~n
o~
our.
academic program and
tile, Lee E. Prestqo, Leslie A. Fiedler
~"'· ~. c:.llfornY, J973. 94
U~verslt).'-Wlde .Priorities.
· ana Sara M. Cics'ielli of the Faculty·
Proceas Optimization provides what
wlll
certainly
miss you as dean,
We
Serafin Andermn, Gary C o h n aru:i
"'Ibis book," the authors note in the
Ray and Szekely feel is the first test.
but '!ill gsin great BBtisfaction from
Terry DiFilippo of the Student Body; - preface, "J?resents a framework for
to emphasize. the. practical application
l':"wmg that _you will once again have
Bemic:e P088 and Neil Goen of the Pro!fllderstsnding and therefore modifyof mathematical a n d computational
e opportunity Jo aerv~ as ao exem
fessional Stall; and Jeannette Schaefer
mg behavior .- specifically behavior
methodologies lo real, compleat sysptsry fac:uJty member whose p~
of the Civil Service Employees Astems, !'Iter developing the necessary
that """"!"' m the. special ,environ:~c~ecf the student," Dr. Ketter
ments deSJgned for mstructie&gt;nal purcond•tJons for an optimum, the autbsociation.
' ~
electropl;lao6.

a

.........

AI..- .._... ....__,

em..-'

'":Jrking

c.rar-----

-,.Wiley·"

Assembly Action

Germ&amp;ny:

'-:1

-=~-~~w

�~

~~ .... ,...... ,)

66 o Faculty Receive Promotions in Rank

-

. ._~c ~:.::,:

.u.:u..
!ala~!'~
-

CIUIIplilliD . . -

~ - - - ....__ 6um
· qidae . ..-...! ~ "Ba.d8 or

·

J.973.7f,

_ I~
~~- ~
...:c-·L~aw
IIU'• ..,. to

::-!:f 1 1.-.
. . , . _ . to

t-1

-

!.!~! •.:.!!!::f.~:.m
to diDieal
._
•

-

Named to
~-clemle .....bwta 818:
F.
Velt, a..m-lc aad Slavic,
ty ol

lllllaar6ha." ·
_........ IIDoulbout bill
bdef _ , g b tile l8alatlilll tradl·

8CIIOol.ar liiiAL2B DtJCAftO)f : Edward
l. Wrilbt, iaotructorto -.w.t p..,_
oor.

if:-,
·~.::::r~~
to olbrlcol -.w.t nrol-r; Robert 8 .
eo-.

olbrlcol

==•;
.-

....,_,
.Jack

0.,:.

diDiall ...a.te
1111111, -~prot.,_. to - . , . . , pro-

diaiaol.......,.....,_,

AatbooQo Foli,
to diDiisl ...a.te . . - : ~:
Edwani W. H......._ diDiall iDI&amp;rilciOr

ea_.t
a:.-...

;;.1;t,~-=.
......... ,
......, .,...,_
~ 1i:u-, c:1iD1&lt;a1
fi.
c1iniar1 - t ...,r-r; ol.._ Cad,.,_,

~~-=~-~
. =.
~t!t"~~.~~ · ical
=tel~::t'-~
..~:.
.._..
. . . . ::C ............. ·~=~~
ultv o1 Art&amp; aDd • -'1mB,:· w. H8
Harmon
ical ~~nc-r. Pot~u&gt;lo,y: Peter
. - .... co · • - t prot-.
Vaoilion,
·
-lant prof-r to
aor.
a~ ol ~ aad lip-.ue profeooor·, Judith M.
~ a.,_~pi()IMI r,;~~~·
• &amp;ol-len=~~=lR.R.,..,ADdreaseD,
__,_ ,
SCROOL ar . . - c: Rita E. CauPill,
~·=-c:==·t1~
- t p _ t o _ _ le~.

.~·-!,_ .r ~ adlt In
-· -

-

........

,......,

•T

---

' ~~the
-.
,.,.

U.ttwn.r:t.,Faculty of. Nat-

Storer,
111111 8cia1cee 111111

~I llial&amp;

wfta

~~
ww111 ...t thJ.
~ftlllladllcl

l&gt;amdJI

lbema*ic:s; John

~~~f:=~.:::
or.,_ N. Slater~:!,.tical Sc:ienre,
FacaJtyotSocial •
andAdminlstratioll; IUiil·IAouel s. Uwis. SociolCJBY, ~FacuJtv of. 8ocial Sci""""" and
~traik._
~ted to full pmfeaaorabips in

.,.__,
tt~~e~to

the North ~aaly ~milea.
-•~
Wilb __._,

-u;:"="'

.........

==-~u."~..!J;~!f_lltoraiF.
. . . . --~ ...... &amp;IIUIIIBII

m.llb ~-

-

-·--

'!"'ti.mer
_...,
lnDOva·

Clll -

tiCJDa within ·- '-lty;lndudlna the
the beallh aciences are: Wayne L.
aedaiaD, -sa ap~nst lbe w1a1a o1 .
Jolmson, Gyneccilogy-Obstetrics,
...,. ctean., to iDclude beaJtb .:lance
Scbool of Medicine; and Gerda L
IMulty r...-tatn. (health aciKlingman, Scbool of Pharmacy. Earl
- ) Clll previously all«!
W. Noble, Department of Medicine, mbr,istratf
eommit1ieeo sum
Scbool of Medicine; was advanced 1o
"'-'th .!!,_ ..___., T _..._ ofaa
· clinical pmfeaaor and Lucius F . Sinks,
..,.. .....,... """""""' .....,...
camPediatrics, Scbool of Medicine; to relllllllicatioa, Mewro of en.t," prompted
- ---"- p""'-r.
him to CN&amp;fl! thill "oallalenl path"""""' ""~

u..;

OtM----Ze

'IOBY"~=mdecldan-mUers
IUICI fllcuUy,
• Mid.

PannDI

r,;vlted queadabs ,..;.... the

=w.u.:~~no:.:~

sial 8c:bool ol Health Bduc:atiool,

-~."he

IB!!L

rll

~:J':!

·

~~~~p~e~.=.:r :::.t::::,~

A preliminary report tiy the chair-

..

Hovorb poin
out that the Uni. -.ity aaw aulomalically ~ any

transfer ~ .:!rilb a p&amp;de·. point
'' • a_,.., ol'2.li •.&lt;c'4) or abOve, IUICI yet
C811J10t fiDd the daairecl 1660

• .,,. It

liwr

.r
~~

vermty.
•
•
·Hovorka alao noted, m passmg, 'that
the Equal Opportunity l'r&lt;lllram is undersubocribed this year. CurrenUy
some 1187 EOP ...tudents have regist.ered, 163 students "'-t of a target

!'::W'~·~~ka~~ !':1-

)OUl the pro&amp;ram this
lDCIIltb. Senator Claude Welch ininquired whether startin&amp; ~ a
lDCIIllb into the did not con·
stitute a further educational injustice
for a- atudeJ)ts. It was not clear
to HCMirlta wlietJ., the additional
students - , In fact att•nding
.,.. ~ ~ 'Sin!Ply 'run afoul of
the o111cia1 rePilration p~ or
whether they 11ac1 yet tc be recrwted.
'lbe Senate authorized the Faculty
of Natural 8ciencea and Mathematics
to~ a one-sbot~t in
somethin&amp; very like early admissions.
1be FacUlty was empowen!d tc """'400 well-qualified applicants who exp . - 1 I n - In the physical aci""""" IUICI mathematK:s. 1be Faculty
will undertake to peraonally contact
hall of a-, ctx.a&gt; at random;- and
tc make them aWIU'e of their adrnis&amp;ability . to the ol6ciaJ notification
date of
15, 1974. 1be experiment is designee! tc detennine whether

dents 1DIIY

Fe:ruary

'*rsonal

soficitation siinificanUy af·

fects the percentage of accepted IJesh.
. men who actua11f matriculate.
Hovorka pro.ru-1 the full repPrt of
his committee sometime next month.
Senator IUICI University Archivist
Shonnie Finnepn caerved that October '8 marta the 50th anniwenary of
the Faculty Seoate. Folihded in 1923
"to OOil8ider aeneral educational
tiona· and policies aftectin&amp; the :::l'e
university . . • and to make recommendations therecm," the Senate has
frequently fnDctioned In spite of a

~'G.\~mr:~

!"..l'."Z:!ate.,l',=.,"":":;;
uaociate profeaaor; Thl!Gtre : ~ Swiniuch. wtructor to -tant profesonr.
PACULTY or mUCAnONAL IITVDIJ8: Robert E. Jenninp, aeoisllint proleooo• to .,..
lociate profeuor; Cbarleo R. COoper, as.
aistailt prof01110r to 8880ciate prol"""'!r;
., Ronald K. Goodenow, lecturer to ...,..
tant- profeuor.
.
_,
:~ : ··~ or uw AND ~~CZ:
~orman
8.
a-b!lw,
~
~
"' ...
.wtant pro!MBOr.

...,_ .tlmM
-sb •
.J
~M~
!
Ia.
-11
·.-..-""-'_,;_;.,...,
- aev-fllk ,11166._ ~u ll'U _ , . . , _ .
enil ........ 'that ;laq!et Quotaa and
other admiaaiOIIa jlollciea ci8YeJoped iii
AlbaDy IUICI •b&amp;Md. 00 such.'!"".....,. ·
~ criteria 88 local poll~ 111111
dorm vacancies ~ted m the
ol standards. W11h the openEllicott complex nerl year,
1l1l
IIOil1e 8200 beds will be available on
aunpus. \\lbat, if any, i~n...t this
will heve Clll aclmiMions ~is not

-clear, ~ IJI!id, but,~ piedi~
lie%\ year this will be a dilferent UDI·

Ullice, o

t o . - .... profeuor; Fred See, auistant
prole.or to auociate profeuor; Music:
Pamela C. Gearblut, auistant prof.... r
to aooociate proleooor; Frina A. Boldt.

..,.., o1 the Senate Admiaaioas Com-

:en~ ~~
-"-· --'~ liB ~
,......." .,..

the Univenlity Perr advancement,. in-

A&amp; CO!"j&gt;iled

•·

SCROOL OP IUNAGEMEHT: Howard G.

Footer, auistant professor to 8880ciate

p~=~

or

NATtia.u.

sc!EHCEII'

AND

KATIIIDL\TlCB: Chemistry : James W. Me- ·
lver, asaistant prof....,r to associate pror....,r· Robert D Allendnerfer asaistant
prof..;..r to . ....,.;.;.te prol....;r; Statistica' Peter EnD, -lant proleaor to
Uoociate proleaor; ~atlumatiu: . Nicb·
olas p. Goodman, U81Stant professor to

~.:..::~~ BCIEHCZS AND ADMIN·

tsmATION : .Anthropolo1y: David J.
Banb, auistant proleoaor to 8880ciate

prof-.r; Philo09phy : James Brady, as·
aistant proleoaor to aaoociate prolesaor;
Political Science : Terry W. Nardin, ...
oistant proleoaor to aaoociate professor;·
P&lt;Yfhololty: Joel .0 . Ra~or, ass~t

~5K;aEirf6rE·=~

c1iniar1

8CROOL ar PIIAUIACt': n;.. TobiM,
elinical - r to cliniarJ - t

~ItoA~~~f~i.Jc.,';•Y=~i

f.:!.~...:=::,~~
Kellick. cliniarJ
to cliniarJ u-

,,rof...,r to clinical aooociate prof-.r;

aistant 'PI'Of-r.

•
Wee kl y C ommumque~----------

(Continued from Pa.e 12. coL 4)
WOMEN' S TiNNI5'

•

U/B vs. Fredonia State. Rotary Field
TOnnio Courto. 4 p.m.
WoMlN'S

vouniWl•

U/ B va. Fredonia State. Clark Hall.
·

4 p.m.
FilM'

Walkabout, 140 Capen, 7 &amp; 9 p.m. No
·on charge. '

a
. d m•i•u i

coNarr•

Steve Reich' &amp; Musiciam~· .Re·
cital Hall. 8 p.m.
Joinipg Reiclr for his first Bu lo per-

=~or't'i.eJ~n~:~~r~:""thei:'rea~V:

:..;~r~.~::;, ~~.=:

ice J atett, ~len Velez. and Timothy J.
Fercben. Reich and his musicians ore
best known lor their performances of
Third World music,

N~n"tsa':.J'1' ~~0\\l:,dv::'':.:~ t

purchased one hour before (the concert
at the Baird Holl Ticket Office.
Tbe concert is presented under· the
auspices of UUAB. the Office ol Cui turol Affairs. the Center lor the Creative
and Performing Arlo. nnd the Deport.
ment or Music.
·
FilM'

..Jh&amp;la of the OoMe ( " - d i ) _:At NOr--

ton. 8:1.5'"~p.m. No aamission charge.

llfAINNG'
u:YN~:::;:, ~~~~,::W· Conlerem:e Tbea-

POmiY

Presented by the UUAB Literary Art.
Committee.

Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.. 8 p.m.

sense that it was accomplishina little.
In 1942, Ms. Finnegan told the Report~, a Senate Committee ·of Reference with Respect to Budpt was
chagrined when Chancellor Capen
failed to consult with it before submi~ the University budget to the
Council. At the Senate meeting ol
May 29, 1942, Capen confessed to
dereliction in the matter but argued
that his dereliction was onJy aJlPlU'I!tlt
· because of ''unusual circumstance&amp;" In
the constnJction of the budaet that ·
year;-o He also cited the ''plt!ll&amp; of
events.'' 1be Senate did not meet
again for 12 years, Ms. Finnegan
noted, ''whfch was," she said, ''lrioo!t
ljkely a coincideoce."

WlfO HIGHliGHTS

Ford Hall Forum, with Carl Bomstein
and Robert Woodward, Pulitzer Prize

P:t·'w:.e:::: An N~tio!J~:.
sis.," 9 p.m .

~

EXI!IBITS
UUA&amp; AIT EXHiiif.

N!'~':.~tf~gh~~~~~e~

bouro: - Monday,
day. lla.m.-6

~
MUSIC

Wedn~

p.m.;~

aDd Tbun•

"""V'lO

EJCH..r•

New Mu.ic Department Focully: 1!113Mosie Lib&lt;ary, Baird Hall, t1m!ucb
October 15.

u.

m:.t...tow:r {:!V:Z.::;;:w;

~~tl:.o":'A.:t~ ~lleetiEl::

::~~~r%.:: 't.~::~:

JodreU Bonk. Enfdai&gt;d, 147 Diefendorf,
8 · 15 p.m
· Presenied by 'tJie Faculty of Nntwal
Sciences and Mathematics. Free and
open to the public.
THEAm•

•

bii,!\::
cbarRe. Throu~

be~l,'"t!:,:,te J!...~=o

THEAm• .

proleuor; Harvey Sprowl, clirW:al ueociate prol...,.r to aaoociate prof...,r·
J - A. McMollen. clinical auiotant
proleaor to clinical aaoociate prof. . . r;
David R. Jerome. cliniaJI wtructor to
cliniaJI -tant prol..,r.

Lichter, Courtyard Theatre, Lafayette
and Hoyt, 8:30 p.m. Admiuion charge.
Oct 12.

Throu~b

UIIARY EliHIIIT"

Man's A#tronomical Krrowhdte of the
U~NJ&lt;: The Solar System Ol1d 1M

8 :30 p.m. Admission
Oct. 13·

=~I P:!::OJ,rE~~':?.":::t

.

Given : No B1Yt14, an EIICOIUlter Ol1d
Dinner for Fifteen, directed by Morton

MAN'S liBATION ~0 THE UNivtlSE'

proleooor to aaoociate proleooor.

lapo. auistant,r.ror-.r to auociate proleooor; Peter · Sc:lueier. imtructor to
~tant prof~r; Judith E . Albino,
Ullltructor to !'"'"'tan! prol"""'!r; nu-ll
~~:.;.,.ma,t~ ::::.: ~!:
f. . . r to aooociate prof,..r; Malvin E .
run,, e1inica1 -tant prof..... to cliniCal aaoociate prof....,r; William Carl,
rlil!ical -tant prof!"!"'• to clinical "'!·

THEATitf•

A1UIGHT..CNOX ElCHIIIr

SUICJCOT SEIVICf•

-

Sdenc:es
In the Faculty of Health Sciences:
SCHOOL or DEHTlSTliY: Davis A. Gar-

-r

Mic:bael Cohen. clirW:al aurstant profeooor to clinical . - . . . , profeuor; Phy•i·
olon: Albert .1. Oluowka, auistant pro-

Given: ·No Briod, on Encounter and

E:.fo&amp;,~~·~

wo6d Ave.. throUgh Sunday, Nov. lL

50th Annivenory of the Publicmion of
U!y....., part of the pennanent J . _
w..:.~ ~~ (207), Lock-

:

..

·~f~1972

an ezhibition
in memory of eminent literary fi&amp;ureo
who died during 1972. Baloony, -=and
ftoor. Lockwood Memorial Library. Continuing.

INTERVIEWS

'¥t,"::,';;!,btM.~:

and Hoyt, 8 , 30 p.m.
Tickets are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office: 50 cents lor students;
$1 lor generol~public. Buaes will run to
the Courtyard Theatre from Norton Hall.
Through Oct. 12.

THURSDAY_
· ··

11

MASIII QASS•

With Steve Reich , Baird Recital Hall.
noon.
LlCIWE'
•
Principko of Thumodyi!01rliu Applied

to Biology, Dr. Daj&gt;hne Hare, asaociate
professor of medicme at U/B. Tmiler
#5. 1 p.m.
.
Preoented by the CoUege of Mathematical Science.
UUA&amp; COfRINOUSE'
Featuring ./UK Graves. &amp;nt Boor cafeleria, Norton. two obowo. Tickets are
available at the Norton Hall Ticket Offico.

.

NOTICES
COUNsaJHO

Profeu:ional counseling is available at
Hillel Houoe, 40 Capen Blvd. For an
appoin-t. call 886-4540.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADUNE
For ewryone•s convenM!nca •nd pleasure.

we like to publicize all events taking .,._
on campus. To t8CO!'d infonnation. contact
Nancy C.Ordarelll, ext. 2228.

�cent. are omUiable- at the N - --Hall
Ticket Ollice.

uu.u ...~.

W~onk

:.

WIIOH-

and 1/u Chocolate Foe-

~ ::----~~rto~

...,_.

ln~rftJCial CoopeatWn in Kenya, Dr.

~ 1."'"~'l'rJc..~r·~

tea. Conl..-ce Room, 2 : 30

p.m_

Spcmoored by the African Stwli.. Faculty Committee.

CIVIl ENGINEWHG SUUN.U#

Allemativ&lt;! Approachn ID lhe Pfannint
of. Public Focililin Sytle,.., Dr. Jo.epb

Berec!unan, attistant prof..,.r, U/B l&gt;e~..!_•&amp;,'1::;:-!;"f:;';_:. 142-PukYOM

~

SHYICES•
Cooducted by Hillel, Fillmore Room,
Norton, 6:30 p.m_
-

•

Maripooa '73, perfoniumcea, worbbol&gt;a.
and interriewa from the 1978 Feotiftl
reconled•"" the""""" by WBI'O, 9 ' p.m.
uu.u iL··
-.-

_.fe~::. ~T J~972..!.;..&lt;:

for timea. Admiaoion cbarp.
- ntEA:ru PaESENTAnoN•
Woyzeck, Conrtyard 'Theatre, Lafayf~andw!:&gt;'fors~ta\\::'" See Th~
WIIO HooiluaHrs

Jazz 'by · Requnl, with p..,. "Freeland,

~~o·~6..
~t:

-

0:..::.1: -=..~.

SUNDAY-7

CAC filM•

Buuerflict are Free (Kat.elas) , .140
Capen, 7: 45 &amp;. 9:45 p.m_ TU:kela" at 76
cents are available at the Norton Hall
Ticket Ollice.
Edward Albert won occlaioi&gt; for bia
cbaraclerizalion of a y~blind, would-

=r·

:;·

=~
an:
.=u~
- t t a auer.... girl (~e Hawn) wbo

=

bel!» him in bia attempt at- emotional

~:!;"'--~

~ 0~

the

IHlDNATIONAL fOU( DANCING•

lnatruction in beoic atepo, 2 Diafenclorf,· S-11 p.m.
~
UUAafllM••

TM Godfalher (Coppola, 11172), Conlereooe ~. Norton, check abowcue
for timea. A~n c:barp. _ ·
THIATB PIISIMTAIION•

FRIDAY-5

Woyzeck, Courtyard 'Theatre, La!ay.

:Ow..'""at!".&gt;).!'~ See Thu~y
SATuRDAY-S
YOM U.W: laVICu•
· ' Tbe oervioeo conducted

=:...~~~i~
FiDmoft . ~- Norton,

10 a.m.

IOCICII"

U/~yo.

bet1izmina at
-

Niqara, Rotary Field,_1 p.m.

r;:..

YAatnY ........•

p2C~

--~· .

&lt;!looble-beader).

~

..:ill~~ cA:=.."'.J:::k

CAC . . .•

WIIO 11-.oHrS

Wo_,_,,

..__
producod by Terrl

Groaa, Mana Scluoeder, and ;Jndy Trei-

bl~~venatiou with 111111a ADd "'
former DUDIJ..
·
caotiU/B .._ BL Bonavenmre, Growr
land Tnct. 3:30 p.m.

a-

NIIIUCHE AND "IHI UTaAaY I'IXfO

U/B -... Cortland State, Rotary Field
Tcaia Coata,.1•:30 p.m.
•
·

.,._

W,li:DNESDAY -10

by H"illell will

~-- ~

..

c:barp.

.C::::.."".ffi: n, ~·w: P%:!:'~t ~~

.

~~~It'~
Prol-rlea.Amaa B, lim. 6, 4 p.m.
.

-

-~~~

Prapam in Com-

U/B w. BL Bona.abue, Rotary' Field,

4p.m.

(~ontimutd o n - 11. col. 3)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>8tDdifll fll Jao.lble _..,..... fli
what the Middle ...............

committee~--

.........

~
tllniCbR'e
. .Lderway, Presldmt
Bablirt
Kellk

told the~ Sid s-ta last

~

-ya to . . . . tbe u.itaity structure poMibly . . _ tAliiDt
and -a.wo..bawt been . . . . __

A"f:l=

aider7a~
said.
Early taJb earlY
~
.
ic Alfaira CouDcil, tbe Jlftllidealil fli
the Faculty. and Pu~ Sid
senates, vice preeidenta, provaata._am
deans, be .indicated, 'with ~ ~
now &amp;Pzeadinc to ~ ~ ·
Becauae the University tbia year ill
taking the 6nt steps - . . ! ftllina
student and · pe111011Del pipelinM leetfing to full utilli8tion of Ambemt Ja.
cilities in 1980-81, "this is lhe time \
to look at the structural organiZation
of the future," Ketter said.
Another factor in considering realignment now, be indicated, ·is tbe "
necessity for ."quality ooiltrol" of aca. demic programs brought about by the
' five-year review I!Dd .........,.;,..t cycles
r called for in the University's Master
, Plan for tbe next decade. Lines of
' responsibility for such University-wide
review need to be clearly delineated.
Other ·. questions being considered,
the President said, involve certain
academic support areas, sucb aa Li'Jbe Uabenliy will olliclally
a :Dew ceiling, lighting and
grad~te studel\18 in the Art Depart..
braries, Admissions and ' Recorda, 'lnita ..,._ted Oral Heallh C1lDiC as
pRinting. Several areas W!'re red~.
~~ in a revol-?ng series of exlubistructioDal Communicatiooa, the Com1'lellidlllt RobMt L. Ketler prillldes and oPened up to provtde .more el,. · ti"'15 made posstble through the co- - puter Center and t6e Nuclear Facility,
at .a ~ ~ kMDDr·ficienf care Jacilities.
·
operation of Donald Robertson, ·chairwhich serve both current majo&lt; di- ,
row (Seplllmber 28) at 10....;. .(Room
· . According_ to Dentistry. Dean Wilman of that departmenl
visions of the University (bealth sciOo!l,_('·- ~.). . •• _ • .
• Jirun. M . FeaP}II!.- ·~ -elfo&lt;t-has·.
Launching the program will be a
ences and academiC affairs} but noW
· ~~11\d&amp;~:-or ::::beeir :'niaae: "to· ,dloikec..u.e·'faCifitY -aS
showing of acrylic paintings and water
rei&gt;ort to the l)ead of only one of the
a $860,1100 p...;..&amp; inwlvinc pnera1 · inviting and 'non-clinical' as possible.
colors by Roy 0 . Anderson, wbo exdivisions. Should some of tbe9e func.
.......vatioa, lllsiallalion Of 72 -of tbe " ;- :m&gt;at'sWhy we've-.elied so heavily on
pecl8 to receive the Master of Fine
lions be -mised above the divisional
Jalell .QIOIW .-..L_ dlodn Uld UDiW,
l!iiibt ·011Jor8 anll interesting PJ!hiCS.
Arts degree n~ June. His '"';'rk has
pattern to University-wide status?
alid a&amp;DISall til a DIOIIlflelletrill ~
We want to make coming .to the denbeen shown m~ the 19'71 Qiamtj181
Tbe divisional pattern itaelf is ti1so
- tortlllh 1 ~ ....-t-of..u.a . tiat u pleaautl.---...,...." • ~--,....,W:eatern.,.New ~Exhibition. at the
under""81Udy, ~ indicated. Poi_=
and'puticliia fiom the IIIUUth, lhe Jarg"ll1 line with this plillosopby, paMbtight-Knox and in the Chautauqua
example. ·should there be only one
eat syatem of ita type in the Uilited
_~IB will have the opportunity to
EXhibition of American
1972.
bead for both present divisions aa at
Statea.
~
VJeW work done by ·undeJ1mlduate and
(Continued on ptl(Je .6, col. 2)
· UCLA (the -onlY. major university in
'lbe project ia the lint
. 111110• • •• - • ;. • • • •
• • •
•• • - • - • •
•
the nation with this pattern)
sbou1d'
vatioa .._ the 8d&gt;ool ~tistly
there, , in fact, be even more maio&lt;
divisions
within
the
University?
Or,
IDIM!d to lhe MaiD Street Cam~
ft=t? is :00 present split JDO!rt el-

~afficiiJI' Opening .Se~ lor pen__ta/. Clinic
:a,-· dueled

Art.?

d

d

·

or

=1:~i~a~:: Da~ es·Says-:-SA-Has MQve
i:'S'.SI~~uJ:!:
:-from
Erosio.n to Legitimacy
a
" .
.
r

~

equipment
. 'lbe Oral ~th Clinic, estat&gt;JiSbed...
m·1963, provides -Jete dental servics to IIIUIY• ...,. lllllideniB tbroud&gt;
than '10,000 patient;visita each ·
year. It Iii &amp;We larpat dinle in ·lhe
8c:bool ol Dentiat;rY ~ tbe .
~18 . ol (liierati.., Dolitiab;y, ·
Periodaolica aD d' Endodontic&amp;, and
Compn+ensiw D111ta1 Caie.
'lbe dmtal eba1n replace 119
old UDila. IIIIIIIY ol- .tUcb dated back
to the lftlra 111111 19110'&amp;
'
a - 1 ......,.lion in tbe cliniC in'

Paper Rec.ycliiJg
~rf_.__,, • ~~~ ~eu

~~ ;:tvC

&gt;&lt;

era::

~ . ~wlll be lnitiUeil in
...._- Hill am Nortan UDiaD
tba 8outll
at .Jolla

c.q,.;u::
O'IIriu aaillhe o-..on ~

·.

Student government on campus has
moved hom a ~lion of "erosion"
brou~t on "by year&amp; -of ~i~\ mto an "area of legitimacy that ·
8llowa us now to function with a aenae
of~;" .SA President Jon Dandes
.aaid tn an address to the Student
Aseembl,y MOIIIkY nlibl
.
"In ~ with our Uni-mty Ad-

minlstzatioll, ' Dandes said, "we have
~ a llemeodou8 aensilivity
and willi.Dgiieas to listen ori tbe put
of the President, Ellecutive Vice President 111111 - other UnivemitY o6:iaJa.

~:~..:..-=.=~~

==~.=,-t.!~
to beiDa
~ A dUect

:nL.

::;:~a~"':i.,p~:: .
tbe

w- Of C!llll)mnficoaiJon.

I am - -

Cl&amp;i:alfx referrina to the monthly - t IDa thal ~· eqtire· ~liye Commfttee ba . with President Ketter.

.

... bad been less than cordial": "One
of my personal top priorities has been
to get out into the community and
to talk ilbout what we are doing&gt; bere
and to atternP.t lo dislodge the' fear
-and appiebensi(m that the Niagara·
Frontier has tor UIB. In thia quest
over the 1a:st aix months, I have spoken to 117 community and civic groups
and can ~ that to a Rotary Club,
the inevitable finlt QUestion is. 'when
do we gej; baclt foothall?' '!
'lbe Council ol the Univemity, the
SA President llllllOUDCed, is yet another conatii:Uellcy which will be bav,ing cber relatiODabi with studeniB:
"I am very
to lniomt. you
that I received a letter fnmi President
~ to me atatin&amp; that be bas been
1natructed to inform me that the U/B
CouDciJ is deaUous ol student .
t,
and aa a matlllir of policy will
me and future Student Asaocialillll
piaiidealli to take Part iri CouDciJ

p=r'

'lbeee and other matter&amp; are noW
being carefully looked at, the President said. For study purposes, be

l:';~i!:"'~o•:Jor~

will continue.
No changes will be implemented,
however, Ketter pledged,
tbey
offer something ~live. "We are not
interested in oounterpzoductive chanp
for chanp'a sake," be said.

uru-

Appnolul -

~

'::c

meetinp."

ImprOved relatiooa are alao being
kaJJ. aa tbe NOrth Campus, 0c100er - ~.beve ~!"formative #
aougbt with th8 S t a ·t e J:..eP.iature,
- L 'lbe ~ ia a mapellltiWJ _,.
,__ ~
.~· , Dandea
.aaid-wbich body, be I)Oted,
tuN b8tioNID tbe Uni~ .the
111 ...... fll t.culty, Dandes ~
"bas made it a practice of condemning
student. JOV!!lDIDODIB aa irz~
~.:.:,:,""
;'For ·
equaJI,y iqmwed mJationa. Student
and ba8 on a yearlY buis
Rec,ded
Pap.."
all furmatilm
hl:ull.f 8eoate
...6 __,_ ...6 ....... _...__
•
m
coaani- 111111 tbe
of ~
tbe validity ol tbe ' IDIU&gt;datort fee."
_•'lbe fltudeo!t Association, be aid, "bas
-Oaly -cleua
- (l..e.,
- ...DDt
.........
.
IIII8Cial
Seaalie r.calty..mdont mntamlnated . diaaiiDa · ~
llkiry) ~- .... ~ to brinll lheae
Willi .........). miDd -.rtJI be
haft, be Iiiia, •p_, llllslth to alu·II!PIIatora to campus
~..::
~ doat input m.otar- poUc,-aillkiDI ia
=~...... fa Oldorfeir the.........
.
.~ ~:
~~
Blaewtiele in. wlcl.......m&amp; 16-~
---"d. food ...... . - . ~.
..... laiCIIIW' ........
u
PlOP. npart .., bia adliiinlidntioll'a
...... ll&amp;ml6lal.
Giber
venll;y waald .... aood lllacol to Wildt
~to date, Dandes lllllad that:
• 'lbe admlniotlatioD, aplit 6-li be~~=.:•,t
~ iftitDde
it~
- .......... 'lbla at- .
. ........ .....,
.. ~ . , _ Cllllll..ttiaa.
-~factiaaainlilat-m.'a
-.bla far
We ue
·that thia • eleetionil, .,.. ....... - t o Itabulb- erllb that people Wildt ....
...
~-tbataabiiiiiiU.~
project io c6lially I.IMd a "piiot,",
deut- - . i t y n~a--. .tUcb
~ a c:ampalp 10
•!be wayllide •
(~---..-·~
...... .,., mil tbeiiOIIIIIe_ tllenD

..:;"'~:'=~

u

==Cll'e

~

&lt;- ......

:=':. ti:i'1u:
.. s

_. !'1
::=
;ora:;..'--•
~~~~ ~ a~w'*':=flf·~inatu-

·.

ana """"

aa:J-Ia

(~010-J,!ll)

~·

E-

Tuming to more 6irect staff concerns, the President pve piopeaa re·.porta on both performance -noiaal
and job evaluatiOD procedures now
tmderway. E a c h proleEimW stalf
member baa been rated by bia or bar
auperviaor acoordin&amp; to performance
propama drawn up earlier and, '-1
(Coll""'-1 Oil 6, ooL I)

Religious Use
Guidelines Set
. New University guidelines for uae
of facilities for religious aerVicea were
announced this weelt by Dr. Albert
Somit: executive vice pzeaidenl
'lbe regulation&amp;, developed after
cansultation with the Ot6ce of the
UniVersity Counael and Vice Chan-

~:
~be"=e =~u;:
religioua aervicea when:

1. 1be reQI*It oomea hom a bona
fide •tiuknl orcanization; and .
2. As in the caae · ol all other re-

queets to uae Univemity facilities for
IIOIH&gt;ducational the nlqlleat..
ed _,., is available; and
3. PrcMaion .flf the requMtad operaAll _...... far ...... ahouJd .be
add!-' to tbe 06le ol Vice Plaaldeut far FaciUUz. l'tanninl. DO )at.
tbea 10'&lt;1aya before tbe due date fll
the Nlllioul...__.

:.! :!t :=.:::.._campus

�- :::-~.:~-~:5~~~::~:
.....,.18canre

d!J-

.... u-.-"

Ally~'-!Jty ... profo&amp;ional staff
monber. bavinl ideas for ciJanse:; in
the exiatiDt oantraet or new ~
is &lt;llClOIJnllll!d to atteud and present
his views. Persons unable to attend
ei!Mr oi u-..-tinp are invited to
tnmsmit written _ . to Negoti. ation Issues Committee, SUNY/
United. in tbe FacuiiY Cluti.
.

r~~c

~==::~c-

ulty...tudent relationships em all levels,
FacuiiY Senate Esecutive Comn'Uttee

Chairman Gilbert D. Moore bas an- •
nour&gt;c:ed establishment of a FaCulty,
Senate Student-Faculty Cooniinating
' . Committee.
Faculty representatives. selected
from the Executive Conunittee ~tre
·Milton Pleliur, MarViri ·Zelen and .Michael Metzger. Student rep_,tatives
are David Saleh; Judy Kravitz and
Jcmathen Dandes.
·
. - ~Committee will:
· 1) Conduct resu1sr and continuous
hiVieMi of general University policies
_ . . m g all alipects of studentfaeulty relationships.
2) .4ct as a cleeringbouse and souudina board for the E""""tive Coimnittee ~ student-faculty relation""r-Invesiigste all matters concern-

- iDI etudent-faculty relationships
_ brc!ulb~ before it and report its 6nd-

lnP to

the Faculty Senate Executive

Committee for appropriate action.
4) Refer matters to other Faculty
Senate ,Standing Committees for action wherever appropriate.
6) Carry out IIUCb specific studies
or invstigations regarding studentfaeulty relationships as may be asalped to it by the Eiecutive ComJDJttee.
Student Aaaociation President Dande&amp; wu elected Chairman of the Committee wbicb will r:eport periodically
to tbe full 8eDale.

Symposium S-lated .
•AduJt lalrning Payc:bology: Implications for HlgMr Education" is the
u - ol tbe ~ anniversary
II,YIIIIICI8inm of tbe U /B. Division of
CootinulnJ Education, which is celebnting ta. 50th annivenary Ibis year.
The aympoaium, to be held October
16, will feature .-tatioaa by six
cliltiapisbed vW't.;;;"' including autborlty ... acln&amp; Jack BoQrinldo: and
Malt leeminl aCiminiatratoo 'I1wrman
White. (For oamplate details, - Re~

.-t- week.)

-

The . . ....., aympoaium is being
held et the a-a Molar Inn But.
~fee for the annivenary
......... iadlldlal cliala and codt-

........ tu.,..~ID

-·

.............. ...-..w ...._ 0:.
.... 8 b . r - ..... Bthel Scbmidt,
aL *'- 8ladilata - elldlle for •
...........
(.... ...a cocldaiiA

. . . . . . . .1).

the.._ tiDalllo.--......
the-·
""'--·-the
the
-...rp fund.
the $11,000
the -. out to the
11J
o.-, Franll L - ,
ot the Alumni
pme, ..,.,_.. H. Ill,
-olthe-.- -- - .
,.......... Clwiolll ••• , .......... Saini
t.nn-.the~---·1.

...... 2,800 -

...... of tbe
of Ibis
yeu'a bmpiaiDc," SUNY/United &gt;eo
par1a, uatiDp beiDa conducted
ibrcJucboat the SUNY system to &lt;Je.
Wmine of faculty and pi'Or-ionll std.~, repraoentatn.oftbe
•
...,..t.IIIIY,from
aucb
di&amp;cuallions
IIIIIIOiiatinl positions rellec:tq
-.,. . .

Courier ~. -

U/8 _ . .

·A

lor
In . . . - - U/8 F - , II .......,_
(flom ...., 11A .......
John
Dr.
~

-

-

-

- · - - of the

poesi-

Colleges Protest GelbaL(m's ~/an for ·Change
The Collegiate Assembly bas p~
tested to tbe Academic Affairs COlincil, the Executive CoiDlnittee of the
Faculty Sen,ate, and the FaCulty Senate Committee on the Colleges a pro-.1 by Dr. l3emard. Gelba~, vice
presJdent for academic atraus, eon·
ceming reorganization of the Collegiilte System. ( Reporter, September
. 6.1
The Asaernbly ·bas also requested
lhat discussion of · the Gelbaum pio- 1 be tabled "until l:bat body, or
those bodies, charged with· restructuring the Collegiate System provide op- portunities to the University and Buf,
falo communities to express their opinions on Collegiate reorganization."
•
. .....
.'lbe. ~Y .atstement ·indtcates
l:bat 1be group op~ the Gelbaum
proposal.~'!"" m_ form, tone and
content It IS ~~tly ~lo~
to warrant senous deliberative !'cti'!!J
by the Faculty ~te, to · which It
bas been refened.
. Three p o i'n t s of contention are
...,;,M;d by the Assembly:
"1) 'lbe documenrs brevity reflects,
we believe, the author's personal prejudice against the Collegiate System,
and his refusal to deal with the System sympsthetically, directly and· seriously. The document does not explain
why dnmtic . reo~tion is n~
sary; since its plan csUs for the firing
of many individuals presently working
with the Colleges, simple courtesy as '
well as professions! integrity, sbOuld
r&lt;quire t!'at detailed arguments, tbe
presentation of documents and evidence of consultation on all levels be
offered.

·

"2) The document- is negative in
tone. It csUs for the eliminstion of
two-thirds of the Colleges without any
discussion of their relative strenphs,
merits or ci&gt;ntributions to the Uruversity and Buffalo cOmmunities. The
language of tbe documeitt seems designed to offend. At a time when tbe
national administration is c u tt i n g
funding of economically and political- ly deprived classes, the SUNY/ B ad:
ministration characterii:es the cliief
merit oJ its plan • as a question of . •
ecoDDIDlcs rather than one of educational benefil n.e chief result
the
P~ to '~il) the
ol ~ ·
middle
rather then of die
very poor,' is
t 26 Univimlity
fe&amp;IIOrB would- rather~
salaries while the currently ll!ldoirfunded co!~e4e. etatr meriJbers ...iul,i have

Perhaps, if 'tigbt money' is the problem, the fiscal responsibility of other
University dep&amp;!tments and programs
and the A~tration · (as the University .audit suggesls) sbould. be· exllmined to detelmine if a more rationa! distribution of the · budget is
possible.
"b) Granting some budgetary limi- "'
tstio!IS, we still .do not aee why Gel,.
baum's proposal is the only alternative
we have. Nor, do we see bow his reduced Collegiate program_would allow
!or the f!lll!cationsl experimentation
the Colleges were designed to engage
in.
•
,
"In summary, tbe Gelbaum JllOposal
argues l:bat a reduced Coli~ Systern will ensure academic quality. We
argue l:bat · a smaller size does not
IIU'U!"'tee quality; w bat guarantees
quality is a serious, well-working intemal and extemal review system. As
has beep .saio:J in the recent past, the
Colleges make 'a significant and valuable contribu~on to the Uni~rsity'

(Jobn Halstead, Summary Evaluation

of the-Cofle,es, 6/26/73) . We feell:bat

we can continue to do so, and to
improve tbe quality of our contribu-

tion, but · we are convince&lt;f l:bat a
reduction in the size of the System
will not help us to better OUraelves
in the near or distent future. Indeed
we 6nd IIUCb a prospect
and discourrudng, especlally in ligbt
of ·a general decilDe of academic cju81ity at SUNYIB with the continued
exodus of. eminent faculty and the
dismantling of innoyati~e p~
"Finally, we object Yigorilusly·to the
~ timing of the Gelbaum pr:oposaL ·ll/6
proposal for reorganization sboul\1 be
considered before extemal review .of
the entire Collegiate System, by a
team of outside experts, bas token
place.- The proposal Jnid&gt;t seriously
prejudice 'tbe team's evafuation, csuslllll' tbem to rank-order the Colleges
instead of examining objectively the
variOus merits of each college individ~." . ·

demoralizinii

:(++-~H+o:+foo! :; I $1. t I 11 J I I I I II I I I 1111111 I I II I I I I I I I I I I;

f

PETITION OF REDRESS .

~ Robert Lord Ketter, ,
.
· by the Grace of the ~rd of ~ruateea, King ~

*.

1

_We the below nmned .ub1ecta ol .the abOve·
nameil_Potentate do hereby demand tltDt tlie lol.. lowing.·Boone• be granted to ru pur..uant to the
Appelation in grade of no further recoar.e wlricla
wcu filed in thue reaLm. on or about the tenth
d~y of ~grut . ol. ~leU .Y ear.
·
J"o f!Jit ·· · ·
· J:lail Edna Thill, known aa "the ,Jower,'' .be ap-pointed. Regent .untif.uch time cu Jonathan -grow•
up•

. ·. ..

-~···~·

..

.

:

f

••

••

_ • Tha_t.at a ~m~ Gnfl place.to be agreed upon that
lhe Krng~ Hu apongu, and Toadiu dq,a.uemble

nou~ a~u..; tO ··~
~:~reuaofora.U
Wilt
•
a,-. with """ lllu-

ther~t~ -~o perform a Duel with the. Below aipetl
.tullt!nt•, their agent. and attendant..
iei com~ io ,;,.. that tile Wei:rpo,.. lor
the above menfioneJ_,.D uel Jtall' 1M pia and that
tiU ~ •letJI be :fought ~n titi,· pbrtiu cu.
:. P!Jlillfl!en· iinil .tltQi.~there Mtall: be· rio bwaclt.ry
-- ~n ·~~· ,· . -~.
·' :·:· ·.·: .. ;-· ......: .

=..~.~li&gt;wbldltbe~

lrUtorU:ol ~ tlwlt tiU Du.l wcu laqltl and

economy

denta,

or

U..CCU..IIIly ·" ""

•a) We .have 11-. tol!l .by o11.a
!bat tbe SUIJY/8 ~ Ia ...........
a l y - llalhle lbui .Gelbulm . . . aad ... feel that;- lbu u
IlDia. could be fUIIded ~•

.

.A.riJ

;i

' ~ ~ ,~ _it'cohae t~»~ ~ ~-·,_;,-91 tiw

..,.u t(one . i.HII. . .

--:ByOrJeroiJ~

�.

lllMb

ol

B)'

file=

t'ATRICIA

~~·lillY birlh invol¥111l

.

~~~:. :llit. 1ft ~~mot!::
.....-- ._.,.
• lYiniPID a&amp;llircieched, women m-1
;;,w..;~ : them.el_.-(or lbeir bout with deStiny.

~~~

~

"':r.

.Ki!f1oltll.

provide the
ar
Jl'wtiliho _... deatiny for Hmuy's

=

__..__,_ ."!._ ....._ died .......,_ sbe
~~..
falJed liD bava • . 800, JUII! Seymour
died ID --ua,. ~:..Y,J'81111111Cies
...~ -

IIDd..,.....=::.,r:r'!.!118m=~

Eyen queene .were .not immUDe."

at1:"'~ ~"'::
mat.eb. While in· ~~-~~ .ec1inled
in ber cilambi!r at nKIIIJ'ton Cowt,

propped up 00 CUihions of crimson

damuk.. b"immed with I!Oid. In medi·

~~

·

1111 now, women delivered
nude. Jane was wi'IIJiP.8d in a crimson
W!lvet lllaJl6e trinuiiecl with royal er...
mioe. BecaiMe of great coocem about
~__;_ ~ ~~: ~ ;pique, Heni-yEdWBBD'rdtwith Jane.born.wbenOn
._,~- ""-~al
. his only son,
wa , -Was
00
fill --·~=..:.-,
___......
.... ·-·
lieBrina ·!lie
the King &lt;&gt;niered
••• ........... tile fate of EncJaDd hung
2,000
from the Tower.
Oil a IIUIOW ttu.d, indeoid. that Q{
Three days later, the new mother was
Tbdor catetriail pnoctice.
strong enough to attend the elaborate
Malt ba&amp; . . _ a ~t clea1 about ·
clir'istening mandated for ··tbe new :
the ......_._ UW. ol Henry"s. AlmeB.
... _ th
·
~
J.W:•;;;i Ca~ but little is
prince. And """'• ree days later still,
._..uy known about tbe contema snadow fell over the joyous court.
Dorar.. fc
·
- The Queen ran a high fever, tbe firat

1llale lie&gt;-

salvos";!

,

~~:

fet"ns0~nd=~.fo~o/~';;,.,~~=

e-tha-f
·.
~"eiYUl' J. "'-·-.:-, -~ _ . tion were issued by the court pbysi..,
•........, ~
cians on October 17, 1537, and on the
childbirth
24th, sbe • died. In all, three Tudor
soclate
r of
in Tallbr w- Will an
·
that
queens died of puerperal fever or sep- .
Cllllll&gt;il*l superstitioq wl a dawning
ticemis, Tucker points out, including
mecliCal aopblaticatiOil. Tucker, - who
Henry vnrs mother, Elizabeth Planm.:.- 16th century obstetrics and
lagenet, 1and his widow, Catherine
pediatrics In a forthcoming volume on
Parr, wllo succumbed alter bearing a
cblldhood through tbe....., no""' that
daughter to Thomas Seymour.
a book on ~entitled, ."'lbe
- . Jxcl._
·
Byrth of Manl&lt;ynde, was a 'l)Jdor
U n t i I the mid-sixteenth century
best,jle)Jer, Jts author, 'Rkbard JOilBB
childbirth was a ritual from which men
bavinl hit oo a JIUl'l!fire subject in an
were strictly excluded, euept perhaps
age vn- the King ~ bell i~lf
a cleric on band to give last rites.
in order to secure an heir. An EngliSh
Tucker repeats the hair-raising history
of an· unforlunste German nhysician
translation of a Latin lraltise by German physician Eucbarius Ra!Siin,
. wbo tried to end this tradfuon prematurely. In 1522, a ·Dr. Werrt of·
"j3yrth" {1540) was.dedicated.to Henry's filth wife, Catherine Howard. Not,
Hamburg, realizing that birth to be
. as history pfoved; a partiCUlarly ap~
understood would need to be studied
choice. ,Catherine had no chilllren by
in .the llesh, disguised himself as a
belly." The same tieatise. recommends
:u.nry, and in 1542 she foUow,.l'Anne
woman and presented himself at tbe
that the attendant then scrutinize the
8Qieyn to the block.
'
next lying-in in his neighborhood. !A
child's navel. If it bas no wrinkles, the
midwife penetrated his disguise and
mother will be barren in the future.
· Superstition p~ a role in
poor Werrt was burned at tbe stalre ' When wriilkles are present, a count
then
Tucker shows
for his crime. The ·physician's, fate, it
will reveal bow many children sbe·will
~yn ~t~ of ber ~
was reasoned, would serve as· a detereventually bear. The midwife or nurse
and days )ll'egDallt or aspifi!I!Jo be.
rent to others in the profession whose
was also expected to annoint the baby
During ooe of ber pregnancies, probgrowing scienilljc curiosity was getting
with oil of acornS (thought to protect
ably in tbe happy moaths before .her
tbe better of their respect for tradition
aiainst
cold and- smoke) , to wash tbe
firat child was bOrn and diacovered to
Jmd propriety. An occasinnal excepnewborn, open his nostril&amp;, and put a
.__....__~
lion to tbe barring of men was made
be 8 · 1 ber -"-'
drop
of
oil in each eye. Until this
ber a ~-lucl&lt;~ ;:::."'
for-a male astrologer relained ti&gt; cast · century, fewer
than ball tbe children
cbanns apinst miac:an:iap were bolthe newborn's horoscope.
born grew to maturity. Tbis-..:fudor
low stones with 101'8'! pieces InSide
. The
baby, washed, annointed, swaadled
that zattled. Named by the Gnieks
Besides the mother, tbe principal
and snu' in his cradle, probably decwho believed e a g I e s carried such
actress in the high drama of a Tudor
orated With a bit of coral for good luck,
stones to lbeir nests to aid lbeir egglying-in was the midwife. Margaret
bad survived at least the first ordeal .
• laying, the cbaJ:ms were usually-worn
Cobbe is the first Enflisb midwife on
Flm_on_
tied to ' tbe left wrist. Anne probablY
rerord, reports tbe historian. Sbe atIn 1545 tbe first English book on
wore bers faithfully, perhaps as much
tended Queen Elizabeth Woodville at
pediatri&lt;s was J!ublisbed. Called "The
to p.!!&gt;ase the giver as for any other
the birth of Edward V: ~tty;
Regiment of Life . . .," it was written
reason, and in September, 1533, ·she
English midwives tOok a special oath
by 'lbomas Pbayre, wbo drew liberally
gave birth to a bmltby baby J!irl.
and operated under a license from
on both contemporary and ancient
Henry's ~ · is histoey; at best
tbeir bishop. Besides knowing bow to , authorities. 'l'ucker' describes Pbayre's
be _..ted 1t 1111 a llOod start.
deal with a prob"acted labor or a mulapproach to the care and diseases of
The eq1e 111ooe failed Anne distiple birth, a midwife aJao knew tbe
cbildhood as "peeudO&amp;Cientific,"_writma11y throughout the rest ol ber brief
correct form of baptism so that tbe
ten with tbe Renaissance passion for
•
Pregnan~ again and dei;perala
child who did not survive long in this ' BYatematization that was encouraged
~ the cbi1d, obe dared not par·
,!l'~rl~-~d he bom ~ into
ticipate in tbe daDcing and more stnm""' ~ ..
uaus festivities decreed by Henry on
Midwives and lbeir .beJPI!l'B ....;re nil
tbe dell.th of bia problema&amp; 11rst wife.
uniform euept 1beir regWar--dotbes.~- ol ., _ _ ln.J
536
perbal"'
TuckCa...
......., ·~..,...,
~. lt»&gt; ·
er believes. The
•
equipment - (Conlilwed from I, col. 3)
All Tucker obaeM!a.· all the Queen's
of lbeir &lt;alling (rerorded in Thomas
m light ol tbe iesponaibilities of Stu·
precautiooa...,... fot naught. On Jan- Delaney's TM G~Dtk Craft) inclilded
dent Alleociatioo ollice."
· llBlY 23, llb8 fainted oo bearing that
_ , and candles; babyclotbes. iliclud• Student government bas strivad
Henry's mailed horae had fallen 011
;n~ "tailclouta" or diapers· " - ·
to move away from "crisis - top ol him. After alliMMt a week' ill
~." whidl· were tied ~'u;;
ment" -..1 generating irii~
bed, D miaciUried .a male .cliiJd. In
head of the mother to piewmt wrmthat mab&amp; criaN few and far be~ ~ was. dead, bi order
kJes, and "crickets," low a1oo1s ..-J
tween.
•
by the birth attomclanta. Sometimes, .
• Kenneth Unker1 .~ treasurer,
...-the mother, not the mic1trife. oat 011 a
biiiJ erased a bed aeot of $70,000
Jane Seymoui_ was- DI!d. UJ1til 1111_
stool: a - later, llluatrallid edftioo of • brought oo by "th!ee years of hOrrible
•
"'lbe Byrtb of Mankynde" includes
flnaDcial i.._.mility" and initiated
· D.J::,..,., roL...:6:-~ •
a picture ol a birth stool,'- a thn!e"1oDca1 and strict" procechuo&amp; for tbe
'-'illllfft:U · ,
• Jetpd alfair with· a: ~
~t o1 flmda.
The Univenity'a """ policy 011 the ·
- t ~~· f«. boldina
~"":'!!!:..J;:V:=

A~

:E'

._....., ....,_ •"'* .

.JC

M-

covered ;!!!:a'U'r!l!ron,

,.,_ Nat....

tiJ8I!IDilllll'

....:e

" : _"-

=..:s&gt;·U:::::-:.r~~
... c.f :- _~.s~oo~A:·-:..~~
o.r. _._:....t_.. an .m:.. : -· teae 01 pav;.y · in~ .wr-y.. · =~=~~tyot;::;.
plete padae inaln8d in tbla IIDil fuTudor -allb ..ve ~ m the . ~=
the~..,.,....,
tme - - . , Dr. Cllarlea H. V.
more to~~~
,•
!)ilaileratioo aiata. b&amp;-.
::;;.:-~~:..~:=:: :: 11iat~'7·ii.~~!:· ~ ·SA a · ~ Soicurity in
. 'lbepaljcy,

~.

cloa&amp;.not- •.. ;.'11&gt;cut-dle umiJIIIcol Card. Fattllill the
midwife tw.d liD llQ te.:an .,nbQdty

-=urity

. . . . ol bolb bii:yde
IIDil
"'peraaioo Jdonllhtioo," a _..m
than the 11th -.,..~
· :ftnia·Pbll- . whicb ......... klllltlllcatioa ol ftluplete ...._ iDay be i--ed accord- 081J(lber-pb,yUdan A
wbo .,.._
llble·altjecla lhloagb a &lt;*ltnl ClllllpOitiqto the cll8cr8tlea ol.the illdividaU .
viaM
l'8pCII'Ied In "TTie B7rth ol
.... Brie Col,mt711111l "wiil bopefully
~ - « !bey limply .....m oo
Manllyade") thet the cord Jboald. be
be -~ ID a ftllam ol stolen
the~~ . . . -.
- --·c:ut •"tfnie' &amp;lpa 1iN..tth ftcim....
~-"·
. ,
,. .
'

tDcoarpJete . . . _. DniceiJIDo the fall

......... :a-t ..ld. . "8ual

~

&lt;•

in ·Henry's England by the YOillll!
Royal College of Pbysiciana, f~
with the blessing of the Kiilg in 1518
and sponsored by his personal physician Thomas Linacre.
-)'Modem" n;ledical, pJ1!Ctice -~
to · emerge during the 16th century.
Both Rosslin and the French "obstetrician" Ambroise Pare, ~ worlt

F:!~-~beenE:g'ii.hi~

assisted at detveries, according to
Tucker. A century later forosps were
invented.
Tucker, wbo serves as wcontributing
editor to the new History of ChildlrDod
·QUJll'terly, a journal of ps;vcbobistory,
doesn't speculate in the proeent chapter on the impact Henry's wives' uncerlain marital histories might have ·
bad on his three children. What is
record is that Elizabeth never msrried,
withstanding both the frenzied emmple of her fatber and lifeloog preasure
from Cburcb and rounto-y. Maybe, a
smart little girl, she obeerved that
royal marriage frequently led the way
~t:!f.'th. either oo tbe block or

f:;

Dandes and SA.---------------

-·

• u.n.r

lau.tr.tlen ffOM '1llrl . , . . ef .....,..._,, IIJIL

,.... • A referendum will be held Qo.
Iober 3-5 on tbe Student Aasembly'a
decision to raise tbe mandatory fee
for tbe funding of WNYPIRG.

Two llhone Lines
Aid Communication
twO

The University now olrers
automatic telephone services to pr.....te
communication with publica bolb oo
tbe campus and in tbe w - N, Yorlt community.
·
The IJajly Report at 831-4343 pto.
vides a brief informatioaal n-.e
each day.
Reaction Line at 831-f4.44 P.
callers the opportUnity to . . . . . their

n-

views, COIDDleDia « ~
who wiab to be contacted with a . .

II(IOM8 from tbe UniWIIIIity ~ ......
pbooa numben and/or~ Tba

appropriate Univenity &lt;6:ia1 · . .
apooda to 11-. views, _ . ar
queatiOila.

�·:t~~ ­
-: =~.:.t:
1bl;

.•

,

.

.

.·

.........

n.ea...~

~=-c--~.-= ·

Jll.':r'~ .:..;,,._le

=:-..:...e-r~=-::
..-w ....

=

. - l of
mil tbe
~of-tad Bliidr~

wlih=-~~

·~·cantiftulilr ecluealion
- 811 ·~t tit tbe _ .. .lion of

aU
and-to-elfart. are pyen
~·every
te attention
and
~t • man for tbe Unlwadt,-!' .· ,·
"
to · Unl-..ity-obJi.
."CipauDooc lloll Floe
tioa.
•
The
u~.
tbe
Plan
118
''OIIIIy..by vi&amp;oroualy -tronting tlie .• ~~~ ~
___!!:
fOletiOing ~ am the University
..,_.... - · - . . . - c:liullllu( -.....
ex1end to the Ml publjc those -educa·
and _...,,..;... of ..,...., 'lMulty;
"'l11a paduate and adwnced
lioaal opportuilities which are· ........
stalf, and COIDIIlUJiity. But it llllllt also
~ _...,.. of. the Uni~
tia1 to society's well beiJIB. 'l1ie UniudiacrimiData in favw of tbe IIIOR-ef•
• . . maintain as th8ir basic ~ '
versity will Ibis public trust."
fectiYe
.to a d . - aad tmnoimft•
tioaal aim tbe~ofscbolar· - r-_-_~ .._
~ ~ec:. those '
wl skills and 81!ilities.
The Master l'lan'Viaws fr8edom and
libilUies afpiflamt to
" To
- this is tbe purauit of -- ~ responaibillty 'p .mutus!Jr&gt;-deuendent
do 'this, five Cllll8ideratioos are '- ·
basiC and applied ~ or, as in
OlliHlepts'flPPli&lt;ioble Ia aU in ihe Unitia1: 1.• Dewlopmeat of bsu. data •
Creative activities. 'Ib8se
versity:.
.
· . ·
""- as IIUides to ~;
fuDdameat8l objectives l"eqUUe tbst
..In tbe classroom, tbe. ~ to. ' - 2.1mpli!msmalion of ....,_ta predioprmmt paaithe graduate and advaooed profession.
tmnsmit and acquj"' knOorledge and - tive models.to 111'0Videnlll80iied-.
each of tbe three .....,.._
a1 PIDiltamB be at the forefront of
skill includes tbe freedom. to evaluate.
ment of-pmbabte ·ou~ of· various
- 41J!11~· f!dme.
deW!Ioiimenls in tbeir field, and tbst·
SimultaneouSly, the ~ty ex·
alternative actiima; 3. 8peciflcation-of
tbeY equip tbeir students with tbe.
ists to be accuraie, fair, ~
sliort and lOng ·lan&amp;e .-Ia; ol. Ju.
ability to continue .to ·particiP,.te in
oonsiderale of tbe views of others,
dici0118 llllliignment of··Jn!80Ul'CIIII to var"' "'l11a imp!iowticww iDiaad in tbe
fllllt tine ...... for tbe ~leand utilize 01110ing re8earcb and deand tO provide a clear ideotifl&lt;:alion
io!Js pnlll'IUDS; and 5. Alllamnent of
- t b e of tbe Um-.i&amp;f ~.~
""'-"'nt.
of what is p-.ted as fact, what is
resultant activities for their ellective_ . J!rimar7 111111, ......,.. u
"fn order to acbieye these aims durinterp..,tation, ·and what is COIIIIDI!IIt
ness.
tbe ~l of edueated P.'!l""'."'
ing the DeXt decade, the University
or recO'Iilmendation. The 1'1!8PClPBibilitY
Tho ~ Emlltonmot\t
wbo ~.die - t i a l abilities to
must:
'
also exists to-....:ognize other views
~ 'lbe MaSter Plan-CCJn&lt;leiV... of the
· ............... " 8Miyie, c:dticbe, and • - Empluosi:re, as at the undergradand 10 · ~ tbe risht of aU
Uruveni!ty as a- community of SCholars
~Ide.. Baa:alaun!ate prouale level, ~ in the life,.naturmembers oHhe Umversity c:Oimnunlty
.committed to acbolar!lhiP and to an
palll8 do to -..pJe1e this
al, and social
including prOto riiacb tliek .own conclwii&lt;ins by exenvironment: in wbicl1 'scbolarabip is
~ bat I:Btber to advance
fessionaJ PJ:OIII8IIIB in tbe-Health Sci·
ercising informed judgment.
' ·
valued,-- r t e d &amp;btl eDbanoed. :
--' it and to place the.,._. wbo.Pur·
ences, An:hitectwe, EIJgineering, U"Jn . ...,_.a, and creative activity,
Tofoslersucban'environment,"tbe
..... · tbis ~ in a J&gt;CII!ition to . =Studies. I:Aw._ ;M.inagement, and
- !J&gt;e.u-lom to pursue W&lt;?rtbwhile to!&gt;::
• University';must eonsclentiously select
continue hiiledul:atioa lbnJU;fioUt l.if&amp;.Weltaie; •
1ts and to· opeD}y publisb 'lellults is. ". petlDIII&lt;wbo.llle best qualffli!d'-ilil' be
F'ur!la111018, ~te _....,..
• Orient advaooed education toacoompanied by
responsibility to
members o(tbe immediate University
contributinc apeciflcaJ)y to pmfeMionward profel!!lil&gt;naJ r o I e s in SO!liety
display integrity in tbe utiliZation of
community. 'lbiiS, in the selection,
al ......._,.t intend to P"'P&amp;re the
while decreasing the emphasis placed
resoinces ai; well as in researcli'seleo- . ·..ValuatiOO,- "'ti!ntion/ .Bnd "J!romotion
~b • c ~f:.=r ~
solely oo providing '"'placements for
tion ani! the · production of l'lllllllll'Ch
or itll facUlty; -the Uiiiver&amp;itY' must be
1
......
- the &amp;CII!IemY';
o-'lellullll. 8iinilarly the right '&lt;to par- · ~ concernechritb qda)itieiiiiiiicb 118 rofu.
oldlls lllhicb can contmue to be·de'Yel·
:-• Develop .impioved
l&gt;f - ticipe.le in'CODUDWut}' affahs and pubmitment to teacbipg and 1'EI8elllCh, as .
oped.
•
'"
'
1ts graduate arid advanced professionlie service carries -Wlth' it the respoD..
well as further pcirtooal •learning" . -x'o IIIJCil!"'"¥iY.attain this primary
al ~ iJJ!:lu&lt;!i!&gt;IIIIIJOte..&lt;;mct.llp&lt;!Ci.
~ility .. _to indicate,. wbeb_and Where
such commitment to be de!no-ted
-of•lbe-tulion'a ~'te ' fiaitiilri olthe af&gt;ilities, knoWledge and
appropnale, that one is not a spokes.
in the individual~&amp; profeasional cueer,
ednaltioaal pmpam, the' UniVersity . skills to be posaesoed by 'thoae ' who
·
lllllllt:
.
,
have completed programs for these
r-----------.:.....,....,'":-'_-::;:-..----:'~--~'--..._..,
in anticipati~ of a · · ~; .
·
1. _;,&gt;-;C, _
lDD,I8
l!&gt;s.i&lt;:al .and complei&lt; so• Sbortenthea'verage-timU"''uiied'
-'
1[.11 •••
~
ciety;
life, aocial, and .natunil sci·
to complete ad~ dtlgrees; includ-;
.
'
·
ing curriCula condensation and innova• '
'
·
.•
e ·Develop a satisfactory ast of litotion in an academic anil professional
1. The Universil)( will continue iiB evolution ·-....Is becoi!Ung one
ca1aureate c1epee concepts, including
disciplines;
of tbe nation's p~ent.Paduate and piofessionaCcentsl!l with a finn
tbe provision. at least as ooe alterna• Give special attention 'fo the
commitment f&lt;! the ad1I1!JI(lell&gt;eJit of ~ ~ 'l eacbing and
liw, of a "clasoicsl" . baccalaweete
elimination · of )XlC!Sible · · unjustifiOO
, research in selected academic 8IJd.. profeasional disciplines.
· c1epee propmn;
•
overlap, duplication, ana multiplica• ~. and redevel'!!' its
tim;t of course. and program offerings
- 2.. The University will continue to accept tbe 'obliption iDberent in ·
while e:g&gt;anding the cooperative use
its graduate center aspin!-tions of creating both an outatanding imderbonors ~ m the lnlest sense;
or facilities and other I'I!I!DIIn:6!··
d te di · ·
'th
·
· cademi
· · • wbi'-'- ...__ .. _ _
• Criticilly analyze tbe .impact of
its four.courae load as the ..nonDal"
.• Work with other colleges' and
gra ua
VIBlOD, WI a .ngorous a
c onentalion
"" ~.....,....~
Jllltlarn of-study in bacc:81aweete prouniversities in Western New York and&gt; .
tbe individual to test to tbe limits ofhis intellectual and. pera(,nat develop'
~ ·.• .
.
_
~th the graduate_ and bealtlnentem
ment, and an-1ltltstandiilg coritinuing education divisioo dedicated to the
• Ulll8lOI!l' .ifB grading patfi;ms and
m the Sfate University !')'Stem to en·
?''?cept of ild11a1tion as a life-long 'pursuit.
•
. ..
the ~~ "! tbeae to both t;t.e·
sure the balana;cl proviSJon of gradu3. In eacb
. _'of its ...-..v.r
diVi810
• ··~--'-duate, -""·-~. --..~
quality of instruction and the quality · ale lJil!l. P"'!C!SSJ~ ilducatiooal op~
~,..a
a•~-~ y•v•of' students;
PC&gt;rtunities fiir Ibis ....a and tbe State·
sional, and continuing education-the Uriiversity will act to maintain
• ~\'ely .~ tbe ~
~ Continue its pattern of p.rograui
. existing_ acad~c strengths, to streng!J&gt;en amas .of promise, and to
~t of mterdiacip)inary and )Omt
nMew and evalW!tion, including both
-develop ·new a...as wbicb indications of future importanQe to the
Dl8)0r underpaduate prosrams;
self-and external examination at least
•
·
-. Reduce unneceaaary courae overonce every five years.
University .and ~ ~ety: .
.
lap and. duplication;
"While not aU graduate ancL ad:
· 4: 'The University will ·remain unequivocally committed-to academic
f...OO
·twill ·mu1 eous1
· -·
• ~ data of. studenlil' ·' vanced professional degiee progtiuns
including historic academic
of tbe University will be equally emom; ... ·
.~
tan
Y· inaist. upon a commitment to academic
phasized over the DeXt decade it is
~bility.
· _
·
_
·
•
information- as ....U as ~ plans;
! CootiDuaDy. , _ the out.cot.- intended
that every graduate and-ad.
s: In its academic programs, pOlicies, and 0 ._......,
- . ; - " - tb8 University
of Jts PI'IIIJI8III8, m 1enzl8 of the Vlilue
Vanc:ed 1 professional progiam WhiCh
of tine IIi students ils tbeJ' seek _ the University conducts shall be of .
will be QPen to innovation· and sensitive to tbe .-Js of faculty and
_ . devel0jJ1181t and fulfillment;
the higMst )XlC!Sible quality 'flhis will ,
.students, both present and prospective; yet it will never lose ·aigbt Of
• Flnil .new ""'YB to create' an ~t-·
requiie"'?t ";DDY elfe_ctive ~ but
i~J~ academic PIJI1&gt;oses·and of tlie need to determine and di...tminate in
also continwng basic. and applied iefavor of the iiiost _elfectjve methods of advancing and tzanilmiftirii lnowl·
~~ty.p!'f~~d!
edge, understanding, and abilities si~cant· and Vliluable to mankind.
such as the Health Sciences. · Only .
6, 'The Univeillity will IeCOglli%e ' the importance of an ·environment
through an emplyosis on quality .in
conducive to learning, · ~cbing, and resealcll; it' will _ . to p.Ovide
F_ _ _ _ _ . . . . _ _
eveey graduate l!rid ,lldvanced profesthe facili""·
and
~-- PJ:OPBDI can tbe UniversitY
,....., &amp;elllloe&amp;,
pemooal examples&lt;wtiicb create 8Ucb an
....,....., its pi of ~ a preenvironment.
_
·
•.r. tau. ....,.,.,... .. ......,.
:'~":!_f8Guate~ professional in/ ' 7. -The. Univenity will continue_ to~~· ·a ~ . ;.lionship
2UF,J.
~ ~ ,;.....,. . . _._
. · with the ~ty and region, ,and. it; Will- btthis relatlouahip
'"Tha.--Cootilming Education Pro· ~ to l iB adldemic fn~ ~ ~!*~ _ , A.. JFZI2"Ur II!CWUifD
=~~""!.'t:r ~
8. The University will never be bouDd ili&gt; die traditioaal fOrms· of
r ..ILlltl.nT
, of Oni-..ity edwBtion for aduiiB wbo
~ ednaltion;.:it will be willing to act~ or coopemtlvely ln. using
haW!
otbm
~
cwnmt
commitmentB
.-.1
its
_,.,., to """'le new forms ,wbkb :will ·further tbe reaiUatloo of
... ClDI1IDit
0
=-:c:..-.;;!..~Ol_llY· on· a
its aspiratioiiS, JIUlPCI!Ie8, and goals.
·
I'£!"JUCCA.
~•A.RD .-.-...ur
PGitunities ~'be utilbed ,::::..::
9. The University will strive l!!_ orpnir.e and IQYeiD itaelf in such
.AIICF •. t!4RDt"f rr
aJ ..-th « the deWJioiiinmt of ahilia ........,...as to make the .III&gt;OIIt productive 1188 of thoee .,..,...._ entrusted
:-=:r=--tor~
to it!»' ..,;sty for the ~t of tine goals.

-"""JII'OIIUI

u....

wan·

!l,-;t::;:;:

same-.

-.w.

-- ·* ..........,.._direclioQi
.

- ·Six·

sci"""'""

a

::''f"' .w;o

••them

conc:epts

•m1

'n;._,ersny
·• _n

P....-.

----&lt;1................

·:....-=...-:-:. ,:.:.::::::.
-•u,...,..._.._......_

---·------··_

-

u.;,

..

:, ·.._ · ·

�~Tbec6en111.theU..,_
llllllit plq bolb.
1liidifr.

•"''
-.=. ......
"-db'.~
.......---......,.
lullibUI...........
iaJiy at the .....

=~:t~

=
,:;::,- ...................

h!.-llllllitUIIa!!ijr-t"
,__.
•

1§1
a.•
c:
ualied~·
~

8tudail8. . . .- I

==-...
= ==
:::r=

Similarly die -t.ddair .........
cletaiDIDe bolbllilll
• ·-~ •
!liaalll eWr 111. the Uar-.iity .-.lap 111111 wJII ~ to the . . ~ill
this pa- 111. llloulbtful
- - 111. ~ ......
8l:tiob. ror u.
their role!! 111ey ~ - requind 111r Ill* 1711f'
,

-tlal
oontribations
the unn..r.
sity'a lolill
edualtloozalto elloda.
~
denta al8o have ~ ....-&gt;
ti_, fO bring to a pattem ol .......ed
I&gt;!:OINa '1l&gt;8 apeCiJica ol faadty, &amp;t!dl,

~
."'l1!!e
-t

..

oat

8JIJlU8ll3r.
eJf1!:T uait
...-lUll a lllllfo~
eat
&amp;tu!lel8d ............. _...,. 111.
the-UIIivea!it7 1ri11 PMtr auaiD 'hi

111111

and !!ludent participation must
priately be detenuined at unit"C:
year' status, at wblal~ tbDe, ~
Furtbe. theao groups must participate
and efforts will Iii llllzjecled to Cl!IIDa~ the University-wide level through
plete r
,..t, ~ m.l CJb.
governance organir.at.ions, lll1dt 88 tlie
jectiye ref.......,l•tion lll}uitillc!dia
UDi-mty Aaaembiy, the Faculty Sen·
reevaluation, 111111 ~ ...,.._.
ate, the PrOfessional S1alf Senate, and . ing.
student JIOVemmeJ!t aBlciationa.
For !IIIIIU8I ..- quiDque!mial _ . . .
'"lbe"University must also """"''nize
..-nent will iDdode allC!!U18M Ud
_the .legiilil!"te conbibutions to -this
programs in !IC8demic- and all
process which can be made by groups
activilie!o in ..._tma - - . It will
extemal to the institution. The Uni1nclude the size,~ dislriliution, and the
versity Council and alumni oonbibute
quality cit faal)ty and !!latf·-. . _ t
not D?IY their "'!PPDrt but ~ retroaervkea 111111 their funllinB; 'esaDilna- -8!J'!!'Iive evaluation o~ !"fucational extion o( _,jetaJ .-Ia -....1-1!}' the
penences and recogrutiona o( current
program· evaluation of atudellta wbo
aocietal needs. The State University
cbooee ibe propam. and the extoilt
Trustees~ and Central Administrative
to -which the JH'OJl!IID """""' tbem; ·
~... _provid~ .a. state-wi&lt;~;e view o(
quality 111111
~ o( researoh 111111
U"!vers•ty. '!c?vttiea and. higher educreative activity, 88 ...,11 88 the quality
catio!L Additionally, legu;latora bom
and estent o( community service diaWealem _New Yolk oon~le an unplayed. Excelleuce o( attainment, irderatanding of the needs, wisbea,-and
respective o( unit size, will be the
hopes of. the people &lt;&gt;! the State.
major criterion for evaluation, directly
"Within the plannin!! cycle, each
affecting budgetary decisions and ,...
unit of the University will be ezpected
suiting program directions."
to .eet a aeries of specific objectives to
· be achieved. The identification •of the
"The emerging academic plan is
means necessary to attain the9e objectives will also be required. In genconcerned with preae~
that which
eral, theee objectives will be fomlU·
lated in light of the long range and
an increased awareness of this Unispecific goals of the University, its
versity's responsibility to prune acavarious major divisions. and the · r&amp;
demic programs which !lie not supsponsibilitiea which the University 111111
ported by student_interest or aocial.or
its components have as a University
academic 'lee&lt;!. It:piesumes a redirecC-enter of-the State University df New
tion of theao ~ toward the
York.
developml!Dt of new 111111/or ~
"Procedures for obtsining these 00.
areas of aocietal concern. Specifically,

-t

=~~~=~·ltalso~

~chMa~ti'!.!~~the.J":

·· . • Anticijlated groWth of the University is re6ecled in• the pro~ons
below:
Annuol Ave,_- Student FTE
Core Campus,
Hulth Sclencos Canllor
Actual ' Budpted Pmj. ~ ,At:tual· Budpl8d 1'!01·
72·13
73-74
SO.S1
72-13
7~74
-

Lower Division
Upper Division
~Grad/
.Profeosional
~dvanced Grad
Tat.l

7,989•
5,715

8,685•
5,930

10,000

2,835

2,888

1,138

1,157
18,660

4.851
1,152
2,099
18725,500 . 2.251

17,fi17

8,550

1st751 '

1ss•
fnl

roo

1,160

1,097

1,421

196

- '}!11

2.065

3,060

•B..w,· s o . - ~ tiJriltion n'B ~T
in tM Con c_,... Uta.. la Uti.
iNtMc., the (JP- ,.._ bMrt ..,_..,.,. Identified lor I'Mifilrr ~ willl tJ. ll._.l

a.. indutJei

.

~~

'This d&amp;ta indicates a significant . . . iru:rease in enrollment ~
1972-73 111111 1973-74. In large .measure, this is attributable to the University's "phase up" for occupancy of the Amherst Campus.
The University preaently -occupies 1,064,602 net square feet o( permanent Bp!lce at the Main Sln!et Campus (excluding' residential
and
leases 529,491 NSF at various locationa in the metropolitan area. Leased

areas&gt; ,

consista mostly of 268,932 NSF at the Ridge Lea Campus. and
97,440 NSF at the Bell Planl At ~ (excluding residential
ties), 1,521,IDS NSF is either under CODBtruction Dr in planning, an!i
it i8 anticipated that by 1980, approximate,ly 2,812,000 NSF (excluding
residential areas) will be available for occupancy. · Correspondingly, about
750,000 NSF will remain at the. Main Sln!et Campus for rehabilitation
111111 utilization by the Health Sciences Center. Also, as major rental
tocat!ODs are pbased ou~ over this period o( progressive Ambenit expansiooi,tocations and services critical to thetfealth Sciences program will be
iMitated 111111 •further developed tbrougb ledefined aJiiliation qreementa
with local hosPitals.
The number of. full-time University instructional faculty is ezpiicted
to increase from 1,518 (Fall 1972) to approximately 2,500 by 1980. This
mer.- - 88 well as u.cz- in other n!8(IIJrCe . . . - - is d!a:ribed
in the University's current·aiid anticipated --.tiDe budget. The Uni~s tom! _.m... budaet for 1.972-73 is in 111. $106 million
dollara obtained from the followinl
.
$ 69 million State ...............t
$ 2 million endowment income
$ 86-mBilon Federal ~
~~tom! _.uu. ~ lw;IIIIlO- ~no inf/4timl, a ~t ~/!!IUIIeDt ratio, 111111 il llimilar diatributloll ol
PniPame- -.Jd be:
:
lll4 million Slate ~
• 3 million &amp;iduwuad income
$ _18 million Federal ....... OOWtt

Bp!lCe

,..cili-

-=

StUdy of .the Afirii, to D!IJDe but two
new concentratioas, are being eumined. Programs aildreoaing suCh issues
a&amp; enelliY .CODIII!Mltion, ecology,· water
resources, and urban enviromnent also
are being diacuaaed.
"'lbe Master Plan's conuni-.t to ,....
a ·p lanning-implementation....-t
cycle is evident in other Ullivenity
activities. The Academic Alfaira Council is currently aamining such fundamental questions as the future ~
tions o( the Uni-mty as rellected in
an Academic Plan, tbe nature of the
baocalaW'Illlte de 1 r e e, and bow to
strengtbeil and further devel&lt;&gt;p inter·
disciplinary program~~; the Graduate
School . . . bas establiabed a camp""
beosive procedure for the review of ita
offerings; the Undergraduate Division
is ready to embarlr. upon a similar
program at the undergraduate level;
the Faculty Senate baa undertabn
a review o( tbe Colleps. the fourcourse load, 111111 otber tlems; and the
Professional Staff Senate iS establishing an in....mce training 111111 educational Prosnun so that professional
employees may' bring to tbeir taab a
b_!98der perspective o( University operations. A variety of moperative ventures also are being planned and carried out by/111111 between!varioua pub.
lie and private higher education institutions, including the University at
Bu1ralo.
"Furtbermore, methods to provide
two major inf&lt;&gt;P.tional bases aary to the plafuling cycle are in the
process of developmenl The flnlt ol
the9e bases requires methods to exactly identify the oosta and required
n!80UI'OI!S o( actual 111111 planned programs. The -..nd involves methlida
to provide better _ , _ t a 111.
p_....m oui&lt;:Oalm.m thSs&lt;r'eftorta, the
ti~;.;;;-;ty is utilizing ita own - . c h
88 ....IJ 88 that of the natloozal higher
- edualtion community.
'"The ye!UII ~tely !lheed ... extzemely lliKnificant for the Uni-aity it 8ufrAlo 88 it -a to provide
scholarly opportunities 111111 oontribu- ·
lions which will advance the society
it - - Only by planninJ Wilton.

~ling ~ni-=.;

-

' ;;:;: it tar tbl8 ......
Plan ID!Iicata.,
the wmmp!Wm-tt bu beJun..

�.E i • b t ....... ........ ,._ '10
DOIIIizi8ea ..-tins elabllieldlr, will
I'IIC8i1ie UDMnity c:i.iatloaa for • ·
ceptioaal. perfonMnce lD their
and public life, Saturday, Octo!&gt;er 211.
d u r iilg a University -Community
luncheon; co-IIIXIIlllOre .by the U/B
Community Ad~ Counl:il and the
Alumni Aasociation.
'The eipt are: Helen Yasgur1 .,to;
Allalie Babbidge, business and industry· Anna Porter BurreD, higher education· Lucille Kinne, government and
public' aervioe; Dr. Mary Kazmierzak.
professions; Joan Bozer, sociaJ services; Dorothy Haas, education and community; and Marilyn G. Stahlka, mm-munications media
The awards will be- greaented at a
luncheon in tbe StaUer Hilton for
which M.;s. Rita E: Hauser, director,
First Empire Bank-New York, will be
tbe main - u r . Mrs. Hauaer ~- a
partner .in SllOOC:k 1: Stroock 1: Levim,
a New York Jaw firm, and a -graduate
of Hunter College_ A member of tbe ·
U.S. Delegation to tbe 24th UN General Assembly, siHl holds tbe doctorate
in political economy from the Universit~_ or S\raSbourg and tbe LI.B.
from Harvard and New York Univer- sity law schools. She'was national cochairman of tbe Committee for theReElection of tbe President, 1972, and
serveS as a director of tbe( NAACP
Legal Defense Fund.
Invitations 1Q s"l!gest candidates for
tlie award citations were sent to
women's clubs in tbe Bullalo area, to
prominent representatives from e8cb -:
of tbe eight designated categories, and
to tbe Community Advisory C!&gt;uncil
and AIUDlni Association membership.
Judges for tbe awards were Leslie
G. Arri!!S, Jr., vice presiderif and gene~ niBnager of WBEN-TV; Mary
I,. Hef1Jl81l public relations spec:i.alist
for New York Telephone ComJ)ftny;_
Richard G. Charlton, director of-pub.
lie affairs, Calspan Corpollltion; Paul
A.~ Willax, senior vice president of
Erie County §avinp Bank;Mrs. _ ~
ther G. SwartZ, 8SSistant to the president for cultural· 8Jfairs at' U/B; Dr.
Walter S. WaDs, medical director of
Blue Shield of Western New York;
Mrs. Ina D. All, _president, In'terclub
Council of Western N\!W York; Fred
M. Tamalonis of the AIUDlni A880Cia,
...
~--

c:a- .

--

malre it
receiws a
mvert to a.-year
i n - of time
DOD-J:eDOWBI ootificasuperviaors are "en""""'18d" to give omJ briefings• on,
for non-renewal or term appointmeDta (altbouih they are not
required to put such reasons in writ-

-iDa&gt;-

.

Ketter apin em~ his commitment to vigorous Allirmative Action policies in both persooneJ and
student rectuitment, noting that be
bold&amp; every olli&lt;:ef in tbe University
both responsible and acoountable for

""':~~~ ~~:SS will ollicial.!y

come under Allirmative Action posting,
...m and hlrina prooedUJeS (ali fac..
ulty slots aJreaay are) · duripg this
~L~ indicated. Underscoring
the eiDpoasia, being g;.., to insuring
University-w_l de implementation of
~ policies, be told or a cbecking
proce&amp;B now being conducted on a
•::&gt;random aample of 15 of 100 faculty
poaitioaa autborimcl in"""""t.mootbs.
From the records of each hiring de~1, each individual listed ·as
bavinl been coasidered: for a Post is
beinlllllbd bow be or she beard about
the position, wbetber or not he or she
invited for an interview, his or her
- . t of lbe competitiveness of
the aalary structure, and why be or
abe ll!"''!f'ted or rejected any offer that
indicated as having been made.
To date, aome discrepmcies have been
ootecl b e - information supplied
by individuals and ·lbat provided by
~"Any Univel'l!ity o8loer
wbo might falaify such infonnation is
in trou6le." the President warned

._

___

tion; Barbano M. 8bno, diJeclor of ihe
U/B Oftlce of Equal Oppommity, Mrs: Marie K. t:onxmm ol the U/B
Community Advisory CouDciL .
.
Co-sponsors of the evmt antic:i.Pate
an attendance ~ laat year's
:JIO. The Procram. from award aelection to tbe main - - . . bas been
deailned to a~ to men • weU .as

women.

~of

the .......tare Marie

Corooran, ...,._,ting the U/B Community A~ Council, and Phyllis
Kelly, vice president of the. AIUDlni
. Aaaociation.
Cost or the Iunebeon, wbicb includes
'a reception beginning at 11:30, will

be $5.00. Rmervationa may be made
before OctOber 15 by calling 831-4121.

Executive Agenda · '
The Professional Stall Senate bas
set -the following agends for its exei:utive committee meeting, October 2, 9
a .m., U4 Crosby HaD :
1. Approval of Minutes, September
18 meeting; 2. Standing . Committee
Membership; 3. Committee Charges;
4. Extra Services Payments for Professional S\!llf; 5. PrQfessinnal Stall
Appointment Policies; 6. Stalling
Needa Jor Pl:ofessional Stall to 198081; 7. Other Busineso.

Interested in Govemance1
This noti"ce is beuig written on tbe aSsumption that numerous faculty members rrught wtsh til ta.&lt;e part in tbe governance of the University but are uncertain as to how to do so. The bUsiness Or The University Faculty Senate is
based .'in good measure upon tbe wnrk ol ita various committees. U a faculty
membel\wishes to intluence oertain educational- pol,icies, there is no better way
than meihl;!erabip on an appropriate committee. Many faculty members, bOwever, ma'y iibt be fuUy aware of bow one becomes a member of a committee.
When vacancies occur on a committee, tbe Senate's NominatiJII Committee
submits a list of prospective new members to The Executive Committee of the
Senate. The latter body actually makes tbe new appoin-.ts. For obviowi
reasons. on a campus this size, a large number or potantially valuable committee
members are overlooked The Nominating Committee would be aided in its
task if interested mlleagues would identity themselves. 'J'!IerefQre, we appeal
~you to. fill out and send in tbe .form Jielow.
.
.
1.
· 2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

~s:~=~~~u!~""r: Faculty Tenure 1: Privilepo

Admiasions
Athletics
Colleges
Economic Status ·
Educational Planning &amp; Policy
E.lections

9.
10.
1L
12.
13.

Financial Aida
Information 6 Library RMources
Publieationa
~ 6 Creative Activity '
Student Faculty
.
~ting COi'nmittee

-------~--------------~-...----------------;-----,-~-------~
NAME: .. .. ·······---···'····· -······-··········-···.. ····· ·········-·····················-···:::-..... .
DEPARTMENT OR UNIT: ·;- ..

Ust two commlttMs in onler of prote,..nce
1. ··- ·• _!'"....... -:."••~ · ·~!: .. _ .....:~ .... !...:. ,./..!_..· - ·
2. -·· .;........ .

�- c11v181aM o1. the Um-.tty .ddft to

.lJO,OOO.

.

ralae
TraiDialr _..,. f« United Wq
WDibn will be oonolulllad Gil: ~
. 2, at 11 "--IL lu a- 246, HMlth
SeimDea. ..... at 4 p.m. iD a- 402,
Hay• Rail; lllld October a, at-9:30
8-Dl. iD Rllom 71, 4224 Ridte I.a. .....

~kt~~......,. a-,

.Aoaardial to Dr. A- Weatley Row. land, vice Pl!llident for univeislty ,....

1at1oaa and "ebairman ol. the Universi
Clllllll8iiD. tbe lddt-df meeting

~

atbiDded

be
by more 1ban 100
feelilty and prol.eaaional staff who are
.wviDg as ~ leedBnlln the 22

-Six Scholarship§ .
.Awanted'by CSEA

aul8li taur
ia

UmlUDIIIIIIIl

-evealDI.
to be
tbat IUbjacL
wiD .-1&lt; on
lllld tbe MGdem World" at
CoiJep. He • Do Jll'!llllrinl a tape
JIUddbimD lu
tiou, with the

~ Calmd1 ~UI'CbM.

Nu'a edlecluled CIJIIPII8 appMr8JICI!S
ue: Tu81a.Y, Oet. 2, lealure on "BBiddbiam lllld the Modem World" ~!it­
ical acience c:laal). Rm. 24, 4242 Hidle
1M Campus, 11 a.m-; an .._......,e
In a history c:las on "~ ~
to UIOO," Rm. '7,Diofen41iif,l:SO P-"'·•
lllld im appearana! ln a pblloaopby
c:laaJ 011 "'Ddian ~." Rm. 24,
4242 Ridae 1M Campus, 2:30 pm.-

Adams-Named

Mn.

RDMma .J. Adams baa been -

._mted a.istant to the vice president for student alfaim. "-.
A member ol. tbe student a1fairll staff
olnoe ll1811, Mra. Adams replaces Lenora Cole, who l'lllipled September 1
to ' - ' e vice preilident for atudent
life at Ameriam Uniwni.ty, Washm,ton. D.C.
.
li. 1950 ·paduate or the Univemity
o1. l'ittobur11b. Mn. Adams previously
~ at :Ro8weU Park Memorial Institute, Bulralo.

t..!""'~to~p~
"': t':
Office.

Oil-Campus HOU&amp;lng

'lbe UIB Chapter or the Civil Service ~loy- Aaoociatiou baa awarded Biz acbolarsbipe, two or them to
employees lllld four to 80118 and daughlenl ol. employees.
Mra. June W. Boyle, a cashie&lt; ln
the Of6ce of StUdent "AQcounta, ·and
Mn. Kathleen B. Berchou, an account
clerk In the Ol6ce of the Vice PreSident fO&lt; Reaean:b, ead&gt; received a
acbolanhip cbed&lt; for $50.
Receiving $100 awards were: Joaephlne l'anowicz, a senior J.&gt;SYchology
and special education DliiJOr' at D'Youville, daughter of Stanley Panc&gt;Wicz. an empfoyee of the University
Pbysical Plant unit; Deanna Lee Full- .
e&lt;, a U/B senior pbysi!"'l education
major, daughter or Emmett- B. Fuller,
also or the Physical Plant unit; David
Calabotta, a freshman biology major
at LOYola College, Montreal, son
or Mn. Dolotes C. Calabotta, a senior
steuographer In the School of Dentistry; and Robert Sbeehe, an electrical ted&gt;nology student 11t Erie eom:
munity College, son of Howard ASbeehe, a laboratory mechanic In the
Department or Med&gt;anical Engineer-

OYERSEAS STUDY ADVISEMENT
The Oflice of Overseas Academic Pro·
hils announced that. beginning October 1,
Robert Moskowitz" will be avellable In 107
Townsend fo[ student advisement con ·
ceming overseas study. Interview hours
will be 2·5 p.m., Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday, and 9 a.m .oflOOn and 1·5 p.m.
on Friday. Mr. Moskowitz may be con·
tecl8d ot 83l-4942 durins theM hours.

The Per.mD8l Office ~tea- that U:.. following faculty
~

Bu&amp;lo: .

/

and DODstaff positioos are open at State UniVe&lt;sity at -

.

-·t

5,000 - 6,999
7,000- 8,999
9,000 - 10,999
11,000- 12,999
13,000- 14,999
15,000 - 16,999
17,000- 18,999
19,0QO -. l,l0,999
21,000- 22,999
23,000- 2.4,999
25,000 - ,26,999
27,000 - p,999
29,000 - 30,999
31,000 and over

ing.

grams, Council on International Studies,

Continuing
braries, $6,000;
·tiV\' Vice Pn!&amp;ident, S6,300; Vice
President for Amdemic Aftain.. SS.300; Vice President f« l"'lcclitiia
Planning, $1,500; Vice President- f«
Operations and Syatems, $16,500;
Faculty-Student Association, $3.000;
Vice President for Research, f1liO;
Vice President -for Student Allillra,
$4,700; Vice President for Univemity
Relations,. $1.,500; U/B FoundationAlumni Alfairs, $1,000; Nuclear Science an&lt;! Ted&gt;nology Facility, $500.

This is a GUIDE lor University civlns to rud1 OU&lt; UnlvenlfJ'o United Way
£001 or $1ZO,OOO. This cukle
tell ,.,.. mucll to live - no one can'
tell JOU !haL But It is • ...,..tlon of equitable cMns. We ' - It will be helpful
to ,.,.. conolderins ,.,.., contribution. - · no lea than ~ per pay
period on payroll deductions, which must be ca.....- in multipleS of ten.
'
CONTRIBUTION · PER PAY PERIOO
Annual Salary
Cum Laude Magna Cum Laude Summa Cum Laude
$ 3,000 - $ 4,999
$ .80
$ .90
$ 1.00

The presentations were made ' by
•U/B President Robert L. Ketter and
Chapter President Edward c. Dudek.

Job Openings
'-&lt;:biDJ

Report meetiDp on campus for
divisional leaders or their repreeentetives 8re &amp;,~ for 201 Hayes at 4
.- p.m. ""
r 11, 18, 25, and Novembei- 1.
"'lbe Univemity United Way Committee baa established a :!"JJ'!Sted
. guide for computing your Um~ersity
fair share gift. This is a guide for
University-giving to reach our - 1 of
$120,000," Dr. Rowland said. He also
pointed out that "the guide doesn't
tell anyone how mud&gt; to give - no
one can ilo thaL But it is a suggestion
of equitable giving. The Reporter is
publishing the guide in the """"' that
it 'will he helpful to the Uruve&lt;sity
.community." t-See box this page.)
, 'Those working closely with the
United Way agencies hsve again
-stressed "what yolir dollar does, when
you make a contribution to the United
Way!' For example, a weekly pledge
of 11¢ ( $4 per year) will buy a _personal visit by a represeotative of
Goodwill Industry to a lonely, severely handicapped person confined to his
or her home; 1.3t weekly _($7 pe&lt; yesr)

1.10
1.50
2.10

1.ZO
1.80

2.50

2.70
3.70
5.40
6.60
8.70
11.10
12.20
13-20 14.40
15.10
ZO.OO

1.40 '
2.00

2.30 .

2.20

3.50
4.50
6.30
7.2!J
10.70
11.80
12.90
14.00
15.00
15.30

2.90
4.00

6-10
6.!1\)

10.50
11.50 '
12.60
13.60
14.70

1!1.20
25.00

Weekly Communique--------( Continued from

ptllle

8, coL 4)

UNITED WAY DHIIIJS &amp; DEMONSTUIIONS•

N&lt;YriCE~

DuriDc U/B's United Way Week, October 1-5, United Way qencies will bold

HIGH. HOliDAY IIIYICU

-tiona include: the Red Croa, Monday,
OcL I, Center Lounp. Nortxm, 10 a.m.2 p.m.; the HearinB and Spe&lt;e/&amp; Center,
Tueeday, OcL 2. Faculty Club Blue
Room, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; the &amp;lua!ion

the Fillmore Roc.a, NortoD, on 'fhuroday, SePt. 27, at 10 a.m. and 7: 80_p.m.,
and on Friday, Ses&gt;l 28. at 10 a.m. Home
hc!spitality io available for holiday ....to
to students.,-,_ iDRJested are~
eel to call Hillel Hoaoe at 886-4640.

=~f~uswo~=J-=::

~r:"a:~~ill~:r ~
- ~.~:;:it"~~~~=
.
Norton, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; and Trawler'•
Aid, Friday, OcL 6, Cenjer LouDce. Norton. 10 .a.m.-2 p.m.
Alao OD Friday, diabetic detection teotillc and ~- acreeDinc will take
place in IDe Blue Roc.a of the Faculty

~o~:::l!.?'~c~~

"'*' to _pe..,... 21 yean ol.- or older;
patiala are "u bd to' skip hmch before

!:.~~~~~

u; yean or - or Older.
~ vo~".!:- will be~ by__.

ma::r

~

Cbria Brita, Gallely 219,
Norlioa, ~. OcL 1, 1imJaP&gt; Friday,
Oct. 12. ~ boaio: M~. w..m.cla:J - ~. 11 a.m.-6 P-m-; '1'115- - ;and
FridaY,
....._,
l-6 --" - . -

-.,_.

8-10

.

· lOll~ llw ~of

~-= 'lwrL.I[F
;;tJ=
woad.._..
~Y..r ef ~nl. •

_::.
...,_....
....
""'*""""

.
...,.._

~o:~;=....,
~- Oaa-

on~ •J!~~~~~

HIWl

ciWJ

a

Tbe Hillel Gmd Club wUJ bold..,"'*'
bouoe on Sunday, Sept. 80, at 7:80 P-DIin Hillel Roue,~ Blvd. AII.,..Suate otudeala and ·
faculty ....abera
are invited -to
Future actmtioo
of the """" wUJ b e IHDUSTIIIAL -

IBOC&amp;TIOOI

The Ileputmeat ol. laduotrial ~fn&gt;m the South C....-

nee..U.. bu -

pua to 4232 Ridp Lea, Rm. 29. Tbe
- telephone~ io 831-1166.
PAKING IENFOitCIMBn

=:.

Campus Seauity will beiln ita &amp;IUUIIII

enfon:ement

or ....,Jationo peJ"taininr to

~.·~r tt'

South
Studenla are roquind to po.rlo: in oludent lola and r-.lty and are requind to po.rlo: in the r-.lly lola. Si,m
at the etnmcoo to each lot dearly otat.

lotaaipmeat

IIWUIITII-IOSH

HASKAIWI-

Reform Jewiob Roob RMiwlaboemcea
~ atodoDia wUJ be bold at TaD-

"~

~

for

·

Drift, oa ~. 7,"...!Id:f11 a.m.
-rn--·
wiJl ...
• . .... the
Rldp LM boa- ,_ io iDionMI;

.~

C..:a-~~nt'j'~,_

there is ao......_

�&amp;armiDWAY-•

.

Kid-ott M.mn,; ~ HAll, 'loth
....... 8:30p.m.
-

~
...
-~ Slate, RotarY ~
~
TeDDis CowU, 4 p.m: •
'
·~

CBfiR SEMINAl•
O.rienlotion,-4238 RiClge Lea, ·Rm.
10,"7-9 p.m.

· u..,

.·

UNITED WAY WHit*

.•.r~~~·1!&amp;!1~c~~'H=
Library, 8 .m.
.
..
SCIHNING/DIKUSSION•

CIVIl----· .
-ICIINCI-·
~

r

in N-.al Wate-., Dr. -

:::.!.~oi~~·.l'i£~~

er, S p.m. Colfee at 2:.30 p.m.

Ene;:.. of C-tiw Ctu'1'011lo on Freezinl, Dr. Richiud 8_. Tankin, Deputmentof MecbaDical ~ring, Nortbweetem Ullivenity, 104 Parker, 4 p.m. RefreeluileDia_ ill 107 Parke&lt;_ at 3: 30 p.m.
INI8NA110MAL COfM NOla•

. ,_

EftryODO D invited to attend, 204

'fOWDOOad,

4 p.m.

CAC filM•

..

.

~~~"4-t;oi-!~\~~~~e(f~{Aftl

liom of Us ( 1934-35) , Pie in the Sky
(1934), China Striku Back' (1937),
Deadliiie /o1" Action. and UniUd Action
(1939) , Coolerence Theatre._ Norton, 8
p.m.
.
Presented by the Center for Mectia
Study.
- UUAI FilM••

The God/other (Coppola._l972r,Conference Theatre. Norton. check showcase

foT~A~~~~~e-Winner~ is
bsc!&lt;; 8ee

·

;!~""':.t \~ ~7~~!' ~ -

tbo Norton Hall Ticb&amp; Ollioe.
. Merian C. Cooper'a Cluaic atory of ·

~.- :-n.!a-:d!~ :s~vm.~~
~~!f..:=' acclaim

lllllliiAn01w fOU&lt; IWICINO•

A Miosing Ciwpter in the History of
U.S. Docununt4ry Film is the theme
of a three-day screening/ discussion ses. sioo led by Tom Brarulon, film historiao.
This evening's films include: Workera "'
tlu!

fiLMS•

it if you ha¥en't already.
_

The Blood of the Beasu (Franju, 1949)
and Therese (Franju, 1.962), 1.40 Capen,
9_-p.m. No ~n cbarp.
·

TUE~DAY-2

for

-

IaotractioD in- tr.ic stepo, 2 Diefen-

-

tlod.. &amp;-11 p.m.

--·

~Tsavtcl•

Hlllol ""'-· 40

,

e.p.,.

BMI;·

8 p.m.

TM Han/R Tiley
Come (Henzell,
.

~~~':.Jto~eck

sATURDAY ...:29

UUAI FRMS••

· -

The Mg(IU (Huston, 1961), . - , . .
MarilyD MoniOe and Cladt Gto6le, 140
Co~ 7 p.m.
.
- ',

.a-u.
1953)':'="
J:ri/;, '{J.~= ..k~
140 Copen, 9 p.m.

,.,.._....

~ ~·
Earl Jocbon, Jr. will read from bia

w~!ecl~:~ of Ger-

msnie and Sltmc.

·: ·

UNDID WAY WEB*

•1
•

FocrJty-SWdent &amp;outball Come"
per penon,
Hall, 8 p.m.

9-"rl'

IIUAa ......

. '

fe~~J~~~ -for lima

....

.
..,
Citizen K~ (W~ 1941),140 Oopen,
9 p.m. ~0 atbiliaoloo cha,p:

- WEDNEsDAY -3

¥bniaoioa

cbarp.

~

..

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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.

.

~uw

.

~a.,.P~

·scho91-0Pe1Js ·- - -

Orientation for the lorges\ ~n~* in · the h~ :ui t!)e · U/11.

Law 5chc!ol bopn_'T.-ay_in John L'!f1! -O'Bri~n ·EioU on the ..Aql~
l:atnp,us-wlthc outs ·in the claos.-ns. But-lhlf didn't' ·to
bot~~&amp; the group nwc1e 'them- at home" on the ca~. 'tienid
' ft~ of the first floor lecture halls. "tlr. Richllrd D. Schwartz, . , _
of the Faculty of Law and )u~. addressed the 315 freshmen
· at mld-momlng T.,..S.y following culded tours of the building. · Orienta·
lkin continued a studoni activities fair on WedMSilay and daaH
• ,for ali 69o Law School students be&amp;ln tnclay.

Senate -Confirms Health Education School
Scboo·f·or

The establislmient of4he
at tbis &lt;t.i.M: .IIIUDei.Y. the ,appqintHllalth, Ed~~Ct~ctiori. within Health Sci~t of ·the .new -vi.oe president for
ences,-waa 11f&gt;DIIrmed ·by the F,aculty
'-lth affairs; the time constraints of
Senate :I'ue9day in a low-key aession
the normal cycle of funding within
bighligbted by President Robert' Ketthe 'State which.
·
budget .matfer's review of the baclqp-ound of his
ters to be Te!IOI:f"i: July 1 and
decision to establisb the new &amp;boql
budgetary needs' to be anticipated-1'h ,;.
..:'lbe.CIIlly dlawliiock, be said, is ~'that
~ 14- priw to . faculty action.
. to. 2__years in advan&lt;ie; _and_ his respon•
sibili
thin the affect
it's. fartbar aw.a,y .than we~d like.". • •
"1-do
feel . ~
•." · t .•&gt;. =
ty to ...,..~
ect____..._~,
,.,.,.,
_ t y Senate · ed PJ"OIIliiiDS.
A largj!W1number of sluN- faCilities for theatre are p8it "' 18
' · a ...,.._y
~44
:body that , dents and some "30 plus" 'faculty have
of the North Cam.{&gt;ua plan, but consbould gm, ~ ... 'theee'- Diatler&amp;," : been "' "~'-"
Ke
stmction of tbeae J8 -not ~ to
lWu. ~~that-'...be - ~
~,..-J"indi~"-~rthaaty~- now, ~
be ~ until die ·
· lion of
haol~~~~ them.· .theJ~-J;oo-.piogram""',;;;'in a :~==- -.
the lease beina aeaotiai.td~e.r s8id.
.,...,......
-......,
tinn m ~--' to recnn
_ 'fmeri
_ • 'l .
ate -:aud a '" . . . positioil •oii t:bl! .
'""~u
. The Courtyard n-tre is owned
School but. Ilia( '
t time oonstraiilts
Sinoe est&amp;b~t of'
School,
by_ Roderick G. Grllllo. 'lbe Coliri.er
hac! made _it ...,:'ey flit bim to take · -~ said,.the new vice president for .
i:eported that*"" annual COiit Of leu-'
...,qoo
•
•
·•
_·
~
,_
,
.·
:
,
..
_
·
.
•.health
alfllirs·has
been
charsedJrith
inl the theatre Will be in the . Deish_ Ketler naJlell that ·a SCbool d
• two major _...mruties in reprd to .
borbood Qf $24,000. • '
.

.........__6,

the

~- oUT

•

;.

' Health: Bducation _,... .iist,1 ! . _ t
ben&gt; ..... anolber name,:'iJl-.:a.19k'
ccinsultanta' ~
;#&gt; ll)e. late 'Presi-

Tha entlrw serieS of Sloe llaothollen Quartat Cycle..concai1S 6elng _.nted !IV !be·' ·
c-.nd Stri111 Quattat 11 sold-out. the

Music Depo-nt repoi1S. n-o untoetlendln -will-tho~ntty to - · tbe - I t S - · "" WBI'O-

~2~
. t

.

-Martin

;and:

....,...

----

ltU&gt;tlo~; ·_;:a="!":!~~':, \t!
· W - au-

tboriJid: such · a ll!lbOol iii 1.968. He:

• alao' ciled _!i;.aePes d~ ~ :--.

ll!"L'!. _

-

.

.

·

8

·~ ~
Mark Sbechner then~ the "by- Ia......, .. question that bad been ' implii:itin the previous argumenl "What
IIII!Dibers of the Senate felt to be at
~" Sbeclmer said "

was a

~ to the ~tiws of the

Fol~Qwing~Ketter's~ _·, faculty 1llllls wbat we thought to

be

Dr. Cbarles ~describod the
the Bylawa." ~the Sen- ,
~ of .his
in lha Health
ata to cimlnn the
•
t of the ·
hocUy tho Bulfllo
last )'Mr.
• •
Sdencea. who, at
JeqiiM of the · School.~ to the Bylaws wbich
s.brwo' lloalliu and lbrs tho Cincln_ ~- ....._ tOr
Senate, .had
an ezto(nllive ..,_
'dwp the Faculty Senate with the
Mil llwor-8, ocheduled for tho 'Hoi~
•
port .., ·the
wbich .,.. sub._u,ruty ol initia!Jng or oon&amp;rm~n.JIInb; Clloe~ -&lt;••·
, ..• .,,.•., T!&gt;!!,Pi!ld:leat.qllared, thlee- -\'&lt;'- - ~toibe .
oUiealtbSeii!R4 ,., .q: tlie ••taliJW.ment or dialolu\iali
FM. Allo IOid oui II tonllht'o•-.strip

Ollllllellllll1ioas from th8. Senate and

othel' ~ groups made.....,. the

t.c.... · -

r..

!""':...

~~t:i to_...
!~
tinllity. ahd -·-"ty"''l-.;;:-....&lt;:: and

lishment

oi the new ScboOI was announced.
· · "'- anelli indica·ted that the matter
• ""
was of more than ''puochial interest,"
and said, "the issue is oot whether
tbeie sbould or sbould not be a &amp;boo! ·
of Health Education but only thal in
creating t&amp; School lull OODIIIlltation
was not achieved."
'
A resolution
'
m·~ by ' ..._ __
•neui, calUDg "upon the Sensta and
its
Executive Committee to "take all possible measures tO vo'd rec:ulrenCe of
~--'- an a....,on;' anda to' ..___._: ~•--'A""""
..~
~
tion of the Bylaws on ·the issUe of
creation of acallemic units,~ curled.

· ··~. '"'""-

' .' .' · ' · •

· .r ...,,

_..,,..._to

s

eiilil[ll6llh -.:~.:·" -~ 'thiO:*IJii*.., ...__. \ .· ~--.:,. -··J/Ooir''t.~&lt;

• ~

,

�..........
..r:..r.:u::.-=:
"... .=. . . .
=-:r
=.
=
(Caool6aooit ;,_ ,.,. '· ""'" 4)

af aD .......... "illiiL•

.,...'The- liPl
..til

tbd~

-~·-

8IJiliG'Nd tbe BylaWa
CCIUIIIIil af SUNY bu ad-

~

. af ..tala --llilled
811d 'jbat, ln .

... .aws-;,":':'~

~ tllal .he beljewd • ,.,.
a1ty abould11awe. by
111e
lillY ·in -ttea lbat ...
but
that "at liD8 aDd 1lildar time CIJII-

.-

rar,

areateat

...-me

atmlnlll" adioll8 -.Jd have to be

~ =-~-==~:::.

-

'

l1DiYaraity AldliYiat 8balliiie Fin-

........ obaai'wd that. ..._....._. 1be
bisiiOiy af tbe

s...ate. ib.e--.;;·been

;a==1~$~
-Acupu
llllllle8led.
"'s DOt ...:::;:

tioa, abe

:r.:::=sto~tyoot·ilo_

The~

.

.

ies.Sia·tecl

-Foe M~eting. 0tqentai .AlurQni

Two New 'York City cliniCal aCienFut:ure ' D;...,tion of .tbe De.ntal- ·
tists l"iU.present one of llle first 4ocu· · . SdlP&lt;ll.':
}Vijliam · F - .lllld
• meilted studies Of'"tbe use of, a
&gt;' • SteVen. L. -~rta, president &gt;Of ~
bJ!8 anesthesia in ro""t..i P:~~ ·"";· l~ajai--SiuilentS' Asso!;iatioo, will'cbailman of tbe Senate's Committee
prQcedwes at Uie 71st Ann.W::miieWig
· r.!atured~" ~
.
. :..'T
on tbe Co1Jeaes. Reicbert&amp;IIIIOUDiled a
CJ!. tbe UlB. Dental Alumni Associa·
.• At tbe Wedneiid&amp;y'·Imiclie60:. (ooip&amp;De) of five. eUemal ~ (aee:
lion, Moi&gt;doly-Weiloesday October 1·
holl
ill be tbeto · 0 f p ·ui.MoG ·
ll!!ll8l'&amp;te l!fmy, .psae 6) who Will visit • 3 at tbe~tler llilton ' •
• . • ~w 8
l!'c
a
. !'!"'•
. Dentis
' will
""
~ football
ocner analyst.
u1falo f!ill turiled televJBl&lt;iil
the -~·
_.... at· least .._._
•w- to ~~
~
. .'"A
. cu
m
... """"
"'J .
.
""
an edeiisive evaluation af tbe
·•
. the feature or the final aftemOIID aes- o•L ~
. will
-: · · •
~ ..~- ~
winlitY'S·CcitleiPMe.S~ ~last
,sion of tbe meeting ( WednesdaY. 2-5
~ . """'S~!SSIC&gt;Il!'
range uuw ~ ..,..~
yeiu' In aatil!i)iation 'Of' tbe ~iraticin
; pm.). Presenting the studies ;\1) be ' . tical PrOsthetic . T!eatment . Of . A&lt;!cause- of the ' center's elpauded root ·tfte •"pl:e8ojnt •Colleti8t.t ~
:Maffiii'Rubm;· D:D~S:;=aBs6ciate 'pro- ~- · .· ~··Ben_tai ·PJSeaSe" ~van- 8JillDL ''Tbe ,renovation· will
Each member of tbe panel will visit
fessor, Depm:tment of'" Community
ous discussi.""'! of&gt; acn-i~ ·to: ~ · ·a· llette"r · teacbing;leaming situatipn,
tbe campus for ..., initial period of
Heslth.and PreVentiYI! Den~,c.New·.
~ded Duties of. Ben@. AiWiiatani! J;&gt;rovide """physical atmosphere
1es." .
. ·. . .. . ·
. · " condqcive .to educational atlainmeiit,"
three clay&amp;;. Reicbert said. Tiley will · ; York Uriiv~ty CoUege of Dentistry;
later return coUectiw.ly, at whiCh time
and Matthew Lee, MD associate
For dentists arnYIDg m Buffalo Sun- -·· Ms. U11ge10 said..._ ..
• ~
. tliey iriJ! prepare a dnift or tbei&lt;·find:prof-.. of· ~~;~'" medicine;
day; September 30, Dean F~and
· The .E QC was· formed t.JirOugb ,tpe
inf!!- '""'t document will be public,
NeW" Yoik'UriiVeis'ity' Scl:)ool of Medtlie ~tal School faculty W!ll· bilet
~ : *'tli9' U)!B- ~tiYe' Colo
said ReiObert. Nothing in • tbe Com- .
icine. Dr. Rubin bas 100 patients .Parmc;eption and tour of the ~roved ~-~ Center IUid tbe .State Uliiyenuty ·
mittee!s_. ~ .~!". -~. ; ~~
t,i:patipgiriDrtwoJlCU '
of
deJ!tslcfinic_m.~J.WI.fmm5-8 u~een · in .
te
~:!?'' •: A : . ·'-' - • &lt;~P K I' ' · ·l ••. ~ .
•
-.J.ll. .
~:Ai .u;..,~~~~~~~ua~,~ ,!I'eum;,.~,
tf!r .
·,
.._~
s t• ..
ner.~lfe~:tbeii!l&gt;-~ · l'li'ml
·
~.J?
~ltee'MJi~~/~~.ii
medieaf'.'l¥:'
· -·~
u(il003J ~gnwitlt·-...........19Ci8, . - ~ &lt;ll;&lt;fibihoy\di
~
tbe
~d ~ ~mett/ ~ ~~ "!s·~!~~"""! i.n.P,-"1'·. · i~: i~~r~~~ um'!!L- .••):- i· , :;.. ~~ •cm'!J!l]'...: :.cQ_Q•.
·.. :::"{~t'~~.that•ta~u~~~~~~ . An~~~o'f~s -;;.g iOnr. Frink 6raZiano; president
·· ~ " '
. Beceniber 19 is tbe date, Reichert .
·or the nanta1 Alwnili Associlition. .
.
11rogram_ will be
said, by wbicb be intends to deliver
on Openfl)jl day dunng which a f!IIWD :
Tbe ~ meeting will "be
~
of. alumru, ~ty.-""'! one - sltident
in .eonjunction..,witli tbe· Eigb.tlr Dilli.e!:~;;! ~i: ~~~
11 report-frol!l tbe CoUeg!!S Committee
m'to tlie: IiruiilS ·of the 'SeDate ·Exeru-' ,- wllll&gt;!""!'n£ their el&lt;J!"~ and Qb. .
trict and tli'a·Erie County" Dental sodent 1\f a-rt; ii M:~erson, "·• tiv_e eo"!""·~-.
·
,
servations on thj1
. an_d_
cieties and the ~
- I of :Qentistry. _ ,
----"' actiDg"
~ presiden't
-J
"""
......,
_., top1c, ·Progress
.
......,_.
ofRicbmOnd
,._
'lhl Senate tben '-rd 1111 inf0111181
p....,_ repcirt from Joaathan Reld&gt;ert. wbo SIICI-'ecl Jolulc Halstead as

.o..m

facilit,te

a

.

. '-"''?.ti.:i:':he""' ...

=

,.nit'i:..t:fiDJ;·

::a.

":ii'

bo!Jy

an_artem?OD. ~ii-

Toustet Named· · ~-

beiJ. •

··

been

~~~an
- ~~~iial~;~.tate· Fo
. rmal OrganizatioliPiahned-for . ~. ~~~of~eityUniversity.ot.Ne-;v
""""""" ~~
pTouster
rcreviously provost .,";w
~:ti~:
~
Ji.~~~rrnia
lntern·
a
ticlnal
Studies
Consortium.~
·
·
~~~tA~~t'.'~~
abd fboee .on campus who have bei!h
,
.• .
.
•·
,
and HarvUd Law, _T&lt;inster him held
WSB

uuucWKUU

/
Formal organ.ization of .a Western · -meetings. of 'tibrsrY ~ {in·Oo(acWty .alJPOinlll&gt;eDia-.inc:e 1965. Prior
SUNY(United Chapter PreSident \ N&lt;tW York Consortium for Intema- .. oj)e~lil"'· '!'ith ~ w.,-~York
to_Jb!it,--be.-lliiiiRI!ell;&gt;in..tli&amp;il!"iWI!e
Constantine Yerai:aris revealed at this
tional• Frograms, a regional •council
~ pj
ltbe ~ &lt;if. law iilfi*..Jl.aH CitY... o
~that, 88 of _~&lt;&gt;JK!aY. SUNY/ftoor~alel'Jl8~ip'!8J:;~._.
r
.li,
~
_
~tsb
·
.
::,..~J~.
U
ili
~
:•.~
. ":':.~
. .....~~bir.:,'!!f!! m:t-'~
·~t
U:ruted l!ad. a new acting executive
!"' . maJor. 00 ~·-.-.:-;~;o a m~..,..
W
~"""!'- ,'!t·
.. ,!" ...., .....,.......,,~,... ,..,..,......,... "'
director m Fled Lambert, "on Joan"
o1. .representatives of tfie p\lhlic ·and
!i!i
haseo[ ~pro
.BIIVlSlODS .
lQ--10~ ~ m'' u:
for several months from SUNY/Uriitprivate institutions oOOeemed schedersitr Center will ·pliiy
!"'tipn, IDediciDe, ·psycloology and poluled for lWsazy Hill CoUege;· Satur.' - ali excej&gt;tiowil role m.any &amp;eqJlisftions
•cy. science: In 1969, be ~ased's State af61iate NYSUT. In additiqo, t*o fulltime Jegai ~ and
day, September 22. •
- •
•
cprogram." ..
.~ .. . .
• .:· "!slant' to Me~ witb,
illtwo experts in arbitration have joined
T!:&gt;e proposed Consottitim .is~a reO~r -:agenda •!emS· for Sliturday's
•.t!esJor academic pll,mning, reorpnizatbe staff. in "!' effort, '(ersa":is -said,
suit of an. init.ial•.conference &amp;eld a t
meeting mc!~de addresses by Dr. Ivan
. lion !"'d devj!lopmenL Before c:oming -srd resolvuur tbe c:urrent unpru;se
•· Uf B JSSt spring Ullder ii grant• from
Pu~ director- of Overseas .Aai·-' 19 . C•ty College, be - t -two years
. on wage negotiations.
~
· • • tbe· SUNY Faculty Sepate: The 'grimt,
demlC Programs, State ..University of' • 88 a profeslior or 'law and social' sci• Robert Fisk would be available on
to Dr. Howard .Bengbusch or Buffalo
~ew ~ork, and Dr. Warfl MorehQuse, · -'l"""S at tbe State University's expericampus to receive any inputs Oll-tbe:
' Sta_fl!; was .provided f.or the ."inveStrduector,.Center for'lnteinational PromentaJ coUege at Old Westbwtv.
·new contract, -Yerscaris adviSed
.. · gation-of possible areaS of cooperation
, grams and St,udies, New York State
The only_ ·upper divisiOn coUege in
.
·
•
in intematiOOal Studies witbih SUNY.
Edu"!'tion ~partmen~ and three
the City Univ.ersity, RiduDond - Coi.
.
· . 88 well 88 with private IOC!ll oolleges."
working III!SSlO'!l'. ~
.·
lege, loaited on Staten Island~ was
An executive committee, ~ected- folDr. A.L.• MicliaeiS, director of U/ B's . founded in 1965. The college eDrolls
lowing the sprinl' conf!!rence, niet pver
Council on lntetil8.tion8.1 Siudi.S will
2,700 jlll!lors, seniors, and. graduate
Two Scl:)oo) or Dentistry facUlty will
the .,........,r to discuss ways and means •
le&amp;ll a sessjon ,.on "AudiO-VisuAvU- . students"" 32 major fields or .atudy
participate in tbe · 5th l:ntemational . -&lt;&gt;f "'!"J.ll!r&amp;_ti"!' and to d~ byla'!"":;Jor
brary" with ~tant assi&amp;tsnce from_ •
•
·
. Coofenmce on Endodontics at 'tbe
COIISlderation at _Saturdar 8 &amp;eSSlOJl. Mr. Peter Lux, director or library .
I
University ·or Penns lvania S&lt;;Jloof ·r
The By~ws WJU estsblish an annual
Cariisius, Dr. -Gerald' O'Gmiiy; diri!c~
.
u. .
Dental Medicine. ~elnh;A- a.; .~ ~~p fee of $:!00 ~,institution · tor ofo.tlie Instructional ColiUUimica..~:'"7 _
. an&lt;! limi~ ""!"'~P I!' ~....tu- •
tion • Genter, ~ Ut B,.. and Th: • Charles
U/ B President Robert .L.. Ketter
- !ember 21-24
· Dr Joseph Natiella,
· &amp;, • • • '. catio';'ai ·UlStitutions which 'have sub~ Olleni ·associate. vice . president,"\aca~d"Buffalo Attorney Alvin Glick were
f.....,;. of oral palhcilogt~ !!:~ &gt; stantial unde~gradua!e- o,~ professional
.delliic affairs, Bulfalo State.: _
iiamed to the BOara or TrUstees 'of'lbe
"discuss or" 011 ·~plantation o{
!:'~ 0 ~ mstn}ction. Each mem"Structure" for. the new CoDSOrtium : University at Buffalo Foundatipn,
Teeth," lllld Dr .tames G ttuso
r if!stitution · WJU have .01\8 repre-• . will proyid!fthe• roeu.· for 11 second
'Inc., at Wednssday's meeting. or tbe
sociate prof.....,.: or endod.::.tics ':lj ..;_ ·· ~tativ~ Oll tbe board or. directors
• worltinplelliDOD, to be chaired lJ;r. Dr; , S.~ ,'fellstees. .
. .· ·
be a "diacuasor" 011 "'The HesliD' Pro"!"hich will elect a non-salaried~D n.r-an of ·Canisii!s ~ .Df.;·Gar:Y
• .Gilpk, 'll ~r ·in 'the· firm of Falk,
..,. Following Endodontic ' ~I&gt; • live~ foUr- o_tbell! to _oer;v.e;.on ' llll
- Quel&gt;l, emcutivedirector,Colleileceri' · S1emer, Glick, Tuppen ana Maloney
menL" About 300 dentists from Eu~~~e.0 COilllDlSa
..··~ ·; • . . -·
• ter .of tbe:Fin_ger-I..ilklill, andl&gt;l'.·FraJi:
~"a .tlf~ !!Jumn!'S -&lt;JJ.A.'and LL.B.): ·
rope, Auatra1ia arrd .tbe U S '
•
"""" '! • • "'"!_, 0: 11' ~ for
ciYI': :Siemank~, -itirector Of East
"¥'. lll' a diteC!Or or tbe Community ·
COQPel:ation wllbin the area·of UlStruo- •
E
d SJa · s~·"'- p
·
Welfare Co·'--''
d f tbe
· " are ""
peeled to aUiend.
~ tional communicatl9D. · drafted by
AIUIIUii-i ~'tionanand ~
88
.tames A. Duran, Jr., or &lt;::anisius, is "'
The t:birtl w.orking . meeting oti
~ CoUnCil of D'YOuville CoUege.
- ~ ~ to.~receive. oonsideratioo
"Study Abroad" will be chaired b .;· 'His lennon tbe tJ/BF Board expires
- Dr. Willlam z;w. aasoeiilte ~ •• -::. ~..J!"~~~~a~
~- Donald Myers_. director, in~ .t~, 1976.
y,
~. Ollll 8UlJI!lY, 8cbool of "Oencala)og or audio-vlsllal ~- relional education, . .. fate College at
'oent Ketter was af&amp;l:inted to
~. h8s bemi appointeol a!' U n J · · Iated to international studii!o, a · re~
~~n; a:~~ a·:;::n:-....la ~~the
chairman of that department,_tllrougb
gioba) delivery· system, various conand Sister Marsareflrr, dean, ~
· FouncQtion . Board to its full compleJuly 30, 1974.
· · tractual ~-~- a~ d regular
Hill as consultants.
ment of 25 members.
·
uploring alternatives.·'

E
.. l i l i

..

u

At Denta.l Meeting . -. .

_.New.. 18f Tru
.
_ .stees . -

· A .
Zi ter cttng. ·, .

s::;'.:S:.,,

as -

J'Jt:'

:::...W'"';i,;. rosram;

.

IDI!Dlbelf':r

�.'

�-. .
•

- Sad&gt; ~ of 4ill&gt;lay of fire..

:r~..~=~'==
~ct-~
dllcs invbl.wd. If a-Mum !I'

dlaeiii!Ned ... tlllir

- ::::""'Jn.
'!:'.Lteballnotified
make the
. veatiption upcm
!bat
beiJig

:' cllacberae of &amp;rearms baa taken
place.

•

- .

-

.••

~

.. tholoulb. •·
hluJsthoe jnveatiplion of tbe c:lreWDIIQliOUildlnrr tbe
~

•0!1After

discha..m: '

. ~..t
~:a ::tailed wri:
ten report of tbe .-.Its of bia iil·

free fire

ting on

. Stage

sbootirig

.!=:

veeQp\ion to the Director.' 'lbla ,. :=..::::~).time
limit 10 silconda. . •
. • .
ROOt shall also contain tbe ~­
- E. ScOring on the N.R.A.' B-3 target
tioall anil coaclusions of the ollaer m
command as to wbetber the dischaJ:8e . will be accomplishi!d by COUll~ _all
was justified lll)d in a.ccordance With
hits on tbe tenet. All &amp;hots 11111"""8
, thi!j order, with any """""""'~ rec:om·
the target or Prlnlinl outside "' tbe
ineildatiens.
.,_
scoring riiiRB will ~ ~ as ."0"

Part n··;.
Firearms Regulations ~-·
·~

.01
..
The policy of this Departmen~ JS

that members•shall, Without exceptiO!\,
exhaust-every other reasonable means
ol ai!Prehension before resorting to tbe
uae of any fireanns.

.02_ru;

officer of. this Depm:tment shall

ootberd~eooriD¥myfireanns

in the performance of his police' dutieoi,
except under the following circumstances and after all other mee.ns-hav~
faileil:' v ••
.
a. In the necessary defense from
death or serious injury of another
~ attaCked;
,
.
. b. In the nec:esoa/-Y. -defenae of hunself from death or serious injury when

points. Hits touching l!llCiftDII 'tli!IIB
- ,-l~The Director shall submit tbe ofwill 'assuine tbe n!'Xt bigbe&lt; pmnt
• ficer'tl report and tbe report of· ~ •
oilly. :All 'llirleta will be~~ shilt cominander's investifatioa'of """';'
incident to lhe Univerfllty , ~ty ;
Review Board; which shall
o~ :. ·· -ri(!!it hinld ci&gt;Jiier ~~~e~:
A. n&gt;e Director of Security or his •
will be' aooeptali for
~g.
F. All qualifying officera uamg Z:'·
designated representative.
.
3" barreled or BDub nose revolvers·will
~ B. -Representative of the Fa,.Wty
indicate· """"' on their targets before
' &amp;Mta.
• Go
sub'mitting same for aoceptance by the
C. Representatives of Student
vSupervisory Officer. ~
emments.
. .•
D . .&amp;presentative ~ tbe Stair Sen~
· G. '!'he word "unsupporletf" used in
ate.
. .
.
, .
- the foregoing oon- a h a Jt· be deE. Representative of the University
scribeil 118 holding" the weapon out.streq:hed, in one hand the shooter
A=~:~niversity Assembly has
standing upright; the SbOOtar's body
ooen formed and is operating, reprenot touching, leaning against. or l;!!IYseniati""'i·in cetegories B, C, D .above
in~ 'ui&gt;on any 'llOiid;o!&gt;~ fOl'-support.
may be replaoad 'by representatives of
H. The distance (from stance to
the Assembly.
.
target } is fiftY. _f50).1'l"t ~or a!! qua!ij
.11
. . -.Re .
-~ ·..nn! :. fiClltioY. ~P!-';~"" ~).!' ,~,]!ll] :

at~~; effect

susPect.

an arrest ol a felony
when other means have failid,

when:
1. Tbe crime for which tbe arrest
is sought involved conduct including
the use and/or threatened use of deadly force; and
2. There is a substantial risk !Pat
'the person whose arrest is oought; will
cause death or serious bodily harm il
_ his apprehension is delayed;
d. To kill a dangerous animal, or a
seriously injured imimal . for whi£)1
humanity 1\'0uld require its removal
from further suffering, if other disposition· is impractical or impossible.
.03

.Fireanns shall not be discharged
under the folloWing ciroumstance&lt;l:
a. as a w~; and '
h. at fteeing 'Jlersons or vehicles:
.04

An officer shall file a ·written report
through his offirer in co~d to the
Director immediately (ollowmg the
loss of a police firearm, and shalf list
a complete description, including the
serial number. A full Cletailed report
·concerning the loss, including theft
of ·a police · firearm, ·shall include all
the facts. surrounding the loss.
.05

. •

'J'h~~ of~~n.R.ii&amp;':.
~.'!1- qf' ci'in\ihal CoUrts :tO •I"'!Ir'evi"'

a. DWWon ol u........
. , . .....,_, SW. Um-wtr 01 -..:

. . . n-.4• . by

rn .,

ar~~t.Jo, ~

, ... sc.,

~

II.Y. J42!4 • .BiitorW r~~ac- -~· ­
._..2U,250 .........,_.A._~
:un~

........

~!db« .

.4. lt'&amp;STIZr ROWLA.IID

. ,._.,..,_

--·-------- -aoaaar r. MAIU.IlrT
-"'-~

-

-

P.&amp;I'IIKU

... C£0(1ftD

•

.,.UU. alaDauuN

. . . , . . N P ! U P f t J I.

-

/ L-----------~--~~-w

be~~, ; a\o-1!&gt;.~...\' .~Jl911!' -•
( 211 ft;et. ........... 1·· 1 ",.. . ... . : .:.•• :~;; :l,t'l

I. The officer 'Will ·qualify at an apdence, review the case and w.ill ·recpropiiataly sanctioned 'firt&gt;arms range.
ollllDOnd io' tlie President :.SI!PJ:OPriata
J . If (or 8ny reason an ·o ffioei does
action with respect to the oflicl!r in· not Qualify, said matter will be re"olved in the incident. Possible recviewed by a ~ed arms instructor,
ommendations include:
Officer-and the officer's Shift
A. That the action of the officer • · Training
Commander. Corrective training ~
was justifioo under the circumatanoes,
urea
Will
be implemented if tbe
and in' compliance with tliis orde.J:.
cumstances warrant same. ~
B. That the ,action was 1,1Djustified •
'K.
A
maximumscore of 300 is posalld oot in compliance, and on what
sible.; ll a licore of 298 is ob~,
tbed~twloooorwd~r
o1 fillding B .• tlie Board
with a day off wilh pay. A minimum
shall recommend disciplinary action
score of 25 per cent higher than re·according to the seriouaneoa 6f the
quired
hy local municipal ageaciea is
infraction and the spe&lt;:ific disciplinary
needed to qualify.
• .• :
. . . ..
actions available to the University. In
'
·
·
' An ,.._...;iioDal ~oii: of
particular, the offire• Will be immedi- •.
J~~
"~
-the ac;tu8l :.
atel)" telleved of the ~ponsibilitY ·of ..
canyjng ~ weapon.
-1
\
• , .. I
• .,•;
'i6i,f.qlau::·

=·

.gmc."fri: .,;..

t

.12-· . .

.

J •

•

.~··

•

(. •

·No weapons, privately .owned or bbr: ·
rowed, not provided ' by and . msued
through the Office of Campus Security,
shall be. carried by any Campus Security Officer.
·

' ~ armed oimpus' 8ecur;ty Of- .
liners shall complete monthly qualification with the departxpent issued
service revolver. 150. rounds of .38 Spl.
practice ammunition will be issued
each month for purpose &lt;&gt;f such qual~
_
ification.

1

Whenever an officer discharges or ·
~4
.
displays hi!j firelirm either (ar acciA. All ar{ned Campus Security Ofdentally or (b ). in the per:(brman!"'.of
ficers . are required to shoot weekly
police duty; he shall verballt notify . 30 rounds in practice, gjving a total
his supervisor . as soon as
and
of one hundred twenty (i20) practice
circumstances pennit, but in no ev~t
· rounds per month. In addition to the ,
later_than the oonclusion ·of _his tDUr
weekly firing ot thirty practice rounds, •
of duty. n an officer in ·c:onunand iS
such ollillers must qualify_ once I!"•
oot ,on duty at. the time, tJ;&gt;e officer . month with an additional thirtY row\cls
- shall verbally ootify the on-coming
fired ii\ the departmental iSsUe weapofficer in cotnmand. ,..
bn. In qualifybig once per month,
each officer muat have his supervisor,
·~
or Ill) officer-of ~isory rank, presThe offirer who discharges .v disent to witneM ·!lie 'QUallllcation sc:ore.
pWy&amp; his, firearm shall. file a fuJ! deB. All quaJjfying tai-pbi will be
tailed written ~ of the IDcideilt
siped by$ the. supervisory officer witthrougli the ollaer in ClQIIIIIIBDd to tbe
DeMing and turned over to t!ie lnlil1in'g ·
' Director with • azbaa Ciopy of tbe
report 'tor tbe ollloer'a o11aer iii camfqr: entey on the- ofllcer'• ~Y •
IIWid. Thill report shall be completed'
C. To obtain" • the . - r y 150 ·
....t delivered ... the Director wilbin
rotmds, oontect tbe ablft ..............S
eilht (8) ..,.... - before llhiflll eod
and aafd -rounda will be II8UBd after •
if P-ible-: .
.
relun!ing _.,., ty cartridp braao 'from ,.Ill
,.
. . - .,
If the ollaer wbo ~ ... dia- ; laat ~""?i: ....t .,;g,w,. for.freeb

time

* " _.;.... . - - . l t r ....,.....: ,.,.,..,

~~~~~- ~f

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&lt;.. . . . : . .
~

. . , .Part. m:-

, ..,. • :. 1 • "';...

,.

.

.

• PWC Bulletin Article
. Re: NYPD
~;i;, fro:;. the I'WC iuUSI'!N, !'M
Polb We.,.,.. Cen•,
o1 Chilli el

roo.,

In~~
.l~J U72, LI-!U No. 2

The ..311 SP.eclal Carbtclp:
NYPD Adopts Bullet •

Ever since the early 11100!', ~
. .38
caitrid!re baa been 'Wiaety criticized . in gwi and police circles (or
its alleged ineffectivenesa. In ,aome
cases, the criticism has extended to
the firearm itself-the- .88 Spec:illl revolver. .
.
1
Following several
. years of li!Vlew
and testing, the New York City Police
Departroent.--tbe iargest in the 'coon·
try-baa elected to keep tbe .38 SpeciaJ cartridge and the revolver. 'l'IJe!r
old .38 Special cartridge, however, IS
bein_g modified with a custom made
senuwa!fout~ bullet of tbe "Keith"

Special

ty~ d..;isionjA&gt; keep the .a8-8pecial .

cartridge and tbe revolver, but niodify
~_!&amp;riridl". WB&amp; based upon a
"""'"';. jntemaJ study. During tbe
peat ......rat .}'ean. tbe Firearms Section of the ~t reviewed tbe
"entire aiiienaJ and conducted examinations, teats, and eYaluatioa&amp; .of all
WMPODfY. Baaed on tbia review, the
(~ontinuH 011 - · 1, col. I)

-

�-· ~,.g~,_

~2o, ·-nn.·&lt;-

s-~ Panel · SCi fi·VJtwed.

Naniid·lor Stilflr
~

,

vr-theC~·
•

J4Ue.up of the flve.lDBIIIIIer ftlriew -

.boald .Wbii:h will coaduct ·a ~
e9aluJd;loo of lbe Uni"VI!dlifcy'a Cd·
·Jem1a ~ i;l\isiall waaiiiiDowioed

.

By
PA'IRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN

~ :;i.S:U-aupty but

reHJioot_ll- atzunaer than

t!\\Bf==

aplD8t till! CIIDJiipp!eeDce of tbe
8IDiliDs l~eaN!Id Perfect,

, _

aDd the ¥~8llielaioe of a ,.,.,. .WbO ~
bj Keilll ~. actin~ Collegjate AF
make&amp;.': IUs . by_ ~tddng Y"'!"'
~ edmim,...,.ti¥e ollk:er, at the ·
converts• out .
pn!D!tille Chflstiaii
, ~.. areetin&amp;. September J-2.
.communities &amp;lid ~ them . tD
- On the )1111181. are: ·
1.... zealoUB ~18. Like .leaUB, Who
• Dr. Beajamin H. DeMOtt, EDa·
tauJbt whereVer •·~ mo~ ofUm
"' 1iah ~ Ambenlt Ccillep.
~laxin&amp; with frieDda than m some
- • ~ .M..,. Bill actiDI pres;. co..-:rated e4ifi9e, contanporary reeleD!, P'lt.ds World c;.u.;jje, Huntina·
_ligiaa is no ~ confiDed tD chun:h
IIDn, . _ Iallmd.
,
·
or temple. Relijious values llllrfacle

• 11iaillea Gould, classics pro'-»:,
in tJie _ . . , _.t oecular- pla""'';
Ylill! Univaait;x.
.
minlatem teDd obiu, nuns style ·baif,
• B.S. Ououc'eleek'wr, pbyaics pro- Goap8ls ,become roct ope1"88--&lt;1Ild" ulr_,. IUid
at dase WIISiem He-" " . timalely~ II:IOiiies. One is liable to
.sene tJnivenit;y; ·
' ·•
• I!IICOUDter religiOUs themes and values .
.~
~ Sem aar-lts, cibairman..of the. - almost an,Ywnere. Even, claims U/B's
PbiiOIDP,by Department at the Uni· ClareD&lt;:e Dye, in the; pages of .AsWI!Iity of l4azy)aud.
'
roUnding Scienc# Fiction.
•
.. T-tive plaDS ue for eac:h. .aan-. .
Dy"' Wbo ~a doctorate m the
ber of•the pcup tD sjlend pro or tble8
bist6rY of reHpons atFo~ da,ya on c8mpUa evaluatina tbe -col· :"-&lt;&gt;n the faculty of tbe Religious Stud·.
ieg011, beKiJming in late ~teliiber..or . , ies ~ in -DUS as well as co.· early OctOber. Dr. JOII&amp;tliail Reichert's
oqliJiati!lg Veterans A1faim at U / 8.
Facill(y Senate Collepi8 Committee
This ymr be is offering a COI!ftl!! in
. is in cbaqe of the review which is
"Reeigi~ Thought 1n Science FiC.. ,
ailled rot by the ProepecliJs l!"veminl ~ - tiOn" (RSP 287) .iJI which stlldepts J
the ~tal -~~~ : · wjll scrutiniie tlie :works of Arthur 9·
AlsO at l8st ~·'- ·
y ""'''t- . . €Iarke, .Frank Hemeiti' e.s. .J;ewis,
· ~ ·'
'
• · · .. • · · :
• ·'
Robert Heinlein, 1 J a' me.s ·Biish · and ·•.
lll:'i. CoU~te- ri&gt;i)~ ·v.., 141iel&gt; ol.ber ~ of·-:the sci fi.fraterlrity
led 'A.s:ad . ·c:..AJWrs.:vice ~t. fOI""'&lt;!Videnee -oheligious thouglit and
~ Gft&amp;itm's i&gt;MPoiial for: tu~, • feeling.
.
.11e¥elopmeilt of _the system (Reportu,
Stlor!M •t Eleht Hasn't ·Stopped
September 6) ..iS "insWiiciently com- Like many of his students, Dye be.petent in Ionn, tone and content -as
gan ·relldilig science fiction when he
to wamuit serious,delibersti..e actiqn.".:
was e i"g h t and bas never stopped.
• .8talled acfio'n on tbe appointAware of a burgeoning religious-strain
ment of"Dr. Curtis Bennett of Jntema:
in iOO genre, be found that students
tionill Studies as· actin&amp;' Assembl;v di:
sariietimes descn"bed their encounters
)lrith scienee.:ficti.on in terms . of a
rector, as pri&gt;poeed by tbe admiJlisUa.
lion, pending nomination of othl:r
religious tesponse: a Fordllam student,
candidates by the "individual 'ooUeges;
Jor~ examr!f, said his -first "religious .
and·· ~
. ·. ,
experience' .tOOk place when he ssw
• Aired a. response to ail Assembly . ~ubrick's · ~ versian of .2001: . A ·
letter "tO ·"Piesident- K-etter ronceming · Space Ody..ey. (Another· student in
Gelhii:UJIU; status as Assem!&gt;lY · f"W!: • !!"&gt;~. SIUJI!' c!ass, ·a professional." film
""''L 11! ,tbe absence of a ""directOr, m . . cntic, S!Ud he te)l asleep, Dye reCalls. . ) .
wlilifl ·tt-8\ier .said' '""'t. GeiJ!aU1n' bad ·
WJx!theo tha~t .student&gt; -r;enoed

a-n

hiil~'&lt;l~i~r':lll!ll·lilld''
n.;na ·
· te ·
- •
~ ~~ ~..:~~Pffl~l1.'1, ;,..·~· • " . ·. ~-

1
;~ ;··t:Mtt:'
a!·.'Jre,....~
D'oes--·osing.'D'r~; ,~~~sci~~~!~~~- ~ t.~·· ··

d '-

•·

•

· . - .

Make Ltfe 'Easy?~·•
·

gellllinp ·~mic· ...We 'or:,&amp;.m

tactbigli rot~abl ·d ·
at lea's~ Viewed~ :rience

!"' one

~WCI1

?f. C?ntemporary rehg-

~':n!!ti:d~~llllll.J.t~!ur;nerable

"College students today don't have"
garden-variety religious attitudes," be
says. uOne of the places they get them
is from science fiction.''
.
The In06t.._ overtly religious writer
to be introduced· to the cUiss is C.S.
"A."onl'h:e·.u~~~imslin"etti.~cke~ II!~
Lewis, currently in the -'thnies of a
"" ""' ~
major revival, according to Dye_ "In
"Spece ~ counlc ~ or c:ont.ct, NaN
the difference between "lught !:!&gt;is
The Space Trilogy, "Lewis is writiog
waYl -doctor," and "What_ can I 9o
a Christian apologetic ih the form. of
"grok"- to the language, is also on
man-made superhero, ·the thinking .ma·
fot you?" at ·
· In Clevel8pd,
scienoe fiction," )u• ss;vs; In"Perelimdra
chine. ' Unlike L e w i s, "who doesn't ..---Dye's reading list. Heinlein incora Jli:ilf- '~41"
'-.re coiJrte...· (Lewis's c.lictiona!Jzed 1 · t v
l f know much about science and doesn't
porates such ancient and enduring
ous "treatmiint •
'Ii't:' -at' liljli;IS, :: ..;,d oth~r books in ~~;.,ries"'!'fi':.; · care,".Ciarke .U.,technologically up-toreligious motifs as ritUal cannibalism
~Uriints: /(.
chimfi8t
British · writer takes as his ,.;,tral
into StrQnger in a&gt;Stronge Lrmd and
the-minute, even (as WeUs was before'
'Dr.' wile!! visiting
·
'They're . ~ what, is probably · the· basic .retakes his title itself from E:rodus. As
him) several minutes ahead. For
not sum "Whether .
~ extend
ligJous ""'tif: the great· struggle beto "grok," which began appearing on
ample, .Clarke ' boasts lhilt he "sold"
professional courtesy. (fiee treattrient)
tween good and evil" Lewis was never
walls some y e a r s ago and means,
the rights to ·.the telecommunication
or not,' be chuckles. · . • '
.shy abo u t introducing theological
roughly, to "experience something
satellite for sdmetlling like $50 by
''But !he 'Dr.' iitle can pose probthemes into fiction, ani!_. the Space·
mystically," it's a word that would not
describing the device in detail in a
lems. Flying as Jl 'Dr.; orie Ph.D. reTrilogy, as Dye notes, works familiar
be out of place in the vocabulary of
story published years l!efore the satports be haS· been asked. tD . render
theological ground, emerging as verSt. John of the Cross or the Yaqui
ellite· was .actually developed.
itable '"!llice cafechism · that includes
assistanoe nn two flights :when medical
c'But every now .and then," .., Dye . ' master Don Juan. Frank Herbe~ too,
emergencies -arose. A similar thijlg
2riginal sin, · sa1vs9on, =n~ersion,
treads familiar, albeit holy ground.
points ·out, "C~.¥ke slips intO religion
happeni,d •"J)) Jl Columbia University
death and resurrection.• I:bng "Out of
Dune. Dye Contends,. draws on the
-without knowing it.""Clark"e's religious
Ph.D. "OJlce when she was at the th"'"
print, Lewis's SCience-fiction titles
tradition practiced b_y St. Aothony end
preferences . rend to be more exotic
have J:lloenlly b·e en re-issued; Dye . than Lewis's. Born in A\JStralia, Clarke
- am. with .reservations as.a 'Dr.' The
other early Christian holy men · of
-speculates that the ren~wed-interest
title 'Dr.' often me an s businesses
going into the desert as a prelude to
has liveQ.,_for almost 20 years in Cey'sock it to you' becsuse they assume - in ~ msy result from his "reinattaining greater perfection.
lori, also the· h o.m e of Theravada
physicians are weU off, warns a Uniforcing the ideas of a lot of people ' ' Buddhisin, and it is the Wisdom of
Dye predicts that religiOus themes
versicy- of Massschusetts.dean.
nostalgic for a return· to the old-time
the East that enters Clarke's work
and imagery will contioue tD exert a
"A 'doctor's plea' for special treatreligion." ~
··
whenever he ·strays far from scientific
puU on the imaginations of
strong
ment sways some clubious,..pirline_and
Even an Atheist ._,
•
/
'humanism.
,...
\::
science fiotion fans, particularly in
phon e-&lt;:ampanjl employees. 'Y.ou'd
Unlike l:.el¥is, "who writes scienc:e
"As presented visually, ihe end 1&gt;f
light
of
the waning interest in stories
rather give "' to a liar than have a
fiction to. spread the Christian mesthe film .2001· is puie Thera v ad a
that depend too heavily on . the ·methalh on your collBCienc!!.,' says One..,
sage,". Arthui D. Clarke is ,ua pro..
Buddhism: ·the 1ast-s&amp;ne is a ·viswil
chanics of space flight &gt;Uld .sutvival.
fessed atheist who claims "his books
representation of Nirvana," the re-"Real-life gadgetry is now so ad·
have nothing to -do with religion/' . ligious historian says of the now clasvanced, that the writers are forced ,
says Dye. Clarke is the ·dean ef Britsic lilin's fjnal sequence of aging, death
'Paul ·Ruff.,; bas t.ee"n named' Hillel
to turn to human themes,", be silya
ish science fiction writers, ·andr the
and rebirth into-changelessness. '
Program Associate on a full-time basis
Religion is surel:)' one of the most
"Ciaike's early. Childhood's End
class is ~4U!I! • Ciarke's 2001 (ex- ·
to assist Rabbi JpStin Hofmann, Bulenduring of these. In spite of cynics,
haS a salvation··theme· through the
falo Hillel director,
meeting the • panded" from his short story, '-'The
scoffers,
and non-believ~rs, in spite of
Sen tiller.'), f&lt;hildhood'.s Endr and, a
spaceship, the
· iritetveiltiori of.an
needS of .Jewislnltudents at State_.UniFreud and William J - e..ery gen- t
new I!
k called RendezUOUB "With ~ earth grows into peace.n "lp Clarke's
versity COllege and at UfB. · ' . ·
eration
produces
new "seekem after tbe
RarntJ,
which;
bas
ap_..n
to
-date
latest. book the alien msc:hine, a ~
Mr. (Julfer studied •during_ the aca: ·
ancient g"9'f news.
, ·. •
ship ll@.in. has tbe ,holy name, Rams,
demic year J.968..69 .at the Hebrew · onlg. as a magazine aerial:Clarlie
.
e
schews
the
he&amp;vy-handed
notes
Dye;
who
argues
tluU
atheist"
Dye
offersw
simple
ezplanation for
Uni¥eraity in Jerusalem. He COlD"S to
' this latest eztraterrestial variation on
stuJf-tbe battle. of good and eviL f~
"' oo, GiarD lias abs6rbBd liwiY ·or
Buffalo fmoi tbe Propam in Human·
lhs
eternal
tbeme:
''People
seem to
'tiie
~igiouslcultui:at
valu•
of
his
~
typicaUy
writes
"about
istic Education at State Uni\'ersity at
islancl hoiJie.
.•
1.-1 i,oligion. When they turn olf to
the · pos~~u~~~of. ~
Albany where be was in..alved in
formal
religion,
they
tum
tD
«!~her
versus
tbe
mic:hine;
cu1iDihating
m
reseoudl IUid development in innova·
pl8oes tD fUlfW their religious 1-.18.~
R.obert Heinlein, the man who 8dd_ed
th8 ~tatioD-~twem man &amp;lid the
tive educatioD.
·
·
"P,eople with Ph.D.'s often tack 'Dr.'
on their names to make life easier;"
the W_pll Street Journal ~'revealed" to
very little surprise this Week.
Their report noted that:

'Dr

uses -

ex-

a

Hillei"Associate .

m

alien

oo

-

·'

.

�"·......... .......
~
::n::

1be

:aJjo

Crt -

....

:::!tt
~.::~
• fD . .... Us
1

punie1r iMIB 1IDique ID
-~
- - . ID
facui'Y-studimt
~tiaa-~ _relatilln•

an
abift,~· plaia~aa- ,.

'*.

ev:e-=t:L~ -

quogoe~
-l

-~la!!Jil!t Crt m.
-llttbe
llll8llbiliGD Crt

fmm.tbe
etudlmt

.......me
~ ""l'bba -plan In·
wl\'e8 lbe -t-nmae cl ~. Jt

~cl.nz,::::c;,..aiiDdeq.nuniqae
• •
---~
L ~~urea

qualilils iii each

A JrievaDoe All iadude but DOt
• be realri!*d .to ~ ~t. by an
llllllerliad..w ll&amp;udeat; "'
.
lbat t1ieoa me lleen 1D bim a

i)

ol ..-.ben; termed tbe Grievance
"·l'luleL The Faculty GrieVIIDCI! Po!&gt;l
"shall illcllide two
as
· appropriate of each department: one
faculty member 8JI!l 0 oe IIJidersraduate-student. Thi!ileparJmental-repr&amp;~ti.ves on the Fawlty~I

~lives

..= stuaan~

~ti~""r!cut~

&amp;tituencies in .an ~te demo'
cratic fashion . and in · DO case sball . •
those -......matives be appoint..d by
the de;;:!"....;......tal
administratiod /
,_._,....

· ;s·..-..~.., ~

icdnal~
lba Ri!iUJ8".!:»&gt;!.~.!Pl"'....,_~
- ~u ·el· a· .OlOlOl ;DiYiaicJD,
...

::· ; ,~ _IWiulty.- ~
Ls·:..:.:.,.:••..
~
~
·c~ .
I

~~o~~n=

.,..,. ~ ~"1'"·:..._·
.-

,., - ·
ly or

-

-

aCt or ailillitliJu,- wbicb ia oontraiy to
~ .policy or practice IJoverD·
il!r or afiei:dnl underpaduate studiil
11_ -·111.

..liilmbel$~ . n.o -UIIdan!r!lduate..Btl!ileii"' but sball not include represeni;t;vea- from the department in-

,.............,.
"' __,
any

-...J...- •

~·

-· ~

•

'

••

·

volved in the grievance as appropriate
. •
.
,
The members of theae Committees
sliall be · Belectect so that DO llll!lllbm
1 ed ·
.. , _ __.,
te

~- ~foi~=~ey~;i

=·~
.to.__..t.J:i....~
~_,~.!.~ ~~~~
or .~ ~~r;i~

cation and K
,
If a priiJcipel
to . a forinet president
tbi.s level fti:ml tbe
..,.,..., • ~ of J'b,Jail:al
Dr.
or if. he" Wishes
lllltive ol CincinDalt' cision (a) of t!&gt;e FacUlty, or ~
HiS :~lbe·s. ~ .~a ~
GrieviiiiCI\
ware f1!:&gt;a!
,pt,:11Jji&gt;oi8
. ulty

'

~was:!'

=

Ql'•"lO!oiL"- ·, :• ~·- ... ~~~
of~the~~ Coufer.":;·.,.; Pio-_
raouai ~tioll in Pbyaicaf Ed-~
ucation. 'llle JI!'OIDUI&gt;· that eoolved
filb- tlie conference bas been tile
model
___., for pb,ysical
·· • ,education
the_.,. ..pror..,_
___...

demic.. daYs cl ~. reaipliiioi cl tbe
Statement .ol ~ The IQIIlMl
sb_ol!l!l. be filed With 1be J)eU[.cf ~
Dmmon of Ut&gt;deqmduate ~
If _the Dean believ.
tbla s t a
- t of
desea
reaaonabt,
IIIounds
8

~"::¥~doubt_ cl ~"!&gt;"

;n'l"S P!,~! .li'VIl!W. l&gt;e.~ ,&lt;..,_.thin
~ a

Qru~

aild.~:.tl!i'.V!'i~~

~dt"~ ~ ,ten 1$..

siili.t=".!"'!~%.,red~"m - -

c days "1, recel\'1111 ~
appeal) 'I"""!"!". a Gnevance.Cominittee o! the DiY1SIOD Ill tl_ndel:sradllllte.
Studies to bola tbe bearinl!{a) ~
"'!'Y to..resolve the
dispute.
• • '
I • •' •
The Committee sball issue a writlen
...,.;.. •

sevenr1 military tectinical manUals, ·motion .,.....,,_ 11 n d ~ &amp;erYice
pbbUca~ln-lbe oporta and lltoeis
field. "One-of-"bis 11108*- noted publicationa ·is ~ and AdmiltU-

~ty ~-~ -VtratolW...off.,_~if._"!&lt;mt
· -~~~
tm.eft a_""'' .waa:u a one !""""'eduwas
used.

more·CQ!Ieaiate pbyajcal

..
~,-Departh
___ .~':'-)' ·• ::,;a~~~.._~-~~~~ ~ ~~Lita-!Jndjpp,
-~
. ~~pro:
(orAco~,_Pf!!J-:::.;
....-- .,..,____ - lhi displlte' "sball• bave'~~ ~( • -~~o:;r:tO~~~~
1be

~p!'!'lr~".:'~ · _~ ~=~~

lfiBplitif'..wii\'"~·r~-i!f

1

A~"at r!le ~ #-

!.-the~-:.~~
!!f-:'-~·~y~~
....~~
=:'~J..u~~ - ~~~~.;a::t
.
iloa!lld. atlilap$- te 411eet-m : CJQierll6.
~ .;?reptaeen.e:.;'iriapproprifor implementing the reoommfindei! .
and ' aerved..,
,.tiooaJ
the'

ate, the par1y sball -transmit, within
actions, if any, and tbe ~t
five academic days of the naming of
Chairman, Dean of the SChoOl, i{ -~
the Gommittee, a written .statement ot
propriate, · the~ .of the Division.
the """'""" or tbill ''CballeniJe for
of Undeqraliuate Studies and tbe
cause"'t;;"·i ,i; Chairman of the Faculty
President. ·
,'
.
or SChool Grievance-Pool wbo sbaiJ
(1) OOIIIP081TIONOPTBBOOrule on -its merits and either retain' or
-The Dean of-the Division ol Underreplace t he Committee .meniber .0
graduate Studies -aball ~ thio Division
of.Undergradu.ate
Stndiea
"challenged.EachCOmmitteeinember
oelecte({ sball-.bave -the' optiOn ot dis'
Q.lievance
Committee"ofJaui
IIII!UI6era
qualifyinll himself or herself frc!m' tbe
from the· Pool of memb8nl called lbe"
Committee by stiputating reasons why
Rioo"vim···on of Undezgraduate .Studies
~de COIIllllltal~-•~rovidedand
~
tl!is ~feels '!""'&gt;le to~~ un- - .........~ Di . . ot
'?!._
~ •u.~at
• &amp;qsuwa
biasedly-on the . gnevance.
... ~
YlSlon . ~~.or.--~
tiona.. _the~ bas .no such ; - (2) o,PBIIATINc PR!lCEDUBI!S' - The ·, Studies Pool-8ball include
~ttee, lbe wntti!n lllateioent of • Cbaiimitn of the Faculty or SchoO! • arate Faculty ~ools and".~!
~ ~and the P""JD!D8 fqr the : Grievance Pool aball give the 6riev- . where they emt. '11!8 Di~ .
gnevancethe~c::i=~~- &amp;nee Committee:copiea of the writ~ep · Un~dilate . Studoaa • G.-ance
man aba1J .rule on the case WithiD ~ . pievance as well"!' all documentation
~~n~ ~~~
academic
ot
tbe
·
dent. membeli lind in. no case aball
ance .., ~ "tn~the .rea&amp;;;is~ ~-receiw a copy of"this
.tbi.s 'COIIliDittee include representatives
on&lt;•&gt; whY this 18
-An ap.
file El¥:b Principal sball
· ·
from· the D&lt;!partment involved in th&lt;i
peal to. the laculi:J' or .school I~
· ;.., · of a11 infonuation ·P=~co~
,griTheevapce.n.""t ,;: , the ~-c,.:;.;:::-to:.,.... may be l"'!!.anlbe.Departz-.t Chair;
the Committee. The Committee sball
,... 01
cnncJ,_.. ,
·~
IDIDI'a decisio.n.
~
convene· reView (s) _ . . , to·allow
quest 'replacement of members •
B. Faculty or· ~hool _1:-eoel
both Principals u,;~tunity to
pointed to the, DMiicm of UndergradIf tbe student :wis'- to !1~-lbe
presen_! ~ {'OSition and-sball allciw
uate • Studies Grievance Comniittee ~tat~. the wntten state- . each Principal the right to QU!!8tion. shall be defined in the aame fashion
~~~:fiiJ! , the presentation - ('":ritten.or v~)
·as' fortheFacultYorScboolGriev&amp;nce-.
Chairman of the appropriate ~ty .
~ttee~~~~ - ~=.:::':r ~:'t r::nate ~
or Scbool l:lnd"!Jraduate GnevllJII)e
have the risbt to be present ·aria to
(2) _OP,EIIATING PIIOCIWOHEB • •'I_'be
P~l If tlie Chairman or. the ~ty
bave one· or two advisers present- at
operating procedures '!f. the :qiYl810D
or. _School .UnCiei'SiftdUalil G~.· ••all ,review&amp; In no case sball the· ad- ~.. of Un~te ~q.idiflll G"'!'vance
lj&gt;Ollinds _thet the elatement of l[lii!Y·
~ be an attoroey unless be is a
.~mnn~ ·.sliall be defined•,m· ,tbe
""?'· provul~ ftl880Diible "llfQI!Dd8 f9 , • member of the- f,ac;ulty not acting"'i n •· _,same faab!on ~ for lh'! ,F!!CU!ty or
.
11J18ve or .~ ~ ofi&gt;J&gt;.n.&lt;!f 1!-P·his _capacit)f as a member of lhti"bar. .
SCI:!!&gt;ol ~nevance ~ttee With an
• "Y P~~-........., boJ sbiill (WJ~
. Such review~ II!! conducted· in
approl'l1;'!te, SJibstituliO)! of rele1(ant
ace
~) &lt;Xltlvene a Grib&amp;Doe
confidence. ' · •
·
'
·tabels. •
,
· .·
·
. ~ttee to conduct a grimince ,reThe fuiat findings,~~~r: -1:.
,
.4,..
•
VH!W~a) ~ to .-.Iva, the -u~" .. and _ _ for the" recommendatioaa
..x.t·twalZ , y..ipoln _
certainty !" the dispu~. The """"1"tof tbe~ttee .(the Statement ol
" T~ C. Schwarz baS been llPI!&lt;Jint.&lt;
le!' '!'&gt;all I 8. u e a written ata6emi!nt
Decision) sball be tnnsmitted in writed dinictOr the- U/B f"'--,. Ol6ce,
Wlthin 10 _days .ar~ ~- meefin,l of _
. to the J!rinoipala with their """'P.ell"ective immedialely.-~
:
of suC1l
reoeipted
meiit .l'aB
bY'. J - H. Blacktiaa to the dispute the Ileparbiient
as well as to ·~ int:lmclu8la responhun~t, executive~ of tha DePartCbairman, Deati of Scbool ibPP.r&lt;JPri·
sible fpr impleinenting lbe ~ment of Mliaic:. Schwarz will. be ""
ate tbe n..o or the Divlaloo cil Un-·
ed actions, if any... the ~t
sponaible for lllllll8giniJ the more tban
~ Studl. and the Preoident.
Cl!ai~'Dean 01 Scbool ~it '!PPfO- 1 160 l1lll8kat pedonnancea preaeoted
· (1) oo...O...O.orTBB-OOMKrrrBB
priate),
Dean .o! the Ditbe~
each year.
~The Chainna of tbe Faeulty or
Undergraduate Studies and
!':"""" .
. Sch- .,.,.._ to U/B after aervScbool G .
Pool aliall select the
dent.
'
IIIII as~ Q[. the .Fine Arts Col.mFacul ~ GrieYanm CommitC. Dwuioi. of UndeTIJ'fldii/Jle Stud"Cit at the Umv.sity c1 ~
tee
llllinhera from a panel
U.. Level
.from
.to 1978.
· rMDlve ambbly with mutual repnl
the dispute inWived.
· ·~ It may'ile llll8ful for tbe stUdent to
'"' seek tbe llllllilltuice first ol•his Depilrtment Cbairmap. Director cl UnderJl8duate, S~ or~ of_Scbool
( ~ appropna~) as a ID8CI;iaiDr to
~ • m _ ~-bandedty: resoiVDIIJ tbe
. The .liluc!ent
•'
.(;l) • J&gt;OIIKAt. , IIIMEW'· '
~ leels that the. ~ _.., ·
req.- _. ..........

-~-~~·-·-·.
~

~th
!.'3.•~ .

·~ .nlcel~

~-

·'(:'J::!,:

·u...........:........

81111ies

~!L._"?'~tro;;,"p~~

::!

rl

::.=.u:.,.~caJ:!'f,.:.':t!::';:::

~four

~n

or

~t ~

~

1~

ted

Honor

Medicine
board of directors of Little ~
a-ball, Inc.
·
·
· Sumvora·cinclude bls Wife; Mary
Al!nes (Jeftp..,), and a
Mrs. L Richal'd Roes ol Corvallis, Oregon. A memorial service Was held Wed, .
W!llday at Eupne, OregoD.
r •.

d&amp;~ter,

•

·

"EdCha_ngeGran·t ·· '
ro·.Suppgrt 25 '&gt;-'.'
• ·. . ·: '.~ ~ .. '..;~.. .,:·l'.' ~, ·,· • :,.t ·~ ~ ·~
.,.. 'I'Ille· ~.ol• ~
aad 'E4ucatidDal ,/ldmfriiot.tbi"'hr;io•

=!.

rece:ived.·a"$327,600 1J1118t 'to lnlfil·•25.
paduate•stulienta in t h e -........~

::ra=~

quaint a c h o o I adminialzatqn aDd
teachem with tbe varioua ~ by
which chan&amp;al in educaliaaal ay8tema ·
maybe carried out.
·
•
'
Proiecl; direciors are Dr. R. Olivei
Gibeon, Cbait:man of the Jleparmalt
of ~tional· A"dminiatra~ - anoJ ~
Di. Freclarid&lt; 0. o..riq, pral-.r of
anthropolOIJY. The U/B~one
of21aucheducational
·
,
~ea7.lbe u~. Of6ce of
~ •.
Wayne D.--HIIIJhea,_ the Jlropam's
associate' director, ezplained that tbe
-local project 'jo tbe first to combine
the use of anthropological and "!PJ'·
ization develop~t teclmiqum. J.:lai&gt;ners fl!lt that the teclui.iqu8s used. by
anthropologists, wbo arrive in· unfam..
iliar places and muai obtain a n d -·information quickly, would also be
u 8 eJu 1 to IIIIUUigers of educatioual
chaniJe wbo might similarly come Into
an institution imd need the aame abiiity: to obtain and._ relevant elite.

~ues~~
~el:=~ u:ln
increase ;their ability to work elfectiw.
ly with peDIODIIel m educational tin
.
!ff,., participants 'i n the
•
wbo •range fiom elementary~
teacbem to co"- vice n...,uden... will
....,..,
r-..,
~ ~foe..
~:ti= as do

�~ --·

-

,(~,_~ .. -'4

-·

~;;r:=
..Ill&gt;'

....... . ~.
~ IUDiil. . .

- • ....,.

Tbe"·
- daiof or ·re;:.s · ••oe~to1hll~rt'e
._n.:r"'nr.
Allen
-~ • ~ tedbl
b
to
Bulfalll
nom the
. •malic
~tber
to a
..,.._
· Corporatioo, Bloomfield, New J......,,
·
or to •
pciiiOI!I;IId

where. be ..., in charge of a "'!''&amp;brewl-.
daoll!l o1 a ftwoloratiwe ceolml ne6loiia , .,.._ re' "" said to be DNcb alter U.S a auto... .
banda 'o f dip o6cuioaal
...-..rdl program. He has also served
'1111 adjuo&lt;:NJMoclate prof""""" at Fair- . Dllll:ic Ia · the iDio which illdlll policF
lelsb Dickinson UniveJIIity.
·
- ::!f:n~ alsO poiot out ·!loaf
Two qtber .........m ecientil!ta ,......, . .the alaDdard eervioe revo~- ...-u,y
Dllii&gt;Sd:
' ·
•
can be.dra""' iDa placed jato~
• Dr. Dorothy Gteenbouse ·comes
much facter aad JDOll! ll8fel'y than the
• to Bullalo from the Medical C..Uege
auto-~ pistol. 'l1le fllster reloadQf Virginia (Virgihia Commonwealth - -ins capability of the automatic Ill ·
University) ; Ricbmond, where abe re- •. as generally unimporbqlt Ia potic:e
ceived her Ph.D. in physiology ~
confrontations. 'rbeir data abow thet
• 1973. From 1962-07. abe 1111as an asthe-&amp;verage number of DIIJIIds apend'Bistant pharmacol~ 81 the Scheiing • ed during a ClDilfiqntation ia 2.6;-abou.t
Corporation. She will oontinJie to forus ' half the c:a~tyof a BMVIal revolver.
• her research on the ph~~ogy of
'lbe standald 158-grain, .38 Special •
-motor control systems, utilizmg the
round-nose police 1 0 a d ,.mdi the
elfects' of alcohol as a model system. • NYPD is giving up ...,- the """""""' ·
' • Mr. James J. Wood expecls to
to ihe 38-c:aliher Long C..lt cartridge
"";clve.his P_!LD. in h!story from tJIB · · with a ·bullet. weildtt.of 148 ~
this year. He taught history and math·'lbe .38 Long Colt was adopted by
• e~tics .at !he Capinville, Illinois.
the U.S. AJ;my in 1892, and ..-! with High SChool !" 1965. and 1966. He ~
a singutar lack of suoc:e.s in the Phil~ a teaching assw~t at the_ Uruippine Campaign of 1899-1901. Tbti
vei'Slty i!&gt;e ~ ~ years. H!s reinability of the weapon/cartridge to
""""!&lt;'h wtU forus O!i the evaluation of p&amp;form-satisfactorily was the piimary .
s6ciaJ expenments m alcohol and drug
rea S 0 n for the 'lbompson-LaGarde
t~buse and the &lt;ievelo~t of data
Committee, which the Army convened
~ysf:ems for tl)e exammation of the
to analyze the stopping power of handunpact of social change on alcohol , gun cartridges. The W.Srk of tha} comand drug l?atten:u'.
.
mittee JeSU!ted in the' abandonment
The Institute IS located m the old
b Jhe Mm,y of the .38 artd· jtil·lldim-·
- five-story Federal building' which was
/ 1 ' f·a ~ · hand - .;r. ttimed over to t!le U~versity Novem~ i:hlilige hiililg' maae·m~ NeW-~
her, 2, 1972, Renovati~" •tar!"&lt;!. JanYork Police Denori~f ill"a'~oary-2S •of• lhill7yelu' and"Di'. 'S~
iinJil!''~J;t-;,f"tlie liUllet; not
and_ o~er staf!" members moved .li1
in the caliber or ballistic properties
d""!'g ~ sprmg and summer. 'lbe
of (he cartridie. It is the pOsition of
Institute 1s supported by _tl)e State
the ,Firearms Section of the NYPD,
Department of Mental Hyg1ene.
hssed on their study that the rec!)i[
'~-- f·
~
and muzzle blast or' a higher-pow.!r
load illevitably yields a ~r peliod
of adjus~~ to the """'?illl!!d a i.ltJ'gMe~iA~!...-lodav:.,
er number 'of t&gt;lliCera . - r· become ·
~!Q&lt;Q.ed 19. it. 'lbey baw a1sQ docu· ~~~'tiitl~r~-i&gt;rof~ilirillrl;tati
mented the fact that marksmanship .
Senate will h9ld its first 'meeting of
·scores and the ability to strike_a target
-tQe:_y\lior1r.toda)'&gt;;irh' 8 'IDIV4Jr.the ·Fac,
~ d'*&gt;1ranga ·decreilse .. wilh, ,. .~
ulty Club Dining Room.
ridge of bi_gher velocity, even among_
· On the agenda are reports by Presfirearms instructors and fUll hobbyident Robert L. Ketter and Eugene
ists, large!y ,due to an mcrease in ~
Martell,.,cl!aimlan..of the. Senate, disreoa.~ -ti.rne; • ":"' "' 4··= · ~ -- ~"&gt;
cuSsion or 'SIJPA representation, cone
The effret whicli ballisfici3 ean
stitutional changes, and a report on
on marksmanship is one of the con·
the Professional Development Survey.
siderations deemed most imporl!~Dt by
the NYPD in the aelectioli of a wellp,'
onkartridge. Noting the pheno'inhipn'
of -" body 'tilarm reaction;n .a·'pliysip-_
IDgical ·occurrence 'w h 'i e J. relea8e8
/
odre!Ullin and sleroids intO the bloOd
siream,
and gtmeraUy serves to prepare
'lbe Peraoruiel Office indicates that the following faculty and nona person for a situation involving im·...:~c!riP,g; _frc&gt;\_~qnal_ .stall ~!ioils. are open at State University at
minenl danger, a training dO(;ument
1
from the New York Police Academy
·. _
maintam. that " stopping a determined
• J
..
. &lt;~t ~!')'!Educational Studie'S. ·&lt;.' .. , jT&gt;
'\L
person wlw is in an alarm (!hysical
. ; ; .::~.:: · ,yisitl.;g Assistant. Px0fesaot;_f2 openiiigs), B ngineefilig and Apptred
conduwn can on.l y be accomplished by
. •. .· SCiences. .
.
.
immediate interference wi.lh the primary life support organs or the body
Clinical Instructor (2 openiilgs, part-tin!") , Restoratiue Denlistry.
support struc.t.ure." Since this involves
Research Assistant Prof.....,r, Bioc~i,Ustry. '
a duect hil in the "T'' zoloe, IJCCCJr!iinl
Instructor, Physical Educcitwn.
_: ~ ·•.
• 'to
the dOCument; the q u e s t i o n of
Visiting Assilitant Prof~r. GeoiDgica{_Sc~. . 1 ~.
marks~ Ulkes on ad&lt;kd signifiNTP" ,.,:· • '
cance. In this reii&lt;Ud, even detracWnl
A&amp;sisl&lt;lllt w ProiJ08t, Arts and Lettem. •
' ·•·
of the .38 S
iai cartridge admit that
Technit:al A&amp;sist&lt;int,· Biochemistry. ·
•• ~
u is
·acc!U'Ilte and that it8
. Cr-ealWe Aaociate, Music.
" '
'
mild recoil makes it relatively easy
w train recruits.
A&amp;siBlcnt Libnz..ian,• ·Science and EhgineeHng Library.
.
0 t b e r considerations which went
A&amp;sistant Librorilln (3 positions), Health Sciences Library. .
· into the selection of the new NYPD
Head of Acqwsitwll8, ITniYersity- Libraries.
_
load involved the bullet's ricochet and
A&amp;sililznt -Librarian (~time), Law Li)&gt;rary.
penetration ·potential. A semiwadcut-Progrruruner/ Analyst, t,(anagement lhformatio~ Systems, PR-1.
ter bullet has a low tendency to ri~
Aaoc:iate for UnWersity Sysiems Analysis, Management Informati.chet, which is an important factor in
urban places. Further, the penetration
. · systema; PR.S. ·
c
_ · - _ '· .
.,
•
·! .
'lbe followinJ atatemant of univerof--the bullet does not tend to be as
~
ABtiPiant for f:lnWet-oity :Systems Analysi8, M~t Information
sity policy on committee aelxice ,is
Systenlti; PR-2.
. '
I
.
~t as a rounded projectile, iDaking
b!llng circulated to vioe presidents;"
1t less likely to p1eroe ·a wall and
A&amp;sillilnt w Clwirman, History,. PR.-1.
_
l'i'ovoeta, University-wide dearw and
strike someone on the other side. AdProgramming,
Student
Activities,
PR-1._
_
Assistant
Diredor;
depertmelit besda by E . W. Doty, vice.
ditionally, the anti-pel90nnel effect of
For llllditional information "cioncemina these jobs and for &lt;l!&gt;taila ol preeident for operati.ona and &amp;Ystems: ,
the semiwadcutter is an advantage_ A
NTP 'openinp throUghout ~ State Uni....ty system, consult buU~
bullet
.of this design tends to make a
"'OIIciaa Un1veJBity Committees
'bciUdB at these locations: ' ,·
•
clean, distinct wound channel and is
desieodent . _ the 1lme, eftdrt ' and
more
apt
to continue in a sp-aigbt-line
....
·:1.'Bell-Facility_
~
.
D152
'and
0163;
2.
Ridce
La,
Building
Olllllll8tleaoe ol-.h individual member• ~ .,... (o cafeteria; ·a. Riil&amp;e La, Buildlnc 4230, il) corridor next to
1:~ the body rather than to
for the - - o( the Committee'&amp;- •
• C-1; -4. HMlth Sciences BuildiJ!g, in corridor Ol&gt;l!""ite HS 181; 5. Capen
mlaalon. 'lllenl are IDIIIIY times -wberi
· N e w Y or k's new cartridges are
__., it is ditlc:ult and ,perbaP&amp; impossible
Hall,' iii the corrido&lt;' 6etweeD Room 1-u and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood..
made-to-order-for them by WinchesterWapare aa individual- employee who
• ground 8oor in corridor to vending Jiiacbin.; 7. Hayes Hall, in
'
Western.
is aabd to serve on such a Commit/ lnain entrance Joyer, aaoas from Public Information Oftice; 8. Acbeaan
tee. HoweVer, efrort abould .b!l made
Hall in carridOr b e - Rooms 112 aad -118; 9. Pubr ~.
EDITOR'S NOTE FROII PWC BULI...E'n:N:
by -.h auperviaor to pemsi~ individum ~ next to Room 15;\l.o. Goocty.ar Hall, 1at 11oor, Housing Oftice
-· Tile Police Weapons Center recogniz.. al l!lllllloYfi to serve on such C!llicial
es
that this .topic ·is one of continuing
.area·
11.
180'7
Elmwood,
Personnel
~t; 12. Norton Unioa,
COIIJDI!tUieo when the time demands
interest a n d current disagreement.
Dired.or'a Oftice, Room 225; 13. DiefaDdorf Hall, in corridor next to ·
are JeiiiODIIble arid wDI not aenously
This article is presented with that
Room1oo.
r
hamper the ~lion of the depart·thought in mind.
menl"

• · ; 't ··.:ff- ·- :-. ·
Pro ess1ona Sta ,_
.., ,-. __ ;,

.} •, . . . .

liave

.Job
. .ope,nings
..
~

j:t~~~;-:~;.~~:·~ t!~~~~;~;~~ ~'~!:~ ~FaCutt,Z.:\st ~~~-· ~

superff:

Committee Policy

·s.re

...

�OOpon- lD poMc
CIIIIJ lD -

lJOpen

-•~ JD. ............. of:tlle Ont.....itj.
with a ~ ,. _ In the subject
831.,z228; ~ ~• '.

cioatoict. Ninr.y ~~'·

'FRIDAY-21
CONI1NUING DINTAL EDUCAnoN#

tis'f::j &amp;~.;:.:.~ ~~~':?'U::~:r

·· .tt ~i~u~w2~ -·
1

a.m.
. '
uoMn.Y UMINAI#

Data Retrieual SyBtems~ Prof. Allen H.
LeVy. direttor. COmputer Science Pro~

_g'!""o

Ba)'lor .C!!~c-&lt;&gt;~ M.octi&lt;lne.- ~

~Lea,

_Rm. A:;:f9, U:30 a.m.

ana

· -~~ted

by the" Sta~tical. Scieh!'&lt;'
DIYISlOq; Department of Computer Scien~.
·
·
WcT.tCAt ENGINEERING iEM.iNu~ ..
Trocer ldenJi(ia!/.iliiJ(""o/ M~l(i-Phose
SpOcioUy lnhomo/eriet&gt;UJ "ft'Ton..re~t Syi-

.•t1'tr.:h:

~::;1 ~ti~~vi~ ~ro~

~tetter,

1 p.m.

.f"

5

c7~GI~~! ~~~r

:Reuf/oreed

B eams, Dr. Rene _Dupuis, assistant pro-fessor, U/ B Departn'lent of Civil Engi.
neering, 142 Parker, 3 · p.m. Coffee at
2:-ao p.Di.
r
INTtiHATIONAl cofFH HOUJ•
EVeryone is inVited to attend. 204
Townsend, 4 p.m.
SHAIIOS SRICHOS•

Followed with full Sabbath meal Chabad HoWJe~ 3292 Main Sl, 7:30 p:.U.
For further information, call 833-8334.
CAC FILM·

'

...

'

Harold and Maude, ' 140 CApen, 7:45
f and 9:45 p.m. Tickets at 75 cents -are
available at the Norton Hall TiWt Of-

- fice.

• .

HIUR SAIIIATH SftvtcE•

.

..

J1ollowed by an One1 Shabbat Hillel
House, 40 Capen- Bivd., 8 p.m. •

u~~~=~r Jtdm

wi"ili

RitChie
guitar and dulcimer, 1st Boor cafeteria
Norton., 8 p;m, Admission cliarge.
•

-

tNJEUiATIONAL fOlx DANCING• _.
~
do!{;~~~ .~ic ate~ 2 Diefen·"'•
UUA&amp; RiM••
Life and . Timu of Judge Roy B;..,

(Huston. 1972). ~ Conference: Theatre
N_?rlon. Check showcase for timeo. Ad:
nusa1.on charge.

,SATURDAY -22.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text>Reporter, 1973-09-20</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>1973-09-20</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>en-US</text>
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                <text>Text</text>
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>HEWFu_ndS
E~riof

Vet.servlces
rima
A J11111t of t112,000

the US.

Of&amp;ce of Edaaltillo--tbe lblnl bilhmt
of its kiDd """"-' by a ..Jar pabllc

institution-wil -"'a tr/8 to '!"P" ~
plement and further develap __...,.
for ~ than 3,000 velillran ,.wtients ,
and for veterans in the- community at '

tarr.-arence

W. Dye, coonliDat.M of
vefersns aJfairs within the Division of
Student.Allairs. said Monday that the '
funds from HEW, received only about
two weeks ago, will be ...-! this year
in five major ways to ~ programs "growing out of the IDllwrsal
experience and .-Is of veterans on
and olf......,pus:"
1. To provide- more stall p8IBIXIDe!
for veterans at tbe Univemity, including a financial aids advisor and a
placement and camer guidance OOIDl·
selor within 11..- respective ollices,
and additional part..time ataJf within
tbe Ol&amp;ce of Veterans AJfairs. Added
in tbe Veterans Of&amp;ce will. be Ron
Bologna, last year's p'resident of . the
U/B Vets, 88 a half-time assistant .X,.
ordinstor and an illdividual yet to be
selected wbo will work with ex--Gls
enrolled in .Millsnl. Fillmore College.
2. To set-up and coordinate a OOUIIl!eling service, using veterans J?f""
vioualy enrolled at U/B ·as part..time

~= ~..J..:'i:.""J~ booths

.PiJblic.Nighf$ at Obselyatory
~~W,ays ~5orriething ·Different.'
. ·it

~-

By siL\RQN EDELMAN
......,.. Stall

FSA fmployees
Get 4 Per Cent

Plus 'Merit

.

.,..

BuJraloaiaDs are often identified
&amp;y !heir bloodshot eyl!8, chmoiC
coughs,_Or perpetual case of the. friz..
zies. ·1ne infamous Bulfalo climate'
. tabs its toll on each of us, and wll
despair for """"""' of vanity' or bealth.
There are even professional reasons
for bating the weather, but few are as
valid as the astrooomers'.
-·
"CI(!IJds are my ·biggeot problem,"
· contends Clift Stoll, wbo, on clear Friday evenings, OODducts "public

nilrht"

in the University obeervato . ''There
.slr;y is

are very f..W nights wben
perfectly clear."

3:;,

l,OOOYisltors

Despite this. over 1,000 people this
year have climbed to the top of HochAn ...,...,....U,.board salary increase
stetler Hall to view star clusters, moon
shadows, or the rings around Saturn.
Tomoii'OW evening, for instance. the
the llppniZimately tOO full. and part.
doqble-star Alberio will be the lea·
liD!e Univanir=oy- of the Fac- ' ·tured attraction, billed with Jupiter,
ulty-Studeot
tion.
. Venus, Mars, and the. full moon.
ACcording to len ~der, assistant
"Something dilferent happens every
vice preaiaiint for bollfllnl! and auxilnight," says Stoll, wbo should knOw.
iary aervicea, ·total cost of tbe increaaes
He generally inhabits 'the observatory
. cau1d 8PPrmtimate six and on&amp;-balf per
from .sundown to the· early bours of
cent of - the total FSA payroll for
every morning.
.
•
1972-73.
The observatory includes four teleThe merit factor of the increase enaoopes which Stoll positions 80 that
abled de!oerving employees to receive . visitors ·may beat ogle the celestial
~ from ooe to six per cent" of
bodies. The view is BUppi-IAid by
their 1aat year's salary in addition to
Stoll's technical knowledae. and star
the ~- bike. The most a single - maps are available to al[ ·
illdividual· could receive was a total
The pulil.ic nfabt (IIOI11llll was ex":J
increment of ten per cent, Snyder said. • panded by Stoll, al~ it existed
Employ- covered by the inCreases
before he came to U/B· in 1971. He
included those working for auxil.iaiy · previously conducted similar evening
aervicea such 88 Food, Seryice, tbe
sessions at tbe Pu1falo Museum of
Booblore and Vending, and , a om e
Scieoce, bu\ finds tbe U/B facilities
Norton Union staff' memben.
. superior to any in tbe - .
Faculty and non-teaching p_rofes&amp;ionals represe~~ted by SUNY/United
NextCornlrw
on tbeUplt-venly
be
are the only I!J&amp;jor campus group
promiaes, will De the majol' comet of
without a salary ~ for this year.
the decade: moving oi-ly aCl'OIIB tbe

~~~==~~

agenda;

sky
will first be visible in October,
wiih observations expected to continue
until mid-January. Oboervations will
iJeP.l Sunday mornings at 4:00, aiid
continue until sunrise. Stoll added that
Jupiter, Saturn, and various star clus- r s · may be obseJ:Yed throughout the
·winter. In addition, tbe first quarter
moon, which he finds most eftective
(Co ntimud on -

·2. col. 3)

UGL Delayed
Fora Few Weeks
Books are in bane( steff have been
named, l,&gt;ut the Undergraduate LibrarY

( UGL) will have to delay its longanticipated opening for a few more
weeks until .the rest of the furniture
and equip~t o_rders are

i'ill!d':"

UGL Librarian Yoram Szekely now
calculates that thQ.facility' will "hopefully open 80me5me in October that's tentative." Previously it was
hoped that tbe UGL would be in operation early this month, its opening
coordinated with the beginning of tbe
new academic year.
Although frustrating, . the current
delay is a minor one compared to
major problems of priority, location".
and funding that haW. stslled tbe
Undergraduate Libr&amp;IY.
Szekely indicaled· that the end---..:or
the beginning-is deTmitely in sight
and that "90 .to 95 per cent~' of tbe
work : in Diefendorf Annex -.equ4-ed
for opening has alri!ady been oolnpleted. Some chairs, carrels, and office furniture have been moved in,
and mUch of tbe remaining furniture
is iri storage elsewhere on camplis,
(Continrud on -

2, col. 1)

in .
3. To arrange tutoritil and remedial
services for veterans, using available
Univemity 886istsnce and more student aides.
4. To develop a community outreach and recruitment piOJ!rsm; again
emphasizing peer · counseling, to interest veterans at large in available
educational opportunities in Western
New York. Envisioned as a possibility
here is a sort of "traveling roe.d sbow"
which could visit shopping plazas and
other heavy traffic locations in the
inn!!r city, outer city and sUburbs to
answer ve•~~.. ·
· about edeeation generi[ff. ~ _
attempt to direct
uiJs to the
Bducatioaal '
ter -Eiie - •
Community . Co~. -and other' area
iiuitifufi~ 88 well&amp;s u 1s , aepeilding
on their btickgrounds tind interests.
5. To possiblr work with veterans
in ~-VA J:l&lt;!spital l'croos Bailey Avenue. One Po8slbility which Dye sees
in this area would be to establish a
cadre of student-veterans who could
investigate anlt become ·expert in tbe
educational programs offered by State
Univemity's Empire State Colleg&amp;the college without waJis.-.and could
:'rk i~'t, pa~ts ~tio!:l
le~ Some =.tory VA patients
might aJao be directed into programs
in MFC, Dye suggests.
·
Following hls background planning
with veterans wbo have been on tbe
campus for tbe past year, Dye reports
that everyone wbom he has contacted
has "great expectations" that significant and vital services for all area

;~~"'!."cti~&amp;:'vided ~

tbe

Nixon 1_.,..11*1! DUy

The grant came from a Federal pn&gt;gram authorized by Coll8ress 1aat year
and funded this !'Pring. According to
Dye, President NJXOn impounded tbe
funds until veterans' groups took tbe
matter to court and bad tbe neceassry
grant application forms released. 'This,
he says, delayed actUal funding and
accounts for tbe tentative nature of
developments to date. Within a month
or 80, however, be ~ programs
to be fully-operational.
Only institutions which increased
their veteran enrollment by 10 per
cent or more over tbe 1aat year were
eligible for tOO funds which were pn&gt;rsted according to numbers of-veteran
undergraduates enrolled A r e p o r t
from the National Association of State
Universities and Land Grant Colleges

~N~=.~a:u~~

Dlinois University and the University
of Massscbusetts--ranked above U/B
in total funds awarded under tbe $20
million PlOif8lll which is geared to
(Contiluud oi&amp;
-

pa(/e

11. col. 3)

CAMPUS

MAP •

For your information and convenHtnce, a
pull-out campus Map-Directory Is included
as pages 5-11 of today's Issue.

- A ..

.

�'RsfattBI(,

Health 5ena~ ~concerned'
. Seoa~L•ters
Get o
ew
Over -~reation of New School of the Campus .

~
· Adiaaa-':t,.I'Neldmt
Robed L Keta - Scbool o1 Baalth

no1enn to FHS
daD Ia tbe ~...
t iDto ~
....... n ~
._ NPid-

Ali _... ol lbe ~ "Staae .
o1 tbe Um-.lty" ad a fai--th e r
c:barp far tbe Slbate'a~ Cam-

~

far~~~~

Senate ED!cutive Ocimmlttlee, Septeai-

. ter iD

~~;:a.,!:

- termed ... tlnU to lbe

::m..::..~ ~Baalth

ScieiMa 111mat1aa to Da-. Gilbert
Moan, ~ -ollbe "-dty S..iD
ba ~tal lbe iDto ita
lllimdee (SepCember 5 a-tiD&amp;), and

:Un:=:rw._,-=.,a~o~e

:U::=:&amp;.~~:;

~-au:- Pby8lcaJ sm-tioa 1110- · J.r~t &amp;bert L
gram,~.~~~--

reatiaaal=--iD

~··--

•"n,..~~tl&amp;e, ~- ~~pro~~ iD P.A.

and R., • ao far~ does not
i:Je1oa1 iD Health •·

demic Afrain Vice

Al:a~·

!Uk,
PJealdoa.t Bemard
VJoe P.re&amp;-

aen..um, Haalth- ~

l:"'~Ji.~ol~,~~

Dr Chadea H.V. m.t, de-. ol UndeJ1naduate Studlea, IIDd Deb &amp;bert
1-.1 • ..a~ut~ao calllna Clll ii.e new
"8. 'lbere ~~~-~~ ~:
F. a..- of Cantinulnc Education
Scboal to .a.IJiillh a curilc:ulum comVOI'OOIIDfllt ol ....,......._~
m ·
&amp;en'IICi aa a pauel Clll CUI'I8lt IIIDIPU8
mittee ad a lialam with tba Faculty
ntura1 team Dlllfienmeiit and ~~
developments.
ol Educational &amp;udlea. The ED!cutiY8 ·~ . &lt;~..!!..,~~;:"'..;:3
-Accordinc to UDIIIIPIOWid mhmtes of
ti"" Committee a1ao acbeduJed to
iD RB) h&lt;iai tbe ~"·~-:-:
the --.,.,. Ketter .lildicaled that the
.u- .., AIJIUill4 ._n Clll . . . . _ graduate taechiDa ~vi~ ~~ University abauld - itll tmollment
~- e.ubliabi!Wit ol. the
the ability to- Jl&amp;rtidpate m . ~..... • projeclioas for fall, but tbat earoiJ.
8c:baGI ll1fimitted by the Academic
activities may be of ·Value • a 1~· IDI!Itt fD Contlnuint Bdui:atbl is
Sab'Committee of tba Health
ing earcise. f!" aome students, Ibis
down. He no1ec1, too, that Summer
aet ap aa put
SdiDcei CaaDci1 at ita JMetinB y.esterhardly ""'Wftlt! tbat tbeae other ..,.
s-ions au'OIJment alltbis ;rear,
ol tbe
to tbe
dQ (after R"eporter. deadline). IDctudtivlties be in the
posing a need "to take a lool&lt; at the
ol
Bclucation and
ad 1n- Ibis cioi:uD.tt are specific reoHealth BcieDces taco,dty
• ; . budpt f o r : = . " Deb Hull reWtillare tbet their
Clll Mfeoialnendatioas aa to the future Qf varicine .w ithout a 'Uruver&amp;lty Hoop1tal,
ported 'that
' te eouon-ta are
0118 propams incorpruated iDto the
IIUI!I'CiiDa tbe rllhlil and welfare of
for esample.
.,._
dropliU., an mdicatalthat the Gradfounded Scbo&lt;it The Scbool
FolloPing lbeie _steps,
uate Sdlool "Wiil ley to
........ _
~ degree -programs iD '-ltb,
rent programs. are revised '
new
dents, such aa i&gt;eoPiit WbO have.......,
edlicatioa· and recreation,
programs developed, tbe&gt;:
· out of scbool f&lt;W a few ytiua,
_,..,
....,_ ~s-evfously iD Educational
reviewed by- the appropnate ""'!""'
wiYill and~ .,..q,.."· . ~
the
lba
are
with tbe -.... Division of
·
• bodies . iJi lfflS prior to CUI)' actiaDs
.
Vice Preaidsost: f'allliill·. told ol a
ftiiiiCIIIIible lor
Bc1uca •
and A
tics.
being taken.
• '
for "mooe cd8iaa within
(1)
- . d a Clllifarms to
frOm tbe Council of
"6. There is alao -a -a011 • to
·the Facul... of Haalth Sc:lencee, "alao ·
3 aludentafin tbe Faculty."
·moral and acianllfic principloe; (2) it
HaaJui ScieDoe S....tors reads as folwbetbei instructional
· 8.1110111
is to be condncted Clllly by acientificallows:
•
ciated with. tbe HE ~..........
He will work,
-.ro a bealth
ly qualified 1*811118; (3)_ the impor"Tbe CouDcil of Haalth Science
be an autonomous unit, (Le. a scbcJ!&gt;I)·
care program 011 tbla campus, basin·
lance of the obJective and I'CIIIIfi!le
Senators wisbes to call to the attenor as ~Ia Jrilbin the ~
ning with the students. A pn!paid c:ambeuafita tberefrom are iD proportion
tioa of tbe Faculty Senate ED!cutiwe
of HaP. There .is: inadequate , _ .
pus health c:an. ~ AIVXII!IpeMi"jj
to the inherent risk to the subject; (-4)
Committee "the actiOo ~ by· P.,:
Cation for a aip&amp;ratii:ochoal· ~ 'IIIIi ,._atudeniii, faculty and staff~ Ill): ultithe subjecta bave "-' fully iDfOIJDBCI
ident Ketter 011 AIIIUit 14, 1973, iD
present time. The current
mate aim. 'Die aean:b for a dean: of
of tbe procedwea and poadble elfects
~a
new Scbool of ·HM!th M
arid iD)'e&amp;tigative programs are ..,..._ . tbe Medical Scbool is coiltinuing,l.'aniDWilwed and their· CC11l81!Dt baa " - '
~~ witbiD
.the 1'llaiJty of HaaJth
broad ~
- nor 1arae .....,.,.tl to·, . n111 reported_
.
_
obtained.
Scieocls. .
.
._
tbia. . .
oould be ..oiioauncw." ·- A ·baaic
atUdent- aoMoeAccordiu to the ReMn:h Office,
"Pressccint..' Ketier•look ttiis action - dated- very
. y witbiD tfle 8cliool
with . nioie flicU!ty iDvolwment
initiation &lt;4 tlii! review process is tbe
deaplte awareneaa tbat tbe Academic • of Health Related ProfeCIIiona. Tbewas cbampimled by .Dean Eberl He
ft!IIPODSibillty of the project director
a...L "---•ttee of the Coun- · -'""-- competencies coqld """""' toa1ao llDDOUllCled t&amp;at_oo_
a .is "taking
or principal iDYI!Stiptor who must
was ·
. . .to 1'eiP
••
submit a protocol of the ~ relbr.o~ c011 Senato':B
I!Wida..
graduate lind graduate ~"R' Pl!1fP"l!!!!8 - :.stUdy" lind -~'"ftlin.
.-...,
search to tba appropriate committee
7aealty
in Health
Oft
well iD adwnoe of the propcEa)'s due
merita of Ibis IJI'I!PI8}.
• Changes and future dewlopthe III'OIIllCi "If'- -," he laid, "there
dale. "'t abauld be
!be
"'lbe "(:oW)cij o( Haaltb. 8cienoe ' -,...Is, tbe reJ&gt;.OI't says, will, requile _ abould be ccmaideratioa
seneraJ
Office &amp;aYJ!. "tbat..RO~, m¥0!~ ---- Senatoii....., the Pre8ident's· 8iitlo.( • funds ror facul~ and facib~: ""We · ·c~egree iD Arts aDd Scil!ncea."
88 a threat to the integrity mlci viahuman subjecta will bciwlittle dianal
are prepared to support such ~
-'The Executiye-Committee approyed
for ~ unless .the committee's
billty of tbe Council of Health Science
but under ~ circumstanc:es is Ibis to
a charge for the Colleges Commit!"!'
aPIJIOYa) "' ~- m ad~
Sena~ tbe Faculty Senate Execu- . be at the expense of present programs as follows:
'
· F'onm and
theb
tive Committee ind the Faculty Senin FHS units. In fact, additional sup:.
1. Coordinate, plan and see tbrougb
policy and procedmea
oy
ate."
port will have to be provided to aome
tbe p....._, of
review of the
. HEW are available at the Reae8rch
. 1be Executivefommittee . incorpFHS unita (e.g. the Physiology and
.
. ..
Office. 178 Haya
orated Ibis position iDto ita minutes,
Anatomy departments, among others)
2. Review and pro- moclillaitioas,
I ~~"'Land also voted to "tecommend to tbe
to allow them to participate Pl:pducif neceaaary, '1f the
Coll'!Jl'e
3
UU
Scbool· of Health Education that it
tively in the programs under discus·bold diaC:uadoas WJth
from the
establish a curriculum committee, and
sion. The current FHS programs are
tbe "&amp;ecu.tiwe ."Committee (open to
awaitiuc
for the period of time iD which the
educationally and socially sound and
Senate members} Clll prellmliuirY (or
• tiCIIl ·· ·"very ROod."
trans(er studenta who were admitted
productive, and, considering tbe reinterim) _ . . ; b. hold apmi dlsst8H
into the F""!'!ty of Educational
""'\t
in NIH suppor;t '!f
!'IJ'IfliOilll wilb the CJ&lt;l!ldemlc.commun~ hand
· day including
iea are still m the program, that liaitiaimng actiVIties, deserve first pnon1ty on propQal modiflcatioDs. .
Mr
Se,aJ who son be eateblisbed with the Faculty of ty in tbe FHS bud«t."
3.
m.ajor l'eP.lrl to tbe Senbaa.'-' activety iDvolveci for
Educational Stud!!'" to'!"-"""" that tbe
iD buiJdiDg up the U..GL collection,
students trans(e!=' WJII not be ad·
bef
the cl""""&amp;. oi " ' - iD the fall
and two new staff .IDI!Itlbers. 'lbe reversely affected.
( Contbwed from 1, coL 3)
~ '. Al!t. •
...nt 111J110inteM are: Mrs. Mary
from
in displaying surface f"":turea lhrouf!h
cantinuing review ay&amp;4 for
8
Piatou, named bead ref'!""""' lilmui- Health
sched led for ·disshadow !"'£1
will onoo 111!8!"
tem
the __:jlealth and
.., far UGI.. and put-time referenoo
.
""terdaces, . and u "tten bef
be on VIew llunng tbe first week m
weliare" of tbe
_ _._
libarlan, Mrs. Ann
Formerly
CUSBlon yea
y
ore

~

'Die~
lhdvaa~-nwnce

~

=·

~-..=.~~- ~
~"="!!_];'!! ~~of ~
~~
~
~:
the~

·~tioa

The~

~-~~ J;}f
~

~·4.

-meruit,~~

.U: """
~'!_.~

Fvlties_L~

~t

be...,

u;,

~~

~

~"

·~.

~

p•---•-cil7i\..i~
::':a~

ment

dmlelop 1 ~~- an_otber. ;llar):! . icJI!\;*~~~
Education.~
-~ Farulty-wide-diii;Jof-bli,r:~"jet:

or ..

guideU...~
min~tecl.

~

~·--:Lt.81':... ~......wDal

J~

llhel~t's tbe llhel- tbat anm't
ready for lbem: atecb have not yet,.' - ' illlltal!ecl The UG L librarian ad-

mila tbat the general collection is
"bit or mt." but fbinb the retereOO.i

colleclioa. wbich will be the '-rt of
the - - facility -is "quite JIOOCl" In

8dditiaa, the ~te reserve
collectioa of ....., 8,000-4.000 w1umea
will be lrlmafened to tbe UGI.. be
_._
·
· _
,.....18 out.

~~ ":: :;!..~~-

dCIIlated or mode POI8ible
by 1ift1. 8rlaloely CIIIIPhaal....t "Hardly
a dq s-- witiiDUtOIJr I8CIIivini a
lift. rm caatlnucully .......t at the
.-oaJty of J1B11ban of 1b1a Univenity ~ MazQr of tbeae
1ifta are aplllliv8 boob;" be -.aid,
-+&lt;-"--: tbe total ftlue of 1ifta
--.-cia~-"-'~ o1 ~ ..ca1s, -

:: ~" ...__- -

S~- -

~tha

Clult.
.refareDoe llbnuian at Elmim Coll-.
Mrs. Platoo Willi traiDed at the Univeraity of Deaver Mrs. Clarl&lt; recently
ouperviaocl-tbe ~of six donnltory lihnriea aa residence halls librarian at the University of Dlinois,
where ... eamec1 a masters degree
ill 1lbauy aciaDoe.
The· book lituatiCIIl is oatisfactory
acoardiDg to 8ooelcely. Some 12,oo0
vo1umeo, l!lduaiYe of bound period!cals, are catalacued and ready for the

....._._

~

Coli"~!"";

-.
(~
~- "'!~- ~
~1tie..J::vation
~
~ ~

~U,.

!"evelo~~ta

~rite.!

'~ ~~.r.~~il:i

Observatory-

~~· ~ ~document

con~t,

&amp;f""

wn

October

~-

-

the a~ by ~ Preai~ent, ~tted
Stoll ·iDtends to plot tbe course '!f
that tbe question at l8SUe IS (not)
tbe cornet by computer, aootber medlreally whetber HPER should move
1 um with which be baa had vast e:q&gt;eriin!'&gt; FHS. .Too much baa already been
enoo. He has worked for tbe past two
88ld_ ":"d done !or "tbere. to be ~
years with Dr. Lj&gt;jaren _Hille,r in !he
~liStie al~mative, tbe report ~d,
U/ B De!'Brlmen~ &lt;?f Mustc, developmg
. otin_g a ae"!ea of pro!"""'ls and disa new type of digttal-to-analogue conCUSBlODB dating back to 1971.
ve rier. This would translate programs
The report was, bowever, ~ on
through an · audio amplifier, resulting
tbe. notion that "the ~nsi!&gt;tbty for
in new forms q. computerized '!""'ic.
revtew and recommendation on tbe
Stoll is lllao responsible for mamtenlDI!t!er was tbe Facul~ Be;nate's.. It
anoo and repair of tbe lJepartment's
al8o ·~ from. dl8CU88l'?"" WJth
Moog srntbesizer, and supplies the
Health ~""'! Vt"'! Presulent F.
electrorucs effects for tbe Creative AsCarter Pll_!lnill m whj,ch, --the rei'!'rt
aocistes.
contends, "he support"ed !be notion
Only Astronomy -Grocl •
that ... (tbe Heal_th Sciences f:!enaAs tbe University's only astronomy_
tors) abauld constitute -an adV180ry
graduate (Class of '73) , Stoll was
group" arid abould designate a faculty
gl,!ided by Drs. Mendel Sachs and
11'0\'P to review tbe matter and report _ Ly"! Borst in developing an app~on it.
- ·
ate independent study ~ He l8
"'I'bo!...most productive -Y to state
a veteran ,of OOWBea in oolc!itial metbe current problem." the document
chanics imd planetuy motioas.
noted. "is that the c:ircwnstancea un- _ Stoll is present! ""P'!rimenting-with
der which componenta of HPER come
photomultiplier
and hopes
into FHS muat now .. detennined.
·to develop new electronic devices by
'lbere8re ail!nificant educational reawhich to amp~
· r
Moat of his
aona for such recqani._.tl011. We do
teleacopic pbo
have ~ cat-not doubt the potential which will
alotrued and co
· by the Depart.
emt to develop broad, aound pro.
!!Wit of ~·cs and ~......_"
•
·
Ultima
, Stoll iDiendo to work
Fha
-.rd a
., the "CIIlly deKIM for
'Die Health Sc:lencai II!DOrt auga ~ astronomer."-BUt be's
paled five for caaalderation:
leamed a ~Moon ·from Buftalo: be's
"1,. 'Die JII!'IIBIIl iD Health Bclucaapplied to the University of. Arizoaa.

:{ectronlc:a,

C.-•llal•

!'!"""!

•J-

Sign-up Set for
Spe(:ial Course
Physically, I!Witally and emotionally handicapped· children and their
families can .I'C!Iister for fall ~
sessions of "Communicative Creativ'
ity" on campus Tuesday evening, September 18, from 7 to 10 p.m.
Described as an ~torY recreational wort.s.p
to prc&gt;mote cre8tivit~ 1 a&gt;mmllnication and
oooperation," tl18 claM ..,cb
S\lllday afternoon for three hours during tbe 8C!1D1!81er iD Norton Union.
U/B students work iD a one-to-one
relationship with the ~
According to Ms. Bambli Abelson
Kertzman, director
ex:'!~...... tl)e
program will be
· ·tbiiyear.
Increased ftMnc:ial
will permit more arta llnd
abel. media
projecta. In addition, stuaoota .will
work with the fami1iS of the handicaPped to promote Cllatinuity ol therapy far enrolled children When they
are at home.

:n

Since the propam .,... initiated in
19691 m o r e tlian 800 bandlcappecl
chilanm bave taJcen put.

�This WH 8 -'&lt; of welcome for , _ , . , . . to the Unlversity-focully, -·
stofl. The bid to moke m.hl1*1 ond tnln$1ero feel Ill home lndudod movies, clonCn,
concerts. pmes, dub and orpnlzation orientation ..sessions, and -=tuntS, Kheduled
from 9 o.m. to mldnlctrt-ouch to Interest ond/or exluoust of most 'lonyone. New fKully
ond proleulonol mlf, meanwhile, were liven • dual roceptilll&gt;--1n lnfonnol Woc~Msdoy
evening welcoming picnic Ill the home of l'nlsldent and Mrs. Robert L Ketter on Lelltun
(featurine bllepipe music, highland dances and chicken) and a more formal "Orientation"
on S.turday (futurine a North C.mP.us tour) at which administrative and student offidals
"told them -,thlni they'"" otwop wonted to knoW obout !hi Uni..,l'lity--ond then
no doubL

�4

Some ddloltions of Humanism
Edited by Paul Kurtz

/

Recent Volumes Deal with Man's Creativity, Ma~hines
I'Ollllll IN

I'ZB»i8--by Norman N.

w. w.
N~ ~"li:.!mii ~

Holland, prol-.r

of~

tbe artisfs psycbe and hiS art has long
held a faacinalioa lor Dr. Norman Holland: wi~ his P.yclwanGiyais and
SlrDJrapean. His interest m lbe how
and wti,y ·ol Jaction to art is manifest
in his 1)ynturUo o{ Literary Response.
And both aides ol this psychic coin
are fair
at tbe UDivenlity's Cen-

J.:i::

~lorwhich~!t~

Kline contends at the ouiset of , this .
new appraisal of one' of the great lit:
erary figures of 20th century France. ·
''Each of his novels represents one
step in tbe evolution of an answer to
man's anguished alienation from an
absurd society within a "meaningless
universe. Because of tbe development
of his· th.inJring from . . . ~c
activisai . .. toward a ·more 01&gt;timiStic
re8ection upon man's possible harmony with nature, many of (his) ...

ethiCal and religious leaders represent..
ing_ most of the varieties of Humanism.
F r o m their diverse contributions,
Kurtz concludes, "it . sbould be clear
that Humanism is not a dogma or a
creed. .•. If there is a common thread

. systems from various diaciplines; digital simulation; convolution swnmation; properties of Iineolr systems; the
z-transform and inverse z-tzansfonn ·
system lranllfeo function; system , :
sponse and the·tzansfer function; d.igi.

to the method of reason a

. state _.,., repft!111!1111ltion&amp;;
•

~:::g~:.:::,t;,i;..;,· ~ ::!:t

the ·c:bief
means of ~lems 8nd the

~ enjoy. ..~~

::::,..

This conviction and belief, howev«,
can be realized only if men continue
to have confidence in their own natural
.
and abilities and tbe

September 18
Sena,e
*' A. genda

as are applicitions ol tbe psycbolotlical to othM fieldS 88 wiciiHanlinl 88
aesthetics, anthropolosY. biography,
•
•
history and law.
In lieu of a comprohenoMe ·annual
It Cot~~toS as no surprise, then. that
DISCilETIM'IKI!: SY81'1&lt;118: An lntroThe Faculty Senate will hold its
of faculty wmcs. the Re·
this latest Holland volume, subtitled
porter hopes to print , _ of
duc.lion wilh lnteNliaciplityuy Appli- • first n!JUlar. meeting of . tbe 1973-74
..An Introduction to tbe I'Bychoa.nsly• ~ns-by James A.~ J&gt;!i&gt;fes;. .: • .academic year on-TuesdaY, September
~ they appiar. We =isk 11m
ais of Literature," propounds. in his
sor, electrical engineering. • Prentice· ·fl!; at 2:30 p.m. in 148 Diefendorf.
faculty Include us on publishers'
words, "tbe only theory of literature
Senate Secretary Mac Hammond has
Hall, Inc., Englewood, N.J., 1973. 440
malllnl lists or forward copies and/
which reveals tbe way literary works
pages. $i8.95.
.
· announced the follOwing agenda for
o r - - to 250 Wl-r. Rm. 213.
interact with tbe individual personThis addition to the·"Pri!ntice-HaU ._: .ti!B J\leeting:
.,.,
·
All
wfll
bo
returned.
alities that write and -.1 them. The.
Com ter Applications· .iD.-"Eiearical ·
I -i.1973
fipproval pf the • . tes of May
book develop&amp; aJII&gt;ft*'hes to both
..._,._._,_,
gmeering · Series" is based mt'ibe
creation and ._which atart froni
,...........,..~ pronouncements often
premise .that "mathematical modeiB
'
·
· •
something we aU know • Vue
•
appear confused or contradictory when
d d" "taJ..
2. Report of tbe President. 'Eitch .. ··u.r·bt • . • -~ ~ - r.; : :- j~ . fioih.;,ruQJlGJogically dis- . ~ · and.
Jill
'i"llll&gt;Uter
sigwlstiqns; nf
3. •o-~rt
.
ynsmic
· sys""""
are
integral to"~
....,.. · ·or the Chairman.
each ::'der. TI!.re,~ -=11 .,;mtei-'s
parate writings"· . .
.
broad range oh:nodem activities in
4. Open panel d.isciission on collecact of literary creation and -=11 readUnfortunately, _l_{line 8Uhmtf;!, most
the physical, biologjcal and social scitive hargaiD.ing (3:00 to 4:00 p.m.);
ru:'s act of ~tioo.is ..,.IIDiqqe, ••• of Ma)raux'~ !""tics_ ~'(e fa!.led _to_ •• ences; in- commerce and ~ and •
Presenters: Marvin Feldman, Shonnie
Stmply analyzmg tbe 'wordS 00 the . appreoafe: lbe:un~ce of his gnia. in engineeiing and mdustry."
Finnegan, Constantine Yeracaris,
page' in formal isolation can never
~ develol!ment. His stuay .Propqees,
'f!le volume is an introductory anCharles Lipani.
expialn literature as an individual
'by analyzmg Malraux's Dl8)0r ""'!ge
alr tical !re"tmen.t of ~ concept. coY·
5. Committee Qn tbe Colleges.
human aperience. To do that, a ps .
pa~ "! d"'!'ons~te an _m~g
enng:
discrete
time,
SJgnals
and
sys-.
6 F
chology is required and not- just a%Y
"'!Phistication ·II! his no_velistic tech- . ' tems; applications of linear discrete
· our-oourae loa.d.
psychology." The "crude. old fash.
ruque . . . and, m so ~omg, to ~veal
7. School of Health Education.
ioned " "universal symbolism" of yesfuodamental changes m his attitude
8.
Other business.
SMOKING THERAPY
teniaY's probings of literature, Hoi!fward,; the 'h u ~an condition," ~
• Researchers in the Psychology Department
land argues, must be replaoed by
}r;ace, .as the ~cket blurb puts 1t,
are evaluating a technique to help cig"modern psychoanalytic psychology
~the.~ uopercelVed currents and
~rette smokers quit. Anyone who might be
with its concern for tbe egl&gt; and idenuruty.
.
.
mterested in participating in the theratity and lifestyle of tbe particular
As for t!'at .uruty, Kline concludes
· Campus Security will begin its anpeutic program stY.)Uid call Rob at 838- ,
human being."
!hat .the~" lS "little doubt that, at least
nual enfortlelnent of -·'•tiona per3874, 7·9 p.m., Monday, Sept. 17, through
The volume emmines specific poems,
~ 1\15 last three novels, M&lt;!-lraux was
taining to ll&amp;rkin« in ·-...-ed lots on
)"ednesday, Sept. 19. .
.
studies reader responses, and delves
m the process of formulating a perthe South Campu8 on = t Monday
':"'nsl,_decidedly Eastern philosophy,
into tbe imagist poet H.D. who worked
in October (tbe 1st), tbe Traffic Conwith Freud, blending principles and
m wh1_ch ~ could_ resolve his Westtrol A d v i s o r y Committee has aneumples to explain "the Jiving ex~rn ""'"!ent!a' anguish through a total
nounced.
·
·
perience" of literature.
:;~~o:km~~~mal life-death
The Committee "reminds that stuT
i
c
k
e
t
outlets
for
the
exhibition
~
The study, prepared u n d.e r the
dents are required to park in student
hockey game between the Calder Cup
ANDRE lllALRAUX AND THE MEl'AMOR·
Graduate Faculties of· Columbia Unilots and faculty and staff are required
Champion Cincinnati S w o r d s and
PHOIIIB OP DEATH-b,Y Thoni8.s Jefterversity, was selected by a committee
to park in tbe faculty lots. Signs at
NHL Buffalo Sabre Rookies and Stars
aon K I i n e, a&amp;80CIIlte professor of
of those faculties to receive one of the
tbe entrances to each lot clearly state
at Holiday Twin Rinks, (Thursday)
Frenclt. Columbia University Press,
Clarke F. Ansley awards ~ven annuallot asaignment."
September 20, at 8 p.m., have been
New York and London, 1973. Ul1
ly by Columb•ia U.nive.is•ty Press.
finalized.
Both students and faculty have expaps.$8.
pressed ·concern that unauthorized
Proceeds from tbe contest will go
"'lbe time has come f&lt;&gt;&lt; a aerious
THE "HUMANIST ALTERNATIVE : Some
persons uae the parking lots. tbe Comto ~ U/ B Alumni Scholarship Fund.
analysis of Malraux's style throullhout
Defi.nuions of Humanis,......,ruted by
mittee reminder says.
Tickets are now available at the
his novelistic development,:• Professor
Paul Kurtz, professor of philosophy.
foll!'Wing :
Pemberton Books, London; Promethe· S a b r e TiCket Office at Memorial
us Books, Buffalo, 1973. 190 pages.
.
Auditorium; Wijliam E . Mathias Inc.
$8.95.
The University's annual fall admin~1 Court Street; AI Dekdebrun SpOrt: ·
This .symposium, Professor Kurtz
istrative meetil!g .has been called by
mg· Goods Inc., North Town Plaza·
wntes m bra preface, was initiated
President Robert I. Ketter for WedBrinkwortb's Saratoga and
to answer several questions:
nesday, September 19, at 4 p.m. in
town; . Norton Union and Clark Hall
A ~ oommunit)r _ _ , . , . . ~
"The term 'Humanism' is ·widely
335 Hayes.
br m. nm.ioft o1 uninr-South Campus· U/ B Alumni Office'
used1 as are the tenns 'ethical' Hu;., Re.r.dorw, Stafe U,..,_.tp o1 N123. Jewett P,;,kway; and Holiday
marusm. 'scientific' Humanism and 're~ """ ajlenda
University-wide
Y~ al ll.ti.Jo, 343$ Main SJ·• Bull.,
Twin Rinks, 3465 Broadway, Cheek&gt;
!igious' Humanism. What is Humanadminis.lrative matters such as chanlf.Y . 14aJ&lt;I. Uilorlal olfW.. ~ in
towage. 1
ram? Can you define it? If tbere is in
ges:_ln. -~nnel policies, academic
Room 2U, 2$0 W ....... A,__ (P-...
your .iudiment no clear definition in·
Pro&lt;i!dJlli!S. etc.
2121).
, ~v~i:.~tely 3,000 a:'"~ -~ be
tbe literature, you may wish to proB.ncutn. Uhor
If.vl~Qn. have been issued to aU
11"11" ooe. You "!'!&gt;' aJao wish to focus .
A. WltSTUY ROWLAND
de~r heads, vice presidents,
~
on ~ rels!'Jonshil' of Humanism to
NEW I..Oi:ATJON
Univ~ ":ide deans and provosls.
llOIIB.R'J' T . ll.uu.aTT
atheism. 8Ciell&lt;e, 1ts ethical position
The Department of Theatre has announced
,.,__
or some other tbeme."
a new location, ~N Hamman, a former
}OBlt A. CLOUTL&amp;R
.'""-. who answered ~resent a
rehearsal room. Extension numbers remain
Wlde
opeclntm
of
Humanist
.opinion
rATIUCIA WAJtD llalmRMAN
the same, 3340 for genel'lll infonnation·
~-Sidney Hook. B. F. Skinner,
2045 for'" the chairman. The old depart:
Dr. Gustavo cUdkowicz, professor,
Corlias
Lamont.·
H.
J.
Eyaenck,
and
IIAJIICY a. CARD.utau.r
mental offices m28N are nOW being used
Department of PatholoJIY. bas• been
U/B's Marvin Zimmerman among
:,:~ces for four additional fa"culty
appointed a c tin g chairman of that
SUSAN II. 8UROU
them. 'Il&gt;ey are primarily philosophMedical School department throug!J
ers, psychologists, ~ o c i a I scientists, ·
December 31.

~:theill.".

'

:dfil~i~i=~j

-~- :--~;::·fs

Annoi:Jnced

Parking Enforcement

Hockey TICkets

&lt;iREPORTE~
.,.. r.......,.

Administrative Meet

Down:

are

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

C)idkowicz Named .

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Bannon's Experimental Works Tour'of Eurqpe

~ Cr&amp;Dh

re

ad CODirada
(ildudiJili. falit . . . .
~*\Sfalo
IDe.)
71/16 to u
.........
.Aitpat, .Robert •

/Screened at Media Study Inc.-_ fl_ _ _

By JILL RADLER

Marks 10th Year Of U/B Center.

A 21,day COIIIat tour ol Eniope
will highlight thla tenth .....u-ry
8I!II80il Of die U/B Ceoter for tbe Creative aDd l'erfonDiDII Arta llbd iiB
Creative AMooiates. The ....,.. will
~
vlee PftlllidaDt for
also include a eake aDd dw~
_
birthday ~ at the Alhrilb~ '
........ ~-received by:
Sculpture
Court
following
an
October
RGiat Goad. -a-.bl ~
27 "Eveniop for New Muaie" - ~lACS for a llludy Of
tation.
al ~'Bodiee_by.Liq.
The continental trelr. belina February 12 and 13 in London aDd Will
uldll;"
~ ,BiDlacY
Scboolllf:~
_
include programa in Abenlesa aDd
~...
~ByEdinburgh, Sc6u..id, LiabOD, Barc&amp;~
ID PedodaDtal n;....;"
lona, Perugia, Rome, Sllatlbouq, aDd
c. D'
I'Bycbialry, $128,798,
Karlarube before a retum to the U.S~
. The intriguina tiUe, Pa.itiue Negaflom PBS for ~ 8calal of
March 4. Worka by Amerie&amp;D compos- •
twe
Electronic
Facu,
relates
direcUy
. the IDtervllidiaD Type iD Huaum DrUg
ers will be featured lbroughout
to tbe basic content of the film-preUlll!lll udlor .t\bulan;" S. lk:udresiTbe Center's "Eveniop for New
sentatinns ?f a dozen or ao people
steiD, C2lemlalzy, $49 143 flom AFOSR
~usic" pro
open with' the :anwho, acoordmg fo Bannon, live io Buffor "F''mdammtal So I i d Electi'Ode
mversary cefeb:'tion at the Albrilbt!alo
and
!'"'
,;'paasi"!"'telY
iotl!reSted
Studies;" 6. ~ ADihropOIKnox
and
continue
on November ~7
m """'!'thiog· The '\'ldeotape is slnlcCJIY, $1,440 flom !REX tor a Procram
December 16, March 31 aod May 4
tured m beautifully oonceived shots
iDvolviD&amp; u.s. viaiiB by Polish an:bat
the
same
location.
A May 5 "Ev&amp;aeolotlisiB; Raoul Naron, ADthropol- of individuals io long unedited blocks
ning" is set for Baird Hall. Out-ofCJIY, $27,831 froiD tbe RockefeUer~ Pla.)led agaiost short transition cuts oi
town
performances will include: State
·
Bullalo
·street
scenes:
Mostof
the
ioFOUDdaticm for ''The Inlluence of SoUniversity Co II e 11 e at Plattsburgh
terview ahots use a similar basic methcial and Cultural Factors em Populamid-November; Carnegie Recital-Hal.!'
od of superimposing two ioJages, altion Growth•" a · John. Corcoran,
New York, December 5 and April 10:
though the visual effects are constantPhili&amp;IPiiY, $1,000. from Nj;IF for docState University at Albany,' early 0..:
wlio
chose
not
to
speak,
Wiesemeld,
ly
changing.
Bannon
explained
that
toral reroeardl iD the histo,.f of science
cember;
Brooklyn Academy of Music
is
shown
painting
one
of
his
meticutbe two video cameras were used io
on behaH, of 8uMD B. WOOd.
December 29; Suffolk County Com:
lous room-sized still lifes; the sequence
conjunction with a special effects genThe U/B FOUIIdation . awanU, all
munity
College,
March 22.
abstract,
yet
lyrical
is
geometrically
from UHF, .....t to: Miriam Meisler, - erator, serviog to disiotegrate and
Creative Associate recitals begin.
camera movement caresses tbe lorms.
bleed the camera images at the same
Bioc:bemistry, $3,450 for "Biochemical
September
25
with
composer-cellist
time.
.
Quickly cut shots of Bullalo · form
Basis of HUIDIID B-Ga1actosidase DeDavid Gibaon. Creative Associates will
·Bannon stated that the maio object
the transitions between the ·faces: peoficiencie&amp;;" 'Ibeodore Herman, Medialso
be
featured
performers
at the
ple
on
the
street,
changing
traffic
-sigwas to articutate the character of the
ciDe, $11,700 for "HormoDal Regulation
State University Convocation of the
people represented without using faces
nals, .neon signs lit at night. One supof Scldlwn aDd W a t e r Transport·"
AriB, April 25-27, at State University
-too
clearly;
in
this
they
suoceededposes
that
Uiis
is
an
attempt
to
place
Larry Green, Ortbodon~ $1,870 f~r
C-ollege, Fredonia.
the principals within a specific locale
"Dental Trait AI&gt;Dormalities io C.left. quite well. In the opening sequence
The Center, co-directed ·by Lukas
I one of the terms of the grant was
Lip.aod Non-cleft Siblinp;" aod Peter · Leslie Fiedler's barely identifiable fa.,;
Foss !'I'd U/~ Music Professor Lejaris superimposed on an ioverted trav- - that the tape be shot io Bullalo) . The
N1ckemon, I'athology, $7,450 for
en Hiller, currenUy on leave in Warelling
shot
of
Forest
Lawn
Cemetery
individuals
are
rather
introspective
"Identification of Gonadotrophs io the
saw as a Fulbright lecturer, includes
while Fiedler ·reads a poem about Red
dealing with the i r own "passions':
Anterior Pituitaty. of tbe Rat"
the followin,~; members:
Jacket. Both voice and camera stop
rather than the i r relation to their
Major renewal, corltinuation or supEberhard Blum, flute; Amron Cbo- ·
when the grave marker of the Indian
place. Given the truly exciting and
plemental stipends went to: James
dos, clarinet; Julius Eastman comdiverse
,handling
of
the
faces,
the
is
reached.
The
sequence
is
visually
Danielli, Pharmacy, $120,000 from
poser-pianist;
David Gibson, cOmpos..
exciting, but so iotense that one has
somewhat traditiorlal and harsh tranNASA for "Studieot of the Range of
er-cellist; Benjamio Hudson violin·
difficulty concentratin'g on ·Fiedler's'
sitional shobi punctuate the film abrasExistence of Cella;!!.Jilhn Siegel, Sur:.- ivefy'rather than smoothly interlacing - Dennis Kahl~;percussion; Peir Kotik;
words. 1
gery, $78,978 from NIH for "The Role
composer-flutiSt; G eo r g e Ritscher
lt.
I
In subsequent segments, dancer
eJectronicist; . Frederic Rzewski com:
of Occult Mrocardial Failure io HuSome of the lyrical qualities evident
Christyne Lawson talks about ber art
~
poser-pian~t(second semeSter);' Thorman Shock;' Ruth McGrorey, Nurs~ the camera captures her mirror 1 in the videotape were more fully exkell S1gurb)Ornsson, composer-pianist
ing, $36,604 and $28,350 from NIH
plored io Bannon's three short films:
Jm&amp;ge across a dressil!g room table
for "Professional Nurse Traineeship
Graduate
Fellows are Ralph Jones
a workprint with footage relating to
through the arch created by her arm
electronicist- hornist - composer a n d
Program" and "Graduate Ps chiatric
the filmmaker's fascination with living
and back. A dance . teacher reads poNursing Traioiog -Program;r respecDelmar
Stewart
violist.
'
things growing out of d e ad ones;
etry w hi I e the monitor shows the
tively; and Chung Huang, Health SciBaroque Variatwns, a response to
amorphnus body parts of the dancers
. ence ubrary, $27,500 from New York
Lukas Foss' piece by the same name;
superimposed on the partially _seen
=.my of Medicine for Interlibrary
and Rainlight, glowing red ioJages
face of the teacher (a particularly
dealing with rain, movement and light.
beautiful sequence) . P a i n t e r Pan!_
.................

J

u.;

" UBF Trustees

The Board of TrUstees ~f Sta~ Uni-

A video ~t aDd three abort
filma made by .An.thoa.Y ~ BuifaJD ,Euenin6 New. 111m critiC, filmmaker, film student aDd film tMcher,
were IICI'eeDed F r I d a y eveniog at
Media Study, I'!f~ em Bailey Avenue.
· Bannon couanorated last spring
with Ed Emshwiller, artist-in-residence at WNED-TV, em the video
ezperiment.-tapilll a half-hour black
and white procram that . - hall inch
and two inch video tape llimultaneously. The project was fuDded. by the
New York State Couucil on tbe AriB.

American Studies Courses
Focus on Working Women

v~ty has reappoioll!d six memben;
and appointed three new members to
the Board of Trus~ of the University at Bullalo Fduqdation, Inc.
. Middle-c~. women ~ve int:reasReappointed for terms expiring June
30, 1975, are William C. Baird, Har- · mgly ~de articulate the1r anger· and
frustration at the documented pattern
. old Farber, Adelbert ·FleisChmann
of d!scrinlioati_on io the professjons
John L. Hettrick, Jeremy M. Jacobs:
and m acadenua.. Much less has been
and M. Robert Koren.
~ . from, and consequenUy much
Paul Snyder, Mrs. Raymond D. - less JS ~own about, the great mass
S~vens and Louis B. Reif were apof working women, the women who
pomted as new members.
work on assembly lioes or as sales~ler~. the ho~wives who have no
IllUSion that the1r husband's factory
job would bring th~ the sense of
Robert W. Case and John D. Hill
fulfillment absent in their own ,llaily
have been appointed to basketball
roun? of cooking, cleaning and babycoaching positions by Dr. Harry Fritz,
tendmg.
W~'men as workers, with special emdf!an of tbe School of Health Educaphasis on the working-class woman,
tion and director of athletics.
Js
the fOCI!" of two new courses l,&gt;e!ng
Case, a 19:72 graduate of Brockport
offe~ thiS "!'mester by Ms. Lilhan
· ~tate, will be a varsity assistant under
Robmson,
assiStant professor of Amer&lt;&gt;"!'d Coach Leo Richardson. Hill,
ican S t u d i e s and a member of
~.delberg_ (@.) '70, assumes the
~~~·s
!)tud~es
College. H~r cours.:s
k~~ty post, formerly held by
m Working Class Women m Amer1CS;" &amp;nd "Women Under Capitalism,"
N'orb Baschnagel, active io the U/ B
w1ll concentrate on the work women
baa
. ke_tball program since his graduado '?oth in and outside ~ ~• .extion m 1965, hai; been named bead
~lormg personal and pohbcal,!Dl_phcacoach of tennis and will continue io- , tions of work for women.
struction duties in physical education.
Tbe social sciences have traditionally neglected worki1111-class women, Ms.
Robioson argues. and the few existing
attempts to understand their lives are
A . glass blowing demonstration; to
marred by sex and class bias. In
be VIewed from the patio off the Cen"~orking Class Women,'' students
ter Lounge of Norton, will be beld
will try to evolve an alternative aptoc;laY from 1 to 4 p.m. under sponsorproach, she explains, "in which the
ship of the Creative Craft Center.
working-class woman is the agent of
study, rather than the-passive object"
Demonstrator will be Tom Kekic,
To facilitate this, the class will meet
bead of the Glass Department of the
uafter work," Mondays and Thursdays
School for 1\ m e r i c a n Craftamen
from 7:30 to 9 p.m., so that working
Rochester Institute of Technology. '

· Coaches Named

Demonstration Set

women can more easily enroll and attend. During the second semester the
group will document the lives of working-class women in Buffalo through
an oral history project. Participating
in such a project is often an effective
way of making people aware of their
lives as history, she explains. Housewives will be included io this study
as well as more· traditional workers:
As Ms. RobinSon admits "It is only
very recently that wom~ on the left
have begun to understand that bouse, wives are workers: That that is what
all of us do some of the time " '
"Women Under Capitalism'; will
involve an examination of women's
eoo!'omic life and role in contemporary
SOCJety. Ms. Robioson noted that this
is an area of growing interest to mainstream as well· as female and Marxist
economists. Ultimately, she feels, both
courses could contribute to a working
class movement that takes account of
the situation of .women.
Because of computer error, neither
of Ms. Robii)SOn's courses were correctly listed io the recent Class Scbedules. "Workiog Class Women io America" I Am St and Wm St 409 cont
410) meets Monday and Tb.irsday
7:30-9 p.m. "Women Under- Capital:
ism" I Am St 431) meets Monday and
Thursday, 3-4 :30 p.m.
CORRECnON
The llepcHtet- regrets that Or. ChaMes B.

Sclar

W'IIS

inadvertently listed among new

University appointments last week. Dr.

Sclar will not be

~ning

us.

Szekely Awarded
British Gold Medal

Dr. Julian Szekely, professor of
chemical engioeering and d.itector of
the Center for ·Process Metallurgy
has been awarded the 1973 Sir Georg.;
Beilby Memorial G&lt;lld Medal for outstanding contributions to chemical engineering.
Given cooperatively- by the British
Society for the Cherrucal Industry the
Institution for Metals and the humtution of Chemical , Engineers the
award-also includes 11 stipend of £ 100.
Dr. Szekely, who last year received
the . Mathewson Gold Medal and the
Extractive Division Science Award of
the American Institute of Mining ana
Metallurgical Engioeers, joined U/B
m 1966. He was appointed d.itector
~ ~ ~ter for ·Process Metallurgy

0

His current research ioterests ioclude ga&amp;-solid !""ctions, turbulent
now phenomena m metallurgical systems, process simulation and optimization and envirollliJSlltal. problems relating to metals pnJceasinl!.

Williams at MeetingJoseph F. Williams, director of foreign student aflairs, is one ·of 20 educators from the U.S. aod Canada
selected to . participate io an "International WorkBhop on Educational
Exchange io Scandioavian Countries,"
Septembe! 14 throu~ early Oc(ober,
The workshop is bemg spollll&lt;lr'ed by
t!Je Nordic Council and various educa!'ional and government groupe, includmg the U.S. State Department
Participants will meet with Scandioavian "!lucators and government
representati9es, _ as well as visiting.
vanous educational iostitutions io
Sweden, Denmari: and Norway;

�Campus Project .

Designed to Aid
US Steetmaker.s

~ prol-.n at U/B have
· Blartlld tbe ......t year ol a '-reb
poopam that could saw U .8. aleel·
_...... millions ol dolJano in _.uiut

Cll8ls.

,

-

~i.!Y-~~g~.m:

Szeltel8. c:bemiaol .....u-rm. prola-

aor and din!ctor ol tbe Center lot
Process Metallurgy, ...., principal in·
.-ipton ol the project, "Modeling
and Optlmimtion ol tbe ~
Sleelmaldnl Operational ~A Nal:ioaal Scieuce Foundation cnmt ·
of $105,000 proVides support.
· 'lbe reEili'Ch involves uae ol mathematical models t - ol mathematical
equatians) and ~ten to repreaent the man,y camplkated operatiooll
reqiUred to tum molten aleel into fill.
co ished produc:ta, sueb .. ateel abeela,
~or bars. 'l1uoulb use of tbe mod·
els it is paaiible to explore different
ways of _.w:inc pi'O!fuction to arrive at optimum operating mnditicms,
without disruptinc actual opetatioos.
· 'lblou8h this optimization, the enginema ...., able to determine the muimum tale at which desired products
may be pro&lt;l_uced using existing plant
and macbinely.
Dr. Ray explained that """'-ti·
cal modeling and optimization have
been used extensively in the aero- - ·
chemical and petroleum industries, but the appUcatioo of these ideas
to steel making and steel proc:esSing
is a "pioneer Wldertakin ""'The UfB
Center for Process Me~urgy is one
of the very few academic centers in
the world where this type of work is
being carried out, be aaid.
Dr. Szekely is a recognized expert
in the area of metal pn&gt;&lt;:&lt;!S!ling and
mathematical modeling of metallurgical systems. Professor Ray is consid. ered an autbority on process optimization and particularly the treatment of
.
r., .
~·
:::~ '- •._;;.rn nn:~.~ ~
,.._ . .
--:--- r
&lt; ;.
,~..
{ , ,.._••-.
•tv~ • • r.~·, ; r,;7;... .;.o'ltJ\o"'l'~ br.
large scale oomp~ex sy~tems. :"
State University bas · announoed
Distinguishe4 Teaching Professors ·
same •c&amp;n\pus nommafi!&gt;l' pro.cedures
While the work is primarily acathat.nine pmfessors .Qnooo from .U/B}
, !JlUS~ lie ~'~ profe5lil1f.',l o9J: .assoalld .@.;iteria were followed as 1m ·
.demicJesearch,_ that. .iLinvofves
have been promoted to the ne.w ;J:ank
'Ciate'' profolSsdrs ..kith' at Je.lst three
DiSiiiigU1st;ed. ' Teaching. Ptiifessors,professors. graduate students and post
of Distinguished Teaching Professor
years~ tenure and must regularly teach
with_ the exception that .a ll full.,time
doctoral associates, a determined ef.
and
76
others
(including
eight
from
some
undergraduate
students.
~teaching ·faculty of any rank.and with
fort is made to tackle real problems.
here
)
·havereceived
.the
Cbancellor's
lion
criteria
inci)Jded
demonstrated
.!'.~ Y!lf!!' or JtlOie of University service
_
Cloee"cooperiition·'is 1Daihtamed
Award
for
Excellence
in
Teacbing.
•
'
n:iaStery
of
'
teaching
teCliiiiques
and
Weie
eligible. .
·
'
1 with several majot. steel companies,
Chapcellor Ernest L. Boyer, in mskflexible response to student &gt;;leeds,
Caaipuses were in'lited to nominate
including Robliq Steel , Bethlehem
ing the announcement. aaid that the
interests," and problenls; continuing
candidates for the award..,.. the basis
Steel and Youngstown S,t eel In contitled professorsfiips recognize the
scholarship in a field; establishment of
of. one nominee for every block of
nection with one project concerning
impact of senior faculty who have
bigb standards for students and a
2,000 full-time equivalent ~d-the optimization of the "finishing
taught effectively thoW!&amp;Dds of stu· constructive attemp.t to help students
uate students.
•
end" of an integrated steel plant, Drs.
dents throughout the years, while the • 1 attain academic excellence; and. a
.WinneJ:S of these Awards from U / B
Ray and Szekely visited Youn~ · Chancellor's Awards acknowledge outwillingness to serve as an acaileinic
are: Dr. Saul Elkin, associate profesSteel several times.
standing contributiODS of younger
advisor and be easily ...,.,.,.m1e to
aor of theatre; Miss Rbae Ann
To ensure that the mathematical
teachers 8li well
students.
·
Hawkss, instructor of -bealth educa:model to be constructed at U fB would
"This program is one of the first in
Where Distinguished Teaching J&gt;r!&gt;.
tion; Dr.-EliZabeth ~. assistan,t
indeed reftect the real- system, exten .
the nation," Dr. Boyer aaid "It affessorsbips can be awarded ooly to
prOfessor of American atDdies; Dr.
sive diacuasiODS with researchen and
firms that the quality .of a college edthose who have demonstrated great . Jrving Shames, professor of ~
opemton at the Youngstown plant
ucation is cloeely linked to good
competence over a period of years,
ing science; Dr. Nonbaa &amp;lkolf, p..,:.
were held
teaching and . calls for teachen who
the Chancellor's Awards for Excelfessor of psychiatry~ Dr. Warren
demon,strate
high
standards
of
scbol·
lenoe-in
Teachin'
are,
within
the
reach
'l'bomas,
associate prof_.. of ind.S..
'lbe first result&amp; of this work are
arly work and love of learning."
of the great ma)Ority of the Univertrial engineerins; Dr. Howard.l'ieckelC
now being generated by.a large digital
'lbe
Di!'tin~hed
T!"'ching
Prosity's
overall
faculty,
~yer
exp~
mann,
profeils6r
of cbemistzy; Dr. Sol
' computer Qll campus. Gordon Lilly,
fessor designation_ constitutes a proThe Awards provide a one-time
W. Weller, professor of chemical endirector of lbe Computer Center, is
motion
and
carries
with
it
a
salary
cnmt
of
$500
to
each
designee.·
The
gineering.
a metallurgist himself and actively inincrease of up to $2,500. 'lbe first
terested in the project. Results indi·
SUNY DistinguiShed Teaching Procate that' throush improved scheduling
fesson, their present titles and camit should be _,ole to increase the
puses are:
comPanY's prochil:tion tales.
Dr. . Allen -Benton, professor of biDr. Ray noted that this is a very
ology, College at Fredonia; Dr. Ralph
imPortant point at prei!ent, wbeh steel
A. Brown, _professor of American his- ·
mills in the United States...., working • tory, Colleae at Cortland;1lr. Fraser
at full capacity to meet demand and
A total of $55,000 is available ine&gt;&lt;t 4312, deadline: Wedneaday, OctoDrew, professor of English, College
resist overaas ~lion.
ternally for support of research, the
ber 3; Engineering: Dr. Law,rence
at Bulfalo; Jobn H. Grosvenor, proInstitutional ,Funds Committee an·
Kennedy, eJtl 39«, deadUne: Friday,
fessor of art and language, AgriculWhile the research is done"with spenounced today.
October 5; Health Sciences: Dr. Rich- ,
tural'and 'f:echnical College at Coblecific steel coiD]!an.ieoi' on specific ·prob- 'lbe Committee has approximately
ard Jones, eJtt 5105, Wednesday, Oc·lems, results...., made generally avail·
skill; Dr. .Jobn Mackiewicz,• professor
$30,000 and the U / B Alumni Assoof biology, University Center at Altober 3; Law: !'.Jr. Marc GalBnter,
able to the steel industry throl.lllb the
ciation will provide an additional $25,en. 6-2070, 'lbursllay, October 4; NatpubUcation Of reports, books and jaw&gt;.
bany; Dr. Robert L. Sells, 'Professor
000.
.
ural Sciences: Dr. Harry King, eJtt
nal articles.
•
of J?hysics, College at Geneseo; Dale
Dr. McAIUster H , Hull, Jr., dean
Stem, professor of art, College at
.3629, Wednesday, October 3; Manof the Graduate School and chairman
New Paltz; Dr: Gearge H . Stein, proagement: lli. Howard Foster, ext:
of the CoUunittee, especially invites
fessor of history, ·University Center
.5011, Monday, October 8; -8cici.ai Sci·
new facult and those who were on
at Binghamton, and Dr. Joseph A.
. ences: Dr. Lester Milbrath, m . 1716,
Dr. J'!""J'h A._ Berpntz. professor
sabbaticals last year to submit proWiecba, professor of German and diMonday, October 1.
of cbemical· engmeenng, hail been
rector of the Foreign Studies Center,
posals.
.
-Proposals which involve human sub- l
elected a Fellow, of the American InCollege
at·
Ol!wego.
·.
~ewly. revised .applications .and jid·
jects
should.
conform
to
··the
J!'~ver- ·
~
Chemical ~
dihonal mformation may be obtained . sity's· policy; HUll said lA panel of four University professeparate
-from representatives within each Unisors and thtee administraton reviewed
story, this i"''Ue) .
.
·
Memben of the AICbE DOmlnaled •
campus · nominations and evaluated
versity division. Dr. Hull notes that ·
Also he noiA!d1 previoUsly approved
and elected Dr. Bergantz in recognirecommendations of colleagues, stueach area has estabUsbed deadUnes
pro~ls involvmg
gmduate student
tion of his professional attainment and
for filing proposgls which will be
do!nbl. scholars in the nominees' spesupport have had sucb budget item~!
si~t accomplishments in eoai·
strictly adhered to. cial fields, associates and alumni. 'lbe
- Umited to $1,000: "While this Umita·
Divisional representatives and dead: ' tion is not a fW!d policy, It vias set
Truste.
acted
upon
the
recommenda~American Institute of Cbemical
tion of Cbancellor Boyer and the comline ftling daU. follow: Arts and Let- • in the spring by tlie allocations com'
""" ~ with 39.000 members in
ters: .Ills. BemiCe Poss; eJtl 5306,
mi~ chaired by Dr. Kent D. Law·
mitteea· in view ol !be amall reser:ve
102 kql leCtions nationwide, ja the
deadUne: Wedneaday, October 3; Ed'l""t.i&gt;rof-.: ol pbyalcs at tbe Colleie
of funds· available and may well be
oldest . . . larleet orpDbatlaa for
ucational
Studies:
Dr.
~rd
Knight,
at~ta.
•.
set
agsin for the III!IDe reason. w
chemiad ........

. Eight Local·Profess.ors Wi-lfSU.NY..Aw~rds.~;

Institutional Funds Committee
Has $~,000 for.Research Awa..ds

-n

Bergantz Honored

f.

'1'\

�~lJ,IP'1:J

Ze~en

- ~.

wages Stadsrical Battle ~
~ ol

oamialu..

witbln ....
coaperalive .......,.,_ ud 8DIIII,y by the
NafioNl
"IIIIWalll.

c.-.
~'!!~~..,J:.;

• a

~t,

the -nty ol cue pool the par!icipaliJII in·
etilu... am be caDoklmed ·811111111
the beat in the world."
'""- times IIJIIIU8IJ,y .... ol the
moperatiwe poup&amp; ...... Ill formally
cliaCoa -.Ita ol PMt ud cummt
trials ud .Ill plan -~ far the
~year. ~~tly
theEutern Cooperative Onco
(ECOG)
met at Bulralo'a
Park Memorial IDst:itute, attmctiDg m8re than
130 inwetipton from the
aDd
vided at

aDy

-u.s..

e.m..IL
.
Other COIIJP'ftliw poup&amp; &amp;MIICiated
wilh the Uai-.lty's Statistical Lab
iDclude tJie Radiation Tlierapy On·
oo1ogy Group, Wod&lt;inl PartY m Lung
Cancer, and the Veterans Administza.
lion Lung Cancer Study Group.
MUch T..... Inch-

Besides f o r m a I general III!SSions,
planning lll'll! )evaluating committees

are continii,JIIy . meeting .throughout

the year. It JS not unusual in aDy week
to find members of the U/ B sta1f trav·
eling to Washingto~ Chic!lgo, Denver
and other major cities. ''OUr coiJabc&gt;.
rations are not for people having low
energy levels or who wish to be homebodies," Dr. Zeleo remarks.
Be adds that many members of his
stidl are in active liaison with cancer
research c e n t e r s and clinical trial
groups· throughout the world.
"Collecting, processing and analyz.
ing clinical data· require a completely
in~ted team eftort involving the
speciallm&lt;iwledge of data prool!sl;on;,
computer scientists and statisticians.
Our group is one of the best of its
kind in the- world," Dr. Zelen con·
tends . .
.
'Ih. Statistical Lab 8lso serves as
a training ground for graduate studeots in ' the Univen;ity's Biometry
Prograni. Biometry is the application
of msthemati&lt;&gt;1 and statistics to the
life scienoes'; -and the program here is
considered to be a leading one.
''Because we are playing for real
on these research projects, the stu·
dents participating have a strong feel·
ing that they are not merely earning
an advanced de'gree, but are belping
to solve some of our important health
problems," Dr. Zeleo 88.YI"" _.The author of .more than 60 publi·

_.·lob Qpen~f~gs
.Tbe Peraannel Ollice indicates tl!at the following faculty and ·non·
leecbing profes8ional sta1f positions are opeo · at Stata University at
Bulralo:

F-*Y
Clinical Instructor, Mediew.
• Allsis1ant Profesaor, Education41 Studia.
Visiting A,osilltant Professor ! 2 openings) , Engwering and Applied
&amp;~oou.

•
Clinical Instructor (2 openings, part.timel, Restorative Dentistry.
~ .Assistant Professo'r, Biochemistry.
, NTP
ProfNUJl171CI Andlyst; Computer Services, PR-2.
~I A!Jolyst,

'

-

Data Prooessing, Computer Services, PR~2.
AaWant to ~rovost, Arts and Letters.
Technical Assislal!t, Biocbeuiistry . .
Creative Aaociate, Music.:
~Librarian, Science and Engineering Library.
Assistmot Librarian (3 positioris), Health Sciences Library.
Hmd of Acquisitions, University Libraries.
AatUI&lt;rAt Librarian (part-time) , law Library.
~1An4lyst, ;Management Information Systems, PR-1. .
Aaociate for University Systems AMlysis, Management Informatipn·

Systems, PR-3.
•
'
Assist&lt;lnl for University Systems An4lysis, Management Information
Systems, PR-2.
Assiotcmt to Cilllirman, History, PR-1.

For additional informatim concenlins these jobs and for details of
the Stata University· sYstem, consult bulletiB
,
·
·
1. Bell Facility between D162 and D153; 2. Ridge Lea, Buildina
&lt;&amp;236, nezt to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Buildina 4230, in comlior Dezt Ill
C-1; 4.. Health 8c:ien1:e8 Building, in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capeo_
Hali, in tbe corridor~ Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Loctwood,
I!OUDd 8oor in corridor Dezt to veoding IIIIICbiM&amp;; 7. Hayee Hall, in
main . . , _ foyer ..,..,.. hom Pllblic Informatim Ollice; 8. A"*-'
Hall, in corridor bet- Rooms 1.12 and 113; 9. Parker ~·
in corridor nezt Ill Room 16; 10. Goodyear Hall, 1st lloor, H01181118 08lce
f t; 11. 1807 Elmwood, ~ Department; 12. Norton Union,
Director'• Olllce, Room 225; l3. Dielendolf Hall, in corridor .-t Ill
Room 108.

NTi&gt; !IIJI!Ilings lhroulhout
boardS at these locatiolla:

.,,

eancer _ =--,._ ,.,.
' .

Communique- ~

• catians, Dr. Zelm jaiDed tbe flo:alt.Y
in 1967 - .a s-ot- ol st:atlatlcs.
Befono that. be served - '-1 ol the
Natiaaal ~ Institute's Ya)bematlcal 8tatislics'8Dd Applied Mathemstial 8ectian.

botw~~=~
his·,~ Dr. Zelen

.""""'nitlarls for.

first liecame inll!n!8tell in """""" ......
aearch while a research prof-.r at
the University of Wisconain 12 yean;
ago.

SUNY Seeking
Albany Building

U , coL 4)
'lb8 ~~U/8 f8oall;y; old
111111 dooh• fmaillol. For rainformetin- .U 811·2146.

---

•""¥:.~of 1M Fiui-Conlilolo, Ccm·
-

~ No-. 8:80 -"No

' w - o1 the

19'12 AaldaiiY Award
for tho boot fo.....,. film, tmel 11m&amp; priao
in the Bedin FiliD FeotiRL

uuM-

Fe&amp;....U.. David Crooby, ~The­
atre, downtown smr.lo, 8:80 p.m. Ad·
-No- ·Hall
tlcbloTicbt
be
JJUn:Moed - the
Olloe.
·

THURSDAY.-20

State University of /New York has
u.s. General Se'rvices Administration of its desire to acquire·
Albany's Old Federal Building in
order to local!' , two major support .

advised the

=~o~m!~ ~v~~ J.ri:

versity Construction Fund - within
a downtown site already ·planned for
its Central Administration.
In addition, Chancellor Ernest L.
Boyer anno'unoed this week, the Uru- ·
versity will relinquisb most of its
property on Thur)ow Terrace near
the Downtown Campus of State Universio/ of New York at Albany. 'The
bnildings at 7, 8, 9 and 10 Thurlow
Terrace and approximately four acres
of land upon which they are located
will be tumec! over to, the New York
State Office of General 'Services for
disposition.
Boyer said that the State University
Bollrd of Trustees has authorized him
to seek University. acquisition of the
Old Federal Building, in anticipation
of the facility being declared surplus
when a ney.&gt; Federal Building now
under construction in the capi~ is
completed.
The University, he said, will proceed as prompUy as possible to obtain
a decision regarding the - .future of
the Old Federal_Building from GSA
and if. the response is.lavorable, an
appllcation for formal transfel" of the
property will be made.

wful:':'UX· ~~~ 'i!

completing initial planning for r:ellO'vation of the Delaware and Hodson
Railroad complex and the adjoining
Albany Journal' building wliich will
become the Central Stalt's future head·
qUarten;. Plails to acquire t1ie build·
ings,. a landmark of Albany's early
heritage and a nationally recognized
histbrital site, were annoimoed last
November. 'The Old Federal Building
iS. adjacent to these properties.

HEWGrantccontinued from 1, coL 4)
encouraging veterans to attend school.
UMass gained $133,000 and Southern
Dlinois, $125,000. Ranking alter U/ B
was the University of Kentucky with
$109,000.
.
U/B biib Ninth

' In yet another NASULGC study,
that agency ranked U/ B_l!inth on the
list of its memben; with · the higbest percentages of veteran enrollment
Accordjng to that report, in 1972·73
veterans accounted for 13.45 per cent
of all U/B students. 'The top five institutions percentage-wise were Dela·
ware State, Lincoln University, the
University of Washington, the University of Ari&gt;.ona and the University of
Arkansas at Pine Bluff. In the same
report, State University of New York
topped all State educational systems
in the number of veterans enrolled,
with 32,114.
Tile NASULGC report indicated
also that financial aid continues to be
a problem for . many returning Gis.
According to cited fiKures hom the
~ - National League ol Cities-United
States Conference of Mayors, the student attanding SUNY on the Gl Bill,
for e" amp I e, has ooly $9'7 .22 per
month for livinl ezpenaes altar pay·ing tnitim and book COlli&amp;
UliRAit'( 11£1'11ESENTATIVES
OmlttH h'Om last - · · llstllll of ......
· - to the University - b l y repre_Mntilll the FKUity s.nst. were Marthe
Msnn1111 end Mary Bredy, UniWtslty U·
brerlas.

EXHffiiTS
UU.U AIT EXHIIIT•

&amp;~nl Canadian P~ and Scult&gt;tu.re - A Se.lution~ · Ceaturin&amp;' work &amp;y • '
David Bolduc. Robin Collyer, Graham

l:~~~rytw~'!.!'.....t1l!;.~~

wich. Gordon Ra)'nl!r, Daniel Solomon,
Joy Walker and Tom W!Uten, Gallery
219. Notion, through September 28.
Gallery hours: Monday, Wednesday and

....:;: =~-~sS:.

--lllr
r=r~~

day, 1-5 p.m.

Y...,. of /JamJJge-1972, an eshibition
in memory of emiMm litenory 1igwao
who died durin&amp; 1972. BalcoJIY, oecood
ftoor. _Lockwood Memorial Libnory. Con·

. tinuinl:.

=

UIIAIY EXHIIIT*

.,_

50th A.....W.nary of 1M Publication of
Ulyueo, part of the~w..:~oe~nory. (207), Lock·

NOTICES

�·-.«:

IIIC1Wr

Arfluv 0 . Eve, New York State A.
oemblyman the l.ard Diotrict, will
_.-In tbo Baa Lowlp, Norion, 8 p.m.

- N O IIC1INCI IIMINAa#

~i!~"p!::1~'~=:,:,~

f_,r of applied mathematics, California
lnotitute of Tec:bnolol!Y, 104 Parker, 4
p.m. Collee In 107 Parker at 3:30 P-!D·
_ HUMAN OIIOWIH fOUNDATION LECTUII•

A Newl)' R-niz•d Substance (Soma-

:.,~ ~..!7"'S'·~~

.

QDiveraity of North Carolina. Kinch
Auditorium, Baft'alo Children'• Hoopital,
7:80p.m.
.
The -.e io
by the Weot-

cr:;.naored

- - ~..,.F~n~~H;
7 m..•o Hoopitol

PANIC 1HIATM oaiiNTAtJON••

Orientation for a~,. for Kimu&lt;l,
232 ·Norton, 7:80 p.m.
.For additional infO.,.tioft. coil Pegy
Sparr· at 886-82C7. - ·
·
UUAI MOYir• ·

CONCUr .

Music by 806, Baird Lawn, ·behind
Scboelllropf Hall, 9:80 p.m.-midni&amp;hl No
admiaoion charze.
,
In cue ,of inclement weather, the con~:~ be)!eld in the, ~ore~
fUI RSnVAL•

......_

G::o:. ~de~

Halla, North Oompua, 12: 30 a.m. No
admiooion charze.

FRIDAY ;:;- 14
CAC IXIIIIIT•

Fillmore Room, Norton. 9 a.Di.-5 p.m.
oaowtH _,.TION UCTUil#

HUMAN

&amp;~:ta';:;';;;;:,.~e:.~ob.~ J:::::!h v:!
Wyt. prof...,r of pediatriat, University

.

.

UUAI COffHHOUSE• -

tel":'=~~..,I'";..'i;J!o~ ~!
00

UUAA MOVII.••

•. Euorythu.,

Admdoioli: 75 cen1o.
- CONCUr

=;

;tfways Wanted

Y~u'uo

~~:~:: ~!c(·~=-~

lo

-

Music by New DecGIU,- Baird ~lawn,
behind Scboellkcipf Hall, 9:30 p.m.-12: 30
a.m. No admieoion c:harse.
In cue of iDi:lement weather, the ooncert will be held in the Fillmore Room,

Nort.on.

_

_ .

SATURDAY_: 15

.

EuerythU., Yo,.'oe Alway• Wanl&lt;d to
Know About Su .. , olarrinc Woody
Allen, Conference Theatre, Norion, check
ohow&lt;:ue for timeo. Ad.miooion: 75 cento.

Zo~~~'t":. ra::.

Hh1B SAIIA'" SEavta•

Followed by Otuf Shobbal, H i 11 e I
Ho.-, 40 Capen ffivd., 8 p.m.
_

SHAIIOS MOINING IRVICES•

_ •

H.!'.:!:""~ blf.!.'1t"10m:!

c:-•

For further information, call 833-8;134.
vAUlTY soccu•
•
U/B w. Fredonia, Rotary Field, ~ p.m.
(Pre-eeaoon .,.m8'.)

HHIIW QASS•

6,13 Mitzbao, Chabad House, 3232 MeiD •

SL, 6 p.m.

c

For further infonnation. call 833-8384.
CAC MOVIE•

..

of North Carolina. XiDch Auditorium,

r~..J.~· iow~';.d.l.';"o!'vf!t

uu.u

-t· G~"F~c:-.:;:r~s~~
· · Hoopilal.
stUDINT
Msoa.AnoN

...o~MAJION•

Sludebt Aooooialion ...... ,and J .,.:-ordinatoro will with ~ Cen~. Norion, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

ter

_,..,

...........

SlatiiJtioall'&gt;obkmo in PII)'Chi4try, Dr.

""7 ~~=:.:.~:-:r~

4230 Bidp .1M. Rm. A-49, 11:30 a.m.,
12:80 p.m.. 2 p.m. • 3 p.m.
Sponaored by the Statiotical Science

WEEKLY COMIIIIUNJQUE COPY DEADUNE

~ For eveJYOIMI'O COIIWnlenco ond plasure,
we lilfll to publlclza all ~ taking piKe
on campus. To record Information, contact ~
Nancy Cardarelli, ext. 2228.

COfRIHOUSE•

/

te~=:."S"~m.K~l.;J!\o~oock~:~
UUAa MOVII••

AJu.oa,,.

.....

EuerythU., Yo,.•vi
Wanl&lt;d 1o
Know About Su ... , Co,.Uerence Theabe, Norton, check ohowcue for 1imeo.
Admiooion: 75 ceolo.
CONCEIT* •

-

Featurinc the Slompin~,.S""ik Gre...

~
oake.

:a11tb; ~!'-rton t;.!n ~
~

osA socw•

Featuring muolc by the 'Good Timu;
beer and pop,~, mixed drinb, 75¢.

~..::!r':f!::'::.:!t~:--~'!.c..

all otbea,

fl.

CHAS11D1C OAnlalffO*

- U.lillll 'til dawn,

Leisure

Land .

·

Motel,

=

Route 71&gt;, Ham·

~~-t~~~~i.~~:

Road (dinner-----$4 per penon). Repltrati.on begiDI at 8: 00 a.m.; •t:artinc time
- io 10:01 a.m.
•
_,a_~noored . by the U/B Sport. Car ·' HIU.B. WIINH IOASr

-.

No admiuion Cbare, Hillel HoWle pr-·
den, ~ Capen
5 p.m. ~ • • • . :

m..r.

IN1'B-IEStiiNCI

·co.-.ca

MOVII••

'SIDulthter-Ho,... FW.. Reotricted to
I.R.C. l.,...payen only. Call ut. 4715 for
.
......
•
time and location.
UUAI MOVIE*•

NIAGAIA fAUS IUS TIP..

The tour will include the Niagara
Powef ProjeCt, Whirlpool Park, the Floral ClOck. the Horticultural Uardeno and
Niagara Falls, OnL Proof of citizenohip
will be required ot the Canadien honler.
Tickets for the tour are available at the
Norton Hall Ticltet Oftice ($1). a.....,.
will leave Norton Hall promptly al 1
p.m., and will return by 8 p.m.
- Swnaored by the Student Aooociation.

Shadow of a Doubt (Hit.cbcock) , 140
Capen, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m. Ticlreto at 75
centa 8J'e available et the Norton 'Hall
Ticket Oftice.

Buffalo Children'• Hoopilal. 10 a.m.

DIIYErS lAilY*

S~y~r.~c; ·:e::

ehabad HOuM, 8292

~ ~;~~D, call~&gt;

•

Evorythu., You'vo Alway• Wanl&lt;d tiJ
Know About Su .... Conference Tbea.tre, NortOn. &lt;lheclc ohowcooe for timeo.
Admiaeion: 75 cents.

MONDAY-17
FILM MAICUS WOIKSHOP*

311 Norton, noon-2 p.m. and 3-5 p.m.
Preoented by the Student Aaoociation
and the Film Club.
SYMP051UM ON THE ENGINUI*
Du;.,n, Frederick G. Reina,~oyotems

A::: :

~~ r a Researeh
rp.,_ 70 .
• Preoenl&lt;d by the U/ B otudent branch,
'The Inotitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineera, ~
_.
PiJIUC: LECTUa•

~

-

Steworl M. uuy, Republican coudi- date for Mayor, Buffalo, Haas lounge,

Ncpr::;,::.,g~y

tion Committee.

flLM· ·

the U/ B Fall

Orienta~

· . Wild. Slrawberri&lt;1 (Bercman, ~95J),
~~"!Jjiorf, 7 .m. No allmiuion

�</text>
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              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1383543">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451216">
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                <text>Campus Maps</text>
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                <text>1973-09-13</text>
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>en-US</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383531">
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                    <text>:n::t==~ m.:=t
- t , culied~'fl!l

DO--

mudl- dobalad, oftoD- ...uped, but
Cllllllistll!llloolled-~ new (or
Nonh or~) ~ ol UlB.

111e new road._.......,. as !be Ra.D
camJ&gt;US eoolraDce amd c:om~Ds . into a
stretch designated 88 Hadley Road,
was by Sunday aftemoan doaabrith
the ears of some 800 studiiiltB and
their families laden with tbe l:lal&gt;"

pinp . of
-rne, amvms~.~
_ bomesleaden, to stake the &amp;rat
•
on livblg in a community that
will,one day be a bustling educational
metropolis of some 40,000 students,
faculty 8nd stalL
. If, .however. any of the dorm~
were congratulating tbemsel...,. 011 b&amp;ing .. the first" (in addition to cril'!nl
abc&gt;ut isolation and lack of ~
and ~indiviilual cooking facilitieS' as
reported in Monday's Courier-E%press ), they were w"r o n g. Another
~ Of "pioneers," as they like ·to
think of themselves, bad '.already arrived-the faculty and steff of the
· Faculty of Law and .Jurisprudenci!
whO liegan the first move Of academic
facilities to the new site in eerly
August · and are just noW frantically
unpacking and adjusting to new surroundings in the John Lord O'Brian
Building, straining to meet a September 18 orientation lor all students and
a Sip!ember -20 first day- of classes
(delayed about 10 days ) .
In a sense, both the dorm residents
. and the Law faculty qualify as " trail
blazers., or '"pioneers" JJr whatever
term of distinction they rrul!ht like .t o·
have appliM. Some might call them ··
" guinea pigs." l'bey're the first to
test, or be tested in, the enormous
scbeme of "phased" transition from
old to new facilities that will be a
fact· of UniversitY liSe for a decade.
,. - At--thiivpoint,-.aJUhat can definitely
be said bv way of.. -~"··~is
... 'tliBt 8U donn slu~
'9ia-;(:or~Wi11 soon be, moved in; that woilanen.are
still movblg books and . chairs' and
boxes and stacks of papers up and
down and around the seven stories of
John Lord O'Brian Hall; that buses
are sbuttling hundreds back and forth
among Amberst, Ridge Lea and Main
Street ( see scbedules, page 10) ; that
food is being served in the resideoce
halls; that the lights are on, and the
plumbing in working order (in most
cases); that Amherst is finally with us.

c:onese

. .
~·

'We're Opening September 18'

" We may have to seat students on
the Boor for six weeks but we're oPening September 18," Dr. Marjorie Mix.
assistant dean, sa¥&amp; about the Faculty
of Law and Jurispaldence from the
third level balcony adjoining the Faculty's administrative offices and over:.
looking sitework and building progress
on the nearby Engineering sub-aim·
pus. Construction noises and confus·
ion-make it "exciting" to• really be on
the scene, sbe feels, describing with
pride and some awe the progress that
has already been made on nearby
buildings in tl)e few .weeks sbe and
others have been there.
I n s i d e the Law building, library
chairs are being moved on the elevators as arrangement of the library,
the core of the $9 million structure
which will have an ultimate capacity
of 302,000 volumes, proceeds at a rapid
_pace. From the second level through
the seventh. stacks are being erected
and boolufinoved in as fast aa workmen can do it. All books from Eagle
Street and the Prudential Building
are "in bouse," with others to follow
from their long-term temporary locations in Erie County Hall ·and University storage at the Bell Plant.
.
· Meanwlille, the last stages of clas&amp;room carpeting are going forward at
the same rapid 'clip-the final preliminary to determining a definite date ·
of arrival for furniture for a seriell.
ol large lecture halls ( ranging in ea-,
~ty froin 159 to 72) and Smaller
'problem l'OOIDII." Final carpeting was
delaYed by leaks in the outer wall
area wbere the blict f •
sliPiled
-lieJ- this y ...... These~ ted lq_
eome -ter in the pits of the tfeJ:af
~a situation which Dr. Mix
(Co11tiluud "" -

9, ""': •)

�VIii Clime Off.·~.

·uy .3(i:P~

-;ent-:· -~ -

Major erimea 1111 ~- declined
36118r cent in 1972, ~ ID Campus Security ...... -'"'d in the

Buf{akl ·E,.,U, N - thla

..t.. .

'There were 602 :m.lor campus
crimes in 1971 and .only 885 in 1972,
the report said.
·
Major crimes include -.Iau,hter,
rape, robbery, assault, . . - t e d assault, grand l&amp;nleny, petit . . _ and
auto theft.
The incidenc&amp;-ol crime 1111 cunpus, .
the report indicated, ia equivalent I?
a rate of 1155 c:riiMs per 100,000 population. 'The _...tiOnal uerqe ia 2829
major erimea per 100,000 8lld the Niagara Frontier"rate.Ja 26711;6.
Kennetli P. ~ dlrector. of.
Campus SecuritY, •ai8D DDied. a 24.9
per cent reduction .iD aii' I'IIXWled incidents Ill crime in 1972 - 847, compared .to 1,128 in 1971.' 'The CU1PUS
arrest- rate increuecl from for
eveey 5.52 major crimoa ·in 1971 to
one for every 3.11.'! ~ Crimes in
197l.
.
. .
.
•
GlenDon ci~ an ~ of 11 se. · curity ollicera, a pealier number of
foot and clom!itory-=~- ~
-

..._

.

.39 Women, 27 Minority Students ,_
Among 135 Freshmen in ·Medic~n~ .
'111ereailllDOie-Uidminority
students tban evet before in this year's
frarbman class in ·the Scbool of Medicine.
'The class of 136 studenbi includes ~
39 women and 'Jf1 minority stu&lt;lents
&lt;24 Black ~.2 Puerto Ricans
and 1 MexJCIID ~! · Last year
' 36 women and 18 mmonty students

entered

Dr:-Lutbet Musselman, chairman of
the Medic;al Sd)ool admissi"'!" ~mmitee, . """d

were

tha~ s:an

applications

"'"'"~ ~ Y"'!f· 'The 12-n;&gt;"D!-

"!'•
comnuttee mterviewed
voduals and accepted 136.
M.ost &lt;121)

688 ,mdi.

of the freshmen are

from New York State, with 59 .from'
Western N'!'W. York. The ~· ·
are .from """"!' other sl.ljtes and .l!'X
foretgn countries.
'The new medical c1 ass includes
graduates of 86 dillerent oolleges and
universities While most are science
·
·
ba
de
· such
:!!'gt;"""
uorels~· fie~:;:"'a.'nmusic,
economics, religious studies and art
education. Eight hold master's and
four l'b.D. det:mes. Alfare undel' 31;
17

FIR£ AT CI.DIEJIT
~ fire in the ninth ftoor elewtor room of
Clement Hall on lila South ~mpus Jues·
d a y - caus'ed 'six studerits tO be ~
tnlpped in an eleVIItor at third ftoor level
for about . en hour end c8used approxi·
rMWy $10,000 d a m age. No one was
InjuN&lt;~ In the bWe which started at

approxlrnmly 1 p.m. and affected one
elevator. Firemen had extinguished the
llaiNS by 1:30 p.m. and the students were
freed from the elevator by 1:55. The incident was attributed to an overheated
.
motor.

.de 'married.' . •.

..

An .
.
.
held ·r
onentation sesSlOD W88
or
the freshman class August 23 and 24
at the School of Medicine. 'The pro-

gram included- remark!! .by President
Robert L. "Ketter and F. Carter Pan-

· pres•·d ent fo,r health
·
nil'' vtre
. SCiences,
~~:.:'to':s '::'J'~:::lr. With faculty,

President Ketter told the group that
medical students "are traditionally
thought of as intelligent, hard working,
hard driving,, almost always on the
border of exhaustion." Termiog the
present time ."the start of a most
intensive period of profound change,''
Ketter said be hoped that most in

the class would see new d~ m
both medicine and in the delivery· of
}&gt;ealth care. He 8ll6l1led them that· be
had no q u a I m ~ whatsoeVer 88 to
"where we are 80llll. under ~ lead·
erllhiJ: of. the new VIce preSident ~or

:::!.t :-~· !;J:!.~

also pictured faculty here as playing
"
. _,..__, role in chanaina the

.a 81.........-.care-deli
~ho:a """""&amp;;~ health care . very

m Or ~I~......-! the hope that
.._ wm {eel a sense of achievement
in attaining aome of the goals outlined by the ~dent.~ He cautioaed
the new clajls that "if .YOU are not
willing bOth to J earn and to tinleain
all your life through. take \'\' another
· art. You 10re ~rs of ~ prole&amp;:
sion from 'todaY and will continite 10
be as. lqng as you live."
ro
ld abou teadl
. Fa_cuttySJ!Okesmenf:O
t
·.
mg, mnovations and . ad~ placement exams. Sophomore, JuniOr and
. senior medi~ takestudenadts urge df
newcomers ~
'!'antag~ 0
the opportunities that will avail them· selves \0 yqu · - ' to respond .I!&gt; presS.!IJ"' • . • to beoome aware of llllStrealment and disregard of patient individuality and to do something."
. p
.
From Dr. . M~!f!in taut, 8880CIB.te
prof~ of .~~~:!&gt;" group beard
18
that something
gomg to ha~
m the next oouple of years. Mixed
up with all of the fascirlating diseases
you are g,oing to 1~. about is the
danger of a debumaruzmg process so
subtle you have to . be on '~ l~t
you ';".~ a P a t 1 e n t as JUSt an
ulrer~
And there. was &amp;. ~tee
that . each of yo'! will make tt through
MediCal School i1 you ~J:.,w"!'t ~u
now possess and add to tt
~entific ..
kn~ledge you have to learn.

~U8~~10Pthe~

situation.

.

Housn1g #N---1--1
et:=Ueu
-

•

C:or_
c:ofinig'~er:s
.J"'

r'

oc;J

Some 70 U/B foreign students from
frightening
30 nations- are baving a •-~
find
and discouraging· lin!!' .lrl'"-"'- l!.&gt; - ptaces 10 live:
·.
. .
A shortage ·of liousioi in the Buffalo.....,., and a :Wjli~ !ist. of aoo ·
fo.r .domutoey ~~ ~e•'l': '
ibl f
,.!1"',--Jll ·~

':i: .:
'..~ou:~Jt
ba&amp;beeii . recent
years .
..
.,

According' to Mia. France J . Pruitt,
acting director. of the Office of Foreign

Student Aftairs, the students _need
housin~ ..,;thin a ......W.Ie oommutin;. d_,istance
.,_. of the U-"-'ty. smce
·
....,
"'·~none bave Clll'B, the availability
of bus
servia! is also important.
·
Mrs. Pruitt said that male ·and
female studenta. and even a few married oouples make up the "homeless"
group.
.
Families who would be interested
in providing "foreign students with
homes or individuals ·who have rooms
or apartments for rent can call the
Office of Foreil!" StUdent Alfair!l for
mo re-382Sinf.onna~.. 'The . n~r is
831
,

·Treating Na~cotic Dependency is·Topic of TJu·ee .~tudie§·~
By KEN SERVICE
Unhwrity

lnl~ ~

Advances in the treatment of narootic dependency will be the subject
of three fedetally-funded studies being
·undertaken by a team of researchers
in the Department of Psychiatry. Two
of the studies involve testing new
chemical agents and the third deals
with measuring the results of various
methodi; of treatment;
'The first of the new drugs to be
tested is naltremne, 8 heroin antsg·
onist developed by Endo Laboratories,.
Zebulon Taint or, M .D., associate·
~ Chairman of the Psychiatry Depart..
ment and principal investigator for ·
the project, explained that the effects
of naltrexone are similar to immunization. A dose of the drug, given orally,
can PJ'I'YI'flt any effects from intravl'llOUS heroin for up' to 72 hours.
While- some research has alreadr
'-n done on the drug, the U/B proJect will be the fiist oontrolled study .
over an extended period of time (at
IPillll nine months) desiined to determine long-term effects and out patient
11'1'11tment effects.
.
Or. Taintor ' indicated that naltreE·
oue midtt prove to be "anqther step
-down the path to adtieving the - '
..r JM'I'Yftllllljt heroin addiclion." He
nddfod that •t milbt &amp;!-a l!hed Iicht

on solutions to other drug dependen-

ci~e ailvan~e

that naltremne offers over other narootic antagonists,
he Said, is thitt it baa no addicting &lt;?•
euphoric e f f e c t s whatsoever. This
makes it a possible replacement for
methadone since problems of resale
and overdose would be nonenstent.
Patients eligible to participate in

this study are males over the age of

18. 'They include both addicts wbo
have been detoxified to a drug-fme ·
state either after methadone maintenance qr other trealment, and esperimenters with narootics who are not
addi~ but who are ooncerned abou.t .

~.!:is will

receive a medical
history, and a oomexamination, including
I and psychiatric examinations.
examinations, 88 well as
the medication, will be provided fme.
In addition, patients will also reCeive,
w i t h&lt;&gt; u t preiJt&lt;!ice, all IIP(I!OI&gt;i'iate;tmalment for tlieir dru1 problem.
~ information . may be ~
talned from the Emeqency Dr u'J.
Ahua Service (1194-144'7) at the E . ·
Meyer Memorial HOopital
'The ullllaoae atudy is being fund.
ecHw a $208,000 paat from tile Nationa'l Imti- for Mental Health.
'The aecond.atudy invo.lving a diem-&lt;
chiatric

~
plete

·

ical agent will test the effectiveness of
cific scales ·tor specific types of drug
L - alpha - &amp;!&gt;!tyl- methadyl ( LAAM ) . · users will · be- ccmstrueted.
This drug, developed by l .G. FarbenDr. D'Amanda · Will. serve as prinindustrie, is a long-acting fono of
cipal' investigator fiir ·this study, and
methadone, with 8 single .oral dose
Dr. Plumb w HI be oo-irlvestigator.
lasting for 72 hours. Dr. 1Taintor, who
They will' be assisted by Dr, 'l'liintor
is also the principal investigator for
and· Dt.· RObert Nichola, proffllll!!lr of
this project; explairis that the in!foeducational jl8ycbol0sy.'
·
duction of LA A M into methadone
The project will involve interviewmaintenance prognims oould.eliminate
ing several hundred patients of both
take&lt;bome and overdose problems in
sexes wbo .....-presently participatiitg
patients who are willing to report
in drug ·treatment_ programs in Westtwice weekly.
em New York..· TbMe programs inThis study will' involve patients who
~m!.~te:nr~:::.:df!
have been on methadone maintenance
for at least three monthS. The medgram of the LaCkawanna Health &lt;Am·
icapon and the necessary laboratory
ter, the Community Action Qrianiza·
. tests will be provided free of charge.
lion's Drug Abuse ~ · and
The project will be oonducted at
Treabnent Program, the North Side
the Sisters of Charity Hospital MethHospital in RoChester and the Direct
adone Maintenanre Program .in But·
Education aboUt Narootial Program
falo. Working with Or. Tainti&gt;r will
in Syracuse.
.• .
be Or. BenjaDlln F. Murpby, of S~ters
Preparati0118 for this stUdy have al·
Hospital; Or. Christopher. D'A.manda,
read)' begun and it will be completed
assistant clinical professor of medicine
in Deceniber 1974. it-Is being fuilded
and psychiatry, a 1\,!1 .Or. Marjorie ·
~h a $~,000 cbntract with the
Plumb, assistant: prol'easor of psych:
National IDatltute for JIII!IJltal Health.
The LAAM study will begin in
TUITION WAMII IIEQuaTs
' NOYI!IllbM or Decenlber. It is being
The Peroonnel ~ Ninliiclo' .Pro·
.Junded by a $104,000 grant from ·the
lessionol Setvfc:a ....,...,_ (18culty and
~~ Qffice for Drug Abuse
'The third atudy ia desifl!ed to develop ecoleo. to predict which patients
may have 1be giea.test su""""*-in various narootic treatment prbgrams. Spe-

&amp;tall) who •!II rwq-.,. tu-. waivers
that tho rwqUir.d Fonns 11-140 must be ·
complot8d and . . , _ tD lila ~of
Student. Accounts by &amp;epwnber 25 (tttree· ·
- k s after the start of - ) .

�~

3

NTPs Seek P£RP Qkay for

Separate Bargai~ing Unit
. -

_ . s . tile AAC ~ . the
ild............GIIIId.......,n

.
.
=-=:e..:

........ 1M . . . . . . . to the
~· Cllllliililllie Clll the
~ . W ., ......_ , _
lila JWc1at, ....... it will be _;_
~
plea fot
- L Many in the
....... ....._, - 'a id to be ,...
liltaDt to the Ia '*"'- It JIIVVidoB
IID CJIIIlfaB lor aperimmtatioa. COIIIIid:r~
beart of the
- At ...., ....
the . plan 00

~atreda tbe ~y. IDdpp

:'t
.....'f:"P.:~ :.m~·:!
.....- to be tonrarded to the RekbeJt
cOmm1tlee.

·

fl!r_..._ ·
·
Cancerillnc citbeF Collegiate Asaem-

-.tl

bJy bus!-, Klapp reponed this week

:::::.L

A Stne-wideCSBA._..t- to)leliliaD the Public Bql!oyeM'BelatiaaeJioud (l'ERB) to bMr 1IJIU-.
-~~~~to Ullit
lomaliaD
......
arate
lor theof SUNY

DOD-~~ lltd(N'l'Pa) -

U... in the petlliaD clriV&amp;-which ·was
'-led
by Richard
W.that
Glesbeen
of
Stony 8 ........
-reported
sip&gt;aiures
of 900 of awrozjmately 2500 NTPs
• SUNY-wide bad been forwarded to
PERB.
~i"':ttyti.e
A.Fi&lt;;:::i ~
Qllice, arid Marpret 'S. O'Bryan. academic advisor, Division of Undergraduate S t u d i e s, oecured over 100
• signatures in a two-week period in

that the Mardi for 1111
Orinterim
~uw The .......,..
tit there is mme dil&amp;culty in finding
an individual on campus to assume
· tbe 10le.
• In terms of a permanent director,
K111PP oaid tb8t .a search coD)IDittee
h&lt;IPo!l to ·have a list of seven or
,eicbt indiviiluaJa who will, ""pefully,
be lnvlll!d tO the ~for interviews liometime early this fall Earli:
er,. lhe I\Membly had -set a tentative
da:te of NoYember for issuing an invitaliaD to a new director. The
director would' replace 'Dr. Wayland
P: Sniith who resisneil from the office
in June, 1973. Names of prospective

~of·
Dr. .t".~~-U.on,_~,_tion~usplwas·ces

new

wil! ~~o=~~

=~!:,.

that they be invited for the interviews
aooon~;- to a ..,;reb committee re-'
-•
=::.~- Au~ ~ JJ'M!e~h' ~f the
.

3

-

~ =n•

Anm••t, tbe Assemb
.
lv
~,
aP.I&gt;ft'¥eil• "' rev.iaed; list 'Of ·10 'candi...,

it::t
"':;..:OOwill~ :.,e'g;i'J!
fliate 8y8letli next year. The ,llllJDe8
were to be submitted

baa appua!Jy pined tbe liBcOiiity
aipWun!a of 30 per ..,..t of ~boa in
the barpininr uniL
At the end of last week, NTPa ac-

10
tn PreSident

Ketter who .will ·engage five to serve
"!l the board. · · · · · :
1'b&lt;.e named on the list were:

c=.

A~~r tbe Taylor Law, which gov
ovems..public employee collective bargaining in the State, tlie petition had
to be received by PERB before the
end of August if there is to be any
possibility of separate representation
for NTPs for the three-yesr contract
period which begins nert July. .
FoH Election Possible

If PERB accepts the petition, it
will hear the arguments of the petitioner (CSEA in ·this case) and all
other interested parties such as the
s t a te and the current bargaining
t, SUNY/U 'ted and ·u tbe
a decision ':i'n the meri~ of
case. If PERB so decides, an election
would be held in the rau, at which
time any· of several organizations, ineluding CSEA; SUNY/United and
others, could be on tbe balloL
Although the Civil Service Employees Association is sponsoring the petition drive (and although those signing
had to designate CSEA as their representative), SpoKesmen for the moveemphasize that they
not
"""""""'ily endorsing CSEA as the
~rg agent for a separated NTP
This was ·aii especUj)ly imP9rtant
issue on this campus, wbere the term
"civil service" brings to mind res~

=
ment

tt!

are

1
of.
~~~~u=~ ~~d
~t'!.1~~~=P::;
K. Patricia Croeo!. senior ......arch psy- '
poesible problems. There are a variety

cholotist for the EducatiOital TestiJ:Ig
Service at tbe University of "·"'onua·
"""''
at Berkeley; Ruth Mary Hill, acting
pn!llident of Friends World College;
Florence Howe, asoociate pJOfesaor of
American Studies at.State University
ol.New Yoill: at Old Wes~; Tliomaa Gould, prof-.r of classia3 at Yale.
A Ia ~· Samuel Bowles, a political
~ fJOm Harvard; . Dr. Paul
He\'JI. ~rofesaor &lt;J!. ~ucation at the
Uru-.nty &lt;J!. California at Berkeley;
Lauren Baritz. proi_,r _of the devel-~
~tallaculty !'f Emp!"' Stale Col~. Sam Gorovitz, chainnan of ~
~Y Department at the Uruversity ·of Maryland; and B.S. ChancleaaelqJar, dean of \Yeslem Reserve

ColleP.

.

The . Extramural ~ - Board's
t:;'"J:~U:U.thele =~::. manda(
doptedted

Facultv
•
•
~.~
t.Y Se!&gt;ate m April, 19'12)
.........states that tbe Jll'OIDUD8 &lt;J!. tbe
Colleliate .System ohill be reviewed
i::,~ ~ty·ruvenn ·

:C..'!.;:!tal1,

of
· ·
local! -'-'---t wba · - h
opuuons
Y ...,....
t oug t
to be done about tbe future, Conner
and Ms. ()'Bryan report; those signing
the petition simply reflected wideapread agteement that the contract to
dale haan't worked for tbe professional
staff and that something needs to be
done.
No

Comm-

The only reason CSEA is sponsoring the ·drive tbe two local spokesmen say, ;. a..;t the Taylor Law requires that the petit 1 on be preaenled to PERB in the name of some
organization willing to represent · the
unit And CSEA according to a fact
l!Met 011 the maiter ~ cin:ulaled ·
State-wide, was the ,...'\., n.....n;••tlon
"which had shown ;iii;~~ is
no commitment to join CSEA or even
support it in any election which might
be called.
·
Diacussions on the matter -re in
fact, beld with N'IT llll!D1bers of •the
execuU... board of SUNY/United the
!act.sheet DOles. However, that orianlZBtion could not serve aa sponsor
&lt;J!. the m o v e without appJOVal by
1111 Delegate Assembly Which was not
acbeduJed to ..et before the deadline
lor .filina.
sumi'!Unill!d could still be the bariaininB agent for ~ ~boa sup~~ the" petitiorlindicate, but it
......., · then - t facwty and
NTP8 - t a l y :· "Each (croup)
,..,aid be mtitled to ._w.te·ita own
CXJGinJct - ! e l y or could function
in eoalltioo barPinina 011 ileilla - of
lft1!tual interest. 'I'bla i8 the way that
the lour antnnnmo.Ja Ullilll of claMified
a.vice employeea worl&lt; Within CSEA.
... Each one neaotiatea ita CM~Lcon­
tract with the Slate with G8BA acting
.. their .....~. 'l'bey (u.) eoallliaD
tor ~r intereeta. They
of
tJ;:8 rilbt of oell ratUicatlon

::r=
con:!t.

I;*Jt IUIC\'/Unll8d ;.... ..
• The
Me. O'Bryan
u not an of diaoitislaction
with &amp;UNYtl1nll!lll·-~; rather, it

....,._.t.

notes:

'
.mrrthe frallmliaD of NTPa iii peoaeived lad&lt; of ..........

-

aad r~ta •

to ....
.r a

.

pat

~~ 111111,';!)I'D&gt; pa81-

tlai1.,.., ,_ ...,....,.... .........,_
in _.. aad prioritlia ...... fiJGUlty

and NTP8 "and ............. .......
aa a tactic to b8 lad ia---._
Such tacticll tald to JII'IIMit eidier
hom readlinr ~ ebjecneither the NTP plllitian
paper ... local ~ point to -

f""'..
1ttboulh

it aa a apecific eample, Gcw. Roc*efellet's poailiaD 011 pay rahee · lor
NTPs and la&lt;ulty ......... dMoic
case in point. "-''ty llltll N'I'Ps;
Rockefeller proclaimed, do not - '
the five per ..,..t ...,..... the board pay
hike ~ by lact.llndera because the SUNY (ocuJly (only) is
a~ tbe hi~ paid in the Dation.
In this case. NTPs would they
are penalized because the fa c u It y ,
shows up well on AAUP acalee.
The State-wide NTP
'tion paper
on tbe moV..ment emp'J:':: "con·
ftict" and "disagreement" within tbe
merged bargaining u n i t conceming
"the issue of the ten month year for
some of tbe Professional Staff.'' "the
i s s u e of job security for technical
specialists who work directly for faculty," and "the standards by which
professional accomplisbment is to be
recognized."·
Principal-

Whereas most faculty have the -D_I&gt;portunity for attaining continuing employment, the NTP statement aays,
job' security remains "of · major importance to the professional staff."
While faculty have the opportunity
for gJOWth through the _professorial
ranks, "career ladders" for professional staff remain an unrealized objective.
These issues "must be tbe principal
. items of negotiation" for whoever represents the, professional stall in the
future, the statement contends. noting
that "many of both tbe laculty and
professional staff thJOughout the UniveJllity feel -that the formation of separate bargaining- unita
benefit lis
both in tbe long run."
·
Ms. O'Bryan points to Articles 33
and 34 of the present State-SUNY!Uni~ con~~-:g~verning position
rankinga and evaluation and appointment prooedures-as ezamples of processes in which NTPs have been bypassed and/or not consulll!d in ·decisions vital tn them. The articles were
worked ·out after the total contract bait
been voted on bv faculty and stall
Not only did NTPs have no ratifica:
lion rights, Ms. O'Bryan feels, 'they
also Jacked a forum to which to take
their concerns when the prooedures
were_ rather h a s t i I y implemented.
CLocal SUNY/Unill!d meetinp devoted, she feels, little time tn NTP
concems.) "If we had such a forum "
she arid Gonner agree, .._ could do
more about ouch things."

·will

U/B Ranks Sixth
In Black Students
U/ B iaat fall ranked sixth in D&gt;e na!ion amonr major public institutions

m percentage of black enrollment, according to a survey by tbe National
Asaociation of State Universities and
Land-Grant Coll~es.
The survey, which ezcluded the Association's 2Naditionally black member · institutions, indicated that tbe
University's enrolled 1,594 black students last fall, &amp;""'?'Jllting for 7.6 per
cent of the student body - sixth
highest among 106 predominanU white I&gt;Uhlic' institutlons can.-.-1. Y
Bulf8lo State willr 766 black students, or 7.2 per Cent of its student
body, ~ seventh nationally percentage-WJ&amp;e.
.
The top filii! institutions and their
percentages of black enrollment were:
Wayne State University, 19.09 per
cent; City University of New York,
. 18.69; Temple University, 13.7; Rut- '
gers, 12.12; and Chicago Circle Campus of !he University of lllinois, 10.26.
· Speci'al Proerams for the disadvantaged were cill!d aa the ·...,.._. for the ·
:r!'~ ~ack enrollment at .

�·~

7

Jn Danger of Being Swept A~ .
~t.::=p
~d.tldlia,...... evl-

2s:t.Wn:=
c=-~=..._,.Bd-

&amp; llfea:.-.:.::.

~~T!:
_. c.-w..... a-ve .

Ill . . . . . . . . . . d. the
Mr. HihaR'a _ . , . Ob
.
Ill
~
.............•), llllldent aUitudeo

~~t-.:'=.;:r:.;

~ the ·etudeDIL ••••), the
............. ("'lia dearly~

-

. . . . . tD

thiBit ...... about lb.

'lilalitbafl!icilll•-·~
_ _ _............
be
IIIII IIII(NI;y tD

race

,

- - ol their clevptlan to tlielr lltu·
olenla the IMt that tbe.Y Pllhliab no
_.... ....... - o i l the campus.
...... ... for the !attar Ia. ol
~ that naiJody inYitea them. The

lnlld wbidl is evident 111110111 uni-aities ol the various alate ll)'lllema or

-nnr the output of the profin - o f contacthow&amp; with.students
is part of a _.a! daJiprous lnllid

.to aet up tsaching apinst researdl,

and to mward wlvit is at best .uniit·
spired I o y a I t y .as agabist inspired Rdlolan!hip. It is based on false

the paooibillty of
1111 iDsti-

a - I D a ~-~at

3!!:£ ~
~
inrericJr
•
• ._ must
race -tile·
..._ pcalbiW;y d. ._Yinl to Jeaw the
............
·&gt;.
111111 oancluding
- . b ~ JII"HHIIivmaity education.

---'G.

.

-~be"'~
=:t;·
m.- hold~a'Q
refrained from

I
lalllicy tbat tbeae two scholarly ...,.
ti'riliaa are in conllict. It is of course
perfec:tl,y .,._, tllat each of tbeae roles
ol • member ., the academic prole&amp;. . . Ia o l - - . . . impot11Ulce. What,
..._._, bas to be a--' today is
that, far from their ~inoompati!Jie. they are camplement.aty. There• DO !mown WilY of l!llllllring that a
potential faculty member .will tum
out, to, be a &amp;00&lt;1 teacher, nor of eo8111111g !bat a j&gt;rofesaor remain conscientious 111111 elfectiw in his le&amp;ch_ , . , I· would claim !bat, in
for &amp;00&lt;1 leaching, one of the
tors is the enthusiasm of
the faculty member for his subject.
u.._, this enthusiasm is prac~ alWIIJrs manifested by researclt
-..;ty, It is perfectly true th&amp;t there
are aome prof"""""' who, While not
lldiwly --.eel in reaean:h tbemaelves.; neWrtbel.... remain cl18!1y
aware and deeply involVed in develop!"""ts ~ tbejr sub~ and, communi~ this awareness aod. · this• involve.
meat tO their students. Hawewr, such

analogies with industry, of which I

will say more in 'the next section, and
on a grievously superficial View of the
nstllnli modus operandi of a university. (A facrdly member at the UnWt!rsily of Washington is required to a. p/Din,, on an appropriate form, e=h
occa&amp;IDII on whido he passes the night
"' a ~ not localed within the Stole
of Washinfton.)
•
Serious Defects with 11epn1 to Teac:hlna

Having emphasiv.ed that to raise
the isSue of teaching or researclt is to
lilake a false dichotomy, it is necessary to add that, although the good
research man is the more likely to be
the good teacher, there are many serious defi!cts "Viilhin' Diu professional
community with regaro to teaching.
w~ have to take teaching desperately
senously, and, as I have emphasized
earlier, this must include not only the
training of· future specialists, but also
the teaching of a special field to in·
telligent people who do not them!"'lves propose to become specialists
.1n ~. fiel&lt;j. ,ktme .bere ·~ revert

Law Is
.=-tel~DO~ ~~ = .CTaylor
alled a ·~faree'-

.~ 11!8)','111BY be ~ed far pi8Ctical
JIUlllf!88B as PQetic ,mutations. Thus it
WoUla be absurd to ~ on tbem
!or lhe ~ty of the inStruction withlil-a dePartri&gt;enL Hence, we are led to
oanclude !bat· the beat available criledoa lor aood teecbing is """""""
-..;ty, and !bat therefore we should
look to the active researCher to make
the beat teaeber
.
.
It is ~ to au,;ck and demoliab the view, which is .becoming
iDcreasingly prevalent, that each in·
di~l schotsr must cbooee bet.veen
lellchina: and resean:b; and, moreOW!!I', ~t the community would be
well ~ to """'- teacheril rather
than researclt workers for university
employmenL 'The scholarly pursuit of
our subject 'is UDder attack from gov~ emment, bUreaucracy administration
and sund &lt;y · ~uses, and also
.from aome students. 'The case is stridently made out !bat university profl!880r8 are aelftsbly pwsuing their
own inlen!8fs, scientific and financial
to the neglect of' their . 'pal· •
8pODBibility which is that~....~
students. One has, todii,Y, the unseem-

'

.

.

~PORTER_; ·

__
---,

Uil~

ROBERt' 2". IIAIU.8Tl'

JORit A. CLoUTIER
Aaoc:MMUiu. .1

Arv-=e :::::,.::.o:::::,AN

I'

-

NAIICY II.. CARD.UUI.Ll
• SVSAJI II; .VIIOIUf.

EDI1'0R:

All iteoessary provisiolll! of the Taylor Law in the State of New York
. were met in the resolution of the
wage contract negotiations for SUNY
&lt;Articles 19 and 20 of the Agreement
between SPA and OER) except the ·
most crucial ones, .and these were not
hono&lt;ed by the GOvernor's Office of
Employee Relations (the branch of
government designed to·implement the
I.aw!)and the State Legislature(those
who created the Law!) . 'The SUNY/United (formerly SPA) accepted reluctantly the fact,finding recommendations (on Article 19) for a 5 per cent
ac"'!"'"the-~ and · 1~ per cent ·
ment salarjr mcreases for faculty and
non-teaching professionals before a
special legislative bearing conunittee
'The OER took the same ha&lt;d-tirwi
position that it had during the impasse, namely only 3 per cent acroe&amp;tbe-boanl and 1~ P!'r cent for merit!
1lbe contract agreed to bet.veen OER
an:d ·the special conunittee of SUNY/United on Article 20 (for medical faculty) was duly ratified. When the
special legislature was conwned on
Jul.y 26, 1973, the Governor chose not
to mtrpduce our salary adjustments
. as an agenda item, and the
legislative committee on Article- 19
never !"ported its reconuneildations!
What 18 the IDMlling of .this? Is it
poaoible for us to IIBIII1me anything
other thiUl that the Taylor Law· is a

-w

fl!ioe? .

A. W&amp;STLZY R0W£AND

.

~of

tsneous--,

success

L 1118-

' T----.,.,

- ~---

eli:

I ~ be lllld ID provide copies of the

_ . . . . ........ Ob
DIII,·
IDatriJdiaa..

: or~.:......._ · ~
to. lhe special CIISI1 01 matheiJ:Iatic&amp;,
since I wilfb to draw on actu8l flit·.
. . . .l'nlud
. . . IUid punish.
behavior tlu:oUIIl
perienoe. So far as university le&amp;chers
menL Whatever .t he J111111ib1e WJefu!:
of mathematics are ooncemed, I belleve that this latter aspect of our
Delli ol sueb~ for a 1arae
iridustrial
It will be truly
1 teaching job, that is, the tea~ ?f
mathematics .to the non-specialist, JS
d~ as a '!!Y dealing with ~
·
uruverslty facult;y.• •
. currently the least satisfactory. W~
~tlao Ia l1le ....._ of a unimust . give to it the attention..-it deserves, and we must treat these nonversi.y, 111111 P8rtleulariv at the
underpaduata lev8l. ""Tbe ..m.-. of
specialist students, like all students,
educatiOb Ia to earldt the ~ irwith the dignity that they merit as
. it '!fld ~ llberale the indi'ridualsp 1D
inteUigent human beings. We must understand and respect the nature of
achieve his fuUeat polentlal, It is not
possible to estm.te, · by any instsn.
their moti""l' for studying mathematics, and we must reinforce the positive
tbe depee to·which
aspects of those motives.
tbeae purposes have been achieved.
We must not take the view that we
However, .1!11~ beiDa a IOCiologist or
are simply members of a secret sopsycholDetrtcian, I 6ave DO inhibitions
ciety whose function it is to indoc. about atstll!l objecliY811 which are not
trinate new acolytes. · I believe that ·
measurable. It Ia alway~&lt; - . y to
one of Out difficulties in meeting the
remember that It Ia no IDOI'e dillicult
prejudiced chargeS which' have been
to achieve IIOIIJD8IIIIUia objecti
le~led agamst us todaY is ·preCisely
thiUl lllMIIUrable ob~ "The
·that our ' own house is not in good ·
culty arlaee in' deciding whether in.oroer in this respect U we could point
deed, given ob1ectives have b.;;
to Qur
in'the teachinl: of math·
achieved. I oertainiy pOerer worthwhile
ematics to the generalit'y of our stu·
nonmeasurable o1))ectives to sterile
meesurable objecliY811. •
dents, we could then the better anEducatiooi is a permanent process
swer those charges. I OO!ieve that .the
pe(&gt;ple who have been attacking our
that should be 110inll on within the
profession have--been doing so from
(ContUuui,it mo , ~o. ~ I) •
a position of ignorance; &lt;teYertheless
it is always possible for ignorant peo- ,
pie to speak the f;J:uth, or at any rate ·
the partial truth. I believe that manyof our discreditors have indeed noticed certain WJSafisfactory symptoms
with regard to our teaching, but they
'The members of SUNY/Uhlted welhave made a totally wrong diagnosis
come all new faculty and non-teaching
as to their c&amp;1181!.
•
•
professionals and invite tbem to join
Jn _emphasizing the importance or
the Buffalo chapter ol their ha!piDing
teaching, I have come hack ·again to
the point which I raised earlier under • org8nization, SONY/United (formerly
~ Senate ,Profeosloa&amp;l Association)
the heading of the orientation of
18 a State-wide orpnization composed
courses. That ;.; we must place greatof over 3,500 academic ud professioner emphasis on teaching in our train·
al employees on 30 SUNY campuses.
~ of ~duate students. We cannot
expect good '' teaching froni . graduate
students who have been led to believe
pnnCJpally responsible for negotiating
that the only imporhmt acti'rity in
a contract with the Ollioe of Employee
~ profession&amp;l lives is that of proRe~~ · EaCh "year,~ 'ii- ,State-)'(ide
ducmg an&lt;l pu!Jiisbing origin'al renegotiatirig · COillJiUttee is (OnQed On
search. ' Howeve~. , I 'haw nowhere' in
..tbe basiS· ~ ~18 fiom liii Chapters,
my remarks intended to .dowrign;de
liD .a~ 18 sought on a variety of
the !mportance of original work, and
~ including ' basic Wage, . salary
. ~cu)B.rly, .l..esteem . .it liillhllt ··in
~IS, terms of• N~PDinbnent,
mathematics. I believe that too many
gne~
proceilures, and the general
~p~e are today concerned in this
condi!Jons of employineot for SUNY
activ1ty, but that is another matter.
teaching
and
non-teaching professional
~~. what needs to be emphaemployees.
~ '!' that the academic community
~ are llj&gt;Proziinately 300 memJS ~- m any· way fulfilling its re&amp;pon·
bers m 'the lOcal chapter. This unit
sibiiiti"!' to lhe community at large
performs a number of functions. Each
unless 1t pays as serious' attention to
mon!Jt, the executive "-rd meets with
ll)e teaching of mathematics and the
l're&amp;Jdent Ketter to discuss Iocanm!r&amp;iJUng of teachers of mathematics as
plemeotation of the contrac( agree1t currently pays ·to the advancement
JIIe';lt. the devei!'Pment of a University
of ma!J!ematics itself. At\d in this
policy.
and to informallr ,_.lve dispropos1tion one may certainly replace
putes ·with the adniiniBtnttion. The
::f'~J::.!any other field worthy
IOCiit chapter 'is ahio ' re&amp;Jic.1118il!l ~
h8ndiing · the llrat stage of' the · e · ~~
Edueotlon and Tralnlnc
ance· l&gt;rooedwes' ti;Jroush whi.f"'a11
Here ~g~ I nJ!!ist the temptatioi&gt;.
emploYees· n'i6st -;o' w -receive ~ ·rriJal
to enb"tte this\ section EducatiOn ver' mdn;s8•of' llrievaitee! .......l.:....:•• ;~ the
sus lrainilig, though I hilve to admit
local 'Chapter Ia" ~~· d
that there would be more justice for
t.ermining the pOiiCicjs" of ihe
esetting these objectives in opposition
Organimtion i:Ji· tliat its Odioers
than there iR for setting teaching and
!"""8"ch against each other. ~ irony
select~Jt,:=?~ ~ter from its
18 that !be prevailing view among
·aie ·be£i .~ve ,.':;a r ~
those who discuss ·educatioiial · robera!
~ ~ oocurijri.
.lems appears to be the precise ~
monthly . · •
, ,, - • · ' ·
site. I will go ·so far as •t.&lt;i ..Y that I
· lliem~ In- SUNY~United has
believe that the failure to distihliuish
'8 n!"iiber' of '1ldVailtaP&amp;. ThlQugb its
between the . functibus ' ·of edlii:ation
alliliation With the Natil!oal' .il:duCation
and training has been one of· the prin
Association. (NEA), 'U... New York
cipal . errors . responsible for the ~
Sta•te Umq.t· 'reacbeiB : &lt;NYSUT),
cc;&gt;noeptimis whi£11 abound in popular
and.-the Ameu&gt;can .Federation of
VI"!"" of the role of the university and
Teachers (.AFT) ; IIi nu1Dber dt insur·
which bring ,a111iction to tliOee who are
anoe benefits and lduao.liciilal services
endea"'!ring. to ~tsin the apirit of
"!" available at low cOst as well as
the uruvemty · m an extremely UJi.
favorable aociaJ climate.
4discounM
_ .. _.ts on. all .major purchases.
euwem are kept infonnl!d of the
It is a !':Bt"ettsble fact that enemies
progress of contract· neaotiation8 and
of the spmt of a .university are to be
-found even on the university campus
::"ecting~ce
administiation policies
tbrouD a newaletter.
The
~ the Committee on
The
.
mos~ impor_tan~ 6eoe&amp;t, however,
~ ~. a committee of aca18 the VOICe which inembenahip gives
enucs appomted by President Corson
the ~niversiU&lt; p~eialoaal in the de'of Cornell Universih· made
·
mendations el
·?'
recomtermmadoil·of ~ Wtiich directl
----~-·, ~tly and accuratetv
. :inv'ol'"!'' the~ qu.uty g{
~uuanz.ea by Pri&gt;ft!880r Olum in blB
. protest on 'the I:I!POJ1, iD tbe Jon~
.
. ..~9~ta~'S
Indlviduiils •
" · " · · '' SUNY/
terms: "'l;be ~I of lhe l:Jni..;.;..:...
UnitAid """'-'!d· -n
b,~· .w.~:dt
otl'!'fed bY the oominittee •
(~14232) ·or-~7 ·it.e~
~thiY..~tini
t of, ~
'ter of&amp;ce' mthe ""
•
zation ,.-.th 1.ts anployeee~~­
ulty- carefully watcb8d
~more~~~
and maniPulated to _..._,!__coniz'!U!"f
.
the
.
~
~t,
..&lt;Jooiatsntine
tratiw!l
• .
~-... adminia~ (831-1685j., or ,Coini . to. a
this is~~~:u- ~d
.
. ~ - -tlnr. 'MeetiDP:,..,
~~~ad~'¥{ U..J(epot:W.
· to ~ P&amp;rVasive apint of the ~
~ part of til!' report, by the use
; ~ · ~.n:r-e CJf¥"J'BBI•

-

?.;

•

. SUNY/~nited, with the help of its
Jilem!&gt;erahip and new-leaderahip, is de' termined to use ·all eft'orts ud ·all
~ available to it fronl its atste
and national Blliliates to this .
unbelievable inocbry of law irnplemmtstion by u-e ·who created it and
· u-e .entrusted to ~!ement It )IIJd
~~""":" effectively secure our
-&lt;l.A. TBIL\~ President
SUNY/United,
·

. -

~' • Sl.INYJBCeoalerCiuJPter

SUNY/Onitecl'
"Offers_Weicome

~~~JJrm

"S .

'!::

:::!!bigs

d

:1'lri

l..onii

fudust!W·u,;,...,..."'

U:,

CI''.. · ·

�---6,1973

Joint DoctorafStudy Yields
·Guic!e to Williams' Papers
By
PATBICIA WARD B1EDBJU4AN
. - ·-. _._
- _ _~ coiJeo.

~ mJI!I8Uy llDIIted them- ·
tam

=...::

- - ...... -

~-"::''!r
~
·- . , ..nect~ for
::-.:. .-...~ .a
Chulee
D. AliiiGir bad a mdlal1
Why
_..........__....._.._ -- -rrum

=
::::ez

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

.Jbe
- w 11 ...... tbe ~ts.,J:tile

::J:..=:'trouldn't
at

ja1t ~

these,

Lockwood Me.

~~......-~.provide
.

tiona ol ec!lolu!i witb an

bt ~~-;:, ~ ·

:,::-'
....t.~-.;;;:...Such a]Jeut
ol tba
~·a ~

the

~

tbelliUal;

col-

.....wd..,.,
for the ~..y ol the
.....
crea=liwt..-thee
~ that ·,,. , _•. ap-A~J~J&lt;JQ;
witb hie acheme was a
lbarronl, New
doctor.
namedWilliamsW~~,., . .....!!!.-(wiDrtb,.

"-vJ:f'Y

w..._ , _

\W88

.._..

~~~) tbat be didn't

~tit,;.,~~~::~

i n - . ~thepediatrician
cautioned ( ._.
Abbott tbougbt.

veniaaa of • poem - tbat its evolulion over tbM ia made Yiaible. dmft
by draft.write
Of iD
tbla
1Mtc:a
coautbon
their
• "la,id
Oil • table &amp;lid viewed
end
to enr!. each 1ie11a its own individuai-atory. To- the reader of the
printed poem, Williams revM1a whet
is left of the ~ tbe t!P of the
iceberc, the polished gem. Here, via
thec:a~the' uncutstoneismade
available. Thus, a reader of Pater.on
11 aees the Jines "outside myaeH/ tbere
• is a world,/ ... subject to my incursions." But the student wlio follows

S'tt'

·

~ro:-~~IU:w~~

_ a craftsman woo· believed that words
are situation-specific just as drugs are,
~ ~'.incursions" only att:;r rejecting
pro-, m-, d&amp;-, oeductions.
l'rajec:t ...... In 1971

- Long advocated by Libtaries Director EmerituS Oscar Silverman and
Poetry Curator Karl Gay (to whom
the finished catalogue is dedicated),
the cataloguing project got off the~
giound iri spring of 1971, after then
Chairman Marcus Klein sen~ a notice
around the English Department asking prospective cataloguers to apply.

M~\Vj!~~i~ J"b.:~iber

poets is .)brougb him," says Meyers,
whose interest in William&amp; dates back
to his undergraduate study at Knox
College. "I caine to Buflalo ~use I
knew the Williams' collection was
here."
. Meyers was joined in the mammath
20,000 ..._ "'
pioject by .Baldwin, who bad !&gt;een a
That exchange ol letters was the
history major at Rocbeoter and whose
beginning ol a warm friendship tbat
i n t e r e s t in the -=ial-biograpbical
~,..!__quarterwmis!. a~
·lfY· ~
" context of poetr y" complemented ...., 3 - •
, Meyers' wncem with the "psychology
~lrllijren(Wt)and .................. . , . . . _ .
......
;~aiOQO, p~tbeolit- ~..l-~
of .the, cn!lltive proc:ess." •
•
,.;,
~
.....,_
Their first job was to filld a method
advice: be was,"'" some ,mid-Westem- ·
and "Willie": in it, ~ poet llfiUI!8
1;lled Oil p,_,..;ption .-de. ~
for approaching · the chaotic polleeers ssy, a "oner." For ~pie, !d·
with himoeH about takiJia 011 the epu:
"deRtaila"
out ''in white heat"
J;ion., "It look- about six months of
though be maintained clooe ties wtth
task of PateNJOn, at an advaDced age
dlttad
ClODStant 'work to deye)op a system,"
the writers, adol1j, painters and
and while still practi~ ll*ticine.
DIB --.... ,......, . Meyers I'I!CI11b!, and BaldV(in adds, ·
tograpbers who sWarmed to G"""!'Wlcb
"You'll never da Jt," "You re too old,"
'
' ~ ·
"We'd still be ori aquare one if it
Village early in the century, be stuck
the pessimistic seH llfllll"8. In fact,
a -·~ · JelleD,
'iDcluding - corweren't for Emily Wallace's bibliograto his roots, bucking the expatriate
Williams n e v e r did complete the
~· =len "' witb E - Pound. EwrY
ph.)&lt; of .Williams.~ During the crucial
tide' to· settle dawn at· 9 Ridge- Road
poem; aft.:r . writing the~ f~ . b!x&gt;b
fall, w'- Williams vac:atloned with
organjzational phase, the two Were
in the town where be was ,born.
origilially" pWu&gt;ed, be · ~ 'the
frioada in Pavilioll, New . Y ark. be
aided' by Williams himself. In the spirHe also rejeded the academic poetry
scheme throuih Book VI, which .was
.....wd ~t Abbott witb another
it of the "experinient" be bad under~.
of his contemporaries: be publicly
planned but unwritten at his death.
ba ol What be disparapd 88 "junk"·
taken witb Abbott, the poet often decdenounoed T .S. Eliot, calling ''The
The collection also includes a protoc:arlaaa of 11111.terials
1
came in tbr!'
orated his margins with a word or two
Wasteland"•~tbe 'gn:at calas~ to
type • poem, ·a •kind of Ur.Pater.on
aa Well
- \ •
about his intent or clues to wbat be
our letters" "that "set AmeHaui poetrY
- • ...
'called "Detail• and Parody" for ' the
Williams liked' Abbott's idea from
planned to do next. "We were always
back 50 years. Instead, acknowledging
Poem PaleNJOn." ''This is a pmctice
the atart. He tboucbt of It aa an "exfinding notes be bad !"rltten to us,"
Whibnsn as his examplar, be spent
run-through," says Meyers, whr)')ikes
psrm-t," &amp;lid be helped alani :the
saya Meyers.
.
his life writlng poems about the things
to think of these earlr.. versinns not
wad&lt; ol p.tberq by cliain&amp; through
• At about this time both men began
and people be saw in Rutherford,
so much as initial failures, "but as
ctraw.a, ~&amp;lid aid llimU 80 that '
to bave c1reems in which the poet figstruggling to transmute the rhythm of
necessary exercises of Williams' i.mdoc:lmalts ' - ' aa ...tY as the 19'.10's
ured. Meyers rec:sUa, "' dreamed that
their common speech into a new metagination." S a d I y, Williams' moat
Williams, _,.;n~ his straw bat, was
n'c. "'---~ with ·spoken language,
m II b t be lncluiled In Lockwood's
painfuJJy delivered poem was not his
II'OWIIIII colledioa..
taking me~ his attic, showing
be ~ the conversatinns of
'i.est
received, at least while be lived;
- UDdl ~ 8I!YODe wbo wanted to
me an inventory of his life as we
his patients and his mother's bigbl_y
the· Pulitzer Prize, awarded in 1963,
uoe ~
~~~.
looked at the objects, the memorabilia,
individualistic Creole (the latter 18
otep.by-.,.... ~ uy w._.., ~
be bad collected. Tliat's when I knew
incorporated in a book called Yes,
~ :::.~.=-._
Willl8inio' IPfBWlil!a · ('C"'P' • Pater.On
we were going in the right direction."
Mrs. Williams that Baldwin and MeyAfter they finished the cata1otrue.
was llom. .was· ~ almost before
lllumlnellnc DotaHs
ers reprd as a precursor of the tsped
Baldwin and M'\Yera made a "pil~~
evidence was tbeie
As they delved further and further
intefVlew~. He incessanUy recorded
grimage" to the big dull-yellow ""'bUt the problem was bow
iniD his "extended autobiogra~
"details," p..- and poetry "snapwhere Williams lived, wrote and ~
lllep
Wil~~it::or,.ooJ;.,~=
~l ~d~i&gt;OP!'
Iiams' widow Florence and lite~
in his ollice between earaches and
their son Bil~ Jr., contin115 his fath_a_..
"-•-'-h;a
p
etree:11tor
James
Laughlin
of.
New
Diswollen
tonsils,
waiting
for
a
trallic
er's pediatric practice.
tha~ tb ....-• rections Boob, previously zeatricted
light to j:bange, sitting for a moment
''We bi'OIIJ[bt pansies for Mrs. WJl" &amp;lid endild wi a Ji1!00ID.
matsrials were made available to tbem,
in a hospital corridor: the "master of
a "
lisms," BaldWin says. " 'How did you
P 1rinted....,ifliA~
palor~a
machinelike.
a
and the bare 1loo5 ol the .poet's bi·the gUm-" Kenneth Burke called
know
J liked
• ?' abe asked, &amp;lid
p um, ..
,
ograph,y were 8eabed out witb bunbUa
_
we just ~s Baldwin, recall-·
for llll!kiDI 1!olts," •
dreds of ilbpninating details. His
..,_ About - ,
ing
bow often Williams comi)Ued her
~· lllp -•
·
: Can'bbian-bi&gt;m mother, a 1ilalong inA supremely aelf&gt;()()llScioua poet,
to a flower. ~ J~ur.:tea
in
· It Clll)y tbis year1 the tentb anfluence 011 the poet, bad wanted him · WillianlS wrote a sreat deal of p..the garden. Mrs. w·
is a fraPie
ni-.y "of' the poet's OMtb, that this
to be a dentist like her brotber..earlcs
about poetry. Amaas tbeir genuine
woman in her eighties with eleclric
critical pp .Was filled by the compJe.
(whose name kept Williams' own from
finds Baldwin &amp;lid Meyers number an
white hair. She bas arthritis &amp;lid lion of a dliacriptive· c:ata~ot~ue to the
being a parody of a White Protestant
unpubJisbed - · "formerly buried
one of those walker canes. She tiree
Williams' J1IIP'II'I in the Lockwood
American's) but, "FIOSIIie" told tbem,
in the 'unabsorbed' files;" ~mtiUed
very easily so we only stayed for balf
PoetrY Collection. Tba c:ata~oru;e,
''Bill couldn't accept the·idea ofatsnd- -' "Wba~ Is the Use of Poetry?," which
an hour or so slftuis on either oirle
wbicb nma mont tban 600 paps m
ing ·in one place all day." Ins'-~ be
Williams wrote in a single sitting in
of her, in this big old boUse filled witb •
ll1llll1l8i:rip is the -rk ol .Neil E .
decided to become botb ·a poet and
a 5tb pade notebook ~ to his
J""'lt Amer!can art. She· listened very ·
Baldwin &amp;lid Slewln
two
a physician, the latter beCa.- be said
-rufesto,"
8011 Paul ".o\11
mtensely to everyt!&gt;inJ we bad to IIII,Y,
, _ U/8 Pb.D.'a in
people "ba~ to •t to live." He lliaothe _..,.._.__ tenn this :lll,pqe e&amp;perhaps
beca.- abe IS bard of bNI'In obapibc this' bMic tool for future
tioed in Rutberford until into the
oay ~Williams cleecribeol poetry
ing and bas to concentrate. We ..._
IIMft ol tbe co~ _.t
1950's, delhwing mont than 8,000 bel&gt;as a "Ioree" for "aplitting the wood
it was the cloeest we could ever ll'8t
to I&gt;Ua"
.
''Bill," Mrs. William&amp; told u-.,
-- · Lrll:hood. Bitlina ol -the time
•. As an 1lllllerpwluate at .Penli;' Wilmotto that could be the poet's own:
"was a sreat guy, a sreat doctor, BDd
:,:S~ I wish you could
ol the ward, &amp;lid not
can't ·helP hailiDa that the
.
A.D." ol hie life. That relatloneblp,
Al8o ~ 1n the coune o1 tbeir
· : "Now don't forget to buc:kJe. up
Roam 4rill !IQII1eda.y include .,.._,t,
~ etridnad aa a re.Jlt ol l'lluDd'a · work· a nUII!Ia- o1 ..tariala reyour - t belts," slie added, .. they
well-llt'-'lnc
ol tbe
actlvitioe for tbit ~-a •c11aJated to
1r;5 ~
drove ..,.y.
There will .be an abiblt ol -tedwblch, .Baldwin
•
all from the Williams' co11ectiaD in
Ina ..d.itaa, ....,.=t:'the«Weol
wtmaa. as to wbat 1D dci
the Lockwood Poetry Roam this fall
calapoidfiaa - - - ~ .......
&lt;abUilan Ratbeofonl ..... 1D
..... the' work,- bia ...... &amp;lid fre.
'Ibe cMalotue ... "-' pnwisiaaaJJy
accepted for publication by the State
qumt faJee 11tarts
the colUni-.ity ~
·
_
~and CllderiaJ -....-.t, · falWtoU...,IIat.....,taalc ·l'aaocl'a
lectlon ;. ·a dialape ~"Doc"
_
be -"'~......., ....,..., -

,__,._.........._.
....,..__.,_.
future ~), "' ol1en 011 tba a.:biDe." a - -, the poet
CODCiuded ~· "You're wei-~~I _..
.
~ ..,

·~
· ~ ' -~;,..-...~
· _ ;L.._

P~

m;,u

"'aaiora,"'e':'

t::'fu.dii:'\v'fbe

a ~is~PAJ:._\Yiu::;; tW::s ~~~~~~ ~
d.:.rtTw:ftliQ
:b ·

~erMh':':..J~~=t

-aald·

.-.

""""""'*"•

:t.,:tZers,

rn:: ~ ~

~Roam~ ...:..a ::....~

~.::

~~~ ~~Ia~

Wmt,::t.!W'..=-=~!:

;;:,.::.~

~ d'=f~~
~
!:rt!:~·=--~b=ID=

=

,._.for-

:li''t'~·.!:..:r'

lifted==

~~··=~liD.=:::

::,.~e:u:r.~a;:nt!..-:a~;:

ba.,

Pater•;:t_;
~~ ~'*..=

~In

�manol that ........... fora _.;ear
-~~1.

A lllllive ttl Leeda, BasJa!!d, ~
-Garton ..... far ....... i n - -

at~'Um-.lty""""'-he--:

awarded the B.A. and M.A. in 18(9
1953, ._t~te~1 . He did Jf&amp;du-

~ and

"'C.t~'SJ:th
ill
. Neaail ,W
T:

• ate work at the. Umversity of Basle
in Switzerland in 1949-1950.
Prior to his lippointment to "UIB
in 1965, he beld pasta at the Univer·
sity of Hull and the University of
Dwham !Northern Division), later
renamed the University of. Newcastle
-

.-ty ol 1.oJa1o1 U"'-aal;y,
•
a well.._., faaiDillt .. well .. 'sci·
entiat..
. •
'
Dr. Weiutein, wbO _....ton
. c:aJ111U1 1..t February at the sympo~

-r-m -.t..Feminist

Psycbol-

""· and apia af'lloe IIUJDIIIer semi- .... "CoDition and Struc:ture," is
auth« ol •RIDder, Kuche. Kirche a5
Scientific law: Payc:hoJosy Construct'
the Female," one ol the IDDBl widely
publiabed _ , . to come out of the
1

WlliiDMI 8 ~DDW~~Da~t.

s:-

A Pbi Beta
paduate or Wetlealey CoQNe. abe n!ileiwd a Ph.D.
from HaMUd Uniwnib' in two IUld
a balf yeua, beld a National Science
Foundation PQ8tdoc:toral fellowship in
.,.tbematiail bioi6KY and was an associate prof_,.. at Loyola. Last year,
abe was a visiting l;'elllllllCher at Bell
lAboratories · in Murray Hill, · New
Jersey, where abe held a Nationru .
Institute of Mental Health grant Her
.-ret. and teaching interests include
work" in OO!l"ition, memory, informa·
tion proc:essmg, visual pen:eption and
psychology of dill'erenoes between men
and women. Sbe has been active in ·
the .feminist movement since · l 966,
when she helped organize one of the
flnlt. women's liberation groups (II the
country and eontributed to the first
women's liberation journal in the
United StateS, Voice of Women's Lib- eration.
·

-.-.;..

. .

-. .

~·~

o;ieciO.:

Director of the new Educational Opportunity Center (EOC ), created by
the meilii'r ol the former Cooperative
~~lep ~ter and the. Buffalo Q'tban
Ceiiter, is Ms. George E. Dykes Un'
ger, formerly an asaOciate professor a t
San Ehmc:iaciO State College.
'lbe EOC, .to be administered by
U ,IB, will combine the missions of the
two former qencies and expand upon
them. 'lbe ......,.... of the two facilities
/ is one a£ a taking place within_..
New Yodr. State in line with SUNY
Master Plan recommendations. The
EOC is located at 465 Washington
Street, site Of the CCC.
Ma. Unpr, who holds the as. and
.MB. from Prairie View Co1Je8e, Tex·

~. = = = . t ea~O::. ~

State with a minor in eociology. Sbe ·
aerwd Jor years aa a conauJ.

~-=MI~ :.m~~
USAIDjUberia Project and was for

three years (J.966.68) an assistant
profaalr at ~ Institute,· Alabama. She has also held
'tions as
.an uaistant principal,
'-d&gt;er~ and t.dler in the Dallas
~~ School District

:::.J:':

-.--.. . .

vice pn!flident for aaulemic affairs and
aaaociate pm(~ ol Spaniab, has
been appointed acting chairman . of
the Deputment of Spaniab, Italian
and Portupeae for a .one-year tenn
elfective September 1.
.
Dr. Ricbards ~
Ph.D ..
Spanish and Latin ~
from the University of Mm-ta in1964. He received M.A. and B.A. desrees frilm Marquette.
~
Prior to ,iOinina U/B in 19'71, be
was oo the '-'tty of the Spanilb Department at Bulfalo State. In 1970,
dean ol ~~

stud!:

~

-.~

__.. __
,/

, Dr. AHredo Madlla, aaaociate pro.
~ Rican ~ bas .

f - of

- , _ Dlndar, Admissions &amp; -

· James C. Schwender has been aP.
. ted ctio d' to r the Offi
:,'l"'ldmi:,.;o.! a::d" ~rds until ":
permanent director is appointed · to
replace DL Arthur L. Kaiser who ...;.
signed after 12 years in the position.
· . Mr. Schwender, a member of the
admissions and records stall s ince
1963, has been associate director since
1969. Be holds both B.A. an4 Ed.M .
degrees
U/B0
.
•

"'!m

uporr 1'yne.

At Bull'alo, Professor Garton has
serwd as an editor of An!l'huc, a
journal supported by the Ota&amp;sics De-

.. .

partment

.

OVector, eompar.uw Utetat&amp;n
Dr. E~o Donato ar.sociate pn&gt;fessor of Ftencb, has 1oeen appointed
to a three-year teun as director ol
the PrOgra.m in Comparative Literature, eft'ective September 1.
The newly expanded P~ brings
- ~ether a- number of faculty fro{n
different departments and rellectS,
University sources indicate, the strong
interdisciplinary approacb of the Fac- ulty of Arts and Letters in wbicb the
program is housed. Faculty memben; ·
from the Departments of Englisb,

~cbC:. ~J'uctand~~ !;,~

parative literatore at both the under·
graduate and graduate levels.
•
University made two major adminis- ·
Dr. Donato, born in Cyprus, retrative appointments at their August
oeived bis M.A. and P.h.D. degrees
meeting and granted emeritus status .
from Johns Hopkins University. Prior
- to joining Uf.B in 1968 he. serwd iln
to four faculty membeJS.
The Trustees appointed Dr. William
the faculties of Cornell (1968-64-) 110d
H Ba
· tant ·
'd
Johns Hopkins ( 1~ ).
fo~ aca~!:'i~ and :,c;;J:,~
The author of several articles 1o the
appointment of Dr. Arthur D. Butler
fields of Frencb and Italiali ~ture,:
as acting provost of the Faculty of
Dr. Donato e d i ted, wit!f _R~
Social &amp;ienoes and Administration.
Macksey, The Lan8UIJ8es of CritU:i.m
Retired Professors Gregory -Breit,
and t/u. Sciences of' Mall (1970), rephysics; Jobn T. Horton, history ; Harpublisbed fit paperback in 1972 as
riet ~Iague, mathematics; and Carl
~'d . ~~/ !fi:,';"~'flid::;
=~ :::!,~~vi ci,
LaniJUDCe Notes, published by JohnS
Dr. Baumer, a professor of philoi;o.
Hopkins, lrom 1964-Q!. · · ,
-.:
phy and former chairman of the Fac~
ulty 'S enate, bas. been a member·or the
Chairman, Electrical Enal-nc
U/ B faculty since 1962. He recently
--. Dr. Demetrios G. Lainiotis, interna:
completed a one-year fellowship under
tionally recognized contributor to en81\ academic administration program
gineering education and research, bas.
sponsored by the American Council
accepted an appointment aa full pn&gt;on Education.
·
fessor of electrical engineering. Dr
Dr. Baumer holds a B.A. from LakeLainiotis will also serve a three-yertt ·
land College (Sheboygan, Wisconsin)
term as chairman nf the de!&gt;artment.
and an M .A. and Pb.D. in pbilooophy
Corning to U/B from the tiniveraib'from the University of Wisconsin.
of Texas at Austin where he was a
Dr. Butler has been acting 'provost
prof"""'?r of electrical engineerina, Dr.
since April 1,-replaciDg Dr. Edwin P.
Lainiotis replaces Dr. Dennis P, MeHollander who was on leave. Because
lone who was appointed chairman in
Dr. Hollander recently resigned from
1970 and who remains here as a -prothe position, Dr. Butler will continue·
fessor.
m
At Texas, Dr. Lainiotis founded' the
: ~~until a permAnent ~r
18 . - - .
Communications S.YSiems ~
f_,., .......... .-afdi ,JII'O• •
~ratory and aerwo1 as a.ociallli
r_. in: IJ68:
If. __ .._~
Adlni ~. - lmm......_
director of the Electronica ~
to the clapadmeUt • ~ ill '
Dr. Felix Milgram is the new acting
Center. In addition, he introduced aev1970.
..
•
, ··
director of the Center of Immunology.
era,IJ!"'! _graduate and ID&gt;dersra!luate
Dr. Thomas, 40, wbo - .-. 11nrt
=.=,~ ~~ - ~~to the University's ~
appointed· ~ cbUanu in
8eJ&gt;te1nbe.- 967 and
.........,.
'"fu.~:
· 19'10, j9ined tbe ·UtB fl!aaky in 1863
Beumer, Butler Named
The Board of Trustees of State

!':!,

=

:r J:

1
~ Medicai'ScboOI"
~~

1958.
•
._ . ..
Dr. Mil""""-·--'· Dr. N'oet .,__..,
..-~- .......,.,...,
_..._,
who lB joming the Wayne -State Universicy (Detroit) MediCal School faG.
ulb' in January as cbairman..and pro.
~ of immunoJosy and ~1-.
•
- ' - CMimwl, ...,.,_,

st--.
" ' " ' -assistant
Dr. Henry
J- . Ricbards,

!.'::..ti: :.::s '-•
. ......._

1967. He
atBgloklyn
andV..ar.
Dr. Matilla is the a'!~ ol - V~­
Itaclan (Anaya, Madrid, 1972) and
the editor, ~th I. Silen, of The Puer·
1o Rican Poe/.8 (Bantam Books, .New
York 1972J. .
. •

Zebu!Oil Tainter; M.D., BBICiate
psychiatQ', haio ' - ' appointed aaaociate cbairman ol the DepartmenDr
. Taint
-~_!BYcbladidbistry:::.r=.te

""1'_,.. of

-

wodt at ObeJiin Colle8e: '
paduated from Came!I ~edlcid CoiJ,_ep in
~~
m~ bi medICIDe at
Hoopitaf in N"" .
Y~ Cib' and did hla Jl8l...~tric

He.=.,:

P:~~Ciinic~t ~NPayne.:""':'~
one
..,.
• ....,. .....,.
p~ to... U!B. .
•

Tain

="1.

m 1968, Dr.

~~.:..,~~u:'tJ

.

li

. '

.

.

mtereataioclude·~ ··· · aa~t~.Se-named

:r~ ·'!Jl&amp;J¥10Qiltrol &lt;the·al
- - ~~-Ia lB67, and__.
•
a system work under
-.-. as~
cbalmiiiD af-tbe·clePutment
ClfCWnStani:es). pattern recognitioa,
in 1989.
a~tomatic control a n'd !'DIIIIIlUilica"•
•·
tiolla, and ~lioDstO '-m ·
U/B " - ¥1' . '"''-" .·' . ,.
~~~ ~ &amp;&amp;Jobn M. Carter, eacatbe dilllctor,
er
PfOCI!OSIJig and -thU/B AlUmni - AaDciatiorL 11M ' - '
-.....,.._....
., named -'ive vice~/B
. Alloociate 'editor of three tecbnica1
Founda~Inc.
...~~ f .
filDd
i&gt;!'ld..cxmsultant-poai~ with aeveraJ·
'Mill
t1nua1 pnerai
_oi!Heand el~ firms.
··
of
~ A8JC!ation.
the CireceiYad his B.S. degree from
An exlalaive recruitinc ,........ for a
b' Coiieile nf N"" York and bis • new ~tiw'dhector~ttl the AB&gt;cia·
MB. and PhD. degreea from Pun!ue . . tion is now beinc caaducted. ·
Univerait)(. Prior to .iiilninc the ~ _
• • •.
•
..
~b'. h8 served on the '-dtiea at
- ' - Vb .........., ......., . . _ .
PUrihie, Oldaboma State U~
Dr Dooald A. t.nOft, &amp;uwly ~
and !he Fe4eraJ U!)i)'eiBitx_ ot RIO ·cle . ~ Of ~ and director of the
• Janeuo. •.
· ,.
_ - Ollice ,ttl EdiiCIItiaD lor tba Health
·
, ·
.. . •
.•
·•
•, ·.. .Pro&amp;.iane al tbe UlliWalf&gt;y cif Tmals
TwO"
lot~
·"'-'' at All8tin, bu "-l"--*' Uiociate
· Dr. a-Id P. Francia bu a-,._
,vice preoideat for '-lib .m--, ·Dr.

f.....,....,M

~:!tan~u::-· ~

~ Foolnda~

=m:..

ralaini-==

u:'

••IIIIo••

n'.:!!'!:,11~~ --;~~-alaowill~a~of·
~tBJ:~~Servicea~ =..~ ~-!-'~.
-tbeB&gt;.I)._,_ tba -Uni-.
•
•
•
Both llave tfi::........, ~
~t;y.
I!Jiaa'l, ._11M dl.e-ezten•
~~~ttl...;,. . ~ ~ -~ -r-tmevta .. =..~a:="~~
1C8, . _ ' -.'
ted ......__ cbair'-'lbr~who . iolned the · U/B • . ~· lie ~. 11M eapjed ·_In
-. . llll ~ proPolleD anibW«~ oltlile. .

..

�•

-

,..,.._ facullr_,_
Dr. Bli B............ a aobo1ar of
llilYI*t-m..iail ~ has

.... II(IIIOillted

FacultiY

Profeoaor in
and Ap-

:t.t~.: &amp;prwerina
As

=r

~~

,

Profeoaor, Dr Ruckenl
oi cbemical

y a pr:of-

.......-mg at 1he Oaiwr&amp;ity of DeJa.
ware, will he &amp;8110Cia'tad with several
departments. In addition, he will continue a broad J'IIIIP! of.research activitles in 8IICh areas as heat transfer
kinetia. and crystallization.
•
Autbo&lt; of more than 200 articles in
five· languages, including English
FJench, German, Russian and Ruman:
ian, Dr. Ruckenstein has received recognition for his researdt in mass transfer, physio-chemical hydrodynamics
surface phenomena, Jiving cell and
related fields.
' A native of Rumania, be received
his Ph.D. in engineering from the
Polytechnic Institute of Bucharest and
served for 10 years as a professor at
the University or london . . Before
joining· the faculty aCDelaware, Dr.
Ruckenstein was Na tiona l Science
Foundation Senior Foreign Scientist
at Clarkson College of Technology.

. . .

Acting Dean, HRP

Dr. Joseph E . Nechasek, associate
dean and assistarit professor, Schoor of
Health Related Professions, will serve
as acting dean of that ~I for 197374. Dean J. Warren Perry will be on
leave until May 31, 1974, as ilirector
of a national study of allied health
education for the American Association of Community and JUnior Colleges.
Professor, Geography

Dr. Duane F. Marble, professor of
geography at Northwestern University, has. been appointed a full pro, =..;:.,~t.tenure in the. Geograp~y
According to Dr. Richard A. Mitor the department,
Dr. Mamie 1s one of the outstanding
geographers in the coimtry. He is
an internationally known scholar and
will give our department a national
image."
. Dr. Mamie, who was also associate
d1rector of the Transportation Center
at Northwestern, has done extensive
work · in the field of transportation
geography, geographical information
systems, aiid behavioral geography. A
(:lB.duate of the University of Washington, where he received the B.A
M.A, and Ph.D~ - he has been S:t
Northwestern siiioe 1967. He has also
served on 1he facilltles of 1he Universities of· Uppsala and Stockholm in
Sweden, and the Univemitles of Pennsylvania, Oregon, and Iowa.
.
~ll , ~

·'due, Oalifomia State, Pepperdine, and
• Florida Slats. While at UCLA, he
served. as director of the Center for
Afro.Anwiam Studies duripg 1970.
73. He J:&gt;as served as an ediicalilmal
· ~tant to acbools and organizations, BDil is a &lt;lODIItilting ·editOr · for
publifhem for boob 011 _,t,

........u

...

=~~and 0011~

.
Wiibcll ~ In · Educatliift
Dr. Ropr R. Wood&lt; bas beeil appointed to a prof-.hip and tcr a
tbre&amp;-year tarm as -~ of "lhe
~t of Social, l'hilOeollhii:a
lion:-~-Fowulatiaas of~-

Dr. Wooak, ·previoualy at._lhe University of Calpry in Canada, received
his B.A. fJom t1&gt;e Uni_.oty of Min....ta. his M.A. fJom Ttachen Col._, Columbia Uru-aitf and his
Eill&gt;. fJom New York .UmVen;ty. He
bas tallj!bt at· Sir ·a-. William8
Uni-ty in M011tnoil, lluntar Collep, and at U/B durinr the 111644
academic year;
Dr. Wood&lt; ,baa )ened •: a COil·
oultant to the Harjem .s.mau. l'ro.............. by N- York Uai- ·
-.tty;· ... adJuDct·PI"'- far the

· · om- or--. .eaq.

~ at
'New Y.«t U~; a COiioloaltairt
. to the N- York Cil;y a-d of Bclu-

catlaa. ·md a 'Willlilic 1ectunr at the

UlliwDltiY of'Odald. He Ia ..-tJ.y
an educatiaDal -uant to the Oammualty Actiaa l1talmm of the Olloe

of Bcaaamlc_ ()ppartuaity; • Cllllmlt.-

~bari':"B.~

rofesaor of
geological sciences at
and
principal investigator of lunar rock
samples reWmed from ·five Apollo
-~ JD!ssions, has !&gt;een appointed
=~Department of Geo-

f.!blgh,

Dr. Sclar, 48, will replace Rosaman
F. Giese, Jr., acting chairman sinee
1971; he holds a B.S. riom the College of the City of New York and
M.S. and .Ph.D. degrees from Y8Je.
His fields or specialization incliide
high-pressure research, geochemiatry
and mineralogy, igneous and metamorphic petrology and metallic mineral deposits. In addition, he has experience in the application of geological knowledge to the solution of environmental problems and fundamental research in geosciences.
Prior to 1968, when he joined I.ehigh as a full professor, Dr. Sclar held
various. teaching and research posit.lons With the College of the City of
New York, Yale, Ohio State, and Ba~~~Memorial Institute at Columbus,
While at Batelle;.he traveled widely .
to examine minera:l deposits all over
the world and was involved with the
lunar ro.fk studies.

SUCFA~ards

Contract for
Amherst Cooling

The State University Construction
Fund has awarded $4.8 million in contracts for construction of the Chilled
Water Plant, the gigantic "air conditioning unit'' for the North Campus
in Amherst.
Albert Elia Building Company Inc.
of Niagara Falls received 1he $1.8
million general contract for construction of the building. Electrical switch
gear and transformer condacta totalling J866.000 went to 1he Buftalo
Electric Company Inc. and General
- Dr. Robert
Rqppol*"
Electric Company, both cit Bulfalo.
0. ~chairman of
Awarda for more than $2.2 millioo
the Department of Higher Education,
in mechanical COIIJPOD!!Ilts. including
I""! ~ ...,ppointad . ID a tlJre&amp;.year
pumps
and~towers, were made
. term ~ that
to the
Company Inc. of
B u f fa o and 1he Cenimic Cooling
JuliM ~ "' Heed ...,.......,
Tower
Company
of
Fort
Worth, Teua.
Dr. James W. Julian, cbairman or
The 32,000 Sq. ft. stvJcture, ached.1he ~t of."l?Jord&gt;ology aince
ul~
for
~leti011
in
April
of 1975,
1972, ,bas been ~intad to that
will JlroYlde cooled water for all air
post for a-three,year teftn.
.
conditioned units at the new campus.
All buildinp oo~ 1he campua will be
Allluq- .......,. ~&lt;chlirm.on
air conditioned 'ezoept residence halls.
Dr. Edaoo X. Alifuqueique bas been
.
Dr. John A. Neal, assistant vice
named actina cbairman of the Depart- .
president for facilities ~ DOtes
Pharmacoloay, Scbool 'of
that 1he plant will have an 'initial
capacity41f 96 million' British Tbermal
1heDr~, a full prof-.. in
Units • (BTtJ:s) with """"" provided
Smith who
~ replaces ~- Cedric
for lin additional 96 million BTU'
as more huildinga near completion.
amcentrata
~ 1he typical home or ol6ce
. 8Midl Inatituta Oil
liam. Dr
ID , ~"':' a capacity of 5,000
Smith will continue to teem at u..;
10 000
Meclia!l Scbool aa prof.-,r of phar- ·
. pr. Neal added that 1he single ~­
macoiOI)'.
cility, rather than individual cooling
units for each building "will provide
10011! ellicient cooling 'at 1 e s s ·cost,
Dr. Gm-t 0. Brialt bas been rewhile being far more aesthetically adappointed actina cbairman of the Devanlapous."
partaa,l of Plv*a. We · ftrat
J:l!lsiiDed lw New Y oril architec"ts·
appointed lut year to replace Dr
Da...., B r o d ;r and A.aOc:iates 1he
McAllilllar t K Hull, Jr., who ....,; • . Chilled Watar Plant's exteriOr win be
nu.d-clean of the Gnduate 8cbool.
built .,tirelY of rellective aJass panels.
.
-It will be locaied in the sou~
- . . ...... llnMielllie
COfti!Ot of the campus..
. ,,.,_
Ricbard K. a.lmen, llliloclata pro.9ccuPaDta 'of the Nonh Campua
,_and~ ofcmduate llludWill be ~tbout air cooditiabina until
lee in the Scbool of Arddtecture and
completion of the project.
·

...

'

l'Of'L •

•.

...

=t.:e

~~~

.

.

-·51,_ .......,....

...

h:

�,.......... .. ,,

Cift£Nn-.,

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

School

lth fdu
Created with Fritz aS'L1eiiR

__

Educ:ag,.; -

A Scbool ol HeaJtb
o&amp;:lall,y a.led at tbe ~

a, JOHN 'lHURB.I'ON

AlJIUIIl 22 81111 Dr. Jlemo G. Fritz,

dilector ol tbe lilnDIIr Oivlslan of
A ~ ar ..W pen11111181lt
I'IIYslosl Bduc:ation, Racnation mad
•!!!1111"10.....,._· toaeb filii. Will be a Atbletica,- &amp;PPOintocf•.·ts lint-dean.
llliiB\v.llllanlBI&amp;,Dr. SlieldaD WiDkPnolident Ro68rt L Ketter auu-i-.1 beth actions.
~lff!~
Tbe ochDol ClOIIIbln. paduate
and Ulldeqpaduste .......... JIIOif8lD8 in
~ JlllyaicaJ education. aDd ""*~ tD Dr. Winkler,
ation, f~ in tbe Fac:ulcy ol Edu........ oE ll1illc teelh iiMII... tbe
cational ~ wilh .._ former Di......,... el a pu:ticuJar fype.ol ..,.
vision ol PbYSical Ed.,;a-tion, Recreation and Aihletica. It """""'- tbe
- ' lhat. ill cbe
"'pftM!IIt
fartber ~ aDd . . . ol l!lqX8d
sizth school in tbe. Faculcy t&gt;f Heilltb
Sciences, joiDing tbe"'SchoOls of Mod- ,
- - Amuqd cbe IDoth ~ there
~.__,a ..,...m ... juocticla . icine, Dentistry, Pharmacy, NWliing
bet-; toaeb - - ' mad lllliDg ma- .
and Healtb Related Professions.
lllrlaL
Tbe School, of Healtb Education
"Wiibaat
8ealmc. food par- will Direr baa:alaureate. master's and-_
ticleaan ~way back intD that
doctorsl degrees as ~ as required
_... c:auaiDa NCUm!llt tooth decay
and electi.., physical education cours-'
es for noo-majors. In addition, it will
~--:a-tual dialocltiDI ol the_ filladminister intramural, club and inter"'fr\\;,lh
biahlx · intense
collegiate atbletic programs. ·
In all but tbe U::ercollegiste pro"'*''IY. ""'-"'-· it Wlll be pos.
grams, Dean Fritz will report directly
to .Dr. F . Carter Pannill, vice presrIDIIDellt one.
dent 'for healtb sciences. Under reguA c:.dl
lations of tbe National· Collegiate
Atblelic Association, Dr. Fritz will
'l'Mre'B still a catch, tbough.
continue
to report directly to tbe Office
~t experimentation
sbown
of the President in matters involving
tbet tbe ft!8torsti.., materials (llloiDJDOnintercollegiate athletics.
ly U88d for fllline loday cannot· be

-;·;'tiCi

::!.t:;=::~~ -

..,_t

eavi"

!itl! ere-Jasei's

~n~ tDJ: t;:'i~:g:~·

~wlf...":..ti1 ~~- ~::!

ol ~ a &lt;eramic-like ·
material lhat can be fllsed by tbe laser.
Still another problem for wbicb tbe
in..tigatDn are seeking a solutinn
ClOIICBfJI8 tbe method of safely apply}:e~ laser eDeQY to ~ tDolh surprGC888

To avoid possible ~ of· an u-

~be~~~d~·

tube-like instrument no larger lhan
otber dental apparatus. Wilh this pro• """"' known as fiber optics, light is
carried lhrougb a series of tiny steel·
fiben. Tbe Proc:Mi is already uSed for
providhlg increaaed amowils of reg:t:,rbil~;"':!W.1"l!'iP~t as tP.!&gt;
It will be ' - ' Y first to convert
tbe llber optics unit so lhat it is compatible wilh tbe laser. Once this is ac.........ilhed, tbe q r energy
be
eaatlalled to allow 'for. awlii:alion to
,a ~ .,_ in tbe moutb.
Dr. W"mkler believes tbet tbe laser
will (IIOVide a multitude of advantages
tD IIIIIDc teetb. "By fusing tDotb colored natorative materials to tbe enamel aurfece, tootb decay will be eJim.
mated in a caametic:ally acceptable
DI8IIIMI'," -be aid.
Opllnium Juncllon
He added tbet "la8er eqiosure wOuld
alao melt tl!e nstorstive material into
ibe ~ wbicb always occur
be~ tbe filling matter and IIJ!Ifgin
~~~"·providing an"opti-

am

Dr. Winkler, wbo is COildUctini his
~ts witb a laser "" loaD to

tbe Unlveraity from Boswell Park Memorial ln8litUte of Bulfalo, aJao notes
tbat - ' - tbe sy8lem is developed
dentiats wfiJ ,.. able to puldlase
' * - ! Y equipment at "a COIIlparstivaly . low ~.

u.e

SIL~ Gets Grant

For May Institute
,
«..&gt;

Tbe 8cbool of Information and Li- ·
brary Studies bas recaived a $14,985
pant from tbe . Bun!au .of YJ:Irsry
SeJvioss of tbe u:s. Ollee of Eauaition to boid .., IDiltitute an Library
8eJvioss for tbe HaDdic:appecl on c:ampua in May, 1974.
.
' Dr. Georp 8. Botmaki, dean of
tbe 8cbool is project director of tbe
put 8Dd Iu; wife, ~. is tbe instituta ctiNctor. Tbe ......... inatitute
will leodwe autboiities from . . - y ol . tbe library ........., as well as
ft'laled 6oldl, IIJIMting an tbe lateot
- - - .... ~ for tbe buldi:
capped mad

illltitutianaliad.
·
' Ill edclltlaD ..... 18cturaa. parliciputs
.., iD lhe m.tilale will maU lleld tripa
,..,
to radUdeo I« cbe t.~ and
illlltllulioaau..t ill Weatera New
•

Yoft. ~

-

l'lllioloplly of Hulth Educotion

Acrording to President Ketter, formation of tbe ,new school and its
inclusion in tbe F~ty of Healtb
Sciences represent a "new pbiloo;opby
toward health education." Tbere· is,
Ketter said, "a growing . realization
that healtb maintenance, in tbe forin
taken in bealtb education programs,
· is an important component in _total
bealtb care. Tbe moreo we know·pliout
maintaining tbe total fitoess of tbe
individual and tbe more professionals
we can train to transmit this knowl·
· edge to tbe general public througb
'education, voluntary, and government·
programs, tbe ·greater tbe chances of
e&gt;rtending elfective preventive medic~,...,P~,Iq , ~. .obvi
., . , ...
' Jt ~ more
otJS. every ·
year tbat many of tbe killing and
crippling diseases of our nation spring
from a failure to maintain adequate
levels of fitness. This is why we consider bealtb education to be a com. plement to uisting training and research programs in tbe bealtb sciences.
''The University at Buffalo bas a
long tradition of service in supplying
bealtb care professionals for tbe Westem New .York region. Our School of
Healtb Education will be responsible
for tbe training of a new kind of
healtb professional, wbo will be in
greater and greater d~mand in tbe
future.
·
''This University becomes tbe first
in tbe State UniversitY of New York
to offer such trsinjng lhrougb tbe
doctoral level and tbe first 'in Western
New York to establish such a program
witb close lies to other schools for
professional bealtb care · trsining."
President Ketter lint proposed tbe
new school in 197L
·

wilh atber bllllh ...... ~
Dr. ~ that tbe ochDol . .,• . --\I!IIU,y be con-

C811*1willtt9.olaw.tic
traiDen _.
pei!IOitne1. CoatiJUDI
tjGD p10pams

.a

-

iDediciDe. - -

iD such......

gency care,
tatldb mad aerc:iss
::r"PY
.are otber pls_ ~ tbe - :

~ ....... -

.
··--·Serving as -.tinator
of fDiduate ·
Pf'OII1llll8 iD Heallh Education will
be Dr. Arthur A. BoaliDpr, dean ol·
tbe Uni~ ol On!tron School of

~~ ~~~ ~

says tbat

Dr. ~ is "an inter-

n.e' .,__._~
.....__._. A:=:l:el::
. . _... niuded S1.80e
dalla lhla ....mar as

= ":-dedae
(GSA)

tD-•

a.

e.&amp; ~
in its receatly ~

i

'Iii ~
bas beml • for ~ . . far.
tber awards tD be u.Je,iD o.t-.

Tbe sti_..ta. "'aid. in~
~
for adYIIIICIId~t
to:
Ahdui-IIah
Abupby, $310, for ' a study ol
Cbaracteristial Mel c - Sbaplnr-Tri
Behavior;" Edward G.
;;;:;_, PPolitical Sc:ace, .176, "PwBODal ~ 81111 PoliticaJ Ill-

car-

~;,.... autbority in ' ~-tAmong ~Ia;"
ed~--;:-baving chaired !'-~~
~~ ~....:.....$240.
tbe 1962 National Conferenos on. Pro'"" ...d Cclldlol . _ l a . of
'essional l'repua••- 'm Pbysjc:al Ed• lllleNDIIan iD a ~
tbe WOrk
which bas ErYed
turaJ s.ttiD,;" Eric R. Liley, BiolnCY.
as tbe model for
education
$220, "E&gt;aHteeetal Micraatruclure ':.1
r-.v""'"!"
Crabe mad Trilobitas;" IJDda A. lbprofessionaJ preparation for tbe past
selll, l'llycbolosY, $196, '"Die Blfecla
dec::adi!:";Amo his lDany publiCations
of Dilfereatial ~ an BnliD De- .
is
~tu"'
Gild wbich
AdlroinUtrulion
of
-•~t
tn" • tbe
--~• Rat·,"
Physu:al
Educati&lt;Hi
be co-autb·
·~...,..._,
...........
ored witb 'A. Voltmer. For lqany yealir · MarkJ. Sokololf, PBY&lt;:bo._,l'$2(1.76, · ·
tbis .text was used in more' collegiate • "8ocilllizatlan and
Pacfoq
phy'!ical education professiobal·:P~i&gt;'
m
•• tbeof~ of ~
-8. .,;~ •
810118
aration programs lhan any similar
.......,...., by
'""""""'
work. Dr..Esslinger is tbe pas~ presiChildren;" Katbleen Van Every, Bdudent of botb tbe 'American Association
caRate~tternPsy~. ~..:!"astala~
for Health, Physical Educatian and
"'~--caof .._}lopmen&gt;uringt........,.iD
·..,.·-'·• ,..t;~.
Recreation ( 1959-00) and tbe Ameri·
""'"'' .......,
~.., ........,
can Academy o{ Pby&amp;ical Educatiod:.
booa."
Otbers .prominent in ,tbe Braduate
Tbe GRAD awsrda project iniprogram of tbe new school are Dr.
tialed by psycbiOiogy pllduate atude!&gt;t
·
Jolm Gramwooci as a re&amp;pODBe to ~
Carlton R .. M eyers, m
measurement
sbarP decreaae in fundintt for PBdP·
and evaluation; Dr. John Piscopo, in
ate students 8Dd their JI!I!IOI!ICh.. Jnikinesiology and bio-mecbanics; Dr.
tiaJ funds · were rec:e1-r tbrougb a
Diane L De 'Bacy, in pbysical ~pant to GSA bom tbe Univenity
in · Allocation Committee fM Speci,U
8
J
Funck:· 'nle· ·-...t IMI' ·for· IIUIIIiillir;:
ld S Greenbe and '·~-~
erro
·
rg
....wrence
G~ notes, ...:i~• l8os tb8D it'WIIl
A. Cappiello in scbool and community ' be in ~t. panting pedods.
_bealtb education PI"OifiUD8.
.
In determining Ibis IIUIIIIIier'll ·"""""
.Dean Fritz bad been director .or tbe
reci'"'-'-' 14 ~ ..... ~
· "
U/B Division of ·l'hyeic:al. EdUcation,
by ,_....,
,.......,_..
-" " {
Re&lt;:reation ·..and Atbletice since" ~
~~ ~WHh"fil;
~. 1970. Before comins to ~Pl!lieDce in pabts and reaeirc:b.
falo, he was dean of,: tbe ScbOCIL ol
·- ___ ,_._......, $'""" ...._ tbe ini
Health, Pbysiosl- Education ahd"Reo- .
' "AD _ . . . . . . _ , ..,....., ,......
reation at Western Illinois Univenity
tial fuDdiDg and $6,000 wted by ·the
at Macomb.
GSA Sanate will be aVIIllabl8 to~&lt;
Administrative offiCes of ~ new
~t"'~~ mad Mud&gt; Of
School are located in ~Ciarlt"~Tbe ceiling on awsn1a is now $25()'

nationally
pbyaic:al

:....lion,

7
""-u...•

co.aiir.:.

7

:~t?,:"ii~~fa!Ju:S~

t;rtbe~

HRP o,ientarion .
L...-Satu'-'"'"'
Set lUI'
n,JGy

:r;;:.::,;.::=

GSA says. ,\11 /B paduate students
who are~~ are .eligible fo -wly. Gnmts are competitive
in a llmiled - . since ' tlae are
Approximately. 200 students in tbe
School of Health Releti&gt;d Professions
more ~ lhan luade, but at- ·
·
tempts as
will
made tD 8Dec:ial
. - 1 ODDtbe
w1·u partiCipate
in an orientetion promoney
tar be
as ........._
gram s&amp;turday, September 8, tbree
slderation- is, P\Wl tD 8luileDts ,.,.,
days after classes stsrL From 9 a.m.
~- 1-.f mad have made prito 12. noon tbe sessions will be in
or a~ta.
an their
Diefendorf Annex classrooms, and
oWn. ·EquiJIIIII!I!t -~ are P&gt;Wl
from 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. tbe)( will · priority aincoi GSA ~ ae1a1n 'tbe
move .to tbe-E.' J. Meyer Memorial.· bardw8re in -a GRAD~ Ja-·
Hospital.
ventory fOr requlaition bY ~t
Dr. Harley Flack, 888istsnt dean,
student ............_ AaidemiC said tbe purpose of tbe program is to
wbicb do DOt noriaa)ly reca1ve ·.,..
acquaint students witb tbe goals and
-.reb fuadiDc wf1J ai.o reca1ve a
operations of the School Students . ~t hiPl8r priori" for 8ftrds.
suggested tbe orientation PfOIJfBDllast
Academic· aceiJeDCe 81111 eocielaJ lligHationeiTftnd
•
spring, but it WBB impossible to arnillc:ano8 are furtbet ~ - ' - ' - .
range prior to opening of c:l8sses.
criteria.
,
-Dean FriiZ 'Doted'· tbat tbere is a
national trelld towards such schools,
Six facultY -members and four
GRAD is now !lying tD eeilmiiab
citing similar units at Penn Stete,
dents will lead di0&lt;,"8ionS Tbe stuwitb iDdi!*Y 8Jid .,.....
tbe UniversitY of Massachusetts and
dents are-Joan Gerber, medical
ment tD· I!Dfarp tbe award fuild mad
Ohio State. Tbe iDQ&gt;ortance of loaittechnology; Jerry Miller, ~tb sciplace p;idualas ID or=:=-inl( tbe school in tbe FacultY of·Healtb .
enoes education and eva)ul!tian; Paul
~tiona. EderJial put _ _ _ •
Sciences can be seen by tbe ~ of
O'.Bars, j&gt;liysic:allherapy; ~ Josepb
IB ~ ptbered "and wOl be dJatrib.
activities in whicb tbe school will enPapaj, occupational tberspy. Facufcy
uted to students in ·~gage, Fritz said It will be-concerned
' participants are -Dr. Charles Ford,
Students .may ret
ta. or
wilh tbe preparation o( school healtb
~ 8880ciate;·$usan Depew, asiDformation flaoa tbe
Stueduc:aton and ph y: s i c a I educ:atim
SIBtant profeBBQr, medi,cal tecfmology;
dent Assc:~Patiad'OIIIce, 206 Norian. •
teachers, includilur teachers of tbe
. Dr. S. .AI·Nakeeb, 888istant prot_,.
bandic:apped, baaea -tO a large alent
of animal laboratory science; Kent
on tbe scienWic areas of tbe Healtb
Tigges, chairman and 8880Ciate pro•'
, ~ such as anatomy mad pbyaifeasor
of occupational therapy; J;&gt;oro- ·
\!illiam T. Stober1, a. Ut:....
oqy.
.
Ill addition, Fritz noted a ...t for · ~~~therapy instiuctor,
~J..~~ty
trained ~ for beallh education
York . Employee ~ Piopua
centan and ......- which ..... bem
'AIIIQII8" LOT II£YI
.
JII'OPC*d "' educ:ata tbe public "' "the
N- looys tor t.cu~ ...rld'W importance mad PI8Ctic:al IIIIP8CIII of
pool maintomanc:a. He IIUIIaled lhat
wift not be Issued tor lin-74, the Uni.,.,.,.,.,. '-WI maintanance mad fitWBity Tmllc: Contra~ Alhtoooy- ~
lire for varioal . . . . ol
~t
be.eteDciJed on.._. _
....
rwmii)CIL
The
looys
loau!od
for
1112·73
Dr. Frita pojated out tbet llllduate
.mad lhat ~ ll&amp;lebm be u.iod ""
ellortj iD pbyaic:al eiluc:ation
... to "be -)leer.
- · - .Kayo. , - otlcMiS
wllo _..
.
for
~freqlaatly ICelltered in scienP8lbmeil ..
t i f i c - ol .tbe ....lh ......... ouch
be~"""' the .
Far bJ. ~ .... be Nallived ._,
will- d ..
as tbe l'll7aiolaD o1 -.:lae..'lfe at o - - Mel ....
.,.._
ol.mo.re
a cbeci:
~on....._~-pseta .
....mt. " ' - - ....

"'·""'* _....

stu:

.lacts

.Stober/ Gets
. Award.

oil;:;

:;:,. .,_.cau~ !':

.-."

-=

on ....,_

,..._t .liJ.......,

. . . . . . . Depe-tribule-- -oer....,

...... =..-.. .
=

~

.....

:f! .,~~
~
far·=

�9
.AfiiK aalY . . . . . . . . ill ollae,
Alan M. MlllerA ~ of 1be
Graduale w
~"'- .....
Bi8ned. ellecliw ............,. followina a , _ elecdaa iD ...., ()ctab&amp;
Miller indlcatad that Jle ......

ping~ . . . . . . be aoilJd DO .......
make GSA Ilia prime oalllde
biB studies. "In .-at -lbe, I bave

Amhent:-----------------------by
6 plus the four extension

~~ ' " " " -

l, col. 4)

- " ' bas ' - ' Corrected.
0 t be r problems developed wben
-ler entaed 'the O'Brian baselne!\t
tbroulb a twmel OOili18CtiDi tbe Law
buildini with the adjoining Christopher Baldy Education and l'bil.-.
pby Buildini still under construction;
tbat, too bas now ' - t remedied ·and
portiol)8 'of tbe basement will be set
• up as a IIUike«Wt food aervic:e-ratbskelle&lt; area capable of providini "hot
food" aervic:e (or 170 individual&amp; at a
.time. This "food service ~" for
wbicb no rovi&amp;ion bad been made in
!be buii.J:., plans' but wbich is a
necessity at the present stage of Amberst · de--'~nt, is an example of
wbat
tbe "remarkable"
cooperation being shown by Facilities
P~. Food Servic:es and other
UniYei'Bity qencies in making the
move go as smoothly as p068ible. ''It's
a complicated business," sbe reports,
giving credit as well to Law School
faculty . and staff such as Associate
Pl'OYOBl 'William Greiner, Registrar
Cbsrles Wallin, Ofti&lt;:e Manager Audrey Koscielniak_and Professor Wade
Newhouse· for their roles in facilitating varioUs aspect., of tbe move .and
planning and alloi:ating space in tbe
building itself.

nr:M:;;;n..

-

.....

Tbe ·Law."""'School administrative of-.
fioes on the tbird level of tbe building
are reached by ti pair of convenientlylocated elevators. Faculty offices are
along the ballways above and· -are
aomewbat smaller. These lack ~open

Politic:afsdenc

~~=vt;,&gt;' ~la~'!.t'f~IsU:

Studying ware.gare

stairwell areas bu't are supplemented
by a faculty lounge and library opening onto tbe landscaped inner courtyard at Level 5. Staff· and student
lounges are on tbe fourth level, with
another student lounge on tbe · first
'level. Students will also be able to
make lounge use of aupeted risers
pl·a c e d in hallways throughout tbe

~vee oo Watergate" is tbe
title of • oowae beina oBered
tbis fall by tbe Political Science DepartDienL 'tbe oowae will bave a~- .
mUln enrollinent of 200 undergraduate
students and will be taUght py faculty
members from poli~cal acierice; law,
liistoey, -na.....-t· and obiliiooj&gt;by:
buildiJli.
T.he Law School, as always, will
'Fopica to be'Cxivered' inc:!&amp;e: growth of ~~-~ .. :·IJCI'WI!I'. Coi1greasioilal
operate on an ind-ndent schedule
this year, starting later tban tbe ~t
~~tbe Beparatioo 'of powers, eseciJtive rivilege, m.peac~unent,
of tbe University-because of opening
mooey in
"na'tional seCurity,
~~t;:.:'d~~~ ~:~
and ~ for .refonit.
'
Dr. .John c: Lane, Politiciiil Science
and semester break, Jan. 28-Feb. 4.
~t chairman,
. lained' tbat
Instruction will end June 5 with Comtbe ..,.,.... _..
beCauae of
.mencement slated for June 15, 1974.
·In substanc:e, Dr.. Mix reP.,rllld tbat
"obvious titudlint intereat" and"a'belief
00 tbe part of tbe faculty Dlll!nibeis
tbe School is bappy with tbe new
building . and its' facilities, with tbe
tbat lbe clapartmim~ s b Q u 1 d be involved with cunent pOlitical events. ' '
progress made in oettling in and readying for tbe new school year, and with
He~'""' ........_. tbat "Perspecli ~ .,;, inore ib8ii just
tbe fact tbat they are "out there" as
living proof to tbe 'rest of the Univerc:ummt . evenIa WI8P'U.P· "We mtend
to study Watergate m • tbe bniadei
sity tbat better days, facilities-wise,
coolaKt of lbe political and legal sysare coming.
tem of. tbis count.y," be said.
Olherl'
Tbe oowae ill designed to give tbe
Other bits of information collected
students a fuller IDidentanding Of the
dUring a "whirlwind" toUr of the ·not~te_xt of Watergate events by exyet-quite-ready ,bUildiqg this week inlliiiiDDII botb antecedenta And J.IOIII!ble . eluded tbe news tbat: .
~ of tbe currelit mtuation.
• Tbe formal dedication of tbe
• While "Penpectivea oo Walerp.te"
buildini will not be held until next
tlaalf IMY not became a pemwll!llt
spring when' ewrytbing is t!%peCted to
feature of lbe cunicW
Dr . LaDe
be "in shape."
believa it ia an indica~ Or tbe
- • A- public oonferenc:e ·on "'lbe ·
~. deainr ' to -.tinue· ·to
Delivery and•. Dislributioo of Lelia!
Ser:vices"
is, bOwevec, slated for Oc=:r~~ Jto~~ -ol~.t~ tober. 11 .and
12.
.. " '..
~ ,.I
t '"I
• Viaitonl and students can most
cooveniently .....ch tbe building, once
orientation and " ' - are underway,
via tbe Flint E n - to tbe campus

::d'tics.

diNel'i;:/

a

~~:'~.::-!&gt;O::J

comp~

• Calielll from tbe mat of tbe.Uni- ~ ~. Lur ~ oftioee

dialing

digits. (Tbe Information number is 62060 when calling from campus; 6362060 when calling from outside-636
is tbe exchange number for tbe Amherst Campus Centrex phone system.)
• Various campus groups, including
the U/8 Foundation, Faculty Senate,
Professional Staff Senate and others,
bave been invited to use the facilities
of O'Brian Hall for meetings in an
effort to foster campus community togetherness.,
.
• Tbe dramatic Moot Court Room
on tbe building's first level will be tbe
""""e of tbe proceedings of the Appellate Division or 1be· Supreme Court,
Fourth Judicial Department, on October 24 and tbe site of student-sponsored movies (for Governors' Residenc:e dwellers ) thq&gt;Ugbout tbe year.
• Economics and tbe Human Relations Area Files are " temporary" (for
tbe next year or two) teoants on tbe ·
6th and 7th levels.
• Student offices,•such as tbe Bar
Association and Law Review, bave setups much improved over fornier facilities.
• The Law Library, when fully
operative, will oller considerable services, particularly search aervic:es, ' for
practicing local attorneys.
1

be:.g ~WI~ :!: .:ti'o':f~f.U:
library stack area, on tbe 7th floortemporarily at least,
• The Library will bave 500 reader

fitations. .
.. 'lbe ·Law SChOol will, for tlie first
time, bave a number !30) of donn
students, making use of tbe nearby
Governors' Residenc:e Complex.
• The building will feature almost
all new furnishings &lt;putty color for
faculty, oak wood in otber areas).
• Faculty bave permission to install, at their own expense, one windOw
air conditioner for each two offices,
pending completion of tbe air-&lt;lOilditioning system for tbe entire new campus in 1975. . The building was cool
last Friday despite the lack of airconditioning but tbis may become a
problem in crowded windowless
ture balls.

l!:&lt;'-

Prolle•ndhns ·
Bell&gt;.'-aching vied with praise for

the arChitecture as tbe Go-m· Residenc:e Halls opened tbis SUnday 1 adding such names as Lehman, Clinton,
Roosevelt (Theodore) , and Dewey to
tbe more familiar campus lexicoo of
Hayeaes, Croebys,, and Goodyears.
Tbe gripes centered c'm "isolation,"
"ugly surroundings" of bare dirt and
conStruction, and the fact tbat tbere is
only one cooking unit for ev~ 200
students (four for 824), although full
dormitory food. aervic:e is available.
Tbe praise came for tbe 10 per cent
or $65 reduction in residence ball bills
to ComP""""Ie . lor "the bardabipa;"
the carpeted first 6oor lounges wbich
come complete with black and white
television and pool tables; tbe brick,
angular architectural d e s i:'g n, tbe
large· wfndowa, courtyard views and
airy, bright rooms; tbe ""-nt din1md the feeling of intiaQacy
ing
walla and corridors, partitbe centnl dininl .....
Tbe residence balls after 412 1001118
in 103 auilee, each of which cootains
four dallble " " " " - rooms, batbrooin facilitiea and a ....U lounge.
Studeats of botb occupy lbe
oo.mplex with IIISDban of the same 1181:
sllariDI the, iAdividual suites.

crea::.T"om

taken 00 oommi-la tbat -*1
make it impo8olble far me to coodaue
doini the job I feel Ia .....-..ry of
tbe president," be aaid.
Miller ll8llllred that then WauJd ba
no "lame-duck" period in tba liDal
weeks of biB lalure. He U.O indlcatad
tbat be would cootinue in tbe future
to serve GSA "in whatever ~
I can, 1110re importantly in COilliJiuiDc
tbe fight for flm.din!r." Miller bas'-'
particularly active m GSA's ,_.tel- .
fort in tbe area of graduate student
funding.

Grants Offered for
Work Abroad '

'

The Institute of International Education bas announced the opening of
tbe 1974-75 competition for grants foe
graduate study or researdl abroad
and for professional training in tbe
creative and performing arts. Tbe
grants, whose purpose is to increase
mutual understanding between tbe
people of tbe United States and other
countries tbrouih the exchange of persons, knowledge and skills, are provided under the terms of tbe Mutual
Educational and Cultural Esd&gt;ange
Act of 1961 &lt;Fulbrigbt-Hays Act) and
by foreign governments, universities
and private donors. Some 550 awards
to 46 countries are t!%peCted . to be
available for 1974-75.
Applicants must · be U' .S. citizens
who will hold a bachelor's degree or
its equivalent before tbe beginning
date of tbe grant. Creative and performing artists are not required to
have a bachelor's degree, but tbey
must have four years pi professional
study -or equivalenf: e~ence. ~
most cases, proficiency in tlie' languiigi!
·of tbe host country is required.
Further information and application
forD)S may .bo: ob.U.ined , from . 107
Townsend Hall. Deadline for applications is October 1.

Tbe Chemistry-Department bas announced tbe awarding of special fellowships and awards for 1973-74 to
seven of its graduate students. Those J
honored are: Joseph Solsky, recipient
of the Allied Chemical Foundation
· FeUowship; Mani Sbabrang, awarded
a Henry M . Woodburn hllowship
and the Electrocbemical Society, Inc.,
Fellowship (Summer 1973); Micbel
' Dupuis, Stanley Ficner, and Paul Savino, recipients of Graduate School
Fellowships; Thomas Riedbammer,
awarded . tbe Samuel Silberf Fellowship; and Batbara J . Kalbacher, recip•ent of a Henry M. Woodburn
Fellowship.

New Soccer Coach
Dr. Salvatore R. Esposito bas been
named bead cqoch of varsity socc:er at
tbe UniverSity, Dr. Harry Fritz, dean
of tbe School of Health Education,
bas announcdl. Esposito will U.O
serve as an assistant professor in the
Department of PhysiCal Education;
School of Health Education.
A graduate of West Chester State
College, the University of Nortb Carolina, Md tbe University of Southern
Miasissippi, Esposito was formerly
cOach at .Tbe American Univenity,
where be directed tbe physical education depa-L

Small Honored
Dr. S. Mouchly Small, professor
. and cbainnan, ~t of Psycbj.
at.y, ia tbis y..,.s president o( tbe
w~ New Xork Psychoanal)'ti!:
Society, 811 diliate society of tbe
American Psychoanalytic Asaociatioo.

�~-~
Tbe·-·

.....-ry
and...,.,..
However,
pacquirinc skills
tends
to ~.:- narrowing
ratla- than
•
In oar --o.v ........... - ,_
lbe 'III'Old ~" in ouch contexts
as 1be trainina of atbletlltor lbe train·
iDa ol clop, and it..ia perfectly clear
what is - L Tbe activities de~ are worthy, but lbey . have
DDtbiDg in ........., with education as

a

__.....,.

care..

lO-W

"""
....

'

to perform the _..

l!eiiiiJ teall!id. ·li

ill a eupreme 1_,- ol the eunent syat.m r~~--m, by writtea amrinaliool
that it oqop.n to IIOlpta Ibis principle
in e.ey .....,.. aVailable! Let . . . ol a ........ eamblation in

1'} matlwmatics. ~ a matbematirinn .,..._ . . ·problem, • -

" ' - tbe....,._.; ..__a malb-

rmnticiftn ..a.b In . - and tranquil-

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parable w'ltb, for example, the study

a

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9:15

preciae terminology in current use,
ouch u, for elllllllple, lbe descriptjon
ol a certain llDUIIIe cum..t in our high
ecboola 88 . "Driver Education." One .
.w-ly lbe unfortlmate eft'ects of
Ibis alispomer when ""' dewilopment of a uaeful social skiU is as-

._tly

1:.45

,..30

::..are..:=•~te~

ol history or bioloiY, and which contribute -ards the toteJ aggrepte of
aedita which are ~ for qu8J;.
fll:ation for entry to a. university. It is
-uaJ for lbe a&lt;:ademic C:ommunity
to illslst' oiHhe impoo'taDce of its edu-'
c:atiooal role, and to distinwish sharp.
ly between this and the entirely
"1"- 11ftJP0r but less ai~'"'-"t ro.l e of- the
·" ua!Wmity oi P~ training for·
lltadents in special atilla.
.
A particularly unfortunate eft'ect of .
the Cllllfuslon is tbat tests o(. the effi..
cacy ol ~ are devl.d and are
tlaa held to be wlid test:s of the sue. _ ol the educatiooal J&gt;IOC!!88. Tbis
tru1_y diaastnJuo error penniiates our
entire educatiooal ~ . . .
~-.......,TTralniDa ..... and llhould be tested;
education C8IIDOt be tested by any instant - . and lbe educatiooal P"""""'
is
clistortsd by attempts
to -its e«a- It is a common
COIIIPiaint ol both llludents and faculty
that it is impoMible to apect the
i n - of lltadents in any material
Wbieb is not~ to-figure in
a since, ....... ""' etudents to devole a IXIIIIiderable amount of time
and attention to pursuit olouch "liberal" studies, tbey wauld jeopardize
their p._q of a -.-1 pade in the
a.t, and hence ol a sacc:eBuJ career.
T...W., is the bene. ol 8&lt;lldemic life
for both lllud!mta and tsacheia. It
would appear to be CIJIIIPletely utopian to.....-~
·
But
at lout -"''n
ftiClUiilil&amp;&gt;da.
tiona .... and
be _ . , to mediate its unfootunata _.... ......... In
particular, I wouJd lilre to ......that, where it 1a llplli'Opriate to 1M
0
a.t, tlaa tlie teet abouJd alao be appnprlate. That Ia to !JAY, where tbe
~MPect . ol the education Ill'
1IIIMl ~-lbr -.Pill. at the
t-!:te leYel ~ tt.. the teit abouJd
....a:oedand~)' ~
claaely .. pcalble the~CDIIH,.., tiona under which the .....lola aolni

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Canrilht 4&gt; 1J7J ~
Publirlhinl Cam.
p.~~y, reprinr.d with pennlaion. TIQ ,.,_ • •
,.,.._,. , • • tM Pilllt A.ttnual 0J-o Cowt &amp;ditorlal
........._., Bo.d

- !"''·

..........

Chorus O~n to All

IIUIII'. c.rw-..... CAIIIW

Membert!hip in the University Chorus is now open, and Dr. Harriet Si-

,_
~

student body, faculty, and staff at
U/ B and tbe community ~if. join
the coming season. No aDditions are
required and tbe only pmfeq\Jisite for
membersliip is "a love ol singing "
accorifmg to Pror_,.. Simons.
'
'lboee interested"in membenthip are
asked to attend one ol the Opening
rehearsals which will ~ place from
7-9 p.m. on Monday, September 10,
in Room 140 Capen Hall and Wednesda.y, September 12. in Room 147 Dief.
endorf HsU, both OIL tbe South Cam,

It IS

for

._

. . . . . . Hill .........

~j~r::,f ::~~ ~

)lUlL

-v

--. .-

REGU.ARSESSION-- Y ...... ,_Y

...."""
....

... .,.....'""

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12&lt;15PII

1:&gt;50
1:15

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12:20PII
12&gt;05
1:10
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1:15
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3:20

4:10
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1205 Pll
1230

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. 12:15
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9:10

.

. 9:15

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·:ml
CJ:ISI

1031

�U/8 As-sembly's
,
.... .
.

~ 6~

Flrst Meeting
Set for the 26th-

=

- - Center~ Norton,- 11 a .m.. 4 JUIL No admlloi&lt;m ebarce:
' P.-nlecl by the Stuilent Aaociatiort•
and the .UUAB Video Commi~.
rHIATIE A\IM'110id**
The Theatre Department will holcl.
pneral auditiODB ~ for four fall procluctiona, 102 Bllrrimui Library, afte!DOO'L
(~ for timea at ext. 2jl45.)

meeting :':

2 p;m., w~. SePtember 26, at
a aile to be cletermlued:
•

.Tolm lAird O'Brian JWl't.lloot Court
Room bea .bam paald as a ~ble

I.IGAL AIO aJNIC FOIUM.,

Haaa Li&gt;WIIl". Norton, S p.m. and"7: 30

- lOr
Place.
just
88 it bas
o«ered
early
· moetinp
of been
tbe

p.m.

but
made.

a

cleei8laa bea DDt yet .been

(Hit&lt;:hcock),

1~

Capm, 3 lo 9 p.m. No admission charp.

""a!.~.~~~. No~n.

The U8t of elected repreaeiitatives ·
to tbe ~. bY CDIIIItitueucies, .
followa: -.
•

cbeck ...bowcue for timel. Admiaaio
charp. _
.

BenSOil, Guy Bloomprdea, Aim CbalGuy Calm, .TOII&amp;tban llbdes.
Peter ~ IMIY .Kraltowitz,
Clift l'MIU;y. Mill:beiL ~

S.H=

IHTaAMUIAI. fOOJUU. •• ,..

Studento may oitn-up for int18D1Ural
foOt.ball team'i all . day today in Clad&lt;
Hall. For additional information, call ext.
2924.

Tyrcme
Robert
.Temiifer..W~ DiaDe ZwoStudat &amp;lr Aaeoc:iatioll: · .James ·

McLeod.
•
. ,
&lt;
.
n..tol Studat Aaoeiation: .J.-ph

~I Studelll. AaOeiotion: Sera-

~
p~

I.ounae_. Norton. 10 a.m.-2

coCen-

YIOIO EHVItONMENI"'

OriciD81 video ta- and experilliental
methods of ·~ will be demouotlated, C....ter
• , Norton. 11 a.m.-4
p.m. No admiuioo charp.

an~"J!n~U~ ~&gt;&lt;l!,~•tio~

111EATIE AUDITIOid••

The· Tbeotre Department will hold
general -auditions for four fall productions, 102 Harriman Library, afternoon. ·
(Cbeclt for t4l&gt;eo" at ext. 20411.)
VAUnT SOCCEI PRACTICE*

..

tice'
": W! ~.:.%:r~rl.':t
1 _p.m.. ,Spectators .are i'Dvited to a ttend.
SYMPOSIUM' ON THE ENGINE&amp;;

•

.

1
Production, Thon;188 J . Gullo, Yice president, Manufacturing Moog Music, Inc.,
70 Acheoon, 2 p.m.

fASHIION SHOW &amp; SALE*

WEDNESPAY_...c 12

David 8aleb, Scott
SaUIIdon, Barry- 8chwei

ter

ins~~f
~~:.t"'!~"E:::..~
Engineers.

-

Room. Norton, 8:30 p.m. No

Performen to be &amp;nDOunced. Baird
lawn, behind 8choellkopf Hall. 9:30p.m.·
midnight, No admission cha:rge. ·

~:

- Student
· ASSOCIAI'ION
- I 'ol6cen
I O Nand
·
A.ociaticm

on!inaton will meet with

COIICBt"

Fillmore

-.,_Smalley.
~=-·~"~-~
Studat
Dobozah

.c:wa~=-~=8 im.-IIOOIL.

admiuion charp.

llaAIU POl&amp; DANCING* -...

Oratbltlk~ ~:Hen­

ry s.da, Weeley c.rt.er, Ridlard

=-

'

~;ran.f~,.. on a Train

Fal:ulw IUid ProfeMicmal swr Sen-

aiel,

·

. ,.

7""""·~titueacies,~ .

%..t to~ta first

n. ooL·-•J

~~"~=
aDd experimental
~a( w ~ will be demon-

'l'ba lhaiVenity ~U/B­

wide

,_ ,..

onliDalllro will' - t with aludeota, Center l..ouDp, N - . 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

·Sabres'.Came Will
Aid ScholarShips

fin ADclenon, Edward HoUlfeld.
Prof-wn..l Stoff &amp;IIGk: Nancy
Proceeds from a Sept,ember 20 exBroderick,' 1M1Y Drake, Neil Goen,
hibition hockey game~•tting tbe BufAllen Kunlz, Marjorie Mix, Bernice
. falo Sabres rookies
a few veterans
Poss, Tbomas Sebillo, . T - Schwenagainst ihe Cincinna · Swords, the
de\:t Robert Waguer; •Ciiffm:d Wilson.
Sabres' . farm team, will be given to
~,.;iuil Seruice Employees . Aaeoc:iathe University at Buftalo Foundation
tion: Mic:bael Day, Rotlet: Frieday,
for ilse in the University's general
Norina Haas, .Jeannette Schaefer,
scholarship fund.
Hugh&amp;Dck. .
.
Arrangements for the g!IJOO, to be
. U/B :.tfumni Aaociation: ·.TolurCarplayed at Holiday Twiri RirikB in
ter...Cheektowaga, were made by the U/ B
Faculty Senate: Social &amp;;iences •
Alumni Association and the Buftalo
AdrrainUtralion: Mervyn Alleyne, RoSabres of the National Hockey
I&gt;Ort Denton;' James .Lawler, Lionel
Lewis, Gerry Miller, -John Milligan,
~edonation for all 3,000 general
Lou Shupe. John Vitek.
admission tickets is $4.00 each. TickEducolionol Stiuliea: Ronald Genets are on sale at the Alumni offices,
tile, Anthony Papalia, Richard ,salzer.
123 Jewett Parkway, and at the NorMIWJiemf!llt: l.ee Preston.
ton Ticket -Office. Checks and money
Arts • Letters: Pierre Aubery, Sylorders should be made payable to the
via Dimiziani. Leslie Fiedler, Edwin
U/ B Alumni Association.
Gonion. Maria Hale, Ronald Hauser, · Alumni president, Dr. Frank I;.
Micb8el MetzJer.
·
Graziano says, ''The alumni of the
lAUI • Juruprudence: Jacob HyUniversity are particularly grateful
to the Sabres for providing this major
man.
I
,
boost in our scholarship program. The
NtJiul'al Sciences • Mathematics :
Sidney . Adelman, Stariley· Bruckenneed for such financial support for so
stein, Robert Qa,yley, Marvin Zelen.
many deserving ·students bas never
been greater."
·
E"'lu.-ru.. ' • Applied" Sciences:
Co-chainnen of the pro'ject are
GeraJd:FrBncis,
John Medi
ltying
. Shaunm. ,;
' ge, /
James J . O'Brien, an attorney and
president-elect of the Alumni AssociH~ Scie11Cf!8: Wayne Anderson,.
ation, and George Voskerchjan, the
John Boylan, Saia -Cicarelli, J. David
Association's vice president for activiEick, Cbiules Lipani, Norman Mohl,
ties. Dr. Morley C. Townsend, an Erie
James Nolan, Charles Paganelli, BenCounty legislator and immediate past
Sanders, Jeannette Spero, Ruth
president of tbe Alumni Association,
is honorary chairman.
MFC Studint Association: RepreFace-off time is 8 p.m.
sentatives names not yet submitted.

=-

0

ae'Za ~ r:~n~ ~Jill:
more Room, Nqrton, 2-4:30 p.m.

-riNNI5 MATCH*.

U/8 vs. Geneseo State, Rotary Field,

3 p.m.

.==-=c

SDS MIEIING..

- will
The
boldSbJ!I:nt:r

~ ~=-

additional

information.

·

=~

EXHIBITS
UUAI AU EJUIIIII'*

contact

Recent CGIIGdian P~ and Sculpture - A &amp;lection, featuriDc work by
David Bolduc, Robin Collyer, G.abam

Sylvia Dick. 876-2949, or leave a message
in Box 52. Norton Hall · ·

::~:~ry&amp;~'!~~~~

NlAG.AIA ' FALLS- IUS fliP**

Busses leave Norfon Hall promptly at

~.t.~;'t.ti;.~ f'::'r.'ta%. ~} &amp;,-::;,

wich. Gordon Rayoer, Daniel Solomo~
Joy Walker .and Tom White9. Galleiy
219, Norton. t b rough September 28.
-Gallery hoW11: Monday, Wedneoday and
Thunday, 11 a .m.-5 ·p.m.; Tlleoday and
Friday, noon-4 p.m. and 8-10 p.m.; Suhday, 1-5 p.m.
·
r

See

I'SYCHOMAT*

A listening and s peaking experienCe,

Cafeterili 118, Norton, 7-10 p.m.
· HH.LB. GENEIAI. MEETING* *

-··

Hillel House, ~ Capen Blvd., 7: 30 p.m.

MEMOIW EXMJin•

UUAI MOVIE••

Year 0/ Darn.ll8e-I972, an exhibition

Brew.ter McCloud , 140 Capen. Call
ext 5117 for time of screening. No ad.
mission charge.
·
CONCBf*

M~ictu.Ifaif 8T;':t. Be~UUtt,.

in memory of eminent literary figures
who died during 1972. Balcony, oec:ond
6oor. Lockwood Memorial Library. ContinUing.

Kleinhans

UUA.IY EXHI&amp;fT*

S~th ~"!JJ'Y pf the Publication of
m y..es, part of the Il:,rmanent James
!~ M:.=,~oel;'?;rary_m (207), Lock-

' Ticke'ts 'lit' $5, ·$7, and $8.50 ' iu'e avail able -at the Norton Hall Ticket Office. ·
ruauc LECTURE•
SYndicated columnist Jack Anderson
wiU appear on _campw: under s ponsorship

NOTICES

of the Student Association-Graduate Student A.Ssociation Speake rs' Bureau, Clark
Hall, 8 p .m.
Mr. Anderson's lecture wiU be preceded

11

~~::•s::;o~guter bicycles imd
other valuables with Campus Security,
196 Winspear0 ext. 5555. Registration
aUows the Security office to return regoods to the owner. '

by a p ress confe rence in 232 Norton at
7:15 p .m.
.

covered stolen

UUAI MAIX IIOTHEU FESTIYAlu
8

NJ'J:n, ~~e!to~~w~efo~~J'!~ld~

IOOIC. EXCHANGE

r

mi~ion charge.
RlM FEmYAl*

The Student Association Book Exchange will operate in 231 Norto~on­
day-Friday, 10 a .m.-4:50 p.m.,
h
September 26. Used books may be broug t
in for sale through September 12. Checks
and · unsold books can be picked up Septembe&lt; 19-26.

King Kong and a series of six Twilite
Zone features, Tower lawn, 10: 30 p.m.
No admission charge.
...
In case of inclement weather, the films
will be shown in Goodyear Cafeteria.

CONVOCAtioN CANCB1ATION

th;~:o~rWe~~ieta~P!~!:not:.~

THURSDAY- 13

which was " originally scheduled tcrbe
held on September '7 in the Fillmore
Room, Norton, at 9 am.., has been can-

CI.UI &amp; OIGANIZADON FAll*

Fillmore Room. Norton, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

celled.

CONTINUING DENTAl EDUCATION#

Trouble Shooting the Problem Areas
of Complete Denture Pr01thodontics, Dr.

"FUTUIE Of MAN" COUUE

Students who wish to register for FS
159, Future of Man , for the 1973 fall
semester, 'should phone Kay Maher at
ext. 1323 to make an appointment with

S. Howard Payne, local dental practition·
er, 143 ·Capen, 9 a.m._.: 30 p.m.
.
STUDENT ASSOCIATION INFOIMATION•

Job Openi~gs
'Ibe Per&amp;D!lllel Oflice indicates that tbe following faculty and nonteaching professiooal staff positions are open at State University at
Buftalo:
Foculty

Students may obtain I.D. cards on
Monday-Friday, through September ' 14
in 240 Norton, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
No I.D. cards will be made between

The Lepl Aid Clinic and the Attica

Defense Committee present an ABC-produced film. Attica Like It /51 Conference

u

Theatre, Norton,

~~{ lfna:o;~rdsw!iue~ ~:i:i~

a.m.

16 Foster.

~-~=db~g:::txti: [;.":,i~ili

NTP

,, ___ ,...,. ......__ "'·----:-----

On Friday, September 7, aU cars must

The Creative Craft Center will have
demonstrations in ceramics, leathercraft.

the lot that .evening.

~::Oi;;_;;~oZ:: =~~~king.
wQ.IuMor•

.

·

·

OIAL COMMUNICATION COUISE

Some openings are still available in
Oral Communication Skills, a four credit

•

311 Norton, noon-2 p.m. and 3-5 p.m.
Preoenlecl by the Student Aaociation
aod the Film Cl_&gt;d&gt;.
•
PSYCHOMA.t•

.

~ ~:.::1:;~i!:e~~~e!ct:J~J :~:

CIAFJ CfNTEI DEMONSTIATIONS•

FHM MAKEU

•

NO PARKING

follow the film.

Profrfltrlmerl Analyst, Computer Services, PR-2. .
.
Programmer/ Analyst, Data Processing, Computer Sernces, PR-2.
For addiUOII&amp;l · information concerning these jobs · and for details of
NTP openings throughout the State Univell!ity gystern, consult bulletin
boards at tlieae locations: ·
1. Bell Facility between D152 and 0153; 2. Ridge Lee, Building
4236, nen to cafeteria; S. Ridge Lea, .Building 4230, in 'coi:ridor next ·to
C-,1; 4. Health ScUmces Building, in corridor opposite· HS 131; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor betWeen ·Room 141 tuid the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
pOund floor in oorrillor neXt to vending machines; 7. Hayes ~. in
main ..,tmnc:e foyer acroes from Public Information Office; 8. Acbeeon
Hall, in oorriclcJI. ~ Rooms 112 and ~; 9. Plirker ~.
in corridor 11at to Boom 15; 10. Goodyear Hall. 1st floor, HoUsing Ol6ce
area; 11. 1807 Elmwood,. Peraoonel ~t; 12. Norton ,Union,
~. Qlllce. Room 225; 13. Dieferulorf Hall, in corridor' ~ tO
~ - 1011... ' ~---

I.D. CARDS

FILM &amp; l.fCTUif•

a

Clinical Instructor, Medicine.

Dr. Danielli.

Student Association officers and coor·
dinators will meet with students, Center
Lounge, Norton. 10 a.m..-2 p.m.

-

:~r:et:n~:e~~!t!~~: :~t1::1· ·
reasoning skills for classroom discussion.
Call 831-1723 for more infonnation.

A listening and opeakina- experience.
Cafete!:\4 118, Norton, S-6 p.m. ••

llCUAnoNAl fACI&amp;.n1ES

PUIUC I.ECfUII•

s~;~M;::a~:.~y,l'3~1 ~!:;j

•

~r.!:~743~ iia= !t
p~
0

:::.:..: :::::.;.::-: 3

MatdUtul.....ilr:._S_in•ultJr Per.l.ur:boliofl ...;.

Proble,.,, ~- Paco A. Lqentrom, pro-

a1 n:3:l•bfaciJtti~e~ta~~~aeH~i

houra are on Monday-Friday, 7-lO .. p.m..,
and WM!o:endo from 2-5 p.~ Cowt .....,..

vationa for tennis, squash and handball
may be made at the Intnlmural and
Re(:..,.tion Oftice •in Clark Hall, ext. 2!124.

.

�-:;:::.,-::~;.....;.The·

ata,N....._cloedl....,_fM . tlmoo.

=

AAIIIIoolla .......

eM,.:-:.; Cot. -..o Capa. 'l: 46 aDd
~tbe~....:t~~~ =~
.

uuaa~aoua---

F.!d":&amp;\"LT!:.ts;{.:!t f'::.:O::
- . . . c:harae- 8 p.m._. call ext. 6112 fo!
locatioli.

ltiLLIL OPIN MOUSI•

---·
The.

Theatre [)eputmaqt_will _bald
iene.-1 auditioaa :far.'-""" ·· ~ ........._
tiono, 102 ~ Libnoit, .,.........
(Check for at ext. 111:6)
-

'

Hil.lel Houoe, 40 Capen Blvd., 9 p.m.
For additional information, call 896-4540.

-

UUAI JIIDNIGHJ MOYIE••

_

P.inlr Fl4minloft, Conference Theatre,
Norton_, midnight. Admia8ion charge: 75
cents~
, _..

SUNDAY-9~
·CONCHT•

•

Performer to be announced, Baird
lawn, behind Scboellkopf Hall, 9:30 a.m.-

,~:~f;:;r:IRooca: ~o~cl.;:)N! : :
sion charge.

•,

NEWMAN CEHTU "OPIN HOUSI.* .

HefreshllMmll wiU be served, Newman
8

~~it!'n~~~~- Th~ a~l Jo~i -~~

motion. call .834--2297.
-

Busses leave Norton Hall promptly at
I p.m:, and will return by 8 p .m. See
Saturday liSting for &lt;!!tails of tour.

•SQUAB

----=-:

qu!.ro:n.!jot~
~
a,n.:.~n:~~

OD the South (Mam SU.t) cSmpw~,
ataft' member. will be available to answer
questions co nee rninc health aervices.
academic matters. minority atudent af.
fain, otudent activitieo and placement
and career .,.;daDcO, Norton Hall Center
Lounp, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
I.A.

fU -a.ua

-4

foatoN stueBn ~.;.,;.

Academic advilement for foreign stu-

dent&amp; will be available in 114 DiefendOrf,

10 a:m.-noon.

be available to meet with students, Center I.ounp, Norton, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

1

-·-~-

.

OIIINTATION ACADEMIC FAll

Reprt188DtatiYea from the Faculties or
Natural Sciences aDd Mathematics,
Health Seieoceo, and n.e· CoD-. have
- . iltvited to meeCwith atudenta, Fill·
- . Norton, 1-4 p.m.
PSYCHOMAt• .
A liateninc and speaking experience in
an -,endeol. free-flowing and invitinc
oellin&amp;, Cafeteria 118. Norton, 3-6 p.m.
For further ~ormation about P aycho!D&amp;I. ~ •."'- 4630.

-·

Representatives from the Faculties of

School of Management l&gt;ave been invited
to meet with students, Fillmore Room,
Norton, 1-4 'p.m.
FU.E GAME HOUIS**

Table Jennis, shullleboard, pocket billiards and bowling activities will be free
for freshmen and transfer students, Recreation Area, Norton Baaement, S-6 p.m.
Pel"80na1 identification will be reqwred.
UUAI 1i11A1X AOTHEIS FE:STIVAL..·t
A Night at the Opera, Conference 'Jbe..
atre, Norton, check. showcase -for times.
Admission charge.

.

UUAI MAIX IIOTNEIS fUYIVA&amp;.•• -

tmf~Sou~~et:;we~Tn;;;!~~

cbarce.
CACMOva•

·

Fritz the Cat, 140 Capei:J.. 7:-45. and
9:45 p.ui. Tickets at 75 cents can be
pun:haoed at the Norton Ball Ticket Oflice.

MOVIE OIGT••

.

Featuring W. C. Fields aborts, Roadi-unner and Tweety cartooD0. an-old 'IV

c:r=

~·- Sty-~~:::,

Hollywood~uction lniler,

old-time
........, reela, Laurel and Banly'o C/wmpa
· at Ch/ord, collep-made -rimentol film,
a Ropr llarnjet . . -,
Tbreo
and the Flash Goedon feature,
~le Death /rom Outu_ Spo«, Tower
admiai"':,..~~ 8 p.m.-2 a.m. No

The

s'-'

Preoented by the Student Asaociation
and the Inter-_Reoiden&lt;e Council.

-

con•aousr
F-rinc

~

mllllie by Rutlt &amp;ron, Fill-

more Room, Norton, 8:80· p.m. No ad• - c h a r p.
Israeli refieahmeslts will ba oerved at
. ~~-:~~.!..._...red by . the

...... ~

PDeW~••

Prooident Robert . L

Ketter; Student

:!~':.J~~~niH=:

,

e

r

t

a

e

h

-

~

Pilft , _ _ _
UUAa-~·

T

Food Senite. the 'lbter-Reoidenoe Coanril nad Student AMD&amp;- will meet
with ........... to cfiocu. the fnlnle.of the
North ~ moin actmtieo -loomp,
Lohnw1 HaU: Nortb ~ 9 p.m.
-

•'

Nort""' midloljlat. ~: 76 OS!DIL

FOREIGN STUDENT OIIE'tf!ATION IANQUO ..

'

~

uu.u IWX. Uo- iu'nvAJ.••
Room

S~rvice,

Conference Theatre,

Norton, check abowease for time&amp;. Admi.Baion charze.
OU.DUATI JiiUSIC IICtrAL•

•

·8~~:.t~A:.:..~\Q'ea~~~·rt~

citol Ball, 8 p.m. No admission cbarceu/t AatS Hiiulol
·
U/B Arta 1-'orum-~eSUID.es broadcU.ting
{VA~~-~~ tO:oS;.:U·hour format,
UUA&amp; MIDHIOtiT MDVII*•

l"'in.lt Flathlngoes, Conference Theatre,
Norton, midnight. Admisaion cbarce: 75
cent..
.

For reservations, c8.ll ext. 3828. l'iffin
Norton. 7 p.m.

~m.

CAC MOVIE•

Fritz the Cat, 140 Capen, 7 :45 and
·9:45 p.m. Tickets at 75 cents are available · at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
UUAI COHHHOUSE••

Featuring The Son Sealo Blues &amp;md.
Food will ba 100ld by Food Service; ad·
misaioii charge. 8 P.m., call ext.. 5112 for
location.
DANCE• •

Featuring music by Swed Leaf; refreshments will be sold by Food Service,
Tower parkin&amp; Jo~ 9:80 p.m. No admission charge.
·
In caae of rain, the dance will be beld
in the Fillmore Room, Norton. Preoented
by the Student Aoaociation.

MONDAY-10
QUI &amp; OIGANIZAnON- FAll•

CUlt &amp; OJJOANIZA110N

Fillmore .Room. Norton, 9 a.m.-5

p~

STUDINt .USOClAtfON INFOtMAtiON•

Shtdent A:ssociati.on · otficen _and co..

Painting arid Sculpture
.....:A SeleCtion," the · first exhibition "o f
the 1973-74 season, is now on view
in Galle•y 219, the studenl;:tun """bibition center in Norton Union. - ~
Tbe show, organized by the Arts
Committee of the University Union
Activities Board, was, the group asp.
conceived in resppose to the JIIOWlDI
recognition of the international reputations camered by IJ!IliD}Jers of .t&amp;e
young Canadian art scene. Choices of
particular • works were made in an
elfort to achieve. a ~Y coherent
~bition. Thus, the show has bet
characterized by" the organizers as having an "abstract" nature.
For the duration of the· exhibition",
which runs through September 28,
gallery hours will be; Monday, Wed~~ ani! Thursdlly, 11 a.m.~ p.M.;
y and Friday, 12 p.m.-4 p.m.
and 8 p:m.-10 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-

~to'sBeOi David Syua.

SATURDAY -=:8
.

U/B va. Bulfalo State, SUC at Bulfalo
campua, noon. '
N.I.G.UA fAllS

M

.

tar•

~j:ty=r~~Fl;.'d
~ ~::,.~~:;;f;;.,~:-»a:;

Student Aaociation- oftioen and co(ColltiftuN._ 11,- col. Z)

Canadian Art Exhibit in Norton--.

Niapn Falla, ODt. Prnof of eitiaenablp

Pink Fl!uninl .... Conference Tbealre,
Norton, ~t. Admi.oion : 75 cents.

STUDINT ASIDCIA110N- INFOIMAJION*

"Canadi&amp;n

The tour will incluole the Niapra

UUAI JUONIGHT MOYIE..

f_.

Fillmore Room, Norton, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

5 p.m. •
Tbe eleven artists wl..- work will
be on view are: David Bolduc, winner
of three awanls granted by the Canada Council; Robin Col!,yer, a . graduate of the Ontario College- of Art;
Graham Coughtry, wbooe work is represented · in many major collections
!pcllll!jng tbooe of. the ·MiiMum of
Modem Art in New . York Cityc....~
Albright-Knox Art Gallel'y the l'llil·
adelphia Museum of Art aDd the Na-

VAISIIY IAJIUU•

TUESDAY - -11

.

Social Sciences and Administration, Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the

~~"::£ ~; g~:~:ff/~t~st"a~~i~

Piece MtuUi4/al Elid. War (Sharits); and
T ,O,U,CJI),N,G (Sharits). For tiJne ·and
location of ocreeninca call the UUAB
informatioa. aeMce 83L5117.

·

oamitATION COUIGI FAll
~
ttepreeentativee from The Collegei will

Film Molruo Worltihop, 311 Norton,
noou-2 p.m. and 3-6 p.m.

D.t.HCE••

Muaic by Highwooth Strinl &amp;md, ciill·
er lind instruction• will be 'pmvided,
Tower-Goodyear lawn, S.6 p.m. No admission charge.
·
·
.
Sponoored by UUAB and the ·Student
Aoaociatiop. '

'IHIATII . . . . . .
AU Tbaalre Department majors and
proopec:tiw-majon, freehmen and transfer -.tudenta are invited to "'a general
Dopertmentol .meeting, Tbeatre Studio,
Harriman Library. Call ext.. 2045 for
r:_ ti.Jne.
.. .

MIIJINOU

..

NIAGARA Fl.us MIS fl.rP••

tional . ~~.~t: ~

gogue and a Dllldl at Toronto IDler·
national Airport; Robert Hedricl, who
has bad 13 one--lbon aillce 111M
and la ·iDclDded bi .lbe co11ec11ana of
the Naliallal Gallery ol Cul8da 8Dd
......... BICI - - _ . .
the Art Galloiry ol Ontario; Robin
_. Tile F . - c-u-. R.otrie1ec1 to
Macbnzle. wbO 11M bad 11 OIIHD8D
LR.C. ....._. cab'. Call art 4'116 for-. . ibows. ia t:anada and Ia IDcluded In
loeitlioD. .
major Caadian collecllana; Roo

No.- lUll 'I'Icbt Ollice ($1). " B -will ·liave N~ Ball promptly at -&amp;
p.m., and will m..m by 11 p,m.
•
8 - r e d by the Slqdent Asaociation.

Maf·

-

-------.

tin, wboae w or It 1,s .....-w In
numerous~ and priftte eoJieo.
tiqns lncl ·
tbe Natioul
•of Canada
tee Ontario
lery;· Royden Rablnowidl, wbo 11M
participated in many
ahibita;
Gordon. Rayner, a~ palntlna
at tbe New ScliOolOl Art, tbe Ontario
Collep of Art and York Univasity
who iapp,_,ted In major Canadian •
coJlectioos and at tbe Pbiladelpbia.
M.-um of Art and the M - = ol
"Modem Art, New Yodt City; IlaDlel ' ~
Sollllllllll,. 8il inalzuctor • the On. tarioJA&gt;IleKe of Art wbo ba had tbne
,__ziian shows at Torooto'a &amp;a...
Gallery; Joy Walbi;· a natiw .o1· Ta·
coma, WllllbiutDL ...,. livlna1n Toronto, wbo bU luid ........, illowa at
Dartmouth CoiJe8o and ibe UniVIiiaity
• ol TOI'OIItio; and 1'am Wbha, a 1111tive
. of J:nliBter;, Micbllllln. wbo lea&lt;:bM at
York Univasit.y Ud ma .....md a
to I!IIIICUte 12 COD-

1rt..J:r:r.

:"""""t:t:'.r

• cr.ele

~AlP« .Put.

Orelm-

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1383519">
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                    <text>CLAss SCHEDIJLE

2

General Notes f• Use of·
tbe Schedule of Classe$

Examination·Schedule for Classes .
in the Day Division

'1'1111 Sdledulo prorideo 100m Ullpmenta for the Pint S e - .
1972-1973 eoune otreriJ!Cs.
s.-.1 polnilllbould be Ulldentood by the ltudeDta:

DECEMBER 16 TO DECEMBER·22, 1972
1.

Tbe otudent obould pay careful atteutlon to the campua
llldlcator ealumn obown ID the coune listiDp. 'lblllndlca·
tor ldolltillll th- .which ore. ol'relecl at outlytnc

camp.-.
Tbeoe lllducle:

RL • JUdce Lea Campua
BP • Jlolll'lmt or Race Street Campua
MA. u.,.r ADnex or Grider s - Camp111
AX • All 0111« Awdllary Locations
2.

It II the l'lllpCIIIIIIblllty of the otuclent to -

that eclequate

time (approm.tlllf 30 mlnuta) Is provided Ill hlllldledule
for llawl ~ ~- BIIJiia&amp; ...tee, leoriDg from
tbe Dlefeadorf AIIDex Bus Stop, Is provided to the Rldce

.. ·~

Final examiDatloa~ to be Ciftn this oemester will foUow the oyllem
uaed duriDC the pMI two oemesters.
'lbll automated oystem &lt;beets the recistntion of the lltudeota Ill all
.;o..,_ to be e:umlned and oqaolzes lbe exam scbedule Ill •dl a
fuhlon os to miDimlze oeuly all d~ co~lcta duriDC tbe eum
pildod. '1'1111 oystem 11so miDimlzes the possibility or a student hariDI
more thaD two fiDals in aay Ciftn day.
As iD the post, we wilb to remind you that the .,..,.,. of this eum ·
schedule depends upon th'e run cooperation or both the faculty aad the
students.

Lea aad Races- Campualocatlons.
3.

4.

BUILDING ABBREVIATIONS

c:c~~~a.

that ore lilted • "ARR" Ill the Day, Hours,
BDikiiDI or Room columns coiiiUit the deportment os to
the location or the eouree.
For

.,a;;;;,

U a pertlc:olu
eleportmeut or college II aot lilted Ill
this lldledule, eontact tbe Depertmeat for further lllfor:
matlop.

SOUI'H CAMPUS

NO CAMPUS INDICATOR

ACH . . . . • . • . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . ACHESON HALL.
ACH A . . • . • . • • . • • . • • . • • . . . . . . . ACHESON ANNEX
. ANXB . : • . . . . ... .. .. • _. • . •••.••• . ••. ANNBXB

~~ ::::::::::: :: :::: :::: ::: ::: · ~~~~
CLARK ... . •.••.. . •.. • •• . . ~ . .. •• . •. CLARK GYM
ClsBY •. ; •.. . .•••. .. .•• • •...•. •. CROSBYHALL
DFN .. . .. . . . . . . • . .' .. : . .•.•. ·: . DIBFBNDOiltH.&amp;LL
DFN A . .. . • . . . • . . . . . . .. . . . . . . DIEFENDORF ANNEX
FSTR . . . • . . . • . . . • . • • . • . • . • . . . • • . FOSTER HALL
FSTRA •• . •••••••.••... . .• .. •.•• FOSTBRANNBX
HAR L .•... . . : •. .... . .• , •... . HAIUUIIAN LIBRARY
HAYES .• . .• • •• ••• • ·• • . • • • • • • • • • • . • HAYES HALL
HTH S • •. ..• • : • . . • . • • . . HEALTH SCIBNCBS BUILDING.
HOOH •. ••• • • . .. . .•.••• . • . .• _ H0CH8'1'&amp;'1TB1l HALL
NOR'nl . . • .. •• • .• ... • • • , , • • •• .. ..:_ . NOilTON HALL
PARKR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . PARKBRBNGINDRING
• • ... : . .•~ .• • .•.... SCHQsy;ioPFHALL

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY aud FRIDAY
S..IIICalpUI

. 8:00. 8:60
9:00. 9:60'
10:00.10:60
11:00.11:60
12:00.12:60
1:00. 1:60
2~ 1:60'
8:00. 8:60
4:00. 4:60

Section Lcttu

•

A

B

c

D
~

K
L '
M

,.~-,..

R

Ri4le Lea Gild molt
AU%1111Jry Loeatioru
8:80- 11:20
9:80-10:20
10:80-11:20
.11:80-12:20
12:80- 1!20
1:80- ~:20
2:30- 8:20
3:30- 4 :20
4:30· 5:20

TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY
S..lhCalplll

~

8:00. 8:60
9:00. 9:50
10:00.10:60
11:00.11: 60
12:00.12:60
1:00. 1:60
2:00. 2:60
8:00. 8:60
4:00. 4:60

Section Lcttu

E

,r.r

F
G
H

.N
0

p
Q

·· V

• TUESDAY

Ridge Lea Gild mo1t
Awcilltuy LocGtioru

8:30- 9:20
9:80-10:20
. 10:80-11 :20
11:30-12:20
12:30- 1:20
1:80- 2:20
2:80- 3:20
3:80- 4:20
4:80-; 5:20

And THURBDAY (ONLY)'

(Double Perioda • 80 minutes)
. Section Lcttu

9:00.10:20
10:10-11:60
U:OO. 1:20
1:111- 2:1i0 ./
1.110- 4:20 ·
4:10- &amp;:10

s
w
T
y

z

X.

9:80-10:60
11:00.12:20
12:80- 1:60
1:00. 8:20
8:80- 4:60
- 5:00. 6:20

sCHKP ...
TNSND' ..•
TRL •• · • . .
V1V AR .. .

•.. •• .. .... •.• • -•••. . . . . T01(NSBND HALL
. • . . • • . • . • . . . • . . . . • • TRAfLBR COMPLEX
. • . • . . . ..- . .. ·. . . . • . . . • • .. . . . VIY.AIUUM

RL CAJIPUS INDICATOR

RIDGE LjlA·CAJIPUS

. (;!24-4250 _ •. ._, .. ; : . : .• .. . : • : .

RIDGE LEA BUILDINGS

BP CAMPUS INDICATOR
BELL FACILlTY
RACE • ••• , . • • . • . . • • 180 RACE STR.BBT (BELL FACILITY)
JltA CAMPUSINDICA'IV)R

MEYER ANNEX

462AA • . .. .. .. . , .. , . . . . . . . 462 GRIDER STRBBT AA
462BB •.••• -.••••. .. .. , .. • • •• . 462 GRIDER STRBBT BB
462KA . .' .... . . . . . . . .• . 462 GRIDER STR.BBT It ANNEX
·AX CAMPUS INDICATOR

ALL OTHER AUXIUARY LOCA770NS

l721E .. . .. . . : . . . . . . . . .. . : 1721 BUIWOOD AVENUE
1749M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1749 MILLBBSPOBT HIGHWAY
2211A . . . . . . . • . • . • . . . . • • • • • • • 221111AIN IITBBBT A
210 F . . . : . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . 210 FRANKLIN STRBBT
• 2299E .· .. : • ..•. . .": . . : .•. •·. • 2299 BUIWOOD A VBNUB
2917M . . . . . . •.. . . . ... . . . : . . .'. 291711AIN STR.BBT
30CHR .. . •... . .... . ...••.•. _'. ·so cmiBcB 8TRBBT
3423B ..... : . • . . . . . . . . • . • . • • 3428 BAILBY AVENUE
4510M . ... : . ... .". . . . . . .. . . . .· . . 4610 MAIN 8TRBBT
560 M .... . . . . . . •... . . . ..• . • : . . '· 560 11A1N IITBBBT
73 H •.... ... • . .• -,.· • . • . . . . • . • • • 73 HIGH 8TRBBT
BSH .... •• . . . . . . . .· .... BliFFALOSTATEHOSPITAL
CHLDR ..• : .. . . .... ·. . ......•• CHILDRBNS HOSPITAL
DBCNS • . •...•..... . .• . . ..• . DBACONBSSHOSPITAL
RAGLE • . • . • . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . 77 Wll8T 8Aot:&amp; 8!'llBBT
ELTON . . . . . . . • . . . 4 ELTON STR.BBT(IlOCHBIITBB, N.Y.)
. BSTMN • . ." . EASTMANDENTALCBNTBR(ROCIIBSTER,N.Y.)
1
GENRL . . ..... . . ·, ..... BUFFALOGBNBilAL'HOBPITAL
WRSN .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . •' 79UEFFBRSON AVENUE
(~FFBRSON.QBNBSBB CLINIC)

MEYER .... •.. .' . . . . . . E.J. MEYER IIE!il'oRIAL HOSJIITAL

MILRD . . .- .~ ... . . . .. : . IO.LLARDPILUIOBEROSPITAL

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29
·.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR SARA REGISTRATION
PLEASE READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY AND CDMPLETEL Y BEFORE. ATTEMPTING TD FILL OUT ANY OF THE
REGISTRATION FORMS. THESE REGISTRATION FORMS MUST BE COMPLETED WITH A NUMBER TWO LEAD PENCIL ONLY.

.....___
lntroduc:don:

1be proeedure uaed for registration as
described below can be uWized for
odVlDced nptratlon, In-person registration, and for cban&amp;e or nptrltlon. The
system allows tbe student to cban&amp;e his
aobedule (with permlaolon) unw tbe end or
a aemeoter and alao allows for ~lion
In future aemeolelli where departmental
orrer~n~s are mown.

1.

&amp;Enlially, the system is a thleHtep I. Student •O.ta Form-Examples 1 and 2
proeedure; each portion of which must be
completed In tun If the student Is to be
All students at the Uni-.enity must
reelstered OD the SARA Reclstnllon complete or update I data form prior to
System. The student should fill out his the begtnnlne of the aemester In which
Student Data Form, Student Scbedullne they plan to reclsti!r. This doc:ument Is a
Form, and Courae Request Form, as pet • composite of all the student data neceosary
the attached examples to complete the Cor the completion or I variety or Unlverregistratlon
slty reports. The completion of this form
by the student is an lntepal part or the
registration
Therefore, students

P""""'"·

P""""'"·

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
STUDBfT DATA POD
I"LlASiaUD ~OJiaiYDSIIIOI IU'Oittc:Gift.nMC I"CWWI

Who Call to file . this Corm will be lnelillble
to complete their nptratlon. For Fall
Semester 1972 nptratlon, ..bmlallon or
the Addreu and Vehicle ~W~~strat~on
Cbanee Form (example •9) wW aene u an
update Cor contlnullll students. Newly
admitted and rwnterin6 abulenll must
complete a new Corm In Ill entirety before a
n!gislratlon can be proce.ed.
a. Continuing Students are thoae
enrolled In tbe ..U.... lmmedtatety
Precedinl tbe - - Cor which they
are reclsterlne. Th- students will
receive a printout of prevlolllly .....
mltted data and need OOiy to update
Incorrect Information. This can be done
by drawine a llne tbroillh the old lnfor- matlon ..,.d
tbe· ·new· lnfor- ,
matlon In the space provided.
examp.e •1) ·

lnaeitine

c-

b. Newly Admitted Slu~ts are thoae
who are regtsterlne Cor. the firat ·tlme at
this University u a Creabman, tranarer,
graduate or professional stud.ent. These
students will receive a blank data form
and are to complete It In Its entirety .
The &lt;!ate September 1972 must be
inserted where date or rust registration
at State University of New York at
Bu[(alo is requested.
c . Re-Entering Stu~a Include all
former University students not enrolled
In the semester Immediately Precedln&amp;
the &amp;emester for whlcb they are te&amp;lsterine. This Coni. must be completed in
its entirety. (&amp;ee examp!e •2)

Data Forms ..., to be 'returned to the
following offices prior to the registration period.

--.wa..u.w..n

c·-u.-...aun

I.

u~uote . to tbe omce or
Undergraduate Studies, 106 Diefendorf
Hall

o.y

j" .........

rnH»·
- -IJIJ

2.

J

All Gnduata Sludonts • to tbe Otrlce or
Admlaslonaand Recorda,.~ea B

Profeaional Sludon1a • to i tbe main
admlnlatlalhe ofllce lA tbe reapoctl..
profeeolonll acbool

STATE UNIVERSCTY OF 'NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

All IWa p....,. will be fonrazdod to
AdmllliODa and llecolda and 11*1 to the
IWa l'roceallnl C...tar ..... . . , wiD be
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32
need departmental ap)noval
register for tht!se oou.rses. .

to
b. Check the cou,_ selected ln tbe
Reeistrati~n Plannin&amp; Table (Side "A"
of tbe Coune Request Form) oplnst
tbe moot cunent copy of tbe "&lt;loed
Secti0111 Llstin(' to avoid ~
tor a .,.,.._ wblcb Ia aiNady ftlled. U
. . - . y tbe lludent obould 'mate
approptlate cJ1aD1o1 ln tbe table to tellect tbe new Information.

a2. It is also advisable for tbe
student to secure bls mmuctor's or
ld"filer's approval when be rec~aters
for a llllrioble cl't!dit coune to
.... re that the hours of credit are
properly understood by all ~
concerned.

CompJeUnc tbe Scan Sbeet (Side "B"

8.
of Coune

~

"fided. Tbere is a place available on tbe
pre-add!eaed eq-.elope ·for students to
place an eleht cent stamp and tbelr retum-addreoi to inllure proper handling. It
il imjJorltlnt ihot tJII Course .Request .
Fomu be retumod to tM Office of Admiaionr and Recordl within one week
after receipt. It Ia -ntlal tbat tb'.!""
tonns be retumecl promptly If lludents
• •wish. to ba1e tbelr Coune Request Formo
pro-d ln order by .,.__Please be sul't!
tiu.t you have cletU"ed your account at

Form)-'&lt;-Eumple •8

a. Use a •2 pencil only, no otber
pendl or pea may be uaed. It Ia tbe
student's ft!IIPOIIIIIbUity to brine bill

10. Arter tiie lludent bas completed bla
Coune Request Form be obould check It
ooer to Its correctneas and complete- and place It In the en-.elope pro-

8.-

the Office of Sludent Accounll
(thro"'fh Summer Sellion) before you
maU your Course Request Fotm. If your
account II not clear your Course Reqi.ut
Form cannot be proc..,ed.

/

CLASS SCHEDULE

11. After tbe Coune Request Fotml for
a given .,._ of students are P"""""!"'i·
acbedule cards will be·produced and held
ln tbe Ofllce of Admladons and Recorda.
All student acbedule cards will be available for diltribution on September 5.
Tbere will be _.ate 1001111 set up
around campus In wbleb schedule cards
will be anllable per tbe 1111t letter of a
student's laot name. A ICIIedaJe of th...
locations il included with tM ,..,WtnJtwn
materiall.
Schedule cards will be dlsllibuted
with • obeet of mmuctlons for
chances of · rectstzation.
This card obould be taken to Room
240 Norton Hall, where it will se"e u
authorization for tbe Fall 1972 l .D.
cud to be Issued.

L

ProceUma

b. st.idenls who participate" In tbe
· mail repstration will have their
student parking pennit printed
automatically and mailed to tbem by
the Campus Security Office. Those
students who do not participate in the
mail regist.._tion should report to the
Campus Security Office , 196
Winspear Avenue, the week of
September 11-15 to receive their
parking sticker.

12. Courses Reserved for Majors: During
tbe initial registration period, and after·
wards in some cases, there are some
departments reserving a fixed percentage
of the spa~ in course for majors.
Courses where some portion ,of tbe enrollment is reserved for majors are indicated in the class schedule with an aster·
isk(*) to the left of the· registration
number. Students who are closed out
during registration because they are not a
major should check witb the department
concerned during change of registration
abou t enroPing as a non-major. If the
student rCet, that he is a major and has
bt!en dosed out erroneously he should
report to 106 Diefendorf Hall to institute a change in his major designation.
Graduate students should contact their
departmental offices.
13. Students who do not participate In
tbe mall registtation process may register
ln tbe Office of Admissions and Recorda

9
IF NO at.ANOES IN ADDAESS OR VDUCU: R£CISTRA110M H A\'£0CCU Rftt:D S1Nct: YOU fli.&amp;D YOUR DATA FORM
FOR 111E COttlNG SDU::STElt. otf.CK HJ::R £ '.:) AND DO :ill)' .-!U. OUT THt: REMAINDER OF TtflS F'OIUL

September 5. Co~ Request Fotml will
be available there and students will
complete them and return them to Clark
Gym Basement. Students will be·told by
tbe Admialons and Recon:ls ataa when
tbeir schedule cards will be produced and
where they will be available.

ALL STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED

..L

.

.TROUBLE FREE REGISTRATIO~

a~~- ··--~~

d.:

TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MAIL
. REGISTRATION IF AT ALL POSSmLB. THOSE STUDBNTS WHO DC}
PARTICIPATE HAVB THB PIR8T
CHANCE AT COURSES AND ARE
MORE LIKELY TO HAVE A

..l.

...I..

.[ .1:£1

E@ d!ill S+r~e -t

,,,;.,zj?,,,;3;;i3B3 Jl

At tbill point tbe lludent hal oftldaUy
completed the ~ ~ Aldol
will "' ....... In tbe .....
ICbedult cards ... to ... dlltlibutlld to belp
with uy poableml. Don't ....... to aot
quootloas. Olanp of ~"MD be
held flom September 11-16. NO c6XNGB

OF REGISTRATION WILL BE
ACCEPTED BY THE OFFICE OF
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS PRIOR
TO SBPI'!lJIBBR II.

�- .,.......

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STUDT
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CONSUT
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IHCl"lNDUT STUDT
tNDf"IJIIOENT STUDT
t "D~(IIOE'fT STUDT

CONSENT
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:=:::tg::~ :i~g:

INO I!,I!N OEftT STUOT.
INOE"f;f,DEHT STUDT
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J .o UGhiAIC TOPOlOGY
J.O 'UI'ICTipNAL 4NAlTSIS

100 . .
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621
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CQJtSINT
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nn!

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~~ ii§ ·ii I ;§II ~g~~~ €~ ~~ ~~~~ ~· ~ ~ ~~ li~~ ~~I

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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>SARA Instructions-See Genter fold
· *IMPORTANT- THE SARA REGISTRATION FORM. couRsE REQUEST FORM. MUST BE COMPLETE.D WITH
NUMBER TW0 _"4t2" LEAD PEN&lt;;It IF YOUR REGISTRATIO. ,S TO BE-PROCESSED.

II'' •.

..}:- '

· ....

A

�CLASS SCHED~LE

2_

llstructions for Use of the

Schedule of Classes
, . ~ pmrides . _ 8lollaa 1978 -

...........ta far the
......... 8eNnl poiDII
.......ad ... wD1111doatood by the lltDdoDta:

....

1. , . lltDdoDt lbould pey ..nful atfmlioll to the
....... llldledar colwlm lbowDID the -liltiDC·
'l'bll ........ Jaootlfllo u.c. wbleb ... .
.. orr.nd 8 Pldl7iDI ......-, IDdudinC RL (Ridlt
Lee Ouapal), BP (llelll'lallt or b» SliM Calpul)
IIIII IIA (u.,. Almox or Grldor SliM Campua). It II
the INipCMII8IIIIty ol the IDdlold1W ltude.at to - that
adoqUiit U.. (appiOl&lt;lmat.ly 30 miDutes) II prorided
ID bii .........Je far tnill ' * - CIDipUI8S. Bullln&amp;
..W.,IIPial flom the DiiiiiDdorf Almox lkil Stop,
Ia proridld to the Rldp 1.- IIIII a- Stnlet eampua
.locelioaL .

'

2. 8eNnl llbbreolatlllal appeir In the

prerequisite

cahuaa for the .,.,..,. ICbedule. Some of~ abbre. ftouoaaarellliowD below:

PD CRS APP:
PI:

BUILDING ABBRBVlATIONS

ACHSN • • • •' . • . • •• Acbeoon Hill
ACHSN A .• • .. • Acbeoon Almox
ANNXB •• . • .• •• ..• ~B
BAIRD • • • . : • • • • • • .Balnl Hill

DlEF A • . . . • • . Diefendorf Almox

FOSTER .• . . . . . . .. F - Hill .
FSTR A •• .. •• • •. . F - Almox
HRMN L . •. .•.. Hmlman Ubruy
HAYES ••. • •. .. . • • !byes Hill
HLTH 8 • • • . • . . Heolth Sciences

HCHSTR • • • • . . • Hod&gt;atetter Hill

PARKBRr~ . ... ~r~
TNSEND • . • • • • • • ToWiliOnd Hill
TRLR ••.• ·••• .• TnDer Complex

l'ermiJIIon of lnltructor.

ao~

4. " - DOle tbU,In
the enclooed llsUn&amp;
of .,.,.._ .,.y dlrr. flom the Stunmer- Sarioru
Bulletin. studenll llbould npter for counes only as
they - I n the followlne .......

CAMPUS MAPS

42M-4~ • • . : Rldce Lee BuUclln&amp;s
• • • WN • • • : • .Wlnspeor Atenue
180 RACE . • . . • • 180 Race Slleet
(Bell Faclllty)

Unless otbenriae Indicated, ~ In acb IOIIIon meet
live days a week, Monday_tbroueb Friday.
Note: Studenll are permitted to enroll In any
oomblnatlon of IOIIIons prorided enrollment does not
exooed the maximum ooune load
Summer Sessioru
Bulklin).

&lt;-

FIRST SESSION .•..............••................. Moy 29-July 13
May 25

Friday

May 29
June 1

Tuesday
Friday

July 6

Friday

July4
July 13

Wed.
Friday

MAIN STREET CAMPUS

......

J1eiiru April 9

CLARK •.•. ••. •.•. aut Gym
CROSBY . . . . . . . . • •Crooby Hill
DFNDRF • . . . . • . Diefendorf Hill .

apptoprlate academic bodies.

For counes that are lilted as "ARR" In the build·
ini....S 100m ............,t columna, consult the depart·
meDt as to Jociolioll of the .,.,..,..

Continuous Reptzallon • • • • • • • • • •

CAPEN • • • • • • • • • ·• • Capen. Hill

hDcllnc .,.,..,.approval by the

3~

SUMMER SESSIONS CALENDAR
1973-

Last day to regiJter for Flnt
Session oourses.
lnstructlon be&amp;inJ.
Last day to resign from Flnt
SeiiSI~n courses without cbaqe
of tuitlon. ·
Last day to reSip from First
Sasslon counes · without Jflde
penalty• .' ;
Nq~. -

;-

, ..

Last day of inltructlon.

·

SECOND SESSION .. :.~.~.: •••:: •••••: ••.• J~no :ZS.Auguot

10

Friday _ Last day to regilt;e~ for ·second
Seuion coUr.es.
· ·
'· ·
lnstructlon be&amp;inJ.
Last. day to resign trom Seoond
Session counes without . cbaqe
of tuitlon.
·
July 4
Wed.
No cJaiaea.
Al!lfUSl 3 Friday
Last claY to resign trom Seoond
Session couraes without ~fade
penalty.
Last day of inatructlon. _
Aucust 10 Friday

June 22

June 25
June 29

Monday
Friday

THIRD SESSION ••••.....•.•...•••••••••••.••• .July 16-Auguot 31
July 13

Friday

July 16
July20

Monday
Friday

Aueust24 Friday

Aucust 31 Friday

Lut day to repter for 'J:'b!rd
Session counes.
lnllnlctlon becina'
Last daY to resign from Thinl
Session couneo without cbaqe
of tuitlon.
.
Lut day to. mien from Thinl
Seaion counes without pade
penalty.
Lut day of illltru~on .

REGISTRATION HOURS

felllte~

To uaiJt Ml11anl FlllmDN IIUdanta In
for
Summer counea, the Omce of Adm1lllona and Raconb
(lbyea Annex B) will maintain the followJnc extended

houn:
April 9-May 31

kne 4-AU(UJt 31

=

8:30a.m.· 8:80 ~':n;. (M,T,W,'lb) 8:80 a.m. - 4:80 p.lli. (F)
8:30a.m. · 8:80p.m. (M,Tf
8:80a.m. · 4:80p.m. (W,'lb,F)

MAXIMUM CREDIT LOAD

, Any Seftn Woof\ SeooiO.. Alooe
(Session I orSatolon U orSoeskiniD) . . .. 9 Cndlt HounI and
(lol woeta) • ••. •
16 Cndlt Houn
Saai
I and U (11 woeb) •• •••• •• 13 Cndlt Houn
ona U and m (10 woeb) •. ..... • 12 Cncilt Houn

m

!-.:

�· CLASS SCHEDULE

3

·.

CONTENTS
DEPARTMENT

PAGE

A"ERICAN STUDIES
ANTHROPOLOGY
ARCHITEC:YURE
ART
ART HISTORY

I

I
I
2

•
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
BIOCHEMISTRY
BIOCHEMISTRY ~ ROSWELL PARK
BIOLOGY
BIOLOGY•ROSWELL PARK

2
2
3
3
5

CHEMISTR~ • ~OSWELL PARK
CHINESE
CIVIL ENGINEERING
CLASSICS
COMPUTER SCIENCE

8
8
8
9
9

COUNSELOR EDUC A.T I ON
CTR ~OR CRITICAL LANGUAGE
CURRICULUM . DEVEL . ~ INSTR MEDIA
DENTAL MATERIALS - ,·
DIAGNOSTIC SE~VICES

9

6
6

6
6

UNDERGRADUAt~ ~TUD

.
tDUCA~iONAL . ADMINISTRATION
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY

10
10
10
10
10
10
10
12
12

ELECTRICAL -ENGINEERING
ELEMENTARY ~ REMEDIAL EDUC
ENGINEERING SCIENCE
ENGLISH
£NGN ~ APPL SCIENCES, ~AC 0~

13
13
13
13

ENVIRONMENTAL DES1GN
STUDE~T ENGLISH

·18
18
18

16

~

~OREIGN
~RENCH

GEOGRAPHY
GEOLO~ICA~

20
20

SCIENCES

GERMAN
&amp;REEK
HE·AL TH REL PRO~, SCHOOL 0~
HEAL"TH SCIE·NCE EDUC ~ EVAL
HEALT~o PHYS ED . ~ REC

21
21
21
21
21

HEBREW
HJ&amp;HER EDUCATION
HI.NDI
HISTORY
HUNGARIAN .

22
22
22 .
22
23

INSTRUCTION
ITALIAN
JAPANESE
JUDAIC STUDIES

23
2'1
2'1
2'1
2'1

LABORATOR~ ·ANIMAL ~CitNCE

•..

LATIN
LAW ~ JUR1SPRUDENCEo ~ACULTY
LEARNING CENTER
.
1
LIBR ~ IN~O STUDIESoSCHOOL 0~
LINGUISTICS

2'1
2'1
25
25
25

MATHEMATICS
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
MG•ACCOUNU NG

26
27
27
27
27

MG•ECONOMICS
MG•FINANCE
MG•INOUSTRIAL RELATIONS
MG•MANAGEMENT · AND POLICY
M~•MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS

5

BIOPHYSICAL SCIENCES
BIOPHYSICS • ROSWELL PARK
BIOSTATISTICS • ROSWELL PARK
BLACK STUDIES
CHEMISTRY

DIVISION 0~
DUTCH .
ECONOMICS

J

-"

28
2B

28
28
29

MG•MARKETING
MG•OPERATION S ANALYSIS
MG•ORGANi l ATI~N AND BEHAVIORAL
MG•QUANTITATIVE M£JHOOS
MICRORIOLOGY

29
29
29

MICROBIOLOGY • ROSWELL PARK
MIJSIC
NURSING, SCHOOL OF
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
ORAL BIOLOGY

30

ORTHODONTICS
PATHOL"OG'I"
PATHOLOGY • ROSWELL PARK
PHARMACEUTICS
PHARMACOLOG f

31
31

30
30

30

31
31
31

3\

32

3i

PHARMACOLOGY • ROSWELL PARK
PHARMACY
PH 1-LOSOPHY
PHYSICAL EDUCATION INON• MAJ ORl
PHYSICA~ THERAPY
PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
PHYSIOLOGY
PHYSIOLOGY • ROSWELL PARK
POLICY SCIENCES
POLITICAL SCIENCE

35
35
35
36
36

PORTUGUESE
PSYCHOLOGY
PUERTO•RICAN STUDIES
II
RADIOLOGY
ROSWELL PARK SPECIAL PROGRAM

36
31

37
38
31

RIISS I'AN
SCHOOL 0~ · SOCIAL POLICY ~ CO.MM
SOC UL SCIENCES IINTE.RD I SC-I PI·
SOCIAL t PHIL ~ HIST ~OUNDATIO~S
SOCIOLOGY

31
38 .
31
31
39

SPANI·SH
SPEECH COMMUNICATION
STATISTICS
SWAHILI
SY~TEMS ENGINEERING

'10
'10
'II

TEACHER EDUCATION
THEATER

FAC OF NATURAL SCIENCES ' MATH

...

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�CL_ASS SCHEDULE

12

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�CLASS SCHEDULE

13 ·

INSTRUCTIONS FOR SARA· REGI-STRATION
PLEASE READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY AND COIII'LETEL Y BEFORE ATTEMPTING TO FILL OUT ANY OF THE
REGISTRATION FORMS. THESE REGISTRATION FORMS MUST BE COMPLETED WITH A"NUMBER TWO LEAD PENCIL ONL~.

is a com· durlne thll Sprlnt11l7S oe-., need only
poolte of all the atudent data n..-.ry for to update their data IDe If the .......,,
the completion of a variety of University ' addreaa, major or other pertiDont lalormadeocrlbed below 1:011 be utilized for rerlstra· cess.
reporta. The completion of thll form by the tion hM c:baneed· Newly odmitUd, oii/U,.,
tion and for cbanfe of rec~Antion.
student Is an lnterral part of the rerlstra· speci41 and ro-cnterlnt studlllta IDIIIt oom~Ually, the system Is a three-&lt;itep I. Student Data Form-iExamples 1 and 2) tiOII' piOCOIIII. Therefore, students who fall plete a new form In Ita entirety before their
proc:edure, eech porUon of which must be
to me this form will be lnelltlble to com- · zet!stration can be proceued.
oompletad In full If the student Is to be
All studenti at the University must com- plete their zet!stration. For Summer See..
fllllstered on the SARA Rellstntion 8y5- plele or update a Data Form prior to the oion 1973 RePtntion continulnt atudents,
0. Continuint Stuclonto 1ft th- en·
tem. The student abould ftll out his Student betlnnlnl of the oeme&amp;ter In which they. thooe students who were reptered at U/B
roUed In the u..-dlately pNoedlnt the for which they are'
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
lntroduC1ion:

plan to repter. This document

llata..l'orm, Student Scbedullnc Form, and
Coume Requlllt Form, u per the attached

The proc:edure UJed for reptration as examplea, to complete the· reptration pro-

1.

fllllsterlnl.

ST\I)fMT DATA PDU

1'1.IAIIIIAD tMSTt\IC'nota OM Ill' lUI t101 U'OI:I COMI'LITMIIO

Theoe student&amp; need only

submit the Local Addreaa and Vehicle
Repttallon Form (UIIIlple. •9) for
Summer Seeoion rer~atrttion If c:baneea
hue occured.

"'*"

(

b . Newly Admitted Stuclenta ore thwho are reclslerlnt for the flnt Ume at
thil University u either a freabman,
transfer, rraduate or prof.-lonal stu·
dent. Theae students wUi receive a blank
_ Data Form and are to complete It In ita
enUrety. The date June 1973 mtut be
Inserted where dale of f1nt reclltration
at U/B ia requested. &lt;- example •2)

--

_._.. .......'/:.
.....-..-;: . ".. _·:·:.:·.
._

•

,:.,.,...,.,;;...

~ -- ~ ·~

-II&amp;.Wil.l.UIIMnl

~.-ua..u.I"'''.UT

NOTE: VlsiUng and Special under·
rraduate student&amp; abould enter clas
Code 5 (Unclu&amp;lfted) in item T (~)
Of the Student Data Form.

.,.._..-;;:

~

--...!;

c. Visiting and SpKial Students Include
all those who are not rei(Ular student&amp;
here and are studying here only for the
suJ:rui.er term. (see example • 2)

.,._

-· "'.......,.

'""

I

··-;~

r ,.... , ... W
w.
(
1.------.J
u

1e1

::: ---~.-~~ ·· ·~fri~~--~

.

' e\!J

=1

... . ..~.··.. - ~ !!ill

2.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

Non-Matriculant lflduale student&amp;
should enter Code 9 (Non-Matriculant)
in Item T.

-~-~-

d. ROHtntarint Students include all
former University student&amp; not enroUed
In the aeme&amp;ter Immediately Precedlne
the aemlllter for which they are reclster·
int. This form must be completed In Ita
entirety.( see example •2)
Data Forma ore to be returned to the.
followlnt office two weeks prior to the
start of the Summer Seeoion that students Intend to repter for.
Millard Fillmono SlUdents • to the Office
Admilllons and Recorda In Hayea B.
I

J...::::==-'==--.1.! -~~~f)

J

All Groduata and UnderJroduata Stu·
dents • to the Office of Admiaalona and
Recorda in Hayea B.
......-.... Students
to the main
omce In the reapecthe profeulonal
achoola.

All Data Forma will U.U·be forware!Mi
to Admllalo• "bel Reoonlo and U.U to tile
Data ""'-1111 Center ..... 11117 wiD ....
Uypunched and tbe Sllldent u-.. Fie
updated.
.
11. Roglatntlon a..c1t Slope-(Bulllpl!t
and-l)

Cunelllly earoll8d aWdenla • ex

• oeotlnt IHdmlaolon .. adlalalloD
pnftDied

IIUt
-

.)

ol

jL

dlaquallllc:alioD, •• ex ~
,_,..._ It Ia 1M rapotlllblllty o(' lk

Ill. RegllontiDn ............. (SARA lilllllod)-

.
In

ear

to
his _ . . bJ ......._
tile apJ11111111Ue omce In .._.. ot ...._
IZatloD.

-

lUI

...

u.......,, -

demlc

atw~Mt

--------

*-

~

rr..m ......... for ..... - -

........-IDdeb-.s- to tile

!lid

a

....

Jiach itudea&amp; *ould -

•

eapJ

ot

the SdiMiale of a-, ... wltlla ....._

�CLASS SC_HEDULE
L

CLBABBD T11B FllBilBQUISI'I'B8, · HIS , opporlwllty to aeeure l'llllltnlion In tl!olr
RBGISTBATION IN THAT COURSE pdmaly ooloctlooa, 111111 to bop In accarMAY BB CANCBLLBD.
claooe with atate ~,110 1tudent will
be ....,wed to ....... for IliON tban 16
6. ll'on4..........t Qadaate Sladonta - - boura clluiDIIIIJDIDOl .......b.
a-.llafonaalloa
(thea lludla&amp;a ........ ID lftldliata pn&gt;8. It II tba illlldeot'a reponoibllliy to.
L 'Die lludla&amp; lllaldd IIDt loot tluoutla paa at ott. UIIINalltlea, or lludla&amp;a wbo
... _~lilllodto--..me .................. ~- Dope IDIUre 111at 1111 IICbednle an..... for approximately
one-half hour
time betw-.
w b l d l - .. ww.. to CUt t l d a - iDd .. DOt IIIDimlY ......aed at tlda Uni·
llr. Aft. ...... .-....... lllaldd Uot - , . ) maot obtain
or lnllruc- eamp-.
U... oe 1111 S&amp;udoat Sc:beclaiiDc Fonn b ....,..,... for eacb p:aduate ....,. eou110
(. . . . . •&amp;)to .... _ ...... .,., .. IIIey Wlab to - · T1111 apj,ro.al abould be
9. Ad•••-t It II ..aooted tbat IJll
. illlldonil- their advloon before IIIey ........
wbldl COIIIIIot with aeeured pdor to l'llllltnllon·
ter for appronl of their clelbed .,.,..,_ llld
_,.. allier. ('Die .a. ol tlda ,_II ojllloDIi ,._ a .,.._ polat ol'llew' alltd II ID·
7. In ao attempt to lift allstudeata _tba on aoy Jpoctal nquaot dtmed.
lor ... ollbe ....
dallt.) .
Afllr lbe otudoat 1111 lliec:llld 1111

- ....., ot lbe a-d s,diolll I..IIIIDp
(........ H) to . . _ lllat be II DOl
~ to,...._foraCOUIIIwbicb
llllli.dylllled.

3.

o,.n;.s.ISI!n*t•
A-'dtoo-tlliJt
~·frOI'Io..ckfist

stood by all parlloa COIIClemed.

.

...

10

20

2t

Toltn 13rown

2. 'Die otodollt ~ eleot, howe-, to
lliCOid 1111 COUDt lllleeUoas dlndly on tbe
Jle&amp;lllaUcm l'lamiiDc Table; eumple •7
(licle "A" of lbe eo.u. Req.- Form).

S.:.:Ws-.ritvNo.

l1lolr l (!I!J ~
(

..

~~~

..rn.

8. Primary - . . Altemate coune ...

01

T,.lloe &amp; s.•~•

13

leclloD .
L Pdmuy-'lbe otudlot abould 1111t ...
loct tb- wbldl In! to
fuUIII ........ n q - t a ud/or tbe
flee elec:ll.- whlcb In! prefened. 1be
..,..,.. abould be ldenWiecl • {illt pre(ermco ..... lliCOided lo tbe primiJry

.....

4

r---------------------------o--.~-1-~
--~ ----.~o~--------,

•

b. Altemate-'lbe studeot abould oiJo
lodlcate tb- subotltute COWII!O be will
·If primiJry COW'Ift 111'1! clo&lt;U. ·( The
studeot II uqed to lodlcate alternate
ebojcs wben!ver. pomble; 1111 dotoc so
· will bolp to ioiUre ao ...eptalile tidied·

:To hn

!it

/IOdtoOoed&lt;lkt

1

~from o-t:iist

'1 0

,f'.m..(_th.._

StudtntN-

ule.)

b.1 Alternate COUlleS will be allligned
ooly IC tbe primuy &amp;election II unanBable.
b.2 A student may cbooee two (2)

altemates for primary &amp;elections 1
tluouCb 4; however, pnly 1 alternate
II pooolble for primuy &amp;elections 5
tbrou&amp;b 7.
b.3 Altemate cowses cannot conflict
in time wltb aoy primuy except tbat
primuy for whlc:b tbey are tbe alternate.

b.i All ~temate &amp;elections abould be
recorded lo tbe ''ollernllte" aections
of tbe form protlded.

4. U II tbe abideot'a nopolllibBity to
,...._ iodependenUy for eacb /ecture ,redtation, lind laboratory in o!J COlUSa where
combiMtiona 111'1! required. &amp;ch of there
ae/ectiona ahould be """'" ... prim4ry ...
/ectiona lind IMte(o~ requeaWlaeporatny.
WileD nqueoliDt cboonillry or pb)'lics
..,.._, tbe labolatorlea 'llld recitations
baetbe.,. ...lion WW; 1D JDatb&amp;.
a.llcoud _ . . . . . . _ tbe nc:Hation
..... tba l8dlon leu.' • tbe
lldwe. A otodollt be~ for
- tba proper lecliare, recllatlon, 111111 labon·
lory lor ICioDoe- to..-,.. credit for
tba COUDO. U II tbaatudent~._nrlblllty
to JIIOPIIIr ,...._ blmaolt 1D tbaae co,..
lllaalb. .._IIIey an Nq1liNd.

li. PRBRBQUrsrrss: IT IS T11B
STUDENT'S RBSPONSIBIUTY TO
8BCURB TIIB Aft'BOPIUATB fiiiiMIS810N OF TIIB INSTBUC'ftON OR '1'HB

5.

nuDEJrTSCHEllUIC FDIII

--~

·-

UIO · t:SCI
ltl0 · 9:l'll

..

I ~ iT1:

3

nt·JD · ll1fiJ

5

JI:CIO · I~

ll;a! - lljll
III.:JI - U:20)

lUIO · lfjl)
I~..JI -

~ ~_.;tTr

~.tl"l-'

·.~~

I "!'PP"

UCBMNG PBIIMI8sao14, HIS IIB!HSCANCIILLBD. 'nil 8'l'UDili'J' Iii .ALso

6

I:IKI - 1:51
(1:JI-l11l

7

I'Z:JII · ]~

llllsrONBIBLB TO a&amp;AJt AU O'I'HBR
.I'RB8BQUIIII'l' IIDOBB IUIGIS'J'BR.
INO- FOil ~ OOUIIS&amp;. ~ 811 BABJIOT

~.

lEt.,.

1'-

·-..

l:Drl - lj,g

-.·

8

10

j-G,'&lt;'

I.:lO}

DIPARTIIBNT WIIBRB INDICATBD· IF
BB ATI'BIIPTS TO BBGIIITBil Wl'ni6UT
'IBA,ON IN THAT OOUIUIB MAY BB

~~·.")

&lt;'i

"'

ft-30 IUOJ

-

1'~.'-J
I~"'llc

2

4

I 1'\.IESOAT I fEDfltmAT I T11.1RSMY I f'WIIA'i' I SA'MOA'i'
1..:.1.::- 1-1 .::- 1-1 ~- 1-J.::..i-1 -=-1-1-=IIIOimA'i'

1 '~ -~ ·.l'

lltl

I.,..A'

1';3.Z-

under.

2. It II oiJo adollable for tbe student
to eeeure hil lutructor's or advisor's
appronl when lie npten for a IJOri- able credit to tbat the
boun of cndlt 1n1 propedy under-

ellldod....,
L

tatinc

dopartmeotal appiVnl to "'later for
tb- .,.,....... UlldelpMuatea taking
a pMaate coaJIO muat petition the
Oftlee of tba DMn.
~

..-.s ..., -

..... .. ........ dooct t i l e - .....

IWdoata

..,suate coaJIO for l!*luate credit ~
and -undefll'adaate endit need

tn,..

.,._I

Type of Special R..-t

l:- Graduale

~~~_;.

�CL~

SCHEDULE

15

6.

-sTATE UUVUSin OP REV YOU· AT IUFPUO
T~B FOLLOVIKC COUI.SBS AU CLOSED
AS OP 11/20/70
C 0 U It S B

**ADM** ·

181
181
181
181
181
IBI
181
181
181

c

403

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105 A I
105 A 2
10-5 B
105 c

141 5 c
105
215
225
301
311

t•z

D
B

182
182
205
205
317
335
461

D

c

B

**ARC**
301 ·~
321 c
"351 D
40 3 P~ I
403 r~z

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c 2

-c

1

D I
D 2
D 3
A

c

D
A
B

c

B
B

217 B

219
219
289
289
289
- 293
293
305
313
325
32 7
345
351
367
38 7
483

H
J

223 A

**810**
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201
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107
107
121
207

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ii

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011
012

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**POL**

Ill A
119 D
412 c
4 93 B

H
HE

c

2 83 CE

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101 A
101 B
101 It'
103 B
103 c
103 D
105 ·o
105 K
207 PH
221 c
222 K
223 A
223 D

291 ..
305 p
313 HE

**MUS**

c
1C

**PBY**

336 c
357 c
411 B

101
103
121
201
223
233
273

,.

100 AllR

**OB.G**
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l~tM.tiO lc-'.

251
259
311
319
321
413
417
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137 c
137 D
141 A

TINI.

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107
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108
109
109
110
215
215
21'S
216
329
335
345
360
463

145 c
23.1 D
241 I
241 c
242 A

D

137 B

T&lt;i-T

......

301 H

**PK_U.*

325 H
391 c
401 HL
427 H

**KAT**

1.... 1.261 D. l&amp;a&amp;.e ... .llcl. allr..o liJLfl l.ww,. I.'.'JS::

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301 p
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201 A
202 B
. 301 c
301 D
302 c
403 A
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••HIS**
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DIPT

k-..

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101 c
10 2 A
103 c

D 3
D 4
D S
F

141 B
141 c
141 D
142 A
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282 8

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l.2fl w- ,.... ., IIW. /EetM_ 111111 lr .. r I,":JJ:: I
c::otJR5E Tin.£
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locua.. l•tt lv.!l

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301
30
303
304' 1(

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403

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301 tr .
N.Un IAIS .,., w

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211 B 2
211 B 3
211 B 4

211
211
211
211
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**ENG**
**ART**
Ill A
114 c
159 c
163 J
16 7 ~
229 c
259 ~
337 A

242
281
359
3,69
393
393
417
435
462

**FIN**

202 I
350 B
350 K
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---~

ACADEMIC POLICY REGARDING REGISTRATION FOR GRADUATE COURSES
BY UNDERGRADUATES, MILLARD
FILLMORE, UNCLASSFIEO AND NON·
MATRICULATED STUDEN;J"S.
1. All recuJuly enroUed underpaduale
5tudents attemptluc lo repter for p2duale
cou.nes for underpaduate credit "!lilt ·pet!·
lion the Ofllce of 1be Dean of the Dlmloo
of Underpaduale Studlea, 278 Hayoo Hall.
2. All recuJuly enrolled llillud l'lllllloN
students attempt1111 lo NCioter for paduale
cou.nes for underpaduale Cledlt mlllt petition the Ofllce of the Dean of Contlnumc
Education, 292 Hay• Hall.
'
S. Underpaduale aDd IIUlud FUlmen
students ittemptluc 1o npter ror paduale
COUIIel for Jladua\e c:ndlt maot oiKaiD
appnml _ of• the 0... of the Gmdule
School, 230 Hay• Hall.

Stude n ta taldac Summor 8ellloo
who ue ~ or lllllard
Fl1lmare ltudoatl .... - eo6od • - ·
mallkulatecl or IUidallllled (La. -u.s.

e&lt;JUDeS

oludoall cluJiDi ..,.........._) maotlbe appooq1
111e Onduallt Daa, 210
Hayoo Hall, to ....... for ........ - ........... of wllltMr llle II to be

or

takft for

p8liuale

or unhpstak a.dlt.

�~~·~..,;;-----~--------- ---~

CLASS SCHEDULE

16
10. Completlnc
~a"

Of

eow.

IDe Scan

Requ..t

Sbeot (~

infomlition.

F~)-Eumple

c. Transfer tbe coune InformatiOn from

•8

olde "A" to olde "B" of tbe CowM Jle.
queot Foim.
-

UN a •2 lead penca only, no other
pecll or po11 may be uoed.

L

,

b. a-t tbe .,.,..... oelec:t.d In ~
~ l'lanninc Table (Side "A"
ol Coullt Reqaeot Form) apiDit tbe
IIIOit
of tbe ~ !&amp;cu... UIIIDF' to uold .........,. for a
- - wlddl .. .....,. filled. I f ..y tbe ,WdeDt obould mate
lle ....... In tbe table to m~ec:t' .....

-

-copy

""-ri-

c.l For -=II pdmary and alternate
_
, reeon~ t11e ~D
ber and variable c:redlt• In tbe blocks

num-

· pnmded. A four c:redlt bour variable
c:redlt obould be Indicated •
040. Only - t thoe coune Indicated In tbe c:l.- acbedule a V AR as
variable c:redlt cows.. All others are

tlxed eredlt ......- and no variable
eredlt Indication II DIIC&lt;!SUY· lndl·
c;ate drop only If you willh to drop a
co..- p~ nptel'ed for. Now
blacba the appropriate nopci. .
blocb below~ ~lion numiMir
and variable eredlt bouo.
• To be shown f or Variable Credit
Counes only, fixed credit -cows.
need not be Indicated.

c.2 Tbe student should be very careful wben tronspoodnc tbe reptrallon
numbeD from side "A" to side " B,"

8.

be ·will be reptered In thoe ...W..
with tbe blackened repdzalloD DUIDben on side "8" repnDe. of what Is
lndlcateil on side " A."

c.3 At tbls point, the lltudent sh'Ouid
his form at tbe upper lett band
comer, print bil name below It and
Indicate bil division and da OD tbe
rlebt hand~ of tbe Coullt Requ..t
Form. Tben, In tbe lower rlebt band
comer of tbe form; tbe student
should write In bil IOdal IOCUrlty
number and the !bit letter of his last
name. At tbls potnt, tbe student has
completed his formal ...plrallon and
Ia ready to turn In bil nptzation
llll'terlala.

siln

11. Tbere will be l'adllllee available -In
Admlaslona and Records to lnatruct stu·
denbo In bow to propedy complete their
reptrallon materlala. If lltudeata desire
belp In completing their ~n forms,
they should seek belp there before attemptIn( to tum In their form. lncomplete regl&amp;trallon forms will not be accepted.
12. Tbe student should report to Admlaslona and Records to turn In bil reptra.
lion materials. Other turn-In locations wili
be posted at Admiaslons and Records If
. - r y.
a. When turning in your reeistrallon
forms, you may band them to any
checker who will n!fiew them to assure
a certain degree of correctness. The
checker will then give you a receipt for
·your Coune ·Request Form and tell you
when your Schedule Card will be available. Schedu le Cards (or all Millard Fillmore students will be auailllble at

Admissions and RecorcU. Hayu Annex
''8 ".
13. Completed ClaJjs Scbedule Carda
will be avaiW&gt;Ie for pick-up by studen"
approximately one week after a Coune
Request Form is submitted. Schedule Carda
will usually be available at Admlsdons and
Records with other locations posted if
required. Studenbo aides will be available to
direct studenbo in picking up their registration forms .
•

9·.

a. :J:be Student Class Schedules are

arranced alpbabetlcally by last name. As
~~~..7.""';;':-

the student entem Admlsdons and Jle.
cords, be -.bould go 1o the c1ert Uking

J:i.h H T
·----==---·
..
/D

care of hi,&lt; letter, Cive bil/har name and
receive_ his Schedule Card. If there is DO
Schedule Card. anllable ror him he
should go to the Problem Desk.

b. Wben tbe clerk poaslnc -;;ut Scbeclule
Carda Ci•• Ule student bllacbedule, abe
will live him a sheet: of lnatrudlo,. for
PI'OCOJII!IInc cJwiae of ~ Tbe
c1ert will alao live tbe studaot allamped
ID card wblcli w i l l - a an authorization for tbe student'a ...,.totrallon.

d.

. 1..

,. ..=--=---..L__
,·

. [JJI

___,..__
14. eou...

R......r tOr Malontbe reptrallon pedod and after.
wards In aome .,_, there are ao.,.
menta raenlnc a tlxed _ . . , . _ of tbe
apace In their .,.,..... for their majora.
eo..... wbae ao.,. potUoa of tbe emollment II rf!&amp;""ed for majora are IndiCated In
the c:l.- acbedule with an -.tot (*) to
the left of tbe nptrallon number. Stu·
denbo wbo are oto.d out c1ur1nt nptzat~c;n
IInce they are not- a major llhould cbect
with tbe ciopartmoi,t ~ durlnc
........ of J:ellotrallon to - about enro111nc
• a DOIHDajor. ·
·

Durlnc

JJll

.-

.

-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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B{OCHi!MtUL PHARMAC.Otll&gt;Y
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PROSTHODONTICS
FORE 'IGN S T'UDENT ENGLIS,!I
FRENC'H.,
·- - --,
FR.ESHMAN SEMINAR
,~ ~ :-·
GEOGR~PHY .
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GEOLO~t,CAL"·. SC·IENCES.:t 1 :... :
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HINDI,'".
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HISTORY
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HUNG AR I A,N
'
INDONES'IAN
INDUSTRUL ENGINEERING
INSTRUCTION
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INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
ITALIAN'
·JAPANESE
JUDAIC STUDIES
KOREAN
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LABORATORY A;~IHAL SCI.ENC€
LATIN '
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LAW &amp; J~RISPRUDENCE, FACULTY
LEARNING CENTER
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LIBR &amp; INFO STUDIES,SC~OOL OF
LINGUtSTICS
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MASTERS IN .HUMANITIES PROGRAM
MATHEMATICS
MECHA~'I,CAL ENGINEER INu
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
MEOICI·NE
MEDt CINE, SCHOLl· OF
MG-ACCOUNT JNG
MG-ECONDH'ICS '.
MG-F INAt&lt;IC E , .
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HG-INDUSfRIAL REt:.AHil'4S ~or&lt; ·
MG-MA~AG~HENT AND POLIC~~
MG-MANAGEMENT. SYSTE:JIIS , ' ::-,
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_MG-OPERATION$ At&lt;IALV:Sts - ~~ .
MG-ORGANI ~. ATION AND,' BEHAi tORAL '
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.HlCROBlOLOGY
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>~ - NUMBER ~U~GUST 2, 1973

- STATE UNIVERSilY AT BUFFALO

Social Policy
Is Officially
·Reaccredited
The Sc:bool ol SocW Policy IUid
Communlty~JIIIIi­

BaS/ietbaJI Cimji --:

llle------DoJ!:amp-ln
-.In
211,.,........ -

---and
ha- -

. _ful

. of 11 -

Ed MuiD-

tile

-c~Oege$

Clott&lt; a,m- ~17 J*1lclpelinl tile -

tile -

of -

watwlty -

, . . _ --•ballid.., _ _ . , . . - sldllo, l"'irod ID 1""'"""111
-of cammunlly ,.,.....,..._ -.

Will Air.Furnas With~rawarToday ~- ~-bat-- witt- ~ cfi,.

..a-

redlY• • tbe
of tb8 dean of the
Diviaian of Undoqraduate Studies
{Dr. Cbarles Ebert) . IUid that appr&lt;&gt;priate budget tranafers {namely, the
budget allocatiall made by the ColIePste Aseembly to CFC for the 7Z-73
academic year) will be made to the
ollice of the dean -or undergr&amp;duafe
studies, throush whose ollicoi all fiscal
matters will be bandied.
The matter of CFC's withdrawal
from the AEembly was a major topic
of discussion at the CollePste Asaem-bly meetinJ of July 25. {No formal
action was taken at the meeting since
tbere Willi' not a q110rum.-) Dr. Gelbaum cbaited the meetinJ. ('Ibis is
' In accordance with the CollePste ProapectUs, which proVides tliat in the
abaeDce of a permanent director, the
vic:e president for academic a1fairs
sball chair Assembly meetinJS.)

...

--

!cardlrbiod--lly Br. '~fetter.- - - Wben CFC leaVes the .Aseembly, it
will retsln the $17,000 budget it. waa
allocated. &lt;The" CoUegiate System receives one budget which ia lnWlnally
aUocated among the -various units.)
The !DI'Dibera of . the Aaoembly feel
that since CFC is leavinJ, the funds
which the system ))ad allocated to it
should revert to the ABaembly. Dr.
Gelbauio respooded that there ia only
one sourc:e of moaey In the University,
the tots! budget, and that if reporting
relationships are changed tbere ia no
new money In the budget to support
4. col. 4) -

(Contiruud on -

~
Dr. AKbur L Smith baa hem apVarious members of tbe Assembly
pointed to a three-year term .U. cliaiJ-.
iltsted their objections · to this actioo
of CFC'a withd-rawal.., IIIM!nll
man ol the ~ of ~
iiounda. The CoJii!liete Prospectus Comm~mjc:ation, elfectiwt ~
atatee that: • .,. college may diaestsb1. Dr. Smith, wbo . - to U/8 from
lillh itself, UpOil DOtiftcation to the
the University of California at Loa
"-mbby." The AMemb1y feels" that
Angeles. baa aleo ben appointed a
jf CPC leawe tbe ~Y. In the
fUll pmf.-.i with In the ...
eyes ol-tbe.-~ it ia ftiiiiiMiinl
~t. The appilinllllent- -.le
!&gt;Y Proaident Ralat L KetMr.
.u.olu~ and ~ b i I baa .not hem
ca.; tbe A-.ibl,y _ . . . 110 Jon.! • Dr. Smith il IIi ....... aut!Mmty
· ats..,_t ol CI'C'a in..,tlon to witbori lnlem!cial CIIIIIIIIUIIiai l!l"l a
dmw from tbe ayatem. IUid the ,..
~ u-i8t ... bloick O'P""Puiica. ..abJ,y teunea ol -the action wben
tl.. bobaviDr. Dr. Adllar ~. acttbe actin~ admlnlatrathe ollie. of the . Ina JIIV"'R of the ll'lil:ulty ol 8ocild
l!cleaolM and ............tfaD, .ul ol
~ JC.IIb Klapp, received a QIPY
the ..............., "Dr. 8lllith ... -ol ... to Dr. llciiiiL
~~ ...... In theflelii
Di. Gellaam .ul tbat ... ._u. prior to bill action be Mol had
of..,..eh _ _ . . . . , Unda&gt; bill
leadoahlp, - lnlllad til dewiop . . .
fiM -~- with Dr. Bant,
l'naidiDt Ketllar,lllld ..._ Collepa
rate teMblnc IUid --a.~
ill both ...... .
.......... lllld
Di-a Dr. Weyland P. 81altli about
..,....lllld ..... ...._, 6at will
tbe eepuatian. {Dr. Slllith,
be.....-... willa-the ..... o1
suited, ~ ClpiUal t b e ure,). In adolltioD. be
be ...
- NW Yadr;_l!llate and U. Illation
aa a.,.._• .
reaehed • nipolt .,._ Dr. a-t 1l!at
of the CPC 1ta11ea11 }llllled 8llilat tbe -. Dt. 8tllilll ........... B.A. ,._
..-atiort, a poMt _,..._ -111
OldUDaa a.tllla thllwnlty, bill
fawr. Oelbaum .ul . . ft*
1
M.A.,._~UIIhallb',and .
tr...- ,_. ... the lnlommbl be bill Ph.D. . . . UQJ;iA. Be ... - . received 1n tt..

w-.

..w.

1

.......,tar
-

_,

Sepliomlier 6.

Oil IUIIIIIEII
.._of tile . . , . _

aWs.Tiie......, . . ,.
~

011

•,

11usdiiiJ,

•

1

da ....... ana-

_.........._C[D

Sc:bool'a ..,_.__
The Comftriea!on ....,.,...;.d tbet
"the Scbool ia In tbe ~ ol ...
(COIIIinued""- 3, col. l)

Dr. Smith of UCLA Named
1-n Speec~ Communication

w---

UIT - Tod8Ya Ia tile -

fted of Ita reaccredibltialllllllt IIIOidbbaa uoW received formal DDiice fiom
the Council Oil SocW WG4 Edualtion. The Sc:bool, which reviewed
by the Council's. Owpmi-lcla Oil As:creditati&lt;a, ia ..,. accNdlted r.. a
three year period UDtll ........ 1976.
The Sc:bool of SocW Policy. wblch
ia pert ol the Faculty of Soi:lal Sc:ieDces aDd Administration, prepareil .,_
ciaJ work practitionen. It eetabliabed aa a c:urriculum at U/8 In 1934,
IUid baa beld aecredited atatua In tbe
Council .., SocW Work Educatiaa
and ita ~. theJ.meriea,..
sociatiOil of 8c:bools ol Social Work,
since tbet time. The 8c:bool ia ~~­
ly Wider tbe I.denihlp ol Dean SMrman Merle.
·In a letter to Preoident Robert L
Ketter advialna him of tbe Sc:bool's
continuiDa aecreditstiort, the Commiesian Oil. Aa:redltstiOil Chairman L
Diane Beman! Mid, ''Tbe educational
objectivee IUid tbe curriculum, In the
process of beina esamlned IUid .modified with particular empbaaia .., upecteillliWient 011"""-, IIi.. promise
for acbieYina the 1o.,l of praparing
competent social work practitioners."
The ec.amu.ioo noted the Sc:bool's
substantial elf..ta -to dial with major
deflciencieo which bad hem Identified
In a previous visit In 1971, IUid added
that "the oontinued support of the
Sc:bool . by the University's admlni&amp;tratllln ia particularly DOteworlhy."
The Qmuni.W, pointed out four
areas that requlle f1lrlbar aMmtloll:
the limited utent tO which faculty
activity ia lmown to the 8c:bool IUid
the ~ ol. a IIY8Mm' ol .. emJiit.mf •_.,_. . .
utilize ita faculty to tbelr
-fulleA polll!lltial; . the fuller. .c~ne~op­
ment of written m.tzuctloaal aida ud
learninJ ....urcea; - - - ol tbe
principle tbet the r-.lty, ~Ia,
alid.Dean.bave to sba!e a.pcwwlhlllty
for IIIXlOUiltabllity, pmdudivity, IUid
the creatioD ol a positive leamhia atn&gt;QOJPbele; IUid beUer functial;liDc of
the atruCtuna f .. studalt _.,mment
IUid s t u d e.n t puticipation In tbe

-~·...--· ........ OOLA . . .

�.....,2,lf7:J .

r

Sl)NY Grant Applications . : Women.Said Making 'ln~oads'
Ava.l~ble in Research·Office /n University A-dministration
w....... .....

ai&amp;-

lllllkiDc aaMill, but
.uac-t, inroeda Into iodmialatrative
opemtions ol, public unhsaitieo, a
8lllW)' ~ from the 08lce ol RAi.arcb and IDfonnation ol the National Aaopciatioa ol Slate :Um-slties
and Laud Grant CoU..,..(NABULGC)
iDdicaliea:
•
~to tbe report, 864""""""
held adminialzative poaiti01111 at lH
NABULGC member illatitutians during 1972-73 - a DOiewortb.Y iDcreue
in tbe iJWol-.t ol in decialon-mall:ini fwM:tioaa during the pas~
~)'MDI.

'

.

A 8lllWY conducted 111110111 the
NABULGC nwnbenbjp during 19ro71 by Dr. Marpret Helm Arter ol
Arizona State Uni¥WIIity u part ol
a doc:toral m-taliaa. an -rbe Role
of w......, in Administmliaa. in State
Unl-.ities and.l:;and-Grant eon-"
bad abown that the median llUIIIber ol
in toP-level adminiatzaliaa.zero. 8lzty per cmt of the illatitutians
IAUYeyed by Dr. Arter .did DOt biow
any adminlatntm&amp; who met
tt&gt;e criteria ol tbe study. In tbe 197273 ·811lW)', all but .... ol tbe illatitutiOIIII ""'''I'O'iiii bad at leut two adminiatzatms wbo met the criteria of
the Arter study.
.

T-at-

Types ol positions included in tbe
NABULGC 8lllWY {a trider l'lllll"
than in the Arl2bitudy) . aDd tbe total
number · o~ . """""" listed u hOlding
t t - poaitiOIIII included: president or
dlancellor, 3; Ulliatant to the president or dlancellor, 43; chief'olllcer of
an administrative &amp;vision - (primarily
• vice preaidenlil) , 10; IUIIOCiate or. usistant l&gt;I!MI8I, vice p...adent or vice
chancellor, 14; aaaistant to vice pnaident,- 23; cbil'l olllcer o{ an academic
... -..:b division {primaril deans)
166; director of an '~tive ~
tion, 246; 811110ciate or Ulliatanl dean!
'director. ol academicladminiatzative
unit, 359.
_.-'
The survey .a.nalysis CIIIICIUdes lbat
"the major portion ol ...._ hi adminiatzatioa ..... in middle llllllla&amp;l&gt;ment jobs" or in "c:banneled fielda" tbooe into which tradiliaa.ally
have been cfuected. Seventy per cmt,
or 605 ol tbe -864 """""" llllminiatm101&amp;, were claaaified as either a.director
ol an administrative ..:tion or as an
811110ciate or aaaistant dean or u a
director ol either an academic or adminiatzative unit, ·the ~ daasificatiOIIII included in the 811lW)'.
In addition, lbere ...... 52 deans or eli-. ol lllllllinl and 28
deans &lt;Jl · bome ecaaaalial
111110111 tbe 186 listed as chief .......,
of an academic or -..:b· aectian, accounting for 48.2 per cmt ol in t'-e poailiaa.s.
EMollnllip

1l&gt;e elite-"'-~

traton wbo beld lop-level policy..,.),.

ing poai~ DOt tradiliaa.ally li\l'8ll
to - . tlwl, included aaly 1'19, or
1.9 per inltitutioa. 1bia
was. ~. an iDcreue of than tOO from tbe Arter llludy ol two
yean ... wblcb found aaly 7 0 appt'C~Kimately

in ouch job--..
Tbe lb.- !.ada ol inltituliaa.s tbe prealdoa.t ol HUDiior
Collete ol City Uni¥WIIity ol New
York, the preaidoa.t ol the Uniwaity
ol ~ S)'Rim NIUI!ing School, and
the cbancellar ol RePaaal Ca!pus
Adminle!zetim, l'lldlaa Um-.it,;. . .
Tbe 43 . . - . . . t o Jll'tlllidmla· or
~ ,..,._w • ...,. infrom the . . In aucb
poaitions in the 1970-71 mney. In
- . the adual title beld by
- .-...m
• p!ll8a1
.... ouch -uw,
or opedal..t.lant,

with .......... c:arryinl major ........ .
8ibOity for _,..... allnalift actiaa
.
.
Tbe ......... "' -nparted to
bs ...m, u vice PNII!Ieats or vice
dwnoellna, wblle .alael:r ..u

....,._

Ollw o\n8IJMi

=

Other ........y analy808 indicated:
• 'lbat tbe lsrp DlliDber of woaien
in middle ...............t jobs "bodes
well for the continued .........._t of
into jobs at an even_ hllber

in middle IIIIIDagl!eopeciaJly in poaitiona cateas director ol an administrative ..:tion - teDd to bs clustered in
ouch cateaories u director ol llludent
..vices and acti..W.., director ol regiatratian/adm;..;.,. dlnlctor ol affirmative actiollf~ oppclrQmity, director ol public Information, director
ol Cllll.-ling/.,._1, li~rarlan,
dean ol - - . cllnJCior ol lllllllincl
boapital and cllrector ol

• 'lbat -

ment -

aorized

.moe.

.

.......,,food

• 'lbat -.ciU8 oa: a.istant deans
or eli-. ol -s.nic or adminiatratlve units ·~o~~ow IIIIlCh the ......,
pattem.

• Tbat the a.liaD .......... olwom... ..W., In admiialllllative poaitians
in inotltuliaaa co...ad by the mney

. -eiabt-

• • Tbat' the .... inotlbdigcjoj with tbe
l.srpst numba' ol ad~Dfnla~n­
ton multi-GIIIplla IMiitatians
~Ill the ~ ol ~ State
U~ty .(S!ate Univw~it¥ ol NYm~~~~~ten)_.

._

l'ham:Jacy ~3 .
.. Three 1al:ulty P&lt;Oiiiildow .... been

- - - b7 tbeSchoolol....._.
They ar,:

Dr. Qerda Kllapnaa, Ph.D~ from
.....-te profeaaor ol ~
JJbannacololy to ....,__
Habert P..,..., M.SC., from _...

....,_"'..,._,.to

tant
.-date
....,__ Mr. ~ Ia . . . cllrector
ol cliUI iDianMilaD ..vices and acting
c:hafrawl ol the DeputmeOt ol Phar- .

...,_ .

Dr. Rlcbard Hu~ from as-

..-.at .....,_ ol

pbumacy lo ..

~te~·
flrl .
..............
. ••&lt;
. ·--···
~

~~~

-~ ·

,,

�.,..,2, lf7J

3

Social·Policy Sets
separate Sign-up
For Fall Classes

PTStudent
Wins Award for
Journal Article

1be ScbDol of 8oeial Policy aad
c-mlliY 8ervicee will ClDIIduot ...

Ma. Nancy Urbacbelt, wbo NCIIiwd
tbe Ph.D. t.e thla ~ Ia lhla
year'o recipient ol tbe Darolby Brlaa

•

.......
intemal

l'elistratloD

&lt;

during tbe Fall .

ftePintion numbers for graduate

aDd _lllllleqnlduale cpu1'8M were withbald from tbe . . acbedules pub.
llshed in tbe /lept1fWr clasa acbeduJe
issue . . tiJU .
s.ab Ulldellnldual8 aad graduate
studeat wDJ be prvvided liD IDdividualilled pdet CllllllliDlDI full retPatra·
tiaa .....,....... Packets may be
piebd up by ~18 .student&amp;
in s - 106, . . .
SeplaD4. ........ ..........18 81udmta
may be . . . . . up in a - 101, . . .
Hall, Clll .......... 6, after 1 p.m.
llludadllmay ....... - fGUow:
U.....,.rlrwk: September 4
tluoalb 8epl8albe&amp;' 11, 9:00 a.m.-12:00
aad 2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m.
Grotlwlla: ~ 6, I:OO p.m.·
5:00 p.m.; ~ 6 tluouch' 8ep.
tember 11, 8:00 a.m.-12:00 110011 aad
. 2:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m.
SludiDIII may nPter for olber than
Social Welfant cooun. tluouch tbe
,....W Um-.llif ~ ,

a.n.-

Accreditation~

(~ ,_,.,... 1, cot 4)
buildiDIIIII JII'OINID," aDd added that
"the . . . . . . ritaliliY aad tbe ~
indlcalian of pwpaeeful d I r e c t i o n
abould ....... well for tbe ..ur.ation
of tbe- ml8lion of tbe 8cbooL" Tbe
CommWinn reql.aled that tbe Scbool
IIIDDit a report in .June, 1976, detail-

~~~.:,.,~
tilled by tbe Commillllion .. ....e.tinc

-~

;==.•

til ltiit Ccimmliaioits
letter, ... behalf of Dr. Ketter, Euilut.ive V"ICe Pleoldent An-t Somit expr-s appreciation tO tbe Commission aad to tbe a:anbers of tbe accreditinl teams tbet bad vilited U/B
for "the .,.,..._. 81111 IJUi&amp;nce they
bawl prvvided_ . . during a difticult
IDD&amp;Itian period." He added, "We
will liw cueful attmliaD to tbe OliNera! problem idelllifled in your
letler. DoiiD Mede, worklq fllletber
with bla faculliY aad atudtmla, . . .
moved tbe ScbDol forward a oubstantial cli8tuce tbe put . ,.,.. aad
- are caalldeot tbet tbe collabooalhe elfari will-"le tbe Scbool
to deal 8IICCIIIIIIfu11 with ~ IMttln."

..................
..... to.....,_. . _..., ......

...,..._1/11 _ _ _

the U....ola _,..............., A1i1111t
IHQ. Tile Ollae ol CNdlt F.- " ' - " '
... tlla C...tlr ....... Wlllllt ......,_
- .,.._. tl tlla..-.t ..... II ._
..... tar ...,_, pullllc olldlla and
Giller - - - Ill tlla ...... Chi . , . _ .
Jni, lew, . . . . Allll blalalr ,..._..

.............................
!IIIII In ............ ol,...... UllloiL

· Perry to Direct National Study;
Nechasek Will Act as HRP Dean
.J. Wanlen Perry, dMn of tbe Scbool
of Health • Related
has
aocepted ... appointment .. director .
of a national study of allied beelth
. e&lt;fucalion for tbe American Asaocia-_
tiaa o1 Communiw aDd· .Junior CoJ~eps. Tbe lliiDOIID08IIIet Willi made by
William G. Shannon, ·AACJC aenior
vice president, ud U / 8 President
Robert L Ketter. .
Dr. Perry will be oo leave from
September 1, 1973, through May 31,
1974. Dr. .Joseph E . Necbasek, aasociale dean. and aasistsnt professor, Wtll
be actiDr dean for the pericid.
Aim of tbe national program which

Prot--.,

io ptber

Dr. Perry will direct is
and
disseminale information that will belp
community and j u n i o r colleges in
strengt.benins their roles ·in profesaional educatioo for ambulatory and
primary beelth c a r e practice. 'The
Robert· Wood .Jolmaon Foundatiaa is
prorid.ing a one-year grant of $185,000
to oupport tbe study.
Tbe ultimate JIOil) will be tbe development of a long-nnce project for
impmving allied beelth educational
prognuns; with special · emphasis on
tbe role of tbe communilif and junior
college within tbe total spectrum of
national allied health ..-.urces.

~~~~~~~~ipli~.ary German Course

·w.ns··undergrad Instruction· Grant
·· · A: 'siate ' uzii~~iy · hc;w~ Gn.;,t

for tbe Im~t of Unclergraduale Instructioo has beeo awarded to

~

·Peter· Heller · and · David
Ricbarda of tbe Department of Germanic aad Slavic for u interdisciplinary CDUIII8 in Germu cultural history
from 1910 to 1933, tbe ·~ge of EIpreiaioniam."
Accordinl to tbe grant recipients,
Germu 480, being olfered this fall
aad cootinuing in tbe sp$g semester, will consiat of lectures,. audio-visual pieaentatiaas and diacussiona,
bringing topther literature, painting,
IIIUIIic; theatre aDd tbe .,;,_,. .. welL
aa major intellectual currents aDd coollidering them in tbelr aociaJ cootext.
'lbe 8rat _ _ . will cover 1910 to
tbe ~t of tbe Weiuiar Republic; tbe _ . . . will extend to tbe
last )'1181'11 of tbe ~lie and tbe
rille of Natblal 8oc:ialisnl.
Inc:ludad will be IIUCb e l i - topics
.. 'l'bomaa Mann'• DetJlA u. vmi«,
tbe molion picture. The Bli!e A1J#l,
tbe art of tbe Germu Wilhelnw!lotn
Bra - ICakrwf!b K1ee, et a1, tbe
...... of Freud aad Kafka, tbe ll1m,
All Quid 010 the Weakm Front, B.c.
Luxsaburl, St:rlndblq, Scboeabeq,
s - , Baubaua architecture, Brecht,
aad otbeiL
.
Ilia. Hellor aad Ricbarda indicale
tiJU "the IIIUdy of ...... in - .(IUdcular art lonn .will be tmidled by
tbe .tully olftlla'ted ~ in tbe
other aria, tt.c~ ... blat paintincwill to clarity ............. poetry ud .... 8tnlclure and

-~~t q( worl\1! !JI.art.will be,reiJ!ted
to aociaJ structwes and tbe Ze~ut."

For iheir- iiuiivid~

inOii.cta. :siu-

dents will be able to concentrate in
their major fields of interest (German
literature, drama; history, music) but
will 6e eocou'raged tO Use an. inler- ,
disciplinary approach to relate their
topic to other art forms or to tbe larger
cultural context of tbe period. ·
Lectures will be given in English.
Germu majors will ·read most texts in
the original; no n·m a j or a may use
translations.

For additional informat.ioo, coolliCt
tbe two instructors at tbe Ilepertment
of Gennanic and SlaVic.

Memorial Scientlllc InquiJy Award
p-ad by tbe Amelbn Pb,ylb1
'lberapy AaMidation at 1111 . . national c:onferenCle in HouAaa.
Tbe award lfJOOIII)-. tbe ~
therapy atudelit wbo bas pabiiAe4
tbe most elfective ~ Ia
the pbyslc:al IMrapy joumaJ within
the year.
.
Tbe winninl paper, "Pooaldlda
Evoked from tbe Abjuctor DicW Minim! Muacle in tbe Norma aad ~
loPcally lnvolved Hand," authored by Dr. ~ Blabap, sociale ~ In tbe ~
of Pbyalolacy. 'lbe article~ in - •
tbe .lountGl of the Americrm p~
Therapy AaociatiDn, VoL 52, No. 6,
May 1972.
Ma. Urbacbeft received a B.S. in
pb,yaic:al therapy from tbe Scbool of
Health Related l'lol-"- in 1968.
Sbe received a Maaler'a In 1971 from
tbe Deparlmont "of ~ In tbe
School of Medicine, aad tbe Pb.Jj,
from tbe clepartmmt. Her lhe
years ol ~ual8 trainlnr &amp;UPported by ... A..-ican Pbyaical 'lberapy AaMidation-Public Health Service
TraineMhip.
Ma. Urbscbeit plans to teach aad
to further ber
00 -.ro-plllbologic cooditiaaa. -

-m.

Smith..;_
(c;,.linued fro"' l, col. 4)
porary rhetoric for ~ ~
He and his wife bave b-. Danforth
Aaloc:iate&amp; since 1970.
Tbe editor of .10U171Gl of B lac II
s~. an lnlerdl.ci~ ~
joumal, Dr. Smith , Ia alao a boalt reviewer for lhe·.lour.ntll ~.c...._.,...
tion, and eerves on tbe advlaory bQud
of B/Qcll lAW .TOUI'II4L He Ia tbe author of live boob, indudlna lUidoril:
of B/Qclt Rei.'OWlion aad :~ Communication, aad tbaD 36
articleo aad boalt ........
Dr. Smith ia a member of tbe
ap.,b Comrmmiratioll Awoc;.liaD,
· tbe African Studlea A-dation, lha
American Academy of Palltic:a1 aad
Soc:ia1 8c:iences, aad lbe IntematiaDa1
Society .far Gaaal s-andal. Ha
alao ... tbe bauila ol ,diNetoa
ol tbe ~tblal eo---w-*hl
AaMidatioll aad'lbe AflbD 8IDdlea
Herit:qe Awoc;.tlan
.

/

Hottel Tates Leare

Dr. , .... A. Rowell of tbe Jlopart- .
ol.a-.kal ~ wDJ be
... a.bbalicU 1eaW dadDI tbe 197374 ....-me ~- ~ Howell
b-. ........ a s.alar Vilitlnl
Fellowlblp of . . 8cilaaa a - d l
Comd1 ol tbe Ualled Jtialdam.
~
will oanduct a pmJect ..allied .....,..._ole Dllila ..._....
lloclualdal 'l'dddlal IUtNtian" Ia aallabolatian with l'ro'-ar llenMrd At~ at tbe Um-.ilif Ool.... u
. 9wanMII • •Wa'la ' . . -'

'*

,

..

l

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

-~ ·

. ...

�'

•

-.P

Colleges- (COIIIUuJed

from- l, ...I: 3)

the llllit In q~M8!icm; liP.. ...
ita repcll'linl relatloaobip
(CFC)"liiUSt continue to be~
by ita orilinal funding _,_ (the
Colletiate Syalllm) • ..

Umt

cbanllnl

c:coao.-·
--.
'lbe colleps
reapond that if, • - DL
Gelbeom bolda, CFC .lustlled itself as a _lltrcol .-lemic JIIOIIIIIII,
then this juslificalioo is eaaucb to find _...., funding for it; ff ..... '
arate funding aumot be loUDd, CFC
sbould atay in the syafl!m from which
it is hmdecL
MeililloP of the Assembly alao .
tiooed . Dr. Gelbaum'•
inaking such a decision. They qDDte
from the Faculty Senate bylawa, Article n, Sectioa 3, wblcb ....... '!'( c)
Silel:ifically,_""" In addiJ;IoD to tbi!
foregoing powetB aDd dutiel, the voting faculty, throulh the medium of the
Senate, shall have initiatlnc or aooifirming authority with nilpeCt to: · (i)
the establiabment or dlaootution of all •
academic units aDd all .-reb mdta
sueh as Institutee, c-ten, m the lib; .

~

----·

Exhibit Features
'Vertical Forms'

UUAIFU••

Minnie

&amp;

·

Mooltowilz

(CaaaveiM,

1971) , Conforence'l'hMIIe, Norton, cboclt
sbowcaoo for a-. Aclmiaion cbaqe.

By ERICH RASSOW
Writer'• - : 'lbe Muillc 8oam in
NortaD UDi&lt;m featmw a _.. of arf
8llbtitll thftJulhoat the y e a r. Tim
I:leclollr, wbo -tlY IIIOII'8d to Buftalo
from B y - . is llbooriDJ bia ""'"'
kxally for .the lint time in a MusiC
&amp;am ablbit wbida rur.a lilloulh Frict.y, AucUR 10. Dec:br llludled art at
the M-.a Scbool in~ aDd art
bialoly ·at &amp;y...,... UniWirllity. He
•
bad a WM 1111111 &amp;bow in 8ymcuoe
... al8o puticlpaleiJ in ..._
oliowa In UtiCa aild Saratop. What . 1.f0
I~ fOUC DAIICINO*
folkMs is a revised .......UOU of a cooInotrudion in the baaic otepe, Norton
,..tima wbida .... taped, between
fountain area, 11-U p.m.
the artist aDd the interviewer.
UUAI ,.;a••
"Callin&amp; the ellhibit Variclk Gild
· M i nnie &amp; Mod:owitz (Caaaveta.
I~ Nototio11 is aDOtber way of
1971) , Conference ThMIIe, Norton, cboclt
sbowcue for times. Aclmiloion cbaqe.
aplaiJIIJIIIDy aelection Of materials,
the format, """ the llmita of aimcentraliml· wblcb "produce the art object.
. .Two thlnp DJUai be ~ ·cleu; llmt
-is tbat - haw objects wbidi dellne a
the ~ -cataaorY within
. Wblcb all dialno .... )ilaood, etc. """.
SUNDAY
- alao haw .tatementa wbida in dlflorlna cootmta are quite ·variable or
UUAIFU••
at leMt quite variable if attributed to
Harold.&amp; Maude (Aohby, 1971) , Conference Theatre, Norton. check abowc.e
' 7"/ dllrerina - a n d places: So the
for W... Aclmiuion i:luu!le.
·
object is, by ita . JIIItuie, a notation
which is aipUIIcant cDly llil 1111 apU/IAmPart :two of a convenation with Jon
~tima f!{.llll idea. Similarly, the
Williamo. U/ B pen:uooioniot and member
statament m relatinnsbip of idea&amp; can
of the Creative AMociates, W ADV-FM
Clllly ha the rellection_of a perapecitive
(106.5) , 10: 05 p.m.
which . . . . _ with time. What's left
U/I.UNDAYSWPWIINT
is u..t bMide the point of the work,
Dr. H . Roy Kaplan, uoislant prof-r
a damlniUit -..:lnation with a &lt;ertain
~oociolo~~~ ~~
structuM1 farm, 1111 . ard&gt;etypica1 aswith boot Kan Servire, WYSL
lllldatiGD ar-CCIIIIIIII!It within these var- . today~
(1400 khz.)" and WPHD-FM (103.8) .
UibiHI:Ia In my. Work it is obviously
10: 30 p.m.
.
a w.tical. form, the verti&lt;al fO!Dl il. _ . _ the variability of the object
.. G111181ant and becaus.e of the ........
RIMS'
si'lll! Dalure of these vertical forms the
The Smnmer F'ilm lnotitole preeenla:
Fiallcu (Oimi. 1968) , 7 &amp;"9 p.m., 1.f0
~ of the unified statement
.. relatiaaablp of parts Ia tmdenDined.
~;
Tom the PiP'!r'• Son (Ja.eoi»;
So wbat 1 do then is llllect verti&lt;al ~ ~:_n~":.1oo-n.
IM1eriall ~ 111e ....Wy available, - J9f/~
7
1:
9
p.m.,
Confe""""' 'Thealle, Norton.
~(-..ly- piOducecl)
• a IIIIIUpbor for ·the object as a
Char!U Slorr, one man band, blueo,
IXIIIIIIaDt. l match these vertiail parts
ballado, Norto!' Terrace, 8 p.m.
with otl-. materiala in the most methodical of ...,. In order to oystematu.e
_ . . . Jelatialllblpe &lt;l*blinl ma-

FRIDAY-3

....

~-~1~
l~"!:.
ea-.
·

SATURDAY--4

.ora,

--=s -

.~

l

MONDAY-6

•,:,.

UUM-

TUESDAY-7

t.rial to tbat.wblcb is .....,..., . 'lbe - . r.n- of Mdi·'MIIk ~

Clll ........ both of these CCIIIIIIIUita
. _ . . . . ... ....., variable tbroulh
• tbe IICtiaD of verti&lt;al form."

-~ ~~f:a

:at,;;:.:.

the Faculty &amp;nate, not of Dr. ,Gelbaum.
.
. :
Dr. Gelbeum aald, after Cllii8Uitaticio with alllileted uDita and with the
Preaident, thet be• does indeed hawi.
the authority to ...up ._.tiug re:: _
lationsbipe. -He aajd that there are
two seta of bylaWB, tho8e of the Boud
of '~"Nate. of · ·the UniWirllity and
tho&amp;e"of the ~ty Senale,""" thet tbe former tab precedeDce over the
latter. 'lbe Boud of ~ 1M
authority to the" Preaideiit, wbo may
delegate tbat - - 'lbe F.ac\tlty Senate bylawa were cooat:nicted · by the
Faculty Senate aild - t to .u..i)l,
but, • to the bmt Of Dr. GelbaliiD's
knowledae, halie beeD apprcMICi
by lillY UtP PresideDL 1b!Js, the •
FacultY Senate .. 1111 advioorY
tiody, but' the authOrity ftnally in the President, wbo thniuch~"bia
delegate, _the vice presidmt
demk affairs, Cllll make this dec:iaion.
Dr. Gelbaum alao ...,_ that a DIIW
academic llllit ia DDt beinc fDlilled,
but 1111 l!ltistinl lmit is mmely cblmging i~ ~ relaliaa!!dP. -('lbe

ror ..,._

..,le,

. Collegiate_Aasembly ...... th&amp;t"it Ia
the Collegiate System as a
not
· the individuisl collep, wbich comrti-

tutes the ac:oidemic lllliL)
'. .
At the J _u ly 25 ...etlna, the Ailaembfy - , I y sa-d ita deeire for
reooncillation with CFC aDd ita hope
tbat CFC remain part of the Collegiate SyStem.
•
THURS.QAY--:9
The Assembly alao ...act thet CFC,
fiLM~
which
is
still
a
meinber
of the AamThe Summer Film lnolilute preoanla:
bly, be speciflcalJy invited to toda,y'a
' Soft Rain, 7 1: 7: 16 P;"'-• 1.f0 Capen.
Assembly ...etlna to diacua8 the mat~he~;~h (Be--. 1971) , CoDter- ter. It was alao. 8IJIII'88Ied that all the
facta i'! the matter ha ptbeNd aDd
f':".:!!:"~~ ~ - t e d at .the ..-m,.
.
At Reporte deadline, .a ......._,
EXHIBITS
·was beiDa - - to M£11 of .the 16 collegiate unitil askinc them to vote, CIIl
wbether or DDt the· matter ~~add be .
sent to the Faculty Sellate fm the
Seuate's opinion· of the matter. 'lbe
-..Ita of , the menmdum "'-ld be
in by taday'a JMel:ing.

R~on Re-named
Dr. Anthony Ralston - . hem . .
appointaa : cbainuan of the Jleput.
- t of Computer Sciouao for-a tlae-

-y ..... asaipment,

1.

.

bellnniniSeptemller
-

.

.

In a letter t111J1iJuDcinJ the appamtment to the l&gt;epartuwJt'a iltudanta,
faculty """ slafr, EDeutive 'Vice :t&gt;N.ident Albert Somlt wid!cl COIIIIdeaae
that the clemaDdlnt ~
of the po&amp;ition woUld be capably arriecl out under Dr, Ralaton'a directbi.
- Dr. R8Jaton, wbo will belln lila 1hird
COll8ec:uti\Je tlae-year term .. chair- -

man, Joined the U/8 facultY ln 1966
as a PI'Of-.- of mathematb. He al8o
served as director of the Olloe of Com•·puter .l!ervkes Ill the University..from
1987 to 1970.
·~

-

�</text>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
                </elementText>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379775">
                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379776">
                  <text>Reporter</text>
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              </elementTextContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1383123">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451211">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Summer Reporter, 1973-08-02</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383104">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383105">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383106">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383107">
                <text>1973-08-02</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383109">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383110">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1383111">
                <text>Text</text>
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                    <text>~lba.riy Sets Guidelines ·for

-'_Rationing' Tuition Waivers

��"'6 J_\cade~ic &amp;.Admi~i~trative Appointments Announced
Fotmdations'at the Uiuvmaity Of~­
French, German, RU88ian.and Rumanued capable IWfillment of the ebairpry since 1969, aDd preyiously taught
ian, Dr. Ruckensteln bas received inmanship reeponaibilities.
•
at Sir. George Williams University in · temational recognition. for his research
Dr. Brink was first appointed to b
Montreal Uld at Hunter College. ·He - in' mass ·tranafer, physio-chemical hyact41g cbainnanlhip , last year aa a
illao taught at l:J/8 in 1964-M. . ·
drodynamics; surface phenomena, livreptacen;oent . fot' Dr. McAllister" H.
He bas served as: a consultant ·to
ing cell ahd related fields.
Hull, Jr., who was named dean of the
the Harlem Seminara Program sponThe 47-year-old native of Rumania
Graduate School.
sored by New York Upiversity; an adnlC!li'ved
his
engil)eering
from
Polytechnic
titute
of Buclwest
junqt prof-. for the Urban Teachers . thJ
and served for 1 years as a professor
CorPs Program at New York Univerllity; a COII8uitant to the New York
City Boeid of Education, and a visit.. ·ing lecturer at the University of OxRuckebstein was a National Science
The NatiOoa! Science Foundation .
Foundation senior foreign scientist at
ford. He is p""""'tly an educational
Clarksoq College of Technology.
will provide funds for Bicentennial
oonsultant to the Community Action .
I;isted ih the 1968 World Who's
Commemorative Projecta, ·related to
Program of the Office of Economic
Who in Sc~nce, he bas received aev- • science and technology. nieoe awards
Opportunity; a '!""8uiting .editbr to
era! -teaching and research honors a . are adminiatered by the NSF Ol6ce of
the.Qllartedy liook review joumal EdGovernment and Public Prosrama. unfrom the Rumanian Department of
ucGtioMl Studia; aDd a member of
Edueation.
der arrangements with the American
the editorial board of UrbalJ Educa•
·•
Revolution BicenteoniaJ. Commiaaioo.
tion, a quarterly journal devoted to
. Dr. Edson X. Albuqu-;,njue has been
Tlui awards genenluy do not exceed
reeeari:h and program planning for
~:11&lt;:tAng..~of the Qepart~ •• . ,$25,«¥JJ .&amp;1¥1 must•. be matched~
ci~ llflhoo!s ·that- is-edited:i&gt;er'!':-.. :·
~ ~
meht -of . "Pii'ai-riia£of.;gy; . Scl.iiol . -of
~ for-dOllar llflth crantee funda from 11011•
Medicine, effective immediately:
fedo:ral aouroes. :rt&gt;e total .amount
Dr. Albuquerque join~ the U/8
avadable under thja ~ 18$200,: • IabbltY tn 1!l6'7'lllf 8h' aSatstanb:;g,aich
000. · · ·: · ' -· - 1 : •
" ·
profeMOr of pharmacology and ' Bus- ·:: t.'~~'in9.11i•.kigd,atate,well Fellow. He was promoted to asor retiOOaflealferilhlp aDd ~vestment,
sistant professor in 1968; associate
and where appropriate, have a con~prof....aor with,. tenure ih 1Q!'9; and - .uing •\IJliiHI IUld lial!
the. celebiaprofessor ;;, i9'12: • · • • • ·' ·
lion year of 1976. Tbe objective of
He replaces Dr. Cedric Smith who
tile program is to develop projects
resigned as chaiiman to concentrate
designed to: ( 1) ~ the role of
on directing the new Reaearch Instiocience and tecbnoloiY ln. tile nation'.('
tute on Alcobolism, 1021 Main Street.
hiatory; (2) demonstrate the iDtpect
Dr. Smith will continue to· teecb at
of S!'ienoe and teciJnololy on our Uw.
the Medical Scliool as 'a prol_,r of
today; (3~ indicate the potential and
pharmacoiogy. . , - ·
'
pooialble Jimllatiaaa ol acieaoe jllld
•.
tecbnoloiY ia aoiYina the aocietal
. prpblema of today and the future Dr. Gilbert 0 . Bripl&lt; has been relocal, ft!lioaal al!d aatiaul; and (f) •
appointed acting cbairmaJi of the Jle..
edead the public "1!11 II•• d'n" ol the
partment ol Ph,yaial for a one-year
nature
ol ecleGdflc -..:b and ita
term, which begina September 1.
methodology.
In a letter to atudellta, faculty aDd
staff Qf the ~t, Elrec:uthe
~lianal inloaDaliaD Ia available
.Vioe President Albert Somit ~
from Mra. Sl!lrt.y D: Stout, 192 Hayea
Hall (ext. 4722).
.
his confidence in Dr. Brink's contin-

P~in

~u!:, ~v:tyor.~~a!'r~

...

"'·

4

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

NSF Has.Funds
For Bicentennial

•

af•

�4

THURSDAY-26

-·

MONDAY-30

.
Il:uta=.'r~ !:tti~-:/CO,.

~ (deSela, 1961): 7 1: 9 p.m., 140

~ &amp;hool of Sambo (1966), and Macu&gt;IGimc (ADclrade, 1969) , 7 1: 9 : 15 p.m.,
148 DiefODdorf.
UUM~·

·

,

Frieruh of Fidd1D'• Gr~~n. Norton
Terrace, 8 p.m.

TUESDAY--'31
FRIDAY-27
\

UYIIAY-.~•

Litertllun ill A/rietl TodJJy, Michael
Chukwadala ~author of Morl4liZ,:!~ ~= ~e, Culbuo and
~reel by lhe U/ B
of

g:&gt;---=

-·

THURSDAY-2

Tbe Sunuiler Film Jnotitute p-ta:

u::ro'i."~1J~!:~ ~ Fuld

COU~IAft AJSUi.::y MIITIHO.

Ten.tative,- lll9 c-by, 4-6 p.m.

IN1'IINATIOHAI. FOUC DANCING•

IDotruetioa in lhe buie otepo, Norton
t-wa area, 8-11 p.m.
UUAI .....

~~r:~~~=:
Cbarae.
•

cue for .m.-. Adaliuion

SA&gt;'ll\JRDAV-28~

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

TrtHU&gt;k M011 (Dizoo, 1972). ConferenOl TbNtre. NortaD, Check obowcue for
Admiooion dlarp.

SUNDAY-29 : .

fiLMS•

RIMS'

The .Summer Film Inotitute P""""'la:
Viva Cariri (Sarno, 1970) "RDd The
Murdcrtd HoUR jSaracooi, 19711, 7. a,·
9:"15 p.m., C6Jirerenoe nieat.ret NortOtL
' A ecOtone (Paoolini, 1961), 7 1: 9 p.m.,
140 Capen.
.
The Wov· G&lt;z&gt;ae•(Wa\kiDo, 196jij .,7 4,
9 p.m., 14'1 DieiODdorf.

. ..
&amp;u:k and FDrth (Snow, 1968-89), 8 1:
10 p.m., 147 Diefendorf.
.

·'

· *•

.

•

~lies~~~unr:,!tu~)':'"t'i"~

p.m., 1&lt;16 Di&lt;ifandort.

o!ir~~~ 1949): 7 ~ 9 ~· 147
SCIIIHINO/DISCUU-•

Wilk&gt;rd Van Dyu, director of film,

~~~~...:r~d,it,

tu:;jeoenle!!_ b~ ~ stlmuiitr ~ Inoti-

PSYCIIOOIAT'

A ~ ·and •~&gt;"akin~

e-rience.
p:m.
·
-~·
N::::~o:;..S:,S~.r!_ bluegrau sroap,
232 Norton; 7-"!0"

EXHIBITS .

MUSIC Of De AMUICAS CCIHCUT'

u.!'~ ~""~"'1~t!o-w::J

Juliuo Eastman, and performed by IU"'I
• artista and tbe Inner-City Ballet_ Co.,
Baird RA!cital Hall, 8 p.m.

by~tf'J= ~"'"u:,~w~~

cc.r IIEADUiiiE

and Wtlliam Grant Still, and Julius Eastman'• receDt composition. Wood _in Tinu-••.

WIDCLY COM-.ouE

Hli~::rm:.~~~~.;.~rt;

... 11.. to Pllbllcla an t.l!lnll ..,_
on ..
TD - . 1 ~ ...._
Haner C.I'IIII..W, - . 2228.

For_,_.• ....._...._ -t

faculty, otoll and ~ ·&amp;lllDIDi, $2; litudenta, $1. Co-oponoorecl by tfoe U/B
Department ot Muoic and tile Center of
tbe Creative and Performinc Art.:

m-_

TuffionlYawe~--------~·~
' --------~­
~;.,- have~-:...,; dim.
Cultly in getting

pari.time jobs, ·aud.

this . will be taken .into 00118ideratiol1,

Mn1. Prw.thaiil. •

'

..

.

.The tuition waiver crisis lirolre Mdy
this year·wtaen a State lePdatm CXIIDplained tba!.S&amp;ate Uniwnity- ,.m.
viDa milliiDI ill tultiaa u.c.c- for
foreip otudoDIL 0.... SUNY-Idlers· point to tbe -hl!elune.j; of tbe
tuition lllli8taDce awards aDd liberalizallan of lbe policy toward e r HI c
t.cben - lbe ~ that folqlll •
re-lhiDIIIDt "' SUNY'• policy tllwald
lbe walvini "' tuillan.

~

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383080">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1973-07-26</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1383086">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>n08</text>
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                <text>4 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

NUMBER"7-JULY 19, 1973

·_UGL to·Open
Qn or,4bobt

·Laoo' .Day
The loniL.:. awaited Undelpaduoa
Library l UGL) will open in DieloDdorf Annex on or about Labar
a~ing to UGL DiNctor Y S7.ekely. "Unless there is aome 11111ao1.
seen-snag, the opening al Cbe · ~
will be synchronized with the belinning of the fall semester," be said.
Included in the collec:tioll al the
new facility are 3,263 sift ~
doll!'ted since a request for Clllliribations to the UGL collection was -.ed
Mareh 1. .
''The ,&lt;esponae has been """""""*,
and the books are still coming .
the director said, noting that 1,000
issues· of periodicals have alao been.
added to the collection as a result ·or
the drive.
Seventy-two donors, the vast majority of them U/ B faculty, contributed a total o! some 6,500 ·volw..., of
which about half were retained. Tbe
others have beeh turned over to the
Libraries' Gifts and Exchange pepartment for posaib1e'other use.
More than a thoUSand paperbacks,
exclu~ from the catalogued colleo&gt;tion because they were damaged .,..
unbindable, will 'make.up a paperback
browKing collection in the new facility,
available on a b&lt;ing one/take one
basis, Szekely said He noted that
gifts of paperbacks are welcome by the
UGL. "As long as paperbecb ant
unmar&lt;ed and bindable, they 'lrill be
.conside&lt;ed for the permanent collection. • .
"Some departments, notably l!:DIIlab
and Psychology, organized intemal
book drives lor the UGL with impressive &lt;esults," said Szekely.
As it is obapin1 up, the VGL oolleetion ;, relatiwlly ..,_. ill Ill!'~
ities and aocial aciences and aofiil in
mathematics, thanks largely to a aingle
donor. Weaknesses remain in Eurovert, he began foraging. &lt;Two other
pean history &lt;American history is betgood basic books on the subject, be
ter represented ) and in literary critiKBys, are The Weed Cookbook aod
cism, although there ·Is a ~ collecThe Wild Food Trail Guide. )
tion of standaro AmeriCap and Bnalish
The advantages of finding at least
literary works. Tbe collection contains
relatively little in the physical li&lt;:iea.some of one's food are many, Wagener
and technology, but these are not the
!"'YB- Getting closer to the land is an
principal· emphases of the undergraduimportant one. Another is that wjld
food is often less polluted food, free
ate collection, Szekely said
.
Tbe gifts swell the total collection
of commereial fertiliT.ers and pesticides.
"The rule-of-thumb is to go at least
to some 15,000 volumes, which are
now being catalogued. IncJuded in this
150 feet away from the road to avoid
lead pollution," he adds.
l..
·
number are new ~ and the
volumes fo.merly oo.-1 ui the Har"Most domesticated vegetableil are
riman Reserve ~ Btill unraised for swi and mildness of flavor,
tapped is a card · ftle listing multip~
with no .concem for vitainin or mineral
copies
of works in Lockwood, aome of
content. Most wild foods have more
which may be made available to UGL.
vitamins and minerals and more flavor,
"By the time we open, we bope to
which is almost always an advantage.
(Conlu.-d on PDI• 2, col. 4)
So wild loods make a tremendous &amp;up-

nv;

m.•

for example. But the foragers did discover guavas and mangoes in numbers.
"Anii;" Wagener recalls happily, "at
one i&gt;oint we stumbled upon an aban"When we dill a. succulent clam or
doned graj&gt;efruit grove.
galher a tt!lllkr wild vegetable IDe are
"The course will involve tent-camp-not beinf clever ruidera, but are mereing," Wagener explains, ' 4 but it won't
ly claiming an ancient inheritance."
-: Bwii. OI~, St~ tt. B,_.£.,., Sc.JJop
be terribly strenuous. It won't be a
heavy backpacking experience." En·
rollees will need a sleeping hag. "We'll
~'or aevi&gt;ral yeam now Alan Wagener
try to get together on tents," he adds.
and his students have stalked the wild
-ragus and the other free food that . He!ptsned A-reness 5ou&amp;1rt
grows wild in virtually any spot that
· With his colleagues in Rachel Carhasn't been covered with cement. ·But
ROn College, Wagener is concerned
thiil MUJDmer they are setting out in a
with Ktimulating people to a heightnew, more ancient direction and gaing
ened awarenesS of their environment
to the lll!llllhore. Tbere, to paraphrase
and in exploring ways to live in balmaster forager Euell _..Gibbons once
ance with the natural world. A native
again, they'll stsJk .the common periof auJfalo, he came upon Gibbons'
winkle, the pollack aDd the rock crab, . classic. Stalking the W i1d AsparagU$
just 88 native AmerieaDs did centuries
one gloomy .winte•;· tha~ sp&lt;ini, a o&lt;lljago. This weeldong aperienee of Jiving off the - 'lrill cllmu Wqener's
cciurse in "'rjpmic SuMval," a DODcredit 00111111! being offered during the
last three weeks in August tbrougb
EDITOR'S NOTE: ThU i.J the secRachel Caraon College.
ond of two articles tkaling with a
Wasener prepared for the upcoming
druft at&gt;llkmic plan beinf circulaled
PIOIIJ8Dl during a recent trip to Florby the Acatkmic A/fain COIUII:il for
ida, where be and oompanicms foraaed
COIISideration by variDtu .,..,._ conalang the East Coast "-cbi!s and
.titumcia. Today's artiL:le outlines
doom the Keys. TheY speared barratile COIUII:il'a augges~ aUocation plan
cuda and aboYe!bead shark, netted
'"' future growth. .
By
·PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
Reporter SUIII

...

=-·:: : :.~~
aDiabt

the inlaDd waterways
be polluted, the f0ftll8b bmd autJicient food
the lleaeMa. Tbey supplemented
their protaln-riCb r-t fJOm the with the -.rild edible plants that gnM
the shore, including roclret·
1a t&amp;JIIY peen thai Qibbona claims
tnmlforms a lllUDdaDe UWIIWillllt 011
tioasted rye into liD~ delilbtl.
8IIJIIpbhe (...,a pJaled) 111111 blite
(ebop, cook 111111 mix with a CIUl of
enun of IDUibroom or celery ooup,
Gillbau edvl8os) .
bmd the wild -.egeblble
.uu.tiaD - -....,a dn the 8outlan
..... fila fllltber ~: . . . . DOt mac:b 1D the..._.t/1 .-...-~,

w.....,

-

.

An . allocatioa plan, the" Academic
Allain Council &lt;AAC) planning document e.:plains, "is intended to be the
. means by which the academiC plan is
carried oUt.
"But, there are aiao ....., coilslniints:"
.
• . 8tnmgth of llllisting .propaz6s
muat be -intsined - . - r y
.cbmaea of dlNctiaa ar 8IIIIIM* ....,..: ·
eur, IIDd .
'- ·
... ·
• &lt;2laDgea aboukJ caly 88
~ aa .the Uai-.ity can ..wn .

.....

~

,'Jbe plaD ~ three levels al

aDo&lt;atiao pdoritlea. 'lbe fint niCDI-

m- ailltilll~ ..,._ ~ ,_ ...

(Cont~u ed

on page 2. rol. 2)

development and their "relevance to
the traditional miasion of the University." Secood order priorities "can
provide dillerential support to pJOgrams which ab:eady have higb student enrollment and relatively · eaB¥
placement of graduates." Tbe thinl
omer provides - t for the
non-traditional, soci8ny -relevant programs Wbic:h form the major-mendation of the academic plaD clileament.
.
.
Tbe AAC's llilgpstiobs for fiNt..
order priorities, based em pen:. . . .
of iDdiYidual PftltiNJD · quality piG'
vided by c:hairmeu, provoel8, scbool
deena, repulatioaal ~ autale
-Gpert evaluatiao plnild throucb the
Gnduate, Sdlaof .,..._ al - - tioM, 111111 lllatilltical ...... ... pre.
-*'4 ,in 11.- Faculty- by- Faculty

....-riea:
I.

=-~~:: ~tedule· mt Jba¥hga.

ll*ltal :o.ip, 'l'Mata 111111 n.-.
. MUiic, Art. Hiataw
hilb liD-

-.we

�..... .._ur-

...

GSA RresidenfSiated to Testify
.Before Senate l~bOr Gominittee
Collep E ~·. Mries lecluro8
in' CIIIIDIICiioo with its "P818P1Ydlol.,.;e.J I"Jopam •ol. s t u d y and ReSMidl~ with an appearana•by Swami
Rania ol. the 1iimalayas in the NortDn
C'.Gaf.......ce '"-lni at 7:30 p.m. ·1.,.
nllht ('11luNdlly,. July 19) . .
.
Swluiii''Rama, wboae claimil for his
explolta extend . to the ability to
"develop a tumor on DIY arm in t,..;
- - - and . diMolYe- it in one-one
lumdndtb ol. a .......t" and the faci.
lil;y to llllip the llaiW ol. blood fnim his
t..rt tor 17.....,.. while in·a medita•
tM elate, indlealaa -that his ' purpose
"'a to help tbe mallerialiatic, ....-ntly
~ people ol. the ......tern world
t be i r potential and di.velop it

'at

-

ttuoUab Yop."

-

.

His llpPI!IIriiDCe topigbt i&amp; co-spon""""' by the Aum Center or Ellicottville a lid the campus Shanti-Yoga
Club which is a1so co-sponsor or the
Pn&gt;jected JllllllPBYchological I e c t u r e
aeries.
.
_'lbe College, E handout for the
Swamrs a - notes that he is a
47-year-old · ""t'etarian. hom of Brahmin parents in the Indian state of
Uttar Pradesh. Qrphaned at three
ID&lt;IIJths, be ....... the background sheet
says, "adopted by a Yogi and ssint of
Bengal wbo lived in the Rimslayas."
Swami Rania recalls "being able . to
read Sanskrit'' when he was "between
two' and three years old,'' without the
aid or instruction, and eXJilainS that
he had lesmed this "in a previous
life." 'lbe biographicsl d a t a notes
further that be attended school and
· oolleii! in India "as a fl!"W•foi;D,lBij,ty.~
before studying and earning d"'ireeS
in ......tern psychology and philosophy
iDE~
·

bloclcing a library of infinite -knowledge hidden beneath il We have not
learned the me_tho d of unlearning.
Much of the so-cslled learning process
we go through is mere iMitation. We
imitate each other and think we are ·
learning. We have not let our intuitive knowledge come forward and he
useful."
·

-~ GSA Prem~nt AI Miller is~ '
to g0 before the Senate Committee on
l;a!,Or and Public Welfare next Wed- •.
nesday to testify in favor of a bill lh:at
woulil provide some $207,947.,000 for
fellpwships an4 training grants in·-J&gt;io-·
IJI!!!!icsl and behavio~ research for
the fiScs1 year ending June 30, 197!1_,
Bill S-2\)7, generally' known· as the .
national research service award act,
was proposed by Senators' Kennedy
lind "Javits, among others. It repre&amp;ents a major Congressional effort to
counter recent sweeping cutbacks in
federal support for basic research. The
Natio"''l Student Lobby arranged the
Congressional appearance for Miller,
Who bas been active in a national
graduate student csmpaign to win
back government funding and also to
establish alternative sources of funds
for graduate students.
... ,
·.
· ,.
.
Congress .has been gympathetic all
along to the need to restore funds,''
M_iller said\ explaining tha~ Nixon's
Bct"!'ce adviSO!" have also argued
agamst trunnu_ng the bud~et at ~
expense of basic ~- 'The chi~f
o!'ponent of fundmg for research IS
the ~ederai .Office of M~e"!""t and
Busmess, the OMB, wh1ch claims that
large-scale funding of basic research

U/8 F o r a g e r s - - - - - - - - - -. e

~f;:; ';;,"':.,~:; ;;;:~d

forag- .
ing is a good wsy to· augment your
fond budgel For example, in season,
I never buy vegetables for salads but
""'!, only the g~ and other vegetab es-1 6nd .growing wi(d;;!. J!e S!!Y"- · .·' ,

:~ ~~'!'!u~~" tte,.::!~~e

is

fls~lly ui.aound:"

•

Miller was apParent I y underwhelmed by, HEW'~ recent announce!"""t ~~g con.t inuance ?f existmg training grants and revealing that
$30 milliJID had '-'i found for new fellowshipB. ""J3i~ deal," M i ~ I!' r c:ommen ted. . W&lt;; ve lost $60 milbon smce
1972. ~ IS a !Pisture ol. appease.
ment This year- HEW restores $30
million - half the 1111101111t lost. Next
year' it reston!S $l6 .lllilli~ and so on
unl:il soon no funiling for new proposals is fortl'!)oming:' "
Miller explained that in i972•HEW
budgeted sOme $189 million for training grants and f~ ln 1973
$192 million wall budget8d, but only
-$142 million was actUally spent Using
the previous y e .. r. 8 ~lienee as
partial juatificstiol\, "lhe- bUdl'!t .for
1974 was reduced· 1o $125 .million,
which lias ~ ' - a"'I!;MMited by
the $30 million allol:ation for new fellowshipB. · · .
·• .
Miller he6eYea the ;OMB argument
is sJ:&gt;ort-fiigbted lind that fed e r a 1
money spent ioday' for, reaeilrch will
e~entually save the 'country· many
more mime- tomonow in pub 1 i c
ftinds spent pn i-looJth care and soCietal protilems ••
·
·

~eari~g RepOrt

Q~~ .~YJ~~ ~r~~t

1

JobFisb are also plentifUl, ·esp;.,;ajJj
· The / SUlfl'..Qnj~. ·.:lterotlafirig
when one· steers clear or the most popCOmmittee presented its iise :for -a
ulat gamefisb. "If you ask a farmer if
'saiari increase to a select six-member
· you can fish his pond for bl\legills .inLegislative Committee · Friday, July
stead of !:N1ss, he'll ~lv [lilY Y"ll
6, in Albany. 'llbe Legislative Com"Supennarket of the Sw•mps'
Mast ·pe(iple b'ave SuC!i&lt;D8'rrowJ:Y-·a..:'
~ff-~to'~'&lt;'~_:,~~~&lt;1-flli,.~IJI-_
fined tastes. There is Jots of Cheap,
........
~...... w~
be
A good place to ·begin foraging is
· Tlie..aiiUM&gt;r c&gt;t'·n;Or.,'-·th&amp;rl'J:!f iJo:.'kii'
right' in• your own backyard, ·or ·in--a·
good fond toile; had, if you ~- w!Jiing • ~ fore
_. f!le: sP,el;Ja! ~!"'
. .~
_ W. ~ -~M.Q'
23
and cUrrently aaid to he develpplng an
to' go· just outside the boundaries ·or"
··
nearby vacant lot, acconling to Wageencyclopedia 01 Yoga, the Swami csme
what most people define as1&gt;alatable."
AttorneyJerome Sturm represented
ner, who ticks off an impressive list
to the U.S. · four years ago "to work
of natural fonds to he lound in the
Some Plants Are Poisonous
SUNY/,United, the bargaining agent
for 14,000 academic and professions!
with scientists and doctors to esf.ab..
· Buffalo area One of the most availemploy_ees of SUNY. On hehalf of the
Although nature proVides a . feast of
lish the genuineness of the power ·of
able and most versatile edible plants
greens, grains, Seeds, fruits and other
Negotiating Committee, he csl1ed for
. the milid and the soul." He claims to
is -the common cattail. 'Sometimes
the "reluctant acceptance" of the Facthe the first Yogi to subject himself to
called "tlie supennarl&lt;et of the · fondstulfs, some wild plants are pilisonous.
:'To
avoid
poisoning
I
follow
Findets
Report (5 per cent across-tbemodem scientific inethods of testing
swamps," the cattail provideS edible
Euell Gibbons' mu;im: for eating purboard plus 1.6 per cent merit). ''With
; his stste ol. c:onaciOusnes&amp; while at the - sterns c
as C'.&lt;lSBBck iosparagus) ,
poses,
pick
only
~
plants
wboee
·
all
its
1anlts,"
he said, the report is a
highest leVel ol. D.editstion. At . the
green spikes that can he cooked, butidentity you're. positive of. If you're
"peaceful method to end the current
Menninger' Clinic in Tppeka, KanBBS,
tered and eaten like com, pollen fgood
picking lamb's-quarters and one of the
. dispute."
.he oavs. he "astonished" medical remiJ&lt;ed with wheat flour and made into
plants ·looks different, unfamiliar
Sturm tressed h
•
searchers by:
pancUe&amp;J, and edible roots (in the
don' t pick it and don't eat it
s
t at ' we do not
' • Stppping the blond 6ow to his
spring, eat the potatolike bulbs; later
agree with merit increases being part
foraging for mushrooms, for example,
of the basic settlement _ ·it is divi' heart - "1 cjemonstrioted that I ·can
in the year dry the roots ani! grind
_die legally and medically, then rome
sive. But; we will accept the _package
take ao~y with y_ou who knows
into flour).
·
:
•
' back. I stopped my heart, my brain,
which varieties are edible, and have
in order to fll!ttle the dispute."
The beautiful dsy lily is another
, my_blood cell8 and everything elae in ·• remarkably versatile source of wild
,him &amp;bow Y'!U which are safe to eat"
He W'JI'!(I the Committee to accept
my body, then mide them' function
food. The tubers are tasty . natural '
Like Gibbons, Wagener thinks wild
the Fact-Findem Report in view or the
....,aln."
- '
"munchies." In spring the crisp stems
fond sbbuld provide more than sus- .
riae in the cost of living ol. 6.5 ·per cent
• Using his mental power to move
can he eaten like celery. The buds are
tenance; it should also taste good. A
during the twelve-month period ending
a metal object by .more than 30
good steamed, and the . flowers are
May 31.
good cook as well as a natural one; be
'c~egrea
d"!DD8.tic and edible whether served
occasiolially esters complete wild fond
'lbe 06ic8 ol Employee Relations
• Prnducing delta waves -long re~in salads' or batter-djP.ped •apd
banquets with menus featuring sorrel
~OER) repreoieuted t h e .Executive
~
the ~ of deep· sleep :...
soup, Woodchuck in aour . cream wi&amp;Branch ol. JII)Venlllalt It IJIIlintained
A wide range of salad/ cooking gieens
feria bl061l0m fritters,' Japahese 'knotits. Original position (3.6 per cent
• PerfOrming the tumor ll'icL
grow wild lOcally; yellow dock, sheep
~ p~e and ;a/"'"~ of other untamed
acroll&amp;'tbe-hoard plus 1.6 per c e n t
~ to Ill!' Swami, "if we live
l"?rrel, dandelions and chickory cboth
debcsoes.
. , .,
, .:
·merit), arguing that-the high level of
with only the "-n part of ouraelves,
.Of which can alsO he prepared ·as cofIn addition to the seacoast foraging
average SUNY. aaJaries wammted an
· with the CODIICious mind,_ then we
fee substitutes) , violet leaves, lamb's110
experience, enrollees in "Organic s'urincrease
larger.don't train the totality ol. the mine!quarters &lt;look in vscant Jots and
vival"
will
meet
with
1ocs1
-organic
. The ClDII8Cioas mind is just hUng on •
IUOI,ind telepllone pales, Waiener ad-u.., ...,_ ol. the thinking I eve I , ~ vises) , ~ aramantb, chickweed,
~rs and, while on the road, will
· (Contillllild./r»"' - 1 . cOL 4)
VlSlt several more commercially-'Orient, have 6-,000 _ 7,000 w1umes on the
his own fa~rite wild
ed organjc farms . . Enrolhrient will be
shelves," the director aaicl
limited
to
10
or·
15.
Credit
can
be
UGL I18CI!Mld $86,000 from the Liu-....~n-.. ...~ '-ll
I' 'I ._:
arranged 'lbose intereSted ahould
.braries for the Cllm!llt 6acal · year for
. "Cities are su'l!fisingly goocf places ,
"t·""-•-rr-· ... .
·acquisitioba, In~ new hooks,
to forace;" Wapner says. He also . · contact Racbei .Carson College' 881'
2135) and attend an initial meeting
, the maio!r _...__,_ has lllioD ori bUildreo
e•ls prdens- as a likely plaCe
August 1 at RacbeJ CarsOn, 180 Win¥&gt;g a ~-&lt;lOUectian -tial to
to rmd .......,.. wild peens. "You can·,
~· at 7 p.m. There is a $40 fee.
.the new 'facility, 8oJelrely l8id. Funds
gather mulbeniall· by the buabeJfu1 in
r.:f'.JGI«.
.. , .....
_
_
....,_
llelawJue
PuS.
-Muu.m.
.
____
. ..
D--..L-_--...:· h-lri., .
have also heen.llllid 1o maJoe -.omfpopUlar ~ tbe Middle East ~~
~"'-"'1 '-T'-'C -cal ~- J;lUJ'CI-."' smpiUs books
omamantaliiiOUDtsin aab that is found
.,_,~---­
The Cleveland Quartet ..;II perform
UDderwrite
~-.;locllJy ... edible Ollllll8 berrij!a. Soot~ lull cycle or Beethoven string
8zeloely iDdii:ated· 1bat, barring
liab ~ -maloe them into a JIIU!Dil·
qilartets
for
the
first
time
during-1973funding
Jli'Ob1-.
it
will111ill
take two
l8dlt; tbi7 make a delicioua· sauce for
74, the Music ~t announced
to three
poaltlj.•
•
. - this w.lt. During the last two aea' graduate~
build a alllaalliDCies-·
•W.,._ .._,t ~eating
the resident quartet was one ol.
"And it _... tab a Jot .jaaallr
wild_.. w ~ becal.e they are 80D8,
three performing the aix, pnllriiDa
without the lli(l8,. Slilllrel)' ..... '-n&gt;ey .., .......... ·to tbe «ll))ogy, but be
pgial81oCICI*.r-,
Proteilia:
Ev!m
_._19-.1
..._ ... ...,....,....__not
~ . . . . . illbbits, and ....
~.2.~ ~-thol.
tic;llela . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . - - - .......... ..... ~ Imtilt. (Jii,i).'-i'"W ... --., are Ailed
ber 4. • . , _
. . : ~~ a. colleclion

1eaaers

known

W.....:

.:::'...!a.

UGL---,--_.;,.......:;__

__
---.--- -

:!:.'_'l'Biat!e.

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

~

_,_

-.....rut

::.,f~:"'24.~,.S:.~,

('

=Jo

-·•...-Wol-.y.
.

I,

�3

july 19, .fP'/3

AACA~ation~n~~~--~~----------------~--~--------------(Conlin"ed fro,. pGI/e I. eoL I)

II. Tile

c-..

Iod in its development. Geology needs
major ·strengthening.
Physics and Statistics

Matheniatics,
are esaentially
on bold, 81111 in tbe csae of. Statistics,
tbe effect of tile'new orjanization·pattem will Deed to lie studied.

,

The CoiJeles are not a section of
DUS. Since tbe approval of tbe revised Collegiate Prospectus in .April
1972, tbe Colleges are an Altemat~
Fa&lt;:ulty with a ''full-time administrative ollicer at tlx! Prol&gt;ostal 'tevel, reporting to tbe VPAA." ·
A new Dindor for tbe Colleges is
a current and urgent priority. On a
collegiate-wide basis tbe Coli- bave
high priority for maintenance at a
viable level as liD alternative learning
system. The pniaent level of support
is approadJMtely one-fourth tbat of
comparable lnldilional academic programs ud abou1d be doubled in Order .
to maintain IIJl ...vironment of about
the same size but with a n!II80Dilble
. chance of 8IICCII8B.
Until onaoiDB eztemal review and
evaluation .ai8 completed in 1974, it is
premalure to establish internal priorities between unita for 111li!nsthehlns.
maintaining, .-:uing, or pbasing out.
However, tbe_ evaluation JII'OC*8 luis
already aubatiiJltiafed that DOD-traditional Collep procrams of d!m&gt;onstrable qtiality. ud having strong stu~t
demand ·do aiat within tbe syste=111. ~·nd,\ppHedArguments aupport all departments.
Priorities, for maintenance of cjuality,
streogtbening and ~. point to
Chemical, Civil, and Industrial Engineering. Development,. for inteidisciIinary activities and basic cWiaen--

~- )s ·-recX.mmeixteci ~ ror

u.e

....a.

"Etei:triC&amp;l

and Mechanical; maintenance for Engineering Science. The School of
Information and Library Studies bas
its own plan, n!CDDIIDeDding modest
development· to fill ' gBpe!' Tllei&lt;!: 'Is'
significant activity in interdisciplinary
groupings. Tbe Center for ~.
Metalll!lt!Y and tbe Center for Watet
R8ources have high priority for development. New efforts in Transportation, Socio-Engineering, Bio-Engineering are expected to b e c o in e
relatively more important in tbe fu- ·
ture.
IV• . . . . - . . -

.

Chairmen for Social, Pbiloaophical

and Hist.orical Foundations and In-

struction are current priorities, whi,h
should aoon be met. Office of Teacher
Education and Department of lnstruo-:
tioo bave a high priority for supp&lt;irt
to enable tbem to perform effectively
tbe job&amp; tbey already do. Areas ( rather lball ~IIi) with priority for
support are ~ult education, reading
and. Iancuase arts (liJiguistic orientation). Counselor Edueation,_aa one of
tbe sflul&amp;l!st departments in the Faculty, bas priority for support to meet
student demands oo its reiiOUft)I!S.
The Bureau of Institutional Devel·- t , eervina tbe broadeoo education
commllllity, .-Is aupport. A new
ventwe woulil be a Teaching and
Learning CE!nter as a model for, and
our participation in, tbe Statewide
Center of the same name. The Center
would have a focusing and hopefully
8)'DBI'IIstic ellect ba local activities.
v. LawEllpmaion ol tba J D. procram &lt;to
. , . atudoat qemand, mcietal Deeds,
and to popalate tba new building) bas
high priority. The I.-I Studies program for unclarpaduates 81111 graduate
outalde tba Faculty are important 1o tba developnalt of tbe ~
ulty. ~ . _ In .moe to tbe JlrilleMian ant apectacl to iQcraue ill
importmace. .Joint ...,._ piOitaiiiB.
lor eumple La., 81111 8oc:ioloi:Y, are
beinl developed. Suppaot far 'this de-

J.....,._

P.......,.

~ illcludem

Job Openings

I

or--·
&lt;-&gt;.

facult;y 18 ,YIIU far - '
yean, a few- ~tl"" 1m.
81111 atudeat IIJIIIIIId (about 10 ll'l"Ba)
VI.Nabnl..._
___ _
....
tba p'l'lod.

a.

whim have fallen into disarray. ReDena.try 81111 Law, "with Pbumacy a
little behind"). Social Policy 81111
IIOilnlea; i:equired to impnive on-going
activities in DUS include: (1) addiCommunity Se,:vicxs.
tional staff and equipment to improve
- ~ in ibis ""teaorY might alao
the advisement system, as deacribed in .
be olfen!d 1D IJlOII8ID(which need to,
otber.,position papers; (2) additional
and are williq to, JII'OVide for IICtian
·or aemce .,._ tba AAC plan proresourCe&amp; to&amp;upport tbe Special Major
and Bulletin Boanl Couraes: funds for
- ' ........_ Cil!lid bele are: foreign
VII. ol ...napment
.
. To jmprove ita undergraduate provisual aids, instrument rentals, special
~ (if bn.lomed to illchide
_grams, the Scbool will fol:us on more ' libi'8IY material; !3) u ollioe in DUB
sipllfiamt elemoat:s ol law, ...,._
cobesive and creative concentration
which would design, supervise, 81111
practice 81111 ........-n ol tba IIPIIIOareas for non..aa:ountin1 majors, . ra~aluate educational innovatiaow withpriate country);..,..,.. (If~
tionalizing electives, and raising
in the undergraduate curriculum. The
to include applied wmlt In aataiala
quality and elllcia)cy of its academic
kinds of educational innoVations con!~Cierlee, . pollutiaD CXIIltnll and a-uoperation. Maintenance of tbe standmental lnooitorinc. - . : y .,..,_._
templated include experimental cowsaula and capacity or· tbe professional
es within the I.OOIIeges and various
·sion); ewlied -~; ~­
accounting progra~ registered by the
alternative educational systems; (4)
lion for -year collele -.bins
State, and promoting the recenUy inthe ·establishment of one or more
( ID88tl;r's or doc:bnl pr-oiram); troduced 3-2 program for selected
model &lt;'.oil- at tbe Jreahman or
nins muter's leWII edncation in fields
MBA students have ' high priorities.
sophomore years, providing a common
when! student demallll can be obown,
At tbe master's degree level, developcurriculum oft'ered 6y a limited, interespecially~ 81111 ~
~t of tbe day MBA program will
disciplinary faculty group; (5) faculty
sujlportina ~ COIIIIIIII1'08 81111
foCus on the design of elective pack,
lines for asSignment to young propublic service; pbiJoaopby propamoi
ages for, professionals (e.g., financial
grams or to. areas with temporary or
in applied locic and/or applied ~
planning and control, tbe management
Npecial needs or to stimulate program
Third PrloriiiM
..
·Third-order priority would be
of h~ resources, M.BA-CPA, quaninnovation and reward SIIOOe88ful proed to two ca._..,. ol _......, (lj
titative-systems analysis), on selective
gralllf!.
expansion of interdisciplinary degree
new alignments ol intellectual thrusts
X. Continulna Educ:ation
•
programs (e.g., the present JD-MBA
with "some promiae iil Providilll difIn addition to a wide spectrum of
and Pharmacy-MBA, Industrial Engiferent insights into culture, human beongoing activities in courses (credit
neering;MBA, Civil Engineering-MBA
havior oe human activities, and .(2)
and credit free), individual programs
and Geography-MBA), on tbe conaolinew
8880Ciations llf' 'diaciplines formed
and extension programs, DCE will dedation and improvement of tbe core
to study applied problems ol - velop the undergraduate degree proni7.ed
sodetal interest."
progi-am, and on new ways of integram ·!assuming final State Education
Examples provided include interacgrating theory and application, while
Department approval) it has launched.
tive ciUAters among Architecture, Mandtal"ins upon resources and problems
New support is sought .for a Study
agement, Social ~ and Engiin tbe mimagement community. Im~tar for Adult Higher Education,
proving the quality of the part-time
neering; cultural activities foaMed in
· both to provide the opportunity for
evening MBA for experienced pro'Theatre. Music and Art 81111 OOilDeCied
lifelong learning and for research in
with local" public cultural activities;
fessionals will be given increased priadult higher education. Master's level
Comparative U.teratwe; complex. syaority. An· immediate priority is the
education in several modes is proposed
l&lt;!rM design and modeling; environ-initiation of a Master of Professional
as a long range goal.
mental studies (involving EngineerStudieS-Public Affairs Management,
XI. Graduate Division
ing, law, Natural ~ and Mathconsisting of instruction in disciplines
The fllSt priority by a long margin
of management analysis, management
ematics. Health Sciencea.. Manqeis to develop a maior and continuing
ment',--iini:I·Soi:lal ~Y; the appli:
of publiC" sector operatioll§, public
basis' for ' atlecjilate :·gT&amp;diuite"· stUdent'
P&lt;!licy . envitOrlrnent, ·and ·'flinclioniifg·
cation of mathematics to bioloPcsl
support. Assistance to and coordinaand GDCial aciences problems; bealth
oipublic systems; specialization tracks
tion of inter- or multi-disciplinary
C8l1l dcel4very (involving ManaJI!IIIIIIll,
~;im:'~~
,P~J!
..
I\I,!li
..
~~.%~!!f!~"
mode&amp;"
of
'graduaui
education
will'
&amp;.·
E~ and Health &amp;:ia&gt;aas);
reso~ managemen '-Pys_..,... ~
coine im incniasingly important activiproblems ol aging (Health Sclenoes,
analysis, and regional development
ty of this division. Recruibnent of
Social Sciences, Natural Sciences);
management; and internship in a pubgrsd~te students, with special attenhuman learning !Education and Social
lic eector· institution in the region. . A
tion to the recruibnent of students
Sciences l ; urban studies ( Architeccomplementary p.riority is the introwith
a
history
of
educational
disadture, Social Sciences, Health Scien&lt;es,
duction of a professi.onal option in
vantage, should be organized and co· Education and Management); eoergy
health Clll'!' systems and management.
ordinated here.
·
producti,.f deliwiy (~ 81111
Estsblisbment of the Center for Policy
Natural Sciences).
Studies as an interdisciplinary endeaSecond Order Priorities
vor within · the School will reinforce
To respond to current demand for
"There· are stroos iDdicaiJons that
many faculty and atudomts em campus
graduates, the AAC proposal suggests
links with other University areas interested in the formulation, implemen- ·
second order priorities for: Psychology
would welcome thea new directions
tation, and impact of public policy.
!especially c!inical, behavioral, develif incremental support available,"
At tbe PhD. level, immediate atten- ·- - opmental-), Health 'Related Profesthe plan ~ coocludea.- -·
"Perhaps
two
per
cent
o(\ tbe retion will be given t6 improving acssions. Speech (pathology and al!dioloSDUras of Aaldemic A&amp;inl ought to
demic procedures to utilize the recosgy ), Geography, Nursing, Economics,
nized research' strengths of the faculty
CoWl&amp;elor Education, Management
be reserved. tba fimt ,YIIU tba opporin producing doctoral graduates.
! accounting, health .,...., management,
tunities .... 8IIIIIIIIIID8II 81111 iDCftlll8ed
VIII. Social Sciences and Admlnlotration
part-time and contiquing prof,ealiooal
as demand cr-. 'l'be , _ r y mooPsychology, Socio1ogy and Anlhroeducation) , Statistics, Ardliteclw\',
itorin&amp; ol educatiooal procrams
pology bave a priority for support to
the "learned professions" ( Medicin8,
will prevent any runaway~"
improve teaching loads. Economics, a
high -demand 11rogram of good quality,
requires . .;:eplacemenla to • maintain
strength. Geography is developing W..U
81111 demand seems good. Lit\guistics
The Peraonnel Ollire indicates that tbe ,lolloorinl facalt,y aDd DODis a quality program needing modest
teaching professional stall positJons are open at State Univmaity at
faculty increa8es. Political-acience reButralo:
quires replacements. Pbiloaophy is em
bold, with History, where demand for
.
g r a d u a t ·e s is small. 'Sociology is
Assistant Librarian, Mruic Library.
planned for modest growth, eopecially
Associate
Prof_,r,
S~h c~
.,;,. interest in legal, medical and urban.
Admissions Ojlicer/Lecturer in Law, School of ' -·
problems develops_ Speech CominuniPlacement Ollicer/Lecturer in Law, School of
catioo is in process ol cbanae: aa it
Postdoct.oral Research ~te, Oral BiDIDcY.
stands, it must reduce its IDad (it Ia
popular with master's students, who
get placed) or ilicreaae ita faculty.
Bladt Studies is reorganizing and will
need - . director. SOcial Policy ..,.t
Community Services is OOIIIIOlidating,
reviewing aQlieuiWQ. No immediate
illcrementa ... _planDed dDtins. tbe review. The Social Sc:leDca
~ Inatitute coo~ aa a
majOr support for I'I!III!Bidl ill tbe ~
ulty 81111 .-vice to tbe Uni¥11111ity.
(l'lldlpll! evaluation and a critical per-

search Center for Studies in American
Cultwe (nascent), and Medieval
S.t udies (approved in principle).

. BiakV
a hilb priority far auppott toJDB~&amp; teMbial ~ Cbemillr)' In ....... quelil;y- fill PJII,
Compaw ...... to. ~ to the_

,_.,

u..

IX.U._,.,.__

Prioritis ant to~ . . . ........
ptOIJiem. ol qualitr _aontrol nl8ed "'
'tl!a. Middle 8tatea aad ......... to
.,_.. 81111 atreunline- olferiNa,
t.bMudY tba hed&gt;elor'a depee, In IJD.
JIIO"" UllderplodUate advlsilll. to •atudy
distribuliaD ~ts, and to •

.

"!"~~~.~~ - .

�July 1!1,1913

4

PBKRevises
Eligibllty:Rul~·
•............,._..pede
point-.. . . . the
criterion for

I week1J1 eommualqu

OmiamaC118pWofPhlBela:tt._ -

OCipen.. ......

...........
A.ccardiDt

to

CIIJI8ct ...... CMI8NII.

,

In the oulljlct

I'SYCIIOMATI

111-22a ............

~J:::.!:'~-~~

FILMS•

pede

lmmunolot!Y.

·

.

'lbe third such 8I!J8IIioD (the first was
held in July, 1969), it is supported in
part by a World Health Orpnizatinn
pant and is 8pOII80I'8d by 'lbe Center
for limmmolosY and the Woiid Health
Orpnizat:ion RePonai Reference Labonltory for tlie 8emiOKY of Autoim-

-m--.

.

For the 32 particip8Dis wbo """"
hom beads of department&amp; to postdoctoral fellows, the three-week COUJIIe
...,._.ta an opportunit;y to be ca:saed to the pmut of immunoloiY'lbe Bulfalo Center, Mad School
~ ..,, is the anly ..... in the
1lllllld to ........~ aD aspects of

MUSIC . OF THE AMDtcAS CONCHT*

Appalachia, a repeat of the perform-

~t!r~,~~'::,"~..tY!·=
for detaila.

W.U COFFHHOUSE*

Featuring Suni McGrath, Norton Terrace, 8 p.m. Admission charge.

POfTaY HADING•

Featuring British poet T ed Walku,

337 Norton, 8 : 30 p.m.
p.....,nted by the Office of Cultural Af. fain, the UUAB Literary Aris Commit-

tee, the

the U.S. 'J1Jey live in tbe Unlverait;y'a
~ HaD 8lld follow • riluo'ol!a

....... nan.v ...................

~ _ . . . . . . - lollowm by

...... Padt--

---~.-.ted

by • , _

-.:i~-at6iatbe~.
IDIIitule and
........ ~aa~rp~W. ad inatiluliuiiL
...... ...-...s Dr. B-. ......

.....~~==
....,._==-·
....
_.., ......... .,_...
. . . be .......,.. . each .....

--~

Dr.

NI!IIIJI!II' . . . - . · .....
,_ .... ·
I
1 'r- It
•
diiD-

1111•••\

Poetry Collectio" of Lockw9QCI
library, and the Friends of Lockwood
Library.

Clnt~ln"F'httuuafa.tlll,.,'

TlflJRSDAY-19

ference Theatre, Norton, check abowoue
for times. Admission charge.

Tentative, 129 CJooby, 4-6 p.m.

THURSDAY-26
FH.MS•

·,

SUNDAY-~

COUlGIATl AS5-Y IIIUTIHG.

The Summe r Film Inotitute presenta:
&amp;reru Velocity {Gehr, 1970) , and

f.~§ ~~,&lt;i~~'::~J~uel,

filMS•

-.... The Summer Film lnstitu~ pre&amp;ent:l:
Cot ' Food (Wielaftd, 1967), aDd Rol
Life and Diet in N.A . (WielaDd, 1968),
7 &amp; 9 p.m.; Viridimta (Bwwel. 1961) ,

)J.m.,

SCIHNINO/DISCUSSIOH*

FRIDAY-20

UUAaNM•• 1 · :

The excunaion package includes a ticket
to see Verdi's opera; Pahitafl. and roundtrip, air-conditioned coach ..tran&amp;porta·

·

tion. Tit•kets are available at, .e Norton
Hall Ti&lt;·ket Office: general public, $11;
faculty. s tair, and U1B alumni, $9.50;
.tudents. $8.
For further information. contact the
-FlLM*

The Summer Film Institute presents:
f 'anto"""' (Feuillade. 1913) , 7 &amp; 8 : 15
p.m., 140 Capen.

MONDAY-23

SCIHNING/DIKUSSION*

INTHHAJ10NAL

FOUC

DANCING*

Instruction in the basic steps, Norton
~11 p.m.
.

fountain area,

THfORHICAl &amp;IOI.OGY SEMINAl#

TM. Problem of the Origin of

SyStem~ ·

Viewed from the St4ndpointr:J Teko-

~:i~n!ys;:.O'feJ:r:S'cl,~ ~

M!d:':!:

University of North Carolina at Chapel
~ij}ee"!~ 2~g;.m.Lea, _ Rm. ~. 3 p.m.
. P.....,nted by 'the U/ B Center for Tbeol'f'tical BioJogy.
FILM•

CONCIIT*
WB~K

presents Tlu! l•aa c Hayu
Movement, Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.., 8 :80p.m.
Tickets are available at the Norton
HaU Ticket Oftlce: at $4. $5, .aDd $8.

Tbe Summer Film Institute p . - :
N .U. (Antonioni, 1948), p.nd II Grido
. (Antoni~ni. 1957), 7 &amp; 9 p.m., 1 4 0 : :

-1968)
1~)~'.! ~!un~~~·a 1':"1F~rmon:·
. 7 "' 9 p.m., 147 Diefendorf.
La Hora de Lao Homoo (Sanjireo,
1969) , 7 p.m., 146 Diefendorf.

SATURDAY-21
-FiM(ul
-··
of Do_U an

· Golf

(laoDe, 1968), Con-

LA:Hn tiJ&gt; Ends
--e-~

'lbe FacWt;y-Stall' Golf League concluded 11111973- July 16 with an
........ bulquet and electiao of olllcera
at the CNebide Golf eow. clubboo.e. w-llllleb in the leepe'a three
cliyiaicjaa _ , Dlvialcm I Paul
Onl. Security, .-1 Howard 8lrau.,
~ •• Diviaiao D-Ed Wright,
l'byaieal Education, and Manta Abbott, ~ Olllce; Diviaiob .m CIINatce Coomor, Pbwlcla} Aid, and
Ama~Bioqy•

New aileen eleeted for the

~

1974
_ , Ed Wright, pnsident;

X.Grillla (Sec:urit;y), ~ Ncllb

......... (l'byabl ~).
lwndirapper; and .1-. .~
J~t Alralm), . . . . _ .

ot

ft

Colton Comes to Harkm (Davis, 1970) ,
Conference Theatre, Norton, check show.
case for times. Admiaion charge.

EXHIBITS

tiC'ket offit'E', Hal-3704.

lute.

•

Filmmaker- Paul Bonder will screen
and diacua his film. Part of the Family.
147 Diefendorf. 8 p.m.
Presented l&gt;y ihe summ'er Film Institute.
·

CHAUTAUQUA INST1111JtoM EXCUISION•

will"icreen and discuM his prize-winning
film. The Olive Treu of JWJiice. 147 Die·
· ·
. fendorf. 8 p.m.
Presented by the Summer Film INti-

14«! Qipen.

Fort Apache (Ford, 1948), 7 &amp; g, 16
p.m. , 1~ ))jefendorf.

1960) . 7 &amp; 9:45p.m., 140 Capen.
No Way Out (Manckiewicz, 1950), 7
&amp; 9 p.m., 148 Diefendo~.

James Blue,_filmmaker and co..dllector
of the Media Center, Rice University,

1948) . •

Eclipoe (Anionioni, 1962), 7 &amp; 9 : 15

7: ~.:.,: !.'f J}-g'·: .J!~:.efe~~..u.

immunolasY-

. WXbe partidJ18Dis," according to Dr.
Noel !be, director of the . Cente&lt;,
. . _ oelecled hom over '10 applicanlll
flnim • far away • .Japan, Ni&amp;erla,
11817, PiDiand, Gamally 8lld Yuao.tile
. .W.t
. and&amp;omu-iiiV.-Ja,
Indlee, CaD8da and aeroE •

•

cg;'ried

01111¥ select

One of the few methods courses on
immunologic - " " ' and diagnosis
'1l&amp;red to physicians and .--rebel'&amp;
hom medical schools, hospitals and
blood baJib fluouahout the w o r I d
opened Monday at U/B'a Center for

·

1
"?._
W~man (Godard.' 1965), 7
&amp; 9 p.m., 147 Diefendorf.
Hi$iory (Gehr, 1970).. 7 &amp; 8 p.m., 148
Diefendorf.
'
La~. CarniUill and D,...,.. (Saraconi;
1972) , 7 &amp; 9 p.m., Conference Theatre,
Norton.

Claude B. Weleb, the pade point
....... atudard .-1 in n!cent years

3rd Immunology·
Session Begins

.

expenenoe.

Tbe Summer Fib:&gt; Imtitute preoenta: ·
La Notte (Al&gt;tonioni, 1960/. 7 &amp; 9 p.m.,

q.pter President

..... to fawlr otudenlll wbo judiciC0U1BM in 8ftl88 with
diltribulians weiilbted -.n:t '
the uppw l!lld of the scale," a Bi1ualica DDt ~ in ............... with
Pbi Bela :tt._'a p of ''reeotlnizing
.-Jemicqualit;y."
.
In' addition, .Weld1 llllid, facult;y involvement in the JIOIIIination and ..,.
lec:tion of melDbe... has been limited,
and some academic: . . - have been
ll!lderreprMmted.
11ie ,_ po..- wilfentail no additional . procedun!e f o r departments, .
Welch pointed out. AdmiMions and
Reconlo now l'llqll5t&amp; departrnenlll to
""""' amdida7 of .....,.._te studenlll about two months before the end
of eacb - - WXbe top ten per
Cl!llt can be indicated on the list re,
tumed to Admiaaioas and Records for
,_ by Chapter ollioen in choosing
new membem," be eaiil
.
Existinl procedures f o r aeJecting
juniors will continue in effect and individual undergraduates ma'Y continue
to nouiinate tbemaelves by writing to
the aecretary of the Chapter, Prof-.r
W. Leslie Barnette, Department of
PsydloiOIIY, 4230 Ridge Lea.
'lbe new prooeciUiea Will go irito
effect with candidates who will complete B .A. requirements this summer.

.

ium:

••ap. .. - , t h e _ . . ,

•a,. ...., ........... ~ ...-... -

primuy
1110111llalblp ad inlltitutilla in ita .,a- a
............... which each doput- ' olforina' a B.A. major will 1111111laale the top .... per Cl!llt of ita padu-.

J.ICtUII•

The Kidney and Hyp..uruum, pr.
Jonas Hunt, aaoociate director, Clinicti
Education Procnun. The ·Mayo F~­
tion Research Studies Center auditorRoswell Park, 12: 30 p.m.•

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1383077">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                    <text>Middle States
.Re-Approves

TheUniversity·
Tbe Commission Oil HiJber Educa·
tion of tile Middle States AMociation
of CoUeges and Secondary ScbOola
has advised Preeident Roberl L Ketter " tha* following its niYiew . of the

__

.

____ ,

Faulkner's

MC Academic Plan Proposal
Stresses the Non-Traditional
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thia io IM fint

of ti4'0 arlicla d«Jlinf with

a draft

~mil: plml beinf circulated by 1M '

Blacks ·said
·

report prepared

Stpck Types'

1

--

A&lt;:alkmic Aff9in Council for coMideration by llal"io&lt;U campiUI conatitu.enciu. Today'o article tktila with 1M
more philo.ophical· "IJI&gt;tMhmU: plan"
84!Ction of IM docunumt. Ne&gt;:t week:
a looll at IM AAC'a propotiO]a for a
rather ~i(ic "allocation plan-''

•

By

•

•

-

"We need to commit ourselves to
activities of obvious·societal relevance··
~maintaining our strength in basic
In all 01 Faulber coantzy only the
scholarship. We muat protect our right
trashy
are as uzqvaaliy
to respond · to the intamal dynamics
blown· u Dlleay, the "mammy" who
the Uiliversity. but extend olir reof
.......... from the aound and r..y &amp;p011888 to the erlemal dynamics of
erated by the tnP: CampaJ. 'family
society. Without abandoning our traas a liviD&amp; ~ of eodunmce. DDsey Ia widely reprcled as one of.Faulk- . &lt;!itioaal mission as ·the custodians of
,_.. ~ Bu.t ln an Rlllllyaiol of
culture, or our traditional mission of
·adding to ~ jntelleptual capital of
DiWey to be ~ted July 18 and
~tly publlBbad ln a~-lenllh · all our discipliries, we need to find
DMm~B of applying our disciplines to
llludy of ~. black Cbuacten,
the problems of society. We need to
visitm, pro~-.r of En,liah Walter
prejl8re .ome. of O.U· Btud8nis: for c;,i: ·
TIIYior .,.u. that DiJiBY is a very
~ T..Yiar, ..... pri-. reers other than academic careers. We
need to• cban,s'e our image&amp; and activimary Jiteluy lntenR il the illpcttleoi lit a faster rata than our pUt ·avool. white Si!~i~Jienl~... lllaCk aliltiJre
Oll.-cb &lt;lib., ........ !bet~ _........, «NNd-juotify~ ohoaking ·
our. ~tution lnto tlbp!Oductive re- .
t.d ~ cbraaic "iDbibittaaa"
creatiq black c:banlcleia. Ae a ..Wt
..-_ •
·
·
Arid ibe mOsi viable ine8Ds of fulDit.ey and the other blacb in Faulkflllini moat of these needs appears to
..... IIIOVIIlo- ofllm _ . atmeot3'pee
of black people, white _,.. 6clioas
be throuih 8!DPhasizinl development
of DOn-traditional graduate programs.
rather than aeallalic pcll'tmits ot..ldan' n - are the mi&gt;clusious underlytiflable blacb.
ina and illformlnl a 34-1&gt;ele workina
"Cudaully, the ranae ot. ~.
draft of an ..,..cJemic and allocation
IUclt . . . . . . ill_,.. limited;" Tay-.
plan for the future of the University
Jar paiala Gat. "'ne 8ada 811
now beiDa circulated by the Aaldemic
allmded podlait-of • '-aliful black
Affain Council (AAC) for considera·
- . far ~ ADd thant tion by thjl Faculty Seuate, the seVeral
ao -._, ~ bi8Ck malea
Facul&amp;a and schoolo, and the Pn!si1111111111 bi8 ~they are
denl
dacJaal to an early death."
A Y-• ar-t
Accanllac to Taylor, inltelld of fuJq
Rewritlal and CXIIIIIOlidated by Jobn
Jl(ll'li.its ol. blacb, .... ......
P. Sullivan, provoat of the Feculty of
emJb&gt; 8ada iD Faulber ~ llk&gt;c:t
Ana and Letters, and baMd primarily
tn-. iDcladiDI .._...... lib Dil- · on a draft by Gmduate School Dean
aey. P'aulb. pana,ya Dilley u the
McAl&amp;ter Hull with ....,..ationa
....... . . . . . .......... cbuiiCter
V11rious members of the AAC, the ·
witbiD the clioolu....atlu, COillpeoa
J111P« prea~~Dts a syntheeia of ·Piannin&amp;
alfarta bei1in in the 8prina of 1!172.
family. It ill . . wbo "de 8nt 8ll
de 1Mt"' of the ~ ad, tD' aD.·
A draft academic plan preii&amp;Dted at
i roll i c m-.iOil of the Plalltaticil
that time by Dr.' Bemard Gelbaum,
ldaU, it ill abe-tbe blaclr: __,t who
viae p.-idoat for ' aaodemic affairs,
iD the old
1D be cared
~elUted the p1ann1nc proCeia and ori·
far and )II'Citected by ber wblte eoted it -..1 ooocrete budaetarY
lier--wbo far ad pmtec:l8. the
and adminiatrative decision&amp;,n the docCoalpeaaa ln the Jut . . . .of their

IY.TRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN

a.-

ID

_,...

.

a-

from

.a.J--__

-..,.

. UJIII!IIlt iia,ya.

(~Oft,...

'

·

'lbe Gelbaum draft was not adopted
by the Council, and it wu ...-I that

J, col. J)

the AAC would develop a more comprehensive plan which, while using
elements of the Gelbaum draft, would
draw heavily on the views of the Faculties.
·
" Accordingly," the synthesized plan
proposal notes, "each Faculty formulated a plan for its own development
in the formulation of which students
and faculty were significantly represented."
Faculty and school reports went to
the Council m November, 1972. They
were disCussed through January both
within the Council, with repreeentatives of the Faculty Senate, and with
the President and his stalf. Subcommittees were then fo.....ed by the AAC
to deal with several major Univeraitywide issues. T h e s e subcommittees,
each of which mcluded representatives
appointed by· the Faculty Senate, reported to the Council in early spring. ·
Tbe single draft document now be~ advanced for consideration "integrateS the ·informatiim and planning
set forth in these several ..,ts of documenta". in both a philoeciphical academic plan and a more specific, de-tailed ..,t of ordered allocation· prioritie8.
Selectl1111 ltDm Y•rt.llono
• ,

ID IX , I .......

policy Ia eftllct ...
.....,_ of the 81at8 u.n..ltp fll .

.

· Federal JUide}IDai.ta IIIIa-. SUNY

I

.,..u.,;

;,.
proyidea 'for '
N- Ycft,-BUNYc.t.l ....._.
:
. ,_
·
a
.~ of - - ...w-t pq "vpaD
...._ ......._, _._._._ _...._it' --a..t.. • ~t .proof thet llldl ....,._
- _..............
- tD . .- _ _
li IIIIRiile to ~
ber ~ du•
far·thliwnlty
.....,_
.

IMt---

cr...hldt .._and .....-pq·a.
-tsndty and pou-pnauacy

Ina

~. -

........ by . . . . .

Uatv..ity Baud of -rn.te. .,._
the ~-wide
hallt;y Senate, the.................
u A.....tetim the

~ with

Ina ....

calllcdva........

far ........... ~

... ._..Iflllll
· - of'lbeUm-.IW,
-•t~ou .fl. • ....... wUb

.

..

m:.= :,!:..•;
-w.

~':,::,:.

..... uw,y be edeDded. If

.
.
'l1le jll89loul UnJwonlt;y policy left
the effeattve elate of the .... up to
tbi')INIIIdeot of -=b um...u,. - PI&amp; It~- oflkt ..... for

~

.aDII

...se .....-....... .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,
eai1IP\IB 'ptellldlota. •

· ..

the~~tion

accreditation" of the UDfversity.
. "This action," Slater Elizabeth J .
McCormack of Manhattanrille · College, cbsirman of the Commi-ion,
said, "reflects the canfideoce of your
coUeaguee in the COiltribution you are
making to higher education and their
belief that you will continue to lltrl\l'e
to. improve the quality of education
oUered.n

· ·choirman McCormack noted recommendations made in the Evaluation
Report and exp.-1 confidence "that
these recommendations will receiw
~ consiileration and implementa-

n.e Commission alao ftlqlllllted that
it be, k_ept advised of the Uni-.ity's
transition to the new campua "throuih
the"abarinc of an internal report, IIUCh
as an annual report."
On behslf of the Commiaaion, the
Chairman assured Ketter "of our willingness to be of appropriate asoiatallCe
to you as you wOrk .for an ever •lronl·
er State University of N- Yodt at
Buffalo."

Larson-.to Be.
~-Associate

VP

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

Dr. Doaald A.~..-f-.r of botany and dinlctar. "' tile
OjiiQe ol. E!l~Mstion for the ·Heetth
Al!sessiitg ihe tt.iuhle 8nd tUtiDoi.I PrilfiesionB at the University Of Tau
at Austin, has been named U/8 asof the Sixties as a " time of V&amp;Mtion,
sociate vice preoident for he&amp;kb lciproviding experiences from which to
learn and opportunities with which to · ences. Dr. Larson will alao ..,. 011
the faculty as prof-.r of biolocY.
grow," the draft plan identifies the
Born in Chicago, Dr. Larson gradmajoc task confrontm, the University
uated from Wheaton ~ and
as ..,lectin&amp; " from ·u.e V&amp;Mijons,those
earned
his Ph.D. in batany at the
who... growth will ClOiltribulil to the
University of Illillola (Uibuial. He
stability of. the institution,. and to its
has done ezterwiw .-reb 011 polleD
capacity to provide quali_ty education,
cytolOgy, eytocbemlatzy and deftlopneW lmowledge, and ...mea to the
commtmity. n
-ment and poUeo morpbolocy. He alao enppd ln poUeo .ulyllia of
In such a·..,lectiOI! proceaa, the draft
archeeololical oitea.
argues, "Each proposail for additiaDal
All clirect« ol. the Ollce of Educa·
.-.urces' obould, •if polllible. alate the
tion
for the HeUib ~at A~ benefits and C08I8 and bow
tin,
I..iu.xa 1-.led the - - - adthey should be ..-swed. M..U.
v;-,t and 1110may be qualitative or quantitetiYI!, but
gram.. far 101118 1800 .tudalla iD
~ve~:....W.
~~::. cine, deollatzy all d the .-oclated .
idity.n
hMith ........ 1118 .,.,. .........

--w..-u-

-

inwlved in ........ P.I-aiDI curricular Nform of 1DiAi .,..... •wl
propama ln the~ aJtb ...

To foster propams ..,lected, it .is
recommended t h a t "the 'UniV8111ity
should ...t aside • special prciii8ID
hmd, COII8istinl of a liven pen:entaae
of the entire budget, for the preii&amp;Dt

~..::,;;:~tiona from
this hmd' "ahould be made .by a joint
committee C0118iatinl, for aumple, of
repreeentatives of !hoi Prellideot, the
. AAC, the (Faculty), Senate :s.catlw

wbich--

of , . _ .,..__

-·-J ---

ural p!w - • ar ' - ~"
8lld that' IDCietli, than .... Ia
. cp ......... .. . validity ad ~
. of the ..,.....,., ~ ......_
crltllia b:r wlllcls to~ wbat will be

llludilll. e-. becaalii. _.... ....
noqu1riac not ~ aalledlal!l
of brW&gt;l ..... 11M&amp;........_.. ad
future bapel," but . . . . "pooicy ....
~~ .......... .

liNda oolllcllft . . . . .. .

··

..

II a..tl-

•r ·

IIIDed

Medical and Dental Application C..
ter,
aU the .......
and cleolal acboola, ln tile UlllwaiQ-

prop-.
'l1le PftiiiC8l ll..t "•
Um-.lt,y G11J11Dt elleeiDW llludy ar
in.-olve illelf.ln- .fll· Dat.-

--

..........

~ , in~. ClUIIIII

=:.

· . ~ • · (~.,..,.,. '· Jrt

.

~.._...

m-.....u--u.iDI!Iru-

~ Matemitf Lea~ Rules . -~IX==
For Pfofessiotial Emphlyees .
~t~~=
A - . la-a.d ......_,. .....

ey

Committee (Reporter, April 6), ibe
Commission has voted to realflrm the

·., ..

.•

�. /ofy 12, J!l73

-'1973-74 Exectifive~committ~ .
Is Announced by.Faculty senate·

Unit.-'l1le Balla1o

um.o emter-a

111e

_ . . . lato •llinlle aaa&gt;cY· taown aa ~ Opportualty Cealor,
6clift&amp;plaaber 1, State UniWinity
olBdala - - - . . d. in ~ t!Ua

~

D·- ..,

um.o

~rding

M..........

ular planning
which year.
will take
place
during
lbe coming'
Per&amp;OIIDBI

EduattioDal Opportunity
Cm1or (BOC), to be atlmiDI.tered by
lk!lralo. will combine lbe mia8loaa of lbe two eZfatinl
CODiora IUid apaad upcJil ~ The
-.er Ia.one of a - - . taldag place
througbout lbe State in llua with
SUNY .._Plan ,.,.,...,....,tloaa.
Locaticm of lbe , _ BOC IUid appoialml!llt of ita first direCtor will be
' IIIIIIDUIICed In lbe next few weeb,
Albany _,.,..llllid.
.
.
The Buffalo
Center, located
at 220 Delaware Avenue, has aince its
fOIIIIding in 1966 )li'O'Vided 5,~ educationally diaadvantaged students with
.opportunities to llpl1'llde occupational
eldlla, to find ll8inful employment, and
to advana! through remedial and comtory education.
to SUNY spolresmen,
'"The akiUs gained thete haW! helped
hundreds 'of tbeae students break tbe
unemploymeat cycle and apand otherwise limited educational horizons."
ECC lloJe E.- AuiU1t 31
·
·
Dr. J81111!8 s. Smoot, s~ vice
ebancellor for University-wide aervices
and special programs, creolilod Erie
County IUid Erie CommUnity College ·
tEGC) fM adminlatrative sponaarabip
of !be Urlian-Cenlor for lbe Past seVeil '
yean: '"The ,._,... IUid ECC haw
earned lbe appndaticm of all New
y orlt Slota ft8iclenla &lt;
ror- botli eatab- .
J.ishibs ali Udilm Cmtar in Western' ..
New York, IUid COIIitantly being wlllinl to !OqL ,rv,W. "!!ucatian progra,ma.
to tb8 ·._- of illl atudents," Dr.
Smoot said. ECC'a adminiatration ol
the Urt.o Cmlor t!llda formally on
.Aucqit
Moat. lllaff aanbers will
- - . ali the County payroll Wltil
State Um-.lty at

. ·M~ cif 1be ~;~ ~~-·ti Commitlllie of lbe Fal:uity Benalo
~baeD lUUIIIUIIC8d by Senate Chair.man Gilbert D. Moore. Members are: '
. OffU..: Gilbert D. Moare (~ · '
.,_) ·C bairman· r - selor Edual..... •
• ~-~
Hocbflelci
(English)
• Cbairinan-Eiect;
Mac Hammond
(English),
Secretary;

Dr. Gecne Howard, SUNY dean for
special .educatloa, will ..ork with U/B
officiala to develop 1111 inlmlllw PlO-~ "" in...vlce '-'-'-- IUid currio-

~ Collep. Carter will be

~te!":nlbeparti~~ :!..!~ -.N~ Garver ·&lt;~l· Parlia- Better Health
-;;;;;tS e 11 a I c Repme~: ·

pbyaicaJ teloeatian and lbe c:bange- .

over in administmtioq, instructiollaJ

~-~~ru:~~~~~·&lt;~~~=
·In_Manaoemen·
t
B'·-*'-•_. _,. __
Hart
0:'
....,..
-~·· -~o., .....,..... ' - · - ·
Better
care Ia the
a

·=~i.J..k.n

_.

. ......__a full p-~ of instruCtion a

In addition to fuHilling the ~
of its two pred_,r centers, the
SUNY · - - - - t 11111'd, lbe E0C
~
will develop an outn.lch (unction not
only to aerve the diaadvantaged but
alao to provide COIIDIIeling and informatian services to other public oegmenta. Plans call fM EOCs to become
headquarters which will infonn local
residents about' aid programs and
learru,., ~ties both at the
EOC and other educational institutions.
.
Two kinds ol .advisory committees
are under diacusaion. One board would
consist of oounaelors, educators, and
repriatntativee of ·college8 entend by
EOC "graduate&amp;» It would advise tlle
EOC on its curricidar rontent and 'on
lbe requirements and i.xt&gt;ect8tions of
the cooperating coUeges.
The second panel would be !l citi?.ens'·J)olicy-.ndingboaid,-muc:hlike ·
lbe councils which ·serve lbe Stateopera~ I!!UNY campuses..Re!!resentati\'1!8 · ·would be drawn from .many
pubjics in Western New York.

faJJJlc.ne(S .IJ,~

-.

-.__....

.

-.........

-...s

AIL·.._

18 ..,...._.._

U;T

of COmpulerized iJJlomaticm 8)'lltems.
eowa. in bealth II)'Bioma 8Dalyida
and 1111U18gement informaticm syatems
will alai&gt; be . ilicluded. 'Ibe syatems
. analyaiii courae will consider the decision ~ in bealth syRema,
and lbe informaticm ayatem will
deSign IUid impleaaltatian of llOIIIputerized inf'*maticm ayalema.
Tbl! final courae Ia a - . d l proiect in which lbe student wiD be m:pected .to apply tbe skQ1a be has acquired to aolvmg I! probkm in lbe
bealth" aue·lleld. 111eae _.m projects 'w ill ·be·ciaadaded either at local
bealth. cBre III8ICiM
u part of
federiol - . a ,· -"'-"" in this
• ·• . . . . .,.v..,._
-.

cover

J!

or

Pllrtualt of English.

_Prof Stu~ie5 Pre-Kit1dergarten·.

,

·
'
·
·
A total of 17,000 diildr..' are en- ·. turea of -~ P101f81111;
rolled in 425 ~ - PlOBased em lbe IRiiwy data, oae out
lll8IIIB Oil~ C111111J1i- thloachl&gt;ut .
of every. four oflbe 1,100.~- ·
the u'Dited Statea. Tbis one &lt;iflbe
al, accredited, lour-year collepa IUid
fladinga of a "Survey of PJ&amp;.kinder· lllli-mtiee in the United Statile opprten frolramo ' at lllllltiniam. of
...., at leut · llil8 ~
Hieber Education. in lbe u.s.• conpropam. The awraae ~ tor
· ducted by Bemard Grea.bla"- aBJcieach of
PIOPallla.ia &lt;tO dlildnm,.
ate 11&lt;"'-or of ~ .pollay. · 'l1le
IUid a llllliorit.Y (67 per cart) o( the
survey, the flrat to · illudy. tbla
PfOtiDIJM 111e emolled to ~ IUid
subject at lbe nationat.leWII; will be. .haw wdtina II ate that a - . . lB
pubiiabed ' in lbe futum by lbe
ddldrm. . .
.
Bw.u oflbe u.s.~
__
.~
------------'-'of Labor, \ . ·. • . . • . •
•. .
. . . . . llaiiS'I'UThe....,_, which-~ 1!&gt;~ 111r the t1ttn1......,.;-_
lladed Ill lilulb&gt; dll,y • ' doNo Frlcl8y, Jill)' -13. &lt;At the t111n1 - ·
to iDdude all :t.YP8I
· olon; Willett IUM fntm July 11 to Aulult
31, lhe

u-_

w....,..·.

ll~

.· ---------111-.y'

to ~ ~ !lli!Y from ~arury ....._ ..........,.
_......,..inaGaacaineoquew.y.
ecboala aDCl Gila limllllr...........
. . . _ Ta,rlor..,.. "-YYhinn
The . . . . JIIIIJal ,lil1 ........ .
......... wlallei'Neollan&amp;- Dill
.......
· B II....,.. pdlllilboe. .............. .._. 818 11'G11118d.I9.-...:Qil ll!!hW, .. ·

.... _ . , . . . , . . , . . . - ........
. . . . . , ....... than the....,__
adeldld willie llldety, - . . - . I ,

tJo:

.

=.,ons~lic:al -and ~--

~~
~
a...:w., ~ ~ ..,...,_ .. ·

~

.

'lbe nezt oourae is health econouncs.
This courae will IIZIIIIline lbe bealth
area as part ol lbe national eD1J110111Y
and lbe inlormaticm sy-.s courae
will cciver design ·a implementation

·

~

=~ .~ ~=t,0:.,.ber~;

, 'ElaiiiC , _
Taylor RrJII!!8 that Dilaey'a alftaglh
la tbet of lbe "emtic primitive," an
~map of blacka that
durlat
lbe 1!12Ua in tbe ...n of both black
IUidwblte.wrilora, notablr-CJaude MeKa,y, Couatee Cu11ea, Qirl Van Vedi._ IUid Slawood ~ Bmtlc
primltivlam tapped • 'lib--m.tlc
atrala that . . . . . . -d8lllic
Amaiaa llteratunl aDCllllllaletpnlod
lt lor 1be J latleriD&amp;
to biMb 1d ilo - ....... than
. . . . . . . . . . lbe bJack
1o'
............ Harllm

-.

courses.

The · fust Will Consider lbe · liOcial
and polilic:al structure of bealth care
systems in lbe United States by foc:using 'not .Oniy' 6n ·the ' iniJtiiutiOi.s iuid ·
agencies that ' 8re clepveiers ol bealth
care, ,but ahio em BUCh '191ated organi-

ol lbe Faculty Club (Harriman Li,
b'lberary'~- ~
at__
S P;11L~
. ~! :;::

·n...-..r

In lbe book's c:rucial acene in a black
spiritualiat chiud!, Faullater Pull!~ out
alllbe a1opa aDcl ~ lbe ~
er in atavistic terma.

·

ber

:::::-111e"':

will be
to . .. ateDt warranted by
......_. JII'Ojecllaaa aDCl IQIIIIONd
.....- ...... the~--

Sc~:.

aim of

School of Management.
Dr. "'~~ L Wall!l&lt;e, chairman
""'"""'
_
of · the Manaiement Systems Depart..
ment, f111,Y1i lbe program will ClOII&lt;ell·
trate 0.. improving.elllciency in bealth
care
•-The· capacity tor bealth care in
lbe United States in terms of medical
knowledge-and lbe training of professiorials is emtlpldinarily high. The
pioblem is really ooe of bow to deliver ·
this care efficiently to the population
and bow to finance lbe deliveryt ·be
aaid.
'
' The pl'Of!fiiiD, wbich will begin operation in September, will allow 'lfaduate s.tudents ~Ued in the M.B.A.
to specialUJe in this area by
=:'five especially-designed

"primitivism is alao a way· of cbaJ:ao.
terizing people· tO tbeir disadvlmtqe."
Even··in·-Dil8ey'.s. ability to'. ~
Taylor ael•v an . ii!Dhigitity; . arguing
lhl!t lbe author's ~-.that ~BeY ·aoceptB
place JS Plltroaizini.
Taylor was born in ..Jacbon, Mia.· ·
sissippi, aDd.at:ti!D4ed F'aulbte(a alma ·
mater, lbe University ol Mississippi.
He bolds a Ph.D. from Emozy University and is currently. an IIIIIIOcialo.
pro(.....,r of English at-lbe University
of Tems at El Paao. While at U/B
this summer, be is conducting 8 pad- ;·
ua~"""'t&amp;tr-~Dna.,y, !he .
'Nether Channel' ol Southe!;n Tradi- . . .
ti~ " will be held in lbe Red aoom .

,_ eaa.a.

~nciliael ~~am·· both

·

Health~ Systems

~ b e-i it g oll'end by lbe

Facully of He.allh
Jean:
netlo Spero (Nursing) ; Sara Ciauelli
(MediCal: ~echnOiogy) ; Charles · V. ·
Pag8nelli Jr. (Physiology).
Law " Jurisprudence and Lib_~
have yet to chooee repres81J1atives · ~ .
lbe Committee. ,.
·
.. , '

..,o•

fied

bealth

new program in

Natural- &amp;;e~

Res!&gt;Urces).

~nivenity

~... ....,...fadll... Quali-

te) · PieiTe

(Germanic &amp; Slavic). _
Facully of Arts &amp; Lettm: M~
Sbeclmer . (English); Michael, Metz..
1
ll"f (Germanic I&lt; Slavic) .
. ••
Faiulty of EducaliA&gt;nal Studia:
Robert Fisk (Educational Admini&amp;tration).
~
· .
Faculty of ElllineejnB &amp; App~
Herbert Reismann (Engi
Science8;,~--)
·&amp;
Mathematics: HaroldSepl (BioiOIY);
Marvin Zelen (Statistical Lab).
'
Facidt)r of Social Science8 .&amp; AdmilliitratiDn: Hazeltine Clements (Social Policy 1: Community Services);
Claude we 1c h (Political ·Science);
Milton Pleslir (History) .
School of MOIIIJ#melll; Car I o s
Kruyt;boech. (Organiza,tion &amp; H~

~7

ar.

tdllliillll

Is

- A··~- 'o f Pr~
_ rani
~5

Doaald altemate);
Rennie (Physiology)
(S: Cio- .
arelli,
Marvin Feldman

programs at both existing 'Cf!lllers this

(Conti~WH from ptJfe 1, coL 1)
Faullater liked to think of Dilsey
as a ~lion of lbe ability of
lbe human spirit to endure. Taylor
lolls ·thai in lbe '50s the .Nobel-prize
1badalo. ..
· • • Misaissippian told students
'l1le CoOpemtiWI College Cmtar, at
of viiiPnia, "Yet in
_.. w~
has fulfilled
that family there waa Dil8ey that held
~................ -identifying stulbe
whole
thing
qether
for no ,..
dealll with collep potailial. Biz eo.
ward, that lbe will Of man to prevail
..-the Collep Cmters througbout
'the ..... beW! belped flU lbe-pp be- . will even take lbe nether channel, of
' - the level of· academic ~ .. lbe biack man, black race, Wore it
will relinquisb, succwnb, be defeated.»
dnelaped in blch 8CbOol IUid lbe
Faulkner's Wlgtammatical autocrit:
~ ~eve~ ·required at two IUid four..
icism is dOub~ultaDI!ol!sly
'lboee wbo ClOIIIP.Iete
lllldt at the CODion 11ft! placed in maftatlering and devaluing lbe blact m:tddalatad ]ll'OIIIIIII8 ... both public
perienee. Some of that same mii&gt;i.... priyalo caiJop c:aJIIIIU-. .-raJguity creeps into lbe portrait of Dil._ l!t~ Eduattlonal Opporaey, Taylor saya. For eumple, Dilsey
v
UIB has admini&amp;spealrs a dialect that Taylor dJarac.
Cooperative Ocillege·
teriz;es as "a minstrel Joe venion of
black English." Faullater alao ~ ' I)..
Cadar ..... 19'10.
.
whole a e r i e a of perjorative, if ·not
oftl!e mqec~ aaa&gt;cY will
radat,
clicbes in portraying lbe blact .
ildade ....,. of the te.:blq lllaff
. -......; .... administra- .

s-.

Pierre ~ - ~ j SUNY
Senate . alfll!mate, -ted .._
Senator Robert Stem - - - . . ! that
be would be em eabbalic:al for.the ,..
mainder of his term. The Seaate ByLaws Committee Ia m:pected to draft
a by-Jaws c:1ump to ftiiiU)8rim band"--'-"-- aituatioM in 1be lu_
ture.
..._ .........,.

initiaaal .............

1(111117.....................

.,....,.It ......... - -

Fec:ullr; llatJj ......... ..............,
... ... 11a .._ lit tbe - ;
,...._,_AdnilloiDatoU/Ba.-

......
....... Ill . . . . . . . . . ,...
ec:lloal ........-: ............. ............,..

.

can.l!UI!~ft!ll!:fiJIIIII'lllf ·--•M- ··
........ il!t'"'·r.•·otW ·.......,~-~ -· I*I!••l·.~: ?'1 3~.~. '=n-rntae;'..,..;--.:.!t.·;·· -.
lilr'IHift,.;,... ........1Uilr.~. ~·Ji~~
..... ~.~-~-~-~......::·•· •
·•· · •
-"' if·:L ..

�/.,., 12, 191$

.~- M~Aademic ,Plan Pfoposali---=.- ___;..:~--~---...:.;..;;:.....;,.~
, ;
"

(ColdiloMof

tr- -

1, eol. 3)

.

-

lp fao:ildqc ...:b poUc;., the. plan
arjuM; ~ CIIIIIIOt be the" -.Ji
criteriaa. lmparian,ce or need IIID8t be
~" In tenna of the •"""'8C'iam
of a lfWII diaclpline with ada ellacipJiza ar with eociety'a lntenata. ·
Alao.•to be evaluated ;., a diacipline'a
relation to the intellec:tual ar cultural
atreqtb of the Univendty 111111-fiOCiety
A ......,.

ea.•-• · ·

:Another major cionalderation In de'Veloping a directian for this Jnatit:ulion, In particular, the report notes,
Ia the. 8I8UIIIption thet "the vocation of university faculty member is, and
will continue to be, for the immediate
future, a dimini'!hing vocation." This
does not mean "there will be 110 demand for -temica," but beca-.- the
market will shrink, "the reputation of
!=be inatltution or PI'Oif8JD will be an
illlpoltapt factor In pladng graduateS."
In this situation, the document ·contends, "history is against us The
ACE ratings ...., reputational, ;,.,d _, .
1lle to be iJnored at our peril"
Because the future need for ·academica will, thus, "presumably be supplied by a limited number of programs
with the beat reputation," and because
"not many of our disciplines can be
sure" qf inclusion among the eleCt,
the draft plan · contends that "yery
few" programs at SUNYAB "sbOuld
give no thought to alternative modes
of graduata education."
A further consideration In forg;i,g
a ~ for SUNYAB is that, deapite our perceived inability to place
large mimbera of graduates in ' the
teaching profession, graduate enrollmenta are ezpected to increase here
ovez the. lien 10 years---ey about 17
per c:ait . ;,; tbn!e ·ye&amp;rs· and 76· j,er· ...
cent ~ 7 years.
.

&gt;

'

'

L To deY8Iap rapldl7 eDCJUib In Iraclftlonal that - oupply the decllnlni m a r k e t fw -.lomb and

. , _ the ACE tatinlpl and rate l&gt;l
~ are '-taut."
2. ~o IIIJIIP?l't dill.....,liall,y U...
diaciplinee which ~ly a u p p I y
IMX1-111:8domlc po&amp;ltiona, aucb "" en~ where 76 p8r amt of PILD.'s
so into DOD-eaodemic poaltlons. .Here,
~· the report warns, economic
ftuct:uationa may produce new surplus-

ea.

3. To develpp non-traditional programs to respond to the dynamics of
society. ''This option· is a1ao danae&lt;'- ·
'!""-" ,the report states, "but ·likely to be the path by which we ·
can respond optimally to the greatest
number of apparentl,y con11icting de""""':"-" .
.
This. ·third option, the draft plan
contends, would a1ao enable U7B to
cooperate with ita sister institutions
within S!Bte. Uni~ty and develop
eoundly m lme wtth the ezpectation
that "we sball have to articulate our
Di. &amp;bert 0. Berdahl, c:bainnan' Of
development with o t b e r • units in
the Deputmont fll HJper Educatioil;
bas been reappointed- to a tlue&amp;-year ·
SUNY." It would further "establish
term effective September 1, Pleaiilent
us. aolicJ!y ~ "'.'mpariaon to the major
P':"'ale m_stit:ulions of tl!e State, which,
Robert L. Ketler bois IIJIDO'mced
wtth theor development already far
Dr. 8eidahl bM -.Yed ""c:baimiaD
advanced, can leas easily meet new
of the department eiDce 1971. He
cballenges."
came to U/8 In 1969 from San Fran. cisto State Collep.
'The problems of society to which
such new programs would respond
His apecial fll Interest is the
would Include "environmental protecrelatioMbip w - hlst- education
~ energy production and diatribuand aovemment, and be - t the
tion, urban decay, '-ltb care delivJ.968.69 IIC8demic. year "" a Gualmery, the. satisfaction ef -the aspiration·
beim Fellow In Britain c1o1nc - . d l
of minorities and women." Tbeee
on this topic. He bas -.Yed "" a conquire more, ·not fmr, highly educated
Ollice fll Educasultant to the
people, the ptanning report contends.
tion, director of Comparative Higher
EduCatiOn' fix ih8 tn~ eow,:.
Thill aort or -university missiori, the
ciJ far Edullalional Development, ..,.
draft plan argues, would not- consist
• te din!ctar of ihll Common
8ewJ:81. ~- , . _. .. . . . , , _ • • of narrowly structured voc:elionalpro'lri
dJilectUt ot
~ assumptions lead 19. ~
grams but would 'involve concentralinc
greater eftort ·on baSic acbolarsbip .and
options, the report concludes:
of siitiewiaB"COOrdiDation. of
research
licable
•
Education for the American CouDciJ
cietal
·F~ty":f'~
on Education, and ..,..,...,.,iaajoopr•of
. a Study of Canadian Univeraity Govfrom several disciplines would be enemJIIOflt.
couraged to study and attack one of
The author of aeveral boob ' and
the problems. arlicleo ... hlst- education In Amer"What is called for," the plan &lt;IO!:uica, BDIIaDd. and Cuulda, Dr. Berment ssys, is "a careful analyaia of
dahl il currmtly JlftiiiUilll a book em .
the elements of goOd acbolarsbip and ·
8riliob .--+ey- educatioo.. ,- · .
their new setting." This will "ensure
aound Innovation" and bring the rate
of wil.liamsviue
of change of the University "closer
and I:loodaa -C . Reif of the Town ol.
to the rate of change ·of society."
Tonawanda have been awanled ClifThis direction for the University,
ford C. FurDas Undergraduate Scbol.the report contends, is consistent with
arsbips, given annually by' Ca'-"
its
goals, . respoi,ds to extama1 presCorp. (fonuerly Comell AeronautiCal
Laboratory) to children of employ8ee · sures · without sacrill'cing traditional
values,
provides a clear direction, difor study at U/8. The acbolanbipe
amount to ·$700 annually for eadl
student for four ·years of undergraduate study. Dr. Furnas, fmmer chan•
cellor and president of the University,
· waa founder and first dilec:tor of the
aeroaautiall - . d l facility.

Berdahl Named
· In Higher ~d

u.s.

=

-~:

Hi= ..

iifrl~

I~Plel
~-.::-Samet

. . ..

'Reaction Une'
New in, OPeration_

".

n.-

p.J,f!lns_

·

In an ~ ..:t1aa at theelusion of the cltaft plim ..__..,
the AAC identlllaa allrmaliw . . . . .
~t, 1ibrariea 111111 . . . . . -vironment liB ·~ . . . . . . . . .
.ti~IIIS "and problelm In
. llllll·

..-me.._

In terms of alllrmatlve lldion, the
document aug.,ists t bat "Not aaJy
should aucb academic •
WDD*l'a 81udiea, 81ad&lt; 8tudlea, aad
Puerto Rican Stu.Ue. be _...._pel
t.o develop the hllbB pc8ible ....,._
arl,y rilor and .ociU relevuce, bat
the fUn partidpetlon ol. .....
minorities In other llmovative must be atrenuo'uol,y btered, lliDDe
tbeae 8ftlllB will not have a tradition fll
domiuaDce by while CauoMian mal-."
I&gt;iscuaain£ enrollment, the paper
notes that on tbe 1 ra d u a t e lenl
"SUNY'A8, for wbaleYer rilll8on8, pta .
far fewer than miPt be apected fll
the bolclera of ~ fellowlblp
awards, ~ by CCJIIIIIU'-1
with the private lnltlt:utiona In the
State. It.would appear, t1ae1ore, that
our unde"'l'8duate· papulatlcin Ia at
present ql18!1tatlvely auperior to our '
. graduate population." 'lboioe suationa for aolutiona are advanced: a
higher lev.el of ·support for lftl(luate
. students; the attractian fll auperiar
graduate faculty ; the lntroductiaD fll
innovptiv'l and unique .-luate pro.
grams; the broadenlnc ol. tradll:iaaal
disciplines and facilitation of lntemction with other diaclplini!a; exlalaive ·
efforts . at the plaoameot. o1. Jf8(luate
students.
·
.
. The report notes. tbat .... the IIID8t
optimistic . -.mptiaail fw 1880 lndi~te that ·liY that year the Uni"!!fflty ,
will have onJ,y 77 per cent of ~Ill'
foJ11!Ula 1J!inimum library collectiopa · .
and lirge&amp; attainment of the mininiuin ·
adeqlate collection by 1980.
In tefDIS of academic environment,
the plan propoeal calla · for a better
system of ad~t for students,
for foalerinl "the ,freedom and·fli'P8rimentation that in "'ep- Wt lll:udy and
the colJep oystem mUie paBble . ..
without IDldennininc 8Cbolaatlc dania and evaluation," for "mGnn open,
uniform and predictable" prooaclmeia
for appointment, promotion and tenure of faculty, for f - delays In
~ reaaoaable facultx requelll8,
and for more I'IIW8l'Cia for outatandinc
~t.

n

�Buins, Housekeepers and Lovers

ti.t.-"""
...-.It
It-

Drama- t h e - . . : . . . .
t h e , _ . , . . _• .,......_
111 Bums, Housekeepers and Lovers, A Golliny from and Plnllor, llln!Pt.lhlllillfl
'SuniloJ, In the Hlnlmln . n..tN
8:30 p.m. ~ far the ~

--

- - IVIIIIble

the .,......_ canilols

T1c:111t Olllcl. Dlrlcllld b)' vllltlnc . . . -.of - - .. . ........ 8nd ............... from -

-

lllndln,
-

..._ '-"'"• to fonn • ~ ·•
. hit of • ~ - . . . """ the .
~ · the prod- .. . ... .. , . . _ of the Summar far

1

wetldil eouuntque

.
&lt;If ·,

.
Cat -Food (WielaDd, 1~Dd~ Rat
Life and Diet in N .A. (W'
· 1968)_,
7 " 9
; V-iridioM_ (Bwauol, 1961).
7: 30
30 p.m., 146 Diofoudorf.
Rocco and Hio Bi'rit1ten (V'..xmD,

:.,r;;

1

•
1980) , 7 • 9:46p.m., lAO c.pen.
No Way Oat (MaDckiewiCs, 1950), 7
• 9 p,m., 148 DmDdorf.

~ .... : :r.,:~~ ,tio ·~-= .... ~
to .... with • ~ ~ In the -..llild
c.- ......, ~ 83l..z228, far ........

.a,.n ...,

EXHIBITS

.

THURSDAY-12.

A" HtfMIId ~ (Br-an, 1968),
7' 4 9 p.m., H7 Diofeodolf.
MaddiM ·Mo10.AIJIOW' ~ 1968),

~f.o:m\~"f'l':C{)!,~~jev.
THIATII_A_

·

BalM, Ho'u eltupera Gild Looe,..t .ee
'nmDclo,y, ~aly 12 liolin&amp; for clelaila. ,
INTIINA'IIONAliOIK DANCING•
hmruolion ill tbe buic 1topo, Norton

foun-. ...a. 11-11 .p.m. ..

UUAaf&amp;M••

•
.

c!t~~~l.~~~:

cue for ~ Admiooion ' ebup.

SAn;RDAY-14

....

.

TM Foru lAflio (1968J , ·1-te Diofon· ·
dorf, 7 . 9 ' p.m.
~··' '
'
One of the popular fllmo made ill
Taiwan;
·oet
ill
eul,y
·
CbiDa.
~ b)' tbe U/B -~ of

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>NUMBER 5-JULY 5, 1973

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO •

R~i'uitment··

Lagging,Med
·council Told
'Recruitment, the .-u.biJity of . .
grading audiovisual and oil.. media
resources of the Medlc:al 8dlool, and
the pros and cons of a can-.ial
SUNY/ United conlraclfGr hMith -=i·
ences engaged members of the Med·
ical Faculty Council at their Juoe 28
meeting.
Dr. Clyde Randall, reportinlu acting dean of the Medical School, reveeled that Dr. Donald Larson baa
been chosen by new Heelth Sciences
Vice President Carter Panuill to
as his -associljte for preclinical a1fairs.

serve

Recruitment Report

CityHall Visit

Rape Volatile lssue-atP.enn; -Less,so.Here
By
f!A~ · WARD BIEDER
.
~--.
,
An 8Jlii'Y croonh&gt;l 200 - l l y -oc-

cupied the adminlstmtive ollices of the
Univemity of Pennsylvania, demaJid.
~ to - former U/B President Martin Meyer11011. 1l&gt;e crowd, made up
of_ Pl!llll stall, students and faculty
then - l e d Meyerson with
their liat of demulda. At ;.,.., nol the usual~ peckap ol. an
end to diacrimin;atlai&gt;, jab( -Uid
the lite. 1l&gt;e ~ ~ that
the University llc:l tO atop the gloWing number_ of takiDJ plaoe at
Penn. ~ the IDIII;lth prior to the demonstralion aeveu women reported beiDa
attacbd 011 or - . the Phlledelphbo
- . 1l&gt;e .aituatiOII became wlatiJe
auly in April when two P...t IIUJ8S ·
·-ulled by live uanbera ol a
-.,e pmg. ·
.
No reported baa CICCUlllld 011
the U/B CIIDJIIU8 1!in&lt;e J.l!72. ~ ioccording to the• . . . , . . ,. litJ* ill'~
wiving U/B ciO -OCc:ar" .fnliD:
tia. 1o tm.. u..t are lfliiGdld,
. at 1eMt to poliae. .Aa:onllng
to Campua Security. IIIIDGIIt all -

WI-.

of which Security has become aware
_inJti!l¥eMt,~R one-:has .._
liiiila'"fi
r &gt;riii·room, _
curity's knowledge, although during
1971, two different men-both cany.
ing knives-tried to forcibly aodomize
or otherwise sexually attack !""'en dif.
ferenl women on campus. All the in·
cidents OCCUlTed in the dorms, exrepl
one in a ladies room in Bainl..
· Since then, III!CUI'ity in the dorms
has .improved d-ticaJJy, II&lt;XIb.ding
to' ·.AoBislailt. Qitec:t.cll-• of C8mpus -Becurity Lee' Grillin;'Wbo points oullbal
campus police may ·be found in the
doni&gt;a any hoUr of the day. Sludenis
- . i to .be accepting the presence of
campua police with better grace than
in the tumultuous recent past.

Jl,...'-n.e kids .Gifa'
• • .·
.
are tired of gettinl ripped
of. ~Rip •

olf," oay.a Grillin; who notes that ..tudents ·are · DOW more ·libly to tate
~ pn;cautiOIIs. aPlnsl crime
...,mfe;'l~ing '~. ~ 1D!'f"
illlaly. ' to. - ~ . tl:&gt;eft&amp;..:and iimiJ8r·
cDme. i(' they -dO '·occur. ''Our 'lela~
tioll8hip with Houainc baa improVed
dramatically over the 1..t -couple ol
years," Griffin ..-ys. Security patrol

New Ed-P1~y Building
To Honor Christopher Baldy
1l&gt;e State University B o a r d of
~ have approved a recommendation to name the Education-Philo&amp;opby BuiJdinJ 011 the Amherst Campus, Chriatapber Baldy Hall.
.
1l&gt;e ,...,.....11M11Mjation to name the
otructure, which Ia curreully under
....tructiOII, was 811bmilled by the
U/B Council.
A naUve of Buffalo, Mr. Baldy padualed from the UIB Law School in
1910 and enjoyed a Jooc and ~
ful cmeei u an attomey. In 1960, he
wu eJeeled tn the Uni-.lty CounciJ
and oerved u ita aecretary and a
.,_._ ol i1a CommiUee 011 Geaeral
Administration until his clealjl ill 11169.
Mr. Baldy wu &amp;boo active a~
aftain, taking duup ol. the lepJ and
_inlarpretive upecta of revising the
CCIII8titutlone of the ~edical. Dental

and PbarinacY Participatin'g Funds of
the University. In 1958, he was award·
ed the Samuel P . Capen A I u m n i·
Award fox. nolable and meritorious
services.
1l&gt;e Education- Pbiloeopby atruclure, located -* ol. John Lord 0'Brian Hall, is ocbeduled for cxxnpi&amp;tion during the . 8limalow ol '1976. ..
In another actiOII, the SUNY TN&amp;tees have named Dr. Mitebelll. Rubin
p~ emaritua ol pedialrial.
Dr. Rubin. wbo retired in May ol
1972 u p~ of padiatrica. served
as c:balrman ol the ~t ol
Pedialrica and padiatrician-in,c:blel ol
Buffalo Ch!Jdren'a Ho.pilal from liNii
to 1967. He baa beeD involved in pedlalric tead&gt;ing and pa1lent care 1Gr
more than 46 years.
He naw reoideo in Cbarlalllan. S.C.

tactics have also changed, he noted.
Until· teeently, · the · -~ -

veiilciiliir patrol. 'But i1ie iijiiia

· !'"' &lt;.
car

concept has given way to the neighborhood concept, and now most patrolling is done on fool, with heavy
emphasis put on patrolling buildings.
Besides improved security in the
dorms, other measures have been taken
to make the. campus safer. During
-197(}.71 there were a nun\lier: of milgginp·· and ·a-wt&amp; ·-in''·d ·u t :· areas.
Lights
subeiecjuenlly . iniltalled,
and the ' number of allacb dropped
precipitously. (Better campus ligbtinl
was demanded by the women at Pl!llll,
and -the administration i&gt;romiaed that
!!Odium lights would be inslalled)
Although the crime rate here baa
dropped, there is crime 011 the CIIIIJ&gt;UII.
as anyone who has )oat a waJJet or
perused the monlhly report of .the
Security Ollice knows. '"The crime rate
for the campus is higher than the
City's." Griffin
'"Well,. loot," he adds, "eccording to
any census this is a alum," with a
large population of peat-crime ap
pack.ed into J.l than 200 ..,..._
Olr c.mpuo
MO&amp;l ·sexual crimea against U/B
women actually occur olf C8JIIPU&amp;
Coeds in the Allenhurst area have
bleD terrorized in recent JDOIItbe by
a middle--aged man who baa fon:ibly
aodomized several women. Several ol.
the girls attaeted never reported the
crimea for penonal ranging
from a desire to avoid embemiEmenl
to f"!": that their parenia would make
lheni drop out of acbool, u .,..._t
against reporting or ~ charaa
that &lt;aDipua police flequmtly - . .
Security baa beeD worldng 011 the . . .

were.

!ll!inits.

....,.even

.

.

utilizina 1111 '-18 aileen u

deco)'ll-«&lt;tboulh. the man baa not.,et
been appreblmded.
Hitc:bhiting filul'llll in the . . - majority ol -

Security
feela
., lllroniiY llbout -the danpra
ol hi1d&gt;fC&lt;&gt;IIlinaftlOOI-J, ooL3)

'EMLY IIUDUIII"
BeceUM of the Faultb of July holiday,
today'o of the ........, tn

-----·

Larilon's upcoming appointment was
the lone positive note in Randall's
informal progress report on recruit..
menl of medical administrators. 1l&gt;e
position of assistant dean for student
affairs remains" vacant, Randall said,
indicatinrtb&amp;t for the immediate fu.
ture the ....lponsibilities of the positilln
will probably be shared by two in·
dividua:ls, one responsible for students
during their first two years of precJinjcal experience on campus, the
other concerned with the cJinjcaJ and
graduate programs.
No head has been found for the
Department of Family Practice either,
Randall reported. An offer was made
but the candidate ~uenlly accep~
ed elsewhere. Randall said that a
joint committee made up of U/B fac.
ulty and staff of JJeaconess Hoepi.tal,
where the al6listed program in famiJ,y
practice is baaed, were conaidering
other. candid!ll!!s. Family._tice .Ia a
field tl:iat "luis gone 11rat claaa," the
acting dean commented, and the Uni·
versity "may have to alrain ilaelf fl.

.rianclAJ)y'C 'lo Cbmpete in' the' ~

place for a field of well quaWied ..,..
~idatea, ~!forts to hrin1 in a ._.. 1o
lieiod the' i&gt;Btbolosif~ 'aiDfell through, Randall reporled.
As to the vacan' deanahip ol the
· Medical Scbool, Randall reported that
the sean:h committee baa hem ,_t..
ing but that no candidate has hem
asked to -Qait the campus u yet.

·-~

n.e . - I for long-range planning
and .om.. initial action to create •
'inatructional CODIIIIUilicatiOII c en t e r
for the Medlc:al School was cliaa-.1.
Aa Council President James P. NaiUl
noted, aome 'students have cxxnplained
about the Scbool'a Jact ol audioviaual
and, other innovative educatiOIIal puticularly in lilbl ol the cilinl develapaalta in this area at
other medical -=boola.
Dr. B.E. 8lmden, c;bairmu ol the
EducatiOIIal Reaour-cea CommiUee,
said that the CommiUee baa ftlqlal8d
that the lower lloon ol the ~
Health -~ Llbnly in c.,_ be
u..t foe a Leamlng C..W ..._ th8
hllnry to Toww. Tbe 0...
miUee, with • parellel Cllllllllliale health ""*'-. ._..... by Dr. AIBt
Rekate, baa &amp;boo recpalad that •
proleBaaal coanlinatnr iDIInll&gt;
tioDal COIIIIIIIInic:a be ....... 1o
facilitate planning in tbla .... Ft.la
for ·a fuWiedpd Leamlng C • a tar
woUld -tually be Ued in with library piUlning. 8mden .ul
c:..act
.
n.e -tract JIIIQtlaled by SUNY/·
United for hMitb ......_ .U.
" " - ' by Dr. W IIlla a 8taubib,
c:t.iJman ol the Bamlllale • • , ••
Commitule. The cantract hM trJ-s
atroac ...u-.. - both ......-. . .
bitz aaid. OppoetiOII Ia ~
atraag in the _...,. and .......
apecialliea deputmmta. Tbe cracW
~ ol the -tract, - far - ....
CommiUee Ia ODDCellled, be iDIIicatad,
is that it - - the eiM:Ied ..,.....
board ... adviaaly bocl,y 1o the ...,

llllminiabaUve . . .

n.e c:-.mu.e

baa aalrad that the - , y ~
in the -act be dallied .....
uanbera are noqaiJed to "'*- It alaD
le' M mw1W tbat iD futunl ....,eiatlone aactiom ol tha -.t.et dealing
(C""""'*' oa ,_. I, coL J)

�· An ahibit of ''Flower Studies" by
Tbeodore Palermo, former director of
University Publications S e r v i c e s,
opeus in Norton's 9allery_219 tomorIOW night with a reception from 8.10
p.m. and CODtinues through Friday,
July Zl. Appmzimately 30 oil paintings, dooB for "the enjoyment I feel
while rm creating,'' will be on view.
Palermo, wboee 1971 Norton show
. fea.tnreil "bard edge, very flat- and very
introspective" acrylics, notes that the
. earlier. exhibition -':WSS. an attempt to
sort_out feelings I bave about peciple"
and caueed him to reach "a stalemate"
in his work: '"i'be careful, painstaking
· technique·tbat ·I, Wai using in ·my 'bard
edge .OOrk was contrary to the emoti~ strong. ftas!&gt; feelipgs I'iii\d .to
'
.
ft'"'" on canvas..
•
The cuirent show, be say/;, grew out
of a need "to loosen up" and reflects
"an exploration of i:olor, tenure and
shspes in as free and emotional a way"

.....

..

.

Senate Stalls Stand on School
Whether 't he proposed School of
Health Education will come into the
world legitimized by the support of
the FacultY Senate remained a moot
point after the Senate's June 20 ll)xecutive-Committee meeting.
President Robert L. Ketter bad publicly . indicated his support for 1he
schoo1 late last semester. This supp&lt;irt
was reallirmed l!arlier this month wben
the President indicated to the Senate
Cbairmab his intention to establish
the School within the Health Sciences
this summer.
·
Tbe Senate retains, according to iii!
by-laws, initiating and confirming authority in all academic units. However,
the by-laws bave never been approved
by the Presideot, and therefore are
DDt, according to Law Professor Robert Fleming who .....e..rched the matter, in any formal or lePl111!118e, binding.
In the past, academic matters of
"""" major importanoe 88 the estab-

____
·--lr--cl' -.. _
·---r_., ___ ..__

--

•.r.tGJ4......-r..._ .. ...., ..

-216,---~
2UF).
..a.INPIUIF-D

...... cw.r
_,.,.......,.,.
.,_,_

_--·
._
-·--""'
----lfiCI .. CiloiiiiiiD

_._

~&amp;Cfft'"P'

lishment of a new unit bave sometimes been placed before ' tlte Senate
for approval and sometimes not. The Meyerson reorganization of the University · into Faculties was approved
by the Senate. Tbe Senate was not
called .upon to act on the initiation
of the Schools of Architecture and
Environmental Design or Health Related Profe&amp;lions.
Tbe consensus of the Executive
Committee, as reported in the unapproved minutes of the meeting, w8s
"that the President has indiai.ted his
support of the Senate by liis willingness to- consult witb the Senate and
bring matters ·before it." A new Executive Committee is to be announced
shortly, and ·the niiltter will be' referred to it..
•
In other busiDess, Cluiirman Gilbert
D. Moore told the Executive Committee that a CC!PY of the academic
planning 'report .preparec~ bY tt.e Academic Alfairs Council has been reoeived. Moo • e asid that be will
suggeSt lo the COimciJ that tbe-Se.uate
1le more intimately involved in the
diacuMion of this document.

Med f;oondi:(C-iAMed fro• -

1, coL 4)

witb lli1lowable _..ntures be ......
88 to be . . .-icted.
In- other~ the Council

viaed ..

bemd:

• that 1m eccelerated propam liM
. _ approwd for
.doata.
:- • that NIH ._ indlcaled infom.J.
ly ·that c.pitiatiaD Filild. will nm
llbout ~ per -.t leM than currat
· Jewola for Jai yeR.
r
Tbe CoullciJ ...... .,.m·... July 24.

m em.y- ....

--

as poosible. He U8f!CI flowers "beCause
they allowed me to tie to something
tbat suggests
infiilite variety of
fonns and color."
.
Palermo says his goal is "to exp...,.
as much depth of feeling II!! possible
and put me on the canVas." Perhaps,
he adds, ''tbeee paintings are not altogether ends in l;!lemsel.ves. ~be
they are ,sqrt oj 8J!erCisee •~t I .~I
I bav11 !ichieved bappy, playful paint-

an

ings of flowers tbat are comfo&lt;table
to be with."
su- tbeee studies, he has moved
on to Jarae _.,;ooa land3eapes, "kind
of free 8bstractil" with "a feeling of
vista, largenees, distanoe," designed
" to surround the viewer and evoke
feelings out of- memory."
Pale.mo is BFA graduate of U / B
and !"'!' a """'!her of the University's
staff froin 1961-1972.

a

Rape. Less. Vola~le,ISSUe Her·e-~~~--( Conlinued from pGie I , col. 3)

hiking that last year it plastered the
CliiJlpus w i t•h : posters -warning· that
"HitChhiking can be hazardous tO yourbealth." Girls bave been picked up
thumbing ·in ,front .Of ·Norton, :driV.en
o campus and assa tea. Uslililly the
girl goes to a City hospital for treat·
ment, reports the crime to the Bulfalo
police, if at· all, and Campus Security
is never notified, a situation that obviously piecludes suboequent investigstion by Security.
Giotis .Edethart, a therapist who
w 0 r k 8 with student-age clients at
United Fund's Child and FaJllily Service in Bulfalo and who has COWIBeled
U!B WQmen whO' bave ~Mien rapeil,
does not join with campus police in
'- universally condemning hitchhiking.
But sbe does wisb that WOII&gt;ell-&lt;Uid
young men-would be smarter about
it. She also thinks it's too bad women
aren't more willing to pick up other
women who are hitcb,ing.
"I like the idea of hitchhiking," Ma
Edetbart saya ''It involves putting
yowself in a position · of · trust; it's
people helping each otber.'h But- abe
also thinks ·there at!&gt; eertam high-risk
conditions in' which . the- positive · lll!r
pects of hitching are c I e a r I y aut- weighed by the chance of a bigb degree of potential trauma. For this
"""""\. IIi!" thinks women should liitdt
oofy ·in groups and· should ·avoid getting into the liack - t , immediately
get out of any car witb an automatic
lock, . a'(i;iid hitching at n i g h t and
· simply not take rides from someone
tbey intuitively mistrust:
·•- ~
'
As a therapist sbe blames the treatment. tYPically affoMed a rape victim
for a ..-sure of the traiuna IUIIIOCiioted
with ee:J&lt;11S! IISIIIlults. Clienta bave J.e.
-ted . lo her "inamlaitive remarks"
made to them by Bullalo and State
police, "and the Amberat police aren't
much better," ihe adds.
"A rPrl COIM8 in to a police station
an hour after being raped and .....,.
one · oays 1101De1.binJ very inamlaitiye
lilre'You brfni' it.., younelf' or 'Why
are you out hltchhlldnr In the 8nt
plloce?' In other ........ the viclim is
IIUbjected to a Jot of latility and
anaer.., the part of the pollee, Juat at
the IDOIIIIlll.t ...._ abe is under stzea
So ilie Jlllll- bedt ' - own fee11np
llbout the lncidmt and belina to feel
defealiVe."

Often the rape victim has doubts
about ber own role in an assault, Ma
Edelhart explains, acknowledging that
_ some women do get into risky situations because they are testing them·,selves. •No· matter· how blaiDeJ,_. the
victim may 'be,· Ms. Edetbart says,
. "she knows she ueed poor judgment
and she also knows that women in our
culture are raieed to be seductive."
Typically, a rape victim never gets
to "talk Ol!t" her experience, at- l.,...t
not in her encounter with the police.
"A lot of· hurt and pain is noC fully
catbarted because the victim is busy
!fefending benielf,'' says Ma Edelbart.
Conlldentl8l 1-.n.tion
•
Campus police 'ale CODCemed on

this point, fiivestigator Gerald Denny
says, and are eaaer to ........., U/B
students that campus police will not
further ·bana a girl who bas been
aeeaulted. Denny points out tbat
prompt reporting makea it much ea&amp;ier to apprehend a mpiat. Routinely
one of U/B's four women ~ty
ollioers (the ?enn women wanted and
were . pmmiaed more women .., the
campus foroe) interviews a 1Prl re-porting.-an. --..It. Any information
•given' to. Security by a rape victim
is strictly conlldential, Dam,y _...,_
sizes.. Campua police try· to e as e
the woman'a ....__t experience
with oft-campus police by completing
the required 11-91 ftiiiOd f...., ..men.
poaeible. Security will .... ~
the woman to Meyer for trea-t
and for the pelvic agmination needed
to obtain all'l&lt;lbaratne evidoDce required to estsbliab tbat ·a criminal
assault bas taken place.
•
University Health BerviCle will counael a girl who has been raped but
'typically will not tnat.Jao, 8CCOI'dinl
to Director · Pap} F. lfiiftmmL Dr.
Hoftman ezplaina that a pby1dcian ·is
WIUaliy on duty on camp111 aaly during
l'l!llular worldnr hours, ..._ rapeo are
!_!!Sat likely to·occur. When a woman
reports a lll!lDW
to Heelth
8ervicee, tbey 11111aliy call Securiey,
who IICCOIIIpUI,y ' - to Meyer.

-wt

.1&amp;..--..;;.~v toIL.:.
I'Uit!HiitiUIJ
W'Dil
Tbe Rew!nDildtalpb DllYid Atiernatby,.;.~ to tba late Martin
Lulllei!clibli u 1.e..t of tba 8outbem
ChriiJiiiluib!edenhlp Ooaf~ Will
~ in the Fillmore Roo~!~, Norton,
'l'lad8,y, Jply 17, at 7~16. p.m., the
SI!Jdent Aomclatlorl hu .anDi&gt;upced.

�- July· 5, 1!173 ·

,Mary Dan_i~l~i: Poet, Artist and SCientist
m&amp;Dent staff, 110 rules, 110 clasrooms
Maly Danielli met ~r husband Jim
ucept the Allenhurst 1001118 of ita
her flftlt day up at University College
members, she found a place, an orienin 1.932. He waa buttonholing his feltation.
low students, trying to collect IIBIDI!6
1n the fluid. period of 196MO, Com011 a petition protesting Dilrie justice
munication College chanpd radically
in the
of the Scottsborl&gt;
in character, was utaken over," in ber
boys. Maly wa8 the only person who
words. The spirit of re-ts in Allewouldn't sign at once because, she
gheny State Park gone, Mrs. Danielli
told him, she didn't know preciaely
what the petition said. He was in- _ with&lt;lre.v. She continues to teach the
mandala course, however, offered first
trigued, abe IIU)JP&lt;8!8 now. "Actually,
under the·auspices of American StudI hesitated because my father, who
ies, currently by the Center, and soon
was an BClCOUJltant, had warned me
to be taken to the University of Calnever to siiD anything I hadn't read
ifornia at San Diego. She will publish
carefully fiist." _
an anthropological study of the manMary Danielli, a n!llllBrch 81180Ciate
dala in the near future. A third volin the Center for Theoretical Biology
ume of poems, entitled A P~niz
bMded by her husband, is, in her own
Nesting, is· already in press. Tears of
right, an antbropologiat, painter and
Gold, published last December, was
poel Tosether she and Dr. Danielli
the second volume.
teach a courae in the "Future or
Man," and independently she qflers
Both Tears of Gold and the volume
a courae in the· mandala, the "'eoin· press are decorated with drawings
by the author. She began painting .
mantic .-Ia!" ~ aile liDcovered
firat in anthropolcipcal" siudies of
when she was forty c"I've always written poetry"), and m&gt;W paints whereScandinavian and Malagaay materials.
The mandala is both the subject and, .
ever she is-in ' a 8UII1II&gt;I!r place in
Wales, a studio near San Diego, aon
in a - . the aehema of her work",
Richard's apartment in London, and
aa poet and aa ~- Aa she her- self writes, in a poem ( cjedicated to
here in Buffalo. The drawings in Tears
Mac Hammond) found in a volume
of Gold Cin addition to geomantic
of related poema called The Quat
models) give shape in black and white
to her strong ilense of place. In the
CMitre, 19'10):
I diM:ouered a nJO&lt;kl: a three dinew book, the drawings are more var. ied, aome reflecting a deep concern
mt!MiD111Jl strucbue of sluJpes, in my
· about relations within the family and
own mind:" ·
• ' ·
'
other mUlti'&amp;ge groups, others reflectOn the rare occQsioris when 1. 8eem
ing an· intense love of nature. One
to speak with God
'
(But more often wilh the gods!,
shows a &amp;WeeJ&gt; of gulls, the birds she
they speak from the rrioikl, · - • · ~ ' ·SeiB froin i; slUay wiridOW at lhe· Salk
Which is an inclusive kind of formInstitute in La.Jolla, California. At the
Institute this year, Mrs. Danielli has
ula on a three or euen a four dimt!nsiD111Jl plan,. , •. .. , • • • • ·-:
..~Jo!en. ~g ~r ~ .apd J&gt;er !"'·
throi&gt;ological work-in-progress with
Infinitely fuU of nudti-directiDnol
Francoise Gilot, a powerful painter
linear planes and their crossinB points.
' It could be ex~ in r./Jor.th•and
whO is ·perhaps best known as -the .author""o f "llie wit&amp; Picasao." Now
is often shOWn it( buildinJs, or even
ried to Jonas Salk, cone speculates
in dances or the way one may trouel.
It offers assembly" places, seats, to
inevitably on the way gifted, independent women ao often attract the very
the Bods. to which we may .invoke
men who rather overshadow them ),
them
·
Francoise Gilot has by indirection
And to which they bring t1ie symbrought Mrs. Danielli to a new stage
biDses, the formulas, the pictures and
in her painting. "She stretched my
poems,
mind,
in a painting sense:' she says
And, when we luJue summo....d eof Francoise GiloL
noUBh of them, then, too, the .mtuic.

--t

mar-

An . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.:"

'·--·

.

The mandala is an integrative model, and over and over again the various threads of Mrs. Danielli's life
seem, in a phrase at once Forster's
and the human potential movemim.t's
to connect. The mandala represents
the rationale and coherency that she
has quested for since she was five,
when her grandmother-a l'ftlDIBil with
the marvelously English· oame of
Maly. Speucer, her own oame, .and
yet another in~veand
read to her a wnion of Makiry;'s. Le
Morte D'Arthur. The elements of
those Arthuri!m tales '-rd aa a child
-ritual, magic:, the cyclical nature of
life and aocial strudures, tha quest,
the~ ol defying the oocial
and Dalmal order-continue aa major
ol her adult work.
Mn. Danielli.haa been studying the
mandala at leaat since 1940. When
she waa invited to participate aa mentor in Cornnlunfcation College in 1967,
. in the flrat ahiluating, hopeful days
·of the collep aperiments, it was the
IIIBJidala obe naturally cboae to teach.
"It fucinata students," obe found.
For ~ - llludenta alialated bum

.u -

-

- t a W lademlc c:ourae-

. work, ... ~ that the mandala
coune aftl!o - t e d a "way," .....
inc their rite ol ~ into the mainstream ol aunpua and poet..college

life.
Mn. Dmdelll ta1b 8bout her ueodadaa with €&lt;111111111Diaatlon ~
.... wllh pat110wumtb.
deuly
1111
youtbarSbe
...._Ia_
__
~

cultwe: lhe baa o.dlrid.,.:iblbls ol
lademlc -ueace and dqalieB"evideoce ol "fla- few a ·p8de. But In
llludent-orillDated Communlca tion
bad
1111 •

A

S....:.

.;,~i:-tnui!J

Reflected in all of Mrs. Danielli's
work is a seruie of the continuity of
past and preaenL She is the mother of
two univeri.ity-age children, Richard
and Corinne (named by her father
after · the maid who goes a'maying ) ,
but in many "of her poems she, the
poet, is the child, experiencing again
the wild blue hyacinth and golden
gorae .that colored her, •English childhood. She waa born in Cheshire, where
as.a:.naii child she would play 011 the
sandy ·-...ry of the Pee. dashing to
safety just a'-&lt;! of, the tide, a game
obe realli:al abe would never have allowed ber own children to play. "My
father was a pliiloaopher by temperament and an .accountant by prof..,_
sion, employed by a firm trading with
the Gold Coast." Her mother, a school
t.c:ber, did cltM!r thinp with - the
trade aooda be lxou&amp;bt home (all
three cbiJdnn abow a lll8lbd talent
· for handicralta), and it waa this l:anli·
ble link with ezotic foreipl .lands that
led her 110 anihropoloKy, abe speculate.. Wlwl.lhe waa twelve the family
"""""' 110 Kmt, the wild and fertile
"Garden ol Encland." ....... the child... helped laid • ol apple -c:barcla and ptbered tbe ola yard .
full ol ebicbaL 'lbe c:bildl8l all ol ...u-.ity duriDI the Doopr5sion. Maly traveled lb.- bows ilacb
clay to Um-.ity Co1Jete. Nuc:h ol
the trip 011 foot, and ......... met up with _ , ol tbe doom and
outen wbo tramped roaad .....,
durinc tbe '101. . . , _ .....
~" lbe ...... Lib au)' &lt;Jl ....
day'a atudiDia, t . ,....,_ at the 1ml' vanity didn't iaiDw ....... tbey
~ IIDd jaba aflir ........... IJiu..
dlmta-DQt~~!;l.r

stipends at the time, and the .students.
many living at home, saw at firathand
how dearly their parents psid for their
educations.
•
The experience left Mrs. Danielli
with a strong conviction that students
should use their university time to
discover what is right and good for
them, to develop some professional .
orientation (as well as cultivsting
more abstract qualities of mind ) to
hold onto in times of adversity. "Students need to learn aome sense of order, organization, balance and proportion in order to manage their own
lives ao that they won't be subject to
every wind that blows. A student
should be a rooted plant., not simply
a leaf blown off a tree."

In 1935 she earned a B.A. "with
honours" in English language and literature with a minor, called a "subsidiary ,'' in French. She also completed teacher ttaiiling. She and Dr. Dani·
elli were married in 1937. Knowing
that the War wss coming, they deferred having children, and she began
an ambitious program of reading in
Northern Studies and anthropology,
that eventually led to a diploma awarded by Cambridge University in
1944.

·-

in a pattern complex but whole and
unbroken:
Poetry is my own art,
To wluJse end I luJve, throUBh IDng
years
Liste....d to the synlheais of language
From the furthest past into this
day ..•

Painting was my mother's strangW
gift,
.4.nd (or her sake I taUBht my
unaccustomed luJnds
To answer to my mood with line and
co!Dur ...
But music, which eludes ,., stiU,
My father sluJuld luJue practised: this
Was the deep passiDn of his heart,
DenU.d, abandoned, and his ultimate
- despair.
Already near his end he built a wall
Of Dawlish stone, so beautiful
My heart, not knowi.nll il was his,
Leapt when 1 saw it, after he was
. dead . : .

Anthropological Studios

She spent six months in Madagascar in 1946, studying the semi-civil-

i7.ed Malagasy culture, thought by her
teacher J .H. Hutton to have derived
. ·from. the Naga.hill tribes of .India .. In
the fortified villages of the Malagasy,
she studied the geomancer (it is in
the geomancer and the mandala that
she ·perceives a link between the island
culture and that of ancient China),
witches, and a wide range of rituals,
including the strange "rite' by which
the people "tum" their dead. On her
return she was elected a fellow of the
Royal Ant!&gt;ropological Institute, and
she maintains her interest in the island culture to the preaenL

1 weep still, as I always wept
. For him, for his frustrated zeaL.
' tn"iliuJt he felt for" u.~··
'::&lt;
His tragic abnegatiDn of hi.mself.
• But I may still medAote. the ....WC..
He did not make hinuelf:
l'll try to distinJtiish cU!arly wluJt
I hear
And write it down. It won't be
The particular beauty he would
himM!If luJue com[)(J8Md
But he'II recognise him«l{
And take his peace. He, and wilh him
Somt! port of ""'• may slup foi- elJf!l:
to this world
And ils demands of WI, and go
Whither fulfibnenl takes him after
thal.

..

In a poem in Tears of Gold Mrs.
Dsnielli transforms the raw materials
of autobiography into both a tribute
to her father and a s.tatement of personal faith-in a plan by which what
is valuable in life is passed between
parent and child, student and teacher,

Job Openings ,
The Personnel Olllce indicates that the followinJ faculty and DOD·
teaching_ professional staff positions are open at State Univenlty at
Bulfalo:

F8CUIIJ
AaaistanfProfeaaor Ctwo positions), Restorat.We Denlistry.
lnstructo&lt;, Surgery, School of Medii:W.
Visiting Assistant Profeaaor, Thtlatn.
Aaaistant Profeaaor, Orpnization and Human Re.x-.
ScluJol of MantJ~emt!nl. .
Aaaistant Profeaaor, Aasistant Band rn-tor ( 'n position), Jluic.
Clinical Aasistant .l'rofiiiBOr !two positional, P~.
Clinical Aaaociate ProfiiiBOr, -~.
A!lsistant Clinical Profeaaor (two poeitiona), P.,.chiGtry.
Aaaociate Clinical Profeaaor, P_,.chiGtry.
Prolee&gt;r, p_,.chi41ry.
Aasistant Prof_., Gynecoloiy and ONtelric:l.Aasistant Pnlleaaor (vlaiting or tenD, two opominp), Mathe-a.

Aariistant

~ (Coacert

06le), .Jiuic.

.

Profeaaor, Petlialrica.
.
Inatmctor in ..-1 dantiatry, Periodttntica.
Aaoistant Profeaaor,
Dalietry (l'iad).

a-we

For addlliODal I E t tfc .. -..Jaa tt.. jaba and for detaill ol
NTP opom~np tbnJuPout the Slate u~
- u baiiMiD
. _ . at . . . lomtiona: L Bell h:llity . , . _ D162 111111 DIU; 2. Ridae I.., BuDdinc
4238, to cafeleria; Ridae ._ BuDdlnc
1n corridol' to
C-1; .. n.Jtb 8c:ilmla BalldiDI. In corridol' Cllll*ite H8 131; &amp;.
Hall.' in the corridol'
1f1 B!i the I..GllbJ; 8. I.Ocbtood,
.....,.t IDar In corridol' 110 ............... '1. na,. Hall, In
ta.a l'IIWic I+ •lht 0..0 8. ...._.
Hall, Ill_... .......
1U ... l1J; .. ...... . . . . . . .co
In_... -110 . _ 11; so.~ lid, Ja IDar,llaallnl

.,......,

a

.._a-'a....._...__..a -

-

aao,

c.a..

u. I.w......,WIDar ...... Ww •lkw baud a - - a -.

u--.

u.

a--. •._

1IG'1 ........ ...._.. Dlpwlmwd; 13. Nartmt
~a...
DWiada&amp;f Ball, 1n corridol'110 . _ 1011.

108- ..... 101;

�july 5, 1973

4

Economists Say Travelers Have to Spend Mo~e Abroad.
By SUSAN A. CAMARIX&gt;

~~---

Ameriama ¥isiting Europe tbillllllm-.
mer can apect to _..t -.ey
tban they would have 1sat year 11&amp;......,; ol the devaluation ol the American dollar abroad and inflation within European countries, three U/B
_....msta indicate.
Dr. Arthur Butler, Dr. Winston W.
aDd Dr. Millol1 A. lyaba, •
......... ol the Department ol Ecoaomic:a, point out, ~. that the
situation is still unatable and fluctuating according to speculation and
chaaiing market condition&amp;. For ex'
ample, the furor over the Watergate
affair t.a definitely influenced the
price of p&gt;ld 011 the European market.
T h U'l, they lllllke their predictiolns
with the .-rvation that the situation ·
can change at any momenL
'!be devaluation ratea in various
European countries h a v e changed
since the original 10 per cent devaluation lsat January. Aax&gt;rding to Dr.
lyoba, 801118 Common Market COUD·
tries, such as Germany, France, Belgium, and '!be Netherlands, had an
early June devaluation rate of approximately 14 per cenL Thus, an
American travelling in Germany this
BlliDiqer, for example, sbould 'be prepared to pay between $111 to $150
for goods that would have cost $100
1sat year. Switzerland also has a fairly
hich devaluation rate, while England
and Italy devalue at a relatively low
rate.

a....

._.,.-,Too

Ia planaing their budiets, travellers

must take into 'CXIIISideration not only
the devaluation rate for Aml!dcan
cunency but aioo the fact that European countries are also su1ferina from
inflation and -that prices wiW~! countriel: ~MY :lit liiibor: tlloiD - ~ ·Yiiiat.
But. Dr. lyoba notea that travellers

obvuld obop ... --~ .....
since a country's "specialtY 'items,"
ouch as German cameras or Bwias
watchM, will still be cheaper if bought
in Europe.
Dr. Chang suggests that people who
plaa to stay in Europe for a few
mooths might be amart t.b exchange
their dollars for European . cunency
as 00011 as they arrive. Since exchange
rates between European countries are
liDd, the traveller would then be prc&gt;lieded If the American dollar depreciany further. Of courae, this gamble would work against the traveller
H the rate c:baap!e 80 that the value ·
olthe Ameriam dollar up apin.
Me a Ia and aa:ommodations will
aioo be men _,aive for the Europee trawiier this IUIIIIDel'. Dr. Iyoba
...miana that food prices in Europe

Dr. White Named to
State Historic Board

Dr. Marian B. wruie, ~r of
hu been appointed by
ao..,_ Nei8oD A. Roctefeller to
011 the New York State Board
011 Bi8toric ~tion until , De_ . _ , 1976. Dr. White d-.
~ ol ber alloDsive an:haeolotPcal 'IRIIk Ia the state.
'l1le 11 ......,_ ol th8 Board,
wblda fuacdaaa within the New York
State 08lce ol PUb and Recreation,
edvt.e aa policy mattera decting hi&amp;tadc ...-ation and eet priorities
..,... ~ _ . . , . , appor....... lit N'ew Y"ark. Ia a let1lllr ad·
..... Dr. Wbi1lll ol ber appointment,
Roelleleller aald, "The time
and - . y )'Gil have devoted over the
,.... tD t h e - ol biatoric ~~.

ao-.ar

?=:-a... ::iii

. ..,
B
.......................... --

Ia ...your~
Wei, will ..... and
you

............ _._ill the Baud."
h

U/B
r.:wty
in
been
director

~Ji!J£~;
. . lbrGuPaat
~

the

are fairly hich """'· fliiP8C;ially Ia BDI- Iand where much of the food IDUIIt be
imported. And llll'vellers won't be able
to hich meat prices by leaving
this country-European countries are
having the aame problem.
Airfares will generally be a bit higher, and Dr. Butler notea that "package
deals" which include airfare, meals,
and lodging should become more ex- 1
pensive. Dr. Chang cautions those
who plan to rent a car abroad: gasoline prices in Europe are .three times
higher 'than American prices.
.American dollars ·have the worst
exchange rate in those foreign countries with the strongest currencies.
Thus, West Germany, France, and
Switzerland could .turn out to be most
expensive for American 'tourists. But
Dr. Chang notes that evecywhere · in
EilroP., things will be at lesst 10 to .20
per cent more expensive than before
devaluation.

.
Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and
England sbould be good bets for traveUera. And Dr. Iyoba mentions that
Eastern European countries, such as
Poland a n d Czecboslovakia, would
also be good for a tourist's poclretbook,
since they have kept prices in cbeck
and still have a demand for American
dollars.
'1'1..- croasing the Mediterranean
to visit ~tries of North Africa
and the Middle East should also find
relatively good buys. For those travel·
ling closer to home, Dr. lyoha
tions that the Can'bbean Islands are
still relatively inexpensive, since serv·
ices are cheap and prices reasonable.

men-

None of the economists ventured
a p~ctiop on whelher the increased
c o s t of European travelling would
deter ·would-be tou.r ists from going
abroad. Although Or. lyohli suggeSts .

that the me.- mlcbt mOe IIDIDI!
people decide to .._ America first,"
all think that if people want to go
abroad badly enough, tbey will go
despite the price bibs. Dr. lyoba mentions the possibility of a reverae tourist trend; be feels that many more
Europeans may come to America be·caw;e the devaluation is in their favor
and they can get more !or their money.
'!be profesoors advise travellers to
be aware of current exchange rates
! which can be cbecked throuih the
f o r e i g n exchange department of "
bank) and plan their money accordingly.
.
Will the furor over devaluation in
any way change the attitude of the
Europeans toward American tourists?
·: The- economists don't think 80. As Dr.
Buller commen'ts, ''Bankers and governments may be mad at each other,
but in terms of·'tbe general public, .
it shouldn't make a difterence."
. ~

•

I'

!

r.

'

COGNITION AND mUCTUU SIMINAI#

How People 1Aarn Propcuitiont, Gor-

~:~~: !'23Qe~J:r':f;:::ra!_~3t' 1~:J:
3 :30 P.ln.

00
•Opon 1D public
0pon ID of the IJ.-wty
#Opon only ID • .,-.J In the IUbject
ConDd Noncy C.nllorolll, 831·2228, lor llotlnp.

PreMnted by the Copitive Studies
Area of the U/B Department of Psychology.
FILMS• ..

STUDENT IICifAL•

THURSDAY-5

3 P-11\-

COIUGIATE ASSIMaY MHTJNO#

Tentative, ·129 Crooby, ·4-6

filMS•

A,!:!':.t' &amp;,~ 1l:t.dn~t! r~:J.

p.m.

• .• . '

The Summer Film Institute £.'-"to:

•1969).
~;:;; p~;:r·w~J~ wm:,_t~=:
9 p.m., 140 Capen.
Sileru:e and Cry (Jani!CO, 1968) , 7 &amp;

9 p.m.• r46 Diefendorf.

UUA&amp; FilM•• •

-tute.

The Twe~ Chair&lt; (Broob, 1970) .
Conference Theatre. Norton, check showcase for times. Adm.ission charge.

-·

FRIDAY-S

1 '- . . .. .:·

~tt,;:

:: :_, .,.

;,...~~.,.~:

case for times. 'Aclm.iuion charce.

U/ i

AITS

fOiuM

Part two of an interview with film.
maker Stan V&lt;Jilderbeek, WADV-FM
(106.5
10:06 p.m. .

"!'•-&gt;.

MONDAY-9 .
~~~'k.uion
of

UUAI FUM••

~

,j

C:,~f':::!'cew~. ~~~!;,~~:!. ~~:

leHitli~MtiMic:lissi~
John Mo.ralulll will screen and di.scuea

~7by~O:.~!!;,!,Piffl;.., lnati.

..•• .•

E1111~

Prediccteo, Cbarleo J. Fill-

~0~rC!~~uilld;~~ ~C.st

I :30-3:30 p.m.
Preoentecl by the Cop&gt;itive Studieo
Area of the U/B Department of Poy.
chology.

rJ'Kut!fou(~MU:::U""c;., i:/), fi
1

148 Diefendorf.

t:.r:.:

.

saW.ii.otDiscuisJON•

Filmmaker Ralph Steiner will ocreen
snd diocuoo oelectiona from his work,
li~ .D.i!ferulorf, ,8 p.m.
UUAI FILM••

~:..!:fit!::~~~=~=:
tlmel:. Ad.miaalon Charge.
~for

EXHIBITS
POSTC.UO EXMtllf•

Throltllh the Mail, a collection of poetcards from the eorly 1900'o, home-made
cardo, 8Dd cards from. part of the CaJwl.

ian Poolalrd Movement, Muaic Roam,

filMS"

The Summer Film Institule preoento:
'The Red and White (Jansco, 1967).
7 I&lt; 9 p.m .• 148 Diefendorf.
Brohen Blouomo (Griffith. 1919) , 7 I&lt;
9 p:m., 147 Diefendorf.
Muicon B ... Ri&lt;h (Bunuel, 1954), 7
.l 9 p.m., 146 Diefendorf.

The Summer Film Institule preoento:.
' · :Pie,rot /,e .Fou ~Godard,· 19(i6) , 7 p.m.,
a¥ . ~:a ··.D~~i'l.··(Ap~ ~). 9
~"'kr:.. .l .. ~~J;;Ip· # · •

The Summer Film Institute preoento:
1 J~=~rf~ll;"ba~. 1962) ,"7 &amp; 9 p.m.,
Molll:hette (B.......,n, 1968), · 7 p.m..
~~1 ~:~J~ry (Ozu, 1968), 9 p.m.,

The Bicyck Thief (cleSica, 1949) . 7
" 9 p.m.. 140 Capen.

269 Norton. Houn: Moaday-Friday, 10
a.m.-~0 !'"m. Th~ July 12.

~~~-=-b;y. J - De&amp;Jntu.
~C:::t!!.r~..i'...--~_.,y~
~dJ~~l~_Y .,._ 9 a.m.·S p.m ..

CONCIIt•

Musicol Am.ericaria, by Lejaren Hiller,
Baird Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
The concert, co-lpODOCJted by the U/B
Department of Muaic 8Dd the Cenler of
the Creative arid Performiuc Aria, will
feature JUOOt artiata, faculty 8Dd atudento
m a vanety of performancea, iDcl.uclinc a
vocal quartet and an inltzumental ee.x-

TUESDAY-10

OAU.In 21t M1' IIXHIIIt•

8
!i::..
!r!f" ~ J':..~tba~
Galle~1~ortoo, Fridu, July

a
artiot,

6, throaab
· '·July 27. G alia r y
boun: Moaclo.Y-1
, 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
~=~ tl&gt;e Univeroity Union Ac-

teL Tbeatricol dinlctor: Elliabeth A•el.

~~'df:~= :::-~":."· and
Ticket. are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office: ceneral admiooion,
$1.50: faculty, ataft' 8Dd U/B alumni, $1:
students, 60 cents.
IAIA&amp;

FU••

The Tw•lve Chairo (Broob, 1970).
Conference Tbeatre, Norton, check show.
case for timeo. Admiuioo charp.

SATURDAY-7

--~--·
er~'ti~":."d'!::::'~ 'i:::
tute of Deoip, Illinoia Institule of Tech.
nology, will IICIMil 8Dd ~ his 111m
Saturds;_Ni#ht at ~ ColiMum, M..w;
Study,
., 3323 Bailey Ave., 8: 15 p.m.
Preoentecl by the Summer Film Insti.
tule.

UUAI . . .••

Travelo With My Aruat (Cukor, 1972).
Conference Tbeatre, Nortoo, cl-* show.
caoe for Admiooie dlarp.

. SUNDAY-8

...__ -

lllllllllr

Jula Olildi Re110qet:tiw EV.U.itioll.
a ~-~ ~liDp. All&gt;rilbt·Kao•
~'7."7uuy 2B. Elmwood Ave., throaab

~---

PaintU... /rom IM Coll«tion of th•
MariM Mi.dland ,.BcaM-Watem. an eshibition by contemporary American 8Dd
European artiota, Albrid&gt;t-KDo. Art
Gallery, 1286 Elmwood A... The CoJ.
lection will be on view for ftn iDdeenite
periocl. ·
UIIAaY IXMIIIf•

50th Anniw,...ry of th• Publi&lt;otion of

---

Y.!~=:~ ;~ ~~t) ,J=

wood Memorial Librory.

. Yoar of ~1972, an nhibition
.

.=::

!'bo":'!uri:,."f'~~~":.ry

!&gt;Y oelectiono .from tbair pub;:c work

mclude: Johri Berryman, ~th P•tchen. PadJ-aic Colum, Marianne Moore
Richard Cburcb, Edmund Wiloon,"''aui
Goodman, Natalie ~ord Berney Eara
Pound. A. M . Klein. Mark Van DOren
80d J . _ K. Baxter. Balcony IICOnd
11.!?:.'~· Loclcwood Memorial Libraey. Coll~lliDC·

WUICLY COMMUNIQUE COPY DEADLINE

'&lt;For - - • convent.nC. .and P'-ure

we liM 1D pullllclu all -nts toklnc ~
on campus. To rKOrd lnfonnotlon, conl8ct
. Honey C.rdlrelll, a&gt;&lt;t. 2228.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>6rad .Stutlents FeelingPinm
.Of Dwindling Support.Funds
W be r e onoe the support monies
SUNY responded to -the natioual
flowed, there is now only a tricklecutback or support funds by ~­
and nobody is feeling the pinch more
ing $700,000 for fel.low&amp;blp support in
acutely tlian graduate students.
the 1973/ 74 budgel When tbia IJOI·DO
According to the annual report of
further than lellislative hMrinp, an
the Graduate School, the University
attempt was made to replaoe $350,000
will I.--between 1970 and 1977in t,!l(l supplemental budget, wblcb aJao
a million dollars in outside f~lowships
fanea.
and traineeships. It -baa already lost
~ntFundF~
over $600,000 in external support, due
This campus baa alao recognized
to the total extinction of federallythe need to eslablish a degree of selfsupported (ellowsblpa, ·the phasing out
sufficiency in this area. According to
of training grants, and the dwindling
the Graduate School report, "for the .
of subvention funds.
future we are oonoentralinll on buildTo the University as a whole, Grad·
ing up internal funds, and in the
. uate Dean McAllister H . Hull, Jr.,
1974175 budget proposala for SUNY/writes, .,this is critical because we
Bulfalo, we bellin a three-yl"''" effort
compete for the ablest graduate stu· to replaoe the lost fed~ral funds, at
dents with universities which have
leasl" In addition to giving the very
long established internally supported
highest budget priority to expansion
student aid programs or considerable
of internal funds, the University baa
size. Excellence of our graduate protaken aome stopgap measures to ease
. grams is, of course, our principal aid
the crunch. "President Ketter,'' says
in the competition, but our natural
the report, "in a one time only effort,
competitors, the 30 to 40 top public
has provided considerable fellowship
and private universities in the country,
support (or next year." This has taken
weigh in heavily on that score as well,
the form or dipping into endowment
. and they have the best support profunds to provide some 55 fellowships
grams. The economic efficiency of our
worth approximately $3000 each.
'o peration, in fhe overall picture, is
Meanwhile, graduate students have
affected by too little student supporl"
undertaken a bootstrap operation of
"Too little student support" transtheir own. The GSA baa eslablisbed
lates in human terms into considerable
and hopes to expand its own resouroe
anxiety and financial pressure for the
agency, the Graduate Resource Acoees
average graduate student. As GSA
Development Pro~r&amp;m, its acronym,
President Alan M . Miller indicates,
·
GRAD.
almost half of U/ B's graduate popuIn addition, Miller reports, the local
lation is married. Most no longer deGSA has initiated a natioual campaign
pend on their parents for financial
to work for the restoration of support
support, and many have already used
monies. This effort is being coordinup available Regents Scholarships as
ated by the National Student Lobby.
undergraduates. While support goes
The campaign will be a three-pronged
down, prices of everything, including
effort, Miller says. The first step is
education, go up. U/ B graduate tuito make graduate students across the
tion is now $1200 a year. According
country . aware of the campaign and
to Miller, graduate students are fur·
to engage their graduate associations.
ther handicapped because they are
It is essential to m a k e lellislators
unable to borrow money as readily as
aware of the numbers of persons ops~udenta pwJJHiiUJ f~e&amp;&amp;ional - . posed to cutbacks if the trend is to_
careers, in part, because careers in
be reversed, Miller contends.
research and teaching do not carry
Benefits to Society
with them" the earning potential of
Second, the campaign· bopes to "win
careers in medicine, law and dentistry.
(Continued on JXlle 3. col. J)

Left Seen Lionizing Hoover
In Attempt to Cut Down FDR
By
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
R.,.,.,.tw Stall

"Just as the liberal historians denigrated Hoover in order to make FDR's
· fame all the more lustrous, so it seems
likely that Hoover wiU be built up in
orc:l&lt;'r to cut his """"""""r down to
~ize. "

So forecasts Dr. Selig Adler, Samuel
P . Capen ProfeftllOr of American History, who analyzed latter d a y _ .
menta of Hoover's plaoe
American
history at a COI!ference on the Hoover
Pre.udency held. recently at Gen-..
What Adler sees shaping .u p is a
m o r e sympathetic interpretation of
Hoover's foreign policy by the "guild"
of professional historians, ·particularly
those identilied with the N- Lefl
Even Hoover's isolationism - once
conaiden!d the most damning feature
of the Republican President's inter·
national policy - is being scrutinized
anew by radi...t historians In tight of,
in Adler's term, "the seismic shift in
values triggered" by the Vietnamese
nlgbtmare.
. "Hiatorians," Adler COIIteads, "DOW
read with an approving eye Hoaver's
cautialla against f o r e i 11 n enlanllements, bla hostility to over-&lt;IJI'!II(ilnl
on defense, bla. emphasis on "the danpre of lmperiaiJam and bla dread of
the 'eternal malign l'clrcM' of the outside world. .. . To • a-ration WMried
of the taak of llobal s-ee-keeping,
Hoovel'o 01111tantion lbet ADaicaD In·
temationau.m be c:onftDed to slncele

m

cooparatbo with~ . - . 1 1 de-

voted to furtbarillll the JXO- of
peace bokll ~t ~-"

Four-Letter Word

· Until the lesson of Vietnam, " isola·
tionism" was a four-letter word among
liberal historians, who mOre or less
agreed that the Quaker President's
tenure was "an era of darkness before
the dawning of the New Deaf.
"In contrast,'' explains Adler, "the
New Dealers were regarded as forward-looking men who saved the,country (rom economic chaos and later
spared western civilization from . the
hands of the fascist outlaws."
Adler attributes the relative homogeneity of this anti-Hoover sentiment
within the guild to the "strong bonds
of personal memories" among those
historians who actually experienced
the Depression and its two presi·
dencie&amp;.
• Hoover hinmelr COIItributed to his
poor image, Adler . Bugge&amp;ts, by declaring hm-lf loudly and publicly
on COIItemporary iaaues during his 32
years aa an ex-preeidenl
"Almost all his admonitions ran
COIItrary to prevailing trends of opin·
ion," Adler explains, "and his dire
prophecies ......Uy wrong."
Until the , _ , thaw mward Hoover, the ·~ historiaaa," a
calla them, found little aood to

''·~:!~~:~~

ver, to his eredit, bad eadad the era

of "old-faahhoned II!Qboat lmpirial.

•. . • ltd . . . . . . . . .

• • • 10 tMclt lull·t;,...

Hollander Quits~ Provost;
Julian Named in Psychology
University administrative cbanges
COIItinued tbia week with the announcement or the resi~n&amp;tion of a
provost and the appointment of a
major departmental chairman, both in
the Faculty of Social Sciences.

...

Dr. Edwin P. Hollander, proiiOBt of
the' Faculty of Social 8cienoea and
Administration for the Pl!8t twO yea~~~,
will reeiln from thet post and ........
full-time t.cbing ..... -..:b Sep.
tember 1.
Sinoe April 1, when Dr. Hollander
took a leave from the lldminiatmtive

..... faculty Jlc*a. Dr. Arthur

Builer

- - -to-OCIIItiDue
- actin~inproiiOBt.
Healtar
._ apeed
thet post
8eptedJer 1.

ism" in Americao"1liJ&gt;iomatic telatiana.
But this ... damniDc wit b faint
praiae ..._ ~ with the debit
In~ Dr. Hollader'a .-..
nation, Pnllldct RcDrt L. K.u.
side of .lbe Hoovw adminlatratioll,
c:baracterlacl by • loq atrinc of dis- . oald, "'nne um-.lty aad the PW:u~Q­
. . - culmlllatmc iD •the Pnlideat'o of 8oclaJ SclaM-. ... ~
...... • debt" al patllude to Dr. Hol(COIIfilowd "" 4, eoL l)

�, _ 28,1973

2

Lawmakers Ready for C~ . 50,000-Memb.er Class of 1973
Of Rocky
vs. SUNY/United Is Largest in SUNY's History ·
Marini

year ol a lb.--year --..eat betbe State and tbe Civil SeMce
Employees' AMOC:iatiaa, Inc., of 6.5
perceDL"
Among bia .......,.. for rejectinc tbia
recommendation, Rockefeller noted:
(1) No claim waa made tbat SUNY
aalariea Lq appreciably below tbe level
ol aalariea in 00111J1818i&gt;1e institutions
but that, .to tbe contnuy, data submitted 011 ooiDpanobla aalarieo indicate
that average COIJII)eiiMtion in SUNY
ranked 81D0111 the bigbeot in tbe nation in the fall of 1972; (2) Tbe average aalarieo in tbia JleiOtiatins wtit ~
are far higher than for otbar State
employeea, particularly tlx.e involved
in the lb.--year_settlement with the
Civil Service Employees' Asaocialiaa;
(:t) Tbe CSEA settlement ia not comparable since it involvecj a lb.--year
agreement on all terms and conditions
of employment and not merely reopened negotiations limited to salaries
for the last year of a lb.--year agreement; and (4 ) The Panel's recoinmendation does not recognize other
one-year settlements involving State
meriL
employees.
'The Governor noted that the recSUNY{United's De Lucia in the
ommendation that 1'h per cent of pay- ·
June newsletter of the organization
roD be set aside for the sole purpose
said that the Rockefeller statements
are "unrealistic." He said he truat&amp;-of salary increases for meritorious performance bad initially been the State's
"as the Taylor Law requires us to and, thus, concurred with the Facttruat-that a fair and impartial l.egislative determination will cut through
Findeni on this point.
• 'Solafy lneq-·
the rationalization to what can be
SUNY/ United, Rockefeller sa i d,· ·
fairly called a realistic salary settle""bad sought a $425 flat increase to
ment."
be distributed to all faculty and stalf
Locally; Dr. Constantine Yeracaris,
irrespective of salary level _plus a pool
president of the Buffalo Center Chapof 3 per cent ( $2 million) to be dister of ,SUNY/ United, 'i"YS if. the l.egtributed oJ\ly to tlx.e memhen1 of the
- islature accepts Rockefeller's position,
"we will be nowhere close to matcbfaculty and stall who earn less than
the median salaries in the Arts and
ing cost of living increases.'' ~e said
Sciences Coli- for their respective
he hopes the Legislature realizes that
rank." This was called "necessary" by
if SUNY has, in fact, achieved the
SUNY/ United, Rockefeller said, in
national salary ststus claimed by the
order "to redress alleged 'inequities'
Governor, the Rockefeller offer of
three and one-half per cent will serve ·
in the SUNY salary structure.''
The Governor here also concurred
only to insure that· this position will
with the Fact-Finding report which
deteriorate. .
urged denial on the grounds that the
Panel had "not beOm per&amp;\l!lded ol the
validity of the concept that tiiJary
inequities can be inferred simply from
A search committee has been apsalary dilferences, without first depointed by Dr. Bernard R. Gelbaum,
termining how t!Jey are alfected by
vice president for academic affairs, to
such variables as dilferences in emrecommend candidates for the Position
ployees' length of service, educational
of dean of the School of Architecture
p._,.tion, pedagogical responsibiliand Environmental Design.
ties, and tbe like...
•
'The poet was held by John P. Eberhard who resigned to become president
Acoordina to Rockefeller, the Factof the American Institute of ArchiFinding Panel's recommendation on
tects Research C-orporation in WashacnJM-.the-board salary i n c r e a s e s
ington, D. C. Richard K. Chalmers is
(whidl he rejected) "appeBnl to be
serving
as acting dean.
a compromise between the S t a t e's
Final recommendations by the comtotal after of 5 per cent (3'h per cent
mittee, to be chaired by Michael Brill,
..,..,.._the-board and 1'h per cent
professor of architecture and environ'iuerit). and tbe position of SPA (now
mental design, are due in October.
SUNY/Unital!) ... ol a total settleNamed to the committee are: Har"*'t l*bire ......nh 9 per. ceDI of
PQIOIJ.• Tbe Filet-Finders' only bases
vey Brevemian, profeoaor of art; Chalfor dar re • • d•tion of 5 per
mers, who is an associate professor in
cent a c r o a •the-board, Rockefeller
the School; Max Clarkson, president,
Graphic Controls, . Inc.; Frank Coraid, "are 0081-of-livinll changes (totallnl 3.8 to 4 per cent· in the present
bett, director of urban all'ain1 and associate
professor, School of Social
ollhe ~t) and tbe fir&amp;t
Policy and Commwtity Services; Peter
F. DiMatteo, graduate student, School
ol Architecture and Environmental
'lbe Leclalative
paDel 011
the dllpute ~ SUNY/Ualtod and tbe State for. tbe 1973-74
--..;.,year (Reporter, JUDe 7) ia
_ . . to ..,.,_ late tbia .......,
early nat week, 80W'Cll!8 • in tbe ·
flll:ulty-a buplning apnt indicate.
With~ for the SUNY/t:lnited
poailiaa (of a 6 per cent ..,..,.._tbebaerd U.C... caupled with 1~ per
coat ol total aalariea for merit hills)
beinc daimed 11om IIICb filures aa
Stata' AFirCIO Preeident Raymootl
Coltlett and NYSUT -£&gt;o!cutive Vice.
Pralidoat Albert flbanbr, "what remains to be detanniDed ill tbe Goveroor's role In tbe .......,..,mn, M&amp;rinp," SUNY/United 8tata Preoiclent
Lawrence A. DeLucia aaya.
Rocbfeller'a only public atataiDMit
.., tbe matter to date Willi bia May 22
- t o the Lecialature In wbidl he
aCcepted two ol three ,.,...,..,JDMida.
tious (or settling the dispute propcaKI
by a Fact-Finding Panel apj&gt;ointed by
the Public Employment Relations
Board. He wged a 3~ per cent acroosthe -board hike with 1'h per cent for

fr

Search Cqmmittee

--

__
•.r·----------·-___
---

_,_.., .. _.,_
...,........,
·----r.-.,....,-- ... -....
.,,_

-~-

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

--·----

1'. MAIII.nT

......._....,
--........
IIMIIII&amp;CI"IM!''

Tbe number o1 degrees awanled at
needed prola.looala ;D"";.IIl'llinl, mediState University of New Yod&lt; camcal-eocial work. and nune education,
puaes pa_.t tbe 50,000 mark for the
AI~;.::-~also showed
first time tbia spring.
According to SUNY Central figures,
dramatic growth at tbe two-year as69 University colleges and cenlenl
sociate degree level. Graduates in
presented 52,7I&gt;7 degrees, an increaae
health teciGiologiea, wbidl include
of 4,596, or 9.5 per cent, cM!r the
nllrsing, totaled 5,«)44, a pin of 1,040
number awanled a year ..,...
over the 4,004 Sprinc 1972 total.
Granted were 1,221 doctoral deNo otbar clear-cut vocational trends
grees, 3,978 masters, 20,330 bachelors,
nor preferences 8ll1l!rJI'CI from romand '}!1,228 aasociate degrees.
·
parisons with degrees granted a year
A CD111parison w i t h tbe previous
ago, SUNY Central aaid. While there
spring's graduates s1&gt;owe4 growth in
were 100 fewer .maaters degrees in
degrees aasociated with tbe health
engineerinc, there Wllll -a University·
Wbil docto tes · medi
wide increaae ol 81 in beccalaureate
p rofeR81011S.
e
ra
m
degrees ·m· •L-t diaclp-•~-. Tbe Uru'cine, dentistry and health rose only
..,.
'""'
four from the previous year, to 555; - versity's awarded appro:rihaocalaureate health profession de- - mately 250 fewer graduate degrees in
grees .were up 360, with 870 a~
arts and aciences, but bachelors deMasters degrees in health profe881ons
~"!."" in .tbia """'• inc1uding teacher
more than doubled, from 46 to 99.
education graduates, rose by m o r e
'The increase reflected tbe employthan 1,600.
men! stability health professions proMaslen! degrees in education increased by more than 300.
vide and the growing number of

lniematiOIJal Educa~ Program
Projects 550 Awards for 1974-75
The Institute of International .Education has announced the opening of
its 1974-75 competition for grants for
graduate study or research abroad and
for professional training in the creative and performing arts. It is expected
that approximately 550 ·a wards to 46
countries will be available for 1974-75.
The grants; Whose~ is to increase mutual unden1tanding between
the people of the United States and
other countries through the exchange
of pe~ns, knowledge and skills, are
provided under the tenps of the Mutual Educational and Cultural Ex-

jpeo·-~
Vice President

of

AAUA -

Dr. Marjorie C. Mix, assistant dean
of the Law School, has been elecf.ed
to a two-year term as vice president
of the American Association of University Administrators ( AA U A) . Dr.
Mix was a founding member of the
organization; w hi c b was fonned in
1970 to promote prof.lssional excellence in higher education administra"
tion.
Urotoctc Assocllltlon President

Dr. William J . Stsubitz, professor
and chairman of the Department of
Urology, has been elected president
of the 400-member Canadian Urologic
Association. He is the first American
to hold this office and will be installed
at the Association's annual meeting in
Ottswa in 1974. Dr. Staubitz, who has
published widely in bis field, is current president of the Northeastern
section of the American Urologic Aasociation.

Design.

Dr. Norman N. Holland, professor
ol Engliab; Sue F. Knapp, student,
Sc:bool ol An:hitecture and EnvironIDMital Deaip; Dorothy L. Lynn, prof-, Sc:bool ol Social Policy and
Coommmity Servicee, and Dr. Robert
E. Paawell, IIIBOCiate profesaor ol
civil~ .

-· lOEPfDI HCINOIIED
Dr. Conowt F. Toepfer, Jr., -

proIn the Deportment of Curriculum
Instructional Media, hu
~ of the Now Vorl&lt;
Allociotlon for Supenriaion ond Curriculum DIIMiopmont for 1973-74. The
Allociotlon ......-ts owr 2,000 lndi-

Nomect Ofllc:era

Two U/ B administraton1 have been
elected ollicen in the pewly formed
' Western New York Chapter of tbe
American Asaociation ol University
Administrators, NIUDI!d vice preaident
was Larry R. Drake, aasociate dlrec:tor
of University Placement and Career
Guidance. Tbe University'&amp; director
ol information eervices, J,._ R. [)e..
Santia, was elected

. .secretary--.
. ·
v-

Dewelopment -

.....,._ of 1111

.........

, Dr. Kenneth M. Kiler, IIIBOCiate
prol- ol chemical ~. baa
bemo named "~ ol the Yeor"
by the U/B Tau Beta Pi Asaociati011,
an ....u-m, llludeat boaor aoclety.

Act ) and by foreign governments, universities and private donors.
Applicants must: be U.S. citizens at
the time of application, be slated to
hold a _bachelor's degree or its equivalent before the beginning date of the
grant and, in most cases, be prOficient
in . the J(ln.l!l!"'e .o( tbe .host ."'!untry.
Excep~ for certain specific awards,
candidates may not bold the Ph.D.
at -the time o( application. .
Creative and perforining artists are
not required to have a bachelor's degree, but they must have four years
of professional study or equivalent experience. Social work applicants must
have at least two yean! of· professional
experience after the Master of Social
Work degree; candidates in medicine
must have .an M.D.
Selection is based on the academic
and/ or professional record of the applicant, the validity and feasibility of
his proposed study plan, bis language
preparation and personal qualifica-tions. Preference is given to candidates
between 20 and 35 who have not had
prior opportunity for extended study
or residence abro&amp;d.
·
Information and application' (onns
may be obtained from 107 Townsend.
Phone 831-4247 for appointments to
diScuss the program;- Tbe deadline
date for receipt of applications in 107
Townsend is Octoher·1, 1973.

Julianrcontin""d from PG11&lt; 1, coL #)

Ph.D. from the University of lllinois
at Urbana. Before joining U/B in
1963, he tsught at the University of
Illinois. He has served aa director of
graduate studies in peychol"'Y aince
1969.
He ia a member ol the AJMrican
Psychological .A.oclation, tbe Midwestern Psychological Asaociation,
and
Eaatem Psychological Aasociation.

tt&gt;e

IlK£ COMPOUND OI'£HINQ
The bicycle compound behind Lockwood
Ubrlry will open July 2, SA Trusurar
Kenny Untcer hu onnounc:«&lt;. The hlncad·
In .,.. will operate 9 o.m.-4 p.m., Mondoy
throuah Friday. A IICUrity iUird will be
&amp;Utioned ot the compound durina this
period. Persons intorastecl in usi"i the
IICIIIty should re&amp;ilter their bikes with
Compus Security, 196 Winspeor Avenue
R11istran11 will be Issued 1 numberwd
deal lor their bikes and 1 numbeowt 1.0 .
cord, which they will presont to the··auord
when plcklna up their bikes. Untcer olso
raportocl the ~dent Associotlon (205
Norton) II now occopttna oppllcottons fro")
ltudenll tntorasttd In Mrvi"i 11 ~rdl
It the compound.
,

�3

Randall Named

l{effer Urges End to Com~unity ~

T0 the Staff of · Amherst
''The University and the 'l'own
now&lt;hsve an opportunity to
Planning 0 ffi1ce .. ~:_toy.: :::t :":" .:of

,
Jolm D. Rlmdall, f011111!1' D18JI8II!r
Cll fadlltiee plaDniq for the Illinois
~t of Generill 8erYia!s, baa
'-" -inted ~t.ec:tural IISIIOCiate
in the U/B Oftlce of F'lldlities Plan· '
ning, •elfective immediately.
With din!ct reopabBllliJity for super·
viaiaD of both the .Arcbitecture and
l'lanlliiis. and Equipment Planning
Sections of tbe Olllce, RaDdall will be.
revlewinl an:bit.ec:tural cloclm8lts at
various ...... in both building and
site ~t projects. · In pouaUel
with tbe cleveiOpaalt of the North
· Campus, be will also be respDIIsible ·
for planning a n d redesigning tbe
South Campua into a _,ter for the
Faculty of Health Sciences.
~the ~tment, Vice
President for Facilities ·Planning John
D . Telfer oaid:
"Mr. Randall's extensive experience
in the development of new campuses
as well as broad interest and know·
ledge of uiliversity communities and functions. obtained as instructor, administrator a n d an:bitect-historian,
will certainly become apparent as he
f u r the r develops this Un.i versity's
planning team to its fullest capabilities.
"He brings unique telents to an
especially important dimension of
creativity - that of determining a .
better1llld more aesthetic 'living-working environment for untold thousands
of future students and faculty at the
University in Amherst and at Main
Street."
A native of Chicago, Randall, 54,
studied civil engineering and architecture at the University of lllinois, before receiving his B.S. in architecture
from · the · lllil\ois Insti'tute of Tech· nology.
'"
From 1961-69, he served as associate
University architect for the Edwardsville Campus of So11thern Illinois,
where he coordinated planning and
design for a $33 million campus -development. During the .same period he
was an instructor in the University's
Department of Fine Arts and imple- mented an architectural arts program
which focused on the famous ornament collection of Architect Louis H.
Sullivan.
.'
A member of the American Institute
of Architects ( AlA ) , Randall is a
past member of -the Chicago Chapter's
board of directors and past president
of the Southern Illillois Chapter. He
is aloo a former president of the Chicago Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians.

Grad Students-

f

(Continued (rom- 1. coL 4)
the_ support of faculty and administrators involved in graduate education.
These are the people, Miller thinks,
who can best convince society of the
benefits to it of graduate education.
T h i r d, the campaigners hope to
reach Congress, through the efforts of
the NSL and also by utilizing the
media, writina letters, and giving tes-.
timony. Tbe Washington phase of the
program aot underway this week when
NSL ~tative Fran Ribman Hew
to the Capitol to assess the legislative
·
situation.
Miller tbinJ!a a great deal more
attention must also be paid to dealing.
with tbe problem 011 the State level.
The Student Aaociation of State University (8ASU) baa taken a step in
this direction by actively supportina
the. Aaembly's Maqiotts bill, which
would ~ the Lehman gradu·
ate fellowobip
Miller ia urging everyone coocamed with graduate
educstioo to write to their State legislators uldq them to do all they can
to exta&gt;d graduate support and COil·
demning thoee wbo ldlled the graduate
s u ll p o r t provision In the SUNY
budpt.

procnun:

greatest beneftts of a mooumental undertaking - in this case the creation
of a new University campus in Amherst - ~ through the cooperative ieoolutioo of j o f n t problems "
President Robert L. Ketter told
Amherst Cbaniber of Commerce as it.
presented him its seventh annual VIP
of the Year aWI!fd July 19.
Too many iSsues in Western New
Yark, Ketter recalled, have been dealt
with by "the processes of recrimlnatiqn and deception," with divisiveness
spilling into the community "to the
point where the community is sometimes soured by its own progress_"
He told the VIP Dinner audience
at the Wick Center, Rosary Hill, that
the University is committed to cooperation and it is "my belief- that
the Town of Amherst is, too."
University-community - Ketter noted that whe!i lie first
assumed office he "began to devote a
considerable amount of time to the
improvement of University-oommunity relations-which certainly needed
improvement." One of his premises,
he said, was "that the University-&lt;X&gt;mmunity relationship could not be a
one-way arrangement; that a one-way
relationship between these two elements would be just like a one-way
marriage: unsatisfactory:•
An example of this philosophy in
terms of Amherst, he said, has been
estahlislnnent of a "University-Town
of Amherst Conference, a joint meeting which occurs once a month, deals
with specific problems, and involves
the heads of · compansble ·operational
units in the Town and University.
The purpose of these meetings is to
create a cooperative working relationship and to allow good faitll' "eJI'orts
and candor to be applied to the solution of problems."
Many problem a· rea s have been
identified, Ketter indicated, and " they
exist not just for the University or
the community, but for both. Some of
the most critical involve transportation, fire and police protection, housing, sewage treatment, Hood control,
and recreational facilities in the Town
and at. the University for the use of
both citizens and students."
S u c h U/ B-Amherst -relationships
warrant increasing CXJOperative attention, the President suggested, because
"this year marks the beginning of
educational activity on the Amherst
Campus. Later this summer, the University's law faculty will occupy its
new building; in the fall, students will
- be living in some of the new dormitory
space. These events will represent the
first completed steps in a moving process that will continue throughout this
decade."

the

Special Needs Gro~p
A Lockwood Library Special Needs
Committee has been formally organized to better meet the needs of the
Black Studies, Jewish Studies, and
Puerto Rican Studies programs and
those of their constituencies.
" Hopefully," according to Joseph
Stetson, Acquisitions Department, the
group can alao anticipate the needs
of other ethnic studies.
"We hope to concern ourselves
with improving faculty-atudent input
in all areas, including the materials
selection process, effort.
increase
acce1111ibility of the oollectiOIIs and the
planning of displays and emibits in
the library, aome of u-, bopeluJiy,
to be coordinated w i t h Oil-campus
eventa."
Unfortunately, Stetaoft. oaid, "clue
to a lack of enthullaam 8IDOIII thoee
asked to oerve Oil the committee, a
resignation and a defectiOII, the 011111mittee is rtJlMr oborWiaJided aD d
volunteers would be welcome. ..- .

to

Tho- Compuo -the~

h1Jrary, the CM!!Ntilization than 500 per ...t.
"But even more than that, I lblak
you will agree with me that . . _
J&lt;inds ,of &amp;,urea u-Jw. do not
reVeal the Jwman ~to._...
aons who are required to u. -sthat under DO...,.! , ~
would be considered um:-t.le- ' menta, closets, windowlellll enclolula
- and we have a number of
''The Main Street Campua fi ra t
served as the county ~ In
recent years, there wa a certain iftllly
about that fact which many of,. at
the University could ~te even if we were DOt ~ by it.
These 8rst moves to Amherst cma
therefore be viewed as tbe initial 8lepe
in a long-awaited "cbulp of atatian"
for the University, as well a s which may serve to restore our appreciation of the ironic - at IM8t
until,__ the move has liMn completed. '
Of course, the Main Street Campua
will be rehabilitated rather than aban·
doned, and it is planned that event- ually it will be uaed ezclusively by
the Health Sciences."

Notina that be baa told lllllllY audiences of the impact of the new University campus 011 the community,
Ketter gave this insight into bow the
massive construction project alfects_
the ·University:
"lt is imposSible for me to OODvey
to you the excitement - even ezbila.
ration - and certainly the relief," he
said.
''The Amherst Campus has been a
long time corning. When plans were
first announced, in 1964, University
expectations ran high. They were too
high, in fact, not to be eroded by the
long delays in construction which followed the original announcement. The
frustration of expectations damaged
the morale of faculty, staB, and students. Nor was morale helped by the
University's overoocupancy of existing facilities. That overoccupancy last
year, taking intO account all fortysome of our separate and distinct locations in Buffalo and Amherst, was
on the average 35 per cent, according
to S_tate standards. In certain areas,
lor example the reader stations in the

u-.

Job Openings
The Personnel Office indicates that the following faculty and non~~~ professional staB positions are open at State University at
Foculty_

Assistant Professor, Health 'Education -Program.
Assistant Professor, Psyclwlogy.
Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, Child Health.
Instructor-Sophomore Nursing, School of Nursing, Child Health.
Instructor or Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, Child Health.
Instructors ! 2 ) , School of Nursing, Maternal Health Nursing.
Heal~~~tructor or Assistant Professor ( 2 ), School pf Nursing, .Adult
lnst~ctor or Assistant Professor (pt. time ) , School of Nursing,
Adult Health.
·
Major Advisor/ Graduate Faculty, School of Nursing, Community
Health Nursing.
Graduate Faculty Member, School of Nursing, Community Health

Nwsinru
•
Instructor/ Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, Community Health

Nursif}g.
Assistant to Director of Clinical Education, part time, Physictd
Therapy.
Assistant Professor, Fired Prostlwdontics.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Industrial Engineering.
Visiting AssiStant Professor, Voice, Music.
Instructor, part-time, Music.
Field and Research Archaeologist, Anthropology.
Assistant Professor, Biology.
Visiting Professor, Chemistry.
Assistant Librarian, Music Library, University Librcria.
Assistant Librarian, Undergraduate Library, part-time, Univeroity
Libraries.
, Assistant Librarian, Archives, part-time, University Libraria.
Assistant or Associate Librarian, Mathematics, Univeroity Libraria.
Assistant or Associate Librarian, Undergraduate Library, Univenity
Libraries.
Assistant Director, Technical Services, Unwenily Libraria.
Associate Director of Libraries, University Libr-aria.
Assistant Director, Collection Development, U~ Lib,..,.ia. ·
Assistant Professor ! two positions), Rf!Bioralive IH..u.try,
Instructor, Surgery, School of Medicine.
Visiting Assistant Professor, ThaJlre.
Assistant Professor, Organization and Human Reaources,
School of Mant1gement.
·
AssiRtant Professor, Assistant Band Director ('AI position), Jlruk.
NTP

Assislml! for Instructional Servicf!B, Division of Student AflUn,
PR-1.
•
Assistant to Dean, Divisioo of Student Affairs, PR-1.
Assislmlt to Iktua, Oftlce for Credit-Free Prognuns, PR-1.
Assislmlt to Director, Admissions and Recorda, PR-1.
Struknt Actwitia Assi&amp;lmlt Dinclol', Division of Student AflUn,
PR-2.

For additional iniormation CllllllliiDibil .._ jobe and for detaila of
NTP opeoinp throughout the State Unlwaity ~ ~t bulletin
boards at th8oe Jocationa:
1. Bell Facility ' * - 0162 and D11i3; 2. Rldp 1M, Buildlnc
4236, nut to cafeteria; a Rldp 1M. BuiJillnl 4230, 1n CDridor .-&amp; to
e-1; 4. Health ~ Buildina.
corridor os.-~ta HB 111; &amp;.
HaJJ. in the corridor ~ Room 141 and lbe Lobby; 6. Lodr.wood,
ground floor in corridor nut to ~ JDMblnM; 7. ~ Hill, In
main ""llanoe foyer, from Public InflanMtbi a..; 8. ~
Hill, in corridor . . . _
112 ad 118; 9. PariDar ~
in corridor nut to Room 16; 10. Good.Jear Hill, lit floor, Haallnc
11. Law Sobool, lint
boul'*108 and 108; 12. ~ m-.1, . . _ . Illputmmt; 18. NortoD
Unioa, Director'• Olllce, Room 2211; 14.. I:IWmdolf Hill, In CDridor .-&amp;
to Room 106.

m

a-

floor...,............_

c-

a..
a-

�weeki1J eomaunique

j_

OOpon Ill . . . -

-

----·

-T HURSDAY-28

E - of PGiiml Care by Audit:
A Nudinl R~y. io the tbome

of a -.day worbbap. Ill be bold at the
Roowo11 Park Mllllllirial lllllituta Re...-.b Studioo OoDtar loday aad

_,r.

u.!'::..ob.t'::.t:'~~
....=::-~
-r. chairJDaD, CaaummitY Health

:--.:::

eonof~.=~~
NuniDc, W8)ilje State UalftnitY

-1

U/B lkhOol of NuniDc DoparlmoDt of
OonliDDIDc Edamliclll.
fiSTIVAL*
FativalCluJmber
Orcllalnl
-rebeazoal.

. , _ . ~ conductor, Baird Hall,
10 a.m. • DOOJL
Erythrocyre
~·

Polymorp/W: Cllarocun

~IM~toN'f{!1 ~~:.~:{:;'J;:;":.

eociate p~..or, Kanua State Univeroity, OUidren'o Hoopitol N- Board

--IIOOD.

-·

P-tad by the U/B Departmento of
Biocbomiotry omd Pediatrics.

The Summer Film lllllituta presents:
Sun and Sh&lt;ldow (Vulcbanov, 1961),
7 &amp; 9 p.m., 146 Diefendorf.
liJOII the Terrible 1 (Eisenotein, 1944),
7 p.m., and Ivan the Terrible 11 (Eisenstein, 1946) , 9 p.m., 147 Diefendorf.
J~l:;f.~:f.trone, 1913), 7 &amp; 9 p.m.,

1

~=/~fM&amp;Or

of libttaleviaiOn and director, Alternate Media

~~i~J~o~=~'1fr:"::
Ca~t&lt;\d.m.by

the

tute.

S~r

... tlie lllllject
Dl·2221. tor llllloop.
cheotro, ~ Gearl-rt, cooductor, u
well aa .mdent pariticpanla, BaUd Recitol Hall, 8 :80p.m. N o - clwp.

• ...-... -

~ Nency Cerde....

-·
::;:-

of .... __ . . ,

•OOpon Ill -

.Open ..., Ill -

Film llllli-

YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMifl FEStiVAl.•

The Cleveland Quarrel, joined by

an-

ista Suphen Mane•, piano, and Theodore
Mayer, string basi, will p~nt the second of a four-concert teries as part of
the procram for the Young Musicians
Chamber Festival, sponoored by tl&gt;e U/B

Department of Music. Baird Recitol Hall.
8
eveninc'a prosram will include
worb by Mozart omd Schubert Ticketo
are available at the Norton Hall Ticket

SATURDAY-30
YOUNG MUSICIANs CMAMaR fiSTIYAL•

Feoliuol Chomber Muoic coaceR, fe&amp;·
turin&amp; otudent enoembleo selected from
·vounc Muaiciano Cbambor Festival audilion winnero, Baird Recitol Hall, 2 p.m.
UUAifi.M••

&amp;ya in the &amp;n4 (Friedkin. 1968),
Conference Tbeatre, Norton, ebock obowciooe for timea. Admiuion charp.
Mart Crowley'• " breakthroud&gt;" com·
edy-drama of lifo 8JDOJ&gt;C G-..wich VJIJace homooexuall, adapted by the author
(rom his off-~roadway. atage aUCCIMI.

SUNDAY-I
UUAA

Fft.M••

&amp;ya in the Bond (Friedkin, 1968),
Conference Theatre, NortoD, check abow'C&amp;Ie for times. Adm.ission charp.
U/ 1 ADS FOIUM

Film and video artist Stan Vanderbe'eh
is Esther Swartz's guest in the fint of a
two-part interview, WADV-FM (106.5
mgz) , 10: 15 p.m.
U/1 SUNDAY SurPLEMfHT

and WPHD-FM (103.3 mp.), 10:30 p.m.

Th6 Summer Film Institute presents:
Variation on a Theme (Szabo, 1962).
and AI• of Illusion (Szabo, 1964), 7 &amp; 9
p.m ., 148 Die(endorf.
Earth (Dov&lt;henko, 1930), 7 &amp; 9 p.m.,
147 Diefendorf.
L4 Terra Tretnll (Visconti, 1948),
&amp; 10 p.m., 140 Capen.

discusses parent-child relationships with
boot Ken Service, WYSL (1400 khz.)

MONDAY-2
FILMS•

The Su.mme.r Film IMtitute presents:
Prof._,, Hormibol (Fabri), 7 &amp; 9 p.m.,
148 Diefendorf.
·
Citizen Kane (Welles, 1941) , 7 p.m.,
and Day of Wroth (Dreyer, 1943) ;9 p.m.,
147 Diefendorf.
Open City (Rosaelini, 1945), 7 &amp; 9

Dcu8hton of Dor~ (Kumel, 1971).
Cobference 'Theatre, Norton. check abow-

cue for liiMo. Admiuion charge. •

FRIDAY-29
YOUNG MUStCIANI CHAMIEI flmVAl•

Feotivol Chomber Orch..tro rehearael.
Pamela Gearhart, conductor, Baird Hall.

10 a.m. • DOOD.
YOUNG MUSICIANS CHAMIEI FISIIVAL•

Solllinl Special ProbleiiUI ofl""""""'n

io Chomber Muoic, 1ectwe/demonobatioD, Tbo Cleftland Quartet. 106 Baird,
4:80p.m.

-·

Tbe Summer Film IDIIitute presen1B:
The POt1l:l&amp; TI!Uf (Radev, 1964), 7 &amp; 9
p.m., 148 Diefendorf.

---I'IITfvAL•
~

the FatiuaJ Chomber Or-

THURSDAY-S

DANCE llfCIT.U*

FILMS•

b:i:Jt:rz~~· 'D1:~te &lt;Mcllri:e:.

1968) , 7 p.m., and"Winur Wind (Jansco,
1969) , 9 p.m., 140 Capen.
Mexican Bus Ride (Bunuel, 1954), 7

:'!.Pc:,entJ:!.co. 1968). 7

1
&amp; }if:;:;
9 p.m., 146 DieCendorf.

&amp;

5CifENING/DI5CU5StoN•

TUESDAY-3
FILMS•

The Summer Film Institute presents:
Loa Oluidodos (Bunuel, 1951), 7 &amp; 9

Paiaon (Rooselini. 1946) , 7 &amp; 9 p.m.,
140 Capen.
Serene Velocity (Gehr, 1970), Mouie
(Connor, 1958), PIDying a Note on the
Violin While Walking Around the Studio
(Nauman, 1968), Trip to the Door (Brakbage , Hand Catchins Leod (Serra), Bob
(Close), 69 (Breer, 1968), and Gulu and
Buoys (Breer, 1972), 7 &amp;_9 p.m., 146
Die(endorf.
·
CONCRT•

John Marshall will screen and discun
his films, 147 Die(endor(, 8 p.m.
Presented by the Summer Film lmtitut:e.

EXHIBITS
GAWRY 219 EXHIIIrt•

Lithosroplu and lnlaiiUo Printo by
~ur Secunda, Gallery 219, No.ton,
throuch Wedneoday, June 30. Gallery
hoUn: Monday-Friday, 11 a..m.-5 p.m.
Included in the 30 prints are eome

d Cop-

ba:t.~~

bannony, Baird Recitol Hall, 8 p.m.
Tickets are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office: general admiuion,
$1.50; facul ty, stall and U/B alumn~ $1;
studento, 50 cento. Preoented by the U/B
Department of Music.

Europaan arliato, Albricht-Knoz Art
Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Ave. Tbe Collection will be on view for an indefinite
period.
UllldY EXHIIIT•

50th Anniversary of the Publication of

Y.!;:'!'~~ ~~~ d::~:&lt;mV=.

wood Memorial library. MEMOIIAl EXHIIIT•.

Year of DaniQil&amp;-1972, an ezbibition

~ho~a'u~~~n~~r:&gt;'~

.by selections from their publisf!!d work
include: Jobn Berryman, Kenneth Pat.

chen, Padiaic Colum, MarianDe Moore,
Richard Olurch, Edmund Wilaon, P~ul
Goodman, Natalie Clilford· Bamey, Eara
Pound, A. M. Klein, Mark Van Doren,
.and James K. Bazter. Balcony, second
ftoor. Lockwood' Memorial Library. Con-

linuinc.

NOTICES
. _ _ A l suaJICIS NHDID

of~.;; ~.. U:a~~J:":ir:~

Waahincton, D.C., and the Muoeum of
Modern Art in New York..
,..

S - 1 SOFIULL LIAGW

~CARD

Foster, Gershwin, Gottochalk

IXHIIIT•

M=1.f~Lr:: ~~w:::r:# ~ ~':

smoltinc. lndividualo interested in par-

~·~:~C::.:".tt:~

second

ALMIGHT~NOX

experimental graphics made last year

while Secunda was a guest artist at the

t.!e~.~f::"wJ:~*:c,~k.~·~Y
-ic;.r~

Sid~e

ALIRIGHT-kNOX AIT EXHIIfT•

Jula Olitski Retrospective Exhibition,
a display o! 60 paintinp. A.Thricht-Knoz
~!2,~"R\~~ Elmwood Ave. , through

Tamarind Institute for Lithocrapby in
New Mexico. Works by the intemati.on-

~=f
~J~~i~~~~
the National Colleclion of Fine Arts in

U.S.A.: The Lishter

Lobby d i a p 1 a y cases, 9 a .m.-5 p.m. ,
l.hroucb July 20.

hibition by contemporary American and

COL1EGIAT£ ASSEMBLY MEf'iiNO#

· Tentative, 129 Crosby, 4·6 p.m.

Dance, choreography and costumes by
Sunghee Cho, Fillmore Room,· Nortoh,
8 :30p.m. No ad.mission charge; donations
accepted.
Presented by the Ewba Woman's Univenity Asaoc:iati.on. in cooperation with
the Korean Society of New York and
the U/B Korean Student AB&amp;Ociation.

Color Photographs by JameS DeSant;.,

Offi!eco~0~t!!afn::ar:.seH~eabyH~

FILMS•

p.m., 140 Capen.

p .m., 147 Diefendorf.

UUAI FILM••

'IIOTOGIAPHY EXHIUT-

WEDNESDAY-4

~

~;.,.riJiW a~-.:::tl2; i~~~a~:l:

•

Dr. Shepard Goldbers, U/ B clinical
.llliiiOciate in j,oycholoCY and poy~try.

EXHIIIT•

T-hrough the Mail, a collection of poltcards (rom the early 1900's, bome-ma'd e
cardo; and cards from part of the Canadian Postcard Movement, Music Room,
259 Nortol}. Hours: Monday-Friday, 10
u.m.-10 p.m. Tluvugb July 12.

tiveneu of a technique to cure ciprette

ticipatinc should contact Rob at 838-3874,
between the 'boura of 7-9 p~ . 011 Friday,
~::;;' 2!1, Sunday, July 1, or Monday,
2

Summer SoltbeU Leque will
begin dul'iq Sesoion U of Summer !leo-

. one
~""b..~"':l::! ~-= ~~~
in forming teama or joinintere~ted

inc a team should contact William Monkarah, intramural d i - r •• 113 Clark

Hall. exl 2926.

New left&amp; Hoover·----------~--------------cept of gkal polic:emansbip remained
Adler alao cites the anti-FDR strain
- . . Doeln't Qulta Fit

(~,._- !• eol. I)

- - +. ol the Manchurian crisis

_.,
iD 1931.
'11111 Flllt
~
• hi lbe 1lliadl ol moat historians, the
fall ol ~to the .r...- was
lbe .._ tDI1Pibil domiaD In a-Cbain
tbB led inevltllbly to the world damlnatioo policlea ol the Axil ~
~~Gover reflad to Bid tmop&amp; apin&amp;t
lbe ~~ In Mut::biiM. for ......
... autllned In .... Jlemoin, bopina
ioltltad tlllll-sd apmiaa ~ brina
_..-.Ilia to . . . - lbe Ea!pMar.
BaWalolJ br llae .._.... that Boo_.. . . . . . Ia llct. failed, maat
...,... ol lbe 1J2N8 ~

T..,..

r

...... llaeti'-·Wbantled

. . . . . . . . . . . . 1881 allis.

t.dly

-~- .... ~- tbe ~

popular, it seemed tO historians that
Hoover's decision to condemn Japan
without qreeinc to use eithe&lt; economic CJl..JDilitary coerciOn served ·to
focua Tokyo's eumity on Washing-

ton."

Adlel' tnuBI the burc-.ins ""'P'
praiaal 'of Hoover to the changed climate Iince Vietnam and opeci&amp;ally
•to the paduai ,J'IHMlluatioo of the
Qualoer President in the influential ..,.
Cl!llt wodt of neo-Marziat historian '

Wllliam A. Wllliama. Mentor of "a
- t i o n of lmnorl"*ic diplomatic biatorlana," WDJiams ha rece~~tly Ulldertabn • full-ecale "ret.bilitatioo" of Hoover, empbaaizing
bla pecillam and p~U., dcJwn the
lmperiUatic ~ ol bis capitaliotic

~ pollcleo..

In Adler's view, however, Hoover
does not quite fit into the heroic mold
that Williams and bis followen 8eem
to be faahioning. For maunple, !;lie
fonner President never budpd in bis
oppoaitioo to Communism,-refusing to
the eod to ._mze the 8oriet Union.
Racist • well as vodferously. anti-

Commwliat, Hoover alao tried in 11124
· to have the J a - bam!d from immigrafina tO America, Adler ft!ID!nda.
Why, after yeara of regarding Hver 88 the natioo'a No. 1 "myopic
~." are a paeratiim of New
Left bistoriane beglmdng to rally to
bis def-? Adler .that the
YOWlB neo-Mandsl. are II)'IIJI'8thetic

with Hoover'• DOtioo that America
muat lelld the world not by foroe but
~

aood ,.,.ample.

of New Left history as adtlinc impetus

to !hi! Hoover

I! "

,.,

L Aa be

points out, "New Deal apeciaJiats with.
in the ocbool have indicted Roc.evelt
for, in the name of .eform, fastening
industrial capitalism on tlie country
all the more firmly,"
Unlike bis cbarismatic .....,._. in
the White House, Hoover was -at least
always ''honestly pro-capitalist," a
trait that Adler thinks may reccim- _
mend him further to radical revisioniota within the guild.

"Moreover," Adler emphasizes,
"tfoover puraued a forei1111 p o I i c y

~ enticing 88 the United
States ~ once more for a aenaible
mean between a barren ieolationiam
and an exaggerated coneem for minor
global convulaions."

which

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

----

17 Per Cent.

Of_NTPs Said
Undergraded

By
PA'DUCIA WARD BIEDERMAN

With job ct.cription point evaluations ...... completed for 74 par Cl!llt
of tbe University's prol.e.ionaJ at:d
positions, it la tbe oPinion of thie Per8011Del Ilepartinent that up to 17 par

--

,.North Campus COiltinuea to rlae,
lib cold-Iller Miami out of
lbe Ambent ~ And 88 lbe
limetllble ......,..,_ a campus fact.&lt;Jftife, 8nt lOr ...... aDd Juri8prudence
aDd that for lbe ~ faculties aDd
clepartDalta, DION aDd more people
are WlllllleriDt what lbe tnlllaition will
inwlve. oAa to llbnuy aDd related
- . - - t h a t ...,. central aspect of
lbe educational ~ J!ac.
ulty Seaato'a Cammitlee on J:ntormation aDd Library lleaouroell predicts
there will be ple6ty of problema durin&amp;
lbe lmDoltion pmiod.
H- Mrioua willlbe problaM be?
In ito Jeactby l1llllU8) report, tbe Committee citoa ita own earlier forecast
lbet -~ tbe iDcoption of tbe
, _ campus and tbe abenc!on!IW!t of
tbe old, there will reip a cbaoa of
. lilind-bosJlinl dl"""'!"ona In !II h I c h
any Ullderpaduato education . which
depeoda upon lbe Libnuy will be a
matter of pure .......tlpiiy."
'The Committee acbowledges that
underpaduatoa at least will not have
it quito that had-due Jaraely to ita
own IIIICCSIIIfuJ e«orta to get tbe Underpaduato Library (UGL) off tbe
ground and Into Diefendorf Annex.
But. this w iII not, tbe Committoa
warns, "solve tbe problems of tbe
students and departments" who move
to Amherst before tbe Central Library
and Joint Library-the two major library units planned for Amherst open tbeir doors.
Getting clcMn to specifics, tbe Committee points but that when tbe Pei
Dorms !'Perl this fall, ,nth space for .
than' 800 students, tbe Law Li-

cent ani "probably paded" loci low
and nine par cent ovel:1lftlded. Preai~ L Ketter reported .laat

Ketter also dealt with budget, affirmative action, master planning and
admissions applicatioos, 1110011g other
curtellt concerns, at the spring p!l&gt;8lll)
membership ..-tlng of tbe Profea-sional Stall Senate.
"We are trying to get_all tbe upgrading for · stall positions that ...,
can," Ketter iridicated, "but it would
be inappropriate to predict ~ the
Division of ' the Budget ( whicli has
final say in such matters) will react."
That qency, tbe President noted,
often sees things di1ferently t11an U/B
officials. For ezample, the local budpt
request for 1973-74 included workload
incresses and "modest proposals" for
new programs which should have re- .
suited in a sizable number of additional faculty and NTP positions:
"We justi&amp;ld 7().8() faculty , positions"
but the Oivisioit ·'of
BuiiP.t ·allowed only. 20. •
•
' .
. .. .
Despite this, Ketter said, ....., have
not cut our projected workload Increase" because 't hat increase reflects
the first conscious increment toward
the expansion in enrollment that can
be accommodated by faCilities .in Amherst. Nezt fall's freshman class will
number 2,500 compared with 1,700 in
1972, The same number will be admitted in the fall of 1974 and again
in 1975. ~er students · wm ·818o
be increased by between 600 and 700,
for a total increase of 1400-lSOO un-

.. - ~~·
WiiL-. .. ..,.W:Iilliao¥~
a.. - .A.booiot.. ..

~ thia unit,
having a capacity of 314,400 wlumes,
will !lave I!U8I8 apace, there does not
• - to be a feasible way to enable
it to tbe 1-.1&amp; of tbe dormitory
students," tbe Cammitlee reports. Pei
students will he, In effect, without a
library, and will haYe to return to
tbe South Campus or go to 1lelllby
Ridge Lea for boob.

Collop Compla

Nan on .line ia tbe Davis-Brocly
College COillplez, p a r t of which is
acbeduJed for - OCCIJilBDCY In JanuaJY
'74, with an ultimate capacity of 3~
studenta. DavJ&amp;.Biody will be served
by an Academic Center that la to
include four mini-lihlarim with • tolal
capacity ol. more thim 60,000 wi~J.D~M.
'The Caller la acbeduJed to open • .
full _ , . . .after lbe other Colleae
fadlitles In September '74, aDd ....,..
a-, lbe Commitleli predicts, lack ol.
far llbrariee will
that lbe mlni-lilllllriea llnll't

e.-.w. ...._

much than lllud3' haUa.
. '-n-. - . . tbe npcft ilolea, "Do
. fuDde to buy lbe boob to lltocl&lt; tbe
llbelwie IM!Il 88 tbere ia no at:d to
a.vice them;~. little can
lie aqiiiCied of them !1eJonc1 tbeir uee
88 reading ..... (800 reader stations
(~--:I. coLI)

!Jerfl!l'dllllte&amp;.

•

.

'Sq-·~

Tree Treatments
One hundred -

American Elm trees on aompus ore recelvtnc this

commen:illl funcldde lnjiction trutment to oove them from the Dutch

Elm which ._ audi havoc •lone mony of the Cftr'•
The fungicide protection, which Juts for -·· the funilua ...- than the _.._nylnc .. 1o the .
.... 1 - - . Grounda aupenrisor Rlchllrd Seblon ..,. there
lo only bMIIy domopd elm on aompua; tho reit ore Ina than 5
por C8flt 1 . . - , the Umlt ·to which the lungldde 1o - . ·

Retirement Plans Sus,Jeixled.
For All New State Employees :
Senate bill 6627, ps-.1 by . tbe
l..eiislature in tbe last days before
adjoumment, &amp;~_..ted all .mstlng
retinawlt .provisions, Including the
Optional Retin!aalt Plotlram (TIM·CREF·), tor - ·employees appointed
Oil July 1, 1973, 0,: thereafter;-Keliiieth
)4. MacKenzie, SUNY vi&lt;e ch8Dcellor
for JIIIIIIC)IUlel and employee relations,
..m-1 auupua presidents in a llleiDDrandum this week.
Accordlni to MacKenzie, the. legis-

Socie:tl Poiicy-ls R~Accredited

:'Although this is the first step in
building toward Amherst," Ketter explslned, ''new facilities being opened
tbere this fall won'~ provide any space
relief for~" and tbe ~
be squeezed" in tbe ~t Main
Street facilities.
·
The .._
.. .is furtber complicated, the President noted, by tbe .-1 .
''to free space so "" can begin redevelopment of this campu8 for tbe Health
Sciences Center. We · have to move
people out of Capen so this work can.
start."
.
Although tbe llllpP!eaaltaey budpt
provides fuDde to _p(m:baae ~ow.. r ·
Dorm from the State . Darmlloly Au. ·
. thority and COilvert it to olllee and
1\)&gt;rary ~ this will n o t - any im- ·
mediato.mr. apace.
'Jb8 pIan, ~ outlined, Ia to
move lbe Health 8c:ila8 tlbauy
and alllcea.for Health Related Plolea-sicas, Nunlng and tbe Vide l'relidct
for Health Sc:lenc., .a-, ,.._.,
bito the TOII'Iir 80 that·~- .
begin In tbeir ~t

Jocaticie. Wbich .

will llltimalely provide room for a .

;..c.- In lbe llize of ·tbe mtairlnl

a-. .

. .

Medical
Tho!' ialtiaJ portion.. of tbe. ~
project sbaqJd begip 80011, Klltler .ud,
. with facilities projected. far . . . r.n
br ·tmfy ~~ cfCcapancy• .

�June 2I, I973

2

Security Usts
Sixty Crimes
During May
'' :&lt;l l ·,

·: ~

•:" .. r

(Contiliued from -

"' •

'I.'!JOft ·~ • 6(Y reported · Cri'ilii!s on
campus dunng May; 0amPUs 8ec;urity
recolllls indicate. Seven , arrests were

1'

made, other than for vehicle and traf·
fie violations.
lfisblilhta of the month's Security
blotter follow:
May 1, Campus Security Officers
William Snedden and William . Sutz
reported the arrest of one Purkin V.
. J - (DOD«udent) of 234 Glenny
Street, Bulfalo, for a charge of criminal ~ of stolen property, ronsisting of lic:eDIII! plates. Case pending
City Court action.
May 4, Campus Security Specialist
Gerald Denny reported the arrest of
one Kenneth Segars, 111 student residing in Clement Hall, for a charge of
cri'minal ~of dangerous
drugs in the 6th degree. Case pending
·City Court action.
May 7, A female evening student
reported that a male accosted her and
~ bis private parts in a lewd
manner. No warrant was issued.
llav 8, Campus Security Officers
·T¥~::;Y,'.Jiol~" · I! J)a")Uel w&amp;l te

~=~~...;# {jf"\Hie;;j~fs.

Berole· (studenl) of 100 Morgen Parkway, Williamsville, on a charge of
criminal tiespass. Case pending City
Court action.
Moy 13, Campus Security Officer
Gary Kalisz reported the arrest of one
Willie Henry · Calhoun of 55 Oneida
Street, Buffalo, (non-student) for burglary, as the I3I1IIP'!d allegedly entered
"I'OOll1 824 Clement Hall, and removed
· ~r:eo equipment belonpng to a stu- ·
'SusPect ·wa8 'ma-t and'
hended. Case pending City Court ac-

This fenced .In bleyde compound .......,... ID . , . - 1·..-Jna number
of camp&lt;is oplrlsl 1 ..-Ina number of II lilted ID Ill
_ . . - July 1. A project af SA, In _..uon tho Unlvenlty,
tho compound lo ID Ill _ . - by I ~. ICCOnlhW ID liminal)' pllnL It I I " - blhlnd . . - _

The Black Studies Program
-Gets De~erital Status
President &amp;bert L. Ketter has approved a rerommendation that the
Black Studies 'Program receive departmentsl status within the Faculty
of Social Sciences and Administmtion.
Acrording to Warren T . Barbour,
acting· .director &lt;&gt;1· the . Program, departmentsl status . should be imple,
mented fuily before September.
··-!The Black Studies PrOgram, estsb1
' Jished in -1969, is des.i~ to provide
students of all etlmic background,s·
_with an understanding of the roots of
black identity and of the relationships
betwe e n black people and other

I, coL I)

are planned) unlla the occupants
themaelves are able, by their own initiative, to IICCOIIiplish IIOIIIO!tbini. Even
if limited funds were available, the
UGL would have ftiBt call on them.~
'Ibe Committee also points out that
no general libraiy facility will be
available. on Amhemt until the Fall of
'77 at the earliest, given the funding
problems that have plagued the Central Library. This ,_,. that the lag
between 1IIBt Amhemt students and
fimt general library facility will be
3'h to four years, "a whole student
generation." 'Ibe report, issued before
the Central Library was apparenUy
overlooked in the aupplementsl budget, further notes that the larger Joint
Library may be completed as early as
the Fall of "17 but only if the Central
Library is funded at once.
''In the meantime, various academic
units will be moving to Amhemt. How
these will be serviced is still unknown
and no information concerning real
planning for this has rome to our
attention. Even the February 28, 1973,
draft report of the library consultants
Becker ·and Hayes, Inc. ignores this
except for remarking that the provis. ion of library services rorresponding
to the moving schedule of other depsrlments is one of four factum in the
romplex problem of moving the Libraries to Amherst."
Adequocy of Joint Ulnl)'

-

In discussing the library situation
in A m h e r s t, the Committee turned ·
again to the quolstion it unearthed last
year of the adequacy _ of the Joint
Library as currenUy planned to_bouse
even the rollection already at hand.
Libraries Director EldQ!d Smith has
· ~resaed ronllrlenpe that the Joint,
Library will be adequate for immediate flOOds (see Rej&gt;orter, March 1;
. ~73) . But the Committee feam · that,

allow us to be rompetitive ·and attract
and hold quality faculty inembers wbo
might not be interested in associating
themsel've8 with aomething ao uncertain as a program."
Barbo\1&lt; lauded the work of .Black
..• ,s~~..,, J8plllty_jn. ~- ~ ~ years,
and added, "W•th dep,irfmeiltsl stet&gt;drrei:tO'r'ii·"'rosY· p,o,;ec.
tiotL ~
us, we have now reacbed the begin- ' eVen 'witli
tiolljl," the Joint Library will be cram-I=May·•n : A•s~t....nding-mJMac­
, nina. ~ q111 move...on. fl9m, here in " meo'rUII
l!y
Fali'
"19--'==niy~tWO years
~cb' ill-eas 8s~deve!opin~ research, se!-"
..cfonal•UfaiJ, n!JIOrted be-was aocosted
after the t:arliest probable date of ocby two malea, wbo produced a knife
ling up relationships With other urucupancy-or
'
at
least
by 1981 or '82.
and demanded money. Complainant
versities that have Black Studies, ilnd
had no money and the two lied. Case
investigating work being done in Black . . Given u..i lead time required for any ·
c
a
m
p
u
s
ronstruction
projec_t, the
cl.-1. Complainant refused to obtain
Studies internationally."
Committee urges in its report that a .
groups.
As a department, Black Studies will
Jobn Doe warrant.
"serious effort -.rei the provision
Moy 17, Campus Security Officers
As a department, Black Studies will
undergo a standard review within a
of additiooal space" in ·the Joint LiWayne R&lt;&gt;biju&amp; and· Michael Lucckhave permanence within the Univerfew yl!ars to determine bow well it is
bniry begin at once.
ino ·reportea the arrest of Clarence
sity. As Barbour put it, "Departmenacromplishing its goala." A search rom"It 6houfd be noted,~ the Committee
tel stetus will clarify the position of
mittee is presenUy in the process of
Brown, alkla Edgar Meeks (non-stuaddA, ••our views 8r&amp; at variance with ·
Black Studies within and outside of
nominating a chairman. Barbour's apdent) of 165 Rodney Street, Buffalo, ·
the view beld by the Administra~
the University and legitimize it as a
pointnient as act i n g director ends
oo a charge of crimin8I trespass. Case
which prefen1 to wait until the two
valid academic discipline. It will also
August 31.
pending City Court a~
library buildings are well uhder coo- ·
struction before se4ing additiooal li-.
brary _.., It is preciaely because of
~ward
these difterenCI'II that we have felt
-~:'f' l -2.1(l.:&gt; &lt;B..D£~-: rn o&lt;l/f";;.:; ..:.~·:
n~!1,tl.ll~ l 1~3 . ~$illlb
. _ athe"~""N· romoblilll'll to bring tbeite cin:umstances
Jag&amp;ra
- peutibll sponso..... y
to lighL It is our recommendation ·
Frontier Editor's Association; top bonthat the• 1973-74 Committee keep
om in three out of silt categories were
"~da can unquestionably inpolicy, Preston suggested, rould be
cl.-ly in touch with develoPments in
won by the S UN Y A B Pharmacy
crease its international trade earnings
the establishment of selected "prime
this ares. For, un1eas this is done,
· Newo/etto; a publication of the School
tlu!&gt;ugh the export of valuable mw
p Ian t" activities by multi-national
there is a real c1anpr that boolis for ·
of Pharmacy.
.
materials," Lee H . Prestou, Melvin H .
the Joint Library will have !&lt;&gt; he
firms: "This process would strengthen
At the Association's annual awards
Baker- Professor of American Enterthe industrial and marketing base of
J!.laced in lltllnlae even before, the faclinMr, May 30, Pharmacy Newsletter
prise and chairman of Envirolimentsl
cility is opened or "'-tty thereafter.
the Canadian economy and increase
editor Harold Reiss was named the
Analysis and Policy, School of Manits opportunities both for export sales
This is a matter of obvious .,..,..,...
winMr for . "beat management me&amp;agement, said in a summary of the
and domestic development."
.
to the Faculty, ani!. the Direc;tor of ·
-.~"beat news feature," and "over"Conference
Co~ponite PerformAt the same time, however, a .change
Libraries is on reoonl as IJein4 opall writing ezilel.lence. ~ Mr. Reiss is
ance iri the Canadian-American Econof this sort ''would also decrease Cap.-1 to the storage of boob as ronaasiatant to .the dean in the School of .
omy," he I d at Nia~-on-the-l.alre
nadian reliance on dotnestic productrasted with having tt.n avaiJable in
Pbanollcy.
earlier this month.
tion under tsrilf protection and inthe stscks for immediate use.~
''On the other hand,~ be pointed out;
crease its imports.:• This, Preston said,
Dr. Lowell Sd&gt;oeafiold (matbemat&gt;-·
"the present resource scarcity could
would "deepen the interpimetmtion
ice) served as
of the Library
be ~ as a barpining tool in the
Committee ' for 1972-73.
between the two eronomies.
rontext of a more -ambitious economy."Paradoxically," pres t 0 n noted,
wide development strategy. A subetan"the relatively small size of the Catial number of Canadian ronference .
nadian eronomy in romparison to the
(Continued from pofe I, coL -3)
'"jJilrticipoiilts appeared to feel that this
U.S. might prove a favomble factor
tion•of the select 'ClOmlllittee with4be
·latter app"*lh might prove siu:ces&amp;in this .evolving stmtegy; since the
request that the opiioo period may be
ful.~
same volume of prodUction and marextended until 30 days following the
Aecording to Preston, conference
keting activities can loom qui_te subdate new legislation becamee law.~
' participan.ts _...ny· rellected the
stantial in the Canadian fnunework
Although it is not now polllible to
·ut&amp;bsloft ,between '.CJM!ft -intelration
while being of relatively amall magnipredict the outoome of the future leg&lt;••an~~..-teueparaiillm ·as·thetillding
tude within the United Sttltes."
islative action, MacKenzie said, "it
policy for U;S...c.m.disn eex&gt;DOII:iic reA b o u t 20 top-level E!II!CUtives of
does seem reaaonabla to anticipate
lation8hip8. 'Ibe ~ty in size beCanadian and American co~pomtioos
that aome ~ in the existing re:the ._ I!CXIIIIIIDieo and the great
attended the~ on rorporate pertirement benelit procnim are likely. •
' ~ ol. C8nada Oil the u.s.
formance at lh@. Niapra Institute for
New employeealbould be made a....e
are blillic f.- .of the situation, &amp;e
Intematiooal Studies.
.
· of this development.~ •
.
oaid. ..At the lllllll8 time, ' - " - · the
'Ibe conference, which also had perTbe former rem-t optioos incurrent 'Mil'ld..nde ohortqe of food
tic:ipan.ts from IIC8IIemic and iovern- · cl~alldition to TIAA-CREF,
and raw aatariala tilta the balance
._,ta! flelda, ~ sPanaored by U/B, the
loyeea' Retirement ~ya~-~oluar.~
.
the
~ty...... ~r.-1
Y~Mni. 91. _ , ~
.i
.mat!!,.;~~
A apec:iflc p i ol. ~- c.n.dian
V8IBI •
.
• .

•aent.

Newsletter::

appre-

.

·u.e

- ~~~rc-e ·Scarcity Seen .as

Boon
To Canadian Economic Upsurge

on

c:bainnlfu

ReJi"rement-

�]untl 21, 1913

3

.'£1diJ

Report

of the

•

...

Advisory.Committee
/

to the

Educational Opportunities
Program
EDITOR'S NOTE: The co~te tut
of the Committee report is printed
here in order to propide as wide a
distributwn as possible. Readers will
note, hl!UJever, tho.t, because of space
considerations, only Appendicell I, 2,
7, and 8 are included. ThDBe wishing
to make a closer study of the AppendiA:es .will·.fin4..N(erence :COpies" of
the report with all appended mate.rW1.
•.at. ~~ liq~ D.eU p. ~~
Lilmzry and in the R_,.., Room in
Harriman.

I. The Committee's
Charge and PFocedure
The General Plan for the Organization, Development, Coordination and
Operatioli of the Educational Op119rtunity Propams of State University
of New York, revised June 16, 1972,
calls for tbe ''continualice" of a campus/ community advisory committee to
MCb EOP· Pzot1ram. It stipulates the
composition of tbe membel1lbip to
include Uniwrsity and EOP adminisllators, fsculty members, EOP and
DOil-EOP students and members of
the community; it declanl8 that the
selection proceos sbould be establisbed by the President, and states
that memberahip on tbe Committee
sbould be rotated at intarvals.
In acconlance with the Plan, President Kettar, in November/December
1972, appointed tbe Committee herewith reporting. We have met six
an- as a whole Committee, from
December to Mil)!. Three subcommittees - Clll Admissions and Financial
Aid, on CooiDseiing, Tutoring, and
Testing, and llll Student Piotr.- .and
P._t--bave met IK!PUBtely with
"""""""' persoas (both EOP sts1f and
non-EOP adminiatntton involved in
.» ~ . _ t i w ...a), and ))ave reported to the whole Committee.
The Clll tbe Committee ol
JDIIIIIbera from various parts ol the
Uniwrsity and various civic communtllllbled it to fulfill tbe reiliea quirement of "d&amp;eminatina PIOII8Dl
iDfora8tion to tbe COD&amp;titumcies tbat
it ....,._.." The ol tbe
Dbecllor and members ol tbe EOP
sts1f at llll!lltinp, ...... with penallll8!
from ~and a.-11, ll'inml-

c:ial
Aid,and
lmlrucliaaal~
IIBiiDI
~·
iD
motion a ll1llllb. ol
&amp;-

......., 'alii 'IIM'

. .

for the Committee to be informally
and usefully advisory to the Program
staJJ on. several questions.
A Subcommittee on Drafting has
met several times on this Report,
whicb has been discussed and revised
twice in meetings of the wbole Colli::.
IDittee, and circulated ·tq all .n=bers
'for 1ndiVidu8! .ixiiiuhent and liM! approval. Suggestions from Committee

... i!ie'IP~"fdt 'IIJ.W''ilnl&gt;ltiviM!enl:'bt'the

Report were all of style and empbasis
and almost all were incorporated. An
invitation to register dissent from any
part or the whole of the Report was
extended No dissent having been
received, the name of eacb Committee .
member and his or ber office or title
is listed below.
.A copy of the Report is being sent
-to persons who provided information
to the Committee, as well as to Committee members. Tbe original of the
Report is presented to President Ketter.
BAJIBARA ABilAIIS

EOP Office, SUNYAB
CLAUDB D. CLAPP

Deputy Superintendent of Bulfalo
• Public Schools
EDWARD W . DOTY

Vice President, Operatiotis and
Systems, SUNYAB
ANN L. EGAN

Pro( Behavioral Sciences
SUC! Bulfalo
THEODORE P11IEND

Prof., History
Chairman, EOP Advisory Committee
CldL

~OHNSON

Representative foe Arthur 0. Eve,
Member of the Assembly
SIIDILBY GAYLB

EOP Office, SUNYAB
DONALD GR08B

EOP Office, SUNYAB
I'HY1nS KI:ILY

Member, CouDcil of the University
SUNYAB
KIDII'J"T LYONS

lntarim Dir., EOP Ollice,. SUNYAB
JVVBN'I'INO IIIKI'IA

EOP Office, SUNYAB
JAIIIJ!II PONmLO

GSA Re!&gt;o-tative, SUNYAB
JDNJIY IIICIL\IIII8

AIB't. Vice PrMident for Academic

Maka, SUNYAB

AIDA n.U.
194 Jewett Parkway
n-.M-~ Vice PrMident

-•"Studeat ~

SUNYAB

ERWIN SEGAL

Associate Prof., Psychology
RICHARD A. SIOOELKOW

Vice President for
Student Affairs, SUNYAB
RUDINE SIMS

Associate Prof., Elementszy
.
" and·Remedial EiluC.:tioil, ·sUNY.AB
LUM SlllTH

EOP Otlice SUNYAB

:·.&lt;~

..

fl h • ' odo \

•

~J.•,Ii ~

.

2tj:'M.8,~~ ~~3

II. EOP Objectives and
Performance: SUNY
and SUNYAB
Tbe current SUNY General Plan
subsumes the aims of Educational Opportunity Programs under the longterm objective that: " ... every student
capable of completing a program of
higher education shall 'have the opportunity to do so." The two primary
short-term objectives of tbe Educationa!· Oppo~ty. Progtamli ·are: ~to
help eacb enrolled · oppoitUnity.-sfudent complete satisfactorilJr the educational program in whicb be has been
enroUed, and to· foster and support
the searcb for effective tecbniques and
materials by whicb instructing and
advising atypical learners can be sueceSsful." ( General Plan for tbe Organization, Development, Coordinalion and Operation of the Educational
Opportunity Propams of State University of New York, for 1972-73, p. 1) .
Within this broadly ststed coutext,
. and tbeae generally defined objectives,
the · Committee can advise tbe President: (1) that the State ~
by requiring that EOP student. be
both educati.onaUy and ......,...laJ!ly
disadvantaged, - t l y induce
among some higb scbool atudentB intentiClllal performance II!ICW capacity,
in order to "qualify" --..ically for
the Prosrams; (2) tbat IIUCb data u
are now available ......- tbat tbe rate
ol 8UCCOIIIful CIIIIJIIIetioil ol deiJwill )lnlbably ...,._ mmpeJab!e to
tbe Educatian81 ()ppartunity Propam
at tbe State -Uni-.lty CoiJep . at , .
BulfaJo, wbicb .......... , . . euller \..:.
than oun; (3) tbat rata ol -.pJedaa
ill llipJiflcuJtly .... than tbe rate ol
oomplilliaa ol --EOP ........ at
our OWD inRitutiaa, bat ...t ....,._

iniiY ._ID viewoltbe~

CCIIIdition al EOP llladada; (4) tbat
tbe Catamittee 11M 110&amp; been able 1D
intelltory ..,. •fl 'u it • i"'CI .,,,.

and matarials for EOP aiudenta u
have been developed at SUNYAB,
and is unable to the elfectiv&amp;ness ol such as there are; and (5) that
the Educational Opportunity ~
gram, "after shaky early yean, has
stabilized and stningthened itaell; tbat
it has been highly respoll8ible to tbe
Advisory Committee, and is alrMdy
QJlder:taltiJ)g .ol. lhe. ~­
tions that follow~·
· VI ol-tbia
Report.
Cost-benefit
.
partic:ularly
di16cult in a field such as this, but a
study of data in Appendices 1 and 2
leads to the following surmise: at a
special per/ student expanditme of ·
about $2000 per year of Federal, State,
and SUNYAB funds, be)IO!Id basic
per/student ooetB, EOP studenbi who
persist in the Program are ac:bieving
a median cumulative grade point average nearly equal to that ol other
students. Tbe Committee belieYes that
the $2000 special EOP i n - t p8r
student per year yields benelltB to the ·
students in learning and sldll that
eventually yield mucb more than that
value to the State, not to mention its
value to the communities and fanillies
from whicb EOP studentB come.
The further SeCtions of. this Report
attempt ·to ensure further and more
certain return on educational investment in this opportunity program.
Seetions ill and IV pro)id.&lt;; the history, qtl!llltltativii d.a!S;' ·Im'd'q\UI_lj'tati~e
inipiesslons 'necl.siiafY''IO ·~y ''EdP
objectives at SUNY!.B; whicb clarification is attempted in Section V.
There ensue recommendations on a
number of pointB in Section VI. Some
of them require EOP staff attention
only; several of them require coordinate action between the EOP Office and
· other adminiBilative functions, Particularly with the Office of !\dmissions
and Recor$·.(B1, B4, D2! ,, JII!.d.:-U~
.the. Financial Aid Committee 8iU!. ibe
the Financial Aid Office (C1, 2, 3) ;
one especially significant """ requires
:cocmtinet;o,jldiop , ~\Yv ~l-

• erating Academic .~•.G2l.i ·and

another especially sil!nificant cme requesbi action by the Ptesident of
SUNYAB (Guidelines for Admissions: A1, 2, 3 ).

ill. EPIS to. EpP:

the Program, 1968-73
Tbe efforts of this particJllar University · with respect to ..au..tional
opportunity stodentB have been copious and energetic, even tboulh COilsenBUB and continuity in objectives
have been Jackini, ;·11.."1: , • •
The Propam;l:leiPu;l.'ll',EPJ.S (."EE:perimental Piopam c in'·• ~t
Study") in ttie Fall ol 1968. Ita liDmediate lll&amp;lldate derived from U..
President Mey--.'s ~
shortly after the .....mation ol Martin Luther Kine, ol tbe 8eJect CGmmittee llll BquaJ Oppanuaity, . and
from U.. CllaceiJar s.ma.l B.

Gould's apeecb at tbe l'laldad'a

Coof-.ce llll tbe ~ iD
Buffalo, April 30, 1968. In eaJ1iD1 a
a apecial
-.rei _ . a-tment, CbaDcelJor Gould clec:lalC:
'"Tbe llrinlinl ol .....u.d hilbd*
student. ID the eampus calla
imlciname obifta in tbe ..._....,, prolfiiiiL Our failme ben _ . . 118 . .
pecially tnlic, b
it -w .....
U.... ....._ bopoa - hl!d a--.1 ID
UDdeqo yet aaot1a ~ _ . .
in fruslration and failme. To ....

e«ort

a

tbeoollepdoar-wldeb'~

as a COI'Illlmy, tbe IDinldatiaa fll adically ..... curricular AIJd btt I' • I
pattema. In l!bort, a ....,._ ~
_ . ID tba clepitoed 1i1J1J111!t
~ ...t oaly ~ bill! tD d.
campua, but,U., . . . . . . Al!d.,..
patheticolly ...,.., bill! arrived...
J'Jam tba bePJaiD1 ol tbe ~
at SUNYAB U.....,.. ...__.....,.
liaaal ...... iD .W l!baald _..
cli&amp;dt..................... . _ tD
a.lill ti.D; ADd, ..all ....._ . . .

liB-

11M '-'lillile.ar-

•

i!hw dllla

�... , _ IDdl they ~ to have .,_,
........... In the Fall (If 1llll8, lao:ll-

......ua, 80cial, COIICOirll ......, faculty

........... braucbt ....ty

100 (If tbem
fonrud .. whm- tutom in ... "Ezperimontel l'ratlram in In ilpm • t
Study." IDitially, 100 cn.dvutqed
aDd etiiDlc minority aludeillll were
admitted. EacJ1 - .,.;,Dad a tutor,
""" li~ ~"&gt;' 'to taD up to
16 ' credita in uc 151"" all '
COIII8I!

deaisnatiiio. .;hld, . : : :

to a visa for entraooe to ..,...Jar curriculum as much ..- is little as one
felt able. .
Tbe IIOOdwill of of the faculty
inilially ilwomld m-led their ability to cope with problema of advising
sludeolll with baclrpouuds 8lld prob....... unfamiliar to them. Tbe studenlll in the Propam, in pueral,
received better fiDaucial than educa·
tioaal IIQIIIIOrt. It baa proved, in
relrospec:t, eztremely di81Cult to acfor the 161/llludents originally
admitted into the l'ratlram or to aecount for the ca.- of ....,._.. or
atlritian. Admittedly imperfect data
show that by JUDe 1973, 40 of the
original Jll'OUP. ... 25%, will )Ia""
graduated in ten ....,_...... or less.
· By the aecood year, prime operatioaal respoasibilitiee in the Prosram
bad paaoed from faculty members to
administrators 8lld staJr more lii!DSitively' attuned to the bebavior and
. needs of its studeniBI While aocial and
~'tidoal · ~lii•g" impro""'l' as a
..,.,_,.,.,...., it is not clear that academic ClOI1II8elinJ improved to the
same eztent. Demands em ClOI1II8elinJ
time remain heavy 8lld dilfuae. Recognition of these problems baa led the
Committee to the l'f'WlDIDmenilations
on Accelezating Academic Progress,
Section VI, G, at the end of the Report.

Since December .1971, new administratiy!!)eadership iiJ the .Educations,I
Opportunity Prolinun baa given it
new direction and energy. Tbe nonEOP members .of the advisory com~~_~ M_r. ·Etinnitt Lyons
ana tbe EOP staJf lor their dedication
to the job and their building ,;, administrative structure oonsonant with
the needs of the Program.
1be ''Evaluation and Progress Report of the Educational Opportunity
Program at the State University of
New York at BulJalo for the Period
1968 to 1972" by Mr. Lyons and stsft
JUDe 16, 1972, is' a valuable contribu:
tion ~ developing Perspective on
the l&gt;rosmm. He and they continue
to grapple with an inherited problem,
that of developing a clear and aocu-

-. ;':t=~~ta.~c!:
Bll!ft"i'Dd

mittee, -belped by EOP
staJr
of other Uni-..ity 016ces, baa tried
to assist the effort to senerate, un.... improve baseline and comparative data ..men.- ~ In
daiDg 80, it baa
much in.-.pleta or contndictory informatioa. Same vijal _ . . ""' l'IICCIIDired
in M
:feW.. em Record KeepiDg. 8ectioD VI, D, at the eud (If the

""""""tmed

~

Recapizlng that - .... the ftr8t
~ .Advimri c....am.
tee to iDianD il8elf em the EOP at
SUNYAB, -117 ill the~...,_
tion to..-&amp; a niUih pidan (If what
Ill~ ill the ~ from
........ to ......... .
-

IV. EOP Students

fanaell.-4bat a COIJIIIIIIiBr oomper;..,
bat -for . . . ll&amp;udeala admiUed dm&gt;..m fllirollmad .,_, 162 llludenlll
~ EOP and IKIIl-EOP Jetter
ina . . lmr'llldlool , . r Gilly, 74%
tailing 1 COIIIBI!; 66 atuclmta taJdDc 2
grades. and grades (If ,(i. u. I,
and
.... Dial*, 15% Wbilie, 9% 8puiob
CDIIIIBI; 15 sludeolll taJdns 3 CDIIIIBI;
X. would have lllbn ......, time than
auriuuua, and 2% ere Native Auai1 studellt taking ..........
was
available
to
us,.
80
&amp;Je
unable
Tbe total, 233 sludeots .taJr:ing 321
-CIID. (~ 3) In the moet to say in avalilation ol the
Cllllltly adiDitled poup, sample data
counea, ......., a ' load of about 1'h
Spring 1972 study. ID any Cl88e, the
CD1111B1 ~ sludeot there. A-.ge
111J1111!18t that a Jarae lllllllber of stuEOP
administration
cleuly- moved to
length of attendance is estimated at
dents .... lrlmoferring from other
reduce __pon~ by cutting
twq -ters. 80 that one arrives at
~ and other. EO~ l'ropamJ, a .
off the second installment of 6nancial
an estimate ol 12. credit bours in
• W1 ., UJIOil which Recommenaid each .....-ter for students proved
Learning Center courses far the averdation B, • c:alls far policy studY.
delinquent by grade reports.
age atudel!t thi!re. (Figures, courtesy
GiVen _guideliiles 'w hich State that
How much ba.,.., stricter adminisof Mrs. Doria .Taylor)
to qualify for EOP, studesit8 muSt be
trative standards reduced the "trouble
A
high'
proportion
of
esch
entering
~y and educatiooally dislevel" among EOP students from tbe
advantaged, it is not surprising to find
group of EOP · ~dents is discovered
31% represented by terminations and
by diagnostic tests to need lheae
that about 213 ,o f the student&amp; have
'
probations
imposed. in Jantiary 1972?
·courses.
What
is
tbe
result
ol
taking
high acbool ~ in the 70's; and
It is dillicult to say. An Admissions ·
tbem? The only report of significance
. the .... about equally divided beand
Records
mintout in February
shows that a target poup of EOP
the 80's and 80's. 'lbeal pro1973 showed over 500 EOP --students
portions do not . . _ . to have greattested considerably below a refei:'!IIOO
deficient in 'hOurs oompleted,_or grade
gn)up of Psychology 101 student&amp; in
ly cbanged since inception of the
point a""rage, or both. A name-byProgram (See Appendix 4) . Several
vocabulary, slightly less disadvantagname check by the EOP director, in
aspects of tbe admissions policy were
eously on comprebension, and .still less
EOP students' permanent records,
disadvantageously on rate of reading.
considered by the - Committee and,
yielded only 356 such sludeolll (someTbe reference group was not retested,
after reviewing them, a change in that
what 'under 30% of current enrollbut retests on · the target group after
policy is l'f'WlOIDmpnded in Section VI,
ment) of whom ere believed to
a semester at the Learning Center
A. 1be Committee noted that the
be able to put tbemaelves in good
showed a small increase in voCabulary,
EOP Program is a major source for
stsriding with satisfaclllry oompletion
Jarser in oomprebension, and importhe admission of economically disof Spring Semestei- couraes. Tbe Comtant gains in rate of reading over the
advantaged students. we-have reports
, mittee can Gilly DOte ttiat rigorous
fuat tests. Tbe gap b e - retest refrom Admisaions and Records that as
administration appears to have results on the target giOiip and original
many as 100 minority applicants per
duced tbe level of serious academic
results on the refereooe group reyear meet the educational requiretrouble. 'lbat it remains at a aignifi.
mained
large
(Appendix
5)
.
ments for admission, but cannot enter
cant level is not surpriaing in a high1be next · step, to follow Learning
because· they cannot alford it econ'Omrisk
program. 'lbat important differCenter students into regular courses,
irally. Others anticipating this probin the data ezjst. points again
and to see how they perform there, is
lem are said intentionally to perform
to l&gt;!COrd-keepirig problems. The letter
now being foil~ up. Until it is
poorly in high achool and on tests.
of
the
recommendation in Section VI,
complete, there will be no longitudinal
In light of these facts, the COmmittee
D 2, is for a meeting b e - EOP
data on given students or ·sets of
members unanimously agreed that tbe
and Admissions' and Records staJr
students passing from Learning Cenquality of the EOP applicants could
and its spirit is - for continued com:
ter courses wbolly into the general
be improved and the eftect of the EOP
munication between the two to reduce
the
data
that
folcurriculum.
Given
Prosram on the community c o u I d
discrepancies in all figures.
low in paragrapbs below, it might be
be heightened by changing the admiswise to run a control study on longid) The Perfonnance Df Those Who Penlst
sion guidelines (Sect;ion VI, A 1; 2, 3 ).
tudinal performance of EOP students
Use of standardized test scores in
The Committee bas- initiated renot taking Learning Center courses.
relation to EOP students raises anxiesearch into academic performance of
Formal recommendations on EOP
ties and arguments. The Committee
EOP students compared with nonand Learning Center are found in .
EOP (Appe~~dix 2), an inquiry rnsde
bas discysaed .the arguments within
Sect;ion VI, E.
itseft ' sUmcienUY-- ' 16 'allay anxieties
possible by tbe fact that in Fall 1972
for the fuat time, EOP students
among some that standardized test
c) Non-pe.1.,once, ~on, a:'A~
came identifiable ·on !he -coniputer.
scores would be used without underBe{ore go~g on ~ data abo!!~ ~
We excluded &amp;esbmaD year.oaa ~a year
standing or discretion: Clearly, iruch
preponderant group m the EOP popUof adjustment for EOP' students, and
testS are not culture-free. C learly,
lation, those wbo persist and perform
took self-designated sopbomores, junEOP students are not expected to
well, we take note of some information
mrs, and seniors compared with a
score well on them. In fBct, they are
concerning those not performing well.
random sample of non-EOP students
selected. in part specilically because
Before January 1972, EOP warnings
they do poorly on these tests. It is
in
tbe same claases. Tbe interabout insullicient academic progress
esting results are those concerning
very likely furt_hermore that such
were relatively few and there were no
distribution
of
cumulative
grade
point
scores are far less valuable predictors
effective terminations from the Proaverages. A significantly lesaer proporof performance for EOP students than
gram for aeademic reasons. Action
tion of EOP students have achieved
they are for populations which are
taken at that time by more rigorous
a' cumulative average of 3.50 to 4.00
far more test-educated and test-..xpec.
administration took the proportions
(9.1% compared to ro.1% non-EOP ) ;
tant. Such scores for EOP students
as sbown in Chart i\.
a slightly greater proportion of EOP
nonetheless have some value in estabThe checkstop procedure alluded to
students fall in the 1.00 to 2.49 range
lishing the area of difference in their
in Chart A was instituteif' in response
(14.8% compared to 12.8% noncredentjals from non-EOP, and · in
to a Spring 1972 study which revealed,
EOP) . Tbe densest population for
helping to estima,t&lt;i the degree to
for Fall 1971, that 17% of a aample
both EOP and non-EOP iS in the
which disadvantage is . ~Uy
of EOP students completed no courses
!""Je of 2.50 -to 3.49, and ~ly
overoome. Because the University
at all. (James C. Schwender to Edm the range of 3.00 to 3.24. 'The meparticipates in a competitive and creward Saindoux, March 24, 1972, and
dian cumulative grade point average
dentials-minded larger world, iC does
follow UJI memos, May 3rd and May ..
(excluding transfers and others rep. the EOP student no clesr service by
9th.) ~r data in the same study
resented at 0.00) is 3.08 for non-EOP
sbielding him froqt that world .. We
suggested relatively low losds for EOP
elaborate this familiar discussion no
and ezact1y 3.00 for EOP
students in general and rather high
students. Reaullll for the' Fall Semesfurther, but point to the fact that the
percentages
of
inoompletes
and
ux"
few EOP students who ·have taken
ter, 1972, ctiffer .in abowing greater
grades (resignation without olllciaJ
peroeniagaJ at hiabw aDd . _ ends
Sdlolaatic Aptitude Tests and PSATs
penalty). Tbe Committee inof the acale for ' bolb 'BOP and DOD·
fall senerally one, two, or more standard deviaticms below the national
CHARTA
norm. \For overall· Univenity data
Time of
em SATs, see 8UNYAB Self-study
Orifinally
Admitted
Tt!rlrlinaUd Put on ProbatiDrt
Entry
Fall,
p. 100&gt; . Similar
JtJIWIJI'y, 1972 JtJ~~WTy, 1972
Fall 1968
appear from the· aole occ:uioo . when
151
32
18
Fall
1969
Stanford ~t Tests were
Fall 1970
liYea EOP&amp;tudents. They ebow grade
....,.. _pedw......,. -oy raJIIing
from u.veD!h" to uele¥entb," . CQII&gt;pared to a UB mterina DDml (If utbir"tourteomtb." (."Criteria
~ .Aiiaipina EOP Studoalll lD Seot~aaa,• 28 .._
11172; intarpnlatim:, .

·a.

ror-

I

re:

.-,Ia

urn.

~

...............
...........
.__ ..... ,..k
':.
..
........................... ...... . . ...
..........................
................. ,......18'11.
.._ ........... _..., __ ...,
at SUNYAB ···

............. ~(/ltbe.IIOP
' II 1. .- . ................ in
_,tdiM.
72 . ' I L
I I &gt;l8f
5

I

;

reauib ·

. '-'15' ..
~

--

~~:..:...._

,

. :~

,a;~ ,~ ~4iid6-~AS,_., with tlle'lilrart

a.ftimedlat•·ar dM!II:t -- r 1-...~&lt; at

lla ~ Ceater. ~an edaea-

A ................. ....

.... -

............. dlmciiT

................... llda_
.(/ltbe110P

........ - .,.j..........,.......,
. . . . . . .

_._(/l~the~

Ceater ........... _, . , It ill - - .
lJ7l, At tbll&amp; . . . It .....
........ lliO-tal ......... II8'J(,
(If tbem BOP. Ill tt., 8priDJ (If 19'13,

-

3

It . . . . . . - - - ......... about
. ~BOP aDd tben.t--EOP, Car-

:

:.

�EOP studenta. but they do IICibdllo
fii'I!Dl impc B M a1illiwell&lt;
---•- •
~'-

pooaibie in the time aftilable afllllr
the cpatiao framed. Data Clll
dlatributioll of majora 111D0111 EOP
students,""""""'· (A~'6)_ and
on· pade distribution by Faeulty

oanf1nn tbe

by.n::~
--:"'briefly~=

ita tindlnp m ...,.te point a__..,..:
(1) tt..e studenta doinl well in BOP
~._ . _ credit hours than
==~~ (2) BOP studenta
in the riiJI8B of 3.5 to 4.0 are a considenbly ..ner proportion of their
poop then are non-EOP studomta;
(3) BOP maiitm ...,.te point aver....., for Fall 1972, and cumillative,
are only faintly '-!low t1..- of non""'P students.
""'
Of ~ 8ndinp, the first is understandable m view of the 10 semester
norm for BOP etudenta to camplete a

-·-a •"'.::::!t

=::-~

(SUNYAB Self-Study, Falll972, pp.

64-66) show over 27% of cleclan!d
majors in Health Sciencea, Engjneer-

ing, and Natural Sciences and Mathematica, the.hardest-ma.rking Faculties.
'l'bere is no bizarre clusterinc in the
easiest-maddng Faeulties.
'l'be cumulative pade point averages of EOP studenta who persist do
~t a striking oantrast with admlasions and early lelltiDa data. All
of the factors abOve having been repeatedly discuBd. however, the prevai1ing mood of the Committee was

~~;:

(1) to

'~~ a~"'tate ,University College,
Bullalo. and fully undenlandable in
lilbt of the dilladvantqed backpouiida of the studenta coocemecl
'The third 6ndln&amp; . . - t a a rid&gt;er
cpatiao for intll!llprelatioll. A first

oi:JseM that the ao-called pre-

dictors are imperfect, and ( 2) having
seen considerable """"""" in defiance .
of them, to cbeiish student """""""'
above the predictorB.

•&gt;

Qndudon -

~

. to _.. jobs in tbe ..... tboulh
ita ~t . . . . " - ' ' - '
relatiYely hi8h- Worldnc in fawr . of
our paduat..., """"-· are A111rmatlve Action legislatim, the specific
eftorta of hundreds of lllltiooal corporations and dozens of local ~
to increase minority hiring. 'l'be
1anguqe of the Placement Olllce gives
an impression of thjo Clll1'8llt situatlpn :
"Almost without exreptlon, the minority graduate will · find' a str&lt;Jb&amp;er
demand market than the lion-minority
with similar qualifications, especially
graduates with ~ and management (including aCCDUJltina ) degrees. . . . Minority liberal arts graduates fa&lt;e , difticult market but still
have an advantage over the nonminority candidates. 'The same holds ·
true in the teaching field. While most
employers are fairly strict on the specific discipline required, we have
found that some employers will make
exceptions for minority candidates on
the area of study required for a position. .. ..
"Mr. Drake indicated that over the
past two years every minority engineeling and rn&amp;.na~~ement candidate
active in the campus recruiting program during their senior year (with
whom he has worked in a counseling
· relationship) has had at least one
solid career offer prior to graduation.
In fact, the demand is well above the
supply.
':In the final analysis, the opportunities for minorities, by discipline,
run at a higher demand level to the
opportunities in the employment market in general. . . .
"Next year this Office will make
every attempt to identify graduating
mii!ority students for follow-up purposes."
(E . J . Martell to Theodore Friend,
24 April 1973.)

Data on graduation. of EOP studenta from SUNYAB are for the first
time being compiled. Preliminaiy resuits are shown in Chart B.
-.......-\ 8Dd IIIJIII)Qirt (10m proThese results show that of the first
pam Blllft and Um-aity faculty, and
admitted group, including transfers
stimulation from llludl!llla with strongwith some progress already, 16% gradIeaniina lladqpounds has broucht
uated in 8 semesters or less, and 25%
a ......... BOP ...,.te pedonnance at a
in 10 aemesteis or less. Of the second
~fre81Jm0 level DMrly equal to
admitted group, 20% will have gradnon-BOP.
uated in 8 semesters or less. Further
Some halllatioos arlee, """"""'· in
research on the problem may show
holding to such_ an interpretation.
other results.
'The dedication ol the BOP staff and
To interpret these findings, two
the motivation and application of
firm sets of data can be uaed for commany EOP IJiu!lents to their work are
pariaon: ( 1) consistent and careful
not in qwstiorL 'The problem is to
record keeping at the State College,
Buffalo, shows 14% of their first group
explain, in view of the imperfect resulta, 1111tionally reported. of compenof SEEK students, admitted in Sepsatory programs at primary and aec•tember 1967, graduating- in 8 semesondary levels of education, how a
ters or less, and 47% in 10 semesters
or less; ( 2) a name-by-llllme search
program in ~education, affecting
studenta Wlth presumably greater
of the records of all SUNYAB underaccumiua.tion of disadvantage, could
graduates entering September 1967,
show such positive resulta. 'lbe que&amp;shows 54% graduating in 8 semesters,
tion o;&gt;Q188 into shaq_&gt;er f~ Q!&gt;nsi!i· and 67% in 10 semesters (Appendices
ering available data on the high school
7 ·and 8). Computations for Septema - aqd s~ teat JICOl'E!O
ber 1968 entmnta are not complete.
of tbe 8iadeota ~
bUt a rising rate is 'iDqjectecL EOP
One is obliged, in considering a merates of graduation at SUNYAB and
dian EOP cumulative average of 3.0,
State University College, Buffalo, and
to reftect on more than the sheer dedinon-EOP rates at SUNYAB are taken
cation and self-improvenient of EOP
in account in defining EOP Program
studenta, and the earnest 'efforts of
objectives at SUNYAB (Section V ).
.thoee supportina them. One may ask
No clear picture of employment and
to what degree dcies this reftect a
job satisfaction amom.EOP graduates
1111tionwide and campuawide inflation
from SUNYAB is yet possible, but it
of college level grades? And to what
is clesr that the SUNYAB Placement
decree, if any, is t!&gt;ere a special in0111ce and the EOP Program have deflation of grades for E OP studenta on
veloped an excellent working relationthe pert of faculty """- social idee1s
ship. Both underslalid that EOP stuor pemmal ._thies may create
dents in general are job and incomespecial standards for such studenta?
oriented, and both do their best to
'l'bere is specific 8llidence o1 campus
acquaint them with changing realities
pade infiatioD. ~ Fall 1965
of the job market and with current
and 8priJ11 1972, the percentages of
opportunitiee. 'lbe EOP staff serves
A's gi.VaJ IIIDOIII rf,portal grades has
its students well by discouraging manearly doubled, and the percentage
jors which may have an aura of roof C'a, D's, and F'a has fallen by twomance bUt which do not currently
third&amp; (See SUNYAB Belf.&amp;udy,
appear to lead to a stroog prospect of
Fall 1972, pp. &amp;U6, .-lculaled for
eventual employability. 'The heaviest '
- " " " pwlea.) 'The BOP Propam
, EOP major ooocentrationa currently
bepn in Fall 1968, midway in an
reported are in NursiJ,lg, Social. Welinllat!oo m-l.y
ed
'The
fare, Manqement, and ElenEntery
addition of a lup papulation of
Educatlm, ~ tocether oomprising
atypioal ' - - ~ hiM! further
'384 students, or 46% of those who
contributed to this inflation, but it is
have decided upon majors. More stu~ to oay to wt.t dopee.
denta have ...._, Pharmacy 88 a
CJeul.y, tbe overridlnl a•• .,. m
major (20) than have ...._, Blad&lt;
is a~ 1IDIIDcy to live A'•
Studiell (18) (Appeadls 6).
and B'a, a rt- • ., m-t.y well
'The job 11i11r1oot in ....,..I has d&amp;advaced hebe the BOP - Propam
terioraled oiDce the BOP Propam at
'-n- .
SUNYAB bepn in 1988. BOP llluNo CliiiDIJUiior -'Y8 of BOP pwle
dents, ~ - III08tly drawn
rpa:::f::=::
...
::....;b::::.._,::lleld=.,_:of:_:lltud.y::;::
y
:._:-~-=-:::f~-the
rom -N_._..,;,__Fron
. . . __tler
_' ......-and
- pnler
- ..,

bluab 8B111JP1ioo wonkl be that the
oombiMtion of opportunity, pemmal
motivalion, remedial beJp available,

er

1

cHARTS

. Ti.IMof~

c.6

Y-o{

BliiiY ....
,.,.,_
:a-.. ___

.!tilL

May

.iliA- Jlay

19'10 19'10 19'11
1
2
0
1
0
lla-'10 ·--·0

IJ'I0.'11 ___o

19'71-72 _ __o

0

0

1
0

19'11

0
7
0
0

..::

(De,ie
!~.

PiW) "
.iliA. Jlay .iliA. Jla;y
Tolal
19'12 19'12 19'13 19'13
40
13
21
2
1
67
'4
46
0
0

0

0

7
0

0
0

13
20

218
20

TOTAL:
1
0 ~i""""" 7
1
32
2
96
141
(Soalw: BOP Std. Spec;lel Report to AdYieoiY CammiUae. Ya.J, 1.8"18)

V. Toward Clarification
of EOP Objectives at
"SUNYAB.
To arrive at a clllrificaf.ion of
SUNYAB objectives for the EOP
Program we proceed by way of a
change ~f vocabulary. There. is still
current among non-EOP administrators a phrase about the need that the
EOP student should "join the rosinstream" of the University after two
years. There is a connected concern
that the EOP Program tends to become a separate and parallel substructure rather than an integral pert of
University administration. Such language dstes hack to the origin of the
EPIS Program in 1968 and appears in
an EPIS Working Paper of 17 July
1969: "Once a student has been admitted to the University, the function
of EPIS is deceptively simple: to do
whatever is feasible to get him oul of
EPIS and into the University'~­
stream as quickly as possible.'
'The
t majority of the committee
believe~t the "mainstream" idea in
1973 is an unreel issue- In a Uniwrsity """- constituent population is
so various and """- prop1IDI8 eo
numerous there is no single, hr....t.
"mainstreem." 'The BOP Propam
and the Learning Center are doinc
their best to equip disadvantapd llludenta for the recuJar curricnhan. Same
do not make it. Many do, and'wDIIO
Oil to paduate. SipllfDDt bebaviar
is to regiatar for a major and to at~.
fy ita requiremmla. Hundreds of EOP
studomta are doinc both, and b,. ·ne.-ity they-~ the ........
and jlla6cieDclee of t h e - - - ..,.:lal
c:ulturee that .._,_.. ...,._t. At
...,. !PwloGIJiipW to depa.._.,

.,,..,_.._ ........u ..,.,_,
aludioala .wbo .~ '.4tlat ,;flw ;d.l

relym~. _.....,_

-· a-

,u lty wbam they ...... to .,... and

DOt

Clll

BOP 8ld to bilp . . _

throu&amp;b- n.. will

~

..,.._

........
in
wtDch ......, of
in pact1oa1
their thlnl
• taarth
ar .llfth ,._ will tum tD BOP in
T-.-1 HaD far . . . ...,... ...,
be "" ~ far ..... and
II J"'" 91U ).,ru, 'I@ ;;c&lt;'('.!\

allnitiee built up thole in a lladalt'•
early yean at the U ......liJ. Ill
abort, tbe OamadUoee ~ DOt -

SUNYAD lllminl putlallF to .u.ahe
miiMKity IUbcul-. 88 tbe ..___
8\ream" imqe lmplia 'l1le ~
tee would - the UnMalliJ Pviol to
these studenta an additlonel ljiiiCial
.

-..r-w

wblclJ -=~&gt;
potmt&amp;.Jiy
tainL

culture.

~ COmalittee"':..

nO ._ . t&amp;i'

au;,-t- EOP Blllft havily to poaCooct
studenta from deo:aclnatiaiL ~
does it worry about EOP Blllft ~
protectively to develop a .....lie and
peraJiei

edministrative ...... uctme

for that purpoee. EOP lllldl and
will remain IIP8CiaDY eappartlw 'of
the atudenta they . . . . . but they
cannot proYicl8 ma:Jan ar ....,t d&amp;grees. on- --we. - - their
own demaDdL .
•
Mindful that Educatlonel Oppoo- .
tunity p..,..._ are for tbe __,...
ically and aducatlonally . ~
taged, and ' ftiClOIPilzilll that! SUNYwide objectives for BOP •llludl!llla
stress completion of.-..-. iAe c......
mitt« proposes thDt
major
SUNYAJJ objectWe ahoul4 l&gt;e Ill&gt; admit atudenta with •ln&gt;IIB poiAmtial f..compldillg il~ U&gt;Ot'lo ilJ 10 ters or lea. Bearinl further in mind
that 67% of non-EOP atudenta now
graduate within that time, a _ , . ,
major objecti»e should l&gt;e to /l1VIluale
tl8 many EOP ltlUknta Of ,_;;b~
from those atlmlu:t:d•• ;I
,I-t i, ~ ~~·-11.
To ensure. ~ · t!IJds, . - .,....wl.
identify needs to develop a IIIDN OIU'e- ·
(ul and sensiti»e EOP admiaions process; to atrenrthen EOP contad roith
th£ Learning Centu and ita ~;
and to elaborate and inkMify contoct
of EOP Bta(f and student. with departments and their faculty ""'""'""'· aa
weU tJ8 with aupporting adminiatrati»e

o+e

.

offices.

VI. Recommendationli ·"·'
The recommendations that follow
are designed to adWwe the'objectivee

and tO fulfill the needs "!&amp;~ !Jt &amp;ection V, preceding. Action m eome
cases is already underway.
A. Guldell- for •

Recommended:
( 1 ) 'That the Slate guidelines concerning eligibility of studomta for Educational Opportunity Protlram8 be
amended so that up to 20% of tl..students annually accepted- .-1 be
only ecooomicelly disadvantapd, and
not also educationally disadvantapd
as presentlY defined;
(2) 'That the Preaidellt of the Slate
University of N- York at Bu&amp;lo
initiate such atepio .with · SUNY administration with ......... '(&lt;1) ' li1ilwe;
requlnd to......,. Wi4*iatla
8111111111Dalt of 8ecdaD 641111 of the
Education lAw .....,..,. b,. tbe 1,..;.
lature of the State of N- Yodt, 19'10;
(3) 'lbat if (1) abovublluld faD of
State~ tbe 8late ~
o1 N- York at Bldflllo _ . , . c8pt and fund from ite .... - - up
to liO llludl!llla in a ,......_ ....._.
to BOP,..._...._.. all b e nomlcally but DOt edawwtlcwwl\y ....
advantapd.

as-

.. ........,_ __........._
ReccNWMnr'r':
(1) That tbe BOP . . . - *
with A . . . . . . . . . . and . . . . . .

- n ............ .........

'lollwmdlion pnllram, I ! : t , ... . . . . . .
at!oo with tbe A '
Jlao.
.... Ollae; 81111 ~ ........Oil a plall, that BOP .... .aa&amp; .._. ·
I

Ia 'fllllt

I

-

hiP ..... ¥-.. ~.Cl_ _..,

-"cecaps' 'I
tD...twllla
•I I lwbaka*' ........ - - -..

'-lliJad ..........

"' &lt;fi,'IW' ....... I 1 .1111..-....
...._,,,..,...,.....,;
...,·m 1:-l •
OppcaMiit; •......- . . . . .......

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

eo • tD . . Nalhoa~
. . _ til* IIIII.....
.... '

-

,......_..........,_....
....
_..._..
(8)

That . . ' ' '

1

bpt ..... _ . . . . . . . _

IJIItlallelfar..-11;

,'91daJiRVB v,l f&amp;'19P!t3 lOft 818

1111 . .

...

,

�·'

]liM :ll, 1913

6
( 4) 'l1lat • otudy ~ ...sa of the
Jllllllbol', ~ aDd lew!! ol.
~ ol. tniDIIlen-admitted to
the l'ropuD in l'IICIDt ... - to
determlae ......... aDd clarify policy

---

C._Aid .

~:

n.t ...,._tativa from

the
BOP 1111111 Dleet with ._......tativee
from the Ollcos ol. the Vice President
far Aaodemic A1fairs, the Vice Presidellt far Operations aDd Systeme, aDd
the Viae ~t for Student A1fairs,
to adapt t-a) II8BUrina that
llludoGta the March 1 deadline
elate far IDancial aid applications; aDd
(b)
intensified verification
ol. IIIUdlat lllatua, """""- dependent,
~-t or married.
(2) 'l1lat ..-tativee from the
BOP .... with -tativee
from the Ollcos ol. the Vice President
for Aaldlmic A1fairs, the Viae Presidellt for Operations.aDd 8ysterns, and
the Viae. PresideDt for Student Affairs, to .-.he problems -.ciated
with the 81ing of adlolar inrentive ap{1)

cantiveawarda.
·
(3) Tbat IIIIDU&amp;lly,- ........ State
allocatiollo of diJect EOP aludmt aid
.. are known ..ch )'lm", aDd before the
Financial" Aid Committee OOIIIIiden
allocations to the EOP Propam, the
EOP stair aDd the Olllce ol. Financial
Aid confer oo EOP student .-Is in
order to recomtl8ld student budgets
to ~ Financial Aid Committee.
D . - "-Pin~

Recommended:
·
(1) That - t i!lforts at developing coosistent lines ol. demographic
and academic data m •&lt;h admitted

student be continued A more cl..rly
focussed "student profile" will belp
more readily to identify significant
changes, lind thereby assist in expediting policy adjustments, and in
strengthening Program recommendations;
( 2) Tbat, in view of the fact that
significant discrepancies exist between
registration figures m EOP student
population and thoee in AdmissiCIIl8
and Records, a meeting between stalf

-m..

''·

. ...,._tatives ol. the two Ollcos
obould be held in crier to resularbe
procedures aDd IDinimUJe cllacn!pencies. Tbe Direcloa ol. the two Oflloea,
8Jid -tatiW!II from the Olllce of
the· EDcutive Vice Preaident, the
Olllce of the Vice President for Academic A1fairs, aDd the Olllce of the
Vice President for Student A1fairs,
shoUld attend to 8llllist in aeeldng a
detailed understanding;
(3) That, because of the significant
commitment of .-.urces to the EOP,
and the desire of Program stair to
spend it oo students wbo use it to
best advantqe, and because late grade
reports delay academic action by the _
EOP Olllce, aDd haVe an adverse
effect oo other programs as well, the

pllcatiooa aDd receipt ol. adlolar in-

=..den~~-==tevu:
turning in of grade reports.

APPENDIX 1

'!~ mm -t\ln\f~

Y...,

FiMnciol
Aid

Xot4l

Pmjected

1968-69 .......... 100
1989-70 .......... 450
1970-71 . ···-····· 875
1971-72 ..........1150
1972-73 ..........1290
1973-74 ..........1400

Budleted

$ 284,438
1,174,792
2,052,795
2,644,137
2,541,335
2,808,008

$ 249,433

1,030,889
1,647,661
1,995,208
1,961,270
2,211,200

Admin.•
$ 35,000
143,903
158,854
168,353
153,674
154,467

(Requested)

Total
E:pend.
State Per tudent Per Stud.
CoUIIM!L- Letuning
Allocation
F~.
Tuwring
Center Fin.Aid CoUIIIl. St.,U/B
$$:_
$$$2,844
2,610 ·
800
246,280.
1,001
2,346
195,500
1,200
285,076
150
2,300
-187,050
239,341
1,970
1,128
145
203,000
239,341
1,128
145
2,006

(Source: Office of the Assistant Executive Vice President, SUNYAB)
•Salaries on non-EOP lines not covered
FiMnciol Aid Detail

. . ··"J;op "·•
$
~J~-20 • •• 250,000 .,
' "iil1&lt;&gt;-71 . . 1175;875
1971-72
1,880,000
1972-73
1.455,120
1973-74
' 1,579,000
Y~ ·.
1968-el

' "'E oo .
$ 80,000
' .'!!:7~
=u,OOO

320,000
295,000
420,000

.•

·work-Study :
. HEOP
$ 85,000
$
• .. 92,15() . .. • 13;3,000
225,000
.206,400
112,000
112,000

U/B
, Sclwlarsfoip , Endow~Mnt
Total
$8(438 ..
$ .
$' 249~-·
24.,989
431,025
1,030,889 .
16,786 .

·· 250;QOO'"' •

50,000
50,000
50,000

36,808
49,150
50,000

(Requested)

APPENDIX 2

NON-EOP•

7:

7.3%
0.8%
4.9%
7.1%
11.6%
13.5%
19.7%
16.0%
13.2%
6.9%

2.00-2.24 ···········-············· 50
2.26-2.49 ···-····················· 73
2.60-2.74 .......................... 119
2.75-2.99 ···················-····· 138
3.00-3.24 -·········-····-······· 200
3.25-3.49 -·-······-············· 154
3.60-a74 ···-····················· 135
3.76-4.00 ...........:..~-···- ··· 71

EOP•
80
8
39

64
119
123

186
116
53
16

4.0%
1.1%
5.2%
8.5%
15.8%
16.3%
24.7%
15.3%
7.0%
2.1%

(f)

·: ::!: ~:==-~-===--==· =

·1

14.6%

2.9%

10.0%
16.0%
25,9%,
30.6%

1:995~

1,961,270
2,211,200

P...,..,....iO&amp;ie. .~&gt;e~t81.iin~· &amp;­

cause job llllir&amp;ta fluctuate, ·however,
and because prediction of future job
markets mUBt be imperfect, care
should be taken to avoid cboioo of
majors ba-' on current employment
conditions alone.
'

BOP
151
46
100
83
185
202

Completion of Degree, SEEK, State Univerlily Collqe at Buffalo
admitted September 1967
203 students
graduated in 8 semesters or less
28 (or 14%)
graduated in 10 semesters or less
95 (or 47%)
transferred to other institutions
38 (or 19%}
still at SUCB, Spring 1973 (on leave,
15 (or 7%)
returning after l•ve, etc.)
withdrew
55 (or 27%)

NOTE: Any further comparison of graduation rates ' * - EOP
(SUN"¥AB) and SEEK (SUC/Bulfalo) mUBt bar in mind
that there have been numerous transfers of JliOIIIIIIIl aludmta
from SUC/Bulfalo to SUNYAB, but noae the other way.
Tbe oipillcant number of tranafers from varioua inalitutioaa in
BOP (SUNYAB) 8IJII1l8IB .-1 for a otudy wbicb, IIDIOill
other pbeuomena, COIIIpiU'!!Ii graduation rates of EOP transfen
with thoee ol. regular JliOIIIIIIIl transfsa.
(See Rtu+n w -4ations B {4).j

GPA FALL SEMEsTER, 1972-73•
BOP AND NON-EOP STUDENTS
Self-deaipated aopbomores, juniors, and aeniom
G.P.A.
NON-BOP
. 0.00 ···-·-········~··-· 162
LOO-J.JI9 --·····- ····-··-·- 3D
2.00-2.49 ···-······-····-··~- lOt
2.&amp;0-2.1111 -·---··-·· ······~ 186

.

l ""fi'4T:liill. ' "

Recommended:
(1) Tbat the present realistic informing of students on current and
foreseeable job markets be continued,
and cl.- communication with . the

TOTAL: c, d, e, f
203
100%)
Predictions on current information for group of 200 admitted September
1968: group graduating in 8 semesters or less has increased dnur.atically
through UBe of summer program, etc.; 46, or 23%, have alrady graduated. '""- graduating in 10 semesters will be over 50%. Number of
academic dismisoals is rising, through imposition and """""""' of
firmer standards. Withdrawal rate remains the II8IDI!, aDd is ~ to
continue around 30%.
·
(Source: ~r, SEEK, State University Co~ at Bulfakl)

1025
100.0%
754
100.0%
NCIIl-EOP
.
EOP
Meditm, ea:luding transfers
Median, ea:luding transfers
aDd olbers - t e d at
and others represented at
0.00: .3.D8
0.00: 3.00
• All BOP aopbomorea, juniors, and am&gt;iors identifiable m computer
by advisor'• code "30"; non-EOP students randoinly selected.

•

-.we..._

APPENDIX 7
Rare of
(a )
(b )
(c )
(d )
(e )

CUMULATIVE GRADE POINT AVERAGES,
EOP AND NON-EOP ST-UDENTS
Self-designated 110pbomores, juniors, and seniors, including Fall Semester,
1972-73
.
G.P.A.

-.u..·

Recommended: .
(1) Tbat the EOP Program. adopt
a ~ aDd 8liDCliiiiC8d policy of
roncentrating c:ounseling elforts on
students in their llrst two years, in
order more efficiently to use stair, and
more effectively to promote subeequeni indepeodent judgment in students·
(2l Tbat volunteers be 80118ht with
the .help aDd advice of Provosts, Deperlment Chaiimen, and EOP Advisory Committee members, from
among faculty who are quali1led to
serve as departments! 1iaisao to the
EOP; and that procedures be established to facilitate regular oominunication of such faculty liaisao with the
Assistant Vice · President for Academic Affairs, the EOP Director, and
EOP stair; furthef, that this recommendation be interpreted as corollary
. to, and enacted in coordination with,
recommendation G (1) above.
H. " ' - t

December, 1972

1.00-~ ~~:~:::::::::::

F.~

Recommended: ·
( 1) Tbat as long as the ratio of
EOP Coullselors to EOP students remains within State gui&lt;lelinM, more
time be allotted for in-eervire training
of counselors, and OJ'IIIIIIization of the
sta1f to permit oome to specialize.
G.

LNm1nc Cen1ar
Recom~Mrukd :
·
( 1) Tbat EOP stair, faculty members of the EOP Advisory Committee,
and stair of the Leunina Center meet
to consider further development and
E. EOP -

EOP SUPPORT BY YEAR
(above and beyond ordinary per-student instructimal upenditnre)
BrealuUJwn of E:pendilU~U
No.
.,~ .

evaluatian ol. ilmovative taddDI techmc,JW\t the I.aruinl Ceotar;
(2) "1bat the EOP ataJI coafer with
Leunina Ceoti!r (lll the feoudbility ol.
its administering the """"' ~
testa in aeveraliiUilCI!8Sive yeem, oo as
to supply regularity aDd .......rabiJ.
ity ol. data to EOP;
(3) Tbat the EOP stair facilitate
inquiiy aDd investiptian from Loaming Center on students wbo bave completed its CD11llll!ll, aDd evaluation of
their PJ:'OII'!OII.

19.7%

APPENDIX ..B

6.0%

13.0%
10.8%
24.1%

26.2%

;
'

Rare of Completion of Dqrw, Non-BOP Studenu, SUNYAB, .M
Per«n~Dge of Frahman CIDa over Specified Number of Y.....,
Percantap Graduating After:
Frelloman y.....
4
6
6
7
of AdmiaiM
y ......
y...,.
y...,.
y...,..
1980
27%
1983
31%
43%
1964
37%
. 51%
1986
39%
51%
58%
.1986
40%
52%
54%
1967
54%
67&amp;.,.
.
(Source: ~aDd ~ Cllilli
SUNYAB)

M,

�Over $1 Mill;(;;:
In Grant Funds
Received in May
University J:e8l!8lCbers received .21
ll8JliB I can.totaling $1,025,945
during May, Robert c. Fitzpatrick,
acting vice president for .--reb, reports.
During tbe month, 54 pro~
totaling $3,504,948 """" submitted to

~-

'IWo Jarae cantinuing ll8JliB were
.included in tbe May totals: $197,464
to M. Zelen, Statistica, from NIH, for
"Cancer Clinical Investiptions Coordinating Center A," and $112,821 to
M. Hreobcbyabyn, Obstetrics and GynecoJocy, from NIH, for tbe Gynecologic Onoolotly Group. Dr. Zelen
also received an NIH continuation
g r a n t nf $96,813 for a "Biometry
Training Program in Cancer."
Reported 88 recipienta of new ll8Jlls
were: J . Campbell, WBFO, $26,712
from USOE for radio equipment upgrading fot: WBFO; P. Goldstein, Law,
$37,000 from NSF foa- a study nf "Patent and Copyright Effects on Instnmtional Innovation;" G.C. ·Lee, Civil
~. $42,244 for a study of
"Solid and Structural Mechanics Of
Lungs;" F. lDewus, Biology, $10,000
from Holfman'L a R o c he, Inc.,. for
"Study of the Syna-is and Metabolism Qf Ascorbic Acid in Plant Systems;" C. Clemency, Geological Sciences, $31,960 from u.s. Army Researdl for "A Quantits,tive Geochemical S t d y o( Roclt
from
Brazil;" H. Ftiedman, Mathematics,
$22,000 from NSF for "Inveatigation
of Lambda-Calculi;" and . S. Yuan,
Mathematics, $9,100 from NSF for a
study of ''Inseparable Fields."

u

~.

W.l l~r·

rrOmes

••

•. 1-.1 .. '\

w"1-·

, ,·. ,.

~-r~.

. MMAP...J.rojed.·!
Awarded $75,000
Sanford M . Lottor, &amp;ssistant dean,
S c h o o I of Management, hils been
awarded a "$75,000 renewal · ciontract
· for ooe year by tbe U .S. Department
of C0mmercl1 - Ol6ce of Minority
Business Enterprise. Tbe contract is
· for tbe Minority Management Assis. tan&lt;ie Program of tbe School which
invol..,.. ~ and -technical
. aasistance, lOiln peckaging, educational PfOP.&amp;IDB, and busineee · develop- ·
ment related to m in o r i t y groUpe
in tbe Bidlalo '!felL Under last yeer's
$24,000 contract, MMAP aponsored a
short ·Cow&amp;e, two wo~ · and a
_minority ......._ fair. In addition,
tbe program ollered mlinagement and
technical -mstance to '49 minority
clients. Fifty graduate IIQJdent volun. lel!n erbd in tbe program. Thj! new
$75,000 ciiatract . will 81)ow MMAP
to ezpadd JIDd add new-aervicee to ita
goal of .aldinJ minority busineee develoi&gt;Dalt. . :
. ..
.

Alumni A\sodation

Gets NatiOnal Honor

Kette~sReportto~~--------~--------------~---0
(Co~ from 1, col. 4)
a viable entity' in tbe development of
to negleCt how ax- issues should be
lature and Western New York" in an
presented. There is continuing concern
the University."
noted, for m:effort to find out why funds were deabout exactly what tbe Senate conample, that the
was tbe only
leted and what can be done to restore
tributes to the University, for. there
University constituent
them. Preliminary information indiis no single act of the Senate which
spond to his request for 'atfti;SU....a
. cates, be said, jhat the dropping of
produced a visible response, and there
on bow to go about solving tbe con!
the money from the budget peckage
is considerable disagreement about
f':.i"··i~~~¥ed ;in) hi!, ~-81;1!&lt;1&gt;: ,~
did not reftect an intent on tbe pert
what it can contribute. , ..
.
'
.
of tbe Legislature not to provide fund"Tbere .('!8 ~ tasks to be
4
ing. 'Thus, we are pursuing f!!Yery avecompleted, and some yet to be begun.
Eugene J . Martell, director, Uninue open to find some device to get
Perhaps the task most talked about
versity Placement and Career Guidbida this fall and start foundation work
but most poorly defined; of most conance, will become chairman of tbe
this winter."
cern but most resistant to systematic
Professional Stalf Senate (PSS), July
attack, of moot importance but most
Turning to employment oppor1.
uncerain of solution is the notion of
tunity, l{etter said his administration
Other new PSS office!"! elected for
41
is seriOUS when we say we are going - training, orientation and continuing
one--year terms, are: vice cbairman,
to develop an allirmative action pro- . education of the profel;Sional adminisRobert J . Wagner, Natural Sciences
trative stalf...."
and Mathematics; secretary, J u d y
gram," tbe basis for which was pubPresident Ketter said be is "conDingeldey, School of Manqement;
lished in the Reporter, May 17. "We
vinced tbe Stalf Senate is moving in
won't compromise standards in order
and Statewide SUPA ~tative,
tbe right direction, that of becoming
to do this," be said, "but people doing
Ethel Schmidt, Continuing Education.
hiring are going to have to go out
of their way to find minority candidates." And, he added, there will be
periodic examinations of how well the
University is doing in this regard.
The Personnel Office indicates that the following faculty and nonTbe first draft of U/ B's 10-year
~ professional stalf positions are open at State University at
master plan, which is required by law
every four years, is now in Albany
Faculty
for review and comment, Ketter reAssistant/ Associate Professor, Elementary and Remedial Edlu:Gtion.
ported. After tbe Albany review, it
Assistant Professor, BiDIDgy.
will be returned for final formulation
Assistant or Associate Professor, InstructiDn, EducatiDnal Studia.
and tbe completed plan should be
Visiting Associate or Full Professor, MathemtJtics.
reedy in late summer. The draft, be
Visiting Professor, Mathe"''atics.
_indicated, js not a line-by' line specific
Assistant Professor or Vis1ting AssiStant Prilf....,J:, MathemtJlico.
projection for the nert decade. "We
Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering.'·' •·,i.-. ... '
'H'·'\Y
took tbe nine guals and aspirations of
. Professor and Associate Provost, Faculty of Enginuring and Applied ·
the University from tbe Middle States
Scwu:es.
Sell-Study report and outlinlld bow we
Visiting Assistant Professor, MathemtJtico.
wish to operationalize these goals in
Assistant Professor, HiBtory.
the next ten years. We did, however,
Assistant Professor, Chemistry.
have specifics regarding programs we
Assistant Professor, HeaUh EducatiDn Program.
offer now and those we'd like to add
Assistant Professor, PsychoiDgy.
and offer in the nert decade."
Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, Child Health.
lnstructor-Sopbomore Nursing, School of Nursing. Child Health.
Instructor or Assistant Professor, School of Nuning, Child Health.
In other areas, Ketter indicated:
. Instructors ( 2 ), $chool of Nursing, Maternal Health Nursing . .
,.
• That although some SUNY four' •IiiStructor or Assistant Profesilor ( 2 ) , School of Nuning, AduU
year pilleges will &amp; ·uP to 36
Health.
cent shy of their enrollment goals for
falL_,._~ -- 20-26 per .
Adulllns:::."!:J:. or .. ~istant Pro!""l'Qr,. (pt. time~, s_~hool of , l)T~ ,
oent dnip in admissions applications,
Majqr Advisor/ Graduate Faculty, School of N~ing, Co~
U / B, with an 8-9 per cent increase in
Health Nursing.
.
applications, will b a v e no trouble
Graduate Faculty Member, School of Nursing, Community Health
meeting enrollment projections this
Nursing.
·
fall or in coming years. Most of the
Instructor/ Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, Community Health
SUNY university centers have noted
Nursing.
·.
increases in applications, Ketter said,
Assistant to Director of Clinical Education, pert time, Phyaical
88 have tbe two-year schools, especialTherapy.
ly in their technical· programs.
Assistant Professor, Fixed Prosthodontics. ·
• That the Governor and the LegAssistant or Associate Profei!sor, Industrial Engineering.
islature seem committed to keep priVisiting Assistant Professor, Voice, Music.
vate edllcation in tbe State at its cur- - I n structor,-f)ltl't-time;-usic.- rent level--uf-enrolilifehts:-Witli eWI!
Field and Research Archaeologist, AnthropoiDgy.
individuals seeking higher education
Assistant Professor, BiDIDgy.
.
Ketter said, this means that the drop
1 • Jt
Visiting Professor Chemistry.
'
. 1\.' '- ~'
will come in the public sector. He
Assistant
Lib....n,;.,
MUsic
Library,
Un"'wer.i.ty
LibrrzrieB. 00.0
foresees no tro\lhle on this count for
~tant Librarian, Undergraduate Library, pert-time, ff~
U/ B but does think some of tbe other ·
LUJranes.
State units 'may be in difficulty.
Assistant
Librarian, Archi~ pert-time, Univenity Libraria.
• That the eearcb committee for
Assistant or Associate Librarian, Mathematics, Univenity Libraria.
a dean of .the Medical School baa narLib=tant or Associate Librarian, Unde~uate Library, Univenity
rowed its ·Jist to 10-12 candidates. ·
.Contacts are now being made. to deASsistant DireCtor, Technical Services, Univenity Libraria.
_termine which of these ""' seriously
Associate Director of I:ibraries, Univenity Libraria.
intereeted and to an:ange interviews.
Assistant Director, Collection De\'eloptl81t, Univenity Libraria.
• · That hundfeds of applications
(BDDie from 88 far away 88 California)
NTP
have been _receiyed for tbe position of
AssiBtant to Director, University Libraries, 1'&amp;-2.
direcfur of Admissions and Records
ABBistant to Vice PN!8ident, Health Sciences, PR-2.
that the position wi!J be filled by
Research Aasistant, Regional Kidney Disease Center, PR-1. .
Aasistant (or Instructional Serv~, Division of Studeat Allain,
• That it is tbe University's posiPR-1.
;lion 'that if "we are going to run" the ·
ABBisl4nt to Dean, Division of Student Affair&amp;, l'R-1.
new SUNY EdllC&amp;Iional OpportunAssistant to Dean, Ol6ce for Credit-Free Programa. PR-1.
ity Cehter in Buffalo, "we're going to
Aasisl4nt to Director, Admiasions and Recorda, PR-1.
run it." . U/B is "not intereeted" in •
PR-:.tudent ActWitia A81isl4nt Director, .DiVision of Studeat Allain,
being involved only in reoord-keeping

.

'Job Openings

Other-

Per ·

faiT.

Tbe · U/B ·Alumni :Aaoociirtion re.ceived • ~ a,....t .from tbe American Alunmi Cowlcil at the Aasoeialion's Installation ·and Awards Ban_quet last Friday. . . .
•
c Tbe AJuami A~lidn Award ·
responsibility 88 SUNY seems to
loa-. lmpJovemojnt recoimzes. strides
wpnt, Ketter said.. Tbe eenter will
over a two-y..:r period iJt provicijng a
. result from tbe merger of two formerly
full QOIDPienient of programs for 64.000.
'f'P"'8te proirams, the Cooperative
alllllmi, 8J1!1 especially ~.000 d~ J&gt;!IY·
College Center and the State Univer1
ing members. Tbe latter -are eligible • sity Urben Center. .
'1 •
far 11101e aerviceA. ImprOvement must· ·
• ·•
•
. be demoaatnted. in . dfectiw · ...., of •
Also ·at tbe Stalf Senate meeting,
lime, reaowcea lllld voluntarY -elf~
.' «&gt;~Jt-goini president Allen H. Kuntz
Dr. Robert E. Unaon, ~ of
reported on tbe finlt year of tbe orthe board of tbe Nni.rican· AlUmni
P*alion's aistence:
CouncD, ~ tlie award .to Mor~Certainly not~ was bar. lay c. ~ alwmli: ~t . ~and -.y. The ideat(ty of tbe
for i.972-78. ·
· . :. · Senate lllill Ia quite cWbe on tbe
'lbe 'Alumni A..,.,;,iti!J!! WI/JFcited
........._ 'lbere are Vll8t ~of
bY !hoi: Alumni &lt;Council
opinklll conceminllbe role of tbe Sen. alwaui ~atiaa:
Qt; and ialuoe · R lbould add-. not

ail.......

. ..

.

.

For additiOnal information ~ tbo!ae job! and foi dlllda of •
NTP openings tbrouabout tbe State Univenity system, CODIIUlt ba11etiia
boards at theee locations:
,-...,~1. Bell Facility between p152 and D153; 2. Ridae 1.a, BuDc1in1
:'"""· MEt to alfeteria; 3. R!dc8 La, ~ .f280; in oorridar to
• e-t; 4. Health !i!ci- Bui!lWm, in corridbt':CJPP08ite HS )31;'a. '~
Hall, in tbe mrridor ~:Jetwei,tt'Ri.om 141 lldd tbe I.obby; -6. ~
pound 8oor in corridor to V1IDdlna IIIIIC:IIiza; 7. ~ Hall, ill
main entrance foyer, ...,.... from Public Infonnalion 06le; 8. Adllat
Hall, in corridor ~ Roomo 112 and 118; 9. Parbr ............
in iloi-ridar MEt to Booilllli; 10. ~Hall, ~ . . . . . . . . Olb
- ; 11. Law School, finlt ,._ . . . . . ~board~._
108 and 109; 12. 1807 Elmwaod, l"emmnee Dllputaad; 18. Nartla
Union, Dinlctor'a 08lce, a - 226; 14. nw..lad Hall, ill _.....,-'
to a - 108.

'

�J - 21, 1913'

8 Visiting Profs ·

Set for P-rogram

.

In Modern.Lit
..

I weeldg eoiiiDrQnigue 1 .·~===
·-· =

,:;

-..~, . ,.
,.;,~ ~~-will....tiooi. ti6~
111111 ....... level ........_ durin~ tbe
lOCh S....... Propam in Modem. Litaature.. .1- 25 lh1'ouib
August 3.
a&amp;ted for tbe
lnt tiiDt at 0/B: An,lo.Irisb Litentbire, .............. in Poetry, and Gro-.
_,.... 111111 Psyc:be in 19th and .20th
Century Nmraliw.
, _ Blue ia tbe director of tbe
Media O.ta at Rice ·university in
HoualaD. 'He ._ held a Fonl Foundation Glut to interiiew film directors
wbo ... _.....,..,.., 111111 a Guggenheim
~ to Jll'!llllre a acript for a
film ... tbe hiatmy of his family in
America. ~ Blue will conduct
1111 undelpaduate co u r s e, "Films
Made will&gt; Ncm-Actor:s," and a graduate aeminar em "'The Roots of American J'ndopmdent Film."
Geoftn!y -Dummt, profeB&gt;r or Engliab at tbe University of British Columbia 111111 author of Willimn Words•
Worlh 111111 Words!Dorth and the Great
Syatem, will amduct a graduate semi.Mrl OIJ! ; W~. and an under- ··

.....,_lllbjeda

.·

~

of t.W

~
conduct an ~r-

eeat.ry, he will
. poldaate eo u u e on "Metaphysical
Poela" 111111 a paduale esninar, "Stud- lu ~ (Y•ta, 8teveus, Roetbb)." •
.
• WaltK 'l'll,yb il 111!. aBICiate pro,_,.. at tbe Um-.lty of Te:11111 at
Bl &amp;.&gt;. ~ bii pul!liabed wotb
"Let My PeapJe GOS'-'l'be White
Ma'• lferitloae in Go 'Doum Moae/1'
(Soia/a A tl o 11 t i c Quorkrly), and
. •l'aallaa'a l'lmtalaon: 'Ibe Negro
~ . . . &amp;art of Go Doum
.,_, M..._ ~&gt;- P,n&gt;t.ar ~will conduct-. pduate'
. . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . all

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

a..IM

~totr.
nan.. . ~

m!:.eob~~!:.~~
~"'!:.!~~~~-0~~

nenf, chairman, Coaummity H~tb
Nunin&amp;'. Wayue Stale U.U...nity Ooll8p
of Nunin&amp;', will be the cimf........,leader.
For ..,.Utnolion detailo, CODtact the
U/B Scbool of Nunin&amp;' ~t of
Continaing Education.
SEMIIWt.

Erythrocyte PolymDrp/tk Clloro&lt;!tera
in Ruminonto with SD&lt;Cial Reference to
GluiGthioM, N'lhal S: APr, vililiDa u-

~le~r,~f&gt;~:.

I

Ffi.MS• •

The Summer Filin Institute preoenla:
Sun and S/uulow (Vulcbanov, 1961), 7

anf..!,P~·f'~~rr.

7 p.m., and loon the

1944),
.g:;:rz:;;..,
II
(Eioen-

ste~~/p,!J:;:;; 1~\'s)~:S'i;.m.&gt;

vis?c:rr:n:to~~fAit!r:!~~

Center, New York Univenity, wiliBCreell
and di8euBs selections from his filma, 140

Ca~t!t.m.by

tute.

.. . , .r.
Fntfval awnta this week.

U/ 1 SUNDAY SUPPUMENT

Mrs. Margaret Nevin, director, U/B
Adult Advisement Ce..ter, discusses ca-

~~ ~=loWs£ Prfk,~f' a~J

WPHD-FM (103.3 mgz) , 10 p.m.·
-.VI IJ..S.......,,...a...,_.._. Iii-~ focusing on topics of current intereet,

fo~~~~S'e~~ce of Universlty In-

COU£GlATt AS SEMI&amp;. Y MfDING•

10:05 p.m.

EXHIBITS

FRIDAY-22

Eut preOento Pink Floyd, Memorial Auditorium;· 8 p.m.
Ticteta at $6, $5 and $4 are available
at the NoJton" Hall · Tidcet Olllce.

...... filMS••

(,....,• ..r "iiedieNN Ut-

clallea-- ....... 6 -...JatiaD

. clihe
,._......
••- ••• about tbe
2'ftljD ·

.........
-.,.;~;iiiifiiiDr.li..,iin·-·B.•eao-iif'
~

~Jlii't al...::t~; .~~ii:

Daul!htera of Darltneio (Kumel, 1971),
Conference Ttieatre, Norton, cbeclo: lhowcaoe for times. Admiosion cbup.

writing at the university I e v e 1 with
bootees Eother Swar ·t z. WADV-FM,

CONCOT'
FM~

...... (!)liMa).• P.-.ar Dada Ju.

are available at the Norton Hall Ticket

=.ru.o: ~~~ '!:n:ac=~-

Irving Feldman, P."'t and U/B pro-

'The SUUIJDi!r Film Inatitule
preoento
.
Alha and Diamond. (Wajda, 1959), 147
Diefendolf, 7 and 9 p.m.

&lt;It

=:-.!:':~~...r=~tt~
8
~ ~· ~ wUl include
works by Moaart aDd Schubert. Ticket.

u/ a Am FOIUM

-·

"'"
..,.,_..

The Ckue/and Quarut, joined by art- •
Manu~ piano, and Theodore
Mayer, string bass, will preoent the second- of a four·cxmcert .eries aa part of
the program~ for the" You.nc Musicians
ists Stephen

JAI'ANE$E FILMS•

MONDAY-25

""'*-

s~ Film ~ti-· .

· Tentative, 129 Crooby, 4-6 p.m.

Noh Baraku Kabuki, filmo on traditional Japanese art theatre (narrated in
EDgiiab) , Conference THeatre, Norton.
5, 6: 30, 8 and 9 : 30 p.m.
•
•

.

the

YOUNG MUSICIAN$ CHAMIEI FESTIVAL•

Quartet performlnc at Younc Muskians

a he - . - at tbe Uni_.., cl T-. will ..... "Modem

,cf

UC

Room, DOQD.
Preoented by the U/B Departmento of
Biocbemiotry and Pediatriao.

148 Diefendorf.

of

~

-r-

row.

SCIHNIND/DISCUSSION'

. . ~of

j\w;J'i ..

~oaluatiDR:,;=~ &amp;

A
of a ~ wOrbbop, to be beld at the
Roswell Park Memorial Inati- Research Studieo Center today and

ature.

,...,. .r..a...ture

iDuct.nciil

CONIUIUING N -

.

1

Ra I ph Freedman is professor of
comparative litemture at Prineeton
and author of a novel, Divided, and a
critical work, The Lyriml No vel:
Studies in Herman Hesse, Andre Gide,
and Virginia Woolf. .
"Modernism in Poetry'' is tbe topic
for his seminar which will concentr:ste
on ioodemism as a phenomenon in
intellectnal history. an expression or
con~ life, and a litemry style.
In addition, Freedman will conduct
an UDdeqraduate COUISe, "Problems:
~ and Psyc:be in 19th and
20th Century Nanative."
'Ibe lnldition or including a Joyce
scholar in tbe summer· program continues with 'Arnold Goldman, a reader
in English and American studies at
tbe U~ty of ~ in England.
.He is tbe author of The Joyce Paradm: and .lamea Joyce (Profi/n in Literuture) 111111 will conduct a gmduate
seminar on Joyce as well as an under•
graduate cowae on Anglo-Irish ·literI.yle Glazier, U/B profeaaor emeritus.. retums to conduct couroes in
"MaP American Writers" and "Afro~~; Profe8110r Glazier ia lhefllllbm &lt;il,OrchDnl ParJz and
1-"aa, Y- Too, Vcriea of the Deml
111111 The DervWia.
Fnmk ·Wamloe holda 'the posts of.
...,.,_of EngJisb and prof- and
~of __...a... literature at
tbe Um-.lty of WatlbiJictaa- 'Ibe
autbar of~ Jl~lillal Po.
etry, :V. . . . of .Baroque and EIII'O-

Qaartel, 101 Baird, 8 p.m. -

THURSDAY-28

•Cipln ... . . . ••Cipln ............. of the 1-.Ky
#Cipln ...., ... with • . , . _ . . . In the IUIIject
Caoad •~Uni:J ~ 831-22211. far llltlnp.

~IIIJI!Iy,of!eitlllt§bakespearean

traaecliaL .

B&lt;Jdapeat

,; 1:.•

'

'

a~!;~~if~va!~~~'"t~,:;

(1962), Conferenee -'I'Matre, Norton,
check abOwc::ue for times.' Ac:lmi8aion

-....;.

S,U NDAY-24

TUESDAY-26 ·
filMS'

'The Summer Film IDotitule p._,la:
Un ClrUn Andalou (Bunuel. 1929), Land
Wil/aout Bnad (Bunuel, 1982), and Fall
of 1M Houw of UIMr (Watoon, 1928),
7 and 8..p.m., 147 DiefeDCiorf.
Antony and Cko~ru (Kleine, 1914),
Homo'o OdyfiHY (Kleine, 1913), Three
Early Comedia (1911), and Early liGI.ion Melodrtur~Ga (1910), 7 and 9 : 30p.m.,
140 Capen. .
'
•
&amp;rJi&gt; Follieo (Landow 1967), R&gt;uu
Good (O'Neill)_, J{irror (Morria, 19'11),
&amp;oldl Tape (....Uth, 1962), Speeiol Ef·
f&lt;CU (FniDDion), Prwl Re..,.. (Serra,
1971), and
D~
1970), 1, uc1 9 p.m., 148 nw....

::,;;:a.

r_. st....,.

WEDNESDAY....:..27.

UUAS FRM••

_J

~

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>2017-07-07</text>
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                <text>n03</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382983">
                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                    <text>·-4 -Course

Supported
Senate Group

Four Uoiv~r~ity ~ppointments Announced
A aerial cl Univenity JIPPOuitmeJ&gt;I!I
this - t ....Wted in an acting dean
for th8 Scbool- of An:hitecture, an
8lii!JCillive ollicer for the School l:if
MedlciDe, a cbairmlm for the Department cl InstzuctioD, and an 8lii!JCiltive.
ollicer in the IJeputment of Music.
•
•
•
Ricbard K. Cbalmei'8, associate profeoaor and cbairman of graduate atudies in ib!o 8cbool cl ~ and

DiloiP&gt;. bas asuDeii
the acting deanship of .that School,
~t ~ L. .Ketter bas an-

Enviiobmontal

nOuDced:
. -- ~

'

·

-c:::bll-..~~-ne.m

Jobn P . Eberb.rd who was recently

!IPP'!inted president of the American
and the Potomac Valley AlA Award
Institute of ArChitects Research Cor( 1973) .
poration in Washington.
At UIB, be bas been director of the
'Prior to joining U / B in 1970, ProBachelor of An:hitecture degree piofesaor Chalmers was an associate with
gram and a research associate with
~L, Inc., ~ architecture, planning,
the Bu1falo Organization for Social and
n!ilearch and development firm in .BalTechnological Innovation (BOSTI).
timore. While there, be designed two
A Bu1falo native, Professor Cbaimajor PlV&amp;-winning projects: the unmers received the B. Arch. from North
derground parking garage and pub!i.c_....,earolina State College in 1958. He
111aZa (Fpuntain Square) in Cincinreceived an M. Arch. in 1964 from
· 'n&amp;ti; wfunei of the 1973 American
the School of An:hitecture and PlanInstitute of An:hitects (AlA ) Nationning at the Massachusetta Institute
aJ ~Award, and the Bio&amp;cience
of Technology.
·
a-im" u.horatory in Bellilville,
.He is a f~ ~of the
MUy~of'ibe~llftvo
BUifalo ·,ro..p BUild ·A N- - eity
ices Ailmlniatration Award of Merit
(BANC) and bas se!Yed in an ad·
visory capacity to the United States
Department of Education and the
United States Atomic Energy Com-

mghtHandA4ayNotKn~w
Wh~f Leh Daes, Scientist Says
By
PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN

-s..n
'nlat old saw, "'lbe . right band
OO..'t know what the left is doing,"
is uaually false as well as trite. But
a cbamatic demonstration of instaDces
in whli:b tile cliclie is Uterally true iiven ·bere by· Dr. MlcMel 8. Gazzanip. noted pbylololotist and neuropaycbolotPst ~an apnpua June
4 and 6.
.,
•
Gazr:anlp worb with "aplit-brain"'
human aubjec:ta, individuals who have
undersoae IUfl8l7 iD wbidl the corpus
~ nerve tiEue CCIIIIl8CtiD&amp;
........, bemilpbMee of the bralD-ia
...-1. Firat performed In 1961, this
aurPcaJ procedure bas proved blgbly
elleclive iD the tnlatmmt of certain
severe ~ It lellvee the patient
free of ~ eelzurea aDd able - to
functiaD --uy iD the wodd, without - JIIIIC8Piible per8!111aiity cbanp
or cid.. -.leodrahle oid&amp;-elfecta.
·In a labolatcey oettinl, however,
the" opllt-braln penon clemoaatrBtes
certain hilbiY ldbyncratlc bebavio&lt;.
u be Ia bliDdfolded and . . object
is placed iD ... rilbt bud {wbidl
. . . _ , . lalormation to the left
bemiapbele of hla lnln)' be Ia able
to and deaibe wrbaJJy whatGb)ect be boldL But If the object Ia placed bi hla left bud {wbidl
. . . IDf-tlan primuiJ,y to the

Gazmiuga's extremely specialized
subject pool bas cooperated in a wide
range of experiments carried on over
more than a decade. In one test, the
word "heart" was flashed in the center of the aubject's visual field. Asked
to say· what the word was, the splitbrain paraon 8IIIIWeTed "art" - that
portion of the word presented to his
left hemisphere. The word was flashed
(Continued on -

2, col. 1)

rilbt ...........) • be c:mmot deaibe
............. lillllaalb be Ia able

to lillldlfy It Ill •· ~ teet
(........., It
a puup cl objec:ta,
for
Altlloucb both hom..... , . _ llafonatlaD. Gilly the
left bemiapbele - . . . . . . . ..-:h
oolllion .... loeated---k pra6cleat In

rr-

eDIIII'Ie&gt;-

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

AllentoWn Scene

mission.

Dr. Clyde L. Randall, vioe president
for health scienoes since 1970 and
acting dean of the School of Medicine
since 1971, bas been appointed 8lii!JCil·
tive oflioer of the School of Medicine,
effective June 14.
President Robert L. · Ketter
made the appointment on the recom·
mendation of Dr. F. Carter Pannill,
who becomes vioe president for health
sciences ofl July 1. Dr. Randall will
bold the post until a permanent dean
is appointed. An 11-member SMrch
(Contjlwed on 2, c:ol. 3)

--

The Faculty S,O.te'a ~Uee
on Bacciilameate Raqulrwaada 11M
"'PPrted to the Senate E:recutift . . .
mittee thet it is unable to ll1ld ~
basis for IIUili'Ortina reveraian to the
llve-courae load or rein8titutlaD of
the one credit boi1r equa1a GDe cJ...
room hour formula- Plosx-f iD Much
by the Academic Atiia CouDdJ.
Chaired by Dr. Marian Wblte of
Anthr!&gt;PDIOIY, the tan-penon eub-committee bas been scrutinlzillg the fowcourae load as one~ ol ita ori,maJ
charge since the sprfna of 1972. Until
the-MC p~ appeued in Much
of thll year tbere waa little lntenat
anywhere on campua iD dropplnc the
present fout-()OUI88 eyatem, allbouih
the t-.1 to the four..courae load
as part of the undergraduate educational experience bad been """"""""'·
Most recently c;barpd with ree_ponding to the AAC document on "Courses and eredits." the subcommittee
tried, it reports, to . . _ the basic
question of whether "tbe overall quality of the students' educational experience" is lower when the typical
load is four four-a-edit courses ( typically in-..alving 12 formal class hours)
than when the standard load is live
three-hour courses involving 15 clas&amp;room hours. The subcommittee could
find uno bard evidence," only ucircumstantial evidence," that b&amp;ccalau·
reate education here bas suffered "a
significant decline" either in quality
or breadth as a ....Wt of the four- .
course pattern, as claimed by the
AAC.
.
The subcommittee did emphasize
repeatedly that its reports could not
be regarded as conclusive becaule, In
spite of a conscientious elfort to collect and examine all the evidence -

-.-..m.
an tha---. lt Mil booR able' to obtain cortaiD ........, .....

-a---~

Rather than ClOI!denminr the four..
course pattern, the subcommittee argued that the more generous credit
pattern bas probably beoelltted Btudents educationally. '"lbi! four..,.,.._
load bas led to amaller
and
bas made available increased individual attentlaD to studell.ts," the eubcommittee canteods. "It is likely that
these ....Wts together with a revjaioa
of ""' curriculum in certain Departments have ted to imp~ learning
oonditioba."
I -~ ·
UnderiYinf the subcommittee'• efforts WB8 a basic tnJst that IDII8t fac.
ulty are COII8Cientioua and ClOIDiilitted
to good teacblng and thet IDII8t Btudents "will put . full elfort into their
(C~
J, col. 3)

w-

011-

-

............
....... ................................
c....-..... .. --.- ........ - ................ ..
Ait -

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

llrllht ................... ...._. .....

_ . . . , . . . . . , . , . . . • . . . . . , _ . _ _ llul ... .._..... .... ..........

tMn . . ,..... IIIIo

-,

~

.

�Cretflf UniOn is OJ)eti tCfUIB
~,._-I,

RePNiimn within State Unherelty
took another step fonrllrd Ibis week
with the - t by E.W. Doty,
vice prl!llidlmt few opemtinns and ay&amp;tems, el 8ft&amp;DIII!IIII!Ita to prov!de emof UIB with the oppl!rbmity
to join the ~t Uninn at Bulfalo _
State CoiJeft.
.
Tbe Manoa R. Ulle State Univenity Federal Credit Union, as it is
olllcially k no w n, is now receiving

..._ 'l1lla time the .ubJect was ·. .ad
.. paint to the won! be ... with bil
left bomd. Sbowll emda
"be" .
. "'art," the ~ IUbjecla fD..
c:t... "be,. illdltatina tbat
rlibt beml.pbere bid also ob.-..s the won! 1IDd bid _.nea"
the left bmlilpbere
not

.-me

NqUiNd to -

IIPIIfJd&gt;.

'*'-

""'*'

GuaDlp, a DUllY 1961 paduate
el DIUtmoutb, became interested in
..,ut.laln phnoeooa while an UD·
cllqraduate. Warldna at Cal Tedl
with R. K. . Sperry, wbo ~
..,ut..bmln .-reb in a-aeries el ....
perimmda with a cat, Gazzanip undertoalt 8lltmslwe ·t.eallna el 801111! 15
.. 16 J181*D!in Callfomla wboee .....
- - bid ' - ' bieecled IIUfllically.
~ D8lll8d !&gt;""- el psyc:bol. CIIY at 8taay BIOOk, be cunently
llludlee the bomdful el aplit-brain per. . . wbo Jiw in theN- York region,
drivlnc to tbeir """- in a 19' van
be baa tranaformed into' a fully-&lt;!filliJ&gt;ped mobile lab. He also atudiee splitbmin p!vmonw&gt;a in animals, usually
ru-us rilonkeya.

IDI!IIIbenbip

--~~ --

. Although Gazzanip baa found that
. ·the left bemispbere is trupetior to
·the right in the bandling of language,
be' also discovered, in-experiments like
the one with the woman just mentioned, that the right hemisphere is
equally capable of emotional response
and bas certain unique excellences as
well Some spatial manipulations are
performed better by the left band, for
eample, suggesting that the right
bemispbere bas a . superior j&gt;attern orpnization capability. In one such experfment, ll male subject was asked
to reproduce a design with his right
band using di1ferent colored blocks.
In the filmed session the subject's left
band _ , . to bave a Strangelovesn
life el its own and keeps coming up
lnvoiuntarlly to arrange th!! blocks.
Tbe experimenter asks the subject to
llit nn his left band. "Ok!oy, now use
yonr left band," the experimenter fin.
ally aaya, and the subject's bands
~ qainot eaCh other for domJnace in oompletinc the task. .

,...,..,...

__

'

Taken · ~

these experi_,ts . . . . - tblt the bi-.ted brain
-~ ~ If it were really two in-

-.
.....
,..
...-1:?&amp;::--'"-- -~

'

-~
...

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

~
""""-_

application

beneficiary

desipatinn forms (to be acoompanied by $6) from any employee of U/B.
Of the $6, one dollar is fo~ a membership fee and $5 represents a s118re
in· the Credit Union.
.
ACcordilig to Dr. Gerbard' .Falk, so- •
cioiOIY profeaaor at 8u1ralo State and
president of the Credit Union, mem- ·
bership bail the following features:
-1. deposits may be made by -mail or
by payroll deduction; 2. dividends of,

'

five and nn&amp;-balf per oent have been
declared at the I!IDd el f1llerY six-month
period for the .-t ..,..t ye&amp;n~; 3.
free life insulaDoe io olfered, covering
100 per c:ent of depOsita, up to $2,000,
tJuuuP aie 64, 75 per oent of depos.
ita from 56-al, 60 per c:ent to age
64 and 25 per c:ent 10 -69; • . innn Joana is 1 1"!1' c:ent,.,r. month
on the unpllld balaJice, also payable

n-na-

d peymu cledUctioD.
. Applic:atioli!l for - ~p or
' questinns ~· be' -~ . to Ms.
by_

· ion;
:.t"u~~~t~~
111 ·p.,..Y H8n, State' University

· Colleg11,· 1.300 E1DiwOod A'Yellue ( telephone _llj)U825, MnnilaY' -,:ir_ Thurs-

dit ')

,_.

•

~ Credit' Unkm

•

.

bas :ioore than
650 members and a8aets of Over $280,000. It is lll8liaged by an elected board
of ,~

Four~Course Load1----·-· -· - - - - - (Contiluud from - · I, coL 4)

PIIS llocunwlt8ly

Gazzanip baa filmed many of his
sessions with split-btain subjects:
some of this footage was incotpOrated
into PBS's prize-winning documentary, "Tbe Mind of Man.'' In these
filmed sessions, individuals with normally integrated persooalities but bi-.ted cerebral bemispberes 'respond
to stimuli in ways usually identified
only with extreme psychiatric dissociation. In one particularly vivid experiment, a aeries of innocuous slides were
being flashed in a tachistoscope to the
left visual field of a female subject.
Suddenly a picture of a J1Ude woman
was tbn7wn in. Tbe subject laughed
but was unable to tell the experimenter what wa8 funny. When preeeed,
" abe said abe was laughing at the funny

-

.

col. f)

SI'UT-IIIIAIN
- opllt-lnln
-oubjec:ts,c:allosum,
-In tso11n1
the
presented lllmull to

1 ~rnonter

- to
vlsulll
- fields
presented
the -rich! only.
•nd ·
left vlsulll
Is
transmitted vlo the optic chlum to- the
left •nd rich! hemllphe-, ....._ . y,
Aftor • opllt-lnln openotlon, • subject
aonnot describe lllmull .._, In the left
vlsulll field only, •lthouah he con Identify
the lllmull non~rb.llly, Dlq,.m reprinted
from Scientific American.

dependent brains. Whether the two
fwtction better -than one • is wtclear,
but the neuropsychologist bas determined that split-brain monkeys can
deal with almost twice as much visual
information as .normal monkeys and
that split-brain humans can carry out
two experimental tasks in the time it
• 1iLkes a' normal 'penion ·w 'do one.
The research bas raised a great
many questions tbat remain unanswered. A basi~ -one is precisely how
the corpus callosum integrates the
two hemispheres. 'The -ecientist theorizes that the callosum transmits visual pattern information from one hem. ispbere to the other and alao a complex, 'higher-order neural code, not yet
understood.
-

_

Tbe superiority of the left hemisphere in language points to another
interesting line for fut(ure """""""- In
an early report on split-brain phenom- ·
ena published in Scientific American
(August, 1967), Gazzaniga noted that only adults show hemispheric inequity
in language; in children up to the age
of f o u r the bemispberes are aloout
equally profi!:ient as to languoge and
speech_ How does this inequity develop in the mature brain? No nne knows.
But Gazzaniga takes the question a
step further and asks if the -disparity
is inevitable.

total Ieeming experience irrespective
of the number of cowses, iill of which
are arbitrary schemes for partitioning
a body of knowledge.''
'
Confronting the AAC's cbarge that
students were abusing the four-coUrse
pattern by taking "overloads," the
subcommittee argued that individual
abuses woUld occur under any system
- unless specifically controlled and that
isolated cases did not condemn the
pattern as a wbole. In the fall of 1972
some 4 per cent of U / 8 students were
carrying more than 20 hours, prior to
drop and add day, the report noted.
No record wa8 available' of how many
of these credits were actuslly awarded, however, Tbe subcommittee sug-.
gested .that the overload situation bad
been uexaggerated."
Tbe subcommittee also charged that
wbat inflexibility the current pattern
-may bave is attribulable to " insuf~
ficient implementation . by the administration when the change was made
(in 1969) " as well as "faculty indifference" to the ·need for creative
rethinking of curricula in light of the
new pattern.
Mlclclle - C h l l...
Accume In sOme C:...

"Tbe charge," the report continued,
"that the individual course changed
little if at all (Middle States Evaluation ) when the credit changed from
3 to 4 for 3 class hours is probably
accurate in a number of cases which
require identification an d revision.
Tbere- may be as many instances
where 4 or more classroom hour!! occur
for 4 credits. Tbe latter are never
mentioped in &amp;weeping statements that

studenb! am: ~ onlY. 415 of the
educatfon l"!!l~..th!!Y l'fd 5 years ago.
All such statements erroneously assume a l : 1 relat:ioOahlp between leam.ing and class hours.. .
''In ~ opinion,", the subcolplnittee
adviloed, "the q u a I i t y of education
should always be under active scrutiny
and we urge that the q)Jestion of the
course-credit pattern in Particular continue to be pursued"
In order to improve the.pre5ent situation in the meantime, the subcommittee . pro~ tbat all depai'tments
and programs re-aamine their currie. u1a to Be&lt;\ if cpursework is approprjate
to ciedit hours. This review rould lead
either to enlarging the "depth and
• I!COP!O" of -'1 &lt;lPl!IS&amp; found to-be bearing
more credit than it is worth or to
designaq COU1'8es as less than or
more than four . credits (ujW,.g twohour increments), so tha~ a wi!ak fourcredit oowse miiht be 're.demgnated
a two-credit cowse. This reVfew would
also result in the depart:qmt preparing specific descriptions of actuaUornial class bow&amp;, recitation or lab time,
or other contact bours for each course.
On the. basis of these formal dmcriJ&gt;tions, the subcommittee advises, DUS
could develop sPecific CCliUIIIHlr'edit
guidelines, ideally to be implemented
by fall, 1974.
.
Tbe subcommittee aiao recommend. ed that a separate 'committee- be est$blisbed to study the romplex problem of oVerload and that a rigorous,
possibly cross-institutional, :oomparative stUdy of ClOWIIII-Credit,"'ttems be
wtdertaken, .
' .
'
.
. The Execut;ive Cc!IJI1Dittee approved
the -""""~ - .
.

Ap~intmenu--------~-:-~--~·-----(contimud from - · 1, col. 3)

committee, cbaired by Pr. Alan J .
Drinnan, was appointed in March to
find and recommend Clllldidates for

Risin4:

Dr.
:,mp,., area of specialty
. is matbenoatii:s Eiducation, received bis
BA ~ Jild:M. _from the-University
of Bocbmter, lila M.S. from Notre
Dame, and his Ph.D. from N- York
University. Before coming · to U/8 in
1966, be served as aisistant director
- of the MINNEMATH Center-and as
a reoieslcl.llll80ciate in the Matbenoat· ics Department at the Univm'aity of

the deanship. -No deadliDe . for the
committee bas been set, although Vice
President Pannill bas said that be
" It h entirely ~le," be specuwould like to bave the n- deoin aJ&gt;lates, "that if a human brain were
pointed
as soon as possible. . :
divided in a very YOIUIII penon, both
Beferr;ng to Dr. ~·s new ashemispheres ClOIIld .. a .-.It sepsisnment.
President Ketter said, "We
~ta.
arately a n d ind&lt;ponde,tiy develop
are deeply indebted -to Dr. -Rimda!I
·- · .•- • ..: .. ·•
-tal functinns of a hilb order at
for
""""'Piing
this
interim
~t·
..Ja..- H~ Blackburet; ·cliractor of
the level attained mly in the left
with
the
same
dedicatinn
be
baa
shown
Summer
Sessions, baa lieeD ''!PJ'Ointed
bmlilpbere of normal individuals."
in his by poeitinn u vice pnaident
~live ll8lcw of tb8 DejlilitiDent of
Tbe acientillt appeued nn c8mpus
MUBIC, effective ~tely._
for health eciencee ~~Urine the .-t
under the IDIIIIJI&lt;a el the P.)oc:bolCIIY -. three yeais. We are fortunate to
According to Pnisident Robert L
bave bis _....,and ability as we
Ketter, 8~ Will 'lll!iiW 'in this
~· -omninar in.....
nithe II8Yc:bo!CIIYlaunch a era for health sciences
capacity "until suCh time as a a.rch
at this Univenity."
committee effort .-.Ita in die aPPc&gt;int•
•
ment of a
cbalrman. .
Dr. Gerald ·a. Risintl, a professor
"Mr. Blacldnirst baa bad a fiDe recin the Department of lnetruction, Facord at the University in administrative
ulty &lt;4 Educational Studies, bas t-1
- Dr. Manleline "~ oounaelcir ed· .
positions," K.nw l!llid. -·~~ I am
D8lll8d chairman of the department,
ucatiaa, baa t-1 appointed oo-dlairespecially pale(ul IO" IWJ"for acceptelfective September 1. Dr. Risina, wbo
IIIIID el the Praddent'e Panel few the
ing this_interim ~"
'Review of 8eud&gt; Proceaurea.
baa t-1 ~- to a three-year
81ackburatcame to U/8 as assistant
term liy President Robert L Ketter,
directOr of Summer Sessions in 1964.
Dr. "~ . . _ . . Dr. Harriet
8llllC-tl Dr. Anthony Papoilis, wbo -- .He becsiiie. director in 1967, From
Montque, noatt-tlcs, who is . rebas served .. acting chairman ainc:e
1967 to 1970, be served also .. astirJna,
' October, 1972.
sistant to the pi'AIIidenl

Dr. Jaques Named
Panel t.eadet'

new

�..... .,.......

')... 14, 1973

:· .. GSA·Accepting

Grant Proposals·

Tbe Graduate Student Asoc:iation
will --..t ~licatiOIIIf for newly inatituted GSA 1:1!8e8l'dl 'granta through
.July 1, PSA apobmDan .Jolm Green·
. wood reports. Tbe Asoc:iatioo ho!to oamplete ita review process 80 that
die 8nl 'awards will be . announced
.July llq.
Tbe · $lSA awards are !Jeing made
out ol ~ h)itial IP'B!It of $2,500 made
to. ~ Aa&gt;cialion. from._ the Institu~ .Funds Committee (IFC) . Tbe
~tioD aqued in ~ the
fuDds fi'!la! tlie lFC that tJ:!e aecision
to .mUe .-paduate students ineligible
for direCt grants from the IFC heightened ibe ' - ' for an altemati\re pattern ~ ~ flmdins for _graduatelevel ~~ similar. to that availalile lo ~uatee. GSA will reapply to the IFC for additional funds
in the faiL Tbe t\alloci4ltion bas already committed $6,000 of ita own
fuDda to the project beginning in September. GSA..U, wortdng to get additional outside monies for graduate researc:h as well, G""!"'wood noted, "as

:!:'venl!:!.n.,~" :J?rorm-i

but
...USuate ·student in the terminal stegee of a final degree (masters
or doctorilte) can apply for an award.
An applicant's - . c h mwit be ap.
proved by his committee. In addition
to describing his propoeed research,
the applicant will be expected to describe his efforts to obtain support
from other .aouroes. Grants will generally not exceed $~.
Proposals i,n all fields are welcome,
GreenWood emphasized. Students in
Arts and Letters and other non-sci-ence fields are encoiiraged tO apply,
he said.
· GreenwoOd · dee&lt;:ribed the' -Assocla- ·
tion's a c co u n tin g procedures as
"tight," and noted' that, in general,
; hmds aiuld ' nOt' be naed Tor· travel,
. i&gt;e~'-.8Jaries, copying, reimbursement of expenses already incurred, or
for t h e s i s preparation. All capitsl
equipment pwd&gt;aaed with awards will
become GSA property at the end of
the six-month funding period.
The proposals • will undergo peer
review by a screening committee made
up of representatives from· each of the
Faculties and the School o( Management.
IU!cipienta ·of awards will be required to submit a brief abstract of

· Ant

~':!~ 1~f·~~~
lished in a GSA - . c h journal
the spring," Green....oo.t said.

in

· Ai&gt;Piication fonns are available in
the GSA oCiioe, 205 N:orton. Grants
will be made again in _the faJI, with
a tentative applicatioh deadline of
September 30. GreenwoOd 'direCts 1he Graduate ReIIOUI'Cle8 Acc:eaa Developlnent Project
of which the' f.Wards project is a part.

VIP ol the Year
Preaideoit Robert L Ketter will be
cited aa the. V .LP. of the Year at the
SevJmtb. Annual V.LP. Dinner -of the
Am II era t · Chamber : of ,Conunen:e,
Tu.day, .JUDe 19, at die Charles H.
Wid&lt; Centar, Rosary Hill College.
AJII)I'DKhDately 100 individuals from
the Univeraity are expected to attend
. die : ~ - aJoaa with ~ reaidents of

Amlaat.

WlliOM8

TIM! . AND !'LACE

Tho ~lril/~ by Petrie
of h,ls film Tho Clp. I - for laot ThUI'I·
dey 1ft the ....,_ of June 7, was, ••
many clluppol- film enthusle sts
leomed too 1ete, held Tuesday, June 5.
Tho lllpoltei' ....,_ the Inconvenience
end f1uotrMIOn this II I t I n I may heve
·ce.- but
eccept NIPO"'Ibillty
tor \he enw. '"" lnfonnetlon pn- was
supplied by the Oflllnlals IJI tile film In ·
ltltuta. throuah the Unlwnlt)&gt; Information
Oll(ce. To 8Cid to the confvllon, the - ntown - . . . , . . . - end p r l - the
..., . .............a lnfonnetlon •• did the

"""not

"-"-·

U/BO~a~d~·~----------------------~~---(COIUilu&lt;ed

/TOM -

4, ooL 2)

audition awards. Edwari:l Boausz. an
English Ph.D. fonuerly aaaociated
with the U/B Opera, now sings each
summer with a E.._., company.
Or tsJre the """" of Denis Azaro,
who holds a B.A. in cbemistry from
U/ B and i:ame to the program because
he wanted to be an opera director.
Starting hecbtage, he was 110011 into
ooetume design and set construction.
This summer, he will also be at Sante
Fe as an apprentice artist in CDBtum- .
ing. And be bas re-started his . UIB
undergraduate career, this time taking
a special major in musical theatre
wit? Ms. WoU and Esther Kling, as80Clate professor of theatre, as his
advisors.
Several students. have won scholarships from such prestigious institutions
as Juillisrd and the Manhattan
School of Music.

die pp ~ the artiSt 8Dd society!'
Opera tp Ms. WoU is "oae ol the
greatest fonns of integrating die moat
important ~ ol our ciYi1izatiaa,
combining all the pelfonniJII aria, in-·
eluding all aspects ol verhel and visual communication, and - t i n g
historical, sociological and politieal
i"'-. It is .in this perspective that
Academia offers the richest
and moot profound contribution for
the survival and powth of opera as
'theatre in music.' ,. .

......n..s

Nat SeiiiiJine About the Future

Da!pite her succesaes and the solid
p&lt;itential which sbe and others see
for the program, Ms. Wolf is not at
all sangu}ne about the future of opera

..... Pr.. for

die~

c..p.

do not indude die opeoa facllll:y ......
abe CIIIC8 thquPt poobable and lludpl
""""''ition ol ber oplft . . . . . . . . .

' - ' minimal.
·NoaelbeloM, obe

-a

~

"'can't believe that a~ aaiw6ity
witli a• f88pOII8ibillty and ccwwdludit
to tbe arts will let thla CJIIIIOI1uJiity
alip tbroulh illl finpra."
As her colleque Prof. Roberi Doaincton. who was .-ocialed with die
production ol"L'Ormllldo," ._painted out, " ADy additional 1UJ1PCWt which
this Unil181111ty ean s1w to thla admirable undertaJdnc will ....., die
cultural intet.ta of the &amp;tu4enta IDvolved, of our more numerous aludenta
in the audience, and, not least, of tbe
community ·at large • ••"

Variety of~

.Ms. WoU indicates that the opera
program bas developed these and other
students from the freshman level without an extensive scholarship program.
''We are perhaps unique among academic opera programs," she says, 14in
our work with the development of raw
tslent" in practically every aspect of
the multi-media discipline.
Part of this has been out of necessity.
·
Because of low-budgeting and sts!I
shortage ·( Ms. Wolf is the full-time
sts!I and must squeeze opera into an
already overloaded schedule of voice
students, opera classes, tutorials and
independent study ), "we have to find
and develop student tslent in every
facet of opera or we wouldn't have a
program," Ms. Wolf points out.
'Il];us, in addition' tO Student voices,
the Opera Studio uses student con'ductors, stage directors and deSigners.
Students also translate and abridge
scores and librettos and play in the
orchestra.
..
. , ·
.
Many do more than one of these.
Wherever possible, operas are double
cast with an individual student Je8ming two or more roles. There is n.o
"star system" here, Ms. Wolf says,
noting that her goal is development
of a well-rounded company ensemble.
Each student is encouraged to fully
explore his versstility. A .student in
a lead role may also he working in
Cl&gt;Stumes; some of the more experienced singers help train others; a grad
student is often Ms. Wotr s administrative assistant for an entire project. .
ProfessiOnal Aulstance

The opera program has also been
able to draw upon professional sources
in addition to Ms. Wolf. Philharmonic
conductor and U/ B faculty member
Melvin Strauss (who is now leaving
the area ) was associated with the
"Cosi Fan Tutte" tour; faculty mem·
bers Stephen Manes and Carlo Pinto
have been associated with several
projects; Robert Winkler, scenic designer for the Metropolitan Opera, bas
been involved in designing U/ B productions because, as Ms. Wolf puts it,
''he likes what we're doing here;" and
faculty members Heinz Rehfuss, Sylvia Dimiziani and Harriet Simons
have contributed time and expertise.
Prof. Simons will, in fact, be conducting the Opera Worksbop this faiL Ms.
Wolf will be on asbbatical workiitg on
a . study of "Opera and Academia"
uniler a grant from the SUNY Re-_
searc:h Foundation.
Opera on the college campus, sbe ·
notes, is a 25-yeaN&gt;Id caocept that
today is experiencing a rapid powth.
However, sbe adds, too many ~
music achools "buy" talented, alreadytrained performers who - t opera
in a highly competitive pnJfa&amp;onaJ
situation. U/~ on tbe . od&gt;er haDd,
sbe feels, bas a chaDce to develop another type ol leamlni propam, aoe
which can train aDd develop taw talent, can tum out whole people with
an orientation to the b11111811i.._ and
an undentanding ol their relationships with aDd reopcll18iblll- to ...
ciety. ''This is tbe only way to bridae

I
"Dr. Tbom's scholarly articles, eaaays, and reviews span a period of
over. 25 years; they have appeared in

such souroea as Speech M onographa,
the Journal of Reh4bilil4lion, the
Qlllll'terly Jo~ of Spi!ech, the Journal 0/ tlpeech imd Hearing Di.Borden.
Above all, sbe stands out as one of
the State's moat succeufuJ trainers of
speech pathologists, as director of a
major clinical service, as a g i f t e d·
woman who bas demonstrated exemplary skill in the pursuit of scholarly
and professional excellence and in her
human concern for the communicatively handicapped."
~ and

Heanna

Loctures In Eeu.-

Group

Honors Dr. Thom

A retired University professor bas
received honors from the New York
State Speech and Hearing Association
-"for unusual and outstanding service
to (the) profession and to the Association, and for her pioneering con- .
tribution to clinical service for the
speech handicapped in the State.
"Katherine F . Thorn," a citation,
read by Dr. Arthur J . Bronstein
st the recent convention of the Association, recalled, "moved from a career as speech therapist in the public
schools of East Aurora to the college
sts!Is of Elmira College, the University of Minnesota, and the State University of New York at Buffalo from
which she retired as professor just
· two years ago. Upon arrival at the
University of Buffalo in 1949, sbe instituted the speech pathology program; she acted as the director of its
clinic for 21 years.
''That program grew into one of the
major training centers of speech pathologists in the State, with fully developed, highly Considered programs at
all three academic levels up to the
Ph.D. Her guidsnce Rlld direction and
the maintenance of high standards led
to the recognition of that program as
one of the finest such training centers
in this State.
"One of the founding members of
this organization, Dr. Thorn bas continued her interest and activity therein since NYSSHA was chartered. Sbe
has served on its ·committees, programs. and as its vice president. Tbe
Aineric:an ~ aild Hearina Association made ber a Fallow; sbe carries
the oartilicate ol dinic:aJ competenoe
in epeech patholotiY; and ..... holds
diplomate status in die Ammam Paychololical A.ocialion. '8be ... MI'VIiif'
.. editorial ~taDt to die J-...J

of Sr-ch and H-v.. Di-.Jen, •

a...

vice pnsideat ol die A8HA
ol
State Deleptaa and as vice ~t
for ethlea and lllmldarda ol die aatic&amp;
a) aaeoci8tion Tbln ... olbw ......
lioaal dvi- in die .8eld, .......
...... IIDkliDII. the ~ ol die
Mm-.ta ap.,h CJinlc:l8m ~
tim to die IJI8Iidoacy ol dla SUNY
........ ol die AAUP at Bu«aao to VA
bolpltaJ CODIUiflmtllbiPI, to othas too

Dmnerouato_tioD...._

Dr. Robert P . Apmann, associate
professor of civil engineering, bas departed for a month-long visit to the
Universicy of Guayaquil in Ecuador,
whe"' he will present a series of post
graduate lectures on - • ,_,..,..,.,
Funded by a Fulbright grant from the
Department of State, the lecture series
ia being. given, June 5 through July 6,
to graduate civil and agricultural engineers who will be involved with planning for development of the GuayiS
River Basin.
lAhman Fot-..., Winner

David I . Deul8ch, a recent political
science graduate, bas been awarded
one of 30 Herbert H. Lehman Graduate Fellowships in Social 8ciencee
and Public and International Affair&amp;
by the State ol New Yod&lt;. Recipients
of the awards may receive up to $19,000 for four yean ol graduate study,
beginning in September, 1973. Awards
were based 011 an evaluation ol teat
scores, academic recorda, and penona) qualificationa.

Llllnloy Cowd ........

s.

Dr. George
BobUIIild, deaD ol
tbe 8cbool ol ~tion and Library
Studies, and Dr. Mary B. e-ta,
asiatant director for Public !!elva.
for the U/B L1brariea, haw bam -leeted as Coandl 011 Liblary ReFellowa for 1871-74. 'l1la
Council,a~CII.....-...COD­

cemed with aidlac 1D die aaia11aD ol
lihnuy ~ . _ . die ......
ships to~ llladiDa wbo wDJ
do inllmahe - - - 011 • parllcalar
lihnuy-problem. Dr.llctialld ...........
an $1800 1J11Dt to ciD a ....,. . .
~ ol die a--t ....... .....
future tnada ol ..._,. ...... . _
loial ~ ID lba U.S. _. C..
ada. Ria-till ..............
Jy helpful to die U/B 8cbDal, 1lllldl
Ia -".Y 1D die~ ol ......
Jating a doctoral JII'IIIIDL Dr. 0.:
ata'a $:11100 pat wDJ _.. J111111i1a
a.ulrollba ....... • ' ' • • ....
.... ol full f8ea1ty ...... lar ~
......
........ will
haw'rillt ....... · · - fll
,_
alty ...._ID Cll'dllr to- Wllat flladty
.tataa ID tam. ol die~
- ' ol 111.-a -rca ID llllarlea.

- a.

V8171Di..,._

-

�I ~ldg ·eoJIUilanique .I
THURSDAY-14
PIDfUIIONAL nAif IINAtl Mllt'IMG**
P88 B...... 1978 ~ M-..DJ&gt;

w-.., 148

IM~.....,rf, 8 p.m.
wiB iDclode iepona by
Robert L. l{Mgr, the P88
Elodio110 Committee, ad A II en H.
KJmt&amp;. P 8 8 -

The

.....,.sa

~

WOMIWS STUDIO LICTUII*

Selma Jameo, a Britiob houMwife, ..m
diacuu bar effort&amp; to orpnize a move-.
ment in 1Upport .of WOIDSl•a w..- for
houMwork, 108 W'anapear Ave., 7 p.m.
~ted by WoJDOD'a Studieo College.
FILMS•

The Summer Film IDotitute p.-ula
a double featwe, Entral!U (Ciair, 1924) ,
~a;~~.Jr~~:1s). 7 p.m.

::

FRIDAY-15

U/8 Opera Str.Kfto Has 'Burst Out'
To the Deflght of AualeOCeS, Critics
"Faced with the option of 'adapt or
perish,' Opera in Academia bas been
jetted out of ita aomnambulistic traditions and ba· viaorously bad to
action-orient ltaelf to new perform-

-~n

.·

So .Muriel WoH wrote in the Summer 19'72 number of "NOA Opera
loumal," making a case for ''i:r.:ue
oyatematic planninJ from an organipttlooal cents. . . . to help Opera in
Academia play ita role more elfective_IY in moving -..rd a new 'theatre
r-:m. music.'"
'
She IIIIY8 tnud:l the same thing today
in terms of the IIOIDI!Wbat unbelievable
ourvival and development, "QD the .
lbinmst of fw&gt;ds,n as the Buffalo Eve,;,.. NI!WI deftly phrased it, of the
c:ampus Opera Studio wbicb she directs. .Jetted, -even bunt out, it basto the clelicht of audiences and critics
but without either ayatematic planninJ
.,.. aerioua funclinl ... the part of the
UDivemity orpnizatioa.
To think wbat could he, pyen such
aupport, is aomething which obviously
bolb intrJ,u. and frustrates Ma. Wolf
· wbo I!IW!S oft the vibrations of a dedicalad battler who bas fousbt long and
lovinaiY for .the realization of her
-ru-m of U/B as a major university
operaCI!Ilte..

Provldlna freeh reeolve for her quest
- a - t eollaboration between the
Um-.ity Opera Studio anrLthe Bufwboae participation
...... pa8ble by • Jlllllt from
the Stale CouDdl ... the Arts. 'Ibis
lllliflll of ~ sympbooy and
campua opera r.Jlted in an 11-perf~tour ol W - N- York
lillb ecboola of an abriclpd. zeslfuJ
peoductlaD of Moaort'a "Coal Fan
~Ale UJre 'lbar).
To the lliapd8e of practksl)y everybut .... :Wolf. M-.n "wcJwed
·-· at ll'l'aa1llr Ceatzal, AltraD eeaA-...&amp; .Jlllliw Hi1b. Weot Herfalo~

&lt;"W-

'

tel llkldle8cbool, ~Lan­

. . . llaryvale, South Side .Junior
HIP. OriBI r.ll&amp;ul8, Oldlud Pa!k

~-llllb lllld Haalbara- AJJ.di.......... of . . . . . tour.

ailtof the -- -the~
e4 - . lila. Wolf
the·
dlllbof ........
. - o f ..... ......._ID ..... of
. &amp;be .___ ~ the ,.,atbful
- Jl8laN of the ~. the fact
lllet it • of "youth cailflrlDt..

r... ,...,.wltb.-

ing youth.n Still a. thini was that this
"Cosi" was a jaunty, weU-CXIIltumed, _
well-&lt;!D!CUied production, with breezy
right.-"""' d i a I o g u e adaptations by
graduate student Robin Willoughby.
In short, it was opera as Ms. Wolf
believes opera should be--alive, ·relevant and communicative, not a petrifled mtmeiiiJI piece.
· Ms.
- Thon
Coww'professional credWolf,• whose

its encomp888 both performance and
musicology, including a Fulbright
Award to study Gennan Lied in Vienna, is an fl8fiOCiate prof...,.;,. in the
Department of Music with primsry
duties in the voice program. On paper,
the opera program is but one fourcredit COUJIIe (0 per a Workshop)
among hundreds oftered. But to Ms.
Wolf it is clesrly more than just ·a
course: "Tilis kind of project supports
the undergraduste and graduste programs in perfonnance; casting pyes
priority to thoee in the program. But
it also provides opportunities for thoee
with outstanding talents who are not
music majors."
The Opera Studio pro(ram started
from zero five years ago and now, in
addition to the distinction of having
appeared with a major American symphony, bas been invited to perform
before two important national conferences - The National Opera Association which will he meeting in Toronto
in October and the National Association of Teachers of Singing at the
Waldorf in New York City, in December.
The local critics have been ecstatic.
A production Of Cavalli's "L'Ormindo"
was judged a "triumph;" ''Tum·of the
Saew," a "top production;" and "Ida"
by Gm-t alid Sullivan, a "charmer?'
"We IDIIIt be doing flflll;ietbing
richt." Ma. Wolf _..
'I'hme'e further evidence in the de~t of flludeat talent.. Ellen
l.eq, a
wbo took her '
· Y.JI'.A. bin in wice, basbem a Pops
aolmat with the lk6lo Pbilbarmoilic
.and will thla lllldonludy the
!eM iD the A--.. pnmiere of the
Brftlal ......... "'w&amp; WIDp.te" at the
"Sate Fe Op.a. Bolb Ma. lAme Uri .
anodlllr Opera Studio ....
u1ar Uo In the M.F.A. ¥llice ~
ba" Metlapolltan Opon district
(C""""'-1 ,. I, coL I)

SATURDAY-16

SUNDAY-17
UUAA FILM ..

Marjoe (1972), Oonle"'""" Tbee.he,
Norian, cbeck obowcuo for iimeL Ad-

NOTICES

m.iMion charge.
U/1 Aln JOIUM

.l~':"ru~4Jtlf~
of Millie, .,.;u deocribe bia oeon:b for

:!':: .:f~~dem~ tbeF~':Ji

be perfo'!""fl WADV)'M, 10:06 p.m. ,

MONDAY-18
FILMS*

The Summer Film lnotitute p,_lo
Odeaa Seepe S e q u e n. c e (EiMDit.ein,
1925) and Our Daily Bread "Sequence
(Vidor. 1934), 7 and 8:30 p.m.; Earth
(Dovzbenko. 1930), 7:30 and 9/.m., in
146 Diefendorf. Clooel;t WatcM Traina
(Menael, 1967), 147 Diefeodorf, 7 and
9 p.m.

TUESDAY-19
SCIHNINO/DISCUSSION*

The Summer Film Inotitute preoenlo a
ocreening of lilmo and videotapeo, followed by a diocuuion led by Stan VaJi.
deri&gt;eek, filmmaker ·and artiot-in-reoidenoe, Univenity of South Florida, 1~
Capen, 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-20

....__liDO

"- s-.

_,__y_.

~DAY-21

.1'aaliw. 129

.w.........

Cnoby, 4-6 p.m.

Nolo Bonzb KabuJU, 1i1mo i&gt;D - ticmal Japm.e ...t thMtre (nunted in
Endiab), CoafereDoo n-ie, Norton,

5, 8:8!), 8 - 9:30p.m.

- .. - .

,' ·

-.~~.-

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>NUMBER l;._JUNE

7,

1973

.Denial of Library~ Funds Said 'Distressing'
"~ =uni~ 'adniinistmtion is
- t l y diatresoed that funds for the
AiDbeist aUDpiiS pi)eral libl'BlY. adm!niStratiolt and :~t activities
complex were again 11ot included ln
the State's Bllpplemental budget,"
President Robert L · Ketter said after
the· Legialalure'8 adjournment last
week.

"Funds for this project have .been
requested by the Stl!te Univemty at
Bulfalo for three mnaecutive years,"
he said, and even though the project

was given "top· priority" this year by
the University, by central administration of State University of New York
in _Albany, and by the Governor's
Office, "the ' funds we.re once lriore
denied.
"Unfortunately, the singular importance o! this facility to all other con. struction on the Amherst campus
seems not to have l;&gt;een tealized by
aome pe1'801l8. In 1977-78, the Univer·
sity will have 13,000-14,000 students
on the Amherst campus. If this gen-

era! libl'BlY, administration and student activities comple&gt;: is not completed at that -time, there will t. DO
general hDI'BlY facilities, no _..,..._
aeiiLdining facilities ·and no ...,.._
activities -..far"*"- ..............
their supporting fa&lt;:ulty and ataft.
"As or Friilay, May 26, we bad
received the IUI8Uftlll&lt;e8 of the State
University o! New York as well as
o! 8 o m e Legislative representatives
that this. building :would, in fact, he
included in the State's aupp~
budget. We were sbocbd to leam tbat
it had been eliminated.
::we are urging our Legislative
repi"8Bntatives and ollicials of the
Staie University of New York to seek
restoration of thea! absolutely - tial funds at the earliellt poaoible data
110 tbat we may pr...-1 to Aut oanstruction Oil this siqle moat impor-

·.Legislative Panel to Htw·

_Faculty-Staff. Pay Dispute
.
'

A six-member Legislative committee
bas been eatabli.sbed to bear and make
-meiidations to the full Legislature obnceming SUNY/United's BBIary dispute with the State, Dr. Conatantine y erac:aris, president of the
·sii«aJo Centar SUNY/United chaptar, ~ this week.
.

The beorinc is tbelinBJ step in the
collectite ~ pro c e 8 s pre:
scribec! by the Taylor I:aw and Yeracaris . joini!d his report with a strong
plea for faculty and NTP's to become
dum-Paying llll!lllbera ol SUNY!-UI!it.8d In aider "to """""' sln!nlth" at this
"crucial" pbae ol the -_tia·

cent acroas the board hike and one
aud one-hall per C8lt for merit.
"S~/United," Yeracaris continued, "is going to filht at all COIIts for
the package recommended by the Offi&lt;:e of Employee Relations' fact lind·
ers aud hoi- tbet the . Legislature
will realize that the oountar offer by
the State do5 not even matcb the rise
in the cost ol Jiving."
The collective bargaininr orpni.zation ~tini State ~ bes
a I 8o i1rto Legialative beorinc,
Yel'll&lt;l&amp;rili lllid, and'it ill poEible that
the Govemor may put the .-.Ita ol
both bearingo Oil the ...... ol the .
(Co~

tions~:

"I am appealing to all fa&lt;:ulty and
• pooleooimsal ataft to· join our orpn-_
lzation Immediately ........ it is only
in this way tal ·- CID diiJplay· the
ol thia aqan!atiaa ~ ill
pennitlllld to pml8i:t_our n,bta. pn&gt;moto~ In the UIIMnity, and
~ our CDIIditiono ol employ- .

ment."

'

Accalding ... . y......,..;a, "the adpoeition o1 SUNY/Un!ted is to

.... l!l!b' a.

f8ct4ndinl NCCI!ID· -.......... JJ78-74' Jilaries wbic:h
c:eJIIora.,., . - . . . t - the board
- . . . .far ........ ol a. fllcultY
aad a' r ..._ ......-.,aJ .td
---.-CIIIIIb.-ilin· ..,. ..... ..w; fl inIIIMinl .., a tm. 1111111 -&amp;J( . -

011 _

_ J,

eoL

:J)

t a n t - on our..,. campuo."
Jobn D. TeUer, vice pnB!oat for
facilities pJannin&amp; BBid tt.t the building project - wbic:h will .... home
adminiatzation . . . . and ~
for 2,000 ll&amp;udenta - CID ·be 1-'Y
!or -action In J-r.r.
·Acconllnf to the Bvffalo B-a..
N-., the
mllliaD -action
COIIt could be ......... .., the badlet
in the Jul,y
ol the
Legialature; OCber iDdicatle,
!
- · thet the clelldmc.1 lladtot
Uoually 8llopc.d In . . . _ , _ . . be
the ..u.t - ~ .... far the
fuildinl ... be ..... awdiiiiiL

-7

-au ......

'&gt;

Summer Enrollment Tops 6,000
c-- "'

Altbouib
- t "" buely
over, some fi'JI11 UIB otUdsda ue
alrady
adlool, flllllbinl up
t h e - - _.. ol . . . . In the lint
ol three~ 8wnmer s-lam.
Accalding to DirectGi Jam ea H.
Blacldiurat, the . . _ ciii:Y tmftlll..
ment ol 41182 II up 14 per amt Iaiit ,_.. ........ ........
'"Die moat ma-tic - - .. ill
l!adaate ~·be DOled.
"GIIIIluatellludeata ~far Ill per
_,, ol the . , ..._...- • .
All~18711 . . . . . . _tU-

iDr

-m.-. w.....-...s a

tbellrattilllletiiiJ,_ID..,.__

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

a-....-.

Al ~ BIMildlllnt ........ --

...oa-t for the --s 1111111 M d - ~

'** ...

..... -

tp be . . . . . . . . . . . . .

l

beblnd . . ,_...
.... ,.., ~ o!aall.-.., ....,
h a6oe cldy, 1111111-- * t l . . . .
will DOt be a...nilble Wltl1 r¥1 ,
m.- .r- 22 (lllw the .-111 Ilion) and Jnly 18 (for the tild).
, . ........ far .,. ....... - ..
~..._~llldla-

.

to edvaeed eell ...,_..,_ ......_
tiaDal lllulla will DOt daallllaW . . .
-....-.•lllllllim '! M
..,..... ill ._ al&amp;atap;d .....;

-

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

If+• .... ......._

�_,_ 7, IP73

2

.Colleges Pick 10
For Study .Panel

Sfr.K/ent Rankings Said·VaTKI
As MeciSure Of InStruction ·
,_,..,.,..._

'J.lle Colleliate ~ baa apBy KEN SERVICE
• prahd a lillt of 10 amdldates for the
Emamural Review Boerd that will
Student evaluation of instruction is
evaluate the colleliate syatem MEt
a valid IDMD8 of IIIOII8Uring teaching
)'till'. 'lbe ....,.. have been submitted
- etrecU-.
to Prsidmt ~ - L Ketter, wbo
Tbla is one of the findinp of a study
will ....... 1M ID ...,;, on the review
coilducted by Dr. Peter K. o - ,
II&amp;IOCiate pror-- of pbannacology,
Extmmural Review Boerd's
publjsbed in the May 11 iaoue Of Scieval,.lion of the coD- is called for
His study found a "hilb in the Calleliate Proepaclua (the doclation ' * - t student ratinla of in·
'-* ........... by the Ferui\Y Senate atruction
ud daa parforman&lt;e Oil a .
in Apdl, 19'12, wblch provided far the
national normative esam."
ealahiW.--t of the colleliate sya'lbe group uaed for Dr. a - ' s
_ , . 'l1le pl'll8p8CtuB atatee that the
study was a clua of 119 oopbomore
~ of the coUeclate syatem
medical students at U/8 taldng a 01111- ~
oball baft\'leMMI in 1974 by fiw ......
.....,.._ basic ecience ~ in the
pie of "Datiollal promineace" from
Medical Scbool. Tbe course was
oulllide the Universi\Y.
taught by 10 fa&lt;:ulty members, eadl
The .A.mlbly ...,....ted the ........
of whom was solely reapDI&gt;8ible for
of .Jalm
Gardla, c:balrme of Ccminstruction in ooe or more of 23 aublpDD Call88 ud former aec:retary of ·
ject areas. The situation allowed data
Health, Education ud Welfare; .Jon·
for the study to be roUected un4er
atbm Komi, aulbor ud tMcber wbo
rontroUed conditiona, since all faculty
wn&gt;te Deall&amp;..at an Early A6e; Munay
membara were rated by the same group
Bookdiin, a fleelaDae writer; Ruth
of atudenta.
Mary Hill, a fa&lt;:ulty IIIM1Iber ud for·
mer actiDI praddent of Frienda World
Student ratinla of teecbing effectiveCo11eae In Huntlnpm, N.Y.; Paul
ness were obtained by means of a
Davidoff, dilector of the Suburban
qumtionnaire completed anonymouoly.
Action Institute in White Plains,
by the students- at the last lecture
N.Y., en orpniritioo involved in ur8lllllim of the coume. Students were
ban' planning; Charles S. Adams, di-.
asked to woe a three-point scale of
rector of Projj!ct 10, a residential rol,.good," "satisfactory," or •'linsatisfat&gt;
lep of 300 students at the University
tory" to rate each of the subject areas
1 of M...,;,musetta.
Also Benjamin H. DeMott, prof.,.. . on ron tent, organization, and ·p..-n·
tation.
Results were converted to a
sor of English at Amberat: CoUep end
numerical acale.
author of Surviving tM Seventies;
Cfasa
performance relative to a na8alll'w Bowles, a political ecanomiat
tional norm waa evaluated by an an·
from Harvard; K . Patricia Cross, sen·
alyaia of bow the students answered
ior ..........m psychologist for the Ed·
the 141 questions on Part I of the
ucational Testing Service; and either
National Medical Boerd Examination,
Florence Howe or Roberta Salper; ..,.
wbicb they took five weeks after the
soeiste " " " - at the State Uni·
end of the OOU1'IIe. Each of the quesveraity of New Yorlt at Old Westbury
tions was claaailied acrording to the
who are involved In women's studies.
subject area of the coun;e to which it
The candidates were cl-. from
pertained, and the National Medical
names auggeatecl by the Faculty SeD·
BeaPdo provided the percentage of both
ate Colleges Committee, Dr." Ketter,
U/8 students and the nationwide sam- ·
and the roUeges.
ple who answered each ques!ion rorThe ~ly baa also approved a
rectly.
recommendation from ita Program
'lbe study found that the hjgber the
Evaluation Committee that Law and
student ratings of instruction they reSociety CoUep look into four areas
ceived in a particular area, the higher
of major concern this summer and rethe claaa arore relative to the nationport back to the ~ly in the fall.
wide norm in that area. According to
The areas involve de\lelopment of an
Dr. Gessner, ''This suggests that both
interested student ronatituency, claristudent ratings and claaa performance
fication of the source of direction for
on national nonnative examinations
academic pi'Oti1'IIJDilli, communi.ca8J:" valid measures of teecbing effeolion with other units concerning
tivenesa. .
abued prognuna, and clarification of
''We realty don't know what good
the source of control for funding and
teaching is, but if the students say it
policy. The committee's recommendais good, it means they like it, and if
tion stated that baaicaUy it was "tryclaaa performances on examinations
. inl ID find out if •Law and Society
are high it means they learned soJ:Deo
intenda 1D develop as a coUeclate unit
thing. H both of these results are in
or aa a program operated . entirely
some way related to how well the
within the confines of the Faculty of
teaching is done, then they should
Law ud .Juriaprudeoce."
parallel each other, which was the
'l1le ft!C!IIDDW!dation further sugcase
with this study," be said .
.-ted that if significant progreaa baa
To insure that the relationship beDOt been made by fall, the AssemblY
tween
student evaluation and class
obould CODBider diaoolution of Law
· performance was a viable one, Dr.
ud Society College with a recommenGessner investigated other variables
dation that it reapplY when progreaa
which might have alfected the results.
baa been made.
He studied the data to determine if
material was ~ better because it was taught later in the course,
or if the amount of time and emphasis devoted to a subject influenced the
results. In both cases the answer was
"no,'' leaving teaching effectiveness as
the only rommon factor in the out.
come.

~

en«.

w.

-~-

~
_____
·--"-"'"..... _.,.,_
.._....._
..__...,
·---~

•.r.tm.. ......, ....... ..,.,., ..
-

2Uf).

ll.t. UD .,....._A.,_~

,.....,_ Ellllmo far Evoluotlon

The high cOrrelation between student ratings and class performance
indicate&amp; that either could be used as
a IDMDB of fa&lt;:ulty evaluation. 'Ibe
' 11811 of national normative exams for
ttila }IWPOIIe would, however, have
"CBtaln predictable ronaequencea" in
Dr. o - ' a opinion.
,
"s-.e an.obvious way to improve
daa &amp;*foe......, would be 1D insure
that tha material. - t e d in claaa
, Clfl!d......,.W ID the ma~ teeted

for In the mr:amination, tbara would
be a tendency to JocS the c:urriculum
to the mr:amination, that is, ID Umit
materill ~ted by Individual Instructors to that cuaiDmarily CCM!ied
by .,.m examinatioaa. 'l.1lia, In turn,
could tend to make lnatructora more
oonoomed with . the content Of IIUCh
normative national examinatinlla ud
more detemiined to have a voice in
deciding what the rontent should be,"
be COIIIIDI!Dted.
Ill regud to using student evalualiona, Dr. ' Gea&gt;m' pointed out. that
other _.m baa indicated . that
giviJII-facuity zDembera 8000111 to atuclent ratm,a of tbemaelwa can Improve the ratm,a they receive on aub""'''*lt occaaiona. Since Dr. G8aaner'a
study fiiiPPO&lt;la the contention 1bat
student ratm,a -..re teaching elfectivenesa, be feela that tbara _,
"some grouDda for the llfiiUID8Dt that
tha \1118 of student ratinla can lead ID
enha!!CW!Wit of the faculty's ~
e«ecti-."
Dr. o - , wbo baa taught at U/B
since 1962, baa long been intereated in
good teaching, and in 1972 be received
a apeciaJ award from the UIB Medical Scbool atudenta for ''insight and
cle!lication ·ID teaching."
He undertook this study, in pert, In
response to another study pulilisbed.
,In Scieru:e last year which was, baaed
on the ratings of teaching 8111iatanta
and ooDcludad thabitudenta iata"mo8t
higbly tboee instructors from -whom
· they learn the least. Dr. o - criticized the methodology ol that study
and felt that acceplal!ce of ita con·
elusiOns would have · ''ratbet IDOIDI!Il·
toua effeCts on education, Since they
logicaUy lead to the sugpstinn that
promotions should be. .-ved for
those receiVIng the lowest ratinia."
Dr. Gessner also carried out bia
study because be believes that the
whole subjeCt ot telicllet elfectiYeneaa
is one that baa "great implicatinlla '
for the nation's educational ayall!m,
but despite ita importance baa not
been hitherto the subject of meanintful investigations."

Pay Disputerconti.twea from 1, coL 3)
special eesaion in July. H, however,

Rockefeller electa not to do so, Yera. carla indicated that "we will be abeolute!y determined to mount the strongest pceaible case so that when the
Legislature reconvenes in Januaiy we
can be a.aaured of retroactive in&lt;:zeu-"
es" in the deficiency budget. .
The Legislative bearing panel in
the SUNY/ United case is COIIIP'Med of
three members of the Senate ud three
from the AssemblY. Senate members
are William ~th, R-Big Flats; Ronald Stafford, R-Plattsburgh; and Mary
N . · Krutsak, D-Amaterdain. Representing ibe Assembly are John E.
Kingston, R-Weatbury; Willis Stephens, R-Brewater; and Erwin ·tandea,
D-G"'"-t Neck.
Hearings will, bopefully, begin in a
week or eo, Yeracaris said.
He indicated also that a new negotiations rommittee baa been eataJ&gt;.
lisbed by SUNY/ United to represent
it in the bearings. This new group,
he said, is chaired by a SUNY faculty
member and "baa the romplete COD·
fidenqe of SUNY/ United."
'Ibe entire SUNY/ United organization baa, in fact, undergone a !XliDPiete
cbarige in direction and in pbilosopby,
Yeracaria indicated.

lester·Among
8 Alumni C.itees
a

Dr. Olive P. I.eatai, 1924 graduate
and Pbi Beta Kappa wbo baa taught
at U /B....,., 1925 ud was chairman
of the DepariDatt of Paycbology from
1964 to 1964, is lliDIIDI eight lndivid·
ual8 who will .. honored by the u /B
Alumni Aaaociation at ita 34th An·
nual InataUatioo and Awards Banquet,
Friday n,igbt .in Goodyear Hall.
Dr. .Lester will receive one of five
Diatinsuiabed Alumni Awards. Tbe
recipient of three College of Arta and
Sciences and School of Nursing citatiOD&amp; for distiniuiabed service and
t.eacbing, ihi! hU been invi&gt;IV..cf m
traiDing procrama for the U.S. gov.....,_t, in Veterans Administration
matters, and baa advised the New
Yorlt State Education Department on
nursing. She currentlY serves on Pres. ident RoJ&gt;ert Ketter's Committee on
the Recruitment and Promotion of
Women and is president of the Lancaster Library Baud.
•
Others wbo will receive Diatin- guislied AlUinlii Awards include: Hon.
Earl W. Brydges, a 1926 law graduate
who was majority leader of the New
York Senate from 1966 to 1972 and
rep-ted the Wtb Senate District
for 23 years; Han. Charles S. Desmond, a 1920 graduate wbo retired
in 1966 as chief justice of the State
of New Yorlt; Dr. Anthony's. Gugino,
prof-.r emeritus of the School of
Dentistry and a 1922 graduate of that

~~ :~i ~~':"'~:·or~

SchoOl 01-Medk:inli wbO ·is in geOOrai
practice in New Yorlt City and teaches
at tba State . Uni-.itY :Downstate
Medical Center ud New Yorlt University.
Gerald C. Saltarelli, chairman and
president of .H ou,laille Industries, Inc.,
and Cbaiitia K. s.-tt, buaineaaman
aruf i&gt;bilantbioplst,• will receive the
Capen 8nd COoke Awards respectively.. The Cape,ri Award, n&amp;med for the
late chancellor, hoDora serVici.s to the
University by an al.umnua. Saltarelli,
with a buainesa depee in 1935 and a
law degree in. 1938, is chairman of the
University at Buffalo Foundation,
Inc., and a member of the Council of
the University. Tbe Cooke Award, for
service by a non.aJumnua, is named
for former acting cbanceUor Walter P.
Cooke. · A meChanical ..nciDeer · ftom
CorneD University where be was a
varsity wn!etler, Bassett's contributions to. U jB include an ·auditorium
in Acheson HaD, special ·equipment
for the School ·of "EDgineerinc during
GENERAL PSS MEETING .
ita formative stases, arid a long record
The Sprinc 1973 General M-rahlp
of supporting UjB wreatling.
Meetinc of the Prl&gt;feuloiMII SUIII S.nata ·
~ on the Banquet progralli: Morwill be held on June 14 at 3 p.m. In
ley C. Townaend, c:Urrent alumni pri!&amp;'
148 Dlolondorf. The qondl lndudeo 111·
ident, Will reCeive tha Prealdenti'
~rts by Prosldent Robert. L t&lt;etwt, the . Award from Dr. Robert L Ketter,
PSS ~no Comm-. end Allen H.
and Qr. Frank L... GraZiano will lie
Kuntz. PSS chllrmon.
·
inataUed ~. 1~7-t" piealdent of .
AliiDIDi A"81ciatlon.
. . . .
' ·'

u.e

�3
Georgetown VP
' Gets No. 2 Post

The Collegium
Calls for Reform
&amp; Restrudu.ring

In SUNY System

...,. -.Jar JII'OIIORtlon Ia that re-

·bm - -n - tbLCCIIltbmed Punult
ol ......._ .. required aDd that tbe
-.Jar ~ fo be -~ is that ol
tbe lnlilllatlon olll:nowledp. 1be -

aad aDd~ important JllOIIORtlon·
Ia ~bat 811)' . . . . . l'llfarm that -

beiYaad ....aatlan ol pletlea will require lltractmal .admlnlatllltlw cbu-

....

nfomJ,--w.

v~ B~p~y, . . . _ _

talk

about echwtionsl
talkInc about wlfat ........ aDd c.dlan
ch To do ~tJY. cmr-t ........
.......-11111\)Bt... piovlded."
With thiS ~ ol eclucatiaDal
cbaDp .:&amp;.lnlmewmt,'the ~
-the

·eve· Dim •JICIIi' 011

~

~ IWDIIil in 'March by tbe " ulty E!eaafle----baa iB..t a prelimi!la!y
report illuslratiq ill initial tbinldDa
011 waya tbe Unl9w8ty milht be reformed towaril tbe ultimate ~ of a
~ "inlilllatlon ollr:nowleclp;" .• · · -• . • • . -·.
. In 1111 ·ft.port 'dated ' Ml!y 15, the
peDe! -~ four ''tlmtatlw notions" - . d thla' IIIIi ·n- ideas

-

DOt

fui1i

llilbod Ol1t ~

tbe CoUePum emplwsi-t, aDd abouid
be noprded - "pertainiDa to liD - perimental I!IUiiD. - to any iva ....tructuriDa ol tbe Unl9w8ty."
~ by tbe peDe! a IIIBW
approedi to the fnlolla.n year, a
broadeDed qe mb:-ln tbe«udmt pop.
ulatlon, tbe aeatlon ol "lntrammal
lniYe11ina ~.. aDd tbe "pro-'
Yialan of altamatlw inteUectual opace"
by olferinl al-tlw linea.

., ~- ~..:;. 'Z&amp;uecmm ar-

that a freab approach is required
sin&lt;e they """"" to tbe campuS :'not
elnpty;'' \lj.t' fiill ' .. .' DOt Ooly with
16,000 boWs' Of C1asiiioQm lil8tiuction
but 18,000 bours of elec:trooic meta·
pbysica picked up from tbe TV in tbe
family living room." 1be peDe! SUI·
geslll that tbe fresbman year be -d&amp;votad to critical .-ment ol this
rich prior experjeDce in media, achool,
and aocia1 relationabipa, topther with
an introduction to tbe olferinp of tbe
Univenity:
.
Both Univenity aDd community
. would beDellt from breaidDI the traditioDal 1S-22 year old pattern IUld
intzoduciDc m o r e mldcl1e-apd aDd
older studeDIII into tbe campus population, tbe peDe! COiltanda. With tbe
(C&lt;Hitiluled 011 II, eoL I)

Cadenhead Finds 1st Sample
.Of a Lunar Volcanic Cinder
1be first ~ly definable sample

a 1imar 'valcanic cinder has been
cll8oovenid by Dr. David A. Caden:-

of

'-d;~te prof_,r of

cheDiistry.

11aina the University's Scanning
Elec:tron ~pe (SEM) to examine Lomar Specimen 15015 (a
sample from tbe Apollo 15 mission ),
Dr. ~ found the i&gt;orous
&lt;sPori!le-likel · material · !hat n..t.Its
from volcanic activity, The specimen,
not visible to the naked eye, revealed
itself as ·an "example which clearly
demimstrates it -to be a lunar volcanic
cinder," at ·s,OOO magnifications.
Dr. Cad8!'head . e:.plljine.d . ~t
''while there is plenty of evidence
which already indicates that volcanic
ection took place on the moon with
great intensity .110me 3.1 to 3.9 biJlion
yeers qo, there has also been a lack
of evidence of cinder formation, a phenomenon frequently 8B90Ciated with
volcanic activity on Eartb."
Volcanic cinders are formed as a
result of gas evolving or escaping
while the molten rock is 110lidifying.
If the g8s escapes too rapidly the rock
will be 110lid, and if the gas escapes
too alowly, 110me will be trapped in-

side the rock, but the rock may not
be porous. 1n addition, the molten
material should have a higb viscosity
(poor
prope_rties) to -be able to
f;:,"ti~~ , re collapse &lt;!uring solidi-

OciJ,

''Tbe SEM revealed in 15015 a porous structure on the exterior but not
,in the interior," Dr. Cadenhead indicated. "This could only have been
created by gas evolution through a
solidifying rock matrix," he added.
"The reasons for incomplete pore
formation in this instance, and possibly for a general absence of such
·rook structure,"' he continued, "are
presumably lunar conditions, which
include a near zero atmosphere and
molten materials with a low viscosity."
Dr. Cadenhead has been an investigator of moon· rock samples since
April 1971, when be received samples
(rom the Apollo 14 mission.
As one of approl&lt;imately 150 scientists now studying moon samples for
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, Dr. Cadenhead previouslY announced, in December, 1972,
a mechanism for tbe formation of indigenous water vapor on tbe moon.

Diebold is 1973-Medalist

Charlea a.: Diebold, preaident a1111
cblef 8lllCUtive ofticer ol tbe Firat
Empire State Corporation, award-

ed U/B'o hilbMt haaar, tbe Olanoel- ·
lor's Medal, clurizil C ... ,., ,., ,.,t

-.:18M far tbe Faculty ol Law aDd
Jurisprudence in K1einhau Music
Hall Beturday (a8e oeparate Com- ,
atory). 1be Medal ~tad by Pre.ideat Rot.t L: Kattar.
Mr. Dillbold Ia a tn111ee ol the
Weotem N- Yoft: Savinp Ben1t aDd
a dinJctor ol Manufacluren aDd Trad818 Tru8t Company. He Ia_
.-, a partner in tbe law firm of Diebold IIDd
Mlllaml, a director ol tbe Buffalo
E-.ina N-, aDd a clinCtor aDd vios
preaident ol DicJomoan Min. Ltd.,
C8Dada,
In ma1dnc the ~talion, Kettar

Dr. After Honol'f!D

Dr. 8a1ia Adlor, Samuel P. Cape
Pi"'- ol ADaican Hiotory, .....
' - ' elected to ~ ll8llblnbJp
011 tbe ~ CouDcl1 oltha ,.,__
• lam ,...... Hiolladea1 Sodlty. Dr.
Adlor - ftiCOIIIlaed far hlo liD , _ .
ol..W. • a.,_,._ ol tbe llocMty'o
_....bally, aDd Ia aaJy tbe foardl
illdividua1 to _be appolated to . _ .
ary ............

ct.cribed Diebold as "a person who
has wed his' busin&lt;s interests to the
betterment of tbe community." He
aiBO cited tbe many positions Mr. Diebold has held in pommunity organiza. ti011s; including: member and former
chairman of the Niagara Frontier
Tranoportati011 Authority; past twoterm president of tbe Buffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce; president of
tbe Erie County Society for the Pre-.tion of Cruelty to Animals; and
chairman of tbe Board of Directors
at DeaooneE HC111Pital.
"Our honoree has been deacribed in
a number of waya. For example, be is
a foroeful -IUld forihrigbt individual.
He ia .,tbuaiaatic aDd energetic. He
ia a decisive aDd determined per80il.
n- are an qualitiee wblch be posaDd Wbich be ' - brouiht to
bia varied ~ aDd civic activiu.. Tbey are qualltiee which have
benefited many. if not all of .... bare
in Buffalo aa they beve been brousht
to bear 011 wbat ultimalaly Ia 0118 of
tha -11a1 Cll-.tioDI for our tim&amp;wba&amp; Ia tbe . . . - Clllllnlct wblch
"'-ld aiR'*-~ aDd ...
aiety, -Qoe doliDitlon ol that ..ratlon-

~·peaaai&amp;dinthalifeolthla

man."
K.- oUd.
1be PNoideDt a1oo DOted that '"l_'be

recipient Ia 011e ol our own--. law
alumnus ol the a- ol 1936--ae .,..
ius father before him in the a- ol
1897. Twp ol hlo chi1ciND beve re-

ceived Ulldeqnoduate ...... from
thla Um-.ity-Gie In 1.984 and anotber In 19811. 'lblo 'tie with tbe thdvemlty io pua11a)ed by tbe 1ifHIDI
relaliaa!biP ol tbe reclpiiDt aDd hio
family with tbe ' CiV ol Bl6lo. It ...
a relaliaolohip wblch hM poaloand1y
~ tha c:bamdor ol tblo - : "

Dr. James F . Kelly, 57, vice pt'eljldent of Georgetown University aDd
former asaistant U.S. - w y ol
Heelth, Education and Welfare, will
become ueeutive vice chance11or of
State University on June 15.
The Univenity's Board of 'I'rusteM
named Dr. Kelly to the No. 2 Cenllal
Administrative Staff positiOn in tbe
syatem following a nati011-wide ...cb
and an e:.tensive 8CI'I!I!IliJII ol cadidates.
.
The appointment rounds out a reorganization of the SUNY Cenllal
Administration berun by Chanoellor
Ernest L Boyer in 1Q71. Since tl*l
the staff has been reduced aDd 0011801·
idated at a 006t aavm, of more than
$1.5 million, SUNY officials indicata.
The position of e:.ecutive vios chiUlcellor is a redesignated post which Incorporates responsibilities carried' out
by Dr. Boyer wben be held tbe title
of vice chancellor of the Univendty
prior to .888Ul11ing his present clutlea
in September, 1970.
·"
As e:.ecutive vios chancellor, Dr.
Kelly will asaist Dr. Boyer in direct.ing intemal fiscal 8Dd administrative
matters, in coofdinating the ~ of
the vice chancellors in Centlal Administration, in formulatiq University policies, in maintaining relationships with otber State agendea, andr
in working with presidents of tbe
University's 72 colleges and centers
in the overall administration of their
campuses. Til&amp; position carries a aalary of $46,000 per year.
·
. Since joining Georgetown in 1970,
Dr. Kelly has directed &amp;I Jlllll&gt;al8'l!"nt activities for that university's
undergraduate, graduate and profeasional schools and has establisbed
new financial planning proceduree.
Dr. Kelly's career with the Department of Health,- Education and Welfare and its predecessOr agencies began in 1954 witb his appointment a8
a departmental budget officer. He subsequently servlld as deputy obmptroller, deputy 8B8istant for administra:
tion, and comptroller before becoming
asaistant HEW secretary in 1966. He
resigned from that post four yeers
later to accept the Geol'll"town assign- ·
ment.
A member of the Districl of Columbia Bar, Dr. Kelly otudied ac:a&gt;UIIting
and 1!uai.- administration at Co(Coltlillud 011 II, eoL J)

�back to ;1919, relating tbe prob~ it
faced and overcame, discussing his
(C~n~ .fr;om ptJ/Ie. 1. coL If
~~P. "!!d. ~lajnj,ng 'l'llid!!iJ;h~ 97 Equal Opportunity Program
cia! lilajor iS . deSigned . and "cartied
ment 'of the present SChool in 1.968.
students. Twenty-three of these gradout by the student with the help of
Mr. Rounds lauded Dean George -s:
uated with honors including 16, cum
two faculty sponsors whom he selects.
Bobinski for his leadersliip, and cited
laude; 5, 1111lfna cum laude; and 2,
Graduates' fields ranged from phomutually advantageous cooperation besumma cum laude. The two gradual.tography to Indian philosophy.
tween tlie School ana tbe libraries"of
Associate degrees are awarded to
the area as indicative of" the high
ing summa cum-laude majored in educational philoeophy and English (the
students completing two-year proquality of the .dean's administration
latter graduating with a 3.802 average
grsms.
and the calibre of the faculty.
Arts and Letters
President Ketter presented Mr.
on a 4.0 acale); and the five 1111lfM
cum laude's majored in hislery;-«M:i----Si===~-:::,==,=====,---'""'unds with a University Citation for
ology, speech communication, ~1
IX bun~
..,, t egrees were
his distinguished career as a librarian,
American studies, and black studies.
awarded m the Fa~ of Arts ~
noting Rounds' role in the establish·
Following are reports on each of
I.e~. 8 ~ evenmg, May 20, m
ment of the School and helping it
the Commencement convocations·
Kl~ MUSic Hall, to the accomachieve accreditation from the Ameri.
parument of poetry readings and muscan Library Association. Dr. Bobinski
ical _performanoes.presented the Alumni Award for outForty-nine students received decreea
President Ketter conferred 500 B.A.
standing student of tlie year to Nonila
at i.nfonnal ezen:iSM for the Scbool ·
and B.F.A.'s, fr1 M.A.'s, 31 M.F.A.'s,
A. Allenbach.
·
"' An:bitecture", Friday evening, May
and 70 Ph.D.'s. Only about 135 gradThe ceremony concluded with a
18. Of tbe 49, 21 _ , awudjod bachuates attended.
welcome to new alumni from Janet E .
elor of arts c!epas in ..,viroomental
The main addi'i!ss was delivered by
Mousbey, outgoing president of tbe
deoipa; 16,- bacbeJor of ud1ite!:lare
Dr. John_P. Sulli-, provost of tbe
Alumni Association.
.
depeM, IIDd 12, of llldlitecture
Fac;uJty. ~ urged women to remain
....__
active in their scholastic fields.
"
.John · p_ Bbedlanl, 4 e an Of tbe
flilhlighting the pro 1 ram were
One hundred fifteen new pbym~
Scbool, ..-ted amclidalea to Presireedings by . two Well-lmown faculty
took the Hippocratic Oath and formaldent Ketter wbo caafened tbe depae&amp;.
poets, Irving Feldman and Mac Hamly signed the book of physjciana in
Tbe C • • •
t ~ ....,
mond. Feldman presented a cycle of
tradition-! aden School of Medicine
cleiMIIed by Dean li:liaberd.
four jloems riains from 1nora1 ...bausceremonies in Kleinhans, S u n d a y,
Tbe - . , . fDolt place em tbe
tion to moral ~lation. 1laJomo!1d
May 20.
·•
·
I8CIIDII8aarofthe8dloolofAn:hiteoreed flam .his poetic autobiopaphy,
Begues were ccmferred by Dr.
ture balldiDI. 21117 Main St., IIDd in"Looney 'I'unM IIDd News."
Clyde L Randall, adinc dean of the
c:IDded a 1_.tiaa IIDd an ablbitiaa 'I1ie Uni-.ity Cboli Surge
Scbool and outgoing vice president
of 8ludiDt wark.
Illlurainaire (Arioe, ShiM) by ~
for '-lth sciences, wbo also awarded
.,.... , ...._
trine IIDd Jauchzet dem Herm (Shoul
43 PhD.'.s, 24 maSter of arts; and four
lo 1M Lord) by~
~of==- to students
~·a Fatioe Overture....,
Eicbteen medical seniors obareil l5
performed by tbe Uni-.ity Symphoawards. One, Micbliel R. Sa.....,
ny Bend.
·
.
·
. ·
eemed three while three otbera, Wil- - Ubnuylialn .J. Ackerman, Robert L · Penn·
Eicbty.&lt;1iz students received - .
~Michael A. · Sanvone, eerneli ~
of library ....... ...... flam tbe
........
ScbooJ of lnformatiaoL.IIDd Libmry
Nlll'llnl
Studies (8 I LS) 8unday aftemooa,
Dr. Madeleine M. Leininger, a nurae
May 20, in tbe Bulfalo IIDd Erie
and an•'--•-=~ empbesimd tbe
County Libaly Auditorium.
·
_......,........
• .Ja.pb B. Rouads, ciirector of that
value of ClOIItinuing educatiaa to liM
faelllty wbo -.eel aa director of tbe
Scbool ol Nursing craduall!e in KleinU/8 Doparlment of T ,._;___ 8c:ience
hans' Mary Seeton Room, Sundey,
. _ ....
-~
May 20.
uuw ..,.1 to 1945, apolle about tbe
"A true acbolar in nursing will continue to apkn in bar field,
biollary of the Scbool. ~ ita roota

Graduations-

'

'This was _the fizBt. graduation exer-·
cise ever held for special majors. An
in~gly popular option, the spe-

sn.s

long after '!he leaves a ~ty or
program of study;" Dr. leininger said.
J::legf!!OB were COI)ferred by PreSident
Ketter and Nursing Dean Ruth MoGrorey presenjed nine awanls.

~
.,.., more completely graduates are
able to concern themselves with tbe
total patient rather than just his cavities, tbe more tbe Dental School will
have sUcceeded in its educational mission, Dean William M. Feagans said
to 73 D.D.S. degree recipients, Thursday, May 24, at Kleinhans.
"We hope to have instilled a desire
in each of yo&lt;i to look at tbe total
patient, to practice - t i o n , to
mete a lifel0111 oammitment to ·tbe
mst-t ethical stindards, IIDd to mete
:'!;.,.~ an oncoinJ pert of your

-

Dr. .Aiberl Somit, .Decutive vice
president, ~ ~be depas em
gradual"'l IIDd each graduate, in turn,
preoen~ I!D
Bingle red , _
-to-a loved .... wbo bad helped mete
the day poEible.

....am-

Educdonol llildW
"Gettiila YourleH toptliar 18 tbe job
for studenta IIDd fMcbera, 11t111 ·IIDd
evec," Dr. 'l1li!oanre Frilmd DI;
f_,. oi hlati&gt;ry ilt UlB .IIDd ~
dent-deoipaate Ci 8wartbmore Cotteie.
reminded ~tee ol the Faculty of
Educational Studies in Kleinhans.
Saturday, May 26.
In his adclreM, Friend told, craduatee wllat be feela be has·lMm:ld flam
students IIDd what be ' fli8!a )18 hila . :
tallllht a.,m. .
.
.
' Preaident Ketter conf~ 146
bad1elors of ........ 40( masters of
education, 17 masters of acience, 58
docto"" of education, and 49 Ph.D.'s.
Acting ProY08t Blanley Cramer ClOII·
eluded the propam, which also included a p e r f - by the ·c"'-.
land String Quartet, with the bapt
that craduall!e "have become _.,.
tbat what an educator ia aa a human · ·
::::...~ just . . important .. what. be

�5

Enli.-w
- A!&gt;PIIecl
Four hundred
and twenty-five

engineering students """"ived degrees
during esercises held in front of Parker EngiMering, May 26.
Department chairmen presented 251
bachelors, 125 masters and 38 Ph.D.
degree camlidates. Remarks by each
of the department chairmen and Provoot William N. Gill took the place
of a formal Commencement address.
Specia)IIUeats I9CI&gt;gl1ized at the ceremony· were members of the first U/B
School of Engineering,graduating class
of 1948. 1be 25-ye&amp;r graduates wit,.
nesaed induction of new grads into
the EngiMering Alumni Aseociation
by Joaeph Testa, presidenl
:Approsimately 125 of -'25 graduateswere-l • .

HeoHh-~
Dr. Clyde L RaDdall, vice president
for health acience8, conferred lfllJ d&amp;greeo m graduates of the SeboOI of
Health Related Prote.ions in the
~ ftoc!m of N¢on. Batun!aY,
ay 26.
Miss Siple BrunnstJixn received a
University Citation for "QUtstandinl
acbievemmt in the 1l8id cit pbysical
rehahilitation aa a ~· in clinical
inVI!Stilialiao ,IIDII an 0 u t f ta n d i n g
tescbef,M ~ted bY Dr. J . Warren ·
Perry, dean o1. the Sc:bool Ol Health
Related Prott.iaas.
Miss Bnnmstrom W11S m the faclilty of the Co1Jece ol. Pbyaiciana and
SUli8DIIII, Columbia Uni~ty. few 20
Years. Sbe l8lired hi 1970 after. 40
years. .Sbe baa auibond two tmts that
are UMd .........n.ly by phyaical and
&lt;&gt;CCUpa.tiaoal therapiatL
Dr. 'l"booMa W. M0u. prowet .for
the Health Sciei&gt;cM; Stale Univcaity
of New York. ...,a 1111 "New Dimon·
sions for the Health Related Profe&amp;.
siona in our a..lth Care ~"

--·Ilea

Nabnl
. . .8c:iomla
._ Natmal
IIDil Matlanatica
grads heud from Drr Jui H. W.ng.
U~B· Einnein ~. that blaminl
IICieDce
a11 die evDa
tod!I.Y'•
world, altbouih a -popular treDd ct...,.

ror

m

ing recent years, ''is .a rather simpli&amp;-

tic point of view!' Wars, environmental pollution and depletion of.na~
resources, Dr. Wang said, oould bet,.
ter he. dealt with through "more acientific research instead of less."
Addressing graduates who participated iri the Clark Hall ceremony Sat,.
urday, May 26, Dr. Wang stressed
the inter-dependence of society on acience, explaining the role of acience 88
"an integral part of human endeavor.
''We have devoted a great deal of
elfort to matching production with
consumption, revenue with expenditure, m e d i c a I service with patient
need, and so forth, and lived on from
year to year or crisis to crisis bases
since the tum of the century," Dr.
Wang charged
''Shouldn't we also devote an equal
aroount of elfort and resources to thcee
long-range projects w h i c h promise
eventual benefit but with no immediate return, such as the hameasing of
more laating energy sources, recycling
of rare elements, improving the environment or increasing longevity? ()b.
viously, the answer is yea. 1be reelly
di8icult qUMtion is not whether but
how."
.
Degree camlidates ..... p..-nted
by individual department c:hainneil
to President Ketter who cmlerred 295
hachelors. 116 masters and 68 Ph.D.
degreee. Of the 479 graduates, apprm:imately 100 were p.-.l
As her laat ol6cial act upon retir&amp;ment, iDr. Harriet Mmtague. profeesor
Of mau-tial, .rved as Conunencement Herald.
A reception for paduaiM IIDil
.,-. C!ll!&gt;red by wive&amp; of. faculty IIDil
staff members, was held immediately
following the ConnJWM'ement in the
Faculty Club.
:....

......._.

. Ninety-two 8 c h o o I ol. l'tlaJmKy
graduaiM heud criticism ol. the State'•
failure to demand patient jk811CripticD
record-looepina. cantinuing em-tioa.
~ review and true
ol
8lloiDpt narcotica .... by Martin
~ .-.tly nanllld the ou1atandinl

........w.-

community pharmacist by the American Pharmaceutical Association.
,T he l;!tate B o.a r d of . P.Iiarwacy
should he less concerned with the political climate and more receptive to
suggestions to enhance the professional pooture of pharmacists, Rein contended.
Dr. Clyde L. Randall, vice president for health sciences, cooferred 51
bachelor of acience in pharmacy degrees; 12 bachelors of acience in health
science; 8 Ph.D.'s and one masters in
biochemical pharmacology; 7 Ph.D.'s
and 8 masters in medicirial chemistry;
3 Ph.D.'s bd 2 masters in · pharma-

ceutiCS:

.

1be Pharmacy convocation was held
Sunday, May '1:1, in ~utler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
SocHI Sdencos -

Administration

''We need help. We no longer know
w h a t problems government o16cia1s
can solve," Erie County EDcutive Edward V. Regan said in his adcina at
HONORS UST

The complete list/ of no..- of &amp;radiNites
nocetving hono" ond owords will be print·

ed In • -rote brochure, beln&amp; compiled
by University Publlcotions Services, which
will be distributed to oil 111*1.- ot •
later data. ·

arts, 70 ol opcial ....an; 18
masters of science, and 72 Ph.D.'s.
At the . ce~Y•. DF. J~ T. Hor- .
ton, wbo is retiring this year after 4'1
years at U/ B, was p..-nted with a
University Citation for "outstanding
contributions.''
Monopmont

H e n r y H. Coords. president of
Fisher-Price Toys, told Management
degree camlidates that he "violentJyM
disagrees that profit is the basic purpoee of 6usiness. "A company whose
mission is to produce the beet product
in its field or to perform the best
service is the company which will 1111&lt;&gt;
ceed and, 88 a by-prOduct, will make
the ..-! profits' for iiB stockholders,"
Coords cootended.
1be East Aurora 818CUtive adru-1 the graduates in Kleinhans,
Sunday nicht, May '1:1.
Dr. Richard G. Brandenbura, dean
of the School ol. ~t, Jll&amp;"
-ted 548 candidaiM to l'relldeat
Ketter who cmlerred 408 bachelor ol.
acieDce ~ 132 lll8llla ol. lull, _ adminlatration d e 1 r e e a, IIDil
three Ph.D.'s.
'The ceremoay concluded with . .
marks by Monica Lipkin, ~ pnaident ol. tblt UDderpaduata· M-..
ment Aalclation; a-,. KobM, . . ident ol. the Gnoduata M-..,-.t
Aasod•tion IIDil Lee B.. Qulaaa, ~
pieeident ol. the School ol. . . . _ .
ment Alumni .A.oclatlan. ·

u.-.......-

....._CIIl .....

Pre.idieDt Ketter ......,.... 1'10 :000.
t«oi.J............
. --ol. the~ ol. I.wmdJart.

. .......,._, llatutd8.1• .,_ t. .

'n. C•P!.,. •• ....... ._
Henna IBD Ka,y, ...,e-ar ol .... Ill
the UDivwalt;y ol. CalHamla at ......
ley, wbo ..,.a.u..tn ~law,­
~ c11acriJ1o1nati all d law _.

.

.

..---ol. ....
---a-ld..,
_........_. ....
~

w. a-..IMcn,

. . . . . .,_,_. ll8allal, .... .....
jade CBrtb, _........,e-ar crl .....
Dalaow DID-

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

U/B I.w &amp;bool Aa-1 A-w=hdm

�..............

6

Dr. Sclar of.Lehigh Nam~
Geological Sciences Head

2·Win Retirement Waivers

m.

:.,~F~~:~~~~

cal Society of America.

-un.

The cueer-Iines proposal calls for

IJI*IIi&gt;l up the University's tradition-

ally-" ci.-d apprnac:b to .,..._ lines.

Aa an eumple; the panel suggests
that the Colleges might be "revitalUai" if 8dvanoed students ana junior
faculty wen&gt; ollered "attmctive con. tra&lt;:tuaJ arranpments (apecifically,
....--tion otb. than tenure) ...
oat.lde or aloapide of tbe usual de~tal lilldt -..1 tenure." The
cmftlllt ac8demlc market would facilitala oudl a plan, tbe Collegium notes,
edalowiedlin&amp; that the ~ could
inwiWI rllk for tbe faculty in'V'Oived but &amp;riUiDI that "if the innovation lrom a policy adopted by
the faculty. it .-1 not be exploitative... '
.
Before outllniDg i~ 011'11 tentative
.pi'OIICIM)a, the " Collegium ada&gt;owledpd thet various efforts beve been
a.de in tbe peat - y - to OIIUilter
the freprw!letion ol IIDowledle that
-'ta-lrom~ ......... Oil
illdivldu8l .dJeclplha, lndudiDI tbe
fauDdina ol the Collelea and the lqiaJatioo of IMult;y-wide -.laaL R.ults
.... 11-. IDMieqtata, ~. tbe

~~ iDVItad the Unhwtlllir~b'to
.......,
..,.._ to U. pl'lllimiDmy report,
. . . . . . . 11-. cliltdb8llld t.calty---~~.-

..........

_ .. _.'n. ......... ....

..........

. ................... .llald
.....
r.; .
. . .-·
....
..
. . . ..ny

.

-rra.-

Names for the buildings wen&gt; sub.mitted to the Board by a special U fB
Council committee chaired by Gerald
C. Saltarelli.
•

Education Offers Fall Semester in India ·
Dr. ldar

In 1946, he was named Ward_Medalist at the College of the C1ty of
New York and while at Yale he was
a William E. Ford acbolar and James
Dwight Dana Fellow.
In a letter to faculty, students and
staff of the Geological Sciences De~t, President Robert L. Ketter
stated that in bringing Dr. Sclar to
the University, "we are attracting
both an outstanding geologist and
chairman wbo, I am confident, will
continue to move our Geology De~t

forwan!."

Senate Collegium Report(ContilwH irom- 3, ·.,..L I)
trends toward smaller families and
earlier retirement, new age groups are
emerging wbo both wish "to enlarge
lbelr Iivas'" -t1Jrou1b education and
have the time to pursue an educationaJ propam. The Collegium reoomiDends integrating older students into
the undergraduate ·mainsU'esm rather
than isolating them in Millard Fillmore College, where most of the campus's older students have traditionally
turned.
The "intramural tmvel!ing profesaombip" acheme would encouraae faculty in one discipline to share their
knowledge with students and faculty
ol another.

from faculty, atudelitll and "idmini&amp;tmtian led to a -'nal ol tbe Truatees' earlier decisioD.
The
IIIJIIIO'Nd the name
of Jlmbert H. I.ebma Hall for aae
of four resideDCe Mila in the Gowmors' Residenae CGmplex ocbeduied to
open on tbe , _ C1UJ1PU8 In September. One of four sucb facilit:B In tbe
oooilpla, the buiJdiDc will --.......
date appmdmataly 200 81Ddmta. In
N..-nber o1 1972, the ~ blld
approved names !or the ~ three
halls: DeWitt Clin- Hall; ' n - a
E. Dewey Hall and Tlleodore Rcdevelt Hall All four are former ..,.......
ors nf the State.

· The Trilstees of State Univmsity
ha"" waiYed the mandatory retbe118lt age regulation for two U fB fa.
culty members and have approved tbe
name ol a residence hall on tbe North
Campus in Ambenl
Sir John Eccles, distinguished pro,_,.. of pbyaiology and biopbyaic:s,
and Dr. Mltd&gt;ell Franklin, prof-.r
in tbe Department of Phii-"Y and
the Scbool ol Law, have both _ ,
granted appointments fiom Septem· ber 1, 1973, to August 31, 1974.
Dr.. Eccles, a 1963 Nobel Laureate
who is Buswell Research Fellow, was
70 years old in January; Dr. Franklin
is 71. The policies of the Board of
Trustees mandate retirement of faculty at 70 unless the special waiver
is granted.
-·
Dr. Franklin was earlier refuaed
waiver. But strong support for him

Charles B. Sclar, prol-.r o1
geological ~ at Lebilh. and
principal · investi tor of hmar rock
samples re
from fiw Apollo
_.,e miaaiODB, bas been appomted
chairman of the ~ o1 GeoJoPcal S c i - eifectiw 8eptaDber
L Dr. Sclar, 48, will npi8ce. s-n
F. GiMe, Jr., ediDI c:t.imml .,_
1971· he holds a B.S. from tbe College 'or tbe City of New Yolk and
M.S and Pb:D. depeia lrom Yale.
His fields of apeclallzatiaii IDc1ude
bigb-p.-.re _,m, ~y
and mineralogy, ipleoul and meta·
morphic petroiOI)&gt; and metsJllc mineral depoaila. In addition, he bll8 ....
perience in tbe application of ..,olol,ical Imowledp to tbe aolution of ....
virnnmental problems and fundamental research in ,_,;ences.
Prior to 1968, when he joined Lehigh aa a full prot_,r, Dr. Sc1ar l!eld
various tachiDI and research posi-tiom with tbe College of the City of
New YOrk, Yale, Ohio State, and Batelle Memorial Institute at Columbus,
Ohio.
While at Batelle, he tmveled widely
to examine mineral deposits all over
the world and was involved with the
lunar rock studies.
·
.
Author olaome 65 publications and
tbe bolder of three. ps.tents, Dr. Sclar

J- 7, J97J

..

· M-embers of the &lt;::ollegium ~ :
David T . Bazelon, professor of policy
scienee; Lawrence Chisolm, professor
of American studies; Leslie A. Fiedlfl'",
Samuel L. Clemens Prof""""r of E?'!·
Iisb; George Lee, professor of mvil
en~eering, and Harold Segal, ·pro.
lessor of biology.. M!'c Hammond,
professor of English, 18 secretary.
Communications to the Collegium
should be mailed to the Faculty Sen·
ate Office, 135 Hayes Hall.

No. 2 SUNY Post(ContilwH from P41&lt; 3, coL 4)
lumbus University in Washington,
D.C., and received his Juris Doctor
degree from Catholic University there.
Dr. Kelly is a national authority
on financing of medical education. He
has been a consultant to the Norfolk
Area Medical Center Authority, where
he helped plan clinical facilities for
the new Eastern Virginia Medical
School, and currently serves on the
Medical School Financing Committee
of the National Institute of Medicine .
Other oonsultancies included service :with the National Academy of
' Public Administration and the National Center for Health Services Research and Developmenl
His publications include pspers and
articles in ·the areas of inter-governmental relations, federal-university
affairs, grants, budgets and audits,
biomedical ..-rob, and dental education.

Bulls Defeated
U /B's ~ for national l'eOOgl!ition in the NOAA University DivisiOn
baaoball cbampiomhip playoll aeries
ended Saturday with a 4-3 lea in 11
inninp to Temple at West W"mdaor,
N.J.
The defeat .... the Bulls' ~
in tbe Dillrict 2 l'eliouls wbkb they
bopn with a 1.() ~ ol Temple.
The otb. defat .,.. at the banda of
Pam State, 3-L .
T_.. blld tbre8 uu.med nma in
the ...... wbich eliminated the Bulk
The Balla ended the with • ·
:10-lll -.1.
-

and to teachers in pub~c and private
acbools and "?lieges m New Yolk
State. All candida'"'!' must be teachers
or ~ents pnopariJII- to teach "!'&gt;&lt;&gt;
have specialization in the humanities,
arts, or aocial oclences. ·
Candidates will be selected 011 tbe
basis of merit and tbe importance of
the experience to their teecbinJ. Students participating can a p p I y the
cowaes given through the p!'OI!IIIIl to
graduate studies on either tbe masters or doctDral leveL
. F'\trtber . information and appliestions .for admission can be obtained
from James A. Michielli, dlrector of
~ . ~ Propams. 107
Townaend Hall or from ·nr. Glenn.
313 Fnster HaJi~ ·
• . - -. . ; . .
. . . . . · , •.

The Faculty of Educational St¢ies
is ollering a study program in India
next fall for teachers and students of
tea _,_ __ education interested in Asian

stud'i:

The program, first oftered in 1971,
allows 16 graduate students to study
for one oemester at Gujarst Universi&amp;y&gt;
in Ahmedabad, a city in central Indis. Siudents take courses in such
areas as the educational sociology of
Asia, eastern Asian culture, and the
arts of India, reci.iving graduate creelit f!Om U/ f! _for 15 semester. ~ .or
study.
· ·
In addition, . first;band ezposure. to
Asian culture 18 gamed through trips
to other parts of India, as well as
from living. in Abmedaba~, a ~
industrial cty famous for 118 umver-

!~· ,.::t~d

Grievanc . Chairmen

schOOls or dance

The Executil~ of the Buffalo
Center Chapter of SUNY/ United has
elected Dr. Go on M. Harris, Larkin
Professor of
· try, to serve as
grievance
- Dr Harris
Dr. Orville T .
M · h bisto
bo resigned
urp y,
.
The Executive
~ alao. electeel Edward V. G y, seruor artist-dl;
signer in the Ins
." onal CommUJ?l·
cations Center, as ~
- ance ~man to serve non-tea
g pro!e&amp;Blonal
staff.

Aocording to Dr. Burvil H. Glenn,
professor in the Department of Instructi'on and an organizer of the. program, the program is funded by a
grant from the U.S. Office of Education whi:Jl provides for ~~I to and
from India and pays for tuition, room,
and board at Gujarat University. The
student must pay one semester's tuilion at U/ B and additional expenses.
The program is scheduled to run from
September 4 to December 18. .
Participation is open to U/B graduate students and faculty memhera

a;:

£;· ·. .

Job Openings_
The Peraonnel Office indicates that the following faculty and DOll·
teaching professional stalf positions are open at State University at
Bulfalo:

F8CUIIJ .
AssistanU Aaoociate Profesaor, Elemmtary and Remeclial Educotion.
Assistant Profesaor, BiOlogy.
.
Assistant or Aaoociate Prof_,r, Inatruction, EdwatiQMl Struliea.
Visiting Aaoociate or Full Prof_,r, MatMmalica.
Visiting Prof_,r, MlllMmalica.
Assistant Prof_,r or Visiting Assistant Profesaor, M tJlMmalica.
Assistant Profesaor, Electrical Engineerinl.
Profesaor and Aaoociate Provost, Faculty of E"'lin«rinl and App!Ud
Sciences. ·
.
Visiting Assistant Profesaor, MIJlMmalU:a.
Assistant Pra!esaor, Hutory.
Assistant Professor, CMmistry.
I

NTP

Aaautant to Director, University Libraries, PR-2.
Aaautant to VU:e Preoideni, Health Sciences, PR-2.
Reuarch Aaautant, Regional Kidney Diseaae Center, PR-1.
For additional information concerning these jobs and for ~ of
NTP openings throucbout the State University system, oonsult buiJet:in
boerds at these locations:
1. Bell Facility between 0152 and Dl53; 2. Ridge Lea, Bliil4ing
4236, DeJ:t to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building 4230, In corridor DfiXt to
C-1; 4. Health ScieDces Bnilding, in corridor op~X*fte HB 131; 5. Capen
Hall, in the corridor between. Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood,
ground 8oor .in corridor DfiXt to ·vending lll&amp;dliMe; 7. Hayes Hall, in
main ..,trance foyer, across from Public Information Ollloe; 8. Aa-.
~ in corridor .between ROome 112 and 11ll; 9........ EnP-Inc.
in canidor to Room 15; 10. Goodyear Hall, let floor, Houllnj Ollloe
- ; 1L U. 8cbool, lint floor pDera) infonaatioo baud~ f t - .
108 and 109; 12. 1807 m.a-1, Pem1ome1 ~ 18. Norkm
Ulliaa, Direc:tm'a Ollloe, Room 226; 14. Dlofaldorf Hall, In canidor MEt .
to Room 108.

�J- 1, 1913

.....

7

nta'W

Chances of Nixon lmpeachm~nt Appear Slim, Profs Say
By SUSAN A. CAMAROO
r1~~s.n-

M invot......J..t in the Watergate
acandal ~higher and higher into the Wblt.e House hierarchy, 8everaJ
members of Congteaa have .talked of
the poaaibllity ol inatipting im-.chment pmceeclinp qainst the President if it is undeniably proven that
the cbief IIII!CUtive was pen!ODil)Jy involved

Al~~:~~tord
impeachment
bas
.-1 -~ freely.
-.three u /B
piD
- Selig Adler, Samuel
P. Capen ~ ol American Hisiory, and DnL Clark A. Murdock and
Cbar1ea R. Planclt ol political scieoce
-lhinJ&lt; at this point that c:luulaJ. ol
impeadnxelt are slim.
Dr. Murdock deac:rlbed impeachment • "a formal prooeoa by which.
elected n!ipft1881ltatives ol the people
decide tbet an olfidal Ia DO loapr fit
to bold ol6oe.N 'lbe Pn!aident c:ould
be ~ by a two-third&amp; vote ol
the u - ol Rep-tativee if there
was "probable ..,_. to believe that
be cammitt.ed a crime." U the HoiM8
indicted the President, be would be
tried by the Senate where a two-thirda
vote would him from office.

. . . . . . . . . Nat·- .

U the Prellidellt Ia impeached, it .
d.- DOt....., that be will automatic-

ally be indicted or tried in the Senate.

Dr. Murdock ezplained that a vote
. of impeachment with no further action
would be equivalent to , a statement
of lac&amp; ol ClOIIfideoce hi tb8 Pres;.

dent's ability to svvem. He noted that ·
only 12 officiala in American history
have ever been impeached, and of this
number only four :were oonvic.t.ed;
most officiala have resiiiJI"(( when they
beard that impeachment proooedings
against them imminenl
.Dr. Murdock· c:ommental, "While
many -tativea misbt feel · that
the President ia of low moral character be cannot be indicti.d if ·be himself
not rommitt.ed a crime. U
Niion is impli,.ted in tbe attampt to
cover up tbe Waterpte aamdal, this
ClOII.-Iment would constitute ·a mi&amp;demeanor. But whether this ......mid
prove to be sufficient grounds to convince m8ny ODnllft!I!IIIDI'II to im-.ch

has

231 Films(Contilwed from 8, col. 2)
Board.
For further information _Jbout the
Institut.e,contsct: Dr. Gerald O'Grady,
Department ol EnaJisb. '

~~e of ~ coDoert series is
'\Music 01 the Americas," and the
schedule includes:
.
June 12, "Music ol the Seneca Nation," featuriq the Allegbeay' Singing
Society under tbe direction ol .Mr.
Johnny Jolm. Panel disc:ualiion, 7
p.m.; CIIIIGI!ri, 8 p.m.
June 18, "Music ol the Serieca
Nation," concert only, 8 p.m.
July 3, "America: 'lbe IJgbt.er
Side," !busic by Stephen Foster,
Gershwin, Bemat.ein and others, 8
p.m.
.
.
July 17, "Canada," the Lyric Arts
Trio in woib of Canadian composers.
Jllly 24, "Appalachia," tbe McLain
Family Band in a program of bluegrass yesterday and today. Panel di&amp;cuasioa, 7 p.m.; concert, 8 p.m.
July 25, "Appalachia," concert only,
8 p.m. .
AIIIUBt 1, ''Black Music &amp; Dance,"
C&lt;Hiirected by Carl Singletary and
Julius Elista¥m, featuriq ragtime of
Scott Joplin, works ol William Fisher,
William Grant Still and Eastman.
A..... 8, "latin America," directed
by J1111 Willlaml 111111 featuriq tbe
U!B Percu.iaD s.-ab1e: Glnaatara'a
"Cantata para A....a Mqica" for :
53 - - . , ~Datnuzalta will be a
·hiahllcbt ol tbe (IIOIIUL
AU will be beld In Baird
HaiJ and will have admloalaD cbarpa.

--J-

or indict the President is ....Other

matter."

Drl Adler noted that the only case
of impeachment of an American preaident occurred in 1868 when Andrew
Johnaon was impeacboid but not convicted; the conviction was defeated
by one vote because some of tbe aenatora thought that the man who would
be Jylmaon's sucxeasor in the White
House would make a worse president
than Johnaon himself. Dr. Murdock
added that although Jobnaon was tbe ·
only president to be impeached, there
was much talk of impeachment during
tbe acandal-ridden Grant presidency
in the 1870's.
· All three profeasora agreed that ~­
leas major new developments definitely link the President to Watergate, it.
is doubtful that be will be impeached
.or formally censured in any way. But
all agreed, too, that tbe mere talk of
impeachment and the Watergate acandal will undoubtedly influence tbe remainder of Nixon's time in office.
Pr. Murdock said, "'Ibis will have
a permanent eroding impact cin the
rest of Nimn's administration. It will
put a tremendous conatraint on the
President and be won't feel as powerful as be did when the polls showed
that be was supported by the majority
of the people in the country."
Shift

of-

Drs. Planck and· Adler feel that
Watergate will result in a shift of
power from tbe executive 'to the legislative branch of government, that
there will be more independence on
Capitol Hill and a redress of the balance of power. Dr. Murdock is not
quite so optimistic. "Rather than a
shift of power there will be a decrease
of power all. around. The President
will still have just as much power to
frustrate policy as before, but be will
now be less confident that be can
determine hia own policy· and . do ·it
regardless of what other political actora wanl But even thougb the President will be less_ powerful it does not
neoessarily follow that Congress will
tske tbe initiative in policy-making."
In terms of foreign policy, Dr. Mur-dock commented that the chances of
tbe United Ststes becoming re-invalved in Vietnam are much less now
than they were before Watergate:
"Since he is without hia previous pop- u1ar support, the President will be
leas inclined to do things that the
people might react negatively to." Dr.
- Planck felt that the President will
continue hia active foreign policy,
since these actions, e.g., the settlement
in Vietnam and. relations with Peking
and Moscow, have been Ni:a:on's
strengths as a Presidenl "Other governments," Planck said, ''would like
to see the re,vival of stability of the
American political process because
this cunent crisis destabilizes the
United Ststes, a major power with
whom most natiollB.in the world deal."
Dr. Adler sees Americs passing into
another isolationist phase, and feels
that tl)e President will begin to pay
more attention to pressing domestic
ooncems.
Won't Be Fo111otten

As Dr. Murdsx:J&lt; pointed out, ''Wat.ergate will not be forgotten easily.
The indictments and trials will drag
on for a long time, and it will have
an impact on the 1974 and 1976 elections. In terms or the Republican
l'r!!sidential nominee in 1976, Watergate will probably burt Spiro Agnew
and help John Connally. Watergate
will definitely hurt the Republicsna
in the 1974 congressional elections.
'lbere is some evideDoe that a ....;...
factor llat prompt.ed Niion to take
actian was that aeveral Repuhllcan
.....to.. and - t a t i - told him
that Watsrpte bad so damqed their
cbmcoa for re-electiaD that tbey would
DOt run if NU... didn't do aomet!J1na
..to clean up tbe imqe of. tha Republi-

can party."
Drs.· P!plck_ and Adler agreed with
thia , _ l Dr. Planck feels that
candidates in 1974 and 1976 will try
to detach tbemselvea from tbe President'• influence and become more independent· of the Wllite House. Concerning political strategy, Dr. Planck
mentioned that Nixon will probably
try to ...,..,.tablisb ties with the more
moderate lllld progressive wings of
the Republican party and work more
with those such as Jacob Javita and
Nelaon Rockefeller who have not been

touched by tbe acandal
None of the- p~D-.n feela that
thia is the political end ol Richard
Niion. Dr. Murdock thinb tbat though tbe Prellidellt is DOW edaptiq
a concilistory attitude ~ tbe
press and aocial welfare policy, N~
Ia a ''political animal" who will ~
to hia old attitudea if be repJJ. W.
power bue. Dr. A.D. DOIIId that
Nimn is famous for ............ua, aftlor
seemingly bamnountable politlall
defeats, and "mlaht have OM rise in him yel"

»eople
lnvbd to Obelfln

ticipats in the profr&amp;lllllllll ....... tbllr

John P . Sullivan, provoat of the
Faculty of Arts and Letters, bas been
invited to deliver the preatigious Martin Clasaical Lec:turea for 1975-76 at
Oberlin College. Neronian IJterature
is the subject f1&gt;r the four lecture series, from which Profesaor Sullivan e:&lt;·
pecta to develop a book-length inanuscripl

expertise with Cbllean
educstora.
&lt;

Foculty Club Olllcefl

Dr. A. Westley Rowland, vice president for university relations, has been
elected president of the Faculty Club
for -1973-74. Other oflioera, elected by
the Club's Board of Directors, are:
Dr. Barb&amp;ra Bunker, aasistant professor of psychology, vice president; Dr.
Constantine A. Yeracsris, professor of
sociology, treasurer, and Dr. Larry J .
Green, professor of orthodontics, secretary. Five new members of the Board
of Directora were also elected: Dr.
Lyle B. Borst, professor of physics
and astronomy; Dr. Arthur L. Kaiser,
director of admissions and records;
John D . Telfer, vice president for fa.
cilities planning; Dr, Green and Dr.
Yeracsris. ·
' •

...

Fulbri&amp;ht Grant
Dr" Paul L. Garvin, chairman of the
Linguistics Department, bas received
a short-term Fulbright grant )o spend
one month in Chile thia summer organizing an intematiooal atudy program and field school tha~ will eumine language problems in C b it e a n
education. Purpose of tbe atudy pro- •
gram, which will be conducted next '\
· winter, is to help Chileans increase
their underltanding of tbe role of
sociolinguistica (which deals with the
social role of language) in education.
Chile has an urban language problem
becsuse of rural migranta who come
to tbe citiea, and a problem with hilincualism ainre it bas a W&amp;e AIM&lt;·
iam Indian· populatioli with ita OWil
............ Since tbe,le klnda ol ......
IU8P problema are aiBD fauDd in tbe
United Stataa, three ADaiam IIDIUIIIB - Dr. GuY1n. Dr. Mlllleleine
Malbiot, .-c:lata ~ ol .....
tiaJ at UIB, Uld. Dr. o..ld
oi. ·Nwlhw tau UllhemltiJ-wlll I*'

w-

·

lnta..--·
In addition to orpnizlq tbe JII'Ogram in Chile, Dr. Garvin will aiBD ...
to Me:&lt;lco City to deliver tbe byDOta
"8occollnPJanntnc" at
the inter•American acienti11c ~
"Science And Man in tbe Amer~c:M.·
.Dr. Wolfgang Wolck, associate professor of linguistics at U /B, Ia ..,.
of the organizers of tbe ·sympoaium,
and Dr. Mervyn C. Alleyne, an 8110ciate profeasor in tbe department, wiJk
also participate.•
speech at a sympoaium
guiatloo and Language

'*'

Hads lluftolo Civil Encl-.s
Dr. Ernest T. Selig, associate professor of civil engineering, baa hem
elected president of the Buffalo Section of the American Society of Civil
Engineers (ASCE) for 1973-7.(. The
ASCE is a national technical ..-odation whose .me.mbem are respolllible
for tbe structural design and CODBtnJo.
tion of buildings, higbw.,Ya, w a t e r
treatment planta, residenoe-.\Jalls lind
other major installation&amp;.

Horned O.nforth Aaocloteo

Dr. Claude E . Welch; professor of
political science, and hia wile, Nancy,
have been named Danforth Associates
by the Danforth Foundstion of Sl
Louis. !be purpose of the Associates
program is to encourage humanizing
of the educstion prooesa- in collegea
and universities. Associates work directly •with atudents on a personal
basis in an effort to improve studentfaculty relationa and to strengthen the
t.eacber-leaming proceaa. Dr. and Mrs.
Welch were chosen by regional and
national committees. becsuse of their
''keen interest in student-faculty relationships" and their concern for. "human relations and valuea as well as
scholastic values." As Associates, Dr.
and Mra. Welch indieate, they would
like to work more closely with students, and perhaps use their home for
discussions with students.

1inlulata 111111

~

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

Dr. Hlnrlcb R. Martens, piD-.r
of mecbanicwl 111111 electrical engiMering, bas hem 8WII!ded the aecond liD·
nual Distincuiabed Prof-.r Award
by tbe Faculty ol EnsD-in1 and
Applied Sciencoe. Given to ........,;...
distinguisbed and oontinuina ooatributi0118 to l!llliMerin&amp; 111111 applied ecieoce.educatiaa, tbe award~ a
c:ertiflcste 111111 • atipsad ol 12150. Dr.
Gerald P . Francia, cbairmaD &lt;Jl tbe
~t ol Mechanical EnPneering, who .........,.s Dr• . . . . _ - .
ll&lt;liDi.-, noted that Dr. Martalll ...
developed 10 couraes 111111 In --.1
instaDcea aiBD obtained natioaal faading to ~ equip J.IICIIaliadM
which ACCIJIIIIIUIY them. Hi8 work In
developina a lahantory far ...-lmentsl analyala 111111 de8lp, Dr. J!'nD.
cis said, "baa ..ved • a JDDdel far
similar facilities at aeveral olber leMing univenities." In an intardlecipllnary Vein, Dr. Mart.eos baa joiaed Lejaren A. Hiller, S Le.e ~ ol
Music, in work
oomputar -.ynlbeRI
of music.

'*'

Dr.llnllt--

Dr. Greaory Breit, distlnculabed
professor of physics, was 811111111 rel:ireea honored at -the 1978 Com. mencement Llmcbeon, Juna 2 (few tbe
complete list, - Reporter, May 17).
Dr. Breit, · a member ol tbe fllculty
ainre 1968, Ia .wall lalown • a llUCII.r
physicist and for his work which pcovided tbe &amp;rat published ~
proof ol the uiat.enal ol tbe ~
apbere. Dr. Breit was t.be flmt to tbe pul8e metbod ol ....... by . .
8ectiaD which .. tbe bMia ol madlm
....... Amcml . . JIIIIIY. .... ..... ia the Nalblal Medal ol ~ ....
..tad to ~~~m·
Pre.idiDt LYBdla
..~ Ia 11187. Dr. Bnit -wet tbe ,_...., o1 Yu -. ....,- ,_.
belen _... ID Bl6lo.

..,.

�J- 7,1973

I weeldg eommunlque I
•Open to pullllc
•Open aniJ to -

.

••Open

-

io - -

o pro-.! -

CGnQd JUncy ~. &amp;3142211,

of the ~ •
In the oubjoct

tar -....

U/1 AlliS -

.•

Mull: 8beclmer ol doe Eaclioh J:)oputment Cli• cuouo ~ ~ ad
"Bioamtday," which will be oolebJUod
on June 16; WADV-FM (108.6 - ) .
10:06 p.m.
.

THURSDAY-7

UUAS filM•

TM Hoi

Roc~, Conference ~

Norton, cbecl&lt; .-;;... for
aion c:harp.

a-. - .

MONDAY-11

__,

FIUIS•

___ -- -·
.....

..

J:;:;:u;~J~
-~
p.m.; Ubcrtall (Me-. 1929), 7:30
p.m.; N~bc'-r&gt; I (Lane, 1928), 7:46
p.m.; and N~lie'-r&gt; II (Lane), 9:16
p.m., 147 Dielendo.t

.....

TUESDAY-12

Gallery 219's Summer Shows Will
Feature Variety of Visual Media
' Gallery 219, the studant.-nm emibition area In Norton, will present four
shows, fee.turinJ drawlnp, p r i n t s,
paintings and photographs, during the
summer.
U/B artists Charles Munday and
Andy TOPOlski are opening the """"""
with "ExtensiOJIS of the Mind," an
exhibition of aurree.Jist p r i n t s and
drawings, through June 12.
Munday, who received an M.F.A.
here this month, exhibited In ten national shows this yee.r. In addition to
worldng In the Art Department lind
at the TEAM Workahop, be bas been
teaching on · the ·Albright-Knox. Art
Gallery's Color Wbeels bus.
T-opolski, a .third-yee.r student, was
recently awarded a tra...lins echolsrabip by the Rumsey Fund, established
a~ U/ B in -memory of Bronson Case
Rumsey and his wile Evaline Hall

Rumsey.
The second summer show will be a
print exbibition, June 14-.'30, by Arthur Secunda, an internationally-known
artist. Secunda's works are included
in the holdings · of. the Smithaonian
Institution, the National Collection of
Fine Arts in Waabington, D.C., and
the Museum of Modern Art in New
York.
Secunda will bring to the show
prints done last year wbile be served
as a guest artist at the prestigious
Tamarind Institute for Lithograpby
in New Mexico.
Oil paintings by Buffalo artist Ted
Palermo will be on view from July 6'1:1 and award-winning local photographer Jerome Hartzberg will exhibit
his work Aogust 1.,'10.
Summer hoqrs for Gallery 219 will
be Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

231 Films, Lectures and Concerts
._ To Enliven Campus Cuhural Scene
The Summer arts scene on campus
will be enlivened by a series of public
lectures and 231 film screenings, part
of the second annual Summer Film
Institute, and by a concert series featurlni Indian songs and dances, bluegrass, ragtime and the avant garde.
Dr. V1ada Petrie, Luce Profe&amp;IIOr at
Harvard for 1973-74 and visiting prof....,. in English here this summer,
will giVfj the first lecture in the Summer Film Institcte's .....U.. on ''The
Maldng, Knowing and Judging of
Film . and Media," tonight at 8 p.m.
in the Nortm Coaference TIM.tre.
Dr. Petrie will atao acreen his film,
TM Cqe, made in 1962 as his M.A.
tlaia at the _Academy of TIM.tre,
Radio, Film and Television In BelJNde. Yu,o.tavia. The film describes
a· 18 ye.r old Jirl's first loYe ~­
bor ralatiaaahip to middle-cle8s
-nty. and her 1IIIIIUCI.-ful attempt
to .cape ber COIM!llltiOoal emoiron-

....t.

Otbor acreeninp began May. 30 and
CODtinue am-t daily tbroull&gt; August
.., · 3!'. (Watcb for IOClll-to-be-diatribut
blocbune with the full ecbaduJe and
cx.,.nlt ee.cb ....t'o COJnlrllllliqw foe
...-J,y 8Cb.lnleo.)
' 'lbe Film Institnte Is alao o&amp;rlnc
16 Clllllll8 topics coverina alsnifi&lt;ant
...,..,.. of ftbn and media, lnclndin&amp;.
foe the fimt time, worit In 6lm and
.., media lilclmlqua
8ewm widel,y-~ aeative
ftbn ~ and ................
recinlted to te.di 1D ~­
- a l v-..s.o, ~and J'bo.
lolraiJiu&gt;, Jllba ~ . . Euro-

, .... a - ,
-

the

Ida A--. em.
Pilm, T.ciUn,

&amp;peri-•·•

Media, the Oral History of the Independent CinelDB, the Italian Cinema,
the Non-Actor in Film, Bimnet and
the Surrealists, Introduction to the
Art of the Film, and MinoritieS in
U.S. Cinema 1~1970.
The Institute's faculty includes:
Stan Vanderbeek, one of America's
leading filmmakers, currently artist.in-residence at the University of South
Florida; Geoff Winningham, teacher
of photography at Rice University in
Houston and at the Institute of Design at the Dlinois .Institute of Technology; Paul Sbarits, a distinguished
independent libllmaker who founded
the Film Department at Antioch College and will join the faculty of U/ B's
Program in Media Study in September; James Blue, co-director of .the
Media Center at RiCe University and ·
director of the prize-winning film, 'rhe
0/.ioe Trea of Ju.tice; Fabiano Canosa, founder of the Brazilian AaaoCl&amp;tion of Art TIM.tres and diiec:tor of
the Film Department ilt the Museum
of ;Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro;
Barry Gerson, an indepeodent 61m~ leo&lt;:bhqr 6lm at Bard College;
Gerald O'Grady, director of UIB's Jn.
structiona1 Communication Center at
the Center for Media Study and a
of Media Study Inc.; apd

;r

The Summer Institute io sponsored
by UIB'o Center for Media Stndy
with the onpport of the Nal&gt;onal Endowment foe the Arto and Is orpirized
In ClOOJ&gt;t'l:lltion with Summer~
Intematianal Stndies, the Department
of Enalioh. the Department of· Art,
and the Uni-mty Union Activities.
(Cont~ "" ~ 7. iiOL 1)

· WEDNESDAY-13
PSYCHOMAT*
Pll)lcho7Ml io

FRIDAY-S
COLlOQUIUM•

TM 1930'1 Activity Pro1ram of tM
New York Citr. Schoolt, Dr. J . W~e

~~·&amp;t=. ~tr=.ro

..=

a!~=:.'! tz,,f~~~naland~~:

cholOSY Deportment.

COGNrTION AND SftUCTUU SEMINAl#

. Detection Models and Scene Perceptwn. Dr. Naomi WeiMf.ein. Loyola University of Chicago, 4230 Ri~ Lea, Rm.

==
·

a liateninB aod opeakins

:=rt::..,in
~0::
communcation io ito &amp;'001--ud. pends

on

you-on

and
obare
group tbio

~

your

deto be

with others. Be port of o

&amp;IIJDJIU!r. 232

Norton, 7-10 p.m.

FILMS•

Tbe Summer Film lnotilute p.-n18 a
double feature, A Bo~ A(krnoon (Puoer, 1966) , and Cauandro CGt (Juny,
1963), 147 Dieleodorf, 7 p.m. and 9 : 1.5

p.m.

..

C.31, 1:30-3:30 p.m.
Presented by the Cognoitive ·Studies
Area, U/ B ~nt of PaycholOCY.

MUSIC Of TH1 AMUJC.U•

FilMS•

~f-~ ~ ""'!.!f{.lf.t.ol~

Tbe Summer Film Inatiiute pJ1!0eDia
Bezhin Meculow (Kleiman, YutlaMch,

!r.J;o;,.,":,. ~.!.':.,~· ~.!t":

:tu_Br::_ Nation..

oalM~
concert
~- at IS for pnerol odmiooion,
Norton Holt Tielret Olllce.

THURSDAY-14

!:'c!.i.7:30 p.m. and 9:30p.m., 147 DiefFilMS•

ALUMNI IIANQUfT

Tbe U/ B Alumni AMociation will bold

Tbe BIIIDD&gt;er Film !noli- p.-t.

a dilullle featnre, EniTock (aair, 1924),
Fanlo,_ (FeUillode, 1918), 7 p.m.
in Goodyear Hall. and
and 9 p.m., 146 .
Reception - ,at 7 p.m.; dinner at 8 p.m. ·

iUo 34th Aniwa! Awardt and 1111t41/4tWn
&amp;nqiU!t thil ·evening

~-rf.

By reservation ~nly.

EXHIBITS

UUAI FlaM•

. $$#, Conference Theatre, No rto a,
check abowcate for timM. Admiooion
charge.

SATUR.DAY-9
uu.u

filM•

TM Hot Rock, Confem&gt;ee Theatre

Ad:

Norton, cbeck abowcue for timM.
miuion clwp.
Tbe RoboiC Redfonl SDille mee1o the
Georoe Sept Grin
olill onod&gt;er I'OUDdof bwdarY with • amart Couch. u
memory eei'WII, tbia one hu a helicopter
~f":i~~ police otatioD, and

in

SUNDAY-10
U/1-DAY~

Dr. Millon Pleour, prof_,r ol hl&amp;tory
"Eroo
the White Houoe:'
of Pnoidenliol l:lesuality "
SOme
with booit Ken Service, WYSL (1.00
~· and WPHD-FM. (103.3 - ) . 9£30

m.c.-

.ur-

in

U/fJSIUidcy B_uppkment 1o OJ?IOpiUD
~ on .topico ol cunent mtenoOt,
08lce ol Uniwnity In-

r.::::= 'f.:!:.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1382938">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>1973-06-07</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1382924">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>en-US</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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  <item itemId="85442" public="1" featured="0">
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                    <text>�CALENDAR
Coailauoas Reciotration JJecins April 9*

BESSION I

............. .... ." . . May 29-July 13

SESSION H

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . June 25-Augusr 10

SESSION

(Regiotcation closes May 25)*
(Registration closes June 22) •

.
_

Ill ........ ... ... . .. .. July 16-August31
(Regiotcation closes July 13)*

u.... elloenrioe . . . . . . claues in each session meet riVe days a
weok,~~Fri4ay. Nete:

S&amp;ud~ are

Jll"CI"rided

pennitted to enroll in any combination of sessions
enrollment does not exceed the · maximum' course load.

,

OFfiCIAL BULLETIN
.To NC&gt;Oiv~ the Olflcial BuUetia col8plele and mail the
. r.....,;t f - Oil the bad&lt; ·cover of this publiCIItion.

--------____.,...-..............-.... _
.· -----·
----=--.. .

COURSE NUMBER KEY

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

_,

-.-:-.:.t.=.:~
--~"tW7

. . .....

.,__Cr.

.•

,,..'

•..$u,a
-.,,arM
te:u..u,a

?a

. ..." t,aPM
l:lt• l:t6 PM

-

~ ..........

~-~%J:.~ :,!'".W.. a- Comllfl• ore DOW uiiL ~r the
A-ue, are not.. •liP

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

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

.

t-.2tr~l

»~12!15

ftA

z:15- J,arM
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PM

AMERICAN .STUDIES

-·-

Z:lf- J,a Pill

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---...........
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Je:lll-ll,a
-·,apll(

·•.a1:21PM
1 - l:t5Pl\l
1;11- 1:21 PM

AROI1TF.OiiJJm:AND

ENVIRQNMENTAL DJS1Qt

.

• •:at· _ _I'll

DA

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'

U~ ar·w.Y.

uaurr.u.O,.ms--

·ADMISSION AND REGISTRATION. INFORMATION
~

~

:

-

.

'

q

.

u...,..,.......,

'l1ae Bfllte_U~ .r N.W York at BuffJole ·wiiJ eoatinue its "open" admlssiOM
..,uq M. doe ~ level U~•te stw:leata repluly eDrOIJed In other colle~es aqd
...._.._ wiR be _..ttW to rePter without maldnc foamal application to tbe University. Hi&amp;'
..-.a ...- )lrlll .... be penaalttool to iecbter widtout ClllllpletiDc the formal applicntion to the
U.._...,., ~ 1... • - counea does not ~titulo admission to the University.

LANGUAGE STUD\'

S...._

All reculuiY ..tmltteol IJWIWite studenta of the Univenity need only reflster to attend
s-caa.-. .Odaer stu,leaata who have c:ompleted the baccalaureate def:ree m,.Y bco
~ to email • DOD ..tdeulut ...,.tuate studeDta. NOU::matriculant students must secure the
~.t the .......,..tate clepertmeDt or faculty _member for eadJ graduate level couroe to he U.k•n.

REGISTRATION 'INFORMATION
reclotntion for the Su\aomer._ Sessious beJins April 9. Registration for any particular
..-... wiD d.e 011 tbe Friday before that sealon beJins. All student are strongly,uc(,_ed to register as

c-tla,;;;.

~-~-'~ole

to IDiare utiof......,. eoune selection. It is not possible to hl!ftdle maU registrations.

A'll.......,ta not rec&amp;tered at' lhli University durlnr tbe Spring Semester 1973 (Including Visiting
lllaol Speeial StudeDta) must COIIQIIete aJill return a Student Data Form (Social Security Numher or
eu.liooa ~t Number Is required to - complete the form). Student Data Forms may be
.......,. 1D ~~ the Offiee of Admissions and Records (Hayes Annex B) or, through the mail,
~J' 'retauiaiDI the .Jeil~ lena ...,ta!Ded jn the Summer Sessions Bulletin. Completed Student Dnla
F - must be reeohid at the Office of Admissionil"and Records at least one week prior to the dO)'
oa whlda )'OU are reilsteriDr-

Cl~mg Dates for Courses i.i the 'major' sessions
SeSsion I ~ ... .. . ......... ... : . -. .... . Registration, Closes l\1.ay 2;)
"-se&amp;si.On U ...... : . .. ....... . ,_ .. .. Registration Closes.Jtme 23
Session Ill ............... ·.. ....-.. Regist_ration Closes July 13
Slaoce a aiDDber ol counea will ~ stuclenls ~re lldvised to rqister as early a possible to ~ure
eeane ~ Pie-. reDM~Dber tbat you must rqister Witbln tbe dates Indicated
*';'' ret:isla!tion !"' tbe f"mt day of ~ch session as in previous summer.;.

~

aloeve. '11&gt;ere wiD be

!(e.

.... -

a vailable from :

Language lm;lilule

State Ur,Uvc"'it~· of New. York at Buffalo

r

0 . Box 7

Hayes Hall
Buflalo, New York 14214

CREDIT FREE PROGRAMS
A department of the Division of Continulnr
Education will present a variety of course5 dur·
in( the summer of 1973. Included In tbe offerlnp

•will be eoun;es in personal growth, acquisition

.

but there will be several offered durlnc the day.
There are no prerequisites and you Deed not be
accepted Into the SUNY AB, program to lake -ad·

MAXIMUM CREDIT LOAD

• ~~ WeokSeoalaoaAI~
.
,
(s-iea 1 w s-iOD 0 er Session W) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I Credit
. ........ I _ . m (U ........) .. .. . .. .. .. . . • .. .. .. .. .
. 16 Credit
.............. I .... D (11 ........) .. .. .. .. . . ..... .. .. , .
.13 Credit
~ _D and-Ill (10 weeks) . .. .. . .. .
. .. . .. .... ..... 1% 'Credit
,...

1973. A complete oourse offeriD&amp; wiU be announced In tbc near future. A brochure will be

..Most courses
are riven duriD( the evenin&amp;

Aprilt-May -31 · 1:30-·8:30pm(M,TW,Tb)
8:31- .·4:30pm (F)
s-4·A..,...t31 8:30-·8:30pm(M,T)
8:30- ·4:30pm (W,Tb,F)

~

A spec:ial Summer '1-~ant;UAJ'C Institute ia a,einc

de \·eloped by l&lt;&gt;&lt;·nl &lt;ollcgCII and uni~•erslties lor

of new skills and intellectual crowtb.

,;
RE~ISTRATION HOURS
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c:-llod. . Cr.

.

TO BE ANNOUNCED

GRADUATE AOMISSION

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ENGLISH (As a Forei111 Loncu111e)

Stophe~~ C. OW...el~ Director
F.prelp Sla4eat Enclisb
Seuloa I (1...,. t-luly 13)
Seulon II (1aly 11-Aurust %4)
I Credit Hour1

%12 Townsend H.•ll ; 131-38%8

FRENCH

---

.,oomoN.U. L.UiGUAGE COURSES TO BE IL"'NOUNCIDlN LA~GUAGE INSTITIITF.
EIGHT-WEEK SESSION-Moy Zl-1uly Z1
511
51%

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Lileratare " Clvllhatka
311
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HIST~RY
13

Unite.d States Ui5ton· Survey
United States History Survey
Survey of Canadiut llist.ory
BriU.h lfutory, 1832-lKt
Europe in the lith Century
The City in Ameriam History
HistOt")' of Modem Japan '
Modem China, 1800-Preseat
WhAt i5 Hioto&lt;y1
MQor 'l"'lema ia Modem .Hidol')'

Wrillal'
%0th Contpry Russia
U~~t= ~~.laue Rclatl9~
l n d - - t Study
lnde.-enclent ReMJncs
Topics in the History ol Soviet
Unioa.
The Wost- an4 Aoia
la4opoadont Rooeorch

Th&lt;oU. Guidan~

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ADDITIONAL LANGUA,_GE COURSES TO BE ANNOUNCED IN LANGUAGE INS1'1TUTL
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AQDmONAL LANGUAGE COUR.!!ES TO 8~ &lt;'NNOUNCF» IN LANGUAGE INSTITUTE.
Gl!miAN
FIRST ~K-.,
11
· 1 • ~,
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FIRST, SECOND 011 mlRD SESSION-May zt-Auruot 31

GERMANIC &amp; SLAVIC

Ia Zldl CeDia'7 Utentare:

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II:Jt·li:JI

_· HEALTH SCIENCES
EDUCATlON AND EVALUATION

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Dl'l'BNSIYB BNGUSII LANGUAGE INS'lTI'VTE .•• stfMMEB "lt73
fenlp .......Ia ... ~ ~te Ia the lt73
~ ...... ~ llllltltute lii!U) tliii iumDer at the State Uni·
ftll'litT fll N.w Yedt at Buffalo.
Ia ;...,.... r... callep work Ia the Unltecl States, studeltta fiom u_p
te •
.U.W the lix·week """"""'".-loa Ia past years. This
,_-, ,_ .... 11nt u.e, the llllltltute will feature l:w!t lix·week oess~.....
·
..,.._ C. DaueU, dlreetor of the : JELl, explalaed daat the two ses·
.._ - ......,.. te provide full prellmlaary &amp;&gt;llloh requirements.· "In the )lalt ......... ..W bike the oae aUIIIIIMir ·_..., uad then have to take a
· ..-. ..._ art.c the fall oemeoter. This year they CUI take both sessions
thariooC tbe -·"Mr. DwmeU oaicl.
'
•
(
Be ....... that it wUJ not be IIUIDCbotory but optional to the student to'Cab- ........ "' the-"-·
fAcia - - - Ia tlo8ped to meet the student's Eb&amp;llsh languare needs
~ te lalroth- llliio to die "-ri&lt;an culture. Courses are· offered on three
li!Yell ............ ialerlllediate uad advaneed.
,
lfala _ , . . Ia the be(innera level is plaeed on spoken proficiency,
lllllooaP ~• ..-,.;~ readinr uad voca~ulary development ~
. - ......,_ _1'be latermedlate level reviews the bas1c stru_ctures of EDgtish
wi~ . . readlar uad writin(.
.
.
'1119&gt; MVU,ald level, (iven for atu!'ents with a knowledre. of Enclis!'•
ilia. te lncnaM their Ouency to a pomt where they may begin academ1c

... a- ui

.._lone

studlea. .
All ltadeolla will receive U hours of lastruction per week and a special
~ prorram fll activities Will provide them with an opportunity
te llftdlee their rrowinr Ea(lish Janru~e skills as well as Jearn about
Alioerlean aoclal uad cultural back(rounds aad University life.

Mr. DwmeU noted that prospective applicants

should request the lELI

Summer Enrllab Pro_cram brochure aad applicatioD form at his office Ia
Zl% TOWIIIelld Hall at the U/B South (Main St.) Campus or i!Y
alliDc 831-38Z8.·
.
Sesldoa. oae of tbe IELI \viii rua from June 4 to July 13 and the second
- - . will bella July 16 uad end AU(USt %4.
PBOGBAMA DE ESTUDIOS WSP,ANICOS
It's aa accepted fact that the study fll another culture is best done "on
locatiaa." Aa a to daat end, the lan(wlge, literature and culture of
SpaiD · wUJ be explored under the aeris of the Prorrama de Esttulios .His~ apoaaored by the State University of New York at Buffalo in co_.atiOa with the Univenidad de Salamanca from the end of June through
tbe 1alt week Ia Au(alt.
.
Dr. Peter Boyd-Bowman paofessor of Spanish and director of the Center
f..., Critical l..aD(aalel at U 1B will be the prorram's resident director this
year. Olle fll tbe cnater thrultt of the prorram will be aimed at secondary
ocbool ........., -..rdlar· to Dr. Bruno Arcudi., chairman of the department
-« s.-w., ltall.a aDIIl Panuc-. Accordin( to J;)r. Arcudi, "this will be
· tbe lint tii.e daat a coacerted effort bat been made to fashion a procram
.Wtable te the Meda of the secondary school teachers so that they can take
advantap fll Dr. Boyd-Bowman's pioneerin( concepts of Janruage learning."
· Another a1pect of the prorram aimed at underg'Olauates and rraduate
otadeab alike, is tbe opportunity to propose and conduct independent studies.
Topia may iadade:
role in contemporary Spanish society, environmental problema, the atructw'e of Spanish provincial or city rovemment,
the _.atiaD fll local acbools, law courts and other lastitutio~1 the structure
of tbe University of Salamanca itself, and linguistics topics like local slang,
reatures . - f..- of address, the use ot An(licisms in daily speech, 8Dil
the ~ In Spal!a of Ea(lisb u a forei(n lan(wlge.
The eolt of tbe prorram is approximately $690 which includes round
trip latenlatiGDal air trampootatioa, a (Uided travel period, and rooJDl and
.._. loada darlar the travel period and in Salamaaca. Not included are the
SVNY..tultioa _. re., p8isport, travel to and from the airport ot departure,
---.. an4 penoul expenses.
.
Fardoer lafliimatiaD and applicatioaa may be obtalaed from: James
~ Dlndor, Ov~ Academic Prorrams, 107 T~wusend ,HaJ,l

w-'•

AaCIIAEOLOGlCAL FIELD SCHOOL IN MEXICO
• Aatluopeleo atudeotta · taldnr part in the Arcbaeoloeical Field School
Ia llmdco wBlloe IDgodueed to the ClOBital aspecll of Weal MexiCUI pre-history
_.a ftliet7 fll ex;erieDcea in .......,nui...once, mapplar, and excavation. The
......-.. wiolda .._ heeD Cllllductea ann~y alace 1M3, ·• offered by the
. , . , . . . . . "'~and io desiped for ande...-.duate uad rraduate
-*'tliiiiJ.........
-'
.
.
a - D ill tile- Field ~ io aioaed at the datin( aad ex,.;tion of
......,. cuiAire fll · several aCcupeliaaal ~ in the coutal plains of
.,.._ .. W..... Mexieo. The pniChJIII, which ac:centa arcbaeolocical
....., ............ wBl aJao inelade atudies of palocy, plant ecolon.
_. u ..aoweaiOCJ.- The teatative dates for the piocnm are May zt to

lab" u.

-

.

OrP!Iiun fll the ............ iael that ardlaeoJocical lraininc OD the site
~ ~ wbich eannot be duplicated_.,. an American campus
~ .. ........... ....,_ that_,.,.. &amp;.. beiDc Ia a forelia locality.

J. u

It II JMCh '

~

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~ for otadeDtt

wllaoe

acado:o!'le

prGpllllll

have an

lllllt te haft fleW experiea&lt;ea ouWde fll tbe Ulliled States.
~ auh nl P.,al &amp;ld experieace and ·IIDowledre fll c'on_.._. s-ldo ............ far ,....uc..ta. Beciltnliaa • JlaUted, uad
Dr. 8taart SeoU, dlreeter "' tbe ....,...., .. ~
~
lip . te eipt Cft!!lita f~~r the l'leld Sdlool, uad
......... ~bike~ creditL ~ . . . . . &amp;..the field
111te "11119 .. _....,.
·tire ........ TaltiGoa ' - will lie recu1ar Uni-

rw::::::...._
•

_ _ , ...................... 4

P

~~~

JNefartllelr-~eoata.

dr ~aayloe...._.,..;..Dr.Stuart
fiF'rrl el
,
, 4Z4Z 8Wp Lea lload, Amherst,

...._w,..

J). IJellt,

_..._aired.

'*'"""e

.

.

-

:

.....

SUMMER ARCHAEOLOGICAL FlELD SCHOOL IN NEW YORK STATE

-..u.c

teeludq.- will be
A vanety of experieaces in excavatia( lllld
ol!~ to studeltta partidpatlar in the s - r Ar+aeal p-.l Field School
in. New Yolk. State May zt tbroU(h July 13. Studeoota "will """-• familiar
WI'!&gt; all aspects of archaeoloPcai field work while -~-data • ·houses.
palisades, reluse pits, uad burials on one or two New Ylil;k SCrlle IDdiaD sites.
.
The • Field Schoc!l io desiped ' primarily- for t'-e irJIIa ,...._ional
mterest m antbropoiOCJ, but the coune CUI . - 11e
to field
work for the serious non-professional. The JIIOina CUiiea e1c11t credit
hours, uad reristration is limited.
Fo_r' further informatiaD uad pe...,..._ to ncloter, ~ Dr. Marian
~...:'!hlte, Prorram ~. Department of
WZ IIWP. 1M
·--. Ambent, N.Y. 14ZZ6. .
·
•

•-tatrodaeti•

.1

Aa...,..,

SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS MATH IN8'lftVTB

· ~ birh

school nuithematica teachen are .eliiiWe • -.17 lar ·.....U·
ment m the Summer Institute Ia Mathematics far ~ SCM.~ Teecben
at.the State University of New' Yodt at Buffalo. ·
SchedUled for June !5 te Auruat 10 111e oev• week .......,.' 1a•JIIrl ol.
a f'?ur-summer ~uential procntm f11 ~ ..........
subject matter m mathematica which 1a ____._.. .. ...
fJ ' e I
. Jrowtb of leCODdary teacbera.
....... .... - .
~
~, __ _Dr·.~ R. CaVior, a.odate prof- f11 •a.tP=·!Ia at U/8, who
~to ...., laltitute DOted that the procraa lavllh. ... - fll a
tion clasa of birh acbool 5tudenta. Be Mded daat ""*- wM ..-fa~Jy
complete .the aequential procram .... who
~.....,.....,.
~ts
may qualify for the M.S. derree for teacben f11 11111a lcloeGI wafhe=atia ,..
Dr. ~vior •. - added that farther lafo.,...tiaa ._..._. the - - r
math ialt!tute u available tbroaci&gt; the U/B ~ fll Ma..._.ticl
~. U::.U~~~
·::-'~•~
Applicati- ihoald ba In IIJ Februaey 15
•
WI.
ae led by March 15.
,, •
•·

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carrr.

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PROGRAM IN MEDIA mJDY
''The ~. Kaowinr and Judcinr of fUm IIDII ......." the -tr)''a
most exteaoive~ummer film/media pncnm, io .......... 'bJ' the
Eadowmeat
the Arts aad io the Secoad Aaaaa1 J.titilte ol. a.. ~
for Media S
y. In the eoune of the three - - - . . . _ ' * May Zll aad A:ucuat 31, more thaa three huadred m- wiD .. KIWMII, aad .._.
a aeries of ';.,e:!!J"blic lectures by vialtlac facalty ead iaviW dloCiapllloed
cuests are
Courses are Glfered in the c~tiO.. of ...._.....
aad 'At meh
videotapes, taucht by some of the aatioa's Jeacliai fila ·eriiiiL Ouataacllac
scholars will present course in the Chlaeae, lfel!tena Banpeu, J'nJDelo,
LatiD-AiDerican, and Soviet cinemas. More "IMI!dc Ia fiJIIl ualyals,
the art of the film and the teachlnc of media, lite ........u.t ~die Ne-tll'
American Cinema, Jhe dance film, and eomputer aeiataJe _. the arts will
also be- eoveretL
~
"
For fuitber informati'oa, contact Dr. Genld O'Grady, Dinctor, l'rolnm
for Media "Stud7, AaDex A-8, State University ol. New
et Buffalo,
Buffalo, New York 14214, 831-4804.
•
.

N.._.

I

m..

"Jo.-k

WORKSHOP IN COMMUNITY RESOURCES
Tbe _-WerkShop in Community ~ Glfered throuah the Faculty -.1. 1
of Eclucatioaal Studies for four craduate credits, affords an opportuaity for
teacben, counselors,' administrators, and other ocbool p6noaael to explore
the N'~agara Frontier's rich resources aad to..examine the key _problaas
facing the development of the area. The procram Ia deaicaed ·to help per·
' ticipaDts realli:e how they can effectively utilize the - l e , caltural, and
social resources of the · area in their work In achools.
·
Aecordlnc to Dr. Conrad F. Toepfer, Jr~ director of the workshop, the
program is aa effort to help· educaton find out more about tW COIDDIWlity
lllld use thi&amp; kDowledce in the schools. Dr•. Toepfer explained, "We are eoncemed with the fad that education has been confined within the coven of
textbooks and the foiu- walls of a classroom. We want to brine the reality
of the eommUDity iato ·the classroom."
'!be workshop, whieh is run cooperatively with Caaisiua Collece, io opea
to educators on all levels and will-meet from June Z5 to Aucuat 10. 'l1le.. ,
class will participate In the plRDilin&amp; of croup and iadividual l'tlleUda activities to study area resources. Tlie partcipaDts will co .., field trips, ·aad hear
panels . ~( specialists and pest speaken.aaalyze specific aspects of important
community resources. City and county executives and lawmakers, key leaden frGm industry and labor, recopized experts in -.ucs, ~pby,
goverment, aad cultural institutiOilS will also IQ.et with the workahopa.
FOI" further informatioa, _contact Dr. CODI'Ild Toepfer, CoauDuDity Resources Workshop, ZZ8 Foster Hall.
MODERN LrrERATURE

Pta

A distlncuished comhiaati011 of · outataadiDC critics,
aad aovellsb
will again be auembl~ hy the Department of EDPioh f• the lOth Summer
Procram Ia Modem Uterature from June, Z5 throuch A'!J"S' 3.
ParticipatiDK faculty will include Geoffrey Durraat, •c:hairmaa cif the
EDcfish Department at the University of British Columbia; Ralph Freed-. "
maa, professor of comparative literature at Priacetoa Uafveralty; Fraak

Wap&gt;ke, chairJqm of the EDPioh Department at· the Uafvenlty ol. Waollin&amp;ton in Seattle, and Dr. Lyle F. Gluier, ~- Emeritus of .EaPlah
at U/B.
.
Interested undercracluates and cradiute otudeats may eont.ct the De·
partmeat.of EDclish at 831-Z317ofor further informatiOD.
·

BRmsB PRIMARY SCHOOLS

~doa with

.

Didsbury
in ~ EacJand, 'the
~ itl. lllellleDtary and BeaiedW Eclucati011 is GlferiD( a four-week
~ . . . . _ to study the Enclish "inforllllll~ style ol. elementary sdlool
.........._A~ featUre "of"the trip will be visits to the informal class. _ -.. doat ·AiioeJiem students of elemelltary educatiOil can observe the
-cliod ol. ~ ueed in ov~r one third of the British
schools. '1'IMo ..n.r-,.whlda-c:arries six houn ol credit, rum lroor! _Jwae Z5 to
Jllly 21,
II apaa to Jl Jimlted aud&gt;er ol -cnod!'8te and ad~. uacler·
~..._II; Dr. Bidlard Saber, the coorcliaator ol. jhe JIC!ICIUB,_prefers
Nckcrouad Ia America or Caaadlaa ~eatary edueat!G. ..a -&amp;lidllari?" with alteraative -chods of elemelltary edueatloa.
Dr. Saber tend. the procram "a eoatnstive atudy ol elemelllary educ~­
. tloa. We wat to pve our atadeats.the opportuaity to ot.erve first-baad this
........,. ..cllod doat ha beea In use Ia Badaa4 for the pest tweaty JeaJS,
aaol P.,. ..._ a ~ to talk with the British teedoen Ia ~ Khools.~
'1'loa c-.t o1. the procram io ~tely' ""' ,laa tultioa aad fees.
PurtMr
1811 be obtalaecl a- Dr. Bkhanl Salzer, Departmeat
ol. me-ter)' ..a a-edial Eclut:atioa, zztD Foster Hall.

Ia

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...._..willa._.
w-..

CHAMBER-MUSIC WORKSHOP FOK ·STBINGS AND PlANO
The Youni Musiciam Chamber Festival for Striae Plaren ....r·Plaaiata,
an expease-free weeli of musieal involv-t. will be oftere4 f.- Jufle Z3
throuch Juae 30. Forty studeats of hlP ochool ... co1Jere ace, to be
selected by auditioa, will partidpete Ia the Jaa-ive ........,_
•
'lbe studeats aecepted will wed&lt;' witla doe Clenlllllol Qunet, cuna&amp;IJ
in resideace at U/B aad naked • - ol. the _.... &amp;Mit lllrt.c ........
"and U/B millie faculty _ . . . . Mlaehe ........_, llllllt wlda die ..........,_,
pest Striae Quu:tet; Pamela ~ CGDdactor el tile~ ~
tra, the University c::llaaalo« OrclleMn, .... die c-a.1tJ llalic Sclleel
Orchestra, and Stephea Me-. wt- ol. ~ ..................... die
Leventritt and Kaedaalr.o ....... c.apedU...
·
In aclditioa to dally eUmber ..... . _ _ aad Rrilllr
als, the week's act1vities will ladude sevenl ..aa.ter ct-, tw. - a Jot
the Clevelaad Quartet, a Piuo-CIWD'ber Music aedllil ... a llaal ......,
coaeert.
F• .further laformatiOil - * l Puaela Geullert; lbllc ~
State Uaivenity o( New Ycll'k . at Bllffalo, Bu&amp;le, N.Y. 1411.:- 1)r Cal
831-3f41.
.

•

-

.
GEOLOGICAL nEl.D TBAINING
Fint-haad ~ at poloPcaJ flelcJ ........ wll .. ..,_. 6la t"
• ....._.. Ia a fecir..weol&lt; eoune throuch lite~ o1. o..laclal...._
at the State U..n..ity at Baffa1o, _ •
•
• ·
. Geolecieal Field
aad __..... ,......,. atadeats, .. etuaetarM ....... • . . . . . ..
·-..... tJ.iW 8tatee-Utah, Wi411abtc IIDII -Celena- . 1 - I ..
J.
OIICalailli tloeh- - . ~ ........ -will ........... ...
flelcJ trip .. Dera_., ~ f t e - ....... , _ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
o( the four -week .....-c eserdMa are I a - o1.
..nz ••,

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FIRST st:!);u)N-May ze-~11

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>. STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO. - .

MAY 10,1973

Power.- Crisis f.

Affects All
Nationalities
By JAMES SEffiER
SMiar• • lectrioal ............

_ . _Du_

.

A·:Lobk ~t the Intensive English Institute·
. ED~TOR'~ NOTE: TM folk&gt;wing
u an UllerV&amp;ew with StepMn C. Dunnett, director, Intensive Engli8h LanIUIJIJe Ins~, condw:ted by Peter
Groutnf'O$ of UIB International.

..

. ~:"'~'.I~ the State

Uruvei'Slty of New York irt Bulfalo
has been offering a Summer Program·
i':' English as · a Foreigo Language
81DCe 1962. I would like to know what
your goals are for the participants in
these programs.
MR. DUNNm:

Our prograro has four

( 4) main goals. We want 1o .prepare

our atwlents 1o communicate veriJally
with Americans in a comfortable, relaxed manner and to activ8ly participate in any conversational situatiOD.

n:oo~~ ~ =v:::

'!"

spoken English wben they arrive
However, t!I8Y Often lack the
~ to actively Patti~ in
clisc:u!l8i0118 with native apeekers;-thus,
· our first ~ ill to try 1o give them
the eelf-rana. they· need
·
Our_&amp;a'OIId loei .. to perfect '!heir
reeding and . writinc skills in order to
enable them jD IIU&lt;ll..tully compete
with_ ~~ in tbeir ..,;,.
demic ~ with a minimum of
dilliculty. 1 A1tbouch the average student arrivt!ll with a fair vocabulary
and is able to reed most university
level materlaJsi be often lacks 8peecL
. Without It ·grat deal of work in this
area, be would beve much diJiiculty
in bandling 'tbe normal reeding load
r'!fluire~J,Iar, full-dmi ,academic atud}f.
He alao .-Is a ·great deal of work
in writing, espeei8lly ihe' teclmi&lt;!ue' of
'tenD paper writlna.
~.
Our third goal is really a -oomlliDltiall ol the lint ~- In _.a!, attanpt to ~ the participants w·
be able 1o mab a 8UCCBIIful transitiall from the Janguaie program 1o
full-time academic study, where the
participants Will be required; tO the lanpage skills I beve just mentioned'&gt;bi competltiall w;. t h nati~ .

self:

~-

,

•

..

Our b&amp; and f!nal goal is 1o introduce foreign atudents 1o !be typical
United States cc)llege campus in order
1o minlmise .the ~ tbey may
encounter later, as
as to mini~ ....... ol ttie aDXieties they may
ahara, and, fiDllly. through this sum-, .
mer on-auapua experieooe, we hqpe I•
1o iQtroduoe -the atudeot to the variauiJ

..en

aspects of American culture and so-

ciety.
GRoUMPOS: What are the participants' goals?

MR.

envirOnment prior to beginning their
studies.
They want to know about American
dating habits, social customs, how they
should dress on certain occasions, how
t.o ~ the bank, how &lt;to shop, etc.
Agam, they want these things explained to them during the English .
prograro; they don't want to waste
t i m e in September. So everjthlng
must he done during the six-week
summer program.
I think you can see that our goals
and the goals of the participants are
not too dissimilar.

1be fin;t goal of the
foreigo student, we Bllppose, is to improve b!SEnglish. However, there are
always a few &lt;in every kroup who feel
English· training is unnecessary for
them, who are convinced that their
test scores do not properly reftect their
true language proficiency. Sometimes
we find .t hat 1o' he so, but in the majority of ceses it is not. TOOse students
MR. GROUMPOS: Does your prograro
will protest and demand to he remeet the participants' and your asleased from the language training propirations?
gram. However, these are a minority
and the majority do share the goal
of ' wishing to improve their language
""· DUNNE'lT : In terms ·or English
language training, judging by standproficiency.
Their nat goal, and perhaps this ardized testing resuJ Is and comparison
of skills as observj,.j at ihe beginning
should have come first, is 1o :suoooed
of the prograro and at the end, we
in their academic studies.
nothing
believe we do meet everyone's aselse; our students are highly motivat..
pirations.
ed end """"""" oriented. They want
As far . as the Bllca!86 goals are
1o he prepared for the educational
concerned,
dlat is, the foreigo stuezperience they will undergo in Sepdents' desire to he SIICce!l8ful in acatember and ti&gt;ey want that preparademic studies, we believe that, here
tiqn during the, Enclish progrem.
Another goal we believe foteigo stu- ) again, we are fairly 8IIOCfl88ful and
meet our goals. Mind you, we only
dents shall. iil coming lo an English
have dais on -lhooe students wbo haV..
prognun, and a 8081 which is rea)ly
remained within ·the State University
OOiliii!Cted to . their deaire tD BUCOeed
ftD!I be prep&amp;ied; is that ti&gt;ey want of New York system, which is about
50-60 per cent of our iota! enrollmenl
1o familiarize themselves with the
(Tum to 2, coL 2 of tloio· m.rl)
American· acadeinic and aoc:li).cultural
-~ -·..;;IIlii. DUNNETI':

n:

..

A young couple sit in their living
room watching television, an air conditioner humming in ihe background
Suddenly, BLACK OUT!!!
.
We now have another addition 1o
the list of people directly affected by
our mad quest for q&gt;ore power.
In the first draft of this article, the
couple mentioned above were Americans, but, thanks to my roommate, I
, ~':"" eee that they might just have
~u~ been Eng~, Frepch, ·Spanish,
or some other nationality. No irDagination is required to eee the consequences of our growiog demands for
power. In many areas of the world
electricsl power systems are on ~
brink of coUa.PBe, in total or in part.
In the event of a prolonged largescsle power failure we might have to
face : 1 ) ~employment; 2) lack of
transportatiOn and communications·
3 ) disease and epidemics· 4 ) cold•
starvation, and thirst; 5) wicontrolled
fires and explosions; 6 ) massive criminsl aru.vity and riots; and 7 ) loss of
our national defenses, or worse.
In truth, we members of the world
community have only ourselves 1o
blame for our present crisis. We are
the ones who have squandered our
n a t u r a I resourees, especially those
capable of producing power. Should
we then get rid of our electric knives
scissors, razors, and hotcombs?
experts say no. or the one-third of
the power generated in the United
States which goes into the home very
little is used for these uextras,'.. com·
P8""!- to such essentillls as heating,
cooking, and cleaning.
Ene'ID' to Clan Up
.
We also will need more energy to
help clean up our earth. 1be ·desalinization of sea water and the recycling
of our metals require large quantities
of power. Anti-pollution equipment
also requires large aroounts of power
to operate efficieotly. The only solution to the energy crw, and 1o pollution, seems 1o he the production of
more energy.
Solar energy genera1ors come in
three varieties. 1be first type is composed of solar cells on the ground,
possibly in desert areas. Solar oeUs
convert sunlight directly into ~
tricity. Advonlofu: 110 polluticm and
a large number of posaible locations.
DiMJdVOIIl4gU: hiJh coat, large 111'888
of land required, affected by weather.
Solar oeUs at J&gt;IME!Dt cost $2,5001
square foot. A house would ~
35 square feet at today'a preeent power
derDaDda per Y e a r. For the aame
amount ol power, today's power compenles charae far - - The -.oDd
type ia Oil the llfOUIId alao, but .,_
solar coUectora.
co11ec1on ..,_
erate large IIIIIDUilts ol beat from IIID·
lichl The ' - ! ia lata' u.d liD drlw
a twbiDe and _ . t e electricity,
Ad!'I'IIIUia: 110 pollutiaa, llllll&gt;ber ol loc:ation8, loww cost ~ IIIIer
cells, allected !eM bJ weaU. c:11eaa
DWuliJtllllllla: at I II ~ large
1snd The tbird type Ia poeed of solar . . .. and • . plllced ill
apace. AdiJtllllllla: lmdeded bJ
..,.U., 110 pollutloa. Diad,..,._:

on.;

n-e

waste beat

'*"-

a

~-

in

hilh cost al JIUUinl tbinp in '
orbit, hilb cost ol oeUt ~
·beam
colleclion
-·
potelitial ........-ol-......_
- .. _ ,..
n.lf.
.,.,_ ol the 1111111Y ~!aiM ol
the solar colleclion ...,..,._ they' are
not CCIIIidan!d at dli&amp; time 1o he the
~ 1o our~ BreU:tbrauiba

a.

:."':'~at:: ...__, milht ~

~-Tllllltidal
a..,
llame, geotbermal 8Dd
-.y
are a1ao ~~as aJiiOmaave
p o w e r - All~ power.... a -aictlon Oil lacatiall. nu...
can only be bullt ecaocndcall~ Where
(Tiim 10 ...... 4, Go£ i 'of 1/iu u-rtf ·

�)

I

Nalll FROm Of"/A
We are sony to announce thai we
have not hMrd of any changes regarding the proposal on the cuts of foreisn
student tuition waivers. Last month,
David Sancho, Student Association
international coordinator, Mohammed Rajaballey, Graduate Student Association international coordinator, lnd I
attended a meeting_ or~ by a
Pakistani student from Albany, to discuss the foreisn student tuition waiver
problem with members sl. tbe State
University Centnl AdmiDislmtion. It
was felt that this was a good oppbr~ty for the vice chancellors to bear
~d reports on the consequences
and repercussions which a cut in foreign student tuition waivers wouldhave.
A week later, about 50 students met
in Townsend Hall to discuss various
strategies. For more details on this
meeting, I wo'iild suggest that you
contact David Sancho in ·t he Student
Association · office.
We hope to ~ from Albany by
the beginning of June. Meanwhile, we
urge you to fill out the applications ·
lor summer and fall and to find alternative actiVities for the summer if it
is at all posaible.
.
U you have to take courses this
summer, I would suggest that you
register now and check with us before
the last date for dropping courses
without penalty. Presently, we are•
tmable to grant any new tuition waivers. Any further notice will be publisbed in the Reportu or posted in
the Office of Foreign Student Affairs.
.

...

their first confusing days ·here. Please
complete the form which follows, telling us what ways you can help, and
return it to Room 210 Townsend Hall
as soon as pooaible.
. Even if you cannot be actively involved in the orientation program, we
will appreciate any ideas or suggestions you may have. Please come over\
to the OFSA or talk to David Sancho,
international affairs coordinator of SA
(831-5507) .
There will be planning meetings
· during the summer so let us know
what your intereSts are as soon as
poasible. ~
-

Return to: 210 TOWNSEND HALL
NAME ....: ............: .......................:. ._.....
PHONE ..·............................................... .
Will you need a roommate next
yeu?
( ) Yes
&lt;,- )No
Would you like to plan~ special
activities for the new students during
the orientation program?
( )Yes
( ) No
Would you like to participete in
small group discussions about life on
campus with the new students?
( ) No
( ) Yes
Would you like ·to J...d such a discussion group?
( ) No
( ) Yes
Do you have a mr which you could
use to take new students to see apart..
ments?
( ) Yes
( ) No

-PilANCB I. PBUITI'

ForotCn Student Orlenbotlon ,.,...,..m

New foreign students will be arriving on campus during the last week
· of August and the first week of Septenmer. Many will need help, will
• not speak English fluently, will have
no place to stay and will not know
anyone in Bulfalo. You can help!
An orientation program is being
planned for _the first week of· September. Your belp is needed to plan the
program, to assist in locating)!Uitable
housing, to a n s w e r new students'
questions, and to help make these
students feel more comfortable during

WHY NOT
try something new in your
college-dormitory life?
live and learn with students
from difterent parts of tbe world?
ezperieuce other cultures?
discuss ~ share. your ideas
and feelings with students who
may have completely difterent
philOBOPhies and ways?

WANT TO LEARN
a new /tmgutJge?
foU. dtuu:u?
Would you shore ycw.rself and
your COil1lt;y in fr~ndship with
foreip stwkllUY
Next fall will find tbe 1973
International. living Center located on the North (Ambemt)
Campus in· the Govemo,&amp;' Residence. The Center will not only
provide living fa ' · · for American and fo •
students, the
goal is to
te a real commun-.
ity of
and Jeaming.
Our goal will IMI' accomplisbed
through a variety of ways: seminars, folk dancing, cooking
worbbope, ft1ms and slides, etc.
etc., etc. H.....,_, our main
thrust for the '73 Cent... will be
the -le' and their inter...t and
efforts.
.ARE YOU INTEijEsp:D?
U you would like mcire information either call the Ollice of
.Foreign Student Alfaira (8313829) or 831-2985 in the eveninp.

WHY NOT?

lnt~nsive

In ·t he beginning of April, Greek
students from all of New York State
gathered at Q u e e n s College for a
meeting of the Hellenic Federation.
Discussed in tbe meeting, the first of
its kind, were issues sum as educational opportunities for Greek students
in the United States, financial problems and possible solutions, tbe expansion of the Federation into a national organization of Greek students,
and the publication of .a newsletter.
The Federation intends to cany out

long-tenn educatiONI! and cuitural
programs s u c h as tutoring in the
Greek language on U.S. campuses, organizing trips to Greece for all American and foreign .lltudenta, and others.
As 8 result of the meeting a broeder
oonmrunication among Greek students
in New Y&lt;&gt;&lt;k State has bt.en achieved.
It is hoped that in the coming years
with the interest of other Greek organizations and agencies in this country .t he association can be expanded
to a national level. ·

English lnstitute~----------------=-~:---

( Cont'd from poge I , col. 3 of this imler!)

It is a little more difticult to answer about th4 others. We have tried
to determine how successful we have
been by using student evaluations a t
the end of each program. From these
student evaluations, we have found
that we have been fairly sucoessful in
alleviating much of ·t he initial anxiety
_ the participants felt about beginning
their academic .studies in September.
These evaluations, plus a follow-up
evaluation at the end of tbeir first
academic semESter, have told us that
the participants are pleased and ..,tistied with the preparation we have
given them.
They also indi&lt;=!-te they are satisfied
with the acculturation aspect of the
program; however, it is here .that we
are not really sure we are meeting
our aspirations. Student evaluations
aside, and once more I must stress
that we have no data to support our
thoughts, so based only on personal
observation of students on our own
campus and tbe ~rvption of my
colleagues, we have ~disappointed
to note that, once out of the summer
program aiul into the University, the
students seem to reve~ to their own
culture groups, or ,t o the security of
their labs. This is regardless of how
well-integrated they may have been
and how much jbey may have participeted in the various 0'0118-&lt;:Uitura
activities of ·the summer program.
Perhaps this has something to do
with tbe Bulfalo campus, I don't~­
Perhaps -t his is not really a failure
on our part. Perhaps all one
hope
to do in a six-week summer program
is to give the student as much ezpoe-.
ure as poEible to the difterent asp8ots
of ~can culture and pert,ap. this
shoui&lt;l be the only goal.

can

W b a t factora make
your program meet the ~
y~ and? the students .,t for the ,l!l&lt;·
penence.

Kll. GIIOUJIP08:

Kll. IIVNlflrl'r:

Greek Students Hold State Meet~ng

F ~om the

~

train1JJ1 point of view, - believe our
COJ;riculum Is an important lldm. It •
is ftezible eDDUih eo 8llaw for Ian- .
guqe inslruction on' dilfonat loivela
of prollciency and able to aClOOIIUIIO-

date inmvidual problems. It includes
practice in understanding and speaking English, grammar and imomatic
usage, written English, reading and
vocabulary development, study skills,
term paper writing and library use.
The last three are major stumbling
blocks for foreign students and often
the least recognized by the students
as being extremely important to their
university careers. .
Another factor is our small classes
which allow students to have as much
individual attention as needed to help
them before they encounter the problem of alienation in a large wban
university; while at tbe same time,
slo~ly weaning them away from 8 dependency on the teachers and program
administrators.
Finally, we believe our comprehensive extra-&lt;:urricular activities program
is also .a very important factor. This
program is organized to introduce the
students to American culture as well
as to enable them to become acquainted with the local community and the
surrounding ares. These activities include weekly lectures and seminars on
contemporary United States issues,
films, concerts, sports; week-end excursions, parties, ooffee boun;, conversation grou_ps (all of these with American students) and homestsys with
American families. We try to reduce
social · isolation and foster a group
identity by housing the participants
with American roommates in the
dormitory whenever poasible. Much
to the dismay of my tea~. the
extra-curricular activities program is
often the most popular part of the
whole .llix-week experience as far as
the participarits are ooncemed.
Kll. GROtlKPOS: How does your program fit into the total United States
experience of__international students?

Well, lli08t obviously
~are the ' beginning of their educa:
~ experience; - aie the vehicle
Clesigned to brush up their "'--"-'retieve their initial anxieties,
them how the system works, prepare
~ so they will be able to compete
m an academic environment, orient
llll. DOJINI:rr:

-'Q

them to life in a very complex society,
introduce them to American 'culture
and ftnally deliver them on the professor's doorstep ·in September. We
try to do all this in a shOrt six-week
summer program.
Well. of coun;e, it is a stiperficial
preparation at best. However, we are
able, I believe, to give them some important insights into the social and
academic situations they will encounter later.
But we are more than a beginning
and our program does more than initiate the student into an environment
within which be will experience success or failure.
,
We believe that we serve as a kind
of base for our students. Many stu·
dents regard the I""Ple they have
met in the Eng lis Ir program (the
teachers, tbe"adminis""tors, the American student assistants) as friends
wbo have helped them and taught
them as well as advisors.
And for many of them, they will
never again during their studies in
the United States experience the same
intimacy with Americans as that experienced during the English program.
This may be the only time in which
· they are enCOilfal)eci to speak frankly
about their impressions of America
and to discuss 111.-J inter...ts With
Alilericans.

Waiver Applications
The deadline for Foreign Student
Tuition Waiver applications is May
16. Due to the tuition waiver shortage,
applications submiUed after that date
will only ~ conaidered if there are
any tuition w&amp;ivers left at that time.

Summer Addresses
All foreign students muat remember
to let the OFSA know their Sllllllher
addresses. We receive inqvi.ries and
communications from foreign governmenta, , embassies, Jl.S. agencies and
others, and in all cas8i we Have to
get in touch -with the studenis. It is
know your
very important that -

wbereabouf!l.

'

REPOit'Ukl~"FtATION?iUNSERll/ MAY 10, 1973/ Pa{e!lb

�__;_

K·e~p Working-T oward Peace
'lbe Editor wishes everyone a happy

summer end ' - for full COC&gt;penltion

u.s:.

earth.

rellpOIIIIibOity

as theirs. -

Let us bope that we are on the
right l!4fh which will eventually Ieed
MEMBERS OF U/B INTERNATIONAL

EorroRtAL

IIOAIID

f'Nr Groumpos, Edit~reece
Ca..._ Alvoroz-uerto Rico
'lAwrance Kwok-=-tiona Kons

Helbert Moraenrott&gt;--Germany
Bendy' Sc&gt;---HOna l&lt;oftll
Suclhlr SucNik-TIIIZIIftia- .
Ana Moria Lolnu, Advlsor--f'ueftO Rico

(

----- --- ----------- -- -------------·- - - ]

-F~reigners Cain-from-US 'Stu(fyBut 'They Pay a High Price for If

~OOoRIALJ.

8.IDODI all for international friendship.
There are oaly a few days lef' until
1he end ol this semester and consequendy ol d&gt;e academic year 1972-73.
At this moment I would like to take
the opporbmity 410 thank all ol you
who baw 8llppOI'tai and helped our
el!orla to briDg Ul B InternatWTII1l to
the shape '"' haw s8en it for the last
few moalba. I would like to thank the
Oftioe of Foreip Student A1fairs and
psrticuiarly Me. Maly Loinaz wbo is
one ol our advilon in that office and
who t.s '-n tile ad..;- to our Editorial Board I would-~ to extend
mY deep app~oq to tile Reporter,
and particularly 410 Mr. Robett Marlett, for their COC&gt;penltion in our elforc:
to reach tile whole campus ODDmlunity. 'lbe Editorial Board also deserves
many congratulations. _•
Tbe enthuaiasm,.ol tile campus oommunity, faculty; . students and stall,
kept warm our initiative.
Now that we will soon be leaving
on dilfereDt patbs for the coming sum. mer or. for the rest ol our lives, I would
like to wish all ol you a nice and
peaceful summer and good luck in all
ol your~
.
I espec:ially want to communicate
with aJl of tJ:&gt;oee foreign students who
are going lieclt to their -countries for
good. Don't forget the educational
experience you have bad here in the
and particuliu-Jy at U/)3. Don't
forget What die world expects from all
of us, tomorrow's leaders. Don't forget
to fight for Jiigh goals and ideals that
will bring the whole world together,
to an inle(national unity, with equal• ity and justice for all. Carry this message with you back home and spread
it to f!!Very comer of the
Have
a nice trip back home.
Of course, most of the above should
be heeded by all -young people, disregarding race, color, a,ed, sex or orig:
in.
Let us hope that all'of us are working toward the aaroe goals. Because
who ol us would like to see another
World War, or a Korean, or a Vietnam War?
Who ol us should not believe in
equality and justice? We all were hom
und...- the same sun. Wben it rains on
everybody, why should some have umbrellas and otbars not, and, therefore,
get wet and miserable?
Wbo ol us· would not like to see a
more stable, prosperous, just . world
for all?
'lbe lllllnl'm to bow · much of this
we can realize in the future rests
totally upon us. We are the ODeS wbo
will guide d&gt;e whMI ol this ship called
earth. We &amp;bould be ~ and ready
to accept 1he responsibility of our &amp;&lt;&gt;:
tiona.
ADd it is my opinion that everyone
around- us is willing to cooperate with
the full ~ ol youlh-&lt;&gt;ur parents,
our profeilloi8, and our aooiety. Our
main goal abould be to reach and
crooe over die 4hresbold ol international friendabip. F u 11 cooperation
among all ol us will produce ''the future world" that we desire and our
childrai demand. It is as much our

--- - --

-

us to a peeoeful and prosperous world.
Let us keep working toward this great
goal.
-PETER GROUMPOS

Foreign Students
Are Individuals
'lbere has been a lot of discussion
about possible cuts in tuition waiver
scholarships for foreign Students during · the past few weeks. Advisors,
administrators and, most of all, foreign
students have ®en annously waiting
to bear about the future of these
scholarships, and consequently about
the academic and personal future of
many foreign students currently attending SUNYAB.
Under consideration by tbe SUNY
Central Administration is a propoeal
to cut 46 per cent of all tuition waiver
scholarships now granted to foreign
students in 1he State system. This
unexpected plan means that close to
120 foreign students will lose their
tuition waivers, and in most cases will
have to return home without completing their studies.
'lbe situation is especisUy difficult
for foreign students because ol -other
related variables: foreign students are,
HElP WANTED
Interested in becoming 1 member of U/B

lm.t'nltloft.l's ·editorial boon!? We need
you. It's a srut experie"nce. Please call
Ms. Ani Mario Lolnaz (831 -3828) or Peter
Grouinpos (836-8429).

by law, required to be full-time students; they are not pMD&gt;iUed to 'III'Od&lt;
outside tile . campus except in special
circumstances and then o n I y pert.
time; foreign students are not eligible
for any other 80UJ'OI! ol financial assistance. ~
Mrs. Dean Pruitt has said that the
whole issue is disastrous for the students and a very di8icult task for 'tile
OFSA advisors. Wbo are they going
to cut oil? 'lbe tuition waiwrs are
granted with financial need as ~
main criteria. How do you estebliah .
an order ol need when eueryl&gt;ody is
needy, when you know _that whet you
are really sayiDa is "aorTY, you cannot .continue studying, pack up end
back bome aomebow."
"We are all waitiDI for the .decisilm.
We bope .that foreign studealll are
COIIIIidered as individuala ill need 8iid
not as a statistic ..,. a piece fll. ~-

Pa~ May 10, 3973/ REPOR:rER-INfet~~Lsi~ERT

By SUDHIR SUCHAK
EDITOR'S .NOTE: J'IU. is the second of a two-part -w. on Fonitln
Erc/v:Jnfe profNliM. The first part
( publiihed iii the laat ~) emmined
the growth of the U.S. foreitln uc/v:Jnfe program, its aimo and the extent to whieh it luB benefited the
United Stotes and the partidpating
countries. The seco,PEt deals with
foreitln students and their problems
and what luB been ·do to solve these
problems.
Even though foreign students gain
much from their stays in the United
States, {bey have to pay a very high
price. Most ol them have to leave
1heir homes during the best years of
their youth and many leave their
wives and children behind. One ol the
most critical problems is financial difficulties. Hundreds come on e. par.t ial
scholarahip and many have to support
one or more persons at home. The
recent proposed drastic cuts in tuition
waivers for foreign students in New
York State has added to the problems.
Difficulties also arise for many in find.
ing siuniner or part-lime jobs as a
source of obtaining income to pay for
expenses other ·t han tuition.
Another major problena f8 language.
Many foreign students are incompetent in English while others do not
have any knowledge of English at all. ·
Besides this, almost all have problems
because ol accent.
Almost all studenta who come to
the United States, except t1iOse from
Europe and Canada, have problems
· which arise because ol dillerent social ,
mores. A student from India or Pakistan msy 'have a very hard time getting adjusted to living in a society
where the position ol 1woroen is equal
if not superior to ~t of men. A
student
one of '·the Polynesian
Islands, s&amp;moa; for example, msy find
it hard to believe
premaNtal sexual intercourse is mOrally denounced
in the United States.

mno'

t.lraf

Sod1l DIKrlmiiUitlon

Almost all Black Mricans and many
other foreign studenis experience social discrimination in tl)e U n i t e d
States. This msy leave a very bitter
feeling in the heart of the victim,
prejudicing everythmg else he or she
sees.
In this world of crisis, there are
constant political conllicts between the
U.S . government and other countries
participating in the exchange program.
This and the political unrest in many
emerging nations have an adverse effect on students from such countries.
The problem can be aggravated by tile
addition of any ol the problems mentioned before and it is the duty ol the
foreign student advisor to see that all
these have the least possible eftect on
the student's work. This was recently
brought up as an important issue at
a meeting of foreign student advisors and others connected with the exchange program held at Minneapolis.
How can these problems be solved
or lesaened in intensity? Every person connected with the program can
· contribute to enabling foreign studenta
to ha.ve a more comfortable end more
bene6cial stay in tile United SCat....
Many national and m~ern&amp;tional organizations contribute toward this in
various ways. Some provide Orientation for foreign students, while others
provide iDdividuals at ¥11rioua universities who belp fore i 1 n lludenta
tbrcJucbout their ~ HUDdredsJ of
private clubs and aocW arpnizatians
indudinl tile' c:hurc:h . . . oonlributea-tdeel
·,
Orimtation Ia a ....-ity for every
foreign atudeDt if time pennita. - The
need fm orioJntatioD, fmw!-aJiy,
ia • .,.,.,_,_ ., the cli&amp;nmt CUlt- tams end babits which pevail in vari01111 parts ol tba world. Orientation
famillolrUa (oreipon with pmQcuJar

patterns ol behavior taken for panted
by Ameri-. It ... introclucee the foreign student 410 the , _ aystem ol
education he. is going into and alfers
factual informaaon and prsctiaol ruid·
ance. Unless the foreign student walka
on some familiar ground while he ia
here, mutua1 understanding betw.n
him and the American people will be
hard to oome by.
·
Another, thou,&amp; ·Uinlted, benl!6t ol
orientation is to improw the ~
ability ol the eu:hangeee.

~~~-~
'lbe initW familiarizing ol the foreign studf!t to America is really only
the beginning of orientation, wbic:h
should'- be carried on in one way or
another until 1he exc:hangee leaves for
home. This is done on coUege and
university campuses with the help of
foreign student advisors · and others
connected witb the college either u
faculty or students. In many cases,
even the community takes an active
· interest. The greetest eftort is provided by the me.mber·s ol a program
knO)NII as the University People-toPeople program, founded by President
Eisenhower in 1956. This w,as originated at 1be University of _Kansas in
Lawrence. 'lbe enthusiasm in Law. ( Tum 10 1JG1&lt; 4, cot 2 of du. ~rf)

Letters Laud
Public~tion
EDITOR'S NOTE: U / B Internstional luB been mailed to many other
universities within New York Stote
and to a few others around the nation.
Their ruponses were favorable. Here
are two /etten from among th&lt;&gt;se we
have r-ib.rl:
EDri'OR:

...

Thank you very much for sending
roe a eopy of U I B I TIUrnational, your
international affairs publication.
._ At the preeent time, the Council of
International Students and 9rganizations ( COISO) of the University of
Mia.m1 'Is planning to revive an internatiOnal student affairs publication
&lt;The G/ok). I am going to pass your
letter alotlg to the president of COISO
and suggeet that he put you on their
mailing .list for copies ol this forthcoming publication.
Exchange of newsletters and perhaps conferences and ll)'ll!poeia among
foreign students and internationallyminded American students tluoulhout uniwrsities in the United Statee
will be an excellent COI)tribution to
the realization ol the elusiw ClOIIQI!Pt
ol "world uncleratandinl."
My ~ for IUCOI!88 with
your el!orla in'this -.rea.
Sincerely ypurs.

Ph.D.
. Director
International 8ervioe&amp;
Univeraity ol Miami

- - A. D.TINO,

BIJITOR:

...

"

'lbank you very much for tbe copy
of the UIB InterriDiioniJI, wbic:h sent to our a8ice ~~ I_,. much

enjoyed reedinl it. Cc!Dira&amp;ulatiom
on your IUCOI!88 with tb8 publiaatioD.
Unfortunately, we· d6 DOt haw. a
similar · publication at Northwea'tac:,
so it ia not poosible for u. to .._.
icJ.s with you on lhls.-111111 IIIMIDt
this avaiW&gt;Ie to ........ ol
Intanational Club here, end.....,.. it will
plant tile -.!._ol an idea b - of
them, particuiuly 1'- who involwd ill .ICIIIIIWiom.
Thanlt you ..... fm )J'OUr thoulbt(ul-.

our

y

�II · - ............"

Chicano ~u!t!-iral W~e~

fro,.-

1, coL 4 of tltU U.Urt)
(C&lt;mfd
there is a
dec:rease in elevation
for large quantities of water. Dams
have also been known to ....,te earth
tremors and small quakes if the water
they bold OCM!fll an area that was
previqualy ~ GeOtbenDal sen-

largo;

erators are reotrided to the earth's
holapota. Some 1 eo t h :e. r m a I generators use ground steam, others pump
• water in arid use the resultant steam
to drive turbines: We are also working
on direct heio~tricity convertOrs.

Tidal energy production has IODl{ been

a cl-.n of man but the technological '
prcblema of """-ing the tides are
...-ly insurmountable. n.ere is a
tidal pnerat« operatinJ in France
bur there are very few other areas
when\ t i d a I power is econOmically
feasible. Tbere are a1io 8DIDe emtic
pllma

to ......_ the earth's natmal

d.YJIIIIIIOS. sliOnD. aysllllma. Bare, technolocY lap ......... and cost &lt;iOIIBiderationa aemn prohibitive.

-E-v

'The only aolutian semns to be in the
atomic energy production- field 'The
firwt atoinic reactors .,.,.ted energy by
apJiUin« large atoms into ........ - . .
DiMuiDG111t11Je8: tmm.J pollution of
our water· 8IIJIPia. dlapcaJ of radioactiye waste, f!'Bf d lllllhdowa. Meltdown occura when atomie fuels cafd\
on•fire and can't be stopped. No explosion can -wt but high tempera-

· tures can melt the fuel containers and
c au a e radioactive leakage. Future
atomic reactors will probably create
· power by couibining limaller atoms
into large ones. DiMuluanl4ges: ther. mal pollution. In this type of reactor,
no radioactive waste products resull
Also; fuel is· easily a?.ilable. 'The fuel
is hydrogen and ita isotopes. Early
reactors were uaing up our atomic
fuels, uranium and plutonium. The

f.tu.tnc

plnatM, ......... .......,.

- - - -:- .. .-pr- ortiocrafta (IncHon ~. rup, oculplure. lnotn.orrwa) .....
CulturW hold In In ... April Union.

-.........,."'tho -

"' tho -

-

poosible solution to our energy crisis
is what is called a breeder reactor. It

is a reactor of the first type-only,
the process it uses creates more fuel
·t han is used up, hence the name
breeder. If not for the breeder reactor, we would use up our ~c fuels
in thirty years. 'The eeccmd type of
reacto'r · is atiJJ ebout twenty years to
completion of a prototype. 'lbere are
s t i II technological problems to be

.......... -

--""'

solved before it can be started.
Experts iJOIW think the most feasible
solution to our power needs is the
widespread use of the breeder reactor
until the second type of atomic :re-actor can be perfected. Atomic generators -.also have the advantage of a
large number of locations and small
a.rea uaage. 'lberefore, they are ideal
or near ide81 solutions to our - t
problema.
'

Exchange Program---------:-------,--_..:._ _ __
( Cont'd from

paf&lt;

3, coL 4 of tltU U.Urt)

renee could be a.,;.ly seen wben the
.whole llOIDDJUility p a r t i c i p a t e d :
churdlea, civjc clubs and organizations, residents of the city, farmen,

.

lrafe!nitieo, bus~ opened
their bomea «&gt; foreign students. .

'The cooperalion of toni students
1D8be of lbi. work
easier. 'They should realize that they
-are in rfc&gt;reiin . country where life
fOl' tbem is DOt easy. During any
world crisis, 'or in a situation where
their' lllltive country is at odds orith
the United -States, it is ·the duty .of
the fCIIeipJ students 1o clear up mia- .
understanding · lllllObl the American
people by writinc - - p m articles
and . ~ 4alks in the cJeaoom_
Only Wb8D the iXImmon - l e UDder- .

~ly

stand the real situation, wbich is

Us-

ually distorted due to political complelrities, can they appreciate the position of the concerned students aDd
assist in &amp;toPping the crisis from turning into 8 major political problem.

'Ibroush all u-e dillicultiea, bow,
ever, many foreign students have 11!1&lt;&gt;
caded .remarbbly well, both academically ~ in extzacunicular activities.
In to d a y'a world, paradozically
eDou8b, with ita extraordinary communication ayslema," there are many
miacoolocoptian .both about the United
States and about the .....,..;n, natiaus. 'The eldluge proiram, in coordinatiom with many other internatiulal Ol'lllllimtlooa such as the Insti-

tute- of -~tional Eddcation, the

Peace Corps ~ the Rotary Intemational, QUl do 8 great deal te bring
about int.emational underatanding. I
am . sa~ thet the propam is
perfecl It haB ita own abortcominp,
as inany8ui:ll' extensive projects have,
but on the whole the t&gt;roP!!m baa
been very effective in .ful8llii,g the
aim&amp; ~t -set out to aooomplish.

liiST U/B INIUNIIT!OftAJ. FOR YEAR
U/B

~

will not be

·pu~lished

durina summer because of a lack or funds
and -nel-illlmuih our _ , . Is to
do so. See all or most of yi,u nut~
tember.

'"

' •1~1

• REPORUR'1P4Tl'JRI'&lt;IA'f10NAL INSERTI MAy JO, 1973 I Page 4 •

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

UIB Outlines BaBzs for A{finitative Action Program

Cyclical Planning Idea Unv~iled
By President at Faculty Meeting

lp Commencements

Although they did not tum
out in droves, a respejjjlble
number of the voting faCulty
·gathered Tuesday in 148 Dielendorf for the....annual meeting
mandated by Senate bylaws.
Principal business was PreSIdent Robert L Ketter's annual
year-end review, largely devot..
ed to a report on the status of
University-wide planning activ'ties.
( Speaking of the U/ B Master
Plan-a draft of which will go
this week to SUNY CentralKetter unveiled "a basic cyclical planning process that will
be adopted in the University."
Quoting from the d r a f t, ·t he
President explained:
"Each unit of the University
will be expected to set a series
of s p e c ·i ric objectiYes to be
achieved. The identification of
the means necessary to attain
these objectives will be fonnulated in light of the long range
and speCific goals of the University, its various major divisions, and the resl"'nsibilities
which ·the University and its
components have as a University Center of the State University of New York.
"Procedures for at·t aining
these ~vee must lake into
acCount anticipated' resources,
including fa cuI t y, students,
staff, and support funding. Subsequent performance w i I I be

year. We will resume regular pub·
li~~ jn S.P!ember. "!eanwh!le,
a SuinrnOr- Reporter will be Issued
eac~ Thuisday, June 7 thiough

~~~t ~=~l!ri~~!it!:::

.

Aug.ust 2.

evaluated in terms of stated
objectives and resources jlvailable during the period d implementation. This evaluation
wiU determine b o I h achievement and shortcomings .a nd will
point {a the next series of objectives and the resources re~~ for their implementa"This planning, implementation, and assessment cycle will
be carried out annually, with
every unit completing and .m.
porting a seU..........,.,t. With
staaered implementation, onefifth-of the UniYelSity wiU yearly attain 'fiw-year' status, at

.

Folk Festival lineup

-a.:

Educatio_ual Studies, Jnforma-

Enrollm~nt

for Summer
May Set a New Record

".Mail inquiries are up phenomenally this year. They'll
probably run to 8,000, more
than double last year. We had
to order 5,000 addi tionsl copies
of the Summer Sessions bulletin. or course, we don't know
yet how the inquiries will
translate into students, but registration is well abead of laat
year's at this time."
Last year ..-S ummer Sessions
. was plagued by an eleventhLAST IsSUE OF YEAR
hour budget cut, but ·this year,
Today's issue of the Reporter Is Director James H. Blackhurst
the last for the 1972-73 academic

Scheduled This ear
This Commencement season,
for the first ·tip&gt;e in U/B history, 15 individual ceremonies matics, Social Sciences and AdwiU -take the place of the ever- ministration, Management, Unlarger increasingly-impersonal dergraduate Studies, Architecoombined esen:ises.
ture and Nwsing.
Spread over a two-week perTbe complete Commencement
iod beginning tomorrow aod schedule follows :
continuing throuth Saturday,
FACULTY OP Airrs AND LE'lTEB8,
June 2, Faculty and acbool Sunday, May 20, Kleinhans
ceremonies, each tailored to the Music Hall, 8:30 p.m. Speaker:
specific needs and interests of John P . Sullivan, provcet (also.
the group asoembled, wiU at- a poetry reading) . Robes not
tempt to bring a personal touch required.
back to the traditional pi&gt;mp
FACULTY OP EDUCA'nONAL
and pageantry or wiU drop the STUDII!S, Saturday, May 26,
altogether in favor or Kleiniwls Music Hall, 8:30
. - look ·eurcises.
p.m. Speaker: Dr. Theodore
An estimated total of 5,808 Friend m. president-del!ignate.
. 1972-73 graduatee wiU be can- Swarthmore College. Robes ..,:.
didatee fOr ~ at the var- qnired.
ious propama.
Each Cl!n!IDOilY wiU have an
individwJ -printed program and
at many of the events, each
craduate will receive a certificate of ac:bievement in lieu or
the.ollicial Diploma whicli will,
1111 .-1, be mailed aometime
in early summer. (At least
one ~acuity, however, hopes to
have diplomas in time for graduation.)
Tbe Comriwmoement of the
Faculty of Law and Jurispnldence, June 2; will have moat
ol the llavor .of tbe traditional
annual ceremony. 'lbe 1973
Chancellor Norton Medal, the
UniYelSity's highest award, will
be presented at that program
and President and MnL Robert
L Ketter have selected tbat
date for their C o m - t
Luocbaon which will hoDor tba
medal ra:ipj_ent and retirinl
full p r o f - (eee _..te
story .., retaements).
Presideat Ketter will atteod
and coafllr clepeM at ten of tbe
16
Arts aod Lettenl,

which time, programs and ef- serves them'; quality and extent
forts will be subjected to com- of research and creative activplete re-assessment, including ity, as well as the quality and
tot a I objec;tive ref&lt;!rmulation, extent of commumty . service
rejustification, re-evaluation, displayed. Excellen~attain­
and ze~se rebudgeting.
·ment, irrespective of unit size,
"For annool or quinquennial wiU be the major criterion for
review, assessment will include evaluation, direcUy affecting .
all oburses and programs in llC· budgetary decisions and lesultademic areas, and all activities ing program directions.'' This
in supporting areas. 'It will in- quinquennial review could reclude the size, distribution, and sult in such m a j o.r changes
the quality of faculty and stajl; as departmental restructuring,
support services and their fund- Ketter said, in response to a
ing; examination of societal
needs served by the program; CaK!,tfte:"':~ that the M..,_./
evaluation of students wbo ter Plan, which will be subchoose the program, and -the mitted to A I ban y in a 1inaJ
extent to which the program (Continued on page 2, col. 4)

~l:"ed":i.!t ~f~g=~=~
ing summer enrollment could

. he. shaping

up.

Last summer some 12,000
students enrolled in at least
one of the three overlapping
sessions (this year May 29 July 13, June 25- August 10,
July 16 - August 31 ). Traditionally, there's an 85 per cent

~';,"~~f 3:e Jf~:~~n~

sions, Blackhurst aays.
The course me for '73 includes everYthing. from American Indian art to advanced cell
physiology. ''Educational stuaies will not dominate the summer program,"notee Blackhurst,
speaking to the stereotyped
notion that 8U1IIIIII!r school attracts mceUy vacationin1 school
teachers. Of the seven faculties.
Social Sciences and Administration offers the most extensive summer curriculwn, followed by Arts and Letters and
Natural Sciences arid Mathematics. Educational Studies is
fourth.
n.e moat . dramatic increase
in course offerinp this year is
in the evening curriculum, up
55 per cent oYer last aummer.
For the first time evening
couraes will be offered in three
overlappiDJ _ . _ , paralleling the daytime propam. .'"lbe

Between the lime-green and
Mediteri'anean bl11e covers of
tbis year's Summer Bulletin
are descriptions for some 1,500
courses, representing oft'erings
of each of the seven faculties.
Students can lake a full semester in the summer, and in
fact, mcet or the summer ·enrollment is drawn from the
regular U/ B student body.
"Ninety per cent of thcee
wbo graduate from U / B attend
Summer Sessions at aome
point," says Blackhurst. "In
fact, of the people 11\'ho wiU
graduate in the next 12 months,
60 to 65 per cent will be here
this summer. One U/B degree nilbt. actually 'til mJdnicht
in six is actually fmished in the when you ei&gt;unt utroaomy
suauner."
. (Conliml.od ... J, coL J)

¥:~~~~:am:

�i

Mq 11, 1973

Matter of Arms Isn't. Oswego Prof
Will Head~
The Point, -H~U· Says SUNY/United
"The matter of aDDing decided last fall," Dr. McAI..-lister Hull, dean ol tbe Grsduate School and chainnan of tlle
Suboommittee of Internal' Security on Selective .Arming, told ·
student reprmentatives l rom
the Committee APinat Arming
at": subcommittee meeting
April~-.
·'Tbe ft!IIP(IIisibWt of the
subcommittee is to recommend
how, where, wben and whom to
arm." ·Hull said.
The followini are the olliciai
minutes of the discuasions be,
tween the Hull suboommittee
and the stndent group:
''Tbe student committee ..,.
P""""'tatiYI!I - t e d a petition for peruoal which signed by a laae number of
students against ·arming. . . .
The studenlll continued by expreasing fear for the minority
studenlll Of Juu-a.ment by campus police and conveyed this
_group's apprehensiDDB to even
attend -t he ..-w.,.
' 'Discuaion that followed was
on the pros and cons of arming
security officers. The students
cited alleged incidents of har-

tioo which bas - e d the

committee, ip&gt;ores the fact of
Dr. Lawrence DeLucia. a !aarmed persons and armed at- bor ecooomist on the faeulty of

Cyclical Pulaununu.inDI.g t ; - - - - - - (Continued from _ . 1, coL 6)
form in July or August, representa the lfr8i step in making
an "operstional reality" of the
,.,.U.S and JLBPirations identified
m the University's Self-Study.
The plan will serve, he aaid, as
a ."strong underpinning'' for the
academic plan, whicb 'is also

!"' a _whllle. Ezistioc mecbanISDlS. m~ed to inc:reeae com-

mum"!'tion - open '-rings on
comnuttee reports, for eu.mple
- have non-. 8IICCesSful and
altef1!8tives ahould be soU,ht,
he &amp;Sicl Moore Prsiaed the genera! !eye! of conunittee work
and also pointed to the "excel

tacks on campus, and presumes State University College at Osattitudeli for which there is no -wego wbo specializes ill"collecevidence;
tive barpining, w a s elected fairs Council and the Senate's and the administration as a
"The tmining of officers was state president of SUNY/ Uni- Collegium
among others.
higb point ·of the year
ctuestioned by the students. Dr. ted at -!be first meeting of the
"Frankly," Ketter said, "'
"Let us hope," Moore aaid
Hull replied that the drafting neW organization's Delegate Ali- look
forwanl
with
a
greet
deal
" that we can b ·
the
'
committee appointed to write sembly in Albany Satunlay.
of
anticipation
to
the time wben kind of critical~ same
up a proposal will oiddrea&amp; the
According to Dr. Constantine the venous campus proposala mtionality to the Sanate ~d
type, duration and frequency Yer_acsr!s. president of -!be local
be con- we bring to our "reopective
of training seesions. Intorma- Uruvenuty Center Chapter of we are considering_am
into a University aca- ciplines and that we can truly
tioll gathered from other echools SUNY/ United, "DeLucia is solidated
demic
_pian_ In many respects, become the kind or organization
and public _...,;.,. is available much more sensitive to the that will he the capstone to the, to which we uplre."
to the drafting committee. In needs and philoeophy of the
addition, -there may be possible · SUNY univers.ity centers thaii documenlll we have draftod; to......,mmendations of short or the old SPA leederahip. I am gea-, ~a coolong training in 'response un- convinced there is much hope
to a :
(C....,.._ , _
1, col. 2)
der streoiil.' 1be criteria for ae- that we can promote the goals bas ~"
May 26, ill front of Parker Enlection of armed personnel will of our univers.ity centers for
Chairman of -!be Faculty ~ 8 p.m. Speabrs: Dr.
also be incorporsted into the both faculty and profeseional Senate Gilbert D. Moore also W~ N. GW, prpwet, and
proposal. 1be question of the stalf within this new admin- tocik this opportunity to di&amp;- ~ of tleilartmenlll. Robes
appropriate action when a .,.._ istration. The obstructionist tributa a yeer-end report. Ad- Hall,required. &lt;Altamat&lt;-: Clark
curity officer diecharges or even p¥Joeophy of the Grsnger ad- mitting that his
as hMd
7 p_m_)
cb-aws his -pon will be con- !"JJlistration is gone and I am of
the Senate vacillates b e 8CR!X?L 01' Da'OIIIlA"nON AND
sidered. The student l{W!Sts sug- hopliiJ for a better future in "churlish and Pollyanna," LIUAaY 8TtJDIIII, Sunday, Ma,e.
gested that a heering before the collective bargaining in State Moore urged his coUequeo to 20, Bulfalo and Erie County LiCommission on Campus Dis- Univers.ity."
remember that ''no · 8 en ate brary Auditorium, a p.liLSpeako!'!ers or i?efore a ppssible CiOther new state offioers ininto being fullborn." and er: Mr. Joseph Rounds, dimevilian ReVIew Board would be elude: vice president for lac- comes
that the representative Senate tor, Buft"alo and Erie County
appropriate. The Committee ulty, Dr. Fred Burelbach, State is
only three-years-old on this Library. Robes not required.
~ consider these recommen- University College at Brockcampus.
FACULTY OF LAW AND .rtJJUSdations.
.
port; vice president for NTP's
Among the Senate's prob- PIIUDENCE, Saturday, June 2
am:'~:;,8:!; . "The student group ques- Ms. Pat Buchalter, State Uni: !ems,
Moore singled out lack Kleinhans Music lWI 8 p.m'
. campuaes and exp.-ed indivi- ,lli&gt;ned. student input _into the vers.ity a t Albany; aecretary, of communication between Sen- Speaker: Ms. Henna
Kay.
dual viewpoints on arniing. Dr. comnuttee and were informed Dr. Dorothy Gutenkaugh State ate leadership and the Senste professor, School of Law urn:
Hull reported that from the ·thet student representatives on · University College a t CortJand·
·
versity of California. ae;keley
armed campuses surveyed re- the subconunittee could act as treasurer, Joseph Drew Stau;
Robes required.
.
.
cently, there· were no reports a elea~ channel of •~:!!dent in- University at Buffal~ ; and
FACULTY OP NATURAL"- SCIorr misuse or firearms by cam- fonnabon and perceptions, but membership and development
ENCES AND MATHEMATICS Satpus securitjl' personnel.
~t any member would be
chainnan, Ann Wilcox, profesurday, May 26, C lark
3
"The position of the Students ling to do so. They were also sional stalf member Upstate
'
A combined P!"lram . that p.m. Speaker: Dr. Jui H.
·for a Democ'ratic Society, who i~onned that- ·t!'e conunittee : Medical Center.
Yeracaris was named to a will allow mdustrial· engmeer- Wang, U!B Einstein Professor
comprise part of the member- will propose an open hearing'
·
ship of the Committee Against once the guideline!! of arming two-year term on the state exe- mg s~dents who plan careers in Robes required.
FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
Arming, was brought forth by are &lt;;lrawn up at ~hich !he Uni- cutive board which consists of ~hmcal management and alAND
AD&gt;&lt;INISTRATION
(including
a representative attending. the verslty commUillty will have the officers and 11 additional hed fields to earn both .t he
members.
bachelor's degree in industrial . School of Social Policy and
meeting. It is as follows: 'Any the opportunity for input.
"The improper statements f engineering and a master's de- Co~unity Servioes), Sunday
appeal .to "j'iilitily the &amp;hning of . . uone_ or the students indi·campus security which refers cs'ted his feeling_ that -the meet- Mr. Ed Purcell, a paid. staoff greein business administration May 27, Ro~ Field, 3 p.m:
to " c r i m e on campus" and mg was helpful m that he now member of the SUNY/ U "ted within a five-year period will Spea.ker: Edward V. Regan,
"armed incursions" partakes of underst&amp;flds the mission and central office l which ap~ed be available this!-fall, according Erie. County Executive. Robes
&lt;Alternate : Clark
the raciSt li~ used to justify a~mphshments : of _the · com~ in 1 as t· weel;'s R ep!)rter and to Dr. Warren H . Thomas, requued.
law and order campaigns in nuttee; Most of the group cohcemed certain dissatisf
chairman of the Department Hall.)
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT, Sun·
the ghettos and on the campus. ~greedihaThey indica!"&lt;~ th~ir tions with SPA by member:~£ of .~dustrisl Engineering.
Such appeals sometimes talk
ope
t th!' corruruttee, will the U/ B community ) are not
. Many of our gra\luates de- day, May ~. Kleinhans Music
about "lower class ghetto resi- pro,\dse a ratio?\\' use of mea- shared by the new leadership .. c1de to !'nter mdus try_and roan- Hall, 8 p.m. Speaker: Henry
dents" being uprone . to vio- sur
response.
Yeracaris said. ••Those remarks ufactunn_g not as engmeers but Coo~ds, president, Fisher-Price
lence" or "culturslly prediswere, in fact, received with dis- as technical managers. Tradi- ~oys. Robes not required.
posed to crime." On campus,
SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY,-nursbelief by many of the members tionally they have enrolled in
the line goes that "outsiders"
of the Delegate Assembly."
the Sch~ol of Management after day, May . 24, Mary Seaton
aie a threat to life and pro- (Continued from page I , coL )
Room, Kleinhans Music Hall
In
addition
Yeracaris
noted
graduation.
Under
the
new
perty.' Dr. Hull's response to lab," the director points out 6 "the recent ~pus electio~ program,_ ~ student who makes 7:30p.m. Robes required. (In:
this for . the Conunittee was
As part of this
.
·
for SUNY / United indicate just thiS decisi_on early can apply eludes Oral Biology and Otlb9~t n'! such race or class cpn- cational effort A~.""!"g edud how responsive the local leade rfor adnussion to the MBA prc5- do!'tics -from Faculty of Health
mderations were ever in the Records is staying ~;;".!'Iii . ship is to its members." Pur- gram tedwh1le still a _junior. If Sciences.)
&lt;:ommittee's discussions, by im- 8:30 p.m. Monda
SCHOOL __..OF HEALTH RELATED
thro h cell had charged t h a t local accep , he can _fm_Ish both
plication or explicitly. The Thursday during th~ mo
thug f leaders of .the old SPA chapter degree Pr:&lt;&gt;grams within a per- P~OFESSIONS, Saturday, May 26,
Colnmittee responded to speciFillmore
Room, Norton, 8:30
fic d a t a on the presence of May and will have late nho o Y(ere unresponsive, indicating Iod of five years mstead of p.m. Speaker: Dr. Thomas W.
·armed penions •on campus, and two nights a week over ~ they would likely not be re- f1ve-and-a-half or six," Thomas Mou, provost {or health scitu~ed to office. However, Yera- · explamed.
~
attacks or threats by sucb per- summer.
Every Summer Sessions lea- caf!S ~o had headed the SPA
Sl:l!dents who opt_ for the _enoes, State Univers.ity of New
sons directed toward others on
York_ Robes required.
campus. The -SDS statement in tures a number of special pro- Uruversity Center chapter was combmed program W1l! take a
SCHOOL OF KEDICINE, Sungrams and institutes This sum- elected to the ssme office in the spe_cifi~ sequence of electives·
substan':"' · yo'8B long aJO ad- mer
day, May 20, Kleinhans Music
these
will
inel.;de
archaenew
SUNY/
United
unit
(see
wh!le
m
the
BSIE
program
to
vanced m an entirely dilferent
sstis_fy M B. A requirements. Hall, - 3 p.m. Robes required.
contel&lt;t, is therefore unsuited logical field schools in Mexico separste story).
J?urmg the fifth year, three of (lnclu!'es Anato~, Biochemisto. address the particular situa- and at a New York State Intry, Biophysics, Epidemiology
SIX MBA electives may be sedian site, an on-the-spot study
of _B ritish primary SChools, a
!ecl!'d Tro!l' gra~uate courses !-ficrobiology, Pathology, Phys:
Iology, Pharmacology &amp;om Facreglonal language institute a
1
In mdustnal engmeering. The
media studies program on •ufbe
bachelor's degree will be award• ulty of Health Sciences.)
&amp;CHOOL 01' NUIISING, Sunday,
Five speakers have been for- M~g, Knowin¥ and Judging . Students int:ereste&lt;;t in spend- ed at the end of the fourth year,
mally contracted for the 1973- of Film and Media," the annual ll!g next year m PariS studying t!'e master's at the end of the M"'l' 20, Mary Seeton Room;
Kleinhans Music Hall, 7 p.m.
74 acsdemiC yaar by the Under- program in modern literature f II m through a "cooperative fifth.
IJ"&amp;(Iuate_ Student Aaaociation a geololl;' field school, a
study -center" of the Council
Adm issi~n .to the program re- ~er: Dr. Madelaine LeinSpeeken' BureaUber music workshop a work- on International Educational qwres a mm1mum score of 500 liiJ~r, d~, School of Nurs.ing,
. AccordiDr to Robert Burrick, shop. in environmeniaJ -design Exchange should go to 107 on the Admission Test for Umver&amp;Ity of Washington Se'
~ ~ the .agency, the !hat mcl'!des field work in rna- Townsend Hall, Office of Over- Graduate St;udy in Business atUe. Robes required.
SCHOOL OF PHABJIACY, Sunfirm lineup meludes: Jack JOr ~ncan cities and in Ap- seas ~cademi~ Programs, for (ATGSB ) and a 2.5 grade
~ay, May ~. Butler Auditor. Anderson, September 10; Ab- pals,chis, and a group dynamics more infonnation.
pomt average.
• ble Ho1fman. October 2;_ Lester mstitute.
The program, organized by
For further information con- Ium, Capen Hall, 3 p .m . Speak. Maddox, N~ 1; Bill Rus- . Students re~ with ssm- the University of California tact Dr. ':!'homas, ~partment e~: ~tin Rein, local pharmaeall, March 19, and Howdy pies from a mid-6\liDIDe.r ar- _integrates ~ study of film
of lnduslrl&amp;l Engineering i54 =~ wmner of the Daniel B.
Doody - . Bulfalo Bob, Jan- ~logical dig will have the !h• hUJIU!1llti~ and emphasizes Parker Engineering.
'
Snuth Award for 1973 R&lt;&gt;bes
uary 23.
·
option to date them using ra- 1ls relationship to the otlier -· - - -- - - -- - - . n~t required, (IncludeS Medidioaubon and other "nuclear arts. Students
expected to
cinal Chemistry, Biochemical
HANDBOOK
AWMNI-FACULTY ~
?ock" tec:hn!ques
enrolling have some background in film A recently-published• Faculty/ Stall ~harmacology and PharmaceuHandbook has ileen distributed to tics from the Faculty of Health
The q-naiN 011~1111 t.cul· m a sPec I•&amp;I' third &amp;ellli.on an~ a proficiency in French
Sciences.)
ty, ltall and atumnl. Interest and courae that utilizes the campus ~hic:h will enable them to parti- facultyl staff and campus offices
DIVIS.ION OP UNDEBGB.ADUATE
daslN to 1111JP01t an l\iumnl.facul- nuclear J:e&amp;Ctor. Blackhurat sees Clpate _actively in the courses. The handbook is lnanded to an:
ty Center In Amhent was mallad c rea t i v e and ~ For this purpose there is an in- s~r ques_tions concerning Univer- snm~ (special majors and
to 2.500 1aculty4tall and 4,000 .~ulinB like .this as one of teuslve session in September Sity pollco.., practices, facilities two-year degrees ), Satunlay,
al!hnnlu111ortllis-. ~ ,..
the and pctober preceding"the aca- and servl~s. and to indicate where M~ 19, Faculty Club, Dining
more complete infonnatioi, may be ROOm.Charl 1:30 p.m, Speeker: Dr.
~to
the Uni..a!ty.
am .mU.e to demic year for the study of fdllnd.
..Each campus office unit
es 1L V. Ebert, _deen,
by 118)' 21 10 tiiM ,.. ·
s-tons bas an open
an introduction should hive an accessible
DUS. Robes not requii.,Q.
- oulls may be •nalplod and ....nita •
pallci.
'll_le coot
program (in- for stall use. .Co pi.. may
8CHOOI; 01' AIICIIJTIDi:-rv
plaM ftla IUITU-.
~
Regiatndkm for the firat eluding travel but without room :~ from University Publications ~· May 18, 2917 Msin
8MII8IIIar cbM Ma,y 25.
and board) is $2100.
rv ~· Ext ~nslon 2228.
~:30 - P-!JL . Robes not
1

~=j,;i~=rn ~~-=~u: .=u;.~
ru}:

ffm"!:mty

ezt!;t

Commencements
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mooa

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BSIE-MBA Set

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Five Speakers

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�Mq J1, 1913

3

Commencement Lunch 4&gt; Honor
6 Retiri~g Faculty-StaffMembers
Five professors and stall Union and to students dUring University a f fa i r s over the
members who will be officially her tenure there. She was also years, he was a member of the
retiring frQm the University as recipient of a University Cits-. executive,committee of the Colof June 30 and one who retired tion on the occasion of the lege of Arts and Sciences for 20
Ialit year will be · honored at dedication of the new Norton years, chairman of the Comthe A&lt;fin ua I Commen&lt;:ejllellt Hall in November 1962. From mittee for Setting-Up UniverLunQileoR, Saturday, June 2, 1970 until tsst year, she served sity_ College (now the Division
at 1 p.m. ·i n the tenth ftoor din- as associate director of Plaoe- of Undergraduate Studies), and
ing room, Goodyear Hall.
ment and Career Guidance.
chairman of the Committee on
'!bey are: Dr. Raymo n d Dr. Horton
Reorganization of the College
· Ewell, former vice president for
Dr. Horton, a specialist in of Arts and Sciences, 1964-65.
researdl; Miss Dorothy M . medieval, Renaissance and ref- He was chairman of the execuHaas, former director, Norton ormation history, received his tive committee of the Buttalo
Hall; Dr. John 1:. Horton, pro- B.A. from U / B and his M.A. Chamber M u s i c Society for
fessor of history; Dr. Harriet F . and Ph.D. from Harvard. He over 25 years and a radio book
Montague, professor of mathe- joined the faculty here as an reviewer for WBEN and WGR
matics; and Dr. Oscar A. Silver- instructor in history and gov- during the 1940's. Dr. Silverman, former director, Univer· ernment in 1926, becoming a man was a founding member of
sity Libraries.
full professor in 1946. He served Five Associated Universities, a
Also being honored is Dr. A. as chairman of the History De- oooperative venture toward faMargaret Larsen, former chair- par.tment from 1948 to 1967. 1n ci 1 ita tin g communication
man of Functional Nursing, 1939, he received the Albert J . among the libraries of UI B,
wlio retired February, 1972.
'Beveridge Prize of the Ameri· Rochester, Syracuse, SUNY/
Dr. Ewell
can Historical Association for Binghamton and Cornell. He
Dr. Ewell, who holds the aca- his book, James Kent: A Study received the ''Town and Gown
demic title of professor of chem- in Conservatism. 1n 1971, he Award" of the Women's Comis~r¥ and professor of chemical
received the Samuel P . Capen mittee of the Buffalo Museum
·engmeering, served as vice pres- ·Alumni Award, presented to an of Science in 1971 .
ident for researdl from 1957 to alumnus who has made notable
last fall, helping develop the a n d meritorious contributions
University's SJ&gt;C!n&amp;ored research to the University. He is a memtotsls from minimal amounts to ber of the American Historical
more than $16 million annwtlly. Society and the Buttalo Air
Recipient of the . President's socistion of the Sons of RevoluTen medical faculty - nine
Medal for Merit in 1948 (for tion in New York Stste. He is are physicians, one an attorney
work done in World War ll), also author of Old Erie: Tlu! · -who are age 70 will retire on
he was a technical aide for tbe Growth of on American Com- the last day of August after
National D-efense Research munity.
collectively serving a tots! of
Committee, 1941-45, and opera- Dr. Monmcue
346 years at the University.
lions analyst for the U.S. Air
· Another of the Uni~ity's Nine were born in Western
Force, 1943-45. Between that own, Dr. Montague receivedn
York· eight are medical
time and the time he came to B.S. and M.A here and
'graduates ;,f U/ B. They are
U/B, he served as a chemical Ph.D. from Cornell in _1
.
rs. Marvin A. Block, John
analyst for Shell Chemical; as She joined the faculty as~urke, Clyde W. George, Marchairman of the Department of instructor in mathematics in
in L. Gerstner Ramsdell Gur--chemistry and Chemical En- ~929, beco~g a full prof
ney, L. Edgar Hummel, Joseph .
gineering, · Stanford Research m ..1947. ~ce she serv
as G . Kry.stsf, L. Maxwell Lockie,
lnstitute; as manager, Chern- acting chairman of the Depart- -Meyer H. Riwchun, and Joseph
ical Economics Service, Stan- ment, from .1~ and f!'OfJl L. Guariglia ( LLB).
ford Rese8lch lnstitute; as as- 1962-SS. Listed m Ameru:an
All will be honored at the
sistant director for program an- . aMctie_nveom[SthecumMcea,.~_hasti
"cal~ School of Med_icine's annual
alya.is, Natiooal Science Foun..._._...
,....
Tbursda
dation, and as an adviser on in- socistion of America, ·the Amer- fa c u 1 t Y meeting,
·
y,
dustrial development, Govern- ican Mathematical Society, the May- 24 • at 7 ' 30 P·'!'· m ~
ment of India. He has also been National Council of Teachers Faculty Club, Hamman Liconsultan
the Philip
" · . of Mathematics, the Association b"!!;Y·
.
:,.d other ..t..!!'...~ts. pmes of Mathematics Teachers of
Five have se~~ m the DeMisa New York Stste, Phi Bets parbnent of !ded•cme. ·
bus
Kappa, Sigma Xi, Pi Lambda
Dr. Marvin A. Block, hom
M . Haas
~ab
~S:te ofU.:: '!bets, Pi Mu Eptilon, AAUP in ~uttal? and -~ucaled . here
UniV8lllity,wasassociatedwith and AAUW. She is co-author &lt;M 25 l• 18 -a clini~_8881Stsnt
Norton Onion from 11134 to (with M.D. Monlflomery) of 1''!'fessor m med!cme who
1970, serving 88 secretary, as- · '!'.M S~ o( MaJiu!mot- !';,~~:a~,!Y .,:::.i~
~,:~lor·
of' =tdirectoa_.,Vl!_• 1C8 ().
) • Active m bol;h comAmerican M~ical Association's
...............
~"
mumty and church alfaUs, she medal of chie
t fo his
ties, and director. During the has served as moderator_ofNthe 25 years of servi~m:' the rfield
Second World War, she was Presbytery of ~esteni
ew of -'cobolism and L'- role in
-'-'~-t ~'-~of-·._,__
as_ chairman, De.·p~.t.
..
""'
.._..,..,..
.....,._....,. -- w""' York and
f C . m D us MiJJ,;'""- gaining AMA recognition cil.
ing at the University. She also ment ?
amP us
try, alcoholism as a disease.
·
served i1B actini dean cil. women • Council of Chwd&gt;es.
Dr. Clyde w. George, a 1929
for a eemester in 1964. '!be Or. _,_,_,
·
Haas Lounge in Nllflon was
A well-known campllS ~ alumn~ is a aini..u BB&gt;Cl&amp;te
named in 1'8Cl0111lition of her for over 40 yeara, Dr. Sif-- in medicine who ·joined the
m a n y COiltributions «&gt; the man, a g'radwtte of yale, joined lacul~ in 1943 as an assistant
the faculty here in 1926 and ( medicine/therapeutics) · ThiS
served as instructor, assistant intemlat and primary physician
TliANKS TO ICC
_,
· te ......~
to many was always a volunThe Deportment of History wishes p .....esaor, 889DCUl
.... ~esaor, .t eer teacher..
•
to . . - Its tlianlcs to the com pus l!_rofesaor and chairman of the
BuJialo.bom and educated
Instructlonal CommuniCIItlons Cen· ~
~~~::J:i:: (M'29), Dr. Ramadell Gumey
t..- and its tJho!olnpher tor bold,. with UIB. He also 8Bl'Wid. foe a !&amp; a ~ uaociate ~_,,
the orflliial tJho!olnphs for the number of :Yeua as,dilectiir of m medicine.wbo started in 1932
color pottralt of Dr. John UniV8lllity I..lbrarioiL Editor cil. as an aaaiatanl He ia a~
~
~m:-::~ .JIIDIN ,Joyoa'a Ellil&gt;lrGnia. Dr. mate, American Ba8rd ol InSilverman is 1iaieil in Wllo'• · WMl Medicine, 8Bl'Wid • Buf.
honor, May 13• The ~ will Who in Aniericg,and ia ui hiiD- faiO c-.al lfalpital'a first
h.lnl In the History Conle,.nce orary member . of the Buftalo oulpatiomt ~ direcfDr,
_R_oom_._20_2_01efendorf
___
• - . . - - • •~ -~ ~- ~- m and was cme .of the fOundera

Dr. Hottorl

Lesgue for Nursing and Pi
Dr. Larsen was professor and Lambda '!bets. She has eerved
chairman of Functional Nurs- . as chairman of the Committee
ing al the time of her retire- on Research a n d Studies of
ment. She joined the University District One of the New York
in 1943 as assistant professor Stste Nurses Association and
of nlll'Sing education and prior as chairman of the Committee
to that time had served as pedi- on Historical Source Materisls
atric supervisor in hospitals in of the Western New York
Seattle and New Haven and as Lesgue for Nursing. 1n 1965,
educational director at the Buf- she was cited by the UIB
falo Children's Hospital. Hold- School of Nursing Alumnae "in
ing degrees from the University recognition of ability and efof Texas, and the University of fort in guiding nursing students
Chicago, Dr. Larsen has been
active in the American Nurses toward professional and person·
A sso ciation. the National al excellence."
Dr. Larsen

Med Faculty to Salute 10 Retirees

o-·--·

u':!

:f

:!'':.

of the Buffalo Medical Group.
Dr. L. Edgar Hummel, hom
in Darien Center, is a 1931 Harvard graduate. The clinical assistant professor in medicine
has been on the faculty since
1938 and has tsken a keen interest in research. He retired
from the directorship of the
Meyer Hospital in January,
1970.
Dr. L . Maxwell Lockie, hom
and educated (M'28 ) in Buffalo, has been a clinical professor in medicine since 1932 when
he joined as an assistsnl An
Associate Fellow of the American College of .Physicians, he
has served as professor/ head of
the Division of Therapeutics
since 1939 and has made con·
tributions both locally and na-

Ophthalniology/ Otolaryngology
and American Colle1e of Surgeons.
Mr. Joseph L. Guaiiglis,
born in Buffalo and a 1928 U / B
Law School graduate, has
served as a lecturer in the Department of Legal Medicine
since 1959. He has served as
counsel to the Erie County
Medical Society IQld as asaistsnt attorney to the Buttalo
Legal Aid Bureau.

New·Campus
Supervisor
a

Dean
Fredericka •
'-'
tionally to the field of rheuma- appointed ~r of pbyaicjll
to~ of the n!tirees are Buf- ptsnt fo"-tbe new North Cam("- •- L and educated to- pus, effective im.....U.tely.
~~ogists. Dr. Martino L. Fredericka will euperviae operGerstner &lt;M'29),aclinicalas- ational and main-..ce resociste profeseor, has served apoJISibilit&amp; for buiJdlDp ant'
since 1938 when he joined as grounds on the J.200.cre facil
ty.
an assistsnl Dr. Joseph G.
Fredericka baa '-&gt; em
Krystsf ( M'27), a clinical asployed
in the~ and
sistant J.&gt;rofeseor, C81I!" . to the mamlenlmce
field for the past
·f acu.lfy m 1944 as clinical as-- 12 yean. From
1989 t.o -the
te
80C18. •
he worbd for FisherRetiring from the Depart,. present
Price Toy Co~ .i n East Auronl;
ment of Surgery is Dr. John from 1962 t.o 1989 at M001lnc.,
B ke A clinical
· te
ur ·
8B&gt;Cl&amp;
pro- East AUJOrll, and from 1961
lnc., Buf.
fessor since 1936, he was bom to 1962 for
iq Buffalo and is a Yale alum- falo.
nus ( 1928) •
'!be ClliiiPU for whid&gt;
Dr. Meyer H. ru-bun, clin- he will he ft!IIPCIIIItie will .,_,.
ical professor of opblbalmoJosy,
6 million
headed the Divisloo of Onhlbal- tually include --faetol~
molot!Y at the Childreli'a-H&lt;»- IJ"'
CC! PIOYidlna pby8ical flicili..
pita! and has ..we! aa ~ =.~thin 27,000 fultof the DeilarfDieut of ()pblbalmoJoty. 1'he Buftalo-boml.an
Prederic:b .. • 11164 padu, .
educated (M'27) .aphlhalmal&lt;&gt;- .ate of lA8alle Hlcb &amp;boo! in
gist joined the faculb' in 19IW Niepra V.U. and ...mil hilt.
t.cbelor'a ..,._ in baildlDi
88 an aaislanl Ha ia a DipJornate, American Board of . ecieDce from Bea.eiMr 1Wv.
()phthaJmolocy and a fellow tecbnle IDitllutt In
in
.
'
of the American ~ ol" 19al.

am-.

.

TrOY

�&lt;iREPORTEf(,

4

Kurtz Article Called
Farrago of Crudities

Student Contends Prof Used Faulty Logic
In His 'Expose' of~ to the University

BySHELLEYTAYWR
and fashions make up life. Tbey
~r Kurtz, in the" course
A
of incoherencies aild must be met ·and studied and of his lengthy article on demoocrudities and unfactualities analyzed. If the University or racy and bieber edUf'&amp;~on, bas
this ia the artide by Professor the kindergarten cannot cope ·developed a theory WhiCh,., to
Paul Kurtz, tbat yOU: reprint with the bot fabric of !ivins say the very least, debatable.
fmm hia .....,aziDe, The Hu- then there can be no acl&gt;olar· UDder the guise of A philosoph·
IIIIJIIi#. He ~ts the falsityt ship.
ic argument, the Professor has
of dicbotomy between · demoKurtz says: "Let me state included in Iris eJP08" some excracy and bieber learning.
riJbt off that I am in broad traoidiiwy claims !'hoot open
'There ia no IIUd&gt; thiDB. Demoadmiasious, educational staucracy and leamiJig (Dever mind
·
dards, and student participa·
the "'h!J.her:l are a Unity; not ~TTl::'tll~Tl\l'TS lion. Not only has Dr. Kurtz
a Duality. This word "higher" - y .lL yy C .Vll"f
used faulty logic, but his aria a ncmous weed in the lezicon The ....... ' - on guments are replete with inof education.
.
111 -'* • forum fOr . tho a- consistencies and false analoWlal a child learns the al- .......,. of an • nrt.ly gies.
phabet that is the higher learn- of tho fKinll tho On one band, the Professor
~ When an adolescent dropcomm un lty. We welcom8- sternly defends ·t he "excelout leams elementary English po8ltliln p • per s 1et1ers a
lence" of the university and
tbat ia higher learning. When .pennitL ·
that the ''brightest minds can
a •profi!IIIIOf of physics learns
pursue their inquiries, even if
the Popperian philosophy of
irrelevant to immediate social
science that js.his hi&amp;ber learn- agreement with a Deweyan ap- needs or psychological yearning. When a whole nation prosch to education and that I . ings." On the other hand, howlearns democracy that is the consider my .basic ethical, so- r"ver, Dr. Kurtz argues against
higher learning.
cia!, and political philosophy to students seeking relevance and
Professor Kurtz separates be· that of humanistic deinocra- -defending their right to "do
the institutional creature of so- cy ." A few paragraphs later their own thing." Is the indiciety's making, the University, he says: "Accordipg to some vidualistic inquiry of students
and builds up for it a fantasy, people ideas should be tested any less essential for excellence
called "The Higher Learning." -only by their consequences to than that of the faculty? H so, j
This is not intellectual elitism; society; but to insis.t upon this does the good Professor rank
this is the failure of tbe intel- would unduly narrow man's in- intellectual merit in terms of
!eel
tellectual horizons." This is a age alone? And if it is acodemWben a teacher in the kin- llagrant incoberency. Dewey's ic training that is his criteria
dergarten seeks to advance the philosophy is just that: what for independent research, why
mind of the .child he is engaged are the consequences of think- do University personnel autoin multiple activities :- teach- ing to society? And what is matically qualify? Is it not
ing in all its ramifications; Kurtz saying when he. claims possible for dedicated and hardwhich implies research. What to want to advance the horizons working students to earn the
can be .more fatuous than of the intellect? Isn't that a right to "do their own, thing?"
Kurtz's separation of teaching wish to advance the consequen- Is it not also possible (even
and research? He says the ces to society? Nobody objects probable? ) that there exist
University is for research and to advancing the consequences many faculty members who are
inquiry; it is for creative peoj&gt;l.e to society. Peopl~ differ as to not intellectually qualified for
to COI!le up with discoveries and the nature ol the consequences their positions and privileges?
creations. This is abysmal dis- they want for society.
.
. Furthermore, are independent
tortion. Every teacher on every
In the sense of that kind of study and experimental student
level is a researcher and an learning that serves humanity programs a necessary denial of
inquirer and a creative being. (and we must be clear as to ·t he purposes of the university
We are, of course, idealizing. what serves humanity) all and the striving for academic
But that is what we must do "learning" throughout history excellence? If so, I assume that
when we are engaged in tbe served humanity if it was some. of the publishable work
enterprise of · conceptualizing "learning." Learning that does done by my fellow students
about education.
not serve humanity is no c8nnot· be worthwhile, until,
Here is a sentence that is "learning;" such learning n.-iri! that is, they have held faculty
born in deformity of illogic: doctrination and force and com- posts. And, if that is true, how
"Ideas may be irrelevant to im- pulsion and demagogy and per- long must they be employed?
mediate social problems, but sillage and creedaliam and ten years? two years? one year?
they may be relevant to the mythology and habituation and six· months? a day? •. .
d_eeper1 intellectqal interests of . encrusted custom and fetishism
Magnanimously, Professor
man." This is pure obscuran- and superstition and obscur- Kurtz agrees that primary and
tism. No such thing as ideas antism.
Learning, knowing, secondary level education is neirrelevant to the immediate so- studying, probing, exploring, cessary and des.irable. In fact,
cial p"?blems. The ideas con- questioning, criticizing are all be calls univerSal and free edoemed with social problems are essential aspects of the way of ucation to that point "prQgresideas and social and intellectual life that is democracy and ed- sive and democratic." Blit that
8lld relevant. This is a tsutolo- · ucation. So, there can be no is where his democratic spirit
gy. · All immediate. social prob- question of compatibility or in- abrupUy stops. Although he
lema are the deeper intellectual compatibility between educa- realjzes that "so many· jobs in
interests of man. Poverty is a tion and democracy. The life • society are clbsely geared to
crucial social problem; and it of the Mind in all its abstrusity college educations," be chalis a very deep intellectual in- advances man. If people do not lenges open admissions.policies
·l erest. Kurtz loves dichotomies. take this then they need more arguing that only those suffi.
He creates th&lt;;st like bubbles and more learning. More learn- cienUy talented or motivated
put of a clay pipe. -It all comes ing means more democracy. should attend universities ..Does
from the initial distortion: tbat More democracy entails ·more he not realize that men and
the University is a community learning. And if we fail in this women, oppressed from birth,
of scholars engaged in ihquiry it is because we still do not who have grown up in environand research: All sch09ls are know how to educate. If our ments depressing to the mind
communities of scholars.
education does not educate we and spirit, wbo have struggled
Kt!IU asys we sbould be free are not advancing learning to survive in totslly non-seafrom the pressures of the mar- high or low (what a loathsom~ demic, indeed anti-academic,
ket place and from the fads dichotomy) .
atmospheres will need greater
and fashions. Perfect inanity.
-KAIITIN WOLP90N
impetus, an enforced motiva'Ibe market place ·and the fads
Woodridge, N .Y tiQ.n to suca!ed'? Does he not
that "exacting
of
excellence"
can bestaudards
consistent
- - . . , . . . - - - . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -· see
with schools where open admissions policies exist? Does he
not see tbat the university does
society a service, not by
sting a "
·-leisure class of
£ ,_.,... - - ' " - . . . . . . . ,.,.,.., .... . ,......,.,. . , ,.. ~ ol u...
.......- ......_ sc.e. u~ o1 ,.., l'cwl: • lh#l.tJlJo. .JI3S • • Sl.. . .. , those ag~25,'' but by ad•· r. tcu. ~U~t.W ~ ....· ,._,., • a.a. 2u, 2.10 .......,. . . , , _ mitting a larger spectrum of
(,.,._ 2i21J.
.
people than ever before and,
therefore, all~ a greater
proportion of disadvantaged
groupS to experience (even if
· not to graduate from) . institutioils .o f hi~r learning?
EDITOII"

ram,..

ere:.

--

,

P.ti"JUCU W'AJtD ~

lfAIICF .. CAitDfPK'll
·-~­
srur ..,..,......., ....._ ...W.
oolfnrf.ur~J~D

.&amp;a'!"'S7':

s - 11. •_,.,

M.,y I 7, I 973

II-

He
tho Paint
.Again, it seems, Dr. Kurtz
misses the point. If he believes
in those, "special programs of
tutorial instruction" and believes that "those dei:lied admissiOnS ·because of race, class,
"ethnic origin, sex or economic
deprivation should be given the

opportunity to en:ter, ~ ~ ~
believes in open admissions m

every sense of the term. 'lbe

And, eeoondiy, tbat students
should not decide the impor.
tsnt questions of the university
(hiring, promotion, tenure,
etc.) due til the fact that we
would not allow support staff
to do eo.
Tbe implicaJion behind all of
Dr. Kurtz's remarks is to seperste the student from the socalled "faculty roles" in the
university. That is where I moot
strenuously d.ieeenl Not only
should studenta decide on faculcy ai'J'!'inlmenta and curriculum WJth faculty, but students
should teach, if QWiimed, as
well Concerned, intelligent
(yes, even wise) student s
should and must he ·i ntegral
parts of all such decisions. It
IS not only nepessary to "reSp&lt;?lld" to their needs, it is their
nght to be included. What does
Dr. Kurtz fear in this regard?
Is he afraid that sddenly the
democratic ideal, the free competition of ideas, will not serve
his interests? Does he not realize that, were that to be the
case, the outcome of such open
discussions would be most just?
Clearly, if differences in decisions were the result of student
participation, then student participation is essential for just
decisions. If there were no differences m policy with students
involved, then what would be
the problem?

added sense with which he d.iaaF""'! is of his own creation. ~t
18 a kind of acbolarly panlllOUl
which invades his article; he
seems in mortal ·fear of universities meening "all things to all
men." Somehow in his narrow
approach 1o U.:. question, he
has decided that open admissions is necessarily mconaistent
with those amorpbous, still und e fined "standards of excellence." Clearly; that is neither demonstratively nor deductively proved.
In tem1S of the educational
content in universities today,
Dr. Kurtz is alao wary. From
his point of view, students writing their own course projects
and experimenting -with selfgrading procedures are not
moved to do so by any sense of
"academic inquiry" t)ut, instead, are simply trying to glide
easily through school. As a student and one who took the more
traditional route ·t hrough departmentsl requirements (Philosophy ) and distribution demands, lef me assure ·t he Professor ·that I remain unconvinced ·that my course of study
has benefitted me in a way a
program of my own making
would not. Surely, Dr. Kurtz
.would agree that it is not requirements per se that make The Most Pernicious Idea
universities good nor innovation
The most pernicious idea in
per se that makes experimental all of t h · h
· tha
programs bad. Rather, it is the "
1 s.. owever, lS
t
individual course of .study or _ only those mvolved and those
the individual student's project who "'!-ve some comP'!ten~ an?
that should m 0 , t fairly be expertise should dec1de. Is 1t
judged. And, if that ; 8 tru~. let not c!ear that . students are. uius not condemn all such pro- tally mvol.;'ed ':" the edu_cat!ongrams nor praise all such uni- al process. Is 1t not ~e1r n~ht
versi\}1 requirements. To be to see that good teaching (which
most fair, it would be far better ts very .rare) .and g&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;4 co~
to evaluate each tradition and are avallable m the umvers1ties
e a c h innovJtlve program in they help to ~pport? Do !!'ey
light of to day's educational not have ~e co~P:"tence to
goals.· If this were done, Dr. /)ldge ~&lt;;I,Ung ab1hll~ ~d the
Kurtz would be shown (by his
exper~1se from survlVmg the
peers not students) that the education tbey have had for
conte;,porary search for rele- twelv~ to twenty years? How
vance and 4X~:"'rimentstion in can one "'! &amp;W'!f" of the thf!"'ts
higher educabion is. "9 asset to the umvers1ty have no 1dea
for all concerned. Slirely · the ?f the ~Is _to ?the students
Profess 0 r remembers when m that mstitution. .
Latin and/or Greek was a com. For those who remam unconmon requirement in universi- vmced of th""!' threats, I would
ties. And he must remember sugges~ a bnef study of the
stories about when euery course Collegmte System. For those
was required. Does be therefore unaware of what students can
believe that the progress of edu- do, study any one
the ~~­
cation towards the needs and leges, such!"' \Yomen s Studi~,
wants of society should be ·halt- and JUdge 1t WJth the most rlged for the sake of tradition? o~us ''staudards of excellence."
Does he not realize that
Students work collectively with
university takes sufficient steps yolunteer factilty to both organalreadr to counteract experi- u.e and teach m that program. I
menta programs (witness the would challenge anyone to find
stepchild-like treatment of the a course that is not both releCoUeges)? Finslly, isn't it clear vant and traditionally_ rigo~.
that today's movement towards or one student teaching assJS·
individualized ~programs, what taut who does not demand exOr. Kurtz calls "involvement cellence from heiseU as well
and commibrient," is fast ap- !'$ her students. And yet, there
proaching the Gemian ideal of lS no need for concern, Dr.
lehrfreiheit - lernfreiheit, t h a t Kurtz, none of ~ OOI1l'l!""
students learn what they want can be used for ruther majOr
to learn; teachers ·teach what or distribution credit, and no
they want to teach? And can one can gradua~ ft.Om t ~a t
he not see that faculty. are not pro~, DO "'!'!te&lt; how exdiscarded by these new pro- , cellent.
g;nuils, b u t are essential for
Ms. Taylor i8 a Be1liDr in the
them? We are not asking our
teachers to leave us to our ef- Philosophy Department and
forts; we are asking them to will nut J.ear Hlin · a joint
join us in collective and serioUs program, .D.-Ph.D., in Law
and Philosophy. ~
work.

"!

u.;,

Seporeta Paint

One last point made by Dr.
Kurtz concerning students deserves a separate treatment. Although he admits that ''we need
to. trust studentS as adulta" and
that "students ought to be involved in many or most decisions concerning themselves "
he would deny them that right.
Depending on ·arguments froin
loose - analogies, K u r tz heie
maintains two points. First,
students should not be involved
with curriculum decisions because cancer patients may know
their pain but no.t their cure.

Lovell to Visit
Sir Bernard Lovell, profi!IIIIOf
of radio astronomy at the University of MandJester ·and director of the Radio AStronomy
Station at Jodrell Bank (England). hils accepted the Distinguished Visiting Lectureship
of ·the Faculty of Natural Sci·
e n c e s and Mathematics for
1973-74.
.
Sir Lovell will be vlltting the
University, October 9-12, 1973,
and will present lectures· on
r o u r consecutive evenings at
8:15 p.m.

�Mq 1 7, 1973

To the C..mpus Community :
" In Pun;uit of Excellence: A Basis for
an Affirmative Action and Equal
Employment Opportunity Program -at
\.State University of New York at Buffalo"
reaffirms the Univen;ity's longstanding
commitment to equal employment
opportunity regardless of race, color, sex,
national origin, religion, or age. It affmns
the commitment the Univen;ity has
undert.aken, and continues to undert.ake,
.to correct any identified underutilization
of women, minorities, and other
appropriate grouping.&lt;, and to provide
them equal compemation, in accordance
with the principle of equal employment
opportunity and applicable government
directives and laws and State University
guidelines.
The document specifies or calls for the ·
development and implementation of
policies and procedures and the collection
and analysis of essential data designed to
ensure afflmlllive action and equal
empl oyment opportunity. It Uligns
responsibility for theae tuks. It provicla
for the appending of such policies,
procedures, and analyses to · this buic
document, with the whole coJlltitutina
·the Univen;ity's complete Affirmative
Action and Equal Employment
Opportunity Propam.
.
The basic document wu drawn with
the consultation of the Vice Presidents,
the Academk: Affairs Council, chiirrnen
of the Ficulty Senate and the
Prof!ssional Staff Senate, the Committee
on the Recruitment and Promotion of
Women, .the &lt;:o~IAA, _Qll _ Miootit)l. . ,

F acuity and Staff Recruitment, the
Office of Equal Opportunity, and other
faculty and administrative . persons.
Publication ensures that tbJs consultation
will continue throughout the
development of the full program. It also
emplwiza the intent of the Univenity to
widely publicize ita actions In affirmative
action and equal employment
opport11nity; for although the primary
responsibility and authorjty' for the
program must be borne by the President,
the Vice Presidenta, and the Director of
Equal Opportunity, it Is clear that the
Provosts, Deana, Department anct
Prosram Cb.ainnen, and other unit leaden
must carry-and be held IICCOUDtable
for-m.uch of the operatlonll
responsibility.
·
Together,-theae penons-and, In fact,
aU members .o f the camp~s
community-c:.an help create an
institution In wbicb the jultk:e of
affarmative actioo and equal e~~~ployment
opportunitY is a reality.
·
.
l -llOIIEilT L IICET'lmt

,_,

I. OVERVIEW
The State Uottenity at Buffalo bu
pursued excellence in ita development u
fiut a private and then a p)lblic
institution. In doln&amp; 10, it bu recopized
that the attainment of that quality ill the
roles the Univenity bu ~ for itaelf
depends greatly upon the capecitiel of
lndMduaj penons. For tbJs .--.. the
Univenity bu IOilgbt within the~
of ita resources to attract the most
_capable faculty, .professional and-.SJppprt •'·

�Jlay iT, 1973

6

.

'

University, to comply with government ·
immediately and formally incorporated in
remembered that affirmative action ind
staff and students. However,-our pursuit
-directives an~ laws, will work through
·the University's continuing operations.
equal employment opportunity must
of .,;cellence for too Ions wasllmlted by
State University to remedy such instances
That assurance is our first concern. As
become a responsibility of ali persons 1D
~ comparatively narrow vision of the
according to chapter nine, section four,
necenary data are systematically
the University. All faculty, professional
range of human talenL
•
collected and mechanical specifics
and suppOrt staff, and Ill students: each
1bat vision was not peculiar to this
"A Plan for Equal Employment
. elaborated, these will be incorporated
has an attitudinal responsibility in tbe
institution or to hilher education; it l).as
Opportunity in State Univemt:Y of New
within or . appended to this basic
University's broader-based pursuit of.
·pervaded tilt, society. No statistics are
· York."
needed to dlfCument the obvious; that is,
excellence.
document; the Whole will constitute the
b. The Vice Presidents· for Academic
University's formal Affirmative Action _ .
race, color, leX, natiooal origin, religion,
Arfain and Health Sciences and the Vice
and
Equal
Employment
Opportuqlty
.
and ase bave often determined
President for Operations and Systems, in
• Program. Therefore, tbe foUowing basis
JV. PROCEDURES
employment opportunities? and the wne
.consultation with the COD)Dlittee on the
for an Arrurnative Action and Equal
A. F-'ty
factors bave fnquendy served u
Recruitment and l!!'omodo.n of Women
Employment Opportunity Program is
I. Reauitmmt .
limitations to adnacement and reward
and the Committee on Minority Faculty
established at the State Univenity at
a, The "Affirmative Ac~on Facul~y
once emP.(oyment bas .been secured.
·
and. Staff Recruitment, ilso are to devise
Buffalo.
·
Recruiting Procedure" now 1D effect will
The (roe society for wbicb we strive is
a proc'tdure which ensufes and
continue to be adhered to by ali
one in wblcb there are no artifacial .
documents the fact that any salary
Ill.
RESPONSIBILITY
AND
AUTHORITY
concerned.
The salient features of this
barriers to the realization or· an
increase above that specified
procedure ensure a fun descripti\)D Of the
individual's run potential In this nation,
contractually is not subject to ·racial or
A. ~President . is the locus of
position to be .filled ; a sta.tement of
we have moved slowly, at drnel haltingly,
sexual bias. The procedure will be
qualifications felt necessary w meeting
responsibility . and authority for
but al ways inexorably, toward .the
reviewed by the Direttor of Equal
afllrmative action and equal empfoyment
the responsibilities of the position; _an
creation of. such a system. That
Opportunity and forwarded to the
aggressive search for women and nunonty
opportunity at the S~te University at
movement, spurred by persons who have
for approval.
.
President
candidates; in equitable selection process;
Buffalo. Within the authority granted to
suffered unnatural ·restraints to their
c. Current policies relating !o fringe
him by tbe Cbancellor and the Board of
and the provision of information
aspirations and achievements, has
benefits
will
be
reviewed
by
the
Director
necessary for constant monitoring of
trustees, be will ensure the establishment
expanded . our vision of the range of
of· Equal Opportuwty to determine that
and enactment of recruiting and hiring
affirmative action and equal employment
human talent; It has broadened our
llicse policies are devoid of discrimination
pr41:edures thlt will resu!t in the
opportunity progress.
'
pursuit of excellence.
~ baSed on race , color, sex, national origin,
increased utilization of the talents of
b. It is recogruzed that faculty
Two tasks at the ~ce of higher
relijlion, and .g.. Findings will be
women
and
minorities
in
ali
units
of
the
Positions of identical or similar rank can
education are those of conservation and
reported in writing to t.•e President.
Univenity; he will ensure equitable
require duties that may vary conSiderably
cultivation. These have encompassed both
Further
policies, if determined by and
evaluation and promotion procedures at
in natut'e or emphasis from department to
knowledge and hUVWt potential ; yet in
applicable only to this campus, also will
every level of employment; he will ensure
department as well as within the S!ffi"
the realm of potential, we have been
be
reviewed
by the· Director of Equal
equal compensation in comparable
department. ThiS variance seems to
concerned almost exclusively with
Opportunity with findings reported in
circumstances of employment; he will
preclude any description that would be
students. today, we are called upon to
writing
to
the
President before such
ensure the compilation and analysis of
comprehensive enough to be appUed
extend this concern more than ever to all
polici~ can become effective.
data necessary for· the -establishment of .
meaningfuny to ali positions of the same
levels and among ali constituencies of the
realistic goals and timetables within each
rank. Therefore, I t is especially imporfiilt
· Univenity.
4. EvabJ41ion and Promotion
unit of the Univenity; he will ensure the
to the pote~tial candidate that the initial
One means of enlarging the scope of
a. Peer evaluation is basic to th e
establishmen
i
of
those
goals
and
description of every pOsition be clear In
these traditional tasks is through an
proccss.of academic promotion. Although
timetables; and he will ensure the
its statement of responsibilities and
Affirmative Action · and Equal
the process is by nature discriminatory , it
creation of an . effective monitoring and
Employment Opportunity Program. As
duties.
may not discriminate on the basis of ra ce,
evaluative system for affirmative action.
c. Desired qualifications will be stated
the title indicates, a passive stance in this
color, sex, national origin, religion, and
In meeting these responsibilities, the
area is not sufficient. The institution
in terrns of the minimum necessary to
age. Peer judgments are to be concerned
President, will use the fuU moral suasion
must demonstrate its broader
satisfactorily perform the duties of the
with quality ; specifically the quality or
of his office as well. as ~exercising such
commitment to cons'ervation and
position at this University. Qualifications
scholarly achie·1ement and promise ,
other authority as he feels -is necessary for
.cultivation; and it must convey that
other than the traditiQllal ones· may be
teaching effectiveness, University service,
the successful functioning of the
commitment to those persons whose
stated if there is reason to believe that
and community service. There can be no
Affirma'tive Action and Equal
freed abilities can take them to higher
these are indicative of a candidate's
formula specifying the individual weigh iS
Employment Opportunity Program. this
ability to perform the described duties.
achievements.
that should be assigned to these variou s
will include the use of his discretionary
The content of such a program-no
d. In addition to utilizing the campus
endea¥Ors. Each case must stand on its
authority in the development and
less than goverrunent policy and the
resources of the University·wide
own, and evaluations must take into
administration of the University budget.
law-is subject to the inconstancies· of
Committee on the Recruitment and
account the thrust of the proposal in
B. Vice Prasldon1s
current wisCiom. However, susceptibility ·
PTomotion of Women and the
terms of the University's mission .
I. The Vice Presidents are charged
·.to change must never be allowed to
University-wide Committee on Minority
b. Possible variations in duties among
specifically with responsibility for the
Faculty and Staff Recruitment, as well as
constrict the aim of affirmative action,
faculty positions of identical rank have
implementation of the Affirmative
following the University's posting ~ been acknowledged. The variations may
which is to bring down those externally
Action and Equal Employment
procedures, each academic unit seeking to
imposed barriers that .are wasteful of
themselves change from year to year
Opportunity Program in their own units.
fill a position will be expected to exercise
human resources and that are limiting to
depending upon changing faculty
In addition to their unit responsibility
its own initiative to identify and inform
the pursuit of exceUence.
interests
and abilities as well as
and authority for the total University
off.campus women and minority
departmental and program needs. In view
program, the Vice Presidents also have
candidates whose merits entitle them to
of this changeability, a just evaluation by
II. TH E INTENT AT BUFFALO
authority to develop auxiliary affirmative
consi deration. These efforts are to
peers requires some documentation on a
It is generally acknowledged that
action and equal employment
complement traditional academic search
periodic basis; e.g., annually,
the
affirmative action 'a nd equal employment
opportunity plans which are. consonant
procedures.
specific duties required of/and pen":\med
opportunity are especially needed in
with the aims. and procedures of the
regard . to the initial and continued
2.
Selecliom
by/the
various
members
of
lr\
acadenuc
Univenity program. These w~uld become
employment of women and minorities.
a. The qualifications presented by
unit. Therefore, the Vice Presidents for
operative after being reviewed by the
These persons constitute more -than half
candidates are to be appraised relative to
Academic Affairs and Health Sciences, in
Director of Equal Opportunity, approved
of tbe nation's population; and , as the
.
the
description
of
the
positl6n
being
consultation
with the President'• Board
by the President, and appended to this
sought and to the organizational and
United States Commissioner of Education
on Faculty Appointments, Promotion,
basic document.
noted in his report to Congress on, the
and
Tenure,
the Committee on
academic
qualities
and
directions
which
C. Direo:tor of Equal Opportunity
Education of t/u Gifted tmd Talented,
are the prerogatives of the responsible
Recruitment and Promotion of Women,
I. The Director of the Office of .Equalthey represent the ,nation's largest
authority
within
a
particular
academic
and tbe Committee on Minority Faculty
Opportunity participates directly in the
untapped spurcc of human potential.
unit
and Staff Recruitment, are to devise a
formulation of affmnative action and
The State Univenity at Buffalo
procedure to incorporate Ibis feature in
equal employment opportunity policy
b. It is acknowledged that personal - the faculty promotion process. The
already b.u committed itself .both
and procedures through the role of
judgments form an important part of the
organizationally and financially to the
procedure will · be reviewed by the
advisor to the President. The Director will
selection process. Such judgments, as
task of freeing this potential. Through a
Director of Equal Opportunity and
be instrumental in the development and
provided for in the Search Procedure
forrnol Affirmative Action and Equal
forwarded
to the President for apprgval
.establishment of the Univenity's
Report, must be demonstrably free of
Employp10nt Opportunity Proamu, the
and adoption.
Affirmative Action and Equal
prejudice related to race, color, sex,
University's continuing · efforts will
c.
The
President'•
Board on Faculty
Employment Opportunity Program and
national origin, religion, and age (in ali
beco.m e more systematic and
Appointments, Promotion, and Tenure,
will participate in the design and
instances
in
this
document
within
the
cOmprehensive, encompassing four
in consultation with the Vice Presidents
implementation of daia collection and
limits of University. retirement policies).
categories of persons within tbe
for Academic Affain and Health
monitorlns and evaluative systems, as
institution. These are: faculty,
3. Compensation and Fringe Benefits
Sciences, the Committee on Recruitment
well u participate in tbe identification of
non-teacbina professiOnals, support staff,
a.
The
basic
faculty
compensation
is
and Promotion of Womeil, and the
affirmative ·action problem areas within
and students.
•
an academic-year salary. this is based
Committee on Minority Faculty and Staff
the University. Among other duties,
Wble much bas .already been done,
upon State Univenity of New York
Recruitment, will review the procedures \
authorized by the President, the Director
additional affitrna!Mo action IIICUWeS
policies, ecOnomic facto(\ within a
followed by the board and ensure that
will be responsible for providing
will be Instituted within each or these.
particular discipline, · the budgetary
tl!ey protect to whatever degree possible
assistance, information, · and
catesories of ·persons to lead tluouaboJJt
situation of a specific academic unit, and
against the e&gt;tercisc of bias based on·race,
interpretation to all University officers in
tbe University to· an ~d utilization
upon an individual's background,
color, sex, national origin, religion, and
teBlfd
to affirmative action and equal
of the talents of WOIIIIII and minorities,
experience, ability, duties and
The completed statement of procedures
ell)ployment opportunity; for developing
and to asuno fair 111!1 tiCJ'III treatment in
responsibilities, Iensth of service, and his
an lnforrnol &amp;rievance meclwtisrn; and for
will be reviewed by the Director of Equal
the prorillon__of bedtllts to Ill women
prospective or actual wOrth to the
cultivating cbanneb of communication
Opportunity . and submitted to the
and mllloridel •
are or wil be
both -within and outside the University ""llniyersity. Salary parity in terrns of
President for approv'al- and adoption.
memben of the Uniyenity community.
affirmative action and equal employment
which are -neceasuy to the success of
d. The grantins !» tenure must be
Some of dlele meuures wiJ be common
opportunity col\lists of a salary based
afJirmatlye action and equal employment
viewed seriously in terms of its Ions-range
to .U ~ otbeD WI! pertain Ollly
only on the previously mentioned factors,
oppor!UDity.
effect upon the University and particular
to ~ JIIOUpl. Some IIHIIIIItel ·.,.;
comidered jointly or singly, and oot in
academic. units. Alao, the noceosity of
llready in effect or wll be cnactecl
Altbousb the .President must
any . manner upon race, color, ~ex,
infusions of new and different talents
llllllllldiately; otben ... - aequlre tbe
ultimately leiJ)OIIIiblllty for the . national origin, religion, and II"· The
within the University's uaclemic units is
_ , . . . . ad Ullylla ol • Uta base
Implementation of tbe Afllrmative
University will undertake an initial salary
acknowledaed ... Neveltbelea, promotion
be(ono they can be lilly lllallllobed.
Action and · li'l"al Employment
analysis according to government and
.from within the unit wtJI be considered in
The p111pCa ol lbi&amp; doc:uiMat II to
~and Wbio the Vice
State University guidelines, as D()ted in
fillins aenlor-level pol(tions and will be _
Prel!denta-411 conjunction wltb ·the
prcwlde .ttbout delay - • seaenJ
(E.J.a.); the analysis will be conducted
initiated when. such an•act II compatible
Dlrei:tor · of Equal Opportunity-are
proceclunl plan wbldlwll
that
annually thereafter; u noted in' (G.3.b.).
with the academic uplrltlons of tbe uniL
1M I'd . _ of af!kmalift 11CtioD and
operationally responsible for. action in
In cues. where salary variations are
hi the eventrtbe promotion from within
theae ""!4. related area, ~ , siiClO!Jd be
equ! _e~pl~yme~t . ~PP-..itf. II
o~viollsly. due to . !&amp;ce or aex, . flte
the 'unit Is tiot feulble, tb~ rationale for

"lf

as

.-ceo

�MIIY 11, 1913

the negativ-e decision must · be
documented . Therefore the Vice
Presidents for Academic Affair&gt; and
Health Sciences, in consultation with the
Vice President' for Operations and
Systems, the Committee on the
Recruitment and Promotion of Women,
and the Committee on Minority Faculty
and Staff Recruitment, will propose an
amendment to the Authorization to
- RecNit Forsn in the "Al'firmative Action
Faculty Recrultins Procedure" which' will
provide this documentation. The
amendment will be reViewed by the
Director of .Eq~ Opportunity and
forwarded to the President for approval
and adoption.
B. Non-TNChi111 Profeaionol Staff
I. &amp;cruitmmt .
.
a. The "Affirmative · Action Faculty
RecNitment Prooe~ure," including the
amendment ~fled in (A.4.d.), will .b e
adapted for' application to the
non-teaching professional atafT. This
adaptation, which is to retain the silient
features of the faculty procedure, will be
the responsibility of the Vice Presidents,
chaired by the Executive Vice President.
They will act in consultation with the
C onunittee on the Recruitment and
Promotion of Women and the Committee
on Mldority Faculty and Staff
Recruitment. The completed procedure
will be reviewed by the Director of Equal
Opportunity and forwarded to the
President for approval and adoption.
b. The . procedures for the current
"non-teaching Prof=ional Jobi' Review
and Evaluation Program" will continue to
be followed to obtain clear job
descriptions and statements of desired
qualifications for all positions in ~this
category . . Additionairy, the v ·
Presidents, chaired by the .Executive Vace
President and in consultation with the
Comffiittee on the Recruitment and
Promotion of Women and the Committee
on Minority Faculty and Staff
Recrui!ment, will supplement this
program with a 1procedure which ensures
that job descriptions and stat~ments of
qualifications :are maintained on a current
basis. The prbpolal will be reviewed by
the Director of Equal Opportunity and
forwarded to the President• for approval
and adoption.
c. The stipulations in (A.l.d .)
concerning an academic unit's 1,1tilization
Of campus recruitment resources,
adherence to the posting procedure, and
the display ~initiative in contacting
wented offufilomen and minority
candidates are
appticable to un!ts
seeking non-teaching prof=ional staff.

2. Sil«:tion
'
a. The comments concerning faculty
selection in (A.2.a.) and (A.2.b.) are
appticable to all units in the selection of
non-teaching professional staff.
3. Compensation tmd Fringe Benefits
' a. The basic compensation for
non-teaching professionals is an annual
Salary. This is basell upon !he same
facto11 tisted in (A.3.a.). Salary parity. is
similarly defined according to · the
provisions · of (A.3.a.). Additionally,
comments in (A.3.a.) about salary
analysis and the correction of identified
discrepancies based on race or oex are
app-licable to the non-teaching
professional staff.
b. The saine or l similar proced.ure as
that describCd in (A.3:b.) to ensure that
any salary increue ·above the
contractually apecifled is not subject to
bias based on race, color, sex, national
origin, telipon, and li!O will be made ·
!Pplicable to the non-teacf!in~
professional staff. The Vice Presidents,
chairtd' by. the Executive Vice President
and in consu!Jat(on. with the Committee
on the ' Recruilllieat• and Promotion· pf
Wo~MD and. the Comniittee on Minority
F acuity aad S~ · RecrUitment, ·are
respooslhle for dewlopfug this procedure,
wbich 'will be rmewed tep~~;&amp;tely from or
tOJ!Otber with 1he procedure in (A.3.b.)
by the .Director of ~!.quai. Opportunityand forwarded to -the P•dent for
approql.
.
c. The ~0111 Ia (A3.c.) relating
to polic:lel de~ friDF benefits
will be appllod by the Director of Equal
Oppottuuity to befteftts applicable to the
non-teacblaa .prof-.mai staff to ensure
that· these policies are devoid of
discrimination ~ upqn race, ~or,

7
aex, national origin, religion, and •II"·
supplerrieot but do not supe11ede those o'f
dlsclptines and professional flelda, and
the Civil SOrvice. .
·
· 4. · Ewzlwztion and Promotion
have, in fact, encouraged "dustetlngh in
a . The "Performance Appraisal
2. R«:tuitmmt
other academic areas. This situation in
Program· for Non-Teaching Professionals"
a. _The Vice PreSident for Operations
itself is a hindrance to affirmative action
adopted on this campus and provided for
and Sfstems, in consultation with the
' and equal employment opportunity,
by Article 33 of the Agreement between
Committee on the Recruitment ~d
wbich constitute the prinCipal concerns
the State of New York and the Senate
Promotion of Women and the Committee
of this document. Therefore, the Vice
Professional Association, and a
on Minorlty Facult-y and Staff
Presidents for Academic Affair&gt; and
memorandum of unde11tand1Jig between
Re&lt;:ruitment, will develop a proiam of
Health Sciences, in consultation with the
SPA and State . University, will be
campus procedures currently followed
VIce President for Student Affair&gt;, the
reviewed by the Director of Equal
and plan·ned which reinforce for
appropriate committees of the FlCl!ity
Opportunity to determine that this
affirmative action and equal employment
Senate, the Committee on the
evaiJ!ItiOn program is properly concerned
opportunity purposes the standard Civil
Recruitment and Promotion of Women,
witll ability and performance and
Service System procedures for the
and the Cominittee on Minority Faculty
recruitment of support staff personnel.
protects to whatever degree possible
and Staff Recruitment, will develop a
Incorporated in this program will be a
against the exercise of bias based on race,
recruitment plan adaptable to all
color, sex, national oriz,iit, religion, and
procedure designed to document
disciplines and programs to supplement
age. Findings will be reported in writing
adherence to the campus program. The
standard recruitment procedures. The
to the President. Any alterations to this
prog11m will be reviewed by the Director
purpose of this supplementary plan will
program, if determined by and appticable
of Equal Opportunity and forwarded to
be to ensure tbt those dlsciP.tines and
only to this campus, alSo will be reviewed
the President for approval and adoption.
prog11ms in which talented women and
by the Direetor of Equal Opportunity
b . Comments in (C . l.b.) are
minority perrons are obviously under
with fmdings reported in writing to the
appticable to ensuring that standard Civil
represented or not represented at all-or
President before such changes can
Service System recruiting procedures do
in which women and minority pe110ns are ·
· become effective.
not discriminate on the basis of race ,
unjustifu.bly "clustered"-make strenuous
b. Th·e competency of the
color, sex, ·national origin, religion, and
efforts either to identify and enroll
non-teaching professional staff is no less
age.
qualified women and minority persons or
important to the University than that of
3. Testing , Validation , Job
to break the pattern of "clustering."
the faculty. The benefit of attracting to
Desaiptions
Provisions will be made in the plan for
· the University pmons with. fresh
a. Comments in (C.i.b.) are appticable
the documentation of these eff9rts. The
perspecllves and demonstrated abilaties as ( to the examination and validation of Civil
completed plan will be reviewell by the
recognized. However, all units will '·Service System testing and job
Director of Equal Opportunity and
consider · the feasibility of promotion
descriptions to determine the i r
forwarded to the President for approval
equitableness.
from within the unit or from other unils
and adoption.
of the University in filling available
4. Compenmtion
c. Financial aid to students will
positions. The Vice Presidents, chaired by
a. Comments in (C.l .b .) are appticable
continue to be based on need or ability or
to the determination of salary parity
the jlxecutive Vice President and in
a combination of both , but will not be
among Civil Service System personnel.
consultation with the Committee on
provided on the basis of race, color, sex,
5. Evaluation and Promotion
Recruitment and Promotion of Women
national origin, religion , and age.
and the Committee oil Minority Faculty
a. The Vice President for Operations
2. 7Uroring, Counseling, and
and Staff Recruitment, will devise a
and Systems, in consultation with the
CUrriculum .
Committee on the Recruitment and
procedure which , insofar as possible,
a. It is University policy to maintain,
Promotion of Women and the Committee
ensures that units seeking to fill positions
within its resources, tutoring and
are appraised of the availability of the
o n Minorit y Faculty and Staff
counselirig services designed for specific
most qualified pe.,ons on campus for
Recruitment, will develop a program
groups of persons who come to the
who~ appointment t? the po_sition would
which supplements for affirmative action
University with needs which are unique
a nd equal employment opportunity
constatute a promotion. Tbas procedure
to, yet pervasive within , a particular
will be reviewed by the Director of Equal
purposes the Standard Civil Service
group. These services may supplement
Opportunity and forwarded to the
System procedures for evaluation and
services designed to serve those personal
President for approval and adoption.
promotion of support staff personnel.
and academic needs which are common
to aU students.
c. As instructed in (B.l.a.), the
This program will include ~urrent and
b. It is acknowledged that academic
planne~ Umvemty ~cuvalles m such areas
procedure for (acuity in (A~.d.) will be
courses relevent to minority and women 's
incorporated in an affmnative action and
as po_st.mg, pre·servtce trammg, .m·servtce
experiences can be beneficial to these
equal employment opportunity recruiting
trammg, and care~r co~nsehng.. ~e
~ons as well as to other members of
procedure for non·teaching professionals
co~pleted program, mclud~ng ~ prOVISIOn
the Unive.,ity. This institution, within its
to ensure that in the event promotion
which documents the appticauon of the
resources and upirations, will encourage
program, will be rev~ewed by the Director
from within the unit or University is not
the development of such cou11es in the
of Equal Opporturuty and forwarded to
feasible, the rationale for the negative
curricul um provided they have a
decision will be documented.
the Presadent for approval and adopuon.
demonstrated academic base and are not
c Support St8ff
b . Comments an (C . l.b.) are
utilized t~e sexual or racial
· 1. Generrzl
applicable to ensuring that standard Civil
"clustering."
"-.
a. As an agent of the State, the
Servace System evaluataon ~d-promollon
University must rely upon the Civil
procedures do not dascnnunate on the
c. Student groups recognized and
Service System in fulfilling its
b~~ of race, color, sex, nattonal ongm,
supported 'by the University or tlirough
rehgaon, and age.
refuirements for a qualified support staff.
student fees may not discriminate on the
D · Students . .
. .
Responsibility for this system rests in
basis of race, color, sex, national origin,
1 · ~dm_ISswns, Recnutment, and
government statute , contract ual
religion, and age. Compliance will be
relationships, and with the Department of
FinancW Aad . .
.
.
assured annually by the Vice President
Civil Service; however, the University,
a. The. Umverslty ~nsrders as tts
for Student Affai11, who will report his
acting within legal and contractual
pre .r~gattve the matntenance .of
findings in writing to the Director of
restraints and within the procedures of
admiSSions standards. and programs which
Equal Opportunity. The fmdlngs, with
the Department of Civil Service, can • may be preferenllal m terms of acadenuc
appropriate comment, will be forwarded
or creative abilaty, . servace to the regaon
facilitate the equitable operation of the
to the President.
.State Civil Service System.
and . State, and Unaversaty resources and
3. Pllzcement tmd Ho!Uing
asparauons. It also co"'!ders as ats
b. Since the System is homogenous
a. The University will not provide
throughout the units of State University,
pre~o~atave_ t~e _estabhshment of
housing that is aegrepted on the basis of
it is expected that State Unive.,ity's
a~ons cntena_WI~ these pro!!"'ms
race, color, national origin, reli&amp;ion, and
Director of Equal Employment
which may be ob!ective or subjective m
age. The Vice President for Student
Opportunity Programs (as suggested in
natu~ . and traditional or _altern~ live by
Affairs and the ·Vice President for
chapter four, section ill, "A Plan for
de~ruti~n. Furthe~ore, tt IS con~4ered a
Operations and Systems ·will develop a
Umvem':Y ~rerogative to d~terrnme that
Equal Employment Opportunity in State
procedure to ensure and document
Univenity of New Yorlc") will assume the
these cnte_n a have been. met, and suCh
compliance with this poticy. -The .
bNnt of the responsibility for liaison
determanation may co~t of ob)ecllve
pro oedure will : be reviewed by· the
with the Department of Civil Service to
measurement, the exercase of . mforrned
Director of Equf( Opportunity and
e that standard Civil Service
subjective JUdgment, ora _combmation of
forwarded to the President for approval
assur
.
both. However, no admissions program or
and adoption.
procedures m support of staff
. .
ill . t t disc· · te
be
b. 'Rie Vice President for Student
recruitment; testing. validation, and job
cntena w "! ~c .
nmma • o~
descriptions; compensation; and
construed to disc""':"'"te• on theblSlSof
Affaln' will develop a procedure whidl ·
evaluation and promotion airve the intent
race, color, ~· ~tional origin, rellgac;m,
provides documentation. that the
of the affirmative action and equal
and age. All cntena will •P.ply eq~y to
University deals In its external placement
employment opportunity programs of
all per_soos who fall wathin the p~ of
and housin&amp; activities only with penons •
State University and its iddivldual units.
• pl[!je..,~~_gos~lt1!!8Jl01 an ~y of
or f1rr111 who do not dlacriminate on the
The University at Buffalo's Director of
the _preferenttal ~reas .ment~ned
basis of race, color, aex, natfoaal origin,
Equal Opportunity , will assist ill this
prevaously. Also, an all a~os qon, and ap. This. procedure will be
pr~f~a.ms, academac or creative
tiai.son when requested ... convenely,
reviewed by the Dbector of Equal
may
ICI!llns that could be talcen
a b 1 1 t y • : w h e tb e r Ia t e n t or
Opportunity .and fornrded to tbe ·
by State University's Director of Eq.W - d~monstrated--will . be. the primary
President for appro¥al and -adoption.
Employment Opportuni~ Propams io
cnte!'on amona all cntena spedfted by
E: 0... Collectiooo
further· that oftke's·~tiai.son with the
the pr~
.
I. Scope
Department of Cml Seivice in relarll to
• b . .lhe UniVersity will continue !"
L Chapter ....,. -and chapter DIDe,
affirmative action· and ~ emplo)'!nent
recruit 'lmong qualified proopective
ection l. subllctlon C., In "A PIID for
opportunity.
,..
students reprdless of race, color, MX;
Equal Employment ()pportmjlty ill
Univenlty of New y ortt,K • well •
c. The Vice ~dent for Operationi
national orlaln, · reJI&amp;ion, · IIIII ap.
and Systems will be J:eii)OIIIibJe. on this
NOftrthelal, it Ia acknowledpd that
aovernment auldollna, ........ llld
campus for easur1na lld&amp;erence to Civil
societalattitudoa. and plictlcel lane liMa
11J11e1t .;ertain externallllcllaliemU data
to be Initially pthe:&gt;d llld then
Service System prooedum relAtina to
factors wbidl haft tended to IDblblt the
maintained oo a c:Ormll ..._ Formats
su~ staff penom&gt;el, u wolt u for
aplralioas of many talellted womn llld
for
tbe onledna aild ~tloa t1( data
'dn)Oiopins campus . ptocel~Juos .l"'llc;h . . lllinorit)' stlldents' ill . ,oome ecademlc

suslest-

s-

..

�May 11, 1913

8
are detailed in !he previously mentioned
parts of !he overall State University Plan.
External data relate to !he availability of
women and "minority group persons
whose qualifications are such !hat !hey
could be eligible for consideration for
employment in one or more of !he lhree
categories of University pe=nnel.
Internal data relate to an analysis of
University salaries and to !he actual
utilization of women and minority group
persons at ali levels of employment. Data
in both areas are necessar/ to a
comprehensive Affirmativ~ Action and
Equal Employment Opportunity
Program.
2. Rerponsibflily
a. The Director of Equal Opportunity
will be responsible for collecting external
. data and for specifying and receiving in
ordered form internal data essential to
· affirmative action and equal employment
opportunity on this campus. This
responsibility includes !he development,
in consultation with other persons
I deemed appropriate by !he Director, of a
detailed data c..Uection plan. For each of
· the three categ~ries of University
personnel" referred to earlier in this
docum&lt;nt , !he plan will accomplish !he
foDowing : (I} determine necessary and
required data , mcluding its fotm and
ordering; (2~ determine !he sources of
"!his data; and (~}determine priorities for
!he coDection of data. Among !he !hree
categories of person~, however, priority
will .be given to, in order: faculty,
non-teaching professionals, and support
staff. Within each category, priorities
mentioned in (3} will take into
consideration such factors as data
accessibility and, importantly, data
usefulness in terms of substantively
advancing affirmative action. The detailed
plan of data coDection developed by !he
Director of Equal Opportunity will be
reviewed by the Vice Presidents, !he
Committee on !he Recruitment and
Promotion of Women , and the
Committee on Minority Faculty and Staff
Recruitment, and forwarded to !he
President for approval and adoption.
b. The Vice Presidents will be
responsible for ensuring !he availability
and delivery of required internal data.
This responsibility includes !he creation
'&gt;f methods which routinize !he process
~-- br affirmative action data development,
accumulation, and access with primary
concern given to methods which are the
least complex, costly , and time
consuminS. The Vice Presidents, chaired
by !he Executive Vice President and in
consultation with the Committee on the
Recruitment and "Promotion of Women,
the Committee on Minority Faculty and
Staff Recruitment, and other persons the
Vice Presidents deem appropriate, will
provide a detailed specification of these
melh~ of routinization. The methods
wiU be reviewed by the Direcjor ef Equal
Opportunity and fowarded to the
President for approval and adoption.
· c. The Director of Equal Opportunity
wiU be responsible for the distribution of
collected and ordered data to !he Vice
Presidents, who in tum will distribute .the
data wilhin the units for which they are
responsible. The data also will be
forwarded to the President to be
appended to this plan.
d. The Director of Equal Opportunity
will be responsible for !he periodic
preparation of formal reports which, is.
·equired by government and State
University regulations, document !he
results of this University's affirmative
action program. The required reports will
be forwar&lt;\ed to . the President for
submission by him to the appropriate
-"28ency.
F . Golla 8lld TuneiM!es

.J. l'lupox

.

.

a. Rulistic goals, IS weD as timetables
indicating reasonable expectations of
prosnss toward !hose goals, will be
eitablisbed IS estimated and flexible
- "guides for helping overcome any
identifaed under-utilization of women,
minorities, or other appropriate groupings
amo111 the various employment catesoriea
itt the f~culty, non-teaching professional
staff, ind support staff.

• "f

2. RQPOIISibOity

a. Eacb Yice President will bC
re s"p on s ible for identifying the
appropriate o.rganizational _unit or units

under his juri.!diction for which the
establishment of goals and timetables will
be considered.
b. The Vice PJesidents, chaired by the
Executive v ·ce President, will be
responsible for constnicting a standard
format for the statement of goals and
timetables for each of the identified
organizational units. This format also wiD
provide for a statement of rationale for
each orginizational unit's goals; or, in the
event goals and timetables are not
required, a statement of rationale
supporting their absence . These
statements must take into consideration
the factors relating to goal estsblishment
contained in government and State
University affirmative action and equal
employment opportunity guidelines.
c . Each Vice President, in
consultapon with aU units under his
jurisdiction, will be responsible for
establishin&amp; goals and timelJibles - or
determining that they are not required for each of !he units identified according
to (F.2.a}. The establishment. of goals or determination that they are
inappropriate - wiD be based on a
comparison of the availability and
utilization data pertaining to women and
minorities distributed by the Director of
Equal Opportunity, as noted in (E.2.c.},
as well as on other factors relating to goal
establishment contained in government
and State University affirmative action
and equal employment opportunity
guidelines.
d. Goals will be numerical and set
separately for women and minorities
{which, as defmed by the Department of
Labor, are Negroes, Spanisb-sumamed
persons, American Indians, and Orientals}
when deficiencies exist and numbers are
relevant in developing corrective action.
e. Timetsbles must be based on
realistic expectations and include such
considerations as projected staffing expansion, contraction, and turnover.
f. Each Vice President . will be
responsible for reviewing goals ,
timetables, .and rationales with the
Director Qf.. Equal Opportunity , the
Committee on the Recruitme nt and
Promotion of Women, · and the
Committee on Minority Faculty and Staff
Recruitment. The Vice President will
~n forward the goals, timetables, and
ratlqnales to the President for approval
and adoption and to be appended to this
Plan with the data noted in (E.2.c.}.

3. Generrzl
a. This University does not subscribe
to the contention that .the provisiOn of
equal employment opportunity and
efforts toward the correction of the
identified underutilization of women and
minorities must necessarily be
contradictory in practice. Both purposes
will be served compatibly through
conscientious and equitable adherence to
the procedures and actions - ih which.the
establishment of estimated and flexible
goals is one element - calied for in this
Plan. Nevertheless , the University
recognizes the possibility !hat exists for
the primacy of equal employment
. opportunity to be subverted by
over-zealous attention being given to
numbers to the exclusion of
consideration for individual talents and
qualifications. Such a subversion would
be unjust to ali pe=ns and will not be
condoned in theory or in tractice by this
University.
G. Eft.ctlvo....
I. Program Imple&gt;Mntation
a. The Vice President and Director of
Equal Opportunity will be responsible for
maldng every good failh effort to ensure
the implementation of all upects of this
program by October I, 1973. In the event
that some aspe'cts cannot .be operational
by that date, the responsible person or
pe!$001 will notify !he President in
writing of !he delay, 111d !he causes of
that delay, IS well as apecifyina a new
time of· implementation. However, in-no
case should implementation extend
beyond December 31, 1973.
2. Priorities &lt;
•
, a. Priority for implementation will. be
given to; in order: faculty, non-teaching
Ptofessional staff, "llld support staff•
3, Monitorlfll and Audit
· a. An audit system is necessary to
deterf11ine the effectiveness of the

University's afflflllltive action -program.
This system will provide for analysis of
current availability and utilization data
related to women and minorities; for
analysis Qf the racial and sexual
composition of applicant flow, referrals,
selections, transfers, promotions, and
terminations; and for analysis of
University salaries.
b. Unless required otherwise by
government or State University
instruction, a full-scale audit involving the
factors in (G.3.a.} will be conducted
annualiy to be completed by October I.
{Initial data required by tbis document
will be compiled on a one-time basis
according to a February I, 1973, cut-off
date.)
c. The Director of Equal Opportunity
will be responsible for collecting the
external data and for specifying and
receiving in ordered form internal data
necessary for such an audit.
d. The Vice Presidents will be
resj\onsible for ensuring the availability
and delivery of necessary internal data.
e. The Vice Presidents and Director of
Equal Opportunity, chaired by the
Executive Vice President and in .
consultation with the Committee on !he
Recruitment and Promotion of Women
and the &lt;;ommittee on Minority Faculty
and Staff Recruitment , will be
responsible for detailing the procedures
necessary for obtaining the data required
in such an audit. To the greatest extent
possible, these procedurCl should be built
into the ongoing processes of affinnative
action , with the audit primarily a process
of tabulation rather than a completely.
new process in itself. The detailed
procedures will be forwarded by the
Executive Vice President to the President
for approval and adoption.
f. The annual audit wiU serve as the
basis · for a review of progress in relation
to stated goals and timetables. This
review will be conducted conjointly by
the Vice Presidents and Director of Equal
Opportunity, chaired by the Executive
Vice President and in consultation with
the Committee on the ~cruitment and
Promotion of Women and the Committee
on Minority Faculty and Staff
Recruitment. At this time, goals and
timetables may be revi~d by the Vice
Presidents, with the approval of the
President , according to available
information. Also , specific areas of
difficulty will be ideptified together with
actions which might resolve such
problems. The results of this review will
be reported in writing to the President by
the Executive Vice President for
appropriate action .
g. Following the development and
implementation of ali procedures in this
Plan, the Vice Presidents andJ)irector of
Equal Opportunity will be responSible for
bringing to the President's attention any
difficulties related to their effectiveness
as such difficulties become evident.
H. Additional Contributions to
Affirmative Action Eft.ctlvoneu
I. Nepotism and Maternity Lem&gt;e
a. The University w,ill foDow the
system-wide policies determined by State
University.
2. Orild Care Services
a. The University view is that child
care is the responsibility of the parents.
Therefore, the Vice Presidents of
Operations and Systems and Student
Affairs, in consultation with the
Committee on the Recruitment and
Promotion of Women and the Committee
on Minority · Faculty and Staff
Recruitment, will be responsible for
investigating the feasibility of utilizing
the Day Care Program, as presently
constituted and as envisioned upon
occupancy of the Amherst Cam_pus, fqr
the care of employee children with, the
expense of such a program to be carried
by the parents. Proprietary programs may
also be considered. The resulls of this
investigatio·n , to&amp;ether with
recommendations,• .will ·be forwarded by
the two Vice !'~~~ents to the President
for appropriate~on.
3. Advertising
·
a. The . Vice President for Operations
and Systems will be responsible for seeing
til-at all advertising relating to
employment carri_ea a notation such as:
"An Equal Opportupity/Affirmativc

Action Empioyei."
4 . Contractors, VendOTI, and
Suppliers
a. The University wiU continue to
abide by and support the procedures of
the New York State Office of General

Services.
b . The Equal Employment
Opportunity Programs . Officer of the
State University Construction Fund is
responsible fo.r equal employment
oppurtunity development in campus
cons truction programs and wiU be
supported by this University. '
c. The Vice President for Operations
and Systems will be responsible for
obtaining from ali vendors and suppliers
not covered in (H.4.a. and b.}, and dealt
with directly by this University, a
certification that they do not
discriminate irr their employment
practices on the buis of race, color, sex,
national origin, relision, and age. The
procedure for obtairting this certification
will be reviewed by the Director of Equil
Opportunity and forwarded to the
President for approval and adoption.

5. Committees
a . Search c ommitt"s and .all
University-wide committees should have
minority group persons and women as
members when appropriate and feasible.
6. Comnwnication
a. In addition to publication of its
Affirmative Action and Equal
Employment Opportunity Program, the
University will follow its normal
information dissemination channels in
communicating its affirmative action and
equal employment opportunity plans and
progress. Also , the Vice President for
University Relations and the Director of
Equal Opportunity will be responsible for
involving community orgmtizations in
programs which can be expected to
further the University 's affirmative action
and equal employment intentions.

7. Grievance Procedure
a. The Director of Equ)ll Opportunity
will be responsible for developing an
informal grievance mechanism which will
ali ow women and minority group persqns
to seek relief from ' any discriminatory
practice within their area of employment.
This mechanism will not interfere with
the formal mechanisms established
previously through University policy and
in agreements with various employee
bargaining units. The procedure will be
forwarded to the President for approval
and ,doption.
---g. Costs
a. It is acknowledged that the
development and implementation of the
Affirmative Action and Equal
Employment Opportunity Program will
place added demands on the time of
many individuals and, in some -instances~
on the use of equipment and facilities.
University policy will be to attempt.-to
the greatest extent possible to absorb
these increases · without adding to
operating costs wlfen this can be done
without excessive disruption to the
University's educational . and research
programs. However, as need is identified,
the Uhiversity wiU seek additional
. funding through State University for the
operation of its Affirmative Action and
Equal ' Employment OpporfunityProgram.
9 . Non -State Employee;s at the
Clnivenit)!

a. It is !he sense of the University "t hat
non-State employ- lhould benefit from '
affirmative action and equal employment
opportunity within their employment
a!eas. Therefore, the Director of Equal
Opportunity will be re~or
initiating contact with
e
cb
foundation, the University a
uffalo
Foundation, and the •. faculty-Student
- Association for . th_e purpose of
ascertaining the intent " of tbese
orpnizations in regaid to affinnative
action . and eq.u_al e~ployment
opporturuty. The Director will offer ·the
services of ..tbe Office of EqUal
Opportunity ·In developina· affirmative
action an.d equal employment.
opportunity programs and convey the
results of . ':hja- liaison on a continuing
bws m w~ to !he President.
10. ArMltdmtnt
a. This program may be amended at
any time at the discretion of the
President after appropriate consultation.

�GREPOirtER,_

May 11, 1913

9

rralk

Boyer on the Budget, Tenure
AAUP Resolutio113 Support
Top April SUNY Senate Meeting · Franklin, Oppose 'QUotas'
.4
By MARVIN J. FELDMAN
·
wrrr .

it does not give rise to a sense
of retrenchment and gloom so
-~ S!&gt;riq Meatiq of tbe prev"!~talt ~ect":""ctatwon
n yearst
be.
~ Seaaiie close to The ~
""
0
haiDe 011 the campus of the judged until the sul'Plementary
at Fredonia on Friday budget is paased_ The suppleand Saturday, April 27-28. A ~~ budget emphasizes pricJa,y-loalm-apour made it im11.'!~
.
of the Health
~ lo w8lk around this
~"'
lather -Jy built ~ but
Another matter of concern
our lib\)' In 'Fred o '! 1a was the problem created by the
~ by l'!e ~ bos- Legislative ruling which manpltality of ~t &amp;"'! Mrs. dated reductions in t u ft i o n
lleo!l· The aocial _P.therlng at waivers of five million doitara
tbeir home late Friday alter- from 15 to 10 million. A cer11001\ a IJIII!cia;l for tain amount can be saved large~ bulls m that t!jll ly by a bookkeeping operation
~ ho!ne at Fredonia of requiring all those elipble
18 an oUtatanding example Of
for scholarship incentive money
New York S!ate Victor i a.n to go that route rather than ask
homes and lB so featured 10 for tuition waivers. However,
several hooks.
.
tOO-cutbacks are likely to aftect
The Frida,y morning seesion foreign students, graduate stualways leads off with the Chan- dents, and lower-middle income
cell!'f'S ~port which in tum students, but primarily the first
beglnB With the Chancellor's re- two· g r o ups. The Chancellor
sponse to 'Senate resolutions seemed to rmply that actual fipassed at its previous meeting. nancial need would be the deln !&lt;eeping with a resolution ciding factor. While this seems
callmg for the State to supply equitable for undergraduates, it
additional funding for graduate does not take into account the
stipends to offset Federal cut- realities of graduate stipends.
hacks, Chancellor Boyer noted Waivers are no longer possible
that funds earmarked for ·t his for graduate students not on
purpose were cut out of the regular stipends. If a note of
executive budget by the Legis- uncertainty were to be attached
lature, and a request for $375 _ to the tuition waiver accom000 for this purpose is psrt of psnying regular graduate stithe supplementary budget. If wpenodsuI dthfine ds~_?lveesn tm.e ras
the LeglSiature grants this reu"""""
quest it will of course be wei- uniquely poor competitive sitcome and .,;, be put' to good uation with almost all other
use even though it will obvi- u n i v e r sit i e s which grant
ously be too late to help in the wpivera automatically with the
recruitment of graduate stu- award of a graduate stipend!
dents for nat Fall.
The Chancellor made a brief
Council and Truotee Repfwoentatlon reference to trends in underAnother Sen a t e resolution graduate enrollments. While on
had called for both faculty and an overall basis applicstions
student representation on ~ocal are almost the same level as
college· councils and also on the last year, the psttem of appliBosnl of Trustees. Several en- cations has shifted- The two
ahduling m~illsthehacurrenve
beent ~-'f'&gt;-on year Agricultural and Technicoed
al schools have registered deof ·the Legislature. The suocesa cided increases, the University
of these bills depends in part Centers are ~ly constant, but
on the position taken by our the four-year coll"l!es have exCentral Administration and the perienoed a ahs.rP7decline in
Board of Trustees. Chancellor applications. If the trend were
Boyer could readily support the to continue, i t might raise queschange requested fur local coun- tions about the admission policils, but both be and the Board cies at the four-year colleges.
of Trustees were still consider- Tenure
ing wbether or not to support
Finally, the Chancellor spoke·
the augmentation of !he Board about tenure, noting that the
of Trustees. · The feer he ex- very important Keast report on
preaaed is that such a change this matter had just been remifllt open the Board to other leaaed. The Chancellor knew
claims for constituency repre- that a committee of the Senate
sentation.
was conaidering ·the question of
Two other resolutions on tenure, and he expected that
matter a of ~ employment the deliberations of the Keast
called for c:banlres in various Committee would receive carearticles of the Policies of the fuJ attention. He also noted that
Bosnl of Trustees. One change a ll:!'UP of Acsdemic Vice Preswould make the sick leave for idents were also considering the
pregnancy leal subject to arbi- matter, .and while be had not
trary administrative action; the as yet beard from them, be exother change would insert "aex- peeled that their views would
ual orientation" in the spec::ific undoubtedly differ from those
list calling for non-discrimina- of the Senate.
Chancellor Boyer could not
tion in hiring, The Chancellor
(along with SPA) su~ the bave been aware of how right
chana8 on maternity mel&lt; leave be was in referring to the Senwhicli would seem to guarantee ate Committee on Personnel
such a cbanp in the new SPA Policies: We are fortunste that ·
contract, and · in the Policiea, this bard-working committee is
hut as yet, 11011e of this bas hap.- chaired by Profeasor Sara Cicapened_ · Tbe Chancellor steted mii and also has available the
that lo the beat of his know!- expertise of our A r c h i v i s t,
edge, "aaxual orientation" was ShOnnie Finnegan. The comnot a basis for discrimination mittee was able to secure a
in CllmiDt h i r i n g practices copy of the full Keast report
tluouabout SUNY; neverthe- even before its public release,
leas, lie bealtant to ~ and their report to the Senate
out "aaxual orientation"- for 111- . was basi d upon a thorouRh
elusion Uon&amp; wilh the tradi- study of the Keast report, The i
tional o1 race, religion, Senate report COilClUII with the
8l)d aez.
major tenet of the Keast '1'8.......
port, namely that although the
. Tbe budpt always gets top tenure system gives rise to some
billin&amp; In other matters of In- problems, any alternatiw sya.
tereat In the Chancellor's r&amp;- tem gives rise to even greater
port, Tbe Cbanoellor seemed to problems especially in failing
~ aaying that we haw a bud&amp;et to provide adequate saf8lNBlds
which the sys-. can Uw wit.IL for acsdemic freedom w h I c h
It may not ezcite great entbusi- historically haa bee(i the baais
asm becaliae it conteina only of the tenure system. The Senmodeat provisiOua for powth. ate adopted the report of the
On the other hand, perhaps we Personnel Policy Committee
have turned a ~becaUM which essentially nial6rms the ·

eon-

&amp;f.!!;.,

importance of tenure in ~
education and the SUNY Sya.
tem and also deems tenure quo.
tas to be unnecessary. At the
same time~the report notes that
an ellective tenure system requires the most diligent applicstion of evaluative procedures.
To this end, the report also
contained guidelinee for
recommendations on promotion
and tenure. The main thrust of
these guidelines is to maximize
the participstion and responsibility of the acsdemic staff for
the determination of its own
quality lj.lld membership and to
restrict administrative involvement until the final stages of
implementing the decisions. 1n
my opinion, this report was the
most important matter brought
before the Senate.
The \Committee qn Professional Rights and Responsibilities pref!ented a report which
revises w:&gt; interim statement
adopted at the May 1971 meeting of the Senate. The committee also prepared guidelines for
adjudicsting allegations of unprofessional conduct in violation of the SUNY Statement
of Professional Rights and Responsibilities. In these matters,
the Senate would seem to be
guided by recent reports emanating from the AAUP. Thus the
Senate in adopting the report
is (a ) delineating c 0 m m 0 n
areas of professional rights and
respensibilities and (b ) insuring that professional rights will
not be viOlated by a failure of
due process.
Lump 'Sum AppropriaHons

By. a large margin, the Senate psssed a resolution fomlUlated by the Budget Committee
which endorsed the principle of
lump sum appropriations for at
least a small part of the SUNY
budget. This year the original
Executive Budget cslled for
such discretionary funds, but
the item was eliminated in the
final Legislative budget. There
is a request in the supplementary budget for a smaller discretionary sum. I would have
thought that all Senators would
favor a modicum of flexibility
in budgeting, but at least one
Sen'ator defended the present
overly detiilled system as being
in the best public interest.
During my previous years in
the Senate, I have observed
that the Committee on Library
Resources has been notably unsuccessful in gaining Senate
dorsement of its resolutio::
This year, however, under the
leadership of Mary Cassata, the
committee has been batting one
thousand. At this meeting, the
Senate reaffirmed its position
adopted in October, 1972, which
called for a clarification of the
librarians' status. Although
SPA and SUNY Central seem
favorably disposed towards 'resolving this matter, somehow
the matter still remains ambiguous in the current ·collective
negotiations.
The Committee on Fair Employment indicated that at this
stage they are more interested
in deviainJ .concrete ways of
implementing allirmative action
than in psaaing more reaolutions. It should be noted that
the SUNY guidelinee on alllrmiltive action have - t l y been
published. In the spirit of the
times, the Senate did pus a
Boardresolutionof~_?'Jdthating ~
• ,...,.._

the wun~

"Chairman" in Article IX, Title
C be replaoed by the word,
"Chairperson."
Sena~ ~1973-Cbalrperaon?•
will beof~
.., '""
..
..-....maaor Nancy Austin.
By Salurday afternoon the
rain bad let up to a IIP.t drlzzle, maldng the sbPrt ride b.ck
to Butralo quite tolerable. Such
~'l:.IJinail joys ol. a SUNY

The campus chapter of the
American Association of Univenoity Professors at its annual
membelship meeting Monday
unanimously passed a reaolution supporting the reappointment of Mitchell Franklin and"
another on tenure quotas.
The Franklin resolution stated that: "In keeping with the
AAUP Statement of Principles
on Acsdemic Retirement, which
holds that where ·there is nrovision for extension of services
beyond the hase retirement age,
'such extensions should be
made upon the recommendation
of representatives of the faculty and administration through
appropriate committee procedures that assure full protection
of acsdemic freedom • the
SUNY at Buffalo Chapte'r urges the Chancellor and Board of
Trustees of SUNY to concur in
the r e q u e s t of the two concemed Faculties the Graduate
School and the Administration
of SUNY at Buffalo that Professor Mitchell Franklin be reappointed for another year "
The
:
tenure quota resolution
supported the. stand of the 59 th
Annual Meetmg of AAUP and
reads as follows:
"The Fifty-ninth An n u a I
Meetmg is disturbed by recent
developments in higher education which .t hreaten AAUP
standards governmg probationary appointments and tenure
conferral. These developments
include proposals to adop$- in~titutional policies lhnt would
mcorporate a fixed percentage
range or quota for tenured fac-

ulty members at oollepa and
uruvenoities.
"Sudt·quota 8)'8teml can haw
the practical ellect of ..tabllobing an artificial- which
would become the primary and
perhaps esclusiw baais for tenure decisions, supplanting the
vital criterion of mer i l Tbe
Annual Meeting recognizes the
necessitr to maintain recruitment o '!"W. fac_ulty and the
val1111. to lnBtit:ut;ions of 1!'1!11~ange .staff planniDf, ""J"!Ci'CllY
m a time of financial ~trinpn­
cy. But we do not believe that
!"~lure quotas are required to
~re these benefitll. If new appomt,ments are "'!re~ully ;made
and If tenUre 18 )Udictoual)'
award~, the problelJlll · &amp;880Cla ted w1th a reduoed rate of meulty expsnsion should be minimized. Tbe imposition of tenure quotas may serve only to
creste a more or less permanent
class of nontenured fa c u I t Y
members, inadequately protected by the guarantees of acsdemic freedom. 1n these ci~cumstances, many able candldates will be discouraged from
entering the academic profession, and the early years of
professional activity will be debased.
"The Fifty-ninth An n u a I
Meeting, while recognizing the
seriousness of economic condilions on many campuses, nevertheless opposes the imposition
of quotas as an expedient dangerous to acsdemic freedom and
acsdemic life. We reaffirm that
decisions on tenure must represent, first and tast, judgments
on individual ~t."

CAC Gets a Van &amp; Helps
Others thru a Book Drive
By SHARON EDELMAN
R•porter St.II

~:"U.:.t~:~n ~'kd:hfv'~

All's well that ends well. The is being planned by Dr. Walter
Community Action Corps has a Hobbs and Tuisem Shishak of
van and a little extra cash, the the Department of Higher EduU/ B Library has some new cation. Their goal is to estabbooks, and somewhere in Nags- lish a lib':'~'}' of 25,000 volumes
land a college waiting to be for a Christian Colle(e_ Slliahak
born has some books ·for its hopes to start in Nagaland.
near Burma. It is agreed that
library.
Scenario 1: The drama be- Shishak will accept the unsold
gins with the Quest: in this books from the CAC.
Scenario 5: Car I in selects
esse the CAC's search for someone who might be willing to volumes from the unsold books
donate a van for their commu- to be uaed in the CAC tutorial
nity-based p r o grams , Ulti- programs, the hospital COIQp&amp;nmately, CAC Director Mark ion program, etc.
Scenario 6: A happy ending. ·
Carlin contacts Fred Tamalonis, ..A.irector of undergradul!le.hro'lrams for the U/ B
Alumni Association, who sugTbe deadline for IIUbmitting
gests that a book drive might
be the answer.
Scenario 2: Early the fol- :i:~~":"onf'\VJ~
lowing morning, letters go out ships for the Fall Semeater to the 3,000 or so dues-paying May 16. Applicatioaa IIUbmitalumni, who are notified that ted after that date will be CODthe Alumni Association is endorsing and co-sponsoring the :!;~~ :~areall~
drive. Within a week, over 4,000
SUD~Da' waiYer llPIIllcatlaas
books find their way-to the must be sutmitted before the
CAC office.
last date of . . . . .lion lar . .
Sales before, during and after ......... in wllidl you .... to
the May 6 Community-Unive.... enroll. Applicatloaa will DDt be
sity celeltration net, according granted automatically ao that
to Carlin, more than $500, but students muat cbeck with h
approximately 2,000 volumes Office ol Forei1n Studlllt Af.
remain to be sold. The Library fairs within ·~~uee ciay1l of the
claims several books f o r its start of summer " ' - lio ..,_
own collection, including a 11).
the rwult of . . ~
volume' printed edition.of Presidential notes and pape!S from
Applicat:ioae are eurrmtly
1789-1900, as well as eome dic- avall8ble In dJ8 Ollce ol ,._
tionaries and art boob.
eign 8ludent AlfaiD lar h
Scenario 3: Meanwbila, J8ck UllderimduaiB Panlp &amp;udmt
Latona ol the U/B Foundation ScbolaniJip lar the DBt - sucoessfuJiy completes aegotia- demlc y.... Tbe deadline .for
tions for tbe donation ol a van applicatioao is October 1, 1873•
fur the CAC effort. It is cleecrihed by Carlin aa a "midu-1 acbool bus," and is donated &amp;llOil,YDliiUII by a local
cWier. It is deCidea at thla
point that all proceeda from
the book drive will be 1-t for
iDsuraDoe and fDiiDJ:ena!M'8 ol.
the bu8.
Scenario 4; Word C!Q1De8 to

Tuition Waivers

=J:.,_

•

�• ., 11, JIJ13

5 Distingziished-ScientiSts Slated
For Summer Seminnr on ·'Cognition''
Five distinguished scientists
wbo have made major contributions to the study of cognitive psychology will participate
in a special summer seminar on
"Cognition and Structure," to
be held June 4 -to July 13 under
the auspioes of the Cognitive
Studies Ares. Department of
Psychology.
"The area hss sponsored a
special seminar on cognitive

l:'ci"::£:.ts~ch
dit, each summer pince 1967,"
said l)r. Irving Biederman. organizer of the program. Cogn,itive psychology is the study Oi

tsJc!f:r''::!

Piscotty Is Top Hitter

..-f

Senior c:eilterfielder Joe Piscotty (Niapra Falls) continues to. lead the nation's major
college betters with a .519 average. Pisootty earlier posted
a leading .522 in the National
C oH e g i ate Sports Servioes
weekly averages. 'lbe figures included contests through May 5.
Pisootty, reoont recipient of
the ·ECAC Medal of Merit, hss
collect,e,cl" 41 bits in 79 at bats
in 19 games. He leads the Bulls
in rtiiiS-batted-in with 22. His
fireworks include five doubles,
a triple and three homezs.
:ounnJ a home doubleheader
this spnng at Peelle Field 11
professional scouts visited · the
campus to observe him.
Coach Bill Monkanih's Blue
continues the regular season ~
day (Thursday) at Pittsburgh.
Earlier this week the B u II s
played two games at Penn State
Sunday, defeated Niagara ·here
f&gt;-2 Monday, played at Buft'alo
State 'I'ueadjly, hosted Colpte
Wedneaday and prepared to
await word from the NCAA
District #2 tournament. Penn
. State and Temple are two
strong candidates for district
play. U/ B is in contention for
one Of the two remaining
berths.
.
.

·Richardson
Named Coach
i.eo Ricbardaon hss been ~
pointed • d coach of varsity
basketball by President Robert
L Ketter.
'lbe appointment, which is
e f f e c t i v e inunediately, "was
made foUowing the recommendation of a six-member search

;::i=.= 9'ihe~~

of Phyaical Education,Becrea-

i l

tion and Athletics.
Ricbarilson will replace Edwin D. Muto who resigned
from the bead cosdling assignment March 27 after thnie aeaaons. Muto hss remained on
the .Btaff as chairman of Men's
PbyaicaJ Education.
Dr. Fritz in discussing the
appoinm.ot aald, '-rbe searcb
committee enthusiastically fa.
vored Coach Ricbardaon and
he is the bMt man available to
continue to develop the program 80 ably instituted by Ed
Muto.
"Leo is "ltlonily inlenlated
optimistic about buketball

and
==-7/and his_very ::i
winning reoo

aat."
7 ' ·

•,

:U _. the

~

as-

OOIIIIIlittee'a JIIQ-

jectioa lbot Ricbardaon a1.-ly
enjo,. . . . . mpport witb play-

Clll the vanity and ia amdcMw
k&gt;- caatinue to build a ....,.,.
8diedule agaiut - - ol .Jbe
aation's aat JeOpCICied l'iiiiiDL
Ri&lt;bardaon iolned tbe ~
~ an ..U.W.t laat ,_... He
- . "-1 coecb of· the -jwiior
varuty JJIOIIUL

-

rr·

.

bow man thinks, remembers,
perceives, s o 1 v e s problems,
makes decisions, and uses langUIIj!e, he explained.
'One of tbe dlemes of this
year's seminar is tbe linking up
of recent developments in cognitive psychology witb new
findings in linguistics and neurophysiology," Dr. Biederman
said. '7o this end, we've invited Professor Gazzaniga, a
distinguished neurophysiologist
noted for his studies on splitbrain human patients, and Dr.
Fillmore, a noted linguist, to

pects of General Organiz&amp;tion,"
June 4 &amp; 5; Dr. Naomi Wei&amp;stein, Loyola University of
Chicago, a well known feminist
as well as scientist, speaking on
"Detection Models and Scene
Perception," June 7 &amp; 8; Dr.
Ulrich Neisser, Cornell University, author of the leading
textbook in the field, discussing ''New Dellclo!&gt;ments in the
Study of ViSWU Imagery" and
" Cognitive Strategies: Experimental, Developmental and
Cultural Perspecti\!ei!; '·June 11
&amp; 12: Dr. Charles J . Fillmore,
University of California, Berkeley, on "Case Grammar and the

ClassiflCBtion of ~lisb Predi·
cates" and "Pmgmatics and the
Classification of D i scou rae
Types," June 9 &amp; 10; and Dr.
Gordon H. Bower, Stanford"
University, with ••An Overview
of Recent Developmenbi in
Memory Theories," "How Pea.
pie Learn Propositions,'' and
"Fact Retrieval," July 11, 12
&amp;13.
Seminars will meet at 1:30
f.;:· in Room C-31, 4230 Ridge

.

wisbP.;ass
' ett Is
'M an 0 f y. ·ear'

Students and others who
further information should contact Dr. Biederman, Room
26, 4230 Ridge Lea, Exl 1682.

July 1st is Deadline for
Fulbright~Hays Applicants

William D. Hassett, Jr., president of W.D. Hassett, Inc..
received the Niagara Frontier
Businesaman of tbe Y"flr Award
from the U/ B School ol ManJuly 1, 1973 is the deadline agement Alumni Aasociation at
The Comn:l1ttee 0.!} International Exchange of Persons hss for applying for most of the the A ss oci.at i on's -Annual
announoed that applications for announced research a w a r d s, Awards Banquet last Friday, at
senior Fulbright-Haya awards altd it is the suggested date for the Pellamwood House, West
Seneca.
for university lecturing and ad- filing for lectureships.
Hassett beads the largest real
Senior Ful bright-Hay s
vanoed research during 1974-75
in over 75 countries are now awards generally consist of a estate servicing firm of its kind
being accepted. The booklet on mainte:nance allowance in local in Western New York wbich
the program for this period is currency to cover normal living employs over 600 area residents
available on r e q u e s t to the costs of the grantee arul family in both real estate and related
partici~te."
service lines, such as maintenParticipants in this year's Committee, (2101 Constitution while in residence abroad, and ance, construction and h o t e I
travel for the granprogram include: Dr. Michael Avenue, N .W., Washington, round-trip
service.
In the last two years,
is
not
protee
(transportation
S. Gazzaniga, New York Uni- D.C. 20418).
vided for dependents) . For lec- he hss acquired two of Buft'alo's
versity, who will discuss " AsApplication requirements in- turers going to most non-Euro- lan"""'-'ks-the 29-story Rand
clude: U.S. citizenship; for lec- pean countries, the award in- Building and the Statler Hilton
tureships, college or university cludes a do 11 a r supplement, Hotel.
Active in community affairs
teaching experience; for re-. subject to the availability of
search awards, a doctorate or, funds, or carries a stipend in Hassett is a trustee of both ~
State
University of New York
in some fields, recognized pro- dollars and foreign currency,
fessional standing as demon- the amount depending on the and Canisius College, and president
of the United Way of
strated by faculty rank, publi- assignment, the lecturer's qualDedication of a new facility cations, compositions, exhibi- ifications, salary, and other fac. Buffalo and Erie County. Jie
at 3423 Bailey Avenue being tion record, etc.
served
as general chairman of
tors.
used by a Univeraity project
the 1972 United Fund Appeal
designed to dPvelop educational
which r e p o r t e d the largest
tools in the area of early childamount of money ever raised
hood growth and development
in a oommunity drive in West-.
em New York.
will be held Wednesday, May
·23, at 4 p.m.
·
Seveq..;_Students also received
The Personnel Office indicates that the following faculty
awards a t\the banquet: UnderThe project is supported by
graduate Students of ·t he Year
and non-teaching professional stsfl positions are open at
a five-year $396,632 training
-Monica J . Lipkin and Crrug
State University at Buft'alo:
grant awarded by the Division
P . Sylvester; Graduate Students
of Nursing, Department of
Focuttr
of the Year~d R. Boller
Health, Education and Welfare,
Assistant Professor, Psychology.
and Richard A. Frederick·
and is producing 40 seven-minAssistant Professor-Health Edw:ation Program, Ath- )o8pecial Studerit Achievement
ute films ( 10 each of four chilletic Trainer.
Award-Leslie E . Scbmarder·
dren and tbeir families ). The
Assistant Professor Health Edw:ation Program,
W a II Street Jourlllll Student
films depict the behavioral life
Women's Physical Edw:ation, coaching.
Awat:d - Mark A. Swersky·
style of four families. 'lbe chilDelta
Sigma Pi Scholarship
Assistant
Professor-Health
Edw:ation
Program,
Men's
dren are filmed periodically
Key Award-Edwin A. Swan.
Physical Educalion, soccer.
·
during -t heir early childhood
Benjamin
L Enloe, adjunct
or
Full
Professor-Health
Educalion
Pro.Aasociste
beginning at three weeks of age.
professor of acooun~, regram, Administration, Teaching.
'lbe project will continue until
ceived
a
"Special
Recotlnition
the children are four years old.
Assistant Professor-Health Education Program, Dance.
Award" from the School and
Assistant Professor - Dentistry, Fiud Prosthodontics.
the Alumni AssoCiation to mark
'lbe films will be u8ed in
Associate Professor· Instructor- Dentistry, Operative
his retirement from teaching.
classroom settings with instrucDentistry.
Enloe hss been a member of
tional manuals written by the
Assistant Professor-Dentistry, Pedodontics.
•
the faculty since 1961. Prior to
project directors, Miss Donna
that he spent "37 Years with
Visiting Associate Professor, Computer Scumce.
M. Juenker, associate professor
PJ;ice;Waterhouse,
beginniilg as
of child bealth nursing, and
Assistant . Pro(essor, Social and Preoentive Medicine.
Mrs. Jacqueline K. Thompson,
a JIIIUOf acooun- in 1924 and
Clinical Instructor, Gynecology.ObsU!trics.
retiring
as
a
parfDer
in Cbarae
-assistant professor of child
Director of Collegiate System, CollegiaU SysU!m.
of the BulJBio oG1ce in 1961.
bealtb nursing.
Clinical IJ)structor, Oral Medi&lt;:ine.
Visiting Professor, PhiloM&gt;phy.
Attending the project facility
Assistant Professor, Athhtics.
dedication oereDJ&lt;?n,Y will be
Dr. Hazel M. •Aslakaon, chief
Assistant Professor, Operations Analysis, Scbooi of
of the Projects Section, Nursing
Mansgemenl
Education Branch, Department
Assistant Professor, Theatre.
Dr. Conatantine Yaracaria,
of Health, Education
Welfonnerly presidenl ol..Jbe Buf.
fare, Natioaal Iniltltutea of
~
faJo
Center Chapter ol'the SenHealtli, Mr. Jobn Bruaer, edAsaistant FacilitUs Protram Coordinah&gt;r, Paciliti!or
ate Profea!ion8l Aaaoc:iation,
.-tlon media specialiat, HEW
Planning, PR-2.
.
bas
been .elecl8d psident of
Nlll, and the project's
Assiatan~ .to t~ . Choirmnn, Philosophy, PR-1.
the Center Chapter ol SUNY/
tants: Rulli G, Elder, PhD.,
For additional information concerning these jobs and
United, the organi%ation formed
' aaaociate profaa&gt;r ol lllttllina.
by tbe merger be~ SPA
for details ol NTP opening&amp; througbout the State UniverU/B; Ellie 0 . Ellia, M.D., speand the State University Fedaity sYSiem. Cllll8uit bulletin boards at these locations: ""'"
eial assistant for ~lh aerveration
of Teadlera.
1; Bell Facilit&gt;y between D152 and Dl53; 2. Ridge Lea,
ices, American Medical .AMO· 0 t h e r o6icels of the :new
Bnilding 4236, next to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building
ciation; Armin Grams, PhD.,
S.UNY/United
chapt-er are:
4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Healtb . ScieDces Building
prof-.r of human developVJce president..aeademic, Marment, University of Vllrii&gt;OIU;
in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capan Hall, in the ~
vin Bloom; vice presideDt-N'J:P
Doaald Klft -Grant, M.D~ ......
'*-' Roc!m 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lodtwood. ground Ethel Schmidt; grieyance
~ proleilaor of pediatrica,
i_n corridor next to vending 1118ChinE; . 7. Hayes Hall,
J)eriiOII, Orville Murphy: oecreU/B; Charles R. Peaie, PhD.,
m mam entr&amp;n!le foy:er, acrooa from Public Information Of.
Frances Dietz;
.-.ciate ~ of . apeeeb
lice;
~
Hall,
In
corridor
between
Rooma
112
and
CDIIIIIIunieatioa, U/B; Riduud
llJI; 9. Parter Ensineering, in corridor next to Room 15·
J. Popp, Ph.D~ uslatsnt pn&gt;bly: . ·-*nlc, Robart F i a k,
10. G®d,year Hall, 1st 8oor, HOI.IIIinc' Olllce area· "lL ~
,_ol~, U~; Tag~~-; · NTP, J.-ph .
8cbool, ·fhlit lloor aenereJ lnformatioa board .~ Boama
108
1~; 12. J!!l11 Elmwood, Personnel Ilepartment; 13.
Memi?en ol the· committee
Nmoa Uman, J&gt;ire!:tor'• Oflice, Room 225; 14. Diefomdorf instnactiaaal medla, U/B;
HaU, in oorridar next to Room 106.
.
•
Imu E. 8lpl, PhD~ .profea.w~~. U/B.
•
wy, tmcJ J - Blackburst.

Dedicl;ltion Set
For Bailey Unit

Job Openings

SUNY/United
Names Yeracaris

and

consul:

!b'r

Cbair:

t;'Y·

tr8aswer, .

to-s:~s~b.ct~

=-~~'t::
and

and

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1lhy

11, 197-3

~R..,

.-JJ

Ketter Terms Middle States.Report 'Basically Realistic'
. Basically "fair, raaliatic, per- ly oompc-.i of the University- Colleges, together with ita var- ments of Sociology and Philos- restrictive conditiODI! ~
ceptive and ellOOtll"8dnC' was wide Deans) to aid him in ious sub-committees, is con- opby, appear promising. Even space, personnel, and ~t.
the way President llo6ert L. making decisions in his ....., dueling an intensive evaluation the M .S. in Social Sciences, The geographical fralmentatioo
-Ketter ~ the report of ' of responsibility.
of the Colleges unit by unit. although a F a c u 1t y degree, of our campus locatiblloo furtber
the ·Middle Sta""' evaluation
"As reported earlier in this Members of the adminisll1ltion, often draws courses from other intensified tbe protilems of .that
team in a 11)-pqe, point-by- response, the functional rela- faculty, and student body pres- FaCulties if ·t hey fit into the oflice. On the other band, one
point. J:eiiPOfi8l' to thet report tionships, vertically apd hori- ently are beinJ! interviewed to program requirementa of the in- could point out that the various
bBued by the President May 7. zontally, among and between voice their opmions about the dividual student. Tbe recently departments and schools, over
ChaJiae is a continual process , various administrative offices of Colleges. This coming fall out- announced three-year M .S ..J.D. previous years of greeter alBu- of a 8lowinl institution such as the University are under study, side evaluator§ will be invitad degree programs between State ence, have accumulated a Cllll·
the· University, Ketter notad, as ..,00 many functions are moving · to complete the review of the University at Bullalo and State siderable amount of equipment
be outliDed changes that have mto sharper focus. Additional- Colleges.
.
University at , Stony Brook ~projectors, screen a, slides,
occurred ainoe and, to some ex- ly, · throughout the entire oper"Concrete eviden~as pre- should also be noted."
~ etc.) ·which .helped to
tant, ~- of the team's viait · ation, the Uni~ty is clearly sentad that undergraduate stuamehorata some of the pro!&gt;- .
to tbe campus last fall
. defining the specific functions dents in the Colleges were de . Faculty
.
lema. However, there ts no
AIIIOIII ...,. aiqhia out by and areas Of responsibility of (acto teaching courses in aev"We agree-with the percepthe team, upon which the Pres- the various oflioes and their ad- era) areas. With the """"ption tions revealed in the Middle
ident C111D111811tad, were:
ministration. Tbe aim of this of the experimental courses, States report cbncerning fae- receive ilreatar support COIIl·
Adoo•olatiallan
University adminisll1ltion is to where at this time University- ulty matters. We mil!ht also
" ... We, too, have come to refine the roles of ita various wide (i.e., DUS) review is not remark upon tbe development
exrealiJatbatcertainofourorgan. members and to clearly ideri- required, it is believed that the of the University Assembly,
The President also expreioooed
iratioDal .......,.,.._.. co u I d tify their responsibilities."
one-time problem of undergrad- which is a furtber demonsll1lbenellt from c~~an&amp;e. We have - . . : ...-.
· uata students teaching courses, lion of concern for University agreement with the team's obbeenfaDd are/ ~ aev" . .. Since the team's viait, totally an their own, has been governance and faculty J'ft}tiCI· servations on the relations of
eral altazlatlvea. Our pnmary the DiYisian of Undergraduate eliminatad. Even for the ex- pation in forming and inlluen- this institution with State agen-·
OIIIIC8ftl ia that it be clearly
Studil!io has agreed to develop perimental offerings, major im· cinJ! U niversity policies and cies.
In cloaing remarks on the reethavident
thet, llrio!'tatq ~moclbei~N:!; a review system designed to provements have occurred, and which has been brougbt into
port Ketter obeerved that ··the
beni8 "'
critically examine all existing 11 is considered that the prob- beinJ since the visitation.
will moie than COIIlpen&amp;ata for undergraduate programs at reg- !em is being brought under con"The observation by the vis- evaluators had de&amp;(%ibed the
the ll1luma that must neceesar- ular intervals, similar to the ttol.
iting team about the lack of University as at a ''plataaun an
ily l'ollow.
review and evaluation prooed\'Other problems, the four- direc t representation of the which it could re-group· ''before
"Tbe Middle States Team ures in the Graduate School. course load and grading prae- Millard Fillmore College fae- the next climb begins." Tbe
left with the impression that Also, a completely new under- tices, which caused the Middle ulty although represented in the President summed up the Unithe.Univenoity-wide Deans, par- graduate degree track, the Fae- . States Team to voice its con- Faculty Senate through fae- versity's pOeitian as "on the
ticularly the Dean of the Grad- ulty-wide major, is presently cems, are under active review ulty members who have an as- threshold of starting our next
uata School and the Dean of being developed with the vari- by both ·t he Faculty Senate socistion with Millard Fillmore climb.
"Construction of the Amberst
the Diviaian of Undergraduate ous Faculties under the guid- Committee on Education Pol- College, is correct. On the other
Studies, have- little more au- ance of the Division of Under- icy and its sub-committee on hand, members of Millard Fill· Campus is progressing; key positions
have been filled ; some
thority than their personal in- graduate Studies.
grading, as well as by sub-com- more Coll&lt;!le. serve on several
fluence and voice of persuasion.
''In regard to academic ad- mittaes of the Academic Mairs key committees of the Division excellent new faculty members
-on
a
highly selective •basisAlthough we would maintain visement, two important devo:J- Council. (Tbe Faculty Senate of UndergradUate Studies, inthat this perception is not en: opments have taken place since sub-committee on grading a]. eluding the Special Major Pro- have been acquired; the budget
·
ready has submittad a report.) gram. Furthermore, the Dean outlook allows for some cautirely accurate, it is significant the team's visit:
to point out that the University
" (a ) The Office of the Dean Additional actions include a of the Division of Continuing tious optimism; and the Uniis presently engaged in looking of the Division of Undergradu- stricter set of regulations de- Education meets regularly with versity is making a marked ef.
very cloeely into. specific fune-. _ate Studies has submitted a signed to reduce the abuse of the Academic Mairs Cowu;il fort to come to grips with the
lions of the University-wide comprehensive document to the Sati s factory I Unsatisfactory and is also a member of the very problems touched upon in
Deans and their relationship V ice President of Academic grades a n d the inappropriate newly esteblished advisory cab- the report of .the Middle States
to the Provosts and the faculty. Allairs outlining a complete re- assignments of 'Incompleles' inet to the Vice President for Team. Many problems still exist; new problems will arise; but
A sub-committee of the Aca- vision of academic advisement where other grade designstlons Academic Affairs! '
there seems to be a new stir
demic Mairs Council (advis· at this University. The main should have been given.
Students and Student Services
on
this campus, a readiness to
ory to the Vice President for points include more direct fol"Such educations! issues as
"We are appreciative of the
Academic Mairs) has already lowup advisement lor freshmen course duplication, independent laudatory comments offered by move into new, carefully planned
ventures. We do not want
submittad a d e t a i I e d report and sophomores; new 'field sta- stud1es, and overall rationalize . . the Middle States Team in the
deaiilig ..With the role of · the !ions' for aeal!emic advisement· lion of academic programs are area of students and studen t to repest the almost reckless
momentum
of the past, but we
l:Jniversity-wide Deans and that information and referral serviC: now..being defined to supply services; however, it is felt that
of the Provosts. It also should es &lt;It many points of .maximum addotlpnsl charges to the ap- _ the scope of ,pontribution to do wish to move ahead conbe noted that in the forthcom- student traffic on both the Main proproate Senate committees, student services made by th-. fidently in our belief that this
Institution will be a great oDe,"
ing budget the role of the Uni- Street and Amherst campuses; to the Academic Affairs Coun- student associations. . . .
Ketter said.
versity-wide D e a n s has been and direct involvement of fac- cil, and to the divisions! com- Ubnories and Instructional
An ad hoc committee, chaired
strengthened by assigning, a cer- ulty members, as regularly as- mittees of the University-wide Communications Center
by DUS Dean Charles HN.
"Since the visit of the Mid- Ebert,
lain number of facul ty lines signed duty, in the Upper Di- Deans. In other words, the recrecently prepared a draft
to. them. Moreover, they have vision advisement process.
ommendation by the M i d d I e die States Team the overall
to the Middle States rebeen included in a special ad" (b ) Complementing this State;; Team that guality con. situstion in the Library and its reply
port,
which
was then distributvisory cabinet under the Vice proposal is the Division's in· !J'ol· ""!Ues deser:e direct and afliliated branches has greatly ed to the vice
presidents f&lt;&gt;r
Presodent for Academic Mairs tan tion to create a new Divis- ommedoa'!' attentlon has been improved. A Director of Uni- review and comment.
Presand have been consulted with ion of Undergraduate Studies well receoved and is being act- versity Libraries has been ap- ident noted that this The
input was
increased frequency in tenure Co unci I which will be com- ed upon."
pointed and other key adminis- " taken into account'' in
preparrecommendations.
prised of faculty represent&amp;- Graduate Education
t rat i v e positions have been
Centnol
live,; from · all departments of.
''The observation of the Mid- filled or are in the process of ing his official response.
Gnodu~ Admlsolono Control
lering a baccalaureate degree, die Stales T eam that there are being filled. Of particular- in"Tbe Middle States Team student representatives, a nd areas of strength in the overall tares! is the creation of the new
expreased . some roncern about Divi si on of Undergraduate · graduate pro gra m but that Und~rgraduata. Lib~ary, which
the lack of cel'otral control by Studies academic advisors. In s trength is not 'across the has 118 own new dorectpr. AdAlfred E. Anscombe, presithe Graduate School over ad- general, department represent&amp;- ·board' is correct, but· it is to be ditional study areas and carrels dent of Ambers! Cable Vision,
mission of graduate • students tives will be faculty members recognized that such a situstion were creatad near the central Inc., has been elected chainnan
and over the dinection of grad- directly involved in departmen- is not unique to the University library for the use of under- of the University's Community
uata programs. The Dean of tal student advisement as en- at Bullal&lt;Y.'Presently, the Aca- graduate students.
.
Advisory Council for 1973-74.
the Graduate School·is now ex..._ visioned in the plan mentioned demic Mairs Council and its
''It is our belief that the 'low
l.ealie G. Arries, .l r., vice
ami n in g the functioning of above in- (a ).
·
sub-committee on graduate edu- point' of our Library problems president and genentl ~
graduate programs ( growth, de"W h i I e ·the Middle States cation, chaired by the Dean of has passed and that the Library of WBEN, Inc., wao votad VIce
gree output, scholarly reeearch, team confirmed the admission th&amp;"Graduate School, are re- will improve under a new leadof the Council and
standardS) ,'and a P.lan has been contained in the SeU-Study doe- viewing the ·overall patterns of ership and, ~y, under chainnan
Marie K. Corcoran ·was cboeen
developed and will be imple- ument that the institution suf- graduate education and aca- be"!'r budg:et co~ditions than secretary.
mentacl which will allow him fers from the absence of any demic priorities of this Univer- durmg the immediate past two
Membeno-al'larle of the atQ exercise stronger leadership clear, universally acceptad, uni- sity. This review includes an years.
·
comm!Uee are:. Dr. EdiJt" t.beee areas than his prede- form University con c e p t of examiilation of the expreased
" Comments a'! out .Faculty ecutive
ward F.Mimmack,a U / B.alum008IiOni;
w h a t a baccalaureate degree concern that fragmentation of Sen a t-e Committee 'intarfer- nus and past "**1her of the
''Tbe team sta~ that they should mean, the team felt that the jurisdiction over graduate ence' should be notad briefly. University Council; Miss Marleft the G!JDpua wtthout under- this admission appeared to be degree programs may lead to The Fa"!"~ ·Senat;e is not in- garet Bany, past president . of
standing 'boW the office of the no more applicable to SUNY a lack of direction and bring ~ '." mtarfermg with ad- the Zonta Club of bullalcl, 81111
Vice President for Academic Bullalo than to other institu- about a number of academic 111UU81l1ltive procedures, but at Mrs. Edward R . Herman, a
Alfairoo relates the evaluations tions. Nevertheless, the Uni~ and logistical problems in grad- times faculty fee I in gs are , public relations specialiat for
and priorilie$ made by th6 three versity, through a sub-commit- uata education.
aroused, and some times
di_visional Deans (Oniversity- tee of the Academic Mairs
''The Middle States Team ex- aroused very deeply. When this lihe N- York Telephone Co.
Milton G. Kader, Pniai4ent
wtde Deans) to the evaluations Council on undergraduate edu- preased the opinion ·t hat there occurs, the faculty may, in their
and priorities made by tbe Pro- cation, has begun to seriously is a general dearth in cross- zeal to correct what tbey see of Kadttr Realtors, Inc., waavosts and aeveral Deans.
grapple with this problem with Faculty and interdisciplinary as an. ....., of .negl!"''. ~nd electad to his IOeCOIId term as
"Since the visit of the e9alu- the hope that it will be possible programs. Although this obeer- too YlgOrously . . l~lS to be rec- chairman of tbe R!laoureea Ccimation teem, the role of the to. define the concept of oou vation is currently understand- ognized that .th8 Library has mittae. Ricb8nl G. Owftoa,
Academic Allairs Council has baccalaureate d~
able in regard to formalized been a very sensitive ....., an putilic relations lDIIDqer for
been more clearly defined and
"The University agrees that graduate cross-Faculty pro- the campus. P =a vigorous ~. Inc., and Mrs. 1181'at a par- ~~
intensiJled. For example, sev- the role of the non-defii'OO rec- grams or degree optiorog; many aJ&gt;Proach was
~ the Projecla_
era] sub-committees of t h·a t ommending Colleges, within the
areas of potential interaction· Ucular point in time in order
GeoQre J . M_,_puhllaber ...
'"""~, _........_. of Deans, Pro- educational framework and and mutual su1pporrt do exist. to,dramatically call people's at-~;,;;b:; ~rNentatives from KOals of this institution, must , Consideration should be pven tention to what. we all knew of Bee J:&gt;ublicationa omd a the Faculty Senat.o are devel
6e reviewed and defined· bow- 1 to the M.S. depee program in ......., aborteominp. However, ber of the U / 8 CouDc1L will
opU., ~ for ov: ever, we do -feel that eaCh Col- the Humanities, which is a that time has ~' m;od the head the Universl~ u.t.m
erall academic polides and al- ·lege island s h o.u I d remain! companion to the Nalunll Sci- ,_ly appointad 1JII'eClllr of ~ttee and Cy KiD&amp;locatioo of ~- Further: IJ_l1ique and .&amp;hat no general con- ences programs """''P1ized by Llbnuiee aDd the Senate Com- utive editoc ~tua of tbe
more, the Vice President for ciU810ll8 should be drawn from tbe:.taam. Moreowr, joint pro. mittae - . d y MPPNr to be Ct&gt;UIWr-E--. will a
~of the Mediii"Ua1eaD
AcademiC Afralra. s;yDtheslzes the cond~
'tio t:t;enofs, P._hiloeo- grams now.~.· such aa funcdoalDr well tooplber.
many 01111, or thoee establiahed by Ulli Facul"We qree that the Jnstruo. Committee• . Dr. Mlmmaclt ..... ,.
the input oi-'A.,__ ._...__,_ Af phies, and
fairs
even se\'
• of them. The ~ . ty of, r:.w· aDd ~~ tiooal eolmnunlcatioa8 eem.,r
creatededvlloryc:abln8t (Jilain- ulty Sena_te -~~ -'!1!-~-- .!!l}~!.¥~!'-i!l!.~-~ la~·-liDI!.~ -~- ~ther

~:~J.!"~~
==-~~ ~ \:J:.~~!'·

Ahscombe Elected

eou:dt.....ana"""ti:""'_,;

·=-~~~~

�-;r,

~ ~2 - -

CREPORTE~

SUNY, Middle States ·t o Conduct Nursing -School to Honor
Study of Central Administration : Nine GraduatesonMay.ID
P'8lluatiDI

Dr. Ruth McGrorey, dean of
the School of NlirsinJ, will preall Slilte ~versity
·cam~ continuinl inrolvement in such sent special honors to nine
Now the ·
hu come for us ....... u relationohipa with prito focus upon
Central Ad- vate colletlee and articulation graduates of the School during
ministration
.
the befween the State's elementary Nursing's Commencement, May
elliciency ol the system oYerall. and ~ schools are 20 at 7 p.m. in the Mary Seaton
Room, Kleinhans Music Hall
We're eager .to look at the cen- imong other. topics.
Mias D!lrothy J . Ackmmall
The national symposium is
tral operation ·to determine
will
receive two awards: The
ocboiduled
for
Noverilber
1-2
es.
what is workina well and where
The . . t pro~ will esam- · iniJirovements alJl and should and ia designed to provide cban- Anne Walker Sengbuach Lead.
ersbip
Award for demonstrating
oellors
and
presidents
ol
other
ine
and BOV- be made," he aaid.
emanoe procedW'BB.
The re v i e w supports the state university !')'Stems with the highest degree of awareness
One ol its features will be University's commitment to in- the opportunity to study the of professional re&amp;Ponsibility;
ol"""tion a n d organizational leadership potential and pera national sYmposium during
professional and intelwhich SUNY will serve as a
p'l:, structure of Slate University. sonal,
Dr. Merton E . ErteU. deputy lectual growth; and The Stuesse s t u d y for leaders "from 1972, ·nr. Boyer noted.
dent
Council's
Anne Sengbuscb
vice
chancellor,
and
Dr.
Murother state university systems
Herbert R. Kella, associate
from across the nation.
executive secretary of the Mid- ray H. Block, deputy ·t o the Award for signifi&lt;:ant contribo"We've been planning this dle S t a t e s' Commission on cbanoellor for university opera- tion to the Student Council.
Other awards will include:
project w i t h the Association Higher Educstion, oominent.ed tions, are co-chairing the comsince 1970," Chancellor Ernest that Slate University "provides mittee for State University par- :~~~.t..':.":'fro~toeacl. =~~:
ticipation
in
the
project.
L. Boyer said. "Durina' the past a tremendous educstional Jabfive years the Middle Slates oratory from w h i c h can he
Association hu conducted re- drawn acx:omplishment.S and
accreditation visits on almost
0

-" State University and the
Middle States Association of
Colleps and Secondary Schools
will embark this fall on a major
study of the ~tionshipe between the SUNY Central Administration and its 7.2 camp~

=

I!J:"!tucationaJ

incx:oili::'~:·

'!!

!ff;:"~r ~~=~in!J:

8UI SCHEISULS.
MAIN STit£ET CAM"-'1 - fiiDQE LEA
For Eiemlnetlol'i ,..rfod
Friday, M•r 11-Frid.,y, M•r 25, 1973

~~d~=rd•Y·~.;&amp;E 9LJ9~

TD RI08E: LEA

7:30AM
7:45

2:15
2:25
2:35

8:10
8:30
8:50

2:55
3:05
3:1 5
3:35
3 :4 5

9 :15
9:30
9:50

4 :05
4 :25
4:45

10:10

10:30
10:50
11 :10
11:20

:ri'

11 :30
11 :50

5:00
5:20
5:40
5:55

MAIN CAIII"-JS

7:50AM

8:10
8:30

8:55

2:35
2:45
2:55

3:15
3 :25

9:10 ·

3 :45

9:30
9:50

4:05
4:25

10:10
10:30

4 :45

10:50

5:05
5:20
5:40

11 :10
11 :30
11:45
11:55

verstties across ·t he nation."
- As a result of insighls garnered by Commission teams in

lh':t&amp;,:'!;..~:~·~U:..~d'~

itself to be in an excellent position to interact with Central
Administration in term s of
helping foster even greater eo!'rdination and furthering self
rmprovemenl
While the upcoming interaction with the Central Administration is not an evaluation
in a formal
Kells continued, the resultant meetings
and seminars will he audited
by a recorder-editbr. He said
it is anticipated that highlights'
of the discussions will provide
the hssis for a future publicstion of wide interest to the nation's higher educstion community.
The Project with Middle
~=~II be conducted in two

aus SCHmu
MAIN STIIUT CAIII'U

lOR au1111..

T="~'t-""":rbii

•~73

'%s"'Ao:'12:20~.nPM ~r"~~
12:40
1.2:40

i\~

10:00 .
10:30
10:40
11:05

U;ig

~

t:os

5

~: · ;;:g

.

~~~~

10:10

~;gg

1o,55

2;l3

11:25

.,0
~~~

~~:g

ng

3:05

u:ls
4:30
11!55
12:00 H
5!05
THERE WILL R NO IIUS SIJIYICE Ott
~llM:DAYS, II.IIIDAYS. CNt HOUDAYS
sus..=,--· ~

•w

:-'-. r..~

AnMX

ACTUAL TRAVEL n'IE ONE WAY IS
APPROXIIIATn.Y 11 MINu;t"ES

Rettoration, Dr. George Mum-

ford, University of Connecti.cu ~
Hall. 9 a.m.-5 p .m.

Capen

For furth er information. contact lhe U/ B School of Dentistry,

881-2837.

COW:GlATE ASSEMI&amp;.'( MEDING#

Last meeting of the semeoter;
agenda to be announced. 233 Norton, 4 p.m.
Prob~11111

D i&lt;upora:
floUkrainian
Ethnic~y and ldentity ,

Dr.

the~~k,B",!!d"=~nt~

205

Dtefendorf,

7

3

'!' e ~c.J'u~~ m~bill'&amp;,

~cti~~ ru:~~~~
gional use of ~; and a~ .
countability. The Uruversity's

Alumni Banquet
The A I u m n i Association's
34th Annual Awards and Installation Banquet will be held
~y, June 8, _at Goodyear

p.m.

care: Judith

denlll, 50 centa. Spo-red by lh~
U/ B Department of Music.

WEDNESDAY-23

door.

This film deals with lhe 1970
U/ B otudent disruptions. Pre-

sented by the Student Film Club.'
GlADUAR UCITA1*

Baird Recital Hall, 8: 30

UUAA fiLM ..
D~ He

Said (NicboleOn) ,
Conference The at r e, Norton.
check showcase for timeo. Admission charge.

student of Donald Weilerotein,
will perlonn works by Bach, Hiller and Mozari, Baird Recital
Hall. 8:30 p.m.

THURS.DAY-24
ANNUAL MERINO OF

MEDICAL SCHOOL FACULTY#
Acting Dean Clyde I. Randall

will

preside, Faculty Club, Harnman Library, 7:30 p.m.

EXHilliTS
COPEINICAN EXHIIIT*

ga~• :;a•ti,:l f:f:.~":iub~i

Committee for the fifth Coperni-

~ 'iri:t"81:!.~ t~ :I.

fam, Hayes Hall lobby display
caoea, throuch Thunday, May 24.
STUDENT EXHIIIT*
Se~cted Duit/n

Projet:u from

~
~U..."'t"':Wi'&gt;e~':i
Art. Weotem Sa'rinp Bank, 3840

Maple Rd., through SaWrday
May 19. Viewing houn: Monday:
Wedneoday, 8: 30 a.m.-3 ' 30 p.m.·
Over 30 minority buain... !inns Thunday and Friday, 8' 30
are expected to participate in this · 8 p.m.; Saturday, 9, 30 a.m.-12:30
event to indicate to the Buffalo p.m.
The show has been Planned to
community the· natwe and tcope

a.m.:

¥he~ ~~t~~=;
of Florida and Jefl:enon Streeta
9 a.m.-4 p.m..
UUAI FILM**
D~ He

Said

(NicholsOn)

~~\~~~
aion cbarxe.

-n.e title coinea from a Robert
Creeley poem; the atory from Jer-

'

. Sponsored by the U/ B Minority
Management A&gt;sistance Program
and the ~ l,!rban Leacue.
FILM•

(::;:: ~~. ~ Ifief~::,~

time to be announced. Tickeu at
emy Lamer's novel of college etu- 50
cenla can be purcbued at lhe
denta who pack it in when faced . door.
wilh the draft and/or the empti.
n... of their li-. Whet Bill Tep- UUAI FILM••
The Graduate (Nichola), Con•
per and Karen Black do in a Corvette bad lhe French at Cannea ference Theatre, Norton. check
booinf insanely, but red-blooded ~case for times. . Admiaion
Amencans can p a • • over the
wh&lt;&gt;!e epioode and Jive their ats~arri,.g Dustin Hoffman ~
tention to the beet film aa:ount Anne BaBctoft.
a1
oollep baskelballllince
~
Globe ~ TV apeSUNDAY-20

!i,.-time

·Ber: ·

·

fa':!j), ~ tief~~~

time to !&gt;e announced. Tickets at

50 cents can be pu.rcbaaed at the

w~.

~~F~ing

SATURDAY-19

=0::,

The Alaami ~tillll requeata lbd -tioaa be
m.de tar h " - 8 baaquet
by J - 1.-c.Jl 88l-412L

FilM*

p.m.

n,.;n;; ·

MINOIITY IUSINIIS fAll*

A reception at 7 p~ followed by dinner at 8 wiu1 cost
FRIDAY-18
$20 per c o u p I e (:including
cocktsiJs). Dress is informal
~~~~~~U PSYCHOLOGY
Officers of the General AlumThe Winninf Edte ito Che theme
ni Association for 1973-74 will of t three-day oporlo conference
he installed by President Rob- C&lt;H!'OD!"red by tbe U/ B Di..Uion
ert I. Ketter. The alumni will af Physical Eduoation, Recreation
'ght
and Alhletiat and the Di · ·
f
preaent "'
awards. leading Men's A.lhletiao of •the
olf with the ,Samuel P. CaPen Aooocia"on for Health, Physical
Award, for C&gt;Utstanding service Education and Rec..,.tion to be
by an alumnus, to Gerald C held at the l!taUer HiltoO: Hotel
Saltsrelli Tbe Walter P. Cclclb through Sunday, May 20.
Award, for outstanding service
~t.eur and prof-ioD&amp;I coachby a non-allllnlllli, wiJl be pre- ~ ~. bukelhaU. track,
sented to Charles K. Basaett. piat will ~rti'! ~ ~.M!"flay C. T~, ~t which ito open to the public. AJ1
P~~ of the~ Aaloc!- area ~ et .all'""" levela of
atioo, will receJVe the Presi- competition are mvKed to alteJ&gt;d.
dent'a A w a •cl FiYe DiStin- Gnduate credit ito a...u.hle. for
guisbed Alumni Awards will go the worbhop.
to HoiL Earl W. Bml8al, Dr . Details ~ .be.~ from
-Anthony 8. Gucino: Or.
M"n. Ethel '~ Univenity
nard "S: Gottlieb:' liOn. Cbarlee Coalereaoe ~. 881-390i.
~~ and Dr. Olive P. ~s,...,.":l;- IDUCATioto.i
..__.. -

For further information on the
program. which will continue tomorrow, oontact the U / B School
of Nwzin&amp;', 881-5548.

(It~

~P

Jacquelynne Leonard, vi 01 in

Performance by Ellen Priscilla
Larw. voice otudent of Muriel

SIMJNAI IN UKIAINJAN CULTUU
AND CIVIUU.nON*

The first, on October 2-3 will
involve an "internal revie~' of
the. University operations in a
sen.es ?f seminars involving
Uruvennty and Middle Slates
representatives which wiJJ he
based on papers and information provided by the central

staBThe
. senunars· w ,· 11 concentrate on cam~tral staff
___...,.._-,-f:,,!!i25f--,.;:;,.,~--l,iii,,~-~~tionships m the
of
==~

THURSDAY-17
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION#
The Porcelain-Fused to Metal

ance. -=rune 81111

potential) : Adult Health Nuning, Sally A. Dupn · Rebabilitation Nursing,
P.
Dulski; Child Health Nursing,
Patricia A. Gotzb; CGmmwilty Health N~. Bette C.
Felton; TeachinJ ol Nursing
in Community Collepe, Emma
H. Hatlield; · Mental Health.P sychiatric NUrsing, Beverly J .
Burke; Baccalaureate Prognun
Rosemary A. DeCarlo.
'
S. Mouchly Small Award for superior understan4ing and
ability m ·the mental health

GIADUATE UCttAl*

•Open- to public;
••Open. to members at the University;
#Open only to those with o prafesslonol Interest In the subject
Contllct Honey C.rdorelll, 831-2228, for listings.

nH!valuating the University's
csmpuses individually over the

sense,

6:20
12:15 PM .. 6:35
12:25
12:35
••7:10
'1 2:55 .
..7:50

(&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

ate program and to a
baccalaureate student for ou~
standinc ocbolastic abiHty and
excelleDCe in nlllllina perfcxm-

: TM Pro/eaiontll iiitd
!he-lh.!o!&gt;e of' a ilot!&gt;-

:: C,_,.;.

~ ;::-~ ~

at ~. Motor lim, Nlapm
..... lj.Y,
· !:· -~- ; '

CONCHT•
Contempo':!l'r Mruic, under the
direction of l.eJaren Hiller, Baird
Recilal Hall, 8:30 p.m. No ad-

111180!0n charge.

Perlormanceo will featwe Kai-

increase the community's awaren ... of the U/B program ond to
convey information on the kindJ
of experiences in visuar co~
aeetbetic awarenea, symbo~·

ty(lOCnlpby, communicatift

~~~....:~~
program ofl'e.n..

'

r=r ~
·

MUSIC U11A1Y mtiiiT•

Morton Feldm.n. ViailiDc Slee
Profe.or in the U/B ~~

of Muoie, ito the oubjoet of the
current nhibit in the Muoic Li~~· Baird Hall, thJouab May

uoun IIXlllllr
6pth Anni""'*")! of lhe Publim - part of lba jlel'm:ment Jameo Joyce exhIbit.
f~riaiRoamLib . (207), Loc:boocl
n.em.:»
raJ7. .

cation of

bi~:"
lite~

~111111,
a&amp;:..-.:b'! ~~

- 0
{

tiD

1_972. Those rep,_t.d 'lly_u;;;;,;:.
tiODS from their ~ -zi:
include: John Ba~ Kamojh

:;,~~; ~~.:..!~ !':..~_!.t.m~~:

.W~rk';'tr:,ry~';'.}"o~:.:r~:~d':; ~::L.w~"o.J' a~ dk':
those by Berio, Johnaton and Hi!- · Pound, A. M. Klein. M.ii. Ytlll
ler. Presented by the U/B Depariment of Music.

UUAI

FilM••

The Graduate (Nichols) , Coarereru:e
Th.tre, Norion, check
u-. Admiooii&gt;n

~";"" tor

Doran, and Jameo K. Baxter.
Balconf, 08CODd lloor, Loc:boocl
Mmnoriai Library. Conllnam..

NOTICES .·

-=:,:=-:==="-_:.~---­
CIAMm
The Harriman R.ervs Roam will

COffU -

at ....,;.,., to 2
. Featured cueot ia Dwicht Mae- . a.m. """'Y da)' durin&amp;' the' period
Donald, WADV-FM, 10,05 p.m. of final examinationa, May 17-24.
extend ita bOuio

U/ 1 AITS -UM - ·-

TUESDAY-22

coNCar

J.

f.:.:::: ~~Ri:,t•M~'

The R.ene ~will aloo ..,""
~ .cotree dwinc Jbo period. be(lJU1lllB

at 9 p.m. each """DiD&amp;·

WEEICLY COIIM~
COPY DfAIIIJNI! '

Lejaren 'lliller, Petr Kolik,
Eu"'ma11 and Ramon Fllllor, fOt' evaoyone•o ~ and
~lJ:='~ HaD.."8:30 p.m.
.
W. Ill• to publlcla ~I
Norton Hall ~~ the - taklrw ~ on campus.

et.l admiaoion. SJ.50· ~otatf

a,ot~· WB ~ .~ 1 ;

Ji; ..

P_- ._

To ...,Ill I~ contact
Honey C.nlareUI, ext. 2228.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·Amhersf's O'Brian Hall
'$teals' Campus Siww
'Die Amber8t CaDQ&gt;us; alar- reading room of the Charles B.
Jobn Lord O'Brian Hall, Sears Law Library three leveiB
..... ·easily tbe fawrilj! attrac- below.
t
tion .iii d&gt;e llbow ol. shows that
Hallways are carpeted in a
Willi Sunday'•· Cauniunity-Unidurable brown. Along them,
versity Diu' ope. house.
and ·down stairwells framed in
As an -estimated 20,000 · gla&amp;&lt;; and off~ a .dizzying
miHed around ~ for the view of surrounding construelive-hoUr, 100-ettnictiOn extrav- tion, the tour group came to
a g an 'z a, .....,-piing qwcksana the third ftoor where faculty
and lilser . demnnstrations,' offices line the major hallway.
~and b8sebo!ll, moon
Eacb of the offices bas one wall
With .an average acrossrock a, Psablowing, a 5()(}. of gla&amp;&lt;; facing a brick balrony ranks total compensation pack_.m :cxinenite. canoe: ~ ')IOU ,and offering further panoramic .a ge of $21,810 for nine months,
name it, it~ 1hlll ride to Am.- views. The gener..l adminis- U/B fsculty are among the
ileist that bad 11-. standing in trative offices of the Fa&lt;;!li.tY. of 26 best rom~ted in ·t he na, IP!!,
-hw-and Jurlsp
;.mo., tiOil, aCCoriiing lo a list &lt;iom'D!abeft·Jino'ree the~':!',' and grewed
· . lthisoc;ated
___'lff a 'rej:eption area on piled from AAUP date by The
from
...- scheduled
1.,..,._
Chronic~~! of Higher Education
departure a t 1 p.m. until the
From the third ftoor hallway, (April 30) . .,._
last bus pulled away at 5, leev- the .tour entereil the balcony of · U/ B was 21st among 47 - l n.
•. ing 40 or more still at the curl!. the Sears Library-hose 314,- medical institutions that ~d
11iirty round-trip tours were 000 vollirne steck aree and faculty an average of more
conducted, each with a full other facilities occupy fully 50 than $20,000 {or the academic
coplplement of 44 gawkers, per oent of the building's space. year 1972-73 (in combined aal•
tJiincing to 1,820 the numbers The balcony is lined with a ary and benefits). The highest
ol. the general public who can series of little closets, study average salary was $30,303, re111!)' ~y've seen first- band
carrelB in fact, d&gt;e sites of ported by the Oity University
what others hav~ only glimpsed those mysterious port hoI e s of New York's Graduate Cenfrom their car windows on which can be SPOtted from Ma- ter. 1be Graduate Center led
.Ma!&gt;le, Millersport, and Sweet pie. The portholes, it turns the compensation list lex the
Home.
,
·
•
out, are actually polaroid win- third atraigbt year. Aocording
'And wha;t ,a difterence that dows which can be rotated to to the ChronU:k's analysts, the
•
ROOM
.
. .• ...,
.adjust lighting in the carrels. natioiJ.'S most J)restigious pri,
-·~ 5
&lt;The porthOle motif, incident- vate universities seem to be
The Department:of Economics and .ally, is . rontinued throughout losing ground, 'salary-wise. Harthe" Human 11-.,ns Area' Flies, .the building throoih use of V&amp;rd lias slipped from 1st to
both now IOcited at Ridge Lea, large · circ!l!s of colOr as hall- 6th place over the last four
will temporarily share space with · way decorations. 'Ibis super- years. Stenford, .the University
the Faculty of l.llw and Jurisprud- graphics trend is again seen in o1. Chicago, Northwestern, Yale
once in John Lord O'Brian Hall, huge ftoor numbers decorating and Johns Hopkins have also
beginning this foil . In two years, stairwell doors.}
dropped; Salaries at many p~
Economics will move laterally Into
The bdclmy of the Library lie instilutions have risen over
the Education-Philosophy Building, is con._e.t to the main ftoor tbe 8lllJie period, with City Unian adjacent structure currently un· by an opm stairway which be- ·versity of New York making
der construction, John D. Telfer, comes a c:irouJar lounge plat- the moat dramatic gains. Half
vice pn!Sident for focilities plan· form belore turning into steira o1. .the top ten institutions were
nlng, has announced.
a~
divisions of City University.
first..b&amp;nd vi- .·makes, espe- side the Library is a aeries of
Of the four SUNY UniverciaUy in lenDs ol. J:hat 1\!&gt;xy, wmwhere.
dowd-~ wru
''J?robbel~,-~011a" sity ·centers, U/ B trailed Stony
ugly duckling .Jilbn·1 brd o'Bii""AAl
,......,..
Brook ($22,42S} and Binghamali lbJl wlliCh baa· been lr:noWn ileries of low tiers oVerlooking ton (~l,927) but ranked abead
to make tbe• ~ li.otorist a central arena.
·
ol SUNYI Albany ($20,B96} ·
gaap iii dl&amp;belief.
•
Court 1111om
.AJDol!.i the top . twenty
lfa 0 •
.
On the fjrst level, the- tonr IICbools were: New School for.
Up dose, inside, awiila.Y. a.e was directed to the Carlos C. Social Reeeerch ($26,133) • Hepublic was still gaaping as the Alden Moot Court Room which brew Union Collage ($24,371) •
UJiy ducllling revealed iteeJl plunges downward at a forty- California Insti.tute of Techn?laa a brea_thtaldng sWan.
&amp;ve degree angle, formed by OtiY ($24,079) • CUNY/Ctty
Mike Vopl in the Buffalo dealinding tiers where 325 thea- Colleae ($24,065) • Harvard
.t~Je~Ji1~6 Neu;. aaid the build- tJe -ta will be erected. Atthe ($23.688), Claremont G~reminded him ot a JIIIM8 tiottom o1. the dramatic slope ate.~ ($23,015) , :Y~va
Baud eel To others the JJIMIII- ( which will be C&amp;Jtl8ted In a Um......aity'a Graduate .DiVWQD
story atructure -.ned more - purple .lUI leaping lialf"'nf up ($22,629) • Unillll n-logical
! Ike 88Yal an:hitect's· homes the baek wall) are the judges' &amp;
( •m
.J~?') &lt;U~~610~
•· B~ .. ..,.,..
ripped from thee paps Of HOIUI! bench, w i - stand and jury • __..., ~· m
Beal#iful and steclred totefb8r, boz, behind which
~ ($22,428),
($22,full 'ol ·~ briek, pale wood. ·cbauibe18. . Another I&gt;CIIar!&gt;ld
), Air Foroe(..,., 122
ID8d)tuteColum-cl
- ' - .,..... and a "-"u: ol porthole mterrupta tlie aide ~ ' •
:p;;:j:,..:::::;,
...,.,.....
wall direclly a1xwe the jury bia ($22,ll78) and Corne II
'Die tour 'bepn on the fifth boK. 'Ibis_11De, III1ICil larpr (cxmtnct: $21,911}.
f!!oo1 in a'facufty lbary, eom- ~ those m the study CIII'Nis, Accoriiinlr to ciMa eubmltted
J)leta .,..ub Jdflal*l, whidt ~ IS the opening for a p.- bolt ~ ..... AAt1P, awt11118 OOiilpeD· to a Qee.~ fnah air court- where eYe!l ~ aMiOn by ranb far U/8 ~
yard Domfiitimc . the Cowt- ~ be ~ without dl8- beOken down • followli:
yard .il~.a IIIQtllcbt 'tlbicb , full- turl!illl~ ltllll, ~ of ~ \flill ...--_ $211.1100; .-cl. -. brilb- Into &lt;tbe. inaih! , &lt;~ w.
~·' """a,
•prol~~~ •

rinr

U/B Total Compensation Average .
21sfin Nation, AAUP Data Shows

:00'":-"J:':. !"mt:.":t

m,

are jud.....

'

. ..

..

professor, $16,400; 'nstructor,
$11,500.
.
1be AAUP has collected and
published data on faculty oompensation annually since 1958.
'This year .the survey encompassed more than 290,000 fac.
ulty at 1,509 ·~tut.ions .
·
Overall, salaiies for '72-73
were up 4.1 per cent over the
previous year and compensa·
tion up 5 per cent. Aocording
to the AAUP's Committee Z
on the Economic Status ol. the
Profession, the average increase
in compensation outstripped a
reported 3.3 per cent increase
in the rost of living (as measured by the Consumer Price
lndex), reversing the net-loss
situation of the .two previous
years. The Committee warned,

however; that the apparent gain
was ''small comfort" in view of
rontinued inflation. It alao
uestioned the validity of the
CPl figure as a realistic mM&amp;-,
ure of lile full incNese in· li&gt;oin&amp;
coats. Moraowr, aa the Cammittee 'p ointed out, the U.S.
per capita income rose 7.7 per
cent for the same period that
saw a 4.1 increase for the ljlcul ty member. "It is clear," aaid
the Committee, "-that the profession bas continued to loae
grodnd ·relative to tbe awrap
American." '
While not overly ~
by this year's qwilified_ .,W.,
the Committee 81'lmowledgecl
.that "a new record of ac1versi1f.
will have to wait at least until
next year's report."

·asA; Others Seek More
Support for Franklin
.

Graduste students and others
eager to see tew and philosophy
professor Mitchell .Franklin reappointed next year have received the endorsement o( more
than 26 student groups and

t;"th~ ~~

su=::!

SUNY Trustees make their decision May 23.
A wide range of students and
.faculty, including the heeds of
the .divisions in wbicb Franklin
~ had expnaed their
suppor t for his ooittinua~
pnor to the Trustees' meeting
test month when a 1lnal decisian had been es:pecled. No
action was teksn at thet time,
however.
According toTetty DiFilippo,

'

distwbed that a compromise
semester appointment rather
than a full year would be decided u
DiFilippo aaid. At
this stag~re is concern 'that
at least some of the .tnJsmay be : _ ........nno negatively
to FrankimTj;iitiea, be aald.
At Reporm deadline, GSA and
Committ..erep-tati-planning to ~Met with Pnlident Ketter in the hope that he.
would reallirm •troa&amp; 8lqlpCII't
for Franklin fot a full..yll8r-tinuanoe.
' 'Die Committee Bta~
reada:
"Tbe concerted elfort lor the
~ ol. Prof-. Mitm.n
Franklin on tbe put cl liDdents and faculty cl the l'tailla~andlaw~

GSAeztemal=vicePfl!!lli-

.

I

·dent and
for fbe the Graduata Sludelat ~
Commltt..e
the Reappoint- tioa, ·the 8tudlat ~
(eo.tiaud - · ,...
ment" of Dr. Fnmlilin and for
the Ilemocnltic ~t ol
the University tbe Committee
is canceined !bit tbe declaiGn Next~~':':,.'=,.
will come after~~ ,._
wtl1 "- ~ _. ....:
faculty and etuden18 baw left . - • 17•
- u• "' the aunp111 far _the - - :::::.::'~~~..::
Sbould the deciGaD !Je unlay- 7 tilrDulh Aupat 2. Air¥ - ..,
orable, it would be ~t for · "rmllt riln" for tile .
tbose ~ to IMire a cxm- 17 laue "'-Ill tile ..,
certed ......,... at lbat time, IIOitW-. Ellt. 2127 .. •
,DIJ'Dippo ~!1111 Ollt...;jJ '
-s.bla
'
.
Ialtlally, tt.c.m~,.,. ru=; ·

.-..t .

7:;;.;;·

.•

'r

·

�OpenHou~~~------------------------------~~----~~~--~-(COIIIiltue4 , . _ , . l, Col. 2)
court. Anolber feature ol the
large IOOID is aliabtina aJill:rol
system which ·c:an darlreD the
top of the epectator tiers wt.t
orily a small crowd Is ·OD haDd
and thus provide an Intimate,
small court feeling. 'Ibe ·CICIU,t'
room, ..m.- .-lral cleconltioa
is a giant Uniwraity book~
in blue oa the taD while waD
behind the judaes' ~ will
be used primarily fOr moat
~ activities but Will be the
••te of real .,._ork as well.
'Ibe Fourth n.n...,_nt .olthe
Appellate :DM;ionwill; ·in
fact, be -ted there for its
October tenn.
• ·
Sharing the 6nlt .~ with
the courtroom are smaller Ylll'
flioas ol the same kind of facility-ral Jectwe luolls~. in« downward in size """' a
tll&amp;ldalum capacity ol 169.

,
_ ~ . ~,..:-r WUI
R..~l!#!
floor where a p
'Pftl"

residena! complex at State Uni-

vennty

College

at Fredonia,

bas the air of a aeries of small
residence units rather than that
of a large collection• of beds,
iood service areas, lounge and
study facilities for more !ban
800 students which it in fact is.
Various 8Uite and room ar..angements are available...-a,
unit aeY-ccotained. 'Ibe overall feeling is small, intimate
and convenient; fumislrings in
bright. colors, blond WOOd and
metal complement the predominl!nt light_briek.
"Tbe · new donn is about 88
dose 88 one could come to living at home o&lt; in im apartment.
I like the way_it is Bet up," one
student COIIJII8Jted.
Tbe AmbenJt lour&amp; aiao
move by tbe ederionJ of other
, _ ...,.._ facilities, notably
1he .J.oeepb lWJoott College
~ · Lake~ ..... .,""'
two lake8 which Will be !joined,

Mien Millelsport is niroutedand the Biology and ~
lowel'll, with most of tboae on
!he~~in­

m seemg the· mteriors ol ~
also when construction progress
permits.
.
Back on Main Stzeet, viSItors were free to roam tbe:more
traditional Uniwraity buildings, decorated 88 they for
the occasion by flowering ......
in deep pinks and wbites,
gloasy J"""! lawns, and bright
blue ~- Thouaands did.
More !ban 2,000 people investipted . the . capabilities of
·t he Scanning Electron Microscope in the . Facalty of Engi,_;,g ScifiiCeS; the Health
Sciences were "quite erowded,"
eopecially . ·dents! emmination
areas and clini!;s, and l'lesident
Ketter ahooiC~ with ~
proximately 450 visitors in his

~J
·-.0~
-. ---- ~f ~~ti~

were: lbiat NorlOn we&amp;'OOt "too
busy" probably becll- most
people pnHned - to do their
roaming in .the' ~; that
the band concert on lbe Lockwood slieps was •well-ettanded
(in addition to belq weU-Marci
by tbe h~ or 110 in line
for the Amherst"'-~ ·
times) ; and that the
Cllllltest on

Peelle liWd betften

U!JJ 81\d Ithaca Uo 'IJOPular.
'
• '
'Ibe overall crowd estimate,
Open """"" Cbairman John
BueJk !!aid, was baaed on ' a
count of '08111 in !be (lll1'killll !qt
and on trdic noports..from Vlll"ous locations.
·
'Ibe turnout; be Mid. ..... the
largest of tbe ~ University
open'-- held since tbe 125th
Ann I v&amp;raary .00 the day
seemed to O«er ~lor
everybody, - -

..,..ADd ice

c:r.m

aa'one li e

!Jioy P.ointed J)Ut. ~,lh clftlis~t. '·

�"3

)

PUrcell of SPA Staff Ketter Cites Staff Senate Approves
Changes, Hears Soi;nit
.D,isagrees ·with Brown . Innccufacies
Re: Amherst ~

1n to • .......,
from the· Soot, Somit .ud 6at
the Adminilltration
be
happy &lt;to ._rt luUy to 4be
University~ em how
any "new .........,.... 8N .U.
tributed in amwal badpta.

i...st week's Reporter story on SPA University Center vote on
the dissatisfaction of some merp&lt; was 65 in faY!&gt;r and 4
members of the campus com- against "deapite local leadermf.!'i!io!~!"tion~_!e~~ ship's oppooition," asking '~bo
....., .uawu consis
noti~..~'l"responsive to their
fire (D&gt;m a SPA (now~/
-J

Becauae g r 0 s s inaocurscies
have a_.m in tbe PrMI during recent days ~g_the
State University of New York
at Bulfalo and a stall aDd sub- '
committee report airad at the

university's ProfMiionaJ Stall Sen&amp;te, . ..-tine ~
:rt'~· &amp;!;'Proved cbanges m
ds oons~tion, beanl ""~""""!
on electiODB and prolest11onal
dev~t, approvad a~ment ~recommendations

ofleUer
any anti-SPA movement (see
.from Dr. Harris on the

Board last Thursday May 3
1973 it has become'
'
to
thsee im~ry
L The State University has
had an interest subsidy grant
request --.&gt;:-~ be f 0 r e the
~tc;:("lJ4!alth. Educalion and Welfare (HEW) for
$4,530 000. The Erie-Niagaza
Counties Regional Plannfug
Board acts ,418 ·- lobal clearing
bouse on such requelits making
reoommendations related to environmental impact
2. The University has never
requested $32,000,000 in interest subsidy for the new Campus. (This ocinfusion apparently
arises from ENCRPB's stall
estimate that 88 this federal
program had CJi&gt;erated in the
past the maximum possible that
could be available to SUNYAB
for the entire Amherst Campus would not exceed $32 million) . Nor has State University

gram, and received an interim deal with budpt ~ 'l1le
"State of the University'' re-. budpt '"'!e ~ to Ia• lD
port from Execut!ve Vice Pres- 1973-74,". be said, will~
ident Albert Som1l
"bring us back to tbe Jewoel Constitutional. d!&amp;nges ap- _,., operating at duee ,_..
proved for f01wardmg to the aao. but will actually buy tell
g~ral .membership for ratifi- per cent leas becauM of inf)a:
cation included: a procedure lion."
• __,.
for elec~ both a president
Somit D!Xed. too, d&gt;at _ . .
and presulenHiect sh~d bc?th ment projeoti01111 for tbe UDi.slots beco!"e vacant,,'!' whicb versity in 1980 have ._,
the candidate_ rece~vmg . the scaled doom aomewhat •
most votes will be preBJ.dent all of SUNY's student ..tiand the runner-up, presi~ mates for that year. While be
elect; a system for replacmg was "reluctant" to di8clma apesenators who cannot complete cific figures until they are retheir terms of office by having leased by the Preaiaent, be said
the remaining senators from that U/ B's scaling down ia prothat area seleot a substitute; portionate to the overall sysestablialunent of staggered tem-wide cutback Of 17 tenns of membership on the cenl The graduate/underpadgrievance committee; . and an U.te mix has not significandy
oflicial mechanism for electing changed, be said, and the acalrepresentatives to the Univer- ing-down will not interfere with
sity Nisembly in the future projected development 88 a
\ the PSS has already selected graduate center.

~~t!/:~~
BJ;ru~~~=
Gonion Harris tbet be is part the loml lea.dembip to work
"V".....points" J181'1') :.
'EdWard R. Pwcell, assistant
executive director of SUNY/

~ted,the ~~
---.

curacies" in stalaments made

diiecUy with SPA Central.
U there have been problems
wtth SPA at the State level,
PuroeD said, it is because aome
Of the Bulfalo leadership ha~
not displayed "an interest in
andotber =i~y
• ,~
110 .....,..,.
,--;
SPA or State university con-

by spokesman Murray Brown
and said that BIOWD and a "few. cems."
.•
others" em this campus were
Puroell alao noted that those
-aimpl "bllhavin&amp; like spoiled who want to join SUNY/Unitbrats'l becauae "they didn't ,;t ed ebould write to the same adtheir way"' (in connection wdh dress that Prof. Brown has
the merger between SPA and given out for those who wish
the.State University-Federation .t o resign: SPA. 15 .Computer
of Teacher&amp; .to which several Drive, Albany, N.Y. 1.2200. "
U/B SPA members -re outspokenly CIPIPeli). ·
Purce.HO.- diaputed Prof.
Brown'a ealiDiata tbet 35 to 40
per c:ent of: 8PA's duea-payjng
members come' from the SUNY
university centem The correct
~· Purcell-said,. ia 800 out
The University has received

D'r ug Abuse

Team Set

bers~ta~ SPA mem-

Puicell al8o- expressed concern over the allep.tion signed
' b,Y. several members of the
U t B communitY that the new
SUNY/United dues structure
elfecti~ely prices a substantial
number of potential members
out of the organization. Dues
are one per cent of salary, Purcell said; UP to a maximum of
$250. ''NObody is Prilled out,"
be· -.iontinued, espeoially ''fat
cat full professors" at university CBDtenl. In addition, be
noted,: "the principle of a graduated dues structure has been
well established by AAUP."
In connection with Prof.
Brown's suggestions about
CSEA, and AAUP, singly or
tOgether as a new bargaming
contender for professional stall,
Purc:eiJ said that BIOWD ''n&amp;glected to ilay" that representstives from both thsee organizations meeting with SPA committees dismissed any such
moves. (SPA in Albany has
contended this for seve r a I
m on t h s while some local
spokesmen have just as vigorously beld that SPA was not
really interested· in aJJiliations
with either CSEA or AAUP.)
Purc:eiJ Sllid he found it dif.
ficult to believe that Brown
could criticize SPA for "unresponsiveness" to some of its
members while at the same time
"championing" AAUP and
CSEA.
U Brown is aeriously interested in academic viewpoints
being expresaed. Purcell posed.
"then :why aJJiliate with an organization
.clerla!, maintenance peraonneJ, etc..,..
And if Brown ;,; concerned
about the well-being of all those
c o v e red by \he professional
~~J.:l:!r·e.::.~~t, .......,
...H~
be seems "to overlook the fact

of

=~~UP~ ~~

=:. ~!~:n~f"'"f~ :~s~~v!:'Ac~on~~
0

..;rrect

~::"U:·J:.-.::-::~

a.ve

=m~ ~':'i!"~:~::'~S:,~~ ttv'Jo~ its1!/:tE~Y~~~e- exp~~!~;'J~ao:!

:J"':t!rrto.:=..:v:'
leaders in drug abuse preven- · ment of $650,000,000 through
tion programs on campus.
j ENCRl'B, s ince those authoriThe new project, funded un- zatiollB are made by the Legisder the U .S. Office of Educa- fature of the State of New York
tion's ''Help Communities Help and funded through ·t he sale of
Themselves'.' Program, will be bonds issued by the State Unibeaded by Dr. Edna M . Grex- versity Construction Fun&lt;i and
ton, director of drug programs not by the Federal Government.
on campus, a component of the
3. Regrettably, t h; s request
University's Division of Stu- for interest grant subsidy on
dent Allairs.
'
$4,530,000 for the AdminiatraThe seven faculty and stall lion and Service Building will
will attend a two-week..training not be forthcoming - not- )lesession at Yale University Med- cauu ENCRPB has or bea not
ical School to get the latest in- withheld approval at this time,
formation on research, problems but' because HEW does not
and programs related to drug have sufficient funds to support
abuse. They will also attend such a request. Thus, in fact,
P.,riodic follow-up sessiollB at State University does not have
Yale to update their knowledge. any requests pending belor&amp;
The team members will be HEW which require any stateexpected to disseminate the in- 'ment by the Er ie- Niagara
formation they gain at the Counties Regional Planning
training center by way of pan- Board.
els, seminars, radio spot an4. The University at Buffalo
nouncements, television and has been furnished. a copy of
classroom presentations.
the com m e.n t s of the ErieIn addition, members w iII Niagara Planning Board and
participate in identifying drug has discussed them with their
abuse program content for ex- Committees, indicating present
iating clasaes, orientation pro- status, and ongoing efforts, and
grams for new students and fae- projected solutions in all areas
ulty, and training programs covered by their stall reports.
such 88 those for Campus .Se- · We are appreciative of this excurity and dormitory advisors. change of data and views and
They will aJao 8881St in plan- are studying these comments
ning and initiating new drug with a view to the fur .the r
education programs and will be strengthening of our efforts at
expected to contribute to pol- collective 88 well as individual
icy-making and deciaion-mak- solutions.
ing in an effort to combet drug
5. As from the outset. we are
abuae on campus.
still willing to cooperate with
In addition to Dr. Grexton, all relevant agencies in the solumembers of the team are: AI- tions of difficult problems and,
bert J . . Ermanovics, assistant toward t hi s end, are eagerly
director of Norton Union; Med- awaiting the start of joint efison L. Boyce, director of Uni- forts under the 701 Planning
versity Housing; Charles M. Grant with t'h e Erie-Niagara
Klepak. counae!O&lt; in the Stu- Board, Town of·Amberst, UDC,
dant Counseling Center and a Ransom Oaks and State Uni~te
stw!ent in ~linl; versi~ to study and proP'!""
H. Grillin, uoialant
- - solutions to difticult and mrector of Campus Security; pr.. volved problems. , .

;=.; ~-=

wants all NTPs put into the try, and Ralph Hernal!dez....
classified -.vice."
siatant to tbe director · of UniPureeD maintained tbet be · veraity ~ and Career
knew
Only about 25 recent Guidance. •
r e_s i 1 n a h on s from SPA 0&lt;
Dr. Gralml noted that this
SUNY/United. If 20 ue from core gronp will be expanded
Buffalo, be indicated, tha move- eventually to include fac.
ment "18 ni&gt;t very widesprMd. ulty and staff membara • well
To the contrary, we have added as students.
approximately 100 new d.-.
paying members since the mer110SWEU COMMEIICDIEHT
181:·" CANCnLED
.
Purcell charaed that "*'- The comrnencernent c o r e m o n y·
......, old sbains fiCdl Bulfalo, ' scheduled by the Roowol! Parle .,...
using SPA Cenlnil•a a 'wbip- mon.1 !nstltuiB Grad- Olvtslon
ping boy' :wbfle cbampof
thaionmgl
'
for Frldly, ~ 25, lin_, can·
the reaponlll' local
celled. Raswollsourca uy, "since
SPA Jeadenbip are being all the~ will haw loft the

of

.:=~ofJ:*.JiliJ:l.:;

-w

r~~ ~'f!'l''c that, ,_."

-ROBERT L. K&gt;=EB

Serials Head

Robert L. Mi~ult has bean
appointed
~
~
bnry. Mr. Mip*ult ho1da the

ported that a three-member
group has been established by
the Executive Committee to determine eligibility for general
membership ·i n the Stall Senate
based on source of funding,
title, status, et.c., and to maintain and distribute membership
lists. The Comm&gt;ttee also recommended .that the PSS adopt
the policy that releaaing actual
vote totals in i ts elections is
"counter-productive."

Senators . who noted that the
"explosion of paperwork"
caused by procedweima'ndated
by the SPA contraot has imposed enormous extra workloads on prolessional ataH in
many departments. These
things are mandated from outside, Somit noted, and the State
is reluctant to provide help. The situation wiU be intensified by paperwork generated by Affirmative Action, be
said, emphasizing that be l'rofeslklnal Dowlopmont
e&gt;:pressing no criticism of eiPat Hpltander, chairman oi tber program, just empathy for
the Committee on Professional those who must deal with tbe
Development, reported that the administrative impact
both.
B\lbcommittee on Evaluation of
Ranking is still investigating
the point factor ptan for ranking NTP pooitions and expects
to make a report soon. The
Sbili~sh'ttee _don. ~reer Moty, . e 88J • IS · process
. o_f foll&lt;?Wmg through on a quesThe Graduate School bas antio~ ~eYll!ll all NTPs, nounced plans for a new · jour·~err career h1Stones and_goals, nal to be known 88 OEcW!U!M.
m order to develop and lDlple- According to Dr. M a r v e I
ment career .development _pat- Shmiefsky, associate ~.
le""!. A third subcommittee English, the tiUe is IIIMnt to
has JUSt been fozmed, Ms. J;lol- stress the ecUmenical function
Iande: repo~. to OODSlder of the j o u r n a I in foetering
questiON! of retire""'!'t bene61s,
greater coheaiveneM within the
early retirement opti~ etc.
Graduate School The 'llllbtiUe
E?Sene Martell exp~ an will be ''The U/B Graduate
O)lUine plan for ~rmative AoSchool Journal."
ti'!n that a special PSS ""!"·
"Tbe journal will au- ...,_
mJ~ had drafted fo_r considhera
of the Graduata School 'to
~ratio!' br the Presiden!. for
esplaln
o urael ves to our~UBlon m ~ ovefB;ll Umverstty Affi!matiye .Ac;tion state- selves.'.. Dr Bluniefaky~
be .··fcirum for
m&lt;;i&gt;t which will be issued lat,er with colleuuea
in otla
th!s lll'!nth. 'I_be rel.''"t paaaed
With litUe ~ e&gt;ocept plinM the ti'OIItien or ~
m
a
particular
field,
for IIIJIICIIfor a sugg'!"tion of ~
~ !he teriDlDOlogy defining JB· lating on the futura inlallect1m
diVIduals w!&gt;&lt;&gt;m tbe .~
oi the COUll~~a
in~thiaU
statement will cover. ~ role
ln tbe- eolution of . . . .

of

Grad Scpool
Plans Jourrial

"n":fu

Yell-

responded.~,~~ ~"'f!

that ·u~ Spanilh

J:IIIUI.~bl

~

• ---'--' ._.,, __ ...

b'iiEw~.:

agency ~ the Ac1ioD
program.
Somlt'a R1poot

•

·

Somit noted an "uncbanged"
Univarsil,y aituation since hi&amp;
last report to tbe Beaate in
Man:b. "We ~·
for
~~...:.~be the other~ shoe to
,"
reopaaaibJe for the adminiatno- be said, refemllll to the
ticm of tbe ~t, includ- DBllal budpt atill awaiting
lng tbe _.ua.11oa and~ I..ePrJatiw ·~proval 'lbat
1ng Of claaallled and •onclaMIIIed budaet. be Mlllt ;. alma8t .,_
tbe main~ of tbe ere&amp; health orimled.
CCJIIIIIIIIel'b record. of the Ji- II b)' ......, c::lla.- it ~ DOt
._....
, llerial ~ -lhzoulb, be IDdlcalad tbat
-~, 8)11111aa
01bK UDiv...lty bide will
and tbe _ne..,_,t .of
baWl to be laobd at ear-ly
!H,:d~~~ carefa117 to fiDd addltlaoal
formed with Mr. MilniP!t'a Jlllll!liMrfor J-lth acieacee opllrrfvab l I
•-if• •
t
~
• I
·i-·•.

be:J

-w..

~

"A ..-~hie fcJnnd artica
milbt take wwld be - - - ill
the aplrit of 4he N- Ycd .a.
uU!w of Boo.b. While mary audleDce and •••••
wwld be tbe . . . . . . 1liii!IW
and studenta f#. SUNY at W.
faJo,
liape to
. ..

C.',;

~ofaar••='R,

::~-aa..=:

~~.t-·

The a - of tbe . . . . . . .
Dr. Sbmlefally ..,., • ......

on.

ward a a Mmtociniey?"

oaatribulolll ID tbla .... "wwil
bil ......... ~ "1111&amp;WO!i1d UJre to aaUdt . . . . . .
tioaa to the _ _ . .... at tbla
t~me.•

~andcudl......_

ebould be.,...._.. tD Ik.

~. 211!1,.~~"'.

'

�4 ..

)

•J •••

• • .~ r

j' . .. - -- -· ·· ·-

-- ~

--- · · -· - ---- -·. JI•J O, .1973

S~ Participation in'Facu!ty Roles,
An ·o pen Letter to:
veraity"
All NTP~Technicians· 7lelevance'.&amp; Quotas Called 'Threat~'
41'

'•

••

bas became tbe bandmaiden of society; it baa traiDed
people
for
tbe ~ law
An opm letter to all non-teadl- IDIIIIY rommitteea or volunteer
tbe lninjstry medicine,
•
ina CNTP) tedmic:iaDa:
.to ..,ve in"aJJ,f.J:8PO'CitY in or· ecutivea'for : ~ . , : : :
Since tbe inception of tbe c1er to J&gt;IOIDIIIe-:ca better UDderd~. for...._, in tbe army
S tate Univemity ProfMBimal staDdinJ of their poaitiaao and
and Jt bas dane - . d J for'
Aasociation (SUPA) Ill 1968 lruatrationa Ill tbe U~
'tbe.military-industrial com
until the ...-nt. I l)8re been CCJillmUIIity.
as active as IIOII8ible Ill~
U the contract """' by SPA
. By .PAUL KURTZ
This slowly erodes tbe.
~ and autonomy of the wAB~at I.~to~m--- ( - SUNY/UniiA!cl) was DOt
"',_
uruvermty. Relommce can be a
"""""""' - to your likina. tbe fault lies
VI
syn&lt;mym for the moet vulgar
tbe of JDOIII!.Ialiy rewards, with tbooe of you wbo decided
A third fallacy ~tiA!cl by
native prqmatics. In ita 11111ne,
VII
~~~~~- to remain ailent by DOt joining tbe ..,;.,.m, democratic ortbo........,.
lllequi· the Union and thereby furf4!it- d
· tbe ·
tha tbe
·
A fourth major attaclt upon BabQitt can reip tiUpn!lne.
ties, time aooouDtinl
Ill and ing your rilbt to vote .., ap- ..::::,: is ....,":.'; lilret the s : the independence and au~
Well. ..thars DOt what those
the ..-all -tment of tech- pmval Of-the contract.
·
or goyemment. Hence the no- my of the university is tbe d&amp;- wbo argue for 1i1evance mean,
nician type pei8CIIIII8! as comSPA bas now meraed with tion of participatory democracy mand for relevance; the view and those are apt tbe kinds of
(l8n!d to administrative, mana- the Stale Unlvemity -F ederation bas been annlied. Tbooe wbo that the university exists with· problems tbet ....,. would have
gerial and faculty per11011118).
~~~:'~ill..!: so IDier(lret lMtitutions of high- in society and~ that the univer- tbe uni-aty: ...at. 'They are
inteiesled Ill the university's
~
I&gt;OWedul unit to mate the State er learning believe that tbe-cen- sity must therefore serve tbe deallq
with ra d i c a I social
needs of society and contribute
to tbe solution of its problems. cbsnge, !lrban bligb.~ peace, inlisten
more
attentively
.............., .... SUNY's
faculty
and sllift. to
of
·
I accept this role. 'I)&gt;e uni- . ternational cooperation, an end
versity C&amp;nDOt exist in splendid to racism, tbe aolutiog of eco: destructicm. · Granted,
Professions) Staff Senate Steer- merger will add more strength students. And tbey say eech is isolation in a COlnplete ivory logical
ing Committee. I was also into count for one. "People ought · tower of oon sequitur irrelev- the university abould be on the
ance. First, because society will cutting edge of socia1 pni&gt;lems',
'IA!cl
to
-"""'"""'
to
have
control
over
their
lives,"
VI
. - - , . , . - as a .,_,.
is a , __ ,, __ · "'--- 'The rage not support tbe university fi. and it should be COila!rD8d with
ber of tbe Presidanrs Commituuuuuuc -.._.~
tee on merit and equity nxmey
only ~o yeera ago was for large nancially if it ignores its needs,· some of tbe urpnt .social and
and, 'second, because the uni- normative issues of the day.
disbibutiQn. I am ~tly a The lllpartlor . _ a n ita- :":~ ~;'f'.:~ne:t versity, as an IDstitution of crit- But I wo u I d argue that it
member of tbe Professions1 to . , . - a for . tha a- should be done
ical inquiry, has some oblip.- should not puraue these at the
Staff Senate's Subcommittee 011 cbanp at an a nJtety
N · 1e
NTP .......er mobility.
·
at tha feclnc
tha ..-nlc
aw- t me · grant that stu- tinn to tum its attention to tbe expense of other kinds of pure
During my tenure as ~ c 0 m m u n 1t y. We - . . both dents ought to be ~yolved Ill ptessing normative problems of research or quiet scbolarship,
of poetry and pbiloaophy, biol·
-. •
many or most d8ClSlons con- society.
Committee chairman, I had tbe poo111on p a P • r a and history - studies for
ponnb.
~ ::"'b::'gco~vesabou
. ThetYa~Widet if ~~~~no!x:m~n~ ogy
privilege of talldng to IDIIIIY of which there seem to be no imyou on a private basis, ~
and so- mediate social 'WieB.
to many complaints arid oll'err a n g e of problems affecting standards of
I am op~ to the politicaling BUfgestions on how some of . to our ·neg\&gt;tiations and wlli be -them -and their institutions, es- called irrelevant researd1.
Indeed, the problem that we ization, moralization, economizyou migbt be able to solve some the type of Union nlost NTP pecia))y concerning their moral
(ColOtinue&lt;l.
on P"8• 7, coL I)
of your job pioblems. Most of technicians will be able to iden- behavior, in which they should have faoed is that the multithe qgestions you submitiA!cl tify with. But a Union is on).y be free to decide what to do,
to 11M! were· brought to tbe at- as strong liS its paid membe'i- and tbey should insist upon
tiontion of SUPA's E:recutive ship.
good leaching. 'The institutions
Boenl and I believe are ndw
I would strongly urge all NTP ought to be responsive to their
showing fruition.
technicians \ to l o i n SUNY1 needs, interests, and opinions.
Though many technicians UniiA!cl so that we may have a :_I'he best way to learn the ethcomplained aboi.tt their job and louder, stronger v o i c e in all !CS ~f democracy is by practic- · EDrr&lt;&gt;B :
hospitals, in most C!ISe&amp;, Meyer
workini conditions, .it was ex- areas that have an effect on our mg tt.
· As a member of the Campus Memorial, B u f fa I o General,
tremely rare that l!l'Y techni- careers in the SUNY system.
Yet bow far do we JO? Should
clan (or group· of technicians) Those areas of concern to us everyone in the uruversity or Security, I feel that it is im- Sisters or Veterans Hospitals.
In tbe case of a drug · overhad the courage to follow es- should no~ only be those of connected with it decide what portant to keep the University
tsblisbed prooedures through dollar remuneration .but also of to do? At SUNYAB there Community informed as to dose, wbether the person needs
some
of
the
areas
·in
"Which
we
the
services of the S t u d e n t
SUPA or SPA in order to cor- workload, membership on de- are 23,000 ·s tudents and 1 500 are mvolved. We often work
Health Office or a hospital
rect whatever was considered partmental search committees
professors. But there are ;....,
in conjunction with other de- Sunshine House is called, and
wrong or improper.
etc.
.
' 4,000 janitors, maids, guards
·, As one who considers himaelf
Let's be practical. and real- ~!aries,_ and those involved partments on campus. One of in most situations contributes
piimarily a technician, I can istic. How powerful would a m supporting s e r v i c e s, and the most frequent cooperative to the handling of the esse. If
empathize with your feera of block of NTP technician votes many of them have dedicated efforts is w i t h the Student a situation is relatively noncritical, we may refer the perdepartmental retaliati&lt;nr shoutd be on the overall workings of the.ir I i v e s to the university Health Office. Foi example
you push too hard for those Par t s of the SUNY system? community. Should their vote during the months of January' son directly to the S t u d e n t
rights you believed _yourselves How effective can such a block be equal in all matters? They February, and March of 1973' Health Oflictl or Sunshine
to be deprived of. What I can- of votes be on our careers in should surely be consulted in there were approximately 45 House. In any case, we attempt
not \,lnderstand, however, is the system?
·
matters iliat concern them- he a I t h-related calls. 'There to handle the situation with the
why this fear should be so all
U you as a technician are but in all matters? No, say the seems to be no typical emer- immediate needs of the person
though certain patterns in mind.
.
co~11. to many of you. not a dues paying member of students. Why? BeCause they
Some of these
Netther can I understand the SUNY/ United, you'll be forced are not com_petent to judge mat- are repeeted.
are accident-injuries,
Emergency and bealth-relatattitude shared by all too many to accept what other ~ups feel ters of cumculum or education. opatterns
v e r-&lt;loses, epileptic seizUres ed calls, such as these examples,
technicians t bat the present you're worth for you II have oo In other words, specialization
and minor acci: are just one of ·t he important
Uni!"' ''is just DOt for us" and v o i c e in any decisions that and the division of labor here beart-seizures,
that tbe reason 'for not joininJI might adversely affect your ca- 'COme into &lt;ionllict with demo- dents. The normal procedure in roles Campus s.icurity plays on
dealinJ.
with
these
situations
the SUNYAB campus. Thanks
the Union !other than cost) IS reer. On the other band. . : .? cratic &lt;!ecision-making. Should is to dispatclt an officer
to
to excellent inllmaction and cothar:!t
:'th!&gt;.._:?mme·on." hasn't ' done
I would be very much inter- the entire college or university scene to see if a nurse from operation between the Student
&lt;uc
esiA!cl in hearing from those vote on the type of beating
an
should lilre to point out NTP technicians (n ot those plant to install, the best sewer- the Student Health Office is Health Office, SUnshine House,
that many of fOU now bold with technical specialist titles age disposal system, the pro- needed. U so, she · is then es- and our ol6ce, - have come a
three-year appomtments. He- ?~Y please) wi)O would like to fessors to be chosen, who corted to the person in need of long way Ill meetinl the needs
member ""- you could come )0111 SUNY/UruiA!cl with an eye should get tenure and be pro- belp. In csses of reel emergen- of the campus community.
sin-eJ
to worlt Ill the morning and ' toward the possible formation moiA!cl, who should be admitiA!cl cy, when an ambulance is not
y,
receive ).'.01!&lt; "pink slip" before. of our own special interest or ~uaiA!cl, and which books ~tely available, ollicers
~~ty Of6oer
110011 WithOut any ezpi&amp;Mtion?
group within SUNY/UniiA!cl.
or JOurnals to purchase for the will · escort. ~ns to nearby
~I d&lt;m't.recsll a .....rlil·techBDWAIID v. GRAY
'
library? Obviously not: 'There
II1CWI turning down tbe raise
Sr Artist/Desi
·
~ to be a wide consulta~t was won (01' you by SPA
'·
ln8tructionaJ
tion; but · only those involved
paid ~ or DOt. I siMiuJd
munication Center • and those wbo have some comalso ~li!Jn that there were
25 Foster .Hall·
petence a n d expertise should
no technicians wbo would ecTel· 4802
dec;id:e. Do e x p e r i e n c e and
cept positicJDs .., any of tbe
~: 633-9502
training mean nothing, and the EDITOR:
•
wi11ingnesa b) accept tbior!nom·
. word of an educator who bas
your May 3 -an ar- instion if offered. Obviously in
devoiA!cl his life to education ~c e ·~8~ under the bead- contradiction of
8Uigestion
equal thatofim incoming fresh. m_g
roWIRg Numbers Here -I was about to reatgn from 'the
man who hates math and would F"!d SPA Unresponsive," in organization.
rather experiment with drugs? which my name appeared aS---.,.
In my view, the factilty should bavinl signed a letter of resig- · rd hate -to think we are havA:. ...... ~ . . . . . . , . , . . . . ..... ~.,. •
.owwo. ol u ... ~ l.araely reBpOilSlble for run- n!'tion from the seDate Profes- in~ our own "Watel'pte connmg -the univemity or collejle, .!"o!!al Association. 'This report spuacy" here at su,NYj BulJalo,
u~.,,.. rcwt• -..-.~.-.&amp;.. a.u-.
sharing some responsibility With ts m error and resuiiA!cl from a but can acxount in no other
11. r. 14.214. ........, . - . . . . •,_,.. .. 2J3, 2a .,.......,.. .... _
(...... 2121}.
~
students a n d administrators clever impersonation of me in way , for tbe asies Of events
and tbe president and ,board oi a phone call to Professor Mur- concerning my 8IJIII)OII8il resig• ~trustees should be elected.
ray Brown. I am convinced that nation from SPA.- t:lince I am
Sbould tbe.democratic model Prof. Brown bad DO idea that n_ot a politiCilliY ambitious perapply to universities and col- he W8!' not talking to me. I son I am not losing much sleep
~
poaar
r . .&amp;UU!T -·
leges? U so, it might destroy bave, ~ fact, not discussed the ·over this matter. I am. how·
~In New York State and ~ibility . of my resignation ever, seriously concerned insoJOB1f. .._ cuxrruut
California many citizens in the wtth ~~ne, nor have I made far as it appears to represent
community-lit-large seek to in- the decision so to do As a a new and disturbing dimen·
. l'.u"BU ....... .......,.,.
teivene in the .running of their matter of easily conf.irmable sion to the abclttnt but no long·
state uiliversities. Many of their ~ I was in communication· ·e r · honorable JM118 of campus
.AJICF .. Cf PQfPStrl
~IA!cloftheir~tors have at the wtth Professor Elizabeth Har- . politica.
•
.....
agendas "the firing vey last week in connection
-y:
' aincerel •
of radical and liberal profes. wi!h my possible nomination
'·
OUI8
y,
..,... and "the ..,..,..u;,. of
as a candidsle:f
.8RA
oo-.. M. RABIIIII
At".that time, ,fl~ o!Jkle.
•.
I.adda~r
of
c:alcitrant 8 t u ciBnta:'l,
"" ' • !' ~ : j
t t.:
- - ·· - ·
!d ~r~.,'",1 ~i·• I· ,a.-latry' . ini· O•
"power to tbe people" mean
that the people Ill tbe state at
large should run tbe universities? 'They are often unable to
apl'recia~ what tbe idea of a
uruveraity is. No, we argue. We
believe in the indepeildeoce and
autonomy of the univemity?
Yes. And in academic freedom?
Yes. And in allowing lhoeti wbo
are best qualified to i u d .I e?
Yes.

..=:r:;

U:.:

=--·~~-~~-

=-

:!,~;!.! f:U:di.;:,

~:.::J~~U: fj~=:!z~~evoJ:! ~=-=~~~

INTs

GVIEWPQ.

excellence

Security Officer Outlines
Health-Related Procedures

gency,

u..;

Dr. Harris Says He Did Not
Sign SPA Resignatiort Memo

&amp;:::

.r

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

..

__

·--

·-~­

-...,..~~rPt~T-~~~~::i:."i""~;---;r;;t;u..;;;:::=;iiiii;.;;;

~

anr

�~ coREPORTER.,

Jlq 10. 1913

'Certsured List; Tenure Talk He·a d -Alumni-F~ulty Interest
Hochfield's Report on AAUP Meet In Centerto beSuroeyed
-

·

Tbe unusually larie number
of iDstKutioos on the "censured" 1iat and talk aboqt tenwe dominated Dr. George
Hocbfield's imprt!IIBXms of the
b9th Annual_ Meeting of the
I ~ican Aaoociation of Uni-

( which ;, expensive to the institut.ion) or to get around tenpurele") , (b
HY ""'.·:ntraeldc~d.for emmocbfi
.lt the annual meeting, the
kAUP responded on the question o( "tenm.;na in" in several
-separate actions: A subseotion
of the report on the economic

of desirable tenured

to

llODten-

ured faculty ratilla and insist
lwtber that faculty should participate fully in all tenure decisions. The Special Committee on Nontenured Foculty also
issued a report Vigorously opposing tenure . quotas on the
versitY Prof-.. (MUP),
~ April '1:1 and . 28 in St.
grounda that they undennine
Louia.
.
.the principle of inerit and reH~ wbo attended tbe
e.llinning the AAUP position
a •=-tee,~::::;
CAMPUS AAUP
that a university is obliged to
-~ --~
.
TWhel
.ll cahomldpuslts cohnanpteuo'l om! etmhebe~hu,.PP makeb all tethenure._~f·o~~f":""
~ . ~thealia~of~••
Y case on
""""'o .uuuV1d"!"" ,..._.
•
· . meeting Monday, May 14, in the ual merit. . The nontenured
tions_ CI!II8Ul'eCI bf tbe AA~ Red Room of the Faculty Club, faculty group emphasized tbe
had ~ .fiD many Pl'OIIll- beginning at 3:30 p.m. According need for better plamiing in
nent ~ DOt:ably Co.- to Chapter President Shonnle Fin- ~eving desirable balances of
nell aDd Obio S - . The ad- negon, the agenda Includes the tenured I nontenured faculty.
ministrations of both instiW- report from the president on mom- Finally, Hochfield and other

881

::::t':.,.:l

f.,~!:.i~ted~~"!!{!: =~::; ~:_m:z 1 ,:· t~d;:l;, ~~rad~~~lu=,%::'~

tion of accepted AAUP procedures;
·
Faculty tenure was the other
promineot feature of this ~Meting, aocording to ~ld.
Tbe ~~~ ~C
· . _report
of tbe
on
Tenure in u:....- Education
•.....was ~ extensively.
"'Ibe AAUP is patilied Chat
the report stroos!Y tRJPported
te
it geoera11
tes
llllidet="!.,d
standards," Hodilieid iaid. The
Asaociation was particularly
~tified, be noted, Sinoo the
Keast team bad tested AAUP
standards (including .the sevenyear rule, the- right of otboee not
granted tenure to reasons, and
tbe like) against possible alternatives including contraots, and
bad generally found tbe AA UP
approach. more effective in insuring both job security and
academic freedom. However,
the Keast Commission's cau·
tion •in the matter of "tenuring
·in"' caused some concern among
tbe AAUP.
''Tenuring in" is the tendency of educational institutions to
become increasingly staffed by
tenured ~culty . Although eatablishment of tenure quotas
was not recommended, the
Keast Commisaion warned that
a university with more than
half to liw&lt;&gt;-thirds of its faculty
tenured is in danger. This caution could be interpreted by
administrations in such a way
as to pose a threat to tenure,
possibly even a direct assault
~J:'f~\1!" syatem, tbe
A number of people at the
meetinJ! reported that their own
institutions· were talking about
tenure quotas. Given a poosibly
inadvertent push from · the
Keast Commission, 8ome institutions are looitinf for reasons
to justify not pving_ tenure

......,....,m!MIOO

·undm::; :'A{rp

Fulbright Gran,t

discussions between the AAUP and paased by the Association oondisaffected membel$ of SPA; a no- deD11Jlng tenure quotas and report on the state and notional aHirmjng that tenure decisiona
AAUP conventions; and a resolu- must represent judgments on
tion supporting the noappolntment individual merit.
of Mitchell Franklin besed on the
Hochfield, who attended a
classic AAUP governance position.
meeting of the StatewideAAUP
earlier in April, also re-~-'
""'~
status of the p!O!eaaion was
that the New York State AAUP
devoted to tbe issue. Michigan will soon name a part-time execonomist Peter .O. Steiner and ecutive secretary, funded by a
the Co-authora of this document grant from the national offioo,
(entitled "Surviving the Seven- who will handle a wide range
ties") argue for a non-simplis- of Association business a t tbe
ti~ approach to the calculation State level

U/B faculty, stalf and alumni will aoon be survered· about
their interest and desire to support an Alumni-Foculty Center
in Amherst.
Faculty · and stati' the U/B
Alumni Association' and tbe
U/ B Foundation, working with
the Survey Reeean:b Center
have prepared a four:-pag~
questionnaire which will ask:
1. How .much will memben;
be willing to pay in membership fees for facilities consid- .
ered minimum to aatisfy tbe
recreational needs of aluinni,
faculty and stall'?
2. How often would members use these minimum facili ties?
3. How much would mem.::,.:&amp;o!:d
cilities, such as handball and
squash courts, an indoor swimming pool and ·perhaps a Universal gym and related e:a:eroise
equipment?
Minimum facilities include a
dinin
" g room and L . .
ting"
"""• mee
room and special purpose
TOOms, and lOUJliiO, among othera
A major hotel chain has indicated interest in building . a
hotel and conference complex
on tbe 19-acre siiA! (at the cor-

~.:: ~':g

ner of Sweet Home and CMtnut Ridge TO&amp;ds) which the
U / B Foundation rooceived from ·
the Baird Foundation. If a
hotel is to be built, the developera want to know what faciliti'i!twill be
between the
ho
and co e.renoo complex
and tbe Alwnn1-Faculty Center, and which features will be
separate.
Thet's why tbe ·validity of
tbe entire queationnaire, or survey iostrumeilt, has been oonsidered carefully by the Survey
Reeean:b Center, and other
participating groups, U/B
Foundation epo1msmen say.
·
Tbe Sufvey instrument is
~ to be mailed •to 2,500
fa ty and 4,000 alumni.
2 It is

"':,red

(~: ~tsre~ ~~:f ~:,

the summer and definite plans
made.
Last year, tbe U/B Foundation sponsored a study, performed by a New York Citybased fum, 'which indicated
that a hotel on the~
·
erty would be
y
practical

Some income will be generated by the hotel for the benefit of the Center, but membership fees will have to cany tbe
operating coata of the Center.

50-Year
Graduates
Return for
Reunion

'Ciiol(-

A crowd of about 120, including 60 older alumni, attended
the U/B Alumni Aaoociation's fitst annual 50 Year Alumni
Reunion lAmcheon. Saturday, including Dr. Henry V. Heiss,
class of l909, froin Jobnaon City, N. Y., who is 85 and still practices dentistry.
·
The event specifically honored tbe Class of 1923 but also
saluted those who graduated before that date.
&amp;-!rers included President Robert L. . Ketter who noted
that the presence of the visiting ~P indi&lt;:ated that "our lines
to the past. have not been cast astde;' Jon Dandes, president of
.the Student Aaoociation; Morley C. Townsend, pre81dent of the
General Alumni Board; Dr. L. MaxwoU Lockie, a tDember of
tbe Class of '23 who served as Reunion cbairman; and Miss Emily
H. Webiter, retired University aasistimt vice president and '23
claaa poet.
Miss Webster presented a poem for the Reunion, the text of
which follows: .

Dr. Charlotte S. Catz, aaaociate p!O!esaor of pediatrics, clinical direclor Of tbe Birth Defects Center and 11880Ciate· attendina pbysiCian at Children's
lloopital, bas been awarded a
Fulbright Grant to conduct research in developmental pbarmacology.
Dr. Catz will belrin her sabbatical in Sel&gt;teuiber at the
Center for Biolotical Research
on Newboms in Paris, France.
She bas alao been named an. Where are they gone-those daya of yeoteeyear?
=~~-wt.!!, ~ ~ Sinoo that glittering June morning so long ago ·
illsugutate a co u r s e on the Fifty long years ago--when,
•
~ of tbe f
and
Heads held proud and high. we ventured forth
~·
' etus
Together from tbe aheltering arms of Alma Mater.
Sbe rooceived her MD. de- In full youth then-to faoo the bright new world and
gree from tbe University of
Make it ours at last
Buenos Aires School of Medi- We weie 80 sure there was something waiting to be done by us,
cine, kgeotlna, · a n d fUrther
And we would find it.
~ at Stanford University
, .
School of Medic:lne. Sbe came
_ . and
to U/B , in 1966 and has pub- J.ook back once more at tbooeha years, ..,_..
cone
'
lisbed wide! ill tbe fields of 1Where have we been--what ve - .
pedistrics .a; d pharmaooJocy.
What have ,.., cioDe--what left uncSox.?
Sbe is 'a member of tbe Pres!- What prpmises made and kept-to otMw a_llll to OUI'll8lwe?
dent's Committee 011 Recruit- What dreams fuJfilled-or daahe&lt;! to eutb m unfulllllmmt?
lll!'D~~Ptom!nion of w~
·
·

·

._---Dr.-·

Some hopes realized-&lt;10me J&gt;lUPOIIe8 accomplishedSome abandoned.
.
'
Some of us free to follow a chosen path
1
Some driven by strange !lwists of fa~ foll"'f paths not c:hoeen.

Always a war-or so it seemed- war to go tc&gt;A war to return from
Moments of courage-many moments of ~ ol despair
Always a prorni-t pea.,.,._. worlq to b8 set free
But such uneasy, restless peaoo ~the wars. •
Peaoo never quite aafe or sure-within our grll8p-DOt I!Yell nowPerhaps leE than ever, now.
•
But not all lost, if you will but count tbe rich rewards,
The precious memories
.
Remember each new spring such as this o Wben :April lust aang tbru our veins
'1'1..- sharp springs mattered moat
Out of them came lov&amp;--'beautiful creatures to love
And be loved by-and mads one's own until tbe death.
Tbere wer8, ol courae, tbe loved}}!* wbo - t away .
To not retum--.Dq more!
But always hope' of life and love,
a - , d at "!"De other time aDd place.
Try qoce more today to look at..dDare ...... again to face the lone. lont futUre

Feute., fcirsivinc. Iovin&amp; ._ bopinc;
~. and tomorrow and ._,.._._

Tbat is tbe part for
.

-mlll.YIL-

CJ.- Poet
a- of 1923

·~

�Dent Grant
AidsStuderits

Job Openings
The Perso;,el Office indicates that the following faculty
and non-tesching professional staff' positiona are open at
State University at Bulfalo:
Foculty

-

(

now, one of Tui's
cems is establishing
a
razy of 2,500 volumes for
.the WI 1974 opening.
Books collected on campus
and at other schools and oolleges in Western New York Will
form the basic librazy for the
new ooUege and will not be
simply a specialized En~lish­
language collection_ English is
tlte official languaie of the
1'/agas who have no national
language of their own.
The International Education
Committee of -the Faculty of
Educational Studies is sponsoring the book ooUection effort at U/B. Books from all
· disciplines social studies,
humanities and natural sciences - may be sent to the
Department of Higher Education, Room 16, Foster Annex
and all st\14ents, faculty and
staff are urged to p&amp;J:ticipate. ·
Assistance is also needed
ship the books to Nagaland.
Tui indicates it costs $1.40 to
mail an 11-~ package of
books. Checks for this purpose
may be made Datable to "Patkai" and mailed· to Boz 7~
Bu4o.lo 14221. Contributions
are tu-deductihle because the
Patkai · Foundation Inc. is a
recognired non-profit organiza·tion.
1be Foundation, one'of whOse
board members is Dr. Walter
C. Hobbs of the Hiiber Education Ilo!partment, will eany
on d&gt;it Colieae'a capital fund
efforts in the U.s. aUer Tui ...,_
turns to Napland. The"' is a
possibility ihat e. national fund
drive will be laUDCbed.

ro

There is .a further possibility
of government assistance - for
such things as utilities, -'Sitework and construction, not for
actual college operations. Aid
in the latter category, Tui feels,
might lead to "a loss of freedom," to government control of
curriculum. Besides, the political situation in Nagaland is at
present " unsettled." The area
is organized into a state which
is part of the nation of India_
MBI)y Nagas are unhappy with
this situation which is a carz;yover from _tHe organization of
.the British Empire and are
active
resistance to Delhi.
Tui feels that the "politics" of
this strug~e have nothing to
do with
e coUese project
which he opes will be of service to the 'country whatever its
ev~tual political organization.
otherActivities other than fundraising which await Tui next

m-

~Wfing~cl~den~~i

and construction efforts

A -t hirteen-member bunding
committee has been .established
to plan and oversee construction; and a 20-member oollege
board ol directors is· being
formed - 18 persons (the chief

·State OT Leader

~lineR. BrayJer, 1188istant
professor, ~t ol Occupational Ther&amp;py, School of
Health Belated f&gt;iOre&amp;lions, has
been electeif president ol the
N..W York State Occupe.tionaJ
Therapy ~lion. Sbe took
olllce May 4, ~annual
conference at
. 1be
AJ11DCiatian was inoorporatiod in
1958, and DOW iDcludes districts serving than 1100
members, the Iarpst state unit
~ c:uu:.tianal therapists in

Full Professor, Classics.
Associate or Full Professor ( #2 ), Classics.
Instructor, Medical Tecluwlogy . ~
Visiting Assistant, Associste or Full Professor, Geographt
·
Assistant Professor (Division of Statistical Science),
Computer Science.
Assistant-Associste Professor, Soci41 Foundations.
Assistant Professor, History.
Assistant Professor, Linguistics.
· _Assistant Professor, Music.
Assistant Professor ( #2), Music.
Visiting Professor, Music.
Assistant or Associate Professor, Speech Comrrwnication.
Assistant Professor, Theatre.
Assistant ~lessor (Art History) , Art.
Assistant Professor, Psychology.
Assistant Professor-Health Education Program, Athletic Trainer.
Assistant Professor - Health Ethuxltion Program, .
Women's Physical Education, coaching.
Assistant Professor-Health Education Program, Men's
Physical Education, soccer.
·
Associste or FuU&gt; Professor-Health Education Program, Administration, Teachini.
Assistant Professor-He4lth Education Profr&lt;un, Dance.
Assistant Prolessor-Denti&amp;try, Fi:ud Prosthodontics.
Associste Professor - Instructor:..._ Denti&amp;try, OpoUtioe
Denti&amp;try.
Assistant Professor-DentiStrY, Pedodontics..
Visiting Associate Professor, Computer Science.
Assistant Professor,, Social arul. Pretientiue Medicine.
Clinical Instructor, Gynecology..Obatetrics.
Director of Col.legiate System, CollegiDte System.

'-

Assisi&lt;Jnt FaciUtiU Proirom Coordiruztor, Fe.cilitiee.
Planning, PR-2.
For additional information concel11ilia tbee.e jobs aDd
for details of NTP openings tbrouihout the Slate University system, consult bulletin boarda at tbee.e Iocatiallll:
"
1. Bell Filcility between D152 and D153; 2. Ridae Lea,
Building 4236, next to cafeteria; S. Ridp Lea, JJulldiDc
4230, in corridor next to C-1; 4. Health ScieDcee. BulldiDJ,
in corridor opposite HS 131; 5. Capen HaU, in the oorridor
between Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwood, JII'OUIIIl
ftoor in corridor next to vending machines; 7. Hay.. Hall.
in maiJi entrance foyer, acrosa from Public Informatiall. Of- _
lice; 8. Adleean Hall. in corridor between Rooms 112 aDd
113; 9. Parker Engineering, in corridor to Roam 15;
10. Goodyear Hall. lat ftoor, .Housinl Ollice aree.; u_ law
School, first 6oor seneni informatiall. board between Rooms
108 and 109; 12. 1807 Elmwood, 'Pe.normel ~t; 13_
Nanm· Unilm, .Director's Ollice, Room 225; 14_ Diefandad
Hali, .ID oorridor DDt to Roam lOll
'

- ,,

: .-;- ·

�~

{fi.IAAt

Stud~tParticipation-----'"--· (C~ from -

4, coL 6)
and the only test upon demonstnted rompetenoe.
.
izalion ol the university; that
Unfortunately, aflirmative acis, to the devotion of its entire lion plans have often boon ronand eftocts to one end, strued to say that you w ill
OOwe\W commendable. Thoee judge persons by their """ or
within the university who wish group and not by. their indito deal with apeci1ic social prob- vidual abilities. What this can
lema should be eiiCOUIYJIIed to mean, if implemented, is that
do so, sinciY or cooperatively. some highly talented individulil
But we muat not tum the entin if be is not a member of U,:
univeraity into an instrument rompensated If o up, can be
for social c:ban8e and ameliora- pasaed over for someone elae.
lion; W.. muat allow some free- What abol!t the rights of· such
-dom and diversity for non-am- an individual? Never mind ·
fol1llll.'f individuals. 'Thus, it is about him, some seem to be
one thing to llfiU8 that lhooe saying, be must be sacrificed to
within the ..m-aity, as indi- · repay tbe centuries of diacrimviduale or in JIOiql8. should be ination. In a Period of tight
socially M politiallly c:enoerned. budgets, some universities have
It ill quite uolher to insiSt that virtually been w a r n e d: You
eueryOM abould lie compelled will hire women or membera of
to be imolwel, or that the uni- diaadvanlapd ~ firat, and
venity • a ~Ia b o-d y you will eu:lude otbera, or e1ae
should take "olllclal" position&amp;. your funds will be cut oil.
In my view, the ~ty UWhat is at stake here is the
..Y should still inainlain aome ability of faculties to make ro.
neutrality, save In ~ ~ ez- fessionally qualified · ~ts
treme CUIII wtae tt 18 ttself • about applicants, wf"thout exthreatened. It should not be for traneous matters intervening
Dr. John T . Hol'lon, retiring
God or atheism, for or againat Granted, we need to get rid
professor of histOry, will be
South , Viellwn, for the Arab all forms of ~ty and dis- honored by the Department of
or IaraeU b.~ for . women's crimination. We should allow History at a dinner Sunday,
I~ or 189 lib, vir!Ue or ain. Its merit and talent to be the chief May 13, in the Faculty Club.
cbiefdeyotion ~~.to ke_ep criteria. Wa should treat in- Dr. Horton, who bas been at
~ door ~ to• cntical m- dividusls as i.ndividutJls, not as U I B since 1926, will retire
qwry. It should be a place ·members of l!fOUps, either to .from the Department and tbe
where e v e r y o n. e can feel at apply discrimination or to re- University at the end of this
~me: the ~ and . reac- verse it. Even though the HEW term.
tionary Republ!""", the liberal allinDative action. plan was illMore than 100 guests will
and the anarchist. • •
.
ronceived, we need to rome up
I. grant that. by exmting m a with new plans to· ensure that attend the allair, including
President
Robert L. Ketter. At
SOCiety B1!" be:inl.suPported by everyone be treated tairly, that
~t. \he.uruvenuty m some ""'!"" women and minority members the dinner, Dr. Clifton K Yearley,
chainnan
of Jhe History
IS illrelldy ·part of the social
be encouraged to rompete on
Department, will present Dr.
st~~'poliantiJ:_,to" ~.t ~t. ~.terms for positions in 'uni- Horton
with
a
portrait
of him! .IS •
· ~·
ror •.ts ex- verstties and other institutions
sell done by the Schalk Studios
lStmg "! a. SOClety unavoidably of society.
in Bullalo. The portrait, a gift
IX
relates It m some way to the
social sy~. ~ in spite of
Is it impossible to defend the from the Department w~th the
this,-tbe..• umverst~ should. be view that the chief end of the assistance of the U/ B Foundathe ~orne'?f a v~ety ?f po'!'ts university is learning and the tion, will bang in the history
of VIeW, mclud'!'l d:JSSenting • quest for k[WwkdJie,- ~aching, conference room, 202 Diefenand n~n-ronformmg vtews. that and sclw/4rship? 1'be point is, dorf.
mar .diverge ~ ~ dommant tboae··who wish to use the uni- . Dr. Horton received his B.A.
pohtical or soctal mterests of versity for other purpoijes how · from •U/ B and · his M.A. and
Ph.D. from HarVard. He joined
the Establishment.
ever rommendable ~
VIII
be, may end up by undermin- the U/ B faculty as an instructOr
in history and government
There is one final illustration ing and destroying the univerof the current egalitarian as- sity as a free and independent in 1926, specializing in medie-·
val,
Renaissance, and reformasault on the university that is institution.
especially pressing. In my judgNow surely I do not wish to tion history. He served as
ment, this · new program of re- defend the status quo in the chafrman . of the History Deform can, if carried out, alter university, nor to argue that the· psrtrQent from _ 1948 to 1967.
the nature of ·the university universities are inWlible. Bu't In 1939 he received the Albert
drastically. I am here referring ·neither are rolleges and uni- J . Beveridge Prize of the
lo the recent policies of affirrr- versities, often the most liberal American Historical Associaative action in the hiring of segment of the society, rom- tion for his book, James Kent:
minority tacul_ty and womeit, posed of irrelevant and oppres- A Study in Conservatism.
In 1971, Dr. Horton received
and to the use of the quota or sive oligarchs, entrenched raetarget system to achieve it ists or sexists, as their critics the 22nd annual Samuel P .
This bas boon initiated by thoi charge. Is the university as I Capen Alumni 4ward, preDepartment of Health, Educa- have outlined it elitist? I re- sented to an alumnus who bas
tion and Weltare &amp;,Dd other gov. iterate, my answer is Yes. The made notable and meritorious
emmental aseilciies 'and imp)&amp;. university is an elitist institu- rontributions to'·the University.
mented by universities and rol- tion: for if it were anything
Dr. Horton is. a member of
leges acrooa the land. So much elae it rould not function. But the American Historical Sohas recently boon written about it is elitist only in tbe sense ciety and the Bullalo Associathis that I sba1J . oonf1iie my that it seeks to bring to it the tion of ·the Sons of Revolution
discussion to a f - brief re- best minds and talents to work in the State of New York. He·
marks.
..
·
on the most difficult intellectual is the author of Old Er~: The
Many weU-.ili)• demo:&gt;- programs ol mankind. It opens Growth of 011 American Comcrata who. are apinst
ita doors to studenta and me- TTWnUy.
ties and diacrimlnation
-;;;;;;
~piartiof
- ;~PI!te,·
~L~
apparently
l1lliq cjuotas
in re- ~&amp;.t"t,.__
~qwry w"""'

awin. relilioaizalion, or vulgar.

• to •W'}}
1
H 18 ry

Honor Horton

oi

rna;

r-··"

verae. But I8VI!I8e dlacrimina-

lion is still discrimlnati
·
if it is .called ~ ; ,
~uae

against

tt.ere is cliacrimiitatian
w o m e n or minority

meut):&gt;ers. does lhie entitle. 011e
to ~te against the

bi,.....y qua)j8ed individual who
bawppens to be a male Wasp or
eej (Wblte Butem European J-) by ckihyinr him a
P&lt;lflition In lha univts:sitr 1Je.
"1'UBe !'OIIMI pt tboae cla8iified
like him DillY be o\oer-repre. ~ted on facUlties? Do not the
rJghta ol such' peraoas also need
to be ProCected?
1boiie or us who are genuineI.Y "'!ffiDlitted to the democrat- ·
JC PIUlCiples of equality and the
~~~ersthashouldt
all

,.......&gt;WIIlll....,. -...un""'

.be broken !loMt, that we ought
!&lt;? .treat himuui beinp as indn'vidllll;ls UK' Juda them. .so.lely
O
their ll:lelita. -All
d
distinctions 1Jued
mvt tous
~~._,orna~~

~~wd 1Mab8Ddooed: 'lbe only

~~ ol choice~ be
-~~ oppo~~·
I
-

who suooeed earn the right to
qualify for further inquiry. It
iB an elite of demonstrated rompetenoe, skill, and achievement.
But does this mean then that
the university is alien to democracy or a democratic society?
No. For a democratic society is
one which is OJ":" to anyone,
, regardlEI!8 of Oflgins. It is open
to them, however, only if they
-can qualify. Democracy ought
not to bar anyone who can rontribute. ,I t ought to enrourage
everyone who wishes to berome
involved and bas the capacity
to do so. But it should not rom·
promise its principles, its standards, or its mission in the pro.
cess. The appeals to universal
higher education, to open admissions, to the students' unlimited right to choose currieulum, the right tO graduate,
participatory ~.· the
demands for relevance, tne' uae
of quotas, each of which bas its
place, if applied uncritically,
can have a deleterious ellect
upon thiHuU.ersity.
(1'- ...

H-N-"/~

'Jewish Love'

GSA &amp; Franklin----.,---(Con~d from 1. COL 6)
the Provost ol the Facullf of
Social Sciences and Administntion, the Piovost of the Faculty or Law and Jurisprudence,
and President Ketter, . as well
as many others, raises important issues regarding the future
of this University.

"Professor Franklin of the
Philosophy and Law Departments perfonns a unique educa~
tiona! function on this campus.
He is {111 internstionally known
Marxmt scholar whose reseaidJ
and publications demonstnte
rontinuing acholarly rontributions and whose services are
demanded by many students.
As such his case is a clear-&lt;:~~t
· ~ption to-the mandatory retirement rule and he should be
fully reinstated in his position
for ~ Y""! 19~3-74. Fior the
admm!Stration m Afbany to
oller less than one fu1l year's
renewal of ro!'lnct would clear~eed~J'8UN"yl\j' very real
''Moreover, in the case of
those professors who should be
excepted from mandatory retirement and yet who eventually desire to retire from full-time
teaching responsibilities, some
means should be created by
which they can continue their
research in the Universjl¥,
guide dissertations and teaoh
studen ts in a more limited manner. Neither obligatory retirement nor ftill retirement aid in
advancing younger scholars and
teachers if they are forced to
lose a person who makes a
s ignificant and unique contribution to their intellectual development.
"Finally, there should be no
terminations of professors without adequate replacement. n
professors are retired under the
guise of r"f!oving the qld · to
make way for the yoU{lg or

otherwise terminated without
provision for replacement, no
new teaching positions are
opened and consequently there
is a further cutback in the
quality or education.
" It is alarming to see that
while military spending continues to increase, there are cutbacks in social and educational
programs for the majority of
the population. At the -university, tuitions are raised,
making attendance more diffi.
cult for young people from low
to moderate income {antilles.
A consequent slackening of the
growth of student enrollment is
then taken as a basis for further limiting the hiring of
teachers. 'The University should
join with others in the community in protesting these regressive tendencies."

'We are l1flinjl any student
or faculty Org&amp;ll1Z8tion or department bead to endorae this
statement or to take any other
action they feel would publicize their support for Dr.
F'ranklin," DiFilippo said
A rover letter was distributed
with tbe statement, noting that:
"It is especially urged lbat
faculty: organizations and depsrtrnent beada act for the following reason: the policy of
the AAUP is that £acuity members should take part in any
decision ronceming the reappointment ol a faculty manber
who ·is past the age of retirement. 'The emphasis that the
AAUP places upon faculty in¥Olvement should help estab!ish the importance of faculty
par?cipation and responsibiltty in d&gt;allenging the trealmomt
of Dt FraDkin. ~t
of tt.e' statement is a ..-. ~
-.,.,.-......
~ fuller faculty partieipa-

Cbabad House will present
a program on current understanding of •·Jewish love" and
its relevancy for young rouples
from all hackpounds, WedrJe&amp;.
day, May 16 at 8 P.m.
Guest lecturer and educator
Rechel Fogelman Wilf discuss
aspects of Jewish tam.ily life
and abow how "tbese timeless
values now more than '&lt;IYt!f offer a sound baae to the difficulties ·young Jewish rouples will
be (acing in tbe ~ture," Rebbi
Noson Gurary says.
Mrs. F~ is a lecturer
in the Jewish Studies Program
at Clark UniWrsity, Worcester,
Mass. Sbe also oonducls adult
·• t u d y . grpupa in the Jewish
oommumty O!llter !hare.
·
Areas to be rovered include:
Judaism in the bopJe, wbetber
religious rillbts limit maniage
rights, Kaalirua as a necessity
on.
•
for Jewish ~. Sbabboe,
"'The trnste., &amp;y tbeii furetc. After the program, regis- tber. poatponemeat of this detntion will be "!*' for woa-t cision apPMf to be resiatant to
to take """""•'-J""" C!l,lq8B8 on the 11!0111llinll ppro•-• ovw llte

.J~' ~,~·~· ,.'

~tinent~ .:or.-~· ~-

dor11e111e11t of the statement
would enoo~ the trustees to
be more &amp;enllltive to student
and faculty alfairs."
· Student groups that have endorsed ~ statement include:
EnJlillh Graduste Student As90Clation; Graduate Philosophy
Association; Political Science
GSA; Graduate History Student Association; Graduate Anthropology Asaociation; U/ B
.Vets Club; President, Bullalo
Chapter ol LEMAR; President,
Chemical Engineering GSA·
Indo-China Educational Pro~
ect; Student Bar Aaoociatioo· ·
ot6cezs of Slatistica GSA; ~
ident, Music GSA; C&lt;tmpazative Literature paduata students; &lt;Hiioera of Medicinal
Chemistry Graduate Student
Organizauon; 08lcon of ·Sociology GSA; · OftioenJ of Computer ~ GSA; Eooolomico
GSA; American Studies Graduat,e Student Club; President,
Graduate Management A.ociation; President, Graduate Microbiology Club; President,
Graduate Students of Gennan;
Editor, The Spectrum; President, Graduate Chemists Club;
Director of Black Rock Riverside Teaching Center; President, French GSA; Law Li- .
brary Stall; and the Center for
Socialist Studies.

Communique(continu•d from f'GI• 8, coL 6)
tention to the beet film account

~~:i~ttG~~~~~k~~s~

cia I.

EXHIBITS

,..,

�=r · ,~~· """ 1
Conferenoe T h • • Ire, Noftoa.
- check ahowcue for timol. Admia•.ion cbarp.
A well done lirat-di.Jection effort by Siclnoy Poitier, who also
otara aa the wqoamaaler leadinc
f.-:1 alaveo out to the weot where
they can find worbble Ia n d.
Harry Belafonte doos a gond job
aa the oon...niot preacher. A18o
~Ruby Dee aDd Cameron.
THIATII PUSlHTAfiON•

VenuB and Adonis. see Thwsday l.iatil)l above for details.

SUNDAY-13
SlNtOI

ucn.u•

Dennis Williamson, cello student of Paul Katz, will perform
works by Bach, Brahms and Sbostak&lt;Mch, Baird Recital Hall, 8
p.m.
• Preaented by the U/B Department of Muaic.
THEATII PIIIENTATION•

Feotival Eut presents GodspeU,
Kleinhans Music Hllll, 2:30 aDd 8
p.m.
Tickets at $6, $5.50 and $4.50
are
at the Norton Hall
Ticket Office.

_

.available

..

FUNCH CAIAIET PIOGIAM*
~

En

Utilization of

Auz~

Per~

bons, Jr., practicing Buiialo dentist, Capen Hall, 9 : 30 a.m.-4: 30
p.m.
.
For further information, con.
~~-~U/B ~I of Dentistry,
SIMINAI: TMI MIAN1NO

FOI

oua ·TIMI•

~f

fAmt

People and God in Spoce will
be dUcussed at a seminar on the
theme of "Are You Living Now
and/or Do You Know What
You're Waiting For?," 2S4 Nor·

tofie!~ ~~n include the
Rev. David Tulin, Canisiua College, and JQhn Buerk, U/B director for orientation. The aem.
inar ia •JX!DSOI'IId by the Protestant Campus Ministry, the Buffalo Area Council of Churches
and the U n i t e d Ministries in
SC~:!o!m

be

served.

l'lfYIICI COUOQUIUM#

Spo~rlt De~ of Coher-

:i'/l. f;::J!.If:J~'QE~ fh'.~

orin of RodiGtion, Dr. H y a 't t
Gibbs, Ben Tel;x_hone Laboratory,

CONCEIT•

University ·Strings, Pamela
Gearhart, conductor, Baird Recital Hall, 8 :30 p .m. No admission
charge.
The program will include works
by Hindemith. Corelli, Gearhart,
Debusay, Bach and Bloch. Presenled ~y the U/ B Department
of Muaic.
·
Venuo

"AntiUm-

plata'': An Approoch Aimed at
Selectiue B/oelcin6 of C..ndic Information, Dr. Tbomas J. Be.rdoe,

profMIOr, U/B Department of
MecliclDal Cbemiatry, 4:US Ridce
Lea, Rm. 29, 4 p.m. Coffee at
8: 30 p.m.
CONCBr
Feotival E ao t pJMenta The
EG~Ia-imd SJ!O&lt;!_Iry Tooth, KleinhaDa M · Hall, 7
Tlcbta~t tf;.!iO,
aDd $4
are available at the Nortoa. Hall
Ticket Ollico,
SIMIN.U IN UlgiAINIAH CUI.TIIII
AND CMUZATION•
Tllll. Deuelopmenl of Ulrrairlian
Muoic, Ma. Luba Zuk. DepartlMDI of Muaic, McGill Uni..ai!y,
aDd Ultruinimo Art Racloolaw
Zuk. arcbjtect, 206 DurrODdorf, 7
P.Jil. •
CAC aooaia,

f.$

=
-

IIQOAirr

-D·

Hna Buiialo Folk Festival,

large
tent behind Clark Hall. Tickets
are available at the Norton Hall
Ticket Office: general adm.i.ssion
for all concerts and d a y t i m e
evenls, $10; individual tickets pef

Cbhd!!-n ~Crr ~o~~·a~

tec:L free with an accompanying
adull
.
This evening's concert, to be-

r,nhna~.i~~ ~~~~· ~.~~

Killen, Diana Markovitz, David
Nichtem, Roosevelt Sykes, and
Martin, Bogan &amp; the A.rm9trongs.
Tony Barrand and John ROOe rts will emcee each .concert.

Vivian Hornik, piano student
of Stephen Manes, will perform
works by Copland, Mozart, De·
hussy and Brahms, Baird Recital
Hall, 2 p.m.
m.!'r;'~t~~~ the U/ B Depart-

GRADUATE IECfTA&amp;.•

Florence Pearson, violin student
of Donald Weilemein, will perform works by Mozart, Tartini,
Bartok and Brahms, Baird Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Presenled by the U/B Departt;nent of Music.

LECTUI!*

Women in Egypt, Joan Weimer,

This is the final lecture in a
series sponsored by the U/ B Der.~ent of English graduate stu.

UUAI FILM••

Buck &amp; The PreocMr (Poi tier),
Conference The at r e, Norton,
check ahowcase for timea. Admis·
trion charge.

shErv~nta will take place in •

JUNIOI UCnAL*

IUffAlO FOLK FESTIVAL•

Performances by: Paul Cadwell,
Sara Grey, Maria Mllldaur, John
Prine, Leon Redbone, Don Reno,
Bill Harrell and the Tenn_..
Cut-Ups, Hound Dog Taylor, and
Sonny Terry and Brownie Me·
Gbee, tent behind Clark Hall,
7: 30 p.m.
See FJ:iday 1.ist.ing for details.

Venu.1 and Adonis, see Thursday listing above for details.

through Sunday, May 13. . The
Festival will include a different
concert on all three evenings and
late morning and afternoon work-

" FRIDAY-11

Venuo
Adonio, Harriman
Studio Theatre, 3 and 8:30 p.m.
See Thunday listing above for
deta.ila.
.J

THEATIE PUSENTATION•

The

!!fnb;f ~~~~';:l1f'..=
Stud1o The at r e, ·8: 30 p.m.
Through Sunday, May 13.
Tickets are available at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office: general admission, $1; students, 50
cents. Presented by the U/ B Department of Theatre.

Hocbstetter at 8:30p.m.

THIOilTICAL IIOtOOY IIMIN.U#

eot-

~~~eli oBt'cam~ t1o~cy

and Adonio, an adapts·

~::' Univeroi!y, 332 Norton •• 2

:!

IUFFAI.O FOLK f£STIVA1*

TMIATII PKSINTATION•

~~~~&amp;~n~"i'!'"~~
Strudun- S-i(ic

~- ~-lA~~

tt::f,:u:;::su~~~ The Good, The

p::,':{Jc:fo~:"'D~.vel.'::::dy 8~

S'il Voua Plait

g= r.~~~~c.....~=:

•Open to public;
••Open to m&amp;mbel$ of tile University;
. #Open only to with • proleulonal Interest In the subject
Contact Nancy C:.nlorolll, 831-2228, for llstinp.

THURSDAY-10

and

oourae) and his sirl friend (Ida
Lupino) biding out in the High
Sierras, until the police find them.
Screenplay by John Huston. _

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

CONONUING DINTAL EDUCAliON#

THEATU PIEIENTATIO.,..

SATURDAY....:.12

CONCEIT•

Evenings for New Music V.

::f:~iii:,!t~~;ea~ea~:

le~~~~~8;.,~rtm.in this
~~c,::r:en!::d b~e:t,e~teAr:
and the U / B Depariment or
Music. Ticketa at $1 for students

::e~all!Zn:si::e:aanie$2:::~

chased at the Norton iia11 Ticket
Office.
•

MONDAY-14
FILM, VIDEO &amp; LECTUU•

Cekbralio,.. in City Plac.. a
presentation of the Elaine sUm~
mers Experimental Intermedia
Foundation, Conference Theatre,
Norton, 1 p.m. No admission
charge.
Sponsored by the Office of Cultural Alfairo.
AAUP MUTING#

The U/ B chapter of the American AssQCiation of University Pro.
fesaora will ho!CI ita annual membership meeting in the Faculty
Club Red Roont. a.ao p.m.
COMPUTING CENTh COUOQUIUM#

S Y s t e m OrganizatioM I o r
Speech Understanding, Vic to r
~r. DeparU:~?ent of Computer
LACIOSSE•
~eg1e-Mellon Univer~
U/ B vs. Kenmore Leciosse Soence,
ai!y, 422!; Ridge Lea, Rm. 41,
Club, Rotary Lee~ Field, 2 3:
30 p.m.

MEDICINAl CHEMISTIY SEMINAR#

1,4-Benzodia.zepinu: Chemistry _ p.m.
amf. Structun-Activity Relation- CONCEIT*
•h'Pil, B. Booshan, graduate stuU/ B Chomber Wind En8emble
d~'!l. U/B Department of MeFrank J . Cipolla conductor and
d•cinaJ Chemistry, 244 Health William Penn guest cond.;_ctor·
Sciences, 2 p.m.
U/ B Percuuil&gt;n Enoemble J..;
TENNIS•
Williams, director; and the' Buf-U/B w. Canisius, Rotary Field falo Jazz En8emble, Phil DiRe
Cowa, 3 p.m.
director, Baird Recital Hall, 4
p.m. No admiMion charge.
.
'"=~=-#and lndiuiduPreSenled by the U/ B Departiltion, Dr. Kenneth Batber, ... ment of Music.
oociate professor;' U/B Depart- IUffAU) FOU&lt; RSTtVAl•
men! of Pbilooophy, 4244 Ridge
ToniJdlt'a concert f..,turea
Lea. Rm. 15, 3:30 p.m.
Hazel Dickens Marohall ~.
ICHOOL Of MANAGEMENT 14NOUET• Eric Kaz, Leo kottke, Tracy NelThe U/ B School of Mana-- son, Putnam String CoUD!y Band,
•Eloise and Tracy Schwan: Dan
1 i~~ ~~::..:.,~
Smith and Louden Wain~t
Faculty ·Award a Banquet aDd ~~tent behind Clarll: Hall, 7: 30
Dance thia e.eninc at Pellouuwond
See Friday "-"-- for detaila
H - . Weot Senaca, 7 p.m.
.._....

Q

-D·

FILMS*

Met.tuwmen,. Off-On, and Moon
(Bartlett, 1966-69) , 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. Free.
The Seue~h Seal (BefJlD\811,
1956), 147 Diefendorf, ; : 45 p.m.
Free. All~'"l' o~ man a search
for llle8lWif m life. A .kniaht,
after re~ from the Cruoaaea,
P~ ~ With Deatli whiJe the
P .viJ.t~!"ueL=~"i47
D1efendorf, 9 : 30 p.m. ~'
CONcut•

. Uni';f;raity Choruo, Harriet Si~~· rectoPamelar
, aDd the U~raily
""~~'·
Gearhart, oonductor, Amherst Community
~';.· 8:30 p.m. No admiuion

better '
whE.:rovida
their ilotb-

ciana """ ...,_.
care for bOieo

:d~=rj,~be~~~

ton Hotel. .
.
Participenta .in the proorram will
attend
aDd join in workshop aeai0111. The worbllop ia
presented by the Department of
=~"f\,~.:;:c- of tbe UJB
For further infol1M.tion. ODD·
tact the Ofti&lt;e of Continu,inc Medical Education, 831-5626.

!_,,..

CONTINUING DENTAL. IDUCATIQJI#

Four-Handed Do..u.try, Dr.
James Collord, aaaociate pror-or
of pedndontics, and director, dental uxiliary tilizati 0
and Dr~ Nebo~ l'if:::
more, professor and eection director, comprehensive dental care,
Division of General Clinical Dentistry, U/ B, Capen Hall, 10 "a.m.-

ur8;

t:- ~~;"1m~==·

5
con·
tact the U/B School of Dentistry,
831-2837.
•
.
IASEU.U.•

U/B w. Colpte, Peelle Field,
I p.m.
TENNIS•

U/B w. Colgate, Rotary Field
Courts, 2 p.m.
OCONOMICI IIMIN.U#

Fixed Versus Fk:ribl Foreil/n
E:rchonge Ratu, a panel diacuasion w i't h Profeeson Winston
Chang, JamN Hoi"""' and Milton
Iyoba, U/B Departm...t of Economico, -4224 Ridge Lea, Rm. 24,
3:30 p.m. Coffee in Rm. 9 at 8
p.m.
WEDNUDAY NIGHT DOUMI FEATURE•

ea~W:.,\F:Z ~~o=&gt;~

drama
coal-miners
plagued~
unsafe of
conditions,
labor
.strikes
and corruption. Starring Pa
Muni.
Sportocuo (Kubrick, 1960). 1
Capen, 8:30 p.m. Free.
·
Douglas stan aa the leader of
a huge slave revolt; Lawrence
Olivier, Peter Uatinov and Charles
Laughton, among a literal cast of
thousands, slink around as typ.
ically evil ROmans. There are no
miraculous conversions to t a k e

:::ypatr:a~e t~ee ~=-:S:, ~ 1

but there is a crucifixion llt the
end - of some 10,000 defeated
slaves.
·
C::ONCHT• .

Creative ASBOCiote Recital V Ill

featuring Andrew Stiller, besaoon;
Baird Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. No
adm.i.ssion ~e.
Mr. Stiller will be assisled by
Frina Arachanska B o I d t and
Jam... Whitman, keyboards; Jane
Holcombe, voice; Henry Rubin,

~:~i J,:~d~ ~o;~~~d
Lee Lovallo, trombone. The

lJ:'.

~ot!i:'~F~.b~d~

and Stiller.
Preaenled by the U/B Department of Music and the Center of
the Creative and Performing Arts. ·

. THURSDAY-17
CONYINUINQ DINTAI EDUCATION#

The PorcelDin-Fuoed to Metal

Ruwfation, Dr. George -Mumford, University of Conneclicut,

Ce.~ ~e~ Wo!:.:-n.

COD·

:e~~B School of Dentiatly,
SEMINAl IN ....UNIAN C\1.11ME

AND CIVIUZA.TION•

UkraiAitm Diaopora: Probknu
of Ethnicity and Identily, Dr.
lto~!?!;W;!k. correspondent for
~ Diole~rf,B~~ Co.,

co Ncar•

,.!':O.::a..£~ir~

~8:30 p.m. No _lldmioaion

· The
will indnde works
by Zief!.~aleotrina. .Pacbelbel and r.&lt;..l Featwed will be

~eotan'd~W:.,~Pa~-

Orealtovic.

'

·

aa

m!.t~ the_U/B Depart.

propam will include worlal
tr.TheBach.
Debuilay and &gt;Haydn.

UUAI

o-

-

filM••

c.~J'~e:&lt;:~~)~ tJ!T~be/:~B='· ~~me":":.t;"IM~the U!B .Depart. eo~'!:O:•Tf':'!t~~i~=
~0~~~-::.at ..,.,. of the Year, the Graduate
CGMJ!&gt;I4nca. (Curtis), 140 CaTUESDAY-l
c!&gt;eck~ for timeo. Admia019
5
..~
... playaa !!:_ l"!:'_,~. ~ =fe'!ftutt,J:"ti.ett;~~ :"7t:..eDdu:'!..E:eie ~~
-&amp;,., ti ·comes from a Robert
...,_
tb
•·- 1 ~ ,...... the Wall Street Journal Stndent Norton ·Hall Ticket Ollice.
fiLM•
·
Creeley poem; the story from Jer-

atanina Sydaey. Grealotreet aDd

,...r

I'Nr Lone.
UUM

Finful of DYnomite (t-oe),

~ T h • • t r e. Nor!GD,
cloadt lhowcMe for liGa chup.

Admioo-

Award.
CAC ai..A,

·

- Hilh;Swna

~
•'
(W.Job), 140 Ca-

IIQOAirr

pe, 7:46 aDd 9:46 p.m. Ticketa

at 76 -

are · available at the

NOrtoa. Hall Ticbt Ollce.·

. · l!tanu~ll~,flteipr•U--·•~·-Aa......._~

~~--........, ....-u·~'IP~&lt;(

·A ~ c:aoiDo In a North

Two or Thne Thin6• I Know
1967), 140

=Y~~~ ~ fo!_~ ~~ ~·;:J~
,__::~~~ ~ " " " '!'~larBoprt, lurid

•--- 0 f

..,.......

ruac

Peter Lorre aDd "&amp;ycinoy

Jln!el . •

..•

,__

~

WEDNESDAY-IS

w_;-.nmcs

'Ji ·~r :o,:a.l..-.. F•lal Jl
~of "; liJII66l.~; ~Dtllooobes

.r,::--" ''

emy LarDer'• novel of oollep otu-

~~ta tb.,~~~rwJ:"~~nftboirli
BiD
.
ep0

nn......

- . "'""

•

per aDd Katen Blad&lt; do In a Corhad the French at Cann.ii
~lnf u-aety, but" red-hloodod

· ~, !C."';,:"'~a;:_u,:.~
11.1~ , ~on- 7,--.,./fj?':

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                    <text>,,.Amherst

To. , .be'4 Part

. .

~

.-. Of.C~UDay
, . ...._...uty ,.,.. .....
Ullivealty
.. ¥Jew the iMoriora
ol ~ Oil the 'Am'-at
will be e&amp;red

--.a cl- 6e
~ty

c...-

...-~.

TounrlhrouahJhe
Lard O'llriAn - Low lnd
Jurilrprudei&gt;ee Building and the
Governors' Residence Hall COlDpia will be CODducted.by members ol the Faculty of Law and
JurispnHienc:!&gt; and the Houainc
Ollice as .part of CommunityUniwraity Day.
Transportation to the North .
Campus will be provid8d by
Jolm

:S;!-;:=~~~

bnuy fNery half hour 1Jecinnjng
at 1 p.m. 1be last bus ilepartii
at 5 p.m. T"'- w;.hinf to tour
the North Campus lftUIIt lalrr
the bu., ailtce priuaU ...,., .,.,..
not -be oecoiNIIDIIDled.
Jolm· Lord O'Brian Hall,
scbeduled for occupation in
September, iS a seven story
structure ,.rum will house 78
faculty members, 800 students,
' and a 300,000-volume library.
It will replace the Law Sc:bool's
J)I'I!Bellt facilities downtown and
oilers several innovative features.

,_

The~

.

A courtlOom, which is located
on the grade level, proviiles a
'laioed platform on which the
judges' bench, witneas stand
and jury hal&lt; are situated. It
has a aeating capacity of 90,
can be e:rpanded to accommo·date up to 350, and will be used
for actual court caaes.
In addition, special rooms
and a lounge for visiting attorneys will provide a place for
interaction ap10ng students, faculty and attorneys. Large lecture balls, alao on the grade
~eve~, 'Will ll!!llltlitl! an expanaed continuing legal education
program for practicing attorneys.
Problem rooms, s e m i n a r
rooms and library check~ut are
located on the second level.
The third through seventh
levels wiU provide space for
faculty ·and administrative offices, suppc;rting facilities, study
carrels, and library stocks.
An open-air center court,
reached from the fifth level,
will be completely landscaped
and equipped for study and relaution.
The Governors' Residence
Hall complex is alao scheduled
(Continued on fJGI• 2, col. 6)

GrowingNumbers Here
Find SPA Unresponsive
Growing concern · that the
Ststewide Senate Professional
Association &lt;SPA) has failed
to represent the interests of
the significant minority of its
members alliliated with University Centers has reliblted· in
more than 20 local resignations
from SPA, now SUNY-United.
More resignations are expected,
according to Murray Brown,
who was the first to resign.
Brown, who served until the
SPA-SUFI' merger on SPA's
local executive committee and,
at the State level, on SPA's
representstive co u n c i I, said
that Ststewide SPA had become inCreasingly unresponsive
to the 35 to 40 per cent of its
membership who
from
University Centers. Moreover,
even some members at the two

come

~~:~ct!.:SJ.f.;

l:w.mty to acconipli)lh economic Objectives qn their behalf;
he added.
.
In
tiating such cnJcial
matters~ salary BQd working
conditions, Stat.ewicl! SPA has

been emphasizing' the interests
of two e.nd four-year units,
Brown said. These units · are
esger to achieve parity with
the Centers and ~uld uequa1.
ize" work loads. s&amp;larl• and
the like; poten\itiJ.Iy at the expense of the Centers. For example, State,SPA has included
in its bargaining packsge salary .
sd&gt;edules that would level inequities and would result in
smaller proportionaJ increases
in University salaries as · compared to college pay scales.
unu. could. reduce the University Centers' competitive
position vis-a'vis other universities outside the system," predicts Brown, who be I i eves
S;l'A's current policy has serious academic implications.
"Recently SPA leaders who
have tried to speak out for
Ceriter interests have literally
been llhut out ol SPA leadership caUCU908,'' Bro'wn aaid.
· Resignees from · U/B b&amp;ve
signed . a letter ststing:
(Continued on 6, . col. 3)

�~

2

llfiJ' 3, 1973

Senate Executive Group E~do~~s Symposium Prob~ .F.emini:s_t
'Quality Control' fort~ ·colleges Approaeh
to c~~~!~~jan
SHAR~~ELMAN
\

By
arise. Certain subcoaunittees.
"Feminist scholarsbip must
such as the grading evaluation include a thorouBt! n;;interpreand baa:alaweate delree re- tetioo of the classics. .
quirements subcommittees, will
"Is this an owr-~OJ!? Aa
remain operable until present. classicists, ~ we bemg mtelasaipments are oompleled.
lectually dishOnest?"
.
The Student Aosembly asked - "Isn't it just like a woman
-the Executive Committee if the to worry about it?"
analysis of OOIJl1le&amp; that will .reThis dialogu~ (the last oomsuit from tbe present teaching ment was facetious) charactereffectivene:ss survey oould be izedtheclosinsm!""""ta.of .last
made available to the SA for week's "Women. m Antiqwty"
OINra revised SCATE-like publica- symposium. The final 81!111Sion,
In otbel; business the Com- . -•tion. 'Ale S e n a t e leadership ''Toward a Feminist Classics,"
rnittee forwanled to the Somate okayed • the request With the was designed by ita participants
a rmolution endoniing the oon- proviso that indivicfual faculty to help de~ a metbodqlogy
cept of a School of Health Edu- will have the option of releo&amp;- for the feminist approach to
cation within the Faculty of ing information pertaining to classical literature. The effect
He a I t h Sciences, but urging their courses.
was less a plan of action thlm
that the Faculty of Heelth SciExecutive Vice President AI- a reaf6rmation of the legitimacy
ences eumine initially and for bert Sornit appeared fo~ the of feminist scholarship.
a period of five yeam tJ\e currie- President and '!"" questi"""!i
~ particular in~
uta. Pf0111ll11 and staffing of the about the effectiveness of IDI· was triggered by ooe
s
School.
'
· nority and women's hiriDf ef- oontention that the Plato of the
The Senate leadership also forts': to date. Dr. Sornit mdi- Republic was somethiDg less
endorsed a plan to reoonstitute caled~t he was aware of no than a feminist. Elizabeth Asthe Educational Policy &amp; Plan- problems in this regard.
mis, assistant professor of clasDing Committee as: an overall
The report of the Academic sics at Cornell, cited several
planning oommittee · to ~lace Freedom &amp; Responsibility Com- passsges in the work which
the present aggregsle of highly mittae on the question of po- seem to argue. the equality of
specialized suboommittees. Un- litical tests in the Colleges and women and men. A cloeer fook,
ance of unqualified in&amp;tluctom der the reorganization plan the related matters was again di&amp;- she maintained, reveals, howhas diluted the qt!81io/ of sev- Executive Committee would, on · .cussed. The Senate is expected ever, that Plato believed that
era~ -oouraes which, m themthe recommendation of EP&amp;P, to name a suboommittee to oon- women are more men's possesselvee, may have been legiti- appoint ad hoc bodies to deal tinue search into matters raised sions than their parluers.
mate Uniwrsity oouraes. The with -specific issues as they by the report.
Umlted Concept of Partnership
Committee does not airee that
In Book Three, for a:ample,
self-approval as an eu:lusW.
Asrnis quoted Plato's Socrates
as saying that women and men
method for selecting either instruCtors or their oourses is any (Contiluud from PGB&lt; 1. coL 5) ure that would restrict freedom should share equally in work.
more defensible than aelf-eval- ateurs riding hobby horses." To to experiment of faculty and social function and responsibility. But he qualifies this With
uation as an exclusive method lind abuses of the Collegiate students alike.
for ~ student perform- System, you need only read
This report, like all recent his view_that women are weaker
ance. Moreover, the Committee through the catalogue of Col- proposals on e d u c a ti ona I and, therefore, less qualified at
does not agree that the experi- lege E, he suggested. As an change we've seen, go in the their tasks than men. The immental function of the Colleg- example, he read the course de- same d i r e c t i o n, said Chip plication is reinforced linguisiate System is 'unnegotiable' t cription lor a course .in palm- Planck, that of "cautious or not- ticallr. by the use of "women
(Jacqueline Finley to Gilbert istry called "The Hand." "This so tautious readoption of oon- guardians" and "wives of the
Moore, March 29, 1973~ or that wisdom of the East retails at ventional procedures." A "tired guardians" as interchangeable
it will be rendered inoperable , $ 10 a hand" ("at $5 a hand," retreat," he termed the propos- terms. Similarly, Plato's conby faculty and administrative a. voice corrected ). The fact al-or the trend. A better dl~ oept of "partneriohip" between
intervention to improve stand- that this is a credit-bearing rection would be toward "more the two sexes is limited, accordards."
course, an~ that College E has modest, that is, more open-«nd- ing to Aamis, to situations in
Advisory Committee
awarded some 3,000 hours of ed proposals," PI an c k said. which the men "s hare" the
Acoof&lt;!ingly,. the Committee credit, forces a professional re- Whatever abuses exist, he for women and children among
Uf8!ld
reYiew of both ex- sponsibility on the members of one is not anxious to bring themselves.
~
~ and facultr the faculty, he said. "We· can- back procedures which have al"One is left," Asmis oomthe respon&amp;lbilitr of the Dl· not simply avert our eyes from ready proven themselves inade- mented, "with the impression
rector of the C. o I e g e s who oourses on the hand," . said quate. An experiment has been that the guardians are the rulwould be advised on these mat- Hochfield, arguing for stricter mandated, he said, referring to ing class, and that they own
1
u· b the 1 the full-scale evaluation of the all the women."
ters by a oommittee of hall
oollegiate~representatives, half conbo s as ou med Y
co · colleges that is underway, one
Throughout the work, she
facul~ representatives. T h is leges report.
. that is "about as scientific as added, Plato refers to the rulers
co~~ would: 1 ) undertake
"'That course "sounds more can be found in sucn a sloppy as " philosopher-kings," and derev~ pn~ to ·approval of all interesting than tax law to me," laboratory." It is ..atrocious sci· scfibes stupid behavior, such
-Imental OOUI8es to be of- somebody in the gallery coun- entific procedure" to act pre- as the plundering of corpses, as
fered by the colleges, 2) review teredCo.llegl·ate Assembitv\ Director cipitously on the predicted out- "small-minded and womanish."
all'hew oourses after one semesk
come of that experiment, he
It was suggested to Ms. As~ ih ~rder to .reoorf!UleDd con- . Wayland Smith as e d bow said, admitting that he was no mis that the necessary use of
tinuance or diScontinuance to much data had been oollected x il!ntist."
the two linguistic genders in
the !Jean of Underpaduste b &lt;t[ ore the guidelines were
Greek, and Plato's own acculs~. !'Jld 3) r e y 1 e w the drawn up 81\d pointed out that
Mike Frisch objected that the turation might diminish the
qual!ftcations of all ~c~rs the colleges themselves had had Halstead Committee proposal, true revolutionary impact of his
seeking to olfer credit-bearmg -little or no input on the mat- like a number of others brought views about women. Visiting
couraeo in the c 0 1 ! e g e s and ter. Hals,tead answered that de- before ~ Se!"'te t h is year, Professor Eric Havelock, howmake recommendations to the cisions such as these were prop- puts the ~Y m the '!"comfort- ever oountered this point· "In
Vice. President. for . Academic erly made on the basis on ex- able P&lt;&gt;Siti~n of havmg to de- Book Eight," he noted, 'Plato
~- Potential liiS~rs perience and judgment as well . cide very Important, substan- states that his fundamental 00.
~d ~
as ~ l!lther as data. "Now would .be a very tiv&lt;: !ssues _o n the ~- of in- iection to democracy is the inacademic' qualifications (a bad time to make a major sullid~~&lt;:R~!~Jta and m ~'Tbeseght
of evitable equality between men
master's delree or better) or change in the Collegiate . Pro- a mmiS
ve pressure.
and women."
pragmatic oneo (demonstrable spectus," the same prospectus tnl!lflOI! keei_J -~g out of the Potrlorc:IIol hulo·Europeon Myth
ezpertise in the field of intend- that the Senate had a1_1proved acfm!nistmtion saymg 'The repNancy Walter of the Herbert
ed i n s t r u c t i o• n _ .tuld r el e Y an t only a year ago -rem I n de d utation of the University is at Lehman Insti'tute, "'·-·-~
Smith.
'
•
stake. To anns!' " Frisch said,
............,..
"ttee
J"""""line Finley, head of 1Irguing that the Senate bas
natl:ioturel of Thethe
.
·~
.
-T:~
moved little this year because,
~ uropean m_y - ogy.
8IDI!Ilde!l ~ recom~tioo the eDstirig program evaluation · the ~ and · · · culture, she noted, operated acby spec;ilYinl tha~ the adYI80l'Y oomrnittae of the Collegiate As- ~hid. im~~t ma~'::.g h;~ cording to three basic motivaeval':"'tioo ~ ~ o u 1 d sembly, explained. that all pro- been ooming before it, it has tiona: ( 1) the ooncept of soveoonsist of eight llllllllb8ra. four ~ for ...,. couraeo to -be had no other choice.
reignty, represented on earth by
named by the Director from a ~~~ wt~lhin~Uetheges uru~t firsm
. t_
priesta· ( 2 ) physical prowess
slate ~ eight ~led by the •c•""'""'
At an' emergency meeting of symboiized by the warriom!
~~tive Commithe
....,~~OW: volved and then reviewed apin the oolleges Monday night, a and ( 3 ) fertility or earthly'
~--·
a by her owri advisory oommittee. Faculty Senator who was asked
leasures
;&lt;l :
_..._. b the Col
•_" -- ""'"
...__ by11ooncemed
supporters of the P.
• e~plinea by peaceaimilar
le ....,.._.
•
Y
• ...._,_
'""' body incJ··"......, ...,._
._ __ the
time occupations such as farmleliate .A.clbly. A~ lelltlt t1ro ulty members and' tbiee addi- oo eges """'
vote might JO ing or herding sheep Eventual
of the Collepale Ass em~ [ y
tion8J "faculty from the ~ the next' day predicted that the ly, the. sovereign mUt pbysi..,j
members_w o u I d be full-time es oomrnittae are a1aO a!WII)'S matter""""" be tabled, "as had forces merged to form a ma)O·r
members of the faculty.
ilivited, Ms. Finley explained. every ~ piece of legislation force always at odds with the
.~
to ..__...,M the Col- Course evaluation is a l'l!llpOD- t¥.'~
.
~-ti·on was call-',
t hi rd, a sihiiltion somewhat
_.. CclmmiUIIle recommended sibllity1 that the " " " - take
",.,.. ..~ , _
,...
imilar" to the Levi-S
thet "a neideadal ·-" if it .. --:..;- •• sbe said
Somator the senate returned the report -sbmary
"
tmussian
~ DillY-"'..._ from -=-~t a •
COUliMi to the Colleges Committee. An BY&amp;tem.
the IIecil olllle Ccillellate AaMs. F:inley, explainthis ,.,:llr,t•\t~t:lt.::le

A report _;,.,.mendin1 a
mecbanlsm for~ "quality oonbol" over c:urricula and
in&amp;tluctom in the oolleges was
endu.-1 by the Faculty Senate
&amp;.lutive Committee at ita
April 25th ,_tjq. The report
011 the apnda of
o ..-tiq of the full
· Sen a e
_...te story
ooe) .
'
At the ~ 01 the &amp;.lutiw Committee, the CoUeaes
Committee, chaired by JOhn
Halo'-' addreMed ,illlelf to
queotiooo' o1 eclueational quality
and the relatioaabip of oo1Jeaes
to the Colleliate AMmnbly.
specifically the d,bt ol ooi:
!epa that 'wlab to do so to
"secede" from the AManbly.
Aa to ~ COIII888
and faculty quali8catioos, the .
Halotead Conimittee upreesed
the opinion that the mattem
are "inseparable." Aa .Halstesd
reported, "'Ibe aelf-monitoring
of 0011188 c o n t e n t has been
abused in aeveral caaeo, permittiq inappropriate oouraes to be
offered. In tum, the perfonn-

~&lt;-

.

_...
the "pneral
caiieat" that nothiDg be done
to !'"'judice the .,..-vuive eva!Uation of the oolleges now in
J&gt;l'llP"lll. Since the 1ar1er repoA will not be completed until
the fall, howewr. the €olleges
Comml~ was ~ to undedake this interim Jep&lt;Jrt. in ..
lilbt of the urgency of the io.._ broucht before it by the
&amp;.lutive Committee.

cl.nmiuee ·with

Faculty Senate

U:::

'!""""""'

~~~ ~)Commi.

theind~paEtriat:cbai

Z . . _....... ..,....

.....

;;rt·~~~ ~r::::..-:='!t"': TheU~~~~~·Majors

the eou-.' 'l1le ll...tiaa ol
...,.,.._.._I.in
,. . . __. . . _____.niJ.d~

-c

-~&amp;".,._.._.

.._report......... to the Bs:ee•tl YO

be found in the Ililzd:

enemy is oontmuously associaled with imyery of earthly
QllCUpatloos. "'Ibe Ililzd," Walfer ot.erved, "chronicles the
victory of the patriarcbal forces
over the matriarcbal ones."
- Similarly, Indo. European
culture attributee the origm of
the world to a male progenitor
the !leVered p&amp;rts of whoSe body
became the various features of
the earth. Acoo~ly, the
l1aiDe8 of the goddi!oaeS derive
from the~ of the gods: the
Lord of Might, for eumple inevitably has a m a t e
Might.
Rowever, Wal~ noted, there
was a tnnsitioDal point in the
cuI t u r e, -when lllldroJnmous
forme he!J?ed to unite the-alveme
el.,._,ta m _society; an eumple
is Athena, who sprouted fullgrown from tt.e body of Zeus
In this sense, WL:!ter
taine4. "feminism .itself may be
a metaphor, especially as it relates to 9Cbolarship." She quoted Anthula, the publication of
the U/B Department of CJas.
sics: "Scholarship should be
Jess sexist and raise instead new
issues which include androgynous pointa of view."
Monds! Appruec:II
~'The Manist Approach to
Women" was discussed by Marilyn Arthur of Brooklyn College. Although Marrs comments on the subject were few,
she noted, they were consistently favorable: at one point
he desa-ibes a man's relationship to women as the way in
which the !levelopment of the
whole male character.can be assessed, 1 i k e the "immediate,
necessary relation of human
being to human be~."
Manist scholars SIIDOne de
Beauvoir and Margaret Wason
l:iavenoted' that'tllioughout history, women have oonsistently
been better off in an aristocratic
rather than democratic society.
Arthur noted examples in the
references of Pindar, the aristocratic poet, to peace and barmony represented by the god
desses and the mother of th~
heroes, while Hesiod, as a poet
f d
chro "cled th
0 tash
/
focra~ ru d
c hal0 f pa
· theanlndmaE1 I·
. :~cpean ~":r.,~
o- uArthur )inked this transforti
to the
"od
hich
ma on
peri
at w
Athens and its neighbors began
to formtyCity-Ste~"..'!~ p~vate
proper
was '"''"""Y mtroduoed. Thus women's enslaved
s tatus became a ·m ore explicit
and leal one, much as it did
when gurope became more capitalistic than feudalistic.
Lillian Robinson, American
Studies, moderated the panel.

.wnoo

main:

C- U Day- ,
(CollliAwd fro• -

1, coL 1)

for occupation this fall. The
compleJt is one building oonlisting cil four units, or quadrangles, with a total capacity of
825 reeident students.
.
ou- FNturM
Tours of the North Campils

;:r'sonld'om:u~hni'!ers~

Day, which will f¥ture exhib,
its, displays, and demonstmtiona on almoet every aspecl
of U/ B.
- - - -- '--- - - COIIR£CTlON
In last _ . . R8portlr story on
the Medical Foculty Council, Dr.
Charles Paganelli, chairman of the
CoHeolth~- Llbnlry ~ry

mm•..,..., Slid to have • reP&lt;Kted that tho Committee felt It
would be -ble lot the health
oci8nceo PbtMao to ,.port to the

ca':!
~ ~ni.r..::t.~::u:::

fllllllllllbl of h'tlr «mrnittee. will n.- liAw Local 1173 In a ::""~(the(the ~eretpl)•~ - - o n . • -~by
a.~but they
few
wamor • ....- Dr. Paganelli, - that the health
::C::are
•
~e
5Cia'!.._~
8 p.m$1.; , Aphrodil~)
:~ !theul.J_:!_dteldye•.....,..
~.~ :::'"vi._
--~ 11~-~-n
should ,.port to
~~----=:::,._
---••
-•
•
--•Oil!
•
v•~ ' ....... ~-·~
•
I
_. - .-.....C&amp;ll 877&lt;6184 far~ ·
inrevenee ApbroditeiaWound
u~
~dont . foi heoltl\ IC ·
Jlft!CIOIIaN --~~.
ed anct-mcicl.id ~t a,; -·-:--------""'

•- __.._, -'"

..

�)(:~

Grad Students Want Services from
Sub-Board, GSA 'Reporl Indicates
U / B gxaduate students assign
m,bMt priority to St»Boerd I
v i c e projects, eapecially
._.tb-related projects, acconling to incOmplete returns from
a- survey being COJiducted by
Jobn Greenwood, outgoing student aftairs · vice president of
the Graduate Student Asaociation.
'1be survey and other aspects
of gxad student relationsbil&gt;s
with s.&amp;Boerd are ~vel,y
~ in a nine-page summary oi·GSA I!Ctivities for 1972' '13 c:iJ!:ulated by the retiring
· esa:uti-:e committee- John J .
PCMIIOIIIO, president; George E.
H a a a e, administrati\18 vice
president; RichardT. Clausen,
Gterna1 aftairs vice president;
Greecwood; and Don aId F.
G_rilliths, ueaaurer.
Acconiing to tbe report, GSA
c:ontjpued du:rinl the year "to
( shape Ill!' direction that the
Uruversity's student corpora. tiona took. "Of Sub-Board, the
primary corporation, the report
notes a shift in attentiop. toward
aervicee, in line with the opinion' survey, and away from
"enterlainment activities and
publications."
a er

,...

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

.

2B Year-Old 'Cfu"id Acto;'
Vu;its U/B H.fstory CkLss
Bill Barrett's. face is the rea""" be bad to leave the busi, _ world, and IIIII' of several

no.v

reaao..S that ·. be:a.
finding
succeaa aa ll!l .actor. At .26, ·be
!!lOki! .1$,.. gedect for modeling
children'&amp; dolbM, "'for. ·hia role
. the stUdio· Aiena'a,&lt;"Cbild's
/' or for .commerciala. EnY unsuited, however, for
the role of credit manager for
an oil ~. especially
when his subord.inates were
middl~ and looked even
older.
·
So with promotion denied
him for cosmetic reasons, Barrett !eft for New York to seek
his fortune. He studied acting
at the Strasaberg Institute, appeared in some movies, commercials, and plays, and was
cast early this year in the local
production of "Child's Play."
Mter a chance encounter with
Dr. Milton Plesur in the steam
room of the Bulfalo Jewish
Center, Barrett .... sianed up
for his first profeosi~ spealt-

~

~.::::r;e"~~.!i!..,~
"Films "in Modem American
In .
.
hia e&gt;prience

Socie~

·primarily a dance critic, and
tor yea.r:s lias urged that more
creative dance work be included in Broadway a n d oft
BI'Oildway productions.
•
Barrett cOntended the arts
br'l2!18 · ClOii)llf?" 'Will never b!
State-supPorted, and that many
existing repertory companies
which now operate as tax
breaks for their rontnbutors
will be forced to close down.
However, he noted one positive
aspect to this situation. Where
drama groups in universities
were once considered dead ende
for actors, they now have more
appeal, due to institutional support, aerious work, appreciative
audiences, and opportunities
for actors-in-residen~. "Uni·
versities," be su~gested, " may
well be the centers for the re-birth of theatre."
· Barrett then opened 4:be floor
to gueations and someone im~
mediately asked him bow old
be was. ·

McKinney Visits

=

as an actor,
tt Observed
60
that a new actina style" is now ·studies and black separatism
becoming 8Yident in film and during a two-day visit to the
theatre. Formerly actors could campus today and tomorrow.
be classified aa "peraonality" ,
.
.
.
types such aa Steve M~
McKinney '" currently mor "method" actors like Marm.; Vol~ in. the ~ph m.tJBrando wbo build up in them- !Ute a • appn;ntlcoahip-- ~
ae1- the II8CI!BilY emotioaaJ m wbicb ..w-lty hlcb adlool
intensity. Until JeCenlly there paduateringteatheare ~I
d. ~~
have been few - - · to
skilled.. 11.- types, but Barrett noted ~ a cooperatiYe
. that many clirectora ''Dow em- with
crafts unions. McKIDpbaaize the ._t for one actor JII!Y IS· alao enpged, llllelhR
to IUe hia cues from inteNC- wtth
the CDIIIItion with the otben." By re- try, in ~Iiiii Aflo.Aa.ito
lltadiee JIIOIIUIII • part
·
latine
O!J8 anolber tbia~ can
o1 an elfl!ri to -truct a

P.....-

·f.he

.m-ton -

~-=-

=r

apNM

the inlaiSity of cli«enmt .tiGbL.
•
Banett said that altboulb
be pNftin tlatre worit to ftlme.
be ~ that unl-. -

:. e.a':t.uc

wri~•':a ~

die aut

and

. Too !lflen,

Ill noly oa
plot..._
are~ olber
~t ~tic l8llhalqueL
N- Ycri Tw. ~ ciritic
GiYe Bsmea, for eumple, ill

. be .tded,

model

PIOp8IIL

Mc:Kbmey will apeelt tonilbt
Oil '"lbe Future ol Afro-ADaican 8tudiea" in 206 Diefladarf
at 8 ~ T - . - 118 wUJ

dllcalio "'l''le Soalall'a)~
ol Bl8elt l!lllpsmt!mi,•
Rldp
Roam 41, ~
111
11

u,.

a.m.

.

.. Corpcnllon

=

Ernest Rice McKinney,

wboae work in civil rights and

~...ftJ .:::::0

-

Sub-Board, t b e report recounts, has established a aeparate corporation (Scholastic
Housing, Inc.) to deal with increasing problems of finding decent, reasonably priced student
housing. GSA Vice President
Clauaen and Michael Holtz,
architecture aenator, are both
members of the housing corpor.ation's board of clirectora. 'Ibe
GSA report gives this run-down
of illl activities : "Their major
action in the past year was to
generate and submit a proposal
IIi itie Housing and Urban Development Agency in Washington for a multiple-unit apartment complex. 'The propoilal
was prepared after intense consultation with local and national HUD oflicisls and was certain to have been approved until President Nixon froze the
domestic aid programs. The
proposal is back on top of the
stack and will be processed im-:.
mediately if a thaw comes. 'The
Corporation also continued its
negotiations with the S tate
agency, the Urban Develop.rnent Corporation, for S t a t e
and locally financed housing in
the Audubon Community near
the Amherst Campus. Presideilt Ketter has formally recognized and encouraged their
efforts."
Sub-Boerd has also initiated
discussions with the U/B Student Health Service, GSA reporta, aimed at expanding and
amproving services. It has also
initiated examination of and
negotiation with various heeltb
insurance carriers to provide
more comprehensive coverage
for students and has funded
and helped ezpand ti!B Pregnancy Counaeling-Birtb Control
Center, although the latter has
"encountered c e r t a i n legal
tanp.a that continue to bold
up aiii.Procr-."
- Other -&amp;11&gt;-Boerd projects,
Bucb as the Day Care Center,
ha"" a1ao pawn and~.
the GSA report aotea, aiad "it
.,_.. ceJtain that the c:laairol SuiHtaerd will be a
gmduate lltudeat in the coming
y,MI' and that the mduale aiDcleat wllf c:oallaue to .
be .......... r.ctara.in the aor~;-;;.mties.. .
11le a.-wood aurwy, GSA
8QW, . . . . . from ba!leR etacleat ............~ about
lbe faactiaD ol S.lkiud and

......

ft.

studenlll (not CIIIUidias ......,.
members) abould be ...._ •
speak eflectivel,y for ~·
at the bottom of priorities.
graduate students, ~
with the . licit poeailailitr .,
FSA
GSA said it alao "continues
action
to be active in the largest noncontinued . . . . .
pro_!it corporation · on C811!PUS, m GSA
the Faculty Stuqent Associa- the year a policy ol cmei' ...
tion, which direda tbe Ulli118r- the needs of foreign .......
sity's Book Store, Food Service, wbo co;mpriae a aipi8c:aDt Pll'Vending and ae~lll of Nor- centage of maduata ~
ton Union's activities." Credit "Five new loNip etudmt clull8
is claimed for brinJing prob-· were .recopaized and fuDIIed •••
lems of professional studenlll in adciit&gt;on to the tbrae cbllaa
before FSA and lor continuing previously funded. The pcl8illaa
woik toward creating a trust of foreign student CIIOI'Ciilmar
to guarantee funds for student waa created and fllllod. • • • •
aervice projects: "Pending ad- help clulie plan budpta _ ..
verse action at the State level, activities and to work with tile
't
that the \FSA-owned Of6ce of Foteicn Student Ill.
land will be sold and fairs."
the fund established. However, Others i n c e the students, through
In other areas, GSA nporta:
Sub-Board, will b a v e• ac:ce68
• 1111 Academic Afraha.Btuonly to the income from the dents Rilhta . Committee U.
invested capitlil, this will not been instrumental in -=uriq
generate significant resources student rep..-ntation oa tta8
for some time. It was primarily divisional committees ol e.cb
through action of the gxaduate Faculty \the groups ._..aistudents on Sub-Boerd and ble for academic poliey) ; oa. a
FSA (all GSA officers) that departmental leviol, the comthis degree of success has been mittee has been surveyinc-~
department to determine the
achieved."
level of student input into acaThe~
Expanded efforts on bebaU demic., financial a i d , ~~dam.
of educationally and financially sions, tenure and promotion,
disadvantaged studentS are also and curricula policy,
noted in the GSA reporL Vice
• The Grievance~
President Greenwood is credited of the Graduate School, enacted
with working with University last year on GSA initiation,
administraton; to insure that have been aerving paduate .otuqualified but disadvantaged stu- denlll very well; graduate students are considered by depart.- dents have won moat ol tba
ments, And the Graduate School, cases white many others it is reported, bas joined a setUed informally in a ada-·
Minority Locator Service which factory manner.
distributes names and qualmcations of interested students
from across the nation to UJ B
departlnents with graduate Programs. :Additionally, a report
proposing a major eflort in the
recruitment of qualified, dis-'
advantsged s tudents and out.lining the specifics of bow to
implement such a program has
"U the Professional S t alf
also been forwarded for ron- Senate am adequately deecribe
•ideration.
ita consqtuency, it can build a
In ~~iated area, the management education _..am
GSA E~ve Committee in- of benefit both to the Uni~ty
d icates that at has "worked all and to the individual aueera
year to overcome bureaucratic of non-teaching profesionala,"
roadblocks, here and in Albany, Senate President . A II en K
to the StudenN. o a n Fund. (Bud) Kuntz said this week
Established in principle two in ur~ NTPs to respond. to a
years ago, it appears finally queatJonnaire on career develthat . it will be operational in opment now· beini $lin:ulated.
the fall. This year, the UniverBut, said KIBitz, ''If - 11i
sity Women's Club waa im- down the
on this - . lbe
pressed with our program Stall
will be llterally
enough to decide to merge their
do ~ . of
loan fund into ours, joining the
1188.
GSA, Millard Fillmore, Underto know ow-COIIIItigraduate Student Naociation
emph8aized. "And
and Alwnni Association. 'The
oa.1Dfonll8lii!D iR
capital is now on the orde&lt; of
$15,000 and should prove very
valuable in coming yeera."
~
·
'The GSA Senate, the report
poinlll out, has ,_,lly eatablisbed a Student~ Committee "designed to ,_ate
and distribute funds to .,...m..
a_.te
.. ~~tteetbeir
• ~
the !JIIry&lt;!Y ~~~~- Cui~:
gramnung IS seen as
expansion while athletics are

~y: !'~

w::::.

A:Co

Kuntz Says

PSSSurvey

'Iniportant'

18 1111PlYiD11

•""

for a block II'Ult from tbil Uaf..
Yersity Inatllutioaal Fuada
Committee and will work. with
the -ly......t.ed U/B CoiJea.11188, aa well • tbe 'U/8 FouDdation. to funnel additioaal
funds in to the c-ittee'a
budpt_• A fartla role ol lbe
Committee will be to try to . .
or ~laat
.
for lllllluata a1udaalll with
and' alata . . , _ _ , and
induatry.
· Wblle~8ub-Boud'a

cinleiuahipa

Cllqllata . . . Iii ........ etacleat ...... and ........ . . . .
lt.lc. 08A ~ ... It ...

~ -~ =~-~==
........
........

rm....luillllac of~

Mc:Kbmey Ia vWtiJ1i the
llaelrtallaiat DiQiiiala. vieweel' b.r tNd ........ Gilly
~ UDder the jajut !&gt;'- ol the Bill* Blilll* !'ro- alilhll:f ._ ialpDrlat thaa
~-and the~ ol
~
.ally ~ __..., to
SOciOIIIIY-

-me

-

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tar

T_... U.U., tf ~,
"WbbJa .it ..._, . . i t - lha1

tlaoi-- ol

�4

.,_ :J, 197:J

~

Uncritical Democ~cy Seen Posing Thre~ts tp Universities
John Dewey is often llJ)J)Il8)ed
to as the pbiloaopher who de-

__
..

By PAUL KURTZ

IV
Tbe flnlt . . . is tbe belief
tbat the democratic kiM! jm.
plies wdveraal h II h u education. Clearly, the elforf to
extend 8ducation, free and uni-

=-~~1,~

feDds lbe role of the university
in a demolncy. Yet be recogDizea the point r- am making:
"Beeief in equality is an eJe.
ment of the democratic credo.
It is not, however, belief in
equality of n a t u r a I endowmenta Those who proclaimed
the ide&amp; of equality did not
SUJ&gt;P06e tbey were enunciating
a psycliological doctrine, but a
Iepl and political one . : . .
Each one is equally an individual• and entitled .to equal
~tunity of develoim!ent of
his own capacities, be ~ large ,
Tile .......... ...,_ . , tt. or sinal! in range. Moreover,
to . . , - • far , 1M each bas .-.Is· of his own as
- __ -~- ., • - t to him as those of
.,.
-'"lJ .,-~
of the ·f8clnl the o rs are to them. Tbe very
communI t J. W. ........ Jact of natural and psycholog.,..._ p a p a r a - - . •
ical inequality is all the more
- ......reason for establishment by law

CVIEWP(}IN1"S ·

~~'i!:.,ty :,ol(=~:

all strata of aociety is prognls_. they have neither the talent nor
slve and democratic. No inart the motivation. But aociaJ p"""
can fulllll hla potentialities un- surii6 compel them to go; only
less be is dordecl the oppor- with a degree. it is thought, can
tunity for cultural enrichment they get a lfood job or lillllO'
'This is particularly true in COD· well; otherwlJie, tbey would, be
temporary technologiCal societY a failure in life. But to attend
where hicher educatim enhan- a unlversity or college is not
""" further developmenL
necessarily tbe o.n I y way to
. Tbe open admiasions policy achieve tbe good life or signifiIS an effort to· fulllll this ideal
cant experience;·indeed, it may,
of univers81 education. I sup- for many students, deaden some
port tbe open admissions policy, !'f \heir creative life-spirit; and
but only in thii; sen&amp;e: ThOse 1t may not be the only road
denied admissions because of to increased income or success
race. class. ethnic origin, sex, later . in life ( as Christopher
or economic deprivation should Jencks and others have shown
be given the opportunity to in the book IMqUtllily J. Unienter. Cl might add that, in versities and colleges have bemy view, universities ought to come sacred i n s t i t u t ions,
continue to seek out high po- thought to be necessary waytential, disadvantaged youth stations of life. Too many emand provide them with spec:ipl ployers require a B.A. -degree,
program8 of tutorial instruction thus forcing students into unso that they can succeed in productive higher education.
higher education.) Indeed, in
I sharply· dissent Perhaps
an ideally democratic .Y,.tem we need' some descbooling. Why
of hicfler education, the Jltate confine young people 11t the
or SOCiety ought to provide ade- prime of life to four more years
quate scholarship aid for all of ex!'mded education? Why
thoee who cannot· alford il It not g1ve them the opportunity
is undemocratic to allow the to get out and· Jive and to ooroo
white-shoe boy to get into the back later in tbeir careers if
best schools because or family they so wish? It is a pity that
. weal~ or prestige, while ex- so many jobs in society are
eluding the poor boy. The prin- closely geared to college edu~iple of equal!ty of opportuncation. I would prefer to see
•!Y and equality of considers- the development of more techtion should · operate without nical training institutions in inequivOcation. l ·n deed, the dustry.
~Is. in empha,sizing mobilHowever, that everyone
Ity, can contnl&gt;ute to the break- ~ould a
d insti !li2ns..Jl
rc---o;;.;,•...,lntlfBS8jjoeffiiiic
•gfier'learrung
questionable
and gi~e everyo~. no ·matter · on other grounds. For ability·
what his background, an equal and talent are unevenly dischanoe, Unfortunately, there ~·tributed among individuals·
has been some correlati_on, be- and universities and colle~
tween class, _college_ adrruss1ons~ should only admit those who
and occupation which needs to have- the capability to achieve
or show some promise that tbey
be broken down.
But, we should ask, s!:Iould can. '8 om e egalitarians have
eve~ one go to '!" institution
misconstrued democracy. Tbey
of higher education? Should believe "all men are created
everr.one be admitted to a lmi- equal" means that intelligence
vel'8lty '!f college of his C:h!&gt;ice? and capacity are determined
Would it be undemocratic to solely by environmental causexdude !'f1"'»? It is a remark- es; .and they ·dismiss distincable ~"!""""t today that. in tiona .based upon merit or tslAmerica, virtuaJiy 50 per cient ent as undemocratic or elitisl
of tbe popula~ .attend col- Pemocracy is committed, howleps ~ ~l!eiSI~ whereas , ever, to the principle of eauaiIIIOBt 80CI8ties lll!ftd ..Qnly 2, .5, ity, not to an ovelsimpli&amp;ed
or 10 per .....t »f their ~~ --. ejpl[itarianism.
'

Holt bas 8WII!I!8II!d. lib a U· wiala to atlald m ~d­
bl'&amp;ry' or m ,;;; le !bater, &amp;Dd uate oon-. • medical or
eYeQ'ODe should .!&gt;e aiiOioed to law ec:booili But atill. abould
enter, without prior qualib- -DDt jlr&amp;lluale Gilly those wbo
tion. But if ao. sbaU lhere be - - ' ht coiJep, IUid abould
a revolviDJ door policy as_ ~? _ - bot by to tum out the best
If students wbo are admitted · aurpcma 111111 lawyers?
don't make tbe llr&amp;de. may .
llunk them :out? Or cJoes dernocr
~-~-~~ '!JOOUid
racy rilean that everyooe wbo iiO ~~ """' ...,......... all ereis admitted has a pght to lll&amp;d- dentiallsm. All st&amp;l!dards and
uate and receive 4 degree? 'This ~tialaJ. _they aay, are false
is tbe no exit policy. Doea it . and all claims 1o ob.iectivity:
mean tbat studenta sbould be r.::.a,::e-byn-,-lbey say, are
allowed to detennine tbe entire . .
entzaacbed profescontent of tbe curriculum? Sbaii ~ eliles wbo are not infsitbe nature -of tbe educational Iible _aDd often are resistant to
P""'!""' be ~-iiled by ri&amp;or· cl,_ude,~ ="h'i.!!:fr conous standards of mtellectual ex...,
t
can
cellence, or cbiefty by the COD· better Judla what be wiabes to
Ieam 8Dd
what
-~• ..
- ~7
....... or
sum ·e r studenIa •L-"-'
......,_.ves? __..,__
him.
"".'':.."'
Those who argue tbe latter are """~7
• . - . they- insist
laboring under a second mill- tbat DOt oaly does everyone
conception of democracy. One _have a .rilbt til be ~tted to
can p o s sib I y 81JIIe that an Institution of higher learnougbt to admit eVery.one Who -(~ - 7, coL I)

i.:..~f- ·':~r:cr wO: ~ Community Advisory ·Group
intelligence (is) . distributed in

18
=ti~
ui .iq.;aii~ ·Said
theJaith that each individual

•

Important to Future

· ~ ~
shall have the chance and OPBy M. R.· POUMMIT
venity Drly."• 'This now is well
portunity to contribute what- c...._, .,.,.__..,.~- ,_ oo ita way to being an annual
ever ha is capable of contribuf..
Having served as. chairman of event ....:. tbe 3rd takes place
ing and that the value of his the Community Adviaory Coun· this Slmday. ~
contribution be decided by ita cil sin&lt;&gt;e ita inception in tbe fall
4. Creatiq IUid implementplace and function in the organ. of 197071" would lib to share ing tbe first Christmas Tree Reized total . of similar contribu- my feelings about the Council cycling Proararn. Approlrimatetions, not on the basis of prior and the ·role it plays in the life ly 250 vofunteers from bigh
status of any kind whatever." of the University and commun- schools and coUeg....:.....tudents,
&lt;John Dewey, -"Democrscy and ity.
.
faculty, staff-plus private citiEducati6n," Problems of Man.
First, the Council was ere- zens from all ftib of life
New York : Philosophical Li- ated as a result of both nega- joined in a team effort to chip
brary, p. 60.)
. tivism ( riots, unrest, violenQe, into mulch approximately 12.
We can parody the confusion conllict, disturbances, and the 000 Christmas trees brought t:,
here by asking: Should every- horrible. deaths at Kent Slate) the campus on two of the coldone be admitted to the M.A. or ani! a positive attitude of cele- est days of the year, January
Ph.D.. pJ:!&gt;gram of his choice, . brating the University's 125th 6 and 7. This ecological project
even !f. he lacks the requisite Anniversary.
saved ~ra' ..money and
capsb1hty or mot iva t i"o n'!
In 1970, the image of . tbe was laudeclliy the media"as "a
Whei:e .do we draw the line? University was anything ' but most worthy and outstanding
AdmiiLing everyone to an in- savory because all that aeeri&gt;ed cofort.~unity and Univ_ersity efstitution i'Jf higher learning has to make the headl.ines was the
become the nali.o nal craze for sensationalism of horrendous
5: Assisting \he COmmunity
parents, _students, educationists, acts by students. Many wonder- Action COrps m tbeir many
ll!'d l~giSiators alike. Our so- ful accomplishments were not worthwhile endeavors.
Ciet~ IS now committed to. sup- generally made known to the . 6. Joinin_g tbe Alumni group
portmg thj_s_ new s_tyle of life commllnity.
m 8p0D80nng a luncheon to
for a whole !!"ne~t1on . w_e are
n,.; COuncil, consisting of honor outstanding women .
the first . SOCiety m the history almoo;t 100 citizens from the B - Vlow tar Future
of manJm:KI _that has created a professions, clergy, business,
nMi above are typicaLof some
ne~ quasi-leiSUre class of those mdustry, government, and edu- of the things we have done but
aged 18-25. U we were to admit cation, felt the 125th Anniver- we now ha"" a !!!9ader view of
100 per cent of the general pop- sary could be a "focal point for the responsibility we in the
ulation, the? !"'e would need re- bringing University and com- community bave for the- future.
medud trammg programs for munity closer together. n,.; . Inasmuch as. the University
IS ihe-ndlnber&lt;lfti!t!oonomic
he re~--as,arror-wim&gt;er "COunc• . assum
e ro e 0
e d u c a t 1 o n; and universities mediator in developing a co-. generator in WeStern New
would mean all things ' til all · hesive mutual regard between York, more interaction between
!""n. _W_hy '!"Jl't we mak~ q'!'ll- ~ese two groups . • Interaction, the ~munity and the Univer•!Y d1s~mc_t1ons among •nslitu- dialogue, and feedback were felt sil:y IS necessary. It is conceivtlo~umor and community to be paramount in creating a a61e that in a few years with
coljeges on one ~nd o_f .the scale, better understanding of individ- an expected ' enrollment of over
antheresea_rch universities on the ual problems and objectives
40,000 students at the Univero r-w~thout being called unThe community lleeds ·tbe- sity, plus increased enrollments
d_em':l':t•c? Why ~·t. we in- University and vice versa. It in other institutions of higher
~t
t '!"'"" l.llJ&gt;btutiOns re- was necessary for a well organ-· learning in the area, Buffalo
n e~cting ·standards of ex- ized, "dedicated group to de- """ become a "college town"
ce~~~Wthaeare warned by velop a deep i-espect for each hke Colwnbus, Obio Aiin AI·
ef- 1 . . . t the so-called other so that progress for both bor, Michipu, or· Ithaca, New
e Ite . mstitutions are next on would be assured. n,.; chaJ. York. From l!!rictiY a buSir.ess
the \18t for an assal!ll ! For ex- lenge was great, but worthWhile point of view,~this can be vi !.'II
ek!':" bethe ~rt1cle by J~r- It wol!ld ·take time and ellort ~the economy of the commuo.
.
a I, 0~ AdmiS- to achieve our mutual goals Ity.
=iit;~J!,.Mer~acy 2' and it was time to starL
f. major consideration for the
pp. 38-43.) .
ge, ay,l
• ~,.,.,.,._JUst ._.....,..111
~mmunity Advisory Cou~il
Is not part of the
t . .
Personally, I feel ,great pro- 18 to continue as an acti~e
of the university ~ ca= gress has been made in the two ll'I!UP and be --.ly ~ availby demands that it ~me a rears of our existence but it)a . !'.t:t~work cloeely With Pf!'S'
CD~
~
suP.,rmarket? It was i&gt;nl to be JUSt a beginning.
·
.
!
tter, hla atalf of admin·
~ft()R'I'ED"
expected that high
r%enta
As I look baek, most 'of the IStrator&amp;r. the la,culty and stu:1.~
• of students w 0 u 1dpefind u!t ev~ts and projects we aCCOIII'- dents, on any
:md
_...._- :._.;... ,..;..... - ·
., ,..
.,· ,.._ ::;uch of what was '?e!ng offered ' &amp;!.,WC:U:,ife.,.:j'drely · to aee •if ·
.• - r... ., -_&gt;US •• .._, . tthebem by ac;ado;"!!ClallS
with the 'Uni" _wot cloeelr make more....-...-'-'--'-·' to the
"· r . , ..,~. -- ._ •u• .., .. , _ -• - . fno
theu: liking_. Is ·•t· the
than J'ust ·an a de!"'
Y capacity
m more co--·-'ty
.._.......~
auI t ·or~
''rellCtionary"
·
viSOry
"-~ ·
~ um. ·
-~
and "~c" ~s.:llt;:.'"c!;
CouilCii has ~- invOlved tv!or
bea pri~ -....~ an
..._
IS 1t-doo to the fact that man
m.
the ~ ... ,,..,.,nnan
· .....,-ur _,_....
of thoee now being admitted ~
1. 'nMi !25th Amiiv
of ~ Community M!isory
· -..-,
universities have dille~;ent in- Ban9uet- the COuncil
Council and I ~YB· eft!')' CO!I·
_ , . 2'. •....arr
terests imd inclinations? Per- marily responsible for selling fibedence tbat i!Ua C&lt;nmc.il will
., - haps tbe failure Of the univer- ali?ost 1,000 ticketa to Dlllk£'
an Important. cot .m the
.&amp;. a.ormu
sity, if. it has failed, is not due th1s one. of the gala events 0
w!-ls of Progn!lll8 fo~ \!le fu·
._to the ilcbolars so muCh as it is the Annive!"'l'&gt;' year.
· ttire developmenL!'f !hm area.
•..u:-•41&gt; _ .'
•.. "'to
-~. wi~ ~ex~on .of the
2.c Y,reat!Jlg the first ."Open
,
·
~vem!Y-. to .aceOmmoaate the House which dre:~~: -over 20,000 _ ~!2.f!'O~ NOTfii:.._M_r: Poum• - ~ .._• general j)OjS\Jhition.
people to the campus t&lt;i "see" """u chaii-man of - -board of
IIMICJ' &amp; c*lniRfl u
'
what really goes on at the Uni- - Co/ad, Inc. He
liUo " meml'.erba
.
. v.ersity.
•
ber of tN. bocvd of "trustees of
co"':"'_,_
open~ ~l:;. a,gue~for
S. t:f~-.uDProvemiiiilsand. \liii!J Miii'ta ;f1~ge. '!mf o{"the
---------~~_.;:,-:-----4::;,_-...._. • llllivtai...
~-•d' , as"'""
hn ~g
the "CommUnity-Uni-.
name frem "'pen b~
cdnu_nl6trtJtuJn
., coun•3• ......,..
dO
House , to
c..., ROOtUy
Hill"'

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!I:

�PHOTO CONTEST
While on campus tate • picture or the campus,
buildings, events or activities and enter the
petition Cor money prizes. F1nt prize $25, second

rom

prize $15 and third prize $10. lntormation and entry
blanks are available at the information booths. (See
milp for location pf the booths.)

�)

......

IN CASE OF
Et!IERGENCY
CAll (831) 6655

·I

••

INFORMATION BOQTHS
BUS SERVICE

TOURS OF NORTu · CAMPUS IN

AMHERST

•Bus tows (DO printe cU. please) to the
North ~pus 1ft available. Bwes will
leaft liom tbe parklne - • in liont of
Lockwood Ubraly ""'ry half hour
bepu.in&amp; at 1 p.m. The lut bus deports
.t5p.m.

•

BAIRD HAll

' ··Tbe University Strine Orcllestra,
-dueled by Pamela Gearbort, wW
..-nt . a forty.ftft minute eoneert.
Norton 1lall, Fill,_ llbom/1 :30 P.M.
•UIIhtntty· Opera Slladlo, clinded by
...... WOlf, ,....... llaurt'• "Coli fall
~

l u .,. Q-1

U~ CJ :;u

w ..., c.

ot-8:10 P.ll. Ill Bolrd llecltol HaD.
,.. public .. bniiH to ~ HaD to
oum!Do tbe ll&amp;hted •ts. &amp;ciiJJJ Hall/1-6

P.JI....

V}hAth.

MAIN STREET RT·5

•1be Creative Associates, from the Center
of The Cre1tive and Performine Arts, wlll
present 'two performances of a
contemporary work. Room 10012:00 and
4: 00P.M.

oCbamber music mini ... citats by students
under faculty member dln!cUon. Various
en.mble combinations will be presented
every bour on tbe bour in 101 Baird.
•A demoDitratlon recitalond explanotlon
ot tbe N~k po~ble Orton will be pen
e•ery balf·bour. on tbe halt-hour
beelnnineat 2:30 P.M. IIbom 101.
•Demonltratlons of tbe Mooe tyntbeslur
·l'lld 1Upplementary electronic equipment
wiD be li"'n by pduote stu&amp;nts every
bour on tbe bour in tbe Electronic Music
Studio. Room 49.
'
•The Muoie Ubnry features a •pedal
dia)llllr
plllllllt- 111ee Proteuor Morton
Feldman'• colllpolltl!lnl, IIIIDUocripla and
recordinp. The Ubrary wW "lllo"Jive toll.D

or

to tbe public (approximately 20 in each)
at 2:00, 3: 00, 4 :00 and 5:00P.M.
•The Music Education faculty will give
interested .Wton 1 15·minute Musical
Aptitude Sul&gt;-telt toUowed by a
videotape -of 1tudent teaching at 2:00,
3:00, 4: 00and 5:00P.M. Room 106.

•Tbe U/B Symphony Band, Frank
Cipolla, cooductor, wW perform 1 full
proeram witb tbe dlallneui•bed guest
artllt, Col. Amald Gabriel, director of the
U.S. Airtoree Band.at S:OO P.M. SteJJS ~f

1

Locllwood Library (Norton 114 '
Fillmore Room in cae of inct.numt

. IDBIIIMr) .

•

HARRii.tAN ·LiBRARY

•Tiw Art UbniJ·pn•ntaon Open House
Mid Tour•
eTbe Tbeatre Department presen ts an

·"open N'--1" of V&lt;nUI and Adon".
The ~ebeaaal will lut approximate ly l'h
bolin. HJJrrimtJn Theotre/3:00 P.M.

�oCbed other -campus l),.,atloas tor
addltionol Library preoonlatloaa (Baird
Holl, Hmi111111, Heolth SdeDceo and
Science and Ellll!'eeriDC-Ubrary).

•
CROSBY HALL
•Tbe School or Mallqement will offer
information and haYe repretOnlati- or
the unde..,..duote proeram In blllin. .
admininatralion, tbe . )JBA decree
procnm and, tbe .....U,.ment uol&amp;lance
procram ..vallable to tail&lt; with visitors.
Room I50/I.:J P.M.

•

'HAYES HALL·
•President and Mn. Ketter, with .the

Pftl(denllol admiDI&amp;tralhe &amp;taft and their
opo,_., will be In tbeir o!ftce&amp; to meet
'fillton and dilcua varioua actiYillea and
procram&amp; or tbe Univenity. 108 Hayu
&amp;II, &lt;tllit-wing/1-5 P.M.

HA~ESA

•

•The Adult AdYilement Center will ha.. an exhibit adj_..,nt to the Credit-Free
Deportment and will otter resume ad-rice,
information regarding civil senice
opportunities and credit·free course
information. Lobby/1-4 P.M.

'

•The Division of Continuing Education's
Office of Credit-Free Education will
raffle one free course for the fall, 197 3
session. The winner will be notified by
maiL Lobby/ I-4 P.M.

~~~~Jfr~::Jiiiar~iii:~~
-: :
p

•MiUard
representati
..s
will be Fillmore
available College
to answer
questions
about summer and ran programs.
Applications will be available. Lobby/1-4
P.M.

•

TOURS OF NORTH
CAMPUS IN AMHERST

HOCHSTETTER HALL

•The Department of Physics and
Astronomy will present ·a series of
scientific demonstrations during the
afternoon in · Room 114 and 214 of
Hoclutetter HaU.
•The Observatory on the 6th floor ofHochstetter will be open to the public
fl'om 7:00 P.M. until midnight. Several
telescopes, including the main 10"
reflector and a ,6" reflector will be
available for use. In case of clouds, there
.will be a demonstration of the radio
telescope. Guests are requested to enter
the 6th floor Astronomy Observatory
tbrougb·stairway C.

•

LOCKWOOD MEMORIAL

-~ LIBRARY

•The Library will present, .. part or a
general open boUle, a series of tows,
talks, demonstrations and exhibit&amp;. They
include:
-Selt Guided Tours. Prepared by
Reference Department or Public Services

Reaources.
t·

., _

t

•·

-An audiovisual orientalion of libraries.
-Libruy e:r:blblll linked to special
interest eroupo.
-Tours or Technical Services by
AcqulsJtions and Cataloc Librarians.
-Talks on tbe library's book colleclions
by book selecton.
-poetry Room Open House.
.
-Tour or Documents Room; demonstration or Microform&amp;.
-open 1-!oue or Interlibrary Loan
Department; demonstration or TWX

machine.
-Exhibit: "Reaoureeo Unlimited"
depiclinc SUNY at Buttolo'a a!ftliates tor
reaollll\!~·

•The Department of Physics and
Astronomy will conduct twenty·minute
physical oplics-demonstrations on ruby
lMer, neop..tlelium luen, how luen
work, polarized IIebi effects and mqic
windows. Room 114/I-4 P.M. on the
hour and hDI{-hour.

•

PARKER

•

DIEFENDORF HALL

•Dr. Gordon F. Lilly, director, computer
services, will lecture on "Computer Services on Campus" twice, with each lecture
followed by a discussion period. Room
146/ I :30 and 3:_3 0 P.M.

•

DIEFENDORF ANNEX

•Deportment of Medical Technology
faculty members will present exhibits and
explanations including: Blood Grouping; ·
Electrocardiogram; Blood Slides and
Hemoglobins ; Automated Clinical
Chemistry; and Bacteriology-Culture and
Slides. Rooms 29 and 30/1-6 P.M.
•The Occupational Therapy Club will
presen t an exhibit and film of tbe various
aspects of Occupalional Therapy. Room
1/1-6 P.M.

•Tours are available to the North
Campus in Amlierst. Buses will
leave pOriodicaUy riom the parking
area in front of Lockwood Library
(no private cars please).

•

-Electrical Enclneerinc will ~nt
demonstrations and e:r:blbila on a
miniature\ radio otation, talerilion
demonstration,_ radar velocity mea&amp;ilrine,
anclelectrocardlocram clilpo&amp;iL
-Encineerinc Science will present
ple:d&amp;l- strea strain rotations.
-Nuclear Enclneerinc will demonstrate a
neutron howitzer, audio'rilual eiectronic
countinc equipment and neutron
acti'flllon of me tala. BuildiJrl I6.
-Aeroapace Enclneerinc will haft a
number or demonstrations and exblbill.
-cbemical Enctneennc will demonstrate
automatic oontroi or nowtnc Uquids,
analoc computer reprnentation or a
complex cbemlcal reaction, the freezlnJ
or &amp;all solutions, tbe crowth or cas
bubbles in a liquid, and strange fluids.
-Mechanical Encineerinc will have TV
lapel on electron microocope studies on
transport process, dynamic materials
leltlnc, and demonstrations on fluid
power control and design.

~NGINEERING

• Departments in the Faculty of
Enctneering and Appiled ~iences will
preoont a number or demonstrations,
. show tum&amp; and explain diaptaya.
· -The avU Enclneerinc Department will
have demonstrations and exblblts on:
quick sand, lnstron machine, ~Ilion
naehlne, shear macb.lne, beam scale,
transit, raindrop experiment, water !low,
rotaline lab and a canoe film on ASCE
project.
-Ipdustrlal Enctneerinc will haft
demonstrations and exhibits on auqeon
tralnlnc, at11nc aatety, · dri'finc akllll,
Jnd.uotrtal lnapeclion atudle&amp;, and 11t11nc
or awkward objects. Aloo, a pnoral

rum

,f{l!ftl'I~.Jndullrtal EnclneerinC-

•

ACHESON HALL

P.M.

-Room 3: Movie&amp; 1:00 P.M.
-Library: Loop Fliml1:00 P.M.
•Information handout&amp; and retreabmenta
will be available.

•

HEALTHSCIENCES

•The Health Sciences !Jbrary will ..-nl
demonstrations of Meclllne and SUNY
Terminals and an •:r:blbit bJtbllebtinc tbe
. history or denllatry .
•The School of Nurstnc will present
exhibits foculi.nc on "CommunicationCare-Community." The pre10ntations are
mad&lt;) by student&amp; and faculty.

•The School or Pharmacy will otter olide
presentations on careers In Pharmacy,
Information on drug abuse and other
topics. The presentations and exhibit&amp; are
located in the School or Pllarmacy,
Health Sciences building.
•The Department or Microbioloey or the
Medical and Dental Schools will feature
in 223 Sherman demonstrations of how
immunization protects against infections.
Disp~s by Dr. Eugene Gorzynski and his
associates will illustrate methods or
counting bacteria in organs of immunized
mice that baye been infected.

•

•
SCIENCE AND
ENGINEERING LIBRARY
•A v i deotap e presentation
.. Astronomy : Eyes of Ute Universe:"

p.M.; Square Donco 8:45p.M.
-Tennll Courta: SJnclea 2:00 P.M.;
Doubles 3:00 p.M.; Mixed douliloa 4:00
P.M.
-fMUe Field: Intra- aquad bueballllJDe
2:00P.M.
-&amp;&gt;c:eer Field: Intra- &amp;quad ca- 2:00
P.M.
-Albie tic Field: Golf 2:00P.M.
-Retearcb Lab: Demonstration 1:80
P.M.
-8quub Court&amp;: Demonstration 2:00

CAPEN HALL

•The
of

~

•1be Department of Chemistry will
conduct tours of the bu~dlnJ , originating
in the lounge area, every 30 minutes from
1-4 P.M. Tour highlights include: the
research labs or Dr. David Cadenhead
where moon r()j:k -samples will be
displayed and a brief talk given on aspects
of the "moon rock research"; tbe
glassblowing shop where Mr. Gus !Oein
will demonstrate his expertise u a master
glassblower and discuss scientific and
artistic glassblowing; a Yisit to the
freshmen lecture balls and labs where
members of the Student Affiliates or the
American Chemical Society will present
demonstrations and special experiments.
•Complimentary coffee and donuts will
be available in tbe Jounce area.

•
NUCLEAR SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY FACILITY
•The facility will oponsor toun and
periodic lectures throuchout the
afternoon. Children under 15 must be
accompanied by a parent. 1-4:30 P.M.

.COOKE HALL
•The Day Care Center (buement of
Cooke HAll) will provide babylitter
service ~om 1-6 P.M. tor children up to
the age of six years. A maximum of 50
children can be accommodated at any
one lime.

•
CLARK HALL
(GYMNASIUM)
•Tbe tolioq events, demonstrations or
actlvltiea are acbeduied for tbe afternoon:
-Main Gym: Judo 1:00 P.M.; Fendnc
2:30 p.M; Trampoline 8:00 p.M.; Table
TeD!~~&amp; 4:00 P.M.; s.telboll Rl&lt;iNuion
5:00P.M.
-ilwlmmlnt PoOl: heulty Raenation
1:00 P.M.; SCUBA 2:00 P.M.; 'Stuclent
Recnation 3:30 P.M.
,
-W01111n'a Gym: a.dminton 1:00 P.M.;
Dance 2:00 P.M.; ApoUo ~ 8:00

Deportment of Physiology has
a tour or the Laboratory or
Environmental Pbyslology, showtnc bleb
and low pressure chambers, human
centrifuge, and the annular pool for
swimming studies. Shennan Hall Annex.
arr~e d

•The School or Denllatry wiU present a
varied program, lncluclinc:
-Buffalo Banjo Band at I: 00 P.M. in
North Foyer o{ Capen Hall.
-The Sidewalk Care.
- " A Happenin&amp;"- North Capen L&lt;lwn.
- An Orthodontics di&amp;play and projected
slides or orthodontic problema and
traatment (Dr. John Cunat and faculty).
North Foyer o( Capen Hall.
--l'eriodontal dlae- detection cllnlc.(Dr.
Se-lan Oancio and faculty). LoctJted
in the DenW Clinic.
-Prevention atnic conducted by Dr.
Garry Wleczkowaki and tacuity. Patient&amp;
will be lnltnlcted on proper oral hypene
tecbniquea.. Den141 Clinic, Capen HalL
-Remot'able Prootbodonllca Depalmlllt
preoontation' of educ:ationol 111ma and
exhibits (Dr. Ortman and fai:ulty). Nort/1
Foyer o( Capen IWL
--over-tbe-eounter druC e:r:blblla aet up
by ste... Paain and Interested dental
student&amp;. I48 Capen.

•
NORTON HALL
GROUND FLOOR
•Tbe Boobtore will be open 1-6 P.II.·
•Tbe Qeatlve Craft Center, Room 7--9,
will realuae . an open &amp;bop willa
demonotralloaa In ceramlca and mow.
and craft e:r:blblla. I -6 P.M.

•Villton to llle reereallon aaa will lind:
an lnlercolleCiate lnYita&amp;lonU llowllllc
Touln-..1; an Open Tablt ,._.
~Ill; . . . . . . (bA!fpriee apecW),
Bumper Pool 81111 SbllfDe a-d; 81111 •
pboto and lropll)iellldl!fL I-Ii P.JL
oTbe RallloDIIr will be
I-7:30P.M.

opetl

hm

-

nRSTFLOOR
•Tbe Boobtcn will be open I-Ii P.JL •

�lq"

t

\ .

)
,.-: r, ...
•An arf ublblllon and oole .wtn be'· ·· bortlcdlture, human uxuallty,
pielented by Art Department .........
di-allon of tile-pound, ~Ileal n IIDtJs Loulll/0/1-6 P.M.
and colldltlonlnl, creatln life
mana1ement, the politics of art,
•An Infol'l!lallon Exa..n,e Center.
tranaactlooal anal)llis, lmltllnl and.
lnfol'llla"tlOil wiD be uallahle l'tom
neeclepoint.
· '
AduUaioDI and Recuda, flllandal Aid,
Minority Student 8enlcee (lndudlnc the
•One MID Show: Eupnlo Benlni· Galkry
Equal Opportunity Propam and tile
219/1-5 P.M. Monoreallam, a unique and
-LearniDI Center), Academic Actrloeuient,
reo! approach to palntlne that alloWI the
Studetit Se"lcea, and · Uniwrilty
ar111t to work only with the shades of one
Placement and Career Guidance. Cenmr
basic color. •
Lou,.i1-6 P.M.
oCommunity Ac:tlon Corpo exhibit and
slide preeentallon. 'lbll voluntary ...ncy
•An lnternallonol Students Propam
bas enlisted 2000 volunteers to serve 45
Includes performances by Lalln
projects in Buffalo. Otncen And
Amerlcon, dbineoe, Pollab, Korean and
·coordinators wiD be anllable to meet
Israeli dancers and UkraiDlan siDI"fl.
'rillton
and shale lliformaUon about tbe
Conference ~ater/1-5 P.M.
CAC. propam. Room 220 and lldiGcont
corridor/1-6 P.M.
·The· University Sbin1 Orchestra Concert.
Millard Fillmore Room/1 : 30 P.M.

•University Symphony Band Concert
Lockwood Library Stqn (MillJJrd
Fillmore Room in case of inclement
weather)/3: 00 P.M.
oCheckroom facilities for coC.\5, books,
etc. avallable from 12 Noon.

•University Activities
22311·5 p.M.

office.

Room

•Norton Administration offices. Room
225/1·5 P.M.
oCampus Ministry Open House . Displays,
films and refreshments. Room 232/1·5
P.M.

SECOND FLOOR
•Student eovemment officers will meet
visitors throughout tbe afternoon in
Student Association offices. Rooms
205-207/1-5 P.M.

•Communicative ( Creativity Workshop
(Handicapped · Children's J&gt;roeram)
directed by Bambii Abelson Kertzman.
1-3 P.M.
-Greeting and introduction to workshop
with music and dance. Public is invited to
attend and observe. Room 231/1 :00P.M.
-Sound and sights of Communicative
Creativity (compilation of rums and slides
of .group activities). Room 21.1II :45 P.M.
-Arts and Sports Activities. 1:45-3: 15
P.M.
-Home Cnfts - Room 233
-Theater Play - Room 234
-Exercise • Room 240
-EcoiOCY and Nature • Room 242
~mmunicative Creativity Kookery
Room244
-Woodcraft- Room 246
-Moviemaking - Room 248
-Junior Play · Room 231-233 Corridor
-Horseshoe and Junior Bowling . Room
240.244 Corridor
.Sub Board I, Inc. Room 21411-5 P.M.
Visitors may visit witb tbe leadership and
staff of this non·profit student
corporation which provides student
·services including culturol • and · $0Cial .
activities, publications, housing, htalth
care and Norton Hall operations. The
orpnization functions as the custodial
and disbuning agent for mandatory
student fees.
· •Life Workshops. Room 218/1 -5 P.M.
These workshops, voluntary enterprises
on the part of hotb leaders and
participants, orter ~ . wide ranee of
learning and sbarinc experiences in
informal association outside the
c:lusroom. Workshops have mcluded

•Tiffin Room (Room 235)·· Cocktails and·
hors d'oeuvre&amp;. 1-5 P.M.
•Browsine Library . A a. nique
studenktaffed and .funded libllfY for
leisure reading. The collection exceeds
1800 volumes and approximately 115
periodicals. Room 255/ 1·10 P.M.

•Music Listening Room. An outstanding
(approximately 2500 olbums) contem·
porary and classicol record collec:tlon
available for listening in a music lounee
and 7 adjoining listening booths. Room
257/1 -10 P.M.
•Gradua~

Student Association officers
will be ~vailable to meet visitors during
the afternoon. Room 205/ 1-5 P.M. •

THIRD FLOOR
•Queen City Open Invitational Chess
Tournament (sponsored by Cbess Club).
Rooms 334, 339/10:00 A.M. · 11: 00
P.M.

•Muslim Student
330/ 1-3 P.M'.

Room

Association.

Room

•Graphic Arts Center and Leather
Workshop (beltmaklng). Room 307/1-5
P.M.
•Publications in Action . 1-5 P.M . University Press- Room 343. Bu((alonian-Room
356. elho• (newsmagazine)-Room 302.
Spectrum (Tbrice-weekly)·Room 355.

•WBFO Radio , public radio witb highly
diversifoed programming at 88.7 FM,
presents Open HoU&lt;e and tours. Rooms
325-32711-5 P.M.
•Amateur Radio. Room 324/1 ·5 P.M.

IN CASE OF
EMERGENCY
OR FOR FIRST AID
~ALL

Games.

•Confiict Simulation
337/Noon-7:00 P.M.

(831) 5655

�. 5

Trustees OK
SUNY-Wide·
StudentVoice

Federal Funds
Swinging to _
The Applied ·

A State' Uniwrsity Student
wbicb WOUld provide
a ..-.teliYe voice in Universil;y-wide • decialon making
for SUNiY's , 364,000 students
was approved l&amp;llt ,..,.. by the
Board al- 1'raatea
.
1be edioa, subject' to student ratillallillll, 'III'OII!d estab-

.

lish a.. ..,.._._ bo!lY repleaenlinl more atwleate thaD at.
any other collep or univiiraity
in the

u.s.

tbeAa.A~~-~~
y wuwu j)J'OYide a
formal lllzUctme "b conaultetion and the acluliiae of ' ill- ·
formatioa b e - .. Univentty ·
students, the Chaiicellor and
tbe Board of Trullteea; oo mat,
ters of a Uni-..ity-wide nature which idlect student con-

oems."

Chancellor E - I,. BOy,er
said the 'l'ruateM' actioo emphasizes the Boud's reCotlni·
tion of student. partidpatioa. as
an irpportant element in University ....-.umce and · imple.
menta a major ,.,.,.,mendatioo
of tbe 1972 Maii1a- Plan designed to improve, conaultetive
relationships wil!qll'imary constituent groups within the University.
1be enabling doc u.m en t,
which defines the membership

~r swing in fedenll
for research in tbe llacal
budget is "from basic to
lied re&amp;ji8.ICh al .the prabvina, ..Uty~ VB·
with added ~ oo
gettiila full value returned for
the aomewbat m o r e limited
fund&amp; available." ·
'!bat's t h e - offered
in tbe first issue of ReMitJ7Ch
Noteo, a new monthly PUblica·
tion from tbe 011ioe of tbe Vice
President for Research at U/B.
Accordina to the puliication,
six~areas of "civilian" reaearch
interests have been identified
as tnn priority needs to ensure
the.'fdective utilization of • ·
isting scientilic and technical
capabilities and a proper retum
on federal R &amp; D mveatmenta."
1bese include: adequate, reasonably-priced c I e an energy
with emphasis on tbe solution
of near-term problems, such asthe pre-combustion cleaning of
coal, fusion power and solar
energy; improvement of transportation systems, with em·
P_hasis on environmental protection. energy conservation, improved wban mobility, safety
and productivity; reduction of
loss of lives and pro~ty -from '
natural disasters, w1th acoelerated efforts in earthquake engineering and prediction; cancer and heart disease research;
research to curb drug trafficking; and improvements in crime
prevention and controL

1be

Assembly

Rogoff Will Stage Ve11US &amp;AdoniB'

In 1593, William Shakes- features' astro-turf and water- have the $p&amp;ce to cast the play
beds: uan exercise," according as tradition t'f:'X~ Uires."
Adonis,'' a long poem which tO set designer Raymond FetSponsored by the Depart.
was soon to become the most terlY., "in failed technology."
. ment _of Theatre, the play will
popular work of his lifetime.
run
in ·the Harriman TI&gt;eatre
Moat likely he was motivated No Spoce for Troclitlon
Studio from May 9-13, with a
by financial as well as artistic
Rogoff maintains that his preview May 8, and an open
need: the English theatre had adaptation is much more than rehearsal on May 6, Communbeen closed down by p~e, a simple case of an Ovidian ex- itiio'- University Day. Curtain
and unable to support hiiDself ercise vs. theatrical lirense. time is 8:30 p.in. for the pre;::,le
dent governing ·bodies at each as a playwrigbt, Shakespeare "Theatre can make a claim on view and regular performof the 29 State operated cam- attempted a non · theatrical Shakespeare the same way mu- ances; open rehearsal ltlld a
puses for rati&amp;ation. (Not-in- work. U/B Theatre Depart- sic and dance do," he insists. Sunday, May 13, matinee will
cluded are the flve statutory ment chairman Gordon Rogoff " And with the limi lations of begin at 3 p.m. Tickets are
colleges at Comell and Alfred has found, h!)Wever, that the University facilities, we must available at the Norton ticket Fire Resurch
· and the 38 locally-sponsored poem is entirely suitable for improvise and adapt the Shake- oflice-.at ~ lor students and
The National Bureau of
community colleps. 1be com- the stage, and has adapted it speare canon. We simply don't $1 for general admission.
Standards' fire research a n d
munity colleges .win be af6Jiate fQr 'CSDlpll§ production next
safety program w i II receive
members with a total of 8 dele- week undei' the subtitle, "An
add~ funding, the report says,
gates.)
Open Road." .. .
,
SPA~-- as will the Bureau's program to
In order for the Assembly to
''Venus and Adonis,'' Rogoff
develop reference standards and
become a functioning body, notes, "has generally been can- (Continued from page I. ro/. 2) our own concerns about the measurement systems for air
student leaders at three-fourths sidered a non-dramatic narra''We have taken the decision St.a.te--wide organization," and water pollution. ·E nergy
of the State.operated. campuses tive; and as less than one-third · to resign from the Senate Pro- Brown said.
conservation will continue to
must ratify its provisions. •
of the lines are dialogue, very fessional AssociaJion (SPAJ.
CSEA-AAUP
receive support, with emphasis
difficult to stage. We wanted ·unresponsive'
placed on better use of energy
Although SUNY-United is in byildings,· while ocean polPHYS 'EO ACTION
to find appropriate theatrical
"We do not believe that./.be the designated faculty bargain- lution will be studied through
Also at lost - · · meeting, the expression for tile poem, one
Trustees voted 11·1 to obolish the which would break •WilY from merger between SPA and th? ing agent under the Taylor marine ecosystem analysis.
State Unive1$1!y physical educe· the narrative structure Bllll:_&lt;tst State University Federation of law, SPA members who are
NSF's budget support in
tion requirement. allowing each..., ligbt in and around the te:c'~ Teachers ISUFTJ, which has unhappy with the present eli- 1974, the article indicates, will
just been effected, is in the real mate State-wide have consid- continue to go to fiindamental
campus of the SUNY system to a contemporary way."
detennine for ttself whether phyThe production begins with interest of en academic bargain- ered meeting with the Civil reseanch in the science discisical education will be mandatory. a reading of the source mater- ing agent. No! only will d""" Service Employees AsSociation plines, engineering and matebe increased to over one per 1CSEAJ and the AAUP to ex- rials, with extended funding for ~lB deCision on the matter ial from Ovid's "Metamorphowill likety be considered in various sis," after which, Rogoff main- cent of our gross salary, which plore. alternative possibilities research on selected problems
administrative· and faculty bodies tains, "all straightforward nar- effectively prices a substantial with· respect to collective bar- of national concel'l!, tbe promobefore being made. .
.
tion of international cooperarative technique,. all nopons of number of SUNY members out gainirlg.
At present, the situation is tioo through acience and atl!lclts
romantic' Elizabethiana are dis- of • the ofganization and weakens
its
JJargaining
power,
but
"extremely
,fluid,"
Brown
said
on
a nuniber of major science
1be campus student govern- carded. There is a break in the present entrenched leaderments are expected tO vote on form, as well as in attitude to- ship at the State level is un- One suggestion has been to re- education problems through a
quest
that
CSEA,
in
coopera"restructured
and more focUsed
·
the matter b e - now and ward the materiaL"
responsive tp the needs of an tion with the AAUP, absorb science educatioa improvement
the end of the ·current academ- A Muslcol COUnterpoint to Ve~ academic
institution
intefe5ted
University
faculty
and
NTPs
program."
NSF's
Social Science
ic year. U aoceptod, tbe AsHe --d~ribed his approach in the mater.ial well-beihg of as a fifth unit of the Associa- Division is 1ookinJi for studies
sembly · could begin operation
as
a
,''-"'usical
counterpoint
to
all
,of
its
members.
-it,.
is
untion.
This
would
be
poiisible
of
science
pOlley'
tbe imPact of
as eru:ly as September, 1973.
8 tudents !&gt;ave been actively actual verse, in wl)ich modenv res~nsive to the prerogatives only_ if CSEA. AAVP, or some science an society iani!· the U8e
American
urban
life
becomes
of
its
academic
members,
and
coahtion
of
the
two,
were
to
of
bllllpUteno
in
moMII""*'L
8
consulted by the University's
leadership in a more informal resOnating chamber for the des- it is unresponsive to the need challenge sucoessfully SUNY-- ·'lbere ·wjll be continued em- 1.
and
laments
in
the
.
for
the increasing professional- t!nited's r:ig!tt to act as ezclu-' phasls 0n coriceptuaJ atudfes hi " -.....
criptions
manner since 1967 wben then poem." However, rehearsals ization and groW.th of its non- slVe bal'JPWUilg agenL Alao un- social inclicalonl and bapefully
88
Chancellor SamUel B. Gould
d_er _consideration is_~ partj. anthropoiocical ~ fo·r
created a s t u d n t Cabinet progressed, Rogoff says, his in- teaching members.
''Thus the merged organiza· tionmg_of the berga.uung agent reaean:b in U.S. wban aettinp
co~ of student presi- &gt;leiJ)retation remained "counter·
so
Ulat the Centers would bar- and sOcial ~ 8eld ......
puntal"
while
"the
text
contion,
as
it
is
now
constituted,
d~ts, With whom h. met peri&gt;
tinued to force itself foovard." has within it. the capability and gain as a lleparate unit (aimila dies emploYIIIJ dirtiCt obeerveodiC:olly. '
.
--;
:0 Health SP-A) . A third op- tiona.
·
He
finds
the
resulting
baJ.
the
properisitl'
to
inhibit
the
Dr. Boyer il)craa.a the "fre.
ance theatrically useful: "as growth of exceilence in major tion, 'Brown said, is to iiUppOrt Nat - - ~
-~ of this praclioe .upon we
--· got ' deeper into the story, areas of !he university system SUNY;United·candidatea
. •L. .,_ ..... ~wilbNSI"aRANN.Jll'C1118.111.._
~ncellor in 1970.
......
' in keeping with we became aware of an active and the economic well-being m ...., O~wuu _..., are dinlctor J.nmta .._._ .ui
tension
between
the
verse
and
of
all
the
members
of
the
bar·
!he Master Plan'a empbaais on
~=--""';""',., ~ receMd ...... ~qualun~ ..,_,.._ .relation- tbe actions_ . . .· w.e began to . gaining uniL"
lndlviiluala . who Willi to .... lty ~ ~
ships, be aalt e d tbe student step back from ' our craze for · Titose who had signed tlie
P~IB to lllllliat' in deveJ. invention, and allow the poeln's letter by R~f'D'*r deaclline in- Sign from SPA fboUid write to:
~P..... _a lltruotUre which would rhythm and imaLI!fJI to take elude: Charles Beyer, Jolm S.P.A., 15 ~Drift, 'Al· ~vi~ in biiiClarify, ntaularbie ancr make over for itself. Silall:eapelue's Buerk, Pat Colvard, Tbomas
m ~re. ~ - effective" poetic voice iS the &gt;.vinner- in an Connolly, Ba·rba ra· Dullea,
Erika Federman, MarVin Feld- . the letter abou!d alao be . . ' tecllmalou ad ila ~
theu m w l - during the undeclared war.
"1 have always been in· man, T. Ronald Gen~ Mac to; Arthur l.eviu; ~ to eociaf~ inlroclallliail
decade ol tbe.l8'10's. .
T h e re eiiiiUed a · six-month trigued," be adds, ','by tbe way ,_ Hammond, Gordon Harris, :Leo of Audit ~ Control, State of -le!:liDDioiY Uld 118-=ial
policy
in
period of intenaiYe conaultation .a piece will begin to clear its Lbubere, · Robert N i c h ·o I~ . Ollioe, Buildint, Olany, N.Y. illll*t.
Eman""l"Pari:ell, Lee Preston,
t;elionnwmmfadlana
mvol~ ·the ChanceDor's rep! own needs and forplS."
As ·such. the play relies less Dean Pruitt, Riclrard SallEr,
d:"ntati-._ the student presi11~tic!P Dlvilioo will
nta and a apecia) ten-member and leas on: COP,temPQrary im- James S. Schindler, 'Claude TIIM tor-- c:an__,.,t _:. ooooentrate oo ~ stu·
ages'as ·it goe, along. Ne~ Welch, and Rose Weinstein.
student committee.
•
monies of 1lle -Saboal "" ........ diea of:--- "ec!uoatioil ~­
Brown emphasized that local Rel8ted ~ s.tunley, leml, iach- wiQ' Wllllllili"bd
d As defined in the Assembly leas tbe Hist' "'lllment will be
socumen
,_ _ t, students from tbe aom'etbing to behOld: 101ttihp le&amp;dership· !If SPA wu not to Moy · 26. In the ~ Roam, miliodty lftiUII8 are. so lJllder."
18 oc-v)&gt;erated eantpU8ea woUld include a PQl!lder ro6m, a bowl- be blamed for the unwillingness NottiWI. wtH bo 8:aO 'P.Ift. Tho ~~ iii ecientiftce 1'! c t their clelePtes on tbe ina alley, a,hlgb school dance in of ~ organizit.ion as a whole time - - - includod In the Of. ·11111 di9lsion ia looklDc lor the
basiS .of one rep~a~entative for tbe 1940's. The set is a mix· to respoJi4 •to the specialized fidel In~ pnMdecl 11y » np0rt. ..,., ianovllthil ~­
each 3,500 full-time equivalent twe of idioms, which recalls needa of tbe C..tera. "Loc88 millions .o nd.....,.--. tiaMI ......... to~
studenl:!,....
,
_
· the Eliz8bethan .stage while itl laodersi,!!P is in aympa_thy with
-----...-.---:--~J ~ ~ tbe IOUiiz!e.

!ill

~~-:~

peare published ''Venus. and

=

Disenchantment with

e

r\1=:

:::.u-:::::...uch •m::

"T.o.!':i~=thataoapyof ~~~ r;;:Q
a

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�)

TaskForce
Will Study
Life Sciences

Attica Is 8Ymbol ofllope:..
__ :,__..:..;:_....:.z,__~~---de'-r-the_8p0D80_.,.'2.___:_SA_Mi_._
(~ t - -

1

to a..
.. =~~.:s= nority Student . . and the
·In tbe ·u.s.~. he Mid. in N- OriMns-) 111111 from Black Student Union, also fea- ._. ....., 1iDtiaid and
CIWd alim COIIIIIilatloo lured appeerances by: E II i s
It did he"" cme ~as UIIPi
' ,..., ar'm of ~~ by·;:udnm~ Haizlip, producer 1ol the TV
I bate to 8V it. n.. - 110 : ; • : : : . • . .
~
put together by Miss
series, "So ~rl;"· LaBelle and
--~t. Tbe
TaD ....
much
tbe:::tt-ot the~ Daniel Ruflin; Samuel Yette,
to
r•author of The Choi«; the BotPresident Robert L. Kette&lt; ~'pj;; in the ~. froiD the in1laeat llllbue of the
He
ltatl
to
be
thwe
to
pick
the
~
80dety.
Ar1iJ
lf
you
domlhantly
audieDce
of
'
- of the BUcket Dance Ccm._ appointed ,a 11-'&gt;er
- thinlt -~ NBII7 ,aolwa "!'! approzimalely 75 wbo up PIIIIY: the Ebony Voices Choir
Tuk l!'aree to 8ludy the ullli- wbite _ . . catllaa."
Allllf
tbe
Ci9ll
War,
thwe
~
We
1101
...
a
liw
npmt
on
Nbmi's
8eV
Of
State University at Albany_
zatioft of University ...., fabi.,~ ~~-~
......alq of and others, during a week's run
cilities 111111 fwlds cleYoted -illlll plemy of cotiDD-pick. ND
to t.cbiJII ud - . c h in the inJ, diteiHll IJ in I jebi for
Davia olfered DO J!!lt IID!u'lbe Black Arts· ~ un- which ended ~ night.
N........_..,lbey cadd do to tim&amp; At cme {'Oil\t, be de8Ded
ealllbliah e.a.1ves iD that ."nrvooutian" 8imply as c:hanie
EiDIIein ~-- .lui H. part of the ~ wbidl ,_ - - .. the pniC8I!! of creatm,
w..., will cbail tbe ..... Force
new COIIditioal b bblda! in
on tbe Utilization of Life Sci- body eJse wanted to lou!=b;
• MA black~ up m ~ ~At Ulllther, he_noted
tt.owe. wbidl ... .,_,
lilod a choicli,• ~a~ 1.1 that "true clemocncy" 18 not
c h a r 1• d with delenniniDt South
'lh M
'talism,H
whethel- the ra-t orpaiza- aaid. "He cadd Jiallm to hie
The l'er8onDel OftJce indicates that the follOwing faculty
lormL" tlolial llzuctwe CICJDtribateol "in . ~ and atudy lD ...... to . ~.:
"'4f!11 non-telidting profeSSional stair positions are open at
:..:~lflhloa to tbe ...,:
State' UliiV81Bity at Buftalo:
·
• •
illlmalt of our ae.da!Dt.
_..... 111111 ..wee .......... at tbe bottom of the eciiDOIIIy, youth wbo are "oar hOpe for 'I
'! :
•
-,ecultr
.. .
. aocialir.ed, feiiPOI)8ible woi'IIL
The othw II8Dben ill ·tbe doinJ dirty wurk."
SO - . y - "hili pl8Ce," for an end to drudaery and
at!Jdy paup are: Sir .Joha C.
,
F
sooi~AS8oclate
or Assistant Prof"'""!'• Anthroi&gt;oloiY&gt;.
F 3002-Associate Prqfessor (Opera~OII8 a-rch),
Eix:1es, Nobel "l.auretle- 111111 be remembered, t&amp;t Southern pollution in all its lonna.
1-.1 lynchinp to ke!&gt;P
"You can pursue tbe AnleftArchit«ture
.
\
&lt; ••
•
~ pto~_. of ph,y. :&gt; wbites
can mi11dle claal dn!am," , be
F~Asioc;:iats Professo~ (Commuaicati~. GraphioiiJIY; Dr. Peter T. LlmoburY•. bim -in it.
years ago, ~~ , cballenged, or "you can purof chomlatry~ perFive
ics, Media~, Arehikcture.
. _
oelit
of
tbe
cor..,...,.,..
sue
real
.peeoe,
equality
-and
P . BahJ, ...,_, ol
·
F3004--Asllietant Professor (Art Histoiy),.Arf.
Di
paed by justice With a willingness to
isby, aDd Dr. Fnmk A. Loe- m Miaaissippj_ . F 3006--Asaociats or Full Professor (Cbaiiman or machine. ' '·Niaen 10t to be change the~ things happen,
wua, ...,..,.. of blolocr·
rector)
;
Bb:ill.
SIU/Ua.
•
•
ra1
.,.;......)
Kette&lt; in a Jette&lt; to the - expendable" and m o r e than to .Jigbt injustice anyWhere."
. 'F SOOS-Aasistant Professor (Bebavto ~ ,
If you mardt headlong into
Talk p...;;, n 0 ted that halt of the Ull8killed displaCed
Dent#~-Assistan~ Prof.;...,r . (TeBcher Eil.), E_iJucalw,;.
· "the Univenity's orpaizatioael poor came North to the inner the middle class, be said to
cities.
.
black
yOuth
in
particular,
"you
c:bart IIIJQ08t8, at filllt Pance, a
F 300S-Assistant Professor, lAw.
~
.
· ,
"Now there- are oaly b....,. tum your back on a l~~~~g lille
~hi duplicstion or overlap"
. F 3009-Hesd of Reference Department, Lib~.
111111 bette&lt; go...mment welfare of martyrs who bave set meabF
3011~-Head
of
Serials
~-.Librvna.
.
of::::::::::-that there ue eicht J!l011f8J1!8-Whch ,_., ~igger ' ingful examples.
F 3011-Aasistant Professor, LinRuUtJCS.
·
And - welfare. 18 DO
"Will you tum your becks
de..-ta "involveil in the 111111 worae.
F 301Z:C.Assistantl Associate Professor ( Management),
fat 1hoee who have no on Martin Luther King's unstudy of biolOIY ·Or specialized answer
Management'
Sya~mB.
·
.
.
•
in society.
finished wort? At tbe time of
areae of bioJocy. "nlere uell.., role
F 3013-Aasistant Pri&gt;tessc'&gt;r (·Management), Opera· "So, what's· to bea;&gt;me of us?" his death, be called for a march
clepertmenta concerned with · At the top, :O..via c:baraed. of the poor of all races to concbemistry. Phannac:olosY is o_f- the American Establishment front power at its seat in WashtiollBF1':ifC~t Professor (Management), Opm~­
fered in depertmenta located. m b
s - room for token blacks ington. Has this been done? If
the Schools of Medicine 111111 whoa. "sit
tionsF1'Q'f~~tant Professor (Management) , OrfCUlimin the windows" of not, can you join the middle
Pharmacy 111111 at Roswell Park the educational and ~te class and tum your backs?
.
t
. tion &amp; Human Resourt:es.
Memorial Inolitute. . •
F 3016-Visiting Assistant or Assocta te Professor,
slruelwe, making tbe white
"Will you tum your·backs on
Ketter asked tbe Task Force power elite comfortable.
• Malcolm X who was trying to
Mathematici.
M
·
•--'--'
to eumine the P!"ED! orpnF3017~-Assl thru Full Professor,
""""""""
the . _ . to - ·
bring Black America's caae to
izatioaal structure 111111 ,_er 'T..
"But what about the 5!t to 75 the. United Nations?
·
the question, "Aie there; alt;el· per cent W!eDlployed 'lD the
Professor (Nep,..;IPSY), Medit!iM. ·
"Or are you reaiiy concerned
native modes of orpruzation
F 3019-Asaociate Professor (SOcial • Preventive Med. .
~•ft- with education, even if it _should
which milbt Jeed to a bette&lt; gbetto?"
'l'be token black middle........, cam:e you pain?''
·
icine), MedU:iM.
-.:~-.:• 'Theiulllizatioft of . Univem!,IY ze- Davia said,....and .lie .incl~ in
Perhaps, ··said ' the :lffilllab\
F llllln-lnstructbr C2 positions),.
~!'1 k _.,_,, ·
SOIIJ'CI!8
a more elllciimt ac- this the few blaCks who have
b 1 a c k talent ·responsible for
campliabment of our objec. been. picked" to ente&lt; colleges "Purlie
apy-. F 3021-Assistant Professor; Po1ilkal Sc:lence.
Viotorious," perhaps
lives?"
·
F 3022-Visiting Professor, Political ScieTJCe. ·'
uniYeflliti'"' - thiJ; token t1W; F'"'tival of Black Art and
No deedline was set for the and
m i d d I e class is supposed to Culture (for which he and his
F 3023-Visiting Assistant Professor, PolilU;al ScieTJCe.
group; but Ketter said he wish- keep order in the ghetto, to
wife, actress Ruby Dee, were on
F 3024-Associate Professor, Psyclw/Dfy.
·
es- to impress upon ita mem- keep the lid on when the sumcampus) can mean the recfis..
F 3025-Assistant Professor, Social Poljcy &amp; Commun.bers "tho! primary importance mers ."get hot."
covery of that element which
and of the problem"
"You're supposed to go out transforms "pimps thieves and
ity s;v:J:2:L_Assistant or Associate Professor ( #l). Socio"
and that be hopef! the Task in the streets 111111 tell tlie brothDiggers into men.'•
Force will present a report to ers to behave."
ogy. F 3027-Assistant or Associa~ Professor ( #2), Si&gt;cio"
·
Attla!: Symbal of " .
him as soon as poesible.
B:ut. he .,asked the s~ent
Here, Davis invoked the
ogy.
. '"
.
.
~
audienoeJ . Are . you gomg to tragedy of A t t i c a which be
F 3028-Assistant Professor ( #1), {Spamsh, ltDlipn &amp;
~
tum your _becks on your broth- viewed more as a symbol of
uniOn · · ers to P~ the powels who hope, than a lesson in futility
P,rofessor (#2), Spani.h. Italian .l
Portuguese.
·
The UIB AJua'.ni Aasoc:iation
that
At
he said,
Full
Professor,
C/QsaU:o.
will oelebmte the Golden Anni- you owe it · to the Establish- black men, m 80Ciety s deepest
Associate or Full Professor ( #2), Classics.
versary of the Class of 1923 ment. You're, g.o in 1 to bear
dungeon, creale!l for .fi,ve days
with ita First Annual 50 Year about
triolism. And if you a mcel~ anti-establislur'!'Jlt,
lnstriic!or, MedU:al Technolt&gt;gy.
•
A I u.m n i Reunion, Saturday, dcm't ~ with the Establish- d~mocratic 80Ciety-e 80Clety
Visiting Assistant, Associate or Full Professor, ·GeU a u .5 Graduates from earlier
·
the
With a .workable government,
ography.
~·are also being Invited ~\". yo_u'll be Just 800 r with a solidarity, with a respect
Assistant Professor CDivision of Statistiail. Science),
Accordina to John M Carte&lt;
uppity mgger' who g~ booted for human life (the , prisoners
Computer Science.
· __
eucutive ciireclOr of ·the A&amp;. ""!je not goirur to be easy to did not hann thei~ hostages,
Assistant-Associate Professor, Social . FoundatiollB.
sociatioll, appmzimately 150 • be bi.d.: and m1dcue class."·
he contended, even !" the ~ce
Assistant
ProfeSsor,
Hi.tory._
individuals are apected to atTurning to Africa where the of gun fire) -a SOCiety wltich
Assistant Professor, Lir~~~W.tU:o.
tend' the event- 90 of them bJac:k man has supposedly woq
the State~-"~ .
Assistant PrOfessor, Mut~il:.
membem 'a( the Class of '23. his freedom, Davia painted still Jt ~ murder"--e SOCiety ~ch
1'boM ~ ~ 1o another bJeak picture. n.ese -white Sou_lhemer Tom W1cker .
Assistant Professor ( #2), Mut~U:.
date are~ from·Weetem "eDII!liling'' black nations, he of the TJmeB called the filllt
Visiting Professor, Musie.
"had ,ever seen no
New YOrk but at least ..,. is said, liave f 0 u n d that tliey · Pia?&gt;
Assistant . or Associate Professor,
caminJ from A;lbimY and an- · were n o t prepared for· inde- raClllDLif
learn ,,_,_ ·
.
cation.
other m.n Flopda.
pelidenoe, tliat they laated the
men can
....., m p~
Assistant ProfMSOr, Theatre.
The oa~y- ecbeduled Jteunion trained middle Jll!lll8lfliB to nm on bette&lt; _than. they. ~ . m
.1\asistant ·Professor &lt;Art History); Art '
ia • lwldl••: to be held things for themaelvai. no, ~ or ~ the_ IJ!llver&amp;lties;
on ~ear-10, belinninl wilb ' ~.., bad to NCall 1fthe u:-·
s:.':.'k"..tthing u~ clpwn?
. ';r,
. NTP
repqatiall at 11 a.m. Holoeww, - ploilelll" to liea&lt;b them how to
''Isn't :A~the ~
-Aa&amp;Utant to Chair1IIQIJ, Stetistics, PR-1
CUIIP!Ia 1Jua 1ioua1 of ~~a in maJre it woft.&lt;to tUrn .their level t ~..._-~ · the
position~.
'
a-t and lbe ~ youth into "'bbao:k White men."
ye .....,..,., m
~Will be a~ 41f1iu · "So," he' aeld. "the Weatem atruggle-a,le&amp;I!"D. to ua all'!"
Aaai.tont to Chairmtm, GeQIOIY, PR-1 (half;time posi• .
tion). ·
..
·
IDalia foi . _ wilbinc 66 view ~ are bad. in ,urica. perM:en d!m t u:iat .m a. vacuum.
tbe lJ~• elM d llliTWit
- , . than before,' and DaviS said., "We li..,
values
• For additional information ConcerninJ jlae jciba and
~
:·
- .. llill 1101 flee."
111111 tbe values - u... by in
for details of ~ Oll8llcinp thioughout tbe State lJm-.
,l1 lbi ~
erJey
JWJ ......., lD AfriC11 and the United ~tea IJ!8 WIOIJI." . aity BY&amp;tll!m, cxiniult bulletin boarcil at tlae locatiaaa:
• • 1. Bell Faellity between D152 and Dl53; 2. Ridte LM,
~~ Gl. U.e bi -~ Davie aald; Qlll "re~m:=:aA~
Buililing 4236, MZ~ to cafeteria; a. Bidte LM. BuildlnJ
::;.w..~-iwm •- oaJ.y _ , . ~
of aeJf which eraied ~~4230;-in corridor MZ~ to C-r; 4. lfMlth · Scienca Buildlq,
JMIIhlD,
..
tbelr
in-corridor opposite HS 131; 5. ea.- Hall, in tbe corridor
L
"Either we die or - -take
belwe!m Room 141 111111 the t.Jbby; 6. I.ocboocl, P'OUDII
floor in corridor MZt to vending ~ 7. llayea
in main enlnlnce foyer, acna from PubiJc Illfannaliaa Of.
&amp;ce; 8. ~ lfall, in corridor . , . _ ltooml 112 8Dil
Lod.)e, • ..... ...._ ... lniDnlll .....
of wbO
113; 9. Parter ~ in corridor DllZl to Room li;
ol1118~ 08 "'alilbtallww ill Clltf!labal."
• •
10. Good,year Hall, tat lloor, .lloualq Ollloe. ~ n; law
llllyl4,l................
;In Ilia - . 1 half of tbe
School. lint floor Pll8ral information houd helwalltooml
Davis was
108 111111 108; 12. 1807 E!znwood. Pemaane1 ~ 13.
4dal
Jlllllt. or Qd!ut-1 Mella, Ia ill ......,.. 01
from
Dee~;
Nor:ton Union, Dinctots 0111ce, Room 225; 14. nw.idarf
It ... a ..... JIMD IICIII far . . ....,._ ............ ill atm., froiD the JIIM\!D8 ol Bob
.Hall, in .corridor to Boom 106.
Kaur.- (the ... Of a black
1. eoL 4)

Mid, "al8,.-r: ..mt aB

~

claddel p1UD11inf em be~Qas: liiit

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Job Openings

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Port~=-Assistant

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'

.

Threats to the l:Jniversity_ _ __
(Co..n..-4 ,.,. -~ 4, coL 6)

;,.. but each bas an lnalienlib1e
rilbt to detennine what . and
bow he laama. "He who wears
tbe sbo8 lalowa beat where it

.Weekly Communique,_ _ _ __

There are some who belie\le
that the chief aim of education
is &lt; m p e r i - long as tbe
student experiences anythina
be is le&amp;mlll(. But ~

,

=:

(Co~ from 8, coL IS)
Tlv H'"""" Body "' c&gt; a..,._

' ~~~J,~~=
t!~~rc::: \:="!;
Euviroomental M e d i c in e, 104

~::,UU:~!ri~~ ~ ~~!t=:r::.

Parl&lt;or, 1 p.m.
.
&gt;
apPlY, it ill said, to studenla in peri~ is an educative .,.
umvinilie&amp; • · -'1. Faith in I e a r n 1 n r ezperience, un1eoa
ol~
~ 'fp'!u.ct~
.__
the man and 'tbe com- some_ degree of oornition enters;
mon student ls IU'bnomded
nor 18 tlvery kind of leaming
PAntoi.OGYIIMIIIA&amp;.
Now ~here is 110111e truth to rood. 1 . - leem_boot' to play .
the criticiaD of -the prof-.ri- &amp;ridge or grow poppy -a, to
ce~;;;,1;~~n:J:!!.~;
ate - It' Ia. ofUm reoistant to . make love or drink gin--«11 are
· Laboratory ol 8uqicaJ PalbolocY,
chan 1 e. Further, pven the form a of ezperience and no
and prof...,r ol pa~ni·
gr owth af ·tbe multiYI!I'IIity, doubt have a place in the com..
· ~~~. ~~=-3:30
P.-ued by tbe public to ad- plete life. But learninr also
mit larp aiailben of students, should include the development
CHIMICAL ENGiiiiRING IEMJHM • .
Prof. Robert Simha, DepartIIIIIIIY itudenta feel delnunan- and appreciation for the akills
ment ol Polymer Science and Enized and find their courae of of the mtellect. •
&amp;ineerin.r, Cue Weetem Reeerve
study cleadeldnl. .Jobn Dewey
I reject . the n~t.ion that the
Univenity, will apeak on a topic
was ~ correct: We abould student cxiosumer is invariably .
to be 8llDOUDOOd, 104 Parker, · 4
p.m.
not teildi_claad eubject matter the beat judp of what is good
but llvinr human 'balnp.
· for him or what he oulht to
LACIOSH•
But bow
do - 10? &amp;- leem. n... cancer patient knows 1
U/B vs. Rocheoter, Rotary
cause aome atandarda were nJis. be is in pain, but may not know
A U I B profesaor of medicine Field, 4 p .m.
taken IUid othem baaed 011 out- · bow to ,tleat. his cancer. A per· noted for her work on sickle WEDHUDAY NIGHT DOUILE fiA.1'11U•
dated eriteria, does this &gt;mean son. may 811J0Y rood food, but cell anemia is one of 95 AmerMan With the X-Ray Eye•
that tlae are 110 &amp;t8Ddarda of may not know the principles of icon acienti&amp;ta newly elected to (Corman, 1963)' 140 Capen, 7
exoellence or merit and · that rood nutrition or health. TI&gt;ere the National Academy of 'Scifaculties are 110 more oompetent are objective standards and cri- enoes, geilerally regarded as the Ce~.s"fs~&gt;~m!~~~v~M~e':;
to judp than atudenta? Here teria in dill'erent fields that re- nation's I e ad i n g scientific ~,:;.tri!; }:!,,Capen, 9 p.m. Both
an uncritical interpretatiOn of quire disciplined intellectual group.
democracy comes mto oonftict effort.
Honored was Dr. Helen M. ntEATH PIESINTATtoN•
Veruu Olld Ado.U., an adaptawith the . principle of oompeRanney, 11 member of the Unitenoe. We need to reach a belMaking the student king in versity faculty sinoe 1970. Dr. tion of Shakespeare's play directanced view. ·
.
all csaea and catering solely to Ranney, whose researeh in-. ed br Gordon &amp;goff, Harriman
Studio T beat r'e, 8:30 p.m.
Some humani&amp;ta in education his pleasure may lead to the volves biochemical studies of 111
8
3
todav emphasize the need ~or a vulgarization of learning. Many the structure and function of
Tick~ts ~~:S~·v:t.!1f: ~t
,
~culty members k n o w that
ab
curnculum based upon atrectiv- there is a good deal of nonsense
normal hemoglobin, is cur- Norton Hall Ticket Oilice: genity and feeling. TI&gt;ey seem to prated by the new quackadem- rently chief of hematology at eral admission, $1; students, 50
"think that an .disci line rules
E. J . Meyer Memorial Hospi- cents. Presented by the U/B Deand regula~ im~ 'on u..; ics. Yet for some; the way to tal. She will leave Buffalo to partment of Theatre.
studenta.ls foreign to them. n... attract attention is to say some- become chainnan of the DeTHURSDAY-10
student should be enoouraged thing new, to "innovate" and · partment of Medicine at the
to do his own ''-'--. To reqwre
·
demand "change," even if it is University of California, San CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATtoN•
~.......
for the worse, instead of the
Utilization of Auxiliary Perany oourse of study, even the better! The rarest commodities _ Diego, on July 1. .
to lmproU£ Eflic.~ncy and
weakest distribution require- in universities of lste have been
Dr. Ranney rece1ved her un- «Jnnel
Production, Dr. Raymond Gibmeqt, is said to be oppressive. wisdom (there is plenty of in- dergraduate training at B~rnsrd bons, Jr., practicing Buffalo denStullents are held to be _slayes telligenoe) and c 0 u r a g e, the College and her M.D. degree
or serf~ fo~ to do the b1ddmg . a b i 1 i t y to say No But, of from the College of Physicians tis}o;ar.:'.'U!allwonnation, conof !hell' loroo- and masters, the course,. everyone w,.;.la to be and Surgeons, Columbia Uni- tact the U/B School of Dentistry,
831-2837.
.profesaors-they need to be lib- liked. There is no such fool as versity.
.
·
an old fool who curries ~vors
Last year she was presented 5EMINAI: THE MEANING OF FAITH
erated. '

...

p.:

NAB' Elects.

Dr.~ey

w

-

rea·'f

ters awud and a Gugenheim

~1.-!:dtry~~
brary, thro111h May 4.

col!£.
-

Woodburn Fellows Named

=-

oo.t

Rules Drafters

t!'"

·

AUIIOHT-«NOX PIIOTOGaAPIIIC
EXHIIIT•
.

the

am~~e~r-.'tU:."!~~~~Th~; f&lt;9m ll)j; Yl!ung. He has neither. ~~ -~· e ~~~ lp:~!v~~i
tion requirements for gradua- Wisdom nor couray.
Award " for ou tstanding con.... •
tribution in the field of sickle
lion h a v e been eliminated.
There are no English language,
This artie&amp;
xt oell anemia."
scienoe, or literature require- week wilh the d c wn of
Dr. Ranney is president-&lt;Oiect
ments; if students are. not in- student-faculty ro , rekvance of the American Society of Heterested, there often is no ex- ar.d quotas.
·
. •
matology.
posure to history or to the social scienoes. Many experimental colleges now consider grades
to be repressive. and the students grade themselves. We are
told that this stimulates learnThe GradUAte School has are awarded to new student~
ing and motivation. Students
seven three-year grants for three-year terms.
often write their own course awarded
and
15 one-year grants under
The recipients of three-year
projeCts. n... main thing is in- its Henry
M . Woodburn Grad- awards, their hometowns, devolvement and oommitmenl
uate Fellowship Program. Each
major fields of study and
' .. Under this kind of program award carries a stipend of grees,
undergraduate institutions are:
no one flunks. Everyone grad- $4,000 per calenc&amp;r year.
Thomas •J . Colatsky, Passaic,
uates. We are told it is immoJNamed for a former dean of N .J ., B.S., physiology, Georgeal, and makes invidious distinc- the University's G r J1 d u a t e town U n i ve rsi ty( Peter A.
tions, tO reoognize or reward School, the awards were begun Dashner, Schenecta&lt;ty, N .Y.,
"'!'!"' and
others. n... recog- last year. In coming years, the · B.S., engineering scienoe, State
rution of mtellectual , distinc- overall number of grants will University at Buffalo; Laurie
tions and achievements is even be reduced until all of them Y. Feldman, St. Louis, Mo.,
B.A., psychology, Oberlin Col!?Y amne to be "unlege; Charles M . Gravis, Alioe,
Now·surely I do not wiSh to
Texas, B.A. and B.S., biophysdeny the need for innovative f A three-member committee ical sciences, ·Texas A &amp; I Uniand creative methods. We need \pas been appointed by the Uni- versity;
to '&lt;mperiment with curricula. versity's Subcommittee on InJohn M. Krafft, Springfield,
We need to trust atudents as ternal Security on Selective
B.A., · · English, Miami
adults an: d to arouse within Arming to draft proposed cam- Ohio,
University; Manuranjan S.
them an interest in leaming. pus regulations on firearms.
.
Mangst,
London, England, B.S.,
We abouJd not iris is t upon
FTed Casar, a graduate stugrades or 8IWII8 .,. attendanoe dent, Tom DeMartino, under- chemical engineering, Imperial
College;
and Kennelh A. Man·
rules pl!t' .e.
·
graduate student, aiJd Pete Gulning, Bulfalo, B.S., engineering
· JJut noWhere in the literature ley, a stsff member, have been scienoe, Sts,te University at
of 'protest 18 there an emphasis chaiged with compiling regula- Buffalo.
on what I oonaider to be es- tions conoeming:
Recipients of the one-year
1. Who should be armed.
sential to hilher education2. What training should be nwards, all current ~duate
!"" authority or discipline of
students
at the 'Univei'Sity, are:
lilt~~- Dewey, often in- given to armed- personnel.
3. What regulations should Miland B. Ajinkya; Charles
voked lo s u p p o r t creativity
Baxter;
Ray
W. BeJ'IIII)&amp;toCk,
(which is an - t i a l oompon- be implemented for the ll9e of Jr.; Oscar J. Daniels;
&amp;mara
ent of education), also empha- firearms.
J.
Kalbacher·
Kwolt Pun Lee;
4. Arrest power with or withaized tbe need to develop critMichael J .' f..;tz; Bemice K.
ical ilslellillent:e, a . knowledge out anns.
6. Concealed weapons verswi Noble; Michael E. Rei!Piorf;
of and faeility with the stoDdStuart W. Rowland; A}U C.
visible weepons .
ard&amp; of tbe method of ·
·
Aocording to minutes of the Schroeder; Mani SbaiJnml;
. in particuW fields. This~
Tracy"Taft; SbalOn Wllcl;yJI8ki
·April
13
meeting
of
the
Sub!In intellipace ~ exactand Christilpber F. ZuaL
~
Ing wort and dili&amp;ent eftort. oommittee, '"l'be group agreed
All candidates far the PlllMotivation-8Dd e rl or t must that once proposed 1'81ulali0118
come fnJm tbe atudeat, but fao. are drawn up, a ieneral bear- . lowshipe were aec • n•wtee• by
will be held. n... bearing ~~to~wbleb !bey
ultiea surely have a role in .
cri~ IUid ruldinJ·inqulry, ~ be acheduled with due
~ m applying 8valua~ regard for the~~~ study IUid
UnivenitYa Commii*Je 011 l'iJUdfJD8Dta :ci pmomJIIIICe IJDd portunity to study tbe
nancial Ald. ..
achievement,
·
and atlend
hearing." ·

COUICTIOH IXIIIIIT*
The Worl of Iruin6 Feu-,

J&gt;.rofeMOr, U/8 Depa.- ..
En&amp;lilh. and
ioort of a National Institute 0 Arto and IM-

Men Who Make Our World:
Portrai" by Kanh, an ezhibitioll
of over 100 pboto81'8Pba, iDc1udiDc
!'Ortrai,. of Albert Schwe;tur,
Prin.,_ Gra&lt;:e of MonacoR.:.:li
ston Clturcbill, Bertrand

:ndAU,~t~~ .t~a:.n~
1285 Elmwood Ave.

~

MONOI£AU5M EXHIIIT•

a::f.~~~. Y;,rt~~~U:'Wrf:

·

day, May n.
Lliii.UY EXHIIIT"

50th Anniversary of the Publicat.ion of Ulyue~, pa.rt of the permanent James Joyce e :r. hi bit.
People Olld God in Space will Poetry Room (207), Lockwood
be discussed at a semiruw on the Memorial Library.

FOI oua ttME•

theme of .. Are You Living Now

MEMOIJAL EXHJIIT•

and / or Do You Know What
Year of DatrUJ6e-1972, an ex~~~·3: :'.~~.!.For?,"' 234 Nor- hibition in memory of eminent
Resource leaders include the lite~ who died durin&amp;
Rev. David Tulin, Ca.U.ius Col- ~~,! from ~;"""~~
lege, and John Buerk. U/B eli- iDclude: Jolm.Berryman, Kenneth
r:~is f~~~e;;:t,n·~p:~: Patchen. Padmc Colum. Maritant Campus Ministry, the Buf- :"'u:Cr~J:;,~~ f'~·
falo Area Council of Churches Natalie aifl'ord Bamey, Ezra
and the U n i ted Ministries in Pound, A. M. Klein, Mark Van
Hiaher Education.
Doren. and J'amea K. Suter.
Refreshments will be served.
Balcony, oecond floor, Lockwood
CONcur•
Memorial Library. ConliDaiJJc.
Festival E a a t presents The NOTICES
Eagln and Spooky Tooth Klein- ::.~-=-===------hans Music Hall, 7 p.m. •
CAC lOOK IAI.I
Tickets at 16.60, $4.60 and $4 ' · Tbo Comm 'ty Adloa Co ·
ar:e available at the Norton Hall in oooperaw:::" with
u'}ii
Ticket Office.
Alumni A-a.tioD, will
S&lt;MIIIA&amp; IN UICIAINIAH CUUUIIE
a book oale fe&gt;&lt;
AND CIYIUZATION•
venity Day, Sunday. U.,. 8.

"::ri;

a.

Coamumi';.U.:.

lr"'....!it!":a

M~. DM':./ot::b:t ;),.._~l!'Jiniml

'1:..1.fron~of.!f:~
bo bokl in a. lint 11oo&lt; lal&gt;by ol
UkrainiDn Art. Radoolaw N - . .
Zuk. architect, 206 Diefeodorf,- 7
Proceedo r - U. aala will .be
p.m.
' :::'to......,.._ a ._ _to. CAC

ment of Music, McGill U~
and

fAII.--

CAC CINEMk
HUIIIPHBY 100AD W&amp;UND•

Malt... Falcon (Huaton), 140

StudentAward
A sophomore medical 8tu·
dent at U/B is &amp;1110111&amp; bandful of students fnJm around the
nation !o recej_ve a $1,000 l'barmaceulical Manufacturers ABsociation FOUDdalion award for
reeesrch IUid traiDing in clinlc8l
pbannaoolOI)'.
'
He is .Jobn L LoJeocblo
who&amp;e interest in bow lnfaD
reepond to drup led to bill wmninr p10p08111 for a study Oil
bow drup IUid prolieip inlerad.
His ihnie • llllllllb .......
of OHnical ~,
o-w· b.F Dr. Samae.r ~­

Yalle,Jbe~raa..

ita --.... . .

110

bearlnr oa

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

tile

.-a ol

lufo-wiDwtibo~-~......._

-111.......,.
:t!":..::"l:
~ W'~
liaoa Ana. Tbo fa11ooriDr ·.;;;r.

d'Dwn "-'-~ tile ""--'-u,·
~ ;--~~ ~ l8otc....z ____'l1madll;j, May a
. All B.O.P. ~
ol w1a.re 11'!1)' ...
wiD
1lk:k ali ........,
ill
~~ ........tin~
_
to tile
-- WIIIILY

COfMIIGQUI

,
COPr~
,•
For _ , . , . . . -lleace Md

........ - . . to ........... dJ'III ......,_ -1*111
....... _

~-u.":a:-.:~
-~ ........
, _ a d ......
..... Ia 1afalta.

oloidoato lliiDuld

=:a..N.==~~-= .

. hn:o

will be in. the a.allaiPUal ~ ·

traineeabip

d re.n'a

Unde~

OODtiJwe ID update thoir data
. formo ...,.rdilia ID U.. ........,..

.

To -

.............._ contact ·

...... CWIIeNII, . . 2221.

�............
. ........ -..................
............................
...
~

- . .................,._, 111·22211...........
•,
.

muRSDAY-3

'

FRIDAY-t.

IASUALL•

U1B vs. Niapra (double bead·
er), PeeUe ~d. 1 p.m.
MIDICINAL ClliMISTIY SIMIIWI.

Some Abnormal M etGI Hydride
Reactiotu on l41uinazoluwnu,
Dr. S.C. Pakrasbi, head, Division
of Medicinal Chemistry, Indian

=:.~~~;::·~~~~

ceo. 2 p.m.

UNOUIHtCS LECTUIE*

Pe,..Jiectwu

=:
.

in - lnteroctioMl
Saslee. Depart·

Analy.U, HaiYey

~~~~"fl;y~~3~!;:

P.-nled by the U! B Depart..
ment of Linguistics with the Proj.
ect in Ethnography in Education
of tbe U/ B Department of AnthropolOI)'.
PHilOSOPHY LICIVIE#
Pa.ua, Locatwn land th.e Identity
Theory, Prof. ~·ran1c Jacbon, La
Trobe University, 4244 Rcdge Lea,
Hm. 16, 3 :30 p ..m
ENGIN&amp;IING SEMINAR#

LKn*•

PkumtJ TechnckJgy in Switch
Dracula: Patron Saint of the
Seuentiu1, Leonard WoU, authOr Gear Appa.rouu. 1Jr. Gerhard
and - profe.or, San F1'8.Dc:isco }&lt;'rind. General Electric Company
Stale
140 Capen, 4 p.m. . Research and De\lelopment Cen-Pror-.r Wolf is the author ter, 104 P...arker, 4 p.m. Refreshmenta in Rm. 107 4t 3:30 p.m..

Goll-.
· ~-=~~=
A D,....,. of DrwKI!l and Voice•
from lite Lo.., Chn&lt;!ration.
~;!J:!!,the U / B Depart·

liMINAl IN IICIAINlAN CULTURE

·

AJID CIY!UL'TJON•
Modem Ulrrainian Lilerature,

~~vic~!!"".;.JroJ:::U:.

UDivemty -of Toronto, 205 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
'
GSA iucnoNS.

M1D1CA1. POUIY FILM•

OPUA NaFOIMAHCE*

Mozart's Ccni fan Tutte and
other acenes will be presented by
the University Opera Studio and
the University Opera Worbbop,
under the di~n of Muriel He-

:~~'li.u";!l~":fJ"..ii~e~

.p.m.
This evening's K:rfonnance will

~~~~ s~..:::. =~ ,;:dan::~

sociate conductor, Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, will be the
guest artist on Sunday.
The production is under thtl
musical direction of Mr. Strauss.
Robert Winkler of the Metropol-

SATURDAY-S
TIACIC•

U/ B Invitational, Rotary Field
Track, 9 a.m.

~~des~gndi:i~ o:s.:~~

THEATIE PlfSENTATION•

Field Dance• and Outdoor Piec·
es. new works by environmental
choreographers directed by Christyne Lawson, Buffalo State College, 1 p.m. No admiuion charge.

oJ~/BmJ:~e"=',:tt,!'f-

IAU&lt;AN DANCE

neering Science and Electrical
Engineering.

yt'tth guest mstructo r Ronald
WlXJllall, 231 Norton, 2-5 p.m.

~011&lt;51101"

IIOCHEMISTaY SEMINAl#

CONCERT•

'

Manes, pianist, and members of
Teaching U.:&gt;. HLStory Through the· Niagara Chamber Winds.
FoUr Music, Keith and Musty
Co-sponsored by the U/ B DeMcNeil, University of California partment of Music, the Grosvenor
atAr:niec~ D~en=::~~ Society, and the Buffalo and Erie
are designed to introduce teach- County Public Library.
era to tbe UJe of the folk song CAC CINEMA*
aa a teacbinc tool . There is a
They Shoot H or Me 11. Don't

eta at 76 oenta are available at the
Noricm Hall Ticket Ollice.

The further adwnlun of Antoine Douanel, the youthfUl hero
of Truffaufs 400 Blowo. A humor. - . alfectioDate and altopther
c:barmiDIIIIory of the y.....,. mtUl'a

"COIIliDI 0~

-·.

PIIAIMACY SPIINO cUNtc· MY.
C&lt;Jpauk COMIIIe,.,. from Curran'• J:t&gt;rur, Boti Curran. ·Buffalo

~=;;~.Charter

;frof:~ti~:. ~: J:'N~~

in(ormation on all events and ac·
tivities scheduled, see the special
insert in this issue of the Repbrt-

er.

IASEIAU*

U/ B vo. Ithaca (doubleheader),
PeeUe· Field, I p.m.
·
. THEATU PHSENTATION•

~=r

Office.

defeat

~l~.m.""'&amp;'we v..v .,.; ~ o'f

:=.!" ~~

~~==
-a.z.
a-

,_- AdmiaaioD........
a.

_..-liew.n?"m!:. ~-P=•

=

J{~:;i!~Theebi!~ ~.~La';,

oratory, University of Oxford,
England, 362' Acbeoon, 4 p.m.
UCTUif: DUION FOI THE HUMAN
IN A THElMA&amp;. ENVIIONMINT* ,

OSHA StOlldar&lt;h for Heat and
Cold, Dr. Ralph F. Goldman, director, Military Ergonomics Laboratory, U.S. Army Reoeareb Institute of Environmental Medi-

II.OCK ..... ATHLETIC U.HQWJ•

Jim McKay, award-winning
ABCTV sportocaster, will be the
featured sJ&gt;e&amp;l!er at the 64th An-

p.m.
Major awards will be presented
to U/B athletes. Special con·

~e';.~t=d ~~ri~ cl~e:~~ie:J:

en will alao be honored.
Tickets for the banquet are
available at the Clark Hall Ticket Office.
FILMS*

Primaries; A Turning Poilit in
Lunatic €hina; I . 2. 3. FoUT;
Flower; and A MOll is More than

}~e ~..ii d!.:!:.rb"'1:o~

charge.

GIADUATI UCn:AL•

IALKAN DANCE WOIKSHOP•

With guest instructor Ronald
Wi.xman, .231 Norton. 2-5 p.m.

t:::!
! ~~f~~YMMc:;.r"~~:
mann, Beq, Muon and Chopin,

.n:;l'"3::fvai~.!&amp;Uffi: ~~t!J.

filMS•

3:Ue::.w2np.~brw:,t-!J:is.~o~

dent

Office.

Counlleu aocial oul&lt;:as18 of the Htu.B. OPUATION GI&amp;NUGHT#
Great Depression eeekinR: fame
Operation Greenlight . a service
·a nd fortune, flock' to the Pacifiea project sponsored by Hillel, will
bold its final propam of the
semester this evemng in Hillel
ReomiDD BaDquet. The ~~thon dance contesl The House, 40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
~
. p~ww.!!!.: f•tunto. . 1
characte!"', at _fircot sympathetic,
CONCEIT &amp; DANa•
~~
on. PtCI o con- become UlCreaaJ.ngly grotesque as INTEINATIONAl
evening includes dandng
cem to the prof~n, 81 well u .their strength' ebbs. Exceptional to The
the Balkan Serenaders a n d
• ~rt to alumm and -to bY' · performanceo by Jane Fonda and will
aloo feature oeveral performing groups, FiUmore Room. Nor·
GirYC&gt;UDCton. 8 p.m.
...
wiD oalllle me m b e ro of tbe LYUC liND Pll0$A•
Sdooal'a 60-)eu duo and fonaaJ.
·P oema and tranalaliona, featur- ' Aclm.ission: at u den t a, $1.50;
17 iDdaot
of the 1973 ing Max Wickert, U/ B · Depart.. ceneral public, S2.50. Co-apon~
into the rub ment of Enclioh. 244 Crooby, 8 aored ~ the Balkan Folk Dancers
o( tbe UDi....ay'a almlmi.
p.m.
and tbe Council on International
Stuclieo.
POinY IIADIIIO•
HIUB SUIAYH •via•
Foelllrlu MkiiMl AnGrUc. 231 · The Sabbotth oervice will in- UUAI PILM••
Mary Quun of &amp;ou (J8rrott),
NoliDD. 8:110 JI.IIL S _ . ~ dude• a Torah atwly ~ led
tbe U/B Ilepcirfmeat o1 EJIIIiah- by Dr. Joatin .Hofmann, and will O:tnference T b e a t r e, Norton,
c:bec:k abowcue for limes. Admia-1
' - followed ~ an 0... Sbabbat
·
Tile eo.&amp;-.., c-t....C. Hillel 1{.,._ 40 CapoD Bhd., 8 aion cbarp.
Glenda lacbon ia spin Queen
'l'bube, Norbl, c:bec:k """""- JI.IIL
,
Elizabeth. the cold brutal moD•
~
an:b wbo continually crinda -her
boot into the lovely maaochiatic
s.-pay -.,.. 1larolii Pinter;
alarriac AWr lletea .... Julie .......,t ]&gt;101- o1 hlitor-y, Mary, played ~ Vaneua Red·
a.rialie.
U~ty ol :u,...a.- et arave. Soaie -~ttraetive ~~ IDI).

•
.
.
Curra.a aa tbe after--d.i.nner
~~rAlthe l!/~~tion~f

EvolutioMrY Perfection: The
Enir1etics of Tri.o«pho•phote

Field Dances and Outdoor Pieces.
new works by environmental
choreographers directed by Chria-

Council for the Social CH~r~! n::; Highway tEngliah
For further information, con- subtitles), 5 Acheson, 7:30 a nd CONCEn•
t
tat:t the Oftioe for Credit-Free 9:30 p.m. Admission charge .
!Jrograms, 831401.
~ ·~~ .o~:.,n~~~o== Chubby Cheeken, Bill Haley, Bo
CAC CINEMA*
village and his ultimate
Diddley and oiben, Buft'alo MeThey Shooi' H:O r • e 1,~ Don't at the hands of a knight named
They1 , 140 Capen, 7 and 9 :20 Ho Vi-lang.
m¥1~e~u~to~~ ~~.50 are
p.m. Tickets at 75 cents are availSponsored by the Chinese Stu- . available at the NortOn Hall Tickable at the Norton Hall Ticket
Aa&amp;ociation.
et Office.

a

IKTUll#

~q!traiJ?'~~~~B'~~O:~ti7

?o:=U:~ty~~:~i:~s ~~. o~~

:grclra!!o~-~~~~ 't; !.~Y~J!~ ~f:~n~ ~'::a~~
Ca~7:~~ ~~~)~ ~=4
the U/B Office for Credit-Free able at the Norton Hall Ticket

CHEMimY Of IIOLOGtcAL SYSTEMS

SUNDAY-6
U/ B .will hold its third annual

~~a!t~:~pi~~~~S~e~h:~

4 p.m.

SCHOLAR, A Corweroational

Computer T u tor. El8anor H.
Warnock, Bolt Beranek &amp;. Newman, Inc., 4226 Ridge Lea. Rm.
41, 3: SO p.m.

ci~;.,!.~~at;rih! ' ~tK~culty
~~!:gineerine and Appli~ 89.c

COMMUNITY..UNIVHSITY DAY•

partment of lliocb~mistry, En- a dmission charge.
zyme Institute, University of WiaParticipating in the L'On cert
conain at Madison, G-22 Capen, are: The Cleveland Quartet;

COMPUTING CINlll LKn*.

ara
and technical direction and
lighting is by John Carey.
aJi::~b~:r a:mtl! ~o1:,-::Ji.ill
Ticket Office: general ad.m.isaion,
$1.50: fa cuI t y, stall' and U/ B
alumni, $1 ; s tudents, . 50 centa.

]ron-Sulfur Proteuas of NitroA Mozart Festival-Concert V,
gen Fixation. Dr. William Orme- Buffalo a nd Erie County Public
Johnson, associate prOfessor, De- Library Auditorium, 3 p.m. No

LICTUU/PUfOIMAHCE•

'The Graduate Student Associ·
ation will hold iat election of
officers thia evening in '240 Norton, 7 p.m.
All Senators and Alternates are
urged to atlend.

menta and a co•nfoortable
setting.

Boston, 147 Diefendo.rf, 8 p.m.
Dr. Gordon recenUy returned
for a aix~week trip to mainland
China, where she paid pnrticular
attention to the lives ~f Chinese
women.
The lecture is co-sponsored by
the U/B Program in American
Studies and the Women'" Studies
College.
UUAI FILM••
• The Go-Between. Conference
Thea_tre, Norto':l, ~k showcase
for times. Admiss1on cha rge.

UUAI FILM••

Mary Queen of &amp;oto (Jarrotl),
Conferem.-e The at r e, Norton,
check showcaae for limes. Admission charge.
OPERA PHFOIMANCE•

Mozart's Co.i fan · Tutte and

8\~:~S:n~'es{e::tist-fw~ew:.

cital Hall, 8:30 p.m. See Satur·
day listing for de_tails.
U/1 AITS fOIUM

Dr. Peter Boyd-Bowman, U/ B

lh':'~!.c;!;~ll!'n~ie7'}o~

ical Lancua.... with booteu Bather Swartz, .WADV-FM, . 10: 05
p.m.

'· MONDAY-7
ILOCk PADY•

The Allenhurst Houae Council

~:h':t~Bithf: ~

1970). 147 Diefen:lorf, 7 p.m.
Free.

Geoqe Swiellicki, piano stu0

Baird Recital Hall, 8: so p.m.

Man · Wit!l o MovU Camera

=· . }ml:~~t~.

9:30p.m. .Free.

TUESDAY---8
l.IC1'Uft: OISIGN fOI THI HUMAN IN A THElMA&amp;. INVIIONIIINI'*

Physical Fitn..-lo It Worth

It? . Dr. Ralph F. Goldman, director, Military Eqonomico Laboratory, U.S. Anny -rob ln·

·citin~~.a6fP~~r:o2!.tal M~-

. Preaenled by ,the 'Ut a Faculty
of Engineering and Applied Sci·
enoes.
FilM•

Breathlea (Godard, 1959), 140
Capen, 8 p.m. Free.
THIAntl PIIVIIW•

Venuo and .\doloio. an adapla·
tioh of Sbakeopea"'o play directed br Gordon Roci&gt;ft', Harriman

S~ckeU
~::. .~~a£..m.at the
Norton Hall Ticket Olllce: ...,.
era! edmiaion, •1; otadento, 50 ·
oeniL Pzwenled ~ -the U/B Department ol n-~~e.

uen..---"-

. WEDNESDAY~
There will be live muaic and ..,.
f~IL.Free· anid open to the
publjc. (Rain dale: Sunday after. • IN A 'J't8MAL 8IYIIONMINT•
1
,
noon.)
(ContitwM on pqe 7, col. 4)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>SouthCanipusPlari
Now in Data Stag~c
"Are they mvering some-

thing up?,'' said Jobp D . Telfer,

vice p"!'Sident .for facilities
planning, reading the minds of
some medical faculty wbo are
mncemed that faculty have
bad too little to say and the
-P lanning Office has said too
little about plans for the South

Campus.

No one is mvering up, Telfer

~!~a~~tl i:.

Clovemora" "-i-.w:.

complu: aw~tts

t•ll

tenants.

monthly meeting _T uesday. The
Council, which h.ild previously
expressed quslms about the way
planning is proceeding for the
renovation of the South Cama health sciences facilP.us as
tty, 1esm ed that SCUMP, or
.the South Campus University
Master Plan as it is properly
and rarely called, is still in the
data-gathering stages. Faculty
input has not been more vigorously sought to date becsuse,
so far, the plarming opera-tion
has been largely concerned with
an inventory of the South Campus as it now exists, assessing
the mndition of various puildings, the kinds of apace available in them snd the like. This
effort has been "pretty much
non-proJtram-related to thi s
point," Telfer said.

.T he pl'&lt;lblem before the campus planners is the grsdual
renovation of a multi-use cam• pus to a health sciences one as
North Campus space "comes on
The Governors' complex was only, four stoves will be avail- line" over .t he nert seven yeatll
"introduced" to prospective .able for students who elect not (llld units now on the Main
tenants this past weekend when to take board contracts.
Street site move out to Amabout 200 students were taken herst. The project is a unique
on tours sponsored by the
How msny students will ac- one, which mesns tba~ tl)ere
Housing Office snd the Inter- tually apply for Amherst-in are few. (or no ) gmdehnes
Residence Council. According lig~ of these snd other consid- fo_rthcommg ·from other camto Wilson, _reaction ·n&gt;ported to erations-ls anybody s guess puses who have undergone a
him was iood. StUdents seemed until after todJ?.y, Wilson says. similar transformation, Thlfer
impniised with the building, he Alao unknown. IS whether or D?t noted. Other campuses have
. oald.--m..r """-"; -lbal eev· the.. decrease m. .totaLbeds will . .been...mvamped .but..lhey..lwte..
era1 remarked about the dis- _result in an excess of demand not . ~n modified for ~imilar
lance to the dorms froin preeent over supply.
purposes.
University facilities.
The lottery aspect of dorm
Information gathering must
This will be made less of a applications, Wilson says, is be completed . before ''we csn
problem, Wiloon said, through used to make decisions when- get this on the train with the
arrangements for full bus ser- ever there are conflicting re- {'mancing process at the State
vice to Amberst in the fall- quests-:-for either ball or loca- level,'' Telfer said.
all day and up 1mtil midnight. tion assignments. Each pair of
That service will alSo be used roommates is -given a number.
by claas mmmuters
Law In .the past, the lottery has
. and some other departments been used only to resolve locaare expected to be in full op- tion problems within a · given
eration in the J o h n Lord dorm. But this year, Wilson
O'Brian building.
says. if everybody asks for
Other mmplaints about jhe Main Street dorm placements,
Governors' Res idence Halls some may imd up assigned to
'were reported · in Monday's Amherst through drawing nomSpectrum which noted that ber:s out of the bat.

Dorm··Space Lottery Is in Progress
Todq is the last day for ietumiiic ...,, aa-.nea to make
applicatioai'!Qid rece_ive lottery
numbera for University housing
accommodatiorul next fall, &lt;;lifford B. Wilson, reaideDOe ball
director, oayB_
SejJtember, Wilson mdicates,
will see 8 net deer-. Of abOut
260-badil In ·Univera!tY'!ll@f:'
._jwjt:ibaat 1M vhm ol
vacancies which. occurred th!syear. Altbouih -the 825-qpecity Governora' Residence Hall
complex on the Amberat campus will be available for the
flnlt time, two other residence
units are being phased out. 'Ibe
Univemity is rel.inquishing its
lease on the AlleDhurat Apart..
menta which . . - provide 660
beds and Tower. Residence
Hall's 426 spaces will be converted to library and office uoe.
Allenhurat is now being offered
for private rentals" by its owners and the University is hopeful that the Tower conver&amp;lon
project will begin this summer.

since

SUNY/United Ele~tions Begin;
Yeracaris Voic~s. 'Apprehensions'
''With apprehension," qualifying ·him to continue to
Dr. Constantine. Y e r a ~ a ~ i s, bold State office in the merged
president of. llie former Uni- organization.
versity Center ~r of SPA, a.tlots Due .._, 3
has lll1llOIIIIald his--candidacy
At Re~r desdline, refor election_io·tbo\ post of pre81· · quests for nominations for all
dentbetnewof ~llecti~terve ~.of available offices in SUNY/
, ~..,._......,./~United
. . United were still in -the -bands
orpruza-.., ov•~
of dues-paying $FA imd SUFT
SUNY/United was formed membera, to be returned by
by the recent merger of SPA Wednesday afternoon. The full
and the State University Fed· alate of nominees was riot avail·
able,
1!nltion of&lt; Teachers.
,
Dr. Robert S. Flak, another
Following receipt of nominaveteran ol SPl\ activities both tions, a three-member commitlocally and State-wide, has said ' tee is ,scbeiluled to .issue a fort h. t he ...~ 11Upp011j1" mal hellot by F.riday of this
Yeiai:arls. Fisk said he Would week. Ballota-' will be due by

- ~!liM~ ail~ Th~u!.;. and eli!ctbe ne.v StmYtu!'i:rDeJe- lions committee is cbmpo9lid of
pte Aasembly, successOr to the
SPA Repriie!intaave Council of
Which be is currently a memher. HOW!M!r, Pis!&lt;' said, be
contUnM. to liold the caocems
about coUectlve baftraininJ that
be ·has bad frGm tlie outset.
.Jo.pb. Drew, U/B Data 1'10COMina Center, State SPA

Elizabeth Harve'y, associate
plofi!IIIIOI', Social Policy. and
Community Services "(fOrmerly
ol SPA), Marvin Blcxm, 118aociata ~ Social Policy
and "Community ServiceB (far,
St1l"''), 4nd . , _
dlreclor of Summer
s-iono (
ly of .SPA)'.

=.E"'
=--~':"a a=..;:: := vv=:...-:=
the Dalepte

~.

tiiloi - , :

':tbas . ment CDDCimlng bisoamdidacy:

''I had long decided that for
the heslth of our organization
snd," in fact,' for SUNY and our .
own campus, it is imperative
that new colleagues emerge to
assume the leadership of our
chapter. In addition, my p!Ofessional activities which. hive
been sacrifioed up to now as I
·:was doing my best to promote
academic excellence in · SPA
.activities can no longer be sacrificed. My decision to become
available once again for this of.
lice is due to a major concern
about tJ1e future of collective
- barKainina in our University.
. . "From the inception of SPA, _
my !'l!'lY involvement was die. tated &gt;bY ID,Y conviction ' that
(a) collective herpining wu
inevitahle in our University due
to both social ila well .. ielislative currents and (b) that the
lnlditiclnal inibWrilol Jlllldele of
Cllllletive ~ ·bacJ_to be .
~- mildUiecf- to - - .

~

.........~- ­

in....-ltbe~ . - .
ol.- ~. l ,a8enld my
~...- .a cll'dlr to be

able ... oaeft ·.tbe

•e:rlllla

(~--_s• .

1)

-Is

'"'Planned
Three documents will ewintually emerge in the curftllt
planning · effort; be aaid. The
first is a mmprebenai.. _..
pus plan document for tile
health sci-. 'The fint major
phase of this is virtually completed. A second cloCuBalt,
dealing with "mmprebenai..

H:fth"~=~ ~

"very much involved'l in llbe
preparation of this documeDt,
which will reQllire speciftc: data
on programs . and the ~
ships among various beilth'
sciences"'\mits, Telfer aaid. Pi- ·
nally, a "master action p!0gram"
be prepared.
.The will
campus
p'·--- . ~•.
,......_, w"'
consider """' canstructialr·
where upgrsding of p r - t fa.
cilities appeB.rs too coatly, 'I'elfer said. It is expenoi.. to
cbsnge such basic. camponenla
of a building as size and char--'
acter, he noted, indicatinJ that
if the projected cost of renovating a building exceeded aome
standard, the sum allocated _for
nremelledodem
.llintoga funooulddforben:_,~
~- ~

struction.
•
In developing SCUMP, the
University is taking into &amp;ew
count the expanded leasing of
U!B-=ntrolled space in af.
filiated hospitals for clinical
pUr-poses, Telfer said .
As a way to eliminate most
bias and favoritism in tbe a.s-signing of space, the .plannera
have developed a computer
model against which P.ropooed
space assignments will eventually be checked for efficiency.
The computer program devised
csn take into account 8 wide
array of vari&amp;bles, includins lhe
condition of buildings, facility
needs, and cost factora. If"a unit
- ehonld-be-diopl'""""''lb "itsspace &amp;SIIiiJUD"l!l, the ~ter
will be able to evalua.te any 81temati've propoeals. According
to Telfer, this computer verification system is alresdy workable.
(Continued on fKll• 2, coL 4)

�t

·~~~

;·~ .

,

... .. (J
Aid X, 1913

,

:.SPA&amp; sui~ ·sUNYP!itns 'F!iJating'
the-Arts'
~:.~-~~~E;:'-'1: · Goin~ . - ·conferenceon .

SUNY/United Elections·
(~ -v-- 1 , - 3)

riety ol

' . ; .

~~

edu- ·

~~
.:t~ pera~fors~Ambe•~all
for--=..,~'ji';j or 100&lt;kin1 orpmza~ ~til!&amp;.,...th
Clllldi~'lbe ~

u- ~~ -m,.., . .

bas
' - ' ..__ and with miDd n&gt;-

~~~ BDd, ~
.,..__.... ...... obanid deciaicm~

"""'-"'1. Locol SPA Ieeder. ship ._ ' - ' able to J.&gt;IUDO!e
.....,.._by IIDCIIUJ1IIIIII J&gt;!U·

come'_a jJolitical . . _ ol ita
own ind to try tD manipulate
the c1i11eran&lt;es in order •to pro-

.

.

Fact-Fmding

ticipatiou in ~ ··IIIAI&lt;inl
by the two bodiea (Facul~ and
~Sialflleaates. We
have e&amp;IBbliobed elfeclive and
-mctulnolaliona,
with. equal IIIJill.-, ~th
President and bia cabiueL We_
have reaol~ locally . m a !'.Y
PYIIDCI!8WlthtbeasJ.::':""·
or the grievants and o
. ve
' - ' punued
adlvedruaeatly
with sllolli
2
the .local chapter to
be"!"' .ebave.
very bas
C1,.o
the

DOtal~

1.::.:!

~tepa
~·the

...._

1

t

SPA~'t,
by which aca&lt;l

h:=

~~ ~•mak·
academi

:",... "''''DCY

Ide

. om, """ """""'

IDJ should be

~romoted.

and

this we have achieved lociilly.

Not True of -

1-.hip

mote its """ political aoala. It
has reooried to out-0£-&lt;lOil~

RPPMIB 4o parity within the

SUNY system while sacrillcini
autonomy of-chapters and seri·
ously endanierilir the accomplisbments oliiOIDI! or the Univarsity Centers and many otber
mllegeswithinthesystem.'lbe
reault haS been a growinJ disenchantment of SPA's mnstitueat members as attested to by
the mntinuing, pitifully small
membership.
"The merger ol SPA-SUFI'
forming the SUNY/United
bopefu1ly presents the best opportunity for us to. accomplish
what we were ~le to ·accomplish in SPA. If re-elected
as· president and according to
the new constitution of SUNY1
United, I will be a member of
the
hi~t decislon-making _b o.dy
within the new orgaruzation.
Both as Chapter President of
the merged chapter of SUNY/
United and as a d~legate to the
new assembly, I will try to fig~t
a hatUe for a new leade~p
i!' the !&gt;oPe ~t a reorgaruzation will prov1de the needed
oppor~ty to help_ create a
d~tic or_g'!"'zation of mllective bari{"!"IDg for !?UNY
Wl!X'mpromu•~COilUD.I~ t. e d
to p~te
· decunonmakIng,
and excellent working mndltions for ~ professional "Staff
of SUNY.

ol U':;
!::· tsasbasfwellbeen~
as the accomp/I:: ·~ Delega_~ ~ly,
the State SPA leader-

''1 canoot

howe

thai

mshi'=" Jnasmouch
the SUNY
p. .
as.
·
sys!-eDJ 18 a mmpoeJie '?fa wide
var1ety of campuses With a va·

phOto Contest
. FOf U
. ,.. - C
'. D ay.
'The Uni1(ersity is sponsoring

bo
test -"' r Co
~::.Ui;'.~versi~
.-~.. s.::::
da l4a 6 All lbose Uend
in:·the lay;.- aCtivities :n....u: .

• gib)e, to submit PI:!&lt;&gt;'" •entrieli.

Fffilt'~prize is~ $25.00,1.econiFis

academoc;excellen~

'Fisk statement

$15.001 and third is $10.00.
Fisk said that one reason he
nw; rules are:
,.
.
S!Jpports YeracariS election is
, } . .Photos m,ust be. taken 'May that Yeracaris ''would be a good
6, 1973, Community-University representative of the views of
Day.
,
the University centers."
For hjmself, .Fisk noted .that,
2. Contents ol photo must be
ol activities related to C!&gt;m- while be would be- happy to
munity,Univeisity Day.
'
serve, he does not intend to
3. AU entries must be 8 x 10 campaign because he thinks his
or ·larger, black and white. (No Position on collective bargainlimit to number of entries per ing is "clearly known. I have
person.)
been very critical of. the pres4. AU residents ·ol. · Western ent State leadership of SPA as
. New York and the University being much too unilateral and
community are eligible.
Critical, too, about w~J!otl view
6. Plaoe your name, address- .this leadership'~ pos~ to be
and telepbone nidbber, on the on """! evaluation, ment. m.mback of each photo submitted. . pensstion, the role of mllective
Also include details on &lt;:amera bargainin~ in tenure · matters,
and film used, ezposolie, .etc. : and the mevitabl~&gt; oonllict o(
6. If there are insufficient en- their point of view With local
tries or if pbolop'apbs 'do not · campus governance procedures.
''If re-elected, it would be to
meet the iudalll' atand8rds,_ no
prizes Will be awarded.
·.
battle the 'organization' on
7. Maill!lltrUio to Commun- tt-matters.Peoplemustrecity-Uniftlllity Day, SIBle Uni- ognize that this was a minority
. varsity at Butralo, 186 Hayas position in SPA and will probHall, BWralo, New York ·1.n4. · ably be tbe same in SUNY/
8 Deadline for entries is · United. 'l:he campus rosy want
.Friday, May 18, 1978. •
to be ·'repNSellted by a person
9. Award ~ wDl be . :CDqiiDitted -to a dilf~t thrust
DOti(ied by mail by Frld.y, for mllective barpiniilg than I
May 26, 1973.
• ·- L "

t:~Z~~beoame~~
_ :::L....._ . -.. __
"" ~u .............._
&amp;DB
oiou o1 the judaM will·be filial

-

'-

'Western lllew Yor,. liish
acbOol students will8CNI!II their
-'moria&amp; and media ...-lations
a't the fourth UJiwa1 Sbooo
New Yod&lt;
and.
~- .,.....,_

Umvers1
'ty
··
........... ...._ ..........
$10,()(X) fi'Qm GE • :.,en:..:-~.in~-

:_

IIUi to SUNY at . The~ will nih fnllli 9:30
.

•

.

..:......::.;.,
..-:--..
.....-;;...criteria,and
;;u;;;-,;;_u.;..,

State
~The Beoate Pzofaoual¥- YolkisepoQIIOrillcA ·~
AcooaliJia.toSUNY.8CJWCes,
oociatiou- State aaJuy ooaOiiato- ~Commereuce=~"theandUthem~.: . &gt;the cxmf~ ia: designed to
tioua fO&lt; 1973-7, will ... in
....,
~~"""model
Western
will . allow
since P&amp;aaase of the TayiO&lt; cations 1'IUlJiDJ from the Kenan for careful ez8millati0n ol the
Law that a State-wide bargain- Center in Lockport to the Stat- ....,._ and problema oominl unit bas requeeted this step ler Hotel downtown., . ·
moD to all COIIIJ!IIDil!fee.
• the p.-:ribed JleiOtiations
'"lbe conference 18 dillerent
All'BIBIB Um.._ty ol New
mrooea
because ·you're aoinl to _, York faculty, 8ta!f and ""'!·
P ~ to SPA, the ,... what you're talking about," dents, repreaiil)tatiwe ol pnquest ' for fact.~ came at Ianners say
vale coUeps, CXIIDIIIUllity )..,d.
. last Tburaday's mediatiDn sea- P Its theme iS an exp!oratiDn of era, -tativee ol aria oraion wben tbe State made what tbe relationship he tw ee!' pnizatio111 and others interSPA in...-reted as a final of- SUNY campuses a n d their ested in tbe aria are eU,ible to
..,,.
•"-·""' the aria
attend. A ~tlon fee · ol
·~~
: : t , . : u : '"'B..=":..~~ as the $10 will be requiled ol. all parone and one-ball per """t fO&lt; site, the SUNYOifioeof Aca· tieipanta. Tbefeeinclu&lt;hs
diacretiorwy increases to lle demic Programs ~tea, beca!"'f' meals ancl "'-. Anyone wishbanded out by State Univer- it is ''A city emergulla&amp; an an- inl to attend may make araity administration.
portant cultural center
ransemenlli at the Statler prior
This, SPA indicated was of its pluralistic nature. ~ to the OJ&gt;Oilinl.-ion.
"troublesome"-' because the ol- mnferenoe is a step toward mThe ecbedule:
fer was.little more than ball ol cre&lt;jlling the mutuality of n&gt;- . Friday, May 4: Convocation,
'what other barKaininlr units spect and support· of inde- Opening Remarks, Vmette CarhAve'~ panted by tiie State pendent mmmunities of people ro11, artistic director, Ulban
for JHlXt year.
·
who share a mmmitment tD the Aria Cozpa,_'keynoter, Statler,
U
ibed roced
·
1 p.m.; ·Kenan Center T&lt;&gt;ur,
nCier prescr
P
ures,la aria."
·
ol the Lockport, 3 p .m.; Dinner, Facthe Public Employment Re • •. The general sessions
.
ulty Club, UIB, , p.m.·, Altiona Boani (PERB) will now mol.erence ..will include presen6 30
assign a person or panel to tations from the KeR811 Center, rican · Cultural Center: dranl8
hear the facts in the case and the Langston Hugbes Center, presentation, 8:30 p.m.
'make judgment on the rela- the African-American Center,
Saturl/Qy, May 5: Bu ses
tive merits of the positions of and a Niagra .County- Com· leave Statler, 9 a.m.; Langston
SPA and tbe State negotiston;. m.. - :....
Center Tour, 9 :30a.m.;
~.,
~ student theatre Hughes
N'
County CC student
The fact-finders will then is- production. There will also be th::::l:" production, Stud i
!"fa~ :::.f~::fta'bJ:."~ttr~f,:{ l:_~~"::.n~f ~~~ Arena, 11:30 a.m.; Lunch and0
should be. That report is not Buffalo ·state Gospel Singers, dialogue, 12:30- 2 p.m.; Chobinding, &lt;llthougb SPA feels it U/ B's Creative Associates, and pin Cboral Society, Erie Comwill carry "moral persuasion."
the Chopin Choral Society munity c 0 II e g e, 2:30 p.m.;
If either paJty rejects the from the Polish cmmnunity. Cocktails and performance by
(act-finding report,. " Legislative Participanta will move around Creative Associates, Albrightheilring'' is the final step pn&gt;- Buffalo in buses to these cen- Knoi, 6.p.m.; Dinner, Buffalo
scribed by law.
ten; as well as to Erie Com- State, 7 p.m.~ Buffalo Inner
SPA said it bas urged PE~B mnnity College and the AI- City Ballet, Buffalo State Gostoi'nove rapidly in naming the bl-ight-Knox Galle'ry. •
pel· Bingen;, · Campus School
fact-finding individual or panel
Sbort workshop sessions are Allditorium, Buffalo State, 8: 30
in hopes ihat a report can be planned for . Suriday' momlng p m/ •
. •... ' .
made pHor ·to the closinl ol where participants will · work · . Sunday; May -6: Workshopthe current Legislative session. toward understanding the na- discussion, Statler, 9:30-11 :30
Otherwise, SUNY professional ture of mmmuruty 'arts organ- a.m.; Summation, Allen Sapp,
staff will have to wait for the izations as they. · relate to· the director, Arla/ Woith, Statler,
deficlericy · budget in the i 974 . campus, to oommunity devel- 12-1 p.m.
session to have funds appropriated for whatever settlement is
eventually reached.
_
. PERB will select the tndi- (Cont(nued from _ . 1, coL 6)
Paganelli _pointed. '!ut ~t
vidual or panel from a standtbe Unive1'8lty administration
ing group of ~rts in eco- Ubnuy Situation
had done little about the severe
nomics, law, higher education,
From SCUMP, the Council problems of tbe .Health Scietc., who are ~ri&lt;inoed in turned to one ol the most per- ences Library until the Medifact-finding procedures.
·
sistent problems facing l;he cal School'~ accreditation was
Tbe "Legislative hearing'' health sciences -.the inade- threatened.
which tbe law calla for if fact- quacy ot existing library lacilMr. Huanr, .who was appearfinding fails would pose unique ities. Citing ·a 'taft 'of statistics inl before the Council for the
problems, SPA said, sinoe the mllected by Health Scienoes first ·tinie ' llilked the medical
TayiO&lt; Law does ~t ~-the Librarian C ..· K. Huanr, Pr. faculty-to i-r in JDind that the
term. Because this step m the Charles· Paganelli, ·chairman of mnverSion .of three · fioon; of
• process bas also never beEon the · Health ·Sciences Library Tower iloini for tbe Health Scitaken on"' a State-wide basis, a ·(HSL) Advisory Committee, enoes: Library is · only ·a stop
SPA · Albany spokesman said, described a-facility that is O\II!J'o pp measure. Library _usage
it is- not clear whether the en- crowded, understaffed' and un- oontinues ·to riae &lt;IJamatically.
.tire l:.egislature would bear the -derfinanced: ·As Dr. Paganelli Last year atteudaDce was up
case, whether a mmmittee pointed out, tbe library mn- 43 per cent, with an attendant
would be appointed, or just tainssome 127,000volumea (in mc-intbeworkloadofthe
what the procedures would be. 1971-72) , only a quarter ol library staff;' Hopefully,
· SPA asid .it remains optim- the volumes that SUNY re- SOUMP Will iDciude the allotistic on fact-finding and bas garda as d,..irable. It bas liD ·meat o1 60,000 tD 100,000
already prepared the materials operating budget .(foi the same square f&amp;\'t of space m meet
·t he panel will need.
period) of $421,800. 'Ibis rep- immediate future ~ of tbe
"We are more interested,
ts oni 12 per cent ol the lib
H
aeid.
however, in a good settlement, u:i"versity ifuraries' budcet, in
~·
'1111118; • HSL is
than in settlement f'!T te," the spite ol the faot that the fad!- feelinr the finaDcial squeeze.
&amp;PA spokaman aaid.
ity serves liome 3,200 FI'E .Joumal pricoa lib meat prices

.

~;,rk~~ ;:.""~~tat&amp;,and

l::.e!':

aw~

a

Colle~~e

Med Faculty.·-----:----:c:------ -

o::;'

fngh
Schoolers
to Screen Their Movie~
•
.
.

•~

£

.
UniYel'Sity · ol

au!~ our ampua, I think I :•!:.=~d?'J!! ~:"'~~:~· ri_da~
can 1111118 that ..., have been SIBle leaderabip cbooe to be-

•

~-~ ~u~lit:'lt/~~~ ~~~5·bel!ll
:.;:.: ~

per cent ol · tbe gradUate students) . .
O'Grildy, director ol the Center
The library bas suffered, Dr.
for Media Study, and Tbomas p~ •• :.o .__
.Janibro 8UperYI80r ol art edu"""'
cat¥m
.,......__,_for the Bu1falo· -Public ~"' •...,...._
-~
.,........
ly to. the Uni-.il¥ librarian
mther than to 11DIDe '-lib c-.
CAC 11001( ~
enoeo adminiatrativil ........ Tbe
Ubnry Cooilmitiee .~

':!:4C

viaion bas
made for the
&lt;increased OOBt of aiau&gt;Jy main·

tai1\ini

the J&gt;i-t oiilfeotion.

u.,. __ also _.......... out that
··-........

---=:......
•--~:..... ~
. ad=:::ti~ ::.W~~
· !&gt;X'
...~-; ia --~"
in apita of · -~ 8 ·tl!"'!"'·
tia1 inYOI-t m ~

~--==•~ ::'"tt!'U/B
~~: and.~ ~ ~up"~~&gt; Commun"--llnl·
c;::·~ .~j
-latiaM, .O'?.:'Z----=:....._~
"'-~ .._ M-~•-

iDeqded the eevenn,oeth&amp;t.-ainlnlatrative tie, l&gt;ut Dr. P ...~
w111 e11i told the Coundl thatzibo

11nry ~ lor new eurflcql8 ~lllld ~ ~ U-

~t::~:"~ ~::

booked
for
a p • · . · litql
. .
~
.... n... u- ~ :~
lor a DeW pzopam· or a 1!'8J'!~
Che OtiaetW..,.. ~- ·- Study Ia hOlt Jar the . , . , ;;;;;.... ';boo.,-:......... ·~ de;, ~tioq.~
~c!Wnillp,-~tthel&gt;
· ,..,...tl.-tfllaa7 wblehotia·!'~~~ · ~nc:oopem~on-.~~~eutBAiull!· ~~ ~
.......... ~ __ ,_..
lllilllali:
'hid'I•J!:l~.OI't ....
.... ..... nl Aleaclltipn,"'- funds for tiou. . • _............ ~ ....
-~- · --the­
. . . . _4 1 1 1 1 ' b . r ...W.fll the Ne7r Yod&lt;&amp;ate 111e pu~ol a van: Tho - • ~ far h clinlctor ol
asld. ·He~ tbe~,.._
,_

..,.._

.:;·;._--

.........
=I

..e.llfll:
....

.• . . . .

...

.

• .. .

.__,..,. ,.,..

....,.

t-::

u:.::,ial

~:::~me..::
-:'==1~:= ~~...IBdit~ ~,_~~;
· lllld_ the . 8l:at! , tile - M lie....,. llle liSt be delinlble far tbe lal!J1 ..;1- a nu'• DOCb J- ~~~-the Uthe AiiLDr.~
...
Oa. . B~
•' 1 -

Ia

-

.~ of ....... Union. - . '

lllilarlu "" l!flliCIIt Iii tbe
Ubnry ~ Ciluunitllla.

bllH;v
{ll'lllell ~ to
IIDd
ailrrlali1L -

pro-

�_Apdl 26, 1973

)

~~

Sane. &amp; Insane NQt Readily,Distinguishable,
Rosenhan Says ~r Stay in 'Insane :Place'
By

=~ARD

-Tbe hero: of Ken- K e s e y's
0111! FlaD Over the · Cuckoo'•
Nm Ia a hYPer -'individualist
named McMUrphy who f.;n.
mental ru- as a way \o escape a prison work farm. MeMun&gt;hY eDda .up lobotom!zed
far hiS pains but only after
triumphanUT 8111aultinl the Big
Nune, tumillg the hospital upside down and lneaking ita fearfuJ hold em the aoulB of the
other inmates:"
In an instance of acience imitatinl art, David L Roaenhan
a Stanford paycboJOiist and1
law prof81111Dr, - t l y ~
as a psychiatric patiimt in order
to study certain aapecta of the
~L~gnt!f.!.d ~-~.,~_
...,._,
~ ..._..
hart's "On Being Sane in Insane
Places" appeared in Scietu:e
January 19,- and last Friday be
~ his experienc:eo, more·
CatcA-22 thajl Clll!koo'• Ne•t,
as a gueSt-of the U/B Department of Paychiatey·and Btdfalo

.

S~-H~~.:._, ba .

•"" .._,.....,_.

ckDound

of Rosenhan's 8 t u d y derives
largely from work in visual perception. People - even highly
trained profe.ionala - cannot
~Y "dis-imbed" an object,
person, or event from the contexthainvwehivisual-~
it a.f.pears.USI_ODS~~
we
illusia
~
which ~~of the same

:~~= C

to the dull routine of boepital
life. Takillg a cue from their
fellow patients, they flushed
down all but two of eome 2100
£_i lis administered to them.
Tbey talked a great deal to
other patients, both becauae
there wasn't much else to do
and because they often found
these conversations rich and rewarding. And tliey .took notes
conatanUy. At first they vmite
furtively, but soon they began
writinl out in the open on 8'h
.x 11-incli pads. At no time did '
a stalf member inquire as to
what they were doing. In reading their own records auboeque n t I y the ~dopatients
learned that stalf had regarded
this "writing behavior" as
aymptomatic of their non-existent achizophrenis. Rea I patients, however, often surmiSed
that they were, in fact. taking
notes. "You're not crazy. You're
a journalist or a professor.
You're. checking up on the hospital,'' said one.
Once in the hospital, the
peeudopatienta told psychistric
atalf !holt they no loQger beard
thelimi.~~ volain!oes. Tbey
- . ,...,... comp
tfllo vertical ones, the arurietielt; fears
and concerns that alllict them
in their. everyday lives much as
they do all of us who have
never · been judged insane. Insteed of. this normal behavior

~:::.: =titatively

the
_....,. of stalf toward patients, Rosenhan recorded a aeries of interactions initiated by
pseudopatients. The paychologist reasoned that the amount
of time an individual spends
with you and his willingness to
make eye contact are indices of
your importance to him. In the
aperiment, pseudopatients approached stalf with some reasonable question, politely asked.
In seventy-one per cent of these
attempted contacts a psychistrist so approached either did
not answer at all or answered
on the move, with his head
averted. Nurses and attendants
were even mo~;e likely to avoid
.interacting with the questioner
(88 per cent). In only four per
cent of the instances did the
psychistrist stop to ,talk with
the peeudopatient ( 5 per cent
for n u r s e s and attendants) .
Rosenhan records 'one strange
enoounter where a pseudopatient's (his, one sus~ts ) polite query to a phys1cian as to
when he oould apect grounds
privileges was answered "Good
morning, Dave. How ,U.., you
today?"
For comparison Rosenhan
sent a young woman out on the
Stanford campus to approach
faculty who seemed to be moving purposefully with a series
of six questions, including directions to a nonexistent cam-

3Seminars
On Religion

~=rie~DOt~::

tinguiaj&gt;able that SSDe bahavior in •'lnaaM places" is 1\abit-- •
ually miainterpre¥ because of
a ''fusion of flcure and ground."
(The p10081111 can ba reversed.
In a challenge study Rosenhan
found that fully 20 pm: cent of a
group of new admissions were
thought to ba paeudopatients
by stalf alerted to the fAct that
a pseudopatient would be procesaed. In fact, no paeudopatient was 81ll9ng them.) Rosenhart feels that this finding argues for oonaervatism in disgnosis.
. "'The issue," he said, "is the
dl8gnostic leap from hallucinat\ons. to schizophrenia. ~I!cmations of unknown or 1 g 1 n
should have been the disgnosis,'' he explained.
RoSenhan is also oonvinoed
that, given the unreliability of
the diagnostic process, labeling
plays_ a muc!' '?&lt;&gt; important
part m psycluatnc assessment.
"A paychistric label has a life
and ":" i~!fiuence of its own,"
he wntes '!' Sct_en~e.. I!tstead_of
b u r ~ en 1 n g mdiVlduals With
emotionally charged labels, ~t-ter to talk about the behav1ors
themselves, suggests Rosenhan.
As to the psychistric. hospit-al, Rosenhart re~ ·~ "!' a
counter-thera~utic . ms~1tU~?n.

The process . DY. wh1ch mdiVId~- ~ sociali~ to such an
mstitubon d_oes l!ttle to pre~e

~on-J; ~~w:d ~8b~arJ,,eR:ban~o'::d ~l'Oob~~tf'f:~f~ ~~~ ~r'l'd.fox;.~d •~ts'!':

and on the angles at which
they are displayed. This law of
peroeption holds true in social
IO!ttinga as well F 0 ears Rosenhan has opened
course .in
abnormal psychology by aittinl
in a student's lap or otherwise
violating personal space. Only
this semester did one of his
students suggest that the pro-.
fessor acted biZarrely becaUEe
be was crazy. ao powerful is
the eflect of Context .(including.

hJ

1!:,.8~:~~

dentiala and his status as a
s·--·
wuuord professor) that it typ-

ically overwhelms the more usual reection to groaaly insppropriste behavior.
Roaenhan's classroom behav.
.
nl
1or 18 o Y -a stunt, but the

~tywill ~~?'zed~

lace wbe .
'ty .
apectedp
. !" ll18l!!" .18 ex_..., __;::,yl'lll888m·".!""""'
.· t of the~:
::ti'~ ihat.....,.continues--;,
cling to the indiVidual who has
been instiiutionalized. To test
whether
rmality.
readil

~ tro! ~
ity as most ol us

think. Rosen-

;:.,.,::;~psy~

~~In each case,
the
tient preaented
·
far admisaion with a
aingle falsified symptom. He
complained that be hMrlng
voices (of_tbe II8Die aex) that
-.ned to be 88Yin&amp; "empty"
~." "thud." T6e psychO!otl8t choee this part • cuI a r
beca- It was metaattractive, mo~...... n«
ihat ttie Yindividual ..;;;'~
lq ed.stential sulfering ahout
meani~ of life.
Mliterature does
not JI1CIIrd a aingle_iUtanoo of
exlatsltial pilydiosis. "'t ahould
haW t-1 a/~ si-.way"
~ 8JQ.II- .lit fact, the
dearth" 0( ~l .notW!I!i-

~
f.!

ataDdlDg, _ , .

-~tient

who ~ l1ims!ill ""'" !'dmltted, .mUcli ,m ~ swp~,
_with_a~ofi!Chizopbnala.
"rrllf fii10II , _ . . . •
Dlllfllatbelret.yalntheho&amp;pltaJ (which NJ1Iiod from 7 to
li2 c!Qa~ tbe Peeudopatienta
falood MtbiD;. As ·tar-a. they
able to ~ ·~ .cted

just the opposite. The label assigned to the pseudopatient
t.Qpk over, and the diagnosis of
achizophrenia, not the counterindication of sane behavior, determined the way the psychiatric .staft interpreted what the
paeudopatient said and did.
Purposeful note-taking was seen
as aberrant "writing' behavior."
A pseudopatient who recalled
that he had on two occasions
(and only two) apanked his
~~a:'t'"'an~~n~gpl'aC:::
in the medicine cabinet, was
described
sub
as
iect to "angry
outbursts" as part of a pattern
of ambivalence in close relationabipa. "Nervous?" .i. nurse
a 8 ked another pseudopatient
who was pacing. "Bored,'' he
answered The
pseudopatient ~~gaw
hangs m the Guggenheim and
the Whitney were analyzed by
her psy_chis_·trist in terms
_ ftr de- .
. pre88lve linea and mamc ~
of color. l!nintenti~J!: ~
enhan balieves,_ the •"'!!S distorted the plain facts of behavior to :'fit" the dynamics of

to talk with her; many went
out of their way to try to locats mysterious "Fish Annex''
o to
· t he ·
th
r Art!"".:!yw~.:,n f::m,era ~.;,~
to a month and a half in the
hospital, all the pseudopatients
were released with the dis~
is schizophrenia "in remiss 1on."
''That means," Rosenhan qu 1·pped, "there are no symptoms
now, but just you wait."
Sane ond 111Nne

Not DiotlniUIIhllble

As a result of his experience
as a pseudopatient Rosenhart is
convmoed that, while deviant

n...

T --Z..;n

Gets

gards as hopeful those forms of
therapy that avoid psychiatric
labels, concentrate on behavior,
and keep the individual out of
an .institutional setting. Among
these, he numbers community
mental health programs, crisis
intervention centers, c e r t a i n
kinds of behavior therapy, and
the h umlln potential movement·

No-Show
Prof:s Face
p ena}t'Ies

Patienta _and paetijiDpati"'!ts
~ esPerienced ~
!'ti"!' ~power!"":""""" m the
mati~ticmal a e t t 1 n g. In one
hospital the attendan~ """'!"'~
the ward each
mommg wtth
00

"~or bedOD,'1 Pa~~-fuckers,

00 '

ularly

•

~"' were reg-

~ _lepl

rights, but

more ~ from ~-today was -~ ~- of stalf
to treat patients as DOD-~.

Attendanta a b u s e d patients
only when "'! other stalf
_ . 1 , as if 0 ~ patients
were
not a-edible
bJ:::ec:''~
-=-~-herA
full ..1 male
• m a
room
"-'
·patients.
Aa~r..J:ta o;out, tt,JOBt
Cnlil!rarehlcall · ::'t~
8tilft
the least
status (attendaDtB) &amp;pEi1ding
the most time with patientil.
l'ayehialrista 1118 rarely see-n
(l&amp;e time spent dally
with a 'pl,cblatrlat or ~abler~- 8.8 minutal) y . , . _ lllafl ad pe1ieota-1118~~

cban~C-

c:hangea.

.m-

In this spirit, u:p..-.d by
Campus Minlstar He¥. .Rocr
Snedeker, a cauordum til _.
ligious organiu.liom ia ..,aosoring a aeN8 til three
on the mearung of faith ID lbe.
modem world. Entitled •Jue
You Living Now and!c.. . Do
You Know What You're w~·
.ing For," the aeries betrin8 thl8
afternoon with a diacuallim til
changing sex roles led by Pall·
q Nevin, director ol Adult AiivJSement at U/B, and tile Rev.
Foster Freeman ol the North,
Amherst New Formo Minlatzy,
Among the isSues likely to 6e
raised are the impact !J( new
life styles and chanaiDa li8X
roles on the nuclear famUy and·
the finding of altsmative famw
of worship in a cbanginJ world.
Rev. Freeman's- Free Fimna
Ministry is devoted to altemative worship styles, ancampassing, for example, a JI'OUP·
interested in Jungian ~cbol­
ogy whose religious practice in·
eludes analysia of dresmo.
On M•v 3, Dr. Victor n...~ft
of the U / B English ~
ment and Rev. Snedeker of the·
Buffalo Area c 0 unci 1 ot
Churches will lead a discuasion
on . "Cool -Persons and Hot

-u.m

Media." Ac:oordin_g to . ~Sned~r. ~ semmar '!ill melude
discuss_1on of the . ~
of 111888 m~ on the individual and SOC!ety and the eflectof '!"""' ~ on the moraiS!"i
e~cal options 0~ to the mdiv•dual. CenaorshiJ:.,and
~"ganda are arno!'g
P
IB!'ues to be raised. Snedeker
will
draw
on
the
work
of
Jacques Ellul, whose Propagando and The .PoUtit;al IUu•ion ileal ·with 'changing social
institutions in their relation tu
the Christian (Protestant) tra-

...J:bt;

1!~~~ ~~~WI- P=J-

Faculty who fail to meet
their classes are subject to a
formal warning that continuing
to do so will result in: an unauthorized leave without pay,
Dr. John A. Larkin, associate . Faculty Senate leaders were
professor of history, has beell told April 18.
awarded a fellowship from the
The matter was raised by
American Council of Learned Dr. Albert Somit, executive
Societies (ACLS). Dr. Larkin vice president, appearing for
~- ¥Us~a:'l\;;.
the President at the Weekly
an ACLS fellowship; Dr. Uwis :::J~-~ i!:Tt E.:JdtiJ:'at~~
C. Perry, also an associate pro- President's office had ....,.,ived
lessor of history, received one a number of iDquiriea on tbe the~;,=tyis ~":';'!;! .
last year. Dr. Larkin was one -matter in recent ~volv- , the Protestant Culpua .._.,
7~S:PP~.,:b~~froU: !~!J::ft&amp;, =:t'..,ir
try, the Buftalo Area OaaacD·
_country.
over extended periods of time of Ohun:bes and tbe Uali8d
Dr. Larkin will use his fel- without reasonable eiplanation. ·Ministrie&amp;. in 1filber :B&amp;J.lowship to write a hook on the Faculty will eventually :have to tion.
social and economic history or c:ome to mps with u,ia prob- · All aaninan will ba blld.lb
lem, Somit-indicated: Tbe Eo:192()
~1~~P:i'l ~ a f,! ecutive Committee exp.-1
~~
months this summer doing re- support of the current policy will be ...-1.
·
-.tb in the United States,
tsted &gt;.v Somit.
.
--~ •L- ~vel to the Pbili''p- asTbeS tuj::!"
• ' "h••" .•
......, ..~ ~m
won W8lver .. _.....,. .
·
·
his B.A
and M.A ·from Yale. and his campuses most aflected by tbe
·
~
·
Ph.D from N
York u !back
aity. .He~the U/B ~t
.,;--'~,
~PJ:
ty in 1966. He Boned • a vis- Wllop a joint
em the
Dr ....~ L a_._ a1
itinl --=iats lecturw at the ~ A 11181dDg· tu cbaft-. ·' p;~""d;;. til~
Uni-.ity ~the l'blllw!- in a~ will ~held in Albey . College 1n· ....... wJI . ..
-1964, ed. m 1989 ftlCIIiwd a - .,. doWDoltate, 8omit aald.
come SUNY"• p-..t ... ._.
l_rllllt from the Olllca of.Bduea~ other ~ the .s-- clerpaduate: .......... - ~
tioo of tbe ~ of -utiwl Committee:
.
1 · ··
Health, Bducaticm and Welflue • • · _.._s aapporUOr c:iu· ... ·. - ·
to _..t. the yeer dolnr · ~e- . NDt ellorta -tD reap,polnt
Tbe BMI!f•Gf ~lilt'

ur,

IJ.Uf(,u ~

.

=

'Z

.,U::

:;n:'1:

~ p~- f~":o.nved
WI~

Dtembera·..lth

'"n&gt;e . w_orld J.

From wtthin the ~ til
faith, we have. to mUe • ...
sponse. Not &amp;imply tha&amp;
denies, ~l't one tbat'
the-

....._....... ~ ,.......,. th
reference to the insighta pro'ded b M-• --L-VI
y
C&gt;AWan.
The final seminar on. May
10 will be devoted to "People
and God in Space." Resowce·
leaders are the Rev. David
Tulin. o1 Canisius College and
Jolm Buerk, U/B director fGr
orientation. Participanla will.
be invited to nlllei:t on the
meanihg or faith in a "world ID.
which relativity and a ..........._
cosmology have replaced tba
Babylonian-Asyri&amp;n view of
=~ .aeoepted In Blblbl

':!r k A CLS Award

:::":'~Po

Scheduled

...m tbere.

.

.ms~ ;8~~-:!;
:- ~"-·==·

SUNY Names
N ew-ProVost

Mlllcboll ~ .

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

-

·Hia pmljreliom Include The
• amllaald .......,.til a
,._,.,..,.., Cohtial ·~ "NP&lt;ft ftiOii9ed the _ . , .
. . . . -~ .,.,...,_ ...... r - the "Camailttea·•
-11172) .... --r~te· W'...W .&lt;J/ .Amdimlc ~ . . .
-~-If~ · ~ -Aaioa (1118T, wllli epcillllblllty.-llle.-.....tll
~ · oontqloua. .' : • .
~ .l. Boala). ' .r
·•
~ taN ID tbe Co!l..--

1M ~JIIIIIIIl!!iit.·a
..__.Dr.
A
. . . ........ ~

..

. bt . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
taraa..~Ja~

aal IMt aaw.i.

·

�~~

~e~lJepartmentls PrOviding
Aid to ·S~h-~peQking Peoples _
·~08 ~: ·p~ a~~
tigb~in~'~
be 88¥,S. " We have sought _m-

que su bijo tiene el. 811181DPIOD.

Es preciso que el (o ella) no
asiata a ·I a """"ela·y que lo (Ia)
alejad0 d 0 ttos ninos
retenp
e
por un periodo de cinco diss
~ el"coniienm del ~pullid.J;.e ·8Pan;sb~ parent
wbo8e dilld must stay awsy
from the Buffalo public .schools
birituse of measles now receives
this message from D o I' to r
· • A. Dun!
MD di
J IIJlltl8
..._
op,
.,
rector de Sslud Inlantil.
Previously, however, Dr.
JIUill€ A. ~· director of
Cbild Health, would write:
''Dear Parent: Your 'child appears to have metiSles. He (or
she ) must be kept out of schoOl
and awsy from otber chil.dren
for a 5-day period."
The Englisb version was not
always underBtood by Spanishspeaking parents of many children' who attend 11 Inner City
schools.

· Is R- e~ a
Wha t ·uro

g

d
.
i
• n

By SHARON EDE:r:
- - so.~t
Witbilrawal and reappraisal seem
have replaced all
.

=::....

:'a':..
of,:!'li;
resl.J:!e=.t'"':"..:'O:~ :!~
of·national best-aellem, compiled each month by the Chron-

icle of Hi«het Education from college bookstore data.Not ~risiJIPy, U/B's current reading habits have
PIOved identicsl to the ~tional preference, indieating thst
this Univemty fs"O..ceilgiin at the· vanguard, in revolution
- or in dormancy:·'"'. "··· """~' . ,. .
"· .· .
.,.,..
ThuS, the saccharine droppings of Jonathon Living,ton
Seogu1l tbrilJ Te&amp;ders here ss they do others across the na• ti~- the bapPy-~"*lh !'&gt; maJ&lt;ing friends and ·influr encmg people· (Jm'Own ..,_rcially as I'm OK, You're OK:
A Pructicol GIIW to Transactional Analysis) smiles on in
· Bulfalo, and 110 forth. As a Whole, the list of this year's
best-aeJling ti!Jee suggests a turning inward, a seeking of
sanctnary within·- one's · own body and mind, and from
this vantege point, a preoccupation with the csutious beck-

ward~~kw
Diet Revolution, for example, ~eals with
the timely drama of the digestive tract; Seagull and I'm

OK, Y &lt;Nre OK opine aoout our minds. And ·the good Don
Juan, last· of Carlos-Gastsneda's three most reoont works,
attempts to synthesize both body and mind into a s(ngle
tranacendenlal ..,.tssy. Two other widely-read aulhorB pro• vide the ammunition for reapprsisal: the two von Daniken
boob (Chariot.· of tM Godtl1 and Gods from Outo Space) ·
nH!mllline the ongins. of the buman species and culture by
attributing them 1r&gt;, pnihistoric spaoomeri fiom a distant
star. And David· HalbenotSm does the same thing microCosmically in • The Bat and tm. Bri«htest, a political/
bistoricsl study whidt ihrows the Kennedy competence and
in~eooe into doubt, IL9d diarupti the-traditions! "Camelot" VIew of that period.
·
-.
.
A Jr8llhic recreation of U/B's cummt reading prefereooe for last month, compared to the national IIUrVey loOks
lib this:
·•
· '

UIB
1
2

•3
. 5
6
7

·

.

.

NOtional

JotJrMy to lztlarl by'Oruios 'Castaneda
Chariot. of the Gt&gt;iUf by Erldi voD'Danilren
GodtJ from Oukr Space by- Erldi Yon Daniken
Jontl~Mn LiDinelton ~Ridla!d Bll&lt;h
- OK,"-··. G··'"r....
• '- •• O"':
n A
......, to , .
~nal Allali.U by Thomas A. Harris
· • A &amp;pt~7ate Rallityoby Cerloe.ca.tmeda .'
'Flu! Teocl!inla of Don J - ·
· -

'5
2
· 91

·

.·

3·
•

- .'
~~ qartoa ·€astane;da " 6
Dr.&amp;yp;u/..
·.A.J-~!!'t;:.~ by B.F. Stiimet- 7

• 98

. ·

10

.

....,.. uoc

·

by Rcberi -C.• Atkins

, Tk Bat anil.tlv BN"-

··

8

_

·

·

•

·, ·

......,_ -

4io h

.,..,. Bo4ia - -

"""'

f-.le body 111111 mind, wriUea 111111 edited

""! ~.W.oa-'•Jiealth~ Cl;lllectiW!, il8
~-to tliemael~ tt . . . . both-

~to~~-t:~-~

aboutBafavii.N•1'--~..ctbtD..... vloleace
..... -u lllllwn . . . . ~- ~~
by
-able~ IGim
tawr.
,_
..
~~--::_~-fiom.;!:.C,.,_.
-.-•
U Ill, -~wda
.,.... taU 1P1icW
lllld oal WMt 1blj'llt
lldltla. . ,
-

Omilnlt......

In fact, says Dr. Bnmo Arcudi; acting bead of the Department, Spanish; Italian and
Portuguese "has beoome very
much aware of the needs of the
SpanisiM!peaking community

As described by University
faculty members Peter BoydBowman, Bonnie Flickinger;Anthony Papalis and Kenneth
Rasmussen in the · April issue
of The Modern LongU4fJe Journal, · economies and elliciency
have been elfected througb US!'
of the method.
Students in the team-teught
classes meet ouly twioo a week
with ·their regular teacher, a
teaching assistent. The other
three weekly sessions are condueled by na-tive speakers of
Spanish wbo have not bad for· mal teaching experience and

resu1ta in a 1971 experiment..indicated that groups
teiJiht in this manner are not
significantly d iff e r en t in
ad&gt;ievement fror;:I oonventionally-talllht IPI'UIJ!I. And, 88 a result, the team-teac:hin&amp; progrsm
was extendiil in tbie Fall of 1972
to"three oilt of Jive sections of
elementary 8paniah and to
IIOIDe sections of intermediate

Spanish.
Tbe metbod ollers a potential
net savinf!!. to the Department
of abou~;i,~ per year, msk·it ·
·
to meet the d&amp;mand fDr fimt..year · Spanisb
without ba~ing to curtaif offerings for majors or resort to

ms

measures thst would result in

seriOus oven:rowding in regular
course sections.
The approach, Arcudi says,
may be used to study any language and its . use here bas
been investigated by other colleges and universities for pos.sible .applicstion in their programs.

SUNY Official Outlines
CSEA Contract Settlement
The recent contract settlement between the Stele and
the Civil Service Employees
Association for members of the
'administrative, institutional,

vide that they may be negotiated only on ·a coalition basis
among public employerB and
public employees.
• The maximum retirement

;,•~lth!~.:try'~ana"~; :J',:'~i~an~teJ'~~ ~~f J::. ':sewred'.!:i

includes a six and one-half pet from '15 per cent to .60 per oont
oont salary increase in the first of the first $12,000 of final avyear of the agreement, a five ersge · salszy, and from 75 per
Special Courses
and one-half per cent hike .in cel!t tO 50· per cent of fmal
As another example, Arcudi the second year, and a , _ _ average salary ·in · e,..;.,.. of
cites jjpeci8l courses which the er on,salaries in the third, ac- $12,000. -.
Department has offered and is cordirig to infonnation circu• The norm a I retirement
planning for majorB in socjal lated to SUNY csmpus presi- age is increaaed from 55 to 62.
sciences and health ·sciences.
dents by Kennetli M. MacKen- Earlier retirement would be
During · the past semester, zie, vioo cbancellor for person- · pennitted only on a reduood
Professor George 0. Scbanzer nel ~employee relations.
benefit basis.
taugbt Spanish 104 JSS, Inter-Aooording to MacKenzie,
• , A minimum of five yeaJS
mediate Spanish, for students normal _)lalary incrementB ,.;)~ of servioo would be required in
iii the Faculty of Social Sci- be continued during the first order to l!ltire.
ences. Many social sciences ma- two 'yeers of' the agreemenl
• Final average salazy-'lhe
"special elforts to be of assis-

tence."

;r:ww~hererk~d,.~essen~Ptial;: zie
m2,~
~=~ ~~~
=~::'!
:UO:~U:
include:
'·
dermed to prevent using lump""'~

in client oontect.
• Estsblislunent of a mini- sum· PIJYIIl!!lllll and other unThe same · reasoning ill re- mum salazy of $6,500 after two UBUBl paytiients shortly . before
sponsible for a beginning course YearB of seroce in. -the eeconcl retirement to distort pension
in Spanish to be offered for year.of the agreement;
paYments.
•
·
medics! ~tudentB next year• A pension reform PI'OIJl'IUII
• Credit for part..time ser- at their requesl · These stu- applicable .to employees' hired. vice is liinited eo 88 to prevent
dents, Arcudi no&amp;es, frequently after July ·1, 1973; Olllll!is&amp;int ciispiOportionate . benefits for
fi.Dd themselves in hospitel sit- with the- recommendations of those Who work Jess than full
uations where, without knowl- the Kinzel Commission. As time.
·
edge of the language, they can- part of the program, most tern-··
• The u nus u a II y large
not telk to patients or explain porary benefits of present em- "death jiiUIIb!e." benefit would
medics! pro&lt;edures to them. ployees would be made per- be eliminated or reduced and
The· course will emphasize vo- manent·
a , _ ll1lemati?e life insursnce
cabulary and readinp U8eful
· • A '!!PW, more effective and J&gt;I'OIIl8lll would be made availfor this specific ~
~ _disciplilw_y pro- ai;le to new _,!oyees. Thus,
· In ~ tilifd community-related oodure v,'lth 1ts IJl')tectiooa ez- 'siprlficant dealh beaefits would
area of activity, .Arcudi says, tended to labOr and non'com- be pJO:Vided for the younger
Departmentel majors tau 1 b t petitive clsss employees after employee with family responsilaJu[wu[es for credit in the Bul- two YearB of service;
bility.
falo eeiementary schools last
• Heslth ........
insurance
im• :All--'-_..._.
__ $6. ailllion
..,.._....._.., _ _ would
year. .•L'~
The acting
dl8irman P~ts ~
•
be subtheject1il
indl!peac!8J!\ audit
view's
by
State T~'Depart88 more ...___ .,..,.. over..., tenn of tbe ...,..,..._t·,
~in the ~ 'ihJ · • lmprovemen ts in. the ment based"';"""lllandanls
City _acbool&amp; to introduce lari- · stete's c;!entel .insurance_ pro- covering such IIJ!II8CI8 aa actu·
'instruction -in the 1.- gram including - -the establish- arial assumpliolll, accounting
It was _also a contrlbu- meot of a $50 individual deduc- pi:acticea, admiJDalmtbe efficition to humari undemanding tlble and increesing the amount ency, ~ of fiduciary "!'
and interactioil, be says, partie. of creimburaement from 80 per · BpOI&gt;IIibilitiea, invealmeQt poliularly in tboee .idloo!" situa- oont to 100 per cent ol the cies and fiDaJxW 80Uilcfuess
tions Where half the students ~uled benefilll;
.•
- generally ..tUcb ~be proolspeak 8{i&amp;nlah on tb8 play• .Provisions applicable to · ulgated by: the' -8uper.tDteudent
JI'(IIIDIIa.
. •
.
eac;b• of tbe. four ~liating of ~ -'witation
.
. .
' llllill! .....~by CSEA; in- with ·t he
.. COmmission
t-T~ '!!nlect ~
dllding additionaf JuDda fDr and .the •admln!tdrah M&amp;ds
Beca...e of· tl8e and other- ~.ph~ Jaci1ities 111111 of !be ayatema. . -&gt;J1VWinl .-Ia and ~ """"""" "'l!liPment, imPiOved tzavelre•.

:=..

{..""::~~-~=--\~pilot .
AISElftLYoa.iraAlD ~ ~7fi:iian ..__..._':""'pay~~ . T-huftclnld.tH~IStalf

~) Areudi note
~ t-of 'tie..:;;;;._~
atUr1i8a of hJanguipl
~ tbe.,uaiplfieant ·
by his lleper:lmeDt ere~ fast. tuies of the
. reform fea·J!UWbig ·~aniuqe ;proerams gram far
pro-.
in~ A,medca.n. unive1Bitie8. Kenzie lista· emp -MacGmwth cinr Iilia r ~ M&amp;
o A limiiation on the "ne..__ _. -----~----..;..;;~--·--· _,...;._...:;:....;;~ . been_.~ m,pld at 80tiability" OI118Jl8iona to pro.

..;:1a

are peid on· "an hourly basis
through FtodoilaJ work - study

prosrama.
Testing

a- .

_ by David Ha1bentam · 10
boollatOte..
Two ~ ~~-llllllhiK- -.o~!:..~
..- a ~.oarof
-

·

Thst th message IJOW comes
to the hoJ!, in the lahguage of
the home is .the result of a service project of the U/ B Department of Spanish, Itslian and
Portuguese whose faculty have
translated a variety of forms
for the County Department of
Health.

novative methods· of teaching
. . . ingenious·; ;·:s,f.ll. continue
to offer the n
1&gt;f cowses
our students demand''
·
He is especially pleased that
a pilot project, beiUD by. the_
~t two 7 ears .ago,
which employs a oombination
of .well-trained teaching assistentB and native speakers .to
teach elementary Spanisli, has
proven I!IIOCO!IlSful to -the point
of nati'onal recogru"ti'on. •.

OffeJi

:-loy

members---- dele·

sates to the Unlvefslty -mbly:
Nancy Brodett.d&lt;;- 1..811y Orllce:. Neil
Goen: . .AIIen KIIIIIZ; Molijorie Mix:~
Bem!Ci "-; . Tltomu Schillo,
James
Wosner.
Ctlflori! Wlllon.

Be~· -

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

�.

'

---~:

5 Area Centers Offer Ed.Students T'hTeeProfsSeekPostof
Teacher Preparation Alternatives c~:!~c~oL!~!! ~nhwa.
,;;;;;Y

Would you liJr.e to •tutor eJe. language, math aDd social stud- It involves as ~
100 leagues are before the votina
- ' - - · aDd _,.,;MarY. scbool 1·101 ...,..,..._led.
s~
. --~- -~~ ~--L-- --~ of- faculty wbQ will choose a cf&gt;air..
~? Teach m a prec1oms:;;;;."'&amp;rloo assumed cfuec.. f.;:-;:.18ori::ta~
of man-els1:t' for the Faculty Sen,.
inantly bladt wban setting? · tion of thia .center in 1969, it change processes aDd wban ateNbyomr=. 1·a re
Mari'e
Worli:•iil a progressive 8llbwban bas developed into a lluee ,.;. education, particularly -through c;--u:
•
_,
ac:bool dWjct?
mester, three phase prograiil student-initialed' projects. Us- and~0.:'r'!!!li~=~
Five U/B teaching centers in inv41lving over 150 University ing fa(\Ulty in Social Founda- nology· George Hocbfield proWestem N"'!' York ""!!lllllll!ity students and scbool tescbezs tionll, Black Rock-~verai.de bas feasor 'of Engliah and former
ac:bools P!'Mde such speci1ic, each semeeter in a balance ·of developed several CDUr8I01 on., president of the CIIIIJl&gt;US AAUP·
~t altematiVM in .piepar- course work and practical ex- history, pbilcJoOphy, and ~ a:nd Lee H. Preston, Melvin K .
mg ~ta fo/ ,the ~
pe~. -~ include Ed- _ education. Dr. ~lee _Cooper Baker Professor of American
~ while also mvolv- ucational Sociology (TED 321), bas· taugbt his Englil!b· mst.pc.. Enterprise and chairman of enmg the_ University . in .l".'~lic ~eam Teaching aDd Alt.;mation course throuih the center viromnental analysis and polaDd pnyate ~I activll:ies, tives (TED 410), Practicum · ~ ~ year~- An~ny Pa- icy, School of Management.
ClliiJIDWUty projects, aDd field
in Secondary School Methods pslia will do his fore1gn JanThe chairman-elect will asresearch.
.
and Techniques- (TED 419) , guage insli-uction . there. This sume cbaimJanahi of the Ben· ~ Bartoo. director &lt;?f the and Student Teaching &lt;TE;D cen~r bas also !level!'ped proj- ate when ~ Chairman
teiicbing center program m the 425) . · The program now lll• ecte m cooperation With scbools G"L-rt D M 00
letes
Faculty ol ~tiona! Studies, volVM two -"'""' scbools and 'aDd departments outside of the . ·"""
·
~ romp
says that .all centers involve three middle~ls and is Faculty of Education aDd of- his two-year .t erm m 1974·
llllllerp'8dualles in both practi·
feis students an . opportuni~ ·statements at Intent
--~-'- pwsuita and
·
cal aDd ..._.....;.,
TEACHER m ORIENTATioN
for work at the graduate le¥ .
On this year's bellot the
use mrperienced gra!f students The University's Ollioe of Teacher l.awiotoll s landard "check one" boXJl8 are
as special project diiectors and ·Edue11tlon will oller an orientation
Tbe , --'-ton-Porter .Tesch- &amp;lJ81Dented by brief statements
superviaozy pei'I1C1Il1le). Tbey program for sophomores and jun·
....... ~
of intent composed by each of
S
. ara

~te=..,

thea!=
certain 11011-amt.er courses are
requiJed to complete University _requiremeots."
Tbe ·c enters are. under the
cooperative directioq. supervi. sion aDd maintenance of public
school pereoniJel and Umversity stsft wbo have had public
scbool uperience, Bartoo explains: "They provide an excellent vehicle for ·the developQJellt of imP.rDVed educational
programs that can ~Met and
exceed certain State and community needs."
The fltSt .....,.,..

1

·
'ty' "'-t ~--L
Tbe . U mvenn
s
er educatioo
center,
Bartoo
recslls, Was deVelope(! in the
Maryvale School . Sva
by
Dr. Robert ~~under ·
""ord ""-·~-;,-tion ._ __ _..__ m··
~·
..,....,_
•...........,
·1959. WJleri.~. PI"'~ ended in

=• ........-

~:

•:;sr.!..~-4~.;,.T:Sd

u...E~).,~~ter~n:..: the~~~

states: "IntenWed..-.y, May 2, from 10 a.m. . tio!ling for .abcut a . year, pro- tiona: (Role of Senate) 1)
noon and' 2-4 p.m. In 234 Norton: viding opportunities for a small Hope to minimize · disparity
A Teacher Educotlon inf6rmatiorr
of students to obtain that will occur over the next
booth will also be ·open In tho certification in _,.,ndary edu- three or four years as departNorton Center Lounso from 10 cation areas. The setting for ments and schools ·move to
o.m.-4 ,.m., both days. Students the concentrated three semester North Campus. 2 ) Strengthen
unable to -nd, but interested practical experience progranJ is faculty influence .on the total
in leeching center · programs a progressive subwban scbool campus by an ~~clive role in the
should contact these canter direc· district. The Lewiston-Porter University Assembly. 3 ) Entori" for lnfonnotion end opplica· "progranJ is unique, Bartoo courage stronger ties between
tions: Block Rock·Riven;ldo, Ron - says, in ~ sense that it is Health Sciences aDd lh&lt;t other
old Goodenow, 305 Foster, 831· managed and developed by a . Faculties. This is new most es3746; City, Ms. Geri Myeio, 319 policy board composed of vot.- sentW because the Health SciFoster; Lewiston-Porter, Peter AI · ing representatives from the ences Faculty will be geograpblen, 319 Foster; Williamsville, Roy SUNY s tudeots, SUNY stsft, ically separaied from the rest
Bertoo, 319 Foster, and Woodlawn , Lewiston administrators and of the campus when the move
Herbert L . Foster, 319 Foster. teachers groups. Its· goal is· to to the North Campus is com' de Wormstion
Telephone number for 319 Foster develop and.. maintain
ualized a .com- pleted. 4) Prov1
-is 8!11-4843.
pletely indiv1d .
traming for options available relating to
progranJ, in which each pro- proposals in restructuring the
spective teacher demonstrates administrative organization of
designed to prepare students competency in knowledge. atti- the University."
for teaching in subwban mid- tude and skill areas
die and high schools.
·
Hochfield writes: " As Cbair-

number

WB;.~ ~f~ ~~ty

University Plans with
~ ;:,eanSe.=:; a~
the Council" Specifying
Clergy Confierence and
methods ol Presidential search
nomination and-the fscplty

Teaching Calter at
auspices of the University. Dr. East High, inallBW"ted in 1971
Toepfer continUed there until and directed by .Ma. Geri My
ou.er , respcinsibiliW.. made it cio of the Office of Tea.,oo;
•
·
,
·
necessary for him to leave in Education, is a spin-oft 'from
· Tbe Uniyersity, in coopers1969, at · which time the pro- the progranJ established at tion with the Clergy Economic
granJ Wli&amp;. phased out for lack Woodlawn. This center, in the Education Foundation ( CEEF),
of another stsft member willing · beginning, was only for 'stu- will conduct · the ninth annJJal
to 8ll8ll1l1" responsibility,,,
dents interested in teachin in Western New York Clergy EcWGIICIIiJwn
_
a predominantly - black
· anomie Education Conference,
In 1967, Dr. Herbert Foster setting. ·
April 29-May · 3, at Kissing
of the Office of Teacher EducaWith the increase in student" Bridge.
tion was appointed director of a interest in the center, however,
More than 40 clergymen from
Woodlawn Teacher Education Kensington High School, an in- 10
·
.
· .
deoominstion9 WI 11 partie•Center, which developed from tegrated academic facility, was
the Woodlawn . Cooperative Included, along ~with Fillmore pete in the fiv&lt;Hiay progranJ of
Teacber Education Pro._.
in· Middle Schoo'·
an integrated seminars,
lectures,
and work..,...,
o;
shops which
iS designed to proa........-ted ~arren But.- scbool of grades six, seven, and vide understanding of "the
ton of -the
t of So- eigbt;liiid .Scbool6, an elemen- wodtings ·of the American ecocial, ~cal; aDd Histi&gt;ri- ·tary 'scbool In addition, the nomic system and the - various
cal Foundations in 1965. Tbe program bas provided experi- economic problems and conWoodlawn Center continues as ences at BUILD Academy, cern8which need to have ChrisP.C:tsce: ~ ~
~~i
Cleveland, tian solutions."
sity to 1!ft!P1Jf8 feachen for in·
Tbe City Center also inTopics covered will include
ner city secondary ac:bools. Tbe voiVM three 8el11101ters begin- distribution of income, money
program consists of a three ning with Educational Sociolo. and b a n.k in g, intemationl!l
course, ooe aDd one-half year
gy. Tbe student. then takes a trade, urban economicsle!""~ ~Jractim
. 'thecum exper
_ of'
ClOillBe in Teaching in City
tion, aDd consu.mer prob
·
D--....
fall o _ Scboola (TED 418) and com·.co.directors for the conferthe junior _...star. Tbe three pletes the sequence with stu- ence are Dr. Robert F. Berner,
c:ouraea are Educational Soci- dent . teaching.
dean of the Division of Conology (TED 321), Teaching in
According to Bartoo,
tinuing Education, and Dr. A.
lnnllr-City&gt;Scbools (TED .418), program is a response to inter- W101Uey Rowland, vice pres.iaDd Practk:uai in Mental , est on the part of students for dent ~ university reiB.tions.
HMI... lllethodB aDd _Tech- involvement in city scbools,
T-=bing (TEl) 419). whose WO&lt;king situations and
C ' - meet in Woodlawn Jun- problems are unique.
ior ffilh aDd experiencos are Bl8dl - - - The Student Association bas
8J'1'8III8Cl in .the school and the
In 1971, the Black R&amp;k-Riv- •~•aa·ted a .· p~~ similar' ~
COIIIIDUiiity. 'There .is also a erside Teaching Calter. was ·--. - em Outdoor Educatioo.
inaugurated in West Hertel the Buffalo Police Pilot 100
WillE:• ••
.
Middle 8cbool ' aDd Canlinal ~t.
AIIlo in 1967 .tbe--.1 Sub- DoulbertY HigQ School UDder
InterMtad etudanta ~ DOW
urban' teii:bina oentsl' was in- joint auspices ol tbe Olllce of sicn up for day' or. Disht sbiftJo
............. by Di. Roy Callahan Teacher Edualtion aDd • ~th of
&amp;n1.~
oftlwOIIIcBGfT-eacherBduca- -Bulfa!O ac:bool syslem WI
withcampus
~~
tion in tbe William8viBe com- Rooald Goodenow as center tbelr lourL
.
director
.
IIIUIU•ty _. ... - t i o n of the
~~ adiDinisBlack. Roek -Ri.,..,.;de in-: thlsAll~~~==
lialioD. Two hilh ac:bools 'were volves atudeata inac:boolbotb ~ . work willi CaJIJPU8 SecurtQ- olu.c!Mtbefleldamtsi'IIJIIIstU- ~ iDdilpendent.
ficsd,
SA ~aid.
. dellta- imoolved in CJbiiria: - sucib • tu~~ sludeafm8.Y ..... up 1or llblflll
. tioM M pal1 ol I' ~ Ie&amp;;;; Jl;vb;;': in 2Q6 NortaD.
•'
~t far Ed~acetjmal So- _,_ this amtsl' ' - added
Purlb. liifoiD.sll1l!l io avail::::'• ~~~~~ .::~ ~ Hi1b, Nottinlbim able by .uiDt alii .....,..,
teachlnl. About 16 cooperalfnl ~cad em y · (I'll inclopwJclent 81udeat rliblll ...UU.tar. al
teadBIIIn tbe ol fcnlp 8chool) and 8dooola 61 mel '19. at.

ur\.:::

8::::.

.....

;a:ver

.

this

,._'"'Of

Police .Progmm

·c :a-

=...-r-

Securi..t,_

-u-

filii!!· •

.

·role in this process; 2 ) Insist
upon strict adherence to AAUP
standards in the granting of
tenure and notice of dismissal,
and oppose any attempt to
modify · the tenure system by
contracts or tenure-quotas; 3 )
Assert the primary responsibility of 1he facultY in maintaining s tandards of academic
freedQm in every unit of the
University; 4) Use the infiuence of the Senate to help eatsblisb fa cuI ty prerogatives,
through by-laws and appropriate committees. in all the units
of the Faculty of Health Sciences; 5) Involve the Senate to

~~~. =~ ~

eradicate from the mind of the
University all . vestiges of the
Wamous 'Gelbaum plan'; 6)
Strengthen the administiJition's
will to demand of the depart.menta -demonstrations of good
faith in the sesrdl for, recruit.Dlj!nt and promotion of quail::
lied women and members ol
minority groups; .8nd 7) Support all elforts to improve tbe
quality of education, maintain
bigb academic stsndjuds, aDd'
defend .the statewide and nationa! .lOie of tbe University

centers."

•

Preston says: "'The faculty
is the beatt of the Univenity. ·
Ita unique functions of teacb· ing aDd -.ch are the c:mla1
activiliea In the •tire ..._.
p.rise.. Facalt,Y- fiDde
Jta. ~inrelationtott.e

un•q·ua functioas-diJeclly,
with .nepeCt to studeDt ~ .
~ faadty 8l1lection ailefta.

::U!';.~~~. ~

- - . . ,..,..
I8PI1C't to tbe .....U .-..
plae of hdeiWtpal ~

::! ~J:..a..:t::
liool~

Oar-,..,._

....._ J.ayy ~ iD
C1( ~~In addltlaa,

....

sity-wide aovemance strUcture
P""""'la a new aet of fuDclicma
and relationsliipe requiri!JI immediate · attentioo. Tbe next
_!~ Yuu.
"!"'1-tial woccuhich-~ lncloludethe
~t cam~~ be "
time of unusual opportunity
and challenge for everr part o1
the SUNYAlJ ente.,..;-.nd,
in my view fo tbe faculty mast
of all." • ' r '
SUNY s.
· At
faculty are also
being asked to choose between
Thomas C o = ('~&gt;--1:-L)
and Thomas
• o (~)
for SUNY Senator. J -

this"":..,

Blackburst -(Summer Sessions)
bas been ' nominated u an illtemats to tha SUNY Senate.
ml18t
be returned
theBallots
Facu!W
Senate
office, to
185
Hay,.. IWI, before 5 p.m., May

1. .

Spring ACT
Starting
OnMayl
Forms for the spring aero-.
ester Analysis of Courses and
Teaching (ACT) will be available to faculty members for distribution to students, May 1,
the Survey Researeh Center
bas announced.
Envelopes containing tbe
completed evaluations sbould
be returned by May 16 to the
departmental office which dis.tributed them, the anJJOUDCement indicates. May 21 is the
deadline for departments or
colleges to return all evaluations to provosts, director&amp; or
vice presidents.
Close Adherence Asked

•,

•

"Close adherence to the timetable should facilitate efticieot
administration of the survey
as well as faster availability. of
results," JOhn Bruce Francis,
associate director of the Survey
Resesrab Calter, says. "Faculty sbould plan to set aside time
for the survey between May 1
and the tast class meeting."
Departments and faculty
members are encouraged to
bave actual distribution and
collection of the evaluation instrument done by eitber students or-.. clerical stsft. At the.
class prior to that in which the
instrument -~ to be di8trlbuted.
the instructor is requested to
remind students to brint a No.
2 pencil to the next clue ~
ing in order to complete tbe . ,
survey.

�~f'tlR'rn~

6

A,ril 26, 1!173

.

.

·can Democracy Be Compatible
~th theBigher Learnin.g?·
work.,:,&amp;::BDITOR"B NOTE: TM Re-

porllllr tN. - ' ,.._.,. lite
(int of G ,.,.,.,.,.,_tli«:uMon. of
Clatociracy aNI hif1wr """ninn
arhids flrilinally appetJI"ed" iA

1M lluaiUI8t 1114Bazine (Dr
JIIIt'di/April. ReoMrCOIIIIIIellta
tllf! _ , . . . , ilwit«l.
rA\UL KURTZ
BIY P
-- . , -

1

•

k ·tbe idea~ democlacy m-

CXJ11111a11b1a With .the hi•her
leamlnc'l 'lbe daEica) um---

sity a it evalY8d com!"itted tn -m., atandouda of
inlellectual ADd .-thetie acel~ lllld cDIIIPS'• no, lllld the

~!l.,:,tlncted achoi~~:rs

IIJI!l.

wbo PID8IBl m-

CIWnM that allen "breJe.
vsnt" 4lo immediate aocial in~ Is ~ idea 11011' dead,

!'t ~ ap.billp~beca.1 18118sica11y
to
thevalllllllof"'----"

of..J.h8~i-;;;n;'TD hilba'

education are being done in the
name of democlacy; yet
olOJiiilo e1faris at letcnn, 801118
how-

~ be1RoD a imi-

..aity ADd a CXJIIop. I wioh eo
foeu8 bilber leuDiuc in
ibe unlwiraity. •
WhaUs .the unl..aity? Wbat
abould be ita fuDcticla? b v
defillitioo tbat Ia a&amp;ndl;,
hoomd
Co be IIOIIII&amp;tift, for "tbe
__....., · DOt
,......_,
unl
. ·-~ •
an.._.aet,ICil in 801118 PlaiGDlc uniIt io an ~ insti.tutioo .&amp;bet is clevelalrinlr ADd
00118tanti.y~.ld
· erent
Jdnda of
- h ave
'"tbe university."
In 801118 contem the uni\WsitY
bas ' - .-1 In iMulalte belief in God,
the Estab8 - . train
liabment or
.people for Uidustry ADd the
prolesaiolls,. develop a base for
aocial d&gt;anie or novolution, indoctrinete in ideoloiY, serve as
a mother for the arts and sci~or provide a bome for
frstemities or lor~in oex1ia1 hedonism. To
,ask. ''What is the university?"
is to ask what it OUlfht tn be
For human institutions are, ui
a aenae, whatever ..., choose eo

Tit

.poinla of view eo
lema of inteliectuai

e
ADd artistic creetivity. :And it
abould provide the setting
.......mn divergent ideas can
~ and be evaluated in
the m.-iptive piOCIIIIII.
·
'lbe teet of tile standards of
_.,___ •

, __ .

• temal

.,..,.,......., .18 -a-Y m
In the euhject matter at h&amp;Dd

~- =~~nofot 9&gt;e l""""""ful
......
~-:-· mqwry fi1! the cnteria ~- '!"'thods of
eVldence aDcl sill!lificsnce. as
they vary from fioild Co field and
as determined by the ClOIDlDunGUTUl:ITnnTllo.T'"rC'
- Y .lL Y-Y .r Vll .. .l ~
The llopaltor ....,.. • ID pnMde • bum far the

uon • wldit not.tJ
fadnc the communltJ.We.- . . . _,.,. of -

of the -

~papua--

a

apace pennitL ·

(
ity of qualified inquirers in each
ever ~ 00 moral
field, however fallible their
ground~, may undermine .the make ~ tlie
judgments may be. 'Ibe major
very idea of tile univmalty it- Straints impooecl by his= test of excellence, thus, is peraelf.
drift, tradition, and .cultural formance.
~ me state right ofl that 1 lag. 'lbe" multiversity swely
Acco!ding tn some people,
am m broad apeement with a bas bad a host of tasks thrown ideas should be tested only by
J?eweyan approadl ~ ecluca- In it. Many of these are appro- their ronsequences to society:
tion ADd d&gt;ft I consular ~ priate, !"&gt;me. in my view, in- but In insist upon this would
basic '!thical. aocial, and ppliti- approprJSte. What I want to unduly narrow man's intellec- .
cal ~ l10 be &gt;that of hu- establjsh is that the university tua1 hori%.ons. Independent of
manistic democracy. Let me ought to be the institution of social relevance, there is a kind
alSo state that, like 80 many society Preeminently roncemed ·of intellectual relevance that is
other students of John Dewey, with the cultivstion of learning often overlooked 'Ibat is, ideas,
I conaider that many faddist ADd inquiry. It ought In be the including merely abstract or
reforms in higber. education, · repo&amp;itnry "of the best insights esoteric ideas, can be tested by
often done in the nsme of ~ civilizations of the past, and ho\\1 weU they help us tn over~Y •• have the effect of un- It ouat&gt;t In push the frontiers rome puzzles enrountered in incferm!ning one of the _,tial of knOwledge in tbe futme. It quiry. Ideas may be irrelevant
~ upon which the unl- ought ~ be a place where a tn immediste social problems,
ver&amp;Jty 18 based. In pouticular, commuruty of scholars and stu- but they may be relevant eo the
a new fonn of egalitarianism is dents tngether or singly can deeper intellectual interests of
~ &amp;trona, and this is · P~ tlleir visions of truth man.
_ • . ~ . l10 efforts In Ill!thou ~ty as they see fit and
The justification for the "itmamtain bich IIIBndarda -4.· eo:- -'" Wl'lbe t ~
.
relevant'' is instrumental ·a nd
fuhcUOn,"P'""l'llty bas aa .. sis "Utilitarian: ·Free and untramfor "-'~~inc!~
teatchmelee! inquiry
the
..............,
u
ex- ing of tbeofy:!!!!"'-~
-.. """ no
so highest
long-runmay
good,have
both In
""f'tional merit IJI!d .
ess y~. Bu\ the univerai_ty does society and the individual.
1 as . achievement or no t, Ill my judgment, exist sole- Here 1 am talking about know!'
fundamentally by 1y In educate studen~tial
" I mean the ch.ve!- as this function is. (I take the edge derived from both theoretCllim;eat of ~standards of -~g of students Co be the ical and practical science,JI':
attainmelit . m intellectual in- Pnmary. Puq&gt;o&amp;e of a rollege.)
rra·viliza~!"'ce,ti.on.as Thew .!'_
quby or bich quality in aes- The uruversity has at least a
~
lhetlc value, as these emerge in double function-teaching and called "irrelevant'' may have a
different fielda of human en- learning, on one band, and ...,. deeper kind of relevance In the
deavor. 'lbe university ideal- search and inquiry, 00 the long-range interests of ' manly at least, 801lllht eo
other. T h u 8 the university kind. and this ls often' overcreetive geniua in the disrove
should make P&lt;JIISible the pur- looked by the disciples of pracof beauty and truth. And
9Uit of free . and independem .tice. Thus, knOWledge ought tn
IICJUiht tn encourage the work !earning and research, whether be pursued for its own sake.
of ru-.ting individuals wbo Ill \he Jli!Ysical, behavioral. and
In this mrmative definition
may not have bad any interest social SCienCe&amp;, ]&gt;hilosophy, his- of the university, I am not sayin tile _reiping social or politi- tnry, claosica, or the arts. This ing that learning and research
cal ortboclozies or faahiOII8 and on-going inquiry should not be· · should be its sole functionwboee lonely work may not rompromised tq the extgencies there are other roles that sohave been directly relevant to of the msrket place. It should ciety may wish tn entrust tn it,
them.
not be sacrificed to the tyran- many of which are appropriate.
Can both ezoe11ence abel so- ny of the fads and fashiom of But a university is not a uni-

'"'"-&amp;::

·• ',. . ·

=

u::

:.o.m.t.

?;

~~

:
tc...def=-eds:
vive the -current -ults upon
"them'? ·SbouJd they?

J:"

oppo~ty

~·f~~tn~~4!tet.: :,~ .:::'J":' .:,,1
::: this . . :':!~~!huni~.J:'"'::f

therance of this aim, it should

There are always threats In
seek In develop in its studenta this task: IDOIIt often they rome
n
.., appteC:iation of the ~ from nsrrow Establishmentar. One's ~ ·tn these ques- of ezcelleoce.
·
ian&amp;, whether of church, state,
ti~ ~ m a I1PO!' . 'lbe task of a great univel'- party, or class, who are oppooecl
ODes definition of .the "f.PIOPD· mty is·tn provide optimum con- In free inquiry, which they conate role of the university. AI- ditions for tbe best creative sider tn be dangerous and sub_tboush there are many COIIIIIIOil mindS, no matter what their versive. 'There ftas been a long
- - , - - - - - - - - - _ ; __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . and bard journey In.defend and
justify the right of a rommunity
of s::bolars tn ezisl 'lbe practical men of commerce do not
see an immediste economic value in scholarabip, the Church is
fearful of heresy, political leadA. ...... _ _ . , . . ........................ ,.......,. .,. . . .or.wo. ol u...
rn • ...,_~ .... a, li.lt-. ers pf sedi~ the Party of

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

.......,.. ........, ..,... 11.._,.,.,,..
:::...!;. =~

Paradoiically, one of tile acelleDce, ADd sadly these do
major threats In acbolarabip DOt come from reactionary
~ romM from . fhc?ae wbo, foroes, but froaJ well-meaning
m the nsme of eplitarial! dem- and ZIMiou8 defenders of dem
ocracy, would smother the in- . ocrati!' eplitarianiam. A r ~
dependence of the unl...,;ty democracy: ADd ezoellence inbecause it is found irrelevant OOIIIIllltible?
In del:noc!""tic. ends. John
111
Stuart Mill, m On Liberty,
,..,__
I ..;..._, .
maintained that, tho\\ih · rep- marily~cy, ........... t, IS Pri·
• d
bad
a moral philosophy that
= v : vi~:~ c.,'g~ au- islesbasedF _upon .two ~ Princi.thoritarian government, a new I? •
"!' t.. 1M liberklrima
roblem that ~ within UJ«U: a~ Ill freedom of be~tic society was the de- lief ADd action and a wish to
f
of the individual against provide the widest degree of
tyranny of the majority. fteedom of cboice for· individMay we perilaps say tba.t, at ~ 80 that they can satisfy
the same moment that the ·their own ~ and interests
struggle for autnnomy is being and pursue their moral ~alues
won in the unh•ersities of the as ~ see fit.. 'lbe end 18 the
United Stales, the are . in creative ·growth and realization
danger of being sa~ Co of in d i vi _d u a!. pe_rsonality.
excessive application of the Second, . tM ~ ideal:
democratic faith.
aofCOIDIDl!m"nt to the principle
equality Here the ·
I think that I should make wiahtn nWid (a)
re_JS a
80e
it _clear. that this ideal &lt;?f the
uruversity as a commuruty . of can"fulfill their Unique interests
scholars devoted tn leammg and needs; and ( b) equality f
and research .bas not always ronsideration. which esp~
~ fully realized. Tenure was a roncem for each indi"Vl"duaJ
mtroduced In protect professors as an individual. The · ·
from inliD;Jidation and """!ction of eqUality mearJS (c) lb._"f"'P~
by goy&lt;!rillllg powers; but It bas individual is to be jud eel"'!
some~ berome a mask for partially before .the Jfw ,:·
the pnvi!ege of an ~ (d ) that if the individ,;m i~
profesaorJSte, an4 Ibis. Jlle!lllS unable tn satisfy his basic bi~
the end of geni&amp;!De mquuy. logical and cultural needs 1·t "
~tive ~ often is best the task of the socie u; ts
~ne. "';'tside ~ academy, DOt vide tJ.e minimal ~rewi~
WJthin Il Men like Kari Marx, - for him tn do 80 All discrimin
John Stuart Mill, and Charles
tn 0 bJ c1es ·bssed
·
Peirce best illustrate this fsct.- ~
ts class
on .rae£,
for they did not pursue full- ·
· · ' sex,
' or national
time acsdemic careers, yet were ongm are In be overrome.
among_ the most Reminal ~d_B ~
The principle of equality is
of _theu dsy. Moreover, lDSti- not In be equated with egalitartutions of higher learning often ianism. Individuals are not the
have. been ruit, not by the rom- same, nor are .they tn be treated
muruty of scholars, but by ab- exactly alilre. They are tn be
sentee boanls of trustees who given positive assistance by so. attempt In bind the university ciety in order tn allow them to
In the Establishment and the esprees and fulfill 1heir own
status quo.
:
unique talents imd interests.
It has been only relatively
How· does defnocra
_cy apply
!""""t
that the greater society
itself came In recognize the In tbe university? Jn my view,
need for freedom and autnn- -democracy canuot function elomy for scholarabip And on!
unless it allows for
-..-.
r fectively
the Emergence - of leadership
s~ ~ 19th century bav.: uru- bssed upon tal.e nt and demon·
£::'~.,.;~In . begin In strated achievemenl Unless a
trol by the ch.. _,_ ~condemocratio sOciety is able to
·
~- 8 • • or recognize and ft!WB1'd merit and
rorporate interests, which, •for ~lienee in performance, it
?Ver one tho.usand years, dom- will unddrmine its own vitslity.
li~ted and. ~ 1hern. Re111°US roiiilllltment, I o ~a! t y
Democmcy and elitiam are
test oaths, and subscriptions inrompatihle -when! elites are
were o!'ce ~ rule throughout hssed ·upon class, race, ethnic
therluruversities of the Western orisin, or sex. ' But democracy
wo ~
and elitism are compatible
. Spmoza turned down a tesch.- where I~ is chosen on
mg poet because he thouaht it ·betherabi~p
· 18•of..!!"~-~~eli.~are·
would limit his philosophical
-~ auu
...,
f""!'fom, The judgDI!!Ilt of the responsive « can be replaced.
Uruvers1ty of Paris was that Egali.tsriana' uncritical applica·
Joan of Arc was a witch, and ~~tyof ~ts~iabumty~
the University of Toulouse · a free institution 4edicsted In

--

~ 21,, uti ........ A . . -

'
A.. W'DI"£81" IIDWLAIID
~

CDUDterrevolutioa. and

8

ome

students are impatient because
sc:b;olarsbip and science do not
"!'tisfy their immediate ezistential lnterests _and ~
Demands for immediate re1evance at times may be as ~
!nJcf:ive In the PI'OCIBI of free
mqwry "" ou~ BUppresJJion
EstabliahmeDt, A n d

by .the

,

What ia -uaJ, II I!IIIOBllabCe

is Co develop, ia that academic
80 that the

...W. P rev a.i 1

~~.,.:"If=

vsnt tn immediate aocial -w
~-~n•
--

or Jlll)'cholosiea

c-

~ =~

learning and inquiry.
Paris also later passed a ,_._
•
•
lu!ion declaring n-.artes'.-theNut ~. Prof. Krutz disones unsound. Iii 1798, Jowhat M
"{We re~ J!'ichte was forced tn re- cent · abu.a
iA tAU area: (1)
Sign his pro!esso~p at Jens
the open tldmiaioM policy;
because of his atheiSm and his (2} tlu! no-ezit policy and the
pro-French revolutionary aenti- b1"f!Gkdown of ~ of edumenta: In 1916, Bertrand Rus- catioiJIJl rolll&lt;mt and ~
sell was ranovecl from his post ti.on; (3) •tudmt participation
at ~ty. qoDege, Cambridge, iA (at:ldty rola; (~) releVance;
for hi!' pacifism, and he was not
pemutted In teach at C!o/ and -(6) tlu! quot4 .y•tem."
Co~e .in 1940 -because of his
mo
VIews. And Communista
~re. hounded off some feculties Ill America during the Mc'lbe University's Women's
Carthy period_
•
• Council is contemplating a
Of course, DOne of this can" change of na-me to the
rompare with tile utter conlrol SUNYABWoman'a Caucus,
that i&lt;?talitarian societies mlert ~ ~ Arnol~
on their U'D Ivers it i e s. 'lbe e&amp;m_PWJ coordinatnr of women's
~azi'8 demanded of their facul- · aftairs, says.
ties absolute loxalty tn Hitler
Accol:'dini l10 Ms. Amol~ the
and. the ~ Reich, ADd uni- change of name "will elfectuate
"':""ties Ill Commllnist coun- (the Council'a) dlliation as
tries .must no. t d"'""""' from tile SUNYAB unit of the StateMannsm as mterp~-by the wide lll'IPlDiiatlaD of. women in
Party.
the UnM!rsity oammunity, the
~t the Preeent moment in the · SUNY \Vomm'• Caucus:"
Uruted States-and &amp;ome WestCouncil ~ will be at~counoftries. • there are new t.!nd.ingof
·
a State-wide meeting
the Caucus in. Alhsn,y on
- tbst threaten m t e l l =autonomy
and May 12.
-

oau.

Name Change

-

�f~

26, 191:J

College 'A'
Dis8olved

Student AskS
That .Waivers
NotBe.Cut

By ~Assembly

awroa:

College A, in its day perhaps
the most controwrsial of col-

A SUNY _,.,.;.,., tD' limit
tuitilill ~-b"foreiln atudenta · as a abocl&lt; tD me.
8ucb a drMtlc action, if tabla,
would put IDADY of us in a dlf.
8cuU lltuatioD. I; for ~
decidlld tD CDIIll! tD SUNY booCRIMe of tbe Tuitioll Scbolarahip aDd DOW that I biJ.w 011111pleted a part of my educatioll
I do not bow where tD go. As
moat of 118 ..... already bavq

le8iate units, is no more.
The Collegiate Assembly last

~~and beca':e

oaly 8Domcial

aid~ 'tD

is ,Tuition Wai"""" tbe offeet .. Mr. Spindler'spropooa1,
if earriecl out, would'moat
of tbe foreip etudenta would
be forced tD tnnsfer tD otber
universities for IIOOSible 11Danci.illll8listlmce. n.- UDAble tD
l!8t any would be .forced tD 110
&amp;aclt tD their oount..ies before
completing their studies.
Any IIIICh action would not

eou..e

• 118

~C(8a !8 ill-~

t;!. ~

jeetive
tbe~ Administmtion. 'fiaDsfer tD other uriiversitiea · or I e a v i n g SUNY
would
no increase in rev-·
enue which Administmtim anticipata! by c:anceJJing tbe Tuition Waivers. Ally cu~ in
fina1iciaJ aid should be 111Uiual
to avoid bardahipa tD the students. Let 118 bope a stnma pro-

!r

n-n

b~~=n~ti:U C.:

·=t
taking this drastic aetioll and
remove tbe uncertainty caused
in tbe minds of many foreign
studenta.
.
Sincerely YOIU8,

---'8AL KlUSHNA IIOONDIL\.

.&lt;: . ,·A . f~ atudent

'

Haw to Apply for

Nelif Music Degree
Procedures for admission tD
a"""' five-year BFA-MFA program I e a d i n g tD permanent
'State certifiestion in music ped.
agogy bave been oullinld by
Charles H.v. Ebert, dean of tbe
D i v•i s ion of Undergraduate
Studies.
ACOI)l!ling tD Ebert, individuals wishirii to enter tbe program must: 1. file a Universi!?'
admissions appliestim; 2. nOt;.
fy tbe director of underii1Ufuate
studies in tbe MUBie Depart.
ment of intention tD enter; 3.
send a tape of a solo, instrumentsl· or vocal, tD tbe director
of mUBie educ:stion, · 105 Baird
Hall; •. request tbe director of
music educatioll tD aend a musiesl aptitude taat tD a high
ocbool counselor {or other autborizecl person) tD be· '!&lt;~min·

istered

tD

.the

~te.

UJ&gt;OD aaieptance by tbe Univennty and tbe Department of
Music (aDd after receil!t of autborizatioil tD register ror .w~ht
semester hours ol maic ap'J'l.;;d
music Instruction~p tbe
freobman y e·a r), tbe student
mllBt, upon arrival on esmpus,
meet with tbe direetDr of music
eduestion for advisement on
registmtion. .
Questiona, Ebert aaid, should
be directed tD tbe direetDr of
mU&amp;ic: eduestion, 105 Baird.

Powell
Named
.. ,~-~ A'. _ ,

as-

Thlll!ld(y vote d-tD inter tbe
' one-time Main Street storefraot
opere,tion aDd 8II8P8IId Inll!mationaL College. 'the JDMtlni
was F'continuation of an - gency session held April 12:
'The Aasemblf ""-' three
motions concemmllnlenlatioaal College, which bad been p,.._
viously zenH&gt;udgeted for tbe
·1973-14 ilc:Bdemic year.
.
Since .International
bad changed ita focua hom IDtemational and non-resldenti&amp;l
tD intercultural and residential,
it appeared before the Program
Evaluation Committal of the
colleges March 29 tD ezplain
cony· of Lockwood will permit.
RICHARD CHURCH (born 18~ ) its new program. At the AMemArmed wi~ xeroxed vitse, a -British novelist, editDr, biog- bly meeting, that committee's
wealth of critiesl commentary rapher and poet ( 19 volumes chairwoman Jacquelyn Finlay
tprimarily from Contemporary listed) who believed "the novel asked the group tD endorse the
Poets ) and a tally sheet of spec- tD be a modern form of the committee's recommendation
ial materials available in the poem, as it functions by im- that International College be
collection, the curatDr marches ages." (Five manuscripts and allowed tD "retain all of tbe
the visitDr briskly across the four letters available.)
voting and action privileges Of
balcony tD view a pailticbe of
PADRAJC OOLUll (born 1881) a college within the Collegiate
printed materia 1 s (manu- - "the doyen of Irish
ters," System."
scripts are · not on display fo r a poet dedicated tD n001talgia,
After extensive debete and
reasons of security) represent- both for tradition and the lJOO- questioning of International
ing: .
ple who embody il Also a play- College representative Kirk RoNATALIB CUFFORD 8 A R N E Y
wright, novelist and one of the bey, • however, the Assembly
(born 1877) - the Alperiean- founders of the 1rish ReuU!w. voted not tD endorse the ,_.
born proprietDr of the famous His career is said tD "stsnd in ommendation. Instea!i, a sec&gt;.
literary "salon de I' Amazone" an almost symbolic relation tD ond resolution was passed disin Paris who gave financial as- the rise and fall of the Irish solving the unit.
·
.Sistsnce tD Eliot and Valery Literary &amp;naissance." H is first · Since the Asaembll': felt thai
when they had fallen on hard poems appeared in the anthol- International Colleges Program
times, and befriended Heming- ogy, New Songs : the occasion does have some merit, it passed•
way, Fitzgerald an d Sinclair receives an ironi.c salute in the a third motion strongly recomLewis. (Two of her letters are library scene in Ulysses. ( One mending that the college p,.._
available in the collection.)
manu., eript, 47 letters and four pare a complete presentation of
J'A.Y:Di K . BAXTER (hom
recordings in the collection.) its new program and A=tly
1926)--allled " the most comLEWIS C. DAY (born 1904)- ~1::;l_"•ion w the
.
Jy
pelling and colprful poet tD ap- named Poet laureate of Engpear in New ~d sirice the · land-in 1968. A po:et of politieal
The Assembly unanimously
Second World War."
thouj:ht and social critii:isdi, of endorsed the recommendation
~OHN BEIIRYlllAN (born 1914 )
1y r 1 c i s m and introspection, of 'the Program Evaluation
-American P u I i t z e r Prize whose work " changed with the Conunittee that College A be
( 1965) and National Book times and with his enlarJing disoolved, since that llllit 'had'
Award ( 1969) winner, recog- interests." (Two manuscnpts,
nized as "being at the forefront 18 letters and nine recordings
of his talented generation, a available.)
lion in the Collegiate Assem.
group ofpoets including Robert
PAUL GOODMAN (born 1911) bly!'
Lowell, Delmore Schwartz, and -a "direct" poet, whose mesRandall Jarrell." (Four letters sage was ''much, much more
and three recordiJ&gt;gs in the col- important'' than music and rbylection.)
(Contiruud on IJOII&lt; 10, coL 4)

Exhibit Recalls a 'Year of Damage'
.

"1972 was - well. it was a
of Damage' in the literary
world," Karl Gay, curatDr of

.Year

the University's poetry collection, saya ·as he peers over piles
of wor!a!Mets, cOrrespondence,
file cards, esbineta and . books
in his ol6ce on Lockwood's second floor, just ·around the corner from the piercing gaze .of

~ t:n~:t~a~ .

ities in tbe ~romn of the
collection (
?JYT) .
'The Poetry Room bas been
described as bavinJ "the finest
and moet ext&lt;aordinary collection of modern poetry in the
wqrld"_ (by A. Alvarez in a
BBC Third Programme talk in
1958) , so what more appropriate setting in which tD mourn
the tQll of 22 major and minor
literary figures in a s i n g I e
year?
,A.nd wbat better Joestion f!!!
an exhibit of their work? -~
A YirtuaJ 1liuine tD, and fortress of; James Joyce materials,
the poetry collection permanently maintains a sinaU eilu"bit
of this vast and celebrated file
of Joyceena as sort of an understated introduction to its
WMith of letters, manuaeripts,
first and limited editions and
recordings by (and other memorabilia
such as Robert
Graves, Dylan Thomas, William Carlos Williams, and W.
H. Auden; representing, as AI• varez bas said, "every kind of
poem, maslerpteCeB lind dogger.
el." Porlnlits of the Joyce fam.
iJy keep cmnpany with Auden's
massive company I e d g e r-like
notebook; the notebooks for
"~'s Wake," with Dylan
'Thomas' drafts for ''The Ballad
of tbe Long-Legged Bail" Not
tD mention I i t tIe magazines
and broadsides from around the
English-epealiing world, or tbe
materials ~ the University's """ poets-in-residence,
one . of whom, Irving Feldman,
is celebrated in a current-sbawcaae, next tD Joyce and in view
of Graves.
Yes, there is:a Comstock Lode
of literary gold here --: riches
create4 by .both the Jiving and
the cli!ad, a peculiarity which
aeta the coUeetim flpart from
others. Here, death is not now,
nor ever bas been a requisite
for recognition.
Nor is the tresSure k e p t
simply tD s e r v e as a "bibliograplier's paradise," .t hough
that in ' itaelf was "d a r i n II"
enough when tbe late Charles
Abbott began the .....,m of acquisiaon in~935: Serious oitudenta
are invi
also to ~ the
"psychology of creation, die
"whole. ~ly line~ of tbe
creatiw as Alvarez~

of)

Dr. ....,.....
• _.,..,
sociala dean and professor of
~... :cleiltistry, bas been
named tD llluiJQI!itions with tbe
.-·~
Ameriam A810clation of Deotsl il But
is the ; , . which
Scboall. He will aerw 88 cbail' estenalve mapzine aDd ~
man of tbe Section on Clinic:al articles ...., (aDd ba.,; been)
Adminlataltion, and secretary · made of. It is not lnday'e tapic
of the Council on SectioDs, with Mr. Gay. Today- recall
tiJ:ouih APrll 1o, 1974.
aDd ' oolebrate the ·"1972-22"Dr. Powell bas been on tbe or as IIIIIDY of tbem 88 space'In
U/B faallty for 26 y8am.
·
csses on the second 80or bel-

UU:,

:J:r:~~=~ts~t!

SA Now Booking

Campus Speakers

Prospective candidata! for
the 19'16 Presidential nominations, women's rigbta advocata!,
.
black ~ and the N- •
York aenatDrial team are 81110111
· those ''pencilled-in" for campua
s p e a k i n g engagements next
year, according tD Robert Burrick, recently ·a ppointed chair- ·
man of the Student Aasociation's Speakers' Bureau.
According tD Burrick, he bas
received assurances that Illinola
.SenatDr Charles Percy, ~
touted - tbe Liberal Republican bope for the next CIIDIPaim.
will~on
esm 18 "{or 110
cost except
~"
"A · ·
y," Burriclt a a .y 1,
"word bas been aJI but certain
that' Senators (Ted) ~

~~t::J...:~future."

~ ~taeta with
fice of ~ Bella
.Abl:u4· the ~ Bureau

h'ot.

::S,..!!...,~t ~auch~

rilbts adwcata! as G I or i a
8tailaD aDd Siasy Fanmbolt. •
Burric1t eaya he boii a Is o
"been asned that Senalon
(IMDb) Javita aDd ( J - )
Buckley will bold a _ . of
' - in HaM I..ounp far tbe
Unhwalty camnunity."
Rail~ of

eoa.-nan

~~.::
SA~tD~

to an SA~
'"
wi!l beJNe, Bm'.idt.....
..,.,

aored~

�Archaeology
Tour Slated
For August .·
~~~t-!:

day Guatemala ArcbaeolosY
Tour this 8111DD1el. 'lbe tour,
which is deaigDed Q) provide

aa in-depth look at that aaticm,
:&amp;om ita lOth century c:laaaic:al
jungle city. to ita p . - t day
Indian villqeo and modem
capital, will depart from Buf' falo, Saturday,' A\liUSt 26, aad
return Sunday, Seplamber 2.
One of the highlighta of the
trip will be-a three-cllly visit to
Tikal, located in the tropical
folt!St of El Petaa. Tikal, Guatemala's cliief 8rdl8eololical attraction, was the 1!1'81lteo€ city

~thewill~aa~~~

Tal-ski ~eyrw.tes Nattm
. (~, o{ Lonic
Conference
b
11

8y .JOHN CORCORAN . .
-

·-

-

,._, ....,_ ,._
Prof. Alfred Tanki pve the
main ..til-. "What are Lotkal nDtiiibs~ at the Confer-

:,on~the~~ E"a~~
~ 'lbe infonnaJ in~

in Tarski's explicati.;,; of logica1 conaequence is the notion of
a logical notion. It bas ·been
standard praCtice to SBJ&lt; that a
logical notion is one whose
lM8Iling is independent of tlje

: _ &lt;!.':tofu::'yagl~~~
truth is ime which bolds indeciplinary CXXIference &amp;plllliiQI'ed pendently of the rontent of any
bY the U/8 PbiJoaophy Depart. particular scienoo.) Tarski was
meat bild 17 other 8PMkers quite clear already in the 1930's
from Mathematics, Philoeopb,y that wi€bout an aplication of
and Computer .science Depart. "logical notion" his explication
~~a~ta of 'U/8, Bu1fa1o State, of fogiml conaequence was not
University of Rochester, Sl!NY completely determinate. In
at Albany; McMaster Uru-- · practioo this was not a problem
sity, Harvard and 1!rfD Mawr. because there was (and is) wide
More than. ~ .loiicians. !rom agreement on which notions are
•~tutiona participa.•
I og1ca
·
l "And," "or," " not,"
over 60 -w
ed.
"all." "some" and so on are
Tarsld, wbo is ~Y "'!sard- · uni~ersally regarded ·as lo&amp;ical.
e_d , as ~ .lDOit inftuential· of "Point," "line," ''pI an e,"
•

tiona of ·t he universe of points
there will be ""!'tain propert\!ls
which are ''preserved by" 'Or
"invariant under" those tran&amp;formations. For example, if one
ronsiders the class of transfor-

=.,~:!::' ~~thepo~

fixed (the distsnoo between r
and y' is the same as the distsnoo between " and y ) then
the property of being an ifio&amp;.
ooles triangle is preserved in
the sense that any set of points
forming an isosceles triangle
will be transformed into a set
of points forming an isosceles
triangle.
A Hie n:h1 of sets
Kl ra·
abl to d fin
hie~w~ se~ of :anJo~
mations 80 that the notions Qf
Eu lidean
t

~ ft~~ai""!~'!_~log- .•

on "i
tity."
The nurln point of Tarski's
address was a suggestion of an
explication of "logical notion."
·
~ began .w ith !' gene~ disCWlSlon of the vanous attitudes
toward explication and be expliciUy denied the existenoo of
any "true meaning" or Platonic
idea rorresponding to the no· oil 'cal
·
tion
01!1
notion.
Tben, somewhat surprisingly,
he seemed to forsake his .topic
for a lucid . exposition of the
famous Erlangen Program of
Fe!ix Klein, the 19th century •
geometer wbo explicated the
ditferences lllDOOg the kinds of

· :!.,~':!::':t,: ~~ ~m:r~
times fur centurie&amp;-with ·accuracy and fruilful.- - bl!fon
!her are liwa a PI'IICi8e explication in tarms ol·rMni funda- ·

1 --r

minded the a~ that each
scieooe bas a universe of discourse or domain of individual
objects whiCh forms its subject

Prof.

cIa s s of transformations the
In addition to
Alfred
class of notions preserved decreases but each notion in the ;..~~dBe=~(be~
preserved class is more general. Nature of l,ogi·c ,. __ _. ....'..__, ·
At this point lie obeerved
"""'u ··~3
tha
.
f
Putnam, professor of .Philoeot the notions 0 1ogic seem Pizy; at Harvard1 _~ ~
to liave a maximum of general- 16 informal WOl'KIIDOp ~
ity so that it would be reason. · led by logiciaris from a variety
able to guess that a logical no- of fields
tion -is one which is preserved
Pu'-•:.. - " ' - - on "Wbat
under the -maximum class of
.._..., ·~
transformations (the set of aU Is Lop:ai Trutli?'', argued for .
transf
·
a realist stance toward matheorraations) ·
matic:al theories. (A realist
Thus by .Deans of a fascin- . bolds that the laws of mathe- .
atil)g but seemingly irrelevant matics are objective tr u t h .a
detOur through geometry, Tar- which are independent of the
ski bad not only brought ·t he mind.) Putnam ap.-1
audience to a point wbere his ~greement with ~. wbo be-

Juyu,
.-r
emala City. ·
· Tour le&amp;der will be Dr. Stuart
D. Scott, -.ciate profe.&gt;r of
anthroPDlil£y. wbo 11M done ·
CODilid8mblii ea:avation 1II"'rit in

Goa~ at

~. site

't he

· the~ will
No prior knowledge of ardlaeology is required to participate in the program. 'lbe group
will be limited .to 30 persons.
~-~"- info
ti
be ...
~by ro:rl!tJ::'g ~ Offi";
1 Credi Free Pro
831
or
tgrams,
•
430L
_
1
V f.
nis
••

2 TI'B.·Stude

At· Sczence Meet

Two U/ 8 students, HOwie

=

of geometry is the c1ass of a11 hist.~tl:~n
aryrcleeared~th
points, that of arithmetic is the .,.,.,;;;;;;, practioo and
it
claas
of
wbole
~
and'so
counts
"identi
..
..,
as a 1--'-'
on. Far Klein's wo'dt the notion
•3
..,.......
cation to "capture" tbe of • transformation of the uni- notion. Tben be sbowed that
eoncept beiac aplicated then · ~of
•
· was funda- there are IUio noa.ns o( memIWMid1ln Ia the lleld ..., in· ""'f"-ivd thet bership, one of which romeo out
dlaid to lblnk of the «~plica- a
tion JB not a pro- .as ~ the o€ber 88 nontlon as '"a-dallnition." However, eeoa of aay ldnd, that it does lOgical: Tne lecture was thus
Tan1d 11M been .-y careful to not involve 1iJoe or motion ,in ~-~ta ':.~~~~~ dtoedtheby
dilicourqa !liis sort of ~ aay literal - . 'that a frail&amp;. ~~,
lbe
~
-bat wilbaut'much .e.ct. · fanaationisaimplya.biuaique
__ .. _.._ __ ti_.
Many lotldalll talre Tuob~s ~ al. the ani- Clllto
.... ,._...._ apUoadai&gt; of Jrulh to have re- . illllill
relatiaa Which ClniJ nn. - T..
..W tie ~ of lbe J10. relatee ~ In the aalOaJy time will tall whether
1iaa. 8ballariy, lhinl are mad- . tD ~ Ia lbe ani- 'nlnild'a eoplicallall
"'oP:aJ
.., ~ who wtlte as ...-.): U a~ .li dem- DDtiaa" is 88 Important as his
theuch AriBtode, the 8loka. able .._ a ..,..._tion in other ~ bat, 88
l.elbnlz, .Baole and' the -~ ~ C!&amp;D be lbouaht of as era! JaP:iam aolad. it 1a~:
-Tualdaa lotldalll hiod .-1 a J.II'DI8III! wbki1 _ . . . , . 1be r-'Y dear lbat it ...._ at
lbe lllllliiD .ill lacical ...... IICIIIIIII.nlldheto..._.._ao IMat =two ~with the
. ...-Ia ..aiy t h e - c.p. · ...,.,_ . . .......,._tiaa Ia ~ aad labeialt
. . . Ia -r.nkl'8 ,..Pbtiaa
....,._. . . ~ "Joab the ~.
&lt;c..
•

-.ore

centuries

that.

it was ....-.IC8ted 88 the
88t
al. points
-udiatant
from
a. 1in11.
Naturalfy,
If an· expli-

,i ":k'ti:

&lt;a-

of

.............a.-

=
E- . ._. . _

.. -.• ~· ...._ 811111111

~.
Ia . . ~ J1C11a11! diller.............__....._._
!Ill....._._
aappo.ecertaiD ii£i _
__,,.._poliita
....
110

••• a I lfulla

(~

. Oaaof

1" II •

b-tJI.
~..._a

Ia

; •• .. , .
). 8.J
~·

·.

, --

~

wbleb

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

ronfderencete~-~~oted to undergra ua '""""''""·
Bush is a senior wbo will
graduate with a B.S. in mathematics. He bas received a
-"'··•- fiillowship' from the
u""ru~.v~
4..;;ty of •"--un.·

~~
. ...,_,
. . Crystal is !' junior mai&lt;?ring
m mathematics and envuonmental design.
'lbe IIWo have been doing research in Math 499 with Dr.
Harriet Montague as advisor.
Tbe project deals with prob1emri studenla have with their
first -rience with ooncep1ua1 matt.aatica.
.
Bush arid Crystal will give an
bit,li:~ s.::..,m~tus:;d ~evein~':"thema~:: oral p""""'tation of their 1II"'rit
reminded them of the basic · ject matter ..t='thematial but at the conf~ aad ba"'! !"'·
ideas ne&lt;le8llllry to understand be urged thet this intuition is otered a m rompetibon
il
lallible and that it is not the for the undergraduate research
After. presentini his explica- sole ground of mathematical· .....ard.

=~-~: :::T't :'~~=r.~r=::: ~ nagf~n~t~

~.of ~.~..

.

: n : a ntha~...J:':::2;
either in i,:t[ or as a tool .of
science, the study of logic leads
to the poeoibility of better undbaersvetandina
lil)g famoor.Dil Htboeee
_,: _wre-bo
1
will
......,
peato~~men·
view_tb;:~~tib&lt;:bellepsto~
the propapnda and pseudoreasonings they are inceasantly
exposed to. In ·a lighter vein,·
when a s k e d bow he decided
that he .,..,.....
..... .., study lop'c, he
replied ~t as a student he
j!Ot A's m all of the other subJeCts but only a B in logic.

~s:=
a Mayan ruin
Guat-

~~~;.~~ ~'time~soS:nno":
~o~~~t:,.:~~:~n5 Prof. S
Putnam
logicak-Dioagreement seems-to 'were those invaiiruit under the AI
_ aks . ~1b~~:t;E:~~
through Sa......... at Pennsylfocus on the notion of "mem·
d
d
T--•~ -"
·~.....,.
bershil:, and to a lesser extent =:.d •U: as~n';'in.:r: tJ;
SO pe
vania State University. The

the~c:alm~oflogic.
Aithoullh
lie reprds hjmseU as
a ~ theorist, his explicatiolls

IC !'le'.,.
of 816!~~ · ~
p h i \ : · of!~~ Tarski s
exp
d
. the consefllllb». .a 0 n 8 m
l930's,
aupe sbortly attar his explication ot the notion of truth.
' n - two explications laid the
foundations fur modern semantial (called Tarslrian
ti
bv many) and martedsemanthe ..&lt;:'
-{
...,..
~ of ·rapid expansion of
model tbeoey. a branch of
mathematic&amp; ClOII&lt;lOUled w it'h
• atruc1un1s which arise in semantic inW!IItilatiqna.
·
In order to appreciate the
importance of explicatioll, it
abou1d be ~ that in

tl

'

gogical and I o g i c a I qualities
into a structure which was effective on all three levels.During '811 informal discussion meeting on the second ds.Y,
Ta rs k i reiterated his -tl-

.:r-,.:

'balll IDcilla ~ -t ....
~e.iiaalat &amp;1111
:0... 8
NilbaaailliMc

lee'-'!

...0,_..... . . audlaaaa. . , _ ,

~ lllll'lld

6d ~
~ lilealed m-t:~c, Pllda-

::""'~;..In Pu!;"~~ Cardiologist Is
simptr -Dmn·er Speake
.
r

is
that ita resulta are not
logical rollSiiquences of ' intui!:i,~Y ·rgroundede
c e ,· v e 1ll&lt;l01118~·
; ~
"""'
.....,
through applications in
•
and oiher &amp;rMS. Putnam
up Ilia views with exauiples
from the history , of mathematics, logic 'a nd pb.ysics. He
went on to abtch a , _ view ·
of foundations of mathematic&amp;
baaed on·~ worlds"
which, be aaid, would valldata
the realist view and a1so count for .much ol the , _ ad
bafllliig ..ullll
JoDc.
Tbe coafarence funiled
under granl'from Stata Uai-.

ofiiiD&amp;nl

vrnity~ .Jolm Comoraa.

cJheo.

'lbe ' - t ,...,.....
--'"'~ Dr.
Paul Dudley ·Whita
be 1be
guest 8PMbr at the Bu1fa1o
Academy of Mediclae's "Preoident's l:&gt;inner" ' bi the Ge!Jrlian Room ol the Statler Hilton,
Wem-iay, May 2.
·
'lbe . dinner will bonor Dr.
David.C.Dean,dinical...,.,;..
ate professor of laediCiJie, who
ia Ol.ltgoiat prsideat 01 ~
Ac:adaDy.
• .....~
~
Dr. Whille'a ioplc will:be ·"A
·Medical· Ealleate b6twei!ll · tbe ·

~ll
~of ~and

· klr cl iraduate atudieo In Pldl- ·
,
.
CIBDIIb.i, and dWriMa,
the · - _ _ _.._
. ----~ 1.GIIi!: CoUoc!uium. COI'RE FOR C11M1111J11
:
c:bainilaa. LWaaa with BUtlaJo Tile Hantmen' - . . . RDom will
State haadled b.v Prof. -..ct 1t11 ._,. o1 Wvic:e to 2
~~tk! the Bulralo &amp;a• a.m. -.y day durfnl lila period
...
~ ~ o1 11
""""
. Alll8l.r
U/8- Tile,...._
nalaamJMtlonl, _ , 17-24.
,.,_..__IaH~of..::.. .. ,__....__
RDom wtU a11ofJw ..,_ durt111 tba Plfkld. bedaced tW .-. .....-.. .
111111)1~ at 9 p.m.-

of

Wi:::ofTanrld'':"'.-;

-•na.

�Ai&gt;!:i{ :16,

1,7~

9
f

·5 EducatOrs
Will Present
Dent Lectures.
·Five internationally lalown
denial educatom will be ,...t"
speakara at the- third annual
l81DM A. Engllah Lectwe Ser:
ies, Friday, April 27, ·at lbe
Statler Hilton.
They are: . Dr. Pltilip .1.
Boyne, professor and c::bafrmm
of oral llllfPlY aDd aaaiatant
dean ol boopltal aDd clinieal .,_
fain at the Um-.Ky of Call.fomia at Looi ~i Dr. Jolon
Hortoll, a colollelln IDe Ullited
Stata Army DoDtal Corpa, wbo
Ia at lbe Labolatory of MicrO'

:'~~~~ i{:: .

SUN~V, M~Y 6,1973

1=00~6:00 P.M.

SJftT€ UNI\JERSITY OF NEW YORI&lt; ftT BUFfN.O
-,.

.
,.4 --&lt;r " f"'i"·• ,··- 1'
.... .
PRESIDENT ROBERT L KETTER' AND MRS. l&lt;ETTER. ,.;m tho
presidenu.l Hministntl• sr.ff and their spouses, will rnHt viliton
in 108 tt.v• from ' - 5 p.m.
.... '

1:-, ... : ~·

.,~,

. ,. .. 1

OBSERVKTORY (Hoctmemr .._,0: .,..,_"'from 7 p :m : 'titf ""*Hght
for tky..unnP,g. If douds obscure the hea.,.,t) • rKiio telescope
• ~~~•tion is the •termtive.

NORTH CAMPUS (Amheml : Bu1 Toun (no priwaM cars pie. . )
awailable with butH leawing from the ~rkine aNa in front of
Lockwood Ubrary every twf hour beginning at t p.m. Ust bus

ADULT ADVISEMENT CENTER : Exhibit in Hayes A; r8sumi Mfvic:e• .
Civil service opportunities and credk·frM Coune infortNtion.

~at&amp;p..m.

DAY CARE CENTER: Qlildren .,e 6 .nd undlr; Center's meXimum
e.p«::ity will be 50 •J eny one time.

HEALTH SCIENCES
• ar.l cenow dttaetion dinic
• ~tion on cltntlll dH.y
• Oinic for h11U11~ of or.l toft tiauli
• · llidt ...,...m.t:ion .nd inf~tion on pharmacy caf"Mfl ·
• Film MMI Htentute on wneNal d...,_
• o.mon.tTation of occupatioMI thefapy medi•
• " Mldic8l tiiChnoiOf'r' uhibit.

THE UPiiVERSITY LIBRARIES : A •-"•IY' of tou~•. ulks. \liMo~
p-esenu.tio111, demorwtntion, eKhibitJ end open hOUMS •t ....,..
e~~mpus loc.etions (Lockwood Library . a.ird· Hell Music Libr•rv.
Science end Engineering Library . Haelth Sc:ienCIS Library and the
Art Ubr.wy In Htrrimanl .
MUSIC
U/8 Symphony a.nct Concert (3 p .m. in front of Lockwood).
The University String Orchestr• in Concert.
~
,..,.,or,..nce of Moz:.-t't ''eo.i f•n tutte" by the Uniwret'lity c:tper.,
Scudies (e single performa11cel •t 8 :30 p.m.; the public will be NH
to examine the lightedMts from 1-6 p .m.
The er.tiw Alloc:iatl'l will prMent two perf~ of •
contempor.ry work C2 end 4 p.m. in 100 Beirdl .
O..mber Music Mini· Rec:iUIII C'"!Y hour on the hour in 101 BeirdJ .
Orpn Dernonstretion· (redtll in ·1 01 S.lrd, ewry ...,f-hour on the
Nlf-tlour beainning•t 2:30p.m.) .
EMctronic: Music Studio demonstretions ewry hour on the hour in
49 a.ird;
Mu&amp;iC Ubr•ry hours •nd dispUysJ.
Mulie Education: VIIi ton rNY t8ke 15-minutnnusic:el IIPlitude a.t
enc:hiew •ideotapn of student teli:bint-

STUDENT "--NION : Norton Hllll is the site of many activities and
....,. indvdina : Studlnt Alsociation officer visits; Movies,
lntlmlltioNI Pwform.ncea end Folk Danc:ina; CtutiW'I Craft Center
eiChlbitl end •monltration (ceramics, metals, behmakina and
tlatikJ; Open 'a... and •T•ble TJJnnil Tournament~, B:illiar•

•n.-

Pool and . . ..ffteboerd, end lnten:oll••• lnwitlltionM

SOwlin• Aho: Photo Exhibit. Browtina Library •nd Music
Lidenint Room; Conflict Simul•tion Gama and Communicative
o.tmty (Handiclpplld a.ildren's Worbhop); .nd eating fKilities
lndudlne tho c.I.-Mo ond Tho Tiffin Room.

AMtioMAy : Community Action Corpi eKhibit; •n open ·for-butiMU
8Dall:store; lnform~tion ·booths on ....... ons. fiNindal aidl.

......_ ......,.. ownua stulfy,

carMn.,.

plactrMnt; uhibits
on -0{'11 Opponunicy Pr....,. IEOPI, Upwa•d Bound
......,_, IMmlnt1 Coma&lt;. Coapomi. . Col.... eon ... _, MinO&lt;itY

-·Aif-.

MAN8,0EMENT:

.....,.,.don

ART:

Adwi•ement

on

undergreclilate busin.s
prOifam. ....,. (day 8fMf ewening) . . . . program~

8ftd ..........,., ......,_ program (free tlehniul

-··---~-···

___' -

...·--....c..v-.
.
............,_
..__J

[lepM1rnent wiU IPOI'1ICW exhibits end...__

.nUnc~,

. Minlotoln-.-

--=--··--.

pleltitf-

r.t.ny olhw

._...,

----------tion
--

,...._... is •t for 3 p.m. in

..._.th

Office wiU be open
•

(---··SCUBA

s.-.

T - . Golf, ~
· T - Tan. .. Judo, T...-;no
(with - • tcooteff. ~. · Apollo EJCifdeer and fil-.
~ pertic:i~Mtion in .ctift.tiel -..eft • ...... Dllnc:int end
Bldnntan.
.

CLARK 'HALL·A-tic

ENGINEERING

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

-t:

heU~r

UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE : The
from 1 p.m•• &amp; p.m.

__
_ _~
_ ..........
DMfondorliWI
..
COIII'UTER
SERVICES:
expiMning
the .ctmi.nirtretiwe
and

• 0' I II ..... of . _.....n rel8tioM in
..........................tion

n. Art

THEATRE : An open, one •nd •
Herriman 'The•tre •

__
.......

d..-tn-na:--- .,.. do ftOt..;.. ......._. to .._.

.... _.... ..._ .... _.
--"!"~~~-

--·~~-~--

..............
....,,__

....
-· -·--·-·-~-

~~-~tlo!'"""!"'FO&lt;odoltioMI•-tol _ ___ _ _ _
131-41101.

• ~-==--===.:-~tionforii1ner

~

•.

-

----·--. ·--··

_.e._;_,,!' anll ~--·
MOON ROC:ili T,..; ~ dooirillintl N · - of !he
CHEMUITRY:--.;

-

.NUCI..EAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FACILITY: T.,.,.,;;.., 1
·4....,..
llinustllo...........,lod .. porant.
•

-·under

&lt;

"--;..;==;:.=::.:;::;;.;;:..:::::::..:::..::=.:.;~~--~---.,j.

-.dl, National Institutes of
Health; Dr. HarlJld Loe, profSQr and clliec:tor of the Dental
Research Institute, University
of .Michigan; Dr. Robert G.
Scha/Jhorn, professor and chair·
man of periodontics a:t the University of Colorado Medical
Center; and Dr. Nortcn S.
·Taichman, professor and chairman of pathology, University
of Pennsylvania Schoo I of
Dental Medicine.
Drs. Horton and Taichman
will participate in the morning
session (9 a.m.-12 noon) with
four U/ B Dental and Medical
School faculty membem in d.jg.
CU88ing the "P088ible Role of
Immune Phenomena in Peri&lt;&gt;dontal Tissue Destruction." Dr.
Loe will moderate this seosioJl.
The Dental-Medical Schoo I
participants are: Dr. Robert
Genco, associate professor of
oral biology; Dr. Ernest Hausmann, professor of oral biology;
Dr. Russell Nisengard, 8.8818tant professor of periodontics
and endodontics; ' Dr. Stanley

~=·J:l::r~rtbo'ogy

"Immunological Considerations in the Therapeutic Use of
Osseous (bony) Implants" will
be the thenie of the aftamoon
session (2-'4 p.m.). Dr. Fl'ed
Emmings, assistant prof8111101'
of oral biology at the Dental
Scbool. will team with three
visitors, Drs. Loe, Sc:ballhom'
and Boyne, for this discussion.
This lhird annual~po&amp;ium honors Dr. En ·
wbo
was dean of 'the
I of
Dentistry frOm 196().70. He is
cunenUy professo~ of oral biology at lbe Scbool

�Al&gt;d1 26, 1173
.

-4•

Faculty Openings
'lbe PeraoDDel Department lists the followinc faculty
poe&gt;tiona • ·~tly available~ on tb:le eampus.
F 3001--.AMociate or Assistant, ~.~­
F 30QZ-...Asaoc:ita Prof.-.r · (()peraliam Reaeud:l),
Arcllitecture.
F9()()3.,-Associte Prof.-.r (Communications,~
ics, Media), Arcllitecturc.
F 3004--Aaaistsnt Prof.-.r .(Art History), Art.
·
F 3005-Asaociate or Full Pto'-&gt;r ( Cbairman or Director) BIDcll Studia.
F aooii=Aaoistant Professor (Behavioral Sclenae),

,_

Diamond Bz.iJJs

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

~-----prior to ,.....,.......... C:.nllluo.

ot-

The Bulls ...
ot · ~. F~ ond Soturdoy; In Pltbburaf1, SUnday;
ond .win return home lolondoJ for • 4 p.m. cluh Butlolo
State
Fleld. Pltchlnc- __, hH beon vory
, - or
the mtlotlcs . - . but hlttinc Ia • hit
team bottlnc .,.,... 1o .313.

ve.y.-.

~

GSA Airs Complaints to Ketter
. Complaints against one Uni- Merle's influence over the stu" currenUy eirist in the Graduate
veraity office, and a near-ron- dents' non-academic activities, School, and suggested that the
ftontation .in anotber ....,.., the . and grading and admissions Office might best be used as an
main topics of diacuaaion as the policies deemed "unfair" to aid in cutting through bureauEiecutive Committee of the third-world students. The sit- cratlc red tape.
Graduate Student Association uation now appears in Ketter's
Poveromo also reported from
met last week wi.t h President view, to be "optimistic."
· the meeting -that there is a "·reaKetter. .
Also discussed was the· pos- sonable chance" that the State
sibi!ity of reviving the Office supplementary budget will inA ''lack of ~·lvenees"
-~of Ombudsman, a step which elude a certain number of gradand "student orientation" on would require, according to uate feUowships. APJ&gt;ropria-

- De~_:_Assistant Prof.-.r (Teadler Ed), EductJtiDrL
"F 3008-Assistant Ptof_,., Ltlw.
F 3009-Head of Reference Depal'lment; Libraria.
F 3010--Head of Serials :I:Iepa.-rt; Libroria.
F 3011-Asalstsnt Profes8or, ~F 3012--Aasistant/ Associate Proleesor (Management),
Mattlllfement Syste~M.
·
F301S-Aaaistant Prof.-.r (~t), Opera·tioM Analyaia.
·,
F 3014-Aasist8nt Prof.-.r (Management), OperutioM Analyaia.
.
.
..
. I' 3015-Assistant Prof_,. (Management), ~
tion &amp; HumDII R - .
·.
F 3016-Visiting Assistant or Assoc.i ate Pnll.-.r,
MatMtrUJtia.
.
.
F3017~Asst. thru Full Prof.-.r, M«hanicol
E .
.
.
~Asaociate ·Prof.-.r (N~IOIY), MftlieiM.
F 3019-.Associate Prof.-.r (Social It Preventive Medicine), Medit:iM.
F BOro-Instructor (2 positions), OccupatiDMl Therapy.
.
F 3021-Asaistant Prof.-.r, Political Science.
F 3022-Visiting Professor, Political Science.
•
F 3023-Visiting Assistant Professor, PoliJical Science.
F3024-Associate ProfeMOr, P~elwlogy.
F 302&amp;-Assistsnt Professor, Social Policy &amp; Community Seiuit:u.
•
F 3026--Assistant or Associate Prof_,. ( 4H), Sociology.
F3027-Assistant or ~te PJGfesaor &lt;*2), Sociology.
F 3028--Assistant PJGfessor ( #1), Sp&lt;znUh, 114lian &amp;
PoriUfuese.
·
F 3028--Assistant Professor ( #2), Spanuh, It4lian &amp;
Portuguese.
Additional information on each opening is posted on
the same bulletin hoards UBed for NTP job listings.

~:!3f~~';,:'ct..~ ~.!d~~~:~~r,; budget,
!!~!: ~~~made
=~:./~ial
~ 'Year
ofDamage'-c
---------public last month.
.
;

by the GSA representstiyes, role and position in the Uniwho &amp;UIIe&amp;ted such ameliora- versity. Poveromo stressed the
tory meesures· as providing un- ·need to maintain not replace
caged Door-walking liaisbns be- the grievance p~ures whicll
students and personnel.
·
ather complaints were cen-

=~~ ~ck"ofa"::ci

. GSA with rep!d to f-tting

zeapCJIISibruties.

The · Executive Committee (Contuuud from fKll• 7, c:oL 4)
will meet again with President lhm. He wrote about everyKetter on May 11.
~thing, "although hoiD06eXIIIIIity
and the war in Vietnam" usurped much of his attention. (One

~~=~~

Kent.State Physiologist
To Give Campus Lectures

a Canadian poet·whose "surety

Dr. Lawrence A. Golding,
professor and director of applied physiology at Kent State,
will deliver a
presentstion in physical performance on
campus, May 3.
·
Dr. Golding is one of the
nation's ~rts in the area of
-~ and drup.
heart exercise
His visit to C!lmpwj is open
to the public. A noon luncheon
will be beld at ~ Syra--a

womanv:::

1909)'--

of permanence" is rellected in
but four books, including uni'l""
Restaurant (4346 Bailey) and EFrennglishch. Canapoemsda. of(Onehis native
those desiring to attend should
manucontact Dr. Jerrold S . Green- script, two letters and one reberg bf April 30, at 831-2943. cording in the coUection.)
Semmar meetings with Dr.
"A B 1 ANN B KOOBB (hom
Golding will be held at 3 p.m. ~;;;;..::~
in 106 Sherman and at 7 p.m.
who has come out
in 139 Capen.
f the
"ted Sta•- · the last
His . first presentation
will 050 yeus."
ru Few -poets
m in the
.
deal WJth ~fCISe of !he heart-' U.S. commanded such. "admir"'!d heart disease. His second ation and honor,'' it is said
willd phrela~calto .clrugB,rf hormones (Four manuscri...., 37 Jette~
~an . . ysl . pe ormance.
ten recordings a~le.)
·~
· Dr. Golding has been the reKENNBTH p A T c H E N (hom
cipient
of
eight
gr&amp;Jllll·
to
study
1911)....:.
"one
of
America's
peat
r
.
the ef!ect of eJ:erellle. on ~ poet-pTQPhets. Tbe l'lliiP of his
risk tact:orB·and
cardio- work holds the w il.d ness of
v.asciJiar elfi""'!'CY· ~has pub- America's energy and all the
. ~ !"PPrts m leading mags- 1\orror implicit in her need for
Tbe ~ Ollice indiCBtes that the following Nonzmes.
self-destruction. It continues
Teachilig Professional Staft positions are open at Stete
the profound fury of ·Whitman's
large vision." (15 manuscripts,
University at Buftalo:- .
COUIIMlZU., PoycboiDgut, Student Counseling Center,
·
.t"'-1
191etters and seven recordinp
As a result of ,S~t Alloo- available.)
PR-3'.
·
IZIIA P!&gt;UND (hom 1885)T«hnit:ol S~U.U.t, Dental Materials PR-1.
ciation (SA). cooperation ,nth
Ao~Uttmt
Stetistics. PR-1 &lt;half-time
Facilities Planning and Cam- ~ as being, "Uniquely !&amp;"
pamticm).
.
•
·
·
pus Security, students wiU aoon 8poDSIVe both to the sharp m,
Aaiottmt to Chairrrum, Geology, PR-1 (half-time posibe able to protect bicycles tejpity of particularB and to the
tiaa).
• ·
.
·
against theft by usinl a new dynamics of historical and metFor Additional information \iOI&gt;CBnliDc u-e jobs 111111
fenced-in area for. that Plll'- lllDOrPhic process,'' this Ameriror det:an. of____
NTP, "
'
throulhout
the
.
State
Univer'
pose.
Aaloniing
to lin SA
.....---...
IIOUIICIIIIIeDt
the locatiaa
of.Ulthe
llity systan, _ . t bulletin boards at 0.. locitiam: .
endiiiiW'e wjll be adjacent to few that have· clone more than
L Bell FM21lty he~ D152 111111 D163~ 2. Ridp Lea.
Lt,lckwood AnML ~
express an individuality: that
BnlldiDc 4236, ..u to cafeteria; 3. Rldp Lea. BaiJdiDc.
Accordina to the plan, bi- have helped make 20th century
In Cllll1ilb ..U to C-1; 4. 8Mlth 8c:ieoM8 BalldiDI.
cy&amp;s can Le publl and lllfe- - ' - " ' inteWPb!e.~ (17
ID C11111i1b appoaite HS 131; 5. C.,... Hall, ln. the corridor
1\lUded by a ~in Wa 1!1811U1icrip~ ~ letterB and
four racordinp in the co11ec....._, Room 141 aiid· the l.Gbby; 6. Lackwooil, pound • . . . .
~
.
.
.,_ In corridor ..U to .....W., ....abiD5; 7, ~~aye~ Jfa.ll, !
. SA said it - , _ thet the tion.) ,
liLUX VAN DODN (hom 1894)
iD -m . a - ,.,., from PDblic Infannatiall Ofendoowe .wiU help to alleriats -"A
..,tie qallltiuctive· force·
liar. .w- Hall. In oorr;4c* . , . _ Rooms 1U'and
a 1f0win1 problem of bic;de In twentieth
einlmy ~
WI; •• Pubr ~ iD -aa'ridlir ..U,to Room 16;
........ and lllbfot the ~ poetry," his work fell ·tnto "the
. 10. ~lid, Ja ~Dow, Houabli 0 . . 1L X.W ~old-., ol the Uni- lraditiaa wbleh CCIIIIbinM EmSdloal,la&amp;Joar.,...al.._tiaabamd'*-i~
~-!,b - CCJIIIDI!Dil~ ln . ~ ef. ....wu.m with·llllldaD meta"108 and 108; 12. 1807 Blmwood; Pill-'~ 13.
•......
pb.yalcU a DR ·humanist CODHadaD Ualaa, DiNatar'a a.., Room 225; 14."Di111Ddad _
Par ,.,._,lllformatioD, CXJD- .. Hla ,erlticlam hu ....
lmPoiimt· In the -e«ort
"'-Hall,--ID-corridor
_ _ _..u
......_tit_Room..;;
· __
QUr l'aieMy in lbe SA ~
to 8llblbllah the ...UU. of sp&amp;-

'lbe recent conl:!'&lt;&gt;versy within the graduate School of Social
Policy and Community Services was alao discuased. Noting
.that a potentially volatile situation bad IIIJCCe08fully been
avoided, the GSA repreeentatiWIII acknowledged and exPI-'
appreciation of Ke~r's
role 88 a mediator.
Apparently ,_,lved during
the crisis .,.,re disputes over the
~t of ~--- Sherman
~.....,....

special

NTP Job Openings

nary_

=

U:::":;&amp;.!:!

em

Bike ComTV\und .

,:;-:·chairman

=.,~t.di:'~:l=

uao.

a

a_.___._.__.;..·--': _:;..

cificaUy American literature."
His teaching iJ)lluenced several
generations. (Ten manuscripts,
7 letters, 4 recordings available.)
EDMUND WilBON (hom 1895)
-American critic and novelist
who served as editor of Vanity
Fair (1920) and book reviewer
of the New Yorloer· (1926).
Although not represented in
the exhibit, these figures are
a1Bo included in Mr. Gay's 1972
necrology: Foster Damon (hom
1893), Ra;rmond Holden
(1894), K 1mb a 11 Flaccus
(1911) , Clifford ~
(1914), Lew Welch (1926),
Michael Johnson (1937), Pete
Winslow (1934), Compton McKenzie (1883) and Helen Hoyt
(1887) .
Of them. Mr. Gay feels, the
most inten!sting is Welch, one
of the "younpr wilder """'ts"
who disapp;;.;i in ealliclttu.a
during the year.
Tbe ..Year of Damaae" · exhibit will be on display lor llfi1Veral months on the l.ockwood
~- Both the display and
tl.- 1t honors are more than
' worth the climb.
And the Poetry Rocim .
further investilal:per

...ents

p~~on

Is Named

~
Robert
who .loilled
the School of
facul-

~inJ.!1~~~~~
~!!!-~~. ·"

......,..,..... 01 .
•
An 8Miltaat Pmt- of
. pbarmacy M ..U D..un.ct.or of
Dr ILl laformatiaa SeMces,
PJGI. p - bo1d8 • bldlioion and a ma1en1 depw from
lbe UnlvMity of t111Do1a. 'lbe
Ilrua lnfcnaittian 8erWci he
diNCia ~ and

medlea1 )118Ct!U.... throuah-

·oat the eaiUe a..te of N"ew

Yodt:

.

-- ~

r

�-

'

· Week]y Communique-

GJIIGHER

GEDUCATION

·GNOTES-

Neadi four million !!!'P"fS.IeS
lPfta pooduced $1.6 billion in
Voluntary --.upport to 1 080 1
ieaee llllil unfvenities in ~0:
. 1, 8CCIIIdinc to an analysis
7
publislled by the Am e r i c• n
Council Oil Education. ''In humantbat termB,on
al,:::efour
,atalisticamillion.
. ~
..........

(Continued from 12, coL 6)
Church of Amherot, 8 : ao p.m.

.,'2f .!reeSt.~L: t ~:r.n,;

can Guild of ~ '
Mila Crouer wW hold a muter
cluo, opanoored by the UJB DeP8f1D1eDt of MUSIC, on Monday,

~ril. 30, at· St. John Lutheran
urch at 8 p.m.

u~~;·

Sam

AAain,
(Ross)
Conference Theatre, N"orto..;
checlt •hawcue for times. AdmioIIOD

cbarse. .

-· .
tow:

!:?'

cou....,.

p~~ysia

also discloeed

these patterns:

~thB~. ~ni~i~-~
me~ta wiH be serv~ at

3:45

p~

IASEIAU.•

U/B ... Buffalo State, Peelle
Field, 4 p.m.
•

• Wbile 95 per cent of all
gift tranaactiona to higber education were for less tban $5 000
COMPUTING CENTU SEMINAl#
in the ag~te these ~c=
SJ?linu and Se1nunt Approxitions prodUced 24.96 per cent motion, Uoyd Uhler, instructor,
of voluntary 's upwrt. The 4.73 4238 Ridge Lea, Rm. 10, .7 p.m.
per cent o( transactions of $5,- FKMi• .,
000. or more produced 75:04 per . S
(~~~~dovkin, 1925).
cent of all volimtary support. . rA~ d rl 7 .ln. 'F 1925), 147
• •.'l)Nenty-two per tent of the
en
P
ree.

C.""•

volun~

8\lpport was received
by_ public 'colleges -and \iniver.
Sities. .
.
• Support in the form of bequests reached $266 million; an
increase of 43.3 per cent over

°'

MAmi CLASUo

c ;~ · 8t_C'j~~

Ch

-L

u~

0f

Amh

1!:3:::=:

crs~ 8 p.m.
U/ B ~~'­

mes:'~':t..!'fc.&lt;the

the previous year. ~Is of

TuESDAY-!

$5,000 or more amounted to ap.
proximately 911 per cent of all
bequests, while bequests of securities, real estate, and other
property repneented 67 p e r
cent of all bequest receipts.

Flow Phenomena in. the Blast
Furt14Ce-Sc~nce and Pract.U:e
Nicbolu Standiab, prol.e uor, Wol:

. • 'nle amount of annuities,
life contract's, insurance policies
~d other forma of deferred Jiv-

Master University, 224 Parker,
4 p.m.
LAW UCTUU#

mg amounted' to $30.1 million,
a decrease of u ,7 per cent over
tho previous ·Year.

..,. ,.

The ~'Fouftdotlon hal an........... ' It ... pled&amp;iocl ..... ....
- - . , _ ... two•........-..u.o
In Its ......._. lliO million ID
wos~~~....,.. u~ and $20
mllllan IDit. loula ~­

Both...-.............---

lenp ..._... ....... the.."' motchlni - . , 111oo

,_

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

· - al . . . -

. IIIIa

the

Ezcept for '-rt disease and

=;i~U!'Wae

Instttuteo ol Health, with only
two m I" a or """"'J'ioa8 are

~uled tor larp cuts by tho
N1:ron Admlni8b:al:ioa'sllscal

1974 budpt. Tbe budaet rea tote! ol $1.966 billion
for NIH for flacaJ 1974, almost

quests

CHEMICAl. ENOINHilNG HMlNAI#

=~~~ti!Z p;::::~. ~~

obf:f'C:J..~'}':i!llth~!."A.~Uc._~:

..

'

•

IIPJII'OF.III

•4

"'lliil ~ ...t ""-dt
Dolleje:ellt'"lft;i
t w i r- - ot ......., iild It ... "corillnUe ...
IWIIIIIa ........ IIi - the al

__

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

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . mojor .

..

~.._

~

toll, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . .

-

. . fll!i-.II.......C

I*to

and
22
·,.- d.
1. . .
. .. .·. . .d.all
._

~

.... --..;.

He runs it clown the flagpole
and up the -establishment.

tary Field

ae.eiand Stale, Ro-

Tnd. 3

p.m. ·

LAw~~~:..

""*"

Ni.aara, Rotary LaF1eld, 4 p.m.

-UDAY NIGIIT DoUIU RATUII•

_ Juanz (Dieterle, 1999), a bi·
OJftphy of tho Mezican leader
olarrin&amp; 'Paul Muni.i Bette Daiio'

f~~~ -'.:_ obn Garfieli
Honcrmoon ~illenr (Kutlo) a

re-creation of the bizarre acti:n•

lies of Martha BoOt Olld Roymood Femandy, olherwioe lmawn
u the "Lonely Hearta MurdOTen.•• Their etyle wu to contact
women lbroilgh lonely hearlo
clubo, wed them, ftoeco them. Olld
then lrillthem. 140 Capen, 9 p.m.

Both filma are free.

THURSDAY-3
CONTINUING DENTAl. IDUCATtoN#

Nutrition in Preuenti.ve Denti6try: Sc.~nce ,.and Practice, Dr.
Abraham E. Nizel, asaociate profeuor of nutrition. Thfb Univer·
sity School of Dental Medicine
and ~iting associate profeMOr oi
nutrition and
Massa·
chuaetl&amp; Irutitute of Technology.
For 1nformation on time and
campus location,
the U/ B
School of Dentiotry.

metrabou.m.
contact

SEMINAl: THE MEANING OF FAITH

fOI OUt TIME•
Cool Per~on.1 and Hot
234 Norton, 3: 30-5 p.m.

Medi4
'
Resource leaders include Dr
Victor Dayno, U/ B Department
of Erudiah, .and Tile Rev. Rodney
SnedeKer, campus minister Buf.
falo Area Council of Churches.
Refreshments will be served.

"PUTNEY
SWOPE"

SEMINAl IN UUAINlA.N CULTUif
AND CIYILllATION•

Modern Ukrainian. Literature
Dr. Danylo Struk, · profeuor oi
Sla~ ~guages and literature,

Uruveralty of Toronto, 205 Dief-

endorf, 7 p.m.

MEDICAL P01JTY FILM•

Stolen Kiooes (Truffaut) 140
Capon, 7:30 and 9 : 30p.m. Ticketa at 75 cents ·a re aVailable at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office.
The further adventure of Antoine Douanel, the youthful hero
of Truffaut's 400 Blows. A humor-

ous, ~ectionat.e and altogether
chemung story of the young man's
''coming of age!'

PHARMACY SP.IINO Q.INIC

~AY#

Capsule ComnunU from Cur-

rtUI's Comer, Bob Curran, Buffalo

Everung New. colllDllli.st. Charter
House Motor Hotel.
C u r r a n is the after-dinner
~er for the U/ B School of

a:s ~tfw~I&gt;:;ti::J

The.Truth and Soul Movie
The CAC film, FrtAy

include 1972-73 performances by

the Center's Creative Associat.ea.
Through April 30.

T.he , Work of Ir.ving Fel4man,
pro~. U/8, D.e~e»&amp; , Qf
English, and recipient of li Nationai ·Irutiiute of Arb and Letters award a n d a Guggenheim
Fellowship, Poetry .Room. secood
ftoor, Lockwood Memorial Library, through May 4.
EXHiart•

M•n Who Ma6, Our 'ivorld·
Portrait. by tKanh, an exhibitio~
of ove~ 100 photographs, including

rri!:! G!.ceA~~'ito~cowewr::

aton Churchill, Bertnmd Ruaell
and others through Sunday, May
ts:-1~.!!:'~...~ r t ~ery,

11:

-.u-·

WEDNESDAY-2

EAT POPCOIN fOR CHARITY

On Friday and Saturday nighta
(April 27 and 28), Proj;;t 326

INTERVIEWS

~r"~ta~c.:lr.rr:~&gt;.

in

~:

i.~~~ 1t t:n.u~~·p~=~
0

~=~I:J~~t a:Ukre,co:e.meo':

(erence Theatre in Norton before,

during, and alter the movie. All
proceoda will Co to charity.

ALIIIOHT~NOX PHOTOGIAPHIC

l : flZT).

.~ SatuniQ.

NOTICES

POETIY COW.CTION EXHian•

Reunion Quet. The day-long
!w.n. U/B Scb
of Law, 77 W. event will also feature addresses MONOIEAUSM EXHIIIJ•
by pharmacists on. topics of conPainting• by EU«enio &amp;nini
Eade St., 7 .m.
This is the fifth in a series of cern to the prOfession. aa well as Gallery 219, Norton, Monday'
April 30, through Friday, May.
six lectures for practicing e.ttor- · a report to alumni and guests by
U/B
Pharmacy
Dean
Michael
neys presented by the U/ B School
•
Schwartz. The evening banquet , LINAIY EXHiaiT•
of Law. •
6!Jih Anniueraary pf the Publiwill salute m~mbers of the
FilM•
School's 50-year class aod formal- calwn of Ul~ put of the r:rlkiro (Kurosawa, 1952), 140 ly induct members of the 1973 p::~t
e~
Ca:pen, 8 p.m. Free.
gradustin: class into the ranb Memorial Libeary.
.
of the UniversitY's alumni.
TOM WOLR LIC'I'UU*
Clou Wwfor• .Among Youth,
. ~oar of ~1972, an ez.
Tom WoUe, author, Fillmore
hibition m memory of a:ainent
Room. Norton, 8 p.m.
literary &amp;,ureo who died dwinc
Wolfe, a leading exponent of
1!J72. Those "'!'.....,.ted by IIO!ec1_
tio01 from their publiahed work
~~o':"'a'!--~1e ceo:e~r ~i,
the American aocial aoene. His
=Jp~~~
works include The Electric Kooianne Moore, Richard Cb~­
Aid Acid Tut, The Kondy-Colmund .Wiloon, P au 1 ~
ored Tongerille-Fiake Streamlill•
Nalalle Cilronl llamey. E&amp;ra
Pound, A. M. Klein, MUtt Van
'/!:14'C/::m:::t"J:a?.~a:·~
Danm, and J - K: Bqter
the Fillk Catchen.
IWcony, IIOeODd ftoor, ~
PreoeDted by the UUAB LitMemorial Library. ContmlliDcerary Aria Committee.

5z:mn:=-=~
Je.-tban the ~. ;;x..
. -

tion . for' D'12.

.

~ t'uff:fo~o:--~: "'t% .._

casical in lhla one year, men
and women made decisions
• MONDAY-..30
w h i c h colleclively provid,ed
•
more tlwl a billiOD and a hillf' FilM•
The Pauion of Joon of .An:
dollanl to American bill- ed(;Dreyer,
1928).
147
Diefeodorf,
ucation," aald ~ w; He)'llll,
preaidmt ol the dOunciL "In in- lime to be annoUDCed. Free. .
. stitutiOilal termB, "'!&gt;f the
Barry Gerwon one.man-ahow in
dilfereaco betw.n
quality
J!Ufa: Willtu So"«• {1969),
and mediocritY, or, indeed, in .Fiuitlity
(1969). Ex)KUidU., Yean
some c a 8 e 8 between survival (1970~ and V ~rna l Equinox
and death." .
.
v.:~
147 Diefeodorf, 3 p.m.
Tbe lltud¥"ealyzed patterns
of ·givinl in data coUected from COMPUTING CEHTH COLLOQUIUMit
and univenitii!s
the
Lan,uage Directed Computer
Council f!lr Financial Aid to P erf.orrfl4nee Eual.uation, P r 0 f.
Educatioa. It found that highar Da'!Jd B. Wortman, Univeraity of'
Toronto,
4226 Ridge Lea, Rm. 41,
education is dependent on larJe
g i ft s (dellned u •$5,000 or 3:30 p.m. Refreohmenta will be
served
after
the colloquium.
more)c:i balf ol..rum come from
indivi uals. Approximately 50 IIIOI.Oov/ IIOCIIEMISTIY
per cent of these gilts from:. in- JOINT SIMINAI#
The Worburg . Efl&lt;ct 011d th•
dividuals-both over and under
$5,(J()()........w in tlie form bf se- BW.Y_ntheoio of Glycolau, Dr.
curities, real estate, ... othet Martin Gibbs, professor of bioi ~

biJh

0011*

U/B .._ Ba&amp;lo -sta... Aodaboo&gt;
Golf Oomoe, 2 p.m.

FAll IIGISTIATION

Undergraduste atudenta mould
continue to update their data
· forms accon:liria to the achedule
below. (Note: The time ·a student

!!&lt;!:
~~ 'l:!_~teli:.~
regiotration.)

Information on the recistratiml
be handed to studenta
the
fl;ata forma in Diofaodorf
•
p...._ will

as they- come in to pick

E
.

~~nw~ou:;:~f;
presentclua.

SOPHOMORES w h 0 I . l.ut
name becino with:
R-S ···-··--Thursday, April 26
T-z ................ Friday, April 27

be~~N whole lut aamo

:-I ····-·-··-.

M.2Jiday, A.p!il 80

~ -~:~:::::w~::: ~

T-z ..............Thursday, May 8
All E.O.P. otudenlo, .,..;u.oo( wbero they ... lldtoiMd. wm

...

~n:.,r~· ~~J!

=
--

ocMdale.

~or-coua.

StudaDta who wloh to -wfor F8 11181 "Fulwe of ......
~
the 1978 1811 IllKay ~. ftt.
to

...... ;:,m"!~-i823.
Dr, ..

.
...:u-~-"'~=
..... ,_.._)_ .......

=

~

RID.

J!;;t,;;! ¥·

1'-'D.! , . )IIQ will ..

... _Oclollel'•

Mq t

~~

~

�.

-

~ membero. Tbe .-on will
be moderatad by Dr. Harald.,~

. ~

l&lt;!rly of App!iM Mat/u""""",

~C::rk~aM:'"m.Coffee in

~~m.O:of

IIOC1WUSTIIY SEMINAJt#

l"""""'*'ti&lt;:a! Comuurat ion •
in the
u.. of O..uo

~~:!;!i[.";:'!f.:!rA,,+m!

~uaiolaDt proliiooor of

cbemiOby, Uni"!'nity of North
Carolina 8cboo1 of Medicine, G22 Cape~~, 4 p.m.

tiotry; Dr.

CAC CINEMA•

Boyne, proleuor and chairman of
oial 811rPry and .,..;.tant. dean
of hoopital and clinical affairs,
University of €alifomia at Loe
Anceles, and Dr. Loe, 2-4 p.m.
Tbe symposium will be held at
~ Staller Hilton Hotel. ·

Ticket Oflice.

CONFIUMCI ON WOMEN

M£Xtc.A.NoAMIIICAN CUI.TUIAL .WES(•

Michipn. 9 a:m.-noon.

TC,raic

~o~m!ru~~~

UUAa

FJIM••·

.

c!J'i....! "'t:o.f::.

101

~=

check ehO'IIICUe for t.ima. Admia-

•

=ai·::.n=-:cDup==:==:·==:-:-=~=""-SATURDAY:_28
0

Probk ... in the Study of the

MEDIA SHOW AND W -

Hi&amp;h ecbool itudenio fna Wem N""' York will their
filma and moclia lit the

R%..1Jt 8£""&gt;~ . Put:!:l ~wope, 140 Capen. 7:45 =M':i'l.'1~-...rw...=
L":f=:'"~
..~""::' ~~..=.;
Medical Center; ·Dr. Philip J. =:·~~::-.fi~"'N~..Z.! ~ .Dieftmdorr Anuex. s:so a.m.-5:30

IN ANnourrY•

P~po,...red by the s..r-,.. ol
.ut · Eduoortion and H1111Wlilieo
of &lt;he New· York State Eduoortion

=·

Putney Swope, a mild-mannered token black in a Madison

~=~~~J!,

Department, the New York State

Starring

ol Truth and Soul, Inc.
Arnold Jobnoon as Swope.

Fe•tWal

Muicano,

~T~s!..-eo:a-:':f::

Arlo.

•

140 Capen, 7:45

CAC CINEMA*

.

Putney·Swope,

featurill!r

=."':"· ~~~"!:= Ticket
=~~N~'H:
!' ~r~o~~~.=~: 8 p.m.-3 a.m.
Oflice.
~ Waltar and Dorothea Wen- 1 PA~;.rty sponsored by the Stu- CONc:&amp;r
T&lt;JUJQTtU a l!'eminisf Cto..U!I,

der, 404 Hayes, 10 a.m.:

dent Houoe of the School of ·So-

Buffalo Feoti..J preaenla Shir-

p.m. Refreshments will in~ude
·~.BJ~:.': ~,!can Stud- 8Canadian
beer, wine and maclr.s.
of sr,:~;:ct~d~t!' ~.zent ~t&amp;ts F!!~. F:,~ ::~~

at $6, $5, and $4 are
available at the Norton Hall Tick-

{Jram for Women, .Kay Brover.

r.,:~"!,.,'b'!t?tbi::U.Se';i ~~
~!f~:"ll~~
8

MIDICINAL CHEMISliY SEMINAl#

mation. contact Gloria Whittaker,
ext 5341.

IICTUIII•

·Towards a Revolutionary Pro-

A.!;Z~Z"~. PW'"'A.loc:.::!.
studen~ U/B Department of Medicinal Chemistry. 244
Health Sciences, 2 p.m.

tradU&amp;te

ENGINHIING U:CTUU#

~~=:::-.;-""";~&lt;;;.;;:::;;._
.

Sot'rle Polymer Problems in
Aeroopace Technoloty, Dr. Robert F. Lande!, manager, Polymer

In Hort1Mt. T.,...Y.

~h,~p:b~;: ~r!!:;:

California Institute of TechnolCoffee

GWEEK:LY COMMUNIQUE ·atJ~,!'~·by
'

•Open to piJbllc;

••Open to mambers of tha University;

#Open only to· those with o professlonol Interest In tha subject
Contoct Noncy Cordontlll, 831-2228, for listings.

THUR$DAY- 26
MIXIC.'N li"EI!tAN CULTUIAL WEEK•

.Moxican Am and Cro/U preoentatlon. includint Indian pottery, rup. eculpture, wood carvinc and inotruments. 232 Norton,
9 Lm.-6 p.m. No admission charge.
MeDcan-American CuI t u r a 1
Week fllotivities, oponoored by the
U/ B Astec:a Student Union. will
oonclade tomoqow.
C~ONWOMIN

IN ANIIQUITY•

•

..!r:i..!~=:· J::m:"ik~

1

and Lillian Robmson. 233 Norloll, 10 a.m.
. .
TIWo ie the oecond day of a
fout-day conference to reorient
the traditional male views which
have been dominant in classical
studias. Preeenl&lt;!d by the U/ B
D~ of Cla!au:s.
eo..vnNG CIHTEI COUOQUIUM#
n-Paralkl R~t-Linear Lan-

Refreshments will be served.
CONfiiENCE ON WOMEN
IN ANTIQUITY*

MULTJ.MIDIA PIUENTATION*

Litertiture fro m Taras SMvclunko to t/u BetlnninB of 1/u
20th Century, Dr. Assya Humeska, professor of SlaW: litensture,
University of -Michigan, 205 Dief.

endorf. 7 p.m.
MEDICAl. POUTY FILM*

The Absent-Minded Professor.

140 Capen; 7:30 p.m. Tickets at

50 cents are available at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office.
Fred MacMurray invents fiubber and the rest ~ history.

=:~·, ~~&amp;m:':~·p~

N!:,':ioH :fi

~~ s~:'.tCoAfW!.~ and

stetter, 8 p.m.

IICYQI IEPAII DlMONSTtATION•

8

l:i."::.:!:,~~~

~theatre. w~re he oan worship and meJDOD;U Humphrey
Boprt'~ ambience. A pretty
senoua
Y about 8lm bU!fery.

SUNDAY-29
CONcm•

Festival East presents Sl&lt;!vie .

Wonder, KleinhaM Mualc Hall,

7

:

~ct~ for the

available at tjJe

et Oflice.

rfOrmance are

~rton Hall Tick-

CONcqt•

F"'!turint organitot" CathariM
Crozier, St. John Lutheran
(Continued on pate 11, coL 2)

.

Commencement Information Guide
The following is the official 1973 Commencement information guide provi4ed by the
Office of Admissions and Records. Degree candiMtu -&lt;Jiwu.Jd m&lt;Jke a note of the arrangements for the Commencement in which t/uy wiU participate or should clip and fik thiJl
information -,or future reference. Because of space limitations, the Reporter cannot print the
entire list again. We will, however, Jist basic information in the Weekly Commu.niq~U for
the dates concerned and in news stories in the issues preceding the, events.
COMMENCEMENT

19n

1108ES
(y.-ori'ID)

DATE &amp; PLACE &amp; nME

Sunday, May 20, 1973--8:30" p .m.
Klei nhans Music Hell-·lbl n A.ud.
Saturday, May 26, 1973--8:30 p .m .
Faculty of
Educational Studies
Kleinhans Music Hall
Faculty of En&amp;lneertn&amp; Saturday, May 26, 1973--3:00 p .m .
&amp; Applied Sciences
In front of .Parker ~neerln&amp;
(alternate: CJark Hall 7:00 p .m .)
Information &amp;
Sunday, May 20, 1973--3:00-5:00 p.m .
Ubrary Studies
Buffeto &amp; Erie Cou~ Ubrary--Aud.
School of Dentistry•
Thursday, May 24. 1.9 73-7:30 p .m .
KJelnhaM Music Hal~. Seeton Rm.
Sunday, May 27, 1973-3:00-5:00 p .m .
Butler Aud.--capen Hall Reception:
5:00..7:00 Faculty Club Olnl"- Room
School of Medici ne• •• Sunday, May 20, 1973--3:00 p .m .
Kleinhans Music Hel~aln Aud.
School f?1 Nursln1
Sunday. May 20, 1973--7:00 p .m .
Klei nhans Music Heii--M. Seeton Rm .
School of Hutth
Saturday, May 26. 1973 (ewrtln&amp;)
Reletl8d Professions
Millard Fillmore Room-Horton Union
Feculty of Lew &amp;
Saturday, June 2. 1973--8:00 p.m.
Jurisprudence
Klelnhefts Musk Hell--Main A.ud.
facutty of Natural
Saturday, May 26. 1973--3:00:5:00 p .m.
Sciences &amp; Methemetics Clerk Hall

~Arts &amp; Letters

The Nude in Greek Art. Ch.ria-

check showcaae for times. AdmiAsion charge.

Mi-

UJBF~

faculty of

CONFHENCE .ON WOMEN
IN ANTIQUITY•

UUM FILM**

Oflice. Preoented by the

ANNUAL HAIIINGTON LICTUIE*

.

Sl.MIN.A..l IN UKRAINIAN CUl.TUU
A"D CI~TION*

n.;,;

IIUIGbilitia in Tra11.1ition in
Natwa! Co"''Mfion 1'tow., Dr.
Benjmnin Gebhart, Sillh&gt;y School
of Machanical and AerDOJ*lO En-

c!J'ire!:.. ~·a f~ ~~~

:av:::~~r ::nUt~

t'::::

~J;~14f~~~~: t;;;~

ln/Wfy, ;. it .. ., writtan by · a~a;r~o%~e ~! Bicycle
Sal Trai&gt;to, Conference Theetre,
Norton. ooon. 1, 2, and 8 p.m. UUM FILM••
No admiosion charge.
Pl4y If Allain, Som (R&lt;.s).
Codlerence Theatr.e, Norton.
l SJ&gt;0!1110red 'by Act V,
cbedk abowcase for times. AdmiaC O - ON WOMEN
Ilion charge.
IN ~·
Woody Allen's wife il a doer;
. W o"!"n 111 Myfho~tY. a panel be, J1 wiltcller. It's notbinc perdiecuooion. 1e a tu n_n J Volene eonal, abe assures him, that be
Broap, Sr. Mary Doly, Dalla - has no sex appeal, no pefiOIIality
J~ . C!!"P. Mo.....W and FfQIII8 and' is a wuhout in bed.
Zeitlin, sa Crooby, 2 p.m.
.
aitnationcm- an underat.ndably

~~ .

1 cket

CONCUT•

Crete and Mycenae: TM Battie o~ the Sex .., Thalia Feldman,

&amp;lJ"~~..'rut~:
f,~.;l';,'fJi; ~ ~'R': ~~:.a=
or of Hellenistic Art, 114 Hocb19, 11 a.m. Refreohments will be
•rved after the · colloquium.

p.m.

Labelk and Dtll!id Ruffin,
Clark Hall, 8 p.m.
Ticlteta at $3 for otudenta and

et Of6ce.
·
UUAI CONCEit*
Todd · Rundgren &amp; Fanny, Cen~~8 : = e at fhe
Norton Hall Ticket Oflice: studenta, $3 and $8.50; pneral admission. $4 and $4.50.

T/u Phy•il&gt;lotkal Effect. of
Transcendental Meditatto.fl. Dr.
Robert K. Wallace, independent
the
Los Angeles researcl&gt;er, 147 Diefof Engineering and Applied Ser- endorf. 8:30 p.m.
ences.
Each year studenta at the U/ B
School of Medicine IIO!ect a leeENGIN~EIING SCIENCE SEMINAl#
The Roie of Linear and Non, . turer for the event. which waa
created in 1896 by the teiXIlB of
B:fieEt:~~qlfe~U::, the Will of ·the late Dr. Devillo
W. Harri~n. profeesor of geni¥hoO:~w~t!~"R!!:;; ~:: tal and urinary d iseases at -~e
ter (I.B.M.), and editor, Quar- School of Medicine.
ogy, ·362 Acheson, 3

·

'~J;:

Faculty- of SOCial Sd_- Sunday, May 27, 1973-3:00-5:00 p .m .

o,:!:';:l::~:~~ Rotary Flel~ (alternate: Clerk Hall)
&amp; Cornrn. s.ntk:es)
School of Man ...ment Sunday, ;May 27, 1973--8:00 ·p .m .
Klelnhens Music Hett--:Maln Aud.
s-turdily, May 19, 19731 : ~:30 p.m ..
Faculty Club Olnlna Rbom
~ Friday,

Ro.well Park Memorial
Institute Graduate
Dhrltilon

May 18, 1973
2917 Main· Sl:tMt
Friday, May, 25, 1973-2:30 p .m .
R.... teh Stud* Auditorium
Roswell Park Memorial Jnstltute

COORDINAT'Oit

Pou-6306 ·

No

Bam~

v..

Flore"" Fradl n-6447

Ya

Howard Strauss-3104

SP'E.CIAL NOTES
SpNkll~ohrt

P.

SulliYIIn, Provost

~eker--Or.

H . Gill,

No

Edward O'Nem-3835

v..

Rosanne Herlnc--2126

No

John Coulter-.2:546

-·

William

Pn:lo¥oft

YH John "R:Ichett:-2111
YH

Mery Herren---2536

Ya

MacMIIne

v..

Marjorie MlJc--.64.47

Ya

Rk:Nird Schmidt . 1241

v..

Jemn Brad)i-1814

No

'S anford Lottor-3401

No

William Frttton--3517

.

Wet~910

I

Speekllt-Mr. Edward

~~w
Spu~. Chert.

H. V. Ebert Dean
. No

YH

.

.

Dr. Ed Mirand

--

Dr. Clyde Randell,
' vice president for

•Ind .... Oral 8loloi:J and Orthodontics fnwn the' Facuft¥ of H•lth Sdences
,
t• ..
••lft!=ludes i&lt;M~ nal Chemlstt)'. Biochemical Phannac:okiQ, Phannaceutlcs from the Facyfty }II Huitt! Sclenc:a •

.

~

Speeke,._.,.r. Joseph

•

.,.~:~of"'=' ~ry, BkJ,phyaka. [pi~~· Mk~bioJocr, Patholog, Ph~,. Pha~ from
•

~~--=-~ ~

.......
....

J

~'!**'•••.C

•

~

.....ONE

~-

~ll · amNtE tt.

tuta.ut ef_c-t-

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

MO&lt;ee&gt;Ver, Ketier indicates,
the introdoctory paragraph f&lt;&gt;&lt;
the Audit's ''managerial IIWilmary," in which tl-. criti~ &amp;Ie olfiired.. "00. nothing~great amoimt
of imprG1!81Dl!Dt that has taken
plea! both dUrlDg·~ wiod of
the report _and;aince the end. of
that~ -:-:-::&gt;-·;:.

~ :1;~ sepe;rate

-n.eni

SPA.Joms

recomrnendatioDs contained in
· the report. Of U.. appnmmately 60 per cent have beeri
implemerited by us. Another
10 per oOnt require no action
on our part because they are
ditected to State Uni..-ity
(al~. .many of t1-. are
all!o· baina acted upon). The
30 Per oaBl,whicb -remain to be
impl-tlld .&amp;Ie f&lt;&gt;&lt; the moat
part eit~ac. awaiting computer
app}ieafi.c&gt;D.·ou lepl opinion."
NQDetbeiMs. Ketter said "A
point whldl sboulcf definitely
be. made ~ tlljlt- we feel that
we have benefited ~ly
frmn the tbpf®Jih examination
conducted bY "l.6e Department
of Audit aDd Control and from ·
the coastructive suggestions
and recommendations that resulted from this examination."
The Audit covers the period
from eight xeers ago to two
years ago, University spokes-

InM~rger ·
By a Y04&amp; ol 55-4: wilh.-

=~::lioil~~
!:;e_.t~t~

State Ulliversity FederatioR of
Teachenl in a new oipnization
to be blown 8s SUNY United.
'Ibe me r g e r Wllll llCCOillpliabed Cluouih an emendment
to the SPA CODStitution aDd bylaw&amp; w hi c h aubltilutea the
SUNY Unitl@d by-laWs. for the
former SPA J'ellll)atioas. SUNY
United, . thus, becomee the official ~ . . - lor the

~~~=
-~
'lbe 8 P A Repre&amp;l!lltative

=::::r~

1-lollftoAAUDIT: "As of May 31, 1971,
stUdent accounts receivable bal-ances totaled $2,571,821. Much
of this balance resulted ·frcim
poor collection procedures,
while a portion of it was cauaed
by unauthorized defen'als of
tuition and fees for students
participating in the University's intercollegiate alhletic pr&lt;&gt;
gram. As of March 31, 1971,
the, latest date f&lt;&gt;&lt; which an
aging schedule was available
Marly $900,000 was due from
students for periods prior to
1970, Another $300,000 was uncollecteil for the 1970 year. We
recommended that students be
required to settle their accounts
for prior semesters before beID!m· emphasize. . .
.
ing permitted to re-register.
: l'olloWing are U\e iJitzbcluc- Also, stui:lents should not be
fl!&gt;ry observation of : tbe De- registered and enrolled in classpartme'nt of · Audit and es without payment of tuition
COntrol's report sum in a r y , and fees unless a formal deferswnmaries of its 10 major rec- ment is obtained in accordance
ommendations and Ketter's re- with SUNY regulations ....
sponses to each recommenda"As noted . . . , students~­
tion as contained
a letter to ticipating in the University's
members of tbe U IB Council, intercollegiate athletic program
were- granted deferrals of tui. A~~i..u.i.GEmAL SUlDlARY: tion and fees. Through the
"SUNY at Bu1falo baa not im- Spr~ of 1971, these deferrals
plemented tbe administrative
cop.trols-and ~ -~
to: assure the elllciency and effecti- of many of I"" Uni·~ $Ia~has been
. •
.
'
venllty'rl Prolnims- AB T'il!sult,
tbele:hall!heen a aerlous.IIIIB ol
State funde through inel&amp;cient amounts allocated for that pur~
·
•
tS'ose by the Division of the The establishment of a StuBudget. Therefore, in not col- d 'Wid J di .
.18
. t
all ri!venue due. In """'" in- leeting tuition and.. fees from env
e u •""'!&gt;' - a ~
stances, expenditures of both students participating in the in- ·~ cl~ to realization aJ; ~
State and student funda were tercollegiate athletic p~res\ilt of 118 endorsement April
improper as well as ·inejllcient. the Universtiy acted improper- 6 bJ:' ~ Graduate S~t
Association. Endorsed earlier
To improve University opera•. ly
·..Although the intercollegiate by the ~tudelit ,Association and
tiono, we beve made numerous
recommendati&lt;llls. We also sug- program was fimded through the Millerd ~ College
geet ·t hat a follow-up be made the FSA accounting system, Student Associs,tioo, the P!Oby tbe Central AdminiStration the FSA had disclaimed liabil- J&gt;?l:ed campus-Wide student JU-·• 1, col. I)
dic18l'Y has now been approved
of St.tte University to enBt1te .fContimud on ~

79 iri the Sun

i:~~~!

All-Student Judiciary
t:::~~ at.hle~- Clostl-r_to Rellli~·z~a
. . t~i"
. -n--

r:u:f~.! :~d'~

(Copernicus' Will Be Heard Tuesday

~ approved the affiliation by a 4-1 majority. The
SUFI' Ezscutive Board had
cnnmleted ,·ts
· _ _. of the rati-

'

"Copernicus," its composer
Leo Smit says, "was begun last
summer in the heart of a Cali~~-'&lt;
,_..
fornia desert, carried through
fication PIOCOIII in March. .
m· auk---• Bu1falo and win'""'
'Ibe business of activating
completed in ;:;,:,
SUNY United bepn in Syrs- _.. __ , __ bastion o1 Dubro·-',_
"""" ~ ... memlienl of ~.......
tbe merger ~tion YUjiOSiavia, to the accompanioouuuiliteai of both SPA and. ment of a ln!mendous Slavic
spring thunderstorm."
=-~
conaoli~ memIt will be heoud on campus
A Dierged list will be sent to Tueeday ~ • the U/B Coeach •.....:..• - ...__,_ _ ...,,_. per'nica-n Commemoration
.:·~ reecbOe i1il'tilib point. . - •

Rome,"":

0:::

omtificib d'ili
---•-..;.. a ....._,.
. "--'-TbB IIIIIBo-t.hea tre Piece,
i:di SPA :;.d~"': . _..t fpi-:Dara.too-, ma.l cllool'elldlle.~~etJ:! ~-. ~:.;=

&amp;1NY uwiad of6ow

which &amp;Ie to b8 completed by
April 30. LoaiJ rep-tetiWJS

-==

to the SUNY United Delepte

~

lor th8 ~year by the
Natililal 'Aaldeiny of ScieDceoi,

will be'--'•flllell., in 140 Cepen_
BaH

'8'~

~.==:! ..m.h
.-&lt;k.u~::-:.
d..
will have ila

new aat-up, lbe pnlllideDt of
each 1oa11 c:blpter load lbe ¥ice
~from the ..~~ep~ry of
.._.,_.,ip which lbe
·dent 00. DOt repreaent ~tomatically he members ol the
Ilelelaia "-''liy. Each local
dlapier will also selact other
deleptea based upon. member(
._)

s u-.. a-. y

work,

~

in Wlllhillitoa; UIB fatuity ~!!mit alld·
British astnlllomar and..Wiitilt
. Fred Hoyle. Smit will ~
and Hoyle will .. ~
mtor. In addi~
·
&amp;nit will
play a selection of
• pieo.
es, aDd Hoyle will
·- a

llhl~~~
l "tte~:'4~of c;
12
~B
11~
~~~-:=
stitulioo - 8lld by-law&amp; and to ly develoPed muaic ol medievlll .
oonsidar certain III!M!IIdnw!la
which IDOIIIb8ra· .of. tbe SPA
(Cominued

011 -

accom.plisbed." ....

1.·2.---...o;

in

SUIT

·

:011r•

that
recxvnmeNta!PM &amp;Ie
. Jemented and .
t
:"'propm _a~

2, col 3)

and renaiasanoe Poland. 'lbe
only" ezception .is lbe chorus ol
(~ on 3, coL 6)

•• -

· ·
~.1.
by representativee of each Of
the maw student groupe that
woula '.:;, Unaer its .............
tion. J~
According to Dr. RGnald H.
Stein;'~associate director of otu-

aovem-

dent dairs, the student
menta-have agreed upon ftWj-thing but the opecific lanpaae
of the by-laws cbanllee 118Ce118itated by the pfOP&lt;Mal_ Acceptable language 1rilf ba hammered
aut by a joint committee ol SA,
GSA, 'and MFCSA, be aald.

"We are hopeful that we will
he able to 1mJ&gt;~t the Student-Wide Judiciary for the fall ·
semester," said Stein, wbo baa
been working on the project for
the lilst three yeua.
A prosr- report Ia euneatly
baing prepued Joe the l'nlclldent, be indiaated. Ac:cordini to lbe'~ act
endoraeii by the studomt IJV'SDments, lbe JDI!jor ~ of
lbe new judid&amp;ry 11oc1y an to
provide studente..cbaqjed with
violations of ----.me nc. ulatiooi with "a. falr bel!riDa
and' deciiliaD by lltudealll,.. to
redve .....titutlaaal . . . . . . .
. wbich might .... . , . . . .
deDf ~II, alld .to lllbiJzate disputes ' * - llludci
rovemments. The Judlc!az7
would a Is o become inwlveil

.=:.,~~in

ClllliiPIIB •

1'be ~ would OOIIIiat of .J.8
by
. eacil
oltbe amatilaMlt ....... Sbiluld there be 81labundlladit of . lmolvinlr
llDderKraduatea, tbe SA ~
be able to three eclclitiooal judicial ~tau-. 'Ibe
18 a a., cIa te Jud.- would
~ ,.,.. their _......,
jl!d8es, llbr

a - ,.,.. _.

=-=-

lcbiutlltadmt
~-- I
of •~
..........
court judp tram each -.tit'IIIIIIC)' allll a chief ~).
~--two-,_
lama would l
(c..ua...l . . -

'· coL 6) :

�JunMcK(zy~

Scheciul£d ·

�~

lfrijJact :of:NiXon -cuts·on ~citwn
·Woi4d Be Staggering; 'Repoit Says

Moo Grads
'Matched' ·

3

Colleges Plan to Request
More ~ds from Gelbauni

�~

4

Study Find.s No Basis for Idea that Wome~ ~ear :~e~~

'
knew· ~ of the respondent An~
By -fATRICIA WARD
Tbe U/ B writers have an ezBIEDERMAN
as sooofasthey MW "Anne" or
lana lion. As they oonjecture,
....
"Jobn" Oil the paper in frUit
Fast becominc a platitude of of them, thus, ~ting the pos- P.n,., 'motive to avoid"""""""'
the women's movement is the sibility that results were skewed is a plausible """""Pt. ezplairiing the mystery of women's be"-''--of ni.vchologist
' Mattina b
b'
Tbe U/B
&amp;;; (~recently became ~~- tbisinto~ havior when they do not ""'cb
pn!Sident of Radclilfe) \i;t""" in 'L'ff-designing the study. IJl their .potential. Further, it iS ·a
reaon women aenerallY fail to the Subjects received a paper COilCiipt aocepblble to women
reaibe their fUll potential is . which reed, "On this page, there for it mmfortably blames failthat they fear ~is a description of an event. ure 011 an internalized set of
· Na. Hor.- bypotbesizes that Your task is to make up as cultural ~tiona. Tbe coilthe prabebillty ol ~ ere- dramatic li. story as you can. elusion · only is picked up by
ales a bia!HmDety oltuation for Tell what had led up to the ~
..:.._
-~ isin lianttle ~':_~__!?
"""""""'
- , wbo evideDce "a motive ..-.&amp;, dMcribe what is happen- wQH;U . . . , . ,
to a......S ~ that minor- ing at the moment, what the F'Bilwes to replicate are seldom
published,
and~ lemimap1 male fear of failure. ~ penona involved are feeling and
CDI'dlnlto Hilmer, '"'be aious- tbinldng, and then give ~ out.ai of moliwtion to avoid IILIC- come." On half the sbeet8, the
~ may very well account for
"Anne" aenleDee foUowod, on
a mltjor part of the withdrawal the o t be r half the "Jobn."
ol eo maey trained American These were distributed randomfmm the maiDstream of ly among the subjects. Informathoasltt and acbiewaMmt."
tion sheets (that included the BDrroa!
AI~ Na. Horner's COil; sez of the subject) were' filled
T b e University community
tation is a much cited tnJism out · separately, end ralels did should know that fslse and deof the · mowment, it is about not see these =Iii
,they famatory statements were into ~ a ~ cbellenge_ from bad anslyzed. the stories.
eluded in the agenda submitted
' - sistenl m . aociai 8IBMlCe,
If .,.. ___ .
'emal ''moti
Adeline J.erine, aSsociate
""'"' ·IS a ,,
e
ve to the Collegiate Assembly in
r-and cbeirman of theWs to a~oid success," the U/ B soci- connection with its :A p Ti I 12
· 1
n......-..-t, and ologJSts reasooed, the responses meeting, as reported in last
8 OClO
ogy .....,_.":"""' .
of the women writing about week's Reporto. To establish
Jl'llduate student Jaruoe Cnim- Anne were .likelY ~
~·rine. What the U/B sOciologists
~ "':"'"':"' the Jacts, I am submitting the
aUlompted to replicate tblvdi&amp;- n;&gt;&lt;&gt;re expressiOns of negative lit- correspondence between Profes-tion study upon wbidl t!tudee toward success « nega- sor W. P. Smith and mysell on
Homer baed her mnclusiODS, live ~nces of success, the matter I reJer to. Tbe letthey fouDd DD support for the more &lt;lenil!' &lt;?f .tbe cue, and a ter of March 21, signed by myezis*- of a female "motive mo~ ~c tone than self and others, represents a
consensus view. Tbe letter of
to avoid au"""""." Moreover, :::::; =-:torl!:':OOU~~ April 3 was written by me withthey found 8 number of tech- But if ultwrzl ____.., '
I
nlcal fiaws in the original study
c
.,........-tions .or out consultation.
I do not argue the . merits
that cast further doubt on its women are lower than for men,
validity
th!m both men snd women are ol our proposal bere, but only
·
more likely to write negative,
wish to stete that we have only '
~U:.::,.DDDr~ and pessimistic stories about Anne asked that it be . permitted to
Na. Crumrine. will argue before than about John.
proceed through normal administrative channels-together with
the American .Socioloaical As- Upolde Down
oociation meeting in August,
Content anslysis tumed most •aey other proposals which
that what Homer's study doq of H o r n e r's findings upside may come forward. I wish to
. indlalte is' the 1-.1 for good . down. .Almost all stories. con~~J::t ~
metbodology and conacientious teined "fear of sticciess iuiag- a nnoition:~
of academic Ieeder
replication. particularly in pop- ery,'' not only tbose written by sbfp- (I refer
to the writer of
ular ..- CClllw-sial a r e .a s.- women. Fewer of the women the above-mentioned agenda)
~----an 1Dau81ciently
wrote stories high in negative
~. ~tbqsis , can ,...,;.ny . ,sentences.a!Jout&gt;Anne.than they should set so carelees an exbeCDiDe myth accepted as fact, did about Jobn or than the ll:ti&gt;!OO of commitment to. bonparticularly wben the' ~- men wrote about either_ Anne esty, particularly in dlllllinp
ella oilers .a "~~ .. f!lt- .or John.. - More, men -( 39.. per · orith a largely student constit• ·
~ for an emotionallycent) - than wom'en (:M per uency.
cberpd pbennmenm
cent) wrote stories with denial
·
Yours sincerely,
HAROLD L. SBGAL, Ph.D.
Homer baed ' - coadusions themes. Moreover, men were
Pn!feasor
.
011 a study 1llldenaken at the
twice as likely as women to
Um-Bity, of Micbigim where write-denial stories about Anne. ·
abe.._ a iraduste student:. Hac As a group, tbe wtmen's stories
March 21, 1973
eubjects- 90 undergraduate were judlleci I e s s pessimistic
and 88 undergraduate than tbe men's. Men's stories DR. WAYLAND P. SIIITH,
- . She asbd the women to about Jobn were sligbtly more DUBC'l'OR OJ' THE COlLBGES
write a story to complete a ~c t ban tbose about 133~BAU.
TAT (Tbematic Appen:eption Anne. Women's stories about CAKPOII
'l'eot) - . , !bat -reed MAfter Anne were the least pesaimistic DIWIPAY:
fint.term finals Anne·ftnds her- of all tbose written.
•
.
A group of faculty members,
~t the top of ' - medical ' Wben the date were analyzed, wbo have been 'associated with
.US." 'Il&gt;e 11*1 CDDPlet- the U/B sociologists found no tba teachina- of Rachel
ed a ~ stem in wbidl supPort for Homer's conclua- Canlon Colleie or otherwise in"Anne was "J.o bn." H....- ioos. Have times changed, they volved in tbe development of
tlsl anslyzed the stories for wondered, with a dac.....se in teacbing activities in the en"fear ol success imapry," women's anxieties about sue. viroamental area, have met to
which abe fouDd plaeDt in 65 -~· But Whatever consider the present etate of
par 01 the women~a re- bas
in tbe tbree.year the Colleae end its future. We
...,._ and only 10 par Cl!llt in
since Homer first -·"- are in ....--K that with.J obn
of tbe .._...
.
lisbed ._ ......t, the
Howell's I'OIIIipation as Master
In order to re-test H«Mr's of rater-bias and &lt;&gt;"- tecbnical of the College and the lack of
Jvpothesil. Dr. 1-me and ' - fiaws aerioualy mar tbi original faculty involvsnent in its operIIIUdeDt took as their fiiUnple study. Why then bas a ..X ation the end of its existence as
'100 U/B llludents enrolled in study, that bas been rep- a viable tMcblna unit is _.;.
iallodaclloty IIDCiolocy. In the Heated IIIIOOI!lBIIfuly, become- ~ threatiOned: We are lll8o
Ran. lllui!y the "ralln" wbo of the movement's "scientific" m . _ t that tbere is a
...,.t ~ the atories tezts?
~ 1-.1 lor tbe oon-

istaM._ ~ ·

poraril,y , invubienble to - tbe
Dormaf edvenarial procedureo
of eclence quicldy attain ;mythical sta_tus. Tbe brief history of

-

"

Meamrhil8.: -~-ful
would ~ ~t llPrDel: was ...- ~·wroa,i IQc:k: to
abOuJd becin with. ~ .J. Jelbr:poy.
women

the J~omer hypothesis
alert us apin to the function . chologi&amp;t Naami W-..ebi~X~tD­
of good methodology especially plaiDed here -~.her~
in oontroYersial end newly POP- 1em J!!!IID't feu of ~ : or
ular a...... of study.
aey·trait crllei' }lo!raboal:
ity~'":Jlain-old iilequallty
"The a..... of women's studies . of ·
ty.
in the social acienoes iS too new,
too important to be clouded by
"I was ooziDg self-mastery. 1
=testea oonclusious, no matter knew I .was good, and pGIIBibly
how fitting their catch Pfuues. the best in my &amp;dd. But DOlle
'There may well be a 'motive to of that mmnt aD,Ything =til I
avoid success.' So far, its ez- got a job."

Segal Says Agenda for t}]e Collegiafe Meeting
Contained False and De{aniatory Statements

after

:l!,

poaaibilitY

......_t

tiJ!uanoo. and
of
teacbint
.
mental ..:n:-at.._"t._ .,U~

a. r. ,.,,_ ......, .._ .. ....., • -

-IUf).

UJ. uo .,....._..;..

--

;r.

lfAit£ftT
.... _ _

•Mter a. c«pnnzuz

WAn UI'OIII2"ao -

-

~ ~·- w.-

Giftll the _ . . _ ol 8rumciaJ and ....-;,.......
lllllllt b; tba ~.!" ~

to -

-~ ...~

and ...._... our

- Staff Senate

'NI'illi:rl~-....r.wo
•-" - -

HAlOLD L SEGAL
p,ofo,.., of
llology · ·
CLYDE F HEliEII
Auoa.rl.

DR. WATLAND P. 8llrl'H
DIIIBCI'OR OP Dm OOLLI!IGIIII
OPPICB 9P-TIDO DIIIBCTOK

CHliSTINE 1.
DUGGlEIY
....,,..., , _ _ .
of A
H.V. Ufkr

=:..
th.........,

·~~

0:

Aooodo10 ''"'-•-NoRMAN STRAUSS

of ,......,..,.
DAVID X SMITII

,.,...,_ ,...,.,_
of lllology '• .

~~!'J,i!;-Df:!f.;,."';:;!,..,

RAYMOND L EWELL of Engl-n"'
r&lt;o~o.... of
Sdonco

·

Choml&lt;al
Engl-n,. •

March 30, 1973

PROP. liAliOLD L. 8I!IGAL

:X,~~~~

Dl!lAII HAL:

..,.

The stslf of RCC, well aware
of the 1-.1 for more faculty
_
-. ;.________
_ __ ......
involvement
and ~ _,_,._
.._:.;..

'I

•
April 3, 1973

133 CROIIB1' BALi.

BUFPALO, NEW YOill&lt;

14214

D&amp;\llPA~: ~.
I am in &lt;eceipt' Of Your letter
ol March 30 wbicb I find to
¥.-

:

be ·nOt Only'~ to'Oilr
~ bu~ gnmu~ insultmg. The unputations of your
post«:ript are beneath conlempt and tmdeservirig of the
dignity of a reply.
The activities ol what ou
describe as ''Uie stslf of Rtc"
to f 0 C U S llpOil an individusJ
they wish to DOminate as master are UIIIWlOptioaable. They,
or lillY other group, are perfectly entitled to....U. such" pro~ and indeed their
.
their
mterest
in : ~ Cql)ep
vl8wa

=

· iiaiticuJar~CODBider-

Gt1TU'1.I~INTS
-·· •f;loiL . ~ ' ItJ!8111118 .bom
- y .I.JJYY -C'V
· Yout ·curientl,y ~ . atti-

previowl=u:

tude and
Director ol tbe c.
you 1-.1 to be
·
that
faculty, DOt "sta«,• are reapcmaible far t.eac:blq activities in
this Univenity mid to no ~
eztent for tbe detembwlinn of
.....,_
·
academic ·~ in its teadiin«
units. Y0111: -am..t at efhave taken several constructive forts of iDtereeted r-dty to
stepa to that end. 'lbey- bave meet this ....,_a,mty and &amp;&amp;planned a series of small din-- sertiClll tbat tbe RCC "star
ners for interested · r-d+- ~ will llllllle the IQIIIlicable deterbear their views on tbe ~ ~tiona; 110111illle lll81.cad bedirection of RCC and::=
- · lW if i t - DOt eo·cl8erl,y ezsome commitment far
~ iD :pear ..-_
• ·
inpu~ In additiau, they
WI
The ~II/'.0..,. proconsidered --.1 - · ..__,_
~
.......
-=-~~
....;;....&gt; ~
ty, youraelff induded. as CUidi- ....-~ dates or Master of Rcc 'lbey lmowledlinl
~ ,oa ADd othhave a liat of S pretem,d can- . era are flee to _,.,.ay it
diilates (you ue not ol H&gt;o. with w11ateyw _.......,,tioas
three) and they ... ~ 'you· ~ wisb .., .....
Clll diacowfoaa with their lint
...._
c:boice.
- .
• ........ _,
'I'benfaie, it -.Ia be qalta
~L.
PILI).
~ for the Co1Jeiiate
hllalbly to COMider lbe piAi1EII a.illww .:..;,..;..
The ........ . _ ... til to .....,... • farum far tha _.
- . . . a l - . . , ·• wldit _....,
al tha ..._ faclnl tha com m unIt-,. ~ ..._,. 11a111
_ . _ P • P era lllllls •

J:! . __ . . .

•-

..;....=

-

-rs:rin~cr..:
::11::!':

-~~
...:.....__ ol the Pro~lat
wblle~
~•
-~
OUr•-..- •-u

•

cr.ocma .

•.&lt; ,~,. ·~·~··· '

mver-

sity- and tbat Rachel C.......
~ can CCllltinue to .. ...,foeus far tt.e ~

pared

' ~

-£.

-

.....,

Adlainisfratioa _

A. ._.._ ..uJrD

· P .8. .In double c:becking I
lound that aeveral of the signers of y.ow lettet bad not actually attended 'your meeting
nor were they fully aware ol the
solid planning elfom of the
RCC stslf and its coocurrent
continl!ing dia:lOIIU8 with Jobn
Howell end his CoU- U . proposal ·In all boDMty, I find
your recent elforts to force
yourseH an RCC as Master
ClllUDtezproductive to the enlarBemant of teaching i&gt;'9lrtams
inenvironmental studies 'at this
University and the· effortS of
RCC to serve as the focus for
these programs.

. .;IE~~~ ·

:I:!J:g

GREPbRTER.,
•_
_.......,......_
__
.... _olu.:_
_ &amp;"!"_.,_r
......,_llr
___
..__

elforts to develop valid educatione.l opportunities in this area .
through til!' College. We propose to aerve as a pro .t empore
governing bosrd of the College
with Professor Segal as Colleae
Master and with the aildition
to the bosrd of additional fa&lt;&gt;.
ulty members wbo are willing
to participate in its teaching
activities, as well as appropriate
student representative8. We ad
the Collegiate Assembly to .,.
dorse this governance an'8JI4'&gt;' ·
ment at the Mrliat opJ,ort,u,tty
so that we may 'proCeed with
the stepa that are hecessary to
provide teaching olferings in
this a..... for the •coming academic year.
Yours ~y,

1

Genaldy, ... 11111111

"';:rii!Wr.

111:y l..lbradel. wll , . . _, .,..,...
houiSaf~-Gaod ' l'tllllly,

-011 ....... ...._._

bald
will be
.llaweWr, faeuity input April QO; - ......., . . .. 21:
,t. ·-~· 8 _8 8 p.m. ia~l48 • ill ..aoa.-l In 6liit, IDGit ol
...._22.
))~ rJ ur P'~!!!!If il:.I1.&lt;l • '\£1 -"J41ie~,JIIIIIr~-&lt; · · ·..-- - · ..... ~
. .. ·",.
• =--•·.,..am~ - lllmptai -,~~-,
•tiel!- iar cbaDaee in the Pro- aleo Oil tlie list tliat tbe ROC by bolnc opait llanl 9 un. to 5
.
~ Staff Seaate- Cllll8li- staff Jl1mmed to invite to tllllir p.m. an April 21 - fn1m . 2 p.m.
--...; a npart from tbe Blec&gt; amaJl"'m-_
tD 9 p.m. .., r..- Sunday, - r

o-·~,, hu

!:*,.:,ur_:..=:. .

1t • {

C

-:::::::;,~=;::~n~?~·MQ~
-~"~N~'btl~il~•~M~..,=;,;
·-,_~,..;..;....;;.;.:::::;::..,.,::-.:..·::;
~~:~~

~ttee, and~

report

~~

-

-.cy,, , ·

., WAYLAND •· .8l.llft'll

then _..,... 1111111 mid·
nl8ht on ltiDell dilL ·
1,

�A,.iJ 19;

-~

.Z9T3 ·

s·

'!'

Wzse Use of Black Economic·Power
Called Key to Changing The-System
"'nne

llCIII8ml8ll

llbout -·re

Black America u beiq a .vlable ecooomic Iaroe, nor doM It
in moet see it u bema
aeything other dian a cbuity.
. . • Itd.-.'t see it u beiq a
thiDa tbat DillY have a viable
approach for them. It doein't
see it u beiDa a COIDIDIIIIity
or growing indepeodimce wt.e
there DillY be real dollars."
ManY. large Clllllp&amp;l!ieo, be
said, m8ke millions eal:h
sellinl to blacb but ~
never _..t a ain,Je I*IDY in
IDMIIin8ful black economic d&amp;-

·

JOing to haw. a bot aummer is
.i\IBt thtzt, ~ Tbe ooly

place that's KOint to be bot is ·
our backyard."

.

Earl c. Graves, publiBber or
· B/acll Enterpri8e mapzioe, wu
addresaint the Worbbop on
Business Opportunities for Mi-·
DOrity EntrepreDI!OlJI!, sponeored by the 1J/B Of6ce of Urban Affairs and the School \of
Manqement Minority Management Aasistanoe Prosram.
held at the Statler-Hilton Frivelopment."
day and Saturday.
lie was clearly cai1inJ lot a·
Notins the abundaDca ol
reYOlution but "not . . . any
producllj in the typical Ameriviolent type of TeYO!ution. . . .
can home which ~ made in
rm not proposing that we d&amp;Germany and Japan, Gra. .
stroy anything. I don't pn;
asks, "How ma~~y · people have
poee that we bum anything.
something in ·their home that
Understand, lboee clays are
says either made in Watts or
j!One forever . .. . White Amer- black leadership," he carries a made in Bedford- StuyvM&amp;nt,
lC8 is prepared and ready to
major message to whites: ''That or made in the Southside ol
deal massively with us. Tear- the black consumer market is Chicago. Not a one. . . . lndoed
1
ing up OW' own neighborhOod, not homogenous:''
one micht wonder H it woula
because we never did get downWhite America, Graves con- not have been bettar for us to
town, that is gone forever.
ten!!&amp;. sees Black America as have been at war wilb this
"I am talking about making a " giBilt monolilb. For the country in terms ol what it is
it in the system . .. , dealint most part, when a white Amer- we have been able to exwilb the sys,tem in a way that ican picks up The New York pect. . . ."
the system understands. In my Tima and sees a story about
view, that means a selective 'wdfare,' that's everybody ~ and judicious use of our buy- black. It doesn't mattar that
Gra- remains hopeful, bowing power."
social assistance is extended :~. ' ] : "6!.,~frs~
Mont 1-...-.nt tluon C.nadll
to far more whites lban blacks.
.. ,_.The see black.
thin.!! to do for the b'-~
~ comBlack Americans, Graves · · ·~0 !..ue,. what the story muruty, but because it is our
pointed out, earned $51 billion or its merits, blacks are always motheral~~ ~~'lb.a shareTbereof
last year, representinJ a mar· pictured in the negative wilb
-~ .._.
ket that is larger than Canada little mention taken or the ~&gt;en; will be blacb on boards or ma-one that would be, if it were ic effort of 90 ma~~y-the ma· jor corporations, not because
a separate country. the ninth jority of black people - wbo we suddenly became smart By SHARON_E;o~
"litemln-,n Lichter bas at. largest free .· market in lbe struggle against tremendous we were smart 20 years ago-tempted to create a worlt which world.
odds in a frequently boetile but ~ the major corc"GiVfll: No Bread, An En- bolb radiates and is ,lonnally
Suppoee, Graves suggested, climate to educate their chil· tiona, . ~ it's • ~
·oounte&lt; and Dinner for Fif. ~ on the peroeption ollhne black people "stop drinking a dren or to i:arve out ...,;., op- ness.
.
teen" serves bolb as Cl!e title in its moe~ .U.jeclivir foi'ms. · · ... particular • brand Of coffee. portunities for themselves and
And the way to achieve that
for. a. new Morton i..ichter play
Ss&gt;oos0red by lbe Depar1ment Theil, .the food company would their families."
.
be told his aucfiemce
and aa ; a. ai!eminalY ll!ctuai .or Theatre .and lbe Center for have to stop making that cof'l)lus, be says, he tries to , last · Fr·iliay, . Jo tbrour\b ~
s~• ·Rllh h •int!Ndi- Theat:re·o-...:...:...... theplaywill fee. Tivot's ho'o'(,i\nporlant .the convince the" advertising · com·. economic'pr-&lt;~88ure;· tbroullr ·
enlii•Of a· mathematical eDrCise.
·-black. community '18."
munity that blacks travel in asking over and over again,
pedaaps,. or another aud&gt; form PF~ ~urtynigb.!m"\~.m.
But very few ol the leaders airplanes, that their -offices are "What have you done to give
of ~ behavior. In fact, a
•
-.::: in "White Busirless , A.tn&lt;lrics" equipped wilb typewriters, ~t us back a piece of the ~ .,
boWiiYm:, there is plenty of ~yetteAv"'!~'?.!:!is... _,_.: seem to realize it.
they are; in fact, "an attractive pie wtiidf we nave spent•Wtib0 ·;
bread in the pla,y, and no one ul
to nm ~......,.. .............,.
Qeffin~ that message acroas
ke b
·teria."
•
· billions.
- n .. lmows If there is an en- evening. There is no charge for 18
. wha-tGraves prac" oes and
mar t Y any en
you m
· · ·
.,_.,.
all ""-·-' -~-'-'
the P"""- performauoe, and
w
The 3M'I
'"'be ayatem will respond
counl(er at · ·~ s
tickets for regular l&gt;&amp;lformances preaches. .
.
when it is in the IICIJDODiic in- •
no dhmar, and to comp . te are awtilable at die No r f o n
. "!' pre&amp;J.dent or his own pubF&lt;&gt;&lt; the black businessman, ' tereat ol thoee wbo CDiltroi the ·.
~ onJy .~CI&lt;llWn peOple Union ticket ollioe at a ~ lishing. ~ be produce&amp; 8 . ~i!~'ie ~ ;::;:-,.,.,.;:. system. It.. is for this reaaon
subtitle. -..8 worlt in of 50¢ for
and $1
..
sary to make it in busin.- _
that I "* ·you to tab out your
progreaa,", hints a.t the"'!'&gt;- f~ ='thuo.,~ ~ for~b~ck~JSinessman Now money, management and mar- l::..~d~:,:. ~~"':
118
=~ibeL!d&gt;,...!:;&lt;:Jl'll· (theatre at 7:46 p.m. , for the ' entering third year, ~- ~J.;.,y, he contends, is par- 110 I a . tonJ,ht and pick out
......_. ol ID88tinp. and · .. .. a -regular performanoos Clllly.
ture ·has ~ profitab ~ "cularly scarce for black busi- oae product you liaft any'Cboaa . ,;;;:;:,. ~- '" ·
• •
.
lUI moeption and advertWng w
when! Inside or oataide of the
bouse - car, food prodDcla,
Time! !n:botJ;Ill!!.azb\izaiY. .and
· ·'
controned ~ 150,- Like it&lt;&gt;&lt; not, be says, "a black ei«tronk: Pillet. credit eardo
relative capacities, ~ e ·
A;tenure;d UfB ~JII!!IIl- 000 with an estimated 550,000 businessman bonowing money ~ policy, etc. - and
criticalagont, a variable,qainst bllr "' consid8rlllf. "!' olfer. fiom pass-al
. oog reademhip and is , today does so in the urban af- write !bat COIIIPUIY and uy
Which oae may "clisdDver aoe's Hac:beJ. Carson CoiJeale to !'&amp;- carried on all major .rlrlines.
fairs departmellt,_ the special what "-ve .you done for us r&amp;own d!:ytbon" and thus, to 811!"" come 1ls nat master, "!""'rding
Graves is also president or all'airs department or the mi- ~
extent; direct one's own exist- "! RCC BPObamea !nn Bed· a management consultant firm nority loan diviSion ol a bank."
'I1ll. kind of ecooomlc polieoca.
.
dint and Beverly p......_
which he formed to advise 01'His coal ·in this area is to tics, Grawe IIQIIII8t:s, "-Y
As it dow 8lista, and . u , it
ROC especl8 a final deciaion pnizatiooa on urban all'airs have bi¥b ··~ as _ , well be the avinl ~
will be - t e d APril ~22, by the end of- Apjil'llle candl- and ecooomic development. busiJ-.ien wbo happen to be for the ~ md
the play Ia a ..,- al108etiDga date Ia "emiousl,y in......W,~ His clieniB include the ~ation- black and - _u blade busi- 'have nolll' ol our Clllllltry.• ·
aDd .....,.tioas llll8pi!IDded in. Ms. Paigen reported, and .;. a1 Bank-o1 North America. the neasmen." The rules or ~&gt;e~q
Gra. . .;.y. be 1a COIIIIIliUed
yet dependent on, aome upecla diac:wlliq d e t a i Ia of the u- Barbados Tourist Boud and in bu8ineas abould have "to the f.act !bat tbinp will be
of moe. A aintle. IIIQII*It. i,n rangemant wilb .his depuQnent. the N- y or1r. City. Heaiihl!lld difterent applicatioas fa&lt; whii'!S ~t for my md for
the lint aoeoe; to. .IIKIIIIlP.Ie; 18
Rachel Careon baa hem with- Hospital COrporalioD. _.
and blacb, he urps.
bladt ddldrm all ovw til
talllible II? the __pojnt o(oOm- out4"nas-'ainoe .the rea1111a- . While busineoa in America
~ ~ Gra- counlr)-. I loot to a .,..._
~~~~-~-~
tion I a at }iOW!IIIber ol 101m remains white ~ Gre- contends, should be the aame wt.e .....m.tui .liD will be
...,.. u
·VJIIWU ones,
Howell. Tbe 0o11o!fe .._. aays, thia does not _ , . there also: "I set the ame staDdarda o&amp;nd to daD .wifiiiD lba
lima Ia ..,_ Co a lllaDdstilL CJ11"91lY dNw up a liat ol11111l- is oo QPI!Ol1wlity for blac:b to required ol any buai-, not '.u.lcm Canlanta ~·
Tbe - t Ia .ultimaliei.Y abet. Urad laculty wbo be.,. hem move into the free •terprise because it's lad in ....x-'ul Not (jabe M) director alwtla
leNd, buwawr,:and ~ b&amp;- adive in RCC aDd ..m.t at llyBtem. But it doM _ , . that "white ~ b,Jt ~ it's daln; « cliNc:tlx ol ...._..,
dDa: ......t.at:arted -~ muque a abort li8t of
pNierred II&amp; lb8n half ol one Ji18f cent tJie sys11em !bat warb. In my ........uc.alioM, or the ..litmillllllqlei'JSlOe has instaDtlf names to fill the Y8aiDC7 Tbe or- total ~ .-pta are o111oe, you do the job and you· ~ in eberp ol dluk
bam ilnn8fGnDed into a thealri- lint D8li&gt;il on that liat . . . in·'
by black IJuai.- do it
or y&lt;Mre , _ • • • - - - :
!bat _..
cal ..._
•
·
vi ted to D-t with tile RCC and !bat Clllly 2.2 per OSlt ol white or black." ·
for •
'l'bla Ia - an illdl5• Tbe '!O"Jr. Lichter mai,nta!DI, staff &amp;Ill! ~t hia ~ all ~ - bladt-.....~.
Gra- . . . md .... - t ol1he
111Mb
• .wl m ~ in~ for the eouep. .F'DIIooftllt lbat The ClniJ
aests for othor biB ........... Ia _.,_ jabe, but; lalla,
mind, Ill W.U • • ~
lllllllilia, · the itd wled - ' Ria ............, wbidl "a
~
.
an ~ ol lba . , - .
illlell "'f ~wljpd.
lllDIIIlY to . . . . the ciuldldllle ...-~vee~ ..... be _ _
J'itd&gt;... Ill
with po&amp;- . ...... -~ their taleBia •
a.klfD....., . ~~ an ·a«er, wblch Ia , _ belq .-;.n. _..., for ...,.. jlectiwoildvaU...forbla-. " - ......

.

'No ~Bread'_ Debuts Tonight

As Work Still in Progress

....wz.aon.

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=

~

-u.

.,_we-

w.

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"'that
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a:r d-.
at aJ.Y
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wu'-1
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.':d '=' ~" belp me. out. I did - M:1 A ......... mini w - - =:t'T.t':'.o~.=
==~~~(~:, ~t.-~~- ~~·;...:.': ~"-. .~:
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for 800 ,.... aDd that
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to
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woik for liD ,~ par..._

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.

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
UMINA&amp;.

MIOlANICA1

•o••-••

N~

Conli'olB,.,_._ '

Humant'ioaO!

Ac&lt;:o~

aNl 1M Triad Sllopbe Pllil6Jie.
Unmroity of Ooiiiorm. at.Bezb.
ley, 224 Parker, 8:80p.m. CGihe
at '8 p.m.

--...cru.. -·

muRSDAY-19

How
SOCIO

to Mine Gold ill 8ocial

~&amp;'.L..~
AnaJym Diviaioa.' Nalim* Bu-u of Stududo,
3: ~~:!

1M Pubr,

Vt:-Depmt.

mentofcmi~

uc:n.• '·.

~

~~~..:=-==
:ry~ 'Ca:.t ~";;,

ake
someone
who excites you
-.
te see
.
"The Lickerish
·Quartet"
~

"Fruitily beautiful movie!"

ITHE NEW RADLEY METZGER MOVIE. j
W ITH SILVANA VENTURELLI , FRANK WOLFF ,
ERIKA REMBERG , PAOLO TURCO .
IN EASTMAN COLOR.

'R-..::.::=___
~

In.~tiaaal I;r....,t

'ii:o

"'·
CouDdl -

•

FilMS"

. TIN Brig (Meba, 1964)', 140

=.!:~)~~~
p.m. No admiaimi cbup.

ucna•

lAW
P~TWNWJ BaMraptcy
Marjorie ~ U/ll Sc:bool

r-•.

of
Law, 77 W. Eqle St, 7 p.m.
Tbio ia lbe fowth in a oeriea
of oix lectunoo for p~at=J~ by 1be /B
MUSIC/IMEA_TII PIUBna~•

Copemicuo, a

l'ieoo

.

ocoli!ld for

D8JTiltor, uijnd eboruo · and an

ensemble of uiM inotrumllpta, 140

c.~ao . P~.. -~ ·;,;...,...,

Vincent Canby of the
New York Times says,

DiatriMitilf by,~, judubtafll~t~s

H~ ·

··· - -

Lao Smit,~ ~ compoaer,
and Fred Hotle, Britiair . . - .
mer and writer. Mr. Smit will alao

' :"!
~r4Ie:J:'.,.ih=~
talk on Copemicua.

Ticketa. ..., anilable •t lbe
Norton Hall Ticket Ollice: gener.
al admiuion, fS; otudenta. $L Co-

=':.f~~~U/8
~

of lbe UniwrOitY&lt;o'
. eom-monation.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Propos~

to Limit TUition Waivers
Viewed on Campus as Problematic

A SUNY proposal to limit (that is, one that'acknoWlediiOS or unavailable in their own
tuition. waivers for foreign stu- the primacy of Stony Brook countries. Of these, some 490
dent&amp; as part ol a plan to trim and U/B in serving SUNY's hsve tuition waiveno and an$5.7 million from the total foreign s tude n t population) other 350 hsve graduate otuvalue o{ tuition waivers would within which each campus will dent assistantships augme~~ted
hsve a "devastating" effect- on be able to assign waivers as it by an automatic tuition waiver.
Ibis campus's international stu- sees fit. Hull has already asked Her office is very strict about
dent programs. according to all students who are eligible to · granting ·tuition waivezs only
France J. Pruitt, acting di- apply f o r scholar incenl;\ve to tbooe who can dEinl&gt;nsbate
rector of tbe Office ol Foreign ·money to reduce the· finarieial financial heed, Mm. Ptuitt" imStudent AJfaira.
•
bun!en on SUNY. ·
phasizes. Saine 460 foreign atu•
Some concern has been ·ex- dents pay full tuition out of
AocordiDg to a Mareb 5
memo from SUNY's · Vice pn!ssed that the second of the their own resouroes.
Chancellor for Finance and memo's reoommendations vioMrs. Pruitt hopes tbat Y(hstBuainess Harry K . Spindler; lates t h e anti-discrimination ever policy finally emerges will
( State University .is obliged to policy of the SUNY Boaid of allow foreign student waivers
restrict tbe value ol tuition Trustees if whst is called for to be reduced by attrition and
-.,;aivers SUNY-wide to a total is the denial ol automatic tui- will not ~ this campus to
of $11 million (since reduced tion waivers to sOme graduate pull financial support out from
by the Legislature to $10 mil- assistants on the basis ol na- under students wno cannot conlion). In order to accomplish tionality.
tinue without it
this, Spindler proposes the fol- Foreign Students Most Affected
"Some of these students are
Althoug!l.._other groups would only a year from finishin¥ and
lowing reductions and estibe affected; no single group of hsve no . place el10e to. go, ' she_
mated savings:
1. Applicatiqn of scholar in- students would be touched as 88
centive for dissdvantaged stu- markedl!' as campus foreign
be
·
20,25 per cent a year through
..dents .(summer program waivera not affected) --$2.2 million. ~=ts. th~ ~,!'ru~~~ attrition, she indicates. A non2. Application of scholar in- some 1300 foreign students each gradual reduction will produce
centive for eligible graduate semester, most of whom are at- enormous i!J-will, she predicts,
students and removal of auto- tracted here by graduate pro- as. well as personal hsrdahip.
matic tuition waiver for foreign grams that are highly regarded {Continued on poge 6. col. 3)
graduate students--$1.0 million.
3. Reduction in waivers for
other foreign students--$1.0
million.
4. T i g h t e r restrictions on
employees--$.3 mil-

\t'ai~ers .,;;~d

rr:;ers for

Total: $4.5 million.

further .\ctiOn
- "Ail "Spiildk!i-pointil out; fur-

ther action would be n~
even if these reductions were
made to sufficiently reduce the
total. He further proposes cam,
~ ceilings on tuition waivers,
mviting input from the cam·
puses on this "extremely important and sensitive me.tter."
Tbe Spindler memo is a pro~ and beans-the "three posal not a statement of policy,
sisters o{ life." And it is tbe and at this point tbe campuses
WilrQith of "our ~!her are in whst Graduate Dean
1110011
Oiiiiil"at nig!Mbat MI:A1liater . Hull called "susmakes planta grow. "'The JuDar ~· "Uuii&amp;tion!'· 88 to the
cycle inllneoces lbe cyS'Ie ol life plan tli&amp;t.- Will fiJiall ..WI&gt;
itaell More-births occur at the ~PI the Deed ~ tl&gt;r
full moon tban at other times beJ~jlif.l!UiDoi;~ U/B&amp;d-·
for example, Ms. I..opn said.
miniaaators li a v e indicated
Bom of our mother the Earth, tlieir bopefuJ._ .tbat the 4JndiaD c:hildren are instinctiv... point proposal will be replaced
(Continued on P&lt;J6c 3, c:of: 4)
with a falrly adjudicated Calling

Women's Role Said
Centr-al to Indian Life

~uced b~

Joint Grad Program Set
For UIB &amp; Stony Brook

A new grsdwite program,
which will provide pro&amp;pective
lawyers wilb tbe quantitative
·skills needed for professional
careers in inodem city, subur·
ban, state and federal government, will begin next fall on
two campuses of tbe State University of New York.

UIB. ~t.e~~

both~C. ~

......wa

normally take five years.
Contln..V. Effort
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer
aaid tbat the combined Stony
Brook-Buffalo program exemplifies State University's "con.tinuing effort to create innovative and effective educational
programs without duplicating
existing academic resow'a!s at
. our separate .c ampuses.w
He noted that the program
inoolJ&gt;Or_&amp;te&amp; • two objectives of

Ten students will begin the
combined law and public policy
program next September with
!' four-year curriculum that will
mclude study at U / B and
Stoll)' , Brook and, ~r internship programs WJth ~GYem­ ~ · ~ty.'a- ~.2,. Master
IDj!!ltal agencies. In four yea.-..
students·l!llrll - l&gt;c!th . ., ~~·
·Master of Sclence.&amp;gnee :in at- ~ta studY dd' incowqod ·
ban and policy ·sciences from movement from CI!JIIPUB to camStony Brook and a J.D. (IJoo.· pus by University graduate
tor of Jurisprudence) from studenta and faculty.

-wm.

SPA ~State at 'lm[JQS§e' on Wages.

'l'boulb other unlveniU., In·
dudlna Harvard, the Unl..,....
· aity of CaHfomia at BerUJey,
· and 1be Ullhwslty ol J&gt;oau.)iJ.
vania,
haw -Jaw
lly
wated liiiilJar·
dd ~
poljcy
the

Brook-~
ocwnblnellm

~~-~:

:';a~uni-*Y

�2-

. .

~

A,.a J2, JP7$

• - . ~ ·•· • -- ..:_, 'SPA 'eoiiri.Cil ·-

. -- ---

. -~ -

~

,

N~Clat!DSC~~tans 'Aavi3ed'to . New·~~ Offers

Jl~v~:
. f~~d ~h~
Jews
IIIJ IIRAIIDN'EDELMAN&lt;
:S
I

.t

•

()~Merger Aid T,o-'Yo-Yo' Dieter
'

.~ .

_. _.. .

.

-· .

• --.-;::.........,._ . . · .· ,
• ~~-~Ia·
NCitlllqie-~
"Aa Cbrll&amp;laal, - · hue. ·
live·.~- 111; !!W~~te to the o6e. ~ who has
' lailecl to ._..r in time ol
~.. A~a))_~!a&lt;lon ~dieted vii a larle
.Jewioh need. What happened
(SPA) Will ~ m ~ number of pcJUDda dian watdlin GeJman.y duri111 World War
~ to COD81~ !' COII8ti- inJ the acale creep back up,
D muat oot ............. ap.in in
tution for an °J:111111Z8!iOn to be often p a s t hill ariliDal hiJb
the Soviet uDiOil.'hknOW!' ~ SUNY-Umted. The weight mark, as sooa as ealoneSister Ann Gillen, ..-:utive
constitution '!"ould have the ef· counting stops. But members ol
director of the Na!Xmai Interfeet of "!"~ SPA ~ the the U/B community wbo are
...u,ioua Tal&lt; Force on Soviet
State Um~ty F~enrtion ol overtly obMe Will have an .opJewry, appeared on campus last
T~rs (SUF:J') mto a ...,.. portunity to break this ~
...,.. to publicize the exiateoos .
coUective. ~ ~t for alizin&amp; "yo-yo" pattern in a
ol ber orpnization and the
State UDIVel'81ty p~8!JIIionala, """ weight-losinJ program that
Soviet J-.,._
The Assembly will lie ~t- combines behavior modillcation
to representatives
lng . in tbe JOBke of a 3-1 yes tecbniques with a periiCIII8)UJed
o1
Campua Ministry, Slater
vote on the 111!"11"': by SPA mediaillnut;ritional .piogram.
GiJio!oa .ootac1 the· vaJ:ioua typea
fl!""'bers belloting. m an ~The program. which ~
ol·.NpJ'IIIIIiPft Wbich have bee·
VJSOry_.referendum m )fardL
of ten hour-long ~ sesswns
suffered by Soviet. ,r..,. .,_
.
.
Sta~ ' the ;Mf01'811ilum following an initial mterview/
hundreds of years. Tbere are .mSu!nee of Israel; which live found 1~ ; SPA ·~ in ' -l!Yaluatibu. was conoeived and
n.,.., for pample, 20,000 Rua- them hope."
• ·.
f&amp;YO&lt; of the a1!iliation and 4J:1 • ol'pJilzed by psydrlatric social
aian.Orthodoz relilrioua centers, · C.mpus Pwlltlon Drive
opposed. 0 n I y d~ worker Gloria Whittaker and
which serve the 4ll million So- · Sister Gillen's organization · members of SPA were eliaible Dr. Isaac Alcabes, 8880ciate
viet Christians at a ratio of one has also begun a petition dri-fe, to vote. Overall results liave professor ol social policy and
chwch per 2,000 people. Haw- administered at U/ B ·by the been broken down by faculty community services, both affili.
ever, only 60 synagogues exist Campus Minis::ry, in support of and NTP categories, showing ated with the School of Social
for the 2,151,000 Jews .in the the Jackson-Miii&amp;-Vanik legis- 925 faculty in favor and 332 Policy, Dr. C. Cblouverakis, asSoviet Uniorr: a ratio of one to Jation.
opposed and 300 NTP's for and sociate professor of medicine
43,000.
"Christians must see this as 79 against.
and director of the 0 be sit y
_Over "!"'turies &lt;&gt;! repression, · a human struggle," Sis,ter GilResults for U / B's two SPA Clinit;. E.J. MeY;e~ M~~
Sister Gillen continued, syns- len maintained. "We now have chapten; were: Buffalo Center Hosp1tal, and . Clinic dietician
as . well, as . Hebrew an opportunity, tlirough the Chapter, 78 yes and 52 no and Patricia Tracy.
1~~J~·~ve,:. ~./e&gt;~ ..,!&lt;! .W.orld,c;:ouncil of.C_Jiun;hes and Health Sciences Chap~. 31
Individuals !JCC8P~ ~to~
!tl
f!P.teiii.Ua:lqqiJ~ """' 'Vati4&amp;D .~ ·toclarify ycslllld-i5no. ---. p.r~Jr • m will . pertiapate m
!""i· ~ '!lil',~tiiJSf#il; litJd. rectify. : ~.- si~&lt;u&amp;l;ipQ,,: al!.d
These VDtes were also re-. weekly grDIIJ!_sessions a~ which
of religiOIIS continwty . .·Ohly to help ·to raJ&amp;e the COllBCIOU&amp;- vorted by· .categories· In the cues to modify over-eating ~
Center Chapter 50 fsm.Jty were ' liavior will 6e lesrned Dr. .AI30 rabbis now live in the So- ness Of Soviet Christians.
viet Union, and, of these, ~~
"'tis true," she 11dded, "that in favor and 3a opposed· 28 cabes lliJ!I Ms. Whi~ ~
are over 70 years of age. W1th people all over the world are NTP's voted yes and 19 • no serve as lesder-pertiapants m
!"' Hebrew schools in exia.le!Jce, being oppressed. But the So- In the Health Sciences, 2:f fsC: these grou~ meetings at which
1t becomes e&gt;:tremely dillicult viet Jews are most ready for ulty approved the merger and enrollees will be encouraged to
for young Jewish !""" to study our help, ready to leave, ready 14 did not; 4 NTP's were in .disc;uss their f~gs and exor to become rallllls, she ad~ to risk more. And as the So- favor and one was against.
penences relating to the proExit Tu
.
viet Union becomes more seA _.,_ to J
h D
gram. The program will be
Another repl1!§&amp;ive' measure, cure it can begin to cope more
oco •..._
osep
""'!'• "positive and emphatic," Ms.
noted Sister Gillen, is the exit, readily with social change."
P.rogrammer. ~yst at U/B s Whittaker noted.
or educational tax levied on all
Sister Gillen concluded with ~p~ {~trea!w.,
Center . an~ lndlvlduollzed Reclmen
Jews ~~ _wish _to emigrate. a reference to _rather Daniel
tel
. di .d~ app~
During an· initial interview,
Each. individual IS .. taxed. . ac-. Berrigan the activist J;&gt;riest. rna Y 400 m ":' .
on
enrollees will undergo a brief
~hiseduWionalclevel, "If Berrigafi•'i$ correct in say' ~pus were eligible -- to vote medic a I tl86eS8Dlent by( Dr.
wllicb.airu~ of ,a ,,lew.iob, iug., tha~., evil exi!;to. in social ;:;:~ ..abo~t 200 votes ;actually Chlouverakis. Ms. Tracy will
ProlessJorfal, can run to tens of structures, then we have here
mg cas ·
.
.
take a fulf di_e tary his~ry "!'d
thousands of dollars. The fact an opportunity to act as indiDrew noted that State-wuie, a psychosocial questionnatre
that the Soviet gove':"_l~H'1tt has viduals, with Jess emphasis on the 30. chapters .of S~A break will. be ~tered: On the
allowed 30 or 40 families to em- institutional rommibnent. We down mto 59 categones (each basiS of this mterview, ""ch
igrs~ she insisted, only_clouds . can help our.;elves by making chapter being made ':'1' of both P"!?o?P&amp;D~ will_ be given . an
the. Jlii!W'• f"! the po!"'¥ re- our own religious institutioru; facu!ty and NTPs, With the e.&gt;:- md!vidual.imd dietary- medical
mama intact m the m&amp;)Onty of more sensitive to the real needs ception of the Central SUNY regunen to follow as part of the
. cases.
of people today."
Administration which has no ·program.
Sister Gillen's Task Force is
~cWty). Of these 59· categor·
In spite of their varied procurrently seeking ways to exert
1es, 54 approved mergm, 3 were fessionsl orientations, the proPreMUJe on. the American govopposed and there were 2 ties. gram's organizers are convlnoed
emment !0-.i!'teroede. A bill ·. • " ..
SUFI' has already approved that no weight-reducing pronowpending.mbothbollSe!'of
n...4the_ "!l!rgerplan_ b~a5to . 1 gramcani?e .successful.inthe
Gongress v.;ould ~~. ,RU881J!. a .. ep~.nffi~Q.
-l"",'.O~ty. ~ ··ind]!'&amp;ted, aJ1!1 l9.ng. run ~tliout ~g ha"'-"l
011 ;.
•·PI m'ffi.'-R.l'i:jb"Vllf G~"~-· il . the.,.. SP.A -~tative b1t1!&amp;1 eating behaVIor.
,...,..
o. • ' t~ man of the Departmenl -0 f Ed· ~unci[jll&gt;ptov.. at Ss~s
lained¥
. Dr. ChlouveraJDs e.&gt;:.,,:
.
flldl!
. -"-'tio'nat "'"""''
~~ -·~ ..
· "-tion, · has meeting, the new organizatiOn P
, unless dietary habits
r, me " l;!Oviet 11""
""
·wiH become fuJJy operative by are changed, the obMe indivldU,nion is iecure. According to been reapkcinted chairman• by mid-May. Meanwhile, SPA ual who tries to J.- -ight will
~VanikGI_IIeBn,ill ~ - Jacksont
.•,:, ~,:0~":: wliT"'.,';t!;;d~.!:·~ "!ould C;Onlinue salary negotia· fall Into' an u!Hiown cycle of
........,_
....., me ""'"'
.
~
boru; With the State for 1.973wiiJespresd support through- tember 1, 1973, to August 31, 74 (see separate story for statUs
out Congreaa.
·
. · 1976. :
·
of those sessions)
The nun noted lhlit ber
'!n a ~tter to Gibeon,_ Ketter Drew issued this statement
IPOIIP Ia also IIJ&gt;P8I!Iing to Am· S&amp;ld that the reappomgnent on the electim outcome·
eri&lt;,lan profeEionals, auch as was _made "on the besia of
"'Ibe vote is
clear
educaton and i:l8rgymeb. to · UD81l11DOUS IRJpport" from . ~ evidenee of overwbelmiJic
J&gt;Ni!ent the Cll8e to -their peers d~t, the EXec II t IV e port across the State in
m the Soviet Union, especially Commi~ of ~ Facult):' of of merger. What has transpired
as Interaction and ~ · Educalionsl Studies, Act 1 n g thus far on Article Ill (Salary

t:

18

GI'bson Rena'med
D
tH. ea.d

obviouslY

=

~~~. -~~ ·~~~=l~ty~~ -~&gt;

negOflationa.as . re,;""" .'·~· 101'~ ~ -Mfaln Bernard por:ona~·~· thethe· lli!Wil media~
~••, •• ~ ~,,.. R.. Gelbaum.. Dr..· Gftlaon baa . ~-.1!8ed frw aoJ.idar.
...,._......... m inierilation- --~~ ·
_.._,_~A of.._ _ _._
tty. The 3'.'2 pro vote on our
al
cniclal to the So- _ _ , as· """""""'
..., ...- campus ilr particularJi' aignlfi-• One IPOIIP ol ·par~ment
1.9811.
• aont becauae 't.b e · advoCates
. ~·frim Baetoo ,.... al- ~~~':t.t
-~\1.1! nat been viaible ,In auch
.._.,. l1tt8npted to obtam em- Acildia U-'-'tv . .
N
nlimban heretofore. It 18 hoped
.-ty for the 40 known .Jewllh
• • ~~ •.,. m
ova lhe,Y will now aurface and join
~ ol ............," ·•
Scotia,_ and "arlo 1,11 other the e«ort to
our ·c qu.W.
..
!JChoolli In-~ .
• . izadail .......... Nble ...,; that
'l'be Amlrlcu .Jewilh cam-·
In 19'71, hlllened ~ .acllnlr. aon deal ~ with the
--'11' hM been ~In dean ol _the· 8dloal ol Socllil ·Stalle'e poaltlon Clll all 'itema·
~- the . . - . . til ovw ~ CcJmma~!!ty Sal&gt;- thAt a!fect ·our"-- IUid cooID,OOO 8iMet . J - 8iller ODDr Gibaon'a NlcwtiaN in- dlta. ol ~"

"'Jecaaie ·~tion

m-

*:t :f:!.::.·

·mae

W:

~..r=" ~-=

clurle lhe ...._ ol f1llllll far
_..._ . . ... _
. . ...,_

pall ........ .. ..... ..........

~ 111e c,_ .~18llll now, II!:- lllld
tJ# W..,_ N• 1'--' . ~~~~ eou.e~ ~;:
lhe~alY
Ot·B
'
to the
~~~utGI (la)olllld _.. SPA
~
· eouDcit

dud8
-

'{llMt\T¥ 8dloof.P_,w

~1111!1111!111'rt'~m ._.., M.e de- icll&amp; ar&amp;lea Gd!Joak ~ to

...... ............. .......... . 1m'.._......
Gllce -

. ...
_ ....
. _8Dtoirrl
. . . J.a
. _tbaalllt...
_ _ the

-Tilt ,..._,..
• open

PIGPallil

....._e. a.p

~ lllll.t~

"* ol ......!lmPJ
lor........,._ . ...._.._.._rES
.... . Dr.-Ralllrt

altlarfll.......

...... - - ~ - .... ... ..... ., DINciDr., ~
=to~-~ .._..~~and lhe ..--.t1aat

Clll

BIIG~~~.F"t'asc~ .......
...Jt ................. c-a~t......, =~~.:r&amp;;~-*
J..w.
,......,..,..... ......................
---~~-

•

futinllllld nlfeecllDj; DurinK
the ""'-'iDc ,._, the iDdividual's blood~ nIUid becauae of a "moimory'• aopacity, the enzyJ~&gt;M tbat lriaer
the layinJ down ol fat work
even more elllciantl.v than before ao that the rate ol fat deJIO!!tion Ia accelerated: Sudl an
individual would have been better olf DJ)t to have dieted In the
first nlA-. Dr.
ouverskis
~
-

T..........

ID ~ ~

Behavior modillcation is a
technique that baa been used
suocessfully to !nat a range of
psy:chological dislirders, notably
phcibic behavior,. Jiut has only
teeently been used to retrain
habitual over.....tei&amp;. U n I ike
many other forms of therapy,
behavi&lt;&gt;&lt; modillcation does not
emphasize surfacinB or anslysis of. unclerlyinJ causes. Instead, the emphasis is on eJim.
inatm, unwanted behavior and
inducing desired or desirable
""'!avior. Alao part of the theoretical framework of the U/ B
weight-reducing program is the
discovery by PBYch!&gt;logist StsnleySchacterandhlecollesgues
that habitual over:""ters tend
to be more respon8J.ve to .externsJ cues such as the availability
of food than their non-obese
counterparta, who tend to est
~n the basis of intemal cues
like hunger.
Groupa will meet one evening
a week at the~. Any U/ B
faculty, stsft
r or student
who is overtly obMe is invited
to apply for the program by
writing to: Mrs. Linda Knuutila, c/o C. Chlouverakis, M.D.,
E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital
-462 Grider Street, Buffalo N.N
York 14215. P -lease U:cJude
name, address, pbone number,
age and sex, height and weight.
Applicants are asked to apply
by mail not by phone. Male
!'PPiican'ts in particular are bemg 90Ught.
Initial interviews are expected to begin durinJ the last week
in April.
Tbere is a nomina) fee of $20
for the program.
.Dr. Chlouverakis is also currentlyunder~afamily
study of obesity WJth an annual
grant of $51,094 from the Na:
tionsl Inatitutes ol Health. The
project Will Include study of
all members ol the obese subject's immediate family lncludinJ pre-obese lndi~

Fall Registration

�Indian Wo~-"'""~~.:r,,..---~~..;,.-------:~
(COIItiiu.ed froM"

tii.

I, col. 2)

=-

Mnta ; lidmlta ..dly.

dlat her,

!I..~':...~~
~f':.ew::.."':::::!·
pavementa; "'hhiy ~when! ' ftveci loNer; be8llliillr 1hea

~-~~
'wflenc=,~ry
elm~;;-~
dlll'inll !bt· ...... with ,.,. .....
....... ~
' 'tlie
t.b&amp;t.·~the. dOPolnant· one"

~.las aJiDoat Oriental, lielp

instruct the children in the way
of nature, which is at once life
style and religion. And in
spring and fall, children go o1f
into the woods by tbemselto Jearn about "our ~!her."
Given. this ron text, it is only
natural that Indian women enjoy what a white woman Clll1
nl call l'tical ·
In the
~ of~ Iroq':;r;:·Audrey
Sbanandoah ·explained, women
Ia the 'lead'
lee
"~
::X,Y rs•i
~~ ~'!"' ~:_.., 4

the~- ~~T~

. . . ,_,.,. . . ---Nul-.. up-

.

(

In ......... Qollooy 21, IIIIo -

...... -

hal!llnc

sblrtllnc to. find .

.' n..,
- - · corofully _ ,.... of ~
- . . _ , . . -lltlqJ~ U/B MFA,c a n d - -

Nazis in Norton?
'

Soo*plol, _ _ . . . . . by dc&gt;cunWary- dmm
t h o - of Dr. WIUiom Allen, . , - of hlstooy. Senkplol ha pined • reputation for his fnclnatlon blzomo
t n p : - fllureo u 111...- In thfte ond others
of hil . - The
hanp tiiiOUih Friday.

""'!-

Tarski, Putnam on Logic Panel ·
The Department ·of Phil~ heiJD fellowships. Although he
sophy Will sponsor a major con- is most widely known as a log·
ference on "Tbe Nature of ician, his reeeerch bas ranged
I.Dgic," April 20 and 21, with to such fields as set theory, a!A I f t e .d Tarsii, professor of gebra, measure theory • and
ma!Mnatics at Berl&lt;eley, and . point-set topology. A CbaracHi!My&lt;:"Putnam, professor of teristic of his work bas been
~ at Harvard, as prin- the discovery .of interronneccipal;,speakers. , .,
1 , •
·
tiODB·· betlween apparenUy di1 m additilm.~ conferenee - V8l'8e fielda. His books include
will ,include 16 infl&gt;nna1 work- lnlroduelion, ;to- Logil:; Lo~.
abop aesaillllll.
by scbolars Sei'II&lt;JIItici and MetanllJtMnllJtfrom three U/B departments il:s; and Urukcideqhk Theori£s.
(Philosophy, ¥athematic8 and In 1971, he was nominated for
Computer Science) and from the 125th Anniversary Award
five other universities (State at Ut-8.
University at Albany, Bulfalo
J. I . .
State, University Qf .Waterloo,
lY.IalO'r
'University of Roc:bester and
~
Bryn Mawr).
The conference is designed r ~ I
, u
yyc
for adV8IlCI!il graduate students, _ Tbe State University Conlogic teachers and reeeereh I~ struct.ion Fund ' bas awarded
gicians; scbOianL from more rontrects tl&gt;taliniJ $1.6 million
than 76 institutions in the U.S. for four major ~t rom,

4

Dr. Putnam specializes in the
philosophy of acience and math·
ematical logic. He is a member of the American Philosophical j\ssociation, the Association of Symbolic Logic, an!l the
American Mathematical Society. He has taught at Northwestern University, Princeton,
and the Massachusetts Institute
of TeChnology, 'llllli' ba's' received Rockefeller, Gu~genheim, and National Science
Foundation fellowships. His
latest book is Philosophy of

c0 ntraCts Awarded
_
Logie.

Do,.... C'Z..:lled UT.ater I'Dacility
'
I

::00~,

Quackenbush Company Inc. of

Buffalo, for two chillers; the
Ceramic Cooling Towe. Company-of· Fort Worth, Tems, for

~=e~

of

and

"lubricate"
tak- '
iniJ. catnip tea to make their
milk llow freely (also flOOd for
babies' rolic), -and drinkina the
astringeot tea brewed from the
witch hazel to c l - their 8)'11tems.

The slo11!16 are filled with
spices from India and 'l'urlteY,
she aays, but the native American bas his own spices. Tbe
twip of the spice bush
be
prepared lis a beven~~e ''much
better for youi bladder thanrolfee." .COoting.WitJI:fhe'spice1
bush' 'talu!s &gt;' tbe. mlisk» mnell'
away fr6nl wild pme, she advenised,twt'anthdchi:·~~.!ras is excel1
"""''
LUt to speak was Janet MeCloud, a native American from
Wasbinjton State who "went
siJ:years to' school and fiimked
every grade" and remembers
playing childhood games of
"getting drunk" with waterfilled beer · bohles. A " bandsome rompelling woman, she has -been ·active in the Indian '
rights m
·
1961
wh"'! she''
'·bl!r l!!'W.!l?'

can

leader ("good pef!!On" is a better translation than "chier')
leaves the earlh, the clan mother must lind a candidate lo
replace him. She looks for an
individual who will preserve the
Indian way of life. Rather than
ooeking a candidate who.is "!tUccessful" in terms defined by the
dominant culture, she looks for
one who, first of all, loves and
cares for his own family. With·
in the netive "longbouse" religion, clan mothers and their
faitbkeepers are "a 'chosen·p&lt;!O'
ple who · walk ·with' their ' feet ctiltllWi if
a 0 "'J~).I001
not toilchillg "the 'earth," li ate' Iisn!ie ~· W; u; 'a ' . . .....fo't ·mru:
tion· that places on them a · tancy in the cause' of her peospecial responsibility to lead pie, starting with the Northexemplary lives. Neither clan west Indiena' fight for their
mothers nor faitbkeepers are traditional fishing g rounds.
permitted to marry Christians Like her fellow panelists, Ms.
or non-Indians. In what panel McCloud spoke out of her own
member Gigi Ground termed past, recalling !bet her first ex"the uphill fight to Jearn the periences as an organizer were
Indian way," these women serve as the leader of a teena'ge gang
as a vital link between the in a West Coast slum.
traditions of the clan and those
seeking a true Indian identity Don't Try to Be Younc
in the present day.
Indian women keep their
strengdkand dignity even~ ea
Ulle the~. W~ . - ...... ,' ,.. tbey, &gt;giuor,,ddvilloe inaietlo•I!Wa&gt;
• Like the Boston •women· whO d&lt;&gt;ft1t ,a))oltry tobbe09tnlrig,~
put Our Bodies be f 0 r e Our said, in ·a quick jab to 'the
Selves, the panelists bad a Jot youth-worshipping dominant
to say about menstruation and culture. With the majority on
childbirth. "We never bad an the panel, she is a · ~thoverpopulation problem," De- er, an experience she \alled
wasanta (Alice Papineau) said "the most beautiful thiniJ."
proudly. ("Ifwhitepeoplerould
"I have never found a Iile
control IMir population, it style or relir,on !bet Com~
would be a lot bette] fDi us," to our own, • she_eaid, visibly
one of her sisters commented.) proud to be a native American
Population rontrol, like every and radiating a fem8Je quality
.other aspect of the Indian way, that even whites identify with
is natural. Abortion is not prac- ali "earth mother."

=~:.,
~~
.;"~~~-tt.,~~~
~~:~ 6:,ryp~~gis~
~i:~.'
p " .~.ACU~ia. .
.... _;;..
•' .
hi-'-- ' Ua . swildt k
and the e&amp;ru!:.~ . - ' . '.
'
!!!!'!
l~

are expected to
The worksbops will be open
infonbal diac:aEion treating

~-Cruned

t ."1.!!'~~ ~

10 11 c, foundations of matbe-

his
0 f "-'·
mlitial and
tory
:.....-c.
Events,..llriJ! be lield m the
new
Center on
: : the
tics and Pblloaophy departma
, _ _., ...~
ments of that ......tu......
. The corifeience is funded under a p&amp;ntJrom Slate Univer- .

='\lt;lions

Water . Plant
structUre. which haS
to be
adveztisecl.,fQI' .bids, will supply
cooled water .for all air-ronditioned faCilities 011 the new

xet

campus.

a~~Sta:rJ:J:: that
~rt:,.
~tf!~ia:!:S::;
he _._........_._ bid adver-

...._
tismnents for the structure within the nezt two weeks. He added !bet .fhe ·entire facility is
scheduled for oompletioo- in
May, t976.
. •

u:-~,!! E l . ~

· :M~&amp;;;· ~d"'duidbJ::ih
of"Buffalo, for two high-voltage are tradition&amp;lly regulated by
tl'1111Bformers. ·
what Dewasanta called " the
· Commenting on the choice of etromr beelth law of the Iroa single chilled water facility ~:'· The "Jaw'! that she·
for the entire campus, Assistant describes p u t s Leviliclu to
ViavPresident for Facilities shame in its rijor and specificPlanniniJ John A. Neal ex- ity. A meilstruating yroman waa
plaiDed that the single system thought to be throwmg oR 1mis lees expensive, more efficient purities. DUring lljenStruation,
and aesthetically advant&amp;geollll, she traditiODI!lly removed ~
in compsrlson .to separate cool- self from the rest of her SOCiety
iniJ ... - - for eech structure. and spent the "··- in a ---'·'
.n;:~·it;i· addid that ' all J-'-.•_..., .. ,8 .,,;:"!". -'."--'-r:-•.o r

" 1.....:.

~ h~~~
40 ~cent of IJiaWi' meil, u,.: -

cluainJ lhe best edueated; are
marrymg w!rlte women. An
·Indian woman Ia further restricted in her choice of a mate
in that- .she can't marry a
is._ a Jellow clan

."zel-

ative;~ .thllt

IIU!IIIber
• uun...• do you do when
" .....
you're. related to thJee.quartera

of the. reaervation~t .lamented
sity.JobnCorroran,~of
anlroquo'JB.P'Imtne~
graduate studies u. pbi]oeopby
.!o".:R.
. wnu"'....,
~
. ...~~.- ,..~---~
_-:......_
...-_,.._-).....
"' ~.m;:c
"'•P!IiOSIDul&lt;
and cba1nnan of t!ie Bu«aJJ
·
....._t
.....&gt;-:.~~-~
~........
_ _ ..........
..... c!'.ouB.
·," itGti'ao'u:trms
LoPe Cc&gt;lloquium. is director.
~0011n.c- ::...vinglnd~
food, ~0 .,~"'~'tlb
)H C·:&lt;XJ. • ~£-W.F
0 f resideDce' hell8 '
~ tio CoJ1lOfBJI,.:Di. , ~ . ·;
:
~
~~~~-~ c~:"'•l V "0 t_t· .~H ~:~ &gt;~ll.
. .

. __.. ,. . .

VOl&amp;

=~~.a~
PrO~s~Aid. UGLJ?eyelop~e~~
~!:a~~~~
~~~t~
Will inbOciuce' batb
fiUI!l!t ~.. Faculty ~ to ~ -. their
intemal book~
.impurities ~
~~liB!'* of· all tlie
_.,._
.

own

major

.· · . if,.. ·.

~Other -~

81

quest for boob

and· periodicala

f:. t,!;~ ~

~

"We areand~""':..,both for

!he

~ .3inte.:r~

which

.slored.

:~~ e·c i a ~J:
rites after childbirth. As ...;
reeiiiJII.P'

, inll." ~-~ ·to Yora~ -~~~~~"be4A · ~~~•. ~&amp;_!«.!.~

S

PA-Sta~

:m=llareoo:::tJ:C:: : oro.;
.
.._...._._._
, : ·. , .. · lbolooly,-dl:eclcifoftbeUJllder.:
· . , ·• • · .Y
... . .and__.,.
__,_.-~a ..~-'--::' -(~.~A~-~..;!:_,~
,_....~ ima"·~nteia~aci- ..-duate"Uhnay. Since FebJu.,
~•• I'AinY'
......... - " ....., ... ..... .... ................ _
'pliniuy a - l i f the eoiiflir: ary 41JI!llhouocholumanuid_ 'The c:oonN.~. kuo, made tiom ·a' bimdle !If· tWiP . ~tlon .tie. ~.'~ · II)Jilw _,
· -.~with lhe etatuie 1,008 ~~of. pet: , sponlplllll.a . . _ ._.."'-·.broileD .from: the wild~ an ilinnediate. ~ •.of
,of the priDi:lpa1 n.titimftlltita, :: 10dla118'.t'bift-'bien -Yed .\1111!1~ ~., Su.,.,i-.AII!Ifl , .treeaod:~ (noUao . ) ·in lhe.f8cta·by an liDpUtlaliiWd
make it a
from "35';flll:uhy .....,._
;, •JlO.·i~11!.4tl~ ~--,..., ...~. ·. ~....'~' ...~J ~
CXIIIID.,._ ;: : ' . :··-•·~ ~'' ' "W.,.... buyinr- ~ -..fiiMi:&gt;~l~:~~-&lt;~ID)Jl':oiitAit. . . . ~-~ ~~~ • ·nie11PA~t;;.;;;.;:r..,. ·
· CiircOran rates Dr: Ta'rild a · far lhe-U~te I.ibnir:\'t J(.-·~12l·.llt_.....Jol!lll'llft-. -- ._.......,....,.
_ , _... -~J~
.p erhape lhe "IIIIIR~ iaflilliDtial • IK!t. :woe lliove, ~"!~ much ·or _~q, ,.;,. .~- »....--i(l!fe -~ ~ ~dll;l~ ~);d~~ .
.livlq JoPCbin. . :A M~M&lt;:of ' lbe ~ - ...... .-1 bra116n wl.lldl.wll lnclliile..ntNab- ~ (Dt _!te:J!"D~~~ ISUCOMCIIitaX"iW&gt;raa.n
1 x--cs.U: Ac.t.'Nb.-Aim'
l"'lllfld.'"Dr, - ~.,. froai faCulV ~· anillt .•- -.'enoi:~---~ lui· C~~~)
--- taiaiht • ~-iljDOe., ill hllh. ~ materW in pod P!l. ~ - . egt~,.JI!I'" . ==-~ li!IO, ID .
loadlile};-.nd&lt;'l!la. BaiahMter
:tfH2. lfe~ -iDiili.liail."~ ;L~..:.
~ .:tn _
_..af .•
..-L ~ • ·, : .-. . ,
. {SUNY~);»· ' · ;'"" .
-~
. ~ He also ,
·~....,. _.-lk(tfalr&gt;'Mejor........,
T........ ' - - . . . . . .
.
-....·-&amp;Ia J.r . _ "
•
a
eliioodkia '
".itillboiDIIeolilftdlmiillaadtoJ ol!i -pnoa~e~mec~ s .. nda;y •
.
·
•. : • ..,.
te
""'--'-'~
~ a ·'
· memben, iDi:llhal..- cJe:: ':chlldlwlls o.,.•
, :, .'.·
··A p a y W - wt.. ~t,.s ~t ·~

·

1.·

... ;.; . . -. . -·· .. ' -

uniquii-;;;;.1-t;•roar.

'::

w-

.:..:. .....

,JIIIlved~andGuaai':'
baft'' eWID 'oqmibed
:-.. . __. ., _1- -·-··- ----·-.. _.__ . parlmenl!l&lt;
..-l"_ ,..., ..,.;...
- ~ ..."'""-'\" ~
...
~
4

'

A,-........

••.

.

.

•

•

.,...

~

&gt;#'~":

IWl.!!-- :0...
--

~

...,

... c

~ - •. .

.

..-

-&gt;':•'·

�')

4

~

'

. . 12, Jll7l

WOodcock~ Scores AMA'S~llout~, tO Iilsuiaz:ic

EDITOR'S NOTE; 1J«:GuM fered a ~ ol the Cllll.""'t
lite mea- .slate ol bealtb cue leflolatiOD.
of lite , __
__ -a;;d~ inkrat · itt &lt;lpe a _Domoclat, the ~~
• the. ~~'VAW ~ they ' agreed ...,...
L«Manf
a "118tional beel.tb insunloce law
ta.t Saturday';
is coming:'!"""eon _.u,n of the U I B Medical that pbysiCIJI!lS will
CJ!Ml·
•

·

.

,,_,,_.of

w.;::;.
~:;!,. ![

WciOaeoc~
tunc,;.

Alumni Spring Clinical~yo, is
pnn
. ted here in only ' •lillhtly

a~r'-'•ed ]Jma.. Mr. Woodoock
~161 his remarks · ao the

41111Utll Stockton KimbaU Memoria! lecturer.
•

•

•

~agreed

__ _.

....

~ haw. -'--' their
~
~ ot

IIIIIIIM lo· ... Gl -

AMA ~ - ibat you, the
~Ofit.~ ere d·

r-t

!".U:::.: t¥ 7cliff~

J, •

-.,

111111

,,11

1
;;;:t(onal hMith lll8UI'IIJlOe
bills
!"&gt;I ove_r thetr ~ prof"!""on before the ~· It's too

1f organiZed medicme continues
til fight !'gainat public~
(or real nnprovemen~ m ~
msurance . and ""'!""t ~re
coll8Ull!"r influence m sbapmg
the delivery ol bealth care. And
they agNed that pbyeician ·eelf·
in.tereet demand&amp; that the~oast
off their neptive appl'08

So r
much to ask ol
ra.
m
bere today to talk about just
::ityof ~~~
nedy) bill and the AMA'e
Med'-~'t
bill. And rm here .
""""'
to tell you that, accordinc to

tti:panies

p........,. ...,jj•t working well
and OU8ht to be cfl.&amp;npd. 'They
tllat we ouaht to eqJaDd

· Because Comanmity Mental
HeeKb Centem baWl demonatmted 1 rea t ....,._, Mr.
~education and produce Nizon and M&lt;. Weinberger
mo18 c1octon aDd• a1ao pb,ysl- , want to atop llllpiiC)rtiq them.
ciana'
....is1airta. 'l'bey agree But wlu!t does this mean •to
that hospital facilities ouaht to your patient: tbe adolescent
bet!.:panded and imPrQved and who peed&amp; the ~ you
that hnth basic and apPlied re- are 1.l!'l"&gt;le to P~ in a busy
search'i;. bealtli science and practice? 'Ibje addlot, the alcobealth care should be well· holic, the ·emo.~ionally disturbed? Within Ibis troubled
~ are matters on whidl society many look to the Comboth petienla and doctors are munity Mental Health Center
in firm aareemenl But to date as a_ vital, aDd . often only, re__,_,_
find that source B~ 2,000 cen
in W ..........j!lon, we
.:_ __ ...,
,...__, the ·
representatives of patienls are ~ pauu.n::Q
, ~t . nastrua:lintl to stop the bullget- tion, only
1\ave been estabcutters-at-the OMB-lrom am., 1iabed. ~have~ the
health programs that ought to o~ and streee m slate
be strengthened, . w hi I e the mental hoep•tala and . the .P!"SJ;MA.. in line with ito consis- sores c;&gt;n the family ·j&gt;hysiCIB.Il.
tent policy .tbat health care for Mr. NIXOn wants .the Communan AmeriCans should be the ity Mental Heelth Center legisresponsibility of DO one in par- lation to expire .this June 30th.
ticular has NiBed no audible
Even though the OMB bas
objection or concurred with developed . ingenu~us; dev!ces
most of what's going on.
for obecuring the~&lt; mtenbons,
Meanwhile, Federal Admin· the facts ~ that 'IO health
ietnition engages in prolonged program ' entirely escapes lhe
flights of fancy about its a'?' . budget cutters'~- Not heallh
complisbments, but the Presi- manpower educati~n, nor p~
·dent's health budget reveal&amp; a ventive bealth servl(:es, nor d1harsh insensitivity" to the need&amp; • sease control: ~allied heallh
of both patients and doctors. . training, nor : populati_on reHe wants to cut into health search and fanuly planning, nor
servites research and develop- medi"";l li~raries.. Instesd of
ment and cut out entirely the proposmg mnovation for the
_regional medic:aJ progn1I11. He Hill-~n prog-r am, they progives no additional support to pose mtennent. They would
biomedical reseo.reh and pro- replace Public Heal-t h Service
poses to phase out all NIH fel- hospitals and clinics wilh valowship and training grants. cant lo&gt;ts. ~ey would cut
Who will provide for biomed· back on Medicare.
ical research which is ·essential . It is not _eurprising that lhe
to your clinical practice when AMA berugnly walches as
the government support stop~? these cuts occur. Nobody has
The Administration says it w ll ever accused the AMA of any
1
come from lhe normal economic
leadership in protecting the
forces of the private market- patient's rights or improving
place. The faculty and, go;vem- hU; · Jot. But ~v!"ryone ~~ws
ing body of your M-e d c a 1 that the. practicmg P~YSICIBn,
School here will teU you 1suo!F and especially the p r m a r y
1
a -statement at best derives from .physician, is &lt;!eep)y concerned
ignonmce and at worst deceit. ( Continued on paie 7, col. I)
.,_,

,
By LEONARD WOODCOCK
~. Utrir.d A.uto Worbn
As I travel about the coUDtry
I am asked from time. to time AMA's "MedlcNdlt"
.
Gt~
.· l.·_TDI"\
why I as a union Ieeder take
I think that many physicians - Y 1.£.. Y'\' .I" V
-. major ·.mtarost in Nforming ~ that the. AMA's M~- The 11opar111r ' - .., - ·OUr.Jllltion's bealtb'care syatem. ·icredit proposaj lB a Jll!llltive ·!D prow11111 • far)lm tor. the M~ ~ - is .that&lt; tbe oaf"*'· approecb. It .se.ts the ~.of ·~ 0( ·- . -- , . . .
auarding of health. is of the ~edical care m. !' bard ' ~ Ot-lhe ...U.. fioc:1na \be . _ .
l"'&amp;lest importance to the fixed frame When It should. m· c 0 m unIt J. We~ liotfl
- . ..
wod&lt;er and his family. He rec- · vile innovation. It assures high- -'lion paper • opizes that without good er costs when it should reduce space permits.
bealth the hard foufbt gains in waste and duplication. dt enhis economic situatloll, won at courages unneceesary SUl'Jiery
the coUective barpining lable,- when it should promote preven- your own principles and slandare almoet without meau.W~. Ji. tive medicine and quality con- ard&amp;, the Health Security bill
his health becomes poor and he trois. It i&amp; in&amp;urance indus b-y · rather than the AMA bill has
can't work, he knowa ' he and . o_rientec! when it should be pa- the doctors' interest: at heart.
his family can barely live. ·
tient onented.
There's a 1iigh level game
n.e disability rate for fam. To illustrate ·one of its many being play"'! by the AMA.
ilies below the poverty level i&amp; serious deficiencies, look at the They !![&lt;' usmg your dues . to
!lfrj~t 50 llflr, wn~ hi(li!er til'¥] dental benefits. The AMA was promole the mterests of the _m·
for "liiiliale arid· upper ' incorrie ·:_ ~iticized i,&gt;Y !he Alnericari I&gt;!m· surance industry. You'd think
f~!I'L~me~f'!•~J?St·1 · '-'#f· Association for excluding that Mutual of Omaha and
·{i'1j git!l#· · -'crpotlf flttililies; d"dental beneiila-from - tbe- J&gt;&lt;&amp;- --;&gt;\etna -w&amp;uld· spend their own
They are
too aware that 8: ' vlous Medicredit biU. ~ ruoney to lobb~ Co'\K~ for
child born in poverty has twice year, lhe _AMA rep!""""~tives favors 1.? the pnv&amp;te msutan&lt;:e
the chance of dying before age are boasting of lhe mclus10n of compames. But the AMA IS
35 as a child born into a mid· dental benefits. But they ~ spending your mon~y tor ~t
die income family.
to make clear that the benef1ts purpose. The Medicredit b11l
And so union members feel are limited to children age 2 to does not serve doctors well. It
an urgent need to have reedy 6. They don't broedcast the does not serve the inU!r"'!ts of
access to decent, comprehen- fact that there is a $100 deduct- patients. But it certainly will
create billions of dollars m ~w
sive bealth services at prices ible per child, per year.
they can afford. For some
This is -the tooth fairy in re- business and Prc;&gt;fits for the mthirty years the UAW has ne· verse: the · parent wiU leave surance cpmparues.
gotiaied with employers to pro- $100 under the pillow before
I can tell you that my U:AW
vide fund&amp; to make possible the dentist provides any ser- members are a lot more dediis a!P'88, to good health care. vices.
·
.,
manding .with us about the '!""
IIBil~Apltofl&amp;pM!f" Mcalat!ri!r~ • .lfhe dental benefit, really, is of ·theiT dues than you' are w11h
'•!!ll~tlli\U~UP e~..-ui ti!!!;.J" Mnsi&amp;tetit with lhe rest of the lhe AMA.
area are becomiilg less and less Medicredit bill in that it comI t has been said a lhousand
productive.
pleU!ly ignores the need&amp; ·of times by the AMA hierarchy
Our · members have. been both patients and physicians. that we who.support the Health
ready and willing to give up Reforms are conspicuous by Security bill don' t care about
wages for health protection. To- their abse_nce.
.
you. I'm here to tell you we
day it costs them one month's
The lure ·of tax cred1ts would care a great deal about you. It
waaes to pay for private bealth theoretically result in better i&amp; time we had · a sensible di- EDITOB:
. · insuranoe that does not provide and .broader health insurance alogue to uplore and ""''IUld
In a recent Reporter (3/ 29/ 73) , the minimal budget recom,
fuJI and needed coverage. Ac- coverage for all. But the facts lhe wide areas of agreement mendation
as proposed by the CoUeges was displayed in decording to HEW,·in seven years are that only the working poor that we sbare. No such di- tail.
It calle for an increase (on an annualized basis) from apit will -cost them two months with incomes below about $6,· alogue has been possible with
proximately
$257,000 to $348,000 or a 35 per cent increaoe. Qui~
w_aaes to pay for the same ·000 annually would have any an intraneigent or,~tanization
a few people have indicated to me that a . 35 ~ ce~t
IS
piutia1 protection.
~ incentive to buy the poli- purpo_rting to . ~present. y~u , excess.ve
in· the face of the current gloomy Univemty~de b'!d·
lti recent years we have ..c"'O' pro~
.,, by )he ,/l!4t&gt;-. , ~tIS i;I!Spolll!'ve ,.Qnly_,to ·•ts
come J.o
that . 'llle"·.Ma theY. . wd, be ·encout)lgi!d !!lOSt COnset:Vatlve l")nstituenla. get situation. Otbera have noted the teSponsible,1way m which
have .aJlocated their scarce 18801':"""'. including the
lllRit)IIiifij:l
OiP 'OP '' !0 buy th1, '. orat kini!!._ilidivid: . . .'We ean•t talk with the med- the Colleges
budgetin' ol several ·unita and other major shift&amp;. Pemaps
IIMU!i~ilet·
·' ficin · ·\i:aJ· policies thai refurn only 50 lC01'01iticiruts in Chicago. They a~ro
few
facts
will
befp put the College's bjidget ~tion
fll •llle "delivBry' system •·and cents on the dollar to the health 'teU· you that Health Security
request is. .
shortages ·of professional per- system. The other 50 cent&amp; will come between patient and in peis~ve and show haw' cOMerualive
11le foUowing table compares five other academic units and
aonnel, with the resultant sky- sla:Ys with the in&amp;urera. .
doctor. Show us where that i&amp;,
the CoUeges in terms of their in&amp;tructional costa. 'lbe five units
rocketina coste will not be
The whole Medicredit plan and we'll change it.
were selected because they are neareet in size to the CoUeaiste
solved by our diverting more i&amp; really a seU9ut to the insur- Physician Sentiments
and more. !""DeY from !"ages ·ance industry. As practicing
To my knowledge, the AMA System in term&amp; of teaching load as measured by FTE student
to buy pnvate ~ msur- pbysicians, you should tell the has never ·rei~ any poll of enroUment (data from 3/16/73 AdmissioDS and Recorda report).
ance. 11le problema m health ·AMA you won't buy il But to its membership on the subject Unite are rank ordered on the b&amp;sis ol total budgeted doiJan; per
care are problema of the so- date, I wonder bow many phy- of · national bealth insurance FTE student; a Widely accepted statistic for CDmplll'ina inetrucc:iety. So we in the labor move- sicians have bad the time, or but the magazine, Modern tional costs between different programs of higher education. It
."ment are ~a major effort taken the .time, even to reed MedU:ine, reported the reac- should come as no suoprise that 1be· College8 are 11 very poor
to brina about needed· change the national health insurance tions of 17,000 physicians last last pltree. They should be! But the pp is too 1arae and practhrough aocial reform:: . ·
plen that is being i&gt;,_.ted•in year. Underalandably, beCause tically guarantee&amp; innninent failure for the Colleges. Is such
·
- . ,..Y c:onw- '·'""" ,,.,..J''Ybllt behalf .to'·Congrees, : Y&lt;iu. they do not like chatige, moot failure our coUective desire?
FT£SUNY TBA, $
Olli!btto reed itand"ljBderaland physicians· were agaihot any
$/student FT£
Unit
(n of 2/13173)
(fY 72·73)
~ ral8lo
· "'f-'" -it&gt; becaUB&amp; ~ Congri;samen (orm ol national health irisur$2110
Chemtsby ·
556
$1,170,000
.. ,
·•
·
•
-ance. But, those who saw any
$1820
Mot~ematlcs
661
'
~
·
$1,200,000
merit in national ·b ealth insur$1400
Law
741 • .;J
$1,040,000
ance proyosaJs. by a alightly
$1250
Management
861 · ·,
$1,080,000
hjgher percentage, prefei-red
$1140
Psychology
861
$990.000
the Health Security program
$ 350
Colleges .
699
$240,000
to ·those of the AMA or the
Nbon· Administration. A latetA. - . - _ _ _ . , ............ ,:..,.,., e d n...lq 67,.. u. Diriaoft' ol tlttlTo budget the CoUeges on a
equivaiMt to -thett nearest
poU, conducted bY the Gallup disadvantaged neighbor, the l)epartmerit of -PaycholOIY, would
.....,. ......... S,_. . U~ ol NMr York ld Bg/I.S0, ·343! Jl-. St., Bfllfalo,
Orgailization, found 51 per call for an in&amp;lantaneoue increase (on a FY basis) from $240,000
••• Y. 14214. adltwW• allb. Jor::.IM Ja R - 2.13, 250 1VJn.per.r ~·--(PI.M. 2121).
.
cent of· physician&amp; favorable to to $800,000 or " 233 per cent increeae! But the Co~ do not
some form of national health i!xpect to be budgeted an a basis equal to any fnditional acainsurance. Numerous national demic ~t. As.a non-traditional flltematioe, we believe we canA..WBSI"Ln'~D
and state poDs show that about be cost-effective at. about $700 i&gt;er FTE student· (or rOUirbly .,h
~
t..w&gt;-lhi.rds;-of '!'I ptJtiente want ih&lt;! cost of, a traditional unit). We are llryil?!! to pt lbe.e as
· ...,_.. T. llihurr ,
governmental beaJ.tll insuni.."lce ilmckly as we Cll11. taking into aa:ounr the reelities of competina
·~· An-;~
to "!Place private 'insuNnce, for scarce resoun::es. ~ a subslantial
to aet to
/OBlf.O.~
whiCh m08t find inelfective or the level of support that will aesure JliOtll'IUD quality and m:defective; 0. both. .
cellence, and running- out of !'lme and
PATIUc:Ll WAIID ~
~"'~
lit Ibis light I hope onr request for a 35 !'!!!' cent incriase
.Doctors ."and patients may
differ · oo what are the moot will be seen for what it la;the very lmla1leat incl&amp;ae that stand&amp; .
~
·~ • · c•-!D••nrr
· a chance of dtmOnatrat.ina collegiate elfectivmaM and our ability
pn!08ing 'PI'Oblems· in American
· rrur~-.­
to make constructive contributPiwfillobannon,y wHh Univ~ty
bealtb "i:are. But they &amp;1188 on goala.
OOII1'1U8UTIIIO Ari'IS't't S . . Jl. 8rtf!6w
many things. 11ley &amp;1188 that
.•
QUr Present health .insurance

IN1'S

m

Smith Says Colleges Are
Conservative in Budgeting

mc:rease

our

""'l!heolWw=:.:...oians·

GRE~!rrE~ .

_

basis

.........

..__

.

·-~-

-·

mer-ru. ·

�--

By PATRICIA WARD
BIEDERMAN
"A man wbo planlll a garden
is a vsy ha
man," · tbe
fatbers in ~Fant&lt;zst:t'; arlllinf tunefully that-raising care
rolll JB a surer thing than bringina up dilldren. True, as far
as it ..-. But raising ·carrolll
Isn't all that easY eit.Qer (and
. . besonias is downrilht
=t). Gardening, indoor
gardening in particular, bas. become a national pastime. Poo. pie are buying grelll&gt;8ey only to
discover, as tbe poor !hinge wilt
and yellDw before their eyes,
that their enthusiasm bas ou~
dis~ by a mile their
koowledae ol tbe care and feed.
ina of &amp;uSe planlll. To cl.tbe gap, tbe Re'!"':_ter asked
two of tbe campus s professional indoor gardeners to share
some of their eq&gt;ertise.

-Suttle

Alfred S..ttie, born -i n Soo~
land, was foreman of 20,000
s q u a r e feet of commercial
neenbouse before be came to
UtB. Now a senior groundsman, be tends tbe small greenhouse b e t w e e n Rotary Field
and the Service Center building
and also works on tbe grounds,
one of the men respohsible for
the crowd of ~,&lt;:'. daffodils
blooming near
· and various campus' lower beds like the
triangle of not yet opened tu- ·
in front of Hayes.
With his wife, Suttie bas
cared for "dj s h gardens" at
home; for the beginner, be recommends succulents, including
various . forms of cactus, jade
planlll, anc;l, in particular, snake
plantd l'be last thrives with .v ery
poor soil and not much water,
conditions the be~ often
provides by forgetting the plant
exists after his i'Utial enthusiasm wears' olf.
Suttie bas a rul~&gt;&lt;&gt;f-thuinb for
feeding that is reiulily adap~
able to indoor prdening. He
begins br planting in a good
commercial potting mixture to
which be adds osmocote, a slow
release fertilizer in the form of
reddish pellelll that be disperses
throughout the medium. With
osmooote, be need not feed ·!he
plant a g a i n for up to six
months. Then be uses one of
tbe liquid fertiiU:ers (be prefers Capco ~~20), which be
!"""' after every fourth watermg.
Poor Dnll- A , _ ,
.
Overwatering is usually cited
as the m o s t common crime
against bouse plants, "!nit more
often the problem is poor drainage. Too .much water or fertilizer will "aour" soil and/o• rot
plant roots, S..ttie warns. For
bouaa planla in any container
. without drainaeo boles, be reooiDIDI!Dds imznllaica as th8 beat

lips

One of . . . . . . . more uotk phinta,

.

• "Dwt1 ..........

method of watering. Plunge the
container into a bucket of water
and keep ·it there until air bubbles stop surfacing. (Some people like to "water" their hanging plants with scoops of ioe
cuiles.) He reminds tbst plants
in clay pots need more frequent
waterings tban those in nonbreathing plastic. Most plants,
with the exception of the succulents, appreciate a daily misting.
A recycled Windex sprayer · is
Adequate for tbis. Suttie believes in foliar feeding and rec-

r==:~~!~lio1~

as every· other day. Misting is
tile only way to keep mo~e- .
loving plants like ferns from
fading in the dry, overheated
atmosphere of most homes and
offices.
Big plants like the ~tted
palms or schetBera-any putted
plant for tbst matter-need an
occasional top dresaing, Suttie
adviaes. This means
lacing
part of the soil mix in
pot,
usually by starting around the
rim and removing as much of

"'J',!!

the soil in tbe top half of the
oontainer as the roots easily
give up.
Joseph Nolan

During January and February anyone passing the cluster
of greenhouses behind Health large corsage-type blooms that from campus, stocks the BrookSciences saw orchids blooming most people tbink of when they lyn Botanic Garden series· and
in the windows above the snow. hear "orchid," are a good cboioe recommends the handbooks in
These were raised by Joseph for the beginner Nolan also this series to begin!lers) . A 4-H
W. Nolan, the Biology J?epart· likes phalaenopsis, for which leader as well. as a "farmer unment's greenho~ h?rticul~- le.'lS light is required. At home, der glass," Nolan is writing his
lSI. t(nder the direction of BI- orchids prefer the high-humid- own book on indoor prdening
ology s _Greenho~ Committee, ity atmosphere of a .batbroom. for young people. .
Nolan IS resP?nsible for P~- , Founder and papt president When ~ ~ ~
grown for various ~ of the Niagara Frontier Orchid
= t 'doespne
poses and for a small teaching- Spclety· Nolan • ilains·: tha'r '"'bi ' eM"ftM'f'~
collection that includes a dra- comme:CW ouuetT."Mr good or- ~a · · Or'llti!al'Y'l!Ut
matic stagbom fe~ various air chids are non-existent locally. draoei\a? Nolar\ acNoc:iitea:pest..
plants, amall fruit trees and Not counting hybrids, there are icides only IIi a I a • t ..art.
many tropical plants, as well some 30 ()()() species of these Dabbing the mealy but with a
as -~ own fav?rites, seve~otic p~ts ranging f"lm the Q-tip dipped in alcobol (lzy
varJeties of orchids.
big showy blooms to varieties not to get too much aloobol oli
"Orchids are easier to grow with l'iny ·ftawers. Rather tban the plant! usually llou1i"- the
lh"!' Afri"'!" violets," Nolan r e 1 y on commercial source~!• pesl Scale often suCCIJ!Dbe to
claims, addmg ~t suooess..de- Nolan and his fellow enthusi- SOBpy water. The chemical inpends on the· vanety you piCk. asts trade varieties and buy at sect cOntrol P10if8111 U. the part
Cymbidiums won't do well in· the Society's plant sales.
of his job Nolan, wbq believes
most bomes because they need Avoid ~ insecticides ~t an accupacooler tban comforlllble temIn -buying any kind of bouse tiona! hs2ard, enjoya tbe l..t,
J!8rllture&amp;, . but cattelayas, ~ plant, Nolan ad9iaes relianoe and be is reluctant to recam. on .jl recognized n u.r ~ e r y or mend aerosol~ _. h&lt;lme
-8flll8IIho'!88··1'upeflll&amp;rqtplants,,. ,USS, ."'" ~
are a 1!114 b!&gt;t. be,,Wilf!IB. ~Y , LD'!Il!).t • -'I:P,"'!
~~'·
are i m p r o p e rl y climatized. iilao tie1Je ell 1IIi·
•
Moreover, supermarket person- most plants once a week.
ne1 rarely package planlll prop- Jets the dust oft-and leta than
erly for the trip bol!!", be's no- breathe. He's .hill than canticed, and del•aye'lptants are vinced that talll:inl: to plants
often damaged in transit from does · any ' good. ~· Caexposure.
ruso, PBS's ""Piarit Lady,"...,._
Nolan, wbo financed his bon- peels that aU ~ lo oae'a
eymoon by ~ African vi- •Vi or !'Pider plaDt -plilbolets and ~ acreee· with es U. blowing . a Utde aubon
Suttie tbilt cai:ti are a natural dioxide in ita direction, DOt
for the beginner. A)ooJ with a h a r m f u I but DOt lllinlCaloua .
first plant, the .beginner also either. Nolan· ~ !bat
needS some basic bow-to infor- someone who tabs the time to
mation. For this, Nolan ·1111· whi8per . _ t not hi n 1• lo
pi8ls ~ throu8h the-~ household ...-,y also waters,
P.!OJlriate llhefves of the publiC - feeds, and ~ it beck reclibnry .. Tbooe are lll8Jl,f IOod ~.•
.
·
boob Oil houae plants. Penon~y lba beat w.y fo lind
ally1 be .likes TAe .Por:Mt En- Out whether your t h u m b Ia
eyc10~ of Indoor PlanU by
~ « blad&lt; is to pick an
A 1 e 'Nicolaiaen ~M-Dien . unliemandlnJ p1'.a n' t· and 1989), wblcb be found on a ale bow it fan!&amp;.
•
table ;p.~ the U/8 ~boobtldle.
ADd as Nolan llll,Y8, "U ,.,u ·
(The Plant l'arloui, a Dlmt can't pow 1¥)', ,.,u a h o aId
boutique licl-clll8 ~ M a I n Slnet . quil"

®-

I;;!'!.:!&amp;:

��'
Woodcock
Chargp AMA witJt Sellout·

(~ , _ . - 4, col. 6)
about .biB petist. And if be'
doe8 DOt ba.. the time to c:ru&amp;Ide for the ~ and needs
of ma- doctonl patieats, be is
·
8till ...-.-1.
I s a y - is the time to exp.-yourCOIICBI1LDon'twaste
your time expreasing it to the

AMA. But Jet your CoJIII!""S&amp;man ~ that_ ~ IIIJIIP()rt
good aovemmeotai _beslth tac-

tivities and oppose budset cuts
that renk Ma1lli low in nstional
priorities. And let Mr. Nimn
know, too.
,,..,_. .........., -

· , _ Prlndplos . ,

last yeu I bad the privilege
of- tukl.-inl the annusl ..-ting of the American Society of
IDiemal Medicine at Atlantic
City. I made the point then
that of all the propoaals bef""'
the Collar- for nalioDal beslth
insuranCe. oaly tbe Health 8ecurity bill moiosured up to the
SocietY'• ·opn ataDdanls.
It WBB and is the ooly bill
_ __.,~. their .._, ....v...;ple

::""'.._

,.._ r·--:-should

that every ~
.
haw comprebensi:&gt; beslth msurance ~ 'I1!e AMA
plan, the Admi!Bslration .Pian
• and ~ ol the otho!r&amp; fails to
pro"7
""'f':""""":!ve~
8
,,ge. ven • . oug
.. · be. catastrophic lJI!IUf""lll' J8
m.J promoted lD these plans
this year, their enactment would
only ~~ in a delay of comprebeiiSlve COYellll!'· ::r'&gt;e Pl'!'"
spect of _catasboPbi&lt;; msurance
already 18 enCOILfll8UII promoleis and enk'epreneurs b o t h
within ;BDd ou!!'ide the-~~
prof~on to go _public' _Wlth
exotic and esot.enc ~ery
and, treatment, some of_ ji !&gt;&lt;'&lt;·
denng on quackery and little
of .it geared ~ ~needs '!f ·t he
~rmoary physiCl8D and his patient.
. .
Catastrophic .. lllt!UI'tiDCe says
to .the rConsulner: '"If you ~et
real sick,, we'll s Ia r I paylj.g
your ·bills." But don't get too ·
sick because we1l:.atop paying
them."
That isn't what ou need to
practice good ......J'cal care. It
isn't what your patient needs.
'The primary physician is the
forgotten man in that equation,
and so is his patient. Tbe philo_aopby ~t h_olds that a patient's senoll8 illness should be
a financial dis a ate r for his
family..is inconsistent with.:the
profeseional motivation of the
primary phYsician.
In the Health ' Security program which emphasizes early
•

European Flights

diagnosis and treatment, the
primaey pbysician baa a special
place. . • •
.
Qu811ty ~
I' think the -·"'li 18
• '--m-

.
..~ c
,_,...
1111 more acutely A'!are of the
!leOO for bel!er quality controls
m ~ medicsl c • r e system.
Patticularly the streem of reandporla.~of-~-~andery
. 1~ ~~~ ~ m""""
~e1gbbors 18 causmg CODStemaI ~~W~ur
0
the'
~':,
·... ~
are
Y
~ reports. · · •
•
'The system m.ll!'t be ~qualica~ to
of h!gh
ty
care. includinJ[
!IUCh_ ~ctors_ as ~nsumer an~
~ro~r sstisfacti?D- In addition, 11 must proyide for IIBB!'f·
ance _to ~ pub~c that quality
~bemgtbed-1~:.:... ta•·

!::illi 'f...ruue.

fid

.,!d;JJ'Vl810'!

ofWBB . •'Yl~~ 8 ~
"'!"'I.
prmc.p ea. We agree
woth it.
·
Vfe also '!I!!"" !h'!t a well
trained ph)'81Cl8D 18 m an excellent position to evaluate th'e
quality of care. We have some'
trouble in understanding why
he must be from the locsJ group
and subjected to the social organizational and referral
sures that come from havinJ to
- ~- J'udgment on one's neogh&amp;;;;; and friends. We wonder if
a physician is any less com
tent to review a sur 'cal ..;.
~ or a tissue analy 8~ if his
practice is four hundred miles.
removed from the site of the
than if 1't 18
· f
mil
=:~
our
es
Further, your slandsrd calls
for the inclll8ion of "such fac.tors as consumer and provider
satisfaction" . but your procedure calls
th
h · ·
to
determine
lt ~nable to expect that patieobl may
have meaningful views about
b
the
. bandied b
h
."!'
y are
.
· y p ys 1coans, the ways m _which t1!ey
are , referf&lt;!!i, ~be info"'!"lion
they are 11ven ~r. not g 1 v en
!'bout t1!etr con'!itions, and the
mstructions whi_ch are passed
'!" to them d~mg the fo~low~g treatinent. Our expent:nce
m the UAW l~ds me ID believe
that th"!"' are ~po~ aspects
to IJUll!ity which reqwre conswner mpuL
Tbe oveowhelming majority
f
ha
kn .
0
consumers
ve no
ow
ledge as to whether they ha_ve
lifdtedtoo m~J&gt;r~ures gh.mc
upon
or n enou
They have no ~ that
the&lt;:""' thel:' recetve 18, m fact,
""""!&amp;"ent wtth the best lll9&lt;iern
medical knowledge. Tbey must
look to you.and the con_trol pro~ures you set up to gtve them
this assurance.
•
.
. Most encounters wt~.phySICl8IIS and health servtces take

pres-

i

J'.i.. -Js

7.
~

· ··· ·

inec:Jltu!ism for_weeding"'"' the
~ J:"'.::,~ ~

-diets, and the . just plain Ju;y
wbo will,not keep up with mod-

ernw~

-..r

.::!i for:
in "

about the
ti!8 quality ~ If you
will broaden your . . - to take
into account the quality COD-

~-=::. ~
~for

:=J: ~=-~

' TheAMAt....-famyth

t . ._.their fawrilte ecue

word. I want to ' dllpel lbat

myth rllh&amp; -,If lean. ·
We IM;IIeve there oqbttD ba
a.8oclal.&amp;ecarit.Y-bPe trut
~ ... pq for ...... . . . - .
. :=.-o ol eil Mlll,l'_ ol ~

-~ ..u1111

=

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ol~~.._olhMltb

. _ , _ poHcla BU&amp; -

do

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a..-0

~~~:m¢.~'

-'""

UQ

,PF-·•

0

w1'. .:J. ; :

=fr!

.:'&amp;.:W

:!i,D

:1ans.

~r'&gt;f.::.,:;.ru!,;: C~ ..

o.ill.,i

::en: =~~or.= · ~
Ji..a
~~:-~~IUld~· ~~ '
N&lt;pal, pbo_topapbe N..-, 10 LIIL·2

:r

. -''

o--

selvestodellvercare,andwitb.
.
containment and qualit.Y · printiq, Gallery 219, NMtoo, .. 'l1oe tiMtlilDe for atatlollt
~ will remain · the · Monday, April 18, tbrougb Fri- ooallm., ~ IUld other
key and _tial fiKme. Only dey, April m ,
·
_
· . iDteruted Uodiwklaalo 11r -be will prescribe for lois patlmt
-~ ~: ~

::. =..if:,.!":rw;a.:e ~be-

ua to 'IOIIfk out with
you an llPPJ'Cllll'iate ...twniom
~ .,_...

.,.

::'.I

=~cl~""':l::o~~ ::'P su~rt :"new
clans' ollices In this set"~w
there
..;__,,_wl t U are ...._..... y ew

any cbecb on ~~ happeus,
Tbe preeeul_ syStem. for ex!'lllPJe. _provules n~ worbble

. · · Weekly Communiqqe · -

!lOt believe ill .a moaalilhic (~.,._- ~,,col. I) tblo -th'o •s:bibit ill the M!l*
8lructwe for the delivery of
J?-ll!d by the U/B o.piut. ~rc;cr;.,~~
l(erYicoa. We believe in plural,..ofFnoch.••
•
_
~~~.~!!'·.~-by
ism. We belieYe ibat llllliiY _
_
_
~- ~-y- ~
IYPM of oqanizationalarraupTile Som&gt;w and 1M Pity (Opb. 'I'brooqb A,Ni1 '80,
menta abould be ~ uJo. 19'12), Ccmfenmco, Tbeatre, Al.iiiaafR-~ '•.
and evaluated. Calltiary to ~=~-~
lor'-. DHIIIr
·
,
what docton are hem, told,
~··
M•" Wloo Mallo Oou- · World:
...., . do not reject solo pzac, CONCIIIf'
PortraiU by Kcnlo, 101 ablhition
lice, fee-for-8el'\lice medicine.
ChtJmber MWJU:, Baird Recital of owr 100J"':~ iDdudinc
Wefavorflenbility,nol~ty. Han; 8:80p.m.
portraito
AI
Sebwatur,
And we don't favor aoc:iaJized
Artiato including Ronald Rich- Prin"""" Groce of M - . W'mmedicine. It is not our position erdo, oboo: Eiko Ito, ftute; and oton Cburdtill, Bertnmd
that doctors should become civil ~'iiFM~~=n~f ~ . r'dA"i=t-~ ~ri,
servantsorthatbospitalsshould perform worko by Ravel, Perai- 1285 Elmwood Ave.
be taken over by the aovem- cbetli, Surinech, Holli-r end
ment. The people who are mak·INli'ERVIEWS ·
ing these allegations about a ~~~~~~~ Tfcl.~•81::!~
Tbrouabout the toe!i&gt;OoiM,' OD•
"monolithic" .Health Security general aclmiuion, $1.50: facul tY, campus
interview~ wll1 be can-.
bill know fuJJ well ·t hat the bill otaft and U/ B alumni, $1 ; slu- dueled for otudento intenoted in
encourages pluralism in the de- denio, 50 cento.
attendins araduate ocboobo or oblivery 8 y 8 t em . Anyone who
P""""'ted by the U/ B Deport- taininc emPJoymenl To arrup
takes the time to read it knows ment of Music.
en appoin-t, contact 1h1 Ulliit, too.
---=T=H=URS=:::D=-:-A-=-y=---AvaWiHI!y of ~
-19
1
Your society and our union PSYCHOLOGY LKTUU•
~ tn~~
agree there is a great need to inTh• Poycholofic:al Sense of ~h
THURSDAY
·- 12: Rapublic
crease .t he availability of medi- Community, Dr. Seymour Barecal serVices, and that increasing oon. Yale Univenity, 4230 Ridge St?rui).{'i;_13 : Globe Albeny
phy . .
rod . .
sh uld Lea. Rm. C-17, 1:15 p.m.
~·Cl&amp;n P
uctiv1tl:'
'!
P..,..nted by the U/ B Deport- International Corp.
rece1ve eq'!ai empbas18 w 1 t h ment of Psychology.
NOTICES
1ncr-:a81ng the number of IIAUIIAU'
~==c=-==-,------:-physo"!""".
U/ B VI. Geneseo State, Peelle ADMISSIONS II UCOIDI
Obv1ously, we cannot project Field, s p.m.
.
REGISTIAtiON HOUU
needs for _future phy8ic!an man- HIUlL PASSOVER SUPPER•
The Office of Aclmiuiono and
P:'bier ,:tho~ ~m~
By reservation only, Hillel ~';'8~~ ~.:Oan'r~~'f:;:
81
e P ,uct!v•tl:' gaons
ug
House 40 Capen Blvd 6 pm.
Ler '1973 reg,.· •-u'on houn·.
new or~ozatoonal arrange•
.,
.
ments. This should be based on SEMIN.U .. UKIAINIAN CULTUU
THROUGH MAY , 3~: , 8:30
reasonable, practical planning. AND CIVIUXAT:ON•
~-3o-8:,30
M-;r:\&gt;,;, lfjill};a-'1'.·
But once there is identification s-f.~t~~r./''~":_'u'Jao::;;;I~J•B_
,- ~t}~:.ii~:JUi:&lt;/ :.icf.:l'lflac\'llllli!;!
of _goals, we should ~ove J'e!'l· Rudnytoky professor of Slavic 8:30 'p.m.• M-T; 8:30 a.m.-4 :30
tstically toward thetr attain- languages, • University of Mani- j).m., W-F.
ment.
toba, 205 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
.
JULY 23-AUGUST 3: 8:30
In 1931, there were 1,097 per- MEDICAL POUTY fiLM'
a.m.-8 30S p.m., M-F.
sons in the United !?tales for
The Bank Dick , 140 Capen,
AU ;r :-~ : 8 :30/::··8:30
every general practitioner. In 7:30 and 9 p.m. Tickets at 50
a.m.- :
p.m.,
l970, as you well ~ow, there cents are available at the Norlon
Extended office hours for the
were almost four times that Hall Ticket Office.
1973-74 academic year will be enmany persons per general pracShould campus p o 1ice be noune&lt;!d at a later date.
. titioner and an increas~g num- anned? Watch W.C. Fields as a
IJ:er of them were foretgn ?S·
guard and decide lor HE~·~.,'!~ ~~:;,:~~u~~ the late
toonals and graduates of fore1gn
Henry Lee 'Smith, Jr., bas ~een
medocal schools. Furthermore, uuu CONCEIT'
established to help delray the
the shortages of health personPaul Butter~·ld's Better Days.
t 01
·
r
d ddin
nel in the uman ghettos and the pCen.m.tu
· ry n.e,;~r. do"'!',town
, . •,,,8, """
cunng or en a
g "'
rurs1 areas ' have reached !lie
·
'
~~Jj'~:;~~-f~~~~
desperate stage. Not only are
Tickets .-a re available at the is donating to JAC.kwood Memorthey statistically far worse off Norton Hall Tickel Office: gen- ini Libmry. ContributiolUI to the
than other areas, but 88 you era! admission : $4 and $4.50; lund -should be made out w the ,
well know, the majority of these studento, $3 and $3.50.
Uni,eo;sity at Buffalo Foundation,
physicians are . elderly, often THEATIE PREVIEW•
Inc., (with a notation on the face
past the retirement age. It is
Giv&lt;n: N~ Bread, An _Encoun- f!r thJ..~-=d)thatPi!.:. or=~
therefore of little value ID make ter and Dmrler for F!fteen , a contribution.o to the Foundation
funds available to consumen; work 10 progress conceoved and at 250 Winopear Ave- Buffalo,
.
, directed by Morton L•chter,
..
when W1~ .t hose funds they?"'· Courtyard The a 1 r e, Lafayette N.Y. 14214.
'
not obtain the need~ serv1&lt;:"". and Hoyt, 8:30 p.m. Through HOUR NOMINATIONS
The Health Security Act om- Sundey, April 22.
N · ti
t
plements the principle of inThe play is presented by the 1973~!f't'rru't:t
A'lr:O..,'i~
creasing the availsbility of me- U/ B Department of Theatre and nationo (for President, Vice-Preo-.
dical services and increasing The ~nter for Tbeatn; Reooearcb. ident, Secretary IUld or...urer) ·
physician 'productivity. There Ticketo are available lit~ NorJ must be made in wri!iq to ·a._
is a orubsiantial Resouroes •De- 1&lt;&gt;1&gt; ,Hall ,Tic:"•' Office:. general ' 20, N~.!_~_5 ~..f..~
velopment Fund to provide new aclmiuion. $1, atudento. iO · cento.
el! ioi"No~ ~
18
support for the edl!cation and uu.u foLM••
training of new beslth profesCanrum Baby (Metzger), Connominetiono io'Fridey, April18.
sionals, . w i 1 h priorities for ferenoe Theatre, Norton, checl&lt; NEW GINiioAL INfOIMATION
groups which have been dis- obowcaoe for time a. Aclmiuion PHONI N advantaged in the past. There ~~P updating of the Caron-For all individualoi ·ofr-campuo,
· · technical
· tance d tart:::..:c•~ b~s"'i:: ~= ­
besl"ij.
Peroono located on aompuo ibould
There ~ a way !" pay for all EXHIBITS
continue to ditol "()". (campuo
the &amp;erVlces provuled br these
·telephone --~- fnr Uaiftrplans. '!here are incentives foe UUAII AIT DHolllt•
ail)' inlormatic!oL
.
primary pbysicisrl8 to ulilize
Drawintl• and CoMtructio,.. by n - ~TION - T I O N
IIIICiiJiary services for their pa- Rob•rt SeiOJopiet Gallery 219,
Oflicerw IUld oocirdinaloro of the
tients, includin:g physician as- N rto tbrougb Frida A ri1 18 Stwlesot A.ociatloa will be avallsistants as tq&gt;prOpriste.
boiuo: M~Jriday; able w anower uoy ~
~th ~ty is a program r:"aO.t~i&gt;P~ Wedneocl&amp;y evening, =it~!t~~.:=
. prOviding umyersal ~verage for
tlinoaih· Flidoft c..eior ~

m:

-AD_._ . ·

~H~ll::;:'s:t;_ ::w:~~~=

I am ben· tocS.y to IIUIIIitllt - - R. ~ . . _ • ODd -eiT •,... wWt 'it ID . that a opirit ol C11CJ1181MiaD · N~ Yort. the ahiiJiiloa bodatiM ~ .. It willllilt be edl!oocL 8oooiod
' - - the pb,ylliclaD and the ~.:....-;.;:: by ~ ialoJmmlaa to: ~- ¥. ....
..-tali- ol hla ·~ beollle. AJbriPt-KMK J:'"o.~ .WO,..Ri!o- :1111, NortooiL . ··

=..::-~.-=

:": ~

.

t:h~ ........ A_ tJaaaP f~ Will'-.

oailiDIU7

aJl .of lloe ~ Wbkh ear- ~ ·UW.__.._.J:.GI ..........t
nmtlY . piqUe the clellWt7 ol
,_ '"'o9oH; __ . . . • put .e::="~ all ~
besl1h.,... in 611 _..,,We .col .lha ~· ............. col . ...._ ID
~·
c:an 'IOIIfk ..,..._ ll::owanl lbe lhaiCIOda ~lhaltirtll
a
p~ · ot a .laltll- .,._ col~
,.m be ._.__..IDbeloooldn.a...
ippropriala .... . . . . . . . and -~loll...........
llq~lha ......... _
. . _ cif.aur tltlwoiDd ....,_ Ll1oraiF.....,.. Apdll'l.
col~ !lw ad ..stlllloalbb a tiYIIIIml it._... !lilly - u """'"-"-.' -tioot lob. WDinuociiatoFwbWtt..Jt..priariftlc...ret~~wc..ea.. ·...r a- at a1.-.r. , _ ~ .tlallbL
• .
.
,..,.,.,..,. Arle It .... _. . _ col - .

.. .,.,

11

�Ati#1

'

..,.i M...;.hnrai; Weot Side ~ fl~"%e~ ~
iDa _aob, 1 p.m.
IV: Moum
Opera Golhr:y, rea~ tbe t'IDiwnity Opera Studio, directed by
Muriei.Wolf, and piallio_t Stephen
M--. Bolfalo and Ene County
Puhllc Library, 8 p.m:
Co-eponoorecl by tbe t'I/B Deparm.nt ol· Mooic and the Groa- • Society of the Bulfalo ' and
Erie County Puhllc Library, No
admiolion cbarp.

::=

Per'mtiiiDit fi'ile•, S)ldaey Mcinotructor, 4288 Ridp

Carthy,

,Lea, Rm. 10,_7 p.m.
HILLS. ~SIDH•

By

CAC CINEMA•

•

Johnny Got Hio GUll (Trumbo),
140 Capen, 7:45 and 9 :45. p.m.
Ticketa at 75 cent. are available
. at tbe NortOn Hall Ticket Office.
COffiEIIOUII·

Liw band, donations requested,

~-:..~a:'':!!~~

benefit the Bidfa!o Riglita Action

Groui&gt; (BRAG) Organizers Legal
Defense (BOLD) . Sponsored by
the U/B Women's Liberation
Club.

r

.u o.na. .
'
. ~
..Open to •rnemborl of the University;
#Open only to those with o pr&lt;ifesolonollnterest In the,subject
Contact Nancy C.nll!relll, 831·2228, for llstinp.
t \)

--THUR--,.--,-D-A""'Yc:c-----,-- - are available at
12
8
Ticket Office.
HIUB. ClASS•

Introduction to Judaism , 310
·
.

• Foster, 2 I!=

·

PATMOLOOY SEMINAl•

/gA-lgG 6lom.erulor Nephritis,
Prof. Jean Berger, Nephrology
Clinic, Rene ~rtea Uni..,raity,

Neb&lt; BoaJ!!tal. Pario, J'nmce,

~·
"81l!i8J M~ ~!l!!i=
tonum,
2 p.m.
'
Preoented by the U/ B' Department of Patholory.

lhe Norton Hall

The Marx Brothers star in a
charming film about life at college. Imagine Groucho as President of U/ B and you have some
idea ot what's in store.
CONFUINCI ON YAi.LEJo ..
Twelve poems from the best

books by Peruvian poet CeSar A.

~-r~:J::f.!td~~~~

cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m.
Presented by .the 0 ff i c e of
Foreign Student Affairs.
UUAI FILM..

Murmur of the H earl (Malle,
1972), Conference Theatre, Nor-

ton, check showcaee for times.
Admission charge.
A delicately handled story of
a fifteen-year-old boy's initiation

!ili~~
~~u::~:~~mc
mother. An exceptionally · w e 11
done film with ezcellent characterizations.·

raf~~ 4 °~.;,..~ff:gy;;. ~g:

UUAI CONCEn•

M in8uB &amp; Arch~
Shepp, Clark Hall, 8 and 11 p.m.
Tickets are available at the
Noll&lt;&gt; Hall Ticket Office: general admiooion, $4; students, $3.
Charla

P.arkerlat J3:30 p.m. "
· (
Presented by- the U!-B Departments of Engineering Science and
Electrical Engineering.

ence

IIOCHEMimY SEMINAl#

cbaro:e.

The A cetylcholinuterase of
Bungarus Fasciatqa Venom. Vijay
Kumar, U / B Department of Bioclle.nilitry, G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
CAC CINEMA"

Johnny Got Hio Gun (Trumbo),
140 Capen, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m.
Tickets at 75 centa are available
at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
This is a gruesome. hanowing
tale of incapacitated Joe Bonham, who characterizes the wont
aspects of wa r - those who are
maimed beyond repair. The audience will feel Joe's frustrations
and his ultimate hatred of war aa
be struggles to communicate his
·(eelioga to others.
HIUB SAUATH SIIVICI•

Torah otudy ....aion ·and Oneg
Sbabbat will follow the service,
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd., 8
p.m.
UUAI COH&amp;HOUSE•

Jim Brewer and Ray Bookbinder, 1st Door cafeteria. Norton, 8 p.m. Admission charge.

u~t:'~k!o"'

(Feiwu). ConferTheatre, Norton, cbeck
for times. Admission

showcase

~

~

FOliini'a tribute .to the circus
clown goes beyord the suggestion
of documentary into a strongly
personal vision that will delight
any who see it. Very nice for
children.
CONCUT-

Studeol r&lt;!cital by the Collegium · Muaicum, under the dinoction of Robert Dooington, Baird
Recital Hall, 8 : SO p.m.
Preoented by the U/ B Depart.
ment ofJ-ftaic. •

SUNDAY-15
ATHIIIIC DEMONSTIAT-·

&lt;M•tmer,J!,

The

Sorrow

.

and

the

Pity

!~'lt::~~
·ame.. AdmUoioD. charge.

-DANCI·

!'fU.un!J. n u'~ \ \.&lt;'\\!

.

UUAI fliMU

Jim Bnwu and Ray Boo~­
lot floor cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. Admission cbarp.

. • -open IO'j&gt;Utillc; '

Tiffin

ubertall
The
Crazy Ray (Clair, 1928 , 147
Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
of a
Poi t (Cocteau, 1980), t47 Diefendorf, 8: 16 p.m. No admiooion
charge.
·

binde~.

Photochemiotry of Air Pol/4.tion, Dr. A. J . Haagen-Smit, profeasor of biocbemiatry, California

~"" "

RIMS•

~he1fo;~4sA=

Limited -ling capacity.

.-Mltion oofy,

Room, Noft9n. 7 p.m.

FilMS'
I&gt;ocummltary films
: Volcono
Dead Bird., High School

INOINIDINO liMINAl•

~-

follow

COWUTING ·aina AMINAl.

AL-TIVI -

uu.u

.

p-tation.

~ Featiool

Sur~,

12, lP1$

:i.

Tbiouch tbe ,.. of old film
clipe and contemporary interviews the film. a~ to neon·

~: tt'U::J..of~~

petion.

TIJESDAY-17
filMS•

•

The iHJ1toMd -(Viaoonti, 1969),
140 Capen, 6 p.m. Per10114 (Berg-

~;d:..S::!on 1~

8 p.m.

tAW LECTUII#

The Nationolization of Fwu!LJmental Legal Rilhu &amp;ued upon
the Firat Amendment, H . Howard Mann, U/B Scjlool of Law,
77 W. Eagle SL, 7 p .m.
.
This is the third in a aeries of
siz lectures for practicin&amp;' attorneys presented by tbe U/B ·
School of Law.
PORIY...-IIADINO•

The !!~C~ko:!"nbe~:
~ Robinson, Arthur A:r;.
elrod and Jean Hill, 827 Norton,
10

-&amp;-:'mdinp

will be simultaneously broadcaot on WBFO, 88.7
on the FM dial. lntereoted individuala are welcome to attend
and be part of the studio audience. Refreobmenta will be oerved
81llllll; the i-eodinl . .
UUAI fJlMU

The SorN~w and the Pity
(Qphula, 1972) , Conference Theatre, Norton. check sbowcaae for
times. Admi.uioo ·cbarp,

-·

· WEDNESD,AY-18

Ut B varsity· athletes will d ' • ·
onatrate their equipment
Do You Really Know Whot an
tecbniqueo for handicapped and Induotrial Ensineer 1•1, 162
retarded children, oeoond floor,
Parker, noon, and 150 Parter, 4
.Norton, 1-8 P.llL
p.m.
'
p,_.,ted by the U/B student
STUDINT HCiTAL•
Piano studeobo of Frina Ar- chapter, American Institute of
acbaoaka Boldt will perform lnduotrial EDcineera. Students
works by Oliver Meoaiaen, Baird will be availohle to ........,r qQM·
tiona after the film.
~tal Hall, s p.D..

(

�</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <element elementId="43">
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379775">
                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1379776">
                  <text>Reporter</text>
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        <element elementId="7">
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1382754">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451195">
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              </elementText>
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                    <text>-Middle)States EvaiL(p,tion Team Issues UIB Report
.

.

SPA Group
Won't Get

Admissions,
Fund Data
A presidential report oo ad- •

UDiversity faculty BDd 'lionprofeaaioaal atd ....
~led by the Senate ProfaDiaU A8lciation J:IBIICitiat..
iDe unit ere apparently DOt erN·
ered by last week's Latislati...,
actian ClDIIferriD&amp; a produclivity
baauo ol 0118 &amp;lid oae-balf par
C8lt Oil Slate worlu!nl.
Early Al!aocialed Preas ....
~ indicated tbat the booua,
OriPDallY a pout o1 the Civil
8ervials EmployeM .Assoc:iatioa'a present contzac:t with the
Stale, bad been 'Utsnded "ID
..-yoae OIL the State payroll

~~~;;
....._.. ...... an m

~

eiel:ted

IDlDl·

ColletiwD -re
t.be princip8} bu8ineal of ' ! ' day's ( AprilS) Faculty Senate

· aeMion of the

meetizta.

ollicials, judps

=:

'lbe local Personuel Office ....
porta that it 1&gt;as been advised
by .A!Idft BDd Control that, al-

thouiih

the Albany
has
not _ , a copy ol ~ill in
questioo, it is their unilerstaDd-

Debut Recording

ina that the ooly U/B employees who will be CCM!Ied are
tbcal rep.-oted by CSEA BDd
tbcal clasaifled .. lllllll88BID'!DtCCJDfid8ntlal m both civil .-vice
and professions! categories.·

The Chicago Tribune Nip It's ,;In ~n1ry blend of tal·
ents .. .." The Now York Times - . . . that the pe&lt;tonna..arw " • . • stytloll rudlnp that only the strl"' qua!Ub • • •
wwld be llkol)' to match." And RCA.-.. that lt'a "a rNI
of d'-Y.'' All lh,... ant t.lklnc about U/ B'a Clew-

~,::.~~~~~ ~~)~'::
available (jacket picture abooe). The oet Ia Nld to futurw
.. impulsive exhuberance end fire. : . . perlormences th1t 1re

NoWonl..,_

youthfully open, direct, lntenN, al"'lnc and of the arut qu.rtets of our time."

'There has also "'beeJi no word
on '"*&gt; the employees....t.o""'
«Nered !D8Y ezpect ID receift
tbe l;lon ' which is .tD bp (igured

... by ona

'at lli\e.~ 'one-bail par cisnt of
~~·s ~tale •i~Jcaope

March 81. 19'13..
..
'
Alan Willsey, chairman, Legislation Committee of tbe State
SPA, isaued this atatement on
tbe bonus 1D tbe SPA eD!CUtive
boaJd, c:ba::rter e.residents BDd
members
the Representative
Council:
•
''In the l8St several d a y s •
newspapers acroaa the State
bave carried beadliDes on tbe
Jecislation (8-1250, A-1427) as
proviiling a one and on&amp;-haU
CO!Ilt
boost to all State

::!' bhieesaiuf wi:h ~ clear
miacODception that m

Special Major is Meaningful Option
For Growi Numbers, DUS Says

~

w
~oellor

IUCh .. CbanBDd the ~
employees not
covered in the CSEA uuits were
also lliveD the L6 par cent.
"As far as we em determine,
DO IDIJII8Y aistll in the ~­
lion far the SUNY ProfeMioaal
Senicee BarJadnii:w UDit, lliir
llbould It cooitaln 0.. flmda.
'Negotiatiops for a SUNY ln.,....., are contimilna.n
SPAN.alfltlalw

IDI!Il

...tial

n...a.. ~--_._SPA
ltllian,y· 8 ~rfd·

stage

b ave &lt;IDien!d the
"the State is puab-

lnglor a ..w.-at.n

Accordint

ID SPA, tbe Stale a-. already
aet11ed with ......, IQ8rils BDd
raliable wpart&amp; haft it that the
aalary pottioo oiJIIe.- CSEA
contnct.has 8Ja6 been apMd
upon, althoulh tba State BDd
CSEA ramain in disairer!meot
.,_ rethemeot proviaions.'

=--n

Acicordinlr
ID thla
. SPk
Is 8tilf neaotia

~h

basis ol the aalary ~
paclrqe outlined late iMf ,._
(IUpcwto, December 14). Ui&gt;
(Continued .;,. pate. 7; col. 2)

The 1973-74 freshman class was
filled from a pool of 10,484 applications ( ID date 10,561applications for freshman slots bave
been received) .. Letters of ac~were sent .to 5,421 applicants, in con~t with 3,163
aooeptan&lt;:es iaaf yaar.
FresbiDeft from the Eighth
Judicial District comJlllre reesonably well with those from
elsewhere in the State. In the
1972-73 class, for emmple, local studenbj represented the !Dp
five per cent of their high
school classes, while other New ·
York S t a t e students represented the !Dp .f our per oent .
The high school average of incoming local students ia 83, the
average Regents• exam soore
225 ( compa&lt;ed With 235 for 1
non-locals). Tranaler students .
need a 2.5 -de-point averqe.
Thi&amp; year's budaet IDtals
$68,96l,ooo; Ketter reported,
excluiiioc _J.be •
budget, n.ew bWI~ .......,,_
costs of $L5 millibn and~
increases from SPA. Last year
the regular legislative budget
plus supplemental requests
totalled $67,078,000.
capital Budpt

''The •special major d.oeB provide a meaningful option for
an inareasincly significant
of students at this
~~A~&amp;&gt;'is the nUIIIber
mauifeatatioo of tbe CSEA sal- UDiversity foe working out aducational
BDd/or vilcationallife
ary aettlement last vear. As
initially flied, it provided one- goals.n
'That's
a
major conclusion of
time payml!llts ID the f o u r
CSEA clasilifled aervice bar- an evaluation of the special
major
program
undertaken by
llllininl u ill t-s . It waa then
IUIIellded by 1be Le&amp;islature ID William M. Fritton, 888istant
indude itB own employeM BDd -to the dean, Division of Qndertbe judiciary. Top-nDit politi- paduate Studies.

anr

.

Summina up tbe admlMioas
situation, p,.,mdeot Rabeot L
KM!er reported that laat year's
regular freshman class of 1,410
has been expanded this year ID
2,056. This represents the first
year qf student body ezpansion
at ¢be rniilbman level in anticipetion of Amherst, Ketter aaid.

BDd part-time employees.n
.This ~ however reports
received oo Campu8 ~ the
State olllce ol Audit and Control BDd from SPA iDdicate that
~
BDd NTP's are not in-

I

--.--.

Se~ateG~

~onus~ay

scept

.......

Studielj. wban stwlies, social

work, psychology and sociology.
'Those worlting hold such
titles as special assistant ID !he
vioe p....Ud..,t Of health atfairs,
University ol Pennsylvania, reporter, "special" sdlool teacher, health related professions
worlr.er, worker in a crime conttrol planning oftioe, worker in
a community development of-

fioe, theatre penormer. social
worker aod self-employed.
'The .._,. Holpocl'
Asked 1D evaluate the special
major ai havirlg helped, bavina
had no effeCt or bBv1ng bindered them, forty-three respondents (84.3 per oent) indicated
.that the program helped; eight
115.7 per cent ) indicated ttiat
the major bad no effect; none
(Contilwed 011 pGIO 6, coL I)

The University's capital budget is set at $37,431,000 for six
structures on the Amherst campus, includiJJI ijJe c h i II e d
water plant and facilities for
engineering, administrative services, and English and modem
languages. Planning morues in
the amolmt of $5.6 million bave·
also been ~ Requests
in tbe eupp~ bwlPt inelude $1 mUiioR:-fail' tbe' conversjoo of Tower, $2.6 million for
the ~ of Tower from the
Dormi!Dry Authority, and $23.9
million for a major library on
the new campus. The urpncy
of the last has -itated almoet daily contact with Albany,
K-r aaid

~==:~~

SAS.U Has Support .cor·rup~tter'~ •="':.min~
B 1"II t 0 E xpan-d cOUllCl"I :..:k,..,_

.

.......... in..,.,..,..,

the n!Bpolldents in tbe evalua'
1~
Door ...; tbea
of 15 aab- _
tion sur....y praiaed tbe program
betical appllaotiona from the
for meetiJJI particular needs
Faculty of Social Scienoaa BDd
~ror_provi~!'lladdi~onal~ ~tion
wbi~b ha_ve ·
option m Umversity studies.
.
been
for "8ix ID ..,..
• 'l.'bKty-thrae (or 84.7 !*' ·.
teal
n ' " - bave been
A bill callin
. • g for tbe addition
Aa preseotly written, the bill acted lJIIOil, lbe ~t eaid,
oen£ of .._..tents) -workm, in jobs they found meaninc· of one ~ and one student oallll for tbe eddition to -=it but _.. ~"'Uiiiif -.rful BDd which were, in II'BnY •member .ofD the local councils coilbciJ of a member choaen by 8DOB8 IMde 4ilat all clascaaes, directly related ·ID the 'of each SUNY uDit, iaduding ancl from the faculty, who aes nonnaJly t&amp;ulht by tbe fao.
main t h r ii s t of their special the· UIB ConDcil, bas -.:ted would ..serve foe
three-year uiW involvad could be met.
major.JilOIInUIII"
-8p0080r&amp;
s - Sen- term, BDd a student member Sabbeticala are a ~ DOt
~
(~,......
~_.....
,~.,._,.---·-cent ol reapoodenta) bad been Mark ,Boreaslein,- chairman yeal' tenn.
• not IJ'BIIted ~~~. al-'
accepted in graduate achool and and UIB representative of the
Chances for - f " this year . thoulh tbe adminlalmlioo ip
were working -..ms advBnced Student Aaooc:iation ol the "look good," amording ID Bor- tryiJJI to honor all .._ re..,..__
.
Slate Univemity of New Yom enetein.
QUMI8 lilat 001118 forwM'd with ,
"It ""uld
Fritton re- (SASU) .
SASU is also Ul1linl- proper·~ bt tbe deport:ecl. "that the special ma'lbe SASU~ bill .has ol two additional pieces of lei· parlD8&gt;t am eury the t.chJCil bad a poaitive ratbar than . tbe ISacl.ina cit .om.. ~ islation that would exteod rep- ina load &amp;lid olb8r. - . y
.....,.Uve effect on IIUCb ll&lt;lC8Pt- t.a of bodi. bot.- of tbe Lee· ,_tatlon on SUNY aovem- information.
.
anoe foe lhia pera!llltqe com- islatullo, · ~ :reported. ina bodies to flocaky and etuThe~ o1 the'
P8Ie8 fa~ with tbe na- Chief apoaear in the ~Y dents. Qne bill cummtly belnc Senate'• eubcolmDitltee on llmdtiona111Yenllllia Ccmalaude Cook (ft.~), conaidered aa11e for tbe addi- inl practicee, -Wd over lrom
'Those atudents m graduate who chairs the body's Bel.-. ticm of Olle ,flocaky &amp;lid Jut IDCIIth'aiiMietiDir, Olx.
acbool, tbe evaluation report tion Committae. In the Ben- student member to tbe SUNY .apin on tbe floor. SiudeDfa had
mdicittes,. are worlting foe ad~ ate, Joaeph PiSani (R-Weat- Board of ~ Altbaoqh · . . invited. .to ent;1o into the
vanced ..,_in audl areas as che8ler County), bead ol tbe the ~ lllfl1 believes debate, and...,.. 8ludent Aaaomediclne, den!Utry, law, edu- Hllher Bdacation COmmitltee in thla· bill, Borenstein eaid, cistion President Jon Dandes
cation, joumalilm, religiolj&amp;. is principal backer of ~llilj:' (Continued 011 7, -'. J)
(Co__, - par z. col. 1)

.........

-n

report

...

a

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

---

��-.

.

Al&gt;ril 5, 1913

3rdAnnua.I
C-UDay
IsMay6
·

'lbe lllini annual Coin,;;un.
itf.-UDivenity -~ ~ bo.me
will be held ~ May 6,
from 1-6 p.m.
As in ibe past two yeara
wben-tban 25,000 "rilliWn
have atleDded, tbe planned ·
eYaJ:ta are i-.ded to "in1zo.
duce tbe people c1 wea.m
N- Yodt Co tbe di-.ity,
- . emtemez&amp;and .........,_
ol the Uni.-ity CDI1llllllllity,
8pecial empbaBia ... beinl
p*-1 Clll inviting tiiUdenla 'IIIIo
plan Co au-t UIB and itanmla
ol studenla 'IIIIo are now at-

tendins.

u-q, ol
includes:
Bus Coma cl North Campa
~ leaviDI liom
Lockwood Ubraly Clll tbe Main
8 - t ~_,.ball hour
belinDinl at 1 p.m.
Healllt Bciem:a iactwal and
clamox.tralioao: oral ......... detectiaD, dental decay, ~

--toto

OutlpoUn 1!117 Nobel La..- Dr. - . . Weld of Hunrd.
hero
dellvw •
of-.... an laplca ,.....,.
from "Duth"
''Chi- _ _ .... - . - - In the

Tbe tentative

-

.._,

tjcme(

inediaai ~'IY-

tbempy

•
Norton Hall 8¥Gta: StudeDt
Aa1c:iatioD ol6c. 'l'ilila· IIIIW·
8; intematloDal ~
and f o I k cllmclac; Crealive
Crsft C..... clemoo""'atimJ&amp;
and edlibit&amp;; open a- and
table tennis CoumameDts and
other ~ activities;
Community Action COrps ·axhibita; informa1ion hood1ll and
e:xhibila 011 admissiana, finan.
cial aida, academic propam8,
minority Jl1'01181D8; photo axhibits, In addition, the Otfe•1ifta; TilfiD ROoin and Book• tito,e will bs open for ~
, ~of M~!· ail'Viaimiiat 011 undHju8uate

•'*

~

· Fec:ult)l of Neturol - - -

for en lnformel ~ -

-

tl..,. out
In - . Frlcley

eftemoon. an hlo ,.....rb et - - · ...... he_p_bly ................ ---·
phuh on "pteytnc It - · " the taptc.

Educ~tional ThiTJking.Sterile,

Dean ·Chntges·

fied with any one ~t," evsluation.)
the joint major. A student
A fifth major option, called
Tbe " ' - size of Coday's ..U- ' can create 1ri&amp; own joint major a faculty majoc, is now under
veraitie&amp; is ODe d their moot by fullilling part of the require- consideration. 'The facultY "rnalricbteninc MpeCI8, acoordinc ments in each ol two depart- jor would enable 8 student into Dr. Obarles H. V. Ebert, mer&gt;ts. A third, snd related op- tere&amp;ted in 8 broad area, such
dam ol the Division ol Under- !l:io11. is 4be double major. To as social sciences or bumanilll'llCbHe Studies. Speaking at grailuete wKh 8 double major ties, to pick one ol the seven
last Wecu-lay's "Univeftity a s tudent must fulfiH all of the facukies for his field of conReport," Ebert~ lhat .requirements m each of two de- oentnrtioo, ....u- lb&amp;n a single
tbe size of today's in&amp;litv.tioos par!ments.
deperimenl Ebert described it
indiatte&amp; 'tilat "we ba11JB become . . 'l)1e. . .fOUI'th t).'pe pn!8eDtly . as "somewhere between the trasterile in olir .._,_..,___
· available is the Specie) major, ditionel and specialmsV.r."
"Ail we can~ bigpr whicb Ebett termed "the beThe vario\18 facultie8 ';,., exand hiller universities, wben lrinninR_-oJ.!l .J1BW -type o( edu- . lll11ininc the possibilities for
'Wbdt· we sbould bs 'doin£ is de- 1 . J l.-r; "llle. stu~, wh9 . opts this type of major and Ebert
velopin£ new•WaY&amp; ol mtegnot- · for a special mejoram d881£D expects it will be ready for im6usineos ~ JliO- inc the lllliversity with the real his own field with the assi&amp;- plementation in the fall ol
- . ....-., decree propams world," bs saicL
.tsnoe ol any two f{tculty mem- 1974. He empmsized lhat it
and 1J18D1111!1111! asaiatance Type of llopaltment
bers wbo are willinc to asoiiBt was not meant Co be "a low
propam (free technical 8llli&amp;One poeoible m e tho d ol. him in pwsuing lri&amp; porticular stODdard degree designed to
tance, eapecia!ly to minority ad&gt;ieWn£ this integration, ac- interest. (See ~ story salvage p Q o r students," but
small h g s j _ , ) . ·
. cording to Ebert, would bs the tbis .ieoue on special majors rather an attempt to meet the
Thc Uni.oenily Libraria: a establishment ol a oew type of
·
variety· of tows, alb, vicJec&gt;. 8CII!elemic ~ one tbet
tape _.tationl, demoaslza. would embrace a mum .broader
tiona, al1tila and open bouaea acope cl subject ......... 'Ibis
at ....aa~ campus . loclalioas could be accomplished by elim(I.ockwood, Baird Mmdc Li- inalinl~iicidi of tradihrary, 8cience and En •
.
tiona!
&amp;tn1dure,
- library, HaUth ~ and Jller1l.nl individnel ~
brary and lfalrlmlm, A1t Li- -"inenla into l8rpr inlerestlfOUps
'There is a new approach to who bas also bsen instrumental
hlmY).
·
·
• that would devote .tilemllelves to treating chronic alcoholism, the in coordinatin£ • propam ol
Jl ueic Depanment; U/B core pnlblema. Ebert - tbeee nation's No. 1 addiction prob. . care for the ~Y ill ''We
Sympbon:y Band ClliiC8t, lbe deparm&amp;Us aa.b&amp;inc ''nl- 1em, at the E . J . Meyer Mem- wont to tea4'i~tiie patient to
avoid ·t he misulie~ or abuse of·
UDi¥ersity B1rin8 Ordiealra in sponaiw to needs and not tied orial H08Pital.
CODillllt, pedormaoce c1 Mo- · to tradition.
''This new approach begins aloobol, to make him aa totall.Y
"'Ibe individual ll18l1lbe!9 ol byd'•~_ the• treamedlm.encal/t~~ =~ve in aociety aa is poezart'a "Coal fan tulle" by the
118
1
UDiwnity Opua ......abop, tbeee clepMments could still
Tbe detosiflcation prooesio taoo c..aatiw. Aalciate con- iunotion aa prolMRCIIlllls in psychiatriclrebabililative astient is draWn away from
carts, ··o .r 1• n delnouataaticll, tbek own fields, but at the pects - into o n e serviceable the
elecacaic -music atudio, muoi- alJI1e time they would be mom- p&amp;cialge of care for the patient," a1::J:1 -throulh the .me of other
cal aptitude tesl8.
•
bars Of a larnr 4loam," be &amp;aid says propam dizector Dr. Earl drop - usually leba about
C/arli B.U.AIA/dic D,pori;Ebert .......lei also like to W. Noble, "!ODd it OCIIltinUM five days. Other health c a r e
ment: 8IIIJIIIIi: h D D h, IOif. etudeDlB do m&lt;n ''pmdical with Planninc some real after teem members 8Iso become indance, tialebeU, tl1ble ....., work outside the "'-omn" fOI" care and followup once the .pa- volved in helping the patient
judo• .__,...._ 8CUBA with ecedemic credit. He cK8d in- tient is discharced from the . who, as soon aa be or abe ia
able to be up and uound, will
waler ~--a.,~ tenJships with indualriaJ fum&amp; hoepital."
8Uidaa' and fllma.
01" eommunity qeocie&amp; as axFro"! the ~t ~ chronic ~~ 1 r o ~ p meetinp, may .
perticipatioa In~
IIIIIPiee ol d&gt;is typo ol. -work. aloobolic ,...~ S8 ~ by )Om· others m the recreation
aa......., ~ uid badmin- In this way, bs believes, tbe the '-P•tals ~ de- room to watdt 'IV, participate
Coo.
"
leanlinc- could be IDIIde partment to the 30-hed m-pa- in planned biqo, shullebOard
E,..u-vJEminfatme ndio' · nJddt llllft.--rtbwbile,for the · tient de~tion facility activities, etc., utilize the boapistation. radAr W1locit;y _ , . . . IIIDdaat, iliec:ame "thare.ia a real : (four room&amp;~ for 'IIIOID- tai:;ym 01" oocujletiooal therspy
: ·
inl. electzoclrdiopa dlapo- ad--.,. ill .c1o1nc what •you • en, f!&gt;e ~ ·26 {or. men), center.
'There are daily meetinp with
· sis, demoaslzalion c1 . , _ arslesnilna."
~ indi~ patien~ numllliain ~ ' In ~ ..._ of Clpllona •
ap!11181lt "ooordinator--will fol- the patient ~t 001111that everythin£
neutzon ~ ~ v~ ~ ~in..UD.- 1 low tbe~tthJ:oulh the 1-. selors to lllal-"ean. be dliDe'it beinc·done
tioa, aantron aclivalioD ol doqnodmate · 81d11iea." "E"bht Pl~'tal
*Y'·· Durhic what -~ for
tbe patient, meetinp three
metsl8, electronic. count in 1 noted that thin ' - t-1 axne
be an
teD.....,
~t, 11owr cndt demCJil.. J&gt;101NM at UIB In braadatSnc ~· t e BEiped
....:r;;"cl..!nr, times ....akly with Alcoholia1
'8tnltloa, ll1lll1pCIONr alnnft dia- the
cl options which • wuu may be any
the AnoQymous ~Iivas .. .
with
play, model l1in:n.ft IX1IIIeat, IIIDdmt
in se1eat1q a major ~th ears fMm- ~_ : · ....u .. open .
wbo visit the in-pa.
COIIJPllla' CODIIolled model ,ail- field. A~~ thele are four ~ ~~~ volunteers
tient
facility.
mad, film, 111111!11 aDd chiU1B ellenlatiwa,
· ~ peycbiaN_'&gt; L...-hL
~ lranlpqlt:aticil ... . The first llllllbod. which is ta ..... COUMelor, .....tai .......
Not oaly do. the patict
;..,. city relidlali ..
orpnlad aJonc tnldltianal de- worker, ._..w., ... lemt llbout what be ...... do
ol ehraalc
Allo participalin£ will be· ~linea,allowsastudellt Cia! worker,~ admlnl- In hlllldle hie
aemc.. ~ tomQOI" in a puticular aubject, ~tor. to cbaplaiD ':"'" will m- aloohollm1, but l*un -.hen
lemt • well. A t - loura, apeclal aped- and be" ..-m. bill ...... in ordinate an the - - - a D d demoaalralioao).
d1&amp;t ,U,jeot by . fulfilliilc the sary for thet ~ patiomt. ....etly l1ll!edDa thin ...... -chanp ol lnliimiatioo 011 all
Nuc:J.r 8c:isnae 8Dd ~~ requinmeDioa ol oaly one de- Help .f or n- Wl1o Went It
0
. patieilla . . wall . . . aharinll cl
--.1
•hlch
toto
-dilllcult medlcal aDd nlhlohlfitatloo poablana.
In JllidlilPt) Adult· MVJ.. . J!lbelt .-:rihed as heine for Jlelped," llllid Dr. Noble, liD •
Otltea Ie.m lihaut UcallolIIBlt Celller, imd maDY otleil. llludellla "wbo ... not . . . - - t ~ cl mediclm
By KEN SERVIcE

u_, , _ -

;,

increasinc

ueed for a broader

-PienoDan'tn--

scope in education.

Ebert also commented that
society a n d tecimoloiY are
changing so rapidly t a t it
"doesn't make sense .to develop
a 111-year master plan becauee
we have no idea of whet the
social., political snd economic
trerujs of tha next four or five
years may be.

.

.

''We are at the threabold ol
a new era in education. We
know that education is not a
panacea, and that the tradi-

~~·t· ~~lyNl"'~ -

must develop is not a rigid
master plan, but rather on ongoing process that will enable ,
us to deal with the llends of
&lt;the future."

The Meyer Has New Approach to Treating
Nation's Number One Addiction Problem

a-

mny:,;

~
b ,
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April 5, 1973
-

.

TM Advocate Contends Technique
Keeps IndiviJJ,ualS-Ever-Cal"":, Alert
Robert Harrow (U/ B senior
in psychology) says:
· "I bepn to notice my mind
was becoming clearer and more
alerl I bepn to appreciate people and """"Y'hini around me.
Since meditating, it's easier to
aee the positive aspects of different siblatiolls."
De.vid Ruedeman (U/B senior in electrical en ·
· )

a..-1 aboutbeingab~

more clearly since sla!ting TM.
"I bepn to do bettar on tests
and bettar in school." T h i s

'cor re Ia tes with a study at
UCLA which found sludents'
grade point averages went up

after starting TM. 'Tm not as
bothered by school pressures
either," David concluded.
· ~editators do report a reduction in tension and anxiety,
as well as an inCreased feeling
of calmness throogbout the dsy.
In the midst or even the most
stressful situations, practitioners experience greater stability,
greater equilibrium.
lnteresfed in' bearing more?
Come to an introductory lecture offered by Students InternatiOnal Meditation Society on
Tuesday, April 10, at 8 p.m.,
Room 334, Norton Union. For
more information, call837-0894.

.ollhe---lhe. . . . of-.. . -......, The New 'Ethel &amp; Albert'
The llilporlilr . _ ... -

.....

to , _ • tarum far . 1118 -

),.

co-mml!nltJ.W.-_ . _ peper• o n i l - •
-

·NI·xo-n, ·Most of_U.S. Sa;d
'Threa·t ene
· d'
- by D ay - care

pennltL

is universal. Anyone can prBA&gt;tice TM because it is. e a s Y
to learn and easy to do. It requireo no withdrawal (rom life,
no change in life-style or belief,
and it is not a religion or philosophy. In fa&lt;:!; no amount or
~ticism csn liinder -the prae. ticie ,in ani' way1 nor will imy
amount of belie! make it work
more effectively.

- What.••isu Transcendental Med-

N&lt;;&gt;w Beirig Aired on WBFO

"Etbel and Albert," tbe popu1ar tadio 'c omedy aeries or
the 1940's, and later a television
favorite, is being heard in a
new version weekdays at 2:30
p.m. during the monlh oi April
over WBFO (88.7 FM).
Peg LY&lt;ich. w)&gt;o plays Ethel,
has authored more than 6,000
"Ethel and Alber(' SCI'ipts for

''Ethel and Albert" so popular
earlier. Rather than pushing
for "relevancy'' in the scripts,
be bopes to keep ihe·plots sUbordinate to t h e characters.
"It's my conviction that they'll
do well," be says. :•They're
marvelously literate. Ten cuts
above anything else."

Airport Mdil

both
radio began.
and television
since
the series
The original
itation? · It is a simple tech- "Albert" was Richard Widnique practiced 15-20 minutes mark. He was replaced by Al.
twice daily, sitting comfortably 1an Bunce, who 'played the benwiU. eyes closed. An easy, nat- . pecked husband for ov"" 20
The country as a whole does ically, he advised those con- ural process learned in personal years. Moving from radio to
not favor child care, and Presi- cemed about day care to devel- instruction, TM a II ow s the television, "Ethel and Albert''
. ~H:~adv~!~RoberCI
__ i wm
. . moP.o'vae bfO'!nt.•dt-basedthe
locslgrasslevelroothatst mind to experience increasingly was a staple of tb'e- Kate Smiih
HO...UU..
...., ,......,. •.,.,......,.
mo!nt&lt;
: liaer states. o{ ll)E'Iltal activity . . show for jwo years before ~v- ·EDITOR:
the campus Day Csre Symposi· can work over _the long ' hsu1 cbrrespondingiy1 therl. 18 -a re: - : ing it.s .Dwti shaw, for seven.
lit may be of some interest to
urn March ,28. Ai:oording to for a nati~Jl!ll child care system. ·finement.in physiological activ- When Bunce died in 1965, the 1he members or the academic
Hosrl!.j&gt;s. t'lioyis ~q, direcC
.. dl.lfo irul•vill~ !'ll'ei Pf"- iY,~w~ ~ws the \lpdy to show was di!JI:ontinued.
communit)" to learn that the
4&gt; 0 " the' Do. c.tn.-anll Clill&lt; grBI? _am alii
be~ gain ·dee~~ In facl, the res
Last year, ':Eruplay' 8 produc- "stamp window" of the U.S.
Development Council of Amer- even !f •t currently •hal! funding, received d'!'ing 'TM is '!f - a tion center'· in Mactlson, Wis- Postal Service Airport Mailing
,;..,~on has-"""""ded k&gt;-the r ~osk!ns ~. urgmg--thpse--&lt; deeper. quality.than that gamed consin devOted to the produc- Facility at the Buffalo lntemamajont'y's lack of support for m the movement to take time in a full night's sleep. This
.
•f
di d
tiona! Airport is IICb&lt;jduled to
child care services by vetoing out .~fom. ~ir ~ o~rations s~te. in w h i c h ~e body ;re- ~:.ch..! r'Ms~
m •.;..a~ be shut down i&gt;ermaitent.ly. The
the cOmprehensive child devel- for coalition-building.
cetVes deep rest while the mind sh would be inte ted .
· t- AUport is curreDtly unde&lt;going
opment bill and by cutting back
For tbe task of building a new remains folly awake is called . e
eWti
res them ~·
a Significant eJql&amp;nSion, all, we
0118
on monies currently supporting majority in favor of child care, a state of "restful 'alertness" mg new
of
senes. are told, in the interest of imchild care programs.
Hoskins
recommended that (see Scienti~Tenchanged
yoors older
.and · provm·g ae-~ce.
One_.......,
of
·
,...... American , ''The ;'lhe
m a was.
greatly
soc1ety,
.. u
~
Nixon has learned ·that be those mvolved ~ the present Physiology ~f M.editation,'' Ethel and Albert are guided by this service over the years has
need not act upon his own pre- ~1818 as an OCCSSIOn to organ- Feb., 1972) . Th18 untque exper- M L ~ •L- ...,
nfro ta- been the ability to take urgent
. s. ~= ~Uo- co
n
a:ir mail to the "stamp wind9w''
viously articulated commitment tze. Malfe ' long-range plans ience was proposed to be a
to "tl;te first' fiye years of lli~' ths~ ~ mto account tbe larger major state of consciousness, tio'!" wtth skyl!'ctqng, homosex- at the Airport any time of
Hookins aplsined .to an audt- pohtical nature of •the task and completely different from wak- uality, women~ lib and oth~ _day or nigbt, every day.or the
ence which includ!"!· more nllllll &lt;!on't get oogg~- down_ in. ad- · ing, dreaming, or sleeping. :"'=iraryM::"'L"y;.mlna lh!". week with the lmDw!edge it
than. m a I e participants. The voc;acy . of particular P•eces of
However, one doesn't. medila 8 thees,role ~~ Ethel
would be on ·the next plane
directo Karl scl.m;,n going t.o_it&amp; ,d1!91ination. Tboae
President speaks of ~Y care .as legiSlation, he urged. ~- · tate for the sake of the exper- ~la
a threat to t:l&gt;&amp;AIJ!"ricsn.fann.ly . !&gt;or· !!,&gt;at all .
hg belie,ve ieace· qt. meditation itself, but a8 llirt
r
tnemlleni oi 1he academic coma•es ~th~-' !" daY;, csre m
er form, ' ralber ;fl.r the benefits -it ' proInitial .
f
...__ munity who woold .like to bave
P~
mel~ P va
care, are,· d..,.,., 'in '(Ially life' ·As a reSult
·
!""'"lnse rom ...., this -w:e oon1inued might
in tliei 1. friends, 1not
'PM; he added.•' f·d ..
cti' ' . meditato
Mmn!'ftpolis area, where the 001181._,_ wn'ting ...__,_Con~_ _. as ~ He alsO ad9ised ihat the "ex" 0 · I! 1 1 Y 12ra ce,
.
~ p_rogrsms
, . hs_ve aheady been.
...,.
""""'
•·talgic 8nd 0' I .... - realisti
P&lt;\ltS" limit the I
to d fuid mcreased "!'o;rgy, mtelli- atred IS still mcomplete· but m- ' sional repreaeotative.
The stra~ ofor:t!r dsy
visory roles and~o~esthe C::n: ft"i::..~d J::"tiij•ty and ful- dicatjons so far reveai strong
Yours sincerely,
~t at this •.point, Hos- sumers, to
the leadership
The ~t w~ ~esbuk about reaction both P"! and con.
~r,
kina advised, must be to con- · roles. 'Don t stand between the benefits of TM however is WBFO ~ Dtrecto,r J?aye
Phsnnaco'--•
vinoe Nixon's constitulmcy that consumers and the grim reali- to hear about it f..;,m the
Karpoff 18 fairly opti'!"i.stic.
..,.3
tbe pl81811t day American fam- ties of the bureaucratic pro- pie who do it' Says Leo Siegel
·~ fact of the matter IS, the
ily need$ child care in order to cess," he warned.
f
U B 8·tud . .
• audtences never really gave up
survive and to produce whole .
''The future belongs to a tru- ormer I
ent.
on radio drama. .It was abanand t-Ithy children.
ly sensitive consumer-&lt;&gt;riented ~- Are SUbtle
doned by the wnters and the
Because or the local-&lt;&gt;J&gt;tion thrust," Hoskins said.
'The cbsnges _from
are ectors who left for · the glamour
nature or muCh of the PresiThe SympOsium was spon-. subtle.. It took me a few ~o.nths and money of
eVIsipnyWbat
dent's social-aei-vices program, 6ored by the U / B Day Care to notice any profou~. ~er- we hope
and Albert' will
-· '
.
the focus fcir political action Center. Hoskins appeared up- ence other than the t.mtial ef- be is an at
to pick up
Noon °'\. ~ 6 18 fh!' ·~has shifted from w~· to der the auspices o' tlie Com- fects ·of calmn~, bemg more where radio
woUld
dent . nommating ,COIDIIlllit!"' s
•
•
·
·
'
rested-and reqwrmg leas sleep
'f · hsdn'
dlladline for aooepting nomma~ -Hoskins 881d. •trateg- muntty Ac!_i&lt;&gt;n ~rps.
•.. • which ,now seems more triviai now • it .
t
- tions for the State University's
_,
-~ ·•
-,_.- '· .·' 'than tire _.,. 18 hi-L --·--' doned,, not JUSt another attempt . Distin
' 6-·'·'-' T'......J.:-w Profeseuec • w l.:n uu.."UJ: n:u · to revtve the 'Shadow' or the
. u.ux..u ~
,
later. rm starting to relate to 'Lone Ranger.' If 'Ethel and sorships and Chance II or . s
myaelf as a person. I find my- Albert' is successful in this ares Awards for Ex c e II en c e m
aelf more comfortable to be we hooe to expand the amoimt Teaching (Reporter, March
with, and feel a lot m&lt;;&gt;re i~de- of radio drama on the air_How- 29), J~ Dandes, SA Pf"lS!dent
pendent and self-sufficient.
ever, I wouldn't want to just and dtainnan or lbe.coDIIIlll&gt;tee,
acceot dramas from a -national has annoiUlced.
Ians
prodUction center Radio drama
Students wishing to submit
.
•'
has too ·'great
potential for nominations should write a letsocist . cormnunication to timit !er"' recommendation. indicat-.
·
it to national inte.....t items. I mg also tl;ae nilmber, or '?""""'"
·The Rev. Charles AU8tin would very much like tD aee '·the: student hail ~ wtth ,the
Dinkier assumed . d U·*i e s as local authors writing plays on faculty member m question.
ROBERT r. IIARLEIT
EpiscOpal dtaplain tD the Uni- local themes and then have Letters must be signed and must
veraity campus, April 1, The them produ~ in out studioo. I indude the nominator's sti.ld_ent
/01111 A.. cwunu
Rev. Frederick J. Masterman, ~ that the talent is there, · n~, Dandas aays. In adcbainnsn, ' ~ of Col- tt's JlL'lt a matter or finding it, _dition to ~ . members of
• Ieee W!llk, Diocese of-Western or of it findin~ us. We"re going · the student COIIIIIIlttee are JoI ;.. ,. PATiucu lrho ~.,.ll8JUI.ur ~
. New .Yori, bas announced.
to watch what bappens -to ann Annao, Tyrone Saunders,
·.
· Until rerit.ed quarters are ob- 'Ethel and ·Albert' very care- jl:d .Wolf and Bob Kole.
ltANCF •. CA.RD~
tained, Father Dinkier's ad- fully.''
. The committee bas aiao sent
dress will ,be thllt or the EpiscoEarplav Direct o_r Karl a· letter requesting nominations
pal Diocesait Offi!:i&gt;, 1114 Deb.- Schmidt hooes tD retilin the to ~ cbainnen. The ,
ware Avenue, Bulfalo, 14209.
homey quality that made letter is tD be read in all ciasaes.
t:.U

Window . ':

Is Doomed

L;,clt t!

:,U:

~

ca!,

=:t.,

.ta!'e

p;,.,_

·Nomm·atio'ns
Deadl'me Set

™

• ' al'
E plSCOP
N arne Chaplam

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

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

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

a

�..

-

.

.

-

.

.

.

REPORt JOTHE ·· ·
.
.· · fACULrt
..
. .. ADMI ISJRAT~
· · ·COONEit
. . .·
· . OFTHi
, ·· . . STATE UNIVERSITYOP
... ·. "EW YORK AT BWFFALO
BY
e··:·. . .- . · AN EVALUATION ·TEAM
. . ·.. . · REPRESENT NG THE
· COMMSSION ON HIGHER
.. :·. . \· EDUCAJON·· op -r·H~
MIDDLE' STATES
. '· ·· . .. - ASSOCIAT ON
.

.

. . ' 3rr

·. · .

-

.. '

.

.·

.· ·

r1

-

.

.

.

•

1.....

,

.

. ' I-

;. i·..

', .,, '·,''

.,t r...

'1 L•:~;," '

.,.
!·1: ~

�' ".'

JTt..

..:e

CONTENfS
Introduction ......:........................- ....... 2

.

:::~=-- =:::::=::::::::::::::::=: !
Colleliale AMmlbly

······················
F'our-Counoe, Four-Credit ···-·······
Grades 8Dd Grading ·····' ················
Independent Study .. -....................
Graduate Educat&gt;on ····················-····
Faculty ········································-·· .. ··
Students &amp;l!P.Student Se,rvices ... -, ..

3
4

4

4
4

5
6

=~~.:~~~::::=:::=~~;_=: t

I.iJxari~~--

Ji .,..

·I

Communlcations'Cenler ............... 6

Relations with State Apmcies . ....... 7
Some Closina Comments ................ 8

·~
1be evaluation team which represented the Commission on Higlll!r Education of the Middle Stales Association was asked to make a oomprehensive review of the State .University of
New York at Buftalo. Concurrent with
the Middle States visit five other speci41 Qf, P!.'\(~a~ '!"Cieli&lt;!s

_,..ripre118111edoby,AWalqation.teama.
At least ooe additional team had been
'f&amp;lifp\is '-llppii&gt;xlilllllely : twO
weeks earlier. SUNY-BuftalO had prepared for each visiting team in a very
oommendable manner 8Dd hence approached the visitors with an already
'-VY investment of time and elforl

oli'"'tlil.

Representatives of the University'
were fuJJy cooperative and Helpful
duririg the viail It was obvious that'
they wanted the evaluation elf&lt;K:t to be
constructively useful rather than a pro
forma ~in deoennial aocredit!F
linn. 'l'h8.
Stluly report was i!&gt;sightful aPd candid and il).vi~ re-

seg

aoonaes..' ,....

.~""
tiOOs

X-'

•

's·' Visiting

to.·' :YeritY~tJ\e
'cOodi.' Citeci 'in the

self stUdy 8Dd to express opinions and
judgments on these ~tiers.

In aeneraJ, .t he team's overall intention was to review the goals of the
Univenity 8Dd to evaluate the insti- lutional·data wbich pertain to the attainment of these pis. However, the
greater part of the team's accompHshment was a review of the statement of
the goals 8Dd an l!llllnination of the
settinl in wbich theae goals -~ JJUFsuecl. 'l'b4.1kY s~. as ..., ~ the
report, f~ the ·IIUJIB pneral ,d e, ,
sign. '·
,. .
1be viaitlii, team ' fowl4 .. SUNYBulflilo i c!JIIIilples'institii\ion to evalu:
ate despite the ~ 'ol the &amp;If

~- ~-~~-:~
iDielied
helore we -n..d .... our .._. ·
·-mea the earlier assumpllllli. SUNYBulfalo Ia 11 CJ10W1411elalaiw ~
8Dd has
eo lor 1118J1Y Y8BIL Mare
,_IIi.
Ulldtqoae impjlrtlmt
chaDpL We endeavored to compr&amp;head .1ba sipdficm!ce ol the c:illulps
wilbla._4he pat tao y - 0&lt; ~ tmd
to 1111111 the. c:illulps etill In propea

aa '-

It mllbt.be U8lllul

to.-- the-;.,

•

policy c:onstitutes an ' ilzcellent elfort
at perticipe.tion in aovemanoe hut it
also raises the questiOn of how long
to!{:~ conditions are better
the pace can he maintained
knoom and understood much more
Reference is made in another seccompletely by per110ns aseociated with
tion of this report to l8iations with
SUNY•Buftalo than by the visiting
State
agencies. It is obvious that the
team.
But
since
they
inftuenoed
our
• the office of tbe President has
sucoeesful qlimagement ol the Univerobservat:iOJlll, our deliberations, and
been occupied by four per110ns since
sity
requires
extensive intenction with
our
responses,
they
are
identified
as
1966· other key administrative oflicers
a host of State agencies and this norreference points.
are .:.,latively new to the. UniV&lt;Il&amp;ity;
mally involves the principal Univer'1be visiting tMm, in endeavoring to
• the undergraduate population
- sity. administrators. When added to
meet its responsihilities, paralleled the
doubled as did the professional schools;
Self Stluly with some variations parthe OIHl8fiiPIIS administrative work
graduate enrollments tripled;
ticularly in emphasis. 1be team gave
load, the total task appears Herculean.
• the size of the faculty increased
close
attention
to
the
administrative
propoit.ionstely; ' ·
·· .
Returning to the intenial adminisorganization, to academic programs,~
. tzatioo of the UniverSity, the separa• · faculty salaries and 8.880Cl8ted
students and student -.ices, to li. tioo ol major areas pi academic rebenefits improved during the period of
braries' and instructional services, to
sponsibility_ between the Vice Presifticyi\Y' b'!ildup to a _compe_titive level
dent for Acai:lemic Aftairs and the Vice
wit~t, tbe nations! acsaenu~. ms,rket- . !hi faculty and to some. of the special
programs
in
which
the
University
has
President of the Faculty of Health
place;
..
been involved in ita elforts to relate to
• operating budgets grew fourfold
Sciences is understandable in light of
the city and to the region. Less atbetwe£n 1962 and 1972 but tbe dollar
the long tradition of bealth science
tention was given to sponsored relevel support has pis tesued in tbe last
education at Buftalo, coupled with the
sesrch, to supporting services and fathree-year period with a slight downspecial place held by medical educacilities and to iinanoes and budgets.
tum experienoed in the present fiscal
tion centers in 1he SUNY system. The
Relatl'lns with State agencies were
year. Tbe inftationary trend operates
viability of this relationship will he
considered as having special signifiin the opposite direction;
l:e9ted by events which O(:CUr after the
cance for the welfare of SUNY-Buf• goals or objectives of the instinew campus is occupied. However, the
falo but the team was · at some distution were redesigned and restated.
present !II!PIIrBtion of academic aftairs
advantage in going beyond the verifi'The importance of quality graduate
into two major compooents leads also
cation of ti)e complexity of the !J&gt;terwOrk was cited as a niust for a univerinJo the separation of the jurisdiction
agency relationships · and the un"'l'rsity center, and strength in professionof Ph.D. programs with a.--programs
tainties with which a campus adminisal schools acclaimed. 1bere continued,
which occur in tha bealth sciences retration operates within the very large
as 1nstitutionaJ soals, '11\ outstan&lt;l}ni'
~ponsible to the :V,ice ~dent of the
State system.
undergraduate program and a specull'
Faculty of Health Sciences for initial
relab1mship with the cbmmunity arid
resource allocations. We note further
Administration
,..
region;
that the Graduate School is not the
Tbe University's plan of adminis• the administrative organization
degree
recommending unit for the
trative organization is an impressive
of the academic oomponents of the
Master
and Doctor of Educa-tion, the
structure of assigned responsibilities
campus were altered substantially in
Master o( Business Administration,
associated with major administrative
1967 and now feature three divisions
the Master of Library Science, the
offices, combined with stated interreand seven Faculties;,
..Master of Social Work, the Doctor of
lationships
among
the
oftices.
Discus• plans for a collegiate system were
Jurisprudence, and the several doc- ·
sions with many of the office holders
superim~ on the structure of Factoretes in the Health Sciences. Also,
document a consistent repreaentetion
ulties and divisions. At the time of
there is a separate vice presidency for
of
the
plan.
the visit there were fifteen identifiable
research which we presumed to be
1be· administration is multi-layered
ro(leges in operation;
closely related to .lll"!duale and proand requires close attention if the
• tbe faculty has assumed an infessional study in a UDiwrsity setting.
tiUes are to be kept straight. 1bere
aeasingly active .role in the governWe are mindful that -the first stated
are seven vice presidents and one exance of the institution;
ecutive vice president. One vice pre&amp;'
goal of SUNY-Buffalo is the desire to
.-,. ,plapsJor an entirely new campus
continue "its evolut&gt;on towards beoomident heeds a Faculty unit. Provoels
emerged and it is n'!w under construc'-d the major Faculty groups, aling ooe of the nation's preeminent
tion. At the lime of the Writ no part
though one professional school has a
graduate 8Dd professional centers."
of the new plant was in operation.
1be goal is unchallenged for a major
provost-dean and one Faculty unit, as
Time and elfort have gone into camnoted, reports to a vice president.
univenity. Our ~ ia whether
pus planning, with changes in directhe several University administrators
Other schools are headed by deans.
tion being a part of the process. To
-school 8Dd college deans, a divisionSchool deans report to provosts or to
accommodate the fifty percent student
one of two vice presidents. 1bere are
dean, and three Vice presidentsgrowth experienced since .1965, leased
deans of schools 8Dd three campuseach having """" part in the admini.sbuildings have beep in use at a third
wide deans. We did nat find the averlration of graduate p!Oir8ln8 and relocation, prefabricsted buildings have - arching principle which yielda this
search can provide lhe easential dibeen plaoed on the Msin Campus
.design and nomenclature but the plan
rection and quality cantrol .
and various perimeter 8Dd off. Following the same general lead,
is described in a c:onsiatent manner
campus facilities have been p""""'"""
by the office holders.
the structure of \IDderp'aduate divisor leased. Campus facilities are widely
ion/ diviaianal facultieal collegiate sysCommendation is accorded the efspread;
fort made to maintain e«ective intertem penillta relative~¥ independent
• -the Mains- campus~ within
action throughout the administrative
~ of action~ toant the baccathe~ ol a city that
«ganization and throughout the Unilaureate degree with considefable difhas~ a population 8Dd ecc&gt;ferences of opinion concerning who is
versity. · Allbaugh we did' not derive
namic decline. It is a city now seekestimates of time given to the process,
"in charge" short of the President's
. ing revitalization. Under these cirwe were impressed with scheduled
office. 1bere is divided opinion also
.,.,_._4,be. city..has lool&lt;ed.to the
qo...whetheo&gt;..the.~.AI!f&amp;1C!1181;iag, an
:eomrnitments made by the Presidant's
Uni\Wsit:Y. foe asirist8ncie and l!I888UI'OftK:e to meet wlth administrative of"outstanding undergraduate division,
a-. 1be new campus, however, is
ficers, with twenty or so ad hoc 8Dd
_with a rigorous academic orientatiot:~"
ouiBide d)e citY limits ·and ClODIItnJ&lt;&gt;.
ot&amp;Dding committees, in addition to
ia psz:t of the present reality. Our
tiOil of a ~rapid transit system
other enumerated regularly scheduled
concern is for the opQmal use of availwhich will link the main campus to
meetiligs, and a hall day per - k
able resources, thereby raising the
the cit; has riot been started; set aside U! implement an open-door
question of whether ,relative priorities
policy. Cerlalnly the scheduled meet-·
- • ..., understood that SUNY-Buffor graduate and undergraduate efforts
falo luui if:so~ af-counp111 Ullre8t in
i!J.p· must take considerable preparahave been agreed upon.
tion time 8Dd follow-up time in the
While ..., did not pursue a review
- the late obtiea 'UIIi early - - ;
punruit of screed upon actioas. 1be
-~ ol thlt-.·earller ~ is .
·of the continuinJ education division,
develo),menta ' wliidi infttienoed our
pereej&gt;~ ol the inStitution. . In.abbreYiated fomi 4hey were:
· • financial support and govemanoe
shifted from the private to the public

sensed eVen by the short-lime visitor

-;

;

· · ·: - ·

q··.(

APRILS, 1973 I MIDD~E STATEiJNSERT /Page 2.,.

�' )

"The PresidentS Offtee deServes
morebroad~~~t
·by ..-. focul£y Qflct •• adnjiriistdors."
'They would lib to do more in bebaU
of the Um-.it,y but~ that
~ ~ naide with the
Boad of '1'ruiteM. 'There is a recionall8m complez in the Counciliiii!IDbara'
outlook with · ~ to. ita own COilatilumcy ADd to the ...,. which the
Uni..mt,y ADd .lbould ilene.
'lbere ill Mdeapread aood feelin&amp; for
the President's - . - , for his availabitit,y, for the time aDd elbt he JiW!8
to the task, for his wi1JinaDesa to engage others in deliberations. He stands
as a stalwart peraon eDdeavorini to
improve" 1be Uhiwrsit,y and Uying to
obtain mare .-.urces for it in an era
of reduced ouppozt but higher expectations. Hill adminiatmtion is new · ADd
his key coli~ are new to their
poaitiODB. There ill a time limit within
wbidi deciaions must be made. In·our
opinion, the Premdeut's office deeerYes
. more broadly baaed support by the
faculty and by the ''middle 1118DB&amp;'&amp;~t" administra1x&gt;m than it has been
accorded to date.
Apart frQm the facilities crunch, ·
which can be alleviated ooly by the
pi!!W plant now Wider co1181ruction, two
major re&amp;CliJlCe8 are available to move
the University forwud : (1) a Well
COIDpeDilated and qualified faculty
b~ with modest inslructiooaJ'· ....
aponsibilities and (2) an abundance
of sOOd &amp;tl!llenla. The major l~r­
abip task iS to 'bames8 tbO;se energies
to achieve the institutiorial goals. We
eee ·t his as being achieved in part
through a simplified administmtive
structure and through further clarification of the faculty role in governance.

-le---

A . review of academic programs,
Faculty by Faculty or department by
department, was not an intended purpc&lt;;e of ·the evaluation and l!enoe was
not pursued. The academic evaluation
was confined principally to the major
divisions of the University as was
characteristic also of the Self Study
report. The visiting team conducted
brief sorties into 1i limited number of
areas of apOOiaJ academic interest iDcluding the QOllege system and the
four courae-four credit plan. Subsequent sections relate to the Gmduate
School and t.o the faculty.
We have previously ezpreesed reeervation for the levera&amp;e available .at
the divisional level to initiate academic change' br to estebliah priorities.
SJ-kinl speCillcally of the Division
of Undergraduate Studies it is aaid to
be ._mJe far the intepation of
underlraduate curriculum ol!erinp.
The DUB Is ezpected to Ulist individuals and ~Ia iD pJanninc
-and devalopinr prognllll8, in bteriq ~ prognllll8, in desiping DBW wa,ya to obtain a ~te
depee, in llllllkinc new 1earninc a:-

~~J:)Uil . ~ . ~
studlata. and ~ three opecial

JIIOIINIDB.' We' clld DOl obtain Ul88 Gil bow
tt.e ~

...u

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

....

beiDc adlieved.Jiut we·1'8DQ111ia lhllt

the
and !W:altiea -

198'7.

pie of dlviliolla
DOl t!&amp;cted until

-

lmMwalb» .... diad in the deacrtp. .

tb»ofthe~~

Pap 3 I MIDDLE STAnS INSERT,./ APRIL 5, 1973 ,
·

J.JtJ l U

n-..., ..

the ID08t • part, interdiacipllnarY effOI'Ia, the development of multidisciplin8ry llalds 88 in oqineering, interFa cuI ty cooperation, ~t
stUdy. independently desi.-1 majors,
and the combination of theoretical and
practical disciplines. The inference is
permitted that tt.e chan..., were effected principelly by the respeotive
Faculties leaving the role of the DUS
unaplalned. There is the complicating
factor also that the l'8IIOUl'ClOB of faculty and facilities are ~ by the
undergraduate, graduate, and professional components of the University
operation. Hence the actions of one
divisional dean allect the range of
actions of his fellow deens.
Organization by Faculties postulated educational opportunities or educational benefits by way· of extensive
interdiaciplinary Q&lt; tmnsd.isciplinary
ProtP'fliDB ADd gr&amp;lter llen'billty in programming, 88 well 88 embmcing within a given faculty the continuum from
the theoretical to the applied. There .
are .examples cited where these benefits have resulted, but the basic assumptions remain lar~ely untested. In
the words of the Self Study, "there
are currenUy no cross-Faculty degree
programs in op&lt;;ration except the Master's degree program conducted under
the Gredll&amp;le School in natural sciences. Professional schools are excepted
f/iW ~ g~Mralization. The del:ision of tbe School of Management to
leeve tbe Faculty of Social Sciences
and Administmti&lt;in · cballenges tbe
continuum principle and opens tbe
door for the few remaining schools
to leeve the Faculty groupings.
The Self Study report presents a
generalization which relates to. an effective review of extant and propoeed
innovationS in tbe undergraduate program when i t is aaid that ''within the
undergraduate area, a major difficulty
is tbe absence of any cleer, accepted
University conoept of what a beccaJaureete degree "s hould mean . . ."
This is· in many ways a self deprecatory atetement and a~ to us 'l&gt;o
more applicable to SUNY-Butlalo
than to other institutions with which
we are acquainted. But the University is considering and using altern&amp;·
tive routes to an uncertain deetination.
Some of the dilrerences expressed by
campus per80ilB about tbe college 8)111tem, abQut grade dislributiono, and
about particular couraes or Ieeming
~ C88e8 in poin~
prompted or reinforced by the a'-noe
of a COII8en8UB on baccalaureate level
performance.
.
Colk1ilm ~ly. We pw particular -tian to 1be coiJep , _
.88 part of the undlqraduate. cliYi8laa
with an thala llludlmt 00.
not earn bla
within •
collep but ratb. Is ·.-tctad in the
percentqe ol the depee pracram 1.,
can .lliJIIIPiete Jn a..mllete--£olleaee
- _ ! I l l the. minda ofiDOSt ...._....
met Gil .......... and dierow!gne about
the col'- .,..., ...-.~ into
flllk*ly.
~liN~ dlWied. Sup.
ptWtiYe .,.._are r-';y to~

or '- .......

edp lilariDaaiiDII. ~ wiih -~ IIDII peaal. who are attic,.) CCIIII*Ie lhllt a., .... - -

number of the oolletrM are quality
operatiODB: RepramKati\w~ of both
sides of the iaue are ...U equipped
with aneodota, Jmpn.iaao, and 11m.
band a:perkmceo to .uppart their . .
~ve poinla of view. We clld not
find the crossover point of accep~amce
or rejection.
Three colla..., were selected for ,.._
view to the a:tent that time would
permil It .... the net impnaian thet,
in tt.e colleges, serious thouabt and
considerable effort have been given to
the colleges by thoee directly involved.
There was aearching, open inquiry app&amp;lent, a collegial aasoclation among
students and faculty, and aood morale. Since the colleps are largely
dependent' upon the. voluntary participation liy fac:ulty membem, and
tbe concurrence of lbe department
c:hairmsn and provost if the time given
is to be considered a part of the
regular teaching loed, eome of the
difficulties reported about maintaining
the collegiate system are to be expect..
ed.
We were concerned about the dilferences in perception of the controls
presently exercised over a new course
which a college might initiate on a
one-eemeater, try-out beaia. There are
thoee who cballenge the academic defensibility of the preeent arrangement
which they aee as permitting most
any course ~'come ·into lielni, a t ' l for one semester 81ld P!)6Billl,y ~
by changing the course name. There
are thoee who contend that COIU8e8
offered by the colleges are reviewed
with appropriate care and they offer
tbe cballenge 'to have all' erlant courses, both inside and outside the college
system, examined on theii' merila.
Correapoi&gt;ding dilferences in percep- ,
tions prevail in the area of screening
faculty for thoee "one time" couraes
other than regular faculty 1118111bem offer them. There was 80IIIe evi- _
dence offered sugp!llting that on oe&gt;caainn, an undergraduate otiJdent -baa/
been responalble for a COIU8e. This
stetemeni was conteslad ~ '*-'ted as a ata-t of raii\;~"~·Jiiri ·
the campus with ID&gt;CI!Irialnty Gil thla
-issue. Within the iul&lt;lelln. of fac.
ulty ~Ia, 88 ... UllllaataDd
them for SUNY-Bullalo, any cndit
beerinc COWII8 muat be . . . . . and
cooducted by • properly cndeldlaJed
faculty member. We - ' d aq111et
the a e COIIdllb» to bio baaand
tbrouibout the Unn..it,y.
As a spin-oft bl tt.e Gitd• •h
perta.inina to COWII8 Qlll&lt;l¥81 and inatruc:tor clearance for the
there ~ ra:il8ll aboal a.
.w-iblllt,y of the . . . . clioolrJbutlwM
and the .--1 Nll8b8ll7 if the -soclated reconiL (Bee aiiD .aka - .
Grot/a Cilld. ONtlinf.) 'Whdlow 1M
...UtiM of the lllluatiaD - . .....
qualit.y -trol - - ~ ~

when.

.u..-.

~~~~~~."~
CJIIII8tio!l wJil be - -

- eaJaplll

The pll!ll b oal8ide - - - - - fll
the
to ... caip~Med'ID . . . .
but CXIIIICiaoW wilbin., , _ , -

.u..-.

to be-•

IbM,._,-...
...
.-4 ..... ......

._..~and- .

........le
mada tline -

...... lntiJ!Utad.A......,.._.

�~~ Mluation impHes d.e
._.r:tor a careful clellnitioo of pur~ aDd ata._t of the role ,of
callepo witbiD a univenity which is
.... .....,u.l by FacultieL Tbili ef- .
fort at ideatifyinl objecliWIO Ol' pur~ Diilbt DOt anly the coJJeae
reviews but al8o the other components
of the underlraduate operation as Well.
Anr the ~ _,tially an ar.....,..,_t witbiD an - llliiiii&amp;8Diellt?
Wblle it appearB that the Faculties
ha.... the potential 41&lt; interdisciplinary
~ to knowledp aDd ·t he potential for a llexible
to .the
special .-dB aDd ezpectatioaa of students, mcludin&amp; a oollegial atmo&amp;pl*",'~ wliiie 8111111Pies are ·ot.id
for 1beir havinl dlln8 110, is· there an
educatiollal pp for which the colleges
have provided a special bridging? As
an imprellllion we felt the college plan
in "'I8D8f8} baa maile a favorable contributinn to the undergraduate · program. Colleges, now ·dependent upon
the willingness of facultY members
and departments to commit time and
resources, need a greater certainty of
support U they are to remain a viable
part of the University.
We see a resolution of the debate
·about the college system as being an
important decision relating to the new
· Amherst Campus.··• Our UJtdet&amp;tanding •
is .,ipcomple,te~ qp ,U., .sub,iec;t. o( )&gt;ow
the new building plans were programmed; that is, whether or not the buildings are keyed direcUy to colleges.
We derived the impression that the
residence halls and associated instructional facilities can be used e.llicienUy,
independent of the presence or absence
of colleges but we a r e E E
· ·.t' oh
the details of this in
ibllity.
fourFour-Course, Four-Credit:
course, four-aedit plan merits further
consideration by ·t he faculty and administrative officers. We do not imply
the existence 9f a staiulard measure
whereby , "'1- appropriate n~ of
course ~Is ·is given; we recognize.
that · :Va'riab~ Jciedita· have long since
been associated with courses. Foul-credit and five - credit COW1!eS have
been common in the laboratory sciences over the years, and variable credit
courses are common. But upon raising the guestion of whether courses
which fDnoerly calried three credits
were inc:rea8ed in srope or in some
· other dimension when changed to four
credits the most common response was
that - the individual course changed
very little, if at aU. We inquired
. whether the extra hour of credit was
accompanied by an- extra class meeting, by _ , . prQjecta lll1p8rVised by
faculty ._..._., 'by atended oGiae
hours aDd pester faadty arailabllity.
Noae of these c:ircumstaDoes was cited
as pnerally pertaining.
Tbe principle behilid the p~ as

"""""'*

,.

we·~it," .a. 1 to"pi'll9i&amp;Nor ~

peeler CODCI!IIlration, for pester indepth study at the undergraduate
leYel. In practice the student may be
paduated with fewer COUI'8I!6, f!!Wer
by OIIIHhinl, without the guarahtee of
pester depth. - Whether this apparent
CIIDCiuslon is correct is oue ·which can
be voerified: by a review of the records
of stUdents who were reoenUy paduated or who are nearing' paduation.

An imparlaDt . .....-me mocWicatioD
of this natwe Diiaht well ba"" iDclud8d within the plan a atlpulation for an
early evaluation, partic:ularly ... in
light' of the aecond - ' of the institutioo whl!;h_.includea an "outstanding
underpaduate division, with a rilorous academic orientation which challenges the individual to test the limibl
of his intellectual and personal dewlopment. ... ."

view ..,.illii:llatribulions llbd to prewnt
the

.mao- ol. ·gtade reporting prooed-

wes.
Inde,leltdmt S t u d y. Independent
study is one area where academic

standarda might be in jeopardy. In_depeodent atudy couraes without di&amp;cemible focal points are apparenUy
available in several departments. Tbe
student-:t&gt;eeda anly to find a faculty
member willli!g to sponsor his project
and agree upon the number of academic credits the project will yield. Tbe
latitude of di!lcretion granted to the
instructor baa raiaed questions of integrity and accountability. It is the
absenoe of the usual cbects and bal""""" wiUch permitS the question to
be raised
An administrative piopoeal to require an initial project description and
evidence of a systematic evaluatioq of
the student's achievement was apparenUy op~ as an infringement on
academic freedom. On balance the
integrity of the system deserves priority; appropriate evidence of academic
performance should promote rather
than threaten academic freedom. A
project description coupled with evidence of systematic evaluation merits
reconsideration along with other alternatives whicb would assure the maintenanoe of academic standards in the
Independent Study. option.

Since ~ undergnl!iuatee are influenced by this policy it would seem to
deserve priority of review over the
collep system which, at the moet,
reaches a small peroenlap of the students and roziJ!titutes only part of 'their
total course load.
Gl'Diks. and GradU.,. Concern is
expressed in the Self Study report on
the general elevation of grade dis1ributions. A simple review of the data
whicb were provided would raise the
same question, particularly in Arts
and Letters, Educational Studies, and ·
Social Sciences and Administration.
D and F grades have aU but vilni.shed,
except in the Health Sciences.
Tbe team's review was much too.
shallow to obtain more than a few
soundings. There are those who account for improved grades by citing
the quality Qf ~tudenta being attracted
to ~suNY-Biilralo. " Others disagree
and regard the change as part of a
national trend toward higher grading
Gradu•te Education
and hence there is litUe true meaning
The importance of graduate educain academic awards and the dean's
tion to ·sUNY-Buffalo is inherent in
list. Perhaps the reality lies some-ita goal of becoming "one of the nawhere between these accounts. Evaltion's preeminent graduate and prouation of student academic performfessional centers." Certainly the size
ance should be a top priority among
of the graduate student body bas inacademicians and it is hope(! that the
creased remarkably fast and the ACE
concern~ressed in the Self Study is
surveys (1964 survey, 1969 survey)
sufficient reason for the pursuit of the
have yielded• greatly improved ratings
matter at SUNY-Buffalo. Confidence
for approlcimately twenty departments.
in the institution on the part of_ stuBuffalo's reputation as a graduate cen-'
dents and the community resides to a
. ter is growing, qualified applicants
large extent in the validity and reliaexceed the capacity of acceptance, and.
bility of measures applied by faculty
graduates have been placed in apmenibers to determine student achievepropriate positions.
ment.
,
To the extent that our own compeTbe satisfactory/ unsatisfactory optencies permitted us to make evalution is a variable in the grading sysations we were impressed with the
tem whicb might affect significanUy
number of first-r!lte scholars and
the student's grade point average and
teachers wbo have been attracted to
also introduce the possibility of mak- .
the University in ~ bdef period of
ing a decision late enough in' a course
time. General conditions related to
to affect an average · (i.e. ahift out of
the University's expansion, a nationS-U when the course is going well;
ally competitive faculty compensation
shifting to the S-U when the course
package, and the promise ·of new and
is going poorly). In fact, it was reimproved facilities facilitated faculty
ported that a ahift is permitted alter
·the course bas been completed.
rectuitmenl Their presence, in tum,
attracted good students and particuIn the course of our viait we conlarly so at a time when $dent sup:'
versed with faculty members and administrators wbo apoke of irregulariport was also expanding. Now SUNYties in reporting grades, in resubmitBuffalo, like most universities, is exting improved grades, and in the Misperiencing. plateaued budpta, less and
use Of "incompletes." These repre-less graduate student support and ;D
sentations, although not specific, pve
this instance, a delayed completio~ of
us concern and we made a special
new facilities, and a rl!g!'Ouping of
. aliOtt w'liiiffi'liiore' ali6W:•'fhol 'situl.'!"' forc!es·· under•,ifo •n..W 'administration:'
tion. Our. probe did not lead us to
Fortunalfly the faculty resource conirre&amp;ula!ities of a documented nature
~ues to be available under favorable
although the general statements did
COmpensation and work lnad Condireoccur. We were of the opinion that
tions, and the administration is interacademic policies On incomplete grades
ested in a quality program.
should be made explicit and that
Our net impression of a qualitative
· there should be a general tightening of
nature was that there are areas of
the f!Upervi&amp;jon o( incomplete grades.
strength in the overall graduate proPersons with wbom we discussed grade
gr8{1l but the strength is not "across
reporting are in key positions to rethe board." The University is ~ge

and compnjbeasive aud hence these
q...wtatiV.. dilfereucee are to be expected 1n a recently apauded institution. Tbe qiMI8ijon is raised wbether
a reduction in tLe acope Ol' range of
the enterpriae is '*"""""Y .to achieve
the goal of esceJience, particuarly in
light of the budpt restric:tions now
being esperienced. Obtaining " Jerger
amount ol. paduate student support
seems o&amp;ential if the llow of qualified
paduate students is to be aasured.
Tbe reductioll in federal support program&amp; return&amp; the issue to the State
level and bere we are met with the
matter of priorities in a nearly coo. stant budget.
Facilities in the form of special
buildings and special equipment are
essential to a comprehensive graduate
program of quality. Graduate study is
a heavy 'consumer of space. Convenience of location between and among
certain disciplin"" is an 8888t to faculty and students wbo normally relate
to one another in their professiooal
pursuits.
While a valiant e!Jort baa been made
to provide interim facilities, pending
the new campus oonstmction, present
conditions are generally inadequate
and they are scattered. Facilities for
the sciences and for engineering are
superior to those provided for the
social sciences and the · humanities.
Library space and services are discussed in a later section but the shortcomings in this important service unit
presenUy handicap the graduate program. The facilities are crowded, well
beyond reasonable capacity and, while
this situation adversely affects the
undergraduate program, it hampers
graduate instruction in special ways.
It seems especially important to accelerate the new campus construction
as rapidly as pollsible.
Tbe administrative organization for
graduate education at SUNY-Buffalo
is bewilderingiy complex to the outsider, as was mentioned earlier. The
Graduate Dean must rely on powers
of persuasion rather than upon financial clout. Although the present principal administmtor is new to the position, the consensus is highly laudatory
of his ability arid performance. His
principal forums are the Aatdemic
Affairs Council an d the Eucutive
Commi~ or the Graduate Council.
Tbe Graduate Dean can influence departmental objectives and long-range
planning through the cogency of bis
presentations and the Dean must approve_a faculty member's participation
in a graduate program before be is
eligrble to participate.
~Is preeeatly admit students to graduate programa. Tbere is
movement towards the centralization .
of admissions, as we-' uuderatand the
development, with the silpervision likely to be made a resi&gt;onsiliility of tbe
Dean. Departments nave exhibited
restraint in admissions in"tJ!i!'interest
of accepting superior . students and
with the known limitations of funds
availabl~ to the d_.trnenta.
Separation of the graduate prograins
in the arts and sciences from professional school programs baa resulted in
overlappinf·· Nthough we did not review the sttuation in· depth to deter-

APRI L 5, 1973 / MIDDLE.STATEsTNSERT I Page 4 '

/

�..

lo grcxJuOte edocal:iQn,·
"subslcintiol progreSs·
has beerl mcide,•••"

the_faculty to participela in Uniwnity
miDe llbl-. 8lld di1lerences, or
rompJenw!leqty, we leamed of tbeir
(IOVernamce raqing •from the State
University Faculty BEaate to tba Faobeinl foUr ~Ia of cbemistry
at SUNY-Bufralo. It cio5 not -...
ulty level, with dlvisiollal Jevelii'JW!IlD__...., to apec:t 0118 wtM!rsity to
ing bodies 88 well. An oarception to
this ganeralization is Millard Fillmore
attain -neace in four duplicated
College which is MprMented in tba
proplllll8 ud parlicularly so in a di&amp;cipiiDe wbidl requina hilh cast facili- --:Paculty Senate only throulh BEaate
members wbo have an IUI80Ciation with
ties.
MFC, rather than through direct ,;,p- Tbe time faolm needed to initiate
resentation. Considering tba import,.
a DeW propam IUid the pneral freeze
ori additional propams is a type of
ance 8Bii6ciated with adult and contincontnll to which ecadf'Diciang have
uing education by the University it is
doubtful whether the interesta of MFC
bealme accustomed. Tbe imde-olf_posare expressed effectively by this arsibilitles not aamtained by the
viSiting team; that is, we ·are not adrangement.
vised where there is the opportunity
We did not obtain a measure of the
to oonaolidate or phaae out programs
· number or percentage of faculty memand a- . to baYe use of these rebers wbo engage in formally consti80UfC81 to initiate new program areas
tuted academic policy making bodies
of study. At least a horizontal movebeyond the departmental level but the
ment of some BQrt seems necessary
impression was gained .that the aame
in order to ._,.{ to · changing edupersons reappear in different councils.
cational needs IUid to maintain morale
'lbe consensus reached on the basis
of campus interviews was that, at tbe
within the total operatiOIL ~on,
as such, is on a "bold" pattern and
departmental and Faculty levels, fscthis is Understilndable.
ulty participation is broadly based.
'lbe UniYeraity is to be highly com'lbe focus of the individual faculty
mended for . implementing examinamembez:. insofsr as the T,Jniversity is
tions of approximately « departments
conoemed appears to be on his department or professional school and
by outaide evaluators. We understand
his perspective extenda as far as the
tbe revie:w was initiated some tiine ago
provost of his Faculty, or as fsr as the
and is nearing completion. Departdean of his professional school The
mental evaluations sbould provide a
factual ·base for decisions whicb are
department or professiobaT SChool is
the basic unit of the University, and
tben made. ' All in all these compreit is here that decisions are made with
hensive reviews are difficult to make
respect to commitments of Faculty
and are time coosuming and particuresources to the undergraduate divislarly so wben a sincere effort is made
ion, to the graduate division, to the
to study the findings. Few institucollegiate system, to the continuing
tions acCept such intimate scrutiny of
what they are doing.
education division, to inter-Faculty
programs. The goals of the University
Graduate student&amp; seem well -organare greatly dependent upon the unized for participation in governance.
derstanding and acoeptance of tbe
The grievance panel establisbed by the
goals by department chairmen, deans
Graduate Student Association might
and provosts aince tbey allocate their
very well serve as a aatisfactory proresources accordingly. We see a gap
cedure for considering the appeals of
between the broad fonDat of goals
graduate students wbo are turned
for the University and the perception
down for advancement. ·Other univerof the goals at the Faculty level insities sbould hi. interested in SUNYsofar as what the goals mean for reBuffalo's experience in this endeavor.
sotu"Ce' •allocation. If so, this might
Graduate student participation on
account in part for the various innovafsculty · tenure committees in certain
tions, such as the colleges, not having
areas was noted; further developments
a firm plan for being · implemented
in this area sbould likewise be shared
with resources and for not having at
with interested colleges IUid univerthe outaet an agn;ed upon basis for
sities.
·
We concur that a strong and well · - evaluating tbeir effectiveness.
'Jbe advent of collective bargaining
hslanced graduate program is essenon the part of the fsculty is too new to
tial to achieving the role SUNY-Bufthe State and oto tbe University to
falo sbould play in the SUNY system.
permit the discernment of trends or to
Substantial progress has been made,
measure its potential impact on govperhaps as much progress as could
ernance. 'lbe critique offered in the
rightfully be ezpected. 'lbe oompleiSelf Study indicates an awareness on
ity of the administrative organization
the part of campus persons of how the
is a handicap to an elllcient operation
collective bargaining procedure carand perhaps to an effective operation.
ried
oo in behalf of the public aector
Thera is a genuine interaat in moving
of higher eduCation by a State OIIiCe
forward; thera is laadership capability
ol Employee Relations might not repon the. campus to direct a strong gradresent the comprehensive interests of
uate program.
"-- .... a~· ... -: .. .. o:th'... ~ ..,1 •
~Univeniit)hrand"lnigbt-riduar 1he' '
effectiveness of campus baaed covemFoculty
ing. bodies. Opinions ezpressed by
· This section covers principally fscfaculty-members raiaed almclst identiulty participation in Univenrity .govcal
questions of whether the uniqueernance, collectiYe bargaining, Csculty
ness of a University unit within the
commitment&amp; ·t o tbe University, impliSUNY system can be maintained in
cations of physically ~ted facili~ent years of collec;_tive barties, appointments and promotions,
gaining (e.g. teaching load, aalary
and some generalizations' drawn from
scale, appointment IUid .Pl'!JIIIC)tions
faculty .interviews.
procedures)
and whether the matters
There is exiensive opportuniw for

Page.S/ MIDDLE STATES INSERT I APRII.-5, 1973

barpined lor collec!ively will take
p.-ience over ell other University

needs.
Facilities have been referred to ea&lt;lier and are returned oto at Ibis point
in special relationship to tbe faculty.
Sinoe the groowth of the University
oocw'red rapidly and well in advance
of the completion of the new campus
the urgent need for space was provided in paJt throush leased facilities
at a location appro:limat.ely thn!e
miles from the Main Street Campus.
'lbe University is ·o~o · be commended
for the eftorl made to accommodate
students and to provide !0&lt; selected
departments in a manner greatly superior oto the alraady Congested South
Campus. A --.1 locatioo introduoed
inter- campwt ·transportation needs
which bave been met in a reasonable
mannec. However, the physical separation of faculty groups oocw'red at
a time when a maXimum ol interaction was need to consolidate Faculties,
to yield int«disciplinary efforts, to
understand tbe special needs of the
college system, ·to adjust to growth
itself, to move on a broad front as one
University, to accommodate to major
obanges in administration. Faculty
members with whom we met generally
regard the present physical ammgement as inconvenient, as was reasonable \o expect. They are not certain
that the new .North Campus will develop fast enough to overcome the ·
problems associated with the existing
physical dislocation. Some of them
foresee a two oampus psychology prevailing upon the completion of the ·
North Campus. If so, this w-ill have
impli&lt;:ations for faculty organization
and for academic progranuning.
Faculty appointments and promotions procedures have worked well in
recruiting high-quality facul ty members to the University and in retaining
a large percentage of those recruited.
SUNY - Buffalo's growth coincided
with the faculty shortage era. Hence .
the accomplishment -is all tbe more to
he cormnended.
The all-University procedures which
apply to continuing faculty appointments at the aenior rank levels, and
which apply also to the promotion of
faculty members to. these ranks, pro..
vide careful . screening. lnillial appointments at lower levels, including
term -appointments, are processed in
several ways and may require only dePartmental involvement, except for
pro forma approval. Our roDJ:!Im inheres in the possibility that depart·mental decisions might limit in some
raai ways the n.nge of persons considered for initial appointment lllld,
subsequently, the persons considered
for continuing appointment or promotion. The University's operational
policy of rnakini -f -,-con&amp;inuing ap-·
poiQtments , at the aasistant professor
level -is one safeguard. But there are
mounting p - including litigation or threatened litigation, which
make it inoreasingly involved to terminate even term appointmenls. Conditions ·generally suggeet -the precautionary move of very c:areful screening !0&lt;
initial employment, .....,-dless of contractual arrangements.

'lbe all-Univenity appoin-.ta
and promotaons procedw. to whicb
referenoe has '-n miode ~ two reactions. First, it was ......,.ted that
ai the departmentol and Faculty levels
the guidelm. be ....00 IIIOie ezplicit
in stating ustandarda" for appoint.
menta and promotion&amp; and, second,
tbe documentation forwarded from
level to level be more comprehensive.
Outside evaluations, fo~ example,
might be a part of the record although
this is cited as one of aeveral options.
'lbere is aome reservation on campus for the involvement of the President's Board on Appointments, Promotions and Tenure , and fOI" the
Preoident's final say _lin- continuing
appointments and promotions. No
one suggested a better plan which
would provide a University...,ide perspective, nor was any persuasive resson advanced for there not being a
University perspective on these impoc-tant decisions. It is, however, an area
of sensitivity in one or more Faculties
where it -is thought the final decision
should reside with persons acquainted
with the family of disciplines involved.
The present arrangement provides the
department or Faculty with a clear opportunity to make ita "best case."
Since the President or ChanoellD&lt; bas
tbe ultimate lleBPOnsibility in the matter, the procedure provides a basis for
responsible action on the part or the
dlief adm inistrative officer.
Based upon interactions with twenty randomly chosen faculty members,
several observations were made which
were useful to the visiting team in
gaining a better comprebansion of tbe
University as an operation~ In· some
ways the observations reflect the complexity of the institution, as _described . .
at the outset of the repol't. Tile analysis is the following:
Many faculty members joined the
University wben the new era for Buffalo was oCcurring, when budgets were
growing i\opidly, when neW facilities
seemed cloee at haild, Wilen *'-duala
programs had unlimited 'horizons,
when innovations were the order of
the day, when reorganization promised euiting new adYeDtures. when
higher education was bald in hillh esteem, and when campus disruptions
seemed a peculiarity pf Weet Coast
institutions. People's bopee. visions,
and aspirations ran high IUid with
good reaaon. Tbe early momentum
and early promiae have not been maintained at SUNY-Buffalo juot as higher
education generally bu aped1111ced
lessened support, ' - 1 ~and
lessened e s t e e m . ()qulizatiooal
changes which were bepn duriDJ 4be
preceding adminlatmtioD ... cau-tioned or not fully imp!emeoted by tba
present. adminisb-ation. WW. IIIIIIIY
. variables in the picture it ia not clear
that' tbe "planned ~caald,..,.
been, or wculd have been, implemented by the prier admliliatration, bad it
continued in office. But it ia dilllcult
-to sort out tba fo"""' at work 8lld hence 4bere ia a new adjustment Jlll'iod; adjustments b e - 8lld . _ ,
Faculties as .....U as be..._, r-tty
and llllminiatratiaa.. Tbe aliCe "' the
Pn!aideot ia aeen as a - " " lllllce.
but the ineltla. ora large institution

�to divemily ~ ol boomiJ11 available
to atuden111; (S) plauol for futwe .,._
- dent neecla &lt;e.c. medical Uld .........
pncy .amvicee last forces) as the
.North Campus develope 111111 provides
.additional ieaideDce faailitiell; ( 4 ) ~

ia ~­
Aft!~ 111111 LetAiers• and
Social so- emol1 ~ creates~
.......,_ of minoi'Ky students. 'Ole ex-

ticular
ble

"traddnn" Pattem

illlboulh

a-

teDt to·whlch
categoriee include larp percoatapa ol "undecided ca. rea&amp;'! nat Je8med. Direct conoperative· efforls by all CIIUIIII!lina
taCts with nmdomiy available miDority
apnCies in reac:hina 8tudenta with '
stildenta had 4o the pnenilization
wide variety ol c:ooc:ems and inlereabl;
1hat feetinp of inadequacy and alien(5) welk-in counaeling .-vicM; (6)
ation prevail.
·
intema~ .education PftltiiiiDI8 for
'Ole Cooperative College Center
foreip lio!;D students, and (7) .an
was
viewed
aio
an
edtJallional
-WIIIIure
awarenees. Of 111111 ft!8POII8I' to ~ exand as a oompooent ol the aervioe
• p.-1 student .-1 few help in ~
miasion
of
the
Uni~.
0\Jr
ft!vlew
urgencies of drul abuse, contraceptioo,
verities lb8t the Center deYeioped
abortion, and Y8118re11.1· diseases.
on a craab basis, with the reque8t for
To the credit 111111 beDeflt ol the
i.t originatinJ in Albany. - While the
University, proleMiooal meomers of
college _.,.tory function 'l'elll8il!s
the Slullent Alf!lirs staJf ~pate
consislll!nt, other poMible usee, with
in the iastructiooal prugrsm as their
time allows. Aa the &amp;If Study reports, · implications for programming, remain
unclear. UncerWntiea of purpoae,
-the advisement of undergra~ stufunding, and continuity have added
dents at the time ol admission and fie.
greatly to the problem of staJfing and
quently well into the period of pursuhave .i mposed an adminislzative buring a major is provided by the Dividen.
Regardless ol
and other
sion of Undergraduate Studies rather
problems there ·i s the beliel on ihe
than by faculty membeiS representing
prut of tbe facu}ty, staJf and students
d~psrtriJents or
'The visitat tbe Center .that there is a communing team's reaction is that the ·
ity .-1 for post secondary p._....faculty should participate more extory experiences and ·t hat the CCC is
tensively in ~ undergraduate stuoffering this needed service.
dent's experience lbrougb 8 great....
11&gt;e CCC bas been a "problem" tD
range cil student contacts IDcluding
tbe University and ·tbe initial adminadvisement. Growing interest in gmdistrative _a nd supervisory . a~on
uate education shopld not -be a detergiven' ·to it was less 1han tbe CM!er
rent to continuous efforts 1o ·i-eexiih-~·'
needed, according to the information
ine and improve undergmduate exshared witb us. But it is reassuring to
periences. Present faculty workloads,
note that the present tespODSe on the
as measured by credit hours and class
part of tbe University is to eontinuot
size, point to ~ availability of faculthe adm.inistrative and progmmmatic
ty time to meet a greater part of the
assistance and "guidance in a fully n&gt;undergraduate student advisement responaible manner. We offer the folsponsibility.
lowing suggestions in the interest of
Special Programs. We gave attenan improved operation, witb most of.
tion to the special progmms iDtended
the suggestions resulting from interprincipally for minorities and to the
views:
·
UniveiSity's efforts to recnrit and re1. Seek a longer range commitment
tain students we referred to in our
on the prut of the State to these ceodeliberutions as "bypassed Ameritel&amp; permitting more pwpooeful plancans."
ning and facilitating recruitment ol
'The. information we ~ perfaculty and stalf. Once the time frume
taiiling to' undefiraduates was to the
is aasured, at least scme of the faculty
. effect t&amp;t a large percentage ol the
appointments might well be made on
minority-student repieoentation comes
a joint basis witb the University Facto the University through the Coopulties.
erative CoUege Center, which is com2. Develop a working ·r elationship
ment¢ upon later, and through the
with
key secondary schools to compenEs11e•ime!Jtal Progmm in Independent·
sste earlier for some of the educational
Study (EPISJ . 'lbe&amp;e efforiB are to
g- ~students pmleJltly edUbit.
be eommended. Within the two year
3. Support a . - d l CXJIIIIIOilent ·
_., of fall 1970 to fall 1972'the perwithin tbe program as is cbuacteristic
centage of mioority students .in Uiiiof. a univeraity endeavor.
veralty attendance increaaed from 8.3
4. Consider additi....il satellite ceoto 11.7. H"""""", witb the existing
leiS as college veatibules for POtential
EOP guidelines limiting applicants to
students and as ·a me&amp;!J8 ol bridcinl
_ . . wbo are both educationa1ly
the publie tlanspottatiw. gap. 8pacial
aDd financiaiJy diaadvantaaed, the net
concem is _ . - lor cloaiiis the
result ia the 'Jl8I'CIIPtion of inferior'atuoenle&lt;
which .....S tbe Bpaniab- d4!!&gt;111 lteinl ~in the minor~ cammnnity. Such _,.,_
ity ,.,_qtion. Whelber SUNY-milbt also extend Univendty .-vicM
Buffalo, .. the only atate um-ity
oil.- tban . coUeae prepamtory servin a large l'8lioo of N- York, am be
icea.
equally ·~in recruiting.._....
~"''raM(er Stride/IIi. Policiilllpe!'~Jin­
miDority- atiidatta -· left~ .....
ing
to tNnofer )ltuda&gt;ta ~ to con- ·
We adviled. u.t tbio Dlvlaiala ol
Sladaat AflaiiS hila a "nnlaaar" 1111- • M:itute • barrier to the •tudct who

u-

ProKrams.

....... claellba ...... foNiiiDori-

ty·. . . . . . ...-~~YiD.....-..
a-tiaD - * a r e ....... Oue
NllCft l*tUiial to BPJS . . _ atudeat~~ . . . . . .

......

~

....-r1n1 Clll

. . . . . . . &amp;OUid
!be daaa'a ~ No-,

mroUa inltlellY in uotber i'natitutiall.
Within • fciQi..,._ ...... ol time tbe
prior - - - performani:e level ....

qulred far ~ 88' ... UDder·
...mate--- - fram 2.0 to 2.26
to 2.7. We do DOt haft pnJII)e cWa
Clll . . . . . . . . . . ~ elll'OIIed by

class lt!Yel 111111 by

I:Uiricidums to be

.odviaed_gf
the pade
point
·of native atudeDtll;
oor do
.,;, haw
....,.
mM8Ill'eB of pade ClOIIJII8ftbili. We
do not lmow, &lt;tbonfon, wbella the
grade point ........... required o l fer awdents are "compatitiw" poiDta
ol ently, or wbetbw met- gndea . . - eimply to cantrol the number of
students wbo enter. 'Ole ....tlve student of cowae eontinuea Ida elillbilitY
·to remain in the Univenity by ..rung
an aven~~e of 2.0 or better. · J:..ons
I8DI" plans for regionalization in NYork will likely -1 * to a COilllideration of arUculatioa policies inwlving
the qommunity " " " - and four7y coll- 111111 universities, particularl.y
lhl»e institutions in the public aect.Or.
In ~ ~while the Univaei!;y's
re1&amp;tions with other institutions ind
with potential transfer stixlema ....wd
be aided by further CI&gt;IISideN.tion 0~
·the tbresbold for admission and the
nrtionale which mqiports it.
.
We recognize ~ complexity of the
problem of accommodating students
in the majors of their d&gt;oioe when the
resources of the institution nmain
neariy eonstant and wben student
choices, cumulatively considered, can
fluctuate mlber widely. Trimafer stu~ add to lhll complexity. We simply liigDal eoncem for the''VaijBief
student in admissions policy fornluli!tion and in the options tie or abe bas
once admitted.
Tronsportotion. Public ~­
tion is ·t ime eonsuming between the
Main Street Campua and ihe inner
city. 'The new campus will add to
the travel time since it is a great....
distance and lies oulaide tbe 'city limits. Overall cooditions are not ex...
peeled to improve eppniCiabl.y until a
rapid transit system b8comes a reality.
Univelllity olficials are coocemed
about campus acceaalbility from tbe
inner city but are optimistic about
rapid transit developing 88 planued.
However, the new campus sbould be
well along as an operating ~ olthe
Univendty before the new ..._.ution aysteui ia constnacted. We raise .
the question ol. ..t.etber interim arrangements am be provided to make
the Univemity more c:anveniently acceoosible, particu)ady the North Cam,
pus, pending the ftiPid tlan8it ayatem
completion.
Our review ol. atudeDI1I Uld sludent
servicea rela4es prinaipal1y to UDdergraduates. An ..tilir ref........e made to the paduate sludent admissions. ~lations made in tbe
&amp;If Study ~ to atudenlll in
prore.ioDal adioola Uld .,...tuate
stud,y eoibcided with tbe samplinp
~.by-the Yiaitint tMm.

l.llnlioallld

c...

' lnolnocllonol ~
'Ole &amp;If Study fti)IOI't 011 SUNY-

BuJralo Ubaorioa aad the ID8tzuclioaaJ
~ Center.ACCilllltel;y ....

o-.. aUuatlon 88 cDerwd by the

rillltlna team. . Tbe critique • detailed

and

...n t.luiced aad coiDCiilea with

ourat.a......_

It appnplate io ,.in~ tbe
um-.il;;'a' ......._. ol aolleoliaa tllnmllha Pd wah
88
judpd bolb by llbnii .... ad fllcul..

APRIL 5, 1W3/ "1~ STATES INSERT I Page 6

�~library Focili~ies ore .
grossly if1Qdequa~e for btbth
grOOi.des amd l:Jndergroduo~es _••• "
ty; as being ~e statements.
Oleari.Y. tbe lhri&gt;efold increase in
printed wlumes aver a U!n-year period
ft!1XE81!Dt&amp; a aerious intent to develop
l'Ol88&amp;ftlh collections It is difticult to
imagine dat fll"'ller quantities el materials miabt bave bloen aaeembled in
light of the Giber limiting Caclonl of
stall and ~ facililies to proceos and
sbel...e sucb materials and to make
them ...,.,..,.a,Je. We visited tbe Univemity at .a time
when the position of "Director of librarieo was open and w.hen 1he Dilector of Inotructloaal Commtmications ·
was -..iDg his first term in oflioe.
The evaluation of the preeent situation, 811
811 put pedonnance, is
tempered by the """""""' that tbe
new ieaderablp Will vmy .likely diange
or redeline the problems 'Wbidl the
Univeftlity commuolty )ViU address
the monlbs and y_.. ahead. But we
call attentiOn to prablems wbich we
regarded as major conoems at the
time of our vat..
L Tbe fi1linl of key adlninistr&amp;tive
posts ia orucial. While tbe ICC directorsbip .,... recently filled it had remained in the baDds of an acting director for appnmmately tbree ye&amp;n~.
The Aalociate Director position in tbe
lib~' l!l&lt;P8Peoced a double turnover
anii-lti'e pci.lioi\ .e.D8ined vacant for
a.. Y,fll'!.~ .~ , .,~., f&lt;&gt;/,!Pwec1 by
the vacancy m the ~p; tbe
leadership crisis became all the more
critical. We did not bave tbe time
and re90UlCell available to d-.nine
why theoe key positions_ aperienoed
delays in ,l&gt;ein&amp; filled apart from not-.
ing the gEineral ooodilions whim have
reduced the amount of fiDancial support and wbidl reduced tbe likelihood
of job satisfactions.
The library al:aff aeem well quali!ied
for their tasb but it is difficult to
know what their mazimal capab;lities
are since they have' been wodrlng
against the M&amp;vy odds of a leadership
gap, inadequate faciliGes, a reduction
in positions, and a aiJqificant reduc- .
tion in the acquisiti0118 budset As a
OOil!leC!!!fll1 both the tibrary operation
and the ICC face a major taalt of rebuilding stalf morale, fiHing vacana.s,
redefining miasioos, and te-eslablishing 1.-ust and credibility within tbe
University.
2. Undar the circ::umstanees cited
above, a poliCy and administrative
vacuum developed. The Faculty Senale Committee on Information and Library ~ bas moved into theoe
areas .,.._;vely. Meeting almoet
weekly, the COmmittee bas ezerc:i-'
the initiative; 111001t notably COIIC8I1IIni
tbe libraries.
It 1119 be lllJIIII!d
the Committee
the , only ~ thing to
do gn'l!ll the circumstances. Without
iudrinr the
o1 its actions 0011-

....u

m

ihat

&lt;!id

menta

~·"- M'l5&gt; •~tit.if,
appropri;ii.elo
iioi8tliiiiu.i. rOle of
the Committee abou1d return to that
of policy adVice. Tbe two Dew Direc-

tors should be given every opportunity
to demonalmte tbeir administrative
and p~ ald1la as tbe
· ·pat

administratiw!.....

-~

3. . Tbe poorthAf library collections
to suppon the Un'iwnity ..,at Of deveiopina ·a -ment paduate and
i"

. ,,, .

,

- '-,.

research center bas been lap!.( The
matters of loc8ting tbe union catalog
creation of a new unit witbi:Ji 'the li-'
for tbe collections of tbe library, the
Tile visiting team's evaluation efbraries to oversee collection · di!velopappropriate l&lt;ication of technical proforts and report pertain a1111001t udu.ment policies is good. 'The neW Direccessing functions, and tbe bookstack
sively
to the inMr workinp of the
tor of Libraries sbould move promptly
capacities of the two structures in reUniversity, to a look inward. Howto appoint .a hilhlY qUB.lified candilationship to tbe projected size of the
ever,
in
tbe Self StUdy report, and in
date to tbe position of Assistant Dicollections to be hQused in each.
our interviews. with campus pei'IIOIIIlei,
rector for Collection Development.
5. Planning libraries to support tbe
we noted considerable eapmeas to
More comprehensive surveys of tbe
comprehensive graduate and research
extend this perspective well beyond
collection strengths and weaknesses
programs are clouded by the alleged
the campus. Eftecti"'! relationships
should be made and, after consultation
Regents' policy that none of tbe four
with Stste agencies are regarded as
with tbe appropriate University comresearch centers in New York State
being of crucial importance to tbe
mittees and oflioera about tbe status
will be permitted to develop collecUniversity.
and future . of academic programs,
tions in excesa of 2,000,000 volumes.
On balanoo tbe - . t· is both
plans should be drawn up for tbe or'Ibis apparent restriction sbould be
positive and negative. Tbe shift fzom
derly buildup of less than · adequate
carefully explored as an integral part
private suppOrt to public auppan Is
collections.
of further academic planning for tbe
generally acknowledpcLIII!,
pr&amp;•· Library facilities are grossly inUniversity.
vanted the flOOIIOIIli~ , !'PJ~ai!fl&gt; Q(.,.th!l
adequate for both graduate and under6. Recent budget allocations to the
institution
as
&amp;~fruniversity. Otber
graduate students . The 'Lockwood LiUniversity, partical&amp;rly the book budbenefits are cited to include ·t be si;iuft.
brary bas ten study carrels which can
get and personnel authorizations for
cant growth of graduate programs
be assigned for graduate or faculty
tbe library, indicate that resources
thereby enhancing its status as a 111*1researeh. No other libi:JlfY fac:i.lity on
will be limited in tbe years immediuate center, a vastly improved faculty
tbe Main Campus indicates tbe availately ahead. In view of this fact, the
compensation
plan which is competiability of similar research carrels.
University should aet priorities aniong
tive throughout tbe nation, tbe recruitGeneral seating in the libraries now
its goals and thereby permit tbe liment
and
retention
of highly qualified
shows a persons to seating ramo of
braries to focus on !l more reatistic
faculty members, tbe forward move to14.6:1. The prospects of tbe North
portion of the concerns listed on pages
ward a completey new campus unit,
Campus should bring improved resi5 and 6 of tbe Self Study. There will
and the general improvement of postdential and library study fac:i.lities,
be, over the next few years, a tension
bsccalaureate prof...,ional programs. ,
al1hough tbe immediate future promof competition between tbe reaearch
. Despite theoe important gains and
ises to be ~t in bringing academcollection requirements for large book
advantag~~S there is a permeating conic program '-teaching areas, libraries,
budgets and bookstack -apace, and the
cern
on the campus for tbe number
and J.ai!oratories together.
needs of tbe undergraduate program
WJ~ tbe next year it~ ll&amp;\ini&amp;ted
for ffi!&gt;J;e ·atui!y _.,.,, reserie r,.ailinc ·· and variety of Slate a~ wllidl ''•
in
one
w~ or anOUie'r "4fl'&amp;!t'Jtlie lla&gt;
that 4PO,OOO volumes will be Iileated • collections, underrrapuate libraries for
ministration and management of the
in storage facilities. T1ris will mean
tbe colleges, and other kinds of dupli·
University.
The examples cited vary,
that one-third to one-fourth of the
cation. Facilities, stall and book budeach making a slightly different poinl
printed collecfions of tbe University . gets will not meet all the needs and
The advent of regionalization arid tbe
will be located off-&lt;:ampus. The presthreatm&gt; to bring the quality of total
establishment of tbe Cooperative Col- . ·
ent prospects are that tbe Central
library services down even furtlier if
ege
Center at Bulralo are instanoas
Library for tbe North Campus (wbicb
pursued without discrimination.
wbere plans developed principally in
will serve al; an Undergraduate, SciAlbany
and then became an additional
ence and Engineering, and Special
Tbe Instructional Communications
campus responsibility, even thoulh inCollections Library) will be put forCenter, now a modest operation, can
dividual institutions bad minor rolea in
ward by the University as its top
mOVe in two or more directions. By
tbe development process. The Divipriority in next year's request for
one option it could be more closely
sion of tbe Budget is cited in even
building authorizations. H suooessful
related to the library in its programs
more specific ways as in' lbe inataDoe
in this request, tbe structure could beand in its administration. Or it can ·
of freeziitg specific posltiOaa in order
. come availsble for occupancy in tbe
remain separated from the , library,
. to keep the·Stitte budpt ~ 'luriiUua'
summer of 1976. The Joint Library
with the Dilector of ibe ICC continua deficit but witbout ~"iiiii'''
(which will serve the humanities and
ing to report to tbe Vice President for ·
UniVersity ·w Ofl'et ~ti~
social ~) is 'to be requested for
Academic Affairs, and assume a brood. tive ways of acblevili1 equbalent •vauthorization tbe following year and
er scope of responsibility (or new d&amp;ings.
The issue is not tbe lntn&amp;aion ol
might be ezpected to be occupied by
livery systems of instruction. Relathe Division of the Budpt ·in mainJanuary of 1977.
tionships with Empire State College,
taining a halancod budpt bat ia tha
Over tbe next four years tbe libraries
tbe regional consortia, the regionalizawill probably add at least 250,000
tion ,..program, and the community
decision-making
Pro«-.
the -...
range~
of theaDd
..-~fie
printed volume&amp; to · tbe collections.
aervioo role of SUNY·BulfaJo suggest
cisions. In-be~ eamplee- i:lllld
Sinoe all p..- fac:i.lities on tbe South
that policy decisions pertaining to tbe
wharein tan or 8iata . . . . Campus are filled, an equal number
ICC should be high on the Univerrelate directly to tha admlnllolration ol
of volumes will need to be transferred. sity's list of priorities.
the Unlwnity, in addition to tha
to locatiOns elsewhere. Likewise, d&amp;There are many good reasons for opSUNY governing ageilcy, DSJDely tbe
. partments and faculties will be shiftm,
timism in this general area as attesl8d
Chancellor's ollloe and tha BoiUd ol
to tbe North Campus throughout this
to
bY
higb
.Perfonnance
when&gt;
cooclf-'
Ret!mta. It is admowledpd that
period of time. Detailed . plannini
tions
permit
Tbe
Science
and
Encl81110111
the tan tt..are ._........
must be undertaken by tbe Library
neering
Library
and
the
Health
Sciwbidl aD ol ...._..., DOt jult
and tbe Facilities Division of tbe
ences
Library
deserve
COIIIiDeDdation.
University in. order to coordinate il)a
the pUblic aeci!Jr: ·JII'OI9Jde - . .
The Poetry COlleCtion Is lltiODC and
.enti8l nplaby, ~ ot .. ...
logistics of these JDOYes. 'l1ie Univerwell 1118111lg1!!1. 'The Locltwood Referrange pbuinlna ioamee. "l'bio .......
sity should also begin to plan for
anoo Department baa a . worthwhile
refened to are dMcrtbed m· tbe ~
lemporary stslf and special funding to
publications aeries ~ and the
~t' llflllulit'V'I!IIbi~ M
011 that elforl Tbe . . . in piDift1.
inliorviawL
•
relocation of quantities of boob. Bibalthoulh di8coumted and dejected
Undar
c:iretmwfa- wW
liographic records must ha adjusted
about
facilitiea
coowdinc.
about
llllevBlualione
milbt
a visltinc
and such activities .will be time 0011lllled .-Idea, I!Dd about Faadty
wbidl would ha raponai.. to tha Unilllmiing and espenalve.
veraity'a CIIIICI!ftl8'! Wbat IDaicbll are
Senate eamnitcee "intorfereDoe." """"'
It is important that sllong leaderdedication aDd Olllanl about the stupo8aible - - the IIUIIIId . . . . . .
ship be emrciaed in fiMl oaasideraciea, and tbelr lnlilrM:tiow trfth the
'lbey
tion of tbe two major library buildiDa ' dela and faculty they are .to be mrn!!!Mided for tbelr proUnlwnity, haft 110t ' - ca...d In
plans before COIIIIIzuclion is besunfeM!Oneliom and p e l - a fln&amp;.band way by the taal?
Problem areas are baing idoatifled in

----~

"'Villi

~~~~~

~~
u-

.

Page 7 I MIDDLE STATES INSERT I APRIL 5, 1973

fain .._

.,

�~~he UniVersi~y ·is co~le

of developing and implemenling
· . ·positive solutions ..• "
We ,_,..,w, the aigniflaanoe of the
ently in silht· for very cramped 8Dd
U.U. lnwlwd and. we are mindful
seneraliY inadequate facilities. Espan.
that similar......., have '-n euminad
sion as such ·bas '-'&gt; a relief .Valve
by acbolan ~ the yean~. Tbe Comparticularly by way of accommodating
mittee 011 Government and Higher Ednew visiODS, new goals, new faculty
ucatian, a a caae in point, reported
members, new programs, and new edon illl ~year deliberations imder the
ucational ~tures.
captioD of TM._Effieiency of Frudom.•
Tbe University bas reacbed a pla'Ibil report identifiee 8Dd .presenlll a
teau which allows. for a regrouping bepoaitioD 011 state supported higber .edfore the next climb begin&amp;. With near·
ucatiOn 8Dd state government relaly ooristant operating budgets a realitionobips. While no aingle exoerpt from
ty, new ventures, if pursued, will rethe report can stand alone as a full
quire a ' curtailment of existing operand correct representation of the romations which means a reordering of
mittee's position, something approe.cbpriorities. With from 60 to 65 per
ing a CQII88IIBU8 statement reads' as '. cent of the faculty members on ·ronfollows·•
·
tinuing appointments the University ·
''In ~ the Co~ttee urges all
must play its educations! . game with
state olllclaJa- uec:utive and legislathe present roeter. Young faculty
members not on oontinuing appointtive .- to recognize the boarda of
trustees ol elate oolleps and universimen Is will feel the preesures of oei.l·
tiel ·• the J'e8)lOJIIIible supervisors of.
ings on eenior ranks. Turnover of
our public institutiqas Of hilber teemfaculty provides the principal opporing; to look to such boarda exclusively
tunity for rounding out the faculty
for. the development of -.nd ......m
team. Under theee circumstances a
and educational .Program&amp; Within the
new appointment is a cberisbed occa·
reeourcea available, and to· bold such ·.. sion for the total University rather
boarda l'llfiPCIIIBible for the ellicient
than a ~ntal privilege. Permana.......,t- of public oolleaes and
haps tbeee and other olleervations are
universitieo. ·
• · ·• ••
abundantly clear to the administration
·" . :&gt;(.!. 'l'tili edirimittee is· stniiigly: '
' . &lt;&gt;fliculty . of the University~ and... •
tlie 'opiillon :tbaf 'tbe Aiiieriam -peoploO
hena! the visiting teem's reactions do
will tat be served if all institutions
little more than reiilforce the obvious.
of higber education are ·tleated as if
This is an occasion for reviewing~
they bad legal autonomy, once their
jectives or goals, Have the dual goals
Jli'OifiUII8 have been approved 8Dd
of being a preeminent graduate 8Dd
tbeir _llupport determined by the legis.
professional center, and an outatandlature."
ing undergroduate division - along
We """"Pt the repreeentation made
with other goals - been put to the
by University olllclaJa that oonsidera·
tests of faculty understaru;iing and
able time is spent by the principal
commitment? Is there a willingnees
edministrative olllc:ers of SUNY-Buton their part to aert the eftort' to
falo in _dearing matters with one ·or
!ichieve these goals? Are the reeourcee
more State ~ matters which we
adequate for the scope of !'P8llltion
would upect'.tbe University to handle
now envisioned? Tbe University now
'frithin poliDJ stali6meDtsA::.pidelines. . needs to give 'Ill!"" attention to illl
We . aiiDply lDIIIbla to .....flam our " ' ' 'diiection t.b8n ·liillr·been 'fzue beretothe l"'
"l~./ &lt;'J·
J~. · We ~
· • · the map:u
' 'tude 0 f
... ~......-\...,
mt ............,t i8 wammted"or unthe task of edmini&amp;tering e COIDpJ'&amp;wammll!d. wbetber a better approa"ch ; bensive university, an institution wbich
is feasible in a large system. Tbe
is comprised of discr!:te units 8l!l'\Oing
i &gt; - procedure is cumbersome and
di11erent clientelee. But the time seems
it addS to the difficulty of detennii&gt;ing
opportune to firm up the J!..lan 'of adwbo boldp the final reepoasibility -in a
· ministrative orga'nization an&lt;( provide
, ; - ~ We do not """""
the eseential leedership. ·
,
w!*l- tlpe ciamplaity is compounded
Turning to everyday matters, cerby poar Clfi"""•micwtilin, l!Y misu:nder·
lain "housekeeping'' cboree .-1
atood po&amp;ill, ar by the ....-........,;,
prompt attentiOn. Difterenees of opin.of the tD4!d operatioa, meaning the
ion wbich now pre\'llil CXIIlCill1ling
~ syatam, the State Education
pronedilree for undergraduate credit~ and the aevmal !'Jiate
bearing couree· approvals sboald be
.........
.
reeolved. Academic~ which
If the J'IIFI(Iiieatetion Ia • fair ooe,
pertain to c:baDp of padea, 1io s-et
tba -ar 'ilallar ~ .likely • fall, IIi J_....teteB. sboald be IUpllr- .
pertDi. • c¥ar allllpiiiJII ol. . tbe .
viM in a - whk:b precludes IIDY
SUNY...,.._ We,.,
+- d ~ '' daubt -about the inleliity ol. the ·ay8.
be, thld, wblm lbe SUNY cadml
tan.' ,
cilllce .. ..ma-l by the trnnn!wlcm
,'Ibe ~talle\'lewa of lftlllu-

r-.r.of Public a..i!ih, l'enDaylvania
: State Unhoeralty, 108 Human Developman~ - BuiJdin&amp; University Perk,
Pennsylvania 16802
David R. Goddard, Um-sity Pror-.,. of Biology, Leidy Laboratory,
University of Pemasylvsnia, PbiladeJ.
phia, Pennsylvania 19104
.
Donald L . Herd1nQII,_Dean, College
vi Education, Fairleigh Dickinson
University, Rutherford, New Jeraey
Physical facilities at this stage mn071110
stitute a unique sitwltion for the UniKathryn L. HopWood, Chairman,
versity and for the evaluation teem.
Department of Couneeling and StuOn the one band critical .iu&lt;IP'*IIII.
d8nt Development, Profi088C&gt;l' ol Psyare unfair wben it is lmilwn that new
chology, Hunter Col.lep, New York,
facilities are on the way. Yet we CI!D· - New York 10021
not evaluate what is not in use. A new
NormQ11 J. JohMon, Associate ·Probuilding on an operating campus is a
f-.r ol Urban A1falrs, Camegie-Metnet gain immediately.. But, in this
lon University, PittsburJh, Pennsyl·
instance, e. complex of new · buildings
vania 15213
must be construct:ed and occupied li&amp;J. M erril1 KMpp, Prol-.r ol. Musfore relief is ezperienced. Anotbar
ic,
Woolworth Center of Musical· Stud·
class of undergraduates from freshman
ies, · Prinoeton University, Princeton,
through graduation is a time ..-sure
New
Jersey D8540 ·
applicable to classroom, labOratozy
J. Harry SnWJa, PresideDt, Faex
and library availability on the ·North
Campus. We commend tii8 aood&amp;pidt· "' Count;, . ~ 3l Clinllla
and tolerance in whiCh tbeee problems "' Newa4, New Jereey .07102 •
Al!I·IN$8 met by tbe Uni..mty · ~­
· Beiii'Y R. WiMler, Vice Preeiilent
lllliiDel - students, TacUlty a!id adminfot 'Aceclemic AlrairB; I'IOfeeilor of ~~lao
istration.
·
tory, Rutgers University, New Bnm&amp;wick, New Jeney Ollllln
We left the campus with an awar&amp;'
H . .JerorM Zoffer, 'Dean, Grad~ate
nees that the University, in its ooaoing
Scbool of BusiJwa, UnivemiV of
operation, bas identified a number of
Pittsburch, Pittsburgb, Pennsylvania
problems to whicb eerious attention is
being given. Tbe University is capa- ' 15218
ble of developing and i.fnplementing
R. La Hornballe, Vice President
poeitive solutions to theee problems
for Academic A1falrs, University of
and we believe the institution will do
Maryland, Co~ Part, Maryland
80.
207~
.
Tbe Council, while greatly reetficted
in the reeponaibilitiee assigned to it,
can OOIIltinue to assume a Dilljor role
in developing favorable relations with
the community of Metropolitan Buf. '
falo and in presenting the University
es e,n asset to the total State. Broedening the perspective beyond the region is oonsi&amp;tent with the goal of
beooming a center of professional and
graduate study.
-

1. In this ....,o)t SUNY-Buffalo Is UMd Inter·
chana:.. bly with the Unlve~. When ,.,.renee
ls made to U. SUNY aydMn. rdaer than to this
one component of tM .,..,.._ tt.. ,..,.,._. la

Omi=--:...,., wbetW

II

Bulr.Jo ...,art pertaiDlDc to ~
and~ and~ wilb State
,..,_,.,.. 1111

villitiq

.-m.

made aY8ilable to the

upl~ft.

•·r:.ctJ"'•" .....,.

2. C.pltallzed
eo the orpnlutlon.l pattern at SUNY·Bu1blo. Ae of June 30,
1972 the School of Manapment ..,.,._, from
the Fac:utty of Social Sci~ and Admlrntr8·
t lon and becllrne the ..ahth faculty 1roup ,...
portlnc to the v~c. PraJdent for Academk: AI·
fairs ..

3 • ..., ....,., pp. 16-17.

the,..,, col.._.

... w.

understand ttm dlr.ct budeft;8ry . .
now· 1tanct1: 8t $250.000

port for the

for
•

5. TlMI Commltt8e on Gowmrn.t and Hie~'*'
Educftlon, Mitton S. Otel"'tMJwer, Chairman. n.
~ el ,,.......,
laltlrnooNo The JohM
tiopllins PNs:e. 1959, 44 p .

6. 111M.. p. 30.

. •

•

'Tiw ~mkn of tile E~n tazm:
fl~ Aquino-&amp;nrwdez, Aaaoci·
_ ale ~. Chairman, ~t
of Pla1o Rican Studies; ~t

~ pioviil8
AM&amp; an'
I ~
-..--------~
......;;t:·140th
Etlmlc
Studies;
• - t fil· lbe . City .CoUeae.
Stz.eet
and ·Tbe
Amgraduate compollllit oflbe University ·
well beyilod the review made In this
ev.tuation. Simflarly, lbe ~~dive review of the collegiate ~ sboald
provide a CODtn'bution to the under-

graduate openition. We ba\oe Cam·
mended theee acjiooa. Perbape new
and ~ "IJ'(IUIIII rulee" will ea1erp
from the oitudieB with .the ...._,..__,

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

tbat
in the future
imd
new departura
will- havepiOII'IIIDI
built-in prooeduree far evaluatlq the outcoon.
as pett of the or111na1 JIIOPOIII). .

sterdaDi Avenuee, New York, New
~ork

·

10081

ElizDbeth E. Bollninl, Prof_,. and

Chairman, Ilepartmant of Umgu&amp;ges
abd Literature, University o1. DeJa.
ware, Newaik, Delaware 19711
HOUltll'!l W. Dillon, Univenit)v. Librarlan and Aalc:iate ~ of Librut Science, 8anpmoo State Univenity, Sp-'----'"
.' 62'101
,............, Illinoia
Edward V . EW.,ASaociate Dean for
Continuing Education, Aseociate Pro-

W oriinf witla tile team:
Haro/4 Orltuu, Government Studies
Propam, 'lba Blookinp- Institution,
Waabington, D.C. 20086
Fraleridl TUbba, .A.ociate in T-=b.
er Educatloa, 'lba State Education
~t, Albany, New York.12224
American PaychoJacical Aalc:lation
- Three 1eam Jll8lllben with B.,...
. Biboce ..vine a cbalrman
Aasociatiim ol. American lAw Scbool8
- n.ree team Jll8lllben wilb QuintiA
Joi!MtoM ..vine - ebaiJmaD
Board ol. 8cboals ol. the American
Society ol. Clinical PathDlatiiAI and
the Ameriean Society far. Medical
TeclmoloiY-'IW team~ with
Coli# R. Jl~ M.D., aeivinc
uc:Mirman .
BDP-illl' ~ far~
ai~~Ellbtllllain-­
ben, a Stite Education ~t
~taliw, with Robert. Jl. SaundD'I ..vine··~- - .... ~ ' '
Natibnal' 'Al'dlitectmal
Board - Four team Jll8lllben wilb
Ridoard M . Geneert ..vine a cbalr-

AcCieolitiDi

man

STATUS of the inetitution:' ~­
iteil "Mbc!i9 1921; evaluation is for ..,.

~

APRIL 5, 1973/ MIDDLE STATES INSERT I Page 8

�April 5, 1973

5

(}hiria ·To~y
Tbeee ~ of Mainland Cb:ina were taken last
summer by. a visiting U/B. faculty m..me., Dr. H.K. Cbanl!.

profepor of civil ~ and a Chin..,. wition&amp;I
Dr. (2wqr traveled IDIIeusivei,Y in the nO&lt;thern regioJJS and
reoonied IIBJ"'CC!! of ehineee life which have received relatively
little aue'ntian from American n"""!"""'L
·
·

~taat

w..;

-1'1

....-;)""";

In 1958, the ChiMA flm oucceufully lncroooed human -Y ~ to o level equivalent to - ·of
high tenolon wires, enabling electrical
to molntoln direct contoct with the llnH - . - , end
eliminating the nMd for Insulation. Since the mld·slxtles, this practice hoo become commanpl- In
Chino, ond Is pmently considered the moot elfident method of repairing ond molntolnl"' hi~
lines. This photograph was taken neer Anshan; by means of a special, gradual charalna clevicl, the •mount
of electricity which t~ bodies of these women workers c.n sustain has been lnc:teaMCI to 220,000 volts.

----

...

I(I:H7 •4
~~

1• I f '

1' •

Stlr·fried Chinese food tokes
only ..-.ds to cook, but conoid·
erably longer to prepare. Working

--todevotomuchtlme

:.::~~~~~~

then nMd only to be cooked, The
prepared meals In this photo-

·

· U. ~__...,RIMa~ Cilia!\¥............

graph, like oil

~-.150

c:anven..,_

~L

mllllon.- :Dnly ·1}· ...,.'C8flt o1 thor.lond mou:.~s·~noble. ~ -· 1111o,dt.
: '~~~~7~~;:~~"~"'~ the--iwlol
•·
Chi,_ ~ Is punctuotM with farr!lneo which forced many fomUieo
·
Chinese
own refrl. . ratoro,
to~......, land ,-ln .- r to survive. This viUop, In northern
marketing
Is
gonorally
dono
aach
Hopll _ . , . . , _ • . . . _ ...,...... t~;~e . end of the 19th century for
day.
predtely this ,..._, b,- - . a l fomUies who carried soil ond water
from o rwaoi&gt;y viU..., and Pl-.! to form the dry ond mountainous '
11lls rMn is • "'barefoot doctor/' one .of the thoulancls of .,.,...
terrain: _ SlOne retUIIng wells alon&amp; 1118 mountolnoldeo provide level
I U - fpr .IP.IJwlnl .._ theM I U - ranae In width from OpprGX·
medico who form the boc:lcbone of ChiMA public health, a lmotely 8 on a P.Odual slope, to Ieos then 2 feet on the to the shortage of medlcol peroontlel. He Is · - to cllotrlbuW
of • pootlallarly stoep .......-.
blrlh control - - · to Immunize his pallento . .olnot d l - end
·to ~be the moot' commonly l5ed Chlneoo W-m drup, in'
dueling ontlblotlco •lid herbal meclldne. A barefoot doc:toi- Is by hlo fell- vlllopro on the basis of his humaneness end level o1
educotlon. Generally a high school greduote, he Is trained 1ntom1ve1y
for six months by on M.D. In .o neooi&gt;y dtJ, ond returns for re-training
one momtt out of every year. When he Is not . o medical

.

copodty, the ,bOrefo!&gt;t clqctqr.

his

·

In

Chlneoa heolth_,u,.. Is -~~~•=:::.::!!!'!::!'E'':....!C"!:'-':"'E'!
Chino bolonp to one of the
-~ ·'"-""" "
.. commune representing from 20,000 to
aomer Is charged approximately $1.00 per yeor for the health

his entire family. In the coso of an epidemic, the notional _ . , . . _
contributes liddltlonol emergency old.
Y
'

�·6
~-~
.Special Majors.Evaluation----------

'~ from ~ i, coL 4) 'The Trfp'o tile Tl1lnl'
f!n!9'r!'t-~~ OoU:- .
iDdieated that the JU'OIIliUI1 had
"You Diilbt be mter.t.ed in
hindered lhem.
.
the fact !bat I'm fiDdiJII Cbe bet- with 6 olber'
also , from
'l1ie Faculb' ~te, on De- aatdemic I'8CIIIiNmaDIII of State
cember 5, 1968, 'li'J)I'Oved a . Uni¥818ity ol N- York at Buf- Brockport-We have a per.-.lution Chat pnMsion be (a]o· Law Scbool deu)8ndinc.
made tor a student to design but no more 10 llhan lbe dehis own field of coocentmtion manda I put on myae1f during tbe Bay. A-. lave 2 ..,...
to be qlpiUWid by twu faculey my -~ major JII'DIIIUII," an oamina -up m Fehruilry ana
!II8IDben ooncemad with tbe enviioamei&gt;tal itudieo pr&amp;-law April-"-l'm .reODDIItrudinB 2 of
-my olcle!\-pieoes for the Februsubject matter invol-', and maior adWaed.
by tbe dean of tbe nl~on of .. ··TS...., of tiJe wlue of tiJe ary concert, and a iaJ1e (1!11
Ullderlnlduate Studiee t1uou1t1 special major is in 1be whOle e)'l!lling work: Bridle fi&gt;r iM
his faculey committees. The trip of orpnizing aDd piii'IIUing (u.uu-e: I am applying fcw a
8 - Univeiiity's Provost Of- your_,. atudy pftiCiliiD- If,you National '.EndoWment ol . Cbe .
lice formally appouved tbe pro. can . pt · that totett-. : you Arts gnmt to helP - pmn ln. ,.....,. '!( 1970 and s!louJd be able lo hRndJj! one
etey tha{ .I 'lme' lily. lid
tbe first api!e1al · iDiljora were . lf!,at'nnaso produced. - ·..
awarded in June of 'that year. · . "I laWn't been able ,to em- boc majoo: eveey Clay dOes not
The 8111'\'eY m which tbe ploy tbe tecbnical enW!on- describe it-it's mud!. evalualion is. lased . was con-- mentsl stuft I !earned, but I that every day I am l&gt;ested,' all
duCted in January 111'13 8IDOIII filure I'll keep 1t stored ·away that rve learned and am learnall former otudenla in tbe Di- · for " year .s&gt;r twu and tben ing~ teet is ... Jll1!lll of
vision or Underpaduate Stud- maybed '!"" 1be ~ (steel ) .in- adaptation: 'Now.-boW C8D you'
db thrK old pieee and . maloe
; . who lad graduated with 8
uslly m one shot.
special ~r up to that time
'Tm · just ·glad tbat I was it nial for .U... daDcera? You
A ~ was aent to 93 . able. to do ~ lucky enough to don't have 18 lisbtinB iDitruyou bave 2 spots plus
studenls 10 list.ed in tbe Office "'!' m •tbe right ~ at tbe ments;
llaahligbt. . • • Tzy .this . : .
or Admiasiono and Records 1llld .risht time. I waa ,either gonna aWhy
, are you still doing !bat?
51. CM.8 per cent) responded
quit sc!&gt;oo1 or find a different
a~.~-ta __ - •-- -~ ..
way, Ullddleofmyjunior y.,r." · · ,;Anyone applYing for an lid
.......... "-~ ,._, ~~From
wban stUdi 'iOOjor
~-== tbe. ~ro- . came
appraiasl ,U: "If I hoc degree in Da-nce ......,.
statistical data.
providing lad not ~ able to get an ad- should be given my address. rn
hoc major, -I probably would ~!fi'~more specifically
'End 111 llcndom ~·
not have been able -to finish
.A · IJIIYd&gt;ololyl j.;urnaliem college and graduate. The ~a­ Not Ail-,.
Not an the responses were 10
special major ·wrotedilltr· , . 'ditiOnal'majors were too restric-n.;e apeciw-ma}or 'PJ'Oiftlm, tive for what I ' wimted and ~. howeY~.
more than anylbina e1ae, . ,_ needed to team. 'lbrou.sh my .. A.·'wteran who c:rediUd · tbe
special
major
with
88llistina
in
·atond my faith in both myilelf major and 'College A, I was able
and in acbooL After thlee years . to study, ezperience, and atrilc- easi.nl tbe ~n from militar.f to oivilian lire nonedleat U/ B in lbe psyddogy pro- cial,J!eto. J&gt;Oiitical
fir!d. wayo•-~~.!?: . leas noted dlat ' '11ince graduagram, I wa8 bored, disappointed c:onilidons.
.......,
~ -tion, tbe specific benefits of
. and conru-L I bated ecbool
. "With' tbe enonnclus P~ laving Iaten 4llis pn&gt;pam
and felt I was goina DOWbere. Jemo facing us, we ,_] more (over another ) have been deDewloping my own-- p e r -not leas-.,..,.gve ti&gt;&lt;Jugbt, batable. What must carry over
and later creatine an ad hoc Jlctions, and -""ilities. 'fbl is the initiative and inolivation,
'Ibllre's JIO. maw liiiPinl at
~r JU'OIIliUI1 around 1be ad hoc
""'1""'
In 111e Rid&amp;e-Lea same 100111
paper, waa ~ beat thing that .
major waa one- im- beoause euch I'J'EIIl&amp;l&amp;lion makes w_here
Car"- """!' ~ the boUom: of "Summertim&amp;."
.,_ baw!med: to me. :cMOr8 portant step in that direction one an 'ezception' in a businef8 lrinB,
.lnl!tea4
there's a little trap like
·
t
here
a
·a
new
NJilllllB
than_ anv _...., _ ....,__._ ....... - -. . for. me and oChers lilre IDj!." '
~ ...... .,......,..,......., · A health ab,ldies major also =" no~ geared,-,~ - ~ baD
machin.e
~t.t.woulil-be
· a hockey cqe that deAeCia the
- wiz8rda
,..,.. .....
_~ . • . luid
And a media studiee major
' ball back_-iato ~ aDd 'penence gave me a , aenae of credited:tbe PIOJII'IIIIl with belp.
laying tbeir"'~·'Ibe lbe cio&lt;S. You ·c an -fl....,.&lt;'d&gt;e
'- ~ 'rtiuit illl ·~ &lt;get .u.roup ac:bool:
~~
~~-~
B machine 0s Williams!~ WI to tbe aides ol 1111! Cap, but
same ·ame
&lt;~neDoe
"' had"bad· ai'&gt;ProDmately 5 """""'
·' wbldt-•a.e
time," a: device seVeral liP.t 1hlll 1s .,.,
licizina'''tbe+a d ·hoc Ilia' ·
can' impart, aa far as rm con- Y~. or . ~ experience gram and''empbasiziilg ~ ~ years wabead or ita Gottlieb val.- are all cbanged. Even
oemecL
•
wilbout recetiiUII a B.S. in . ues of ad hoc majors to busi- competitors in the p.,y-...... flushing. a disaater 'on lbe other
"Both the bulletin board nlll!linB-g ra d u a tin g from nessmen, employers, etc. Part of or its payoff. ..~ machines, bas· its p1aoe m.
cot.- and my special major
Duke Universiey Sc:bool or tbe problem alao rests-with tbe rewards sucCess not simply ~Summertime~ where keeping
helped cll!veJop my abilities to Nursing in 1953. At that mne overall employment p i c t u r e wilh silver balls, so I en o i d
1be baD in play no matlter wbat
orpnlae, plan long term and college crediiB were changing which bas not been particularly c I u n k s, and a skyJoc:tBtina is leso ~rtant tban esplolt-tWDk ntiwly: -n-e abili- and ~ne s Year prognan to re- &amp;00&lt;L Media bas been i1 down score. It pe,ys '!If with time.
inB tbe Jaster action at
• beiPed me .to win a $7500 oeive a B.S. and an R.N. waa market for a while. The degree -~ begin each game or tbe machine. A ~-re.
a ·
fallolillbip in joumaliom to tbe ~.completed. I found it very is, bowev~. accepted as a B.A. Wlth sixtY -.ond8 on the ma- even "intentionally p
Univaisiey of W'IIIOOIIIIin start,. difficult. to pull together certi- much like any other, wben com- chine's clock. "'bis.dwiDdles re- ball is not
for
ing Eleptembor 1971. And ~ fiaation requiremeuls and col- . pared witlt other liberal arts de- .J entleesly during play wileaB tbe precious time •t OOBIIi.
ly 88 a -.It ot ·that, I g&lt;)t my lese credits to complete a B.S. grees, and is not in itaelf a one finds Cbe spots that stop tbe
''Tbere's a )ot of ·action on
preaent job at tbe Milwaukee to be able to laoch health. lm&gt;dicap to some kinds of em- clock. Not atn1 ballS but bonuo
this macbine,"•·one play~ ez.loill'nal.
•
Without the ad hoc program I . ploymenl The •
point is aeconda are tbe sweet reward
, "J'y 8ll J1!1181111' I enCo.iraie would probably 1llill be work- . that 1ibenl arts dl!g!eeiS seem to or · hitting 111e properly prO- plained, dropping anolber quarinto lh!' alol Wbalher iea
:!'CIIllo eontinue-.aad·furlbeo:·d&amp;- ipg 09: a ·B.S., I bave 15 sem!:'!' wotlh leso than ·t!dmbl. ~p~cmtbe~ tar
the action "" 8.'DIOie IIUbtle at.. - . . t;be'-.ldioc-• ~ ~"~myE;&lt;1.~. at si:ientilic, or bUsine!is' CJeg-."
lraction, Cbe has
·"llieN'u-IDo·....,Y stil.
...... ...,..., to finish m •a
'.'Stock Car" eating d!ml
. lDre me Wb6 are turned yearl'
·
• to the ·tndltianal wayo or 11 on. c.. bave
acboollnaAnd, unless you
Still
an om:ellent t;eacbe~• •tbe
ani&gt;tber wrote of· a cale!:ture/discuaoiotiilib method :""S:~=: that bas led
:_.~~ :"t'!k ~
"While workinc m B.A. His- .
~ and CNiite."
•
tory requirementa I became
A "*udent with a general .more and more involved in tbe
~ ..... bmiltbd, _
r~
"n. IIPIIC!a1 ~ DOt only for myaeH included &amp;emalter
~ lo 1198 tlljl back- of etndy at State U ·
·ey
pOund for lbe, traUiinB I am COliele at BIO_Ciqlort ~v:..,
: . ,~ I * .alao waa of there~ a full da'ni:e curriculum.
iDiio Cbls my ...... ~ 'Die iDcn!clible vidue of 11!¥-ad
; .......
___, ...,..__,,""
~~.9tl1.- ... .tbe,.•• -~· - I¥IC maJ!Jr .-y .be. ...-tiat
Daam1 ,...... due ..to timiD&amp; - limine ·
clbe. Jn adltitlaa,: t feel :.liMit iDipcRianl .
o.n a Tl y ~ ·
my ' Putlcalar JII'OIIEI _ ,.., • for
. • aria
.

.....,._aeveraJ dance=.

:~~~~

Br.!!f:

:'

=.

u!"

New Pinball Machine W~

King!s Crown at Ridge Lea"S¥

·same -m

0

'

•= .top

-.mn.

·=·

NTP Job Opinings :

n:t =. a

-~-- ~~- wo,otilis
;,ff.'n:.w
~:
abap8d me into a bill-

br
. allowed ine ~~ b&amp;'oad

!UI'"..:

~ t:raiJt;

tiilned; ~- but

Vff!ry

~.,.~brlnll~::a:. ·=~.:"~ -

~ l 'obly wllli e.at· in ~ to tbe D8iice
rad, t l p - iJDoMil in lila r·Jlepartmjjnt of ~State ·
- ~ hit the cJii'pUiiDalt just
·cbat_many .Jldrolnistrafnni aftilr a J111W ~- !Mid '-n
... 'lbat tiP&gt;t CaQIIol Ia ~ c:t.;J8d, the _ _ .. iDcreiaed
..., to, prevent abme« _,w 8lld a.e:anrollmeat
•' ~but I tee! 'lflrY
·a·fllat bunt o f - '==-llj·

· · special major IJI'OIDI,IIl. I -

m.a-

~~a
;:::=.nal".~
~-~~~tor· .,_·
...,
m ....._ a ..~ die '-xis
~ be beaafJclll to u- that ~t blilcJ-.-worl&lt;lltudenla wbo dl benefit from' big lndependenlly aa a cbortbllir ....,._ ciii!P1lle all the eoPaPber/~ - showiq

. ..

1.:1 :w.:~ DOt

11111n~
, . . . . . their- ec~uca-.

...........

, _ e.a aw.t...

·

~JII'OII.l!cinl conc.ertal

. .... wi

=..=~ .!Z:i
out-

~tmetiDI

- iatL

~tly

....

rm Rllllll bin

��&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
Cbarleo Brover, American Stud-

THURSDAY-S

F:::.,"j"'.:: .o'""""':·

~~by332~~ -

HUll ClASS•

-·

graduate obldenta.
810

A rariher Loo. at lnilial Mioclaaillootion in Diacriminant An-

=~~~~
!ina, 42110 1lldp Loa, Bm. A'*, .

• p.m.~.. will be ..wei
in Rm. A-16 at 3: 80 p.m.

~IIOtOOY-·
Nucl«JT Promno o=Amooba,

l)r. NuuimbaJao V.

-m.

....U.te, Cloll

re-

..

- =~~~~~'~}:

Rm. 211, 4 p.m. Colfee will be
oerved at 8:80 p.m.
_
HIU&amp; fAC\Il'IY fiUOWIHIP
COffll HOur•

Rabbi Max D. Ticktin, ...Utant
national Hillel clliector, Wallhinr- . D.C., will 1aad an inlom&gt;al
dilcu8Uon on Emer1inl Pattern.

~:.~ Ca~v,f:f:·p~el

UCTWI•
·The E~ecu of Nixon'• Policiu ·

~~;..J:."t.~~~ni!~:

tive fn&gt;m N - York, Oarlt Hall,
7 p.m.
8p)ooored by the U/B Student
Aoloeiation aDd the Ollice of Minority Student AlfairL
SIMIN.U IN llkiAINIAN Clatwl
AND CI'VIUZAiJoN•

•

Uiraini&lt;Jn Orthodoxy - c,...,..
roadl of &amp;uum Gild Wuum
Reli6iou. Coucioluneu, Rev. Mychajlo Zaparyniuk, Forestville,
Conn., 205 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

'"aosOntY
KGIIt, Gandhi Gild lhl :Probiao
UCTWI.

~

v::~p!~.tif-0:::.
1

Ridp
IIOCIIIMISTIIT _

Rm. 16,8:80 p.m.
.......

The Bw,m..;. of Rat LW.r
PeroxiMJma~ Dr. CluUtian DeD u v.e, R&lt;.-..kefeller UniWlroity,
G-22 Capen, • p.m.
HIUB. PHAillll IHAIIOS•

Sbabboo will be followed by
dinner aDd . a cDocu.ion led by
Rabbi Morril A. Cohen, Hillel
Houae, 40 Capen Blvd., 6: 30 p.m.
fiUl•

The Raou, by Benita A1ezraki,
147 Diefendorf, 7: 30 p.m.
The film consists of four short&amp;

:'nt!l~~e~!:S~
~r"~7;!.':i'!i:~ f~ ~:.r=:~
guese.

CAC CINEMA•

'

Caproin BWod, 140 Capen, 7:45

::: :~::-ar::..N:~~ c;;:n

Ticket Oftice.
Tbia famowo action-adventure
stary of Dr. Peter Blood; wbo
wu sold into llavery. escapes
£rom an Wand prison, and later
becOmes a most feared pint.te
captain on the high seas, was
Errol Flynn'• lint film and made
him an immediate auccea. A.leo
i:.'it1a~~e.De HavilliiDd and
HK.LB. SAUATM

snvaa•

Torah study session and One~
Shabbat, Hillel House, 40 Capen
CONCUr•
Bulfelo Feotivel preoenta Seals . Blvd., 8 p.m.
UUAI filM**
and Crafu, Memorill Auditarium,
The Decamer.on/ltaly (Paao8 p.m. "
Tickela at $5 'and $4 anr awil- ..Jini), Conference Theatre, NorabW 'at the Nortan · Hall Ticket toft, check showcase for timea. Ad-

Oflk:e.

,

.mission charge.

j

UUA&amp;fUU

CONCUT*

The LJ&lt;cameranl ltaly (Paaolini), Conference Theatre, Norton ,
&lt;beck lbowcue for times. Admi&amp;llion cba.rp.
AU but two of tbe nine stories
in thio film are fn&gt;m the N&lt;4J&gt;Olitan Talu, part of the oricinel
llecameron. Paolini bas written
the remainder includinc a frame

University OrcheMtra, Pamela
Gearhart, conductor, and University Chonu, Harriet Simolli!J, conductor, Amherst Junior H i g b
School, 8:30 p.m. No admission
charge.
The performance will include
worlta by Schubert, Mendelsoohn
and Kodali. P"'-"'nted by tbe U/B
Department of Music.

•.

~r&amp;o:O:"~~.=.~~~:u.u:: ~

tenpened between the tales are
little aecmenta of Giotto worltinc
on a mural for a church wall The
mural actually contains the cbaracte,. in tbe taJeo 1U&gt;d only when
all tbli otOrieo ba¥e been tald is
Jhe ~ llnilbecl.
.,

_..

Creative Auociat&lt;s Recital VII.

~~~~.:::·As-

aociate p~mpoeer, will preaent two of hil own worb • Well
u the "Conoord"
by
Amer;eau compaoer Cbarlea I - .
Tb&amp; ~ · CODOOrt io preoented by
the U/B Canter of the .Creative
~o:t:~~ aDd tbe

Sonata

De-

THEA.TIE PRESENTATION*
Subject to Fits, written by Ro-

bert Montgomery and directed by
Martin Taclcle, will be performed

tJIBT8~~ o1~~':~~ r::_

falo State Hoopitel Rehabilitation
Center, 400 Forest Ave., 8:30p.m.
Tickello are awilable at the
Norton Hall Tieket Office: reoera! admiaaion, $1; studenla 50¢ .
p..,..nted by the U/B Department of T,heatre, Center for Resean:h and State University of
New York Committee on the Artl.

·uuu

CONCUT•

The Kinb, Century · Tbeatoe,
Main SL, Downtown. 8 : 30 p.m.
Tickello are avoilable at li&gt;e
Norton Hall Ticket Office: O!Udents, 53.50 &amp; $4; ' reneral admiasion; $4.50 &amp; $5.
'

tHIAYII - A n o N •
The S&lt;rvice for Joooph AxmiNto~ (by Geojp Denniaon)
AIWIIIURST COff&amp;HOusi• ·
aDd SiT, Som FiM&lt;( You'ro D&lt;ad
Featurinc 1 i v e ent&lt;rtainment
(by Mortoa. Liebler) will be per- aDd cheap .....eta; no admi8aion
1be Fauo\&lt;Jo ~ cbarp. Allenhurst ApL 490-A, 10
:..,,. aDd .fii::".:yinofthe U/~ . p.m.-l a.m.
.
~ of n-toe, Bu&amp;lo
8.!\TURDAY-7
S t a to Booa&gt;ital Reba~Ji~Kation
Center, 400 F~t Ave., 8:30p.m. ITCICICTOM 1C1M1AU
Ticket. are &amp;ftilable at the MEMOitJ:u LICRIII••
""
Norton Hall Ticket
Olllce: 1'!0:
"l&lt;iueroal
....u ,alth IMWG~~Ce
-" ...t.........,
•ll .....,..
__ _ · t.~a!Wa'
·~~aco-.!1!~
·~

fo":'!.':l.

•~

~ by the U/B DepaJt-

- t of 'lbeatoe, ~r f'!~ .Re-

. :\-:~':.:'~

---·
FRIDAY-S

The PeWnticl Rok of Siftile

C r·y_l _1" I X-Rt!Y· Di/lrodiDa in
Medidnal Chellli6try, D. J. Almo-

De,__of
Medioiaal a..m;,tzy,
UniwlloiliF of Pittobu-rch .
bam, prol_.r aDd ebainDIUr,

HNIIh - . 2 p.m:

)l44

~·
7'u Uninilt ConceptiDn of
eo,_;.,......,, &amp;.ildinl"~he Bot"'-iit Pony '!'hen Gild Now,

United Auto }Vorlterw Staller
Hiltan Hotel; noon. · ,'

.J~.~~-:..:~~-~~-==
nnal Sp.U.. Clinioal De,yo.

.,

______ ,..,..__

~:{,..~""bll;=~~
roreot

A ..... 2 :80 \'=See~
day, April 6, l.iotiDg for detaila.
MILLB. GlAD CU. IWPII••

P,_uer Tradition~, Dr. JU8tin
Hofmann, Hillel Ho..., 40 Capen
Blvd., 6: 80 p.m.
.

UUAI FILM••

La Sallmandre (Tanner, 1972),
Conference Theatre, N o r to n •
check lbowcaae for timea. Admisaion cbarce.
·
GIADUAft IECITAI.•

•

Mary Jane Bane, voice .mdent

of Muriel Wolf, will perfollil
worlta bY Scariat.ti, Straneo, Berlioz
.Stravinsky' Baird Recital Hall, 8 :80p.m.

-a

U/IADS fOaiiM
Featured guMt Raymond Fed-

erman, prof...,r, U/B Depart-ment of Frencb, will diacuoo his
recent experimental fiction,
WADV-FM, 10: 05 p.m. '

�</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>'IQL 4 ·!«l- 23 ·-·~~·~~~73 . MedFacultyOkays
~';~,,- - ~lexibleCuniculum
• · Support in principle - af • Olljedlono
more flaible curriculum: "in ~ Objectioos to a three-year
terms ol time and conleat" was Pf011'8111 were raiaed at the re-

~b~~i[.!i::; ~~op~o'!,"•\,"=ra-:.an:=

~
felt it should not be mandatory,
The -Council also '!Qiced· op- since ID&amp;I\Y students 1-.1 vapoaition io a inandatory three- cations to rest, work, or do hoeyear eutticulum but agreed to pita! work br ..........,n Con- cxmsider devaoping an aooel- cern was expressed that accelerated prognun for ~ cur- eration might be in conflict
rently cjualified freshmeit who with existing minimum time ..,.
.desire it.
quirements for licensure. More
The- Council's Curriculum philosophicaJly, the 1-.1 for
Committee was charged with' students to "mature" in medirevising an existing 'prOposal cine was diacussed. Dr. Leonfor curricular reform- the ard A. Katz commented that
.Piiase I, n, m report -which the development of clinical rnahad been previously endorsed turity reQuired more time not
-br .t he faculty but never · ini- 18811.
plemented. T he Committee
At one point a guest at the
was asked to update the pro- retreat from the Dental School
peaal "in light of ,the current asked why there was so much
and future needs and capabili- interest in a three-year cou111e.
ties of the School" as a basic Not because of fiscal pressures,
step toward achieving a more he hoped, or at the dictation of
flexible medical curriculum.
non-physicians and non-edua~The Curriculum Committee, tors. A similar view was exco-chaiJed by Dr. Vincent J . pressed on the Council floor
Capraro and Dr. Alemnder C. by health sciences vice presiBrownie, _had met March 10 dent-designate F. C. Pannill,
for a special retreat on curricu- who said capitulating to nonlar matters with i:lepartment academic pressures on this is,betds, students, a n d others. sue was similar "to a practice
Most of Tuesday's Co unci I in society known as prostitumeeting was devoted ·to a re- . lion." But the matter is aceport on that retreat.
demic, he added, in light of the
A&lt;lOOrding to the repol'l, the frequent vetoing I a t e I y o(
retreat opened with a discus- health funding.
sion of ·the three-year curricuWhen the retreat ·t urned from
lum. Acoelera.tion of Ilii!dical this particular issue to the more
education is being advocated at general subject of flexibility in

at .i ts March 'J:7

-

-

· - · -.--- - · : - ·

·

-· : · - · · · - · · - · -

i'·Campuse8 ·uiflW.:·alth"'
Sirm,
'J

. /"b
·, .;·~:
~~

't)' ":

,~;~. ng
- .;. -:.fY4
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· 111
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y y (a.:
us
Vi110""""

::ro...=:::te!~ 'A"~~: ~~~ :r"!tud~r:!:e:'=

~
by the Curriculum Committee dividual, with some needing
·
indicated that as high as 40 three years to complete their
-_p-· ~
" -. --: ~·DT\
""- o6..:. -'::."'. - 'f u . ..-.\:,.; .;::..,_:·_
. fo
- . cl. 'din
~ I .
wr·oent of.U/B~s ""'!"nt freah: s.tuilies and Othef!' requirlnl-..
....,""o · ~."':'"... ~ . ~ '!1&gt; - IIIJ 11
g yo'!!"
~- ~"'"llll8l ~·i4!'•8JI-- '!"'J'l'caa..li"e~&gt;&lt;c.ux. , • •~ .
B
•
andM."*natiq;,'('~.fi;!~Y - . ~~ ~~~~ - ~,P~.fof~ , .. ~t~~~ ··---. -..-: ~ •.
• .~
-C!&gt;M~ 'b'-toda.Y -ADcili&gt;- • ~- on _a 'qulel ~ear,
poU U'being ·taken in the belief particularly m the first tow •
CampUIJ!!I are ~ AD&lt;!. Dr. morrgw.)
'
l!e !lllld, _acrewJDg up his fa\"' diet the ori~ finding may be years, was needed. Students
Geol'le F. Wald ,.. coba&amp;rined
'TGrty ·JMI! ceqt ol .ll:!e 81!~ Bttd; drawmg the quole marks m .:....- L'..s.) - · • ··-· • • · · · . (Coiotinu•d ... - ~~ 2. coL I'
&amp;boat .it.- Weld; 'lOtio, With Paul-- ing class at Haivatd ·consider the
like hoOks. ·
• ..
""" ._.. ·
•
·
~'
ing 011 tile . aide -ol the ~ tbemaelves pre-meda. · I to I d
"This year it's gol;ten a little
and Shocldey on the other mde,._ thet ·t o someone at Yale and he sick and craZy."
is -one of AmQrica'a 111081 vis- ' Aa.id the figure there was 55
It's the cut-throat mmpetiible Nobel _laureatea,'llilnb the . per. cem;n ·
· '- · - -lion that worries-Weld,
requiet is an~ sign. '
'Many, ol the· rest are headed calla that "these were the beauPolitical aCtivism bas ·given for law school., Walil said Why tilul people of two years ago."
way to an intemecine atrusgle are so !JlllllY seeking careers m
Parents delude themselves il
· 'for IP'IIdes. Weld "'-vee, on the straightest· of professions? they -think the current preocthe basi&amp; of 40 years of teach- Largely because of economics, cupalion with grades represents
mg at 'Harvard
he thinks. .
8 genuine interes~ in studies.
'"l'bere's a s c Tam b I e for
"They .give any answer ex- Apd students are Kidding -themgrades like rve never seen be- oept a deep interea_t in medi- selves if they think studying
fore," Weld aaye.
cine.
medicine is going fo guarantee
Tbe Nobel Laureate was
_ "One Radcliffe girl. told U)e, the econonric security .it .once
~ at a campus press
'we want to do something .fii&lt; promised. Even if inedical and
CC&gt;Dfefti'Dce n-tay-opening his people-that's lucrative.'
law schools were not already .
visit beh! as guest ·lecturer for
"Last year, college ' adminis-. jammed, no professional degree
is an effective Charm against
the mc~ly bleak future
that Weld sees aheaO for all
of ua.
·
Weld is still visibly shocked
thet the young, given the vote
."by a miracle," by-and-large
tumeil their backs on what he
tlermed- "one of the 111081 sigTbe Graduate Student-Asao- and p~uctive scholar. Accord- nificant · political choices ever
dation, which has been actively ing to a file on the .case PIJ'- offered to the American peosupportinc the reappointment of pared liy graduate s tude n t ple."Law and Pbiloaophy Professor T I' r ry DiFilippo, Frariklin's
America is not so much quiet
Mitdiell Pranldhi, ·is liopeful studeilts have' been ~ as in a "slate 01 convalesceuce;
that Albany will recommsnd
shout his chances for cgnP,u- tryjng · to ··size up whai _ we
eodlll8icD, proboibly fllr one&amp;&amp;- ance· ~- last;Sei&gt;leJriber. Vari- -boUgh(': . Blil before long, we
10r t h 8 ~ oua 8dminiit,atO&lt;s at;'thi! 100a1
liave to . hack. .... being
MarziSt.8Cholar aome time this level indicated that the reap- political,
piedicts. Major
President Joseph J . pointment was· "very Jikely" Changes are nece811101:)&lt;, if we are
PoVeromo ' tilld the ~porter.
accordinil to the- me, F'i8nlilin to surVive, not siniply 115 midUnder ~Y promulp.ted had _tlie•III!PJI04. Of, PhiloaoPh,y~ die clasa: Americana but as buSUNY l\ddellnlia, laculty peat CbaiJ:mtm Pe.~ -H. Hare, and J1!8D&amp;- · '
•
.
the .~ retirement ase Law ~oat Richard ~-"We,are no~bemg asked. We
of 70· are ~ extenaiiJ1ia as well .as a 1arJe 'grouJ! Of· stu; are being ioljl"
only 6y
..individual decioiion denlil: Preslilo!nt ~t , JCo:!tter "-:Wald, wbO. i!&gt;cal)a' ,that hie
otthe l!oard of Trustees. As ,.. • pnooentecNhe ~~, li!e was "cbaQged on March ~
ceDtly
b y. Chanae)". that Dr: Franldlii'be~
1.9611 wben :he 118Y.eliia famaua
lor 'Bnat
,
pzide, • ' ~ ..Alblin,yls •~ to "Gelierau~ bi SO..U. of. a
linea reqabe
t'~ temilnate became ~ the Flitwe" ~ .at l(lT, ~-- must be .so.-.; c8se Was tBken up in the::.atu; ~ acti,;.m as iiJ natuNJ'
· •

Br ..

-

.- . , - ·

:LiCtU;f"~u,L"'
·• --

~us~-r~~==~: :=::.ft~~:'~.::u~:!i~M~w:::
dents and facul1. agreed that

support budgets. The idea bas

'-u·'• ...,...... . .....,.,•

_..-

air

whO

GSA '.H opeful' about
Frariklih'~- Extension

an

"""""-GSA

-.,ww

w:..f

an

illtil=-u-

e;.ran~will
~--~~:- ~~=
•
..... Ia 'l'9; riicelWd -'181111 'beciaaaci Olliia-~ --- ci- -·~,...pel'
:::::tl!:':a.=.
- ~ ... ..-..·IIIith 001!' .
in' the CI8Dtiill.. ailmin&amp; ~-'and ~~-11) poli-

·~ol~~l.
Until that~. ~ on

lbe lllllllilr bad tieeD ,.loraJimd
~ .._
..lh Wblcill.· - ~ - ..
in the 1ft 8cbool - · in the ' "'""' .._~ '!"'
Ketter ~ art ol people 'lh-ini to~ J)epartment. wbare ~ .l'ieiiiclellt,
CI!Jiber.• ' . .
.:
F.ranldlil w a popular lellcher (Contilluftf 1!11, Z, &lt;
..C...lJ ,
(~.- J, """' 4)

�· - 29, 1913

2

Search Group 1\f~cal Facul~:...____;___~~~~7-t~~~:
cc-;,.,,.,l"f,_1be cempus ~~ed
bnakinc
.uP"
li!8 Tue::,~~te:uMe!cllci': ·.
Is Named for · *"' ·-w
bloca
time devOted m ~': meili&lt;lal division.
th!"
·
tbe
two'
opeclfic National A
d
MediCal
Dean!"".!:':.~~:-~ :::&gt;~·=·~.
An 11-member sean:h
Curriculum Dr. Zebuof educating
pro-.'
I, q&gt;l. 6)

.

~

.

la!p
finlt

of

yeo1111 fD

~

lon Taintor contrasted tbe bMic
sciences and diDical year&amp;,
. ina "tbe very ffuest medical' pointm, out that much ol tbe
educator available," · bas been ~m·r i;!~~ ~-~
named by Preaident Robert. 1;. ......-..
......... ~Ketter:
·
·:
~ use of aelf-instnlcDr Alan .J Drinnan, ~ tiona! material was~ hr.
· man Or tbe ~t of Oral Dr. Cedric Smith, · who said .'~
Medicine in tbe School of Den-. would be of special
m
miUee for a -dean of the Bcbool
of Medicine, cblraed with find-

~

=:=

ca

of
e m y of Sci-

~
fSBionals for- use bY Congree-

coat

~~-.:"""~ -~~~

""""""' ~..... - . ......,..,_,.
that fbe data developed would
probably be rftlected in future
allocation of funds am on g
health. educational programs;
' In another area, Dr. Erwin :
N~~&lt;fr ~ ~ that. . .

bel¥:!:.~· f'J~g~~ter'lJ - .C. oro'erence·
Will
Peach who ....a,-t was. cited "'! an Af11Um8Dt
I "' I
.
•

Leroy A.
as dean in December, 1971. Dr.

apinot

extenaive use of t&amp;JM!!L

~de,;-~=.:: . · !:::.~~t"A:

.

•. . 0•

- . •·

Consider:
.. ·.· ·uAWHead
. .
.
.
'·
t .matwnrr[ Stud:y
uOu~1.n e .
·~· . .. .. .. ·.
To
Address
A.
'What
CooPeration
CaA
C.:~~ MedAI~mni
';:&amp;:
91!
T. ;..;;.~o

T,

I.

'

~

been ' aervins as ioqnc . dean : ·~to· ttieir teacbelii,·PIU'
w :1ong oonfere~tee on to oonsider tthe question
aince that time
·
· •. tlculaiiy· in the baSic acieiloes. "Areas of
in InSUNY Uni4a Do .~ U'!In bill
to the oonmiit- 'Ibis contact is especially .im: tem&amp;'l:ional ·Studies," involving How .Can We
tee, President Ketter" ~ ~t.ib prod~~ facul-ty arid admiriistr;ative
'I,'hj!Dl?":
tthe a
.
..
."J..eooanlWoodoock, president,
that it "CBn)' out. a national, with' a. ~-.opentation, be resentatives fro!" . sev~~ P .. . ~&lt;11!8 _1cball,fp~cr:: United Auto Workers,,will give
even intemational, SMrc:h. · · · said. ·
.
"
lie and private institutioos !II of fa tf
. . .
·of the Stockton Kimball .Memori·
'
Westetn ~ew 'York, will be registration, · ~~~ . · al Lecture at the Medical Alum·
011
IJiplamellc ComL.oclt
Fundi-~
held ·on · calnpus ·FridaY., with students. from . p~vale irl8titu- ni Asaociati911'&amp; 36th annual
"'bviouaay, tbe dean muat
In die oounoe of tbe retreat, U/ B's ·eouhcil on International tions ' in SUNY Study Abroad Sprina Clinical Daya Saturday
~ tbe academic Cfl'den- Dr. Smith reCalled the ..psting Studies and BWfalo· Slate as programs, ·areas ".of M.utUal co- noon, April 7, at t1;; Statler
tials in teaching and ~ Phase I, U, and ill repolt pre- hosts
operation and financial re- Hilton. Hie topic: "Universal
that will oommand tbe ~ pared a number of ye8l8 ~o.
·
sources pooling.
. ·
Health lrilrurance." .
of his coil-: I am p&amp;ltic- It was felt ~t this plan. while · 'Ibe session;. being _financed • The noon ·l.uncbeoll in 233
u1ar1y oonceriii!!I that we at- needing re"""'?n, was v'Jable. It i!Y a erant from the S~ Norton will feature a weloome
The two-day meetiug opens
tract a oommumcator who po&amp;- bad not been unplemented, the FacultY' Senate under which bv Dr Bernard Gelbaum, U/B Friday, April 6.
"""""" the slr:ills of a diplomat; group felt, because of Ia~ of Dr. Howard ~.of But- vfce p;,.,ooent for academic arTopics of current interest to
a pen!On who can gather tbe . funds and spaoe. SIIIIUDilrized falo State is investigating poe- fairs
·
both patients and physiciansfaculty into a single unit, work- for the group by Dr. Evan Cal- siDle areas of oooperation in in·
drug reactione and interactions,
ing for th~ bet~rment ~ !he kins, the ~tina .Plan w~d ·temational studies w i t.h in
~ ..:!~wl\'l'i,., ~ro!':,b;.! nuclear medicine, and the prob.
whole, while still. reoogruzmg encourage mtegrative teaching SUNY as well as with pnvate
lem-&lt;&gt;riented medical recordthat it ~ ooe of the major !Jnits involving the. P~. ~ local oolleges.
session with summaries of the will be discussed in detail dur•
morning's individual g r.o.u P ing the sessions.
o( a still larger oommunity-;- clinical faculty. It aiBo po,nThe State University of New tains provisions for a functional
This . iniiial cOOferenoe will meetings outlining are as of
The opening program, Friday
York at BWfalo.
preoeptorsbip prognun, a weak seek «&gt; establish guidelines for agreement, areas of ooncem, ( 10 a.m. to 12 noon), will deal
"At the same time, we look area in the existiug program, cooperation which can be fur- and future gools.
with the "Problem Oriented
for innovation. and academic acoording to Dr. Harold Brody. ·ther developed at a follow-up
Jean T . Wischeratb, assistant Medical Record." Dr. Robert L.
excellence. We- must ~t f""! Students were especially inter- session .in late summer or .earlY director of otbe U/ B. &lt;;ouncil on ru
· · _._.... __ . "'--'~r · of ambulaor avoid ·cbaltge, ndr shOuld we ested in Pliase ll's "University fall .
' ·
· · · · ·
Iritematio'nal· "S!udies; Is · the to~Z.~B.ulfalo General
c bang e for change's sake,'' Year" of integrative teaching,
One emmple of such ool- conference coordinator.
Hospital,~ give a formal pre·
including clinical experience.
laboration is \b!lt betw~. q t B
sentation and- then oonduct a
· Ketter said.
~.,;- ~..
' :1n· disClJ.sBing : ~ report ·a~ arid BUffalo Stale in an · on" give and take", ~rlq!Dap.
Other members Oil the com- the Council meeting, .boweVl'f", goin¥ Russian-East European •
Faculty ...embers from UIB's
mittee are: Dr. John C. Dower, ~t ~%..,Ya~% f.Um!'ed '!utyt stud1es program, whiCh ha s (Co nt'u.ued from fJC//e 1, col. 3) Department of Nuclear Medi·
acting chairman of the DepartP
WI
ruvei"Sl
been described as the first of
cme· will discuss "Nuclear·Medf Pe&lt;l' tri · .P u1 Ed.- Year" bad assumed the exis- · kifld" · · thiS . - ·
·
'Of :the . nationAl sitUation,
QaBsocia":e ""; 0 f~.s s-o~. tenoe of. a .p niversitY· hospital: tis
m
· ~JOn.
· Wald admits be bas "cruel" icine and ItS Current ApplicaScbool of
Policy and Dr. Browrue ~en~ that
Friday's prognun will be di- things -to say. ''The American tion ~2~~oe," ~~~ter­
Community Services; Dr. t.eon 1i!e lack of a Uruvennty ~&gt;?&amp;- vided into three simultaneous people are being bled white b~ l:\n de Drs ~ A &amp;;;'
E . Farhi, _professor of pbyaiol- pi tal _made such an lil~tive morning sessions, a luncheon, a grol,lp or people, inc1udinfl- the der,u cfuucal . professor; Monu;
ogy· Dr La~ A. Gl&gt;lden, expenenoe even more unpera- an iUtemoon oombin&lt;id session, President, acting mostly as an Bla .-reb rof
Mar
clini"cal ' aSsociate professor of ..tive and ~d that "tbe C!lfrlcu- and a coCktails-bullet hour to agent, however." .
·
U..
p · "!'""r;
:
medicine; Dr. Francis .J. lum Comml~lee was taking ·up cl- the day._
Although be looks like an guenteT. ~ya, clinical~Klocke rof
of medi ·
· these questions Dr 'Browrue
. bl Will Geer W aid d
ate profeseor, George J .
,
Miss eo"fetta~r Klug,
also n.oted the. ~pO~. of
SeSsion A in the morning will
as"~ prophet':£ Jr., clinical aaeociate profcalessor;
of nn,..;n~, . Dr. an Office of Medical Education include representatives of Buf- cr
.,
.
. .
· J.-pb A. Preeio, clini
asate P-•-·r
"'""""'
-.-..,,
to the
of --•- ted fal0 State and U/B
d will be doom. His VISion of the fu- · sociate profeseor· R Ronald
Felix Milgram, chaiimou&gt;, :oe.
suooess
~ra
an
ture is ~ enviro~tal apoca- Toffolo clinical ~r; and
•
· parlment of Microbiology; and other non-standard pro- -~.lif-e·~~
lypse, Wlth ~ SIUVl~ of tbe Y'ehwk G. Laor, clinical assis- ~~';;r ~edt'.i":; ~ ~·
Work Together?" The agenda ~~c:i:tfnse possible only tarit prof_,.-. The pmel will
";ik
W
Einatein
ProfMNat
•
Ru- Stllmp
includes
a
report
on
the
Rus· ra .•. P" cY changes occur be moderated by 0.. Eugene V.
.J
!IDI.
In other business, the Facul- sian-East EuropMn Studies very QWCk!Y.
Leslie, clinica1 prof_,r and
80r; and ' Reve·r eno William ty Council was assured by Dr. Committee and a series of ques"None of our problems can cbaimlan, Depar1ment of Radi~ _,.Chari·.~~. ~ of Alao J . Drinnan, that the tiona: How oould Aaian pro- be solved while maXimizing ology
·
........,..
search" oommittee w b i c b he
be ·
ted? H
p~ts,'' he warns. "It's goina
·
Dr. Ketter did not est a dead- beads ·is not a rubber-stamp grams
·
·be ?W to oost something."
Prominent phyaic:ian-educatline for tbe commillee. How- committee as rumored and bas ::'a.oo~~ sbu~ti.,lrus ,:;:
Pollution, population, and ors from Kanaas and Massaa-, Dr. F. Carter Pannill,ex· no one yet in mind to liJl tbe vice between tbe two institu- · the threat of ,nuclear war form "cb-.-tta will be featured on tbe
peeled to be appointed vice vacant medical dee.Dilbip Mem- tiona be arranged on a sbered the sword tliat hanas over our Saturday DIDrllinl panel (10
• preaiaent f~ '-lib acia&gt;ces as hers of the commillee will wei· oost basis? Hilw ' can "--licii.- · heads, Walchays. ·He does not a.m. to 12 DIIOIII), "Drui Reaoof .July 1, lllid clurinl a .would
- t t ...;......
any reco--~-·
-· &amp;E 'tion of cotinles ~rev..,ted? . -think we-Jack tbe imormation ~·-="="
....._.._
......__..,.. Tosicivi8it to Buftllo that be
to poasib1e Cllllllic¥tee or pro- How 'can ecbedu
oonflicta to solve these problems. Our ty."
. ..v,eh Hurwitz, aasisllb to a new dean ap- · cec1ure, Drinnan indicated. A .be reduced? Are
areas failure is one of will. "Deci· tent prof-.r of medlcbie and
~!:,dvt.~·-~wi~Sub- -tion from the n~ about of consolidation within Study &amp;ions are not beiDa made 'on PharmacoloiiY atlbe Uni-aty
-~~~
f
tbe . __. tbe number of vacant dean- Abroad programs? In what the basis of what's best for Of Kanaas Medical Ceot.er,
wt ...........,tionl or
v-:-• abipa nationwide ~':Efed a areas can financial """""""' be most people," be contends.
Kanaas City will cliacl&amp; "Drui
may direct than to Dr. Drin- J"I!8IIOiiae from Dr
who pooled?
People Cion't realize tbe .,.. · In~ IUid Dr. .Jan
nan or to Dr. ~ A. ~ termed biJme1f "~ -..-. bav·
.
tent of tbe threat we face be- Kod&gt;-Weaer, aMOCiate ~
pWio, aadal8nt to Cbe aecutive · ·ina just YII!Ued ·..,;:;--Out of
Session B, to hoe dJaized by cause they are unable to live ·of liharmaooloiiY and c:blef of
v1oe )INiidelil, 124 Haya • · 107 or 108
~ 22 Dr. Albert Michaels, · director with a. oonstant sense of doom . the C li.n i cal PbannacolotiY
818" cummtly ....w,;. deana, a of U/B's Council on Inter' : and so push it out of consciou&amp;-.· Unit, Mai-dn....., ~
situation that -p;;;mm saw as national Studies, will brina to- • ness. But the volume of oil in .Hospital; Boaton. will ~k on
· rellectinl not on. the health of getbe• ~tatives of 0/B, tbe oceans already equalS the "Serum · ~ eo-dratiolls
Dr.' Raoul ·Nuoll prol-.r ·inatifutiona involYed but on the Bu1falo State, Brockport, F'J:&amp;. bulk ol tbe algae that beps as ~tic Guldea." Two
ol anthrolloloD. hM boiea elect- viability o1 tbe position. ·
donia, Geneseo, Erie Commun- . os;ygen in our atmo&amp;pbere and, Bullalo pb.yaiciana will also be
eel lll'l!llldiaf"iil'tbe a-n Re- • · 'l'be Dean..- report was Jiven ity College and Monme Com- in spite o( SJ.LT, ihe United on the pauei-Dr. Robert .E.
Jatb. Area Fflel (IIRAP), an • by Br. CI.Jde RUdaJl ·N o in- munity College for a discusion Statee etill produces dlree , _ Reisman, diDical aMOCiata pro. intemallaMI Cllllall'li1D wbk:h -fOraallaa CiiD Cbe 19'73-74 bud· ol "In .What Areas Can We hydrogen Wam.ts every day. ' - o f medicine, llpallklna oo
~ and dWribatJii 11(18- · -'Ia aft1W11e, but rumaa are · Cooperator Faculty lm:banlle. Tbeee are DOt i-.Juble ~ . '"'Diie Claaoic Dr u 1 Be.atioD
dal data ~ dldDa with il!eppulpc be said. Randall link-up of out.of.-lllld loCal ""'!"' "Weld insista. As to pol, ~ ~t:ivity" IUid Dr. Sull!m- bebavJar arouniJ the beeocl &amp; w..11: ibat $260,000 " units, areas in which tlnanclal lutic!a. be Pf'OPOii9B that the u er .J.•Ydee, ....,_. al pediwadd.
W belll tdaaed biv Cbe filal1 ·;,_,.,.can be pooled, tbe fn- · handling of waste be regarded abb at Clilldnm'• HOIIjlltal,
'l'be 22 manlier luolii:Uikllll review -utM at Cbe Lap- 1ereat ol .sbldenta from out-of: as a coet of production and that · ~ "Dnll ReM:IIan in
of HRAF indDde UtB, · Y·'·
Jalllratr.a UIB'a ........ of tbe - . , UDita in loCaJ S .tucb pollution be atoppec1 at tbe ~." Dr. · Milford C.
tbe 8albaaae "jj; Gowmol'• budllil "Oar JMJpo. .Abroad IJIIIIIBIII8 IUid olbclr aource. "" to "tDci balance ol' Waloaey, _clinic.I Militant pro~
.
tbe u~ alMkb- nat· with the fate of Cbe 11UP- areas of poaaible' CICIOp8n,ltion larrot'," be ftiDlndo that anJy t-.r
medidDe IUid dla!r~--.
_..._,__ plemeDiary budpt," RaDclaiJ will be aploied.
tho balano:e Ia ~ and 111811, Ll~t of Medicine.
lpJl, a.bao. ~-~··.,.....,
·
that tbe tenor could be de- Bulfalo
Hoapltal, will
aDd K,..eo m
Ill the ~Ia
At s-loD C. a&gt; be chaired' .crecoaacJ bv mc.-ta · more moderate.
Dr. N&amp;IOil - .....,.. ..... Wltb . atllliat.ll
tbe by l;lr..._
Damn of CaD, ..........~fly !ban it ~ In, . . .. al BRAF 11r the .Baud PJ.idlat Ia
a ....Sa Jl!ua, ~- .frGIJI U{B IUid creued.
.
~ 1be 11128 daa (SO~) will
_....,......._ . . . a . = ' - - - - ' 1etW al mt.i tel B..J. ~- · ~ · Slate .W~~
Wald - a ----'-'~ a1 be babanocl at a ..,.cJal ,_.. :
~-~ ~
-..- coantelparta uum ___. 'tbe Nabel Pri11e!;~-. tioD and dlm.ll'rldcl7 -"'1
=T1.:3'~ near . 1-. )I-..,. -and a.-:, HDl and.Medlcille m JIJir~~ at the l'laa 8alte Re.lammlt. "

cbarP

•

234 0

w a}d

!::::S,

Social'

..=:

ib!. hlmseu

'W:

IDC?'Cf

__.

u...,

llledii:a!

liRAF Presidenf

·.r..-

_.:....lallilalllm. ....... _

oi"

�111-· 29, 1913

.

~

-:r::t.e-.Ls-··
TAT
D . b'"" ,
#:rl:t1zc1ii·l:~i:&amp;
~ery esq:a ~, ·-·
1

(=_.t:-- ~l.." - .

-

I)anielli Contelids -a~- Tql1r of Italy"Artific:i81 life ·syntbeeis· iS

both

II8CI!8II8ly

aDd deeirab~"·

Dr. ,..,_ F. ~ dir8c-

~·~-~

fc1c; Center for Jbeoretical
Bi011
a 1our of
·~ wboee work in auo._tu))y ._blina a liviDB
aDd NJ110Cfuc1nJ Oll8-ei!IJ orpnilm ~- bitema~ a,ttarticoi m 19'10, I!'-~ m
Toriuo, 'I'ries18, MiliiDo, Rome
and Bari, under auapicee of the
Aaeociuiaile Cultunile Itali.aDL

a

Ot aociA1 ·evol~ti&lt;Ji,. . '.

.

a-.-

tbeee are prob1em8
for the whole of ~. 88

=.~~=-=~theworltwbldliadonecmtbem

"should be COIICMied."
Tbere 'baa been a tendency,
Danialli aeya, !.'to live aceesive attenticm to poeelble senetic ...,.;neering .on men, em the
-ooie eztreme, aDd on the other
to feeraome "!flectioas
on the syntbMis. -of patbopna
for use ID war."
·

~.~J! ecn.m.., 3 - -

''

• ....,... ...,...
While be - - will.inc·
nma from Noto dial:u88 tbeee eztnmes,
-.iber
April, lllld .baa be eq,_ moze concem on ~
lUred ~ . otbl!r pdinta: a problem in food
"such • .John Kenneth. Gal- production·, iJSes of synthetic
bnlitb, Hertiert Marc:U.. ~ orpnisms for Industry; IUid
M~. Betty FriedaD, • uses of ayitthetlc hrpnisms 'for
bert, C&amp;mus, Aldous . Huxley . medicine: .
_, 8nd
Dr. DaJij.
Ben"My ci&gt;lleam~
Raymond
jamin.Julian
8pockHudey.
will follow
D~
Ewiill, ~tl;Y !'&amp;ICUJated that
elli the - L of April 6 _ _ .
the 'increase m'· world pop_!l)aUnder the PfOII'8!D format, t:ion expected iri the nan twenthe ~ appear.'!' the!&gt;~ tY y.eara can be supplied with
in eecb of..tbe tQur cities, IIYil!ll food provided sufficient investa short inlroductioJ;I o.n a tojnc · ment is made over the next ten
.of controve~ or m~rest !IJid years in the fertilizer indust&gt;-y..
then ~ueting a _dlscusalon· · Tbe coat of building nitrogendebate .Wlth ,the audience.
fixation planta for this purpose
In his .sta.~t ~or the ae~- will be about $20 billion. Tbe
!e"1 _Danlelli !" saymg ~t. it only apparerit alternative is to
"! rus con~'!twp. that art!ficial use artificial life synthesis tech·
life syntliei!is 'is !"' evitable Diques to provide. biolo&amp;ical
fe8!J~t of ,the aocial process nitrogen-fixation in the .fields,
wllicb baa ~J:?ugbt 11!' to. ~ e.g., by -transferring the genes
preaent condition. Wf! -~ now for nitrogen . fixation to crop
see. clearly_ that artif1&lt;:ia~ or: plants. The cost of this will
~ will be ~tbesized. !)robably be .less than $100 milthis "! no lo~er the unportant lion _ much less than the cosf
2~~n . . ~list . ~~~n··i.!: of b1,1ildip~ , in~ustr!:SI ·piB,ilts;
w•""" .li"tl. m
, ~...,.
·d and requnmg litUe m the way
selves JS: what uses am, ."!'
of foreign exchange from counabould, l]!e made of our abiliiJ! tries like Inifie.
to" d!('l"· ' . - - :., ,
"It is - lM!coming apparent
Syn~o ~cilil
.
th8t conventional induStry can, Taking mto account the, na· no~- expand much further. As
tUre. of. . man ~d of SOCle~ haS been emphasized partieuDanie.cial!li · ~ys ~~
·be ·larly through the Club· o! Rome,
18
artif
1 • ':te . syn
• .
there are limits to growth imbenefic.aL He bases
Jud~- P!'Sed by pollution and limited
"'!"'!, be f!SYS,, on an Oi:.!f·'
resources. Where, hownu.sm, .a fmth m thef ·on. d; ever we can cl\ange from con0
""""" virtu~ f · tiais ventlonal · induiltry to biologi. Tbe great !"""" o 8Cien
. cal industry, energy use is reoyer tho: commg years, be pre- duced and pollution greatly redicta, will be_:
.
duceil. The synthesis of artifi·
1. AnalysiS of the relation- cia! orgJIDisma is necessary to
~hip belwee!&gt; the genes present permit tbe change from convenm an org~, and the naj:ure tiona! to biological industrial
of 2~iJ~Jr.:b.":'ding the brain, production.
.
and the Jisycbolopcal natUre
''H we bad an abundant supof man.
•
ply of human . bol'ID'?nes and
3 Understanding and con- human antibodies, our control
trolling ecosystems, including over problems of bealth
food production, energy supply, would be greater, ~d -would
and the use of natural re- cost 1..... We can expect to
• BOUrCeS. •
•
obtain IDI\DY such_ !"'bstances,
4 Development of the ~tbe- Cheaply ahd ·effiClently, by
ory.of ~ties,~ the contro~ tiaftsf~rring '!I;~ g~ -~.._..,

~"

ne...

,\his

mankin'

energy

0

5.000

f:: .

qt!bed for.-~ synt'-lo, to
zmcro..orpmsms.
. . . . . - , 11mp1o

u.. . _

~;!l- ~ =~

life~

of a zelatively
almplj! natUre; can be 1-.1 for
rood By 'leamiDc
IIIKlr to do tbeee
tliinD.
- ahall build up part of the
knowledse . - r y . e.a.. to
CID'6 ..,.,..tic c11aeaae, virus-in·
duced birth defecbo aDd Yiru&amp;induced amcera: Tbe ability
to do tbeile tbinp developa
from .the natur:~_~oft '!'
IIOciety, 88 a •um.-..uu
ICl·
ence Jlcting aa part of the ao-

14,000

~::888

s.ooo

750

1,210

11,000

3,000
4,000
1,000

1.500

21.000

4,000

2~.000

· 10,110

246,000

10,00!0

.,,::=
TOTAL
TAt~C~Kr

J.) Col....

B

20.3

0

1,200

.....
.....
..... .....
k:
4iMO

25,000

simple

cial·proceoa:

.....

~
~0

at:- hn .5 ml~ liM,

40,000

, oo,ooo
27.oao

-=

~
40,000
MUCiO
141,000

17,000:

Col-Ieges·Ask $348,000
na- For 13-~dget in 19(3-74 ··

"Science ' in all fields beains
WJ'th -"----~-- of, ualure,
turns ;·~ysis 'of
lure, aDd ultimately'" uses the
knowledge gained for syntbeaia.
• my belief that over the
It" 18
coming years we aball see ayn:
thesis of genes, of cells,. of organ1ama, .of societies, of ecosyslema. If" our Civilization is to
continue we shall need to become more coneemed with 8Y.Jt
thesiS, ·more cohOIII'Iled With
the J ong-term consequences of
our actions and decisionf! more
concerned with wisdom. Ji we
develop this concern we may
well find we also synthesize a
higher level of biolopcal order,
the hypersociety. I . commend
reflection on the need for wisdom in choice and on the problem of a hype'rsociety, to all."

SUNY Observing
25th Anniversary

State University ol . :Niiw
York began celebration of ita
25th anniversary at a joint
meeting of the Lelialature held
in the ~J;Dl!ly 9J:w nb•n: in
Albany, March 13.
. '
Receiving special governmental awards were Governor Nelson Rockefeller, A s s e m b I Y.
Speaker Perry Duryea and Senate Majority Leader Warren
Anderson.
.
Individuals honored were
former Lieutenant Governor
Frank Moore, who was a mem·
ber of the,. Board of Trustees
from 1948 to 1965, including 11
years as Board cbairmiut; for'
mer Governor Thomas E. Dew·
ey, who signed the bill creating
the University; and Irwin Stein:
gut and Benjamin Feinberg,
who we!'ll tl\e principal Assembly and Senate sponsors of ~
legislation. · Tbe Dewey; Stem·
gut and Feinberg-awarda-were
-~ven poeth~ly.
·

In a special meeting March
a, the Colleliate Assembly
adopted a propoeed 1973-74
budget of $348~000. The request repr.,.ts a substantial
in"'- over last year's allocation of $257,148.
At Reporter deadline, -college Head
Wayland P. Smith sa ics.--that they
have been notified that actual
funding will be some $45.000
short of the request , affecting
sal8ries and wages. This will be
disc~ssed at an Assembly Meeti ng

today.

coll-'a budget, and tentatively shifted the tee.chinr line of
Ali EI-Saiafy to Social Sciancea
College. 'lbe Committee also
recommended diseolution of In·
teruational College and · SU!I'·
gested that those lnvolved m
the unit actively =~te in
the affairs of the
y IUid
its Program Evaluation Committee in the next ·year. ,

Year/iy Gets
HiStory Post
Dr. Clifton K. Yearley, professor of history, .has -been ·appointed acting cbeinnan of the
History Department ellective

=~:
~~earlet=.
will serve as cbeinnan Until

August 31, 1974. ·.
· A native of Baltimore, Dr.
Yearley received his B.A. and
Ph.D. ft&lt;im Joluis·Hopkins'Uni'
versity. Before coming to U/ B
in 1966, be taught at Johns
Hopkins, .t he University of Del·
aware, the Unive~ of Flor'
ids, and the Universities of
Rome and Bologne in Italy.
He has ,.,..,;ved several fellowslrip8 and granta, including a
Guggenheim Fellowship in
i970, an Ameriam Philoaophi·
cal Society Reaearob Grant in
· 1964, a Ful_!&gt;rip&gt;t-Hayea Lectureship in -"!'1,Y . in 1963, aDd
an American History Reaearob
Center Grant in 1960.
Dr. Yearley, a speciali.st in
U.S. economic his-tory, baa
served aa diJeetor of gmduate
studies in history here since
Jan~ of this year. He is a
1IIIIIDbir of 4he Alnerican HJ&amp;.
torical Aaaoc:iation,?the Pbl AI·
pba Tbeta Intematioml H0110r
Society in history, aDd the Eco.nomic History AMociat:icm.
His boOb include TM
. Money Macllina:' TM B11!U-

down ~iJd Reform of. ~
1Mnl41 and E'arty Fintsnee Ill

the 'North, 111110-1920 (111'70),

Enlel'fNUe and Anlluatitc Ecand Democracy in

OIIOIIUCI

Scluiyllrill County; 1820-1875
( 1961) ' IUid Brito,.. jn American Labor: A H~ of the Influe- of United Ku.,dom
~ oa Alllf!rican Labor,

z.,..

1820-1914 (1967) :

�J l - 29, 1973

�Jladl .29, 1P7l

5

�· - 29, 1!113

-·-

-"'-·""

.'ertergj Crisis' VteW~d -· ·
As .Wcirning, ·not Eanger
IAe • - - - .

..u.ted

piltleman 'wbo bes ~ •
mild '-rt ·attack -all d an..t
c:haDie hill way of life lil order
to "iilrvhie, 1he United States
m...t liw with the ,..uty oUts
depleted natural-. Tbe

which hu been ill

~

!ian

bare for the PMt or,...
yeua.
''There was no· "-' llhortqe

here ibis winter ~thia
~" be aid,
· - a
similar .m.tioo
tbe ~
winter. Cwrmtly, be added. ·hla
~ Ia IJU8II)ed, .altboulh company, in ~ with ·
tt • far flea bopeleE: apm18. Amoco, is uplo11111 a.s drillapel\lhet with ~ pn!CIIll· ing 2 millioJl in Tllllllll to
seek out further """"'* of nattiom . . . ._win.,.,.._
~In· ~ an
ural ps. At the same time, Jro.
- ailequate fuel ,aupply b 1he quoiaGu.Corporatian haCDD. eurnmt and tutwe-.;y .-18
of thill CXIIlDVy• •
for Jl!ltural
by 1976. N__

,

problems

--

.- ~~'N~~

Gea CompanY. the ..-ttllilir-

r ... •c.r.a~

I

~~===~

An-·--· . . . =:'~!...&lt;!""'~=

• N ow un d erway T o Faci1itate
eODStruCt IOn
Loc-

~"""~'=

al - by reduciJil iia ~­
an immediate.-_. "Ill fact," !me to ..,-260• F, recltlciDI ita
he noted, "there are eurnmtly- volume to 11600 d ita ,._,.,..
hundreds of yean~' worth of coal form and aim~lifyinr storage
and transportatillll iDetboda. .
nlflO!l\'1!8, and eveJl the lllll8t
peesimistic ...timatee of our nat.
C I a y also noted that, like
other fuel companies acmas the
COUiltry,
the Natural Fuel.Gas
pleted for 70 years." ·
Company is conducting """""""'
What Aioericans m...t recog- and davelopment prorrams dinize, hoWever, said Clay, is that rected at producin1, altemlltive
fuel source&amp; for tile future. "By
the end of the ilecade," ·Clay
mining ac- predicted, "power will be suptivtties, be mamtained and con- plied in part by gasaifled colll
and the fuel cell will be well
on its way to becoming the
lll06t f e a s i b I e and ef6cient
means to generate electricity.'f

'gy crisis. - . 'tiJillllillglhan

.

~":~~
::.'kn

~!'!re dr~ ~d

~"o~o:as~~'!.mred~

~und ..Robin of Shifts in Lockwood; Annex ~~~~ig~

Ultimately, he added, the
Construction work which will nical Services.
the· collection of oversized dation, demands for environallow mov'"' of some ~ ·
7, Provision Tor growth'of tbe bdoks ' now arranged along the' mental and mining safety fea- problem will be alleviated by
. personnel and resoun:es in or- catali&gt;g.
. ··
stairwells on all tiers of Lock- lures, and the need to drill fur. the con&lt;;ept of "total energy,''
by whicli gas will be converted
0
into electricity, · and ~ by·
::;;::
products
will also be utilized in
underway in Lockwood Allnex. users.
,
·that presenUy exists in tbe Bib- ~=~heretvealoenngergy SOline!Jrce,,; tbe process
to prevent both enAccordi!{g to .iohD Vasi, aSOther considerations incluol&amp;! liography Rooin .is for oversize
the
sistant librarian, University Li1. The Bound Periodicals in books. SubsequenUy, !Iris pro- Clay QQntended, . "some com- etgy· waste and pollution. This
technique·
is.
already in operabraries, tbe .work, which began Lockwood Annex will move to vides an added 4,000 volume ·I:'=~!are gomg to have . to tion in some parts
of the counduring the spring recess, should the area in. Lockwood's Tier 1 capacity for Lockwood stacks.
·
. try; said Clay.
,
be fin\Bhed by the end of th,!s vacated by the Refe1'enee Col3. Seating for library users Political ,..._
·
week.
.· .
·
lection and also will be stacked, will fill the present BibliograA participant in Tuesday's
He added that -President
The changes, V asi said, will . in the -former Ground Floor ph~ Room w h e n Reference Campus Gas Energy Conserva- Nixon will make a maio&lt; energy
Rl"'dioK Room. The .disadvan- moves .oul
tion Seminar, Clay attributed policy annoWlcement at the end
make possible:
l ' consi&gt;lidstion of ·~~ Ref. · tage · tO 'this -plan, · Li&amp;rarian
&gt;i. · Current · Periodiails will the current energy criSis to·"is- of April Which should define the
erence Collection in one area. Vasi says, is that Bound Peri- gain some badly needed work sues of politics and human men- issue more clearly for the Amer.
The stacks shown in the ac- odicals had to be weeded by space.
agement" rather than to the fin. icaD people.
. "'. companying · dia-..,. include . about 16 per cent to fit in!&lt;? tb;e
5. There will be no 1oes of ite nature of the resource&amp; themseminar was sponsored
- all the reference ;:;;"..;"rials-hOm new area. Some of 'the penodi- reader stations in tbe move. selves. Since the end of World byThe
tbe Niagara Frontier ChapTier 1 th
B'bl'
cals have been sent to the fac- There will be about 40 lees War n, when natural gas he- .
h R'
e pra;ent 1 •ogra- - urt;y libraries where they' are of seata on the groimd level of came known as a cheap fuel ter of tbe Gas Appliance En·
pny noom on the first floor of more use because of their spec
Lockwood and the Allnex, but source rather .thaD a by-product gineer's Society and the U/ B
Lockwood, and those Reference iaJized
tu
d
ha · !Iris' number will be _, _ _, m·
of oil production, he noted, Department of Mechanical En.
,
that now exist in the . been pu';"in:
s;.~ the Bibliography Roo~~~
"rue[ producers have supplied gineering.
_ Location of th~ Refen:nlll! . age at~ Bell Facility.
The work is being done by gas at giveaway prices, using it
2
staff near the Reference col.2.. Smce the books {':""' the the Construction and Rehabil- ~=Yn:!,tt,:';ti~~:::
Iection. The plan provides an . B•bliography 800m will. now itation section of the Division ~ed, "are also very Often pooftioe \formerly Interlibrary be located m the stacks lD tbe of Facilities Planning. The htical issues. For emmple oil
Dr. 8nd Mrs. A.M. HasofetLoan) for the three core refer- ADI!ex, shelf space becorna; Librari'"'' Circulation Depart- cannot be imporled wi~t will . be featured speilkem on
ence libhu-ians and crealel;; a avallable -th~re for about 4,000 ment is supplying tbe manpow- cor18idering, the impact on DB· campus this week, addreosilig
new Reference and Bibliogra- v'!lumes. It 18 felt that tbe area er to move the books to and tiona[ securitr, the balance of several different audieocea on a
phy office in the aeneral area will probably be used to house from the shelv....
payments, or mternatiorl81 com- variety of suhjeots.
'
where Current Periodicals used
petition." He noted that while
to be. There is included in !Iris
red tape in ~Waahington pre~will
note:!Me!
area an office for" a Head ·of
vents AmericaD utilization of Ai::!_ Hi~'- m· "--~~Reference, and also space .for
.l , U(
oil ,_,.,..,.,. in Alaska, Japan
the two full-time bibliOJrai&gt;hen;
is importing Alaskan oil by the RaDdom,
" tomonow at
employed br Collection DevelThe Personriel Office indicateS that the following Nontankfuls e""9', day. _ .
4 . pin. · in RoOm A-49, 4230
opment, givmg them needed ofT"'!"!'ffi~ Professional Sta1f positions are open at State
Similarly, Clay said, certain Ridl!e La.
•'
fice seace.
Uruvenuty at Buffalo:
,
.•
government agencies tend· to
On Friday evening, be and
3. Consolidstion of InterliProlfl'tlmmer Analyst (Assistant Manager ), Computer
work against each other in this Mrs.. Hsofer will speak on
-brary Loan. This plan allows
Services, PR-2, CTwa positions open).
regard: while the Federal Pow- Judaism at tbe Chabed House
the office of the Ini.erlihrary
Programmer Analyst (Sr. Software Programmer Aner Commission is attempting to following Bahbath · eervices.
Loan Librarian and his equipalyst) , Computer Services, PR-2.
.
_.
.
,
~prove the climate for produe. 'They will also aUebd and speak
!Dilllt and derieal staff to be
·
tion al natural gas and -to sim- at Chahad HOUM M'Vioes Satcomhined in one area delle to
. TechniaJl ,SpecWU.t, Removalile.Pro6tbetics, Scbllol of
ultaneous[y liold down prices, urday moniing at 10, and the
the reference materisls .......
· o....tistiy; P.R-1 (April 12, 1973, is .~Jle closing. date 1or
· ~- pepertzn~t of Interior 4s aame evening at 9. · Meals will
•---•"-_,.
receipt of applications) .
""
•
mvffitog u.e··opE'te--•~ ·
be
ed
all""-- · ·
P rspesnetnbetI!:..~~
useLoan. 18.
waiting fci •L- .
~~L'!':
and_.,are ,."!,. ~ =~sioos
111011 """
....~ ...., .........,
Tec'hnicol Specialist, Anatomical 'Sciences- School of
'""'
-~ " ' - · - • in the Annex and a wothoom
Medicine, PR-1.
• ·
· '
·
fore leasmil
re 'd.iilling
,
in Lockwood.
rights.
·
·
Dr. Hasofer ill profe11110r of
For additional iDformation co~g 1hese joba and
_ 'fhe. National· Fuel Gas Com- statistics and he.a d of the
""'
4. Provision for added lllllitfor details of NTP openings througboot the State Univerpany ' 18 a ho~ 001p0n1tio
School of Malhematico at the
' ' ing -ce in Lockwood Alma.
sity ~ oonsult bulletin boards at these locations:
:_~~of~~ University'tif"N~ South W8ies
·Tbe Libmries hope to be able
""' ....,.,_
in Sydney, Auslliilia. Current,.
1 Ball Facility ~ n 152 and n·153 2
~-~·f_o_rd ~~
•
; · Ridge Lea,
penies in "'-'- y,...
cam- ly .on leilve, he hOlds
................
.........
BuiJdini
4288,-.-t to eafe.!eria; 3. Ridll! Lee. Building
-.. rot
·--.....
,.... will~ ,
-~
~ ..
j280,
Ill ,corridor to C-1; 4. Hliillth Sciimoes .............,,
o .. n.o:-emOhici!'~vania,
81111·
parts of Pnnceton
Pi . e11110rabips
at ClDII1iDs
MJ.T. year
and.
.........,
_ ,..
. ~..,_
. All
~
for the
Current
and 1he
m ............ opposite HB 131; 5. Capen H8n. in the corridor'
. ClaY. aai!i. ·Irociuois . Gea· ~ Dr. Haaofer is noted for hiS
.-.paper...., ·
bl!loNm ltoapl141 and the I..o6QY; ' f!; ~ - ~ .• · ~ -~--·prottr- -. in !"o.rltintheapplicatioDofstat,.
floor ill corridor to . . . . . lll&amp;chinM; 7.-Hayea Hall,
. ~the ......f De&amp;Ia' istica to •ll'uctl!nol.~.
~
~k:tf.
ill main .,truce Jcfw, _ . . fram Pilblic Iafar.atiDD Of,. ·. -aDd an
' - - u , ·of tiM! as ....U lis J&gt;CIPII¥tioD ~
ca1a 1Dto - . Jt a felt
lloa; 8.
Hill; ID cdfidar ~ ~ '112 ai.d
W~
ew .'f-ork r'e11Q1L and h_istory of PftlbabilitY,
!hatduzini..,beUn(-'....~)
_ llJ;B. .Padmir 8 i' ' ·•rillcaitidiiorilelf-'&amp;iom. I6,·. · ,WhiJoiother-eft.IJBOOIID••· .- · '
·
liDt 11e
· - 10. a...,-. u,~~. 111&amp; 1oor, llooJaiq Dlllce.'lu-, lL I.w · try adfet "brrRaottta,.'Uil .,_ • .....,., Haaofer ia e cliDicaJ
&amp;bao1, liNt lloat...-J
bat-. Roomi ,, :::
·
.,. a""'!' mlrbt remain ~
108 ad lOll; 12. 18&amp;'1 ~ PanbnneJ ~ 13 . alfected~mc!apwit81JY..wll worb 1Jl youth and IIIBII'iqe-'

~ihle~o~w/~:f

i!':. ta~i.::."Js:!ts ~or'ft!.re~= ~Y i::ntedmak~e th.i:Jv~~ 1:;~ ":,~~~"":,=.~~

.=-ials

!"tnO:b'.:

Gue.s t Speakers

Nrp'P

,.;:?;·.
....,..c

T.Ob Q'{Je
. mng.·
· S.

.':lis!..

""'""" ............,

"'"'"ft•

eon:::::d=-.1'

.w-

~~ • ..!t":!•tfit C .

~~t3! ~~
and Bindery ·oectioft of Tech-

~board

.~illu.:..~

=

~ 225; .14, Dif#endoi1

~~:'d.is -~~~~w~

,..; ~-..._~Nat .y~·· •· ::.~a: lias deYeioP,8il
~·to

~rag ~
-.,

Clay attributed thia
the have been
wtderground &amp;torale a Y a t e m · Jl&amp;Ycbiatrista.

�v

Man:b :Z9, 1973

GSA :freezes
Fee
Levels J.&lt;i
wWM&lt;

Sir-;-Sam Fi.Mel Yoa're Dead (by

•=

~.!'L
~r~=- ~per-

other C08I8.
up,
gnoduallll' student fees 'llrill not
~ .durins the .fiac:al
Year, the Gaduate BCudent Aasociatiaa· ckMrmined a.t
}darcb li : ............... The fee_
f - was BmDIII tho! recom-.
,..........._of tbe GSA Financial Co!maitiBeapJroveci by the
body. Alloeatioll of l'8IIIOIJJiillg
fuDds for c:lum - tllao okayed,
with approval IP..,., to budaet
,eq.- by ....., GSA dubo.
· GSA · Preoidant .J._,), L.
p.,__, reporad on·Cbe outcome of die .A.ociation"a reapjnat Dr. Jolm
Simoo. cbalrman ol tbe FWncb

an e
e OfllllpaDy of
acton IIJid ~in ""-UIB
Department of 'I'b.Ue.- Bulfalo
S t a t e Hoopital RehabilitatiOn
Center, 8:30 p.m. (tiirouch SWJday, April 8) .
Ticket. ue a..n.ble at the
Norton Hall Ticket Ollice:" generol
admiaion. 51; otudento 60 oonlo.
Preoented by the U/B Depot.
· ment of Theatre, Center for Re-rch and State Univeroity of
New York Committee on the Alta.

n.

PASSOYII AIIAft-m.

HiUel• io makinc plano for a
P&amp;NOYer Seder, aeveral Palover
JDMia, IIJid ~r H._ Hoopitslity. Studenlo may_ oiaJ up 1
for adioilloo at Hillel R or at lbe Hillel tDie in No-.

For · further iaformation. contact
Hillel Hoo.e, ~ ea.- Blvd.
" " - IIIIAMOI

-

iob~~::ru, ~~.:; .

·tfi'U!t
box•~~-: ~
Sbabboo bocinniac- on F r I d a y. •
March 30, at IIUDdown at Ril1el
Houoe, ~
Blvd. Thio io in

CaJ:"

EXHmrrs

~ti~th s.::r:.rly oched-

cent.....,_

Al.IIJOHT-«NOX

Reftectlnc the Pbuioalc ideM,
the ~'i_will be one of putld-

~.=:..~~~

~7o~~P~~~

STUDENT All EX.HIIIT•
Se~ted Wor.U ~

and caDrieiclusiY" violated Cbe
by-lawl ot die Fre.m .Dopart.ment in niCOoatitutina; the
Ph.D. Committee in sudi a way
t1..t .-m-t student parity
was deDied: A panel ol tbe
GrieYBDcio Committee of tbe
Faculty. of Ales and Letters
found in' f&amp;...,.,, ol tbe Associa- .
tion, recomri•euding aftinDation
of the Pb.D. CommitiBe as
previouoly · OOII8Iituted as tbe

Pain.tingt by Ju.e Nazaret,

Gallery 219, Norton. through Friday, AJ.&gt;ril6. Gallery houn: Mon.
day-Fnday, noon-5 p.m.; Sunday,
l -5 J?.m.; Wedneaday and Friday
evenmp, 7:30-10 p.m.
Al.IIIGHT-KNOX AIT EXHIIIT*

Eva Huse : A Memorial Er·

hibilion. Orpnized by the Solomon R Guggenheim Mu.eeum.
New York, the exhibition inclw:leo
over 80 worb executed by the

h~fu!~ri.:d,,thl:K~!;e ktears~~
~:;'rit l:.S Elmwood Ave. , through

COPEINICAN EXHIIITlON*

WEDNESDAY-4

used to circumvent the fon:nal
grieYfiJce procedures of the
Graduate School, 2) lbat the
GSA participate. ill selection ·of
the appointee, 3) arid that ·ibe
new OIDIJtK!sman spend a significant portion of his time on
student problems.

COMPUTII ICIENC! COllOQUIUM #

A Model for a CoWter Sys-

~s~t'!r..,·..;iy~

Ridge U!a, Rm. 41, l p.m.
WATI.l IESOUICES SEMINAl.
Mec~

of Sedi.IMnt Elltrain-

~,.,p~.piJ~li'D~t

FrankliD.-

of Covil Engineering, 146 Parker
8

E~~ fif~m. a ~~iies or
seminars dealing with the proceooes tha.t influence water movement
and water quality. Presented by
the U/ B Center for Inland Water
Reoourceo.

I , col 2)

appealed to Albany to re&lt;Xmsider its decision.
Others also appealed directly

to Albany. On March 13 Po-

veromo and Student Association President Debbie BeiiiiOn,
in .Albany for SUNY 25th an-

THURSDAY-5 .
HILLEL CLASS•

lntrodudion to Judai.Bm. 310

Foeter, 2 p.m.·

STATISnCI •COUOQUIUM# I

A Further Look at lniliol Milicla.aificlJI:Um in Discrimiru:tht~ .
&lt;&gt;lysis. Prof. Peter A. .Lacben·
brucb, University of North Carolina. 4280 Ridge Lee, Rm. A-49,
4 p.m. Refreshments will be served
in Rm. A-15 at 3 : 90 p.m.
SEMINAR IN UkRAINIAN CUUUU
AND CIYWZATION*

niversary ceremonies, presented

the tile on Frariklin tO Chancellor Boyer, his ·staff, a n d .
several members of tbe Board. •
Pov&amp;rQIDOI and new SA President Jon Dandes met in Albany Man:h 20 with Vice Cbanoellor for Pel8onne1 Dr. Kenneth .MacKenzie. MacKtmzie
was parlicular)y imp..-1 that
Franldin was thesis adviso&lt; for
sixteen studoots in the Philosophy Department and ~seemed
~t ._.ave to· the argument that Fnmtlin's reliremelit
would oonStitute a hardship for
these studeata, Povel'llmo said.
·MacKeazie indicat!ed· be IIOOU1d
give his fulleat consideration to
exfaJding Fnmtlin's a
intment for ODe semester,'}:'ove.

Tbe matter still mUBt come
before tbe Board of TruStees,

p,__, u.ue-.
The GSA Bacutive Committee ~=:a Law Scboo1
and
Department

Ukrainian Orthodoxy - CrourocuL. of Eastern and Western
Religious Consciou.sneu, Rev. My.
chajlo Zap&amp;ryniuk, Forestville,
Conn., 205 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

ism. The rilwllo of tbo ~
will be deocribed, ~ IIJid
practiced in an authentic Pbuiby Rabbi Morrio A. Cohen.
Inte,...ted otudanu can obtain

fwther information by~ Hil-

UUAI AIT EXHIIIT*

•:l:t f';!~.,:~~:~ ·~

The exhibit. presented aa part
of the University's celebration of
the 600th anniversary of the birth
of Nicolaus Copernicus, will be
on display in Lockwood Memorial
Li\l&lt;ary ·tlu:ou&amp;h ~pril 27, ALIIIGKT-«NOX PHOTOGu.PHIC
E.XHIIIT•

Men Who Make Our World :

PortraiU by Karth. an exhibition
of over ·100 photographs, including
~rtraita of Albert Schweitzer,

lfu~~!!~~·.lfe~:t'R~

rd Attri~h~~n':x~ ~~Oan~~
1285 Elmwood Ave.

INTERVIEWS
Throughout the eemeeter, OD·
campus interviews will be conducted for students interested in
attending graduate schools or ob·
taining employment. To atranp
an appointment. contact the University Placement and Career
Guidance Ollice, Hayes C. Rm. 6,
ext. 4414. The followinc apncieo
will be interviewinc:
THURSDAY- 29: Rod.ester

~".: LI:!_~·Cf~~

School..
FRIDAY-30: Travelero Inourance.

N&lt;YI'ICES
AAUW USED lOOK IAll

lel at 836-4540.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
COPY DEADLINE
For everyone•• convenience end
pleasure, we llka to publicize all
events taki"ll pi.C. on campus.
To record Information, contect
Nancy Cardarwlll, ext. 2228.

Good Teachers
Being Sought
Now is &lt;the time for the
University community to speak
up in behalf of good teachers,
an administrative spokesman
said this week.
Under new programs announced by SUNY in January
( R eporter, January 18), 10
Distinguisbed Teaching ~
fessorshiPS ( to be continuing
and regarded as promotiOIIS
with salary increases oC up to
$2,500) will . be awarded

fg%~~ f~~~r!

ulty members will be pven
Chancellor's Awards for Excellence in Teaching which
will bring $500 in each year a
professor is so d~ .

•Nominees for the awards are
be recommended to tbe

{0

Chancellor ~faculty,

r=:~

..

ll!ldiJ-

and admin-

Each campus may nominate
one faculty. member for. a PJo.
fessorsbip. The Excellence
Awards will be divided .......,
~ Oil die bella of unclerpaduata ~

.

The Buffalo bnJIICb of the
· American "-&gt;ciatio11 of
oity w--. will conduct ilo 19th
Annual Uoed Book Sale 011 Monday, April 2-Friday, April 6, at

U--

270 Pearl St., Bufblo.
Pootero, .-nil, IIJid 160.000
boob of all typeo &amp;nJ included iii
the oale. ln addilion, art work,
craft items, aulopapbed boob

::h.bf.o~:'=~~

·

N~from . . _ _

tion.
.
mitlaee will be 1BVillwlld by a
The oale will be bekf hom 10 - ~ Comadlllee~
a.m.-4:30 p.m. - . .day. Tbeno ol equal IIUIIIIas of tMulty
io • $1 ~ion. cbaqe 011 Moo- etudeola and
~~ .. fn~e ~ heeded by Dr. Bemard 011-

will approach tbe U/8 Foundation or .1101118 l!lldamal source in
o r d e r to obtain supPort for
Franldin for the tiPrinf 1974 ...
...... .Povenmo aid.

admlnllllralal8

P . - ~ theoalewillbelp

·=..:~~ IIJid by
·· toraJ AIJd pi~

Deaihess Study

A$10,000~~

~--

Foundatiail pant bas b e en
Dr. .Joel M . Bernstein, cllnicel IUiilitant in ...,.
~.ad Dr. Noel H. s.-, director ol the Ulli~a Center fw lmmwwlol)', to investipte earpedawtsJ productioD ol

'

~ ~ Al1d , __

awarded to

a,. ..........au., a ....U.W. at HUws-~eo-Bhd.Pw­
~ wilh Rabbi Monla

A.

Coboa. call 854MI.

nA&amp;WO -

VIllA AVAIIMUI
AIIUIIb~-'lilla

..
..... I a -

~-:.t1:

by immuno-,
ol t'1 totsim, - 1100.000 by the J.l'oundalba iWI ·,_. 1o IIJWC!d.
mediGil iDwoltlptloaa thr0Uib-

out411e-*Y.

aee environment. Lecture• in
Pharisee literature will be PY81l

f.T:~;}~~~- ~f~~~

~~U"r..:-'m!

romo reported

'l:~=':nib~~~-=

lery. Albrisbt-Knox Art Gallery,
1285 Elmwood Avenue, tluouch
April l. Gallery houro: 'l'ueodaY·
Mondaya.

ters. The panel also llll[_ed tJ:&gt;at
ambiguities in tbe Deplirtmentsl by-btws be clarlfkid to
avoid similar problems in the
future.
Tloe proposed cbarJe Cor a
reinstituted U ni vers1ty Ombudsman was approved with

(Continued from -

Art Sludenu, SUNY at Buffalo, inclw:l-

.

in lbe

ltalla!t ~ -

Lab

f::""-~~,.-'hH·
&lt;~au- aalup ~for...,_
a,. Al1d ........ wa.. to: l'lllt

~Boa -

OIDooooaii
C:lDid,
q.uloada

=~:X.:..:

will report to l'rellclem . . . .

L. KaUer wbo wfU tarw.nl
....... oC ~ to the
Cbancellor by Wq L

�.

(

·s.-

CWEEKLYCOMMUNIQUE
· THURSDAY-29
AfiiCA . . . . ~TION'
M part ~ weeJ&lt;·l-

celel&gt;l'!·
lion of Afncan ]i(e aDd cultun,
pulicipanla will work today I!'&gt;

promote

~lion aDd

ool!·

darity amoac AI""""" aud Afri.
can natioha.!;

Afri&lt;a week is preoeldecl by the
Afri&lt;a Club the African GraduAalocialion, the Student -~ · the Graduate
Student Auocial:ion and the Black
ale StudentO'

Student Union.
0P1N IIHIAISAL••

T/u

~

Cl&lt;t~eland

·

Q114rtet, 101

::;::-rebearul is primarily
· for mus1e etudents; boweYer, •tu·
denla enrolled in other dilciplineo
at U!B are welcome to attend.
'The Quartet will perform worb
by Bartok.
COONmYE PSYCHOLOGY liMINAl•

Auditory Memory, George Sper.
line, prof...,r of poycholO&amp;Y, New
York Uniwraity, 4280 Ridge Lea,
Rm. C-31, 1-3 p.m.· .
.
Presented by the Cotft'llive Stud·
::..;r;:r;:,J!,l~. / B Depart.

~

Daniel ~ Department of
Black Community Education.. Re'se:li'C".h and Development. lJmveroity of l'itlabuqb. 299 Hayee, 3

P~ lecture is presen~ b~ t;be

Caliaula, ... Thunday, March
29. fo_r details.

M:_

co;;::; Recitol,

UUAI FILM*•

ENO..;EWNG SCIENa SEMINA&amp;#
M«~.'?_{_ BIJ&gt;od Flow, Dr.

Richard 8~ chairman,

))e.

r=~~.:.t!!~..::.!

filM••

~~~ !ttt!!~t:J::

A·15 at 3:30p.m.

(Polanaki), Confer·

:~J.ebea:;·

UOCHEMIS'nY SEMINAl.

J!::. t Adm=

l

Corcino • Placental A I k a I 1 n e
Phosphat&lt;ue, Dr. William H. Fishchaqe.
The slaughter of Duncan, u man, Depo.riment of Palholo!Q'.
depicted in this film, olfen an Tufts University School of Medi·
Unoomfortably cloae ~el with cine, G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.

~o~'•-r:,rso~

~icbolas

•F:=,;

Caliaula, oee Thunday, March
29, for detailo.

SATURDAY--31

MONDAY-2

..-'liar....:•

riman Theatre Studio, 8:30 p.m.
The play is a preaentation of

~~~·;i~~&amp;'ir~

ment of Theatre. Tickets are
available at the Norton HaU TiCket Oftioe:. general a&lt;bnil.ion $1;
studenlll, 50 cents. 'The play wiU
run through f!unday, April L

2 p.m.

A Computer Oriented Sy_•um
for ·· M.uu: Printint, DeYid A.

Sum""'r of '42, 140 ()open, 7:45

:~t:-a'Pff.e~~;z,~
~ ~M~~u't:."1:~
p.m.
.

Ticket Oftlce.

·

HIUil ClASS•

T~

ugocy, Hillel Houoe, 40 Capen
Bhd.,

·=

~·
8

~~'f.:.~:f'~~,.e
ff:;
York Uni..,nity, 4280 Rl
'Lea,
Rm. C-31, ' 12:30-2:30 p.m.
.
Preoented by tho Coonitive Stud-

iesen1Program
~ycbofo•~·.U//BB .Depart.
m
0
of Po'
...,.,
MKHANICAl ENGINEWHG SEMINM#
T/uGcnui.o/theCe/JuWPre-

CAC CINEMA*

.

Summer of '42, 140 Capen, 7:45'
18

:~i'!"Ji~ N~~ ~

Ticket Office.
Fifteen-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hermie (Gary
Grimeo) bxperiences· rrowing up

KRONOS Control Larl611411&lt;.
inltruclecl , by Rocer Campbell.,
4238 ~ Lea, 7 p.m.

_.

A Short Hilt&lt;Jry of Animation:

AfiJCA W&amp;IC CllllaAtiOM!'

U:'"U:' lt1f~ Dew"~~

Band, Fillmore ROom, Norton, 8

p.m..-8 a.m.
~
Free drinb; donation, $1.

CONCEIT•

-

·

Euening• for,- New Mwnc

IV/

~~~~\it"=~=lifo'; r.~.::~~~.l:~
!:bc,P:O.'~!i"!.of~e.tj=.~

mie's infatuation. 'Thio film is a
line blend of humor, tendem-.
and life "".f"'rioncea.
HowL IAI&amp;Anl 'SBYIQ'
Toralo lludy ...,ion, led by
Rabbi J . .Hofmann. Onec Shabbol
wiU follow, Hillel Houoe, 40 Ca·
pen Blvd, 8 p.m.
~ VlfiiiNO tKTUB , .

~p.m.

COWimHG QNTH .........

AfRICA WEB( cauaATtON•

F&lt;a8ting on African Food, Clark
Hall. , 6:30-8 p.m.

.

COMIIIIIIt SCIINQ CO&amp;.IOQUIUM#

=

FOml LECTUIE SBJU•

FRIDAY-30
COGHITM! PSYCHOlOGY

Dc::;~o/. ~"iC:;~ tf:tt

CAC CINEMA*

- Pericyclic Reaction., Dr. MichSelby and Mar- ael J.S. Dewer, proleuor.of cbamlin Shaw.
i&amp;try. University of Texas at Austin, 5 AC\&gt;eson, 4: 15 p.m.
THEATIE PaiSifrhATION•

~~y~~~~~:

ucriJoE!IIIIMCiotm.o.nON"

Bonnie Zimmerman, wiao atudent of S !viA Dimiziani, wiU perform wo~ b~tradella, w~
~ ':.'~·
'r.d Recital
.

Maximo Aboue Hilh uuet. in
Gtuusi= 114ndom F~ldo. Prof. A.

Macbeth

THEATa NISitnATION*

a,pd Eric
Frandsen 'aud the Moooil Park
1M Jtoor caf.~ria.
No'rton. 9 aud u p.m..Admiooion:.
. - . . . all nlhen. •ts.

U=mty, 104 ?arlter EDJineer•
•
..

UUAI

·

Stouu!era,

iiJf· 4, p,p&gt;._

M Hasofer Univeraity of New
W a i ~ '· AUotnoJia, 4280

.--

~~~~berr

STAnSTICS aiUOOUlUM#

s.'utt&gt;

-

King Lepr (Brooko), Confer·
once Theatre, Norton, check obowcue for - · Admiooion cbarp.

worb by Bach, Stravinski aud
BrahmL

T/u-

ory of Ob~n. Allen W~,
Cornell Umve18Jty, 4244 Ridge
Lea. Rm. u;, 3:3Q p.m.
•

LeoDIItd Mat-

~ki~ R::1:.it ~~
P~ performance will inclucje

U/B· ·~t of LiquiMico
aud tiie-'Bt.Oek.studieo PiOpau!.

"'~:".:.r::~ontract

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

~~~by ·~ g.~,P~

IHlAI'If HUINTAnON•

T/u Cartoon, 147 DiefeDdorf, 7
p.m. &amp;,oM DuU Core, Hen ·Hop,

PM -u Deux, Tlu E:yo H«Zrr-TM EGT Sea, Lo. Pouktte Griu,
Pen Point Perwaion witA Loopo,
aDd Na,hboro (MclAren), 147
· f!.:~rf. 8 p.m. Aclmiloion il

==·

HIU&amp; ClASS'

•

Talmud, Hillel HoUM, 40 Ca-

7 p.m.
•
ical
Albrifbt-knox a.J.
co..._. stnn. Q-.lliWd
lery AwlijOnum, 1285 ~ Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m.
!':available d fbe
Norton Hall Tidtet,081oo or may . bid AjemUm, 'rialia;'J- n--,
be pwcbaoed at the aoor: geneml Yio\!i aDd Micbael RudiUDY, ..,).
admiaoion, $2; Gallery IDOID!ion lo ·· - group will podorm worb
and student&amp;, $1. Preoented . by .,y Ben&lt;; Ciawford,. Moun aDd
the U/ B Depariment. of Millie Carte.. "Ticketa are a¥11i18b18 at
and The Canter of the C,_t;.., the Norto"' Hall Ticbt Ollce:
and PerforminJ Arlo.
•
PMral ·~
ta.:aJtY.,

A~,

Av,;.;.,:~:&gt;

~'R.~.

'= :;:: ·

=

sa;·

:::ta,~..W!.n~ ~
. '2 .m. ~
: r . n..•-w.w._,....
;,;--~. Hamni' U .
29,--~
for detailo. .•
- ..~
.
~-~uaac. p
~.aDd 196'1Nobe11Aure:::"!·:. .~- FelafelPMIY•
.
~ • .
"TuEsDAY-=-a
Glu M ·
Ra. medii: iD-e-~. 1
'!ftd wtne; no~
·•
,
~= ~~~ ~Science and Medici-,
ortoD,

2 -

Y

Diefendorf 8: 1&amp; p.m.

~' by tiiO U'}f'Ileput. . ~ ~~ U(B
. mont of EaPoh.· rraduate atu.
dania.
'

J'

FacultY

l'lllA"::. _UNTATION'

·

•

cbarp. Hillel H ....;,. 40 Ca"'1'
.Blwf, ,8:811 P~ . -.
• -.

~ ·~-. Ma~ · .. ~ SUNDAY~r

~==~ ~~~A~~ a:; R«ii4ll!i~~ Hat·
•

. _ , D. W. Sum, ,...._,. ~·.~..utz._~ ~
~~d~'!.~;l&gt;~~.
·- · 0 _,'!! ._ •...........,
• ar
~-- ltoJI, 8:111 p.m.-1 a.m.
8doaclo, 2 p.m.
u11u Rill"
I.ICJiia•
.
.
Macbetll (PolaDUi), Coatenaco
TAo Clmwnt Stawo of~ ~ ~ "'-cue
onJJ!ailt C~n. 'Jeok L foi'---~ Adoiliiaida -..._ ··

-

•

•

kin, Fint ·Preobyteriaji Chlll'l!h,
S}'lllllbony Circle; 4:45 p.m. FIM

edmilooian.

•

Heoldn, who il lnalndor of
OJ'IIID in U/B'o ~ of
Muaie, will perfonn worlto by De
GriiJ&gt;y, Becb, ¥-iaen. Vleme

-

. Ccnitrol Stl'ucllua Ill

~r

~ J.oa,

11m. 19,

sc.Nca - •

iJ':f"Level~olb.~:!':
alljr,
11 a.m. .

"":L~-;
_,__,

foll;"-.

Hob- J62 Nor·
. ....,
.

ucn./-m.o.noit•

.F-.m,

-f.

Cbarloo Waorinen,
and Paal Zaklofllty,

(Continued on -

7, cOL Z)

.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1382707">
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382693">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
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                <text>en-US</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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  <item itemId="85432" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
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                    <text>U/BColleaguesGet
Approval of:Seilate
By-laws , .for a "U/ B other non·aaulemic in.._..
Colleagues" organjzatlo..- for unre stricted. lifla. ·Dr.
faculty/oommunity effort in George Hocbfield (Eaclilh),
which cruporatioos aDd other for eDmple, cbaracteriaed the
lfOIIP8 would pay feM in the proposal as "in the~
form Ol umeatricted aifta aDd of academic corruption" in Amfaculty would prcrride collegi- erica. Prmicloint RDbert L
&amp;lity and information ... 1'&amp;- Ketter noted thet fundinl of
aearc:h--won the -~ of campus .......:h activity Ia likely to continue at the CUI'· Fa\:ulty Sene tom 1ofarch 6.
AJso BDDOunced at that meet- rent rate from such naerallY
ing .were the niiDlM of the fao- acceptable tiOUl'C88 aa ti.e Stalli.
c:om.d.
•ulty who will make up the. Ben- When the uestioil
p&amp;soed
:ll. in
ate's .Collegium ~ cacademic the
spile of &amp;ODie m\li"IIIUriDc 8bout
planning.
''
The . " U /-B Coli..,._.' was ''Coffee Rich Univeraity.•
originally PrOP.c-i tiY A&lt;Bdemic V;ce PreSident BeiDard
SPttiNG 11ECEA
Gelbaum, who bas bail ~- The " - - - will not be publlolled
ence with similar a:rranpmenls - for the next - - - of
at other .universitie!o,.-"" modi- the UniWI'Iity'O Spring-- OUr
fied by the Senate's Committee next looue ' will • - • Thu'"*Y:
on ~ 'and Creative Ac- Man:h 29. Maanwhllo, a ,.. ,
-"
tivity,_the program ;. intendea laxing break.
to. establish tooo-way communication between University and Tha Collollum
community, to promote na
Senate Chairman Gilbert D.
sense of ilrte~P:&amp;tion and mu- Moore announced that t be
tuality of interest," and to en- planning CollePum will caDcourege formal ~PP&lt;!rt ~ cam- sist of David T . Bazelon . (Pal~"'! .research and · crea?ve ae- icy Sciences) , laWrence .Chlot- •
tiV'lties by ~ 90mmumty.
.- oJm _(American Stiuliea); l.ee-:
The program will be oi&gt;eil lie A. Fiedler (En g1 i a b),
to • an'y "appropriate organiza- George C. Lee (Civil Englntion,'' including trade unions, !"!ring) and Harold Segal (BIcommunity service organiza- ology), with Dr. Mac Hamtions and businesses. A ten- mond presiding aii secretary.
member board of directors, half Mandatory - faculty and b8ll colleagues,
University President Ketter,
will administer the program. who stayed for the entire 1188Each community _member will sion, read a letter from SUNY
pay both an entrance fee and Chancellor Ernest Boyer clarsustaining fees. . Funds raised ifying the position on mandaby the Colleagues will be de- tory retirement. The Board of
posited with the U/ B Founda- Trustees must act individuAItion, Inc., to be disbu!Bed at ly on all n!lqiJmts for conjiuuathe discretion of the Colleagues ·tion afte&lt; retirement age which
Board. .
•
must- be sulimitted on a year
In exchange for their f-, to year buia. In reoent y membera will be able to dileCt the numbe• of •""' .....,....
--=:::-~~:...,.:..-:;;~.:-......;:...!..:=:=~====:::-::=::::-:-::::~==~
--'brief'apP.fOI&gt;riaW~
to bP iDcnued; ~ ald.
t lftiiCUity""!Jirouil'C i CiiiiPU8 8lik8d that oampuaes c&lt;iOpem1e
liaisOn olf10e. . Extensive ean- in ·rec1!£in1 fll~ - - by
· sultalion is not lntehded under aeekini waivers Only ln "abaOthjs arrangement, according to
lutely com p e IIi n 1 circumthe by-laws, and such consul- stanees" wbere demonstration
tation must be·ananged oulllide of unique need and potentl81 for
the Collellgue8 progmm. Tbe outstanding peraonaJ contribuColleagues would also publish tion can be made. In the case
reports on their activities and of Dr. Mitclfell Franklin, wboee
"The search fi&gt;r a dean for ' health- sciences area during ·a istrative-academic balance will on C5111PUS reseaoch progralns. recent ""{11"!11 for extension
solid research- Wi th students' pemria'lion, in- was denied, Boyer acknowlthe Medical School should start three-&lt;lay visit · to the campus tilt toward
right away. It can•t wait until earlier this week, sandwiching · publishing backaround.
formation on proepective
edged that Franklin is a "dio"Personally, I favor bringing ployees would be provided at tinguished scholar," but indiI take off ice July 1. Tbe an evening interview between
School's .been &lt;l&lt;lan-less too meetings and preliminaries to someone in from the outside. the request of community par- cated that unique and ~­
It has been my experience that ticipants.
house-hunting. •
long." ·
ling circumstances for continuIt's going to take a long time much..,stronger institutions deFinding "a strong, effective
Debate on the proposal, poe- ation do not. eD&amp;t. Boyer cited
professional" to fill the Med- to lind the right man for the velop when people- whose pri- sented by Committee Chairman the need for ensuring jab opmary
.
experience
bas
been
in
ical School vacancy topli the ' School, .Panni!! predicts. The
Emanuel Parzen (Statistics), portunity for younpr faculty
priority list of Dr. · Fitzhugh ideal candidate is someone with . ~?,ther ~titution are brought focused on tbe fear that .sUch and staff in the COII8lnined ..,..
Carter PSnnitl, Jr., who bas irnpeccatile academic creden- m, , he Sllld.
an arrangement was a soul- demic marl&lt;et as the rationale
Pannill assured that he would selling bargain in which tbe for . the current poljcy, Ketter
been recommended .to the Board tials who will-be accepted withof Trustees as the next vice out reservation as a faculty col- assist in the search in any way University would trade its in- estimated that tJt B ·forwards
leaiue. He will also need solid that lie can, including suggest- dependence from business. and (Conlinuai "" _ . 2, coL 3)
president for hmlth sciences.
Pannill discossed thjs and administrative experience, but ing names to the search comother plans ~ concerns for the Panel thinks that the admin- mittee and ftying up from Texas tb meet with candidates.
,_

i&gt;ro:..'l

ST"t..

a.

=-

S"earef;t{or a New-- Dean;of Medicine
_M~t B_
egjn Now,

Patmill Maintains
a

Plan to Revive Ombudsman
I.ts F"1na-~ Stage
Said
N·
e
aring
Pbins for
the
the
commun-

resurrecting
members of
U7B
Olfice of 'University Ombuda- ity on how to resolw griev- ·
man are now , _ , ; , the final ances. Only in tboee ceaes
staseo!, IICCOiding to Dr. Gilbert where no other-!egitimate grievD. MOo.e, ebairm8n of the Fac- ance mecbanilim already\ ap. ulty Senate. .
• plies woulil be 'be empowered
Within the MXt few weeb, if to in~ br process a
all imoiYed parties ""P'eE sup- griev)lDC8 or comp~t. . - . ·
port, Moore .,.;n submit "' the
. The Olfice of Ombwisman
ezecutive 'V'ice president a pro- was dissolved in 1972 leas than
JX*C1 charge ~or· the Ombuds- ~ yeam after ~ Scandin- ,
man &amp;peed upon· by groups aV181l COJKli!Pt was intmduced .
~epte,re;::~ =~:· on 121!'JII!&amp; At tJ..ct time AI- '
tion bany indicated that J!10 Slale

_

Allll-

em-

A,..ri.ont.

=:=

a~':'l!. ~
is another pressing concern,
=~~~tsem!~~~
entirely o'n meeting the cbrucal
needS of the medical and nursing' schools. The educational
reqUirements of other health
science areas such as dentistry
and pharmacy have to """?~·
nized as well, he' · ,
cting that at least so
o
preileflt
·n be. .
written.
.

agreements
ru.!'
:
'
:
.ii!l;.,
f;':; ·
Medical School at

from llMI6 to wn:-is;-&lt;:.;'.;7-;:.ti::-.ve
to 8 "~ inseCurity 8IDCIIII
hmlth pn;feMion-

&amp;r:r-S:.....~~ lunda.~ be:foo.ill~ ,_inedlcal

~
•

8oDate "Profeaaiooal As;

• _____,_and S ~-"-t
...,._, """"""'
lion.
Aa · described in the new

z.=..::.~be~
::.,.~ ~ ~
~me:

.I'Jelldaltilll authority, but
~"'---- -·"" be "--......,_... ........,
....,

a l1mven;ty .
le or an illiL• T9 counter th;s locallY,
Qmhul.,..n - Since ihea,- the and to...foster communication
SUNY ...,tnol adminjalatjon
tbe
JJiJs'S bMJfh ·
bas indicated 1b&amp;t Ioeai ·IWuls ~
camlavor
~
can be' ._t · for fudlni .... -~~':'~ali' ~th~

~
~0:~
' faailty .1oodyt:.e -~~..._ ...__ &amp;a~ IIIDbJY,.·...C •
~ ~......,. . for IUCb a JII'C)ImiiL

........,. stu....uJ Yiewa
aa.-..

'"' • ralioll for

The hcutty !~~Dale - - peajlently of ~t'a or · tive CoauDitt8e ......._. the
anyolberc6e.Hia~n.- . i&gt;~ . . . at
~~lie to advise
(C...- ... Pole 3, elll. IJ .
. . .t

.-..

'Qiiloln.,._la- ~

ile..... way-_,
.... - •
mltllle

the

~-.

of ... ilialth .......
(~ '!".,.. -!· .... 1)
M

Is Individuality Doomed?
.,-

At uie·time of the University's mel'fl8l with Slele Uni. veniity of New York 'i n 1962, Glifford C. Furnas, cbancelJor
of the priva~ University of Buftalo, warned .that "we mD8I
avoid becoming a number in a Howard Johnaon'a dlain."
Eleven 'Years'.nave-:passed, brinslnl p~wvwnene1 cr-th.
c;hange and plOgn!llll. But in that 1111181 -~ cataloi of
University C0DC1!1118, the Self-Study prepared for the Mlddle'
s'tatl!s eYaluatioo visit last fall, me can find ...., vigorous .reteiencea to the "leveling flllect, • "the tendlacy
,-.ref unifonn:ty, toward treating every apncyllb every
other no matter how disparate their tasb and ll!llpDDiibilitiea, ~- fCBtered by the Slate system.
'niat · UIB is not a1oJie in facinr thjs cballeaae IIIIi
that, indeed,' N- York's State System is u0t the aDiy
candidate for Y1J1aia ,are bom '!"I b)'. al special _.,by
Editorial Projects b Eduaatinn, IDe., 'publiaben -of !'lw .
·Chronicle of Hillw- Edut:Glion, which is part_of toca;y'a Beptirwr.
.
'
The- - " that ~'hanging 8ludent ~ ~
the trend toward Cl811tnol contzol, the uniolli&amp;ati011 of t.:ultiea, the CIUIICb. IIIIi· ~~calla . .
~--....._."' ................ "CD
"We-8aw . . Jiullvidaailfy el Our ~ "'r will ...,.
eduJ . , . _ _ mul·olf the-~-~

edaaUIOD'I'"

-

-:rur a faD cll8cuaiaiOD aDd ...,. tenletive - - . .... 6-'12 oflbkl .....
'

�DentiStry &amp; Sciences" Enrol,/ment
For Spring·
. ~nm-.·-n...·.
~!-1er~.~~ Ft!~e Fiscal Probiem, Somit Sa)rs Is 22,551 ·
(~ , , _ - , .. ...t

spliL People beer more

t

Medi.~ine,

11}

a · All interim noport 011 the

~~: ~

!:'=::; kf_by

it on tbia camJ": beca.,. of
..
the prozimlty
the facultieL~ bert 8om1t 8Dd
Contin~Jo!uo=~~a~ :&amp;W Po!;y vice

okay lor the total

buildhll." - arate

story, tbia .iaaae). The

~~af&amp;:a.,.eatire~""': ~~~:3.t,'::: 8Dd'l'be~~~of~

is "DOW well ~~ In the ......ad ............ ia ~1, the
Student 'Affaim ~be said, .011ice of AdmiaODa 8Dd RecIIIOW!8
all job .-criptions
ve been ords rep1iited lbi8 ....a&lt;. Tots!
completed and
U.tion ia day en!ollmontfull-tiuie
' --~ 17,7Jr-U,~-._) ~ ~ "will maJr.e . tecruim-t more · DOW in~. The.eatim pro,j- 968
..:-·.
. . - .. 3 ,7...., part~teiiebinJ ~ ._..
pooaible. - Often. "" ha"" the ect, lnwlving _,., 400 NTP ~
lisbtad the Mardl IDIII!tinl
mooey to hire but no _.., for positions on calDpuB, ia to lie
The CM!iall total is doWn ·2.6
the Profeoaioaal Stall Senate the individual and his p10- completed by September 28.
per cent from the lall I'BfPstralPSS) last 'Ibunday. _
p-ams." This is a!p8CiaiJ.y true
Doty emplui•i'""' that. the lion of 23,16% Qd is alao below
Just as It Ia ~ year be- . m • terms liL laboratorY NTP "appM! i&gt;rocedJU'e" to last sPrinc's t ol'al of 23,167.
the ~~ 'budret he noted._
contest, initial PR rarikina ia a Total ct.Y I!III'CIIlDBa1 Jut fsll
-llliUiiiaileciilative ac·
Asked' about~ future separate prooeos. ·':In ali han- was :18,11i3 14,4a full-time·
lion on~ matlen, the~ use. of the Law _ building _ esty aDd frankness." be added. last' 'll&gt;riDI jt ·18,008-14:
- time Is oae ol "budret cris- downlolob, """"'
t-, Sc:boo1 "no~ much Will b!q&gt;pea ID - 482 full '~~ide.
'
is" for the Univenity, Somit 1D0W!1i' iiito-ita liP qaarters In the &amp;ppeals:&lt; at tbia j:lme. 'lbe
'lbe .....,_ clec:reue iS noted
said. The entire budret syatam. Amherst, lioallF.'' rep1ied; ''We DivislicinlSe Budpt wbid&gt; In ~ 8lll'lllhilmt. The
be IBid, "eeems'desip&gt;ed to
don't !mow what 'will happen bas the finalllll)'· on·sUc:fi chan- sprlnc IDtal.li 4.9U. down 6.9
duce "'*- and is ~ to that The Lilw Sc:bool might ges bas asked that all . _ - J!8f amt from ...t lall•a· 5,278
that lnlenL"
·
like to keep a foot downtown, be held, until the evaluaticn ·&amp;nd 6.8 Pllf .ca~t below the
Somit indicated that In-lid- but we d~'t know . what the process is furtber~&amp;loo«. After sprilJI1972 total of 5,281. While
(clition to mncems with the reg: outcome will be.~
all, Doty indicated; until the part-time ...,Juate&lt;lelistrations
illar budget, the U/B admin- Datr'• Repaft
.SUNY-wide project of job eva!- are down alitlhtly In both comistration bas been drafting reVice President Doty called uation and ranking has been pariaons, the dip is most evident
quests lor funds ·t o be added attention of the,PS~hto Presi- · completed, tiJoQ seems little In full-time gradUate enrollment
or restored in the supplemental de"'t RObert L.. Kettei:-'s . """!"t "fa~. b;asis on w~cb 1D appesl -!..~ this opo:lng, compitrad to
budget as well u · proposals for notice r e { a t 1 n g 1D the job an indiYJdual ranking.
·
2.~ m the fall- 8Dd 2,679 in
shares in at li!ast four SUNY- description-evaluati6n program
By the same token, be said, February-1972. All Crad stuwide "kitties" which the Rocke- covering PR rants 1-4 (see sep- • if as a result of tlie evaluation dents are couilted as day divis-:.r would allow the Uai--

:,...."':-f... :rr;to tomake
am or eiibt major
~to brin11 mec&amp;:i ~. Ud ~!'I !he
- -apace shoriqes.
~":.one! into the llfe of the CUlftlitMatuoofjob"eYYIIUa!!"D Easlna_..,llhortqes,intum,

ty_as facul.ty memben.
partial eolution, he
~a will be ~Y
pilrtant u the l'l!llt of t6e Uai·
venity. move a 1D the North
~ he adds
·
...,..... The pb,yaic:al plant a1ao ~
_,ts an.iiamediAte COIICIIriL__.As
boldly underacoted by the ,.._
accnd'l.tillll
1
.: : t health ~epotr.!cifi:
fsll critioally abort ol minimum
.

""i::

of

af

_.,a requUementa. Dentist:IY,
f.., example, needs three times
its present "'"'CI! alloaotion. A
pocw physical J,.~.Jilf!ecta laculty morale, Pamilll uplalns.
I.on,-term improvement wIll
come as the rest of the Uai-sity vacates tbia camj&gt;us, but
tlie Ia c t of OIJDCie!e details
about the- plaDnad conversion

~.J::\.,a~~

~~~;:•I~:..~:"~ .F . uJty Se - te- !d~W:::ntfn!' ~ ion~~ ecbool' (DentisaC
Da
action will probably not'be tali- try, Law, Medicine and Doctor

with the
most ...,.uing worltina' ODDClilions as long as they can see
the u,ht at the end of the
tunnel" 'Iboee CODa!med ~ve
to !mow ,ef&amp;ctly what's being
planned, 'be says.
Convinced this U!Jiversity has
~ potan~ for future
!cl:ff'en~healbyththe~ anc,!
P81)Jlill ':.';bruts that the
fewyearswillbe~ti'vel bard

Uibution to Individual campuses.

(Co~d from -

en until the entire evaluation of Pharmacy) enrollment is
project bas ' been completed.
down 5.(7 per oeiit· fiom the
Doty said _he bas told the fall, to 1.,366' from 1,445. This
UIB Peraonnel ·De)iarlment to sprin&amp;'s total ia also 1.8 per cent
use c:Onsiatant standards 8Dd below February 1972's 1,391.
judgments throughout the Uni- All profeBonal acbobl students
yersity in arriving at job rant- are classified as full-time, day
mgs and "not to malce com- studenta. .
·
promises" with supervisors wbo · Total WJderpaduate enrollmay "be pushing to have jobs _ ment (day 8Dd MFC) iS less
up-grsded.
than one per cent below the fall
'!'be State Division of the figure-16,271 for Febfuary and
Budget, Doty indicated, bas 16,(29 for September.
been calling for a system of job
Day division undergraduate.•
evaluations for years. In the (who toqu 11,433) are also
past, ~t.·a-g~ n cy has often sorted out by full and part-time
complained that there was not status and by sex. 'nlese figures
sufficient information on which are: full-time: 10,238 (5 762
to act in terms of up-...,Jing men and (,(76 women ) 'and
positions. .
part-time, 1,195. (568 men and
Doty. 88.1d he feels the -~lnt 6'1:1 women) .
evaluation procedure now ·
MFC currently enrolls 4 838
used. is better for assi~g ·
&lt;!ncluding both full and
JWtkings than the old job com- t 1m e undergraduate reJistt.aparison system. He emphasized tions), down from 4,999 ·m the
!!'a~ he1!ees no danger of estab- fall and 6,099 last spring. The
~g ~a.lary sub-stratifica- current Mli'C figures · include
~Senate ~lt;,e·on tiona Within the i!roader PR- 3,308 men and 1,530 women.
Grading EvSiuation. Dealing rank salary . range&amp;-a system
Male-female comparisons are
with undergraduate grading some fear rmght. result from the also available for graduate and
only, the document includes tea culnrrent evaluation process.
professional registratiOfiB The
recommendations designed to
re'\ponse to q'!""tions . total full-time ...,Juate .;....,n.
foster "quality education while about ~ous ~ ranting and ment of 2,36( includes 1,618
accommodating the rights aDd- salary ~ties, D 0 t ~ said men 8Dd 746 women. 'lbe 2 550
responsibilities of faculty, stu- that the bunc problem 18 not part-time 111'8duate studen~'in­
dents. and administratozs." Ac- ~hi*J:1~~ of NT;Ps · elude 1,396 men an a 1;154
co... ,_ to Sub~ Committee beca
·
ems anse women. The total professional
.....:~-use
fa cuI t Y salary school ---"--t of 1'&gt;= ,.·
'-'"""'oww J o e I 0 . Raynor structure is "excellent" ,..__
"""""""'
.....-J
(Psychology), specific recom·
be
"""" made up of 1,177 men and 189
mendations may represent ~ llentweent'' these "good" women.
"compromise" p o s i t i 0 n s of an """"
ocalee caUBe In,
Total ORrinl ~·lion is
membezs of the Sub-Commit- ternal difticulties, be said.
' also brobD down
faculties
tee, parent committee, 8Dd Otlw ......_
and divioiaae as
· Arts
otbers inwlved. such as DUS
In other PSS business, Preii- 8Dd J:.oitlen, 2,060 (1,631 ;......
Dean Charles H.V. Ebert. The ~~ H. Kuntz an- llr1ldua!'&gt; and 519 = t e) ;
aim, the report _.... was ~
The
Educationa!S..._.._ 1011 (398
"rellect sounded~~ - •. M .resiiiJl!ltion of Dr. Mar- ~";i'l.7ll ...,tity within the context o1. sober
J ~ llSIIista.nt dean, Law ate);
· 8Jid Applied
reality mther than idealistic
unspru~ from !he Sciences, 1,257 ( 46 __ ..._.,_
vision.n
~ Promotional Review ua!'&gt; 8Dd 6011
Approved by the Senate were
• The -'""•tion .....:_ "~'th =Scionceo,_ 3,0IM ( 1.713 underreoiolutions- · 1 &amp;.Ding self
·-."" ._.
te 4118 P.!IIJqata 48P
evaluation ·by· I!!Udents
reasons" of Edward Dale as
edic;..,;·l'Q2 DSitlitry· ~docceptible as the oiily means of Senator from PSS Area IV 8Dd tor~') t.w ai.d J
eva!
·
his replacement &amp;y James Gru ·
;
. ur· !J'tion 1n a COUl8e; 2· re- her, d.irec!or of Norton
IBpal· Na
.,_,=-~ ~'1-Maonthtaining the StU option at its
• The mtention of President
' .,._,.,......
~ .:U't"~ ~ per Kette.- 111 distribute the PSS =~ 1,931 (1,8 under.mae
~t- tnuuiferring the reco~ ~ Self-8tudy ~ report and Socialuata~·~~~;~
8/l:J to Admiaaiona 8Dd a..; """'!'WJendations : to all vice tratiall. 3;930 (8,117 undenii"ad·
cords (faculty Will llllbmit
Pl'e&amp;idents foneview 8Dd '!Gill- uate 8Dd 813 pachiate): 'GenIMrical lll'8iles 8tuden ~ ~~.!~ti!_Y.!_~ era! Univendty, 1,7S8 '(1,717
wish 8/U
ioformts AAR to the ~ -u . - . . . . . . . . undergraduate 8Dd 19 padu1l'ben! tile tmnsfer will be
ate)· 8cbool of ~----t,
made- ..__ .-·---'-• _.._ -~•
• Tbe lntealion of the PSS 1,::-.:..r. (7&amp;0
..._
I ""' - " " " • • - w"'
EmcutiYe Cammitllle ~ .r~
UH
lJIIderwraduate and
thea De raDawd frolllthe atu- op llPProacbes to
~00graduate); 8Dd MFC.
-~~"'~!*&gt;f• tnnacript); 3- requir- . mendatiana of tboi __. ... _ • ......,.
llllllt' ~~ .
~':d.~ lllliMiractol8 ... make taplicit estsbl...._ol
•
11Ua- .
__ , NJP JOe .QI!ENDIQ
.... . _ ...... - ~ ... ptlrWr, . _ . ali), .Samit deala who wish u. mate"Up in.
The ........,,.. 0111c0 -k
~In
~
Wblle t h e - CIIIIIPletas t11i do., within two · ~~~,_._.!!aDd llata- open for 'applications
aper-tation wllb . a - !1 • tbe HMllh 8c::ieDia Lllary ,...._
, . . _ _ .,. ~lion.
throucll March 23 the position of
0
~t, dual .c~.C: u. the ' - - t 81111 first low
Tbe
~ -...,: nua1 Tbe ~ of_ the an- Auiltsnt to u. Director, Houains.
~~
::n...:::-..:r~lle·ladiaat- lutiaae will be 1Ual up it the ing ~~n.et- PR-~. Con au It ._tsr bulletin
. cr.,,u, _;.
..
- .. ~!D,.,1_, ~L~~:....A~-~~- !..~ 14.
for boar~~a for c111a111.
Tllrw Trcoullle -

''Tbe core of the Uaiversity
won't do badly" in the 19'/3-74
budget, Somit predicted, but
three areas are likely to be -iously affected . Medicine and
dentistry both ~ lack of a~
quate support m the "'?llJ1111
year, 8!Jd- the. health BCJence&amp;
•
Y •
and SCJeJJCe6 m general have
times for heal t education. beezr"hjt bard" by Cl.1thacks in
c;::~~~~lf!~,;':l':d- federally-fund~ training
tbenal- '1o Federal fund'
Fan~ ~PJ&gt;r""""''tell[ $9!)0,000
to tbe det!ree that recent
: m ~- crania will \)e · l~
-o...."lyv l u t u r e ·govemment 1n the conung year, Sormt 88.1d.
"'d;;'cl.., thle1J basic
Over the next three or four
programstenas w~ ~~~: years, betoprojectad, the to11 will
mal research activitv
"This ~o!'llt
approXl1118te1y $3.5
Uaiversity is not qw-'ie as de- milli!'n. ~ funds not only
pend
proVIde stipends for ...,Juate
ent as some." but it too education, be said but also pay
will feel the pinch.
f~ SQII1e NTP and faculty salAmbulatory c...
.anes and propams_ Ut B ia apAF. a flmt project, the vice pealing to Albany 1D malce up
-'~--· ~--·
oul
some of the money, Somit inp,.......,.......,.Jgnate w d lite dicatad, "but we don't know."
~~~-=to~~HU,:
Commenting on the recent
enY18Jons a cooperative program Professiorial Stall response to
that encourages """'"'CtfuC pee. the Uaiversity's S e I f-S t u d y
· relationships among all the ~Reporw, Feb. 22), Somit ·said
t-lth professionals involved.
the a&lt;;lministration bas found a
AmbulatorY care &amp;ric! {'f8WD· number of the proposals' to be
live mecliclne are ~ Inter- "excellent" one&amp; w hi c li they
esta of the administrator. A
will attempt to follow-up. OtbSan Antonio, Panni11 developed ers are beyond this University's
a comprehensive family health capacity to implemenl ' Tbreefourths of the difticulties
ted
care program with Federal m· the _....,., Somit saidno,are
funding that serves 8,000 pov• .....,• .,
erty-level-mostlyMu- caused i!r.the system. For exi.,.... Ameriams who bad pre- !W~Pie. "if -we bad a 24-lllOilth
viously lr:nown most! ''bus sta
budget, "" could qperate far
lion medicine."
y·
-. more elllcieally, but UIB am't
Non.-&lt;risis care ia a widely do tbia on its own." Just to
Jll!llected area of most health suggest such a change ca.....,;.
education, Pannlll -~. "Stu- 'its of hilarity In Albany,"
dents usually see -;;';.-1 y tbio Somit DOted. Thus, he said, "it
ecutely ill pinool 8Dd IIlias the .amiabe~-~ ~ocus on things we
-lJr lnlarestlna phases of
_..._.,_
medicine,• such as the aociai
The new· vice president for
adJu8tmeDt that must be made t-lth adeooes wboee recomby the c::hroaioally ill. '"'be
mendation Ill Albany was andon't- the cliacbaraed patieJ ~ -~
begin
r his llfe.
an -immediate IMrcb f.., a new
' - - _..__.-, dilan. for, !lie ..,_.__, of .." ...._
tbese
~vel...,.,... cme,-1lamlt
The~
he didn
lbom In~
· appointment, he
iad acbool." Panni1188yll.
, "is tl}e first of a 1ona
Student t-lth
facili- - - ol
lies could be utilized :in .., u : __., 1D be fartbcamlnt.
perimelltal JliOIIlUD iD
"We are flacliDII 81111 tecruitlng
tbat ~live advanced ftnt..rallo lndlvliluala wbi&gt; amt-lth care IIIUdanta an oppor- oat lie IIJIDDIIIIIIIII • Yet." the ·
tunity to study 8Dd dioliwlr am- ~ Yios" presiileat laid;
bulatory care 8Kvicol 8Dd iJil:ludlq an ~lildl...._
.......__, for the
of
to uas ...... "'-the occaaiaa ; ; ; ,

"":it

::::1

:.W

I , coL 6)

some seven extension requests
a year to Albany. Franldin's
was not the only U/ B request
denied, he indiatted. The Academic Affairs-Council bas amo.
ulsted a policy clarifying precisely wbat circumstances are
normally to be regarded 88
"compelling'' but that guideline
bas not been applied to date, he
said.
.
· _
Letters of a~ have
gone out and a 1973 freshman
class of some 2,500;, expected,
the President announced. This
represen!!..8Jloincrease of about
500 students. Acceptances ·were
sent et a projected ratio of four
letters to escb expected "shOw"
to appliamts outside the Eighth
Judicial District and at 8 ratio
of 1'h to one inside il
Gradtn&amp;
Much of the spring-lite aftel'de ~ .. to
· •by
1100
.....:~ d':...tevoof..,...the ~rtv of-

1

::J"

Pllduab:iT'ih.i'd,

......,..-will

~

Part.

unac:

u.UO..:

..!:t-·r,;;:rnaal ..,;:;;i.

"!.....

Ibis-·

t._.th - ~~ ~,_1D

IDIIilic:.l.........,

e

wni

twJ'.::;::

:

~-Jecf

......

·-h

!:rta~'7.'
liport'a

.:::=;: ~

stud;:;t_;;;: ----------

:::..-:":.aa:.::-up~ol

��4

New Era of Education
Needed fo! Engineers~
By PETER 'GROUMPOS
sive to" the various inputs and
Soob, ........., • muat adjust and c:ompromioe
The history of Jll8llltind is the .acc:o~y. •
.-»nl qJ. a attuule to aatisty In ~
basic .h l man· .-Is__,. food,
lDcrasinal ~will
dotbinc, abel!.,: and llousin&amp;, beoome an ~ticinal occuto mention a f-. Anotlwr more 'Piltion and it is my oplnlon that
or leE WICOIIIICious need is tul- American
will be
fillmenl, or as milbt lllbel more and more in .demand

ensm-a

~:"J:~ ~~: ~'.:,~at

to tulfiU his l'Oie, to live up to
bil hilbMt coacept of 1Wmelf,
to spead his time ..... ....

leut

• But althoucb this znisbt hap. •
pen, the amall natilm&amp; will
greally - t American ......

~~ 1:- =~ua.:!':ttt

self aDd oCiien.
....U educeted to IDler iotaIn this ap of "scientific rev- national atrairs as pert or pra&lt;&gt;
olution,~ . a,.. citben under- tieing his profMSion.
,
stands little about what is ha
But how are we ROing to Cl'&amp;panina aiOUDd bim, - t /,; ate and train future engineers
...Wta, but be is happy to ..,. capable of reaponding' 1o the
cept tbem. He is not quite"""' world's ~? ~t seems to me
if .he is clrMming or
·
tbat .oniY,_~ an advanced
ing nlall!if. We bear~ engiqeering education can we
lot of cnticiam apinst tech- -do this. New programs, more
noiOSY, ~ of 0011111e, the en- emphasis on contemporary SO:
giqeer is blamed. Doea -=iety Ciety's need, the """""Pta or
appreciate the -'led mir- continuous education, and new
actes or ~? or 0011111e, learning techniques muat be
but do they realize this is the practiced and not just r:eoomwork of engiMers?
,
mended as very often has been

~~ ""'.:.!~his:1;

r;:;

dowe ~::
from individuais that "we can put a man
on the moon but we still can't
do anything about poverty,
steals the show ;..;th his antics.
many more unpredicted years traffic, poUution, etc." Putting
By CARL A. BATI'AGLIA
Lumberjad&lt;.ftlce Petruclllo
{we hoj&gt;e) are abead or us.
a man on the moon was made
'The last time I saw a producThe over-riding challenge to He· has a way of making
Although we have reacbec1.. a possible by research and devel- tion of ''The Taming of the any "Shrew" production is to Shakespeare's bawdiness comvery higb level of tedmology opment budgets which were in- Shrew,'' the audienoo nearly SI!PPIY an actor capable of play- preber!Sible and funny, as i '
and efficiency, we have to face itiated !'noo the goal was con- strung up the actors and burned ing that balf-mad, forwanl, bold was meant to be. He achieves
more problems during the near ceptualized and accepted. Abol- down the theatre. The bowling, 8 n d punning-mouthed gentle- this with a ROOd deal of grim·
mimicry, and tumbling.
future. These include not only . ishing I!"Yerty or solving any jeering and primal yelping stop- ::"chioa.nBdut~owashb1S.uckferone'toPfie-t aces,
He en abIes the slapstick to
technical 01188 but also socio- other difficult problem would ped Only dect'bel points abort of
come
oft'
in aU its crude hilarity.
economic ones, national and in- also be possible if we weJ'&lt;! able mass insurrection. Luckily, the into a character who would
ternational- the war against to oo-tualize the problem in author wasn't around - he an,~tttube
the:Fyf.rooctogVlSO
. _enarthaitGonion Connell plsys an old
poverty, maas education, efticl- acceptable terms.
would have been taken bold of
wooing and grotesque Gremio'
ent management ethical and
Technology alone cannot be and shot.
.
the Pj'Sel!t be-fema e and weai- As for Bianca ( Kathl ee~
P.rofMiionsl protiiems, to men- blarne;d for the diffi~ties that
thy ,and not in that order). Doyle) , she is good-looking.
tion just few.
are With us and that be ahead.
The' director's blunder was 'The Studio A r e-n1l offers us
A Dlfl'wont8 And it is equaUy, oortain that his s~pt to present tile play Richard Greene, wbo-I muat
On the wbole, the production
88
.
·
~has
solved
many
technology
alone
cannot
solve
di~l wrote it. The confess-appeared to me at finit keeps a deoont, steady pace,
Engmeenn
them
au enoo on y came to a late to be a lwDberjack looking for- commands enougb interest, and
difficult prob ems of the past. A f'ni..lna Obllption
,
· awareness-that they were being wanl to a tree-chopping con· though not the pandemonium·
1
~ftkw~
~':
A Pf!'S"il!g obligation of our
test This isn't meant to be a producing sensation that I last
..., to build a great society p~ess1on m the years abe:ad G1.n~llTDr\T""lTS
.
slight: it is only to say be saw, is yet worthwhile seeing.
the engineer himself shOuld will be to truly enter the mam- - y .lL yy .l'Vll"'
brings with him a- decisive stage
. the
a differe t
stream of social and political ·
presenoo that is· more physical
lay
1 m
!!.....,;!,
y,;:' roe
UP- actions, to work within the sys- ·The " - " " . _ ... than psycbological. He will
0 lCieS e or
----.
_
.
; tem with aU its compromises ID proolido • tonm for the ex- have nothing to do with extrem'The engmeer should act as and distractions in 8 fashion ciW1ee o f - .., • - nrtety ity of rivaled in;laginstion or
the interfaoo amon' .tec:bn&lt;&gt;IOSY., that is uncbaracteristic of our of the fodna the
any assumed oqtrsgeousness in
eco!'!""lCS, 0':1111lUZ8~'! and profession toaay.
com m ¥ n I ty. We welcams both his Petruchio. He means -what
"To avoid embarrassment and
~btics, yet his f?rmal · educaF!&gt;r the past years and stiU pooftlon p•pua- lotlen as be says, and will lame you if inconve!lienoo to departments
tion f'!""!"'" on 8Cl~
l&lt;?daY, the lawyers and, politi- "'""'! pennltL
you don~t yield. He f0fll088 agy and University personnel,"
Tbe kind of engmeer most ClaDs play the predomiwlnt role
subtlety of gesture or color of John D. Telfer, vioo president
needeCI can harness the .re- . in governmental decisions. But
pitch; he is sober, reJenUess and for facilities plalming, this week
sources of the country and of my- opinion is that
verv tricked and made fools of. At cheering in his resolve to pt restated "I 0 n I· standing and
~world (or. rei!U)ts m~ bene- functions, coneepta and be8is finit there was a heroine Kath- his fortune (which be never stiU current policies relating to
f1c1al to . ~ty;-auch a man for government have .c hanged. erins in name, indul,ui.g ber- distinguishes from his wife). construction communication
!""' ""'!'!&gt;me 8Clenee, econom-· In the future, it is the engin- self {11f!d us) with ber sharp- When .the 'time comes for'phy. and site tJJ:JeeBSM matters:
!~·.politics and h~ organ- "!'r wbo muat also hl!.ve an ac- ~ Wll,_ ber stinging tongue, s•cal display, be will ·tise to the1.- AU communications with '
izAtions.
.
tive role.
ber buUymg force, aU in good, occasion. ~Lip hill! in the face, the Slate University Construe·
. The future ensmeer muat be
Technology is an instrument . crude .fun. But somehow, im- and be will oon~oo you be tioo Fuucr {SUCF) and other
a leader, a designer and a ere- which can be used wisely or perceptibly, she wasn't the same means to have the upper band Sta'- ~ 1--•
·
d
· '
'"' .... """' ":f"DC'es an.
ator. He will undenrtand the- foolishly. We bope that society , in the end. In fact, in· her final ' Holf-Tomed Knt · • • •
OfY as a guide to practiCe. He will cbooee to use technOlogy speech, she was l&lt;neeling down bell you expect &amp;.tberins to ~::!a)'(=~tsh.nd\~
would lltrenlfhen the inforina. wisely. The devotion that- we at the feet of ber husbend
. • bebemoth unleashed upon hv tile ~of.Facilities Plan·
lion link . . _
di&gt;- li!ve 'to our stewardo!UP of !he spouting 'off about the nat:urai ~ stage, you will be disap- ;;J,.,
_ ··
sip ud the
· · ·so that future will likely detenmne not infer-ioritY . of ..Omen and the pomted. This-· Kate (Lin-d a
·
~ ean
only . the quality of our future necessity of conJugal duty_ Carlson) is - balf-temed before·
2. Meetinp :away from cam·
...,.,.,
.
.
but pe1haps whether we have ~nil, "'!rst of aU; -speaking this she begins,' ::-thoUgi; -y;,., still pus for aliy parpoee related to
. In the public il_eciOr, tie must one.
·
· ·m Public, to other women, and wouldn't liU to have her fa..&amp; P~ and/or oonstruction
,._ ~ leW! of wisdom-- and
If pus~! citizens face the .- ~ in front of-their husbanils. sister. At first, she \)qlpM off muat have the t prior approval
lesdenhiJ! lba~ am "!"?rdlnate 91J81!tion and ~ that an- It ~ outrageous. The theatre more .as a peeved ana Peeving of the Olllne of Facilities Plan·
s-t ...,._,., proj8Cta aniJ sweii rnua$ be found1 then W88 ID !Jjiltant ~um. !'uisanOO ~ a lliuew;&lt;Wbich ~' ibcluding the list of par·
poUiies. In ·other· wonls; lie' there is a redan to be i1ptirii- . ·
·· · ..
' •.
!" I'? say her lll1lll!ri!d superiOr. ticipanta. ·
must. be "eensitlve and .._,. istic
· ~
··
·- :r'be !&gt;tudio.Arena li8s sought 1ty 18 . not J&gt;l!fVB8!ve. Sbe is by
3. For I!III80iill involving the
··
·
~.~- any public up- no ~ a Dlll!gmg soold· and, safety of the vjsitor and liabil~ !n ·a program note, the ~!,g:&gt;mts. she 18 -Stitf 8iiii sub- ity to ibe Siate of New York,
.
~ .
.
.- _ •
• . aiiilds
~ Enters, ,.e. sheucu.b But wben abe is attacked, VlSits to conslnlction sites will
.
".
'.
.....:..:..'7'r that there are
~e ~om e s her ~.- be severaly ~ Applica·
: ' ~.:.:~~0,!;1'"ays of performing ~ ~· Her retprting ve- lions to Visit muat be submitted
•~
.
'
·.. ~· ActuaUy, what he
apnnga from ber voice to the 0111ne of Facilities Plan·
.&amp; . . . . ; ; ; - . . . ; . . . . . - - . , . . , . , . 1r ............/ u... .
=~ 11011111
is,, '.'Please, ~ ~ no:!_,~&lt;oir body; ning, 201 Hayes Hall, and on
&lt;I , _ r - 0. - - . • • II., - - . lilre·llie cinematic
· to be 1 thereby ,.........Jn ll,l)ler, but clearly demolistrated need, may
"· r. U214. ~ a._.._ " 2u, 210 • - , . . _ " Jritfi I:iz imd· Dick.~'"' . : , . m~
that be granted if Bite condWons
~·
~;~no !'1'8118 ~ ootdd
esto
f
pbysjcal eam- • wamlnL·
..&amp;. - . . r -........
~ tbe CXIIIIpllnllll1·: the lush OO&amp;J:,":i..,~· a
·· , ·
.. ' • '•
. ~end lea a desicn, and to the 8ooi' with L~f'Pl!ltheted
.....ir.atiUeil Enten bas nnted,
.
a ....... "'
•.
"'lLUILaT
~
•• • fcir
o1 set, aimp)lC;ty • ~sensa~ qui(ber limpinc, . Dr. Artbur Butler; professor
""of. drMI, a ew aldUed perf
· ) Tbeway, 18
te convinc- o f _ . , bas 1Jem1 appomt·
,
.a; ~
en. He 1sn't botbenid ~ ::;r~ end director reli'!¥111 bar ed
the Faculty
•
any of the lyrical infatuation is aUowed ~1-linber1; she --of 8ocl8l
and Admm·
-· or subtlety of im811lnstion· he heres . . .
,..~
modem iatratlon,
ve-~ 1. Dr.
"
- ·'
~-- is. playjq· i~ for all its aCtion in ~~\:,.~on ~or , Butler orill- as actin~ pro.
''"""'
and biaadhinnor.,.And, in some on the audience)
pending VOIIt untn "l'toYaot Edwm P.
ways, b8 11111"*&lt;18.
JuaeJ Bulos 88 G . .
Hollander returns from leave
rwmo near1y Sept.amber 1, tm. ·
bard to make possible a better
and richer life. But the world
ba8 not rome to its end and

'Shrew_' Is Pre-tamed but Likeable

.!::,:&gt; ;:.,.u:i' ::1

p }' • S t £
SUCF Dealings

.c-m1e

:the

=-so= .

~

,__).

·'".' :-,u,.,

-!t.

=

·--OQO

alf.,J

economr,

;r:'"""""!M"

&lt;DJ;f: .,';

Actmg Provost

llCtiD&amp;=

�~~~~

8,1913

5

v

'

\

A SPECIAL REf?ORT

Can We Save

the lndivid~aJity
..
of ·our·Colleges?
.

or will power:tul p.re_Ssures,
on' and off the campuses,
hom.ogenlz~. higher

eduCatic;n?-

qivt:· Jon&amp; prided themselves 00 the
individuality of• their colleaes and universities.
The u&gt;W•~~biance of ,each campus. The
combillation of people IOd
Spirit. The sounds
IDCI ·IfTICIIs thot mote it different from all othe ...
And more :
.. . The outoaomy, of eoclt-instUution that enables it
to choose freely its own pls=--&amp;nd the prop-anu to atloin them.
. . • The ~lilrly AmCricaD Filius for promotina
the existence, side by iiile,' of pt~bUc and• priWJt&lt; cOIIe... aDd uniwnitieo. .
• • . A "l)'ltem"
biaher education, in the best
senae of the word: a '"""' of ialenctina, interrelated,
interdependeot doillents, aioliDa iD a _.........,....... harmoniouS rdatioaship. But a-ty illdividual, - - -

A

MEJUC4NS

purpose:

_or

~ 1f7)

n

~ · ,..a,KI'I I'C&amp; DUC.6.~ . DIC.

~ 1J..i

..;.

":-t'-·'

..... Certaialy - --~" if- W«d illlplieo •
lockslcp, or cCntral CODUOI, or dull unife&gt;nally.
The raul! ia oae of IOdcly'a 11!11Jior mindoa: tbii1 2,600 coiJeaa IDCI Ullivenitiel, ei:h oae dilfcreat
from all the reaL ~Crenl, yet .,..,....... 10 ... -

"!i&gt;n

idea that throuJh di..uty aDd iDdMduaJIIy !be
need&amp; of the c:u1tWe will be met

B

·-·

UT NOW we. or,, encouaterinJ fOI'IlOI thAt lhNaiiD

the aumval of aU that. For the lint lillie ill a
century, acrioua queatioat m,.. be railed allout
the abiHty of our colleFS to maiDtain -dltir badividuaJ
diatinctivaiess-atod of tbe i)'llerD to maiDIIlD ill
divenily.
The. biitoric inlmeelily of what ia lioppeDiaa li ael)'
lqiDaiaa to be clear. Aflllr an era of 1J1411 '
I
c:ooldeaoc. aDd apaatioD l\lfaulllaut llilber edtlclliall.
thoR ia • widespread q.-ioolina of . . . . ..._.
tioa'a 1'1- ill au&lt; cu11un, aDd of 111 cilia "" C* . .
~....__ ADd powtb-wblc:b I« decade&amp; ..........
ballawt of our co11e1ta aDd urdta*iu ia ..,....,

...

-

Witb u- dewdapmellll ..... . , . . of ...
and IIIQIIjy aDd qually ........, lbe' pelt &amp;tt...rt, of
our . , - ot biP echo!Jor llld tbe ~
of_., colleF oDd uaiftnlly willlla iL

•

�./ .

..

f
.tndi_v iduality
and the Changing
Student Population
oa the past 100 y~ American higher educatton
has been powing at an accelerating rate. Enro11·
menl$. doubled-every IS yean until World War
II; liDce lbea. !hey have doubled every decade.

that enough students wouJd be attracted by them. It
cannot be so confident in a period when enrollments
ate stable and resources scarcer. The tend'ency in those
- cifcumstanceS is to standardize, to avoid setting goals
that are offbeat. to try to be all things to as many men
~DDflikdycwr to~-~.
/
and women a~ possibie. ~
'Ric Camqie Conlmiaion on HiJber Educ:ation p.re·
clicb that
will ~ OJilJ
be·· ·
Under such conditioris7-"mere survival is nOt an al~,:" ..
...
.-at91q.~l~· -... ~~'*.! betwea 1980 and _. : tract~!e ~ · - ~•Decelerating gro_wth and "no-growth~ have other
19911. In lhe laSidecac!e of
century,":ibey will 8o up
ramifications. If enroJiment levels afe to be main"tained,
by l'ftly a !bird.
.·
some colleges and universities will be forc:eJ to accept
Enrallments in private instituiions aCIU.llly will drop,
1bC redeial JIOV"I'IltlleDt_estimates. between 1977 ....
studenli who ·do not meet the traditional criteria fO&lt;
college admissions. ..
1980. By tbe eDd or this decade, say statisticiaDS in tbe ~
U.S. Ollice of Uucalion, private education's share of
"Low academic ability .· [measUred . by traditional
:tiiilleae emoDments will fall rroin 22.3 per cat in
means] will he the distinctive characteristic" of many
1972-73 to
per
in 1980-llt.
•
such students, writes K . Patricia Cross of tbe Center
Tbele ftduclioal • in powtb bold profotmcl implica·
· for Resean:h and Development in Higher Education at
the University of-California at Ber:bley.
lioas for aU caOcaes aad uni-.enities. Notea PriDceton's
J'laitlentW"dlialll d.
"We have not yet&gt;!aeed tbe full meaning of Ibis pre· "l11ii beJIIc tor
[private vs. pUi,t;e co11eaes
diction," Ms. Cross says._ Such' llildents will require
..,. ....._...) has wry serious impllcUionl fot
major chanp iD the curriculum, major new sources of
"-rbn· b1J1!er educllion· in ......... wblt:h drawl
ftnancial support, and faculty inemben specially trained
·llltiCllllf ill lbell&amp;lit fJom -plunlital; tbOt is, ,fiOm t!.e
to recoinize and reward ihe non-academic skills they
pllllelice of ....,. ......., 1Jriv* llilt1 many ....,, pubbring to the-campua.
•
lic iDstllatiDas ~ in.clilfennt....,.. topdla".
~ development-the JWWing pressure to edU·
eate a far pter percentage of adults than preaently
"'f ddtl ~ to be enided, Americ:aD biJber
~I chaage tbe c:harac:ler of many a a&gt;11qe aad uni·
- - - -*llldfe&lt; olpillcutly.q
wnity, .Aireacly, a sipliftcant number of flexible arranaemenll. are i.mder way-"open universities,"
is .. ~ ..... IIUI'Yi\lal: tbe seri·
extemal-dqfte
prop-ams, "univenities witbout w..lls"
- q.-w., s..tt.lfar ..,.,
.
-to meet the needs of those who cannot leave fuJI.
In a period"' "flll'ltl cspamion, .. c:olleae 'ill"
time -ployment to earn their colleae degrees.
Dlli¥enity Ctlllltl oet its . . . ~ be ~bly ailured

F

by .;_lialf

emou-

i'lll

a

tu

ceat

ao-:
...mva1

.T

.

·

Alterations in tbe traditional pictun: of bi&amp;ber educa·
lion will be extensive~SaYI Ernest L Boyer, cbancellor
of tbe State Univenity of N.,.., York:
- "'fbe.old Diode! of a scattered collection of isolated
encla,.;., each jealo;...y JU~I its .'reoouroes and mi·
nutely regulating its students, who ~ ~n in confinement for a four-year term, is liviaa -Y to a far
. mon; complex, .dy~ ~ _!lltWilt Of leaming,
• resembling perbaps tbe liUmatt nen;o.. ~ itself:
intricate, continuaUy pulsatin&amp; aod- totally, inten:on·
nected."
.
The individual catiiJllll, u Mr:•Boyer 1001 it, "is be·
· coming lea a forllas surrouJided liY.its moat aad mon:
of a supermarket of ideas, a library witb easy """""· or
a base of -operations to coordinate leamina. not con·
trot it."

.

-

·...,;

-

would quarrel with the aims of such proarams. 11tey offer the poaibility of lifelong
leamina ' for many citizens who have not been
able to afford a college education · in the put. They
permit vast numbers of persons to cam academic degrees in less time with mon: options.
Yet many observen are copcemed.
Supermarkets, they say, are not very friendly places.
While you may meet .your material needs tbere, your
spiritual needs may be unfullilled.
Without precautions, sayw Slepben K. Bailey of Syra·
cuse Univenity, such proarams Mean lead 10 a parade
of academic .horrors: C1'alll _..... orpnized by fast·
buck proprietary schools, a deadly llandardizatioo of
subject-matter, tutorin&amp; to tbe test."

F

EW

�7
Slllle leaislatures, othel'$ warn, could use the de&gt;'elopment of the new programs as an excuse for· reducing
support for the traditional colleges and uniYenities.
Pirhaps most serious of all, howe..,r, are fea" that
such Prosranls ntight change the whole definition of ed~calion in our society. An individual experience, leadong to the de""lopment of "whole men and women" or
"aood citizens," miaht become a purely utilitarian proc·
ess of provi4ing the credentials a person needs to earn
alivina.
·
One writer describes the new trends this way :
~ "We don't offer extracurricular activities; we eJ.imj.
nate most of the theory courses; we give practical applications; and we get the students through in one-third
the time.
"We Fl them through fast."
Another observer ileplores the. prospect :
"This Is the attitude of a no;w breed of educators, the
big-business organize... who ane moving into education_
and tumins out araduates on an assembly-line basis.
Apparently they are being paid by the bead count.~
HERE are ways to broaden our commitment to
educatina as many people Bs possible, wi out
sacrificing the best qualities of higher educ?li!&gt;n
that we have known in the past. They lie in mor~ individuality for our colleges and universities, nofless; mor{!
diversity in our system of higher education, not less. But,
as we shall see, other forces--in addition to those accompanying the new era of no-growth-may be pulting
those qualities in serious jeop,..rdy.

T

Individuality
an~ ttle-rTrend Toward
Central Control
IGHER EDUCATION~$

long period of postwar growth
coincided with a long period of national affluence. As the economy boomed. tax dollars were
more numerous than ever be(ore in history-and. nearly
everywhere. public colleges and universities received a
top-priority sha"' of them.
Most states still place higher education well up on
their priority lists. But urgent new needs have developed in other a~ .g. , health care, aid for the ·disadvantaged-and the competition for tax dolla" has
grown.
The result: Public colleges . fnd univenities have
been subjecled to unprecedf"ted demands for
"efficiency"-&lt;Ollie justified, othe'rs panicky and ~nwise .
And to achieve that efficiency, many states_a~ dra.mati- .
cally l'eOrpnizina their structures of public higher education.
Once-autoDOmOUS insti.tutions, each seeking its own
goals, are findins tbemseiYeS inCorporaled in .laraer and
larger "syatans" of public coli- and universities,
oftat statewide in ac:ope. Decision-making is centralized. ~ functions-Ale eliminaled.
F.- an efficiency standpoint, the trend makes
aenae. "It -ma to - us," argue Paul L n.....e1 and

H

I

William H. Faricy of Michigan State University, "that
higher education must be regarded as a national resource, that the roles of institutions must be determined
by social need. and that resources must be allocated
according to a plan and their actual use accounted for ...
They add :
"In moving in this direction, we are permitting the
public and politicians to make decisions about the character of institutions--and their decisions may not atways accord with , t~ views of those involved with
higher "e ducation."
In 1959, fewer than half the stales hact"formal, legal
mechanisms for statewide coordination of higher education. Now 47 states have such mechanisms. "Besides
this dramatic increase in numbers,'' writes one observer, ••statewide coordinating boards have increued
in power in their areas of influence and in coercive potential."'
"""
1be trend away from campus autonomy and toward
central planning is likely to encompass many private
institutions as well , when-as is happening in many
states-they receive increasing support from public
funds.
"Why," asks one observer, "should the non-public institutions receive tax dollars and not be subjeCted to the
same planning and operating constraints and criteria
for aoc:ountability as the public institutions? While the
initial small, indirect aids may caJI for a modicum of
state contf91. once the amounts become substantial. the
institulion can be treated in no other way than as an
integral cog ln the coOrdinated state system."
It may even be that
9ational iY,stem of hi&amp;her
education will emeuo from -1he upheavals now occurring. Oark Kerr, chairman of the Came,;. Commission, says that education is becoming a ••quasi-~blic

some

utility"--especially since it, like electric power and
other utilities, has become essential in ·the liva of ~
pie.
Just as utilities require regulatory aaencies to protect the public interest, say some observer&amp;, 10 tbe pros-.
peel of government regulation of higher education
cannot be ruled out. -

-

l

HAT happens to llle colleges' individuality 1111d
diversity, in the wake of such developmeats7
- The president of one public institution i n
Ohio. Miami University, says that as the state system
has developed, "we have witnessed a locblep progression, statewide, into a common c&amp;Jendar, into· a
common subsidy formula, into a virtually common fee
pattern."' He warns:
• ~ ·
. .
"U dive,..ity is cominJ out :0,' die public ayiiem• and
is replaced with a pale, iRJipid sameness, and if there iJ
a simultaneous wilherina of the private leCtor, one can
question what the future holds for the very fiber of our
system of higher education."
1be movement toward more centralized authority,
however. seems inexorable. It io clear IMl lbc pulllic
and its elected repreaen~ are no 1oqer wllliDJ· to
Jet lhe colleges and univeraltlea, aloae, decide what iJ
educationally best
the ooclely. "l!ducallaa," oays ...
observer, "is too important. and IOo cxpeailw.. to be
Jell entirely to the educaton."
·
·
·
How, then, can c:olleaea IDd llllivenmc. loam to liYe
in the larger sysl., while ...-.mt lheiT ciMnlty
and individuality? .They mUll be lqaoloao _ , . . 10
develop ~isms to ~ llexillllily wilbia a
hishly structured whole--ad ,., JIC*I ol lbc
major challenges for iiiaher educatioa ODd its oapporten in the yean to c:ome.

W

_

rex

�Jlen:h B, 1973

. -ln_
dividuality __
and the Unionization
of. Faculties

U

~

ProsPect o!

NTII.. REC!Nn v, the
faculty members'
joining unionS and enNing in collective bar-

pining -med fmeip 10 both the spirit and the
reality of life on most campuses. Colleges and universities were serene havens far removed from the materialism and economic competition of the. industrial world.
Faculty members were thought of (and regarded themselves) not as ··employees.. but as in~ividual professionals.
Although thousand• "of faculty membe" and college
administrators still recoil from tbe notion of facultieS
organizing in collective-bargaining units. unionization
-and all that goes with it--:has made major gains oo
the campuses in the.....past five yean. Most observen expect the trend to quicken rather than to slow down . ..
Alrudy, the faculties at nearly 300 'colleies and universities hale won bar~i~a rish~. Mo.re than h&amp;lf of
the inltitutltins are tw~· COltiies. but unionism is

also

p.ining .~.signi6can \!

ootholdsf in many four-year

institutions, as well. FaCUlties at&gt; thef State UniVersity of New York and the City Uoive,.ity of New
York '!J"C orpnized collectively, and the California legislature is considering a move to ~nnit public employees to oraaoiz.e i that slate.
The movement towird faculty unionization was

\'

. s.-Jed by a recent decision of the National Labor 'Relations Board that private institutions with annual
budgets of $!-million br more fall under its jurisdiction. In the past, the -NLRB excluded such institutions,
so that only ~ - public colleges and universities in
states that had laws permitting their employees to orga":!z.e Could develop unionized faculties.
H£5£ occurrences have combined to make the
debafe over whrrher facu1Cy members should join
unions irrelevant. The issue now is, What impact
will collective bargaining have on the character of our
colleges and universii.ies-3nd on the relationships between faculty members, admi nistrators. stude nts, and
governing boards?
"Almost certait)Jy;• says one observer, "collective
bargaining in higher education will move to statewide
or system-wide levels and, in the process, destroy much
of the autonomy of the separate campuses." He adds:
"Collective bargaining in a state system of higher education will ultimately promote centralization of decision-making.
..Collective bargaining will contravene the individual
and departmental autonomy for which many facult y
members have battled so long ...
Collective bargaining's advocates disagree vigorously.
"'In fact." says one union official, " bargaining is a response to that trend. The only way facuity members
established ori a statecan play a role, when policies.
wide basis. is through bargai ning and political action.
Otherwise, it will just be done over their heads.·•
In addition, union leaders poinr out, they have vigorously opposed such steps as the setting of statewide
work.~load standards by some legislatures.
Nonetheless, warns William B. Boyd, president of
Central Michigan University, jthe admin istration of a

T

are

collective bargaining contract, "with its emphuis on legalism, its grievance-laden tendencies, and its use of
advenary proceedings, will almost inevitably change
the tone of university administration. The Last remnants
of colleagueship are apt to disappear. Personal relationships are almost bound to change when personnel relations are altered so "fundamentally."
Can the trad itional character of --a Couege or university survive such strains?
Or will the changes wrought by the unionization of
faculties be a further cause of declining individuali ty
and diversity?

lndi~iduality

allPthe
Money Crunch

T

HE

FINANCIAL CRISIS

in higher education has re-

placed stUdent protest as the •;_'big issue" in the

eyes• of the ~ress and public. Where · once the
beadlines told of 100 students arrested for their roles in
demonstrations, they now tell of I00 colleges and
universities Confronting the prospect of financial disaster.
The money crisis is real and of major proportions.
Some private institutions face the possibility of extinction. The existence of other institutions-public and

�private--is threatened. The Carnegie Commission predicts that nearly two-thirds of the nation's colleges and
universities are in financial trouble or headed for it.
· One spectacular case is that of New York University
-the nation's bigat private institution of higher education. After oeveral year! of backbrealdng deficits,
N.Y.u. announced last fall that ·it planned to eliminate
more thaQ 200 faculty positions, sell ooe of its campu,.. to the public 'system of higher education, aod insist that. hencefOnh, exery academic unit· within the
universi~ able to pay ..its own way plus its fair
share of university o-"ead.
,
Higher education's financial crunch came on the
heel• of reveral yeap of otudent disruptio..........OO some
observers have attributed the crisis to the loss of faith
in colleaa aod universities that followed. But the roots
lie deeper--in the end of the era of growth. '
In , its simplest terms, higher education's tncial
problems developed because costs kept rising · ile income did not. (There-is a li,mit· to the amount of uition
a colleBO or university can charso aod llill remain
competitive. •) At..._ major universities. large research
programs ,.ere initiated with federal ' funcfs. Those funds
have arown ICU'Ce:r u the aovemment"s priorities
chanpd, leavina those universities with commitments

.

,

·• A ' " - ! ~ lias for iastance. that in t%4-65'
a aroup ol ,.....wiwe private institutions was chuaina $657 more per ltUdeat thae a poup' of represen10tive

public inatitutloou. By 1971-12, ihe same private inotitbtions
were cbarsial $1.242 more per lludeot thae the public
institutioes.

they cannot ifford. The increasing costs hit both public
and private institutions.
One observer says that .the huge growth during the
1960's was itself one of the main causes of higher education's money troubles. Colleges and universities were
all the more: vulnerable, he says. because they were
..undercapitalized, overextended, and moving into increased areas of ~ponsibility without permanent
financing.''
·
Yet-while the financial crisis is real , and some insti~
Tutions have been forced to close their doors-for the
vast majority of colleies a!"~ universities. survival itself
is not in quesJ ion.'
. . ._
...
Even at New 'York University, with its appallina
problems, ~resident James M . Hester believeS that the
draconian steps he lfas taken Will allUre the university's
survival. 'The disease has been diaanosed, the prescription has been made. We are taki.na the· medicine;," says
Mr. H&lt;*r. "It i• very paioful, but it is poasible."
Edward D. Eddy, president of Chatham Colleso,
puts it thus:
•
~Postins a death notice for all of private hiJher education is like lhootins all the horses hecauoe some have
the wheeze."
~'The sreat majority of the inotitutions will lllln'i¥e,"
Mr. Eddy declares. "Despite the many predic:lionl of
their deni~tc, surprisinJiy few have clooed their doon.
Institutions" of hisher lcamiDa do have a persillcDee
and tenacity-.but not ~ly a paranleed .qualily.
And there IS the rub."
The nation's colie&amp;es. Mr. Eddy says, "by and ,Juto
wil(survive. But the emel)ina !!-*' is clearly oae
of spirit, oil! just life."

•

ecoOOmic crisis poses one especially oettlina
threat to the diversity of the syotem of biJher
education and the in,dividuality of evay institution: well-meanins but potentially dam&amp;Jina cria for
heightened efficiency aod productivity on the C&amp;lllpi*L
If taken too literally, such ' a - t could tum
the nation's colleaa ' and luriversitiei illlo fao:eleoa,
spiritless factories.
""
Most observers agree that many colleaa aod uui-sities can an4 must improve their 8scal policies. But,
..wa rns Paoi-C. Reinert. preaidetli Ot Saint Louis Uai--sity, they cannot he o11111 like buliDeooea.
"1bere is," F~ ReiDKt says. •more at llake lban

T

HE

Kleenex.••
,:- ...
, ..
" Efti.!oiency in hiRher education nmaias a ~
matter," warns Howard K. Bowa, c:lwlcellar of lhe
Clare"'!'nt University Center.
tuy be ill - .
sor of tryins to reotrict the f18:tlaao of Jdlber ...,._
lion too narrowly. and to caavert ~ iDioasocmbly lines sooerati"' credit ._.., rather' lban . .
lowina them to fanclioa as .,...._ cl ....... IIIli

"Soc::oof

culture.~

H~ adds:
"It would be a miotake, lwmful to bad! . _ . ,
and to IOCial welfare, to 111m ......... IIIII lllli-*ioa
into credit-aod....... .m&amp;Dofaclunn aod 10 Judllllllll!
solely by their procluc:tivily ill

)'atber

Ia--.

Rei.n It up: .... ............
that lhere,ue ,oubolaatiw diCIP- ..._ ..........
aod .. liUsi-. Drive a carpanlioll 10 lhe .... ..S II
may~~inlts.,......._lhat....,..ll

to bounce '*"-\- Drive a
call UJ it..

collelt ..,

lhe

..a -s

)'011

�more controversiaJ than the cries for effici ~
ency are issues raised by the variety of solutions
· that have been proposed for higher education's
money troublea.
Virtually everyone agrees that major new infusions
of- public funds for both private and public institutions
will
he needed. But how those funda should be chan..; .
neled-whether they sbould come from the federal or
state aovemments, Whether ti'tey ~ulfbe in the fo;m

E

of~

VEN

institutional aid or grants and loans to

stude~ts­

produce deep divisiom within the academic community.

Tbe Camesie Commission

bas argued against
"\-.qUIBjMUDI, IICI'OSS-Ihe:board grants" from the federal
-pernmeot. They could lead to reduoed atate support
~ ~ the dewkopmeat 'of a "nationalized system" with
strict _.,;,.,t CODtrols, the COtDJiliJiioo sayt. Jn.
sleoil, it faVQf'S basina federal support· to an iMtituli!&gt;n
on the tiUlfther of federally suppontd, needy students
enrolled, with the statea providioa the bulk of the aup-

tions to develop their own conceptiOns of the
. curriculum required to produce better ~ pe6ple and,
more importantly. would give student-consumen a right
to choose among alternative conceptions. The govern-ment could and should scrutinize the acaden}ic offer·
ings for which it is indirectly paying, but the natu~ of
·such investigations would"chan,e."
· Officials at most public institutions op"'* any ma'jor
shifts of aid from institutional support )0 ·support of
students. The necessary increMes in tuition, they say, .
woold end the nation's long-standing· commitment to
low~t higher education, and would shift the major

}

·· f'Ofl.
'
SpoUuam for some institutions of biabcr education
disaaree. Din:d fedi:nl~.....,ts to ~ the colleJOS ·'Uci-.UDi- •
venities, ~ OIJUC, .can make.•tbe dilfcreDCe between· ·
the sumval aixl co!bPse of many of them. ~
- -~
'
Spokismen for many Other institutions have ar,ued
that .new imocmmeat · silpp9il .obould come in two
fbma : outriaht pots. to ~the most ~ studellts and
"inc:omeoconliDF&gt;t loans" to middle-cl8b .!fudenJS.
(Undei such loOns; bow much a student !JIIIIt pay bock
· • would ~ delermined in part by bow m~ he ~ .

after ll'&amp;duatioo. )'
~
_;
With IOOst "!ffPPOt··..,;na to lludents, these OIIPcaton'
arpe. bqtb .,Ublii: ·and priv_ate institutions could raioc
their tuitions to a point tHat would more nearly pay f11r
the IIChW 'tool d poO.;am, an eilucatloor.
·
Such. -. . , _
best ~ the Cli!eni'Y '&lt;J.f .
• our Syttem of !oilber -~. oaya an - . . i l l .. • '
f._ die llrookiDp ~- We "."~"!,., he ..,.: Ma ~
• lhlft to poiblic: oupport of IIUilcall' nlber !han the ell•
""ceooM relia~ on iostitllliOI9llaed .stippoct that ·chanc-r
leriao .,..,._ Jlllblic .......... ~"He :,C. OD :
"Saa:h • ............ of portalllc lid 1ll'_!llllcl free iJIIIilu.

.

society

burden of paying for education from the
at
large to the individual student.
That shift, they
would represent an end to the
belief that .socie'Y as a whole-not just the iDdividual
student-benefits from the higher education of its citi- .

say,

zens.
Switching from institutional aup)IOrt to 101101 and
grants "constitutes • definite shift any from public decisions and responsibilicy for the support and cootrol-qf
hiJber educatioo and toward a philosophy of private
responSibili'Y and 'Private enterprise, with major cooaequences," says Clifton R. Wharton, Jr., president of
Michigan -State Universicy.
• ~ shift would t:raQsfonn the pis, values, and
conduct of the enti"' hiJher educational •·~" he ,
says.
Decilioos to he mode soon io Coapeis and the atate
legislatures probiobly will determine bow much . governmental aid will he fortbcodliai and wbat form the aid will take.
'
·
.O,lumnae and alumni concerned about ~ the
. qualities of higher education could do .higher educatiOD
IK! ,reater service than to keep iDformed aboul the
altcmati:ves.r•nd advise their repreaeotalhoa of their
prefere,oces. ~

_

T

HE

ecOnomic crisis io ..h.ipr. educatioa . is, in a ·

sense, the cause of all the other forces moving .....,

toward the horno&amp;eoizatiOn and .staDda'idizalioo
universities~
~.
·
Many ohservel'l suspect tm"t neither. the ..mo~t •
toward statewide syatems of_collepa and lllliYenltlos ,
• nor l he trend toward collective bargainio.J arooog the .
facui'Y members would luive ~aone so far it ibe era of
great - ' h had not ended. Suddenly, in the ecoopmic
depression that followed, higher educailoo • was · oo
longer society's favorite place to lpeod IDODeJ.
- How; u~ such Condi~ can collepa .,Pil ooi·
''Yenitlos pnMde d,iversicy and iodlvl\luality?_Muat . they.
saqifice _their autonOmy and iDdividualiiJ? Or can ibey
lind waya to live with the ead of growth Witbout Jiving
• ~ay· to drab unifonnicy?
-

-of our colleges and

.ow..

•

�11-.b I, JJ7:J

li1divid~ality:

All the Threats
C9mbine
ODd of an era of growth, the scarcity of new
resources, the ilicreased competition for them,
and the public's changing definition of higher
education's role in oociety bave all combiaed to produce
a major cballeoae for the nation's colleges and univer·
sities. ·The task before them now is to meet the challenges while ~~· the best of the pjiSL
It is easy tO be peaimillic about the prospects.
Doom-sayen abound. Here il bow aome aeveno critics
have clelcn"bed currat conditioiii on the campuses:
.,... "lleapect
for
univenitia
[faculties
and
adminislrakln) has been replaced by distrust and surveillance."
.
• "Informal procedurea and policies based upon
mutual respect and c:o.i&amp;deoce within the university
have beaD replaced by insiatence upon due process and
by formalized codes."
• "Coolqiality based upon unity in goals bas been
~placOd by identification and resolution of conB.ict."
The concern iS not limited to IeVere critics.
~
Thenclore M. Heaburp, preaident of the University
of Notre Danle, speculates that "perhaps during that
period of rapid growth, the institutions-the academic
community-grew beyond the pote~tial to be penonal

T

HE

and human."

William C. Mcinnes, president of the University of
San Francisco, says: "People will spend their money,
contribute their money, pay their money for services
and thinp in which they believe. What has happened
in many cues is that people don't believe in education
the _way they used to."
As a result, inany institution~ feel more threatened
than .-.er .!&gt;f the challen&amp;ea before them.
One col,..quenc:e bas been that the c:onllicts between

public and private hlat&gt;er ~ucation have been exacerbated. Once the expansion of the ellline hisher educational system c;.eased, ~ happy llate no tongir prevailed in which everyone was proaperina. Now, one
institution's pin may well be another's loa. Public and
pr vate education now often view prosras for one u a
possible threat to 'the other.
·
Says a former official of a state system of hisher eel,
ucation :
.
'"The pleadinp of the private segment for llate financial aid are pinine ground-&lt;10t nearly enough to save
them financially, but sufficient to reduce the direct level
of funding for the pubrTc institutions."
Warns the head of a major educatiOnal association:
.. I am firmly convinced that the gravest danp facing
us is the possibility of a !ferious division between the
public and the independent sect()I'S of higher education.
Relatively dormant for well over a decade, as might be
expected during a period of economic expansion, signs
or divisiveness are again appearing as WO\ move further
into the stringent '70's."
The situation looks confused and troublesome.
Higher education has reached a state where it enjoys
fess public confidence, has less confidence itaelf about
wh at its purposes are, and faces unprecedented competition for a place on America's priority list.
Yet the need for new curricula. and for new educational commitments to new kinds of students, was
never greater. How can colleges respond in innovative
ways, when they must tighten their belts and curtail
thei r functions?
Kingman Brewster, pres"ident of Yale University, sees
this paradox: "Although all universities badly need
funds in order to experiment with new techniques of
learning and study that go beyond the library, the laboratory, and the classroom, most of the ideas for massive central government support threaten to impose a
dead hand of bureaucracy, central planning, and red
tape on local in itiative."
Colleges and universities thus confront major d ilemmas :
• How to continue to be effective in a time when
they need major new sources of outside support; and
• How to keep their distinctiveness in an era tha.t
requires economy and. ingenuity.

Individuality:
Can We
Save It?
o colleges and univeniti,.._.. we have known
them-have a futuie? Or are we headed for ·
some massive, standardized, nationalized 1)'1·
tern of higher education? -Need the new vision or higher
education-as a public utility that everyone can . . produce an impersonal assembly line? .
Put another way:
Can private colleges and universities survive i. . .
form worth preservini'/
public institutiooa avoid
the "pale, insipid sameness" that some see loomine on
the horizon?
No one can be blindly optimistic. But many thouabtful observers feel that the present critical 111afe poaea
not only problems for higher education, but unparalleled opportunities. The tone period of expanaion, they
argue, put a premium on araduate educatiOn aod research, and higher education made enormous pins
quantilati vely. Qualitatively, however, the improvemea.t
may have been insignificant. On the underpaduate
level, indeed, what a student received from hia institution may not have been much better than what wu
provided to his predecessors in earlier aeneratiom.

D

can

N

ow that the pressures for growth have eased,
colleges and universities have an opportunity
to be truly individual ; to set for them.elves
specific, achievable goals, and to punue them effectively.
In an era of no-growth, it is the inltituti001 that
know what they want to be, and how they are soinl to
be it. that wi11 survive and prevail.
Both public and private institUtions will be &amp;mODI
them. Steven Muller, president of the (private) Johns
Hopkins Univenity, notes:
"Privacy means relative independeoce. We have at

�~-

12

c,_ ...,.,.,

lciiSt .... f..-n 10
oJ~emati-, _rellric:tcd u lhat choice may be, ratber lhan 10 have our decisions dic:talcd to us by public: bodies.
"'ur privacy as a university thus ailb ooly u a
narrow. marJin.... Our tat ii ID ~ that _ , _
IIWJin aDd to ma~oe
pooa"ble -ot it."
.
Phillip ll. Shriver of Ohio'a Miomi Univenity opeab
from !be public:-inatitutioD llaDdpoiDI:
"Each university oupt 10 be able ID ~wlop ita own
penonality and uniqueDcoa. Each OIJibt to _have ill .,...,.
IIJ"alllbs. Each oua!Jt to be ·eocouroaed to develop its
own individual ~"
,
Tbe lint task, then, for every institution of hiafler
eclu&lt;:ation-public: aDd private-mUll be tO develop a
firm ...,,. of what it oupt to be aDd bow best to
actueve' it. Each illllitutioo mUll know, 8nd ~lieve
in, its own pmonality aDd uniqueness.
A fooindatio,. olllc:iaJ ·..,.,
'1"he, time bas came to tate a tDiol look at ..eli of
our iDStitutions iD _,. syJtematlc way wbic:h relata
enetJY aDd m:~terial iJ!put to leamias output, aDd relata behavioral objectives to social needs. Ir we do DOt
-llreii!'OIJS'y undertake this task aDd sucoeed, then our
present troubles iD a yarioty of areas will become far
wone. Indeed, f ... the specter of pemrnent or eveo
industrial control of our coUqa aDd universities."
Sir Eric Ashby, a distinauishccl British educator who
ba serv.ccl as a member of America's CameJie Com. mission, says:
'1"he
sinale probltm facins American hiJber
education is thi olarrniDJ dilili.tesration of c:onsensus
about purpose.. It is not just that !be academic: commu·
Dity CIDDOt
OD teclmi&lt;:alities Of curri~la, certifi.
cation. and aovemance; it is a fuDdamental doubt
about the lelitimacy of universities as places insulalcd
from society to pursue knowledse clisenpsccl from its
social implications."
·
EndiDs that fundamental doubt, says . Sir Eric, will
~ "'a reevaluation of the relation between univer·
sities aDd AmeriW. soc:iety."

t!'c

*

sravest

asree

'

\

\

\

\

I

N SHORT, !be

American people must rebuild their
·
faith iD the coUeses and universities-and the
c:oUqes and universities must rebuild faith in themselves. In dniDa so, both parties to the oontnoc:t can
assure the -IIUIVival of both the vast sy$tem's diversity
aDd !be-individuality of its parts.
Many coiJeses aDd uriiversi)ies have alieady bosun
tbe Decessary reassessments. Commissions on the future
have been established on scores of campuses. Faculty
members. students, administrators, trustees. aluinni, and
alumnae have been enlisted to help define their insli·
tutions' goals for the yean to come.
Those new definitions, now emetging, recognize the

end of the era of expansion and come to terms with iL
Some institutions have chosen to remain small, some
large. Others have chosen tO focus on specific missions,
• .g., ecoloBY. health services, the arts. Still others are
movina into the preparation of teachers for the tw~
year collc!ses lhat, in the yean ahead, will attract many
ntt..W students to higher education. For their part, many
two-year colleges are !Uisting pressures to expaDd into
four·year ,institutions, electing to concentrate on provid·
ing the best possible educational opportunities to their
own non.traditional student constituencies.
' Whatever the role they d&lt;fioe for themselves, such
oolleses and universities are seekina ways to make cclucatioJ! more individual aod more rewarding.
OLLEGES and .universities still have a long way to
go before they adjust to the financial stresses,
the chanaing market conditions, !be demands
for reform that have beset them. 1bose that adjust most
effectively will be the ones that survive as distinctive,
indiVidual institutions.
Chatham Collese1s President Eddy notes that our iD·
stitutions, "swinaina into the troublesome '70's from
lbe unusually aflluent.'60's, resemble a middle-asccl a""
sli&amp;hdy portly man ~ho discovers tliat he is panting
heavily after dimbins a quick flilht ~f stairs. ~e
doesn't have yesterday's ~-"

C
)

Mr. Eddy continues:
"He has a choice. He can become a first-dass hypochondriac and, in all probability, brins on the attaclc
by discouragement and tension. Or be can die4 Cut out
smoking, aDd start -some eonsisterit, sensible exercise.
He must convince himself that life Is worth livina-aDCI
living to the hilt-&lt;lespite an occasional long flisbt of
stairs."
The end of the era of powth bas opened once more
the areat debate about the role of bi&amp;ber cclucation (or
any education, for that matter) in tbe lives of individu· ·
als and in the health of societY. Tbe future, iD many
ways, is up for Jrabs.
1bose who care deeply about the diversity aDd indi·
viduality of our· £OUeazei aDd unlversitieo mUll that-regardless of ~hat !bey ---...mey preserve
lbeir distinctin: spjrit iD the cbanaiDc fulw'e.
"There is little profit in lickiDJ our woundo or fneling sorry for ourselves," .oays Father HesburJb of
Notre Dame. "We still repraent ~ beat hope for;
Amenl:a's future, provided we leaiJl -from ~our OWil miltakes aDd reOstablish in the
a,bad whAt bu ao
often testilieil !" !be abbility of our endeavors iD times
past.
,
.
" All is not_ lost.: Yie are "simply beli!&gt;oin&amp; apin, as
many. always must, -m a woitd lilleci.Jritb amlJi&amp;ultia,
~ srealest of w~ is,.....~-" '

daYs

�v
~

Jlateb '· 191:J

13

~tt~ Pose

Qaestioru; about·SPA,
Sex Classification, PakistaniPOWs -

-=

'!be llavw of the Mardl 1
the SPA·
SUFI" ftl8l1ll!!l' qu.,.&amp;n would
_,. to Indicate 'ihat ...,rger
under
c:ircumatancas will
face ~ oppaation 'from
theSUNYABearnpua.
'!be i . - bll8 another dimension which DOt tboi:'OIIIIhly
treated In the .....,.... Much of
R•~kr article on

tbe

CJric1na1

cppoaition w a s

based not em merpr per_oe but
rather

-=
011

tb8

JIIOIII*Id consti-

tutioD &amp;Dd by...... to effect tbe

merpr. .'lbere -

IDII!'1
no
limit

two pri·

L 'There
was
tD tb8 DOIIDI:Jer
of texrns

male responses in an expiatory
overreaction to overexposure to
the Women's Liberation move- .
ment. H tbe results of tbe survey indicate significant ru-.,.
sion between female and male
attitudes, Perhaps separate but
equal asiary procedures oould
be instituted for the two factions.
'I'be individuals res
'ble
for the preparation of
questionnaire were oontscted regarding thiS matter. Ms. Col- vard stated that she had been
oppoeed to the inclusion ol item
9 &amp;Dd was in agreement with
our feeling that the answers to

r"'

an otfica could bald; .2. Proper

ooncem fnr .....-tation on
tbe _.tive board · d. certain
constitualllial w a a iii'&lt;Xlllllidered. Udtof altaltion to aitems . . . - having the
potential for an ol6cer cadre
that MJUid . beaame ., - strong
and firmly ealnmched as to be
virtuaUy

in-able.

-

'!be .._.. develnpmeot is

~raJ!~r"~~

this question should be deleted
from aU processing of the sur

remarked

vey results. She also
tbet &amp;be bad received other objections to tbe item. Dr. Schindler stated that he was Wlllware
of any 'objection to the ques.
lion but that he would weloome

11n-n

vention."
India is not complying witb
this convention &amp;Dd has gone
back on her own solemn pledge.
It is openly flouting the rules
of International conduct; Re- .

0

0

14

0
2
0
0

~~~U:..,In~=

revealed the deplorable conditions of the POWs in the-Indian
camps, &amp;Dd their mistreatment,
murder. and torture committed
by Indian Authorities. Some
ezcerpts of lbe International
Red Cross report
"During
October, 1972, the latest month
for which full repods could be
obtained, st· least ·16 Pakistani
POWs were shot deed and more
tbsn 20 wounded by Indian
guards in POW incidents." 'The
Red Cross observers s a i d at
least two of the killings seemed
to be cases ol "cold blooded
murder." One of the Red Cross
doctors said that after checking
a POW wbo had tried to eecape
at Ambersingh H .Q., "the nail
of his left index finger was totally missing, while 'the nail ol
his right index finger was par.
tially pulled out On botb of
his ankles were found scars of ·
the same size as the end of a
cigarette."
I, on behalf of the Pakistanis
living in the Buffalo area, appeal to the people and government of the United States to
urge the Indian Government to

'
0
0

.
0

2

I
20

0
0
0
2
0
I
0
0
I
0
I
20

0
0

0
0

~

0
I
0
0
I

are:

0

•

0
0
I
I
0
0
2
0
0
2

•

0
3
2
0

•

•

15

14
0
0
1.342
8

I
2
I
7
I

14
14

II
I

17

•
•

15
14
0
0

•

30
0
0
0

0
I

2

...

0

0

10
I

2
0
1.305

1150
20

1160
20

313

0
15

1,34~

•

ciaJdom wbieb parantees' that
these - - will be adru-1
by way of llllll!l:ldmeot at tbe
first delepte - . b l y ol tbe
merged organization. We are
now in the process of writing
amendmeut Jan....- that is ex·
pectecl' to receive wide """"1&gt;-

additional opinions on the subject. We have prepared this
letter to invite members ol tbe
professional stslf to oommunicate their feelings on tbe sub-

tance.
'lbe members of SPA at

~~~~~.:..~~~~~n~: =~teir~=:i:&lt;ii.::':~

37 rimes,

not constitUte invasion ol priv·
acy, since any respondent is
free to disregard any -questions (s) l'resumably without
penalty.' (This is not a aafe
presuinption since it is a trivial
date pi:ooessing task to reject
anindividualsubjec t onthe ·
basis of a single response or
lack of response.) It is precis&amp;ty because of the generalized
acceptance of classification by
sex that we are concerned that
participants in tbe survey will
not ~ to question the desirability of providing this infor·
mation.

sometime between 12/21172&amp;1111
1/16173, his room was unla•
fully entered lind his browa,
leather coat, valued at appr&lt;Diperso""r from off campus who mately $65. was taken. ea.e·
were wanted on warrants.
open; investigation oontinulnaCampus Security Director
1117173. A student~
Kenneth P. Glennon noted that in Tower Hall repoi1ed tbU
one reported crime was the sometime between 12/23/ 72&amp;1111
theft of equipment and supplies 1/17173, her room was unla•
valued at $1,250. 'lbe indivj- fully entered. Taken was ODII
dual reporting the crime noted desk-type lamp, valued e.t &amp;)&gt;that the goods could have been proximately $12, &amp;Dd b"'*stolen any time from September was one Door ~. valued a
S, 1972 to January 5, 1973, approximately $15. Case opea;
wben the report walf made. investigation continuing.

consistent

SUNYAB,
)Nitb the
traditions of academe, may find
there are grounds for serious
consideration ol tbe SPA.SUFf
merger when aU aspects of the
question are fully explored.
On the basis of . tbe aupplementsry agreement, Margaret
O"Bryan, a de I ega te from
SU!j.YAB to the February :U
Representative Council, a n d
myself voted in favor of sending tbe question to membership
referenda.
-JOSR'R D. IMtEW

Programmer Analyst, Date
Processing Center, and
SPA State Treasurer

ject.

'lbere are additional grounds
for our reques t. Botb Dr.
Schindler and Ms. Colvard in-

..

~t ~w:n.• ·;~~=· ~ of~os~:
~~J!::"J:! ~~::!
the American POWs' homecoming. we aeek your support
in tbe returning of the Pakistani POWs.
-&lt;IAIP

UtLAH KHAN

President, Pakistan
Student Association

Faculty -Leaders
M ull Study's Use

The use to be made of tbe recent teaching evaluation study
was among questions directed
at Professor Allen Kuntz. chairman of the Faculty Senate Sub-

c

Tw Arr
o
ests on
January Security Blotter
.

The Campus Security suro·

mary for January, 1973, shows
37 reported crimes on campus.
'lbe only two arrests involved

:~:~
epn:~~~ ~taftno~i ~o~:l~~~= Lti:vv~e:Coi:teemnu.
or~t:tee~.
ea~~~ Secu~~r;g
"::'r~tlri~
totha~~ po:;;:'~t !:'me:\or:w.::
su'N'Yls -wish to object to the survey results. request
nty
y Increases 5 p.m. &amp;Dd
p .m. on
we

Senate

leaders ~.rnressed oon-r
cern about both the method of
the survey and the way·,that it
c. F. ounn
Christ Slc:M,..kl•
will be used. Tile · need for a
Sandr~~D.EbllrhardtHarry Plnlarskl
prefatory statement was raised.
Wlnlf'"" M. Robom loul• Scott
Also discussed was the need for
- -a. ea..,..bon Rich• "' Kucho,.kl long-range planning in the ares
,...,. J. • - •
&lt;PSS s.noton '
of teaching effective""""' in0 "'1" I... c ...,...
Judy Thumon
eluding the pooSible estaj&gt;lishKonny """"""
Nonnon F. Ut.och
ment of an Office of Teechin~
:::: ~_e1:-' ~:~~ :~~~= Effectiveness. Kuntz is expected
Loon "' s
-, • H to return to the Committee with
...:.....;,..~ .,;- ~PSS ·~.,:.,
recommendations as to distribu ti.on of tbe survey.
f!-ymond o. Yotp~ Uo)'d M. Uhl•r. Jr.
v
• Potriclo v Donn~&gt; Honnomon
President Robert L. Ketter
....., Tlbunl
H•""'Y . .,....,
reported to the Committee tbat
ean sm~~•
._..__
be will
t 'th
ts
Rlcho"'K.Hoooo•
Oool"""""
mee ' WI
rePresett •
Gone' ......,.
tives from tbe CoUeges to di&amp;Ctl88 procedures for, llndinJ a
- •
•
•
• '
new directOo&gt; of the· :eol.leciate
·'EDII"()II;
• • ,.
•
Assembly. .'The Asoem)jly is
' Fourteenmontbsafter.the ~tosetup ·independent
"""":"li_on .pt actiye hostilities, . · proCedures, be indica
~~=dp(f~~
A working: !l.ocument calling
!'0~ • . lei
~ ·vn for re-evaluation of the four- .
" !"J ,appromna Y ·16•
~ • course lOad and """"J'mending
~~ ~~ ~cle 118 of
i 949 Ge;..' . re!Uftt'to a _
moie ~Je sched- - Prot-r-.
~ -L, ..... both uJing pettarn was ~teil to
IDiimbenl are belar ~ to eva.....,.,~,- ~ w"""' .
the Committee T6e document.
provide an information bMia Indiil ~ ~tan are_mgna- &amp;ppiowd by a-~ttee o1 ·
for future ..-,. ...,..matibaa. toriiS. ~provides t-hat PO:Ws the Academic~ Aifaira CouDcil,We ..., 1JD11b1e to determine a shall. be' releued and repllfri:'ll.- is .to be ~ at 111e riezt
valid ~tlfiaatioo for dld&gt;oto- ed wttl-t ~ !lfter oeoaation Council meeting."'The EDcutive
mir.atillliby-.
of active boetilit.ies. 'The U.!i. Comrrilttee referred tbe miatter
8iDCB tbe ~ bu Sicurity Council has noted 011 of ~- lbe f o u r-eourae
alrt!ed.Y .,_ ciiMrlbuted &amp;Dd J?ec. 21, J.9'?1, tha!~n.~- toad to the lr.dueatiGaal PolleY.
some ..Wia haw been •
li0Dn!' ~:!r";t-",;;'i'Sam -~ J'lannibl OmmriUee
=::=r::..U:~· Manebhew,cm
, JJ;ec-· 16,'19'11, : ...~-~-~._toeDph•dced. 'I P;.t"' my
em tb8,... 8olemn
be . : : . :witb dignity &amp;Dd .,.: faculty to cloaate to the Uailer'- .
_......_ ... ~....._-U..., PwAPect. that soldiers are .,tided .llfllduata J;lbTar.Y ....,._
..._ "" - ..........,. ca.iJd be to, tUJt1 1 olt4ll obide by 1M Ttema ~have wblcb would be
~O:vily 1han pn&gt;Oi6ion of .1M. Gene,.. COlo- ol~ to tb8 ~
tbe inc!usloo of item 9 in the
"sur v
of tbe profellli0nal
stalf's a tude toward tbe prin·
ciple of 'nait' money as part
of the salary increase."
:.
Item 9 of !tie queetiomlaire
prepjred by_ die Committee on
the 'EconoaiiC Statua-of tbe Faeulty is labeled 'SEX and PI'&lt;&gt;video a chollle between female
and male. .
Our objec:tloG is baaed on the
ins~ of claoslfication of
by sex f or
tbe stated 'lalt of tbe lllll'Vt!Y·
'The . , . , _ of the IIUrYeY is to
obtsiit•an·~c ic:Q,ue of
-'-~
~t...-~-·
faculty ~
~ ...;:r.:::;;;;-~ '.':'
survey 1lo _,_ ~ - ~
cumulate iDiormaliail for pur.
.,._ of IIIIDift) .-reb. No
attartpthilbeenmadetocialllify reapoodaata by marital statUS. nuiuiJao of dePendents. !evel
of educ:atlaa, or otbe!' consider·
llticlm wblcb ..ould provide a

'iJ,

that tbey -do ao.

Sally M. HonMn
• &lt;;ooy " · Gl,_n

WHilo m J . v..lllou
Oovld """'"Y·

~

&amp;ooull_~mdeal·
culatiGal~
sui~ ..-:!."!.. ~

=::-::

'•,u _....,.

tea.: -

u,;,

1

gres

10

chances of successful;. lnvestigation. He appeilled to the University community to report of.
lenses promptly.
.
s
Highlights from the .Januaey
Security blotter foUow :
115173_·It was reported !J&gt;at
between 918172 and
,
~ 'oUnann~
ms __
11
173,the
uclawrwly
lu;,;r;;:.,. an..;;;;;,;
of Meyer Memorial Hospital:
~..,
24 caaaette tapes, valued· !'t .......
;
a WoUenascl&lt;, t b r.e e • Cb8DDel
microphone transistorized mis:er, valued at~; a Wollensal:k
~-K d '" .,..._
reoo""", one
o a. - - graphic slide projecloo; two
dozen ......,tte tapeo!; one~er mounted in a wall 'be111e; a
portable tape recorder; II' Wol·
I""""'*. reel-to-noel -tape ....,.
order· a · d&lt;nat Norelco .,._
sette 'tapes ; one Univentity

sometimi..

ite"

model micropboi&gt;e; and three

Norelco aaette tape reoordera:
Total va:iue, apP!'QXimately
$1:,250
-I/81...3 . ......___ 0-·-"ty Of•· ............., """""
ficMa Micb8el Luccldno a rra.
Gary ' Kalia•&lt; reported lbe """
reot ol ooe W.!tar L. M...,...,
DCIIHtudent, d. 203 Coit Avenue, Baffalo em a City Court
wamn1.
'
uwra. A

llblllell1.,....

t.t.l~-=tti,t71'12

No~-

liUU

IC

Hallwaa BY-..uawu
____ ......., .__.
...

bomb~r_!.~~L ~
--.....,....... _,.....,...,
builru.._. 'The buildbtlwaa,..
--'at12:80p.m.-data.
.....,._.
I/:11173. A otudeDt 'nlllclrtllt
-that at IIIJIIlQIIimale 10 P.ra.
a mele, medium ~·'-halr,pabbedt.-~&amp;Dd8ei
while obe lllmtiliDi in ·, _.
of lfQea B. 8o.lopect . . ....to Main end EDPe-od by mt.~ ~t'wu lo.t lit

CaJDr

---.
I/3111~
Olllcera W~~YDB
MidiMI Luccldno
lbe
me.&amp; of ...e Aaraa
• ._
Z4 of 8Z9 Northland
Bd.Jo, It _...Mient, .,._ a

..A......,

,Family

·

~

~ 11./~n!'!oli!!t~'llaod

· ;;.;'Y-m"'il""~~ &amp;::'.~

1/17/ 71,

the pefty cash and stamp baa&lt;
in· her deek drawer was W...
from her olllce. Contents valuo4
at $67. No sl~• ol forcible-try. _.C
. ue open; inveatip.tiaa ·
continuing.
·
I / !7J73. At approxim8teb'
10:23 a.m., Campus Securil;y
Olllcor .,...,. Britt recsived •
anonymoua " ' - call' at 1lle
desk at 198 Wbupear A~
88Yinl that a bomb would P
off .in Norlian Hall in 0118 booK.

Coaot....-...at.

·

-

.»...:H-_Named
~~)&amp;"-""

Mra."-1·~--­

-~ :..:;:~--~

--= . .

~ ab~ Ul:ldoqNduate~'llfllnl -~.alu~""C::=_'!:;_ ~~-

....~~~
.._ ......
--.....
~
_
•
1116171. A lllllolad.-n.ldilll
. llludlat
• _~
ill &lt;Joocbear
repooted·tW _ llnli. 1JIIIIIl ~ 1, 19'1&amp;.
0

0

.Jiill

-

..

~-=:..._~

~

�M

·'!""'·,

~&lt;

v

Gelbaum s Action Raises
'Coru;erns, 'Ketchum &amp;zys

Ketter BriefS Supervisors About
Review-Evaluation ofNTP Posts
~ followinl III8IDOiaDdum ~

cancemiJia· 1be "Non-TelocbiD&amp;

~ Job Review ...a
Evalualioa Plotlram" (for polililllll clusified PR 1-4) bas
- ' - ' iaaued by Presllent Rot&gt;ert L. Kettsr to all vice prelideal, directoro, cleans, Univerlity-oride cleans, provoal8, .uld
_......,

•

•

•

• The act u a I evaluatioos
will be perf..-.-! by lbe PerIIODIIel Deperiment utili zinc

func~ ~ _.uld acope or

C.:!. N~T=c ~

fOCIISM
lbe •-·
periormance
_ , __ ,upon
a,.,.,_
o f emp~JUII
ra lber
than ,.,.;tiona, and is required
by Article 33 or lbe S PA Contract, is cloaely related to lbe
current job evaluation pl'OIIf8M,
and will be implemented abortJy. Materials related to ita initialioa will be dis!Jibuted to
you in lbe near future.
~ intent or lbe present
procrsm is essentially to introduce a greater measure or
internal oonsistancy in our professional se~ce ~tion
scheme. This prooeos, aided by
job descriptions and a unifo~
ly applied job evaluation propam. will.. DDt only help ua..

&amp;b:.t E :U.tter

-ry:

.

:fi:

;'j:
~~~m i:;!:!
~~~~ ~.l,!i=o:!
meqwUNY
, _ _ ~'--will will be forwariled in tqto, after
S
be
• ":all -~"""'!'a finld revi..W by the President.
similar
essen al Y •
l1IJ!Illl
• Where 1be evaluation m- ·
~ claesifJCBtion appeal&amp; are
""!'~"-- and ...., __ m··-

_,_~·-··tabili'
WUOZDif
-·
~....., acooun
ty '!r 8ll8llJ'-

lllll· that lbe acbedule IS met. I
wou1
this

r=r
.

ached··' ·
""""'f' 'ancreu..:

d DOtey
• ...,.. •.
will feCIUll'!'

t!Je

siatanl:e and coopeg~tion

as-

or us
lill if w'e are to meet our coal.·

-

-

~ a. ~

• Job cleacriJ!tions ~ be

. ~ by the immediate .81!·

t"~U:: ~tion&amp;N'IJ'
J~

they

/d:"

,::'be~ U,::

•e~ cenerically into a aingle
jOb~
• DlillcriJ&gt;tiODS will be ""'
vieWed'; modlfied aa needed, app!OWid by the IIIICODd level of
~ .IJid by lbe appro-pnate Vice President.
• Profeesional employees
will be llllked to share in this
by rev1ewiJJ1 ihe job
deocriJ&gt;t!on_Jibe supervbe~~
will be _ _
eclmmeulll and
~=~:'":::' in job und
~ _super~~=· ~r;...,:,::

ac

lie service, MFC (ciidit-free),
Cultural Aftaira, ccc, EOP
urban Aftaira, Ina~
Communications Center; April
16, Campus Security; April 1720, Librariea, all N:I'P ~tiona;
April 17-20; InstitutioDal Re-

nullify Gelbeum's action, "to
allow ihe duly '!PPDinted ~
ulty ·Sen!tte . ~- '!""":"'ttee
to oomplete 1ta mVIlll!iPtion of
Collece .B. and to msure ~
that ~ will beve an opportunity
to p~t tile full """P" of my

but it would be iJJaA&gt;ropnate to
fon:e the whole CXIIIliDIIDity to
study hiStory as int.mely as
historians do, too....

~I conlider President ~
to bilve mede an error in iudtlment.on the nature or academic
freedom; I do bim no cliahonor
in putting forth a oontnry view,
and I pmiae bim for lbe time
and eDefiiY be pula into UDderst&amp;lJiliDIIbe views of tho!oe wbo
disagnoe witb him."

-

-

-

In anolber widely circulated
letter ClOIICI!&lt;Ilinc ihe' Ketchum
tennination, William • Hatch,
staff manber, Collep B, .uld
Charlea R. Planck. maater, ColWf.'!_~_.~tumhislbamovet
it

..!t
....,...

JeceiS.

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

was "prooedurally improper on
a key point. Moreover, it violate&amp; lbe· spirit we " - would
in lbe handline of ooiece peni0Dll81 decisions."
· The m.uldated policy for peraonnel dedsions at lbe University, lbe two said. 8peCify init-

r.revail

~~f.:;:~~oo":~u:::/lfirm- ~::f'~~~ils.=· ABP:fl''~ :~":'~!tto~=t";:!- :=.,ono~~~i

• The job descnption itself
must support lbe factor ratings
assicoed to it.
·
• The importance of tbe
carefully oompleted (but not
wordy ) job duties questionnaire cannot be over-&lt;~tressed.
• BecaUBeoftheurcencyof
this project, I am requesting
that all new NTP reclassUica·tiona be deferred until they occur in lbe evaluation cycle. Departmenta which do not IJSve
lbeir positions described in
preparatioo for' evaluation by
Pereoonel as acheduled will be
deferied to the end of lbe program.
&lt;
/

10 asllillif ~ JllO!iedy' ~ . ·• Raiher than submitting
~ vac&amp;DCJes and new. ""'!'· reclassifications piecemeal to

ev..uat!on process as

~-::::"!.~

lbe m&amp;JOr ~ or a de- ,_ B Ia "eitb« ideologically moli~t for which be Ia ~:e- vated or capricious," Ketchum
State Univeroity's .lob Evalua- sponsible.
_ ...____, •
lettsr to President
tion Plan.
That lbe job .x.:ripti0118 made public
• Personnel will attempt to quired must be completed on thla week.
......_ for two levels of su- new, staodsrd SUNY Duties
"There are two aspects of Dr.
perviao!¥ to aelist them in the Descriplioa Qu.tionnaires.
Gelbaum's action which I exevaluatiOn procaB. •
PaiBonne1 has a Ia o an- pect will be or crave ooncem,"
• Grade differencea n!8lllt- DOUDCed this acbedule fo. lbe Ketchum told K e t t e r: "The
inc from lbe evaluation process evaluations: February 216- fimt is ita abeolute lack of due
· will be referred to 1be appropri- March 16, Student Aftaira, aH prooeos, which is clear and obate-Vice President.
positions· March 19-23, Stu- vious. The aeoood Ia his supIf not reaolved at that dent ~ all politiODS in presSion of my freedom or
point, crsdinc diff~ will· Undercnuluate Studiea, Admia- ._n "!"' my .richt to articube referred to lbe Preaident for sions and Reoonls; March 26, late a philoeopbiailly heterodox
reaolution.
Student HeaJtb services; position. Tbeee are lbe two
. eor-m. to liMp In Mind:
March 27..'10, Auxiliary Enter- hard oore areas of academic
· • Bear in mind lbe import- P&lt;isea; April 2-20, all budcet freedom."
ance or deacribinc lbe polition; functions or extension and pub- ~ Ketchum a 8 It ed -Ketter to

M anDOUDCed · th!OIIIIh lbe
Vice Prealdenta a f- weeks
- will be oommenciDf a
job cleacription m&gt;Bw
•
evaluation propam fol: all
NOD-TM&lt;bina ProleaaionaJ l&gt;olilioaa in 1be barpininc unit.
Tbia work will ba done by our
P.-nol Department, but will
._ua your participation .uld
~ A tentati"" acbedule .not lbe incumbent.
call8 fo. lbe project to be oom• It is important that we
oonsistenUy evaluate minimum
plated .by late summer.
Tbia propam, for 1be review qualifications and skills reand evaluation of jobo or ,_;,. · quired, not mazimum. Not only
tiona, is not to be confuaed with is this basic to good polition
ihe Performance Appraisal Pro- deacription, it is eumtial to

~

==

Academic V i c e President
submit a brief 8tataMnt of tbe ~· Gelbtlum's . action .to

~

1913

dicates, lbe position . properly

sons.He" ....,..
"""' be was ......._
__,_, __ f or
"academic due process," no t.
"automatic reeppointmebl':_ ·,
Ke~'!"'. ciJSrge_d. that tielbaum ISm 'no'Jl!l'lltiOD to evaluate an academJc procrsm be
kno~.• abeol,utelY; nothing
about, . ~ 'be .IB not ""':""
petent m ~1elds Jike lbe his·to'}' of ~hilosopJ;&gt;y, or Greek
p~osopbi""! philol&lt;?SY, a n!f
~t possibly be m a po&amp;l·
tion to know where my work
fila into the tradition of the
:::!,~:; ~"""
discip~," and that ''be is .in
specialists and all otber titles; no position :whatsoever to die;AufUSt 1-15, ~cademic AtJairs !Ate how philo6ophy obould f1t •
assJStenVassociate deans; pro- mto the ~Yege B procrsm,
vosts vice· presidents· August about which he also knows
1f&gt;.&amp;ptember 21, an' Health no~."
May
May 1,
2 Accounting/Payroll;
Putchasinll· May 3
Intemai Audit· MaY 7-8 Per:
aonnel; May '9-10, Offi;., or
President, Ezecutive Vice President; May 14, Office of Vice
President for Research· May
15-16, Physical Plant; !day 17,
Environmental Health; May
1S.22, Facilities Planning; May
23,. M.I.S. ; May 24-31, Computer Center; June 4-5, University Relations; June 7..July
demi AtJairs
31
·c
. "assis• all (\.';!'-

.::.;:'I!J

==

the oricinatinc
unit, .after
ap.
•~u•
..... ..,._..
--'·'tatio
' n. ''In
propnate
the Ketchum case, these agencies would be the MllS'Iar of
College B and lbe membership
or policy board of lbe College
itself. Such unit initiatioo had
no chance even to take place,
however, since the Collegiate
System is only at present· arriving at a joint budget request
for next academic yeer. In the
course of fonnulatinc its budget request, Co~Jege B has recommended Mr. Ketchum's reappointment, and it is yCljlr
right; as the Presideot's designee, to rule on that reoommen- .
datio
But . yo~..acted. befA;&gt;re
the process took place.
"Just as problematic," Hatch

::rasa:.,~:t %':;~ Four
~:.~t th~..:~ ·~
rei:!,Points
s:=~!::O:::'K':J:. president's action in terminat-

teclmical assistenta/specialists
and all other tiUes; September
24-28, Health Sciences assistenVasoociate deans, provosts,
vice presidents.

belonp in a bieber crsde. this
will be submitted es an olficial
- t to SUNY Central Ofrice . and ihe Division of ihe
B··.i-t. . ,
-~
Dr. A.ttbur A. Esslinger, pn).
. e Where the ,eyaluatiOD in- fessor of physical education at
dicales.. lbe ~•tion p~•ly th u · enn·.... or Ore 0 has
belo:'f at a 1;;;;;;. level ·(-a~
loWe ruv
v
g n,
p -'-L)
......,,..., be .
joined lbe faculty of lbe Di~ -•-~~- or -:-....,..lbe "'!' · vision or Physical Education,
prop~~~ aesi~~ Recreation and Athletics 'for lbe
for future5 ';;;"'cumbenta ....
spring •semester,. Dr: Harry G.
will make every effort ~m8ke ~~vision nirecror, has anammgementa with Centml OfDr. Ess~, whO was dean
fice, . tbe ~t,. of Civil of Oregon's · School of Health,
~~ce,t, andto."~~~~1_f
Physical~tion and ReCr&amp;.
......,.~
_,.. ~ ..atiori' trom 1953-71, was, the disitiODS fo_r aa lorijr. ¥. .lbe ,in- ~ or physical education at
cumbeo.t IS In the P&lt;J61tion.
l;!pringfield COllege from 1!!46•
•
•
53. Previously, he was a proIn additiooi'to lbe President'; fessor for five years at Stenmemo, 'KenDelh H. COoldin of ford University&lt;
lbe Pei'80Dilel Ileparlment, has
A past president or the AiDercirculated procedural llllides to ican ¥soclation for Health,
·lbe same audience. ' ·
Physical Education and RecreTbeaa ~ indicate ilt atiop (1959-60) 'and a former
additian: ·
pres i d e'n t or ~ ·American
That eac:h~v1ca p.u oi d e'D.'t - Academy or Physical EducaIDU8t provide an orpnizalioa tion, Dr. El!slincer will teach~
chart for his NTP joba to the craduate oouraa (HER 525).,
Pemonnel Olfice siz weeb t . "Selected'l'opicsin ·HPER"
fore lbe scheduled 'liValuation (~essiOOal preparati"'!!). jJe
dates. ......... .,.......;.i_ .- ·-• will .also '!"lYe !"' CllllllluliBDt 011
That ...,... ~·-- ~- cumciul~q projects. , "' .

Esslm'ger Named '

r;.;

!'!:

.
ing Ketchum without giving
reasons. "The oolleges rely
pus."
heavily on people with Mr.
First, be esid. Gelbaum did Ketchum's type of positio~~--e
, Presi
part-time appointment requir00
nfi~
befnsuloret ~kine his
·~=~~- Pan-time
\n4 yearly staff
confirmation. If our
members are
The."faulty inference" that Drs. subject to such abrupt deci-·
Kette
1d Somlt
associ
&amp;tad ~lh the acti..:."Ketch~ I sions, unrelated to Pl'OIIf8M•
•• :~ ·~.
.
joumaJ
matic review, unrelated even to
~ was an JDDOCeDt
-- serious review or lbe individual
IStic error."
..
in question, it will be imposSeoond, acoording to Ket- sible to develop good prochum, there is too tittle oon- • grams."
em lor academic fniedom on
Hiltch and Planck called on
campus, outside of T-he Spec- Gelbaum "to recoosider your
g:::mf'~ ~ !:"'.t!}e=· di!ciaion.• ·
.-: ·
~.
dom. He advocated a study' of
A
'II
•
the ooncept to result in a atate.Q.
TU J.Y.I.eetz(lg1
ment1o be
. ted 'in ·the'Uni· Rapreaei,tati- of Recian I ·~
versity ca~
~• . •
. of lbe State Univeraity Alumni
Third, Ketchum said, Preai- Confederation will !Met inBuf- ·
dent K-. ''U alioo ..,Puinely falo at the Frank Lloyd Wridlt '
intereat,ed in acadelidi: f.-. Howie, Jewett Pa&gt;ir:way, &amp;tdom." Thet, be said, "is tile rea- · um.y, Marob 10.
·
8011 for his concern o.er ihe
The propam will Conaiat of
philosophical and· ~ tbree ~ .uld tbree work-·
position of SoCial Sciencea-Col- ahqpa on the -'&lt;era' taPiea.
· •lege." OiW., a split-IIi opinion
Bob ~. State Univerbetween• that College and lbe oity fiaJd resn-tati~ for ~:e­
Histo,Y ~t, Keldlum ~ gionalism, Paul BuJcer, apec1a1
moiiatamed a..t both. lbe P,.. uaistant to the Cbancailor for
ident and.tbat deiJarmait hive JOVe!DIDIIIltal relations, and
llllllle •._ error; "'f oourae, it Sanford Gordon, aulotant
• would be inippi"QPI'iate tor the SUNY vice preaident for polwboje Univeroity to be fOroecl icy .uld planninc, will eilch di&amp;to"'"take a ~ . viewpoint; ~their,_ of aaii11Jl""'1'

~= =.,;;!0: :!'~

--L

fum •

Library S.ets Hours for: :Sprizw /lecess'
The unhlenlty Ubra- -

All
·.
llllllc

··
IJIIJowJ ..........

......

~-~

10
1Jt5
a.

9-5

Cl.
Cl.
9-5

onnoU'nc:ecl 12
13 :

houiS lot' Spnna Receu; Mlln:h 10 • Mon:ll 25. I •
14
211
21
22
9-5
2-9 ,.,.,._ _ _ ....;.,__., pm

11 . . . 16 ·' 17 ,11 1t
23
24
9-5· 9-5
~:: . ::=.:...-==-='~-5':! 1!J. - ~. :::=.=.=.::.=.::?~-5~ ; 1~~
Cl. tam-,-. ...,.---,"-5pm
CL
.a. • - - - - - - - - - 5 p m c:a.
11
2-9

ll---'----9pm_ 9-5

a. .

· - - - - - - - - 9 p m 9-5
Cl. · t.m~-:.l---- - 5pm

2.fi · - - - - - - - - - 5 p m

Cl.
Cl.
9-5

.ct.

Cl.
2.fi
Cl.

!1-!1
a.!leDI---:----,-5pin .CI.
· - - - - - - - - - ! 5 p m ..!1-11 .

, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pill

25
2·10

2,;I~
Cl.
2-8
1-5

2-6

·
·a. Cl.
a.
a. a.
....
-----.....,....,....-ttaurw-:---,-...,-t-!5
a. .7:30•m---- - - - 5 pm 9-5 1-11
H.- a-~
- - - - - - -- - -..... - - Will Mlllntaln Roplor Houts . - - - - - - - - - - - - -

....,_

tom------....o-~spm

•-----~---5pm

Will Mlllntaln Ropier Houts

�COPRNICAN IXHIImON*

The Ollhibit, p,_,ted u ~
Of the Univenity'S celebration of
the SOOth anniversary of the birth
of Nioolaua Copemicua. will be

on dieplay in Lockwood Memorial
Library through April 'n.

INTERVIEWS
Throughout the

eeme~ter,

on-

campus interviews will be conducted for ttudenta interested in
attending graduate ocboolll ur obtaining employmenl To ariaDp
an appointment. contact the Uni- ·
venity Placement and Career

Guidance Oftice, Hoyeo C, Rm. 8,

!il7 :!lf.;~~~"' ..-;..
THURSDA Y-8: Pratt ol Whitney Ain:rafl; lntemal Revenue
Servi!"'; EPC Serviceo, lne. ; Metropolitan Insurance Co.; Ruobford
Central Scboolll; Tonawanda Public Schoolll.
FRIDAY-S: Rite Aid Corp.
·CoMONDAY-26: E.T . eta110 It
TUESDAY-'n: General Milbo,
I"!'.; Reliance Electric Co.; Fioher

t~l'~~~~~
Scboolo.
WEDNESDAY- 28: t.ucidol

g:.p_~'c!:':..~ ~&amp;~·-

THURSDAY- 28· Rocbeoter

'Pu!&gt;lie LIbra~ r&gt;n,.
~ Inc.;

Pablii:

�MeiCb 3, 191:J

16

-- .-.-nn'-·

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

.......... ....-...-tar-....
......

~

,. • .._., tD ....._..of ...

.._., ... pullllc;

~

c:eo.-~ ~ 1114228.

... __.....

'I:HlJRSDAY~

Ionic 8~ of Phoopltolipid
MembraM and B~ ol Co
lono, Dr. sbin...r Ohki. U/8 Depertmentof ~Sci.,_;
~ .!....~ Qwlml, - 101 ' G-22.-c.- 4 p.m.

,.... -

-...1

jo

primar-

:r.=:~~:

__,__

:::r~u:,:::t:!r~

-ClAir

_..,.. ~

.

.·

, _ , . , . _ to .llllloioin; 1110.
. . _ , 2 p.m.
.

~of

PConeer~

7'1w
1M
~
~ ~
100

.Biild, 8:30p.m.

_..far doe.....-.

JIIr, m-net bao wri- - -

...t

talk -

~ wilh 111e

Hio

-Jwiitw
- · ·Bonner (Peckinpeb),
Confe.- Theatre, N o cbod&lt; obowceie for timeo. Admio-

oif!n cbarp.
cooocan•

~~·ricinal Bai~~~i't:.'S::t;;; "'·
-llod by tbo U/B ~

'li.e

conceit

win

feebn&amp; worb

=~~-;!J:.!l:~.: ~~"'Ap~=~ Mc"e.tl&lt;f:t

M1C11AN1CM 81011-110

-•
A1Wria1 F/Mid Meeh~Jnin and
m.--Depcndent Mao o T,..,.._

:::"~i :e~~
~ st::T'..!'!lty~;

~ P..m.
-mar- at s p.m.will p . - e
PHY'SICS c:oU.oGun.•

tbe

-Phonon-Induced Mqnet -

ic ERecu, Chao- Yuan Huanc,

£rn!:i6r.C.Ut WH~~":

--L-- " 12 Hoch p.m. Ref._.._..to m 1
atelier at 3:_30 p.m.
SIMliWI lN UUAlNIAN CULI'UII
&amp;MD CMUZATIOtl*
.

,.;;:;-_~::..~'P~-;;;n8'1I:'f.:

Andrew Ve'fcoff, Paul Tydelaky.
Cbarleo Casavant, Yonc Book
Won. ond Lee Lovallo. Preoented
by tbo-Ut B D&lt;!partment of Music.

.

SATURDAY-10
UUM

DIPINOUIIHED YISmNO LICTUII
SHill•

FRIDAY-16

check obowcaoe for times. Admis-

The 0 ri fin of DeatA, Dr.

SUNDAY-11

haviorcl Pltuticily, Dr. Ricbard
Tbom!"'!'n. Department ol

F.

U/1 AITS fOIUM
.
· Featured guest ia fil.m.maker
Peter Kubelka, WADV-FM,
10 , 05 p.m. ,

MONDAY-i2.

PCa!ifay~
0rrua-.Bto811ogy,. ~.ninii2svenrai~pe~f

Irvin
.....
4 p.m.
Presented by the Bulfalo Chapter of tbe Society for Neuroocience.

SATURDAY-i7

coMPUtiNG CINTH _,......

:t

Woci':!..

GY=~~~~=~E'u,e RU6-

~i'fnc B~~~~rt ~f:'T::.':"'ru~YM~:fitA':j:

ta.u.te of llllnoio, will NOd
from ber work, Fillmore Room,
Norian. 8 p.m.
M-. Broob' visit lo tbe Univeroily is oponoored by tbe - UUAB
Lilezary Aria Committee and the
011ce
Cultural Main.

of
~~n~w!fteto~ l!t

':t
~m:: =~;::!; ,
red
tbo 016
I Culbnby

-~ondfundedce.;tbeN-

Af:.

Yorlt State Council on tbe
In 8ddition lo 't be Pulitzer
Prioo, M~. Broob ha_a won two

~s.::'.!:.=r·Li~~

=.:

Award, and tbe Friendo qf Liter- •

A~

Jaitior Bonner (PeclliDpeb),
Coal....,.. Theatre, No-.
l:beok ol)ow.we f o r - . Admisoion ebarp.
A
end alfeetion&amp;W otudy
of • diwt....._ - " a t eotranged

worm

.

~- ~YS~

-I
toptber,.
.

- ~ ~ is
&amp;rot-rate hen!; Robori- l'reoton
...a
Ida Lapino ci..,

~

performancea.

l!RIDAY-9 .
~A N•w Dimen..... -of Induolrial E1111in«rU.,.

=:.:-n~-~~0:

ioa of BQnerhaniao New York
U~ 1li2 ~ ~r~llod by llie UIB Deputof lnllliotrial Eu,iDoeriJII.

ilorium, 8 p.m.

Geo!J!II Wald, Hinino Prof_.,r

LE~~nal Mecha.ni.ms of Be·

sion charge.

Rt.l::t:Reor
• s'• M
.
. icbo
r.
~~ .l~m·
·um·•
COBOL, an introductory coune
.. Nil ..- v-..&amp;
·to 8 .. business-oriented computer PHiut~HIC WOIKSMOP•
iidic
Cbarcb, Buffalo, 205 lan&amp;'!!'fe, Rm. 10, 4238 Ridge Lee, p Openmo
ie~niCeanaJ
O·c~!••~. Bm.uffult&gt;udow.ilorf, 7 p.m.
7 p.m. ~ ~
hiJhar .
•· ne~U....
cl.udLR WOIIC:sJIOI"'
This seminar will continue on
student musiciana from a~
D:yna.rni&lt;¥ of Human Sexuality:
Monday aJ!d Wednesday eveninP.
H:itB~o7:':c!H::;:,
- ~T.~.t~-= throuch Marcb21. .
1300 Elmwood Ave., 1 p.m.

_,.., M&amp;DINO*

,.

filM'*

eo"..r."'~BoT"h•:·a ,&lt;;.~~~
-

__ . ______

anT!t.~:'i'co~~o::~:: ~
a.m.-

12 30
' p-Di.

•

The team of ail&lt; women, including Ol«o - Korbut aod Liudmila
Tourischeva, who together won
five gold medals during the 1972
Summer Olympics, will be joined
~~·~~
U.niver-

SUNDAy-18

MUSICAL INNOVAnoNS
Featured guest is Gloria Rose,

:!.l:~~~"'l!~V.."i:=.I:

uar.u•

William Appleby, U/B graduate icine and physiology, 147 Diefen8: 15 p.m.
:_m=;~!~~ ~:itt dorf,
Presented by the U/ B Faculty
.,
of Natural Sciences and Mathe3 ' 30 p.m.
matics.
FOmt LICTUI£ SlllU'
The PMO (Pertubational MO) CONCm•
Method, Dr. Michael J.S. Dewar,
Senior Recital. wendell HaYer,
cellist, will perform w o r k'o by
0
Beethoven, Scoville inc! Schubert,
Baird Recital- Hall, 8: 30 p.m.
4:'15 p.m.
·
·
Dr. Dewar will deliver ~a eeriea IMIATil I'IIIAMYA'IION*
of five lectureo u this year'• FooTbe U/B 0111o0 Of Cultural Alter lecturer. The theme of the
aeries ia Molecular Orbital Theory lain p.....,to ZAJ, a tbealricall
.,. a ChemU&gt;al Tool.
m~~~~=ri~~
~late Collep, 1300 Elmwood Ave.,
FILMS'
.
8:30 p.m.
Free buseo will be, leavinc Nor5
Hall at 7:45 p.m., and will
~~{);"the /~":,i:h! h~=e:i ·lon
return at 10: 45 p.m. Tidceto for
Uoher (Webber, 1928). 147 Dief- the performance are available at
eudoif, 7-p.m. Free.
the Norian Hall Ticket Ollice:
T~ Rise of Loua XIV (Roo- geReral admiaiion, $2; students, -

WADV-FM, 10:05 p.m.

9.f::::'"

STUDIHT

MONDAY-19

Ticketo at $7.50, $6.50, $6 and rHILIWMONIC WOII&lt;SHOI'*
fi.J:flJ..t~ at. the Norian p3/:,;~.:!.::,
· from
8 tudent

~rco!,cb:,i~?\ t.=~

~~2:f;?::• (~~~:,'~'Si);

=b

1

~\I~~ "l;"~~

re-creation 'of an ·era. 147 Dief-

entrf·J:,!!.J'~;::.;,.,.

&lt;B--

:!1 !:Ww,~= ~

- 11~

- -

THURSDAY 29
·
.

-:-

OPEN IIIIIEAUAI.**

t,'l,: · and allegory. 147 Diefendorf, 9: 30 sJ!t. :;:n.ve/Gnd

101
QuarUt,
Tbe open rebeaJoaJ il primarily
THURSDAY 15
.:fi eoaod~~oolo,U::J.: I'OOIYaADING* \
·
formuoocotudento;bowewr, otuHall, Bu6a!o State College, ~ Jameo Tate will read from his denio eouolled in otber disci~
coNCUr•
1300 Elmwood Ave., 1 P"!'·
work, 231 Norton, 8:30 p.m.
, at U/ B are welcome lo attend.
. The Toyko StrU., Q=teti:I'he CONCEIT•
Mr. Tate recei.ed tbe 1967 Yale Tbe Quartet will perform worb
cz.vilond
Quartet, Baird Recital • Buffalo Philharmonic orr~outrc. io.~J.l'Hl: !~
by Bariok.
8
H~ ~~ will include works ~~ ·atud~~clam~:. venity is 'oponoored by tbe Poetry ~N~n!c-=;t.:::.:f
li\~3bleM,"t"t:e~~ Union ~Hall, Buffalo State ~';!::- of ~e De~ of tion Palho, Dr. .
J. S .
1300
8 1
bn Hall Ticket Qftice: pneral ~~
ElmwOOd Ave., ' !i FACULTY IIICifAJ.*
~~&amp;"::rT~ofat ·~fi
admisaion. $lj; faculty, •teJf ond
Tbe performance · will include Baiqrd~~Ga.YZ:,!,= _ E nop•ml&gt;,m.le, Acbeoon. 4:16p.m.
30
UIB aiiiDUU, 82; •tudento, $1, , wo~ b n-pt'ghi J·-·-L An~tal .,....,
Preoented by_ tbe U/B Deport- fo,;Woft. ;;:j Mi!ba.:d.~uctTi9teto are available al tbe SIMIIWI IN UUAINIAN CUL,_
of Muou:.
ed by Fnnk . Collwa, ...;.tant Norian Hall Ticket Ollice: con- ""8~'J:'~uo A~eono,
&amp;NIII.IAJ. - . WITHS«Y
coniluclor-in-reoidence wit b tbe era! admiuion. $L50; faculty, Frueoeo, Moaaico and Clwrch
~· ..
Bu1falo Phllbarmonic.
-~~n'* end50 ~!. palreoenumnited$1by; ~~ Arc~cWr&lt;, MO. NiDa Tlooliak,
Dr. Robin ~A. Coombo. Quicl&amp;:
In addi"-- Carisaimi'o 0111- ~ -.
-w.
- ment of '!.=.'~-~
I
U/8 DapeKo
Profeeao• of
ne-~·-t
......,
U/B ~t of .Muaic.
'"--'-" f p tbolocy 'if'~'"' .
torio, ~~will lie performed
·~...,
~·-.7
~~ ~~ty~ ,; ~r Cboil'. ~:~~
TUESDAY-2'i
UJelendorf,
p.m. •
~il.r ~oped ,....ttinc teeb: tion of G. Burion Haibison, w;.
-=-~SI!ID. VIIIIMG LIC1Ua
~eo m unmimo!OIY, 140 Ca- ulty- member, StiJCtBulfalo.
- 5~ IICITAJ.* Human 'l&lt;i • i o ;,, Dr. ~rp
: ~~ teat, which wu
Free tlcketo an! available at
BaUd Recital Hall, noon.
Wald. Higino Profeoaor of, ,BioidoveloDed by Dr. Co 0 m b. for tbe Norion Hall Ticket Office.
FOml ~ m•s•
w""~"T..!'ti:::!
FRIDAY-23
pbyaiolocy, 147 Diefendolf, 8:15
tbroucbo!Jt tbo -dd.
·
~~";'~of111·~6 p.m.
"M'!!:..wAnnr:.:!,!~~ ~~sr:'":j~u8, Acbeoon. 4:15p.m.
of~J:l'.,!!:.
~
tbe U/B ~t of Miera- · otiu.ted Eotr&lt;&gt;-l;J.P(l0).9-Tct- NM* '
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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